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Vol. VI, No. 32

Monday, October 25, 1971

serving the notre dame -st. mary's community

Stephan:"Progress" on Merger Talks SBP finds Trustees ''cordial'' in session

presidents and the off-campus commission in the by John Abowd areas of improved hall life and the development Negotiations continue on the financial of an off-campus student center. arrangements of unification between the ---"the perilous state" of the student in University of Notre Dame and St. Mary's University decision-making. College, according to a joint statement from "The Student Life Council is losing its Mother M. Olivette Whelan and Edmund A. credibility as a viable legislative body since it Stephan, chairmen of the SMC and ND Boards of seems it is always being overruled," Barkett Trustees. added. "Progress has been made in several are_as The student body president called for in­ attending unification," the statement satd, creased "student input" in the decision-making adding that "meetings will follow soon to further processes. He recommended acceptance of the consider financial arrangements ... " SLC's proposal to conduct a "professional According to the office of public information, survey of student life." "All of the principals in these discussions have The Statement agreed not to elaborate on the joint statement." On Thursday evening, a representative group An informed University source noted that of trustees and officers of the University of Notre public releases concerning. the. T~.ustees' Dame and Saint Mary's College met to continue decisions would be forthcommg m several negotiations for the eventual unification of the days." two schools. Following this session, separate SBP John Barkett, SBVP Orlando Rodriguez meetings of the full boards of both institutions and Executive Coordinator Bob Weaver ad­ were held over the weekend. dressed the Trustees on Friday morning. Progress has been made in several areas The session caused the Trustees to drop fifteen attending unification and meetings will follow items from their afternoon agenda to permit soon to further consider financial arrangements discussion of the student sponsored proposals. after reports from auditors have been com­ Student Presentation pleted. The student presentations stressed two major The overall goal for complete unification points: remains the academic year 1974-75, although there is still hope it can be accomplished sooner. --The acceptance of the SLC proposal on Stephan: "Meetings will follow soon to Mother M. Olivette Whelan, Chairman· SMC minimum sanctions for larceny, assaultand further consider financial arrangements ... " Board of Trustees selling of drugs which favored hall deter­ Edmund A. Stephan, Chairman NO Board of mination of parietal and alcohol regulations. Trustees ---The improvement of the University's submitted by the ·Director of Public Infor­ physical facilities especially in the individual mation, Richard Conklin halls and in the student center. "These were the two most fruitful hours of our SBVP Orlando Rodriguez's speech con­ administration because they will probably result centrated on the SLC's proposal for University in more improvement in Notre Dame than we sanctions. have seen in a long time," Barkett said after the Rodriguez noted : meeting. ---that the Hall Life Committee considered its "We were very impressed," he added, "with task "as being much broader than the Ad Hoc the cordial and open acceptance given to our committee" on disciplinary codes. As a result, proposals." "it was not that the committee advocated no The trustees detained Barkett, Rodriguez and sanctions as some would have it, but rather no Wcavcr for over an hour to discuss specific minimum sanctions." clements of their suggestions. ---that hall autonomy is "not really autonomy but "They were very direct and sincere in their authority for individual halls which submit discussions with us. They admitted that the sufficient proof of responsibility." principle problem was lack of funds and asked us The student body vice-president advocated a what areas we would give the highest priority," program termed "model halls" which allows the Weaver said. hall autonomy pr lOsal of the SLC to be im­ All three stressed the willingness of the '.,.·~-·~; I i ! plemented on an experimental basis if the trustees to give additional responsibilities to I t ' ... , ' 'J - trustees are unwilling to adopt the full proposal. "rcsponsible students." Executive coordinator Bob Weaver discussed Barkett predicted "mixed results" but was . I i'.~.~ ~ the physical facilities of the University. • J ""' - ""1- optimistic that students would see "concrete • I• ,-, .;_ • ~, i-"1, ,._. "The importance of hall life is increasing and results" from the trustees. unquestionably there is a tremendous emphasis Emphasizing the "responsible activities" of on the development of hall life," Weaver said. the majority of students, Barkett noted: Barkett: "These were the two most He recommended: ---what he called "the least publicized yet the fruitful hours of our administration ... " ---the addition of "more and better" lounge space most important events" meaning student par­ in the individual sections of halls that currently ticipation in many service oriented activities like lack such space. the ticket exchange for the Navy game, --increased recreational facilities in the halls. MANASA and the Neighborhood Youth Study ---extensive re-modeling of the student lounge to tutoring program. eliminate "excessive lounge space" and "the ---The research efforts of the twenty hall lack of social and recreational facilities."

If the people running the Navy Ticket Exchange aren't Shellings in East Pakistani; 59 dead able to enlist near one hundred l!lil New York Times Pakistani announcements about had fired 1,600 shells at 11 border villages monitors, they're going to guerrilla actions invariably describe have to give up the program. in East Pakistan, killing 59 civilians. Karachi, Pakistan, Oct. 24--The soldiers as "Indian agents," adding to The shelling yesterday at Nayanpur, So if you're willing to enlist: Pakistan government said its forces in <·onfusion as to wheth(•r Indian forces or Attend a meeting at the hctwee11 Kasba and the district capital of East Pakistan Sunday repulsed two bat­ Bengali nationalist guerrillas are in­ Comilla, was said to have involved Fiesta Lounge of LaFortune talion-sized attacks by Bengali guerrillas volved. Student Center at 10 o'clock recoilless rifles for the first time. These supported by Indian troops and artillery. Thl.' departure today of India's Prime h(•avy infantry weapons are generally tomorrow. The two attacks were said to have taken Minister, Mrs. Indira Gandhi, on a three­ Don't give up your football used against tanks or fortified positions. place in Comilla district near East WI.'ek trip to Europe and the United States The first of thl.' large infantry actions ticket. You'll need it to get Pakistan's eastern frontier with India. was taken as a sign by some officials and yourself into the game. today was reportedly ncar Kasba. The Casualties, according to the government diplomats that all-out war is probably not Indian Hadio has claimed, and Pakistan If you just want to give up announcement, were heavy. your football ticket; you'll get imminent. has d!•nied. that the Kasba area is Daily war communiques reporting in­ Fighting in East Pakistan, which began "lih('I'Htl'd territory" held by the Bengali a receipt; just come over to creasing numbers of casualties have last March, has increased sharply during the ACC ticket office between rdt!'ls. eontributcd during the last few weeks to th<' last month. Pakistan chargPd yesterday that an nine AM and four PM today or fl.'ars abroad that war between Pakistan In actions yesterday, the Pakistan tomorrow. Indian plan<' violatl.'d l<~ast Pakistan's and lnflia may be imminent. gm·Prnnwnt charg('d that Indian artillery airspace Page 2 THE OBSERVER Monday, October Voter Registration Drive starts~

by Danit>l P. I{O('k co-founders is also being coor­ Spring Term class-registration ••aeh hall, who they hope will Two Notre Dame students dinated with Student Govern­ day, January \8, \972. ~olicit publicity and create desire ~MflfM!!~ intend to conduct a campus-wide nwnt, Mr. Robert MPagher of the "It must be stressed," said in the students to fulfill their ~H.~~ Voter Registration Drive this Theology Department, and two Meyers, "I hat one should register n<•wly-cstablished rights granted week. Seniors Pat Coyle and Joe national organizations, The to vote as early as possible in to them by the 26th Amendment. Meyers will spearhead the StudPnt Vote and Youth order to insure eligibility to vote The organization will hold an campaign, which aims at Citizenship Fund, Inc. Meagher in the upcoming Presidential open mPeting Wednesday night at registering as many ND-SMC has published an article in the primaries. Deadlines vary ac­ 7: :~o pm in the Fiesta Lounge of students as possible in their horne Scholastic urging student voting cording to state requirements the LaFortune Center. !jjl:litlti,jf:lf.jW: states, if all goes according to registration. and the date of the state's their plans. "Some states do not permit primary." The organization, termed absentee registration," said The organization plans to get at "Voter Registration Drive" by its Coyle, "therefore, in most cases l(•ast one representative from STUDENT TEACHING the only way for a student to f register is to register in person at ANY STUDENT ELIGIBLE his horne county Board of Elections. Undecided court cases FOR STUDENT TEACHING may permit a student to register """ and vote where he attends a DURING SECOND SEMESTER college or university, but as of 1971- 72 now, the full thrust will be at registering a student in his home state where he clearly has the SHOULD COMPLETE right to vote." "Voter Registration Drive" will place emphasis on publicity AN APPLICATION IN RM. 230 before the Thanksgiving and .~ Christmas vacations, according MADELEVA. APPLICATION ( to Meyers, and absentee registration forms (for those states in Which they are per­ Pat Coyle mitted> will be available on .DEADLINE MONDAY NOV. 1 RMN: peace chances good; McGovern:no (c) 1!171 New York Times George S. McGovern in a Washington, Oct. 24--President Veterans Day statement issued Nixon expressed optimism by his office. Sunday about the prospects for McGovern, who is a candidate lasting peace, but at the same for the Democratic Presidential time he warned that "there are nomination in 1972, said that the great differences" between the nation had "delayed too long" in government of the United States guaranteeing to present and and those of the Soviet Union and future Vietnam veterans "the China. best the nation can offer in health In a brief radio address care, employment opportunities marking Veterans Day, which he and benefits for job training." delivered from Camp David, the In support of his accusation, Presidential retreat near McGovern cited labor depart­ Thurmont, Md., Nixon said that ment figures that show "three his trips next year to Peking and hundred thousand Vietnam Moscow "are directed toward" veterans among the millions who the goal of peace. walk the streets unemployed." But he added, "We go with no He also spoke of thousands of false hopes, and we intend to other Vietnam veterans "scarred leave behind us in America no by drug addiction and other unrealistic expectations." psychological problems (who) Nixon also pledged his concern are simply not getting the for the returning veterans of the medical treatment they need war in Vietnam, which he called because funds are short and "the most publicized and least facilities inadequate." understood war in our history." Nixon, in effect, directly an­ He asked all Americans to join swered the Senator. him in a commitment "to do all He noted that, in June, he had that we can do to insure that ordered the labor department to those who have borne the burdens inaugurate special programs to of war are not made, because of provide training and jobs for their sacrifice, to bear veterans, and added: disproportionately the burdens of "I am happy to report that the peace." during July and August alone, A charge that just such neglect more than 121,000 Vietnam-era of the needs of Vietnam veterans veterans were placed in jobs or in was occurring was made by Sen. training for jobs." MEETING ... and saves you money.

CHICANO STUDENTS Your Student Billing Card is yours at no cost at the Indiana Bell Business Office. So, if you All ND-SMC Chicano Students live in a dorm you can make long distance calls from your room simply by telling the operator your card number. (Including Graduate Students) Are Calling by Student Billing Card eliminates Requested To Attend Tonite. the 25-cent additional charge made on every station-to-station "collect" call within Indiana. If you're a dorm resident, MONDAY NOV. 25 7P.M. get your card now!

IN THE URBAN STUDIES INSTITUTE

OF THE ROCKNE MEMORIAL @ Indiana Bell The Observer is published daily during the college semester c.<<..:!pt vacations by the students of the University of Notre Dame and St. Mary's College. Subscriptions may be purchased for $8 per semester from The Observer, Box Q, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556. Second class post~ge paid, Notre Dame, Ind. 46556. _M_on_d~ay~.-~__ tob_e_r_2~s._1_97_1 ______TlfE OBSERVER Page 3

(c) 1971 New York Times News Service United Nations, N.Y.--An audience of United Nations officials and delegates and music lovers from all over the world heard Pablo Casals I conduct two Bach concertos, play a fold tune and lead the world 4:00- -lecture, erik von premiere of his own composition, "Hymn," a short choral work en kuehnelt, renaissance dedicated to the United Nations. After the musical tribute to peace in and reformation, the General Assembly chamber, Secretary General Thant presented =s library auditorium and World the 95-year-old cellist with the United Nation's peace medal. lounge. Clt 4: 15--lecture, john houck, Edmonton, Alberta--Soviet Premier Aleksei N. Kosygin stopped in planning toward the Edmonton on his tour of Canada and visited a nickel refinery at Fort a year 2000, 127 Saskatchewan. Unusually heavy security precautions prompted by t:J nieuwland. Briefs hostile demonstrations elsewhere in Canada discouraged most Ed­ 7:00--meeting, pitt club, montonians from coming out to see the Russian leader. u Iafortune student center, 2d. Belfast. Northern Ireland--British soldiers shot and killed three men 8:00--lecture, prot. c.a. committing a robbery about 40 miles south of Belfast. An army s:: maccartney, problems spokesman said the robbers ignored two warnings to stop. 0 of nationalism in the (c) l!lil NEW YORK TIMES hapsburg monarchy, Washington--The pay board will have the power to retroactively room 1201 library. grant wage increases that were affected by the wage-price freeze, Conald Rumsfeld, the head of the cost of living council, said. Leonard Woodcock, a labor member of the pay board, said that he would favor granting such retroactive raises. I Goal - 1100 tickets Ticket program snagged harman kardon CADS ThE' organizers of the ticket week we called a meeting and exchange program are running only two volunteers showed up. into difficulties making some of This Tuesday at 10:00 at the thE' arrangements for South Bend Fiesta Lounge of LaFortune youths to see the Notre Dame­ Student Center we will hold Navy game. another meeting for those who SAVE $30.00 One problem is that this year want to be monitors, excluding 400 more tickets will be needed, those already signed up. We explained organizers Jack would like the students to know Candon and Eric Andrus. Last that as monitors they will not year 700 tickets were turned in have to give up their tickets. for the Georgia Tech game. The Also, p!'ople with cars are needed planned goal this year is 1100 to provide transportation for the tickets. kids to the game" "Students can turn in their Jack Candon added that "we football tickets from 9 to 4 on r!'ally appreciate the efforts of Monday and Tuesday at the thE' students to make this a Eric AMrw Convocation Center. No ID's are succl'ss, especially the tutors and required. One student can take as school captains in the neigh­ many tickets down as he wants," borhood stu~y help _P!Ogram." Andrus said_ "They will get a receipt for their tickets. The week after the game they can get their tickets by turning in the receipt," he stressed. "One of the problems that we had last year was that very few turned in the tickets on Monday and we had to conduct an in­ IE'nsive campaign that night to make sure we would come up with those tickets." Professional Tape Cassette "What appears to be the bigg!'st obstacle this year," said Recorder With Built-In Dolby Andrus, "is that we don't have t•nough monitors to watch the Noise Reduction Processor kids. We need a hundred. Last SMORGASBORD Every Monday 5-9 pm $1.25 All you can eat NOW $199.95 Every Wednesday evening . PITCHER zs ••• $1.00 NIGHT

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----~------~ ------·------THE OBSERVER AN INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER Editor-in-Chief. Glen S. Corso Assistant Editor ,\ssistant Editor All successful newspapers are John Abowd T.C. Treanor cease! essl y querulous and bellicose. They never defend Business Manager anyone or anything if they can help .\dvertising Manager Jim Jendryk it; if the job is forced upon them, Bill Bauerle they tackle it by denouncing someone or something else. H.L. Mencken Business: 283-7471 News: 283-1715

From the Editor's Desk The Only Losers

Notre Dame's football dreams died stillborn this season with the loss Saturday to Southern California. Those of us who are Seniors "We 'II get there faster on our own" were looking forward to the team having an undefeated season, in this, our last year at Du Lac. The gentlemen from the most Don Ruane populous state in the union felt otherwise, and smashed the hope with a rather convincing finality on the turf. That the Southern Cal team showed more than their usual stuff cannot be denied. Such For What It's Worth excuses sound hollow, though, the Monday after. They played Many Arts and Letters and engineering students have been quietly well, well enough to beat us. Nothing more can or should be said grumbling to themselves this semester as they labor just to get about that. another requirement out of the way. Although it is already midsemester, they still have many grumbles Another type of war was being waged the Thursday and Friday to mumble because the Classic of the Week Club, also known as afternoons before the clash. The Boards of Trustees of both Notre Collegiate Seminar is a two semester, six hour requirement if students Dame and St. Mary's met separately and jointly. They discussed in those two colleges want their diploma. finances---the finances of the unification action. As of yet none of The purpose of the course, according to Tom Musial, the CS them is talking to the outside world. That the Boards decided assistant director, is to give the nearly 1,000 A&Lers and engineers a chance to arbitrate "various attempts by different men at different something seems fairly certain. What they decided is shrouded in times" to answer the universal questions of existence, identity, etc. secrecy. Avail able reports indicate that the rent demanded by the Musial says it is required because of the traditional culture of liberal Holy Cross Sisters was deemed unreasonably high by Notre arts education, the faculty's belief that students need to come to grip Dame. The same reports also indicate that one of the reasons the with these questions, another bleief that students should be active Sisters demanded such a high rent was to meet their financial agents in their education and because there is no other department for this purpose. obligations, obligations which consist of various mortgages Many students will admit willingly that CS has excellent potential to against buildings on the St. Mary's campus. Thus as munificent as fulfill its purpose, but its design, and particularly the tag it might be for the Holy Cross Sisters to rent St. Mary's to Notre "requirement", do much to destroy the spirit of the 16 year old course. Dame for a. nominal sum each year, they are unable to do SIJ. There is nothing like walking into a class the first day and being If the Notre Dame trustees refuse to meet the Sister's price, the handed a syllibus listing a book a week, ranging from Homer's nuns •will lose anyway. Notre Dame's refusal, and subsequent Odyssey to Aristotle's Nicodean Ethics and on to Cervantes' Don Quixote (part one, but the introductory material covers the first 85 action of going co-ed on it's own will surely lead to the demise of pages). St. Mary's. What girl would attend St. Mary's if she were qualified The next surprises are that you will have to make some sort of to enter the University of Notre Dame? presentation or paper on at least two of the classics, participate in The Trustee's decision, according to administration sources, class discussions, (as expected in a seminar) and keep a journal just in case you can't express yourself very well in class. will become public in a few days. If the situation is as reports have The final surprise, depending on whether the seminar leader wants indicated the financial machinations dreamed up by the ac­ to tell you or on someone to ask, is that the CS faculty, for the most countants to solve the problem will be academically interesting. part, is voluntary and represents approximately 90 percent of all The aforementioned machinations won't be interesting, however, University departments, which means the leader may be buying the if they delay unification or seriously impede its progress. A delay book for the first time himself. In the end from one view, it's just like having all the grading and evaluation power in the hands of one of several years won't bother the Trustees or the Administration; student. members of both intend to be here for years. It will bother the However, the faculty has one advantage. Each book slated for the students, all of whom will be gone in four years, most before that. nearly 50 section course is condensed into crib notes by one of the It's wrong to promise a man co-education when he applies to this faculty-students and distributed to the leaders. This is very helpful for school, or while he's struggling through here and then to renege on any guide, the generally accepted duty of a seminar leader, par­ ticularly if he hasn't read the book. Thus another fine basis to it. evaluate a student's performance, the notes of another written on the The Trustees may not have a choice, though. They already have assumption that the leader will read the book. made a partial commitment to unify with St. Mary's, a com­ In the meantime, students in the liberal arts tradition wade through mitment they were supposed to finalize this weekend. If that reams of philosophical, metaphysical and theological thought, decision was made, and if that decision includes holding up sometimes developed during most of the author's life, in one week, and unification for several years more, the only losers will be the are expected to find a fundamental approach to a particular universal question and be ready to "arbitrate" it. students.. Perhaps it can't be helped. Whenever high level games It seems that students could be given two weeks a book, or three are carried out under unfavorable circumstances---as these have periods per book for discussion; and maybe even some crib notes. As been---someone always loses, usually those with the least power. noted above, these thoughts and themes have been developed during entire lifetimes of both men and civilizations. Although Collegiate Seminar appears as a giant ogre, its director, John A. Oestrle, has attempted changes, only to be blocked by the College Council or the University. Attempts to drop the requirement label have been stopped by the News Editor: Jerry Lutkus Features Editor: rick smith A&L College Council and efforts to drop the standard grading Sports Editor: Jim Donaldson procedure for pass-fail have been denied by the University because it Campus Editor: Don Ruane is a requirement. SMC News Editor: Ann Conway However there is still hope in both these areas thanks to the merger Night Editor: Marty Miller of Notre Dame and St. Mary's. If the Bookstore's favorite course is Headlines: Jim McDermott, T .C.Treanor kept as a requirement, it will have to handle nearly 1,500 students in Layout and Editorial Assistant: Stan the each of the next few years. Faced with maintaining a strong staff, CS Man has not secured committments for additional staff and may be forced ···j,· ! 'p,,troller: Joe Wilkowski to take the elective root because of this development and the strain placed on the faculty by related freshman and senior level courses. THE OBSERVER ,Pages LETTERS TO THE EDITOR t<:ditor: din•ct my rl'sponse to Fr. Blantz l•:ditol' to go out with a St. Mary's girl, Daml' guy is behind you in your I have noticed that since last and his opinion on the regulation I uotPd with interest the use of hut some of you guys are r·uining timl' of need. Saturday afternoon there has of paril'tal hours. He stated, phnlsl' "non-nl'gotiable" by Sr. it for me. And for the rest of poor h<'l'n a great deal of speculation "There is a question of the moral Alma Peter regarding the "sale" slobs who sit around on Saturday A concerned ND gut among the student body about the <'nvironment. If public hotels of St. Mary's. If any student nights drinking our fool heads off. reasons for the defeat of the show some concern over un­ IPadcr used that particular I'd much I"ather be with a girl Please print this letter. I am not l<'ighting Irish by the Trojans. married men and women phrase he would be labeled as a than sit with jerks drinking, jerks including my name because some HPasons ranging from the poor soPnding the night together, then danger to the greater ND - St. who screwed me out of a possible of my friends would say that I wPathcr to the inadequacy of the I think a Catholic university .... Mary's Christian community date with a girl who has an wrote the letter just to get a date. Irish offense have been should be more concerned with and dealt with summarily. opinion of all Notre Dame guys. suggested. Yet these guesses are the creation of an environment Anything that students propose is We at Notre Dame are sup­ only stabs in the dark. lwrc of high Christian standards negotiable, while much the ad­ posedly one, big brotherhood. Thl're is only one reason that and ideals". ministrators propose is not. The With St. Mary's and Notre Dame ACCOUNTING AND this dark defeat could have been As of when, should a Christian story alludes earlier to sister's merging, we are becoming one visitl'd upon Notre Dame. The university use the statutes of willingness "to negotiate ac­ big family. These girls will be, in FINANCE MAJORS Irish are being punished for their public hotels as guidelines for the ceptable financial essence, your sisters. Would you Let us help you: sins. Just ask any old grad why "creation" of Christian stan­ ai"rangcmcnts". It would seem sit by and let some guy molest l<•ams have been defeated in the dards? Rather, I should think your sister like that? PLAN AHEAD that St. Mary's is indeed for sale, To Become a past and they will tell you that it public establishments would look hut what is negotiable is the Not only are you ruining it for CPA was because of the low Com­ to the university for guidelines in price. If we don-t learn anything us in this way, but also you are jeopardizing our chances with the THE BECKER munion rate at required chapel the pursual of the essence of l'lsc while we're here, we cer­ CPA REVIEW COURSE on the morning of the Game. So Christianity. The Christian tainly learn how to bargain, don't sanctions. And believe me, the l<'t's get out to the chapels next university is a creative, viable Wl'? Trustees aren't blind at the Saturday morning and help the community which can honestly football games. They are INDIANAPOLIS tl'am score some points. s!'arch for a way of life in ac­ DPvotcdly yours in N.D. capable of putting one and one Pll'ase note that there is no cordance to the teachings of Edwin K. Isely together. They might make their 317- 347- 9971 place for a female in a football Christ; which is relatively free of Craduate Student decision on what they see at the W<'l'kend. So let's leave the SMC jaded, prejudiced beliefs as to games. They might be wrong in Our Successful Students Represent girls and the homl'town honeys at what actions, in a cold, objective Editor: doing it this way, but they are hom!' nl'xt wl'ek. A man must manner, categorically brand you justified in doing it this way,too. 1/5 OF USA dt'votl' all his energies to sup­ as a Christian of high or of low This letter is addressed to the So grow up brothers. And sisters porting the team; get rid of the standards. Notre Dame (men) Student Body of St. Mary's, at least one Notre tPmptations caused by the In the parietal hours issue, we The events of the past weeks pn•s<•ncl' of females. Why, the students are looking at the here on campus are important to pro<'l'SS of sexual infatuation has CJUestion in a creative, positive all of us. Parietals, drinking, etc. hP<'n so marked and disgusting manner; we are frankly ad­ are the topics. And like any red­ that I have actually heard a mitting the fact that rules, blooded Notre Dame man, I am fn•shman contradicting the time similar to those used by hotels, against these sanctions because I honored IPgend that the statue art' not going to create a think we should be able to do atop thl' Goldl'n Dome is not Christian community and hence a what we want so long as we do it Knutl' Hoekne in a raincoat but Christian set of standards, in an adult manner. But these Tne Amencan Tnbai·Love Rock Mus1ca1 T<'rry Ruck in a maxicoat! rather, Wl' believe that Christian sanctions aren't the reasons I am Orw more historic convention standards can only be for­ writing this letter. which has been much violated of mulated by the individual We have also witnessed in the Good Seats lat<• is the traditional prohibition himself, who has been educated past months a change on campus that the unsanctified feet of in thl' values of a Christian way of - namely, more girls from St. Still Available undergraduates must never lifl'. You are not going to create Mary's are taking courses on tou<·h the steps of the Ad­ Christian standards or educate campus due to the merger which ministration building. Now, walk soml'one on the values of is starting this year. And like any hy thP building at the class period Christianity by blindly imposing normal, red-blooded Notre Dame BOX OFFICE and one is nearly knocked over by rules on him. This way of in­ guy, I dig the changes. lhl' barbarian hordes of freshmen stituting morality is a defensive, We should be satisfied that now NOW OPEN issuing from their calculus backwards sort of way of making at least we have more of a chance dasscs. And always, leading the a shallow stab at morality. of meeting some girls from St. charge, thl' females! Traditions This is why we object to the Mary's But, alas, some of us are Noon to Showtime fall, football teams fall. How imposition of parietal hours. You not. These asses I am talking many studl'nts marched down to arl' calling for the regimentation about are the jerks who persist in tlw (;I'Otto to pray for the injured of standards for morality, which passing girls up at football MORRIS CIVIC AUDITORIUM t<:d (;ulyas ? If this merger implies that the individual has no games. Man, some of you guys hdwPl'n the schools is ever crl'ativc pow!'r of decision - no are really horny if you get kicks 211 N. MICHIGAN STREET l'Ompleted, I am afraid that we frl'l' will - to honestly decide how from that. Don't you know what must first realize that Notre he should act. you're doing? Don't you realize I>ame will never again win a You can talk all you want about that you are planting opinions in 7 PERFORMANCES Orchestra & national championship. Just look "Pxtremc" cases that would the minds of these girls? Un­ Mon. Oct. 25 8:30 p.m. Mezzanine Seats at tht• records and I think you will appl'ar under this type of life favorable ones at that. How do Tues. Oct. 26 8:30p.m. $7.50 you expect to meet a girl like Wed. Oct 27 8:30 p.m. noticl' that the last championship style, yet that is exactly what OTHER SEATS AT: was before the start of co-ex they arc : the extremes, and that? Is that the only way you Thurs. Oct. 28 8:30 p.m. Sat. Oct. 30 6 & 10:30 p.m. $6, $4.50, $3.50 dasses. I am afraid that there consequently, rare. can? What about the rest of us Sun. Oct. 31 3:00 p.m. ALL SEATS RESERVED must he a choice, either a coed Society imposes rules con­ poor slops who won't get to first l'ampus or a winning football cerning morality, as some base if you continue? I would like t<'am, but not both. It is time for nwmbcrs of this university seem ,------==--======...., all Notre Dame men to realize intent upon doing, in a futile that the "Our Lady" in the school attempt to relieve its conscience of our Lady is neither Terry Buck of the guilt of not facing the real -ALL YOU CAN EAT!- nor any SMC rah-rah. problems concerning morality. We must learn from these Old Grad '72 mistakes and set forth in an This semester pizza hut offers t<:ditor: honest and positive manner. This letter is in response to the article concerning opinions by Sincerely, two weekly specials ml'mbers of the SLC on new hall Michael Lally life rules, as reported in the Monday night from 5 to 9 all you can eat - M

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Zl-3l 1·10 1.11 US Ut _4.1~ ON SALE: 31-35 l.ZI 1.10 Z.lt :US Ut! Travelers Insurance Co. Bus.Ad. and Lib. Arts. B.S. in Math. Brand new, guaranteed S-track and 31-41 1.35 Z.1~ 3.11 US s.ttf cassette tapes. Fantastic selection. All tapes only $2.99. 41-451.55 ~.31 3.31 4.51 5.511 Call 1781 (Paul) quickly. ~H1.75 2.58 3.Sft 4.75 I.N Monday. ~~ber 25, 1971 ~-~~~-~-~-~~~-~-~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~P_a~~7 Frosh have Fiesta in Mexico by Vic [)orr, '71 also a good dPal smallPr. And this things. I rPally won't know how Tom Bake and Chuck Kelly each think Wl' intercepted five or six of Last WPdnesday, as the Notre diffpn•nce in size was painfully \1'1'11 w<' lookl'd until I get a notched single scores. tlwir passes." Damp freshman football team horne out by the few final chann• to SP<' lhl' films." Notre Dame's other tallies One potentially serious was prl'paring to depart for its statistics that were kept: But ll'hile the Irish coach was eame on Goodman's TD recep­ problem---that of dealing with the spason-opcning game in Mexico --Thl' ND yparlings annihilated at a loss as to how to rate his tion, and defensive end Bob 1\kxican officials---never City, Coach Denny Murphy ex- Los Pil'les llojas (The RPdskinsl ~Pam's performance, Tom Sweeney's 40-yard scamper with materialized for the ND team. pressed genuine concern as to the !l0-0. Clt>rnl'nts, the frosh signal-caller, an intercepted pitchout. "I'd have to say that the refs caliber of opposition that his --The Irish gathered 795 yards was not. <'kmt•nts rounded out the scoring were pretty fair," commented tl'am would face. in total offense to 170 for the "I think we looked real good," marathon by clicking on eight of Clements. "It was a good, clean "About all we know," said MPxicans. said Cll'ml'nts, who started at QB 12 PAT's. game, and there weren't many Murphy, "is that we're going and --ND rolled to a 48-0 halftime hut played only half of the game. The Mexicans, who had trouble penalties. And when there was a wP're playing. We don't know lead, and enabled Murphy to "Everyone played," he said, stopping the ND offense, had penalty called, the referees knew anything at all about the other lwgin substituting early in the "and everyone played well.'' Pqual trouble in moving the ball enough English so that we had no t<'am, and we can only assume sPcond period. But Clernl'nts, like his coach, against the frosh defense. The trouble understanding them.'' that thl•y'll he our size and age --In this one game, the first- had to admit that Saturday's Hl'dskins had limited success Coach Murphy's charges, t'ompetition wasn't exactly top­ with trap plays and quick thrusts houyed by their opening game l<•vpJ." yl'ar ml'n scored more points notch. "I guess their average age The two teams tangled than did the '69 and'70 frosh units up the middle, but that was the Iaugher, will be on the road next Saturday night in front of an l'Ombined. was about 20 or 21," he said, "but Pxtent of it. "They tried to throw week, as they journey to East Pstimated Aztec Stadium crowd thl'y were real small. And they a lot," said Clements, "but they Lansing, Mich., to meet the of :!5,000. And whl'n the final gun "We just outmanned them," didn't know a whole lot about the didn't complete too many_ And I Michigan State freshmen_ had sounded, Murphy's concern admitted Murphy. "They were gaml' either, because they'd just ,. startl'd to play it a couple of years about a physical difference just a bunch of small kids, but j hl•twPen the two clubs had been they kept after us all the ago." ('Onvincingly borne out---although time .. .I'll give them that. Against such opposition, , .. not as the Irish coach had ex- "It'll be hard to evaluate our CIPmPnts had little difficulty in , pl•cted. performance in this one because executing the Irish offense to - !<'or, while the Mexicans were of the opposition." he continued. rwar-perfection. approximately the same age as "We only had to throw the ball six "W<' threw six passes," he said, thPir Irish ('Ounterparts (and timl's, and we were getting 90- "and completed four of them for perhaps a little older l, they were yard plays out of the most basic about 70 yards. There was one touchdown pass: a 15-yarder to Jim Donaldson;:::::?-~8::::?.:::::::::::::8:::::::::::::=:=:=:=:=:======:::::=====:====:

~ '~ ~ ~ Trojans stun the lrish,28-14 I f f By Jim Donaldson Jimmy Jones whipped a first second down and completed a Sports Editor down pass to tight end Charlie pass to Garrison at the Notre ~ Young at the Notre Dame 35. Dame four, where Ellis wrestled 'f The Trojans did it again. Saturday's 28-14 defeat of Notre After Sam

::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~:~:~:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Eric Kinkopf

...... •.•.·-·=·=·=·=·=·-·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·:·.·.· · . . . Onward to vz'ctory ... Outlined against a misty, grey October sky, the myth was shattered. There were no four horsemen this time. There was no figure of a balding Rockne pacing the sidelines. There was only a band of football players facing the inevitable, fighting the odds, trying to recapture the words of Grantland Rice, trying to relive the heroics of Bill Shakespeare. But on the Saturday of October 23rd heroics were to be denied, and all that was left at the end was pride and the union of all Notre Darners ('Verywhere suffering as the dream was shattered, as reality and life ('onvened within the confines of Notre Dame Stadium. This time the miracles didn't come, or at least fell short of their mark. This time we found out rather painfully what we had tried to ignore, that we too are human. There is an old saying that goes something like ... "there are no good losers, only losers". But out of defeat comes something beautiful, something heartening, something real. What it is can't really be put down in words. It can only be felt when thousands of students rise after the players have left the stage, and amidst tears and wounded spirit, sing that song that means more than words can t'xplain. That my friends, not an undefeated season, not a national cham­ pionship, is Notre Dame. And that, nobody, no team, can defeat.

Jo:desel Garrison grabbed this pass from Jimmy Jones at the Notre llamr thrre yard line and romped in for the first Trojan touchdown. That's Clarence Ellis trying vainly to break up the play.