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Presidential Review - Page 5 Presidential Review - page 5 VOL XVIII, NO. 132 the indepemklll ~tmknt new~paper ~lT\ ing notre dame and ~ailll mary·.., THURSDAY, APRIL 26, I 984 ·shakespeare marathon attempts to set record and raise needed funds ByPATSAIN Dame professor of English, specializ· . Senior Staff Reporter ing in Shakespeare. "The entire campus is responding Spring hath arriveth, and people's as a community," said Rathburn. thoughts turneth to Shakespeare. "Instead of just hearing about some­ Well, at least for the next three days. thing, people are doing some­ The words of the English bard are thing ... It's been years since I have being read non-stop for 100 hours seen response like this," he said. during a Shakespeare reading marat­ The readers have come from both hon on the Fieldhouse mall. the Notre Dame and Saint Mary's The marathon is both an attempt communities, with members of the at the world record for Shakespeare administration, faculty, and staff par­ reading, and to raise money for the ticipating in addition to students, family of Accounting Professor Ken­ said Rathburn. neth Milani, whose son, Adam, was Notre Dame Food Services injured while playing hockey last donated $200, and are supplying year. nighttime readers with coffee and Campus personalities have been food, and two South Bend com­ participating regularly - Digger panies have donated a hot air bal­ Phelps started the marathon at mid­ loon and a tent. night on Tuesday, followed yester­ All money raised during the day afternoon by such notables as marathon will be put in the Adam Emil T. Hofman, Bishop Crowley, Milani Fund, and will be used to help Gerry Faust, and Father Van the Milani family with medical ex­ Wolvlear. Yesterday evening saw penses. the Esophagus Constrictors and the Some residence halls have Student Senate spouting donated money, said Rathburn, and Shakespeare. Dan Vogl, a Notre Dame professor of Milani's son was. critically injured art, has donated several paintings to Dece!llber 7 in a high school hockey be sold, with the profit going to the game at Culver Military Academy. Milani Fund. The marathon is also The accident occured when Milani raffling a bound volume of the com­ went after a puck and was knocked plete works of Shakespeare, and sell­ backwards onto a ledge by another ing t-shirts and buttons. The Tempest player. The impact crushed a ver­ will be shown Monday, April 30 at 7 tebra in his neck, leaving him and 10 p.m. in the Engineering paralyzed from the neck down. Auditorium and admission will be The marathon is being organized See BARD, page 4 and run by Paul Rathburn, a Notre Robert Kennedy's son, The Shakespearean reading marathon continued world's record for Shakespearean reading, bas bad its David, dead at age 28 yesterday, beading toward. its goal of April 29. The share of campus personalities participating, includ­ marathon, which is intended both to raise funds for ing Head Football Coach Gerry Faust, Dean of Fresh­ Associated Press evidence of drugs would take "four Adam Milani, the son of Professor Ken Milani who man Year Emil T. Hofman, and the Bookstore to eight days, minimum," he said. u•as injured in a hockey accident last year, and to set a Basketball favorites Esophagus Constrictors. PALM BEACH, Fla. - David An- "The cause of death is pending the I thony Kennedy, 28-year-old son of results of these further studies," the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, was Black said, adding that suicide was found dead in a hotel room yester­ ruled out because of Kennedy's psy­ Columnist Kempton praises Smith, day in this oceanside resort where chological profile, and no evidence his family has wintered for 40 years. of heart attack or brain injury was Investigators seeking the cause of found. criticizes Reagan and Hart in talk death said, "We're now looking for drugs." "Anything (else) is possible at this By MAURA MANDYCK his concern about Hart's campaign Kempton's column, that his should Young Kennedy had a history of point in time," he said, refusing to News Staff slogan of"New Ideas." be signed, not Max, but drug and alcohol problems, but the , rule out even homicide because "we "It is at least rooted in the English "anticlimax." cause of his death might not be , always have it in the back of our Murray Kempton, columnist for language," he conceded, but "an Concerning Kempton's writing, known for several days. minds." Earlier, police had said there the Long Island newspaper idea can stand between us and true Lerner said "To read him is to be "We're not ruling out a natural was no sign of foul play. Newsday, began his lecture at the feeling." Kempton perceives Hart's stretched, if not to your best, at least death but we're now looking for Kennedy's body, on a stretcher Center for Continuing Education alteration of information concern­ to something you shouldn't have to drugs," said Rick Black, chief inves- covered with a red blanket, was last night by denying that he is, as ing his past as not flaws of character be ashamed of." He described tigator for the Palm Beach County moved from the medical examiner's George Will described him, "the but defects of reason. Medical Examiner's office, after the office to a hearse shortly after 8 p.m., best columnist the United States has Also present was Max Lerner, See LECTURE, page 4 autopsy was completed. Tests of accompanied by his brother, joseph ever produced." He then praised chairman of the American studies tissue and body fluid to find II. Red Smith, the honoree of the department, who worked with lecture series sponsored by the Kempton on the New York Post. Ler­ American Studies department and ner commented that perhaps Gary Hauerwas to accept post at Duke Coca Cola. Red Smith, said Hart's presence at Kempton's Kempton, was "about as awesome a lecture would have been beneficial. By PAUL McGINN who had shown him "an act of me to Duke," he added. presence as anyone that self-effacing "It is better to be lauded than Senior StaffReporter hospitality I will always value." Dennis Campbell, dean at Duke's could ever be." roasted, but when the roasting is as "I will be taking a great part of divinity school, told The Observer, Red Smith developed "the rarest elegant as Murray Kempton has just Stanley Hauerwas, a nationally Notre Dame and Catholicism with "We're thrilled that Professor of all art forms in the stockrooms of committed, it is not to be missed prominent theologian, conftrmed Hauerwas is coming to Duke." journalism ..." Kempton main­ even if you are the victim." yesterday he will take a position at Plans for Hauerwas' new position tained. "The ability to see through Lerner spoke of working with Duke University's divinity school as a tenured professor of theological another's eyes. He had the unlucky Kempton as a "sweet and sour time Sept. I. ethics at Duke were made final April sort of talent that makes its posses­ for me." The sweetness was the Hauerwas, a tenured professor in 18, said Campbell. sor feel as if he has been cheated "comradeship of newspaper men" as Notre Dame's theology uepartment, "It's a very significant appoint­ somewhere along the line." well as the "sense of joy that comes said, "It's with deep sadness in many ment for Duke. Without question, he Kempton spoke about democratic in the writing itself." The sourness ways that I leave Notre Dame be­ is a major figure in theological ethics presidential hopeful Gary Hart. was from the "toughness of competi­ cause it has provided me with my in North America," Campbell said. "Hart is to politics what a master of tion." Lerner described having his basic education both as a teacher Father Richard McBrien, theology business administration is to the column published on the same page and as a theologian." department chairman at Notre business world. He reduces the con­ as Kempton's as "falling off a cliff Hauerwas, in his 14th year at Dame declined to comment about crete to the abstract." He expressed step by step." He felt, after reading Notre Dame, thanked those persons Stanley Hauerwas Hauerwas' departure: · The Observer Thursday, April 26, 1984 - page 2 In Brief · It's going to take cooperation "Hansel and Gretel," an opcra by Engdhnt llum­ to keep social life alive and well padinck, will ht.· staged hy the Saint Mary's music department at 8 tonight and again Saturday, April 28 in the Little Theatre. Humpcr­ As alcohol policy protests and demonstrations go on, dinck and his librettist, Addhdd Wctte, first adapted the Grimms' effects of the new policy continue to be debated. One fairy tak to lyric form in 1981 as a "singspid" for children. Humpcr­ thing is certain, though - weekend life on both Theresa Guarino dinck expanded the work to an opera two years later. It is the first campuses will be drastically altered. Yes, Saint Mary's Assistant News Editor opt·ra produced at Saint Mary's in almmost a decade. Tickets for students also will be "victims" of the new rules, al­ "llansc:l and Grt·td" arc S I for adults. Saint Mary's and Notre Dame though not to the extent of Notre Dame students. students and children under 14 will he admitted free. Tickets may he For years, Saint Mary's students have taken full ad- Inside Thursday purchased at the door. - The Obsen1er vantage of Notre Dame's former, rather liberal alcohol iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii':::::::::: policy, while the drinking age on their own campus remained 21.
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