1 ' ; I .. , I' ! j i .. P~u·; ' .. ·... · '"lL· ; I! Pop. ' . .· -E. .• JO·H·"~-., ' ' . .. :·~ . . '!:: . N.. .. ::~ ...... ~- . [1i . . . .

' . : : : . ' ~- : ·.: " ; . . . : : ; . . :! .·· ).. . ' : -~ .. 1~ .R.I::: ,'• :; ..I:· :' ?.;; ·.... ··' J.,. .. 005.: _: : !:: . .MAY . . 18 . . ' 19?0.. ..J...J .Ap . . . .· ...... J .t.-11 ~

·.~ page 2 The Observer + POPE JOHN PAUL II 1920-2005 Monday, April 4, 2005

..He traveled millions of miles ..He was really important, not ..[He] was a r, ..It•s a huge loss for and to every corner of the earth only to Catholics but to the shaper of wor to bring his personal message of the Church. ·· whole world. I feel like I lost a one ofthe m faith, hope and love to all of the part of my family." figures in rece Emily Ledet world, not just Catholics. " Walsh sophomore Cassie Belek Father Ed Father Badin freshman Universit University President Emeritus John Paul II had global, human impact Pontiff reached out to millions, modernized papacy and defended human rights than ever before. by 20th century theologian Karl of the iron curtain, Matovina said. Church teaching, Pope John Paul By EILEEN DUFFY In the face of such challenges, Hahner to characterize Pope John "Not many people have the II was quite different from his In Focus Writer Appleby said, "his presence, his Paul II's papacy. moral gravity to be part of that predecessors. Pope Paul VI, visibility, his charisma . . . assured "Hahner said that following counter-force," Matovina said. Appleby said, was "unpopular" In contrast to his immediate that the Church and particularly Vatican II, we're moving from While the pope was not effective and "retreated" from the public predecessor Pope John Paul I, the pope would be at the center of being a Western European church in ending communism in Cuba near the end of his life. In con­ who served for only 33 days attention." to a truly world church," today, his visit nonetheless meant trast, Pope John Paul II "provided before dying, Pope John Paul II "He brilliantly brought the Matovina said. " ... [B]ecome a a great deal to Catholics in Cuba, answers at a time when there served for 27 years, the third­ Church to the media and global world church, that's happened in whose worship had been so were a lot of questions," longest papacy in history. age," Appleby said. Pope John Paul Il's papacy." restricted by the 40 previous Cummings said. He entered the papacy during a Pope John Paul II made 104 Matovina offered the diversity of years of communism, Matovina For example, Cummings said time of world tumult. While the trips outside Italy and more than bishops as evidence of the global­ said. Cummings called John Paul many thought the Church's stance Church was bouncing in the wake 150 within Italy during his papa­ ization of the church. While II's ecumenical work with Jews on birth control and female ordi­ of Vatican II, an iron curtain was cy. He visited every continent, European bishops used to travel one of the highlights of his papa­ nation W(!.S going to change with cloaking parts of the world. Later, except Antarctica. to places like Africa, South cy. Vatican II - it did not. The time lightning-fast progress would According to the Chicago America and Asia, more and "His moral voice was heard following that was a period of strike, sparking a storm of Tribune, the pontiffs penchant for more bishops native to these con­ throughout the globe," Matovina "tumult and change," she said. changes. world travel stemmed from his tinents are emerging. said. "But [Pope John Paul II] was not The pope was never afraid. He first trip abroad as pope, when he The pope did not hesitate to Humanity apologetic," she said. "He defined seized the new opportunity that visited Mexico in 1979. One of his enter countries that, due to com­ The pope should be remem­ these things as central to Catholic air travel presented, eventually first stops there was the Basilica munism, outlawed the very reli­ bered for his humanity, Matovina teaching." becoming the most-traveled pope of Our Lady of Guadalupe, where gion he represented. He visited said. Law professor Vmcent Rougeau in history. He visited places where he spent more than an hour pray­ Poland twice when it was under Appleby agreed, noting that also highlighted. the pope's rigid he was unwelcome or his mes­ ing alone. martial law, once in 1979 and "[t]he Church often emphasizes adherence to Catholic teaching. sage was rejected. And he always "It was while praying to then again in 1983. He also made the divinity of Christ," but that "He was a very traditional pope kissed the ground of those places Guadalupe, the pope later said, a trip to West Germany in 1987, Pope John Paul II said what we for pe9ple who thought that there when he deplaned, a tribute to that he had an epiphany," the two years before the end of com­ learn from Christ is to be human. might be more conversation the humanity of Jesus Christ. Tribune article said, "suddenly munism, and to Cuba in 1998. ."His gestures - hugging chil­ about the role of women ... he John Paul II always defended understanding that it was his mis­ During these visits, as always, dren, kissing the ground after get­ shut that conversation down," he human rights, especially in the sion to become the pilgrim pope, the pope stressed religious free­ ting off a plane - are all signs of said. face of communism. He also bringing the word of God to peo­ dom, Appleby said. his presence in humanity," he While he defended male-only defended the Church's post­ ple around the world." "He was a great champion of said. ordination and urged women to Vatican II stances, despite their Indeed, the pope did not limit freedom - the freedom to fulfill "On the one hand he empha­ seek out roles as mothers and unpopularity in radical or liberal his travel to any one area of the your destiny as a human being, to sized aspects of the Church that wives, Cummings said, John Paul parts of the world. world, although he personally vis­ fulfill your destiny in God, to be are hierarchical, patriarchal," II also decided to classify sexism The changing world was not a ited almost all of Rome's 334 fully in touch with the spirit of Cummings said. "But he also as a sin. problem for Pope John Paul II. parishes. love and forgiveness," Appleby made the papacy seem more Integrity in death Even Vatican City now has its own Born and raised in Poland, he said. human with his willingness to "People may disagree with him, Web site. "really embraced that relation He was always concerned with embrace and be embraced." but there's no doubt he was a Global reach with Poland and Eastern Europe," human rights, which he called And just as his arms were open faithful and holy man," Cummings Pope John Paul II became the said Kathleen Cummings, associ­ "non-negotiable, inviolable, not for an embrace, his mouth was said of the reaction to John Paul leader of an ancient establish­ ate director of the Cushwa Center something that's transitory," open about the pain he endured II's death. ment on the "threshold of the and professor of history. Appleby said. near the end of his life. "We're seeing various world globalized media world," said his­ John Paul II was also "tremen­ Some of these governments "On his trip to Lourdes [in leaders complement the pope [fol­ tory professor and director of the dously beloved in Latin America," were profoundly changed follow­ August of 2004], he talked about lowing his death]," Matovina said, Kroc Institute for International said Timothy Matovina, director ing these visits. One month after suffering," Cummings said. "He "and that's unprecedented. Not Peace Studies R. Scott Appleby. of the Cushwa Center, for his the pope's second visit to Poland, shared his suffering with the everyone agrees with him, but With air travel reaching new "commitment to justice, consider­ the current leader there, Gen. world." people admire his integrity." possibilities and the arrival of the ing these countries struggle with Wojciech Jaruzelski, ended mar­ Leading the post-Vatican II Internet, the papal office had poverty." tial law. The pope was also "one Church Contact Eileen Duffy at more globalization opportunities Matovina referred to an article of the primary causes" of the fall When it came to defending [email protected]

May 18, 1920 Pope John P.-uJ II was btlm Kaml Joseph W

The Independent Newspaper Serving Notre Dame and Saint Mary's VOLUME 39: ISSUE 116 MONDAY, APRIL 4, 2005 NDSMCOBSERVER.COM Notre Dame remembers Pope John Paul II Comrnunity mourns, Pontiff impacted celebrates life of Catholic universities, Church leader ND presidents

By MADOlE HANNA By MADDIE HANNA A~sociate News Editor Associate News Editor

Wlwn Pop1~ John Paul II passed Although Pope .John Paul II away Saturday aftnrnoon, the novnr stepped foot on God Basiliea lwlls tolled for an hour, Quad or worshipod in tlw alorting tho rampus of his doath Basilica of tho Saen~d lleart. and imnwdiatoly drawing mourn­ a numbor of indireet yet sig­ ers to tho ( ;rouo. nificant tins exist bntwnnn thn Sincn t.hn rwws hit Notrn Dame Jato pontiff and Notrn Damn. this wonkPnd. studonL<;, adminis­ Catholic universities trators. l'arully, stan· and mom­ Perhaps tho· popp,'s most lwrs of tlw South Bond mmmuni­ lasting impact on Notrn DanH' ty havn lanwntnd tho popn's death is his inf'lunnen on Cat.holil~ and C(dobratl1!1 his Jill~ in a variety oduration. In an April 2!'i, 11fways. I 9S9 ad dross nntitlnd "On tlw Approximatoly 400 people Catholic Univnrsitins," thP att.PrHIIHI a rosary sorvien popn stn~ssnd tlw rwenssity of Saturday night at tho (;rotto lnd Catholi1: institutions in a by Vien l'rosidont for Studnnt world fillnd with I:!Jallnngns. Affairs J

kerage lirm was hired to help cause for possible sale. By KATE ANTONACCI with the evaluation. In Sept. 2003, WNDU-TV Rally hosted at ND Aw>eiare Nt•ws Editor Though the firm has been decided not to air the comedy hired, Afrleek-Graves said television show "Coupling" Tho University has hin~d that no deeision has been because of its racy subjnet who helped organizn thn Kalil and Co., a broknrage made at this limn. matter. The board of direc­ By KATIE LAIRD evnnt. Two groups ol' HTI. firm basnd in Tuseon, Ariz., "The rinaneial offieers of tors of MTC unanimously News Writer formed an outrnach program to look at tho possibln saln of tho University are always voted after receiving advance last year to reach out to high Miehiana T1dneasting Corp. making evaluations of how copies of "Coupling" episodes. The Notre Dame Hight to school students to advoeatn (MTC), tho operator of tho money ean best be put to Four officers from the Life (RTL) Club hosted its first chastity and to ernatn abortion WNDU-TV. according to a use," University spokesman University were involved in annual Pro-Life Youth Hally on awarnnnss. statmnnnt rnlnasnd Friday by Matt Storin said. the voting. Saturday, where more than "Wn wanted to eonneet with I·:xneutivn Vicn President .John Though the subject of sell­ Though viewers voiced con­ 100 high school students and the high sehools in local arnas i\fll1H~k -(;raves. ing the station has eome up eern, the University was eau­ youth group members gath­ with our students hern as well "In recent months we have before, it has never been tious about the sensitive ered together and learn and to as othnr organizations," recoived a number of examined to this degree, nature of the show and the listen about abortion aware­ Grossu said. "It is an opportu­ inquiries from parties inter­ Storin told South Bend effect its airing may havn had ness and virtuous living. nity to como tog1~ther." ested in acquiring Michiana Tribune. on WNDU's business relation­ From 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., the Aimee Shnlidn was thn Tnlncasting Corporation," Storin would not speculate ship to NBC. students, volunteers, coordi­ emeee of the nvent and works Afllnc:k-Gravns said. as to why Notre Dame is look­ WNDU's President and nators and Notre Damn under­ to help organize Notre Damn "Tho Univnrsity feels it has ing into selling Miehiana General Manager Jim Behling graduatns assemblnd in volunteers with HTL. She was a rnsponsibility to evaluate Telecasting Corp., whose sta­ had no comment about the Lafortune l3allroom for the pl1~ased with the rally's out­ such inquirins in a fiseally tion WNDU is located on possible sale. rally, celebrating with famous eomn. prudent manner." Notre Dame's eampus. The University has owned speakers, musie, food and a "Thorn's a lot of positive Dun to the University's "Jim­ Sourees close to WNDU said the station since 19!'i!'i. prayer service. energy," She lido said. itnd knowlndgn of the broad­ the content of some NBC pro­ Arina Grossu is the Youth The rally ineluded two casting industry," Afflnck­ grams over the last five to 10 Contact Kate Antonacci at Education Outreach commis­ (;ravns said tho outsidn bro- years may be considered a [email protected] sioner for ND Hight to Life see RALLY/page 8 .------

page 2 The Observer+ PAGE 2 Monday, April 4, 2005

INSIDE COLUMN QUESTION OF THE DAY: WHAT DID YOU DO WHEN YOU HEARD ABOUT THE DEATH OF THE POPE? Realn1en eat food The other night I enjoyed a lovely dinner at Chili's with some friends. Oddly enough, the table was split by gender. Chris Garibaldi J9hnny Mospan Tony Jannazo Nicholas Battafarano Joe Gulntu Katie Jannazo One half of the group indulged in freshman junior senior freshman senior freshman two appetizers, entrees and Eileen Duffy Fisher Fisher Off-campus Fisher Fisher Cavanaugh dessert. One per­ son ordered a Assistant "! went to the "I turned on the "I went to "I prayed." "I prayed the "I prayed for chocolate milk­ News Editor , shake to go. Grotto." news and Mass. rosary with a him. He was a The other half talked to my rosary which he great man.,, only had water to drink; their hands friends in Rome blessed when I did not stray near the godforsaken about it.,, was in Rome. ,, chips and salsa. Even salads were a no-no for this group, since they came with croutons (carbohydrates) on top. Guess which sex sat on which side? Wrong. Ladies and gentlemen, I present to you an epidemic sweeping across the campus: men eating like women. Newsflash, guys, this is more unat­ tractive than those extra pounds IN BRIEF would be. One of the boys I was with at Chili's that night opened his menu to the David Orr, chair of environ­ "Light Fare" and scoffed at the choic­ mental studies at Oberlin es. College, will give a lecture "600 calories?!" he wailed in a sus­ today entitled "The Fifth piciously feminine voice. "How many Revolution: Connecting calories are in the rest of this shit?" People and Places." It is Or take this, for example. My room­ sponsored by the School of mate recently dined at Hooter's with Architecture and will being two gentlemen, one of whom bravely at 4:30 p.m. in 104 Bond ordered fried pickles as an appetizer. Hall. After three (I repeat, three) of the quarter-sized delicacies, the other boy Andrew Rippin of the leaned back and whined, "I think I'm University of Victoria will full!" speak at 4:30 p.m. today in Please. You might as well take out a McKenna Hall in a lecture compact and start powdering your entitled "Syriac in the nose at the table. Quran: Muslim Theories." Another friend of mine was recently The talk is part of the invited to a luncheon with a male com­ "Towards a New Reading of panion. Everything was· going peachy the Qur'an" conference. until they ordered. After requesting a B.L.T. on low-fat The softball team will face wheat toast, the boy smiled at my off against Eastern Michigan friend as the waitress moved to a dif­ in a doubleheader Tuesday at ferent table. Suddenly a look of panic 3 p.m. and 7 at Ivy Field. CLAIRE KELLEY!The Observer crossed the boy's face. Michael Kimmelman, chief art critic for The New York Times, shows slides dur­ "Waitress!" he screamed, almost Ray Ofden, of the depart­ ing a lecture Sunday at the Snite Museum entitled "The Accidental ment of mathematics at the falling out of his chair. "Can you make Masterpiece: On the Art of Life and Vice Versa." sure there's no mayo on that?" Then, University of Glasgow, will turning back to the girl, he giggled, speak Tuesday on blushed and explained that just the "Biomechanics of Soft sight of mayonnaise "makes him Biological Tissue: Structure squeamish." OFFBEAT and Modeling." The lecture Talk about a turn-off. is sponsored by the depart­ If you really do care, boys, my advice Thief robs apartment, does In addition, "clothes and tomers in parts of Dutchess, ment of aerospace and would be never to talk about it. Girls household chores dishes had been washed Ulster, Putnam and Orange mechanical engineering and just don't want to hear about how the RICHMOND, Va. -A and dried," according to the counties. takes place in 138 DeBartolo carbs in those 15 beers you drank last woman's apartment was police report. Hopewell Junction resi­ Hall. night went straight to your butt, or cleaned out, and cleaned up Police Capt. Karl Leonard dent George Morton about how the fare at South Dining by a burglar, police said .. said it's possible the burglar returned home from Palm The South Bend Center for Hall is so greasy and preservative­ According to police, the knew the woman was going Sunday Mass and turned on Medical Education is spon­ loaded. Be a man, for crying out loud. woman returned home to be gone for a while and his television to see a soring a lecture by Gary Last Sunday I was pleasantly sur­ Thursday after being away may have decided to take striptease contest. Fromm, M.D., entitled "Sleep prised to see a young man carrying a for a week and discovered up residence in the interim. "I thought, this is terri­ Disorders" Tuesday at 7 p.m. plate piled high with eggs, sausage, her television, computer ble," Morton said. "I don't in 102 DeBartolo Hall. hash browns and toast. That, I and other items missing. TV channel accidentally get HBO or anything like thought, is my kind of man. The burglar had also airs naked dancers that." The baseball team faces Then he proceeded to cover the helped himself to food and POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y.­ Cablevision said Thursday Toledo Tuesday at 5p.m. in entire plate with cheese, sticking it in booze. Viewers expecting to see it was not a public access Eck Stadium. the microwave as he headed back for But this was not a the latest local meeting on program and that a "pro­ a donut. thoughtless thief. Police their public access channel gram switching error" To submit information to be I practically proposed on the spot. said the rear sliding glass got an eyeful recently when occurred. included in this section of As Kate Gales wrote earlier this door, which the woman had Cablevision played a tape of The Observer, e-mail detailed year, real men drink beer. left open, was closed and nude dancers accidentally. Information compiled information about an event to Yes, they do -- but they also eat a locked when she returned. The mistake affected cus- from the Associated Press. [email protected]. pizza afterwards. And they aren't ashamed to get pep­ peroni on top. TODAY TONIGHT TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY The views expressed in the Inside l::t:: LLI Column are those of the author and ::J: not necessarily those of The Observer. ~ Contact Eileen Duffy at LLI eduffy 1@nd. edu 3: .... c( ~ CORRECTIONS (,) 0 HIGH HIGH HIGH 71 HIGH 61 HIGH HIGH The Observer regards itself as a professional publica­ ..... 63 55 49 51 tion and strives for the highest standards of journal­ LOW 45 LOW 40 LOW 51 LOW 44 LOW 33 LOW 34 ism at all times. We do, however, recognize that we will make mistakes. If we have made a mistake, please contact us at 631-4 54 I so we can Atlanta 74 I 62 Boston 70 I 49 Chicago 64 I 48 Denver 65 I 42 Houston 83 I 67 Los Angeles 78 I 72 Minneapolis 80 I 62 correct our error. New York 70 I 49 Philadelphia 75 I 48 Phoenix 56 I 40 Seattle 61 I 48 St. Louis 71 I 58 Tampa 88 I 68 Washington 75 1 49 Monday, April 4, 2005 The Observer + INTERNATIONAL NEWS page 3 World in mourning gets first glimpse of late pope Vatican begins preparations for funeral and conclave

Assoriatcd Press somn fought back tnars, wlwn Sandri announcod that the latP VATICAN CITY - John Paul's pope prepamd tho prayer himsdf narthly remains lay dothnd in bnlilrt~ hn dind - perhaps onn of' crimson vnstnwnts, his head on John Paul's last writtnn doni­ goldnn pillows and adorned with mont-;. a white bishop's mitPr. I lis hands "It's a histt>rit: nvnnt," said Iwid a rosary, a pastoral stall' was Ermin F(~rri, a 72-ynar-old Homan tucked undnr his IPI't fornann. who proudly shownd oil' a list of Swiss (;uards stood watch on the six popes lw has lived nithnr sidn. through. "It's not sonwthing sad Karol .losPph Wojtyla was finally f(Jr mn. I think of' all that lw has at pPace, tlw !inns of' pain nrased donn." fr0111 his face after ynars of c:rip­ "I think morn about. how hard it. pling disnasn. will be~ l(w a new onn to lilllow in "It was vnry satis(ying l'or all of his f(JOL-;tnps," hn addnd. us to snn him so sernne," said "John Paul held his hand to us Cardinal Hoger Mahony of Los young people," said 21-ynar-old Angnlt~s. orw of many church olli­ Alessio Bussolotti. who dmvn to dals, diplomats and politidans Homn with his l(~llow Boy Scouts who paid tlwir rnspects at the l'rom thn Italian dty of Ancona. papal bier. "I lis lifn is finishnd and "Now we have to give him ours." hn gavn up his spirit." Onee the Mass nndnd, cardinals, Tnlnvision imagns from thn prelates, Italian government olli­ Vatiran 's l'rnscond Apostolic eials and diplomats gatlwred in l'alarn on Sunday gavn the public the Sala Clenwntina of' thn iL-; lirst vinw of' Popn John Paul II Apostolic Palaeo, whnrn John sincn lw dind tho night before. Paul's body lay in state. Starting Monday, thn pope's body llis ewssed hands dutdwd a was to lin in statn at St. Pntnr's Church officials recite prayers over the body of Pope John Paul II in the private chapel of the rosary, and his pastoral stall' was Basilica l(lr public visitlltion. Vatican Sunday. The pope's body will lie in state beginning today in St. Peter's Basilica. tueknd undnr his lnft arm. An nstimated 100,000 pnople At their meetings beginning lurrwd out at St. Pntnr's Square amund the world. builder of bridges between the tradition, Cardinal Camillo Huini, Monday, the eardinals will rmtd for a morning Mass and thou­ John Paul, who was 58 when faiths, noting how he had the late pope's vicar for Homo, John Paul's final instructions. sands morn - tourists, Homans, the cardinals elected him the first embraced Holocaust survivors issued a formal announcement of including his ehoien of burial young and old - knpt coming non-Italian pope in 455 years, with kindness and maintained John Paul's death to tho people of place. Most popes in rncnnt enn­ throughout tho day, filling the also left a legaey of conservatism. friendships with Jewish friends Home early Sunday. tul'ins havn asked to bn buri11d in broad houlnvard loading to St. I le opposed divorce, birth control from childhood. Cardinal Angelo Sodano, tho the crypts below St. Peter's Peter's Basilica. Tlwy clutdwd and abortion, the ordination of In Home, ollidals wore scram­ Vatican's No. 2 oflieial, gave the Basilica, but sonw havn suggnstnd rosaries and rwwspapnr photos of' women and the lifting of the bling l'or a huge influx of pilgrims homily at Sunday's Mass at St. the first Polish-hom pope might tlu• latn pontill', standing shoulder­ celibacy requirement for priest<>. -up to 2 million of them- seek­ Peter's. "For a quarter century, he have chosen to be laid to rest in to-shoulder and praying for tho The mourning stretched from ing to pay linal respects to the late brought the Gospel of Christian his native country. soul of"our hnloved .John Paul." tho pope's native Poland, where pontill'. hope to all the piazzas of the In addition, the eardinals will "l•:vnn if' wn l'nar wn've lost a 100,000 people lilled a Warsaw The College of Cardinals - the world, teaching all of' us that our arrange for the destruction of point of rnl'nrenen, I fnel likn square at the spot where he cele­ rod-capped "princes of the death is nothing but the passage John Paul's Fisherman's Bing and everybody in this square is united brated a landmark Mass 26 years church" who now ofTidally govern toward the homeland in the sky," thn dies used to makn lead seals with him in a hug," said l.uca ago, to tho earthquako-devastatnd the 1 billion-strong Homan he said. fbr apostolic letters - f(n·mal ges­ c;hizzardi, a :~H-ynar-old nurse lndonosian island of' Nias, where Catholic Church - was to hold its The written text of Sodano's tures meant to symbolize thn end with a sleeping bag and a hand­ a priest led special prayers. In first meeting Monday, a pre-eon­ homily ealled the late pope "John of' his mign and to pmv1mt l'orgnr­ made pnacn llag at his l'not. Paris, tho great bell of Notre dave gathering expected to plan Paul the Great," a title usually ins. l~arly Sunday. a tnxt message Damn sounded 84 times - once and set a date l'or the funeral later designated for popes worthy of On thn sidelirws, eardinals will had rirculatnd on cell phones in for each year of the pontill"s life. this week at St. Peter's Square. sainthood, such as Gregory the certainly be sizing nach other up Homo, asking pnopln to light can­ In New York, U.N. Secretary­ President Bush was expected to Great and Leo the Great. Sodano as possible "papabili," or having dles in ttwir windows. "May they Gmwral Koli Annan and former attend the funeral, which will did not use the title when he deliv­ the qualitins to bn the nnxt popn. light up tho road to God for him, Mayor Hudolph Giuliani joined draw other world leaders as well ered the homily, and there was no Cardinal Bnrnard Panalieu, onn the way hn did I(Jr us," the mes­ parishioners who packed St. as Vatican hierarchy and ordinary explanation. Vatiean texts. howev­ of' five French prnlatns who ean sagn said. Patrick's Cathedral for a standing­ faithful. The conclave must begin er, are considered oflieial texts vote, said Sunday hn was hoping Around the world, bells tolled room-only Mass. 15 to 20 days after the pope's even if they are not pronounced. for someone "who dynamizns thn and worshippnrs prayed in "lie showed us how to live and death. After the Mass ended, people- God's people -

Pope's final images: Releasing a dove, touching his throat

Associated Press planned to have it framed. silent appearance at a window to Home's time: They used photos of .John Paul kiss­ "It's a memory that cannot be meas­ Gemelli Polyclinic hospital after doctors ing babies or tenderly making the sign of VATICAN CITY - llo rnleased a dove ured," he said. fitted him with a breathing tube. It was the cross with a thumb ovor their fore­ from his apartmnnt window, and chuckled Images of the pope during that appear­ "almost as if he wanted to apologize," the heads. in dnlight as it llnw back into his room. ance are among the most indelible now Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Homano Some of' the most touching imagns of tho lin touchnd his throat, struggling to that he's gone. commented at the time. pope were captured on Jan. 30, probably spnak l'rom his hospital room aftnr surgery Newspapers and television stations cap­ There was the pope on Palm Sunday, tho day ho came down with the flu - tlw to insert a breathing tubn in his windpipe. tured a gaunt John Paul in the window of back in his Vatican window, pressing a beginning of his rapid downward spiral liP poundnd a lnctnrn in apparont fmstra­ his apartment overlooking St. Peter's. As hand to his head and thumping a lectern and a two-month struggle that nnally tion aftnr trying - and falling - to greet TV cameras zoomed in, he made a dra­ with a list al'ter failing to manage even a ondod Saturday 1wnning. thn faithful. matic attempt to say a few words but simple greeting to 50,000 pilgrims gath­ The pontill' was addrossing thousands of Tlwsn worn some of thfl last poignant managed only a rasp, his mouth open and ered on the square. young people fron'l an Italian Catholic public imagns of Popn John Paul II, who his face contorted in pain. There was the pope a week later, on organization who marked January as a spont his linal days shielded fmm a world Hoalizing he simply couldn't speak, the Easter Sunday, coughing and uttering just month to promote peaen. lin was llanknd so accustomed to snoing him. pope swatted at the microphone in front of' a few unintelligible sounds before resting at his studio window by a pair of H-year­ Millions worn rnovnd Sunday as video of him in a gestme to have it taken away. He his hands on the lectern in apparent .olds - a boy and girl - who urged the tho pope's body lying in state Ill the was then wheeled away from the window del'eat. world to rOJnnmber ehildren who live in Vatican's Apostolic Palaeo was beamed and the white curtains were drawn dosed To be sure, other l'ar more cheerful eountries wracked by war. around the globn. But l'or many Homan - the last time, until his body was dis­ images will endure: photos or the pope in Eaeh of the children at his side sent a Catholics. the photographs and footage of played on Sunday, that he was seen. his prime, on skis or in hiking boots and a dove flying, only to watch helplessly as the .John Paul in tho last weeks of his life stir There wore other affecting recent parka, or jokingly cupping his fists over his white birds darted back into the apart­ nvnn dnnpnr emotions. moments immortalized in lilm, replayed eyes as though peering through binoculars mont. Giusnppn Gobbato, a 62-year-old gas over and over since his death as -for years a hot-selling Rome postcard. John Paul's fac1~ ernasnd with laughter. station attendant who joined thousands on reminders of the frailty and vulnerability Though Monday's edition of lie grabbed one of the dovns, shooed it St. Peter's Square to pray for the pope, - as well as the courage - of John Paul's L'Osservatore Romano, out on newsstands out the window and playfully patted the said ho snipped out a newspaper photo linal weeks. Sunday, mn a black and white photo of the boy on the head. After a quick flight ovnr taknn on Wodnesday - the last time John There was the pope brushing a hand dead pope's face on its front page, three of the square, tho bird winged its way baek Paul appeared alive in public - and over his throat in late Febmary during a Rome's main dailies recalled a happier and flew inside. page 4 The Observer + CAMPUS NEWS Monday, April4, 2005 Notre Dame hosts Observer, staffers honored at ICPA Observer Staff Report articles on Chris Thomas lead­ Story/Heview for an article on ing the Irish in their upset over The Passion of the Christ], annual Spring Vis The Observer was named the No. 5 Connecticut. Lozar [Best Sports Feature second-best daily .stu­ Other first place honors went Story for an article on the 30th dent newspaper at the annual to Soukup in the Best Column anniversary of Notre Dame as necessary entertainment for Indiana Collegiate Press category for "Never Forget," ·ending the 88-game winning By KATIE PERRY the visiting students. Association awards ceremony his farewell column in the streak of the UCLA men's bas­ News Writer "You can't expect to have the Saturday, with 75 percent of its 2004 senior issue, and to for­ ketball team] and photo editor prospective students do home­ entries in writing categories mer assistant managing editor Claire Kelley [Best Sports This weekend more than 150 work - or at least watch their earning first, second or third Joe Hettler in the Best News Photo for two photos of the prospective African American, host do it - and go to the Grotto place honors. Feature category for "Serving Notre Dame-Michigan football Asian American, Latino and and pray or participate in folk The Observer staff earned with Honor," an article on for­ game]. Native American students choir in order to [have] the ND first place in the Best Single mer Irish player and Third place honors went to flocked to Notre Dame to find experience," Doan said. Issue category for iis Dec. 1, Iraq veteran Danielle Green. Heininger [Best Non-Deadline out first hand what life is like Events like Spring Visitation 2004 issue, which added eight Second place honors went to News Reporting for an article under the illustrious - albeit weekend demonstrate the con­ pages of special coverage of Downes and· editor in chief on Malloy's response to the scaffolded -golden dome. certed efforts of administrators the firing of head football Claire Heininger in the Best unexplained barring of Muslim Spring Visitation Weekend to increase campus diversity; coach Tyrone Willingham. Breaking News Reporting cate­ professor Tariq Ramadan from kicked off Thursday with the however the perception of Notre The staff also earned first gory for "Monk Moves On," the U.S.; Best News Feature for arrival of a distinguished group Dame in this area is far from place in the Best News or their coverage of University an article on Notre Dame grad­ of minority prospective students. pristine. Feature Series category for President Father Edward uate and 9/11 panel member The annual event was planned Earlier this year the Princeton February 2004's "Diversity at Malloy's April 2004 decision to Tim Roemer], former scene and coordinated through the Review ranked the University Notre Dame," a comprehensive step down from the presidency editor Maria Smith [Best Office of Undergraduate among the nation's top 10 most three-day series coordinated after June 2005. Soukup, .man­ Entertainment Feature Admissions. homogenous student popula­ by former editor in chief aging editor Pat Leonard and Story/Review for an article on "The weekend's purpose was tions. Additionally, the abrupt Andrew Soukup and former assistant managing editor King Lear],Van Hoegarden, to answer the questions and dismissal of head football coach managing editor Meghanne Heather Van Hoegarden Leonard and Justin Schuver ease the concerns of some of the Tyrone Willingham sparked Downes. earned second place in the (Best Sports News Story for a best and brightest students from accusations of racial discrimina­ The 2004-05 editorial board Best Stand-alone/Pullout package of articles on the under-represented populations tion from the media as well as earned both second and third Section category for "A Decade Willingham firing] and former throughout the United States," students, faculty and staff within place in the Best Staff Editorial of Decline," the Irish Insider graphics editor Mike Harkins assistant recruitment coordina­ the Notre Dame community. category for "Preserve for the 2004 Blue-Gold game. [Best Informational Graphic for tor Son Nguyen said. The apparent racial strains Academic Freedom" and Others earning second place a graphic summarizing the In this aim is the underlying such incidents have placed upon "Homosexual Community were Heininger and Kevin 2003-04 Year in Sports]. goal of attracting talented stu­ the University led to "prep Deserves Equality," respective­ Allen [Best Non-Deadline News Other Notre Dame media dents who may contribute diver­ work" implemented by the ly. Reporting for a package of sto­ groups represented at the ICPA sity to the University, sophomore event's coordinators in order to Numerous staff members ries on gay and lesbian student convention included the student coordinator Covington assess the issue, Doan said. captured a variety of individual groups at Notre Dame], Janice Juggler, named the second­ Doan said. Doan participated in "A forum was held to gather honors as well. Flynn [Best Investigative Story best literary magazine; the program as a high school student input as to how they see Soukup and former editor in for two articles on Opus Dei], Scholastic, named the top news senior. the campus now," Doan said. "A chief Matt Lozar won first scene editor Rama magazine; and the Dome, "Ultimately, Spring Visitation number of Spring Visitation vet­ place in the Best Sports News Gottumukkala [Best named the second-best year­ weekend is an admissions erans offered their input as to Story category for a package of Entertainment Feature book. recruitment tool. The prospec­ what went well and what didn't tive students come here to hear onjheir [visit] and what they felt ftrst hand what students have to needed to be qone this year to say and have their questions help alleviate any tension that answered," Doan said. was present." High school seniors represent­ Nguyen said that aside from ing a wide array of ethnic back­ calling two meetings with minor­ grounds shadowed both minority ity students to gauge the current and non-minority students cur­ atmosphere on campus, not rently enrolled at Notre Dame. many things were done differ­ The prospects experienced near­ ently regarding this year's ly every facet of campus life, Spring Visitation weekend. from parietals and professors to "Is this Spring Visitation dorms and dining halls. Weekend more of a priority to "The hosts do a major service the University than the past to the University by personally Spring Visitation Weekends? welcoming the prospects into Most definitely not. Increasing community life at Notre Dame," campus diversity at Notre Dame Nguyen said. "Our hosts took has always been one of the top their prospects to class, dis­ priorities of the Undergraduate cussed student life issues, Admissions Office and will walked around campus and remain so," Nguyen said. showed them a glimpse of the But Doan says that the ambi­ ND social scene." ence on campus this year indeed In addition to partaking in the affected the weekend. • daily campus bustle, visiting stu­ "I cannot comment for every­ dents attended such culture-ori­ one, but I feel as though ented events as Latin [Willingham's] dismissal had an FULL CALENDAR OF EVENTS AT: Expressions on Friday and impact on Spring Visitation Saturday's BCAC Fashion Show. weekend, but it did not make In past years admissions officials [the weekend] any .more or less www.nd.edu/ -issa/Festival have taken heat from members important than it always has '·--··--······-----·-·---~------~-~-~----·· ------~------of the Notre Dame community been for the University," Doan who label the planned activities said. "We ask students to be who as "deceptive diversity." they are and to be honest and April 4-9, 2005 But according to Nguyen, genuine when speaking to these events are not arranged prospective students - that has A Week of Global Warming brought to you by solely for the purpose of Spring not changed throughout the Visitation weekend. They are years, but it may have been instead part of a larger diversity stressed more this year given ISSA*Notre Dame Food Services*GSU*le Cercle Francais* Department series that spans the entire the current state of the scholastic year. University." of East Asian languages and literatures*Hammes Bookstore*Hesburgh "Latin Expressions and­ For Nguyen and other Fashion Show fall along with University administrators, library*OlA *Athletics Department*University Village*Pakistan Student other signature events like Asian amplifying the importance of Association*legends**Chinese Friendship Allure [in] early fall and Fiestang culture and diversity on campus lin] late winter," Nguyen said. is a continuous mutual goal that Association*Russian Club*IWC*Sahaja Yoga Club* Alumni Association* Doan said that planned events will benefit both current stu­ are functional in that they serve dents and incoming students IAND*10,000 Villages*and the students and scholars of over 100 nations! from different backgrounds. "It is our hope that these stu­ dents come to the realization that Notre Dame can enrich their lives just as much as they can contribute to Our Lady's University," Nguyen said ''These Do you have a story idea? students bring with them amaz­ ing life stories and will most cer­ Would you like to write for news? tainly be tremendous assets in our pursuit of excellence." Call Heather and The Observer News Department at 1-5323. Contact Katie Perry at [email protected] ------ORLD & NATION Monday, April 4, 2005 CoMPILED FROM TIIE Or>sERVER'S WIRE SERVIcrs pageS

INTERNATIONAL NEWS POLAND

Palestinians take on militants HAMALLAII. West Bank -After weeks ol' ht~sitation. Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas Citizens lament death of native son has finally made moves to challenge the pow­ erful militant groups sowing chaos across the Wnst Bank. Hundreds of thousands gather in Warsaw square to remember Pope John Paul II In tlw end. he was spurred into action by donwstic concerns, including an audacious rampage by gunmen through Hamallah and Associated Press l/w V!'ry real fear of impending electoral dPI'eat. rather than by persistent U.S. and WAHSAW About lsraP!i demands that lw crack down on armed 100,000 Poles mourned groups. John Paul II on Sunday at "Tiw Palestinian Authority has been cripplnd the Warsaw square where and it's bnconw very nvident to the people," the Polish-born pope cele­ Palestinian political analyst I Iani Masri says. brated a landmark Mass "It readwd a point whnre people were won­ that inspired opponents of' dt•ring what value is there in having a leader." the communist regime 26 years ago. Ceremony honors tsunami dead In John Paul's hometown of Wadowicc in the south. BAN<; MUANG, Thailand - Pressing their a large bust of the pope hands in a gesture or respect. hundreds or was brought !'rom the town tsunami survivors crowd1~d Sunday into a hall and placr,d in front or Buddhist tPmpln in soutlwrn Thailand that St. Mary's Basiliea, where was a rnakt~shil't mortuary !'or those killed by he was baptized. It is to t.hP deadly wavt~s on Dee. 2(J. remain tlwr<~ until a statue Until just a f'pw wm~ks ago, tfw grounds ol' of John Paul replacns it. thP Bang Muang tt•mpiP wen• lillnd with thou­ Poles returned Sunday to sands of bodit~s. as ollicials struggled to cop<~ the spot as many as 1 mil­ with tlw erushing numbnr ol' eorpsPs !'rom thn lion people turned out in tragmly. 1979 to !war newly Plected Tlw bodies are now gone, moved to a qrs­ John Paul Il's call to tom-buill facility elsewhere. But those who "renew the face of the ~atlwn~d to pray for the souls of the victims Earth" - credited by many are still haunted by the December disaster. with inspiring the "I am still alive but it's as if I am dead. I Solidarity trade union haw~ lost everything," said Savilri Chanakul, movement Jed by Lech 3S, a vendor who lost both ol' her children and Walesa that toppled a grandson. Communism. "From the symbolic place where John Paul ll lit the flame of freedom, dignity NATIONAL NEWS and solidarity. Warsaw is praying !'or mercy for the lloly Father," Bishop Piotr Amtrak train's engine derails Jarecki told the crowd WI liTE SAl .MON. Wash. - The engine ol' an gathered for the special Amtl'llk train derailed Sunday in a Washington service. state gorge, sending at least I 0 passengers to People were "praying People pray at St. Anna's church for Pope John Paul ll's health In Warsaw hospitals, ollicials said. that, in each of' us, in our Friday. The Pope's death was seen as a great loss for Poland. Tlw Portland, Ore.-bound train was carrying town in Poland, in Europn 115 p(~ople when tho locomotive's wlwnls loft and the modern world, we screen. ernment worker, recalled . church during his last visit thP track. leaving four passenger cars leaning can see the fruits of the life Bed-and-white Polish the pontiff's words: "The to his homeland on Aug. upright against an embankment in the and mission of John Paul II llags with mourning bands pope said. 'Don't be 17,2002. . Columbia Hivor Gorge in southern Washington, to the end," .Jarecki said of black cloth attached afraid,' and I'm not. lie During World War II, tlw Amtrak spokeswoman Marde Golgoski said. from a platform in llew around the city. brought Poles closer to young Karol Wojtyla used Hospital officials said a pregnant woman Pilsudski Sq uarp. formerly "It's a great loss for God. fulfilled his mission to pray at a chapel in an was admitted to a hospital for observation. Victory Square. Poland," said Jozef and now he has left." adjacent convent on his Orw man had a shoulder injury and was Police officials put the Homanzuk, 40, a business­ In Krakow. where John way to foreed labor undnr oxpoetnd to bn tmated and rnlr.asr.d. Eight oth­ crowd at around 100,000. man standing in front of Paul served as archbishop, Nazis at the nearby Solvay ers were being examined. The number was difficult SL Anne's. "The pope was hundreds laid flowers. salt quarry. to estimate because the a symbol of the new placed candles and stood "I was born in 19S2 and King's assassination remembered throng spilled over into Poland. Now, we are begin­ in silent contemplation to mo. the popn is a Pole." ATLANTA - The voice of Martin Luther surrounding streets. ning a new history, in under the window, where said Ann Pszczol, a 23- King .Jr. boomed again !'rom the pulpit of Churches elsewhere which we Poles are left John Paul used to appear year-old student of Slavic Eberwzer Baptist Church on Saturday as overflowed with crowds. alone." to talk to people during his languagPs at Krakow's downs of people gathnred to commemorate with several thousand peo­ Jaroslaw Sikorski. 24, visits to Poland as pope. Jagiellonian University who tlw 37th anniversary of the civil rights leader's ple jammed into a Mass at said, "We have been left Outside Krakow, thou­ came to the service. assassination. the St. Anne's Cathedral in orphans. That means we sands stood in a meadow "I cannot imagine now Exct~rpts of several King speeches were Warsaw's Old Town. must be strong. And the an open-air Mass at how l will aecnpt a new played over a loudspeaker at the church Thousands mom stood out­ word of John Paul II gives Lagiewniki, where the pop<~. I have a sense or wlwre King preached from 1960 to 19(>8, side and watched the serv­ us this strength." pope consecrated a large, great loss and emptiness induding his ''I've Bncn to the Mountain Top" ice on a largP tolevision Barbara Zielinska, a gov- modern concrctn-and-glass now." speech. dnliverPd in Memphis, Tenn., just hours bdorn his death. i\mong the crowd was U.S. Hep. John Lewis, a linuwnant of King's during the civil rights movenwnt who becamn a follower as a tePnagPr aftPr hearing King on the radio dur­ St. Peter's Square fills with Inourners ing the Montgmm~ry Bus Boycott. the marble steps of St. Peter's attended Mass. with about 20.000 Associated Press Basilica. more spilling into the surrounding VATICAN CITY - !foisting children Some clutched photos of the pope boulevards. Around the Vatican, bikP LOCAL NEWS onto their shoulders and holding as a younger. more energetic man. riders in spandex and sleek lwlmets cherished photos, tens of thousands before illness left him grimacing and stopped to peer past the colonnades Mayor endorses stadium idea stood silently shoulder-to-shoulder stooped. In them, he beamed, blessed at the crowd. First aid staff readied Sunday at a Mass for the late Pope babies or led processions with a gold­ stretchers, and snifl'er dogs checked INDIANAPOLIS - Mayor Bart Peterson John Paul II in St. Peter's Square. en staff. Each time the giant screens trash cans. Guid(~S holding up endorsed major parts of the governor's plan Gradually, though, tears gave way to lining the colonnades showed a close­ umbrellas led tourists to tho square's to finance a new Colts stadium and an fond memories. Indiana Convention Center expansion up of John Paul's picture, the crowd edge. Some people had camped out in applauded. Emergency health services said late Saturday but insisted the city should have sleeping bags overnight on the cob­ "Even if we fear we've lost a point Sunday that they were called to ultimate control over the project. blestones. Underfoot were melted of reference, I feel like everybody in the faithful in St. Peter's Square 115 The question of' how the project would be candles and flower petals left during this square is united with him in a times during the day. ovnrseen is emerging as possibly the major the vigil. hug," said Luca Ghizzardi, 38, a Most of the injuries were cuL'i and sticking point between Hepublican Gov. As an organ sounded the first notes nurse with a sleeping bag and a broken bones from peoplP who had Mitch Daniels and tho Democratic mayor as. of Mass, many people held up cam­ handmade peace nag at his feet. fallen or fainted. Three of the eases the two race toward a deal in these final eras to photograph the ceremony on Police said about 80,000 people were life threatening, officials said. weeks of the 2005 legislative session. page 6 The Observer + CAMPUS NEWS Monday, April 4, 2005

higher education and toured er than water" has any merit, locations in Poland frequent­ then the pope has one essen­ l01pact ed by the late pontiff in his tial and quasi-familial link to continued from page 1 childhood. the surrounding Notre Dame "I visited the church where community. South Bend, Ind. Malloy added that the docu­ he was baptized and the and Czestochowa, Poland are ment "promoted a positive house where he lived in most sister cities - Czestochowa and friendly relationship of his life," Malloy said. being the site of John Paul II's between local bishops and University President childhood home. Catholic institutions." Emeritus Father Theodore Indiana governor Joe However, when the pope's Hesburgh met John Paul II Kernan originally formed the Ex Corde Eccelsiae came right after the former Karol sister city agreement in 1992 under the scrutiny of the Woityla assumed the position after visiting Poland when he nation's bishops in November at the Vatican, according to was serving as mayor of South 1999, Malloy called the docu­ the South Bend Tribune. Bend. ment's potential impact on In a statement Saturday, A press release from cur­ Catholic universities "positive­ Hesburgh referred to John reo t South Bend mayor ! y dangerous," according to Paul II as a "Pope for the Stephen Luecke outlined the an article in the Nov. 18, 1999 World," explaining that he reasons for the agreement. issue of The Observer. "traveled millions of miles, to "Along with the large Polish R. Scott Appleby, professor every corner of the earth, to community of South Bend that of .history and director of the bring his personal message of draws much of its heritage Kroc Institute for faith, hope and love to all of from cities like Czestochowa, International Peace Studies, the world, not merely to the two cities are also similar explained that Ex Corde was a Catholics." in size and in their common comprehensive, broad-rang­ ND appointments and titles appeal to religious communi­ ing statement about higher The pope has appointed at ties because .of the University education unrelated to the least two priests with Notre of Notre Dame's Saered Heart 1990 Apostolic Constitution. Dame connections to higher Basilica and Czestochowa's "It was a papal document - positions in the church. renowned monastery complex Malloy had noth- In 1997, the of Jasna G6ra, the home of ing to do with it," pope named the famous Black Madonna," Appleby said. ''I've been with him Father Daniel the release said. He said the Jenky as an aux­ in his chapel in the CLAIRE KELLEYfThe Observer iliary bishop for controversy was Contact Maddie Hanna at A crucifix given to University President Emeritus Father Theodore Vatican a couple of the diocese of related to the mhannal @nd.edu Hesburgh by Pope John Paul II sits on a table in the Basilica. issue of academ­ times, and that's a Fort Wayne­ ic freedom and very moving South Bend. Prior especially the to the nomina­ pope's mandate, experience. tion, Jenky, a which requires Holy Cross priest, local bishops to Father served as the approve theology University President rector of the professors at Basilica of the Catholic univer- Sacred Heart. sities. Theology department chair "Malloy led the voices of John Cavadini said the pope those who wanted implemen­ later appointed Jenky to bish­ tation of the papal document op of Peoria, Ill. to reflect academic freedom," In 1995, the pope appointed Appleby said. "Even though Rev. Charles Schleck Titular Expanded May Term/Summer 2005 [the University] is Catholic, Archbishop of Africa. Schleck the underlying principle is graduated from Notre Dame DATES: May 16-June 3, 2005 academic freedom, and in 1948 with an undergradu­ Father Malloy is very much in ate degree in philosophy and TUITION: $332 per credit hour (Ex: $996 for a 3 hour course). A deposit of 112 total tuition is due that tradition. There's no served on the University's fac­ by April29. Financial aid is not available for May Term. question that he wants to be ulty for a short period. Catholic but also a top-rate In addition to making HOUSING: On-campus housing will be available to students attending SMC May Term classes. university." appointments, John Paul II Housing applications are available in the Education Department, the Office of the Registrar and Appleby said Malloy's dis­ made the Sacred Heart agreement was not with the Church a minor basilica in the Office of Special Events in the lobby of O'Laughlin Auditorium. There is no board plan avail­ pope or the general statement 1992. In a Jan. 17, 1992 able; students must dine off campus or use the kitchen facilities in th!3 residence hall. No linens will but the method of implemen­ Observer article, J enky said be provided. tation. the title was "a papal recogni­ However, Appleby said the tion that Sacred Heart is a Double room rate, 3 weeks: $398 approval of Ex Corde by U.S. church with an international Additional week: $133 bishops has not greatly reputation; it is a center for harmed the academic freedom prayer, pilgrimage and devo­ Due to housing limitations, single rooms may or may not be available. Completed Housing applica­ of Catholic universities. tion and a place where the tions must be submitted to the office of Special Events by April 15, 2005. A housing contract will "Very few bishops have liturgy is done with amplified interpreted the mandate as richness." be completed at this time. requiring them to scrutinize The pope's gift SCHEDULE OF CLASSES is available via PRISM. Select "Class Schedule," then "Summer in great detail everything that Those attending Mass in the goes on in the classroom," Basilica of the Sacred Heart 2005:' Click on "Summer'' to view all courses offered or use the PRISM search feature. Appleby said. are undoubtedly drawn to the NOTRE DAME STUDENTS IN EDUCATION must complete the summer application form Malloy and Hesburgh large painting of John Paul II remember surrounded by flowers. and be advised in the Department of Education, 321 Madeleva. The SMC/ND Co-Exchange "I've been with him in his However, just to the left, a Program is not in effect during the summer. Transcripts must be requested for grades to be for­ chapel in the Vatican a couple small crucifix sits unobtru­ warded to Notre Dame. of times, and that's a very sively on a table. moving experience," This simple crucifix was University President Father actually a gift presented by Edward Malloy told The the pope to Hesburgh, accord­ Observer Thursday. "He's ing to a plaque in front of the clearly a man of deep prayer." display. Malloy also worked with the Family ties pope on issues related to If the adage "blood is thick-

;

Tuesd Softball VS Eastern Michigan 8 Baseball VS Toledo S Free Admission (doubleheader) at 5:05PM With at 3:00 &5:00 PM e Frank Eck Stadum ~ Ivy Field The first 100 fans receive a bat key chain! Baseball Free Admission! Games THE OBSERVER

Monday, April 4, 2005 USINESS page 7 MARKET RECAP AI G admits to improper accounting Dow 10,404.30 -99.46 Insurance giant acknowledged transaction errors with Berkshire Hathaway }ones Up: Same: Down: Composite Volume: 1,613 136 VII' 2,189,399,820 Associated Press NI\W YOHK - /\mid AMEX 1,462.91 +3.21 widening government NASDAQ I ,9X4.81 -14.42 probes into its financial pntetiees, insuranco giant NYSE 7,136.36 -44.96 /\nwrican International S&PSOO 1,462.91 +3.21 Croup Inc. aeknowlndgnd NIKKEI(Tokyo) II ,723.63 0.00 Wndnnsday it had improp­ erly booknd transactions FTSE IOO(London) 4, 9 14.00 +19.60 with a unit of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. that artifi­ COMPANY %CHANGE I $GAIN I PRICE cially boosind its reservns. NASDAQ IOOTR SER I (QQQQ) -1.0 I -0.37 36.20 /\IG also said that it had MICROSOFT CP (MSFT) -0.21 -0.05 24.12 not yet completed an in­ housn reviow of its account­ CISCO SYS INC (CSCO) -1.06 -0.19 17.70 ing and would havn to MCIINC (MCIP) + 1.57 +0.39 25.29 delay filing its annual INTEL CP (INTC) n~port until /\pril :w. New -0.95 -0.22 23.01 York-based /\IC natlier had Treasuries said it expected to file the 30-YEAR BOND -0.78 -0.37 47.29 report on Mareh 31. Tho disclosures came as I 0-YEAR NOTE -1.00 -0.45 44.51 tlw See uri ties and 5-YEAR NOTE -1.17 -0.49 41.25 Exchange Commission and Nnw York /\ttornny General +0.18 +0.05 27.27 3-MONTH BILL Eliot Spitzer were prnpar­ Commodities ing to question Al<;'s for­ LIGHT CRUDE ($/bbl.) + 1.87 57.27 mer chief executive oflicor, Maurice "llank" GOLD ($/Troy oz.) -2.80 428.30 Grnenberg, and Bnrkshire PORK BELLIES (cents/lb.) +0.68 96.93 llathaway's chairman and Excha Rates CEO, billionaire investor YEN I 07.6800 Warren Bullett, next month about the controversial EURO 0.7754 reinsurance deal. POUND 0.5323 Buffett is to speak with CANADIAN$ 1.2159 investigators on April 11, and Greenberg the follow­ ing day. Berkshire Hathaway has IN BRIEF said that Buffett was not Berkshire Hathaway's chairman and CEO, billionaire investor Warren Buffett, was aware of how the transac­ unaware of the improperly-booked transactions, the company said. tions were structured "or ATA declares net loss of $817 million on any improper use or Howard Mills, acting apparent lack of accounting company's financial stalll­ INI>I/\N/\POI.IS- The panmt company of purpose" of the transac­ superintendent of New controls at AIG is alarming, nwnts. If there is no risk 1\T/\ /\irlines lne. n~ported a not loss of more tions. York state's insurance in our view." transfer, the deal shouldn't than $800 million for 2004 in its annual rnport Greenberg, who is 79 and department, which is also AIG shares dropped be booked as insurance. 111m! Thursday with the U.S. Securitins and led /\IG for nearly 40 years, participating in the investi­ $1.04, or 1.8 percent, to In the case und1~r rovinw, l·:xchange Commission. was forced out as CEO by gation, called AIG's state­ close at $57.16 in /\IG purchased reinsurarH~e Tlw $817 million loss induded a $100.2 mil­ the board earlier this ment "pretty significant" Wednesday trading on the from Berkshire llathaway's lion operating loss on rnvenue of $1.5 billion, month and has said he will and added: "These are very New York Stock Exchange. (;eneral He Corp. in the and $638.5 million in expenses related to 1\T/\'s resign shortly as chairman serious issues, and their Berkshire Hathaway shares fourth quartnr of 2000 and Chapter 1 I reorganization. That compared of the company. own admission that they dosed virtually unchanged first quarter of 200 I. with earnings of $15.8 million on almost the In a detailed four-page misled this department, we at $87,000.10, also on the Investigators have said same amount of nwenue in 2003. statement, /\IG also dis­ take very seriously." Big Board. that /\IG used thn deals to The biggest expense related to the bankrupt­ closed a number of other Mills said that AIG needs The investigators are pump up its reserves wlwn cy n~organization was $568 million in lease accounting problems,· to continue "to get their looking into a number of markets wern uneasy about rnjeetions on jnts removed from service as the induding the way it booked house in order, and we reinsurance transactions, the company's outstanding airlirw downsiznd. deals with Caribbean-based believe they will do so." which involve insurance liabilities. , 1\T/\ on Thursday was holding an auction to insurance companies. Analysts at Morgan purchased by insurance /\IG said Wndnesday that soli iL<; Chil~ago Expross mmmuter airline and a /\IG said, however, that Stanley said that "some companies like /\IG. its accounting for the trans­ !waring on tho potential sale was scheduled the known errors and investors may take comfort Heinsurance traditionally actions with General He Friday in hankrupky court in Indianapolis. changes in accounting that details are beginning has been used to spread "was improper and. in light would reduce the compa­ to emerge" on /\IG's side. out risk among insurers of the lack of evidence of Living will software sales surge ny's $82.87 billion in capi­ They added, however, but, in some cases. it has risk transfer, these transac­ K/\NS/\S CITY, Mo. - Salns of eomputer soft­ tal by about $1.7 billion, or that "the depth and been used for the question­ tions should not have been warn to ~~reate living wills are surging amid the 2 percent. breadth of troubles and able purpose of polishing a rncorded as insurance." high-profile debatn over Tnrri Schiavo, the s1werely brain-damaged Florida woman who died Thursday. "We've nevnr seen sales likn this," said Clark Miller, a spokesman for Nolo.eom Inc., tlw cre­ ator of Quicken WiliMaker Plus 2005. 'The liv­ Digital photo era changes photography ing will has simply become a part of /\merican consdousness in a way it hadn't been beforn." WillMaknr Plus salns ros~ 6:3 percent in the As the digital revolution sidelines Digital cameras are now in about 43 fivn days after March 18, when Schiavo's feed­ Associated Press film, the photo industry is having to million homes in /\meriea, and that 40 ing tube WitS rnmoved, eompared to the prior HOCIIESTEH, N.Y. Jesse rely more heavily on high-margin percent penetration could reach 70 five days. /\t Kansas City-based II&H Inc., Eisenberg came within a technological services and supplies - inks, chemi­ percent by 2007. The more main­ spokesman Tom l.inafelt said sales of the com­ whisker of losing all her honeymoon cals, paper - that go into making stream they become, some analysts pany's Wli.I.Power program jumped 95 percent snapshots. prints. argue, the more likely that old printing last week. Other sollware makers - including The 31-year-old lawyer's digital Yet the picture is not quite as it habits will re-establish themselves. Carson, Calif.-basnd Cosmi Corp. and Socrates images, stored on an online photogra­ seems. "Everybody treasures memories, Media I.U:- also rnportnd spikes in sales. phy site, vanished while she was in the While there's no hint of a falloff in and what makes memories more vivid "What happens in a ease like this, it becomes hospital this winter having her first the desire of Americans to freeze­ than a photograph, a print?" said a bnllwnther fi1r folks to bneome aware about child. She had given up all hope of frame the world around them, the Ulysses Yannas of Buckman, Buckman an issue that rwrmally thny wouldn't," said retrieving them when they suddenly overall number of images converted & Heid in New York. Thut impulsn, lw Miehanl Kahn, a spoknsman for Chkago-based reappeared on her computer more into prints has been slipping since the thinks, "will not fade, it's human Socrates. than a month later. dawn of the 21st century. nature." Softwarn industry analyst Chris Swenson of "I can't believe we got them back!" The drop-off coincided with the Bolstering Yannas' belief is a recent rnsnarch firm NPD Croup, said will-writing soft­ she exclaimed. "Oh my God, I'm going lightning transition to a world without frenzy of acquisitions or online photo warn and other lngal programs have seen a 63 to be printing all day today." film. A few years ago, there wasn't a startups, whieh are projeded to churn pnrennt increase in sales over the past quarter, It's a refrain that sets the photo framework in place to help digital out 700 million prints this year, up eompan~d with the previous thrnn months. industry's heart radng. shutterbugs print easily or cheaply. from 400 million in 2004. -·------~-~---

f page 8 The Observer + CAMPUS NEWS Monday, April 4, 2005

service was an appropriate way to pay their respects to the pope, Rally Pope whose passing was unfortunate continued from page 1 continued from page 1 but not unexpected, they said. "I wish he was stifl here, but world-renowned speakers, his life." heaven's a better place because of Dan DiSilva and Trish Short. "We have had the opportunity him," freshman James Carlson DiSilva, a musician who has to see him give real meaning to said. played around with world the universality of our faith," "I thought that [the service] was with musicians such as James Warner said. a nice way to commemorate his Taylor, the Chieftains and B.B. He placed the prayer service in death," sophomore Hebeeea Moss King, spoke to the crowd the context of Notre Dame's uni­ said. "I was glad they had it about his experiences. After versity setting. planned before." 10 years of touring, DiSilva "I think that this service and Carlson said he wished more formed the band Crispin, a these services all around the people had attended the service, Catholic funk band that uses world will show us all again so especially considering Notre its music to spread the many people loved John Paul II, Dame's Catholic identity. Catholic message to listeners. but that he had a special love lor "I expected !the crowd] to be DiSilva spoke to the students young people," Warner said. out to the road," Carlson said. about chastity, basing his Touching on what he consid­ "You don't see a pope die every talks on the Theology of the ered remarkable aspects of the day, or every year, for that mat­ Body writings by Pope John pope's life, Warner said John Paul ter." Paul II. II grew up in poverty, studied the­ A memorial Mass will be cele­ Short. a former model and ology underground during the brated today at 5:15 p.m. in the actress turned producer and Nazi occupation and was a "great Basilica of the Sacred Ileart. The director who for the past 10 sportsman." Mass will be preceded by a 4:30 years has been producing pro­ "Since he was such a holy man, rosary service. life videos and music for pro­ TIM it's clear he is with God right life ministries throughout the Approximately 400 people gathered at the Grotto Saturday now," he said. Contact Maddie Hanna world. She spoke to youth evening to say the rosary at a service for Pope John Paul II. Students thought the prayer at mhannal @nd.edu about the power of purity and charity and the role of faith and scripture in today's cul­ ture. Lisa Bonadies and Elizabeth Johnston are two sophomores from Marion High School in South Bend who attended the rally and listened to the speakers. "I think they really got their point across," Bonadies said. "IDiSilval really communicat­ ed with kids," Johnston said. In addition to the speakers, HTL members performed skits on chastity and showed a power point presentation on abortion awareness. There was also a prayer service and music performed by DiSilva. Vendors from Indiana HTL, Heason Enough to Act and ND HTL were at the rally selling T-shirts, and handing out pamphlets other literature to inform students. The Women's Care Center was also there showing sup­ port for their message. "We're here to support what they're doing," said Judy Madden, the Director of Education for the center. "They've got a friend here in the community." The Women's Care Center is a resource center that was started 20 years ago by a Notre Dame professor, and has extended to 12 eare cen­ ters and extends assistance to YOUR CATERING over 10,000 women. It reach­ SOLUTIONUl us out to women who face BOX LUNCHES, PLATTERS, PARTIES! unexpected pregnancins. It is the biggest provider for this DELIVERY ORDERS will include a type of' work in Northwest delivery charge per item. Indiana. E-mails and flyers about the rally WPre sent to 7 diocese including Chicago, Fort Wayne and Grand Hapids areas. However. many high schools were on spring break this week and were unable to attend the rally. "This eould have been dou­ bled ... if it were at a different time," Grossu said. "We want this to grow into something ND HTL is known for. Notre Dame as a premiere Catholic one o our omema e rene uns university in the nation and in FREEBIES ISUBS & CLUBS ONLY) then smothered with onions, mayo, the world should have a real #16 CLUB LULU'Jf.1 Onion. lettuce, alfalfa sprouts, tomato, mayo, sliced lettuce, tomato. & our homemade Fresh sliced turkey breast, bacon, lettuce. tomato. & voice in spreading the pro-life cucumber, Dijon mustard. oil & vinegar, and oregano. Italian dressing. mayo. (JJ's original turkey &bacon club) message to the youth of the nation." Grossu is optimistic about the future of the rally. ''I'm so I WE DELIVER! 7 DAYS A WEEK !r excited about the feedback we're getting from the media," she said. "It sur­ passed my expectations." SOUTH BEND 54570 N. IRONWOOD DR. 57 4.277.8500 The rally ended with a mass in the basilica which included singing by the ND Women's Liturgical Choir. "VOUR MOM WANTS VOU TO EAT AT JIMMY JOJIN'S!'' © ®2005 JIMMY JOHN'S FRANCHISE INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. We Reserve The Right To Make Any Menu Changes. Contact Katie Laird at [email protected] Monday, April 4, 2005 The Observer+ NATIONAL NEWS page 9 Schiavo case spurs statehouse debate, unique coalition

Associated l'rcsi a re-examination of when and what their wishes are, what evi­ aren't going away. several states. how our lives come to an end. dence is needed to prove it. The debate is an etrort to strike Legislation has also been intro­ Thn arguments surrounding So far, only a few legislators in None have yet become law and a new balance betweAn one duced in Alabama, llawaii, Tnrri Schiavo will live on in a handful of states have sought the chances for most, if not all, stance that argues that medical Louisiana, Minnesota and South statdwusn debate and new laws significant changes to their laws, are slim this year, with some leg­ care and morality mAan life must Dakota. The Louisiana bill is if an mnnrging coalition of' dis­ which define the fundamental islatures finished and many far be pursued in nearly all eases, called the "lluman Dignity Act": ability rights activists and right­ elements at stake - how a per­ along in their work for this ses­ and another stance, crafted over Alabama's is tho "Starvation and to-lifnrs succeed in turning the son can set limil<; on their med­ sion. But both Hepublicans and decades of changing views about Dehydration Prevention Act." national agony over hnr casn into ical care, who gets to decide Democrats say the arguments death, that some may choose to Many measuros predate recent end drastically damaged lives weeks of attention to Schiavo, that depAnd on artifidal means. though some dmw their inspira­ "I really wanted to make sure tion diroctly from the agonized NOTRE DAME CENTER FOR ETHICS AND we gave a default for life and not public debate over the 41-year­ RELIGIOUS VALUES IN BUSINESS for death," said Kansas state old woman's death- like one in Rep. Mary Pilcher-Cook, a & Missouri introduced last Republican who helped revive a Thursday, the day Schiavo died. INSTITUTE FOR ETHICAL BUSINESS WORLDWIDE measure that would give courts a "I was gripped by what I was greater chance to review deci­ watching and couldn't believe sions to end life-sustaining care, the state of Florida would let this PRCHJDJY PRESENT lessening the role of guardians woman die in this manner," said or doctors. "Our most vulnerable GOP state Hep. Cynthia Davis. citizens are in fa,ct in the most Iler bill would bar anyone from Amy Domini danger of losing their life without direeting that artificially supplied l'ounder and CEC) of Domini Social Investment, Ll ,C any recourse." food and water be withheld or who will be honored with the She was joined in her efTort by withdrawn without a specific llesburgh Award for Husiness Ethics disability activists, many aligned written directive from the with liberal causes, and patient. Democrats in the state HousA. TherA's also a slew of legisla­ and The measure stalled in the tion around living wills and other • Kansas Senate, however, as the end -of-life issues that wouldn't Professor Robert Audi session ended for the year last further thfl aims of this emerging ( ;allo Chair in Husiness Ethics Friday. group - like a Nevada measure University of Notre Dan"lc "We don't want to get into the that would let a guardian end politics of the right or the left or life-sustaining measures even if Speaking on whomever," said M ichaAI it's against a patient's known Donnelly at the Disability Hights wishes, as long as it's in thoir "Ethical Leadership and Leadership Center of Kansas. "This isn't best interests. about polities, this is ·about how The views of medical care and in Ethics" we value or don't value the lives ending life have shifted ovnr the people with disabilities have." past 30 years as the country As the 2005 l'mnk Cahill Lecture His group had been working grappled with brain-damaged or for years to revisit the issue, and coma-bound patients whose Tuesday, April 5, 2005 came together with several con­ families said they shouldn't be Jordan Auditorium, servative legislators to move the forced to live a life they wouldn't Mendoza College of Business bill forward. Elsewhere, the want, starting with Kamn Ann National Right to Life Committee Quinlan in 1975, then to Nancy 5:00 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. has produced model legislation Cruzan in 1990 and now to and is working with legislators in Schiavo.

Study in TOKYO • No Japanese language requirement • Experience Asian culture • Take courses in Anthropology, Art History, Literature, Theology, Philosophy, Economics, History, Sociology, and Business INFORMATION April 5 at 5pm 215 Debartolo ------~-----

! Tl ..·IE OBSERVER II

page 10 IEWPOINT Monday, April 4, 2005 THE OBSERVER A newhope P.O. Box 779, Notre Dame, IN 46556 024 South Dining Hall, Norre Dame, IN 46556 Prior to arriving at Notre Dame, I had understood what it felt like to bn lost in a fbr every Gandlli, Martin Lutl1er King Jr. EDITOR IN CHIEF never been much of a Catholic. I rarely cave without a torch, and when I saw that and John Paul II that emerges to bring us Claire Heininger made it to Mass more than once or twice a the rest of the world's one billion Catholics together, there are a hw1elred million otlmr month. I had attended more bar mitzvahs shared my predicament, it may have Osama bin Ladens, Adolf Hitlers and Kim MANAGING EDimR 8USINFSS MANAGER than baptisms. There was not a single cru­ pushed me over the edge. Upon further Jong lls around to split us apart. The tricky Pat Leonard Mike Flanagan cifix anywhere in my reflection, I began to recognize that my part, of course, is distin1-,ruishing between AssT. MANAGING EDITOR: Maureen Reynolds house. And when asked Joey entire life had been spent under the mis­ the uniters and the dividers before it is too Assr. MANAGING EDITOR: Sarah Vabulas in CCD class in third Falco conception that a person had to wear a late. AsST. MANAGJ.!'IG EDITOR: Heather Van Hoegarden grade who the Pope crown or fight wars or live in a white house For me, I never quite understood just was, I confidently Party Ounces to truly deserve the title of Leader. I think how important John Paulll was as the glue SPORTS EDITOR: Mike Gilloon answered, "The to Falco what really had me upset and confused on that held over one billion of the Earth's chil­ SCENE EDITOR: Rama Gottumukk.~la President of Italy." Saturday morning, though, was the realiza­ dren together. If I had known earlier about SAINT MARY'S EDITOR: Megan O'Neil Nevertheless, while reading the front tion that I didn't know a damn thing about his diplomatic efforl<> lor achieving global PHOTO EDITOR: Claire Kelley page of Saturday's New York Times, specifi­ how the world worked. harmony by visiting 129 countries, his vital GRAPHICS EDITOR: Graham Ebetsch cally those stories regarding the global For all of the importance that I have role in ending communism and restoring mourning over the impending death of blindly bestowed upon the oflice of the peace to the Middle East, and his passion ADVERTISING MANAGER: Nick Guerrieri Pope John Paul II, I started crying. Yes, the presidency of the United States, I never for spreading the values of Catholic social AD DESIGN MANAGER: Jennifer Kenning kid who could stoically get through "E.T.," stopped to tllink about what made that teaching in the hopes of rescuing all of SYSTEMS ADMINISTRATOR: Mary Allen "Ufe is Beautiful," "Schindler's Ust," and position so great. Sure, a president can hun1anity from its unnecessary sufiering, WEB ADMINISTRATOR: Jim Coulter even "Hudy" without shedding a trmr, start­ improve the lives of some people through perhaps I would not have been so surprisnd CONTROLLER: Michael Landsberg ed weeping over a simple page of tax breaks and social programs, but that by Saturday morning's newspaper. Maybn if newsprint. It truly was one of the most does not change the fact that a huge chunk I had understood that the true leader of tl1e OFFICE MANAGER & GENERAL INFO (574) 631-7471 peculiar moments of my life, and at the of the globe typically despisns tllis "leader frne world was not a person whose primary fAX time, I had no idea what came over me. of the free world," regardless of which goal was American hegemony, but a person (574) 631-6927 After all, I have never been to the political party pulls his strings. whose only goal was global solidarity, then I ADVERTISING Vatican, nor have I ever even watched the On Saturday, after seeing the equally dis­ probably would have been better prepared (574) 631-6900 [email protected] Pope speak on television. I have never read traught faces of European citizens in St. to handle the emotional distress of losing EDITOR IN CHIEF any of hi<> encyclicals or apostolic letters, Peter's Square, Middle Eastern nuns in the Pope. (574) 631-4542 MANAGING EDITOR and nntil recently, I barely even knew what Jerusalem and New Yorkers at St. Patrick's Regardless, though, I finally feel safe say­ (574) 631-4541 [email protected] it was that he did besides drive around in a Cathedral, all huddled together as one col­ ing that there is still a chance for the ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR bubble car and wear a funny hat. On top of lective mass of humanity, life began to human race to come together and prosper, (574) 631-4324 that, I have oftQn fonnd myself in disagree­ make sense again, and I cried with my fel­ and that is just another reason to shed BUSINESS OFFICE ment with many of the more orthodox posi­ low brothers and sisters. If one man could tears of joy over the accomplished life of (574) 631-5313 tions of John Paul II, especially in regards have such a profound uniting effect on the John Paul II. NEWS DESK (574) 631-5323 [email protected] to abortion, euthanasia, birth control, gen­ world - a world full of genocide and racial VIEWPOINT DESK der, homosexuality and embryo research. discrimination and war and political Joey Falco is a sophomore American (574) 631-5303 [email protected] Still, when I read about hi<> illness and his malfeasance and greed and hunger and Studies major. He can be contacted at SPORTS DESK effects on the worldwide Catholic communi­ terrorism and hatred- then humanity [email protected] (574) 631-4543 [email protected] ty on Saturday, I cried like a baby. What might still have a chance. The views expressed in this column are SCENE DESK (574) 631-4540 [email protected] was wrong with me? Great leaders, I realized, do not grace the those of the author and not necessarily SAINT MARY'S DESK It soon dawned on me that I finally world with their presence very often, and those of The Observer. smc.1 @nd.edu PHOTO DESK (574) 631-8767 [email protected] SYSTEMS & WEB ADMINISTRATORS (574) 631-8839 EDITORIAL CARTOON

THE OBSERVER ONLINE www .ndsmcobserver.com

POLICIES The Observer is the independenr, daily newspaper published in print and online by the students of the duLac and Sainr Mary's College. Editorial content, including advertisements, is nor governed by policies of the administration of either institution. The Observer reserves the right to refuse advertisemenrs based on content. The news is reported as acmrately and objectively as possible. Unsigned editorials represenr the opinion of the majority of the Editor in Chief, Managing Editor, Assistanr Managing Editor and department editors. Commenraries, letters and columns present the views of the authors and not necessarily those ofThe Observer. · Viewpoinr space is available ro all readers. The free expression of all opinions through letters is encouraged. Letters to the Editor must be signed and must include contact information.

Questions regarding Observer policies should be directed to Editor in ChiefClaire Heininger.

POST OFFICE INFORMATION

The Observer IWSPS 'i99 2-1000) i~ published Monday through FridJy except during exam and vaation periods A ~uhscription tnThc Observer is $100 for one .acadcmic yeill'; $5S fur one ~mC5u:;.

The Observer i5 published Jl: POSTMASTER • tl24 South Dinin~ ~ 13.11 Send address con«:dot1s to: Notre Dame, IN 46556-0779 The Observer 'Periodical postage p.1id Jt Notte Dame P..O. Box. 779 and additional mailing ofliccs. 021! S<~uth Dining I Jail Nom: Dame, IN 46556-077<)

The Ob<.ctvcr is J memher uf the A\'>l}l;iatcd PreM. AU reproduction righu; .uc r~ol

TODAY'S STAFF News Graphics Kate Antonacci Desiree Zamora OBSERVER POLL QUOTE OF THE DAY Megan O'Neil Sports Meghanne Justin Schuver "Have no fear ofmoving into the Downes Chris Khorey For what will you most Submit aLetter unknown. Simply step out fearlessly Matt Lozar Kevin Brennan remember Pope John Paul II? knowing that I am with you. Tricia deGroot Scene ..·} .·. ·····l:' a E...... dt. ·· ...... •. tor dlt ·. tI: therefore no harm can befall you; all Viewpoint Christie Bolsen to.. th. .•,...... •· ...... f is very. very well. Do this in complete Joey King Vote Thursday by 5 p.m. at faith and confidence." www.ndsmcobserver.com www.ndsmcobserver.com 1 Pope John Paul II r------~------

THE 0HSERVER

Monday. April 4, 2005 IEWPOINT page II

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Filling in 'the whole truth' New ditnension to The column of Professor Hice on March 24, as a Catholic University. An approach so "The whole truth, and nothing but ... " falls exceedingly limited, so legalistic, and so inflex­ the dotne debate . short of delivering the wholn truth as prom­ ible is contrary to the intellectual spirit of the ised. In at least one respect, the column University. Moreover, quoting the argument to I have been reading thn letters to the nditor surrounding thn rnsnmhlns Dan Brown's runaway bestseller discourage those who seek justice- civil controversy between the graduating class and the administration "The DaVind Code." It deploys enough truth to rights and social acceptance in society and the regarding the re-gilding of the domn. I havn to say that I strongly be crPdible but not so much as to be accurate Church - for gays and lesbians is contrary to support the students' point of view. or fair. the core of the Catholic message: the enor­ I vehemently disagree with the statement of Executive Vien To compare Hice's viewpoint to the contro­ mous love that Christ had for humankind. President John Al1leck-Graves that graduation is not about thn versial novo! may strike some as inappropriate No one can forget the scandalous love Christ physical dome. You don't remember standing in front of it getting and misleading. I felt the same when I read demonstrated for humankind, a love of such your picture taken. It will be 30 years this May sincn I stood in Hicn equate snveral difTnrent inclinations: scandalous proportions - breaking bread with front of the dome to have my graduation picture taken with my smoking, problem drinking, shoplifting, eating sinners and dieing on the cross in tJ;le manner parents and I vividly recall the event. That picture stands on my disorders and homosexual feelings. Hice per­ of a common criminal - that the radical desk in my study. I look at it everyday and remember the sists in t.lw durnsy, orw-dimensional compari­ example lives on today. I hope the example moment. son because he prefers the University be res­ will continue to challenge assumptions and Also, )"remember the first time that I saw the dome as my par­ olutn and uniform in its opposition to so-called question convention at Notre Dame. I applaud ents and I drove oiT the Indiana Turnpik11. Every timn since I look disordnn~d inclinations. Hather than bn sensi­ all the members of the University, past and for that same view when I go to Notrn Dame, The physical dome tive to the complexity of human experinnee present, who are open to the radical experi­ symbolizes Notre Dame and what it means to be a Notrn Damn and thn rnality of what sdence teaches us ence of that love and who feel challenged by it graduate. Therefore, tho meaning of graduation is very much about human dnvelopment, he prnfors tho enough to open their hearts and their minds to symbolized and remernbernd by the physical dome and standing University proclaim "the inclination to any dis­ the idea of change. in front of it to have your picture taken with your family. orden~d act is i{self disordernd" and explore no more. Edward Cottrell Patrick J. Kennedy Whilo tho argument may be technically cor­ alumnus alumnus rect. aceording to its source at least, it is not a class of 1994 class of !97'i big enough idea to fullill Notre Damn's promise March 31 April!

U-WIRE Whatever happened to 'Hello?'

My first oxpnl'inncn with "rna!" dancn parties was horn up behind her. Finally, and I'm sorry to alarm my more happened nnxt still haunts me. on the Farm. WhiiP at thesn parties, I observPd an alarm­ sensitive rnaders, but this is actually trun, you begin ram­ In a split second this girllatdwd herself onto me with ing plwnomnnon that I just can't keep to myself. It might ming your pnlvis into her from bohind. Once this "rnquest" three of her four available limbs (thankfully saving one li1r just bn that I'm old, but when I was in middle/high school, is madn, the female expresses her approval or disapproval standing purposes) like I was the last pint of water on the way to w;k a girl to dance was: in an equally non-verbal and rudimentary way. After tak­ "Survivor: Palua" and began bucking like a rodoo broneo. "IIi, do you wanna dancn?" Old Adam ing a quiek glance back, and surveying the opinions of her And just like in rodeo, al'ter the first eight seeonds, I want­ fitshionnd. I know, becausn then Llchtenheld surrounding friends of the would-be suitor, she either eir­ ed oil'. But I was awash in eonf'usion and guilt. Perhaps in we'd just pop in an 8-traek and Stanford des away or pushes back against this ramming in acquies­ this brave new world of' sneak-attack pnlvk thrusting and l•'rankenstnin the night away. (You University cence. Ah, young love. backing that thing up, my simple J.,Tf'enting had a nnw and do rnmmnber Uw FrankPnstoin Stanford Daily At first, I was shocknd, and I asked some of my under­ frightful meaning. I held on until rnscund by frinnds but sehool of slow dancing, right'? grad female friends about this. They all immediately wondered secretly: I lad I brought this on mysoll'? Loekod arms, still' logs and roeking expmssnd their disapproval and disgust. Yet, not a week I supposn my qunstion rnally is: Whatevnr happonod to sidn to sidn'?) Well, apparnntly, in modorn times, the way to later, I saw two of them personally engaging in this very "hello?" Are we just so smart that tho simph~ habiL-; of

College, contraception and strategies against stupid things

We all do stupid things. Espedally as stressed, over­ on spring break." turbation causes pregnancy, and abortion leads to stnrili­ worked, poor, akohol-loving college students away from Now, I am far from being able to daim understanding of ty. school for a week on an exotie beach crawling with gor­ the female psyche, but somehow I feel that the availability It truly is ironic that those who wish so despnrately to geous mnmbnrs of the opposite sex- we all do stupid of contracnptives does not act as the main sparkplug for prevent abortions adamantly snek to deprive individuals things. women's desires to partake in sexual activity (and I can of the means to practice safe sex and prevnnt unwanted Hecognizing this reality, a prn­ personally assure you that it is not the primary determi­ pregnancies. They live in a fantasy world whern young spring-break campaign by University Adam nant for men). Though most individuals wisely seek pro­ people never yield to their sexual desiros and believe that lloalth Serviens advnrtised "stoeking Llchtenheld tection befilrehand, being able to have safe sex is not the students' decisions will be innueneed by the opinions and up" on various contraceptives (includ­ University of main reason people decide to have sex. lectures of politicians or the provisions of rnstriding legis­ ing thn morning-after pill) bnfore J11isconsin Personal opinions on premarital relations notwithstand­ lation. Collegn studenL<> are going to have sex- as it is a Univnrsity of' Wiseonsin students hit Badger /Ierald ing, the urge of young people's uncontrollable hormones personal choice- and it can be done safely or stupidly. the bnekoning sexual havens scattered and drunken-inflated li1elings of unrestricted lusting will But that should bn a responsibility of the individual, not along tho coasts of Mexico and Florida. not be deterred by the inability to access contraceptives. the governrnnnt. Th11 rationale bt~hind the UHS advertisements was rea­ Hather, failing to make safe sex tools available would only It is disturbing to witness the eroding ol' the availability sonable- it would be dillkult for individuals to obtain ensure that the risks of pregnancy and disease would rise of safe sex methods, motivated by tlw fanatidsm of' thn eontracnptivns in unknown places and having resources signilicantly. Indeed, college studenL'i having sex is not the religious right and ultra-conservative wing of t.he at hand "just in ease" would be wise lest something were problem. Unwanted pregnancies that lead to abandoned Republican Party. Their attempts to infringe unnecessary to happnn. childrnn and abortions arn the problem. Sexually trans­ government rngulations based on pnrsonal belief's is nau­ But aceording to Hepublican state rnpresontativn Dan mitted inli1ctions and the HIV virus, which has become a snating, particularly when it entails abolishing individu­ LeMahieu, tho willingnnss of health serviens to provide global npidemic, arn the problem. als' rights of' choien and denying p1mple resources to pro­ prescription birth control to studenL-; is both a waste of' LaMahieu's proposed legislation follows the illogical fnd­ teet themselves. Pnrhaps we should just adhere to the taxpayor dollars (evnn though the UIIS campaign was erally funded approach to sex education in schools that advice of Matt Groenig's "Basic Sex Facts For Today's fundnd 1mlirnly by student sogregatnd foes) and a motivat­ prnach "abstinence only" and fail to teaeh students either Younglillk," "Whnn authorities warn you uf' the sinfulnnss ing factor in tlwir dedsions to explore Uwir sexual same-sex practices or stone-cold f'aets. Let us recall the of sex, thern is an important lesson to be learn mi. Do not dnslrns. report issued several months ago by U.S. Heprnsentative have sex with the authoritins." In rnsponsn, LeMahinu is drafting lngislation that would I Ienry Waxman that revealed severe naws and outright prevent UIIS from advertising the morning-after pill or lies featured in the teachings of the Bush administration's This column originally appeared on March 31 in the supplying it to studnnts. lie was quoted as saying that hn sex-education policy. Among the misinformation that Badger 1/erald, the daily publication at the Unitwrsity r!l is "outrag~~d that our puhlie institutions am giving young young people were spoon-fed was that condoms fail to Wisconsin. eollngn women the tools lilr having promiscuous sexual prevent IllY transmission in 31 percent of cases, half of 11w views expressed in this column are those of the rnlations, whnthnr on campus or thousands of miles away all homosexual teenagers are JIIV positive, mutual mas- author and not necessarily those of The Obserl'er. Tl-IE OBSERVER page 12 CENE Monday, April 4, 2005

PERFORMANCE REVIEW Latin Expressions lights up weekend

ERIC SALESfThe Observer Left, two musicians play in the band for the act "Duelo." Mariachi ND members showed off their musical talents as well in "Popurri de las canciones eclecticos."

permeated their fabulous performance. Without a doubt, though, it was Their stage presence was like a sponta­ By CHRISTIE BOLSEN After shouting to "watch us do it now," "Machetes" by Ballet Folklorico Azul y neous party had broken out onstage Assistant Scene Editor they stomped, clapped and danced Oro that stole Act I and possibly the and everyone was invited to share in away a seductive routine. entire night. With collars open and the fun. In a sold-out performance that Lyons sophomore Gabby Obregon's bandannas tied around their heads, a The Selena Act began with a dramat­ almost shook down the chandeliers in "Tanguillos" stood out spectacularly in stage full of very brave men danced ic recreation of the movie scene where Palais Hoyale, Latin Expressions let a night full of standout acts. Wearing a among flashes of huge, gleaming the kids are playing around instead of everyone celebrate all that is Latino in brilliantly colored dress, she smiled her knives that they wielded easily in their practicing seriously, until their father an absolute revelry of a show on Friday way through a solo hands for a nerv­ chastises them into putting their talent night. dance with confi­ ous audience. to use. Yadira Huerta, wearing a slinky The 15th annual show had too many dence. Her feet Latin Expressions 2005 Weapons flying Selena-like outfit, was dead-on in her highlights to count, with each act were a flurry of high and specta­ singing, with her powerful, gorgeous impressing the rowdy audience for a movement while uRaices" tors tensing, they voice bringing the singer's hits back to different reason. The Masters of her arms were Executive Director: April Garcia tossed and swished life in renditions of songs like, "I Could Ceremonies, Fred Licon and Nicole smoothly graceful, Assistant Director: Yadira Huerta away calmly. Fall in Love." This prompted the bal­ Orozco, elicited riotous response from as she spun Producer: Dennis Bonilla Gasps resounded cony spectators to whip out their light­ the crowd throughout the night by around and flour­ Publicity: Jackie Ramirez when they sudden­ ed cell phones and wave them slowly cracking well-placed ethnic jokes. ished her ruffled Opening Act: Guadalupe Gomez and ly shouted, from side to side. "This is not your standard variety skirt. Miguel Luna "Blindfold!" and Performers from throughout the show," Licon said. "Fuego," with Fundraising: Grise! Ruiz pulled their ban- night danced through the aisles to pull "This is a Latino show," Orozco said, Tessa Garcia, dannas down over up audience members as the Selena to a round of cheers. Natalia Munoz and Grise! Huiz, lit up their eyes, continuing with the pace tribute brightly picked up the tempo. They did suggest to the audience not the stage with a fiery, sparkly dance turned up a few notches. It was a mag­ Soon, the exuberant venue was- as to throw their "chones" up on stage, number featuring colored ribbons, nificent display of skill and hotness. bumping and crowded as a party in a telling people if they didn't know what shoulder shimmying and hip shaking Act II fea,tured powerful poetry and little South Quad dorm room. The last "chones" were to ask the person next energy. Their talents meshed perfectly more talented performances. As act of the show captured the spirit of to them. in their performance, in a riveting expected, Project Fresh was a refresh­ the evening in that dancing - fun, After kicking off with dancing and number with plenty of sultry moves ing blast of the unexpected that can diverse and proud of it. singing acts, the First Class Lady and raucous cheers coming from the only be described as cool. It was inno­ Steppers switched gears when they other performers waiting on the upper vative, even humorous, and combined Contact Christie Boisen at took the stage with an attitude that balcony. raw street moves with polished talent. [email protected]

ERIC SALES/The Observer "Fuego," left, lived up to the translated name "fire" with a sultry dance. Ballet Folklorico dancers wowed the crowd by each wielding machetes in both hands. ------

THE OBSERVER

Monday, April 4, 2005 CENE page 13

OPERA PREVIEW Opera Verdi Europa coming to Morris

nally written by famed Italian By CHRIS McGRADY composer Guisnppe Verdi. Sct•nc Wrircr Vmdi was born in 1813 as the son of an innkeeper and A las to of opera and l~uropean eullure showed promise on the organ. will lw coming to campus. thanks to Ironically. he was denied NI>Prnsnnts. the University-established entrance to the Milan group in ehargP of selwduling well­ Conservatory because of ...... known artists and hands. "inadequatn training." In lieu OpPt'a Verdi l~uropa, an opnra troupe of this, hn studied with out of' Bulgaria, will be performing "La Lavigna of La Scala and wrote Traviata" tonight at the Morris his first opera "Oberto. contn l'nrl'onning Arts Contor in downtown di San Bonifacio" in 1839. ·--~...... South BnrHI. <>twra VPrdi Europa was Verdi was a huge admirer of ITnatl'd in 1996 by artist director Ivan Shakespeare and wrote sever­ Kyurkchiov and is now eonsidProd by al operas that wnre based on many to be orw of top opera groups in Shak<~spearn's works, namely l·:uropn and is now bringing thoir abun­ "Macbeth" and "Othello," the dant tallmts to llw United States. latnr of which was the master­ Tlw fact that famous opera singers pince of his later life. "La such as Orlin Anastassov and Dario Traviata" was writtnn in tho Volontn startnd tlwir careers with middle of his earner and Opera Verdi J·:uropa is a testament to secured his establishmnnt as a tho eonsistnnt quality of tho eornpany. major force in opera. Now This will mark tho seeond time Opera Verdi is considered by many VPrdi Europa has eomo to the Notre to be the foremost Italian l>amo campus. the first time being last composer of opnra and is one yoar's performance of "Ln Boheme" at of the most imitated and llw Morris CPntor. revered mnn in the opera cul­ Pholo courtesy ol Palrick Ryan Tho group is woll-known for perform­ ture. Opera Verdi Europa, the opera troupe out of Bulgaria, will be performing "La Traviata" ing o1wra in a style that many othnr "La Traviata" is based on a tonight at the Morris Performing Arts Center. r.ompanies cannot achieve. The group play by Alexander Dumas and fuses llw eharaetnl'isties of several dil'­ is a tragic story of a beautiful However, "La Traviata" has withstood played by Silvia-Sorina Munteanu. The fnrnnt eulturos, namely blending the courtesan and the sacrifices she makes that test of time and is now considered opera will bn eondueted by Nayden Bulgarian style with other European for love. Originally, when the opera pre­ to be one of the greatest operas ever Todorov. styles, c.reating a multieullural nxperi­ miered at the Teatro Ia Fenice in created and is also one of the most Admission to the performance ranges Pnee that is soeond to none. They have Veniee, Italy in 1853 it was not well often performed. The opera will be per­ from $20 to $45. Tickets are available performod opnras ineluding "Ollwllo," roenived by its lirst audience. Believing formed in its original Italian form with either by calling the Morris Center box "Madamo Buttnrfly," "Carmen" and that his opera was ultimately doomed English supertitles. The main character office toll-free at 800-537-6415 or on "Thn Pearl Fishers" as well as produc­ for failure, a frantic Verdi wrote to a of Alfredo Germont will be performed the web at www.MorrisCentnr.org. tions of tho Mozart and Verdi friend the following night, "La Traviata by tenor Rumen Shterionov, Violeta "Hnquinms." last night was a fiasco. Is it my fault or Valery will be performed by Yanitsa Contact Chris McGrady at Tho three-act "La Traviata" was origi- that of the singers? Only time will tell." Nesheva and Flora Bervoix will be [email protected]

EXHIBIT REVIEW Creative student art impresses in Snite exhibit area where his or her art is displayed surrounded by mostly blue tones. John "Collecting Grief." The piece is essnn­ Fine arts students show as a collection. The variety and con­ Lambert's installation sculpture made tially a stand selling the product, their talents with varied temporary nature of virtually every from elay focused on the "x" symbol, "Eternaplast," a product to which one piece in the exhibit ensures there truly which is a symbol he considers to "rep­ can ".Just add ashes!" of loved ones artistic mediums in is something for every visitor's taste. resent the essence of structural that have died and bonn ernmatnd. Some of the art was a bit more tradi­ strength." Mark Cook prnsented a graphic piecn contemporary display tional in terms of medium, but ehal­ Many of the pieces were not as tradi­ satirically focused on tlw eommon - lnnging in subject. For instance, Megan tional due to the medium chosen. depondeney on fossil fuels. Lloyd's eolleetion of ultra ehrome Tomas Rivas presented a variety of The industrial and product dnsign By BECCA SAUNDERS prints features men and women with pieces including a piece carved on pieces worn also intriguing. Al11x Lobos Assistanr Scene Ediwr less-than-desirable figures in lingerie white drywall and a piece composed of designed a nnw kitchen system, and soxual poses. Allyson a pins and thread drawing on the wall. focused primarily on a dishwashing Many of the exhibits fnatured at the Klutnnkamper's collection also featured Mary Prendergast's piece ealled system basnd on the prineiplns of tlw Snito Museum of Art are internsting to prints, but the prints focused on female "Patternity" focused on the innuenee a ocean. as well as a system based off a handful of peopln on campus with figures that appeared lost and confused woman's relationship with her father the principles of rivers. A safer forklift knowll•dge or internst in a certain area in a variety of snttings. Another atten­ has on her own well-being and future called "Levisafe" was dnsignnd by Mikn of history. But this is not always tho tion-grabbing set of ultra chrome relationships. The piece is presented as Elwonl and a broom that doubles as a ~~as1~ - as has bonn provnn by thn cur­ prints was Haehnl Ourada's collection a series of clothing patterns, showing vacuum cleaner, called "CinanSwnnp," rPnt Snitn exhibit featuring the work of that focused on the idea of possessions the type of father that produces a was designed by Se I i m N u rude<~ n. Notre llame graduatn and undergradu­ as an extension of the self. The prints daughter with certain strengths and Kathryn Colareo designed a shoe to atn students. visually focus on the connection weaknesses. Matthew Searle presented meet the needs of f\ldnrly pnople who The Masters of Finn Arts (M.F.A.) and betwmm snapshots and material items a collection called "The Internal are diabetic. Badwlor of Fine Arts (B.F.A.) students that people may associate with the Theatre" that was composed of throe All in all. the M.F.NB.F.A. exhibit is prnsPnt contl~lllporary piocos of art memory of the snapshot. black boxes with a small peep hole that not to be missnd. And it would bn hard shown in a variety of modiu·ms and Hhett Poche's collection was called the viewer looks into·and sees th11 sur­ to miss it, considering the show will rovnring a vast assortment of contem­ thn "Allngory of the Luscious and the real seones (~reated by Soarlo, "con­ run through May 15 at tlw Snitn. whieh porary issues. Lecherous" and consistnd of two acrylic structed to reveal something about the is frne and open to the public. Tlw All of t.hn pieePs throughout tho paintings on panni. The subjeet of one viewer." Allison Traynham's piece was work of tho nxtremnly talnntnd art. stu­ M.I ... A/B.FA. nxhibit arP thought-pro­ of the paintings was a woman sur­ a collection of graphie images focused dents of Notre I>amn dnsnrvns to hn voking and artistieally impressivn. The rounded by a "luscious" scene com­ visually around house and conceptually seen and the M.F.NB.F.A. nxhibit abun­ rangn of the nwdiums of art indudos posed almost entirely of pink tones; the around the idea of the seattered family dantly proves that point. prints, paintings, carving on drywall. painting displayed directly next to it in the independent world of today. sculpturn, graphie pieces and much was a mirror image of the woman and Th

page 14 The Observer + CLASSIFIEDS Monday, April 4, 2005

NBA Bryant injures leg; Grizzlies blow out Lakers

straight on the road. with 18 points, and Chucky Marion and Johnson The Lakers, already short­ Atkins added 13 points. lead Suns to victory handed with Chris Mihm hurt Memphis built a 32-14 lead and Lamar Odom placed on in the first period as the over Houston 91-78 the injured list before the Lakers struggled from the game, got limited time from field. Bryant had nine points Associated Press Bryant, who left the game in while the rest of the team The fading Los Angeles the second quarter with a right missed 11 of its 12 shots. Lakers lost Kobe Bryant and leg injury. Los Angeles also The Lakers actually got an yet another game, falling 102- lost Brian Grant in the second offensive spark in the second 82 to the Memphis Grizzlies on quarter to a pair of technicals, half after Bryant left the game. Sunday. leaving the Lakers with a Butler keyed the rally with Mike Miller scored 22 points makeshift lineup the rest of nine points, and Sasha Vujacic to help the Grizzlies move into the way. had eight as Los Angeles cut a tie with idle Denver for sev­ Memphis led by 27 in the into the Memphis lead. The enth place in the Western first half and the Lakers never Grizzlies carried a 79-64 lead Conference, 8 1/2 games in cut the deficit into single dig­ into the fourth quarter. front of the lOth-place Lakers. its. Cavaliers 100, Mavericks 80 Memphis and Denver are three Lorenzen Wright added 16 LeBron James kept his cool games ahead of ninth-place points for Memphis, while when his teammates lost Minnesota, which beat Brian Cardinal had 15 points theirs. Sacramento on Sunday. off the bench. Pau Gasol had James scored 37 points and Los Angeles has lost 11 of its 13 points and 10 rebounds. Zydrunas Ilgauskas added 21 last 12 games and eight Caron Butler led Los Angeles to lead the Cleveland Cavaliers past the Dallas Mavericks Sunday despite the ejection of two players. The Cavaliers, who led by 20 points in the second quarter, looked like they would implode late in the third quarter when Robert Traylor and Drew Gooden were tossed for argu­ ing Traylor's foul on Jerry Stackhouse. Traylor threw his arm band into the crowd, and Cleveland Cavaliers guard LeBron James drives in the lane aga­ Gooden followed by whipping gainst the Dallas Mavericks Sunday. James scored 37 points in his head band into the seats. a 100-80 Cavaliers victory. "LeBron came up right after that and said 'I've got it,"' first lead. Dirk Nowitzki scored 21 Cavaliers coach Brendan But Finley was flagged with points and Stackhouse added Malone said. "When you have a technical after getting in an 16. The loss ended the a player of his caliber saying official's face over his foul on a Mavericks' four-game winning 'I've got it,' you got it." 3-point attempt by James, who streak. James played every minute made all four free throws to Cleveland held a 64-34 for the fourth time in nine make it 60-59 at the end of the edge and played games, including two that period. aggressively from the opening went to overtime, and is aver­ Asked if that was the pivotal tip after losing to Dallas eight aging nearly 32 points a game play in the game, Mavericks days ago, 117-86. over that span. coach Avery Johnson respond­ "They came out and they had "No matter how many min­ ed: "What's the next ques­ payback on their mind," utes I play, I'm so determined tion?" Mavericks guard Jason Terry to get to the playoffs right now The four-point play sparked said. that I can't afford to get tired," the crowd and the Cavaliers. After an awful shooting first said James, who added 10 Ilgauskas scored eight of the half, the Mavericks climbed rebounds and seven assists. next 11 points on a 13-2 run to back in it with a 21-5 run late The win keeps the Cavaliers open the fourth quarter, mak­ in the third quarter. (38-34) tied with Indiana for ing it 69-61 and securing the Finley, who was 8-for-8 from the sixth playoff spot in the lead for good. 3-point range against Eastern Conference, and "'Z' was struggling until the Cleveland last week, shot 3- snapped their string of eight fourth quarter and then he for-7 from beyond the arc and straight losses to Dallas. came alive," Malone said. finished with 13 points. The ,- Following the ejections, Ilgauskas scored 15 ·of his Mavericks were just 6-for-22 Stackhouse hit four straight points in the second half, and from 3-point range. free throws to tie the game at had 16 rebounds. Anderson "This was a very disappoint­ Los Angeles Lakers guard Kobe Bryant looks for a shot against 56. Michael Finley added a 3- Varejao stepped up in ing game," Johnson said. "You the Memphis Grizzlies Sunday. The Grizzlies won the game 102- pointer on the next possession Gooden's absence, scoring nine really have to give Cleveland 82 as Bryant suffered an Injury to his right leg. to give the Mavericks their with eight rebounds. some credit."

The Observer accepts classifieds every business day from 8 a.m. to 3 f.m. ar the Notre Dame office, 024 South Dining Hall. Deadline for next-day classifieds is 3 p.m. AI classifieds must be prepaid. The charge is 5 cents per character per day, including all spaces. The Observer reserves the right to edit CLASSIFIEDS all classifieds for content without issuing refunds.

2000 Tracker.26,000 miles.$5200. DOMUS PROPERTIES NOW 2-6 BEDROOM HOMES WALKING Two story house completely remod- 634-4422. LEASING FOR THE 2005-2006 DISTANCE FROM CAMPUS. 708 eled 2003. WANTED SCHOOL YEAR ONLY 4 HOUSES S.B. AVE - 605 ST. PETER CALL Ready for 2005-06 school year. PERSONAL LEFT WELL MAINTAINED HOUS- 532-1408 MMMRENTALS.COM Off street parking includes motion Childcare for 10 and 13 year old FoR RENT ES NEAR CAMPUS. 2-5-7-8 BED- 6 BEDROOM 3.5 BATH. 1 BLOCK sensor light for security. That Ramada bathroom will never after school (3-6) and summer (10- ROOM HOUSES. STUDENT FROM CAMPUS. 1950 PER Four individually locked bedrooms, be the same 6). Nonsmoker. references and reli- 2,4 & 5 B-Rooms,close to campus, NEIGHBORHOODS, SECURITY MONTH + DEP. STAFF AND FAG- six blocks from Notre Dame, bus able car essential. Call or email call 234-9923, ask for Rod. SYSTEMS, WASHER, DRYERS. ULTY ONLY. CALL BRUCE 876- stop in front of house, surrounded Save Vincennes' newspaper, so Violet at 243-3466 or vbloom MAINTENANCE STAFF ON CALL. 3537. by other student housing, they can come out with more than @nd.edu Room for rent. Very nice apt.com- ALSO LEASING FOR THE 2006- Laundromat next door (drycleaning four articles per week plex 10 min. from campus. 2007 SCHOOL YEAR- 2-3-4-5-6-7- NEED HOUSING FOR 2005-06? also),basement available for stor- Summer child care for 14 and 12 yr $350/mo.(517)974-6225. 8-10 BEDROOMS. HOUSES Nice Rental Home avail. for 2 stu- age of bicycles, luggage, trunks, Can you put a subhead on that? old. Good pay. Please call Lisa 631- GOING QUICK. VISIT OUR WEB- dents. 9/12mo. lease avail. Fully etc., new furnace and central air, 9947. 1-yr sublet 1 bdrrn. 10 rnin.to NO. SITEWWW.DOMUSKRAMER.COM furnished. All appliances,utilities, new kitchen including new stove Thanks for the smoothies, honey! $500/mo.Email:ngreenbe@ nd.eduF OR CONTACT: KRAMER cable TV & high speed internet and refrigerator, large living room urn houses on Navarre,Marion & 574-234-2436 OR 574-315-5032. included. Off street parking. 3.5 for TV or entertaining, free trash Let's not lie, I"m going to eat again St. Pete Sts. avail 06-07. 233-9947. miles from NO in nice area. removal. Call 289-4071. FoR SALE Clean homes close to NO. $465/mo/student. 574-656-8695. What are you, adopted or some- Great 6-7 bdrm home available 2-8 bdrms. 3 bdrm house, nicely furnished. 417 thing? OAKHILL CONDO FOR SALE. 6/1/05. Also very nice 3-bdrm avail- High-end and furnished. Room for rent. Napoleon (off NO Ave.)2 min. from 4rm, able NOW. Both Close to Ask about FREE student rent pro- Very nice apt.complex 10 min. from NO. $1100/mo. 2 roommates/1 lam- Yeah, I"m an idiot 2bath. ND,W/D,on-site parking.ND Internet gram. campus. ily. For details fimbel.1 @nd.edu or Canopy access. Call Joe Crimmins Blue & Gold Homes $350/mo. Call 299-9428. Purple shorts 574-261-0900. 574-229-3659 (574)250-7653. (517)974-6225. www.andersonNDrentals.com are hot .------~------

Monday, April 4, 2005 The Observer+ PAID ADVERTISEMENT page 15

GUEST ARTISTS NATALIE MacMASTER Friday, April 8 at 8 pm Tickets $35, $28 faculty/staff, $26 seniors, $15 all students ALTAN Friday, April 15 at 8 pm Tickets $35, $28 faculty/staff, $26 seniors, $15 all students EMERSON STRING QUARTET Saturday, April 16 at 8 pm Tickets $35, $28 faculty/staff, $26 seniors, $15 all students NDPRESENTS: LIVE AT THE MORRIS OPERA VERDI EUROPA performs LA TRAVIATA Morris Performing Arts Center, downtown South Bend Monday, April 4 at 7:30pm Prices range from $45 to $20 . For this show, tickets must be purchased from the Morris: Call (57 4) 235-9190, (800) 537-6415, or order online at www.MorrisCenter.org THEATRE ARCADIA by Tom Stoppard Decio Mainstage Theatre Tuesday, April 12 through Saturday, April 23 (see website for time details) _Tickets: $12, $10 faculty/staff, $10 seniors, $8 all students MUSIC NDT: NOTRE DAME TRIO "An Enjoyable Evening of Jazz" Wednesday, April 13 at 8 pm Tickets: $10, $8 faculty/staff, $5 seniors, $3 all students ND COLLEGIUM MUSICUM Thursday, April 14 at 8 pm Free and open to the public; tickets required ND PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE Wednesday, April20 at 7:30pm Free and open to the public; tickets required NOTRE DAME SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Friday, ApriL 22 at 8 pm Tickets: $6, $5 faculty/staff, $3 all students DANCE THE SLEEPING BEAUTY Presented by Southold Dance Theater Decio Mainstage Theatre Tickets: $25, $19 seniors, $12 all students Friday, April 29 at 7:30pm Saturday, April 30 at 2 and 7:30pm

FILM BROWNING CINEMA Tickets $6, $5 faculty/ staff, $4 seniors, $3 all students SOLDIERS OF SALAMINA Thursday, April 7 at 7 pm and 10 pm sponsored by the Nanovic Institute for Europ~an Studies ONG-BAK: THE THAI WARRIOR Friday, April 8 at 7 pm Saturday, April 9 at 10 pm sponsored by East Asian Languages and Literatures GHOST IN THE SHELL 2: THE INNOCENCE Friday, April 8 at 10 pm sponsored by East Asian Languages and Literatures KEKEXILI: MOUNTAIN PATROL Saturday, April 9 at 7 pm sponsored by East Asian languages and Literatures The film will be followed by a Q&A with Director lu Chuan page 16 The Observer + SPORTS Monday, April 4, 2005

SWIMMING WOMEN'S NCAA TOURNAMENT Phelps edges record-holder Michigan St. knocks off Tennessee

Crocker in 1OOm butterfly The Spartans' last two baskets "Wow! That's a good team we Baylor upsets No. 1 were their only fast-break points just beat," said coach Kim LS U to advance to of the night. Mulkey-Robertson, who looked 15-year-old Katie Huff third-place Peter Verhoef. Only Michigan State's rally tied the misty-eyed as she pumped two the winner of each event is championship game largest in Final Four history. In fists up to the roaring Baylor matches Phelps with guaranteed a spot on the U.S. 2001, Notre Dame came back fans. team for the world champi­ Associated Press from 16 down to beat The Lady Bears (32-3) have three wins at trials onships in. Montreal on July Connecticut. But the Spartans brought a new feeling of pride to 24-31, although the second­ INDIANAPOLIS - Michigan didn't pull off the night's only a campus stained by scandal in Associated Press place finishers likely will be State's climb to national promi­ jaw-dropping return to life: the men's basketball program. added to the roster depending nence took the Spartans all the Baylor had to overcome a 15- They'll take a 19-game winning INDIANAPOLIS - Michael on how others qualify in multi­ way over Rocky Top. point deficit in the game before streak - the longest one going Phelps wasn't as generous this ple events. Down by 16 points in the sec­ to take out overall No. 1 seed in NCAA women's basketball - time around. "Against Michael, if I'm ond half, Michigan State rallied LSU. into the title game Tuesday night Phelps, who yielded his spot going to win the race, I'm - tying the largest comeback in Baylor, whose uplifting tale of against Final Four newcomer on the U.S. gold medal 400- going to have to be ahead at Final Four history - then fin­ redemption is the feel-good story Michigan State. The Spartans meter medley relay to Ian the 50 [meters] because he's ished off Tennessee with a pair in this tournament, advanced to beat six-time national champion Crocker at the Olympic Games such a strong finisher," of fast-break baskets to com­ its first national championship Tennessee 68-64 in the second last summer, caught his long­ Crocker said. "Just be ahead plete the 68-64 upset Sunday game with a 68-57 victory. semifinal. time friend and rival at the but not so far that I can't hang night. The win sets up Tuesday's The Spartans (33-3) danced LSU (33-3), seeded No. 1 over­ finish and won the 100 butter­ on in the last 25. I think I'm title game with Baylor, another and hugged in a circle as the all in the NCAA tournament, fly Sunday night at the U.S. tri­ getting better. at timing that unlikely championship con­ final horn sounded on their jumped out to an early 15-point als for the world champi­ and getting the adjustments tender. game. McCallie said it wouldn't lead but the Lady Bears came onships in July. right." · "This team has the heart of a take long for her to get started storming back to tie it at half­ It was the third victory of the The 51.~4 was just over two­ lion," Michigan State coach preparing for the Lady Bears. time. The Lady Tigers, who· meet for Phelps, who trailed tenths of a second slower than Joanne P. McCallie said, her "By Midnight," she said. looked restless at times on Crocker by more than a half­ Phelps' best time in that event. players bouncing and hugging "Baylor's a fantastic team, and offense, then built a six-point second at the turn but pulled He also held the world record with wide-eyed looks of disbelief they had a terrific game also, lead in the second half, only to ahead to win in 51.34 seconds. at 51.47 before Crocker broke on their faces. and we're very excited, and mid­ wilt again. Crocker, who holds the world it two years ago. Trailing 45-29 with 16:02 left, night, we got til about mid­ "We have a quote in our locker record of 50. 76, finished at "I didn't feel very good this Michigan State wouldn't quit night." room that says you don't always 51.45. morning, I didn't feel good in and finally caught the Lady Vols Baylor 68, LSU 57 get what you want, you get what "I always feel I have to be at warmup. But the times speak at 62-62 on two free throws by Baylor's comeback ranked you earn," LSU coach Pokey a certain place when I race for themselves," Phelps said. Victoria Lucas-Perry with 1:20 among the best in Final Four Chatman said. "I don't think our Ian," Phelps said. "I know he "''m definitely happy with left. Moments later, Michigan history. Its defense was deter­ kids did enough to earn it. We has a faster first 50 than I do, 51.3. Two-tenths off my best State point guard mined and incredibly stingy. got beat in the paint, we got beat so I always feel like I should time, I can't be disappointed at made a and layup to put The Lady Bears were simply in execution and that right there be within striking distance, all." the Big Ten champions ahead. better - and now the end of was the ballgame." within a half a body length of Crocker called his rivalry Tennessee's then their remarkable, uplifting Baylor frustrated LSU to such him. I saw him coming off the with Phelps "a challenge." tied it with a runner in the lane, redemption story will be told on an extent with its 3-2 zone that wall and I just tried to do "Both Michael and I, we race but Spartans senior center Kelli the fmal night of the season in only four players scored for the everything I could to get our friends all the time," Roehrig scored underneath to the national championship Lady Tigers, who held their own home." Crocker said. "They're our make it 66-64 with 35 seconds game. on the boards but still got Crocker beat Phelps at the friends out of the pool, but to play. Baylor got 21 points from outscored 32-24 inside. The 2003 world meet and at the when it gets down to business, The Lady Vols (30-5) then Sophia Young and major contri­ comeback was the third-largest 2004 Olympic trials. But they're your rival no matter missed a 3-pointer and two butions from Emily Niemann in a Final Four game. Michigan Phelps won the Olympic gold who they are, and you want to inside shots before the ball and Abiola Wabara to beat LSU State overcame a 16-point in that event and then gave his beat them. dropped in the hands of Roehrig, in an impressive Final Four deficit in the second semifinal to spot in the 400 medley relay "If we can just keep that in who fed Lucas-Perry for a layup debut for a program that not tie the record set by Notre Dame so Crocker could have another mind, I think we have a pretty with 2.7 seconds left to complete long ago was the worst in the against Connecticut in the 2001 chance for a gold medal fol­ good friendship." the remarkable comeback. Big 12. semifinals. lowing a poor swim in an ear­ Phelps earlier won the 200 lier race. Crocker swam the and 400 freestyle races. butterfly leg in the relay as the In the other events Sunday, American team won the gold the third of six days of trials, in world-record time. Tara Kirk, who finished sixth "I love to race Ian. He's at the Athens Olympics last probably one of my favorite year, won the 100 breast­ competitors to race," Phelps stroke; NCAA champion Kara said. "With the friendship we Lynn Joyce of Georgia won the have, and the competitive edge 50 freestyle; Olympian Jason we both have for that race, it Lezak won the men's 50 free; just makes it that much more and 15-year-old Katie Hoff exciting." matched Phelps as a triple­ Phelps and Crocker were winner with a victory in the almost 2 seconds faster than 400 individual medley.

Headquarte~ "Area's largest selection!" summer at <(irqe ~nle ~nle Only one mile from Campus! Northwestern East Bank Emporium Restaurant Building 121 S. Niles @ Jefferson. downtown South Bend (574) 232-8488 +Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-6 Summe-r at Northwestern. Un.iw:rsity offi.r~ an educational expcri~nu tailored to your nct'ds. Our extensive: (:0\11'$<: offerings provide you with m.anf W;lys w '-·:m::h up, get ahtad, or pursue rK-w hue•cs.\~.

C:ouncs rang~ fmm one-week work~hops in mu~ic to eight~wt~ck inte-nsive sl!'

Jackie Clark, Halle Kiefer Registration begins April 11 • Classes begin June 20 and the Junior Class Request a catalog or visit us online today! 847-491 ~52 50 www.oorthwestern.edu/summer for the Easter Parents' Night Out

Your favorite University Village kids and their grateful parents NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY ------

AROUND THE NATION Monday, April 4, 2005 COMPILED FROM THE QgsERVER'S WIRE SERVICES Page 17

Baseball America College MLB Top 25 team rer:ord pnwious 1 Texas 23-4 4 2 Cal St. Fullerton 11·6 1 3 Georgia Tech 21-4 5 4 Tulane 21·5 2 5 LSU 19·6 3 6 Mississippi 19-5 7 7 Florida 19-7 11 8 Miami (Florida) 22-7 6 9 Arkansas 21·4 8 10 Arizona 18-10 13 11 North Carolina 20-5 16 12 Stanford 14-8 12 13 Rice 18·9 15 14 South Carolina 19-5 9 15 Baylor 16·10 10 16 Texas A&M 19-9 14 17 Florida State 27-5 17 18 Oregon State 19-4 18 19 Coli. of Charleston 20·4 19 20 Nebraska 21-3 20 21 Mississippi State 17-4 24 22 Long Beach State 18-10 NR 23 Auburn 19·8 NR 24 Arizona State 18-13 NR 25 Central Florida 25·5 25

ESPN/USA Softball Collegiate Top 25 lPam record prev. 1 Michigan (17) 31·1 1 2 Arizona (3) 26·2 2 3 California 29-3 3 Randy Johnson led the New York Yankees to a 9-2 defeat of the Boston Red Sox Sunday in the opening 4 Texas 26-4 4 game of the MLB season. Johnson gave up just one run in six innings in his first game as a Yankee. 5 Tennessee 37-4 5 6 Texas A&M 31-2 T1 7 Stanford 23-4 6 8 Baylor 31-4 T1 Johnson, Yankees down Red Sox 9-2 9 Oklahoma 33·6 9 10 UCLA 18·6 10 Matsui leaped in left to rob some of their im probablo huge ovations in his l'irst. 11 Alabama 36·7 11 Associated Press 12 Georgia 28-7 12 Kevin Millar of a two-run triumph staring diroetly at ganw in pinstripes since 13 Florida 27·6 14 NEW YORK- The tallest homer in the third, Giambi the 6-foot-1 0 Big Unit, 2001. 14 Louisiana-Lafayette 22-7 13 Yankee ever began the big stretched to reel in two bad brought to tho Bronx to Sincn Nnw York moved 15 Oregon State 19·6 15 task of putting the Boston throws by shortstop Derek help the Yankeos win tlwir within thrnn outs of swnPp­ 16 Missouri 27-3 16 Heel Sox back in their Jeter, Alex Hodriguez made first title since 2000. ing tlw Hnd Sox in the ;\L 17 Washington 16·9 17 place. a diving stop at third on Giambi, back at first baso championship snrios last. 18 Fresno State 20-7 18 Handy Johnson shut down Edgar Henteria, and Tino following injury, illnnss and Octobor, tho Hml Sox had 19 Iowa 25·5 21 Boston in his New York Martinez made a backhand a rnportnd admission of won 1~ight straight, becom­ 20 Arizona State 25·7 22 debut, dominating his new 21 Georgia Tech 32·7 23 dive at lirst to prevent an steroid usc, rm:nivml a pair ing tho first major lnaguP 22 Nebraska 20·11 T19 team's old rival. lie out­ extra-basn hit by Johnny of standing ovations from team to ovnl'!~omn a :~-0 23 Northwestern 18·9 24 pitched David Wells, got Damon. tlw snllout crowd of !'i4,S 1 S postseason defirit, then 24 Creighton 22·4 NR lwlp from llid11ki Matsui By the time Matsui hit a and wnnt 1-for-2 with a blowing out St. Louis in llw 25 LSU 17-11 T19 and a rejuvenated Jason two-run homer off Matt single and two hit-by-pitch­ World Snrins. Giambi and led the Mantei for a X-1 lnad in the es. But following an oll:'inason Yanknns ovor the World eighth, it was almost piling Gary Sheflield, ba1:k from of joy in Now l·:ngland. tho Sf~rios champions !J-2 on. oll'snason shouldnr surgery, Hod Sox startnd with a Big East Baseball Sunday night in tlw major With Boston taking thn hit a go-ahead single in a thud, pitching poorly, mak­ lnagun opmwr. finld as ehampions for the thrnn-run third inning ing a pair of nrrors and los­ ;\lroady, thoro wore bad first time in R6 years, the against Wells, and ing thnir firth straight. sna­ ream overall (;onj.' omnns for tlw Hod Sox: Hnd Sox returnod to the Martinoz l'!~cnivcd two son OJWnnr. 1 Boston College 16·6 4-1 2 Rutgers 13-9 3-1 3 NOTRE DAME 13-10 3·1 -. 4 St. John's 12·9 2·1 5 Villanova 14·7 3·3 IN BRIEF 6 Georgetown 15·13 3·3 7 Connecticut 15·7 2·2 Cubs place ace Prior on DL hnalnd, but sincn the right-hander players' union agrnml tlu•y would not 8 West Virginia 11·16 2·4 to start the season needs more work, it was bettnr to disclose l.lw exact substance for 9 Pittsburgh 13·9 1-4 PIIOENIX- !\!though he doesn't put him on the DL to makn room for which a playPr tests posiliw. 10 Seton Hall 6·14 1·4 like it, Mark Prior will start the sea­ anothnr pitcher on the activo roster. Sanchez said lw was surpris1•d by son on the disabled list for a seeond Prior, who said that he understands the suspPnsion. adding that lw usPs straight yoar. the Cubs' move even if' hn doesn't milkshakns and multivitamins to "I didn't want to go on tho DL I still like it, will be activated and start build his energy - and blaming llw don't. want. to go on thn DL," Prior against San Dingo on April 12, bar­ positive tnst on sonwthing hi' bought said beforo tho Chicago Cubs' ring any setbacks. ovPr the count!~r. worknd out at Bank Ono Ballpark on Sanchez suspended for vio­ "I'm going t.o fight it, because l'w Sunday. "I don't consider myself lating steroid policy never taken stnroids or anything like around the dial that. ... 1 n1wcr take any steroids injurnd lik11 last year wlwn I couldn't ST. PETEHSBUBG, Fla. - Tampa because I don't ruwd tlwm," said !WOn go out and throw." Bay outfielder ;\lox Sanchez was sus­ Sanelwz. who was r1dPased by Manager Dusty Baker said that pendnd 10 days for violating basn­ ball's new policy on performance­ Detroit in mid-March and sigrwd by becausn Prior couldn't throw for a the l>nvil Hays. MEN'S NCAA TOURNAMENT wnnk bocause of a sore elbow, ho enhancing drugs, the l'irst player 1 Sandwz, 28, who hit .:~22 with I ) CHAMPIONSHIP ne11ds to build up his endurance. lie's publidy identified under the major stol1m bases in 79 games for tlw North Carolina vs Illinois 8:21 p.m., CBS schedulod to start for Triple-A Iowa leagues' tougher mles. Tigers last season, said he was drug in its season openor at ;\lbuquerque The suspension begins Monday tested while lw was with l>ntroil.. lin on Thursday. whnn Tampa Bay opens its season was to be the Devil Bays' eontnr MLB Last season, Prior started on tho I>L against Toronto, the commissioner's fieldPr on opening day. Kansas City at Detroit 12:05 p.m., ESPN2 with ;\chilies' tendon and elbow ollico said Sunday. Devil Hays gennral managPr Chuck NY Mets at Cincinnati 1:10 p.m., ESPN problems and missod two months. Under the new policy that took LaMar said the team would have no eiTeet last month, stc~roids and other Chicago Cubs at Arizona 4:10p.m., ESPN2 This year, though, Baker said tho eomnwnt on the suspPnsion. elbow inflammation that sidelined performance-enhancing substances "It's surprising," manager Lou Prior in spring training and had are the only drugs to draw a 1()-day Piniclla said. "That's all I have to say bothered him since early March has suspension. Baseball of'lieials and the on that." page 18 The Observer+ SPORTS Monday, April 4, 2005

MEN'S lACROSSE Irish fall to Darbnouth 10-9 in second one-goal loss of year

before Notre Dame could score learning the lessons we need to By MIKE GILLOON again. be learning as we go through, Sports Editor "The most encouraging thing both from the wins and the of the day is that we gave our­ losses." Notre Dame fell 10-9 at selves a chance to win the Dartmouth fired 51 shots on Dartmouth Saturday, tallying game," Corrigan said. "We did goal compared to Notre Dame's its second one-goal defeat of that without playing well and 32, but Irish freshman goalie the season. that is a good sign for a team." Joey Kemp made 23 saves to "I feel like we didn't play Walsh, currently second in keep his team within reach. particularly well," Irish coach the NCAA in scoring, continued "Joey was terrific," Corrigan Kevin Corrigan said. "I was his hot streak by netting two said. "I honestly think Joey was disappointed in the way we goals and one assist. The Great the reason we had a chance to played and I take full responsi­ Western Lacrosse League play­ win at the end. He was out­ bility for it. I don't think I had er of the week has totaled at standing all day. I think he's us as prepared as we needed to least three points in every proving to be just a tremen­ be." game this year. dous talent in the cage." Dartmouth led 8-7 at the Notre Dame took the early Notrfl Dame is currently in a beginning of the fourth quarter lead with two Matt Ryan goals position to determine its NCAA but Notre Dame tied the mateh in the first eight minutes of the Tournament fate. The Irish when attack Pat Walsh tossed game. Dartmouth then tied the need to win their remaining· in a goal with 7:11 left in the contest with two goals of their four regular-season games contest. · own coming at the 2:51 and (Denver, Air Force, at Fairfield, The Big Green answered 1:50 mark of the first quarter. at Ohio State) to win the con­ back quickly with two goals in The victory was Dartmouth's ference and automatically the final three minutes to first ever over Notre Dame. qualify for the NCAA cement the win. Midfielder Ben With their only two losses Tournament. Grinnell weavfld his way this seasons coming by a com­ "If we win our next four through the Irish defense and bined two goals, Corrigan we're going to win our IPague scored with 2:54 remaining. believes Notre Dame might be and go to the tournament," His teammate, midfielder Alec better than its reeord indicates. Corrigan said. "That's what we Hufnagle, notched the winning "I think we have tremendous need to be focused on now and goal 1:27 later. potential," Corrigan said. "I've I think we're going to need all The Irish mounted a come­ seen some great signs from the experience that we've back with freshman midfielder this team throughout the sea­ gained throughout the season." Michael Podgajny scoring with son in terms of their approach LUKAS MENDOZNThe Observer 19 seconds remaining, but the to things. At the same time, the Contact Mike Gilloon at Notre Dame's Jim Morrison receives a pass from a teammate in final seconds ticked away important thing is, are we [email protected] his team's win over Butler on March 19.

BASEBALL MEN's NCAA TouRNAMENT Rutgers doubleheader Illini hope to finish No. 1

postponed until today Associated Press Often during their interviews to the NBA soon, as will the Sunday, though, they found sixth man, freshman forward ST. LOUIS - The best team in themselves defending the way Marvin Williams. p.m. the country all season is an they're perceived - as the "They'll have a lottery pick By JUSTIN SCHUVER Junior Tom Thornton and underdog today. By now, Illinois unsung group of guys who coming ofT their bench," Illinois Senior Staff Writer sophomore Jeff Samardzija is used to it. "play the game the right way," forward James Augustine said. ar() the probably starting Even though they've only lost comparPd to Carolina's group "They're obviously more talent­ Inclement weather condi­ pitchers for Notre Dame, once, have tied the NCAA of stars. ed. But when it comes down to tions in New Jersey forced the while Hutgers is expected to record for wins and have been "We have NBA people at our the situation, it's who's the bet­ postponement of Notre send O.J. DeChristofano and ranked No. 1 in the country games every time," Illini coach ter team" that will win. Dame's scheduled double­ Aaron Kalb to the mound. since December, the Illini (3 7-1) Bruce Weber said. "We're going Nobody has won more than header aga,inst Rutgers Notre Dame (13-10, 3-1 in have had trouble getting their to have some guys drafted, fllinois- ever. With their 72-57 Sunday. the Big East) hopes to contin­ due much of the season. whether it's this year or next victory over Louisville in the The teams will attempt to ue its season-long four-game Never has that been more year. But we don't have quite semifinals, the Illini matched make up the two games today winning streak against the true than in the buildup to the names, I guess, and athletic Duke (1986, 1989) and UNLV at Frank Eck Stadium in a Scarlet Knights (13-9, 3-1). Monday night's championship guys that maybe they have." (1987) for the most wins in a qoubleheader that starts at 11 The Irish have outscored their game, when the Illini face The reason the Tar Heels get single season. a.m. opponents 36-11 over that North Carolina (32-4) in a the edge starts with Sean May, Like the Tar Heels, the Illini In accordance with Big East four-game span. matchup being billed as Team the 6-foot-9 center who aver­ have stars and NBA talent, policy, the length of today's The Irish will remain at vs. Talent. ages 17.1 points and 10.9 starting with guard Deroo doubleheader will be limited home to face Toledo Tuesday. Illinois is the "Team. North rebounds this season. North Williams, a tenacious defender because of Notre Dame's trav­ Carolina has the "Talent." Carolina also has Hashad and super ballhandler who may el schedule - no inning will Contact Justin Schuver at The Illini say they don't take McCants, Jawad Williams and have played himself into the .- be allowed to start after 4:30 [email protected] offense to the comparison. Haymond Felton. They'll all go NBA lottery, as well. r------;------~ : 11) "' c c 0 s Special Hours for Graduation : I ..['-'U May 15th 4pm-10pm 1 On CAmpus : Restaurant No Reservations Please : I I Qt:AifUAtlOO l1/Jeekeotf ,SpeeiAl 1 tf'irst Origina( Pizza in Town! : tl!JA!I 12-16, 200J . I Sn1ce 1951 : Specializing in Italian Entrees Nee~ Cl pLC!ce foY !jOur fC!~tL!j to s.ttt!j, TY!j tl.-te StlCYe~ Htttrt 'PttYLSI.-1 CtV'\-ttY Tues. -Thurs.: 5:00PM- ll:OOPM ["SutL~tV\.0 31.. 01'" 1_1_g5 OV'\- !jOUI" ctt~-pus ~CI-ps.] Fri. -Sat.: 5:00PM- 1:00AM Ci37 North St. Louis South Bend, IN 574-233-2464 we set Cl -t9o.oo -peY -persoV'\- oloV'\-tttf..oV'\- for- tl.-te Cut out this coupon for $2.00 off any week?.ell\.0!. pizza. Dine-in only. ((COM6 6ARLY [Thurs.oltltj] -STAY LAU Expires 3/31/2005 ------· [Moiii.OICI!j]"- s.tt~e ~of..'l..tltf..oV'\-. For res.ewtttf..oV'\-S -pLeCise cC!LL: 'PttuL 6ololtj Cit .57-4--G31.-_T512 OY Mtlr!j rOV'\-feYI\?.0 /At .57-4--G31.::J-43G Monday, April 4, 2005 The Observer + SPORTS page 19

NO WOMEN'S TRACK AND FIELD MEN'S TENNIS Team qualifies 7 Irish hobbled by injuries in 5-2 loss Squad drops all but for Big East finals one match to No. 46 Southern Methodist orous wonknnd at Stanf(wd and Hy RYAN KIEFER ran in the 1 ,!iOO meters as a Spun' Wri1rr training exercise. This allowed By RAMA GOTTUMUKKALA llw Irish to dominate this nvent Spons Writer l>nspitn what thn rnsults may scoring six of the top nino say, t.hn higgost winner this placns, induding the top three. Freak injurins lurk in any WPI'kl'rHI at tlw l'onhlnin Moaglwr was followed by sports eontnst. biding thnir timn Invitational was Mother Stnphanif! Madia and Elizabnth and striking at inopportune NaturP. Wnbstnr to eom pinto thn 1-2-3 moments. This wnPknnd, the /\thlntns battlnd 20 to :m mile finish. Coaeh Connolly was Irish saw the injury bug rnar its pnr hour winds Sat11rday at plnasnd by the results, but ugly head. l'urdrw UnivPrsity and worn wasn't worried about his Facing a rallying, motivatnd l'orend to snttln for slow tirnos team's timns this wonk. Southnrn Mnthodist team, the on tlrP trark and short dis­ "Everything was slow Irish men's tennis team strug­ t.anens in llw finld nvtmts. beeauso of thn conditions. The gled on Sunday, losing a !i-2 In spitn of tlw conditions, the kids knnw this and just ran to mateh to thn No. 4h Mustangs womnn 's t.nam Plllt'rgnd with win raees. I was proud of their (11-IJ). No. 29 NotrP Dame (15- four vidorins and ofl'ort," Conm~lly 6) dropped all but one singles snvnn Big l·:ast said. match as they found themselvns qualilkations. "! was proud (~{ The 4-by-1 00 battling minor injurins to sever­ Knrry Mnaghnr relay team of al playnrs. their ~!Jort. " won tlw I ,!iOO Brinnnn Davis, "I think we learned that mntnrs in lwr lirst Maryann you've got to bring it every rar11 siru~P tlw Tim Connelly Iirigha, day," Irish coach Bobby Bayliss cross-rountry Irish coach Domenique said. "I think SMU played prob­ snason and quali­ Manning and ably their bnst match of the find for t.hl' Big Okeehi year - that's what thnir coaeh l·:asl IIWPt. l.aurnn King dupli­ Ogbuokiri also imprnssnd, win­ told mn and I havn no mason to ratPd MPaglwr's pnrfornuuH~P ning in thnir first race tognther. doubt it. It was close enough in t.hl' !i,OOO nwtnrs, winning in "Tiwy got thn stick I baton I but we got outfought in a eou­ hnr lirst attmnpt of Urn traek around nkely, and tlmy worknd pln rnatehes. If anything, we DUSTIN MENNELLA!The Observer snason, and qualifying for con­ wnll togntlwr for thn first time nend to be more aggrnssive. Wn Ryan Keckley returns a shot In a doubles match against Michigan on March 26. f(•rnru~n. out," Connelly said. have to look for offensive King dominatnd the mrnpnti­ Stacey Cowan won thn high opportunities a little bit morn tion, winning by over I I{ see­ jump, qualifying for the Big and in at least three or four of problems of his own. Although slot, sophomore Stephen Bass onds. Tlw rt!turn of King and East meet in the process. the matches, that was the he won the first set, Keekley lost a 6-2, 6-3 decision to SMU's Mnaglwr to tho distaneo toarn Two other high jumpers, case." struggled with severe (Tamps in Paul McNaughton. Sophomore solidil'it1S an alroady strong Cassin Gullickson and Emily Despite getting the early 1-0 the second set and dropped lraekli Akhvlndiani and junior portion of thn Irish's squad. Loomis also earned places in lead after winning tho doubles both of the last two sets in a 4- Patrkk Buchanan also dropped Coaeh Tim Connelly was tho Big East meet. point, the Irish had trouble 6, 6-4, 6-2 decision. qukk decisions to SMU playnrs, ploasnd to havn two of his vet­ Davis's time in the 100 against an aggressive SMU Tho sole Irish singles victory losing 6-3, 6-4 and (>-3, (>-3 at omns back in thn lineup. meters and Manning's 100- team that attaeked across the carne from freshman Sheeva the No. 4 and No. 5 slots, "ll was gn1at to see Kerry meter hurdle effort rounded board in each singles mateh. Parbhu, who won a tlu·ee-set respectively. Playing at tho No. run Wl1ll," Connelly said. "We out the Big East qualifiers. But in the first match of dou­ match with scores of 6-3, 3-6, 2 position, sophomore Barry wantnd to gnt her and Launm The Irish will have next bles play, both senior captain 6-4 against SMU's Federico King lost a elose match to on tho traek aftnr thny rnissnd weeknnd off and will focus Brent D'Amico and junior Eric Murginr. Gwinyai Chingoka, :{-6, 6-4, 7- indoor. Lauren was very strong their nfforts during the next Langenkamp were hobbled by "[Parbhul continues to show 6. in thn !iK. Wn're going to keep two weeks on training for the injuries and the Irish's No. 1 an awful lot of poise for a fresh­ "Barry King played a coura­ lwr in thn 5,000 for a while Mt. SAC Helays, traditionally a duo dropped an 8-4 decision. man," Bayliss said. "lie won the geous match but lost 7 -(> in the bnr.ausn shn's not ready for vory eornpetitivo meet, which "SMU played really well," first, lost the second and won third set," Bayliss said. sp«lPd work ynt. Wo 'rn just glad begins April 1 !i. Bayliss said. "Brent D'Amico the third. Murgier was very "Chingoka was relentloss in his to have thorn both back." has been a little iffy all week solid ofT the ground but Shenva ability to mako Barry hit pass­ Notrn Damn's bnst distance Contact Ryan Kiefer at with a hamstring [injury!. lie was a little more aggrnssive. lin ing shot after passing shot. runrwrs worn roming oil' a rig- [email protected] played doubles but late in thn was able to dictate and had thn That's a tough way to win a doubles match, it tightened up guts to step up and hit some big match because you really havP on him. Erie had a groin pull shots late in tho third." to play twice as good as thP and Brent had a hamstring The other singles matches other guy. Barry playnd as hard injury, so neither of thom was went poorly for the Irish, as thn as he could play and very available for singles play." team faced the added pressure courageously hut just didn't Sophomore Hyan Keekloy of' playing at higher spots have the eonlidnnco to eonw to Dept. of Irish Language & Literature stnppnd in for the Irish in sin­ across the board. the rwt, which was thn diiTnr­ gles play but faced some injury Playing at the No. 1 singles ence in the match." Tlw lone bright spot for tlw Irish was their doubles play in the second and third doublns Roinn Theanga Litriocht na Gaeilge matr.hes, which wnrn both solid 7 victories. Al'tnr shul'lling tlwir doubles lineup at thn Pnd of March, the Irish an~ sening somn dividends with tlw nnw combinations. K1~eklny and King hnat SMU's l'ntnr Orndsson and llnnr·ik SodPrhnrg X-!i al. tlw No. 2

Contact Rama Gottumukkala at [email protected] page 20 The Observer + SPORTS Monday, April 4, 2005

SMC TENNIS NO WOMEN'S BASKETBALL Teatn opens year with Current and future Irish shine 9-0 scritntnage victory Batteast and Schrader

close matches, but everybody both perform well in By KATE SERYAK pulled out a win and did a real­ Indy all-star games Sports Writer ly good job," sophomore Kelly Barnett said. "The doubles On Saturday, younger mem­ teams worked really well By JOE HETTLER bers of the Belles tennis team together despite not having Senior StaffWriter traveled thme hours to Albion, much of a chance to practice Mich., to scrimmage a team with each other." Notre Dame's departing star that is usually in the MIM con­ The Belles are using every and its incoming one both ference but wasn't this year due opportunity they can this early performed well in the to lack of players. in the season to get ready for Women's Basketball Coaches The Belles did well. winning their big matches against con­ Association Night of All-Stars all of their singles and doubles ference rivals Hope, Kalamazoo Saturday at Indianapolis. matches, 9-0. Although it was and Albion. Senior . only a scrimmage, this match "Those three are our biggest who finished her career as served as a stepping-stone for challenges. we always look for­ Notre Dame's fourth all-time several of the younger players ward to those and take a lot of leading scorer, had 11 points, I on the team. pride away when we win," five rebounds and three steals I "Because we lost our top five Harthen said. "Those are the in 29 minutes of the All-Star I players who were seniors last ones we prepare for the most Challenge. I I year, we have a really young and look forward to." The game featured 20 of I I team that needs experience like Even though Saturday's college basketball's best sen­ ~ this to get them ready for future match was important, the ior players. matches," senior Katie Harth en Belles still enjoyed themselves. Lindsay Schrader, who will said. "It was a good match and we arrive at Notre Dame in the GEOFF MATTESON!The Observer For several Belles, this was had fun," Harthen said. "We fall, tallied 10 points in 22 Irish recruit Lindsay Schrader defends North Carolina recruit their first time playing in a col­ were out there for practice and minutes of the High School Rashanda McCants In the McDonald's All-America Game Thursday. lege match. to have a good time and that's All-America Game. She "It was a lot of fun. I got to exactly what we did. It was a drained a key 3-pointer in the Schrader was recently man to play in the WBCi\ play with one of my friends in a good practice for us. I think second half before her Red named Miss Basketball in game. doubles match which we won that we're doing well so far and team eventually lost to the Illinois and is the fourth Alicia Ratay. Katy Flecky and I was really happy about that we're looking really good." White team 92-88. incoming Notre Dame fresh- and current Irish junior that," freshman Jackie Sias Courtney LaVere also partici­ said. Contact Kate Seryak at . pated in the exhibition. "There were some really [email protected] The Bartlett, Ill. product played in the 2005 McDonald's All-A)llerican game March 30 at tlH' Joyce Center. She averaged 21 SMC GOLF points, 10 n~bounds and thn•e steals during her high school career and was a thrne-timP all-state selection. Belles best of 13 teams Schrader will be one of tlw players trying to help replace the graduating Batteast. The South Bend native was at Ohio tournatnent recently named one of 10 members of the Kodak All­ Saturday at 10 a.m. in Angola, American squad. She became By THOMAS BARR Indiana. The team has been just the second Irish player to Sports Writer working hard to fix weaknesses ever earn such an honor. Ruth and maintain strengths that Riley was named to the team The Belles rang in the new were evident at Foxfire. in 2001. season with a tournament victo­ "Our ball striking has been The Big East coaches tabbed ry. solid," Hamilton said. "Weather Batteast as the conference's The team took first place in the has hindered us from getting out player of the year this season

Capital University 2005 Purple on the course to practice. This '~- . '"""~ after the senior posted 16.9 and White Golf Invitational in affects mental preparedness and ""{)~<.~-- points and 6.6 rebounds per Foxfire, Ohio, this Friday and our short game. " game. Saturday. RICHARD FRIEDMANffhe Observer The Belles won the 13-team Contact Thomas Barr at Irish forward Jacqueline Batteast looks to drive in a game Contact Joe Hettler at tournament. shooting a course [email protected] against Purdue Jan. 16. [email protected] record 357. They edged out the Ohio Northern squad by three strokes in the tournament. "Its good anytime you win, to beat 13 teams. but we definitely didn't play up to our potential," Students Belles coach Mark Hamilton said. "It was tough weather on a tough course, but in the end we played better than the other teams, and Fly Cheaper Three-month full-time that is what matters." The inclement weather that summer travel, study abroad & more certificate program for shortened the tournament to four-year college graduates. only 18 holes did not prevent Sample airfares from South Bend: Sample airfares from Chicago: several Belles from having For Additional Information: Wash., D.C $124 Montreal $191 impressive individual perform­ Paralegal Program Office ances. Boston $168 Mexico City $241 303 E. Broad Street Columbus, Ohio 4321 5 Senior Steffanie Simmerman Dallas $168 London $333 tied for overall lowest score with Phone: 614-236-6885 83 strokes. which was also the Los Angeles $233 Rome $359 E-mail: [email protected] club course record. Fellow senior Information also available on Julia Adams finished second with our part-time Paralegal and an84. Legal Nurse Consultant Programs. While two other Belles, captain Chrissy Dunham and Megan Mattia, rounded out the top 20, ~;:,TABLISHED i90J the team was not satisfied. ---- "We had two really great per­ -----·- formances by Simmerman and CAPITAL Adams, but I know some of the other girls were disappointed UNIVERSIIY with their performances." LAW SCHOOL Hamilton said. Celebrating 100 Years if Leadership The Belles are preparing to play in the Tri-State University Premier Provider of Paralegal Education For Over a Quarter of a Century Invitational Tournament this Monday, April 4, 2B05 The Ob$erver + SPORTS page 21

MEN'S TRACK NO WoMEN's TENNIS Irish compete at Purdue Tea111 bounces back,

NO athletes take crushes LOng Beach five titles, including Irish win five 1natches matdws for us," Irish c.oaeh .Jay pole vault, 800 meters Loudnrbaek said. en route to blowout Thn first of four singlns wins eame from Laurnn Connolly at tho By JOHN EVERETT victory over 49ers No. 3 position by topping Long Sports Writl'r Beach's Hocha (,-4, 6-3. This is hnr third out of four makhns sinco By DAN TAPETILLO moving up to thn No. 3 position fhr Thn Irish travnlnd to West Sports Writer thn team. l.af'aynttn, Indiana this past Tim second win eamn from and WIHlknnd to eompete in the No. 44 ranknd Catrina Thompson Mike 1'1whl11in Invitational on After falling to Wiseonsin 4-:~ at No. 1. Shn delimtnd Boufllnr 7- the eampus of Purdue last week, Notre Dame (IJ-8) was 5,6-3. Univnrsity. not just hoping to rebound from But it was the vietory from Thn Fighting Irish won live the loss with this weekend's mateh Sarah Jane Connolly at No. 5 that ·l nvnnts on Saturday, four of versus Long Beach State. The l seeured thn victory for the Irish. j them individual evnnts and Irish were also looking to restorn Connelly beat Carroll 6-2, 7-5 at o1w was a relay vietory. their confidence hoading into the No. 5. Louderback had only words Snlim Nurudnen far out­ final stretch of the season. of praise for thf1 snnior captain. l paced thn field in the 110- Notre Dame topped the 41Jers 5- "I was really imprnssnd with all j mntnr high hurdles. 2 Saturday at the Eck Tennis of the matches, but ~~spneially with l Nurudnnn ran the race in Pavilion, but is just beginning Sarah .Jane's [pnrf'ormance[," 13.96 seconds, not his fastest what the team expeets to aeeom­ Louderback said. "Shn had to time this year - his fastest plish by the season's end. come back in the sneond set to time was 13.92 seconds last "[This match] was extremely clinch the mateh for us and shn wonk at the Dr. Pepper important after losing to did it while staying calm." Invitational - but consistent­ Wisconsin," junior Lauren The final win came from Liz ly strong, which nncourages Connelly said. "We went into this Donohue at the No. 6 position. optimism for the rest of the match as it was the first of the Donohue topped Claudia season. Irish hurdler Geoffrey season so we could get a fresh Argumedo 6-2, 1-6, 6-2. This vie­ Bennett also qualified for the start and gain momentum and tory is her third straight, improv­ Big East in the 11 0-meter confidence for the next several ing her record to 17-12 on tho hurd Ins. matches." season. Adam Currie led a strong The Irish began the contest with The two losses earne from Irish nfl'ort in the ROO-nwters. BETH WEANET/The Observer an impressive sweep in the dou­ Stastny at No. 4 and No. 100 Buck Currin won the event in 1 Irish distance runner Kurt Bennlger runs In the Meyo bles matches. at No. 2. Stastny fi:lll to Porsz 3-6, Ill in U til, 54.2 2 SflCI)JldS, a lnvlatlonal Feb. 5. The Irish competed at the Poehleln First off the court was the No. 2 7-5, 1-0 (1 0-8), while Buck mark which is just .51'1 sec­ lnvlatlonal at Purdue Saturday, winning five events. doubles team in the nation of droppnd the match to Bnnbrson (,- onds shy of the Big East qual­ sophomore twins Christian and 4, 0-6, 6-2. Louderba1:k said the ifying standard. Catrina Thompson, playing at No. victory over Long Beach Statn wa.'i This was Currie's first per­ Kyle Annen, Garrett Koxlein ditions. " 1 for the Irish. The Thompson's a confidence-boostnr li1r thn Irish. formance of the 2005 outdoor and Kevin Moffett all quali­ The Irish relay victory came defeated the 49ers' team of Nkole "This win was so important season. Following Currie in fied. in the 4-by-100 meter relay. Bouffier and Sandra Rocha 8-1. beeause Long Bnach was a tnam thn HOO for Notre Damn wern Many field competitors at Nurudeen, Zach Labrecque, They were followed by the that fought hard. It was also Erie Morrison in third at the meet were adversely Christopher Jacques and Irish's No. 3 team of senior eap­ important for us mentally bnmusn I :54.1'14 and Brett Adams in affected by the strong 30 Tommie Lee combined to run tain Sarah Jane Connnlly and jun­ we have won so many doublns fifth at I :51'1.15. mile-per-hour winds at the the relay in 42.79 seconds. ior Kiki Stastny. Connelly and points and couldn't come up with Two of Notre Dame's victo­ site of the event. However, Jacques and Lee also quali­ Stastny topped Stephanie Bengson throe singles points," Louderback rins camn in the finld, with Viken was very pleased with fied for the Big East in the and Krystina Katayama 8-3. said. · David Viken claiming thn pole how the Irish responded to 100 meters. The final team to walk ofT the Laurnn Connelly attributes thn vault titln and Derek Goguen the challenge. The Irish have no meet this courts was the No. 2 Irish team of win to the team's mnntality during outdistancing his competitors "The wind was really a coming weekend. freshman Brook Buck and Lauren practice. in tho javelin. problem for a lot of the peo­ Their next meets will be Connelly. They handed the 41Jers' "This week in practice we Viken's vault of 4.75 meters ple who competed; they even April 15-17 when the team Alanah Carroll and Haehael Porsz tried to be positive bncausn we and (;ogunn's throw of 55.06 had a hard time keeping the will send athletes to both the an 8-4 defeat. could have easily of bnen nnga­ mntnrs were both good crossbar up for the pole Mt. San Antonio College Coach Jay Louderbaek said the tive after the loss to Wisconsin," nnough to qualify for the Big vault," Viken said. "J·was Helays in Walnut, Calif., and team's impressive performanee in she said. "But everyone has East Championships. really pumped because 15'7" the Indy Relays in doubles was crueial to their later practiced hard and it shownd Notrn Dame field athletes is a [personal record] on the Indianapolis. success in singles. today." also achieved several Big East season for me. I think all of "We played well in the doubles qualifying marks in the ham­ the field athletes did as well Contact John Everett at matches and some of the momen­ Contact Dan Tapetillo at mer throw, as Chip Hoberts, as they could under the con- r------• [email protected] tum carried into the singles [email protected] NO WOMEN'S SOFTBALL 25%0FF Shovvers wash out eastern road trip Villanova today, with starts at Irish extended their winning By JUSTIN SCHUVER 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. streak to six games. REGULAR PRICE Senior Staff Writer The doubleheader against Starting pitcher Ileather Rutgers has not yet been Booth came up one out short in PACKAGES AND LOTIONS 'April showers have put a rescheduled.Because the team her bid to pitch the seeond no­ damper on Notre Dame's Big will remain on the road hitter of her career, allowing a East season so far this year. Monday to make up the games hit to Loyola's Trieia Oberhaus FOR. . . ~STUQENTS : (;.;:, WITH·. .... VA~IO :.· .. ::,:·:,.~, 10... ·., The Irish were scheduled to against the Wildcats, with one out left in the bottom '<,,!f;r';C'"Nb'eE:e VIIID £'0.1...'\.0'\1\.% participate in road double­ Notre Dame's doubleheader of the seventh inning. :-·:::~«;;!'nrvu bH'c~ headers against Rutgers against Eastern Michigan Senior Megan Ciolli paeed Saturday and Villanova Tuesday has been pushed baek the offense with three hits, two Sunday, but inclement weather from 3 pm. to 4 p.m. HBI and three runs. ·2~~· C:~l. ~ in the northeast United States Thursday night, Notre Dame Sophomore Stephanie Brown I forced the postponement of' defeated Loyola-Chicago on the had three hits and an HBI. both series. road 1 0-0, pounding out a sea­ I Notre Dame is scheduled to son-high 16 hits in the contest. Contact Justin Schuver at I make up its games against With their win over Loyola, the [email protected] I I 1~1111 Ta111 I I IT'S MORE FUN IN THE DARK. I Write Sports. Calll-4543 .. ______..I -----Expires 4/30/05 lj;· · .• !I. I page 22 The Observer + SPORTS Monday, April 4, 2005

Isban had the best individ­ tunity to play these [top] ual total for the Irish at 228 teams," he said. "We feel that Augusta - (12 -over par), good for a tie we can play with anyone in continued from page 24 for 14th while Baldwin tied for the country now." 25th overall with a 17-over That confidence will be piv­ lOth, Gustafson was still at 233, second on the team. otal for the Irish in the three-under after 14 holes. "I had a couple stretches of upcoming weeks. Despite a double bogey on bogeys and doubles that really First, they tee off in the the 15th hole and a bogey on hurt my position," lsban said. Texas A&M Invitational Apr. the 16th, Gustafson finished "But fortu- 16-17, with a the round at even par, the nately I was field just as fourth-best score for the third able to come "This definately gives us tough as this round. He finished the tourna­ back with week's. ment in a tie for 38th individ­ two or three a little momentum and a Then, it's ually, good for third on the birdies each little more confidence. back home to team. round that at We've got another big Warren for Before Gustafson's big least held the Big East round, Cole Isban and Mark me in there." event coming ... and we Championship Baldwin had carried the Irish For the know we can play well. , Apr. 23-24. for the first two rounds. team, this For now, the Isban and Baldwin shot was a big Scott Gustafson Irish are confidence happy with matching 75's in the morning Irish golfer round Sunday, and Isban had booster. what they've a four-over 76 to begin the "This defi­ done this tournament. Those two nitely gives week and will rounds left Isban in a tie for us a little bit of momentum use it as a platform for future sixth and Baldwin tied for and a little more confidence," tournaments. 14th after two rounds. Gustafson said. "We've got "This week was great for "We had high expectations, another big event coming up us," Is ban said, "to see how myself and for the team," in Texas A&M with a similar far we have come and yet Isban said. field, and we know we can have so much more we could DUSTIN MENNELLA/The Observer We knew that this was a play well." do." Sophomore Cole lsban takes a shot in the Notre Dame top-notch field with a lot of Isban echoed Gustafson's Invitational Sept. 19. The Irish finished sixth at the Augusta top 25 teams here and we sentiments. Contact Ken Fowler at State Invitational this weekend. were excited." "We love getting this oppor- kfowler [email protected]

Brophy, who shot a par 154, good enough for third place Lacrosse Indiana overall; senior Karen Lotta, continued from page 24 continued from page 24 who finished 11th with a 157; sophomore Stacy Brown, who midfielder Lena Zentgrars first next week in the Lady shot a 163; and junior Sarah col1egiate hat trick. Boilermaker Invitational in Bassett, who finished with The pivotal conference week­ West Lafayette, although she 173. end began on a rather optimistic might have to rest during the Grand Valley State placed note for the Irish. week. three golfers in the top 10, but In search of its first Big East "She's just going to have to their leader, Merissa Sneller, victory, Notre Dame charged out doctor it a little finished one of the gates, netting a 2-0 advan­ bit," King said. shot behind tage on a pair of goals by Foote Notre Dame was "/ was proud that Brophy and and Jackie Bowers, respectively, a heavy favorite we went out and nine shots in the contest's first 2:07. going into the tour­ proved why we behind While Connecticut was able to nament, but King Nakazaki. BETH WERNETfThe Observer were the favorite., secure a 3-2 lead over the next said the win was Minnesota Notre Dame midfielder Lena Zentgraf attacks the Rutgers shot a 634 to eight minutes with three consec­ defense during Sunday's contest. Zentgraf scored three goals still valuable head­ utive goals, the Irish immediate­ ing into tougher Debby King place third, one in a 12-9 Irish victory. shot ahead of ly responded, ta11ying three con­ competition in the Irish head coach secutive goals of their own to weeks to come. fourth place regain a two-goal advantage at of goals while Bowers and attack _ Foote once again sparked an "You still have to Ohio. Toledo, 5-3 with just over 12 minutes Mary McGrath also found their Irish raUy, beating Rutgers goalie stay tough mentally," she said. led by Storck, finished tied remaining before the break. way onto the score sheet with Lyndsey Feldman for her second "I was proud that we went out with Marshall for fifth. After trading goals a pair of single tallies. goal and the first of five consecu­ and proved why we were the Wisconsin, Illinois, Iowa, goal with the Huskies, however, Focused on preventing the tive Notre Dame scores. favorite. Purdue and Ohio Arkansas-Little Rock, Indiana, Notre Dame's wheels began to slow starts that has put the team Leading 7-4 at half time, the State are very tough fields. St. John's, Xavier, Ferris State, fa11 off as Connecticut rallied off in an unconquerable hole time Irish lead would eventually grow We'll need the experience." Ball State, Bowling Green, seven straight goals -four and time again this season, the to seven at 12-5 before the The Irish shot a 20-over-par Indianapolis and IPFW round­ before halftime - and nine of Irish refused to allow the visiting Scarlet Knights used a late four­ 620 as a team to beat out sec­ ed out the field. the next 10 en route to a domi­ Scarlet Knights to run away and goal rally to make the score ond place Grand Valley State nant 13-7 lead 11:53 into the hide. respectable by the contest's final by nine strokes. Scoring for Contact Chris Khorey at 11rst half. The Irish refused to Weathering a quick Scarlet whistle. the Irish were junior Katie [email protected] give in, scoring the game's final Knight burst that staked Rutgers Foote believes the big confer­ three goals, but it was a case of to an early 3-1 advantage after ence victory will only make the too little too late as Notre Dame 4:26 of play, the Irish went to Irish more dangerous as they squandered Foote's four-goal work. head down the stretch. performance and fell to 0-2 in Foote picked up her first goal After taking the week off, the Big East. of the game at the 7:27 mark Notre Dame will finish out a five­ • In dire need of a victory, the with Bowers and Zentgraf fol­ game home stand against a cou­ Irish reversed Friday night's for­ lowing suit. ple of non-conference opponents The Badin Art Show tunes as they rode hat tricks The Irish lead increased to 5-3 when No. 5 Duke (8-2) and from both Zentgraf and Foote to on Zentgraf's third goal of the Stanford (6-4) come to town Aprill5-17 a crucial 12-9 victory over afternoon before Rutgers found Friday and Sunday, respectively. Rutgers Sunday.Midfielders the back of the net to bring the Caitlin McKinney and Brittany Scarlet Knights within one at 5- Contact Matt Puglisi at Call for entries!! Fox each chipped in with a pair 4. [email protected] Cash prizes awarded lst place: $75 2nd place:$50 3rd place: $25 crew's effort; I was just disap­ "The second varsity eight • pointed in the results," Irish and novice eight are growing Open to all students San Diego coach Martin Stone said. "The better and getting faster," All media accepted continued from page 24 effort was definitely there. We Stone said. were facing three crews that The Crew Classic, along with Dame battled neck and neck will most likely be in the most major spring season • Entries due April13 with Oregon State and Texas. NCAAs." regattas, has serious implica­ • With only 20 strokes left to The second varsity eight tions regarding the end of the Show Opening at 7pm Friday, April 15 go, the Notre Dame women crew completed the weekend year NCAA Championships. • Prizes awarded at 7:30pm trailed both opposing crews. In ninth-overall after a fourth­ Stone is undaunted by the a testament to conditioning place fmish in the junior varsi­ results of this weekend. and gut effort the women dug ty B heat followed by finishing "Our chances to make the deep and passed Texas to third in the Petite race. NCAAs would have been Interested'! Contact '-- place seconds in the Petite The novice eight crew had a helped had we made the finals • race, a little more than a half similarly successful Petite [of the Jessop-Whittier Cup], Watch for further information coming soon second behind first-place OSU. heat, finishing in first, beating but by no means are they in the Dining Halls The finish placed the crew in out second place Southern gone," he said. eighth overall for the Jessop­ California by six seconds. The Whittier Cup. novices garnered seventh Contact Kyle Cassity at "I wasn't disappointed in the overall in the Novice races. [email protected] • Monday, April 4, 2005 The Observer+ TODAY page 23

SCOTT ADAMS HENRI ARNOLD DILBERT JUMBLE MIKE ARGIRION

I NEED A NICK­ I WAS THINKING I'VE Nt.VER WANTED NAME TO CREATE ALONG THE LINES TO PUNCH YOU MORE THE ILLUSION OF OF "THE WIZARD" THAN AT THIS VERY Unscramble these four Jumbles, COMPETENCE. one letter to each square, OR"INFO-GURU." MOMENT. to form four ordinary words. :~';,oo~.,.{):1 0 ;...... -- - t ~!.!.PV: . . ~~ I I \ BEPOR (';/'- r J 1 C2005 Tribune Media Services, Inc. ~~~~ ~.@©f,~- .. ;_. \ They put on a good show [~~ftJ \ " Wow! That's somecrash -1PJl.. PEANUTS CHARLES SCHULZ ~ BULJEM j * ____-) . WHAT TI-lE: DR.IVE:R.S J 1 DID IN TI-le: DE:MO­ www.jumble.com r L...ITION DERBY.

I GOBUTHj Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as rxx 1 1 suggested by the above cartoon. Ans: A ·1 I I I J-ITJ" r I I J (Answers tomorrow) Saturday's I Jumbles: BASSO TRAIT INCOME ADAGIO Answer: The exotic dancer quit because her paycheck was- TOO "MODEST'

"ill t992 United Feature

CROSSWORD WILLSHORTZ HOROSCOPE EUGENIA LAST

ACROSS 30_ Parks, 54 Place to buy a former "Miss yacht CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS DAY: Amanda Bynes, 19; Eddie Murphy, 44; 1 French cleric Alec Baldwin, 47; Marsha Mason, 63 America" host 55 Mimicked 5 Enthusiasm 33 Two under par 56 S. Dakota Happy Birthday: You will know instinctively what is necessary and should proceed 9 Slightly open monument quickly and without hesitation. Set your parameters and follow through with a creative . 34 Man's nickname project or concept that you have. Now is the time to expand your horizons and to try 13 "Time_, that's an 58 of Man new things. Your numhers arc 6, 14, 29, 37. 43,45 1990's sci-fi TV alphabetic run series 59 Happening ARIES (March 21-April 19): Everything is going your way today, so do your thing. 35 W.C., in so Johnson who Your ahility to take on a creative project will show everyone around you how talented 14 1950's England you really arc. Your d1ann will he irresistihlc, and a little romance should he scheduled candidate said "Ver-r-r-y interesting!" for late in the day. **** Stevenson 36 56-Across figure TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Personal prohlems will escalate if you try to solve 16 Art 38 Metal in rocks 61 Loads them right now. Relax and do something that you enjoy doing hy yourself. Someone 62 Puts in extra you care ahout may he a worry. hut there won't he much that you can do to ht'lp this 17 56-Across figure 39 Popular card person. ~~e* game 63 Spick and span GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You really should he taking a day trip or checking nut 19 Bushy do a cultural event that interests you. You will meet some interesting people through the 40 When some TV 20 Birds' homes activities you participate in. You'll he in a romantic mood, so spend time with someone news comes on DOWN you really care for. ***** 21 Stabbed CANCER (June 21-,July 22): Don't get down or let anyone cause you grief today. 41 Change for a 1 Battling Make whatever changes arc necessary for you to feel comfortahlc in your own 23 Job application five 2 Indian who may surroundings. Do things that interest you and li1rget ahout the things that frustrak• you. attachments be 1-Down ••• 42 Superman's LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Entertaining friends or getting out socially will enahle you 24 "Bird on " symbol 3 Foundation to huild greater friendships and even serious partnerships with people who have .•imilar 1990 Mel 43 Brings into play 4 Tire out interests. Romance is in a high cycle, so don't forget to pencil in time with that special Gibson movie someone. *** 44 Singer Sumac 5 Cutups VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Don't hother flitting from one thing to another. If you 25 Carrier to have to force yourself or someone else to do something, the end result will not he Sweden 46 Faux pas 6 A sphere lacks worth it. Relax and consider what you can do to make some positive personal changes. them 26 Before: Abbr. 48 Fierce one by Sherry 0. ••• 7 Computer keys: LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): You can easily gruh the attention of friends, relatives or 21 Necessary: 52 Vance of "I Love Abbr. 28 To be, in France 41 One who rows, 49 Taking out the even that special someone today. You will be highly creative, so don't hesitate to develop something you've heen thinking about trying or doing. ••••• Abbr. Lucy" 29 Opposite of an rows, rows the trash, for one a Neighbor of a boat SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Ready yourself for something that is important to you. Vietnamese ans. 50 Heart line Make alterations to your diet or lifestyle to ensure you arc headed in a healthy direction. ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE If you have a pet, take time out to do something special together. •• 9 Firefighter Red 30 Ocean-colored 44 Breadmakers' 51 Chirp needs SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You arc in need of some excitement. Plan an M A R E S T A I lii!IIA N K H 10 56-Across figure 31 Millions of years 52 Colorado resort adventure-packed day and invite someone with whom you enjoy spending time. A A M E N C 0 A N E A L U A U 45 Algebra or trig little love and romance should be your intent. •••• T I N T 0 A E T T 0 E M T S 11 Farm unit 32 56-Across figure 53 facto CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Not too much will go as planned today. Don't set LAT.WINETASTERS 12 Crucifix 33 Set foot in 47 Disney World 54 Partner of born your expectations too high. The more independent you are, the heuer. Consider what attractions changes you should be making in the not-too-distant future. ••• 0 8 liT C D R. D E A R I E 15 Place to dip an 36 Mrs. Bush 57 Dam project: AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feh. 18): You will he raring to get involved in whatever is c L EIA A T I A R A. A N I old pen 37 "My treat!" 48 Headed (for) Abbr. going on around you. You will he excited ah

Name ______~---- Join the more than 13,000 readers who have Address ______found The Observer an indispensible link to the City ______State ____ Zip ______two campuses. Please complete the accompa­ nying form and mail it today to receive The Observer in your home. THE OBSERVER

Monday, April 4, 2005 PORTS page 24

MEN'S GOLF WOMEN'S CREW Irish defeat five ranked opponents Tean1 has • Gustafson leads Notre Dame to sixth place finish in field with 10 top-25 teams success 1n

By KEN FOWLER Sports Writer San Diego

Against one of the toughest fields they have ever faced in a regular-season tournament, the By KYLE CASSILY Irish captured a tie for sixth, besting five top-25 Sports Writer teams and tying another in the Augusta State Invitational this weekend. The boats of the Irish plied Despite finishing 29 shots behind host school the waters of Mission Bay, San and champions Augusta State, Notre Dame Diego this weekend at the Crew achieved essentially every expectation the team Classic with the best women's had coming into the weekend. crew teams the country has to While the Irish "didn't play our best," junior offer. Scott Gustafson said, "we still beat a Jot of top- The results were mixed, with 15 teams." no overall top-3 finishes pres­ For a team ranked in the 60s nationally, that's ent, but the experience and saying something. chance to work together in After shooting consecutive 31 Os on the hilly actual competition will gain Forest llill Golf Club in windy conditions dividends later on in the sea­ Saturday and Sunday, Notre Dame had its best son. team round on Sunday. The first varsity eight crew Gustafson Jed the Irish in the final round with competed in the prestigious a stellar round of even-par 72. lie rallied from a Jessop-Whittier Cup on Saturday 82 and Sunday-morning 81 to post the Saturday afternoon and gar­ sixth-lowest round of the tournament Sunday nered a fourth-place !inish. afternoon. The eight finished with a time "I was kind of down on myself after finishing of 7 minutes, 3.21 seconds, that second round of play," he said. "I was look­ trailing victor California by 17 ing for any kind of momentum I could get." seconds. Washington State fin­ lie found it immediately. ished ahead of Notre Dame by With the shotgun start Sunday afternoon, a little under than three sec­ Gustafson teed off on the par-five sixth, and got onds for third place. the round off to a fast start with a birdie four. The following day proved Three holes later, he birdied the par-live ninth. more fruitful for the first varsi­ Then, on his ninth hole of the afternoon, he ty eight in the Jessop-Whittier made birdie three to reach three-under at the Petite race, a race consisting of halfway point. crews finishing out of the top After rebounding with a birdie on the 11th and DUSTIN MENNELLA !The Observer two in its' first heat. The race making two consecutive pars after bogeying the Junior Dan Klauer tees off in the Notre Dame Invitational Sept. 19. The Irish came down to the wire as Notre made a major national statement this weekend, finishing ahead of five see AUGUSTA/page 22 ranked opponents at the Augusta State Invitational. see SAN DIEGO/page 22

ND WOMEN'S GOLF WOMEN'S lACROSSE Nakazaki leads the way ND splits weekend games to victory at Indiana Irish lose to UConn

a tournament. 13-10, bounce back By CHRIS KHOREY It was also the first individual Sports Writer · victory of Nakazaki's collegiate against Rutgers career. The Irish won their second "That's a big step for her By MATT PUGLISI tournament in a row this past mentally," Irish head coach Associate Sports Editor weekend at the Indiana Debby King said. "Getting her Invitational in Bloomington, first collegiate win is a big besting an 18-team field in the ·deal." It was a weekend of firsts weather-shortened tournament Despite the win, the weekend at Moose Krause Field this at Indiana University Golf Club. was not perfect for the Irish, weekend. Windy conditions and a wet who watched senior co-captain After falling to visiting course forced tournament offi­ Suzie Hayes withdraw from the Connecticut ( 6-2, 1-1 Big cials to cut the competition first round with a hand injury. East) 13-10 Friday night­ from 54 holes to 36. "She came up to me during the first home Irish loss to Irish sophomore Noriko the first round," King said of the Huskies in program his­ Nakazaki Hayes. "Her left hand had tory- Notre Dame (3-6, 1-2 was the event's individual swelled up and she couldn't Big East) bounced back champion, shooting a 2-over grip the club." · Sunday afternoon to knock par 146, beating out Toledo's Hayes returned to action off Rutgers (3-6, 1-2 Big Natalie Storck by one stroke. Sunday and shot a 78. She is East) 12-9 for its first Big The win represented the third expected to be able to compete East win of the year behind Irish defender Heather Furguson, left, spins around a Rutgers time the Irish have taken both defender during Sunday's game. Notre Dame won the game 12- the individual and team titles at see INDIANA/page 22 see LACROSSE/page 22 9 thanks to a hat trick from midfielder Lena Zentgraf.

NO MEN'S TRACK NO WOMEN'S TENNIS NO WOMEN'S HOOPS SMC TENNIS MEN'S TENNIS Nil WOMEN'S TRACK en LLI (,) Irish win five events Notre Dame 5, Batteast, Schrader SMC9, SMUS Team qualifies seven 1-- z at Purdue's Poehlein Long Beach 2 play well in Indiana- Albion 0 Notre Dame 0 members for Big East InvitationaL Irish bounce back polis all-star games. Belles open year with Injuries hobble team finals at Purdue ::5 from loss to Wisconsin. 9-0 scrimmage victory in 5-2 loss to SMU Saturday. =c:l: page 20 over Albion. Saturday. a.. page 21 page 21 page 20 page 19 page 19 en !:i Monday, April 4, 2005 The Observer + POPE JOHN PAUL II 1920-2005 page 3

an offaith, a "'It is certainly a very "'His papacy was a great gift "'The pope was a champion of d events ... and great los~ notjust to Catholics, and an all types of people and of Jst influential for Catholicism but for all inspiration to all people human dignity. " t world history. " humanity., · of good will."

ard Malloy Jerry Strabley Father John Jenkins Thien-An Nguyen-Vu President Notre Dame security University President-elect Morrissey freshman Church turns attention toward next leader Cardinals will follow complicated process to select Pope John Paul II's successor death. the eardinals already in selected. According to church." Begoglio, archbishop of By KATE ANTONACCI Home must wait 15 days for CNN.com, a chemical is mixed One figure that has been Buenos !\ires, Argentina, was in Focus Wri[er those who are absent to travel with the ballots to produce the brought up as a possible can­ also listed as a candidatn. If to the Vatican, Cunningham black smoke. When a new d.id ate is Cardinal Francis elected, Begoglio would Pope John Paul ll's death on said. pope is chosen, the ballots are Arinze of Nigeria. Notre Dame become the first Jesuit popn. Saturday marked the end of Once the cardinals are at the burned alone without chemi­ is presenting him an honorary The process of choosing a his 27 -year term as leader of Vatican, they may not commu­ cals, and white smoke doctorate at the University's nnw pope is not easy, as therP tho Catholic Church. The nicate with anyone outside the emerges from the Pala:ee. Commencement eeremony in are many factors to be consid­ rnsponsibility of choosing a area until a new pope is cho­ "No one knows who it is May, Cunningham said. ered. now popn lies in the hands of sen. going to be," Cunningham "If [Arinze is eleeted popel "Do you try to replicate the members of the Sacred Cardinals under the age of said. he obviously will not be at the !John Paul Ill. or do you bring Colleg1~ of Cardinals, who have 80 are eligible to vote. Though Professors Dolan, Hougeau commence­ someone in who 20 days following the death of there are over 150 cardinals, and Cunningham itll cited an ment," Cunn- will focus mon\ the pope to call a meeting of only 117 cardinals are eligible old Italian saying when asked ingham said. on managing cardinals to tho Vatican. to vote. They will meet in the for predietions about the Arinze, 72, "We're not going to the Church as At this limn, nothing is Sistine Chapel eaeh day until future pope - "Whoever goes has been a key have a black pope. an institution?" known lwyond speculation they reach a 2/3 vote, into the eonelave comes out a figure in ... The church won't said H. Scott ahout who the next pope will Cunningham said. cardinal." arranging inter­ Appleby, history lw, said theology professor According to CNN.com, the "The person who is favored faith dialogue make two bold moves prof'essor and I.awnmen Cunningham. blank ballots are rectangular to be pope never becomes it," among Cath­ in a row. diroetor of tho "There's a pretty formal in shape and must Dolan said. olics, Muslims Kroe Institute process. Tlwy do a good job bear. in the upper Pope John Paul and Hindus. Father Richard McBrien for Inter-nation­ at keeping it seernt," said half, the world "No one knows II was the first Arinze was theology professor al Pnacn Stud­ Vinennt Hougnau, associate "Eiigo in Sum­ non-Italian pope close to John ios. "The new prol'nssor in the Law School. mum Pontificem," who it is going in 455 years, Paul II, accord- pope will have "They are, however, supposed. meaning "I elect to be." Cunningham ing to CNN. If to deal with to bn thinking about the good a.s ..s~p~eme po~­ said. The corner- elected pope, he would be the three issues: the poor in the tlff. 1 he cardi- stone of his of tho Church." Lawrence Cunningham first black pope since Gelasius world, the world of' Islam Catholics around the world nals write the papacy was in 492. Iandi advances in seione<~ and havo rosponded to the death of name of a candi­ theology professor global outreach However, Father Hichard biotechnology." tho popn and are anticipating date on the lower and it is because McBrien, theology professor Under Pope John Paul II. the - the appointment of a new half and fold it in of his great at Notre Dame, told the "Church moved to the right lead or. two. The elector then walks to interest in the world that some Boston Herald that it is and got very conservative," "The thing I'm amazed at is an altar in order of seniority are speculating that the next unlikely a black pope will be Dolan said. the tremendous outpouring of and places the ballot onto a pope may be from a Third elected. Many agree that the cardi­ pnople in prayer and support small disc and drops it inside World country, another non­ "We're not going to have a nals may choose someone and mourning for his death a chalice. Italian or possibly a non­ black pope .... The church more moderate in their views. and also a tribute to his mem­ If there is no winner, anoth­ European. won't make two bold moves in Dolan compared Pope John ory," said Jay Dolan, professor er vote is taken, Cunningham "There's been some specula­ a row," he said. Paul II to Pope John XXIII, emeritus of history. "IIe obvi­ said. tion Central and Latin CNN listed Cardinal Joseph who introduced Vatican II and ously had a major impact on "If after 30 ballots they don't American cardinals and also Ratzinger, John Paul Il's chief called the Second Vatican the entire world." have a 2/3 vote, they can some from Europe of course." theological adviser; Cardinal Council, to describe his con­ Following the death of a agree that the simple majority Cunningham said. Dionigi Tettamanzi, archbish­ servatism. popn, a period of mourning would do to elect a new pope," "It would be good to have op of Milan, Italy; Cardinal "He (Pope John XXIII) want­ begins and runs for nine days. Cunningham said. someone from say Africa, Ivan Dias, archbishop of ed to let the windows of the The mourning period began The ballots are burned after which has the fastest growing Mumbai; Cardinal Godfried church and let some air in," Sunday morning, Cunningham votes are counted. If black Catholic population, or Latin Danneels, archbishop of Dolan said. "I think John Paul said. smoke emerges from the roof America," Cunningham said. Mechlen-Brussels, Belgium II dosed those windows." Though the conclave of car­ of the Vatican Palace. those in "I think it would be a terrific and others as potential candi­ dinals must be called no more waiting in St. Peter's Square thing for the Church - after dates. Contact Kate Antonacci at than 20 days after the pope's know that a pope has not been all the Church is a Catholic Cardinal Jorge Mario [email protected]

3 April 2. 2005 ~--e_____ o_h_n __ P_a_u_l_l-+i~ varlcan catablishcd Pope John Paul II dks at agr 84. formal tics with brad. Pope John PauJ n, tfrom n-Jtalian May 13. 1981 John Paul n survive~ aasa••inatiion attempt in ln his 6m trip to Ho.ly Land,. John Paul D St. Pettis Squazc by ap&logilu:d fot "'tile behavicu oftho.ae• who Mebmct Ali Agca. ~cd the Jews to IULz.

1998 2005 II made haa fint visit I'D the United John Paulllmadc -bi.toJki ere he addrcssr:d the United Nations; trip to Cuba ad ll'lfl with fintt of scvrral vl1its to Poland wbel'r Fidel Castro. criticiud the communist rrgimr. .. ~. ·-J· April 23. 2002. John Paul 11 rumme>ned the U.S. aurdina:ls 1982 to diiQ:IISs aa abu~ scandal; aa.Kl there John Paul D r«civcd PaJc.ti:.nian leadu Y:aaa::r A~ • i1 no place in the priesthood for prmroking c:riticlam Gom brad. duks who abutse t.be young. - page 4 The Observer + POPE JOHN PAUL II 1920-2005 Monday, April4, 2005

Students in Rome join in mourning pope St. Peter's Square fills with faithful

ever known it," she said. "So many "The whole city feels the effects of a blessing at the end. I was there with By KAREN LANGLEY people have been out either driving or this event - St. Peter's Square is the the Notre Dame crowd again, and In Focus Writer just walking near St. Peter's, but even only place in the city that is crowded everyone was cheering and clapping among them it has been almost silent. at all, which is unusual for a week­ when he appeared at his window," When Ashley Sinnott arrived at St. There is an overwhelming feeling of end," Murray said. "It's amazing to be Sinnott said. Peter's Square Saturday, the news of sadness, but also of respect." in Rome right now. I really feel like "A microphone was given to him, but Pope John Paul II's death had been Mullaney called the cycle of praying I'm living a part of history." he couldn't speak. He waved, and kept reverberating around the globe for for the pope before and after his death Notre Dame students studying putting his hands to his cheeks, like he more than three hours. The square "surreal." abroad in Europe were drawn to Rome was crying. It was really emotional, itself. however, remained suspended "Since Friday, I think most people on Easter weekend for a reunion because I think everyone knew this in time. over here have been aware that it was organized by Campus Ministry. would be his last Easter - there was "Even though I didn't get there until only a matter of hours, and we had "There were students that traveled no way we could have realized it around 1 a.m., the piazza CNN on constantly, wait­ from Dublin, London and would be his last public was still filled with thou­ ing for the latest news," Spain to meet at the appearance, or his last - sands of people singing, "Rome has been Mullaney said. Colosseum for Stations of "It's amazing to be Sunday Mass." crying and clapping," the quieter than I "It was incredible to be the Cross on Good Friday. in Rome .... I really As the week went on, Notre Dame junior said. have ever there with thousands and Apparently, Good Friday feel like I'm living students were aware that "There were backpackers thousands of people - and the events that the pope was nearing his with pillows sleeping known it." Catholics, Christians and accompany it have a part of history. " final hours. under the columns, there non-Christians all coming always been very special "I would say the overall were tiny altars set up all Laura Mullaney together to pay their for the pope, even more Caroline Murray mood that I've experi­ around the square, there Notre Dame junior respects and say some so than Easter," Sinnott Notre Dame junior enced in the last day is were people with rosaries prayers. said. one of sadness, but also staring up at the pope's "I know l will never for­ "So TV monitors at the relief, because he's been window. It was very intense because get how it felt to stand under the Colosseum broadcasted images of his so sick there last few months," Sinnott everyone present was so emotional." pope's window with countless others, watching our gathering. It was really said. Sinnott, who is studying in Rome this the smell of scented candles burning a memorable experience to be in the "I know that when the original semester, was not the only Notre throughout the night, and the sound of middle of Rome with Notre Dame kids announcement was made to the Dame student to experience the imme­ one group in particular singing songs from all over Europe, watching the square, they said 'John Paul has diate aftermath of the 84-year-old accompanied by a guitar." ceremony with the pope." returned home,' and everyone pope's death. Junior Caroline Murray agreed, Students were also present at the clapped." The impact of John Paul Il's death adding she does not expect the com­ pope's last public appearance, which was felt intensely on the city streets, munity's intensity to drop in the com­ occurred Easter Sunday. junior Laura Mullaney said. ing weeks as the Church works toward "Easter Mass wasn't said by [John Contact Karen Langley at "Rome has been quieter than I have selecting John Paul II's successor. Paul II] obviously, but he came out for klanglel @nd.edu

-