<<

... SLF -Page 6

an independent student newspaper serving notre dame and saint mary's WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5, 1980 In Stepan Mock ConVention opens tonight by Michael Onufrak entation, consideration, and a­ will begin at 7 p.m. with the Senior Copy Editor doption of the 1980 Republican exception of Saturday's session Mock Convention Platform. which will stan at 2 p.m. The 1980 Refublican Mock Tomorrow night's speakers in­ Convention wil open tonight clude Cissy Bake(, daughter of when University President Fr. Senate Majorjty leader Howard Theodore Hesburgh delivers Baker, Illinnis Congressman u.S.admits the invocation at 7 p.m. in , former Gov. Har­ Stepan Center. old Stassen, and Dr. George Hesburgh will be foJJowed to Crane. Hyde is the author of the speaker's platform by Indi­ the controversial Hyde amend­ to foul-up ana Gov. Otis Bowen, who will ment which opposes govern­ deliver the welcoming address,,. ment abortion funding. He is a and former Secretary of the supporter of former Interior Walter J. Hickel, who Gov. for the will deliver the Mock Conven­ Republican presidential nomi­ on Israel vote tion's keynote address. nation. Hickel, a former governor of Stassen is a signer of the Alaska, will also address the United Nations Charter, former WASHINGTON· (AP) - Secre­ Notre Dame Law School at President of the University of tary of State Cyrus R. Vance 12:15 p.m. and hold a press Pennsylvania, and the only took responsibility yesterday conference at 2 r.m. at the Republican candidate who will for a "foulup" in which the M.:mis Inn. Hicke is attending represent himself at the Mock voted for a U.N. the Mock Convention in con­ Convention. Crane is the father resolution critical of Israel's junction with the presidential of Republican hopeful Sen. occupation of'east Jerusalem. campaign of former Gov­ Phillip Crane of . He is a The U.S. vote in favor of ernor . syndicated newspaper the resolution touched off a Besides tonight's speakers, columnist. diplomatic and political furor· reports of the Mock Conven­ Fr. Donald F. Shea, C.PP.S., and President Carter issued tion's Rules and Credentials will address the Mock Conven­ a statement Monday night say­ Committees will be given. tion on Friday night. Fr. Shea ing the vote had bten an Former Alaska Governor Walter ]. Hickel will address The convention will continue currently serves as. the Republi­ error and was cast in the tonight's Mock Republican Convention, as keynote speaker. tomorrow night with the pres- can National Committee's Dir­ mistaken belief that references ector of Liason for Ethnic and to Jerusalem had been deleted. Religious Groups and was form­ ·JJ State D~partment spokesman erly a professor of history at Hodding Carter said yesterday Saint Joseph's College in Rens­ that Vance was taking respon­ Anderson UJins Massachusetts selaer, IN. ,for 30 years. sibility for the "foulup" and Shea will be followed Friday that President Carter's instruc­ BOSTON (AP) - Rep. John 29 percent. left the Republican field night by George Bush Jr. who jons on how to vote on the Anderson surged from the Re­ In Vermont, Anderson and without a clear leader. This will speak on behalf of his issue were not transmitted cor­ publican field to hold Ronald Reagan each had 31 percent, could make it easier for for­ father Ambassador George rectly to Donald McHenry, the Reagan and George Bush to and Bush was well back at mer President Gerald R. Ford Bush. Denise Anderson will U.S. Ambassador to the United startling standoffs last night 22 percent. to enter the competition be­ then speak on behalf of her Nations. in the Vermont and Massachu­ That left the candidates short latedly. father Illinois Congressman ''The Secretary of State ac­ setts primaries. Sen. Edward of the 40 percent required Anderson's support was bouy­ John Anderson. cepts responsibility for the fail­ Kennedy gained a landslide vic­ to win any delegates there; ed by a hefty turnout of in­ Following these last two cam­ ure in communications,'' tory at home iq Massachusetts, they will be chosen later at dependent voters in the Repub­ paign adresses the Mock Con­ spokesman Carter said. but President Carter swamped a state party convention. lican primaries in both states. vention will hold nominations Following Satuday's U.N. vote him in Vermont. The three GOP leaders were That' won't be available to him and begin ballotting for their the Israeli cabinet, meeting Anderson led by a handful to divide about equally most later in closed primaries where presidential nomination. in Jerusalem, formally rejected of votes as the Vermont vote of Massachusetts' 42 Repub­ only registered Republicans can Saturday's Mock Convention the Security Council resolution neared completion. He had lican delegates. vote. highlights will include an ad­ which called for dismanding led throughout most of the Reagan said he was not un­ J ody Powell, in Burlington, dress by ND graduate and all old and new Jewish set­ evening but Reagan earned happy to be in a three-way Vt., said Vermont Democrats California Congressman Daniel tlements in occupied Arab ter­ a spurt of late votes.. from a tie in Massachusetts. provided Carter with his widest Lundgren and the balloting for ritory. The Israeli cabinet number of rural towns. Reagan and Bush, who had margin of the season, 3 to 1. the vice-presidential nominee. .expressed dismay over the U.S. vote. Anderson remained narrowly struggled for the elusive man-· [continued on page 10] All convention proceedings will ahead in Massachusetts. · tle of Republican frontrunner, be held in Stepan Center; and The resolution's repeated ref­ The white-thatched congress­ erences to Jerusalem as occu­ man from Illinois was the big pied territory is particularly gainer in a two-primary day. At a record 17.25% mitating to israel. The city I was reunited during the Six­ I After campaigning as a lonely, J liberal outsider, he earned his Day war of 1967 and is now credentials as a contender in Inflation signals prime rate increase the country's 'Capital. j contests to come. In the "clarification" issued Kennedy was gaini 1g 65 per­ NEW YORK (AP) - With business still lining Reserve launched its latest effort to tighten by the on Mon­ ~ cent of Massachusert's Demo­ up to borrow money despite record-high interest credit as a way of fighting inflation. day, President Carter assured cratic vote. He told a Bos­ rates, major banks yesterday raised their prime Other industrial and commercial borrowers Israel that the vote "does ton victory rally that his vic­ lending rates to a record 17 114 percent. pay more than the prime rate, in some cases not represent a change in our l tory proves the voters ''will The increase, begun by Chase Manhattan more than 20 percent. But the demand for loans position regarding the Israeli not tolerate an inflation rate Bank and matched by nearly every major bank, has grown in recent weeks, despite the high settlements in the occupied of 20 percent and an inter­ came in response to new signs the Federal rates. areas nor regarding the status est rate of 17 percent.'' They Reserve is determined to tighten credit. The prime rate does not directly affect rates of Jerusalem.'' want, he said, the wage-price ''The Federal Reser:ve is now telling us it is on consumer loans, but is widely watched as an According to Sate Department freeze he advocates. aiming for a recession,'' said William Gibson, an indicator of short-term interest rates. spokesman C::.arter, before Mc­ "We have faced adversity economist with the Wall Street firm of Smith Henry could vote for the re­ Barney, Aarris Upham & Co. "It's trying to do The surge in rates this week came after the solution the references to J e­ and disappointment'' in the Federal Reserve acted to reduce the amount of challenge to Carter, he said, whatever it takes to slow down the economy.'' rusalem were to have been "We're on the brink of a credit crisis," said reserves available to banks, and thereby reduce :leleted. The instructions were but none so serious as the the·amount of money available for lending. economic woes facing the A­ another Wall Street economist, David Jones of "mistranslated," he said. met;ican people. Hubrey G. Lanston & Co. "It's very likely the Among the banks that .{>OS ted the 171 I 4 In Addition to infuriating the Anderson succeeded in vali­ cost of money will be prohibitive to a growing percent prime was San Francisco-based bank of Israelis, McHenry said at a dating his claim that the Re­ number of small and middle-sized companies." America, the nation's largest ranked by de­ news conference that the ad­ publican race has not narrowed Chase Manhattan, the third-largest bank in posits. Among the top 10 banks, only No. 2 ministration's repudiation of its to a two-candidate affair be­ the nation, cited a "very strong" demand for Citibank, of New York, failed to join the move to vote Wll;S certain to anger the tween Reagan and Bush. business loans and rapidly rising interest rates it 171 I 4 percent. Citibank traaitionally announces Arab world. With more than two-thirds pays to acquire funds as the reasons for the changes in its prime rate on Fridays. ''The effect in the /Arab of the Massal ~usetts precincts increase from 16 3/4 percent. Most Wall Street analysts think the prime rate world will not be loving," counted, Anderson was gain­ The prime rate is charged by banks on loan.s to wiU keep rising, probably to 18 percent and McHenry said. He said there ing 31 percent of the vote, their most credit-worthy corporate borrowers. It perha.Ps beyond, as the Federal Reseve tries to would be "wounded feelings" .Bush 31 percent and Reagan ' stood at 151 I 4 percent Feb. 15 when the Federal fight mflation by slowing the economy. . among Arab governmc::nts. . News in? brief Wednesday, March 5, 1980 -page 2 Thirteen year old tycoon Keeping low profile rewrites NYtax law ND publishes research journal ALBANY, N.Y.- Jody Gerard, the 13-year-old required to pay sales tax on his fisbing-worm sales, was met by scowls by Laura L Larimore It features articles of biologi­ the Executive Committee in­ when he confronted State Tax Commissioner James Tully. Senior Staff Reporter cal interest, contributed by clude Robert E. Gordo·n, Theo­ But Tully says he was only teasing as he tried Monday to researchers primarily from the dore J. Crovello, Ronald A. convince J ody that he never meant to be an ogre. And J ody, Have you ever looked United States and Canada .. Hellenthal, and Richard W. in a similar spirit, presented the Legislature with a bag of red through the campus telephone Occasional entries have come Greene, all of the Biology wrigglers "just so you all remember me." "I'm glad you book and seen a hsting "Amer­ from places as far away as Department. dectded to help change this law. If you figure it out logically, ican Midland Naturalist''? The India, according to Juanita The journal has also sponsored it cost the state more to collect the whole $3 tax I paid than I Observer did, and decided to Thomas, secretary of the publi­ a hard-bound monograph series could pay in my childhood,'' said J ody in a brief speech he investigate. cation. in the past. Only one edition is had prepared for the occasion. The American Midland Natu• Articles are unsolicited, but ·still in print; others are avail­ ralist is a professional journal rather are research abstracts, able as reprints. published quarterly at Notre whose authors use the Natural­ The only student participa­ CAB grants approval for Dame through the Ave Maria ist as a vehicle for exposure. tion has been occasional help Press.· The editor of the American with the mailing list, said Midland Naturalist is Robert P. Thomas. "I do most of the service to Cleveland -~ Mcintosh, professor of Biology incidental work,like unpacking, WASHINGTON (AP) - Air Wisconsin received permission at Notre Dame. Members of by myself," she explained. today from the Civil Aeronautics Board to begin providing D'Antuon.o non-stop service between South Bend and Cleveland. The airline was among 26 carriers allowed to add an additional route each under an automatic entry provision of the airline deregulation act. The provision permits an airline to apply to sing IS THERE LIFE AFTER • for one new route a year for three years starting in 1979. The Notte~m~ CAB must grant the request unless it finds that an award would substantially harm the national air transportation tonight nd our:l;om tfr~~-er-tho know ~~~GJ~ system, or if an incumbent carrier has successfully protected that route. On Dec. 31, 1981, the CAB will lose its authority Sat., match 8 over domestic routes and the airlines will have almost total Angela D' Antuono, soprano freedom to fly where they want. with several 1-3 pm Llbtaty Aud. opera companies, will be pre­ sented in recital by the Univer­ Reception to follow U.S. agrees to buy grain left sity of Notre Dame Concert Series at 8: 15 pm. The program in the Memorial Library Audi­ torium is open to the public HEPBURN WEEKEND from Soviet embargo without charge. WASHINGTON - Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland D' Antuono has sung roles CARROLL HALL announced today plans to buy up to 13 million metric tons of with the Brooklyn Lyric Opera, wheat and corn, part of the gram that President Carter two including that of Mtmi in Puc­ PHILADELPHIA STORY cini's "La Boheme." Her months ago embargoed from d~li~ery to the Soviet Un~o~. thurs ., march 6 ... 7 & 9 Officials said the purchases will mvolv~ _up to 4.25 mtlhon operatic roles for the spring metric tons of wheat and up to 9 mtllwn of corn. The season include Rosalinda in a purchases will be made ''at prevailing market prices'' from new production of ''Die Rleder­ 'PAT AND MIKE country elevators and, in some cases, farmers themselves. maus at Kingsborough Com- fri.,march 7 ••• 7,9 & 11 No costs were announced, but at current farm prices the . munity College in New York, furchases could total as much as $1.4 b~ll~on, including about and that of .Madame Butterfly ADAM'S RIB f819 million for the corn and $582 mtllton for the whellt. with the Richmond Opera of Staten Island. march 8 .•. 7 9 & 11 D' Antuono will be accom­ !f:veather panied by John Van Buskirk, a I graduate of the Eastman and Snowshowers Wednesday, tapering off to flurries, with a J ulliard Schools of Music. The possible accumulation of 1-3 inches. Temperatures falling program will include arias by tnto the 20s by afternoon. Partial clearing Wednesday night Bizet,Barber, Rossini and Verdi, and cold. Lows in the teens. Partly sunny Thursday. Highs as well as Spanish songs by in the low to mid 20s. Granados, Turina and Guridi . ._The Observer_ Night Editor:Ann Monaghan $1.00 adttUMitm 1606 w. Wm~ ~. Assistant Night Editors: Dan­ ny Tarullo, Mike J ans ctd! K9CK at 233-5525 flo.tt ~ ',... r ... , Copy Editor:MB Moran Wednesday, M& Layout:Mary Leavitt 12:15 pm LECTIJ.h.. 'energy and world peace," 15ov. walter News Editor:Mark Rust hickel of alaska, fo.mer secretary of the intenor, spons, Editorial Layout:Ann Gales international law society, LAW SHCOOL BASEMENT Features Layout:K. Connelly ; OU.NGE. · Sports Layout:) ohn Smith Typists:Carol Cornwall, Ka­ AIR SCHOOl EXHIBITION, student photography exhibition, ISIS thy Festin, Katie Bigane, GALLERY. Kathy Murray, John Smith, FORCE Ann Monaghan 4pm OPEN DISCUSSION, "is donald gerry right?" spons: nd EMT: Mike Galvin ROTC- women's organization, LIBRARY LOUNGE. Proofreader:Paul Hurley I ND Day Editor:Washerwo­ 4:30pm REILLY LECTIJRE, "glycoproteins: attachment and man Campbell modtfication of oligosaccharide chain uf. william j. Ad Design:Anne Fink, Mike When you're discussing something as important as lennarz, 123 NIEUWLAND, spons: dept •• ._uemistry. Holsinger · your future, it's urgent that you get the straight facts Photographer:Beth Prezio ... and that you understand them. Air Force ROTC 6pm TALK, gov. walter j. hickel of alaska, speaking on behalf Guest Appearances:Deirdre can be an important part of your future. We would like of gov. john connally's presidential campaign, HAYES· Murphy, Mikey Ruhe, Tawm to outline some of the facts and invite you to look into HEALY AUD. Schuster, Scoop, John gathering more. ''Lameduck'' McGrath It's a fact: the Air Force needs highly-qualified, dedi­ 6 8pm VOLUNTEER DAY, volunteer orgamzations, a mini cated officers ... men and women. It's a fact: we need acnvities night, spons: smc volunteer services, LEMANS last week's Paper people in all kinds of educational disciplines. It's a fact: LOBBY, SMC. ofthe Week: we're prepared to offer financial help to those who can SteveSwonk qualify for an Air Force ROTC scholarship. 6:30pm MEETING, sailing club, 204 O'SHAG. Get together with an AFROTC representative and Tilt Obs1rv1r [USPS - IZV] Is discuss the program. We'll give you all the facts. It 7pm MOCK CONVENTION, invocation-- rev. theodore published Monday through Friday II· could be one of the most important talks you've ever hesburgh; welcoming address--gov. otis r. bowen; keynote cept during 111m and VICitilll ..... The Observer Is publlsllld br till had with anyone about your educational plans. apdress- "why war?", walter j. hickel, former gov. of alaska, students rrl Nlltnl 011111 IMI Slillt campaign talk candidate , STEPAN CENTER. Miry's Cll..... Sublcriptilalllly Ill For additional information call CPT purcllned f• S2ll 111r year IS11 1111' llllllltlrl from The Observer. P.O. ba Davis at 283-6634 7, lOpm FILM, "hamle•," ENGR. AUD. spons: stud. union. 0. Nltl'IDIIIII, lltdllllll 4llilil. SICMd admission $1. cl111 paid, Nltrt D11111, ln- 0 dilllll =. 8:15pm GUEST ARTIST angela d'antuono- soprano, LIBRARY The Observer is 1 llllllllllr II till Alloci1tld Prm. An ttptllllctllll AUD. spons: dept. of music. rigllts lrl riiii'VId. ROTC d I T_he Observer Wednesday, March 5, 1980 -page '3 C!ane's father to speak at ND by B. Berry had four boys and one girl. The delegates to the convention at e~dest. boy 1 ,George Jr., was 7:30p.m. Dr. George Crane will appear killed tn 1956 when his Marine Denise Anderson is schedul­ jet crashed on an exhibition ed to appear at the convention at the. Republican Mock Con­ flight. Phil, Dan and David are vention tomorrow night, ac­ at 7:30 p.m. Friday. She will according to People, "Fourth: precede George Bush, Jr., and cording to Tom Jackman, cam­ generation Grano Old Party­ paign manager of the campus the traditional nominating talks for President Com­ liners whose political territory and selection of a presidential is to the right of Reagan's." candidate. mittee. All are actively involved in According to the Sept. 11, politics. Other n<>ted convention 1978 issue of People magazine, guests include Gov. Otis R. Crane, the presidential conten­ Three addtional guests have Bowen, Indiana; candidate Ben der's father, has been a "cur­ ~nnounced plans to participate Fernandez, California; Gov. mud~eonly trumpet of the right tn the Mock Political Conven­ ,· Minnesota; all h1s life." tio~, accor~ing to Jay J. Kane, Gov. Walter J. Hickel, Alaska; Dr. Crane is best known for asststant dtrector of Informa- Rev. Dor:tald F. Shea, Republi­ his advice column, "The Worry tion Services. - can Nattonal Committee, and Clinic'', syndicated in 300 news­ Rep. Henry Hyde of Illinois Rep. Dan Lundgren, California. papers. will represent Ronald Reagan, Dr. Crane and his wife, Cora, Republican candidate for the Jackman said that Bowen presidential nomination, and came ou~. as a strong Ford the daughters of s~ppor_ter m a recent interview and John Anderson will speak With Tzme magazine. He added Chemist for their fathers at the Stepan that Hickel_..is a surrogate for Center convention. ) ohn Connally. Lundgren will represent K.eagan, Jackman Hyde has been a member of concluded. Congress since 1974. He is the to present prime sponsor of a series of !...... '''!'''······...... c amendments to prohibit the use ofFederal Funds for abortions. I ~ND :,~; lecture Hyd_e will attend a 5 p.m. i= SMC ~- reception tomorrow in LaFor­ THEATRE 18'""178 tune Student Center. He is ST. MARY'S CO.£.£eGe Professor William J. Lennarz expected to make. a brief ap­ from the John Hopkins Univer­ pear~nce at the convention Meg Kiingenberger, a sophomore from Fort Wayne was sity School of Medic me's where a vote on the student !III!BX' recenily chosen as editor_ and chief of the 1980-81 edition of Department of Physiological platfc;>rm is scheduled for late SMILIS. the Dome. (photo by Beth Prezio] Chemistry, will present lectures evenmg. today and Friday as part of the Cissy Baker, the youngest of 116. 291t(Gldt 1-6-7 _g Re'illy Lectures m Chemistry at the senator's two children, will Notre Dame. All lectures will *4.00 <•a:oo60l/6ae/&fai) hold a news conference tomor­ l ...... IJ ...... , ••••••••••.-1 be delivered in Room U3 in row afternoon and address Aide sees April as last Nieuwland Science Hall at 4:30 p.m. Lennarz, who earned his chance for Ford Ph.D. from the Un~iversity of Illinois in 1959, became an WASHINGTON (AP) - Ger­ ari interview with the New York ' assistant professor at John ald Ford's chief aide says that Times, saying Ronald Reagan Hofkins in 1962 and became a by AP.ril , Ford either will be in cannot win because he is too ful professor in 1971. Among pres1oential politics up to ·his conservative. Ford said he will his honors are included the ear-S· or he wtll be out of them decide by April 1 whether to Clayton Scholar Award, the forever. jump into the race to provide a Lederle Medical Faculty Award "By the first of April you are more,moderate alternative. and the Distinguished Scientist ~oing to know where Jerry Ford Reagan's response was that Award of the Maryland Acad­ 1s,'' said Bob Barrett. ''Jerry "we' d all like to see him pack emy of Sciences. He is current­ Ford is going to be blown off his long johns and come out ly a member of the executive the scope J?Olitically or Jerry here on the primary trail with committee of the Division of Ford is gomg to be formid­ us." Gov. Richard Snelling of . Biological Chemistry of the able." Vermont,· a supporter of Sen. American Chemical Society. Howard Baker since Ford de- His two lectures are Glyco­ clined a spot on today's ballot proteins: attachment and ' 'By the first of April said Monday that Ford would Modification of Oligosaccharide make the best president. Chains_, and Glycoproteins in· The mathematics of the situ- Fertilization and Embryonic you are going to know ation, as well as the politics of Development, on Friday. ·-it, dictate that Ford had better The lecture program, featur-· ~ where Jerry Ford --is.'' hunl with his decision. ing oyer 150 distinguished 0 the 36 states holding scientists from the United Republican, primary contests States and abroad since it was Until last weekend, the form­ this Jear,_ 17 already have established in 1948, was er president maintained he is close their books to the entry endowed by the late Peter C. not interested in running but of candidates or have held their Reilly. Reilly, born in Provi­ that he would accept a genuine J>rimaries. That means 774 dence, R.I., in 1869, organized draft from th~ Republican Par­ delegates already unavailable and honed the coal-tar distil­ ty. to Ford, except for a handful of ling company now known as the But he went a little further in uncommitteds. Redly Tar and Chemical Corp. The Observer Wednesday, March .S, 1980 -page 4 I' HPC announces plans

for Wolllen'sI Week. by Bruce Oakley guidelines to be discussed at Monday's CLC meeting was Plans for the third annual also circulated. Women's Opportunity Week ~he meeting lasted fifteen (Wow) at Saint Mary's were mmutes. announced in an open letter to the ND/SMC community, circu­ lated at last night's HPC meet­ ing in St. Ed's. S~Csophs HPC chairperson Ellen Dorney read the text of the letter announcing the week's pro­ hold parents' gram of lectures, plays and movies centered on the theme of "Women of Inspiration." Extending from March 9 to weekend March· 14, WOW will feature Pulitzer Prize winning poet by Mary Agnes Carey Gwendolyn Brooks, long dis­ tance swimmer Diana Nyad, Over 300 Saint Mary's soph­ and Jacqueline Means, the first omores and their parents par­ woman to be ordained an ticipated in the annual "Soph­ These members of the HPC appear enthusiastic at the announcement of Women's Episcopal minister. omore Parent Weekend" last Opportunity Week events to be held at SMC. [photo by Beth PrezioJ A proposed draft of new party weekend, establishing a new attendance record for the event, according to Nini Stoll; SPW chairman. · "The turnout was excellent, the budget worked out, and everyone had an excellent weekend," Stoll said. Events for students and parents included the soph­ omore ~class production, ''If They Could See Us Now,'' a champagne receptioni a faculty­ admimstration pane , an aca­ demic open house, a dinner­ dance at Century Center, and Sunday mass at the Church of Our Lady of Loretto with brunch at the SMC cafeteria. Anita Ramker, producer and director of the sophomore class production, expressed her sa­ tisfaction with the cast, ''I was very pleased that the girls worked so hard. . They really had to dedicate themselves, since we've been rehearsing for six months for the show. Everything went as planned, if not better," Ramker said. Colleen Murphy, a soph­ omore, explained, ''The whole weekend was really very well planned and I think it was one of the best weekends I've had • since I've been at Saint Mary's." Mary ] o Schramm, another sophomore, agreed. "Soph­ omore Parent Weekend was a good way to bring us closer to our parents as well as to our II GlU. . ... ~ 1\~ friends," she said. SAVE UP TO $3.00 Dome Top Artists! Major Labels! names Many, Many More! Classics Included! new editor Come Early lor Best Selecdon. The editorial board of the Dome has announced the ap­ pointment of Meg Klingenberg­ er as editor-in-chief for next year. Klingenberger, a sophomore Amencan Studies maJor from Fort Wayne, IN, edited both the dorm and campus organization sections of this year's Dome. In Get Your Favorites at Big Dlsoouatsl addition she wrote copy for the yearbook freshman year.

I Klingenberger brings exper­ ( ience in both yearbook and newspaper journalism to her new position as editor of the Dome. She has also participa­ ted in several journalism sum­ mer workshops as well as a convention of the Columbia THE HAMMES NOTRE DAME Scholastic Press Association. "I would like next year's Dome to be a record of that particular year 1980-1981, ", BOOKSTORE Klingenberger said of her goals, "and cover specifically key events of that year.'' ------~------~--,------~~~

Editorials Wednesday, March 5, 1980 -page 5 P. 0. Box Q

tionably grant women a consti­ Reagan fights tutional right to an abortion since the ERA disallows any distinctions on the basis of sex, for minorities and since all State anti-abortion starutes are designed on (he /), ·.tr l!ditu, · basis of sex, such legislation, under the ERA, is unconstiru- (11 h1s letter to The Observer, tional. 0 1ville Buder probabl{ ex- For instance, Hawaii is one of p lc-.-.n j t h_e sent ·t ments o many the 16 states with an ERA \iD-:-i.\1C students when he said identical to the federal ERA lll.ll 1{,, 11 aid Reagan has worked (equality of rights under the law .tga 11 ht the interests of the poor shall not be denied or abridged .1 11l m11wriiies. Mr. Butler and by the State on account of sex). tillhL' wlw agree with him have In a case involving state tax 1. 11 kd 10 examine Mr. Reagan's funding of abortions the Ameri­ n·ll>rd as governor of Cali- can Ci~Liberties Union pre­ '·•1111,1. If they had, they would sytea to the Hawaii Circuit il.tvc· t;>und that Mr. Reagan did Court the following argument: 111•111' h>r minorities than any Abortion is a medical pro­ P'('\ ,,,us g,•vernor, and that his cedure _{>erformed only for wo- 111;11\agem('nt of the state wei- men; withdrawing funding for 1. 1,,. system saved it from abortions while continuing to lwll.;ruptcy. reimburse other medical pro- l{,11~aid Reagan hired more cedures sought by both sexes or i>:acb for important state posi- only by men would be tanta­ The plight of the freshmen t , .. 11,.., than all previous mount to a denial of equal C.tld;•rnia governors combined. rights on the account of sex." I k appo111ted the first black to The ERA is essentially a Bob Bernoskie \wad a Califurnia department pro-abortion ammendment. ,111d selected numerous minor- The platform also contains a Editor's Note: one's vocation in life is so inextricably attached 111· u>~nmunity members for provision prohibiting abortion. This column, originally intended to preview a to self-expression. Our interests, objectives and p >i1q·-mak111g posts on boards, It is inconsistent to be both talk by Dean Raymond Tuesday night, was "Work goals" become a dimension through , .. :n:nlsslons, and the judiciary. pro-ERA and pro-Life, and, unreadable in Monday's Observer, due to which we breathe, communicate and mature. I k hm.:d mure Spanish-Amer- therefore, the pro-ERA pro­ production difficulties. The problem which complicates this move ,, .tlh for stare positions than vision must be changed. toward career decisiveness is that before one can .Ill)' prevllJUs California gover- 2) Proponents of the ERA Dean Raymond of the College of Business be comfortable with what one wishes to ''do'' in 11"1. Fully one-fifth of his first claim that the ERA is necessary Administration addressed freshmen last evening life, one must first be comfortable with what one ldll appointments were minor- to achieve economic and social at 7:30 in the Hayes-Healy Center. His talk I "is becoming" in life as a person. llll'-.. equality for women in the areas venrure to say was timely especially for those To this realization is added the question of .\1urc· importantly, he reor- of education and employment. freshmen who are undecided about the college what is my motivation for attending collese. Am g.tlllt.nl the state welfare sys- This argument is fallacious program to their liking. I looking to become specialized? ; made tnto the tvnn drew praise from the ERA reveals that all pro­ in bringing one's self to birth, the need for ' , ... ugh••ut the country. Many posed amendments limiting or to help the undecided srudent, indiscriminately, future financial success and fears of its , ,,,,., L•>p1ed it. qualifying the ERA have been in clarifying interests and furure goals. elusiveness coerce one into the role of a Wht·11 R"nald Reagan says he defeated leaving the ERA as an The associate dean is an amiable and competitive machine. /.hill" the individual, he absolute mandate without any understanding man who knows that the fresh­ Toward the close of freshmen year college r.... man's world at this time can be all too readily ;~h·.t·h ,t//tndividuals. He

John Auerbach Roy Fisher prose poems (metamorphis and The persons who have a tendency to act Cu~ Ra~e), the most noteworthy of as if the world were just fine and whtch ts The Ship's Orchestra a dandy as it is. Unfortunately, it is Rea:Jing - MONDAY MARCH lOth READING- THURS MARCH13 surrealistic account of an orche~tra 4:00PM MEM LIB AUD 8:00PM MEM LIB AUD these same people that will not get a;>ked not to play. J ,I{L. k. past the title page without consider­ With neither malice or charity POET'S WORKSHOP- FRI MARCH 14 e11 .sows ., tor the book worthless. towards anyone, John Auerbach 11:00 AM MEM LIB LOUNGE Robert Bacic structures the silence of our lives in such a way that is both arresting and Fol{owing his publication of Collec­ sympathetic. ted F\ems: The Ghost of a Paper John Cage I stood on the poop deck watching Bag,(_I~9), Roy Fisher had been Greek islands conjured out from the ?esc~~bed as an Er:t~lish poet portray­ READING -8:00 WED MARCH 12th sea which zpas a silver panel, and mg unMmpromtsmg and unsenti­ MEM LIB AUD disappeanng szlently to give place to ment.al re~ism" --an artist very popu­ WORKSHOP-I :00 THURS MARCH other zslands ... lar wtth th~ youngenglish generation. 13th MEM LIB AUD In the same way an island will both A decade since the release of appear and disappear when one Collected Poems, ' and countless Recipient of a Guggenheim Fellow­ stands viewin~ it from a ship, so the miles removed from his native Bir­ ship in 1949 and an award from the stability of ltfe is transitory and mingham, Roy Fisher will address National Academy of Arts and Let­ wandering. Auerbach writes of the the University of Notre Dame at the ters, ) ohn Cage has constantly disposessed, the pathetic mambers of upcoming Sophomre Literary Festival confounded audiences for his radical the Hebrew nation. He writes of a Fisher represents a rather para­ innovation in musical composition people tainted with a malevolent doxical English nature poet. His and literature. tntluence, a past thay can and should imagery of light and wind c.'nnot be Born in in 1912, and not for~et. disputed, but that imagery is in educated at Ponoma College, Cage In hts works, Auerbach builds an competition with the confined reality made his debut in New York in 1943. interesting tension which can be of the walled, urban society. An Cage, a former student of avant descrihed as ''The Unwilling Under­ example of this is found in a poem -garde composer Arnold Schoenberg, standing." His characters are co­ entitled ''The Park''. Here the reader directed a large group of musicians erced tnCO situations in which they, confronts and contrasts a "sky drawn who played flowerpots, brake bands, albeit not by choice, must face the thin with frost, I its cloud-rims bright and other objects. Schoenberg, Cage trith of their existence mirrored in the and bitter'', and a ''Shallow concrete claimed, was never radical enough. pathos of an unwitting companion. lake,/scummed over, fouled with Jayne Anne Phillips In an interview in 1946,cage stated Industrialized man can not forget the paper''. The essential nature of such that his major contribution to musical a society must perish. • READING- TUES. MARCH 11 composition was the elimination of past, says Auerbach, even by ignor­ 8:00 PM MEM LIB AUD tng the present. Fisher, born in 1930, has spent harmony. He was born inWarsaw, has lived much of 'his life in and around WORKSHOP- WED* 12/10-11 AM Cage carries his radical artistic in Israel, and is presently working Birmingham, England. As of 1969, MEM LIB LOUNGE (TENTATIVE) views to literature. Author of M: with Saul Bellow, a man who greatly the English poet had yet to visit It is with a sense of urgency and Selected Wn'tings 67-72, and several admires him at the University of America. After receiving his B.A. what· appears to be a scorn for life other works, Cage expresses Zen . His works have been pub­ and M.A. from Birmingham Univer­ th\uJ,ayne Anne Phillips writes Black Buddhist comvictions. Both his music lished in Midstream and Prism sity. Fisher is currently a member of Tickets. The sentences are brief, but and his literary works reflect Cage's magazines, and he will be included in the Department of American Studies expitJsive in getting across the au­ artistic and intellectual diversity. an upcoming issue of Commentary. at the University of Kelle in England. thor's point of view--which happens Concert-goers, readers and students At the same time as he is speaking He was the recipient of the Andrew to be one of contempt. The sensitive of art ftnd Cage's work stimulating, here, the Spingold Theater of Bran­ Kelus Prize in 1970. and ~ppy-go-lucky reader will not innovative and, sometimes, deis University will be performing his Some of Fisher's works of verse finish Black Tickets with a smile. shocking. play, Endgame in Kiryat Gat. include Correspondence, Matrix, Al­ Phillip··~ use of phallic suggestion an Peggy Glanville-Huhs once wrote: so There and Bluebeard's ·Castle. sexual i~uendo add an almost violent '') ohn Cage is one of the rarest Greg O'Jfeara Fisher has also written a number of force to her writing. The scenes people ... not only is he endowed with depict~d are of human beings all humor, an inordinate sense of beauty found tn tpe worst of situations. and purity, and a brilliant musical Louise Gluck Most of the stories in Black Tickets brain, but he brings with him, wherever he may be, the happiness READING FRIDAY MARCH 14th are of a page or less, but Ms. Phillips does not need much space to say a and tranquility of an integrated ME~!. LIB. AUD 8:00PM WITH CHAS. SIMIC great dea! about life. Her characters personality and a mind of peace." POET'S WORKSHOP FRIDAY MARr:H 14th are usually either destitutely poor, MEM. LIB. LOUNGE 11:00 AM morally dead, or, have in some way Steve Tantillo Louise Gluck is undoubtedly one of the most highly regarded members of been deprived love, caring or c. .. ense the c~ntemporary literary world; the critics agree that her distinctive style of being needed. Girls that tell each captivates her audience, ~awing the reader's ima~ination alon~ wit~ her as other dirty words stories in a shack Charles Simic the poem develops. Whtle many of the works whtch appeared m Fzrstborn, while small boys listen avidly out­ REA"QING - W /LOUISE GLUCK her first volume of poetry, are vigorous and arresting, the uniformity of the side; and a fourteen-year-old mute 8:00,~RI. MARCHI4th tense emotions in her second volume, The HrJuse on the Marshland, MEM~LIB AUD orphan girl who sells dirty pictures POET'S, WORKSHOP -11:00 AM illustrate~ how a style can mature to become even more effective. In the latter and hustles her bodr for her drug book, the reader ftnds his own identity entangled with the poem's at the end FR. M,\RCH 14th ad~i~t , pimp. are al exa~ined _in MEM LIB LOUNGE of the reading, juH as Gluck herself meshes indiscriminately the Philltp s wnung. The world ts deple­ autobiographical and he universal. ted as a sadistic carnival groumd Charles Simic, Yugoslavian born Gluck was born Arril 22, 1943 in New York City .. She attended Sarah wher! the .nentally deranged are all poet presently residing in the United Lawrence College and Columbia University. Her lengthy list of honors on a free ide. States, is the author of four books of include: an Academy of American p, ets Prize, a Rockefeller Foundation But alo .g with the cruelty of life poetry: What the Grass Says (1967), grant, a National Endowment of the An ; grant, the Eunice Tietjens Memorial exists the :;orrow for those that are its Somewhere Amoung us a Stone is Prize from Poetry, and a Guggenheim I ellowshtp. In addition to the volumes victims. Although still somewhat Taking Notes, Dismantling the Si­ previously mentioned, Gluck has written The Garden, and many of her farfetched, these few stories add a leflce (1971), and White (1972). He • selections appear in various popular anthologies. touch of sentiment that is noticeably also translated the works of several Ms. Gluck's poems are highly praised by literary reviews even though they absent beforehand. The common French, Russian and Yugoslavian concede that her earlier works were net polished-- at times the images were situation is the more or less reluctant writers including Vasko Popa and too obvious and the words too crowded--; nevertheless, they are still beautiful return home of a young woman, Luan Luok. Simic graduated from as unfinished gems. The poems are indeed brilliant, but are missing the usually a student or teacher, who in 1966 with a crowning glory ~ince they too consciously strove for perfection. They are, finds herself challenged or threat­ bachelor of arts. He is presently according to the Sewanee Review: "tense performances, ... brilliant but lack ened by _parent's concern about what teaching at California State College reson.mce," and unfortunately the reader "cannot bel: eve a one of them." she's domg with her life. There is also in Hayward. However the consensus seems to be unanimous that Gluck has reached a the father who touchingly deflects his Simic's poetry is primarily con­ new It: vel of excellence in her later work. The critics ala: :>st seem superfluous worry about his daughter into an cerned with the relationship between in their praise-- they say that everywhere she has r1anaged to entwine obsessive and annoying worry of her individual man and the natural world opposite elements in an emotional and realistic way. Quoting the Sewanee car, and the mother who upon around him, which, Simic _perceives Review again, "Invention agrees with taste... bola and restrained ... hearing her daughter making love is innately good and leads to the originality. could not at the same time be more classis ... purity and poise." with her boyfriend, leaves the house, truth. The natural world speaks with But this seemingly excessive admiration can be understood by wanderin€ not out of offended assumptions of a different language, and for Simic, through some of her drifting lines : ''Sap rises from the sodden ditch/ anc decercy, but because she fears the major problem for the poet is to glues two gree .I ears/ to the dead birch twig./'Perilous beauty ... " revh ag her dead interest in sexual struggle with the deftencies of the Gluck's poems bring together many elements of pain and confusion and grat .lcation. language of man which must inter- . beauty. She ties them together in a beautiful and moving style. Her poems Bt, ck Tickets is not a collection of pret what the poet intuitively per­ seem to relfect her feelings, as well as the reader's feelings: they seem to fairy tales about people that live ceives from his touch with nature. have a life of their own. Since she has exhibited such remarkable happily ever after, but then, few Simic's poetic style has been improvement since her earlier work, which is superb, yet incomparable to the people in real life ever do. described as one of austure simplici­ more recent efforts, there is no telling how much further she can go as she Instead, Jayne Anne Phillips takes a ty. He prefers a plain phrase and wanders through even more of life's experiences, through, as she expresses harsh look at reality and puts society describes concrete tmages. Paradoxi­ it, "the proper pain." through the ringer. In the process, cally, his strong common oblects -- Beth Minarovich she provides an awakening for those (continued next page) ___...... ------

The Observer Wednesday, March S, 1980 -page 1 John Barth . READING SUNDAY MARCH 9th 8:30PM MEM. 'LIB. AUD. .Dismantling the Silence WORKSHOP MONDAY MARCH lOth MEM. LIB LOUNGE 10-llAM Jane Barber Wuthering Hetf,hts by D.H. Lawrence and Tom jones by Samuel Beckett, these are two hterary possibilities that John Barth, a speaker at the April Fool's Day 1979 • the deadline sealed and delivered over the sum- Sophomore Literary Festival, would like to spend evening~ discussing. The creation of such novels would represent for Barth the sol·utton to one problem for submitting your '.. name if you mer. The anxious waiting be_gins. in literature. This problem, called "used-upness" by Barth, is that there wanted to take a plunge into the Did th~ invitations geat lost 10 the seems unknown and tryout. for the position mail? Why hasn't anyone called back to be only so many ways to put words, sentences, paragraphs, and of chairman of the sixteenth edition yet? Are they all vacationing in the plots together into ideas. .. of the Sophomore. Literary festival. Swiss Alps? Will anyone RSVP? John Barth was born on May 27, 1930. He gre~ up i~ eastern Maryland The brand-new Cultural Arts Com- Queries similar to these nag the · during the rime that authors found themselves seekmg radical ways to combat missioner, .Pave.Ellison sent out a minds ofthe members constantly. "used-upness." The modernist ~roup, which includes Joyce, Eliot, and ·plea for applicant$ to students of all When the replies begm to roll tn, . Beckett. often abandoned the traditional modes of narrative. Barth became majors. . .· · . . the gambling of speaker roo!~tte · familiar with the works and ideas of these writers while he attended John Somehow tge freshmen-dire<;ted pos· commences. You p·lay the wamng Hopkin& University in Baltimore from 1947 to 1?52,. After receiving. ?is ters neglected to mention the book- game in constant appr<:hension of bachelor's degree in 1951, Barth remained at Hopk10s 10 the graduate wnung reading,.nail-bitins, time-gambling, ,accepting a not;so-favonte speaker program. · sleep~losing expenence that would one day, spending the last of the The diverse nature of his literary studies influenced the ways Barth was to awatt th(! prospective, unsuspecting budget, only to receive a call the next overcome "used-upness" in his writing. At the same time he studied and chairmen $d committee members. day from the author of your dreams read the Modernists he "discovered" the epic tale cycles of Oriental A mere days later the kids who who would be pleased to speak but is literature works such' as The Thousand and One Nights, and the stories of the ten hs···oabde$rieg···,J·.n,ed·an·itl' .. w·. ase .... r· ean wAepp,rilt uFpoo} 'ts. jothkee nottoo fond of benefit lectures. You eighteenth century . The .complexity of these works, their narrative inversions u d · 5 10 0 live in fear of having to turn someone and diversions, and their vivid characters fascinated Barth. enthusiasm ot the Festival. when likethatdown because there's just nq In his novels, Barth combines the disparate aspects of his studies. The first interviews 'Were conducted before' a money left. -Also,. an affirmative three The Floating Opera (1956), The End of the Road(1958), and The board consisting of the Cultural Ans response from an author in January Sot-Weed Factor(1960), form a trilogy of nihilism. The setting of the two Commissioner, a few Engtish faculty ·:.does not ne~ess.arily guarantee .he earlier works is contemporary eastern Maryland. These books portray men members and, most importantly, the will be lecturtng 10 March. Negattve who share the Modernist view of life as absurd and meaningless and develop chairman of the 1979 Festival. The apologetic calls, the mixing up of a "casual shoulder-shrugging acceptance." In spite of the contemporary applicants realized the responsibility plane tickets and inclement South themes a~d setting, Barth fills these stories with mythical and classical involved in chairing the largest single Berid weat1-ter have been known to allusions and techniques. expenditure made annvally by the change the outlook for a Sophomore For some readers, his classical techniques prove too heavy-handed, but Student Government. The intended Literary Festival in the rime you can critical and under-~round acclaim for Barth grew as he took his sythesis style budge.t for the 1980 Festival was turn a novel's page. one step farther with The Sot-Weed Factor. This novel, deals ~gain with the approximately $13,000 to be spent Besides luring prominent authors to nihilist view of life, but the setting is eighteenth century colomal Maryland. by the inexperienced hands of mere speak, the committee must also Based on satirical poems from 1708, The Sot-IJ7eed Factor presents BA~th's soon-to-be sophomore who at this devise a publicity campaign that will distortions and imitations of novels and histoncal documents of the penod. point had opt been residents of athe attract a large number of students. For the next six years, Barth worked on the n~JVelsthat .would b~ his ~ew Old Notre Dame campus for even eight This yeat' s campaign was intriguing Testament. His "souped-up" Bible appeared 10 1966 with the title Gzles, the months. But there's "the charm" of and clever. The first step of the Goat-boy; The Revised New Syllabus ofGc:orge Gtles Our Great Tutor. It is the wiiole event as Dave Ellison put campaign's them "Black on White" the story of a boy conceived by the automatic computer of the West Campus of it. . was a perfectly plain white poster New Tammany University and .ra~s~d on the campus go.at farm. After This enthusiasm-generating magic hung on campus walls with a "Naked discovering his humanity, George J010S the college and ulumat~ly becomes ~rows from envisioning an event that 'slf' " in the middle of the blank president, or Grand Tutor of the campus. Throu~~out the narrative lay.c;rs of 1s an entire year in the future, page: ~ix .more posters fo~o~ed, the work, Barth's satire is turned on the absurdltles of <;ontemporary htgher knowing nothing about the latest cul.mmaung 10 the seventh wh1ch was education. "great American novel," where to a full listing of the authors, dates and · Lost in the Funhouse (1968), a collection ?f "Fictions for Pr~nt, Tape, and begin blowing thirteen grand, or. places surrounded by an elaborately- Line Voice,'' and Chimera, winner of the National Book Award m 1973, are as ~hat Kurr Vonnegut' s phone number designed black border. The progres- intriguing as Giles, the Goat-Boy. These three h!ive brought t~ the author, IS. sion from empty to full represents the and to all of his other works, much popular acclaim (and financial success). ~~ The emotion~filled impact of the title· creative process of a writer. The In speaking of his writing, Ba~th .has affirmed: . ofSLF chairman hit Doug K.t:eitzburg posters become increasingly filled as My objective has been to asszmtlate ... the twentzeth century aspects of my last Aptilwheq he Pecallle the chosen ·a writer begins with a blank page and medium, to·invent some myself, and... to preserve t~e t!PPeal ... of suspense, one. · The ftrst few weeks were fllls it wid] his words. of story, with which I've been in love since the begtnmng. exciting as. he· c_hose a .committe~ of Another unique aspect of organizing Barth has returned to that beginning: he is now a professor of English at ·,five members to ponder the posstble the Sophomore Literary Festival i$· John Hopkins, and continues to dee~en the co~plexity of his objective with · course with him qf that stiU. out-of- .that there are no set schedules, no · his latest novel, Letters. The book 1s a cvllecuon of the real, forged, and · focus Match week so far away in the deadlines,·. no guidelines, no restrict~ • mislaid letters of seven· fictional correspondents, several of whom are future. · ing the forces except the allotted ·characters from his earlier works. The CQmmi~tee invaded the library · budget...... "Used-upness," obviously, is no problem for John Barttbuck Wood and began to read contemporary "Waiting is the worst part," Ellison novel after cont~mpoxary ~ovel, says characte. r~.ing the months pre- They searched for tliat certain mod~ ceding the fes~al. An important. (continued from previous page) pation in the festival itself, promi~es etn-dax•. · .. scho1a;rl}r scrib... e that coulq idea to remember in the building of often make reality seem strange and .to provide the Notre Dame-Samt make the1r Fesuvtil spectal. · Personal such an event is that ''things are terrifying. Mary's community with a rare ~d education shines as · one of the going to go wrong." There will be insightful glimpse .at both the arnst A dominant theme in many of domin~t advarl.fages>.()f being in-' disappointmentS, cancellations, out and his work. volved in the Committee~ The ·you've got to. keep that magic of simic's poems is his attempt to Born in 1947 in Sussex, England, ''decipher reality'' as Zora Dervnja David Hare received his education at members .tt~sfOt:'l)l, th~mselyes into enthusiasm alive. The last minute describes inPoet and Critic. The task literary experts thr9ug~out the technicalities keep the gamble going. of poems, Simic seems to feel, is Cambridge Univ~rsity before plu~­ ''A ging headfirst mto the dramatic spring and early summer, ~am.ining Ellison laughs, .. week before the. analo~ous to the solving of riddles. essays, perl1Sing poemsrscrutinizing festival Jt seems like there is never But S1mic has a problem with control, subculture of London's Portable The­ stories late into the rught. Doug going t_o be a festival but then the atre. Although his first attempt at Dervnja says, because he tries to be .. Kreitzburg could pe found in LaFor~ pieces· just fall togetht:t/' Frustra-. toth "the one who asks and the one writing and direction resulted m an tune in the wee morning hoUrs boring tion is another element that may set •. who answers, within the context of unsuccessful collaboration entitled Inside Out this proved of invaluable through····.·.·· !he··· gro·w··.·.··. ing ..• moun···. t~i!!.· o. f in as the SLF week passes by. ·. The . the same poem." It is Simic's belief modertr literature. ·He says~ ··We fact that· you've spent the last year that life is a puzzle which deludes us ex~erience to the budding young thou~ht we bad joined ?te pook·of~ bringing some of the greatest literary wnter. His next play,. ~lag (197~), not because 1t is an endless series of t~e-~tgh~ c~ubY /Readi!lg 40d talents to Notre>Dame and trying to! earned him both the crmcal acclrum •te· clues to a riddle. In Simic's poetry, · vtew10g, the tnembers .als: in Hare's plays have been described as a~nts, The Committee. al$o has to try c:hawmen on an English Department production at O'Laughltn Aud1tonum ·'disturbed, unsettled, and purpose­ to find a theme to tie all the speakers· desk to a list of names of authors on by the ND-SMC Theater Group, ~~re fully vulgar,'' and to a large extent ·together. ''This year the unity is everycampus wall, the Sophomore. ts considered by many drama c~i~ics these claims are valid. David Hare founa in dismantling the silence/' Literary Festival is an education for to be one of the most promismg does not mind shocking or offending Kreitzburg said. ''In a technological - those who attend the lectures but contemporary writers. His appear­ his audience as long as he succeeds world like ours, there ·are !W!ilY espeCially for those who create it. As ance at the final performance of in evoking from them a measure of .absences created by that need to be. Ellison stated, "It i$ uuly a creative Teet.l; 'n' Smiles on Saturday, March emotional and intellectual ~:.tt· 8th as well as his scheduled partici- . tion. Mike r.. · ~ .. ~ ~f~~:v~~~~1b~~~·J~;$~~; •. ;!ii!ifn':eit~f atl1ount of heart ·. ~---~ ----~ •

- - The Observer Wednesday, March 5, 1980-page 8

LONDON (AP) - Steel workers ative _government aimed at ther, an ISTC nation officer, steward who had been fired. tear up their union cards. Auto curbing union power. said of the expelled men. "Out! Out! Out!" the wor­ wcorkers hurl clods of dirt at a In recent weeks, workers at the Sheerness men were kers shouted at Derek "Red British shop steward. Welsh miners Britain's few privately owned cheered on by pot-banging Robbo'' Robinson, accused by re1ect a sympathy strike with a steel companies have refused to wives who said they were fed management of continuous dis­ brother union. strike in sympathy with their up with strikes. Many shops, ruption. Some at the mass The thread of union solidari­ union brothers who walked out resteurants and bars in Sheer­ meeting threw fruit and dirt. • t}', which wove organized labor of nationalized British Steel ness displayed posters saying Others waved placards saying, votce a dominant force in postwar Corp. plants on jan. 2. "Pickets not served here." "We don't want you back" and Britian, seems to be unravel­ Some 430 workers at the Unions, what are they? "We are voting for our jobs, not ing. Canadian-owned Sheerness They're just a handful of blas­ you.'' Steel Co. on the Thames estu­ ted people in London messing Weighung loyalties between ary were expelled from their things up," said 35-year-old When their union asked strong union and family in a harsh union, the Iron and Steel crane driver Tony Hicks, one of South Wales coal miners to economic climate, workers are Trades Confederation, for cros­ the expelled Sheerness men. strike in sympathy with steel­ starting to defy strike calls if sing picket lines set up by ''The unions have outlive their workers because of BSC plans . they feel stoppage might en­ striking BSC men. Some replied usefulness. I know they had a to shut down coal-fuled plants danger their jobs. by tearing up their union cards place once, but now they're full in the area, miners voted the dislike The grassroots rebellion is and handing them to the pic­ of power crazy people who can't strike call by an overwhelming aimed at the leadership of kets. do anything else." margin of 22,000 to 4,000. Britain's 12 million organized That is not a step taken At state-owned British Ley­ Thatcher, whose Tories rose workers - sometimes referred to lightly in alnd where the closed land, 12,000 workers at a car to power on a wave of anti­ as the men who really run shop is the norm. "These men assembly plant near Birming­ union sentiment in the election Britain - and coincides with cannot join any other union - ham voted last wek to reject a last May 3, hailed these devel­ for striking legislation from Prime Minister they are blacked by the whole union strike call to force rein­ opments as "a ,..triumph for Margaret Thatcher's Conserv- trade movement." Sandy Fea- statement of a Communist shop common sense.'' RONAL·D· .. ··-.. REAGAN FOR PRESIDENT

Where Reagan Stands .•. The Reagan Record of Achievement .• ; Ronald Reagan has been consistently forthright Ronald Reagan has a record of outstanding in addressing the issues. accomplishment as a chief executive unmatched by * Inflation. Reagan supports a ceiling on Fed- any other candidate. In eight years as Governor of eral spending, a crackdown on wasteful pro-. California-which would be the eighth largest indus- grams and regulation, and significant incentive tax trial nation in the world if it were an independent cuts to increase economic productivity. country- Ronald Reagan proved what better govern­ ment can do. * Foreign Policy. American military strength * Fiscal Responsibility When Ronald Rea­ is vital to world peace. Ronald Reagan believes gan took office, California had a substantial that this requires an increase in defense spending and deficit and faced bankruptcy. When Ronald Reagan preparedness, strengthening our allies and our allian­ left office, California had a $500 million surplus. ces, and a recognition that American weakness is an r invitation to crises like those in Afghanistan and Iran. * Welfare Reform. When Reagan was . elected-,"Colifornia's welfcne program was un- ·.vu ; Right to Life. Almost alone among can_- manqgeable, expensive and plagued by fraud. In eight didates for President, Ronald Reagan has fre~ years, Ronald Reagan significantly cut the cost and quently stated his belief that abortion involves the overhead of the welfare system, saving millions of taking of a human life. Reagan supports amending taxpayer dollars. At the same time, grants to the the Constitution to restore to the states their histori­ neediest recipients increased by 43%. cal right to legislate in this area. * Taxes. Governor Reagan was responsible for * Federal Regulation of Collegiate Ath· tax credits and rebates which gave California letics. Ronald Reagan is opposed to unneces­ voters $5.7 billion in tax relief. In 1973, he pioneered sary bureaucratic interference in this as in other areas the now-popular tax reform movement by sponsoring of American life, and has confidence that students, Proposition One, a forerunner of the successful Pro­ administrators, faculty and alumni can reach fair, position Thirteen. responsible judgments that will best promote men's * Leadership Ability. Ronald Reagan ac- and women's athletic programs. • complished these· and other objectives with a * The Draft. Ronald Regan has opposed legislature dominated by the other party. In a heavily peacetime registration, the draft, and placing Democratic state, Ronald Reagan was twice elected women in combat positions. to the highest office with huge majorities. The 1980 election is critical. We cannot accept continued inflation, erosion of our dollar, weakening of our defenses and decline in our leadership throughout the world. We cannot afford air?·~less drifting from crisis to crisis. Only Ronald Reagan has the clear thinking and proven experience to lead this country in the 1980s. LET'S MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN. RONALD REAGAN FOR PRESIDENT. Reagan for President-U.S. senator , Chairman; Bay Buchanan, Treas. A cop~ of our report filed with and available for purchase from Federal Election Commission, Washington, D.C. 20463 The Observer Wedn~y, March 5, 1980-page''9 Panel to see hostages K.hotneini overrules militants (AP) -Ayatollah Ruhollah Kho- tion on the Iranian standoff, team to the entire group of rot ini yesterday overruled Iran- saying it should not be judged hostages only as part of a ia·1 militants holding American on the basis of any particular three-stage plan. hostages inside the U.S. Em- statement from the Iranians. First, the militants would pre­ bassy in Tehran, consenting to He told reporters the "see­ sent the panel with documents a meeting between the approxi- nario had bt·en basically on proving some hostages were mately 50 captives and a U.N. track."· spies. Reportedly five hostages commission investigating the In another development, Iran­ were involved. regime of the deposed shah, ian Foreign Minister Sadegh The Commission could then President Abolhassan Bani- Ghotbzadeh rejected a request question them as witnesses. Sadr said. by the Iranian prosecutot-gen- If the commission, in its report The militants said earlier they eral that Victor Tomseh, one of to the United Nations, "man­ would not let the five-member three U.S. diplomats in custody ages to convey the will of the panel see the hostages, who at the Foreign Ministry in brave and oppressed nation of began their fifth IJlonth in Tehran, be turned over to the Iran" and to "convince" the captivity yesterday. revolutionary courts for ques- world body of U.S. crimes in The militants have followed tioning. Iran and wrongdoing by the Khomeini's directives in the Documents found by the mili­ deposed Shah Mohammad Reza past. A spokesman for them, tants at the embassy allegedly Pahlavi, "then a meeting with contacted by telephone after show that Tomseh, 38, embassy all the hostages to inquire into . the council meeting, said they political officer, had a connec­ . their health and conditions will had not been informed of tion with Forghan, an anti-cleri­ be possible." Khomeini's decision and de- cal terrorist group that claimed At a two-hour meeting Mon­ dined further comment. responsibility for a half-dozen day night, Bani-Sadr and four · Bani-Sadr, speakin~ to repor- assassinations after Ayatollah othcer Revolutionary Council ters after a counctl meeting Ruhollah Khomeini's clergy­ members told militant spokes­ Monday night, said Khomeini dominated revolutionaries took men this plan was not accept­ had been contacted and had powe'r last .year. The State able because Iranian authoriues ~iven jurisdict~on to th~ _Revolu-- Deparlr?ent denies taere'!lllfa§ a already had promised the U.N. tlonary Council. Smlimg and connection. · comm'i.ssion That it would be confident, he told reporters the Tehran Ra...:io said the mili­ abk to meet with all the council had decided the meet- tants told the Foreign Ministry hostages, the official Paris ing should take place. they woulo J.llow a v1sit by U.N. news agency reported. Tehran observers had said earlier that the panel members ...... might leave Iran as early as today if they were not allowed to see the hostages. 1980 BUSINESS & In Washington, American D.P. GRADUATES Students took advantage ofthe warmer weather to sharpen U.N. Ambassador Donald their basketball skills, possibly in expectation of Bookstore McHenry reiterated the Carter LOOK TO THE 80's Tourney. [photo by Beth Prezio] administration's cautious posi- ... LOOK TO CASTLE AM Castle, a respected leader in the metal industry will be visiting your college campus on: Week long siege continues MARCH 12, 1980 Our representative will be discussing career oppor­ BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) - he was told by the Vatican to ifesto and safe passage out of tunities in the following fields: The siege at the guerrilla­ await further orders. the country for themselves. • Management occupied Dominican Embassy The papal nuncio to Colom­ • Computer Science ended its first week yesterday bia, Monsignor Angelo Acervi, • Marketing & Development with negotiation efforts stalled •is ; among the two dozen men c Locations we will be recruiting for are in Franklin Park, and signs growin~ that authori- still being held hostage by some aucuses IL, Rockford, IL, City, MO, Davenport, lA, & . ties were prepanng for a long 30 leftist guerrillas at the Milwaukee, WI. standoff. Dominican Republic's mission. The hostages, seized last Wed- Castle Metals looks forward to meeting seniors who On the northern outskirts of •ill be graduating this year and talking about a goal the city, another guerrilla gang nesday, also include U.S. Am- tO meet •'ve worked so hard to achieve. Please contact your stased a bloodless raid on a bassador Diego C. Asencio and 1- ..;ement Office for further details on our visit to your polttical party headquarters, almost 20 other foreign dip- college campus. If unable to attend please send fleeing before police arrived. lomats. . All Mock Convention dele- your resume to: As the stalemate continued at The guerrillas freed 23 of gates must meet in their desig­ the embassy, the Vatican dis­ their captives, including all 15 nated state caucus rooms at 6 patched a veteran diplomat, . women, in three groups last p.m. tonight. Delegates will Monsignor Angelo Pio, to Bo­ Thursday, Friday and Sunday. receive their credentials at this g_ota on an unexplained mis­ The terrorists - members of time. Delegates without ere­ siOn. the leftist April 19 movement - dentials will not be allowed into Pio, who is papal nuncio in demand $50 million in cash, the convention. For more Buenos Aires, Argentinar_.de­ free.c\QJ;D. fsJJ 311 jailed \r;ftist~. information call your state nied he would be serving as a they say are political prisoners, chairman. All delegates fDUSt mediator in the crisis, but said worldwide publication of a man- be in Stepan Center by 7 P,.m. Equal Opportunity Employer MIF INTERNATIONAL VERNOR HAROLD **************** CAREER? STASSEN

A representative ********************** FOR PRESIDENT will be on the campus WEDNESDAY MARCH 12, 1980 GOVERNOR-OF MINNESOTA to discuss qualifications for DIRECTOR OF FOREIGN OPERATIONS UNDER advanced study at AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL PRE_SIDENT EISEN HOWE and job opportunities 'i. in the field of !' ASST. CHIEF OF STAFF TO ADM. HALSEY .INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT

Interviews may be scheduled at. PRESIDENT OF UNIV.OF PENNSYLVANIA PLACEMENT OFFICE MAIN BLDG. PRESIDENT OF AMERICAN BAPTIST ;: . .I '

AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL SIGNER OF U.N. CHARTER CONVENTION ,I OF INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT Thunderbird Campus Glendale, 85306 JOIN ND STUDENTS FOR STASSEN CALL 1475 The Observer- Sports "\'frdnesday, March 5, 1980 -page 10

Molarity by Michael Molinelli ... Mass.

HfY, I'vE AJE..'JE.R SEEN HEY J()W, COHE Mle H~ GO .• GO ... FLJP IT; IW1N IT, THIS ®£ BE~, I$ J1' Ll>O/t; ATTHIS ONE. [continued from page 1 ] FLIP IT.. . UP ntE~S ... HOVb NEW? ...... ---~~ IT... UP 7HERE He also said that Kennedy's plan to bypass the comapign for southern presidential pri­ maries next Tuesday raises questions as to whether the senator could be effective as the Democratic nominee. But Kennedy said last night that he does plan to mount a campaign for the Floriday pri­ mary next Tuesday. With 68 percent of Massa­ chusetts' precincts reporting, the Democratic contest stood: Kennedy 373,489 or 65 per­ cent. Doonesbury by Garry Trudeau Carter 165,923 or 29 percent. California Gov. Edmund G. ,....------. . Brown Jr. 19,739 or 4 per­ I1JN6 13NfXJ6H 70 6H05T 5CitEN cent. AIITHOOZEP HMJR'3 ANIJ M1< IAIHICJI PC/l:S{)/ NO, R/5T The rest were uncommited. 7WITY t1NI1i!l!IOI?IZEP, INCL/JIJfN6 YfX/IdWT 70 PfR5f1/IW· tiS6 7HIRJ) RAL. LIKE On the Republican side, the lHRJZ Qll &lVIS. AlSO, I /(/1/S TH/3 numbers read: B4CK.·IJP 6HOST CW 8CJ!H a: IJ4N 5!1KiutM2 811R.8APA i?ATHEKS 8001<5. I . N4t1fR5. Anderson 71 ,499 or 31 per­ / cent.

)C. Bush 69,864 or 31 percent. Reagan 65,071 or 29 percent. Tennessee Sen. Howard Baker 10,902 or 5 percent. ~ Five other candidates had scattered support. The Republican candidates would spla Massachusetts' 42 convention votes in proportion to their showing last night. Carter led Kenn<:_dy in Ver- mont by a 3-to-1 margin in ACROSS 25 Napoleon 44 Came down 10 Seldom partial returns. That was 1 Narrow defeated heavily 11 Lumber purely a preference vote, bind- aperture the Austri· 45 Hog or show 12 Raison d'- 10g no delegates. 5 Used for ans here 46 Macho 13 Exploit The returns from Vermont The Daily Crossword grinding 26 Part of 47 Recoil 21 Observe 10 Was obli· the eye 50 Hudson·s 23 Byrnes of stood this way with 94 per­ gated to 29 Humanity ship film cent of the 265 towns report- 14 Jostle 33 Forward 54 Legumes 25 Brighten up 10g 10 the Democratic pri­ 15 Light hlue 34 Yield 55 Italian 26 Dromedary mary· 16 Promissory 35 Diva's tune city , 27 Maureen Carter 24,S96 or 75 percent. or bank 36 Shopping 57 Ark. neigh­ or John. 17 Century area bor 28 Race Kennedy 8,441 or 25 pen:ent. plant 37 Stooped 58 Stimulate 29 Flightless In Vermont s Republican pri- 18 S~earer of 38 Concoct 59 Uke some birds mary, the same towns report­ the screen beverages gems 30 Faux pas ed: 19 Nucleus 39 Time 60 Museum 31 Drainer Anderson 17,0¥6 or 31 percent 20 -State periods collection 32 Cut Reagan 17,016 or 31 percent. (Florida) 40 OverthroN 61 Accqm­ 34 Ornamental 22 Did a farm 41 Baseball plishes fruit Bush 12,298 or 22 percent. job item 62 Imitation 37 Disrupts Baker 6,956 or 13 percent. 24 African 42 Brief stops gem 41 Sport Three other entries were far river in journey 63 Trim 43 Paul- behind them. Hindenburg Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: DOWN 44 Taste 1 Baden·Baden 46 Direction TWIN E. C HE R• L 0 S T et al. for remain- RADON.LUXE.OLEA 2 Remarkable ing onstage A L E R T • A M A N •rw E I R thing 47 Potato ... AP PLATOO.COMBI NE 3 "Frost­ 48 Protagonist ••• HMS TIERCrES the punkin" 49 Enthusiasm 12] No"SIAGs REo••• 4 Hemingway 50 Nazi [continued from page AVER GAIT TEE~ novel . , RudoJ! '" weeks ago, jumped from 1 ~. 13 PEA ENNUI ANI · 5 Where Dewey 51 itinerant to No. 7 with 746 po10ts. ERROR iGE.NT TRitt won worker ••• PEG WEEKEND'S Maryland, No. 7 a week ago, 6 Air 52 Meat and 8 E S P E A K -M I 7 Temptation vegetable was next with 722 points while LAND IN.ESSENESR- Notre Dame and Ohio State EGOS NAME.SNOBS 8 Prepare dish SLOE EVER.ECLAT for action 53 Political rounded out the Top 10. © 1980 by Chicago Trlbune-N.Y. News Synd. Inc. SEPS RELY.DEANS 9 Thought cartoonist The Irish, ranked 14th last All Rights Reserved J/4/80 through 56 -tizzy week when they upset DePaul, collected 594 points in edging ______,__ .. ,___ .,.______,______.,. •.,, the Buckeyes for the No. 9 slot by eight points. SAPS pteaenta on Georgetown made the big­ gest move in this week's poll, Satutday match ~th Attention ALL JUNIORS! II jumping from No. 20 to No. 11. Brigham Young nipped St. \t1ake your appointment for your John's, N.Y., 10 ma10taining the No. 12 position. Duke was yearbook portrait today. 14th followed by North Caro­ TOm CHAPIN lina, Missouri, Weber State, ~~~~~·:i.L In conceit~~~~~ Arizona State, Iona and Pur­ CALL 3557, or stop by lC LaFortune, due. Last week the Second 10 was off the ballroom. Missouri, Brigham Young, Indiana, Notre Dame, Arizona State, Weber State, Clemson, Purdue, North Carolina State and Georgetown. Duke, ending a one-week *\\.. THeRE WILL BEA absence from the poll, and v· Iona, making its first appear­ $1.00 SIDING FE:E- ance this season, are the St. mary's Little Theater newcomers to this week's poll. They replace Clemson and North Carolina State, who both 9:30Pm suffered defeats in last week's unteaerved seating J3.00 IT ts IMPORT ANT THAT ALL JUNIORS MAKE Atlantic Coast Conference tour­ nament. tickets thtough the amc programming office THEIR APPOINTMENTS IMMEDIATEL \'II All 20 teams in the poll will PI.EASE DO iT NOW. compete in the NCAA tourna­ 284-4176 ment. w W4&1dll - w ~pep ;qaz - = = - ~ i I The_Observer- SportsBoard rWednesday, M~ch 5,1980 -page 11· __ ( - ~ Kansas State; , James Tillman, Eastern Ken­ 6-5, senior, Marquette. tucky; Kiki Vandeweghe, UCLA Basketball Gene Banks, Duke; Terry Cum­ -- \. Carroll Honorable Mention mings, DePaul; , •• • • -~~ , Southwest­ Pitt;- Curtis Berry, Missouri; ern Louisiana; , Jack Moore, Nebraska; Reggie ; the first team, averaged 27 AP All-America [continued from page 12] Georgetown; , Johnson, Tennessee; Kurt 1 NEW YORK (AP)- The As­ points, 8 rebounds and 3 assists Georgetown; , lona; Nimphius, Arizona State; Dan­ leading dunk-shot artists, in a game. sociated Press 1979-1980 Divi­ , Syracuse; ny Binge, BYU; Darwin Cook, sion I All­ , Syracuse; Ronnie fact the chief operator of Louis­ King, a junior, finally blos­ America team: Valentine, Old Dominion; Boo Portland; Ron Cornelius, Pep­ ville's so-called "Doctors of 1 somed into the greatness long First Team Bowers, American U.; Mike perdlne; Rod Foster, UCLA; Dunk.'' One of his specialties · predicted for him, leading Mary , 7-1, senior Perry, Richmond; Corny Kimberly Belton, Stanford; Purdue; , 6-6, jun­ Thompson, Connecticut; Ron Michael Wiley, Long Beach is a reverse dunk, which he puts land to the regular-season At­ ior, Maryland; , Perry, Holy Cross; Earl Belcher State; Jim McCloskey, Loyola home with as much fervor and lantic Coast Conference champ­ 'I 6-7, sophomore, DePaul; Dar­ St. Bonaventure; Rufus Harris, of Los Angeles; Wally Rank, ferocity as anyone in the land. ionship with a year that in­ rell Griffith, 6-4, senior, Louis­ Maine; Kevin . McHale, Mln­ San Jose State; Don Carfino, Griffith averaged 22 points, 5 cluded a 22-point, 7- ville; , 6-3, senior, sesota; Steve Johnson, Oregon Southern Cal. . State; , Virginia Kevin Ransey, Ohio State; rebounds and 3 assists a game average. Second Team· Sam Bowie, Kentucky; Larry , Kansas; Lar­ for the Metro Conference He was the cat~lyst for a , 6-11, senior, Smith, Alcorn State; Steve ry Drew, Missouri; Calvin Gar­ champions. Maryland team that was not Duke; Dor Collins, 6-6, senior, Stepanovich, M issourl; Rickey rett, Oral Roberts; Earnie Hill, The 6-3 Macy has been] oe B. expected to finish any higher Washington State; Michael • Brown, Mississippi State; Oklahoma City; , Brooks, 6-7, senior. La Salle; , Indiana State; Billy Williams, Hall's "coach on the floor" at than fifth in the ACC this year. Reggie Cdrter, 6-3, senior, St. Notre Dame. Clemson; Tony Murphy, South­ Kentucky ever since he helped John's; Ray Blume, 6-4, junior, Rudy Woods, Texas A&M; ern; Klenny Cunningham, the Wildcats win the NCAA Oregon State. , State; Western Michigan; Mike championship in 1978. Among Third Team Mike 0' Koren, North Carolina; Woodson, Indiana; , , 6-10, junior, Durand Macklin, LSU; De­ Virginia; Terry Teagle, Baylor; Macy' s most supreme qualities Basketball tix Ohio State; , 6-7, Wayne Scales, LSU; Ethan lsiah Thomas, Indiana; Kevin is his ability to thrive in senior, Mississippi; Lewis Martin, LSU; Hawkeye Whit­ Boyle, Iowa; , pressure situations. • Lloyd. 6-6, junior, Drake; Ro­ ney, North Carolina State; Sid­ Maryland; AI Wood, North Macy, one of the nation's top lando Blackman, 6-6, junior, ney Green, Nevada-; Carolina. foul shooters with a 92 per cent rem am average, averaged 16 points and 5 assists a game this year . Aguirre was the main reason available for DePaul's success ·this sea­ Tickets for Notre Dame's sec­ . . . Center ring son, helping the Blue Demons ond round game in the Midwest build a 26-game winning streak Regional of the NCCA basket­ a correlation · berween that fact and Notre [continued from page 12] and keeping them atop the polls ball tournament go on sale to Dame's·failure to usually advance beyond those for a.good part·~&e Y~T· the general public today at the risen. "This is step one. We have to win preliminary rounds. The 6-7 star was ·named" the best Gate 10 box office at the Saturday before we even think about Houston.'' In any case, there is a realistic possibility that power forward in America by Athletic and Convocation Cen­ And he says · again that he needs the Notre Dame will advance to Houston and even to some observers, to which De ter. Tickets for the game, students to, in his words, ''get it done." Ticket the finals, played this year in Market Square Paul Coach Ray Meyer adds: which the Irish will play Satur­ manager Busick claims that students have been Arena. That's in Indianapolis and it's not over ''He may be the best all-around day afternoon against the win­ notoriously lax in purchasing tickets for first spring break. A hell of a lot of people will want ballplayer ever to come to ner of Thursday's Missouri-San and second round N.C.A.A. games. If you tickets to that game ... DePaul." Jose State game, are priced at subscribe to Digger's philosophy, there may be But first, reminds Digger, there's step one. Aguirre, only sophomore on $7, $8, and $9.

All classif!ed a~s must be_received by 5:00p.m., two days prior to the tssue m whtch the ad IS run. The Observer office will accept class!fieds Monday throuQh F~iday,_ 10:00 a.m. to 5;00 p.m. All Classifieds classtfteds must be pre-patd, etther m person or through the mail.

ANARFP and Paz, Student Chooses: $120 shares house Stage Door John ie. VOTE: or $90 for furnished room with bath. Ready for th& weekend? I'm still Miss you.this semester at computes. Notices Thomas NUNNELLEY $75 deposit. Call 289-0103 nights or looking for incartation. Any clw3s? LEARY weekends. 16 score and 7 Morrissey Loan Fund Happy Birthday Janet LEITZINGER N0 Student loans $20-$200. Due in Love, the TV:~nackers. • JENNINGS one month. One percent interest. Hey Dink! . Basement LaFortune 11:30-12:30 M-F. - Wanted Happy. happy day! Tom Jensen: Admiree: Last day for May grads to apply is 1cherish you, K ... forever, a day and a Happy Birthday Cutle!l This is your personal. It remains the March 14 moment. from a not so sacret,admlrer LADY's choice. Need ride to Toledo or Columbus, OH An Admirer March 6 or 7. Call Maria 6925. T. Tuesday Is ND-SMC Day at Royal Gin, Valley Ski Resort! 2 tor 1 lift tickets Peasant Dress- Wanted: N.eed ride to Champaign­ To chuck Wood and all the gang, Happy Birthday to the cutest, most 3-10 pm, also 2 for 17-10 pm M-Tu-Th. 1 know why you had a good time Urbana on March 7th. Mark 1764. Thank you all very much . I love you understanding, and most lovable girl 2chairlifts. CLOSEST SKI AREA TO all. around. I'm glad you're mine. Friday. Does it go both ways? CAMPUS. Buchanan, Michigan. Need ride to Champaign-Urbana on Englishman March 7th. Mark 1764. Mike Love, Andy ------Typing in home-Close to ND. Best Dear Barb B. at Carroll, Need ride to Ohio U. area or Cincinnati Scholastic Writers Mtg. All board Dear Billy Pollock, ti:na to call--mornings or evenings members required to aUend 6:00 Wad. Meet me in St. Louis? · Just thought I'd check up on you. after 6:30 272-4895. March 14. Please call Chris 2103. How's it going? When are you coming 3rd Year Business Major naactad. down again? An Tostal, maybe? See Neea naers to osu Columbus, Ohio ya! . Typing Plus. Term papers, theses, area this weekend. Call Jon..at 1188. "Make a wish·' come true. Listen to Once a month, 3 months to .explain dissertations. Light editing, ghost Tom Chapin this Saturday at the SMC budget operating statement. Marnaret writing. Literary search, bibliogra­ Need riders to N.J. leaving Fri. March Little Theatre. Contact Volunteer Services 7308 pnies, genealogies. Job resume 7. Call John 233-6370. Ryan. service. Sliding rate scale based on Bill P. Attention Hockey Fans: Experience My deepest apologies for letting you lead time. Special discounts on full down Saturday. Can you ever forgive • 1 need six graduation tickets. Call Dick I am madly in love with you. Can fie Alumni's ''Killin' of Dillon" Pep Rally contracts for theses and dissgrtations. arrange a meeting? me? Any time you want breakfast, Aardvark Automatic Solutions/P.O. ~~~68~1. ------~~--· You're my idol ~~~~~~~~~~~~---·-~ find an I. D. and meet m'e in 'E'Iine ~t Box 1204/413624/219-289-6753. Need one-way ride for two to Daytona Flanner Reisidents vote Rob 8:00. Margaret for Spring Break. Can leave at 12:30 Ohio Delegates: Meet Wednesday at "SKATES" Cagnon for UMOC. Spring Braak-Last chance to gat hotel 6:oo pm--115 O'Shag. on Thurs. 27th. Call 6778. ------~------reservations In Ft. Lauderdale and Jan Juniors- Margaret: Daytona Drive N'Save to Ft. Lauder­ ------How many people will partake In You cheapskate! dale only $109 or Daytona only 1 need a ride to Philidslphia over Ryan $99. spring break. Willing to share ga$ and Pam, Tim, Mark, John: "tuale action" In California? Bring In Limited space. For mora information, P.S. how 'bout if I was 5'5'? driving. 1am able to leave Wednesday I'd like to taka this opportunl!f to your $50 deposit for 1980 Senior trip. call Ken 283,1387. March 26 or later.· Please call Joe at thank each of you for "baing there ' in Due March 10-14. Kim, 1 6726. Dayton. I really appreciats it. Panama Rod To the girl In the graan swimsuit Why the heavy abuse?!! Conclusion --jumping isn't fair--or is .It? ------Need ride to/from Long Island, N.Y. Sunday afternoon whose friend didn't lost & Found for spring break. Please call Tony Hey Juniors-Your ticket to a gre~;t need a bathingcap-l'd really like to Doctor "G" Senior yaar-Nunnelley, Leary, Leitz­ 3079. meat you. Respond through personals Lost: Turquoise ring with a silver Inger, & Jennings. Timothy Terrence- band. Call Anne 1274. how I can gat in touch, ok ... ------If you are worried about survival, start Busy Babysitter You have beautilul blue eyes sir. Snow Bunny: Don't worry! Lost: Liscense plate New Jersey thinking health and wealth. LIGHT­ FORCE and your life force work Congratulations and praise on your Senior Class presents another Pulaski Love always, Your "Lah:dee-dah" 682-KMT. Please return. Sentimental step up in life. Teach those Demers value. Call 7631. together to produce the best nutrition Post Party, Friday, March 7th, 9:00-? ------·~- which brings you cash/bonus every journalism! 25 cent beers all night. 1606 W. Ryan VerBerKmoes- .:,:' ,: Lost: Ruby ring with gold band. month. Keep your own hours. Be Western Ave. Some people have ne11er bear~ of a ' Reward. Call Paul at 7336. your own boss. Send brief resume to; Tutors needed: telephone. That's the last ,time 11ever I 1. High school student, Algebra­ Congratulate !Jle new Slounge Queen, make dinner for you! (Or IS1hat (What Pat Bailey, 514 S. Edward, Mt. you were trying to brirtg (lbGUt?)· Found: Orange glove. Call 6866 to Prospect, Illinois, 60056. Or call Geometry II. Mom, and her Court, DenOon and 1 claim. LIGHTFORCE 312-870-1146 for fur- • 2. Student preparing for GED test. DiDi. ---- I'll never forgive you-- ! Contact Volunteer Service 7308. ther information. HELP!!! Need lift to tincoln to see Lost: glasses in black case possibly in The Great Book$--the great minds. Eng. Aud., SOH, or Bookstore? If ------Bath, Meet faculty and students at the gam~. Will trade for P!ac~ to stdy. or jl Need ride to Philadelphia for break. Congratulations on becoming Sports $$$. Call Jack 1949. :;;>: .. . found, call Mike 1609. Call Kathy 1260. General Program of Liberal Studies, Edltorf · Monday, March 10. 7:30 pm, Grace Patsy ------~---- ! Found: Sliver Digital watch in ACC, 2 -Pit. . Rick Irwin (with an 'e'), · , weeks ago. Call Mike 1609. Mucho thanks for nde hom a and For Sale Organizational mee\jng of Notre Don't miss Tom Chapin In concert It mucHsimo apQJogies 'for the abusP Dame-South Bend Bicycle race Thurs­ SM C on March : wh;;t ya kidding me?). Hey-- I can't see the real you if you day, March 6 Room 2-D 8:00 pm· 811!. don't get my glasses! ·May have lost DOME-, greenhouse, 16' diameter, Love, Crybabies $200. Price includes help with LaFortune. For more information, call them at 621 Napoleon Friday--call 234-0467. . . Color Basketball pictures available. 3047. construction. Call 7213 days, 232-0634 All games, including DePaul and Patricia Curtin evenings. Maryland thrillers. All sizes. Cheap. Congrats on acce.ptaoce! 11

• Wednesday, March 5, 1980 -page 12 At Chicago Circle Carroll heads Fencers prepare for Great Lakes All-America

by Paul Mullaney also serves as a qualification ''Our women really don't match selections Assistant Sports Editor time for the following week­ up with a team like Wayne NEW YORK (AP) - Once an end's national championship State," claims DeCicco. "Gina awkward high school player in After finishing the 1980 reg­ competition to be held at Penn Farkashazy and Hanne Denver, ) oe Barry Carroll took ular fencing season with a 19-1 State. Skattebol are practically un­ his time developing- at Purdue. record, coach Mike DeCicco's Defending NCAA champion beatable on the collegiate wo­ But once he did, the sky was Irish are preparing for Satur­ Andy Bonk (35-4 on the year) men's level. But we're very the limit for the giant they call day's Great Lakes Champion­ and freshman Marc DeJong competitive. We've got some '' Rocky Mountain High. '' ships at Illinois-Chicago C~rcle. (17- 7) will represent the Insh m excellent fencers, but they're '' I can see him becoming an Notre Dame is coming off foil, while captain Chris Lyons not the type that are inter­ outstanding pro player, " says weekend victories over Mich­ (37-6) and Greg Armi (35-8) will nationally renowned." his coach, Lee Rose. "I believe igan-Dearborn (19-8) and fence in the sabre. Senior epee After the Great Lakes compe­ he'll make a good living at it. Washington of St. Louis (21-6). captain Thorn Cullum (22-13) tition, the National Intercol­ He's big and strong." Last ThursdaYthe Irish suffered and freshman teammate Rich legiate Women's Fencing As­ Rose's admiration is shared by their first setback in a little over Daly {23-5) will also take part in sociation (AIWF A) Qualifica­ many and reflected in Carroll's the action. tion Round will take place. five dears, as Wayne State selection to the Associated edge DeCicco's squad, 14-13. "Our chances in the Great Freshman Susan Valdiserri (21- "Press All-America college bas- . That put an end to 'Notre Lakes are pretty good if we 13) and sophomore Marcella ketball team for 1979-80. Dame's dual meet winning fence well in each number-two Lansford ( 11-1 0) will join The Purdue skyscraper was streak of 122 wins -- what is position," adds DeCicco. "If Carney and Bathon in Chicago, named yesterday to the First in hopes of qualifying for the believed ro be the longest string all of our people can make it to T earn by a nationwide panel of n collegiate fencing history. the finals, we should have a NIFW A Campionships, to be AP writers along_ with Louis­ good shot at it. Wayne State held at Ohio State the last ville's and Kyle "In a way I guess I'm will ~ the favorite , but it they weekend of March. disappointed that the streak is Macy of Kentucky at the guard loseeither or both of their sabre Irish Items: Over the week­ positions and DePaul's Mark over," says DeCicco, in his 19th men for the finals -- which is a end the Irish also elected A~uirre year as head coach. "But it had and Maryland's Albert possibility -- then that can captains for the 1981 season. Kmg at forwards. to end sometime. I just hope really open things up." Those chosen were Ray Benson Carroll's arrival as a player in we can get it together in the Notre Dame's 11-2 women's in foil, Greg Armi in sabre, his junior year last season Great Lakes and the NCAA foil team will also partake in the I finals.'' Kevin Tindell in epee and signaled a turn in Purdue's Great Lakes, with seniors Susan Valdiserri in women's basketball fortunes, transform- · The Irish will send two Dodee Carney (31-8) and Liz foil. ing a 16-11 team from the year '~ fencers per weapon to Chicago Bathon {30-10) serving as re­ An annual tradition calls for before to 27-7 and a tri-champ­ on Sa"turday, as the Great Lakes presentatives. the fenc:ng manager to partake ionship in the elite Big Ten, as in the final weekend's competi­ well as an NIT berth. I' tion. And this year was no This season, the 7-foot-1 sul­ exception. Senior manager len star averaged 22 points and [ Duane Blaine will go into the 10 rebounds a game while Despite loss to Notre Dame, record books as a . 500 epee keeping the Botlermakers I fencer. After losing a bout All-American among the nation's leading against Washington, Blaine re­ Orlando Woolridge was named teams. ' DePaul remains atop AP corded a victory against an honorable mention AII­ Griffith is one of ~he nation's I Michigan-Dearborn. Not bad Amen·can yesterday. More sel­ (AP) - Ray Meyer claims the stand a good chance of going all for a rookie. ections on page 11. [continued on page 11} monkey is finally off DePaul's the way." I back. And that could spell DePaul collected 54 of 59 trouble for any team which first-place votes and 1,173 Ticket sales I faces the Blue Demons in the points out of a possible 1,180 in I upcoming Natiunal Collegiate the balloting by a nationwide Athletic Association tourna­ panel of sports writers and I ment. broadcasters. The Blue I Meyer and DePaul got rid of Demons were ranked No. 1 in Digger : in the center ring I the monkey last Wednesday the final eight weeks of the poll, when their quest for an unde­ being selected unanimously six I never believed in reincarnation until now. It I feated season was stopped by times. took a while, but I've finally decided that Digger ' Notre Dame 76-74 in double Phelps used to be someone else. And I've even Frank Louisville, ranked fourth last figured out who he was .... ~ overtime. week, edged Louisiana State for "We've relaxed quite a bit Ever hear of P.T. Barnum? You know, the I the No. 2 position. The since the loss to Notre Dame," circus master who ran around telling everyone LaGrotta ~ Meyer said after learning the Cardinals got two first-place he had the greatest show on earth? Well, listen Blue Demons had maintained votes and received 1,030 points to Digger talk about the· N.C.A.A. tournament ''This is an opportunity for our students to be - 12 more than the Tigers, who the No. 1 position in The that he and his team will be starring in a part of the challenge of going after a national ' final college picked up one first-place vote in beginning Saturday ... championship," he said of Saturday's game. advancing two notches in this "It's the greatest show on earth," he And in keeping with his personality, Digger has basketball poll for the 1979-80 week· s poll. season. proclaimed after yesterday's practice. ''There's it all figured out. ''The Uoss has taken the Kentucky collected the final nothing more exciting than a tournament game "It's an easy eight or nine hour ride from here monkey oli our backs.'' two first-place votes and 956 because it's all or nothing.'.' to Lincoln," he plots in the middle of practice. But he notes the NCAA points in slipping from No. 2 to "There's just no second chance." One almost gets the feeling that these plans are tournamem is the starr of No. 4, while Oregon State Shades of man-eating lions, asbestos-tongued as important as the preparation going on behind another season for DePaul. moved up one place and took fire-eaters and tight rope walkers without safety him on the court. "What we did before makes no over the No. 5 position with 872 nets! "The students can leave early Saturday difference now,'' said Meyer, points. Ok, ok ... admittedly .this 48-team tournament morning and get down there in time for the 3:30 who has guided the Blue Syracuse, ranked third last lacks the death-defymg appeal of an Evil . (CST) ufoff. It's all interstate and there are Demon's fortunes the past 38 week but beaten by George­ Knieval leap over whatever canyon happens to plenty o ·tickets available.'' years. "We're ~oing to pia y town in the Big East Con­ get in his way. But Digger hits on one of the And he's right about that one. Last night, every team in this tournam~nt ference tournament title game, underlying principles of athletics when he talks ticket manager Mike Busick reported that as if our lives depended on It. fell to sixth with 785 points. about each game being do-or-die. "about fifty" had been sold to students. That's We're going to be emotionally Indiana, unranked three "It is not another game," he emphasizes, fifty out of an allottrnent of 750. Digger frowned ready fo:· every game. And if with fingers pointing and voice raised. ''Every when he heard that one. we c~w get by that first one, we [continued on page 10] game in the N.C.A.A.'s is the game." "Every fall, students complain because they And that's what makes each game so can't get rickets to basketball games," he points appealing. I mean, what would you rather out. "Well here's an opportunity to get a good watch, the seventh game of the World Series or -seat for a ~reat basketball game that is easily AP Final Top Twenty a game between the Braves and the Dodgers within drivmg distance." played on a lazy Sunday afternoon in July? It's And fhen he makes his final pitch. And he's The Top Twenty teams in the final Associated Press the finality of the whole thing that makes people dead serious. college basketball poll, with first place votes in parenthesis, watch ... that makes them care. "We need the students," he stresses. "You records, and total points. Points based on 20-19-18-17-16-13- Since I have been at Notre Dame, the saw what they did to DePaul here last 14-13-12-11-10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1: basketball team has played in 10 N.C.A.A. Wednesday. Well if we play Missouri on tournament games. I've been to nine of them, Saturday they'll be playing 10 their own back l.DePaul (54) 26-1 1,173 11. Georgetown, D.C.24-5 564 missing only the first game of the 1978 playoffs yard. Nebraska is B1g 8 country and they'll be 2.Louisville (2) 28-3 1,030 12. Brigham Young 24-4 485 against Housto~ in Tulsa, Oklahoma. 1 figure the crowd favorites. We need the students to 3.LouisianaSt. (1) 24-5 1,018 13. St.John's, N.Y. 24-4 479 I've spent quite a few hours and a few more turn us on.'' . 4. Kentucky (2) 28-5 956 14. Duke 22-8 450 dollars on the determination to be there if we And if you really want to get him mad, tell him 5. Oregon St. 26-3 872 15. North Carolina 21-7 322 ever "win it all." you're saving your money for Houston or 6.Syracuse 25-3 785 16. Missouri 23-5 278 And I don't regret a second or a cent of it. Indianapolis. 7 .Indiana 20-7 746 17. Weber State 26-2 240 Every tournament game is like last Wednes· "Hey, there is no second round without · 8. Maryland 23-6 722 18. Arizona State 21-6 156 day's DePaul game only better ... more intense ... winning on Saturday,'' he says, his ire visibly 9. Notre Dame 22-5 594 19. lona 28-4 142 more important. Why? Because like Digger 10. Ohio State 20-7 5861 20. Purdue 18-9 120 says, "You lose, you're out." [continued on page 11]