, , , Exorcism -page 3

VOLUME XV., NO. 54 an independent student newspaper serving notre dame and saint mary's TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1980 Attorney outlines pending Diplo~ats lawsuit against University by Mary Fran Callahan prepare Iran ·Senior Staff Reporter

Last winter, 66 women initiated a lawsuit- which is to be heard in negotiations St.Joseph's District Court on Nov. 24- charging the University with sex discrimination. Washington (AP)- The di­ Of the 66 women, 50 are currently faculty members, according to plomatic team sent to Algeria bv attorney Charles Barnhill, who is representing the women in a class President Carter is carrying ~ action suit. Barnhill, of the Chicago-based Charles Barnhill & pledge of non-intervention in Associates, yesterday explained the grounds of the lawsuit. Iran's internal affairs along with "Notre Dame systematically discriminated against them (the plain­ an explanation of the difficulties tiffs)," he contended. in meeting other terms for free­ Timothy McDevitt, general counsel for the University, said the ing: the 52 American hostages, women are charging that they were discriminated against in several l!.B. officials said yesterday. areas. Some plaintiffs claim they were denied tenure; others claim "We would like to be as posi­ they were denied jobs- because of the their sex. tive as possible, but they have to Whether or not the lawsuit can be settled out of court remains understand the legal and other nebulous. complications," one official, When asked if negotiations were pending to reach such a who asked not to be identified, settlement, McDevitt replied, "At the present time, no. Right now, it told The Associated Press. "Gen­ surely looks as though we'll be in court on the 24th." erally, it's a positive response." Barnhill, however, responded to the same question by saying, "I'm But, he and other officials not at liberty to say anything right now." He said he would "have stressed, returning the assets of details" in the near future. the late Shah Mohammad Reza Several years ago, Brown University was involved in a similar Pahlavi and cancelling all claims lawsuit. McDevitt explained that the court decided that it would keep against Iran - two of the con­ a watchful on Brown to insure itcomplied with legal guidelines. A ditions laid down by the Iranian more recent case at the University of Minnesota resulted in a parliament on Nov. 2- would settlement, according to McDevitt. be extremely difficult to arrange Barnhill contended, however, that the "rulings in the past have for legal and other reasons. gone agaimt the women:" He attributed unfavorable rulings to Freewheelir!' in the Fall... The bicycle shows tlse/f more than a Summer "It's hard to say what flexi­ runabout, and its driver, no 1m than adventurous (Photo by Helen Odar}. bility, if any, there is in the (amtinued on page 4) Iranian position," said the of­ ficial, who has closely followed the hostage crisis. "It's also dif­ ficult to say how much will there Anti-critne progratn includes Chetn-Shield is to end the thing." The U.S. mission, headed by Deputy Secretary of State Hy David Rickabaugh crime prevention. Prevention has not been con­ women's dorms with the placing Warren M. Christopher, flew to Staff Reporter "It does not make you safe, but fined to the individual; several of a telephone and resident list­ Algiers yesterday to explain the if carried in the hand rather than dorms are taking crime preven­ ing at the main door in an complications to Foreign In an attemp~ to combat the in a pocket, you may be able to tion measures. attempt to prevent unwanted Minister Mohamed Benyahia and rising crime wave at Notre ward off a possible attacker," All doors on men's dorms, ex­ intruders from entering the hall. his aides and wait long enough Dame, Student Government has stated May in support of her cept for the main entrances, will The Grace and Flanner Towers for any Iranian response. developed a crime prevention project. be locked after 7:00p.m. Zahm are going to have a new lock While Christopher and the Hall has installed a system similar system installed as a crime pre­ program which includes the sel­ May feels the spray is better to the detex system used in vention measure. (continued on page 4) ling ofChem-Shield, a mace-like protection than a weapon which spray hidden in a leather case key could seriously harm both victim .,, chain, at the Hammes Bookstore and attacker. starting Friday. After dawn~ first light Chcm-Shield is an irritant that May stated, "The selling of affects the would-be attacker's Chem-Shield in the bookstore respiratory areas, eyes, and skin. may eliminate the false sense of The mugger's eyes close and the security which presides at Notre Cadettes honor Edmund Fizgerald nose is unable to be used for Dame, but mainly we are hoping breathing due to the constricting the off-campus students will con­ by Kathy Horak sanctuary bell 29 times Sunday southeastern Lake superior of moist membranes. sider carrying Chem-Shield when Associated Press Wrtter when special services mark the about 3:30p.m., when McSor­ The spray, which is made by walking to and from the cam­ Fitzgerald anniversary. ley radioed a nearby U.S. Steel the Weapon Corporation of pus." DETROIT (AP)--J ust after ''We keep it alive every Corp. freighter, the Arthur M. year. It's one significant tra­ America, is a non-toxic sub­ In addition to the spray, May dawn's chilly first light Mon­ Anderson. gedy that will keep alive our stance which may be nullified by conducted an inspection of the day, 80 cadets from the Great Pounding waves had ripped recognition of what the Great a deck rail from the Fitzgerald rinsing the eyes and washing the night lighting situation at the Lakes Maritime Academy will Lakes are and the personnel and the ship was tilting severe­ skin with soap and water. University with Notre Dame stand at silent attention as two who work them," Ingalls said ~ ly, McSorley told the Ander­ Rose May, Security Commis­ Secu·rity. wreaths are dropped into Grand Traverse Bay. in an interview. son's skipper, Capt. ] esse sioner for Student Government, Student Government is also They will honor the crewmen He. said he remembers the Cooper. was responsible for the Student developing a poster campaign of the freishter F.dmund Fitz­ But McSorley also said Government's endorsement of urging students to lock their gerald, wh1ch sank with all 29 ·.·.·.· .....·.·.•.· .....·;·.·.·;·. pumps were draining the hat- Chem-Shield as a method of doors to prevent crime. hands during a vicious storm TUESDAY ~-.·.·.·.·························· : ches. the Anderson crew later on Lake Superior five years testified before a Coast Guard ago, on Nov. 10, 1975. =;======'$;======FOCUS Marine Board of Investigation The investigation into the that the Fitzgeral did not seem final voyage of the evormous seriously imperiled. ore earner was officially closed sinking "as though it were The 51/ degree waters grew with a U.S. Coast Guard report yesterday." wilder as night fall. By 7:10 in] uly 1977. But the legend of The 729 foot freighter was p.m., with the Fitzgerald 13 the Edmund Fitzgerald sur­ bound for Detroit from Super­ miles off Whitefish Point, vives, in a haunting ballad of ior, Wis., loaded with 26,126 1 waves had built to 25 feet and singer Gordon Lightfoot and as tons of taconite ore pellets. The winds were gusting to 75 mph a testimonial to the treacherous captain, Ernest M. McSorley of in what observers termed the gales of November and the Toledo, Ohio, had 40 years' worst autumn gale in 35 years. Great Lakes sailors who defy experience traversing the When the storm's fury had them. lakes. spent itself 12 hours later all At Mariners' Church in Records from that fateful that remained for rescue c~ews Autumfl: time for the out-ofdoors. See related photos on pages 3 anti 5 (Photos downtown Detroit, the Rev. Monday show the Fitzgerald were two lifeboats, one raft by Helen Odar). Richard Ingalls will toll the was nearing Whitefish Point in and an oil slick. l\T~~Sc~==~==·=~~~~S======~======T=ue=s=da=y='=N=o=ve=m=b=e=r=1=1=,1=9=8=o~==pa=g=e~2 by The Observer and The Associated Press Inside Tuesday Editor explains LaGrotta article Rev. John]. Fitzgerald, C. S.C. has been appointed acting director of campus ministry at the Edttor's Note: An article that appeared on The University of Notre Dame by Prof. Timothy O'Meara, provost. Observer feature page last week parodying Frank Molly He succeeds Rev. William A. Toohey, C.S.C., who died LaGrotta's columns has caused some mixed feelings on October 13 after a brief illness. Fr. Fitzgerald, 3 7, is a native of campus. Features Editor Molly Woulfe explains the Chicago wh0 entered the Holy Cross novitiate in 1961, received controversy surrounding the column. Woulfe his bachelor's degree from Notre Dame in 1965, his M.A. in theology from Holy Cross College, Washington, D.C., in 1968 This is a different ltmde column. No quoting

Standing mmdst the darly deluge of leaves, thm able At St. Mary's I grounds keepers eradicate the campu.r of the botanical Fall guys abundance (Photo by Helen Odar). ,

Officers plan many activities Molarity now in book By Kathryn Dale and Christmas Bazaar, a Christmas also initiated several other class Anne jane Dregalla mass and coffee, and a co-spon­ activities, including the first in a sored Mistletoe Happy Hour at series of Sunday ND/SMC "Rec ~6J.~t1 In recent weeks, the Saint Gipper's. Nights" in Angela. They plan an Mary's elevators have become Mary Joan O'Keefe, Junior open gym along with organized ON THE ROAD crowded with flurries of an­ Class president, is dedicating volleyball and all are encouraged TO SELLING OUT nouncements of activities taking much of this year to developing a to join. place around campus. Saint good working relationship with The sophomores also have Mary's class officers have a full Notre Dame women. She feels been sponsoring a Speakers slate of activities lined up for the that "the women at Notre Dame Series, with the final speaker fall semester, and are hopeful of and Saint Mary's have a lot in being Tony Campbell, this high participation among both common, and we should be able Thursday at 7 p.m. in the Sta­ Mit-luwl Molinelli Saint Mary's and Notre Dame to bring them togetheJ to get to pleton Lounge. Later this month A collection of Michael Molinelli's students. know each other better." the sophs will be having a The Senior Class, under Presi­ Toward this end, the juniors, in Thanksgiving Hayride. In best comic strips from 1977-1979 is dent Teri Hill, have organized a planning their traditional December, they are looking for­ available to you at your home. wide variety of happenings. This Christmas Animal Walk and ward to the Christmas Bazaar and COMING SOON Saturday, the seniors will spon­ Lumen Christi Mass, have de­ a very special ABROAD night, TO NOTRE DAME/SAINT MARY'S BOOKSTORES sor a Senior SMC/ND Raquetball cided to send personal invita­ where they will have airmail and Tennis Tournament. Every­ tions to ND junior women. papers and envelopes available one involved will be able to O'Keefe feels th

Students from the following FULL SERVICE UNISEX CENTER halls will give blood in the Student Health Center from 1 ~------HAIR CUTTING SPECIALISTS ------llllllllillllrr p.m. to 3:00 p.m. on the days mdicated: Our master stylists have the up·to·date and Breen-Phillips and Grace--Nov­ ember 11, 12, 13; Lewis and eonventional styles lor the men and women. ol the Cavanaugh--November 18, 19, 20; Zahm and Pangborn--De­ ,Notre Dame and Saint Mary's eampuses. cember 2,3,4 Last year contributions by Let us take eare ol all your hair eare needs. Notre Dame men and women were part of a record 12,600 units of blood drawn by the We also have a lull line ol retail hair produets and are loeated on Central Blood Bank for use by eampus lor your eonvenienee. the sick in Saint) oseph County hospitals.

J The Observer Tuesday, November 11, 1980-page4 Five experts search for prits in Atlanta killlngs

ATLANTA (AP)- Five sleuths latest victim, 9-year-old Aaron known for having solved mur- Jackson, was buried nearby. His ders in their own cities con- body was found Nov. 2, a day verged on Atlanta on Monday to after he disappeared. Police said begin helping local officials find he was suffocated. the killer, or killers, responsible The five homicide investiga­ for the deaths or disappearances tors joining the inquiry have each · of 15 black children. helped break major murder cases The five- including a detec- in their home cities. , tive who came out of retirement Pierce Brooks, who retired to join the hunt here- were ar- after 29 years of police work, was riving from New York, Los captain of the investigation clivi­ Angeles, Oakland, Detroit and sion in Los Angeles that cracked Stamford, Conn. the "Onion Field" murders, later Meanwhile, in New Jersey, a the subject of Joseph ·self-proclaimed psychic who Wambaugh's book of the same spent four days in Atlanta aiding name. investigators predicted a major Lt. George Myer, commander 1 break in the case could occur of the major case investigative 'Wednesday. division in Stamford, has solved "Now I could be off 24 hours several multi-murder cases in his either way, said Dorothy 21 years of police work, inclu­ Remcmher Smior year- High school? One ofthe many campm to11rs introduces college prospectives to Notre' Dame, Allison of Nutley, N.J., "but I'm ding_the so-called "Parkway Bra l11dialltl (Photo by Helen Odar).. expecting some of the first an- Murders," the slayings of seven swers in this case on the 12th." black women. She predicted the possible arrest Charlie Nan ton was sent from ' Another Saturn revelation ~of "orl€'8'f''the two, and maybe New York City, where he helped three killers, who aren't acting solve in 1979 the murders of together." three elderly victims known as Voyager I discovers gaseous cloud Over 900 volunteers joined a the "Lower East Side Killings." search of a southeast Atlanta- Lt. Gil Hill of Detroit's homi­ PASADENA, Calif. (AP)­ what was expected." Titan late Tuesday on its way to n~ighborhood during the week- . cide_ squad solved_ sever~! multi­ Voyager I, speeding to its ren­ Scientists had anticipated a Wednesday's close pass by the end the fourth such hunt in as slaymg cases, mcludmg the dezvous with Saturn's myster­ very narrow ring o.f gas mostly ringed planet itself. ma~y weeks, but turned up no "Browning G:a?g Murders"- ious moon Titan, gave scientists restricted to the orbit of Titan, The far-ranging spaceship, clues to the killings of 11 chi!- 15 separate bl~mgs. _ vet another surprise Monday rathe-r than the broader cloud, within 2 million miles of Saturn's dren and the disappearance of Sgt. AI Sm1th of Oakland with the discovery of a huge Sandel said. churning yellow cloud tops four others over the last 16 worked on the Symbionese cloud of hydrogen gas sur­ "This means some mechan­ Monday, was for the first time months. Liberation Army killings and last rounding the ringed planet. ism which we don't know, is revealing details on some of As the searchers went through year had 100 percent clearance The hydrogen cloud forms a op~rating t~ spread the hydro­ Saturn's flock of 15 known brush and weeds Saturday, the of cases assigned. ring several hundred thousand gen over a much larger region of moons. miles thick around the planet, space," he said. Also yesterday, a Voyager sci­ William Sandel of the University entist theorized that Saturn's of Southern California said at a famous glimmering rings might news conference. He said the 'The classical contain dozens of moon-like • • . LaUJsuit hydrogen apparently leaks atom objects that cause their puzzling by atom from Titan's bizarre at- complexity. (continued from page I} mosphere, which seems to be theories are going to Instead of the traditionally conservative social climates. mostly methane, or natural gas. counted six broad rings, Voyager Last spring, Barnhill & Associates decided to initiate the lawsuit as "The presence of hydrogen in d is finding hundreds of small but the atmosphere of Saturn has have to be modifie ' one class action suit rather than individual lawsuits. At that time, 130 distinct ringlets of frozen debris women claimed they had been discriminated against. When the been known for some time, but reaching out from the planet. we didn't know how this hy- attorneys decided to go the class action route, 66 of the women Torrence Johnson said the decided to stick to their complaints and take the University to court. drogen was distributed," he said. Scientists expect to learn more unsuspected structure means Barnhill said last spring he was encouraged that 66 women "opted "The shape ... we actually saw · about the hydrogen cloud as "the classical theories (that ex­ in" the suit rather than disappointed that 64 "opted out." He said at ' doesn't conform well at all to Voyager sails to 2,500 miles of plain the rings) are going to have that time that the women who pulled out of the suit believed their I to be modified." · ~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::'::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!::::::::::::::::::~ status at the University might be jeopardized if they went to court. He said the recently discov­ Court is scheduled to convene at 10 a.m. on the 24th- if no ered and still-unnamed 15th settlement is reached prior to that date. ~~~l ·Qualit;y ~~l~ mo-on of Saturn seems to control :~lj. Typing Service -:jll the outer edge of the most bril- liant ring~ and "we'll be looking for small satellites (from about DitJ. lomats five to 50 miles in .4ameter.)qur ' ' ' within the rings themselves. It ------t-in__e_s_t_o-=:the State Department 1 seems possible hundreds of , (continued from page I} for further consultations with bodies of maJ·c;>r size could be in A · ff· · 1 I,,, ,,,,,I there.' - other four; including Deputy. mencan o !Cia s. ,,,,,,,:~=;::~~~~::,,, Treasury Secretary Robert Voyager I, which blasted c;>ff in Carswell, are willing to meet Informed sources said the September, 1977, from Cape face-to-face with Iranian author­ Algerian government has as­ )[~~ MICHl AX A COLLEGE Of COMMIBCE ~i~[ Canaveral, Fla., has already ren- . ities, direct contact is considered sured both parties of its willing­ dezvoused withJupiter. After its highly unlikely. ness' to continue acting as encounter with Saturn, it will Iranian officials have said the intermediary as long as neces­ move out of the solar system and sary, and is prepared to offer an into deep space. Voyager II is due last of the hostages would only be released when Iran is satisfied Algerian aircraft to fly the to pass by Saturn next August that all the conditions have been hostages out of Iran if and when I ,;;::~:~·~~:;;, I and will continue toward a ren- the Iranians are ready to release i::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::llll dezvous with Uranus in 1986. fulfilled. The State Department 1 ' has described a possible piece- them...... ~ meal release of the hostages as Algeria was expected to relay ) - 1 . f" 1 unacceptable. the American reply to Iran within I need pnn 1ng 1 Qualified sources described hours. I · 1 the reply Christopher handed to I in a hurry? I Beny:ahia as "long, detailed and The U.S. Embassy spokesman I complex." said it was not immediately clear 11001 -llXl 7 pOSferS Christopher went to Algiers when Christopher would return I personally to confer with to Washington. II Only $l O.OO II Benyahia "because it is better that those involved fully under- 1 I stand our position," the sources The State Department said }f\}\~1 I• ~ · 03 N. Main added. · Christopher was accompanied to I Algerian officials said Algeria's Algiers by Assistant Secretary of f: I State for Near Eastern and South ···1 South Bend only interest was to ad itate a ld s d ;1...J\ ALABAMA SLAMMERS ·'r·- I mutually acceptable so 1ution to Asian Affairs Haro aun ers; · · R dl Deputy Treasury Secretary I the long h ostage cns1s. e 1a ll S D 2/$1.00 I 289-6977 Malek, Algeria's ambassador in Robert Carswe ; tate epart- 1 • f fh I Washington, delivered the for- mentLegalOfficerRobertOwen the. W.IZ 0 . e I mal text of the Iranian condi- and Arnold L. Raphe!, a special assistant to Secretary of State ALL WEEK LONG!! Printing biZ I tions to Christopher ear1 y 1ast ....11-...... - .....u.u...... aw ~~e:~:k_:an:d~l:a~te:r~re~t~u_r_n_ed __ t_h_r_e_e __E_d_m __ u_n_d_s_._M __ u_s_k_ie_. ______The Observer Tuesday, November 11, 1980 -.page 5 The Blarney Stone? Reagan sprouts from Irish roots

By Ed Blanche where they had existed close to between 1845 and 1848 and Associated Pre.r.r Wrrter the poverty line, after the G re~t went to England looking for Ronald Reagan's election cli­ Famine of the 1840s. work. maxes a rags-to-eminence saga The search centered on par­ The family home was a rough, that began when his great­ ish records in Ireland and grave­ one-story stone , cottage. grandfather left a stone shanty stones in County Tipperary Debrett's genealogical re­ in Ireland in the potato famine cemeteries. These showed that searcher, Hugh Pesketh, said of the 1840s, British and Irish Reagan's great-grandfather, Michael O'Regan probably was genealogists said Monday. Fur­ Michael O'Regan, left the im­ the only member of the family ther back, they said, there is poverished village of Doolis who could read or write. royal blood. Reagan is descended from Brian Boru, an 11th century River City Records Welcomes high king of all Ireland and the Emerald Isle's first national he­ an evening with ro, according to experts from De brett's research organization of London and Hibernian Re­ search based in Dublin. HARRY Boru ironically died at the hour of his greatest triumph, defeating Viking invaders at CHAPIN Clontarf near Dublin in 1014. That victory ended the pillaging Tuesday, December 9 • 8:00 p.m. Norsemen's influence in Ireland. Morris Civic Auditroium • South Bend A De brett's spokesman said a branch of Reagan's family tree Tickets: $9.50/$8.50 Reserved goes back to a nephew of Boru Tickets on sale Wednesday, Nov. 12, at who belonged to the Regans (the way the name was spelled then) of Munster, one of 10:00 a.m. at River City Records, 50970 Ireland's ancient provinces. The investigators said the U.S. 31 North, ONLY! Reagan family, or Regan and Limit 10 tickets per person! r!.Jt' hrirk air ""d stark hmsh jJrove 110 t!eterrt'llf for thir hearty h11rrier {Photo O'Regan in the traditional Irish Call 277-4242 for further information! by I lelen Ot!t~r). spelling, lef( County Tipperary, Justice related cources River City Records & Jam Productions Present Theology ary society in the context of a search for insight and understanding into personal experiences 340 Corporate Conscience 1Tf3 Mertensotto/ while visiting the elderly iQ nursing homes. Heppen Students have an opportunity to develop a (for Business Majors only) comprehensive understanding and articulation A reflection on the Christian moral meaning of of ~heology in relati~nship r.o the dyn~mics of corporate action and purpose within business carmg and compassiOn, agmg, suffermg and organizations. The objective is to develop a dying. comprehensive corporate ethic which deals with the self-interest of the organization, moral 379 Reflections on Service McNeill/ responsibilities, and a social vision for a more Girmscheid .. " human world. This one credit course is for students involved in volunteer ·service activities (e.g. Logan, 342 Christian Ethics 2TT4 Hauerwas tutoring, Big Grothers/Sisters, etc) who want to This course is intended as an introduction to the reflect on their experiences from different discipline of Christian ethics. It begins with a p~rspectives (theology, psychology, etc.) More brief studr of the ] ewish and Christian mformation is available at the Center for scriptures. t then examines four major problem Experential Learning, 1110 Mem. Lib., ext. areas: biomedical ethics, abortion, sexuality 2788. ApRropriate time for the seminar, which and war. lasts the fl.rst nine weeks of the semester, will be arranged wi~h the gi!Oup. 344 Medical Ethics 10TT12 and llMWF Mertensotto 381 War/Law/Ethics 10TT12 Yoder (for Pre-Med Majors only--see Fr. Walter's An interdisciplinary course (ROTC, Law, Philo· secretary for registration) sophy 249, Theolo~y) concerns the morality and A discussion of ethical problems in the medical legality of war; htstory of just-war theory and ! Friday, November 14 e 8:00 p.m. profession in the li8ht of natural law and pacifism; international conventions of "crimes 1 Notre Dame ACC Christian moral principles. of war''; limits of obedience; war crimes and Tickets: $9.00/$8.00 all seats reserved. Good seats still trials; U.S. military policy; rights of non-comba­ available at the ACC Box Office and River City Records, 347 War-Peace-Revolution 1TT3 Yoder tants, prisoners, neutrals. Recommended fot 50970 U.S. 31 North- 3 miles north of campus Classical typologies illustrated from the Cru­ ROTC students. sades, just-war stories and pacifists; renewal of thought since 1940; theologies of revolution; PHILOSOPHY models of responsible withdrawal. 243 Moral Problems 1TT3 and 2TT4 Wachs· ...... · .... largest :;et~ectton 350 Christians and the Third World 101J'12 berg . . · apes and Lowest Prices! Hommes The course seeks to explore the nature the Christia~ty as a world religion, the Church as nature of morality through the consideration of Why pay more at the malls? world Cnurch encompassing the globe. Since discrimination (racial, sexual, compensatory, WW II national independence and growing species); obligations to the poor and to future cultural autonomy in Third World nations have ~enerations; population policy; and paternal· led to new vitality in non-western Christianity. ISm. This course will study the struggles of Christians in the Third World to articulate their 245 Medical Ethics IOMWF Volbrecht '$1.00 OFFI faith in theologies, forms of worship and An exploration, from thefoint of view of ethical any regular album or tape to theory, of a number o ethical problems in purchase with this coupon. approaches service appropriate to their Limit 1 per person. Expires cultural environment. contemporary biomedicine. Topics to be includ­ ed are: abortion, infanticide and euthanasia, · 1 Nov. 30, 1980 37 3 Theology and Community Service 7TU10 the doctor-patient relationship and paternalism, McNeill allocation of scare medical resources, the right (this is a check-marked course--register in to health care, and informed consent and 111-B Mem. Lib.) human experimentation. This interdisciplinary c~urse will be; taug~t by Don McNeill C.S.C. to collaboration wtth a 246 Ethics and Business 911'11 and lOTT12 teaching tea~ (Sr. Judith Ann Beattie, C.S,.C.; Garcia Fr. Joseph Carey, C.S.C.; Sr. Verene Gtrm· An examination of the ways in which moral scheid, O.S.F., etc). The purpose of the course theory can be brought co bear on business is to explore questions .about ~e ~elationship of institutions, and of moral pr~b~ems th~t arise in theology and commumty servtce to contempor· the context of corporate dectston-making. Tuesday, November 11, 1980- page 6 OD'd on Space Invaders Fanatics gather for tourney New York (AP)- For two Fort Worth, and Chicago. And tirst. Then there was Robert hours one day, Bill Heineman Saturday, 4,000 people took part Merek, 16, of Dallas, with held off the alien invaders with in the New York competition. 108,400 points; Frank Tatro, 14, his laser cannons, vaporizing On Monday, five finalists of Yorktown Heights, N.Y., them before they could land on fought it out before relatives, 133,300 points; Hing Ng, 16, of Earth and destroy civilization as reporters, friends and Warner San Francisco, 153,300 points. we know it. officials. At last, came the top finisher, "Fweep, fweep, fweep,"went First to go was Steve Marmel, Heineman, of Whittier, Calif., the lasers. "Krch, krch, krch," 15, of Chicago, who allowed an with 165,200 points. went the doomed invaders, in­ invader to land after he had The points are computed by sidious and persistent. accumulated 28,000 points. the number of invaders and After two hours, Heineman The other four survived until asteroids shot down during the ended his defense. The invaders contest organizers called a halt game. were still coming, but he had two hours later. Heineman, a high school se­ accomplished his goal: he was The winners were announced nior who wants to be a computer winner of the national finals of in Miss America fashion- the last programmer, won· a $2,500 com­ the Space Invaders computer place finisher, Marmel, named puter game for his efforts. video game. In Space Invaders, an army of aliens appears on a television screen, and it is up to the player to kill them off before they land on Earth or bomb the player's laser. After each army is dis­ pensed with, another appears. William F. Grubb, vice presi­ Last night Student Senate candidates were briefed by Election Commis.rioner dent of Warner Communica­ Tom Koegel, on the rttlesfor the upcoming campaign (Photo by Helen Odar). tion's Electronic Entertainment Division, which make Space Invaders, said the popularity of the game is "incredible." "We're in the age of electron­ ics, and after 'Star Wars,' space became a very popular theme,'' he said. ~how!~:!~!uts!C/J Grubb said the company re­ t t ceived letters from fans, dis­ closing their high scores and t Executive Staff t asking about others' triumphs. t Applications Due Today t The company set up a contest to find a champion. f Student Government Office t A thousand enthusiasts com­ peted at regional contests in San ' ..._.~~~~~~~~~~~.._..~~~~ t Jose, Calif., Los Angeles, Dallas-

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Editorials Tuesday, November 11, 1980 -.page 7 P.O.BoxQ ,.

a holier-than-thou attitude, or even "growing apprehension that insightfully points out that fans SMC senior discourage participation in the America's bored attitude about the -Philly fan who don't support their coach aren' Death March. We merely wish to sciences is choking the potential really fans at all. Wow! I wonder make students aware that the that has won us so many Nobel where he went to college? council says no traditional idea of the event em­ prizes ... Today there seems to be a on Olval's Craig Chval must be a terrific phasizes a potential for social certain pride about scientific il­ guy to have such insights into enjoyment rather than a challenge literacy." Does this scathing in­ professionalism game which he probably didn't to death march to see if one can remain standing dictment apply to the Notre Dame even attend. But what do I know? Dear Editor, until the end. community? Apparently so... The Dear Editor - I'm only from Philadelphia. The idea of tradition not only A complete lack of pressure editors of The Observer did not In his brilliant sports pag.e Doug Christian Iappears to be inevitably linked with from administration only increased editorial, "Some people are never Jenkintown, PA the concept of university life itself, the Council's awareness that the satisfied (October 16)," Craig but is viewed as the ultimate stamp responsibility of our choice was to Chval has succeeded in combining of approval upon any event with be based upon our own perceptions the objectivity of an enraged Frank Observer writers which it is associated. It must be of what would be most beneficial to LaGrotta and the professionalism recognized, however, that tradition­ the students. The assurance that of an intoxicated Howard Cosell, al meaning and contemporary the Council would be supported the result being one ofChval's most question paper's reality do not always coincide. regardless of its decision serves to beautifully memorable pieces to strengthen the seriousness with The 21 to 2 decision by th~ Saint date. If anyone on this fine sports­ Mary's College Senior Class which our intent should be viewed. minded campus thinks that Craig editorial policies In essence, the SMC Senior Council not to co-sponsor the does not merit his rightful place at Class Council is not denying the annual Senior Death March was the top of the list of insightful Dear Editor, positive social aspects of the Senior made not in the judgment of the sportswriters, then he should refer We thought we wrote for a news­ Death March. rather, we are event itself, but in acknowledge­ to the article and see just what kind. paper. It was called The Observer, saying: "Enjoy yourselves and ment of its detrimental effects upon of future Craig has in sports jour­ and it served the Notre Dame/St. others. but not to the detriment 0f the community at large. 0 nalism. There are analyses and Mary's community. But after obser­ the community that surrounds you. As stated by OC commissioner insights in his article which must be ving the editorial policy of features Sherri McGonigle, the emphasis Jill De La Hunt so brilliantly conceived and clever­ editor Molly Woulfe, editor-in-chic on improving relations with our ly articulated that the average Paul Mullaney and writer Ken South Bend neighbors will hardly Editor's 11ote: Jill De La Hunt is sports fan should study the article Klingen in last Friday's edition, we be helped by throwing trash in their 1 member of the SMC senior extensively and perhaps discuss it really wonder just why we are yards and creating loud distur­ :ou11cil. in a small group seminar to fully bothering to work for this non­ bances in their neighborhoods. The understand this brilliance. newspaper. The editors in question justifiable student complaint . Craig surely should publish his certainly do not seem to bother t against the concentration of South Chvalisrris in national newspapers I think before they act. Bend police on under-age drinking Nobel laureate's where they will be more appreciated. The Obsen•er's editorial policy rather than more serious crimes I have heard that the National is much like a disjoint system o will not be strengthened by the acts Enquirer or even the Midnight . state governments. A department of overly "boisterous" students. physics speech Star otTer young sportswriters of ; does whatever it pleases for its own Indeed. the resentment of northeast • his caliber the opportunity to fully purpose -- not for a common goal. otT-campus students themselves express themselves. And it must be In this instance, we cite the features against the damage caused by overlooked remembered that these papers enter department. The parody of an weekend rampages in their area millions of households every single ·accurate and well-written sports should be indicative of the impor­ Dear Editor, week. If this article is indicative of column by Frank LaGrotta("Hey! tance of neighborhood relations to On Friday, October 31. Dr. what this young sportswriter can We're No. I," Nov. 3) is the last those who live there. Sheldon Glashow, Higgins profes­ accomplish, it boggles the mind to straw. Another major consideration in sor of physics at Harvard Univer­ think what will be produced in the When a newspaper resorts to the council's decision. voiced by sity. visited the Notre Dame future when he really comes into cheap shots and backstabs toward both SBP Kathleen Sweeney and campus. Dr. Glashow, a Nobel his own. its own writers, it brings its own even bother to send a reporter to Senior Class President Teri Hill. laureate ( 1979), is world-renowned Just imagine the scene in Phila­ level of journalistic competence the press conference. We can only involves the SMC campaign to for his contributions to our under­ delphia which Craig so vividly into serious question. The Obs~rver hope that they learn from this increase awareness of responsible standing of the basic structure of described. Thousands and thou­ has no business turning a critique of unfortunate performance. dri:-~king. Although a somewhat the universe. He also has a well­ sands of fans booing a ballclub LaGrotta and Craig Chval into a which they paid up to thirty dollars ambiguous term, the idea behind deserved reputation as an outstand­ James J. Kalata half-page feature. The paper treats to see. This is atrocious behavior. responsible drinking is both clear ing speaker who is able to explain Associate Professor of Physics this as lightly as it would a movie and simple: It is possible to enjoy some of the more abstruse notions If I had the ability to write prose review. The Chicago Tribune does like Chval, I too would have made drinking without getting drunk. of theoretical physics in an ac­ Walter C. Miller not refer to David Israel and Bob College surveys have revealed a cessible and entertaining manner. Chairman, Department ofPhysics the immediate conclusion that these Verdi as a'' repugnant sportswriting serious drinking problem on both His public lecture went un­ fans are "the scum of the earth." duo" simply because its readers campuses. and perhaps it is time to reported in The Obserl'er, and was Imagine that, booing when your disagree with or dislike them. The realize that a good time is not even excluded from the daily club is playing badly and is four Observer, however. has blazed contingent upon putting oneself calendar of events. Editor's Note: Due to academic runs down after two and a half new trails in editorial policy with into a complete state of inebriation. At an afternoon press conference, commitments Anthonv Walton's innings. And to think that these this article by Klingen. It must be emphasized that the Dr. Glashow told Gail Hinchion of treekZI' column will appear later in 1 "fans" would boo their exciting It is garbage journalism and it is Senior Council is not trying to take the South Bend Tribune of his the ll'eek. coach with a good record. Craig malicious. The two notes at the story's conclusion heighten the vicious attitude of the article and are editorials in themselves. The Doonesbury Garry Trudeau story itself as a feature and The Observer's apparent light-hearted SO 'rVIJR lH£515/N FOR Mll-­ ACTU4LLY, rrs A ~y HEA/...7HY fr5 RE'ALLY Ql/ITC A PHENOMe­ attitude toward it are both inex­ "THE MtJ.Jil4l MJf(J5/(£" UONS OF NON AT 0/NN&R PA/?Jl&5 ALl­ i'"OR SURE. f}e(CL/JPM&Nr P£lJPtE NO LO/VGCR cusable. UPSCALE JU06C 'fW 8Y IUI-W 'tf)() aJ. llLJ_ AROUNlJ lH& {J)(Jtmzy, STVPI£5 7HtMARX&T Alr"8JCAN5, SHOW7HJ1J71-1e P~ FOR G(X}() We do not defend tl'hat LaGrotta 71-f/V REALLY MA~5 WAY 15 CONOO 15 IT ALJ?E417f a/1-#T '/()(/ PAIP FOR YOVI?. IKJfJSf3 W8R/CANT THf313 OAY5 15 NO orChval write. We strongly defend. VERY TIGHT /5, MA/?.1<. ANP M-flfr !T5 IUOR.TH N(}()). L.ON6CR [J(X)l£ OR 6RASS - however, the opportunity to write I \ IT'S !lEAL- 51'1-fTE! "- I without their own newspaper maliciously attacking them. Brian Beglane Bill Marquard Gw:1• Grassey

Editor's note: Beglane, Grqssey and Marquard are members o The Observer's sports staff.

Editorial Board and Department Managers Editor-in-Chief ...... Paul Mullaney Sports Editor ...... Beth Huffman Box Q, Notre Dame, IN 46556 Managing Editor ...... Mark Rust Features Editor ...... Molly Woulfe The Observer is an independent newspaper published by the students of the Editorials Editor ...... Mike Onufrak Photo Editor ...... John Macor University of Notre Dame du Lac and Saint Mary's Colle~e. It does not necessarily Senior Copy Editor ...... Lynne Daley . reflect the policies of the administration of either institution. The news is reponed Business Manager .....•... Greg Hedgea as accurately and as objectively as possible. Editorials represent the opinion of a Executive News Editor .... Tom Jackman Co11trol/er ..... -...... Jim Rudd majority of the Editorial Board. _Com~entaries, opinions, and letters are th~ views News Editor ...... Pam Degnan Advertising Manager ...... Mark Ellis' of their authors. Column s~;>ace ts avatlable to all members of the communtty, and SMC Executive Editor .... Margie Brassil Circulation Ma11ager ...... Beth Hackett the free expression of varytng opinions on campus, through letters, is encouraged. SMC News Editor •...... Mary Leavitt Production AJanager ...... John McGra'th Features Tuesday, November 11, 1980- page 8

Lost • • • or Found Prophets are not people who tell Prophet, whatever he means to them, The other day I bought and read Bill But now I wonder if, in the afterglow fortunes. They are not old and ven­ and people's faith-instinct is seldom Toohey's new book, Life after Birth. I of such a gifted life. this University will erable and not necessarily the wisest wrong. only mourn what it thinks it has lost. had to read it. It's an excellent state­ men on Earth. They are those who Will sad memory be its only response ment. Everybody should read it. dream dreams and see visions. They are to the passionate cry of its prophet, those absorbed in the chaos of Now ''Prophets . . . are those which comes now from the Holy City I did not know the man. I never read who somehow, by the Spirit of God to which we prayerfully commended anything he wrote before. I only heard which is in them, passionately seek the who dream dreams and see him? Or will this University have an one ef his homilies. I had only a brief threads of reconcilliation and hand equal courage to give him a true conversation with him in his room - them on to nimbler fingers that can tie visions . . . I think Bill Christian anamnesis-that is, to re­ when he welcomed me to Flanner. I them together and make the fabric of member his dream, accept his vision, found him to be a wfarm and·genuine Life whole where it is torn. But, most Toohey was a prophet." and give his words life in its own here person. The day befor,e he was striken I, of all, Prophets are those who have and now, and for the future? saw him sitting in the sun-that's the incredible courage and daring which Bill's book seems to me to represent way I want to remember him. turned right side out is simple humble­ the themes of his life. From what I've ness" I live now, not I, but Christ heard of his life and work, they seem to If the University doesn't, it will have lives... " I think Bill Toohey was a lost his presence-it will have good Bill's death saddened me. The grief come together with great power and Prophet. reason to mourn. But if it does, it will of his friends and close associates clarity in this final statement. It is not have found a new light and the "dis­ during his illness, through his death, because his ideas are new or that what covery of fire for the second time" in and the uninhibited tears of young That is what I discovered about the he says has not been said before that Bill Toohey's life which was consumed people at his funeral touched me man in reading his book. I have no gives it power. Rather, it is that he has trying" to harness for God the energies deeply. It was a painful touch because I reason to believe that his others would struggled and believed it first and then tell me a different story. I cannot spoken what he knows. Likt= the great of hope." Art King, OM I, is a chaplain in was outside the circle of his friends and Planner Hall. one who had not shared as much of him distrust what I saw and felt as the Master he tells us where he's been and as those who cried. I wanted to know University and Saint Mary's reverently where he's going and challenges us to him. I wanted to share his gift. 1 had tc said goodbye to him. It was the peo~ follow. He is his message, and his book read his book. pie's celebration of the life of a is a book on life. Art King, OMI Molarity On Wheels inc Tuesday's election was astonish­ support. According to Janet Carp of Molartfy: On The Road To Selling Out, a out the funny ones, and after picking ing. Most political observers had the Mishawaka Zoolosical Gardens collection of Observer cartoonist Mike out those five, chose the ones crucial in expected the Presidential race to be even animals were acttvely support~ Molinelli's popular comic strips, will introducing the characters, then the a heated and close one, and many ing Reagan. be on sale this Thursday in the Notre ones that got the biggest response." were prepared to endure a grueling Dame bookstore. 1200 copies of the marathon vigil in front of the TV 0/ course, we always find ; lot o/ enthusiasm for the GOP from the book have been published by Juniper awaiting Uncle Walter Cronkite's Press, the nation's only independent declaration of the winner. But by elephant section but this year there was considerahle student publishing company. The book features Molarity's hero. 8:30 the contest was over. Jimmy pro-Reagan senti· Jim Mole, "the proverbial anti-hero Carter graciously conceded and John ment from all th.r, .. other animafs--parc whimp," and his roommates, Chuck Anderson failed to answer the bell ticularly the ape house. I belteve the endorsement · of Reagan by his Mason ("my link with the absurd"), after round ten. So what happened? The company is run by students in Mitch ("the quintessential Notre Why rhe landslide? former running-mate, Bonzo, had a lot to do with it.. Associate Prof. Elizabeth Christman's Dame male"), and the suave Dion I posed those questions to several book publishing class. The Press is ("Dion is Dion, and that's enough for four years old, and this will be the fifth, experts and ~ot several explana­ Advandng another the~ry is P. him"). Brenda and Cheryl will also tions. , Dr. · Htram Glitch of the Alan Piper, consultant for De Sade and largest to date, publication. appear. . Electoral Studies Institute and Grill Enterpnses. ··"'···. answered: Thts tide of Republicanism is obvi­ Mr. Reagan was definitely heljJed(Jy . 0 1f4Y a case p/ ma,.ss hysterifl~ Sam./! Molinelli, a fourth-year architecture The cartoons themselves begin with the .large turn-out .of~the ruile .4nthii!l:.,~._.llff,f.e~m.Pa,rei:!Jhts to thiAkP$1(1ink:'' student, was asked to submit a col- the first Molarity strip to appear in The uncivt1 voters. He won over the rude ·· ·· mtjirtftWn tnlo t~e sea, bu!Pd sa:~ lection of cartoons for the class' con­ Observer, and cover a variety of topics, vote when he answered a heckler thts .ts worse. Ridents don t have sideration last summer. He delivered a from Saint Mary's parietals system to before the election with a heart'Cf·f!/1 nuclear . . . ·.. selection in September, and the class parties and the housing lottery. "Oh, Sh1# up!" Arlri. of c.our.s.e .. hi.·s .. approved it over other student manu­ The price of the book is $2.95. behavior towanls Mr.. Carter"' the. Molinelli will be available to autograph tlebate dirin 't hurl eitber; ·· · scripts submitted. The book features cartoon strips from Molinelli's first two copies at an autograph party on This may m.ty not be the whgle years cartooning for The Observer. Thursday, from 3 to 5 p.m. in La story. The Reagan win was due to Fortune's Rathskeller. large turn-out of the •''Clos~!. · blidtns' '· according to ·HU:~ert },,.,...,,,:ni.+:,.afJWf#'VJ Molinelli acknowledges that "it was blower,. professor at Locker College. kind of hard" for him to select which of are ... v:r#~JOUTi'ff_"~ Molly Woulfe We've found that large numbers of Ronnie's locks. · guess because so the two hundred-odd cartoons in his portfolio to print. He finally "picked Reagan votes came from ''closet man:~ customij"s came in lor· a Repubficans''--people who may sup~ shampoo and c#t before the election port the Republicans but who woU/ri and so many. hair stylist$ anti never admit it to anyone unless they barbers were raving about Reagan, were in a closet or wardrobe. naturally voters were persuaded. Apparently these poor souls became confused anri thinking the voting The most plausible explanation for booth was their1 closet at home, Reagan's landslide victory ;; comes registered a Republican vote. from gem-physicist Dean K. Wizzeau of the Bermudian Springs Academy But more than just humans were of Science. ON THE ROAD caught up in this wave of Reagan We fount/ on election day there was TO SELLING OUT an . enormr,fus amount of sunspot actibity··wilrl anti strange activity. This turbulence set up a sort of' magnettl;-gravitational field through­ out all American voting places •. For someJ.et llnexplainetl,ret:~s()""' thjs cause all coinsflipperi in the voting booth to lanri Republican stile up. Astonishing. J , ~;; ·;:;;#:?.~== ------~ The~==~======

T o"d a ~======T=u=e=sd=a=y,=N=o=v=e=m=b=er=11=,=1=98=0=-=p=age==·' Campus Molarity Michael Molinelli • 2:4 5 p.m. - "the arab­ EVEF mAT? 5PINOZA( "discerning Coccidia: dynam­ PLA12J? ics of intracellular parasitism," dr. bill chobotar, galvin auditorium, room 278. • 7, 9, 11 p.m.- movie, "high anxiety," engineering auditorium, $1, sponsored by alpha phi omega. • 7: 30 p.m. _., meeting, ladies of notre dame, library auditorium. • 8 p.m. - concert, jorge bolet, piano, o'laughlin auditorium (smc). Peanuts® Charles M. Schulz • 8: 30 p.m. - meeting, management dub, 120 hayes ALL RIG~T, ~OlJ GUVS, I lt/ Ill 1 ( 1 l l1 t. I I lltlU(IIIllt'l healy. _ \II[J I \ll(l,lflt WHAT HAPPENED WHEN \ /l I I ' 0~ I LfEAH ? H I L(OU WENT INiO TOWN ? ' I t 'I I ' ' ROOT BEERS ' /t,l 'YEAH! I ' I t I ' ' t Irish club \ t ll 1 l t,{J \ I I l I 1 l I I l t I l I .. I t I ' POW!! I , meeting lllldfl/tl/tl/t

The ND-SMC Irish Club will hold an organizational meeting Wednesday evening at 7p.m. in LaFortune Ballroom. Future ac­ C) 1880 United Feature S·tndlcate ll'c /0 -ZB tivities, speakers, musicians, and ~~~------~ parties will be discussed. Any interested student or faculty ACROSS 35 Rooter 80 Rose lover 27 Quickly member is welcome and atten­ 1 Ashen 36 Bird 61 Roofing 28 La Scala's dcnce is appreciated. If you have The Daily Crossword 5 Foolish 40 Edible material site any qyestions call john at 3482 or 10 Farm tuber 62 Twist about 29 Group vehicle 41 Edible 63 007 customs Nancy at 41-5411. 14 Seed cover fungus 64 Fathered 30 "- andhll 15 Habitation 42 Building 65 Crimean money-.. " 16 Salmagundi part river 31 Majorca 17 Flower 43 Cards seaport Evaluation 20 Foxy 45 Storage DOWN 32 Derisive 21 Chl·chl place 1 Footwear expression booklets 22 Church 47 "Soap" name 2 Soviet sea 34 Rlchcake sections 48 Big bundle 3 Garden 37 Damage The Student Government's 23 Request 49 Soviet· bloom 36 Debatable Course Evaluation booklets are 24 Affectation Chinese 4 Ivy Leaguer 39 Looking now available. Any students in­ 26 Bactrian& range 5 Props up for work 29 Snares 52 Use a 6 Body 44 Dramatized terested in obtaining a copy 33 Sacred bull straw passage 45 Stored away may do so at the Registrar's of Egypt 53 Southeast 7 Feeble 46 City In Office, the Student Govern­ .. 34 Ranger's Asians 8 Greek Nevada ment Offices on the s,econd pal 56 Hymn letter 48 Copper capital floor of LaFortune Student 9 Affirmative Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: 10 Gary or 49 King of Center, or Room "101 Allee Israel O'Shaughnessy. rA'S'T A • R A D I I • S L A M 11 European 50 Western C D I N R I D N 0 M E tourist wolf T H E T •oOWEROFBAi!-J...t-b- •r mecca 51 One of a I N D I C-UR GENT 12 Mature pair Piano virtuoso :-0 UNE ISEE- 13 Trifles 52 Excel C A R 0 L S E N I D .M C S 18 -out 53 Exaggerated to perform I ME T A A L D 0 .M E A T (quarrel) 54 Lily family T 0 W E R I NIG I ~tt+~~g_ 19 Sky pilot plant • AD'IOS 55 Willow The dazzling piano virtuoso c AIN SUILTES 23 Pain In , the neck genus 1 Jorge Bolet will perform in 0 G S PIC A-1 •SALAtM I PANE TiEL A 24 Type of 57 Kind of concert Tuesday in O'Laughlin T H E C 0 N N I N G T ;O IW E R truck curve Auditorium of Saint Mary's L A V E .E A S E L •R:E N T 25 Hep 58 MacGraw College at H p.m. © 1980 by Chicago Tribune-N.Y. News Synd. Inc. 10/21/80 0 8 I T •s T A L E aHR A S 26 Henry­ 59 World Holet's program for the even­ All Rights Reserved 10/21180 Lodge power ing will inclu-lc Mendelssohn's "Songs With· ut Words," Opus 19; Schum .nn's "Carnaval," Student Legal Services Opus 9; Ch•1pin's "Sonata in B ,.••••••••••••••••••••••• . flat minor," Opus 35; and "Valse Impromptu" and "Hungarian BASEMENT NOTRE DAME Rhapsody No. 12" bv Liszt. :TONIGHT AT LEE'S! Tickets for the concert, which ...__ LAW SCHOOL ______, is sponsored by the Performing • • Arts Series at Saint Mary's, are $4 LEGAL AID AND : •. for the general public and $2 for DEFENDER ASSOCIATION students. For reservations con­ : $2.00 Pitchers : tact Saint Mary's Ticket Office at RoomB-12 283-7795 9-4:30 284-4176. ~-----other times by appointment ----t • • ••with Purchase o£n· mner: • Skiers meet !C • a I • I • 412• • • tonight orr~AMPUSS!UDIR!S - • •• OllllJal !IIIJhOill Books Will Be Available The ski team will meet ! GOOD BAR-B-QUE : tonight in Room IC of !o Yoa •ovember 11, 11, a 1' 9:00 am to LaFortune at 7:30p.m. Any­ one who plans on going to ':00 Jill Stadent Government Offices : AND BREWS, AT : Vermont mu~t bring their $50 lad floor- Laronue deposit. Information about the trip will be given. • 0•1 BOOK liB BOUII ;. i LEE'S!i r. a • ...... r

The Observer Tuesday, November 11, 1980 -page 10 Bottom Ten Wildcats head list By Skip Desjardin and Rob Simari

The Bottom Ten voters had a lot of pressure taken off of them this week by the schedule makers, who provided them with three games between ranked teams. In East Lansing, the Northwestern Mildcats rolled over to Michigan State (2-7). Northwestern coach Rick Venturi Sl'mmed up his team's play when he said, "All afternoon it seemed like we were facing first and ninety-six." Colorado, coming off a disappointing win last week, took its 'ravelling Gong Show on the road to Stillwater, where Chuck Barris Fairbanks' squad lost to Oklahoma State, 42-7. Cincinnati, a team that appeared to be on the verge of a perfect ;eason, choked down a 10-0 deficit to beat Memphis State, 14-10. The ·vin was the Bearcats' first in thirteen tries. So Michigan State, Oklahoma State, and Cincinnati have been put •n Bottom Ten probation for this week. As everyone knows, Wisconsin is building a fine Bottom Ten ·rogram. This week, they got a little help from their fans. Eight times .Iichigan quarterback John Wangler went to the line of scrimmage, md eight times Wangler's squad backed off, unable to hear his Fighting Irish fall at regionals signals. The first three times it happened, the officials warned the .-rowd to quiet down. The next three stoppages each cost the Badgers by David Wtlson Debbie Raehl for a tremendous ton in the tournament finals. 1 time out. The seventh interruption resulted in a "half the distance" Sports Writer job in the nets. Borh Dayton and Eastern Illinois penalty and a Michigan first down;_After the eighth time and another - Northern Michigan went on to will advance to the national Although Notre Dame did not -lose to eventual champion ~penalty, the Wolverines were on the Wisconsin 1 yard-line, from championships in Edwardsville, fare so well in last weekend's Eastern Illinois, who beat Day- Illinois. where even deaf people could score. regional field hockey champion­ A special Bottom Ten salute goes out this week to Delaware State. ships in Michiga~ Head Coach The Hornets allowed Portland State QB Neil Lomax to throw eight Jan Galen seems .atisfied with TD passes and run for another score, as Delaware State lost to the the results of her fitst year on the Vikings, 105-0. You may remember Portland State as the team that job. • • .1980 beat Cal-Poly Pomona 97-3 two week~ ago. ''I'm very happy with the sea- · Here are the rankings: son despite our losing record," (continued from page 12} she says. "Besides, if we could 1) Northwestern (0-10) puppies and hog jowls, these relatively narrow-minded thought In the Big Ten to stay, in the Bottom Ten to stay take away the losses to Division I teams, we would have a winning schemes may seem alien to your regional heritage. 2) Oregon State (0-~) record. But the hate runs deep through those Southern bones. moves up a notch after loss to Washington State "Most of our games were ex­ In Bear country, and most of the surrounding suburbs, Notre 3) Colorado (1-8) tremely close; they could have Dame football connotes memories more agonizing in nature than the Buffs are back! gone either way. I think we had General Lee's unfortunate surrender along around 1865. 4) UTEP {1-9) the basic skills of the game down "We've been to the barn three times and got burned," said coach okay. We just needed some more Paul "Bear" Bryant after the last of three particularly distasteful scoring." football losses to Notre Dame here in 1976. The Irish, a Division II team, At the time, in fact, the Bear himself wasn't so sure he'd ever have finished their season with a mark another shot at the Irish, what with retirement age so close and the of 8-12, which is better than that 1980 schedule so far away. Said Bryant, "This is getting worse with of last year's squad- and Galen age." • is already looking ahead to next But the Bear must have been looking at the scoreboard these last year. few years. He's seen the South- Mississppi, Tennessee, Clemson, "We'll be a young team," she and Georgia Tech come to mind- rise again, putting the screws to admits, "but our entire defense is the Irish Catholics time and time again since 'Barna's three-point loss staying. We're only losing three to Notre Dame in '76. players, and I'm looking towards Such harbingers of good tidings and the Bear's relentless pursuit of recruiting some girls from the every other record in the books seem to have brought Bryant to what soccer squad." may be, once and for all, a final judgement. In the regionals, all three The great ones- the Wilkinsons, the Blaiks, the McKays- have Indiana team, including state all coached and beaten Notre Dame at one time or another when champion Valparaiso, dropped they've had the chance. But Bear Bryant has, in his own words, been their first round matches and burned by the Irish to the point where he's never been able to savor thus were eliminated from the even one· victory over . college football's most ballyhoo-ed competiton. Notre Dame lost a monument. very even contest 1-0 to Nothern Not to mention, at least four occasions during the last 15 years when Notre Dame has cost Alabama national titles. Cracked one Mich~gan, a t~m Galen termed "the nicest we've played all sea­ witty descendant of Jefferson Davis, "Alabamans still have trouble son." Northern Michigan scored digesting the mathematics of selecting a national football cham- the lone goal in the first- minute of the game. pion." Especially where Notre Dame is involve& To set the record straight, Bear Bryant's record in 36 years of Pat Crowell and Janet Hlavin PREMED STUDENTS coaching is mind-boggling. He has won 303 football games (205 in 23 had superb games, and Giana years at alma mater Alabama), a mark just 11 shy of Amos Alonzo Marrone was playing at her best." ARE YOU WORRIED ABOUT Stagg's all-time record for wins in a career. His teams have earned six Galem also credits-goalkeeper different varieties of the often mythical national championship and MONEY FOR MEDICAL SCHOOL? he is the only coach ever to win 100 games in a decade. Bryant has led Alabama to 21 consecutive bowl appearance,<; (26 Medical/Osteopathic school is tough CHICAGO overall) and won 12 SEC titles during his Tuscaloosa reign. John David Crow, Joe Namath, Ken Stabler- all are Bryant-produced enough without the financial worries. With ballplayers. In fact, 42 former Bryant players and coaches have made· today's rising cost of tuition, medical/osteo­ O'HARE their way to the head coaching ranks on the NCAA and professional pathic school, to some, is only a dream. AIRPORT levels. One poll actually awarded Bryant "SEC Coach of the Century" The U.S. Navy can help you fulfill that EXPRESS honors not too long ago. And, of course, he's even appeared on the dream with a medical/osteopathic scholar­ *3 cover of Time. ship that pays 100% tuition, books, fees and TRIPS DAILY But he's never beaten Notre Dame. That fact alone haunts him as 7 DAYS A WEEK . much today as four years ago when Alabama journalists, after the a monthly stipend of $485 per month. This ONLY Tide's third straight loss to the Irish (the three-point regular season scholarship can help ease the burden of defeat succeeding two-point and one-point bowl game dumpings), financial worries and allow you to use your $1soo wrote of the "victims" of Notre Dame's "lifelong psyche", namely energy to do your best in meClical/ osteo­ iround trip $28.00) Bear, wondering if the misery would ever end. Believe me, when writers start groping for glittery descriptions of the Four Horsemen, pathic school. Rockne, Leahy, and the rest, they have lost sight of reality on the Sound interesting? Find out more about football field. the Navy scholarship program by calling This Saturday in Birmingham- the land where football is a way of the Medical Programs Officer at 657w2169, life, not just religion- Bear Bryant will have a chance to add to his list of coaching feats, a victory sweeter than any other south of Mason- collect, or by writing to: Dixon. · IfNotre Dame and Alabama hadn't won a game all year, Saturday's MEDICAL PROGRAMS OFFICER (HPSP) episode would still merit a chapter all its own in any college football NRD Chicago history book. That's because the Bear's been waiting for one shot at Bldg. 41, NAS Glenview, IL 60026 the Irish all his life. This ~ay be his last. I t ----~------=-=~~~~--==·~--~-~-=--=------~--~~~=---~~~------•

..------. ~~()t"tScJ:~=~=~=·=~~!/S=S======*======T=u=e=sd=a=y,=N=o=v=em=b=e=r=l=l,=l=9=80=-==p=a=ge=1=1 by The Ohser!'t'r and The AJSuciated Prer.r

The interhall six-mile run will be • • .$1000 held on Saturday, November 15 at 10 a.m. The course will be entirely on theN otre Dame campus utilizing the golf course, Saturday's Alabama game. lake trails and campus roads. Notre Dame undergraduates, (contrimedfrom page 12) Is being able to say that you saw this fight LIVE graduates, faculty and staff may enter. Separate divisions for highest face value ever placed on a duckat for a that much of a status symbol? Can people honestly men and women in each category (undergraduate, graduate, sporting event, went for $1,000 each. If you've got say that they received that much pleasure from this faculty, and staff) will be set up. If you wish to run, you must a spare $500 lying around and you can get to New experience? come to the interhall office (C-2) in the ACC to complete Orleans in a hurry, a few of those tickets remain Perhaps, but I doubt it. So why do people pay insurance and entry forms before Wednesday, November 12. -available. Now the question is, how many people that kind of money? If you understand public will pay $300 to be third-rate fight fans? The relations, it's simple- They get sold. If you con­ cheepest seat in the house- somewhere near vince people that a certain event is big-time for Notre Dame or Arrny ticket refunds Baton Rouge- goes for $50. A sellout crowd of enough, sooner or later their going to believe it. St. Mary's students who ordered an individual game ticket for 79,958, which by the way is not expected, would And it is this that Don King does so well. It's the October 18 game and did not pick up that ticket are available in the form of cash refunds during the hours of 9-5 gross (grab a chair) $23 million. nothing but pure, unadulterated hype. ·p.m. Monday throug'h Friday at the Gate 10 Box Office But why fly all the way to Louisiana when you Ray Leonard- the Olympic gold medalist Window. Students may pick up their refund during the month can visit your local arena and cough up $40 (it's up turned pro, 29-1 as a money-making boxer, of November. The last day refunds will be issued will be to $50 in New York and Boston, another record) "America's Fighter." Wednesday, November 26 (the day before Thanksgiving break). to watch another of those miserable closed-circuit Roberto Duran- the slimy, grizzly Pana­ Presentation of your student ID cards is required to obtain the productions. manian who speaks ab9ut six words ofEnglish, 70- cash refund. All of this to see two people pound on each other 1 as a professional, "los manos peidras- the for anywhere from 30 seconds to two hours. Ask hands of stone," the WBC wealterweight cham­ the average person on this campus if there was that still have equipment pion. Lacrosse olar.ers anything they would pay $50 to see, and you might Don King sums all of that up in a simple should bring it to ltich 0 Leary's office on Wednesday from get two responses- Bruce Springsteen or promotional slogan: "Stone vs. Sugar, II." 2-4 p.m.

Dr. Tom Kelly and the interhan office are if&FOOTBALLB!j looking for students to referee the upcoming interhall • • • Wildcats basketball season. This is a paid position and interested (cofltinued from page 10) students are asked to call61 00 as soon as possible. Officiating gave up 46 tewer points this week than last eli nics will begin shortly. 5) Vanderbilt (1-7) AP top 20 Gloria and the boys drop one to Kentucky 6) Memphis State (1-8) their schedule reads like "Who's Who in the Bottom Ten" L Georgia (54) 9-0-0 1,299 Student basketball tickets may be picked 2. So. California (6) 7·11-1 1,180 up at the second floor ticket window of theACC from 8:30a.m. 7) (tie) Columbia (1-7) and Penn (1-7) \. Florida Stat"(\) 9-1-0 I. 171 until4: 30 p.m. according to the following schedule: Juniors and who can tell the difference? 4. Nebraska (2) 8-1-0 I, 105 Alabama 9) Air Force State (1-7-1) ~- 8-1-0 1,067 Graduate Students, today; Sophomores, tomorrow; and Notre Dame 24-47 losers to University of Army at West Point 6. 7-0-1 1,045 Freshmen, Thursday, Nov. 13. From Friday, Nov. 14, until 7. Ohio State 8-1-0 924 Wednesday, Nov. 19, students who are not able to pick up 10) UCLA (6-2) 8. Pitt 8-1-0 868 tickets on scheduled days may get their tickets. Any tickets winless in November 9- Penn State 765 Also Receiving Votes: 10. Oklahoma 6-2-0 618 unclaimed by Nov. 19 will be forfeited by the student and a 11. Michi~~:an 7-l·!l 577 refund rendered. There will be a limit of four ID's per pick up. Kansas State (2-7) , 12. Baylor 1!-1 0 I 550 Because of a high demand for tickets this year some juniors have Wisconsin (2-7) 13. Bri~~:ham YounA 8-1-0 464 NBC News (0-Tuesday) 1·4. So. Carnlina 7-2-0 4,\ been lotteried into bleacher seats. A list of those students was 15. N. Carolona il-l o 444 published in The Observer on Friday, Nov. 7. Any student who gave them the authority to steal California's votes? 16. Purdue 7-2-ll H9 interested in purchasing tickets for the Nov. 20 game with the Quote of the Week: 17.· UCLA 6-2-0 251 Notre Dame coach Dan Devine, after the 3-3 tie with Georgia 18. SMU 1-2-o I 243 Polish National Team may do so at the Gate 10 box office from 19. Mississippi St. 7-2-fl 225 Nov. 10 to Nov. 14. On Nov. 17 unpurchased student tickets­ . Tech (as quoted by David Israel) 20. Florida 6-2-0 90 for that game will go on sale to the general public. "We simply got beat by a better football team that was better coached." H

All, l.lS'>rlter1 JCJS nus! he recervtH1 bv 4 45 p m two davs pno· •o the ·~Sl•f' n ""''''' 11 tt•p c~.l rs rlln The Observer off tee wtlt accept c lassrtreds Mono .. ~ throunh Fnolav. 10 00 a rr •a 4 45 p m All clas~ 'reds must he Classifieds prc-patff Ptlher rn nerson or througt1 the mdtl ------1 wanted: dr•Jmmer lor rock/jazz SOIIIN 31511ETUI!NS TO THE PINNACLE FOUND: a male mixed-breed puppy, NEED MANY TICKETS TO AIR FORCE. II/A Vli 2/lAMA TIX llliSTOFFEiR group. Must be willing to practice OF PARTY SATURDAY NIGHT! NOTICES oil-while with some tan In the Eddy GA PREFEIIED. CALL TIM AT 1650 41-437/i and own his set. Call Shawn-8275 or St. area around Logan Center BOSTON CLUB IS SPONSORING A TRIP luis 3045. Desperately need 3 STU or GA Air 2 BAMA TICKETS FOil SALE. BEST ND/SMC PHOTOGRAPHERS I need Wednesday night, Nov. 5 call 232- TO THE CELTICS-BULLS GAME ON Force tickets. I got lots ol money. OFFER, CALL1022 or 2253. camera time. Do you need a 6140 riders to TORONTO lor weekend ol NOV. 18 IN CHICAGO. PRICE IS $15, Ken 8583 Nov. 14leavlng Fri. a.m. call mike at INClUDES TIX, BUS, REFRESH. SIGN UP model? "' 7344 LOST - a pair ot brown women's 1108. I WILL KILL MYSELF i/1 dmt't Kef 2 OR 4 TONIGHT a TOMMOIIROW IN LAFOR­ TYPINGI FAST, ACCURATE TYPING AT glasses with tinted sun lenses. Lost PERSONALS I ALAIIJ.ioi'IA Tlx. niirfs'IJRGENTit! call TUNE BEGINNING AT 7. 38 SPACES, REASONABLE RATES. II you need Monday between Lafortune and Need ride to Clevelond on Monday Gordon at 277-3617. EVERYONE WELCOME! something In a hurry, I can type II the ACC. II found please call Beth at before Thanksgiving break Will CONNIE, lor you. No job too big or too small. 1715 or 277-8037. share driving and $$. Call Dan at I:"XTRA- TI'R R/!STR/111. llli/NGS CHEER UP All IS NOT AS BAD AS Meet Michael Molinelli altha auto­ Close to campus. Call lynn Saylor 2850. • COMING FOR THE Alii FORCE GAME­ YOU THINK, trS WOIISEI graph party lor "Molarity: On the LOST: MALE GOLDEN RETRIEVER NEAR l DON'T WANT TO UPSET THEM BY NOT FROM YOUR FELLOW DEPI!ESSEEI Road Ia Selling Out," Thursday from 233-3423, onytlme. BULLA ROAD. HE HAS A REDDISH r------, HAVING TIX READY. I NEED 4 STUDENT "LIGHTFINGERS" 3 to 5 In the Lafortune rathskeller. Experienced typist will do typing In COAT AND MICHIGAN TAGS. CALL/ l FOR SAtE OR GA TIX FOR THAT BIG, CHALLENG· her home. Convenient to NO. GENNY AT 283-8903. I MISS HIM. VOLUNTEERS WANTED THE 'BEGOSARE BOLTING TO'BAMAIIII lNG CONTEST. Recently completed typing ol dis­ L------~ 1. Tulor 2nd gr. girl, Basic Math. CAI.Ljolm 111 1947, 1!66/ HI GRAM HOGANIIIIII sertation. References available. 2 USC tickets lor sale Call 607-256- 2. 9th & 10th gr. vietnamese students, English & Math. 272-7623. [FOR RENT ] 6979 SOUTHERN N.D. GRAD DIRELY NEEDS Dear "Strike" Costello: 36? Give me 1 TO 10 GA ALABAMA/N.D. TICKETS. 3. Senior In h.s., Analytical a breakl Anyway, don't get sick over OVERSEAS JOBS · Summer/year PAN-AM TWO-FOR-ONE ROUND TRIP FOR RENT: Elllclency apt. In elegant WILL PAY FAIR PREMIUM PRICE, CALL II, there Is always swlmm... Maybe round. Europe, S.Amer., Australia, TICKETS ANYWHERE PAN-AM FLIES! Geometry - willing to pay. old house near campus. Call Vern COLLECT AT 504-927-6793. not. Hope you leal beHer.... Pieasell Asia. Atllletds. $500-$1200 monthly. $80 CALL 272-8722 4. 14 yr. old girl, Reodlng a Basic lC3881 or 287-3132. Signed, A Chocolate Turtle Sightseeing. Free Info. Write: IJC, Need Alabama tickets desperately. Math. 5. 17 yr. old boy, History & English. Box 52-IN4, Corona Del Mar, Ca. Apt. lor rent.$50.00 month. Near Call Dave or Joe@ 1728 or 1605. The Irish are ready, They're strong school. lmmedlale.233-1329 6. VIsit with handicapped man, and they're mean. They' II turn the 92625. TICKETS Need 2 or 4 Tlx lor Alabama. Call male prelerred-wllllng to pay. Crimson Tide Into a calm sea ol UGLY DUCKLING RENT-A-CAll Wish to sublet 4 person NO apt. tor Stan 1942 Contact Volunteer Servlces,7308. GREEN! THANKSGIVING SPECIAL. 4 days, second semester. $90 each/month Air Force GAs and Students needed Need desperately 2 or 3 GA Tlx to HEY DYXZ: $39.95 with 200 free miles. Phone plus share utilities. Secure; 10 Call6251 or 1040 Air Force game. Call Nancy 5771 BUDDAH NEEDS A SHAVE. BETH WILL Goose - So glad to see yo, hope 255-2323 tor reservations. minute walk to campus. Call 233- NEED 4 GAs tor AIR FORCE GAME. SMC. 2631 SEE HEARTS BEFORE HER EYES WHEN you can make lito Bridget's. Instant cash paid lor ladles· and Call Susan B. - 6945 Need 3 Af tlx, Student or GA Call HE DOES. Hull men's clan rings. $20-$100 or more. FOR RENT - one bedroom apt., THE OSTRICHES Needed 2 Student Or GA Tickets 234-6351. MADEMOISELLE ROBAN, ALIAS We make house calls. Also buying close to campus. Large enough ror For Air Force. Please Call Mike at 2. $155 @ utilities a deposll. Call NEED 4 AIR FORCE TICKETS. WILL PAY Goose, ROBERTA. DIABLO, SAVIOR OF HAP· other gold Items. 255-2402. 3828 Ron at Pandora's Books, 233-2342. TOP DOLLAR. CALL JOHN 1629. Good luck on your Accounting LESS FRESHMEN, SEXY BIKE OWNER, Found: Calculator oft campus. Need Air Force tlx ... Will pay bucksl REDFORD IMITATOR, RECEIVER OF NEED AIR FORCE TIX CALL LARRY 1166 test that we all have heard so much Call 289-5109 to Identity. Calllarry:.·.::.··1..::8_16____ _ about. MYSTERIOUS 3 A.M. PHONE CALLS, Pete B. AND DEAR ROOMATE - HAPPY 19th PART TIME JOB. Ideal lor Students. WANTED J DESPEIIATEL Y NEED THREE STUDENT TIX NEED 3 A. f. GA TIX FOR UNCLE WHO BIRTHDAYIII Telephone work from our olllce FOR AIR FORCE. CALL 4375 P.S. How's your Finance? Noed a Ride to St. louis and back HAS NEVER SEEN AN N.D. GAME CALL (Evening hours) Call Nancy 232- NEED 2 GA TIX TO AIR FORCE GAME SWeets, Gabby, Paul, Don, and HOCKEY IS IN, AT SMC111 HOW 'BOUT on the weekend ol November 15. JIM 8103 8956 NOV. 22; PLEASE CALL JENNIFER AT John - Thanks lor telling me be a IT GIRLSIII Will share usual. Call Gary al1030. 1 need 2 G.A. tickets lor Air Force. TYPINGI Fast, accurate, close by. 4 277-8760. "Lustbomb"l Sheila Woman Champagne Break­ DESPEIIATEL Y need a ride to Please call Mike at 8397. Lillie Goose Call 272-4105 NEED 'BAMA TICKETll!lll CALL CHRIS last Wednesday 7:00 a.m. 1308 WASHINGTON, D.C., AREA lor Thanks­ AT 3283. FOR SALE: FOUR GOOD GA TICKETS Enchanted Forest Be There ALOHA II What do you call a tomb In the giving vacation. Would l)ke to leave TOGETHER FOR AIR FORCE. BEST Yukon? HOW YOU DOIN' Tuesday. Call Mike at 1601. Need 4 or 5 GA's lor Air Force... OFFER CALL JC AT8540 AREII10 PM A:. A mooseleuml DESPEIIATEL VIII Please call Kalan at TO "LimE" MIMI: SORRY THAT THERE LOST/FOUND Anyone who has pictures ol the DESPERATELY NEED TIX FOil AIR FORCE 8731 IS NO MAIIQIJIS IN NEW YORK, NEW Country Rock Jam PLEASEi call CALL JEFF 232-0902 ATTENTION NATIONAL SKI PATROL FOUND: WOMAN'S WATCH, TUESDAY John Higgins at 8553 or 8661. Need 2 Air Force GA tickets. Call MEMBERS! we need your help. YORK TO ANNOUNCE THE BIG 21. tlx call JOHN 3661 NIGHT AT PIPPIN AUDITIONS IN Mlk!l 233-4486. FOOO, TRANSPORTATION and FUN CHEERS! RIDE NEEDED !rom north JERSEY to WORTUNE BALLIIOOM. CALL PAUL NEED MANY STUDENT TIX FOil AIR provided Call larry, 277-0010 lor SIGNED, N.D. alter Thanksgiving. Jim 8700. HELPI Rich uncle need 2 GA tlx to YOUR DRIVER, POPS. 8916 AND IDENTifY_ FORCE - BITZ. 233-2865. Info. Call TODAY! Alabama. Please call 284-5179. Tuesday, November 11, 1980 -·page 12 $1000 for a fight? The business of public relations is an intriguing one. It is one that is often taken for granted by those who think it is nothing besides writing those Michael silly little press releases and using that dynamic personality to impress people. Ah, but then there are those P.R. men who do it Ortman better than· others. They are the wealthy ones­ the verrry wealthy ones. Case in point- Don King, as in Don King rendition; $500 for a seat at ringside. Promotions, Inc. You know, the fight business. Well folks, Don King is at it again, and this one You may recall Don King's last promotion. It promises to be bigger than anything imaginable. was billed as "The Last Hurrah." No fight could Two weeks from tonight, Suger Ray Leonard will live up to the pre-bout hype that King pumped face Roberto Duran in the long-awaited rematch into the thrashing that Larry Holmes gave an over­ of the June 20 wealterweight title fight in which the-hill Muhammed Ali. No fight could live up to the dollar signs that of the June io welterweight title fight in which surrounded that battle either- a record $6.2 Duran stripped Leonard of the World Boxing million gate from ·a make-shift 24, 790-seat area Council crown. Neither fighter has entered the constructed in the Ceasar's Palace parking lot; the ring since that memorable night in Montreal. $5 million that Las Vegas establishment paid just And for the upcoming bout in the New Orleans to stage the fight; millions to the winner; even Superdome, the dollar signs are ... are ... , oh, I feel more millions to the loser; about $30 a ticket paid faint. The 1 ,292 ringside seats were spoken for by millions of people around the world to watch a before the public sale began. Those tickets, the black and white, poorly produced closed-circuit (continued on page II) Oilers prevail over Patriots cornerback Greg Stemrick made winner. Houston (AP) - Ken Stabler The loss was a costly one for the interception that clinched · fired three scoring passes, two in New England, which fell to 7-3 Houston's emotional triumph. Former W'BC welterweight champion Sugar Ray Leonard (above) will a three-touchdown second per­ and back into a first-place tie Stabler's scoring passes in the face Roberto Duran, the man who took that title away from him in june, in iod, and Earl Campbell scored with Buffalo in the AFC east. second quarter were a 79-yard the long-awaited rematch scheduled for November 25. Neither man has twice as the Houston Oilers They play each other on Dec. 14 "excuse me" deflection to Mik~ fought since that first fight. See Michael Ortman's column on the mega­ withstood a furious New in Foxboro, Mass. bucks rematc·h (left). England comeback and beat the Barber and a 4-yarder to old Patriots 38-34 in National buddy Dave Casper. Football League action last Campbell, who scored the To bowls night. other touchdown in that quarter with a 2-yard run on the first play Steve Grogan repeatedly ral­ following Jack Tatum's 35-yard lied New England, throwing interception return, also scored Alabatna· game to decide bids three touchdown passes in the on a 7-yard thrust midway in the second half. And when Mosi fourth quarter. Campbell sur­ Tatupu recovered an onside kick passed the 1 ,000-yard barrier to with barely a minute to play, the remain the National Football ATLANTA- The Omni, Pe-achtree Street and Patriots were on the verge of an League's leading rusher, finish­ one of the largest, most modern airports in the Frank extraordinary victory. But after ing the game with 1 30 yards to world ... This is Atlanta. driving the Pats from their own hit 1,094 for the season. Beautiful women and suntans in November. 48 to the Houston 19-yard line Stabler cemented the triumph Scarlett O'Hara trying to find a midwife, a fire laGrotta with 35 seconds to play, Grogan with his third TD pass, a 16- truck and Rhett Butler all at the same time. This is overthrew Stanley Morgan in the yarder to Mike Renfro with 2:41 either. After all, the Irish drdn't lose so they're still left corner of the end zone and Atlanta. to play. It turned out to be the The highest crime rate in the nation, the Atlanta undefeated. Braves and a 3-3 tie. That too is Atlanta. Yeah, but they didn't win so they're not 8-0 But you can't blame the city- at least not for either. the tie. No one down here even cared about the And so, as the sun sunk slowly between the 1-2-314 game to be played at Grant Field. The heart and Peachtree Pfaza and the Coca Cola Building, the in_.1980 mind of every good Georgian was with Vince question remained: Dooley down inJacksonville where his undefeated What do the bowl people do with a 7-0-1 Notre Bulldogs would defend the state's pride against the Dame team that still must play Alabama and Gary Gators of Florida. Georgia Tech was 1-7 and about Southern Cal on the road? as inept as a porcupine in a balloon factory. And no No, not pray for them (although that might not one much cared that Notre Dame was the top­ be such a bad idea either.) First, they wait and see Grasse ranked team in the nation either. They figured the what the Irish do against Alabama. If they win, Bulldogs should have been number-one all along. meet me in New Orleans for a New Year's party at the Sugar Bowl. If they lose, break out your ten­ It v.:as only September 5th. But already, the Huntsville (Ala.) News So, at gametime, a mere 40,000 people were on headlme was setting the sights of the South on Johnny Reb's biggest hand_ to soak up a little sunshine, southern gallon hats and get set for Danny Does Dallas­ grudge match since Willie T. Sherman waged arson through the land hospitality and watch a massacre unfold. part III. of Tara, peach trees, and cotton fields 115 years ago. But there was to be no massacre on this sunny . See, the way I figure it, the Sugar Bowl people "It's just good, old-fashioned hate" was the perceptive little kicker Georgia Saturday. There was not even to be a hold the trump card- an undefeated, number draped above the lead story on the sports page of northern Alabama's winner. Notre Dame and Georgia Tech banged one-ranked Georgia team that must play only LSU leading tabloid. - heads for the better part of 60 minutes and when it before bids are distributed next Saturday. "Alabama campus looking to Notre Dame" read the headline was over they had proved absolutely nothing at all. Assuming the Bulldogs remain undefeat~d, their informing readers of the Saturday in November reserved in lieu of a Ah, but you'd have never guessed it if you logical opponent for the national title would be 1oped-for Irish Wake- southern style. · the Irish- despite the December 6 game with The article, which appeared in newspapers all across the South was happened to stick your head in the Yellow Jacket · 1 h f 1 h ' lockerroom where the celebration resembled Southern Cal that everyone has been too busy 'o convement ~ ate u .'Iris coach Dan Devine has categorized it as . ,uggest_ed readmg for his players in this week's information packet on Broad Street after the Phillies won the Series. worrying about Alabama to remember. And of t~pcommg opponents. This usually makes for interesting reading on "Hey, this is great!" exclaimed Tech's senior course the Irish would jump at the chance to play l·riday plane rides. safety, Lawrence Lowe. Ge~rgia fm: the title (and the money.) And couldn't you just picture the local plantation owners with their "I'm against ties," admitted Coach Bill Curry, But, if Alabama defeats Notre Dame, the Irish ·\'eh!ng paper_s bas~ing.on their front sto9ps on a sticky September "but I'll take this one anytime. This is definitely would be 7-1-1 and the Sugar Bowl people would ·:ve~m~, su~kmg mmt J_uleps, bespeaking the praises of that grand the high point of our season." probably not risk an invitation. That would leave nstitutton JUSt a few miles down the road in Tuscaloosa. Certainly notthe kind of comments one expects the Orange Bowl and Cotton Bowl drooling in the • "?le Bear's gonna whup on them boys this time," one of the more after a standoff. corner and, in that case, look for the Irish to take o.;apient followers of the Alabama's 67-year old, grizzly-faced football Across' the astroturf, in a garage that doubles as their act to Dallas on New Year's Day. monument must have predicted. But maybe we're getting ahead of ourselves. "Yessuh," responded another of the bleeding-crimson-and-white- the visitor's lockerroom, the scene was entirely Maybe it really isn't a good idea to worry about types, "It's about tahm they was learned a few facts about footbawl different. don't ya' think?" ' "This is as bad as a loss," sighed Mike Courey. anybody or anything but the next opponent- in Of course, for those of you not born and bred on staples like hush "And I think if you ask anyone else in this this case, Alabama. lockerroom they'll tell you the same thing." Now, does anyone need any more to worry (continued on page 10) · · Of course, one doesn't expect that kind of talk about?