$The Observer an independent student newspaper serving notre dame and st. mary's Vol. XI, No. 94 Monday, March 7, 1977 Gassman reviews ‘successful’ regime by Jack C. Silhavy The Gassman-Casey platform Staff Reporter contained seven points of concern: alleviating overcrowding in the College of Business, a continuation Although others might not and follow up on the COUL report, agree, Mike Gassman, this year’s continuation of the drinking lobby, Student Body President (SBP), increase the services of Student feels his regime has been quite Government and Student Union, successful in getting things done. increase relations with the Board of He believes his campaign prom­ Trustees, increase the viability of ises have been fulfilled as much as hall Judicial Boards, to better the allowed by the situations and some faculty-student relations. unforseen projects have also been boasted. Observer The Gassman-Casey ticket won overwhelmingly a year ago over Insight two other tickets. They received Gassman had tried to deal with 2,062 votes—well over the simple the problem last year through the major!ty-as the ticket of Tim Boyle Academic Council. This year he and Peter Gaa placed second with has taken personal interest in the 590 votes. Candidates Mike Swei- problem, he said. On April 1, SPB-elect Bender will take over the responsibilities from Mike Gassman. Gassman sees gert and Bill Walsh received 535 Gassman said he felt headway his regime as successful in fulfilling campaign promises. [Photo by Tony Chifari] votes, placing third. was made in that awareness was Their platform stressed exper­ gained on both sides. Gassman felt ience, and it seemed to be the sole he was enlightened on how things issue. Gassman had worked the are run, and also commented that previous three years in the Student the college’s administration now Government. During his Junior Hogan announces realizes students are unhappy. year he served as Academic Com­ In regard to Gassman’s second missioner for Student Union, in Newly elected Observer Editor- and features writer this year. typists and night controllers. objective, the Committee on Un­ which he was responsible for the in-Chief Marti Hogan has an­ The position of Special Projects Chiames served as a typist and dergraduate life (COUL) report was calendar change proposal. nounced the Editorial Board for the Editor has been revived to allow night controller this year. evaluated at the beginning of this Mike Casey served one year on 1977-78 year. The new board will more supplements and insights. Paul Clevenger, a sophomore year and suggestions given. Hall Presidents’ Council before the take over after spring break. Pat Cole, a junior from Lompoc, from Dallas Texas, will replace election. Until recently it looked as if Martha Fanning, a junior from California, will fill this position. Tony Chifari as Photography During the campaign Gassman Gassman’s third proposal would Milton, Massachusetts, will re­ Cole served this year as a senior Editor. Clevenger was a photo­ stated, “The main thrust of our pay off. Jerry Klingenberger, a place Dan Sanchez as Managing staff reporter and copy reader. grapher this year. platform is to work with our student lobbyist, spent a lot of time Editor. Working with Fanning as Five non board positions have Steve Bonomo will replace grad­ experience for more communica­ in touch with the drinking bill’s Associate Managing Editor will be also been filled. Barb Langhenry, a uating Mike Miller as Advertising tion and cooperation.” [continued on page 6] Bob Brink, a junior from Westport, sophomore from Arlington, Illinois, Manager. Bonomo, a senior from Connecticut. Their duties will will replace Don Reimer as Copy Poughkeepsie, New York, will su­ include the supervision of the Editor. Langhenry served this year pervise a staff which is responsible production department of the pa­ as senior staff reporter and copy for getting ads and ad layout in the per. reader. paper. Fanning has served as senior Replacing Fanning as Production Replacing Tom Fronczak as Bus­ staff reporter, night editor and Manager will be Karen Chiames, a iness Manager is Sue Quigley, a Production Manager this year junior from Winston Salem, North junior from Wheaton, Illinois. while Brink served as a staff Carolina. As Production Manager, Quigley will be responsible for the reporter and night editor. Chiames will be in charge of the general finances of the paper. Maureen Flynn, a junior from Richmond Heights, Missouri, will Redlining-big city problem replace Pat Hanifin as Editorial Editor. Flynn will supervise the overall production of the editorial comes to South Bend page. by Jack Pizzolato Kathy Mills filling the position of tionwherethey had an account and Senior Staff Reporter Executive Editor will be in charge an excellent credit rating. South of payroll and personnel. Mills, a Bend Federal refused to make a Editor’s Note: This is the first in a junior from Bergenfield, New loan or under $15,000. three-part series on the nation­ Jersey, has served as News Editor Other lending institutions in the wide problem of “redlining” in and senior staff reporter this year. city either turned them down or mortgage loan procedures, with Present News Editor Barbara said they would not make loans for particular emphasis on the practice Breitenstein will move up to the less than $10,000. One did agree to in the South Bend area. The first position of Executive News Editor. do so, but a rate of 12 percent article introduces the problem and Breitenstein, a junior from Kansas interest (8.5 percent is standard). some of the arguments advanced City, Kansas, will be in charge of “They wouldn’t commit them­ by each side - the lenders and their the news department. selves,” Dolores fumed. “They potential clients. The second Working with Breitenstein will just beat around the bush, wouldn’t article will deal with the Home be Tom Byrne, a junior from give a reason, and that’s why I got Mortgage Disclosure Act of 1975, Atlanta, Georgia, in the position of so disgusted.” discussing the effect it has had and Campus Editor. Byrne served as The Clarks finally went to a some of the weaknesses of the law. copy reader and senior staff report­ Mishawaka bank where, they The final article will outline some of er this year, as well as a Contribut­ stated they had no problem getting the solutions that have been pro­ Rich Branning, Duck Williams, Bruce Flowers and Randy ing Editor on the board. a lean. But they and their posed or already instituted in other Haefner proceed to tear down the nets following Saturday's Also in the news department will neighbors now fear that the north­ sections of the U.S. 93-82 victory over the No. 1 San Francisco Dons. [Photo by Tony be Katie Kerwin, a junior from west side may be “redlining.” Chifari] Detroit, Michigan. Kerwin who Dolores Clark is still amazed. “ Redlining” is a term that was served as a copy reader, senior Had they lived in Chicago or New little known four years ago. It is the staff reporter and assistant night York or one of the major cities, she arbitrary refusal by lenders to N.D. employee editor this year, will take over might have been less surprised, invest mortgage money in older Mills’ and Breitenstein’s present but it happened in South Bend. urban neighborhoods. According responsibilities as News Editor. Dolores and her husband, James, to a recent report published jointly in automobile accident Jean Powley, a sophomore from were denied a reasonable home by the National Center for Urban by Jack Pizzolato Clark, who was heading north­ Chagrin Falls, Ohio, will replace mortgage loan. Ethnic Affairs in Washington D C., Senior Staff Reporter bound on Juniper Rd. attempted to Hogan as St. Mary’s Editor. A year ago, the Clarks, who live and by the National Training and avoid Raymond by turning onto Powley will supervise the overall in the upper northwest side of the Information Center in Chicago: Sharon R. Clark, 31, an Douglas Rd. but was struck. The input of stories from St. Mary’s. city, decided to purchase for rental “ ...redlining may consist of out­ employee in the physics depart­ accident occured at 2:05 p.m. She served this year as a day editor purposes a vacant house across the right refusal to accept mortgage or ment, was injured Friday afternoon Both drivers were taken to St. and senior staff reporter. street. The previous owners had home improvement loan applica­ St. Joseph County Police reported Joseph County Hospital. Campbell Replacing Fred Herbst as Sports defaulted on a Federal Housing tions. Or it may involve a number when the car she was driving was suffered nose and knee injuries but Editor will be junior Paul Steven­ Administration (FHA) mortgage of subtler actions: awarding mort­ struck by another vehicle at the was treated and released. Clark, son from Hinsdale, Illinois. loan, and the home had been gage loans on inordinately short corner of Juniper and Douglas who resides at 18838 Welworth Stevenson served as sports writer repossessed and put on the market terms with high downpayment Roads. Ave., was admitted with head, and worked on page layout this for $6,500. requirements; refusing to lend on According to a police spokes­ facial, and possible internal in­ year. When the Clarks talked to a local properties older than a prescribed man, the driver of the other juries and is listed in fair condition. Dave O’Keefe, a junior from realtor, they were told there would number of years; stalling on ap­ vehicle, Raymond P. Campbell, 20 Cam pbell was driving a 1968 Northbrook. Illinois, will replace be g problem; the banks and praisals to discourage potential of 710 West LaSalle Ave., was Chevy lour-ddor hardtop and Clark, Tim O’Reiley as Features Editor. savings institutions were not lend­ borrowers; underappraisals; re­ southbound on Juniper Rd. ap­ a 1975 Chevy coupe. Both vehicles His duties will include procurring ing money in that neighborhood. fusing to lend in amounts below a proaching Douglas Rd. when he were lowed away with extensive stories and laying out the page. They went to the South Bend fixed minimum figure, and charg- turned into thy oncoming lane. damage estimated at SI .800. • O’Keefe served as staff reporter Federal Savings & Loan Assovia- |continued on page 5| 2____the o b s O r V O T ______Mondayf March 7. 1977 News Amin seeks go International KAMPALA, Uganda [AP] - U- basketball in which his hand-picked United States and said he would Quake hits 7.2 on scale ganda’s President Idi Amin said team trounced another from the like to see the U.S. Embassy in yesterday he would like the United armed forces and civil service. Kampala reopened as well as more BUCHAREST, Romania (AP) - At least 600 deaths were reported States to reopen its embassy in Amin, 6-feet-4, dwarfed the other Americans working in Uganda. yesterday in shattered Bucharest and areas of Romania and Kampala and he predicted that one players and scored most of his The embassy was closed in 1973 in Bulgaria hit by the latest of a series of deadly earthquakes in day President Carter will be “one team ’s baskets. a dispute over its Marine guards, southern Europe. of my best friends.” Amin said fears raised for the but the United Sates has not broken The government said Friday night’s massive quake, 7.2 on the In his first interview with U.S. safety of the Americans after he diplomatic relations with Kampala. Richter scale, was known to have killed 580 people in Romania, correspondents since the war of issued orders to them Feb. 25 not Despite his conciliatory attitude including 508 in Bucharest alone, and injured 3,214. Western nerves over the 240-person Ameri­ to leave the country until he met toward the United States, Amin diplomats said American medical students helping in hospitals can community in this East African with them was a misunderstand­ repeated his charge that some estimated as many as 3,000 might have been killed in the disaster, nation, Amin asserted it never had ing. He said it stemmed partly 2,600 mercenaries, working in co­ which rocked Europe from Rome to Moscow Friday night. been his intention to hold the from what he called Carter’s lack of operation with the U.S. Navy’s Americans hostage. knowledge about Africa. Indian Ocean fleet and the Kenyan The Ugandan leader met with The crisis was defused after regular army, are “coming towards Communists-Socialists unite correspondents from The Associat­ Amin cancelled a meeting with the Uganda’s borders.” ed Press, CBS and NBC at the American community and lifted his He said that although Uganda GRENOBLE, France (AP)- The Communist party will move into presidential lodge. travel ban. wants good relations with all its the city council of one of France’s best-managed and most attractive He wore a blue track suit top and The president stressed that he neighbors, “it is still capable of communities in nationwide municipal elections next Sunday without white shorts after an afternoon of wants good relations with the defending itself.” having to gather a single new vote. Among other points made by Their easy victory comes from the Communist’s alliance with the Amin were: Socialist party and anagreementto establish a single left-wing slate Sophomore survey reveals -That reports of 3,000 Palestinians of candidates. On the national scale, the agreement holds in 204 big and “several thousand Cuban cities, with the Socialists occasionally being given a free ride into troops” being in the country were office in a Communist fief such as LeHavre. similarities in three classesuntrue. Such reports, he said, have But the single slate essentially benefits the Communists, and in a “degraded the Western pass.” The more students seems to mores in the years 1961, 1971, and place like Grenoble, it is little else than a giveaway of power. The -That reports of mass killings of change, the more they remain the 1976, using a 124-item question­ Socialist party, in total control of the city for the last 12 years, Ugandan Christians by the Ugan­ same, according to a survey of naire. “ They (respondents from all offered the Communists 16 city council candidacies to 22 for itself on dan army were also incorrect. But, three different groups of sopho­ groups) agreed on two-thirds of all the united left ticket. referring to a plot he recently said mores over the last 15 years at the the item responses for the entire he uncovered to overthrow him, University. inventory,” Prof. Fargen said in a Amin also said that anyone, wheth­ National J. Jerome Fargen, professor of preliminary report. “This fact er Christian, Moslem or pagan, ‘ education at Spalding College in raises a question about whether must pay the price of plotting Louisville, Kentucky, surveyed the Urban poverty is target these classes were really as differ­ against Uganda. brightest of Notre Dame’s sopho- ent as students were often made -That he fully intends to attend the WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary Juanita Kreps says the out to be,” he added. Commonwealth Conference in Lon­ Commerce Department is strengthening its efforts to revive sagging Spring semester When contrasts were evident in don in June despite demands that local economies that have left thousands out of work in the nation’s the survey, they were with the 1971 he should be barred from the event older cities and towns. sophomores. The greatest differ­ because of alleged violations of Until recently, the department has had little role in the war on enrollment peaksences were between either the 1961 human rights within Uganda. urban poverty, and Kreps’ pledge to enter the fray may signal sophomores and their counterparts -That he also hopes to visit the Spring semester enrollment fig­ Carter administration efforts to stimulate private investment in the 10 years later or the 1971 sopho­ United Nations in New York Later ures at the University have reached cities. mores and their counter parts five this year. If he is refused 8,556, the highest number for any “ No statistical trick can hide the fact that structural unemploy­ years later. The 1961 sophomores permission by the U.S. government comparable period in the school’s ment, low incomes and small-business failures have been heavily were surveyed about the time of to visit the U.N., he said other history. A total of 8,057 were concentrated in the older cities and towns,” Kreps said yesterday. the inauguration of president John nations would insist that the U.N. registered a year ago and 8,540 in F. Kennedy. The 1971 research headquarters be moved out of New the previous record semester of coincided with the beginning of York. 1975. non-violence and less severe pro­ Undergraduate enrollment is testing on campuses, and the 1976 On Campus 6,786, an increase of 40 students data were collected after the elec­ Erratum over last year, and Law School is tion of Jimmy Carter. - In the last edition of this paper 9:30- workshop, work values, sponsored by student affairs, 449, an increase of 37. The Sections of the research instru­ on Mar. 4, it was erroneously 11:30 am student activities conference room graduate program in business ment included family relations, reported that The Observer and the administration reports six addition­ outlook on life and the future, University will co-sponsor a loan of 11 am - exhibition, five nd students display works in ceramics, al students and other post­ evaluation of education in general $5,000 to finance continued publi­ 3 pm painting, sculpture, and silkscreen, isis gallery, free. baccalaureate programs are down and Notre Dame in particular, and cation this year. ' ! 34 to 1,150. attitudes toward the economic and 12:15 pm mass, celebrated by fr. robert griffin c.s.c, university The correct amount of th e loan is Enrollment in the College of Arts legal systems. chaplain, lafortune ballroom. $15,000. and Letters this semester is down In questions about their own 84 from last year’s 1,917, down 31 University, 1976 sophomores gave 2-4 pm tax assistance program, conducted by nd accounting in the College of Business Adminis­ it the highest rating, 1961 sopho­ Placement Bureau students, lafortune ballroom, free tration from last year's 1,480, up 73 mores were next, and 1971 sopho­ to 878 in the College of mores last. Residentiality drew the changes date Engineering, and up 16 to 938 in strongest favorable assertion from 3;30 pm colloquim, "the real world of commercializing an the College of Science. There are all three groups, and the influence Students wishing to sign up for invention" by dr. cloyd snavely, national standard co, 1,688 in the Freshman Year of of coeducation, which arrived in interviews in the Placement Bureau mishawaka, sponsored by nettalurgical engineering .Studies, up 65 from last year. 1972, could be seen in the turn­ Office for the week of Mar. 28 can dept., room 5 engineering bldg. around in evaluation of social and do so on Tuesday, Mar. 22. For recreational activities between the this week, there will be no Monday sophomores of 1971 and of 1976. sign-ups. _ 4:30 pm lecture, "biochemical studies on sexual agglutination and morphogenesis in yeast" by dr. clinton e. ballou, dept of biochemistry, univ. of California at berkeley, ENLIST sponsored by chemistry dept., room 123, nieuwland science hall, also march 9 and 11.

7-9 pm workshop, job search, sponsored by student affairs, room 141, regina hall.

8 pm lecture, "absolute liberty corrupts absolutely" by prof. gertrude himmelfarb, city univ. of new york, sponsored %The Observer b r i g h t by history dept.,library aud. ial Night Editor: Debbie Dahrling Asst. Night Editor: Paula Carroll Student Activities lists Layout Staff: Laurel Shu- trump, John Calcutt Editorial Layout: Mike Richter GAME ROOM' class election regulationsSports Layout: Paul Stevenson NOW OPEN by Jake Morrissey Student Activities Office no later Typists: Sue Shellenburger, Hickory Rd. than 5 p.m. on Thursday, Mar. 24. Kathy Egbert, Mary Ann Only The campaign will begin at 5 Keefe, Leigh Tunakan s' Aoua" «oa«V " 0”' The Office of Student Activities E .M .T .: Karen Chiames . PINBALL * a° V has announced the rules and p.m. Thursday, and will run until Day Editor: Jack Pizzolato .FOOSBALL regulations for the 1977 Sophomore, midnight, Monday, Mar. 28. Expenses for it are not to exceed Copy Reader: Pat Cole Junior and Senior Class Elections, $50. No donations of money or Photographer: Tony Chifari which will be held on Tuesday, COLLEGE materials are allowed. M arch 29. The balloting for hall residents The Observer is published Monday vV«*°rV According to the rules, each will be from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. ticket must submit their platform through Friday and weekly during and from 5 to 6 p.m. For the summer session, except during SUNDAY stating what they hope to accomp­ off-campus residents, balloting will the exam and vacation periods The Show college lish during their term if elected. take place at the Huddle from 11 Observer is published by students of ID & get $1.00 This must be done prior to the a.m. to 5 p.m. the University of Notre Dame and TILLAGE St Mary's College. Subscriptions off 16" Family distribution of petitions. Students wishing to run can pick may be purchased for $20 per year size Pizza Petitions for all tickets may be up a complete list of rules and ($10 per semester) from The Obser­ obtained from Student Activities regulations at Student Activities. ver, Box Q, Notre Dame, Indiana 401 N. HICKORY anytime after 8 a.m. on Monday, Also, if there are any questions 46556 Second class postage paid, TOWN & COUNTR Mar. 21. One hundred signatures related to class elections, John Notre Dame, Indiana 46556 The Observer is a member of the from the ticket’s class, are required Reid (7308) in Student Activities ■■ to place the ticket on the ballot. Associated Press All reproduction 31 N. AT DARDEN RD. "Where Piita is Always In Good Taste!" will be happy to answer any rights are reserved Signed petitions are due in the questions. Monday, March 7, 1977 the observer 3 Pennsylvania coal miner escapes death trap

TOW ER CITY, Pa. [APJ - Ronald want to walk.” miner’s distress signal and perhaps Harrisburg. only after relatives of the trapped Adley, a feisty coal miner trapped When he reached the sunlight he evoke a response from anyone Since 1960, 50 miners have died men went to court did drilling to deep inside a mountain for the turned down an offer of sunglasses trapped. Sensitive instruments in Schuylkill county. find them resume. Then, a longest five days of his life, to cut the sudden glare. detected nothing. Tuesday’s cave-in occurred some microphone lowered into a crevice squirmed to freedom yesterday and “Adley is mentally alert and Meanwhile, efforts proceeded to 30 miles from the site of another detected voices. was taken to a hospital in good physically in good shape. He has dig 435 feet into another area of the mine accident that drew worldwide So there was some lingering health. several small abrasions on his mine so television cameras and attention 14 years ago. hope yesterday among the families Several hours later the bodies of forehead, legs and arms,” said microphones could be lowered. On the morning of Aug. 27, 1963 of the missing miners. Near the two more coal miners were located, James Kirk, administrators of After they reached him, Adley’s two miners were hoisted 308 feet to mouth of the mine, their relatives bringing to four the number killed Portsville Hospital where the miner rescuers escorted him 1,000 feet to safety after spending 14 days in a still waited yesterday afternoon. by the underground flood that was examined and admitted for a waiting shuttle car that ferried dark, underground cell. Eyes met with understanding. A trapped Adley last Tuesday. observation. him another 4,000 feet to the In that case, state rescue officials pat on a shoulder or a clasping of Five more miners remained Adley and other miners were surface. had called rescue impossible, and a hand distributed the burden. missing. Efforts to locate them trapped at midday Tuesday be­ “The first thing he said when he continued but no new signs of life neath 400-foot-high Big Lick Moun­ got in was that he was afraid of were reported. tain when a wall of ice-cold water getting the ambulance dirty,” said “Pass that jackhammer over to crashed through a shaft ceiling, Zerbe, the ambulance attendant. ‘Heaven-Hell’ me,” Adley comanded as his battering support timbers and trig­ “ I said, don’t let it worry you.” rescuers burst through the last gering rock slides. Two bodies Adley had been trapped for 32 draws great response inches of a 50-foot wall of coal and were found by late Wednesday. hours before his efforts to tap out a quartz that had served as his prison Three miners who escaped were message that he was alive were by Michael Lewis choices for the students this week­ door. injured. detected. A supply hole was drilled e n d .” Then the 37-year-old miner put Walter J. Vincinelly, state com­ to his chamber and the efforts to “Heaven and Hell” weekend, “ Our main competitor seemed to the finishing touches on a shoulder- missioner of deep mine safety, said cut a larger tunnel through began. sponsored by the Student Union be the post-victory celebrations at wide escape tunnel and wiggled his there were no signs of other life in “ He’s alert and well oriented,” last Friday and Saturday was the bars after the basketball five-foot-seven frame through. He the 10-foot wide, 10-foot high said Dr. Leon Scicchitano, director deemed an “ overall success” by game,” Saddler continued. chamber where Adley and the two of the surgery staff at Pottsville thanked his rescuers with slaps on Social Commissioner Kevin Although most of the activities bodies found yesterday had been. Hospital. “We plan to keep him the back and a few jokes. Saddler. went well, there were some prob­ Two teams of four men each under observation for between 24 It had taken them 108 hours to The weekend’s activities in­ lems during the weekend. One of continued to search the area, which reach him. He cut some of the and 36 hours." cluded happy hours at Kubiak’s the events, a disco at The Nazz was penetrates an unknown distance boredom by chewing tobacco pass­ The Kocher Coal Co. mine, Bar and The Heidleberg Bar in closed down early in the evening ed to him by rescuers. But when into a black hole. But it was only honeycombed with abandoned Niles, a computer dating service, a because of lack of student ' he had asked him for whiskey, they one of several sealed-off chutes in shafts that over the years have dance in the LaFortune ballroom attendance. gave him only orange juice. which other miners might be. trapped pockets of rain water, is and a disco party at the Nazz. “ We had to close down The Nazz Turning down an offer to ride on a After Adley’s rescue, workers located in Schuylkill County over “Over all the weekend was a stretcher the mile to the mine’s fell silent so three dynamite blasts Pennsylvania’s major anthracite success and I’m pleased with the on Saturday night,” Saddler said. mouth, Adley barked: “Hell no. I could be set off to simulate a field 40 miles northeast of response,” Saddler said. He also “It didn’t make sense to have noted that the happy hours were people running the equipment if no very successful and that the com­ one was going to show up.” Ip Business College puter dating service received a Saddler closed by saying, “We good response. tried to offer a lot of different Although there were many other activities, but we could have done Dean Ryan announces changes events on campus last weekend, more with more student involve­ Saddler did not see them as being ment and creativity. The student by Diane Wilson is responsible for the entire College Also being evaluated are the competition. “We hoped to inte­ body is unpredictable, and we need rather than just one section of it, communication skills business ma­ grate our activities with the other to know what they want. The only In an effort to “ redistribute the either the graduate or undergra­ jors have and how they should be events on campus,” he stated. way to know this is for students to manpower with the College of duate students. improved, the role of business in “We tried to present a lot of become more actively involved.” Business Administration” some Presently, Raymond is respon­ government relations, the need of administrative changes are due to sible for undergraduates and an international curriculum for our take place soon, according to Malone is responsible for graduate “domestic economy in an interde­ Maintenance Brother Leo Ryan, Dean of the students in business. The way the pendent world,” and the question College. new administration will be set up, of values in “ business in society.” Dr. Yasaka Furuhashi, professor each associate dean will have The answers to these questions in dorms ‘not excessive’ of marketing and former acting certain responsibilities for the en­ and many more will all be compiled by Mark Perry Lyon said there was really no dean of Business Administraiton, tire college. next February and new curriculum specific time where damage to halls will become associate dean for The administration conceives the and college requirements will be was more prevalent, but noted that faculity development and curricu­ college as a total operation. There ready for the 1978-79 school year. The amount of damage and ' exam week was when students lum for undergraduate and gradu­ is no graduate and undergraduate All 55 faculty members of the vandalism in the dormitories has were more apt to cause uninten­ ate students on June 1, 1977. faculty so it makes more sense to college will be working on the not been excessive so far this year, tional damage because of exam Vincent R. Raymond, associate have the administration cover the evaulation. They are all experts in according to Edwin Lyon, director pressure. He also stated that dean of the College since 1973, will entire college rather than divide it the areas of business, not just in of maintenance at Notre Dame. damage was definitely more com­ continue in that role with responsi­ between the gradual and under­ their specified field. Although he was unable to give mon in mens’ dorms. bility for student personnel and graduate students. According to Ryan, this will cause specific figures at this time, Lyon In general, Lyon said students administrative services for both The College of Business is the evaluation to take longer but stated “ except for a couple of wild have been much better in the undergraduate and graduate working on a major evaulation of will give better results as each weekends last fall, over all the 1970’s than in the I960’s. students. the college and all the departments professor is concerned with the students have been good to us this All the hall rectors questioned Dr. John R. Malone, associate • in it. When the evaulation is entire college and not just his y e a r.” also commended the students on dean of the College of Business completed new requirements for department. Lyon noted that some hall dam­ their behavior this year. Sally Administration will leave his ad­ the college and the departments age is expected each year, and Duffy, rector of LewisHallsaid most ministrative position and return to will be recommended. There are Overcrowding still a problem commented “We would allow for a vandalism has been restricted teaching as a professor of market­ no course changes slated for 1977- certain amount of damage because mainly to tearing of wallpaper ing on May 31, 1977. Dr. Frank 78 school year, but the study will be Another concern of the college is of horseplay, but it’s the malicious along the stairwells and other Yeandell, assistant dean of the completed during that year and the crowding within the college. intentional vandalism that bothers minor damage. When asked if she College of Business Administra­ there will be a major shift within Ryan explained some experiments u s .” thought any of the damage might tion, will be joining the faculty at the college and within each going on within the sophomore He listed Planner and Grace be cause by parties in the hall, St. Mary’s College where he will be department. year in statistics. There are Halls as examples of this malicious Duffy said that the girls for the assosiate professor of business and Some things the evaluation is presently large sections with tutor­ vandalism, where the elevators are most part have kept the parties economics effective on Aug. 30, investigating include the structure ials for problems. They will do the constantly being damaged by peo­ very well organized. 1977. of the sophomore year (the sopho­ same thing with the statistics ple covering the walls with graffiti. Br. Benesh of Alumni also said more year is filled with required classes next year for an accurate Lyon recalled one year when the that he didn’t know of any damage Reason for change intro business courses), the role of appraisal of the system. elevators had to be painted four in the hall caused by people at the computer for business courses, Ryan said the collge was also times because of this damage. parties in Alumni. Acceding to Ryan, there are the role of statistics and applied working on not having to have all three purposes of these changes. statistics (BA graduates are required the sophomore courses large. They One is to consolidate and join the to have 6 hours of statistics), and are also trying to revise the faculty administrative offices for graduate the necessity of a ‘cap-up’ course at to teach at the junior and senior are you...... and undergraduate business ma­ the end of the program connecting level new courses and to have the jors into one unit covering both. A all of the' things the business senior courses smaller in number. Not Baptized and interested in third purpose is to extend the scope graduate has learned in the There are three important rea- of the associate deans so that each college. [continued on page 6] becoming a Christian? Baptized and interested in becoming a Roman Catholic? The Observer is looking for Baptized Catholic and interested in some fast moving people receiving the sacrament of Confirmation? to work in ad sales and Baptized Catholic and interested in service next year learning more about your religion? for information please contact the : Excellent sales experience and NOTRE DAME CATECHUMENATE a healthy commission are offered at Campus Ministry Campus Ministry West stop by th e Observer office (3rd floor Lafortune) Memorial Library g p Badin Hall to fill 283-6536 283-3820 % opinion #The Observer EDITORIAL BOARD Thomas O'Neil an independent student newspaper Editor-in-Chief Dan Sanchez serving notre dame and st. mary's Managing Editor Chris Smith Asst. Managing Ed The Observer is published by students of the University of Gregg Bangs Executive Editor Notre Dame and St. Mary's College. It does not necessarily Val Zurblis Executive Editor A Call reflect the policies of either institution. The news is reported Pat Hanifin Editorial Editor as accurately and as objectively as possible Editorials Tim O'Reiley Features Editor represent the opinion of a majority of the Editorial Board. Bob Mader Exec. News Editor Commentaries, opinions and letters are the views of their Maureen Flynn Campus Editor To Action authors. Column space is available to all members of the Marti Hogan St. Mary's Editor community, and letters are encouraged to promote the free Kathy Mills News Editor expression of varying opinions on campus. Barb Breitenstein News Editor = /. p. russell Don Reimer Copy Editor Box Q Business Manager Tom Fronczak _ Martha L Fanning Production Editor Apathy at Notre Dame is not Eck. This type of respect is the Advertising Manager Mike Miller Notre D am e Fred Herbst Sports Editor inherent as some feared. The quality most admirable in a student Photo Editor Tony Chifari Ind. 46556 Tom Byrne Contributing Editor students are concerned and respon­ leader at Notre Dame. sive when an issue of importance Undeniably, the loss hurt, but arises. Such was demonstrated by not in a bitter sort of way. Almost Monday, March 7, 1977 the tremendous turnout in this two thousand students trusted their V J year’s SBP and SBVP elections. A votes to us, an amazing display of remarkable number of people case support. We are onlyworriedthat ballots this election; less than one we will not be in a position to percent separated my running implement the proposals the voters mateJohn Geppert and myself from worked and voted for. However, Retain Danehythe winning ticket. we feel the programs and proposals Certainly this was one of the of our platform are sound an Promptedn i c k r l hvttioby the TTnnmroitv’oUniversity’s retirement V tictoruhistory. most memorable elections in recent implementable. Specifically, we of Prof. James P. Danehy, we examined, in A total scholar, Professor Danehy is times. The slim margin of victory urge our new SBP and SBVP, Dave Friday’s editorial, Notre Dame’s nebulous intimately familiar with the great works of demonstrates the political involve­ Bender and Tom Soma to nurture definition of tenure, and the manner in literature which are read for Seminar. ment that characterized the cam­ the SLC along its path to deal with which this definition may be applied (at the Such a well-rounded professor is an asset pus for several days. For a special student life problems in a long administration’s discretion) either to retire to any school, especially Notre Dame, a group however, this election was range basis, secondly, to be visible or retain professors once they reach 65. university that stresses liberal education. only culminated by the balloting. student leaders and thirdly to We concluded that the current system may In the classroom, Danehy gives himself The entire process of organization, recognize and deal with a social life not last much longer, in view of the totally to his teaching. Outside the planning and strategy took hun­ on campus which is in need of animosity that exists between Notre classroom, he is always available for dreds of man-hours even five much improvement. Dame’s faculty and administration. consultation, and is willing to devote weeks before election day. At this time our Student Govern­ In this editorial, we turn to the whatever time is necessary to help his ment has a tremendous opportunity students. Prof. Danehy demands much We would like to thank all of the to utilize an active and enthusiastic individual case of Prof. Danehy. Whatever voters who had the confidence in us student body to accomplish its the general retirement rules, he deserves from those he teaches, but he demands to trust us with their votes. We goals. With a completely unified to go on teaching. much more from himself as a teacher. cannot repay all of the individuals Student Body Dave and Tom will be Dedicated and hard working, Danehy has who pledged their loyalty and time able to deal more convincingly with By his own definition, Dr. Danehy’s earned the respect of his students, and is to our belief, nor can our hall the business at hand. We are primary job as a Professor of Chemistry is almost universally admired by those who coordinators or campaign mana­ hopeful of a direction in student to teach Organic Chemistry to Notre have had him in class. gers Brian Clancy, Chad government towards greater visi­ Dame’s pre-med and science students. James Danehy has not limited his Tiedemann and Jeff Kohler be bility and efficiency, which will This course is the cut-throat pre-med involvement with Notre Dame to teaching. adequately repaid. enable Dave and Tom to maintain course; it marks the point at which a He is president of the Notre Dame Credit Perhaps Mark Eck, of the third the interest of the student body student who wants to become an M. D. Union’s Board of Directors. He is also a place ticket, will never realize how throughout their whole term. makes it or drops out of pre-med. long-time member of the Faculty Senate. indebted we are for his support and Only with the support of the A tough course for the student, Organic He nowserves as its chairman. In this role, allegiance the night after he him­ greatest student body in the world Chem is most certainly a rigorous course he has increased the efforts of previous self had been defeated. Mark can Notre Dame’s Student Govern­ for the professor who teaches it. Professor chairmen to create an amicable working trusted our platform, had faith in ment represent the concerns of its Danehy has done an admirable job, putting relationship between the Senate and the its candidates and took hours of his students. We pledge our total into his teaching effort enthusiasm and Administration. own time to campaign for Russell- support to Dave Bender and Tom vigor that many younger faculty members Geppert in Flanner Hall. The Soma and encourage our many would be hard-pressed to match. In view of his past record at Notre Dame, overwhelming turnout there not supports to do likewise. There is a Danehy’s teaching is not limited to and his continuing good work, we heartily only- demonstrated a mandate for great deal to be done, we wish the ticket,-but it also demonstrated Dave and Tom the best of success chemistry. He teaches a section of P . support Professor James Danehy in his the confidence and respect of the in their approach to accomplish Collegiate Seminar, a course which (ideal­ effort to continue teaching, and we Flanner residents toward Mark their goals. ly) calls for a teacher who has some reproach anyone who would force him into knowledge of philosophy, literature and retirement long before his time has come. x f ..AND THEN WHEN THEY WELL, IT WAS I KNOW, GOT TO THE SCENE WHERE A PRETTY DIS- BUT I'V E KUNTA KINTE15 CAPTURED TURB/NGSHOW, NEVER SEEN CLYDE JUSTWENT INTO A 6/NNY. I CLYDE SO P. O. Box Q I FIT OF RAGE! SHAKEN! we left the window, sections B, 8, have gotten enough votes to even Dried Brain and 10 were supposedly sold out. I qualify for Thursday’s run-off. say “supposedly” because now I Instead, they chose to wait until read in your paper that some only tickets remained, meaning 5 Syndrome tickets from these very same that an endorsement of one would sections were stolen from the necessarily have some impact on n Dear Editor: Student Union office last week. the efforts of the other. My question is: If these tickets At any rate, the editorial staff R egarding Professor D anehy’s were indeed “ sold,” how is it that obviously felt that Wednesday’s forced retirement: The former there were still some available to endorsement of the Bender-Soma pastor of my parish, an energetic, be stolen? Obviously, these tickets ticket would not be “ unfair to Mr. vigorous man, who was forced to were withheld from the students Russell,” though he would not retire by the Church once said and I’d like to know why. have “ a chance to reply at length.” THE WHOLE WEEK "ROOTS''WAS ON, bitterly, “ You know, when you turn Thus, their subsequent decision to HE JUST WALKED AROUND IN A BUT CLYDE I KNOW, 65 your brains dry up.” Apparent­ Stephen L. N eedles delay the printing of Mr. Van DAZE SAYING OVER AND OVER, ALWAYS SAYS BUT THIS TIME ly some of our administrators suffer Tassel’s letter concerning Mr. "'WHO AM 1 ? HOW DID I GET THAT! \ IT REALLY 7A WORRIED M E.. fror the same mentality. Bender’s misconceptions about the HERE?" Observer SLC was seemingly inconsistent, Bob Mader since the delay was justified by their reasoning that the printing £ Criticized would be “ unfair to Mr. Bender ’ since he would not have “ a chance 3 Ticket Sales to reply at equal length.”. In this Dear Editor: way an attempt to enlighten the Z campus about the weakness of one o Questioned It seems that in dealing with the of the very planks of the platform o recent SBP Election, The th at The Observer had recently so Q Observer’s actions were curiously heartily endorsed was effectively Dear Editor: inconsistent, and in the opinion of suppressed until the election was (SBTTAA myself and a number of others, over. On Tuesday morning, February quite inappropriate. If The Observer feels that it is 22, a friend of mine and I stood in First there was the matter of performing a service to the Notre Ed’s opinion column attacking line for a combined total of five endorsing a ticket. Had The Dame-St. Mary’s community by Not So Dave’s unclarified proposal for hours at the Student Union box Observer’s editorial staff chose to unbiased reporting of important renewal of the SLC reads like a office in order to obtain the best endorse one of the nine tickets and relevant information, and this Impartial frantic bureaucrat's attempt to possible tickets for the upcoming prior to last Tuesday’s preliminary commitment extended to SBP elec­ protect his beloved position. Still, Electric Light Orchestra concert. election they would have their tion coverage, then I feel the Ed does make one very important When we finally reached the ticket preference known to the campus editorial staff should admit not Dear Editor: point. Through any re vamping window at 1 I a.m., we were told without any way hampering the merely their “regret” about this process, the SLC should remain a that the best sections, B and 10, campaigns of the other candidates. incident, but the fact that they in view of the fact that Dave direct student "link to the Board of had already been sold out. This did It seems that if one of the tickets made a serious error in judgement. Bcndei was criticizing the SLC’s T rustees. not surprise us because we were was so impressive as to warrant an This error may have cost a very inactivity of the last year, 1 do not Hopefully, as president, Dave preceded in the line by about 70 endorsement from the editorial dedicated and hard-working indivi­ believe Ed Van Tassel, a twice- will be able to effect action which people. board, they they would have dual the election, when as it was elected North Quad Representative will help the students utilize the Eventually, we purchased a wished the campus to know their the margin of defeat was extremely to the SLC could possibly In link nior ■ 1 1 ectivelv. number of tickets in section 8 feeings before Tuesday’s election. narrow. considered (as he maintains! an which, we were told, were the last After all, the ticket they considered impartial observer" ‘o any lection Mike Richter ones left in that section. So after the best concieVably might not Theodore A. Howard nich Dave had a lak. Monday, March 7, 1977 the observer Redlining problem examined [continued from page 1] “the basic criteria of sound mort­ formation,” Damian remarked, ing inordinately high closing cost, gage investments." “because it’s hard to come by. to name a few.” In general, however, the banking Interest rates and property values Banks and savings and loan community has retreated from its are not publicly recorded." associations (s&l’s) have tradition­ former defense of redlining and is “The banks,” he continued, ally defended the policy of not maintaining a quiet posture. But “always want to say that you need granting loans to “high risk" areas the fervor surrounding the issue to look at each individual case, 9 as necessary in order to secure the has spilled over into smaller com­ because unless you do you won’t safety of their depositors’ funds. munities, and many local groups, understand why they don’t make Opponents of the practice charge with the aid of anti-redlining loans. There are extenuating 1 that redlining is a self-fulfilling organizations such as National circumstances, true, but we should prophesy which dooms inner city People’s Action, have discovered be able to tell the kind of general neighborhoods to blight and inev­ that the problem is not one things that are happening simply itable decay. Citizen groups have restricted to the big cities. from a composit view," also accused lending institutions of Local action Damian did not believe that deliberately “Killing off” urban In South Bend, a small ad hoc redlining was the only factor in areas in order to force families into neighborhood decline. Lending the more profitable suburbs. committee on redlining has been very active. The group is sup­ institutions should not be made Throughout the mid ‘70’s in a score scapegoats, he said, because it is of cities across the nation, such as ported by the United Religious Community, the Broadway Christ­ not their fault alone. “Neighbor­ Los Angelos, Chicago, Boston and hood decline," he concluded, “is a Baltimore, community organiza­ ian Parish, and the Justice and Peace center. Last June, with the compilation of a lot of things that tions came into direct conflict with go on in cities: a kind of lending institutions over this ques­ assistance of the Indiana Public Interest Research Group (INPIRG), lackadaisical attitude toward ser­ tion. vices in inner city areas, the Redlining came to the forefront the committee published a mort­ gage investment study of the seven allowance of housing code vio­ The scoreboard and the fans leave little doubt as to the victors in as an issue in May 1975, when the lations, and the whole race issue.” Senate Banking Committee, chair­ largest lending institutions in Saturday's thriller. [Photo by Tony Chifari] South Bend. The study was Of particular concern to him is ed by Sen. William Proxmire the way in which property is (D.-Wisc.), conducted hearings on completed with the use of public mortgage records located in the St. presently appraised. The neigh­ the pratice. As a result, Congress borhood, he pointed out, will N.D. book publis enacted and President Ford signed Joseph County Recorder’s office. The key finding was that in 1975 naturally play a part in determining into law the first major peice of a house’s value. “But," Damian federal anti-redlining legislation only 37 per cent of an approximate chooses Mclnerny’s $28 million in mortgage money was asked, “what is the point at which entitled the “ Home Mortgage Dis­ property begins to be devalued?" by Michael Lewis production of the book," Mader closure Act of 1975." invested within the city of South Bend. The remaining 63 per cent “ Nobody can say or will say,” he said. The law, which went into effect charged, “because the whole ap­ Quick as a Dodo, a novella by “ Sometimes small mistakes last June, requires depository in­ went to outlying areas. Only the National Bank and Trust Co. show­ praisal system is so obscure.” Notre Dame philosophy professor don’t matter in paper or yearbook stitutions who are federally insured Most lending institutions use a Ralph Mclnerny, has been chosen or something of that sort," Mader or regulated and have assets of ed what the group called a “fairly even distribution of mortgage federal appraisal form. One of the for publication by the book pub­ continued, “but in a book every­ more than $10 million, to disclose categories on the form is titled lishing class here at Notre Dame. thing has to be as perfect as we can the location and dollar amount of money across all South Bend neighborhoods." “Property values,” followed by Bob Mader, president of Juniper make it." residential mortgage or home im­ Other institutions, such as the three check boxes which indicate Press, describes the book as “a Since the book will soon be on provement loans made or pur­ St. Joseph Band and Trust Co. and that the value of property in the children’s story that can be appre­ the market the class has turned its chased within the last fiscal year the Sobieski Federal Savings and neighborhood is either increasing, ciated by adults." The story attention to marketing and publi­ and for each consecutive year. This Loan Association, invested only 24 is stable, or is decreasing. The concerns a small boy whose Easter cizing the book. information must be maintained for per cent of their total mortgage neighborhood is rated good, aver­ egg hatches into a dodo bird. The The class is considering many public inspection and copying for a volume in the city. age, fair or poor on such factors as dodo is very intelligent and soon different ways of publicizing the period of five years from the date of The study also revealed that “general appearance of properties,” learns to talk and read. book, including many on and its release. within South Bend most lenders did “property compatability,” (with Later the bird escapes from the off-campus channels. Current Citizen groups across the country other homes in the area), “ quality possibilities include ads in The not make loans at all in large parts boy’s father, who wishes to use the heralded the bill as a major victory of schools,” and “ protection from Observer, iron-on transfers, and. of the west, southwest, southeast dodo’s talents for financial gain while the Banking Committee detrimental conditions.” The hopefully, autograph parties at a majority labeled it as a “mild and near east sides of town. and teaches what he has learned to In drawing comparisons between house is judged for such things as other birds. few local bookstores. Mader said remedy that will have the effect of “overall livability," “appeal and one member of Juniper Press mortgage investment patterns in encouraging institutions to become marketability.” “I don’t want to tell the whole might go as far as walking around 1971 and 1975, th e rep o rt com ­ more community minded." Prox­ Critics feel that parts of the form story," Mader said, “but it’s an campus in a dodo costume to mented that “if anything, the mire wrote, “The act requires are too vague and subjective. The excellent book and we’re very inform the Notre Dame community picture has worsened.” every bank or savings institution to two criteria most commonly attack­ enthusiastic about it’s success." of the book. “In our report we tried not to give a public accounting of where ed are those which ask the ap­ Quick as a Dodo will be Mader stated, “We would like to make a judgement," said Conrad the community’s money is being praiser to determine a home’s Mclnerny’s seventh published nov­ see the book publicized in some Damian, a spokesman for the group lent. With this disclosure, it will be “effective age,” and its “es­ el. He has also had six philosophy educational magazines or the edu­ and resident of the southeast much more difficult for lenders to timated remaining economic life.” books published. Mclnerny is a full cational sections of some other section of the city. “However, justify writing off entire neighbor­ “Effective age of property” is a professor of Philosophy at Notre magazines. Our goal is to get this redlining certainly appeared to be hoods, as some have done in the phrase widely used among depos­ Dame and has taught here for 22 book a lot of attention.” evident in South Bend." He noted p a s t." itory institutions. The term dif­ years. The class originally considered that across the country it has been Since the passage of the Home ferentiates between the actual age The book, which is 64 pages 18 manuscripts before narrowing documented as a serious problem, Mortgage Disclosure Act, lending of a house and its “market” age long, is now completely ready for the field to five original novels. but added, “ I have some sense that institutions have responded to taking into consideration the con­ printing excepting the illustrations Mclnerny’s book was then chose as the lending institutions in South pressure for more equitable mort­ dition of the property and the and a cover design. The class will a result of class discussion and Bend will respond to the sit­ gage practices. Spokesmen such as location. take the manuscript to Insty-Prints deliberation. Saul B. Klaman, chief economist u atio n ." of South Bend for final printing Senior Jim Winters is editor-in- for the National Association of “We don’t have a lot of in- See Part 2 in tomorrow’s O bserver. before spring break, and if all goes chief of Juniper Press, and Pam Mutual Savings Banks fear that as scheduled the book will be ready Butterworth has been chosen to lenders are being forced to allocate for distribution soon after break. illustrate the book. credit unwisely, without regard for “Our biggest job in making the book ready for printing was catching the many subtle mistakes A career in la w - in the original manuscript and the senior men’s night out!!! without law school. All we can What can you do with only a bachelor’s degree? I tell you isthat | Now there is a way to bridge the gap between an undergraduate education and a challenging, respon­ sible career. The Lawyer's Assistant is able to do I men who don’t 1 work traditionally done by lawyers. 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Pennsylvania 19103 fhis farl ’akon from a n-search study I i - !>•: \ ,n fht- sm o k er who a t agv2.r> (215) 732-6600 Operated by Para-Legal, Inc smokes alxiul a pack and a half of senior MEN only. I rig a re t fes a day. # 9 S * AC-0035 6 the observer Monday. March 7, 1977 Gassman reviews fulfill [continued from page 1] a sort of booklet, describing the wants. In this task, Gassman feels promise by the University to install tigated, and the ways to overcome sponsor in the state legislature. two organizations and their value to he was successful. laundry machines for men. them were drafted. Again, the The bill had a good chance of the student and University. Before He, or some other Student This was not on the original list questions were anticipated and passing until the sponsor decided this could be done, however, Government representative met of campaign issues. This involved answered before the presentation! to run for another office. He has Student Union printed one on their with' them regularly, and Gassman an in-depth investigation before Bender commented, “They look­ dropped his sponsorship and the own and the idea was given up. said that better feelings have been the proposal was even drafted. ed into some real good issues. ” He bill will probably be killed in Gassman has had quite a bit of produced on both sides. This could Much time was spent on in­ added, however, there was not com m ittee. trouble with the Student Union this help with future decisions. formation-gathering for the pro­ enough support by students and Gassman believes this is unfor­ year because of some problems ject. All aspects of financing, Concerning Judicial Boards, the SLC. The SLC did nothing for tunate since the bill was almost between the two organizations. He enginereering and student need Gassman felt that there was too Gassman, according to Bender. passed but hopes more work can be said there was some commun­ were looked into before the presen­ much of a lack in most halls. Many “The important thing is not only done on it in the future. He does, ications problem and this made tation was made. halls didn’t, and still don’t, have that these things were done, but however, feel encouraged by the work between offices hard. Student Government succeeded J-Boards and of the ones that do, that Student Government pushed amount of headway the program Bender saw Student Union or- in gaining administrative aware­ most are ineffective. them through,” Gassman stated. got. ganizaion as a problem in this past ness of the problem, and the “I like to stress professionalism- Dave Bender, SBP-elect, be­ year. He commented that there Gassman s strategy was to rein­ administration agreed to install the responsibility, not politics in this lieved Gassman’s attempt was was a real conflict from what he force the entire system. There was m achines. administration.” “well organized,” and said it was a understood and added “If the two a push to get a J-Board established Gassman stressed the complete­ Under Gassman, the system of credit to be given to this year’s groups are not working together, in each residence dorm as well as to ness of the information. One has to co-exchange between the two din­ SBP. both sides are in for a lot of revitalize the existing ones. Stu­ know all the facts and all the ing halls and with St. Mary’s was The Gassman ticket’s fourth p roblem s.” dent Government recommended questions as well, he said. In expanded. It began with a lunch objective was to increase the Another program Gassamn tried that party and parietal violations be addition to the presentation, Stu­ between the two dining halls. This services of the Student Govern­ to deal with was to get better handled within the halls. dent Government has to know how was so successful that this service ment and Student Union. relations with the Board of Trus­ An important result of the work the administrators will react and was extended to dinners as well. One plan involved the printing of tees to know student needs and of Gassman and his workers is the what questions they will ask. Again, there was great response Whenever this year’s Student and the number of tickets were Government went forward with a doubled. proposal, it was as solid as possible Gassman said his job has been a Carter talkathon draws ‘praise’ with the time they had, Gassman dual one. He must get the job done stated. “You have to prove and also keep people happy. yourself,” he said, adding that he Student Government this year WASHINGTON [AP] - President with the President was the realiza­ Panama Canal to the Panamanian felt they had this year. has tried to talk about things Carter basked in mostly rave tion of a dream. government about the year 2000 without making a lot of noise and reviews yesterday about his first “ W e’re middle-class people with but guarantee U.S. and world Bender also agreed that this disturbances. Gassman stated they radio talk show and figured on no political clout,” she said. “ I’m 1 shipping access to the waterway. year’s SG. communicated “very, hadn’t really had to do anything having another talkathon with the just so down-deep glad that we -March 16 in the scheduled date very well” with the Administra­ spectacular and, therefore, have American people - but perhaps have a President that we can talk for the arrival of a five-member tion. He saw the problem in the had to make little noise. He added using a different format for variety. to .” mission he is sending to Vietnam to communication with the students. that they have gotten things done There was scattered grumbling But Doris Lawton, 53 a Brain­ discuss the fate of scores of Bender cited the Cable TV issue as and have kept up their credibility. but the praise was instant and tree, Mass. housewife, said she Americans still unaccounted for an example of this. He said many Gassman stated that it was a lavish. It came from aides, the didn’t try to reach Carter because it after the Vietnam war and a wide students felt it was not the out­ great learning experience, but a Senate majority leader, people who didn’t seem to worth the effort. range of other matters. standing advantage it was made “lot of hell.” He said, “I don’t talked with Carter on the phone, “He’ll do just as he pleases no -He will have his tax reform out to be by Gassman and others. know if I’d do it agian. If I had the and people who didn’t. matter what we say,” she said. program completed by Sept. 30 and “A lot of people didn’t like the experience, no. If I didn’t, yes, I Carter heard comments and an­ appear before a joint session of idea,” he said. “Too much time The President made no major probably would.” swered questions Saturday from 42 Congress on April 20 to reveal was spent on it.” disclosures, but did refine matters “"I don’t ask for gratitude, I just persons in 26 states on a two-hour details of his comprehensive Gassman had presented a pro­ that had previously been addressed ask not to get the grief,” he radio talk show carried by CBS. energy policy. posal to the University to install a by lesser officials. He said: concluded. Their calls to the Oval Office were Cable TV system to aid educational -He intends to move soon to seek Carter said the plan will not selected for geographical balance and entertainment interests. It was restoration of relations with Cuba, include anything like a 25-cent from an estimated 9.5 million rejected but only by a very close but the island nation will have to boost on gasoline taxes. EUROPE attempts to reach him. margin, Gassman stated. change attitudes and end inter­ -He has no plans to revive the “I liked it,” Carter said at the vention in Latin America before military draft but would like to He said the preparation was very |ySni/2 e£sry end of the two-hour session. “The gull diplomatic ties can be explore a new system of military complete in the amount of time questions...are the kind you never - (800) 325-4867 restored. enlistment “to combine it with a available to them before the issue or set* your tMyel aq en * get in a press conference. It is a -U .S. negotiators will seek a treaty much more comprehensive public came up. All the financial and very good for me to understand ® Utv.Travel Charters . that will yield control of the service opportunity.” engineering problems wqre inves­ from the American people what they’re interested in. “My inclination is to do this again in the future...The two hours We put some of America’s passed very quickly and I learned a lot from it.” White House Press Secretary most important natural resources Jody Powell told reporters the president received a call after the into the ground. show from Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd of West Virginia who told him it was a success. “Certainly the experience here from our point of view was success­ ful,” Powell said. “If subsequent offers are made of a similar nature or if someone has a different idea for it we would certainly consider it.” Mrs. John Ritchey of George­ town, Ky., one of the President’s callers, said after the show went off the air: “It was a thrill. It was something I didn’t think would ever happen. He’s given the presidency to me a whole new look.” Another caller, Esther Thomas, 58, ofUlanova, Pa., said her talk Changes made in Business Dept. [continued from page 3] sons for having smaller classes: as to have more class participation, -which is practically impossible in large lecture classes, to encourage Highly trained, highly qualified, and highly dedicated missile officers discussion, and to foster better in the Air Force. Getting down to tstne vital business of keeping America alert. writing and speaking skills. When This is a specialized field available to a few very special men. Ryan became dean two years ago, You can prepare to enter this exciting field by enrolling in an Air Force the average class size was 55. It is ROTC program. Four-year, 3-year, or 2-year programs leading to a com­ now at 44, and Ryan hopes that by mission of an Air Force officer. There are scholarships available, plus $100 1978 it will be 35. monthly allowances. And after college, an Air Force opportunity for a chal­ The only business class offered lenging job and with paid-for graduate educational degrees. to non-business majors is account­ If you’re the type of a guy who wants to plant your feet on a solid foun­ ing. This spring there are two dation, look into the Air Force ROTC programs and look ahead to becoming a sections, and next fall and spring missile launch officer in the Air Force. there will be two sections each. Get all the details... no obligation, of course. This is a section per semester increase. All the departments are in the process of looking for courses For more information call Capt. Davis at 283- 6635 that can be opened to non-business majors. Hopefully by the fall of 1977, Dean Ryan stated some more new business courses will . be opened to non-business major. Put it all together in Air Force ROTC. Monday, March 7, 1977 the observer 7 ND cagers receive NCAA bid^Observer by Paul Stevenson feated by the University of Conne­ Other contests in the East Re­ Sports Writer cticut last year in the opening gional are VMI against Duquense round of the NCAA’s in overtime. and Princeton vs. Kentucky. The Notre Dame Athletic Depart­ At one point, Hofstra held a 15 In the West Regional, UCLA ment has accepted an invitation for point advantage, but due to the meets Louisville, and either San the Irish basketball team to partici-, fouling out of three starters, their Diego St. or San Jose St. will pate in the NCAA tournament. lead eventually dwindled. confront Idaho St. In games played The invitation, which was of­ Hofstra, which is located in in Tucson, St. John’s will face Utah Sports ficially announced on the NBC j Hempstead, N.Y., has battled a- and USF will challenge UNIV. television network at 3 p.m. (EST), - gainst three common Irish oppo­ placed the Irish in the East nents. The Flying Dutchmen were In the Midwest Regional, Cinci­ Regional to confront Hofstra Col­ edged by the University of Vermont nnati! will meet Marquette and Irish lege in Philadelphia. 87-86 in Burlington, while the Southern Illinois will face Arizona pucksters The Flying Dutchmen won the Notre Dame cagers annihilated the in Omaha, while Kansas St. will East Coast Basketball League for Catamounts 89-48 at the ACC. meet Providence and Arkansas will in Saturday night contest the second consecutive year, i The Irish and the Flying Dutch­ tackle Wake Forest. trate on playing hockey. Meredith, Hofstra beat LaSalle 92-81, an! men found themselves on the The Mideast pits Michigan a- [continued from page 8] ivho played outstanding in both opponent which the Irish em­ losing end of an identical 64-62 gainst Holy Cross and UNC-Char- th e gam e. contests, later scooped up an enant barrassed 113-77, last Saturday score against Villanova. The lotte against either Miami of Ohio In the second period, Dave pass and went in alone on sheer night to capture the conference title Hofstra cagers were downed by or Central Michigan in Blooming­ Lundeen scored on a Dave Herbst hustle, only to be thwarted by Mike and finish the season with a 23-6 Manhattan 78-77 at the Garden, ton. ledger. while Notre Dame emerged victor­ set-up and the Badgers went up by Dibble waiting at the other end. Forward John Irving is the star of ious from that east coast encounter Baton Rouge will be the site of a 2-1 margin. The Badgers Nothing eventuated from a hard- the Roger Gaeckler coached squad. with the Jaspers 86-82. the Middle Tennessee vs. Detroit threatened to widen that margin skated overtime period. Mike Irving is currently leading the The Flying Dutchmen have and Tennessee against Syracuse when they went on the 5-3 advant­ Dibble and John Peterson both country in rebounding with 16 beaten two other teams which have m eetings. age, but excellent Irish penalty made many fine saves, and both caroms per game. The Hofstra received an invitation to the NCAA “We’re just glad we got a bid killing, led by Donny Fairholm were saved by the goaltenders best forward finished third last year and tournament. Hofstra downed Du- and now we just have to prove stymied the glorious Badger oppor­ friends on several occasions, as first in the 1974-75 season. quense 76-70 while sliding past we re worthy of it,” Irish mentor tunity. With Nugent off for both Wisconsin and Notre Dame Irving’s teammate, swingman Southern Illinois 77-76. Digger Phelps commented. “We roughing and with an Irish player wingers oanged the posts and Rich Laurel, is currently the fifth If Notre Dame defeats Hofstra, can’t afford to take Hofstra lightly. serving a slashing penalty for John cross-bars in attempts to win the leading scorer in the country with a they head to College Park, Mary­ They received an NCAA bid, so Peterson, the penalty killing unit sudden-death playoff. 29.9 clip. land to tackle the winner of the they can’t be a bad team. We’re went to work and effectively thwar­ Amidst all the roughness that The Flying Dutchmen were de­ North Carolina - Purdue clash. just going to do our best.” ted goals that could have made the characterized that two game series, difference in the game. As it was, it seemed to be inevitable that the Badgers skated off with a 2-1 someone would have to get hurt. lead. Unfortunately for the Irish, going opened the last into playoffs, it had to be Steve regulation period with the Badger’s Schneider, who was taken to the Purdue heads popcorn research third goal, when he received an hospital. errant pass and skated in alone, For Coach Lefty Smith, a split WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. [AP] agriculture engineer, said expan­ the extent of kernel damage in the puting the puck by John Peterson. would have been nice, but a tie was -Expansion volume is at the heart sion volume is determined by harvesting process,” Lien said. The' Irish came storming back, better than a loss. of popcorn research, successful comparing the volume of popped Dr. G. C. Haugh, said improper however, as Clark Hamilton, set up “I’m pleased to see us come popcorn production and the na­ corn and the weight of the unpopp­ harvesting can reduce expansion by Paul Clarke and Kevin Nugent, back as we did and play well tion’s only active popcorn research ed kernels. A kernel “pops” volume 25 percent. Forward travel lifted the puck above Mike Dibble’s tonight,” commented Smith, “es­ program, headquartered at Purdue because of moisture trapped within speed equipment, the concave left shoulder, and the momentum pecially after last nights game.” University here. it is converted to steam as the clearance of the cylinder and the shifted towards the Irish. One of Coach Smith’s comments The research and subsequent kertiel is heated which eventually operating speeds of the cylinder After three minutes of steady was undeniable. The fans who saw jump in the expansion volume of triggers an explosion, he said. can all damage kernels and reduce pressure by several different Irish Saturday’s game certainly got their popcorn, is partially responsible for Typically, one pound of popcorn crop values, he said. lines, Donny Fairholm brought money’s worth. For the Irish, an $11 million popcorn crop in will produce more than four gallons Lien said popcorn, unlike field down the house when he slipped perhaps it was proof that they can Indiana, said agricultural statisti­ of popcorn. corn, is usually grown on contract the puck behind Mike Dibble tying defeat the team that is without a cians at Purdue. However, if a kernel is damaged, between the farmer and the pop­ th e score. doubt number one. First, however, Since 1954, Hoosier farmers the expansion volume will be corn processor. “ It’s a system that The rest of the game was simply the Irish must look towards this have steadily increased the land impaired, he said. Purdue re­ works well,” he said. “The dog-eat-dog. Everyone got into the Wednesday when the Minnesota devoted to raising the hybrid corn. search is aimed at finding and processor affords a ready market roughing act. The only member of Golden Gophers will invade for the Only Nebraska devoted more that correcting the crop damaging var­ for the farmer and is assured of a either squad that seemed to keep first round of the WCHA playoffs. Indiana’s 45,500 acres to popcorn iables, Lien said. ready source of popcorn to meet the his cool was freshman Greg Tickets for these contests will be on last year. “Expansion volume is a good product’s processing require­ Meredith, who took a hard, unseen sale at the ticket office from 9:00 to Dr. R. M. Lien, a Purdue indicator that readily determines m en ts.” elbow and still managed to concen­ 5:00.

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Call Rosie- 1267. Your friend, J WANTED 3 Girls need ride to DC for break, Julie, Julie, Julie, do you love me? Danny, i'm so glad you won--Con­ Furnished 5 bedroom house, walk to Will split up, share expenses. Call campus, renting to students this Urgent 2 girls need ride to Ft. We love you! I B and K grats! You don't know how hard it is Debbie 7906, Jeannie 7918, Ellen fall, tall 259-7488 after 5. Lauderdale. Call 4168 SMC. to calm Judee dow n!! 7874. To the illustrious Mary C. Fineran, wherever you may be. Give my 4 Bedrooms, living room, dining WANTED: Ride to Louisville Friday NEED RIDE TO GREEN BAY regards to Galesburg-1 hear it's a Need ride to Pitt, for spring break. room, kitchen. Utilities paid. $100 March 11. Call Sue 7938 or Colleen AREA ON March 11. Happy to swell place to be. We'll find out Will share expenses and driving. oer month. Call Oscar 233-1850. 7921. Jack 3493 snaieshare expenses.expenses. Calli_an rani Pah I 6756.o/ 5 6 . rrumfrom oaro, Barb, won'twon T we?we.' ...... 8 the observer Monday, March 7, 1977 ND cagers dump No. 1 Dons, 93-82

by Frank LaGrotta Sports Writer

Saturday was supposed to have been the day...the day that the San Francisco Dons silenced all critics and proved that they were, indeed, worthy of the number-one tag they had worn all season. However, things didn’t quite work out that way. What was, in fact, proven on the floor of the ACC amidst the deafening roar of 11,345 extremely partisan fans, was some­ thing that those following the Notre Dame basketball team all season already knew; Digger Phelps has a darn good basketball team. And the first to admit it was San Francisco coach Bob Gaillard. “They’re good,” sighed Gaillard ' who saw his hopes for an undefeat­ ed season diminish with every Duck Williams lay-up. “ Definately the best we’ve seen all season.” From the tip-off to the final buzzer, which found the Irish on the winning side of a scoreboard reading 93-82, Phelps’ cagers were Bill Paterno, Duck Williams and Toby Knight were outstanding in Saturday's 93-82 defeat of the No. 1 Dons. [Photo by Tony Chifari] impressive in virtually every aspect of their game. that sent them on a scoring spree his reason for going with the Williams garnered the game’s stripe in six attempts. In a first half marked with which proved to be the decisive spread. high scoring honors with 25 points, Awarded the “Most Valuable turnovers, the lead changed hands factor in the game’s outcome. “The flow was going back and finishing the day nine of sixteen Player” award by NBC announcers a number of times before San After two ifast-break buckets, forth between San Francisco and from the field and seven of eight Billy Packer and Dick Enberg, the Francisco jumped to a 27-21 ad­ Phelps sent his team into a ourselves and we felt that we could from the foul line. Toby Knight Notre Dame student body was, in vantage, their widest margin of the four-corner offense. The move beat them with the spread. I felt finished with 19 points followed by the words of Duck Williams, day, on a Marlon Redmond lay-up allowed Duck Williams to exploit a that Duck and Rich could handle it Paterno with 16, Branning with 14, terrific. with 8:25 remaining in the half. weak San Francisco middle de­ so we went to it.” and Batton showing 13 as the Irish “They pulled us through a Then senior forward Bill Paterno fense, as the Irish out-defensed, Statistically, it was Notre Dame ended with five players in the number of times this year. I am took over playing tough defense out-shot, and out-scored the Dons on top in every category except twin-figures category. For San really glad they got the award... and providing ten of Notre Dame’s 24-10 and grabbed a 81-70 lead. shooting percentage where the Francisco, Boynes, displaying ex­ they deserved it.” 19 points in the final minutes of the Williams, commenting on the four- Dons held a 50 to 49 percent edge. ceptional accuracy from the field, A jubilent Phelps talked about half to bring the Irish within two. corner spread remarked, “ I knew I Off the boards the Irish were hit on 11 of 16 attempts for 23 the Notre Dame spirit evident Rich Branning sank two from the was quicker than my opponent and flawless grabbing 42 caroms to San points. Redmond added 18, Cart­ throughout the contest: gift line to tie the score at 42 before the spread allowed me to take Francisco’s 33. Toby Knight wright contributed 15, Hardy had “It’s ND man! It goes back to Dave Batton connected on a turn­ advantage of that. When we grabbed 14 for the victors while 12 and Cox finished with 10 tallies. Knute. The last three weeks St. around shot at the buzzer to give spread it out, some see it as a stall, Williams, Dave Batton and Bruce Commenting on the game, Jude has been good to me and I’m the Irish a 44-42 edge going into but it really isn’t.” Flowers pulled down five apiece. Gaillard cited the play of Paterno as not ashamed to admit it either.” the second half. Williams certainly took advant­ Marlon Redmond retrieved 10 re­ a deciding factor in the outcome. The loss prevented San Fran­ San Francisco came out of the age of the situation, burning San bounds for the Dons while Winfred “ He is a great ball player. He’s cisco from becoming the ninth team locker room and quickly regained Francisco guards Winfred Boynes Boynes gathered eight and James a senior and this was his last game in NCAA history to finish the the lead on a couple of quick shots and Chubby Cox for 14 points in an Hardy seven. Seven foot All- here so I guess he went out in season undefeated as the Dons by Redmond before Toby Knight’s eight minute span. American center, Bill Cartwright style.” Paterno made good on five show a 29-1 record for the year. slam dunk gave the Irish a 57-56 Phelps cited his commence in could manage only two rebounds of seven attempts from the field Notre Dame, 20-6 closes its season lead and provided the inspiration guards Branning and Williams as on the afternoon. and was perfect from the charity tonight at DePaul. leers salvage tie in by Gregory Solman Dame crowd; but then, they had With Bob Suter in the sin-bin for Irish escaped from their own we were too tight. Maybe we Sports Writer more to be vocal about. The roughing, the Irish capitalized on powerplay untouched. didn’t want it badly enough.” Badgers gangtackled the Irish their second powerplay opportunity Minutes later, it was Wisconsin If the Irish were embarrased If there was any doubt in the squad Friday night with an embar­ of the night, when Donny Fair­ with the one man advantage when Friday, they did themselves proud mind’s of Irish fans as to who is the rassing 8-3 trouncing. The follow­ holm, set up by Dukie Walsh and Geoff Collier went off for tripping. Saturday. From the Wisconsin best hockey team in the WCHA, ing night, the Irish levied a third Kevin Nugent, blasted a snap shot This time the Irish weren’t so standpoint, little changed. Badger the Wisconsin Badgers proved that period attack to bring the game into from six feet out that found its way fortunate, and Mark Johnson netminding was still the hottest they were Friday night. If there overtime, where it ended a 3-3 tie. between the legs of Julian Baretta. scored with help from Norwich and thing since the Chicago fire. The was any doubt after Friday’s game In the first game of the series, Les Grauer evened the tally at Taft to put the Badgers out in front vocal Badger fans, decked in as to whether the Irish were the Irish were clearly outplayed by l-l when he took a pass from Rod 2-1. Johnson’s shot was one that crimson red continued to razz the capable of defeating that number the feisty Badgers. They were not Romanchuk and started the scoring Moher might have stopped on one Irish goaltender with yells of one squad, Saturday night may only beaten on the scoreboard, they in what would be a long night for of his better nights, but this wasn’t “ Sieve, sieve” and imply through have proved that they are. In any were intimidated on the ice as well. Irish netminder Lenny Moher. one of the better nights for the Irish their posters that Notre Dame’s case, one has to wonder if the Irish “That was pathetic, absolutely The Irish had another powerplay team or their goaltender. Catholicism was something to be will go into the playoffs Wednesday pathetic,” commented a dejected opportunity when Les Grauer was The Irish evened the score when scoffed at. against Minnesota an inspired Coach Lefty Smith. “ I thought we called for tripping, but the hapless Terry Fairholm slapped the puck From the Irish standpoint, every­ hockey team, or a team that will had an excellent week of practice. I icers had all they could do to keep through the middle, and Steve thing changed. The defense was still be “ seeing red.” don’t understand it. We stunk.” from being scored on short-hand­ Schneider tipped it home. more alert, allowing less Badgers The Badgers invaded the ACC Whatever the case, the Irish had ed. took advantage of a The powerplay of Bob Johnson’s to cruise in unassailed upon the net sporting a 25-5-0 record and a mob their problems containing the pow­ defensive breakdown, and cruised Badgers proved unstoppable again, minder. The passing was sharper. of fans that were, at times, more erful attack of one of the best- in unassailed on Lenny Moher. as Wisonsin’s Mark Johnson scor­ The penalty killing unit may well vocal than the entirety of the Notre trained teams in college hockey. Moher was equal to the test and the ed on an instant replay to end the have had their best night of the first period scoring. year...but then, they had to. It was In the second period, Johnson’s one of the most physical games of “ big red machine” went into action the long season. once again. Displaying remarkable From the moment the Irish “ puck-sense” and passing ability, started skating, you knew they the Badgers badgered Lenny were a different team than they had Moher with three more goals, two been the night before. The first by Steve Alley and the other by period started out with fast skating Dave Lundeen. Ray Johnson action at both ends of the ice. answered with a goal from Tom However, when Tom Ulseth scored Michalek and Ted Weltzin to bring with the game but one minute old, the Irish back to a three goal visions of the night before danced deficit. The period ended with the in the heads of Irish fans. His goal Badgers in front 6-3. was set up by Steve Alley, who Wisonsin made it academic with along with John Taft was skating goals by Lundeen and Craig with the U.S. Olympic team at this Norwich, and the game ended a 8-3 time last year - an Olympic team route for the Badgers. Julian coached by Badger mentor Bob Baretta was outstanding with 40 Johnson. saves in the game. Between Ulseth’s goal and the “This is a good hockey club,” equalizer by Ted Weltzin, nearing commented Smith after the game, the end of the stanza, little hap­ “ and 1 don’t mean to take anything pened aside from tempers flaring. away from them, but 8-3 is an Kevin Nugent was going heavily at embarrasment.” it with Brad Mullens. Dave Herbst Coach Smith cited several of his and Dukie Walsh were exchanging teams shortcomings in the game. glances. Heavy checking was the “ We wandered around too order of the day. until 18:55. when much, and didn’t react well. We Geoff Collier and Terry Fairholm Even normally mild-mannered Jack Brownschidle was provoked into the roughness that had some excellent opportunities set up Well/in’s goal to deadlock characterized last weekend's hockey series. [Photo by Tony Chifari] that wc failed to. convert. M avbc |continued on page 7|