OD The Inside Black Studies ... page 3 Mynah marriage ... page 9

serving. the notre dame - st. mary's community Vol. IX, No. 76 Friday, February 7,1975 Badin residents get explanation

by Andy Praschak 2. l No undergraduate women will be plained. Staff Heporter forced off campus. Burtchaell responded that he has spoken :l. l A proper graduate housing complex to every hall on campus and was not afraid l<'r. James Burtchaell, University provost, will be built by fall of 1976. to speak at any. ''Dr. Gordon was sent and Sr. John Miriam Jones assistant to the Ht>len Gallagher.Badin rector, announced because he is directly involved with the provost. explained last night the decision to that a reciprocal open house will be held graduate students," he continued. convert Lt>wis Hall into an undergraduate between the two dorms from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m. "What do you say to the fact that two womt>n's dorm and Badin Hall into a tem­ on Monday Feb. 10. years ago Hev. Hesburgh said that Lewis porary women's undergraduate dorm to Although Helen Gallagher, Rector of Hall will never be taken away from the Badin Hall residents. Badin Hall attempted to ask all non­ nun:?"' she asked. residents of the hall to leave the meeting, Apology to Badin one Lt>wis Hall resident went unnoticed. "That needs no comment," Burtchaell "In representing Lewis Hall I would like said. Sr. John Miriam Jones apologized to to say that we are deeply insulted with the "Is Badin a half-way house for moving Badin residents for the indirect and unof­ way we were consulted about theis whole graduate students off-campus?" she asked., ficial manner that the housing change was FR. JAMES Burtchaell, University provost, matter." explained the graduate student, "It isn't necessary to say no," he said. announced. and Sr. John Miriam Jones, assistant to the during a question and answer period. Habda questioned the use of federal funds "It was all a mistake in timing," con­ provost, spoke to the Badin Hall residents The Lewis Hall representative, Candacia to build a new graduate complex. "Isn't it tinued Burtchaell. last night. Habda. then produced a copy of the letter of ironic that you are moving out Graduate "We were being pressured to make a preferential treatment but no male dorm notification the hall received. students. moving in undergraduates and decision as soon as possible and I couldn't would be sacrificed. Habda then explained that Dr. Robert E. then using a Federal grant to build a contact Helen Gallagher (Badin Rector) "WP felt that this was an adequate way to Gordon. vice president for Advanced graduate dorm?" she asked. Studies. had spoken to them Wednesday Burtchaell explained that Federal grants in timt>." Jones stated. move towards our long-term goal of a 1,500 Burtchaell suggested that Gallagher and female enrollment." Burtchaell explained. night. ''He told us that Father Burtchaell are only one source being considered and a ft>w others meet and decide on the method Wht>n asked why the University has been would not come and talk to us," she ex- many others are also being t>xplored . of transferring halls. ''haphazardly moving people from dorm to .Jones then explained that if the lottery dorm over the past four years," Burtchaell like last vear's were held, Badin residents ('Xplained that the decision was made to use would be 'taken into other halls only if there the learning process and decide the housing Decision reactions vary is room after the present residents have ~olutions a year at a time. selected. One member of the audience questioned "Prt>sumably, Badin residents will have the eonveniences in moving graduate and by Kathy Mills "With the exception of Lewis Hall," he first choice when returning to their hall in undergraduate- students, to their new starr reporter re":l~~ked, "the present graduate housing 1976." specula ted Jones. locations. "The graduate students are faclhtles on campus are just hand-me- Lt·wis Hall residents now pay a higher further from the library, but closer to the Views of students and administrators downs; they are in poor condition. We need room fee than Badin residents. Answering a dining hall. .. he said. varied in , the wake of Monday's an- this new complex, we need it desperately." question ('Oncerning whether or not the new The present Badin Hall residents were nouncement of the conversion of Badin to a Graduate Student Union President Bill LPwis Hall residents will be paying a higher informPd that they will be allowed to con- graduate hall and the possibility of a new Smith-hinds could not be reached for in- room charge nest year. Burtchaell replied tinue eating in the South Dining Hall. graduate housing complex. formation on the proposed new facility for that he would recommt>nd that the same · '1'h e 1'd ea o f h avmg· a coed dorm was Dr. Robert Gordon, vice-president for graduate students. ratt>s Badin women are now paying be discussed by the officers but it was not a Ad d st di · th 1 f Assessing the role of the graduate vance u es, views e P an or students on the campus, Gordon stated that continued next vear. large part of the discussion." commented transformation of Lewis Hall from a "In other words. all it takes is a Burtchaell. HP explained, however, that graduate to an undergraduate women's they are an "effective force" on un­ ~ignaturt>: it's already been decided," said anything is possible in the future. dormitory as an excellent opportunity to dergraduates, expecially as teachers, .lont>s. Burtchaell announced that all R.A. ap- construct the proposed new graduate correctors, laboratory assistants, teaching plications from Badin residents would be housing complex. assistants, and resident advisers. Yet H1•asoning behind the dt>cision turned over to Lt>wis Hall. "The girl will "I see this time of change as a time of Gordon said that they "tend to have their then be able to transfer the application to opportunity," he stated. own social life." Burtchaell explained that there were two any other hall she chooses." interjected Gordon pointed out that in 1972 he worked Concerning the move to Badin, Gordon sides to the issue the Officers of the .Jones. with the Graduate Student Union to survey no ted that th e g ra d ua t e s t u d en ts require· tlniversity have been discussing for seven the housing needs for graduate students. ,·ndl'v1'dual rooms , s1·nce they ha v e a h eav1er· months. "On the one hand, there was the 1\h•t housing goals This work resulted in a plan for a living workload and more pressure than the un- belief that women should be treated as complex on campus, most probably an dergraduates · Th1's n eed IS· refl ec ted m· the equally as men." the provost said. Ac-cording to Burtchaell the Officers of the apartment complex, built especially and plan to convert Badin to all single rooms Howt•ver. he explained that many of the llniversity feel that they have made a solely for graduate students. Gordon and next fall. Gordon added that it is "very Offict>rs felt that the danger for women off- decision in the interest of women Oil r.am- the Graduate Student Union put together feasible" for cooking facilities to be in- <·.~mh pusf is greater than for men. pus. government subsidies, notably from the stalled in Badin, "since it is vital that the · ere ore. we decided that no women Tht> three goals Burtchaell feels the Of- Federal Housing Authority, to finance the graduate students have them." would be forced off," Burtchaell said. fict>rs have accomplished ar.e: project. However, Gordon said that Despite Gordon's enthusiasm for the new Rurtchat>ll t>xplained that a compromise I. I The number of men forced off-<:ampus President Nixon "shot down" these sub- housing complex, LeV(iS Hall resident Linn ""\\-·a_s_r_e.ac.·h·P•d•\·\·-he_r_e_b_y_w_o_m_e_n_w.. o.u .. ld-re_c_e_iv_e_..:,\\;.:'i~ll..:n.:,:o:.:;t..:i~n~cr:.;e;;,:;a:.:;s~e.;.. ______..;!';;,:.i:;:_dJ:.:i·e~s_;w:,J:.!;.t!.!.h..!h!.!.is~ 1!97.:,:3~bu~d~ei.!;t.;,.------(continued on page 8) 0 versupply of professors · Economy outruns salaries

by Bob Radziewicz Professors -A Thomas Gainsborough painting WASHINGTON - Chicago's Field newspapers -- The Chicago The anti-recession measure. $100 at $10,000 of income. $126 minute, the committee decided not Sun-Times and the Chicago Daily News -- ended a long string of pushed through the committee at $12,500 of income. $170 at to cut off 1974 tax rebates to per­ (•ndorsemPnts of Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley Thursday night in just four days, was approved $15,000 and $200 at $20,000. sons making more than $30,000 to h~· hal· king a rival in the Democratic mayoral primary Feb. 25. 28-5. Action by the full House All told the bill's $20.1 billion $40,000. was expected within several price tag was $4.1 billion above However, anyone making more !'APE CANAVI<--:HAL. Fla. WPI>- A Delta rocket roared into days of its return Feb. 18 from !'resident Ford's recommenda- than $30,000 could get no more than ~pan• late Thursday carrying a satellite designed to improve a 10-day recess. lions -all of it m increased tax $90 to $100. The final rebate figure 11 1·ather forecasting and provide a longer warning for those in the Besides granting $8 billion in relief to individuals. Ford also will be calculated later to remain path of dl'adly tornadoes. 1974 tax refunds and payments to had proposed tax cuts on 1975 within a committee-imposed limit individuals, and another $8.3 individual income but as a part of $8 billion. STOCKHOLM -Stockholm Communists came out against billion in withholding tax relief to of his energy conservation The rebate would work this way: l' .S.-style hamburger emporiums in Sweden Thursday, contending individuals the last half of this package rather than his eco- Every family or single taxpayer thPy an• a danger to the working class. year. the bill would provide $3.8 nomic recovery program. would get back 10 per cent of the billion in tax incentives and Heshaping Ford's proposals taxes he paid in 1974 up to a assistance for business expansion. to emphasize tax relief for low maximum of $200. Those who paid But committee members and middle income groups, the less than $100 in taxes would get turned down a proposal for a $1 committee for the first time back the full tax they paid. billion tax break to help rescue incorporated in legislation a so- The maximum would begin an campus laday finanCially ailing American called negative income tax shrinking when income reached business giants that included provisio~ - cash payments $20,000, phasing down to the the Chrysler Corp., and put a from the government for maximum $90 to $100 at $30,000 of fri. feb. 7 $100 million ceiling on invest- persons too poor to have owed income. any income tax for 1974. A form of negative income tax 12:15 pm--lecture, "northern ireland: some decisive moments In Facility to open The tax-writing committee, like for the working poor was approved its history," by rev. ernan mcmullln., lib. faculty lounge. the rest of Congress under heavy earlier by the committee. This 3:30pm--colloquium, "souls of anumals" by gareth matthews, lib. criticism from Ford for allegedly provision would grant a payment faculty lounge. lor 0-C students dragging its feet on economic of 5 per cent of earned income to 5 pm--mass 9 dinner, bulla shed. lesitlation, was proddedalong by anyone making $4,000 or less even 5 pm--evensong, lady's chapel. its new chairman, Rep. AI Ullman, if they paid no taxes. This credit 6 pm-2 am--mardi gras, talisman, , $1. Fr. Robert Griffin, University D-Ore., who had pledged alnight would phase out as income went Chaplain, has announced the sessions if necessary to get a bill above $4,000 one making more than 7:30pm--hockey, nd vs. michigan st. u., ace. opening of a new service for off­ 7:30--lecture, "congress and minority groups" by rep. edward out by week's end. $6,000. campus students. The service, royball. lib. aud. Withholding taxes for in- Other income tax cuts for in- 8, 10 pm--film, "a I fie", eng. aud., single $1, couple $1.50. which will be open from lla.m. to dividuals the last half of this dividuals would take the form of 3p.m. Mondays through 9 pm-1 am--SMC coffeehouse, 9-j. laughlin & d. zimmerman, 10· year would be lowered by lower withholding rates in the last Fridays,will be located in the raising the minimum standard half of this year. This would be david james, 11-b. hillstrim, j. dadmun, c. cazazza, 12-frank LaFortune Ballroom. martin, ice cream sandwiches 15 cents. deduction, or low income accomplished by increasing the In describing the new service, allowance as it is sometimes standard deduction which many Fr. Griffin noted that it is designed sat. feb. 8 called, and by raising the low and moderate income persons to provide light hospitality, such as maximum standard deduction. and a scattering of the wealthy use 8:30am--workshop, "communicating religious values to children", serving coffee and doughnuts, for The minimum standard de rather than itemizing deduction. the off-campus students. "We will $9.50 includes all materials duction, now $1,300 for a single Ford requested only a 12 percent provide whatever is needed, from return. would be raised to rebate of 1974 taxes, up to a 12 noon--basketball, s. car. vs. nd, ace. the serving of doughnuts to the 5 pm--vespers, log chapel. $1,900 for a single return and maximum of $1,000. blessing of houses and exorcising ~~~~~~~~~~~~==-~~= ~~~~------~ 6 pm-2 am--mardi gras, stepan center, $1, talisman. of demons," Griffin said. VALENTINE'S DAY DINNER DANCE 8,10 pm--film, "alfie", eng. aud., single $1, couple $1.50. During Lent, Fr. Griffin will say 7:30pm--hockey, michigan st. vs. nd., ace. a Mass at 12:30 in the LaFortune. SPONSORED BY KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS "Usually, for the off-campus sunday, feb. 9 student, 11:30 Mass is too early and RESER­ ; o'clock Mass is too late," he said. 12 noon--12 pm--mardi gras, raffle drawing, stepan center, 75 cents. TODAY 2 pm--talos meeting, Iafortune ballroom. Griffin added that on Ash Wed­ VATIONS nesday. ashes will be distributed 4:30 pm--vespers, lady chapel. for the off-campus students. 7:30 pm--meeting, MEACHA, Ia fortune. LAST CHANCE CALL 8 pm--concert, helen reddy, peter allen, ace, $6.50, $5.50, $.4.50. Volunteer girls are needed to staff the service and anyone in­ 8 pm--lecture, "license in liberty", by duncan williams, lib. aud. TO BUY TICKETS terested should contact Fr. Griffin. 7018 Obsessed by a film ''Michael Murphey is Russian steals bus, that rarity among songwriters: a humanist. What he has done flees for 1300 miles 0 MOSCOW made his way back home, Jl(• fitted the vehicle with On Epic Records stolen license plates and forged hut the police finally caught up travel documents under a with him. pseudonym. He listed himself "How could he go through the as an l'ngineer testing experi· entire country when we have a mt•ntal vehicles. police post at nearly every kilometer'?" the newspaper Naserov then set out on his asked. Butch Cassidy & The Sundance Kid Sunday, Feb. 9 7, 9, 11 Engineering Aud. $1 the observer'~ .3 Black Studies Scott sees progress in program by Brian M. Clancy for a major, a student must committee was then formed to because it would allow me to better things easier." Staff Reporter complete 24 hours of courses review the complaints. The plan the courses offered. In ad­ developed and approved by the committee found that most of the dition, it would allow the faculty Black Studies presently operates Mention the term Black Studies director of Black Studies. These complaints were justified, and members to retain their depart­ with a budget of $25,000 which to the average student, and he courses are varied. ranging from then set about correcting the mental status. Also, we would be tends to get stretched very thin. immediately envisions a Economics to Theology, and many situation. As a result of the student operating with an in­ The money, which it receives from classroom full of black students students who are taking these protests, more black teachers creased budget, which would make the College of Arts and Letters, listening to a black professor courses as part of a different were added to the faculty, more pays for phone and electric hills, lecturing about black history with major do not even realize that they scholarship money was made operational costs, secretaries' a soothing Ray Charles tune may have completed or nearly available for blacks, black salaries, and half of Dr. Scott's providing some atmosphere. This completed a sequence allowing counseling programs were salary. In addition, this money is is definitely a false impression, them to claim a second major, one established through the Fresh­ used to acquire films for classes, to however, according to Dr. Joseph in Black Studies. For a student man Year office, and most im­ sponsor symposiums on black portant, the Black Studies related topics, and to pay guest program was formulated. speakers. Last semester Angela Davis, Stokely Carmichael and Observer lnsir:~ht Considering that only six years Harry Edwards, guest lecturers ago there was no black studies who spoke on campus, were all Scott. Director of Black Studies. with 15 hours, the progr<>m offers program, and only one black sponsored, in part, by the Black "There are presently only seven a certificate, which can be useful teacher.who didn't even teach a Studies program. Dr. Scott would black teachers and 125 black under in job applications. black oriented course, it would like to bring Angela Davis back graduates at this university. The Black Studies program was seem that the program has made this semester to speak on Com­ There just a.ren 't enough blacks to one of the first programs to offer great strides forward. However, munism, a topic she neglectedin ·· go around," commented Dr. Scott. the student a multi-disciplinary according to Dr. Scott, "The her last appearance, when she "There is not a single class in the approach to learning. In this type program still has a long way to go. spoke on political repression. Black Studies program in which of a teaching system, teachers I would like to see Black Studies There is also a notionbeing the majority of the students are from two different backgrounds become an institute or center. discussed within the program to black. Therefore, the role of the combine to dual-lecture a class, Then we would have our own try and get Angela Davis to teach a Black Studies program here at providing the students with a budget to buy the time of faculty Dr. Joseph ScoH course in the program in the Notre Dame, is just as much to unique learning opportunity. members of various departments. Director of future. but nothing concrete has educate white students about Most of the courses in the Black This would be beneficial to me Black Studies Program developed yet. blacks. as it is to educate blacks." Studies program are junior and Although there are only 125 black senior level courses because in the undergraduates, Dr. Scott past that is where the leadership estimated that almost all of them placed emphasis. Now, however, New alcohol bill passes will take some courses in the the program is restructured to program during their four years of accommodate more un- schooling. White students on the derclassmen, giving equal other hand, rarely take the representation to the four classes. judiciary sub-committee program as a major, usually There is also a black student taking it as an elective in order to committee, consisteing of 3 by Terry Keeney cenda said. "We pointed out the those violations. This law, a result broaden their intellectual scope. members of each class, all blacks, . News Editor serious problem any college or of an Indiana Supreme Court This is evidenced by the fact that which meets with Dr. Scott to keep university near the Indiana border decision last April, caused the two thirds of the students choosing him aware of student feelings. A bill to free universities and has because every state to the Black Studies major are black. colleges in Indiana from legal surrounding us has an 18- or 19- prohibit drinking by minors on The Black Studies program is a History of thl' Program liability for violations by students year old drinking age," he said. campus. major in the college of Arts and of state drinking laws passed a Under current Indiana law, the This bill was drafted by Notre Letters, but has no faculty or Black Studies began as a result sub-committee of the Indiana universities and colleges are held Dame law students under the courses of its own. Thus the of black student protests in the late Senate Judiciary committee. vicariously responsible for their direction of Faccenda. program relies upon teachers in sixties. Black students presented Passage of thebill came late last students under 21 years of age "Most of the work has been done other departments to offer courses the university with a Jist of night after University Counsel violating Indiana drinking laws if by the Jaw students," Faccenda which can be used towards a Black grievances which they felt Philip Faccenda, Pat McLaughlin, the university has knowledge of said. Studies major. In order to qualify warrantedimmediateaction. and a student body president and Georgia Luks; a third year law student. testified in favor of the At St. Mary's measure. EconoDlists predict The bill, sponsored by State Senator Philip Gutman, Bepublican President Pro Tern, La'WSociety tolneet and Thomas Teague, Democratic The first meeting of the semester minority leader, will come before profession, what it's like to be a uneDlploy~nent peak of the St. Mary's College Law law student, what otherfields one the full Senate Judiciary next Society will be Sunday February Thursday. can enter with a law degree, what By !\liKE FEINSILRER Mass., said the idea was 9th, 7:00p.m., Room 161 LeMans. the LSAT consists of and when to WASHINGTON

\dvPrtisenwnt Justice Department investigates DEPRESSION ART "FOUND" legality of WallaceS second term Public Offered WASHINGTON - The and several other state officials submitted," ~e said, "the the a~endment. Justice Department said today were inaugurated recently for amendment Will. th~n .be eva- . . 1937 U.S. Gov't it is trying to determine their second consecutive terms. !~ate~ t? determme 1f 1t has a T~e votmg nghts act also whether Alabama Gov. George The potential error was uncov- discr1mmatory purpose or ef- apphes that same provision to Wallace illegally began a Pred today by the Birmingham feet." . the st_ate_s ?f .Georgia, Loui~ia- Art Prints second consecutive second term Post-Herald. He did not say what would be na. MISSISSippi, South Carolina A series of rare coincidences in office without seeking prior done in that case about Wallace and Virginia and some isolated has led to the historic discovery federal approval of the state The spokesman emphasized and the other state officials jurisdictions in other states of several thousand sets of full constitutional amendment the Justice Department has who succeded themselves under throughout the nation. color antique art prints that were which allowed him to do so. made no decision on the issue. "lost since 1937." They are now Under the Voting Rights Act being offered to the public. of 1965, Alabama is one of six "One major question to be answered first is whether the states which must submit any * SMC COFFEEHOUSE* ELEANOR ROOSEVELT Alabama succession amend­ proposed political changes that Back in 1937, immediately fol­ mPnt is a change covered by TONIGHT ! might affect minority voting lowing the depression years, Mrs. rights for prior approval either the provisions of the voting Hights Act," he said. Eleanor Roosevelt and a select by the U.S. attorney general or John Laughlin Dave James & group of a dozen nationally pro­ the U.S. district court in If the Justice Department Don Zimmerman minent people formed a volun­ Washington. determines that the amendment Bill Holstron & Co. Frank Martin tary national committee for art A spokesman for the Justice should have been submitted for appreciation to create an art pro­ Department's civil rights divi­ federal review, he said, the under the 9: 30~1: 00 gram that would give the public a sion said Alabama did not state then would be required to dining hall music n' well-needed moral lift. It was the submit its amendment for do so. munchies committee's decision to select the federal approval before Wallace "If it is necessary that it be world's most famous paintings from the 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries - the best THE ROMA paintings of Matisse, Van Gogh, Gainsborough, Picasso, Gauguin, PIZZA * LIQUOR * ITALIAN FOOD Titian, etc., and to reproduce Your them in full color as perfectly as Host Frank Anastasio humanly possible and make them 'A PIZZA YOUCANNOT REFUSE' available to the public at a price LIVE BAN OS 0 N WEE KEN OS within the reach of everyone. ABANDONED IN 1937 Call 234-3258 For Delivery For some unknown reason, 219 N. Mich. Ave. Downtown after a quantity of these beautiful reproductions were made, the en­ At North End Of River Bend Plaza tire project was abandoned and this collection of perfect repro­ ductions was stored in a Brooklyn warehouse, where they remained undisturbed since 1937. The lost collection was "redia­ MICHIGAN STREET covered" and leading lithogra­ phers and art critics agree that the subject matter and quality of detail and color reproduction is incredibly accurate. Over $500,- 000.00 had been spent to make MARY CLEMENCY offers defense in last night's ND-SMC basketball ADULT THEATRES engraved glass printing plates game. In a hard-hitting 40 minutes, the SMC defense effectively stymied These authentic orginal 1937 the Irish drive to win by seven points. (See story on page 11) prints are literally collector's items and have been appraised by the American Appraisers Aaaoc. 2 FILMS at $7.00 each print. Once they MONDAY & TUESDAY have been sold, there will be no * more available. A truly excellent ARE NOTRE DAME NIGHTS art "investment" that makes a r fabulous gift. BOOKSTORE AVAILABLE TO PUBLIC ITALlAN FOODS * Now, after 38 yean these full LIKE YOU USED TO GET AT FRANKIE'S color 11" x 14" (ave. size) prints are finally available to the public & SERVED BY LENNY EDNA at $19.95 for a collection of 18 COMPLETE DINNERS LIVE FLOOR SHOW prints. Send cash, check or mon­ ey order to: U.S. Surplus, Dept. Havioli $2.50 Xl7 , P. 0. Box 605, Tarzana, * Calif. 91356. Fully GUARAN­ Spaghetti $2.75 l.asagna $2.75 1 316 SOUTH MICHIGAN STREET TEED. Certificate of authenticity VPal Parmigana $2.75 given with each set. Master Charge and BankAmericard OK (give Follow Eddy to Mishawaka Ave. Pitchers of Beer $1.50 while viewing card number). '• Block Past River Park Theatre our giant 5 X 7 T.V. CALL 282-1206 FOR INFORMATION 0 • • I ,• ,' ,>., 1 • ~ , 1/1 • f , Adv~rtisemcnt • '' 0 Friday, February 7,1975 the observer 5 May withdraw from HPC Zah1n council delays decision HOME MADE COOKING

by Pat Hanifin SPECIALITY: GOULASH Cox argued that "it shouldn't Staff Reporter just settle 'for receiving reports and second hand information from The council has bodies like the Academic Council FREE SALAD BAR postponed any possibility of with­ and the SLC. (Friday & Saturday only) drawing Zahm from the Hall "We in Zahm, " he stressed, President's Council pending an "are not asking that extra power 8 DIFFERENT TYPES OF SALAD HPC report on the HPC's role in be given to the HPC; instead we the University. Doug Cox, Zahm are asking the HPC to use the Hall President explained that his. power it already has as an Draft and Bottled Beer criticism of the HPC was never advisory body." intended as criticism of its The calender issue, according to ALBERT'S chairman Bob Howl. Cox was an area where the HPC Jim Spurling, the Zahm council should have acted but did not. He 501 LINCOLNW A Y W. ( ¥2 mile west of Mich. Ave l member who sat in on the HPC's said that Jim Ambrose. academic discussion of the Cox charges, commissioner, had discussed the explained Zahm 's action which matter with the council but was taken February 4. "Zahm Hall still recognizes the that nothing had come of it. "ZAHM HALL still recognizes the Cox suggested that the HPC importance of an organization could have served as a conduit for such as the HPC;" he said. con­ importance of an organization such as the HPC," said Doug Cox, feedback from hall residents on the sequently the council voted dispute. unanimously to remain in the HPC president of Zahm. and help direct that a "defimte and sincere desire to IIPC an "information service" reorganization. "We welcome the work on the HPC, but there is not HPC's decision to examine itself, much I can do if it remains simply ''Right now the Council is since it demonstrates an an information service. heading toward being simply an unqualified interest in improving Cox emphasized that "I do not information service and is failing the quality of student represen­ want to antagonize Howl. It is true to get sufficient student input. If it tation." that I am guilty of inaction to does nolchangecourse Zahm would "We felt there was reason to some extent myself. Others could seriously consider quitting:" question the effectiveness of the be criticized; for this too, but that is Biff King, president HPC. After reporting on the not the point. This is a group and a member of the role in­ meeting I attended the council problem. not a problem with vestigation committee, felt Cox t>xpressed hope that it could particular individuals." Cox said. was overreacting to the situation. stimulate some reorganization of "It was ignorant and totally the HPC--to strengthen it from Clarifiying his position on the irrational to start out by within." need for re-orienting the HPC Cox threatening to quit" King said. stated that he realizes it has an "If he has complaints there are Work with IIPC ''advisory capacity" but suggested other. less drastic methods to that it should "initiate constructive express them." COME TO THE BULLA SHED action and not just respond after King stressed he was speaking Responding to a direct question the fact," Cox said. "It should deal as an individual, not as a com­ AND BRING A FRIEND on Howl's charges that Cox with problems that are of concern mittee member. has been inactive in the HPC to the individual halls- for King said that he understood Cox himself and was merely trying to example, make recommendations as saying that the HPC was not mass & dinner every friday 5 pm ·•get in the paper," Cox said he has on maintenance and housing." functioning as Cox thought it should and that therefore Zahm was considering quitting. "I do not think he intended any personal SMC SOCIAL COMMISSION Army troops called attack on Howl but Howl at least felt that such an attack was im­ plied in the criticism of the HPC." to halt disorders King viewed the HPC as a ser­ vice organization to handle mat­ By STEPHEN MORROW spreading false rumors about SEND A LIMA (UPil Peruvian the civil disturbances. ters which need representatives TO YOUR army troops used gunfire Although Lima looked like a in each hall and as a com­ Thursday to halt scattered munications link between students battleground at times on and the University. He pointed to looting and disorders in the Wednesday as troops in ar­ aftermath of a police strike. At such activities as An Tostal as FLOWER mored cars chased looters and indicative of what the HPC is least 47 persons were killed. arsonists, it appeared more of a The government also extended doing. "We are an advisory body mopping-up operation on Thursx­ only with no voting power," he its curfew and warned against day. Pink, White and meetings by more than four said. persons at a time. Bursts of rifle fire were .'ox explained ct heard intermittently as troops that what finally spurred his striped carnations 7 5 The government announced action were two Observer articles. that the strike by 7,000 and special police units brought Order Mon. & Tues. nights at in from an anti-subversive one on the HPC and one on policemen in Lima-which set bringing women from other off the widespread looting, school scattered groups of SMC dining hall 5:00 - 6:30 looters. colleges for Mardi Gras. He saw arson and stone throwing how seriously other people were Wednesday-had been settled The official announcement did taking us but thought the Council and diplomatic sources said not give a death figure but was not measuring up. many police were already back acknowledged "some losses of Because of this Cox asked the Only 300 flowers available. on the job. Zahm Council to allow him to quit UPI newsmpn reported from life. numerous wounded and the Will be delivered Thurs. and Fri detention of a great number of the HPC. The Council agreed to the Lima Central Morgue and have him make a statement of his from the 2nd of May Public persons involved in the distur­ bances." feelings at the next HPC meeting Hospital that at least 47 persons and deputized Spurling to report on were dead of gunshot wounds. With a state of siege in effect the meeting. The government had not for the second consecutive day At this meeting the HPC ap­ Last Day for Registration released an official toll of dead and a national work holiday proved , after considerable and wounded as of Thursday decreed by the government, discussion, a six-member com­ night. downtown Lima was almost mittee to look into the Council's The dead ranged in age from of traffic. role. for Free University teen-agers to middle-aged per­ sons, mostly men although three women were among the bodies at the morgue. THIS SUNDAY NIGHT (FEB. 9) IS Long lines formed at the morgue with citizens trying to N.D. & S.M.C. NIGHT AT SHU LA'S! Student Govt. Offices find out if any · relatives were among the dead. NO COVER CHARGE WITH THISAD The government announced Thursday an extension of its NOW 2nd Floor LaFortune curfew ordering those without APPEARING official passes to stay home between 8 p.m. and 5 a.m. Thursday night, two hours BLITZ 9:30 - 1 :30 earlier than the 10 p.m. curfew ordered Wednesday. AND The government w a r n e d 2:30 - 5 again that it was illegal for LISTEN groups of more than four at a time to meet. "Troops and police have or ca II 61 1 1 orders to act energetically if they see any groups violating this order," the official com­ munique said. ~Sizula~· NO COVER CHARGE TUES-WED-THURS As the government warned against mass meetings, it shut on U.S. 31 lMhrMn llies. So. B•d-FrM P•rtin&-68~350 all guitar courses - closed down the Lima bureau of the British news agency Reuters, accusing the, service with 6 the observer Friday, February 7, 1975 seriausly! falks The O'Leary's pattie caaney The FBI's I'm sure that anyone coming from a large end of Richard, that March he asked me to family thinks that their household is wild his senior orom six weeks in advance. and that nobody's family is crazier than It was orie of those proms that included a theirs; obviously they haven't met my picnic the next day. Anything that could Raw Files friends the O'Learys. There are eight have gone wrong did. My bathing suit came O'Leary children ranging from age 25 to age apart just as Andy O'Leary lost her contact 12, increasing in eccentricity all along the lens. Needless to say we were a big help to art buc hwa I d line. each other, I couldn't move and she couldn't • I encountered six O'Learys my first day of see. I've hated Qicnics ever since. • FBI Director Clarence M. Kelley said last week in a speech that school in high school almost eight years ago. If Alexander Graham Bell knew what a • collecting information about private citizens is not a serious threat My life has never been the same. I went to a lethal weapon his invention could be he • unless the data is misused. And there, as Hamlet's masseur would Sacred Heart high school that also had a never would have invented it. The O'Learys • say, is the rub. What guarantees are there that the raw files won't grade school. At the time there were five spend 99.9 per cent of their time on the • be misused? Suppose you have a vindictive computer which has in O'Learys in grade school and one a fresh­ phone with 99.8 per cent of that time on our • its memory bank the files on some of our leading citizens. Director man in high school. The reputation of the phone. They adopted me as the ninth child • Kt-lley may say it can't happen, but it did just last week. I was on a O'Lean·s was known far and wide. of the family some years back and con­ • tour through FBI headquarters when I fell behind and this Everyone was somewhat in awe of them, sequently they are on our phone morning, • computer started chattering on its printout. almost in fear of them, especially the noon, and night averaging at least six calls a • "Would you like to hear about a senator who wears silk stockings teachers who taught both in the grade school day. Often times when they call they do not • and high heels when he's working on tax reform at home?'' and high school. talk but put the phone next to the radio, • I was shaken and punched back, "Of course not." Nothing was safe from the O'Learys' stereo, or television and sometimes in the • The computer's typewriter worked again. "There's a certain sense of humor, not even the nuns. Jody oven. On my father's birthday they call and • female movie star who takes baths in Coorsbeer with a well-known O'Learv was well known as the voice of God sing to him, then they have their own bir­ • professional football player." and his angels and saints. It was not thday party for him. They call other people • "What's so strange about that?" I typed back . unusual for some poor sister to have to too. and order them pizzas they don't want. • "Nothing. except he poses for Schlitz beer commercials," the answer a phone at 3:00a.m. and hear "This The youngest O'Learys show signs of • printout read," and always says, 'When you're out of Schlitz, you're is God calling ... " surpassing the older ones in pranks. For • out of beer' · ·' fo'or some reason I was neither in awe of, instance the youngest one calls up • "Oh, for heaven's sakes," I typed back, "don't you have norafraid of the O'Learys and it wasn't long pretending she is the family guinea pig, • ;my thing better to do than just print gossip about people?" before I was invited to their house. From "Ginny." "Ginny" also has a wife "Gin­ • The computer seemed to ignore my message and came back what I had heard, going into the O'Leary nette" who occasionally calls to yell at me • with. "There's a liberal actor in 'The Towering Inferno' who household was the same as taking your life for taking so much of Ginny's time up on the • sneaked off for a weekend to Lake Tahoe with a right-wing married into your own hands. I had heard all kinds of phone. They also have a cousin Ginnalou • actress from the same picture." horror stories. one about a girl who who calls when she is visiting town. They • "Do you have proof of this?" somehow got peas down her blouse while even call long distance, collect of course. • "No." the computer replied, "but where there's smoke there's Paling dinner there, and another who got a • fire." bucket of water poured down her back as The best thing about the O'Learys is they • And its lights started blinking as if it was enjoying its own joke . always make me laugh and I've never once • soon as she entered the door. The only thing • I typed back, "I think this is disgraceful. You have all this that happened to me the first time was gotten into an argument with any of them • material stored in you and none of it has been verified. You could getting a paper bag pulled over my head. except "Ginny". They never pay any at­ do tremendous damage to innocent people." tention to my bad moods and if they know • • The computer's lights turned dark red. It was angry. "There are The very worst thing the O'Learys ever I'm feeling grumpy, they either leave me • did to me was introduce me to Richard -, • no innocent people. There are only Americans we know things alone, or do something so outlandish I can't • about and Americans we don't." the printout read, "I am the at a New Year's Eve party sophomore year help but laugh. They give advice if asked • of high school. Richard was a good • keeper of the skeletons in everyone's closet." otherwise they just listen and always take • "Rut just because you have it in your memory bank," I protested, conversationalist but !left him to go watch my misfortunes seriously for at least five • the Orange Bowl game. That was not the • ''doesn't make it a fact." minutes ..Now tell me they are not unique. • "That's what you think. Once the raw files are fed into a com­ • puter it becomes the gospel truth. Computers never lie. Have you aut rider • heard about the Supreme Court justice who took his wife to see • 'lkep Throat'?" • "What's so wrong with that?" I typed back. • ''Six timt•s?" Russian Immigration • "Lies. all lies." I hit the keys furiously. "Your tapes are filled • with rumor. innuendo and vicious gossip. Don't you have any • shame at all?" r:~a rry wi lis • The lights turned red again. "No one has ever called me a liar • before." Let me confess, at the outset, that I do not any ungrateful response from the Russians. • "You're a disgrace to IBM," I angrily typed back . know any sure way of helping those Jews So: some Russians move on, while others • "Thomas Watson would be turning over in his grave if he knew who want to emigrate from Russia. Senator stay and chafe. • the filth you had stored in you!" Jackson thinks they are helped by making 3) To make things even worse, the • The lights turned green. "Would you like to know what I have on Hussians who adapt and are grateful also • their plight a flash point of confrontation • ~·ou'?" the printout read . between the superpowers. Secretary pose a problem. As settlements go up to • I turned white. "What could you possibly have on me?" I typed Kissinger believes that such an approach house them. they join the European • out with my fingers shaking . just makes the Russians more intransigent: privileged class of Jews, and are • The computer clicked noisily. "The Allegheny stewardess in other motives for compassion or ac­ resented by the Orientals who make up a • Little Hock." commodation, for a public-relations' majority of the Jewish population in Israel. • I almost broke my fingers. "I've never been in Little Rock in my liberality, are blunted if we make each Furthermore, they are being put in new • life." backdown, an implicit cold war victory for settlements like the Neveh Yaakov, north of • "Then maybe it was Kansas City." us. Jerusalem, which will inevitably become • "Allegheny doesn't fly to Kansas City." I typed back . 1<-:ach side has an argument, and a fairly the centers of dispute when occupied • "Then maybe it was the Hertz Rent-A-Car girl," the computer good one. Yet I tend to think that on this territories have to be turned back. And • l'l'plied. "I ean't remember everything." point Kissinger is right. I would be hap­ these fugitives from Russia are hawkish, • pier with Senator Jackson's view if he did selling the ranks of the hard-line Likud • not seem willing to settle for a loss of party in its fight with the ruling Labor • DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau prestige on the Russians' part, without any coalition. • actual freeing of the Jews. Having said all this, I must add that the • YOIII Those emigrants reaching Vienna now after they spent over two years at menial • opt. by a great and increasing majority, to work as a maid and janitor--the government • go Plsewhere instead of on toward Israel. had fired them both from university work • There are a number of reasons for this. The when they applied for visas. • l'migrants so far are fairly well equipped • professional people, and they can make And those successful immigrants have • their way in modern society. The Jewish harrowing news about those they left professional classes, despite support for behind. "Do anything you can." Mrs. Levin Israel, have stayed in developed countries said, "to help our friends.' One of them is the long before the question of Russian leading physicist in the country--Or. Mark l'migration arose. Asbel, who has been on a hunger strike for 2> Those Russians who have come to months. We have had no news from him OH .. recently. And our friend Vladimir Mark­ /JUKE, Israel raise problems. They are OUKE! educated professionals in a society already man is due out of prison any day now, yet his glutted with them

Friday, February 7,1975 the observer 7 Letters to a Lonely God blow the trumpet, proclaim a fast

reverend robert griffin~ If I were boney or bad-tempered enough to if those students had paid them the Burger to myself, "as a health measure and as a tent1ve to, when I read the following: "The be a prophet--for prophets, I always Chef rates instead of the seventy-five cents way of reducing your clumsy figure." secret, Father-God is always there ... And it imagine, are skinny, mean-tempered nags; per head saved from their supping as usual in "Is that why the Church observes Lent as is his will that not one of his children should it goes with their being thorns in the flesh, the dining hall. Those students intent upon a season of penance," I object: "So that you perish. Such is the serenity of the teaching pains in the neck--1 would invite you to join sacrifice should remember that the fast, if can be a better looking man at Easter than of Christ, the God-filled man." with me in keeping an old-fashioned Lent. envisioned, as such should continue un­ you were on Ash Wednesday?" Would you believe that after all the recent You know the kind of Lent I mean: forty broken until the time of the next regular "Don't knock it," I answer, humming a reminders of world-hunger, those lines, and days of fast and abstience, with desserts meal. It is quite acceptable, of course, few bars from the hit-hymn of the others with them, caused me a small crisis omitted, cigarettes sacrificed, and the merely to share a meal of tea and rice as a Methodists, "Brighten the Corner Where {)f faith? If God is such a hot-shot as a Stations of the Cross on Fridays. I am not ritual of brotherhood, postponing the more You Are." Father, I said to myself,why are children boney, of course, nor do I care to be; though fleshly undertakings in dining until later in I think of the world as our age knows it: starving? Whose fault is it that they are I am the son of a man named Jeremiah, I the evening. But a solidarity with the chaotic, brawling, indifferent for the most starving? Nobody, I said to myself; think he reg~rded me as an unprophet-able starving masses is more observable if a part to global suffering; broken, bruised, sometimes r patterns change; those of a nectarine. Still I'm in the mood event; at least, it seems so to me. service laid upon us to be healers, saviours, droughts occur; and races that have been for sackcloth and ashes. Lent, this year, We know there are Christians, appalled by nurses, ministers. "Tom Dooley, I am not," surviving for hundreds of years begin to die. • demands something heroic if we are going Biafra, depressed by Vietnam, who I say to myself; "nor Albert Schweitzer, nor Nobody did this to them. But there are • to keep the ship of state and church afloat. sometimes fast. But I ask myself: am I still Thomas Merton, nor Dorothy Day, nor do I fathers and mothers who are praying, and J They are waiting in Nineveh for Jonah to enough of a Christian to fast when no one is want to be so dedicated a Christian." still the kids die. Big deal that God is Abba 4 preach; may be our prayer and fasting is observing or supporting me, when it is a Someone says: if the world is not going to and Daddy, if He lets kids die. A our only way of announcing that old Jonah solitary act of mortification? This is one of die, do you have any other choice than to It was my little buddy Barbara who has arrived. the kinds of fasting Jesus asked for: "But imitate these great souls? reminded me of the truth that has always • Fasting--as long as it is not institutional when you fast, anoint your head and wash I think of a reading I did last Sunday: kept my faith intact. "God let His own son • fasting, as prescribed by the Church--seems your face, so that men may not see that you "Zorba, forever on my mind. I curse and die," she said. "The suffering of children is • to have become fashionable as a gesture of are fasting, but only your Father who is in love you because I am what I am .. .llong to part of His passion." • protest or of heightening awareness. I the secret place ... " release the gypsy in me who would roam the It was stupid of me to have forgotten. remember students fasting during the There was a time when all of us, who were earth, tasting, sampling, traveling light. That little insight of Barbara's doesn't Vietnam War. A group of them decided to old enough, used to fast in accord with the There are so many lives I want to live, so explain anything; but remembering the spend a weekend fasting on the steps of the discipline of the Church: two ounces of food many styles I want to inhabit. In me sleeps experience of Jesus makes the difference, Administration Building as a signal to Mr. in the morning; eight ounces for lunch or Zorba 's concern to allow no lonely woman to for me, between trust and despairing:it is a Nixon of their concern over our Asian in­ supper; only one full meal at noontimeilr at remain comfortless

teaching immediately suffers," he (continued (rom naee 1) "So these schools that are lower Priorities (COUPl was that "If cooperative arrangements those who are hired are the pick of in competitive ability are the ones the university is to have a Catholic concluded. bringing in programs that are the crop? If this is true. then is the most significantly profiting from character, it is obvious that all who relative and meaningful, we'll be overall quality of college education the present economic situation," play a role in recruitment should Future possibilities able to sustain the economic dif­ becoming increasingly better? Burtchaell surmised. "Research exercise care to attract and ap­ ficulties the country is ex­ "We have a surplus of teachers universities like Notre Dame are point from among the most periencing now and be in good in the country today, but in not so likely to notice the dif­ competenty scholars and scientists New means of using university shape," Campanale said. "'If we quantity only," Prof. Eugene ference so much," he added. available, those who are articulate resources more effectively are don't I think we're in for trouble, " Campanale, chairman of the "It's sensible to suggest that the believers." currently in the experimental he stated. t•ducation department at SMC, educational quality of an in­ In view of the recommendation stages. Ofle possibility for ex­ Others remain dubious con­ stated. "I think the quality of stitution gets better as selectivity in the COUP report, yet another panding resources and increasing cerning its benefits. Institutions education will rise only if increases," Rathburn said. "But it factor enters into consideration in efficiency is to develop a con­ should maintain similar universities can bring in people is different from school to school. hiring new faculty, according to sortium or cooperative among philosophies and goals, in addition who are tried, proven and Indeed, it would b(! a very short­ Burtchaell. educational institutions. to contributing equal amounts of dedicated," he added. sightedschool which is not able to "Faculty appointments actually "I think in some respects the resources. Burtchaell pointed out "I don't think a Ph.D. makes you improve immediately the quality are initiated by the department inflation is good because it has that consortia that exchange a better teacher," Campanale of its faculty," Rathburn con­ chairman or college dean who made educational institutions take students are less likely to succeed continued. '"You don't necessarily cluded. make the nominations. The role of cognizance of teaching methods," than those which only exchange have to have a Ph.D. to be Prof. Edward Trubac, the provost is along the lines of Campanale said. "And I don't facilities, for example computer qualified, but the society and president of the Notre approving the nomination," think we really have been going facilities. Notre Dame now par­ economy of the times more or less Dame chapter of the AAUP, Burtchaell explained. about the education process as well ticipates in a facility-consortium df.'mands it because a surplus of agreed. "Universities can afford The economic situation also as we could have," he added. with Indiana University Medical tf.'achers does Pxist," he added. "If to be more selective in certain affects the granting of tenure "For example, if we had been Sch()()l. ------. ~·ou are going to pay someone, he areas where the faculty is strong in which commits the university to working on a consortium basis five FOR THE BEST might as well be a Ph.D. with the subject matter," he said. providing for the faculty member or ten years ago, we have been cxpPrif.'nce," r::ampanale said. for life. able today to offer more courses L SAT "Schools are becoming more and than can now be done," Cam­ PREPARATION Sele<·tive Recruitment Factors afff.'cting hiring more reluctant in granting tenure panale said. CLASSES NOW FORMING because tenured faculty receive a TO BE HELD IN The number of applications large salary that is guaranteed to "Consortium can work, but it is a LA YFA YETTE, INDIANA hPing submitted continue to in­ With the numbers of applicants continue coming in," Rathburn give and take basis," the education department chairman continued. ON MAR. 16. 22, APR. 6, 13

(continued from page 1) i 1 1 Hans Morganthay 13 Seymour Hersh i Sinnott stressed : Gov't Festival - 8:00 pm Wash. Hall : the un<·ertainty of the plan. "As it • • looks now." she stated, "it would : "Separation of Powers : he harmful to grad students to • • move us out of the dorm : in the Wake of Watergate" APRIL : spt•cifically designed for grad • • students into a makeshift situation : 8:00 pm Lib. Aud. * : and maybe nothing after that. <;raduate students are an im­ :• 17 Genera I Session: 8 Carles Butite :• portant part of life on campus; • • moving them around shows a lack : Martin Diamond 30 Dr. Fayez A. Sayegh : of concern. On the other hand, moving the undergrad women also i 8:00 pm Lib. Aud. 8:00 pm Wash. Hall i shows a lack of concern." Sinnott added that since the : 18 Congress: Samuel Patterson : cl<•cision is made, there is nothing • • to do excPpt "get the Graduate : 8:00 pm Lib. Aud. Other Possibilities : StudPnt llnion moving" on the new • • housing complex. : 19 Presidency: Herbert Stoking Debate between the i .Joanne Erdman. another Lewis : 8:00 pm Lib. Aud. Teamsters & : n•sidcnt. commt•nted, "The move • • to Badin might hurt the graduate : 20 Courts: David Fellman Farmworkers : studl'nts. Thl' situation in Badin is • • not good for graduate life. Some i * 8:00 Lib. Aud. Series of Lectures i studl'nts might start mo ~ingl off campus. Lewis is great for : 23, 24, or 25 on Alchol ic : graduate study: it is convenient, but not in the center of campus." i Sen. James Buckley 8:00 pm Abuse by NIAA i LPwis has been a graduate women's dormitory since 1965. It E Wash. Hall was constructed in that year with a * . ! $1 million grant from the Frank J. : Tenat1ve : Li.•wis fo'oundation. • • . ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • Friday, February 7,1975 the observer 9 Sen. Jackson declares candidacy WASHINGTON (UPI) year. was carefully aimed at television nouncement of his candidacy. Mass., took himself out of 1976 Pledging to "help the people in Jackson, 62, is regarded as watchers waiting for the late news. Of this group, only Wallace has presidential consideration. The this country who are getting the front-runner in the early In the format of ranked near Jackson in early withdrawal of Sen. Walter F. hurt," Sen. Henry M. Jackson field. He already has formed a a campaign commercial rather public opinion polls. Mondale, D-Minn., a short time formally declared Thursday strong campaign organization, than a speech, the purchased Jackson's candidacy got its later also was regarded as that he is running for president collected more than $1 million air time was used to play up , biggest boost last fall when eliminating a potentially tough in 1976. and has shown up well in Jackson~s strong points as a 35- ·Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D- rival for the nomination. The Washington Democrat's national poll "trial heats" year veteran of Congress and to long-expected announcement in- against President Ford. answer critics who picture him creased to four the number of Jackson's pre-recorded five- as more interesting in building candidates for the party's minute announcement "I would use the office of the • • presidency to help the people in ~CSQSSlDatlQD this country who. are getting ~ hurt," Jackson said. "For the Kenn e d Y past six years, the Republican . administration_ has b~en tilting vestl•gatl• on refus-e d m favor of big busmess, the ln - large corporations, the people DALLAS (UPil -Police Chief many as four or five persons shot who can take care of themselm­ I li\'1' in Sm·in llall. and our food sales has been closed for about a Donald Byrd Thursday said he will at the president in Dallas on Nov. ves. wt•t•k now. Do ~·ou know when it will be opened again? not initiate a renewed in­ 22, 1963, none of them Oswald. "And, the little people -little vestigation into the assassination Gregory and Ralph Schoeman, business, the elderly, the The Sorin Food-Sales was closed because there was a change in of President John F. Kennedy as a an author and teacher, included in young, across the board -have ownership, but it is now open for business. Its hours are from 11 result of recent contentions the a presentation to newsmen been the ones who have been through midnight Sunday through Friday. killer was other than Lee Harvey photographs they said looked like taking the beating." Oswald. convicted Watergate conspirators Jackson made a special effort \\'ht'n do tht' 1\"orth Dining II all meal validation numbers have to be t'11angt'd b~-·~ If reopening of the case is E. Howard Hunt and Frank Sturgis to dispel the image of "big warranted. Byrd said, it should among persons picked up and bang" defense spender: "I start with other agencies. released by Dallas police the day want to see arms reduced. The North Dining Hall meal validation numbers will be changed from Political activist Dick Gregory Kennedy was killed. Valdisvostok agreement put a l\londay, Feb. 10 through Thursday, Feb. 13, in the office of the and a New York photographer, cap on the arms races, but they North Dining Hall. You will not be allowed to eat dinner on Robert Groden, said in Chicago "I will not initiate any in­ put the cap on Mount Everest Thursday unless you have your new number. this week filmed evidence shows as vestigation as a result of these . .. It's going to cost billions of statements made by Gregory, dollars more for the defense \\'ht•n is tht' Knights of Columbus Formal, and can I still get tickets Groden and Schoeman," Byrd budget." t'or it·~ Mynah birds said. "I think if any investigation is made it should be by the im­ Jackson avoided direct criti­ The Knights of Columbus Formal dinner-dance will be held in the paneling of a Federal Grand Jury, cism of Ford, but used part of lloliday Inn in Niles, Michigan on Feb. 14, Valentines Day. Today set the date a Congressional investigation or the broadcast for a film clip of 1s the last day you can get the invitations for it. For reservations TORONTO

SAT 5:15PM FR. BOB GRIFFIN, CSC Boston doctor accused of SUN 9:30AM FR. ED MALLOY, CSC SUN 10:45 AM FR. JAMES B. SHAUGHNESSY murder in abortion case SUN 12:15 PM FR. BILL TOOHEY BOSTON (UPI> - A medical The smallest survivors Hen­ similar pessimistic estimates of research expert testified Thursday dricks found in his study weighed the possible survival of Edelin's that an aborted fetus a Boston 735 grams, at least 35 grams more alleged victim from two medical doctor is accused of killing had "no than the hghest estimated weight experts from the Boston area--a significant" chance of survival. of Edelin's alleged victim, he said. professor emeritus from Harvard Dr. Kenneth C.'Edelin is on trial And only two of the 28,500 fetuses University and the director of accused of manslaughter following he studied weighed that little and newborn services at Boston City the death of a 11 2 pound fetus survived. Hospital where the abortion and Acareer in law­ during an abortion he performed Hendricks' testimony followed alleged crime occurred. on October, 3, 1973, at the request of a woman about six months WithOUt laW SChOOl. pregnant. IN CONCERT Defense witness Dr. Charles What can you do with only a bachelor's degree? Hendrick's testimony was based Now there is a way to bridge the gap between an on a study of more than 28,000 undergraduate education and a challenging, respon­ HELEN REDDY sible career. The Lawyer's Assistant is able to do newborn infants during 1956-66. with Special Guest work traditionally done by lawyers. The state contends the fetus had Three months of intensive training can give you developed enough to survive, and PETER ALLEN the skills-the courses are taught by lawyers. You that Edelin either intentionally or choose one of the six courses offered-choose the inadvertently let it suffocate by city in which you want to work. hesitating for "at least three THIS SUN. FEB. 9th 8:00 P.M. Since 1970, The Institute for Paralegal Training 'minutes" in mid-operation before has placed more than 700 graduates in law firms. banks. and corporations in over 60 cities. delivery. Ticket Prices NOTRE DAME If you are a student of high academic standing and "There's no significant chance Bleachers ______$4.50 are interested in a career as a Lawyer's Assistant. that the child might have had Lower Arena __ _ _ _ $5.50 ATHLETIC AND we'd like to meet you. meaningful life outside the Floor, Loge ______$6.50 CONVOCATION CENTER Contact your placement office for an interview with uterus," Hendricks testified. and Platforms __ _ _ $6.50 our representative. His testimony in the 23rd day ot We will visit your campus on the trial was introduced to bolster Concert Tickets the defense position that Edelin TUESDAY,FEBRUARY11 could not have committed man­ Now on Sale slaughter since there was no NOTRE DAME, A.C.C. potential human victim. Mon. -Sot. 9 to 5 Hendricks, head of the Ob­ The Institute for stetrics Department at the Also 1 hour University of North Carolina, told Paralegal Training the 13-man, 3-woman jury that said before his study found no fetus of the showtime on 235 South 17th Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103 same weight which survived (215) 732-6600 delivery long enough to be released Sunday Indiana T. Reg. #AC0035 from the hospital. 10 the observer Friday, February 7, 1975

Helen Reddy

includes her gold single(3972) Angie Baby and her new smash single (4021) EMOTION

Management: Produced by JEFFWALD JOEWISSERT 0 Capitol®

' •. • • • • • • • ' - ••• f ~ t , • ' • ,; , • t , f t • ~ • • • • . ~ ------~~qr \ ~ '(1611"1ri9=1 ''(&i>i1=t i·svisc:·do·:grh 01 Friday~February 1, 1975 th-e observ-er. 1 1 .. St. Mary's dumps ND in first meeting, 53-46

If there's one rivalry more in­ beaten Marion College of In­ Helping Grace for St. Mary's Jeanne Earley and her squad are host Ball State in the A.C.C. after tense than Notre Dame-Southern dianapolis 31-26. Notre Dame was the ever-popular "Mad still looking for the first win. the South Carolina game. They Cal, NO-UCLA or the Irish and dropped to 0-3 in its first season of dog" Maddox who also had 14 The Irish women will get another have a rematch scheduled with St. Michigan State, it might be Notre varsity competition. points. chance this Saturday when they Mary's for Feb. 22. Dame and St. Mary's. Yesterday the women of both schools got a St. Mary's pivotwoman, Karen The game was a see-saw affair chance to further the competition Crane. was the big gun for the until midway through the first half Wrestlers, fencers slated on the basketball court in the winners scoring a game-high 15 when St. Mary's ran up eight Both the wrestling team and fencing team will be home this weekend. A.C.C's main arena. points and grabbing numerous straight points giving the cross­ Coach Fred Pechek's wrestlers will face Illinois St., Wisconsin-Parkside rebounds. The 6'1'' center road girls a 24-16 lead. The Irish and Wheaton tomorrow afternoon in the ACC's auxiliary gym. Mike And this time at least. St. Mary's prevented the Irish from driving didn't come close after that DeCicco fencers will battle Detroit, Indiana, Marquette and the has a right to claim superiority. the lane forcing Mary Clemency although in the waning moments University of Chicago Saturday at the ACC. The women will face In­ SMC downed the Notre Dame and .Judy Shiely, who has an in­ they did manage to narrow the gap diana. cagers or cagerettes, if you will, credible over-the-head set shot, to to four. !i:3-4!l before :m enthusiastic crowd gun from the outside. of over :~oo. Both Clemency and Shiely were Rut a quick SMC hoop and a foul CLASSIFIED ADS In winning. St. Mary's upped its superb in a losing effort accounting later. the Irish were out of it, and season record to 2-o having already for 11 and 14 points respectively. at !Past for the time being, coach WANTED HASH BROWN BLUES BAND NOW AVAILABLE FOR YOUR PARTY, DANCE, OR FORMAL. Housekeeper. part-time. 272-4894. Top dollar. FOR FURTHER INFORMArtON, Knight gaining with experience CALL 272-989;. Severa I students need people to TICKETS FOR THE PLAY "THE 1nake conversation with us in soon so that he can begin con­ RIVER NIGER" TO BE (continued from page 12) when he was filtering through his Spanish, very little tutoring. Call collegiate offerings, and still looks centrating on courses in that field. 259·7753 about 9 pm. PRESENTED BY THE SOUTH I beyond basketball when con­ "It's more than just broad­ BEND BROADWAY THEATRE we're supposed to do as a unit." LEAGUE AT THE MORRIS Need ride to I.U. Bloomington any Toby feels that the '74-'75 Irish sidering his future. casting." he explains. "It's CIVIC ON THURSDAY,. "I came to Notre Dame for the writing, directing, screenplays, weekend before break. Call Tim, definitely play a different style of 8382. FEBRUARY 13 ARE NOW ON ball than when he was in­ degree," Knight contends. "The advertising, anything having todo SALE AT THE STUDENT UNION .TICKET OFFICE. $1.00 way things are in the real world, with television. I want a degree in Please! 1 need a ride to the PIH­ doctrinated here as a freshman DISCOUNT ON ALL TICKETS you have to have people in back of something that I'm interested in sburgh area this weekend. Call Sue last year. FOR ND-SMC STUDENTS. "I didn't know what to expect you, you have to know someone. If and that I can use. Eventually, I'd now at 284-4362. Urgent. when I came here. It was a .. you have the Notre Dame name like to try for law school or some Addis Olympic Jerseys on sale . pleasant surprise to see the team behind you, you have a better other type of graduate school." S3.50 S6.00. ~39 Stanford, or 8773. chance of making it, it's going to be But for Toby, that's still a long FOR SALE do so good," Knight explains. Disciplinary action hanging over the difference in getting a job." ways off, and he has more pressing 22" B&W console TV. Very good "Now we're missing so many vour head? Call Student Govt, condition. $50. 272·0871. people from last year, but wejust "I looked at basketball like I'm things on his mind. Like winning 7668. We may be able to help. have to go with what we have. We not going be playing it the rest of the rest of their games andmaking my life," he continues. "I had a the NCAA tournament, despite A set of weights (metal plate). have to play a more controlled Total weight 90 lbs plus 25 lb bar. FOR RENT running game, which is fine chance to go to some other good Wednesday's setback at the hands Best offer. 272·9895. basketball schools, but their of Michigan State. because I've alwaysliked playing a 503 W. Jefferson duplex. 3 rooms, names just weren't as potent. ''We had a couple of games in a BSR Tt 8 track, AM-FM stereo, running game. That's what we second floors. Gas heat furnished. pre amp 2 Kenwood 2-way played inhigh school." Also. I was impressed with the row, we had momentum," .Knight 289 6307' 234 0596. Despite his involvement in enthusiasm of the students." says. ''We can't let oneloss stop it. speakers. SlSO • Phone 289-3365. basketball here, Toby is acutely Knightpoints out also the burden Our goal all season has been P.A. system tor rent. Call Archie, of the student-athlete. He com­ tomake a post-season tour­ Garrard turntable, electrophonic 232·4967. aware of the academic aspect of receiver. Realistic 1.000 speakers. ments that the traveling is not so nament." eollege, especially at Notre Dame. $250.00. Phone 8709. Houses ran9in9 from two to seven He was concerned with more than grueling as the almost-daily "We know we can win if we bedrooms. Completely furnished. just basketball considerations practices that take up three to four concentrate on what we're sup­ Beqinner's camera outfit: Available for May or Sept. 234· hours of the day. "That's four posed to be doing," he adds. Mamiya Sckor 500 TL, SOmm f2, 9364. hours that. if I wasn't a student­ "We've already played the best; SOOn''" 18 telephoto and 2x, Sol igor the observer teleconvertcr. All cases included. Night Editor -· Rick Blower athlete. I would be working or when wcget to the tournament, $320.00. Phone 8709. LOST AND FOUND resting," Knight says. we 'II know what we're up against." Assistant Night Editor -· Maggie Lost: lonq, white and blue knitted Waltman Planning to major in com­ When the Irish's opponents drive munication-arts, Toby is in­ down the lane of struggle for a scarf. possibly ''ear S. Dming Hall. Layout ·· Martha Fanning, Katie NOTICES Rrward. C.lll 3694. Kerwin terested in anything to do with rebound against Toby Knight, radio or television. He hopes to they'll know what they're up It's cominq' "The Music Lovers," Lost· nf Nickie's Fri. nite Day Editors -- Maureen Flynn, March 16. Mary Egan fulfill his University requirements against too. overcoat and wallet. Please call John. 282 1039. Reward. Copy Readers -- Ken Girouard, Accurnte. !nsf typing northeast Bob Radziewicz SPHING BREAK TRIP TO section of South Bend. Reasonable. Lost: one blue stocking cap on Editorials ·· Fred Graver, John 232 0746. No,·th Qui1d on Thursday. Call Annutec Tim R977. MONTEGO BAY Responsible students desire to rent Features .. J. August Lizza, J. n1otorhomc for 10 days (March 21- Robert Baker Found: 1 pr. qlasses, copper JAMAICA 30) lor !rip lo Florida. Will pay frames. •n D 1. Call Mag9ie, 6814. Sports .. Greg Corgan well. Ci'lll Trace. 234-1889. ROlJND TRIP VlA AIR JAMAICA FROM DETROIT Typists ·· Don Roos, Anne Peeler, Found· pr. or qlasses (brown). Jim Landis, Mary Tobin, Rick 1\ DAYS, 7 NIGHTS AT LUXlJRIOUS MONTEGO BAY HOLIDAYINN "YOU'VE GOTTA HAVE C<1ll Boll, 8697. HEART" CHARITY DANCE, Huber, Camille Arrieh MARCH 22-29 $332 per person SAT., FEB. 8TH, 9:30 PM TIL Compugraphic -- John Kuhn Found: set of keys found on NO . $50 DEPOSITS DUE BY FRI. FEB 1~! - 12:30 AM. DENNIS BAMBER nve .. opposite Library. Call 8428. Late Typist -- Martha Fanning QUARTET. CHRIST THE KING SCHOOL GYM, U.S. 31 NORTH Picture Screener -- Albert D'An­ CALL 272-9895 OR STOP BY S.U. TICKET OFFICE PERSONALS tonio FOR FURTHER INFORMATION. AND DARDEN, SOUTH BEND. Night Controller -· Dave Rust SPONSORED BY SOCIAL AC­ Gay Students of Notre Dame: an SPONSORED BY ST. JOE BANK TRAVEL AGENCY TION, CHRIST THE KING Happy Birthday, Maggie!! or9anization of persons interested CATHOLIC CHURCH. FREE in sharin9 with others an im­ REFRESHMENTS. ADMISSION: portant i'lSpect of their lives. P.O. ~ ~ A {I ~ * >-'1... THE GIANT GYPSY PANDA fr 'I"'\. {:( -{;:r .. I $3.50 SINGLE, $7.00 COUPLE. Box 1702, South BPnd, I nd, 46601. 1 M W -"\\ HAS THE AREA'S FINEST ~ r A "Y TICKETS: MARY FREL - 272- r------;-I\_ -1< {r OF Collectable Wearables h.( J;;l J , ~ ~ ~ I 4495. I '""V J::/.. 9 ..]\.., ~ ' PANDA'S 'The"TOP"DEALER :J> I Wanted: o•H' I all handsome toad J.... 'W {l IN THE 100 CENTER I ~ {;:( ~ j.J * I Money? Morrissey Loan will lend tor the Prz Qut>en's birthday. For interviews call 52U2. ~ fr .I;). -t! >:- \1" {:r A S:;1 Clothes for Your Mind and * I up to $150 tor 30 days, 1 day waiting period. Bilsemcnt of LaFortune. Koren P ~ 11 ,, "1r-\ I Daily, 11:15 to 12:15. I ~ {1 I The Association of the Friends of Car problems? Come to Hottman Chicken Wllll AFCW I {l~ ~ I Bros, Eddy"' Madison. Wholesale representative in your hall. I J;r ~ !} I prices toN D SMC student, faculty, and staff do il yourselfers. Repair I~' {!.!}~*I service illso i'lvailable. Since 1929. Happy Birthday, Dirty Dragon, I ~ l:J. ~ I 234 0191. from Rude, Crude, and Unat­ tractive I ~ r? I Join our North East Day Care parent cooperative. $15 a month To John K . the Mad Chemist: plus 4 hours parent participation Happy Birthday' I~ ~~ per week. 9-S. 233-2233. Love, Maria

MEN WOMEN! Jobs on Ships! No Trisha Ann: ! w~ experience required. Excellent Happy 19th birthday Saturday I ~ pay. Worldwide travel. Perfect trom the other Patricia Ann, summer job or career. Send $3.00 Bonnie, and Jan. I tor information. SEAFAX, Dept. I G 13, P.O. Box 2049, Port Angeles, Me.rt Happy Happy! Let's "swing" wash. 98362. loniqht for tomorrow you'll be too old. THIS SPRING BREAK (MARCH "Mary Ellen" 22-29) REGGAE DOWN TO MONTEGO BAY. JAMAICA! This is a "DC'ar John" letter: ROUND TRIP BY AIR JAMAICA I'm a "little" better but still not JET & DELUXE AC­ tree and easy. Why not "fly COMODATIONS AT THE PLUSH DC'bbie, she'll really move her tail MONTEGO HOLIDAY INN. tor you." TENNIS, GOLD, SWIMMING, Sunshine AND GREAT RAYS IN THE CARIBBEAN SUN. $50 DEPOSITS Thank God it's Friday! MUST BE IN BY FRIDAY, Meeting today, 239 NSH, 4-5 pm. FEBRUARY 14. FOR MORE Pre-med club. All members INFORMATION AND SIGN-UPS, welcome. STOP BY THE STUDENT UNION TICKET OFFICE OR CALL 272- Hockey is great 9895 AFTER 7:00 PM. Bacardi is too ARRANGEMENTS BY THE ST. Happy B-day to Sieve JOE BANK TRAVEL AGENCY. Love, The MGDU I 12 the observer Friday, February 7, 1975 USC makes Irish comeback tough / '. ,__ by Pt>te McHugh ~/ for the U.S. team in the World *·-,._ Games this past summer in San After Wednesday night' fracas. j-""-'! . Juan. , . the Notre Dame athletic depart­ Junior 6-8 forward Alex _l<.nghsh. ml•nt might be advised to bring a a pre-season All America. supply of strait jackets for player;;, selection. leads his team in roaches, fans and officials. But rebounds averaging8.7 per game restrained or not, the Irish and with a 14.8 scoring mark. 6-4 roach Digger Phelps should still sophomore Nate Davis (11.7) will have their hands full with South handle the other forward spot. Carolina and Frank McGuire In the backcourt, playmaker Saturday afternoon in the ACC. Mike Dunleavy should keep the The Gamecocks have plenty to Irish honest. The ball-hawking crow about. With a 13-5 overall Dunleavy, a 6-2 junior from record. McGuire and his charges Brooklyn, is second only to Boswell are shooting for their seventh with a 16.6 average. Freshman consecutive 20-win season and fifth Jack Gilloon qualling his He's tall and gangly; and when stop any flying objects that ap­ Peruvian Airlines. quickness," Knight says. "I have 31 point season average. he plants himself under the basket, proach him, namely opposing Whatever his style of play is, it to play a smart, quick finesse Along with Dantley, Notre Dame his long arms spanning the lane, players driving for the basket or must be working, because Tob)' game. If I get into a struggle, then will have to count on a fine per- you might think he's a signal tower crashing the boards. In fact, he's Knight has become a familiar sight I'm going to lose, but if I can beat in the Irish basketball line-up. him with quickness, then I can do After seeing limited action last all right." year. Knight has come on strong Toby put it all together in the leers entertain 'physical' this season, chalking upa good deal Irish's game against Holy Cross, of playing time and some im­ scoring a career-high 19 points and pressive performances. The 6-8 grabbing 16 rebounds. He con­ sophomore is fourth on the squad tributed 12 points in the recen­ Michigan State squad in scoring with a 7.8 average, and t upset of UCLA and has is pulling down close to 6 rebounds lookedgood in the three Notre b)· Bob Kissel ''When we played up there we felt we deserved a per game. Dame contests since then. His better fate (a loss and a tie) than we got," added Toby insists that he is learning growth and maturity seems ttJ.be Will the "Conroy shuffle" be unveiled for full public Smith. ''Our players are ready and I know Coach more each minute he is out there paralleling that of the team as a view? Will Clark Hamilton perform the famous