-- -~------....,

Friday, February 11, 1994 • Vol. XXVI No. 88 THE INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER SFRVING NOTIZE DAME AND SAINT MARY'S Consumer SMC helps Brown's 'exceptional learners' I By MOLLY CONDON needs key to News Writer

Saint Mary's Elementary Education students globalization are experiencing a new challenge this term. · Due to a joint effort by e·ducation professor By JEREMY DIXON Nancy Turner and special education supervisor News Writer Sharon Guiltinan, students enrolled in Educa­ tional Psychology may take a three-week course The key to globalization in titled Teaching Exceptional Learners. the future is knowing the spe­ Teaching Exceptional Learners is a program cific needs of regional con­ joining Saint Mary's students with mentally sumers, said Martin Nuechtern, handicapped students from Brown School in vice-president and general South Bend. Eight students between the ages manager of hair care products of 18 to 21 years old come to Saint Mary's on for Procter & Gamble at a Monday, Wednesday and Friday mornings. roundtable discussion last While here, they work on social skills with night. the students in the class. This includes intro­ Nuechtern, who received a ducing themselves to other people and opening masters of science administra­ and closing conversations. tion from Notre Dame in 1978, After warming up their speaking skills in the said that besides competing classroom, the students leave in pairs to find a with global companies, we also "red flag" which is usually a student who in not "need to learn to compete with affiliated with this program. They can be any­ global consumers." one around campus, but are usually inside "Consumer needs are global", Madeleva Hall where the class is held. stated Nuechtern, but the key The Brown student approaches the red flag, to global success is knowing accompanied by a Saint Mary's student and what to change when the com­ attempt to open a conversation. Most red flags pany enters a new market­ are chosen on the spot, but the Brown students place. The only way to accom­ have learned to adapt quickly. plish this goal is "to go to the The program, which is new this semester, is consumers to find out what proving to be beneficial to all students involved. they want," said Nuechtern. Saint Mary's students have a chance to interact He envisions a "globalization­ with the Brown students in a controlled envi­ localization continuum" on ronment while earning field hours and the which the entrepreneur must Brown students are able to practice their social find a proper balance. The skills outside of the classroom. company must change the In the future, the mentally handicapped will product to meet the needs of hopefully be integrated into a regular school the local consumers. If it does­ system. This advanced form of mainstreaming, n't, the product will fail. which is called inclusion, is the goal of the stu­ A company will try to pack­ dents from Brown. age the same product world­ Paige Laderer, a teacher for severe disabili­ wide, but often runs into prob­ ties at Brown says that of her 46 students, only lems. Consumers may not like 16 will be able to take the class at Saint Mary's. certain colors or packaging, She reserves it for her more outgoing students. and will not buy those prod­ "Their interaction since the first class has ucts. Translation between cul­ improved greatly," added Laderer. tures and languages also pose The class is offered in two different sessions difficulties for the international during this semester. Each session is three company. weeks long. The Observer/Cynthia Exconde To prospective students who The second session this semester will have Jenny Moss, from the Brown School, Senior Terry Dundon and Saint Mary's junior Cyndi want to compete in the interna­ Herman work on communication skills as part of Saint Mary's new education program tional market, it is preferable see BROWN I page 4 "Teaching Exceptional Learners." to "go outside the country at the time that is best for you," citing family concerns. He also said that one key is Health care reforms insufficiently understood "planning what you're going to do globally before you do it." By THERESEA ALEMAN ble urgency," he said. The plan adequate at best, according to everyone equally healthy. But He offered the example of Pam­ Assistant News Editor must provide universal health McCormick. everyone doesn't have the same pers, which came into the U.S. care, and it must cap costs. Before health care reform medical needs, you can sink a market in 1960. They are still "We're in trouble," said Mc­ can take place, two denials fortune into some people and expanding globally today. President Clinton's health Cormick, "but the Clinton re­ must be realized and overcome, never make them healthy. One However, new products today care reform proposal is ill-fated form proposal is kaleidoscopic according to McCormick. "The person might need virtually no are on the global market in two because it seeks to solve a at best; it changes every day. denials are of human mortality, health care at all until age 70. years. He said that is advanta­ problem The final package will bear no and of the human need to be Another person's health, no geous to enter a market first which is resemblance to the original." interdependent," he said. matter how he lives, may because "the guy who is first in widely unde­ The Clinton plan proposes to The notion that humans can demand intensive health care the marketplace usually gets fined and organize alliances to provide transcend mortality and the his whole life, " he said. the cake." There is a very large insufficiently universal medical insurance. notion that dignity necessitates Another approach to the just market outside of the United understood, These alliances will collect independence are the primary distribution of health care, said States in which future busi­ according to money from individuals and barriers to health care reform, Solomon, is to give humanitar­ nesses must go in order to sur­ University of from corporations and in turn said McCormick. ian, good people good health vive. Notre Dame should offer two types of insur­ "I am even more pessimistic care. But the truly humanitar­ Nuechtern believes that with­ p r o f e s s or s Father Richard ance coverage, low cost sharing of the Clinton reform proposal ian people don't want good in twenty-five years, there will F a t h e r McCormick and high cost sharing, ac­ than Father McCormick," began health care for themselves, but only be three global companies Richard cording to McCormick. philosophy professor, David rather for others. "Mother McCormick and David Solomon The alliances, in theory Solomon. Theresa doesn't want better in their discussion of the morals should foster competition The Clinton plan seeks to re­ health care, she wants better see NUECHTERN I page 4 and management of health care among various plans for the form health care by increasing health care for other people reform. best or most complete (yet in­ the justice and efficiency of whether they are good or bad." Resolved that Americans expensive) coverage, thereby status quo health care. But the Of efficiency, Solomon said, <: ,'··;·: spend roughly 16 percent of the creating "managed" or gov­ concepts of justice and effi­ "The more medical technology concerts at the gross national product on ernment-sanctioned competi­ ciency elude stringent defini­ advances, the more sick people and Convocation health care with costs threaten­ tion, according to McCormick. tion, according to Solomon. we have, because they aren't 1 *~-- "'"";.. both sold out. ing to increase exponentially in "The Clinton's proceeded "On one hand we want to give dying, they're just managing the near future, an effective from a moral impulse, but they people what they deserve. If their illnesses. You can't mea­ health care reform plan is not fell into the hands of efficiency someone smokes, he doesn't sure the efficiency of health only desirable, but necessary, experts," said McCormick. The deserve the same coverage as care by how many sick people according to McCormick, a the­ Clinton plan seeks to solve a someone who eats healthily and you have." ology professor. moral dilemma with a man­ exercises regularly. But on the "We also have the problem of This proposed reform plan agement cure. The plan is other hand we want everyone must satisfy a demand of "dou- therefore destined to prove in- to be treated equally; make see HEALTH CARE I page 4 page 2 The Observer • INSIDE Friday, February 11, 1994 INSIDE COLUMN WORLD AT A GLANCE Record-breaking winter continues to assualt nation Freezing rain and sleet pelted the South from Texas to the Carolinas today, downing trees and power lines and lllania hits covering roads with up to 4 inches of ice. Schools canceled classes in many areas, some post offices canceled deliveries, and in Arkansas, most state Notre Dallle offices shut down in Little Rock. Thousands of people were left without power. "It looks like Mother Nature made a bombing run," Dear Garth: said Wayne Nicholas, managing editor of the Bolivar rm Shameless to admit Amy Zwerk Commercial in hard-hit Cleveland, Miss. "When I went that Wild Horses couldn't Advenising Oversight outside this morning, you could hear limbs popping all keep me away from your over the place." concert tomorrow night. I Nicholas' newspaper was one. of the more than the realize this sounds like the Same Old Story but 20,000 customers in Mississippi without power this Every Now and Then all of us feel we have morning, and a spokesman for Mississippi Power & Light . Then suddenly some­ Co. said the number was growing throughout the morn­ thing spectacular happens like your concert. ing. for a few short hours o Ice also plagued West Virginia, which was trying to stressful studies and the bitter South Bend win­ recover from the state's worst flooding in nearly a ter. You will warm our spirits so that Every decade. The problems there were part of the storm sys­ Time It Rains. , or when the tem that pelted the Northeast and Midwest earlier in the snow flies our hearts will be light. week. In its wake, a cold <;nap sent temperatures plung­ All-time Date This Date ing into single digits. coldest winter ~ ·' Buffalo .AW 197&-77 Cilicago ~ 1120185 -21• 1/18/114 §l The Garth Madness began the minute the con­ Weather-related deaths this week reached at least 20: ;: Erie 1977-78 142.8 Cincinnati -25' 1/18/77 -24' 1/19194 ; cert was announced. It was The Night I Called six in Minnesota; three in West Virginia; two each in ~-· Albany Gr,;197P-71 .. 112:5 · • Oen.ver . -25' tfte/63 2• ~ .,; The Old Man Out for free delivery of our dinner. Oklahoma, Illinois, New Jersey and New York state; and . Denver ,,}972-73 94.9 i '.. ~ ..a •. n..sa.~···.! ..... City =2;: 12/22/89 .:-1' 1/1~~ ' one each in Massachusetts, Arizona and Arkansas. i• BQ$10n ,.iJ9:1'N8 85.1 .. '! ...... ,,, 1... i ~ -4" 1{1.,,..) My roommate, Raven, and I were in the midst o ;.· Hartford 1966-67 82.8 Nashville -17' 1/21/85 -1' 1/19/94/1 killing each other over the last leg of the Dixie In addition, two people were killed and a third critically i:c [)etro~ ~Wf{j)aHJ.2 74.() j fi.Y.C. . ~15' 2191$4 -3" 1/111/94 .. Chicken bucket. There we were, Hungry as injured this morning when an air ambulance crashed on f ·. Dayton 19n-78 62.7 ' Wash. b.c· -15' 2i1s99 -4'' 1/19/94 takeoff in freezing rain near the San Antonio Plbburgh 19'77·18 62.2 ·J Hamaburg -14" 1/14112 -22' 1121194 Wolves, Kickin' and Screamin'. Philadelphia 1977·78 54.9 , Atlanta -9' 2/1899 6" 1/19194 Jackie then stormed in with the great news International Airport. In New Orleans, a commuter ferry that Garth was coming to campus. Right then collided with a tugboat in heavy fog, injuring several peo­ L.~z=t:!~!~;::;~t.,,.!t ~::;ales ~~" :~~~ ~;: ~9~ and there, Raven and I realized we should start ple. Source: Accu-Weather, Inc. AP/Carl Fox in harmony and work on Up to 4 inches of ice coated roads in north and east million in damage. As the high water of the Monongahela getting tickets. It was time to Bury the Hatchet Texas, virtually paralyzing the Dallas-Fort Worth area River moved downstream toward the Ohio River, it flood­ and formulate a plan. and snarling traffic as far south as San Antonio and ed basements and streets in Point Marion, Pa. At least 50 Houston. A stretch of Interstate 10 was closed briefly this people fled riverside homes in West Elizabeth, about 20 Forget about the unwritten papers, exams or morning. miles south of Pittsburgh. what we're going to wear to The Dance, we just Meanwhile, West Virginians were grappling with Maryland and Delaware also had problems with ice. had to have tickets and God willing we would Wednesday's one-two punch of heavy rain that caused "The trees are falling as fast as we put the lines up," said soon be face to face with Garth Brooks. the worst flooding in years, followed by ice and snow that spokesman Bob Behlke of the Choptank Electric cut off power to thousands. _ Cooperative on Maryland's Eastern Shore. Raven and I agreed to get up early and to be Hundreds of West Virginians fled their homes along Lake Superior, the largest of the Great Lakes, was the frrst in line. Trudging across campus, we swollen rivers Wednesday as more than 4 inches of rain declared ice-covered for the first time in close to 16 gave each other the Cold Shoulder, our eyes fell. Authorities compared the flooding to the 1985 floods years. The last time the 31,800-square-mile lake was crimson with the Red Strokes of sleeplessness. that killed nearly 50 people and caused more than $500 pronounced ice-locked was March 3, 1978. We soon returned to our drafty dorm room victorious. Tickets secured, we began planning the Garth Party. The phone heated up. Ten year olds intend to drink frequently Brazil ratifies nuclear safeguard treaty Between us we have many . I called home to Reese in the thumb o WASHINGTON BRASILIA, Brazil Michigan. Fve Got A Good Thing Going I tell Those fun-filled beer commercials at half-time may be The Brazilian Senate ratified a nuclear safeguard Ross, Mr. Right as far as friends go, and assure influencing children to drink, according to research that treaty signed more than two years ago with Argentina him I have his ticket and one for our buddy found fifth-graders reciting slogans, reeling off brand and the International Atomic Energy Agency. The treaty, t Cowboy Bill. names and saying they intended to drink frequently later signed in December 1991 and approved Wednesday, per­ in life. And they get plenty of chances to absorb those mits regular inspection of the nuclear facilities in Brazil When asked where he'll sleep, I tell Ross it commercials whenever they watch sports on TV. and Argentina, the only two Latin American countries will be Somewhere Other Than The Night in Researchers counted 685 alcohol ads during 122 tele­ with nuclear fuel cycle technology. The inspections will Breen-Phillips, and that once parietals kick in, vised sporting events, only three of which cautioned mod­ be made by a joint Brazilian-Argentine commission .. The he;ll be Walking After Midnight over to Planner. eration in drinking. "Their beliefs are being influenced, Argentine congress ratified the treaty in August 1992. The party plans for concert night gain their beliefs about the· positive consequences of drink­ Brazil's approval was delayed because of opposition by momentum. Raven and I are Two of a Kind, ing," said Joel Grube of the National Institute of Alcohol some politicians. Neither country has signed the 1968 Workin' on a Full House for this one. Not Abuse and Alcoholism's Prevent Research Center. The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. The treaty approved by Counting You, Garth, everyone has made reser­ issue of alcohol advertising's impact on children has long the Senate includes an amendment that bans inspections vations. But no need to feel like Mr. Blue been controversial. Teen-agers consume 1.1 billion cans of technological developments that Brazil wants to keep because there's always room for one more. As or bottles of beer every year, and some researchers have secret. The Brazilian navy's nuclear submarine project, for Raven, What She's Doing Now is reinforcing linked such drinking to exposure to ads. The industry for example, will not be subject to inspections. The our supply of Kool-Aid, the beverage of choice insists that it doesn't target underage consumers and that amendment was approved by the International Atomic of the American Hanky-Tonk Bar Association. even if minors are exposed to the ads, it doesn't influence Energy Agency. Argentina has told the U.N. agency that it their behavior. But Grube, in two studies to be published has two nuclear installations, six reactors for research, Finally the countdown begins. Today, Raven Friday in the American Journal of Public Health, found four nuclear fuel plants and one nuclear conversion and I are beside ourselves with anticipation. As that not only are children bombarded with alcohol adver­ plant. Brazil has one nuclear installation, four fuel reduc­ in "Groundhog's Day", If Tomorrow Never tising, they link drinking with "romance, sociability and tion plants and one reprocessing plant. Comes, I know many Domers who will be really relaxation.'' disappointed. With all of this hoopla, will tomorrow live up to our expectations? The Night Will Only Know. Welcome to Notre Dame and Party On, Garth! INDIANA Weather NATIONAL Weather The Accu-Weather® forecast for noon, Friday, Feb. 11.

The views expressed in the Inside Column are Lines separate high temperature zones for the day. those of the author and not necessarily those o 10s The Observer.

TODAY'S STAFF News Production Laura Ferguson Kira Hutchinson OHIO Dave Tyler Bridgette Farrell llndianapoli3 23" I Sports Accent ~ • Tom Schlidt Kenya Johnson ILL. Steve Tankovich FRONTS: Viewpoint ...,...... __._ ~ Carolyn Wil~ens COLD WARM STATIONARY IC> 1994 Accu-Weather, Inc. Pressure Graphics H L Lab Tech Brendan Regan HIGH LOW SHOWERS RAIN T·STORMS FLURRIES SNOW ICE SUNNY PT. CLOUDY CLOUDY Eric Ruethling Atlanta 68 53 Dallas 78 60 New Orleans 79 62 Baltimore 28 22 Denver 36 9 New York 20 10 Boston 15 5 Los Angeles 62 50 Philadelphia 25 19 The Observer (USPS 599 2-4000) is published Monday through Friday Chicago 17 2 Miami 75 70 Phoenix 72 60 except during exam and vacation periods. The Observer is a member of Columbus 23 Minneapolis -9 the Associated Press. All reproduction rights are reserved. 14 1 Vts Associated Prsss GraphicsNat Friday, February 11, 1994 The Observer • NATIONAL NEWS page3 Atnish traditions tnisunderstood Clinton says U.S. ground ByNICKRIOS . "The Anabaptist sought to to take care of the family. This News Writer restore the church to the purity can sometimes be hard for the forces won't fight in Bosnia ofits early days." modern woman to accept." Although the Amish and The Anabaptist believed the By TERENCE HUNT Clinton, at a news confer­ Mennonite communities are church had been corrupted by The Amish are a very peace­ Associated Press ence on Wednesday, made famous for their good food and state control which demanded ful community, and do not be­ clear the United States would old fashioned all citizens be baptized as in­ lieve in war or violence. They WASHINGTON not play a major combat role buggies, fants. They were violently per­ are traditionally forgiving and President Clinton today in Bosnia even though their simple secuted by Catholic and understanding. played down differences with American war planes may be life style is Protestant authorities who con­ "We have certainly had our Russia over NATO's threat­ called upon to help silence the often misun­ sidered their stance both share of conflicts with the out­ ened air strikes against guns of Sarajevo. derstood by heresy and treason. side world. One known case Bosnian Serbs, saying there Clinton said U.S. ground modern soci­ "The Amish, led by Jacob was when people used to throw are no serious obstacles to forces would not take part in ety, said Ammann, began in 1693 with a rocks at us, once they hit a carrying out promised attacks. NATO's newly authorized mis­ Alvin Millers, group that split from the baby and killed him. The family For the second straight day, sion to get rid of the more than a member of Alvin Millers Menonites (another Anabaptist quickly forgave the assailant," Clinton and Russian President 500 heavy guns pointed down the Amish church)," said Millers. Today said Tichli. Boris Yeltsin were unable to on Sarajevo by Bosnian Serbs. Community, at a fireside chat the Amish are located primarily consult by telephone on NA­ However, he acknowledged yesterday. in the United States and Nowadays the Amish seldom TO's decision. The White there would be risks from Serb "The Amish community as Canada and most of their have to endure attacks verbally House cited "technical difficul­ air defenses for U.S. pilots on well as the Mennonites have 100,000 members live in Ohio, or physically. Instead, their ties" and scheduling problems. attack missions. their beginnings with the An­ Indiana and Pennsylvania. communities have been con­ Clinton indicated the prob­ "There is no such thing as a abaptist Churches of Europe in verted into tourist attractions lem was in Moscow. Asked risk-free air operation," the 1525, when a group of believ­ "With this church open to as people are curious to see why he couldn't get through to president said. "I don't want ers performed baptism on outsiders to join, one of the their lifestyle. Yeltsin, the president said, "I to mislead the American peo­ adults who made a voluntary toughest things for incoming don't know. You'll have to ask ple on that." However, he said confession of faith," said Father women is that they have to ad­ Although it is important to them." Serb air defenses "are suffi­ Tim Lichti. Lichti, is the direc­ just to our ways which place study the Amish religion, it is Russia has traditionally ciently rudimentary that the tor of Menno-Hof , an Amish­ the role of a woman in the hard to ignore those things that sided with the Serbs, who have risks are minimal." built and run museum in Ship­ house," said Millers. "They do make them visually so different been threatened with NATO Revolted by the slaughter Ind. not hold and are expected from us. For example, Amish attacks unless they remove last week of 68 people in a refuse to own cars, and instead their weapons from around mortar attack in Sarajevo's ride in horse buggies. They also Sarajevo. central marketplace, NATO have no electricity nor a tele­ "We have no reason to be­ allies overcame months of phone. lieve at this point that there's doubts and hesitation and Millers invited the attendants a serious problem with our approved a U.S.-French ulti­ to share in a customary Amish going forward," the president matum giving Bosnian Serbs Thursday, Feb. 10- Intradonn Snow Sculpting meal, in order to better under­ said. He said he received a let­ 10 days to withdraw their stand the Amish culture. The ter from Yeltsin on Wednesday guns 13 miles from Sarajevo Contest Multicultural Executive Council before NATO announced its or face air strikes. hosted the fireside chat in the "We hope that the Bosnian Friday, Feb. 11- All night movies- decision. Notre Dame Room of the "Everything we have done Serb actions will make air Grown-up Fairy tal-es 8pm-3am LaFortune Student Center. with NATO is consistent with strikes unnecessary," a grim­ Saturday, Feb.12- Mardi Gras Party action the U.N. has already faced Clinton said at a White taken," Clinton said. "It's House news conference. "But LaFortune Ballroom 9pm-1am within the umbrella of the U.N. no one should doubt NATO's action and Russia was on the resolve. NATO is now set to Sunday, Feb.13- Free Skating at the JACC Security Council when that act." 2:30-4:30pm Skate Rental included .H!DI.. happened so I don't think Secretary of State Warren Questions?? Call the S.U.B. Hotline at 1-6171 ~ we're doing anything inconsis­ Christopher said today the tent. There may be people NATO decision was "a strong within Russia that don't agree determined action" to try to with this at all." reduce the violence.

FRIDAY Happy 21st Birthday ROCKY! We love you!

Love, Mom, Dad & Maria AND XYZ affair $1500.00 SCHOLARSHIP AT for eight weeks of your summer devoted to service work APPLICATION DEADLINE * February . 11 stop by the Center for Social Concerns for Info and nppltcnlton page4 The Observer • NEWS Friday, February 11, 1994 our lives. The Clinton health ical-technological control," said Standards sought for care plan lacks the resources to Solomon. C-17 Health care stop the rise of medical costs Solomon and McCormick continued from page 1 because we want all the latest agreed that until Americans By JOHN DIAMOND dining, the Pentagon's top ac­ and most expensive technology can relinquish the propensity quisition official, John Deutch, Associated Press the expansion of disease," said available to us." toward independence over in­ said Thursday that the C-17 Solomon," I have a nephew "What do we do about the terdependence and the desire WASHINGTON nevertheless delivers about nine or ten. He's rude, parents who want Human to cheat or postpone human The Clinton administration "absolutely critical" airlift ca­ Growth Hormone for their mortality, health care costs will pability to ground forces. undisciplined, dirty, mean. . . wants to further relax perfor­ and he tells me, 'I have Atten­ eighth grade son who is too continue to milk the American mance standards on the Air After Deutch's testimony be­ short for the basketball team? economy, rendering attempts at fore the House Armed Services tion Deficit Disorder.' We apply Force C-17 transport plane and medical terms to social ills or Or what if someone suddenly reform fruitless or at least pay $348 million to revive the Committee, a congressional in­ tells us we can't have kidney largely ineffective. vestigator questioned the use­ the inability to relate to others. troubled program it may cancel So we can't even tell how many dialysis for our father who's fulness of the program and said next year. sick people we really have." 70? We spend too much money If you see news Although costs are rising there are cheaper alternatives. Solomon continued, saying to keep us going for too long. . steadily and performance de- spending on health care is so . and when it's time to give up, happening, call compete because of trade bar­ exorbitant because of "our we can't even just die. we have riers and Japanese companies American desire for technolog­ to call in a suicide doctor, any­ The Observer at Nuechtern which have been competing ical control over every aspect of thing as long as we are in med- 631-7471. there for many years. continued from page 1 The Austrian-born Nuechtern worldwide in consumer prod­ also stated that it is possible to ucts. "The small fish will be affect markets and consumer wants. "It depends on their eaten by the big fish," ~e said. In the current global market, wants and needs, but it takes Nuechtern said that "trade bar­ time." Sometimes, it is just in­ riers or tariffs are short-term creasing exposure to the prod­ bandages. "The answer lies in uct that will change consumer tastes. ANNE CUSICK "creating better products which the consumer will buy." The roundtable discussion When asked about Japan, was preceded by a dinner spon­ of Nuechtern said that "if we can't sored by the ND/SMC Council of compete in Japan, we can't International Business compete globally." Japan is the Development, and was held at Diocese of Samoa • Pago Pago toughest market in which to the Hesburgh Center for International Studies. era! students. She hopes his will be in LaFortune Student Center basement near will lead to the class' longevity. Brown Most of the education majors the Society Bank on continued from page 1 enrolled in the class are unsure as to exactly what the class will February 12 from 12:00 noon to 5:00p.m. eight new Saint Mary's students be like, but reaction to this first and eight new Brown students. session has been positive. to speak with those students who might be interested in Turner said that because of "As challenging as the class the courses growing popularity, is, I'm going to miss the Brown the two year teaching program in American Samoa. she has had to turn down sev- students," junior Tricia Dud a said.

your Eneaecmcnt!

~. Once ztpotz a time ... Kevin Costner, Julia Roberts, Robin Williams~ and Robin Wright ... Brought your favorite T H E • E X T R A U R D I N A R Y · F L 0 R A L • C 0. Fairy Tales to life in: Fresh Flowers Blooming 8:00 pm Robin Hood Gifts & Green Balloons Plants 10:15 pm Pretty Woman 12:15 am Aladdin 10% Discount with Student ID

,. 256-7277 1 :45 am The Princess Brid.e - The University s Friday, February 11 in the LaFortune Ballroom • " • Choice for Flowers FREE REFRESHMENTS

5 l\'linutcs fro1n Catnpus 703 West Edison Rd., Mishawaka It''s a FUN and FREE night with a (1 block west of Grape Rd.) Hours: Mon-Fri 9-6, Sat. 9-5 HAPPY ENDING! CAMPUS DELIVERIES DAILY ------·~---~------~-- ·-----~-~------~------~------

page 5 Administration says MIA search will not slacken By JIM ABRAMS decision was premature and Associated Press U.S. officials' praise of Vietnam for cooperating in ac­ WASHINGTON counting for the 2,238 missing The administration's top offi­ was "vastly overstated, even cial on Asia told skeptical distorted." POW-MIA family members Thursday that the search for Most major family groups the missing will not slacken and veterans organizations op­ following the restoration of posed lifting the trade em­ trade relations with Vietnam. bargo, and lawmakers at the "Our efforts will continue hearing expressed sympathy undiminished, indeed with for their concerns. "You lost fresh momentum," said Win­ your husband fighting for his ston Lord, assistant secretary country and you shouldn't of state for East Asia and have to fight your country to Pacific affairs. get him back," Rep. Gary In testimony before a House Ackerman, D-N.Y., the chair­ Foreign Affairs Committee man of the subcommittee on panel, Lord said there are Asia and the Pacific, told more than 500 military and Hrdlicka. The Observer/Catherine Marciano civilian personnel assigned to POW-MIA affairs and the issue John F. Sommer Jr. of the St. Valentine couldn't have known "will remain a central focus of American Legion urged the our relationship with Viet­ subcommittee to "help get the Saint Mary's students Amy Bacevich, Katy Lalli and Desiree Leak are doing a booming business sell­ nam." POW-MIA issue back on track ing Valentine Candy Grams in the Saint Mary's Dining Hall as Feb. 14 approaches. But leaders of several POW­ toward real, effective action." MIA family groups said they were betrayed by President He recommended centraliz­ ~he Pre-Vet Club Presents: Clinton's decision last week to ing POW-MIA activities in one American+ end the two-decade-old trade office reporting directly to the embargo on Vietnam. defense secretary. declassify­ Red Cross "The president has sold out ing all relevant documents, the families as well as the strengthening joint commis­ POW activists," said Carol sions with Russia, China and Hrdlicka, whose husband was North Korea, establishing a captured in Laos and never joint standing congressional accounted for. committee on POW-MIA affairs Ann Mills Griffiths, head of and withholding further favor­ the National League of able actions toward Vietnam Families of American until Hanoi provides the fullest Prisoners and Missing in possible accounting of the 18! Southeast Asia, said Clinton's missing. Valentine Specials 3.• + up Country Florists & Gifts, Inc. ===Refreshments will be served=== Maternowski's 272-0970 103 Dixie way/Us 31-1/2 mi. Nof Campus by Dennis Valentine·s Day Balloons andF1owers

Area wide Delivery ••~ 291-3927

SI)IUNCJ IUU~AU l)i\NA1Ii\ (~I'I'Y IU~A(~II, l~tOJUJ)J\ •shell Island Party Cruises •Beach Bonfire Parties 650' Gulf Beach Frontage - 0 Tiki Beach Bar.Nolleyball 2 Outdoor Swimming Pools • Sailboats, Jetskis & Parasails 1 Indoor Heated Pool · - .,_ Karaoke Beach Party Restaurant, 2 & 3 Room Suites ::. • : Area Discount Coupons ® SANDPIPER-BEACON RES[RVATIONS- FROM $104 PER WEEK 17403 Front Beach Road PER PERSON Thanks for your patience during our ranama City Beach, fl 32413 1-800-488-8828 4 PERSON OCCUPANCY "Under the Weather" week of January 14 ... 21. Louisville was "shut down" and our trucks DANIEL DAY-LEWIS MICHELLE PFEIFFER WINONA RYDER couldn't get to us. "A MASTERPIECE! So enjoy... IT'S PHENOMENAL!" -Joel Siegel. ABC-TV "A nMELESSLY ELEGANT DRAMA OF LOVE, YEARNING, 1 , 14" Large Cheese Pizza PAIN AND PASSION." -David Sheehan, KNBCTV, LOS ANGELES 00 9HEcAGEoP INNOCENCE (additional toppings 95¢) COIHIBIA PICTCRES,_ .CAPP.VDE FI~A,_,MARTIN SCORSESE,_ DA.'i!EL DAY·LEI\lS MICHELLE PFEIFFER \\1~0NA RYDER 1!~~\\0~E:'.:,~L~RBER\STEI\ ~.r.~TII WH~RTON ""':jAY~ARTh~a~~~~ 1------..:'l. 1·---1 ;8.\RBAR\DEFI\.\ ,\lARTI\SCORSESE --=- ~'tlj NOTRE DAME COMMUNICATION & THEATRE CINEMA AT THE SNITE 271,1177 Offer Good FRIDAY & SATURDAY 6:45 &9:45 CALL 631-7361 FOR TIMES AND DATES The Most Popular Nwnlx?r Thru FOR ALL CINEMA AT THE SNITE FILMS an Campus! 4.-13.-94 ..----~--~ --~---- -~~~~ -

page6 The Observer • NEWS Friday, February 11, 1994 House renews expired independent counsel bill By LARRY MARGASAK cally that an investigation by Associated Press the Justice Department would be a conflict of interest. WASHINGTON "There has been no hesitancy The House voted 356-56 to­ to prosecute members of day to renew the expired law Congress," said Rep. John that lets a court-appointed in­ Bryant, D-Texas, who spon­ dependent counsel conduct sored the discretionary lan­ criminal investigations of high guage. He suggested that Re­ government officials. publicans only need to "pur­ Before approving the bill, ma­ chase subscriptions to daily jority Democrats beat back a newspapers" to see that the Republican attempt to have all Justice Department is con­ criminal investigations of mem­ ducting criminal investigations bers of Congress handled by of lawmakers. the neutral prosecutor. Rep. George Gekas, R-Pa., Instead the House backed a who the sponsored language Democratic substitute. sup­ for mandatory coverage, ar­ ported by the Clinton adminis­ gued that the attorney general tration. It would give the attor­ should not have the option of ney general discretion to have investigating "a high-ranking, the Justice Department conduct high-profile member of Con­ the probe of a lawmaker or gress" of the same party. apply for an independent coun­ Gekas asked members to sel if it was in the public inter­ agree with him "there's some­ est. thing wrong with that picture," An independent counsel has and added that Americans The Observer/Catherine Marciano never been used to prosecute a were disgusted with Congress' The dance of the dragon lawmaker, although it was per­ failing to apply to itself laws it mitted under the old inde­ passes for other Americans. Freshman Caroline Quinlan and Saint Mary's rung in the Chinese New Year in the lounge of Regina North pendent counsel law. The main question before the with a traditional dancing dragon. The celebration included food and dancing, and was sponsored by the The coverage of lawmakers House remains whether to re­ Student Activities Board. We are entering the year of the dog in the Chinese calendar. was the key issue in House de­ new a law that, from 1978 bate over reviving the inde­ through 1992, provided for pendent counsel law, which court-appointed independent SECURITY BEAT expired in December 1992. The counsels to investigate allega­ The University of Notre Dame Department of Music presents bill is similar to a measure tions of wrongdoing by top of­ A Holy Cross Memorial Concert* passed by the Senate, and ficials of the executive branch. House sponsors said they ex­ In the opening debate pect little difficulty in forging a Wednesday, Democrats insisted Guillermo Fierens compromise. the attorney general should Guest Classical Guitarist The key vote, on a motion to decide who prosecutes each substitute the Democratic lan­ case, even when a member of guage for the Republican alter­ Congress is being investigated. native, was 230-188. The Arguing that the law is House then adopted the Demo­ designed to prevent conflicts of cratic language on a vote of interest, Democrats said there 339-76. is no automatic conflict when Republicans sought to place the Justice Department investi­ members of the House and gates a lawmaker. Senate in the same category as Insisting that members of about 60 top administration of­ Congress be subject to the law, ficials, including the president. Gekas said, "Congress exempts Don•t Any criminal probe of those itself on a thousand and one officials must be conducted by mandates it imposes on other drink and drive! an independent counsel, be­ people. Here is an example cause it is assumed automati- we're trying to correct."

----~-----. Chinese -·xmerican. · • Ser·vice • Community • Culture • Restaurant & Cocktail Lounge 1\uthentic Szechuan, Open Mindedr1ess • Prejudice M:ndarin & Hunan Cuisiu

, _ _,_,.,._L_.. Bar & Restaurant open 7 days a week Lunches starting at ..... $4.25 Dinners starting at ..... $5.95 Voted Be~t· Banquet rooms available for up to 200 Orkr11;~1 Restaurant in Mil:hiana bv St~rvice • 130 Dixie Way N., South Bend Michiana Nvt~· ,:· (next to Randall's Inn) '. Ut1ity •

Cu !t~u

c:u!t;ur~t~. The Nation's Most Progressive Retail Floral Merchandiser "t') pen rejudice WE GUARANTEE YOUR SATISFACTION! ~~eduction • • E I i 111 i n a t i n g

Fresh Flowers & Plants for All Occasions o BALLOONS o WIRE SERVICE o SILK & DRIED Stereotypes • 1\war-eness • Ser·vice o FUNERALS o WEDDINGS FLOWERS That•s what we•re all about. WE DELIVER OPEN EVENINGS & WEEKENDS Interested?

FTD WIRE SERVICE Full Service Florist Stop or order by phone. Multicultural Executive Council All Major Credit Cards Accepted is now accepting applications for 1404 N. IRONWOOD DR. (2 BLKS. E. OF NOTRE DAME) SOUTH BEND,• IN 46635 the 1994-95 school year (219) Applications can be picked up in the Student 288-3995 Activities Office. Deadline: February 18 ..,; Friday, February 11, 1994 Fears persist a year after beating By KARIN DAVIES This is the same cafe where a teachers and social services Associted Press woman recalled seeing the workers. young killers, Robert Thompson Others have blamed broken LIVERPOOL, England and Jon Venables, with 2-year­ families, horror videos, the When Jim Ninnim pushed his old James on Feb. 12, 1993, church, the government, greed baby granddaughter's carriage hours before they tormented and the boys' mean and dispir­ into the shopping mall this and killed him. iting neighborhoods. week, his daughter warned Their trial explored a horrify­ Forget the idyllic images of him: "You won't leave her, you ing crime in painful detail. Ev­ English literature, of charming won't take your eyes off her." ery blow and every minute of a narrow streets and quaint cot­ A year ago, in the same shop­ child's terror was laid out for tages. Northern Liverpool is ping center, two 10-year-old the jurors. grim and gray, an ugly sprawl boys lured little James Bulger Grainy images captured on of brick and concrete. from his mother, took him to an security cameras - a small In the neighborhood where empty railway yard and beat blond boy wandering in the James died, graffiti mars the him to death. mall, then following two older 19th-century church, tomb­ Now Ninnim sat in a cafe at boys, then disappearing - be­ stones are toppled in the ceme­ the mall, dividing his attention came imprinted on the world tery where the only visible between sleepy Samantha Rose consciousness. grass grows between the and a cup of hot chocolate, ex­ But the question no one has graves. plaining his daughter's fears. answered is, "Why?" The litter-strewn railway It was easy, he said, to imag­ To the police, Robert and Jon where James' battered body ine another child straying from are freaks of nature, evil mon­ was found last Valentine's Day his mother among crowds mov­ sters whose crime was an iso­ is still a playground in a neigh­ ing swiftly in the airy avenues lated incident. borhood with few places for of the mall. The boys blame each other. children. "But I can't imagine why two Each mother blames the other's Children have to be tough in lads would take a baby and kill son. Robert's mother, Ann this neighborhood where jobs him," Ninnim said. Thompson, also blames his and money are hard to come by. Less than 2 miles east of the docks that once made Liverpool a rich port city, the area's for­ L 20% Discount tunes have declined with the 0 shipping industry. on full &rvice James Bulger's tragic death was a catalyst for national con­ cern about the lawlessness of Must have <£>tudent ID Britain's youth.

234--6767 "It made us wake up to the fact that young people at the fringe of our society are beyond full &rvice <£>alon control," said Barry Ryan, a member of the local council in v llair • 8kin • Nails James' neighborhood of Kirkby. But he worries that nothing 1357 N. Ironwood will change. AVEDA .. "I fear, and I hope I'm wrong, Corner of Edison l'IIE ART AND SCI EN< :E that we're back to where we lll' rljRE 1'1.0\VER ANn PLANT ESSENCE~ were before the James Bulger ~Ironwood Hair Care • Skin Care • Cnlnur Cnllmclic~ case," Ryan said. "People tend to forget."

ERASMUS BOOKS DOMINOS • Used books bought and sold • 25 Categories of Books • 25,CXJO Hardback and Paperback Books in stock • Out-Of-Print Search Service -$2.00 PIZZA • Appraisals large and small Open noon to six Tuesday through Sunday 1027 E. Wayne South Bend, IN 46617 ®271-0300 (219) 232-8444

Two for

Open on o/afentine 's Seating 5-9 9r{akg. your 1Wervations

Cheese Pizza Cheese Pizza WHAT KIND OF FONDUE DO \VE OFFER? $1 per topping 99¢ $1 per topping cheesc•bccf•chid. .:n scalmxl•vegetable• Twisty Bread Flaming chocolate with Pizza Order J!E Aese,ill -9r· r I VALID AT THIS LOCATION FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY FC~ & 6al :,edl>ng 5p.rn 10 p "'

FRI-SAT j_ SUN-THUR :noCE~TF:R•MISH·\~t\' KA·. 1'\. Upper ~ e'9' Old f3•ewery Bldg 4:80 p.m. · 1 a.m. 1835 SOUTH BEND AVE 4:80 p.m. · 2 a.m. page 8 The Observer • PAID ADVERTISEMENT Friday, February 11, 1994

You Are Invited to Attend "Winning in the Value-Conscious '90s" A Procter & Gamble Presentation on the Key to Creating and Leveraging Consumer Value

Featuring Mike Milligan Senior Vice President

New Date: Tuesday, February 15 5:30p.m. Center for Continuing Education Auditorium Rescheduled from january 20, due to inclement weather. We apologize for any inconvenience.

Reception Meet P&G managers from: immediately following. • Finance Food and beverages • Sales will be served. • Management Systems Dress is casual. • Product Development Students from • Product Supply all majors welcome. • Brand Management

8 ~P,-=, -&Gamble ·•E • BUSINESS Friday, February 11, 1994 page 9 The Morris Inn caters to needs of campus community By RYAN SHARKEY CAMPUS BUSINESS PROFILE and remains to serve the Notre Business Writer ' Dame community. It is the University hospitality center," Contrary to popular opinion, THE MORRIS INN emphasized Harr. there is room at the Inn. Just The Morris Inn is also used don't try to find any on a foot­ Opened: 1952; remodeled 3 for local events in keeping with ball weekend. times, most recently in 1981 University President Father The Morris Inn, a University­ Edward Malloy's goal of im­ owned nonprofit organization, Business goal: ''To be proving the University's rela­ is the only hotel on the campus self-sufficient working with the tions with the surrounding of the University of Notre budget given by the University" community. Dame. While the enormous Events such as the upcoming demand for a room in the shad­ Management philosophy: ''Treat Juniors Parents Weekend re­ ow of the football stadium people like you want to be quire the Morris Inn to hold a would seem enough to fill the treated ... our employees are our lottery in an attempt to give all Inn years in advance, this is not most important resource" parents an equal chance to stay the true reason why the hotel is on campus. inaccessible. In fact, it is impos­ Marketing strategies: Highlight sible for anyone to get a room facilities and attractions of the Looking at its business goals, on these weekends. University; invite corporate the hotel hopes "to be self-suf­ conferences, trade shows, and ficient working with the budget Nine advisory councils use workshops given to it by the University." the Inn on separate weekends The Observer/ Catherine Marciano said Harr. during the fall to meet with -David Harr The Morris Inn continues to attract alumni and conference gatherings The Inn's advertising, though, University heads to discuss the General Manager with its convenient location and top quality service. is interwoven with the conditions outside of Notre University's facilities. Dame, according to James Gib­ of the tab. While recent advertising has conferences regularly and has Brochures offer the use of the bons, director of special events David Harr, General Manager tried to capture the student's an underground tunnel which campus's recreational facilities and protocol for the University. of the Morris Inn, hopes that interest, the Inn's focus re­ connects it to the Morris Inn. and emphasize its beauty to at­ The members of these coun­ students and their parents are mains on corporate confer­ On the other hand, the 14th tract visitors. cils are appointed by the not discouraged by the hotel's ences, workshops, trade shows, floor is used for receptions and Through it all, the Inn's busi­ University to guide various lack of space on football week­ and local community banquets. meals associated with special ness remains fairly constant. aspects of the University to­ ends. University events such as grad­ While the recent depression in ward the future. The council "I want the students to use Along with its five banquet uation. the economy decreased the members arrive on Thursdays the Inn more. It's just like any rooms, the hotel has its own number and length of confer­ and meet until the weekend's other part of the University." banquet catering facility. It The Morris Inn was built on a ences and conventions, the Inn coup de gras, the football game. The hotel has a restaurant, staffs and serves events at the one million dollar gift from was never at a loss for activity. The members must pay for cocktail lounge, does photo pro­ Center for Continuing Educa­ Earnest E. Morris and opened "The last six months have seen their transportation and then cessing, and even makes its tion (CCE) and on the 14th floor its doors in 1952. a noticeable recovery," states the University picks up the rest own ice cream. of the Library. The CCE hosts "The Inn's first mission was Harr. Federal radio frequencies US warns Japan to honor trade pledges

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER opened for private use Associated Press

By RANDOLPH SCHMID military radar testing signals. WASHINGTON Associated Press Congress last year approved After almost 30 different U.S.­ a plan to auction a portion of Japanese trade agreements WASHINGTON the governments frequencies since 1980, the Clinton admin­ The government freed a por­ for use in the expanding per­ istration says this is it: The tion of its radio frequencies for sonal communications indus­ United States will not accept private use today and sched­ try. another meaningless market­ uled an even bigger chunk of The frequencies total 200 opening pledge from Japan. the federal airwaves to go pub­ megahertz of broadcasting and lic. could be used for such things Continuing their tough talk The airwaves designated for as personal communications today, administration officials public use could be turned over systems, new generations of said they were still at logger­ as soon as August, the National wireless telephones, computers heads with the Japanese on the Telecommunications and and fax devices. eve of the summit meeting be­ Information Administration The administration has esti­ tween President Clinton and said. mated that auctioning off the Japanese Prime Minister Mori­ hiro Hosokawa. Federal agencies will give up frequencies could raise as AP File Photo some 200 megahertz of radio much as $7 billion. President Bill Clinton's administration toed a hard line in anticipating the Secretary of State Warren frequencies by the year 2004 Many in the telecommu­ upcoming trade summit between the U.S. and Japan. under terms of last year's bud­ nications and computer in­ Christopher this morning said get act. The Defense dustries envision a day when Japan must now put its eco­ creasingly vocal in their hard Department appears to lose the consumers will be able to make nomic relationship with the line. That tough talk and a soaring most frequencies, though other calls with a wireless telephone United States on the same U.S.-Japan trade imbalance agencies will also give up some from any location in the world, sound footing as the diplomatic "Japan is out of step with the that jumped 20 percent last bands. no matter how far from an and security relationship be­ tween the two countries. rest of the industrialized world. year to almost $60 billion has The affected agencies were urban center. It is time for Japan to come in heightened tensions on the eve consulted in the process of "We need to address the line," says Deputy Treasury of Clinton's first summit with deciding which frequencies to They also imagine tiny, hand tremendous trade surplus that Secretary Roger Altman, who Hosokawa. make public, NTIA officials held computer devices that Japan has with the United claimed that Japan's record said. could send and receive faxes States, and we need to have a trade surpluses were draining Negotiators trying to wrap up The bands will be turned and other types of documents substantial improvement in our jobs and growth not just in trade agreements in time for over to the Federal and images. economic relationships," he America but around the world. Clinton and Hosokawa to sign Communications Commission, said at the outset of a meeting "The Japanese markets are Friday broke off talks Tuesday which will auction them off. But alf of these ideas require with Foreign Minister Tsutomu closed by any measure that you night when the U.S. side de­ The 50 megahertz designated some use of the airwaves, and Hata. "There has not been sat­ might want to use," said U.S. clared the discussions were at for public use currently carry currently all the space allocat­ isfactory progress." Trade Representative Mickey an impasse. military communications and ed to private industry is in use. U.S. officials have been in- Kantor.

MARKET ROUNDUP BUSINESS BRIEFS February 10, 1994 WASHINGTON WOODBURN, Ind. WASHINGTON Although the U.S. economy is The local president of the Teenagers pour about $240 slowing from the torrid pace of United Rubber Workers union million a year into state and late last year, it still will post said he won't recognize a vote federal tax coffers by buying ci­ 4025 the strongest growth in six this weekend on Michelin's lat­ garettes, mostly from stores il­ 3950 years in 1994, top economists est offer to keep a Uniroyal legally selling to minors, a re­ rV..... "\r\ suggest. Goodrich tire plant open. searcher estimated Thursday. 3875 The consensus of 50 analysts The vote is being conducted That doesn't necessarily mean f" 3800 surveyed this month by Blue by the international union, but governments have a financial Ar-'' fJ 3725 Chip Economic Indicators fore­ Local 715 President Ray Wise­ incentive to look the other way ~ \.~ 3650 casts economic growth of 3.3 man told a federal judge in Fort when minors buy cigarettes, 3575 percent this year. fastest since Wayne on Wednesday that he but enforcing laws on underage opposed it. smoking "isn't a priority," said 11/1/93 1211/93 1/1/94 211/94 311/94 the 3.9 percent expansion in 1988. Dr. Michael Cummings. VIEWPOINT page 10 Friday, February 11, 1994 THE OBSERVER NOTRE DAME OFFICE: P.O. Box Q, Notre Dame, IN 46556 (219) 631-7471 SAINT MARY's OFFICE: 309 Haggar, Notre Dame, IN 46556 (219) 284-5365 1993-94 General Board Editor-in-Chief David Kinnc:y Managing Editor Business Manager Kevin Hardman Brian Kennedy

News Editor ...... Meredith McCullough Advertising Manager ...... Anne Heroman Viewpoint Editor ...... Suzy Fry Ad Design Manager...... Steph Goldman Sports Editor ...... George Dohrmann Production Manager ...... Cheryl Moser Aa:ent Editor ...... Kenya Johnson Systems Manager ...... Patrick Banh Photo Editor ...... Jake Peters OTS Director ...... Brendan Regan Saint Mary's Editor ...... Jennifer Habrych Controller ...... Mark Meenan

The Observer is the independent newspaper published by the students of the University of Notre Dame du Lac and Saint Mary's College. It does not necessarily reflect the policies of the administra­ tion of either institution. The news is reponed as accurately and objectively as possible. Unsigned edi­ torials represent the opinion of the majority of the Editor-in-Chief, Managing Editor, News Editor, Viewpoint Editor, Accent Editor, Photo Editor, Sports Editor, and Saint Mary's Editor. Commentaries, letters and Inside Columns present the views of the authors, and not necessarily those of The Observer. Viewpoint space is available to all members of the Notre Dame/Saint Mary's com­ munity and to all readers. The free expression of varying opinions through letters is encouraged.

Observer Phone Lines Editor-in-Chief 631-4542 Accent/Saint Mary's 631-4540 Managing EditorMewpoint 631-4541 Day Editor/Production 631-5303 Business Office 631-5313 Advenising 631-6900/8840 Sports 631-4543 Systems/OTS 631-8839 News/Photo 631-5323 Office Manager 631-7471 GARY CARUSO CAPITOL COMMENTS Avoid unnecessary conflicts: Reflect before speaking

Rep. Mfume's dilemma with Farrakhan's initial actions Mfume when his values are memories long to remember erant the ND community really the Nation of Islam is not unlike have created a personal as well above reproach. the bombings and murdered is when on campus I hear stu­ some dilemmas at Notre Dame. as political dilemma for Mfume. I cannot help but parallel doctors, acts of violence from dents say things like, "I hate I personally do not pay close Here is a man who, according Mfume's dilemma with one I those bolder ones who got the faggots" or hear staff tell a attention to Louis Farrakhan's to one of my friends, gave up had last semester. I remember same signals from others like "faggot" joke. teachings. his slave name to adopt one reading of a Notre Dame stu­ our ND student. Those same nasty tones also I have noted that in the past with religious and ancestral dent who was quoted as saying I think of people in the Notre proliferate during the debates he has preached what I thought roots. He believes in many of in The Observer regarding to be anti-white beliefs, "Hymie the principles supported by racism, homosexuality, abor­ is not a racial slur ... Hitler was a Farrakhan, but not with such tion, and our "screwing out of great man." extremist rhetoric. being number one in football." I However, I have seen first­ Yet, last week after the want to brush off some of those hand in Washington, D.C. the speech, Mfume had to confront advocates as being young, effect his followers have had in Farrakhan to urge his denunci­ immature. But can the exuber­ ridding inner city neighbor­ ation of those statements or ance of youth be blamed on hoods of drugs and crime. lose the backing of the similar conduct in the dor­ Consider me apathetic when it Congressional Black Caucus. mitories or classrooms? I think comes to the bow-tied crowd Eventually Farrakhan wisely not. who belong to the Nation of refuted his assistant's remarks Maybe the next time you stu­ Islam until last week. at a press conference. But dents enter the dining hall, A top Farrakhan aide, Khalid Mfume went the extra mile in fiNAL PoLL$~' make an effort to sit with some­ Abdul Muhammad, labeled the his denunciation of the re­ one of a different race "just for pope a "cracker,"called Jews marks. He mentioned each af­ a different dining experience." "the bloodsuckers of the black fected group specifically instead Or the next time anyone sees an nation," and urged black South of using Farrakhan's tactic of openly gay person on campus, Africans to "kill everything mentioning the speech in gen­ go up and tell that person that white." Responding to criticism eral. you admire his strength in light from Jesse Jackson and other Mfume reassured Jews, of all the harassment they take civil rights figures, the black Catholics, and whites, as well from everyone. separatist refused to repudiate as included gays by specifically Better yet, the next time you the incendiary speech. saying that anti-Semitism, anti­ disagree with someone, Responding to criticism of the Catholic hate, homophobia, and whether it be a difference of speech, Farrakhan called him­ anti-white remarks have no opinion, difference of moral self a victim of a Jewish con­ place in our society. He went values, or just a difference of spiracy. out of his way to include every­ lifestyle, listen to your own Rep. Kwesi Mfume is cur­ one who may have been of­ words in your head before they rently serving as the Chairman fended so that his credibility pass your lips. If we all took of the Congressional Black could be preserved, and so that that extra second, Rep. Mfume Caucus. He is a baseball player he could work with those would not have had to de­ on the Democratic Member's groups toward common goals in nounce one of his brothers, and Team for which I am one of the the future. I would not feel so upset at coaches. So I have had the op­ Mfume has done what all civil that he wanted to be arrested Dame community as being rea­ some of our Notre Dame portunity to interact with him rights leaders before him have in front of an abortion clinic. He sonable, as having many simi­ zealots. on a more personal level than done to insure the success of wanted to obstruct people from lar values and goals. But I also most Congressional staff mem­ their cause. He has placed truth gaining entrance, and indirectly see them more than vigorously Gary Caruso, Notre Dame bers. I find him to be an and equality above politics. gave the impression that any­ disagree with those who are Class of 1973, works in extremely intelligent and artic­ Nobody can argue with the fact one who was bolder than he sometimes different or think Washington, D.C. as a desktop ulate person. I am so impressed that hate is destructive and could attempt other means to differently. It astounds me how publishing specialist for the with him that I would personal­ must be eliminated in both the stop women from seeking abor­ much campus hate is directed U.S. House of Representatives. ly rather see him as Speaker of black as well as the white com­ tions or doctors from per­ toward those who advocate a His column appears every other the House than those who cur­ munities. Nobody can look at forming those abortions. woman's right to have an abor­ Friday. rently hold leadership positions. the motives of someone like We do not have to search our tion. I also wonder just how tol- DOONESBURY GARRY TRUDEAU QUOTE OF THE DAY I IA?N'T 6&7 !7; ~IR. UIHY U/OUW WUL-, 70FAR OUI&NOI

--Anonymous Friday, February 11, 1994 VIEWPOINT page 11 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Courtesy, respect must be learned in order to be lived

like token representatives of ation of difference. The stares as much from these women's student body, I have decided Dear Editor: our colleges. were given as an attempt to experience and knowledge. to pose a challenge to the The concept behind Play of As a result of the disparity intimidate. They were a non­ Unfortunately, the situation Saint Mary's community. the Mind was to discuss the in the conference issues. verbal exchang~ of hatred, and experiences that brought First of all, it was my issues faced at a Catholic many of us "minority" women fear, and ignorance meant to all of us women in that discus­ observation that Saint Mary's Women' s College. I was a broke away from the confer­ communicate that the differ­ sion together provided us with College was far behind on the team member and active par­ ence activities in order to dis­ ences were unwanted. Many a clear picture of the reality of issues of diversity, openness ticipant in the activities at the cuss the issues facing all may ask if we are being too our worlds. The reality is that to other religions, sexual pref­ conference. women: sensitive to these "normal" things like the color of our erence, and change, in com­ I first want to thank the The majority of our reactions. I want to respond skin and obvious other differ- parison to the other Catholic Saint Mary's College women's colleges across the Administration for hosting country. If you, the adminis­ such an event on campus. tration and students of the Unfortunately, when I talk college, really want to address about the conference itself I the needs of the student popu­ need to qualify the fact that lation and follow the creed there were many aspects of that the college was founded the conference that were dis­ upon, then a true, solid com­ appointing, discouraging, and mitment to those issues needs superficial. to be made. It was out of the disparity The administration can experienced that found a actually start to implement group of students and faculty policies that will increase finally getting to the real diversity of "minority" stu­ issues concerning women. dents and faculty on campus, Before I continue, I want to cater to the needs of non­ make sure that I do not offend Catholic students -and faculty, anyone else who was in atten­ and recognize the gay/lesbian dance and who did not see population. • that disparity or frustration However, if this is just too we had. I want to simply much for the administration share and discuss my experi­ and student body to commit ence. to, then maybe we can begin There were many things I conversation dealt with the with a result of these "nor­ ences really do matter. with trying to remember that found to be disappointing experiences and emotions mal" reactions. Although I was never oblivi­ on this "Catholic" campus we about the conference itself. concerning the overwhelming The stereotypes prevented a ous to this reality, I want to be need to increase the level of First was the fact that many problem of exclusion and free exchange of ideas and able to believe in the promise common courtesy and respect issues pertaining to women of stereotyping among women. discussion with those groups and purpose of an all-female for human life and each other. color, lesbians, non -Catholics, This stereotyping occurs, even all because these issues were college. It is supposed to be a We need to try to remember and older, non-traditional stu­ at this all women's Catholic ignored throughout the con­ place where we as women, all that we are all human beings dents and faculty in atten­ College Conference. It was ference. The final example women, are able to thrive~ first, and male, female, dance were not discussed. disappointing and frustrating concerns the assumption that identify, and empower our­ brown, black, white, red, yel­ The discussions and issues to hear that these extremely everyone in attendance was selves. Unfortunately, for my­ low, rich, poor, gay, lesbian, covered were geared towards intelligent, aware, and articu­ heterosexual. I found I was self and those in that discus­ young. or old, second. If we the white, middle class. late "minority" women from even guilty of that insensitiv­ sion we discovered that an all­ cannot learn this at an all straight, and young perspec­ all over the country were ity. However, we were able to female Catholic college really women's Catholic college, tive. treated to a "reality check" on get past our differences and is a place for white, Catholic, then we will never be able to The superficiality of the the situation of women in the discuss the important issues straight, young women to live it. discussions and lack of sensi­ world. we all face in our conversa­ thrive, identify, and empower tivity to the diversity of partic­ For example, they were tion. themselves. TERESA MARQUEZ ipants caused many of us greeted with stares, filters, Unfortunately many were As far as bringing this prob­ Senior "minority" women to feel and blockades. The stares not aware of our discussion lem to the Saint Mary's LeMans Hall uncomfortable, unwanted and were not done out of appreci- and were not able to receive College administration and The New Testan1ent overlooked? Purpose of musicians should never be to " m ak e money" Reader responds· ironically to prior column Dear Editor: not be to "make money." That Dear Editor: high-earning tax shelter." baby. Few people realize that Dave Tyler babbles, com­ is the most "sellout" one can Frank Pimentel deserves The lesson is obvious. To aid abortion represents one of the plains, and categorizes in his be. Also, why should music be commendation for a penetrat­ our lazy sisters in achieving few topics upon which Jesus ridiculous article, "Alternative something all people like? I like ing and courageous column, righteousness we have no ever preached. For this rea­ music's identity crisis" (The music that grates on me. Other "Economic and moral reform choice but to sever the wel­ son, the right to life of the Observer, Feb. 7, 1994). people don't. So should the needed for violence (The fare checks fattening their unborn is the only social issue First of all there is no bands I listen to now change Observer, Feb. 4, 1994). brood of vipers. We, for our • which can ever motivate the alternative music. That is sim­ their sound in order to "make He overlooks, however, a effort, will store up treasures true Christian. Our call is ply a term generated for a money?" Obviously not. This is potential source of great wis­ in heaven. After all, when we clear: Suffer the innocents to quick-sell by the music industry not musical snobbery. dom for the movement to do it for the least of these .... come into this world and per­ powerhouses. Sometimes people will come up abolish public assistance pro­ Furthermore, Jesus left little ish of malnutrition as an Tyler does not realize that to me and say, "Hey, do you grams such as AFDC: The doubt that the Christian example to those who would there is a huge problem when a New Testament. should stigmatize women who sow violence. band moves into mainstream. It True, the gospels lack the practice fornication. Recall Outside of public vilification, loses its identity and musical ' Ilike music that grates moral authority of National His words to the lawyers and there is no better way fGr a integrity. It may sell out and on. Other people Review and fail to mention Pharisees about to stone a Christian to dissuade a allow the producers and major any children conceived out of woman caught in adultery: woman from abortion than record labels to dictate its don't.' wedlock. Nevertheless they "Truly I tell you, stonings may ensuring her child would suf­ sound and message (i.e. Urge Overkill). Worst of all, this band supply guidance to the mem­ or may not be good for those fer and die in squalor. Dave McMahon bers of a Christian campus on on the receiving end, but their And if enough of the welfare that sold out now plays to mas­ this complex issue. deterrent effect on others is deadbeats who infest our sive stadiums where before Read the gospels very care­ wonderful.. .. and indispens­ cities like maggots and beg for they may have played medium fully. Never do they describe able. scraps like Lazarus were to to small sized clubs in which like Nirvana, you look like Jesus as acting or speaking "Our Lord proceeded to dis­ die, we Christians could the artificial barrier between them. I love 'Smells Like Teen with compassion toward poor course on family values while inherit the earth. the performer and the audience Spirit,' blah, blah." All the time people. In fact, many Biblical the elders cast stones. is dismantled. I find myself thinking: a) scholars argue that poverty Unfortunately our govern­ PAUL PERL Tyler says, "There are just Nirvana has been around a probably did not exist in ment cannot employ stoning Graduate Student in Sociology two things the alternative long, long time, and b) Once ancient Palestine; poverty was for risk of killing an unborn Fischer Graduate Residences music crowd needs to remem­ again, the American short virtually unknown in human ber: one, to make money, you attention span triumphs. society before Lyndon need to sell records and two, to So Dave, next time you rail Johnson's Great Society pro­ sell records you need to pro­ and whine about .whiners in the grams. duce music people will like." "alternative music crowd," Rather, the gospels present Before this statement, Tyler realize that the purpose of a Christ who lectured inces­ rails against the notion of a cat­ some music is to criticize the santly on the work ethic. egory of alternative music. Now get-rich, screw-everything atti­ Surely none can forget His he categorizes "the alternative tude of America, not celebrate advice to the young man who music crowd." The problem I it. asked if more was demanded have with Tyler's above state­ than obedience to the law: ment is its ignorance in terms DAVE McMAHON "Go, sell all your possessions, of art as a music form. Sophomore and invest the money in a The goal of a musician should Morrissey Hall The Observer • ETC. Friday, Februa • ra The 27th Annual Sophomore Liu

Charles Johnson-~:?-:::.· hen he won the National Book .•. Award last year, novelist Charles · Johnson made history. He was the W first African-American male to cap- friday ture that prestigious literary honor since Ralph Ellison won it in 1953 for "Invisble evants Man" The work which elevated him to nationwide "Orlando," Snite Auditorium, 7:30 and 9:30p.m., $2. literary acclaim, as well as into the public lime­ light, was his novel "Middle Passage." The piece •ic is an adventurous yet philosophical story of a The Killing Floor, Mishawaka Midway Tavern, 9:30. freed black man who stows away on a ship only p.m. to discover that it is a slaver bound for Africa. Tri-Star pictures is already in the process of turning the novel into a major feature film. Motived by the experience of attending a lec­ ture by Amiri Barake, Johnson became an early saturday founder of several groups just launching the then-new discipline of Black Studies. events It was Baraka's call for black artists to bring their talents home to black people that attracked SMC Basketball vs. Beloit College, 3 p.m., Angela him to drawing illustrations, according to Athletic Facililty {AAF). Johnson. In 1970 he published the first of two "Orlando," Snite Auditorium, 7:30 and9:30 p.m., $2. collections of cartoons. •ic Johnson moved onto writing to broaden his The Killing Floor, Mishawaka Midway Tavern, 9:30 range of expression and studies with famous novelist John Gardner. In 1974 Johnson pub­ p.m. lished his first novel, Faith and the Good Thing and in 1982 Oxherding Tale was released. Johnson also authored a shortstory collection titled "The Sorcerer's Apprentice" and a recent arts movement of the 1960s have urged us con­ sunday work of literary criticism, Being and Race: Black trol our images. But since the late 1940s Ellison Writing Since 1970. has counseled us to expand our images," said events Johnson, although pas- ~-----~~---,------,Johnson. Carolyn Plummer, violinist and William Cerny, sionate about his early work WORKS Director of the Creative in Black Studies, stresses Writing program, Johnson pianist. Annenberg Auditorium at the Snite that a serious African- Black Humor holds an endowed chair in Museum, 2 p.m., free admission and open to the American student of philos- Half-Past Nation Time Humanities at the University public. ophy or art must pursue a Faith And The Good Thing of Washington. Currently broad study, not just black Oxherding Tale Johnson is working on an epic arts or literature, in order to The Sorcerer's Apprentice historical novel about famed truly create freely. Being and Race: Writing Since 1970 civil rights leader Dr. Martin '· movies "Proponents of the black Middle Passage Luther King, Jr. University Pn East Joy Harjo------Carlito's Way 7, 9:50 Wluit I Should Two cultures are represented in the work of Joy Harjo: her Remains of the Day 7, 9:55 mainstream American heritage and her Native American her­ Adams Family Values 7:30, 9:40 Have Said itage. Harjo was born in 1951 in Tulsa to the Muscogee tribe (of My life 7:15,9:40 the Creek nation). Geronimo 7:10, 9:30 She attended the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, There's nothing that says you New Mexico, and then the University of New Mexico. She was in A Dangerous Woman 7:15, 9:20 can't ""'' · the first graduating class of the creative writing program at the University P•k West call. I spend the weekdays University of New Mexico and presently is a professor of creative teaching~ writing at the university. She has also taught creative writing at Perfect World 7, 9:45 and moving my children from the University of Arizona, and has served on a policy panel for the The Three Musketeers 7:15, 9:35 breakfast National Endowment for the Arts. to bedtime. What else, I feel like Nightmare Before Christmas 7:30, 9:20 Harjo has written several screenplays and has published four a traitor books of poetry and short stories. She has won several awards for telling someone else things I her work, including an Academy of Poets Award in 1978, two can't tell National Endowment of the Arts Fellowships, and the Josephine to you. What is it that keeps us Miles Award for Poetry from PEN Oakland (1991). She also won together? the Poetry Society of America's William Carlos Williams Award in Fingertip to fingertip, from 1991. Santa Fe ..,, Harjo's books are What Moon Drove Me to This?, She Had some to Albuquerque? Horses. Secrets from the Center of the Wind, and In Mad Love and I feel bloated with what J War. She is moving away from her original style to one that is should say 'ii~",~if! more prosaic. Her next collection, The Field of Miracles, will be a and what I don't. We drift, and prose narrative. drift, with few storms of heat in between the motions. I love you. The words confuse me. Maybe they have become a cushion ~i keeping us in azure sky and in flight '5-. not there, not here. We are horses knocked out with tranquilizers·~, sucked into a deep deep sleep­ ing for the comfort and anesthesia death. We are caught. between clouds and wet earth and there is no motion either way no life to speak of. ~ ------~------·------~---...... -~------

The Observer • ETC. page 13

rary Festival brings gifted authors to Notre Dame ------June Jordan------A strong believer in the power of the pen, June Jordan is determined " ... to day I did things fast use what I loved, words, to fight for the __ .. -picking up leaves ..,. . people I loved." scrubbing a saucepan clean~-":;" An abused, only child born in Harlem, . " racing th_ rough an Asian American anthology Jordan was raised in the Bedford- Struyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn. · of poems Jordan developed an interest in Ian- All because it hurt so much guage early in life, partly prompted by to think about you hurt urgings from her parents to read litera- because ;;;;:: -- ture and the Bible. I moved so slowly Jordan was educated at Barnard and in circles College and the University of Chicago. . seemingly insensible She is presently a professor of Afro- to how you held a towel American studies and Women's Studies as your slender arms are long at the University of California, Berkley. to -~'old around me ---Michael Harperr---- She also has a regular column in The 1' Progressive Magazine, is a member of shiveringfrom the bathtub With his work rooted in the traditions of folklore, history and the Board of Directors of Poets and . how you held a children's story myth, Michael Harper expresses the tensions of a moral idealism Writers, Inc. and is a member of the ·.. close to my almost closing eyelids faced with historical realities. Center for Constitutional Rights. how you held me Song: I Want a Witness Harper began writing in Jordan has written fifteen books, free the late sixties and has con- including His Own Where, which was as I could ever hope Blacks in frame houses sistently published poetry published in 1971. His Own Where was to be call to the helicopters, outside of traditional genres. the first american novel published in their antlered arms Beginning in 1970 with the "Black English." The book was chosen spinning; jeeps pad publication of De~r John, as one of the Outstanding Books of the these glass-studded streets; !bear .Coltrane, hts wo~ks Year and was a finalist for the National on this hill are tanks painted have mcluded outstandmg Book Award the following year. gold. collections poetry: Images of Jordan has written many poems and !Kin, Chant of Saints and essays to express her political concerns Our children sing Carleton Miscellany, co-edit- and opinions. In the 1980s, she had to spirituals of Motown, ed with Ralph Ellison. face obstacles to getting her work pub­ idioms these streets suckled Harper has spread his lished because of her support for on a southern road. knowledge as an educator Palestinian rights. This scene is about power, across the country through Jordan has many interests including terror, producing the University of Delaware, politics, film, city planning and the the­ love and pain and pathology; Harvard, Yale and Reed ater. She sings and has even written a in an army ofwhite dust, College. His work has earned dramatic and political musical called blacks here to testify him the title of Poet "Band Bang Uber Alles." and testify, and testify, Laureate for the State of She has been honored with the and redeem, and redeem, Rhode Island. National Association of Black in black smoke coming, Currently a professor at Journalists Achievement Award: as they wave their arms, Brown University, Harper International Reporting for coverage of as they wave their tongues. will soon release his newest the Black Condition and a N.E.A. L-~~------=------lwork, Every Eye Ain't Fellowship. Asleep: An Anthology ofAfrican-American Writers Since 1945. ------Alison Lurie------Her roots may be local, but her fame is worldwide. This is the story of Alison Lurie, born in Chicago and raised in the New York suburb of White Plains. With a mother who was a former magazine editor of the Detroit Free Press, and a father who directed a social welfare agency in New York, it was natural for Lurie to develop an interest in writing. By the time of her graduation from Radcliffe in 194 7, Lurie said she was in the "habit" of writing, "as someone else might get into the habit of singing in the shower." Lurie's first novel, Love and Friendship, was pub­ lished in 1962. Lurie's interest in sociology was seen in The Nowhere City (1965), which featured two East Coast conservatives encountering the free-minded world of Los Angeles. This theme was continued in Imaginary Friends (1967), in which two university professors reach startling conlusions while examining a bizarre reli­ gious cult know as the "Truth Seekers." Lurie took a break from her usual themes to write Real People, published in 1969. The she returned to her fondness for the Academe in the novel, The War Between the Tates. In the story, an academic marriage is strained through the pressures and unrests which flowed through campuses during the late 1960s. The War Between the Tates was a huge suc­ cess, winning Lucie very high acclaim from the WORKS likes of the New York Times Book Review, and selling over a million copies. The novel was Love and Friendship also made into a television feature. The Nowhere City Lurie is also reponsible for two works of Imaginary Friends nonfiction: V.R. Lang (1975) and the Real People Language of Clothes (1981) as well as the The War Between the Tates children's books The Heavenlu Zoo (1980), Only Children and Clever Gretchen and Other Forgotten Foreign Affairs Folk Tales (1980). The Truth About Lorin Jones Luries latest novel, The Truth About Lorin Don't Tell the Grownups: Jones, is " ... a writer's rediscovery of herself," Subversive Children's Literature as well as a " ... wry and perceptive look at VR Lang: Poems and Plays female sexuality, radical feminism, and the New The Language of Clothes York Art scene." Lurie has won several awards: Yaddo Foundation page 14 The Observer • LETTERS TO A LONELY GOD . Friday, February 11, 1994 A Valentine for Chancellor and Darby O'Gill III left old Shep convinced that instincts that would impel him Chancellor, the golden Jesus could come to a bad end to want to die with his Master. retriever belonging to .Brot~er if spent much time in such an Near the Cross stood the Dennis Meyers, Um~e.rsity Father Robert Griffin evil place. sorrowful Mother, and Shep Sacristan, and Darby 0 Gill III, Once when the children of was next to her, closer even the cocker spaniel living in /:!e''e'"'" 'o a '->o,ne(u nod the goylm refused to have any- than the Belove? Disciple. Stanford Hall, are campus dogs t.:), l/1 .~_ oJ 11 t.:J1 u 1J ..:::/1 thing to do with the Jewish Nickering occaswnally, he dear to many. This article is child whose father was a car- muted the howling that wanted dedicated to them, as campus penter, Jesus, playing by to break out of him from the sweethearts who des~rv? to be Himself, built a bridge out of terror he felt, for the sake of honored on St. Valentme s Day. ning a better day for Fido. I explained to the children moonbeams across a swift- Mary as empress of Calvary. "As man or boy,; did Jesus Jesus, who taught us to love the that when the Night Visitors flowing stream. When the body was taken ever have a dog? asked the poor, taught His disciples to from the East offered their When the young Gentiles fol- down from the Cross, Shep children perceptively. They make room in their lives for the gifts: gold, frankincense, and lowed Him onto the bridge, they understood that the total paral­ realized that the New four-footed beasties. myrrh to the young child lying found the moonbeams were too ysis called death had overtaken Testament didn't exactly put I said to the children: "Have in a manger, Amahl, the lame insubstantial to hold their his dearest Friend and Helper. dogs on the map. In those days, you ever noticed that whenever shepherd boy who accompanied weight; falling into the river, When the body was removed to dogs were regarded as scav- you meet a wonderfully shaggy them, gave the Lad on whom they would have drowned if or the hous~ of the dead: he start­ engers who begged scraps from English sheep dog, he is invari- the star shone the dearest thing Shep hadn't saved them. He ed to wmt fo~ so~et~mg else ~o the table. ably named Merlin, after the he owned: a puppy from home went to his everlasting sleep happen, hopmg It might be his Dogs licked the sores of court magician of Camelot? which he called Shep, which when he was eighteen. He was own death coming. soon. . Lazarus, the beggar at the g~te. That's because the Adam of was being educated to mind the the Martin Luther King of his The Roman soldiers, guardmg The Old Testament has nothn~g that breed, from which all flock. species who showed by his the tomb, were amazed to see to compare ~it~ .the Homenc English sheep dogs are I said: "Amahl, finding him- noblisse oblige how the under- the glorious animal gr~eving for myths of semi-diVIne creat~res descended, belonged to Merlin self cured of his lameness, left dog deserves his place in the the Jew Who was crucified, and like those horses of Achilles when he was still worshipping his crutch at the manger also. sun they tried in vain to comfort who weep for their hero. fallen as a Druid." The crutch represented the ~ the successor, Shep 11 was Shep. in battle; great Zeus himself According to Bede, that sire pain in his life, which he was with Jesus to the end. He was He was the first to see Jesus, offers them his comfort, or progenitor was entrusted to happy to be relieved of. Giving at Cana in Galilee when the newly-risen from the dead. As because those stout-hearted Merlin's care by Joseph of away the dog was an act of water was made wine; of the with Argos, joy at that mo~ent beasts have never before expe- Arimathea, when he brought pure adoration." wedding meats, he touched not could have been his un~omg, rienced the heartbreak of the Holy Grail to Glastonbury. The children decided that a scrap, because he felt a kin- except J~sus for~ade It. .In death. . . This beautiful animal was Amahl must have been a class- ship with all animals who were reading this scene m Bede, I !fl The early Chnstians ~ever famous in the Druid community act to whom canines every- dumb like himself. reminded of that fi~al scene m heard of Argos, the faithful as "Domini canis," a title which where should be grateful for his He walked beside Jesus on Camelot when Kmg Arthur mastiff who waited so patiently means "the Lord's dog," signify- making Jesus aware of the ful- the storm-tossed waters of the knights the page boy Thomas of for Ulysses to return fr?m t~e ing that his original Master was fillment that comes from own- Galilee. In the street ministry, Warwick, so that as Sir Thomas Trojan War. Finally seemg h~s "God who became man in ing a dog. he led Jesus to the people who of Warwick, he can tell the master after twenty years, his Palestine, and lives today in Shep II became Merlin in were most distressed. He was wondrous story ... faithful heart literally exploded bread and wine." Learning the England, after witnessing the present in the Upper Room The Lord of love my Shepherd with uncontainable joy. life history of this animal, the death and resurrection of when Jesus blessed bread and is, and the hound at His heels "Jesus had two dogs," I Druids were, without knowing Jesus. His father before him cups of wine at the memorial was His under-study, The pas­ answered, "One as a bor, the it, on the road to evangeliza- had gone to Egypt with the Holy meal. When Jesus was fearful toral counterpart of this pict'-!re other as a man. Those ammals, tion. Family. He waited for three in the garden of Gethsemane, can be seen on a thousand hill­ of course, were a father-and- According to the guardians of days at the Temple Gate when Shep was with Him. sides of the green and pleasant son act." I told them that the myth at the Albert and Jesus as a young Jew talked to Before His arrest, Jesus had land called England, whenever according to so.me seldo.m-r~ad Victoria museum in South the doctors of the Law about Shep delivered to His mother's a boy like Amah] tends she.ep pages in Bede s ecclesiastical Kensington, London, Merlin's the destiny of the Jews as the care. Learning from her the with the dog who understudies history, the emergence of dogs stud was Domini canis II, Chosen People; while the day lessons of patient suffering, him at his side. Here's a happy as man's best friend was. almost descended from the prototype became frantic with worry over. Shep would be safe from harm thought I would like to offer a Gospel event. who made his debut at the smell of the blood from the which might come from the Chancellor and Darby O'Gill on likeThe the pets mormng of J~sus starswere begm-alm?st Bethlehem. sacrificed animals. This ordeal enemies of Jesus, and from the St. Valentine's Day.

February is African American History Month. Our store is celebrating the culture and heritage of African Americans by offering a diverse assortment of books in an array of subjects­ history, literature, politics, the arts and more .

The Hammes Please visit us today to browse and choose from NOTRE DAME BOOKSTORE this "Heritage in Print." "on the campus" Open Monday - Saturday 25% off selected titles 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Friday, February 11, 1994 The Observer • WINTER OLYMPICS page 15 Olympic torch passes into Lillehammer Fidjestol unable to jump start flame Blair planning to try for a third medal By PAUL NEWBERRY his wife, Ragnhild, and three children - By ALAN ROBINSON cross country. Associated Press the oldest, 13-year-old Lars, a ski Associated Press "I keep challenging myself, keep look­ jumper himself in a country where ing for new challenges, but stats and LILLEHAMMER, Norway Nordic skiing is the national sport. HAMAR, Norway numbers, they're for sports writers to Ole Gunnar Fidjestol had hoped to "This is not my worst fall, but this A gold medal in the 500 meters, a keep," Blair said. "Honestly, I don't end his ski-jumping career with the leap one got the most focus," said Fidjestol, gold medal in the 1,000. Bonnie Blair think about that stuff. Maybe someday I of his life: flying through the air clutch­ who later received a visit from Juan An­ couldn't ask for anything more. will, but right now, I just worry about ing the Olympic flame at the opening tonio Samaranch, president of the But she just might. what I have to do to get ready." ceremony of the Winter Games. International Olympic Committee. Blair, who can become the most gold­ Right now, she's getting ready for But Fidjestol tumbled head-first into Fidjestol will be replaced in laden U.S. female Olympian ever if she three races, not just the two she'd been the snow during a practice jump Saturday's ceremony by another veteran wins those two golds, apparently plans expected to skate. Thursday, suffering a mild concussion jumper, Stein Gruben. to try for a third medal in the 1,500. There was speculation at the U.S. tri­ that forced him to turn over the torch to The torch leap is supposed to be the Blair rarely enters the 1,500 when als in Milwaukee last month that Blair another Norwegian ski jumper. crowning spectacle to the opening, per­ she skates the two sprints, but in her might skip the 1,500 to concentrate on "He's very unhappy that he won't be haps eclipsing the Spanish archer who fourth and final Games, she may be her two specialties. able to jump," said Dr. Arild Tandberg, fired an arrow to ignite the flame at the tempted. But Blair's coach, Nick Thometz, said medical director of Lillehammer County 1992 Summer Games in Barcelona. She already has four medals - three she is skating so powerfully - and, of Hospital. "The show must go on," said Asbjorn golds, one bronze - from the 1992 and course, so fast - that the 1,500 is worth "It was a real honor for him. He's Langmyr, a spokesman for the Lilleham­ 1988 Games. Three more would give her considering. --· been one of Norway's best ski jumpers. I mer Olympic Organizing Committee. seven overall and move her into some "We're leaning towards the 1,500 feel real sorry for him - especially "We are confident that Stein Gruben super-exclusive Olympic company. right now," he said Thursday. "I don't since it happened only two days before is capable of taking over, capable of The U.S. record for Winter Games think it would be a problem if she the opening ceremony." making this jump." medals is held by Eric Heiden, who won skates. Realistically, she could win a Fidjestol, a 32-year-old former world But the accident put a damper of five with his speedskating sweep in bronze but beyond that would be tough." champion in ski flying who won a Lillehammer's Olympic planning. 1980. Swimmer Shirley Babashoff won In the Calgary Olympics in 1988, Blair bronze medal in team jumping at the "It's like a Hitchcock drama for us," eight - two gold, six silver - in 1972 took gold in the 500, bronze in the 1,000 1988 Olympics, seemed upbeat when he Langmyr said. and 1976, and is the only American and was fourth in the 1,500. Two years talked with reporters from his hospital "We will very much be excited about female Olympian with more than six. ago, she shut herself down on the final bed about 90 minutes after his fall. the opening (being completed) after Only four women have won as many leg of a rainy, slushy 1,500 in Albertville "It was good this didn't happen on what happened today. But we are very as seven Winter Olympic medals, led by to conserve her strength for the 1,000 Saturda " he ed surrounded b confident... it will not ha en a ain." Russia's Raisa Smetanina with 10 in and fmished a distant 21st. The Observer accepts classifieds every business day from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Notre Dame office, 314 LaFonune and from 12 p.m. to 3 p.m. at 309 Haggar College Center. Deadline for next-day classifieds is 3p.m. All classifieds Classifieds must be prepaid. The charge is 2 cents per character per day, including all spaces.

AA CRUISE & TRAVEL EMPLOY· Begging you to trade your Sat. Rise and sh1ne and give God your Quality Copies, Quickly. College of Business AdministratiOn MENT GUIDE, EARN BIG $$ + Garth tix for my Sun. tix Patrice glory, glory THE COPY SHOP MUGS! !I NOTICES TRAVEL THE WORLD FREE! 232-5030 LaFortune Student Center (CARIBBEAN, EUROPE, HAWAII, Rise and shine and give God your Phone 631-COPY Only $10 and on sale Feb 7·11 from USED TEXTBOOKS ASIA!) HURRY BUSY SPRING Plane Ticket to Boston for Spring glory. glory 11 am to 1 pm in the Hayes-Healy Pandora's Bks ND ave & Howard ' AND SUMMER SEASONS Break -REALLY CHEAP. call Alex 4-year-old, loving Mom and Dad in Lobby 233-2342110-6 M-Sat 9-3 Sun APPROACHING. FREE STUDENT at x1679 Rise and shine and give God Washington, D.C. area wish to TRAVEL CLUB MEMBERSHIP\ (clap)your glory, glory adopt infant brother or sister. Close Sponsored by the NO Marketing CALL (919)929-4398 ext C29 extended family in area. Let's help Club 2 tickets to the Sun. Garth concert Children of the Lord .... each other. Mad/legal paid. Please CANCUN 4 best Spr Brk ever! Help! 4 desperate girls need ride to lor sale! Call with your best offer call Jessica or Bob Fly from Chi. or Indy. Seats going Long Island or NYC lor Spring at x3610 To the most humble small group on 1-800-864-8385. !I! VALENTINES DAY Ill fast! x232-7109 Break. Will pay gas, tolls, etc. the Notre Dame Encounter #30 Monday, February 14 Callx4BB1 Unused Amtrak tix one-way to ••••••••sEAT THE RUSH*••••••• Come on in to IRISH GARDENS L.A.San Diego March 4 $50 273- I love each of you dearly-you are VALENTINE'S DAY is quickly (basement of LaFortune) for all of ILOST & FOUND I SITTER NEEDED My Juniper Rd 4868 such special people .... approaching, and if you want to your Valentine's Day needs. We home. 2 yr old & infant, 4/hr. SAT 1- write a classified to that special have a plethora of flowers, bal­ LOST - Has anyone seen my neck­ 5, some Fri or SAT NITES. Prefer Love. Anne someone, you can type your ad loons, cards, and candy. We also lace under all this snow? Gold early ED Maj but will consider all. now. Your message will appear in deliver on-campus and to surround­ chain with 3 gold letters: Must have car & refs. 273-0582 2 TICKETS FOR GARTH BROOKS! the special Valentine's Observer on ing apt. complexes. SUNDAY SHOW Bands - free S-track recording Feb. 14. We are located on the 3rd .. V-day deliveries and pick-up Has anyone seen my necklace Brunos needs waitresses. Must be CALL WITH BEST OFFER (1 song) - must call by Sat. floor of Lafortune. orders must be placed by 5:00 Fri. somewhere under all this snow? 21 and able to work weekends. LISA X1283 call Tim, 273~6142 ...... Feb. 11. Gold chain with three gold letters A­ Please call 288-3320 lor interview. I!! VALENTINE'S DAY Ill R-1 , has great sentimental value. Mik&-Give this week's meet your Will give reward and be eternally NEEDED: GARTH BROOKS TIX FOR SALE THE TOP 20 FROM NDE #30: best shot to get another PR or no grateful to finder. Please call Ari @ SPRING BREAK RIDE to NY for 2 Sun. Feb. 13 show more PDAs .. J/K Love, Jenny VALENTINE'S 259-0219 w/ any info. NYC, Newburgh, Mahwah, Call Dan or John @ x2073 20.Do you have to, do you have to, VALENTINE'S Poughkeepsie pref. Will help $. do you have to let it linger? VALENTINE'S Lost: gold chain with two lockets Please call Brian or Jason x1130 1-W, INDY/ORUNAPLES, $175 19.This is better than the Thurs. afternoon-213-near b-ball 219654722212196548392 Linebacker! Suzy Zoo Cards, KC Knox courts in ACC next to ice rink. Great 18. Fire. Heh. Fire. Kids Photo Cards, Seinleld and personal value. If found, please call 17. Where's the Georgetown lep­ So did you get the gist of the puz­ Farside! Sanmit at 1684 Needed: A ride to either Columbus. rechaun? zle/ Senior Bar Ads?? Chocolate Lips, filled hearts and Bowling Green, or Cincinnati on PERSONAL 16. God is in the ..... silence. cuddly bears. kitties and puppies! Feb. 25 or 26. Call Carey at x291 0. 15. Power genuflecting. Nuff said. If you want GREAT specials figure Luv culls with /keys and Love Blue sweatshirt with gold Irish letter­ ADOPTION: Loving. financially 14.llove me, I love me! them out and uncover the best kept Matches! Your heart's desire! ing lost either outside or in the secure couple longs for a newborn 13.... f-- -I secret in town IIIII basement of LaFortune. Call X1B82 FOR RENT to join our family. Please call Nancy 12. Now, I'm no spiritual guru. and Jerry 1-800-272-5810. 11. Is that a roll of dimes in your Deals! Deals! Deals! Deals! The Country Harvester HOME BASED 8 &8 ALLIANCE pocket, or are you just happy to see LaFortune Lower Level WANTED HOMES available for Feb. 18 & 19, SPRING BREAK! me? M-F 10-5 Sat. 11-4 Parents weekend. Call271-0989. Student Holidays, the nation's 10. I broke parietals ... with Cathy ....SPRING BREAK '94**** Excellant accomadations. leader in Spring Break vacations Bridge. Need ride from Washington DC Cancun, Bahamas, Jamaica, offering the ultimate trip to 9. BROCCOLI back to ND Monday after Easter. In a hurry ... Florida & Padre! 110% Lowest Price FURNISHED ROOM, AIR, CANCUN, MEXICO! B. I wouldn't smile this much if I Will pay. Colleen x4704 don't worry. Guarantee! Organize 15 friends and KITCHEN, PHONE, 3 MIN. N. OF The #1 Student Spring Break were drunk. FAXITI your trip is FREEl TAKE A BREAK CAMPUS. 272-0615 Destination from $399 7. B,O,B,O,B,O,B ... at STUDENT TRAVEL (800)328-7283. Package includes hotel. flight 6. What do you get when you put *&. &*& *& *& ·&*& *& *&*& *& *&. & • & *& THE COPY SHOP BED 'N BREAKFAST REGISTRY­ and parties! Organize a small the U in NDE? LaFortune Student Center Need ride to St. Louis any week­ APPROVED HOMES-JPW. GRAD., group and travel for FREEl 5. Who WAS that blue jogger? NEW LOWER PRICES! endl!ll Will pay for gas!! Call etc. •219-291-7153• CALL RICH! 1-800-360-TRIP 4. Heh, heh. What's a Liska? PW CARNATION SALE: Mindy 284-5417 3. All together now: "Hays is the valentines day special cultural and economic Mecca of Carnationas will be sold in both din­ Hey, NDE #301 Need one extra JPW ticket for all 2-5 BEDROOM HOMES university hairstylist $2.00 off any Western Kansas. ing halls during lunch and dinner events DESPERATELYIIIIIIII SECURITY SYSTEM service monday feb. 14th 2. Shut up and pedal. this week for $1. All proceeds bene­ ... Shut up and pedallll ••• Will pay $$$$$$. Call Kelly at x3506 ALL APPLIANCES 9am-9pm 631-5144 1. PRAY NAKED. fit the Tara Deutsch Scholarship 1/2 MILE FROM CAMPUS Fund. Flowers will be delivered on Desperate! Need ride to Daytona 232 2595 (do you have to, do you have to, do Sunday. Feb. 13. Beach for Spring Break. Price is SEND SOME LOVE! you have to let it linger?) negotiable. Please call Roger at U.P.S. a Valentine to your CANDY FLIP 35081 PARTY TIME '94-95 Sweetheart Tell that special someone how •• CLUB 23 •• Big 6 bedrm. Safe area. Free maid thru much you care: SATURDAY FEB. 12TH Violets are blue sevice. Beach V-ball & 8.8. courts. THE COUNTRY HARVESTER Check out Amy's Inside Column ... Roses are hot Furnished. Washer & dryer. LaFortune Lower Level it's AWESOMEIII Red= I love you. If you want a fun time 273-0482 or 234-3831. M-F 10-5 Pink= t like you. JUST APPROVED BY THE DEANI Call us at Knott Sat.11-4 White= Let's get acquainted. 5-course Minors in Classics: Greek, Wanted 3 willing men to attend the SUMMER JOBS - ALL Yellow= We're friends. Latin, Classical Literature Knott SYR Feb 26th LAND/WATER SPORTS. PRES­ and .... (in translation), Classical if interested call x0722 TICKETS BEWARE! TIGE CHILDRENS' CAMPS Green= ??????? Civilization. Talk to us before the One day I was illegally parking my ADIRONDACK MOUNTAINS NEAR chaos of pre-registration. Contact SKI RESORT JOBS. Up to $2000+ I have an extra ticket to Garth! I car in some parking lot I wasn't sup­ LAKE PLACID CALL 1-800-786- L. Banas (1-7548) or D. Sheerin {1- in salary & benefits. Ski/Snowboard Call Sean at x3102 and give best posed to be in, figuring, there's so 8373 *&*&*&*&*&*&*&*&*&*&*&*&*&*&* 6004) instructors. lift operators. wait staff, offer! many cars here how could ND chalet staff + other positions (includ­ police ever find my one tiny car? Spring Break Bahamas Party ing summer). Over 15,000 open­ Cruise! 6 Days $279! Trip Includes Schlage ... how's the scar?? ings. For more information call: Need to trade two Garth Brooks Then I remembered, NO Security Cruise & Room, 12 Meals & 6 Free Good job on the Cake and take it MARDI GRASIIII ... The Houae of (206)634-0469 ext. V5584 tickets for Sun. 13 to Sat. 12. people have no life. My mistake. Parties! Hurry! This will sell out! easy on that Milk! I !II Blues I Call x2126/x3219 1-800-678-6386 The Observer • SPORTS Friday, February 11, 1994 ,. Terroristn, protests concern IOC

By LARRY McSHANE Israel and the Palestine prises.". Associated Press Liberation Organization. Organizers said 2,770 police "We constantly looked at officers - about a third of Nor­ LILLEHAMMER, Norway that, and at the international way's total- were assigned to There's more to protect here signals that we get," Roger Games duty. Included are an than Nancy Kerrigan. Andresen, spokesman for the anti-terrorist unit, hostage ne­ Middle East terrorism and Olympic police force, said gotiators and bomb squads. anti-whaling protests are the Thursday.' Five helicopters, 400 cars main security concerns at the and 50 police dogs - eight of Lillehammer Games, and one­ 'We have taken into consid­ them bomb-sniffing specialists third of Norway's police force eration that someone from from Northern Ireland - are was assigned to maintain the there could try to do something also on the case. status quo in this tranquil lake here." On the high-tech front, sur­ town. Andresen would not discuss veillance cameras will photo­ Bomb-sniffing dogs and any specifics. But Lillehammer graph cars coming into the hostage negotiators - both Olympic Organizing Committee region, while a helicopter will new concepts to the 23,000 res­ head Gerhard Heiberg said four provide live shots via both day idents -joined athletes and months ago he had been told and night cameras. tourists gathering here for Sat­ opponents of the accord might That's not all. All food urday's opening ceremonies. "want to teach Norway a les­ brought into the Olympic ath­ "All the world can feel calm son." letes' village is inspected. Mail and feel that their athletes are Norway was host for months sent to YIPs is run through X­ ·- protected," said Arne Huuse, of secret talks leading up the ray scanners. Credentials are commander of the Olympic po­ historic Sept. 13 agreement. checked electronically for au­ lice force. Heiberg promised at the time to thenticity. "We have planned security take whatever steps were need­ One athlete will receive spe­ for these Games down to the ed to "prevent another cial protection - and no, it's last detail for five years, and we Munich" - the 1972 massacre not Kerrigan or nemesis Tonya are ready. It will all come off of 11 Israeli athletes in the Harding. Prince Albert of safely." Olympic Village. Monaco, competing in the Organizers spent $50 million Fresher than that tragic im­ Olympic bobsled, will whip on security, though their ap­ age is the picture of Kerrigan down the run at Hunderfossen proach is more low-key than at getting bashed with a club Jan. under the watchful eyes of past Olympics. 6 in Detroit. plainclothes police. "Service with a smile" is Don't expect such incidents There's another concern their motto - a slogan more in Lillehammer, Andresen said: unique to these Games: Olympic likely for an interstate gas sta­ "There should be no big sur- computer hacking. tion than an international secu­ rity force. ------(coupon)------, Norwegian police don't carry r ,.J 'fl• CAMPUS SHOPPES guns, a change from Games at I '~' · ~ 1837 So. Bend Ave. I Barcelona and Sarajevo, where 1 Weekly Special ,. ~ soUTH BEND 1 armed soldiers were a common sight. I ~iaJ: Two years ago in Albertville, : usoc off Sweetheart Pies!" Y~.!.~ 1 the security force was triple the Offer Expires 2/18/94. Limit one coupon per customer. size of the Lillehammer contin­ 1 I L __ ~~ !,a!.!,.d _:!;_h ~'!l. .2J~W'!2~o,!!~ .2,r _;~~'!;... __ .J gent. But authorities here are con­ fident of handling anything that GREAT VALENTINES SPECIALS!

arises - even the possibility of "' .,. -y 1' '"f" y T T •· Middle East terrorists reacting /lOSES to Norway's role in last year's '''"'1111:·'' $l7.50C/C peace agreement between CAHNATIONS starting :rL $1 Z.9'i C:/C FHESH CUr To Raymond Darling: AHRAN(JEM/:NIS $17SO&Up All girls are crazy for you BALLOON lJOKAYS 2226 MISHAWAKA AVE. $9.99 & Up in the world! You're the SOUTII DEND, IN 46615 M•;....., /<>< I.I. lowry· ~ 17 50 (plou """""'oM< 'lf>l«•l (219) 287 ~2955 ~~~·~~~~~ SFIII6 BIEtl fill( playboy of the century. r------, r------, ....IRS ( :t\:->11 ,\: l '1\IUtY Sl'll '1·\L I : .~ Cnl;ully ~Ju< I .. 1,.,,., : I EHQ\ I U( ).\/.\ $\75(1 ,/u~,·n : Happy Birthday! I I : BALUX)N BOKAY : FUJ:'E : Keep your pace down! I I ~l,t..,i\I.Mn I MYL\1? /3ALU X >N : I .MIAhl'\ltu!t..rcntJ<:.«LI\tLI.n·J I SPRING .... J. "'''" .u.J , ...de~·,, o~o>'ol OM> : : $12.99C/C : I 1 Of c•rrtf'tU tkln'"Y only 1 2ll(,Ma.JIA ...-.a1.tA..,,l!... Er.rim: U!l~· I "E~~1 !!!·.!!"~J!!;... __ rix,~t!.~!!!!~., Love, ------~ CALL FOR OTHER "SWEET" IDEAS TO PLEASE Chise, Grace, Shu-li, Jamie, BREAKCOMPLETE FIVE & SEVEN NIGHT TRIPS YOUR VALENTINE Shuji, Warwon, John Open 'ril MIDNIGHT on the 14rh... Order by 10 pm • • • • • • • • Hotel Rooms sti II avai Iable

SOUTH PADRE ISLAND for the 1994 DAYTONA BEACH PANAMA CITY BEACH Junior Parents Weekend! LAS VECAS VAIL/BEAVER CREEK (219)234-2000 ORLANDO/DISNEY WORLD

MUSTANG !SLAND HILTON HEAD ISLAND SOUTH BEND~ffiOff. BRECKENRIDGE/KEYSTONE "I'EIII'EitSC.*DEI'EIIO_,OIIDESTIUTIOit/lllfAKDATts/lEIIHttOfSTAf. FOR AIIOITD'W. l'fiiiMAllON & IIESERVmJNS II•BOO•SUNCHASEI 123 North St. Joseph Street, South Bend, Indiana, 46601 ~~ ~----.------~- ~ -~------=-1

Friday, February 11, 1994 The Observer • SPORTS page 17 Security welcomes Kerrigan to Norway By JIM LITKE a news conference scheduled officials refused a request to Associated Press for Saturday, a few hours be­ have her and Harding practice fore the opening ceremonies. separately. OSLO, Norway Kerrigan's arrival came on The USOC announced Tues­ Nancy Kerrigan arrived in the same day lawyers for Tonya day it will convene a special Norway today, headed for the Harding were to go into court hearing of its Games Adminis­ Winter Games she almost seeking to block a USOC hear­ trative Board on Feb. 15 to re­ missed after a thug smashed ing that could kick Harding off view evidence on Harding's her right leg with a club at the the U.S. Olympic team. possible involvement in the U.S. Figure Skating Champi­ Harding has been implicated Kerrigan attack. onships. by her ex-husband in the attack Harding's lawyers said Kerrigan, who slept most of on Kerrigan last month. Wednesday they would seek a the way on the flight, was met Asked as she was leaving court order blocking that hear­ at the airport by U.S. Olympic Boston if she was prepared to ing on various grounds, includ­ Committee security and was skate with Harding, Kerrigan ing that it could jeopardize her hurried into a car for Lille­ said: ''I'm prepared for the in the criminal investigation hammer without commenting. competition." into the Kerrigan attack. Hard­ Eight hours after she landed, And about the Olympic train­ ing is also seeking $20 million Kerrigan checked into the ing schedule, which would re­ in damages from the USOC. accreditation center in Hamar, quire her to practice side-by­ As she left Boston on Norway, to pick up her ath­ side with Harding, Kerrigan Wednesday, passers-by ap­ lete's credential. About 30 told reporters: ''I'm more un­ plauded Kerrigan as she reporters, photographers and comfortable standing here talk­ walked through the airport. --' TV camera crewmembers met ing to all of you guys." ''I'm so excited, I'm near her, but she again had no com­ Unless Harding is prevented tears," said Judy Wadleigh, 54, ment. from competing, she and Ker­ of Reading. "She just needs a The 24-year-old skater, who rigan will practice together. lot of support now, and at least left Boston on Wednesday, has International Skating Union folks here can give her that." Photo courtesy of Notre DameSports lnfonnation Senior Christy Faustmann and the 18th ranked women's tennis team guns to win it all this year," The one thing that Texas hope to continue their streak over 15th ranked Kansas. commented Coach Bayliss, might want to keep in mind is Tennis "they will be one of the three that a lot teams come into advanced to the final round of continued from page 24 teams who will win the NCAA snowy South Bend the better, Rivalry this weekend's prestigious tourney." more talented team on paper, Rolex National Indoors Chad Clark, will soon become the favorite to win. continued from page 24 Tournament. Jensen is also the nation's number one when With players such as Ernesto ranked 17th in singles. ranking for them. the next poll comes out. Clark Ponci, Tre Philips, David Traper What those teams lack, The 4-0 Irish are excited "Ranking-wise, we're very has won the last two major col­ and 6'9" Ian Williams who however, is what computers about getting the chance to comparable," said Faustmann. lege tournaments. serves the ball 120 mph, who can't calculate: heart and test their skills against some "They definitely have the could argue? desire. "If we beat them, it will be a higher-ranked opponents. big boast for us." "We've been solid in the past two matches," said The match will definitely be Faustman. a challenge for the Irish. "We'll start playing tougher Kansas' No. 1 doubles team of as the season goes on and we Rebecca Jensen and Nora start facing tougher and high­ ~~-~HEY JUNIORS1 Koves, ranked lOth nationally, er-ranked teams."

0 •• • /j ' .. -- ~. ~ ~ <.-:.~::t~'~- ,• '""'-!-"?' . Stll~~o apply for the best .~::-- \~•.

manager 1994-95 ] ob on campus CUSTOM.. GENERAL & MAJOR and CLEANING \_ Studel]t SPECIAUZING IN: 0 FINE HOMES • OFFlCES bartender (~ <'fct. . APARTMENTS e COl\Oft;RCI.U. ~".."""-'-' I}?. . e_:,·· It\ ~ INSURED • BONDED applications 0 REFERENCES AVAILABLE Are you Spring Breaking now STUDENT MANAGER DEADLINE: FEBRUARY 25 FREE ESTIMATES near Daytona?

"CARPET CLEA!'iL~G A \"AILABLE" available BAR TENDER DEADLINE: MARCH r8 PHONE: (219)23~941 O.C. Boston Transit Co. 1\.YETTE S DAYfONA OWNHO E SHL'TTLE SER\'ICE "Luxury Living You Can Enjoy & Afford" From Orlando airport to "Where Tenants Are Of The Utmost Importance" Daytona Beach airport • 4 & 5 BEDROOM TOWNHOMES • 2 BATHROOMS Fare • SECURI1Y SYSTEMS & SECURI1Y GUARDS $2300 One Way • KITCHENS WITH DISHWASHER, GARBAGE DISPOSAL, REFRIGERATOR & RANGE • WASHER & DRYER IN EACH UNIT 10% Discount for • GAS HEAT Students • CENTRAL AIR CONDITIONING • PROFESSIONAL MANAGEMENT Guests are guaranteed • SKILLED & RESPONSIBLE MAINTENANCE • ONLY 1 MILE FROM NOTRE DAME CAMPUS courteous, comfortable, Meet Our Friendly Staff And Let Them Show You Our Beautiful Townhomes and safe service. NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS FOR '94-'95 SCHOOL YEAR FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL For Reservations call 232-8256 1-800-633-4807 ·------·------·------~-

page 18 The Observer • SPORTS Friday, February 11, 1994 ,.. __ Toronto and the NBA come to Glenn Robinson for college player of the year terms on Ontario's sports lottery By HANK LOWENKRON In less than two full seasons, classroom. Robinson surprised Associated Press Robinson has moved into the some people by his decision to By JEFFREY ULBRICH The deal doesn't mean there Top 10 in eight of 13 statistical stay in school rather than move Associated Press will be no gambling on basket­ WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. categories kept by Purdue. to the NBA after last season. ball in Ontario. It only means Coach Gene Keady is cam­ Robinson's performance this "Academically, Glenn is TORONTO there will be no legal gambling paigning for Purdue's Glenn season has helped produced a doing very well. His year off the There will be NBA basket­ on basketball in the province. Robinson to be player of the 19-3 record for Purdue, one court due to Proposition 48 was ball in Toronto, after all. But Newspapers routinely carry year. game behind Big Ten leader good for him. It helped him you won't be able to bet on it in Las Vegas odds on NBA games Writing to "Dear Friends of Michigan and tied for second realize the importance of acad­ Ontario's sports lottery. and other sports and it's un­ College Basketball," Keady said place with defending champion emics," Keady said. The league and the provin­ likely action with the corner the 6-foot-8 junior has taken a Indiana. "Glenn is bright and intelli­ cial government announced an bookie is goillg to be slowed by leadership role for the No. 10 gent. ... is carrying a B-minus agreement Thursday that the agreement. Boilermakers while contending Keady points out in his letter average while majoring in com­ clears the way for a Toronto Under the three-way ar­ for the national scoring leader­ that "virtually everyone is say­ munications." team to begin play in the 1995- rangement between the NBA, ship. ing that Glenn is the best player Robinson, meanwhile, 96 season. the Toronto team and the On­ "While he may appear to be outside of the NBA and most prefers to let his play to his The NBA threatened to void tario government: shy, private and withdrawn to predict he will be the first play­ talking. the Toronto franchise if league those who observe him from a er selected in the NBA draft "He is very modest and games were not removed from - The Toronto team, as yet distance, Glenn is unmistakably whenever he chooses to make prefers his teammates to get the Pro-Line lottery. unnamed, and the NBA will the leader of our team," Keady himself available." more of the publicity," Keady But the issue was settled create a foundation to support wrote. However, he said Robinson said. when the NBA and the Toronto youth programs and other Coaches usually leave the also has outstanding qualities "Competitively, Glenn is the team agreed to contribute charitable causes. campaigning for national and off the court, including in the fiercest I've ever been around. more than $10 million to vari­ The team will contribute $5 conference honors to their ous programs and charities in million to the foundation over sports information offices. Ontario. the first three years and work But Keady has taken over John Bitove Jr., who heads to raise $1 million a year the screening of all interview the Toronto franchise group, thereafter. requests for his superstar and IRON WILL Pall in love with praised Ontario Premier Bob - The NBA will provide $2 this week sent a letter to some 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30 Rae for getting the deal done. million in television time and 750 members of the U.S. l\1~- Girl "The premier brought the advertising space over four Basketball Writers Association ball up the court very well with years to promote tourism in urging their consideration of all over again! only seconds left in the game Ontario and the World Basket­ Robinson. MRS. and sank a 3-pointer," Bitove ball Championships in Toronto ''I've never written a letter said. this summer. like this, but I've never had a DOUBTFIRE mygirl2 NBA commissioner David - The NBA will contribute player like Glenn," wrote 1:30,4:15,7:15, 10:00 2:45, 5:00, 7:30, 9:45 Stern said the agreement $1.5 million to Ontario hospital Keady, Purdue coach since ~- showed the league is willing to research programs. 1980. pay for its anti-gambling - The NBA will hold its Robinson, a 6-foot-8 junior stance. 1995 college draft in Toronto, forward, was tied for the top "It's a principle," he said. worth millions to local hotels spot among NCAA Division I "And we are prepared to pay and restaurants. players with a 28.8 average in to support the principle." - The NBA and the team this week's statistics. The NBA awarded a fran­ will cooperate with the He's shooting .475, averages -- chise to Toronto in November province in television cam­ 10.5 rebounds per game, leads on condition that league games paigns against drug abuse, the Boilermakers with 35 steals be removed from Ontario's child abuse and domestic vio­ and is second on the team with He knew what to do sports lottery. lence, worth about $500,000. 22 blocked shots. with a million bucks. Rae said he wanted an NBA ~f5NE,-·.. RUMPY 010 MtN franchise in Toronto but JACK LEMMON couldn't afford to give up the Blank Check §J WALTER MATTHAU $6 million in revenue from bet­ 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7:00, 9:15 1:15, 4:15, 8:45, 9:00 ~ ting on basketball. In the end, the NBA and the Toronto team put up the cash and the province agreed to re­ PHilAOllPHIA move pro basketball from its TOM HANKS~ lottery. 1:30, 4:45, 7:15, 10:00 Rae said the deal was worth about $10 million over three years and $12-$13 million over the next five years. "We feel we came out way ahead," he said. The shirt that The agreement was reached just a few days before an NBA­ imposed deadline for resolving the issue. tells the TRUTH! NOTRE DAME APARTMENTS \ "Newly Remodeled Apartments .at Very Affordable Rates"

• SPACIOUS 2-BEDROOM APARTMENTS • NEW APPLIANCES, CABINETS, AND CARPETS • ENTRY SECURITY • LAUNDRY FACILITY AVAILABLE colors NOTRE DAME • 4 BLOCKS FROM NOTRE D~E CAMPUS THE REAL 1993 NATIONAL • PROFESSIONAL MANAGEMENT TEAM FOOTBALL • SKILLED MAINTENANCE CREW CHAMPIONS 100% Heavyweight • PRIVATE OFF-STREET PARKING FOR TENANTS BACK cotton T-Shlrts & Sweatshirts • SEVERAL UNITS AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY

Now TAKING APPliCATIONS FOR T-Shlrts Sweatshirts SCHOOL YEAR $15.9i. $25.9.9. '94-'95 Phone Orders FoR MORE INFORMATION Accepted! and under_ add $4.50 CALL 310·791-4492 shipping 30 Ol-$50 __ add $5.50 VISA·M.C. CHECK \-$100 __ add $6.50 Winning systems, Inc. ami 3805 PCH, Suite 101 handling 100.01-$200.. __ add $7.50 232-8256 Torrance, CA 90505 ttl and ove.r-add - --- ~- ----~-----~------.

Friday, February 11, 1994 The Observer • SPORTS page 1! Malone hopes for repeat NBA slam dunk contest loses the spot light By CHRIS SHERIDAN The dunk contests in recent costly. In fact, a botched dunk Associated Press years haven't lived up to the cost Larry Johnson the contest MVP All- Star game excitement level of the earlier two years ago. MINNEAPOLIS Michael Jordan vs. Dominique The contestants this year are By BILL BARNARD Since 1975, when fan voting The NBA dunk contest has Wilkins leapfests, and players defending champion Harold Associated Press started, only seven other All­ been slammed to second-string. have had to resort to gimmicks Miner of Miami, Kemp, James Stars were not on the fan bal­ Don't tune in to the end of - Dee Brown pumping up his Robinson of Portland, Isaiah Karl Malone, who shared lot. Besides Sprewell and "All-Star Saturday" expecting shoes, Cedric Ceballos wearing Rider of Minnesota, Antonio All-Star MVP honors with Utah Laimbeer, they were Alvan to see the finals of the slam a blindfold- for an extra edge. Davis of Indiana and Robert teammate John Stockton last Adams of Phoenix in 1976, dunk contest. By that time, the "The contest doesn't have Pack of Denver. year, ranks second in career Moses Malone of Houston in dunkers will be done and the the flair it had in the past. All Doug Christie of the Los An­ scoring in NBA All-Star history 1978, Dennis Johnson of guys who can't jump will be the great dunks have been geles Lakers pulled out Tues­ with a 21.0 average, trailing Seattle in 1979, Bill Cartwright shooting 3s. done," said Boston's Brown, day with a sprained ankle. only Michael Jordan's 22.1. and Micheal Ray Richardson of In a move for which the NBA champion in 1991. About six other players de­ Last year was only the sec­ New York and Portland's provided no explanation, the "It's lost some of its appeal," clined invitations, Thorn said. ond time in All-Star history that Kermit Washington in 1980 slam dunk contest was moved said Shawn Kemp of the Seattle "The league has called me a co-MVPs were awarded and the and Kelly Tripucka of Detroit in from last to next-to-last on Sat­ SuperSonics, a contestant in few times to try and talk me first time that teammates were 1982. urday night. It will follow the each of his five NBA seasons. into being in the dunk contest, so honored. rookie game and precede the 3- "There's only so many dunks but I had to tell them no. It's The only other time co-MVPs ••• point shooting contest. you can do." more important that I get my were named was in 1959 when NOT MANY NETS: Trying Don McGuire, executive pro­ In an effort to speed up the rest," Stacey Aummon of the Elgin Baylor the of Minneapolis to remember the last time a ducer of TNT Sports, said it was event, the rules have been Atlanta Hawks said. "I could Lakers and Bob Pettit of the St. New Jersey Nets player started a tacit admission that the dunk drastically changed this year. probably win it right now if I Louis Hawks shared the honor an All-Star game? contest isn't considered the The rounds have been cut wanted to do it. But after a in the West's 124-108 victory. Don't bother, because it most exciting event anymore. from three to two, and instead while, it gets boring. You dunk Malone and Stockton are didn't happen until Kenny "They asked us about it, and of having every dunk judged so many times, you get tired of back as reserves on the Anderson and Derrick Coleman we said we didn't want to touch separately as in the past, this it." Western Conference team for were voted as Eastern the format," McGuire said. year's contestants will have 90 "If you're in the dunk con­ Sunday's All-Star game at Conference starters for "The sense (at the NBA) was seconds in the first round to do test, people expect you to dunk Minneapolis. Sunday's game. The last time that there's more drama in the as many dunks as they choose all the time," said past cham­ anyone from the Nets made the 3-point shooting contest. The before being graded on the pion Dominique Wilkins. ••• All-Star game was 1986 when dunk contest flows nicely on whole performance. "You're supposed to be the GET WELL WITH Buck Williams was chosen as a television, but it's been a little Three of the six players will high-flying, windmilling dunk SPREWELL: Latrell Sprewell reserve. flat in the arena because it was make the finals - it had been guy. But if you concentrate on is the first player since 1983 too long." two - and each dunk will be that, you tend to overlook other who was selected for the All­ ••• Rod Thorn, the NBA's vice judged separately. The player parts of your game. It detracts Star game who was not on the NOT MANY KINGS: Mitch president of operations, refused with the highest-rated dunk from your overall game if all All-Star ballot. Richmond will be the first to specify the thought process will win the contest, even if he you're worried about is dunk­ Detroit's Bill Laimbeer was member of the Sacramento behind the dunk demotion. misses every other attempt. ing." not among 10 centers on the Kings to play in the All-Star "It's just something we de­ In past contests, the dunk Fir~t prize is $20,000, to be Eastern Conference ballot in game since the franchise cided to do," he said, straining scores were totaled up and paid by Gatorade, the event 1983. moved to California in 1985. not to be negative. missed dunks were especially sponsor. Sprewell, a second-year Richmond, voted in as a guard for Golden State, at 23 is Western Conference starter, were in the slam-dunk contest Kings finished second in the and only the second time in the youngest player to repre­ was picked as a reserve last on All-Star weekend, with 1992 3-point shooting contest. NBA history, no player from the sent the Warriors in the All­ year, but did not play because Terry Tyler appearing in 1986 ••• Boston Celtics or Minneapolis­ Star game since 1976 when of injury. and Kenny Smith fmishing sec­ NO CEL TICS-LAKERS: Los Angeles Lakers was select­ Jamal Wilkes was 22. Two Sacramento players ond in 1990. Jim Les of the For the second year in a row ed for the All-Star game.

L

Logistics Coordinators To coordinate operations and ensure timely and efficient movement of air freight shipments. We seek a college degree (or active pursuit of same), ex- cellent communication skills, the ability - to train and motivate personnel, and demonstrated ability to lift up to 60 lbs. Air Freight Agents/ Transportation Cledcs You may qualify with proven office and administrative skills including 10- key by touch, accurate 45wpm typing, a customer-focused approach, and proficiency with MicroSoft Windows. Export/import documentation experi­ ence desired. Please send your resume with salary requirements to our regional office: ROADWAY GLOBAL AIR, Attn: PT Employment-South Bend, 9BDB W. Bryn Mawr Ave., Rosemont, IL6DD1 B. No third parties or phone calls, please. EOE, m/f/d/v. page 20 The Observer • SPORTS Friday, February 11, 1994

--:"f ...... Perfect record on the line Men's volleyball sparkles in hard-fought victory By G.R. NELSON scoring early. The Irish plan making the plays for the Irish. Sports Writer was to attack the middle, and The Irish won game three in for Irish fencers they executed it to perfection. much easier fashion, thanks The undefeated men's volley­ "I had to play a little more of primarily to Ceponis, freshman for challenges all year, building By JOE VILLINSKI ball team continued its a finesse game that usual," Josh Clement, and a timely Sports Writer momentum for the NCAA re­ added captain Ceponis, "But time-out from Slosar. With Tri gionals in March. At regionals, sparkling play with a hard­ the result was the same. We State leading 6-5 and rallying, You have just traveled to the Irish hope to qualify each fought 15-12, 15-12, 15-8 vic­ New York and Boston and weapon in order to have a shot tory over Tri State University attacked the middle." Slosar huddled her men and of­ defeated defending NCAA at winning the championship. last night at the Thunderpit. With the middle occupied, the fered them some rather simple champs Columbia to maintain "Penn State came real close Notre Dame (6-0) went outside lanes were open in advice. your unblemished record. to winning it without one expecting a battle, which is games two and three. Outside "I knew we were tired and What are you going to do next? weapon last year," said ar­ exactly what they received. hitter Matt Strottman took ad­ needed a break," commented For the Notre Dame fencing morer Greg Ripple. "But it "Everyone knew this would be vantage and accumulated a the coach. "And then I said fin­ team, the answer lies in makes things really tough." tough," said coach Jennifer game high 14 kills. Senior Tom ish it in three." Thanks to Philadelphia. There they will As for the men's team, the Slosar, "And that is why every­ Kovats also chipped in with three key kills by Clement and face 1993 NCAA runner-up intensity level and total team one played so great." nine kills from the outside. five more from Ceponis, the Penn State and 1993 women's effort needs to continue. With a The Irish came out and Nevertheless, victory in game Irish did just that. champion Temple along with 29-5 record, freshman Jeremy two did not come easy. There "Notre Dame has really im­ Siek has led the men's foil team played as a whole team. Six William& Mary and Penn. were many incredible rallies proved from earlier in the along with veterans Stan players recorded kills in the "The stakes are high this with diving saves being made weekend with a possible unde­ Brunner and Conor Power. opening game, led by middle year," said Tri State coach feated season and a high seed hitters Brian Ceponis and Leo all around. More times than Dave Saenz. "This is a really in the NCAA's," saidmen's Mike Sabre has provided a pleas­ Casas, with five and four, re­ not, it was John Vandemore tough place to play." DeCicco ant suprise this season, as cap­ spectively. One main challenge comes tain Chris Hajnik, Bernard "[Chris] Fry gave me some against Penn State's women's Baez, and freshman Bill Lester good sets and I got my vertical foil squad. The Nittany Lions have powered the team to a jump going," said Casas. "The boast one of the top women's 121-59 record. rest was elementary." Leprechaun and squads in the country. Rounding out the weapons It was not a coincidence that However, the Irish carry· an with epee, captain Greg Woz­ the middle hitters paced the equally impressive team with niak, senior Rian Girard, and an amazing overall record of junior Rakesh Patel are three o lBWCBCB!JDCBffilflCB!J 295-58 on the season. the main reasons the men are "Penn State will be tough," 20-0 this season. said DeCicco. "I think we'll be "If we keep this up in the ready for the challenge second half of the season, we'll though." be right where we want to be The Irish have been ready for the NCAA's," said DeCicco. Tryouts SPORTS BRIEFS 1994-95 Cheerleader Squad Tryouts will be ·_· .. N~~EqUeatf'~-~;Clq~-- ·· :1.\. m'ee~gtoi•U~'~l'S w • ~- •• • ••• • in.· hes· held in March. !BaSk~.,'a . .· .. Students interested Mexico $199 should attend Costa Rica $175 ·~~:rn-~~t~~~ Guatemala $165 the informational g F~IJ, a•. ca s meetfu{t .f9l" Laero~se: will_be at 5 pm 'With b()tbq~baU league. meetm.gaat 6 pm. j\lsp any int~rested Panama City $165 Rio de Janeiro $515 meeting February fjasebl,'ll wnpires ~hopl4 show liP ~or -~ 01ee~ip;g; lit 6;3() PD1·- ~ Fares are each WifY based on a roundtrip pur­ me~tings are on Feb. 24 in JACC Auditorhun: ·· ·· · · ····· ····· · ·· chase from Chicago. Taxes not included and 21, 1994 at 5:00 restrictions apply. Call for other worldwide destinations. p.m. at the JACC in Council Travel the Pit. 1153 N. Dearborn St., 2nd floor Chicago, 1160610 311-951-0585 Please bring proof of insurance. FLORAL CO. Call your FREE copy of the Inc Remember Your Sweetheart Student Travels masazine • on Valentine's Day! 327 Lincolnway West, South Bend 232-3354 Mary B. Green C . ome m and Browse Open daily 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Sundays 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 Noon Serving Notre Dame and St. Mary's Serving South Bend, Mishawaka & Granger for over 60 years

__ 5 in the Hesburgh Library at pm, reception to follow featured in the 1994 festival:

with every • Michael Harper (Sun. 2/13) tanning package purchase •June Jordan (Mon. 2/14) TANNING! FOR A LIMITED TIME (WITH THIS AD) • Alison Lurie* (Tues. 2/15) Expires 2/25/94 •Charles Johnson (Wed. 2/16) FOR DETAILS CALL 212·7653 •Joy Harjo (Thurs. 2/17) b._, __ _ *Frank Deford has been rescheduled for University ::Ommons 4/13/94 State Road South Bend. IN l page 21 The Observer • SPORTS Friday, February II, I994 also faced off against the important player for the future. I Lakers on four occasions. "We're packing opponents' Hockey Oh, did I forget to mention the rinks when were on the road." three games with 5th ranked The two tournaments that ex­ continued from page 24 Michigan St. In addition, Notre tended invites to the Irish were "We've put ourselves in a po­ Dame has faced four other the Great Alaskan Face-Off and teams that were ranked at the the Great Lakes Invitational in sition to win all but six games," main time of their matchup with the Detroit. In addition, the Irish The said Irish coach Ric Schafer. aga~ the Irish ....,.~u., "Also, we've definitely gotten Irish, including 14th ranked played in front of an NCAA Western Michigan and 18th record 20,427 fans at the . ·. Ja,n ~~~~rs Kevin ,.w .. , v·•u• our name out there (in the col­ · SqptfM.cDonald. two ranked Miami. In total, the Palace of Auburn Hills. This The lege hockey world)." di~J,ns finished in under Irish have played 17 of their 29 evening's game against West­ The long-term goal of this p-tinutes at the Meyo. games against ranked competi­ ern Michigan is college hock­ hockey team is to do all they · ..Michigan has five or six can in order to bring Notre tion, 10 against top-ten clubs. ey's game of the week and will What is even more impressive be televised nationally. •standing athletes of their . Dame to the top of the CCHA, iber, ·and I expect those tw() is the level of Notre Dame's "People are starting to take and subsequently, college hock­ or triple up." · play. The Irish have beaten notice of us," said leading scor­ ey. fav()rite, tu••oaArnt Despite their less-than-stellar four of the seven and tied er Jamie Ling. record, the Irish icers have another (MSU) thus far. done plenty in the way of Included among the victories is This exposure, along with reaching this goal. the season's high point, a playing in the nation's toughest Most importantly, coach thrilling overtime victory at league, should only help coach Schafer's squad has played the Lake St., one of the toughest Schafer in the recruiting pro­ best college hockey has to offer. places to play. cess. With the team looking for The squad's schedule is one of, This victory opened some more speed and experience, it if not the toughest slate of eyes of college hockey follow­ is beneficial to have your name games that any team in the ers, as it proved that Notre known to hockey people. school must face. Dame is a threat to beat any­ Another point that can be Notre Dame has skated with one and is on its way to the top emphasized is the probability of the top-ranked Michigan of the conference. quick ice time. If the past two Wolverines four times. Michi­ Name recognition is another classes are any indication, a gan is considered to be one of step the team has taken. new-comer has a good chance the best teams in recent years. "We're now getting invited to of seeing significant skating. It If UM is not the top program all the top tournaments," said is these two classes, the fresh­ in the hockey-crazed upper sophomore Jamie Morshead, men and sophomores who are midwest, then surely Lake Su­ who, although lost for the re­ the foundation of Notre Dame perior St. is. The Irish have mainder of this season, is an hockey. Obviously, this bodes well for the future, as many have Don't Forget that Special Someone. gained invaluable experience this season. They've adjusted 15 Specials starting at $20.00! to a high caliber of play and learned from it. FREE DELIVERY! "Every second of every game we're going to cherish for the Balloon in a Box ...... $25.00 future," said coach Schafer. Gift box filled with balloons, a teddy bear and candy The Irish still have plenty of hockey to look forward to this season, though, and the team is Dozen Long·Stem Red Roses ...... $40.00 going to do all they can to make it count. "This weekend we want to get on a roll, said Ling. " It is ly going to make some noise in rounds of the CCHA tourney)," conceivable that we can win the playoffs." said Schafer. The Irish still have one very There is no better time to re­ your flower alternative seven in row and still get home-ice (advantage in the make able goal for the season. ally get this program moving East Jefferson first-round of the playoffs). "Our goal is to get to Joe toward that goal than this 232 .. 0302 Even if we don't, we're definite- Louis (the site of the later weekend. ~~~~~ See our Beautiful Roses • Puppy Love Bouquet Delivery to • Hershey's Kisses Bouquet Campus 288-7551 Located on Corner of We'll Be Open Sunday for Your Ironwood & Edison Convenience!

The MishaWclka BrtWlg Company

"Northern Indiana's Only Microbrewery" 3703 North Main Street (Just South of Edison on Main Street)

********** Cornish Pasty I Pub Pie I Fish 'N Chips Scotch Eggs I Shepherd's Pie Our Famous "Pubburrito" & Traditional American Fare ********** Sunday, Thursday: Study Booths Available OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FOR LUNCH & DINNER Phone: 256 .. 9993 -,------! page 22 The Observer • SPORTS Friday, February 11, 1994 J Miller Bowen's buzzer-beater beats Butler continued from page 24 By DYLAN BARMMER Whatever head coach Muffet 'shower wasn't just for show. Sports W rirer McGraw said to her reeling But Miller is changing that team, trailing 48-33 at halftime, definition. INDIANAPOLIS it worked. The Irish came out a "I don't really have any goals more aggressive team, and, go­ as far as playing time," said It was fitting that the ball landed in Letitia Bowen's ing on a 12-0 run to tie the the former St. Joseph's star. "I game for the first time at 62-62. just want to play as hard as I hands. Another key point in the can and see what happens." The junior forward had been Irish comeback occurred when Notre Dame got a bargain, instrumental in Notre Dame's second half comeback. Bulldog guard Michelle that's what happened. It usu­ Warwick, who had 13 of her 17 ally costs about $20,000 a year Now, with less than one sec­ ond left on the clock and the points in the first half, fouled to get that kind of production. out of the game with 4:31 left to But Miller is paying to play. game tied at 80, Bowen could play. The loss of Warwick hurt He isn't exactly an All­ put an exclamation point on the team's dramatic run. the Bulldogs, and clutch play by American, but there are schol­ Tootie Jones, who finished with arship athletes who haven't Bowen grabbed the ball that ricocheted off the glass after 11 rebounds and 10 points, and ,made as big an impact. Beth Morgan, who scored 18, · "He's really a pretty good leaving Beth Morgan's hands, and sealed Notre Dame's fourth enabled the Irish to cling to a basketball player," MacLeod game that the tough Butler said, justifying his decision to straight victory when her lay-up drained the net as time expired. team tried desperately to sal­ give a walk-on such extended Bowen's buzzer beater vage. playing time. The final minute of the game Miller is taking it all in sealed an 82-80 Notre Dame victory over Butler. proved heart stopping. Tootie stride, trying not to be awed by The win was key to the Irish, Jones hit a key shot for an 80- his surroundings. 78 Irish lead with 49 seconds Duke's Cameron Indoor Sta­ who held on to first place in the MCC, where they now own a left on the clock. dium can be intimidating even record of 6-1. The Irish are now Butler's Angela Cotton hit to the most seasoned veteran. 15-5 overall, while Butler fell to two free throws to tie the game And when he looks up and 11-9, 4-3 in MCC play. at 80, setting the stage for sees Ed O'Bannon in his face, Bowen's heroics. he feels a long way from that high school across the street. 1 "I try not to worry about that 'and just focus on the game," This Weekend in Notre Dame Sports Miller said. "I have confidence Let's Go Irish!

that I can play on this level. I The Observer/Kyle Kusek Saturday, Febraury 12 don't think of myself as a walk­ Letitia Bowen sunk a last second shot to lead the women's basketball :on. I just think of myself as a Notre Dame Hockey team past the Butler Lady Bulldogs. Garth Brooks part of the team." vs. Western Michigan An important part. When Ticket 7:00pm Monty Williams crashed to the Giveaway! 'floor and injured his wrist in e~&~ JACC Fieldhouse ·the Manhattan game, MacLeod 93~93aPww pointed to Miller to shoot the ~ ~~ Sunday, February 13 q; ~ (""t • $15.00 +Del. ,superstar's free throws. #18 Notre Dame Women's Tennis ; He hadn't played much , but :c ~~ -:5 he stepped to the line cold and vs. William and Mary buried both shots. ·L.~'~" ~s~ 9:00am "That said a lot about Pete \. Doz. carnations with Eck Pavilion Miller," MacLeod said. 2 mylar balloons .A ! A year ago, Miller expected r ~ '"'0 T;~ ~ #14 Notre Dame Men's Tennis to come to Notre Dame, but he • $20.00 + Del. didn't expect to play basket­ ~ep & p\1l~\ $' vs. #8 Texas ball. Maybe he'd play for 5·~J~ 1:00pm ·Zahm, but not for MacLeod. 143 Dixieway South (31 N) Eck Pavilion "I always wanted to come to South Bend, IN 46637 ~

~~j Break Make your next move to Hickory VIllage and ·>: discover affordablllty, convenience nnd comfort. ]l We'ro just minutes from Unkersity Park Mc.JI, thl:) tell road, Notre Dame and downtown South Bend. Our beautiful grounds are spacious and well kept ... and we have an activi­ ties, program thatincludos team sports, rrco c.':lrobics dasses, Loan and mud1 more.

$300 minimum Efficiencies from $270 $300 maximum 1w8edrooms from $285 Deferred payments 2w8odrooms fro:'TI $345 9.4% APR Pool & Clubhouse • Beautifully Landscaped Grounds Laundry Facilities • Elalcony or Patio Students with good credit or f.J.r Conditioning • Close To St.opping no credit qualify 24-hour Emergency f-tlaintenance Servico Planned Activities with Free A::~robics No co-signer needed. Slop by today and we'll show you how Bring your student I.D. affordable apartment living can be.

I+CLEVELANO I I+DOUGLAS .. ~ /

..IL ~H~G~'III.I.MIE ~ 0 ;~~~~~ I " 0 -EDISON1. DlLLA(3ERa ,~, !.! NOTRE DAME McKINLEY-1-- j Mon.·F•I. 9-6, FEDERAL CREDIT UNION JEFFER&Otl ~ I 288-NDCU ·:t 1<>4&8"".12-4 ,__J

Independent of the University .~,.·, Friday, February 11, 1994 The Observer • TODAY page 23 SPELUNKER JAY HOSLER THE FAR SIDE GARY lARSON

WIS 15 THE. LAST 11ME. W£ PLA'/ PoKI:R WITH DE.A-L­ fl- MEAL CARDS

CALVIN AND HOBBES BILL WATTERSON Test: I do Not BELiE:.VE iN LiNEa.R tiME. T~£RE i'S No ?CI'St CIN~ l. "What im~rtanl ~en\:. \.ook. f1.1tURE: q LL iS ONE, QNq place on December 1!0. 1773? E)(iStENCE iN -\+-\£ t£t-~PoRql '5"£NSE i"> iLLUSoRY. 11-li'.i QUE'StioN, +1-\t:II.UoR£, iS ME<~Nil-l<:.lt.S') QNc\ .,\1\possiBLI:. to <'~N5wt::R. ~\~:~

"Well, here he comes ... Mr. Never-Makes-a-Dud."

FOUR FOOD GROUPS OF THE APOCALYPSE DAVE KELLETT

filA"'"\ tlo•l't.E, "Ror-t>EI!oN(, THE ALL 6Aot "PRof'\ oN EN <-f. 0NL'-\ 'RECEf'IT 'S,,uDEf'lf Go\IE.R.t>~il\£1'oir lJ,A.\E.N ll'l'S'TtTU,.IO,..AL. -p.z.08LEfi"'S oPLE VoTED FoP. Su<.~ "tl~snc. ELE.('t\ONS, t\Avl. F~uND 7ARALL€LS t>,,..o fRuSrRAToo_N'> I;JEr A S, ... uno .... ·· . Vu\t>omtR Z><•R•NOVSK'1 ... I

CROSSWORD _,.•. ACROSS 28 Cherub 59 "March 33 Coos' partner Madness" org. 1 Man has seven 34 Maintain 60 Energy source 5 Small groove 35Word &1 N.R.A. symbol 10 Trims the tree associated with &2 Venetian strip 14 Barbarian light bulbs 63 Flattop, of sorts 15 Cut- swath 3&STOCK ... Just a fraction of what we spend on · 1&"-Heron 40 That, in Sonora 64 Hitler's architect Monday" (1942 41 Part of HOMES es Gossips are all sports can help keep society m shape. hit) this 42Reagan It's so to help your ,- hours of. volunteer time 17 Mercury or ~asy fi,-~ Attorney community, when you think · per week the standard of Saturn General DOWN about it. giving in America. 1& Treacherous 43 Coffeecake 1vlillion,ofpL'Dpkhavc G" v, Get involved with the person topping 1 "It's--!" helped make n,·e per-:ent IVe rIVe. causes you care about 19 Computer 4&Mug (wow!) of their incomes and lt'lrat_w1, ~·1 'e.:~.-~Jut'hwc\ur.Jiw and gh·e fi\'e. memory ·47 Turner or Cole 2 Foot problem 20LOCK ... INDIVIDUAL GIVING/VOLUNTEERING CAMPAIGN 48 Kiddie talk? 3 Luncheon NEWSPAPER AD NO.IGV-89-1493-2 COL. 23 Praise loudly 49BARREL ... follower 24 Giant's third 57 Pealed· 4Work word 58 Double-check discussion 25 Fling the check 5 British taste &Tween 7 Torn and tide, OF INTEREST ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE e.g. a The same, to Caesar 9Gaseous 10 A nut for 27 See 26-Down 45 Mideast inits. 51 Years in Toledo cooking ~F+~iiio ·-~~~!!:~~~- 11 Novel set on 28Use 4& It usually has a 52 Gather Tahiti 29 Pool, in poetry garten in back 53 Knight's glove 12 President ~,.-F+::-1 30 Movie shots 48 Dipper 54 Member of DINING HALL Fujimori's land 31 Items on hand 49Pull an 59-Across 13 Blue-pencil all-nighter 32Western 55 German river notation 50 0dium seGrub lilf::-T.±::-1 21 Fort on the 34 Plot measure Oregon Trail 37 Makes as good ~-:+,,;+,,-~ 22 Craggy hill as new 38 Plain People Get answers to any three clues 25 French clerics by touch-tone phone: 1-900-420- 26 With 27-Down, 39 Knee jerk, e.g. ground level 44 Mystery 5656 (75¢ each minute).

Mardi Gras Party! Saturday, Feb. 12 LaFortune Ballroom Feb. 13-17 7:30pm Freel 9pm-1am Hesburgh Library Auditorium Fortunes, Sunday: Michael Harper Food, and FUN! Reception to follow. IIT1JDIINr VNJON lOAD SPORTS Friday, February 11, 1994 Irish get a bargain in Miller

By JASON KELLY O'Bannon-men born to run and Associate Sports Editor jump-and proved that desire means as much as dunks. Watch You wouldn't look twice at Pete a loose ball long enough and you'll Miller if you passed him on the see Miller wrapped around it. street. "He has tremendous heart," said But he's got people doing double Irish coach John MacLeod, who takes when he's on the basketball hasn'.t hesitated to insert Miller in court. crucial situations. The freshman walk-on from He has responded with scrappy South Bend has become a hero for defense and even some sparkling the Not Fast Enough and the Not shooting to become one of Notre Strong Enough. Dame's most popular players. He is the patron saint of Limited Walk-ons hllve long been cult Physical Ability. figures at Notre Dame. Everybody This is another one of those There are 180 pounds hidden loved the frustrated former high "should-win" games for the 8-14 Irish. But that has been the somewhere on that skeletal 6-foot- school stars toiling in anonymity team's downfall this season. After 4 frame. And his face turns bright for the good of the team. wins against No. 4 UCLA and Georgia last weekend, Notre red after a few trips up and down Maybe, when the team had a big Dame ran out of gas against the court. He looks as comfort­ lead, they got a few flings in front Butler. Fatigue will be a factor able on the court as Andre Agassi of an audience so the post-game again tonight as the Irish play their fourth game in six days, but in a barber shop. shower wasn't just for show. sleepwalking should be enough The Observer/Kyle Kusek Yet he stood toe-to-toe with against the Flying Dutchmen. Pete Miller's gutty defense and solid outside shooting have UCLA's Shon Tarver and Ed see MILLER I page 22 made him an important role player for the Irish this season.

Notre Dame --...-- hockey keeps an eye on the future By TIM SHERMAN Sports Writer

The short-term goals at the begin­ ning of the year were simple. Finish in at least sixth place in the CCHA, beat every team at least once, and win at least 15 games. With four weeks remaining in the .. regular season, it is doubtful that the '· Notre Dame hockey team will achieve ~ their goals. Has the season been a disap­ pointment for the 8-17-4 Irish? Surely, rJ Has the season been a failure for the program? Hardly.

see HOCKEY I page 21 Men's tennis awaits No. 4 Texas Emotions reach a peak when By PHIL LANGER face a rejuvenated Notre Dame Sports Writer squad will be Ohio State. Irish and Jayhawks meet "They are a sound team," By KATE CRISHAM "Kansas is a big match," The University of Notre Dame stated Notre Dame head coach SporuWrirer said Louderback. "They are II men's tennis team will hope to Bob Bayliss, "they don't make a competitive and talented. duplicate last weekend's bas­ lot of mistakes. We will have Tonight's match againsfthe "It will be a very emotional ketball upset by beating No. 4 our hands full. " University of Kansas promises match. We're definitely look­ ranked Texas this Sunday at The highlight of the weekend, to be an intense and emotional ing forward to meeting them." 1:00 after facing a competitive however, will be Sunday when one for the 18th-ranked wom­ "Since we've beaten them Ohio State squad on Friday at Texas leaves the sunny south to en's tennis team. the past two years, there will 3:15 at the Eck Pavallion. play under the lights of the Eck. The Irish have developed a be a revenge factor for them," With Freshman Mike Mathers Texas comes to Notre Dame rivalry with the 15th·ranked admitted senior captain playing in his first match since with five of the six players who Jayhawks in recent years, Chrif!ty Faustmann. "But I undergoing back surgery, the beat Stanford last year in the having narrowly defeated think that will turn into just as Irish pose a real threat to any quarterfinals of the NCAA tour­ them 5-4 in their past two big a motivation for us." and every collegiate tennis nament before losing to even­ meetings. Head coach Jay The Irish are aware that a team, especially when playing tual champion USC. Louderback believes that this big win against the Jayhawks Photo courtesy of ND Sports Information on. the sacred soil of Notre Their No. 1 singles player, year's match will prove just as could translate into a highl:lr A big weekend awaits BobBayliss Dame. competitive. and the men's tennis team. The first of the two teams to see TENNIS I pagel7 see RIVALRY I page 17 Inside SPORTS Women's Hoops Track College Basketball Joe Piane's track teams Letitia Bowen's last sec­ head to Michigan for Gene Keady is lobbying ond shot lifts the Irish important weekend for Glenn Robinson to be past Butler. meets. named Player of the Year. see page 22 see page 21 see page 18