... Music review pages 10- 11

VOL. XIII, NO. an independent student newspaper serving notre dame and srunt mary's TIIURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1979

Housing Farmer protest rematns• continues uncertatn• in D.C. by Michael Onufrak WASHINGTON (AP)-J eered and booed by angry farmers, Agricul­ Edmund T. Pr~ce, director of ture Secret~ Bob Bergland Housing, said yesterday that the softly apologized yesterday to Housing Office is still "trying to anyone msulted by his sugges­ get it all together.'' Price was tion that some farmers demon­ referrin~ to to the housing dilem­ strating for more government aid ma wluch has troubled Notre are ''driven by just old-fashioned Dame for the past few months. greed." In an interview yesterday, Bergland did not withdraw his Price stated that he is awaiting remark, however, and he reiter­ the final compilation of current ated his opposition to increasing statistics which will reveal crop price su)?pons and insisted whether a lottery will be neces­ that 1978 ' m vinually every sary, who will have to move respect ... was a good year'' for off-campus and what the demand rural America. for on-campus housing will be for Outside, the city's worst snow­ the 1979-80 school year. fall in years made conditions Price admitted he had the bulk even rougher for those of the of the needed statistics, but he 3, 500 American Agriculture also stated that he has not yet movement farmers who were received housing cards from sleeping by their tractors in their overseas students and other compound on the Mall, west of special cases. Housing cards for the Capitol. the majority of Notre Dame students were due Feb. 2. Nonetheless, they paraded 130 Price denied the rumor which tractors around the Capitol, with On(l winter reflections penetrate the solitude of the Administratt"on Building. [photo by Bob police permission, filling the air had suggested that the hold-up in Gzltj the administration's announce­ with the dense smell of diesel ment was tjle result of a com­ smoke. puter foul-up. A group of schoolchildren ''There has been no computer On Donahue show stood outside the Supreme Coun trouble which I know of,'' he and waved as the slow "tractor­ said, adding that the hold-up on cade" rolled by. the official University announce­ More than 300 farmers crowd­ ment was simply a matter of Hesburgh discusses issues ed into the House Agriculture statistics which had not come into Committee hearing to hear Berg­ the Housing Office by yesterday. by Gresory Solman fulfilled a _promise he had made concurred; adding, "It's been hot land. Rep. Richard Nolan, D­ "Hopefully, we will have a Stajj Reporter Tuesday rught when speaking in all the time. Because you put Minn., told Bergland that he had decision by Monday, maybe Washington Hall. Numerous men and women in the same been "~ready shocked and dis­ sooner,'' said Price when pressed University President Theodore students asked Donahue to bring campus in the same place, and turbed' by the secretary's re­ to set a definite date for the M. Hesburgh discussed a variety · their complaints to Hesburgh on they are all very attractive marks Tuesday. University's announcement. of issues relating to Catholicism his show the next day, and youngsters. I just say that one of "You owe them an apology," Price said he realized the and higher education with talk Donahue agreed. the greatest things that we can do Nolan said. student body's concern over this show host and Notre Dame ''The students want unlimited is draw a few parameters ... say, The farmers roared agreement serious situation and reaffirmed alumnus Phil Donahue on his visitation,'' Donahue pointed out 'Here are a few rules, live with and one jumped to his feet, his _pk·dge to analyze incoming syndicated television program during the one-hour show. ''That them." demanding, "Have him do it statts tics and expedite the admin­ yesterday. is to say, most of them do." Hesbur~h was asked about right now!" istration's decision as soon as In confrontin~ Hesburgh with. "Well, that's the big, noisy student drinking on campus, and Rep. Thomas S. Foley, D­ possible. the parietals 1ssue, Donahue thing you hear all of the time,' ' said that to check I. D.'s, as WA, chairman of the panel, Hesburgh replied, adding, "I Donahue had suggested, would threatened to have the man don't think you can get through be an "impossible task. " He ejected. life without having restrictions. added that students should You have restrictions all through ''learn how to drink, without Bergland did not apologize at HPC to administer your life, and I think that it's getting drunk all of the time." the time, but noted he had not good to stan learning a few of ascribed selfish motives to all them in school. " farmers. "Of course, "he said, 'parietal ' survey Donahue continued, ''How "there's a little greed in all of would you respond to that stu­ I could belong us.'' an hour later, by Tim Sullivan administration cannot ignore the dent who would say 'Father, Half ho~ever, StaffReporter bare statistics,'' Coonan we're adults now. You're treat­ when a member of the committee explained. ing us like children. After all, we to everybody apologized to chief Agriculture Carroll Hall representatives According to Andy McKenna, are over eighteen, and isn't Department economist Howard are devising a survey to deter­ Student Body president, ''The giving us a cuifew to suggest that Hjon for remarks to him at a mine precisely students' senti­ Student Government sym­ we're not capable or mature Hesbur~h also discussed the hearing last year, Bergland of­ ments on the parietals issue. The pathizes with Carroll Hall's vtew­ enoush to make these kind of university s addmissions policy fered his apolo~ for ill feelings Hall Presidents Council (HPC) r,oint but will not endorse a decis10ns?''' and S.A.T.'s and called Notre generated by his words. plans to administer the survey in Break Parietals Night.' " "I think it's an effon to have Dame "probably the most nation- "I want to take this opponuni­ the residence halls by Friday. McKenna stated that this type of some guidelines." Hesburgh al university in America today. '' ty to apologize to anyone who has Dr. Pat McCabe, Counseling protest would be ineffective due answered, adding, "And I think Donahue, for the second time on felt insulted by anything I've Center director, and Chuck to potentially heavy penalties on most youngsters want some his program in the last month, said. It was not intended,'' he DelGrande, HPC chairman, are involved students. He also guidelines. deplored the condition of the said. assisting with the formulation of indicated that he did not believe "Most people don't care what tower high-rises, particularly The protesters did not seem to the survey questions. Student campus-wide sentiment was kids do,'' Hesburgh coQ.tinued. Grace Hall, where Donahue notice. Government is financing the strong enou~h to suppon such a "We do. We care about the kind stayed when here for his reunion. The fuss concerned a remark survey. protest at this point. of people they are becoming, The subject had arisen on an Bergland made in a television ''The main purpose of the Alumni Hall residents recently what's happenmg in their lives, earlier program that explored interview Tuesday. He said some survey," according to Tim completed a hall council survey what kind ofvalues they have and coeducation with Northwestern farmers from west Texas to Coonan, Carroll Hall resident, similar to the one presently being how they are learning to live with University students as guests. Nebraska were in ''real trouble,'' "is to gather the most accurate devised by Carroll Hall. To the rules. Because we all have to live Hesburgh quickly quipped, then added: ''There are others indication of student feeling pos­ question, "Do you favor with rules. I have to live with the "No," when asked if he had ever who have made bad business sible. ' ' Coonan indicated that chan~ing the parietals struc­ rules." wanted to ~t married. "I felt judgments, paid too much money the survey would more effectively ture? ' 196 residents responded Later, Donahue inquired, "Are that becommg a priest, I cop.ld for land. I know some people in indicate student suppon for an "yes," 43 said "no," and 23 you communicating with the stu· belong to everybOdy," he com- that category. Others are seek­ anti-parietals movement than an abstained. To the question, "Do dents on these issues? I mean, it mented, adding, "And the price ing publicity and others are original plan to schedule an open you favor a formal protest such as is a very hot item, is it not?" of belonging to everybody is ' driven by just old-fashioned meeting in LaFortune. "The [contt"nued on page 6] "It's fairly hot," Hesburgh [conttnue · d on page 6] ·,greed.'' .. ,..,..., __ ...... _

...... :···News / . . in brief Thursday, February 8, 1979- page 2 Carter a.dministration considers · p.ot._.'s.forces gain victories . . . Sunday gas station closings BANQKOl<, Thailapd (AP)-Th~ ~errilla ,fighters qf toppled Prelll).er Pol·Pot clauned new vtctones ~amst. the Vtetname!?e WASHINGTON (AP)-The Carter that gasoline rationing would be sideration are: Y5!Sterday.· Reporters who entered cambod.ian waters srud administration is considering for­ .Yietn~mese. gunboats were shelling the southwes~ern part of a mandatory conservation -Setting limits on heating and Cambodian co~t, a stronghold of Pol ~ot forces.. The radi~ of cing gasoline stations to close on program. cooling in public and commercial the·Pol Ponegime, believed broadcast10g.from lts ally China, Sunday as part of a program to Saying he has seen no indica­ buildings. cla.Uped' n_!!arfy 300 Vi~tnamese we~e kill~d and 19 tanks reduce oil consumption and build tion "thatthe slide of Iran toward -Limiting the number of parking destroyed 10 recent fight10~ along national highways and ~ear public awareness of the ener~ chaos has been arrested,'' places. provincial capitals. Pol Pot s government was ousted 1an. 7 10 a crisis prompted by instability 10 Schlesinger said the cutoff of oil -Barring non-essential lighting rapid push bY. the Vietnamese and their Cambodian allies who Iran. from that Mideast country is such as advertisin~ signs. setzecf.several key cities and the capital of Phnom Penh. Energy Secretary ] ames forcing the Urited States to draw -Pressing for additional conver­ Schlesinger told the Senate Ener­ on reserves to make up part of sions from oil to coal in power gy Committee yesterday the ad­ the 900,000 barrels a day once plants and other industrial facili­ . Bostl!orth predicts failure ministration still hopes voluntary imported from Iran. ties. measures will be enough, but a ''Unless we are able to restock Schlesinger said the nation package of mandatory controls is for next winter, our inventories now has a 70-day supply of oil in being studied. could be dangerously low,'' 1 he reserve. At the time of the 1973 · WASiiiNGTON (~)-A top a~strati9n inflatiqn fighter sajd He ruled out the possibility said. Arab oil embargo, the normal yesterday that, without pubhc cooperation\ President Carter s The secretary said oil con­ reserve was 54 days, he said. "voluri~acy'.'wage and pnq: guidehnes wont work. :Tm ready sumption could be reduced by Asked when he would advise .to admit·nght now, that under a yolunt¥Y progran:h if ~vetyone wants tmeone New ·festival, NAZZ Features lAyout: Cindy ''Cos­ at mo" McKie! 7:30 pm, I.ECIURE, "the poem as icon: the Sports lAyout: Mr. Bill (M.P.) :elationship between tenor and vehicle in the Typists: lisa DiValerio, Tom religious and nature poems of william eersom", by (100 w.p.m.) Pipp, Beth ("I THE· RAMROD vicky dill, UB. WUNGE Love Joe Evans!) Willard, Pete ("I Don't Get No Re­ 9 pm, MEETING, for those interested in the migrant spect") McFadden free admission with farm viorkers union, LA FOR1UNE BAI..IROOM Early Morning Typist: Kim Convey college ID 12: U am, WSND-FM, nocturne nightflight, hosted Day Editor: MB Moran by bob diemer, 89 FM . Ad lAyout: Matt DeSalvo every thursday Photographer: Bob Gill $1.50 pitchers The Observ~r ]USPS 598 9201 Is hnW.aua...- published Monday through Friday ex­ MARDIGRASDEALERSCHOOL cept during exam and vacatioa periods. The Observer Is published by the studenb Df Notre Dame and Saini 7:00 lioly cross (nd) * dance floor * OJ Buddy King Mary's College. Subscriptions may be purchased for $20 per year 1$10 per every Fri G Sat night 7:45 carroll semester] from The Observer. P.O. box * pool table Q, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556. Second 8:30 dillon 1:lass postage paid. Notre Dame. In· diana 46556. 511 S. Mich St. 9:15 fischer-pangborn (in fischer) The Observer Is a member of the AIIOCiated Press. All repraductlon (downtown) 10:00 off-campus (in Ia fortune) rights are reserved. open till 3am. The Observer Thursday, February 8, 1979- page 3 Final total eclipse of century to occur [AP) - The two Chinese by looking directly at the sun. astronomers who got drunk 4116 Thousands are jockeying for a years ago and forgot to scare off good position when the moon's the serpent swallowing the sun shadow touches land ftrst at 8:12 would get a kick out of Russ a.m. at Agate Beach, Ore., just Cox's knockout cocktail the west of Portland, then sweeps a "Total Eclipse." path 180 miles wide up the They also might enjoy watch- Columbia River and across much ing the sun go black on a of Oregon, Washington, champagne-sippmg "Flight to Northern Idaho and North Dakota Totality'' high above the into Canada. In other areas of Columbia River gorge. the United States, it will be seen If the Chinese astronomers, as only a partial eclipse, or named Hi and Ho, were still of varymg degrees. around, they could be at Cox's For those who want a view Bar in Richland, Washington, on above the clouds, the Seattle Feb. 26, when this country's ftnal Science Center has chartered an total . eclipse of the century Alaska Airlines 727 jetliner to occurs. take observers - at $115 to $135 Cox, manager of the Hanover each - on a champagne flight House, invented the "To~al 40,000 feet above the Columbia Eclipse," a mixture of run, gin, River Gorge. sloe gin and orange juice, for A tourist "J.gency in Berkeley, armchair astronomers who want CA. , has already sold out its to celebrate the ftrst such eclipse '' Moonshadow Expeditions,'' visible in the United States since which will leave San Francisco March 7, 1970. and Los Angeles on Feb. 23 for a Hi and Ho won't be there, of resort on Hecla Island off The clouds combine with the sunset to provide a powerful image over the Noire Dame golf course, since their names appear Canada. Ms. Wendy Weaer, the course. [photo by Bob Gill] in the earliest surviving wntten tour coordinator, said 60 persons record of a total eclipse of the have paid $445 to $475.50 for the sun. It says they lost their heads trip, but she could have sold to the royal executioner in 2137 many more tickets. b.c. for partaking of strong spirits ''The response has been unbe­ Khomeini 's supeorters gain and neglecting to bang drums lievable," she said. "We are and shoot arrows at the offending already making plans for next serpent, which the ancient year's eclipse in Mrica." strength throughout Iran Chinese blamed for an eclipse of But the biggest hubbub is in the sun. Goldendale, WA. , a farming TEHRAN, Iran (AP)-Backers of said the provisional government Tehran sports stadium to give Americans have more scientific community of about 3,300, which Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini will try to operate with civil him backing. explanations for an eclipse, but has the only public observatory in were reported in control of sev­ servants loyal to Khomeini. The The rally was attended mainly some of their rituals seem almost the path of the eclipse. Thou­ eral city governments yesterday provisional government is to by middle-and upper-class as strange. Indeed, a kind of sands of visitors are expected, on the eve of demonstrations arran~e a referendum on a Iranians, and was punctuated by solar mania grips humankind the town's four motels have been intended to drive home the constitution that would make Iran slogans backtng Shah when the moon blocks our view of booked up for weeks, and the religious leader's claim to the an Islamic republic. Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, who the sun, and everybody wants a mayor is allowing campers to reins of this troubled nation. Cities where administrative was forced to leave Iran Jan. 16 front-row seat, even if mean park on the school grounds. In Washington, Energy Secre­ by the Khomeini-led masses scores will permanently damage Not to be outdone, the mayor tary James Schlesinger told the and some police functions now are run by Khomeini backers opposed to his rule. their eyesight, as 121 did in 1970, [continued on page .5) Senate Energy Committee the Men and won .:n with tears in Iranian crists could leave included Isfahan, Qom, Shiraz and others especially in southern their eyes chanted ''Long live the American oil inventories "dan­ shah" and knelt in homage to the ********************************* gerously low'' next winter and Iran, reports from those cities said. monarch. Said one woman: ''I force controls, but he said he love my king arid if I had a little In the western city of Sanandaj ·~ does not anticipate gasoline blood in my body I would ~ive it -...... ~ ----- rationing. an armed group attacked a for my king.'' Iran sold about 900,000 barrels television station Tuesday night, of oil a day to the United States killing a guard and destroying before strikes hobbled production cars in the parking lot, state radio Billiard last fall. said. ., Yesterday, 8,000 supporters of Oil engineer Mehdi Bazargan, Bakhtiar' s shah-appointed tourney named by Khomeini - to form a government gathered at a provisional government, announced he will outline his slated * * program and possible name min­ The annual campus-wide bil­ ! put in a : ISters on Friday. Support migrant liards tournament will begin Khomeini 's rival government Monday. The contest is straight * * to the shah-appointed adminis­ pool, with the winner being the tration of Prime Minister farmworkers? first to reach 100 points. Each contestant pays for his time. i i Shahpour Bakhtiar got support Valentines from striking civil servants in the There will be an informational Only one game is to be played. * * Justice Mimstry and in Bahtiar's and organizational meeting for all Registration for the competi­ own office and from the staff of people interested in supporting tion is being held through Sunday Feb.I4th the official Pars news agency the Migrant Farmworkers' in the poolroom under the ~ wed. Day ~ yesterday. Movement in Ohio tonight at 9 Huddle. First and s~cond place Khomeini aide Ibrahim Yazdi p.m. in the LaFortune Ballroom. trophies will be awarded. i If You're Tired Of The Cold . . !personal Warm Up At The !!! ~ for your sweetie I!~ Nazz * * t special greeting section in the ! Thurs- Open Stage 9: 00-12 : 00 ! OBSERVER ! come in and show us what you've got * wnte . message here, pay at t h e observer office * * * musically that is!! *------** * Friday Brian McHale & Friends * ------· * (guitarist) 9 : 30-1 : 30 * ------· *~- *------·** * !------** * Sat Tony Aquilino Bill Floriano Julia Perry !------E 9:30-1.:30 *·------~--** . * *; ------rates found above todav 's classified ads ;* *******************~************** The Observer Thursday, February 8, 1979 - page 4

Oriental Express Restaurant Professor admits to hypnotizing Featuring Cantonese BRANDENTON Fla. [APl - A deny his actions but maintains not to use demonstrations of Medical Examiners. Chinese, Vietnamese hypnosis on campus,'' he told the Price told the trustees Lincks & Amencan Dishes white-haired professor with a that the orders to stop came only 30-year teaching career at stake from Wetzler and were not policy board. was placed on administrative 115 Dixie Way N. faced his superiors Wednesday to because the trustees hadn't "We think the question is probation during 1973-74 for explain why he shouldn't be ftred acted. He says he's studied . simply whether he is guilty of practicing hypnosis, but "that "Carry out or Dine in" for hypnotizing students after he psychology so as to be fully gross insubordination and if so didn't stop him." • was ordered not to. qualified as a hypnotist. we ask for his dismissal ... despite "In '74 he ~ain ignored policy 272-6702 Arlie Lincks, an engineering "There isn't any college whether he's a lovable professor from the prestdent against dem­ teacher, says he used hypnosis to policy. There never has been and and whether he does a ~ood job.'' onstrations, and he was relieved improve his students' grades. only will be if you decide to make Hypnotists are not licensed by of his continuing contract for ARmANDO'S Yesterday he sat on an audi­ one," Lincks' attorney, Don the state but anyone who per­ February 75-76," price said. torium stage at Manatee Junior Hadsock, told the board. forms hypnosis must work either In 1977 he began teaching a BARBER & HAIR College in this quiet Gulf coast Floyd Price, Wetzler's for a physician or dentist or under non-credit course on hypnosis, STYLE SHOP city facing a five-member board attorney, disagreed. "Evidence their supervision, says Dr. resuming demonstrations on of trustees who will decide his will show there was never a doubt George Palmer, executive direc­ campus. He was suspended two 1437 N .Ironwood Dr. fate. in Mr. Lincks' mind that he was tor of the Florida Board of months ago. More than 100 people attended South Bend the hearing, many of them stu­ dents applauding the professor 277-0615 until they were shushed by presiding trustee ] ohn Blue. Sue, Ruthie, The school claims Lincks was grossly insubordinate for persis­ 400 apply for Free University Armando- stylist tently practicing hypnosis during the last seven years despite warnings and disciplinary action. by David Rumbach ing to Bill Caldwell, co-director of Government offices before 5 p.m. mon-fri 8-5:30 School President Dr. Wilson Senior Staff Reporter the program. , today and either Caldwell or Jolm sat 8-2 Wetzler, saying hypnosis Although the deadline for Free Eardley (1155) thereafter. shouldn't be taught by unquali­ University's formal registration Skydivmg 116, with 80 pro­ by appt. only fied persons, wants Lincks ftred. Approximately 400 students was yesterday, interested stu­ spective students, is this year's Lincks, who has a master's have signed up for Free Universi­ dents who have not yet registered most popular course, Caldwell sat-no appt. needed degree in education, doesn't ty classes this semester, accord- may do so by calling the Student said. Other popular courses include Polish language and Culture 102 taught by Rich Hunter, Beginning and Interme­ diate Auto Mechanics and 121 Job Interview Skills. Caldwell described the re­ sponse to this semester's Free introdUcing University curriculum as''a little less'' enthusiastic than in the past. "We usually get around 600 people to sign up. There was some _problem distributing course descnption booklets at Saint our most Mary's, and we think maybe that might account for the drop (in students interest),'' Caldwell sta­ ted. Students will be notified in valuable case of class cancellations or changes in time or meeting places, Caldwell said. asset! O'Meara We're Northrop Corporation Defense Sys- , announces temf Division, a recognized leader in the­ • research, design and manufacture of sophis­ ticated electronic countermeasure equip­ promotton ment and ·systems. Peter C. Grande has been promoted from assistant to asso­ ciate dean of the Freshman Year The people you see pictured here - and many of Studies, it has been announced others not pictured - are a part of our pro­ ELECTRICAL by Prof. Timothy O'Meara, fessional team. They are very, very special University provost. . here at Northrop. They're outstandingly talented. . .creative. . .determined. . .and ENGINEERS Grande, who received his doc­ extraordinary people ...and they continue We are currently seeking torate in educational psychology to help us maintain our world-renowned Electrical Engineers with BS and guidance from Notre Dame position. through PhD to participate in 1965, has been involved in in the conception, develop­ teaching, research and adminis­ Why take the time to tell you about ourdro­ ment and manufacture of tration in his 24 years at the fessionals? Very simply, we are prou of high technology circuits and University. His teaching and their accomplishments. . . . .they make systems in the areas of elec­ research has focused on mea­ Northrop what it is today. So, how about it'? tronic countermeasures, surement and evaluation, and as Do you, as an engineering professional, seek electro-optical/infrared an administrator he has served as a challenge? countermeasures and micro­ director of the Office of If you do, and your interest is in High Tech­ wave receivers. Creative de­ Institutional Studies, director of nology Engineering, investigate the potential sign engineers are needed admissions and, since -1971, of a career with Northrop: for the areas of digital, ana­ assistant dean of the Freshman log, microwave integrated Year. circuits, microprocessor ap­ He has assisted in the develop­ CAMPUS INTERVIEWS plications1 software develop­ ment of the Freshman Year's A Northrop representative will be ment, m1crowave systems, extensive counseling, guidance interviewing at your campus on high efficiency power sup­ testing and credit-by-examina­ ply systems and sophisti­ tion pro~rams. In addition, he is FEB.15 cated analog and digital sys­ conductmg a career pattern study See your Placement Officer for tems design and develop- of Notre Dame students. further information ment. · A native of Pennsylvania, ' Grande received his undergra­ We offer superior salary/benefits packages, an en­ duate education at Kutztown J vironment conducive to professional achievement State College before coming to and creative freedomh and exceptional opportuni­ Notre Dame in 1953 for graduate ties for growth. Nort rop is an equal opportunity work. He is a past president of employer m/f. the Northern Indiana Personnel NORTHROP CORPORATION Guidance Association and of the Defense Systems Division Fort Wayne-South Bend 600 Hicks Road, Rolling Meadows, IL 60008 Diocesan Guidance Council. He served as editor of the Indiana Personnel and Guidance ] ournal NORTHROP from 1967-70. The Observer Thursday, February 8, 1979- page 5 La-w school plans lecture series

by Pat Mangan either in professional sports or Staff Reporter have been drafted by a pro Sports and has consulted with team.'' U.S. Senator Gary Hart on pro­ ''Not only should they find posed anti-truSt legislation con­ As early as the 1890's, law themselves capable of negotia­ cerning professional athletics. found its way into professional ting a contract," he continued, Sobel currently teaches Profes­ sports when Hall of Famers "but they should be equipped to sional SJ?<>rtS law at the Southern Monty Ward and Buck Ewing, defend their clients against the Califorrua Law School and practi­ dissatisfied with their contracts, outrageous abuses of disrepu­ ces law in Beverly Hills, where he table agents." is counsel for college athletic decided to break them. Appear­ conferences and athletic direc­ ing before New York and federal Cleveland explained that the tors. judges, they rri~gered several area of athletic representation in decades of htigatton. .the legal profession was still in its Since then, the courts have "embryonic stases" of develop­ become an arena for debate on ment, and that ts an area which the application of corporate and "sorely needs well motivated, contractual law in player dis­ highly qu~~ed professional in­ putes. However, in spite of volvement. almost 90 years of law suits, Rice said that the recent 1 arbitration, negotiation, and stream of litigation was basically legislation, sports legal problems over contract disJ?utes, but that have only recently been ad­ negotiatin~ techniques, the eth­ dressed as a distinct le~al field ics of solicttation, and workman's known as "Sports law.' compensation were also impor­ The Notre Dame Law School tant issues. has recently instituted a Sports The ftrst lecture is planned for . Law course, and according to Friday, Feb. 9, at 3:30 p.m. in Professor Charles C. Rice, coor­ Room 101 of the law School, and dinator of the course, the class will feature Attorney Lionel So- 1 was designed to ' 'inspire interest bel. Cleveland described Sobel in this particular field." as the leading expert in the fteld In conjunction with the course, of Sports Law and encoura~ed a series of public lectures dealing anyone interested in the subject with contemporary sports legal to attend. Vilma S. Martinez spoke last night at the Law School on the topic problems has been planned. Sobel is the author of Profes­ of the Mexican-American legal defense fund. [photo by Granville E. Cleveland, coordina­ Stonal Sports And The Law, and Bob Gill} tor of the Sports law Seminars, has written several articles for stated, "Recent graduates from the Bar Association. He has law schools are fmding them­ testified before the House Select Tennis tournament selves faced with clients who are Committee on Professional begins on Friday

by Ellen Buddy will be on sale m LeMans lobby Saint Mary's Editor between 11 a.m. and 12 noon every Monday, Wednesday and , Friday until Feb. 20. Molloney Shari Molloney, off-campus will also sell tickets at her commiSSioner, announced a off-campus residence, Apr. 2A, round-robin tennis tournament to Notre Dame Apartments. For take place at the South Bend more information, contact her at Raquet Club on Friday, Feb. 23, 234-1996. between 7 and 11 p.m. "In the past we have had little response and would like to see greater participation at this Potential event,'' Mollont:"y said. Tennis and raquetball courts candidates to meet will be available, as well as the use of saunas and jacuzzis. Beer, wine and a variety of munchies There will be a mandatory will be served, according to meeting for all potential Student Molloney. Body President/Student Body "It is an opportunity to meet Vice-President candidates tomor­ other off-campus students,'' she row at 10 p.m. in the Student said. Government offices on the The event is open to all Notte second floor of LaFonune. Dame-Saint Mary's students. Candidacy petitions will be distri­ Tickets are $7 per person. They buted during the meeting. r------~ I # I .. .eclipse 'I The Student Umon Record Sale 1

[continued from page 3) on the sidewalk with her son, of Helena, MA. , is invmng Howard, who was 2 at the time. I RECORDS PRICED AT COST I everyone in the United States to ''The chickens went to roost her city, "the Queen of the and, when the moon passed over I I Rockies,'' to witness the event the sun, the chickens came out which won't have a rerun until and the rooster crowed," Mrs. 1 February 19-23 From 12-5 1 the year 2017. Spalding recalls. Mayor Kathleen Ramey said Mrs. Zola Brooks, now 87, the eclipse will have its longest recalls that she and most of the I I duration in Helena, tossing off other townspeople watched the the figure 36 minutes and 8 eclipse from atop a buqe, a I I seconds with a sly smiile. flat- top hill. Scientists say, however, it ac­ ''A weird feeling came over me I Second Floor Lafortunel tually will last only 2 minutes, 36 when it happened," Mrs. Brooks seconds. recalls, "Something I'd never I I While Mayor Ramey says she experienced before or since.'' I Room 1-D can't promise cloudless skies, In Washington's tri-cities of 1 she sa.td, ''I'm guaranteeing we Richland, Kennewick and Pasco, I I won't have smog." hotel reservations also are going I #_4 4, I The eclipse will be nothing new fast. Scientists say that area is to a few Goldendale residents, one of the few metropolitan I ._~.~~. I who were there when it happened regions along the eclipse path in the last time, on June 8, 1918. the U.S. with a reasonably good Mrs. Wilma Spalding, now 85, chance of clear weather on I 1bis will be the only time the records I is one of them. She remembers eclipse day, a 50 percent chance how she smoked some glass to as compared with 20 percent in I · will ever be priced this low! !! I look through and took a chair out Portland. 1------J - -~---- ~ ------~~------~------~--~-...... _____ ,._------

The Observer •. Thursday, February 8, 1979 - page 6 Teng criticizes US policy on Iran

TOKYO (AP)-Chinese Vice Pre­ cannot be allowed to go on this mier Teng Hsiao-ping, fresh from way." a trip to America, told Japanese Teng called for a withdrawal of leaders yesterday the United U.S. troops from South Korea, States showed a lack of direction but also urged Washinsron to on Iran and mishandled the crisis check Soviet expansiorusm in there, a spokesman reported. other parts of the world, Mori Teng told former Premier Ta­ said. keo Fukuda that the United "Should the U.S. troops leave States has shown indecision and South Korea, they will still be that the UniteJ States' handling near by, so it will not affect the of the crisis lacks direction,'' stability of the region ... But it Fukuda's secretary Yoshiro Mori would be betteF for both Taiwan told reporters. and South Korea, if the troops Teng stopped in Japan for two were withdrawn,'' Teng was days of talks Wlth ] apanese quoted as sayin~. leaders after his four-city tour of Teng also cnticized Vietnam the United States. He called on and Cuba, saying that the United the former premier because Fuku­ States cannot simply allow Cuba da was in office when the to increase its influence in Mrica. Chinese-] apanese pea-ce and The Chinese vice premier told friendship treaty was signed last ] apanese Prime Minister Masa­ year. yoshi Ohira that some restraint The Chinese official told Fuku­ must be exercised over the da he thought the Ru.ssians were activities of Vietnam. already in Iran and that they After the ] apanese media john jannazo [pictured on the nght] receives commandfrom Carl Aumen at the Air Force ROTC would surely become a destabili­ described Teng as having called ceremony. [photo by Bob Giflj z~g influence on the area, Mori for the punishment of Vietnam, srud. Ohira told opposition parliamen­ Iran has been embroiled in tarians, "I don't think he had more than a year of political military action in mind.'' turmoil directed against the A new Cambodian leadership authoritarian rule of Shah came to power in the wake of a OSCO Drug loses liquor permit Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, who Vietnamese-backed invasion of was forced to leave the strategic the country last month, and oil-rich nation last month. China claims that the Soviet INDIANAPOUS [AP] - A drug The Liquor Board voted 3-0 to represented by executive vice . The secretary quoted Teng as Union was behind Vietnam's store chain here was denied reject renewal of the Osco Drug president Warren Spangle, con­ saying the United States "is action. The Chinese sought renewal of its liq_uor permit Store licenses which had been tended that Osco failed to qualify allowing the Soviet Union to recourse in the United Nations yesterday because 1ts pharma­ challenged by the Indiana under state pharmacy laws place a lot of pawns on the Security Council but the Soviet ceutical operations are secondary Package Liquor Store which require a drug store to set world's chessboard" and "things Union vetoed the resolution. to other retail sales. Association. Osco Liquor sales aside a prescribed area for the An attorney for the drug stores have been regarded as stiff sale of drugs. said the decision by the Marion competition to package stores for Osco counted that the County Liquor Board could have almost a year. pharmacy act contradicted state statewide 1mpact. The package store assocation, (ABC) regulations. ] .B. King, attorney for the • • • Hesburgh Indiana Retail Council, of which [continued from page 1] Osco is a member, said an appeal proba~ly not to belong to any­ barrass you? will be filed with the ABC. Kin~ body. "Phil, that happens occassion­ said Spangle's appearance indi­ Hesburgh talked at length ally,'' Hesburgh responded. r Fox's., cated that the package store about the Pope's proclamation in "I've never really known any of association will seek similar ac­ DIRECT DIAMOND IMPORTERS Puebla, Me~ico. He also our coaches to really pour it on, tion statewide to lessen its com­ responded to questions from the petition in liquor sales. but here is the problem that you JEWELERS SINCE 1917 studio audience on the subjects of have this year: Phelps happens King also said that if the same the costs of hegher education, the Town & Country and Concord Mall, standard were applied to taverns to have a strong bench. These recruiting of minorities, the guys are eager to get in, to prove operating under a restaurant number of women and the possi­ 10-9 Blackmond 's, daily, g:3o:.:s· license, they also could be in that they are better than the guys bility of "cult groups" at Notre they are playing. And when he Special 15% Discount On jeopardy of losing their liquor Dame; women and the priest­ permits. hood, and divorce among Catho­ puts them in, he can't say go in, Merchandise To Notre Dame The standard in question re­ lics. but don't shoot any baskets. quires a permit holder to do at On a lighter note, Hesburgh was There's no way on earth that you least half its bu.siness in other asked by Donahue about whether can train kids to be competitive & St. Mary's Students. than liquor-related sales. there is a conflict between and then just shut it off. " In handing down the decision, "I also saw the Notre Dame­ county liquor board Chairman Christian ethics and ' 'running up" the score in athletic competi­ Navy game, and I thought Coach Harry, Wick said: "It is my Devine could have substituted opinion that the eight Osco Drug tion. announctnq th€ (jRanb Op€ntn(j o~ ''Your awesome University of sooner,'' Donahue persisted. Stores do not do a substantial Hesburgh appeared prepared to portion of their bu.siness at their Notre Dame Fighting Irish bas­ ketball team beat the Wildcats of answer that question, too. ''They premises as a proprietor of a drug substituted against u.s in the THE YELLOW SUBMARINE store as it required of them Northwestern this season by a Cotton Bowl this year, and they by the existing laws and regula­ score of 101-57," he reminded 'a great taste sensation' tions." Hesburgh. "Doesn't that em- lost the game. And they were 22 points ahead of u.s," he said. foot regular long HAM...... 1.60 2.30 SALAMI...... 1.45 2.10 • • • Survey SPICED LOAF...... 1.35 1.90 COMBO CUTS...... 1.55 2.20 Iaux receives award [contz'nued from page 1] ROAST BEEF...... 1. 70 2.50 that proposed by Carroll Hall?' ' CORNED BEEF...... 1.85 2. 75 Kenneth F. Laux, a Notre Laux was a participant in the 124 residents responded ''yes,'' MEATBALL...... 1.40 2.10 Dame senior majoring in physics University's foreign study {>CO­ 8' said "no '' and 56 abstruned. PIZZA...... 1.40 2.10 and Japanese language, has been­ gram in ] apan during his Morrissey representatives selected by .the ] apanese sophomore year. SUPER:SUB "SPECIAL".... 2.95 passed a resolution last night Ministry of Education to receive a which read, ''The Morrissey Hall ------4 "Mombu.sho Award" for gradu­ ., • ALL SANDWICHES SERVED HOT OR COLD Council disapproves of the re_gu­ ., ate education. Thirty of the ., lations on !arietals as stated in ANlJ INCLUDE: CHEESE, LETTUCE, TOMATO, prestigious awards were pre­ duLac, an supports Carroll Hall SWEET ONION, MUSTARD AND YELLOW SUBMARINE sented this year to both· under­ College Bowl in their effort to abolish parie­ DRESSING! ~raduatc; and ~rad~~e scholars tals. '' Ken Kadleck, Morrissey open Fri &Sat til 1 am m Amencan uruvers1t1es. president, stated that the issue ~ ·. Lame, of Chest~rfield, Mo., will sets deadline was "taken very seriously" by phone in order in advance for receive an 18-month renewable the members of the hall, and that · th they supported ' 'any organized scholarship to the physics depart­ The d eadlin e £or entenng e · campu.s-wide. acti9n' to ac::rp.on- Quik Pik-Up Service ment of a state university desig­ College Bowl competition is Feb. strate the antl-)2arletals posmon. nated by the Ministry. It 9th. Team application forms and Kadleck statea that the HPC call 272-4453 includes transporation and field game rules are available in the should be the body to organize study expenses, residence, Student Union office. Anyone in such action since tliey "have the 18109 state rd. 23:(across from fat wally's) tuition and a monthly allowance search of a ·teani can call Ed widest contact to the residence of$730. (2129). halls." EditOrials Thursday, February 8, 1979 .. · pag~ 7 Third World: struggle of a people

Editor's Note: The following is farmworkers when rains prevent President points out, ''All of us negotiations with the canneries season in Ohio, and there we can the ftrst pan of CADENA, the them from working; it is already a know the only time they'll recog­ are the key to any longterm see history live and in colOr. The. Third World Column. It deals state law in Wisconsin. Because nize us is when the crop is in the stability for the farmworkers' movie attests to the fact· that the with the goals of the migrant the farmworker is technically field.'' Even if individual grow­ union and its members. As one farmworkers' struggle has gone farmworkers in their present "employed" when it rains and ers offer wage increases to farmworker organizer put it, ·on for years and years.· bm the' struggle. Pan II will appear on therefore ineligible for aid such farmworkers, as some did last ''FLOC handles the canneries. movement in Ohio is proof that the editorial page tomorrow. as food stamps, a wet season summer, the farmworkers will I'm just helping to get people." that struggle continues .. Here we means no work, no income, and refuse to accept any contract in Getting people means organizing spoke of only a few c~ties in' no means of buying food. which the canneries do not also meetings in the south to let prole northwestern Ohio. But. a vic.tory . ''Maybe someday we will get bet­ Another key issue for the participate. people know about the union in there would have wides_eread ter wages and be treated like farmworkers is housing. State To back their demands, at a Ohio and its demands. Many repercussi?ns, especiaJly if .the humans." regulations for housing in mi­ rally in Toledo on Jan. 28, the leaders in the farmworkers will efforts to mvolve the la:rg~ cor-. grant camps are often tgnored. farmworkers' union and the return to the Ohio area this porations in the contracts· is A line from Henry Fonda in The scenes of the migrant camps FLOC announced they would summer to participate in the successful. It could be. a long, The Grapes of Wrath? No, the in The Grapes of Wrath were launch a massive bor.cott against strike and to encourage any 'long struggle. But as one· woman quote above is not from a movie. very true to life. One room all Campbell's, Libby's, and migrants who do come to the area farmworker at the rally said, It was spoken in Ohio, not in shacks house entire families Nestle's (a parent company to to leave the fields in support of "Maybe when my kids grow· up California, by a real Mexican­ water is ofte available only a; Libby) products. These are the the strike. they can say, 'My mother worked American, not a famous actor, centrally located taps, and dirt major companies contracting How do the farmworkers see in that. My mother helped get and the issue is tomatoes, not and fllth are the ever-present with growers in the area. themselves and their work? ''My better wages.' " · · facts of life. gra~es. But the stories are very In addition to Libb}:"s and Nestle job is very important,'' said one sirrular. Both involve the strug­ Other demands include a four products, many subsidiearies of farmworker at the rally. "It's month medical coverage plan, Campbell's aQpear on the boycott just that I'm not getting paid This week's Third World column gle of migrant farmworkers to was submitted by Cadenda. earn a decent wage and to be transportation payment to and list. Some orthese are Franco­ enough for it." He said he could treated like human beings. You from the workers' home states in American~yepperidge Far.m, take no pride in factory work, the south, and payment to crew Swanson, v-8, Bounty, Rectpe because as he put it, "You can't might say this story begins where pet foods and Vlasic. The Grapes of Wrath left off. leaders for the use and main­ eat automobiles." Note: There will be an organiza­ tenance of their vehicles used in For those involved in the Mi~rant farmworkers are now ~onal meeting tonight at 9 p.m. unioruzing in their homes in the hauling workers and tomatoes.k organizing and boycott, P1e effort When The Grapes of Wrath m LaFortune ballroOm for anyone south to prepare for the coming But recognition of the farm­ is two-fold. On the one hand, was showing on campus two interested in supporting the tomato season in northwestern workers' union by growers and wages and housing are imme­ weeks ago, viewers saw a little farmworker's boyco!f. Ohio. Under the leadership of the canneries is a problem. As diately important to the farm­ history. But there's another the Farm Labor Organizing Baldemar Velasquez, FLOC worker. But on the other hand, Grapes of Wrath showing this Committee (FLOC) and with the help of the United Farm Workers, farmworkers are planning to continue the strike again growers and canners in the P. 0. Box tomato industry that began last Q August. At that time, 200 of jokes, his readers woUld be resident if he has a copy of a - Now what? Which Notre Dame approximately 8000 tomato pick­ student or group of students is erks walked out of fields in rolling on the floor in paroxysms ''Nig~er ~pplication for Employ­ of laughter. Then in their ment which was on the bulletm going to be the ftrst "sucker" to northwestern Ohio, leaving the Minority objection say," Hey, look Admiriistration! croll to rot. The farmworkers are weakened state hey would not board about a year ago). Or notice the weakness of his article. maybe even worse, they will I'm breaking one of the rules," asking for a wage increase, better and then let them make an housing conditions, and a three­ to ' on Astology ' Somehow he overlooked Indians make some trite statement which and Chicacnos; but he may have is merely a paraphrasing of example of you? way contract system involving I feel that the farmworkers, growers and the thought that the other groups something which they heard in a Dear Editor: were funny enough~ The only sociology class. parietal regulation shoUld be canneries, among various other abolished, although I do believe demands. reason that I finished the article The point is, I am not tryin~ to Once again the minority popu­ was to see if there was some condemn Mr. Byrnes; he JUSt that quiet hours should be en­ The most important issue for forced, but I don't see the use of the individual farmworker is lations of Notre Dame and St. point in his inclusion of such happens to be a venient scape­ Mary's have been subjected to statements; there was not. Also, goat. It seems that such humor the hall governments abolishing wages. At present, a workers is it. They don't enforce it, the paid a piece rate of anywhere the 'humor' which is characteris­ I was curious to see whether or and attitudes are alive and well tic of the white, middle-class not there was any mention of on this campu; otherwise, Mr. administration does. The hall from 19-2~ cents per 33 pound governments won't face the con­ hamper of tomatoes. The farm­ student body. Obviously, there Poles, Irishmen, Italians or Byrnes would not have written must be an unwritten law that if Catholics. There was not be­ such an article. Some people sequences, the individual student workers are asking for 35 cents will. It's fine for the student per hamper and a minimum wage you want to get a augh, just cause the majority of Notre Dame may say that I am being oversen­ mention blacks, ) ews, homo­ students fall within these groups, sitive. I believe that while I may body to take a ftrm stand on the of $3.2~ per hour when the piece issue, but let's think this through sexuals, or some other ~roup and Me. Byrnes did not want to be overreacting since the J"okes rate does not add up to at least and act responsibly not like the which does not fit the stattstical offend them (which mi~ht be why were only a small pan o the $3.2~. little kids that can't get their way. One rough estimate is that a norm of what a Notre Dame he used "Negroes" mstead of article, there is a need for healthy young person can pick up student is. "blacks". It is all right, most someone to do so. The problem I commend our hall govern­ to 100 hampers in a day, but this When I ftrst saw the cartoon prefer black). is not my having written this, but ments for actin~ on the problem, involves at least 10-12 hours of under Pat Byrnes' "Intellectual While there may not be many the fact that I had to. I am not but I think they re heading in the asking for an apology; that would work. At 2~ cents per hamper Livin~·', I failed to understand its ) ewish people on campus, the wrong direction. The admini­ and minimum wage , a mearung. Then after close fact that Me. Byrnes felt it be merely more words, probably) stration will not - can not - abolish farmworker can earn a maximum scrutiny, I realized that one of the necessary to make such jokes without any true conviction be­ P.arietals now. It would looks as of about $55 in a day. But when animals was supposed to be s~ems to show a preoccupation hind them. What I am doing is if they were forced into that factors such as weather, size and black---thick lips, fuzzy hair, wtth these r.eople. It is not a expressing my view, not to try to position, and they wori't allow quality of the crop, age and black shading, get it? Such matter of 'out-of-siht, out-of­ change any attitudes (I am a that to happen. They have to physical condition of the indivi­ humor is very outdated, but I mind'' but that only in numbers realist), but to show that there make the decision, we can't and I dual worker, and the sheer guess that since it was does a group get any considera­ are some peole out here listen­ think that this action may cause back-breaking character of the Groundhog's Day, Mr. Byrnes tion of its feelings. Maybe he will ing. And we do care. more delay. work are taken into account, the felt that he should have contri­ say that his article was a satire of I hope that the administration average amount earned in a day buted something. Ho hum, we such attitudes; if so, "You, sir, will soon see that the Notre Dame Name Withheld by any one picker is considerably could have been spared (and lacked clarity and so missed the student body is mature enough to less than $5~. should have been). point." Chances are, he did not handle their own social lives, and In discussing the wage in­ Next, in reading the "On think before he wrote the article. will abolish parietals without crease, one farmworker said, Astrology" anicle, I was amazed If this is true, I find it fitting that being backed into a corner. I also "I'm not saying we want to be as that he would still try such his article came under the head­ Prove maturity hope that our hall goverrunents rich as they (the growers and humor. In trying to get a smile ing of "Intellectual Living". It will review their decisions and canners) are. We just want from his readers, Mr. Byrnes reflects the intellectual level of handle this dilemna in a mature better w~es." decided to throw in ethnic and too many students when it comes with parietals issue way. In addition, the farmworkers sexual jokes as well as racial to the subject of groups which are Robert Bact'c are demanding a work guarantee ones. He mentioned blacks and different from them. The only Planner Resident of at least 28 hours every two watermelons, Jews and money, intellectual acknowledgement Dear Editor weeks. This provision would and homosexuals. Maybe he which they give is in some dirty, So certain hall governments ensure some mcome for the thought that after reading these stereotypical joke (ask a Grace have decided to abolish parietals of either Institution. The news is EDITORIAL BOARD _The Observer_ reported as accurately and as objectively Editor-in-Chief ...... Tony Pace News Editor ...... Diane Wilson as possible. Editorials represent the Managing Editor ...... Steve Odland Spons Editor ...... Ray O'Bnen &x Q Notre Dame, IN 46556 opinion of a majority of the Editorial Executive Editor ...... john Calctm Features Editor ...... Chris Stewart Board. Commentaries, opinions and Executive Editor ...... Barb Lang henry Photo Editor ...... , Doug Chnslian The Observer is an independent newspa­ letters are the views of their authors. Editorial Editor ...... Rosemary Mills per published by students of the Column space is available to all mem· Copy Editor ...... Phil Cac~? Production Manager ...... Mardi Nevin Universiry of Notre Dame and Saint bers of the community, and the free Samt Mary's Editof ...... , FJ/en Buddy Business Manager ...... john Tucker Mary's College. It does not necessarily expression of varying opinions on cam· News Editor ...... Ann Gales Advertising Manager ...... &b Rudy reflect the policies of the administration pus, through letters, is encouraged. News Editor ...... Mike Lewis ------~ ------

The Observer - Editorials Thursday, February 8, 1979 - page 8 Carroll Hall resident clarifies stand I am a Carroll Hall resident and the standard ar~ent against Remember change? I think the step must be taken in order for us gettinf; rid of parietals is a bad considering the recent flurry of parietals may be mvoked, ''What founders of our country thought a to procede; we need a confmna­ thing if it has never been tried controversy over the Carroll Hall can be done after 2:00 that can't little bit about it too. Maybe tion of hall unity. If someone has here? Certainly there would be Council's move to abolish pa­ be done before 2:00?" well, that's a bit dramatic, but it does further suggestions, let us know. confusion at first as things rietals, I would _like to explain, what can? If a couple is goins to get my point across. All we need is support--a strong, change, but with cooperation it clarify, and suggest a few things. have intercourse, it can cenrunly If parietals are abolished, it united, and universal support. could be done. Some halls could be done in fourteen hours. But doesn't mean that the university Represent your sections truth­ still have _parietals, others could First, let me make it clear mat anyway, aren't the problems of will fall apart. It will still be a I, personally, am totallY. against fully and well or you may fmd have 24 hour visitation, and parietals. I just do not like them. roommmates best left up to the C~tholic university, the guidance yourselves out of office after the others could set their own stan­ roommates to be solved, or at wtll still be there. Moral values next election. dards. From now on there could Secondly, ~ reference to the least shouldn't they be solved on may be instilled within us, but What we advocate here at be a small explanation to fresh­ also recent talk about a campus a lower level than involving the they should not be forced upon Carroll is not necessarily a total men of their choices of living wide ''break parietals night,'' the · whole campus? us. Being able to have a friend in abolition of parietals, but what quarters. I personally was not administration need not worry, it the room as long as the person we really want is the chance for told that such a thing as parietals doesn't need to happen. What Another ar~ent for parietals is that they msure quiet hours. likes should hel~ to promote ourselves to decide. It should be existed before I came here. we here at Carroll are trying to maturity, by allowmg responsibi­ a matter for each of the indivi­ My own personal suggestion is invoke is an intelligent and Then, why have parietals on weekends, if quiet hours are not lity and decision making abilities duals within each hall to decide that Carroll Hall should be al­ hopefully positive response to the to develop, not create a disregard what restrictions they want on lowed a trial period in which we question ''Why are there pa­ enforced and do not apply to weekends? Logically following, for a system with too many rules. their own communal lifestyle. I would be allowed to make our netals?" 1bis campus wtde In the meantime, I'll be waiting think the administration would be own decisions, through a hall breaking of parietals would be a parietals should not be enforced or apply to weekends if quiet for more and hopefully better suprised at how intelligent and vote, perhaps for the rest of this last ditch protest used in order to arBU;ID~nts !or panetals from the mature we really are. Please, we semester. Then next year, or the force the issue to a head. hours aren't and don't. During part of the time that quiet hours administration. need all the support we can get. end of this year, we can review Without responsible action on So hall councils and section If there are any brave faculty how the trial period went and both sides now, it could happen are in effect, visitation is allowed in most halls. Are these leads, you are wondering what to members out there who will and then go from there. I really do I. soon. do, you want Carroll to lead the can support us--if you agree with think the administration would be I times any less quiet? Again, just ! because opposite sexes are in the way? Then the ftrist step for the us--call me, Scott Rueter, at very suprised at how responsible 1birdly, I would like to reply to same room, it doesn't mean they rest of the halls is to pass a 283-7986 or mail a letter express­ . we are--we might even quiet some of the comments that have will make more noise than people proposal among themselves, ing your interest to me at 408 down out here. Thank you. been in The Observer since the of the same sex when they are in abolishing parietals or at least Carroll Hall. Any support would ' be~inning of this controversy, the same room. Are there not making them the decision of the be gready appreciated. which include some of the stand­ RAs on duty to enforce quiet hall, and we'll see what can As I satd before, we learn from ing arguments against 24 hour hours? Again, shouldn't the happen from there. 1bis first the past. How is it known that Scott Rueter visitation. One of the standard problem of noise be, and isn't it, arguments against 24 hour visita­ one which is solved on the section tion is that wtth parietals, privacy level or the hall level and not on is provided. Does privacy apply the university level? to members of opposite sexes WhyWSND? only? Can't a person's privacy be In The Observer ofJanuary 31, interrupted by members of his 1979, our rector, Brother Frank or her own gender as well as Drury, is quoted as saying, "If WhyWSND? No one wants to listen to a musical broadcast so those of the opposite one? Are we had more upperclassmen, I'm There are two radio stations located in the tower bathed in static that it sounds like a blender full of there not locks on every private sure there would be a more of O'Shaughnessy Hall both of which bear the call gravel. Or Howard Cosell gargling in the morning. room door on campus to insure mature view. Different things letters WSND. These two are staffed by Notre Or Howard Cosell gargling a blender full of gravel privacy? (Even though several would be discussed.'' What Dame/St. Mary's students (althoughWSNDFM is before bed. people have keys and are not different things? The future? not entirely student-run) and provide an excellent The second problem with WSND-AM is that it restricted entry.) It is also said Sure the future, as well as what opportunity for a student to try his hand at news serves littleuse to the student audience. 1bis is no that d.is privacy includes being goals we should set and how we reponing, sports broadcasting, disc- jockeying and doubt related to the first fault; there is little able to walk around the hall should attain them, is important, other jobs connected with the medium. As Du Lac student interest in the station because it's barely audible (or not stereo) and so there are fewer good naked. I asked, who really wants but so is the present. Parietals succ~nctly sta~es 1 • WSND7FM has a "cl~sical to? I'm not particularly enthused affect us now. It is something we .~s1c onentatton and so 1s not the real subJeCt of programs of interest to the students being about seeing naked guys around want to change now, not just this letter. On the other hand, WSND-AM plays broadcast. Consequently, the "special" programs my hall. In fact, I have yet to see shrug off with apathetic words of, contemporary music and is geared primarily .for have become rather rare and almost always someone here to to the restroom "Hell, we'll be out of here soon." students. ridiculous. Case in point: last Monday's Radio with anything less on than what The future is not the only From my experience as a Ted Baxter-type in the Free Notre Dame talk show which was to feature they might wear in public. Also, important thing. We learn from news department at WSND-AM last year, I know ND sex authority Brian Hogan degenerated into a what make 2:00 or 12:00 the the past and the present is alway that the radio station has good (yet somewhat ludicrous display of the latest off-color jokes and magic hour for a person to say, always here--we cannot ignore it. austere) facilities. It is staffed by some very songs. Though the hosts were entertaining, their "Hey, I wanna go to the john Besides, upon becoming an up­ dedicated individuals and has a really fine lise of double-entendres and their cutsie attitudes naked!'' I was told by someone perclassman, does one automa­ collection of music in its album library. But despite toward serious phoners also set the tone for the here in Carroll that he ''would tically become mature? 1bis all that it has going for it, WSND-AM has rest of the show. The callers responded rather put on a robe, than tell would seem to imply that going to somethin~ seriously wrong with' it. I say this accordingly and the ''discussion'~ degenerated to a someone to get out.'' college makes one maure. (It's because m talking to many of my acquaintances funny, yet intellectually empty series of pranks. I've discovered that nearly all of them never listen Similarly, other radio programs have become silly It is also said that between on the diploma in fme print.) 1bis also implies that anyone who regularly to "their" radio station and most of them exibitions ofDJ "personalities" or of bush-league roommates, there is the right that have never even tuned it in. disco music. they should each have the free­ doesn't go to colle~e is terminally immature. If this is not true, Now, I'll be the first to agree that my little What should be done with WSND? First, we dom to enter their room without should remind the staff of WSND, the students of ''interrupting'' something. then I think we should ask survey can hardly be called a tightly-screened, "What is mature? How does statistically-accurate poll. However there is ND/SMC and anybody else that cares to listen that First, that implies that there is the primary concern of a student radio station something to "interrupt." 1bis one become mature, and when something amiss that these audiophiles and media freaks would never bother to spin their dials to 640 should be the needs of its student audience. Of means that the does one become mature?'' Personally, I resent being called A.M. course, the station provides excellent experience fo reason for parietals is that the for the staff members but the purpose of this public administration afraid of stu­ immature merely because I am a Well, what is wrong with WSND? First off, it's is AM. AM-radio has poor sound quality: stereo medium is to serve the public (i.e. its audtence) - dents engaging in sexual activity, sophomore. music cannot be broadcast over the AM· band and not just prqvide jobs for its employees. If this which is also, well, dumb. Brother Drury is also quoted as (although I understand that advances in this are were not the case, then a whole lot of money could Merely because someone is in saying, ''No matter where you go area have been made recently), Monaural AM is be saved if we just "pretended" that the radio someone else's room, it doesn't or what you do people will be station was actually broadcasting and then mean that they must have inter­ nice in the dash of a VW or in a jacket pocket at the telling you what to do, and this ball park but it is totally unacceptable and almost students could still get all that valuable experience course. If it does then there are happens all throughout life ... you from a complete, full-scale radio station mock-up. quite a few homosexuals on sacreligious on a $2000 stereo system. What is are going to be marching to even more annoying about the sound quality of a How could the needs of both staff and audience campus. 1bis is not meant to be many tunes." Now, merely best be met? IncreasingWSND'sAM power inight a "dig" at homosexuals, it is only WSND-AM broad cast is that often there is no because someone is telling you sound at all. The broadcast power of WSND is so help though I doubt it (1t may not be permitted by a way to say that someone who what to do, you. do.n't have to. do the FCC). What the students want (and need!) is has sexual relations with every­ weak that audible or intelligible reception is it. If you don t like something normally impossible in my room on the ufper floor stereo. Why not have WSND-AM and WSND-FM on:~ who enters his or her room is there is this thing called change. ofFlanner and, I suspect, in other areas o campus. switch P.laces: could the punk rock and jazz go to extremely prolific. At this point FM while the super market Muzak went to AM? If not, what aboutWSNDAM going cable? These are DOONESBURV by Garry Trudeau just a few questions (from a person of very questionable intelligence) which deserve to be examined. QJN3RES5MAN, WOU/.OYOU What will be done? Probably nothing. The 'rfJIJ'V&fJEEN IN fl£TURN 7D WCKJ/.0 'rfJIJ .. Administration will no doubt dismiss this by SClf-IMRJSEI) C/JN6I?ES5 IF · YE.5, I IAJOU/.0. /.J.lJUWYOU singing the "Ain't Got No Money or Time" blues ~XIIENW~ S&tflf7l)R !

Professions under siege Notre Dame's singular voice

The status of anY. profession arranged and organized with a One of Ray Bradbury's short stories depicts how when Notre Daine replaces them, it attempts to goes up and down hke the stock distinct practical purpose in view. the bodies of a family killed by a nuclear fallout place controls on the student to keep up its unage market, in response to things That is what makes it a were reduced to ashen silhouettes on the walls of of a cloistered America. other than net worth. And, for a 1 profession.' " Since the laity, by their home. From what I've seen, as a naive So, here we are. The hope of the world. Yet, decade or more, the public and definition, has no such purposes freshman, a nuclear fallout has hit Notre Dame. where we have been begged to lead, we are forced the press have made it clear that and lacks special tratning, a As I walk from class to class I see similar to follow. Notre Dame seems to give no other the learned professions are not profession is necessarily a mono­ shadows of what were once people; a frozen choice. (In the immortal words of Carroll Rector the splendid companies, held in poly. In modern soc1eties this pantomime of stoic characters engaged in stoic Bro. Frank Drury, "No matter where you go or awe and respect, that they once monopoly is made legal by a action. I see them everywhere: m the offices, what you do, people will be telling you what to were. license to practice. Professionals where papers drift from desk to desk;, in the do ... '') As a matter of fact, we seem to give Doctors, formerly worshiped as justify the monopoly by calling it stadium, ashes falling on tier after tier; in the ourselves no other chance. We refuse to omniscient Good Samaritans, are essential to the safety of the library, littered among the bookshelv~s. ~o.thing is communicate to one another on a personal level. now seen as profiteers, often of public. But between monopoly left of these people except fo:r certatn radioactive We refuse to be nothing other than silhouettes. doubtful competence, who cover and conspiracy the line of demar­ sensations which crackle and sputter like an old Striking up a conversation with a stranger is like up one another's homicidal mis­ cation is hard to fix and easy to wireless, groping for a mouth to give them voice. overturning a chess board; it disrupts a game we takes. Lawyers, once the defen­ step over. You can perceive these sensations all the time: in seem to enJOY so much playing. It s time that we ders of private and civil rights, The upshot is that a profession an accidental _glance at someone you would like to unplug ourselves from our calculators and overturn now are thought neglectful and is by nature a vulnerable institu­ knowi an inaavertant brush across the cheek in a a few chess boards. It's time to reach out to extortionate, calculatedly deceiv­ tion. It makes claims; it demands crowaed bar; when something in you screams to others--l'm not talking about the needy--I'm ing the public through purposely unique privile~es; and it has to say "hello," and all you can muster is a muted, talking about the pers.on who ju!!t bumped into.you mystifying language. The aca- perform. But I 1t'' of course does half-garbled sound. These shadows cannot speak at COrby's. It'S' ttme to dirty our precious not exist as a single entity; it is a because they have lost their concrete form. monogrammed-sweaters with the dirt and beautiful demics lost their prestige by their few hundred or many thousands Emotions have been replaced by standardized tests fmgrance of the human experience. Life isn't all fecklessness in t.he campus of individuals, who differ as and as a result the ability to communicate feelings Fifth Avenue--don't forget skid row. troubles of 1965-1970. The widely as all other human beings, is lost. As for the University Itself, it had better begin to scientists, demi-gods since Dar­ yet who, as professionals, are The trouble with the Voice of Notre Dame is just immerse itself in the real world. With a virtual win, became objects of suspicion expected to act in a standard that. Notre Dame has only one Voice. The voice Shangri La to live in, it's no wonder that no one after Hiroshima. Latest· on the manner and to be invariably that cheers at sporting events. The Voice that wishes to move off campus. Shadows cannot live carpet, the austere, unfathom­ successful in their art. complains against off-campus housing. The Voice behind grimy windows with the reality of an empty able accountant is being shown In fact, though, as a whole that wants parietals abolished. In this great refrigerator and leaking roof. They need the up as a master of misrepresenta­ every profession is horribly melting pot of America, Notre Dame is one of those illus10n of life the Golden Dome offers. When the tion, a cordon bleu at cooking the average, mediocre. By definition institutions where students are not thrown together illusion is removed, when the students are given books. it cannot be anything else. But from different backgrounds, but selected and the responsibility to choose and communicate that Long ago, Bernard Shaw wrote the public expectation aims much casted from a single mold of clay. Suburbia is fine, choice, perhaps the fallout will end and we can that t self-governed profession is 11 higher than mediou:ity, so that in but it's only one aspect of the world we live in. In recover our individual emotions and voices. Those a conspiracy against the laity.'' a time of reckoning, when the struggling to become the Westchester of academic voices may not be in the grand ol' Notre Danie The epigram should not be laity is hot about its rights, institutions, Notre Dame cannot adequately pre­ tradition, of unity, but in a variety that will round dismissed as a joke or a needless general dismay and recrimination pare us for, as poet Allen Ginsber~ sar.s, "a out the squares in our plaid pants. exag~eration. The only overem­ are inevitable. What is more, starving, torn-apart, freaked out world. ' Suburbia phasis is in the word conspiracy, although any art should be is an illusionary projection from the evils of life and which implies a secret purpose to judged by its best results, a overreach the public. Yet it is democr~tic nation, bent on equal­ that very imputation of making return the boy. " on various professional boards on fact, are fot crinlinals apd ·compe- : ity in all things, is sure to judge a titors, no( for. ·profe'ssions ·.that· the most of closely held secrets profession by its worst exem­ It is because of these intrica­ the ground that internal manage­ that becomes the common man's want to be known· as· deditai:ed.: plar~. That is the condition we cies behind the gross results--a ment is unable to serve the public idea of a profession when it No .doubt tpe professiQ·naJ" codes ·. are tn now. cure, a good education, winning fairly without supervision. The begins to lose the public's faith Consider the malpractice suit. the lawsuit--that for centuries It great force of government money now in force· ·cah 'benefit from . · revision, bur"_ wna't I • profes> and regard. And there lies the From one point of view, it is just has seemed best to let the works to the same en:d, for the th~. danger. For the obvious next that a patient--or his heirs-­ professions police themselves. bureaucracy follows the funds sions need ·first is. the. will· t9: idea that occurs to the aroused should recover damages for care­ But the regulati .1s of business and while directing their use is police themsd.ves. with n9 fr~ter- ·. critics is to demand strong super­ less or ignorant treatment. From came about because business did bound to control the user. nal hand, ·~ith ~o tho~ght · of vision from outside. another point of view, it is absurd not regulate itself. It exploited Such moves, whether viewed public relations ... Any few scan:. Yet better relations between that after the best/rofessional labor and the buyer, under the as threats or reforms, signify one dais giving the.group.a bad qirne layman and professional can efforts failure shoul be a cause motto "The public be damned." thing: The modern professions will soon conyince ·the pul>lic thai. hardly be brought about in of complaint. Yet a customer An alert professional today has . have enjoyed their monopoly so self-policing.rneans .w~ar.it s~ys mutual suspicion and hostility. cannot· tell whether he has had the uneasy feeling that the long that they have forgotten that and corif1dence w1ll return. Nor can there be improvement the best. He judges by gross professions are at the juncture it is a privilege given in exchange Disciplining ·from ·within· ·musi: through collective bargaining. c~ntinue,. ste;1dily and ~1fn:t, or .it results--kill or cure--and wants where the same motto IS being for a public benefit. Occasional The essence of those relations is complaints have been interpreted wt!l be . taken ~vet. by . pubhc the reasons plain. imputed to them. bodies. · · · · individual, from which it follows The subtleties of the predica­ There are other signs · of a as envy or misunderstanding, that some clearer idea of what a ment are even clearer in educa­ gradual demoting of the profes­ instead of what they are: resent­ But policing,.bei~g· ~egative 1 .is profession is must once again tion, where the failure to 11 edu­ sions to the level of ordinary ment at breach of faith, contempt not enough.: Moral r:egeneratton become common property among cate'' a particular student is trades and businesses. The right of complacency. can come · abou( only when the insiders and outsiders both. evident in the student, yet as­ of lawyers and physicians to It may be, of course, that we members of a. group feel once more confident that ethical beha­ According to Abraham Flex­ signing blame is beyond human advertise, which reintroduces are witnessing the evolution of a nee, the famous reformer of Wit. Nor can our modern system money competition, has been drive toward a society collecti­ vior is desirabl.e, ·widely prac­ medical education nearly 70 follow the example of the old­ granted. Architects are being vized through and through, the ticed, . approved and ·admlred. years ago, to be medically trained time college president who said allowed to act as contractors. theory being that no individual or Mter a marked decline, . it . can 1mplies "the possession of cer­ to the indignant parent: "Ma­ Teachers have been unionized. group can be trusted. That would only be a slow growth; and. only tain portions of many sciences dam, we guarantee results--or we Laymen demand the right to sit mean the death of the very idea one fo.r:ce can start it on its way: of a profession. the force of moral arid .intellectual The message for the profes­ leadership. All the ptofessfons sions to~ay is t~at their ~ne h~pe need critics from inside·, men who of surv1val w1th anythtgn like know what conditions: are and can their present freedoms is the .. offer their fellow practiti<)n~rs a recovery. of. mental and · moral new vision of the prof~ssi6n ~ an ·force. Moral here does not mean ·institution. . · , . merely honest; it refers to ·the · For each profession;. ·qetails nature of any encounter between · will have to be spelled out and two human beings. As soon as a embe~dc;d in generalJ?~i~ciples. person serves another, . ethical The rum 1s to hft the cnuq~e: from 1ssues spring to life and get a set of complaints to .a set of settled well or badly. Such purposes. That is what Flexner l?ractices as experiments on poor did when he riddled medical patients, or operations by young education in 1910. He changed residents while the patient thinks American medicine, having made he is in the hands of the great it impossible for do-nothing surgeon, seem clear-cut matters schools to continue in being: that find their parallels iri teach­ When the problem is a failure ing and in the law. But more of competence and morality, subtle situations arise from group nothing will solve it but the work practice, in any profession, of an mdividual mind and con­ where the client may be tossed science, aided of course by the about among several hands, los­ many scattered men of talent and ing confidence all the while, and good wil! who are only waiting for in the end knowing that responsi­ a lead. Without some such heroic ble attention has been denied effort, we professionals shall all him. go down--appropriately--as. non­ Moral sensitivity will not re­ heroes together. turn to the individual practitioner Jacques Barzun {Historian and by his guild's writing a fresh Professor Emeritus, Columbia code. A code only sets the limits University) beyond which behavior will be Editor's Note: Reprinted with condemned, and the moral level permission from the January, is not high when most of those 1979 Readers Digest (c) 1978 The living under it always act within a Reader's Digest Association, hairline of those limits. Codes, in Inc., Pleasantville, N.Y. 10570

. · ...

.,~. -<·-1i~i--~ '"'Wi!i'~ ·lll·-~-~----~- ·Features -Thursday, February 8, 1979 - 10 ·THE iVA VB .·OF THE FUTURE ·.· ·New WaVe: Another English Ripple Tim Sullivan · Th~ Beatles, ·by definition, tions ''that new British trash.'' fresh British music emerges, Pistols, punk's worst disaster groups like Klark Kent and wete a riew wave group 'before· y ~t very few of these same remjnisq:nt of the ftrst English and therefore the most success­ Generation restate the existen­ · their time_. . . individuals· have ever taken the wave of which the Beatles, the ful, attests to this. Punk groups tialist doctrine that life is ab­ · No doubt the abOve staterP,ent trouble . to sit down and really Who, and· the Rolling Stones fail to last more than a year. surd, but they make a joke of pr<>duc~d· physiol9gica.Liy · ·.and · see what New Wave l:,las·to s.ay. were· so prominent a part. Punk, like a flash fire, was this somber thought. Only a psychologica-lly ·damag.ing But that's o.k.'a lot of dumb Fi:rst, New Wave is not punk horrific at first, but didn't last sense of humor can save man· waves af abht>rreoce ·. itl any. people· also ignored the Beades · rock, and punk rock is not New long. kind. devoted' fan of the Fab Four.· when their music ftrst arrived Wave. Punk rock grew out of New Wave is the moderate Indeed, New Wave is worth Whether: one . likes it or oot, on our American shores. the depression and frustration and yet provocative reaction to listening to. Not only are the however, the U.k.; Squee~ and The pubiic' s general hatred ·of England's young ·working to punk, with various styles and songs an attempt to see life as it .the Bea des. shiJ.re the · saine and distaste of New Wave class, who found it lffipossible messages worth listerung to. appears to be, but the music, too.ts in jolly ~ld England. Still, . st¢ms ·from several generaliza- to· ftnd · a job ot better the- Most New Wave groups consist altho1;1gh a ~it mechar_ll~al and most· Beaile worshippers wotild . tions; IJlisconceptiollS, and pre­ . themselves socially because of of artists, using the music to repetmve, 1s entertatnmg as .cringe, ai the . thought of e~en . judices produced by its _bastard Britain's floundering economy. paint a ·portrait of the world as well. att~tnptit,lg to·. c(?m~are Jofln, brother, punk rock, which was Rebellious youths saw the eco­ they see it. The scenes of In the sixties, America rus­ Pa.ul, ·George, and Ringo to the. ·the flrst ripple of Erigland's . nomic structure as part of the mankind they present are often covered England, releasing a British musical .discord .called l~test rock trend to touch the ''old-age establishment.'' frightening, sometimes humor­ flood of new groups answering Ne~Wave .. · · . States. The well-deserved dis­ In anger and pain, punk rock ous, and always fresh. to the needs of those weary of In fact; most intelligent gust produced by d)is. tribute to was formed as an outlet for The U.K. Squeeze envisions a primordial rock-n-roll. Out of beings· would 'not even. lower sadism and loud clanging caco­ frustrations and protest. Punk mechanical humanity, driven this torrent emerged the themselves ·td listen to . the phony turned. ~eads away fr?~ rock is inherently anti­ into submission by the routines Beatles, who singlehandedly supposedly dete:;;table stuff. the · more c1vil tones which establishment, anti-England, of daily existence. Their turned .the tide of pop music As a 'resiltt, ~ost "musically followed. Ifone looks closely at and anti-everything, even anti­ American counterparts, the forever after. The New Wave, if aware' ' people fuid · it fashlon­ the evolution ofNewWave and punk rock. As a result, punk Talking Heads and Devo, also given half a chance, may repeat ~bl~ i:o &rimace ·and fain gastric · strips away the guile flavors of· was doomed to die before it was forge this impression. history and give us a new mdigest'lon whenever one. men- punk rock, an exciting exodus of born. The fate of the Sex Lesser known New Wave Beatles.

Q. Is-~Th-is Not Rock? Mick Mancuso People so far have just been rehashing song you've got it licked and listening to and being detivative and making it [rock the rest of the album should be no music] all into one constipated rut, ana problem. DEVO just wanted to give everything a A sense of nervous urgency comes big enema, so we did!'' through in Mark Devo's vocals, especi­ That's the way Jerry Devo puts the ally on "Too Much Paranoias," an ode to · "why" of DEVO. Like a knife cutting the fears of induced consumption. This through a world hung up on following same feeling comes to life in their parody the crowd. DEVO' s debut release Q: of male sexual disfunction "Sloppy". Are We Not Men? A: We Are DEVOl is No subject is out of DEVO' s realm as is the sound of things falling apart. It's evidenced by two outstanding cuts, very DEVO. "Uncontrollable Urge" and "Mongo­ The spud boys, as they call loid." themselves hail, from Akron, Ohio. One strength of DEVO' s music is that :"What," you say, "Not Akron, bastion there are no weaklings on this album. If of normalcy!" But it's true, and it was you lik any of it you' II probably like it all. ''clean living ' ' that inspired the Another amazing fact is the abilitiy of formation of DEVO in 1974 when Jerry the musicians. Their talent is apparent, Casale and Mark Mothersbaugh met especially in electronics, but lt is a while studying art at Kent State. Two shame that at times it is masked by the brothers and a drummer were added and sheer repetitiveness of their music. But from there on things started to de­ of all the facets of DEVO, the strongest evolve. is innovation. Finally someone has De-evolution, what DEVO is all about, created music for the paranoid-schizo­ concerns man ·becoming so advanced phrenic. and so robot like that he falls into slavery The band recently appeared on to machines and the system. To survive ' 'S:¥lillday Night Live'' and did excellent he must de-evolve and start all over live versions of ''Jocko Homo" and again. Or so they say. "Satisfaction". The performance The album itself is a p.leasant surpr!se appeared on the surface as an amusing as far as new wave albums go. Bnan stunt, if not a joke. But to DEVO-tees Eno does an excellent job producing a and many others of slightly twisted quite difficult product. Mechanical rock insight another meaning came through: is a good way to describe DEVO's mix of these guys are for real! The spuds are repetitive guitar riffs, electronic wizar­ serious about their music. I wouldn't dry and robot voices. The sound that recommend DEVO for everyone, it takes results is totally .unlike anything else. an extremely open musical mind plus a For those wanting a crash course in taste for the bizarre for true enjoyment. DEVO, ''] ocko Hom<(, ~ ~dentin~ But beware disco-drones and pop­ anthem to ·De-evo/utzon 1s highly adVi­ rockers, DEVO many be the sound of the sable. If you can get through the whole future come. "------~------

he Observer Features Thursday, February 8, 1979- page 1 - : Good Ole' Boys Chris Stewart, Features Editor .After numerous phone calls to The Eubanks: It would never happen in spontaneous. Stewart sets the mood Marshall Tucker Band's director of this band. We went through a lot of very, very well. · public relations, Patti Mitsui in Beverly pressure when we were coming up. We Stewart: Do you think you'll ever go Hills, our lines finally hooked up. An were the opening act for the Allman b~ to Macon to do any recording, or interview with the band was arranged Brothers when they were the biggest will Marshall Tucker do all their fUture with the band's road manager, jim group in the world ('74). We saw them work in Miami, as with Running £de Bannan, who was supposed to contact break up. And that was a real good The Wind? me the week preceeding their perfor- lesson. Eubanks: Never. If I never walk in the mance at the AC£.. Stewart: So you witnessed the same city of Macon llffain, I'll be happy. Saturday morning, January 27, Jim pressure destroy the Allman Bros.? Stewart: You re that tired of it? woke me up, and tentatively scheduled Eubanks: We saw it do them in, so Eubanks: Yes, I cenainly am. I just the interview for 4 p.m., because the when we got that status, it started spent too many years of my life working band was still sleeping from their gettin' to us. But we think we learned to ~d being there, and I've had enough of previous night's engagement in Milwau- cope better. lt. kee. 4 o'clock turned to 5, to 6 and what Most bands have guys from all over Stewart: What can we expect in the the hell, I wasn't expecting any miracles, the country. They don't have anything future from the MIB? figuring that they all came down with a in common. We do. Everybody knows Eubanks: Lots of good music. severe case of don't-hassle-me-iris. where each other came from, so you Stewart: How long will the Marshall . Hey, you know I'm cool; it wasn't the can't get too hi~h-handed. Tucker Band be at the top? fJist time I've been shafted, and it won't Stewart: You re all from Spartanburg, Eubanks: Who knows? S--, you be the last. But you can bet your a-- I South Carolina. can never tell what the public is going to won't be buying any MIB lp's in the Eubanks: Yes. We're all from the want. near future. same town, and thathelpsa lot. (Enter , exhibitor of nasty Yeah, I know that Firefall was too loud y, c ld II Stewart: The sroup has produced 7 T-shirts) and their vocals sounded like sandpaper 0Y a we albums, six of which have gone gold ... Stewart: What was the biggest scraping a cheese grater. They pulled funniest, and most obscene, T-shirts I've Eubanks: And two platinum. transition that the MIB had to make their romantic tunes off OK. During ever seen. Since this is a Catholic Stewart: ... That's a pretty high from its days of obscurity to its present intermission, I was not to be denied. I school, and one of the words are among success rate. I'm curious, with that kind state of fame? trudged down to the dressing room, the seven unmentionable words, I re- of success, what does the band look Gray: We don't have to play Sam and feigning reporter arrogance and de- frain from describing his perverse forward to? What keeps Marshall Dave songs anymore. manding to see Bannan. anecdote. Tucker motivated? (Laughs) ''You heard me right. Features Editor Get on with it, already. Eubanks: We just signed a new Stewart: There's one very important for the Observer, and I'm here to Stewart: Jerry, you guys have spent contract with Warner Brothers, and our thing I have to clear up torute. Where arrange for a post-concert tet a tet with many years together as a sroup. Do you next lp will be out on Warner Brothers did Marshall Tucker get its name? I've these good ole' Southern boys." get tired of playing with the same records. We just keep making music. read it was on a key that one of you He was very cordial, quite accomodat- people? Are there ever any problems Really, as artists, to make money and found. Another story claims it was the in~. "No sweat, meet me out here ten with sensitive egos? enjoy success just sets us free. It name of a blind black pianist who once rrunutes after the show. The guys like to Eubanks: Ego is not a problem with doesn't matter whether we get gold loaned the group a rehearsal hall. have a few minutes alone to recoup their our group at this point. I think any group records. Of course, I want to keep Gray: It was a key; it was on the name resources." of people are going to have ego ~etting gold records. But all that means tag of the key of a place we rented. We Hey, Jim, yo comprendo. Gracias. problems. We've essentially had such IS that I can do what I want to do. picked the name ... The interview was shared with another common roots through the years that Stewart: Has the money and fame Stewart: Rented from the black guy? reporter, Jeff Barkus from The South we've been able to work things out. If changed you much? Eubanks: ... Come to fmd out he wasn't Bend Tnliune. Had not Jeff brought somebody gets out of hand, the other Eubanks: It's made me a lot freer. I black. He was a white guy, he was blind; along his trusty tape recorder, you fine five guys will take him off in a corner and can do whatever the hell I want to do he tuned pianos. He had rented the Notre Dame and Saint Mary's humans beat the hell out of him. without havin~ to worry about where the place before us. His name was still on would not be reading this review. (Laughs) rent money IS coming from. That's the tag. Thanks, Jeff. Stewart: The closeness of the group is mainly what it's done ... Stewart: So, it was a key to the hall ... Most of the interview was held with an interesting aspect of Marshall .. .I devoted my life to music because I Gray: We needed a name for a radio Jerry Eubanks, Marshall Tucker's flutist Tucker. I was readirig one of your press thought we could be successful. I advertisement for a show we had that and saxaphone/layer par excellence. releases, which was discussing the tragic wouldn't have dedicated my life if I weekend. We didn't have a name for the Toward the en , Doug Gray--the lead demise of the Allman Brothers. It didn't think we couldn't be successful at band. So we said 'Hey ... that sounds singer--joined the discussion. I might appears that their situation stands little it. I thought all the guys were talented, good ... Marshall Tucker ... sounds like a add that Doug was wearing one of the chance of ever happening to your group. dedicated, and devoted. That's what it band!' And that's where it came from. r------_:__ _:__.::_..., takes: dedication and persistence, to We found out later that the guy was a stay in there through the hard times. blind piano tuner. Tim Sullivan We started out just playing as an After a beer, and an exchange of opening act. Bands like 1bree Dog addresses (Doug Gray promised to UFO Shall Night gave us 15 minutes for a set. We forward me one of his infamous drove all the. ,way to LA from South T-shirts), the Marshall Tucker Band Carolina to play · '15 minutes at the departed for their beloved Spartanburg. Forum. Things like that just built our I've reconsidered; maybe I'll buy one Re""ain~ Strange.r~ audience slowly but surely. of their albums afterall. Ever since Peter Frampton rose out of and all the similar musical diseaSes We played a year as an opening act; relative obscurity with a multi-platinum produced when one overcompensates in then a year as special guest and then a live album in 1976, virtually every major thi$. manner; chose to let the recordittg third year we started headlining very group and a few unknowns have hit the talents of Nevison take care of the echo small halls--3,000 seat halls. We spent 2 recording industry with a glut of live and their own playing talen~s take ~.pf'· •• • years building up as a headline act. samplings. With the exce.{>tion of the audience. niis grand gesture, Stewart: When did you start headlin- Jackson Browne's "Runmng on however, turns out to be a mistake. ong, 1971-72? Empty,'' however, no one has been able This brin~s us to the second major Eubanks: We started recording in '72. to duplicate Petey the Pretty Boy's fault--UFO Itself. Though Phil M~g~$ We didn't start headlining until early success. UFO, the hard-rocking Brittsh vocals are strong arid melodicil.lly '74. That's when the Searchin' For A five-man band, will unfortunately con­ pleasant, they are larijely uninspired./ Rainbow album came out. That was our tinue this trend. Andy Parker's drumming coupled with first bi~ album, the fJISt platinum also. "Strangers in the Night," UFO's Pete Way's ~ass wor~ provides ~solid (Editors note: a gold record indicated latest release, is appropriately tided rhythm secnon which occasstonally sales exceeding $1 million; platiflum since this live double-set will contribute erupts into some exciting riffs· but th~~ .· indicates sales exceeding one million little to familiarizing the common folks relaxes into dull competency. · ~? units, or albums.) with this competent but faceless group. leaves guitar virtuoso Michael Schenk~ . Stewart: Back then, did you really Although sublimely produced by Ron to cartY, the greatest petfonning ~oac;L think that the Marshall Tucker Band Nevison (the slick manipulator Of that As easily as he can walk, he SWttclt~ · would be as big as you are today? sickeningly commercial but highly suc­ from blazing rock-out chords to screan)~/ Eubanks: Yes, sure did. I thought it cessful troupe called the Babys), exces· ing and/or sensitive leads, which vary#} was a process that if we could stay sively decorated by Hipgnosis (if you've flavor from intense to siniple m.ajestY~i together andkeep working at it, it would seen a Pink Floyd cover you know what I Unfortunately, UFO attempts to show,.. happen. In this business, you simply mean), and adequately performed by the case roo much of Schenker's talent ash¢ outlast the competition. band, this album nusses the point of tries too hard in too many long solos~ Stewart: Does the band prefer playing Doug Gray recording live in the first place. Paul Ray.roond,. the keyboards speciali$t, to live audiences over studio recording?" ======l "Strangers" ' faults are twofold. issimplylacklustet. WfultUFOneeds~ Eubanks: Yeah. We were always a First, the worst possible location was someone who can act as a foil {Qr live band. We had to learn how to make chosen to tape the concen-·the Chicago Schenker's talent, and a Rood multikey~ records. It took us a long time. Our Devo... Amphitheatre. This cavernous architec­ boards operator would he1p. UFO mu.st newest record Running Like The Wind, know this; Raymond is their t:hin,:l is a major step for us. It's the best thing continued from page 10 tual travesty is reknowned for its Maybe so. Then again, what Devo says ungodly echo-and reverb which makes keyboards player in the group's six-y~ we've ever done. does give others some food for future recording almost impossible. Chicago is history. · Stewart: The new album is with your Though far from intolerable, new producer, Stewart Levine. ·~thought. If the group accomplishes supposedly one of UFO's popularity neither for the rest, at least their strongholds, hut judging from the "Strangers" isn't very good either. Eubanks: Yes. He's a dynamite Songs like "Too Hot to Handle/' producer. He's worked with jazz outrageous song techniques make their crowd's respon· they must have first album a must for anyone's record charged 100 doL.~s per ticket. Most "Natural Thing," and "Let It Roll/} musicians for so long, he's used to collection--anyone, that It, who can groups faced with these conditions though excellent in the studio versionst things being spontaneous. He sets up woula try to fight the poor acoustics and reprOduce flady on this sample. A live the mood in such a way as to allow the appreciate a bizarre, but half-serious album should have some ''punch,'' some musicians fo play spontaneously. Rock philosophy. • lethargic crowds ; by cranking up to This album is an unforgettable experi­ maximum volume and power-chording gutsiness, or something "extra." that 'n roll bands usually don't do that, but ln.akes the record special. This one does . Marshall Tucker is like that. We're ence. some enthusiasm into the listless Thank you, Neil Young. audience. But UFO, fearful ofdistortion OQf, ''' ( ; I much like a jazz band in that We are -~--~~ -----

- The Observer Thursday, February 8, 1979 - page 12 MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. The lightnin~ was detected by could come from ''chemical Scientists said there are three (AP)-Early findings from Pioneer the orbiter which has remained frres" on the surface or in the distince cloud layers on Venus, a NASA Venus I and II show Venus' fierce above the Venusian surface and very hot and dense lower atmos­ total of 12 miles thick. The top atmosphere and surface include apparently can't be seen from the phere near the surface. layer is about 55 degrees Fahren­ continuing lightnin~ above and a surface. They said the frres could be heit, the second layer about 68 glow from '' mystenous chemical The glow was detected by two fueled by reactions involvihg degrees and the bottom, which · fires" below, scientists said yes­ probes on the side of the planet sulphur compounds or from the they said is the only layer opaque terday. facing away from the sun. heated or electrically charged enough to be like most earthly releases The information was released Scientists called the!.low myster­ surfaces of the probe craft them­ clouds, is about 395 degrees. from the National Aeronautics ious and unexpecte , and said it selves. Sulphuric acid droplets plus and Space Administration's liquid and solid sulphur appear to Ames Research Center and came drift slowly down from the Pioneer about two months after the clouds, scientists said. The orbiter Venus I and five atmos- material vaporizes and splits up pheric probes called Venus II as it sinks, forming what they reached the tJlanet. called "chemical stew." The lightrung which scientists Bus collides with train said flashed as often as 100 times· findings · n five minutes was also recorded by Russian spacecraft which was Cl-llCAGO (AP)-A bus returnin_g lacerations, attendants said. sent to the planet shortly after kindergarten children to therr The bus driver, Lester Moody, Jury indicts the American crafts. Sctentists homes after morning classes 29, a music teacher at the from Venus said they got the Soviet results collided with a railroad locomo­ Rqseland Christian School on the only yesterday. tive yesterday and was dragged South Side, was charged with 60 feet down the tracks. Author­ £ · ~e to yield ~e right-of-way at prosecutor ities said two youngsters were railroad crossUig . ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ! WEIRTON, W.Va. (AP)-A fed­ • • killed and 17 injured. "We ran out and saw that this • The Professional Touting Co. of • engine, which wasn't pulling any eral grand jury has indicted a Police said the bus had stopped tars, had carried the bus down local prosecutor, three lawyers and started through the intersec­ the tracks about 60 feet or so," and 21 others in connection with : GODSPELL : tion just after a frei~ht train had an alleged gambling operation, passed. A locomotive going the said Beatrice Taylor, a bookkeep­ • • er at the South Shore Iron Works, authorities said yesterday. opposite direction then collided The indictments accuse Han­ • • with the bus . who heard the crash from her • • office . cock County Prosecutor Robert • • The dead youths were identi­ She said there are no gates at Altomare of running his office as • • fied as Faith Alexander, 6, and the crossing on the Louisville & a "racketeering enterprise" and • • Anthony Thompson, 5, both ~ Nashville Railroad line . charge him with bribery, obstruc­ • • the South Side. tion of justice and aiding gam­ • • All the children were 5 or 6 • • One of the injured, Randolph years old, hospital attendants blers by not enforcing state laws • • Small, 5, was reported in critiCal said. Including the driver, there against them. • • condition. Patricia J oily, 5, was were 20 persons in the bus which The indictments were returned • listed in serious condition. The has a seating capacity of about by a grand jury in Elkins on • others suffered mainly from 60. Tuesday but were sealed until • • yesterday , when police fanned • • out through the Weirton area to • • serve warrants on the lawyers, : Sunday, Feb.18, 8pm : club operators and cigar store . A 1fl'(l,'l'li ./ owners named in the documents. : Centuty Centet Theatte : bWS The bribery allegatiuns involve "a monthly payment sort of : Info: 219-284-9711 : ()YYl thing," said William Kolibash, assistant U.S. attorney. Kolibash : good for .50 off with this ad : said the payments, which varied , ______, Action Express in amount, began in 1977 and ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• continued through this year. , The indictments follow a Jan. 26 raid by the FBI and state police on eight alleged gambling parlors in the Weirton area. BULLA SHED About $17,000 in cash, as well as i l DOn't kick the dog ~ambling devices, was recovered m the raid, the FBI office in 5:15 mass and supper Pittsburgh said in a statement. I ~ I Have rou ever noticed that whenever you are away from Notre Altomare, 35, of Weirton, has Dame al you ever hear about this place is how perfect and well been prosecuting attorney for two I this friday rounded is it? I'm not going to try._to denounce most of the ~~~ I· years. He w,a~ indicted on two things you hear since I myself am proua to be liete~"But, by no I and every friday- CC!RJf.US • counts of racketeerin~ involving \ m1n1:... ry means is this place perfect! How often have you become so I frustrated with something that you are ready to kick the nearest bribery and obstruction of jus­ dog? Whether your frustration is cured by waiting in lines, lack tice, one count of obstructing a of communication with the administration, or being lotteried out grand jury investigation and one ~------' of various student privileges (like housing or basketball tickets), count of conspiracy to obstruct you often end up letting out your frustrations on your friends local law enforcement. since there isn't a dog nearby to kick. Being grumpy to your Altomare was released on a friends because you are stea_med up helps netther you nor Y?ur $50,000 unsecured bond after school. The orily way to unprove this place IS by working appearing yesterday before a together. U.S. magistrate in Wheeling.· Since we at Ombudsman realize this need to work together, If convicted, he faces up to 50 we too are frustrated but for a different reason. We know that years in prison and $75,000 in the purpose of our organization is to help the student body by fines. always being there when needed; by answering guestions and His chief investigator, Joseph complaints, by giving out information, and also oy working in · Aperfine, 48, of Weirton, was various ways to 1mprove life under the Dome. Even thougli we charged with one count of con- know what our duties are a lot of students do not and so our ~ spiracy to promote racketeering. services are not fully exploited. He was released on a $25,000

The Special Projects division of Ombudsman, specifically1 is unsecured bond. If convicted, he trying to improve Notre Dame by im,Provising and initiatUig could receive five years in prison projects to tills end, but we face a serious prol:ilem. We need and $20,000 in fUies. practical ideas to work on. Normally, we get these ideas during an event known as Operation Bramstorm conducted by the Ombudsman in the spring of. each year. However, due to a lack of creati~ity, most of last year's ideas were fruitless. We at Ombudsman feel that the main reason for the lack of Senior class and special creativity is that we were trying to force students to think of ideas at one specific time. A far better way to operate (we hope) guest star EXILE would be to allow students to submit suggestions at the time sponsors they are inspired. Therefore we have modified Operation Brainstorm so that we can get some truly producuve and practical input. From no_w on we will run the contest for !he Hockey Night Thursday Feb 22 entire school year bes1des the final push of Opera:tton Brainstorm in the spring. The best idea rec1eved during a gtven The Notre Dame and Saint 8pm Notte Dame ACC year will receive an award of fifty dollars. Mary's senior classes Will be sponsoring a Senior Hockey The process for submitting ideas is quite simple. Just write Night on Saturday, Feb. 17, when ~'I• Seats Reserved down your ideas legibly on a piece of paper and oe sure to include your name and phone number. Send it to the Notre Dame takes on Minnesota. ~ J8.00 & J7.00 Ombudsman. either by leaving it at the Ombudsman office on the Free Blue Line Club passes will second floor ofl.a Fortune (next to Student Government offices) be available for seniors, and Tickets on sale at ACC Box Office or putting it is campus mail. We guarantee that as soon as tickets may be purchased today, someone m Special Projects sends it we will callJou and let you tomorrow, Monday, Tuesday and Ptoduced by know whether we think your idea i~ plausible: 3.1? why_. If we do Wednesday in the LeMans lobby decide to work on your tdea, we wllf call agam tnforffiUlg you of from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and in the SUNSHINE & CELEBRATION the action taken and any accomplishments accompanying it. frrst floor of LaFortune from 12 Don't kick the dog before you let us see what we can ao! noon to 1 p.m. - ~------.....

The Observer Thursday, February 8, 1979 - page 13 - Court pertnits kidney transplant

SAN ANTONIO, Texas (AP)-A Lawyer R.H. Wester Jr., who never fully developed and was state appeals coun cleared the said his intent in filing the appeal removed at age five. The way yesterday for a mentally was to •'fully erotect her mter­ remaining kidney has almost retarded girl to give her 14-year­ ests' ' could further block a ceased to function. He is on old brother the kidney doctors transplant by appealing the order kidney dialysis three times a say he needs to stay al1ve. to the Texas Supreme Coun. week. The 4th Court of Civil Appeals He could not be reached Steve's lawyer, W.O. had been asked--in what attor­ immediately for comment. Kirkendall, said doctors told him neys said was the first appeal of Doctors refused to perform the the boy needs the transplant its kind in Texas--to decide if transplant without coun appro­ within five months and will only 14-year-old Steve Little of val. Steve's kidney problems survive another two years with­ Seguin could receive the life­ began at birth when one kidney out one. saving kidney from his 15-year­ old sister, Anne. A Guadalupe County probate court order Nov. 17 allowed Anne's parents to consent to the operation after doctors deter­ mined that Anne is the only FDA recalls spinach person with an acceptable kidney for her brother. WASI-llNGTON (AP)-A shipment problems. An attorney appointed to rep­ of 45,000 bunches of contamina­ The FDA described the recall resent Anne's legal interests, ted spinach was destroyed before of the 1,877 canons from Baja however, appealed the order, it got to retail stores or consu­ California, as ongoing. because he believed the probate mers, a spokesman for Sun However, Sun World attorney court lacked the authority to World brand spinach said yester­ Jim Kitch of San Francisco said 1t grant it. day. is "inconceivable" that any of The Food and Drug Admini­ the pesticide-contaminated pro­ The Finance Gub sponsored a lecture bv William H. Darrow, stration (FDA) announced earlier duce reached the public. Vice President of New York's chemical bank, last night at the Administration in the day that the spinach was Kitch said the shipment was Hayes-Healy center. [photo by Bob Gt/1] being recalled because it was discovered by California agricul­ contaminated with the pesticide tural officials at the U.S.-Mexico defends right Monitor. The FDA said the border on Dec. 29, 1978, and that pesticide could cause "temporary the border was closed the next SU plans /***************: to punish or medically reversible adverse day with no further pesticide­ : only six a health consequences" but was sprayed spinach ~etting across. WASfllNGTON [AP] - The unlikely to cause serious health ''The entire shipment of spin­ ND-UCLA Carter administration defended ach was intercepted and de­ a DAYS LEFT a its right to punish companies stroyed before it got into normal pompom sale which violate voluntary price and word because the government distribution channels," Kitch : TO : wage guidelines established in was prepared to use economic said. The Student Union has an- * * the anu-inflation battle. sanctions against those who vio­ nounced plans to sell pompoms : No FDA officials could be SCREW : Questions about enforcing Pre­ late the standards. as pan of the UCLA Bruin ''These are compulsions that reached late yesterday to explain * * sident Carter's anti-inflation pro­ weekend. ~e green and gold :YOUR ROOMMATE: gram were raised anew as Alfred are purely economic,'' Kahn why the spinach recall had been pompoms will be sold for 50 cents ,.. described as ongoing when Sun * E. Kahn, his chief inflation said. "I'm not disposed to fmd at the dining halls, the pep rally · adviser, disclosed that more than another word for voluntary. . .I World said the produce had been * * 200 of the Fortune 500 companies don't want to think of another seized and destroyed before dis­ and before the game. ·'***************~ · the nation's largest - have adjective.'' tribution. promised compliance with the price standards. Sr. Class Happy Hour Kahn, chairman of the Council on Wage and Price Stability, also said that most recently negoti­ Rev .McCrackin opposes Friday, February 9 ated major labor contracts have been well within the 7 percent 3:00-6:00 wage guideline. "It is obvious to judicial system me that both management and at St. Mary's Snack Shop labor are taking the standards CINCINNATI lAP}- His attor­ ville?" said McCrackin, a long­ seriously," he said. neys call him a samt, but the time prison reform advocate. Four companies, however, are judicial system here has conclud­ ''Appearing (before the jury) 30~ Beers asking for exceptions to the ed that the Rev. Maurice would be a moral compromise guidelines, said Jack Triplett, the McCrackin is a sinner for failing that I am not prepared to make.'' council's assistant director for to answer questions from a local McCrackin has termed his price monitoring. He said grand jury. decision not to testify "a matter another 16 firms have asked for "It's not that easy to under­ of conscience. '' o£ficials have extensions of the Feb. 15 dead­ stand his moral conditions. It's had to wheel him into coun. line for submitting price data to been a long time since anyone ''I've never met anyone quite the government. read the Sermon on the Mount like him,'' said Kelly Chapman, Tnplett declined to identify the and applied it to the judicial an inmate sentenced to the com~anies. The requests are system,'' concluded Robert Lucasville prison for aggravated pending. Newman, attorney for the 73- robbery. "In fact, I thought Kahn's testimony yesterday year-old McCrackin. some of the prisoners used to use THESE ARE THE ARMIES OF THE NIGHT. before a House banking sub­ Newman has ftled a motion to him- try to get things from him. Tonight they're all out to get the Warriors. committee was in res{'Onse to at least temporarilY. free the ''But Reverend Mac is the type criticism by the Amencan Bar minister, who was jailed Jan. 19. of guy who doesn't care about Association of the administra­ McCrackin was fot.md in con­ being used. The old man is just tion's voluntary wage and price tempt of coun for refusing to solid good." guidelines. answer questions from a Hamil­ Being good has never been The ABA had echoed the ton County grand jury about enough to keep McCrackin out of General Accounting Office's three prison esca('ees who alleg­ trouble, and he has never been a assertion Monday that the admi­ edly kidnapped him and another person to be careful. nistration lacks legal authority to man last November. He spent six months in prison impose sanctions against recalci­ Currently, he is hospitalized in 1959 for refusal to respond to trant companies. for intravenous feeding because summons instigated by the Inter­ The ABA' s economic resources he refused to eat after entering nal Revenue Service. controls committee released a jail. He said he had not paid all or study disputing the notion that After escaping from a deputy any income taxes smce 1948 Carter's wage and price plan is sheriff, three inmates from the "because I believe war to be a voluntary. Southern Ohio Correctional Facil­ crime against God and humanity Instead of depending on volun­ ity at Lucasville fled to Cincinnati and because I want to give my tary compliance, the complex with a hostage who they left at IQoney to works of peace and plar depends ''on a fear of McCrackin's house, police said. reconciliation. '' gov~rnment retaliation,'' it said. The hostage and McCrackin were Kahn insisted, however, that tied up, but unhun, and the "our lawyers tell us it's legal." prisoners left in McCrackin's car, Dealer school He cited a previous Justice according to police. for sophomores Department opinion which Two of the escapees were later urheld the legality of the portion captured. The third was killed by to be held · o the program involving govern­ a man he had taken hostage in ment contracts. Michigan. The Sophomore Oass en­ Paramount P1ctures Presents A Lawrence Gordon Product1on "THE WARRIORS" The anti-inflation program is ''How can ·I go and testify courages all those who wish to be Executive Producer Frank Marshall Based Upon tne Novel by Sol Yunck "in a very large measure, volun­ against a prisoner when it is the dealers for their booth to attend Screenplay by Dav1d Shaber and Walter Hill Produced by Lawrence Gordon tary," Kahn said. But he state of Ohio that is responsible the dealers' school at 10 p.m. acknowled~ed that maybe for the vast injustice, degrada­ tonight in LaFortune Theatre sc:H';J~i!" Directed by Wai!StH!ts Friday at li~.~l "voluntary' wasn't the nght tion and horror that is Lucas- with the off-campus students. Mall 2:15 4:00 5:45 7:45 9:30 - The Observer - Sports c A C R 0 5 S :u. Point u! ~a. Wnath view 44. "Oodlea" ... Tripucka R 1." Tree cover- 23. Skin rrowtha 46. Lepl paper inr 24. Health7: &. Small rem- 3 wdL D 0 W N [continued from page 16] 0 nant 26. Mother: 10. Radium dia- Spanlah 1. Dreaaer Dame player in double figures, s coverer 29. State of 2. Take into but Mike Mitchell came off the 11. Become hap. unreat cuatody bench to score seven big points, pier: 2 wda. 33. Orchestra 3. Coin of Iran s 13. Diaplay Instrument 4. Solution including 3-3 from the field. 14. Violent, riot. 34. June 6,1944: 5. Voracioua Woolridge and Branning had six w oua action hyph. wd. fish apiece. 0 16. Stagger 35. Actreu Weat 8. Rope fiber Austin's 16 points led the 16. -on, talk 36. Statute 7. Corded fabric Wolfpack, and Matthews scored about incea- 37. Paint layer 8. Pencil part R santly 38. Blood veaael 12. Whitney, who leads N.C. 9. Crude boat 17 Young fellow 39• Was State in scoring at 19. 7 per!ame, D · humb~: 10. Payload 18. Ozone 2 wda. 11. Very early could only connect on 3-1 from . s 19. Pier 41. Monte- morn inc: the floor for six points. Solid 20. Deadly 42. Gain knowl- 3wda. defense by Notre Dame, and quarrel edge anew 12. Hanra 16. Derisive especially by Hanzlik, kept lauch Whitney off balance all night. 19. Blockhead: . For State coach Norm Sloan, it alanc was another close loss in a 20. Rural abode 22. Attract disappointing season. 23. Cautioua "We're having a hard time 26. Marab fuel getting the right bounces,' ' Sloan 26. Grindlnc said. ''At the end, we had the tooth right shot with the right guy 27. Lellftna 28. Succeed: (Whitney). We just can't seem to 2wda. get oye~.the hump. I still think 30. Iaaue we wtii.- 81. Caucht, aa a The Irish face another tough fuaitive 82. Opera hero game this Sunday, as the fourth­ 84. Entra- ranked UCLA Bruins invade the 87. Bird'• crop ACC at 1 p.m. three from the field. 88. Weiltllereock 40. ~bet Irish box score U.Bouder NOTRE DAME [53) Woolridge 1 4-4 6, Tripucka 4 8-816, Lalmbeer 2 0-0 4, Branning 3 0-0 6, Hanzlik 1 1-2 3, Wilcox 2 o-o 4, Gymnasts open· first season Jackson 21-1 5, Flowers 1 o-o 2, Mitchell 3 1-2 7, Totals 19 15-17 53. For the last three years from ty, and Central Michigan Univer­ September to March, the Notre sity. Dame Gymnastics Club has met N.C. STATE [52) Pinder 2 3-3 7, Whitney 3 Led by the coaching of Mark in the Rockne Memorial, practi­ Woodford, several gymnasts D-2 6, Sud hop 0 o-oo. Austin 8 D-116, Warren cing two and one-half hours turned in fine performances. 0 0-0 0, Matthews 6 o-o 12, Watts 2 2-4 6, daily, five days a week. Last Freshman Dave Petrillo and Answers Jones 1 o-o 2, Nevitt 0 o-o 0, Parzych 11-1 3, Saturday the men's team saw the sophomore Steve Reifenberg led Totals 23 6-11 52. first fruits of their patience and the team on the floor exercise, labors, as they captured a third scoring a 7,05 and 6.35 respect­ Halftime-Notre Dame 31, N.C. State 29. place in their ftrst meet ever: a ively, and capturing fifth and Fouled out-Watts. Total fouls-Notre Dame four-way meet against School­ seventh places overall, respect­ 11. N.C. State 16. A-12,400. craft, Eastern Michigan Universi·· ively. Freshman Luis deLeon was the team's sole competitor on the pommel horse--he man­ aged a very respectable fifth Molarity Michael Molinelli place. On the rings, Joe Skovira scored a hard-earned 4.8; John Paulik's impressive iron cross helped him attain his 5.65 mark. Dave Petrillo led the team in vaulting with a handspring vault worth 8.3 points and a third place overall. He was followed closely by Bob Meehan, Brain McLaugh­ lin and Dan ~li:k>wley. Skovira led the scoring on the parallel bars. Commenting after­ wards in reference to the some­ what antiquated equipment m use at the Rock, Skovira re­ marked, "It was a great feeling to get up on p-bars that didn't move out from under me when I threw a trick.'' Finally, on high bar, Mclaugh­ lin and Meehan did quite well on what was considered to be their weakest event. I What was really impressive about this gymnastics meet was I that this young team managed to I do so well des,J?ite the less-than­ adequate facilities available at I the Rock. For nearly half of the team, this meet was the first time I in which they had thrown a I routine on a regulation-sized floor mat. Also, it was the first I time for the high bar and rings men to work on free-standing I apparatus. I Under the sponsorship of Coach Noel O'Sullivan, this co-ed I club was started three years ago. I Since its founding it has grown and improved steadily. Although the Gymnastics Club has re­ ceived no financial aid, by sd~ing programs and running a food booth, the members raised enough money to hire Woodford, a Ball State graduate, to coach them. With Woodford's enthusiasm and encouragement, these gym­ nasts have learned some new and more difficult tricks and routines. This ftrst meet for the men's team served to demonstrate both their ability and potential. - ~------~-- ~------. ' ·. !he Observer - Sports ·.Thursday, F:ebruary ~,)~79: -:pag~ ·is·

~. A "~d Slam':.Pep Rally f~r· UCLA. pep rally the Notte Dame;UCLA. game -will Wotnen fencers claitn four \\Tins be held · t.his S~tui-day .. nigftt, Feb!'W{Y 10 · at 7 p.m. (n' the Saturday· ACC. pit. · ~ests· Will include· by Gregory Solman this year, and we've worked hard fencing· coach of the Tri-State Coach ,Digger Phelps·,. the -Irish Assistant Sports Editor so far-,'' commented new senior team she helped defeat. basketbaln~. die. ·ND· Band, captain Karen Lacity, who went Substitutes with 2-1 winning 'and a spec~ s.u'rprise guest. · For the Notre Dame women's 7-2 last weekend in one of -the .records. were Terrie Foley, Liz fencing team this year, a radical three top slots of the foil position. Bathon, and Sue Behnke. change in personnel did not mean "We're all looking fotward to a NUMBER OF DA vs· an end to their winning tradition. wonderful year." Last weekend at Tri-State Uni­ Other top foils earned equally rates 1 ·:z 3 4 5 as impressive victories this week­ Rowing club versity in Angola, Indiana, the Ill fencers won all of their matches, end for Coach Mike DiCicco's 0 meets Ill: 1-10 1.00 1.30 1.75· 2.00 2.25. defeating Milwaukee Tech, squad. Dodee Carney, a junior 0 11-15 1.40 1.85 2 .. 50 2.80 3.15 Cleveland State, Wisconsin Park­ seeing her first year of competi­ There will be a mandatory 16-20 1.80 all ~ 2.40 3.25 3.60 4.05 side, and Tri-State. tion here went 9-0. Carney is a general meeting for members u. 21-25 2.20 2.95 4.00 4.40 5.10 Not a bad debut for a team that first year transfer from the of the Notre Dame Rowing Club 0 26-30 2.60 3.50 4.75 5.20 6.15 on Sunday, February 4, at 7:30 Ill: just a year ago had completely University of Virginia. Marcella w 31-35 3.05 4.10 5.55 6.20 7.20· different fencers in the top spots, Lansford, a freshman, also won PM in the auditoriwn on the main Ill 36-40 3.50 4.70 6.35 7.20 8.25' including graduated Kathy Val­ seven of her nine matches. floor of LaFortune. The topics to ~ 41-45 3.95 5.30 7.1S 8.20 9.30 ::;) diserri who captained the team Lansford, however, has been be discussed will be the Florida z 46-50 4.40 5.90 7.95 9.20 10.35 for three years. fencing for six rears now. under trip and the racing schedule. "We have a brand new team the tutelage o her father, the Everyone must attend this meet­ PAYMENT. All classifieds must be pre-pai·d, either ing in person or through the mail ·

All classified ads must be rece1ved by 5:00 p.ni .. two days prior to the issue in which the ad is run.· The Observer office will accept classifieds Monday through Friday. 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m All Classifieds cla~5ifieds must be pre-paid. either in person or through the ·mail.·

Found: one student basketball ticket. Barmaid wanted ~ply In pe11on at oere;rately need 2 U.C.L.A. tickets - Call 3608 to Identify. Nickles Tues, Thru hu11. after 8 p.m. stu ent or G.A. -call 1824 Hey you- · . Notices Wanna frolic· In the show? Let me Lost: calculator Tl-30 around Feb. 2-3. Emergency! Need one UCLA GA or know. Gay students of Notre Dame/Saint Call ' BJ. 288-4152 student ticket. Ray 289-8657 Me Mary's Gay Information line 8870 · Call For Sale P.S. I found your mittens. Friday February 9- 10 p.m.-mldnl~ht. Lost: black "Lamy" mechanical pencil Need: 4 GA B-Ball tickets to any Saturday February 10 p.m.-mldnlg t or with sliver tip last Saturd~ In the South TIRES ARE FOR LOVERS remaining home game. Paul3115 or 3134 Attention Army ROTC Drill Team Com- write P.O. Box 206 Dining Hall or Eng. Bl g. I would MY PORSCHE,IS GONE. BOO HOO! mander: . tplreclate ve~ much to get It back. PLEASE BUY MY SNOW TIRES* 2 Need 3 UCLA tickets! Call Herb at 3060. AnxJously awaiting your call. Would uardo 288-6 40 evenings. STUDDED GISPAVED 155-15. Excellent like to pay you for the haircut ~ry. ~o Accurate. fast typing. Mrs. Bedford condition. 2 for $40.00. credit. · · · 288·2107 Hours: 8 am to 5 pm Urgently need an~umber UCLA tlx. Lost: one pair rimless eyeglasses gold If purchaser Is gorgeous female type 25. Please call Terl, 7 . Rent~a-teen frame. 288-4540 percent discount plus one date to Ski bus trip to Boyne country $86 Includes movie/of her choice. If male, 10 percent BRAD THE. VEiJ lodging, meals, lift tickets and trans- Help I I need tlx to UCLA-NO game. Call Lost: Brown corduroy blazer, Friday markup. Call AI Paclno at 3748. If not In Anne #4236 Who says nobody ever sent you a portatlon. Leave Fri. Feb. 23 at 5 p.m. night between Morrissey and the Grotto. ask for his roommate Adonia. personal. Here's to hamburgers· and return Sun. Feb 25 p.m. sponsor· Bendix If found please contact 4·1-4993 carnivores Woods Ski Patrol contact Corky Patton Need one student or GA UCLA ticket. FOR SALE! Rugged Winter boots. Call Larry 8701 Marl beth 234·9307 Found: mon'::r. found on 12th floor of the Excellent condition. Dark brown, size 8 Libra~ Sun ay night. Call 2172 to 1/2. Call Jeff at 1525 for Information. Wanted: UCLA tlx. Call Ed at 1022. Emil: Hap~y Hour! Fridays from 3-6, Pandora's ldentl amount. A ve~ ·special and beautiful woman Is o ferlng a 2 for 1 sale on used book. FOR SALE: Marantz Amp. 70 rms knows a I about you and your strands of Located behind N.D. apts. 233-2342 De~eratel~ need UCLA tickets. GA or watts/chan. $300 and/or Fisher speakers stu ent Ca I Pat at 2n-3422. spit. · · ($400 1 pair) call Sundance: 8916 Apollo Attention all Logan volunteers: For Rent I desperately need two GA or student P.S. Anyone for peanuts? There Is a ve~ big game against the REFRIGERATOR FOR SALE $60 1717 • tickets for the UCLA ~ame. If I don't L~n staff on hursday February 8 at Furnished 4-6 bedroom house for rent Ilk for peter I can't reverse It, you have uno!! I this fall. Walking distance to campus. come thro~ht mJ sis er will have my 9: fe.m. Come to pia_,;, or to supflort hide! Call evln at 1787. TO ~our allow volunteers. he game wll be Nice. Call 272·1729 after 7:00 p.m. Excelletn UCLA ticket avallaQie, padded eld at the Logan Center g~m. Any seat, 6th row from floor, student section. Badly needed: UCLA tickets- student or. Who will reign a$ Ugly Man of' '79 questions or problems call uckles at House for rent 913 Cedar St. 3 bedrooms Megabuck range only, 13748, call late 80???? Save your pennies! fully furnished 288-6740 evenings. G.A. an~umber up to 5. Please !II!! Call 3064 Mike: 2 ·1071 Stereo: Must sell, baby on way. Sansul When all are pa~lng down say Slegflred Experienced ~f-'st will do typing out of Tired of noise and crowds? How about a 9090 receiver, 125 watts channel, 2 pair Is not to be foun . home. Call 2 -1401 view of the river! Near campus. of speakers, teak 250 recorder, dual Metro 5 minus 1 Reasonable Rent. Call 234-2662 or turntable, Plckeri[;N XU15 Cartridge. Personals Attention all Logan volunteers and Inter· 234·8402 Call evenings 6-9: 2232·1711 ested students! Pumpkin, · Peter, This Friday, February 9th, from 7:30- Available for next year- 5 bedroom home USED BOOK SHOP. Wed.,Sat., Sun. 9-7 19th!' Does this make you an 10:00 p.m. Is the annual Valentines Day completely furnished. Call Nancy !;lJIJll· 1 It may not be £unctual, but here Is your Hap~ Ralph Casperson 1303 Buchanan Road first personal. veryone deserves at least apprent ce adult? . Dance for the mentally'rtandlca~ped kids barger 234·9364 Niles. 683·2888. -- and adults of the community. he dance one In his/her NO experience. Klmbleand Dave, Is 111 the Logan Center cafeteria, and the For rent: Immediate occupance! 5 bed· Yours In the Archives, Many thanks again for your· part ·In live band Is Paglls, an excellent rock Marybeth room, 2 bath house, furnished and near helpln~ us have ·a great weekend. We group. So come ~In on the fun, Memorial hospital. 6 month lease $300 Tickets Tart the Nerd: appree ate It lots. . · refreshments, and le down. Help month plus utilities and security deposit. A and B (alias Sing and Sank) the kids have a great time! No admission Call Bobble 233-3161 Will ~$20 tor any UCLA GA ticket. Call Although l: turned down the senior char~e. Matt 7 clau trip tO -1 hGpeJ::::P. 778 on the John, Ot er Logan activities: Bowling Friday For Rent- 4-5 bedroom 2 baths available LSAT'I made It all wo hie. Congl'lt- If you're a senior, where· do you hide at 3:20-6:00 p.m. (Meet at NO Library In June or there after $300 mo. 232-9498 Need UCLA tickets, any kind. Call Rob ulatlona cutle-you desam lt. night. It can'tbe Senior Bar. circle). Saturday rec this Saturda~ from 291-4528 287-6056 Llvl, 9:0D-11 :30 a.m. Corvilla formal unday Mutual I'm Sure T night. Volunteers needed to help In Lost: one pair of ~lasses around Nortt Help! I need GA or Student UCLA Happy 20th Birthday John "Curly" hornestart and L~an classrooms during quad on Feb. 7 If ound call Pat, 1827. tickets. Will pay$$$. MJ 8117 ORHrm "Tut," Lit'a 111 your hrHrm Horner. . . . the week. Call Ike at 1371 or Sue at "rock" I Love, 4·1-4832 Top price for one UCLA ticket-try me. Plm Dannie, Kathie, Katy and Linda Greg 8855 NOCTURNE NIGHTFLIGHT,WSND· Wanted AMEN SISTERS: Dear Bear, 89 FM JIM O'BRIEN FEATURES DAVID sell those raffle tlx$ Need GA UCLA tlx Bill 288-m3 Well, here It Is, your own personal. lt'a GILMOUR'S"DAVID GILMOUR" Need UCLA ticket· Will pay Call Pat 8410 only the beginning. Amen Inc. Ia. sponsoring 1 blind data TONIGHT. Wanted: 2 UCLA tlx G.A. or student. Sleeping Beauty For sale- one student ticket to U.C .L.A. Jerry 1756 ntffle - watch for llfllor girls with nttlle tlcklta. padded seat row 10 Call 6637 after 6:00. To B.V. In the little rltaw lemon, Ask for Bub. I'm asking $15.00 Will sell sultemates or:,ovlde much cash For goodness sake- buy a pompom so Thanks lor a tour o the campus. for UCLA student tl t. Call Mike at · Krash Kars Sister and Co. Need ride to U. of 111.-Ghampalgn on Fri. 1619. Frank LaGrotta can shut up.· Lost&Found Feb. 9 Call Mark-1441 Don't forget: Student Union Pompom He~! Bobby desperately needs 4 B1dln Ia 1110"11 Valllltlne cal'lllllona fir sale for UCLA game 50 cents at dining Found: Silver ll~hter with Initials. Found Need riders to Penn State weekend of ~ dec:l seat) UCLA tlx·$$$ Please call r:::r IWIItlt. .110 IICh In Sautll Dining halls near Memorial lbrary on 216. Call 3318 Feb. 9 Call 6141 607 I. Today thnlugh Friday. Buy nowl to Identify. We know something you don't know- "ED HEADI·Tonlght'a till ,btl COIIII ST. LOUis- Ride needed for any weekend Desperately need 1 or 2 student or GA I'• K11111n CDAflrlncl Raom :1111 LOST:One coll,e class ring-St. John come to the Augusta lottery meetings. at r.m. this semester to St. Louis. Will share UCLA tlx. Gall 4-1-4103 l111 11---ded Lllpl lllnll • Yo Flsher College. all 272-9841. expenses! Call Kevln-11631 ta ~· Tonlte, J:il. Y• may brtnga frlllld who 1'111 at Wanted: one or two student or G.A. rt.) Lost: Ladles top of brawn sweatsult at Need ride to Chicago Friday afternoon, UCLA tlx. Will pay good$$$$$. Call F.J. The Adonia Show Is a spiral of musical ACC·mD Feb. 9. Share conversation and ex- 1222. cacarchon~ Tune In for some of the best C• Bill Beny emil ...... ,.. and pick penses. Please call Marybeth, 288-9049 mus c In orthern Indiana, WSND, ~11 p.m. atrawbln1al at till un time? Find oat Lost: a sterll~ Parker pen Friday In Two basketball tlx for UCLA or La Friday at I In 107 Kllllltl. either the cas ler or student account Need some xtra bread and wllll~ to Salle-call 8661. Robert Redford lives In Augusta. offices. If found call Bart at 1078 work? Frll. and/ or Sat. Eves. ave Is that KatB • You're ln. Red. openings at the Huddle. Contact the I need UCLA tickets bM!Iy. Gall Matt reason enough to check It out? lost-gym clothes wrapped In ~Y sweat· Mgr. 1780 pants at South Dining Hall, urs. 211 SMC juniors and sophomores- Call Bob 3209 OVERSEAS JOBS· Summer/year round. Wanted: UCLA tlx please call 288-9988 Now Is the time to start thinking of ..l~ Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia, Etc (John( liVIng In Augusta next year. Lost: one crutch outside of the Ubrary All fields, $500-$1200 monthly. Expenses ~ D about a week and a half~- If you've ~ld. Sightseeing. Free Into.· write: Alumnus needs 2 UCLA tlx $$$ 8656 Augusta Is a musta! seen this crutch alive, call Ike at 1678 JC. Box 4490-14, Berkeley, CA 94704 Need 2 UCLA GA tickets, Call 6117 or Let the Bruins see green and gold all day. Lost: one ft:d watch bracllet Jut Wanted: ial LaSalle tickets. Gall 272·8359 nights. Buy your pompoms at the Dining_ Halls - Thunday In bar ••· Call SUsan at Martbeth 50 cents. 4-1-4536 Help! I I1IIBd two LaSalle GA 'a will trade Part-time help wanted. About 10 hours or negotiate Steve 8417 R.C. F~ Found: 2 prs. ~ovea after NO Student per week In the evenll)Ys Must be 21. A 7 this Friday Is a dinner next Friday. ~- PI= tryouts ueaday. Call Studllnt =In person at the D tillery. 1723 So. Desperately need 2-4 GA tickets for the spoon U and ldenUfy. Ave. LaSalle game. Gall 38311 . ~ S12orts Thursday, February 8, 1979- page 16 Freshman icer shows class

by Mike Henry of what he has wrought in the play at this high level and some Sports Wn"ter WCHA, a league not noted for other players return to form, outstanding freshman perfor­ we'll be a definite threat in the ·For a freshman, the melange of mances. Don't let this down­ play-offs.'' _ activity at Notre Dame can be playing of his talents deceive Poulin has settled in nicely head-spinning. Incoming you, though, for this is a young despite the oft-times frantic pace students are presented with a man supremely confident of his at dulac. "I was unsure what to plethora of sporting events, many skills when he laces his skates. expect when I came to Notre cultural and social opportunities, ''I really felt no pressure to do Dame," he admits. "However, and, sometimes, academic pres­ well from the first day of prac­ it's been very easy for me to sures equal to those of the most tice," Poulin relates. "Bill, Jeff adjust to the everyday routine a austere mstitutions. If this young and I were put together on the ~ockey player must go through. I person happens to be a highly­ second day with the knowledge JUSt love the closeness of the touted hockey player fresh from that Coach Smith had great faith Notre Dame community--for a service in the Provincial Junior A in our abilities. Out styles are school with such a good athletic League, (one of the most respec- very complimentary and we were reputation, I was surprised and . ted junior leagues north of the able to help out right from the delighted with it's intunacy." border), you must wonder if he start.'' Notre Dame fans are equally will be overwhelmed by the With Poulin's line carrying surprised and delighted with the enormity of it all. more than their share of the load, contributions made by this Harbor no such fears about the graceful acrobatics of Dave's affable Canuck. And while his rookie sensation Dave Poulin, the roommate, Dave Laurion, in the presence won't be enjoyed by captivating youngster from Mis­ nets, and the inspiration provi­ Irish rivals. They will come to sissauga, Ontario, who has per­ ded by captains Schneider, expect seeing his arms upraised formed like a seasoned veteran of Meredith and Michalek, the Irish in celebration. He is certain to Hustle like -this has made Dave Poulin [15] a success in his first y the rugged WCHA. Displaying broke from the gate like a stir Irish imaginations for the [photo by john Macor] ear. bold rink-long rushes and a deft drugged thoroughbred, and next three years. touch around the net, he has eventually climbed to the top spot vaulted to a position among the in the nation for: one euphoric league's top ten scorers with week. While their sltu?Y of the Irish prevail, 53-52 twenty-two goals and twenty past few weeks is mystitying, no assists. He and his linemates, one is pointing an accusing finger fellow freshmen Bill Rothstein at Poulin. Free throws by Tripucka nip State and Jeff Perry, have shown "Dave is probably the best such a measure of savoir faire all-arouncf player on the squad," _ byMarkPeny Moments earlier, with the Irish jumpers by Kenny Matthews that they can be considered gushes Irish assistant coach Ric Ass£stant Sports Ed£tor leading 51-50, Charles brought State to· within one, freshman only in the literal Shafer. "He's capable in all and ''Hawkeye'' Whitney tried to put 47-46, with 8:26 remaining. sense. skills, and has cat­ Father}ohn Feeney State ahead on a jumper from The Irish fought back on a basket Despite his immediate success quick reactions and anticipates Special Correspondent inside the free throw line, but by Rich Branning, but a quick on the ice, however, the 5' 10", where the puck is going to be. Tripucka rebounded the missed basket by Art Jones made the 170 pound center is modest and His size may be his only real RAlEIGH, N.C.--Notre Dame shot and was fouled with six score 49-48. unassuming, seemingly unaware drawback. If Dave can keep his survived a poor shootin~ night, a seconds left. The Irish used a slow down tenacious North Carolma State Whitney scored an uncon­ game at this point, and with 3:03 defense, and a hyped-up Carolina tested lay-up with two seconds left, Orlando Woolridge was crowd to defeat the Wolfpack, left, but the Irish let the clock fouled after rebouning his own SM C swimmers split 53-52, at Reynolds Coliseum last expire. missed shot. night. The win boosted Notre Dame's The "Tree" sank the free by Beth Menke medley), Ellen missed the quali­ Two clutch free throws by record to 17-2, as they handed throws to put the Irish up by Sports Wnter fying time by one second. Kelly Tripucka, who led the Irish the Wolfpack, 15-8, their first three once again, but Clyde "the .. Sophomore Peggy O'Brien and with 16 points, iced the ga.me for non-conference home loss since Glide'' Austin, who led the The Saint Mary's swim team Crowe were the two members on the visitors. Tripucka has now hit 1968, against Georgia. Wolfpack with 16 points, retaliat­ got its feet wet for the first time the team to qualify for the on 25 consecutive free throws, 11 The Irish led by as many as ed wlth a long jumper at the 2:48 this season on Friday night, while regional meet last year. They short of the Notre Dame record nine points in the second half, mark. the majority of students were were the first two swimmers from held Austin Carr. but four consecutive long The Irish slowed the pace once wetting their thirsts after the St. _Mary's ever to qualify for a again, but Bill Hanzlik was called long week of classes. The squad reg10nal meet. - · for traveling on a drive up the of fifteen swimmers and two The Belles are coached by Jane middle, and State had the ball divers travelled to DePauw Uni­ Lammers, who also returns for back with 31 seconds left. versity for a triangular meet with her second year with the swim The Wolfpack waited until eight team. Lammers is originally seconds were left before Whitney the host school and the Univer­ took his shot, rebounded by sity of Evansville. The result from Dayton, Ohio, where she Trip~cka to set up the winning was bittersweet. be~an her ten year competitive char1 ty tosses. The Belles triumphed over swimming career. Jane finished ''Hitting the fir-St free throw kind Evansville by a score of 68 to 60. competing at the University of of took the pressure off,'' Unfortunately, for the Belles, Notre Dame, where she became a Tripucka said of his last two DePauw proved itself to be the monogram swimmer before shots. ''Once you hit the first strongest team, easily out­ graduating. one, you kind of feel like the swimming St. Mary's by an 82-46 At Friday's meet, the St. second will go." Mary's divers put on a very fine margin. Tripucka connected on ei~ht Ellen Crowe, a returning show to win some big points for straight from the line, countenng sophomore qualified in two out of the team. Sophomore, Patty a 4-13 shooting night from the three events for the Midwest Meagher captured first place floor. The Irish, who lead the Regionals to be swum at Michi­ a~ainst both DePauw and Evans­ nation in field goal percentage at gan State, March 1, 2, and 3. vllle in her event. Sara Wagner, over 56 percent, could only Crowe qualified in the 100 meter a freshman, placed second connect on 19-49, 39 percent. backstroke event with a time of against Evansville and third Strong defense by State forced 1:10.0, and in the 50 meter agai~st DePauw. Both girls the visitors to take a lot of outside backstroke with an excellent 31.8 practice at the Rockne Memorial shots, and Notre Dame couldn't seconds. In her third event, the pool at ND, as St. Mary's doesn't find the range for most of the 1"0 meter I.M. (individual have diving facilities. game. · Irish Coach Digger Phelps said he thought Notre Dame ''played a smart game plan. We didn't Sponsor helps volleyball team want to get in a running game with them." - The first men's power volley­ Goralski, who also coached the Neither team could shoot well ball team in Notre Dame history Notre Dame women's volleyball in the first half, as the Irish has been organized this year, club. Goralski was named India­ connected on 35.5 percent, which thanks to a donation from ] ohn na Volleyball Coach of the Year N.C. State hit only 46 percent. O'Hanlon of O'Hanlon's Ware­ after his ] unior team won the But 9 of 10 first half free house liquors. National Title. throws by Notre Dame gave the University policy is to not The schedule for the first year Irish a 31-29 halftime lead. recognize a club sport in its first team is demanding. The Irish ' 'State is an explosive team year until the team can prove have been placed in the western with a lot of firepower," Phelps ttself. Since no university funds division of the lv1IV A, competing said. ''I thought that pulling were available, O'Hanlon deci­ against teams like Ohio State, them out of the zone and controll­ ded to sponsor the team. Ball State, Indiana, Purdue, Kel­ ing the tempo were the keys to The team has been accepted log, Michigan, Michigan State, the game. We were just not into the Midwest Interc_o~giate and Western College. The shooting well against the zone." Volleyball Association (MIVA). season runs from February 3 to With 25 straight free throws, Kelly Tnpucka is not the man to foul, as Tripucka was the only Notre The team will be coached by Mel April 14. N.C. State discovered. [photo by Mark Muench] [continfled on page 14]