Trespassers at ND Apprehended by KELLEY TUTHILL Other Two Were at the Bus Shel­ Staff Reporter Ter Near the Post Office in a Ve­ Hicle, Said Johnson

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Trespassers at ND Apprehended by KELLEY TUTHILL Other Two Were at the Bus Shel­ Staff Reporter Ter Near the Post Office in a Ve­ Hicle, Said Johnson Frosty’s in town ACCENT: Are you a “teleholic?” V ° o'' Cloudy and cold today with a . A ” ° * •' 40 percent chance of light snow, mainly in the afternoon. VIEWPOINT: Trying to be No.1 off the field High in the middle 30s. VOL. XXII, NO. 60 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1988 the independent newspaper serving Notre Dame and Saint Mary’s Trespassers at ND apprehended By KELLEY TUTHILL other two were at the bus shel­ Staff Reporter ter near the post office in a ve­ hicle, said Johnson. Four “peeping Tom’s” were apprehended early Tuesday One adult was arrested for morning by Campus Security. trespassing, two of the youths Phillip Johnson, assistant were turned over to Park View director of security, said that Juvenile Center, and the fourth at 2:30 a.m. residents of person was released to his par­ Howard Hall reported four ent or guardian, said Johnson. young men who were looking into their room to the hall se­ Johnson said that all the men curity monitor. were charged with trespassing and one man was taken to St. The security monitor then Joseph County Jail. immediately notified the main “The credit here must go to security office by radio, said the residents of Howard Hall Johnson. The men left the area for quickly reporting the inci­ as the security officer arrived. dent. I encourage all students to report any suspicious behav­ Johnson said that the officer ior on campus immediately to was able to obtain descriptions security,” said Johnson. of the men before leaving The Observer / Scott McCann Howard Hall. Investigators are looking UNICEF sale into the possibility that this in­ Two men were found near St. cident is related to other recent Kathy McDonough looks through the booklets at the mugs, stationary and puzzles. Their goal is to raise Michael’s laundry and the campus crimes, said Johnson. UNICEF sale in the library. The sale includes cards, $5,000 during the two week sale. Construction site explosion kills six, creates large craters Associated Press dynamite explode more even­6 or 7 feet deep, and a smaller homes. One merchant, Stan guards at the site had called ly, authorities said. The second one about 15 feet across and 4 Katz, said looters took items them when they noticed a KANSAS CITY, Mo.- Con­ trailer was storing about 15,000 feet deep. from his Food City Warehouse pickup truck on fire, Knabe struction trailers loaded with pounds of the material. A third “The remains of one fire supermarket, where several said. 45,000 pounds of a chem ical explosion occurred moments truck is sitting very close to one large windows were shattered. used in dynamite explodedlater in what was believed to crater, ” said Fire Department Investigators believe the Tuesday, killing six be a portion of the first trailer spokesman Harold Knabe. A woman at a motel about fires might have been inten­ firefighters, ripping large that had been blown apart. “There is another vehicle of three-quarters of a mile away tionally set, Knabe said. craters in the ground and shat­ Debris was scattered over some sort, a large red truck. said the force knocked her from tering windows up to 10 miles several acres around the con­ The other fire truck- there is her bed to the floor. Security guards reported aw ay. struction site and onto nearby absolutely no evidence that it seeing someone and went to in­ The first trailer was filled U.S. 71, said police spokesman was ever there.” Firefighters were already at vestigate, Knabe said. When with an estim ated 30,000 Sgt. Greg Mills. Windows, some of them large the construction site when the they returned, they found one pounds of ammonium nitrate, The blasts left two very large plate-glass panels, were bro­ explosions rocked the area of their pickup trucks burning, which is used to make craters, 30 to 40 feet wide and ken in scores of businesses and about 4 a.m. Two security and called firemen. Malloy dedicates new homeless shelter By JIM WINKLER staff it as well. URC has ap­ teerism and dedication to the Staff Reporter pointed Father Stephen New­ Center “serves as an act of ton to manage the 24-hour, charity, love and justice, one South Bend’s new Center for seven-days a-week facility. of need and reciprocal return.” the Homeless, located in the old At the Center 100 beds are Malloy concluded by saying Gilbert’s building on South available for single men and that he was proud that Notre Michigan Avenue, was for­ women and for families. In ad­D am e had played a p a rt in “ the mally dedicated in a ceremony dition, the Center will provide human effort that brought us yesterday that featured Uni­ professional counseling in fif­ here.” He expressed hope that versity President Father Ed­ teen disciplines, including alco­Notre Dame would always be ward Malloy as the keynote hol counseling, job training, there to share the volunteer speaker. pregnancy counseling and load. The University purchased housing referral. These ser­ the building last summer and vices will be offered by local In addition to Malloy, two renovated the 38,000-square social work agencies. others associated with the Uni­ foot former department store. At the dedication, Father versity spoke at the dedication. Much of the work was done by Malloy compared those in the David Link, the dean of the volunteers from the student audience to those who weren’t Notre Dame Law School, is the body, staff, and faculty, and there: the homeless who will president of COPOSH. He ex­ cost approxim ately $400,000. use the shelter when it opens pressed his gratitude for all The Center will be leased by its doors on December 1. “Most those who had helped bring the Notre Dame to the Council of of us have never been down onidea of a Center into reality. Providers of Services to the our luck such that we couldn’t Link pointed out that this is Homeless (COPOSH) which get shelter. We have always only a temporary solution and originally had planned on pur­been able to come up with the that South Bend still needed to Arafat denied entry AP Ph0,° chasing the facility. money or credit card, or solve the problem of homeless­ COPOSH has turned the re­ recognition that allows us to ness. Link emphasized the FLO Chairman Yasser Arafat adjusts his glasses as he addresses the sponsibility of operation and find a decent place to sleep at value of volunteering. “We can United Nations 29th General Assembly in 1974. Arafat’s request for a maintenance over to the United night, but we are only a sick­ teach our students more about visa to address the U N. session on Dec. 1 was rejected, and Jordan Religios Community (URC) ness away, one job away, from social justice in one night at the announced Sunday it has agreed with Egypt to seek to move the session which will raise money to the people who will be here,” to Geneva so Arafat can address the world body on the Palestinian finance the Center and will Malloy said. He said the volun- see SHELTER, page 6 problem. page 2 The Observer Wednesday, November 30, 1988 INSIDE COLUMN IN BRIEF Beverly Hills city planners are prescribing a face lift in the city where image is everything. They’re recom­ Thanksgiving was mending “designer” sidewalks, flower planters and novel street lamps to counter fears that cracked sidewalks and traffic-clogged streets will send shoppers elsewhere. The better with the Irish entire revitalization plan for the 30-block business district could run $80 million. -Associated Press The Thanksgiving weekend many of us spent in southern California, our safe trip and the Sandy undefeated Irish show that we have much to be HOW about a bridgefor a Christmas present for the thankful for: Lou Holtz’s Fighting Irish, com­ Cerimele person who has everything? The Colorado Highway De­ mercial pilots, bus drivers and sunshine in No­ partment has honest-to-goodness historic bridges avail­ vem ber. able to anyone who will give them good homes and will Saint Mary’s Editor The 80 Saint Mary’s students on the trip haul them away. Bridges in the 3-year-old “ Adopt-A- learned what United’s Friendly Skies are all Bridge” program are scheduled for replacement because about last Wednesday. We missed our flights they are deteriorating or impractical for modern traffic.- by three and a half hours because a tanker had Associated Press crashed on the expressway, creating a 20-mile holiday traffic jam on the road to O’Hare. There were two planes to catch, and we had In LOS Angeles with the New Age Telephone Book, two moments of silence as each flew over our you can reach waaaaaaaay out and touch someone. The heads. When we finally arrived, we sat in the directory lists psychics, healers, numerologists, gurus, bus for another hour and a half while United T h AN k S g ^ V ^ n GI, channelers, ghost hunters and almost anyone else, who decided what to do with us. Their first plan was may appeal to followers of New Age philosophies. A to get us on a plane at 1 p.m. Thanksgiving real estate agent, for instance, offers clients “your own Day. But they told us to sit tight and they would place in the universe.” A “gentle dentist” promises free see what could be done. wine and stereo headphones. A medical clinic tells AIDS Shortly afterward, they told us that they had patients that their best years are yet to come.
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