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The Independent Newspaper Serving Notre Dame and Saint Mary's VOLUME 40: ISSUE 10 MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 5. 2005 . NDSMCOBSERVER.COM Professors return safely from N el'V Orleans Kelley at Zachman and Chambers grateful to be back at SMC after hurricane stranded them in hotel vvork for hotel employees, family mem­ Zachman and Chambers were "It was kind of at first like By MEGAN O'NEIL bers and pets waiting to be forced to remain at the hotel. camping." Saint Mary's Editor evacuated from New Orleans. After initial moments of Hotel manager Dan King had The pair had been attending panic, Zachman said, the extended the hotel's hospitality President Caught in thn fury of an Advance Placement Testing women resigned themselves to to employees and their families llurricann Katrina and then conference over the weekend staying in New Orleans believ­ unable to leave the city, Professor is named as stranded in their Canal Street along with Saint Mary's faculty ing they would be safe in the Chambers said. hotel by subsequent flooding. members Mary Connolly and Sheraton. "lie didn't just protect the White House counsel two Saint Mary's professors David Stefancic as Katrina Following the hotel staff's tourists, he protected a lot of' finally made it home Thursday approached and storm warn­ instruction's, they filled their people who couldn't get out of and wnrn set to return to their ings began to be issued. bathtub with water to use for New Orleans," Chambers said. By KATIE PERRY dassroorns today. "Hight then they started get­ hygienic purposes later, and "I've told a lot of people this, I News Writer Spanish professor Jenniff1r ting people out," Zachman then gathered with the rest of think the Sheraton literally Zachman and psychology pro­ said. "It was sheer luck of the the guests Sunday at 8 p.m. in saved my life." A Notre Dame associato law fessor Karnn Chambers spent draw who got out." a ballroom on the fifth floor. Zachman said there was a professor has madn the leap thrfH~ days holed up in a Connolly and Stefandc were "Everyone brought their great sense of relief Monday from Notre Damn Avnnue to Slwraton hotel with roughly placed on flights out of the city blankets and pillows and we Pennsylvania Avenue allnr land­ 1,000 other stranded travelers, before cancellations began, but slept in there," Zachman said. see KATRINA/page 3 ing a job in May as deputy Whito House counsel to President George W. Bush. William Kelley, a University faculty member since 1995, spe­ cialized in administrative and constitutional law before being Irish win leaves fans optimistic oll'ered the highly ranknd govern­ mnntal job last spring. lie follows the lead of fellow Notre Dame Students travel to Pittsbugh to be a part of the season opener, others watch from campus law professor Jimmy Gurulo, who also served under President Bush from 2001 to 2003. By JOE PIARULLI Professor Riek Garnett, a col­ News Writer league of Kelley's at the Notre Dame law school. said the They celnbrated at 7:24, appointment was to be expectod 7:57, 8:15, 8:22, 8:41 and given Kellny's legal expertise. 'J::{8 p.m. "Beeause of Professor Knlley's At these times Saturday experience, credentials and legal night. tho nntiro Notre Dame judgment, I don't think any of us student body was chnering, who know him were surprised jumping, yelling, elapping when the Administration asked and bursting with exeite­ him to serve in this important mnnt. These were the position," he said. "I know that monwnts of high fives and Professor Kelley felt honored by erowd dives, of' game notes the appointment and enthusiastic and sore throats, of' ehest about the ehance to eontributo bumps and arm pumps. and to immerse himsnlf' in so Thnso w11ro tho markers of many ehallnnging legal prob­ Notrn Dame's six touchdowns lems." against Pittsburgh on Kelley joins an army of Notrn Saturday night. Dame professors and graduates Moanwhiln, whether at who have gone on to hold power­ l.ngnnds. on the quads or in ful positions in Washin~-,rton. Most tho hasoment of a dorm, stu­ notably, current Secretary of donts and fans on eampus CLAIRE KELLEY !The Observer State Condoleezza Hice- a 1975 Despite being a minority In the crowd of Pitt fans, these Notre Dame supporters continue to see FOOTBALL/page 6 cheer on the Fighting Irish to a 42-21 victory over the Pittsburgh Panthers Saturday. see KELLEY I page 4

SMC offers outdoor education Male professors play

By LISA GALLAGHER vital role at College News Writer Editor's note: The is the last at least as many men's col­ !\ hikn to Indiana Dunes in a three part series exploring leges," McDonnell said. "I Stato Park last Sunday kieknd the role of men at Saint dated women from sevnral ofT a fresh sories of' outdoor­ Mary's. women's schools and respected intnnsivn activities for tho them and their education." womnn of' Saint Mary's. · While the Arnnriean public's "Tho hike was beautiful." By NICOLE ZOOK outlook on single-snx colleges sophomore Loretta Brown Assistant News Editor had changed by the time said. "It took us through MeDonrwll was hired as faculty some eeosystn,m~. that many While some may see the all­ at the College a few years later, pnople never sen. fnmale environment at Saint he viewed Saint Mary's not as Tho hiko was thn first of Mary's as unusual in today's outdated in a quickly dwindling several nnw wenkend outings world of co-ed eollnges and field of all-women's colleges sdwdulnd throughout the fall nven co-Pd dormitories, philos­ but as an opportunity to edu­ to m1abln studnnts to enjoy a ophy professor Kevin eatn students in a different variety of' physical aetivities. McDonnell says he knows the kind of environment. Instructor John Gallagher value of a single-sex education "By the time I came to Saint collaborated with athletic - he attended an all-male Mary's, soon after the merger dirnetor Lynn Kaehmarik last school for his undergraduate negotiations with Notre Dame year to giwge student interest KATE FENLON!The Observer eourses. had broken down, almost every Saint Mary's students participate in one of the many indoor and "In the mid-1960s there see PHYS-ED/page 6 outdoor physical education courses offered by the College. were 300 women's colleges and see MEN/page 4 page 2 The Observer+ PAGE 2 Monday, September 5, 2005

INSIDE COLUMN QUESTION OF THE DAY: WHAT DID YOU THINK OF SATURDAY'S FOOTBALL GAME? Significance of sport In the aftermath of the deadly hurri­ cane Katrina, insignificant as it may sound, I thought about sports. I sat in my sports-adorned dorm room ready to sign Kyle Knust Matthew Frey Ty Martin Andrew Crowe up for interhall sports, eager to take a road trip to Ann Arbor senior senior senior senior for a football game and Tom Dorwart O'Neill O'Neill O'Neill O'Neill excited to experience another Irish home Sports game. Less than a Writer "Not even "I sure do miss "Instead ofbeing "Weisfor week after perhaps the Wanny's 'stache the swinging Stanford East, Reisman!" most catastrophic event in United States could stop the gate. " weare now history, I-along with the rest of Notre Patriots West. " Dame - cheered on the Irish to victory Irish offense." over Pitt. And I wondered -should we feel guilty for having fun, eating pizza and caring so much about sports? I thought about the meaning and importance of sports, the reason we still watch Sportscenter or play two-hand-touch football on the quad. Then, I realized, we need sports. Sports still matter. Last week's chaos put a new perspec­ tive on sports - on life, itself, for that IN BRIEF matter- much in the same way 9/11 and the tsunami in Asia did. We should The hockey team and Notre reflect on the tragedy - pray for the vic­ Dame Athletics will sponsor the tims and those helping with relief efforts inaugural "Drop the Puck" din­ and donate money at our dorm Masses, ner Thesday. Events include an home football games and other events. It open skate from 5:30 p.m. to 6 seems, even hundreds of miles away on the Joyce Center Ice Rink, from the stricken area, that enough can't autographs with the team at 6 be done. p.m., dinner at 7 p.m. and Still, sports matter. guest speaker Hockey Hall of More than ever, Louisianans will be Farner Scotty Bowman, the for­ fans- they will mer Detroit Red Wings head show their resolve and passion if, some­ coach and winningest coach in how, their shaken Saints win their season NHL history - including Nine opener this week. No doubt, the people Stanley Cups. without a town will take pride in their teams. They don't have homes, but they'll A conference titled "Capture watch-if they can -Southern Gamma-Ray Spectroscopy and Mississippi take on Alabama, LSU battle Related Topics" will take place Arizona State and Tulane face Mississippi all day today through Friday in State this weekend and next. the McKenna Hall auditorium. "We need this season," Tulane quarter­ The themes of the conference back Lester Ricard said in an espn.com include Nuclear Structure, article. "I think that will be the ultimate Nuclear Symmetries, Nuclear joy, to see us do well this season." Astrophysics and To Tulane president Scott Cowen, Instrumentation, Facilities and "doing well," at this point, goes beyond Applications of Nuclear Science. winning. Wms would be a mere bonus. KIRSTEN HOELMER!rhe Observer "We want our athletes to carry the Students watching television on the big screen In LaFortune get excited as The tri-military branches of torch, face and name of Tulane University Notre Dame drives to score In Saturday's game against the Pittsburgh ROTC will sponsor a Patriot's during this difficult time," Cowen said. Panthers. Day ceremony Friday at 7 a.m. It's quite the undertaking, but the ath­ next to the Hesburgh Library letes are more than willing to accept it. Reflecting Pool. The event will "It's something that we want to do for OFFBEAT feature speaker retired New Orleans," Green Wave linebacker Lieutenant Colonel Douglass R. Antonio Mason said. "A lot of people look Man finds venomous giant expecting to see the mouse tle more than fig leaves to Hemphill, a former Notre Dame at us as not only reps of Tulane, but of centipede in Britain scamper away. cover their modesty. professor of Military Science New Orleans. People can look at us and LONDON - Aaron Balick "Instead, when I lifted the The mammals were cho­ and current academic advisor in say, 'Wow, look at that team; they're expected to find a tiny papers, I saw this prehis­ sen from dozens of hopefuls the Mendoza College of going on the road, going through all that mouse stirring around toric looking animal skitter in an Internet competition. Business. The public is invited to adversity, and still getting the job done."' behind the 1V in his apart­ away behind a stack of The "Human Zoo" is attend. Thlane coach Chris Scelfo called the ment. Instead, he found a books." intended to show the basic country to "rally" behind New Orleans, venomous giant centipede The next day Balick, 32, nature of human beings as An exhibit entitled Two Italian saying while his players are worried that somehow made its way took it to Britain's Natural they frolick throughout the Hardbodies: Sports Cars Clad about missing family members, the from South America to History Museum, which August bank holiday week­ by Scaglietti and Frua will be "game will be, not so much competition, Britain. identified the insect as a end. on display in the Snite Museum but a release, a distraction." He trapped the 9-inch­ Scolopendra gigantea - the "We have set up this of Art Entrance Atrium Gallery So, don't feel guilty for playing catch on long creature between a world's biggest species of exhibit to highlight the until Sept. 18. The exhibit fea­ the quad or watching the Irish this week­ stack of books and put it in a centipede. spread of man as a plague tures a 1958 Ferrari and a 1955 end. Coaches always say sports teach plastic container. species and to communicate Maserati. Admission is free. players and fans about life, about team­ "Thinking it was a mouse, Humans on exhibit in the importance of man's work and about working towards a goal. I went to investigate the London Zoo place in the planet's ecosys­ To submit information to be Now, in the midst of tragedy, sports seem sound," Balick said LONDON - London Zoo tem," the London Zoo said. included in this section of The like more than that. They are the very Wednesday. "The sound was unveiled a new exhibition Observer, e-mail detailed infor­ "release" which helps us through chal­ coming from under some Thursday - eight humans Information compiled from mation about an event to lenging times. papers which I lifted, prowling around wearing lit- the Associated Press. obsnews@nd. edu When the world seems, as it did last Monday, like it's about to come to a halt, the sports world keeps spinning - as it should. TODAY TONIGHT TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY 0:::: Contact Tom Dorwart at 11.1 [email protected] :::1: The views expressed in the Inside !;;: Column are those of the author and not 11.1 necessarily those of The Observer. 3: (f (f ..... < CORRECTIONS (.) 0 HIGH HIGH HIGH HIGH HIGH HIGH The Observer regards irself as a professional ...I 82 60 85 83 78 81 publication and strives for rhe highest standards LOW 75 LOW 53 LOW 62 LOW 59 LOW 57 LOW 59 of journalism ar all rimes. We do, however, recognize rhar we will make misrakes. If we have made a misrake, please conracr us ar 631-4541 Atlanta 91 I 69 Boston 84 I 65 Chicago 84 I 56 Denver 86 I 56 Houston 94 I 70 Los Angeles 85 I 66 Minneapolis 78 I 55 so we can correct our error. New York 86 I 65 Philadelphia 89 I 67 Phoenix 105 I 84 Seattle 75 I 52 St. Louis 88 I 65 Tampa 90 I 75 Washington 90 1 85 Monday, September 5, 2005 The Observer + CAMPUS NEWS page 3

on." Katrina Using a contact in the Federal Emergency Management FedEx Kinko's opens on catnpus continued from page 1 Agency (FEMA), the Sheraton Corporation arranged for the By LISA SCHULTZ after the storm passed over the stranded guests to be evacuated News Writer eity and she and Chambers by bus. Fm1ling relieved but also hoped to be able to lly horne the slightly guilty, Zachman and Notre Dame students, faculty rwxt day. Breaches in Nnw Chambers left New Orleans at and staff can now meet their Orleans' Ievins, however, made about 5 p.m. Wednesday and copy needs quickly - and more that impossible. arrived in Dallas early cheaply than ever - at tlH1 "We woke up Tuesday and Thursday morning. campus' new FedEx Kinko's. looked out llw window and saw "We just couldn't believe it," Last spring, a campus com­ tlu~ flooding," Zachman said. "It Zachman said. "I have never mittee researched ways to pro­ was like, 'Oh my God."' been so happy to get on a bus. vide copy services more cl'fi­ Out of food and water. nearby The first thing wn did when we ciently at the request of hot1~ls lwgan !Wieting their got to the hotel in Dallas was Executive Vice President John orcupants, Zachman said. She shower and shower a little bit Aflleck-Graves. Members carne and Charnlwrs watrhed as morn, and then sleep because up with a revamping of all copy rdugnns walked by 1·arrying we had been on the bus for so services on campus and the luggage. long." addition of FedEx Kinko's - a King announced ovnr the Tho women flew into South solution that "translates to a hotel I';\ system that to nnsure Bend Hngional Airport lower cost per copy for Notre ERIC t.lwir safety hn would have to Thursday night, where they Dame students, faculty and FedEx Kinko's employee Ann Durrell works In the revamped lock down the building, were met by Connolly and staff," said Dan Skendzel, campus copy shop In Grace Hall. Zachman said. Stefaneic. director of Administrative Tlw professors said they "We arn so grateful that all of Services and Business new printing services on cam­ "We've tried to sngnwnt tlw thmnselves saw very little of the our friends and family here Operations. pus before deciding on FedEx market needs but also makn looting that was widely report­ were so worried about us, but it . While copy centers in Deeio, Kinko's. tho campus community awarn ed by the media, but under the was just inconvenient for us," O'Shaugnessey and Mendoza "FedEx Kinko's was the suc­ that each of theso locations is eireumstances. they sympa­ Zachman said. "The people that will remain open, the live copy cessful bidder of three compa­ essnntially interchangnabln," thiznd with those who were are still down there that are centers on campus operatnd by nies that submitted proposals," Skendznl said. foremlto stPal to survive. dying. that should be the focus." different University depart­ Skendzel said. "FedEx Kinko's The Gracn llall Fedl\x "I can't judge those people for Thn two professors said they ments and Copy Wright, Inc.'s was the most compelling in Kinko's is geared toward high stealing water," Zachman said. worn appalled at the slow relief Copy Shop in LaFortune are terms of expertise, service and volume copy re-quests, while "Who can blame people for efforts, and intend to contribute dosed or will be dosing. pricing." the LaFortune location will bn stealing nwdidne or food?" to the city's recovery in various "It is much more eflieient to Even though some ·course morn of a typical rntail location The Slwraton. just bloeks ways in thn following weeks. have one entity operating copy packets will still be available and the Statn Road 23 location from llw French Quarter, is "I think that the response was centers on campus," Skendzel though the O'Shaugnessy copy is open 24 hours pnr day for located on orw of the higher uncoordinated, and if you think said. shop, FndEx Kinko's provides a late night service. parts of the eity. Zachman said that recently we have spent lots A new FedEx Kinko's is cur­ network that allows for course At all loeations, Notre Damn that while stranded inside, the of money on emergency rently located in Grace Ilall and packets to be bought along students will pay $.04 pnr black wonwn did not !W!~n realize the response it was kind of surpris­ will be renting another location with regular books at the book­ and white eopy, down from thn gravity of the llooding. ing," Chambers said. "People in the space currently occupied store. Course packets will be copy shop's eharge of $.OS. "We were in kind of a media di(~d of thirst and this is by Copy Wright, Inc. in available for purchase on Other FedEx Kinko's benefits black out," shn said. "The hotel America. But really the story is LaFortune beginning around insideND and can be picked up ineludn online ordering and did snt up four computers (with the people down there, what is fall break, said Matthew Erste, at the FedEx Kinko's State pick-up at any of'the three tlw usn of an emergency gener­ going on with them, how we FedEx Kinko's major account Road 23 location ofT campus, locations. ator) so people could e-mail ean help them." manager. Grace llall, LaFortune or the family and fri!HHls. We would Skendzel said the University Hammes Notre Dame Contact Lisa Shultz at Contact Megan O'Neil lwar things, rumors, but we looked into several options for Bookstore. [email protected] didn't know what was going [email protected]

THE BOS'I'ON CONSULTING GROUP

invites you to our

Information Session

Tuesday, September 6, 2005 6:00pm to 8:00ptn CCE, McKenna Hall, Room 210

All majors are encouraged to attend. Undergraduate and Master Students, non-MBA

THE COMPLEXITY OF A PROBLEM

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BCG www. hcg.com page 4 The Observer + CAMPUS NEWS Monday, September 5, 2005

Saint Mary's newest male in the classroom now than need. They are great problem "I will admit that I've become addition, music professor they used to be, demonstrating solvers but they often need a a real supporter of women's Men Daniel Party, said he feels that the focus during the past sounding board for their education through what I've continued from page 1 Saint Mary's is a good learning several decades on helping ideas," he said. "I just received experienced here," Svelmoe environment because of those girls assert themselves aca­ a copy of a book written by one said. "That doesn't mean I'm benefits. demically has worked," he of my ·former students and she marching in the streets ... but school was rushing to go co­ "In a mixed-sex environ­ said. "Some are even talking credits my mentoring for from what I've seen of the ed," McDonnell said. "Saint ment, men and women tend to now about needing to get boys accomplishing this. I felt rather experience of young women Mary's offered a wonderful fall first into traditional gender into all boys' academic envi­ humbled." here in the classrooms, in ath­ opportunity to take part in roles, and only later individual ronments to 'protect' them Theater professor Mark letics, in student government ... rebuilding a great school and personalities arise," he said. from assertive girls. Go fig­ Abram-Copenhaver, whose well, let's just say I hope places to preserve a diverse kind of "Without the gender divide, ure." daughter like Saint institution. While there were their personalities come out Ted Billy, a longtime profes­ Tori is a Mary's certainly differences between earlier, and it's nice to have sor in the College's English junior at the always exist." single-sex male and single-sex female students taking roles department, has taught at not College, "/ will admit that I've Although female schools, there was also that are traditionally occupied one but two women's colleges, said that become a real supporter of challenges - a great similarity in that no one by men, like being a leader or which he said led him to while he and quirks, was putting on a show for what a clown, to name two believe strongly in the impor­ had ques­ women's education through such as "stu­ I will call extracurricular bene­ extremes." tance of women's education. tions about what I've experienced dents coming fits. Students could be quite History professor Bill "I had the good fortune to all-female here." to class in frank in class. In contrast to Svelmoe, who taught classes at teach for a year at the College education slippers," the co-ed college in which I had Notre Dame and Bethel as a of Saint Benedict, a Catholic, before com­ Abram­ been teaching, the atmosphere graduate student" before com­ all-women's college, a few ing to Saint Bill Svelmoe Copenhaver was freer. Also, women partici­ ing to Saint years before I Mary's he history professor said - are pated in class - if the women Mary's, said he came to Saint has "come presented to didn't, who would?" is used to "My daughter just Mary's," he said. to see the male profes­ teaching all graduated from SMC "That experience great value of the single sex sors teaching at an all-women's It's a woman's world women and prepared me well environment." college, the Saint Mary's pro­ Most male professors on does not feel a last May and loved for teaching "When I was first touring the fessors seem to step up to the campus agree with McDonnell lack of men in the experience. It classes composed campus I was going through the plate and swing their hardest. that there are benefits to sin­ his classrooms. was great seeing her exclusively of scene shop and a student was "I guess I have learned that gle-sex education. Thomas "During my female students. I welding some steel. The student the great Tom Hanks line, Parisi, a psychology professor first few years grow in confidence am an equalitari­ wore a large mask and the 'There's no crying in baseball' at the College since 1980, is here I kept ask­ while here." an, and I believe sparks were flying as the job doesn't apply to a college," one of those professors, ing myself the that educating was completed. At that point Svelmoe said. "I haven't though he said teaching at question of David Stefancic young women is the worker lifted the mask and, learned yet how to deal with Saint Mary's was "challenging how my class­ as vital as educat­ to my surprise, was a young the weeping student in my history professor at first." room was dif­ ing young men." woman," he said. "The fact that office." "At this point, I would find it ferent without History profes- I was surprised and that I real­ Party, who just began to deal odd - and an adjustment - to men. I'm not sor David ized that in this environment I with those challenges, said that be in a co-ed classroom," he sure I ever came up with a sat­ Stefancic believes in it so should not be surprised by such while he does "find it challeng­ said. "Young men are more isfactory answer to that ques­ deeply that he recently sent his an occurrence went a long way ing to try to think like a 1 9- likely to spout on even when tion," he said. "Perhaps I had daughter, Regina, to Saint toward helping me to realize year-old woman," he is not nec­ they don't have much to say. A too little experience in mixed Mary's. the value of studying theater at essarily shocked or over­ dangerous generalization, I classrooms, or perhaps I'm "My daughter just graduated a women's college." whelmed by the all-female know. Let me temper it by say­ remarkably insensitive. My from SMC last May and loved Most male professors say environment. ing that, as time goes on, most hunch is that teachers in the the experience," he said. "It their time at Saint Mary's has However, Party said he does people talk too much, men and sciences might notice more was great seeing her grow in altered their views on women's get ribbed by friends when they women alike. Seriously, radical differences. I think confidence while here." issues. find out he teaches at Saint though, I think that a product women historically have been "Of course, my views on Mary's. of socialization in high school strong in the humanities, so Lessons of ther own women's issues must have "I do get laughs and jokes and grade school is still that perhaps we notice it less." While Stefancic is teaching changed, but I have been here from friends regarding teach­ boys are reinforced for talking, Svelmoe also said the all­ the women of Saint Mary's, he long enough that I would put it ing at a women's college," he and girls for fading to. the female environment is positive said they have also taught him differently: my views have been said. "It's always the same joke: background. Which is one rea­ for empowering women. in his time here. shaped in many significant "Lucky you!" son why there is still a valid "Recent research has shown "Since coming to SMC I have ways by the culture I have been argument to be made for sin­ that women even at the lower become a better listener, which embedded in for the past 25 Contact Nicole Zook at gle sex education." levels are much more assertive is oftentimes what my students years," Parisi said. [email protected]

ing as clerk for Supreme Court Chief Justice Warren E. Burger Kelley and Associate Justice Antonio continued from page 1 Scalia, Kelley worked in the office of Kenneth Starr during the his­ International Study Program graduate with a masters in inter­ toric President Clinton impeach­ in national studies - left the ment trial of 1999. Kelley also University and went on to high­ served in the Department of profile job in the nation's capital. Justice from 1991 to 1993, work­ William McGurn, who graduated ing as assistant to the solicitor from the University in 1980 with general. Angers, France a bachelor's degree in philosophy, A.J. Bellia, a pr

INTERNATIONAL NEWS Housing project fire kills 15 in Paris Kuwait offers $sao million in aid L'IIAY-LES-IWSES, France - Firelighters treating survivors at a housing project lire that killed 15 people Sunday were pelted Countries from around the world join together to donate to hurricane relief with stones by youths complaining or a tardy rnsponse, in what the mayor called a "night Associated Press of horror." l'olico said it appeared local youths wore CAIHO, Egypt to blamn for the pro-dawn fire in the 19- Donations to Hurricane story project south of Paris _ the third deadly Katrina relief poured in blazn in the Paris ama in the past nine days. from around the world Tlw dead included tlm~e children. Sunday, with Kuwait Arson was suspected in the two earlier offering $500 million and lims as well. other Mideast countries Hesidents scrnamml and leapod from win­ offering aid and condo­ dows in the liro that Mayor Patrick Seve said lences despite widespread began around I a.m. in tho town of L'llay­ opposition to U.S. policies lns- Hoses, near Orly airport. in the area. But the al-Qaida in Iraq lbree people killed in Saudi clashes group, led by the HIYAD II. Saudi i\rabia - Police fought run­ Jordanian Abu Musab al­ ning gun battles with al-Qaida militants in an Zarqawi, called the devas­ nastnrn Saudi Arabian city on Sunday in dashes tation across the U.S. Gulf that killnd two extrnmists and a police ollker, a Coast region God's retri­ Saudi ollkial said. bution on America. Thn violencn raged across Dammam, about The European Union 250 milns northem;t of' the (~apital Hiyadh, send­ and NATO also stepped up ing f'rightmwd rnsichml"> running indoors. to provide aid following An Interior Ministry statement said security rare requests for help fon~es were ntrrying out a security operation from Washington, while "against a number of dmnenl"> alliliated to the the 22 - member Arab "deviant group,"' a term that usually rnliws to al­ League urged cquntries <)aida's branch in this kingdom. across the Middle East to State-run Saudi TV aimd f(lotage of what it "extend aid to the United said was the body of' a slain militant slumpnd on States to face the excep­ a strm~t while wnaring a traditional white Arab tional humane circum­ gown stained with blood. stances." Spain, Belgium, Britain, Saudi-own(~d AI-Arabiya satellite TV rnported Germany and Italy· that militanl"> fin~d a rocket propelled grenade announced they had start­ and hurled hand gnmades at security per­ ed or were about to send somwl and set one police vehicle on liro. aid and experts to the U.S. to help with the logis­ tical operation of getting NATIONAL NEWS help to hurricane sur­ vivors. U.S military personnel load emergency food rations onto a flatbead transport Britain's Ministry of Sunday. Donations from around the world flow Into hurricane ravaged areas. Ubraries increase Spanish materials Defense said Sunday the DI·:NVEH - On a rainy Saturday, Miereya government would send us through," Kuwait's released an Internet that face natural catastro­ c:onwz thumbed through a book while her 500,000 ration packs. energy minister, Sheik statement saying "God's phes and extends most of two young sons carried comic books to their Germany and Italy sent Ahmed Fahd AI Ahmed AI great wrath has hit the the aid they rneeive." father in tho children's section of the city's flights of supplies, includ­ Sabah, said in a state­ head of the oppressors The United Nations said Cnntntl Public Library. ing food rations, bed sup­ ment. where their dead are in Sunday the U.S. had "We come lwre mostly for the kids, for plies, inl'latable dinghies Kuwait's .of'fer includes thousands and thnir loss­ accepted its ol'fnr of U.N. books and movies - oducational and enter­ and water purifiers. $400 million in oif prod­ es in billions." assistance and expertise. tainnwnt - in Spanish and English," Gomez The $500 million offer ucts and $1 00 million in Bitter U.S. foes Iran and "A small U.N. coordina­ said. by Kuwait - which owes humanitarian relief, AI North Korea - which tion team is in As thn Spanish-speaking population has its 1991 liberation from Sabah's spokesman told Washington pressured Washington now consult­ grown in the United States, libraries havo sevei1 months of occupa­ The Associated Press. over their respective ing with government off'i­ tried to ktwp paee by stocking up on books, tion by Sad dam II ussein 's Another close U.S. ally, nuclea-r programs cials on how best tho U.N. magazirws and movies. Iraqi army to a U.S.-Ied the United Arab Emirates, offered to help rescuo can complement the In somo plaeos, however, crities say tax­ coalition - is the largest is sending tents, clothing, efforts, and Syria - United States' own emer­ payPr morwy shouldn't be spent on a popula­ to date, surpassing the food and other aid. another longtime oppo­ gency efforts," said a tion that can include illngal immigrants or on $100 million pledged by The United States enjoys nent was among statement from the U.N. proposals that promote languages other than Qatar, another U.S. ally in close relations with most numerous Middle Eastern spokesman. I·:nglish. the Mideast. GNif states, particularly states offering condo­ The Paris-based "It's our duty as Kuwait, which was a lences. International Energy Hurricane Maria fonns over Atlantic Kuwaitis to stand by_ our launch pad for the 2003 And Arab League chief Agency has also said its MIAMI - Maria int(msilied and developed friends to lighten the invasion of Iraq that top­ Amr Moussa said the 2(Hl1ember nations would into tlw season's lirth hurricane on Sunday, humanitarian misery and pled Saddam, and Qatar, a Arab world should sup­ rnloase the equivalent of 2 growing strongor ovor warm water in tho as a pay back for the. base for tho U.S. military port tho United States, million barrels of oil per opnn Atlantic. many situations during in the war's initial stages. which "always exprnssos day from strategic At 5 a.m. 1\I>T, thn storm had maximum which Washington helped But ai-Zarqawi's group solidarity with nations reserves. sustairwd wind of 75 mph - only I mph higlwr than tlw minimum threshold for hur­ riearw status - and was conternd 645 miles sou tlwast of Bnrm uda. It. was moving north-northwest at 14 mph, and was oxp(H~tml to turn to the north later Sunday or narly Monday. Rehnquist burial set for Wednesday

services open to friends and family. Sunday evening. Associated Press The burial at Arlington will be pri­ The bodies of Hohnquist's two vate. immediate predecessors, Warren E. LOCAL NEWS WASHINGTON - Chief Justice In a sensitive ritual, Supreme Burger and Earl Warren, also are William Hehnquist's body will lie in Court officials and the Military buriod at Arlington National Fulton Co. may switch time zones repose in the Great Hall of tho District of Washington coordinated ComfJtery. Burger and Warren lay IWCIII•:STI~H. Ind. - Thn Fullon County Supreme Court on Tuesday and the funeral arrangements with in repose in tho Supremo Court Comrnissiorwrs have voted to ask the U.S. Wednesday and he will be buried at Rehnquist's family. Building before their serviens. Department of Transportation to place the Arlington National Cemetery fol­ Timing and other details were in The casket of' the last chief'justiee Nortlwrn Indiana eounty in tl1o Clmtral tim(~ zone. lowing funeral services Wednesday. the hands of the family, said to have died, Burger in 1995, was At a publk hnaring Thursday, thn commission­ Tho court announced Sunday that Barbara Owens, a spokeswoman carriod up the marble steps of the ers voted 3-0 to rnmmmend joining the Central the public will be invited to pay its for the Army's Joint Force building, where it was on public time zone, ev(m though tl1n county does not bor­ rospects from 10:30 a.m. EDT until Headquarters National Capitol view for 12 hours beforo serviens d(~r any of' thn oth(~r Indiana eounties currnntly in 10 p.m. on Tuesday and from 10 Region/Military District of at National Presbyterian Church. that zone. a.m. until noon on Wednesday. Washington. President Clinton, the nine nwm­ "Wn own it to tho poople of our state to raise Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Hehnquist died Saturday at the bers of the Supreme Court and four their m~onomy any way we can," said Hop. Erie at St. Matthew's Cathedral in age of 80 and the Supreme Court former justices were among the c:utwnin, H-Hensselaer. Washington, D.C., with funeral announced the arrangements 800 people who attended. page 6 The Observer + CAMPUS NEWS Monday, September 5, 2005

first weekend of school," he other trips that may be Like many at Notre Dame, ·said. "I hope the results will offered." Lyzinski and Sulzbach have Phys-ed be [as positive for] the rest Though the athletic Football high hopes for the team's continued from page 1 of the trips, too," department's main priority continued from page 1 future. Both said Saturday Other activities scheduled is catering to the women of night's game just helped to and plan outdoor courses through early December Saint Mary's, Kachmarik is affirm what they already felt. for the 2005-06 school year. include an overnight cycling open to the idea of male were glued to television sets "I've had them winning the Gallagher, who has exten­ and camping trip on the participants if the activity is - and Irish eyes were smil­ national championship since sive wilderness training, is Illinois and Michigan Canal not overnight. ing. day one," Lyzinski said. beginning his second year at State Trail Sept. 10-11, a "We want to try to accom­ Freshman Alex Gonzalez, While thinking about a the College. Though schools canoeing and kayaking trip modate everyone," she said. who went between his dorm championship may be prema­ in the area - including down the River Country Safety is also an issue. and the North Quad to watch ture, it is already in the Saint Mary's - promote Heritage Water Trail Sept. Students are asked to fill out the game, was among the minds of the students, and intramural sports with a 18, indoor climbing at Climb a liability release before crowd of adrenaline-packed the atmosphere on campus high success rate, Gallagher Kalamazoo in they are per- fans. following the game shows said he was surprised to Michigan Nov. 6 mitted to "That was Irish football at students are as pumped as find that none available at and downhill attend the its best," he said. "It was ever for the upcoming season. the College offered any kind skiing at Swiss "What a great way outing. good payback from last year. "They say that after they of outdoor recreation. Valley Ski Area, to show women, "The ulti­ [Tyler] Palko took a beating. re-gild the Dome we win a Kachmarik said outdoor also in 'Look, there [are] mate goal of It was awesome." National Championship," adventures are a terrific Michigan, on these outings "We never questioned the Sulzbach said. way for women to exercise Dec\ 4. lots of great things are to provide play calls," said senior Vince Notre Dame head coach and enjoy themselves. Kachmarik you can do outside.,,, students with Lyzinski, who made the trip Charlie Weis also earned "What a great way to show and Gallagher new skills to Pittsburgh to support the instant praise for his debut our women, 'Look, there said they Lynn Kachmarik and self-con­ team. He said there were on the college field. believe students about as many Irish fans as "Everybody likes the way [are) a lot of things you can athletic director fidence to do outside,"' she said. "This will enjoy these experience Panthers fans at the game. Weis is running the offense," is such a beautiful area· with trips and hope the outdoors ''I'd say it was 50-50," he sophomore Brandon Carroll so many opportunities to do for high levels safely and said. said. "lie was taking care of some different things." of participation from the­ responsibility, and with Much of the Irish fan sec­ [the mistakes] on the side­ Though these new oppor­ campus. curiosity to further educate tion was comprised of hun­ lines. lfe 's strict." tunities are collectively list­ "Fifteen women [signed up themselves about each dreds of members of the Junior Thomas Flowers also ed in the Saint Mary's for] the hike Sund{Ly, and so activity," Gallagher wrote in Notre Dame Alumni Club of said he liked the way Weis course book as 'Introduction we could have 15 very dif­ his course description. Pittsburgh and current stu­ handled the team in his first to Outdoor Sports,' they are ferent women [who] want to Kachmarik also stressed dents who braved high gas game and believes Weis will actually individual activities go on the canoeing trip and the opportunities these prices and a six-hour drive to continue to lead Notre Dame and are not offered for cred­ kayaking trip," Kachmarik activities provide for stu­ get to the game. Pumping up to victory. it, Gallagher said. Gallagher said. dents. the crowd was the Band of "The play calling was vastly and Kachmarik are continu­ Freshman Taryn Pabst, "My feeling is ... it's a the Fighting Irish, which improved ... The game was a ing to measure student who attended the hike with great option for those stu­ chose the season opener as morale booster. There's a lot interest in each activity. some of her neighbors and dents [in that] it's not all the first of its two away game more emotion on the side­ Gallagher said that while roommate from McCandless about partying," she said. trips. lines," Flowers said. "We initially he was concerned Hall, said she enjoyed the "This is a perfect alternative Cindi Sulzbach, a freshman can't let up, especially that word of the hike would trip and is likely to partici­ to a different social life than band member, said the stu­ against Michigan and USC. not spread quickly enough pate in more outdoor cours­ what has typically been dent section was extremely [Weisl won't settle for the to garner participation from es this year. offered at Saint Mary's on a supportive. players doing anything less already busy students, he "The hike overall was a lot Saturday night." "Our offense was amazing than the best. He runs a busi­ was enthused by student of fun and I thought every­ ... [All the Pittsburgh fans] ness." response to Sunday's hike. one came well-prepared," left after halftime. There "I thought it was pretty Pabst said. "I would defi­ Contact Lisa Gallagher at were all green shirts," she Contact Joe Piarulli at good considering it was the nitely take advantage of lastlgallaO 1 @saintmarys.edu said. [email protected]

Each concession stand group must have at least two stude:nts trained ·)!-All training from the spring is stiH valid for the 2.005 Footha11 season

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Monday, September 5, 2005 USINESS page 7 MARKET RECAP Katrina takes a toll at the pumps Dow 10,447.37 -12.26 Holiday weekend travelers opt to carpool as gas prices soar over $3 per gallon }ones

lJfl: Same: Down: Composite Volum Associated Press 2,002 141 '~ 2,246,601,210 _, .lll!!tml3'.. t Traffic was light on AMEX 1,680.04 :~.:1.~: Atlanta highways Saturday NASDAQ 2,141.07 -6.83 and gas stations that were NYSE 7,531.13 ~12.72 fortunate enough to have S&PSOO 1,2 UL02 -3.57 fuel were still charging more than $3 a gallon. In NIKKEI(Tol

THE OBSERVER The lndeptmdnll, Daily NttW.tpap~tr St:r11ing No~ Damt: 4nd Saim .Mary's Homeland insecurity 1~0. Box 779, Notre Dame, IN 46556 024 South Dining Hall, Notre Dame, IN 46556 My name is Peter Schroeder, and met with the same blank stare that my backwoods village, I took the easy EDITOR IN CHIEF I'm from a town. No, I'm not from a says, "I have never heard of that way out and said, "Pittsburgh." Claire Heininger suburb, or from "around" anywhere. place; therefore, I hate you." Of course, in Theology, there was no­ MANAGING EDITOR BUSINESS MANAGER I'm from a town. Eventuallyyou'll see some town.ers way the Big Man was going.to let me Pat Leonard Paula Garcia Beginning with who have just given up, the ones that get away with that one. Two student are perfectly willing to lambaste their introductions later, a girl stated that AssT. MANAGING EDITOR: Maureen Reynolds Freshman Orientation, we all own town before you can. Ask them she too was from Pittsburgh. AssT. MANAGING EDITOR: Sarah Vabulas know the experi­ where they're from, and you usually Naturally, our professor asked if we AssT. MANAGING EDITOR: Heather Van Hoegarden ences of introduc­ get responses like, "Elizabethtown, knew each other. The shame I felt, in SPORTS EDITOR: Mike Gilloon tions. 1. Your Pennsylvania, you've never heard of Theology class no less! It was on that SCENE EDITOR: Rama Gottumukkala name, 2. Your it," or "Prophetstown, Illinois, it's just day I resolved; never again will I hide SAINT MARY's EDITOR: Megan O'Neil major, 3. Your a rinky-dink town in the middle of behind cities with NFL franchises and nowhere," or "Milburn, New Jersey, it skyscrapers and Barnes and Nobles, PHOTO EDITOR: Claire Kelley dorm, 4. Where you're from. The smells funny." These people are ones and embrace my hometown. You've GRAPHICS EDITOR: Graham Ebetsch first three ques­ Peter who.have given up on their towns, never heard of Johnstown, ADVERTISING MANAGER: Nick Guerrieri tions are gimmes. Schroeder and it's only a matter of time until Pennsylvania? You better learn, Ao DESIGN MANAGER: jennifer Kenning Everybody knows they forgo naming their town at all because that's where I'm from! CoNTROLLER: Jim Kirihara where Dillon Hall Wzll Write for and opting for vague geographical Towns have plenty to offer, even if WEB ADMINISTRATOR: Damian Althoff is, or what a Food generalities. they won't light the bulb above every­ Marketing major The best example of these generali­ one's head. For example, my home­ OFFICE MANAGER & GENERAL INFO does (and no, it's not nothing, funny ties is the "near Chicago" squad. town, Johnstown, is the Flood Capital (574) 631-7471 man). but with that last one, it's all up While Notre Dame is a national cam­ of the World, with historic floods in FAX for grabs. Being that Notre Dame is a pus, a large chunk of its student body 1889, 1936, and 1977. It is also the (574) 631-6927 ADVERTISING national campus with students from hails from the Midwest, especially filming location of the movie Slap (574) 631-6900 [email protected] across the country and the world, one Illinois. As such, when going around Shot, and home of the world's steepest EDITOR IN CHIEF always answers that last question and telling hometowns, there is prob­ motorized vehicular inelined plane. (574) 631-4542 with an assumption in mind. One ably a one in five chance that some­ No town is too small to not have MANAGING EDITOR always assumes that this person is body will be from "near Chicago." something to be proud of. Hoople, (574) 631-4541 [email protected] from somewhere far, far away from Alright, near Chicago, that must be Illinois, population 98, is home to the ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITOR (574) 631-4324 your home, and one must be as gener­ near Chicago, right? Well, that's what new University of Wisconsin football BUSINESS OFFICE al as possible. you would think. "Near Chicago" basi­ coach, Bret Bielema. (574) 631-5313 Why be general? If you have to ask, cally is a term that translates to "the So I say to you, Observer readers, NEWS DESK you're not from a town. In the begin­ Central Time Zone, possibly don't hedge your bets anymore and (574) 631-5323 [email protected] ning of a towner's college career, the Mountain." People who claim to live just spit out the name ol' the nearest VIEWPOINT DESK in this abundantly populated area metropolis, get a hold of your town's (574) 631-5303 [email protected] optimism and pride of their homeland SPORTS DESK is evident. Ask a freshman where could live as much as three hours name and never let go. Join me in the (574) 631-4543 [email protected] they're from, and they'll tell you the from Chicago, and still claim their llght against townism, and let's defeat SCENE DESK . name of their town. its approximate nearness. People, it's time to stop hid­ common town stereotypes. No, we (574) 631-4540 [email protected] distance from the nearest place you ing in the shadow of the Sears Tower. don't all wear overalls, and no, we SAINT MARY'S DESK may have heard of, and then draw Embrace your townitude! don't play jugs for fun. And for the sm~.1 @nd.edu · PHOTO DESK you a topographical map on your I have a confession to make; I too last time, she's just my cousin. (574) 631-8767 [email protected] forearm. was once part of the "nearest recog­ SYSTEMS & WEB ADMINISTRATORS However, the life of a towner is a nizable name" rabble, although Peter Schroeder is a senior English (574) 631-8839 grueling one. Every single time some­ Pittsburgh was my crutch. In major. His favorite word is "ennui." one asks where you're f~;om, you have Theology 100 my freshman year, we He can be e-mailed at to submit yourself to the Spanish had to go around the room and intro­ pschroed@nd. edu. OBSERVER ONLINE Inquisition, as people try to ascertain duce ourselves in the standard boiler­ The views expressed in this column www. ndsmcobserver. com where your stupid shack in the woods plate fashion. It got to me, and fearing are those of the author and not is. The name of your town is always the blank stares of unfamiliarity with necessarily those of The Observer. POLICIES The Observer is the independent, daily newspaper published in print and online by the students of the University of Notre Dame duLac and Saint Mary's College. Editorial content, including advertisements, is EDITORIAL CARTOON nor governed by policies of the administration of either institution. The Observer reserves the right to refuse advertisements based on conrenr. The news is reported as accurately and objectively as possible. Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the majority of the Editor in Chief, Managing Editor, Assistant Managing F.ditors and department editors. 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Monday, September 5, 2005 IEWPOINT page 9 Running the University like a business

A long-tinw friend and eollect).,TUe has called "distanee education," whieh boils things, to treating its students like cus­ and such like, are not professional skills. bonn appointed Prosident of the University down to oiTering courses on-line. With an tomers, its faeulty like employees, and its The kind of edueation ND should bn intent of Notrn Dame. I wish you well, John, in initial investment in digital equipment and managers as ultimately responsible for its on providing, accordingly, eannot be nvnry rnspnet, and am eonlident that the photogenic faculty, an established univer­ institutional well-being. accommodated by a managerial model. Univnrsity will flourish under your stew- sity could draw tuition money from thou­ There undoubtedly are some members Other reasons li1r rojoeting this model ardship. Kenneth sands upon thousands of students world­ of the University (mostly faculty) who feel concern untoward side-ellixts that go Thn eorning of a new Sayre wide. Without the overhead of dassrooms we have gone too far along this path along with its employment. .Consider, for prnsident is a fitting and other campus facilities, distance edu­ already. Others may differ. But all con­ example, ND's seemingly obsessive con­ occasion for a commu­ Guest eation has the potential of being enor­ cerned parties should agree that the time cern with publicity. not unlike that of a nity-wide eonvorsation Columnist mously profitable. Aecording to Derek is ripe for a comprehensive discussion of business intent on maintaining a favorable on tho path ND might Bok, former president of I larvard (in his the extent to which the managerial model public appearanee. One may be exeused fi1llow in tho years recent Universities in the Marketplace), is compatible with our educational mis­ for wondering why, ~-,riven the quality of alwad. This Iotter is intended as a contri­ such prestigious universities as Columbia, sion. education it should be providing, the bution to such a eonversation. It will eome Chieago, and Carnegie Mellon have The point to be debated is not whether University is so preoccupied with a care­ in fi1ur installmenl<>. troating four closely already embarked on ventures of this sort. we need an efficiently managed fully managed publk image. related topies. The first concerns the issue It would be naive to assume that ND is Development Office, Investment Ollice and Another concern is the em~et of the busi­ of whether the University should be run as immune to economic pressures like these. the like. Of course we do. The question at ness model upon grading. In the business a commercial enterprise. Viewed from one perspective, ND has a issue is whether, for purposes both of world, success in selling a product hinges Your presidency got oil" to an auspicious product to sell (iL<> degree), a well-defined long-term planning and of day-by-day on customer satisfaetion. When the prod­ start with the announcement in early July base of potential customers, and a skillful­ operation, the University should be con­ uct is a university degree, iL<> perceived that ND will part company with its com­ ly managed marketing program to make ceived as an organiza- value is bound up with the quali­ mereial TV station WNDU. The reason the product attractive. In the abstract, it tion providing a prod­ "The point to be ty of the academie record it rep­ quotnd in the South Bend Tribune is that seems natural that ND be run in a way uct to a select group of debated is not whether resenL'>. Since quality of an aca­ commercial broadcasting "is not our busi­ that maximizes effectiveness in the sale of consumers. My own demic record is measured in we need an efficiently nnss ... What we do instead is run a uni­ its particular product. In practice, this view is that it should terms of grade averages, an VIlrsity." The question at this would amount to running not. There are various managed Development untoward consequence of the point is how your adminis­ the University like a degree­ reasons to be offered Office, Investment model is a tnndency to sweeten tration will deal with other "A recent estimate is granting business. in support o this view. Office and the like. Of the product by giving unde­ problmns stemming from that for-profit schools Indeed, the University has One reason has to do course we do." servedly good grades. This is a thn University's involvement currently serve 600,000 several key components that with the conception of major source of the current epi­ with eommoreial interesL'i. students in this country seem to be run in this fash­ a ND education (and dmnic of grade inflation. NI> is not alone in fadng alone. These students ion already. Notable exam­ the degree symbolizing A dosely rnlated matter is the such problmns. You have are eligible for federal ples are the Development it) as a product. To be sure, there is a need for a purveyor of a product to make taken the holm at a time Pell grants and often Office and the Investment sense in which the training provided by a a favorable impression on potential con­ whnn higher education gen­ for state-sponsored Office, which quite reason­ for-profit career school is a product. A sumers. Under the business model, dass­ erally is bdng bull"eted by scholarships. which ably are expected to show a diploma from such a program equips its rooms teachers are eommonly thought of marknt forees. One prob­ healthy profit at the end of holder to seek employment in the relevant as salespersons and evaluated aeeordingly. lem has to do with cuts into funds each accounting period. field, which often is a benefit worth paying A problem with ND's current system of incrnased dnpendence on available for student Examples of a different sort for. To some extent, the same may be said Teacher-Course Evaluations (TCEs) is that llw business sector for support at non-profit are Human Resources and of professional training in law or business it measures eustomer satisf'aetion rather linandng. Pharmaceutical institutions like ND." the Controller's Office, which provided by ND and similar universities. than success in imparting skills that are and biotedmology firms, for function more or less like Even in such fields, however, NO's sense of part of a sound education. This rnsuiL'i in nxampl!l, often form their corporate counter­ mission should extend beyond professional teaehers being rewarded or penalized for allianees with universities in parts. Under the discipline training. reasons that might be extraneous to tho which research results are exchanged for ofthe Controller, all revenue-generating First and foremost, the goals of a ND University's mission. the funding of equipment, graduate assis­ operations of the University are held education should be thought of in terms of Excessive preoceupation with public tanL<>, and faculty supervision. While such accountable to the bottom-line (consider the personal maturity of its students. This image, grade inflation, and misleading arrangmnenL<> bring obvious benefits, the Food Services and the Joyce Center). is the case without regard for field of spe­ TCEs are all by-producL<; of the long-term result is that university Also to be noted is the fact that many of cialization. For engineers, scientists, and University's drift toward commercializa­ rnsearch programs t1md to be dominated the top officers of the University have a business people alike, growth in personal tion. Each will be treated at more length by commercial agendas. business background, and that the Board maturity is a matter of gaining life-skills in further installments of this letter. Another emerging problem comes with of Trustees tends to be dominated by busi­ like critical thinking, multicultural sensi­ Sullice it for now to say that in the years eompetition from a growing number of ness exeeutives. The net result is that a tivity, and responsible citizenship. In keep­ ahead your administration will eome to be for-profit schools, particularly in the fields sizeable portion of the people responsible ing with the intent of its C.S.C. founders, known by the way it responds to problems of business and medical technology. A for setting University policy think and act ND should also concentrate on the devel­ of this sort. rncent estimate is that for-profit schools like corporate executives. This can only opment of personal traits like compassion eurmntly serve 600,000 students in this add to the external forces acting to trans­ and humility, along with other virtues Kenneth Sayre is a professor of eountry alone. These students are eligible form ND into a business enterprise. ingredient to a mature Catholic faith. philosophy. This column is the first in a fi1r lilderal Poll granL<>. and often for state­ There is little likelihood, of course, that The first reason for rejecting a business four-part series addressed to new sponsornd seholarships, which cuts into the University will ever be operated pri­ model of University governance is that life­ University President Father John Jenkins. funds available for student support at non­ marily to make a profit. This would void skills of this sort simply are not products Kenneth Sayre can be contacted at profit institutions like ND. Admission poli­ its tax-exempt status. More likely is that it that can be exchanged on the market. ksayre@nd. edu eies in career schools are shaped entirely will come to be managed exclusively in the Professional skills can be marketed to The views expressed in this column are by market forees, putting pressure on non­ manner of successful businesses, which is qualified buyers, and a university can be those of the author and not necessarily profit universities to follow suit. to say run according to a managerial managed for efficiency in that transaction. those of The Obsemer. Consider also the burgeoning field of so- model. This would amount, among other But responsible citizenship, compassion,

LETIER TO THE EDITOR Take that, Mr. Grant

Please eonsider this a response to the squalid tripe I enough that Willingham "invested himself in the job, your position with some legitimate faets? suppose was intended to pass as a column by Alan visited the dorms and spoke passionately about the If Notre Dame is irrelevant, why is it that I can't so Grant, which was posted on ESPN.com on Sept. 2. program," not with our record in shambles! much as leave my apartment wearing a Notre Dame T­ Surely there had to be a better way to drive up sales Sometimes, hiring and firing decisions are about unsat­ shirt without eliciting some sort of reaction from for your book than an unfounded diatribe about Notre isfactory results, not integrity. passers by, whether it's a drunk twenty-year-old rolling Dame's supposed irrelevance, arrogance and false But while we're on the subject of integrity, allow me down a cab window to yell "Notre Dame sucks" or a snnse of tradition. After reading your column, I felt to remind you that you attended a university whose stranger yelling "Go Irish!"? Fact is, whether you love eompelled to set you straight on a few points, including band has been banned from Notre Dame Stadium us or hate us, we are relevant. Don't you think the fact your assertion that Notre Dame was wrong in dismiss­ indefinitely for maligning the Catholic religion. And, in that you dedicated a 1400-word eolumn to ND (as well ing eoach Tyrone Willingham after just three seasons, case you forgot, the band was also at one time prevent­ as a 304-page book) is a testament to that? insinuating that the decision was related to something ed from playing at Stanford home games against ND for I could say more, but the .idea of reading your "arti­ other than the W-1. count and even perhaps in part joking about the potato famine, a tragedy that took the cle" one more time makes me physieally ill. So I'll end racially motivated. lives of an estimated 500,000 to one million Irish. In with this: You just don't get it, Mr. Grant. We all wanted to get light of the recent events in the American South, I'd say • The Irish will rise again, Mr. Grant. Maybe not this behind Ty. We wanted him to be "The One," the eoach poking fun at a catastrophe that wreaked immeasura­ year. Maybe not next year. But it will happen. And who would finally resurrect our football program and ble havoc on the Irish nation is a bit worse than prema­ when it does, we won't care that you don't earn. Notrn propel our "Heturn to Glory." Just look at the "Sea of turely firing a football coach. Dame is about tradition, and the fact that you don't Green" at Notrn Dame Stadium on football Saturdays As for your assessment of the Irish as, what was it?. understand it doesn't make it any less real. during Willingham's tenure or the "I lheartl Ty" shirts "J. Crew wearing yuppie larvae," I don't see how this sold on eampus. Unfortunately, and you may not realize ad hominem attack on a group of people with whom Kathleen O'Leary this Mr. (;rant, a football coach's job is, among other you are largely unfamiliar strengthens your argument. Alumnus things, to win liwtball games. Of course it wasn't Hather than hurling invectives at us, why not back up Class of 2004 ------~------.

THE OBSERVER II

page 10 CENE Monday, September 5, 2005

CONCERT REVIEW Leaving Las Vegas Toxic Audio impresses with wide range of vocal abilities

an extended version of the song, "Turn By LIZ BYRUM the Beat Around." The group's beat­ Assistanr Scene Editor boxer extraordinaire, Paul Sperrazza, stole the number when he broke into On Friday night, the Leighton an amazing beat box routine that Concert hall felt more like it was in Las made it hard to believe he was only Vegas, Nev. than Notre Dame, Ind. using his mouth. The group Toxic Audio, which is The mixture of musical genres held gaining recognition and recently the audience's attention throughout played its first Las Vegas show at the the show because they never knew Luxor Hotel on Aug. 19, made a one­ what they were going to hear next. A night appearance on campus and blew cover of the Beatles' "Paperback the crowd away with its amazing vocal Writer" had people moving in their stretches, harmonies and theatrical seats and was even accompanied by performance. James juggling a few paperback books. Toxic Audio, founded in 1998, has One of the more theatrical concepts spent the last few years performing in of the night occurred when a woman New York City and other areas of the was brought on stage to "watch TV" U.S. for various audiences. After a with the group. A remote control break this Christmas, the group will clicked the performers went through travel to Japan for a six-week tour. different television theme songs. The group has also made appearances The end of this performance includ­ at various universities and schools of ed two of the group members taking music, but Friday was its first visit to off their shirts and dancing behind the Notre Dame. woman from the audience. This was Toxic Audio can sing in a wide range MATTHEW SMEDBERG fThe Observer an amusing touch for the older mem­ of octaves and in a wide range of lan­ Jeremy James, Paul Sperrazza and Rene Ruiz sing at Saturday's Toxic Audio bers of the crowd but may have been a guages, as well. In one song Friday, show. The group members also rap, beatbox and perform in other languages. little much for the under-1 0 audience Michelle Mailhot-Valines- the group's that had been seen filing into the the­ bubbly blonde soprano - sang a song The show was a successful start to Jeremy James freestyled a rap made atre with their parents. that jumped between Korean, German, the DeBartolo Center for the up of words audience members chose No matter what crazy antics Toxic Pig Latin and other languages without Performing Arts' second season. A out of a book. Cheers erupted when Audio performed on the stage, they missing a beat. large crowd filled Leighton Concert James finished the rap with a rhyme continued to amaze with their sound- As the members of Toxic Audio took Hall Friday evening, about Notre making abilities. The their spots on with audience Dame. One searing guitar solos, stage, people all members from member of The mixture of animal noises and around the theatre "It's great looking Notre Dame and Toxic Audio the audience incredible harmonies Vocal Group: Toxic Audio musical genres left a feeling of won­ were shocked at out at the crowd at the South Bend Date: Saturday, Sept. 3 called James' the sounds the community. i held the audience's der and amazement this time and Venue: DeBartolo Center for w f e , singers were mak­ A few of the Shalisa's, attention with the crowd as sensing their the Performing Arts the performers exit­ ing purely with people in the performance throughout the their voices. Toxic discovery. " audience even got of "Stand by ed Leighton Concert Audio founder Rene the chance to spend some time Me" "the most beautiful ver­ show, because they Hall. Ruiz said the open­ on stage with the group. During sion of that song I've ever never knew what It's obvious that Rene Ruiz Toxic Audio mem­ ing number is one the skits that Toxic Audio per­ heard." _ they were going to of his favorites performer formed, one of the singers came Ruiz showcased his bass bers are doing so because it "intro­ down into the audience, grabbed voice with a mock string bass hear next. well in Las Vegas duces the audience an unsuspecting audience mem- solo. Ruiz also took part in because they know to what we're going to do." ber and helped him onstage. many skits throughout the what they're doing, "It's great looking out at the crowd at Each member of the group was given show that had the audience roaring and they are doing it well. this time and sensing their discovery," the chance to showcase their special with laughter. he said. talents at some point during the show. The final number of the evening was Contact Liz Byrum at [email protected]

MATTHEW RG/ The Observer MATTHEW SMEDBERGfThe Observer Toxic Audio members Jeremy James and Michelle Mailhot-Valines reveal that Singer Paul Sperrazza shows off his moves, while performing with the group. The the group's eclectic sense transcends music and inspires their fashion as well. group often ad-libs and includes audience members on stage during its show. ------1 I NSIDER ~HE Monday, September 5, 2005 vtiSERVER Notre Dame 42, Pittsburgh 21 Strong start in Steel City Quinn excels as Irish score 28 second-quarter points in Weis' debut

wide receiver Rhema McKnight By MIKE GILLOON in stride for 27 yards after a Spons Editor fake reverse, and Walker com­ pleted the drive seven plays PITTSBUHGII - Just after later - freezing Pitt corner­ midnight on Sunday, Dave back Josh Lay with a stutter Wannstedt emerged from step and strolling into the end Ilninz Field with his tie zone for a 2-yard touchdown undone, rubbing his brow - a run. first-year head eoaeh and Tho Irish then forced a Pittsburgh alum trying to fig­ Panther punt, and Tom ure out what had just hap­ Zbikowski's return put the pened. Irish again at their own 35. Five minutes later, Notre Damn 1\ game intended as the cele­ l>ration of a head eoach's had seored two touchdowns. return to his alma mater went The first was courtesy of full­ terribly wrong for back Hashem Powers-Neal's Wannstedt, at least. one-yard burst over the goal Notrn Dame scored five first­ line. half touchdowns to roll over The second was a diving, No. 23/25 Pittsburgh Saturday acrobatic 1 9-yard reception by night, 42-21, as Notre Dame receiver Jeff Samardzija. graduate Charlie Weis earned Two Notre~ Dame penaltins his first win as Irish head spotted Pittsburgh 29 yards on their ensuing possession and <~oad1. Notre llame quarterback set up Cummings' 23-yard finld Bmdy Quinn ran an

player of the game stat of the game play of the game quote of the game

Brady Quinn 275 to 103 Jeff Samardzija's touchdown catch "It's been a long time since there were The third-year starter calmly and that many smiles in the locker room. " efficiently ran the Irish offense. His Notre Dame's rushing total Junior wide receiver fully ability to spread the ball compared to Pittsburgh's extended to grab a I 9-yard Charlie Wels around kept the Panthers defense rushing total. second quarter touchdown to put Irish coach on its heels. the Irish ahead 28-10. page 2 The Observer+ IRISH INSIDER Monday, September 5, 2005 report card

: Quinn played a first half Weis described as near perfection. He A completed 15 of his first 17 passes, including 10 in a row at a one point, en route to a 227 -yard, 2-TD effort. running backs: With more games like Saturday's, Walker may take home a Heisman. He racked up 152 total A- yards and a pair of touchdowns, and Powers-Neal rushed for three TO's. receivers: Seven different players caught passes, including three receivers and _, two tight ends. Samardzija's diving 19- • 8+ yard, second quarter touchdown was a .·:A'~ highlight of the game. :;; ·' .i··<:.·.··. offensive line: The offensive line punc­ tured holes early and often in an ' ...,; experienced Pittsburgh defensive A line, paving the way for 275 total Irish rushing yards.

defensive line: The line put frequent pressure on Palko, forcing him to scramble and make quick decisions. 8+ Frome and Abiamiri both recorded sacks in the contest.

linebackers: The linebackers, save a 55- yard run by Panther Raymond Kirkley, A limited to the Panther running backs and put numerous big hits on Palko. Hoyte had two sacks and Mays had one. defensive backs: The defensive backs were burned on Greg Lee's 39-yard first quar­ ter touchdown. They settled in after the B breakdown and held Palko to 220 pass­ ing yards and one touchdown.

special teams: Special teams played a solid game, including recovering a B fumble. A couple of the kick-offs could have been better. CLAIRE KELLEYffhe Observer Left tackle Ryan Harris (68), fullback Rashon Powers-Neal, center, and fullback Asaph Schwapp (44) cele­ brate one of Power~-Neal's three rushing touchdowns in Notre Dame's 42-21 rout of Pittsburgh Saturday coaching: The Irish started slow, but rebounded with a vengeance, scoring night at Heinz Field. Notre Dame's dominant victory has raised the level of expectations even higher. four touchdowns in the second quarter. A The players all spoke of their confidence in Weis and his playcalling abilities. overall: Notre Dame got Big game worth waiting for exactly what it was looking 3.59 for from Weis' debut. Michigan will have its hands PITTSBURGH -Notre Dame fans, a lopsided high school game than an on the quad, in dorm rooms and in full next Saturday. players and coaches had been wait­ overtime-bound slugfest between two cars traveling back to South Bend. ing almost nine months for this even squads. While rabid Notre Dame fans are game. As impressive as the Irish looked in known for their optimism, it might be It was worth the wait. the 42-21 opening night romp, the easy to forget that the last time the In front of a contest had ominous beginnings. Irish knocked off a defending ranked adding up standing-room­ When Pittsburgh quarterback Tyler conference champion on the road only crowd of Palko found Biletnikoff Award candi­ wasn't too long ago- former head 66,451 at date Greg Lee on a 39-yard touch­ coach Tyrone Willingham accom­ the numbers Pittsburgh's down strike not five minutes after plished the feat in a 22-0 shutout of Heinz Field, kickoff, ugly memories of last year's Maryland to kick off the 2002 season. quarterback defensive struggles invariably came Nevertheless, while Willingham's first-half points scored by Notre Dame. The Brady Quinn and to mind - the Irish yielded 14 pass­ fate is well-documented, the 2005 last time the Irish scored 35 points in the 35 the Irish offense ing touchdowns in the season's final Irish have reason to be optimistic. first half was Nov. 1996 against Rutgers. showed everyone three games, including a Notre Dame "I think by halftime, I think that our exactly what Matt Puglisi opponent record five to Palko at players were starting to realize that yards in penalties by Notre Dame. The Notre Dame had Notre Dame Stadium in November. they're better than they thought they Irish committed 10 penalties in the con­ in mind when it Would the were," Weis said. 94 test, one of the only areas of concern. inked offensive defense rebound "That's what I've been mastermind Associate or would Palko If Saturday night was trying to tell them all Charlie Weis to a Sports Editor be gunning for any indication, there along, that a lot of this number of Notre Dame touchdowns in their 6 six-year deal in six this time? will be plenty offun to game is confidence, first seven drives. Only a Quinn interception December. Despite its and if you don't have stopped the Irish from scoring. For as high as preseason expecta­ youth and inex­ go around this fall. confidence that you're tions have skyrocketed in recent perience, the going to go out there months - at least within the Notre Irish defense and play well, then time left in the fourth quarter when Dame community- few expected shook off the first drive, and while usually you won't." 14:55 the Irish punted for the first time. the Irish to display such utter domi­ the Notre Dame offense was busy Faith in both Irish coaches and nance right off the bat, no less moving the ball at will against the themselves coupled with results on against a ranked opponent, at night, Pittsburgh defense, the co-captain the field should only produce a per­ celebrating a homecoming of its own linebacker Brandon Hoyte and the petual cycle of success. number of sacks by Notre Dame linebacker Brandon 2 in the return of alum head coach Irish defense were holding the "We just wanted to come out and Hoyle. Hoyle also had 11 tackles in the game. . Panthers to 153 yards and 13 first­ have fun, that was the biggest thing Methodical and precise, the Irish half points. -it wasn't about being nasty," free carved up a young Panther defense, "That shows defensive backbone," safety Tom Zbikowski said. "You're yards passing by Notre Dame quarterback racking up 35 first-half points- the Hoyte said. "We came together as a nasty when you're having fun Brady Quinn most since the Irish hung the same defensive unit, and the coaches did a because you're flying around. 227 first-half total on Rutgers in great job to put us in position to "Football is supposed to be fun." November 1996. Notre Dame found make plays." If Saturday night was any indica­ pay dirt on six of its first seven The implications of Weis' show­ tion, there will be plenty of fun to go rushing touchdowns scored 'by running back 3 drives, only failing to reach the end stopping opening night performance around this fall. Rashon Powers-Neal, matching his career total zone on a Quinn interception during are stunning. the team's second possession. Mere hours after analysts debated The opinions expressed in this col­ By the time the Irish headed back possible 1-5 or 0-6 starts to the Notre umn are those of the author and not to the locker room at the end of the Dame season, talk of Heisman necessarily those of The Observer. Tackles by cornerback Ambrose Wooden, the first half, a game that most predicted Trophy candidates and BCS bowl Contact Matt Puglisi at 12 leading total on the Irish defense. to be a nail-bitter resembled more of games dominated student discussion mpuglisi@nd. edu Monday, September 5, 2005 The Observer+ IRISH INSIDER page 3 Irish flex offensive muscle at Pitt scoring• By MATT PUGLISI sun1mary A~sociate Spons Editor

PITTSBUHC;I I - An oO'ensive outburst 1st 2nd :J rd 4th Total that saw Notw Dame lind the end zone Notre Dame 1 28 1 0 42 on six of its first seven drives en route to Pittsburgh 10 3 0 8 21 a 42-21 thumping of' Pittsburgh Saturday shocknd many pnople. First quarter Irish running back Darius Walker was­ Notre Dame 0, Pittsburgh 7 n't one of them. Greg Lee 39-yard reception from Tyler Palko "I think we worknd towards that [per­ with 10:58 remaining. l'orrnanenl." Walker said. "A lot of' the (Josh Cummings kick) oflimsn is roturning. The chemistry is up, Drive: 8 plays, 73 yards, 4:02 elapsed we gel, we know how each other plays, so Notre Dame 7, Pittsburgh 7 moving the ball was something kind of' Darius Walker 51-yard reception from Brady simple for us." Quinn with 8:19 remaining. (D.J. Fitzpatrick kick) Along with quarterback Brady Quinn, Drive: 6 plays, 78 yards, 2:39 elapsed Walknr spearheaded an Irish attack that Notre Dame 7, Pittsburgh 10 dissectnd the Panthers with surgical pre­ Josh Cummings 49-yard field goal with 1:40 cision. remaining. Punching holes in an inexperienced, Drive: 7 plays, 22 yards, 3:43 elapsed injumd Panthers defensive line, the Irish took advantage of the gross mismatch, Second quarter using a veteran offensive line to open Notre Dame 14, Pittsburgh 10 gaping holes for Walker, Travis Thomas Walker 2-yard run with 13:07 and Hash1m Powers-Neal. remaining. (Fitzpatrick kick) The Irish finished the contest with four Drive: 9 plays, 65 yards, 3:33 elapsed rushing touchdowns. Walker found the Notre Dame 21, Pittsburgh 10 end zone on a two-yard run around left Rashon Powers-Neal 2-yard run end, ineluding a juke that nearly toppled with 6:59 remaining. (Fitzpatrick kick) cornerback Josh Lay, and Powers-Neal Drive: 9 plays, 65 yards, 4:20 elapsed readwd paydirt on runs of' two, four and Notre Dame 28, Pittsburgh 10 nine yards. Samardzija 19-yard reception from Quinn with The three rushing scores matched CLAIRE KELLEYfThe Obse!Ver 6:03 remaining. (Fitzpatrick kick) Powers-Neal's earner total heading into Notre Dame running back Darius Walker shifts his footing as Pittsburgh defenders Drive: 2 plays, 19 yards, 0:45 elapsed the contest. Mike Phillips, left, Darrelle Revis, middle, and H.B. Blades try to wrap him up. Notre Dame 28, Pittsburgh 13 Mixing inside runs with screens and Cummings 23-yard field goal with 4:20 downl1nld passes, head coach Charlie first half came on a Quinn interception formance was nothing new. remaining. Weis' play calling and Quinn's efficient four plays into the second Irish drive. "Brady has been showing us a lot ever Drive: 5 plays, 55 yards, 1:43 elapsed passing kept the Panthers otT-balance all "That [interception], he got caught in since this summer." Samardzija said. "We Notre Dame 35, Pittsburgh 13 night. that gray area where he was reading that see it every day, it's just unfortunate that Powers-Neal 9-yard run with 1:39 remaining. Weis' gnnius showed through on the corner, and that corner kind of middled everyone doesn't get to see that, obviously (Fitzpatrick kick) opening drive of the 2005 campaign when him, and he got caught in between on for different reasons, but Brady is a good Drive: 8 plays, 70 yards, 2:41 elapsed he called for rarn back-to-back screens. whether he should throw the ball short football player. He's got a good arm, a Walker slipped through the offensive for the first down or deeper," Weis said. "I good head on his shoulders. The on·ense Third quarter line, caught a quiek Quinn screen pass basically said, 'You know it's third-and­ is just going to circle around him, and the Notre Dame 42, Pittsburgh 13 and scamperod 51 yards down the right six, I mean let's be a smart football play­ team whole team too, and if he goes out Powers-Neal 4-yard run with 7:59 sideline to knot the game at 7-7. er. It's third-and-six, you had a guy stand­ and plays the way he did [Saturday]. remaining (Fitzpatrick kick) "With thn coverage that their team was ing at seven yards, why don't we throw it plenty of good things are going to hap­ Drive: 20 plays, 80 yards, 7:01 elapsed playing, as I told all along, I was going to to him'!"' pen." makn adjustmnnts based on who's Quinn refused to dwell on the intercep­ Quinn found seven different receivers Fourth quarter defense they were playing," Weis said. tion, bouncing back to lead the Irish on a on the night, hitting receivers Maurice Notre Dame 42, Pittsburgh 21 "They were playing I Pittsburgh coach I pair of back-to-hack nine-play, 65-yard Stovall, Rhema McKnight and Tyler Palko 4-yard run with 12:55 remaining Dave IWannstedt'sl defense, and lhisl touchdown drives, before hitting receiver Samardzija, two tight ends in Anthony (Tim Murphy rush) deliuJsn is basically play four across. That Jell' Samardzija for the third of four sec­ Fasano and John Carlson. and tailbacks Drive: 7 plays, 72 yards, 1:49 elapsed scrmm was designed to go against a team ond-quarter Irish touchdowns. Walker and Powers-Neal. playing four across, and fortunately we Lining up with Powers-Neal and fresh­ With weapons at every position and got a couple blocks and Darius made a man Asaph Schwapp in the backfield and Weis masterminding the attack, nicn run." Samardzija wide left, Quinn faked a Pittsburgh may have only scratched the In picking apart the Pittsburgh defense hand-off before finding a streaking surface of Notre Dame's offensive poten­ statistics - Quinn completed 15 of his first 17 Samardzija, who extended parallel to the tial. passes en route to 227 passing yards and ground to make the highlight film-caliber total yards a pair of touchdown passes - the only 19-yard touchdown reception. Contact Matt Puglisi of'l'nnsive bump in the road during the For Samardzija, Quinn's dominant per- at [email protected] IIIIIIIJ!tll323 rushing yards

Zbikowski glad for chance at returning passing yards

"It feels good [to return a back to return a kick. + Jeff Samardzija made an By MIKE GILLOON punt!. I tried to do the best I Harris and Hoskins incredible, full-extension 19- return yards Sports Editor could with it," Zbikowski said. returned kickoffs for 11 and yard touchdown catch in the "I think just having trust in 24 yards respectively. second quarter against the PJTTSBUHGII Tom the punt team, that they're Panthers. But even a stellar Zbikowski stood his ground, going to block for me, I've just Notes: play couldn't earn him a time of possession waiting for his chance. got to find a seam and hit it as + Charlie Weis is the first reprieve from a Charlie Weis lie received thn punt and hard as I can." Irish coach since Ara tongue-lashing. Weis scolded shot upfield, breaking several Zbikowski was not listed Parseghian to open his career the Irish receiver later in the Pittsburgh before the game anywhere on on the road. period when he forgot to line tack Ins the depth chart for punt Parseghian led Notre Dame up as the holder on the extra bnfore rnturner. to a 31-7 win point after Rashon Powers­ J;t being Freshman over Wisconsin Neal's touchdown to put Notre David Grimes 'Tve just got to in 1964. Dame ahead 35-13. Weis was 50-275 ...31-103 brought rushes-yards down at the held the title of find a seam and hit Parseghian went forced to call the second time­ 18-27-1 comp-att-int 20-35-1 Irish 35 No. 1 punt it as hard as I on to lead the out of the half. 3-137 punts-yards 4-195 yard line. returner going can. Irish to national + Defensive end Ronald 1-0 fumbles-lost 2-1 Not since into the titles in 1966 Talley joined Samardzija in 10-94 penalties-yards 6-55 hn was a Pittsburgh game and 1973. Weis' doghouse late in the 33 first downs 20 high school Zbikowski while Brandon Tom Zbikowski +Notre Dame third quarter. l-Ie drew a 15- passing standout in Harris and Irish safety is now 2-2 in its yard personal foul after hit­ Buf'f'alo Grove, Ill. had thn Justin Hoskins last four season ting Tyler Palko when the Quinn 18-27-1 Palko 20-35-1 Irish sal'nty benn givnn the were the back- openers played Panthers quarterback was at rushing opportunity to return a punt. ups. But Zbikowski was the at night - all coming on the least four yards out of But thn hard-nosnd running only Irish player to return a road. bounds. ABC TV cameras Walker 20-100 Kirkley 5-67 Quinn 5-49 Jennings 12-31 styln and quiek feet he dis­ punt. Along with the win over focused on Weis as he yelled 8-41 12-15 playnd Saturday showed why One noticeable special Pittsburgh, the Irish defeated at Talley for committing one Powers-Neat Ste~hens spneial teams coach Bill teams player missing was Maryland 19-0 in the 2002 of 1 0 Irish penalties totaling receiving Pol ian and thn rnst of the Irish Chase Anastasio. Kickoff Classic. The team 94 yards. Fasano 4-42 Lee 4-63 stall' dnddnd to use Zbikowski Listed as the No. 1 kick dropped its opening game 27- tackling in that capacity against returner along with Harris, 10 at Nebraska in 2001 and Contact Mike Gilloon at Pittsburgh. Anastasio never was sent last season at BYU 20-17. [email protected] Wooden 12 Blades 13 page 4 The Observer+ IRISH INSIDER Monday, September 5, 2005

Pounding the Panthers

Darius Walker and Brady Quinn led the charge behind a seasoned Irish

offensive line and disposed of Pittsburgh with relative ease Saturday night.

Walker rushed for 100 yards and caught a 51-yard touchdown.

The secondary, a question mark entering the season opener, held star

Panther receiver Greg Lee to just four catches for 63 yards. Linebacker

Brandon Hoyte continued his hard-hitting ways, sacking Pittsburgh

- quarterback Tyler Palko twice and recording nine total tackles.

Photos by CLAIRE Brady Quinn eludes the Panthers defense, top left. Dan Stevenson salutes Irish fans who made the trek to Pittsburgh after the game, top right. Jeff Samardzija stiff­ arms Pittsburgh's Darrelle Revis, middle right. Brandon Hoyte harasses Tyler Palko, bottom right, and Charlie Weis enjoys himself on the sidelines, bottom left. ------~------

THE OBSERVER

.~ '·'

Monday, September 5, 2005 CENE page 11

SNITE REVIEW Worth a thousand words Photo exhibit shows many sides of the third. World

soda! messagn that tllP.re is a nned to bn By KELLY CLANCY aware of one's surroundings and not to Sn·ne Writer fonts only that which only concc~rns orwself. Salgado's artwork was brought

Whil«' black and white photography :·.:'::,··.'-=·. to tlw Snite Musnum cout·tnsy of Mr. may semn to lw a nwthod of the past, Stcwe Moriarty, the Milly and Fritz thn Sc~hastiiio Salgado photography ',::~ --~.·t "> ~:,:, Kansar Curator of Photography. PXhihit rurrPntly fpatured at the ;. Moriarty realized tho importance of thn UnivPrsity ol' Notre Dame's Snite works, which succeed in, "showing a MusPum of Art proves tlw assumption world that we might not otlwrwisn wrong. know." Salgado's photographs- over 20 are ''l'vn always liknd Salgado's work," fnaturnd in the O'Shaugnessy <;allorins Moriarity said. "Thn imagns arn lwauti­ through Nov. 20 - provido a social ful tnchnieally and aesthetically but thny romnwntary on contemporary condi­ dna! with important issues." tions in forPign locations. Tlw black and Salgado's photographs had prnviously whitn charactPr of tlw artwork ovokes bnnn shown at thn museum as part of a thP mnssagP that these conditions are smallnr exhibit put tognthnr thnw or n•minisn~nt of a world that is rarely four ynars ago for a sophomon• ron~ undPrstood hy prnsPnt-day Americans. dass that is no longnr part of tlw Notrn An award-winning, world-rnnowrwd Danw eurrieulum. llownvnr, Moriadty donrmPntary photograplwr. Salgado recnived such a positive rnsponsP from t«'rHis to focus on undnnhweloped coun­ the small nxhibit. whnn giwn tlw oppor­ triPs and third-world nations as subjects tunity to host a largnr nxhibition. lw did for his work. Photo courtesy of Snite Museum of Art not pass up thn oll'er. Born in I 1J44 in Bmzil and mnploynd Sabastiao Salgado's best known photographs are from the Sierra Pelado gold Thn Opnning Hnception for tlw Snitn in Paris as a frnnlancn photographer in mine in the Brazilian rainforest. They reveal the site's horrible conditions. Museum, on Sept. 11 from 2 to 4 p.m., 197:~. Salgado found himself concentrat­ will featurn not only Salgado's work but ing his work on his homeland of Latin also thn work of two other llispanie Anu~rka. worldwide but also by those at Notre sibility with our fellow human beings." artists as part of Septernbnr's focus as llis most noted Dame. Assistant Professor of Drago Florez, a fresh- National llispanie­ sPrins of photo­ Portugnse and Brazilian Studies man, enjoyed the assign­ Arnerican lleritagn Month. graphs was a result "We emerge from Fnrrnira Gould assigned her ment. "To see that beauty Featured along with of the Serra Pelado his exhibition freshman literature seminar "I liked the picture you must look past Salgado's work will bn gold minP in the transformed, newly elass to write a response paper 'Women Carrying Mud and the simple truth Zarco Guerrnro: Caras y Brazilian rainfornst, about the exhibit because she Stones' because it has a Mascaras, an exhibit discovernd in 1980. aware of our felt it was pertinent to crude beauty," Florez said. that they're living which displays numerous Salgado was ahln to co-responsibility Portuguese and Creole litera­ "To see that beauty you in poverty. The handmade clay masks capture thn raw with our fellow tures studied in the seminar. must look past the simple beauty is in the along with shrinns to nature or thn gold "Sebastiiio Salgado's photo­ truth that they're living in Cesar Chavez and Frida mirw, which was an human beings. " graphs bring other parts of our poverty. The beauty is in action." Khalo, and Vincent open pit and world elose to us, making the the action." Valdez: Stations, a series involved num carry­ Ferreira Gould strange and the unseen familiar The subjects of Salgado's Drago Florez of charcoal drawings cre­ ing mwrrnous sacks professor and visible: migrants, refugees, photography vary from student ated by the llispanic artist or dirt and rocks up children of war, landless people, painful events to celebrato­ Valdez which represnnts cliffs in hopes of peasants," Gould said. "There is ry images. Salgado's works the Stations of the Cross finding a sirnpln speck or gold. an ethieal dimension to his work. We involve rough and raw conditions and though a boxing fight in a ring. The importance of Salgado's work is emerge from his exhibition trans­ evoke a sense of humility within oneself. r«~cognized not only by photographers formed, newly aware of our co-respon- The photography also highlights the Contact Kelly Clancy at kdancy I @od.edu

Observer File Photo Photo courtesy of The Snlte Museum of Art is currently displaying over 20 of Sabastiao Salgado's photographs and Salgado's photographs use the clarity of black and white the works of two other Hispanic artists as part of National Hispanic-American Heritage Month. images to show the beauty and pain In the lives of the miners. ---~------page 12 The Observer + CLASSIFIEDS Monday, September 5, 2005

M LB - NATIONAL LEAGUE Marquis leads Cardinals over Astros with gem

Marquis (11-13) threw a two­ start, Randy Winn scored twice Giants beat D-backs; hit shutout in his last appear­ and drove in a run, and the Soe and Mets easily ance, Aug. 27 at Washington­ Giants beat the Arizona his first win since beating the Diamondbacks Sunday for their roll past Marlins Astros on July 16. On Sunday, fifth straight victory. he struck out five and didn't The Giants won for the sev­ Associated Press allow any walks while throwing enth time in eight games to 71 of his 98 pitches for strikes move within 5 1/2 games of San HOUSTON - Jason Marquis in his third career complete Diego in the NL West. went more than a month with­ game, all this season. "It feels really good to be able out winning a game for the St. "That's how he pitched early to get that first one under the Louis Cardinals. He didn't trust in the year. He just got in a belt," said Cain, a 20-year-old his pitches and found himself funk," manager Tony La Russa right-hander who on Aug. 30 on the- mound waiting for the said. "In the middle of that became the youngest player to next bad thing to happen. funk, he had a couple of games make his major league debut The right-hander is feeling like this and we couldn't score for the Giants since Mark Grant much better after consecutive for him .... This is what he's in 1984. "I just was fired up too complete-game victories. capable of doing." much for my first start. It was­ Marquis limited Houston to Marquis got hit on his left fin­ n't my normal velocity." five hits in the Cardinals' 4-1 gers swinging at a pitch in the Cain's velocity remained high victory Sunday that kept the seventh inning. He said it was enough _ his fastball was Astros from becoming the NL only a bruise and that the wrap clocked as high as 95 mph - to wild-card leader. He lost seven engulfing his entire hand was keep the Diamondbacks' hitters starts in a row before the two only a precaution. off balance for most of the complete games. game. "I needed this more mentally Giants 3, Diamondbacks 2 than anything," Marquis said. With one major league start Rockies 7, Dodgers 6 "When you start struggling, you already on his resume, San Brad Hawpe set modest goals doubt yourself a little bit, and Francisco Giants pitcher Matt when he recently came off the that's not a good thing .... To Cain was able to relax - and disabled list. have these results in back-to­ win. "I came back and wanted to hack games, it is a confidence Cain allowed three hits in make an impact, and help this •.. '" boost." seven innings in his second team in the end of the year," said Hawpe, who was on the DL AP with a sprained left hamstring The New York Mets' Cliff Floyd hits a two-out, two-run home run until Friday. in the third inning against the Florida Marlins Sunday. The Mets Hawpe drove in the winning defeated the Marlins, 7-1. run with a single with one out in the 1Oth inning as the Colorado Rockies completed a a new Dodgers record for that remained a half-game back. three-game sweep of the Los position, passing the mark of 83 The Marlins play their next 11 Angeles Dodgers with a victory set in 1959 by Charlie Neal. games on the road against fel­ Sunday. low wild-card contenders, start­ Cory Sullivan had four hits, Mets 7, Marlins 1 ing Monday at Washington. including a leadoff double in the Jae Seo revived the New York 10th. Matt Holliday drove in two Mets' playoff prospects - for Nationals 6, Phillies 1 runs with his 15th home run, one more series, at least. Esteban Loaiza threw a 92 and Omar Quintanilla doubled The right-hander allowed one mph fastball past Pat Burrell and had two RBis. run in seven innings Sunday, on his 128th and final pitch Scott Dohman (2-1) worked a helping the Mets salvage the Sunday, then crouched and scoreless 10th inning for the finale of their three-game series pumped his right fist twice. win. against the Florida Marlins with An inning later, a white Sullivan led off the 10th with a victory. towel draped over his shoul­ a double into the right-field cor­ Despite winning just twice in ders, Loaiza led his ner off Duaner Sanchez (4-5). their past eight games, the Mets Washington Nationals team­ Todd Helton was intentionally are only 2 1/2 games behind NL mates out of the dugout for walked and Sanchez struck out wild-card leader Philadelphia, high-fives and back slaps to Holliday before Hawpe drove a which lost to Washington. celebrate a 6-1 victory over 3-2 pitch to the wall in center to "This game was very impor­ the Philadelphia Phillies. score Sullivan. tant to my team," Seo said When the Nationals filed into "On the last at-bat, he threw through a translator, "because their clubhouse, this was writ­ quite a bit of changeups and a this was a game that could start ten in capital letters on the good slider that fell off," Hawpe us off to the playoffs." message board near the door­ said. "On the 3-2 count it was a The Mets improved to 1-2 on way: "The fun has begun!" fastball that got up, and I tried a 10-game trip. Yes, somehow, some way, to put the barrel on it and not "That's why you don't panic. those ex-Expos are still playing do too much, and it worked That's why you don't overre­ - and winning - meaningful out." act," manager Willie Randolph games as the calendar turns to Sanchez saw it a different said. "We know very well that Labor Day. way. things can change at the drop of Loaiza struck out 11 and "I tried to get him out with a a dime, so we'll just keep play­ took a shutout into the eighth high fastball," Sanchez said. "It ing." on short rest, and Preston didn't work." New York begins a three­ Wilson and Brian Schneider Jeff Kent became the all-time game series Monday against NL each hit a three-run homer as AP leader for second basemen with East leader Atlanta. Washington gained a game on The Cardinals' Abraham Bunez leaps and throws out Raul his 13th career grand slam. His Florida missed a chance to all three teams it trails in the Chavez of the Houston Astros during St. Louis' 4-2 win Sunday. 85 RBis as a second baseman is overtake the Phillies and NL wild-card standings.

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Monday, September 5, 2005 The Observer + SPORTS page 13

COLLEGE fOOTBALL Wolverines roll by Castl\?~oiot APARTMENTS Northern Illinois Michigan opens its teams ahead, and orw of them is l 80 I l Cleveland Road • South Bend, lndiana 46637 coming next wenk," Carr said. season with strong The lluskies ran for 211 yards Corner Qr Cleveland and Ironwood Road and thrnw for 200, but they were Phone (574) 272-8110 • Toll Free (888) 642--6110. offense and solid win doomed by the turnovers and a www.cppj.com bloeknd field goal. Associated Press "I honestly thought we had a shot if we didn't turn it over," ANN AHBOH, Mich. - said coach .Joe Novak, who has Michigan made Northern Illinois built Northern Illinois into a mid­ • llusiness Center pay for its mistakes, using major power after it lost 23 turnovers to turn a competitive straight from 1996-

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page 14 The Observer + SPORTS Monday, September 5, 2005

MLB- AMERICAN LEAGUE Angels and Red Sox win with solid pitching Garland and Chicago blank Detroit; Stewart and Twins beat Indians

Associated Press cials in New York. Afterward here and cry about it." he apologized for saying com­ Konerko's 33rd homer gave ANAHEIM, Calif. - Bartolo missioner Bud Selig dragged the White Sox a 2-0 lead in the Colon knew he couldn't last his feet on the steroid issue. fourth, right after two key long against the Seattle "I found out I was wrong," defensive plays turned the Mariners, so he made the most Wells said Sunday, but declined Tigers away. of his injury-shortened outing. to comment on Selig. After center fielder Aaron Colon earned his AL-leading Wells had one other complete Rowand made a nice, running 18th win despite leaving with a game this season, a 3-1 loss at catch of Shelton's long drive, sore back in the sixth inning, Baltimore that was shortened Magglio Ordonez and Carlos and Vladimir Guerrero hit a to six innings by rain. Pena hit two-out singles in the two-run homer in the Los · "Regardless of how much fourth. But with runners at Angeles Angels' 5-3 victory [the suspension] bothered him first and third, third baseman Sunday. or how he felt about things, he Pablo Ozuna made a diving "It's been four days of pain," really did a good job to get stop of Craig Monroe's hard Colon said through a transla­ ready for his start," Red Sox shot down the line before get­ tor. "I knew I could pitch and manager Terry Francona said. ting to his feet and throwing get the team through five Rodrigo Lopez (13-9) pitched him out. innings. I feel like I had good better than Wells in the first "I probably wouldn't have stuff. I was staying on top of four innings, retiring his first been out there in the ninth if it the pitche~ because I couldn't 11 batters after he set down wasn't for Pablo in that fourth bend over." the last 14 batters in his previ­ inning. If he doesn't make that Casey Kotchman hit a three­ ous start against Boston. He play, I probably wouldn't have run homer. a double and a sin­ allowed one hit through four, been in the game," Garland gle for the Angels, who began while Wells gave up five hits said. the day tied with Oakland atop and put runners on base in the AL West. each inning. Twins7, Indians 5 "Casey gave us a big lift," Lopez lost his touch quickly In a game they needed to manager Mike Scioscia said. in the fifth when the first six win, the Minnesota Twins Colon (18-6) allowed two batters reached safely, leading delivered an offensive perform­ runs and five hits in five-plus to five runs - three on John ance their pitchers wish they innings, struck out five and Olerud's sixth homer. AL East­ saw more of. walked none. lie came out leading Boston went on to its Shannon Stewart drove in the because of tightness in his seventh win in eight games. go-ahead run with a sixth­ lower back, but the right-han­ inning single and Mike AP der still won his career-best White Sox 2, Tigers 0 Redmond delivered a three-run Chris Shelton of the Detroit Tigers reacts after striking out to seventh consecutive decision. Jon Garland finally earned double in the seventh, leading Jon Garland of the Chicago White Sox. Garland shut out the "It feels very tight," said his elusive 17th victory. Now he the Twins to a victory over the Tigers en route to a 2-0 Chicago victory Sunday. · Colon, who received electrical says his next goal isn't reach­ Cleveland Indians on Sunday. stimulation before the game. ing 20 wins, it's helping the The Twins won the final two Gardenhire said. "Our fans saw center scored two runs and put "The last four clays it's been Chicago White Sox make a tina! games of the three-game series a pretty fired-up bunch of guys Minnesota ahead 4-3. getting real tight on me. push to the playoffs. between AL Central rivals. out there today." Jesse Crain (10-4) pitched 1 Massage should take care of "It's still a grind," Garland Cleveland began the day one Redmond's hit off the glove of 2-3 innings for the win, taking it." said Sunday after getting win game behind the wild-card right fielder Casey Blake broke over l'or rookie Scott Baker in Esteban Yan, Brendan No. 17 on his fifth try. "We still leaders, while Minnesota was open a game that included four the sixth inning. Joe Nathan Donnelly and Scot Shields com­ have to play GJeveland a few five back. lead changes through the first pitched the ninth, allowing Ben bined to work three innings more times. As long as we con­ "We're battling, and we got six innings, the last coming Broussard's homer, for his 35th before Francisco Rodriguez fin- tinue to play the way we've some big hits," manager Ron when Stewart's single to right- save. . ished for his 34th save in 39 played the last few days, every­ chances. thing will be fine." Los Angeles staked Colon to a Garland threw a four-hitter 5-0 lead, and he responded by and Paul Konerko homered, retiring 12 of his first 13 bat­ sending Chicago to a victory STUDENTS ters to help the Angels take over the Detroit Tigers and a two of three in the series. sweep of their four-game "They got me five runs and series. that was enough," Colon said. After going 12-1.6 in August, He gave up three straight sin­ the White Sox are 4-0 in Transportation Services will be offering gles to open the fifth before September. retiring the next three batters. "When one person starts it two Driver Training sessions in The Mariners scored once in off, it all seems to roll from the inning on an RBI single by there," Garland said after Jose Lopez to cut it to 5-1. Chicago outscored Detroit 29-6 September. Sciascia wanted Colon to quit in the series. after the fifth, but the pitcher After losing three straight declined. He gave up a triple to decisions, Garland (17 -8) Jeremy Reed to start the sixth pitched his third complete If yo~ have not attended a Driver Training session before bowing out. Reed scored game of the season - all conducted by Transportation Services, and you plan on on a groundout by Richie shutouts. Winning for the first Sexson to make it 5-2. time since Aug. 7, he got two driving a University owned, leased, or rented vehicle, stellar defensive plays to keep Red Sox 5, Orioles 1 the Tigers from scoring. you must attend a Driver Training session BEFORE David Wells had no trouble Garland, who started the sea­ you operate a vehicle. with the Baltimore Orioles or son 8-0, walked one and struck the umpires. out seven, including Chris In his first start since serving Shelton with a runner at third a six-game suspension, the to end the eighth right after Sessions will be held on Sunday, September 11th, excitable Wells was solid and manager Ozzie Guillen came to at 7:00pm and at 8:00pm in Room 102 of steady for the Red Sox, pitch­ the mound and asked if he was ing his first nine-inning com­ OK. DeBartolo Hall. plete game of the season in "I was kind of worried about Boston's win Sunday. him leaving the ball around the "Right now, every win is plate and giving up a home The sessions will last approximately 30 minutes. clutch for us," Wells said. "I run, and all of a sudden he'd Please bring your drivers license an'! a pen. felt good. My body felt good. lose everything he built for the Warming up was pretty good. I whole game. He said he was didn't feel rusty at all." fine and I believe my pitchers," Transportation Services rents vehicles to students, faculty, and Wells {12-6) was· suspended Guillen said for arguing with umpires on Garland outpitched Jeremy staff who are in need of transportation while on official July 2, but came back strong. Sonderman {14-12), who lost University business. He allowed seven hits, struck his third consecutive start out four and retired his last 12 despite allowing five hits in his See our website at: transportation.nd.edu batters. It was the seventh time fourth complete game this sea­ in eight games that he did not son and the sixth of his career. issue a walk. He struck out six and walked Ifyou have any questions on the Driver Training sessions or the During the suspension, Wells one. Motor Pool you may contact Transportation Services at worked out at Fenway Park. He "That's the way it goes, 631-6467. also was called to a meeting man," Sonderman said. "What Wednesday with baseball offi- are you going to do? Can't sit r------

AROUND THE NATION Monday, September, 5, 2005 CoMPILED FROM T11E OBSERVER'S WIRE SERVICES Page 15

Major League Baseball u.s. OPEN

American league East team record perc. last 10 GB Boston 80·55 .593 8·2 New York 76·59 .563 7·3 4 Toronto 67-69 .493 3·7 13.5 Baltimore 64-72 .471 3·7 16.5 Tampa Bay 57·81 .413 5·5 24.5 American league Central team record perc. last 10 GB Chicago 84-51 .622 6·4 Cleveland 75·61 .551 5·5 9.5 Minnesota 72·64 .529 5·5 12.5 Detroit 63·71 .470 2·8 20.5 Kansas City 44-91 .326 2·8 40 American league West team record perc. last 10 GB Los Angeles 77·59 .566 4·6 Oakland 76·59 .563 7-3 .5 Texas 67·70 .489 7-3 10.5 Seattle 58·78 .426 4-6 19 National league East team record perc. last 10 GB Atlanta 78-59 .569 6-4 Philadelphia 73-64 .533 5·5 5 Florida 72-64 .529 6·4 5.5 Washington 71-66 .518 5-5 7 New York 70-66 .515 4-6 7.5 National League Central team record perc. last 10 GB St. Louis 87-50 .635 7-3 Houston 72-64 .529 5·5 14.5 Milwaukee 67·70 .489 4·6 20 AP Chicago 66·70 .485 5·5 20.5· Venus Williams, above, outplays Serena in a 7-6, 6-2 victory on Sunday to advance in the U.S. Open. Venus, who Cincinnati 63-73 .463 5·5 23.5 won her third Wimbledon in July, had previously lost six straight matches to her younger sister. Pittsburgh 55·81 .404 1·9 31.5 National league West team record perc. last 10 GB Venus Williallls advances to quarterfinals San Diego 68-68 .500 5-5 SanFranciso 62-73 .459 7-3 5.5 Associated Press emotions. not her power, The 25-year-old Venus, Serena was in trouble los Angeles 61-75 .449 4·6 7 and could hardly manage who won her third from the start. losing the Arizona 61-77 .442 3-7 8 NEW YOHK - Far from a smlie when it was over. Wimbledon two months first three points on her Colorado 55-81 .404 7·3 13 a family feud, matches Serena Williams shrieked ago and is going for her serve in the opening between Venus and and bounced her racket third U.S. Open title, could game, but kept scrambling Serena Williams create a before limping off, angry see that Serena, three back -- often with the family crisis. at herself and achy. weeks shy of 24, was help of Venus' errors. This time neither of It was the ninth time struggling to control her Venus broke her for a 4-3 their parents could watch. they met in a Grand Slam shots and temper. lead in the first set and Artistry gave way to match, and the earliest "When she doesn't play served for the set at 5-4 Big East Volleyball sheer slugging again in since Venus won the first her best is the best time to when she suddenly tight­ Sister Act XIV. the ongoing clash in the second round get a win against her," ened. After winning 11 Big East saga of siblings who hate of the 1998 Australian said Venus, who next straight points on serve in team record record to play each other - espe­ Open. Serena had won plays No. 4 Kim Clijsters, previous games, she hit 1 Georgetown 2·0 0·0 cially if it's not for a Grand their last five matches in a 6-1, 6-0 winner against two double-faults and 2 St. John's 2·0 0·0 Slam title. majors - all in finals. Venezuela's Maria Vento­ made two errors to even 3 ·Villanova 2-D 0·0 Venus' 7-6 (5), 6-2 victo­ "Serena is the baby so Kabchi. the set. 4 Cincinnati 1·0 0·0 ry Sunday to reach the she's going to do her little Women's top seed Maria The tiebreaker was a 5 NOTRE DAME 1·0 0·0 quarterfinals at the U.S. tantrum," said older sister Sharapova had no trouble messy affair filled with 6 Syracuse 1·0 0-0 Open evened their head­ Lyndrea, the only immedi­ dismissing India's rising minibreaks before Venus 7 Marquette 2·1 0·0 to-head matches at 7-7 ate family member watch­ star, Sania Mirza, 6-2, 6-1, won it when Serena 8 Solon Hall 2·1 0-0 and gave the elder sister ing at courtside. "You kind and next plays fellow dumped a backhand into 9 Pittsburgh 2·2 0-0 her second win this year of want to pull for her Russian and No. 9 Nadia the net. Serena bounced 10 Rutgers 1·2 0·0 after losing six straight to because she is the baby. Petrova, a 7-6 (4), 7-5 vic­ her racket onto the court 11 West VIrginia 1·2 0·0 Serena. It's hard but I had to be tor over Nicole Vaidisova and stalked angrily to the 12 Connecticut 0·0 0·0 Venus bottled up her there for them." of the Czech Republic. chair. 13 DePaul 0·1 0·0 14 Louisville 0·0 0·0 15 USF 0·1 0-0 IN BRIEF Woods gives UP. Deutsche going into the final round in 22 last down in the NFL. Bank Championship years on the PGA Tour. The NFL's all-time leading receiv­ NORTON, Mass. - The Deutsche Hurst rebounds to take er was mulling retirenwnt Sunday. Bank Championship appeared to State Farm Classic after Broncos coach Mike Shanahan belong to Tiger Woods at the start SPRINGFIELD, Ill. - Pat llurst told him that he would not be the ·' around the dial of the week. Now it's up for grabs put a final-hole collapse behind her team's No.3 wideout. for just about everyone except golf's in a hurry - and put herself in a llis agent. Jim Steiner. said Hicc No. 1 player. perfect frame of mind for the wanted to close out his career no _ MLB John Rollins set a course record Solheim Cup. lower than a third receiver. with a 28 on the back nine Sunday, A week after making a double "That's what his goal was," Texas at Minnesota 1:10 p.m., ESPN 2 holing out a bunker shot on the bogey on the linal hole to linish two Steiner said. "That's what he want- Seattle at Oakland 3:05p.m., ESPN 18th hole for an 8-under 63 as the strokes behind Cristic Kerr in the e d . " leaders were still warming up on Wendy's Championship for Hice was checked out of his hotPI NCAA FOOTBALL the range. Jason Bohn birdied his Children, Hurst closed with a rou­ in Denver. Steiner said Hice was in UNLV at New Mexico 12 p.m., ESPN 2 last four holes for a 67. Carl tine par Sunday to beat Kerr by San Francisco. and a deeision on Petterson scrambled to a 68. Billy three strokes in the LPGA State the future most likely would comP Mississippi at Memphis 3:30 p.m., ESPN Andrade started and finished with Farm Classic. Monday. Miami at Florida State 7 p.m., ABC birdies and made 16 pars in "You try to look at the present not The 42-year-old Hice sigrwd with between. the past." Hurst said. "I think last the Broncos this summer in hopPs TENNIS And when Olin Browne recovered week was just a stepping stone and of playing a 21st season with a win­ U.S. Open Day 8 Coverage 10 a.m., 6 p.m. from an awkward spot in the fair­ I think it help~~d a little bit." ner. llampen~d by a nagging foot way to save par on the 18th for a USA Network Rice's NFL career may injury, Hicc caught only four passes 70, he joined the five-way tic atop come to a close for 24 yards in the preseason and the leaderboard, the largest logjam Jerry Rice could have played his had trouble getting open. ------

page 16 The Observer + SPORTS Monday, September 5, 2005

COLLEGE fOOTBALL Sooners frogged; Louisville survives Wildcat scare Cardinals' rushing game prevents upset of No. 12 team in country

Tigers get stung Associated Press in 31-24 with 11:52 left on a "I was really happy with the 15-yard touchdown pass from way Michael ran at the end of LEXINGTON, Ky. - For all quarterback Andre Woodson to the game because that is some­ - though unranked - opening the preseason talk about tight end Jacob Tamme. thing we've been working hard Two top-tier teams competition. Both were replacing Louisville's high-powered pass­ Tamme then partially blocked on, getting the tough yards and take tumbles on first terrific and seasoned quarter­ ing game, it was a running back a Louisville punt, giving the physical yards," Petrino backs in the Sooners' Jason and a defensive end that led the Kentucky possession at the said. weekend of season White and the Tigers' Jason Cardinals to victory in their Louisville 33 with 7:21 left, and "That's how rivalry games are Campbell, White a Heisman opener. the Wildcats quickly reached supposed to be and we felt like, Associated Press Trophy winner and Campbell a Michael Bush rushed for 128 the 7 -yard line. coming in here, it was going to first-round NFL draft pick. yards and two touchdowns and On the next play, Woodson be a great battle. So, we're cer­ AUBURN, Ala. -Bob Stoops With the defenses gearing up Elvis Dumervil added a school­ carried, switched the football tainly glad to get out of here found much to dislike in to force Auburn's Brandon Cox record six sacks as No. 12 from one hand to another and with a 'W"' Oklahoma's season-opening per­ and Oklahoma's Paul Thompson Louisville held off Kentucky 31- fumbled at the 2. Louisville line­ Woodson, a sophomore mak- formance. No consistent running and Rhett Bomar to beat them 24 on Sunday. backer Brandon ing his second game. Poor pass protection. through the air, neither team The 6-foot-2, 250-pound Bush Johnson, whose career start, Errant throws. mustered much of a running carried 27 times and scored on knee hit the ball "! don't understand went 17 -of-27 And in the interest of fairness, game. Something that was sel­ runs of 11 and 1 yards. He while Woodson why we have instant for 278 yards he said the coaching also left dom a problem for either offense helped the Cardinals grind out was going down, replay if we don't look and two touch­ something to be desired in a 17- last season. the clock after Kentucky (0-1) recovered with at a pivotal play in the downs but lost 10 loss to TCU on Saturday. The result: Cox turned it over rallied within a touchdown in 6:21 left. , three fumbles. "They outplayed us and out­ on the Tigers' final five drives, the fourth quarter. It was The South­ game. "It just makes coached us as a whole," the with four interceptions and a Bush's fourth career 100-yard eastern me sick to my Sooners coach said Sunday. fumble. rushing effort, and the Conference is Rich Brooks stomach that we No team understands his pain Thompson completed 11 of 26 Cardinals' sixth win in seven using instant were close to better than Auburn. The 16th­ passes for 109 yards with an years against their in-state replay this sea­ Kentucky coach doing something ranked Tigers also stumbled out interception for Oklahoma. rivaL son, but game that would have of the gates with a 23-14 loss to Bomar was 2-for-5 for 19 yards. ''I'm just real sore," Bush officials chose not to stop the been very significant and again, Georgia Tech. Not even the Sooners' super said. "I wasn't paying attention game to review if Woodson was we come up just short on it," The two teams who spent the sophomore Adrian Peterson to how many carries I have. I'm down when he fumbled. Brooks said. "We had our end of last season jockeying for could produce anything on the glad they put it on my shoulders Kentucky coach Rich Brooks ehances." the right to play Southern ground. The Heisman runner-up to do what I did." said he thought Woodson was Louisville opened with a 13- California for the national title ran for only 63 yards after set­ Louisville's heralded sopho­ down and wanted officials to play, 76-yard touchdown drive, likely want no part of the top­ ting an NCAA freshman record more quarterback, Brian review the play. capped by Brohm's 1-yard run, ranked Trojans at the moment. with 1,925 rushing yards. Brohm, went 19-of-27 for 179 "I don't understand why we but Kentucky answered by cov­ For Auburn, it was a turnover­ What went wrong? Good ques­ yards and rushed for two touch­ have instant replay if we don't ering 80 yards in 10 plays, with and mistake-filled end to a 15- tion, Stoops said. downs in his first collegiate look at a pivotal play in the Arliss Beach scoring on a 6- game winning streak that trailed "It might be the attitude and start. He had just one incomple­ game like that," Brooks said. yard run to tie the game. only USC and Utah among active discipline we came out and tion in the first half as the "All we have to do is look at it." Louisville's offense kept streaks. Keeping the season from played with," he said. "Or it Cardinals jumped to a 28-7 Louisville coach Bobby rolling, while Kentucky man­ going downhill was more on the could be the play-calling. It real­ lead. Petrino said he didn't have a aged only two first downs the team's mind in the locker room ly is hard to put your finger on But the Cardinals managed view of the play. rest of the half. The Cardinals than the streak. it." only a 19-yard. field goal by Art The Wildcats never got the went ahead 14-7, ending a 77- "The winning streak. that was Defensive tackle Dusty Carmody in the second half, ball back, as the Cardinals con­ yard drive with a 1-yard touch­ something we obviously all Dvoracek offered a blunt assess­ opening the door for a Kentucky verted three times on third down run by Brohm on the first looked at," coach Tommy ment. rally. The Wildcats pulled with- down on their ensuing drive. play of the second quarter. Tuberville said. "It's something "We never got tough, and we we didn't harp on. It's been never had the attitude we need­ awhile since we lost a game, and ed to win," said Dvoracek, one of it was good to see the seniors the team's four captains. stand up and say a few words Auburn was spoiled last sea­ Do You Have a Parent With an after the game (instead of) hav­ son with tailbacks Ronnie Brown ing their heads down." and Carnell Williams, but aban­ It's no real surprise that the doned the run with an early Alcohol Problem? oiTenses at both Oklahoma and deficit and Georgia Tech stacking Auburn sputtered against decent the line of scrimmage.

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Contact Lisa Goepfrich at 243 Lyons Hall" or 532-8671 with questions ... Monday, September 5, 2005 The Observer + SPORTS page 17

SMC GOLF her body on the line - dove, The Sun Dnvils appeared over­ stretched and leaped for every matched by the Irish talent, but Cha01ps ball she could get to. She had a the underdogs carried their continued from page 20 career-high 20 digs. When told emotion into the second game. of her career night, she laughed. They won 30-28. Belles tee off season, the Irish know they can play "I didn't even know [about it]. They won again 30-21, and under pressure. It was a lot of fun." suddenly, the Irish looked beat­ Texas came back from a 2-0 The momentum shifted in the able. finish 11th in tourney deficit to force a fifth game third game, though, and the "We just reminded them that Saturday evening, and Arizona Longhorns proved their top 15 we've got to take it a point at a Individual scores highlight Saint Mary's debut State hung around for a fifth hype. Six-foot-five freshman time," Brown said. "We wouldn't game Sunday afternoon. Lauren Paolini played more like allow ourselves to get any "I was under a lot of pres­ Serenaded by chants of "Let's an experienced senior, pounding momentum beeause we were a By JORDAN BELTZ sure," Sei said. "It was very Go Irish" and "We are ND" from 13 kills and nabbing three little bit tired, a little bit fatigued, Sports Writer nerve wracking. All that I a small but boisterous crowd, blocks, and sophomore setter so we just said, 'We can't save wanted to do was play well for the Longhorns looked flustered Michelle Moriarty had an anything,' and 'Just go all out on The Saint Mary's golf team the team." throughout the opening two astounding 4 7 set assists in the every point."' got its season ofT on the right The Belles are focusing games against the Irish. third game alone. The Horns Croal reached over the prnss foot with an impressive 11th much more as playing togeth­ The Irish looked unstoppable. took the hard-fought game 30- row tables and bumped a ball placn finish at the Ferris State er as a cohesive unit, as the Notre Dame took the first two 28. They rode their momentum back into play. Fellow freshman Fall Invitational this weekend. team-oriented practices that games 30-21, 31-29, with a syn­ into the fourth game, dominating Madison Clark was getting floor Thn Belles firnd a 344-340- they have been holding indi­ chronized offensive attack, led 30-22. burns diving for balls. Tarutis 61{4, finishing 69 strokes cate. Having a freshmen con­ by sophomore setter Ashley Then in game five, the Irish let pancaked a ball - setting her behind the tournament cham­ tributor in the season opening Tarutis' accurate setting and 51 loose. They became the aggres­ hand completely flat on the floor pions, the host Ferris State match can only add to the set assists. sor, and, again, Texas was on il'l and bouncing the ball oil'. And Lady Bulldogs. While the fin­ team's chemistry. "I feel really good about the heels. Herndon was her usually self. ish was maybe not as high as The Belles finished up the energy we had and the way we "I loved the way they [the "You have to have that kind of some fans may have expected, weekend strongly when com­ executed," Tarutis said. I could­ Irish] came out and finished defensive effort to stay in match­ it was a solid showing to get paring their results to those of n't be happier with the way we really, really strong," Brown es, and I was really pleased the the season ofT to a good start. other similarly sized schools started." said. pursuit on defense, not giving "As a team we played well in the region. They defeated With seniors Meg Henican, For most of the match, despite up," Brown said. "ASU played considering it was our first rival St. Joseph's (Ind.) by 18 Brewster, Lauren Kelbley and the shaky third and fourth great defense; their libero was tournament, but we could shots, and only trailed bitter Carolyn Cooper and freshman games, Notre Dame had more just unbelievable. It was good have done better," said golfer in-state rival DePauw by 44 Mallorie Croal rotating on the energy than Texas. An energetic that we tried to stay with that." Alex Sci. strokes. front line, the Irish set up their crowd was crucial to the Irish The Irish won 30-20, 28-30, llnading up the leader board Looking ahead, while these seemingly unbreakable defense. maintaining focus, however - 21-30,30-23, 15-10. for the Belles was senior early tournaments are indeed The front line's blocks helped especially against Arizona State. In addition to Brewster, Mngan Mattie, who fired an 81 important, the ultimate goal junior libero Danielle Herndon From the opening serve, the Heniean, Croal and Tarutis made in the second round - good for the team is to build up have a career night. Sun Devils made the Irish aware the all-tournament team. enough for a 25th overall fin­ enough confidence to perform "The block was set up really they weren't going to be a "It's a new season; it's a new ish. Senior co-captain Nicole well at the MIAA nice," she said. "And I think pushover. Their 1-3 record was team," Brown said. Bnllino shot a final round 84, Championships, which are to that's a huge part in being able deceiving. Notre Dame won the which gave her a 48th place be held the weekend of Oct. 7 to dig." first game 30-20, but was closer Contact Tom Dorwart at finish. Katie O'Brien shot a and 8. Herndon - at times putting than the score indicates. [email protected] final round 86, good for a 51st In the meantime, the Belles place finish, while the other will hope to carry the momen­ Belles co-captain, Kristen tum from their solid finish this "This is something we've got. We the erossbar. Cahill reeorded five Fantom, fired an 89 to tie for weekend to next weekend, as feel midfielders can score goals." saves over the course of the 61stplaee. they take part in the Notre Split After goalkeeper Chris Cahill game. The Belles knew going into Dame Invitational. continued from page 20 allowed a deflection in the 37th "I felt at the time when we lost the weekend that the most "Next week we are going to minute, the Irish sealed the deal the game we were really con­ important thing to come out of go out and try our best, and goal from 40 yards out. with a John Stephens goal off trolling the game, we were the the invitational was not going hopefully perform a little bet­ Fellow midfielder Nate another Dalby free kick at 79:13. team that was looking to win the to be the team's overall finish,_ ter," Sei said. Norman added to the Irish lead The Irish hammered the upset game," Clark said. "That was but rather the development of The Invitational will be held at 14:59, blasting a shot from home with Joe Lapira's break­ disappointing. It was a very good thn frnshmen. next Friday and Saturday at just outside the box. away feed from Alex Yoshinaga game, it was an excellent game Sni, a freshman, was insert­ the Warren Golf Course. "Obviously you're looking to less than a minute later for a . .. we had chances and they had ed into the lineup and shot a see your forwards get in with fmal score of 4-1. chances." final round 92, finishing at the Contact Jordan Beltz at goals, but it's also great when Although the victory was lop­ Unfortunately for the Irish, the 85th position. [email protected] the midfielders [do]," Clark said. sided, Clark felt the team Demon Deacons would be the showed more heart in the 1-0 team to capitalize on their loss to Wake Forest. chance with a goal in the 96th "It's a funny thing because I minute. felt we played better against "We looked like the team that Wake," Clark said. "I thought the was really wanting to win it," ARE team's performance was actual­ Clark said. "The trouble in sud­ ly better." den death, you don't get an A The team's four goals against opportunity to come back, that's the Mustangs were good for the end of the game." morale, but Clark knows the Clark said the Irish will watch effort the team puts into the game tape and prepare for the game isn't always reflected on Mike Berticelli Memorial the scoreboard. Tournament, which they host "Sometimes in soccer the next weekend. They take mixed FULL OF goals don't always tell the story," emotions out of this weekend's he said." They don't tell the play. whole story - we got goals fair­ "It was kind of bittersweet," ly easily in that game but in Clark said. "You were very many ways from a team per­ happy to win the game against spective, I felt we played better SMU whereas against Wake, you AND soccer against Wake." were happy to play well but dis­ The scoreless regulation peri­ appointed not to win the game." ods were a hard-fought contest The Irish next take the field on Sunday, with both teams con­ against Boston University at 7:30 trolling parts of the play. p.m. on Friday. Forward Kurt Martin had a close call in the second half, Contact Kate Gales at sending a screaming shot over [email protected]

THEN JOIN 1)S!! Notre Dame Athletics Invites DROP THE PUCK DINNER Tuesday, September 6 • Joyce Center Fieldhouse OUR FIRST MEETING IS TODAY!

• Featuring as guest WHEN? SEPTEMBER 5TH, FROM 7:00·8:00PM speaker legendary NHL coach and Hockey Hall of Farner Scotty Bowman WHERE? MENDOZA COLLEGE OF BUSINESS, (former Detroit Red Wings head coach, wlnningest coach in NHL history - Including Nine Stanley Cups.) GIOVANINI COMMON IN THE BASEMENT • Meet the 2005-06 Fighting Irish Hockey team and new head coach Jeff Jackson. • 5-6pm open skate on the Joyce Center Ice Rink FREE JIMMY JOHN'S IS WAITING FOR YOU!!! • 6-6:45pm autographs with the Fighting Irish team. 'l:.!A . 7pm Dinner Sponsored by Famous -Tickets are limited, Call the and Speaking Program. Notre Dame ticket office at 1-7356 to order yours today! ~l'oloTr·~ Dame, UWIB Saint Mary's, Tickets only UNDe!H:GRA·)·lATP, W'OMF.N tN rn.. IS•N~ Cross College $10 ::.nmr..nTs and Staff page 18 The Observer + SPORTS Monday, September 5, 2005

with the first a one-timer off a While Thorlakson was provid­ becoming the fastest Irish player at 28:30 and 33:15. cross by Christie Shaner. ing most of the offense on the to 10 goals both for a season "I thought the goalkeeper was Wins With that, she became just the night, she also had help. and a career, while Thorlakson great today," Waldrum said. continued from page 20 seventh player in Irish history­ After carrying most of the scored once and assisted on two. "She came out and made two or and 28th in NCAA history - to offensive weight last year, The Irish completely con­ three really big-time saves early opener. reach 40 goals and 40 assists for Thorlakson has enjoyed the on­ trolled time of possession, and in the first half." Thorlakson assisted on for­ her career. field company of second-semes­ the Terps rarely had a chance to The Irish's second goal came ward Amanda Cinalli's deciding Her second goal came on a ter freshman star Kerri Hanks. fight back on offense when Carrie Dew scored her goal 17:40 into the first half, penalty kick at 75:12, and Hanks scored her eighth goal Maryland had only first goal of the then went on to score two of her marked the 33rd time in the early in her third collegiate one shot to Notre season when she own. Irish's previous 49 goals that game, receiving and capitalizing Dame's 31. took a pass from The assist was a perfect cor­ Thorlakson has either scored or on up-field leads from Cinalli "With Maryland "We talked about Thorlakson and ner kick from the right side, assisted on the play. It extended and senior midfielder Annie playing in an over­ starting the game beat Resnick allowing Cinalli to head the ball Notre Dame's lead 4-0 and took Schefter at 11 :46. She hit the far time game on early with real close to the net. into the net. Her two goals came the game's outcome out of ques­ right corner from 10 yards out Friday, we felt like Hanks added in the middle of the second half, tion. to put the Irish up 1-0. the depth that we high tempo so that her second goal of For Hanks, that extended her had would give us they couldn't set the game, push­ Irish record for goals to start the opportunity to the pace and try to ing the lead to both a career and season. really run them a three, when she It also marked a critical turn­ lot and wear them slow the game headed a pass ing point in the game for the down," Waldrum down." from Candace team, which had struggled to said. "It was real Chapman into the maintain possession of the ball important, we Randy Waldrum upper right cor­ in the opening minutes of the talked about start­ ner of the net. game. ing the game early Irish coach The Irish took "It took us about 15 minutes to with real high the 3-0 lead into get going," Irish coach Handy tempo so that they the half, but more Waldrum said. couldn't set the pace and try to importantly, outshot Maryland But from then on, the Irish slow the game down." by an 18-to-0 margin. had no problem controlling the And that the Irish did, forcing Notre Dame's dominance con­ ball. fast play from the opening kick­ tinued shortly into the second Notre Dame dominated in off. period, when Thorlakson netted shots and shots on goal, finish­ To exacerbate the situation for her fifth goal of the season, an ing with 15 and eight, respec­ Maryland, Ashley Kennedy was unassisted shot from 20 yards tively, com pared to Florida's given a red card at 10:19, which out. seven and four. forced the Terps to play one­ Susan Pinnick and Beth The Gators cut the lead to 4-1 short for nearly 80 minutes. The Koloup also scored at 76:44 and with 11 minutes remaining Terps had a difficult time play­ 88:56 to put a game that saw when forward Jasmine Johnson ing a man down, and Waldrum the Irish completely outplay tapped a crossing pass from understood that some of his their opponent officially out of KeLeigh Hudson into the right team's ability to control the reach. side of the net. game was related to the ejec­ Following the game, Waldrum But that would be all the tion. spoke about the importance of Gators could muster. "In fairness to Maryland, a lit­ the team's ability to rest some of It was the only blemish on the tle bit of that domination had to its players in the second period. night for Irish goalkeeper Erika do with that," Waldrum said. "It gave us a chance to see Bohn, who saved Florida's other Notre Dame scored its first some young players in the last three shots on goal. goal 14:20 into the first period, 25 or 30 minutes, and still got a The win improved the Irish to when Hanks picked up a couple of goals out of them," 52-13-3 against ranked oppo­ Thorlakson rebound and put the Waldrum said. nents under Waldrum. ball in the top left portion of the The Irish will take their per­ net to give the Irish a 1-0 lead. fect early season record into Notre Dame 6, Maryland 0 The Irish missed several next weekend, when they travel Following Friday night's strong opportunities in the next 15 to California to take on Santa victory, the Irish dominated the minutes due in part to several Clara on Friday and Gonzaga on Terrapins from the first minute, tough saves by Maryland goal­ Sunday. I cruising to a 6-0 victory on keeper Nikki Hesnick, but scored Tournament MVP Katie Thorlakson carries the ball upfield dur­ Sunday afternoon. their second and third goals Contact Bobby Griffin at ing Friday's game against Florida, which the Irish won 4-1. Hanks scored two more goals, within five minutes of each other [email protected]

the Belles in the championship on Sunday. Marietta walked away Tourney with a 1-0 squeaker over a tired continued from page 20 Saint Mary's squad. The lone goal came just under intimidating opponent. 1 0 minutes in the first half. The offee and Conversation The Belles' new field strategy, shot from Marietta attacker Amy For Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Questioning which shifts a defender to an Lehosit deflected off teammate extra attacker position but main­ Melissa Schulte in front of the Students at Notre Dame tains defensive support, proved net, squirting past goaltender successful. Laura Heline (16 saves in two "We had four different people games) for the goal. score in the first game, so having The Belles provided consistent a balance like that really helps to pressure on the Marietta defense confuse the but could not other team," find a way to Mackenzie "We had four different rally for the (and everyfirst Tuesday of the month) said. "It bol­ people score in the tying goal. sters our confi­ Mackenzie felt dence that we first game, so having her team could 7:30- 9:30 p.m. can spread the a balance like that have handled offense like really helps to confuse Marietta most 316 Coleman-Morse that." the other team. " any other time, The Belles but the Belles notched two in were forced to the first half on Caryn Mackenzie come off the goals by Maura Belles coach grueling SUNY­ The student members of the Schoen and Brockport Standing Committee on Gay and Ashley Hinton. game without a Hinton tallied an assist on day's rest and play a well-rested Lesbian Student Needs invite gay, Schoen's goal, while Carrie Orr host team. lesbian, and bisexual members of aided Hinton on her strike. "We didn't have a lot of gas in the Notre Dame family, their SUNY-Brockport quickly the tank. It was kind of brutal to reduced the Belles' advantage by watch us play the second one," friends, and supporters to an scoring three unanswered goals she said. informal coffee at the Co-Mo. between the first and second Four members of the Belles halves to take a 3-2 lead until made it to the All-Tournament Logan tied the game in the wan­ team. Awarded these honors for ing minutes. the Marietta College Classic were "We just found a way," Logan, Hinton, Fron and Carrie Mackenzie said. "We were down Orr. Everyone is welcome and confidentiality is assured. and playing a really tight match. Saint Mary's next takes on "Our mental toughness in that Illinois Wesleyan away on Ql~Q COMMITTIU: ON *Coffee and refreshments will be served* game definitely was the overrid­ Wednesday night. GAT AND LUBIA.N ing plus. One of our team goals is STUDI!J"T N&IEDS to be mentally tough on the road. It was really an Achilles' heel for us last year." Contact Kyle Cassity at Marietta College faced off with [email protected] Monday, September 5, 2005 The Observer+ TODAY page 19

ALEC WHITE & ERIK POWERS HENRI ARNOLD JOCKULAR JUMBLE MIKE ARGIRION

But, Coach, we scored on six Unscramble these four Jumbles, one of our first seven You still have letter to each square, to form four ordinary words. BEPOR J I r02005 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved. NAGGI

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CROISSANTWORLD ADAM FAIRHOLM t BULJEM j J 1 I I WHAT COWBOYS www.jumble.com r 00 ON THE: RANGE. GOBUTH j Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

Ms: A"[ I I I J-ITJ" [ I I J (Answers tomorrow) ..,. Jumbles: BASSO TRAIT INCOME ADAGIO Yesterday's Answer: The exotic dancer quit because her paycheck was - TOO "MODEST'

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Monday, September 5, 2005 PORTS page 20 ND WoMEN's SoccER MEN's SoccER Total domination Irish split Hanks scores four as W"eekend Irish outduel two ranked foes, 10-1 lllatchups

By BOBBY GRIFFIN By KATE GALES Associate Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Two more games, two more wins. They left with mixed feelings, It was hard to find much mixed results and a new record wrong with Notre Dame's play of 1-1. this weekend, as the Irish But the No. 16 Irish made a cruised through the Inn at Saint statement to a nation of fans Mary's Classic, defeating Florida wondering how this team will and Maryland on their way to fare in this season's spotlight. winning the tournament title. Notre Dame beat No. 7 Southern "We're going to have a great Methodist University, 4-1, and team this year," Katie lost a close overtime match to No. Thorlakson said. "We built on 10 Wake Forest. our team last year and were just "They were both good teams," stronger and stronger. We're coach Bobby Clark said. "I think probably going to bring it to winning one and losing one ... every team we play this year." you're not quite sure whether to Thorlakson was named tour­ be happy or sad. I suppose we nament MVP after scoring three seem a little bit more sad goals and adding three assists because the second one was a on the weekend. loss, and it was a tough loss." The Irish faced the Mustangs in Notre Dame 4, Aorida 1 the first game Saturday and Thorlakson and the Irish jumped out to a 1-0 lead on Greg shook off a slow start Friday Dalby's free kick in the first two night to beat the No. 13 Florida minutes of play. The standout Gators in front of 2,086 fans at midfielder, known for his defen­ Alumni Field in the team's home TIM SULLIVANffhe Observer sive play, notched his first career Midfielder Jen Buczowski prepares to feed the ball forward in Friday night's game against the see WINS/pagel8 University of Florida. The Irish defeated the Gators 4-1. see SPLIT/page 17

NO VOLLEYBALL SMC SoccER Irish top ASU for championship Belles miss out on

By TOM DORWART Sports Writer tournament title Lauren Brewster loves volley~ ball so much she doesn't want to physical limits. The Belles won, stop playing - even for a time­ By KYLE CASSILY 4-3. out. Sports Writer The deciding goal came from "It's harder because the time,­ freshman Whitney Fron late in outs were longer," she said, The Belles soccer team fell just the second overtime. Fron bent referring to the lengthened time short of a tournament champi­ the ball into the upper right cor­ outs because of College Sports onship this weekend after bat­ ner of the net on a shot taken Television's airing of Saturday's tling through two physically tax­ nearly 35 yards out, driven from match. "You're all ready; your ing games in a one-day span. the high left side of the goalkeep­ adrenaline is going; you just Saint Mary's er's box. The goal secured the want to get back in there and faced off Belles victory after 102 minutes you just have to sit down and against SUNY­ of action. take another minute." Brockport and "It was a great shot, just really She and her Notre Dame earned a spot well done," Belles coach Caryn teammates enjoyed playing so against tour­ Mackenzie said. much this weekend that they nament host Fron also assisted on the goal played the maximum 10 games Marietta that tied the game with a little in two matches - though, in this DUSTIN MENNELLArrhe College in the­ · over two minutes left to play in case, they would much rather Irish volleyball players gather as a team before Sunday's championship regulation time. Fron dished the have finished ofl' their opponents match against ASU before their Shamrock Invitational win. of the two-day Fron ball to Carolyn Logan, who netted quicker. Marietta College Classic. Both it to tie the game 3-3 and send it "I think that in both cases, in tough, and we know how to Shamrock Invitational, beating games were close, and both were to overtime. both last night and today, we compete hard.' 11th ranked Texas (1-1) and decided by one goal. Mackenzie was impressed with played really good fifth games," "We would prefer not to be in unheralded but scrappy Arizona The Belles managed to knock how her team maintained a con­ coach Debbie Brown said. "I that situation, but I think it State (1-4). off SUNY-Brockport in the open­ sistent level of play through the think that's good. You feel like, showed good mental toughness." At least, after this weekend, ing game, a double-overtime lengthy game against a physically 'OK, I think if we get to the fifth The Irish (3-0) won their own offensive show that pushed the game, then we know how to be The Inn at Saint Mary's see CHAMPS/pagel7 Saint Mary's players to their see TOURNEY/pagel8

SMC GOLF U.S. OPEN MlB MI..B Belles place 11th Venus defeats foe White Sox 2 Mets 7 in tournament Serena in two sets Tigers 0 Marlins 1 After defeating her Saint Mary's golfers· sister in the semifinals, AL Cy Young candi- New York kept did well individually in Venus ties the Williams date Jon Garland shut Florida half a game this weekend's match. sisters' rivalry. out Detroit for his 17th back in the tight NL win this season. wild card race. page 17 page 15 page 12 page 12