Notre Dame Scholastic, Vol. 133, No. 06

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Notre Dame Scholastic, Vol. 133, No. 06 S4+vrAl V· U)-<!r L!1/rf 1\.0(1 (oAl(<!r+ monday, Oct. 7 Stepan Center 7:30 pm Ticl1ets at LaFortune ~nfo. Desh no/smc Stud. $3.00 non-Stud. $6.00 ***SU in I:hair~ or bring blankel~ and plllollJ~ 10 lIJall:h from lhe floor*** TH~RSDAT OCTO!!R S 9:00 &. 10:S0 ~M Shown in Cushing Auditorium Admission is $2 WATCH FOR DETAILS ABOUT JOE CLARK (WHO LEAN ON ME WAS BASED ON) BROUGH'I' 'I'O YOU BY STUDENT UNION BOARD COMING TO CAMPUS OCTOBER 10 NO ALCOHOL PLEASI~ FRIDAY CONTENTS l i OCTOBER 4, 1991 ! 7:30 P.M. - 1 :30 A.M. STEPAN CENTER Food and desserts from countries such ENTERTAINMENT as Africa, China, 5 Late for Dinner South America, etc ... 6 Nirvana just waiting to be tasted by you and your friends. NEWS 7 Campus Computing FREE FOOD AND ADMISSION !! CAMPUS LIFE 9 The Men of Moreau '11 Hangin' Out With the Guys SPORTS 14 Caught in the Spotlight: Student-Athletes at Notre Dame 20 National Champions: 1930 DEPARTMENTS 2 ,,', Editor's Notes 3 Letters y:.' . 4 CampusWatch 12 ComingDistractions GREAT FOOD 19 On Other Campuses GREAT ENTERTAINMENT 20 Behavior Modification HERITAGE DANCE co. SUPERCOMBO PAN AMERICANa 21 Week In Distortion GREAT DANCE MUSIC 22 "Glancing Back DANCE CONTESTS Spo/lsom{ 6y: PRIZES %1I[ticu[tum{'E>;!Clttive COll1lci( 24 Final Word Cover art by Jeanne Naylor. OCTOBER3, 1991 1 FRIDAY CONTENTS l i OCTOBER 4, 1991 ! 7:30 P.M. - 1 :30 A.M. STEPAN CENTER Food and desserts from countries such ENTERTAINMENT as Africa, China, 5 Late for Dinner South America, etc ... 6 Nirvana just waiting to be tasted by you and your friends. NEWS 7 Campus Computing FREE FOOD AND ADMISSION !! CAMPUS LIFE 9 The Men of Moreau '11 Hangin' Out With the Guys SPORTS 14 Caught in the Spotlight: Student-Athletes at Notre Dame 20 National Champions: 1930 DEPARTMENTS 2 ,,', Editor's Notes 3 Letters y:.' . 4 CampusWatch 12 ComingDistractions GREAT FOOD 19 On Other Campuses GREAT ENTERTAINMENT 20 Behavior Modification HERITAGE DANCE co. SUPERCOMBO PAN AMERICANa 21 Week In Distortion GREAT DANCE MUSIC 22 "Glancing Back DANCE CONTESTS Spo/lsom{ 6y: PRIZES %1I[ticu[tum{'E>;!Clttive COll1lci( 24 Final Word Cover art by Jeanne Naylor. OCTOBER3, 1991 1 q F E D ITO R 'S NOT E S LETTERS Security Responds to Letter An Explanation On The Cover A Catholic University Cannot Condone GLNO/SM Some of ourreaders may have noticed that Sports at Notre Dame are not low-stress Dear Editor: SCHOLASTIC the column we printed last week under the activities. The academic demands of the ~JOTRE DAME'S STUDENT MAGAWJE headline "Irish ego goes beyond gridiron" university team with often intense media Dear Editor: looked a little familiar. It should have: the coverage to place real pressure on Irish stu­ I have read with interest the letter to the editor from Ms. Eble which appeared in the September 19 Scholastic. Unfortunately, she Vol. 133, No.6 column, reprinted from from IU's student dent-athletes. Children may idolize them, I cannot allow Mr. Patrick Thorrias' comments regarding the October 3, 1991 did not choose to discuss any of her opinions about the state of paper, also ran Wednesday, the day before livers may quiver over them, butit's often administration's stand against GLND/SM (Scholastic, Sept. 26, security of St. Mary's Road with any security official prior to ~riting , Disce Quasi Semper Victurus last week's issue, in The Observer. impossible for them to escape the public 1991) to pass by me without offering a rebuttal. Notre Dame was that letter. The result is that some completely false information was Vive Quasi eras Moriturus Scholastic is distributed every Thursday eye. When college athletes get in trouble it founded by a Catholic priest, a son of the Church, those 150 years given which heightens fear and compromises safety. night across campus, but the magazine is can be national network news. In this ago. The present administration is doing nothing less than maintain­ Founded 1867 The emergency phone system put in place over the past year does sent to the printer on Tuesday night. Even week's cover story, Sports Editor Jon Paul ing this role in modem society. not require the caller to say anything, much less identify a location. though we had seen the Observer version of Potts explores the difficulties involved in Consider this: what if some students wanted to open and abortion As soon as a call box is opened, it alarms the dispatcher and the col umn, it was too late for us to make any being caught in the glare ofthe spotlight: the clinic in the basement of LaFortune Center? Do you think the EDITOR IN CHIEF immediately identifies the location. Additionally, the opening of the Ian Mitchell changes. problems student-athletes face at Notre administration would allow that? Of course not. Because abortion door puts the caller and dispatcher on a live, open intercom line As a weekly magazine, we can cover Dame. The striking artwork on this week's is against church teaching. MANAGING EDITOR requiring no dialing or punching of numbers. Police and security events in detail and spend a long time on cover is by Graphic Arts Manager Jeanne I'm not supporting the treatment of gays and lesbians by their Mari Okuda units are immediately dispatched to the automatically identified research and writing, but we don't cover Naylor, by the way. fellow students. Notre Dame should, as should any community of location. The speaker system will pick up all sounds within 20 feet EXECUTIVE EDITOR truly fast-breaking news; that's not our job. people sharing a common goal and grounded in Christ, be a "fam­ of the instrument. Should a box fail, that is noted on a computer Patricia Doyle We don't print AP stories or press releases, Also In This Issue i1y." In a family, no matter what differences of opinion are held by screen that constantly polls each box location. and we don't write up ordinary meetings of the members, they respond to each other with loving concern. NEWS We go as far away from the spotlight as This system is by far the most advanced technology available and student government-that's what The Ob­ The problem is not so much discrimination against one group of Editor: Margaret Kenny possible in this week's Campus Life story. was custom designed for Notre Dame. As with all technology, there Assistant: Denisse Marion-Landais server is for. people, as it is that those of us who claim to be Christians have lost Almost everyone knows there's a seminary sometimes are malfunctions. Our system, backed by computer -il But, with a few exceptions, most of the sight of Christ in our fellow human beings. We are all walking ! CAMPUS LIFE at Notre Dame, but as writer Heidi Laura software, gives us immediate notification. Whenever we have news at Notre Dame isnot fast-breaking, and embodiments of the goodness and grace of God. We should respect Editor: Elizabeth Baytion Toboni points out, what goes on at Moreau trouble with a particular box location, we take itoutof service so that that means that Scholastic and The Observer and cherish each other because of this. is pretty much a mystery to most students. a caller cannot be calling on an instrument that is not functioning. SPORTS are in competition, at least some of the time. We all look at God differently, though. No one have the right to Scholastic goes inside the seminary for a We are constantly looking for ways in which to improve the levels Editor: Jon Paul Potts We don't talk about what we're going to judge someone else "wrong." The Church has decided that the Assistant: Jim Kuser look at what it's like to be on the road to the of security present on our campus. The fencing that was referred to print with The Observer, and they don't talk practice of homosexuality is against God's teaching, however, and priesthood. is intended to reduce the numbers of places that pedestrians may be ENTERTAINMENT about their plans with us. Last week we at the predominantly Catholic administration of Notre Dame supports In the News department, we welcome for­ grabbed and pulled off of the roadway. A primary function of crime Editor: Elizabeth Graner Scholastic got beat by the competition, sim­ this by not allowing GLND/SM to meet. It's not that they mean to mer Copy Editor Margaret Kenny to her prevention is to reduce the opportunity for a crime to be com!llitted. ply because they print on a daily basis, while exclude the members of this organization from campus life. It is DEPARTMENTS new post, and writer Laurie Gilbert brings in We believe that the recently installed fencing helps in that regard. It we publish weekly. But this section is la­ simply that they cannot condone what the Church does not condone. Editor: Michael Owen a report on the state of campus computing. would not be practical or wise to extend the fencing beyond its Assistant: Kim Cenedella belled "An Explanation," not "An Apol­ Give 'em a break. Entertainment checks in with a review of present location because of openings for drives, roadways and ogy," and that's an important difference. Late for Dinner as well as a look at some If nothing else, write to the Pope. PHOTOGRAPHY I'm not apologizing for the competition walkways.
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