Mouse ears Race relations Check out the review of in die-rock sensation The Observer takes a look at the challenges Tuesday Modest Mouse's newest release The Moon and Notre Dame faces in uniting students of Anarctica. different cultures. SEPTEMBER 5, Scene + page 16 In Focus 2000 THE

The Independent Newspaper Serving Notre Dame and Saint Mary's VOL XXXIV NO. 10 HTTP:/ /OBSERVER.N D.EDU U.S. News & World Report ranks Notre Dame at No. 19

Moore said University officials ers will rank a college whether Three schools - Columbia At 95 percent, Notre Dame's By JASON McFARLEY are pleased with the ranking or not it submits the requested Univeristy, Cornell University· graduation rate was beaten News Writer but noted that they don't pay information. "We figure that if and the University of Chicago - only by Princeton and Harvard. any great deal of consideration a lot of people are going to be tied for the No. 10 spot. "That's a category that we've Notn~ Dame ranked 19th in to such lists. The annually pub­ making judg- E m o r y always done well in," Moore U.S. News & World Report's lished guide is a means to ments based University said of the 1999 graduation fig­ "200 I America's Best Colleges" gauge national perceptions of on this publi­ "Certainly ifthere's going ranked just ure. guide. which was released to schools but not necessarily col­ cation, we to be a list of the top ahead of The University also fared well n e w s - leges' educational quality, might as well universities in the country, Notre Dame, with its retention rate of first­ stands Moore said. give them while the year students from 1999 to Monday. "Through the years, the ranks accurate, up­ we should be on it. " University of 2000. Notre Dame retained 98 This is the only reflect changes in the to-date infor- California­ percent of first-year students. sec:ond methodology of the ranking sys­ mation," Dennis Moore Berkeley According to the guide, 83 consecu­ tem. not anything we did at the Moore said. placed just percent of the Class of 2003 tive year University," Moore said, adding Ivy League director of public relations behind. Notre entered the University in the Notre that there may be no legitimate schools Dame finished fall of 1999 as graduates in the D a m e means to rank universities with Princeton. with 85 total top 10 percent of their high earnPd the Moore different missions and goals. Harvard and Yale topped this points in the survey. school classes. That, in addition I (Jth spot Notre Dame submits statisti­ year's list of best colleges. U.S. News & World Report to a 35 percent acceptance on tlw I ist. cal information about the Harvard earned the top spot evaluates schools on 16 mea­ rate. make s Notre Dame one of "Cnrtainly if thnre's going to University prior to the maga­ with 99 points. Last year's No.1 sures of academic achievement, the most selective universities be a list of the top universities zine's published list, but not California Institute of with academic reputation, stu­ in the nation. in tlw country, we should be on ever ranked university and col­ Technology slipped to No. 4. dent selectivity. faculty Other factors used to rank it." said Dennis Moore. Notre lege participates in this prac­ The Massachusetts Institute of resources and graduation and schools included SAT and ACT Dame's director of public rela­ tice. Technology rounds out the top retention rates given the most scores, faculty to student ratios, tions and information. According to Moore, publish- five universities for 2001. weight. and alumni donations.

SMC renews Eldred's contract for five-year term

By SARAH RYKOWSKI became the first lay woman ishing number of women's Saint Mary's News Editor to be appointed to the office liberal arts colleges. and ALICIA ORTIZ of the president at the "The faculty has been News Writer College. working on revisions to cur­ "I saw the need for better riculum," Eldred said. "Over Saint Mary's Board of community building within the years I've been here we Trustnns ren.ewnd Marilou the College and connecting have also developed the 1·: I d n~ d · s contract as pres i­ Saint Mary's more to the Master Plan." dent of tlw College .JunP 30 South Bend community," The plan includes renova­ for a f'ive-vPar term. Eldred Eldred said about her accep­ tion and aesthetic improve­ h as h I' I d · t lw o l'f i c n s i n c e tance of the position. "This ments around the campus 1997. campus felt like where I and extensive building pro­ "Siw has brought a sensP of wanted to be." jects. Another of the College's Pnnrgy and direction to the Students were generally focuses during Eldred's term CollngP ... said Bill Schmuhl. pleased with the decision to has been redefining athletics chairman of the Board of renew Eldred's contract. at Saint Mary's, which Trustnns. "Eldred has served "Personally I think it's real- involved hiring Lynn as wondl~r- ly wonder­ Kachmarik, the current ath­ ful rol1~ letic director, in 1999. · modnl for ful to have a "From what I understand, female "Saint Mary's, in the last tllP WOillPil president at four years, has undergone a of Saint she is very up on letting an all lot of great changes including Mary's students come in and talk women's the Master Plan and hiring a Collng11." to her. I think she does a college," new Athletic Director." Bnforp senior Page Warstler said. EldrPd's wonderful job. " Warstler· The first visible steps in the contract said. "I Master Plan are the new w a s Melissa Wheeler think she's Dalloway's Coffeehouse and renewed. Saint Mary's senior done a the Welcome Center at the the Board great job." entrance to the College. sought input " F r o m Hegina Hall was also renovat­ from tlw what I understand she is very ed over the summer as part students and faculty or the up on letting students come of the plan. Collngn. Thn response was in and talk to her," senior "We certainly want to unanimously positive. and the Melissa Wheeler said. "She increase overall enrollment cam pus was plnased with just wants to get to know the but also attract more minori­ Eldred's performance as the students. I think she does a ty and overseas students to leader of thn Saint Mary's wonderful job." the College," Eldred said. "My community. After reviewing Eldred has spent much of vision was to bring all of the J'I)Cdbaek from the stu­ her career working in those to fruition." dents and faculty the Board Catholic women's colleges, Eldred's next two tasks agreed to renew Eldred's and hopes to continue to do since her contract was contract. so. She believes that it is renewed will be to continue Eldred came to Saint important to maintain the to improve first-year enroll- Mary's to replace President NELLIE WILLIAMS/The PObserver reputation of the College in Saint Mary's president Marilou Eldred (center) was offered a contract William Hickey in June of the face of the rapidly dimin- see ELDRED/page4 renewal this summer. Among her noted achievements since she took 1997. At the same time she office in 1997 was the new Welcome Center, part of the Master Plan. page 2 The Observer+ INSIDE Tuesday, September 5, 2000

INSIDE COLUMN THIS WEEK IN MICHIANA Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday For love is God • Art: Fernwood Botanic • Game: The Ultimate • Show: Sky Potpourri, • Open House: lloosinr Kids today. Garden: Clark Lecture Hall Corn Maze, 5 to 10 p.m. at 6:30 p.m. at the Valley Hailroad MusEHim I low many limns have I hnard that from dis­ grunllnd adults. frustrated with America's youth Gallery, Nature Center, Barbott Farms and Planetarium & Space Open !louse f'E~aturing and t.hE~ir lack of morals, eonsideration or tact? "Femwood Flora," pho­ Greenhouse Museum caboose rides, displays Well. this past weekend I was a disgruntled adult. tographs by Carol C. • Music: Front Porch • Art: Studebaker National and refn)shments, 11 a.m. Kate Steer For tlw past three years. I Bradley, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Music: Featuring Open Museum: "2000 Tom to 4 p.m. haw attended Notre Danw horne football gamE~s as a Stage with Wild Carrot, 8 Kellogg Exhibit," 9 a.m. to studnnt, and I have enjoyed Associate the spirit. and atmosphere of News Editor p.m. 5 p.m. the student section. Though the process of gntting stu- dent tickets leaves something to be desired, it's always a rush to walk up to the window with the OuTSIDE THE DoME Compiled from U-Wire reports hope of getting spectacular seats with my friends. And ynt I don't nxaggeratn when I say that I have never actually sat in those assignnd seats. Evm1 when last year we scored sixth row Presidential candidates to debate at Washington U. seats. we usually claimed third or fourth row by virtue of gntting to the stadium early. So when ST. LOUIS mat for thn debates has not bnen we walknd into the stadium a half an hour before For the third consecutive election, determined. If the debate is set up in gamn time- our normal arrival time- we the Commission on Presidential the format of a town-hall style Pxpected to bt> able to sit rnasonably near the Debates chose Washington forum, there may be mom available front. The three of us clainwd seats five rows in University to host one of three tickets than there would be for a front. of our actual sEmts and psyched ourselves nationally televised candidate panel format, because of thn seating up f(Jr tlw arrival of thn team and the band. debates. arrangement. The tiekets are eon­ Tlw biParhers filled up quickly, with peopln Although facilities preparations trollml by the Commission and first who had tickPls in that section and people who will not begin until September, a must be used to mE~et thn demands didn't, with drunk and sober fans, with my fellow subcommittee for Student Activities House Visitor's Center. of' local and national nnws nwdia. students. A few minutes after kiekofl". a group of and Programs is working on orga­ The committee has also discussed Television equipment will also take five or six girls walked in. demanding their seats nizing student involvement leading inter-departmental educational up much of' the spaee in the Field -the ones WP WPI'E~ in. up to and during the event. opportunities, including lectures and I louse. Mind you. this was no polite confrontation. like The subcommittee's ideas include debates, and events involving local "We just won't know," said Steve "Are these your seal<;'? I may be reading my tick­ tours of the debate area for mem­ politicians and leaders. Givens, assistant to tlw chaneelior. et wrong," but rather a bark full of expletives. hers of the community, parents, and "Student initiative and interest will "It's all in the hands of' the Someone 1warbv who was confused about their students. WU is the only one of the determine some of this," said Jill Commission." own SEmts directed them across the aisle. three debate sites that will have on Carnaghi, director of Campus Life Students who rncnive tickets to the Eventually they retumed, morn demanding display oil paintings of every presi­ and member o!' the committee. debates will most liknly be deter­ than lmforn. dent. The paintings, done by an The number of available tickets mined based on a lottE~ry. Students We accomrnodatml them. making room that artist commissioned by C-SPAN, will for students cannot bn determined may be able to sign up for tlw lot­ wasn't really there. but this wasn't satisfactory. then move directly to the White at this time, in part beeause the for- tery closer to the limn of' thn debatn. I don't know if these women had been drink­ ing, but I almost hopn that thny had been, so as to have sonwthing to which I can attribute their aetions. UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY "Get the f'*** out of our f'***ing seats," one of tlwm dmnandml repE~atndly. Thn morn slw flung these strings of hatn at us, Branch ordered to stop research Cabbie will be jailed for shooting the morn indignant and prone to stay wn AUSTIN, Texas WASIIINGTON, D.C. bncamn. I informnd them that if we wern dis­ The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston A D.C. jury found the shooter of Georgetown plarNI, wn would bP forcnd to ask people to leave University Information Services nmployen Kennnth our sEmts. who would have to do the same, and came under fire when it was ordered to suspend its enrollment of new inmates for medical research studies. 'Skip' Ames guilty of mayhem and assault this July, that I didn't want to ruin other people's gameday The Office for Human Research Protections, a federal following a trial in whieh Ames was accused of' start­ nxpnrienrns. ing the December eneounter which put him in thn hos­ "I don't earn whern you go, but get out of our agency that oversees the welfare of patients at hundreds pital in serious condition and left him paraplegie. f'***ing snats." of universities, ordered UTMB as well as the University of Miami, to suspend some of their clinical research pro­ Benjamin Alcindore, 43, the cab drivnr eonvieted of Obviously. shooting Ames, will face a maximum of life in prison Wlwn thn rest of their party showed up, in the grams. Officials with the 01-IRP were not available for comment. UTMB had been conducting clinical tests on and, a mandatory 5-to-15 ymtr sentenee whnn he is second quartnr, wn did mow~. Ilowever, I rncog­ Texas inmates infected with the HIV/AIDS virus. Most of sentenced on Sept. 14. The jury noted that tlwy nizml otH~ of the girls as a f(u·mer RA and there­ believed Alcindore had acted in self-defense. and fore graduate who didn't have a ticket in the stu­ the studies involved new drug therapies for IllY/AIDS patients. All studies must bn approved by the prisoner aequitted him of the most serious of tho ehargE~s. dPnt section. assault with intent to kill. Amns, 45, was shot follow­ Tlw issun at hand is not these people's disre­ and inmates must make a voluntary and uncoerced deci­ sion to participate. Reasons cited for the suspension at ing a traffie accidl)nt on the roadway betwnen the gard f(u· how tlw systmn works: even if you have Leavey Center and Heiss Scienee Cnnter Dec. 22 when tickets and arP nntitled to those seats, you have UTMB include difTering interpretations on how to cor­ rectly abide by OIIRP documentation guidelines, such as most Georgetown students were home for tho semes­ to show up narly to claim thnm. Hather, my prob­ those used to obtain consent from patients. Other con­ ter break. Alcindorn claimed that Amos had escalatE~d lnm is with the way I was trnatE~d. Thern was the conflict to the point where he felt thn Jl(~ed to draw mwnr a please or thank you, but instead words I cerns focus on OIIRP's request for detailed summaries of Institutional Review Board meetings at UTMB. his unlicensed 9mm pistol. am not allowE~d to say. I could be wrong. but I thought that we attend a Catholic Univnrsity at which we should at least bn aware of and have respect for Christian val­ ues and morals. even if we don't embrace them. LOCAL WEATHER NATIONAL WEATHER So bn nire. We're all people. we all deserve to be trnatnd with rnspm:t. ,------5 Day South Bend Forecast "lklovml, let us lovE~ onn another: for love is of AccuWtad\C:r •forcca!-.t for davfimc conditions and hi rh tcmoeraturcs God; and every one that loveth is born of God, The AccuWeather" forecast for noon,Tuesday, Sept. 5. and knoweth God." -1 John 4:7 SOs Lines separate high temperature zones for the day. '/'he 11iews expressed in the Inside Column are those of the author and not necessarily those of nw Observer. H L

TODAY'S STAFF Tuesday -(f 71 50

News Scene Wednesday -(f 77 54 Maurt·en Srnithe Sam Derheimer Kate Nagengast Chris Scon Thursday ~ 78 57 Kiflin Turner Graphics Sports Jose Cuellar Friday 77 56 WARM Molly McVoy Dana Mangnuson ~ Pressure: Viewpoint Production ®©DDDDDD 76 57 'c:-Hig::_h_-,.Lo=-w ~Sc.cho-"-we::cc'":____cR~al::_n _ _:_T·:::•<•::::•m::;:I_:Fc.::lu:::"l=-es ~~---'~!_._ !u~",!!.Y __ Pl. C~o~dy C_lo~y Kurt BogaarJ Kerry Smith Saturday ~ Via ASSOCiilled Press Lab Tech

Pete Richardson Atlanta 84 63 Las Vegas 96 76 Portland 72 54 Baltimore 86 64 Memphis 94 59 Sacramento 85 53 Q,Q,Q,pQ.Q i) ~ u Boston 74 54 Milwaukee 65 ·49 St. LOUIS 83 61 The l lh,nvcr (US I'~ )')<) 2-4000) ;, puhli,hcd Monday through f·riday Showers T·storms Ram Flurries Snow Ice Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy Chicago 73 53 New York 68 54 Tampa 89 76 c:xu:p1 ~lurin~ c.·x.un Jnd v.tt.:.uion penmh. The ( >bs~rver i~ a member of the V1a Assoc1ated Press GraphiCsNel Houston 98 71 Philadelphia 72 50 Washington DC 72 56 t\\.\tKi.un-1 Pre~·'· All rcproducdon riglu~ .m: reserved.

- ......

------~ Tuesday, September 5, 2000 The Observer+ NEWS page 3 Grads shoot for the stars with NASA Teacher agreements

aerospao~ and mechanieal engi­ Michael Good and his family By MARIBEL MOREY neering, agreed with Mueller. recently purchased a house in continue in Philly News Writer "There were and are very good Houston. He and his wife, Joan, students here. They were both have 14 and 10-year-old boys, PHILADELPHIA sure the teachers of the liP grmv up watching shuttle very personable young men. but I and a 2-year-old girl. Three days before class­ city's intentions. launchPs on tPlevision in the kn!~w tlHJm only as a faculty "Joan is very happy and very es were scheduled to begin "There's nothing that we 1%0s. When lw was 12. Michaf!l member would know them," he excited. but the kids are just for 200,000 Philadelphia would like more than to get Good drovP with his family to said. warming up to students, the city's teach­ a contract. We have to For both the idea," he said. Capp Canaveral to watch the "I feel like I am living a ers' union announced have a contract," he said. spacP shuttlns in pnrson. But that stu d fl n t s Now in Monday it would urge The 21 ,000-member was just tlw bPginning. and profns­ dream. Pretty much ever Houston, Good teachers to approve their union has so far rejected "I fpp) likP I'm living a dream," sionals in since II attended] Notre faces the reality first strike since 1981. the district's proposals to the field of of his dream. said Good. "l'rntty much ever Dame I wanted to go Negotiators for the extend the school day and since II att!mdPd I Notre Dame I anrospace When asked Philadelphia Federation of school year, increase co­ nnginenring. about any fears. wantPCI to go up in span~. When I up in space. Teachers and th!~ School payments for health insur­ picked my

ST.IVIICH:AEL'S LAUNDRY ~ DRY CLEANING-. ..

A TR.A.DITI<:>N C<:>NTINUES ... .. • DRY CLEANING & EXPRESS LAUNDRY FOR THOSE SPECIAL ITEMS

• TAILORING SEAMSTRESS AT LAUNDRY DISTRIBUTION CENTER ON CAMPUS

• BUNDLE SERVICE WEEKLV DORM PICK UP

• SUMMER STORAGE NO NEED TO DRAG WINTER GARMENTS HOME

TAKE THIS OPPORTUNITY TO SIGN A FALL CONTRACT ONLY $80.00 TO RECEIVE $100.00 IN ANY OR ALL OF THESE FINE SERVICES! TQAT'S $20.00 OF FREE SERVICESI

HOWEVER. REME.l.\tfBER YOU DO NOT NEED TO BUY A CONTRACT TO USE OUR SERVICES - ALL TRANSACTIONS CAN BE CHARGED TO YOUR STUDENT ACCOUNT

FEEL FREE TO STOP BY OR CALL THE LAUNDRY DISTRIBUTION CENTER LOCATED ON TilE CORNER OF HOLY CROSS DRJVE & SORIN COURT M-F 8:00A.M. - 4:30P.M. 631-7565 ~------

page 4 The Observer+ NEWS Tuesday, September 5. 2000 Eldred Saint: lVlary's Under continued from page I

mnnt and to comp1Ptl1 th11 lVlarilou Eldred: Mast.11r l'lan. 1 997 - present "Fundraising is always a v Pry h i g h priority," E I d n~ d said. l·:ldrpd's vision of thn CollngP will inrludP kPPping it April 11 : Eldred June 26: The Board of Aug. 21: Saint Mary's March 30: Eldred June 30: The Board a strong Catholie wonwn's becomes the first Trustees approves the joins the Michigan participates in Master of Trustees renews coiiPgn, inrrnasing pnrollmnnt lay female President Master Plan to expand Intercollegiate Athletic Plan groundbreaking Eldred's contract for an to 1700 st.udPnts. improving of Saint Mary's. Saint Mary's campus. Association, its first ceremonies. additional five years. divPrsity. maintaining its membership in an imagP as a stqJP.rior undnr­ graduatP lilwral arts institu­ ~colo"""· tion. and kPPping it as rPsi­ dPntial as possibln. Prior to hPr acr.Ppt.ancP of 1998 1999 2000 tiH' position of prnsidPnt at Saint Mary's in I 997. EldrPd sn rvPd as vicP pn~s i d ~~ n t of tlw roiiPgn and as tlw acadP­ Feb. 27: Eldred denies mic vicP prnsidtw! at th11 chartered club status to Aug. 21: Saint Mary's Sept. 2: Eldred names Sept. 5: Saint Mary's The Alliance, a student falls to No. 2 in the U.S. Lynn Kachmarik April 3: Saint Mary's joins CoiiPgP ol' St. CathPrirw's in regains the top position organization supporting News &World Report athletic director. the Worker's Rights Consortium, St. l'aul. MN. Eldn~d rnceivnd in U.S. News & World bisexual, lesbian and ran kings after five making Saint Mary's a group dedicated to improving hPr B.A. from MundPIPin Reports rankings. CoiiPgP in Chicago, and lwr questioning students. years at No. 1. sports a top priority conditions in apparel! factories. rvi.A. and l'h.ll. from Nnw for the College. York llnivPrsity.

Appalachia Semi:n._a.r fi ll II

THE SEMINAR

• Service-leaming through various sites in Appalachia, October 15-21, 2000 • One credit Theology course • Involves orientation & follow-up classes • Past participants in Appalachia Serrlinar are encouraged to appply as Site Coordinators • Presents opportunity to work, laugh, & leam with others The Appalachia Seminar during Fall and Spring break presents a unique service­ leaming opportunity. Students travel to a variety of sites in Appalachia which focus on issues conceming rural health care, the environment, women, children, and housing construction. Through harids on work and person-to-person contacts, students experience the cultural richness of the area and begin to understand and analyze the social forces·that influence the Appalachian people.

APPLICATIONS • Available at the Center for Social Concems Due date: Thursday, September 7, 2000 10:00 am $40 deposit with application (non-refundable if accepted)

INFORMATION NIGHT Monday, September 4, 7:30-8:00 pm @ CSC

FuRTHER INFORMATION

Steve Recupero, Student Task Force Co-Chairperson, 634-1217 Allison Reilly, Student Task Force Co-Chairperson, 243-1-842 Center for Social Concems, 631-5293

...... American Heart ~ §$~~~x~~\~\\ Association®~ ~~~~~$~~; Fighting Heart Disease and Stroke ------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- -~~~~~~~~~~~~~------.

Tuesday, September 5, 2000 COMPILED FROM THE OBSERVER WIRE SERVICES page 5

WORLD NEWS BRIEFS LEBANON

Police ransack student group: Policn raided the headquarters of a Serbian studnnt group Monday known for its opposi­ tion to President Slobodan Miloscvic, ran­ sacking drawers, confiscating campaign matPrial and barring students from leaving during the raid. Sonw 15 students were insidP at the time, said Igor Djapic, an Otpor activist pn~snnt at the raid. "They demanded our I)) cards. ransacked all our drawers and broke into the locked cupboards, confiscating virtually nvPry scrap of campaign material tlwy could lind." Djapic said. Police carried away their computers, as well as posters and f'la.gs with tlw group's clenched-fist resis­ tance symbol, Djapic said.

Elephant kills American tourist: A wild elephant killed one American tourist and injured another during a wildlife tour in n~rnotP. northwestern Namibia, officials said Monday. Dean llall was killed instantly and Dr. A. Said was hurt wlwn a rare desert ele­ phant charged a group of tourists trying to photograph it in the Iluab River Valley on Saturday. Preliminary reports indicated the tourists had Jp,ft their vehicle and walked bctwPcn two groups of elephants from the samc hnrd. said Ben Bnytel, an official with tlw Ministry of Environment and Tourism.

NATIONAL NEWS BRIEFS

Judge doubts guilt of alledged spy: The judge who tried to release fired nudear sci1mtist Wen Ho Lee from jail on $1 AFP Photo million bail said the government failed to Former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri celebrates his overwhelming victory in the final stage of the parliamen- present convincing arguments for keeping tary elections. Hariri is undecided as to whether he will once again seek office after his resignation two years ago. him behind bars. Wen llo Lee was to have b1wn relr.ased Friday from the Santa Fe County jail, whP.re he has been kept since Ex-prime minister may seek title Decnmber in solitary confinement. But an appeals court halted his release at the last early to comment on made Hariri - whose she said. "Many trust that minutP. while it considered an appeal from Associated Press whether he will seek the wealth, status and charis­ Ilariri learned from his the govr.rnm1~nt. U.S. District Judge James BEIRUT post. ma make him a powerful mistakes and would Parker. in an unsealed opinion released late When Rafik Hariri Hariri-backed candi­ force in Lebanon even restore investors' confi­ Friday, outlined his reasons for wanting Lee resigned as prime mmis­ dates also won over­ without political office - dence." released. saying he was no longer convinced ter just two years ago, the whelmingly, ousting Prime look more appealing than Syria, the ultimate guide that Le1~ had downloadp,d some of the coun­ Lebanese people were sick Minister Salim Hoss and when he resigned in 1998 of Lebanese politics and try's most sensitive nuclear secrets. of the construction tycoon three members of his following a power struggle policies, essentially they accused of spending Cabinet from parliament with President Emile approves any premier in Iranian protesters hurl paint: Four the country into debt and and bolstering Hariri's Lahoud. neighboring Lebanon. But Iranians were arrested over the weekend for economic hard times. chances to regain the pre­ "He is energetic, a con­ that shouldn't provide any throwing yellow paint in separate incidents Now, they want him back. miership. And in south struction magnate with problems for Hariri, a Official results released Lebanon, the results indi­ powerful contacts friend of Syrian President ncar the United Nations, where 150 world Monday showed a land­ cated that residents abroad," said Violette Bashar Assad with profes­ leaders are gathering this week for the U.N. slide victory for Hariri in rewarded Hezbollah and Balaa, an economic ana­ sional ties involving vast Mii!Pnnium Summit. One incident involved Sunday's nationwide par­ Amal for their guerrilla lyst with the leading An­ economic investments in thn prPsident of Iran, police said Monday. It liamentary elections, mak­ war against nearly two Nahar newspaper. Syria. wasn't dear if the incidents were related. but ing him the top prospect decades of Israeli occupa­ Voters had hoped Hoss Declaring his desire for a spokesman for the National Council of for prime minister - an tion that ended in May. would put a stop to the the premiership could set HnsistancP of Iran - which bills itself as appointment requiring a During his tenure, Boss "spending and money up a clash with President Iran's parliament-in-exile -said yellow is Syrian endorsement failed to deliver on squandering" under Lahoud, who must name "tlw color of dismay, [and! the color of disap­ Hariri likely would get. pledges to deal with Hariri, Balaa said. the prime minister after prov

year-old lawsuit brought by up with people's money, you end up [)()\'(' Associated Press Indians, who contend they are due in jail." said Elouise Cobell, a WASHINGTON more than $10 billion because of Blackfeet Indian who is the lead SrU)ck arkets Federal officials admit that over the mismanagement. Arguments plaintiff. "That's the problem here, the last 113 years the government are scheduled for today before a that the Department of the Interior mishandled $500 million in trust three-judge federal appellate court has never had to pay for what •c1 ed accounts for American Indians. panel. they've done to screw up people's But they say U.S. District Judge Lawyers for the more than lives on Indian reservations." -\!,.,,.1,•.~. _""__ _ Royce Lamberth overstepped his 300,000 trust account holders con­ The trust accounts came from an authority with rulings ordering a tend the appeal shows the federal 1887 federal law that divided some full accounting of the money and government - particularly Interior reservation land into smaller plots appointing himself overseer of Secretary Bruce Babbitt - is more for individual Indians. The federal reform efforts. He also has held two interested in blocking attempts to government holds that land in trust Cabinet secretaries in contempt. get the money than righting a for the Indians - meaning it cannot The government is appealing wrong. be taxed or sold and the govern­ Lamberth's December ruling in a 4- "In the outside world, if you screw ment must approve any leases.

' ·• - ... --,.. •- ~ •- ...-- ...- •.., ..- ...- ..--""' ..---.,...- __ .,. ·--T"" .. r" • .,, -- .. --... -..,...... ---•"'••--••-•.--•e-.••••••~•· .... ~ ...-· • .a--...-...-a..,._~,aa.-.t_~...Ji..__ .. .,_,.,,...... ,...&~•·- ' ... ~------

page 6 The Observer+ INTERNATIONAL NEWS Tuesday, September 5, 2000

FRANCE Concorde investigation focuses on stray piece of Inetal aircraft are not known. he inch wide. On11 side was paint­ known whether there might be The find comes after a Associated Press add Pd. ed with a greenish epoxy and any legal implications for detailed search for the part's I'A HIS Frnnch Transport Minister the other covered with a nld­ Contin11ntal. The airline noted origin by BEA invnstigators. A stray IPngth of nwtal which Jean-Claude Gayssot has said dish putty. that "it has not bnnn deter­ who examined all pianos that gaslwd a tin• of a supPrsonic tlw plant' will not be certifiHd BEA investigators inspncted minPd dPfinitivcly" that thn had used ibn runway alwad of Conr.ordP. lmtding to a fun! tank as airworthy until investigators the aircrart Saturday in missing part on its aircraft was the Concordn. firn and dooming tlw flight. can unlock the "catastrophic llouston, wh11rn the piece She said tlw plann in qunstion chain of t>vents" that led to the Continr-mtal is found on probably r.anw from a "There are many uncer­ took off about four minutPs Contirwntal Airlines plann that crash. based. officials the run­ beforrl tlw Concordn !light. took oiT on tlw sanw runway Investigators wm·n convinced said, accompa­ tainties and May would way. BEA "Tiwrn is a gap that has bnnn four minut.Ps ParliPr. Freneh early on that the metal part nied by officials seem to be the earliest spokes­ filled in tlw seenario," slw said. destroyed a left forward tire, r r 0 m woman invnstigators announrl'd possible date [for the adding. howPVIH', that tlw dis­ Monday. sending huge chunks of high Continental, the II n I n n e eovery does not advanrn tlw Tlw discovl'ry al"tl'r a dogged velocity rubber toward the fuel National Concorde to be Bastianelli eore issue - how to prnvr>nt Sl'arrh appPars to !'nd onn mys­ tanks in the Concorde's delta­ Transportation airborne again]." said that it this kind of accident. tnry in t.lw invPstigation of thn shaped wings, causing a fuel Safety Board was "prob­ It was tho first accident by .July 2S ar.ridPnt that killed all lr~ak and a huge firn. and the U.S. ably" the tho supnrsonic Conr:ordo sincn I 09 fH'opiP aboard tlw super­ Thn flight. filled with German Federal Pierre-Henri Gourgeon same part. it nnter!ld comnwrciar sPrviee tourists, crashed into a small Aviation A parallel sonic planP and four on thn Air France Chief 24 years ago. Thr~ only two hotel. lnss than two minutes Administration. judicial ground. existing C:oneordn l'lnr~ts - in aftl'r takeoff. A Continental investiga­ Mnanwhiln. Air Franen Chinf France and Britain - wore A Continental DC10 had a statement said the officials tion by Freneh authorities is l·:xPrutivP OflirPr Pit>rre-lll'nri both officially groundnd in missing part "whir:h appeared "determined that a piece of a underway to dntermine eventu­ Courw~on raisPd tlw possibility August until further notieo. to be identical to the metal metal wear strip, similar in al responsibility for the crash. that tlw ConrordP could bn air­ The Conr:orde, which l"lins piece found on the runway" at shape to thn piece of metal but oflicials were not immedi­ borrH' again by May 200 I. It across the Atlantic at twicr> thn Charles de Gaulle airport, said found on the runway in Paris, ately available for comment. was tlw lirst time any date has spend ol' sound, had bonn the bnnn given sine!' Frcmee and a statement issued by Francn's was missing from the space The discovery would clear a Accident and Inquiry Office, or between the fan reverser and doubt cast on the state of run­ most elite form of r:ommnrcial Britain officially ground!'d their transatlantic air travnl. 11rwts in August. BEA. the core door on the right-wing way 26, which had not been Go u r g non . t h n A i r F r 1111 en "Tiwrr~ arn many unl:ertain­ Tlw BEA's preliminary report engine of the Continental fully cleaned for some 12 hours oiTir:ial, said it was adding an tins and May would snPm to be on the accident, made public DC10." before the Concorde took oiT. A early morning Paris-Nnw York tlw narlinst possible date," he Thursday on the Internet, The BEA statement described cleaning due to takr-J place at 3 !light to its schndulfl to compen­ told rl'portrws. "Expr~rts havl'n't showed a picture of a bent the part in question as part of a p.m. -less than two hours ynt rnadn tlwir recommnnda­ metal strip, with rivet holes, hood on a thrust reverser. before the Concorde l'light - sate for the eancPIPd Concordn t.ions." so costs to modify thn nnarly 17 inches long and an lt was not imm11diately was eanceled for a fire drill. 11ights. Please recycle The Observer.

The answer 1s• the people of Deloitte & Touche Deloitte &Touche lwww. us. deloitte. com I ©2000 Oeloitte & Touche LLP. Deloitte & Touche refers to Deloitte & Touche LLP. and related entities .

. Deloit?'. & Touche is an equal opportunity fimt. We recruit, employ, train, compensate, and promote without regard to race, religion, creed, color, national Ortgln, age, gender, sexual orientation, marital status, disability, veteran status or any other basis protected by applicable federal, &tete or local law. Tuesday, September 5, 2000 The Observer+ CAMPAIGN 2000 page 7 Candidates campaign, discuss debate appearances

better steward of the economy ers with a six-state Labor Day debates," the vice president end the Clinton-Gore era," Associated Press and work harder for weekend tour. The two cam­ said on NBC's "Today." Cheney said to loud cheers. Americans. paigned together in Lieberman told reporters, "I Bush and Cheney walked NAI'EHV!l.LE. Ill. "We've got a lot at stake, our Pennsylvania, Michigan and think Governor Bush is making Opening his fall campaign about a mile and a half in the economy in particular," Gore Florida, then Gore hit the trial an end run around the rules of with a weeklong tour, George parade, with Bush moving said in Pittsburgh. "Working on his own in Kentucky while the debate commission." from side to side, pumping W. Bush taunted rival AI Gore people have done better and Lieberman made solo stops in Gore has h a n d s on Monday for rejecting his there arc Ohio and Illinois. accepted the offer of w i t h more jobs." Bush and running mate Dick invitation from "'t's become a tradition those lin­ thrPP pn~s­ As for Cheney together opened a the Commission i dent i a I to get all the networks ing the Bush's campaign push through six on Presidential route. cJpbatPS. $1.3 tril­ Midwest battlegrounds: Illinois Debates to nego­ together and give all of "A II o I' a Cheney lion tax-cut and Michigan on Monday with tiate further this the American people the shook far suddt~n tlw plan, Gore Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, week over a 90- f e w e r w o r d s right to see three told sup­ Indiana and Ohio to follow debate schedule. minute, prime-time h a n d s 'anytime. porters at later this week. B u s h anywhPre' than Bush t h e The Republican presidential spokesman Scott debates." and most­ don't mean Bush Gore L o u i s vi II e candidate kept up the pres­ McClellan said anything." ly walked M o t o r sure on Gore to agree to the commis- Bush told a AI Gore down the Speedway in Kentucky, ''I'd Bush's proposed debate sched­ sion's offer to middle of Labor Day rally. veto that in a minute." ule as the Gore campaign held negotiate fur­ Democratic presidential Gore, 27 the street roming ofT a -hour Gore, the Democratic presi­ open the possibility for negoti­ ther would not candidate campaign sprint through sev­ as Bush dential candidate, and his run­ ations over the three prime­ change Bush's Pral states, tried to keep the darted ning mate Joseph Lieberman time matchups. intention to about. l'ocus on his pitch to working appealed to working dass vot- "Just yesterday, we had an accept only one of its venues familins that he would be the Although the crowd was interesting example of - an Oct. 17 debate at overwhelmingly supportive, Washington doublespeak," Washington University in St. some protesters waved signs Bush told a rally in this heavi­ Louis. ridiculing the GOP ticket. ''I'm ly Hepublican Chicago suburb On the trail. a Gore­ voting for Bush because not Faber Consulting is before he and Cheney walked Lieberman 27 -hour campaign enough of my tax dollars sup­ in a parade. sprint took port corporate welfare," said "My oppo­ "My opponent said he tbe candi­ one sign. Another said: "Vote seeking the brightest nent said he dates to Bush because gay people have would debate would debate me any greet labor­ too many rights." minds me any place, anytime, ers in After the parade, Bush ... to help transform our clients'data assets into place, any­ Philadelphia; attended Michigan's annual time, any­ anywhere. I said fine, Flint, Mich., valuable Business Intelligence. peach festival in Romeo, Mich. where," Bush why don't we just show and Tampa, - known for its high propor­ continued. "J up ... and discuss Fla. Gore tion of voters who swing back Business Intelligence will separate the winners said fine. t h e n and forth between the two why don't we our differences." marched in a from the losers in the coming decade.That's why parties. · just show up Pittsburgh Cheney rode a Chicago ele­ Faber is looking for self-motivated, intelligent ... and dis­ George W. Bush parade and vated train to a Polish food cuss our dif­ Republican presidential rallied at the fair, where he danced the people with a computer .studies background to ferences." speedway in candidate polka with a Polish beauty contribute to our explosive growth and become Two of the Louisville, queen and served up hot cab­ our next generation of consultants. debates Bush K y bage rolls with tomato sauce accepted Lieberman from behind a steam table. would be 60- sandwiched a Cheney told the crowd that We offer a challenging work environment with minute appearances, one Sept. Toledo (Ohio) Mud Hens base­ one of his proudest moments 12 on a special prime-time ball game between visits to ex!=eptional opportunities for training and career was meeting Solidarity leader edition of NBC's "Meet the union members in Detroit and Lech Walesa, saying he "lit a advancement. And every "Faberite" receives an Press" and Oct. 3 from Los Peoria, Ill. spark in Poland that lit 1 a equity stake in our business. Angeles on CNN's "Larry King Gore planned an economic prairie fire of freedom." He Live." speech Wednesday in ended his remarks with a The Gore campaign wants Cleveland. hearty "Sto Lat!" - a Polish Use Go IRISH to ~ign up immediately for an three 90-minute debates as Bush and Cheney endured a congratulatory expression that interview-- the schedule fills quickly. We're recommended by a bipartisan light rain on their parade in means "May you live 100 commission. saying those will Illinois. interviewing Monday, October 2nd at the Career years." reach the widest audience. "I can't think of a better The two were reuniting Center. Or attend our information session on Gore said Bush must agree place to start the fall cam­ Tuesday in Allentown, Pa., to to the commission debates paign," Bush told a crowd of Sunday, October 1st from 7-8 p.m. in Foster, announce their plan to provide before any others. hundreds at a pre-parade seniors with a prescription "It's become a tradition to Room 306 at the Lafortune Student Center. rally. "We're in for a tough drug benefit under Medicare. Refreshments will be served. get all the networks together battle. This is going to be a and give all of the American close race." people the right to see three "In 64 days, we're going to We are an Equal Opportunity Employer 90-minute, prime-time

No surcharge ATMs on campus ... pass it on.

Like living here?

Keep the Earth clear.

Recycle.

rA NOTRE DAME 19033 Douglas Road ~· FEDERAL CREDIT UNION Notre Dame, IN 46556 For People. Not for Profit. 800/522-6611 -~~~ Independent of the University www.ndfcu.org page 8 The Observer• INTERNATIONAL NEWS Tuesday, Scprcmbcr 5, 2000

PAKISTAN RUSSIA Government vows to help women Bombs explode in

commission's agenda is to curb orthodox Taliban. who bar Assot:iated Pres.!! so-called honor killings of wonHHJ from work and educa­ two marketplaces women by their relatives. In a tion and force them to wear ISLAMABAD country wlwr!' centuries-old veils. Pakistan's mililary-lPd gov­ tribal itn d feud a I tr ad i lions Several Islamic groups. espe­ Associated Press away. I turrwd around and PrrJm<•nl has piPdged to scrap hold sway - especially in cially in Pakistan's tribal tlwr~~ was an nxplosion." a disniminatory laws against rural an~as - this will not be region. advocate a Taliban-like HYAZAN daz1•d-looking man told statl'­ w o nw n . r o m b a l v i o I P IH' e simpln. system. Bomb attacks blamed on l'onl.rollnd OHT t1>!Pvision. OHT a g a i n s t Ill!' m and promote "It's a most dishonorable act. · Foqia Sadiq Khan. a human said tlw nxplosion was thn fpmaiP litPracy, but hitting criminal turf battles hit two It's a murder and nobody rights activist. said tho military Hussian eities Monday, killing nq u ivai en t 0 f ;{()() gra Ills of tiH'SI' targets rernains an uphill would IH• g o v e r n - TNT. task in this poor South Asian at In as t tiHen peo1;ll1 in a allowed to ment's tonn nation jittery aftPr a string of ThP bomb was in a plastic nation. get away "Giving lip service to r c• gar ding bag placl'd on t.hl' corrugated i\ nPW national commission dradly, unsolvncl blasts. with it." said women's causes is not women's l'oliee said there was no nwtal roof of Llw mPat stall. has startPd work this w1wk to Sardar. who issuns is pos- w i trwssPs said. T h n bomb «>nd gPrHier discrimination and enough. The issue is appan~nt link bntwem1 tlw two taught law at itive rom-. nxplosions Monday, in an out­ nxplodnd vvlwn a salnswoman pro 1P l'l women · s rights. PPshawar whether the gcwernment pared to the triPd to mow it. NTV quotPd a ShaiH•Pn Sardar. tlw commis­ door nmrkl'l in tlw industrial U n i v l' r s i t y pnwious gov­ witrwss as saying. s i 0 n . s ('hi!' 1'. said f r 0 Ill t lw wants to take city of Hyazan and an elitn Ill' fo rP join­ Prnmc1nt. lntPrior MinistPr Vladimir nor !Ill' r 11 b or d I' r r i I Y of boutique in St. Petersburg. ing liH• m ili­ practical steps." "But this Hushailo said a gang of' Afghan PPshawar. tlrl' capil.lil of And tlwrn was no suggnstion tary govern­ regime has a war vl'LPrans and a rival group Pakistan's ronsPrvativP of a terrorist act- inst11ad. ment. Foqia Sadiq Khan rc1cord of from Hussia 's Caurasus n•gion NorthWPS!Prn Frontier polkn blanwd tlwm on orga­ "Unlikl~ tlw bowing to wnrP compl'ling to control a l'rovirH'l'. human rights activist nizlHI r.rime. whic·h has past govPrn­ tlw prPSSUrl' proi.Pction rark1•t in till' rnar­ llPviPwing laws that an· par­ beconw enlreiH'.]H'd through­ m l' n ts. w P of rPiigious out Bussia. kPt. 1\lost Hussian outdoor tinllarlv harsh toward wonH•n will takP a groups," slw and im.plPnwnling rpform will The l'irst bomb rippPd rnarkPts pay protnr.tion to finn stand against tlw honor said. criminal gangs. and bombings n•quirP a lot of hard work and through a mPal stall in tlw killings," lw said. Earlier this year. !lw military and l'fllllrad killings an• rom­ pol i 1it" a I w iII. s lw said i n an morning in Hyazan. 120 milns Mm·p than I ,000 womPn withdrew a plan to try to curb Ill on. iniPrviPw on Sunday. south of Mosc·ow. damaging WPrP kiiiPd in Pakistan last a b usPs of tlH1 ro nl rove rsi al l'olicl• dP!ainPd l'i\·p IH'opiP llo\I'!'VPr. !IH• lli'W govPrn­ otlH1 r m nat and VI' gP tall IP VPar. nitlwr for marrying nH•n blasplwmy law. which carriPs stands and shatll•ring glass in fnr quPstioning shortly af'!Pr llll'llt has bPI'll Pmpow«>rl'd by ;1gainst tlw will of tl1eir fami­ tlw death penalty l'or insulting l'akistall's SuprPillP Court to nnarby apartmPnt buildings. tlw blast.. said ln!Prior Ministry lies or for l'limsy reasons like Islam or its prophnt. CasPs of burst kPtrhup bottlns spokPsrnan YPvg<•ny Hyahlsl'\'. a Jl](' ll d tlH• ConS t i Ill t i 0 II a II d talking to a mail otlwr than a M o h a mm P d . Si n n• t lwn . a i d and ovl'rtllrn!'d produrn scalf's :\no!IH•r small Pxplosion PllforrP ll!'W laws- without rPiativP, human rights groups workers say rPligious groups ha\'ing to S!'l'un• tlw approval litternd thP marknt squarP dPstr·ovPd tlw windows of a say. have been emboldnnPd and after tlw blast. clothing boutiqw· in tlw north­ of a part i a nwn I. The part ia­ ·i'JwsP killings arn based on a steppPd up threats against llll'nt has lwPn suspPndPd Two fmnaiP vPndors Wl'l"l' ~~rn city of St. l'Ptnrsburg. hut "suspicion or immorality on the fWople working for womPn and killed immediatoly. and an nobody was hurt. i\ policP si nrP I ast Ortolwr. wlwn tlw part ol' tlw victim," indepPn­ minorities· rights. m iIi tar v s ~~ i z P d power in a unidentifind man dind of spokPsman in St. PPtPrsburg dPnt lluman Bights "Giving lip service to injurios latnr in tho hospital, also blanwd thP inrid1111t on bloodiPss coup. Tlw commis­ Commission of Pakistan says. women's causes is not sion inrludPs Sl'llior gov<~rn­ AmergnrH:y officials said. organizml crimP. Most suc~h killings oecurn>d enough." Khan said. "The nwnt officials. rights

UNIVEH.SITY OF NOTRE DAJ\.1:E INTERNATIONAL STUDY PROGRAJ.VIS ~ . 201 SECURITY IlUILDING Notre Dante, Indiana 46556 T: 631-5882 Fax: 631-5711

RO~E INFORlVIA TION _MEETING Professor Michael Francis~ Assistant Provost Campus International Development

Wednesclay September 6., 2000 4:45PM 129 DeBartolo Tuesday, September 5, 2000 The Observer+ INTERNATIONAL NEWS page 9

SPAIN ISRAEL Aznar predicts long road to peace Barak expects treaty

what many see as a desperate port terrorism in the Basque Associated Press attempt to force the government Country," Aznar said. deadline delay MADRID into negotiations. During the cease-fire, ETA's Hesponding to an upsurge in ETA, a Basque-language lon?est in its 32-year-campaign, acronym for Basque Homeland a smgle round of negotiations new ideas to President separatist violence, Spain's Associated Press prime minister on Monday and Freedom, demands the right failed to get either side to budge. Clinton. to self determi- Aznar, a The president was to hold vowed he would grant no leeway UNITED NATIONS nation for survivor of for thP gunmen and predicted a Israeli Prime Minister se.parate talks Wednesday Spain's three an ETA long battle for peace in the Ehud Barak warned Monday wtth Barak and Palestinian Basque "We're faced with car bomb Basque region. that he will only give a leader Yasser Arafat as part provinces in the terrorism, pure and in 1995, "ll's going to bn a long road," Mideast peace treaty a few of the summit. north. It envi­ s a i d Prime Ministnr Jose Maria Aznar simple. And in the weeks to Shortly after arriving in sions an inde­ prospects said in an intnrview with The be con­ New York for the summit, pendent state European Union and for peace, Associated Prnss. "We're faced cluded, Barak headed for U.N. that would also modern democracies of or even with tnrrorism. pure and simplfl. raising headquarters to meet U.N. incorporate negotia­ And in thn Europnan Union and this century there can be the possi­ Secretary-General Kofi tions, in modern dl'moeracies of this cen­ Basque regions bility of Annan. As he entered the in southwestern no room for terror." the near tury thnrn can bn no room for failure building, a reporter noted future are terror." Francfl. ahead of that it was a historic time slim. .Aznar spokn upon rnturning to ETA was par­ Jose Maria Aznar crucial and a historic place for his­ "I will his Moncloa Palaee residence in ticularly active Spanish Prime Minister talks with toric deeisions, and asked n e v e r Barak Madrid al'tPr Iwarly a month in toward the flnd President what flC thought. of the dictator- accept his sPasidP rnsidnnce in eastern Clinton "I do hope and I pray, but ship of Gen. Spanish Spain - a holiday interrupted during this week's U.N. sum­ don't know," Barak democracy or liberties in Spain by l'lllwrals for fivn of the eight Francisco Franco and the first mit. replied. fflw years of Spain's transition to being sacrificed on the altar of pPoplP killnd this summnr in car The formal deadline for a In their talks with Clinton. democracy following his death in some negotiations that might bombs and shootings blamed on treaty, Sept. 13, is widely Barak and Arafat are 1 CJ75. The violence subsided prove justification for the terror­ tlw armnd Basque so paratist expected to be missed. The expected to respond to U.S. slightly under the socialist gov­ ists," he said. group ETA. real target date for Barak is compromise proposals pre­ ernment that ended in 1 CJ96 with The violence brought an end Tlw most rPrnnt victim was the end of October when an sented to them last week by i\znar's first election as prime to any political honeymoon for Manuel lndiano. a small town increasingly hostile Israeli U.S. Mideast envoy Dennis Aznar after winning a second rounrilor for Aznar's Popular minister. parliament reconvenes. Ross, said a senior llistorically, the Basques have term in office with a landslide ~'art~ gumwd down Wednnsday Lawmakers are Pxpected to Palestinian official who victory in the March elections. At Ill his c·andy shop. Tlw dPath maintained a separate cultural try to topple him because of spoke on condition of idnntity and language. For some, the time hr. was hailed at home brought to 10 the numbnr of concessions he has already anonymity. and abroad as representing a Popular Party councilors whose ETA's light is a legitimate battle made to the Palestinians. Both sides described the new and dynamic Spain whose d!'aths an• blamed on ETA. for sowweignty. But the majority With a treaty in hand, he sessions with Clinton as a centrist policies were fueling a ''J'w had lwttt>r Augusts," lw of Spaniards oppose their goals, could seize the initiative and make-or-break moment in thriving economy. said bitl!·rly. "I lwpn to have bnt­ pointing out that under Spain's call early elections. the tortuous peace process democratic constitution. the Aznar rules out any fresh ini­ (Pr onPs in tlw futuro." Barak has said it is now up which began with a mutual Basques enjoy morn autonomy tiatives and insists the govern­ lndiano's dnath was tlw 12th to the Palestinians to com- recognition treaty in 1993. than any other region in Europe. ment will persist in maintaining sinrP ETA PlldPd a 14-month promise, and Israel's In a statement Monday, "Terrorism is just another law and order, boosting police unilatPral enase-firn in Foreign Ministry said Barak said a crossroad has expression of tyranny ... They efficiency and seeking greater DPrPmlwr and unleashed tlllP of Monday the prime minister been reaehed in talks with are Nazis those people who sup- intPrnational coopPration. its most brutal ofl'nnsives nvnr in is not planning to present the Palestinians.

JOI~ the St-u_der1t Ir1 te=rr1a. t1c.I1a.l B -u_ s 1r1 e s s C <::> 1I-I1 c=il (S_I_B_C_)

------a.bo-...::Lt how yoLL ca.ra_ he Come 1ea.:ri1 \ p a.:rt o£ th.:is Ira_t e :rra_ a. t:i o I1 a.I C :i:r c -...:~_:it

Fi_:rst: m~~t:i_::u._g c.£ the Fa.11 2000 _Aca.dem:ic -yea.:r! ~~::u._? T-...::Lesda.y'? September 5-.:h._ 7pm Where? The Jordan_ _Audit:oriu.m~ ~ertdoza College of Bu.siness _All 1VIa.j C)rs WelcC)m~! -' page I 0 The Observer+ HEALTH NEWS Tuesday, September 5, 2000 Lipoprotein increases Study: Parkinson's affects heart

Associated Press needed. diagnosis," Wooten said. risk of heart attack "If it turns out that the "It's expensive. The equip­ PHILADELPHIA loss of these cells (happens ment necessary wouldn't be out that more than a decade only) in the heart. then the widely available. I'm skepti­ Associated Press worth of research previously In a study that could help change how Parkinson's dis­ key question is, what it is eal that it will be useful." failed to link Lp(a) to increased about the nerves in the Wootnn said few DALLAS risk of heart disease in the gener­ ease is diagnosed. researchers have discovered heart and the system in the Parkinson's patients nxhibit Cardiac patient-; with high levels al population. brain that appears to make notieeable heart problems. of a little-known form of "bad" The Oxford findings were pub­ that the disease affects nerves in the heart as well those the systems that are "More often than not, cholesterol in tlwir blood are 70 lished in Monday's edition of destroyed." there's no pen:ent mor1~ likely to have a Circulation, a journal of the as the brain. It has been known for The heart major !wart attack than those with American lleart Association. nerve dam­ "What these findings problem lower concentrations, according Researchers gathered data used many years that the tremors and movement problems age differ­ indicate is that w i t h to a study n~lnased Monday. in the study from 27 different entiates b I o o d The obscun~ cholesterol particle studies tracking more than 5,200 associated with Parkinson's Parkinson's disease is result from a loss of nerve Parkinson's pressure called people who from condi­ associated with a loss of 1:on trol," lipoprotnin - had heart dis­ endings in part ol' the brain. Researchers at the tions with nerves outside the brain Wooten is especially "71ze message here is ease or. sur­ simi I a r said. "It's insidious physicians and vived a heart National Institute of and, in particular. Neurological Disorders and symptoms, rarely a b1~cause it's dif­ attack. The such as in the heart. " problem l'or doc­ cardiologists should ... Stroke report in Tuesday's ficult average age of multiple early and tors to mnasun~ know the Lp(a) levels. issue of the Annals of the people system e a n reliably and Internal Medicine that peo­ David Goldstein in patients." involved in the atrophy, beeonw a because iL-; lev­ ple with Parkinson's disease author of study study was 50, according problem els haVI! little to Danesh said. also have a decreased num­ Dr. Angelo Scanu ber of nerve endings in the to the later on. do with tl11~ The number study. but only better-known director of Lipid Clinic at of heart heart. That suggests that Goldstein said that may help for some patients." form of "bad" University of California attacks suf­ doctors determine whether The study also found that eholnsterol, Parkinson's may effect the fered by indi- a patient has Parkinson's or the breakdown of h1~art cal11~d l.D 1.. entire nervous system. viduals with some other disease. nerves was related to the The elevated Lp(a) levels also "This may change the the high{!St Lp(a) concentrations However, Dr. Fred disease itsnlf, not to drugs have little to do with more con­ viewpoints about what was compared with the number of Wooten, r.hairman of the taken to treat Parkinson's. ventional heart disease risk fac­ Parkinson's disease is," said heart attacks among those with department of neurology at Some patients with tors such as smoking, high blood the lowest Lp(a) readings. During the institute's David Goldstein, author of the the University of Virginia, Parkinson's have difficulty prnssure and poor diet. It also a decade of follow-up, the highest said that while the study maintaining adequate blood r.annot be directly linked to high study. "What these findings group had 70 percent more heart was intriguing, putting it pressure whiln standing up. dwlesterol, or the kind whose lev­ attacks than the low-level Lp(a) indicate is that Parkinson's disease is associated with a into practice in diagnosis The study coneluded that els can be altered through diet or study subjects. may be difficult because such problems happen as a drugs, said lead researcher Dr. loss of nerves outside the "The message here is physicians researchers used special­ result of the nerve damage, .John Danesh. of Oxford UniVf~rsity and cardiologists should be aware brain and, in particular, in the heart." ized imaging equipment to not the drug lnvodopa, in England. and it would be useful to know the see the nerves around the whieh is given to "This study suggests thern is a Goldstein said it appears Lp(a) levels in patients," said Dr. heart. Parkinson's patients clear association between Lp(a) that other organs' nerve Angelo Scanu. director of the "I don't see this ber.oming bfleaus1~ of the loss of cPr­ and an inermtsnd risk of heart dis­ systems are not al'fected, Lipid Clinic at the University of a widely used standard of tain brain ehnmieals. ease," said Danesh. who pointed California. but further research is Tuesday, September 5, 2000 The Observer+ NATIONAL NEWS page 11 Father of hydrogen bo01b defends University of California

good. The connection with UC charged with espionage and scientist Manvendra Dubey. control, said Cal Tech histori­ Associated Press is valuable. It would be a he denies any wrongdoing. "When UC manages you, you an Peter Westwick. grave mistake to interrupt it," Next came budget and dead­ attract a certain kind of UC agreed, motivated by LIVERMORE, Calif. he said in an interview. line troubles for a huge laser employee. You attract the patriotism and possibly the Physicist Edward Teller isn't Through his decades-long being built to simulate ther­ brains." fact that Lawrence had "quite sure whether the nuclear career, Teller has exerted a monuclear explosions at That opinion is shared by a thriving operation going" at WfHtpons labs he helped found profound influence on Lawrence Livermore. Sidney Drell, a member of the the Berkeley lab. have a spy problem. America's And both presidential commission that Today, the Ernest 0. But the man known as the defense and Los Alamos wrote a scathing lab report Lawrence Berkeley "Father of the II-Bomb" is energy poli­ a n d titled "Science at its Best, Laboratory, in the hills above sun~ that any problems aren't cies. In 'The criticism comes to a Livermore Security at its Worst." He the Berkeley campus, per­ going to bn fixed by ousting 1939, Teller great extent from people are being thinks UC should be correct­ forms unclassified research. the University of California as was one of who have quite a limited investigated ed, not ejected. But an annex Lawrence manager of the Los Alamos three sci en­ for possible "Unfortunately, there's been National Laboratory and understanding of what helped start in the country tists who discrimina­ tremendous overreaction," he town of Livermore, about 60 Lawrnnee Livermore National encouraged really goes on in the labs tion against said. Laboratory. miles east of San Francisco, Albert in a scientific way." Asians, a con­ The curious pairing of class has grown into a premier lie's remind1~d of the crisis Einstein to cern high­ instruction and mass destruc­ of 1949 when seientists work­ weapons lab. a I e r t lighted by the tion goes back to the 1930s It includes the office where ing on the weapons program President Edward Teller prosecution when a team of physicists led at Los Alamos, N.M., learned Teller, lab director emeritus, Franklin D. physicist of Taiwanese­ by Ernest 0. Lawrence still works three days a week. that serrets of the atomic Roosevelt born Lee. worked at the Berkeley "Rad bomb had been leaked to the The Hungarian immigrant is that the Energy Lab" (Radiation Laboratory). gray and frail, unable to see a Soviets. power of Secretary Bill "President Truman's reac­ In the early 1940s, Berkeley board full of equations, but nuelear fission - the splitting Richardson, under pressure tion to this discovery was, in up-and-comer Glenn Seaborg his intellect is nimble; he of an atom's nucleus - could from members of Congress to helped discover a key to the­ crisply dismisses those who my opinion, precisely the be tapped to create a devas­ right one - speed up our remove UC from its manage­ nuclear realm- plutonium. criticize the labs he helped tating new weapon. ment role, has ordered major Soon, U.S. scientists racing build. work," the 92-year-old scien­ Today's troubles in the tist said. changes in security. He's to beat the Nazis to an atomic "The criticism comes to a "Today, there is not even a weapons program began last scheduled to get a report on bomb had set up shop at Los great extent from people who whisper of speeding up our year with allegations that how to do that this Tuesday, Alamos. have quite a limited under­ work," he said. Instead, nuclear secrets had leaked to although no immediate After the war, UC wanted standing of what really goes there's been a "magnifying of China. Los Alamos scientist announcement was expected. out of the weapons business, on in the labs in a scientific the damage done when proba­ Wen Ho Lee was fired and Some feel public censure but the new Atomic Energy way," he says. "They're not bly there was no damage or later charged with mishan­ has gone too far. Commission asked the univer­ only ignorant, they arc not little damage." dling classified information. Losing UC would be "a hor­ sity to stay on, hoping to keep aware of the fact that they're "UC's management has been However, Lee was not rible thing," says Los Alamos the program under civilian ignorant."

IN COLLEGE, YOU CAN ONLY MAJOR IN ONE OR TWO THINGS. NOT SO WITH US.

AUGUST 26TH- SEPTEMBER 8TH • DROP FOR ABAS INTERVIEWS ON GO IRISH _ _sEPTEMBER 6TH • PwC MIXER • 7PM-9PM • CCE AUDITORIUM · SEPTEMBER 13TH • PwC MOCK INTERVIEWS • CAREER CENTER \ SEPTEMBER 13TH •'INFO SESSION: PwC TODAY SHOW • 7PM • MORRIS INN • NOTRE DAME ROOM SEPTEMBER 16TH • PwC TAILGATE • NOTRE DAME VS. PURDUE SEPTEMBER 27TH • ABAS FULL TIME INTERVIEWS & SUMMER INTERNS GOING ABROAD INTERVIEWS

Welcome Back. Graduation may be right around the corner, but it shouldn't mark the end of your education. Our Assurance and Business Advisory Services practice gives you major options when it comes to your career. Like ongoing learning. The challenge of new exciting projects. And the promise of change. All in an environment that fosters professional growth and development. And, if you decide you'd like to explore other areas within the organization, we'll support you. Any way you look at it, PricewaterhouseCoopers is the place to be. www.pwcglobal.com/abascareers fR/cEWAJERHousE[roPERS I Join us. Together we can change the world.sM

01000 Prk:ew.Jterhou.seeoopers LLP. lticP\•.-att•thoust'C~ refers to tiM! U.S. linn of Pricew.Jtethuuaoopen LLI' ;uti vlher memi.Jer5 oi the u.vrlcM·ide Pri,-ew.tterhouseCoupt'rs OIJldniz.ltion. Prkm\';lt,~houseCoop~rs i.'f procul ro /.It! tJn -"'lii""ati~-e Action amf C"f!Ual Oppor111nity EmplrJYt~ page 12 The Observer+ PAID ADVERTISEMENT Tuesday, September, 05, 2000

.: :P' ------

We invite Notre Dame students to join us

Monday, September 11, 2ooo 7:00 PM - 9:00 PM Center for Continuing Education, Lower Level

Merrill Lynch is an equal opportunity employer.

ml.com/careers be bullish ~Merrill Lynch

o3ooo M•rrHl Lynch & Ca .• Inc. Tuesday, September 5, 2000 The Observer+ INTERNATIONAL NEWS page 13

HAITI Increase in polVer costs wreaks havoc on Haiti's poor

instability has kept among the "If kids can't walk to where they attended school en to cut aid because of Associated Press poorest on Earth. last year. A medium pepper­ alleged fraud during elections "This is the last straw. I school, they'lljust oni-and-mushroom pizza at that gave Preval's predecessor PETlONVILLE can't make ends meet any bum around and turn the new Food Planet costs and mentor, former President For Ghislaine Leveque more," said Leveque, 36, into delinquents." $6.90. But Jean-Bertrand Aristide, an thnrn's going to be less light, throwing up her hands in des­ f o r overwhelming majority in and for hnr children. no peration. Leveque, Parliament. school. She sells cups of rice, beans Frantzy Baho new school Aristide is expPcted to win A 44-percent increase in gas and cornmeal from open bas­ bus driver enrollment presidential elections in and kerosene prices kets on thP unpaved roadside fees are November. Boycotting opposi­ announcml Fridav has Haitians in Petionville, a Port-au­ too much. tion parties say such a win anticipating tl;e damaging Prince suburb where broken It is unlikely that Leveque's Costs have could set the Caribbean coun­ social and economic conse­ down hovels rub up against children will get to eat at any gone up try back on the road to dicta­ quences in a country that mansions and the fancy shops of the new fast food restau­ from $36 to torship, six years after the political dictatorship and sprouting up to serve the elite. rants in the same community $48, along- Preval United States sent troops to side the dislodge the military from r------, fees for school supplies and power. uniforms. Bus fare has also The price increases and end risen. to subsidies comes as Haitians So on Monday, the beginning are at their most vulnerable, of the new school term, borrowing and scraping Leveque's children stayed together money to try to buy home, like many others across their children the education the country who cannot afford that they believe is the only the higher costs. way to save them from pover­ "We'll lose passengers. but ty. Minimum wage has that's not all. If kids can't walk remained unchanged at $1.70 to school, they'll just bum since 1991 while the gourde around and turn into delin­ has slumped from 7.5 to 21 to quents," said bus driver the dollar. Frantzy Baho, 41. Eighty percent of llaiti's 8 1 "Haiti is in a stranglehold," million people live in absolute President Rene Preval said last poverty, half the work force is month. when he announced jobless or gets by with odd jobs his cash-strapped government and the vast majority live with was ending the bus subsidy. constant hunger pangs. He spoke as Haiti's major Figures are hard to come by, donors - the United States, but the average income is esti­ Canada and France - threat- mated at $250 to $400 a year.

Notre Dame Film, Television, and Theatre presents

Actors from the London Stage As You Like It by William Shakespeare

Thursday, September 14 ...... 7:30pm Friday, September 15 ...... 7:30pm Saturday, September 16 ...... 7:30 pm

Playing at Washington Hall Reserved Seats $16 • Seniors $14 • All Students $12 Tickets available at LaFortune Student Center Ticket Office. MasterCard and Visa orders call 631-8128.

Chicago Brass Quintet TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2000 7:30 p.m. • Little Theatre M~iD ' c_~THEARU Working hard night after night can mean junk food, and lots of it. New BALANCE GOLD; ~llf01'lm.,...... Ill with its 40-30-30 ratio of carbs, protein and dietary fat, is a great-tasting way to help give your body sustained energy. Plus, it has 23 essential vitamins and minerals. Why not check out Balance.com to learn more. VIEWPOINT THE Tuesday, September 5, 2000 O BSERVER

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Differing ideas of game day hospitality

..A·

Disrespecting Texas A&M's tradition Meeting

I made the long trip to South ing memorial to the Aggie war epithets at our band was a spit in Southern Bend this wnek1md for the Texas dead and everyone removes their the face to men like General i\&M vs. Notre Dame game. Like hats upon entering the building. Rudder, whose boys died in Notre Dame, Texas /\&M is a tradi­ Nearby is a statue of General Normandy and men like General standards tion-rich school and Aggie fans James Earl Rudder, who led the George Moore, class of '08, whose have a sincere appreciation for col­ Hangers up Point du Hoc on D-Day, men died at Bataan. Do you make I would just like to express a sincBre thank you for lege traditions. Everyone I talked securing the right l1ank of Omaha those same remarks when you play the hospitality displayed by your students, faculty with enjoyed the opportunity to Beach. These brave men fought to Army or Navy? and staff during the Notre Dam1~- Texas A&M foot­ tour your lovely campus and we wipe the scourge of fascism and I hope the fans that made these ball game last Saturday. Everyone from the shuttlP were looking forward to learning I Iiller's forces of evil off the remarks (and the dozens around bus drivers to the fans in the stadium were polite morn about Notre Dame tradii.ions. European continent and in so who laughed and encouraged) do and helpful. I have never befln to a game wher1~ the I was nxtrmnely disappointed, doing, saved the free world. So not represent the majority of those Aggies were visitors where the horne crowd aetnd in however, to learn that rude and when the Aggie Band, in their who have attended the University such a positive way towards the visiting fans and tlw disrespectful treatment of oppo­ WWI-era uniforms, formed in your of Notre Dame. Sadly, for many of visiting team. Throughout the gamn I hnard compli­ rwnts' fans and visitors was one of endzone, I cannot explain the rage us who visited your campus, they ments on A&M's playPrs and coaches, compared to the ll~ss-publiciz('(l but obviously and disgust we felt at hearing the are the ones who will be remem­ the insults I normally hear when in an opposing sta­ most popular traditions at Notre shouts of" Achtung" and "Sieg bered. Aggie fans are well-known dium. Dame. Ileil" from the Notre Dame fans for their hospitality, and we look I was truly blown away by how nice everyone was. The /\&M College of Texas was around us. forward to hosting you next year in The level of class exhibited by your team. fans and an all-main military institution You may laugh at our yells, think College Station. Perhaps then you staff is something to be proud of. In my opinion this until thn rnid-(10s and it remains our songs are funny and talk all will gain a greater appreciation is the way is supposed to b1~. Two the largest source of officers for the smack you want about our why General George Patton once teams compnting hard on the field and fans in thn the United States military outside football team, but to mock the said, "Give me an army of West stands applauding thnir effort. I only hope that of the serviee academies. As stu­ Corps of Cadets with Nazi catcalls Point graduates, and I'll win a bat­ when your fans comn to visit College Station next dents, we were constantly remind­ was simply inexcusable and. tle. Give me a handful of Texas year, that we show you half of the hospitality you ml of this tradition of service by frankly, ignorant. Thousands of Aggies, and I'll win a war." showed us. Good luck during the rest of the season our many campus landmarks com­ Aggie men and women who wore and beat the heck out of Nebraska! mnmorating those who had fallen. that uniform fought and hundreds Kathy Clarke For nxample, there are 55 l1ags died so that we can be free and the Texas A&M University Michael Taglienti that nneircle Kyle Field in honor of disrespect and ingratitude your class of '95 Texas A&M University thn 55 /\ggins who died in World . fans showed their memory was dis­ San Rafael, California class of '98 War I. Our Student Center is a liv- graceful. Shouting those hateful September 3, 2000 September 3, 2000

_------~-======Building a sense of fellowship Notre Dame is a community. It o!Ter. From section dinners to will in someway bring our com­ is a spndal place where virtues football tickets, students have munity just a little closer together like faith, hope and love guide expenses that cannot always be as we continue on our four-year our daily lives. Since we have met. /\s we all know, Notre Dame journey. Do you have taknn offic1~. one of our primary­ can be an expensive place to live. goals has bnen to build this s1ms1~ In order to foster a sense of Brian P. O'Donoghue of fellowship and friendship family, we offered to the students Student Body President something to say? among tlw students of Our Lady's the Rector's Fund; or, as we Brooke E. Norton Unversity. This idea is what we phrased it during the campaign, Student Body Vice-President campaigned on last Spring and "Money for members of the Notre Jay M. Smith Write usl sonwthing which we have n~lent­ Dame family who don't feel fully Chief of Staff lessly pursued. a part of the community." It is Jim H. Focht observer.viewpoint.l @nd.edu Unfortunatnly, sometimes our pleasure to announce that Office of the President financial considnrations impnde last Tuesday night, the Financial Vision Division Head this unity. Many times, someone Management Board took the final September 4, 2000 may f'1~el less than a full nwmber necessary step and the Hector's of tlw Notrn Damn family whnn Fund is now fully operational to thny cannot afford to take part in meet the needs of the students. all that our University has lo We hope and pray that this fund VIEWPOINT THE OBSERVER Tuesday, September 5, 2000

THE OBSERVER

1'.0. !lox Q. Norre Dame. IN 465'i6 024 South Dining Hall. Notre Dame, IN 46SS(, EDITOR IN CHIEF Mike Connolly MANAGING EDITOR BUSINESS MANAGER Noreen Cillespie Tim Lane ASST. MANAGING EDITOR OPERATIONS MANAGER Christine Kraly Brian Kessler

NEWS EDITOR: Anne Marie Mattingly VIEWPOINT EDITOR: Lila Haughey SPORTS EDITOR: Kerry Smith SCENE EDITOR: Amanda Greco SAINT MARY'S EDITOR: Molly McVoy PIIOTO EDITOR: Eli7.abeth Lang

ADVERTISING MANAGER: Pat Peters All DESIGN MANAGER: Chris Avila SYSTEMS ADMINISTRATOR: Mike Gunville WEB ADMINISTRATOR: Adam Tmner CONTROLLER: Bob Woods GRAPHICS EDITOR: Jose Cuellar

CONTACT Us OFFICE MANAGER/GENERAL INF0 ...... 631-7471 FAX...... 631-6927 ADVERTISING ...... 631-6900/8840 [email protected] EDITOR IN CHIEF...... 631-4542 MANAGING EDITOR/ AssT. ME ...... 631-4 541 BliSINF$S OFFICE...... 631-5313 NEWS ...... 631-5323 observer.obsnews.l @nd.edu GUEST COLUMN VIEWPOINT ...... 631-'5303 observer. viewpoint. I @nd.edu SPORTS ...... 631-4 543 observer.sports. I @nd.edu ScENE...... 631-4 540 Wrenching Religion from Politics obscrver.scene.l @nd.edu SAINT MARY'S ...... 631-4324 , Va. the same rights as any other citizen, he out religion." lie was implying that observer.smc I @nd.edu On Tuesday, the Anti-Defamation also has the potential responsibility of atheists are highly immoral people. The PHOTO ...... 631-8767 League, a primarily Jewish organiza­ representing the government, including absurdity and exclusivity of these SYSTEMS/WEB ADMINISTRATORS ...... 631-8839 tion set up to combat anti-Semitism, its responsibilities and limitations. One remarks are why the architects of this sent a letter to vice-presidential candi­ of those limitations is making "no law nation wrote the First Amendment the THE OBSERVER ONliNE date Senator respecting the establishment of a reli­ way they did. Visit our Web site at lmp:llobserver.ndedulor daily Joseph Lieberman Faraz Rana gion" as stated in the First Amendment. The ADL also openly criticized both updates of campus news. sporrs. features and opinion and bluntly told The purpose of this clause is quite clear Vice President A1 Gore and Bush earlier columns. as well as cartoons. reviews and breaking news from the Associated Press. him to stop parad- - favoritism inevitably would lead to in March for expressing their religious ing his religion. The exclusion. conviction in the primaries. When Gore SURF TO: letter came in Cavalier Daily For example, Texas Gov. George W. expressed on "60 Minutes" his strong weather for up-w-the movies/music for response to Bush said in a speech at a B'nai B'nai faith in Christianity and Bush replied to minute forecasts weekly student reviews Lieberman's speech Brith organization that "Our nation is a question that his favorite political advertise lor policies online features for spe­ in Detroit in which chosen by God and commissioned by philosopher was Jesus Christ, both and rates of print ads cial cam pus coverage the candidate made some remarks history to be a model to the world of rightfully were asked to limit their implying that Americans should "reaf­ justice and inclusion and diversity with­ expression of religious faith. archives ro search lor about The Observer firm" their faith in God and allow reli­ out division. Jews and Christians and While respecting a candidate's right articles published after ro meet the editors and gion to enter the "public life." Muslims speak as one in their commit­ to express his religious beliefs, the ADL August 1')9') staff As religion has taken a front seat on ment to a kind, just, tolerant society." If also has set a precedent of the limita­ the campaign trail in this year's elec­ Bush were president when he gave tions a candidate must endure when POliCIES tions, the ADL has done a necessary these remarks, he would ultimately be running for a government office. The fhe Observer is the independent. daily newspaper and commendable job to attack candi­ implying as the executive leader of the separation of church and state form the published in print and online by the students of the dates who try to mix politics and reli­ government that Hindus, Buddhists, building block of the right to freedom of University of Notre Dame du Lac and Saint Mary's gion. Allowing politics and religion to atheists and others not of the majority religion, which cannot exist without College. Editorial content, including advertisements, is mix is a dangerous step toward infring­ do not believe in a kind, just and toler­ limitations. nor governed by policies of the administration of either ing upon the separation of church and ant society. Politics and politicians make up the institution. The Observer reserves the right to refuse state. When Bush set aside a specific day as government. If we're going to respect advertisements based on content. There is a clear problem in telling a observance of "Jesus Day" in Texas, he the separation of religion and govern­ The news is reported as accurately and objectively as political candidate to keep quiet about used his political power to respect "the ment, we should start with respecting possible. Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of the majority of the Editor in Chief, Managing Editor, his religious ideologies. Presidential establishment of a religion." While the separation of religion and politics. A

DILBERT SCOTT ADAMS QUOTE OF THE DAY

~------Er-~~~~~~~~-, YOU CAN'T GO OIL BERT, YOU 0~ ~ MEET THE HIRE.D ® AROUND JUDGING ~ "The sound of tireless voices is the price we NEW GUY. ~ PEOPLE BY THEIR l pay for the right to hear the music of our A GIANT .. "' AMOEBA? ~ LOOKS. ~ own opinions. ~ : ...,. .1! Adlai E. Stevenson c ::> 0 politician 0 0 "'0 c

page 16 Tuesday, September 5, 2000

ALBUM REVIEW Modest Mouse returns with depth, style The band continues to raise the indie-rock standard with its latest release, The Moon and Antarctica.

attnntion of' major By JOE REISING record labels. The Scene Music Critic group ended up signing with Sony, Anv l'irst tinw listPnPr of Tlw Moon and Tlw Moon and and :A.nt.arc·tira. thP latnst album from Antarctica is thnir indiP-rorkprs ModPst MousP. will bn major rPcord labPl blown away. For an PrHin• hour. lw or debut from Epic slw will b1• t.ransportrd to tlw tinwlnss Hecords. worlds suggnstnd by thP otlwrworldly With The Moon photography insidl' thP album book!Pt. and Antarrlira. ThP songs. whiiP all uniqtw. blnnd Modest Mousn togP!.hnr in a nPw world of Pndless raises the bar dan­ gray sun swPpt skins and will makn gerously high. The just about anyonP an attPnlivn disc:iplP shnrr scopn of the of llw somlwr wisdom of !Pad singPr album's themns !saar Brock. Sonw mav PVPn conw to and laynrcd sound llw 1'o nrl usi on th al tl~ PV h a VP found n~flect a group llw ni'W soundtrack to 1-lwir lifn. But that has alreadv I'I'JH'at listPnings fail to rPcapturP tlw reached maturitY dqlth of tlw initial jourrwy. With tlw fairly quickly for a PXCPption of tlw morP ratrhy and gen­ band whosP oldest LIP aroustir nwlodiPs. Lhl' musir lwgins mnmbPr is 2ft. to sound flat and torwiPss. and instnad Guided by singnr of plunging its listPnPrs into dnnp Isaac Brock's ll!Ptaphysiral wandPrings, tiH~Y twangy voicP, tlw instPad find tlwmsPIVPS listPning to album searchns drab dirgPs and plaintivl' yPIIs from a thn morp desolate far lorwliPr plarP than thny may wish rc~achns of' human lo lw. llowPvnr. with thn snnmingly existenc:e for PndiPss ovnrkill of' sugary happy pop insight into dP.cp llw musir industry has poundnd the human qunstions. Photo courtesy of www.rollingstone.com public wit-h of' latr,, many may find Thn album's first Bassist Eric Judy (left) and drummer Jeremiah Green (right) provide the transcendental alternative tlwmsPIVPS again SPPking thr, dnpth song. ":~rd Planet" and mystnr·y pn•sent in The Moon and begins with the rock backing to lead vocalist Issac Brock's (center) unique rock 'n' roll vision_ Antarctica. lament. Modnst Mous1~ hails from thn bn~r,d­ "Everything that kP.eps me togdher is After tlw subdued "Perfect Disguise," the final song of' thn album. "What ing ground of manv alinnatt~d and falling apart." and thnn dives into a thP. album picks up momentum once People are Made Of'." thn band returns lonPiy musirians: the Pacific: crashing. swirling image of creation again. as it bngins its descent into the to the blasting noise and primal Nortl-iwnst. MorP specifically. thP.y that suggests a deep connection deeper and lonnlier parts of the CD screams of its Parlinr work. n~vealing c:onH' from rural Issaquah. WA, where bntween human bnings and thn earth. with the song "Tiny Cities Made of that the wisdom gainPd in this dnso­ tlw band f'ornwd in 1993 romposing of' Thn song fadP.s in and out of' the newly Ashes." Set to a pulsating bass line. latn journey still provides littln comfort vocalist !saar llror.k. bassist Eric Judy forming world. just as the simple and highlighted by a creepy dual voicn in a world of' isolation and spiritual and drumnwr .lnrnmiah Grnnn. It was arouslir guitar line becomes over­ effect. the song details a demented uncnrtainty. not until I 'J!J(, that the band producnd whelmed by a more urgent barrage of road trip as Brock screams, "Does While most other bands nasily its l'irst full album. thn 70-plus minutn chords. anybody know a resolvn surh pain This is a Long l>rivn for Somnonr, with Thn second song of the album. the way a body could and conf'usion Nothing to Think About. In 1 1JIJ7 they soothing acoustic ballad "Gravity Rides get away/does within thn coursn rP!Pasnd an Iii'. The Fruit that Ate Everything" seems rathnr out of place, anybody know a Album Song List of an album. or ltstdf. and in I99S their album Thn however. The song envisions a time way?" After the othnrwise nnvr~r l.onnsomn Crowdnd Wnst drew thn when gravity wins out, and the press- Nirvana-like "A 1. 3rd Planet dPive f'ar enough ing demands and Different City," the 2. Gravity Rides Everything into the roots of pains of our daily next two songs on 3. Dark Center Of Th<~ Universe their anger to lives "All will f'aliJ the album deal 4. Perfect Disguise rnach such a deep fall right into with various 5. Tiny Cities Made Of Ashes p s y c h o I o g i c· a I place." This song degrees of isola­ (>. A Diff'orrmt City planl', !saar would be a pnr­ tion. building up 7. Tho Cold Part Brock takns his l'ect way to end to the massivP. ~. Alone Down There list<'lli'I'S on a the album. a "Thn Stars are 9. Tho Stars Are Projectors bPautiful journey soothing Projectors." At 10. Wild Packs Of' Family Dogs that strugg!Ps to rnminder after a over eight min­ 11. Paper Thin Walls grasp sonw of tlw painful journey utes, thn song is 12. I Camo As A Hat most basic quPs­ through loneli­ the longest and 13. Lives tions of human nnss and ques- most transcenden­ 14. Life Like Wends nxistPn<'P. VVlwrP tioning that tal track of the 15. What People Arn Made Of did WP com<' things will album. Full of from" Why wnn· always work out shifting dynamics. w n t' rna ! t' d ? in thn end. In the thr, song builds in urgency and sound WhnrP can WI' search for nwaning in grandnr vision of layers until eventually reducing to a our lives? Isaac Brock. thn soft l'inger-picked guitar. Though nevnr sPttling upon a final song's placement The rest of the songs on the album answer, the journey is a nwaningf'ul must makn morc~ slowly rnturn the listener to more onn. And with t.hn beautifully laynr<'d snnsn. "Dark familiar places of sounds and imagns. sounds and haunting vocals to sur­ Center of thn nspec:ially thn bright. happily nnurolic· round mn. it is onP anyone will l'ind U n i v e r s ~~ . " t h e "Paper Thin Walls." more• and more worth r<'pnating. third song of the Tlw vast album, takns a j o u r n n y harsher tone through iso­ The Moon & Antarctica than the first two lation and songs. as the spiritual squealing guitars searching Modest Mouse that ddinnd appears to manv of Modf'st reach somP sort of reso­ Mousp's narlier Epic lution (a]bPit songs makl•s its Records rPiurn. This song a IPss than could Pasilv optimistir bProme th(• onPl as thn Rating anthPrn of any a I b u m Photo courtesy of www ro1t1ngstone.com wPII intPntionPd draws to a lead singer Issac Brock searces through human existence guy told to gPt c I o s n . for answer to life's deeper meanings in his songs. I OS t. llow<'ver in

------

Are we connecting?

Notre Dame's biggest organization for minority students has a new ocus name and a new mission, but its challenges remain the same. THE Tuesday, September 5, 2000 OBSERVER Striving to build bridges

Multicultural office tries to reach out, unite campus

with its i\(J pnrcnnt By TIM LOGAN whitP student body In hH.ll' l:ditnr and its PV<'n morP homognnous tradi­ It was a sunny tions. But it was onn Fridav al'tPrnoon. that tlw MSI'S. and its Notr<' ·DamP was slid­ dirPctor Iris Outlaw, ing into till' f'irst W<'<'k­ would like to Sf'P mon~ <'IHI ol' th<' school yPar ol'tPn around rampus. and stud<'nts wnr(' "I think it's kny that talking aboul what to wp'rp opnning our do and wh<'r(' to go on arms and saying no. tlwir f'irst Friday night it's not just !'or stu­ back on campus. dPnts ol' color." Outlaw At FiPidhousl' ~!all. a said. "It's for Pvnry­ crowd had gathPrPd. ( )I}('. as ol'tf'll happ(•ns on Tlw :viS I'S usnd to b<' sunnv 1:ridav aftPr­ call(~d the OITicn of noon~. !\ ba.nd was Multicultural Studnnt playing; tlwr<' was l'rPP Af'f'airs. It changnd its l'ood and about I :JO namn ovPr tlw sumnwr p" o p I" \\' <' n• t a I k i n g and adjustnd its mis­ and laughing and Pal­ sion in an Pl'fort to ing and dancing. bncomP morn defini­ What was unusual tivf' and inrlusivn. was that thPs<' i :JO Outlaw said tlw ofl'irp 1w o p II' t a I k i n g a n d wants to rnach out to laughing and Paling m aj o ri ty stud<' n ts and and danring W<'r(' ol' spur t lw r o nn n c t ions a II d i ITn r <' n t l'l h n i c i­ that too oftnn f'altPr liPs; blark studPnts. bdwPPn studPnts of /\sian studPnts. Latino diiTPrPnt ra('('S on this stud<'nls and vvhit<' campus. To do that, it studPnts wPr<' Pnjoying is sponsoring morn t lw m s <' I v P s a t t h P <'V!'nts likn the Ol'l'icf' of Multicultural WPicomP Back Picnic. StuciPnt Programs and and. for tlw first time SPrvicl's WPicomP this year. running a Ba(·k l'il'nic. sPriPs of diversity TONY FLOYDrThe Obse!Ver Students and staffers dig in at the MSPS Welcome Back Picnic. Events such as these draw all sorts of It is a pirturP ran~ly SPPn at Notr<' DamP. see MSPS/page 4 members of the Notre Dame community, but barriers remain before racial harmony can be acheived.

Diversity workshops aim to foster discussion

sity is always going to touch the diversity educators invited "The majority of students more who participated in the By KATE NAGENGAST some nerves. tlw goal of creat­ to participate in the program had said, that if not for some 1 program last year and a N~.·\\'!'. \X rilL'r ing dialogue was met [last this year. "Everyone involved of the classes that they took, diversity educator this year ynarl so we are continuing the would be there regardless of they could have gone through said, "We want to do more To Pll('OuragP dialogue on program and refining it this [course) credit." the University not knowing or small group work so the kids tlw issue of' diversity at Notrn ynar," said Kevin Iluie, assis­ "My experience with diversi­ discussing diversity," she said. taking part in it don't fool Dam!'. tlw psychology dnpart­ tant din~ctot· of MSPS and one ty here at Notre Dame has The student diversity educa­ intimidated by a big group of mnnt and Multicultural of nitw l'racticum facilitators. been very interesting," said tors participated in a week­ people." Student Programs and Thn program is structured Charlyn Henderson, a senior end retreat at the start of the Last year's pilot program SPrvicPs (MSI'Sl cn~atPd a as a one-credit psychology and a diversity educator. "I school year and met for din­ allowed diversity educators to I' r act i nrm in [) i v !' r sit y coursn lml by the facilitators. thought I knew everything ner last week to discuss the test six different programs. hlucation. w(~ekly mnntings begin today about diversity just as a racial task they will undertake. The Based on student responses to Tlw focus of' this year's pro­ to prepare for presentations issue ... but anyone who is dif­ subsequent weekly meetings those efforts, this year's pre­ gram - basPd on a pilot pro­ the 40 studnnt "diversity edu­ ferent than the majority is prepare them to give presen­ sentations were revised. One gram !'rom last fall -will bn cators" will give to freshmen diverse and coming here real­ tations and lead small group important change in the pro­ ~~xpanding tlw dPfinition of' in every residence hall this ly opened my eyes to that." discussions in groups of three gramming is the involvement diversity bnyond racial Oetober. Iris Outlaw, director of to five educators with assis­ of each hall staff in the dis­ dPscriptions to encompass "Wn think of it as more of a MSPS and a Practicum facili­ tance from one facilitator cussions. issul's of' gl'nciPr. snxuality, program that you happen to tator. described the need for when they enter the dorms "They are supposed to have handicaps and class. get credit for," said Ilunt the promotion of such discus­ next month. "Although the topic of diver- llanovnr, a snnior and one of sions at Notre Dame. Morgan Russell, a sopho- see TALKS/page 4

In their words In their words Notre Dame's ranking in the 1999 Princeton "5)ome things have changed. "You're going to hang out with people who have Review's list of "Most the same cultural background- it's easier." .")ome things have not." #8 Homogenous Colleges." Mel Tardy Paul Ybarra first-year advisor and 1986 Notre Dame graduate Dillon Hall multicultural commissioner page 2 The Observer+ IN FOCUS Tuesday, September 5, 2000

IN OUR EYES Outside Trying to looking in Student diversity

When I was a freshman, one of my professors self-separati called me a racist. Actually, she railed all of us radsts. WP all stan~d at tlw white French woman with wonder. then at each other, By KATE STEER searching for answers. Associate News Editor I. of the 12-loan student persuasion. had n1wer been Have you ever looked around n~ferrnd to as "privileged" campus and thought you were before. Haisnd in a very tol­ seeing clones? erant, politP home, I had This phenomenon seems to be never bePn accused of common at Notre Dame. but !wing any sort of "ism." And amazingly, some people here do to be labeiPd a racist defy the stereotypes. snPnJnd. ironically. a huge "Not everyone wears injustin~. Christine Kraly Abercrombie and Fitch or comes Our profPssor's tlwory from the same culture," said was that as a "privileged" Dillon llall multicultural commis­ whit1• student at th1~ Assistant sioner Paul Ybarra. Univ1~rsity of Notm Dame. I Managing Where does the desire to fit one am incapablP of under­ Editor prescribed "ideal" come from? standing a black student's What can students and the rweds or strugg!Ps in getting University do about these issues? into school. For sorneonn who had strugglnd Is there any possibility for through fair SAT scorPs and an average high improvement or will these situa­ srhool systPm, I felt dwatnd to bn simply writ­ tions exist indefinitely? ten off as an advantagml whitn kid. Some faculty and students arc It's hard wlwn you'rp a whitn. Irish Notre currently working to improve race llanw IPgary to a·pprPciatn tlw eoncPpt of rc~lations on campus. With offices "'minority." I don't know how a black pnrson such as Multicultural Student fPPis waiking through an Rh pnrcnnt whitP Programs and Serviens (MSPS) campus. and I don't know what it's likn to lw and a multicultural or diversity tlw minority rPpresPntativn in a dassroom. commissionPr in each dorm, the But I do know insPcurity. StPpping onto a col­ University is making efforts to IPgP campus for tlw first tinw was intimidating raise awareness and curiosity Pnough. I ran't imagirw how I'd feel stl~pping about other cultures. onto a ram pus wlwrP I was 1111e of only 14 pnr­ But somn situations are known t"Pnt of tlw population. for being divisive among students. I'd likP to know, though. But why am I so "They say the most segregated afraid to ask'! Why is sonwthing so obvious so time of the wenk is in church. tlw diflirult to talk about'! second being at the dining hall." Probably due to our troubled past, the said Patrick White, multicultural American public does not like to talk about commissioner for Fisher Hall. Students gather at the Center for Social Concerns in February to discuss inte1 race. Instead I sit on a predominantly white Visible situations like these, that race and breaking down the barriers and stereotypes that separate people at eampus. recognize tlw problem with diversity make groups seem impenetrable, ratios. and rarely indude myself in multicultur­ operate as roadblocks to progress. these barriers as being able to away from what is familiar and al !WI~nts. Why'? Students who do not belong to a I do not have black friends or Asian friends step outside of your comfort zone comfortable. given group perceive exr.lusion, and learn new things about differ­ But what is the purpose of this or white friends. I have friends. I've never seen while those involved may not. anyonP I associate with. professionally or per­ ent people and cultures. position? Cynics say that the aver­ "I don't think about it- you're White sees his role as that of an age Notre Dame student is apa­ sonally, as a color or an ethnicity. Yet I know eating a meal with people you're that at limns I fall victim to what I call "the educator. tlletie and dispassionate. If this is comfortable with." said Jane On g. "As multicultural commissioner, true, will this service reach the white pnrson's friendship guilt." who serves as multicultural com­ As much as they might not admit to it. gener­ I serve to facilitate dialogue in the average Notre Dam1\ student? missioner for Farley Hall. dorm, to expose everyone to other There is, of course, no way to cat­ ally when a discussion of race ensues, many Iris Outlaw, director of MSPS, whitn students automatically start naming off cultures." In this capacity, he can egorize all the students at this sees the key to breaking down help to encourage people to move University as one and to only all their minority fri1~nds. Why'? Why is the first martion to open discussion to defend one's cater to that one image. own personal open-mindedness? "So many Notre Dame students BIH:ausP, in general. Americans are sensitive come from privileged back­ people. There is an inherent guilt within many grounds, and through no fault of white people, ignorant and accepting alike, their own. thPy haven't been that prPVPnts them from being successful in exposed to otlwr nrltures," White ran• dPbatns. It's tlw kind of guilt that himlers said. lie said that giving people the opportunity to experience tlwir discussions of hot button issues lik1~ the death penalty and artirmatiw aetion. something difTnrent is only thn It stems from nowhnrn but thn past. It's a first step. "You have to go out of your way [to exp1~rience other cul­ constant, nagging n~mindnr of tlw atrocities minoritiPs haw endured in thn United States, tures[." and it lingnrs in tlw bark of the white person's But some say this is not enough. mind during any and all relevant discussions. It Outlaw said hnr department has realized that past nf'forts have not donsn 't nwan thn JH~rson is racist. tolerant; lib­ eral or rons!•rvativn. It's just tlwrP- the little been sufficient. The recent name voir.P that says "you're right. but how can you change of the office. from the argw• with h.Pr'! \·our history is so difTen~nt 0 ffi c e of M ul tic ul t u r a I Student than lwrs." Affairs was a part of an attempt to MPaningful dialogue is dirtirult when I don't alter the approach to cam pus PVPn know tlw right words to usn. II ow can I diversity. start a conVPI'Sation wlwn till' fair. politi!:ally This year is the beginning of corn•c·t PxprPssions fail nw? I still sen no near­ many changes aimed at involving ing solution or dosP Pnd to tlw "guilt." But majority students. "I think it's key until I do, I'll havn to n•main outside looking in. that we're opening our arms and [saying[, 'No, it's not just for stu­ dents of color. it's for ev1~ryorw,"' Outlaw said. "IMSPSI is about exposing the rest of campus to somn things that may snmn for­ eign and strangn at times ... So IN FOCUS STAFF it's an educational componnnt." Outlaw cited stereotyping of lwr oiTice as a reason for the rnlativn Editor: Tim J.ogan lack of success in reaching some students. Peopln often miscon­ Photography: Tony Floyd ceived the funetion of OMS;\ as being an of'ficn that snrved only minority students, that it was the

Research: Kate Steer TONY FLOYD/The Observer underrepresented student's Ol'fice Students dine together at the MSPS Welcome Back Picnic. Student of Student Affairs. Ybarra is part of this dfort. lie Graphics: Dana Magnuson leaders are trying to facilitate dialogue about race on campus. Tuesday, September 5, 2000 The Observer+ IN FOCUS page 3 eak dow-n barriers ders are encouraging their peers to fight and step outside the comfort zone Minority Distribution at Notre Dame

undergraduates in 1998

Black 261

Native American 38

Asian 276 3-5%

Hispanic 537 6.8%

total: source: 1999 fac-t book

step were taken, attitudes on campus would change drasti­ cally, he said. Talking Will such a move help to dispel common misconcep­ tions about minority groups about on campus? Ybarra said that a place like Notre Dame has dating at Notre Dame. Discussions like this are part of the effort to get students talking about the potential to succeed in Dame and Saint Mary's. this capacity. " I still see a lot race of homogeneity, but at a perceives his role as the pre­ students need to become a chain reaction is started place of learning, we can ''They say the most senter of opportunity to the active participants in the that ultimately results in the move in a positive direction." segregated time of the unaware. "If you want to multicultural atmosphere of support of a stereotype. He also said that he under­ week is at church, the learn about different cul­ Notre Dame. "When you do Ybarra said that the majority stands the importance of his tures, different ways of think­ things with multicultural students are not the only work. "I don't ever want any­ second being in the ing, it's available," Ybarra clubs, it tends to become ones at fault in the situation. one to judge me on my dining hall." said. "I think by simply dis­ your own little world," he "Self-separation is common appearance or culture with­ out knowing who I am." By playing different cultures, it said. in a lot of us," he said. Patrick White can put into people's minds Ong has experienced the "You're going to hang out working to prevent such pre­ the i~.ea that it is welcoming same phenomenon. As an with people who have the judgement, he can improve Fisher Hall here. officer in the Filipino same cultural background - life on campus. muHicultural commissioner Ong approaches her posi­ American Student it's easier." Outlaw made a similar tion with a similar attitude. Organization she has been in In general, there is not observation. "TherA's a potential for stu­ situations where the point enough involvement in these "You can get a different "/ don't think about it dents to get involved, but seems to be lost. "Sometimes clubs on the part of the twist too, looking at how excitnment needs to be built," you get so involved with plan­ majority student, members Christ walked: Christ walked - you're eating a meal slw said. "Most !Notre Dame ning that it doesn't seem like said. among all kinds of people with people you're studPnts] arP open-minded, you're reaching out," she "By being a part of these who are different from him­ comfortable with. " willing to Jearn, the opportu­ said. societies, you're already look­ self," she said. "Christ was a nity just hasn't been present­ II' those involved in a given ing toward open-mindedness, minister and an ally, and how 1 ed." multicultural club are gener­ toward accepting other cul­ are you going to be an ally to Jane Ong Fulfilling his job isn't ally students who come from tures and understanding your people who are different than Farley Hall enough, Ybarra said. Other that particular culture, then own," Ybarra said. If this yourself?" muHicuHural commissioner

Will multicultural students have a place of their own?

• Intercultural hosts a rangA of events and "We want to have our ter is in Notre Dame's future. and the glee club, would do has a variety of resources. She envisions a building that much to allay the biggest con­ Center building LaFortune's second floor also building. But that comes is part of a larger, renovated cern critics have voiced about may be in future serves as a gathering place for with donations and LaFortune Student Center a multicultural center: that it minority students, and a place building and all that kind complex, one which would would simply isolate minority to hold meetings. likely be shared with a range students more. By TIM LOGAN The Center is serving its of thing." of student groups and have "We've gone back and forth In l'ocus Editor purpose, according to Sister seminar rooms and social on that," Lenz said. "Some Jean Lenz, assistant vice pres­ Iris Outlaw space in addition to offices. people do want a separate It may not happen for a long ident for Student Affairs. director of Multicultural Student "The vision that we'd have is building." time, but someday, minority "It is happening over there that it would not only house But, for now, the center is studf1nts at Notre Dame could already," she said. "There is a Programs and Services international affairs and the still in the hypothetical stages. have a studPnt center of their real mix tun~." MSPS, but it would also house No one has donated money to own. The area also has a Coalition student organizations," construct one and it is not CurrPntly. Multicultural Dame. Outlaw said. "We've got 250 atop the University's list of Lounge, a spot adjacent to the ... Student Programs and MSPS office where interns "We want to have our build­ organizations on campus, and building priorities. - Servircs and International work and student gr'oups hold ing," she said. "But that comes how many carrels are in the And until that changes, Student Affairs have offices on meetings. with donations and building Club Resour'ce Center?" MSPS, the Office of the second floor of LaFortune But many schools have their and all that kind of thing." A centrally located building International Student Affairs Student Center. The two own buildings for multicultur­ There are no plans on the that mixes minority groups and minority student groups groups jointly operate the al programs. And Outlaw said drawing board right now, but with general student organiza­ will continue to share the sec­ Intercultural Center. which that is her goal for Notre Outlaw said she hopes a cen- tions, such as the crew team ond floor of LaFortune. page 4 The Observer+ IN FOCUS Tuesday, September '5, 2000

havl' manifested themselves But behaviors. actions speak 1998 figures from the 0 ITice in rhnnring along racial lines louder than words," she said. of Institutional Hc~search show MSPS at Bookstore Basketball "And so you get these commu­ the number of Hispanic fresh­ Talks continued from page I games, and in debates over a nications, indirect communi­ men has grown in thn last continued from page 1 numbPr of incidents. As a cations. Then you start mov­ decade while .tlw numbers of workshops for frPshmen. result of' these tensions over ing over. and changing what blacks and Asians have MSPS is also improving its tlw years, has been dropped slightly. Either way, tlw hall rtH'lors in tlw nwPt­ Pducational offprings to rpach NotrP Dame your major the total percentage of minor­ ings with us this year so that a widPr audiPIH".n. has added and "That's what we're trying philosophy." ity students has hovered should keep clown some of "That's wiH•rt> our I'Xpan­ adjusted its to do, to tell people 'take Fighting between 14 and 17 percent the ignorant comnwnts that sion is going," Outlaw said. el'f'orts to t h 0 s e sinen 1 !JSS, when it rose from wPrn made last y11ar." said a risk.· ... That's a chance Daly Barnns,· a sophomort' "TIW SPrVirPS WI' providP and Pncourage to learn about another changes. the single digits. tlw programs Wt' providP are divnrsity, and encour­ Tardy rememberc~d his timn diversity ndurator. "I just for IWP ryo1H'." according to culture that you may aging people ~tt Notre Damn, when students hope l.o bring my apprncia­ Tlw oiTicP's corn mission - Sister Jean not have been exposed to brnak out would gathnr in the Black tion for diwrsity and lwlp to to support studnnts of color Lnnz, assis­ of the famil­ Cultural Arts Counril of'lkn on eliminatP somt' of tlw igno­ academically and culturally tant vicn pres­ to at all." iar, is the LaFortune's sncond rloor to rance that is out thPre." and to ensurP tlwy gPt a wPII­ ident for task at hand relax. ''I'm looking forward to roundPd Pduration - rnmains Student Iris Outlaw for MSPS "Pnople would go thPre and mon~ focus and unity in tlw group in tPrms of pi·ogram­ tlw sanw. MSPS sponsors Affairs. director of Multicultural Student and the stu­ hang out and study and talk forums to disruss diversity "There havn dents who about stuff that happnnl'fl. It ming this yPar." said Services and Programs issuPs, organiii'S mPntoring bl'nn SOnH~ work with was like 'What did sonwone llt>ndt>rson. who also partit:­ and IH'tworking programs and rna! d i f'f'icul- tlwm. say to you today'?' But I think ipatPd in last yPar's pilot providPS a link bPtWPI'n tins ovPr tlw VPars," slw said. "Helations on campus arP there was just this under­ program. minority studt•nts and many "A I o t of t h Z1 s e d i ffi cult i c s not the best and tweryonn has standing that that was how Tlw frwus of tlw program l!niVPrsitv off'icPs. have indicated tlw nePd for a littiP fear." said l~rendan things were," lw said. will rl'main dialoguP and "\Vp'vt: doni' tPam building. programs on such things." Dowdall. chair of thn Student "I think that thPre's a Pclucation. "ThPrt~ 's going to rommunicalion. lhosP sorts of But another challenge is Senate's Diversity Committee. grPatnr expectation thesl' bn somr• serious globali;a­ things that art• IH•yoJHI thl' morn subtlc1, and perhaps "It takes a little bit to gnt out days that we should bP tion now and I want to makl' pigl'onhoiP that our of'firP gl'ls mon• diiTicult to clcal with. of' your comfort zone for stu­ beyond tensions." surP, and thP rl'st of thP put in by That chal­ dents and talk to someone dif­ Getting bnyond those ten­ staff' wants to makl' surl' thinking that lenge is sim­ ferent than thnm." sions, and making scenes likP thai our students arc prP­ it's only for ·"Relations orz campus are ply the atti­ Nevertheless, the environ­ thP onn that sunny Friday parPd for that." Outlaw said. That prr•paration. howt•v• undnrrPprP­ not the best and everyone tude, at a ment is .not what it usPd to be, artPrnoon at Fieldhoust> Mall sentPd pPo­ school whPrn according to Mel Tardy, a first more common, n1quirPs stu­ Pr. is a large task. act·ording p I P." s lw has a lillie fear." so many stu­ year advisor and 198(J alum­ dPnts to take chances, Outlaw to llu iP. said. ch~nts arP so nus. said. It rPquircs studPnls to "l:vnvonl' f'PPis likP this progranl will solvl' all divPr­ But chai- Brendan Dowdall simi I a r. "Some things have put asidn their fnars. rational Jpngl's towards the changed," said Tardy, who is and irrational. sity probll'ms on campus. chair of Student Senate abound. people who black. "Some things have "That's what wp'rp trying but you just can't do that in Noll'P J>anw Diversity Committee are not. And, not." to do, to Ltd! people, 'takP a a hour and a half," lw said. has a long Outlaw said, "Thnre's more of an Pxpec­ risk,'" slw said. "No onP has "But it can rrcatP clialoguP history of it has an tation that people understand ever gotten muggl'd. shot, and that's our goal." racial 'tensions. It was thosn nfTect on freshmen who have diversity and they're more tol­ killed, [orJ roblwd becausn "IThP divPrsity Pducators tl~nsions that INl to a 1978 sit­ conw lo Notn1 Damn from a l)rant and more accepting," he they happened to lw thn on!y an• I a divl'rse group of' won­ in out of which tlw OMSA was morn div11rsn environment. said. "]But many minority stu­ whitn pPrson at Latin dnrl'ul pt•opiP -who bring rreatnd. A I!)!) I prol!~st led "You havn the upperclass­ den~s] still f;;el that they stand Expressions or Black Images." many diiTt>rPnt pt~rspl'c­ the UniVPrsity to takP furtlwr men - tlwy don't really come out 111 class. "That's a chance to lParn tivns," llanovl'r said. "Tiw steps to try and improvp thP out and say 'Don't hang out Thn minority population has about anothnr culturn that atmosphPrP in tlw room racial rlimatn on campus. In with the black kids, don't not grown much in the last 10 you may not havP benn wlwn wt>'rn doing this stuff recent ynars, tlwse tPnsions hang out with tlw Latinos.' years. but it has changed. exposed to at all." is t1Xcitl'll1Pnt."

.....

....

.... c

Tuesday, September 5, 2000 page 17

ALBUM REVIEW Eminem album mixes talent with vulgarity

traits into a recordiRg studio. minds of young America in the By ARIENNE THOMPSON give your artist of choice a latn 1980s and early '90s. As one Marshall Mathers LP Scene Music Critic microphone and voila. and can imagine. songs that urged months latnr vou have Eminem's ter-ns to "kill the police" and lwrP SPPms to bP a pretty sophomon~ · relPasr,, The "fight thr- powers that be" didn't Eminem TsimplP formula to follow Marshall Mathers LP. go over well with the general nowadays to !'nsurP mammoth "Amnrica's great white hopn" public. ... sucrPss' in thP infamous and is back to dr-fend his title as one Parents and lawmakers alike Epic sonwtinws shady rap world. One of thn most obnoxious and mis­ wern up in arms about the evils Records should nwrPiy bP homophobic. undr-rstood rappnrs of rncent of "gangsta rap" and it wasn't vulgar. homicidal (perhaps suici­ times. Trailblazers such as NWA. long before the controversial Rating dal). rPiatively insanP, and most len-T. Public Enemy and Tupac "Parental Advisory" label was importantly- mad at thP world. Shakur set the standards for dis­ born and systematically slapped So throw all thnsl1 admirable turbing and tainting the virgin on the front of every hip-hop ..... album produced in the United ,al~il\j!it' States. This governmental con­ trol of free exprnssion was a mir­ acle it seemed. Parents knew a compilation of some of the get to the very core of what what their children were listen­ most wicked and profane com­ Eminem represents to his alter ing to, and young America was ments and assertions made by ego, Marshall Mathers and to the once again made slaves to the any one artist on any one album. world as a whole. "Stan" is mainstream. There's murder. mayhem and superb in composition. The first Shortly thereafter, however, mystery on Slim Shady's second three verses are constructed as America's youth managed to release, and he's not apologizing letters written bv an overzealous beat the system again (as for any of it. Slim is without fan. Stan. He is desperate to have always). and were bopping their question one MC to bP reckoned a friend, and confidante in the heads to the prophetic Tupac with. as evidenced by tracks like larger-than-life Eminem. but once again. the angry the angry. ''I'm Back" soon discovers that like most Capitalizing on this idea of and the witty "Kill You." llis celebrities, Slim does not answer freedom of expression, Mr. rhythmic variety and unexpected fan mail eagerly. Eminem voices Marshall Mathers decides a few comic delivery on "Who Knew" the angry Stan with such chilling years after the death of Tupac and "Under the Influence" show­ emotion that it is almost a relief that he wants to be the next in case his skills as a seasoned and to hear the real Slim Shady take line to terrorize thr, 50 states. talented rapper. But his subject charge of the last verse, which is The difference is. he is just a reg­ matter starts to run dry as nearly the long-awaited reply to Stan's ular guy from a regular city in every song on the album is about letters. 'The Way I Am" also dis­ America. What's his gimmick? his obligations to mounting suc­ plays Slim's emotional handles Nothing about his appearance or cess, his strained relationship as he bashes the media for plac­ mannerisms screams originality with his mother, and his tenden­ ing labels on him and his fans for or flair, so what does he do? He cy to be "Pigeonholed into some admiring him too deeply. invents the "most meanest MC poppy sensation." It is ironic that the poor, regu­ on this earth." A Slim srorned is nothing to lar guy from Detroit who wanted Eminem, as he is affectionately play with, though. Few escape nothing more than to make it big called by millions, is undoubtedly Eminem's dirty mouth as he in rap now wishes he "could just insane, and yet, refreshingly gives Christina Aguilera, his wife die or get fired." entertaining. Under the tutelage Kim, and pop icons Britney Slim Shady is undoubtedly of veteran rapper Dr. Ore, Spears and N'SYNC ridiculously troubled, but through his strug­ Eminem has become the well­ crude verbal lashings on at least gles come the raw talent and oiled machine that he has always three different songs. aptitude that have made him the wanted to be. Lyrically, Slim reaches his most popular and certifiable rap­ Photo courtesy of www.rollingstone.com This machine does have a few absolute peak on standout tracks per of the past two years. And The Marshal Mathers LP, the latest album from rising star Emlnem, glitches to be worked out, how­ like "Stan" and "The Way I Am." only time will tell how long capitalizes even more heavily on violence and offensive language ever. The Marshall Mathers LP. Displaying the rawness of his America's favorite misanthrope than his first album. released earlier this summer, is emotion and skill, these songs will continue to charm us.

ALBUM REVIEW Jayhawks shine with new pop album Smile

having a wonderful string section. The whole track just Jayhawks output. makes it obvious where the majority of By GRAEME R.A. WYLLIE builds and builds from il'i initial guitar and piano intro to the country influences were coming from. On the other Scene J\1usic Cririt.: an epic finish. ''I'm Gonna Make You Love Me" kicks with hand, Gary Louris. like other artists such as Jell' Tweedy of a lone mandolin on the intro. but soon is soon transformed Wilco and Matthew Sweet. dearly just knows how to riginally fornwd 15 years ago. Smile is the sixth by a wonderful sing-along chorus that continues to display write a great and catchy pop song. Oalbum from tlw l\1innPsota-based Jayhawks. and the the seminal influPncP that the 70s band Big Star still holds Ultimately, it is these songs that shine through and givr, serond since tlw dPparturP of co-founder Marc Olson. on many of today's songwriters. And although many of the the album a grrat collection of up-beat tracks that should Early albums such as llollywood Town llall and influences of this album are bands from the late 60s and bring a smile to the stoniest o( faces. Tomorrow. tlw Gn~en (;rass displayed a country tinged early 70s, it should be pointPd out that thP album does not And for those fans who do pick up this album, be sure to sound with !wavy inllli(~ncns by such artists IL'> Neil Young at all sound dated. check out WPird Tales by Golden Smog, a colaboration and Stnvl~ EarlP. and a style that was dubbnd as alterna­ Other standout songs indude the rockier "Life Floats By" formed by members of the Jayhawks, Wilco. Soul Asylum tive-country long bPI'on' the tnrm was Ewen being used as and "Pretty Thing," and the sublime ballads "What Led Me and Big Star that also contains a stand-out set of similar a distinct gPnn•. But with tlw mid 90s departure of Olson to this Town" and "Mr. Wilson." But generally, the entire guitar driven pop tunes and is well worth checking out. to nword with his wifn Victoria Williams as the more folky album stands up well to repeated listening and will most Although Smile was released several months ago, the sounding Original llarmony HidgP Creek DippPrs. the sub­ likely have anyone who buys the album quickly finding band has just been announced as the support act for the sequPnt album. 11J 1J7's sonwwhat patchy Sound of Lir,s themselves singing along with the versPs. upcoming Matchbox 20 concert at the Joyce Center. began a rnovP away from thn folk/country sounds of the There arc. however, one or two negative rarliPr albums and toward a morP pop orientatrd sound. points to Smile. particularly relating to the Smil<' continues this mow. if not completing the journey. work of producer Bob Ezrin. A couple of the This is not to say that country sounds arn rntirely absent songs an• just simply owr produced. and the from SimlP. "Brok<'n Harpoon" and "A BrPak in thP multi-tracking of instruments and vocals is Clouds" in particular would could haw easily bnnn found somewhat Pxcessivc on sevPral tracks. In Smile on ParliPr albums. But overall. undPr thP lnadership of the addition tlw tvvo w!'akest songs on the album remaining co-foundPr and princip!P songwritPr Cary bnar Ezrins nanw in thP writing crPdiL'>. and it The Jayhawks l.ouris. tlw band has obviously bnPn vvorking hard mixing makes mw wish at timPs that tlw producer tog<'tlwr such inllw•ncPs as latPr-Pra HPath~s. the BParh had been kPpt on a tighter leash. Also the Columbia Bo~·s. and Big Star to form an Pxtn~mely catchy and w~ry drum loops on a coupln of the songs. although Records up-bPat rollnction of songs. I lug<' rhorusPs. a collection of giving risP to a mow mod(•rn sound. manag<' hcHJh:s to cliP for and a strong sPt of turws makP this one of at tlw sanw tinw to SPPm a bit supPrflunus tlw lwst albums of tlw \'l'ar so far. and onn that should and out of place. A gn~at dPal of thP criticism Rating constant!~· lw n•siding in 'any music lovPr's CD chahgnr. of this album by the n1st of thr musical press Standoul ('Uts includ(' tlw opPrl!'r and title track "SmiiP," has c.ontairwd accusations of sPlling out. but \\ hich displays tlw most obvious BPatlt•s infhH'nCP of thr listrning to both Sim!P and tlw prrvious album. particularly in tlw vocals on the chorus as wl'll as album. as well as Mark Olson's post page I H The Observer+ SPORTS Tuesday, September 5, 2000

U.S. OPEN Sampras stifles Lee to advance to quarterfinals "AftPr I missnd that. I vvas a fpeling a lit­ Associatt·d Press tiP down and I lost a lot of momnntum." LPP said through an interpri'I.Pr. "I wasn't NI·:W YOHK mysPlf at tlw bPginning of thn sncond st't." SurTtHllldl'd by 2:1.000 t•rnpty Sl'al.s and Still, LnP thought thn tall' of thn tiPbn•ak• bui'I'Pit•d by gaiP-I'otTI' winds. a no-non­ l'l' and his liHlt tou<~hing tlw n11t might bn a sl'ns•· I'Plt• Sampras put an t•ml to t.lw U.S. good story f(n· his grandrhildn•n soml' day. Opl'n fair~· tall' of South Korl'a's llyung- "I think I would nxaggPratP a littln bit. Taik '-""· and say ·1 was winning and I touched thn Sampras. who holds a n•rord 1:1 (;rand nl't. and I happl'nPd to lost'." hn said with a Slam titll's. found himsl'lf undl'r nxtraordi­ laugh. nary pr!'ssur1· Monday in tlw first st't LPP said lw was imprnssrd by Sampras' against Lt'l', a qualilil'r playing in his lirst sPrvn. his cairn r.omposurn and his vollnys, major tournanwnt. but wasn't overawrd. In fact. lw rame A nl'arlv full houst• of fans at Arthur awav with his confidPnrr boostPd. Asllf' Stadium dl'lightnd in Lrp's rwrvy. "At first, wlwn I would play a ranked sturdy play amid tllf' swP!tPring lwat and player. I would bn more concPrrwd with humidity wlwn play bngan during thn his numbnr and I would be a littln afraid afkrnoon. llut ai'I.Pr a rloudburst suspPnd­ and I might consider myself a coward," Pd till' matC'h with Sampras IPading 7 -(J LeP said. "But aftnr this nxpnriencn, I fed 14). :l- I, it took 2 1/2 hours bnforn play that I mn play anyonn on any given day. n•sumi'Cl in rhilly, windy weather. l'vn earnnd that kind of confidence." Thn stadium was virtually empty then. One call made all the diiTenmce for excnpt for a r.oupln hundrnd fans as the dl'fending wompn's champion Serena night crowd driftPd in, and Sarnpras was Williams in a tense tiebreaker and broke in no mood to lnt t.lw party lingnr much thn spirit of Jelnna Dokk. longPr. lit• unlnas\wd a 1:12 mph ace on The way they rnactl'd to that call, and his first sPrvP and dosnd out the set by the shift in momentum it hnralded. told lm~aking LnP at low. much about thn qualities of' a champion LPP, a strong, quick basPiirwr who was that Williams possnssns. and that the sad­ unruiTied by Sampras or tlw occasion. nwd I>okic still must find while she deals ro1wd bPttPr with thn four-tinw champion ~ith hPr fathnr's troubles. and tiH' fiPrC'n brnPZPS in tlw third s!'t Williams rallind from that point - thn lwfor·p finally going down 7-h 14), (J-2. 6-4. sPcond of thrcl' Sl't points shn sawd in thn Sampras advanrPd to tlw quartPrfinals, first-snt tinbrcaknr - to thrash I>okic th<~ whl'rt' lw will play Hirhard Krajicek, a 7 -(> rnst of thn way, 7-6 (7), (J-0, Monday and 1Ill. h-4. (,.J virtor owr I >ominik I Irbaly. movn into tlw q uartnrlinals. Lnl' gaw Sampras a lot of troubln at thn At tlw end of a long rally that had both start. Sampras was impn•sst'd not only by playnrs scurrying sidn to sidn. Dokic Lnl''s n•turn of snrw. but his abilitv to slav drillnd a backhand crosscourt that a linP.s­ calm in tlw biggPst matrh of his lift~. · man signalc~d wide to mak11 lhn swrn (J-(>. "I II' was roo I as a ru<·umlwr." Sampras Dokic argtH'd to no avail with tht~ umpire, said. lilt's a good playt•r .... lin wasn't tlwn walknd with her head and shouldnrs ovPrwlwlnwd by tlw situation. playing mP slumped to th11 othnr side of the net. on rPntnr rourt. liP ramt• out and lwld his ShP would get another set point by run­ own. ning down a poor drop shot by Williams "But af'tPr I got tlw first sPt. I startPd to and whacking it crosscourt for a winnPr. sPttln down and slartt•d playing a littln bit but that was the end of Dokic's threat. bnltPr and just WPnt from thPrn to dl'al Photo courtesy of All Sport Williams saved that third set point with a with tlw rain. And tlwn wming bark. dnal­ backhand volley that Dokic couldn't han­ Pete Sampras holds a record 13 Grand Slam titles and is looking for another ing with thP wind and the cool weatlwr. it dle, thnn won the next two poinl'>, punctu­ as he faces Richard Krajicek in the quarterfinal round of the U.S. Open. W a rompll'tPiy difl'nn~nt match from the ating a strong backhand return with a first snt." loud "Ynsss!" whl'n Dokic nettnd the ball. Shortly after the Williams-Dokic match, Also moving into thn quarters wnn• top­ Sampr fendPd ofl' thrne break poinl'i in That was all Williams needl'd as she rain delayed play f()r the second straight seednd Martina I lingis. who complntnd a the sixth ganw of tlw first snt and won the watched Dokic tank the second set, win­ day. When the matches resumed. Todd match that was delayed because of tiebrPakPr only whnn Lne inadvl'rtently ning only thn~e poinl'i on serve. spraying Martin linished ofT a 7-6 (5). 6-3, 6-2 victo­ Sunday's storms, beating No. 1 I Sandrine touchnd thr net with his foot as he rushed live times as many unforcnd errors as she ry over 1Oth-seeded Cedric Pioline. Testud 6-2, (J-1. It was her 12th consecu­ in for an ovnrhead on a short half-volley had the first set, and looking eager to Martin won two sets and was leading in tive victory and sixth this year against the by Sampras. Lne thought no one would catch the nl'xt flight back to to the third Sunday night before rain post­ French player, who has never defeatr~d notice. Sampras didn't, but the umpire prepare for the Olympics. ponnd the end of the match. her. I lingis nnxt plays Monica Seles. did.

The Observer accepts dassifieds every business day rrom 8 a.m. to 3 f.m. at the Notre Dame office, 024 South Dining Hall. Deadline ror next-day dassifieds is 3 p.m. AI dassifieds must be prepaid. The charge is 3 cents per character per day, including all spaces. The Observer reserves the right to edit CLASSIFIEDS all dassifieds ror content without issuing rerunds.

Need babysitter in our home for 7- I have 5 bedrooms for rent in my FOR SALE- BUY/SELL N.D. FOOTBALL TICK- all 90 years and limping of it month-old. Granger. Must have car nicely-decorated private home for STANFORD, AIR FORCE, ETS. HOME & AWAY GAMES. NOTICES & references, 243-5618 Football weekends; less than 2 BOSTON. (219) 289-8048 Cleveland Indians: Winner at base- miles north of stadium, continental Cheap. ball, but losers at life. Job direct wants to HIRE YOU! #1 brkfst included. Many happy repeat 654-0168 Need tix- 75 Grad need 2-4 GA SKYDIVE!! Training Students for 35 rated student job search is seeking customers! Call Kim 277-8340. for Neb and/or Pur Call Tony Max - you should have run after Years 1 Hour North of South Bend enthusiastic reps. More info: WANTED (714)523-3686 that S Man - he was in his socks GREAT LAKES SKYDIVERS, INC. [email protected] 1 mile from ND in quiet neighbor- ND FOOTBALL TKTS 1 -800-351-6617 hood, 2 Bedroom very clean 289-9280 Need 1 cheap Purdue Ticket. Call hmmm ... but then you might have $69,500. Call (219) 264-4966 John 4-3670 missed the nose wiping FoR RENT SELLING WANTED Recent ND grads need Turtle Creek ND FOOTBALL TKTS GA Ticket Available for Nebraska And who would ever want to miss apt. to crash at for ND-NU game. 251-1570 Game - Sept. 9. Lower Section, 20 that? SOUTH BEND LODGING In-home $600/will stock apartment with lots of Yd. Line. Contact Jay: (201 )264- SPRINGBREAK 2001 Hiring On- B&B lodging for football games & food and beverages/ fund big VICTORY TKTS 0262 Only Chris Harris would almost get Campus Reps SELL TRIPS, EARN ND-SMC events. Close to campus. party .. mattea @alumni.law.upenn.edu BUY' SELL 'TRADE arrested by a man named Bowels: CASH, GO FREE!!! Student Travel Breakfast included. Call (219) 243- ND FOOTBALL Need 4 Nebraska tix 634-1430 Services America's #1 Student Tour 2628 or [email protected] I NEED YOUR HELP! I'M A '92 ND 232-0964 I guess that stealth "kitchen route" Operator Jamaica, Mexico, GRAD AND LOST MY YEARBOOK Need GA's: 4 Stanford, 2AF, 2BC just didn't work. Bahamas, Europe, Florida 2 BDRM APTS. FOR 2000-01. IN A FLOOD. IF YOU KNOW ANY- BUY/SELL ND TICKETS Chris 634-4751 Beeley.1 @nd.edu Oops. 1-800-648-4849 ALSO LEASING FOR 2001-02 ONE WHO HAS A '92 YEARBOOK 273-3911 www.gospringbreak.com DAVE 291-2209 AND WOULD NOT MIND PART- Say my name lNG WITH IT, PLEASE CALL ME ALWAYS BUYING EARN EXTRA CASH Word-pro- ALL SIZE HOMES AVAILABLE AT 830-772-5956 OR EMAIL AT NEBRASKA 271-9330 PERSONAL Yellow visor and a baby blue coat- cessing from dictation involving AND CLOSE TO CAMPUS esquivele@ mindspring.com Thank now that's style client case studies. Must have com- http://mmmrentals.homepage.com/ you, Cristina Ortiz TICKET MART I refuse to be the office trollop. puter. Dictaphone provided. Call for email:[email protected] BUY/SELL/TRADE And doing "the dome dump" was info +interview mornings, M-Thur. 232-2595 ALL GAMES 271-9330 My apartment if full of upstanding definitely a highlight. Ask for Cindy 287-3373 FOR SALE young women. 2BR, 2nd fir. Apt. 525/mo. Along St. ND FOOTBALL TIX WANTED Does anyone know any foreign LOVE KIDS? WANT TO EARN Joe River. Include. Water/Sec. A.M.- 232-2378 To answer the long-standing ques- singers from Toronto/ GOOD MONEY BUT ONLY WORK Syst./Trash 288-2654 or 288-2788 Women's Schwinn Bike 26 Like P.M.- 288-2726 lion ... the A&M stand for nothing. A FEW HOURS A WEEK? New Robbye 631-6218 It's true. Call. See for yourself. 1 hear they do a great happy Area family needs individual to care That Pretty Place, Bed and Break- ND FOOTBALL TIX FOR SALE Birthday rendition for two daughters 2-3 times/wk from fast Inn has space available for A.M.- 232-2378 Well giggem and god bless to 3-6 p.m. starting mid-Sept. Mom football/parent wknds. TICKETS P.M.- 288-2726 that. look for the Big TC on this week's attending grad school in Chicago. 5 Rooms w/ private baths, $80- cover Girls are delightful' Transprtn need- $115, NEED 3-5 GA TICKETS FOR Anyone want to move off campus? ed. Generous pay! If interested, Middlebury, 30 miles from campus. BUSINESS MAN NEEDS NEBRASKA FOOTBALL GAME. Christian is a Cassale. please call Karen Stonehill at 272- Toll Road. Exit #107, 1-800-418- Nebraska tickets or season 277- PLEASE CALL 1-630-904-6418 Nah ... I like the "security" of dorm (See Christian. I told you I'd get you 5013. 9487. 1659 THANKS living into The Observer.) ---~- --

Tuesday, September, 05, 2000 The Observer+ PAID ADVERTISEMENT page 23 page 20 The Observer+ SPORTS Tuesday, September 5, 2000

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Boston retires Fisk's Braves, Mets share losing battle

Last week. the players even together solid numbP.rs overall, No. 27 Red Sox jersey Associated Press called a rare clubhouse meet­ but he's only 3-5 since July 18. ing. hoping that airing things Andy Ashby, acquired in an out would turn things around. that sent the '75 Series to a ATLANTA All-Star brr.ak dr.al, was rockr.d But Atlanta is only 2-3 since for fivn runs and night hiL-; in 3 Associated Press seventh game. Go ahead, take the division going behind dosed doors. Fisk may be known best for title. The insist. 2-3 innings Sunday. taking his "There's no panic in this fourth straight loss. Kevin BOSTON his heroics in one game, but he No, no. no. The New York club," managr.r Bobby Cox Millwood is not the samP. pitch­ For 25 years. the left-field played his way into the Ilall of Mets don't want it. Can't they said, undeterred by a 9-3 set­ foul poln at Fenway Park has Fame with a multitude of just leave it in Atlanta for P.r he was a year ago. plodding back Sunday to thr. lowly reminded Boston fans of them. lie caught 2,226 games another year? along at 8-10 with a 4. 76 EHA. Houston Astros. "I think thr. Carlton Fisk. Now there's - more than any catcher in On it goes, a so-called pen­ Overall. the stall EHA 14.221 is day ofT may hr.lp us. Maybr. it'll more than half-run abovP. last something along the right-field history. and hit a major lr.ague nant race in which neither break things up a little for us." year's and on pace to be the line to remember him by. too. record 351 of his 376 homers team will take control, flailing Thanks to the suddenly highP.st since 1990. The Hed Sox retired Fisk's as a catcher. around in the NL East as if the clutch-less Mets. Atlanta was No. 27 on Monday. hanging it "lie played the game the thought of extending the sea­ It's not all about the pitching. still clinging to a one-game on tho right-fir,ld facade with right way," said Yastrzemski. son deep into October is down­ Chipper .Jones. who agreed last lead in the East after going 14- month to a six-yP.ar. $90 mil­ tlw retired numbr,rs of Bobby who was a tr,ammate for all of right revolting. 15 in August and losing two of Doerr ( 11 . .lor Cronin (41. Carl Fisk's time in Boston. "Pudge The Braves were off Monday, lion contract P.xtension, has three in Houston to start Yastrzemski 181 and Ted earned his way into the I fall of licking their wounds and trying been a rather ordinary player September. The once-torrid since thP. All-Star break. liP. is Williams 191. as wrll as Jackie Fame with years of perfor­ to figure out how to escape the Mets endured thrr.e straight Hobinson 1421. Fisk is the only mance excellence." worst stretch of the year - five batting just .259 with eight defeats in seven games, and !ina! at-bat losses to St. Louis homers and 26 HBis, induding native N<~W Englander among But a quote from Fisk posted over the weekend and lost the bunch. on the scoreboard summed it eight of thr, last 11. Included is a current 8-for-48 slump. "Carlton Fisk may tell you up as well as anything: "If the a sr,ason-high. four-game los­ Monday at Cincinnati. Making those numbers more "The way both l!~ams arr. that growing up in Nr,w human body recognized agony ing streak and three straight pronounced. Jones was alwavs llampshire he dreamed of and frustration. people would series losses, another first. playing." Braves outfielder one of the Braves' most reliable Brian Jordan said. "you'd think playing for the Hed Sox. I'm never run marathons. have While Atlanta is still on pace dutch players. Until this yrar. no one wants it." lwrP to tell you that growing babies or play baseball." to win 95 games, it would be lw had a .30(J career average Atlanta could always count up in Massaehusetts. l All of Fisk's longevity mile­ the fewest victories in a full after the break and dirwhcd on its starting pitching, but drPamed of bPing Carlton stones were reached after he season since 1991, when the his first NL MVI' award last Tom Glavine 118-61 has b<~en sPason by hitting .:{24 with 24 Fisk." gPnPral manager Dan left Boston for the White Sox in Braves began their unprece­ out on a limb in rr.rent wr.eks. l>uq uettP said an acrimo­ dented streak of eight straight honwrs and 53 Hills down tlw division titles. Greg Maddux ( 15-81 has put strctrh. at a rerPmo­ "Carlton Fisk may tell nious con­ ny befon~ tract dispute Boston bPat you that growing up in following tlw SPattl" 5-1. New Hampshire he I 1)80 season. "lin's a big, dreamed of playing for Chicago has old. hand- already sonw. stub­ the Red Sox. I'm here to retirnd thn b o r n tell you that growing up No. 72 he mPthodiral. in Massachusetts, I wore for 13 l'inry. Yankee dreamed of being Carlton ynars, though N n w there was no Hnglandnr Fisk." mention of who arrom- the sncond half of his plishPd all Dan Duquette TIAA -CREF provides thosP career during d n~ams. i\nd. Red Sox general manager the cnremony along the or on the way. lw ful- posters given liiiPd our drPams. too." to fans. financial solutions to Drums beat and a fanfare For Fisk. who grew up sounded as a garage door in dreaming of playing basketball cnnter field liftr,d and Fisk for tlw Boston Celties and was walkPd onto thP field when~ he inducted int(J the baseball I !all spent the first nine of his 22 of Fame this summer. having last a lifetime. full seasons in thr, major his number retired next to leagues. lnstr,ad of walking Williams' made the honor even straight to a podium at second more special. base. he traveled the perimr,ter "It was like I was somebody of thn field to slap hands with important," Fisk said. "I think fans and ballpark employn<~s. when you play, you never real­ A scoreboard tribute to his ly rr,alize the impart you had." carenr began with thr, radio Before leaving the field, Fisk Building your assets is one thing. Figuring out With TIAA -CREF, rail of his arm-waving. body­ took part in a role-reversing how those assets can provide you with a you can receive:* bnnding. game-ending homer first pitch, throwing to his comfortable retirement is quite another. off the lr.ft-finld foul pole in longtime batterymate Luis • Cash withdrawals (;am e h o I' the 1 9 7 5 W or I d Tiant. On his way out. Fisk Serins. i\fter running through shook hands with several play­ At TIAA-CREF, we can help you with both. You • Systematic or fixed-period payments** sonw more highlights of Fisk's ers ncar the Mariners dugout. can count on us not only while you're saving and • Interest-only payments time in Boston - including a including Alex Hodriguez, • Lifetime income payments** fight with Yankees outfieldr,r Mark McLemore and coach planning for retirement, but in retirement, too. Lou l'ininlla. who is now the Larry Bowa. • A combination of these Mariners rnanagr,r - the video Piniella wasn't around, but Just call us. We'll show you how our flexible range of ''Guaranteed by our claims-paying ability. endnd by showing the 12th­ he grabbed Fisk after the cere­ inning honwr ofT Pat Darey mony and gave him a big hug . payout options can meet your retirement goals. .------With TIAA-CREF, you benefit from something few Women's other companies can offer: a total commitment to Safety your financial well-being, today and tomorrow. .( 1 YEAR 5 YEARS SINCE INCEPTION & AS OF 6/30/00 6130/00 4/29/94 *Note: Availability may depend on your employer's retirement Self-Defense plan provisions contract. Under federal tax law, withdrawals prior to age 59ll may be subject to restrictions, and may also be CREF Growth is one of many CREF variable annuities. subject to a 10% additional tax. Additional restrictions also apply to the TIAA Traditional Annuity. The objective of this course is to expose women to basic self-defense techniques as used in real-life crisis sihta­ tions. Ensuring the future 1.800.842.2776 Classes Begin Monday, September 11 for those who shape it.'w 10 Sessions on Mondays & Wednesdays www. tiaa-cref.org 6:00-7:15 For more complete information on our securities products, please call1.800.842.2733, ext. 5509, to request prospectuses. Read them carefully Rockne Memorial RM. 219 before you invest. 1. Due to current market volatility. our securities products' performance today may be less than shown above. The invest­ ment results shown for CREF Growth variable annuity reflects past performance and are not indicative of future rates of return. These returns Register in Advance at RecSports and the value of the principal you have invested will fluctuate, so the shares you own may be more or less than their original price upon redemp­ Registration Fee is $20.00 tion. • TIAA-CREF Individual and Institutional Services, Inc. distributes the CREF and TIAA Real Estate variable annuities. • Teachers Personal Call631-6100 for more Info Investors Services, Inc. distributes the Personal Annuities variable annuity component, mutual funds and tuition savings i:lgreements. • TIAA and TIAA-CREF Life Insurance Co., New York, NY, issue insurance and annuities. • TIAA·CREF Trust Company, FSB provides trust services. www.nd.edu/-recsport •Investment products are not FDIC insured, may lose value and are not bank guaranteed.© 2000 TIAA-CREF 08/03

...... " ...... - •••••.••••w•••.••.•.•.•.•.•.'".•.•.••••-•••• -·- r------

Tuesday, September 5, 2000 The Observer+ OLYMPIC SPORTS page 21

OLYMPICS Activists urge athletes to watch Nike Stadium's headwinds

was failing to protect workers "We uphold the Olympic ideal Associated Press rights in its contract factories in of human dignity," the statement cause slow race times Indonesia. said. "Those campaigning to . Australia "Recently, Nike has been push­ eliminate sweatshops are "The ballistic athletes Olympic athletes were urged ing the line that it has reformed addressing the right issue, but Associated Press Monday to visit Nike factories in its human rights practices," targeting the wrong company." depend on warm weather," he Indonesia that activists contend Connor said. "The truth is that Connor said other sportswear added. exploit workers. (there has been) only very minor manufacturers were equally , Australia Include the throwers in the Activists renewed a campaign and grudging reforms. responsible for exploitation of Don't expect Maurice Greene group that prefers the warmth, against the international sports­ "Nike is the biggest company workers, but Nike was being tar­ to break his world record in said Jerry Quiller, an assistant wear giant, releasing a report in the sportswear industry ... if geted because it was the largest. the 100-meter final at the U.S. men's coach responsible that documenl'> claims of intimi­ anyone can afford to pay work­ Nike, based in Beaverton, Ore., Sydney Games. Florence for the distance runners from dation and harassment of union ers enough to eat. enough to feed has 708 factories operated by Griffith Joyner's world records 1,500 meters through 10,000 workers and women in compa­ their children. Nike is the com­ contract companies and employ­ in the women's 100 and 200 meters. nies contracted to make Nike pany," Connor told a news con­ ing about 550,000 people. appear safe from Marion "Sprinters, jumpers and shoes in Indonesia. ference Monday in Sydney. Jim Keady, a former soccer Jones' clutches. throwers don't want to have to The Community Aid Abroad­ In response to Connor's report. coach who resigned from St. World records in the dis­ compete with their sweats on," Oxfam Australia report, based on Nike said it had undertaken to John's in New York over a dis­ tance races also are unlikely, he said. "The distance guys interviews conducted with indus­ raise age requirements and pute about his refusal to wear despite the expected cool will love the cool weather trial union organizers in wages for workers in Indonesia, Nike products, said athletes weather. unless it's windy. If it's just Indonesian factories. said work­ improved factory conditions and should experience firsthand the Although the forecasters are cool, they'll be fresher after ers were threatened with vio­ published factory monitoring conditions endured by Nike predicting temperatures in the running their heats or rounds." lnnce if they tried to join unions; reports as part of reforms to workers in Indonesia. Keady is 60s for late this month when Despite the gloomy forecast that union members were fired improve conditions for its Asian suing Nike in relation to his res­ the track and field competition for the sprinters and jumpers, for small mistakes and that workers. ignation, which he says was is held - from Sept. 22-0ct. 1 Gregoire thinks world records women were intimidated into not "No company has done as forced. - the sprinters will be buffet­ are possible: applying for leave by being much in terms of labor rights, Keady spent August in a facto­ ed by the expected headwinds "When you get in this kind of rPquired to undergo humiliating code of conduct enforcement, ry workers' slum in Indonesia in 110,000-seat Olympic situation and the adrenaline medical examinations. age and wage improvements as trying to live on the wage of a Stadium. starts flowing and there's that Tim Connor. the author of the we have," said Vada Manager, Nike worker - which he said While the distance runners quest to be No. 1. great things "Nike\Vatch" report. said Nike Nike's global issues manager. was about $1.20 a day. - from 1.500 meters through happen," he said. .------the marathon - should find "Special events bring out the conditions ideal. history special times from special pno­ dictates that world records in ple." those events will stand. U.S. high jumper Kenny Fall Break Seminars "I don't think the times are Evans doesn't think anything going to be as fast as everyone special will occur in his event if thinks (in the sprints)," said the weather isn't warm. October 15-20, 2000 Experiential/ Service Learning Ato Boldon of Trinidad & "In that case. I don't think Tobago, the 1996 bronze people will jump as high," he medalist in the 100 and 200, said. "People will just have to who already has competed in tough it out in the cold weath­ Center for Social Concerns the stadium. er. "The wind blows almost "I don't know of anyone directly down the straight into breaking the world record which the 100 meters is run. when it's been cold. I don't APPALACHIASENONAR That's not something that think anything explosive will sprinters love." happen." When Greene set the world American long jumper -> Work and learn at one of 15 record of 9.79 seconds at Melvin Lister doesn't believe sites in the Appalachian region Athens, Greece. last year. the the weather will be a factor. weather was hot and the wind "If you're feeling good. the -> An ND tradition of service-learning negligible. The same conditions record will fall." he said. "If existed when he ran 9.80 in not. it won't." winning the 1999 world cham­ Abdi Abdirahman, a member pionship later at Seville, Spain. of the U.S. 10,000-meter team, CHILDREN & POVERTY SEMINAR When Canada's Donovan said, "It depends on how cold it Bailey set the 100 world record gets. If it's real cold. it might of 9.84 in 1996 at the Atlanta not help set a world record. -> Examine key children's concerns Games. he also was the benefi­ but the cold probably will help ciary of warm weather and lit­ some people get PRs (personal -> Focus on direct service and policy initiatives tle wind. records) by a couple of sec­ "The times this year don't onds. -> Site: New York City matter," Boldon said. "You run "I prefer the cooler weather, to win. The Olympics is when not cold," he said. time matters least." No matter the weather. dis­ That's what Jones should be tance runners don't often set thinking. She is facing a her­ world records at the Olympics, CULTURAL DIVERSITY SEMINAR culean task in trying to win an because most of the races are unprecedented five gold tactical. -> Explore the cultural richness of Chicago medals and will need to pace Of the top performances in herself to remain fit for five races between 1,500 and the -> Examine issues of diversity and related concerns events- the 100. 200, 400 marathon, plus the walks, very relay, 1,600 relay and long few came at the games. Going -> Co-sponsored with Multicultural Student Programs jump. into this year, the highest­ and Services She has come the closest to standing mark from the breaking FloJo's marks of Olympics was 27:07.34 by 10.49 in the 100 and 21.34 in Ethiopia's Haile Gebrselassie in the 200. Jones' best times are winning the 10,000 meters at 10.65 and 21.62. both at alti­ Atlanta. and that ranked only WASHINGTON SEMINAR tude. Sydney is at sea level, so 18th. that will not help her. Only three other Olympic If the weather is cool, "it will marks ranked in the top 50 in Theme: International Humanitarian Issues have a physical and psycholog­ the 10,000. There were none ical effect on the sprinters and in the 1,500, 5,000, marathon -> Direct contact with political, agency, and jumpers," said Ernie Gregoire, or the walks, and only one in an assistant U.S. women's the 3,000 steeplechase - the Church leaders in Washington, D.C. coach in charge of the long then-world record 8:08.02 by jumpers, triple jumpers and Anders Garderud of Sweden in -> Service and political awareness opportunities hurdlers. 1976, and that was No. 49...... •• ; ..:;;.:.;:.:-:.,; .. :; .. ~e:-:-:-s-:-~ Ironwood family Dentistry -~ All seminars offer one academic credit 271-7500 RUSSELL A MURPHY, DDS I 1639 NORTH IRONWOOD DRIVE SOCIAL SUITE 109 Applications Available Now at the CSC CONCERNS SOUTH BEND. IN 46635 Applications Due: Thursday, September 7, 2000 HI~ I page 22 The Observer+ SPORTS Tuesday, September 5, 2000

NATIONAL lEAGUE Griffey's return sparks Reds' victory over Mets

Associated Press experienced in the past. You with a triple. plating all three seven hits in seven innings. He series at Dodger Stadium. Pat just stay after it and keep runners for a 3-0 lead. walked three and struck out a Mearns also homered for the pushing." career-high seven. Pirates, who usod a pair of big CINCINNATI. Ohio The Hockies trailed 2-1 innings on the way to their Ken Griffey Jr. returned to Rockies 6, Cubs 2 heading to the fifth. but scored fourth straight win. the lineup and hit his 37th Cardinals 4, Expos 2 Juan Pierre went 5-for-5 and· twice to take the lead for good. The Dodgors had a thrno­ homer Sunday - a rare left­ Pat llentgen tossed seven keyed a two-run fifth with the Hollandsworth led off with a game winning streak stoppod handed shot ofT AI Leiter - as shutout innings and Edgar game-tying RBI single and a walk and stole second with two and lost for only the fourth tlw Cincinnati Heds beat New Henteria ripped a three-run run scored. leading the outs. lie took third on a balk· time in their last 15 gamns. York 6-2. the Mets' fourth con­ triple in the fourth inning, to victory by Chicago starter Andorson (5-R) limited the secutivn loss. leading the St. Louis Cardinals over the Chicago Cubs in the and scored the tying run on a Dodgers to just ono run and Since catching Atlanta atop to victory over the Montreal opener of a three-game series single by Pierro. scattered 10 hits in going the the NL East. the Mets have Expos. at Coors Field. Todd Walker Pierre then stole second and distance. dropped five of six, costing St. Louis has won five homered and drove in three scored the go-ahead run on a He walkod thren and struck them a chance to open a lead straight games. while the runs for the Rockies. who single to center by Neifi Perez. out three, plus went 2-for-5 while the Braves struggled. Expos lost for the fifth time in snapped a two-game skid and Walker homered in the sixth with an HBI at the plate. The Mets. who trail Atlanta by six gamos. won for the seventh time in to extend the Colorado lead to The Pirates scored five in tho one game, were swept in St. llentgen (14-10) yielded their last 10 games. The Cubs· 4-2, then doubled home two second inning- all with two Louis. losing three one-run soven hits, walking three and have lost live in a row. runs in the seventh to extend outs - to takn c:ontrol. Mean~s games in the last at-bat. before striking out three. Todd Hollandsworth also the advantage to 6-2. started the two-out rally with heading to Cincinnati. Dave Veres pitched the final homered for the Rockies. while his 11th homer and Andorson Mike Piazza went 2-for-3 1 1/3 innings for his 25th save. Todd Helton went 0-for-4 and followed with a single. with a solo homer. his 34th, Montreal starter Javier saw his batting average drop Pirates 12, Dodgers 1 Adrian Brown reached on an but the rest of the Mets' lineup Vazquez didn't allow a hit until to .387. Helton was hitting Jimmy Anderson threw his infield single and Jason managed only< four hits off J.D. Drew singled to lead off .397 last week, but is in a 3- first complete game and Brian Kendall walked to load thn Elmer Dessens (7-5) and two the fourth. He then walked for-20 slump in his last six Giles hit a grand slam, leading bases for Giles, who connected relievnrs. Eric Davis. and with two outs, games. the Pittsburgh Pirates to a win for his 32nd homer of the sea­ The Heds have gotten hot Hay Lankford walked to load Brian Rose (3-2) earned the over the son and third career grand when i1 no longer matters, the bases. Henteria followed win, allowing two runs on in the opener of a three-game slam. winning nine of 12 since falling out of contention in the NL Central. Leitr.r (14-7), who pitched the Mets to their wild card -~%~­ playoff win in Cincinnati last Octobc-~r. couldn't end their SAINT Snptnmber slump. Leiter's two-hit. 5-0 shutout last Oct. MARY'S 4 at C:irwrgy Field stands as COLLEGE the onlv time Cincinnati has NOTRE DAME, IN been biankPd in its last 2RO Chicana 2000 games. The Mots couldn't catch up after hn gave up Griffr.y's two-run hornPr in the first Fall Lecture Series inning, the f'ir·st Jpf't-handed horner off Leitc~r since May 29. The only other lc~ft-han­ ders to homer ofT Leitnr this season wnrn Tony Gwynn (May 23) and Shawn Green Virgil Elizondo (May 29). c;rif'fey missed Sunday's game because of a sore hip. ''Guadalupe: Prophet of a New Humanity'' lie wPnt 1-for-3 with a walk Monday, raising his average to a snason-high .265. Wednesday, September 6, 7:00pm, Little Theatre

Giants 3, Phillies 0 Buss Ortiz was sent to the bullpen at the All-Star Break to work things out. It was a short stay. After spending nxactly one day out of the Arturo Perez Rodriguez starling rotation, Ortiz has bec~n m~arly unbeatable. Ortiz ( 12-1 0) allowed two ''Day of the Dead- - El Dia de los Muertos'' hits. four walks and struck out l'ive in (J 1-3 innings to Thursday, September 14, 12:20 pm, Stapleton Lounge win his seventh consecutive decision as the San Francisco Giants defeated the . Jesusa Rodriguez The right-hander extended his scoreless streak to 17 innings, dating to the second ''Las Posadas - -A Pilgrimage to the Inn'' inning Aug. 25 at Philadelphia. lin hasn't lost Thursday, Sepember 21, 12:20 pm, Stapleton Lounge since July 29 at Chir.ago. "I'm confident in my ability and I never lost that," said Ortiz. "I did lose a little conli­ d ~~ n e e i n l h r o w i n g i n s i d e Dominga Zapata early in the yoar and I made too many mistakes with my fastball and that killed me. ''Quinceaiieras and the Hispanic Woman Now I'm able to make my pitches and stay ahead of the hitters." in the USA'' Ortiz was 4-R when ho mado his only rc~lief appear­ Thursday, Sepember 28, 12:20 pm, Stapleton Lounge anco of thn season on July 14. pitc:hing six innings against thr. Oakland Athletics Free, open to Public-- Inquiries 284-4636 without allowing an earned run. lte hasn't looked back sinro. "lie's keeping the ball in thn ballpark." said Giants' CENTER FOR SPIRITUALITY manager Dusty Bakor. "In SAINT MARY'S COLLEGE the first half he gavo up somothing liko 20 or 25 homnrs. You have to call upon positivo results you'vo Tuesday, September 5, 2000 The Observer+ SPORTS page 23

NFL NFL Belichick loses second opener Favre injurs hand

Associated Press 16. Then he quit, saying he Belichick was 0-1 last sea­ had misgivings because the in loss to New York I'OXBOHO. Mass. son because the Patriots beat Jets were for sale. NFL corn­ lost his sea­ the New York Jets, where he missioner Paul Tagliabue another season in pain. son opener for the second handled the defense as assis­ and a federal judge said Associated Press That could set up an interest­ straight yoar. Whother he's tant head coach, 30-28, at Belichick couldn't leave. But ing test of wills between Favre an assistant coach or run­ the Meadowlands. he went to the Patriots after and Sherman. who has pledged He hopes not to be 0-2 they and the Jets worked out GREEN BAY, Wis. ning the whole show. the Brett Favre's attempt to regain ~o re~ove Favre from the lineup after they meet again next a compensation package. If feoling is his form just got a little bit hard­ the mjuries significantly affect tho samn. Monday night at the Now AI Groh, an assistant his play. Meadowlands. He 'II face the with Belichick on Parcells' er. Losses Green Bay coach Mike "I know I didn't hurt (the hurt. team he left Jan. 4, one day Patriots staff in 1996, is head elbow) any worse," Favre said after being named its head coach of the Jets. Sherman said Monday that Favre "I don't sprained his right thumb during Sunday. "I was able to practice think you coach, but Belichir:k isn't There are plenty of other every day last week. I know how for:using on that bizarre connections. Former Patriots the Packers' 20-16 loss to the feel any New York Jets on Sunday. it's probably going to feel this better departure. No matter who Curtis Martin and Vincent week, maybe the rest of the year. he's playing, getting his team Brisby are with the Jets. Though Sherman said it isn't whnn you serious, the injury is yet another "!..felt for the most part I threw loso as ready to win is his obsession. Former Jets Otis Smith and the ball with a lot of velocity, and Belichick "It's a big game. It's a divi­ Bobby Hamilton are with the blow to a quarterback trying to an assis­ recover from two sub-par sea­ accuracy I thought was as close t a n t sion game on the road and Patriots. to normal as possible. It can get that's what's really impor­ "It's going to liven it up," sons. coach." th1~ first-year head Favre missed the final three better with practice." coach of tho New England tant," he said. "They're not said Hamilton, a starting Still, the Packers' offense sput­ going to have everybody's defensive end. "It's going to preseason games with tendinitis Patriots said Monday. "I in his right elbow, and the three­ tered under Favre against New personal record in the stand­ be a hyped game and it's York. don't think winning as an time MVP played in pain Sunday ings on Monday. It's going to going to be a fun game to In the first half, Favre was 4- assistant coach or a head while competing just 14 of 34 coach gives you any more be where the Patriots are." watch on TV." of-13 (or 25 yards. and the The game won't have the Smith, a cornerback picked passes for 152 yards. satisfaction. Sherman said the thumb injury Packers who dropped five or six hype of past meetings when up when the Jets released of Favre's passes in the game "J don't think it makes any occurred early in the second Bill Parcells, who coached him on their final roster cut managed just 55 yards of total difference whethnr you're a quarter when defensive end playnr, coach. head coach, the Patriots to the 1997 of the exhibition -season, offense before halftime. Super Bowl, played them as downplayed the importance Shaun Ellis swatted the ball out defensiv1~ coordinator. what­ of Favre's hands. "You can't put the blame on coach of the Jets the past of Belichick's move from Brett," said receiver Antonio ever it is. It's all the same Tackle Earl Dotson recovered scornrard. You're either 0-1 three seasons. When Parcells New York to New England. Freeman. who dropped two stepped down after last sea­ "That situation is done the fumble, and Favre played the or you're 1-0." rest of the game. passes. "We couldn't run the son. Belichick's contract with," he said. ball, so we couldn't help the The Patriots are 0-1 "That thumb will not be an ber:ause they lo.st at home automatically made him the Belichick is busy with more passing game. If you can't do successor. pressing issues. On Sunday, issue on this team, and neither Sunday to Tampa Bay, 21- will the elbow," Sherman said. one, it's hard to do the other." the offensive line Sherman, who has preached a allowed six sacks, "Quarterbacks get hurt in this league." return to fundamental football running backs since replacing Ray Rhodes last Favre went through a light gained just 25 winter, was particularly piqued yards, and the workout at Lambeau Field on Monday with his thumb wrapped by the drops. defense failed to "Those are definitely catchable stop the Buccaneers securely in bandages. Offensive balls," Sherman said. "On the Future Lawyer? in key third-down coordinator and quarterbacks coach Tom Rossley said he isn't film, you see balls bouncing off situations. chests." Invitation to Seniors sure whether the injury will "They're going to The Packers' offense won't get affect Favre's ability to practice cause evr.rybody any relief from its running game All seniors planning to apply for law school this some problems. for the upcoming game at Buffalo. - any time soon. either. Shr,rrnan year are invited to an informational meeting on They certainly said Dorsey Levens. who under­ "He has come through a couple the application process. caused us some," went arthroscopic knee surgery Belichick said. of bumps and bruises before," Rossley said. "You don't start all during training camp. won't play "There are a lot of on the artificial turf at Halph Tuesday, September 5 things we need to those games in a row without being tough." Wilson Stadium in Buffalo. gr,t eorrected." Ahrnan Green. Levens' backup. With all the attention focused The Jets began played just three weeks after 131 DeBartolo the season with a on Favre's tendinitis-stricken right elbow this season, the spraining his left knee but was 20-16 win at Green mostly ineffective, gaining 41 balky thumb that hindered him 6 p.m. Bay. a less talented yards on nine carries and losing last year was nearly forgotten. team than Tampa one fumble. Last year. a bruised and Ava Preacher Bay. Still. the Favre, who gainr.d 13 yards on Assistant Dean of Arts and Letters swollen thumb contributed to a Patriots are the only two scrambles. was the team's and Pre-Law Advisor subpar season in which he threw AFC East team second-leading rusher. 23 interceptions and failed to that's not 1-0. "If we had caught even two of A discussion of all aspects of the application process: lead Green Bay to the playoffs Now it's their turn the five drops. we wouldn't be for the first time in seven sea­ to go on the road. talking about any of this right • timetable sons. but it won't be to a now," Sherman said. "Right now, • choosing schools After t_he Packers' loss Sunday, • how the LSDAS works strange place. They (Favre) gives us a chance to win. Favre N who has started an • what is included in your application play at the I don't even think he was at 80 NFL-record 126 straight games • preliminary information about personal statements Meadowlands every percent, but he'!» our guy." • and more ...•.•...... •...• n•••·····--··--···· year against a team -conceded he will probably play they're very familiar with. r------~ I JUICY COUTURE I Shori.n-Ryu Need I I Karate -~£T5fY ToHAISoll Tickets? I •Di.sci.pli.ne fiilm: Ml!!i!!i SIXTY. I •Self-Defense I •Self Confidence lACOSTE Fo~.-.o~lno I •Fi.tness BCBG I MAXAZRIA G UC CI Check out I ... JAMES PERSE FRENCH CUNNECTION I LOS ANGElES easel I the I I ARE YOU A SLAVE TO FASHION? Observer 1 Register in Advance at RecSports Then work lor us. We are looking lor an outgoing, fashion-conscious girl to represent our 1 For More Info. Call 1-6100 e·commerce website at your school. You must be hardworking, sell-starting and motivated. Classifieds I Demonstration Our company carries the best fashions from all the best lines. Get paid to wear your favorite

I Tuesday, September 5, Rockne Rm. 219 6:30PM 1 clothes. Get clothing discounts on all your favorite brands. Earn commissions. Become

I ;?;;}-?~ I part of our national team by emailing us at [email protected] lor an applicati~n. I www.nd.eau/-recsport I Or call 1.608.255.2570. ~------~ ~------

page 24 The Observer+ SPORTS Tuesday, September 5, 2000

AMERICAN lEAGUE Cleveland holds onto wild card lead with win over Tampa

enth. Segui followed with an HBI Moyer allowed four earned knock out Wells in a win over The Blue .Jays. who lead the Associated Pross single to make it 5-0. runs on five hits in sevon the Toronto Blue Jays. majors with 221 homers. failnd Cox hit his ninth homer with innings, walking two and strik­ The Athletics. who 1-~ntered the to homer !'or the l'ourth straight CLEVElAND two outs in the eighth to spoil ing out live as the Mariners lost day 2 1/2 games behind Seattle game. It's the first time Toronto K1~nny Lofton's record run­ Burba's bid for his first shutout for the 16th time in 21 games. in the AL West, outhit the Blue has been held without a homer scoring strnak came to an end in more than live years. lie was matching Martinez until J,ays 19-2 and have won nine of in four straight gamns this sea­ Monday. but Dave Burba pitched Lopez allowed two runs and Donnie Sadler reached with one their last 10 games at SkyDome. son. 7 2-:{ strong innings to help the eight hits in three innings. The out in tho third when first base­ The Blue Jays lost throe of Oakland starters havn allownd ClevPiand Indians maintain their right-hander left with a strained man John Olerud couldn't han­ four to Oakland. falling to fourth two earned runs in thnir last 21 AL wild card lead with a 5-1 vic­ left calf and fell to 0-2 with a dle a grounder. place in the AL wild card race. 2-3 innings. Gil Jlerndia pitdwd torv over tlw Tampa Bay D1wil 2. J(i EHA in seven careor out­ Manny Alexander singled and Stanley enterod the game in a 7 1-3 scoreless innings Havs. ings against his former team. Darren Lewis walked before 3-for-14 slump. lie put that to Saturday. and Tim II udson I~ol'ton failed to score a run for Lopoz had pitched five or Offerman hit a deep fly to cen­ an end quickly. He hit two-run 1 a allowed two narned runs in 7 2- t h n fi r s t time in I ) gam n s. more innings in all 18 of his pre­ ter. Cameron drifted back and double in the first, a two-run 3 innings Sunday. Lofton went 1-for-5 and vious starts. appeared to be ready to catch single in the second, singled in rnmainPd tied with Hed Holfe of thn ball when hn slipped and fell the fourth and sixth. and hit his 1 1 Tigers 5, Angels 0 tlw I U ) New York Yankees for on his backside, kicking up a big 13th homer off Mark Guthrie in thn major Jpagun record for Red Sox 5, Mariners 1 II ideo Nom o pit l'lw d night I'Nfro Martinez struck out II chunk of turf on his way down. the nighth. shutout innings as tho DPtroit scoring in I X ronsPcutivn ganws. The runners, who had benn Wells (19-6) had pitched I') ThP Indians rPmain two -- and didn't hit anybody- and Tigers drnppnd Analwim lwlow holding. l'ormPd a trallir. jam as scornlf~ss innings bdorn Oakland ganws ahPad of Boston and Nomar Carciaparra snapped a .500 by beating the AngPis. 15-gamn HBI slump as tho they took ol'f' for tho platn. scored five runs in the first on Damion Easley was :{-l'or-5 with Oakland in the AI. wild card Sadler a-nd Alnxander scored Stanley's two-run doubln. Ben rae~ I'. Buston Bed Sox cnlnbratecl two doubles and thre1~ HBis !'or Carlton Fisk clay by beating thn easilv. but Lewis arrived at the Gri1we's two-run homor and tlw Tigers. who havP won !'our Burba {I :{-(J) allowPd C!IW run sam~ time as the throw. Catchnr Miguel Tejada's solo shot. It was and SI'VI~n hiL"i -- thrnP to rookie Seattle Mariners. or five and rnmairwd five ganws Making his first start since Dan Wilson, bracing himself for Tejada's 24th homor. setting a behind Cleveland. which !Pads StnvP Cox. ThP right-hander a collision. let thn ball bounce bv franchise record for homo runs struck out !'our a'nd walked two sparking last Tuesday's brawl tlw AI. wild-card racP. with Tampa Hay by hitting the him as he blocked tho platl{; by a shortstop. The Angnls ((JX-(J<)) wPnt to bail out a lwll'agu1~rPd Lnwis slid short and knockod After Terrant:e Long, Handy bu II pPn. CIPVI' land us I'd Pigh t first battnr of the game. undPr .!iOO l'or thP first tinw Wilson bac~k. but tlwn got up VelardA and .Jason Giambi hit pitdwrs Sunday in a 12-11 win Martinez (I (J-41 allmwd six hits since tlwv wPrP 20-2 f on Mav and one walk in eight innings and easilv touched honw to consecutive singlns in the SPC'­ 1 X. Thny'vp lost. liw straight an;J ovl'r Baltinwn~ in I;{ innings. make it 3-tl. ond. Stanlny hit his two-run sin­ Tlw Indians took a 2-0 IPad in bPforP f)prek Lowe pitched tlw arP (J 1/2 gamPs bPhind ninth. Carl Evert>tt doubll'cl to scorn gin. Long tiod his carnN high CIPveland. tlw sc>rond oil' Albic> l.opPz {I I­ Of'f'prman- his I OOth BBI of the with four hits. inl'luding a two­ Tho BPcl Sox n~tirncl Fisk's No. Nomo {(J-11 ), gaw up liw hils I 0). With onP out. David St'gui spason. Garciaparra. who last run homer in the sevnnth. singh~d and scorPd on a triple by 27 in a pn~ganw cnn~mony, but and strurk out snvc•n with two tlw only one who cleared the drove in a run on Aug. 15. drib­ Wells {19-6) gavP up SIWPn walks to win l'or tlw third tinw in Travis Fryman that bouncPd bled one through the right sidn runs and nine hits in 1 I -:{ against tlw r.entl'r-f'ield wall. (;rnPn Monstnr wits Mik1-~ his last four dt>cisions. liP hasn't Canwron, who hit a solo homer of tho infield to score Everett innings. pitc.hPd a shutout sincP Frvman scon'd wlwn llussPII and makn it 5-0. Bookie Barrv Zito {3-3) didn't Br;tllyan groundPd a singln to in tlw seventh to give the SnptPmbnr I ') 1HJ wlwn. whiiP Marinnrs thnir only run. allow a hit ur1til Davn' Martinez pitching for Los Angelos. hP right. singled with one out in Lhn Branvan. HobPrto Alomar. Still. it didn't make up for Athletics 10, Blue Jays 0 thn'w a no-hittPr at. Colorado's Canwron 's blunder in the third. David Wells' bid for 20 wins l'ourth. Thl' IP!'t-handl'r allowed Coors Fic>ld. David s;>gui and 1\·lanny llamirPZ two hits and six walks in 6 2-:1 each had two of CIPwland 's I;{ whnn lw fnll whiln backing up to was temporarily derailed by Scott Karl {0-11 lost in his sPr­ catch .Josn Offerman's bases­ Mike> Stanley and the Oakland innings. ond start sine!' thl' AngPis hils. llamiri'Z PXtPndPd his hit­ The Athletics pitchPd tlwir ting stn~ak to a rarPI'r-high 1 ') loadc>d lly ball. Thn triple opPrwd Athletics. acquired him Aug. 22 !'rom thn gates for Boston's l'ive-run Stanlny went 5-l'or-5 with livn s1wnnth shutout of the season Colorado, allowing livn runs - ganws. despitn walking nine> batters and inning and turnPd Jamie Moym· HBls and Oakland scorc>d st~VPn four narrwd-- and nirw hits in 5 .lim Thonw's b

This is your opportunity to meet with 20 of the hottest vendors in town!

Representatives from t-shirt companies, travel, printing, photographers, DJ's and other companies will be in attendance marketing their services to your group.

IIEIIDOR FAIR Will BE HERE TOMORROW/ . l . WlldDIISday, SIIPIIIDibllr 6 e. 5:30PM .. 7:30PM lalortUDIIBallriJIJDI

FYI! Food Service Training will be offered at 5:00PM in Montgomery Theater. ------, I

Page 25 The Observer+ PAID ADVERTISEMENT September 5, 2000

August 28-September 18 103 Hesburgh Library Freshmen Retreat #30 Sign-up ·rQ9(!hQ91'C'~Q9 •oo Targeted Dorms: Badin, Keenan, Lewis, O'Neill, Pasquerilla East, Ut!>Ix the p09r"t7J 09$ ve $t®r"t 09 xev ye09r" I St. Edward's, Morrissey, Walsh, and Zahm LeQ9rN w hCJ9 t CalP?.p:Y3 'MIN:i3tr~ Tuesday, September 5, 7:00p.m. Siegfried Hall Chapel hCJ9~ t® ®tter ~tiN® ~tudeNt3/ Confirmation-Information Session for Candidates

Tuesday, September 5, 8:00p.m. Siegfried Hall Chapel Thur$da9y. ~epte-nber 7. 2.000 Confirmation-Information Session for Sponsors 5:00 p.n t® 7:30 p.n Tuesday, September 5, 8:00p.m. LaFortune Ballroom F1rst :¥ea9r ~t'Yciexts 5:00 p.PL "Fiesta de Bienvenida" Vpperc.fa9t8Flex 5:1'5 p.PL

Wednesday, September 6, 10:00 pm Basilica of the Sacred Heart Lector Workshop Interested in Becoming Catholic? Wednesday, September 6, 10:00 pm Basilica of the Sacred Heart RCIA Information Sessions-- Interfaith Christian Night Prayer for all interested Candidates Thursday,September 7, Sunday, September 10 from 1-2 p.m. Freshmen-5:00p.m. & Upperclassmen-5:45p.m. LaFortune's Notre Dame Room LaFortune Ballroom Pachanga'OO Would you like to Sponsor someone who Is thinking about becoming Catholic? Info Session for Sponsors: Sunday,September 10, 1:00 p.m. Sunday, September 17 from 1-2 p.m. ND Room, LaFortune Student Center LaFortune's Notre Dame Room RCIA: Information Sessions for Candidates contact Tami Schmitz@ 1-3016 Candidates and Sponsors Sponsors contact Justin Dunn @ 1-3390 Sunday, September 10, 1:30 p.m. Keenan-Stanford Chapel Prayer &Discussion Spanish Mass Presider: Rev. Patrick Neary, esc Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual Students Sunday, September 10, 2:30 pm and their Friends. Basilica of the Sacred Heart Eucharistic Minister Workshop Meet weekly on Wednesday Night for discussion and prayer.

Sunday, September 10, 8:00pm Coming Soon: Basilica of the Sacred Heart Sixth Annual Retreat Lector Workshop November 17th-18th.

For more information, please contact: Tami Schmitz 1-3016 [email protected] Tom Doyle,C.S.C. 1-4112 [email protected] /,r •, Mark Your Calendar ·, \ 0·Mru·s. jl i i' Do you want to help with MI.NimY Ministries at the Basilica? 112 Badin Hall631-5242 Eucharistic Minister Workshop: Sunday, September 10th@ 2:30p.m. 103 Hesburgh Library 631-7800 email ministry.1 @nd.edu Lector Workshop: Wednesday, September 6th@ 10 p.m. Sunday, September 10th@ 8 p.m. web www.nd.edu/~ ministry coming soon Coleman-Morse Center All workshops will be held in the Basilica For more info, call Steve Camilleri@ 637-6282 page 26 The Observer+ SPORTS Tuesday, September 5, 2000

NFL Warner throw-s past Broncos in Rams' 41-36 victory

scored between thnm. the two APnv<•r's ·j-f'TTPII Burklny. It first two snrins of tlw second gaVf' D1•nvPr. whirh traiiPd ;{5- half". making it six scorns in 20 latP in th1• third quartPr. a seven poss<~ssions with the dif­ :H,-:~s !Pad. fprenc<' tlw TDs s<~ornd by the But Warrwr thPn !Pd a 75- Hams against l'iPid goals by thn yard drivn cappNI by HobPrt Broncos. In all. thnre were llolrornbP's 1-vard TD run Photo counesy of All Sport SCOT"PS on Pight OJ" 1 () poSSeS­ with 2:5H And th<' Rams' linebacker London Fletcher celebrates after St. Louis' Monday Night Football victory over !Ph. SiOnS by both teams. dPfnnsn, shrf'ddl'd all ganw by the Broncos. The Rams won the game 41-36 in the offensive shootout. The win was the first as a Brian <;rii~S<'. finally assertnd head coach for Mike Martz. itsnll' with sacks by D'Marco who was St. Louis' offensive straight up the field and out­ was 21-17 St. Louis at thn 1~apped by a 7 -yard 'I'D pass to Farrand Kevin Cartnr. coordinator last season and ran everyone. half. Desmond Clark. "Why an~ wn always so dra~ took ovnr when Dick Vermeil Jason Elam's 32-yard field Elam 's 38-yard field goal on Elam's 35-yardnr madn it matir'?" asknd Carwr in a rnl'­ retired al'tnr the Hams beat goal 1:1 H into the second the first series of the third 35-30. nrnTH'I' to last January's Supnr TenTH~SS(-W in last January's quarter gave the Broncos a quarter cut the Hams' lead to Then came thn final frantic Bowl. wlwn Mikn Jonns' tcu~kle Super Bowl. 10-7 lead. But the Hams came 21-20. shootout. stoppPd TPnnnssne's Knvin Martz took thn blamn for the baek with a nine-play. 89-yard It was quickly 28-20. "It's thn toughnst first half' Dyson a yard short of thn tying intnrception. "It was my eall," drive capped by Faulk's 5-yard On the serond play after the I've cwr had in my lil'n," said touchdown on tlw gamn's l'inal he said. "We almost blew it. TD run. kirkofT. Warner threw the ball Denvnr linnbacknr Bill play. Fortunately, wn were able to Then. after Griese hit Smith in the flat to Faulk who Homanowski. who is in his It was just what the NFL come back and put it in the on a slant for a 25-yard srore, dodgnd two ta<:klcrs and took 13th season. "Whnn you'r<~ wantnd for I>Pnnis Miller's end zonP. " the Hams came right back. the ball 72 yards to the end own offputs up :H1 points. I lirst ofl1dal Monday night tniP­ This was a shootout from the going 77 yards on nine plays zone. don't care if you·n~ playing the <~ast: a shootout in St. Louis. start. capped by Warner's 7-yard TD But Griese came right back, NFC Pro Bowl team, you'vn got "This was a game where if' Denver. coming ol'f' a 6-10 pass to Hieky Proehl and it driving the Broncos 67 yards towinit." you lik<• ofT<•nsf'. it was fun to season aftnr winning eon­ watrh." DPnVPr roarh Mikn snrutivn Supnr Bowls. made Shanahan said. "If you liked it look easy on its first pos­ dPfPnsn. you pirkPd thn wrong The Lowest Priced session. going 59 yards in OTW to go to." just six plays to takn a 7-0 In addition to tlw latn gamn ~~~ ad o n G r i e s e ' s H - yard hnroirs. Az-Zahir llakim wnnt booting. Davis had a 12-yard 1{(, yards on a punt rnturn and run on that sPrins and Hz took a short pass from Warner BOOM Gries!' completed passns of HO yards for another scorn. 1 () and 18 yards to Hod Warnnr, who ·was 25-of-35, Notebook Smith and Duane Carswell. also had a 72-yard TD pass to llakim liPd it with his 86- Marshall Faulk on the same in Atnerica~ yard return which he took pattern on which llakim Back to School, Back to Work! Start off right with this NEW WinBook Si. It's a full-featured notebook from the com­ pany that repeatedly brings you value priced notebooks. We have won over 200 Un1versity of Awards since 1993! Notre Dame International Compare our 800 MHz notebook to the Study Program competition and you'll see what a great in notebook this can be for you! Use your Internet Offer Code and visit our website today!

• lntela Pentiuma Ill processor • 800 MHz • 14.1" XGA Active Matrix Color Display • 64 MB SDRAM, upgrade to 256 MB INNSBRUCK, AUSTRIA • 6 GB Ultra DMA Hard Drive • 56k' Capable v.90 Internal Fax/Modem 2001 - 2002 ACADEiHIC YEAR • 6x DVD-ROM Drive built-in, no need to swap • 3.5" Floppy Disk Drive, built-in • Integrated Dual-Button Touchpad • Configurations sna prtcss are baSBCI on s • Kensington lock support web audtt 7126100. All models usmg • 1 Year LimiTed Extendable Warranty Window$6 98 Sscond Edllton operstmg INFOR:\IA TIONAL MEETI:\G • Microsoft Windows• 98 Second EdiTion. pre-insTalled system. Conltguratfon detatls may dtrrsr Professor Hunnelorc Weber See our weiJsite fi:Jr a complete list of specs. Campus Coordinator How the "Offer Code" Additional notebooks gives you Extra Savings! starting at from time to time, we will olfer •spe• cials" using an OHer Code. Add ywr COde oo our wobsile homepago shown $1199 here

International Summer Service Learning Program Year 2001 BEST BUDDIES INFO

Cambodia louadar II laiYador MEETING Ghana Hall I Hondurat India

K.nya Uganda

ISSLP is an'8-week commwtity based summer service-learning course Tonight I 8-9pm in the esc where students work in one of twelve countries around the world with organizations and ministries meeting the needs of the poor and marginalized. Includes: Travel Expenses, $1,700 Tuition Scholarship, 3.0 credit Theology course, Preparation & Re-entry Classes. lounge~

Qualified candidates must have strong conversational skills for Spanish speaking sites and previous experience in service-learning. ~~~? ~~@[!)0[§~® Information At the Center for Social Concerns ~ Thursday, September 14, 6:00pm Tuesday, September 26, 6:00pm Sunday, October 8, 6:00pm ,.,"'­,, Applications? Available at the Center for Social Concerns

Deadlines? Due Wednesday, November 151

Questions? Call the ISSLP Director, or Andrea Mechenbier or Dawn Lardner at 631-5293

(C{j CCIIIfl• 1'011 SOCIAL CONCERNS

Come find out what it's all about~

Buy /Sell/Trade Your next rriend might just be Nebraska Wanted your Best Buddy!! Preferred Tickets Questions?? Call Mimi at 251-1093 234-5650 page 28 The Observer+ SPORTS Tuesday, September 5, 2000

MEN'S BASKETBALL Murphy learns about more than basketball in HalVaii

power forward said. "Y<~t they continu­ By KATHLEEN O'BRIEN ally want to get better. They're not sat­ Asso,iate Sports Editor isfied. That stit~ks with nw." I>rnam Team Ill ran the gamut in its It takes more than the average Joe to response to tlw NCAA playPrs. blow by All-American basketball player While somn took time out of tlwir Troy Murphy. schedule to pass on a few pointnrs to Somebodv like thn 1998- 1) 1) NBA the collegians, others looked on it as Hook i e of the Year Vince Ca rtn r, for their duty to put thnir youngnr rountt•r• instance. parts in their pl;u~es. "I nnded up covering him ICarl!~rl in "Some of thnm kind of saw it as a ritP OIW of thr. sr.rimmages," Murphy said. of passage. to show us that thny wnrn ''I've never felt so vulnerable in my life. still the guys that had t.o bP lwatPn." It was kind of like pick your poison with M u r p h y s a i d . " T h n I'!~ w n r n a c o u p I n him - he'll either pull up and shoot guys, though, Hay Allen and Vin Baknr. over you or go around you and dunk. who went out of their way to get to Unfortunatp,Jy he dunked on me a cou­ know mn and hnlp mn out." pln of times." Although guys lih Murphy, Duke's Murphy was one of 12 collegiate play­ Shann Battier and .Jason Williams, ers picked to play on a U.S. Mnn's Maryland's Ter<•Jn:e Morris and Iowa Select team that competed in llawaii State's Jamal TinslPV, all nwmbPrs of' Saturday against the U.S. Olympic the Select tnam, an; tlw P)itn among team. college playf~I·s, they canw in at a dis­ Thn Olympic; Dream Team Ill dnfeated advantage. the collegians squar1-1ly 111-74, leaving Not only did they havn lnss PXpPri­ a big impression on its opponents. enc•~. they lacked tim•~ playing togPthPr Murphy. who scored four points and to form a team and learn plays. pulled down three rebounds in thn On the hardwood, the Snkc:t team exhibition game, found himself in awn couldn't compnte with tlw NBA players of Carter's athletir.ism and Alonzo yet. OfT the court. tlw guys got to know Mourning's size. each other and enjoy IIawaii at thn What impressed him even morn was same time. the NBA players' work ethic;. "Wn went snorkeling d of praetir.e they run sprints," Murphy up throwing the fish food on Pach othPr said. "Ray Allen is making S million instead of in the wat<~r. So that attract­ dollars a year and shooting jump shots ed the llsh real clos<'. and wt~ didn't last at the 1-1nd of practice. Alonzo Mourning too long." is running sprints long after everybody Bar-k on campus. Murphy valuPs tlw else has gone home." chance to meet his childhood lwroes The constant dedication to improve facn to face. and stay on top of their game strur.k "It was gr1-1at. I've got pictures up on PETER RICHARDSONfThe Observer Murphy as the biggest lesson of the my w a II i n m y d o r m r o o m o I' t h o s ~~ Junior forward Troy Murphy headed to Hawaii last week to play on the U.S. trip. guys," Murphy said. "It's an nxpnriencn Men's Select team, losing to the U.S ..Olympic team 111-74. "Those guys have made it," the junior that I'll chnrish for a long, long timn."

NCAA FooTBALL KELLOGG Toledo basks in glory INSTITUTE of win over Alabama "I had said we had the best defensive Associated Press group sinr,e I've been here," Toledo said. "They didn't swre any points on Interested in learning more about internships and grants I.OS ANGELES our defense in the second half. Fivfl The broad smile UCLA coach Bob times. we went three plays and out (on for next summer? Come to our roundtable featuring Tolndo displayPd Monday had probably defense). One time. we went two plays benn in plar.e for nearly 48 hours - and recovered a fumble. returnees from all over the world. ever sinr.e thn Bruins completed a domi­ "Offensively, we r.ontrolled the clock. nating 35-24 vktory over Alabama. That's something I wanted to do. I think llr. said it was about to bn replaced by the conditioning really showed. Our a more serious look. offensive line, our tight ends. our full­ "They key thing now is Wfl put it backs, we were knocking guys ofT the LAASP Internship and Summer Research bPhind us," TolPdo said ball. They were very at'tt~r speaking in glow­ physical. (l)eShaun) Experiences 2000 ing tnrms of the Bruins' "The poll thing really Foster was very effort against thn baffles me. I'm pleased physical." Crimson Tide. Foster, plagued Kyle Ledbetter "We worked too hard we moved up in the rank­ by a sprained ankle Tonio Buonassisi to not •~njoy thn victo­ ings, lJut are you going much of It sewmn. The Nature Conservancy, Arlington Washington Office on Latin America ry," Tolndo said. "It's on last year or are you when he gained· only 375 yards. had Kevin Dunn Katie McKenna my job now to make going on this year?" sun~ wn put it bPhind a career-high 1 S7 Woodrow Wilson Center & OAS Foreign TV.Com, Mexico City us. starting with a yards on a sr,hool team meeting at 3 Bob Toledo remrd-tying 42 car­ Maria Christina Feilmeyer Maureen Rodgers o'clock today." UCLA head coach ries against Research, Kenya Research, Argentina UnrankPd nnwring Alabama. Saturday's opPnPr at "The impressive Lindsay Frank Ken Seifert tl1n BosP Bowl, UCL·\ is thing is he had 105 Minnesota Advocates for Human Rights Center for Concern No. I (J in this wnnk's Associatnd Press YAC yards - yards after contact." poll. Toh•do said. Anthony Sieh Alabama is 13th, down from No. 3. When asked about Fostr.r's htlavy Molly Kinder "Thn poll thing rr.ally bafi1Ps mn." work load, Toledo smiled and said: Research, Chile The Nature Conservancy, Brasflia ToiPdo admittPd. ''I'm pleased we "That was a piece of cake compan~d to moved up in tlw rankings, but are you what he did in high sr,hool. I IP. is physi­ Anne Kordenbrock Karen Weiner going on last yt•ar. or arn you going on cally capable of doing that. I don't par­ Operation Crossroads Africa, Kenya Sisters of Suyapa, Honduras this ynar'? ticularly want him to carry the ball 42 "WhtHI you beat somnbody. you times a gam!l. If that's what we need to should bn ranked ahPad of thnm." do, maybe I'll give him two sr.holar­ Thursday, September 7, 2000 Tlw Bruins roiiPd up 396 yards in ships." 5:30pm total olTPnsn against a defense that Foster said he was a little sorn allowt~d an avt~rage of 100 yards lnss Sunday, but felt fine Monday. C-103 Hesburgh Center for International Studies last season. Thn Crimson Tidr., mean­ "I lowever many times they k me to Refreshments will be served after the presentation. while, gainPd 265 yards against UCLA. carry the bail. I'll carry it," said Foster, which gave up 444.6 yards per gamP. who rnr.alled carrying the ball 44 times last ynar. once in high school.

---I ------. ------~

Tuesday, September 5, 2000 The Observer+ SPORTS page 29 Soccer MEN'S SOCCER continued from page 32 Tait earns maintain thP srorPIPss tir. NnithPr team was ablr to ronw up with mtl<'h of'fpnsr in conference thr two ovPrtimP sessions. and tlw gamr PnclPd without a goal. Avl'ry was impr!'ssrd with accolades his (Pam's depth. as thry playPd two overtimns in tlw Special to The Observer scorching drsert hnat. "On Sunday WP playnd 1 R Goalkeeper Gn~g Tait. from playnrs. That shows trnmnn­ Fayetteville, N.Y. was namr,d dous dnpth," said Avery. "Wn the Big East Goalkr-eper of the didn't mincn meat whPn thn Week for the first wer,k of' the guys ramn in ofT thn bnnch. sr-ason. WP'rn n~allv exritnd about He posted shutouts in his how dPPp ou;. bench is." first two collegiate starts at thP Friday's ganw against Nnw UNLV Fila/Snickers Heb0l r,.,Pxico was quitn impn~ssivo Classic in Las Vegas, Nev. over on both Pnds of the field. The the weekend. The Notre Dame oiTnnsP put thn Irish ahead sophomore earns thr, award narlv as Snnior HnggiP for the first time in his carr-Pr MrK;1ight was l'ouiPd in thr after helping the Irish men's pC'nalty box. As McKnight soccer team to a 1-0-1 record dribb!Pd tlw ball into th(' box, in the two games. a l.obo dPI'PndPr ranw up and Tait played in just three tark!Pd him from thP sidn. games as a freshman and ClassmalP Griffin lloward put logged only 35:30 minutes of' tlw JWnalty kirk past thr goal­ action until this weekend's kPPpPr for tlw first Irish tally tournament. In the HebPl of tiH' dav. · Classic. Tait played all 210 Tlw go.al was a carnnr first minutes of' both contests and for lloward. who had just registered nine saves. I lr was SPVPn game's playnd coming named Most Valuable Player of' into tlw SC'ason. Iloward rrPd­ the tournament after making its McKnight for tlw opportu­ five saves against the Lobos nity. "It was a pPnalty kick." and four against UNLV. said llovvard. "Hpggie The Irish, undPr f'irst-ynar ~rKnight did·all th!' hard head coach Chris Appl(~. return work." to action on WPdnPsday. SPpt. Th(• Irish addPd an insur­ 6 when they host Bradley in anrP goal latP in tlw ganw as JOHN DAILY/The Observer Sophomore defender Justin Ratcliffe preserved Notre Dame's shutout of the University of the home opener at Alumni frPshman DPvon !'rPsrod Field. Notre Dame plays its srorC'd unassistPd with 10:06. Nevada - Las Vegas with a key save late in the second half of Sunday's matchup. BIG EAST opener on Saturday. rP main i ng. ThP goal was"" Sept. 9 at 1:00 p.m. at Boston l'rPsrod's first rPgular snason In tho season opener. it was defensive game as a strong Tait. "Also. with Andy College. S!'(li'P. aftnr sroring oncP in dnfensH that proved to be the team effort. Forstner and Greg Martin, I tlw prnsnason. ((~am's strength. Tait saw the "There's some great senior couldn't ask anything more .------, leadership out of Steve Maio. out of those guys. They really Conner LaRose. and Griffin put their hearts out on the VOLLEYBALL Howard. I think those guys field." really helped lead the team in The Irish open their home just giving everything they season Wednesday night at had every single minute," said Alumni Field against regional Big East honors Check out The Observer Boylan

online at Special to The Observer

Senior Denise Boylan was www.nd.edu/""'observer. named Big East Player of the Week on Monday. The Irish setter, who was selected as the 2000 preseason Big East Player of the Year, helped ,- Notre Dame team win three matches during the Shamrock Invitational over All current juniors are invited to attend an in­ the weekend. The Irish Exploring the Future of Business defeated Fairfield in three games, rallied for a five­ formational meeting on the game victory over No.15 Brigham Young University A seminar to celebrate the naming of the after being down two games to none. and added a three­ Mendoza College of Business game victory over Clemson. Speakers: Dr. Cheryl Shavers, Under Secretary Boylan performed her best TRUMAN SCHOLARSHIP when the Brigham Young of Commerce for Technology University match was on the line Saturday night. Boylan's DanWarmenhoven, CEO, Network Appliance ball control allowed the Irish to post a .421 hitting percent­ age in the deciding game and Friday, September 8, 2000 she totaled 50 assists. 10 Tuesday, September 5 digs. three kills and three 1:30 - 3:30 p.m. blocks in the match. Her spectacular play throughout Jordan Auditorium 217 DeBartolo the tournament earned her Mendoza College of Business the Shamrock Invitational tournament Most Valuable 4p.m. Player honor. Notre Dame will r0turn to the court on Friday wlwn the F acuity, Staff and Students Welcome The TrumanScholarship is amerit-based $30,000 scholarship awarded to students who plan 2000 Adidas Invitational begins. Top-25 ranked teams to pursue careers in government or elsewhere in public service and wish to attend graduate UCLA, Nebraska and or professional school to help prepare for their careers. Students who are interested but can­ Michigan Statr, will visit the not attend should contact Ava Preacher by e-mail at Preacher.! @nd.edu Joyce Center for a round­ Nis.·D robin tournamPnt. :~ .. ~-m!!ve! ;.

WOMEN'S SOCCER Muth leads Belles in rough victory over Scots

Milligan. "But WP started orr By SARAH RYKOWSKI rPal strong. It was a gn~at way ~pon~ \X'ritcr to start tlw snason." Stt'phaniP Artnak found tlw IIPathPr \1uth spt>nt a lot of I11't first for thP Bnllns at tht' limP on thP ground Monday. IS minu!P mark. on lwr SPC­ as thP BPIII's socrnr tl'am ond rarnPr pPnalty kirk. sluggt•d tlwir way through a 2- ThP first. an indirt•ct, wPnt 0 virtory against tht• :\lma just vvidP of tlw right post. Tlw Srots. snrond wt•nt dPPp into tlw cor­ Hut whilt· lwr uniform was a Ill' I' and past Scots goaliP lillll' dirty. thl' virtory was l'aula Sdnvarz. worth it. "It was really intimidating at "Tiwy WPI'P prl'!ty rough." lirst." Artnak said. "But it was B" lit> s ,. o-r apt a i n liP at lw r nPat to sron~ on a pnnalty kick M u t h said. "I was on t lw lwcausP in high school I was ground about I'VPry four min­ n f' vI' r t lw on P to t a k I' t h at uti's kick." Tlw vinory puts tlw BPIIPs at \\'hill' tlw Srots ganw bark 1-0 on tlw sl'ason. in a tough­ with a shot of thl'ir own. Bnlles fought matrh that found tlw goalil' and co-captain Tia BPIIPs giving as murh as thPy Kapphahn stoppPd any and all got bark in rl'turn. attnmpts fDr thP first shutout Tlw BPIIPs finislwd tlw ganw of hPr rarPPr. with 12 fouls to thP Srots' Just 10 minutns latnr, thP l'ight. ' Bl'llns had thn ball dP('P in Kristin Slwa. a sophomorl' Scots territory and frPshman SWPPpPr for AI ma. d rnw ttw Kristin Crf'Pnwood passPd to first y!'llow card of tlw ganw Muth to put tlw !kilns up 2-0 halfway through tlw lirst half. over tlw Scots. .!Pssica Klink. also a co-cap­ "Aftnr the Bethel ganw tain for tlw BPIIes, narrwd a nvPrymw realiznd that if we KRISTINE KAAifThe Observer yPilow with rybody got a rhanrP to said hPad roach Jason sophomorn and scoring vnter- knew what we had to do moved the ball around well." play." Milligan said of his today. Wn came out on fire Artnak. a pownrhouse at tnam. "Everybody contributed right from the whistle." center midfield. led the Bnllns to the rnsult which I thought The Bethel scrimmage, a 3-2 with five shots against Alma. was wondPrful." victory for Saint Mary's whil!) Muth. Lynn Taylor. Tht> tnam creditPd thn Aug.24, saw the Belles start Catherinn Valnnt. Laura unusually large honw crowd out slow and only pick up after PaulPn, and Shawna Jiannoni for inspiring tlwm to vidory. thn Lady Pilots had taken the each attnmpted oncn for llw "It's so much morP fun to lead by two. Belles, who wern outshot by play for fans." Taylor said. The contest against Alma the Scots 17-10. Tlw BPIIes travel lirst to facP was a diff<~rent story. Kapphahn had night saves Dnl'auw Sept.

~~~~~\..~~ ~'£.£:_~\:~:!J..c::::&

Tuesday, September 5-- 7:00p.m. --Carroll Auditorium, SMC or Wednesday, September 6 --7:00p.m. -- Hesburgh Auditorium, ND Saint Mary's

KRISTINE KAAI!The Observer The Belles soccer team faces DePauw and Rose-Hulman sEttESTER AROUND THE WORLD PROGRA~ this weekend, where they hope to build on Monday's victo- Open to all ND/SMC students

TRACK AND FIELD Excellent academic program at Opportunity for travel and study Sacred Heart College in Cochin, in many countries of the Far East, MEETING India, focusing on the Asian world Southeast Asia, South Asia, 16 semester credits applicable towards Eastern Europe core or major requirements and Western Europe

Anyone Interested In •. TRACK AND FIELD For The Upcoming Year

INFORMATION AND APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE SHORT VIDEO ON HIGHLIGHTS ALUMNI TO ANSWER QUESTIONS Meeting at 4 p.m. ~lVI·-= I September 6th w·E.LCt.r•: .; ...... Loftus Auditorium -tit­ SAINT SEMESTER AROUND TilE WORLD PROGRAM (219) 284-4468 OR 4473. FAX (219) 284-4866 OR 273-5973 'MARY'S e-mail: pullapi I @saintmarys.edu; http://www .saintmarys.edulsaw COLLEGE BE THERE! NOTRE DAME. IN Tuesday, September 5, 2000 The Observer+ TODAY page 31

TOM KEELEY TYLER FOURTH AND INCHES THINGS COULD BE WORSE WHATELY

)

Fox TROT BILL AMEND

I'M THINKING MAYBE 11-IAT'S FINE FoR WHEN WE FIRST TURN I MEANT OK, NoW WE'RE GoiNG To MARcus, TRAPrTroMAL SURRoUND ON 'THAT MoVIE FIVE oR SIX WE'RE ON NEED FIVE oR MARCUS, SoUND SETUPS, BUT I PRoJEcToR, I WANT SPEAKERS THE SAME SIX BIG SPEAKERS. MARcus., THoUGHT WE WERE TRYING OUR CLASSMATES To PER STUDENT. PAGE. To RAISE THE BAR HERE. kNOW IT. JM'X·SoUND""' SHOULD BE \ SoMETHING ToTALLY NEW. \ '-

The first stage is denial.

CROSSWORD HOROSCOPE EUGENIA LAST ACROSS 28 Retaliate 61 Like some It may be high 31 Hot springs testimony CELEBRITIES BORN ON THIS position. You belong in the limelight. DAY: Jack Klugman, Coretta Scott 000 or low on a car 34 Bowie's weapon 62 Surgery souvenir King, Sheena Easton, Anouk Aimee, VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl 22): Don't 5 Immediately, to 36 "Mo' Better Sandy Dennis, Casey Kasem blow situations out of proportion. 63 Lagoon a surgeon Blues" director Happy Birthday: You need to get You could lose a good friend if you encloser 9 Little bits Spike your act together this year. Stop are critical and stubborn. Get all the 64 Decorate anew thinking and start doing. You need to facts, and don't be too eager to point 14 Airport outside 37 Money man 65 mater concentrate on what it is you want to your finger at others. 000 Paris Greenspan accomplish and go for it. The more LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Listen to 15 Brain tests: 38 Spy 66 Brawl you sit around hesitating, the greater those having more experience. Travel 67 Shake hands for the loss will be: -It's time to spread and educational pursuits will enrich Abbr. 42 Fibster 16 Book that's read the first time your wings and take flight. Only you your vision. You will prosper through 43 Color can take the initiative to make your making new friends. 000 word-for-word 68 Chatters 44 Watermelon life better. Your numbers: 9, 22, 24, 36, SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): 17 Docking spot throwaways 40,45 Money-making ventures look inter­ 18 Waterproof DOWN ARIES (March 21-April 19): Your esting. Take a closer look, but don't 45" cover 1 Conks interest in picking up new informa­ take too much time deciding. Your Miserables" tion or skills is growing. Sign up for intuitive instincts will lead you in the 19 Black, on a 2 Buffalo's lake 46 Popular place seminars or courses that offer a chal­ most prosperous direction. 0000 piano 3 Actor Guinness lenge. You'll quit if you get bored. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): 20 Entry 49 Take care of a 4 Gift of the Magi 000 Don't let your partner play mind bill TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You games with you. Stand up for yoJlr requirement, 5 Agree out of sometimes 50 Diving seabird will have greater concern with your rights and speak your mind. If he court future security. Check out retirement tries to put all the blame on you, be 23 Headlight? 51 Fair-sized field 6 Kitchen whistler plans that offer guarantees. Stress due prepared to let him know what his 24 Little 'un 53 Buried loot 7 Taj Mahal's city to worry has been wearing you faults are. 00 down. Get busy doing things you CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): 25 Uncle 60 Stored on board 8 Dosage amts. enjoy. 00000 Get busy setting up those interviews. 9 Utilized GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You You need a job that offers more chal­ 10 Brainless one will have to make a decision regard­ lenges and higher wages. Sign up for ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE ing your personal partner. The infatu­ courses that will bring you more skills 11 Composer ations that you've been experiencing and business knowledge. 00000 Stravinsky may be due to something you are AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): 12 Curve 33 On pins and 48 American 55 Test standard lacking in your emotional relation­ You'll be desperate for intellectual needles wildcat 13 Hog's home 56 Squirrel's home ship. 00 bantering. Travel should be high on 35 -de-lance 50 Fred's dancing CANCER (June 21-July 22): Don't your list. Foreign cultures offer a host 21 Raring to go 57 Bruins' sch. sister let your desire for love lead you into a of interesting information for you to 22 Wield a wheel 37 Space-_ 58 Freeway access foolish pursuit. One-sided romantic incorporate into your philosophy. (modern) 52 English paper 25 Brain protector 59 Historic times attractions will be emotional and 000 PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Emo­ 39 Auto airflow 53 Love's opposite 60 On the could damage your reputation if you 26 Comics orphan are too demonstrative about your tional setbacks will surface if you regulator 54 Matinee hero (fleeing)- 27 King with a feelings. 0000 haven't resolved the recurring prob­ golden touch 40 Over's partner LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You'll lems that your relationship faces. If 29 Santa's 41 Ad _(to the make lasting friendships if you get your partner denies that there's a Answers to any three clues in this puzzle involved in organizations. Your problem, make plans to go out with assistants stars): Lat. are available by touch-tone phone: beliefs and attitudes will be respected friends. 000 30 Churchill's sign 46 Football 1-900-420-5656 (95¢ per minute). by others. Move into a leadership 31 What a new strategy session Annual subscriptions are available for the parent craves Birthday Baby: You were born with the desire to live life to the fullest. You 47 Memorial Day best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 must, however, make sure that you aren't overindulgent in the process. You are 32 Bamboo eater event years: 1-888-7 -ACROSS. strong both physically and mentally and can accomplish a lot throughout life as long as you aren't too stubborn to compromise when necessary. (Need advice? Check out Eugenia's Web sites at astroadvice.com, eugenialast.com, astromate.com.) Visit The Observer on the web at http://observer.nd.edu/ © 1999 Universal Press Syndicate ------Make checks payable to: The Observer THE OBSERVER and mail to: P.O. Box Q Notre Dame, IN 46556 Published Monday through Friday, The Observer is a vital source of information on 0 Enclosed is $85 for one academic year people and events in the Notre Dame and Saint Mary's Community. D Enclosed is $45 for one semester Name ______Join the more than 13,000 readers who have Address ______found The Observer an indispensible link to the City ______State _____ Zip ______two campuses. Please complete~ the accompa­ nying form and mail it today to receive The Observer in your home...... ----~~ --· Kicking up a storm The Belles open their season with a 2-o shutout of the Alma Scots. PORTS page 30 page 32 OBSERVER Tuesday, September 5, 2000 MEN'S SOCCER Kachmarik Tait records 2 shutouts for Irish in Classic redefines namrd Greg Tail his starter. grateful for it," he said, "The two high powered teams. We By NOAH AMSTADTER Any questions about the whole defense played really felt really good about that." Sports Writer team's stability in goal were well for me. They madr. it pos­ Sunday's game against the athletics answrrnd as Tait posted two sible for me to gnt that Hebels pitted two strong Aft1w losing vrtnran (;erick shutouts and the Irish record­ award." defensive teams. The Irish Pom-poms. smilns. and Short to graduation. the Irish ed a l-0-1 record at the UNLV Playing particularly wr.ll came out on the offensive. tal­ cheering. mrn's soccer team was left Fila/Snickers Hebel Classic was sophomore Andy lying six shots in the first half. "Go blue! Go white~! Team with two sophomorP goal­ over the weekend. The Irish Forstner. The second-year I Iowever, they were unable to fight!" keepers del'eatrd N~1w Mexico 2-0 on starter from Germany was capitalize on any of these This is an imagP that is who had Friday night beforf' playing to named the tournament's most opportunities. familiar combinnd a scoreless tie versus host valuable defensive player. They came closest to scoring to all of to play only Ntwada-Las Vegas on Sunday. "llaving those two awards after halftime, as freshman us. We'vn :15:30 last Tait earned both tourna­ given to our goalkeeper and Justin Detter had was only a. seen it at season. ment Most Valuable Player our central defender. that diving save by Hebel goal­ high Aftrr the honors and Big East shows that our team as a keeper Scott Winstead away school final pre­ Goal ken per of the Week hon­ whole is defending very well," from putting the Irish ahead. basketball season ors for his efforts. Tait prais­ said assistant coach Mike Later in the second half. Irish games, p r a r. t i c e Apple es the team's strong defense Avery. "That was something sophomore Justin Ratcliffe college this sum- in helping him earn the that we put a premium on made a save from the back to football mt~r. rookiP award. coming into the tournament. games, Katie McVoy llf'ad roa1·h Chris Apple "Its real exciting, I'm real We had two shutouts against see SOCCER/page 29 and nvnn from the infamous Inside :.,·aint Dallas FOOTBALL Cowboys' Mary's ,'.,'ports cheer- leadnrs. But at a Saint Mary's vollnyball Battle fights injuries after season opener garnn? Now that's nPws. For yPars. thnre wt•re mnm­ bnrs of thn Saint Marv's com­ By TIM CASEY munity that didn't nv;~n know Assisr.uu Sporrs Fdiror that wn had sports tnams. IIowtwPr, things in thn BPIIns Talk about a scar!'. athlntir facility arn changing. On thP third play of Athlntic director Lynn Satu relay's gamn against Kachrnarik has redelinnd thl' TPxas A&M. Arnaz Battin Saint Mary's athlt~tic depart­ rollnd to his left. gainnd thrPn ment and rnnewed the school's yards and was shovnd out-of­ spirit. Leading this rnbirth is bounds by snvnral Aggin the newly formed Saint Mary's ddendPrs. After being cheerleading squad. pushnd, BattiP hurdlnd a Who would havn thought bnnrh on the Notre Dame that the Saint Mary's student sidPlinns and rollidl'd into a body would rwer want a chnnr­ ronrrntn wall. leading squad? Ath!Ptk teams I lis nnarlv 100 tPammatns havn been bPgging for support WPrl' nowhl'.l"l' in sight. for years. hoping fans makn it "Tlwy partl'd likP thl' Hnd to at least onn honw ganw. SPa," Batlll' said Monday. "I Now there arn womnn rlamor­ thought sonwonl' would ~rab ing to bn part of this nnw club nw. I'm going to watch that that will lnad the quPst for lilm and lind out who mowd." lklles pride. During activitins That inridPnt was not thP night nearly 40 first-year only pntl'ntial St>tback for thn women sho>ved intrrnst. and Irish quartPrbark. In thn snr­ last night. at tlw first informa­ ond quartPr, BattlP sprainPd tional nwPting. !iO wonwn his right ankiP but did not rarnn to find out how tlwy can ll'aVP tlw rontPst. :\t half'tinw support thPir classmates. trainc·r Jim Huss adhl'rl'd to Why thn rncnnt intnrost in lhf' slight injury. n·-taping tlw Saint Mary's sports'? ank II'. l;ollowing tlw gam1~. It rould bP that Saint Mary's llattll' n•rf'iwd fivP stitrlws in students are finally realizing his IPf't shi11. the importancn of tlw total stu­ liP worP an air cast to dent, body and mind. And with Monday morning's prnss con­ that rPalization lhPy are look­ fprenrP but handiPd nvery ing to support thosn wnll­ snap in tlw af'tPrnoon prar­ roundnd individuals that takP tirl'. on ed ueation in thn l'lassroom "lle'll lw f'irw." roach Bob and on thn courts. I> a viP said a f'tp r \1 ond ay's Maybn it is an incrnased prarticl'. pride in an intPgral part of this Good thing for thl' Irish. c:ollngn that has benn ldt in With top-rankPd NPbraska the shadows for ynars. That and thPir al!l•giancn of fans part could only lay in thn back­ rolling into town this wnnkPIHl ground for so long before an injury to lhP Irish startPr somPthing forcPd it to thcJ f'orn­ could cause additional major f'ront. conc:nrns. NPbraska opnnnd That time is now. PETER RICHARDSON/The Observer Or maybe this newfound Irish quarterback Arnaz Battle dodges Aggie defensive end Evan Perroni Saturday in Notre see BATTLE/page 27 Dame's 24-10 win over Texas A&M. Battle is recovering from minor injuries this week. see McVOY/page 27

vs. Bradley vs. Santa Clara Cross Councry Wednesday, 7 p.m. Friday, 7:30 p.m. at Valparaiso lnv. SPORTS Saturday. 10 a.m. ATA Volleyball Volleyball vs. Nebraska at Bethel vs. Nebraska Saturday, I :30 p.m. GLANCE Wednesday, 7:30p.m. Friday, 4 p.m.