lronman five starts tomorrow, so if you've been sitting on your duff all winter you'd better get out and practice before it's too late. [Photo by Doug Christian] Rizzo outlines coordinator's role by Sue Wueteber new Judicial Coordinator has more lity for their actions, more authority authority than any in the past. may be delegated to the hall "My role is to provide assistance Commenting on this, Rizzo noted J-Boards. to students who violate University that according to the new Constitu­ Rizzo revealed that specific plans rules and regulations," said Jayne tion, the Judicial Coordinator is no are already underway for the new Rizzo, newly elected judicial coor­ longer a Cabinet position. school year. "When we get bact, dinator. "Not enough students "It is now a third branch of I'd like to have a workshop for all know their options. We want to government, along with Student the J-Board chairmen," she said. counsel them before they see Dean Government and Student Union," "I don't want to regulate all the Roemer, to make sure their student she explained. "I was elected by halls. Every one is different. rights are not violated," she the out-going J-Board Chairmen. Instead I'd like to give the chair­ added. We are not, however, totally sepa­ men an idea of a just and proper Rizzo stated that besides under­ rated from Andy McKenna's Cabi­ way of handling cases withing the Bar owners, neighbors graduate representation, her duties net," she added. halls," she noted. include overseeing the hall Judicail Also new is her seat on the Other courses of action approved Boards; coordinating the Judicial Student Union Board of Commis­ by Rizzo include a students' rights to revise agreement Council, whieh is made up of the sioners. "I'll be working more with manual, which would list university J-Board Chairmen from each hall, the Administration," she said. rules and regulations, and the by Bob Varettoni the pressure of someone calling me and being a member of the Student "It's important to know and re­ students recourse to various offen­ Senior Staff Reporte1r up to say 'do it.' We gave it a good Union Board of Commissioners. spect Dean Roemer." ses. Also, a letter that advises try last year. If there was a tighter "We holM! to strenghten the One area that expressly concerns them to acquaint themselves with Bar owners and the Northeast organization, we could do it Judicial Council into a collective Rizzo is that of rector communica­ their rights and their hall J-Board Neighborhood Council have de­ again." identity," sht~ remarked. "It will tion. "It's important to keep in chairmen will be sent to all cided to revise an agreement made "You folks have got to get your meet every two weeks, the first contact with the rectors," she students. "The letter will also give last April about noise and litter act together,'' Roos said, refen;ng meeting being today. In this initial stated. "They are a vital link. my office phone number and my problems in the Corby-Eddy area. to the tavern owners. "I go to the meeting, we.' hope to elect a They are the ones who determine home phone number.," she said. At a South Bend Board of Safety council meetings, and people say representative to the Campus Life the seriousness of student offen­ "The most important thing is to meeting Friday afternoon in the I'm a sucker. I tell them there's an Council," she said. ses." Rizzo explained that if stu­ make myself available to the stu­ County-City Building, the Council agreement, but they don't see John Dziminski, student union dents show themselves to be dents. Most of them are not aware accused the owners of not comply­ anything being done." press secretary, observed that the willing and able to take resoonsibi- of their rights and options." ing with a previous agreement to Dziubinski said he would only "be responsible for trash clean-up revise the names and dates, not the in a two-block area around their content of the old agreement. This businesses." revision will be signed Wednesday Art Quigley, Northeast Neigh­ afternoon by Quigley, Dziubinski, Terrorists threaten Moro's ·life borhood Council president, said he and a yet to be determined repre­ would forget about the alleged sentative of the tavern owners. ROME [AP]--ltaly's president told 61-year-old Moro and killed his five gesture of repentance ... and drive violations of the old agreement if, Dziubinski said he wanted such an the terrorist kidnappers of former bodyguards March 16 in a Rome them to spare a life whose sacrifice by signing a revised copy of the old agreement signed during "the Premier Aldo Moro yesterday that street ambush. His captors would gain them nothing, absolute­ agreement on Wednesday, the critical period between now and killing him would be a "fatal error" announced in six subsequent mes­ ly nothing." owners make a "fresh start." when the students leave for the and would gain them "absolutely sages left in public places across The government and the Chris­ In recent weeks, according to summer." nothing." Italy that he was undergoing a tian Democrats have rejected the Board of Safety member Eugene "I don't want you to lose President Giovanni Leone's "people's trial." Brigades' demands, made through Dziubinski, the litter and noise in business," Quigley said, in conclu­ appeal for the life of his longtime On Saturday they said he had letters written by Moro, for the the Corby-Eddy area had reached a sion, to the owners. "I just wa.nt colleague was made indirectly in an been "sentenced to die" for com­ release of jailed terrorists. Fifteen point where the Council felt that you to make a nice, quiet, litterless open message to Moro's wife one plicity in Christian Democrat Red Brigades leaders are on trial in the bar owners had not lived up to profit." day after the Red Brigades kidnap­ policies. Turin, charged with sedition. last year's agreement. Andy McKenna, student body pers announced that a "people's Leone issued his statement after But ChriStian Democrat leaders, "I'm offended by the suggestion president, and John Fitzpatrick, court" had condemned Moro to he met with Premier Giulio after a three-hour meeting yester­ that we abrogated any agreement. off-campus commissioner, attend­ death. Andreotti and Interior Minister day, said through Deputy Secretary We've spent a heck of a lot of ed Friday's meeting. Dave Tatum, The ruling Christian Democrat Francesco Cossiga in a search for Giovanni Galloni that the party, money cleaning up the Corby owner of the Library, Theresa Party, meanwhile, indicated a pos­ ways to save Moro's life. _ while "aware of our duties before area,'' Harold Rowley, part.. owner Bauer, part-owner of sible softening of its refusal to deal The presidential message to the nation" was "anguished about of Corby's tavern, reacted. Bridget McGuire's, and with the Marxist urban guerrilla Moro's wife said a "terrifying the life of Moro andthereforeon the Rowley said that the Northeast an unofficial observer from group for the release of Moro, who threat looms for Aldo Moro" and humanitarian level we feel that his Neighborhood Council was making the South Bend Police Department is party president. added: "A sense of humanity may life must be spared by all the "shotgun accusations." He added also attended. The Brigades kidnapped the induce them (Moro's captors) into a means juridically possible and legi­ that "we've broken our necks" to timate." remove the litter outside Corby's. Christian Democrats in the past John Roos, ND government pro­ have not ruied out the possibility of fessor and member of the Council, buying Moro's freedom with ran­ countered that the area in front of som money from his friends or Corby's by the gas station was family. "just filled with beer cans and beer The Communist Party, largest of cups. This area has been terrible." the parties supporting the Chris­ Crowley observed that some of tian Democrat minority govern­ this garbage could have resulted ment in Parliament, urged the from off-campus parties and keg­ nation's leaders to maintain their gers. "Many times I find bottles tough stance. outside Corby's that we don't even sell there," he noted. The Communist newspaper "From the observing I've done," L'Unita said in a front-page editori­ Dziubinski said, "if those beer al that "emotional feelings must cups and cans are not yours, then not prevail on the coolness and you're really the victim of unusual calm necessary in this grave hour" circumstances. Even if you are, and that politicians "must continue you're going to get blamed for that to display their sense of responsibi­ litter, anyway." lity before the republic." Nickie' s manager, "Bullet," Police continuing the search for admitted that there may be a litter Moro set up checkpoints and problem, but only because Rick stopped thousands of motorists Kanser, who had been the owner's who left the cities on Italy's fist representative under the old agree­ sunny day after two weeks of rain. ment, sold his interest in the Some 50,000 police and soldiers Library. have been pressed into service in "We no longer had a representa­ the hunt, but have turned up no tive," Bullet said. "I didn't have solid leads. ------~-

2 the observer Monday, April17, 1978 Weather Carter meets with Cabinet Ooudy and windy today with a 30 percent chance of showers late. Highs mid to upper 50s. A 70 percent chance of showers tonight CAMP DA VID*Md. [AP] - Presi­ ed on the Camp David grounds by ing control of the Panama Canal to and tomorrow. Lows tonight low to mid 40s. High tomorrow upper dent Carter summoned his Cabinet Lt. Col. Cecil Reed, chaplain at Panama by the year 2000. 50s to low 60s. Southeast winds 15-20 mph and gusty today. and senior advisors to a secluded nearby Fort Richie. He made the prediction in an administration summit meeting The gathering of more than two appearance on the CBS televisins yesterday against a backdrop of dozen officials at the isolated program "Face the Nation." ~On Campus Today-~ continuing political problems for setting for an overnight visit was Congressional energy conferees his 15-month-old administration. the first such conference since still are at odds over the details of 12:30 pm film, "marriage," spon. by women's rights associa­ Two large Marine Corps helicop­ Carter, his prospective Cabinet and an energy policy. After 15 months tion rm. 105 law school. ters were enlisted to carry the top aides met at St. Simons Island, in office, the president finds that government leaders, including Vice Ga., three weeks before inaugura­ his oopularity, as measured in 3:15 pm career workshop, "assertive training and interview President Walter F. Mondale, from tion day. national opinion polls, is continuing; skills," by suzanne areson and mary Iaverty, spon. Washington to this presidential Concern over the president's to slip. by career development rm. 107 lemans. resort in the Catoctin mountains. political problems was evident in A New York Times-CBS sample White House press secretary the fact that John White, the new showed last week that a record low 3:30 pm open forum, with judge harold Ieventhai of the u.s. Jody Powell stressed that the chairman of the Democratic Nation­ of 46 percent of those polled circuit court of appeals, d.c. spon. by white ctr. for meetings were called to discuss . al Committee, was invited to the approved the way Carter was doing law, government, & human rights. law school procedures for long-range decision­ conference. his job. lounge. no charge. making among· the White House The meeting came as the admini­ staff and Cabinet members and not stration faced two significant dates: Billiards semi's 4:30pm reilly lecture, "phosphorylase & the covalent control for policy discussions. on tomorrow the vote in the Senate of metabolic pathways," by prof. edmond h.· fischer, Walt Wurfel, one of Powell's on the second Panama Canal treaty scheduled u of washington, seattle, spon. by chem. cept., 123 deputies, said the formal meetings and, on Thursday, the first anniver­ nieuwland science hall. would take place this morning. sary of Carter's declaration of ''the The semi-finals of the Notre Before his guests arrived, Carter moral equivalent of war" in form­ Dame billiards tournament will be 4:30 pm lecture, "working clinically with older people in the attended a church service conduct- ing a national energy policy. held tonight at 6 p.m. in the pool community: do we understand what we see? by gene Howard Baker of Tennessee, room in the basement of LaFor­ d. cohen, m.d., nat'l inst. of mental health, spon. by ' DiVOrCe' Senate Republican leader, predict­ tune. mental health outreach program for the elderly, ed Sunday that the Senate would All interested persons are invited haggar aud. to follow narrowly approve the treatv return- to attend. 4:30pm ward-phillips lecture series, "the popular print: 'Marriage' apprentice as subculture figure," by prof. ronald The Women's Rights Association paulson, yale u. spon. by english dept. mem. lib. of the Notre Dame Law School will aud. present three films as part of their MAY "Women and the Law" series. All 6:30pm registration, pre-advanced registration meeting for films will be shown on consecutive GRADUX..__..._....IES freshmen, spon. by freshman year of studies, engr. Mondays beginnning today in Rm. aud. lOS ofthe Law School from 12:30-1 p.m. SNELLING AND SNELLING, world's largest employment 6:30 pm banquet, south bend press club hoaxes & banquet, The film "Marriage" will be service with JIIOra than 550 offices, Is seeking College cocktails 5:30 pm, ace. shown today. "Divorce" will Graduates for 11verallarga companies we represent who need appear April24, followed by "Wel­ professionals In the following fields: 6:45 pm rosary, daily at the grotto. , fare" on May-1. 7:20pm duplicate bridge, ladies of nd, faculfy, & staff. univ. Accountina Sales club. Rnancial Analysis Administrative Data Processing Manager Trainee 7:30pm lecture, "super realism: the sublime," by _gregory r!~:; .. ,~~~:~~~~J Systems Personnel battock, author/art critic, span. by nd art dept. & art Asst. Night Editor: Sandra B. Engineering Tedlnical Areas gallery, nd art gallery, o'shag. no charge. Colson Layout Staff: Sue Wuetcher, 8 pm lecture, "The value of virtue: can corporate morality Bill Devitt, Katie Kerwin NOW IS THE TIME TD give serious thought to your futu11; and Ill be measured?" by ralph w. estes, spon. by the joint Sports layout: Mark Perry one of our 5 profNSional Employment Counsallora aullt and guldl univ. committee on business, theology, & philo­ Typists: Mark Rust, Anne you; you may call or come In with complete confidentiality to: sophy, galvin biology bldg. aud. Giere, Carol Erkman, Mary McCauley 8pm film series, "king henry v," laurence olivier, spon. Night Controller: Mardi Nevin by college of a & I, & medieval institute. engr. aud., Day Editor: Bob Bernoski no charge. Copy Reader: Debbie Dahr­ ling 8pm second scene drama, "the belle of amherst," spon. Ad Layout: Rob Civetello Charmer of Convnerce Bldg. by nd/smc theatre, stapleton lounge, lemans hall, Photographer: Doug Christian no charge. 224 W. Jefferson Blvd. S-311 Special Guest: Chris Smith Bend, Ind. This week's paper of the week: South Joe 'n Sandy (yea!) 234-9011 Observer Editoriai Board last .week's pa~er of tJle weekJ: A liaMJsed ~loyment Agency :!· ~ Kahe 'n Margte _ Tony Pace Editor-in-Chief l Steve Odland Managing Editor John Calcutt Executive Editor. .': ...... Barb Langhenry Executive Editor Rosemary Mills Editorial Editor Phil Cackley Copy Editor Jean Powley St. Mary's Editor ... Ann Gales News Editor Mike Lewis News Editor phy&iG& department Diane Wilson News Editor Ray 0' Brien Sports Editor Bryan Grulev Features Editor univel6ity of notre dome '------~------J Wage and Price Council RECOMMENDED UNIVERSITY ELECTIVES tries to restrain inflation DESCRIPTIVE ASTRONOMY WASHINGTON [API - The director "Probably the most promising 11MWF and 2MWF of the president's Council on Wage area is in food purchases." and Price Stability said yesterday He said the economic pressure the federal government is prepared probably would be applied through Ft-. Shilts A1ys 210 to use economic pressure to per­ a program "to identify on a Prerequisite: A one year introductory science course including at least one serrester of suade private business to help quarterly basis those products restrain inflation. whose prices are rising rapidly." physical science. Barry P. Bosworth, the director, Government purchasers then said the government would "real­ would try to either buy alternate A description of the motion and structures of the earth, moon, and planets. An ign procurement policies" based products or delay the purchase. expositionof the modem theories of the sun, stars, nebulae and galaxies. An on how well businesses keep their However, BQsworth said charac­ introduction of cosmology. Sorre exarY1Jies of the influence of astronomy on the prices down. terizing the program as a "federal developrrent of science and civilization. The course includes elerrentary observational Hosworth made the statement boycott" was too strong. He said it exercises. It is intended rimaril for non-science ma·ors. in an appearance on the NBC is more of an attempt by the television program "Meet the government to act as an informed ELECTIVES FOR SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING STUDENTS Press." He expanded on it in a consumer. telephone interview with The Asso­ INSTRUMENTATION WITH MICROPROCESSORS A1ys403 ciated Press. The Observer Is published Mon. t MWF and dloice of labs Prof. Blackstead dly through FrkiiY except during He said the government buys ex1m 1nd v.atlon periods. Tile Prerequisite: Prior experience with BASIC or FORTRAN and permission of instructor. enough that it can influence infla­ Obse1ver Is published by the Design and construction technique for interfacing conventional l~ratory ~paratus t_? tion policies in private industry. By students of Notre Deme 1nd S1lnt Miry's College. Subscriptions microprocessors will be illustrat~ with the use of ·a th1rd generat1o~ l6-~1t delaying purchases from compan­ m1y be pUrchiSed for 520 per yelr ies that don't hold the line on prices ($1 0 per semester) from The microprocessor. Students will des1gn and construct interface cirruits couplmg w1th Q, ui Observer, P.O. Box Notre microprocessors to such apparatus as analog-digital converters, x-y recorders, switching to alternate products, Dime, lndi1n1 4U56. Second it can reward those who he!p fight ct ..s postqe p11d, Notre Dime, oscilloscopes, and particle detectors. Microprocessor architecture and instructionsets inflation and pressure those who do lndllnl, 46556. will be disrussed, but the use of asserrbler language programs will be secondary to the . The ObServer Is 1 membar of not. the Allodltld Prell. All repro­ use of BASIC programs. The design laboratory data aquisition system will surrmarize "The extent to which you can do duction rtghh 1re reaerved. the course's activities. it is limited," Bosworth said. Monday, April17, 1978 the observer

A Special Presentation Commemorating April20 the SOOth Anniversary 21 of Thomas More's Birth and 22 ;Ski tram accident kills four a man 8:00PM / SQUAW VALLEY, Calif. [AP] • being stopped by a safety cable 100 Ken Spencer, said. "It really puts It was the ski tram's last trip ofthe feet above the ground. a lump in your throat." 1 for all I day down the. mountain at Squ~w "My husband disappeared and Placer CouiJtty Sheriffs Sgt. Valley, and tt was loaded wtth the side ofthe car disappeared, but Steve Cader idc:~ntified the dead as seasons vacationers. Then one of three his skis were still there," said a Gina Wismicwski, 20, and her thick cables popped off its roller horrifi~d Mrs. Penning of Menlo husband, Dean, 31, of Alameda; by Robert BoH and ripped through the car, killing Park.· · Deepak K. Mer·chant, 30, of Menlo Center for Continuing a:auccmotnll four perso"s and injuring the other "It!was pretty snowy with gusty Park; and Lawrence A. Hinkle, 27, 30 aboard. '. winds up to 40 miles an hour" at of Milpitas. Auditoriu A second tram car on the same the time of the accident, Boardman Officials said the first car had All seats $2.50 ($2.00 students) line was heading up the mountain said; but he added he did not jumped the cable or the cable had Reservations: 284-417 6 with 70 persons and piles of ski believe the winds were a factor. snapped. When that happened, it gear. No one inside was injured, "We have run the trams in a lot sent passengers tumbling over but that c~r ·was left dangling higher winds," he said. "The tram each other. hundreds of ;feet from the ground has been excellent in very high "It took us 15 to 20 minutes just during a 10-hour rescue operation winds. The.winds today were not to get everyone off each other," I that ~asted until early yesterday excessive." said one passenger, Richard Schipp mormng. .'Three of those who died were of San Francisc:o. "Everyone was The Junior 0~ "There were sereams and moans killed immediately, and the fourth on top of everbody." presents I and it was 1.awful," said Bruce died in the arms of a rescue worker But Dr. Roy Oayburn of Stock- I ./ Zimmerman, ~9. of San Francisco, as he tried to carry her to safety. ton, the 11th rnan to be lowered, i who was in the downward-bound "She died with me on the way said, "I've never seen a rescue car. He said the car gave a sudden down," the 22-year-old rescuer, operation flow so well." jerk, then there was the sound of · _.....,. ripping metal as the heavy cable ·~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!J!!PJr;Our=i1~·~1 cut through the car and crushed PREPARE FOR· J~ ~ several persons tJ the floor. ~ J. Y•• An official sai~ une of the car's MCJ"11 •Dl" 11 ... LSI"II IMI"II three cables had! gone slack and • .... II" II" jumped off its roller, just after the • ~I • II • 11 10-foot-wide, 30-foot-long tram begap its deso~nt of Emigrant ~-~ J,JJ,JJJ•ECf•&•fLEJ•IQE I Peak:. From 8.(100 feet up the Ill Ill I mountain, it went boundng so to 70 NAT'L DENTAL BOARDS • NURSING BOARDS I feet down the rem aimn g lines' then Flexible Programs • Hount slid rapidly dow~hil! :mother 100 feet before it wv haltec! by an CJ"hneiS • ••gnencell.P emergency cable. 70 feet a !Jove the President ground. For Information Please Clll: of the At that poin• ithe loo~t> cable Collect "looped around die (;at and sliced West Lafayette ~ Chicag~ I EDUCATIONAL CUTIII White 'Sox through it," s~id Bill Bo;miman, JlJ-463-7541 TEST I'M"ARATKJH director of the Squaw Vlliley Ski l SHCIALIST5 SINCl 1938 Washington Serving BloolllmgtoD. IndimapoUs, South rtaU Corp. He said the; car iook:ed like I "a shredded can." Bend For Locations in other cltie1 Mary Penning'"' !tusband, David, Outside N.Y. State Only CALL TOll FREE: 800.223--1112 Tuesdav, celebrating his 47th birthday, suf· eentert ln. Mllor us C_lttea Toronto, P111rto lllc:o end Lup110, Swltzerl•nd 18 April fered broken rib., \1/bero the whip· Register now for smnmer MCAT class. ping cable tore tll'nugh the ~ar. It 7:30PM' slipped more tha..11 JO fef'~ before liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilii!!!i!!iiliiiiiiiiliiiliiiiiiiaiii~iiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiill ~-~-~----

8 the observer Monday, April17, 1978 Molarity \ by Michael Molinelli NOJFATHER. THINGS Courts disfavor Indian claims HAVE CHANGED QUITE The Wampanoags claimed title open for further negotiations. The A BIT SINCE" YOU LEI=T WASHINGTON [AP]--Recent court decisions a][ld proposed settlements 1 to about $30 million worth of prime tribes have given the state until HERE IN TH~ SIXTIES , are dealing blows to American Cape Cod land around Mashpee, May 10 to respond officially to the Indian efforts to reclaim lost lands arguing the land was unlawfully offer. Another case in which a tribe and achieve tribal sovereignty. : taken from their ancestors by the appears willing to settle for less Although many disputes have state because it failed to get than originally asked involves the not yet been resolved, the initial approval from Congress, as federal Narragansetts in Rhode Island. results indicate Indians are not. law required at that time. The tribe filed suit in 1975 to get getting everything they seek--and However, a federal judge ruled title to 3,500 acres in Charlestown. in some cases nothing at all. the Wampanoags, who greeted the But a proposed agreement worked Perhaps the most significant Pilgrims when they stepped out by local landowners and feder­ disputes in which courts have ashore, does not constitute a legal al, state, city and tribal officials recently ruled involve the Wam­ tribe and therefore could not claim pared the total down to 1, 900 acres. panoag Indians in Massachusetts the land. Tribal attorneys say they It includes about 1 ,000 acres of and a tribe in Washington seeking will appeal. state land and 900 acres of undevel­ the right to prosecute non-Indians In another case, the Supreme oped private land, on reservation land. Court forbad tribes from prosecut­ Not all recent actions, however, ing non-Indians who violate tribal involve defeat or compromise for laws on reservation lands. The the Indians. President Carter decision, involving the Suquamish recently signed into law a bill Art department tribe in Washington, was viewed permitting the Sioux Indians once by observers as a major setback for again to ask the U.S. Court of sponsors lecture Indians seeking complete self­ Claims to rule the federal govern­ determination. ment unconstitutionally acquired "Super Realism: The Sublime The nation's most celebrated more than seven million acres of Abstraction and the Decline of case involves a claim by the land in South Dakota's Black Hills Formalism" is the topic of a lecture Passamaquoddy and Penobscot in 1877. The court ruled against the to be given by Gregory Battock, art tribes to 12.5 million acres of land -Sioux in 1942. critic, editor and educator, in the in Maine, an area representing Notre Dame Art Gallery at 7:30 two-thirds of the state. p.m. tonight. Co-sponsored by the The tribes have voted over­ Art Gallery and the Art Depart­ whelmingly to accept a White ment, the talk is open to the public House-negotiated settlement that without charge. would give the Indians $25 million An associate professor of art at in federal money; all that to buy William Patterson College in New 300,000 acres of prime timberland Jersey and .at New York University, at $5 an acre, most of which is now Battock has edited "The New Art," owned by 14 large landowners; Placement Bureau "Minimal Art," "New ldeas in annual state payments of $1.7 Art," "The New American million for 15 years; and the option Cinema" and "New Artists to purchase 200,000 additional Video.'' He was editor-in-chief of acres at the fair market value of Arts Magazine from 1973 to 1975 about $112 an acre. and has contributed articles to Arts Timber companies and state Magazine, Art in America and Art officials have spoken out against and Artists .. the settlement, b~t left the door ----PRE-ADVANCE REGISTRAllON PROGiRAI ____IIIIIIII.

Pre-advance registration programs will be conducted for freshmen in all college program areas on MONDAY, APRIL 17 at 6:30P.M.

At each program complete information will be given on the advance registration procedures and on the sophomore year and its relationship to the degree curnculum. At some of the programs there will be mixers with the faculty and upperclass students, as well as tours of the facilities.

The meeting places for the programs, according to college program area, are as ~-· . follows: er..~...w~,::.u-J!t~ a~;./.··. ,_tiMDI:ttt •nd ~,....-~. MPlo~at; ... · ~"*o~. 1~(:/.}::::::: jff:{ ...... V'lo• l'llqottotl •• s~ ft.. ·.l10• .-n~ . .. : ::r,:;:;:;.;.~;:-: .·: ...

:!a.. •••h«h• Yitll tloo IIUn,;;; J;~~~~ • up Ntf hottl.. l•tt -• f._n- tJI!:ont- f"" tlliu.r ···•6 •:•~::: Arts and Letters College Programs (all, including AL Preprofessional) 01111 un. . .)}{{\

I Engineering Auditorium April 17 - April 21 I I I \ Thia Wtoek At The j i q&r.ar Develcpmcnt Center ::~tnt ~~ary'e College Business Administration College Program I 2'14-4431 I Hayes-Healy Center, Room 122, A through G at 6:30 P.M. tt:T~'!!F.W::!/ \ H through 0 at 7:30P.M. ---, I I MAJOR OOSJNED P through Z at 8:30P.M. ~ I ~ 1. April 21 All till!ll\Ot"S ~s. April 25 All M8..1ors Engineering College Programs

I Aerospace Engineering Bldg., Room 303 I Architecture Architecture Bldg., Room 202 ~ ~ Chemical Nieuwland Science Hall, Room 123 Civil Engineering Bldg., Room 205 ~ l.D, • ::~ 00- L. Wilson . Y.eCandles.s Piano Rm. ~:~,t. 41'· p.m. "..A. Daly Electrical Engineering Bldg., Room 212 ~I ~J.Jaion ~:akillf' · Engineering Science Engineering Bldg., Room 22 Va~es Clar1tleation (161 l.M,) Mechanical Engineering Bldg., Room 303 I Thurs. 3:15- Pat MeCormae"lt Executive Board Rm. i 4/20 5:15 Metallurgical Enginefring Bldg., Room 5

ftpen to all ::atnt ~.fary'l and Notre Dame e dante. Please 1ign up tr. at .the CDC, Student Af't'b\rl Wing, 175 '~· na Hall. Call the COC f'Ol 1.n~onu.t1on on po•tponet:tent• and caneella icna. .;.·------~---~-~--~--

Italian trains ,Jiogy Galvin Life Science Center, Room 278 BOWGNA• Ualy [U]-Searchers Authoril .hemistry Nieuwland Science Hall, Room 331 cutting through the crumpled coa­ I gercd b C:arth Sciences Earth Science Bldg., Room 101 rhes of a Venice-Rome express i across t1 Mathematics Computing Center & Math Bldg., Room 300 train reported yesterday that at i northbOi Microbiology Galvin Life Science Center, Room 102 least 43 persons were killed when it Bari tot' PhysiLs Nieuwland Science Hall, Room 327 collided with another passenger \ into the ,. .., ...... Preprofessional Nieuwland Science Hall. Room 127 train. !was tra·: - (Science only) 3ne American passenger, Ema coaches'' Steel of Beverly Hills, Calif., was .the Lagt• NOW AVAILh ., reported missing. An estimated embankfl i 120, including her husband and two AT other Americans, were injured and Red.., ONLY. NOTRE DAMI: taken to hospitals. The launi._ BOOKSTORE ·~ ARE REQUIRED TO ATTEND THE PROGRAM OF THE COLLEGE The southbound express crashed \THE" INTEND TO ENTER IN THE SOPHOMORE YEAR head-on into- a north-bound train coupons April ~. ·". Samrday in mountains 19 miles south of this central Italian city. andd~~. 1-3 p.m. St.. ,...... ~ ~--················ ..• --~----~--~- -- --...... --,-.

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Monday, April17, 1978 Botulism strikes in New Mexico CLOVIS* N.M. [AP]-One of the what was traced to improperly or anti-toxin, and that military largest outbreaks of botulism in the prepared home canned peppers planes were alerted to stand by in United States this century--29 service in a Mexican restaurant in case more patients needed to be cases--has been traced to a posh Pontiac, Mich. There were no evacuated to hospital intensive care country club here, and authorities deaths. units. said yesterday they have made New Mexico health investigators Botulism, a serious form of food emergency preparations in the say those stricken were among 800 poisoning caused by toxin pro­ event more people were stricken. people who dined at the swank duced in certain bacteria some­ Dr. Jonathan Mann, the state's Colonial Park Country Club res­ times found in improperly canned nobodv.~-- chief medical officer, said a third of taurant between April 9 and April foods, has early symptoms of the sick were in serious condition 13. blured vision, slurred speech and and placed on respirators. No Mann said the restaurant, which muscular difficulties. asked! · deaths were reported. has voluntarily closed while offi­ Robert G. Bratt, an official of the "What we feat is that the source cials try to track down the source of federal Food and Drug Administra­ of the poisoning is possibly a the contamination, appeared to tion, said the FDA was called in commercially sold food pmduct, have good food' management and when it was suspected a commer­ He was in h1s- twenties.1 - which could mean others in other sanitation practices. cial food caused the outbreak. parts of the country will get hold of This has led authorities to suspect "Our concem is finding the So was she. it also," Mann said. that commercially prepared food source of the poisoning and, if it Both were Catholic, unmarried, Last year, in what the national that may have been distributed involves a commercial food, we Center for Disease Control in elsewhere was the source of the must find out the extent of its prayerful, creative. Atlanta said was the worst out­ food poisoning. distribution," Brett said. break of botulism in U.S. history, Mann said Sunday that he asked Both cared about people 59 persons were sickened from the CDC to provide 100 more vials ~