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VOL. XVII, NO. 109 the imkpemknt stutlent newspaper serYing notre Jame anti saint mary's THURSDAY, MARCH 3, 1983 Burke investigates so ph election result By KEVIN BINGER Zahm was the only one where Campus Campaign Reporter someone who wanted to vote was turned away," said Koegel. He added Allegations that some sopho­ that the two sophomores who were mores were not allowed to vote turned away at Flanner were given Tuesday in the junior class election the opportunity to return later to are being investigated, according to vote, but never returned. Student Body President Lloyd Burke. The investigation will not be com· John Decker, presidential can­ pleted before the runoffs today. But didate for the Mob ticket, charged Burke said that "if the first election is that the extremely close election declared invalid, then the second was invalid since various polling election (the runoff)· is also negated places ran out of ballots, hindering and a new election will be re­ some voters. quired." Koegel stated that Breen­ "We're going to look into all the Phillips also ran out of ballots but allegations and take any appropriate created provisional ballots so that action," said Burke. He noted that if one more student could vote. He they find that the election for junior said that this is what should have class officers was unfair, they will ask been done at Zahm and what would the Student Senate to declare the have been done at Flanner had the election invalid. two sophomores there returned. Mike Schmitt's ticket came in first in Tuesday's election, receiving 34 The Ombudsmen were forced to Ted Snider, director of the Sacred Heart Boys' advantage of the nice weather yesterday by hold­ percent of the votes cast. Vince estimate the number of students of Choir, pauses in front of Crowley Music Hall to ing its practice procession outside. (Photo by Hockett's ticket finished second each class in each dorm, according instruct a member of the choir. The group took Paul Cifarelli) with 33 percent - accruing only to Koegel, because the student list nine fewer votes than Schmitt's tick­ they received from the registrar's et. Decker's ticket garnered 32 per­ office was not broken down by dorm 'Operation Brainstorm' contest cent, only four votes behind and class. Hockett's. Decker said that any sophomore "There is no doubt, though, that it votes that were not received be­ was our responsibility to get the Winner proposes undergrad club cause of lack of ballots could have right number of ballots to the By KATHLEEN DOYLE The Chautauqua Ballroom is the bars" in order to enhance and com­ influenced the results. He feels that dorms," said Koegel. Assistant News Editor suggested location for the club, but plete the Undergraduate Club's he should be included on the runoff the idea may not be realized for a commitment to providing an atmos· ballot along with Schmitt and Hock­ As the investigation progresses, "A virgin Mary, please." year or more. phere that would be similar to a real ett. Decker continues to lobby for his A Bloody Mary without the al­ "It's a great idea," James McDon­ bar. Tom Koegel, director of the Om­ right to be a part of the run-off, and cohol would be one drink available nell, Director of Student Activities "Students want a place to go on a budsmen and supervisor of the stresses his tickets strengths. "We at the proposed Undergraduate said. ''It would be a positive action consistent basis, to hang out at," elections said that Decker would not wanted to do something original and Club, the winning idea in the on behalf of the University to McDonnell said. "The club will have appear on the runoff ballot because have fun," said Decker. "It's not the "Operation Brainstorm" contest. provide a regular nonalcoholic to be open on a regular basis to be only one student had actually been same old junk that you hear year af­ The club would also place emphasis place for students to go. And the stu­ successful. One of the reasons unable to vote. ter year. If we did win we'd do the on dancing, popul

NewsBrie,b Thursday, March 3, 1983 - page 2 By The Obsen,er and The Associated Press

Doctor A. Robert Caponigri, philosophy professor and member at the University for 35 years, died yesterday Herschel hysteria in his South Bend home. Capanigri was scheduled to visit Spain later this year to receive a government prize for translating the work of Spanish philosopher Xavier Zubiri. Winner of the Fullbright and Since Heisman Trophy winner Herschel Walker Rockefeller fellowship awards, he was the author, editor, or trans­ signed a multi-zillion dollar contract with the New Jer­ lator of I 7 books and numerous scholarly papers dealing with the sey Generals of the United States Football League, we've Michael Monk history of modern and contemporary philosophy. He also wrote on been bombarded with editorials and commentaries aesthetics, humanities, and liberal education. Caponigri served as from the press praising his decision while accusing the Editor-in-Chief visiting professor or fellow at several American universities as well National Football League and college coaches of Inside Thursday as at the Universities of Madrid and Rome, Harvard's Center for hypocrisy for crying "foul" at the the new league's Italian Renaissance Studies, and the American University of Beirut in brashness. Lebanon. He lectured at Italian universities in Genova, Padua. Well, the bombardment continues with thi~ column. Bologna, Parma, Perugia, Pavia, Milano, and Torino, and at Spanish But, instead of glorifying Walker like some omnipotent young men, perhaps too young. Blinded by the glitter of universities at' Cordoba, Valencia, and Salamanca. Funeral services deity just for succumbing to his capitalist urges, what gold, manymay not foresee or understand the serious are set for Saturday at Notre Dame. - The Observer must be considered is the fate of all the other would-be problems and adjustments they must make on the way superstars who will attempt to follow Walker's path to to their own shangri-las. glory. The Times editorial asserts that "most athletes do not Corby's liquor license was renewed yesterday. at­ The editorials to which we have been subjected late­ attend top sports schools to read history and ter the owner Harold Rowley met with Alcoholic Beverage Board ly, such as in the February 28 issue of The New York philosophy." Aside from this blatantlv erroneous members to discuss underage drinking at the bar. Corby Tavern Times, concern themselves solely with Walker's deci­ generalization, college is and should be a iot more than originally was charged with selling alcoholic beverages to minors sion, while largely neglecting the negative ramifications book-learning. The college years are a priceless time and hindering law enforcement during a raid by South Bend police it could have for those underclassmen who try to dupl­ which allows young men and women the opportunity last October. Since the bar did not have any current violations icate his pioneering achieve­ to grow, develop, and against it, renewal of the license was automatic. - The Observer ment. The Times calls mature before being cast out Walker's signing "the best to the harsh "real world." play of his life" and tri­ College does protect us umphantly proclaims that from the real world, but it Authorities say an unemployed computer "several times over, Mr. also prepares us for it. Many programmer in Glennallen, Alaska, went on a shooting rampage in a Walker is now a mil­ students have a difficult snowbound, backcountry village, killing six of lts 22 residents before lionaire." It is apparent that enough time adjusting to the he fled in a snowmobile and was arrested by troopers. In custody at the Times editorial writers rigors and demands of col­ Anchorage, charged with six counts of frrstdegree murder, was 39- subscribe to the same lege. What is to happen to year-old Louis D. Hastings. He was held yesterday in lieu of 5300,000 muddled way of thinking young men, many barely out bond, and authorities said they had no clue to what prompted the that proliferates and mis­ of high school, when thrust shootings. Christopher Richards, one of two injured survivors ofthe leads modern society: that of into the spotlight with violence in the town of McCarthy, told police he remembered vivid­ equating the amount of greenbacks overflowing ly the words of the man who shot him Tuesday: "look, you're already money one amasses with the from their pockets? Many dead. If you'll just quit fighting, I'll make it easy for you." Instead, the level of success. But con­ may not be mentally, as well 29-year-old Richards said, he grabbed a knife, slashed his assailant trary to what these "get it as physically, mature and fled in his stocking feet into the snow. - AP while you can" moralists enough to undertake such would suggest, money does tremendous respon­ not make the man. It doesn't sibilities. We need not rack even come close. our memories to recall lives An estimated 125 million viewers watched the I do not disagree with Walker's decision itself. It was a shattered because of the inability to deal appropriately final episode of"M*A*S*H," making the audience the largest for any very advantageous and wise one - for him. But now he with the sudden onslaught of riches and public single TV show ever broadcast, CBS said today. CBS' estimate was has set the stage for other underclassmen, including notoriety. based on a rating from the A.C. Nielsen Co. for the 2-1/2-hour sophomores and freshmen, to negotiate contracts with There are plenty of athletes who have made the jump program broadcast Monday night of 60.3. That eclipsed by good the second rate USFL. Unlike Walker, most ofthese ath­ from college to the pros and have successfully dealt measure the previous record of53.3 for the "Who Shot JR.?" episode letes will not be offered a majority share in Fort Knox. with their new found wealth and fame. But never before of CBS' "Dallas," shown Nov. 21, 1980. Further, nearly eight of every Most will settle for one or two year contracts worth has the prospect of so many college juniors, sopho­ 10 TV sets in use nationwide during the broadcast of"M*A*S*H" - about 540-80,000 a year, big bucks now but mere mores, and freshmen pursuing glamorous careers in a 77 percent - were tuned to CBS. The "M* A*S*H" finale, for which peanuts in the long run. pro sport been so prominent. For every one that makes advertisers paid as much as 5450,000 for a 30-second commercial, All of the sudden, guys just barely back from their the jump successfully, there will be another unable to atttracted nearly 10 million homes more than "Who Shot JR.?" - high school proms and still suffering from acne will be deal with the pressures and adjustments. These are the 50.3 million to 40.7 million. A single ratings point is worth 833,000 flashing rolls of dough in the big city crawling with athletes that need the four college years to grow, homes today, an increase from 763,000 in 1980. The audience­ parasites and full of the fascinations of life in the fast develop, and mature. estimate breaks the record for a single show of 111.5 million, NBC's lane. Many simply will not be able to deal with their ·Wisdom and maturity do not necessarily come with calculation for Super Bowl XVII last Jan. 30. ABC's recently broad­ age. But in this brutal battle being fought out in the cast "Winds of War" miniseries drew an estimated 140 million new-found fame, fortune, and independence that such a lawyers offices and college campuses across the viewers, but that was for an 18-hour production carried over seven life offers. To say that it won't happen is to ignore a country for quick money and instant stardom, let's not nights. -AP potentially serious problem. Already a sophomore from Pitt says that he will sign with a USFL team before long. throw the soldiers into the war until they've had a The lure of gold certainly will attract dozens of other chance to learn how to fight. Ralph David Abernathy, veteran civil rights leader, has returned to a Baltimore hospital for brain surgery aimed at preventing a second strokt;. After suffering a mild stroke Jan. 21, Abernathy, 56, was flowri to Johns Hopkins Hosptal for treatment, but was sent home to eecover before the surgery. Abernathy was readmitted Tuesday. No date has been set for the surgery. Abernathy is president emeritus of the Southern Christian Leadership Con­ ference and was a top aide to the late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

Design Editor ...... Tim Neely Design Assistant ... Mary Healy Typesetters ...... Jim MacLennan The federal government agreed yesterday to ac­ AI Novas cept 52 million from a Texas oil driller to settle all claims arising News Editor...... Jeff Harrington Copy Editor...... Beth Hackett from the largest oil spill in hislory, a 1979 blowout in the Gulf of Feature.o.; Layout ...... Joe Musumeci Mexico that took nine months to clean up. The agreement was filed Editorials Layout...... Tari Brown in U.S. District Court in Houston. It resolves a complicated lawsuit B& T Layout...... Ed Konrady Alex Szlvia~ .·~ . between the Justice Department and Sedco Inc., founded by former .Sports Copv Editor...... Mike Sullivan Texas Gov. Bill Clements. Sedco had leased the rig to Permargo, a ND Dar hditor. ... Ann Bailey Mexican outfit that had an exploration contract with the Mexican SMC Day Editor ...... Tari Brown national oil company Pemex. The Justice Department had sought to TJ'Pists ...... \larv Beth Porter recover $12.5 million in cleanup costs from Sedco and Perm argo Ad Oesign ...... Marilyn Larkin Photographer...... Paul Ciforcllo and had asked an unspecified amount for the cleanup work along the Guest Appearances ...... Variou~ pow~:r· south Texas coast. The well, Ixtoc I, blew up June 3, 1979, at a depth monger' of 6,207 feet below the seabed. It had been a test well drilled in a and power-hooker~ field in the Bay ofCampeche that is estimated to contain at least 33.6 and Tom MacLennan billion gallons of crude oil. Initially. the well spewed 1.2 million gallons of oil a day and billows of natural gas. About half the oil was burned off but the rest spread onto the beaches of Texas despite efforts to collect it with flotation collars. The Justice Department WEDNESDAY said it agreed to the settlement because it believes "there were sub­ stantial legal obstacles to recovery." Among those was a trial court MARCH 9, 1983 8 pm decision March 30, 1982, which held that Sedco's drilling rig was a "vessel" in the definition of the Limitation of Liability Act and The Observer (USPS 598 920) os MORRIS recovery under that act would have been limited to 5530,000. The published Monday through Fnday and on home football Saturdays except well was 50 miles off-shore and the spill was twice as large as the dunng exam and vacatoon peroods The CIVIC worst previous one, 65.5 million gallons, when the tanker Amoco Observer IS publoshed by the ~tudents Cadiz ran aground and sank near Portsal, France, on March 16, I 978. of Notre Dame and Saont Marys Col· AUDITORIUM -AP lege Subscnptlons may be purchased for $25 per year ($15 per semester) by wntong The Observer P 0 Box 0 TICKETS $5.50 & $6.50 Notre Dame Indo ana 46556 with near record warmth. High around 70. The Observer IS a member of The Sunny today Associated Press All reproductoon AT SU BOX OFFICE Increasing cloudiness and mild tonight. Low in the upper 40s to low nghts are reserved 50s. Cloudy and continued warm tomorrow. High in the mid to up­ Second class postage paod at Notre AFTERWARDS BRING YOUR TICKET STUBS TO per 60s. -AP Dame. lndoana 46556 RAFFERTY'S FOR DRINK SPECIALS 211D REQUIRED ------~ ---~------.

The Observer Thursday, March 3, 1983 - page 3 Marian Wright Edelman SMC chooses graduation speaker By SUSAN O'HARA In 1968 Edelman started the If found to exemplify the qualities Staff Reporter Washington Research Project, now Saint Mary's seeks to foster in its stu­ the Children's Defense Fund, and dents, the list of candidates is Marian Wright Edelman, presi­ has served as the director since its presented to the Board of Regents dent of the Children's Defense Fund inception. CDF was organized to for final approval, according to Hol­ has been chosen to deliver the 1983 defend and expand the rights of land. commencement address at Saint children through the courts and has This years honorary degree Mary's College. promoted the cause of quality child reCipients include Father john Edelman was selected because care. Catoir, Frances Moore Lappe, Mic­ her life, works and achievements Edelman has traveled to Hanoi as hael Mott, and Rosalyn S. Yalow. provide a role-model for the women a member of the President's Com­ Catoir, director of the Christop­ of Saint Mary's, according to joan mission on MIA's and now serves as a hers , received a doctorate in Canon Holland, chairperson of the com­ board member for the German Mar­ Law from Catholic University in mencement committee. shall Fund, the NAACP Legal 1964, and is author of the national Defense and Education Fund, the Edelman has been active in civil bestseller Enjoy the Lord. Lappe is Aetna Life and Casuality Foundation, rights and public interest affairs and co-founder of the Institute for Food the Atari Institute and Essence is noted for her "tireless committ­ and Development Policy, a non­ Magazine. She is also a member of ment to the poor and her devotion profit public education and the District of Columbia bar and the. to justice," said Holland, who also documentation center. A member of Commonwealth of Massachusetts acts as assistant to the President at the faculty at Bowling Green State bar. Saint Mary's. Referring to Edelman as University, Mott has written several books on poetry and presently is "the finest of role models," Holland Edelman has received numerous finishing the official biography of said the civil rights leader embodies honorary degrees and in 1971 was Thomas Merton. Yalow, the final qualities and values that are "worthy named by Time magazine as one of recipient, is the second woman ever of emulation by our students - America's 200 young leaders. qualities such as compassion, con­ to win the Nobel Prize in medicine The selection process for a com­ cern and justice." and currently is chairman of the mencement speaker is a long one department of clinical sciences at Edelman was born in Bennet­ which begins in the spring with sug­ the Montefiore Hospital and Medical tsville, So. Carolina, and attended gestions submitted from the stu­ Center in the Bronx. She is a distin­ Yale Law School and Spelman Col­ dents of the junior class, Regents, guished professor-at-large at the Al­ lege, where she presently chairs the Alumnae Board, Parents' Council bert Einstein College of Medicine at Board of Trustees. After graduating members, faculty and ad­ Yeshiva University. from Yale in 1963, Edelman founded ministrators. The compiled list of The College also awards the Presi­ and directed the NAACP Legal candidates is reviewed, screened dent's medal to someone whose Defense and Education Fund Office and edited by the Academic Affairs service merits recognition. This year in jackson, Miss., and became the Council, which is comprised of ten that award will be given to jerry first black woman admitted to the members of the President's commit­ Hammes, the vice-president of the Mississippi bar. tee. Board of Regents. Richard Steele (right), a South African currently living in • Elkhart, leads a discussion group on conditions in South Africa. Bettcher lecture Steele, who will be returning to his native country next month, is strongly opposed to the mandatory service now required in the South African army. He spoke last night at the Center for Social Director advocates 'natural order' Concerns. (Photo by Paul Cifarelli) By BILL HOGAN (in the children of) women who use "interfere. with the God-given rela­ News Staff them," said Bettcher, because they tion between sexual intercourse and are "intended to alter or kill sperm." the married life." Natural family planning "respects The "barrier methods" of the NFP, on the other hand, can be the natural order" and "increases diaphragm and condom "interfere "quite a vehicle for communication ~iglJt.& nf tlft Miners' protest seems orchestrated

~~. . . DONETSK, U.S.S.R. (AP) - The misdeeds familiar to any student of Sokolov, who read the text of a letter Soviet government cheers when the Soviet media. After loud ap­ from the workers to their comrades anti-war demonstrators take to the plause, five workers took the stand in West Germany. It argued that streets in the West, but keeps its to read statements. The message in Soviet missiles are "not first-strike own peace meetings indoors and each was the same - peace without weapons" but "a missile shield and ensures they are carefully con­ new American missiles in Europe. not a sword. ... a means of defense trolled. A pensioner remembered the against U.S. nuclear weapons that At Donetsk's Chelyutsin coal mine fight against Nazism. The only have long been deployed in the this week, 600 workers crowded in­ woman to speak appealed to West Federal Republic of Germany and to a meeting hall during their lunch German mothers to stop their other NATO countries." hour for 45 minutes of protests children from dying in the holocaust There was no applause after the against the North Atlantic Treaty Or­ threatened by the new American reading of the letter. Instead, the ganization's plans to deploy new U.S. weapons. workers were asked if they ap­ nuclear missiles in Western Europe The parade of speakers ended proved the text. All raised their late this year. with a mine official, Valentin hands. Then the meeting broke up. The men were in spotless miners' uniforms creased, with no trace of coal dust on their boots, hats and lamps. Pope John Paul II Like Western demonstrators, they carried placards - "down with the nuclear arms race," "Do not permit arrives in Costa Rica nuclear catastrophe." A cowboy looking like Ronald SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (AP) - queremos, Juan Pablo," Spanish for Reagan was on one poster, balancing Pope John Paul II arrived yesterday "We love you, John PauL" All busi­ precariously on a tightrope with a with messages of hope and peace for ness shut down at noon, and the misile in one hand and the letters Central America - a region shat­ government virtually stopped New York Mayor Edward Koch listens to former Israeli defense "MX" in the other. tered by violence that has killed operations for the rest of the week, minister Ezer Weizman shortly before they bad lunch at Weiz­ But these demonstrators did not 100,000 people in the past five as the whole country appeared to man's bouse in Caesarea, Israel. The Lebanese government bad wave their banners. They held them years. want to make the best impression withdrawn Koch's invitation to see President Gemayel. ( AP Photo) still while four cameras from Soviet The pontiffs plane touched possible. Television photographed them. ground at 3:24p.m. (4:24p.m. EST) Costa Rica was playing up the The Soviet Union has staged a after a 14-hour flight from the religious aspect ofthe event. "We do series of such meetings and the offi­ Vatican with a stopover in Portugal. not have to use his visit for _Wygant ~lor~l CO.Inc. cial Soviet news agency Tass carries Hundreds of thousands of resi­ propaganda purposes," said a news reports on the meetings. The dents of this heavily Roman Catholic government official. He asked not to West German government of Chan­ nation of 2.5 million - an oasis of be identified, apparently so he cellor Helmut Kohl, who favors the political calm in a troubled area - would not offend neighboring missile deployment, has protested lent a festive atmosphere to the Len­ countries the pope will visit, where that the meetings and Tass reports ten season, generally a time of sensitive political issues are in­ amount to meddling in Sunday's penance for the faithfuL volved. •'g{)Qwe~tg fp~ oQQ -occm~iotm ·· West German elections. John Paul kissed the ground at San There was no cheering or chant­ Jose's Juan Santamaria Airport, The itinerary includes El Salvador _Come-in and Brows~ ing by the coal miners, just applause repeating a gesture from his three where a full-blown guerrilla war has after each speech from a podium previous trips to Latin America, and devastated the country and 327 lincolnway. 232-3354 adorned with a large red banner then rode 18 miles to the city to Nicaragua where the traditional proclaiming that miners from the meet with Central American bis­ church is under attack by a guerrilla­ region opposed nuclear arms. hops. Rain stopped just before the led government. The first speaker, Mikhail Kukhar arrival, but skies remained overcast. CABINET POSITIONS OPEN!! of the miners' union, recited a ten­ Cheering Costa Ricans waved and The Vatican has emphasized that minute litany of alleged Western held aloft signs saying "Te the visit is strictly pastoral, but the pope will face political pressures that are bound to be as difficult as Interested in working with any he has faced in his 16 other Corby's foreign trips. Student Government next year? The prospect of the visit has Thursday Night brought joy and expectation to Get an application from your Hall Pres. or in many of the people of Costa Rica, the Student Government Office today!! Special which is politically calm but is Deadline for Applications Monday, 5PM suffering severe social and economic problems.

A dreary, windswept rain did not r~~---~------~------~ Molson Ale keep city employees from draping pedestrian overpasses with ~ c::J\fotu. :bam:: -~'aintcJ111myi f'Jhwh7. qJ.. o.Ef1tj_ t evergreens, banners and flowers. ~ Bottles The road to the seminary, where the Pope meets with 55 Central American bishops, was lined by mid­ I Special Offer! I day with civil guard troops, sta­ tioned about 100 feet apart. They were unarmed but carried rope I 1 $1~00 whips and clubs for crowd controL Government expectations for the turnout at an open-air Mass in Sabana Park today reach 1 million - ! Go ND Basketballers! more than a third of Costa Rica's population. $1 admission EARN OVER $1000 A MONTH. THUitSDfiY OHLY AND OPEN THE DOOR TO A TOP ENGINEERING FUTURE.

How many corporations would be willing to pay you over $1000 a month during your junior and senior years just so you'd join the company after graduation? Under a special Navy program we're doing just that. March] It's called the Nuclear Propulsion Officer Candidate-College Program. And under it, you'll not only get great pay during your junior and senior years, but after graduation you'll receive a year of valuable graduate-level training that is not available from any other employer. If you are a junior or senior majoring in math, engineering or physical sciences, find out more today. And let your career pay off while still in college. For more information, call the Naval Management Programs Office at: 1-800-382-3782 The Observer Thursday, March 3, 1983 - page 5 Personnel departments promote summer work By AMY STEPHAN main categories. Service job t s in­ .VewsStajf clude groundskeeping, paint crew. and maintenance: clerical jobs in­ Still searching for summer volve working in an office or in the employment? There might be a sum­ library; and technical jobs involve mer job tor you under the Dome. work as a lab assistant or computer The personnel department of programmer. :'1/otre Dame will begin accepting ap­ Seager specified that those apply­ plkations f()r summer employment ing for jobs at Notre Dame are asked this .\1onday. The Saint Mary's per­ to indicate on their application sonnel oftke will begin accepting three of eighteen general areas in applications March 1 S. which they are interested in Acc~rding to Carol Seager of the working. :\lotre Dame personnel department. Last year 600 applicants applied it is still too early to determine how for 225. jobs. according to Seager. A many positions will be available this priority system i;> in effect at both year. However, she said that ap­ Saint Mary's and Notre Dame which proximately 225 jobs were available places students of each respective last summer. school third in order of hiring Seager explained that her office priority out of a list of seven general has contacted the various super­ applicant-categories. visors and department heads Seager commented. "I don't want concerning their need for summer the students to think they're at the employees. The department heads bottom of the list." joan Spohrer, her husband George, Peggy marriage during a "Dual Careers Couples Talk." have until April 1 to state their re­ Salaries vary from job to job with­ Hayes, and Bill Kovalcik (left to right) illustrate last night. (Photo by Paul Cifarel/i) quirements for summer workers. in each school. Summer jobs at Saint their sentiments toward balancing a job and Soon after the April I deadline, Mary's pay between S3.3S and S4 the personnel office will begin to per hour. Salaries for jobs at Notre match applicants to available jobs, Dame have not yet been Amoco grant 'not enough' according to Seager. Therefore, al­ determined, ' but according to though the department has not set a Seager, there will be two basic pay­ deadline for accepting applications, rates. Engineering school lacks funds Seager stated "It would be to their The personnel office at Notre (the applicants') advantage to have ByJACK AMARO a very high priority but it is also very working with the development Dame is located in Brownson Hall their applications in by April I." News Staff expensive. We have to buy a bigger and is open from 8 a.m. to noon and office in the administration to get Saint Mary's personnel depart­ central processing unit and more from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m., Monday more needed computers so that in ment has not yet determined exactly The Amoco Foundation grant of terminals for the labs and the in­ through Friday. Saint Mary's person­ the near future the department will what jobs will be available this sum­ $300,000 to the engineering depart­ structors." nel office is open from 8 a.m. until be able to give students what they mer, according to the office of the ment of Notre Dame will not be 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. A recently acquired asset are ten need. According to Taylor, "new assistant director of personnel. The enough to give all the help necessary Apple II computers donated to the computers to help the computer Saint Mary's office will be accepting Seager noted that students must to update the computer laboratory University by Apple after being used needs of the engineering depart­ applications until May 15. complete a new application every of the college, according to James in the World's Fair in Tennessee. ment is one of the highest priorities Jobs in both schools fall into three summer. Taylor, associate dean of engineer­ According to Taylor, Albert Miller, of the development office." Taylor ing. professor of engineering, will use stressed the fact that the Amoco "The college did not have ade­ these computers to give experience Foundation gift is not enough to ful­ quate facilities from the beginning. to freshman engineers in his class. fil1 all of the needs of the college. Club For that reason we were never able "The gift will help," said Taylor, "but • • • to keep our computers up to date The engineering department is we need more than this". with our needs," said Taylor. "The Club, has applied for the position. continued from page 1 grant is a big improvement, but it is Ciotta is hoping that he will be able not enough to supply computer to do more for the club by working must meet with Placement and capability for all of our needs." TODAY March 3 from that post. assure them that they could still set The foundation's grant, the largest "I like the Undergraduate Club up the partitions for the interviews, one yet, will be given to the Univer­ ENGLISH Library Lounge 4:30 idea," McDonnell said. "In January, I as they do now. The atmosphere sity to fund a modernization of the HISTORY Rm. 219 o'Shag. 6:30 attended a conference in Illinois. may even be more conducive for computer facilities for the engineer­ COTH Loft, 2nd fir. O'Shag 6:30 One of the items that came up was holding interviews. The other re­ ing department. The grant will be alcohol prevention. At the Univer­ THEATRE RM. 1, Wash. Hall 6:30 quirement involves the students. paid in five annual S60,000 install­ sity of Minnesota, a group has MUSIC Rm.115 Crowley HaiL .r:·.~o The students need to say 'we want ments. . ~ ·: :- .·,. ,·. :;.~. . :.. . . . created a nonalcoholic, alternative ' . an Undergraduate Club.' We need Because the grant will not be . .... ·.·.:·' bar." student support to generate ad­ given in one installment, the depart­ The University of Minnesota al­ ministration support," he con­ ment will modernize in phases, said ternative bar is funded through a tinued. Taylor. One of the first phases will grant from the Minnesota Student Abrams suggests building a disc be the addition of three-dimensional Association and sponsored by a jockey booth in Chautauqua. The compugraphics and touch sensitive group called Chemical Abuse set-up now used for "Chance to TV screens. The engineering depart­ Prevention through Peers. It offers a ------Dance" presents acoustic problems ment already has purchased one so­ ------menu of ten nonalcoholic drinks and Abrams believes a built-in booth phisticated system of that can be ordered in any bar. MUSIC FOR YOUR NEXT PARTY would solve these problems and im­ compugraphics. "If we didn't have the problem of prove the sound quality. He also The Col1ege of Engineering 3 HOURS OF DANCING FOR $150 the Placement-Bureau, we might be would like to see a wide screen Services Committee, which is in able to go ahead," McDonnell said. "I MICHIANAS LARGEST MOBILE MUSIC SERVICE television placed in the ballroom. · charge of buying these modernizing have heard that when the faculty REQUESTS TAKEN Football games, popular soap systems, is not certain about te prob­ office building is finished, the Place­ operas, MTV, and feature television ability of buying more sophisticated ment Bureau will move to the base­ movies would be shown, making the systems. According to Taylor, who ment of the library." ~ Undergraduate Club into something chairs the committee, "the system is MUSIC MACHINE Let's drink to that. of a coffeehouse at those times. BUD HALL 679-4043 Abrams believes the club should be ~ open seven days a week. HEY JUNIORS! "'The money for the club is here," ------said Abrams. "The Student Union made money this year. But the ad­ ''FALL'' into the ministration, the Student Union, and the Student Government must see SUMMER SPECIAL the students show an interest in this BAHAMAS! before they'll allot the money. One October Break '83 (DEPART: Day after usc game!) RATES dollar of each student's activity fee, STORAGE which is included in the tuition, INCLUDES:.a days & 7 nights at the could be allocated for the renova­ Sheraton British Colonial non of Chautauqua. But students RESERVATION must let them know they want this. • Round trip transportation from South Bend ~ Maybe there should be a referen­ to Nassau (-) MASTER MINI dum to show the administration . how much student support there is. - . WAREHOUSES "'Whether or not there is an Un­ • COST:$410 ~~ ~ dergraduate Club. Chautauqua is A $150 deposit will be collected in Very Close to Campus there. so the students should enjoy Approx 2% Miles North US 31 it. Suppon or lack of support for LaFortune Lobby Gates Open All Day Sunday Chautauqua may . determine 1 Thur. March 3 7·8PM ~ whether Chautauqua will go under l I or become the Undergraduate ... Fri. March 4 3·5PM ~ -. - - Club," Abrams continued. Bring Your I D ::1--1\: :~t ~\ : ~ Abrams' term as Chautauqua ....., Call Now ~ manager will end April 1 Ciotta. .11·~ FOR MORE INFO CALL: _J I -1 who proposed thf' Undf'fgraduate - i- -( Donna 6874-Tom 1783•Stella 6874 l I 683·1959 The Observer Thursday, March 3, 1983 - page 6 Economic indicators predict strong recovery

WASHINGTON (AP) The be taken as a sign of a coming government's main economic economic boom" since the index forecasting gauge shot upward 3.6 was pushed up by special factors percent in january, the biggest gain such as unusually mild weather and in three decades and an apparent a new type of bank account that new sign that the nation's recovery swelled the measured money supp­ from recession may be more robust ly. than many have predicted. Most economists already were Commerce Secretary Malcolm assuming an economic rebound had Baldrige called his department's begun, and Undersecretary of Com­ report yesterday "highly favorable" merce Robert Dederick had said for recovery. And a national business Tuesday the recovery almost surely group quickly raised its own will be stronger than the administra­ forecast of 1983 U.S. economic tion's forecast of a 3.1 percent over­ growth. all business expansion from the If anyone still doubted the nation fourth quarter of last year to the was pulling out of the 1981 I 82 fourth quarter of 1983. recession, Baldrige said, "There has Echoing that opinion, Alexander never been a gain in the leading in­ Trowbridge, president of the Na­ dex in the past this large without an tional Association of Manufacturers, economic recovery." said yesterday, "Based on the The january gain in Commerce's january numbers, we think we can Index of Leading Economic In­ revise upward our estimate of real dicators was the fifth monthly in­ growth in 1983 to a level of about crease in a row and the largest since 3. 5 percent to 4 percent, which is up the 4.1 percent of july 1950. over our earlier estimate of 2. 5 per­ The index, a compilation of 12 cent to 3 percent. About 400 members of the U.S. 25th Infantry were moved to participate in the annual U.S. - economic measures, is designed to "So things are looking better," he Division's Quick Reaction Force arrive at Osan Korea joint Military traning exercises "Team show trends of the whole economy. said. U.S. Air Force base in South Korea Tuesday. They Spirit '83." ( AP Photo) Baldrige, commenting in a state­ The only negative indicator was a ment distributed by aides, cautioned drop in orders for new plants and that the January figures "should not equipment.

• • • PACE

continued from page 1 ment moved. "The Huddle is not a bad place, We need a central facility." but it serves only starch foods," The plan "nicely takes care of so­ McDonnell says. "Most student cen­ I cial groups but it addresses only ters around the country offer al­ -o~ Thursday is Tankard Night in the 1- I \ one-ninth or one-tenth of our stu­ ternative dining facilities, such as Terrace Lounge at the South Bend dents," he says. "I think there is in­ pizza parlors, to the students." Marriott! South Bend's largest stitutional confusion on what to do. During his research on student 34 oz. tankard of beer is only "I'm confused by the PACE centers, McDonnell says he has Report,': he continues. "It mentions gained an understanding of the type several problems with student social of facilities necessary. "A lot of $4.00 lounge space with comfortable and and YOU KEEP THE SOUVENIR life but offers no real solutions." Plans for a new student center or attractive furniture is important," he GLASS TANKARD! the renovation and expansion of says. "A regular movie theater which Refills every weekday from LaFortune have been discussed for shows first-run films is also a good 4 -7 p.m. (on Thursdays until closing) several years. Many complain that idea." are just $2.00! taFortune is an outdated and poorly "If you put all these things in a used building. building, it can operate on its own ..y McDonnell has done research on without funding from the Univer­ student centers at several other uni­ sity," ht: said. He gave the example of J ve~sities, with the hope of gaining the Irish Gardens flower shop which ~ The Place to Be! knowledge for improvements here grossed 518,000 in its t1rst three 123 N. St. Joseph St., South Bend at Notre Dame. "This center months in LaFortune. Burns said that each student cen­ (LaFortune) is an embarassment," (219) 234-2000 ter the Assessment Committee he says. "It was not built to be a stu­ dent center." visited last spring had its own in­ dividual planning board. In LaFortune was originally built in LaFortune "Student Union does all 1884 as a science hall. The east por­ the planning. There is such a tion of the building was added later. proprietorship on campus,'' she said. The building was converted to a stu­ dent center after the science depart- Concerning LaFortune, Burns says,-"1 don't think it's adequate at all. There's been an explosion across the country and (Notre Dame) KEG SPECIALS hasn't kept pace." BUD LIGHT ..... 29.99 Burns also mentioned the limited MICHELOB •.... 35.99 social space in some halls. She-con­ GENERIC ..•.... 24.99 siders each dorm "a satellite." She OLD characterized the proposed plan as "typical of the University's band-aid MILWAUKEE .. 26.99 approach. "I think they (administration members) have our interests at heart," she said. A new student cen­ ter would be best, according to ---===-Y_O_U'_RE_W_A_S_TI_N_;_G _YO_U_R_M_O_NE_Y_B_UY_I_NG_A_N_YW_H_E_R_E _EL_S_E!_t!i Burns, but she considers renovating and adding on to LaFortune "more LIQUOR WINES feasible - especially since the DEPOSIT $10 KEG $45 TAP KINGS CELLAR VALUE QUARTS ~ BLACI TOWER NO RENT .l.L FEE IF RETURNED Fieldhouse is coming down." GIN OR VODU LIEBFRAUMILCH 75111L 349 MILLER LITE ..... 8.99 WITHiN S DAYS When consulted by the PACE Sub­ 399 499 799 PRICES GOOD AT SOUTH BEND AVE committee on Student life, McDon­ BUD ....•...... 9.29 MANISCHEWITZ 75111L STORE ONLY 750 IlL 1.0LITU 1.75LITU PINA·STRAWIERRY 0 nell recommended similar action. "I OLD COCONEnA 2Foa5° I SATURDAY ONLY I SATURDAY ONLY think it would be much cheaper to GORDON'S VODKA 750 IlL 429 r------~---·-- MILWAUKEE ... 7.49 ~ ·t ZONIN I 3-5-13 I 3-5-13 renovate and add on,'' he said. , . ,· ASTI SPUMANTE 750 ML 4'. GORDON'S GIN 750 IlL 499 I CASTILLO I While no official plans for -.r•r• I RUM I HEINEKEN 719 I I renovating LaFortune or building a JACK DANIELS 750 IlL t., ' TAYLORCHAMPAGNES 750 IlL 4" I I new student center exist, ad­ I I WINDSOR 19 ...... J CHRISTIAN IROS . 139!1 ministrators are still discussing both CANADIAN 1.75 LITU I 3~~ML I 10 CORDIALS WIIIESuullt 399 options. University President Father ~ LIMIT 1 PEl PUS011 LIII1T 1 Pfl PfllSOI 11 BAILEYS IRISM CREAM 75111L 11" + Theodore Hesburgh has commis­ KESSLER'S BLEND 1.75 Llllt 9 499 LEROUX AMAREnO 751ML 7" CARLO ROSSI. LITIIS I ------FRI & SAT I ------SATURDAY ONLY - sioned Tyson, Father Edward Mol­ 19 SEVEN CROWN 1.1s urb 10 GALLO loy, associate provost, and Father KALUHA 75111L a• I STROH 1I BLUEu~ PREMIUMS u um 299 & William Beauchamp. administrative CASTILLO RUM 1.75 LITER g• FRAIIGELICO 51111L a• I LIGHT I NUN . KIUMWIUU assistant to the executive vice presi· ALMADEN PEPPERMINT SCHNAPPS 751 ML 4" J & B SCOTCH 750 ML 819 MOUNTAIN WINES u Lilli 3" dent, to gather information by the OUCONTE CORDIALS u ulll 4" I ! 3~~11L ~ end ofthis semester concerning the JIM BEAM BOURBON usuru 10" E & J BRANDY 75111L 5" BLUE NUN 75111L 3" LIMIT 1 Pfl PIISOI feasibility of a new or renovated stu­ dent center. ---~ -~-----~------

Business & T echnology_Thu_rsda_y,M_arch_3, 19-83 _Pa_ge 7 Engineering Update Lisa project Apple introduces new computer leads the Soviet Union by a 15-1 The United States disks. Lisa includes word processing, Mr. Couch, who is the dire :tor of margin in basic technologies that "have the potential for significant­ By ALEXANDER GLOCKNER accounting, and graphics functions, the Lisa project (which includes ly changing the military balance in the next 10 to 20 years," a Pen­ B&T Reporter among others in its available research, construction, and market­ tagon report says. "This indicates that the United States has John Couch, vice-president of software. Lisa can be updated to in­ ing), also spoke about the history of maintained its lead in most of the basic technologies critical to Apple Computer, Inc., clude additional functions written Lisa. It was conceived in 1980, defense, although the Soviets are eroding the lead in some of the demonstrated the Lisa, Apple's by the user or someone else, and needed 300 person-years and $25 basic technologies," Richard De Lauer, undersecretary of defense for newest microcomputer, yesterday Apple promises to be able to make million to dev.. lop, with the first research and engineering, said in his annual report to Congress. One afternoon at the Center for Continu­ Lisa act like a standard computer, Lisas available in mid-April to fill the of the key technologies in which the United States is ahead of the ing Education. with special languages and com­ thousands of already existing orders. Soviet Union involves "stealth" which are expected to allow While it is faster and has more mands. in the near future. development of bombers, cruise missiles and fighters that would be memory than its predecessors, Lisa's virtually invisible to Soviet radar, the report indicated. But the notable feature is its revolutionary report, which became available yesterday, also said the Soviets are easy-to-learn instructions, designed gaining in six technical areas of defense where the U.S. military still for business applications. maintains its lead. DeLauer said the Soviets are spending nearly Instead of requiring special lan­ double U.S. outlays in an effort to close what he spoke of as the guages and commands to perform a "technological gap." The Reagan administration's fiscal 1984 budget task, Lisa displays, either verbally or calls for $23.5 billion on rsearch, an increase of $4.8 billion over this pictorially, the options available to year. the user. The user then selects the option he desires with a "mouse", an indicator that can go anywhere on Economic Update .- • the display by using a hand-held con­ trol. Lisa is designed to overcome two major problems with using com­ Speaker of the House Tip O'Neill Jr. said today he puters in the business world. Lisa would urge elimination of"pork barrel" provisions from a 54.6 bil­ solves the first problem, the length lion recesssion-relief measure heading for quick House approval. of time required for first-time users O'Neill criticized Democratic members of the House Appropria­ to acquaint themselves with the tions Committee who added costly public works or transportation computer, with its software (built-in projects to the bill for their congressional districts. "I think it is instructions), which simulates the wrong to do that," O'Neill said. "I will personally tell them .... I was normal business office. The TV-like disappointed in what they did." There is n 10 million in the bill for display acts as an "electronic mass transit, most of it designated for districts of the 10 members on desktop", on which the user can put the Appropriations subcommittee on transportation which ap­ "documents" (reports, graphs, proved the S4.6 billion measure last week. Other programs critics balance sheets, etc.), "folders", have objected to including highway and water projects in the which can have documents inside measure, but two senior House Democrats have said they will seek them, and "filing cabinets", which to add more money for health care and for mass transit on a national can store folders. The user can also basis. Despite the criticism, quick House action on the emergency put on his desktop a clock, a cal­ relief bill seemed certain. The measure includes funds for repair of culator, and a garbage can which federal buildings, road improvements and relief for the unemployed. temporarily keeps documents the -AP user no longer wants to save. Lisa solves the second problem, difficulty in moving data from one Wall Street Update place to another, by storing data in a Ethical considerations new way. Before, a computer would store data in some user-specified for­ The stock market has shown evidence of a new, mat, and the data could only be used resurging economy, as the market posted a broad advance in heavy in that format; for example, numbers in business discussed trading yesterday, topping the record highs it set the day before. Oil could be stored to make mathe­ By ALEX SZILVAS to do things which they aren't wil­ and precious-metals stocks, which had sold off early in the week, matics easy for the computer, but B&TEditor ling to support." recorded some of the day's best gains. The Dow Jones average of 30 then printing those numbers on Dunn sees long-run corrections in industrials, up 18.09 Tuesday, rose another 4.35 to 1,135.06. The. paper required a complex trans­ "Ethical Considerations and the the system, but "not until con­ average has now gained 88 points since the start of the year, and formation. World of Commerce" was the topic sumers support businesses which nearly 360 points since Wall Street's bull market was born last Now, Lisa stores the method the of yesterday's sixth annual Faculty support social responsibility." August. Volume on the New York Stock Exchange reached 112.60 data will be used with the data, so Forum Justice Teach-In held in the John Halloran, Finance Depart­ million shares, up from 103.75 million Tuesday. The market drew the transformation is easily done by Hayes-Healy Board Room. ment professor, spoke about the role some fresh encouragement from the news that the index of leading changing the stored way. Professor Ken Milani of the Ac­ of ethics in financial institutions. He economic indicators jumped .6 percent inJanuary. The daily tally on Besides solving these problems, countancy Department introduced cited the tension which exists be­ the NYSE showed about five issues rising in price for every two that Lisa has many extra features. The a distinguished panel of professors, tween owners, managers, and declined, and the exchange's composite index jumped .85 to 87. 78. computer can do more than one task each of whom discussed the implica­ depositors in a financial institution. Nationwide turnover in NYSE-listed issues, including trades in those at a time. It can talk to other Lisas tions of business ethics in their "Traditionally, regulatory authori­ stocks on regional exchanges and in the over-the-counter market, with an optional cable system, store respective areas of expertise. ties have watched out for the totaled 130.59 million shares. - AP short novels in its main memory, and Decision-making and leadership depositors' interests while the huge tomes on hard disks or floppy were the focus of Sal Bella's com­ manager's job was to watch out for ments. A professor of management, the stockholders." Bella cited the best guide to He added that the role of managerial decision-making to be an regulatory authorities has grown in Social examination of the position in ques­ the last decade. These authorities Enjoy Writing but tion itself. He advocated adopting see their task today as involving the position which was inherently more than keeping the institutions Security right or true rather than basing the from failing. Regulations protecting nevergetthechance? decision on the consequences potential borrowers, the com­ which would result or on the beliefs munity, and other parties have to be saved of the majority. become increasingly common. A Quoting Father Theodore Hes­ bank, for example, may be required burgh, Bella remarked, "No othe,r to reinvest funds in a low income WASHINGTON (AP) - House Write about position is in the least bit defen­ neighborhood where the rate of tax writers have embraced a $165 sible." return is substantially lower than ? billion package to make Social . Bella explained that what is right that of alternative investments. Security solvent again, but they are or ethical need not be explicitly This has resulted in an ethical leaving it to the full House to settle a developments defined. Emphasizing the role of the dilemma which the financial squabble over raising the retirement conscience, he stated that the manager must continually face. ag~. manager must carefully decide an Given the goal of management is to The House Ways and Means Com­ issue after taking all relevant inter­ maximize profits of stockholders, in your mittee was wrapping up work today ests into consideration. where does one differentiate be­ on the rescue package which em­ Speaking about ethical considera­ tween sourid business judgement bodies the bipartisan recommenda­ tions in the marketplace, Professor and redlining? Between duty and un­ tions of the National Commission on field!! Mark Dunn of the Marketing Depart­ ethical practice? Social Security Reform. It goes to the ment highlighted the social respon­ Numerous opportunities exist, House floor next week. sibility of business. Halloran said, "to violate the spirit The committee today considered "Since the consumer determines while upholding the letter of the­ a series of minor amendments to the if you make a profit," he said, "the law." Social Security bill and then moved consumer must support social "Banks view these regulations as to take up some provisions affecting Call Alex responsibility in the market." obstacles to their major respon­ the Supplemental Security Income Dunn sees business as willing to sibility - making profits for their welfare program. Later it planned to do its part as long as consumers sup­ stockholders." consider proposals to extend un­ port it - something consumers Professor Jim Gaertner of the Ac­ employment benefits and Medicare 239-5303 have not yet done. countancy Department was unable reforms before taking a final vote on "It's a matter of people wanting us to speak as scheduled due to illness. the entire bill. The Observer Thursday, March 3, 1983 - page 8 Pacific storm wreaks havoc in California CALIFORNIA (AP) - A pacific from our roof." storm stalled off the coast kept The National Weather Service, California under siege yesersday noting that it was the eighth con­ with giant waves and mudslides secutive day of rain in California, splintering lavish homes and famous said Mount Wilson, Calif., had piers. Thousands of people were received eight inches of rain in the routed by floods up to rooftops in past 24 hours, bringing its total for places. the week to 16 inches. And no end The death toll from the West was in sight soon. Coast storms that began during the "We've got bands of showers spin­ weekend rose to 13, with more than ning off a weather system stalled off­ 50 people injured. shore, and that pattern likely will Among the dead was a 3-year"old continue into Thursday," said boy buried about dawn in Clear weather service forecaster Ron Lake, approximately 12 5 miles Wagner. north of San Francisco, when a wall Thundering surf as high as 16 feet of mud 300 feet wide swept down a shattered beachfront houses and hillside and crushed his home. businesses in Southern California, Rain, mud and rocks closed major where 1,000 homes had been highways and railroads and parts of destroyed or damaged since the the Arizona and Colorado were warned latest storm hit the coast on Tuesday to expect up to a foot of 11ew snow. and about 1,000 people had been Snow was already higher than evacuated. Four landmark piers suf­ houses in parts of the Sierra Nevada. fered severe damage. "You want to know how high the Several homes in the exclusive water was?" asked Don Finney in A set of six apartments at the Village Greene at least three persons and injuring more than a Los Angeles suburb of Malibu were one San Diego neighborhood. "Well, sliding il).to the ocean, including one Apartment complex in Greenville, N.C., were dozen. (AP Photo) someone brought a boat down and leveled by a predawn blast this morning, killing owned by tennis star Billie Jean King mv wife easily stepped into the boat and her husband, Larry. About 50 homes in the Santa Bar­ bara area just north of Los Angeles were destroyed or damaged by waves. The man-made oil island Esther, about three-quarters of a mile off Huntington Beach was destroyed by surf and 2, 750 gallons of oil were floating on the suface, the Coast The Most Sophisticated Training Ground Guard said. For Nuclear Engineering Education Isn't On The Ground. department denies funds By LEE MITGANG AP Education Writer

It's on a Navy ship. get them fast. Because College officials are fighting on several fronts to change a proposed The Navy has in the Navy, as your federal rule that would deny educa­ more than 1,900 knowledge grows, so do tion loans to students who have not reactor-years of nuclear your responsibilities. registered for the draft. Some schools argue that the power experience­ Today's Nuclear Department of Education proposal more than anyone else Navy is one of the most would violate the civil rights of stu­ in America. The Navy challenging and reward­ dents; more often they object to the paperwork that would be involved has the most sophisti­ ing career choices a in enforcing the rule. cated nuclear equip­ man can make. And The proposed regulation applies ment in the world. And that choice can pay off to male students born in 1960 or while you're still in school. Qualified later. The rule was announced by the Navy operates over half of the nuclear the Department of Education in reactors in America. juniors and seniors earn approximately January and, pending revisions, will With a nuclear program like that, you $1,000 per month while they finish school. take effect in May and apply to stu­ know the Navy also offers the most compre­ As a nuclear-trained officer, after 4 dent loans for the 1983-84 school year. hensive and sophisticated nuclear training. years with regular promotions and pay "By this means," says Education Every officer in the Nuclear Navy increases, you can be earning as much as Secretary T.H. Bell, "the U.S. govern­ completes a full year of graduate level $40,500. That's on top of a full benefits pack­ ment is saying bluntly that taxpayer funds will not be used to provide a technical training. Outside the Navy, this age that includes medical and dental care, college education for students who kind of program would cost you thousands. and 30 days' vacation earned each year. do not comply with the Selective In the Navy, you're paid while you learn. As a nuclear-trained officer, you also Service registration requirements." Yale University and Dartmouth Then, as a nuclear-trained officer, you earn a place among this nation's most College have countered by promis­ supervise highly trained personnel in the qualified and respected professionals. So, ing to come up with money for draft operation of the most if you're majoring in resisters who stand to lose federal r------, aid. Harvard says it is considering advanced nuclear NAVY OPPORTUNITY w 209 I math, engineering or INFORMATION CENTER doing likewise. propulsion plants I P.O. Box 5000, Clifton, NJ 07015 the physical sciences, ever developed. You I 0 Please send me more information about 1 send in the coupon. get a level of technical I becoming an officer in the Nuclear Navy. (0N) I Find out more about Name the most sophisti­ and management First (Please Print). Last I STUDENT DISCOUNT experience unequalled I Address ______Apt. Il----- cated training ground anywhere else. l City _____ State, _____ Zip__ I for nuclear engineer­ of~ e~~~ I Age•---tCollege/University_____ I S -+-.S 4 " You get important ing. Today's Nuclear Q~\~ ~-1'~ responsibilities and you :j:YearinCollege, _____ tGPA _____ I Navy. I AMajor/Minor·------20°/o OFF Phone · I 1 (Area Code) Best Time to Call Good Mon- Thurs onlv This is for general recruitment information. You do not have to fur- I nish any of the information requested. Of course, the more we I know. the more we can help to determine the kinds of Nayy posi- STUDENT DISCOUNT L tions for which you qualify. MAli 9/82J w/Student 1.0. ------Offer not valid with any other Aurelio's special . Navy Officers Get Responsibility Fast. discount or coupon valid at S.B.'s Aurelio's only. 1705 S.BEND AVE./23 at edison

C

Editorials Thursday, March 3, 1983 - page 9 M*A *S*H completes 11-year growth

Television reared its powerful head again 1950s drew to a close. show. ButM-A·S-H was not always as popular as it Monday, convincing even the skeptics of its In the early 1970s, CBS brought the nation a In 11 years, M-A-S-H touched us all. It made was Monday night. In its first season, the show ability to mesmerize the masses - to hold a trio of situation comedies that may never be us laugh, but rarely without reminding us of once finished 56 out of 60 programs in the nation in its grasp. equalled in terms of quality or popularity. It the horror of war. Nielsen ratings. began with All in the Family and The Mary "It was more about Vietnam than people When peace finally came to the 4077th, it Tyler Moore Show. It continued with M-A-S­ think," says Gene Reynolds who, like Aida, came while its characters were in the operat· H. wrote, directed and produced at various ing room, battling to preserve life - despite Skip Desjardin "Those two shows opened the door to us," times. Indeed, when the show made its debut, the imminence of new lives for themselves. says Alan Aida, the driving force behind M-A­ Americans were dying in Vietnam, in a war And it is fitting that the men and women of On the Media S-H. "Without them, we could not have done more senseless even than that to which Haw­ M-A-S-H should be working as the war ended. the things we did. We could not have dealt keye and Radar and B.}. were sent. For the series always t_aught us one thing - with death, could not have interjected As America in the 1970s changed, so did the verbalized by Col. Henry Blake in an episode America came to a standstill as it hadn't tragedy into a situation comedy." show. As Vietnam peace talks progressed, M­ entitled "Sometimes You Hear the Bullet." since President Nixon resigned. People sat We are all too young to remember the final A-S-H featured programs on false truce an­ "Rule number one in war is that young men glued to their television sets, or the sets of episode of The Fugitive. That show captivated nouncements. When Watergate rocked die," Blake - ironically the only cast member friends, or a wide-screen set in their local bars the country, and was the highest rated regular America, M-A-S-H featured ·a government to die in the war - told Hawkeye. "Rule num­ just as they did in the summer of 1969, when program in history until Bing Crosby's cover-up. As we grew up, so did the shows ber two is that doctors can't change rule num­ man first walked on the moon. daughter killedJ.R. on Dallas. characters. Radar O'Reilly became a man. Mar­ ber one." "Goodbye, Farewell, Amen," the final But we can all remember the long-awaited garet Houlihan became a woman. Time al­ For 11 years, through laughter, pathos, and episode of television's most successful series, episode of that series, and the build-up was tered personalities and relationships. Men stirring drama, M-A-S-H never let us forget M-A-S-H, ran on CBS Monday. With its airing, nothing to rival the outpouring of emotion died, other men replaced them, and AmeJ:ica that. an era to rival TV's Golden years in the late and anticipation that accompanied Monday's watched it all. Goodbye, farewell, amen. P. 0. BoxQ

handle decisions and responsibility, and so propagandistic and "holier-than-thou." to end abortion because it is morally on. If this were the way the world is (and I Second, they may not recognize the op­ wrong). Still, abortions will occur and we Validity counts would surely welcome it), a general moral tion of adoption. Babies are always wanted should try to make them less appealing by assessment of abortion might be possible for adoption. Catholicss could encourage making baby care easier and assuring mot­ Dear Editor: (and I would welcome that); but until we foster families as well as legislation to make hers of their ability to raise, love, and be As everyone knew would happen, the have created such a sufficiently common adoptions for qualified couples easier. loved by their children. "challenge to be pro-choice" printed a few context for abortion decisions (a task to Third, they don't have a good day care ReneeRady weeks ago in these pages has been refused which many "pro-life" supporters have lent center nearby. Women worried about their by the totality of Notre Dame letter-writers. invaluable aid), I do not think that laws careers may, especially in a bad economy, The fact that this opposition has been so should purport to embody as-yet nonexist­ put their jobs before their unborn children. complete, unanimous, and final, the fact that ent moral agreement. Catholics, then, should lobby strongly for we all knew that the pro-choice writer didn't In addition, I am not sure that abortion is greater government funding of way care Editor's have a chance of finding support among the of a sufficiently social character to warrent centers. Moreover, women's clubs and Notre Dame community, leads me to legislation. Of course, the situation does ex­ senior citizen's groups could volunteer to suspect that the pro-choice perspective has tend beyond the person of the pregnant take care of working mothers' children. Note been misunderstood here. This suspicion is woman, to include the future life of the deepened when I see the majority of letter­ potential baby (and-or the life of the fetus, Fourth, they feel guilty already. A woman writers refer to the "pro-abortion" position, for those who view he-she-it as a person), may feel depressed because she has had sex Editor's Note: Letters should be seeing it as the simple rejection of their own other family and community members, and and become pregnant, perhaps before mar­ brief and deal with specific issues. self-proclaied "pro-life" stand. governmental agencies providing assis­ riage. She thinks, "I have sinned so much, They must be typed and bear the I am fairly certain that in most cases "pro­ tance. But the actual importance of all these what's one more sin?" Catholics should not address, telephone number and choice" does not imply "anti-life." Things factors is ambiguous, or at least so situation­ judge others, but show compassion, forgive­ signature of the author. Initials and just aren't that simple. The pro-choice posi­ and-person-specific that no general laws ness, and understanding for those who carry pseudonyms are not acceptable. tion, as I see it, is not ultimately addressed to seem appropriate. I would generally favor a child whom they may not have planned. Ifa Reproductions, carbon copies, or the question of the morality of abortion it­ that the ultimate decision rest in the preg­ woman feels good about herself, she may letters addressed to persons other self, but to the question of the morality of a nant woman; but in any case, it seems to me also feel that she can be a great mother. than the editor are not acceptable. legal-governmental stance on abortion. Of that the true pro-life stance is to be con­ Overall, then, we should adopt a more All letters are subject to editing. course, the latter question is intimately as­ cerned with the specific situations and per­ pragmatic and less theological approach to sociated with the former, since the moral sons involved (which, again, many "pro-life" decreasing the incidence of abortion. This, character or legislation involves the moral supporters have done). of course, is not the ideal (which would be character of the activity legislated. In order Looked at in this way, it seems to me, "the for legislation to be moral, it seems to me, challenge to be pro-choice" is really an in­ the activity legislated must I ) receive a vitation for Notre Dame (and the country) similar moral assessment from most citizens, to realize that there are different and still and 2) be of a sufficiently social character to valid moral perspectives and ways of life, warrant legal-governmental regulation. At and that the world is not as idyllic as one present, the whole complicated situation might hope. Again, many people here have surrounding abortion has not received a realized this; more, however, haven't. similar moral assessment by most U.S. Steve Holmes citizens, as exhibited by the fact that many people choose to have abortions while others choose not to. The distinction be­ tween the two groups of people is not that Pragmatic look the former like to kill babies and the latter do not, that the former devalue life and the lat­ Dear Editor: ter value it, but that different people do dif­ I would like to share my thoughts regard­ ferent things in different situations. It may ing abortion. like many Catholics, I believe very well be that, if the situations surround­ that life begins at conception and that abor­ ing all abortions were similar, people could tion is murder. However, I can see why so agree on a moral assessment of abortion; but many people still choose to abort their in fact those situations vary greatly. Most of children. the "pro-life" writers these past few weeks First, they may not understand that their have presented such a similar context for all baby has a soul and is a person. Perhaps they abortions, one in which everyone agrees have not reflected on the implications of that life begins at conception, in whiCh all their choice; they may act impulsively. For unwed mothers, abandoned children, and this reason, Catholics should help to educate large poor families are cared for, in which all people on the meaning of"abortion," but relevant information is utilized by everyone, in a clear, objective way. Pictures of dead in which everyone is sufficiently mature to fetuses that appeal to emotion come off as

Editorial Board Department Managers Box Q, Notre Dame, IN 46556 Editor-in-Chief...... •...... Michael Monk Business Manager ...... Tony Mello The Observer is the independent newspaper published by the students of the Uni­ Managing Editor ...... Ryan Ver Berkmoes i Controller ...... Eric Sc~ulz versity of Notre Dame duLac and Saint Mary's College. It does not necessarily reflect Executive News Editor ...... David Dziedzic Advertising Manager ...... Chris O!wen the policies of the administration of either institution. The news is reported as ac­ , Production Manager ...... Maura Mutphy curately and as objectively as possible. Unsigned editorials represent the opinion of a SMC Executive Editor ...... Margaret Fosmoe Sports Editor ...... Chris Needles Circulation Manager ...... Mark Mibtto majority of the Editorial Board. Commentaries, letters, and the Inside Column depict Systems Manager ...... Bruce Oakley the views of their authors. Column space is ava;lable to all members of the community, Editorials Editor ...... Paul McGinn Features Editor ...... joe Musumeci and the free expression of varying opinions on 91mpus, through letters, is encouraged. Photo Editor...... Rachel Blount Founded November 3, 1966 (219) 239-5303 P"'-~------~----

Claudette in what?

ombine a confused seventeen year-old girl, an ef­ As you may have noticed, the plotline is rather Cfeminate cousin, a rakish uncle, and an absent simple. The hardest part of reading the book is wading minded professor and you will have a listing of the main through the sexual confusion. Not everything about the characters in Claudine in Paris by Colette. book is bad though. Wonderful descriptive phrases are You will also have a headache. used that give the lines a sense of poetry. It is because of Now, don't get me wrong, it's not <;1 bad book. It just this that I feel the story lost something through transla­ isn't really a good book. It has been translated from tion. For lines to flow like that in English, the original French and it seems to have lost something in the trans­ French must have hung together like music. lation. The story perhaps? It also seems as if Colette just mugh~ be laughing at Written in diary style, the book consists of short, her book through the character of Claudine's maid, choppy sentences. Because of this, it sometimes tends Me lie. Melie's artless speech and malapropisms provide to be incoherent, as does the title character. the book with a touch of humor. Her concern with sex As far as I can tell, the story seems to center around a is so overdone that all you can do is laugh. precocious young woman who has been forced to leave Depending on your taste, this book could make good the French boarding school in which she grew up and light reading. I, however, have a hard time recommend­ move to Paris. ing it to anyone. If any one out there is a French major, Because the move to Paris meant leaving behind her you might try it in its native language. lesbian school friends, Claudine decides to rebel by becoming ill. In fact, it is just after her recovery that we Claudine In Parts, Colette, Ballantine Books, New York, 1976, 183 pages, meet her. Claudine has had her hair cut to ease the $2.50. fever, and is lying abed, listening to her maid propose lovers for her.· She kn0\\l5 a woman's heart and She tells us about her school life in Montigny. Her mimL bod'· tnc1 souL friend, Luce, with whom she has had an affair is agonized at her leaving. It is perhaps, her unease and Freelance: Forever, Marietta Whittlesey, Avon, New York, 1982,347 pages, $7.95. disgust with the theatrics of Luce's farewell that make Claudine decide, finally, to accept Paris. While in Paris she meets her cousin Marcel. Colette describes him as a pretty boy, with fair hair, a light com­ Freelance Away! plexion, and blue eyes. He also ha_s a boyfriend. Marcel introduces Claudine to her Uncle Renaud, Marcel's father. ou're lost in a strange land. You have no money, no credit cards. About the same time that Claudine meets Renaud, Y What will you do .. .what will you do?! she finds her school friend, Luce, in Paris. Luce tells her You're a college graduate. that she has run away from home and is living with her Many of the seniors who are about to graduate in May have already mother's brother-in-law. In return for her "lost honor," lined up jobs with prestigious firms across the country; many others Luce is provided with the luxuries of wealthy life. have been accepted for graduate work at countless institutions. This discovery sends Claudine into tumult. From this A large number have not. point the story becomes the tale ofC! ·:~dine's transition For those who are contemplatng a life in a bread line, for those to adulthood. She accepts the notion that her Luce has who need some way to make extra money while in grad school, or had relations with a man, and begins to consider it for even for those who just want a novel way to keep fed during summer herself. break, Marietta Whittlesey's book, Freelance Forever, may replace During this period of transition, Claudine goes out the family Bible. (Trivia Note: what book did I say the same thing and gets drunk with her uncle, Renaud. Renaud ex­ about last week? Ah, well.) presses his love for her, and she begins to experience mutual feelings. As she struggles with herself, she must also struggle with her t uncle. Renaud feels that she is still Joe a child, and he must keep away from her. Claudine realizes that to keep Renaud's love she must sacrifice her childhood and her past relationships by taking the musumeci step to maturity. The story ends with her marriage to Renaud. Whittlesey's book is a regular cornucopia of information on how to get and keep your own business on track. Whittlesey herself is a freelance writer and has incorporated the testimony and advice of many, many other freelancers in various lines of work to compile her guide. The book as a whole is designed to help the serious free lancer keep track of finances and lifestyles while trying to maintain a steady flow of creativity and cash. Nonetheless, even if yo .u aren't planning to go out and start your own corporation (one ot the books better points- even if you are the entire product, incorporate anyway) the book wll probably be a great help to anybody starting out in the real world. Included and of major interest are sections on buying, renting or just plain old find­ ing housing, establishing a credit rating, setting up work space, arranging taxes, and a particularly fascinating little dialogue on "creative debt management." If, in fact, you are planning to go out and start your own business or plan to make a career of your own in the arts, this book is an indis­ pensable encyclopedia. It is set up and arranged as a reference book - interesting to read all the way through but more valuable to keep around just as a handy helper when specific situations arise. Whit­ tlesey provides a wealth of studied advice in areas such as how to remain creative, how to cope with lean times, how to live economi­ cally and still enjoy it, and how to keep the sort of records,effidiently, that keep freelancers out of jail and the poorhouse at the same time. Besides being a freelancer with a good feel for business (something the book would have us believe is rather uncommon),· Whittlesey has what seems a very rare handle on the problems and trials that face someone trying to market themselves as a commodity and remain an artist. This impressed me even more than her thoroughness in compiling the book, for I have been maing an on­ and-off living for some time now as a free-lance graphic artist, and it wasn't the bed of roses I had thought it might be. Reading through Freelance Foret•er, I realized many of the initial mistakes I had made in setting up my business and image as a designer; oh, how I wish I had read this book before last summer. I would have known, for in­ stance, that I need not have any of my income from specific contrac­ tors withheld, that even the newspaper which provided the closest thing I had to regular employment should not have withheld any tax. I also could have benefitted from what is perhaps Whittlesey's most relevant topic for the graduating or self-employed college student: "Getting Work." This section (as are many of the others) is loaded with relevant and tantalizing lists of people and firms who are likely to be interested in whatever it is one wishes to do for a living. The back cover of the book is topped by a statement in bold red letters: "As a freelancer, you are your own employer, employee and product." This is a much more popular lifestyle than it used to be, and I can vouch for the fact that it holds many very rewarding benefits. Frec:ance Forever is an invaluable investment for anyone who is consiedring the route of the freelancer.

------~ ------·------~------~ ~~(),-tS~/=J=~==i~e~S======i======T=hu=rs=d=~='~~=ar=ch=3='=19=8=3==p=a=gc=_==ll By The Obserz•er and The Associated Press The J.V. lacrosse team will hold an organizational Pirates Bookstore registration will take place meeting for anyone interested in playing for the spring team today • • • Sunday, March 6, from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Great Hall of O'Shaughnessy. at 4:30p.m. in the ACC Auditorium. If you cannot attend, call Austin The entry fee is $4 per team. Details will appear in tomorrow's Henry at 1025 or Rich O'Leary at 239-5108.-- The Obseroer continuedfrom page 16 paper. -The Obseroer tion committee meets next Broomball registration deadline has been weekend to determine which teams extended to 5:00p.m. today instead of 1:00 p.m. The one-day tour­ get to participate in this year'!> ex­ ney will take place on Saturday. Teams of six players may pre­ travaganza The interhall wrestling tournament register at anytime. -- The Observer "All we can do now is win our last' will start during the first week after break. Watch The Obseroer for an three games and keep our fmgers announcement of the exact date, or call 2 39-6100. -- The Obseroer crossed," says Phelps. "Whatever Mud Volleyball registration will take place on the tournament committee decides, Monday, March 7, and Tuesday, March 8. The registration will take we'll accept. place in the ballroom on the second floor of LaFortune from 11:00 to "I don't think we're out of conten­ has announced a new set of The interhall office I :00 and 4:00 to 6:00 on each day. Team rosters should be com­ tion at all, especially when you lose a deadlines for its spring sports. Thursday, Mar. I 0 is the deadline for prised of 6-8 people. A captain must be identified with a phone num­ game at the buzzer. But we would signups for the following sports: interhall men's softball, interhall ber, and the 10 numbers of all players must be included. Additional have liked to have won our last eight women's softball, interhall baseball, interhall women's soccer, and rules will be given at registration. - The Obseroer and finished at 20-8. Even so, if we an open soccer tournament.( limited entry). Also, the interhall wres­ win our last three games and end up tling tournament will start the first week after spring break. Watch See BRIEFS, page 12 I9-9 . . . that's great considering The Observer for an announcement of the date. - The Observer where we were a year ago."

The Observer will accept classifieds Mon­ day through Friday. 10 a.m. to 4.30 p.m. However. classifieds to appear in the next issue must be rece1ved by 3 p.m. the business day prior to msertion. All classifieds must be prepaid. Classifieds either in person or through the mail.

LOST: Gold cotn necklace Sunday Feb. PLEASE HELP need nde to WASH DC ST. LOUIS ST. LOUIS Need rtde to St. ONE or TWO RIDES needed to the GAR­ If REA WOMEN DON'T PUMP GAS, what 20 between North Dtntng Hall. P W . and for break. Wtll share usual Maura X2244 Louts for Spnng Break Will pay usual DEN STATE for Spring Break. Yes, we do do you call a certatn PE restdent who sold NOTICES the Library. If found please call x2966. Please call Moat 7126 want to go to NEW JERSEY for break. Will gas for over a year at ART'S GAS AND DESPERATE! Need Rtde To Northern pay the uusual. Please (PLEASE) call GROCERY? ·Fred and DCG, JR LOST in C-D line of North: 1 blue N.D. N.J. OR NYC. Can LEAVE By 12 Noon Need Rtde to Chtcago Fnday 3/4/83 call Sarah at 1361 or Mary at 1272. Please!!!!! backpack. contains: 1 red "untfted" ON Friday THE 12TH. Will SHARE The Pete x3118 ATLANTAal/anta ATLANTA need ride to TYPING AVAILABLE. 287-4082 notebook. Saul Bellow's THE VICTIM. USUAL CALL JERRY AT 3893 CONNECTICUT bound?! We need Atlanta lor break Can leave Fnday, noon. and TIME mag. If you ptcked tl up by HELP! Need rtde to north JERSEY for (desperately) ONE or TWO ndes to CON· Call Dave at 6931. TYPING mtstake at Wed. lunch. PLEASE call SYRACUSE BOUND? I need a nde to break. Call TOM at x 1750. NECTICUT for Spnng Break Please call Jackte Boggs 8830 a~d/or from' Syr. NY for Spnng Break Will Mary at 1272 orSarah at 1361 Will pay As love grows. 684·8793 share usual Call Bill x1374 RIDE NEEDED TO ROCH NY FOR the usual Hearts are torn 1n the process. LOST-- woman's gold Ttmex watch; tn or BREAK WANDA 7770 Take the heart that watts for you, near O'Shag on 3/1 I am very unhappy Need ride to OMAHA tor break. Can T.S HAVE YOU ABUSED YOURSELF Give tt the chance. TYPING IN MY HOME (RESUMES, LET· wtthout tt-- return 11 to me and name your leave Wed. Call Dan x6740. Rtders Needed to Daytona I Ft. LATELY? To grow with you TEAS. REPORTS. TERM reward!! Ltz x6825 Lauderdale for break Leave 3/10 Call To love you. PAPERS,ETC.) NEAT. ACCURA-TE Need a RIDE TO PITISBURGH for Woody 277-0992 Need nde to CANTON Ohto for break To need you WORK. REASONABLE RATES 233- Lost: RING OF KEYS--Volkswagen car break. Can leave on Fnday at noon. Please call Ctndy at x2948. Take my hand and 7009 key. approx. 9 others please return to Please call Terri x6797. Need riders to Palm Beach. FL. Leavtng GUide me to the tnstde ol your heart. Metallurgtcal Eng. Offtce or call 6328 and Thurs. March 10. Call Sue 5193 SMC Rademaker Feltcta is getttng full! Clue x3: MORRISSEY LOAN FUND Studennt leave message for Dave. Thank you HELP! Need a nde to Madtson. WI thts BUG-HIA? Today, loans - $20-$200 One percent tnterest. weekend. Call Martha 8024 Needed: Rtde for two to Flonda for break We begtn agatn Due tn one month. One day wait Open M Please call 277-1709. LOOKING FOR FUN IN THE SUN OR Anew step - F. 11·30-12:30 LaFortune Basement Need a nde to DALLAS for break. Call JUST HEADING SOUTH? NEED A new begtnntng NOTICE: LAST DAY FOR MAY '83 Tom at 277-8061 Rtders needed to NYC/CONN area. Call RIDERS TO MYRTLE BEACH OR AIKEN GRADS TO APPLY IS MARCH 9 !!! FOR RENT Kathy 284-5322 SOUTH CAROLINA/ AUGUSTA GEOR­ Need a ride to O'Hare Atrport Friday GIA AREA CALL ED AT 233-63t1 WILL Dearest BRENDAN, GOING TO CONNECTICUT??? Seats March 11. Can leave 10:00 am. but must Ride for two needed to O'HARE on Thurs LEAVE FRIDAY NIGHT My personals you've read. are still avatlable for Conn Club's spnng House:4 bedroom. near ND. $250 per be at O'Hare by 3:00 pm Chtcago ttme. Mar 10 leavtng about 7pm. Call Kann at So here's clue 2· break bus! Must call Ttm at 2257 by 8pm mo. Fall or summer No utilittes. Phone Call Trish 284-4421 2910 PITISBURGH CLUB Seats sttll My ha1r IS brown, Thurs . March 3 to Stgn up Cost tS $90. (319) 322-8735. Palty. avatlable for Spnng Break Bus Round tnp And my eyes are blue. Desperately need a nde to MASS for $45.00 and One ways $29.00. Call Bnan Neither sophomore, junior, orsen1or am I, APTS NEAR NO FOR RENT UTILS PO break can leave Thurs share usual x1743 To hnd out more. YOU MUST REPLY! drtve a WILSON DRIVEAWAY carlo your LESS GAS PH 2720261 RIDE NEEDED TO ANYWHERE IN Dave -1766 Love. desttnatton for break. For tnfo· 233-6495 UPSTATE NEW YORK--BUFFALO. PITISBURGH CLUB ... Seats sttll ? 4 bdrm furntshed house, near campus SYRACUSE ALBANY---WILL SHARE Rtders needed to St. Pete-Tampa area or avatlable for Spnng Bus Call Bnan On Notre Dame Ave. Good condttton 9 USUAL--CALL CHRIS ANYTIME at 3510 en rt .. Share dnvtng and gas. Leavtng x1743 mo. lease $335 per mo. Call 684-0933 OR8573 Fnday 3/11 afternoon Call Mark 287- THEO MAJORS: Today-Thursday­ (local call)• 5208 Dear Ltsa J . Andrea. Anne. Carol, Chns, come to the Social Hour with Prof. \ LOST/FOUND \ PHONE WORKLOCAL BRANCH OF NA­ Ei. Laur. Lts. Mar. Patty. Teresa. et al: John Howard Yoder as guest. 321 FURNISHED HOMES FOR NEXT TIONAL NOW HIRING FOR DAY OR ATLANTA atlanta ATLANTA THANK YOU all for your lovtng support O'Shaugnessy... 5:00 P.M. SCHOOL YEAR CLOSE TO NO 277· EVENING HOURS EXCELLENT OP­ Need nde to Atlanta for break Can leave and gutdance Wtn OR lose -- you always LOST PAIR OF SILVER FRAMED 3604 PORTANITY FOR STUDENTS HOURLY Fnday noon Maybe someone gotng thru make my races worthwhile!! P S Ka11e THE NEW NO HOCKEY FIGHT SONG GLASSES IN PLASTIC BROWN CASE SALARY BONUS CALL MR ANGELO FLORIDA can help Call Dave at x6931 you re awesome! SHAME SHAME MOLD NOTRE DAME THE CASE WAS FALLING APART AND FURNISHED TWO ROOMS. PRIVATE 289-4040. THE ALMIGHTY DOLLAR CONTROLS IS HELD TOGETHER BY A PIECE OF ENTRANCE MALE PREF ALL ·Need nde from Flonda. W Coast. after ATTENTION ALL REAL MALES. That YOUR GAMES SEND THE HOCKEY SILVER DUCT TAPE IF FOUND UTILITIES PAID 277-3604 IMPORTANT I NEED A RIDE TO 3/19 Ptck-up anywhere. Wtll pay! Shetla red-hatred FOX. KATHY RUDD. tS PROGRAM OFF TO DIE ITS PLEASE CALL PHIL AT 8295 EITHER INDY OR ANDERSON THIS 284-4186 celebrattng her 21st btrthday today!!! So SACRELIGOUS TO ASK WHY WHAT DESPERAELY NEEDED 1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! FOR RENT NOW - 2 or 3 Bedroom. Full WEEKEND. CALL x1692 AND ASK FOR make sure you stop by 213 PW and gtve THOUGH THE ODDS BE GREAT OR Bath. Yard. Partly furmshed $185 $70 DAVE ANYTIME Need RIDE to any potnl between AKRON her a btrthday ktss'!! Have fun Kath· ! The SMALL THE HOCKEY PROGRAM IS FOUND. NOTRE DAME Jacket at Stepan Uttlittes Depostt $200. Off Portage 289- and CINCY thts weekend X 11 05 PANTHER and TIGRESS OOOMED AFTER ALL WHILE HER Courts on Feb 24/25 ldenttfy color and 1687 NEW JERSEY! RIDE NEEDED TO LOYAL SONS GO MARCHING INTO SIZe and 11 s yours. Call Mtke at 277·2653. NORTH/CENl RAL NJ FOR SPRING NEED RIDERS TO HARRISBURG PA. SMC STUDENTS II OBSCURITY . FURN 2 BAM poss. 3 AVAIL IMMED BREAK. PLEASE CALL KATHY 7906. AREA OR ANYWHERE ON TPIKE CALL Throw Your Hat In The Rtng! Large Neat & Near NO. Call233-7631 JEFF at 232-4731 Apply For OF COURSE I'LL MARRY YOU. MK. I $REWARD$ NEED RIDE TON VAID.C AREA FOR STUDENT GOVERNMENT COMMIS­ JUST CANT WAIT TO SPEND OUR -for the return or whereabouts of HP-11 C 4 Room.single apt. totally remodled. BREAK CAN LEAVE MARCH 10th RIDERS WANTED TO ITHACA. N Y OR SitJNERS!' SERBIAN-CHINESE HONEYMOON IN calculator taken from a blue oackpack at major uttlittes payed 1.50.00 mo 287- CALL JIM AT 1763 THEREABOUTS S T PRINGBREAK March2-7 THE.EXOTIC VIRGIN ISLANDS WHERE SMC Dtntng Hall Thur ntght. 2-24 No 8868 after 6:00 CALL 282- 1517. Ptck up appltcattons tn Student Acttvtltes WE'LL BE NO MORE. I'LL BE TRUE TO questtons asked Has Personal Value - I need a nde to Boslton I mean I need a Offtce YOU ALWAYS YOU'VE BECOME A Please callt

------The Observer Thursday, March 3, 1983 -- page 12 Atlantic Coast Conference Cavaliers, Tar Heels win easily

ATL\.NTA(AP)- 'VIichaeljordan The victory boosted the Cavaliers' awav and eventuallv opened a -+6· ~2 scored 2-l point~. 1 'i in the sn:ond ACC mark to I 1-2 and 2+ .3 overall. edge on a Sampson dunk with .~:2H half. as eighth-ranked North Wake forest raced out to a 20-1 ~ left. Carolina downed Georgta Tech H'\­ le:1d in the tlrst seven mmutes. but l_'sing 62-percent shootmg, Vir­ - ~ in an Atlantic Coast Conterenn: Virgmia rallied and tied it on a Rickv gmia da1med a -;~-~H halftime lead. basketball game last night. Stokes jumper with 1 I :~l) remaining \V ake l'ore~t went ~cordess for four Jordan had two baskets. one a Ill the openmg half. mmute" to -~tart the second half as slam Junk. Juring an 11-0 Carolina The ~core was tied twice more the <:avahers expanded their margin '-purt that stret<.:hed a 12- ~6 ad­ bdore the Cavaliers slowly pulled to 69--+ I with l ):49 remaining. ,·amagc to '\~-~6 with ll:IH kit m the ;,tame. Tech never threatened thereafter as the Tar Heels eventual!\· rolled up a 2~-point lead. their higgest of the • • . Briefs game. whkh thev held on tive occa­ ~lons. continued from paxe 11 The victorv lifted North Carolina to .H-6 for the ~eason and I 1-2 in the .-\CC. Tech tdl to 12- 1-1 and +I 0. added 16 points for will hold a North Carolina. The ND-SMC Bicycling Club meeting tonight in the LaFortune ballroom at ~,oo p.m. - The Ob­ GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - server Believe it or not, pro football begins tbis Sunday. Hersbel Walker Ralph Sampson scored 2!-1 points as and the rest of tbe USFL players will take to the field for their first No. 2-ranked Virginia cruised to a season ever. George Allen, coach of the Chicago Blitz, is shown here 107-74 Atlantic Coast Conference making some last minute preparations for his game against the basketball victory over Wake Forest The WOmen'S golf team will be meeting on Mon­ Washington Federals. ( AP Photo) yesterday. dav, March...,, at 6:30 in the women's varsity office at the ACC to view videotapes and discuss the spring tournament and spring practices. Also, the roster is up in the golf shack so that players can now get on the course. - The Observer 'fPUll~l~ ifli"lnl'C 14 in. 14 in. Jlizzcrin Cheese Pizza 18061 So. Bend Ave. Cheese Pizza n (Willi Ole ldditioulliCfltliHt) z The Ultimate Frisbee Club wm be practicing 0 0 behind Jake Kline tleld, weather permitting. The practices will run $4.95 272-8030 & Liter of D. c: from 3:30 to S:30 Monday through Friday. New members are , Extra Ingredients FREE DELIVERY ~ to NDISMC RC Cola welcome. - The Observer z: $.71 10 PERCENT OFF ANYTIME WITH NO $567 Expires 3/10/83 COUPON, STUDENT I.D. REQUIRED. Expires 3/10/83 No other discount with • SANDWICHES •PIEROGI• No other discount with •CZARNINA •BLINTZES • this offer. this offer. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Ski team members who,have not picked up their COUPO 4:00-1:30 A.M. C UPON jackets, sweatshirts or ski bags should contact Phil Panny at 277- 3 799 as soon as possible. - The Observer

.. r Present An Tostal innertube water polo signupswm be on Sunday, March 6, in the Ballroom in LaFortune from 4-S p.m. Registration will be limited. There is a S5 fee to enter the tourna­ ~H£ this ad for ment. Each team must have a minimum of seven players, including two girls, per team. Teams may not have more than two water polo players and one varsity athlete, or two varsity athletes. - The Ob­ BUfJO~ free admission server

Ft. Lauderdale's no. 1 Rock Club . ~ Norbertlne Presents ~ Fathers & Brothers: NOTRE DAME DAY \\'coffer the opportunity for Teaching Thursday, March 17, 1983,3 p.m. and Pastoral Ministry with life in community. \\'c arc men seeking God through I t shared life t shared prayer t shared ministry Free keg* Contests* On the beach, Las Olas & AlA Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. This Is our eballenge:

For mort· Information write to: Rev. Gene G-ries, O.Praem. Vocation Director St. Norbert Abbey De Pere, WlsconMln Mlli'i '\umc ------,\ddrcs.o., ------Movin'out? Cltv State Zip ____ RENT A Aj(c Completed lllgh School Collcj(c ------N.D. Student Union Ptesents: RYDER TRUCK Tickets available If you·re 18 or over you can rent a Ryder truck to use locally or on a at the one-way (rent-lt-here.leave-i.t-rherej tnp to another City Compare costs before you make plans for mov1ng at the end FOR Student Union of the semester W1th a truck you can take along your stereo. 10-speed. clothes. all your stuff. and still have plenty of room for one or two or her INFORMATION ticket oHice people .and their th1ngs. so you can share the costs Compare that to a plane ticket Or even a bus CALL 277-3550 J35.00 Rent from the best-maintained. most dependable fleet 1n · R the world Ryder The best truck money can rent ......

'nh. l'o~ ------..~tllfL 11 Any oneway rental card rate ..... \1 I L 10°/o with this coupon and your Student/F acurty I D. Saturday, 5 Through June 30, 'f983 OFF Offer Good at 2715 N. Bendix Drive. S.B. Sus leaves libtaty citcle n t ------12 noon retutns oftet RYDERTRUCKRENTAL show. 2715N.BENDJX DR South Bend J

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The Observer Thursday, March 3, 1983- page 13

• • . Dolan continued from page 16 rebounds. Kempton was a distant are actually a poor source for second over this same period with measuring his overall performance With the game still tied 52 49 rebounds. and abilities on the hardwood. As seconds later and Notre Dame with Dolan also led the team in scoring Phelps said after the Hofstra game, it the ball - just when one thought twice in the stretch (including a is his ability to "really make things Paxson would make the key one-on­ career-high 20 points against happen" through his intelligence, one move - Dolan took a pass from Maryland) and was t the runner-up consistency, resourcefulness, and Paxson, drove toward the hoop, and two other times. He also led the court savvy that has helped the Irish banked home the game-winner. team in rebounding in six of those maintain their hopes for a Tourna­ Dolan's heroics started the Notre 10 games (including a career-high ment bid. Dame dreams of an NCAA Tourna­ 13 caroms against Bucknell), and Nevertheless, the most im­ ment bid that just a week before was second in another contest. pressive part of his game is his ability seemed unrealistic. Such performances have earned not to dwell on past mistakes or "That (Marquette) game really him a starting forward slot in the last focus on any single facet of his game gave me the confidence I wanted," eight games. during the course of a contest. says Dolan. "I was just at the right "I didn't think I would come this Against DePaul, for instance, Dolan place at the right time." far so soon," admits Dolan, the 16th­ did not take a shot in the entire Since that game. Dolan has rarely highest scorer in New Jersey high game. Instead of forcing shots, been out of place at all on the basket­ school history. "I'm happy with the though, he displayed his most over­ ball floor. way I've progressed, but I still have a looked skill, passing. Twice during Going into the DePaul contest last long way to go." the last, futile rally, he drilled Saturday, Dolan had a 10-game Still, Dolan has reached that point picture perfect passes inside to set stretch over which he scored 109 where he realizes that most of his up layups. points (third only to Paxson and mistakes now come, not from being "Right now I think I'm contribut­ Kempton qver that same stretch) a freshman, but from being human. ing to the team with my passing and and garnered a team-leading 76 Dolan's recent statistics, however, rebounding," says Dolan, "but I try to prepare myself for whatever a game situation demands. It's impor­ tant to have a complete game and Freshman jim Dolan, sboum here against Marquette earlier in No.3 Louisville leads from not just specialize in one thing. A the year, bas begun to emerge from the shadows of his highly­ complete pla t yer is more aware of touted classmates. Recently, be bas been the team's best rebounder things going on on the court and can and one of the high scorers. For a profile of the 6-8 forward, see start, beats Hokies easily react to things better." Louie Somogyi's story that begins on the back page. (Photo by Rae­ So while he may not have the raw be/Blount) BLACKSBURG, Va. (AP) mission deficit to seven at 38-31. power of a Kempton, the fluid Charles jones, Rodney McCray and The Hokies pulled to within three smoothness of a Barlow, the outside teamed for 49 early in the final 20 minutes. But shot of a Price, or the defensive haw­ r:-;.;:--:.rHEMA"iN-EVENi-~1 points as Louisville's third-ranked Louisville, leading 40-37 with 17:09 king abilities of a Buchanan, Dolan ~~~ April9, 1983 ... Cardinals led from the start en route to play, reeled off nine straight has managed to synthesize all of 1983 SENIOR FORMAL RAFFLE to a 73-64 Metro Conference basket­ points on a dunk and free throw by those elements into his own little ball victory over Virginia Tech's jones and field goals by Gordon, Milt package to become, in the second Hokies last night. Wagner and McCray. The closest half of the season, the most pleasant $1.00 tickets available at all dining halls during dinner Virginia Tech got after that was five surprise of Phelps' squad. It was the l,OOOth win in the his­ and at Senior Bar through THURS MARCH 3. Many points at 65-60 wi~h 1:20 left in the Leave it to a man who comes from tory of the Louisville basketball prizes, including free bid to "THE MAIN EVENT", game. a town in New Jersey called Point program. The Cardinals, now 26-3 overall Pleasant to be the most pleasant dinners and tickets to shows including "Second City Louisville raced to a 27-10 lead and 11-0 in the conference, led by as point and surprise of this year's J Review" inChicago. with 8:39 left in the first half before many as 19 points, 63-44, With 4:43 team. I DRAWING TONITE AT SENIOR BAR!! the Hokies rallied to cut their inter- togo. Phelps, though, knew it all along. L-~-----··········-········------·~-

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575 N. Pennsylvania St. Office 646, Indianapolis, IN 46204 NAVAL A VIA TI0N 1-800-382-3782 ~~-T_h_e_O_b-se_r_v_e_r______---___ -_ ------Thursday, March 3, 1983 - page 14 Roller -coaster season Basford rebounds from adversity By MIKE RICCARDI However, as the Irish recovered toward the basket," says DiStanislao. Sports Writer from the "Crush" foray with a nine­ "She can be a driver for us, as she's game winning streak that carried the shown on occasion. She's been, like In the wild ferris wheel ride that club into the New Year, Denise was any other freshman, up and down has been the 1982-83 season for the getting tougher on herself, and her this year, but, when she's been on, Notre Dame women's basketball consistency came into question. she's given a big lift." team, no player has experienced While Basford dwelt on her er­ DiStanislao, in one of her more -• more drastic highs and lows than rors, she didn't realize her potential. interesting coaching moves, has freshman Denise Basford. Her production fell off during opted to use a backcourt of Basford Basford's recent contributions off January, as only flashes of her and freshman walk-on Brown. The the Notre Dame bench are the result November brilliance were shown in combination added a touch of quick­ of a long, up-and-down year of a few contests during a trying ness and aggressiveness to the Irish growing up for the 5-9 guard from month. backcourt. Farmington, Mich. "Tech Week," the mind-bending "We were working Denise in as a Basford made an impressive debut days of hype aod promotion before pure lead guard," says DiStanislao. with the Irish, starring in Novem­ the game against No. I Louisiana "She's been more comfortable in a ber's intrasquad game and playing Tech, became a heart-rending ex­ two-guard setup where there's more than 20 minutes in each of perience for the freshman as she sat somebody else back there to handle Notre Dame's Orange Crush on the bench the entire game. ul the ball, too." Tournament games, showing poise was so ready for that game, so into "She put us in to bring up the and ball-handling ability that belied the preparation and everything," tempo and instill quickness," says her lack of exprience. She was a says Basford. "I was really upset that Basford. "We like to run, bring up large part of the silver lining around I wouldn't get to contribute. But I the pace, whereas Laura the two tournament losses to Top 20 think she ( DiStanislao) didn't play (Dougherty) and Debbi (Hensley) opponents in the tournament. m,e in that game to wake me up. use their smarts to set a more "Before the first game (against There's a reason for everything she deliberate pace." UCLA), I wasn't real nervous," says does, and besides, Lisa (Brown, who Basford's attitude has allowed her Freshman guard Denise Basford has had more ups and downs Basford, "but when I first went in, played 16 minutes) earned her to overcome adversity. The future this season than her frequently inconsistent team. But, like her there was a feeling of awe playing shot." however, presents another chal­ team, she seems to be back on the right track as the regular season against a team like that. Once I shook The week off between Tech and lenge to the popular freshman. winds down. Mike Riccardi profiles Denise on this page. (Photo b_y that, though, everything was all the Irish women's key road trip to Vonnie Thompson, a 5-8 guard Scott Bower) right." Bradley and Illinois State gave Bas­ from Saginaw, Mich .. has made aver­ It seemed that everything was ford time to take stock of herself and bal committment to attend the uni­ going Denise Basford's way - in her potential. versity next fall. and, as DiStanislao November. She was being groomed The last two weekends have been has said, "could be a John Paxson for Come hear some of the BEST to take over at point guard, of a return to form for Basford. Her us." course. And she just might earn that marks for assists and steals - 4 3 and "I'm not scared at au:: says Bas­ sounds around at: spot before the season was out. 29, respectively - now place her ford, speaking very unlike a fresh­ The leader of two state champion­ third on the team in both categories. man. "She'll be an asset to the team, THE NAZZ ship teams at Our Lady of Mercy And her playing time is once again and she'll make me work a lot hard­ High School, Basford came to Notre significant (she averages 16 minutes er. I'll play if I earn the opportunity. Dame, like most athletes, with im­ per game). The competition will make me a Musical Competition peccable credentials. Basford was a Last weekend'.s games against much better ballplayer- you've got unanimo1,1s all-state choice, and an Midwest independents Marquette to look at it that way." Friday, March 4 honorable mention selection on two and DePaul also brought Basford Listening to Denise Basford gives Saturday March 5 8:00PM major all-America squads. back into the forefront of DiStanis­ one the impression of a player "My grade school athletic direc­ lao's offensive scheme as she hit a whose experience of both sides of tor also refs some women's basket­ career-high eight points against the success ha.'> gilded her resolve to ball games," says Basford. "When I Demons, scoring four key points in make sure that her upswing is far INTHENAZZ! announced my decision (to go to the final minute of the first half to from complete. Come & Enjoy NO's Finest Musical Talent Notre Dame), he said, 'Good job. give the Irish breathing space going "I've had my ups and downs," says You know, a couple of years ago, I into the lockerroom. Basford. "But I've learned a lot refereed a game in Chicago and saw "Denise has such a quick first step and I've come back." the best coach I've ever seen."' "She's a good athlete, of course," says that coach, Notre Dame's Mary DiStanislao. "She gives a consistent Badgers beat Michigan effort and works hard. (When we were recruiting her) we saw her EASY RIDER good speed and quickness, as well as in battle for Big Ten cellar I a potential to be an aggressive TO AND FROM CHICAGO'S O'HARE defensive player. She has lots of MADISON, Wis. (AP) - Fresh­ the first half. EVERY 2 HOURS EVERY DAY potential." man Rick Olson scored a career-high Wisconsin led 41-29 at intermis­ Taking a major role so early in her 25 points, igniting Wisconsin to an sion and Olson picked up right freshman year boded much bigger 82-70 Big Ten college basketball vic­ where he left off when the second I and better things for Basford. tory over Michigan last night. half began, hitting two jump shots to United Limo Playing with an aggressiveness that Olson scored I 2 points during a give the Badgers a 4 7-3 I lead. didn't match her mild looks, she 2 7-10 Badger spurt that turned an The Wolverines, behind Richard ,.__ became an early-season crowd early 13-10 deficit into a 37-23 Wis­ Reliford and Tim McCormick, who favorite. consin lead with 2:18 remaining in each finished with 23 points, closed the gap to 68-62 with 5:19 left in the game. But Jim Smith hit three free throws and Cory Blackwell scored three baskets to give the Badgers some breathing room. Blackwell tlnished with 23 points. The game pitted the two teams with the worst records in the Big Ten. Wisconsin, seeking to escape the cellar, improved its record to 8- Attention 17 overall and 3-12 in the Big Ten. Michigan, I 3-12 overalL slipped to Freshmen & Sophomores 4-11 in the conference, leading the Meet Your Major -~ J· A..., Badgers by one game . The Badgers had lost their pre­ •\,.~"" 15% Discount vious nine games, while the Wol­ COTH verines have lost four of their last q not including, five. COTH offers a comprehensive course · s~ehems of studies in theory & practice of N.D.- S.M.C. contemporary media and theatre • f JEWELERS EAST s. Students Boston Coli 87, Georgetown 85, OT All students interested in film and video, SINCE 1917 Duquesne 93, West V1rg1n1a 70 F0 X A1der 60, Bucknell 52, OT media studies and mass communication are William & Mary 70, Delaware 58 Can1S1us 80. St. Bonaventure 74 cordially invited to visit departmental DIRECT DIAMOND IMPORTERS SOUTH facilities in the Loft, O'Shaughnessy Hall, Clemson 93, Duke 86 Thursday, March 3 from 6:30pm to 8:00pm University Park Mall and South Carolina 52, DePaul 51 MIDWEST All students interested in theatre are cordially Dayton 97, Long Island U 85 Oh10 62, Eastern M1ch1gan 60 invited to visit departmental facilities in ·Concord. & Pierre Moran Nebraska 60, Kansas 58 Room 1, Washington Hall, Today , March 3, SOUTHWEST Malls - Elkhart Baylor 63, Texas Tech 61 from 6:30pm to 8:00pm Southern MethodiSt 61, Texas Chnst1an 56 ....._ Oklahoma 67. Iowa State 65 l Ihe~~======~~4()lell~======~==T=h=u=r=sd=a=y,=M=~==ch==3,=1=9=8=3===p=ag=e=l=S Bloom County Berke Breathed I ~~------~~~.--=-- =--- Campus ~ .·

•1 p.m. - CPR Certification, for ND/SMC Stu­ 1H€- .RIGHT OOAR~· ~ ()0005HJ IS A W€-6 BfT CHIU...Y dents, Havican Hall, /HIS MORN IN&. •4:30 p.m. -Mathematical Colloquium, "The Frenet Frames of Compact Submanifolds in Com­ ~ AAAf6H.I~ plex Projective Spaces," Prof. Hsin-sheng Tai, 226 I CCMB . •6:15 and 7 p.m. -Christo Filmi, "Valley Cur­ r tain," "Running Fence," Annenberg Auditorium •6:30 p.m. - AIESEC Meeting, L?iortune Little < Theatre •7 and 10:15 p.m. -Film, "Camelot," Engineer­ ~ ~~ J-] ~ ing Auditorium, Sponsored by Finance Club, S l •7 p.m. - Collection for Senior Class Trip to Bahamas, LaFortune Lobby Simon Jeb Cashin •7:30 p.m. - Bicycle Club Meeting, 2nd Floor LaFortune •7:30 p.m. -Justice Education Lecture, "The Gospel Agenda in Global Perspective," Sister Marie Augusta Neal, Carroll Hall •s p.m. - ND%SMC Theatre, "Marathon '33,' Washington Hall, S2.50 students & S3 adults •s p.m. - Basketball, ND Men vs. Seton Hall, ACCArena •s p.m. - Piano Recital, Ronald YaDeau, Little Theatre T.V. Tonight

6:30p.m. 16 NBC Nightly News Photius 22 CBS News Fate 28 ABC's World News Tonight 34 Making It Count HE~ CAN I 80RKOW 7p.m. 16 MASH SoM£ OF YOu~ 22 Laverne and Shirley '>HAVIN4 CREAM? 28 Joker's Wild 34 The MacNeiVLehrer Report 7:30p.m. 16 All in the Family \ 22 College Basketball 28 Tic Tac Dough 34 Straight Talk 8p.m. 16 Fame 28 Condo 34 All Creatures Great and Small 8:30p.m. 28 Amanda's 9p.m. 16 Gimme A Break 28 Too Close for Comfort 34 Mystery 9:30p.m. 16 Cheers 22 Family Feud ACROSS 29 Salt or 56 Temperance 22 Setting 28 It Takes Two 1 A Wimbledon ester agitator of"The 10p.m. 16 Hill Street Blues champ 33 Horse opera 60 Riverin Crucible" 22 Knots Landing The Daily Crossword 5 Swank performer England 24 Thicket 28 20/20 9 Stick or of old 61 Tom Joad's 26 Pickle 34 Sneak Previews dash 34 Locus portrayer 27 Doubting 12 13 Crazy one 36 Sponge 63 Cleave one ":":"""+--t--t--1 14 Brutish one 37 Bleed 64- Domingo 28 Gordon of 16 'Barna's 38 David's son 65 Specialty the comics The Far Side ..,..,...+--+-+----1 Crimson - 40 Ring acronym of Pindar 30 Houston 17 Apartment· 41 "-Lay 66 Combina· athlete -+--+-t--1 size canine Dying" tions of 31 Keepsake 19 Slime 42 Peak minerals 32 Primitive 20 Equipage 43 LBJ or DOE 67 Age suffix poem 21 "The - of 44 Metric unit 68 Actress 33 Wire nail Chillon" 46 Weapon Bayes 35 Sacred -,-+--t---1 23 Military found on table "' top man: "Pequod" DOWN 38 Fields abbr. 49 Gist 1 Can. prov. 39 Gasps 25 Hindrance 51 Downfall 2 Grime 43 Float -+--+--1 26 "The - the 52 Windowlike 3 Pitching 45 Revises crime" opening great, 47 "Guys and Waite- Dolls" Wednesday's Solution 4 Practiced author cajolery 48 Song styl· 5 Nutlet ist Edith 6 Scull 50 Free drink 7 "Gripsholm" 52 Gambling for one game 8 Cultivators 53 Glade or 9 Foil green 10 Bert Lahr 54 Not any role 55- of 11 Chopping Cleves tool 57 -·China 12 Equal 58 Frankfort's ©1983 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc. 15 Venezuelan river All Rights Reserved river 59 Houston· 1 J Ot'~ · Chronl~ll Fll!urtl 1113 18 The Emerald based group "Gezundheit." 3/3/83 Isle 62 Map abbr.

Junior Class of Notre Dame & St. Mary's, Flanner, Lyons, PW, Stanford, Pangborn, Thursday Night and Holy Cross in cooperation with Howard Hall ~iorThtr Presents A Chance to Dance BEACH PARTY! $1 Rum & Coke Special

Friday March 4 9:30 · 1:30 "\0(\\\.8 Chautauqua LaFortune Ballroom Door Prises & Refreshments Senior Formal Bids will be available ,___NO· SMC ID REQUIRED!! Also a Raffle for a FREE BIDI SQorts Thursday, March 3, 1983- page 16 Seton Hall visits tonight Irish get chance to even score By RICH O'CONNOR Daryl Devero, and forward Howard Bruno, Calif., where he averaged 19 Sports Writer McNeill, who combined for 43 points and seven rebounds a game points and 1 5 rebounds a game last last season. Sometimes you just know that year, have graduated, and Mike In­ As Seton Hall's point guard, things aren't going your way. Take, gram and John Collins, the No.2 and Powell has been scoring 9.1 points a for instance, the Seton Hall basket­ No. 4 scorers, are sitting out this game while dishing off 3.6 assists. ball team that arrives at Notre Dame season with injuries. Powell also has the distinction of tonight to t take on the Irish in the Also gone are last season's two leading the Pirates in blocked shots ACC at8p.m. head coaches, Bill Raferty, who with 13. Suffering through a 5-21 season to stepped down three weeks before Morris transfered from Kansas date - despite beating Pitt in Big the first game, and interim coach City (Kan.) Community College East Conference action the Hoddy Mahon. Stepping in to fill the where he he was named a juco third­ Pirates must close out their season void is P.). Carlesimo. A 1971 team All-American after averaging against a Notre Dame team they em­ Fordham graduate, Carlesimo 22 points and six rebounds a game. barrassed last season 71-58 in the played for Digger Phelps' 26-3 Morris, a natural forward, is holding Byrne Meadowlands Arena in North­ Fordham team. down Seton Hall's pivot slot. The 6-6 ern New Jersey. Carlesimo had spent seven years junior is scoring 8.4 points while To make matters worse, this as the head man at Wagner College, grabbing 4.1 rebounds a game. Notre Dame squad is a team whose attaining a record of 65-83 and Nate "Skate" Rogers h~s returned record stands at 16-9 and must win taking the Seahawks to three post­ for his sophomore season to claim to have a chance at NCAA post­ season tournaments before taking the other forward spot. The 6-7 season play. On top of all of this, a the Seton Hall job. native of Orange, N.J., played in all Pirate win would be their .first win Carlesimo immediately began the but four games during his freshman on the road in ten tries. process of bringing Seton Hall up to campaign. This season Rogers has john Paxson and the rest of his teammates have a score to settle Seton Hall does not return a start­ the competitive level of the Big East been averaging 7.3 points and four tonight as Seton Hall visits the ACC. Last year, the Pirates embar­ er from last y..::ar's squad that Conference by adding four quality rebounds a game. rassed the Irish in the Byrne Arena. This time, Seton Hall takes on a finished with an 1 1-16 record after recruits. Tom Brown will round out the team that must win to keep its tournament hopes alive. Rich winning nine of its first ten games. Three of these additions have Pirates' starting five. A 6-6 junior O'Connor previews the game at the right. (Photo by Ed Carroll} Guard Dan Callandrillo, forward earned starting berths in their first who can play either forward or year at the Hall. Freshman Andre guard, Brown leads Seton Hall in McCloud has been the big gun, shooting percentage (55 percent) Prophecy coming true however. The 6-6 forward from while averaging seven points and six Washington, D.C., who has started rebounds a game. all 26 Pirate games, has already These players face a Notre Dame Dolan emerges from shadows proven his ability to play with the team that has its back up against the best in the country as he averages 1 7 wall. In order t to have the slimmest By LOUIE SOMOGYI hanan was regarded as the best all- tying basket and - just when one points and seven rebounds a game. hope for an NCAA invitation, the Sports Writer around athlete on the squad. thought that Kempton or Marquette Also gaining starting roles in their Irish have to win their final three With Dolan, however, there was would get the rebound underneath first year in a Pirate uniform are a games against the Pirates, Dayton Ever since Notre Dame"basketball no comparison, no bestowal of a - Dolan tipped the ball in to tie the pair of junior college transfers, Ken- (Monday), and Northern Iowa coach Digger Phelps made national title, no superior abilities. Despite score. ny Powell and Marvin Morris. (Thursday). The tournament selec- ~news last spring with revelations of his 31-point and 14-rebound See DOLAN, page 13 Powell, a 6-3 junior guard, played the cheating and scandals that go on averages as a New Jersey high- two years for Skyline College in San See PIRATES, page 11 in college athletics today, he has schoolsenior,hewasnotselectedto ======been kiddingly labeled as "The Holy the prestigious McDonald's All- One." America squad like his frontline But, after his prophecy in the classmates, Kempton and Barlow. preseason about 6-8 freshman Jim Once the season began, he began The Cubs and the meaning of life Dolan, though, one has to wonder if an even deeper journey into Phelps' words are indeed becoming oblivion. the gospel. While Kempton, Barlow, and his Thoughts that enter and exit while I'm trying to stay "Jim Dolan might be the surprise roommate Price all earned starting awake in commercial law: Craig Chval of the freshmen because he's such an roles in the lineup, and Buchanan Bobby Knight's recent less-than-cordial dealings with intelligent basketball player," served as an important player off the the media certainly didn't cost Indiana any good will Sports Writer predicted Phelps. "He knows the bench, Dolan was relegated to most­ with the United States Basketball Writers Association, I game, he doesn't make mistakes, he's ly mop-up roles, averaging only 3.2 which named the Hoosiers' Randy Wittman as its player an excellent passer, and a good points and 2. 5 rebounds through his of the year in District 4. Wittman isn't even the best shooter. first 12 games. player on his own team (Ted Kitchel), let alone the Big "Before the year is over, you'll see Suddenly, Phelps' prediction Ten (Illinois' Derek Harper), or the state Oohn Pax- son). · him in key situations. He'll get the about Dolan began to sound as hope­ You can thank Digger's deliberate, if unspectacular, I Wittman is simply the most-publicized player on style of ball for that. Had the Irish gotten into a first-half i -~key rebound when you thought less as the "We're-going-to-steal-20- Kempton was going to get it, or wins" prediction he made before the what was, before Kitchel's injury, a classic example of a track meet with their shooting eyes still on the bus, the you'll see him make a key one-on­ 1981-82 basketball season. team that was far greater than the sum of its individual game would have been a rout. To Ray Meyer's credit, one when you thought Paxson was "Naturally, I was a little frustrated, parts. For proof of that, we'll have to wait for next year's DePaul played by far its best half-court game of the going to do it." but I wasn't really disappointed with NBA season, if there is one. But, then, only one of the season, save the final two minutes. "Surprise" was Phelps' word my early season performances," says top seven players from Indiana's famed 1975 and 1976 • choice because of the way Dolan Dolan. "It doesn't work out that way teams - Quinn Buckner - has been anything more Rest assured that NBC will come to regret its overex­ seemed to be overlooked by the fans where you think you should play than a journeyman player. posure of announcers Dick Enberg and AI McGuire. and the press in the early part of the some more in a game just because The fact that Scott May, Kent Benson, Steve Green, Surely the Peacock People realize that familiarity al­ season. With four other highly­ you want to. You just have to go out Bobby Wilkerson, Tom Abernathy and john Laskowski most always breeds contempt, especially when it touted recruits joining the squad, he and work harder and concentrate fell far short ofNBA stardom, though, is hardly an indict­ comes to sportscasters. It may be difficult to believe, ment of Knight. On the contrary, the eventual unmask­ . I became lost in the shuffle. more on the court." but the now-ridiculed Curt Gowdy was once the dar­ Tim Kempton was seen to be the The patience paid off for Dolan in ing of their run-of-the-mill talents is a testimony to ling of TV sports. heir apparent to John Paxson as a the 13th game of the year against Knight's coaching genius. In the first place, Enberg's workload is outrageous. Notre Dame All-American, Ken Bar­ traditional Midwest nemesis, Mar­ • Recently, he has made an uncharacteristically high low was touted as the next Orlando quette. Can Dallas Green be serious? The general manager of number of slip-ups. That should hardly come as a Woolridge, Joseph Price emulated Phelps prophecy was fulfilled. the Phillies-West is outraged because a Chicago colum­ surprise to NBC executives, who have made Enberg the sharp-shooting swingman in the With 58 seconds left and the Irish nist picked his 30-and-over club to finish sixth in the resemble Pac-man as he scurries from airport to airport. mold ofTracy jackson, and joe Buc- trailing 57-55, Kempton missed the National League East. There are two conclusions in the Although I still find him both entertaining and en­ wake of Green's series of shrewd moves (Bill Caudill, lightening, McGuire is beginning to wear thin in some Ferguson jenkins, Keith Moreland, Dan Larsen, Bump circles. As somebody else put it, as smart as he sounds Wills, et a!.) since leaving Philadelphia - Green is still while second-guessing coaches on the air, it's difficult on the Phillies payroll, and somebody must have read to imagine how his Marquette teams ever lost a game. the offensive prediction to him. Besid~s, the guy is But when NBC sent a camera crew on horseback to probably right. The Cubs are due for an off year after follow Cowboy Dick and Cowboy AI home on the range finishing fifth last season. a few weeks back, it was just too much. McGuire ap­ • parently believes otherwise, but his status as a pretty By the way, did anybody at Saturday night's Notre fair basketball coach and a pretty fair commentator Dame hockey game bother to find out if all of those does not qualify him to come into my living room and people (not fans) were there to say their good byes or to tell me the meaning of life. offer their apologies? What was that about returning to • the scene of the crime? How can I be so sure that since the mercury is flirting It goes without saying (even though it surely hasn't with 70 in Chicago while my White Sox are in Florida, I gone unsaid) that Digger Phelps did an impeccable job won't be shivering in 30-degree weather on opening of orchestrating Notre Dame's comeback against day next month? DePaul on Saturday. But his coaching performance in • the first half was equally as impressive. Even though the Well, anyway, did anybody else notice that, while the Irish shot less than 40 percent and avoided the offensive brains behind M*A*S*H were able to overcome quite backboard in the first half, they trailed a team with more nicely the defections of Henry Blake, Trapper john, and I raw talent and with home court advantage by just four Radar, the program never was the same once Frank I points. Burns left? l