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Wednesday, December 7, 1994 • Vol. XXVI No.64 THE INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER SERVING NOTRE DAME AND SAINT MARY'S Third edition of The Guide 'still building' Committee Course book to select meant to help, ~OW El?FECTIVE IS.. THE GUIDE? Do youtuse.? Does .. it. contain new provost but students The Guide?'' classes in your major? express doubts Special to the Observer Rev. Edward Malloy, presi­ Editor's Note: This is the first dent of the University of Notre in a three-part series examin­ Dame, will ing student government and its ask the projects University's Academic· By GWENDOLYN NORGLE Do yo~ fl~Jd. Council at its Assistant News Editor it l1.i!lpfi«~~ January meeting to The future of The Guide , elect a the student course evaluation search com- . book, lies within the hands of mittee to O'Meara the students who must encour­ assist in the age their professors to partici­ process of selecting the pate, according to members of University's next provost, ac­ the Student Government. cording to a University press In their campaign for Stu­ release. dent Body President and Vice President, Dave Hungeling and 100 Students Polled Matt Orsagh originally wanted • see SENATE, page 3 to dissolve Student Govern­ The Observer/Zoe Marin ment, including The Guide. included the cost of printing dents who organize the Hungeling said he, too, The new provost, the However, Hungeling agreed to 2500 copies of a handbook that publication of the course evalu­ thought The Guide is ''definite­ University's second-ranking of­ have its third edition published would contain 216 pages and a ation handbook. Two co-edi­ ly a way to improve the quality ficer, will succeed Timothy again this year, and now sees cover. tors are each paid $300 per of undergraduate education." O'Meara. Notre Dame's the book as a valuable aid for However, the final version of semester, and seven or eight One reason it has the poten­ provost since 1978. O'Meara students. the Fall 1994 edition of The contributors who write for The tial to be effective, Hungeling announced this summer that The student body though still Guide contained only 176 Guide are paid $100 per said, is because it is a student­ he would step down as provost questions its effectiveness. pages, and in order to cut semester. run program. June 30, 1996, at the age of The Guide, which is in its down the budget, McCabe said, These costs are worth the Produced entirely by under­ 68. second year of publication, the course evaluations are money, however. according to graduate students, The Guide In accordance with the aca­ l costs just under $5,000 per printed on recyclable paper. The Guide itself. first asks permission of a pro­ demic articles of the semester to print. More advertisers are also The "Note to All Users of The fessor to print an evaluation of University. Malloy will ask that According to The Guide Co­ being sought in order to Guide" printed on page 2 of the his or her class. the council form a committee Commissioner Susan McCabe, acquire more funding for The handbook, says the Student If given permission, The composed of five of its faculty the bill for the Fall 1994 edi­ Guide. Government's "primary goal is Guide staff includes an evalua­ members and one of its stu­ tion of The Guide was well In addition to the printing to aid students in obtaining the tion consisting students' rank­ dent members. Malloy will below the $4900 estimate that costs, money is spent by the best possible undergraduate ings of 1 to 5 in response to chair the committee, which the printing company sent the Academic Council, which pays education while at Notre Student Government. The bill approximately $2,000 to stu- Dame." see GUIDE I page 4 see PROVOST I page 4

Recycling increases, but more funding required

By PEGGY LENCZEWSKI as it gains support. News Writer "At this point in time, we don't know how successful the Saint Mary's College program will be, and we don't Residence Hall Association has want to waste money on a pro­ made significant progress in gram that will not be used in organizing a campus-wide re­ the long run," she said. cycling program. The success of the program The Recycling Committee has relies on student support, and received information from sev­ RHA hopes to have sufficient eral sources regarding the cost publicity to increase students' of implementing a recycling awareness of the program. program in every section of the residence halls. Other RHA news: Right now, the primary con­ •RHA sponsored an area cern of the committee is finding family for the Thanksgiving a source of funding. A letter holiday, and provided them requesting funding is being with an extensive holiday din­ prepared to be sent to the ad­ ner. ministration. "The family was very nice RHA board member Amy and very grateful," said Jenn Kramer feels that financial sup­ Cherubini, RHA president. port should come from the •Regina Hall's December 2 administration. SYR was a big success. "This program is going to "We were very impressed cost thousands of dollars and with the number of people who the residence halls simply don't turned out," said Sandy have that kind of funding," she Penska, Regina Hall represen­ said. tative. "Eventually a program such However, there was some as this is going to become concern about some vandalism mandatory, so we might as well that occurred in the women's start now," she added. restroom. Meg Couturier, RHA repre­ •Next week's RHA meeting The Observer/Michelle DiRe sentative from Regina Hall, will be at five o'clock instead of Jolly Old Saint Nick feels that the program should six-thirty, and will be the an­ start on a small scale and grow nual RHA Christmas Party. Santa pays a pre-Christmas visit to students studying in the Huddle at LaFortune. • I , I ~-I-,-,-----;--.,:-;,~,;-,;-,;-:-~.,...,...... --.,....--...,...,.___,.--,~- ' I I I I f I • . . . .

page 2 The Observer • INSIDE Wednesday, December 7, 1994 • INSIDE COLUMN • WORLD AT A GLANCE Oh that Serbs keep hold on U.N. peacekeepers, let convoy pass Bosnia rejects Tuesday put the number of peacekeepers path to Refusing to cancel their insur­ held by Serbs at 309, 40 fewer than they ance policy against further NATO concessions reported previously. The United Nations bombings, Serbs kept tight hold offered no explanation for the new figures. womanhood D Bosnian Serb 8] Serb-held Croatia over more than 300 U.N. peace­ The peacekeepers, held at several points in • Muslim·Croat 0 U.N.-designated keepers today despite earlier federation "safe zones" Bosnia, were detained after NATO airstrikes pledges to set them free. ~=--~7J31J1P:"""'~~SP=~"TII against Serb positions two weeks ago. Serbs Dear Mom and Dad, Serbs yielded to U.N. pressure released 53 of them Sunday, all Dutch and I have something to tell and allowed an aid convoy to reach British peacekeepers stopped in earlier efforts you. Please don't be dis­ Srebrenica in eastern Bosnia. A to get food and fuel to Srebrenica. But Serbs appointed. I know you second convoy on its way to have reneged on a promise by their leader, have this image of me as Goradze, another Muslim-held Radovan Karadzic, to release the others and a fine, upstanding, moral, town in eastern Bosnian running U.N. efforts to secure their release have made conservative person. low on vital supplies, was still little progress. And I am really. But awaiting clearance. On the front lines, combat tapered ofT today there comes a time in Serbs refused to let 32 other con­ around the northwestern enclave of Bihac, every young woman's life voys bring relief to other Muslim­ whose civilians are also suffering food short­ where she just has to Krista Nannery held enclaves or to resupply peace­ ages, said Maj. Gourmelon. He said the govern­ break free, do something keepers. Still, a U.N. spokesman in ment-held town of Velika Kladusa just north of wild, something crazy' Assistant Viewpoint Sarajevo, Kris Janowski, hailed the nN'TFN~o'11 Bihac was reported close to falling. something out of charac- Editor Srebrenica convoy as the "first But Gen. Atif Dudakovic, commander of the ter. Please don't get encouraging sign from the Bosnian Bosnian army 5th Corps that is based in Bihac, alarmed, what I did isn't that bad. You might Serb side in many weeks." told the main Sarajevo daily Oslobodjenje that even understand Mom, being a woman your­ The 50,000 residents of his defense lines were holding firm. self. It's Dad I'm worried about. Srebrenica are among the most Serbs from both Bosnia and Croatia have It all started innocently enough. A joke desperate in Bosnia. Nearly half Recent developments linked up with a renegade Muslim force to actually. Guys do these things all the time. are refugees and scuffles broke out •The Bosnian Prime Minister will not make a major push in the Bihac area. accept changes to the current peace Why shouldn't we? And our friend's dad was today between them as 96 tons of proposal. Croat forces claimed to have captured anoth­ kind enough to set us up, make reservations food, fuel and winter gear rolled er seven villages from Serbs in a week-long into the town, said Peter Kessler of •Bosnian Serbs have almost captured push north up the Bosnian side of the border for us, got us a good table. The doorman even Velika Kladusa. Fighting was heavy near greeted us as "The Notre Dame Girls." He U.N. High Commissioner for Bihac. with Croatia. checked our coats for free, waived the cover, Refugees, which organized the con­ More than 200,000 people are dead or miss­ •Bosnian Serbs released 53 and put us on the management's tab for the voys from Belgrade, the Yugoslav peacekeepers, but still hold 350. ing in the 32-month-old conflict, which began evening. We were living the good life. We felt capital. The fuel was the first to when Serbs rebelled after Bosnia's Muslim-led mature. Worldly. But this was no ordinary arrive in six months. •British and French diplomats government declared independence from discussed a new peace initiative with dinner club. Mom, Dad, here it is. I'm com­ U.N. spokesmen in Sarajevo on Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic. Yugoslavia. ing clean. I went to a male strip joint. There. I've said it. But it was a nice strip joint, really it was. Classy even. And they were all so nice Fergie evicted from London home Illinois rape, incest abortions funded to us. I know what you want to ask. Did they take LONDON CHICAGO it all off? Well, they don't call these places The Duchess of York's new landlord is evicting her. A judge Tuesday ordered Illinois to comply with a feder­ strip joints for nothing. No, we didn't shut our Romenda Lodge, home to the former al law requiring the state to provide Medicaid-funded eyes. No, we didn't get any table dances. No, Sarah Ferguson and her two daughters, abortions to women who become pregnant during rape or I didn't put any money in their G-strings or was sold this month to a businessman incest. U.S. District Judge Charles Kocoras made perma­ meet any of the guys after the show. We were who wants to move his family in ...She nent his Nov. 21 temporary order, when he told state offi­ content just to sit and well, stare. We cer­ has to move out by the end of January cials they had to follow the 1993 law in order to acccept tainly saw some interesting things. It's amaz­ and hasn't found anywhere else yet," federal money. Medicaid is jointly funded by federal and ing what the male body is capable of and what said the duchess's spokeswoman, state governments. In mid-November, a state committee a few candles can do for "atmosphere." requesting customary anonymity. Fergie voted to abolish Gov. Jim Edgar's emergency rule allow­ We stayed for less than two hours. It got rented the six-bedroom house near ing for Medicaid funding in cases of rape or incest. The really monotonous after a while. The initial Windsor Castle, 20 miles west of committee said such a rule shouldn't be made without shock of seeing naked men do handstands or London, after separating from Prince Ferguson legislative approval. Edgar issued the rule in July after the lambada faded within the first half hour. Andrew more than two years ago. Congress acted last year to allow Medicaid-funded abor­ Every once in a while, we'd catch our reflec­ Princesses Beatrice, 6, and Eugenie, 4, go to school about tions for rape and incest victims. Until then, the Hyde tions in the mirror behind the stage. Four five miles away from the $1.4 million house. The duchess Amendment had banned federal money for abortions Notre Dame girls were either trying to control has been looking for a home near her husband's at except to save a woman's life. Since then, the state has their giggles or checking their watches. I Sunninghill Park so she could call on his security officers processed six claims for Medicaid-funded abortions for think we embarrassed the poor guys actually. in an emergency, according to Press Association, the rape and incest victims, according to the Illinois They kept looking at us rather shyly as if we British national news agency. Department of Public Aid. were their little sisters or something. That's not surprising considering we were probably the youngest, most innocent looking girls in Binge drinkers: Ruining campus life? Mercury expedition to search for ice the place. One guy practically ran off the stage after he performed, covering himself in CHICAGO SAN FRANCISCO embarrassment. Nearly half of U.S. college students are binge drinkers NASA wants to send an unmanned spacecraft to look I think the whole strip joint experience is a who make life miserable for much of the other half, for ice inside craters on Mercury, the solar system's lot different for guys than for girls. Guys can according to a survey. "Students on campuses where hottest planet. The presence of ice could suggest the pos­ go every night and not get bored. They can there's a lot of binge drinking are affected in a number of sibility of life on Mercury. While the planet's temperature look at the same dirty magazine for hours and ways - including physical assault, sexual harassment, reaches 800 degrees at its equator, Mercury's poles are watch late-nite television every night, all property damage and interrupted sleep or study time," 235 below zero. "Mercury is intriguing to scientists night. The novelty of our evening, on the said Henry Wechsler, director of the Alcohol Studies because it is the least understood of the solar system's other hand, wore off rather quickly. If you've Program at Harvard School of Public Health. He surveyed terrestrial planets," said astronomer Robert M. Nelson. seen one naked man dancing man in cowboy 17,592 students on 140 campuses. Forty-four percent who discussed the plans for the Hermes mission on boots, you've seen them all. reported hinging on alcohol. Binge drinkers were seven Monday at a meeting of the American Geophysical Union We all came to the conclusion that if there is times as likely to have unprotected sex as a non-binge He is the project's principal investigator at NASA's Jet one place we don't want to go for our bache­ drinker and 10 times as likely to drive after drinking. Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena. lorette party, it's a strip club. No strippers for our bridal showers either. But we have a lit­ • INDIANA WEATHER • NATIONAL WEATHER tle time before we start really worrying about Wednesday, Dec. 7 that type of stuff. So don't worry, I'm still Accu-Wealher,.forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures your little girl and will be for a long time. The Accu-Weather® forecast for noon, Wednesday, Dec. 7. Os Lines separate high temperature zones lor the day. 1

The views expressed in the Inside Column are those of the author and not necessarily those of The Observer. ~ '''' ' • TODAY'S STAFf OHIO jlndianapoli3 46° I News ILL Viewpoint Brad Prendergast u· Krista Nannery Amy Schmidt Angela Olsen FRONTS: Lab Tech Sports •• • Mark Alexion •COLD • WARM STATIONARY• • Joe Villinski C 1994 Accu-Wealher. Inc. Accent Pressute Kym Kilbride H L Production HIGH LOW SHOWERS RAIN T-STORMS FLVRRIES SNOW ICE SUNNY PT CLOUDY CLOUDY Graphics KY. Kira Hutchinson Zoe Marin Atlanta 64 53 Dallas 56 45 New Orleans 75 62 Kim Massman Baltimore 47 41 Denver 37 13 New York 45 35 Th~ Ob~rv~r (USPS 599 2-4000) is published Monday through Friday q_~-~4.Q.Q (f ~ c:::1 Boston 34 26 Fremont 67 47 Philadelphia 47 40 exc~pt during exam and vacation ~riods. The Observer is a m~mb~r of Chicago Showers T·storms Rain R~rties S~~;;, Ice Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy 33 24 Miami 85 71 Phoenix 66 45 the Associated Pr~s. All reproduction rights are r~erved. Coldwater 39 34 Minneapolis 23 v.. Associated Preas GraphK;sNel 01994 Accu·Wealher. Inc. 13 St. Louis 33 30 ' . ' '

Wednesday, December 7, 1994 The Observer • CAMPUS NEWS page 3 •HPC • fA CUllY SENATE Acting group Senate debates role in may come electing new provost to campus "The spirit in the Senate Two additional wants to shift authority from By CHRISTINE DEBEVIC the administration to the facul­ News Writer members may be ty in government decisions," said Vosta. "The important The Mulberry Players, an added to council question is not whether the acting group that is committed Senate is recognized or not but to performing topics of interest By MIKE DAY whether things are done in a to students, may visit campus News Writer ' proper fashion and the proper sometime next semester, Lisa decision is made." Puma announced at the Hall The Faculty Senate continues The academic council has the Presidents' Council last night to debate whether or not two of responsibility of choosing the "The Players are a gender its members should be added to provost every five years. relations group that performs the academic council in deter­ According to Father Richard skits relevant to the campus," mining who the new provost McBrien, the chair of the said Rich Palermo, co­ will be for the 1995-96 school Senate, the faculty is seeking chairperson of the council. year. greater input in the governing Puma, from the University The faculty members met last of the university. Counseling , said that night at the Center for Several members of the fac­ the group wants student feed­ Continuing Education to discuss ulty Senate oppose the selection back for ideas of interesting several unresolved issues from of two professors to the assist the five person academic coun­ and informative skits. The last month's meeting. All in a day's work TheObseiVer/MichelleDiRe Players would be brought in However, the meeting turned cil in its decision. by the UCC, and the group into a debate of how large a "There is no justification for Flanner junior Ben Foos works on a pottery project during ceramics would also be sponsored by role the Senate should take in any change," said Senator John class. the Center for Social Concerns assisting the academic council Malkovsky, professor of theol­ and Women's Studies. in its decision next spring. ogy. "Unless seven is better In other HPC news: "The administration has than five members, I don't see • The council discussed the made it known that they would why the Senate needs to move Mass"ror Ballasty. Universit money remaining from the like a more extensive faculty to change the process." President Father Edwar cancellation of Weekend participation," said Senator Senator Michael Detlefsen,

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LAR~GEONE ITEM PIZZA ONLY - $5.00 WiT"rl THIS AD EXPIRES I 12{22/94 ~ l r ' page 4 The Observer· CAMPUS NEWS Wednesday, December 7, 1994 partment that I needed that mately a decision of the profes­ completed, the articles direct were printed in The Guide," she sors" to communicate with the that Malloy consult with the Guide said. Student Body. He suggested Provost elected faculty members of the continued from page 1 Greg Ramano, a junior living that professors might not want continued from page 1 council concerning all serious off campus, admitted, "I've to participate in the evaluation candidates and afterwards re­ seventeen questions. never used The Guide." handbook because of concerns will receive and consider nomi­ port the complete results of These statistics, according to According to Pangborn Hall regarding its objectivity. nations from the University's that consultation to the the Student Government, show senior Cynthia Poulakidas, The In an effort to increase pro­ faculty. trustees, along with a personal how many students responded Guide is "useful for some class­ fessor participation, McCabe Additional nominations may recommendation. and what the average response es. However, it would be used said that not only were letters be received directly by Malloy It is then the responsibility of was. The professor's descrip­ more if more professors partici­ written directly to the profes­ and the University's trustees. the trustees to elect the new tion of the course and its re­ pated in it," she said. sors, but letters were sent to When this procedure has been provost. quirements are also included in McCabe also mentioned that deans asking them to encour­ the evaluation. all other top 25 colleges and age professors in their depart­ The Guide staff said that they universities (according to U.S. ments to allow The Guide to work "to be fair, accurate, and News and World Report) have print evaluations of their cours­ comprehensive in writing these had course evaluation hand­ es. However. she added, "We critiques." books like The Guide that are can't force them (professors) to While The Guide is entirely more developed. do it." student-run, the course book According to McCabe, the According to Guide Co­ may not be reaching the stu­ University of Pennsylvania's Commissioner Andrew Eifert, C.OMPLlTE FIVE & SEVEN NIGHT tRIPS dent body it was intended to Penn Review has a full paid "every year we pick up more IOj.li$ i: I J·1 .J;I J t"f!-1~1·1 help. staff, and Harvard's The Cue and more people. It's not going I :1·1~f·1,l,f.t3' j'i :I 4·!3: I Many members of the student began 30 or 40 years ago. to happen over night." 1·1·\'• i·l~f·i :1 ¥t·i3: I body said that The Guide was However, she said, when their McCabe said that The Guide IBi'lltf)ljl not useful to them. handbooks were in the begin­ is being funded for the next two IJ;:H•H·BI Beth Rabadan, a sophomore ning stages "those schools ran years by the Academic Council, VAIL/BEAVER CREEK from Pangborn Hall agreed. into the same problems we're and it will be decided whether "There were few teachers from dealing with now" or not to continue its publica­ the 200 level classes in my de- Hungeling said that it is "ulti- tion after that two-year period.

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Sutherlin asking the court to execution by electrocution, Two judges turned down re­ review Gov. Evan Bayh's deci­ even if death is not immediate, quests Tuesday to block the ex­ sion Monday to deny clemency. Abel said. ecution of Gregory Resnover, "That's (Bayh's) right, and he Gray, who prosecuted Steven whose lawyers turned to the has now made that decision," Judy for the murder of a moth­ U.S. Supreme Court with a plea Metz said. er and her three children, 1 I' CiintoJ,l($ t•hi'i'eiht ·l··!! to halt his electrocution slated Waples managed to win the agreed electrocution does not J.uLn(.miW· ""'·.,, ... st:i;;];•';· ~~[~~;.H!~t~,;:-)~,:.~,i;:\';~:~:;&i~~:,t;!~]m~ for early Thursday. second hearing only after four violate the Constitution. Judy ~.u,.r•L.to"'·'".n·_,. by ~ l~ader ' One judge called a request "a judges refused to consider the was executed in 1981 after re­ nottuc•aJ Wing {}~tJt~ pre:··· ... last-minute attempt to manipu­ matter and state Supreme fusing to appeal. outlawed.;~,tfJrish late the judicial process." Court Chief Justice Randall T. As the legal battling was ...... ,,e~.._u. .u Army .. ·v·t';(;~f%k;(,.·¥~f+) Robert W. Hammerle, Shepard appointed Morgan ranging from Indianapolis to nu~~.-~ call~d it. a syml:>ollC,ijJ~ Resnover's chief attorney, Superior Judge G. Thomas Gray Washington, Resnover waited important''meeting, since' it asked the U.S. Supreme Court as a special judge. alone on Death Row at the state was the first time that Sinn for a stay to reconsider his But Resnover fared no better prison in Michigan City. Fein representatives had been blocking his , death sentence. The high court with Gray. The state's other condemned to the White House ...We had a pealed. "Someone rescue me... had no immediate response. Waples, arguing before Gray, inmates were transferred to a very gooq,me~ting/' ~~.. ~aid. '% ,•.•. ".,}h~ journalists ga 4 Hammerle said he is also said the state's electric chair super-security prison at i}.t~:l~.tt:>~k the4opportt:J)lity .•·als() • 'Adams and his .• .· .. preparing filings for U.S. works unreliably and that elec­ Westville, about 12 miles away, o(putting on the l'ecord Out dozen s·'·Wfltttint;O District Court in Indianapolis trocution violates state and fed­ after three inmates escaped in that. the British govern"' Wl}ite House.· &>...,.,,...,. and with the 7th U.S. Circuit eral constitutional bans on October. should leaveour country,, 1112 hours in taiJ.,ks;t·~'ntM:i:r:pij~(';iXI Court of Appeals in Chicago. cruel and unusual punishment. A prison guard was shot at and that its main function at Ointon and Vice rres101Bnt "Certainly it appears bleak "Death by electrocution in with homemade weapons and this time should be to do so in Gore did not take now for Mr. Resnover," said Indiana's electric chair actually smuggled bullets. The guard way which leads to havingta•Ui T. h. e'.'··''· .. . Richard Waples, a lawyer with cooks the body and boils the was not injured and the peacefuland a stable 'Ireland;" ...... ~ ...... the Indiana Civil Liberties blood," Waples said. inmates were recaptured inside Adams,told .reporters after AdaiJl.~.~R fhe .. Union. He said the final, failed Court rulings upholding the the prison walls. · meeting \Vith National Security disc\lSii ways to .... ··-~··~·"""' .. "'···· ..,"',.• ..,.., effort in state court was constitutionality of execution by Protests of the impending ex­ Adviser Anthony Lake and and economic growth in Resnover's "last best chance to electrocution are based on ecution resumed at the Commerc13 Secretary Ron troubled Northern lrehmd~i get a stay." wrong and outdated assump­ Statehouse. Brown. '':'t · The ban on U.S. cont · "Federal courts are increas­ tions that the condemned crimi­ "We protest the decision of A+senior U.S. official de- with Sinn Fein was . ingly hostile to these last­ nal loses consciousness imme­ Gov. Bayh to deny clemency to scribed~~ meeting as part.of mont~~; ago. aftet ~ije· ···· ...... ·... _.···· minute attempts to stay execu­ diately, he said. Gregory Resnover," said Nancy the process of nurturing pea.ce annouri'Ced its willingness to · tions," Waples said. After Waples presented evi­ Bothne, the Midwest director of in Northern Ireland. !•we are · enter into a cease-fire with Resnover, 43, is scheduled to dence for more than an hour, Amnesty International. very qopeful,·~ said the official, British forces. Adams'·meeting be executed just after midnight Deputy Attorney General Aaron Edward Ducree, of the Legal who asked not to be identified. with Lake was an evolutionary Wednesday - early Thursday Abel spoke for only for a few Redress Committee of the "We think there is an under- step in Sinn Fein's relations morning - for his part in the minutes. But Abel heard his National Association for the · standing to negotiate the with the United States. admin-: 1980 shooting · death of words echoed in the judge's Advancement of Colored Indianapolis police Sgt. Jack ruling that followed immedi­ People, said the debate over tl!~:: di~:r~n:::e· fight ~~,~:e:~~~~;:~;:~\1]1~n~~~~ .. Ohrberg. Ohrberg was slain ately. capitol punishment rises above ·•····.· Th~ offidal .said it i~r clear port tor joint effQr~s ofth · attempting to arrest Resnover The ICLU's class action suit, issues of race and ethnicity. that ·~when the United States British and Irish ' ·. ·· • in the shooting death of a filed on behalf of Indiana's 51 "It has to do with what is behind a processAit give .··to reach a poimc

Prayer Vigil in Opposition to the Execution of Gregory Resnover

Wednesday, December 7 11:45 pm- 12:15 am Law School Lounge

Gregory Resnover will be the first person to be put to death in Indiana since 1985. His execut~on is scheduled for 12:01 am on Thursday, December 8. Please join us for prayer and reflection at the time of his execution. Some thoughts will be pro­ vided by Law School Dean David T. Link and Father William Lewers of the Center for Civil and Human Rights.

Governor Evan Bayh has the authority to prevent the execution. His phone number is (317) 232-4567

Center for Civil and Human Rights National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty (NDLS Chapter) Notre Dame Amnesty International Office of the Dean, Notre Dame Law School

• r .. ' , • • • • • ' £ • • • • • -~- -~

I •- I. I, I •· I. •· · ., ·t ' , ' ., " ' • ' I.

page 6 The Observer • WASHINGTON NEWS Wednesday, December 7, 1994 Rubin to replace Bentsen as head of Treasury By MARTIN CRUTSINGER going to miss you." really works together as a pushed Clinton to pursue a con­ at Treasury had more than its Associated Press Bentsen, who had spent 22 team." Clinton created the NEC servative economic policy that share of setbacks. years in the Senate before join­ to perform the same coordinat­ stressed deficit reduction and In office less than a month, WASHINGTON ing the administration, said he ing role in economic policy that free trade while failing to ad­ he had to deal with a botched President Clinton selected told the president back in the National Security Council dress the needs of middle class raid of the Branch Davidian Robert Rubin, who amassed a September of his desire to re­ does in foreign affairs. workers who have seen their complex in Waco, Texas, by the multimillion-dollar fortune on turn to his native Texas and The changeover is occurring wages stagnate for two Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Wall Street before joining the was not swayed even though as the administration is in the decades. Firearms, a Treasury agency. administration, to succeed Clinton tried on several occa­ midst of a series of internal "The administration's strat­ He also faced questions about Uoyd Bentsen as Treasury sec­ sions to talk him out of it. meetings trying to map out an egy has not been a terribly the ability of the Secret Service retary Tuesday. "It's been a great time to be approach in its new budget good one in dealing with the to protect the White House and Bentsen's departure will de­ Treasury secretary and it's a proposal to the Republicans' very real problem of middle about Treasury's supervisory prive the administration of the great time to be bowing out as "Contract With America." class anxiety," said Jeff Faux, role in handling a failed Cabinet officer with the most Treasury secretary," said Rubin, who spent three head of the liberal Economic Arkansas savings and loan in­ experience and respect on Bentsen, who later told re­ decades on Wall Street amass­ Policy Institute. volved in the Whitewater inves­ Capitol Hill just as Republicans porters that the Republican ing a fortune estimated at be­ Bentsen said he would leave tigation. are taking control of Congress takeover of Congress had not tween $100 million and $150 office on Dec. 22. But outside of early off-the­ for the first time in 40 years. influenced his decision. million, has little experience Until Rubin is confirmed, cuff remarks that caused the But the change is expected to Rubin's position as director of dealing with Congress. He cer­ Deputy Treasury Secretary dollar to drop sharply, Bentsen have little impact on policy the president's National tainly does not bring Bentsen's Frank Newman will oversee was much more sure-footed in since both men are pro-busi­ Economic Council is expected insider knowledge gained from day-to-day operations of the his economic policy. ness Democrats. to be filled by Erskine Bowles, long tenure as chairman of the department. He was one of the architects Rubin, who took a $26 million currently the deputy White Senate Finance Committee. While Bentsen won high of Clinton's deficit reduction pay cut to leave the investment House chief of staff. Bentsen, however, dismissed marks for his smooth dealings program and he also won plau­ banking firm of Goldman Sachs An administration source, worries on this score, saying with his former congressional dits for deft coordination of & Co. to join the administra­ who spoke on condition of "He's dealt with giant egos on colleagues, his two-year tenure international economic issues. tion, won widespread praise as anonymity, said that Bowles' Wall Street. He can deal with a self-effacing coordinator who selection was not announced them here." made sure a coherent economic Tuesday because the White Rubin was expected to have strategy was developed for a House had not decided on little trouble winning Senate president often criticized for an Bowles' replacement. confirmation. Sen. Bob Dole, R­ inability to reach timely deci­ While Bentsen was the first Kan. who will take over as a T. t1e 0 Jserver sions. top economic policy-maker to majority leader in January, But it was unclear how leave the administration, there said he expected to support smoothly Rubin would be able were already rumors of other Rubin's nomination because of is now accepting applications for to make the transition from his departures. his qualifications and his "hon­ behind-the-scenes role to chief Commerce Secretary Ron esty and integrity." economic policy spokesman for Brown is among those being Sen. Alfonse D'Amato, R-N.Y., the administration, where he considered to run the presi­ the incoming chairman of the will have to serve as the point dent's re-election campaign Senate Banking Committee, man in dealing with a and could depart early next said he looked forward to Cartoonist Republican Congress intent on year. working with Rubin "to lower shrinking the size of govern­ Clinton praised Rubin as the the capital gains tax and to re­ ment and cutting taxes. "consummate honest broker" lieve the tax burden of working In a Rose Garden ceremony who had helped the White middle-class Americans." To draw a comic strip 2-3 times a week for the 1995 announcing the change, Clinton House "do something that had While Rubin won praise from thanked Bentsen for his contri­ never been done before, to Republicans, ·liberal Democrats butions and said, ''I'm really have an economic team that faulted him. They said he had Spring Semester. Those interested, contact Garrett i I. Gray x 1771. Job details and pay will be discussed.

. ,: .., . .. ·-·· ·~f''"~< • .- '' ·--;,. F • ..-.,~.~~.-t.o·\ '~ • 'f·~--~~ .:(~~ '

~ .,..,. 1.1 ~ • • - r" • . • •' t I OFF-CAMPUS STUDENTS: South Bend Police have agreed to provide a home watch service for students over Christmas break. Police will check on your·house or apartment up to three times a day while you are away. There is no charge for this service.

To participate in the Home Watch Program, follow these easy steps: 1. Telephone South Bend Police at 235-9201 and ask to sign up for Home Watch. 2. Identify yourself as a Notre Dame, Saint Mary's, or Holy Cross student. 3. Tell police what day and date you are leaving and when you will return. 4. Be prepared to give police a contact person and telephone number in case there is a problem at your residence. 5. Be sure to notify police if you return from break early. ·

In addition to Home Watch, take other steps to protect your home: 1. Stop mail and newspaper delivery. 2. Leave lights on a timer. Consider leaving a radio on too. 3. Double check to see that all doors and windows are locked. 4. Keep valuables out of sight. 5. Take really valuable property home with you or store it with someone who will be here during break.

Be smart - protect your house while you are on break! This ad is sponsored by Student Government, the Off-campus Presidents, and Notre Dame Security. '-

Wednesday, December 7, 1994 The Observer •INTERNATIONAL NEWS page 7 Peaceful Europe a distant dream Christopher to Arafat:

By SALLY JACOBSEN · develop into full~blown wars. Russian President Boris Stop militant attacks Associated Ptes$ such as in Bosnia. not far from Yeltsin railed against the this elegant Central European United States for trying to By BARRY SCHWEID Christopher's meeting with BUDAPEST capital. _ keep it out of the exclusive Associated Press Assad, the diplomat. who in· Five years ago. it sounded -Jn a hesitant step forward-. NATO club. sis ted on anonymity, said nego­ like the perfect blueprint for a the nations offered to provide President Clinton tried to of~ JERUSALEM tiations with Syria could col· peaceful Europe: Tear down their first peacekeeping mis-: fer soothing words. NATO's Secretary of State Warren lapse if there is no break~ the Berlin,---~_,.,,.. .. .,.,., sion to police the disputed expansion. even if_ up to Christopher served notice on through by the end of 1995. Wall, rip apart Armenian enclave ofNagorno- Russia's borders. would mean PLO Chairman Vasser Arafat Some 70 Israelis have been the• Iron. Karabakh in the former Soviet more security forall, he said. Tuesday that he must put a killed in attacks this year, Curtain and· republic of Azerbaijan. The logic was lost on Yeltsin, stop to Islamic militants' about 50 of them within the dismantle the They also agreed on a series His government fears attacks on Israelis if he expects borders that preceded the 196 7 ··Soviet Union. of measures intended to give diminishing. influence and iso~ to spread Palestinian self~rule war in which the West Bank, Today, it's·· __ the group a higher proftle, in- lation on the continent's ·east.. across the West Bank. Gaza, the Golan Heights, East back to the eluding changing its name to em edge. Christopher also reassured Jerusalem and Sinai were cap~ drawing . ~,, Organization for Security and _ Yeltsin·s government also Israel's hard-pressed govern· tured. Sinai was returned to bo~d. . Shevardnactze Cooperation in Europe. _ ,A,At:bloc~ed .a statement approved ment that the Clinton adminis­ Egypt under a 1979 peace . .. :~f'fe C<;old) . . . .nim~~ii;; The<11J1gerlying· ~tl'a.~~gy;l:ii(\·bythe qt}ler$ that would have·_ .... tration considers Arafat's secu­ treaty. War. is over.. . . .·. ·•·J;i:; . pushed by the Uniied State$< condeJllDed the ·aggression of __ rity pledges "absolutely funda~ In 1993, Rabin agreed to give Beware of the peace, ''tfqrmer and othet Western nations, is •..: the Serbs. its traditional ally in----· mental" to peacemaking. The the PLO administrative control . Soviet Foreign Minister to ·stabilize -Europe by bolster;"'' · Bosnia. __ · government is in the throes of of Gaza and the town of Jericho Eciuat~ Shev~rdn~dzttsaid ingitf()rganizations tqld ~~e·h · That meanfthere was .no deciding whether to pull on the West Bank and to extend >ruefullY Tuesday at. thtFcol)clu· ating strong links betWeen its mention of the Yugoslav crisis Israel's army out of Arab towns PLO self-rule throughout the sion of a 52-nation summit. eastern and western ·halves. ' . - the worst conflict in Europe on the West Bank in the midst area. Arafat, in turn, pledged to that was supposed to difuse The NATO military alliance since World War II- in th~ of a long siege of attacks on maintain security and to pro· tensions in Europe. .... and __ th~ J3:urope~n U:qi(>n .. ~unn11it"s fiplj,l dR~pment, •. i'!" Israel soldiers and civilians. teet the nearly 6,000 Jewish ...... ,.,~b,eyardnadze, now j)resi~ iUJt}nd \e .. -_ admit >Poland,; •·_Bosnian· aelegate Mahir In the same vein, Christopher settlers in Gaza. There are tde'll~ of/Georgia, a former . Hungary ·and other~:t -- but Hadziahmetovic was so angry urged Syrian President Hafez 120,000 on the West Bank and Soviet republic wracked by proba.bly not much before the t.hat he refused to go along Assad in a 4 1/2-hour meeting about 12,000 on the Golan f;ethl)iri"violence, told the ses· . turn of th~ ~entury. _ __ .____ _._ .. "'I\··· .with a. ntilder statement call~ - in Damascus to make a public Heights, which Assad wants to siortthat Europeans were ..liv­ Russia; an unlikely· candf.. ing for humanitarian aid for declaration denouncing murder recover. ing through such a frightening date _for·membership in ~ither his war-torn country. of innocent civilians, a senior "It's clear that unless there is peace." NATO or the EU. would be ••My countryis not facing a U.S. official said. Assad said he security the fundamental com· His Czech counterpart, drawn closer through specitJ.l natural .___ ...•• ___ . disaster,•· would consider it, the official mitments cannot be met," Vac.avHavel, said, ·'Tb, birth partnership$ and through t~~ ' HadziahmMovic said in a told reporters as Christopher Christopher said in response to or a new and genuinely stable CSCE. x · · statement heavy with sarcasm. took his latest Mideast shuttle a reporter's question at Ben European order is taking place But the animosities dis~_ HThe message to small coun~ to Israel from Syria. Gurion airport. "Without secu­ · more slowly and with greater played by some countries at tries is: 'Arm yourself because Assad is believed to have told rity they cannot properly go difficulty and pain than most the summit underscored the no one will help you in case of President Clinton when they forward.'' or us expected five years ago." conflicts rooted in decades~old aggression.••• met in October that he deplores He did not mention Arafat by Their comments provided a ethnic rivalries and hatreds. Italian Prime Minister Silvio terrorism, but the Syrian leader name, but his message clearly bitter ending to the summit of ••The very idea of the com~ Berlusconi also was disheart~ did not make such a declara­ seemed aimed at the PLO the Conference on Security mon European Hquse is nearly.0 ened.He saicl he approached. tion at their joint news confer­ leader. and Cooperation in Europe. dead and being consumed by " other leaders to discuss the . ence in Damascus afterward. Asked if Israel should with~ Both were prominent in the the fires of numerous conflicts Bosnian crisis. Clinton had a 55-minute tele· draw its army from the West upheavals transforming the and wars." said ''(It) left me exhausted, disil~ phone conversation with Assad Bank, Christopher replied: continent since the 1989 fall of Shevardnadze. lusioned and full of anxiety" to last Sunday. "That's a decision that will the Berlin Wall. Bosnia's president, Alija see how tlm leaders "all start­ Syria allows a number of ter· have to be confronted by Israel The summit was intended to Izethegovic. could not contain ed to throw up their hands and rorist groups in its territory and over the next weeks and strengthen the CSCE -. the his disdain for a world be said looked helpless.'' permits them to operate from months." Seemingly sympathet­ only organization drawing to~ had turned a blind eye to the Yet Havel, a playwright, bases in Syrian~controlled ar­ ic to any Israeli hesitation, gether the United States, death of thousands of his peo~ struck a more optimistic eas of Lebanon, said the senior · Christopher said the spate of Canada, all European nations ple. chord. _ official, who briefed reporters violence against Israelis "would and former Soviet republics. The meeting, intended as a ..There is no reason why the on condition of anonymity. have to be taken into account" The goal was to give it showcase of East-West har- East of Europe and the West of The American emphasis on a by government leaders. enough muscle so it can try to mony. also harked back to the Europe should notlearn to live need for security is intended to Christopher will fly to Gaza resolve conflicts before they superpower rivalries of 9ld. together in peace;• he said. encourage Israeli Prime City on Wednesday to meet Minister Yitzhak Rabin to con· with Arafat, fitting him into a tinue to relinquish territory to fast-paced two~day schedule of former Arab foes. Rabin is un· Middle East shuttling. der intense political pressure U.S. officials said the purpose from critics of his policies. was to discuss the transfer of A senior Israeli diplomat said control of taxation, health, edu­ Tuesday night that in light of cation and some other the violence, "there is no rea· Palestinian self-rule powers son to be in a hurry about going from Israel to the PLO. ahead" with Palestinian self· They are likely to get into rule. stickier issues, also. These And after Dennis Ross, include the doubt that is Christopher's senior Middle spreading that Israel's army will withdraw. Saturday,

2:15am Frosty the Snowman Counseline is an audiotape information service sponsored by the Psych Club and the University 2:45 am The Grinch Who Stole Christmas Counseling Center. Counseline offers information on stress, anxiety, relationships, depression, self­ Popcorn and soda will be served. esteem, eating disorders, and anger. Look around your dorm for our list of tapes. The phones are open Mon-Thurs 4pm to 12arn. We are here to Everything babsolutely FREE. provide you with the information you need. page 8 The Observer • INTERNATIONAL NEWS Wednesday, December 7, 1994 Russia's Arctic struggles with nuclear legacy

By DOUG MELLGREN During the Cold War, the Instead, he said with a Cold The waste includes 17 nu­ Associated Press Soviet Union built up a stagger­ War twist, the danger is from clear reactors and at least one ing arsenal on the Kola, which the United States. Russia claims submarine, although joint MURMANSK, Russia borders NATO-member Norway that a U.S. nuclear submarine Norwegian-Russia expeditions Aboard his nuclear-powered and neutral Finland. intruded on Kola waters this have found little radioactive icebreaker, Capt. Anatoly The peninsula, about the size month. contamination. Gorchevsky raised his vodka in of Kentucky, is the base of "Why are American sub­ The Soviet submarine a toast "to the friendly atom." Russia's North Fleet, with 155 marines with atomic reactors Komsomolets, which sank in ' It's a friendship that many nuclear submarines, including RUSSIA and weapons up here? A colli­ 1989, is rusting at the bottom of fear is about to turn ugly. 71 derelict vessels, according to sion up here can result in a cat­ the Norwegian Sea. It still has Murmansk and the surround­ a report by the Norwegian en­ astrophe," he said. "It's not us nuclear weapons and fuel on ing Kola Peninsula is one of the vironmental group Bellona. who are going to Florida. They board that some fear could !,. most nuclear-intensive places Westerners estimate the Kola are coming to us here." threaten rich arctic fishing on the planet. has up to 2,000 nuclear war­ The Kola Nuclear Power grounds. The harbor is home to heads, plus the civilian Station nearly suffered a melt­ nuclear-powered warships, "Atomflot" fleet of eight ice­ APICar1 Fox down in February 1993, when Even when Russia stopped submarines and icebreakers; breakers. back-up power to its cooling offshore dumping and slowed the waters are marked by And Murmansk environmen­ Bellona's report said most of systems failed, said Ragnar transport to a reprocessing cen­ nuclear-powered lighthouses; tal officials generally go along the 71 condemned submarines Vaga Pedersen, of the ter in the Urals, waste ac­ on land there's a nuclear power with those estimates because still have their nuclear fuel on Norwegian government moni­ cumulated on land and on plant and a nuclear test site; they can't get such information board because there is no place toring station on the Russia ships. nuclear warheads are in profu­ from their own government. to put it. border. "Some of the storage facilities sion both at sea and on land. So the Cold War may be over, "It is a big problem with both "It is considered one of the are overfilled," said Ludmila Much of it is in poor repair. but nearby countries still feel a solid and liquid nuclear waste. four or five most dangerous Amozowa, of the Murmansk Radioactive waste is stored chill when they think about the It is a difficult problem that is plants in the world," Pedersen County environment committee. ships so rickety they can't be potential environmental prob­ of interest to the whole world," said. The icebreaker Soviet Union moved from their moorings lems just across the border. admitted Andrey I. Tumparov, The plant provides 60 percent shares a wharf with five old near downtown Murmansk, the Norway has installed radia­ director of ''Atomflot.'' of the Kola's power and closing ships, each laden with atomic Arctic's largest city with about tion detectors in its northern Murmansk governor Yeveny it would be a disaster for the waste and highly radioactive a half million residents. provinces and on Russian terri­ B. Komorov - keen on dis­ region. nuclear fuel rods. The power plant is regarded tory to give early warning of a cussing Western aid for such Bellona claimed that atomic "They are storing waste on by many as one of the most disaster. projects as a tunnel under the warships and weapons are ships that are so rusted that unsafe in the world. "We are close to an area that Kola Bay and modernizing ship­ poorly maintained by under­ they cannot be moved," "There is a problem and it is has a lot of radiation," said Per yards- dismissed the danger. paid, demoralized soldiers, and claimed Pedersen of Norway. acute. We just hope the central Einar Fiskebaek, of Norway's "There won't be any atomic that security at nuclear storage Others said the ships were in government recognizes this," Finnmark county, which bor­ catastrophes in this area. In facilities is lax. good shape. said Yuri Titoyov, a Murmansk ders the Kola. "It is clear that connection with all the changes About two-thirds of the nu­ Environmentalists fear that a resident. "We can't just let all they have a huge number of in our country, the ships aren't clear waste ever dumped in the fire or sinking of a storage ship these ships stay in our harbors boats out of service and prob­ going out of our waters as of­ world's oceans lies ofT the Kola, could trigger a major nuclear with all this waste aboard." lems storing the waste." ten," he said. according to Bellona's report. accident on the Kola. Killer of ex-Iranian premier sentenced to life in prison GIGANTIC By ElAINE GANLEY two other killers, remain at Associated Press large. Defense lawyers said repeat­ END OF SEASON SALE PARIS edly that Iran did not help Two Iranians were convicted Vakili Rad during his three Tuesday in the 1991 killing of years in prison. former Iranian Prime Minister Referring to France's 1990 Shahpour Bakhtiar in a plot decision to pardon Anis that prosecutors blamed on Naccache, serving a life sen­ Iran's theocratic government. A tence for an earlier assassina­ third Iranian was acquitted. tion attempt on Bakhtiar, the The ruling could be difficult defense lawyers said they ex­ for France, which has given in pected Vakili Rad to serve the to Iranian pressure in previous whole sentence. terrorism cases. "No one gives a damn about EVERYTHING ELSE Bakhtiar. the last premier Vakili," said lawyer Bernard IN THE STORE under the Shah, was strangled Sansot. AT LEAST 20% OFF and stabbed to death at his Vakili Rad claimed he super­ suburban Paris home while po­ vised Bakhtiar's National lice stood guard outside. He Iranian Resistance Movement NOTRE DAME GOLF SHOP SPECIAL HOLIDAY HOURS: MONDAY- FRIDAY 9:00AM- 4:00PM was one of 63 exiles killed or in Teheran. CLOSED AT 1:00PM ON DEC. 20 wounded since the Islamic PARK ON LYON'S COURTS IF ON CAMPUS Republic was founded in 1979. NO OTHER DISCOUNTS APPLY After a five-week trial, a spe­ cial terrorism court convicted Ali Vakili Rad, 35, of strangling .------.... and stabbing Bakhtiar and his aide, Souroush Katibeh, with two accomplices who are still at 1995-96 Assistant Rector Applications large. Massoud Hendi, 4 7, a former Paris bureau chief of the Islamic Republic of Iran broad­ casting network, was convicted of helping the killers enter France from Switzerland. He University Residence Facilities was sentenced to 10 years. Zeynalabedine Sarhadi, 28, an archivist at the Iranian Embassy in Bern who was charged with helping the killers escape to Switzerland, was ac­ Are Now Available! quitted. Before the verdict, defense lawyers appealed to the court not to use the case to pass judg­ ment on Iranian state ter­ rorism. They said their clients were Office of Student Affairs victims of mistaken identity or dupes who had no connection to the government. Prosecutor Jacques Mouton 315 Main Building last week called the plot, which stretched from Iran through Turkey and Switzerland to France, a .. perfect murder in perfect cold blood." He said the Iranian government was re­ Through Friday, january 27, 1995 sponsible.Six suspects, including the .______. OINT Wednesday, November 7, 1994 page 9 THE OBSERVER NOTRE DAME OFFICE: P.O. Box Q, Notre Dame, IN 46556 (219) 631-7471 SAINT MARY's OFFICE: 309 Haggar, Notre Dame, IN 46556 (219) 284-5365 1994-95 General Board Editor-in-Chief Jake Peters Managing Editor Business Manager John Lucas Joseph Riley

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The Observer is the independent newspaper published by the students of the University of Notre Dame du Lac and Saint Mary's College. It does not necessarily reflect the policies of the administra­ tion of either institution. The news is reported as accuratc:ly and objectivdy as possible. Unsigned edi­ torials represent the opinion of the majority of rhe Editor-in-Chief, Managing Editor, News Editor, Viewpoint Editor, Accent Editor, Photo Editor, Sports Editor, and Saint Mary's Editor. Commentaries, letters and Inside Columns present the views of the authors, and not necessarily those of The Observer. Viewpoint space is available ro all members of the Notre Dame/Saint Mary's com­ munity and to all readers. The free expression of varying opinions through letters is encouraged. Observer Phone Lines Editor-in-Chief 631-4542 Business Office 631-5313 Managing Editor /Viewpoint 631-4541 Advertising 631-6900 I 8840 Sports 631-4543 Systems/Marketing Dept. 631-8839 News/Photo 631-5323 Office Manager 631-7471 Accent/Saint Mary's 631-4540 Fax 631-6927 Day Editor /Production 631-5303 E-Mail [email protected] General Information 631-7471 Unix [email protected] • I AM NOT A POTTED PLANT The 28th Amendment: A 'Bill of Responsibilities' We've had four major upheavals in call upon its best servants, whether or Protecting flag-burning- which serves their facilities for the expression of the our history. The first was at our found­ not they have already served three only to excite emotions, to insult a sym­ popular faith, so long as the activities ing; we responded with the Constitution terms. bol revered by many, and to make a are not coercive in nature. and the Bill of Rights. The second was 3. The Congress shall have the author­ negative statement about the govern­ When the First Amendment was the Civil War; the Civil War ity to regulate all campaign contribu­ ment that protects flag-burners - is to adopted, there were state-established Amendments banned slavery and gave tions and expenditures. so long as those protect irresponsible speech. This law churches in many states. State churches "equal protection of the laws" to all peo­ regulations are applied equally among would teach us to be responsible in our are a bad idea, since they harm religion ple. The third crisis was the Great political parties. criticism of our country. and exclude non-believers. However, the Depression. The Supreme Court has prevented 6. States may ban the sale of pornog­ simple recognition that faith is a good I think our fourth major national cri­ Congress from legislating effectively in raphy, and may define pornography, in thing that deserves recognition by the sis, ongoing since the late 1960's, is a this area, out of concern for free speech. legislation, by reference to any objective government-when it doesn't impinge lack of national direction and purpose. This concern must not allow our po­ criteria. on the rights of others -is good (see As a nation, we haven't agreed on any. litical system to become warped by the Regulating speech is difficult to do Vatican II's Declaration of Religious Since society has no unifying purpose, power of money. without compromising our first amend­ Liberty). Moreover, it's necessary if we look for meaning in our individual ment freedoms. We must take care that we're really to have "Free Exercise." lives. But humans are social animals by legislation banning pornography doesn't The benefit to government is that nature. The solution is not more free­ hinder other speech. Hence, I would Americans will be better and more dom, but for each of us to take re­ require some objective criteria in defin­ moral people. sponsibility for our lives, and for the fed­ Charles ing pornography. But why, you ask, 9. The right of privacy that inheres in eral government to become responsible should we ban porn at all? Responsible a marital relationship between husband for its behavior. To that end, I suggest sexuality acknowledges the other person and wife does not apply to other sexual the following Constitutional as a human being. Pornography teaches relationships. Amendments, which together I would Roth the lesson that others are to be used to The "right of privacy" is not now in call the ''Bill of Responsibilities. " give us pleasure and then discarded the Constitution; this, at least, would put I. For each fiscal year during peace­ when no longer useful. The harm flow­ it there. It would also define it and limit time, the federal government's budget 4. Freedom of speech and of the press ing from this attitude surely requires no it. Sex within marriage is a responsible must be balanced, unless Congress, by a shall not be so construed as to protect elucidation here. and (one hopes) loving act. Sex outside vote of 60% in each house. specifically defamatory remarks from civil lawsuits. 7. Religious invocations, symbols. and marriage-even in a lifelong monoga­ authorizes deficit spending, and the The Supreme Court, in New York theories are not barred from the public mous relationship of faithful love (if such President approves of such spending Times v. Sullivan, decided to protect schools. so long as their use involves no a thing exists, which I doubt)-is irre­ The Congress may enforce this provision defamatory speech in order to give direct coercion. When prayers are said. sponsible because it includes no by appropriate legislation. "breathing room" to our free press. But provision must be made for those not commitment. Commitment is needed A balanced budget amendment would the court did so by trivializing the wishing to participate. Parents may ex­ both for raising children, and to sustain require the federal government to take distinction between truth and falsity, cuse their children from any religious people emotionally. responsibility for its own spending. Of and by requiring plaintiffs to show not activities carried on in the schools. 10. Human life begins at conception. course, no one wants to raise taxes, and only that the allegation was false, but This would reverse a string of States may take steps to protect life no one wants to cut spending. Either or that the press acted recklessly or mali­ Supreme Court decisions, and would after this point. both must be done. To do nothing is the ciously. Recent campaigns have shown essentially remove the federal courts The greatest irresponsibility prevalent easy and most destructive way out. how wrong this decision is. A free peo­ from these local decisions, except in the in today's society is our refusal to deal 2. No person shall be eligible to serve ple need to hear truth, and we need to most egregious cases. School prayer not with the children we bring into the more than three terms in the United be able to trust our press. Requiring the only reminds us that we are responsible world. We destroy them rather than sac­ States House of Representatives, unless media to take responsibility for what to God for our actions, but reminds pub­ rifice our pleasures, our lifestyles, or it has been 10 years since that person's they write (and politicians to take lic officials and teachers that they have our freedom. This amendment would last term has expired, or unless the responsibility for the ads they run) will a responsibility not to trample on the not only call upon us all to live re­ nation is in a state of war. No person cause us to respect these groups more in religious beliefs of their pupils and citi­ sponsibly, but for our society to take up shall be eligible to serve more than four the long run, and will clean up our polit­ zens. the responsibility of protecting human terms in the United States Senate. ical system. 8. Neither the state nor federal gov­ life from those who would end it. I'm not Term limits can lead to greater 5. The American flag is a symbol of ernment shall endorse the religion of sure which responsibility is tougher to responsibility among our Congressmen, this country, and as such may be pro­ any particular sect or creed. However. take up, but they are both necessary, for but we should tread carefully here. The tected from desecration by state and government may take special cog­ ourselves and our society. We cannot go Senate should include experienced voic­ federal legislation. nizance of religious beliefs, and in doing on living as we've been living. It's time es. Moreover, in the case of a national I never thought that this should be in so, may favor religious beliefs over other for a change. emergency, the nation should be able to the constitution until recently. interests. Governments may allow use of Roth is a second year law student.

• DOONESBURY GARRY TRUDEAU • QUOTE OF THE DAY

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• PEACE ON EARTH • KITCHEN AYE Amnesty Int'l remembers King Don't let finals be your In commemoration of the life cases; Tejgaon and work of Martin Luther King "An end to extrajudicial exe­ Dhaka, Bangladesh Jr., one should remember the cutions and disappearance." • Welcome the fact that in Grinch this Christmas universality of his message: In observance of Martin February 1994 the case of CRUNCH TIME! It's that time ing that he did not even notice nonviolent action for equality, Luther King Day, Amnesty Noorjam had been brought to of year again sports fans. A the Little Prince. He wanted to freedom from discrimination International invites you to ex­ justice by the government. season of holiday cheer and fi- count the stars so he could own and a vision of harmony be­ ercise your freedom and con­ • Urge the government to en­ nals. Ah yes, as we all lose them. When the Little Prince tween all people. This vision of sider, for example, a case in sure that salish bodies do not track of our friends and asked him, "And what do you respecting the rights of individ­ Bangladesh. Whipping, burn­ assume extra-legal judicial or become addicted to Mountain do with five-hundred millions of uals has inspired many activists ing, and stoning have been tak­ law enforcement functions, and Dew, let us reflect on the mean- stars?" the man replied, "I own before MLK and continues to ing place in Bangladesh since that law enforcement functions, ing of the season. them ... I am accurate ... I am prompt many individuals and 1992, with no legal authority. and personnel found to have How many times have you concerned with matters of organizations to act with ur­ Local village councils, or salish, deliberately failed to protect heard (or said to yourself), "All sequence." "The grownups are gency in advocacy of these ide­ have ordered and supervised victims are brought to justice. I have to do is get a 95 percent certainly altogether extraordi­ als. these punishments under • Express your concern for onthefinalto nary," the Islamic laws, which are not on the safety of past and future get a C plus .. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Little Prince Bangladesh's statute book. victims What's to- thought. On Most victims have been women. Writing a letter to the afore­ d a y ? matters of Kathleen Beatty Shefaili, age 14, became mentioned country is just one Tuesday? I Frank consequence pregnant after a landlord way in which we can remind don't really the Little Faye K.olly allegedly raped her. Because ourselves of the struggle that need to sleep Prince had she could not produce four was Civil Rights-the life work 'til ahh... Cristinzio ideas which male witnesses, she was sub­ of Martin Luther King Jr. Friday." Well, were very Frightfully enough however. sequently sentenced by a salish Expressing your concern for if this sounds different racial, religious, and gender in April 1992 to 100 lashes for those unjustly punished in familiar, I from those of discrimination are still preva­ admitting adultery. Her mother accordance with the Universal wish you the best of luck, and I the grownups. lent in the United States as in also received 100 lashes for Declaration of Human Rights, is know where you can purchase "Matters of Conse-quence." I every single country in the accusing the landlord of rape, a way in which we can affirm Vivarin wholesale. guess that's what we're talking world. Refugees continue to be since the testimony of one But listen, it's not worth about here. This time of year denied political asylum, even woman is not accepted under killing yourself over it. OK, fi­ we become more and more like though they fear imprisonment, Islamic law. nals are pretty important, you the businessman who thought torture or execution in their Noorjahan Begum, age 21. ' This vision of want credit for all the work he owned the stars. The holiday home countries. Men, women, who obtained permission from respecting the you've put in and all. So do I, I season, both religious and and children are still held in a village clergy for a second rights of individ­ can understand that. secular, passes us by and we detention without charge or marriage because her first hus­ uals has inspired many However, there are entirely say, "Leave me alone, I'm trial. "Disappearances" and band had abandoned her, was too many stressed out people studying for finals. I'm con­ "death squads" have become stoned, together with her new activists before MLK and on this campus. The future of cerned with matters of conse­ household terms in many coun­ husband in January 1993. A continues to prompt the free world does not rest on quence." tries. Torture and ill-treatment salish had found their marriage many individuals and whether or not you get an A on I'm not trying to tell you not and executions are still wide­ illegal. They were buried up to organizations to act with your chemistry final. No, really, to study for your finals. But spread. their chests and then subjected it might seem that way, but it take some time out and relax a Amnesty International is a to public stoning. Noorjahan di urgency in advocacy of doesn't. little bit. Put some lights up in worldwide organization that ed soon after. these ideals.' Lemme tell you about the your room. Make sure you take works for: WHAT YOU CAN DO: Little Prince. The little prince the time to write those "The release of all prisoners Send appeals to: was from a very small planet Christmas cards. Life is too of conscience-those people Prime Minister Begeun called B-612. (please bear with short to miss out on all the imprisoned for their beliefs, Khaleda Zia our belief in the universal me) One day he decided to gop<:l.Jhings tbat the Christmas race, sex, ethnic. origin, lan­ Office of the Prime Minister rights of every person. leave his planet b~cause ifwas season brings. guage, or religion-who have Dhaka, Bangladesh too small. On his way to earth Study hard, but don't let neither used nor advocated vio­ (Salutation: Dear Prime Editor's Note: This is the third he visited another small planet finals be the Grinch that stole lence; Minister:) in a five part series of columns inhabited by a businessman. Christmas. Good Luck. "An end to torture and ill­ Presidential Secretariat, Old on Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. The businessman was so Frank Cristinzio is a junior. treatment and executions in all Sangsad Bhaban preoccupied with his account- He lives in Stanford Hall . • lETTERS TO THE Emnm With fans like Kelly, who needs enemies? The Fiesta Bowl's not a Time to support the Fightin' Irish Dear Editor: wore on, I became more and national following the Notre Jason Kelly revealed in his more disconcerted as I watched Dame does. Not even Colorado 'farce' to loyal Domers bitter, sarcastic Nov. 29 column the game from the stands. does. NO's addition to the Dear Editor: that he is just one of many Because behind me, fellow Fiesta Bowl has turned the Associate Sports Editor Jason Kelly's comments in his November Notre Dame students who have seniors were becoming in­ game from a ratings loser to a 29, 1994 Observer article about the Irish Fiesta Bowl bid show his decided to withdraw their sup­ creasingly vocal as they yelled ratings winner. lack of understanding of Notre Dame's bowl invitation . port for their home team. insults at Powlus, Holtz, and One of the realities of Notre I am not a Notre Dame alumnus. I am, however, a person who is What happened to the true others. And to my right, occu­ Dame is that our football team able to make the best of an opportunity when it presents itself. loyal Irish fan? If the Fighting pying the best seats in the has a huge national following­ Would Father Malloy, when offered Notre Dame's top job, Irish are treated this way in house were unenthusiastic, haters included. They hate us decline because there might have been another priest who had their own newspaper and on quiet, sullen alumni and VIPs. because we win so often, they scored better on a seminary exam? Did the Associate Sports their own campus, imagine the What happened to fans giving hate us because we have such a Editor, when offered a chance to be part of NO's incoming fresh­ write-ups we are getting in positive support to their team? clean reputation. And they hate man class, decline because he felt that "somewhere in this country places like Boulder, Colorado. True fans understand that us because we take advantage there has to be someone more deserving than myself?" Certainly With "fans" like these, who there will be rough times, even of our popularity by making not! By attending Notre Dame and being part of the Notre Dame needs enemies? for football dynasties like Notre smart business decisions. Like family, many believe that their own and others' lives can be en­ This transformation of Irish Dame. Notre Dame fans are selling exclusive home game TV riched and opportunities increased. fans has occurred gradually spoiled. We expect to win every rights to NBC. Like negotiating The writing of Associate Sports Editor Kelly-labeling the Fiesta over the last couple of years. It game, and we expect a national on par with entire conferences Bowl bid acceptance as a "farce"-fits well with another of his began at the start of the 1993 championship at least once when forming the Bowl articles in that same Observer edition ("Holtz handcuffs ... "). Both season, when fans were quick every four years. Coalition. Like agreeing to play articles reveal a journalist style which appears to come across as to let it be know that they were Kelly states, "How refreshing in the Fiesta Bowl. somewhat arrogant and mean-spirited. Even though Kelly shows unhappy to be "stuck" with it would have been if Notre Instead of degrading your his lack of understanding of the importance of the Fiesta Bowl Bid Kevin McDougal at quarter­ Dame officials had respectfully team during a difficult year, get for the team and ND, Coach Holtz and Father Beauchamp should back, because McDougal was declined the Fiesta Bowl's offer out and support them. Be not be maligned for their acceptance of an incredible opportunity. no phenom like Ron Powlus. and urged the game's represen­ thankful that we have the op­ Remember 1991-92? The ''talk on the street" was that Notre Yet the underrated quarterback tatives to invite one of the many portunity to end this season on Dame had "no business" playing in the Sugar Bowl against quietly led his team to within a more deserving teams." Teams a positive note. I believe that Florida. However, with thorough preparation and determination, few plays of the national cham­ like "Arizona or North Carolina we can beat Colorado, but only the Irish rose to the occasion, defeating Florida with an incredible pionship. Even in his one loss, or Southern Cal or Duke, just to with strong support from all of second-half effort. he engineered an amazing name a few. All are teams with us Fighting Irish fans. A few Did Joe Montana decline to play in the pros because he was not three touchdown comeback in better records and better rank­ years ago, people said we didn't I a Heisman winner at ND? Certainly not ! Indeed, he continued his the second half. ings-if not better reputa­ belong in the Sugar Bowl j hard work to become one of the NFL's finest all-time quarter­ Many ND students, including tions-than Notre Dame." Is he either, and we proved them backs. In a similar manner, if certain members of the ND commu­ members of The Observer really saying that these teams wrong. Take advantage of the nity view the Fiesta Bowl bid as anything other than an incredible sports staff, jumped off the fan should be in the Fiesta Bowl final opportunity this year to be opportunity, they do not fully understand one of the great gifts of bandwagon in November 1993. instead of us? supportive and positive about attending Notre Dame-that of being able to position yourself to This year, the true colors of the The Fiesta Bowl is a business our team. take advantage of an opportunity or gift when it is offered! "fair-weather fan" have been operation, just like every other STEVE YOUNG easy to see. Since it was my bowl. They require a high level MIKE FENOCKETTI Norre Dame Parenr senior year, I was fortunate of revenue to cover their ex­ Senior enough to get great 42-yard penses. None of the teams on Alumni Hall line seats. But as the season Kelly's list have the kind of ~--~------~ CCCNT Wednesday, December 7, 1994 Page 11 ratin non-v1o• ence By lAURA SMITH According to Iris Outlaw, the Director Together these members Accent Writer of Multicultural Student Affairs, "The have joined to promote and Center for Social Concerns is for social stimulate student aware­ When students and faculty return to change. That's why the strong thrust ness of anti-violence. Notre Dame and Saint Mary's in for anti-violence. It's about how we as Beginning with Yolanda January, Martin Luther King Jr. Day will individuals can impact that". King, other scheduled soon be approaching. What better way Outlaw believes that involvement in events include; January 20, to celebrate than to attend Yolanda CSC activities such as Christmas in students and faculty will King's lecture "The Challenge To Insure April, Center for the Homeless, and tuto­ have a chance to "Speak The Future: Nonviolence As A Way Of rial programs promotes a change in stu­ Out on Human Dignity and Life" on January 17 in Washington Hall. dents. "Some students will decide to do Justice". January 20, psy­ As the oldest child of Dr. Martin a few years of volunteer work before chologist Dr. Beverly Luther King Jr. and Coretta Scott King, they enter the corporate mainstream. Vandiver will speak at the Yolanda King has been in the midst of Other students choose to stay in the Counseling Center about the struggle for human rights all her non-profit sector. The riches they gain growing up in a family com­ life. She has participated in numerous go beyond money" said Outlaw. mitted to civil and human civil and human rights demonstrations rights, January 24, there and has spoken before countless reli­ There are several potential plans for will be a prayer service in gious, educational, civic, and human the spring semester to promote this the Basillica. rights groups. theme of anti-violence. The Washington Also planned, students King is committed to using her talents Seminar will conduct a lecture based on will be interviewed in in service toward humanity and has a theme of nonviolence. Other potential Debartolo about "Peace on combined her involvements in social programs in support of anti-violence Earth". The student change with her artistic pursuits. She is include, a visit to a jail, and student par­ r e SJ? 0 n Se. S f r 0 m thiS in - Photo Courtsey of Campus Ministry currently Co-Founding Director of ticipation in the program "This Is My te~VIew will be put togeth~r Yolanda King will be coming to Notre Dame January 17th NUCLEUS. a company of performing Neighborhood: No Shooting Allowed". wtth scenes from Martm to lecture in celebration of Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday. artists dedicated to promoting positive According to Jay Brandenburger. Luther King Jr's speeches. energy through the arts. Coordinator of Seminars and Justice The final project will be shown in to attend these events. "The Notre King's lecture is the first in a series of Education at the CSC, ''The most excit­ Debartolo and Lafortune. Dame and Saint Mary's communities events to celebrate the Martin Luther ing thing is the week of events "In the past few years there have not need to pay att~ntion to .these e.v~nts King Jr. Holiday and the Notre Dame surrounding the Martin Luther King Jr. been many events for Martin Luther beca.use of thet.r Cat~ohc tr~dttton. Center for Social Concerns (CSC) theme Holiday." King Jr. Day and many students have Mart~n Luthe~ Kmg Jr. _s teac.hmgs are of nonviolence. The CSC, in conjunction Members of student government, the expressed their disappointment" said ~on~Istent. with Cathohc social teach­ with Campus Ministry, Multicultural CSC, the African Student Alliance, Brandenburger. He credits the collabo- mgs he s~td. Student Affairs, and other campus Multicultural Student Mfairs, and vari­ ration of students, faculty, and the com- Accordmg to Bran~enburg.~r ..the organizations, has chosen a theme of ous other campus organizations have munity for the establishment of this P!anned e':ents are varted and tap mto nonviolence for this year. been meeting once a week for months to years extensive programming. dtfferent Sides of people, and everyone provide a week of events. Brandenburger encourages students can gain from attending." AIDS awareness

By Peter Rubanis Perhaps most enlightening, however, Accent Writer is the number of responses on the walls that deal with AIDS in a hopeful and A, I, D, and S. Taken alone, these four compassionate way. "Be open and sup­ letters mean very little. But put them portive even if you don't agree with oth­ together in this order - AIDS - and sud­ ers' lifestyles," one quote reads. Another denly you have a disease that people reads, "EVERYONE deserves a loving hear a lot about, but often know very lit­ and caring environment." tle about. Thus, as a community, we find Still another says, "It's the hardest ourselves facing the idea of AIDS thing in the world to watch them die, Awareness and the need for such educa­ but the BEST thing in the world to help tional exhibits as Moreau Galleries' them LIVE." Frame of Reference: Responding to AIDS Ultimately. what you gain from Frame at Saint Mary's College. of Reference is a sense of the very per­ What is AIDS Awareness? AIDS sonal nature of the disease called AIDS. Awareness is the term most often used One person simply wrote "We are all to describe the movement to educate human; nothing more, nothing less." people about the disease of AIDS itself, How true, yet it is so much easier to deal prevention of AIDS and the HIV virus with AIDS compassionately when you that leads to AIDS, and toleration for have names and stories to put with the those individuals who have AIDS. disease. AIDS Awareness can take any one of Many of the stories on the walls of the several forms. For example, Frame of gallery are very personal accounts of Reference is a part of both the National loved ones suffering from or dying of Day Without Art and National AIDS AIDS, John, Gerald, Tootsie, 14 year-old Awareness Day, two national forms of Jeremy, Ryan. Yes, AIDS does have an AIDS Awareness. In addition, an open­ impact here in our community. We just ing reception for the Frame of Reference need to be a little more aware of this exhibit was held at the Moreau Galleries The Observer/ Cynthia EKconde impact. on National AIDS Awareness Day, Writing on the walls of the Frame of Referance at Saint Mary's College is an opportunity for After viewing Frame of Reference, December 1, with a video presentation individuals to remember and reflect on AIDS and what it means to us as a commmunity. Saint Mary's sophomore Rose by the Notre Dame/Saint Mary's AIDS Maciejewski felt that "The exhibit was a Bowles would agree, "The lack of infor- ated with the AIDS disease. Students, very positive and appropriate way to Awareness group. Refreshments were mation about AIDS by younger people is faculty, and members of the community also served, and ribbons and fliers were approach the AIDS crisis. I was very amazing. AIDS can happen to anyone, are all encouraged to reflect on AIDS impressed by some of the insight pre­ distributed to those in attendance. even you and me. We all must be more and write their thoughts, questions, Does AIDS Awareness exist in the sented on the walls." aware of ways to prevent the spread of fears, angers, and hopes on the walls of Notre Dame I Saint Mary's community? Writing on the walls will continue AIDS." the gallery. through December 16. Individuals, To the extent that two organizations So, if AIDS Awareness is so important, Approximately seventy-five to one pertaining to AIDS are present in our classes, and student groups are all what can one do to increase AIDS hundred individuals had taken part in community, yes. A few students also dis­ urged to come participate in this unique Awareness in our community? Notre writing on the walls by the end of last opportunity to reflect on AIDS and what play their individual support for those Dame student Tony Pohlen feels that weekend. These people have taken a with AIDS by wearing a red ribbon on it means to us as a community. education is the most important way to variety of approaches to addressing the To set up a time for your class or their clothing. promote AIDS Awareness. He said, problem of AIDS. But do we really have an awareness group to participate, please call Johnson "Unlike some other diseases, AIDS is Many of the participants in Frame of Bowles at 284-4655. Individuals are for AIDS as a community? Luke Mullany, preventable. The only way to stop the Reference have responded to AIDS with a Notre Dame sophomore, said, "You invited to come during regular Gallery spread of AIDS is through elimination of fear. One person wrote "I have not yet hours Tuesday through Friday 10 A.M. never hear anything about AIDS here. I the unsafe acts that lead to the trans- been personally affected by AIDS. I would have known in high school that to noon and from one o'clock to four, z mission of the disease." know eventually I will be. That hurts." Saturday 10 A.M. to noon, and Sunday last Thursday was National AIDS Education requires communication, Another simply said, ''I'm scared ... l Awareness Day. The fact that I didn't afternoon from one o'clock to three. however, and this is where the Frame of wonder. .. Why?" Additional information about AIDS and know that here is a testament to the Reference exhibit comes into play. On Still others have responded to AIDS lack of conversation about AIDS on our the HIV virus can be obtained by calling the walls of the Hammes Gallery of with anger. "AIDS sucks," reads one the CDC National AIDS Hotline at 1-800- campuses." Moreau Galleries. empty frames have quote. "It's taking my friends. Think. Moreau Galleries Director Johnson 342-AIDS (2437). been hung to symbolize the loss associ- Watch. Listen. Who will be next?" ...... a 2 a a

Wednesday, December 6, 1994 The Observer • SPORTS .NBA 42-point first quarter highlight Magic's win

By CHUCK MEL YIN hamstring that forced him to od. Boston, which dropped its Knicks up 45-38 with 1:39 After losing three in a row, Associated Press miss the previous game. third straight. made only 12 of remaining in the half. Then the Nuggets have won three Williams and Terrell Brandon 36 shots after halftime. Wilkins, who finished the first straight. CLEVELAND scored 14 points each and Mark Dino Radja had 23 points - half with 18 points, scored Brian Williams had 17 points Anfernee Hardaway scored 10 Price had 13 for Cleveland. 13 in the first half - to lead Boston's next 7 points. and Eric and 13 rebounds for the points and Shaquille O'Neal had The teams meet again Boston, which was outrebound­ Montross' windmill dunk pulled Nuggets. which opened the sea­ nine .during Orlando's 42-point Wednesday night at Orlando. ed 54-28. Dominique Wilkins the Celtics to 48-47 at halftime. son with a 22-point win over first quarter Tuesday night as Orlando shot an impressive 69 added 20 but was held to just 2 Boston missed 15 of its 20 Minnesota. Rose finished with the Magic beat the Cleveland percent in the first quarter but in the second half and didn't shots during the quarter after all nine of his points in the final Cavaliers 114-97. was even more impressive from play the fourth quarter. shooting 57 percent in the first period. O'Neal and Nick Anderson fm­ long range in the period, mak­ Anthony Mason had 14 points period. Doug West led the Wolves ished with 26 points each - ing five of its six 3-point shots. and 12 rebounds and Herb with 25 points and Isaiah Rider both on 11-for-14 shooting - The Magic led 68-50 at the Williams added 12 points off Nuggets 102, had 23, 17 in the first half. and Hardaway finished with 20. half, and after Cleveland closed the bench for New York. Timberwolves 95 Winston Garland had 14 points The Magic, whose nine-game within 14 early in the third Patrick Ewing had 11 points. and 11 assists. winning streak ended with a quarter, Orlando ended all Leading 79-60 to start the Dale Ellis scored 14 of his 18 Minnesota led 7 4-69 entering two-point loss at Atlanta on doubt with a 15-0 spurt that fourth quarter, New York didn't points in the second half and the fourth quarter, but Ellis and Saturday, bounced back with a began with seven straight let Boston get within 10 points, rookie Jalen Rose started a Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf hit 3- fury, running off the game's points by Hardaway on a three­ even though Knicks coach Pat fourth-quarter rally Tuesday pointers in an 8-2 run to give first eight points on fast-break point play, a 10-footer and a Riley didn't play his starters night to lead the Denver Denver a 77-76 lead with 9:35 ' dunks by Hardaway and Donald fast-break layup set up when most of the period. Nuggets to an 102-95 victory to play. Royal and two baskets by O'Neal blocked a shot. New York, which had a 1- over the Minnesota Horace Grant. Anderson capped the run with point halftime lead, opened the Timberwolves. The lead changed hands five O'Neal's hook shot midway a short bank shot that gave second half with a 22-8 run as Rose scored six straight points times in the next two minutes, through the quarter built Orlando its biggest lead, 87-58. the Celtics sputtered offensively - his first points of the game - and Minnesota had its last lead, Orlando's lead to double digits and had trouble stopping Smith to turn a one-point deficit into 83-82, on a basket by Sean for good, and by the end of the Knicks 104, inside. Overall, the Knicks an 88-83 lead with 6:08 to play. Rooks with 7:25 left. Rose period the Magic led 42-24 Celtics 90 outscored Boston 31-13 in the Rose's run opened a 10-1 spurt, scored four straight free throws against a Cleveland team that period. capped by Ellis' baseline and then made a short bank had been allowing an NBA-low Charles Smith had 20 points jumper, and sent the shot to start the decisive run, 89.4 points per game. The and the shut After falling behind by 10 Timberwolves to their 12th which ended with the Nuggets Magic surpassed that total with down the Celtics in the second early in the second period, New straight home loss. up 92-84 with 5:09 to play. 3 1/2 minutes left in the third half, beating Boston 104-90 York took advantage of another Minnesota, which entered the quarter. Tuesday night. stretch of dreadful shooting by game having won two straight, The ·Wolves, who had lost The Cavs played shorthanded The Knicks, who have won the Celtics to go on a 23-6 run. has lost all eight home games their previous seven home because power forward Tyrone their last eight games against Smith had 9 points during the this season and hasn't won at games by an average of 19.4 Hill had the flu. Center John the Celtics, led by as many as spurt. the Target Center since beating points, got no closer than five Williams played despite a sore 20 points early in the final peri- A basket by Mason put the the Clippers on April 6. the rest of the way.

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Wednesday, December 6, 1994 The Observer • SPORTS page 13 • Cm.1EGE BASKETBAll IU coach Knight pessimistic Up by 30 at halftime, By MIKE EMBRY range. what was going to happen." Duke cruises against GW Associa[ed Press "They definitely improved Pitino said the loss to UCLA with the Evansville game," didn't hurt his team's confi­ By DAVID DROSCHAK from long range to help open LEXINGTON, Ky. Pitino said. "They played great dence. Assod

------• Wednesday, December 6, 1994 The Observer • SPORTS page 14 CBS signs contract with • ICE DANCING NCAA through 2002 Torvill and Dean remember past glory By jOHN NELSON and basketball; Big East foot­ By BARRY WILNER was a benchmark for us to go Even though Torvill and Dean Associated Press ball: the Fiesta, Orange and Associated Press through all that we had to go won the European champi­ Cotton bowls; the Army-Navy through." onship, Gritschuk and Platov NEW YORK game, and the 1998 Nagano AMHERST, Mass. VVhat they went through was took the free dance there. That CBS Sports, the big loser of Olympics, for which it paid a The bitterness and disappoint­ a complete change in their pro­ delivered a message to T&D. 1993, topped off its comeback Winter Games-record $375 mil­ ment of the fessional lifestyles. For nearly a "It was a very difficult time year Tuesday with a $1.725 bil­ lion. Olympics still hasn't faded for decade, Torvill and Dean for us, because of the ad­ lion NCAA deal that keeps the In addition, the network Torvill and Dean. Maybe it toured with their own show and justments we had made and Final Four on CBS through extended its contracts with Big never will. skated in only a select few pro then discovering that other 2002. Ten basketball, and the PGA From the beginning of the events. Until the International couples were being allowed to Carrying the highest total Championship and PGA Tour, Games, the English stars who Skating Union opened the sport do things we were advised we pricetag of any TV sports rights both for four more years mesmerized the skating world by allowing pros a one-time could not," Torvill said. deal ever made, it replaces a through 1998. CBS also created with their 1984 gold medal per­ reinstatement, Torvill and Dean After the Olympics, the ISU seven-year, $1 billion deal that boxing and formance at Sarajevo never had were considered skating leg­ called a news conference to still had three seasons to run. · series for its Saturday "Eye On a chance. The crowds, the ends. explain the judging, particu­ "1994 has been a very busy Sports" anthology. media and many of the other Then, suddenly, they were larly how several lengthy sepa­ and exciting year for CBS Besides the men's Division I skaters lauded them. But the competitors again, seeking to rations by the Russians - Sports," CBS Sports president basketball tournament, the new judges, making a last stand do the routines that stretched clearly against the rules - David Kenin said. NCAA agreement includes against a flood of rules the parameters of ice dancing were ignored. The explanations The NCAA deal comes nearly rights to the College World changes, created a backlash and popularized what previous­ came off as lame. 12 months after CBS lost the Series final, the Division II against many returning profes­ ly was considered more exhibi­ Thankfully, the Olympic expe­ NFC portion of the NFL con­ men's basketball tournament, sionals. tion than sport. What they did rience has not turned off Torvill L tract to Fox, capping a year of NCAA outdoor track and field, The biggest victims were was entertaining and athletical­ and Dean to all competition. In infamy in which CBS also lost and women's gymnastics and Christopher ly difficult, and the public fact, they are intrigued by the the rights to major league base­ CBS will televise the Division I Dean. noticed. burgeoning schedule of events ball. women's basketball champi­ "The whole thing last year, I But much of the lifts and spawned by the 1994 Olympics. "There was a terrific and gen­ onship this season but will drop think there was so much resis­ moves the pair created had "It is something very new for uine sense of loss at this time it thereafter. The women's tance to the professionals com­ been deemed illegal by the ul­ us," Torvill said. "After last year," Kenin said, "but it championship is expected to be ing back," Dean said as he and traconservative dance judges. Lillehammer, we did not antici­ was tempered with a lot of pro­ picked up by ESPN beginning in Torvill prepared for their only "We've been very much a part pate doing any competitions fessional activity .... I think we 1996. competition of the season, of creating our environment again. We had done enough. felt that anything was possible. In total price, the new CBS­ Tuesday's World Team Figure with our shows," Dean said. We thought at some time we "We knew we would go after NCAA deal breaks the record of Skating Championships. "And "Then you open yourself up to might do a professional compe­ things and be aggressive, and $1.58 billion Fox paid for the there were certain power fac­ taking a lot of shots, because tition, but we had no plans to that we would win many of NFC. Covering eight seasons, tions within the skating fra­ you are going into someone do anything like this, because them and lose some." the basketball deal is worth ternity and amateur fraternity, else's arena. When it was our these international team events This year alone, CBS has slightly more than $215 million and with the strong political show, it was our atmosphere didn't exist. acqujred rjghts tg SEC fggtball per year, while Fox's NFL deal leanings, I don't think there and our audience. Torvill and Dean realize their averages about $395 for four was anything we possibly could "But when you get back into role in the recent popularity Women years. have done to have won that the amateur world, it is some­ explosion for figure skating has "We started a couple of event. continued from page 20 one else's and you feel a little been minimal. And they worry months ago with discussions, "In retrospect, because of the bit exposed." about the future of the sport. reviewing our current con­ result and everything else, the The duo put together a ball­ "I think it is great so much Keisha Kelly. Averaging 25 tract," Dempsey said in a con­ notoriety went up for us. The room salute to Ginger Rogers skating is on TV," she said. points per game, she likes to ference call from Kansas City, awareness, because of the criti­ and that was con­ "The only good thing to come drive to the basket and is a se­ Mo. CBS indicated a sincere in­ cism leveled at the judging at servative for them, but well out of all the Nancy and Tonya rious threat on offense. terest in extending it. It was the time, built from the begin­ within the rules. Then they controversy is that it has McGraw is certain that done in advance of what is usu­ ning to the end of the competi­ were shocked to find Oksana become so much more popular. defense will be key to winning ally done, but our relationship tion. We were seriously ques­ Gritschuk and Evgeni Platov of But hopefully there won't be an • the game. In the last home with CBS guaranteed them the tioning the wisdom of our Russia doing a rollicking tribute overkill. , f game, Notre Dame lost a heart­ right to discuss a new contract choice to compete, but at the to Chuck Berry that included ~ I breaker to state rival Purdue. before we talked to anybody end of it, we felt we accom­ the kinds of maneuvers Torvill It depends on the quality of McGraw cited defense as the else. plished something 10 years af­ and Dean were told to elimi­ the events they put up." major factor in the loss. "One very exciting part of the ter the previous Olympics. It nate. "We've played some tough new agreement for us is imme­ teams so far," Poor said, "but I diately being able to enhance "This will be one of the best If you see think we've learned from our revenues to membership and at Rexing mistakes." the same time to secure for the things that has ever happened next eight years a sizeable continued from page 20 to me," Hexing added. ''I'm Sports hap­ amount of resources for that really excited about racing membership." finished 70th overall with a against national class competi­ pening, call time of 31:59.3. tion." Dempsey said 85-90 percent As for heading to England in "Getting to go over and spend The Observer of the NCAA's total revenue March, Rexing knows that it a weekend with the top comes from its TV basketball will be an experience to re­ American runners can only contract. member. help," Hexing said. at 631-4543

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OFTIIE CUI~t·E N<::EPIION I 0/ld'/o-/o-~~~ 0/ld'~w~~~ J Barbara Ballasty l Thursday, December 8, 5:00 p.m. I ! Basilica of the Sacred Heart ! Father Edward Malloy, C.S. C., Presider

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Wednesday, December 6, 1994 The Observer • SPORTS page 15 Consequences felt after Monday Night game

2) and Pittsburgh (10-3) at What a difference a week "We'll go through our day of Raider's win home, with a trip to New Jersey makes. Inconsistency mourning, which is today, then to play the Jets (6-7) in "It felt good last night and we're going to be ready to vaults them between. The three teams are a today," coach Art Shell said continues to come back and go to work combined 27-12. Tuesday. "But now we're trying tomorrow. We've bounced back back into playoff The Raiders, who appeared to to catch up and get prepared plague Chargers from this type of thing before be so much on the outside look­ for Denver. We really don't and we can do it again." By BERNIE WILSON hunt ing in after losing to Pittsburgh have any time to reflect on this With the offensive line start­ Associated Press win."· ing to show wear and tear. the Associated Press 21-3 on Nov. 27, may instead have the inside track to not Shell stressed the Raiders had SAN DIEGO Chargers were beaten up front. Running back Natrone Means EL SEGUNDO, Calif. only the playoffs but a division gotten the message about play­ It wasn't always this tough for title. ing best when it mattered most. the San Diego Chargers, once was held to 41 yards on 18 car­ How big was the Raiders' vic­ ries, his lowest output of the tory over the San Diego They have shots at the other "December's here and they the hottest team in the NFL. two second-place teams from know if we win in December, Since starting 6-0, the season. Chargers? Big enough that the "Offensively, we're not a one­ once out-of-the-playoff-picture the AFC West. Denver is at the we've got a pretty good chance Chargers haven't won con­ Coliseum Sunday, while Kansas to be in the tournament (play­ secutive games. Their latest dimension team," Ross said. Raiders can actually win the "We can't line up and go into a AFC West. City visits on Dec. 24. In offs), which is what we're striv­ loss was 24-17 to the Los between, the Raiders visit the ing for," he said. Angeles Raiders on Monday, game and throw the ball proba­ A week ago, it took the most bly 50 to 55 times a game and optimistic among the Raiders to 5-8 Seahawks. The Raiders have asserted which kept them from clinching And all three of those teams themselves for the first time in the AFC West title. be successful. We've got to get see anything but despair in the our running game going. And it final month of the season. have potential or current quar­ a season that began 0-2 and 1- The Chargers (9-4) still need terback problems. 3. They have won five of their just one win for their second starts with just sheer out-block­ Now, after beating San Diego ing. I mean, you do have to 24-17 on Monday night, the Denver's John Elway is limp­ last seven games and the division championship in three ing on a sprained knee. schedule appears to favor seasons. block." Raiders see good things in their Quarterback Stan Humphries immediate future. Seattle's Rick Mirer is out for them. Their final three oppo­ But their schedule isn't easy, the season with a broken nents are 19-20. starting Sunday with a home bruised his right thumb when By denying San Diego's he hit it against a helmet late in attempt at clinching the AFC thumb. And Kansas City's Joe But there remains one nega­ game against the San Francisco Montana has a sprained foot tive should the Raiders wind up 49ers. The NFC West champi­ the second quarter, but West Division title, the Raiders returned to the game. Still, he suddenly put the division cham­ and sat out Sunday's loss to in a tiebreaker for the AFC ons (11-2) have won eight West championship. San Diego completed only 17 of 33 passes pionship back into question. Denver. straight games. finished division play 6-2; the for 202 yards and one touch­ San Diego has the upper hand Raiders quarterback Jeff "We have no choice but to Hostetler, who sustained a con­ best the Raiders can do is 5-3. come back," coach Bobby Ross down, with two sacks. at 9-4, two games ahead of the "Stan, for the most part, Raiders, Denver Broncos and cussion against Pittsburgh, had The Raiders came out of the said Tuesday. "I believe that Monday night game with no didn't have enough time," Ross Kansas City Chiefs (all 7 -6). But his left hand stepped on in the we can, yes." significant injuries, and there said. "In some situations we the Chargers have the toughest San Diego game. But X-rays were negative and he's expect­ was little to dim their en­ After the 49ers, the Chargers' could have made the throw, finishing schedule of any team and we missed on a couple of in the AFC playoff race. ed to play Sunday against thusiasm Tuesday as they be­ remaining games are at the Denver. gan preparations to play the things. All in all, we need to be They play San Francisco (11- New York Jets (6-7) and at Broncos. home against the Pittsburgh able to get it done better up "Anything can happen now (in Steelers (10-3), the best team in front." the AFC West)," said tackle the AFC. FIESTA BOWL PACKAGE Gerald Perry. ''I'm just glad The Chargers realize they Left guard Joe Cocozzo, nurs­ $169.00 we're in the equation." blew a perfect chance on ing a sprained foot, was in for Monday. Instead of celebrating only 13 plays. He's been unable a title in front of a record to practice for more than one •2 NIGHTS/2 PERSONS HOTEL ACCOMODATIONS Have some­ crowd of 63,012, they stumbled day each of the last three •FREE AIRPORT SHUTTLE AND GAME TRANSPORTATION again offensively and allowed weeks, and will be listed as •GAME DAY BREAKFAST BUFFET the Raiders to have one of their doubtful. If he can't go, the thing to best offensive games of the sea­ candidates to replace him are son. third-year pro Eric Jonassen FOR RESERVATIONS CALL say? Use and rookies Isaac Davis and Now they must face another Vaughn Parker. (602) 273-1211 big-play bunch, the 49ers, led Left tackle Harry Swayne has Observer by Steve Young and Jerry Rice. a sore knee, center Courtney RODEWAY INN-AIRPORT WEST "Personally, I hope that we Hall has had knee and arm are depressed right now," Ross injuries. and right guard Joe· classifieds! said. "I want people to take Milinichik has had knee, back $26.00 EACH ADDITIONAL PERSON/MAX 4 PERSONS PER ROOM defeat hard. and elbow problems. NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER "It's starting to have a little effect. But I'm reluctant to say these things because often times people start to imply that Did you know that listening to .... these are excuse making," Ross said. Tim O'Neill's new 60 minute solo piano Christmas album has been proven to increase your chances of getting that extension for your paper that is supposed to be due tomorrow?

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. ' \ ' ' . I i i l page 16 The Observer· SPORTS Wednesday, December 6, 1994 •NHL

l) Suprise tax proposal by owners causes setback

By MIKE NADEL first to end that way. far .. . and then a tax on top of at $800,000. Players at first bit apart on a few issues, but I Associated Press However, the NHL owners that, I don't think so. And that's wanted no rookie cap and then overall the framework was I simply could instruct Bettman why I say that I think the offered to have one at $1.5 mil­ there. The big difference was r) CHICAGO to make his best deal with chances of a season happening lion. Owners wanted a Gary Bettman was dying to get NHL labor talks broke down what's currently on the table. if they stick to their tax plan $700,000 limit. this tax on the table and he I Tuesday, with both sides agree­ Or they could set a "drop dead" are close to none." pulled it out with flying colors ing only that prospects are slim date and see how the players Early on, owners asked for a The union said salary arbitra­ today," Miller said. for salvaging the season. respond. 200 percent tax on clubs that tion should be binding; owners "From the outset, we told Commissioner Gary Bettman Regardless, the parties exceed the average NHL payroll wanted it to be non-binding, them we're not here to ne­ said the sides were "too far involved Tuesday acted as if the level. That figure dropped to meaning a team could cut a gotiate a cap. We were apart on substance" regarding season was over before it be­ 122 percent, but players player after an arbitrator negotiating in good faith on the salary arbitration, free agency gan. refused to negotiate it. To get makes a decision. Of the three (other) issues and for them to and rookie salary cap. "It's probably the most disap­ the players bargaining again, main issues, this remained the throw a tax on top, we think is He said negotiations ended pointing day of my career," the owners took the tax off the most contentious, but Miller too onerous. even before owners introduced Toronto Maple Leafs general table until bringing it back said there appeared to be room Bettman said the sides were a 25 percent "modified contri­ manager Cliff Fletcher said. "If Tuesday at 25 percent. for compromise across the far enough apart on all issues, bution proposal" - previously it ends up that I was part of the board. especially arbitration, for nego­ called a luxury tax - on teams process that results in hockey tiations to end. He said only that have payrolls exceeding not being played for an entire But, he said, Bettman - who then did the owners introduce $18 million in what would be season, it would be a tremen­ came from the NBA, where the the tax plan. the agreement's first year. dous black mark." salary cap has been viewed as "We were simply too far apart The players felt negotiations The lockout, in its 67th day, the solution to league problems to close the gaps, and the play­ were going well and the sides began Oct. 1 on what was sup­ - was intent on instituting ers told us that they had gone were close on most issues posed to be opening night. such a system in the NHL. as far as they could," Bettman before the owners dropped the It is generally believed a col­ "Obviously, we were a little said. tax bomb. They consider the lective bargaining agreement tax a form of salary cap and must be in place by mid­ NTERNATIONAL WORKING OPPORTUNITY } have said all along they would December if there is to be a never accept an agreement that "meaningful" 50-game season. j includes it. Now, NHLPA president Mike NHL Players Association exec­ Gartner said, it doesn't look like 1 utive director Bob Goodenow there will be a season at all. said the tax proposal was . "I can't see us going any fur­ "counterproductive" and "seri­ ther than we've gone," the ously endangers the prospects Toronto forward said. "We've of a deal and the prospects of a given them everything they season." j' wanted. We've made a tremen­ No talks are scheduled before dous amount of concessions the NHL Board of Governors along the way and right now meet Monday in New York. the owners are being gluttons The owners could decide then about it. They've been gobbling to become the first in pro sports up everything that we've been RECRUITING DATES: February 1, 2 and 3 ever to cancel an entire season giving and now they're saying at Career and Placement Services. because of a labor dispute. The we want more, more and more. 1994 baseball season was the "We've given everything so Open to all majors. t I

RIElTIVJE THJE TRTIUMJPH ~ ~ ~ November 13, 1993 ... #1 vs. #2 ... The Game of the Century... cap­ tured in a full-color poster depict­ ing the Irish defense shutting down the Seminoles. Irish Impact II post­ ers now available at the Bookstore, the LaFortune Info Desk, and the South Bend Center for the Home­ less. Only $10 each. Makes a great holiday gift!

( ' Iil "\ ) r I All proceeds benefit the South Bend Center for the Homeless Advertisement space donated by Notre Dame Student Government 2 a a a Y I I I 1 1 f I

Wednesday, December 7, 1994 The Observer • SPORTS page 17 - • Nfl •NBA NFL free agency Clipper's losing streak continues By KEN PETERS threw away another game, picks the Clippers have enjoyed Associated Press 115-83 to Charlotte. - because of steady losing system approved The outlook was bleak even records - has developed into LOS ANGELES before the Clippers started NBA stardom. Associated Press A three-judge panel agreed The have training camp three months Fitch in his previous NBA jobs with Doty. been associated with losing so ago. Then they lost center took woeful teams and devel­ ST. LOUIS The players had argued that long that another defeat usually Stanley Roberts to an Achilles oped them into winners, includ­ The NFL's free agency system the court had erred in certify­ doesn't make any difference. tear in the first exhibition ing a situation not unlike the was given the blessing of a fed­ ing them as a class and that Until now. game. current one. In his rookie eral appeals court on Tuesday. they were inadequately repre­ On Wednesday, a home Joss Guard Gary Grant had arthro­ coaching season, the expansion The 8th U.S. Circuit Court of sented. against the Milwaukee Bucks scopic knee surgery, then a Cleveland Cavaliers lost their Appeals rejected an appeal by A federal jury ruled in 1992 will tie the NBA record for futil­ staph infection. Earlier this first 15 games. Under his guid­ 26 players and upheld a federal that the Plan B system was ille­ ity at the start of a season. week, the Clippers placed back­ ance, losing franchises became judge's approval last year of a gal, prompting the league and "Everybody's so frustrated. up center on playoff teams at Cleveland, legal settlement that created the players to negotiate a new We all know the streak is hang­ the injured list because of Houston and Boston. He won the system. system that includes nearly ing over us and we all don't "apparent emotional and per­ one NBA title directing the U.S. District Judge David Doty unrestricted free agency for want to be remembered that sonal problems." Celtics in 1980-81. in Minneapolis had ruled that players with more than five way," said Matt Fish, one of the The Joss of Roberts and Meanwhile, the Clippers' lat­ the labor agreement years of league experience. Clippers' centers. Spencer have left the Clippers est loss gave them a franchise announced in January 1993 Doty gave that plan prelimi­ Under veteran coach Bill with a trivia quiz center tan­ record 20th consecutive defeat was "fair, reasonable and ade­ nary approval Feb. 26, 1993, Fitch, the Clippers are 0-16, a dem: former CBA players Fish stretching back to last season. quate" to the players who had but dozens of players and for­ loss to the Bucks away from and Bob Martin. The over­ The franchise has had just five filed a class-action lawsuit mer Philadelphia Eagles owner tying the league mark set by matched pair combined for a winning seasons in a quarter­ challenging the league's old, Norman Braman filed objec­ the expansion in woeful six points and two re­ century of existence. Plan B. free agency system. tions with the court. 1988. bounds against Charlotte on Two of the better years came The Heat was 0-17 before Monday night. not that long ago. Coached by Tonight is the night finally winning the 18th game The loss of players is nothing Larry Brown, the Clippers that season against, you new to the Clippers, of course. made the playoffs and nearly to be guessed it, the Clippers. The few quality players they've upset Utah in 1991 and "The momentum is killing us had in recent years have been Houston in 1992, losing both and we don't want to Jet it lost to free agency, trades or first-round series 3-2. "mindied" spread," Fitch said. "You have injury. One of the stars of those to act like a winner until you All-Star Danny Manning went teams, now playing again win, and keep a sense of to Atlanta last year and is now under Brown at Indiana, is humor." at Phoenix. The Clippers got Jackson. 51 high-scoring Dominique Wilkins ''I'm very blessed to be out of How bad is it? The Sports in exchange, but only for a here," Jackson said after a vis­ Happy 21 Arena was less than half-full third of the 1993-94 season. iting Indiana team routed the with an announced crowd of Wilkins went to Boston as a Clippers recently. 7,492 Monday night when free agent. cheerleaders tried to bouy The entire Clipper backcourt Jackson said the blame for the Love, home crowd enthusiasm by left as well, playmaker Mark fast decline of the Clippers the Amy, Anne, Claudia, tossing free Clipper T -shirts Jackson to Indiana and Ron past two seasons has to be into the stands. Many fans Harper to Chicago. shared by disinterested players Julie, & Kelly threw them back. Other than Manning, no one as well as bungled manage­ The Clippers, meanwhile, from the numerous high draft ment.

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~----~~~------page 18 The Observer • SPORTS Wednesday, December 6, 1994 • NFL Krieg finds life after Aikman returns to face Cleveland By DENNE H. FREEMAN Aikman still simmers over the Running back Emmitt Smith Seahawks with Lions Associated Press incident. It was three years ago said the team needs Aikman, By HARRY ATKINS "They know we can pass now, and the Cowboys started their despite the success of the Associated Press and teams are not crowding the IRVING, Texas playoff run without him. Steve reserve quarterbacks. line of scrimmage anymore," The Dallas Cowboys won their Beuerlein got on a role and "It's very important that we Fontes said. "As a result, Barry last two games without Troy then-coach Jimmy Johnson get him back before the play­ PONTIAC, Mich. is able to run better." Aikman. It appears they'll get a wouldn't start Aikman, who offs," Smith said. "We've got to There used to be a saying Fontes also likes the way chance to win the next one with said he was ready. gel and get in rhythm for that when the late Bobby Layne was Krieg handles himself, both on him. Finally, in a blowout by playoff run. We need him in quarterbacking the Detroit the field and in the clubhouse. "It's good to have our general Detroit, Aikman got to see sec­ there." Il Lions: "Bobby never lost a He is a communicator. As the back," wide receiver Michael ond-half, mop-up duty. Johnson It's already been a busy week game, he just ran out of time." team takes the field, Krieg is Irvin said. "We've been putting later apologized to Aikman, for Aikman. He opened a l Time after time, the hard­ constantly chatting with his up some points without him. who then led the Cowboys to restaurant in Dallas Monday drinking, fun-loving Texan receivers, making sure they Now that he's going to be back, back-to-hack Super Bowl victo­ night and moved easily from would rescue the Lions. With know what he has in mind. there is no reason why we can't ries. guest to guest without a limp. Layne in control. the Lions He keeps the coach posted, really put up some points." "I know my body and my body went to the NFL championship too. Aikman missed two games tells me when I can play," game four times in the 1950s. "Krieg is just a cagey veter­ with a sprained left knee but Aikman said. "I believe I can Celebrate a They won three of them. an," Fontes said. "He comes to was in charge of the team play." Krieg was asked to crank up the sidelines and has good sug­ Tuesday as the Cowboys pre­ Coach Barry Switzer said f ... friend's his rusty arm Nov. 6 in gestions." pared for Saturday's game Aikman can take as long as he Milwaukee when Scott Mitchell The Lions looked like they against Cleveland in Texas wants to decide. broke the bone in his right were going nowhere with Stadium. "If he runs out of that tunnel Birthday with (non-throwing) wrist in a game Mitchell. He arrived with an "I plan on playing," Aikman on Saturday and - poof- says against the Green Bay Packers. $11 million contract and there said. he can play, then that's enough a special Since then, the 36-year-old were high expectations for him Third-stringer Jason Garrett notice for me," Switzer said. Krieg has been sensational. He even though he had only seven won against Green Bay on "He doesn't need that much has passed for 1 ,069 yards and previous starts. Thanksgiving, and second­ practice time." Observer ad. 10 touchdowns, without a sin­ Mitchell had 10 touchdown stringer Rodney Peete led the gle interception. In the process, passes, but 11 interceptions team to victory Sunday against Krieg has revitalized the Lions' when he was injured. Chances Philadelphia. offense. are Fontes would have given Peete said he knows his role OoMe h-ut oat w/t~ "When the guy under center him the hook, even if Mitchell and doesn't expect to play performs well, this team has hadn't been hurt. against the Browns. ~rg~• the ability to score points," "It saved me the decision, the ''I'd like to play, but I hope Detroit coach Wayne Fontes way it happened," Fontes said. he's feeling well enough to play said. "He knows the offense "But Scott Mitchell is still the because this is his team," Peete h~ and he moves the ball around future of this club." said. "When I came here I well. He's a 15-year veteran For the present, however, knew the only time I was going that's good to have in there at Krieg is the man. The Lions' to get to play was when he this point in time." stretch run for a playoff berth couldn't go." When he came on in relief of rides on his arm. Aikman, who might play with Mitchell, the Packers staked "I think Krieg makes us bet­ a knee brace on Saturday, themselves to a 38-14 lead ter," Fontes said. ''I'm not hates sideline duty. heading into the fourth quarter. going to dance around the "I remember the last time I l\"\'ll~':-)(!l'\1 But Krieg, passing for 275 question. He's totally in the had a sprained knee, I was held yards and three touchdowns, game. He knows why we do out five weeks and could have almost pulled the game out. things. played in two weeks," he said. Since then, the Lions have won three of four, including a 34-31 victory over Green Bay on Sunday. The late charge has Detroit (7 -6) back in the hunt The University of Notre Dame for the NFC Central title. The Lions play the Jets in New York Department of Music on Saturday. "The quarterback is making presents this offense better and better as we go," Fontes said. "We have skilled people and we have a CHILDREN'S CHRISTMAS I team that can score." Handel's u The most skilled of all, of PARTY course, is Barry Sanders. He is the NFL's leading rusher with Saturday, Dec. 10th 1,594 yards and has a chance MESSIAH to become only the third player { in NFL history to run for 2,000 yards. Thursday, Dec. 8 "I've been around some great Friday, Dec. 9 athletes," Krieg said. "But this 8:00p.m. 99 cent lunch special at Really Poppin 11 a.m.-2 p.m.-·--­ I guy is something extra special. Sleeping Beauty Puppet Show 1 & 3 p.m. I'm very impressed with him." Magic Show 2 p.m. But opponents had begun Washington Hall Have your picture taken with Santa for only S6 crowding the line, trying to take Sanders out of the game. Krieg's passing success ended Tickets $6 General Admission that practice. Sanders ran for 237 yards in a 14-9 win over $3 Students Tampa Bay. He ran for 188 Available at LaFortune Box Office yards Sunday in the win over ~~ ~~ I Green Bay. ~~~~~~[~!~ j~ ;1 I ,) iJ" ,lj Some roundball,. anyone? NOTRE DAME Women's Basketball ----vs.------MICHIGAN STATE II; J.,'i$ rli FREE ADMISSION! ' ),! j~ .... j' SIX· INCH with student ID MEATBALL SUB l..d$1.69 ' I ' I f • , , • ' t

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~ ... -.- .. ,- '· ~ ...... !_ SPORTS page 20 · Wednesday, December 6, 1994 Despite tough losses, Irish look to rebound

I I~ against Michigan State Transition defense key tonight against Spartans By K.C. GOYER SportS Writer

'That which does not kill us makes us stronger.' If so, the women's basketball team has been getting quite a work-out. And tonight at 7:00 p.m., The Observer/Rob Finch Michigan State will endure the Jeannine Augustin fruits of Notre Dame's labor. contributed 19 points and The Notre Dame women have grabbed 8 rebounds in the suffered hard fought losses at championship game. the hands of three highly Michigan State has strength as ranked teams in its last four an experienced team with three games. The competition has starting seniors. Notre Dame hurt the team's record but has one senior on the roster, strengthened its abilities. The co-captain Letitia Bowen. new and improved Fighting Bowen is a major factor in the Irish squad is eager to get a win Irish's ability to outrebound against the Spartans in the their opponents, averaging 11.3 JACC arena tonight. boards per game this season., Coach Muffet McGraw expects Although the team has been an up-tempo game from MSU. outscored three times in four I In practice yesterday, the team games so far this season, Notre. spent time working on transi­ Dame has yet to be outrebound­ tion and man-to-man defense in ed. anticipation of Michigan State's Coach McGraw has comment­ ability to run and push the ball ed in the past on the team's up the floor. depth at post. Sophomore's "Michigan State is definitely Rosanne Bohman and Katryna heatable," co-captain Carey Gaither will back up Bowen and Poor said, "We just have to put Poor, and have already scored )i forth a solid effort and stop the double digits otT the bench this li transition game." season. Poor was named to the All­ The player to watch on the ~· Tournament team this weekend Spartans' squad tonight will be fl when the Irish traveled to The Observer/ Rob Finch Sophomore Beth Morgan and the Irish look to have a solid effort tonight against Michigan State at the California for the Newport see WOMEN I page 14! JACC. Beach Marriott Classic. Poor Strayhorn commits t Rexing aims for world title Freshman runner effort, Hexing has qualified for That's when Jimmerson began ·~ the world championships to be to surge ahead into a lead that to Irish next season qualifies for held in Durham, England in he would not relinquish. Observer Staff Report prospects to visit the Notre early March of 1995. The com­ The last eight miles saw a Dame campus over the week­ world champi­ petition is for runners 19 years dogfight for the second place Notre Dame's first major re­ end. An aggressive defender of age or younger. spot. As Hexing turned on the cruiting weekend has produced who can play both safety spots onships "I was really pleased with how afterburners in the last mile, he the first of what many expect to and cornerback, Strayhorn J the race turned out," Hexing managed to finish one second be an intensive list of major recorded 100 tackles and five By JOE VILLINSKI said. "I ended up feeling strong ahead of the third-place run­ prospects. interceptions this season. He Sports Writer in the last two miles." ner. Defensive back Mario made 91 tackles as a junior. The native of Worthington, "You can't begin to rank the Strayhorn, a 6-foot-2, 190- ~n '1- There are moments during a Ohio finished 11 seconds be­ positive effects this will have on pounder from Princeton High Strayhorn is among the top young athlete's career that only hind Stanford sophomore Greg Jason, both as a runner and as School in Cincinnati, is the three safety prospects listed by ji help to provide a glimpse into Jimmerson as the pair dueled a person," Irish head coach Joe fourth high school player to Tom Lemming, editor of the 1 the future. over the 8240-meter course. Piane said. "These type of ex­ commit to the Irish for the Prep Football Report. For freshman cross-country Rexing started the race slow as periences, in big-time events 1995 season. Strayhorn joins Strayhorn carries a 2.5 grade } his breathing became heavy in against big-time runners, will :P runner Jason Rexing, this past tight end John Cerasani of point and scored a 770 on the j; weekend gave an idea of things the first couple of miles. help his development as a com­ Schaumburg, Ill., kicker Kevin SAT. He chose Notre Dame to come. "I started out pretty conserva­ petitive runner." Kopka of Hollywood Hills, Fla., over Michigan, North Carolina, The freshman finished second tively," Hexing added. "I was Rexing helped the Irish to fin­ and Jenks, Okla. defensive line­ Ohio State, and Penn State. ! overall at the U.S. Cross about 25th after the first mile." ish 14th as a team at the NCAA man Jerry Wisne. Strayhorn National signing day is Feb. 2. r Hexing gradually moved into championships this season and I Country Junior Men's champi­ committed early Sunday after­ J· onship held in Portland, Ore., the lead group as the pack noon. The South Bend Tribune con­ with a time of 25:25. For his reached the three-mile mark. see REXING I page 14 Strayhorn was one of 21 tributed to this report. ~t

of note ...... ~ .. Tale of two Quarterbacks

Dave Krieg makes his mark in Detroit, Look for an upcoming preview of while Troy Aikman returns to face Browns Women's Volleyball page 18