Lebanon -page 6 ------==--

VOL XVIII, NO. 30 the independent ~tudcnt 11<."\\ ~papt:r -.t·n ing notn dame ;llld -.aint man·._ THURSDAY,OCTOBER 6, 1983 Minors arrested at Nickle's appear before St. Joe judge By TOM SHAUGHNESSY Hunter. nmnsel for the Notrl" "'fk kt'ls that tht· students of News Staff Dame students. said a dt"fendant on a Notrt" I>amt· and Saint Mary"s do not "minor entt·ring a tavern" chargt.· is n.-alize tht· seriousnt·ss of going out Ten Saint Mary's students and five usually allowed to entrr a pka of to tht.· hars ... hl:' st·enwd to ht· skk Notre Dame students went befon: "guilty," and the srntl:'ncing is with­ and tired of pt.·oplc appearing in St. joseph County judge Hosinski held for six months. If tht: ddendant front of him so oftt"n for this kind of Tuesday morning on a charge of stays out of further troubk during thing." said ont.· Saint Mary's stmknt. "minors entering a tavern." The. I '5 this period, the prosecutor movt:s students were arrested in a raid of · Judgr l-losinski refust"d to t·om­ for dismissal of the chargt:s. ment on the matter. Nickie's bar at~ 928 N. Eddy Sept. I 0. According to Hunter, "the judgr The Notre Dame students, did not serm interested in any com­ Referring to the Nickit.-'s incident, represented by Rich Hunter, en­ promise with the prosecuter." Dean of Students James Rol"mt·r tered pleas of"not guilty." They will Hosinski "would not toleratl" les­ stated that "when studcnts arc return to court on Nov. 3. ser treatment for students," he said. caught in violation of criminal The IO Saint Mary's students ap­ The judge suggested that steps ht· statutt·s. they must go through thc peared without counsel and pleaded taken to inform Notre Dame and criminal justice systrm - getting guilty. Each was fined $2'5 plus Saint Mary's students as to what hood, getting an attorney, et Cl"tera. courts costs and sentenced to one procedures will be taken if they are Thc llnivrrsity does not attt:mpt to day in jail. Though each jail sentence arrested on such charges, said Hun­ intervt.·ne on behalfoftht: studcnts." was suspended, the charge will ter. According to Rot·nwr. "the Uni­ remain on each student's record as a "He basically kcturt:d us," said versity considrrs this ( kgal Class B misdemeanor. one of those involved. Several stu­ process) sufficit:nt sanction for tht: judge Hosinski also gave the stu­ dents said that Judge Hosinski asked studcnt and will not cxercist· om­ dents a stiff warning. saying if any of them what the legal drinking age current jurisdiction," Rot·mer said. them appeared before him again, was in their homr state, and if it was Neitht.·r Saint Mary's nor Notre "they would spend some lime in under 2I, were they using that as an Dame has taken any administratin· jail," according to one defendant. excuSt"" to drink in South Bend? action against tht: studt:nts.

# Walesa awarded Nobel Peace Prize Associated Press port ofthe labor movement. blm:, was tounded in August 1980, Polish authorities did not say aftrr a wave of strikes and unrest, but OSLO, Norway - Lech Walesa, whether they would permit Walcsa was suspended at the imposition of leader of Poland's outlawed to leave Poland to accrpt the award, martial law Dec. I 3, I 98 I, and latt:-r Solidarity labor movement, was and the labor leader said he was outlawed. --.....:.~_ awarded the Nobel Peace Prize yes­ considering sending a rrlative in his A solidarity underground n·mains ·--..... terday for his fight on behalf of the place. Soviet dissident Andrei Sak­ and, despite frequent governnu·nt Record-breaking sale "unconquered longing" of all people harov, the only other Peace Prize efforts to minimize Walesa's impor­ for peace and freedom. laureate from the East bloc, did not tance and discredit him, ht: remains junior julie Berg peniSes the record and tape selection at yesterday's Walesa quickly said he would give accept his award brcause he fearrd a ht:ro of thl:' Polish proplc and a sale in Saint Mary's Shaheen Bookstore. Berg decided on Dionne War­ the approximately $190,000 award he would not be allowed to return rallying point for the movement. wick's Greatest Hits, but not before browsing the classical selections. to Poland's Roman Catholic Church, home. His wife, Ydena Bonner, at­ The Noht:l committee said it which has been outspoken in its sup- tended on his behalf. "n:gards Walesa as an exponent of In Warsaw, deputy government the active longing for pt:at."l" and spokesman Andrzej Konopacki frct:dom which t:xist, in spitc of unt:­ GOP senators: Watt 'must go' charged that the award was political­ qual n>nditions, unconquered in all ly motivated and said the Peace the propks of the world. Associated Press of any kind ... If there was any bigotry or malice in the Prize "used to be a meaningful "In an age wht:'n detente and thc man, prejudice of any kind, he wo11ldn't be a pan ohhe award. Now it is devalued." peaceful resolution of contlkts arc WASHINGTON - Senate Republicans served blunt administration." Walesa, who wa..'> interned by the more necessary than ever bct(,rr, notice on yesterday that Interior Secretary james Watt As for the Republican caucus, Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas Communist government for I I tech Waksa's contribution is both must go or face a strong vote of no confidence. But said "Some very strong feelings were expresed. Therc:'s months during martial law, was an inspiration and an exampk," it President Reagan said Watt "has done a fine job," and a a very, very strong feeling that Secretary Watt should harassed afterward while trying to said. "stupid remark" didn't merit his removal. leave." return to his job as a shipyard The committee said Walt-sa's Senate GOP leaders said a stormy, closed-door And even Watt's must outspoken defender oflate, As­ electrician, and has recently bern work was "charat.:t~·Tized by a deter­ caucus on Tuesday had demonstrated that support for sistant Republican Leader Ted Stevens of Alaska, the object of a news media campaign mination to solve his nmntry's Watt had waned far beyond previous estimates, and a conceded the interior secretary was in deep trouble. to discredit him. problems through nt·gotiation and consensus emerged that the secretary should resign for cooperation without resorting to "There is an increasing number of members of the The Norwegian Nobel Committee the good of the party. Minority Democrats, in their own violence." majority who are of the opinion that a change will ul­ said Walesa had made his contribu­ caucus days earlier, unanimously endorsed a call for His nmtrihution ··is of vital impor­ timately have to be made," Stevens said. tion "with considerable personal Watt's removal. tance in the widcr t:ampaign to Republicans had a wide ranging discussion of Wan at sacrifice to ensure the workers' right Reagan, whose aides had pronounced the case closed the caucus, and almost all agret:d, according to par­ st·cure the universal frt"edom to ,,r­ to establish their own organization." over Watt la..'it week, told The Associated Press board of ticipants, that Watt should resign. ganize - a human right as dd1ned The Solidarity union, the only in­ directors that the secretary "has done a fine job." "It became clear that the Watt thing had hurt by tht:' United. Nations," thl" commit­ drpendent labor union in the Soviet The president said Watt made "a stupid remark" Republicans and had hurt the Reagan administration tee said. when he referred to an advisory panel on coal leasing as and was not just going to go away," said one Senate "a black ... a woman, two Jews and a cripple" two weeks Republican, who asked not to be identified. ago. Even Republicans who hadn't taken a position on But Reagan told the AP directors that he agreed with Watt before the session spoke out against him in scath­ House Democratic Leader Jim Wright of Texas on the ing terms, participants said. issue. "He didn't think it was an impeachable offense, As a result, the White House ha.."i been notifit:d by and I don't either," said Reagan. Republican leaders that they would be unable to block a "I recognize that a mistake wa..'i made," the president "sense of the Senate" resolution calling for Watt's dis­ said. "He (Watt) recognizes that, too. What he was missal, sources said. The resolutation was drafted by trying to say was not based on any malice, any prejudice Democratic Leader Robert Byrd of West Virginia. SMC celebrates Founders' Day By EDWARD NOLAN "The Walk through Time," a grap­ Uniform Review. Teamsoffourfrom News Staff hic illustration on the history of the each hall will compete for a pizza College, also will be presented in the pany in the Scavenger Hunt. Alumnae from the Saint Mary's Haggar College Center Parlor Mon­ Students will dress in fashions 1905-1935 classes will be on day. reflecting student garb from the late campus Tuesday to celebrate the There will be a candlelight dinner 1800's to the present in the Uniform College's I39th Founders' Day, for the alumnae on Tuesday in Review. according to Mary Sue Dunn, coor­ LeMans. A I 5-minute slide presenta­ The programming committee also dinator for Founders' Day festivities, tion on the history of the College discussed plans for another Five Hall who spoke at the programming will be presented at 7 p.m. After the Dance. The success ofthe first dance committee meeting last night. slideshow, Sister Maria McDermott which was held last month initiated Students and faculty members will lead a discussion on the Col­ the discussion, according to Dunn. The Obst-rver/lboma.~ Brown will begin celebrations Monday - lege's history. The dance is tentatively Chairful workers each hall will sponsor a birthday Other activities for the day in­ scheduled for the weekend follow~ Notre Dame employees unload new plush furniture outside LaFortune (.'ake party. dude a Scavenger Hunt, and ing Christmas break. .\tude,t -cimi~r, y~sterda:v r------~- --- The Observer Thursday, October 6, 1983 - page 2 Scholastic: Quality i m proving?

dir~ctor of d~velopmcnt at Saint Thomas Becker, It's out. Mary's, has appointed Lisa Russell O'Shea as assistant dir~ctor of Paul McGinn Scholastic the monthly student magazine of Notre development. She began her duties October Currently Ph.D. Executive Editor 3. a Dame and Saint Mary's the streets last Friday. candidate at the University of Chicago, O'Shea most recently worked Reactions to the magazine's first issue, however, as r~search assistant in the major gifts division in the development were mixed. While some praised its quality by calling it Inside Thursday oftke of the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business. A a "fine example of journalistic talent," others accused 19...,9 magna cum laude graduate of Williams College in Scholastic of ingratiating itsdf to students and faculty Wiliamstown. Mass.. O'Shea is a native of Middletown, Conn. -The members. One student even compared the issue to a and circulation programs, she says. Ohsen,er "had high school newspaper." But more important than saving money, Preuss was Such conflicting comments may he common for any able to bring together faculty, students, and ad­ college publication, but Jim Ganther, Scholastic's ministrators. Scholastic editors met with four faculty editor-in-chid. doesn't take such reader feedback light· members and one administrator each semester to help The Review of Politics has r~cieved the Harold). ly. "Scholastic has made a 4uantum leap in the last five the students assess editorial policies, she says. Pt:tnson award for the:- bt:sl article on American military history years," he says. Gamher recalls the late 1970s when the Preuss hoped such a advisory committee would help published last year. The article, "Power and Diplomacy: The 1920s magazine ran only 16 pages per issue, a downturn overcome the two greatest handicaps of any student­ Rt·appraist:d." was written hy John Brae man. professor of history at whi<..-h even prompted a Notre Dame administrator to organization: students who will not "admit to their tht· l 'niversity of Nebraska at Lin<.:oln, and appeared in the July 19H2 suggest Scholastic cease publishing. But under own ignorance," and faculty members "who won't issue of The Ret•ieu· of Politics, a s<.:holarly journal published here. Chuck Wood, editor-in­ devote themselves to the Tht· award is given by the Eastern National Park and Monument As­ chief from 19HO to 19H2, students' activites." sociation in memory of the late Harold Peterson, chief curator ofthe Scholastic enjoyed a rebirth Ganther also believes the National Park Service who also served on the Eastern National board. - it no longer attempted to advisory council will have Award rn:ipil"nts re<:eive 51 .000. -The Ohsen,er compete with The Ohsen,er much impact on this year's for hard news; instead, editorial direction; Wood decided to print only however, he has changed in-depth news and feature the philosophy established About 100 protesters, including six students in a artidcs . by Wood and Preuss who ... mall boat. demonstratnl nt·ar tht· port ofSasebo,japan, yestt:rday as As a writer for S(.·holastic Ganther says were "too tilt' l .S. airnaft carrier Carl Vinson left after a four-day visit, police during Wood's t1·nure. I • wrapped up in themes." ~;ud There were no casualties or arrests. t:our prott·st<:rs were ar­ realized \X' ood's ability to Ganther says hc wants to rntcd in Sa ... cho Saturday when tht· 91.000-ton carrit:r arrivt:d. At turn student-scholars into make Scholastic less of a that time. 26 small boats carrying at least II H protesters tried to magazine writers and "soapbox" and more of a pn:vcnt the ship from entering the port. while 2,6';0 people staged "politically moderate" editors - a change \Vhich \~+c. '9 70s \ CJ 80's l.lt-monstrations on land. Protestt·rs numht:rt:d over H.OOO Sunday rarely takes place at a magazine which will not and daimt·d tht· ship carried nuckar weapons, in violation ofjapan's student-run newspaper or 'Whe.rr does it- "spoonfeed" students with principles banning the possession. production or introduction of magazine. go "too many articles on nuclear arms. Tht· l'.S. Navy n:fust·s to comment on its nuclear But Wood, who now From he.~? spirituality and social \\Tapons dt·ployment. - AP works with the Washington justice." D.C. archdiocest·'s Because he is a finance newspaper Catholic Standard, left a dt:t:p hole for his major, Ganther considers himsdf"a little bit more prag­ matic" than former editors-in-chid, most of whom have Greenpeace environmental activists succes~ors. been enrolled in the College of Arts and Letters. He also demonstrated yesterday at a fac·tory in Lin;. Austria. which used to Beth Healey Preuss. last year's editor-in-chief, was producT dioxin. hut angry workt:rs brokt: up tht: protest as the contends he knows what students want to read: sports. not as ecstatically received by administrators as was dt·monstrator.., tried to block the plant's gates with moc·k drums of general news. and and no more than "two or three ar- \X'ood. One administrator remarked that Wood's high the dc·adly chemical waste. The demonstrators wert: protesting the . tides" on a specific topic. literary standards may have "spoiled" Scholastic impc·nding return of barrels of dioxin that had hn·n shipped abroad But ifthe editorial policies of Wood and Preuss mean readers, and said the magazine under Preuss failed w for disposal hut wt·rc being st·nt hack to the plant because the dis­ anything, Ganther's new philosophy of making Scholas­ reach the literary standards of Wood. Preuss, now posal contractor backe<.l out. About ';(} angry workers deart:d the tic into a general interest magazine free of thematic working for Notre Dame's University Press, disagrees. guidelines may create many difficulties for the gatt· area at the Chc:mil' l.inz plant before turning on about 20 magazine. ckmon ... trators. according to police. Tht·re wert: no injuries, and the Scholastic began paying its editors and doing its own Wood and Preuss knew St-·holastic's purpose was to protntors drove off in vans. police said. About I 00 workers at tht: layout for the first time last year, said Preuss. According offer a publication through which students and faculty <:Ill·mie Linz plant sutfernl skin disordt:rs aftt·r an accident here in to Preuss, quality at the magazine remained high while members could comment on complicated issues. And 19"7:t Thrt•t· years later. dioxin t·sc.:aped into tht.· air from a plant in students became more involved in the production of two or three articles just don't seem to be enough. St·w·so, northt·rn Italy Tht· inddt·nt was hlamt·d for a series of stil­ the magazine. lbirths. birth dt'f(:('(s and,hundrt·ds of cascs of a rare skin disease. - Observer note AP Such a change in the financial policy of the magazine ------promptcd University administrators to become The Observer needs news editors and news copy "ridiculous" about finances, according to Preuss. Even editors. If you're interested in either of these paid posi­ with the new salaries, Scholastic was able to save the tions, see Paul McGinn at The Observer office. Applica­ A 70-year-old man tlying a homemadt: airplane he University over 51,000 through revamped advertising tions are due Monday at S p.m. had worknl on for I "i years was killed wht·n tht: craft plummt:ted to tilt' ground. Anson William Munson. of Punta Gorda. Florida. was killed Tut·sday afternoon ncar Charlotte County Airport in the _ The_Obser_ver_ singk-c:ngint·. four-passt·ngt·r I>ykt· lkha. A witnt·ss cstimated that Catering Dept. of St. Mary's College is currently the plane fell from I. "iiHI fc<:t. Ownt·r oftht· aircraft. ,I. Austin Kimble (.muposilion Editor ...... Carok Laugit'r in need of waiters I waitresses for a large ban­ of !.t-high Acrc·s. said he and Munson startc<.l huilding tht· Ddta I "i yt·ar.., ago in .\1unson's shop in Llurd. :\hi. Thc Feckral Aviation Ad· (.omjmsition Assi.~tanl \1aurn·n Murphy quet to be held on October 7. Please call Cindy ministration and National Transportation Safety Board said they ami Chri~ liowil'r at 284-5542 or stop into the dining hall office to would inn:stig

,'Veu·s J:tlilor ...... Annt· Monastyrski 12:30 - 4 Monday- Friday Haggar Ctr - 3rd Floor Copy l:'tlitor ...... ·...... Pal Sa in

Of Interest .\fmrt.~ (.'of~J' l:'tlltor ...... Mark Ramirez I

1'1'(/f Un!S /,ti)'OUI...... Man Healy An out of print book you cannot locate? San Diego Zoo, in an effort w t·xpand a rare-monkey Try our search service! breeding program. has purchasnl I:; lion-tailed mact<.JUt'S from tht· S.H(. /}1/J' l:'lli/nl'...... \I an· Ann Potter private col kct ion of Prinn· Rainier of \to naco. Tht• zoo had nationally circulated twgotiatnl a price of S I 2500 for I H monkevs. but thrt'l' died. so tht· .~d /Jt,sign ...... Boh Ciulla initial cost: $.75 price probabl\ will he lowered. Sheldon Camphdl. president ofthe PbolografJh<'l'. . . .. Thoma~ l~rown San Di<.-go Zoological ~(Kil't\·. ~aid Tul·sdav. "As far as I know. tht· no obligation moncy got·s to thc princT himsdf. but I guess that i~ the gon-rnment. (,'IlL'S I ..J.{Ifll'tlf'tl/1('('.~ ...... Paul \kG inn 500Jo success rate \\ c'll pay wlwrt· wt·'re told to." Campbell said. Till' zoo ala·ady had I:; of till' l'IH.langnnl animals. ( >nly :~00 to (lOO lion-taill'd mact4ut·s. eight weeks I.} twit• oftbe Oar natiH' to southl'rn India. arc hdit'\Td lcft in till' wild. - AP It oi/IJ' tak<'s fll'n wonts /IJ 1>/nw J'Oll ERASMUS BOOKS illl'll)' noon~, Toes .-Sun:

The Obeerver (USPS 598 920) IS 232-8444 published Monday through Fnday and on home football Saturdays. I Weather · · · except dunng exam and vacat1on penods The ObMrver 1s published by the students of Notre Dame and Samt Mary s College Subscnp!lons may be purchased for $25 per year ($15 per semester) by wntmg The Mostly sunny today with high in mid to uppt:r 60s. Clear Obaerver. P 0 Box Q. Notre tonight and cool with lows in mid -tOs. Partly cloudy tomorrow with Dame. lnd1ana 46556 high in uppt·r 60s. - AP The ObMrver IS a member of The Auocl.ted PreM. All reproduct1on nghts are reserved The Observer Thursday, October 6, 1983 - page 3 Jesse Helms abandons fight against Martin L. King holiday

Associated Press would be called up if we got unani­ purpose in stalling was to push the mous consent" on the King voting vote back past the week-long recess WASHINGTON - Republican -schedule, Helms said in an inter­ that starts Monday. jesse Helms of North Carolina view. "It happens all the time around ''I'm following exactly the abandoned yesterday his one-man this place. I don't see anything in­ strategy I started out with," Helms filibuster against a bill honoring Mar­ sidious about that." said. "I wanted to take this beyond tin Luther King, Jr. with a national The Helms-Baker agreement the Columbus Day recess so holiday, virtually ensuring it will be prevented the need for at least two senators can have time to think and passed by the Senate and signed by cloture votes, the first scheduled their constituents can get to them. If President Reagan later this month. yesterday, to limit debate. people don't contact their senators, In return for not fighting a Baker and Robert Dole, R-Kan., so be it." scheduled Oct. 19 vote on the King floor of the King holiday measure, Helms got his way on a bill bill, have said it will pass by a wide Helms would not specify the lan­ important to his tobacco-producing margin and President Reagan's guage of his amendments but said he state. spokesmen have declared he will wanted to "delete shutting down Immediately after the Senate sign it. this country for anybody, including agreed to the King voting schedule, The House passed the measure my own personal hero, Thomas Jef­ Majority Leader Howard Baker - by two months ago by a 338-90 vote. ferson. If they want to set aside (the prior arrangement with Helms - It sets the third Monday in january holiday) on Sunday, that is fine." brought to the floor a bill that would - starting in 1986 - as a day to Helms said he knew that his op­ set price supports for dairy products honor the slain civil rights leader. position to the bill and his com­ and tobacco. It was a measure Helms His actual birthday is jan. 15. ments that King espoused Laid to Rest Th~ Observ~r!Tboma..~ Brown wanted considered before next Helms, who said his mail was "action-oriented Marxism" would week's Columbus Day recess. "overwhelmingly in favor of my keep him from getting any black Pallbearers carry• the body of Brother Adalbert Rount u•ho u•as buried "Sure, I had the arrangement with position" against the holiday, con­ votes if he runs for re-election next yesterday in Saint joseph's Cemetery, fo/loU'ing the ftmeml mass. The the majority leader that the farm bill tended in the interview his only year. 70-year-old Ho~v Cross brother died of lung cancer Sundt~l'.

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\. -._ ...... _, .. -.. ------·- .. --...... -...... - . ~ ... - -·- .. .,.. The Observer Thursday, October 6, 1983 - page 4 N.Y.'s Cardinal Cooke 'gravely ill'

Associated Press staged, hut that's thl' way thl' man fl'els." Finn said." He.: wants this to hl' NEW YORK - Cardinal Tcrenn: purposeful. He.: wants his suffering to Cooke. archbishop for I.H million he.· a beautiful gift for othc.:rs." New York Roman Catholit:s, offered Catholics hdievc.: that suffc.:ring the.: pain of his leukemia "as a ht."auti­ <:an be dc.:dkatc.:d w a purpose.:. Armanao·s Barber & Hair Styje Shop ful gift for others" yesterday as his including the salvation of the souls 1437 North Ironwood Drive Sputh Bend. IN life.: continued to slip away, a spokes­ of others. man ~aid. HOME OF THE IRISH Finn said at nt'ws hric.:fings yc.:ster­ fatha Pc.·t~:r finn. spokesman for Four Stylists ro Serve You the Archdim.Tse of Nc.·w York. said day that Cookc.:'s <.'ondition Five minutes from caJD us Cooke remained ''gravely ill." under remained unchanged, and "the.: un­ mcdic.'ation and ncar dc.·ath. predictable course of his illness does But he.· said <:ookc.· wantc.:d to not permit predse estimates" of remain nmscious as muc.:h as pos­ how long he.· would live. sible.- so that his suffc.·ring could he "The omclusion can he in a mat· "pu rposcfu I." Spend a "NEAT" evening Terence Cardinal Cooke ter of hours or a matter of days. It's in ''Thal. might sound a little.: hit the.: hands of God. rc:ally," he: said. with DOUG NIEDT "neet" Finn said Cookc:'s physician, Dr. CLASSICAL GUITARIST Kevin Cahill, had attc.:nded him Argentina's president throughout the: day, administering WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER26 transfusions and medication. ' 8:00PM'·· Priests living in the grey stone rn:· Bendix.th~atre ~ := ~ · ~- threatens to resign tory hc.:hind St. Patrick's Cathedral CENTURY CENTER ·., • . t ' periodit:ally. c:nterc:d Cookc:'s room Associated Press zakz dd Solar jailed aftt."r he and prayed with the: cardinal, Finn . -:-'A unique performance -by returned from a ct. :W if a ti.:dcral on grounds that (;onzakz del Solar dckgatc.· in Washington. Archbishop judge '-UlTtTd:o. in blocking hetrayc.·d national intc.-rnts hy agrel'­ Pio Laghi. told Cooke's staff that the ticket info. call284-971 · rc.·negotiation of Argentina·, 4 huge ing to a clause in a rcnegot iation pontiff "cxprcss<.·d his pasonal and fi1rc.·ign dc.·ht. till' newspaper (,/orin contract that would giVl' forc.·ign prayc.·rful concc.:rn and lovl'" for the: ~aid \TS(('rtl~l\'. courts jurisdic.'tion in disputc.·s. Thl' <:ardinal. At the govcrnmc.·nt':-. rn.Jut·st. an judge also suspendc.·d rc.·negotiation appt·ab court look on·r the dcht oft he.· ckhts of.~ I state corporation,. c"c.· from the.· judgt·. Fnkrico Pinro Kramer. who )Tstc.-rday frc.·c.·d the As a result. foreign hankers in NOTR.EbAlvl~ presidl'lll of the ( :l'lllral Bank from Buc.·nos Aires said they had stopped SNNT MN~f'S jail. loan dbhursals to tht· governmc.·nt. The rc.·port in Cfarin. a mas:. cir· In ordt:ring <;onzalc.·z del Solar's nllation daily. came cmc.· day after rdc.·ase )TStc.·rdaY. Pimo Kramer said I HEAT~ Bignone appearnl on national he was responding to "the urgency tde\'i:o.ion during a paralyzing ,,.·ith which the h·dc..:ral Appt·als nationwitk strike: to in,ist that Ar· Chamhc.·r took ovc.:r the.· c1se." ~Jresents gem ina would not dl'fault on its loan obligation' and imc.·nds to pron-c.-d Pinto Kramc.-r sits in Rio <;all egos. with the elc.-ctions. dcsignc.·d to c..·nd 1.900 milc.-s south of the.· capital. His 1HE SHIN Cf OURTEE1H ~c.·,·c..·n years of military ruk. onkr was rc.·ad via telephone to the.· Argc.·ntina's politic.·aJ Assodated Press hy his secretary. It October 7, H, I {, 1-l, I '1-H:l J( l p. rn. C)'I c1ughl111 Auditorium c..Tonomic.· unc..Trtainty intc.·Jbific.·d dc.·scrihnl (;onzall'Z del Solar as \tonda)· wlll'n PinlO KramlT had "indictnl" hut did not spt·t·if\ any tickets __ _ < :c.·ntral Bank Prc..·sidc:nt Julio {;on- charges. -- - 284 -4626 ---

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-----~----~------The Observer Thursday, October 6, 1983 - page 5 Toxic dumps violate permits the Plants & Flowers shop Associated Press California state officials did not carried out. The interim permits are Basement- Lemans Hall, SMC know how many sites were in com­ supposed to be temporary, pending WASHINGTON - Congressional pliance because few had been more t·ompreht·nsive permanent 284-4597 investigators reported yesterday checked. licensing, and con:r nearly all legal that 78 percent of the hazardous The GAO said underground water dump sites in the country Everyday Low Prices waste dumps they checked this' sum­ pollution "is the most serious poten­ Tht· GAO said through July 19H3. mer were violating their federal per­ tial threat to human health and the 2-t of an estimated H.OOO facilities mits by not monitoring for possible environment posed by the disposal expected to require permits had Roses: $10/doz. & up leaks of toxic chemicals into drink­ of hazardous waste." An estimated received their permant·nt licenses, ing water supplies. 1,350 sites nationwide are subject to and the process of lit·ensing the rest Sweetheart Roses: $6.50 I doz. & up Two influential congressmen said the groundwater monitoring re­ could takt· another I 0 years. they were "shocked," and vowed to quirement. The interim pt·rmits require ask the House to provide for In addition, the GAO said, neither dump operators to install monitor­ criminal prosecution of dump the Environmental Protection ing wells around their sites and take operators who deliberately ignore Agency, which issues the permits, periodic samples to indicatt· Going to a Dance? health safeguards imposed by nor state officials are making sure whether wastes have leaked from federal law. dump operators are complying with the site and are seeping toward un­ We have corsages: nosegays-comoo•~ The sample survey of state pollu­ financial requirements intended to derground watt:'f supplies. Rose Boutoniere: $1.40 & up tion officials in North Carolina and ensure that dumps can be safely The GAO said state officials at· Illinois was conducted by the closed when full and then main­ tributed the lack of compliance to Carry Rose: $1.95 & ap General Accounting Office, the in­ tained, and that adequate insurance the technical complexity and costs Corsages: $3.95 A up vestigative arm of Congress, which against accidents has been obtained. of doing so. A North Carolina offkial found that 78 percent of the dumps The GAO study was released by was quoted as saying that it costs Baby breath aDd greea iacladecl operating under so-called "interim Rep. james Florio, 0-N.j., chairman about S4,000 to install a monitoring status pemits" were not checking of the House Energy and Commerce well and about S 12,800 for thr first for groundwater pollution, as re­ subcommittee with jurisdiction year's sampling. U you ftad we cost a little •ore••• quired. In Illinois, the GAO said, 33 over hazardous wastes, and Rep. Florio and l.cnt said they would of 38 sites were not meeting re­ Norman F. Lent of New York, the introduce an amrndment tu ttw ... w. beca... we're worth It! quirements, and in North Carolina, panel's senior Republican. federal wastr disposal law that nmld (ealla. for •on bafo) 18 of 27 sites were not complying. Florio said that even the minimal impose criminal sanc.:tions on dump In two other states surveyed, the health precautions required by the ownrrs who deliberatdy evade per· GAO said, Massachusetts and interim permits were not being mit requirements. Arizona's flood areas to get aid Associated Press tentatively set at more than S300 The Red Cross put out a call for New Jersey Club -October Break Bus million with I 0 people dead and five more volunteer nurses Tuesday Sign-ups Thurs., Oct. 6 6:30pm TUCSON, Ariz. President missing. night as it opened a 16th emergency LaFortune Ballroom-Roundtrip $80. John-1583 Reagan declared five counties disas­ In what's being called Arizona's shdter - the I'; others housing ter areas yesterday in flooded sout­ worst disaster of the century, more than 2, 900 people - to ac­ heast Arizona, and forecasters American Red Cross surveys indi­ commodate evacuees from the Hol­ warned a hurricane in the Pacific cated about 3,000 houses, mobile ly Acres subdivision southwest of _.. could bring more unwanted rain. homes, and apartment units had Phoenix. --- Floodwaters receded under most­ been destroyed or damaged by the About half of the subdivision's /1/J --- ly sunny skies for a second con­ flooding that began over the 300 rt::,iut:nts left their homes Tues­ () (: secutive day, allowing officials to weekend. The numbers were ex­ day night because of heavy flow in begin toting up the damage, pected to climb. the combined Gila and Salt Rivers. They returned yesterday after the water receded more than a foot. Student Organization for Latin America Reagan's declaration will free Saturday October 8 at 5:00pm presents federal funds for assistance in Green­ lee, Pima, Santa Cruz, Graham and UNCLE'S IRISH PUB Central America Film Series Pinal counties. Gov. Bruce Babbitt, who toured flood-stricken areas ''Sausage Cookout''. around Tucson on Wednesday, had watch N.D. vs. South Carolina Americas in Transition asked for federal aid to I 0 counties. Giant Screen T.D. Video Movies Bob Blair, a Federal Emergency Thurs., Oct.6 7 :oo & 9:30 Management Agency spokesman in DRAFT $.75 Center for Social Concerns Washington, said federal and state Mixed brink and Specials officials were still assessing damages Discussion to follow 7:00 show and that other counties might be ALL NIGHTU! added to the list.

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U'e shall tU!t•er understand one another pc:oplt:. Dodging bullets and offering herself until u·e reduce the lan~uage to set'('1l u•ords. foolishly as a sacrifice, she: heals the healable, Kahlil Gihmn ( 1883-193 I) and is numbed by the incurable. A young man is unable to cross to his side: of lEBANON Lc:hanon. StTm~ wc._·'n: always hc._·aring had the city. His job - no, his livt:lihood, lies CEJSE·FIR£: nn\'~ from the._· tiny Mate:, hmr-tlfths the size: of hc:yond the guns which cripple Beirut. He ( :ounc:ctkut. worries about the bounty placed on his head, Th~E 159. and the heads of his brothc:rs. With courage and conviction ht· dc:fies the threat for his Keith Picher family's sake. Profundity's demise A young woman leaves her country for medical school in the States. Isolated for a timt' from the horror of her homt:land, she Nestkd ht:t\\'t'en Syria. lsra<:l and the plans to rt'turn as soon as possible. Her only .\1t-diterranean. Lebanon once was praised by reminder comes on the weekend, when she (lrary funk. we'd all prefer what we know to be a good gag heide should ha\'t· used is "Nt·w Musk" whi<.:h Furthermore. we find Vonderheide's gross EdU'ard Augu.'ifine to something that may or may not be for real. includes all the.· ditfc.-rent movements includ- gent· ralizations about certain groups and their Diane Yoder Dominique Laflamme

Editorial Board Department Managers ~_....L-======Editor-in-Chief .... _ ... _ ...... David Dziedzic flo.\·(_.}. \'('frt•lhmwl \ 1(,5)(, r.! Ianw du l.ac ;.t!HI Saint \1an··-. Colkgc.· It dot·-. nut nt·c.·t·-.~aril~· rdkn News Editor .. _ ..... _ ... __ .. . Bob Vonderheide Advertising Manager ...... Chris Owen tile.' polluc.·-. ol the adm•n•-.tratHHl ol c._·ithc.-r m-.tltution Thl' nt'""' i-. rt•portc.·d a-. ac. News Editor ...... _ .... Mark Worscheh Composition Manager ...... Suzauuc i..a Croix cur;lldY and a-. ohjc.-ct1 \Th a-. po-.~•hk I n-.•gnnl c.·c._lltoriab rc.·prc.·-.t·nt tht· opinon oLa Saint Mary'sEdi;';jt . .. _ .... _ . Anne Monastyf-ski· · Circulation Manager ...... ·...... Mark Miotto m.tJOflt\' ot tilt" Editorial Bo;1nl <:01nmc.·ntanc.·-.. It-Her,_ and the.· In-.tdc.· ( ·olumn prc.·~·nt features Editor ...... Sarah Hamihog System Manag~r ...... Kt"vin ~-illiams the.·\ •c.·w-. of their author-. < ulumn 'P;Kc.· i~ ;t\'aiiJhk to all nwmhc.·r-. nt the: c.·ummunitv. Photo l:..aitor ... _ ...... __ ...... Scou Bower ;.tllclthc.·lnT t·xpn·-.-.um ol '.1n mgopmaon-. on c.tmpu-.. through kttc.-r'. ,.., c.·nc.·nuragc.·d \Jwrts l:'tlitor ...... \lie had Sulli,·;lll . ··oundrd Novem~r J. 1966 The Bindery Thursday, October 6, 1983 - page 7 Just one of those days

friend Crosbee, the stereotypical by Yic Sciulli Yale grad with the high tastes and atrociously overdone Boston ac­ cent. And then there are the Fisher's Hornpipe numerous jabs at Boston, which Fis­ her contemptuously regards as "a by Todd McEwen debased puppet theater on a big New York, Harper & Row, 1982 chain drive." McEwen's intellect is never offensive however and even $12.95 the true Bostonian is likely to find 256 pages more than a bit to laugh at in his analogies. id you ever have one of those den Pond, Fisher slips on a bump in The humor and the events are D days? You know, the kind of day the ice, splitting his head and begin­ quick and spontaneous; there is a where one bad thing after another ning his "Hitchcockian nightmare" surprise at every turn of the page. happens, and all you can do is just sit in which he is falsely accused of While visiting Walden Lake early in back and watch helplessly as a single being crazy, violates deeply held the novel, Fisher notices Henry stroke of misfortune snowballs into principles, starts a fire in a public David Thoreau himself under the an uncontrollable series of events? library, gets caught nude in his office ice's surface. With dead fish in his This all-too-familiar occurrence is by the company vice president, aging beard, Thoreau flashes Fisher a the basis for the plot ofFisher's argues with one girlfriend and gets sign saying, "Go get Emerson." Fis­ Hornpipe, Todd McEwen's hilarious seduced by another and, leads a riot her, of course, acts as if this happens first novel. of derelicts in downtown Boston. all the time. The entire scene William Fisher, a young, crass Though Fisher's responses and transpires so naturally, one is never Advice in poor taste employee of Boston's Institute of determination are dulled by the really sure whether Fisher is hal­ Science is the unlikely recipient of accident, nothing about him really lucinating or daydreaming. the series of misfortunes. While changes. People's perceptions of One of the most immediate things enjoying the wildlife and the early him, however, do change. His that is noticed in this novel is winter morning on the famed Wal- bloodied bandage and unshaven McEwen's almost complete lack of by Scott Williams face, coupled with his already er­ conventional paragraphing and ratic nature get him into even more punctuation. Quotation marks and trouble with people who think he's a commas are used very infrequently. How to Suroive Your College Daze crazy derelict. Left to defend himself This lack of natural breaks helps by G. Brown against the accusations, Fisher's ex­ communicate just how quickly planations backfire and only serve to everything is happening. Boulder, New View Press, 1983 convince others of his mental in­ Early in the novel, Fisher $5.95 stability. befriends Frank of Oregon, a street 134 pages Fisher regards everything around bum with a touch of class. As their I him with sarcastic contempt, from friendship grows, Fisher's relation­ ., his job at the Institute, to the city of ships with the other characters ith the barra~e of"How-To" literature that has hit the market W durin~ the last decade, one at first glance must wonder why yet Boston itself where most of the ac­ deteriorate; he loses his girlfriend I tion in the novel occurs. McEwen Jillian bacause ofhis had attitude, another ofthese books is necessary. After readin~ G. Brown's "How I I draws much of the novel's humor publicly embarasses Allison and al­ To Survive Your College Daze"( New View Press; $5.95 ), it's obvious I from the stereotyped characteriza­ most gets fired from his job. that such a book is both unnecessary and is frequently insultin~ to tions of its characters. There is Al­ the reader's intelli~ence. Brown attempts to take the point of view of an experienced older sibling as he communicates the "facts" about lison Mapes, the attractive young The ironically funny thing is that librarian Fisher meets and begins to during Fisher's "downfall," he is colle~e in a unique conversational style. date. The two are hopelessly mis­ attempting to come to grips with The book is divided into four sections, each provi din~ advice on a matched, but he falls in love with her something real and meaningful in his particular area of college life. preppie, athletic legs which he fan­ life. That journey, which eventually Brown first elaborates on "Gettin~ There." Topics discussed un­ tasizes as having "straddled Arabian leads him back to an old friend is tru­ der this headin~ include the application process, financial aid, urban horses, numerous Harvard men and ly a humorous one, one well worth versus rural settin~s. distance from home, SAT scores, and packing. The guidance offered here could be somewhat helpful, but is cer­ daddy's sailboats." Then there is his travelling with him. tainly nowhere near complete. A total of twenty-nine pa~es are spent discussin~ what are some of the most important decisions a college­ bound senior will make. The discussion of schools is thus rather in­ I A different kind of friendship complete at best and it seems that a decent hi~h school counselor would be much more valuable to the potential college freshman I than Brown's book. Brown's next two sections, "Bein~ There," and "A Giant Slumber I Indeed, that is the ma~ic of this Party," seemed to be somewhat more pertinent to the average col­ I. by Nick Laflamme whole book: it presents men who I lege freshman than the first section. Herein is found the information I defy the usual ima~e of the success­ that many ~uidance counselors cannot provide, includin~ thou~hts The Best ofFriends ful man as a loner supported only by on subjects such as roommates, college food, prank.-., alcohol, sex, a loving wife. Michaelis shows that the fraternityI sorority system, and a plethora of others. Brown's con­ I by David Michaelis friendship and love can exist and versational style and "older sibling approach" to the material i New York, William Morrow & Co., Inc. thrive between two men who are become a bit more appropriate in these sections, althou~h he is of­ $14.95 successful and prominent in their ten tasteless. A typical excerpt from this section demonstrates his own niche of the world. Men don't style. 318 pages have to be stoic, unemotional Always have something in you stomach before you robots; they can have feelin~s and start drinking . .. You want to get bombed, but ifyou '' vom the start, my thought was made their relationship special. still survive. blow chunks, you want to have something down there .1.' to .:ell a series of stories ba..ed Michaelis's tours de force, though, Overall, The Best ofFriends is a instead of going through the dreaded dry heaves. on the recollections of men to are two of the longer chapters, one pleasant book. It keeps nudging one Thi'i reviewer saw two basic problems with this section of the whom a close friendship with anoth­ about john F. Kennedy and his best forward, not as a suspenseful hook book. er man mattered as much as a friend, LeMoyne Billin~s. and the that doesn't slow down enou~h to First, it seems to exaggerate the extent to which most colle~e romance with a woman." Thus other about two naval officers who let you stop, but as a story that keeps freshmen become involved in the areas of drugs, sex, and alcohol opens the preface to The Best of should have been bitter rivals but in­ inviting the reader to explore just a abuse. All students do not need a lecture on the use of speed, heroin, Friend-;, the new book by David Mic­ stead were close friends and suppor­ little bit more. cocaine, quaaludes, painkillers, and mushrooms just to get throu~h haelis. In this book the author does ters of each other. The chapter on four years of college. In all, Brown's discussion here reflected a poor indeed stick to his plan of action. Kennedy and Billin~s tells of a opinion ofthe avera~e reader, as well as bein~ in extremely poor Michaelis presents seven "couples" famous relationship that has been taste. who ran~e from captains of industry well remembered hy both Billin~s The second problem with this section is that most of the valuable who met as colle~e roommates to and the survivin~ members of the advice ~i ven could have come from an older sib lin~ or friend. For the john Belushi and Dan Ackroyd, from Kennedy clan. It benefits ~reatly average college freshman, there is surely some source more ap­ an inventor and a sculptor to a pair from nearly three decades of propriate than Brown's book from which to find out about the col­ of Navy officers who met after serv­ anecdotes which Michaelis expertly Ie~e social scene. in~ in Vietnam. It is a widely varying draws from. The final section covers the topic of"Stayin~ There," includin~ book coverin~ seven distinct The chapter on the naval officers, commentary on professors, study habits, finances, and cheating. relationships. Four of the seven Leonard Picotte and Michael Ed­ A~ain, this section includes some good advice but is basically filled relationships end in the death of one wards, is well done for a different with information that can be obtained from other sources, such as a of the two men, yet that does not put reason. It tells of a friendship which family member or friend who is a recent college graduate or current a damper on the story, for in at least exists where none would be ex­ student. two of the four cases, death serves to pected to exist. As Michaelis often brin~ the men closer. stres....es in the chapter, the navy In conclusion, G. Brown's "How To Survive Your College Daze" In many ways, The Best ofFriends today does not in any way make it provides some valuable information on college in a very readable must have been a difficult hook to easy for ambitious officers to be style. However, the information is at best incomplete and often taste­ write since it is often extremely hard friends with eaelhlther. ftoweva, less. Even at the bargain price of$5.95, it would be impossible to to explam why two people are Picotte and Edwards have beaten recommend this book to anyone needing serious advice about col­ friends. Nevertheless, Michaelis the odds and become steadfast lege. ~enerally does a ~ood job ofdrawin~ friend-; while at the same time risin~ Scott Williams is a sophomore arts and letters student from out from the ~urvivin~ friends what through the ranks. Arnold, Missouri. Sports Briefs Thursday, October 6, 1983 page 8 Netters

. The International Student Organiza- Entries for the Domer Six-Mile Run are capture tton is forming a soccer team. If you are an international student now being accepted at the NV A office for the Domer 6-mile run. The and are interested in playing, sign up at the I.S.O. office, or call 232- run is set for October H at lO a.m. T-shirts will he awarded to all 7 4 2 3. - The Observer finishers and trophies to the first-place finishers in each of six divi­ tourney sions. Today is the last day to bring the S2 fee to the NV A office. The Observer The Notre Dame men's tennis team made an impressive showing in The Wind Surfing Club is having a meeting on winning the 14th annual Irish Fall In­ Saturday, October 8 at 2 p.m. at S t. Joe's Beach. All members are vitational Tennis Tournament last asked to bring proof of insurance. - The Observer weekend here at the Courtney Courts. It's not too late to become a member of the Century It was the first time since the Club. Again, just call the NVA office (see above) to get on the tournament began in 1970 that newsletter mailing list, or stop by the office in the ACC at Gate 1. - Coac.h Tom Fallon's squad has won The Observer back-to-back titles. The Irish, 3-0 for Saint Mary's basketball tryouts will start the tournament, had to defeat a Sunday, October 9 from 1-3 p.m. in the Angela Athletic Facility. - tough Southern Illinois team in or· Tbe Observer der to claim the tournament victory. Southern Illinois, 2-1, finished second, while Illinois State and The fourth annual running of The Human Wisconsin-Oshkosh, J-2 and 0-3 Race is set for 10 a.m. on Saturday, October 15. Tbe 10-kilometer respectively, rounded out the stand­ footrace and fun run are sponsored by the Broadway Christian Parish ings. United Methodist Church and the South Bend YMCA. The race is a "I think we played very well," Speaking of soccer, no one should be lett out. uyou fund-raising event for both organizations. Registration forms for the FaUon said of his team's per· are interested in joining a grad/faculty soccer league, call the Non­ race can be obtained at Broadway Christian Parish, the YMCA, the formance. Varsity Athletics office (239-6100) and leave your name and num­ Athlete's Foot in University Park MaU, and the Athletic Annex stores And play very well they did, ber. - Tbe Observer in Scotrsdale Mall and the University Commons. - Tbe Observer disposing of Wisconsin-Oshkosh and Illinois State by identical tallies of 9-0 and beating Southern Illinois, 8-1.

The Obs~rv~r LaFortune office accepts classified advertising from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. Th~ Observer Saint Mary's office, located on the third floor of Haggar College Center, is open from 12:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday. The deadline for next day classified service is J p.m. All classifieds must be prepaid, either in person or by Classified s mail Charge is ten ents per seven characters, per day.

need Pitt or Navy G.A.s call Ted at288 ATTENTIONIIIIWSND REMOTES ARE URBAN PLUNGE sign-ups begin Friday, 0137 NOW AVAILABLE FOR ALL OCCA· Oct. 7. Learn first-hand what no Notre ~N_O_T_IC_ES~J ~~W-~_N_TE_D~~~~ __TIC_K_ET_S~ SIONSI FOR THE LOWEST PRICE Dame class could ever teach. Need 2 or more PITI GA. TIX; Tom at AYAIALABLE YOU CAN HAVE A It' a an axpertance of a lifetime. 3331 or 3332 PROFESSIONAL OJ, ENGINEER AND The BREEN-MACHINE is fired-up and 2001 I need 6 GA to any home game. call Dan Desperately need Penn State game tick­ ALL THE MUSIC YOU CAN HANDLEII ready to roll! We are a LEAN MEAN Thurs& Fri at234-6496 ets. Call Brian at 8795. Need 2 USC GA'S Call BRIAN 6981 THE FOLLOWING DATES ARE NOW FOOTBALL MACHINE!!! 7,9:30.12PM .. ···················· ...... ················ AVAILABLE: OCTOBER 8,14,15,21- KofC Hall New/semiused 8 track tapes, any style HELP I NEED USC TIX CALL MARY HAVE 4 AIR FORCE TICKETS. WANT NOVEMBER 4, 12,17,18 AND DECEM­ HENRY SAYS: COOL ITTAMIE!!! $1 . Members Free music. Mark 283-7140 even1ngs. 2845084 TO SWAP FOR PENN ST. CALL PAUL BER 2,3,9,16, 17. TO RESERVE YOUR 1703. DATE CALL REGINALD DANIEL AT EDITORIAL CORRECTION: NOTRE USC-NO tix wanted. Paying most. (312) 283-1153 AFTER 11 P.M. OR AT 239- DAME - WHERE MEN ARE MEN. PRO-TYPE 12 yrs. experience. Responsible babysitter needed part time 246-4650. HELP 7425 TUESDAY FROM 3PM TO 6PM, WOMEN ARE MEN SHEEP ARE Specializing 1n dissertations. days tor infant and three year old in my AND JIM GALLAGHER AT 239-7425. SCARED. AND DUCKS ARE AFRAID OF manuscripts. theses. and student papers. home just north of campus. Sitter with Need Non-student tickets to NO vs USC A very RICH friend needs Pm GA's. He THArS WSND REMOTE$-THE BEST TAM IE Call277·5833 for rates. own child ok. Call Jennifer 239-7278 Mon· Call collect. (312) 565-5959 x2013 or is willing to pay serious dollars for the EQUIPMENT ,THE BEST MUSIC, AT Fn. x2233. tickets. Please help by calling David at THE BEST PRICE Ill MANDATORY SAN FRANCISCO BAY 277·1326. AREA CLUB MEETING THIS SUNDAY NEED 2 TO USC GAME FOR GOOD You'll bd glad you did NEED 2 USC TIX CALL MARY AT SMC 10-09-83 at 7:00pm in La Fortune Little We hoped, but the dream dies hard. OL· DAD .. ! Please call DAVE at 8919 4433 There must be 1 drummer out there Theater. somewhere In the N.D.·S.M.C. lands. NEED 2 USC GAS. CALL JACK AT 277- HELP! NEED USC TIX FOR RICH To the wild women·· of third and fourth TO: THE FOOTBALL TEAM, WE'LL AL· We would like to play some techno­ 5408 RELATIVES. CALL LON AT 8763 floor Holy Cross: Talk 1s cheap-let us be dance. If Interested, call Rob at 233- the judges! WAYS LOVE YOU The Ons1de Kick LOST/FOUND The cheerleaders 4260. Need 6 GA Pitt. tix. Must be in grps. of 3 or USC TIX NEEDED !! Student or GA- $$ were turning ...... more. 239-5845 Steve. CALL KEVIN x 821 t 4 NOW! I am the transparent eyeball ... WOULD LIKE RIDE TO VATICAN flips EXHIBIT SOON; TOM 3331,3332 HELP. Lost valuable class ring. WILL REALL Y,REALL Y NEED 4(0R 6) TICK­ NEED 2 NAVY G.A."S CALL MATI NOW FORMING: The Stephen Lundeen The bands were PAY REWARD.NO QUESTIONS ETS TO PITT GAME!!CALL BILL 1 763 at1462 Fan Club. Attendance at meetings notre­ breaking the quired nor suggested. sound barrier. ASKED. 2876277. HOWIE EN DAD CINCINNATI!CINCINNATI!CINCINNATI! The 102,000 fans I Desperately need a ride to Cincinnati I NEED 4-6 USC GAs AND 1 USC STU­ $$$$ NEED 2 OR 4 TIXS FOR USC HALLOWEEN APPROACHES. roared. LOST Annotated New Oxford Bible. left this weekend. Will share usuals. Call DENT TICKET; CALL PAT 1238 GAME. CALL TOOTlE AT 239-7136 BEWARE THE GREAT PUMPKIN HE IS Football underdog behind in Monday 9/26 at 2:30 p.m. 1n DAVE at 1165. Room 328 Computer Center/Math Build­ NEED 8 GA'S FOR PITT GAME. MUST VERY JEALOUS OF CAPTAIN was meeting Ing. Please return to office of Lost/Found NEED 2 STUD. TIX TO NAVY. PLEASE BE IN PAIRS. CALL KEVIN AT 8636 CRUNCH. football powerhouse. CALL DEBBIE 284-4372 (Administration Building). Thanks Ber­ RIDE needed to EAST LANSING Underdog lost . ············ ...... ALL WOMEN AND FEMALE DOMERS nard Deprez. Fnday.Oct 7.Piease call David at 1105. $1 NEED 4 NAVY GA"$ ·GREG 6863 the toss and had to Help! Need USC tiK, student or GA, Call WHOVE BEEN WANTING AN OLDER kick. Steve at 8638 LOST LADIES MAROON WALLET Dan from NJ. This IS Ted. your ride home GOOD$$ FOR 1 USC GA- GREG 6863 MAN." JOHN BURKE TURNS 22 ON Whistle. CONTAINING $.DRIVERS ······· FRIDAY AND IS AVAILABLE FOR PER­ Roar the weekend of the 8th. Ca111n9 1f you NEED USC STUDENT OR GA TIX-CALL LICENSE.PHOTOS, OTHER 10. IF still want to go. NEED TWO NAVY GAS CALL BRIAN SONAL B-DAY SURPRISES IN ROOM Boot. CHRIS AT 234-7279 ANYTIME FOUND PLEASE CALL LAURA AT 2989 8656 234 ALUMNI HALL. DON"T FORGET It was an onside kick! YOUR B-DAY SUIT FROM S ALLEY A strategy usually Ride wanted to/from Detroit area OCT Need NAVY stud &GA·s x1695 7/9 John 8318 will share costs used near the end LOST roll of Film. 135-24exp. 400 ASA RIDE NEEDED TO COLUMBUS, OHIO. of a game. Lost at South dining hall pictures are ir­ NEED 4 NAVY TIX.CALL CHRIS AT 1201 WILL SHARE EXPENSES. CALL rarely at the beg1nning. Fans gulped. replacable. please call Libby at -3435 Need ride to U of I Champaign Oct. 14-16 HOWIE AT x1765. Piccolo player DESPERATE! Share costs call Fran 2270 PERSONALS LOST: NAVY BLUE BASKIN SPORT NEED 4 NAVY GA"s Call Pete 3114 Gloom. despair. agony for me. My swallowed h1s JACKET AT PE SYR SAT. NITE IF YOU roomate. Gandhi, is dat1ng, Pammy. a piccolo. HAVE BY MISTAKE PLEASE CALL BOB townie. T.V. commentator Have 1 USC GA. Need 1 Pitt. GA or Stud. I HAVE 4 PITT TICKETS, AND I NEED AT 1441 Willing to trade. Call Tracy 277-7232. got hiccups. USC GA'S. WILLING TO TRADE TICK· Attn. all Arck1es: We told Spud. the Underdog got ball. ETS OR PAY MONEY FOR USC GA'S. lOST Woman·s gold Se1k0 watch. Lost Johnny Cash Smirf. we would not reveal Six plays later. I NEED 10GA'STOTHE USC GAME. CALL JERRY AFTER 6 AT x1763. near Grotto. Please call277-3409 WILL PAY ANY AMOUNT FOR THESE his true identity. Stay tuned touchdown! If you re an underdog TICKETS AND THEY NEED NOT BE TO­ DOMER SIX MILE RUN· OCT. 8. 10 a.m. LOST: 1 BLUE BOOKBAG, TAKEN FOR SALE GIMP OF THE MONTH goes to Laurie and don't want to GETHER. PLEASE CALL 1 ng And ASK -sign up at NVA- T-shirts and trophies. FROM THE SOUTH DINING HALL FOR DAN. Oberembt for courage. determination, stay that way. MON .OCT. 3 PLEASE RETURN TO and true grit above and beyond the road try the Great Science Fiction BRIAN LEE (X6741) AS SOON AS POS­ to recovery. CongratulatiOns Laurie!! unexpected for a HELP! Parents will disown us if we don't 2001 SIBLE. OR AT LEAST PUT IT BACK IN EXOT1C PETS- anMM., llurds, tur111s, quick score. get them PITT TIX. Call Pat at1068 or Thurs & Fri THE SOUTH DINING HALL tanlntulu, amphibians, birds, m­ Jeanne at284-4167 Attention all male friends of Jo Jo Chavez: If you·re an underdog. mala. Largeat Mllctlon In U.S. Mid­ Sponsored by the K of C Just because she a)calls you; b)eats watch out for Raptlll, 1520 Mlahawaka Ava., FOUND: CROSS pen in LaFortune. See wast Need two G.A."s tor the Pitt. game. Call lunch with you or asks you to lunch; clever dogs. Love. Shirley at THE OBSERVER office. 232·2095. 2 mi. from N.D. Kelly 284-4074. c)sm1les at you: d)asks you to an SYR. Michelle. Janet. Laura. Katie. Shiela. I LOVE NORTH QUAD shirts $6 On sale does not mean that she has blood tests Beatrice, Kristen. Rita, Kelly, Maureen. For Sale:NEW Wilson Staff irons ... $350 m North Dm1ng Hall Tues. Wed. Thurs din­ FOUND: STOPWATCH AT BURKE I need 3 Navy GAs. Call Theresa 28<4- scheduled and the church reserved. (3N Regina) Call Larry ... 1638 ner. MEMORIAL GOLF COURSE. CALL 5442 Love. Her concerned female fnends P.S. ERIC AT 8192 TO IDENTIFY. Don·t flatter yourselves. Just when I th0119ht I had all tha AVAILABLE: 2 USC tix Call (215) 238- SOUTH QUAD: WHY? Show your pnde answers, they chllnu-f the queatlons. with an I LOVE NORTH QUAD T-shirt On LOST: Red notebook. INTRO to 9052 after 5 pm. HELP!Need 2 USC or 3 PITI BETH-· PULL IT UP!! PULL IT UP!! Juat when I thou;ht I had tk:kata they sale in North Dining Hall Tues. Wed. ELECTRICAL NETWORKS. Left in 127 GA"S. Please call JIM at 8736. FLASH ao1c1 them. Juat when I thought my Thurs at dinner: $6 Neiu Sci on Friday. 9/30 after blowing a dear friends from LA. couldn't come networks test. Since it belongs to my FOR SALE: COMPLETE HOCKEY WANTED 4-6 GA Tix to each of the WORM-- NICE HEADBAND!!ZAHM out, aome nice peraon wiH Mil me 4 Party down this Friday night. 801 St. roommate. he's not too happy either. If GEAR· CCM HELMET BAUER JUNIOR following home games: USC. Pitt and AWAITS!! LOWLY G. A. 'a to the USC game. PLEASE HELP Louis St. It's Jim·s B-Day. so give him a anyone finds this useless book, call Bill SUPREME SKATES, SIZE II GLOVES, Penn State. Call Tom Hollerbach collect BY SELUNG ME YOUR nxs · MIC­ kiss. x1087. PANTS, SHOULDER PADS. SOCKS a at: 312/565·5959 Ext. 2081. KIM-· ... 1 only had three daiquiris and a HELLE 284-4131. GARTER BELT. $50.00 FOR ALL CALL peppermint. .. well. the first two were pret­ 272-7011. need two Pitt GAs call Bill 8395 Hey. s 21 & 22. your favorite liquors think ty strong ... why is everyone looking at me POPPY· HAPPY B-DAY LUV. THE MIN­ t d. alot of you!!! Black Velvet & Brandy funny? .. :· NESOTA TWINS COUPON BOOKLETS. ONLY 19.95. NEED 3or 4 GAs for ANY HOME Game. VALUED OVER COULD MEAN EMPLOYMENT. Call BIERGARTEN Jennifer has pink shortie pajamas. And MOMO- 15 DAYS UNTIL HOME · HANG $1.000.00.RESTAURANTS. PLACES STEVE at 232-0550. BIERGARTEN she eats cap·n Crunch. too. Her ON- LUV. THE BETTER HALF FOR RENT Of ENTERTAINMENT.ETC. BIERGARTEN roommate wonders dbout her a lot Could PROCEEDS TO CHILDREN WITH CAN· Thurs. Oct. 6 rt be she·s from California? Desperately need USC tickets I Student or NEED 2 G.A. S FOR NAVY. WILL PAY SMC9pm-1 am CER/LEUKEMIA CALL NANCY $$$CALL TOM 1423 GA. Call 284-5502 7842638. 21 10 Reqwed I need PITT GA's. Call David at 277· 1326 Enterta1n your guests with M1ddle Eastern wanted 2 roomates for N.D. apts. call HELP! Need 2 PITT GAs. Call Sue at · Fla1r or send a Belly Gram to someone 2349116 or 1101 72 VW BUG.rbtt eng. B/0. Leslie x2710 8050 OKTQBERFEST IS HERE Good luck Kates on your Sk1n you love. Ph. 291·8215 .. ·····························\················...... The Observer Thursday, October 6, 1983 - page 9 Ticket Distribution Monday All seniors

Tuesday Juniors and all undergraduate students in the ninth semester or higher

Fik Phow Clark Kellogg, who bad a sensational rookie day's Logan Benefit Game between the Pacers and Wednesday season u•itb the NBA 's Indiana Pacers last _year, Detroit Pistons at the Notre Dame ACC. Sophomores. graduate students. will be among the assembled talent at this Satur- and law students

Thursday Freshmen and any student who missed his/her appropriate day

All tickets are being distributed at Gate 3 of the ACC from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Crown Royal 750ML Bal1entlne 24 cans ______'"_ 4.99 10.49 Hamms 24 cans ______.. __ __ 5.49 Popov Vodka MILLER 24 cans _ _ _ _. ____ 7.49 Buaweiser 7.49 1.75L 7.86 Lowenbrau M • ...... 8.99

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1.75 L. .750ML ---,~,--~-USHER'S $1 Q99 ANDRE $ 59 CHAMPAGNE. I •• 2 I SCOTCH. 3 LITER 1.75 L ~GALLO $449 EARLY $999 PREMIUM. ••••••• .1.5 LITER $388 TIMES ••••• INGLENOOK ••••• .MOUTON CADET • $459 1.75L. 1.5 LITER $ CANADIAN 7 7 19 9 MIST •••• $1 0 FOPPIANO • • • • • • •

Check Our Low, ~ Low Everyday IM4 _...__..~?s;;:o 277-6805 Prices - ·· ·

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. --~iJ;Wt1i~~.~,. ·:;_~~' ~~···· The Observer Thursday, October 6, 1983- page 10

... Sox "Social Concerns Film Series Logan Center Benefit Basketball Game continued from page 12 Co-sponsored by Student Government (Social Concems)and the Center for Social Concerns Todd Cruz, who later would turn in ~. INDIAN~~ACERS several fielding gems to keep the game close, let this one get by him, (\. ~ ~ though, as the speedy Law raced home uncontested. Student Union The White Sox scored without a DE1ROITPISTONS hit in the sixth. McGregor walked with Kelly Tripucka & Bill Lam beer Paciorek leading off. Luzinski then Logan Center wants to say thanks to NDtSMC students hit a squibber toward first, and Mur­ Half price tickets available at S.U. Record Store ray let it get under his glove for an as Paciorek raced to third. Ron $3 lower arena Kittle's doubleplay grounder scored $1.50 bleacher se~ts Paciorek. Oct. 6-7-8 •••...•...... 6:30 & 10:00 Dempsey led off the bottom of the Engineering Au d ....•...... ••. $1.00 Saturday,Oct.8 AC~ 2pm sixth with the third hit off Hoyt but All proceeds go to Lo~an Center then was erased - almost literally - on a foreceout. Bumbry hit a grounder to second. Dempsey was forced out easily, but rookie Scott Fletcher's sidewind­ ing throw hit Dempsey in the hand ISIS GALLERY ART OPENING as he was protecting his face. Figurative Gouaches By Perhaps suffering from the rain EASY RIDER • delay, McGregor's outing took yet TO AND FROM CHICAGO'S O'HARE FATHER ANDRE BOULER another perilous turn inthe seventh, when he left in favor of Sammy EVERY 2 HOURS EVERY DAY October 8 - 21 Stewart. He walked Vance Law to start the inning, then balked him to second. United Limo Law was sacrificed to third. When McGregor threw a pitch in the dirt past catcher Dempsey, Law tried to ,.__ score. But Dempsey scrambled after the ball, threw a strike to McGregor and Law was out. Opening Reception Saturday, Oct. 8, 7- 9PM McGregor then walked Julio Cruz, and Rudy Law doubled, chasing isis GaUery Art Department McGregor and sending Cruz to 3rd Floor Art BuDding third. But Stewart fanned Fisk looking, and McGregor had exited after giving up just one earned run. He had been bested at his own game - finesse and precision. Restaurant Opportunities CHANCE TO DANCE Are Awaiting You At The New L.A. 4, Phila. 1 featuring NANCY'S WINDY CITY . LOS ANGELES - Pedro Guerrero drilled a two-out, two-run triple in the fifth inning, breaking a tie and OPENING SOON pushing the to Seeking responsible individuals a 4-l victory in last night's second the tP ' for the following postions: game of the Cham­ *Pizza Makers pionship Series. *Cooks The Los Angeles triumph tied the Bartenders best-of-five pennant playoff at 1-1. *Food Servers Game Three is scheduled for tomor­ ~1¥~1:"\I'G~ *Bussers row in Philadelphia with Charles *Dishwashers Hudson starting for the Phillies *Cocktail Servers against the Dodgers' Bob Welch. Apply in Person *Hosts/Hostesses Guerrero's shot rewarded the Friday, Oct. 7 Monday thru Friday *Delivery Personnel , pitching of Fernando Valenzuela, Oct. 3-0ct. 7 who scattered seven hits before LaFortune Ballroom At Tom Niedenfuer took over in the 9:30-1:30 i NANCY'S WINDY CITY ninth. John Denny, a 19-game win­ 2046 South Bend Ave. ner during the regular season, was Adm. $1 South Bend, IN 46637 the loser. minutes from Notre Dame Actually, it was Valenzt,~ela who got the winning rally started, opening the fifth with a drive that sent Garry Maddox to the center field wall. Maddox, who made a cru­ cial error in the fourth game of the 1978 playoff between these teams, Goodtimes to Go caught the ball for an instant but . Columbus Day then dropped it as he fell on the warning track. Valenzuela steamed Special into third base on the error. Just when it looked like the rally would fizzle, Dusty Baker worked Denny for a walk, bringing up Guer­ REFRIGERATORS rero. Steve Carlton had pitched around the Dodgers' cleanup hitter $35 per School Year in Tuesday night's opener. But Den­ ny couldnt escape. On a 2-2 pitch, Guerrero sent a shot into right field Goodtime Pizza that scooted past Sixto Lezcano for a FREE DELIVERY 836Portage triple, scoring Brock and Baker with earned runs and putting Los FREE DELIVERY Angeles in control. (ND&:SMC) 232-1883 cALL Taylor Hours: Sun.-Thurs. 4pm - 11 pm Fri.-Sat. 4pm • lam MUST PRESENT COUPON TO DELIVERY PERSON 501 E. Sample Rental 233-2590 1 0°/o Discount Goodtimes to Go with university 277.2190 16" Pizza your choice 2 toppings ID 48 oz. Pepsi, Mountain Dew, or Dr. Pepper • RH CHARl>ING 1427 N. Ironwood & STARTING $9.49 INCLUDESTAX SYSTEM CHECI< Umit One Pizza per Coupon Offer Ends 9-30-83 Thursday, October 6, 1983 - page 11

Blootn County Berke Breathed Campus • 3 p.m. - Computer Minicourse, IBM PC Fun­ damentals, 11 5 Computing Center ~IR •3:30 p.m. - Holocaust Film Series, "Warsaw MAY I I HfLPYOJ? 8€(, Ghetto," Carroll Hall, Sponsored by SMC Depart­ PARPON! ment of Modem Languages •3:45 p.m. - Tennis, SMC vs. Indiana U. Ft. I Wayne, Angela Outdoor Tennis Courts •4 p.m. - Radiation Lab Seminar, "Dye Loaded Polymer Electrodes in Photoelectrochemical Con­ version of Solar Energy," Dr. Prashant V. Kamat, Rad. Lab. Conference Theatre •6:30 p.m. - Social Concerns Film, "Reds," Engineering Auditorium, $1 •7 and 9:30p.m. and 12 a.m. - Film, "2001: A Space Odessy," K of C Hall, Sponsored by Knights of Columbus, S 1 Fate Photius •7 p.m. - Information Meeting, Scholarships and job Information for students of Japanese Studies, Father George Minamiki, Sponsored by t 'DoN'T KNIJW AIJDUr WHlRl 'R£ YR GtJtN'? DT'HU ltltar, liAr M" TN& ON I VDU MEAN .4 College of Arts and Letters , LaFortune Little HUDDLE IT! S/IU1al Sl'lfWII Mii/JI.£·BI4.f,d(. Theatre OV£( TD TH£ HUDOt.l WH.4T'S LOI~ To rtcr SOH£ LIIC CUT IN ON~ INCH P/Ear •8 p.m. - Lecture, "The Present State of Jewish AND S~t;a.S. KoLl.£0 IN .1D ·lfUL£ r£/IM Christian-Opportunities," Rev. John T. I I &tlfX AND Sf'R4WIJ£KK'f I Pawlikowski, and Rabbi Marc Eli Saperstein, \ .kl.Lo. Library Auditorium \ •9 p.m.- Zahm Coffeehouse, Bob Corrigan and Paul McLean, Zahm Party Room TV Tonight .

6p.m. 16 NewsCenter 16 22 22 Eyewitness News 28 Newswatch 28 Mellish Dave & Dave 34 The MacNeil/Lehrer Report 6:30p.m. 16 MASH I ~t+'J:JGHr RuG£~ ~·r 11f':> 1N HANA\1 ~.,_, Uf f~f~o.~ !"'~ '-t~rt-t OH M~ GilD I ID f{ll[,Cll[;; AIL UCfllE NT I 'it I',._., A STf P AHEAD Of I· ~ANL f:' Pll~ J~ t(,<.' ~--- (,(lll~( f~( 11~~~N~ i>IN[APh£~ f-0( 22 Family Feud ABOJT THAT! I' ~CPf HV 'IOU THtRE'& A BlAN~ f o .,,. [.,(. V\). :•If f''~ illl flii'JI1 L·~tp.TAU ltf'~ ~IIVIN4" 28 Joker's Wild PA\SPORr "A"J'r EX'•(lP. RUAX Wf ·n Straight Talk IIA~IN(, IT AT 34 7p.m. 16 Baseball American West t-~~f \PlAqp 22 Magnum. PI . "' . 28 Trauma Center 34 The Ascent of Man 8p.m. 22 Simon and Simon 28 9 to 5 34 Jazz in America 9p.m. 22 Knots Landing 28 20/20 34 Matters of Life and Death 10 p.m. 16 NewsCenter 16 ACROSS 29 Degree tor 47 "Paddle 13- majeste 22 22 Eyewitness News 1 Bridge bid an attorney your own-" 21 Obliterate 28 Newswatch 28 -the lily 5 George 30 Household 49 Complaints 23 !0:30p.m. 16 Tonight Show animal or Irwin 53 Fullness 25 Craft 22 Hart to Hart/McMillan and Wife 33 Used 57 Musical 28 Oldtlme The Daily Crossw-ord 9 Imperial 28 ABC News Nightline 14 Pay up 37 Head of study shelters 15 Lizard: France 58 Danger for the comb. form 38 Unpolished 59 Dimension needy 16 Drawout 39 Suffix with 61 Encourage 30 Inca land 17 Operatic aster or earnestly 31 Latin abbr. Far Side prince planet 62- ear and 32 Prefix with 18 S.A. monkey 40 Related to out the scope or · Chrontcle Features. 1983 19 Bogsdown hearing other vision 20 Brass 41 Learning by 63 Beige 33 Field 22 Certain repetition 64 Cherished 34 Black bird global 42- 65 Like Marcti 35 Adorable me£suremer.t (baseball weather 36 "0 Sole -" 24 NYclty hit) 66 Headliner 37 Depravity 26 Cheats 44 Lamb's dam 67 Miscalcu­ 40 Idolize 27 Canvas 45 Scrooglan lates 42 Glove: Fr. sheet, for word 43 Egg- short 46 Tlreout DOWN 45 Pearl of 1 American song patriot 47 Actor 2 Backerof Eastwood , a play 48 Proclama· 3 Weather tlon word 50 More chaste 4 Bondage 51 Poe 5 Fastplane 52 Menot 6 Greet vision 7 Vehicles 53 Buy -In 8 Prunellke a poke 9 Prompt 54 Cafe card 10 Corrects 55 Paid manuscripts athletes 11 Hindu 56 Pound the teacher poet 10/6/83 1983 Tribune Comp~ny Syndicate, Inc. 12 Made a hole 60 Continental lD·b All Rights Reserved 10/6/83 In one abbr.

Beat the Clock

DJ Fast Freddie Sports Thursday, October 6, 1983- page 12 Improving Saint Mary's team disposes of hapless Bethel By MICHELE MCKEEVER Bethel College, a weak opponent, The Belles have established them­ Sports Writer did not challenge the team to play its selves as a come-from-behind squad. The Saint Mary's volleyoall team best. But as they face more serious con­ defeated Bethel College in three The team faces the University of tenders i:hey must open '.itrong and straight games 15-13, 1 5-5, and 15- Michigan at Dearborn, a more for­ gain a lead. 10 before a disappointingly small midable opponent, at 6 p.m. tomor­ Individual work wi.h the players, crowd in Angela AtWetic Facility row at the Angela Athletic Facility. according to Goralski, is helping the Tuesday night. Coach Goralski ts confident in the Belles' cause greatl}. Hopefully, this Strong aggressive play from cap­ team's ability and feels that the stiff young and improving squad will be tain Loret Haney and Ann Boutten competition will improve the team's able to rise to the occasion tomor­ enabled the team to quickly dispose performance. row night. of its opponent. Consistent serving by Haney, Miki Matemowski, and Molly Baker contributed to the vic­ Frosh Biafore earns tory in the second game. Bethel rallied in the third game, pushing to a 7-2 lead. The Belles, starting tennis spot however, quickly regained their ByJERRY MELIA development. It was she who in­ momentum and showed there was Sports Writer spired Joanne to take up the spon no cause for worry, outscoring Bet­ and she taught her a great deal of hel by ten to clinch the victory. Like most freshmen, JoAnne what she knows. While the team was playing closer Biafore is not yet very well known. JoAnne played high school tennis as a unit, and serving well, Coach But people who follow Notre Dame at Wooster High School in Wooster, Brian Goralski was not pleased with women's tennis know that not only Ohio. Her record in high school was his team's performance. He feels the File Pboto is Joanne a member of the varsity a more than impressive 109-11, and team is lacking intensity on the tennis team, but she also starts at the she won many titles in her career. The took a 1-0 lead in the coun and needs to show a stronger sixth singles position. To start on a Obviously, joAnne came to Notre Championship series last night, defeating Baltimore 2-1. In the desire to win. National League, Los Angeles beat Philadelphia to tie their series. varsity spon at the college level Da.-ne with excellent credentials. However, Goralski also feels that takes a great deal of talent, deter­ JoAnne chose to attend Notre mination, and hard work. Seeing Dame for many reasons, including Hoyt, Valenzuela win JoAnne play, one can tell that she its great academic reputation, its possesses all of these qualities and present tradition, and its proximity Sox hop on Orioles; LA triumphs more. to her home in Ohio. The main Coach Sharon Petro had a great reason, however, that JoAnne Associated Press the game-winning RBI with a single, Landrum. But Hoyt then got Eddie surprise in store when the semester selected Notre Dame was "the BALTIMORE- LaMarr Hoyt won and he scored an unearned run in th Murray to ground into a force out to began. Prior to this time, Petro had friendliness of the people." This a duel of finesse and precision with sixth without benefit of a hit. end the game. never seen JoAnne grip a racquet. greatly impressed her on her visit to Scott McGregor, pitching a five­ Bearded and barrel-bellied, Hoyt This was Hoyt's ft.rst postseason Joanne, however, expressed her in- the campus last year. hitter that carried the Chicago retired the first seven batters he appearance, whereas McGregor was White Sox to a 2-1 victory last night faced. Constantly working ahead of a veteran of the Orioles' 1979 over the in Game the hitters, Hoyt used a moving playoff team. Bell returning to line-up One of the American League fastball and decent breaking ball to McGregor yielded six hits, one a In case you have not already heard, Irish tailback Greg Bell has playoffs. confound one of baseball's most fluke, but three other hits came at a made the fastest recovery from a broken ankle in history. Actually, The meeting of these two pitchers potent lineups. Nothing got past the most inopponune time - one right the ankle that Bell supposedly broke in the Miami game a couple of was billed ali a matchup of a master until Cruz's hit, but the hard­ after the other in the third inning, years ago, was re-examined, and, early this week, it was announced of control, Hoyt, and a crafty, tricky est hit ball off Hoyt was probably the with two out. that the ankle was not actually broken. veteran, McGregor. one hit two Orioles later. The White Sox threatened in the Bell may see some action in the next couple of weeks, but, unless The right-hander Hoyt, 24-10 and With two out and Cruz still at first, second when hit a his services are badly needed, he probably will be rested until the the winningest pitcher in baseball leadoff hitter hit a long high pop down the right field line to Southern Cal game on October 22. the past two seasons, won this time. flyball to left-center field. White Sox lead off. The ball fell among first center fielder Rudy Law raced to the He struck out only four batters, but baseman , second terest in tennis to Petro in the form played a major role in her tennis wall and gathered it in. And the he walked not a soul. He had walked baseman and right fiel­ of letters. She was invited to try out JoAnne is making the transition Orioles scoring threat had expired. only 31 batters in 260 2-3 innings der Ford, who almost missed the for the team, and earned a singles from high school to college tennis • during the regular season, and he After a 42-minute rain delay in the start with a bad right foot. Murray's spot. rather well. She feels that the big dif­ was on hi5. form. He gave up three middle of the fourth inning, Hoyt throw to shonstop Ripken, covering To this point, Petro is very pleased ferences between the two levels of retook the mound. The clouds singles, to Todd Cruz, second, was in time but in the din. with JoAnne's play. "She is eager to play are the competition and the and Cal Ripken Jr., and two doubles broke, the sun came out, and the big When R!pken couldn't handle the learn and very teachable," Petro says necessity of a more complete game. - by and . right-hander, who extended his per­ throw, Luzinski had a double. of her talented freshman. She means that all the aspects of a Left-bander McGregor, the sonal winning streak to 14 games, McGregor got out of that one, but he person's tennis game - serve, vol­ Orioles top winner this year with an owned the hill. was not so lucky in the third inning. These qualities help JoAnne fit in ley, ground strokes, etc. - must be 18-7 record, had a slightly more ad­ The second game in the best-of­ Law staned the rally with a clean well with the program established strong to win consistently in col­ venturous, 6 2-3-inning outing, five series will be played tonight single up the mddle, past by Petro. Petro feels JoAnne's poten­ lege. She felt she could get away while benefitting from some good again in Baltimore, with Mike McGregor's glove. Carlton Fisk tial is very good and if she has a with a lot of mistakes in high school, defense. He escaped peril in the Flanagan the staner for the Orioles followed with a bloop single to left weakness, it's that she stays at the but at the college level she knows second inning, then stingily gave up and Floyd Bannister for Chicago. that sent Law to second, and baseline too much. She also says that that this will not be the case. a run in the third. The Orioles scored their run m Paciorek came to bat. JoAnne should rush the net more Joanne doesn't sense any pressure , the White Sox's 36- the ninth ining when Ford doubled He hit a blazing one-hopper and be more aggressive. on the court. Instead, she tries to year-old who hit .400 to left center with two out and Rip­ toward third. Orioles JoAnne began playing tennis at play the best tennis she can by giving against the Orioles this season, got ken singled home pinch runner Tito see so~ page 8 the age of thineen. Her mother it all she has. Playoff Bound? Colts back on winning track

Associated Press falo, Miami and the New York jets in and No. 1 draft choice john Elway. the American Conference East. Sud­ But Kush, working with the NFL's BALTIMORE - It's amazing what denly, visions of Ben jones, the Sack youngest team - an average age of three victories in five games and a Pack and the division-winning 24.2 years - has developed a team share of first place can do for some Balimore teams of the mid-1970s ap­ which is 12 points from an unbeaten people. peared before the Colts' fans. season this year (it lost 1 7-10 to Take Nesby Glasgow, a long­ "We just keep improving each Denver and 28-23 to Buffalo). suffering defensive back for the week," said second-year quaner­ Still, the former Arizona State previously suffering Baltimore back Mike Pagel. "We're getting to head coach refuses to take credit for Colts. know each other better, that's all." the rebinh of the Colts, who posted "As far as I'm concerned, we could The keys to the Colts' recent a 19-53-1 mark between 1978 and sneak into the playoffs," said Glas­ success are simple: the league's top 1982. "This is still a people game; it's gow, a five-year National Football kicking game, a strong defense and still the players doing it," he said. League veteran. "I think we're good an opponunistic offense . featuring "I've just got to remind them what enough to be there." the NFL's second-best rushing at­ they need to do." "I'm not saying we'll go to the tack. Now, about those playoffs ... Super Bowl - but we're good And then there's Frank Kush, the "It's an old adage and sounds enough to be respected throughout oft-maligned coach who came here corny, but that's the fanhest thing the league." last year. Kush, much to the chagrin from our players' minds," Kush said. Such comments used to provoke of some players, stressed condition­ And, realistically assessing the laughter throughout the NFL. After ing and fundamentals. Those who Colts' improbable dream, Kush

all, the Colts won just twice in 1981 disagreed with his philosophies added: "The thing to empha<>ize is file Phow and not at all last season. were offered two options: "My way that we're not out of the woods by The Baltimore Colts are flying bigh after their strong start tbis But Sunday's 34-31 victory over or the highway." :my means. We have a long way to go season, sitting atop the AFC East Division in a four-u·a}' tie. But the Cincinnati Bengals lifted the Many took the highway, including before we can be thinking or dream­ playoffs are the farthest thing from their minds, savs He'"ad Coach Colts into a four-way tie with Buf- All-Pro wide rel·eiver Roger Carr ing of the playoffs." Frank Kush. See story• a/left for more details. -