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VOL. XN, NO. 105 an independent student newspaper serving notre dame and saint mary's THURSDAY, MARCH 13, 1980 SLFspeaker Khomeini Cage baffles audience urges large by Tom O'Toole Avante-guarde composer John Cage confounded an overflow crowd in the library auditorium last night with his lecture for the voter turnout Sophomore Literary Festival. Cage, who makes his living in New York "composing, writing, AP- Ayatollah- Ruhollah etchmg, and picking mushrooms," delivered a speech entitled, Khomeini urged Iranians yes­ "Marcel Duchamp, James Joyce, Eric Satis, and the Alphabet," terday to strengthen the Islamic which was composed by chance procedures. Republic and dash the hopes of As a preface to his composition, Cage explained that art, like life, the ·:?ppressiye U.S. govern­ is incomprehensible and can be useful to us only when we find it ment by turmng out en masse outside of libraries. ''Like in Finnigans Wake, we live in a universe to elect a new parliament. that is not clear and concise," he said. Humans will not live long Khomeini has said the parlia­ with things they can't explain, but they also cannot release their ment will decide the fate of the love for the dark. These writers wrote works that we can't explain, American hostages. but we cannot understand our own dreams many times either,'' he In a message broadcast by said. Tehran Radio on the eve of the Cage explained the methods he used in writing his piece. "Each first round of parliamentary • letter in each name (of his subjects) was assigned a word either voting Friday,· Iran's 79-year­ from the dictionary or the encyclopedia, which began with the old revolutionary leader sa:d same first letter. Thus, the first word was choosen from the first the enemies of Islam want a page of the dictionary entries which correspond with the first letter small turnout. But he added: m the first name, and so on," he revealed. "I hope that by your public [continued on page 4] participation in the elections you will dash the hopes of the enemies of the Islamic republic, the agents of the overthrown regime and its followers, espe­ cially the oppressive U.S. go­ CLC rejects keg proposal vernment. Arise on the day of determining the country's fate and storm the ballot boxes to by John McGrath tive to the use of kegs in party rooms.'' The proposal failed to cast your votes. Senior StaffReporter "I hope the nation, after ~arner the necessary 2/3 major­ carefully studyin~ the back­ The latest disappointing Ity at Monday night's meeting. Eleven members favored the grounds of individuals and student affairs decision--the groups, will vote for those who Campus Life Council's Monday proposal, six opposed it, and are faithful to Islam and the night defeat of the so-called keg Vice President for Student Affairs John Van W olvlear With spring and baseball season now in sight, this would-be constitution, are free of tenden- proposal--has many people on pitcher works on the of' fastball. [Photo by Bill Marquardj. campus, including students and [continued on page 6] [continued on page 3] rectors, wondering about the future of the CLC. In an open letter to The Observer's readers published in today's issue, Keenan Hall Editorial.· Keenan rector blasts CLC rector and CLC member Fr. Richard Conyers cast serious doubt on the merits and contin­ Editor's Note: As the legislative that it would allow interchange where issues are regularly/re­ mine the deplorable situation ued operation of the CLC. body ofthe Notre Dame student and communication between judged and predetermine by existing between faculty and ''The CLC can only be a government, the Campus Life the Administration and the 22 the heavy influence of a power­ residential communties. It is frustrated body which plays at Cf!u~~zl [CLC ]Pu:p_orts ~0 "ad- residential communities, with ful few, can there really be any clear that the academic faculty · giving advice or in which a small vtse the admznzstratzon by the hope that there would be an interchange or communication? is not sufficiently interested in few develop parliamentary and proposing rule changes. On effective source for raising and Only if the advised is benevo­ the residential character and debating skills,'' Conyers wrote Monday, the CLC voted not to ·solving issues of interest and lent or patronizin~. aspects of life to send two in his letter. "But who cares pass on to the administration a importance for full life at Notre It is not sur;msing that the representatives to the CLC on a about developing parliamentary proposal which would allow Dame. Far from raising and CLC can't achieve a quorum. sufficiently regular basis to. or debating skills? Who wants kegs of beer in designated hall solving any issues, however, it Who cares about developing insure a rational voice and vote. to submit him or herself to the party rooms, . a proposal the has mirrored effectively, both parliamentary or debatin~ Thirdly: We need to debate frustrations of careful work administration had promised student apathy and disorgani­ skills? Who wants to submit and discuss the role of Adminis­ ignored or even ridiculed?'' ear/ier in the year would be zation, as well as administrative him or herself to the frustra­ tration on the local levels. In Student Body President Bill given afairhean'ng. The propo- isolation and autonomy. tions of careful work ignored or the 22 residential communities, Roche, although expressin~ sal fazled on the basis of The administrative model of even ridiculed. It is significant do the students have the abili­ concern over the CLC's deCI­ negative votes cast by two "in loco parentis" (which that the absenteeism comes not ties or right to influence policy? sion, took a more moderate administrators and four hall sometimes works as a pedago­ from the student representa­ Are rectors just another seg­ stance during an interview last rectors. In this letter to the gical model, but never as an tives, but. from the rectors and ment of administrative "in loco night. When asked whether he editor, Fr. Richard Conyers, administrative model) contin­ the faculty representatives, parentis' ' or are they secure shared the position held by Keenan rector and CLC mem- ues, but now including not only who know that their voices will enough in their idea of the local many that Monday night's ber, articulates what The Ob- questions of imparting values, be heard on more significant community as to allow real action had compromised the server editon'al board feels are but also of determining minute levels. voice to all members of that CLC' s future effectiveness, the weaknesses in the CLC details of daily life. What should be done? What local community? What is the Roche disagreed. which render it impotent as a ''We know what is best for can be done? I would like to administrative model in the 22 ''] ust because we lost on a legislative body. you", says the insecure parent, make a few suggestions. dorms? What is the role of the little thing like kegs, I can't see "just do as we say--you will First:: If the CLC is to aid rector in relation to staff. giving up," Roche said. "To thank us later''. The policy communication and inter­ council, judicial board, student say kegs was the biggest thing Dear Editor: makers at Notre Dame continue change between residential affairs? It is certainly time to all year--no. To get better to "know what is best" for communities and the Office of ask these questions without student in~;ut into administra­ Monday night at the tenth students and in a genuine and Student Affairs, as an advisory anyone being threatened. tion decisiOns--that was our meeting of the Campus Life generous concern for students, body, we should not allow the If the CLC continues as it has goal and I think we've suc­ Council surfaced once again, absolve themselves from the prejudging and predetermina­ gone for the past three years, I , ceeded." the issue: ''What is the CLC all need for consultation with, or tion of advice by allowing the as the only member other than Conyers, in evaluating the about?" We are continually advice from students under the advised to vote. As presently the Dean of Students who has CLC's short history, wrote: reminded that this body has no paternalistic rubric "We know constituted, the Vice President endured all three years, will not "Far from raising and solving legislative ability--so it can only what is best for you, do as we for Student Affairs and the Dean blame the body for voting itself any issues, however, it (CLC) be deliberative and advisory. say, ·you will thank us later." of Students, who are the chief out of existence. But should has mirrored effectively both Perhaps it can aid the process The CLC can only be a .formulators and administrators this' happen, the residential student apathy and disorgani­ of communication between frustrated body which plays at of policy vis a vis student life, community would simply ac­ zation, as well as administrative members of the residential giving advice or in which a · are given equal vote as well as knowledge and accept what isolation and autonomy.'' communities and the adminis­ small few develop parliamen­ veto power. Let them listen to now appears to be the fact, an The keg proposal asked that tration. tary and debating skills. When ' advice and not subvert or unacceptable and unreasonable "each hall be permitted to The CLC was born--approved those advised can re~ularly ; prejudice the same. administrative model. determine its own policy rela- by the Trustees with the hope ignore or veto the advice, or I Secondly: We should exa- 'Rev. Ri~hard ]. Conyers, CSC ),

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--·-~-~-·- T- News irrbrief Thursday, March 13, 1980 -page 2 Congressional leaders agree WOW program continues SW"immer Nyad speaks at SMC onfederalbudgetcut by Ma7. Kay Leydon think of.'' She added that the disciplin­ Staff Reporter "I think swimming is one of ing for the sport is physical as WASHINGTON (AP) - Administration and confressional the least questionable sports," well as mental. An entire year Diana Nyad, a record-break­ Nyad said. "It continues the is dedicated to preparation for a leaders have tentatively agreed to trim as much as 17 billion long swim. The preparation is from the federal budget, which could include eliminating ing marathon swimmer, spoke ancient Greek helenistic tradi­ to a group of Saint Mary's and tion of sports. It requires divided into two six month Saturday mail delivery and changing the way cost-of-living periods. One half of the year is adjustments in Social Security a.n~ other benefits are figured, Notre Dame students last night human beings to pit strength of sources said yesterday. TheiPPlmcallyvolatile Social Security as part of the Womc·11's Oppor­ body, spirit and mind against physical preparation, while the issue dominated a two-hour closed door meeting of Senate tunity Week Program. Nyad's the elements." other half combines the phys­ Democrats, shortly before negotiations from Congress and was the fourth in a series of five Nyad added that she "did ical with mental preparation. the administration huddled again in hopes of working out lectures being held on the Saint not set out for money. I wanted "It takes me as long as two ways to balance the fiscal 1981 federal budget. There also Mary's campus this week. the experience, travel and most months to adjust after a long were increasing signs that President Carter's plan to Nyad discussed her life prior of all pride. Unlike many swim such as the Cuban increase defense spending by $5 billion to $7 billion might be to her discovery of marathon people, I enjoy what I'm doing. attempt," Nyad commented. swimming. After a two year It is what I do best. I give 110 In the summer of 1978, Nyad in danger. That projected increase puts added pressure on attempted to .swim from the negotiations to cut other programs more deeply in order to battle with a heart infection at percent every time I swim.'' age sixteen, Nyad failed to "Marathon swimmers re­ coast of Florida to Cuba. While balance the budget, now expected to be about $20 billion to she failed to complete the $25 billion in deficit. make the Olympic swimming quire hearts of giants. They are team of 1968. She then decided well trained and well tuned swim, she did swim a record­ to pursue another aspect of the athletes," Nyad said. "A breaking 76 miles, the longest Carter reque$tS voluntary sport, marathon swimming. swimmer must endure shark distance ever swum by man or In July of 1969, after months attacks, jelly fish stings and woman. of traimng, Nyad entered her exhaustion. Combatting ex­ ''I swim for myself, for my first marathon race across Lake haustion is a major concern memories and to make Olympic product embargo Ontario. She placed third while swimming. Hallucina· money." Nyad added that it is among men and first among tions are a problem, especially the self accomplishment, the WASHINGTON (AP) - The Carter administration yester­ women in the event. It was also during the extremely long sixty feeling of pride that drives her day asked U.S. companies not to export to the Soviet Union the first in a series of world hour swims. As the human forward. "That is what pro­ an estimated $20 million in products relating to the Summer records. body deteriorates, so does the gress is all about. Pursueing Olympics. The embargo, which would be voluntary, followed Nyad has swum Lake mind. It takes a great deal of something at 110 percent is the suspension on Tuesday of sales of U.S. stamps and Ontario, Lake Michigan, the mental strength to even re­ what the human race is all postcards commemorating the Olympics to be held in North Sea, through the Great member who you are." about," she concluded. Moscow this summer. Barrier Reef, the Nile River, the Indian Ocean and "most every Weather other body of water you can ~eavy sno~ warning for e:=trlY to~ay. _Accumulations of 3·5 ~-The Observer_ mches posstble before endmg. Htghs m the low to mid 30s. Cloudy tonight with l0ws in the low 20s. Mostly sunny Friday Night Editor: Steve ''Inquisi­ with highs near 40. tion" Swonk Asst. Night Editor: Bill "Baseball" Keenan, Eddie "Dr. Death" Holden Layout Staff: Mary ''All They Y ook Was The Grain" Silvt CamP-_us.,;;;;,__-j News Editor: Mark Rust Features Layout:Sal "IRC" 8:30 am-12 pm & 1-4:30 pm KEENAN REVUE TICKET Granata DISTRIBUTION, free tickets will be distributed for the Sports Layout: Mary Perry variety show in O'LAUGHUN AUDITORIUM and from 4-6 Typists: Beth Huffman, Mi­ pm in WASH. HALL chelle Kelleher, Kathy Pes­ tin, Nancy Russell 1-3 pm EXHIBITION "artworks" univ. n. kentucky IS.S EMT: Paul ''Jamaican'' Se­ GALLERY lavko, Kim Convey MASS Proofreader: Mike Onufrak 4:15 pm ALTERNATIVE CAREER EXPLORATIONS ND Day Editor: Janet Rigaux follow-ed by "volunteers in.s,ervice to america," jeanne carney, depute SMC Day Editor: Cece Ba­ dir. vi~\:a;L'rB AUD, open to all, spon by ctr. for exp. learn­ liles supper ing, volunreer services and placement Ad Design: Bub "Rug" Ru- dy, Molly O'Neill ' 6 pm SLIDE SHOW holy cross sisters with cambodians Photographer: Mr. "O.C." every_ CARROLL HALL SMC Michael Bigley Guest Appearances: Michael FRIDAY 6:30 pm MEETING leadership training class campus Ortman, Dierdre "P.I.T.A." crusade for christ REC ROOM Murphy, Ryan "Six Weeks Premature" Ver Berkmoes at the 7 pm MEETING nd historical society officer nominations will The Observer [USPS 511 120] Is be made RM 118 O'SHAUGHNESSY HALL , published Mllllday thraugh Frldly II· cept during exam and VICIIIIn perilds. 7 pm MEET YOUR MAJOR - TEACHER EDUCATION The Observer Is publlsllld by till students of Nlltrl Dlllll IIIII Saint ROOM 121 O'SHAUGHNESSY HALL. Mary's Cllllge. Sublcrlpu..IIIIY bl purdlned lor S28 per yur 1111 per IIINitlr) lrom The Observer, 1'.0. blx 7:30 pm JAPAN ESE FILM SERIES "an autumn afternoon" Q, Nltn Da1111, IIICIIana 415116. Slcllld clau paid, Nitre D11111, In- WASHINGTON HALL spon by depts. of sp/dr and modern diana "=='. and classical languages $1 The Observer Is 1 lllllllblr II 1111 Auaclatld Preu. All IIPIIdlctlln B pm MASTER L~CTURE SERIES ''life span developmental rifhts .,. memd. 5=15 ps¥chology: prom1se or despair, "dr. paul baltes, pa. st. umv. HAGGAR HALL AUD. spon by psychology dept.

8 pm ~PEAKER jacqueline means, fist ordained wumai11in the ep.1scopal ch~;~rch CARROLL HALL SMC spon by women s opportumty week MOLSON PARTY 8 pm FACULTY RECITAL bruce gustafson, harpsichord LITil.E THEATRE SMC spon by dept. of music 2/S 1 from 9pm- 11 8 pm SOPHOMORE LITERARY FESTIVAL roy fischer english poet MEM. LIB AUD ' at LEE'S 2/$1.5011-1 8-10 . pm MOVIE the original "from here to eternity" Tonight while supplies last --~c=-=====g===tt starnng burt lancaster GRACE PIT free ~t}S1 bt to"' 8 pm-12 am JUNIOR CLASS NITE AT THE NAZZ EAV a,a,tl"'ig 8:30, 10:30, 11:30 pm movie "the secret of loving" spon by ~ V t~,-e campus crusade for christ LEWIS HALL FARLEY HALL and FISHER HALL respectively ' ' GVi'f.'l,l)ilt \)e fe'\ BRING 21 ID 10 pm MEETING floc: phase 2 LA FORTUNE BALLROOM The Observer Lack of ND-SMC cooperation produces scheduling conflict between SLF, WOW by Pam Degnan the ND Student Union. during the same week. Kteitz­ Senior StaffReporter ''I sent out numerous letters to berg, however, pointed out that various people in the Student the dates for the following A lack of cooperation between Union last summer. The only year's festival ace usually de­ the Notre Dame Student Union feedback I received was a list of cided right after the closing of and the Saint Mary's Student five movies that were to be each festival. Government has resulted in the shown throughout the year,'' ''The dates for the festival scheduling of the Sophomore Sweeney said. "We can't be were decided last spring by last Literary Festival and Women's expected to guess when ND year's chairman. I guess we Opportunity Week for the same 1 events will be scheduled." should have collaborated more date, according to the Notre Director of Saint Mary's Student with the SMC programming Dame and Saint Mary's com­ office,'' Kreitzberg said. mittee chairmen. Activities Mary Laverty, cited a · definite lack of communication Kevin Conry, who is in chacge Dave Ellison, Cultural Arts of the ND Calender Office, also Commissioner, pointed out that involving social event program­ ming on both campuses. Laver­ emphasized that there is a lack it is the responsibility of the of cooperation. He said that he Saint Mary's Student Govern­ ty said she also tned to contact Student Union officials on nu­ never received a "substan­ ment to work with the Notre tial'' information from the Saint Dame Calender office when merous occasions but did not receive any replies. Mary's Activities Offices con­ programming campus events. cerning social events. "We try to make the schedul­ Doug Kreitzberg, Sophomore Literary Festival chairman, said "It's up to both ND and SMC ing of events available. to. the organizations to take advantage public so campus orgamzanons that it was an ''unfortunate mistake'' that the festival and of the Calender Office,·' Conry can plan around certain func­ said. tions," Ellison said. "It must WOW were scheduled to run -be a cooperative effort.'' Accordmg to Ellison, the dates for the Sophomore Literary . Festival were decided last A­ i juniors: sign up for the ! pril. He said he was a "bit surprised" that Saint Mary's had scheduled WOW for the ·junior class mixed doubles! same week. "I contacted Saint Mary's last year concerning the festival and pool tournament finals at ! I think it's just a waste that both events had to happen at the Nickies i Econ test scam same time," Ellison said. "Ap­ I parently there is a lack of I cooperation. ' ' -~~~~~~~~~~~~~aaaaaati~ According to Kathy Sweeney, Charges weaken: Swartz Chairman of Women's Oppor­ tunity Week, the lecture series i 1st prize- $25.00 i was scheduled for March 9-14 by Lynne Daley had obtained a copy of the last May. Sweeney charged, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~aa~amd StaffReporter following day's exam. however, that as vice president to register your team, 1 ''There may have been a for Student Affairs in charge of I Premliminary investigation theft and cheating, but no one scheduling campus events, she call pam atl7308 or go to the 1 alleged cheating on the March 6 seems able to prove it. We hve received no cooperation from in examination in Economics to have somebody come up and secretary at student activities Iafortune. : courses 124 and 224 has say 'I saw,' instead of · i leave your names and phone nos. I "Failed to substantiate" the heard,' " Wilber stated. charges, according to Swartz stressed that all for more info: I Economics Professor Thomas grades will stand unless a .. . Iran call donna at 793 3 or tom at 1189 I R. Swartz. further investigation uncovers As a result, Swartz said, he conclusive proof that cheating [continued from page I] released the grades of students occurred. '·There will always be some lingering doubt (that cies toward left or right, and are who live in the dorm where the renowned for their good record incident reportedly occurred. cheating occured). The on1 y and commitment to Islam. The BREAK TIME Professor Charles K. Wilber, alternative would be to re-test nation should know that to stray chairman of the Economics the entire class. In all justice, Department, confirmed that this isn't fair. The vast majority from this important Islamic task DIRECT O'HARE- is the dorm under of the students are clear as the would be treason to Islam and investigation. ''This issue is driven snow," Swartz said. the country·" not bemg dropped or covered This "lingering doubt" was Khomeini said he feared $15 EXPRESS $15 up. The investigation will expressed by seven Dillon hostile propaganda "might in- continue," Wilber said. residents who take the course fluen~e some of the public so "We're at a point where the and were surveyed at random that they vote for those basi­ last night. One student said, cally opposed to Islam for the from NOTRE DAME CIRCLE evidence we have is insufficient 1 h d. d · benefit of foreigners." to call an Honesty Committee,'' ''The peop e w 0 1 lt got The second round of parlia- depart 4pm arrive 5:30pm Wilber said. ''The person who away with it." · k 1 March27 told us there was an exam loose 'A certain person said he had me~tary votmg ta e~ P ace in Dillon had second-hand the test the night before. Apnl 4, and the .l~gtsl.ature, March28 lOam 11:30am information. That made our Everyone knows he had it. I'm · known as the Maj!Js,_ ts ex­ lpm 2:30pm position very weak.'' ure if we went down, he would pected to conven.e. sever~! Students accused of the have shown it to us '' another weeks la~er · Khomemt has s~td honor code violation · were rest'd en t s rated . ' the parliament shouldf dectdeh brought before Dean of ''I'm hoping that it they did do whethe.r or not to . ree t e Students James A. Roemer. it they will have gotten enough approximately 50 setz~d. 130 ''Dean Roemer talked to the of a scare so that it won't ?ays ago by Moslem mtlt~ants students and they did deny it,'' happen again. I also hope that tn the U.S. Emb~ssy. Prestdent .283-7080 Wilber said. the people in Dillon will treat A.bolhassan Bam,-Sadr ha~ pre­ According to Wilber, the their friends accordingly. That dtcted the captt~~s . won t be students claimed they flashed a will be enough punishment," release~ bef?re mtd-May at INLJIANA MOTOn aus , past exam and kidded that they Wilber said. the earhest. --~------~------,~ Grecian Cuisine specializing ·in Greek Gyros Class election results r Prime Rib $5.75 - ~Surf & Turf $8.75 by Clare Padgett Cassidy were Megan Boyle, Suzanne Bautista and Keith r: Tender Stuffed Broiled Trout -- $5.75 Caughlin. In elections marked by ex­ . Next year's sophomore class Shishkabob $5.75 tremely narrow margins of vic­ officers will be Sarah McGrath, Steak & Shrimp $5.75 tory, Mickey Turzai, Mike Mark Michuda and Bill Mateja. These meals include: CUP Cassidy and Moe Ruggerio last The tickets were elected in a OF SOUP, SALAD, LOAF LUNCHEON SPECIALS night took next year's respec­ run-off race resembling -~--n BREAD & BUTTER. Our SERVED DAILY tive senior, junior and sopho­ Monday's general election in 3421 W. Sam le :appetizer, Sagonaki [Fia- Evening Dining more class presidencies. which finalists were never sep­ - - 42-3. (ming Greek Cheese] served Mon. thru Sat. In addition to Turzai, the arated by more than nine votes. 2' 82-2 .compliments of the house,_..______. senior class will be run by The Veraldi ticket was slimly with dinner for 2. , vice-president Janie Revord, defeated by a 52 percent vote, --i '.NOW OPEN SUNDAYS secretary Dave Campbell and while both Verfurth and 4::J1J.11 treasurer Chuck Meakin. Hennessey lost to 53 percent PARTIESAND~ANQUETS 1 Elected on the ticket with majorities. ?or Dining aad Cocktails The Observer Thursday, March 13, -page 4 Ugandan hunger continues

"'KARRONG, Uganda (AP)­ at missions and clinics across entire region large enough to Soon after sunrise, several hun­ Karamoja, a vast, cattle-herd­ carry significant amounts of dred people gather at a Roman ing region of dusty plains, thorn food. Catholic misston here to receive trees and huge granite out­ Aid is being left to_outsiders. the daily handout that keeps crops. The area ·is m its second Francesco Surppoli, head of the them alive-a small ration of year of drought. Rivers _an; dry World Food Program office in boiled cornmeal mixed with and, away from the missions, Kampala, says more than 8,000 skim milk powder. hundreds of cattle and Karamo­ tons of cornmeal and hundreds jong tribesmen are dying. of tons of cooking oil and skim Children in the group show And if starvation doesn't kill milk powder are being rushed ··tgns of advanced sta~vatio~­ to Karamoja. distended stomachs, pipe-thm them, there is the possibility legs and apathy. Ten new that heavily armed cattle rus­ On top of famine and cholera, starvation casesarriveevery day tlers will. Karamoja has become victim of at the mission in northeastern United Nations relief experts, the gravest peacetime outbreak Uganda, near the borders with after a recent five-day tour, of violence in Ugandan history. Kenya and Sudan. reported that more than . When Amin's soldiers aban­ 135,000 persons are starvmg to doned their armory last year in .\ medical assistant steps a­ death in Karamoha. That's 38 Morgto, the main Karamoja round the children to tend to a percent of the region's 350,000 town, the population seized the woman lying on a concrete floor population. The rest of the weapons. and dying of cholera. . people, the U.N. officials say, Scenes fike this are repeated need substantial food aid to stay alive. On the scale of previous AnnualASEE African famines, the situation is small-but ir is critical. • meetin.gto Ever since British Colonial• times, Karamoja has been the last part of Uganda to receive convene today ::mention from the central gov­ ernment in Kampala. Rutted, En~ineering educators and dirt roads make the region practitioners will look at the relatively inaccessible and the changing technological, so­ Karamohong remain largely cietal, and educational needs Writer/composer john ~ag_e entertained an _overftow crowd last unschooled, often naked, semi­ which touch their profession night in the library audztonum. [Photo by Mtke BzgleyJ. nomadic herders. during the annual meeting of the Illinois-Indiana Section of · Years of comparative n_eglect the American Society for En­ were intensified under dictator gineering Education. More ldi Amin and the war that than 100 engineers are expect­ Harpsichordist Gustafson ousted him a year ago dis~up~ed ed to attend the meeting here 'jcrop planting. The new civiii_an today and tomorrow. government, preoccupied with "We are particularly enthus­ to give recital tonight ·establishing irs aurhonty closer ed about our plenary session on io Kampala, the capital, has technology in and for develop­ Bruce Gustafson willjresent Briggs is also on the faculty done little to help. ing countries," said Dr. John a recital of harpsichor music at Saint Mary's. In the last year 'SV'. Lucey, section chairman tonight at 8 in Moreau Hall's two of his compositions have J Of some 150 hand-pumped and associate professor of aero Little Theatre at Saint Mary's. been published in New York, .wells installed by the British in space and mechanical engineer­ The concert will feature the attracting the attention of the \northern 'Karamoja, only 30 sull ing at Notre Dame. ''The premiere of both the inst~'-;lment New York Times. "Triptych" work. There are believed to be technological needs of develop­ and one of the composmons. is his first work for harpstchord, l'b~c:::>c::X~~~~~~~~iollfewer than a dozen trucks in the ing nations will have a far The pro~ram is open to the although he has written pieces greater impact on our students' public without charge. for other keyboard instruments. He is the director of the future professional lives than The harpsichord Gustafson they have had on ours." "New Music Festival" at S:tint will play was custom built for Mary's, and he holds a Ph.D. in MASS An informal session from 7 to him by Willard Martin, a 10 at the University Club composition from the Eastman t.m. craftsman from Bethlehem, PA. School of Music. Sunday March 16 4:30pm wil open tonight's meeting. It is a modified copy of a The formal program will be~in harpsichord which was built in at the Center for Continumg Pans in 1720. The sound board !J\FORTUN~ BALLROOM Education tomorrow at 9 a.m. is elaborately decorated wi:h ... Cage with concurrent sessions on traditional symbols of flowers "Ener~y Alternatives," "En­ and birds. The inside of the lid, FATHER FITZ gineenng Manpower Needs in which the audience sees when [continued from page 1] the Eighties" and "Profession­ the harpsichord is bein~ As the lecture unfoldea, these LIGHT SUPPER SERVED al Development of Untenured played, has an original otl chance operations allov.:ed the Faculty." painting in the style of protagomsts to expenenc~ Topics to be addressed dur­ Watteau, an 18th-century some strange encounters, In­ ing the "Energy Alternatives" French painter. This will be the cluding cocktails with Carrie session will include non-electri­ first solo recital played on the Nation and telegrams from cal fusion usage, gasohol, instrument. Marshall McLeun. They also active and passive solar 'con­ spendt a midnight at Walden SENIOR BAR cepts and uulity research activ­ The program will include the Pond where Thoreau toasted (Ifyou missed it last week, ities. first performance of ''Triptych'' them with a glass he discovered The plenary session at 10:45 by Roger Briggs, a composer on that could contain any drink, don't miss it this week.) a.m. on "Technology In and the Saint Mary's faculty. To and ·could never be emptied. For Less Developed Nations" allow the audience. to better "It's commuinist!" said Mao seroes l.,UNCH will feature Denis Goulet, appreciate the short pi_ece, it Tse Tung. "It's Irish," said will be played twice dunng the O'Neill Professor of Education Joyce. "It's simplicity," s3;id for Justice at Notre Dame and a evening. Works by LeRoux, Coupenn and Bach will com­ Thoreau. Cage's protagomst senior fellow with the Overseas then attended a party on the FRIDAY Development Council, and John plete the program. Mediterranian at which Homer Gilligan, White Professor of Gustafson teaches music his­ choose to sing his new revisions from Law at Notre Dame and former tory and harpsichord at Saint to The !Iliad. administrator of the Agency for Mary's. He gives concerts and Later Duchamp was commis­ 11 :30till2 :00 International Development. lectures frequently, and is t~e sioned to build an apartment Following the awards director of the College s complex for Brigham Young luncheon from 12:30 to 2 p.m., "Harpsichord Weekend." Re­ which was to house very few the meeting will close with cently his 3-volume study, bachelors, and Joyce caught three more concurrent sessions: ''French Harpsichord Music of Freud watching a twelve sided featuring· "Trends in Engineering En­ the 17th Century,'' was pub­ television, wh1ch Freud had rollment,'' including the devel­ lished by UMI Research Press. learned to watch in such a way opment of minority and female He holds degrees from as to never see commercials. engineers; "Education for Kalamazoo College, the Uni­ A few concrete observations CHIPS · Social Responsibility,'' and versity of Oklahom~ 3:nd the did surface during the course of , • 'Unconventional Uses of University of Michigan. Cage's lecture. . POP Microprocessors,'' primarily In discussing music, Cage satd educational uses. Gustafson also studied in that people are in the habit of The conference is open to all Germany and Holland, and making music which makes HAMBURG • engineers, not just members of returns to France each year to nothing for them. ''We . need ASEE. Registration informa­ continue his research. His most music that composes Itself, BEER .... tion is available from the Notre recent concert appearance was music that satisfies the human Dame Center for Continuing as a harpsichord soloist with the Grilled Cheese Sandwiches Education. Bach Festival of Kalamazoo. [continued on page 6]

• ' ·"' • • • • w ~ • ' ..,. ' • • • I • • • • ' • • • • fl • The Observer IThursday, March 13, 1980 -~age 5 After only two hours Jury convicts Gacy CHICAGO (AP) - John W. murders intentionally com­ Gacy Jr., whom prosecutors mitted in connection with devi­ called the ''worst murderer'' in ate sexual assault and taking the nation's history, was found indecent liberties with a minor. guilty in the sex killings of 33 The method of execution in boys and young men yesterday Illinois is by the electric chair. by a Circuit Court jury of seven In his 10 minutes of instruc­ men and five women. The jury tion, Garripo had reminded the deliberated only one hour and jurors that a defendant is 50 minutes. presumed innocent until proven The former building contrac­ guilty beyond a reasonable tor was convicted of 33 counts doubt, and had told them they of murder and of taking inde­ should not consider the fact that cent liberties with a minor and Gacy did not testify in reaching deviate sexual assault. Both their verdicts. those latter charges stemmed Piest was 15 when he disap­ from the disapperance of 15- peared in December 1978, and year-old Robert Piest. prose~u~ors said he was Gacy' s The verdicts were read by the last v1ct1m. clerk of the court while Gacy Prosecutors said in closing sat without expression, staring arguments that while Gacy straight ahead. obviously was mentally dis­ When he was taken from the turbed, there was ample evi­ Der!lo"!strating that domers have th_eir share of artt~tic ability_ .. Hanna Storen puts the court, his lips were clamped dence that he planned the fimshtng touches on her latest creatton. [Photo by Mtk.e Btgley]. and he walked briskly under killings, knew what he was heavy guard. doing, and should be convicted. Judge Louis B. Garripo of Cook County Circuit Court asked each of the jurors, who were selected six weeks ago in Rockford, 75 miles northwest of Ford jury delays , Chicago, if they heard the verdict and if it "now is your verdict." prosecution sees hope In each case, the jurors replied "Yes." · WINAMAC IN (AP) - The cided." Garripo told the jurors to vigil for a verdict in Ford Motor Lawyers for the state said return at 1:30 J?.m. . today, Co.'s reckless homicide trial they believe the longer the jury Gacy's 38th btrthday, for a entered its third day yesterday is out, the better it is for the hearing on whether to impose with the prosecution finding prosecution,__ because it indi­ the death penalty. room for hope in the jury's cates there is a good possibility Illinois' capital punishment delay. of a conviction or a hung jury. law covers crimes that were ''They are obviously hung up ''We were always optimis­ committed later than June 21, at this point, " said Terry K1ely, tic,'' said deputy prosecutor 1977. The necessary time a DePaul University law pro­ Terry Shewmaker, reached at element is present in a dozen of fessor who has been assisting the Bass Lake cottage where the murders, which the prose­ the prosecution in the trial,· the the prosecutors have been stay­ cution said began in 1972. first time a corporation has ing. "People thought we were A number of specific types of faced criminal charges in a crazy at indictment time. Then crimes are covered by the law' product liability case. "Other­ they thought we got smarter. including multiple murders and wi!le, they would have de- We've had to be optimistic to go this far. " The jury of seven men and five women returned to the Security tight Pulaski County Courthouse shortly after 9 a.m. EST and after a brief session with Circuit Judge Harold R. Staffeldt re­ Shah to undergo surgery sumed their deliberations. At midday, they took tome for a PANAMA CITY, PANAMA Paitilla Hospital answered lunch break and prepared to go (AP) - Doctors and officials reporters' queries with the .me back to their work. worked under tight security sentence they have been in­ Staffeldt has said that he will yesterday to prepare a local structed to give: "We know not inquire about the jury's hospital ward for a delicate nothing." progress unless the delibera­ spleen operation on the Senior hospital officials met tions go beyond five or six days. deposed Shah of Iran, medical behind closed doors earlier this The panel has met for about 12 sources said. week to plan the operation, one hours since Monday. The sources, who asked not source said, and others said an Around 5 p.m., the jurors to be identified, said Paitilla Iranian woman doctor who sent a message to Staffeldt that Hospital - a private Pana­ accompanies the Shah almost they wanted to continue deli­ manian clinic - was declared a everywhere had visited the berating into the night. Earlier security area by authorities and Paitilla Hospital recently. in the afternoon, they told the SENIOR BAR presents all employees and medical Tourists on Contadora Island judge that if they hadn't personnel were ordered not to said the Shah played his daily reached a verdict by 5 p.m., talk about what they were two hours of tennis last week­ they :wanted to go home for the doing. end, and earlier in the week evemng. A New York spokesman for found a court opponent in Interviewed in his chambers, the deposed monarch said Shah former King Constantine of on Tuesday, Staffeldt said that Fabulous Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's Greece, toppled from his throne regardless of the outcome of the spleen is inflamed, enlarged in a 1967 coup. · trial, the case has sent a and probably associated with a The Shah fled Iran fourteen message to American industry. tumor, and that he will undergo months ago during the final "Maybe no precedent setting 50's an operation soon to have it bloody days of the revolution will be done here, but I think removed. _ headed by the religious there is a messa~e," the judge The former monarch now strongman Ayatollah Ruhollah said. "That 1s, that they lives on Panama's Contadora Khomeini, which culminated in (corporations) ought to refrain Night Island. His last medical check­ the establishment of an Islamic trom doing some of the things up a week a~o showed he had Republic in Iran. they do and have. done. severe anem1a, and low white The Shah has been living "To me, it's gotten pretty cell and platelet blood counts, under political asylum in serious. You hear on the this the New York spokesman said. Panama. But the Iranian national news about the scan­ friday Dr. Benjamin Kean, the government asked on January dals in international deals. The Shah's personal physician, 23 for his extradition, accusing message here, is that people march 14th refused to disclose the date of him of ordinary crimes. The don't hke that, and rightly so, i the operation for security Iranian authorities have 60 days think,'' he added. reasons, the spokesman said. to present the necessary Staffeldt, who celebrated his The spokesman quoted Kean documents required under 61st birthday last week, said his featuring as saying the operation would Panama's complicated extra­ court docket was clear through be "hazardous" and that the dition laws. today . if the extra time is Shah would require major blood Panamanian officials say it c needed for deliberation. dance contest transfusions during and after ould take years to clear the case "It's been long and complex. the operation. through the courts, and I don't want them to hurry," As preparations continued, expressed doubts that the Shah the judge said. ''I want them to costumes will also be rewarded employees and officials at will be extradited. make sure. " The Observer Thursday, March 13, 1980 -page 6 SUMMER JOBS Goulet speaks on economics by Patty Sheehan second more spiritual state­ continued, "after a period of All ant~rnshap~ arC" lo..-atrJ Slr.o~IER l!\1'ERNSJJII'S OtJ\Ul.INt UATI.: • ment concerned ethical contra­ in lt.;a~ohanaton D.C. 19HU S:ou prn, '1ard1 13, I!HW time, it increases inequalities, The economics of our abun­ dictions: "Only through ) esus Sl'tCII:lCATIONS not decreases them. A reward UthJcr.tra.Ju.1tC ___,G"'-'ora,~,uo_,.,to___ _,_,Po~SI'-"ti'-"'on"------dant society and the alterna­ Christ can all ethical contradic­ system works with a lot of

lt.LW. AM, f;con, ~lDA, Econ flcrsonnsl !ot.:&n.1~cmcnt Arcu tives available for Chrisitans tions be resolved in harmony.'' losers," he noted. I. .\nn. 05-17 l'sych ~------were the subjects of a lecture by Goulet said that as humans, America is also under the II. Lit.. Develop new •ll:t. info syncm, gt.p we must learn to live with .!._ Opcntc Rosgyrcs Acq, Sys. Dr. Denis Goulet in Carroll Hall illusion that it is a developed last night. contradictions in the realm of country. Technical and econo­ '·..,"·... [~. •._.· '-----;--ru_bl_._""_"_· ____''"_•_'-_'_~=_· ---.!!.':~!:.!.7l!.~!!!.i~r'-ic-•l_r_••_·c_•r_ch_•_•d__ _ Goulet is a pioneer in the economic order. But "manag­ mic developments are only '' II.E.tc. ing contradictions in an abun­ 1 2ncJ yr ~IS .Ene1nocring illld related ethics of development and has indicators or yardsticks'' to · .\nn .m:.JS Engineering •stud1os 01nd s~y~ written several articles and dant society'' does not mean ends that appear inadequate, H. Lit. 2nd yr. NS :surveys of space books in an effort to identify the pretending they don't exist, for ~-"""'- os~ll Goulet commented. ~r:!!!::*~; r issues which have become cru­ the variety of contradictions is Goulet asserted that the ina­ Bur-eau or I ln&ravane li Students wuh trllinina/exp. Jncvolop charac:t.orhat1on cial for Christian participants in complex, he noted. dequacy of models of develop­ 6 · Pr•nt inF In thcTa:Jl analysis 1mothods for prlnt1ng tnks the development debate. He Goulet said that the American ment stems from a distorted Federal t:.cr,cncy I 7 t:.na;r .• M:Jth, /vou~ous as~.t&niiCnt~ wtth soci~ty suffers from a "disjunc­ · Hct. Acencr · Phystc~ scntor ongtnccr has also done extensive field image of "the good life." ' work in Algeria, Lebanon, Bra­ tion of realms;" a tendency for Evidence of economic growth K.tltOit.tl ...... l. naol, f.lul11. lncv. protocols fo~ &lllllltmiz.ntion 1!1. of lira It,. ~bcroluol. 1w m:~larua ~porazottc ant.tgans zil and Spain. economy, politics, and culture accompanies a lack of informa­ I Dept. or S•·'· BBA llu~ Ad11o, t:..:cl' Gathcrtng factual, h.tstorlcal At present, Goulet is an to follow different rules to reach tion on who benefits from the P._Jr.:aasport.l.llon l'ul Sci, .tcon -----rrot !'Jc..o ;,nd Stnti:stieoll data associate fellow of the Overseas diverse goals. This disjunction growth or how it is achieved. r.o.:. ~:-!~:.!::; ~I[, f.U. 10 Assist senior inl.lustrial IO.lJfCu:c on incor Developmental Council and stymies any agreement on es­ ''Society reinforces the accep­ holds the O'Neil Chair of Edu­ sential human values. 01?1. V.ac~a..:y Srs. A...:ct tance of solutions given by ll.•l.J Fln cationforJ u.>tice at Notre Dame. Another significant contradic­ experts or elites, thereby forc­ ON, \'~c.1acy ''I'm not here to tell funny - tion was the difference between ing the common citizen to 11.·~ sad stories, but to introduce two the equality of opportunity of­ depend on outsiders, to have no latcrul llc"""ur contrasting statements on th,. fered by an ''abundant society'' self-reliance," he pointed out. 11. Sc-nH:.:c·•-----7------.;------i-'-''-"-'-""------role of conscience and ethical and the equality of results. 1"-:pt. of Labor Goulet suggested possible 1.&. I'Ds. llo. OoiS contradiction,'' Goulet explain­ Goulet reasoned that competi­ strategies to change the deve­ tion according to merit would llqJt. of L.:abor Ecoa ' ed. lopment model. In interpreting IS. ros.Xo. 10.! Joum.llls• The first statement was a not achieve good results if it the art the politcs as the skill in lk-pt. of o\rwy .... ------Trainina in personnel •at. definition of conscience by a was used as an organizing creating new Possibilities , the Jo. rcr.anncl theories cynic: "conscience is that part principal of economy. shaping of adevelopmentmodel rcderoal .\"i.:r.t IOD BIA Pro&rllll Analyst , "If competition is used as H. Y.. ------+-----i------of you that feels bad when the requires "implosion," or the 1_-,_\!f.A ______~~~·~~~~- ltlcctroniu tnalncor rest of you feels good.'' The I motor or springboard,'' Goulet testing of a system of specific human conditions beyond its Socaal Stcunty .... h GS-4 Grade Level limitations, he said. 19. ~··· •• Social Security Econa.ics Econoaic-s GS-S, 7and 9 Grade LCve I Thus, Christians have a two­ zo. Ad.••- •z . .. Cage fold commitment to become lld.•rstate Seniors Gradu.mte A!>Si!l.t regional unaJ:!in~ ''co-creators with Christ as 11. ~rce t~l~l Student!!. dire-ctor Locat i•: OicaJO makers of history and witnesses (continued from page 4] ture with his simple attitude to transcendence. '' toward life. "I am here. I have Goulet gave an interesting needs like light nois2, heat. We no regrets. I welcome whatever need furniture music, music image of the function of the happens next." United States in creating new Anyone interested in the organization of a which takes into consideration After his lecture was complet­ economic possibilities. He li­ the environment, music that ed, many members of the kened America to an oyster can fill embarassing silences as audience asked him to play that, under the right conditions, well as neutralize street noises some "furniture music" on the can produce a pearl from a that inhibit conversations," piano that had been positioned speck of sand. ~[)-§~£ Cage said. on stage but which he had not He said our society can "se­ Cage gave his account of the touched throughout the even­ relationship of the artist to the crete social gastric juices to ing. Cage coyly explained that rough stones of dissent forming audience. "I am not good or while Satis was very skilled at fll~ £liJI3 bad. I merely oscillate. A child smooth pearls of conformity." it, he was not. "However, I can Goulet's lecture was the third has natural wisdom; experience at least make some chair noi­ please contact Jack Riley at 1062 is a form of paralysis. Enter­ in a series in conjunction with ses," he said. As he began to the course "Christians for So­ tainers should be envied but not drag a stool across the stage, cial ) ustice'' offered at Saint as much as the listener. That is the audience went wild. Mary's. why it is easier to bore than entertain. Consequently I am obliged to finish my lecture one hour early." According to Cage, "A stu­ de~t needs great patience, the ... Keg rejection "HOW CAN I pauence of a horse, huge patience to put up with his MAKE MY LIFE teacher. This is because the teacher will ask you questions (continued from page I] main,'' Roche said. ''It can still WORTHWHILE?" which he knows the answers to be meaningful and I intend to and you don't. But you have the abstained. The six anti-keg continue using it and I'm sure right to remain silent," Cage votes were cast by two admini- Paul Riehle (SBP elect) expects strators and four rectors. to use it next year." 0... wny may be to live within "'- Auguatln ..n F111temlty. said. When you come to live with ua, you obMrn and For music lessons, Cage stres­ Roche blamed the proposal's Conyers is less enthusiastic. ~te In our community life for M¥e1111 y.. 111 before sed ample preparation and defeat on campus rectors. ''If the CLC continues as it --*"'a a fln~~l commltmenl You obaerve that we are a specific time allotments. ''Do ''The rectors--that's where has gone for the past three rwllgloua community following the charlam of St. your exercises, blow your nose, 1 the problem is," Roche said. years, I, as the only member Auguatlne and "that together and with one h.. rt In and make sure your hands ''They're the ones that voted· · other than the Dean of Students brotherhood and ..,.ritual frlendahlp, we INk and worahlp aren't filled with jelly. The time against it in the CLC.'' who has endured all three God and that we ..bor In the MrYice of the people youy choose for your lesson "Was I disappointed? Yes." years, will not blame the body of God." We MrYe In colleget, high achoola, parishes, should also coincide with the Roche admitted. ''There had for voting itself out of exist­ foreign missions, campus mlnlatrl.. , retruta, hoapltela time your teacher chooses to been lots of good arguments in ence,'' Conyers wrote. and military chapl•lnclea. teach it," Cage urged. "Many favor of kegs, but I haven't seen Roche conceded that the WANT MORE INFORMATION? CONTACT: students go through school one good one against it other anti-keg decision was a setback, Reverend John P. Stack, O.S.A. without every laying eyes on than that the rectors don't want however. Villanova University their teachers. Teachers and it--and that's not a good "It (keg proposal defeat) is P.O. Box 338 students were put on earth to reason." frustrating in that it makes Vi111n0V11, PA 19086 come in contact with each other When asked if he concurred clear sense to me to do it (have (2161 525-6612 - at least sometimes," he said. with growning campus senti- kegs), but now it can't be ~me ______On the eternal relationship of ment that the CLC be discon- done," Roche said. "But it Add~L-______the water to the ocean, Cage tinued or changed, Roche (kegs) is just one of many Ctty______~SU!t. ______,.,Zip. ______said that "the sea is full of strongly defended his previous concerns to me, and to say just Sohool or Ooo. Age water. Why we'll never know." position. because you can't get kegs you Phone Cage closed his complex lee- "No, the CLC should re- quit, that's childish."

administration of either institution. The news is reponed as accurately and Editorial Board and Department Managers -The Observer_ as objectively as possible. Editorials Editor-in-chief ...... Rosemary Mills Sports Editor ...... Mark Perry represent the opimon of a majority of Managing EJitor...... Diane Wilson Features Editor ..... Kathleen Connelly &x Q Noire Dame, IN 46556 the Editorial Board. Commentaries, Editoriaj Editor...... Ann Gales Photo Editor...... Doug Christian opinions and letters are the views of Senior Copy Edzlor ...... M. Onufrak The Observer is an independent their authors. Column space is avail­ Executive News Etiitor ...... Mike Lewis Business Manager...... Steve Odland newspaper published by the students ~ 'Jie to all members of the community, News Editor...... Mark Rust Production Manager ..... ) ohn McGrath_ of the du lac • •,d the free expression of varying News Editor...... Mike Shields Advertising Manager .... M. Holsinger and Saint Mary's College. It does not opinions on campus, through letrers,is SMC News Editor.. '·· .... Margie .Brassil Controller...... Kevin Manion. ~essarily reflect the policies of the encouraged. Circulation Ma11ager ...... Greg Hedges

.. _...... - ~------• ,

Thursday, March 13, 1980 -page 7

music; Howe makes you feel it. And are incapable of presenting subtle band that doesn't fall into this Musicviews that makes the fact that the artist is aura shifts necessary to create fine category has taken their name from comp!etely self taught all the more shades of musical moods, but Howe's just those type of people - PRE­ amazmg. virtuosity transcends this limitation TENDERS . . Howe pl~ys l?edal steel, banjo, and expands the orchestra's emotive s_ltar, electnc. gu1t3;rs of all descrip­ capabilities, rather than reduces If you thmk Deborah Harry is the tiOns, acoustic guitars, mandolins them. motivating force behind Blondie, you pedal effects, moog synthesizers, and should give alisten to Chrissie Hynde bass guitar to create a multitude of Rumors are flying that Howe will take the -Pretenders through their styles and motifs. The whole album is soon retire from Yes to produce more paces. It's obvious that she is in total solo works. If The Steve Howe Album control, and she lets you know it right the best experiment into the overall is any indication of this artists ability capabilities of guitar playing, of any that would be a wise move. ' from the start. "Precious" leads -off type, that I have ever heard. side one, and its clear that that is The best cut is "Pennants", which something that the band and/ or Miss is more in line with Howe's typically Tim Sullivan Hynde is not. You'll never hear this electrifying progressive style. But the song on the radio without some clever quick-tempo tune is injected with a editing which would render the song more positive feel than his technolog­ ~****************** helpless. ical experimentation with Yes. The The only complaint I have about song is not only progressive and the whole album is the production on different, it is also fun. "Stop Your Sobbing.'' Nick Lowe There is more fun with ''The The Steve Howe s~epped in to produce this song and C~mtinental," which is reproduced h1s name is prominently displayed on Album w1th a Gibson open-body jazz guitar the album cover in order to be --an unusual upbeat twist with a impressive. Although I have great Steve Howe normally low-keyed instrumental; respect for Lowe's "talent he un­ and on ''Diary of a Man Who wisely tries to make the Pretenders Vanished," where the bass line, fit his mold and fails. The song (Atlantic) percussion, rhythm, and intertwining sounds out of place. leads are all produced with different ~teve Howe, progressive rock gui­ effects from the same Fender Strata­ Outside of that, the first side flows tarist par excellence and lead axe caster guitar. smoothly from one song to another -man for the space group Yes, has "All's a Chord," the record'smost with "Up the Neck" and "The Wait': finally crafted a well-rounded inves­ ambitious piece, employs eight dif­ coming off extremely well. tigation in_to the_ musical capabilities ferent guitars: moog, piano, arid of that stnnged mstrument. On this, drums; m a multi-faceted rhapsody On side two, ''Brass in Pocket'' is a his second and best solo album that is fragmented, but not incompre­ pretty catchy tune, and "Private (simply titled The Steve Howe Al­ hensi?le, and certainly a wordiy Pretenders Life" comes across very hauntingly. bum), Howe goes beyond the limits e~pen!llent. "Ca~tus Boogie" is a I really like ''Mystery Achievement,'' of Yes' computerized sound and mce httle countnfied ragume ditty Pretenders may?e because in some ways it explores the subtle colors if modern that sets toes-a-tappin'. And "Sur­ remmds me of some of my favorite and seventeenth-century classical ar­ face _Tension" is a tear-jerking ro­ (Sire) Talking Heads material. rangements, the bouncy joy of rag­ mantiC melody performed on mellow This is one of the best debut time ~nd the _emotive powers of Spanish guitar. albums that I have heard. in a long acoustic expresswn. Most interesting are "Double The race is on. All those who waited time, and it certainly is worth your There is only one way to describe Rondo", and Vivaldi's "Concerto in while to check it out if you're even the the ~ivers_e textures of sound presen­ D (Second Movement)'', both of in the shadows until the New Wave showed its staying power have now least bit interested· in the current ~ed m ~h1s well-ro~nded recording: which mix a 59-piece orchestra and music scene. Don't buy just any 1mpress1Ve, sheer vrrtuosity. Not only Howe playing a classic Les Paul rushed out their copycat albums, flooding the local record bins with copycat, but the Pretenders; they're does Howe play difficult riffs and guitar. The results of this interming­ for real. measures with apparent mechanical lingof classical orchestration and lots of trash. As usual, this junk will ease, but he also creates a heartfelt modern electric are surprisingly suc­ turn over a fast buck and then mood as he runs deftly along the cessful. A major complaint of classi­ disappear, but for the time being, fingerboard. You don't just hear the cal 2nthusiasts is that electric guitars you've gotta be on your guard. One A1ichaeli1.1Corbel an Interview with ArtistMolly Woulfe " ... she is ... capable of a range of ASPECTS OF BLACK CULTURE: emotions: brutal, angerrwry satire, '!Hollywood is now stealing our and visionary serenity." --a critic styles. We h.;ive a style called concerning Gwendolyn Brooks. corn-rowing, which goes back hundreds of years ... and, now, if you In 1923, on the south side of app<;ar in th!?,~e elab,otate, d}ffic_ult­ Chicago, seven year oldGwendolyn looking beautiful bratds, you re JUSt Brooks often watched people around likely to be hailed as a ''Bo Derek." I her, trying to "delve into their want to tell . you that nothing darkest secrets, and put them down infu.riates us Black sisters more than on paper. It terrified my mother, that/' when I started writing about the Mi\.RRIAGE: ''Poetry -is . not neighbors,'' Brooks recalls, smilin~. evel'ything in the worl4to me.l knew At age 11, her poems appeared m ...... from the ?egjnning I ~}Vould. want to community newspapers, and when get marned and have children .. .I she was 16, appeared in anthologies. wanted my body ro do everything that Now, at 62, Brooks is a wife, mother, it had indicated it should do.'' Pulitzer Prize winner, and the Poet F?\.VORITE WRflERS: "Ldon't Laureate of Illinois, as well as . a have a single poet, but I like lines part-time lecturer. (She presents 50 here., episodes there.,J enjoy Eliot, I - I lo 62 poetry readings at colleges, enj?f:reading Chaucef~-he has such a I halls, and prisons a year,_ between interest in seeing p~ople as they September and May.) really are~-and I like Laoston In a private interview before her Hughes. Yve certainly been Tuesday poetry reading for Women's influenced by his_ballads and blues. Opportunity Week, the slight And Sterling Brown and Robert poetess, in a simple denim dress, Hayden ... '' discussed a variety of topics pertain­ FUTURE GOALS: ''I'd like to ing to the Black experience in clarify the style I have... write poems A~erica, proving the critic's obser­ that Blacks ·· can apprehend. I'm vatton true; interested in Blacks deciding their POETRY: "Poetry is life distilled. salvation is through their own efforts, Whatever is a life material is a proper and their young. . material for poetry. And my own UFE: "So far as I know, this is all poetry deals not only with love and the time I'II be on this beautiful death, but flowers and trees and people feel are quite. unpleasant, and with some of . those white women worl.d, so I'm really looking at it. And mountains ... with garbage and have dreary conclustons. If you look lib~ers, and those women really hate we ·need to look at each other." abortions ... anything else that some closely, you'll see that my celebration their men ... Black WOdlen cannot Brooks still resides in Chicago, people might say .are not the proper is black." afford to be separated from- their with her husband. Besides numerous subjects for poetry. WOMEN's LIBERATION: "I men. That's a di.,isionary tactic that volumes of poetry, she has written a "I celebrate life, even when I'm favor ERA, but I do: have this caution . cannot be toleratt, .. ,whatshouldwe , . nov¢J,. Maud Martha,_ and her auto­ writing about subj,ects that some for Blackwomen. I've been onpanels do out here alone?" · · · biography, Report .frpm Part On({. The Observer Thursday, March 13, 1980 -page 8 ACE lectures continue VISTA deputy director to speak by Roberta Bottei Explorations (ACE). those with a social action inter- By providing lecturers on est, after having worked with Jeanne Carney, deputy di­ experiences and possible the J?eople." · rector of Volunteers in Service careers in volunteer services lmtiative for this project to to America (VISTA) will speak plus the development of ACE, centrallyoffer to students infor­ about this one-year domestic the central library of alternative marion, speakers, and referrals volunteer service program career information and referral came not from the organiza­ Thursday, March 13, at 4:15 located in room 222 of the dons looking for helo but the p.m. in the Library Auditorium. Administration building, the students themselves, Willemin, A native of Butler, Pa., and a Placement Bureau is attempt- noted. Greatly increased stu­ graduate of the University of ing to "help students on the dent interest in volunteer ser­ North Carolina with a de~ree in road of develoJ?ment, to gain a vices began' 'with pure involve­ classical Greek, Carney IS also broad perspective on careers, to ment in VietNam, when stu­ deputy director of the ACTION enhance their educational pro- dents decided that they wanted Education and Service Learning cess, and assist students in to use their energy to help our Pro~ram. She has held this getting to the point where they people through peaceful position along with her VISTA can confidently make decisions means ... instead of exerting ef­ duties since October 1979. As on how they want to spend the fort in a war they felt was .- one of the founders of the rest of their lives,'' according to immoral and unjust.'' Student National Center for Service bureau director Richard Wil- interest in alternative careers Learning, sh.e helps to admini­ lemin. has continued to increase, and ster approximately 5000 se­ Wille min spoke enthusiastic- in ''facing up to this student condary and post-secondary ally about this combination need," the ACE library was schools in the United States, speakers-ACE project, saying, recently established to help working with students who ''There are so many opportuni- pool university resources and participate in curriculum­ ties for student placement in guidance information on alter­ related projects of service to voluntary services, at any level native careers. their communities. of interest and for any length of Being organized by recent Before joining ACTION and time. Notre Dame students are Notre Dame graduate Tim becoming involved in two of from such backgrounds, along. Beatv: ACE is presently . in that organization's three with the things they see on operations and features ma1or branches, VISTA and Service campus as far as service to the volunteers service directones Learning (the third group being community and each other, that for groups working both in the the Peace Corps), Carney first they naturally think in terms of United States and abroad, peri­ The ongoing construction promises new factlities, but in the served as a special assistant to service to one another. There's odicals, books, descriptive in­ meantime means slushy detours for students. [Photo by john the associate director of Job just something about Notre formation fro{Il the organiza­ Macor]. Corps offices of the Office of Dame that brings out the good tions themselves, and by the Economic Opportunity in in people ... and a high percent- end of the semester will include Was?ington, D,.C. She later age of Notre Dame and Saint applications for all major volun­ received appomtment as a Mary's students go into volun- tary services or~anizations. ATTENTION management intern to VISTA. tary service." Willemin believes that "the VISTA is a federally funded Working directly in a com- history of Notre Dame students andatorvtheerleadinsz: meetine: one-year volunteer program munity is one important "out- is that they've always been withm the United States. let to serve mankind," but highly involved ... and exploring THURSDAY MARCH 13 .. 1980 Sponsoring organizations invite Willemin observed that work- alternative careers gives them a 'Th volunteers into low income ing one's way up into manage- chance to serve others by doing areas to help the community ment positions 10 these volun- something other than what is members help themselves. tary service organizations ''can re~arded as the traditional 8 to At present approximately be important opportunities for 5 Job." 4000 AmeriCans at least 18 HEY JUNIORS!!! years of ag_e are involved in VISTA's efforts {o help com­ munities to improve themselves in many areas, including social Alumnae Seminar examines lffiffiEDIATEL Y ------~ organization and services, SIGN UP FOR YOUR economic development, health and nutrition, legal rights, post -graduation lifestyles YEARBOOK PORTRAITS housing and education. VISTA volunteers use their energies to by]ohn Kelly This became especiallx.._neces­ CALL35570RSTOP BY assist low-income people in sary, she said when at 9'"""months finding a place in American Various viewpoints about the the baby mistook the society where they can deter­ working world were expressed baby sitter for her mother. 2C mine their own destinies. by Notre Dame alumnae at the Ellen Syburg, BA'76, who is Carney's visit will include a third annual Alumnae Seminar now the Associate Director of tour of the campus, a press Saturday afternoon. The Admissions at Lake Forest Col­ LAFORTUNE conference with the local speakers discussed their pro­ lege, complained that her ad­ media, a private meeting with fessional and family lives after vancement is stifled because university president Fr. Theo­ graduation. there is still the .. fear that a dore Hesburgh, and will culmi­ Sr. Miriam ] ones, Assistant woman will get married nate with her talk in the Library Provost, said that the seminar pregnant and quit. ' Auditorium at 4:15p.m. was held so · chat ND women Syburg, whose position re­ PLEASE DO Carney's day at Notre Dame, could find out what kind of quires extensive travel, main­ planned through the Placement career and family future they tained that for a woman ''tra­ Bureau, is the second in the will have by askmg other wo­ velling is not all that fun." She IT NOW!! series of visits on the Volunteer men who have already been described trips to lesser - Services schedule, These through ND. known cities where her unfamil­ speakers are being arranged in Loretta Castaldi, '76 BBA iarity with the area confined her conjunction with the newly Finance who is now a public to her hotel room. undertaken Alternative Career accountant for Peat, Marwick & Mary Philbin, B.A. '76, a­ Mitchell told the meeting that greed that it is difficult for a "being a woman has been woman to travel alone. Accord­ nothing but helpful" to her ing to Philbin, when she is on SMCoffers career. men will not argue with the road she eats as soon as the her as they would with another restaurants open to avoid crowd man, because that's the way because she is uncomfortable summer ''mom taught them to treat eating alone. women,'' Castaldi commented. She says that she has been able to use the double standard to day camp her own advantage. Paula Smith, '77 BA socio­ Sculpture The Early Childhood Devel­ logy and the only married opment Center at Saint Mary's member of the panel is current­ will once again offer a day cam.P ly working as an administrator exhibit program this summer. Th1s in a South Bend nursing home. recreational program is design­ She stated that her relative ed for children of the Notre youth causes more problems Dame/Saint Mary's community than her sex. continues from ages three to five and six Smith, who is also a mother to nine. Both full- and part­ Harold Langland's one-man · did not give up her job with the bronze sculpture exhibit, entitl­ time enrollment schedules are birth of her child. This situa­ available. Anyone interested in ed "Reflections" will continue tion, she said, forces her to in the Women's Art League, registration information should cancel some social engage­ call Terri Kosik at 284-4150 or upper level gallery through ments so that she can spend March 30. 291-3875. time with her baby after work. I I - The Observer Thursday, March 13, 1980 -page9 With two periods gone in this two-game, total goals series, and whispered in his ear, able to wait to get back on the With the University of the Irish and the Wolverines "You've sparked the team." ice,

March 14th Moreau Hall rm. 232 Spm ... DiSabito March 15th Moreau Hall rm 144

[continued from page 12] ''There were no traffic laws were American, too, most often Admission Free that any of us could figure out,'' at the weekly Church service we ·Shah, but we did receive a gift recalls DiSabato with a labored had. No matter where we went from him. It was a painted smile. ''As we rode around the in Iran, there were always men everywhere and no women. Thursday, wooden plate with a picture of country in this 16-seat bus, we 1. -----.--Corby's __ · I . the Shah and his family and he were trying to figure out the The very few Iranian women we March 13,1980 had autographed it." odds of having a wreck with caught a glimpse of always had a veil over their face and - : I I "At the age of 16, I didn't people making U-turns and the I I ·- ---·- --- _ _~. ___ ::.:r_l really know who the Shah was, seemed frightened or shy." 7pmto 3am like everywhere. Somehow we ! but wherever we went people made it safely.". DiSabato still looks back ...,.._...... ,.,.,,__::.~ ------...... ---- chanted his name, almost like fo_ndly on his experience, but DiSabato couldn't under­ with reservations. they worshipped him. For stand how the Americans he did awhile I really thought he was see could stand to live there. ''Those three weeks were worth some religious figure." "Most of the Americans a year's experience in high school, both culturally and ath­ 3 drafts I $.1 "It's really hard to believe there worked in the oil industry. letically.'' ~ow much opinion has changed In fact, a couple we met offered m five years. " some of us jobs. But everyone "But given the opportunity, I seemed depressed or sad or doubt that I'd ever go back. And many of Iran's customs Even before the current situa­ FRIDAY -MOLSON 75¢ seemed strange to the teenage something. ''The only women we saw tion arose, there was something wrestler. out of balance which me skepti­ cal. I'm thankful for the sign up now for experience, but I'd just as soon Corby's Arm Wrestling Team Spo,rt~, Bri stay right where I am." Volleyball team takes 2nd in state STAR I WITH ACOMPANY THAT IS GROWING AS FAST AS YOU ARE

GROWTH (volume in$ millions) We can't use career paths or promotion timetables. Advancement is based solely on achievement. not seniority or politics. That's the way we have grown, and that's the way we'll continue to grow. Rapid inCreases in responsibility mean rapid increases in compensation. This won't impress you until you discover that our starting salaries are even higher than those of many Fortune 500 corporations.

On March 19. we will tell you more about ourselves and available positions in a presentation at 7:00 p.m. in the Shamrock Room of the Morris Inn.

All individuals interested in performing in the following capacities should make a point of attending. PRODUCT MANAGER FINANCIAL ANALYST MANAGEMENT TRAINEE

March 20th is PROGRESSIVE'S DAY on campus. At this time O'Hanlon's Notre Dame Men's Volley ball Team finished we would like to discuss with you the significant opportunities second in the Indiana State Championships held this past Proyressive Companies is a family of specialized insurance available to qualified individuals. Contact the Placement Office weekend at Ball State University. Notre Dame defeated companies which provide insurance coverage for owners of to ensure you are on our schedule. recreational vehicleS, personal Bl,ltomobiles. and commercial teams from Earlham College, Indiana-Purdue at Fort Wayne transports. Our friends who are erecting this bar chart couldn't and Purdue before falling to highly ranked Ball State in the think of a simpler way to tell you: We're growing rapidly and finals. Ball State was one of last year's NCAA fmal four and we intend to follow this pace in the future. is currently ranked eighth in the nation. This weekend the We've succeeded because we have been highly innovative in a first-place Irish return to league play at Ball State, where an stodgy industry. We are young- our President is in his forties. and the median age of our senior managers is in the thirties. • eight-team field will compete. The next home match for] ohn We are resourceful- we have discovered highly profitable O'Hanlon's squad is an exhibition game to be played at ways to service markets others have ignored. We are ·progre07/e . demanding- we ask a lot from our people becaus~ the growth Angela Athleuc Facility against Drake Tuesday night. The we're planning takes considerable effort, intelligence and match will be the best three out of five games and will begin dedication. compan1e.r at 8 p.m. We are an equal opportuntty employer M I F.

_._- .. ,,..,,...... ~.IIi------. -..... --;··· - ...... , ...... The Observer Thursday, March 13, 1980 -page 10

Molarity by Michael Molinelli Inter hall INTERHALL TRACK i=Rf:D, DID 'YOU Team standings: £NrJ'tJY YOUR TFVP Dillon 38 pts. Holy Cross 6 7tJ PARtS? Keenan 12 Stanford 4 Zahm 9 Morrissey 3 Flanner 6 Howard 1 60-yard low hurdlas-1. Arden Dohman, Dillon, 7.34. 2. Mark Franko, Stanford, 7.50. 3. Tom Hofman, Dillon, 7.66. 60-yard dash-1. Dave Divis, Keenan, 6.77. 2. Joe Wltchger, Dillon, 6.78. 3. Mark Franko, Stanford, 6.83. 440-yard dash-1. John Lauer, Dillon, 54.4. 2. Bill Hochul, Zahm, 55.12. 3. John Goetz, Keenan, 57.57. 880-yard run-1. Bill Dwyer, Flanner, 2:03.9. 2. Thomas Kellenberg, Zahm, 2:09.52. 3. Ron Paquette, Howard, 2:09.76. Mila run-1. Dan Sullivan, Holy Cross, 4:39. 2. Ted Gutman, Keenan, 4:43. 3. Shane Little, Holy Cross, 4:54. 4-lap ralay-1. Dillon (Dana Crowley, Mark Nasca, Joe Wltchger, Ralph Solar­ ski), 1:21.95. 2. Dillon, 1:22.36. 8-lap ralay-1. Dillon (Paul Fahrenbach, Mike Burke, Quinn Stepan, John Mer­ lock), 2:58.2. Doonesbury by Garry Trudeau lock), 2:58.2. 2. Keenan, 3:05.7. Long jump-1. Jerry lgoe, Dillon, 19', 3W'. 2. Matt Crooks, Morrissey, 18'9 I THINK 7H£ 8{X)K a/HAT f)() a/5/.l, 51/'-JCE 3/8". 3. Dan Miller, Dillon, 18'8 3/4". C4tl.-5 FOR. A 5MALL. IA/H51?£'() (Ji, H£ /A£NT 'I()} MffAN, /?JCX./5 A High jump-R. Westbrook, Dillon, 6'. 2. ceL£8RAT/oN, CHAMF¥6NE? ZEJ<& GO? UPSTAIRS7D 8R£AI< /IJM/3R, 700, D. Dahlstrom, Zahm, 5'10". 3. R. Wack, 1txJN'T )(XI, aM? 65&, THAT'S BR&4KTH£. 7H8 Nf!IAIS? zm's WOR· Flanner, 5'10". • 6/?iiATOF I Nt/A/5 TO / Rl£30 Hf3U Final Regular Season YOU, MJM. RICK. 8£3 A um.e lnterhall Hockey Standings I \ JCAWU5. \ NORTH w L T Grace 5 0 1 Stanford 4 1 1 Flanner 4 2 0 Keenan 2 3 1 Zahm 1 3 2 Off-Campus 1 4 1 Cavanaugh 1 5 0 SOUTH Alumni 6 0 1 Dillon 5 o 2 Pangborn 4 2 o Morrissey 3 3 1 , Sorin 2 5 0 ACROSS 32 Ranchero 61 Inscribed 25 Drive Fisher 1 5 Share of rope pillar forward Howard/St. Ed's 0 7 0 money 35 Epithet for 63 Citrus 26 Scottish Tonight's Playoffs The Daily Crossword 5 Overseas Hemingway fruit landowner message 37 Long time 64 Proficient 29 Require 9:00 p.m. Stanford vs. Alumni 10 Frustrate 38 CIA man 65 Thorough- 30 Completed 10:15 p.m. Dillon vs. Grace 14 Unhappy 42 Silkworm bred horse 31 Picnic Championship Game 15 Shelters 43 USSR range 66 Above intruders 16 Verve 44 Miner's 67 Lads 32 Regretted Sunday, March 16 1:30 p.m. 17 Barren finds 68 Made a 33 Concerning 18 Corrupt 45 Lessening choice 34 Mine Co-Ree Racquetball Doubles 19 Evaluate of hostil­ 69 Latin Amer- entrance Final 20 Attach ity ican worker 35 -over 21 Deed: Fr. 48 -de (gazed Goyette (1183) & Bialek (8050) v. 22 Scatter Janeiro DOWN intently) Onufer (1109) & Dawson (1295) 23 Invoke an 49 Minor Make 36 A Gardner Women's Open Racquetball amendment offenses suitable 39 Slashes 27 Pigpen 55 Vessel 2 Water wheel 40 Nom de Bankiotts (233-1177) v. Bye 28 Name con- 58 Aircraft 3 Emit gleams plume Chopko (8050) v. Gorski (1257) cerned with 59 Site for a 0f light 41 Ruffian Meyers (1263) v. Segal (1448) a rights building 4 Football 46 Hams it up Verhalen (287-0422) v. McGuire law 60 Custom player 47 Small drink (234-6298) of whisky 5 Easily Men's Racquetball Doubles Saml:t!Dals VVednesday'sresul~ remembered 48 Hinder 6 Subside 50 Expel Onufer (1109) & Hatfield (2255) v. Slat! B U S H • E S T 0 P • S H- A f0L 7 Legal paper 51 Rhubarb (1725) & Philbin (1652) A N T E .R 0 u S E ., 0 N A 8 - Yutang 52 Martini Adams (1183) & Goyette (1183) v. S T AN D 0 N C E R EM 0 N Y 9 Superlative item Brown (277-0671) & Gallagher s 0 N. A D A K •s N I P E S suffix 53 Lover boy J, E R 1-D v •s 0 I L- 10 Wide collar 54 Violinist Men's Open Racquetball R E P A I D.M A N D A T E D Isaac 11 Winglike Brown (277-o671) v. Jenlsta 3265) A V A N T. 8 E T A .R A V E 55 Mop 8 A T. S T E A I L K E N 12 Behind Phillips (1628) v. Slat! (1725) E. 56 Timber A D 0 s .R A I N. A G E N T schedule Coughlin (3223) v. Lynch (1185) T E N E M E N T .T R E A T S 13 Was aware wolf Rose (7583) v. Esrig (3235) I-A I A s• p E L 1 s- 21 Perfume 57 No other Philbin (1652) v. Young (1670) E X P E N D. SA N A .T 0 E from petals than Reagan (8375) v. Labinger G R .~ N D S T A N D ~ L A Y S 22 Vessel: 61 Hit show Siefert (232-6052) v. Mysliwiec (8624) AARE.OVINE ONES abbr. sign Mulligan (3285) v. Bell (1575) © 1980 by -N.Y. News Synd. Inc. DYER.NADER ADZE 24 City in 62 Spigot Phillips (1437) v. Trozzolo (3326) All Rights Reserved 3113160 Italy 63 Chop off Raunhorst (6824) v. Shockley (1437) Onufer (1109) v. Disser (277-3845) Lemon (1578) v. Alexander (6774) Riche (3053) v. Hines (3235) Johnston (8630) v. Finn (234-0467) Gallagher (232-7415) v. Derick (1422) WOMEN'S OPPOPPORTUNITY WEE Student lottery for Participants receiving Byes In the first round of play are:

Pierce Fillingham PRESENTS Jackson Butler TED NUGENT Fisher Allston • Shank Strieblch Arvin Pedace appearing April16 8pm ACC Schaefer O'Toole Rev. Corey Hatfield Payne Thomassen ine Gandhi Mean~ Sunday March 16 Basketball

NOTRE DAME (57)--Hicks 1 0-0 2, Spm LaFortune Ballroom Polltiski 3 0-1 6, Matvey 12 6-8 30, Cashman 1 2-2 4, Lally 0 0-2 0, Liebscher 4 Thursday i3 3-411, McManus 11-2 3, Conboy 0 0-0 0, 5 Antolik 0 0-1 0, Jergesen 01-21, O'Brien 0 Tickets 8.00- s7.50 0-1 0. Totals--22 13-23 57.

PACIFIC LUTHERAN (48)--Shelton 3 go on sale Monday March 17 9AM 5-7 11, Krebs 2 0-0 4, Krumm 1 0-0 2, Betts 10 1-2 21, Bishop 1 2-4 4, Ellerston 1 8PM Carroll Halt 0-0 2, Sammons 1 0-2 2, Stakkestad 1 0-0 Student Union Ticket Office or 2, Rasmussen 0 0-0. Totals--20 8-15 48. ACCgate 10 Halftime score--Pacific Lutheran 21, notre Dame 16. Total fouls--Notre Dame '------·I 17, Pacific 23. Fouled out--none. T_h~ Observer Thursday, March ~3, l980:~agt11 --

e e All classified ads must be received by 5:00p.m. • two d!ffS prior f d to the issue in which the ad is run. The Observer office will accept .~Cl~a~s~~~~· ~- ~~~~===r.:==~~~classiti~eds S classifieds mustMon:;;=daythr~ough be pre-paid, Fr~iday,either In1o~:ooa.m~.to person or through5;oo~p.m. the mall.All Got a blank space on your waii?FIII it p · bTo theth guy I met who claims to be my KULP KULP KULP KULP KULP with color basketball action photos. All ersonal S r~A~PY 19th, Ma;sh Barb- Notices palyers, all sizes. Cheap. Not available Love, are the feathers still on your nose? from Ronco or K·Tel. Call 8932. Michel, Katl Coach ------T--1--S - t Felicitations! on attend le Journal d.~ ------TYPING PLUS. Term papers, theses, !SALE 1973 Ford Gran or no por · Ton ete, "An American In Rauen. F t H E ------I k · 1 t d ellow To my Favorite u re oover xec- Sheryl dissertations. Light editing, ghost Red with blac Vlny op an ~ Grosses Bises B-Starr · Howdo you spell relief? SE-C-o-N-0 writing. Literary search, bibli~graphls, laser stripe. Excellent condition. ------' tlvGe: h.· n't wa1·t for this weekend A c E w d'd It? genealogies. Job resume serv1ce. Slid­ 50 000 miles. One-owner. $1200. Call ee-s IZ·ca P·L- - • . e col ach. ! (31,7) 844.2115. (indianapolis) Ceil, d"d 't . t t e it'll be tun!!! Good luck on calculus!! Ing rate scale based on lead time. 1 sincerely hope I I n JUS YP Your Futre Perry Mason Special discounts on full contracts for ------anything dirty in French. You'd better Sony PS-1100 Direct-Drive semi-auto sensor these things!! these and dissertations. aardvard aut­ turntable. Greg 1826. _ Maureen- What did you really do at omatic solutions/p.o. box 1204 46624/ ------Mike Day, Rob, Mike Hickey, Andy, the Howard\ Formal? phone (219) 289-6753. f"Rio"Av-NIGHrA"T-rtiE-NAzz: Mike Pat and rest of Mardi Gras men. The Slave Driver BARRY STEVENS 10·10:30 and RICK Thanks tor making my 20th B·day ------special. · Last chance-NJ club bus has spaces Wanted WALTERS 10':30-? ------Ignore this personal but don't ignore left! Call Chris at 1178 and Kevin at love, the keenan Revue. Tickets Available at 1166 tor reservations. Need Spring Break riders to uauas Teresa area. 272-7930. wh.!;t"~lr~hw;;;;h~h Washington & O'Laughlin Halls Wed. Wedding have m common? Free­ Ps. The bear burns Saturday and Thurs. Morrissey Loan Fund N0 student wheelln'l! Their debut album 115.50) Seventh Floor Flanner- loans $20-$200. Due In one month. ~~~!d~;"N~;k.NJto~~~g now In at the Student Unlor Record ------PUNK ROCK HAPPY HOUR at Brid· One percent interest. Basement of Break. Will share driving and expen­ Store [2nd floor Lafortune) THANKS FOR THE PARTY, IT WAS ses. Call Cori-287-0289. LOADS OF FUN. gets, Fri. March 14 4-8 p.m. PUNK LaFortune. 11:30-12:30 M-F. Last OUTI!I 3 Buds for $1. day tor May grads to apply Is March ------Third McCandless Rj;-;;-;ded t;Buffalo-;r;;t;;;;k · Hey Queen, . 14. Happy 5,th, 6th, 7th ... Call Chris 3136. ------PHILA CLU~ BUS To all interested boxer-wearers, Usa's leaving 5 pm.m Thurs. March 27-to ------Will do typing. Call 287-5162. Neat. phone is really 41-5437. Ne;d-; ride ------M.M. sign up call Bea (161 B) or maria (3803). Accurate.· to-~~hFiorida~WIII Turn me on Dead Man share the usual. Call Bobby 1049. The Sun King ------Thorn Cullum, ------Happy Birthday one day late!!! I A"suMM'E'Ro'PP(iRru'NirvcoM- Morrissey Loan Fund. Last day for Ne;d-;;t;-t:;;;d;~i;"t"h;26th. MoN VENTURE. Lay woman team up undergrads to apply Is March 27. ATTENTION #CGrace: think this calls for a celebration at with Franciscans and sisters of other Share expenses. Jackie 1362. Pizza Hut. How 'bout It? 2-0 grace ha srepeatedly challenge~ communities In prayer, community ------Anyone Interested In cooking classes you to a game of hoops. Why won t and service. There will be a meeting phone "Patsy's Pantry" 272-5640. Ne;d~Wet;;;df";;c;;;;;;;ch you accept. Julie Joyce, 17. 4262. march 13 at 10 p.m. In the Lewis 1 love you dearly, but could never Recreation Room for those interested. sue Kunkel, . marry a hot-shot Senate staffworker. ;;d;jd;t;-o;;;;;;;-s-;;;&r;.k. You fox you!! Happy belated birth- Congrats anyway. ELECT MR. BILL TO UMOC OR Will Share the usual. Call Bob at 1682. TJ For Rent day. M ELSE! Love, Mary "the Monster from on- De-;;;;;t;y--;;eed ;;d;i;Pt;iiad"eij;hia- SLUG GO ster. Harriet, Large 7 bedroom, furnished house, Will share drivjng and expenses. Call 1 hear they're serving sexist ch~s available for rant starting fall classes. Jim 1729, Greg 1757. -