Devine:A soul search ends - Archives

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VOL. XV, NO. 1
an independent student newspaper serving notre dame and saint many's
f
MONDAY, AUGUST 25, 1980
Makeshift quarters found
for St. Edward’s homeless
by John McGrath
News Editor
Ninety-eight St. hdw ard’s
Hall residents will be living in
m akeshift quarters this semes­
ter and their form er hom e lies
in a state of ruin, all victims of a
destructive Ju n e 25 fire which
swept through the building’s
fourth floor and roof.
A lthough damage was exten­
sive, University officials have
decided to proceed with plans
to rebuild the hall. Donald
Dedrick, director of the Phys­
ical Plant, told The Observer
yesterday that reconstruction
of the 98-year-old structure
could begin as early as Oct. 1.
In the interim , 98 o f St.
hdward’s scheduled 124 resi­
dents will be housed in portions
of Grace, Planner, and Columba Halls, according to Fr.
Michael Heppen, director of
housing.
Sixty-six students are to be
lodged in converted study loun­
ges in the two tower dorms.
Twenty of the study lounges in
Grace and Planner have been
prepared to house three or four
students each along with resi­
dent assistants and an assistant
rector from St. h d ’s.
The section of Colum ba Hall
nearest the G ro tto known as
Vincent Hall has been prepared
to house the remaining 32
students and St. hdw ard’s Rec­
tor Fr. Mario Pedi.
“T hey’re going to try to
m aintain their hall spirit,” said
H eppen o f the displaced St.
hd’s residents. H e indicated
that plans are even being made
to field St. hdward’s intram ural
sports team s this year.
Four firemen were injured
while fighting the blaze which
Frosh
across
by Mary Fran Callahan
Senior Staff Reporter
Due to an increased num ber
of freshm en adm itted, coupled
with the sum m er fire at St.
hdward’s dorm itory, overcrow­
ding on campus has em erged as
a problem this fall. To partially
alleviate the crowding, adm in­
istrators have housed 34 fresh­
men at Villa Angela on U.S. 31
and converted study lounges
into student residences on
campus.
University
adm inistrators
have Jeased Villa Angela, a for­
mer residence for brothers
teaching at St. Jo sep h ’s High
School, from the F ort Wayne/
South Bend diocese u n tiljan . 1.
The rationale behind the decis­
ion, according to Villa Angela
rector Delores W ard, is that the
new dorm s under construction
on the N o rth Q uad will not be
started in the upper floors of
the structure. W orkm en who
ironically were in the process of
installing a sprinkler system,
sounded the alarm shortly efore
9 a.m. when they smelled
smoke.
T here was some speculation
that blow torches being used by
the
workm en may_have been
at fault for the blaze.
N o formal loss figure has
been announced pending the
resolution of insurance cover­
age conflicts.
At the height of the fire, ten
pieces of fire equipm ent were at
the scene. The vehicles encoun­
tered some difficulties in ap­
proaching the structure be­
cause of the lack o f an access
road, and some had to run over
bushes to get within reach of
the fire.
hm ployees of the Adminis­
tration Building, a scant 30
ards away, were evacuated at
one point for a short tim e as
flames threatened to spread.
Fr. Pedi was the only person
living in the structure over the
sum m er, and he was in class at
the tim e the fire broke out.
Many of his personal belong­
ings were saved, including his
pet bird, a Moluccan Cockatoo.
Two other prized fixtures of
the hall, a frescoe on the second
floor painted in the late 1800s
and a stained glass window of
Fr. hdward S o rin ,. were also
saved, although water damage
was heavy throughout the
building.
The blaze was brought under
control by approxim ately 11:30
a.m., and University officials
were im mediately forced to
consider options for providing
[continued on page 5]
crowds
U.S. 3
finished and ready for students
until second semester. Adm in­
istrators say they did no t want
to adm it students at mid-year
bu t did not want to have the
dorm s go unoccupied for a
sem ester.
According to Fr.- Michael
H eppen, H ousing director,
freshm en being housed in Villa
Angela are “ enthusiastic” to
com e to N otre Dame. H e de­
clined com m ent, however, on
the m atter of w hether the 34
women had been wait-listed
first and then accepted last
minute. “I d on’t think it’s really
pertinent to go into that in­
form ation,” he said.
Freshm an arriving Thursday
afternoon, however, confirmed
that they had all been wait-lis­
ted, rejected for admission to
the University and then called
mid Ju n e and offered admis[icontinued on page 8]
v
The J u n e 25 fire that engulfed the roof an d
upper floors o f St. E d 's has left the University
with a severe housing shortage a n d an expensive
renovation. [Photo by Tim McKeogh]
‘Personal reasons’
Devine: A soul search ends
By Paul Mullaney
Editor-in- Chief
N otre Dam e football coach Dan Devine
ended a prolonged soul search last Friday by
announcing that he will resign from his post at
the conclusion o f the 1980 season.
The unexpected announcem ent, which
even caught m ost athletic departm ent
officials by surprise, was televised nationally
over ABC during halftim e of the Aug. 15
exhibition game betw een the Pittsburgh
Steelers and Atlanta Falcons.
Devine, who opens his sixth season at
N otre Dame two weeks from today when the
Irish host Purdue, cited “ personal reasons
and family considerations” for his resigna­
tion.
“I always felt I would be the first to know
when it was time for me to step down,” said
Devine. “I want to spend m ore tim e with my
family.”
Devine reportedly reached his decision in
early August after m onths o f deliberation.
After notifying University President Fr.
Theodore H esburgh and hxecutive VicePresident Fr. hdm und P. Joyce, who serves as
chairman o f the faculty athletic board,
Devine was given liberty to handle the
announcem ent as he saw fit.
Shortly after lunch last Friday, Devine
received a phone call from Dave Diles o f ABC
Sports, who had heard reports that Devine
was planning to resign. Diles was prepared to
make the announcem ent on national tele­
vision.
Devine then made a deal with Diles and
ABC. If the netw ork would withhold from
making the announcem ent until later in the
day, Devine would go before a live national
audience to make his announcem ent. This
would allow him to first inform his players and
coaching staff.
“ Naturally when you make a decision like
this you confide in a few people,” said Devine.
“ B ut when you tell som ebody a secret, it’s no
longer a secret. So I couldn't wait with the
announcem ent, because I didn’t want the
squad and the staff to hear ab out it from
som ebody else.”
Devine has been under pressure from
various alum ni groups since succeeding Ara
Parseghian in 1975, and his wife is suffering
from m ultiple sclerosis. H e em phasized,
however, that he received no pressure to quit,
and the decision was his alone.
“All I can say is that it has been a great five
years,” said Devine, “ and I want to be able to
say it was a good six years. My top priority
right now is to keep outside influences away
from this team so they can play the type of
football they are capable o f playing.”
T here has been much speculation as to
D evine’s replacem ent, but Joyce — who will
eventually make the decision — will be
unavailable for com m ent until he returns
from his visit to Israel in early Septem ber.
Devine, meanwhile, has not announced any
future plans.
“I really don’t think I’ll
coach again,” he said. “ I won’t say never,
because I know there will be opportunities,
b u t I’m ab out 98 percent sure I’ll never coach
again.”
In five years at N o tre Dame, Devine has
com piled a 44-14-0 coaching record. His
team s are undefeated in bowl com petition,
winning the 1976 G ator and the 1978 and ’79
C otton Bowls. His 1977 squad won the
national cham pionship with an 11-1 record.
Devine is N o tre D am e’s 23rd head football
coach.
A
News Briefs_
by the Observer a n d Associated Press
The
b o ld
I s f 3 . e l l governm ent gave pre­
liminary approval yesterday to a hydroelectric project that
would channel water from the M editerranean to the Dead Sea.
Arabs in the Israeli-occupied W est Bank of the Jordan River and
Gaza Strip are strongly opposed to the plan.
bnergy Minister Yitzhak Modai said the station would save
Israel $800 million in oil imports annually at current world
prices.
It could provide 18 percent o f Israel’s current peak-hour
power needs w ithout raising the level o f the Dead Sea, where
water evaporates so quickly that the lake is the highest in
mineral content in the world, he said.
A 67-year-old retired funeral home
director who supposedly raised marijuana plants “as a di­
version,” has been fined $1,000 and placed on two years’
probation for possession of 400 plants. H enry Z opf was
sentenced Thursday after pleading guilty before Judge James
Scullary in District Court. Defense lawyer Cynthia Spinola said
Z opf started gardening after he retired. “H e needed a
diversion and turned to growing marijuana. They were small
plants and I’m sure he had no idea what he would do with them
once the plants m atured,” she said.
A local television station inTravers
City, Mich., was scheduled to show the 1940 Ronald Reagan
film Knute Rockne: All-American, bu t pulled the movie at the last
m inute for fear it would be required to provide equal time for
President Carter and candidate John Anderson. Instead,
W GTU showed The Story of Sea Biscuit, starring Shirley Temple,
,is its Tuesday afternoon movie. “It’s a good thing she’s not
running for anything this year,” said station manager Foster
Winters.
Campaign workers
for Rep John b.
Anderson said yesterday they’ll have more than enough voters’
signatures to get their candidate on Indiana’s presidential ballot
this November. Between 15,000 and 20,000 signatures had
been filed with county clerks around Indiana this week in time
for the Friday deadline, Ann Rogers, an Anderson campaign
spokeswoman, said. By late Friday afternoon, 4,000 to 5,000 of
those signatures were certified, Ms. Rogers said. The Illinois
congressman needs ,6,982 certified signatures of registered
voters to be placed on the Indiana ballot.
A house reSOlutlOfl
introduced yesterday
urges state election officials to ensure that absentee ballots are
sent to the American hostages in Iran. Rep. Thomas B. hvans
Jr., R-Del., said the resolution would ask state officials to check
whether any o f the 52 hostages held since last Nov. 4 are
registered voters in their states. If so, an absentee ballot would
be forwarded to the U.S. hmbassy in Tehran for the hostages to
vote in the N ovem ber general elections, bvans said, “This
action would show both our fellow citizens and their captors
that America has not forgotten them, and their precious rights
of democracy cannot be locked out by a bunch of international
hoodlum s.”
Consumer prices did not rise
overall in July, the first m onth w ithout an increase in m ore than
13 years. B ut a new burst o f food price increases signaled that
m ore inflation is on the way. The Labor D epartm ent reported
yesterday that the Consumer Price Index held steady in July,
mainly because the cost of buying a hom e dropped for the first
time in seven years. Food prices shot up by 0.9 percent — the
biggest increase since March — and a dramatic rise in wholesale
food costs in July has yet to work its way to consumers. W hen
mortgages and the cost of homes are excluded, prices rose 0.6
percent during the m onth, a rate that, if continued for 12
months, would mean annual inflation of 7.4 percent. Overall
consum er prices increased 13.3 percent in 1979 and at an
annual rate of 12.6 percent during the first seven m onths of this
year. The index in July stood at 247.8 before seasonal
adjustment. T hat means goods and services that could be
bought in 1967 for $100 cost $247.80 last month. The 1967
dollar is not worth 40.4 cents.
The first court-martial
o f an American
returning from a Vietnamese prisoner o f war camp was to begin
today with Marine Pfc. R obert Garwood facing charges of
desertion and collaboration during the nearly 14 years he spent
in the Southeast Asia country.
Outside the tiny courtroom at Camp Lejeune, N.C., where
C .rwood will be court-martialed is a bright red wall poster
urging leathernecks to “Stay Proud, Stay Marine.”
Mostly sunny today withhighsinthemid
to upper 80’s. Fair and warmer tonight with lows in the mid 60’s.
Partly cloudy Tuesday with a slight chance of afternoon
thundershowers.
Monday, August 25,1980 -page 2
Inside Monday
Your first taste of an all-nighter
T here’s a lot to be said for com posing prose at
4 a.m. O ne thing th at certainly should n o t be
said is that it is an ideal tim e to write or think.
O ne thing th at may be said is th at you will find
yourself doing it often.
And that, perhaps, is the sagest “w elcom e”
message I can give you. In fact, I find myself at
this very m om ent com posing prose I th o u g h t —
for sure, for sure — I would write in the casual
bliss o f m id-afternoon. B ut these are the times
th at try m en’s souls. They are also the times
when one digresses with frightening frequency,
allowing o n e’s thoughts to m eander into literary
allusions p ertin en t to the plight o f plans and the
late h o u r’s merciless rush toward deadline. For
instance...
“ The best laid plans of mice and m en aft gang
aglay” (R obert B urns of course). O r perhaps
som ething appropriate to the late ho u r and
deadline. Dr. Samuel Johnson, whom you
should get to know, once said: “ W hen a man
knows he is to be hung in a fortnight, it
concentrates his m ind w onderfully.” W onder­
ful.
Ah, b u t why do I stray from my subject. “ Is it
perfum e from a dress...that m akes me so
digress?” (th at is T.S. hliot, b u t don’t worry
ab o u t him until you’re either a junior or very
sure o f your sexual nature). O ne could go on, b u t
m ounds o f literary allusions do n o t a piece of
journalism make, and th at is what I have been
told to do: m ake journalism , n o t allusions. It’s
kind o f like “ m ake love, n o t war,” only in
reverse.
Now, just betw een you and me, we have
probably
lost everyone at this po in t we
wanted to lose along the way. So let’s get to the
p o in t o f all this, which they w ouldn’t have been
interested in reading anyway.
N o m atter what you had been led to believe by
well-meaning b u t hopelessly naive high school
guidance counselors, college is n o t where one
goes to earn a degree guaranteeing a high-paying
“ starting salary.” T h at’s u tte r crap. Anyone
around here who tells you that, professors
included (gasp), are people whom you shouldn’t
trust.
N o, if the tru th be told, college will do m ore
for you than simply show you the way to those
gold paved avenues called “ career opportu n ity .”
College will teach you how to get yourself in a
bind, then get back o u t again. This lesson will
serve you well in “ the real world,” a concept
bandied about quite a b it in college, a place
never so neatly defined as a syllabus, an environ
never quite so predictable as a South Dining Hall
dinner.
A lot o f concepts are bandied ab o u t in college.
And m ost concepts, though they float and flail in
the difficult realm o f the abstract, sincerely
attem p t to arrive at a conclusion that makes the
“ real world” m ore concrete, m ore m eaningful,
_The-Ohserver_
Design Editor............. Paul Mullaney
Mark Rust
Night Technician. . . . Ann Monaghan
News E ditors..............Tom Jackman
Mark Rust
Copy Editor.....................Lynne Daley
Editorials Layout........ Mike Onufrak
Features Layout......... Molly Woulfe
Kate Farrell
The Observer (USPS 598 920) Is
published Monday through Friday
except during exam and vacation
periods. The Observer Is published
by the students of Notre Dame and
Saint M ary's College. Subscriptions
may be purchased for $20 per year
($10 per semester) by w ritin g The
Observer, P.O. Box Q, Notre
Dame, Indiana 46556 Second class
postage paid, Notre Dame, Indiana
46556
The Observer is a member of the
Associated Press. A ll reproduction
rights are reserved.
m ore more. Journalism makes th at a ttem p t too.
Som etim es it is an exercise in sim ple concrete­
ness; m aking econom ics com prehensible, p u t­
ting Palestinian terro r into historical perspec­
tive. Som etim es it is an exercise in com m entary;
shedding light on the hum an situation by
showing the relationship betw een a ghastly fire
and crowded dorm itories. And som etim es it
seeks to en tertain by reflection; connecting
thoughts in the night with an overall schem e o f a
college education. P retty presum ptuous, huh?
O u r philosophy at The Observer remains one o f
staunch com m ittm ent to the ideals and cannons
o f journalism: accuracy, fairness, accountability.
W e also try to stir the coals o f thoughtful
criticism, as any intelligent publication needs to
do. T h e Inside colum n is a little o f th at in tellectu ­
al fire. G enerally we will add to the reportage
you may find on the front page or substantiate
the opininions you will read in the editorials. O r
we may just accent the crisp perceptions th at
entertain on the features pages. O r, as in today’s
colum n we may just m eander.
B ut th ere’s a m ethod to our madness, and in it
you may just find your first m odel o f a timehonored collegiate exercise: writing under dead­
line pressure. Y ou see, the p o in t o f this colum n
can be outlined as though it were a lecture on a
blackboard. First, you do what you m ust to fulfill
a requirem ent. N ext, you reflect on your predic­
am ent until literary insight grabs hold and takes
over. T hen you feed yourself intellectually with
the notion th at m ost o f the guidance you receive
for your $6,000 plus per year is depressing b u t
very, very wrong. Finally, you console yourself
in the knowledge th at the real world is real, its
ebb and flow far rem oved from the m undane
concerns o f academia. T hus it can be said jour­
nalism is the rem edy for a m ultitude o f nonsequiturial sins.
B ut there is a larger lesson here. W ithin the
n ex t week you will look at each individual
syllabus handed you by your professors. You will
listen soberly to their wise and careful adm on­
ishm ents to “ n o t fall behind” or to “ start your
paper now.” You will nod gravely. You will
absorb their countless exam ples of p o o r foolish
students who, thinking they were im m une to last
m inute dashes, en tered upon the three-littlepiggie syndrom e, whereby they played until the
wolf came calling. Finally, you will forget every­
thing they said and find yourself, as the sun
com es up, resorting to analogies from childrens
tales.
T h ere’s a lot to be said for concluding prose at
7 a.m.
Interhall
requires
fcvery student who participates in any
intramural or club sport activity must be
covered by some form o f insurance
policy. Participants in non-contact in­
tramural sports must fill out the medical
consent, insurance and release from available in the non-varsity office, C-2 in
the ACC.
Students planning to participate in a
Ad Design................. Mike Holsinger
Deirdre Murphy
Jim Rudd
Typists................... Mary Beth Budd
John Higgins
Many others
Photographer....................John Macor
Managing Editor
a
contact intramural sport (football, soc­
cer, basketball and hock, ) r a club
sport must bring proof o f insurance to
the non-varsity office.
These insurance requirements must
be m et before a student is eligible to
participate in any activity. Failure to
comply will jeopardize the status o f the
hall and/or team o f any ineligible player.
OPEN
MONDAY
SATURDAY
2pm - Bam
WELCOME
BACK
OSCAR
The Observer
Monday, August 25,1980 - page
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T h e Observer
Monday, August 25,1980 - page 4
Campus construction on
dorms, science hall continues
by John McGrath
News Editor
T h e a fte rn o o n su n p la y s h id e -a n d -s e e k w ith th e
towers o f the Loretta Chapel at St. M ary's. [Photo by John
Macor]
Several new buildings have
risen into the N o tre D am e sky­
line since the end o f the Spring
sem ester,and work is slated to
begin soon on yet another.
M ost visible o f the projects
are the two new dorm itory
structures adjacent to the Li­
brary and the Stepan Chemical
Hall, located to the rear of
Nieuw land Science Hall.
W ork is approxim ately 75
p ercent com plete on the in­
board “ tw in” dorm itory nearest
to the N o rth Dining Hall, ac­
cording to D onald D edrick, di­
rector of the Physical Plant. He
added th at plans call for that
structure to be ready for occu­
pancy by January.
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b u t there really isn’t th at m uch
left to do with it."
The “ o u tb o ard ” dorm itory is
only 50-60 p ercen t com plete,
however. T h at stru ctu re is n o t
expected to be ready for oc­
cupancy until Ju n e 1981.
W orkm en have only g o tten as
far as the third floor deck on
th at planned four-floor build­
ing. T he to tal cost o f the twin
dorm p roject is approxim ately
$7 million, and is being financ­
ed by a d onation from mall de­
veloper Frank J. Pasquerilla of
Johnstow n, Pa bach o f the
dorm s is to house 250 students.
It is expected th at wom en will
occupy b o th halls.
■D edrick estim ated th at work
is now 50 p ercen t com plete on
the $9 m illion S tepan Chemical
Hall. T he 106,000-square foot
com plex is expected to be com ­
pleted som etim e in 1982. The
new building will accom odate
classroom s and laboratories
now located in the old Chemical
hngineering Building.
W ork is expected to begin
soon on a new structure to
which will house the studios of
W N D U radio and television,
The building will be located
near the intersection o f U.S. 31
and D orr Road in the vicinity of
the B urke M emorial G olf
Couse.
harly plans unveiled in the
Spring called for a 30,000square foot structure, which
would double the present size
of W N D U ’s facilities.
C onstruction is expected to
take 12 m onths.
It had been expected that
groundbreaking would take
place at m id-sum m er, b u t plans
have been held up. According
to G reg Giczi, director of p ro ­
m otions for W N D U , bids are
expected to be let soon, how­
ever, with a probable start of
construction following soon af­
terward.
R uth Kelly, m anager o f the
Studedckeck&mked
N o tre D am e c re d it U nion es­
tim ates th at the her organiza­
tio n ’s new $1.2 m illion struc­
ture is approxim ately one-third
com plete.
T he 18,000-square fo o t facil­
ity, located across Douglas Rd.
from the present
office, will
feature a drive-in capacity for
two cars — a service n o t offered
at the p resen t location.
O ccupancy is slated for n ex t
May.
D edrick also outlined this
sum m er’s dorm renovation
work. Five dorm s, Sorin, St.
bdwards, Walsh, Badin, and
Carrol were targeted for over $ 1
million w orth o f renovations.
W ith the exception o f St.
bdw ard’s, D edrick described
the work as “ essentially com ­
p leted.”
T hree co n stru ctio n com pan­
ies perform ed the work — the
first stage o f a program to bring
som e o f the older residence
halls up to m odern standards.
T he work included the in­
stallation o f two stairwells in
Badin Hall. T hose plans caused
controversy in the Spring b e­
cause they necessitated the
eviction of Tony's Shoe Shop, a
privately owned business locat­
ed in the Southeast corner of
the building.
In the afterm ath o f the fire at
St. bdw ard’s, cleanup work has
been going o n in th at structure
in preparation for rebuilding.
A lthough he could give no cost
estim ates, D edrick estim ated
that work on rebuilding the hall
could begin O ct. 1.
Band holds
auditions
All \ persons interested in
auditioning for the University
band should register at the
W ashington Hall band office as
soon as possible. Final audi­
tions will be held W ednesday;
the rain date is Thursday.
Practices are already in p ro­
gress, and m ore inform ation
can be obtained at W ashington
Hall.
21 9 - 2 8 3 - 4 3 9 5
8-5 MON -SAT
E v e n in g s By A ppt
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U N I V E R S I T Y H A IR S T Y L I S T S
mile North
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SMC
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b a d in
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Plcowocy
Pkowocy
426 N. Michigan
234-3185
otre
Dam
e
. In d i a n a 4 6 5 5 6
is happy to a n n o u n c e th at
0
W o t-W o w
N
^ Rocco’s Hair Styling
P ^ g e t o w n Shopping C enter
52303 Emmons Rd
277-5811
1 mile South
H all
N O T R E DA M E UNIVERSITY
DICK STILLSON
“ Indiana B arber and Styling C h am p io n ’
h a s joined th e com plim ent staff of
Ms. Linda L. Neville and
Ms. Jackie Fletcher and N Ferraro
531 N. Michigan S t., South Bend
Monday, August 25,1980 - page 5
The Observer
TP"
Reagan, Bush confer on
apparent contradiction
LOS
ANGfaLhS — George
Bush, his mission to China in
behalf of Ronald Reagan an ap­
parent flop, arrived here yester­
day to confer with the G O P
presidential nominee and try to
patch up their contradictory
remarks over relations with the
world's most populous nation.
Reagan and Bush planned to
m eet privately today before
holding a news conference on
Bush’s just-concluded three-day
trip.
The official New China News
Agency said Bush had “failed to
reassure China” about Reagan,
and that his attem pt was “can­
celled out” by Reagan’s renewed
call for an official governmental
relationship with Taiwan.
In China, Bush had told re­
porters that a Republican ad­
ministration could not legally es­
tablish a governmental liason
office on Taiwan and, even if it
could, had no intention of doing
so.
Bush bypassed reporters at Los
Angeles International Airport,
and was whisked away in a
motorcade. At his hotel, he was
brought in a back door, and
refused to stop for questions.
W hen a reporter shouted a
question about the New China
...St. Ed’s
{continued from page /]
lodging on an already over­
crowded campus.
According to Dedrick, re­
construction work will attem pt
to approxim ate the original
blueprints as closely as possi­
ble.
“ W e’re going to try to be as
faithful (to the original plans) as
possible,” Dedrick said. “ We
m ight even be able to install a
mansard roof similar to the
original one as cheaply or
cheaper than a regular ro o f like
the one on Cavanaugh.”
N o cost estim ates or com ­
pletion target dates were avai­
lable, b u t Dedrick noted that
cleanup work should be com ­
pleted within the n ex t week,
and rebuilding could begin as
soon as Oct. 1.
St. hdward’s Hall was built in
1882 to house N o tre D am e’s
minim departm ent, a type of
boarding school for young
boys. It was converted for use
by University students in 1929
following the disconinuation of
the minim departm ent.
News Agency account, Bush said
over his shoulder:" W e sought an
exchange o f views.”
Reports from Peking follow­
ing his departure said he he had
received a stern message from
Chinese leaders that a Repub­
lican reversal o f policy on
Taiwan, with whom the United
States maintains only unofficial
trade and cultural relations;
could jeopardize a developing
anti-Soviet alliance between
China and the United States.
But Bush, at a stopover in
Honolulu, said that when “You
sit down with the top leaders of
China and have a very frank
exchange of views, it’s got to be a
big plus.”
As for Reagan’s statem ents on
U.S.-Taiwan relations and a
possible U.S. liason office" in
Taiwan,
Bush
commented,
“Look, this subject is a very
complicated one, and the lang­
uage is so imprecise that you
gotta know exactly what you
mean by that.”
“ W e have confirm ed that
Stevens is n o t the m an’s real
name. T hat name was traced to
an obituary found in a looseleaf
notebook, one o f many obi­
tuaries found. This m an is a real
slick operator, the slickest I’ve
seen yet,” city detective D arrell
G rabner said.
The two were arrested W ed­
nesday as they fled from a
jewelry store in Mishawaka,
apparently -conspirators in a
scheme to acquire diam onds
from area jewelers by using
either forged credit cards or cer­
tified checks.
The pair attem pted to make
their get-away in a car police say
Northern Indiana’s Largest
Selection of Albums & Tapes
50970 U.S. 31 North
3 Miles North of Campus
Next to Al’s Supermarket
H e suggested that th6 whole
controversy stemmed from
Semantic confusion over over
the difference between such
words as non-governmental, of­
ficial and official.
“O ur effort is to continue to
improve relations with the
People’s Republic and yet recog­
nize that the people on Taiwan
are, indeed, friends. And that’s
what it’s about,” Bush said.
In Peking, Bush told Senator
Vice Prem ier Deng Xiaoping
that a Republican administration
office on Taiwan and had no
intention o f doing so if it could.
Open until 10:00 p.m.
7 nights a week.
ND/SMC checks cashed up
to $20.00 over purchase
amount
t
Record Crates Available
Police issue charges
on unknown couple
SOUTH B hN D , IN D , (AP) It’s a case involving diam onds, a
young woman, dozens o f false
names and forged addresses;
police are ready to issue char­
ges, if they only could figure ou t
who to charge.
A man calling him self Dr.
A.W. Stephens, or Michael
Colins, is in custody in this
southw est Indiana city along
with a wom an who says she is
either Sharon Miller or K athy
Winn.
Miller-W inn told
police
she is 23 and from Springs, Ark.
Stephens-Collins said he is 29
and from Kissimm ee, Fla.
RIVER CITY
RECORDS
was stolen from New Mexico.
The w om an’s role in the
scheme is no t clear yet, G rab­
ner said. B ut so far police have
discovered about 50 different
names with birth certificates,
drivers licenses and various
type o f registration in the m an’s
belongings.
The identities have linked
him to Arkansas, Virginia, New
Jersey, Rhode Island, Florida,
M assachusetts, Alabama, New
Mexico, O klahom a and India“ The man apparently came to
town, opened a checking ac­
count at a Marshall C ounty
bank (20 miles south o f South
Bend) using a B rem en address
that listed a Stephens as a
resident. H e then apparently
made up business cards iden­
tifying him as a doctor,” G rab­
ner said.
“The m an would pick o u t his
aliases from people who were
roughly his age and who died in
locations o ther than where they
were b o rn ,” he said.
It appears th at this may be the
m an’s first arrest, G rabner said.
FBI bureaus and police depart­
m ents across the country have
been asked to help determ ine
his identity.
Giant Record Posters Available
All Cut-Outs $1.00 Off!
All Blank Tapes $1.00 Off
NO LIMIT! (until S ep tem b er 1)
(we carry TDK, Maxell, BASF, M em orex)
New Releases:
Yes
G eorge Benson
Elvis Presley
Paul Simon
Pete Townshend
Santana
The Rolling Stones
Charlie Daniels
Jeff Beck
Blue Oyster Cult
The Cars
Rossington-Collins
Urban Cowboy
The Kinks
Eddie M oney
Peter Gabriel
Christopher Cross
Pat Senator
Jackson Browne
C h icago
Concert Tickets: The Cars, Sept. 11, ND
new issue: The River City Review
$1.00 OFF
a e o e o o o o n a o o o a B e Q B a e Q B o a B Q < » o Q O Q O Q fl« » o o flw »
Sacred Heart Parish
(we who worship in the crypt)
Needs:
Musicians
vocalists
guitarists
winds
Sunday Mornings
contact: Gerry,
any album or tape
purchase with this
coupon.
Catechists
youth leaders
a few to assist in
a religious education
program
or Mrs.
River City R ecords
50970 U.S. 31 North
277-4242
i
i
i__
The Observer
Monday, August 25,1980 -page 6
Hesbutgh enters 27th year
Rev. T heodore M. H esburgh,
C.S.C., one of the presidents o f
m ajor Am erican universities
longest in office, is in his 27th
year as head of the U niversidy o f
N o tre Dame. Four o f five living
alum ni of the University have
his nam e on their diplomas.
His career illustrates the
m any-faceted role o f a contem ­
porary leader in Am erican edu­
cation, a role which highlights
the increasingly interrelated
areas of education, governm ent
and public affairs. In a national
news magazine’s 1978 poll of
influential Americans, he was
ranked No. 2 in influence with­
in the field of religion and third
in education. Over the last
decade, N o tre D am e’s presi­
d en t has been invloved in na­
tional studies of race relations,
higher eduction, campus unrest,
and a volunteer armed force. His
most recent Presidential appoint­
ment was to the rank of ambassador
to headU.S. delegation to a 1979
United Nations conference on
the transfer of technology from
developed to undeveloped coun­
tries.
Father Hesburgh’s chief contri­
bution on the national level has
been in the area of civil rights.
Appointed to the U.S. Commis­
sion on Civil rights by President
Dwight D. hisenhower when the
commission was established in
1957, he was named its chairman
by President Richard M. Nixon in
1969 and served in that capacity
until his resignation at N ixon’s
request in November, 1972.
N otre Dame, with the assistance
of the Ford Foundation, has es­
tablished on campus a Civil Rights
Center which will prom ote the
cause of human rights in this
country and abroad.
N ixon’s successor as the na­
tion’s chief executive, Gerald
Ford,
appointed
Father
Hesburgh in 1974 to his ninemem ber board charged with ad­
ministering clemency to Vietnam
War draft evaders and deserters.
Since leaving the civil Rights
commission, Notre Dame’s pres­
ident has been very active as
chairman of the Overses Devel­
opm ent Council, a Washingtonbased
private
organization
formed in 1969 to prom ote ef­
fective aid to underdeveloped
countries. H e has also traveled
widely in Third and Fourth W orld
areas, often on assignment from
the Rockefeller Foundation,
which he joined as a trustee in
1963 and of which he became
chairman of the board in 1977.
He formerly served on the
President’s General Advisory
Committee on Foreign Assis­
tance and is a director of the
Council on Foreign Relations.
Many of his recent writings, in­
cluding The Humane Imperative,
published by the Yale University
Press in 1974, stress interdepen­
dence of the earth’s peoples as the
key to human survival in a time of
shrinking resources. As a member
of the board of the Chase
Manhattan Bank, he has empha­
sized investment by transnational
corporations in underdeveloped
countries.
Two major developments at
N otre Dame during his admin­
istration were the reorganization
of the University’s governance
under lay control, accomplished
in 1967, and the introduction of
coeducation at the undergraduate
level in the fall of 1972.
Father Hesburgh’s leadership
in education in recent years has
been
reflected in his work as
president of the International
Federation of Catholic Univer­
sities, which he headed from 1963
to his resignation in 1970, and as a
member of the Kerr-Carnegie
Commission on the Future of
Higher education, the key na­
tional study group on higher ed­
ucation’s problems and promise
which completed his work in
1974.
Sixty-one colleges and univer­
sities have conferred honorary
degrees on Father Hesburgh, among them Harvard, Yale,
Columbia, Princeton, Dartmouth,
S t Louis, UCLA, Michigan State,
Northwestern, Illinois, Indiana,
LeMoyne, Fordham, Wabash,
Brandeis, the University of
Southern California, the Catholic
University of Santiago (Chile) and
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Notre Dame President Fr. Theodore Hesburgh
the
University
of Vienna
(Austria).
Highlighting a long list of
special awards given Father
Hesburgh is on the Medal of
Freedom, the nation’s highest ci­
vilian honor, bestowed on him in
1964 by President Lyndon B.
Johnson. Among groups which
have honored him are the
National
Conference
of
Christians and Jews, the Urban
Coalition, the American Jewish
Committee, the Indiana Bar
Association, The United States
Navy, and the National Institute
of Social Sciences. He is an elected member of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences,
the National Academy of hducation, and the American Phil­
osophical Society.
Father Hesburgh was born in
Syracuse, N.Y., on May 25,1917,
the son of Anne Murphy
Hesburgh and Theodore Bernard
Hesburgh, an executive of the
Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company.
(A brother, James Hesburgh, was
graduated from Notre Dame in
1955, received his M.B.A. from
Harvard in I960 and now is
President of Intercole Automa­
tion in Los Angeles.) Father
Hesburgh has two sisters, Mrs.
Robert O ’Neill, Cazenovia, New
York, and Mrs. John Jackson,
Syracuse, N.Y. A third sister, Mrs.
Alton Lyons, Oneida, New York,
died in 1957. Both his parents are
dead.
He was educated at Notre
Dame and
the Gregorian
University in Rome, from which
he received a Bachelor of
Philosophy degree in 1940. He
was ordained a priest of the
Congregation o f Holy Cross in
Sacred H eart Church on the
N otre Dame campus June 24,
1943, by Bishop John F. Noll of
Fort Wayne. Following his ordi­
nation, Father Hesburgh contin­
ued his study o f sacred theology at
the Catholic University of
America, Washington, D.C., re­
ceiving his doctorate (S.T.D.) in
1945. He joined the N otre Dame
faculty the same year, and served
as chaplain to W orld W ar II
veterans on campus in addition to
his duties in the theology de­
partment. He was appointed head
of the departm ent in 1948, and
the following year was named ex­
ecutive vice president in the ad­
ministration of Rev. John J.
Cavanaugh, C.S.C., University
president.
At the age of 35 in June, 1952,
Father Hesburgh was appointed
the president of N otre Dame. His
administration has marked one of
the greatest periods of physical
growth and internal academic
development in the University’s
135 year history. Today he heads
an institution with a beautiful
campus of 1,250 acres, a disting­
uished faculty of more than 700
scholars, and an enrollment of
some 8,800 students from every
state in the Union and more than
60 foreign countries.
Since Father Hesburgh became
president, N otre Dame has erec­
ted two dozen major buildings,
including the 14-story, $9 million
Memorial Library which opened
in 1963; a $3 million Computing
Center and Mathematics Build­
ing; a $2.2 million Radiation
Research Building built on cam­
pus by the U.S. Atomic hnergy
Commission; a $1.5 million
Center for Continuing education;
Lewis Hall, a residence for wo­
men; an $8 million Athletic and
Convocation Center; HayesHealy Center, the $1 million
home o f N otre Dame’s new grad­
uate business administration pro­
gram; a University Club and two
high-rise residence halls, and the
Paul V. Galvin Life Sqence
Center, which includes the new
quarters of Lobund Laboratory
for germfree animal research and
the departments of biology and
microbiology.
Monday, August 25,1980 -page 7
The Observer
ND, SMC tuition costs rise again
hy Kelli Flint
Senior Staff Reporter
gar
Farley Welcoming Committee greets freshman. [Photo by
John Macor]
Both the University o f N otre
Dame and Saint Mary’s College
have increased tuition costs for
the 1980-81 school term .
U ndergraduate tuition at
N otre D am e has increased
$500, up to $4630 a year, while
room and board costs increase
$250 for an average fee of
$1765.
Salary and benefits im prove­
m ents for University employees
and higher food and energy
costs were cited as contributing
factors to the increase by the
Rev.
T heodore
H esburgh,
U niversity president. H esburgh
added that a review o f 35 peer
institutions revealed that N otre
Dam e’s tuition ranked 28 th and
room and 35th in board. The
increase in tuition and room
and board costs is m ore than in
previohs years, according to
Richard Conklin, director of
Inform ation Services. “The
cost increase is m ore substan­
tial than in previous years, bu t
inflation has also increased
m ore substantially,” Conklin
said.
T uition at Saint Mary's
College increased from $1775
to $1975 per sem ester, while
board increased $30 and room s
Riehle will centralize SG
By Tim Vercellotti
A m ore centralized voice in
student affairs is the immediate
goal o f student governm ent this
year, according to student body
President Paul Riehle. Riehle
hopes to effect reforms in the
current system,, the officialvoice o f N otre Dame students.
His plans are based on the
conversion of the Hall Presid­
en t’s Council into a studentsenate.
According to Riehle, the
present student governm ent is
too decen- tralized. “I want to
make the HPC the center of the
student
governm ent.
This
would give the student body
wider representation, as well as
a m ore effective voice in the
adm inistration,”
Riehle
explained. Also, Riehle feels
that a student senate would give
an elem ent of continuity to the
work
of
the
student
governm ent.
Reforms in the m ake-up of
the governm ent would involve
changes in the governm ent's
constitution, which can only be
done in a constitutional
convention. Riehle hopes to
gather ideas for governm ental
reform s through open
m eetings, to be held in the
residence
halls.
an average of $60 per sem ester.
The cost increase at Saint
Mary’s is no t as substantial as it
appears, according to S tudent
Accounts
associate
Diana
Barnes. “The tuition increase is
not yearly, therefore theunt is
not unusually h ig h ,” B arn e s
said.
As a result of the cost in­
creases at N o tre Dame and
Saint Mary’s, m ore available
funds have been allotted for
financial aid, officials at both
schools said.
Available scholarship funds
for Saint Mary’s increased trom
$330,095 to $336,310. N o tre
Dame received an increase in
financial aid funds p ro p o rtio n ­
ate to the increase in tuition
costs, according to Joseph
Russo, director o f financial aid.
Russo added th at financial aid
has always been a problem at
N otre Dame. “ T here is never
enough m oney to assist all of
the students who apply,” Russo
said. “The problem worsened
due to b o th the increase in tu ­
ition costs and the state o f the
economy.
VOCATION COUNSELING
HOL Y C R O S S F A T H E R S
C
How Do I Know if I Have a Vocation
to the Priesthood?
□
What Is the Academic and Formation
Program for Becoming a Priest?
C
What Scholarships and Financial Aid Are
Available for Seminary Training?
□
What Are the Various Apostolic Ministries
of the Holy Cross Priests?
□
How Do I Pray if I’m Thinking of a Vocation
to the Priesthood and I’m Not Sure?
For a Personal, Confidential
Interview with No Obligation
Please Write or Call the
Vocation Director:
Riehle
intends to establish
office hours soon, and he en­
courages all students,
es­
pecially freshm en and transfer
students to stop in at his office
on the
second floor o f LaFortune.
Rev. Andre Level lie. C.S.C.
Box 541
Notre Dame, Ind. 46556
For Appointment Call Between
8:30 AM - 4:30 PM (219) 283-6385.
The student governm ent can be
worked ou t through these for­
ums and then it will be forrmalized through the conven­
tion,”
Riehle
stated.
The purpose of a student
governm ent, regardless of its
form, is the service of students.
Riehle said that this year’s
student governm ent has b o th
short and long term plans.
Among these are a recycling
program , and a student social
center.
k
REMIft
WEENEY
SMC student government
The Saint Mary’s Student
G overnm ent is in a process of
change and experim entation
this year. According to Presi­
dent K athleen Sweeney, “ We
are experim enting with many
new ideas. A lot is in the drawing
stages that should com e to­
gether in the next week or
two.”
The Judicial System under­
went restructuring during the
1979-80 academic year. These
changes will be announced and
explained to the students in the
first weeks of classes, according
to Sweeney.
The Student Assembly, de­
scribed as the "congress” o f the
S tudent G overnm ent, was dis­
banded last spring. The Student
G overnm ent is now conducting
a self-study to decide if it will be
reinstituted or replaced.
“ The S tudent G overnm ent
brings many o f the disjointed
areas o f student life together. It
is involved in com m unity af­
fairs, social justice and com ­
bining the academic life with
the social life at Saint Mary’s,”
explained Sweeney.
The Board o f G overnance is
the main governing body o f the
student governm ent. Accord­
ing to the S tudent G overnm ent
Manual,“The purpose o f the
Board of governance shall be to
act as a steering com m ittee by
discussing problem s relating to
S tudent G overnm ent and by
making recom m endations to
student com m ittees. It shall
(continued on page 8)
EATING DRINKING & OTHER PLEASANTRIES
o’*
Ss
LUNCH
Mon. - Sat. 11:00-4:30
DINNER
Mon.-Thurs. 5:00 -10:00 >
Fri. - Sat. 4:30 -12:0 0
%
Sun. 12:00 10:00
X
^
Ck.
A
X
PHONE 277-6368
ACROSS FORM UNIVERSITY PARK MALL ON GRAPE ROAD
f 1
Monday, August 25,1980 -page 8
The Observer
Vl t n
O n
XTX C&XXXXXCXX
to live
off campus
{continued from page 1]
sion. T he arriving freshm en
also ex pressed m ixed feelings
ab o u t what they consider “ off
cam pus living” for their first
sem ester at college.
H eppen holds, however, th at
the wom en are n o t living off
campus. “As far as I’m con­
These incoming freshm en, taking their routine
p la cem en t tests, are encountering their first
cerned, they’re n o t o ff campus.
They’re very m uch a part of
N otre D am e,” he said. H e also
said th at parents o f the Villa
Angela freshm en are “ very
happy” th at their daughters are
com ing to N o tre Dame.
W ard, a Pennsylvania native
and m other o f three N otre
taste o f the Notre Dame academic life-. [Photo by
John Macor]
R E F R I G E R A T O R , ice tray, ice cube,
F U N ,
cold, chill, frozen, glacial,
D R I N K S , arctic, Siberian, frostbitten,
W A R M T I M E S , shiver, boreal, snow­
bound E C O N O M Y , iciness, winter,
goose flesh, horripilation, L A T E
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by Mary Leavitt
St. Mary’s News Editor
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som ew hat negatively on their
eating arrangem ents at the
South Dining Hall.
“T h ere’s no food over here at
all,” one freshm an com m ented.
“It’s an inconvenience to take a
shuttle bus to dinner.”
W ard said that plans are
underway to initiate a weekend
breakfast program utilizing
Villa Angela’s operable kitchen
and dining room.
The room s in which the
freshm en are staying consist
prim arily o f spacious singles.
Several freshm an did say, how­
ever, th at they would prefer
having a room m ate first sem es­
ter.
“ I guess will just be knocking
on each o th er’s doors a lo t,” a
girl com m ented.
To obtain her position as
rector, W ard explained, she
wrote a a letter to the University
expressing an interest in “ doing
som ething.” In the letter she
included her work experience
which was nursing, as well as her
knowledge of the campus. She
said she was contacted last July
with the offer o f Villa Angela
rector.
In addition to the situation at
Villa Angela, cam pus dorm s are
also feeling the pressure of
additional students. Residents
of St. bdw ard’s H all are living at
several dorm s on campus. Stu­
dents returning to dorm s at
b o th N D and SMC have ob­
served th at last year’s baggage
room s and study lounges have
now becom e stu d en t residen­
ces. H ousing authorities said a
total o f 20 room s were
renovated.
Frosh advisor job challenging
In this “ Indiana W ilderness” conveniences
are few and pleasures small.
LEASE
Dam e graduates, said she had
no t had many apprehensive
reactions from freshm en par­
ents. She did acknowledge that
she had received a negative
reaction from one p aren t who
expressed concern over the
situation.
“ Precautionary security m ea­
sures are being taken. W e’re
discouraging the girls from
walking alone and at night,”
W ard said.
Freshm en, however, reacted
som ew hat negatively to their
residences.
“ I feel like I’ll be left o u t of
the excitem ent o f the cam pus,”
one com m ented.
A nother wom an said, “I
didn’t
mind
it
(the
arrangem ent) at first, b u t now
that I’m here I see what I’ll be
missing.”
Freshm en fu rth er added th at
they think their living arrange­
m ents will hinder their social
activities as well as their in­
volvem ent in stu d en t activities.
H eppen confirm ed th at an
extensive shuttle program will
be im plem eted to enable the
wom en to get to meals, classes
and activities.
“ It is only for three m onths
though,” W ard com m ented. “I
think th at’s why the girls are
accepting this so well. T hey’re
looking forward to being In the
new dorm s n ex t sem ester.”
W ard confirm ed th at Univer­
sity adm inistrators have “ p ro­
m ised” the wom en residences
in the new dorm s n ex t sem es­
ter.
Since the w om en m ust liter­
ally hop on a bus to eat breakfast. freshm en also com m ented
277-7772
Just 2minutes from Notre Dame Campus
The position o f Freshm an
Advisor is n o t usually thought
to be the m ost glam orous job in
the world by m ost, b u t for
Susan Vanek, the job is a
challenging one. Previously a
m em ber o f Saint Mary’s faculty
in the M odern Language de­
partm ent, Vanek sees her new
position o f freshm an advisor as
part o f a natural progression
towards
which she has
worked.
“ I have always been interes­
ted in freshm en and the special
problem s they may m eet w ith,”
Vanek said.
T he freshm an office offers
services in five basic areas. It
schedules the first sem ester
program s for all incom ing
freshm en. As the freshm an
proggresses through her first
year, the office will assist her
individually with academic
planning. In addition, the
departm ent offers help with
study skills, keeps academic
records for each
freshm an
and provides inform ation about
academic policies.
Vanek, who is herself a
graduate o f Saint Mary’s Col­
lege, looks forward to working
with the freshm en on a personal
level.
She denies th at the Saint
Mary’s wom an can be stereo­
typed. “T here is n o t typical
Saint Mary’s stu d en t,” Vanek
com m ented, “ bach one is an
individual with her own per­
sonality.”
“I really want to play down
the idea o f freshm an year as
being so all
im p o rtan t,”
Vanek continued. “It is just one
step o f many th at will
be
taken by each student. The
im portant thing is to keep an
open mind and n o t overlook all
the op p o rtu n ities which are
available at this tim e.”
The freshm an office is
located in R oom 121, LeMans
Hall.
..
. SM
(continuedfrom page 7)
provide for com m unications
betw een differnet areas o f stu­
dent activity as well as serve in
an advisory capacity to the
bxecutive C om m ittee o f the
Board o f G overnance.”
The bxecutive C om m ittee is
formed by the P resident of
Student G overnm ent, the Vicepresident for Academic Affairs
and the V ice-president for
Student Affairs.
The President, K athleen
Sweeney, is responsible for the
effective op eratio n o f Student
G overnm ent and is the official
representative o f the Student
Body.
The V ice-president for Aca­
demic Affairs, Joan McCarthy,
is responsible for all areas con­
cerning stu d en t academic life.
The V ice-president for Stu­
dent Affairs, N ini Stol, is re­
sponsible for all areas affecting
student co-curricular life.
O th er m em bers o f the Board
are the class presidents, hall
presidents and com m issioners
which represent all areas o f stu­
d en t life.
T he system o f stu d en t rep­
resentation begins at the level
o f the hall com m issioners who
bring the opinions o f students
to the atten tio n o f the hall
councils. T he Council then acts
as the direct link betw een the
students and S tudent G overn­
m ent.
,
Monday, August 25,1980 -page 9
The Observer
SUNSHINE PROMOTIONS W ELCOM ES
Duggan,
Hickey
serve SMC
Dr. Jo h n M. D uggan has
served as President of Saint
Mary’s College since 1975. As
President, he is responsible for
all the functions and operations
of the college, ranging from the
quality o f education to business
affairs.
Duggan represents Saint
Mary’s in the function o f public
relations, travelling around the
country for fund-raising and
speeches. H e is a m em ber o f the
boards o f directors of the In­
dependent Colleges and Uni­
versities of Indiana and the
Association
of
Catholic
Colleges and Universities. H e
also represents Saint Mary’s as a
m em ber o f the executive com ­
m ittee
of
the
W om en’s
C oalition and the finance com ­
m ittee o f the college Entrance
Exam ination Board.
His com m unity involvem ent
includes appointm ents to the
Board o f D irectors o f the
Am erican N ational Bank and
T rust Co., and th e'U rb an Co­
alition o f St. Jo sep h ’s County.
Duggan also serves on the
Board o f the South BendMishawaka Area C ham ber of
Com m erce and boards o f
M emorial H ospital and the
Alcoholism Council, Inc.
As President of Saint Mary’s,
D uggan is also responsible to
the Board o f Regents, inform ­
ing its m em bers of college
issues and needs. He acts as a
liason betw een the college and
the Board.
Dr. W illiam A. Hickey, vicepresident for academic affairs
since 1972, is the Senior Exective officer under the President.
m
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Saint M ary's President Dr. John M. Duggan
Hickey is responsible for all­
areas o f academic life, directing
curriculum developm ent and
pproving all changes in courses
and faculty.
H e serves as a m em ber o f the
Academic Affairs Com m ittee,
*
News Stand
81 General Store
C om m ittee on Academic
Rank and T enure and the
Budget C om m ittee. W ith the
Rank and Tenure com m ittee
and the D epartm ent Chairmen,
Hickey annually reviews the
faculty for advance in ra n k /
hiring and dismissals. He works
in consultation with the College
• W ater Beds
• LEATHER GOODS
•MAGAZINES
‘ Newspapers
•CLOTHING
• Posters
•CANDLES
\ • Jewelry
•Cards
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•PIPES
•PAPERS
•Lites
•NOVELTIES
•BOOKS
Academic Council, academic
departm ents and student repesentatives to adapt curriculum
to m eet the aims o f the College.
• PARPHERNALIA
113 W est
M onroe S t
On block east
Y
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ONE BLOCK WEST O f THE
POST OFFICE
WELCOME FRESHMEN
ON CAMPUS TR A V E L SERV IC ES . . .
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Freshman parents enjoy a tour o f the campus as their
students sit fo r placem ent exams.
First
B
YOU DESERVE FIRST-RATE TREATMENT.
Editorials
Monday, August 25,1980 -page 10
Democratic convention: The inside story
Art Buchwald
N b W YORK — T he story of m et soon after T eddy’s speech the G arden before the applause
“ How ab o u t the o th er arm?
how Teddy K ennedy agreed to on Tuesday night, when the for C arter starts. B ut we want C arter will stand on his right.”
Teddy when he arrives on the
“Teddy h u rt th at arm sailing.
appear on the podium with C arter people realized that if podium to em brace C arter just
Teddy doesn’t w ant Cat ter lif­
Kennedy did no t appear on like M enachem Begin does all ting either o f his arm s.”
P resident Jim m y C arter last
of the tim e.”
“W ould he lift it if we dame o u t
Thursday night is now leaking Thursday evening the D em o­
for
his national health prog­
cratic Party would be torn
“ Teddy never em braces any­
o u t in dribs and drabs. It is a tale
one. W e m ight let you have a ram?”
o f all-night negotiations, frayed
handshake if C arter agrees to do
asunder. T op aides from the away with tax shelters.”
“I’ll have to check with him
tem pers, pleas for unity, and
. Carter and K ennedy factions
on th at.” The aide called
closeted them selves in a ten t at
K ennedy and then said to the
“ W e d o n ’t see any problem
Camp W aldorf on Park Avenue.
C arter people, “Teddy would
Teddy’s people knew they were with that. But we have to have like to do it b u t his doctors say
dealing from strength. His chief m ore assurance th at there will he has to keep his hands in his
negotiator said, “ O ur boy is be party unity. W e w ant C arter pockets.”
going back to Cape Cod unless to be able to lift Teddy’s arm in a
he gets his $12 billion jobs victory gesture for the covers of
“ You have to give us som e­
Time and Newsweek m agazines.”
program in the next budget.”
thing,” the C arter m an pleaded.
“It can’t be done,” the “It would look terrible if Teddy
C arter’s top aide said, “H e’s K ennedy negotiator said. “Ted- com es on the platform and
got it. B ut he has to be in has tennis elbow and it hurts keeps his hands down. W hat
Madison Square G arden, ou t of him to lift his arm over his about a smile? Can we co unt on
sight while the P resident makes head.”
a big K ennedy smile when h e’s
his acceptance speech.”
up there?”
“H e’s been lifting his arm
The K ennedy man said, “Im ­
“ N o way,” the K ennedy m an during the entire cam paign.”
possible. A smile from Teddy is
said. “Teddy stays in his hotel
suite until the speech is over.”
“ H e only go t the tennis elbow non-negotiable.”
som etim es
b itte r
after he decided n o t to p u t his
Okay, as long as he gets to nam e in for nom ination.”
recrim ination. The negotiators
“ You got us up against the
...all-night nego­
tiations, frayed
tempers, pleas
for unity...
wall. Suppose we give Massa­
chusetts a new naval base, three
Air Force bases and a contract
to build a strategic bo m b er.”
. “T h at’s w orth Teddy making
a fist, b u t n o t a sm ile.”
“ So what’s he going to do
when he arrives on the plat­
form ?”
“H e’ll shake hands with
C arter and Rosalynn and say
hello to Amy and then wave to
the crowd.”
“B ut th at will look terrible on
television. W e w ant to leave
New York united. Surely Teddy
can give us a little m ore th at
that. W hat if he kisses Amy on
the cheek? T h at can’t h u rt him
with his su p p orters.”
“I’ll check with him ,” the
K ennedy m an said.
T he aide spoke to Teddy and
hung up the phone. “Teddy says
he doesn’t kiss children.”
“ So all we’ve g o t so far,” the
C arter m an said, “ is Teddy
Required reading listfor all
Michael
bach year the N o tre Dame- T hom pson and published in
Saint Mary’s branch o f Sigma paperback by the Fawcett PopO m icron Sigma, the nation’s ular Library. Available in The
H am m es B ookstore on the
leading collegiate journalist’s N otre D am e cam pus for $2.50
fraternity, publishes a list of plus tax. The Sigma O m icron
Sigma com m ittee found that
seven im portant books consid­
ered essential reading for inco­ many freshm en were unaware
of certain cultural peculiarities
ming ND-SMC freshm en. This and social habits m anifested by
year’s list, selected over the many college students. The
sum m er by the fraternity’s com m ittee, after studying sev­
bxecutive C om m ittee, pertains eral freshm en who had com ­
pleted
Dr.
T hom pson’s
particularly to problem s and volum e, concluded th at the
pitfalls which have consistently freshm en had “ discovered what
plagued ND-SMC freshm en all the fuss was a b o u t.”
2.The Hesburgh Papers: Higher
over the years.
Values in Higher Education
1.Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
W ritten by N o tre D am e Pres­
W ritten by Dr. H unter S. ident
Fr.
T heodore
M.
H esburgh. Published by Andrews and M cNeel and listed at
$12.95 in the bookstore. N o t
yet available in paperback, Fr.
H esburgh’s book provides an
excellent introduction to fresh­
m en who do no t im mediately
grasp the concept o f a “great
Catholic U niversity.” Also ex­
plains the theory behind a cam ­
pus under constant construc­
tion. hxcellent gift for an in­
com ing freshman.
5.The Joy o f Cooking
W ritten by Irm a S. Rombauer and M arion R om bauer Beeker. Published by Signet and
available in paperback for
$5.95. A nother excellent gift
book, m ost often exchanged
betw een new freshm en and
their older b rothers and sisters.
Casey
PSMIS
2hc
“
A Sigma O m icron Sigma survey
of over 7,800 ND-SMC alum ni
showed that form er ND-SMC
grads who had chosen to give
this book to their younger
brothers and sisters had eaten
an average o f 641 meals in an
N D or SMC dining hall, bspecially useful for freshm en
who move o ff campfus later in
their college careers.
4. Wake Up the Echoes: Notre
Dame Football
By K en R appaport. Publish­
ed by Strode Publishers and
listed at $9.95. A good introduction to w om en who m ight
be unfam iliar with this august
tradition, bxtrem ely useful to
m en and w om en forced to room
with N D trivia freaks,
5-A Panorama: 1844-1977;
by Charles Rodrigues
YOCI KNOW WMT
I HAP IN M r
PACKET
I
TOWU JM 1 9 4 9 ?
ONE.
one,
L o a e y
c n em
<T4R D !
FlooR
The Observer
Box Q, Notre Dame, IN 46556
The Observer is an independent new spaper published by the students of the
University of Notre Dame du Lac and Saint M ary’s College. It does not necessarily
reflect the policies of the adm inistration of either institution. The news is reported
as accurately and as objectively as possible. Editorials represent the opinion of a
majority of the Editorial B oard. Com mentaries, opinions, and letters are the views
of their authors. Column space is available to all m em bers of the community, and
the free expression of varying opinions on cam pus, through letters, is encouraged.
Saint Mary’s College By Sr. Mary
Im m aculate Creek. Published
by Saint Mary’s College at $6.50
per copy. Useful to the N o tre
Dame male who is interested in
understanding the historical
ethos inherited by freshwom en
of Saint Mary’s.
6The Doctor’s Guide to Tennis
Elbow, Trick Knee and Other
Miseries o f the Weekend Athlete
W ritten by Leon R oot, M.D.
and Thom as K iernan. Publish­
ed by the David McKay Com ­
pany and available for $4.95.
Invaluable to freshm en who
participate in N o tre Dam e and
Saint Mary’s interhall football
programs.
iH ow to Get the Job You Want
By Melvin W. D onahue and
Jo h n Meyer. Pubished by
Spectrum Books at $3.95 per
book, bssential for pre-m ed
students who are unable to
obtain a place in medical school
or pre-law intents who fare
poorly on LSAT. A good book
to buy now and save for later.
All books on this list are
available in the N o tre Dame
H am m es B ookstore and can be
obtained through Alpha O m i­
cron Alpha in a leather-bound,
gold-em bossed
special
Freshm an hdition. D irect all
inquiries to T he Observer.
Michael Onufrak is editor o f The
Observer’s editorials page. He is
always lookingfor talentedfreshmen
to write on his page.
Editorial Board and Department Managers
Editor-in-Chief
Paul Mullaney
Managing Editor............................................Mark Rust
Editorials Editor
Michael Onufrak
Senior Copy Editor.................................... Lynne Daley
News E ditor............................................. Pam Degnan
News Editor
Tom Jackman
News Editor
John McGrath
SMC Executive Editor.............................. Margie Brassil
SMC News E ditor......................................Mary Leavitt
Sports Editor.............................................Beth Huffman
Features Editor............................................. Kate Farrell
Features E ditor
Molly Woulfe
Photo Editor................................................. John Macor
Business Manager
Greg Hedges
Controller..........................................................Jim Rudd
Advertising Manager............................ Mike Holsinger
Circulation Manager....................................... Tim Zanni
Production Manager...............................Ann Monaghan
The Observer
Monday, August 25,1980 -page 11
iwwerSM.
dWWlSHlNC
...Buchwald
showing up on the podium . Is
that it?”
“ Isn’t th at enough? If you
don’t like the term s, he can
always fly o u t before Thursday
night.”
“ I b etter check with the
President.” C arter’s aide called
up Jim m y and told him the
terms. T here was some backand-forth talk and then the aide
hung up. “ The President said
we’ll agree to everything, as he
feels Teddy’s appearance is
essential to his victory in
N ovem ber.”
“ Did you tell him Teddy
wouldn’t smile?”
“ Yes, and Jim m y said he
wasn’t worried, because he’ll be
able to smile enough for bo th of
them .”
Los Angeles Times Syndicate 1980
Art Buchwald appears regularly
on The Observer’s editorials page.
'THEADWS1TM10N % IT) OKTo START SPENDINGAG/W, PNDW S JUSTINW f P DO IF IWASNT
BROKE AMDOUT0T WORK!'
Myfirst night
Dazed
and
I’ll never forget my first night
at N otre Dame. Mom and Dad
deserted me in Lewis Hall be­
fore dinner. My room m ate was
out with her parents, so I brave­
ly set out for the South Dining
Hall alone. I think I finally
found it about a half hour later.
My first meal in the dining
hall was quite an experience. I
couldn’t believe what a zoo that
place was. N o t knowing anyone
I asked two girls who looked
like freshm en if I could join
them. O ur conversation was
very polite — and very strained.
We discussed our hom e towns,
musical interests and future
plans. They were very nice, b u tl
longed for the friendly faces of
my high school crowd.
Feeling a little sick after mv
at No
Confused
I asked: “ W here did you go to
high school,” as I wondered
“ W hat if she thinks I’m a real
nerd?”
geant in appearance and m an ­
ner, dropped by to ask if we
wanted to go to a party offcampus that night. W e decided
She asked; “How many are in to go for lack of anything b etter
your family,” wondering “W hat to do, and set o u t for the main
circle a while later.
A t the circle we were greeted
first taste o f dining hall food, I if she studies all the time?”
And so the conversation by som e guys from Dillon who
hiked back to Lewis H all where
escorted ab o u t 30 freshm en
I found my room m ate unpack­ went: tim id questions, nervous
answers,
and
long,
awkward
ing. We sat down on our beds
girls into the back o f a U-Haul
with their green blankets and pauses...
Later our R.A., whom I truck, then slammed the door
starched sheets, and shyly
thought resem bled a drill ser­ and hauled us away like cattle.
searched for things to say.
Controversy surrounds rural utilities
Colman McCarthy
W A SHINGTON — If she had been wiser to the ways of
W ashington pushiness, Levonda McDaniel, the secretary of
the Brumley Gap, Va., C oncerned Citizens, would have taken
m ore than two m inutes to tell her story. Mrs. McDaniel, one
of 200 participants in a recent W hite H ouse m eeting with
rural women, rose to tell a cabinet m em ber and a pair of
assistant secretaries that she and her neighbors in P oor Valley
in southwest Virginia were getting the muscle from the
American hlectric P oor Valley and the Federal Energy Reg
ulatory Commission.
T he full story would have taken hours to tell. Some 119
families in Brumley G ap may be flooded off their land if AhP
goes ahead with plans for a large pum ped-storage power
plant. But Mrs. McDaniel took only two minutes. She had the
instinctual graciousness not to hog the time, knowing that
every o th er woman here — from rural places like Clairfield,
Tenn., Roundup, M ont., W atkins, Minn., Columbia, Mo.,
Chelsea, Vt., Franklin, La. — could have risen to tell o f the
struggles to preserve the integrity of their local com m unities.
D espite the frustration of the conference’s tim e limi­
tations — it was only for an afternoon — the wom en who
came knew th at merely to be organized was w orth ce­
lebrating.
For mkny, the days of milking the cows when the hired man
gets sick, or baking pies and organizing the quilting bee, are
m em ories o f the peaceful past. As one wom an wondered,
w hat’s the use o f keeping to the simple things o f farm life
when the com plexities o f econom ics and politics are con­
spiring to drive you off the land?
W ith 7,600 acres o f Am erican farm land being turned over
to non-agricultural uses every day, those rural wom en who
m ust work outside the hom e often find hidden barriers.
G overnm ent officials, for example,say that a small bus­
iness is one with fewer than 250 employees. B ut according to
Rural Am erican W om en, a W ashington-based group, 87
p ercent of all wom en-owned businesses have no employees
besides the owner, and 80 p ercent of businesses in rural areas
have fewer than 25 workers.
As a result, the sm allest o f the small are often the first to
lose o u t in federal and state program s for rural businesses.
The group recom m ended th at “a small business be defined a s
one with less than 25 persons — no t 250.”
For many o f the wom en at the W hite H ouse m eeting, the
Equal Rights A m endm ent, while necessary, doesn’t engage
the em otions as o ther issues do. Appalachian wom en want
equal rights, bu t they want the strip m iners in their local
valleys to restore the land, which few o f them do. W om en in
the rural South want their families to have access to water and
sewer services; nationally, 30,000 rural com m unities lack
these services. Rural wom en want medical services. Only 12
percent o f the nation’s physicians are in rural areas, though
30 percent o f the national population lives there.
The im m ediate goal o f the leaders o f Rural American
W om en — a m em bership group of ab o u t 3 5 ,0 0 0 — is to
create an awareness beyond the cities; these w om en’s issues
are m uch different than those articulated by urban women.
Meaning no offense to the sisterhood in the cities, Jane
Threatt, the South Carolinian who is president and founder
o f Rural Am erican W om en ,says that, “The strength I see in
rural women I just d o n ’t see in urban women. Rural women
don’t concentrate on things like personal growth or ful­
fillment. T h at’s intellectualizirig, and we don’t have tim e for
it.
At this point, it is hard to say w hether rural women can be
rallied into an effective power bloc. The wom en at the W hite
H ouse were aware th at perhaps the adm inistration, by calling
the m eeting, was engaging in tokenism . B ut the evidence of
concern seem ed to suggest otherwise. For the past three
years, Jack W atson has been quietly traveling the country to
m eet with rural groups and give them what encouragem ent
he could to organize. It was W atson whom Rural Am erican
W om en worked with to bring the W hite H ouse meeting.
In exchanges betw een the wom en and adm inistration
officials, a com m ent from Bob Bergland, the secretary of
agriculture, th at ’’you have m ore pow er than you realize,“
was greeted with skepticism by some. It shouldn’t have been.
In m ore than a few Am erican com m unities, it has been the
strength and fire o f wom en like.Levonda M cDaniel th at has
""cant the difference.
Colman McCarthy is a syndicated columnist who appears regularly
on The Observer’s editorials page.
Ann Gales
T he party was in the back
yard o f a house on N o tre Dame
Ave. I can’t rem em ber exactly
how many kegs there were, but
everyone had a beer in their
hand.
I overheard som e guys who
looked like seniors m ention
som ething ab o u t “checking out
the new shipm ent,” as we
walked by.
Everyone seem ed to be hav­
ing a good time, b u t in the
oisy, laughing crowd I felt
isolated, lonely and terribly out
o f place.
I stayed long enough to drink
one beer, then I found my
room m ate (in the dark I wasn’t
even sure I’d recognize her) and
told her I was walking back to
campus. W hen I g o t back to my
room , I w rote my H T H an
eight-page letter and w ent to
bed.
Before I came to N otre
Dame, som eone told me that
my freshm an year would be one
of the best b u t hardest years of
my life. My friend could not
have spoken tru er words.
Adjusting to college life is
difficult for everyone. Some
seem to hndle the adaptation
period m ore confidently than
others, b u t every freshm an at
one tim e or an o th er feels the
pangs of missing hom e and
friends.
The first few weeks o f school
my freshm an year I was con­
stantly seeing people from a
distance who I th o u g h t I knew
from high school. W hen I got
closer I’d realize, with disap­
pointm ent, that I was mistaken.
T he only cure for the freshm an
syndrom e — and a sure one at
th at - is time. Slowly b u t surely,
you’ll get to know your room ­
m ate and neighbors; after a
while the walk to the dining hal
w on’t seem so long; and over
C hristm as break you’ll find
yourself m istaking people from
hom e for friends from school.
Ann Gales is a former editorials
editor. She was once a freshman, is
now no longer, and she will be very
surprised when she reads this.
Monday, August 25,1980 -page 12
Insider’s Guide to the Notre Dame Campus
Mark Ferron
iP
5.
8
O O P
j= n
4.
10.
6.
11.
13.
li.
O n e of the com m on com plaints of
newly-enrolled freshm en is that they
are n o t fully acquainted with the
campus. New students can be con­
fused by the hundred-odd buildings.
Many m ust ask older students ques­
tions like, “ W here are the fourthfloor classrooms in O ’Shaughnessy.
T o help the new students and to
m ake them feel like a part of Du lac,
we present a to u r of the attractions
on campus.
Freshm an Year Office (1).
In this building, we find the offices
of bm il T. H ofm an, D ean o f Fresh­
m en, and his staff. Dr. H ofm an is
available on W ednesday afternoons
for ring-kissing. (P hone for an
appointm ent)._____________________
St. M ichael’s Laundry (2).
T he University is particularly
proud o f the service they afford the
male students with this ultra-m odern
laundry facility. As a further
im provem ent, the laundry has just
this year added a new boiling caul­
dron and rock.
A dm inistration Building (3).
U nder the G olden D om e are many
of the vital departm ents of the
University, am ong which are the
Admissions Office (who due to a
massive clerical screw-up adm itted
this freshm en class) and the Office of
S tudent A ccounts which never
screws up when it com es to prom ptly
sending tu itio n bills).
Making
B ookstore (4).
H ere students can buy all those
non-resalable books at prices well
above cost. The lower floor has the
finest selection of O sm ond album s in
N o rth ern Indiana.
Infirm ary (5).
T he S tudent H ealth C enter prov­
ides the b est in m odern medical care.
If you feel under the w eather, be sure
to stop by for a leeching.
R ockne M em orial (6).
A fternoons during the school year,
“ the R ock” is the site o f many
exciting on-court battles betw een
students. Som etim es they play
basketball.
Security Office (7).
This is the centrally-located head­
quarters where our cham pions of
justice work ’round the clock to
p ro tect the cam pus from that
m enace, the illegally-parked car.
N o rth Dining Hall (8).
“ Quality Food” is n o t a foreign
term to the Dining Hall cooks; they
know what it m eans and work
diligently to assure th at none is
served here. It is also a great place to
practice your foreign languages when
ordering entrees.
M emorial Library (9).
Later in the sem ester, the second
floor o f the “Sacred Silo” is the site of
the nightly m eeting o f the ND/SM C
G ossip Society.
LaFortune S tudent C enter (10).
A m ulti-purpose building, L aFort­
une houses the offices o f student
governm ent, where you gain valuable
experience as a lackey to the Ad­
m inistration. Also in L aFortune is the
H uddle, fast-food restaurant par
excellence. A favorite place for the
over-30 crowd, it is world-renown for
th at savory grease-bom b, the
H uddle-burger.
O ’Shaughnessy Hall (11).
This is whefe m ost freshm en
classes are held. In the basem ent of
the building is the grade-lottery
machine which professors use to
randomly generate the sem ester’s
grades.
N o tre Dame Stadium (12).
H ere is the site o f last year’s
greatest victory: section 35’s success
at “ passing u p ” G lenda “Fats”
Donahue.
Cushing Hall o f Engineering (13).
O n Friday m ornings, the Engin­
eering A uditorium is a favorite hang­
out o f students o f Emil T. and others
with m asochistic tendencies.
South Dining Hall (14).
Like the N o rth Dining Hall, the
South offers a m eal-tim e change of
pace for those tired o f eating tasty or
appetizing food.
The Crossing (15).
M ost freshm en will m ake the trip
“ across Highway 31" within the first
two weeks o f the sem ester. For the
fortunate, it will also be their last.
Mark Ferron, a fourth-year math major
from Appleton, Wisconsin, is a Features
staff writer.
Transition
Molly Woulfe
“ Freshm an year is a very special
tim e for young people, a tim e of
transition. T h at transition m ust have
a special ap p roach,” Emil T. H ofm an,
Dean o f Freshm an Year o f Studies,
maintains. The Freshm an Year of
Studies, located n ex t to Brownson
Hall, seeks to m ake transitions
easier, helping freshm an to arrange
their academ ic schedules and pro­
viding needed guidance in adjust­
m ent, academics, long-range acade­
mic and career planning and personal
problem s.
According to Dean H ofm an, the
Freshm an Year of Studies is, in ef­
fect, a college for freshm en who have
n o t yet declared their majors and
formally enrolled in a University
’college.’
“ W e provide w hatever assurance is
needed by them to be successful in
the freshm an curriculum ,” Dean
H ofm an explains.
The dep artm ent has a staff of
advisors, each o f whom is assisted by
six or seven seniors, readily available
as counselors. “ O ur freshm en don’t
have serious psychiatric problem s,
b u t com m on problem s such as
hom esickness,” H ofm an remarked.
Talking with students who have
“been th e re ” can ease freshm an
anxieties. All freshm an are encour­
aged to take advantage o f this op­
portu n ity for personal guidance and
assistance.
T he Freshm an Year o f Studies also
sends o u t m onthly new sletters to
freshm en and provides free tutoring
service, as well as self-instructing
media aids, in Brownson Hall,
through the Freshm an Learning
Resource C enter. T utors provide
help “ over and above what can be
reasonably expected o f the teach­
ers,” H ofm an claims, and can streng­
then com m unication betw een pro­
fessors and students. T he R esource
C enter is directed by Sandra Harmatiuk.
T he Freshm an Year o f Studies also
sponsors a num ber o f activities for
freshm en because “ they’re fun, and
good options to the drinking scene,”
H ofm an said. These options include
cookouts, shopping tours, and Fresh­
man D ate night, details o f which can
be found in the freshm an new sletter.
To provide fu rth er aid for fresh­
m en adjusting to college life, a
booklet by H ofm an offering tips
from paper-writing to partying, will
be distributed to every N o tre Dame
freshman. H ofm an prom ises the
booklet is backed by “ thirty years’
experience.”
The Freshm an Year o f Studies is
open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m ., Monday
through Friday.
Saint Mary’s Freshm an Office,
located in R oom 121 LeMans, is
headed by Susan Vanek. T he office
counsels freshm en on first sem ester
program s and study skills, handles
changes in academ ic records, and
provides inform ation ab o u t academ ­
ic policies.
S tudents may also pick up infor­
m ation about activities in conjunc­
tion with the Career D evelopm ent
C enter, and foreign study program s
Freshman Year Office
here.
According to Vanek, the Freshm an
Office will try “ to get the students on
the right academ ic track to a suc­
cessful college career.” The Office is
open from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, o th er times
by appointm ent.
(photo by John Macor)
Monday, August 25,1980 - page 14
The Observer
AND NOW
your
L
A iPljDtn Eaaag bg Snljn Sacnr
Features
Monday, August 25,1980 -page 13
What’s All This, Then?
For those freshmen
eager to spread their wings and
explore the environs outside the
shadow o f the Golden Dome, we have
tried to put to-gether a brief list of
local restaurants and entertainment.
This list is by no means complete, nor
is it an endorsement, per se. Entries
were chosen as much for their ac­
cessibility from campus as their
individual merits
RESTAURANTS
B oar’s H ead 52885 U.S. 31 N
272-5478. D inner 5-12 Sat.,
closed Sun. Steaks, prim e rib
and seafood. D inner entrees
range from $6.45 to $12.95.
A.b., M.C. and Visa cards hon­
ored.
C ap tain A lex an d er’s Moonrak er 320 h. Colfax, South
Bend. 234-447/. D inner 5-12
Sat., 5-9 Sun. Seafood. Entrees
$6.50 to 12.95. A.E., Diners,
C.B., M.C. and Visa cards
honored.
Ice H ouse 700 L in c o ln
W a y W e s t a t th e 100 C e n te r,
Mishawaka. 259-9925.
Seafood and steak. Entrees
$5-50 to $13.50. A.E., M.C. and
Visa honored.
H an s H aus 2 8 0 / S. Michigan
on U.S. 31 S., S outh Bend. 2915522. D inner 4:30-10:30 Sat.,
closed Sun. Bavarian. Entrees
$3.95 to $9.95. A.b. C.B.,
Diners, M.C. and Visa honored.
H acien d a 706 Lincoln Way
W est at the 100 C enter, Mish-
The
Browse through a South Bend
telephone directory. O ne discovers
th at there are 61 apartm ent com ­
plexes, 13 architects, 8 billard room s
and clubs, one A rthur Murray Dance
Studio, and 82 taverns (including one
with the intriguing nam e o f “Mar­
ion’s Hide-a way"). The phone book
hints at an area’s activities: its bus­
inesses, history, and pleasures. B u t
w hat is the story behind those b rief
listings? How did these people, some
of whom live in those 61 apartm ent
com plexes, find them selves in South
Bend?
Like N o tre Dame, S outh Bend
traces its roots to an enterprising
Frenchm an. It was the French ex­
plorer R obert Cavelier Sieur de La
Salle who first blazed trails in the
area, travelling down the Mississippi
from Canada to the G u lf o f Mexico
around 1675. A plaque in South
B end’s Riverview C em etery com ­
m em orates La Salle’s visit to the area.
T he early French influence is reflec­
ted in Indiana names: Vincennes,
Versailles, Vevay and Lafayette.
D espite La Salle’s early explora­
tions, it took the F rench m ore than a
century and a half to establish a local
presence — n o t until 1829 when fur
trader P ierre N avarre arrived to
establish a trading p o st for the
A m erican Fur Com pany on the south
bend o f the St. Jo sep h river. The
trading p o st was originally known as
“ Big St. Jo sep h S tatio n” or “The
B end” . T he presen t nam e was n o t
adopted until 1830, when French
settler Alexis C oquillard christened
the post o f 128 traders South Bend.
South Bend’s Century Center.
awaka. 259-8541. D inner 11-11
Sat and Sun. Mexican. Entrees
$1.00 to $6.95. A.b., M.C. and
Visa honored.
S h an g h ai 130 Dixie Way
South, South Bend. 272-7373.
M andarin Chinese. D inner 1110 Sat. and Sun. Entrees $4.25
to 16.95. A.b., C.B., Diners,
M.C. and Visa honored. Reser­
vations accepted.
Villa C apri 1357 N. Ironwood,
S outh Bend. 287-9200. Italian.
D inner 4:30-11:30 Sat., closed
Sun., late night snacks after 9.
Entrees $3.00 to $11.50. A.b.,
M.C. and Visa honored. Reser­
vations accepted.
South
Today, the population has reached
alm ost 125,000. W hen the surroun­
ding St. Joseph county is included,
the num ber rises to 280,000.
A lm ost seven percent o f the pop­
ulation is black. A nother 15 percent
is com prised o f what the census sheet
labels “ foreign stock” . These are the
ethnic groups of South Bend — the
Poles, H ungarians, Serbians, Greeks,
Swedes, and Mexicans — th at proudcling to their language and culture.
(For example, one can still find
church services in Polish.)
W here do all these people work?
N otre Dam e is the tow n’s second
largest em ployer, with 2800 em ploy­
ees. Historically, however, the Studebaker C orporation was the area’s
m ost im portant employer. Studebaker was founded in 1852 when two
o f five Studebaker brothers started a
blacksm ith shop which soon expan­
ded into wagon and buggy making.
By the end of the century, Stude­
baker was one of the largest wagon
makers in the country, and in 1904, it
expanded still further into auto­
m obile production.
S outh Bend was the heart o f the
S tudebaker operation, acting as
corporate headquarters and residen­
tial territory for S tudebaker’s largest
production plant. By 1949, 12,000
locals were em ployed for the com ­
pany.
U nfortunately for South Bend,
S tudebaker suffered a series of
m arketing setbacks after introducing
the stream lined body in 1949-50. By
1963, the work force dropped to
(photo
by John Macor)
MOVIES
B oiler H ouse Flix
100 Center, Mishawaka. 2559575. Close Encounters: Spec­
ial Edition 7, 9:30. The Blue
Lagoon 7:30, 9:30.
F orum one mile north o f N D
on U.S. 31. 277-1522. I: The
Man with B ogart’s Face 7, 9:30.
II: H oneysuckle Rose 7:10,
9:30. Ill: C heech and C hong’s
N e x t Movie 7:30, 9:45.
R iver P ark 2929 Mishawaka
Ave., South Bend. 291-4593.
The O ctagon 7:30, 9:30.
Scottsdale Miami and Ireland
Roads, S outh Bend. 291-4593.
The Em pire Strikes Back 2,
4:30, 7, 9:30.
Bend
7,000, and finally, Studebaker left
the region altogether in Decem ber,
1963. Today, the Studebaker factory
is a wholly-owned subsidiary of
McGraw-Edison where the Avanti, a
high-priced, custom -m ade sports car,
is still m anufactured in very lim ited
numbers.
Studebaker’s departure left the
Bendix C orporation as the tow n’s
m ajor em ployer, with a work force of
approxim ately 6,000. Founded in
South Bend in the 1920’s, Bendix
began as a m anufacturer o f auto
parts, and later moved into aviation
production. The South Bend plant
still concentrates in these two areas,
although Bendix has expanded
considerably beyond its South Bend
beginnings and becom e a worldwide
conglom erate with many diverse
interests.
But, as the num ber o f taverns
reveal, there is m ore to do than work.
There are varied attractions for
diverse interests. Take architecture,
for example. South Bend boasts two
buildings designed by Frank Lloyd
W right, a forerunner o f the m odern
school of architecture. The Avalon
G ro tto , 705 W. W ashington, is a
private hom e designed during
W right’s final architectural period.
The other has recently been sold to a
private party and is n o t open to the
public. Inform ation on these places
can be obtained from the N orth ern
Indiana H istorical Society and the
South Bend C onvention and Visitors
Bureau.
A nother interesting building is the
T ow n and C o u n try 2340 N.
H ickory Road, Mishawaka. 2599090. I: Smokey and the
Bandit, P art II 1:30, 3:30, 5:30,
7:30 9:30. II: Airplane 1:45,
3:45, 5:45, 7:45 and 9:45.
U niversity P ark G rape and
Cleveland Roads, Mishawaka.
277-0441. H erbie G oes Bana­
nas 2, 4, 6, 8, 10. Caddyshack
1:45, 3:35, 5:25, 7:30 and 9:45.
The H u n ter 1:30, 3:20, 5:10,
7:15 and 9:30.
F or a m ore com plete idea of
w hat’s going on, stay tuned to
local radio stations: W SND FM
88.9 gives good listings o f jazz
and classical perform ances;
W N D U 92 and W RBR 104
broadcast the latest concert
inform ation along with Casey
Kasem and his Sunday m orning
Top Forty countdown. The
South Bend Tribune and the b i­
weekly entertainm ent newslet­
ter Front Runner keep tabs on all
kinds o f nightlife and give a
good overview o f South Bend
entertainm ent.
N eed writers
HELP! The Features page
needs writers. Any freshmen in­
terested in working on the
Features staff should call Kate
Farrell or Molly Woulfe at 7471
or 1715.
N
Michelle Kelleher
Studebaker Mansion or Tippecanoe
Place. C om pleted in 1889, it was the
residence of company president
C lem ent Studebaker.
If all this
history fails to catch your interest,
there is always the great outdoors.
The Freshm an Year o f Studies per­
iodically sponsors trips to Bendix
W oods where one can go hiking,
skiing or picnicing.One sight n o t to
miss: pine trees planted to spell o u t
“Studebaker” (the park was formerly
the Studebaker proving grounds).
O th er picnic places are the Rum
Village Park and N ature Trails .
T he phonebook, radio and Soyth
Bend Tribune are useful ways of
becom ing acquainted with the area.
Movie cinemas offer a reasonably
good selection of b oth first-run and
held-over movies, and the local
theatres — the South Bend Civic
Theatre, the Century C enter, and the
Morris Civic Auditorium , am ong
others present an am bitious
selection o f comic, musical and
dram atic
entertainm ent.
T he four years at ND-SMC can be
spent a lot m ore enjoyably if one
takes ad vantage o f w hat South
Bend has to offer.
Michelle Kelleher, a proud Hoosierfrom
Crawfordsville, Indiana, is a fourth year
government major. This is her first
contribution to Features.
The Observer
i•
Today
C am pus
8:30 a.m.-3 p.m. (ND) —
upper-class
registration.
(ACC)
8:30 a.m.-2 p.m. (ND) —
freshmen registration, (stepan center)
8:30
a.m.-4:30
p.m.
(SMC) — registration for all
students, lemans basement)
Monday, August 25,1980 -page 15
Molarity
Michael Molinelli
THE M C S H M W
HI, MY NAME 15 T H l BIUJW
BILL MORAN f JE A N COOKE.
J WHERE ARE
CHICAGO, v
HEY WHATS
____ ____
I YOUR MAJOR ? /M ATH EM ATICS
8:30 a.m.-12 p.m. (SMC)
— freshmen schedule chan­
ges, a-k. (room 121 lemans)
1 p.m.-4 p.m. (SMC) —
freshmen schedule changes,
1-z. (room 121 lemans)
4:30 -5:30 p.m. (SMC) —
madonna night dinner, (di­
ning hall)
6:30
p.m.
(SMC) —
madonna night ceremony,
(church of loretto)
9:30-12:30 p.m. — square
dance and bonfire for all
students (mcCandless park­
ing lot or angela if rain)
London
journalists
hold out
L O N D O N —Jo u rn a lis ts at
The Times o f London w ent on
strike for m ore pay yesterday,
marking the first w alkout by
journalists at the prestigious
newspaper. N egotiations invol­
ved m em bers o f a governm entappointed arbitration com m it­
tee, m anagem ent representat­
ives, and leaders of of the Times'
local o f the N ational U nion of
Journalists, which represents
280 journalists at the newspap­
er. The journalists, who were
not involved in a previous di­
spute that halted puplication of
the Times for 11 m onths until it
reappeared last N ovem ber, in­
sisted that m anagem ent honor
a 21 percent pay increase re­
com m ended by an independent
arbitrator. The Times has said it
could afford to pay only 18 per­
cent.
m
The Daily Crossword
ACROSS
1 Reel
material
6 Check
10 What a
pity!
14 Reflection
15 Cartoonist
Peter
16 Green: Fr.
17 Old Nick
18 Afrikaans
19 S-shaped
molding
20 A pprentice
22 Chalk
24 Nothing
25 He pays
26 Cheated
31 D ow ncast
32 C ease
33 Paradise
lost
35 Tragic
lover
39 Awkward
boat
40 Pertaining
to birth
42 E ggs
43 Calm
46 O ffice
note
47 - R a b b it
48 Increase
50 Rash
52 Transmuted
56 Have being
57 Lyrical
poem
Today’s answers
will appear in
Tuesday’s edition
of The Observer
ERA supporter
faces sentence
SPRIN GFIkLD, 111. ( A P ) An eight-wom en, four-m an jury
on Friday convicted a form er
N ational
O rganization
for
W om en volunteer o f briberj^in
attem pting to influence an
Illinois lawmaker to vote for the
hqual Rights Am endm ent.
But the jury returned an an­
nouncem ent o f an innocent
verdict on a lesser charge of
soliciting a lawmaker to com ­
m it official m isconduct.
The jury deliberated m ore
than seven hours before return­
ing the verdict against W anda
B randstetter, a 55-year old
Chicago businesswomen.
Mrs.
B randstetter
was
charged with offering a $1,000
bribe to freshm an Republican
Rep. N ord Swanstrom on May
14 if he would vote for the bRA.
Circuit C ourt Judge Jeanne
Scott could sentence Mrs.
B randstetter to seven years in
prison and a$ 10,000 fine. •
© 1980 by C h ic a g o Tribune-N.Y. N ew s Synd. Inc.
All R ig h ts R eserved
Refrigerators
dorm room size
students rates
CALL
TAYLOR
RENTAL
277-2190----------
1427 N. Ironwood
58 Wall
coatin g
62 Deep blue
63 Forest
creature
65 Dwell
66 H eed
67 Sicilian
landmark
68 Nocturnal
lemur
69 Special
periods
70 O fficious
71 Trapshooting
DOWN
1 Ancient
sacred
recep tacle
2 Tent maker
3 Pro—
4 Con
5 Nickname
for Nlmoy
6 Fill to
the brim
7 M usical
syllable
8 Make into
law
9 Teeth
10 Salad fruit
11 Genuine: si.
12 Personifi­
cation of
courage
m
m
13 Ranch
animal
21 Terry or
Drew
23 Tragic king
26 Fellow
27 Lagomorph
28 M iss C hase
29 Dutch
ch eese
30 D iscourage
34 Appoint
36 Additional
37 Arden and
others
38 Rest on
o n e 's—
41 Slow train
44 Tapers
45 Move
gradually
47 African
antelope
49 Muffle
51 Animal
en clo su res
52 Wading bird
53 Revere
54 L ouise or
Bryant
55 B e ca u se of
58 Attend
church
59 Weary
60 M iss Adam s
61 R epose
64 Navy man:
abbr.
Notre Dame
Credit Union
C hecking”
share-draft accounts
SPECIAL HOURS
Saturday
9 -4
Sunday
1 2 -4
closed Labor Day
regular hours
M o n .-F ri. 8 :3 0 -5
most convenient location
no service charge
Monday, August 25,1980 page 16
The Observer
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HAMMES NOTRE DAME BOOKSTORE
Monday, August 25,1980 -page 17
The Observer
WHERE TO FIND IT ON THE FIRST
FLOOR OF THE HAMMES NOTRE DAME BOOKSTORE
1. ENTER
2 NOTRE DAME
SPO R T SW EA R
3. JACK ETS
4. C A PS
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6. IMPRINT S H O P S
7 COPYING
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9. INSIGNIA WARE
10. GREETING CARDS
11 R EC O R D S
12. HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS
13 STATIONARY & NOTES
14. SCH O O L SU PPL IE S
15. ART GALLERY
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18. RELIGIOUS JEW ELRY
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WHERE TO FIND BOOKS ON THE UPPER LEVEL OF THE HAMMES BOOKSTORE AT NOTRE DAME
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The Observer - Sports
Monday, August 25,1980 -page 18
Adm ission to the building is
granted only to students pre­
senting a valid, N o tre Dame
identification
card
(which
freshm en will receive at regis­
tration on Monday). N o tre
Dame students may bring
along an out-of-tow n guest who
will be issued a tem porary ID
by the R ockne staff.
T he building’s hours o f operation are 7:30 a .m .- 11 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, 9 a.m .11 p.m. on Saturday and 10 a.m.
through 11 p.m. on Sunday.
Since the swimming pool is
used so extensively by N otre
D am e’s swimming team s and
water polo team , as well as for
phys-ed classes, its hours of
operation are som ewhat dif­
ferent. The pool is accessible
from 12 noon - 1:15 p.m., 3 p.m.
- 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. - 11 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, and 1
p.m. - 6 p.m. and 7 p.m. - 11
p.m. on Saturday and Sunday.
Always check the R ockne
bulletin board or the board in
your dorm for changes in this
schedule.
.Rock
[icontinued fro m page 19]
two squash courts and more.
hvery freshm an becom es
som ewhat familiar vyith the
building right away, hxcept for
those students in an ROTC
program , all freshm en m ust
take physical education. The
initial m eeting o f all o f the physed classes
takes place on the
third floor of the Rock in the
large gymnasium. At th at time,
the phys-ed program and all of
the ro tation options will be
explained in detail by Dennis
Stark, chairm an of the Physical
ed u catio n D epartm ent.
b ach sem ester is divided into
th ree rotations with each ro­
tatio n four to five weeks in
length, bach student may
choose a different sport for
each rotation. Varsity athletes
will receive credit for four of
their six rotations and therefore
will be required to take only two
sports.
six o f which are lighted — a
driving range, putting green,
and a field for flag football and
field hockey. The m ost recent
additions to this list include a
softball diam ond and an allw eather track.
n o t only practice there, b u t
com pete as well. H ockey seat­
T he Saint Mary’s cam pus
ing perm its over 4,000 fans to
boasts a well-equipped sports
watch the Irish and seating is
com plex in its recently com ­
provided for several hundred
pleted Angela A thletic Facility.
track and field fans.
Angela’s unique architectual
In addition to the dozens of
style and design has been
phys ed students who use the
nationally recognized and awar­
ACC daily, the many facilities
Athletic and
ded several tim es in its brief
betw een the dom es and around
history. T he com plex has three
their p erim eters are for th e use
Convocation Center
interchangeable courts used for
of all N o tre D am e students and
W hen N o tre D am e’s Athletic
tennis, volleyball and basket­
faculty. Four basketball courts,
ball; a m ultipurpose area for and C onvocation C enter o- eight
handball/ racquetball
fencing, gymnastics, tum bling, pened on D ecem ber 7, 1968, courts and four squash courts
exercise and dance; and two NBC sportscaster C urt Gowdy are available. Unlike the R ock­
called it “ the best, m ost com ­ ne M em orial facilities, how­
raquetball courts. In addition,
the facility houses a universal plete sports com plex in the ever, which are available on a
gym, billiards, and ping pong - country.” Many similar facili­ first-com e/first-serve basis, the
ties have been built in the 12 ACC courts should be reserved.
tables. Angela is open daily
years
since, yet the ACC still
from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. C ourts
Also located betw een the
ranks near the top o f the list.
may be reserved two days in
dom es and around their peri­
A. new com er to the Univer­ m eters are m ost o f the athletic
advance. Located inside Regina
sity
m ight wander through the d ep artm en t’s adm inistrative of­
Hall is the cam pus’s indooroutdoor swimming pool, fea­ ACC’s maze of stairwells and fices. O n the second floor are
corridors for hours and still not the ticket office, the sports
turing a one m eter diving board
see it all. T he building’s inform ation office, the student
and a skylight which is opened
464,800 square feet o f usable m anagers office, the M onogram
in the sum m er. Saint Mary’s has
floor space m ake it the largest R oom and the adm inistrative
an impressive list of outdoor
exibition hall betw een D etro it offices. O n the first floor are
athletic facilities as well. It
and Chicago.
includes nine tennis courts —
alm ost all of the varsity sports
Q uite simply, the double­ (and coaches) offices plus the
dom ed ACC is divided in two. varsity training facilities and
U nder the south dom e is the weight room .
11,345 seat basketball arena,
Students may be asked to
hom e o f Fighting Irish basket­ present a valid N o tre Dame
ball. Yet the arena’s incredible identification card to be gran­
flexibility perm its it to house ted adm ittance to the building.
Oliver.
m ajor concerts (The Cars, Bill T hose wishing to borrow eRookie defensive end Mansel Cosby com ing up), guest speak­ quipm ent (i.e. racketballs, bas­
C arter is yet an o th er newcoer ers (form er P resident Ford last ketballs, towels, etc.) m ust
who should help ou t on defense winter) and more.
present a N o tre Dam e ID.
U nder the n o rth dom e is the
T he building’s hours o f othis year. The 6-8, 225-pound
C arter was a high school team ­ fieldhouse, an even m ore flex­ peration vary w ith the schedule
ible facility used by over a half of special events, b u t basically,
m ate of form er Irish record
dozen varsity team s at various the ACC is" open from 8 a.m. to
holder Jerom e Heavens at As­ points during their respective 11 p.m. daily. Check the ACC
sum ption H igh School in b. St.
seasons. T he m ost notable bulletin board or your hall
Louis, Mo., where he recorded
fieldhouse residents are the bulletin board for schedule
17 career sacks and 60 solo
hockey and track team s who changes.
tackles.
... Marshall
[icontinued fro m page 20]
have done everything they can
to tig h ten the race with ex­
cellent sum m er practice ses­
sions. In the eyes o f many,
G room s and Kiel have pulled
even with, if not surpassed,
seniors Mike Courey, G reg
K nafelc and Tim K oegel in the
Irish quarterback derby.
bveryone knew last spring
th at b o th Kiel and G room s
were fine quarterbacks, b u t
they have surprised even Devine with their perform ances
thus far.
“ T he two freshm en (Q B ’s)
are b e tte r than I th o u g h t they
were going to b e,” said Devine.
G room s, who followed Ohio
State star quarterback Art
Schlichter at Miami Trace,
threw only three interceptions
during his career at the G reen­
field, O hio, high school.
All Devine would say about
the cu rren t quarterback situa­
tio n was that, “ the guy who the
staff decides can best beat
Purdue will open for us.”
bven if K iel sees little action
directly behind center, it ap­
pears that he will still be taking
several snaps every game. At
this p oint it looks like the
C olum bus, Ind., native has the
inside track on the punting
chores. Kiel averaged 38.4
yards on 105 attem pts in high
school, including a record-set­
ting 74-yarder last fall.
Kiel, ranked by m ost scout­
ing services as the best high
school p u n ter in the nation for
the last two years, could add an
exciting fake possibility to the
Irish special teams.
O th e r freshm en alm ost cer­
tain to see action this fall,
mostly on defense, include de­
fensive backs Chris Brown, who
runs the 100 in under 10 sec­
onds, and Stacey Toran, a de­
fensive back and wide receiver
in high school who caught 20
passes last year, averaging b et­
ter than 25 yards per reception.
In the secondary he picked off
three passes and made 46 tac­
kles.
Freshm en Jo h n Mosley and
Rick N aylor should add depth
to the Irish linebacking corp.
Mosley is a converted running
back from nearby Culver Mil­
itary Academy in Culver, Ind.
Naylor, a m em ber o f Coach and
Athlete’s “ Super 11” last year,
joins a long list of Cincinati’s
Moeller H igh School graduates
to play at N o tre Dame, inclu­
ding active players Bob Crable,
Tony H unter, Tim Koegel,
Dave C ondeni and Harry
Sports Briefs.
... Kelly
[continued from page 20]
vities, which is available in their
office on the first floor o f the
ACC. The m ost fam ous norivarsity sport on campus, how­
ever, doesn’t com e under the
auspices of the Non-V arsity
Sports Program . Rather, it is
the campus-wide B ookstore
Basketball tournam ent held
each spring during An Tostal.
The student-run event will
celebrate its ten th anniversary
in April, and received national
acclaim in Sports Illustrated
magazine in 1978.
T he sin­
gle-elim ination tournam ent is
open to any student, graduate
and undergraduate, and any
faculty and staff m em ber.
Pinocchio’s Pizza Parlor
Hours
Luncheon
Specials
Weekdays
$2.00 off Any Large Pizza
1.00 off Any Small Pizza
F our of N o tre D am e’s five 1980 hom e football gam es arq
com pletely sold out, according to Irish ticket m anager Mike
Busick.
N o tickets rem ain for the Purdue (Sept. 6), M ichigan (Sept.
20), Miami (Oct. 11) or Army (Oct. 18) gam es slated for
N o tre D am e Stadium.
Some tickets do rem ain for the N ovem ber 22 Air Force
g a m e — and they are available to the general, public.
Air Force tickets can be ordered through the mail by
writing to the N o tre D am e T icket Office; A thletic and
C onvocation C enter; University of N o tre Dame; N o tre
Dame, IN 46556. Tickets are $ 12 each, and there is a postage
and handling charge of $1 per order.
All checks should be made payable to the University of
N o tre Dame.
N D general try-out meeting
T here will a general m eeting Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the
Library A uditorium for those interested in trying o u t for
w om en’s basketball, fencing, field hockey, tennis, swimming
(co-ed), and volleyball. T he m eeting will also include reports
on intram ural and interhall com petition, sport interest
groups (w om en’s fast pitch softball and co-ed gymi v tics)
and club sports (track and cross country, co-ed rowing, co-ed
sailing, and co-ed skiing). Call 2163 for m ore inform ation.
Baseball team slates m eeting
11:00-12:00 M on-Thur
11:00-1:30 Fri&Sat
B@@r SpGCidlS
Every Nite - 8:00 to 9:00
$.25 Mug $1.25 Pitcher
ThisCoupon Good For One Pizza
A ir Force tickets remain
1:00-10:00 Sun
\
We Deliver
pondoioV book/
used paperbacks from boolist
at reduced prices— texts on 3-day notice
Emmons
—
Watch the Games
on our Wide Screen
T here will be a very im p o rtan t m eeting b o th for returnees
from the spring 1980 N o tre Dam e baseball team and any new
candidate interested in trying o u t for the squad. All classes
freshm en through senior are invited to the W ednesday
m eeting at 4:15 p.m. in the football auditorium in the ACC
(enter gate 2). Please bring a pen or a pencil.
n
Juniper
■ND
USED BOOKS
BOUGHT & SOLD
phone 233-2342
south bend avenue
! at C O R B Y BLVD.
The Observer - Sports
Monday, August 25,1980-page 19
AstridHotvedt
Faces and Places
idward ‘Moose’ Krause
A dom inant N o tre Dame
ports figure for nearly 50 years,
Edward W. “M oose” Krause
has served Irish athletics on the
gridiron, at the basketball
hoop, on the track and finally,
n the adm inistrative aspect as
athletic director for 31 years.
Krause, a graduate o f DeLa-
Salle H igh School in Chicago,
was honored in 1976 by being
nam ed to the N ational Basket­
ball Hall o f Fame. K rause was
also granted all-American ho­
nors in football and basketball
during his three years as a N otre
Dame athlete. K rause also
served the Irish as varisty bas­
ketball coach, com piling a 9848 com posite. The 67-year old
K rause is the father o f the Rev.
, hdward K rause Jr., a religious
studies professor at Saint
Mary’s College.
)
Joseph O ’Brien
Edw ard ‘‘M oose ’’ Krause
Col. John Stephens
Assistant athletic director
and business m anager Joseph
O ’Brien has handled all areas of
N otre Dame athletic budget
and travel for four years.
O ’Brien, a 1949 N otre Dame
graduate, was the m ost influ­
ential figure in arranging for the
specifics concerning the 1979
Mirage Bowl in Tokyo, Japan.
P rior to his selection as assis­
tant athletic director O ’Brien
served over 20 years as per­
sonnel director for the Univer­
sity.
Col. John Stephens
Col. Jo h n Stephens, associate
athletic director, jokingly refers
to his job as “Moose K rause’s
office boy.” Stephens served as
a professor of military science
and com m anding officer o f the
N otre Dame Army ROTC be­
fore his ap pointm ent to his
present position in 1976. The
recipient o f the Legion o f Merit,
the Silver Star, the Bronze Star
and the Purple H eart, Stephens
functions as liason betw een the
University and the NCAA.
Stephens has also aided in the
cheduling of football games
ind works as one o f N o tre
Dame’s chief public relation
officials.
Tom Kelly
Joseph 0 ’Brien
M ichael Busick
his arrival at the University 16
years ago. Kelly began as an
assistant baseball coach under
the tutelage of hall-of-famer
coach Clarence “Jak e” Kline. In
post as director of non-varsity
athletics and Kelly assumed the
position which he still retains
today. In this vein, Kelly deals
with intram ural, interhall and
club sports. Following the 1975
baseball season Kline retired,
T o m K elly, d ire c to r o f non.risty ath letics a t N o tre D am e,
is excelled in m any areas since
More freshm en will encoun­
ter this m an in a classroom
situation during the upcom ing
week than any o ther faculty
m em ber, including hmil.
D ennis Stark, chairm an of
the Physical Education D epar­
tm ent, is the m an responsible
for coordinating all o f the in­
tricacies o f N o tre D am e’s ex­
tensive freshm an phys ed pro­
gram. Lining up instuctors for
each o f the sports in each ro­
tation as well as class locations
are only a small part of S tark’s
responsibilities at N otre Dame.
A 1947 N o tre Dam e gradu­
ate, Stark returned to his alma
m ater a few years later as a phys
ed instructor and in 1958 as­
sumed the head coaching
chores for the newly form ed
varsity swimming team , a post
he has held ever since. Under
Stark, the Irish swimmers have
com piled a 133-119-1 m ark in
22 seasons.
Swimming plays an im por­
tant role in Stark’s phys ed
program here. A fter a brief
orientation on the third floor of
the R ockne M emorial on the
first class day, each freshm an
m ust pass a simple swimming
test on day two. “N o t being able
to swim is nothing to be asham ed of,” says Stark. “If
som eone doesn’t know how to
play tennis or how to play
volleyball, their life isn’t in
danger. O n the o th er hand, not
being able to swim can be lifethreatening. O u r program is a
precaution for their benefit.”
Those students falling below
a certain point level in their
swimming test will be required
to take swimming during the
first o f their six rotations. After
that, they will be free to choose
a sport they wish to learn m ore
about.
Dennis Stark
Roger Valdiserri
A 1954 N otre Dam e gradu­
ate, Roger Valdiserri heads into
his 15 th year as Sports Infor­
m ation director and his fifth as
assistant athletic director.
O ne of the m ost respected
m en in his field, Valdiserri
heads a staff o f two full time
assistants (John H eisler and
K aren Croake), three secrataries and over a dozen student
assistants who work together
staffing press bo x facilities,
publishing press guides for the
U niversity’s varsity sports as
well as football and basketball
program s and providing a
wealth o f Irish statistics and
sports inform ation to the
world. T he dep artm en t prim ar­
ily serves as the public relations
d epartm ent for N o tre Dam e
athletics.
Since 1967 Valdiserri has
earned 31 awards from the
College Sports ' Inform ation
D irectors o f America (CoSIDA)
for his sports publications.
Michael Busick
just a few short years, Kelly was
appointed assistant director of
non-varsity sports. In the spring
of 1979, D om inick “ N appy”
N apolitano retired from his
Tom K elly
Dennis Stark
leaving Kelly as coach o f the
Irish team. Kelly functioned as
coach until the end o f the 1980
spring season when he stepped
down to devote m ore time to
his job in the non-varisty ath­
letics office.
Mike Busik directs N otre
D am e’s expanding ticket de­
partm ent th at encompasses all
University events. U nder his
realm are the ticket program s
for N o tre Dam e football, bas­
ketball and hockey as well as
ACC concerts and o ther special
events. His increasingly com ­
plex operation includes the use
o f the University com puter
facilities to aid in the allocation,
distribution and mailing of
athletic tickets.
A 1973 N o tre Dame gradu­
a te , Busick served as head
football m anager for the 1972
Irish season. Ju st three m onths
after his graduation, Busick
becam e N otre D am e’s assistant
ticket m anager and assumed
the top ticket position in March
1975.
1980 Irish
grid schedule
Serving as N o tre D am e’s
C oordinator o f W om en’s A th­
letics is A strid H otvedt. The
1969 Eastern Michigan gradu­
ate came to N o tre D am e in
1974 after years o f b o th par­
ticipation in and adm inistration
3f w om en’s sporting activities.
Astrid is in her fifth year as an
Irish adm inistrator and, until
this season, she coached the
w om en’s field hockey team as
well. H o tv ed t continues to
w ork for the expansion of
w om en’s athletics at N otre
D am e by seeking o u t the needs,
interests, and talents that exist
in the rapidly growing w om en’s
sports program at N o tre Dame.
A strid H otvedt
Jerry DaUessio
Jerry Dallessio plays a dual
p art in the production o f Saint
Mary’s athletics. In addition to
being the Belles’s athletic and
recreation director, Dallessio
finds tim e to coach the varsity
basketball team as well. Coach
Dallessio received his B.A. and
M.A. from N o tre Dame. H e has
had considerable experience in
elem entary and high school
athletics, serving as the girls
basketball coach at South Bend
St. Jo sep h ’s high school before
moving up the road to Saint
Mary’s. In his two years as
A thletic D irector, the Belles’
sports program has undergone
trem endous growth, and Dal­
lessio has produced the m ost
successful cage squads in Saint
Mary’s history.
Roger Valdiserri
Erin Murphy
Erin Murphy, Saint Mary’s
assistant athletic director, will
begin her second year as a Belle
adm inistrator and will also start
her second season at the helm of
Saint Mary’s volleyball squad.
M urphy
has experienced a
broad athletic backround her­
self as a player at Lewis Uni­
versity and as a co m p etito r on
several volleyball team s on the
national level. Before coming
to Saint Mary’s, M urphy de­
veloped her adm inistrative
skills by directing athletics for
Chicago’s Park D istricts for
several years.
Jerry Dallessio
Rockne Memorial
A ffectionately know n to its
legion o f fitness freaks as “The
R ock,” The R ockne Memorial
is a facility for the use of not just
varsity athletes, b u t the entire
N o tre D am e population. Lo­
cated at the extrem e west end of
the S outh Quad, the Rock of­
fers som ething for every casual
exerciser including a swimming
pool, two basketball courts,
one com plete weight room plus
an o th er under construction, 10
racquetball/handball
courts,
Sept. 6 .
Sept. 20 ................ Michigan
Oct. 4 .. ....... at Michigan St.
Oct. 11. ...........Miami (Fla.)
Oct. 18.
•Oct. 25 k.™«~™-~at Arizona
Nov. 1 . .................... at Navy
Nov. 8 . . .. at Georgia Tech
Nov. 15
Nov. 22. .................Air Force
Dec. 6 .. . . . . at Southern Cal
Erin M urphy
{continued on pa g e 18]
Monday, August 25,1980 -page 20
And a last
A first time for everything
T here’s a first tim e for everything, and your
freshm an year at N o tre Dame will be filled with
premiers, such as your first extended stay away
B eth
from hom e, your first room m ate, your first Saga
cooked meal, your first college class, and your
first “ D ouble hm il.”
Parallelling these forgetable experiences are
the ones treasured by those tarn and plaid clad
annals thicken with each accom plishm ent. As a
alumni, the times we’ll play m ost clearly when
m em ber o f the stu d en t body th at won a un­
we’re playing “ R em em ber when?” at our first
precedented MVP award in the 1977 N otre
class reunion. Few o ther universities offer the
Dame-San Fransisco basketball clash, you will
com bination o f excellent academic and athletic
have the opp o rtu n ity to see th at history happen.
experiences. D uring your years at Saint Mary’s
D ue to the results o f th e T itle IX ruling, which
and N otre D am e you will surely encounter times
forces N o tre Dam e to spend m ore m oney on
similar to th eseb its of Irish legend:
w om en’s sports, your freshm an year will also be
N O T R h DAMh, Ind. — O ctober 22, 1977 —
the rookie season o f com petition for w om en in
W earing green for the first tim e in over a dozen
Division I basketball. The w om en’s volleyball
years, the “ G reen W ave” poured into N o tre
team and m en’s lacrosse team will open their
Dame Stadium and overwhelm ed Southern Cal,
initial seasons at the varsity level. You will have
49-19. D an Devine, in his third year as head
the chance over your years to watch these and
coach for N o tre Dam e, led the G reen Machine
o ther team s grow from infancy to puberty and
down the path o f Irish m em orabilia.
finally to m aturity.
H O U STO N , T e x .— January 2, 1978 — N o tre
T he 1980-81 academic year also will be a year
Dame stole a controversial national cham pion­
of lasts. The hockey team will com pete in its last
ship from Bear Bryant and his Crim son Tide as
year in the W estern Collegiate H ockey As­
the Irish upset undefeated and num ber-one
sociation as the “Irish leers” prepare to jum p to
pegged Texas, 38-10. The national title returned
the C entral Collegiate H ockey A ssociation for
to South Bend once again, its first visit since
the 1981-82 season. This will also be th e final
1973.
season for many N o tre Dame and St. Mary’s
H O U STO N , Tex. — New Y ear’s Day, 1979 —
athletes slated to graduate in the spring. T he list
the Irish secure a last-second, miracle win over
o f N o tre D am e’s senior superstars includes the
H ouston in the C otton Bowl with a N o tre Dame
likes of Kelly Tripucka, Tracy Jackson, Jo h n
touchdow n as the clock reached 0:00, by Kris
Scully, Tom G ibbons, O rlando W oolridge.John
Haines on an eight-yard pass from “The
K om ora, Dave Campbell, H erb H opw ood, Mark
C om eback K id” Jo e M ontana. Placekicker Joe
Hoyer, Jeff Brownschidle, Maggie Lally, Tricia
Unis nailed another miracle as the Irish tallied a
McManus, Kevin Lovejoy, Sami Kahale, Oliver
Senior captain Dan McCurrie was one o f over two dozen Irish
win on the extra point kick, 35-34.
Franklin, M aureen O ’B rien . . .
soccer players participating in this w eek's grueling
N O T R h DAMh, Ind. — February 27, 1980 — a
Y our first year will also be one o f N o tre D am e’s
three-a-day drills on Cartier F ie ld T h e Irish open Sept. 7 at
stunning upset o f num ber-one ranked Depaul,
Cincinnati. [Photo by John Macor]
m ost widely recognized personalities’ last year.
76-74, in a double-overtim e thriller by Richard
Football H ead Coach Dan Devine, now entering
“D igger” Phelps’
basketball squad in the
his sixth year as an Irish m entor, gave the
ACC. N o tre Dam e graduate and Blue D em on’s
dem anding N o tre Dam e fans a national cham ­
coach, Ray Meyer, could n o t out-craft the m aster
pionship in 1977. D evine’s service to the co m ­
Phelps, and the Chicago based team becam e the
m unity is im m easurable and the class o f 1981,
sixth team in recent history to achieve the
this year’s seniors, are appropriately the last class
nation’s acclaim as num ber one, only to tum ble
to graduate th at actively took part in that
historic cham pionship. L et it be in your prayers
School, an honor won the pre­ to the Irish.
by Paul Mullaney and
T he list o f N o tre Dame com e-back wins,
th at D an Devine can give you such a m em ory, a
vious two years by Tony H unter
Michael Ortman
national cham pionship in your first year, and in
(1978) and Bob Crable (1977), miracles and legendary feats is near endless.
his last at N o tre Dame.
h arlier this m onth, the Big 10 b o th now starring for the Irish. H istory is made each day at N o tre D am e as the
Jo e T erranovi, director of
and the Pac 10 (known in Rose
Bowl circles as the Pac 5) an­ one o f the nation’s leading high
nounced th at they would sup­ school scouting services, affec­
tionately dubbed Marshall “ a
p o rt th e reinstatem ent o f the
D arth Vader in cleats,” partly
freshm an ineligibility rule,
because o f his size, b u t mostly
which the NCAA elim inated in
by Craig Chval
non-varsity athletic program
on its population, interest level
1972. B ut the NCAA m eeting because o f his aggressive style
Sports
Writer
offers
b
e
tte
r
than
fifty
activities
and
the sport. T here are also j
of play.
w on’t take place until January,
open to all students. From bo x ­ several events th at individuals
T
he
biggest
question
on
and until some action is taken in
Dr. Tom Kelly wants you!
ing to squash to ice hockey,
can en ter on their own, such as j
everyone’s mind since the end
this direction, freshm en can
Before
you
decide
to
p
u
t
your
there
is
som
ething
to
keep
the
N o tre Dame O pen, a cam­
of last season has been, “ W ho’s
play college football. N otre
athletic career in m othballs in every ex-jock jocking around.
pus-wide golf to u rn am en t con- j
gonna quarterback?” Freshm en
Dame fans should be quite glad
favor o f thirty dollar calculus The residence halls are the basis
tested on N o tre D am e’s Burke
Scott G room s and Blair Kiel
those m eetings aren’t until
for
m
ost
team
sports,
with
each
books
and
three-hour
science
M
emorial G o lf Course. In ad­
January.
[continued on page 18] labs, be m indful th at K elly’s hall entering team s depending
dition to N o tre D am e’s vast I
N o t less than three Irish
intram ural program , Kelly and]
freshm en have a b etter than
his assistant, Rich O ’Leary, f
average chance o f starting this
oversee N o tre D am e’s nine)
season, a n d 1 several others
club
sports. W o m e:> track,j
should provide m uch needed
skiing, rugby, m en’s volleyball,!
d epth in places where the Irish
rowing, sailing, weight lifting I
need it the most.
and
w ater polo all com pete!
T he rookie with perhaps the
against o th er schools and clubs]
best shot at starting the Sep­
th ro u g h o u t the
Midwest.
tem b er 6 season opener against
N
o
tre
D
am
e’s
ninth club I
P urdue is defensive linem an
sport, boxing, is entering its!
Tim Marshall. The 6-4, 24051st seaso n . in 1980-81. The!
pound am azon from Chicago is
club
has earned a national!
very m uch in the running for a
prom inence with its annual]
spot on the line, b u t exactly
Bengal Bouts, a three-day tour-]
where is still uncertain.
nam ent, the proceeds o f whicl
“ Marshall will start,” said
are donated to missions ir
Irish head coach Dan Devine
Bengladesh. The finals o f the
earlier this week, “I can alm ost
Bengals have been televised bj
predict that. You just can’t
NBC-TV
for the past two years!
keep a player th at good ou t of
The
D
ep
artm
en t of Non-Var-j
the lineup.” “Ju st because I’m a
sity A thletics posts b u lletin !
freshm an,” says Marshall with
regarding sign-up deadlines anc
confidence, “ th at doesn’t m ean
playing dates in the Rockn^
I have to play like a freshm an.”
M emorial and the A thletic anc
Marshall, who was nam ed to
C onvocation Center. Kelly anc!
literally every m ajor publica­
his staff also have published
tio n ’s high school All-America
guide
to all non-varsity ar^'l
team , was nam ed Catholic
Player o f the Year after his
[continued on p a g e 48]|
senior season at W eber High
Huffman
Marshall, freshmen a big plus
to 1980 Irish football squad
Kelly
directs
non-var
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