Black & White - Archives of the University of Notre Dame

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VOL. XV, NO. 82
.Gatnecocks - page 8
an independent student newspaper serving notre dame and saint mary's
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1981
CILA celebrates 20 years;
emphasizes justice for all
Hesburgh
addresses
•
tssues
BY KELLI FLINT
Senior Staff Reporter
Many consider Fr. Theodore M.
llesburxh the most powerful Cat·
ho/ic in America. Since 1952, the
office of President of the l!niversi~v
of Notre Dame has been bis. His inf/ut•nce, hou•t•r•er, e."Ctends far
bt:J>mld the bounds of the Uniwr·
SI/J•. lie bas trcweled thn.ml(houttbe
u•orld as a noted speaker and bas
sen•ed as chairman oftbe board fur
as many as 6 orxanizattons at
once. llesburxh u•as interr,iewed in
two sessions bv Staff Reporter
lhwid Sarphie.
The Community for the International Lay Apostolate brought together students, faculty, and CILA
alumni for a workshop in celebration of its 20th anniversary.
The workshop included two sessions. The first session was held on
Friday night, and the second on
Saturday morning.
In Friday's session, four panelists
discussed the ql;!elti_pll."Whc~e do
justice advm.:ald'go iJ/hen the mood
of the country is going in reverse?"
The panel included Government
Department
members
Edward
Goerner
and
Peter
Walshe,
Economics Department member
Kenneth Jameson, and Kathleen Osberger, a Notre Dame graduate currently direct:ng the St. Athanasius
Parish Center in the South Bronx.
Goerner opened the discussion
by stating that he felt uncomfortable
about the title of the meeting. ''I'm
not sure that our country is going in
reverse," he said. "The country
voted against an incompetent administration, not against justice.
Jameson began by stating that an
article which he wrote in response
to the title question did not appear
in The Observer as planned. He also
noted the amount of space used for
sports in the newspaper. " The Observer has six pages of sports,"
Fr. Hesburgh
Q: I read In the Chicrgo Tribunt·
of your scheduled restwwtion in
19H2. /lou• definite is tbatdate, and
ll'i/1 tht• Trustees accept it?
A: I have no way of knowing, bccaust· the Trustees arc completely
th·c to do what they want. I have
This Keenanite hams it up during one of the skits of the muchgiven them a resignation every year
heralded Keenan Revue that played 011er the weekend in O'Laughlin
for the past five or six years. In those
Hall at Saint Mary's. (photo by john Macor)
l·ast·s I ht·y ha Vl' asked mt· to go on
for another yt·ar. and so I've only acn·ptt·d a yt·ar at a time. I've just mcntiorwd that datt· to them as a
l"OilVcnknt date. Nothing is definite
until tht·y dt·cide it. They're the ones
who have to make that decision; I
don't make lht· decision.
prohibition, now they run dope."
Q: V('hat tffect ti'i/1 your resigna- By BILL CRIDER
these tend to haul not bulky
Indeed, smugglers run so much marijuana but high -price, small tion bm•e 011 /be school. especial~}' Associated Press Writer
dope these days that the intricate pack stuff like Quaaludcs, a popular
tl'ith the nell' bead football coach
am/ athletic director?
maze of inlets and bayous along the depressant that can bring 55 a pill on
NEW ORLEANS- From pirates to
A: I think t·very ~chool has new prohibition to pot, "Louisiana al- coast where the pirate Jean Lafitte the street.
peopk l·oming in all tht· time. ways has been a smuggler's once reigned is developing into the
Narcotics agents know they can
st<ip only a small part of the flood.
paradise," says one frustrated federal nation's busiest drug route.
See HESIUJRGH, page4
agent. "They ran whisky during
Florida, of course, is probably still Even so, the I 0 percent or I 5 pertht· drug smuggler's chosen land. cent they do get amounts to so many
Cynics there rank dope running as tons of pot it eats up time and money
the state's primary industry, surpass- just to get rid of it.
ing tourism.
The Drug Enforcement Administration has burned marijuana
in ·• sugar mill boilers in Cajun
country and in a paper mill furnace
at Bogalusa. But the cheapest dis·
WARSAW, Poland (AP)- The 10 ister Andrzej Kacala, was to confer
posal method is still a bonfire in an
milllon-mcmbt·r independent labor with a worker-farmer panel led by
open field.
"It can tie up 20 men
union Solidarity dt·cidl·d yesterday Bogdan Lis, one of Walesa's two
two or three days to burn I 00,000
to l"all off a nationwide. one-hour, deputies.
But trafficking along the Florida
pounds of marijuana," said DEA
The farmers' union charter ap· coast dropped off when Coast Guard
warning strikt· scht·duled in support
spokeman Michael Downs. "We
of private farmers demanding their plication is pending before the patrols increased for last year's
stoke the fire with diesel fuel, old
Supreme Court, which is to rule on Freedom Flotilla of Cuban refugees,
own independent union.
tires, boards, anything that helps it
The announcemt·nt came during a the matter Feb. I 0.
and narcotics agents assume that hurn."
The government of Communist helped boost the action along the
recess of the union's National
To their disgust, DEA agcnts have
Coordinating Commission, which Party leader Stanislaw Kania has Louisiana coast.
learned that even a bonfire may not
was meeting in spt·cial session here. vigorously objected to the idea of a
In Louisiana, not only are there end it. People sift the ashes. A tew
But commission l·hairman Lech union of private farmers - who more places to hide, but smugglers who retrieved unburned sprigs of
Walesa declared the warning strike, produce three-fourths of Poland's also blend expertly into the bustle of Colombian gold wound up arrested
which had been set for Tuesday, agriculture.
coastal commerce.
on a charge of possession.
The Solidarity national commiswould be rescheduled "if there is
Ton upon ton of marijuana, plus a
The U.S. Customs Service figures
sioners, meeting at Warsaw's little cocaine and hashish, may come for drug seizures by all agencies
any attack on us or on farmers."
Walesa said the job action was Polytechnic University, were also packed in a barge which looks just since Oct. I, the start of fiscal 1981,
shelved because a government com- reviewing new government-labor like any one of a thousand legal show 350 tons of marijuana
mission went to Rzeszow in sout- accords on the length of the barges.
"interdicted" along this coast - an
heastern Poland for negotiations workweek an Solidarity access to
Or it comes in a shrimp boat just
increase of more than 20 fold
with private farmers demanding state communications media.
like any of the hundreds of shrim·
compared to the same pt·riod in fisMarathon negotiations that ended pers that ply the coast. It comes in cal1980.
regnition of"Rural Solidarity." Some
400 farmers have been occupying t·arty Saturday produced agreement innocent - looking sail boats, crew
Cocaine seizures more than
that Polish workers would work boats, and tugs.
the hcadt[Uartcrs of the now defunct
doubled during the same period.
every fourth Saturday, with the
labor organization since Jan. 3.
Dope also arrives in small private The hashish confiscated was up
The government commrssron,
planes or old airliners, although nearly 60 times.
See STRIKE, page 3
headt·d by Deputy Agriculture Min·
Drug route
Pirates find haven in South
Polish labor union
calls off strike
jameson said. "One story in Friday's
paper concerned the possiblt• cancellation of the Hing Crosby (;otf
tournament. An article written by
CII.A member Peggy Osbergl·r did
appear. but her name was mi~­
spelled."
.Jameson said that he was not nostalgic for the Cartcr regime. "Tht·
Carter regime started backtracking
two days after entering otlke. Tht·y
went against Washington. thus
depriving the poor."
Jameson predictt·d that Reagan's
economic programs will fail. "It's pk
in the sky," he said. "Rt·agan will
have the same lurching economy as
Carter had."
..Jameson concluded with a
messagt· to Cll.A members. "Hold
your heads up and smik. Although
you are unahlc to solve social
problems, at kast you art· attt·mpring to deal with them."
Osberger stated that she was not
excited about the new administration. ''I'm not weeping for Carter,
and I'm not anxious for the Rt·agan
administration," she said.
Osberger noted her work in the
South Bronx. "Mort· than buildings
have been abandoned in the South
Bronx," she said. "Human potential
is wasted there.
"The solutions to the probkms of
the poor arc complex solutions
knitted to tht· solutions and analyses
of other problems.
"Problems of the ghettos such as
teenage pregnancy and drug abUlic
have only gained notoriety because
they havt· begun to hit suburbia. Our
pl'fception of a problem is narrowed
and distorted until it hits the middle
class."
"A solution to thcse social
problems would bt· dcaling in a nonhicrJrchkal way in order that a new
social order would t•mergc. We
must rt·alize the need ti>r change in
power rdationships."
Walshc citcd personal thoughts
on the dt-ction of Reagan. "The
country is in the prospect of moving
into a 'dark age,"' he said. "There has
hl't·n a dedsivt' shift in politics. This
shift has bt·en 10 tht· right of center. I
had anticipated that under ntrrcnt
conditions, tht· shift would have
been to the left.
"There have been dl'l'P frustrations in American Imperialism.
Liberalism is an example of this
The
people
arc
frustration.
frustrated by the heaurocracy of tht·
state and l'Orporations. Reagan is not
fulfilling our bt·st hopt·s. hut our
darker side.
"The illusion that harmony and
justice in Aml'fica can come by
growth has been dt·stroynl. Reagan
attt·mpts to rt•kindlc this illusion of
justice. Reagan represents tht· dark
sidt· of Amt·rican idt·ology, which is
greed."
Walshc added that he bdieves
that a solution to the problem would
be for Americans to conft•ss their illusions and idt·ntify with an al·
ternative choice. "This choice
should bt· the dcmonatic systm
outlined in tht•l·onstitution,"hc said.
"There is a nn·d 10 lean towards a
more equitaole distribution of
goods. lssut·s such as eumomic
democrat:y should he l'xamined.
Ideas such as a 3 · 4 day workweek
should be considered. These arc the
See CILA, page 3
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~~~Scf=J=~=-,=!=~~~=~========~======================M==on=d=~='=Fe=b=ru=~==2='=19=B=I==p=a=ge~2
by The Observer and The Associated Press
Playing a dangerous game
was the tone of a commentary that appeared in yesterday's government-controlled Soviet
press that criticized the new U.S. administration. The commentary,
taken with press criticisms ofthe previous two days, appeared W signal a substantially harsher Soviet stance toward the Republican administration. "The kid gloves are definitely off," observed one
Western diplomat here. The Soviet Communist Party newspaper
Pravda said administration charges of Soviet involvement in terrorism
amount to "a campaign oflies and hypocrisy." The party daily also said
U.S. policies are "dangerous to peace," and repeated an earlier Soviet
charge that President Reagan has "deliberately distorted" Soviet
foreign policy goals. Pravda said the administration's comments on
terrorism may be part of an "attempt to strike at processes of international detente, to justify the negative American stand toward limitation of strategic armaments and other measures aimed at relaxation of
international tension." Soviet leaders refrained from any criticism of
the new president or his advisers after Reagan's election in November,
even though Reagan had been sharply critical of the Soviet Union
during the presidential campaign and the Soviets had characterized
him earlier as a "knight ofthe Cold War." -AP
Eight Saint Mary'S students
and a bartender were
arrested in Corby's Tavern Friday evening for violations ofliquor laws.
South Bend Police Special Operations officers entered the bar at 1026
Corby Street and arrested the eight students for possession of an alcoholic beverage by a minor. Corby's bartender Kurt Bottjer was
charged with sale of an alcoholic beverage to a minor. The nine were
released on bail and are scheduled to appear in Circuit Court later this
month. Arresting officers were quoted as saying the students did not
present any identification upon entering the bar. Those students contacted refused to comment. - Observer
Punxsutawney Phil,
the famous woodchuck from
Gobbler's Knob, has been forecasting the length of winter for 94 years
on evidence as thin as a shadow. "He's never been wrong," said
Charles Erhard, president of the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club.
"He's the Seer of Seers, the one and only." Erhard, dressed in tails and a
silk top hat, will rap on the door of a heated burrow atop Gobbler's
Knob at dawn today and ask Phil for his prediction. The groundhog,
according to tradition rooted in Pennsylvania Dutch legend and the
Christian feast of Candlemas, will scurry back into the burrow and
hibernate for six more weeks if he spots his shadow while peeping
into the sunlight. That means, so the legend goes, six more weeks of
winter weather. No shadow means an early spring. "A mortal man can
readily miss the shadow, but Phil never misses it," said Erhard. "He'll
whisper into my ear. He doesn't lie. He tells me the exact truth." The
groundhog made his first official prediction in Punxsutawney, a town
of about 10,000 people, in 1886. Last year, by Erhard's count, some
1 500 spectators turned out on Groundhog Day. - AP
InmateS are Still killing
each other at the New
Mexico State Penitentiary, one:,rear after 33 prisoners died in one of
the most brutal uprisings in U.S. penal history. Millions have been
spent to repair the prison, inv~tigate the riot, prepare prosecution
and defense of prisoners chargeO with riot crimes and pay for studies
on how to improve the system. Yet prisoners say that except for a
reduction in the population - from 1,1 56 at the time of the Feb. 2-3
riot to the current 544 - little has been done to address the
grievances that sparked the violence. These include harassment and
brutality by guards, lack of educational or recreational opportunities,
and poor quality food. And attacks by inmates on one another have not
abated, either. On Sept. 18, George Saavedra was found in his cell
stabbed to death. About a month later, Apolinar Paul Moraga was
knifed to death in front of witnesses in a recreation yard. On Dec. 17,
Theodore John Quintana was found dead in his cell from a cocaine
overdose. His death is not being treated as murder. but Santa Fe District Attorney Eloy Matinez said his office is "not satisfied" that the
overdose was voluntarily injected. Four days before Christmas,
Ricardo Tafoya was found dead in his cell. Evidence indicated that he
had been strangled, a prosecutor said. And on Jan. 24, the prison was
locked down after stabbings and other disturbances had left one
prisoner critically wounded. - AP
On SMC student government
Student elections are once again upon us. The Saint
Mary's student body will go to the polls in a few weeks
to elect their class and student governemt officers. Significantly, the elections are being held earlier this year.
The present student government learned the hard way
how difficult it is to pull together a Board and begin
planning this year's activities right at the end of the
academic year. As a result, they've pushed the elections
up to give more time for a transition. According to Student Government President Kathleen Sweeney, the
present officers will finish their ongoing semester activities, so as not to overload the new officers with unfinished business. The new government will take office
on April 1, leaving most of Febuary and all of March for
the transition.
Unfortunately, the selection of student government
officers is only as important as the students think it
should be. Each year most of the candidates are very
serious and earnest about wanting to contribute their
know-how and skills to keep the student government
functioning efficiently. Every year brings new people to
the offices with their own ideas on how student government should be run. The present officers have
strengthened the Board of Governance
efficiently
run organization through a
self-study
and
newlycreated activities - in both
social and acedemic areas.
week's
Board
Last
meeting was the climax of a
year's activity for student
government, as it finalized
some plans for this semester
and then took time to reflect
upon and reevaluate its role
as the governing body for
Saint Mary's.
An interesting development at last week's meeting
was the elimination of the
Co-Ex Commissioner as a
position on the Board. The
position was by its nature a
bureaucratic waste, handling only the co-ex dining
hall tickets and the shuttle schedule. "We didn't think
those limited duties warranted a commissioner,"
explained Kathleeen. "Those duties have just been
picked up by the Student Activities office - which
makes more sense. The position could be reinstated if
we find there is a greater. need for it than to just handle
the co-ex dining hall tickets."
The Board has begun some work which probably will
not be completed during this term. One of these is the
idea for a position called a Technical Commissioner.
"This would probably involve training six to ten students who would learn how to run all the technical
equipment on this campus that student government is
involved in," said Kathleen. "Then there would be a
central board that everyone could use and then that
knowledge could be passed on each year."
Within the next week or two, a commission will
finalize the fate of the Student Assembly - which has
been in limbo since its suspension last spring. The deci-
Winter storm continues
througll today. Snow accumulating 2 to 4 inches by afternoon. Windy and very cold with
drifting and blowing snow. High in the mid and upper teens. Snow
flurries ending tonight, followed by clear and bitterly cold conditions.
Low from about zero to near S below. Partly cloudy Tuesday and very
cold. High 10 to 1 S. - AP
The present board has been able to build upon the
work of past Boards. There is always room for improvement, but that improvement will be left to the future
Student Government officers elected in two weeks. It's
an important consideration, that students should not
take lightly when they decide who they want to lead
them next year. We can't always accomplish everything
that we would like to, but with the right people in place
- people who will be dedicated to continuing the
worR of improving both social and academic life - the
Board will continue to function as a voice and an effective vehicle of student opinions and needs.
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.· .·
RIVER CITY RECORDS
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South Africa is gearing up
for what is expected to
be its roughest national election in years. But there is virtually no
doubt that the National Party, which has been in power for more than
three decades, will win it. The tiny, fractionalized opposition has
dubbed the April 29 balloting the "phony election" because the real
contest will come before the votes are cast in the National Party
caucuses that will nominate candidates for the House of Assembly's
165 seats. The outcome of that intra-party fight between Prime Minister P.W. Botha's moderate wing and his ultra-rightist opponents will
decide whether South Africa continues its cautious steps toward some
sort of accommodation between the 4. S million whites and the 20
million blacks or takes a sharp right turn. Though Botha has made
clear he would never advocate a political system based on one man,
one vote, he has been telling whites since he became prime minister
Sept. 28, 1978, that they must ease the lot of the blacks or face a
perilous future. But hardline Nationals, led by Andries P. Treurnicht,
minister of state administration and statistics, wants no tampering
with the rigid policies of racial segregation imposed when the National Party first took power in 1948. Most South African blacks view the
upcoming election as irrelevant because they don't have the right to
vote. They tend to see Botha's reforms as window-dressing for the
outside world and say they won't be satisfied until the whole edifice of
apartheid is dismantled. - AP·
sion will be based on how well the Board of Governance managed to govern without the assembly.
Supposedly, the system of section reps, hall councils,
and weekly Board meetings effectively replace the Assembly as a a direct student voice. This, however, has
yet to be proven.
Kathleen believes the Board has been very effective
this year, particularly in its ability to create a balance
between its social and academic duties. The Board has
proved itself to be as much concerned with student
acedemic life as with providing entertainment. The
foremost accomplishments in that area have been The
Liberator, the noon-time luncheon speakers, and the
Graduate Information Handbook (which should go into
print this week).
Kathleen feels the Board does much more than "just
sponsor programs. The stuff
we work on doesn't make
headlines because Saint
Mary's is so progressive and
free - in comparison with
Notre Dame - in terms of
being able to move in and
out and working with so
many people. The Board
functions as a place of identity for the officers, for the
hall presidents and for the
commissioners. It's a place
where the leaders of the
campus can interact, bring
out problems, talk to each
other and filter it back to
their respective groups."
At
yesterday's
Board
meeting, the possibility of
converting the old library
building into a student center was discussed and
recommendations from the board will be presented to
the Administration's commission which will decide the
building's fate. Kathleen stressed the need for a student
center as a single place for students to gather.
Design Editor............................. Mike Monk
Design Assistants ................ Monica Gugle
Elizabeth Clay
Typesetter ............................... Bruce Oakley
News Editor...........
.. .. Pam Degnan
Copy Editor ................................... Kelli Flint
Sports Copy Editor ............. Dave Dziedzic
Systems Control ..................... Steve Brown
Ad Design ............................ Woody and Co.
Photographer ......................... Chris Salvino
Guest Appearances .................... Mark Rust
John McGrath, Paul Mullaney, Scoop
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I MONDAY NIGHT
The Observer (USPS 598 920) is
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Observer, P.O. Box Q, Notre
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The Observer
, 1981 -page 3
Old library
SMC discusses student center·
By CONNIE COONEY
feel number one unless there is a
place
where . they
can
be
recognized." This discussion was
Suppose you had an old library brought up because the new library
that w:L~n't going to he used. Would now under construction will leave
you, a) turn it into a student center, an empty building on the Saint
b) usc it as a counseling center, c) Mary's campus.
usc it as an information center for
The main objective of renovating
mau:rials not found in the new the old archive is to "create a
library, or d) all of the above?
centralized student center in which
Tht•st· 4ucstions were faced by the publications departments and
the Saint Mary's Board of Govcr- other
offices
would
be
nanct·. who hdd their weekly housed, "according to Miss Sweeney.
mt•cting last night in the Student The space now occupied in the
<Jovt·rnmcnt oftke in the basement Regina basement may be used as soof Rt·gina II aiL
cial areas for section dinners or posSomt· ideas wert· answer d) all of sibly study lounges. The possibility
the ahovc, among others. Chairman of moving the bookstore into tht· old
Kathleen Swct•nt·y said, "Saint structure, as well as including food
Mary's studt·nts want to feel as if sales and creating a student governtht•y art· number one. They won't ment meeting room were discussed
in the 30 - minute meeting.
Old business indudt·d the sale of
tickets to "Second City". "We have
sold I 00 tickets, and need SOO sold
to break even,"a board member
added. Tickets for "Second City"
will be sold in the dining halls and
ticket offices at both Notre Dame
and Saint Mary's.
corllinueclfrom page I
News Staff
.. .Strike
othn thrt't' off. The government
agreed in principk to the union's
dt·mand for a five-day workweek,
and tht· union accepted the compromise in light of Poland's con·
sidt·rablt' economic difficulties,
which indude a foreign debt of $23
billion and shortages of food and
consumer goods.
Poland's continuing labor unrest
and reports of Soviet and other East
bloc troops at Poland's borders have
raised fears in tht· West of possible
Soviet intervention.
The meeting was adjourned
following an announcement of a
mandatory meeting for anyone interested in running for student
government or class office. This
meeting will be held this Wednesday at 6:00 p.m. in the Student
Government office in Regina basement
... CILA
continued from page I
beginnings of a complete cultural
transition.
"America is moving into an
awkward transition. The culture will
inevitably shift, because the growth
machine will not work."
According to CIL.A member Mary
Ann Fenwick, Saturday's session was
more informaL (Jsberger led the session, which induded a BINGO role
play game and presentation
followed by group discussions.
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Actors from the upcominp, production of "Pippin" recent~)'
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Chris Salvino)
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...
Monday, February 2, 1981 -page 4
The Observer
...Hesburgh
died, or even the kind of torture that
the secret police in Iran gave to the
people that they captured.
continued from page 1
The foul odor emanating throughout Memorial Library recently
was located by on-the-spot photographer Chris Salvino.
~~DIITII®NS
MUSICIANS
PERFORMERS
Registration 12:30-3:30 Auditions begin at 1:00
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Indianapolis, IN Thurs., Feb. 5
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UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON
Music Theatre Building- Studio Theatre
There's constant turnover - deans,
coaches, department chairmen.
That's a very normal thing. And r put
Q: 1 read something about a Resmy leaving into a different category · burgh Letter that you sent to
than some ofthe others.
Congress. just what does it say?
A: I am presently preparing a final
Q: What was your initial reac· report for the President and
tion to the hostage situation and, in Congress on the whole American
particular, tha torture they under- policy on immigration and refugees.
That will be available on March 1.
went?
A: I haven't seen much on the ac- The Hesburgh Letter is really the
tual torture, except for the preface to my semi-annual report.
psychological problems - being in This commission has been going on
solitary confinement, not being for 2 years, and every 6 months I
allowed out, not being allowed to make a report to the Congress, and I
exercise, having their shoes taken assume they're referring to the
away, and things like this. Actually, it preface to the last report.
would be comparable to the kind of
torture that prisoners underwent in
Q: Do you look forward to
the Korean War and in the Viet- Reagan's administration,
and
namese War where many of them would you accept a role in it, if
asked?
A: I always look forward to a new
administration, because I think that
new people may bring new ideas. It
could be good for the country if they
bring the right ideas. If they bring
men's and women's
the wrong ideas, it could be dishairstyling
astrous, but that's the risk you run
at
with every new administration. As
comfortable prices
far as being a:;ked, I think I've served
531 N. Michigan
40 or 50 days a year for the federal
government during the time I've
233-4957
been president, beginning when I
went on the National Science Board
in 1954. I served on that for 12 years,
and I served on the U.S. Commission
on Human Rights for 15 years. I've
St. Mary's Student
served on about 10 other commissions. Now whether I'll be asked or
Body and Class
,.._-ROCCOS--1
Q: Were you pleased wtth the
Council on jerusalem that was
recently completed?
A: I was very pleased. That was a
good meeting, and we came out
with a ~ood statement. It was called
the Notre Dame statement. It will
probably be carried in the New York
Times and Washington Post. It will
certainly be carried in thejerusalem
Post.
Q: Do you think that Notre Dame
has a drinking problem?
A: I think every school in America
has a drinking problem today. These
youngsters are drinking in high
school, and that's a very bad habit to
bring to college.
Q: Can the administration do
anything to relieve the problem?
A: I think we've got to be conscious of it. We have a full-time person to counsel with people who
have a problem. It's a destructive
habit to have in one's life. I don't
know any successful father or mother or businessman who is an alcoholic; it just ruins their life
completely. It's bad to get into that
habit early in life, because you're not
going to be successful in school, nor
in later life.
Officer Elections
Columbus, OH Sun., Feb. 8
THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY
Weigel Hall
OFF-CAMPUS SHUITLE BUS
SPRING, 1981
Revised Schedule- Effective Feb. 2,1981
Mandatory meeting
Columbus, OH Mon., Feb. 9
CAPITAL UNIVERSITY
Mees Auditorium
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* * * * Point
* * * *Jan.
* * 31
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* *Feb.
* * *14
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Why Just Study It?
MAKE HISTORY
not by this administration, I just
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service when I can do it, and it was in
an area where I thought I could
make a contribution as a priest or as
one involved in education.
¥ANNOUNCING THE '81¥
SELECTION OF STUDENT UNION
lDIRECTOR AND COi\1PTROLLER!
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==Ihe=Obsen!er==
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The Observer is an independent newspaper published by the students of the
University of Notre Dame duLac and Saint Mary's Colle~e. It does nor necessarily
reflect the policies of the administration of either institution. The news is reported
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Editorial Board and Department Managers
Editor-in-Cbief. ..................................... Paul Mullaney
Managing Editor ............................ _.. _.......... Mark Rust
Sports Editor ........ _.................................. Beth Huffman
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Senior Copy Editor ............... -..... Mary Fran Callahan
Executive News Editor .... _.................... Tom Jackman·
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Business Manager ..................................Greg Hedges
Controller ....................................................... .Jim Rudd
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The ,Observer~.=
=
Toda~
Molarity
·~·
'"'":'. ~.;.~_~. .
-~- ·;j
Monday, February 2, 1981 - page S
=============M=i=ch=a=e=lM=o=lin=e=ll=i::::;::=c=am===p=u=s=::;
f WHO
KNDWG WJ./AT
LIF£ EXISTS OLJT n/~RE. ..
WHAT WU..L INE Flf.JO
~H~N W! WAKE UP.
SO()l.J I Wll.L JOIN MY
C::Ae:w IN ~LJ~P~~r>E'P
ANIHAIIOIJ F"oR FoUR
1-fUNt>R~I>
YEARS
I I
Peanuts®
Charles Schulz
•II: 15 a.m. - computer mini·
course, crash spss course, I IS
ccmb
•3:30 p.m. - computer mini·
course crash course, I IS ccmb
•4 p.m. - presentation, career
opportunities with internation·
al
paper,
david
murphy:
speaker, 122 hayes-healy
•7:30 p.m. - cinema, the mother (ussr) 1926, annenberg
aud, snite museum
•8 p.m. - basketball, nd vs.
saint mary's (cal)
•8 p.m. - wsnd-am 6400, nd
basketball vs. saint mary's (cal),
followed hy the total musk ex·
pcrience
•11 p.m. - wsnd-am 6400, album hour, playin my thang by
steve cropper
Doonesbury
THIS HIGHWAY
PATROLLED BY
AIRCRAFT
Garry Trudeau
L£T's 60 fJtV( 70 7lE 8£6/NNING ~ n1R CAPTIVITY, SHALL
/U&, MR.. [)(}J(E? AT I.A5T f?EPORT
'!(X} Uli'.E FACIN6 A PR£-IJ/WN
FIRING 5()(}/JJJ. '\
26 Leanings
27 Philippine
knife
30 Father-andson Roman
generals
33 Mainecol·
lege town
35 Repetition
39 Marmara or
Okhotsk
40 Danger
color
42 Pulpit
offering:
abbr.
43 Eggs
44 Able
47 Fond parent
49 Willing to
give way
51 Playground
ACROSS
1 Tool
machine
6 Syrian
bread
10 Political
family
14 NewYork
city
15 Dutch
cheese
16 Author
Wiesel
17 Prevent
18 Angry
19 Russian
villages
20 Most sodden
22 Metrical
foot
24 Perfume
component
The Daily Crossword
A
In
lA
IUAIG
I
IT
.p
10 A
52 Collect
55 Viscous mud
57 Harasses
60 Most level
64 Seed
covering
65 Goldie
67 Ross
68 Carnival
attraction
69 Redone
70 Against
a thing
71 Holywom·
en: abbr.
72 Work on
a lawn
73 Moorehead
H
.!INDIA
:IN IW
10
1101-
EIS IOILIE
IF
~~
A~~~
lA IL
H liM
IR Ill
A
0 MIE IU IPTPAN
8
Elli IT •ri'Tifll 0 R
ISlE.
©1981 by Chicago Tribune-N.Y. News Synd. Inc.
All Rights Reserved
IE
PS
1/31/81
DOWN
1 Onus
2 ThomasEdison
3 Be produc·
tive
4 Spear
5 Play direc·
tion
6 Crop
dusllngs
7 Altar words
8 GWTW
locale
9 Prayer word
10 Uproar
11 Extraneous
12 On top
13 Tries out
21 Elders:
abbr.
23 On ship
25 Command
to a dog
27 Pear
28 Mountain:
comb. form.
29 Rich soli
31 Famine's
companion
32 Exasperate
34 Threatening
words
36 Jot
37 Across
38 British
stool
pigeon
41 Airport
abbr.
45 Mortars'
complements
46 Late times:
abbr.
48 Debut
50 104
52 Armadillos
53 Worth
54 Digression
56 Radio
and TV
58 Korean
president,
once
59 Carnelian
61 Deserve
62 Snick's
sidekick
63 Woolen
caps
66 Peruke
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~
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ic
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!
:*
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AND
LEARN
. SELF-DEFENSE
Join the ND
Wado-Ru
Karate Club
FT. LAUDERDALE i DAYTONA BEACH
SPRING BREAK
t:
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Riviere Hotel facing lhe ocean In the
heart ot Lauderdale!
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D Partie• end AcUvllle•
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FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL:
STEPHEN ENGRO
1122 Flanner Hall
Phone: 283-1216
Hours: 5:30 to 6:30 pm
Or: 11 :00 pm to 12:00 pm
Monday, February 2, 1981- page 6
The Observer
-
Big crowd on hand
Trackmen ~in first 01eet
By MATT HUFFMAN
Tim Novak turned in a very strong
perfomance while finishing third in
the the two-mile run. Dan Walsh was
One of the largest crowds ever to also able to nab a third place finish in
attend an indoor track meet at Notre the three-mile with a time of 14:52.
Dame cheered the Irish track squad
Dave Bernards blew by Bradley
to its first win of the season Friday star Ed Foreman and won the high
night.
hurdles in one of the more im·
"The amount of people there pressive perfomances of the night.
definitely helped us run better," said Jim Christian helped the team cause
an exuberant head coach Joe Piane.
by finishing third in the 300 yard
The final tally for Friday's meet run.
read Notre Dame 95; Bradley 77;
Irish running back Greg Bell ran a
University of Illinois-Chicago Circle 6.5 .sixty-yard dash to lead Irish
49; Loyala 29; Valparaiso 16.
sprinters.
Piane's squad again ran strongly in
In other field events John Kuzan
all events, but the middle and long finished third and Frank Riely fourth
distance runners led the way. Senior in the shot put. Steve Chronert
star Chuck Aragon won the mile for
finished second in the pole vault
the second meet in a row with a time
with a jump of 14 feet six inches and
of 4: 11. Carl Bicicchi and Andy DilBrian Mccauliffe skipped his way to
lon also turned strong performances
third place finish in the triple jump.
in the mile.
The mile relay team of Aragon,
Rick Rogers and Steve Dziabis
dominated the half mile, finishing
first and second, respectively. In
what Piane called an "excellent"
performan<:e,in,the 1000-yard run,
Tim McCauley and Jim Moyar
turned the same trick, with
McCauley taking first place.
Jacques Eady and Ron Hyde
combined to give Notre Dame a
third 1-2 finish in the 600 yard run
with Eady winning. Eady also
grabbed a second place finish in the
18461 St. Rd. 23
high jump with a leap of 6'8.
Sports Writer
scored 26 points and Orlando Woolridge added
as the Irish easily defeated visiting South Carolina Saturday. The two
are seen here in a file photo of the game against the Polish National
{f!am .
.~The Observer_
needs
bodies!
Anyone interested in working layout
wit_h the Observer should come to the
meeting at 8:00p.m. Thursday, in the
Observer office third floor LaFortune,
or call John at 1715.
()ftllf~S
Eady, Dziabis, and anchorman Hyde
tallied the sixth Irish first place
finish with a time of 3:25. Hyde
crossed the line a full eight seconds
ahead ofthe second place team.
The next meet for the Irish track
squad is scheduled for Friday night
at 6:30p.m. at the ACC. Notre Dame
will take on the Fightin' Falcons of
Bowling Green State University.
... Hoops
cuntinued from page 8
"We really didn't want him to pass
off tonight. We wanted him to shoot.
Our problem. was we didn't get
balanced scoring. Only Zam and
Oimmy) Foster were in double
figures."
IRISH ITEMS- Barry Spencer suffered a sprained arch in practice
Friday and did not dress against
Carolina... The freshman forward
will probably be out another day or
so ... Notre Dame hosts St. Mary's
(Calif) at 8 p.m. tonight...LaSalle
( 12-7) is a Wednesday night guest
before next Sunday's grudge match
against UCLA.
S£1l()()l
IIJI§()4l'• fii3J
Ja()() 11()1, (I()§§
lal()
(S,..£)
fl§li~l
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St. ~111t:~llt Clt 11()1l (I()§§
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KIWte 'Otu~U/SaUd Htwuj'~ Co.ttuttUKicafimt & Tkeabte
'PweHb
The Mother
Monday, February 2 7:30PM
Annenberg Auditorium
Adtttu~«m
$1.0 0
COMPETEFOR30R2YEAR
---------1
SCHOLARSHIPS
Applications Now Available For
The Position Of
STUDENT UNION
COFFEEHOUSE ll!fANAGER
Applications and job descriptions are
available at the S. U. Offices on the
2nd floor of La· Fortune.
Complete~
applications are due by Feb. 6
CALL 283-6252
ARMY ROTC
Sports ~~~~==~r===========================~
Brief.§
Monday, February 2, 19s1 -page 1
by Tht' Obrt'rl'..r .1nd Tht' ArllJOuled Prt·H
Saint Mary's
team
swim
lost to a tough Depauw
team on Saturday by a score of 41 to 75. The only first place winner for
the Belles was sophomore Grace Romzick in diving. Romzick, a Midland, Mich., native, won her event with a score of 155. 5. "It didn't go as
I expected," commented Coach Steve Smith. "We still have some difficulties to iron out." The Saint Mary's record fell to 4 and 7. The Belles
are preparing for this Wednesday's clash at Lake Forrest. .
A mandatory Ski Team meeting
wm be held
for all Notn· Dame and Saint Mary's A and B team members. The
meeting will be in room 2C LaFortune at 7:30 tonight
Notre Dame wrestling
team finished fifth out of nine
at the National Catholic Invitational Tournament at the University of
Scranton. The Fighting Irish accumulated 27 points. Champion John
Carroll University had I 08 points. John Campana finished second in
the 150-pound category for the Irish, while Matt Fischer (I 26
pounds ),Joe Agostuno (I 42 pounds) and Brian Erard ( 158 poounds)
all finished fourth in their respective categories.
Notre Dame and Saint Mary's fencers
wen: in action on Saturday at Ohio State University. SMC defeated
Ca'ie Western Resc:rve 14-2 and lost to Ohio State 14-2. The Belles'
record is now 4-1. The Notre Dame women defeated Case Western
Rt·serve I 6-0 and lost to Ohio State I 4-2. Their record now stands at 4
and I. The Fighting Irish men won both of their contests, defeating
Ca~e Western Reserve 19-8 and Ohio State 21- I 3. Their record is now
c;.o.
Reserves Robert Parish
and Michael Ray Ric·
hardson led a st•ctmd-half flurry that mahlc:d the East to build a 16point lead ;md hold off a West rally Sunday day for a 123-120 victory in
the 3 I st National Ba~kethall Association All-Star Game. Richardson,
who had three points and an assist in the last minute of the third
period, scored two quick baskets in the final quarter and Parish added
a pair of assists as the East went ahead I 07-9 I with 9:54 to play. Nate
Archibald, the sparkplug playmaker of the Boston Ccltics, was voted
the game's most valuable player. Archibald contributed nine points
and nine assists to tht· East victory before the second largest crowd in
All-Star history.
Detroit Lions rookie Eddie Murray kicked four field
goals and quarterback Steve Bartkowski threw a 55-yard scoring pass
to tt•ammate Alfred Jenkins lead the National Football Conference to a
2 I -7 Pro Bowl victory Sunday over the American Conference. The
NFC, winning its fourth consecutive Pro Bowl and sixth of the last
seven National Football League all-star games, turned in a fine
defensive effort against the AFC's explosive offense. Led by Tampa Bay
linebacker Lee Roy Selmon and Dallas tackle Randy White, the NFC
defense held tht· AFC in check all day.
continued from page 8
defens1vely. We did a good job on
Sheila Foster in the first half. But in
the second half, we let things get
away.
Indeed, the Irish did do a good job
defensively in the first half. Foster,
South Carolina's 6-1 junior AllAmerican, was held in check. At the
half, the visitors led 46-20. But then
the sky fell in.
South Carolina shot an amazing
.630 from the field in the second
half. In contrast, the Irish couldn't
generate any offense, shooting only
.291 for the game. Shari Matvey,
Notre Dame's leading scorer for the
season ( 16. I points per game),
played only I 0 minutes Saturday.
"We needed a better defensive effort
than Shari was giving," said
DiStanislao."We needed 100 percent from everybody."
Looking on the brighter side, the
play of freshmen Molly Ryan and
Jenny Klauke was impressive. Ryan,
who had I 0 points and three steals,
played very aggressively. Klauke,
who played only 16 minutes, had six
points and five rebounds. Tricia
McManus was the high scorer for the
Irish with I 6 points.
South Carolina had a balanced
scoring attack, led by Evelyn
Johnson's 25 points. Foster added 22
points and Rita Johnson had 20 for
the winners.
Some people may wonder why a
team like South Carolina is on the
Notre Dame schedule. "We have to
get exposure," DiStanislao said. "We
have to establish a firm schedule by
playing teams of this caliber. This is
only our first season in Division I."
Perhaps things aren't as bad as
they seem, coach. Remember
Digger Phelphs' first sea'!on at Notre
Dame? That year, the Fighting Irsh
were whipped by Indiana, 94-29.
..
Digger's first Notre Dame team had a
6-20 record. Coach DiStanislao
hopes to build a program similar to
Digger's.
Good luck, Coach.
IRISH ITEMS
The "Varsity
Crowd," a bunch of women's basketball groupies, were out in full force
Saturday. They proclaimed it "beach
day," and were equipped with beach
towels,
sunglasses,
and
frisbees... Coach DiStanislao wishes to
thank those who attend the
women's games ... Attendence Saturday? Approximately 100. ...Notre
Dame's ret:ord is now 7-9.
Defeat Pikeville
Belles split tourney
By DAVE WILSON
Sports Writer
team honors for the wn·kend.
Saint Mary's picked up a win and a
loss at the Hanover Basketball
Tournament this weekend and thus
remained at . 500 on tht: sea'ion with
a 7-7 record. Unfortunately, Coach
Jerry Dallessio was unavailable for
comments at press time.
The Belles defeated Pikeville College on Friday night by a score of6356, snapping a four-game losing
streak that had plagued the team
since mid-January. Leading the way
to a team shooting percentage of 63
percent, Mary Pat Sitlington threw
in 20 points for Saint Mary's,
followed hy Anne Armstrong with
I 4, and Gretchen Meyer with 13.
The win pushed the Belles into the
tournament finals, where they
dropped a close contest to Ashland
College, 60-50. The team again shot
well, at 57 percent, hut Armstrong
wa.. held to just four points, well off
her season average. Maureen King
led the way in this one with I 7
points, while Sitlington and Meyer
tallied I 2 apiece. Sitlington's consistent play earned her all-tournament
----· · - ' ------- ·----·---· ·-- --- -----
Classifieds
.-·- - - -·--u
/"
Digger
on
WSND
Digger Phc:lps will he the first
guest on a new talk show on WSNDAM ( 641) ). The show, called
Sportsline, features a format in
which listeners can call and talk with
the guests. Skip Desjardin and Frank
Lagrotta will be hosts of Sportsline,
which will air from 8 to 9 p.m. on
Tu~ays.
----- --------·- -------
'I'
·.
·''•"!
• "'''
r
1•1, 11
,..,, :,,. '' •
II·•· ,, I.· 'II·
1\1•11"11, !fl• 1 1ojllf••·ld ..
jill' 1•.11 11
Saint Mary's will travc:l to (;oshen
on Tuesday with hopes of earning
another net•ded victory. The lklles
then return home to host thdr own
'Roundhall Classic' on Friday and
Saturday.
'-----
----·-····
I 911 I GRAD~ Resumes TYPESET
(camera ready). Spedal Sl 0. Close
lo N.D. Calll72·i716.
K havt•
your nt·kctball or tt·nnis ra<.:kct
improve
)'Our
gillml'
Profc,..,ionally Rt·srrunllRATf.S! Call Andy al 107~.
GOOf>
I he
Thun.. 11·9 anti Thurs. 9·1 0
mixoh>ll)' daMn will meel al !heir
rt·sp•·•·Uv<· rimes rhls Thursday In I he
lla1111ar Hall Autlirorium The ollwr
mlxololl)' das.' will mn·r monday
7:.~0-H:.~O in rhe lla1111ar Aut! Tht'M'
mt•t•ting~ arc do!tc:d, onl)' tho!'!t' who
rt·giM<·rctl may aucnd.
WITH BROWN S!IF.DE FACING. II'
FOUND, PLEASE CAI.L IIOIIBY I 0611.
--ANTED
S I 90 single, ncar l.ogan Bridge, ~49
LW.W., Mish., 2~~- 1194.
1·•111) 1 ..•
1
••olllf•l 1/1 l•lt!'itll• It/
~
--for Bosron U h-hall G.A.'s
-·-·--~-·-·
will pay IJ
on h·b. ltl. <:all Tracey
~206
(SMC)
n<Td Money' Wanled N.D. srudcnls
to work fur Jr. Pan·nts weekend Danqut.·t
Sat. Feh.7
and llreakfasr
Sun.F<·h.ll
at ACC. Contact student c..:oordinators at North and South Dining
If ails.
my falher will sell his soul (go<Kl
Blue Book value) for jus! one, ON F.,
measly liCI.A GA lit:ket, anywhere
inside !he arena - Is willing 10
swt'l'P Door at halftime.·, or dance
wl!h Dandng Irish if nn·cs.ary. Call
'IJ at 3207 Pronto.
lll'l'tl npc:rlenced gullar reacher lo
reach heginncr. Will pay. Call Jim al
61122.
ltJSt-l.IJSt·l.tJ~(
llxllllrn Envlp
Field MuM·um
Fish lllology
Chris liiii·H"'~II
[fOR RENT
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1
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hluc
hookhag
t ALL KEN AT ltdl.
Pl. EASE
a watl·h <U the 9 p.m.
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ll.r. Conla<'lllt·th at ·ll-46.i7.
found;
for Rcnl: Cozy apl. for rent ncar
River & Park. II 'iO/mo. Call l3l·
4'i49.
furnihhcd house ICn rl'nt c.:uupk
bloc.:k..s from campu~ and furni~ht·d
(..'ountry housl:' for rt·nt, ll minutt.·s
lo N.D.
los!,
gold
anti
p<"arl
hrac.:clt·t at ur on tht· way tu
!he
san
francisco
haskt·rhall
f12me IF FOliNI> PLEASE CAI.I.
12114. REWARD.
ltJst;
anyone who ha.' info ahoul a pair
of wire frame gla.•st·s found a! Bendix
W<KKls on Friday,Jan. B. plra.'e ~all
.lim al 3260. Reward lf found or
returned!!!
277-~604,
21111·09'i'i.
[
FOR-SA~~~]
for Sale 1974 AM<: llornel. Good
Condlrion. SlOO
~KETS
n.~u l GA TICKETS FOR ND-UCLA
IIASKETBALI. GAMI:. PLF.ASI: CAI.I.
SHIRLEY AT 11661 OR 171 'i BEFORt:
'ii'.M.
need ucla ga'S l.il-0'}21.
CALl. MATt' AT
wanrt·d; I liCI.A TICKET, STll·
DENT OR GA. PLEASE CALL PAT AT
277-11727
---.-----------
despcrarcly need 2 UCI.A GA 's.
WII.L PAY Mf.GA-IIUCKS!!! pkast·
call Susan or Anneal 6409. It'
buftY
whea!ly
is
real woman on '-·am pus
ucla stutlelll rlckcl needed. Will
pay S I 'i. Sreve 277- 77~9 after I I.
huffy Wheally, rhe ulllmalt' prep,
wears alligarors on lu·r lingerit.•
need Two liCLA GAs. Call Bob at
1201.
happy hinhday 10: Monrc lht·
Soul Ranger, Mayflcltf, The Master
Gee, Navin, Gracon, and arc
Roommale in exile al UMIIC. Ja~k &
Rich
i net·d UCLA GA or Sltlnl TIX.
PI.HSE CAI.I. TOM 1700
I need ucla llx II SUJOE 1142
need 4 GA UCLA TICKiiTS. CAI.L
1101.0 AT 4'i 10
ucla lix II nn·d 2 PAIR GA TIX
CALL 277·6115-1 AFI'FR ~
ncar ND. Furn. Apr. Kilchenene.
tltilllles 272-6174.
bless me wilh I PAIR UCLA STUDENT OR GAs. RECEIVE U U CALL
GREG .!7~4 I 0 p.m. OR LATER.
need LICLA Tlx, GA or Slud. call Dkk
1224.
[
PERSONAL~
t:ash
paid
for
dass
rings, S20· Sll'i OR MORE. Wf.
MAKE HOUSE CAI.I.~. 25'i-l40l.
------,---------
will pay H f<ir llosl<ln lJ G.A.'s on
Fch. 10. Call Tracey 5206 ( SMC)
Red Draw Two ... Uno!l
T.D.
Danner 6-A,
ERNOT!?
What the hell Is
The Gang
need 2 GA UCLA llckets. Call 12114.
fur Rent: l.arge houses for summer
and next Fall. Furnished and sllenl
alarm sysrem.
need 2 Tickets for parents N.D. vs
LaSalle- Pay Much US Call 11609
f
1111
'tl HH·•
·-~'~·'1&•.1~
zeus, IJghlning srrikes ami skit's rip
1 asunder when Zeus and Aphodl!t•
come roger her. l.eatl on - 0 King of
the guds!!!
Aphrodlle
I'.S. I'll see YOU al dinner. Sorry ti>r
!he ddav.
I ---------------
shirley Is nor
personUUS
as
cht·•·rful
only
hidden ht·ar!S fch I ~ Zahm
have you rc:n:ivcd a phone call from
Duffy Whcally?
to all observer empluyc..·t·!t;
If you have nor pickt•tf up
your w-l FORM FOR 19110 l'l.liASii
1>0 SO; IT IS AVAII.AIII.Ii l'ROM
SIIIRI.EY
IN
TilE
OIISI'RVER
OHICI\ !'ROM 9-~.
The Obsenlt'r n<·ws <lcpl. Is
looking for a Monday day nllror -
1!_:~~~~---p~~~~~~':_ __ _
importanr Mandal<lry news
reporters meeting Wednesday, 6:30
p.m., Obsen'f!r office.
q; why an.· Yukon wona-n so appc..·al
ITS AI.L [f)'S I'Alll.T.
Al.EX
inK?
KUt'~'
it'!t llll' kminint•
mtuJsc.·tlqut:"!?
Look, MooM' Control i~ ohvlou~ty
hurting for matc..·ri;~l. Sc..·nd )'our
~n!twc..·n. now to Moo!tt' <olllrol at
'f'ht' Ob:rtt.•rvc..·r. nox {}, and Mop till!-~
a bust.· of your tunny hont·
A:
t:alhlc,
IT'S AU. ALEX'S !'A liLT
El>
t:alhlc,
I THOUGHT IT WAS MY fAll LT.
RANDY
thank gow.lnt•s:rt! Tht• pt·ngum is
hack.
Kaiic..~~
inMant
need 2 tlx for UCLA game. Call
Eileen a! 11042.
It, 1
l'athit-,
despcrarcly need rwo lJCI.A GA'S
payhig U - calll174
wanted;
one
studt:nt
tic..·kct
10 tlw ucla game. WILL PAY
US. CAIJ. MICIIEU.E AT 1363.
',\·OJ
•\ll,l,t'i'!ldot'd:o.,l 1 ~ll)t>
happy llirthday MooM' Kraust·!
megK,
nkc.· houM.'S for rt.·nt fur nt.·xt sc..·hool
year or summer. Furnisht.·d. good
nl'ighborhood, t:losc to l·ampu~.
277·3604, 21111-09~~-
fkers, distribution of cc:rtUkates and
gold pins, and more. Pleas<' pay
balance of dues now!
dcspcralcly U Uneed many ND·
Daytun lil'kers!! Prefer GA's hul also
need sonw srudenl llckets. Will pay
fair price. Please •·all Maureen at
272-04114.
parents are co minK for jpw.
I>ESPERATiii.Y WANT TO SEE UCLA
GAME. NEED TWO GA'S FOR
THEM. CALl. TOM AT 3770.
nn·tl 6
G.A.
TICKETS
FOR
IIOSTON-N.D. 1111 GAME ON FEll.
10. WILL PAY IIIG UU. CAI.L
IJOll<i,277-27H7.
and nt•w mc:mbeni. Important business Includes election of I 911 I of·
the
I' ••
'tt44'JI•t'1
lt)IIJ<I..O'• 11JP /li<fll
30~
410H.(SMC)
t"•,t"ll•v ,1 4 1 ,
p,,.'Ob~ttr\IUI .,fftt t• ,,.oil,~~.·. t•p'
~==-.~~;=-=~==··=-=====-=-=-=-·====================~==:=======
• help!! Oespcrarcly need 4-6 GA's for
graduate!'. or staff - above-average
hey
engineering ellrislsS
tau
loS!; one pair of men'S Gf.(JVES
lrhe ND-Dayron game. Please call
apt., 3 rooms, lik halh, well· furbela pi mecling !his Wednesday al
ON ST. MARY'S Sllli1TI.E. IIEIGF.
I
NOTICES
! Monka al 'i I 54 or Pally ar
nished, privarc, hest of cllcnldt•,
6::\0 pm in room
EG for all old
proks.•ional
ryping
Term
J'oapcr~. theses. ct,:. Tapt· transl·ripliun. l.a.~~tt ycar'!t same ktw prkc~. All
work
Huarantt•t·d.
Aan..lvark
automatk !'t«Jiuttttn~. 2H9-67tt3.
.Offense
••
Oilli;,-- - - - - -- -
Thanks tor n·mc..·mhc..·ring my
birthday anti makingil a sptTial o<·a·
ITS YOUR FAlli.T.
sion. Abu, rhank you for that dt'l1·
IRVING TilE I>IICK
dous t:akt· and tht' smilc..·s that c..·amc..·
wllhll.
Mlkt·
happy ground hog day do•·
66666666(,(,(>66(1666!>666666666
from your night crew
Erlt:, Ted, Mike A., Roh T., john M.
john W., Charlie: TIIANKS!
marybeth Brennan. do you rt'mcmMik<'
hcr Rkh Branning? I rcmemh<·r a lor
(>66(,(,(,(>6(,(,(,(,(>66666666666(,(>()
of thing.• ahout you and he!! forge! ·
Monka,
mt· -not!!
lbanks for laking all of rhc ahust' I
homhard you wllh every Sunday
karen and Eileen,
night. I t:oultln't ask for a nlt:er p<"r·
Considt'r yourselves very lut:ky.
son nr a beuer dt.·sign .assiMant tn
M< workwlrh.
Mike
cathie,
I
(
r-'
\
\
----------------
----
~.-------
- - - - -·
Sports
-
-------
-
Monday, February 2, 1981 -page 8
94-84
Irish rip Gamecocks
By KELLY SULLIVAN
Associate Sports Editor
After Saturday night's game with
South Carolina, Digger Phelps reaf·
firmed what he's been saying all
year. "If Tripucka, Woolridge, and
jackson play well we're a good team.
But when Paxson plays well, it's an
added bonus and we're that much
better - it gives us four great
players."
John Paxson gave Phelps and his
teammates one of his best performances of the season Saturday night.
Resting on the bench right before
halftime, Phelps whisked the sophomore guard back on the floor with
three seconds left to set up a final
shot.
The script couldn't have been
written any better. Paxson sank a 19
foot jumper at the buzzer giving the
Irish a 9 point halftime lead and the
all-important
momentum
that
carried them to a 94-84 victory over
the Gamecocks. The win was Notre
Dame's sixth straigh since losing to
Marquette jan. I 0.
"Yeah, I think that shot did a lot
for us," said Paxson. "We hadn't
played as well as we should have
been up to that point, but it gave us a
lift. Anytime you get to go out on a
shot like that it's bound to do something for the team."
What it did was ignite the Irish offense, keeping their record at home
unblemished this season, and giving
Phelp's club a I 4-3 mark heading into tonight's clash with St. Mary's
(Calif.). South Carolina drops to 128.
"I like Notre Dame," Carolina
coach Bill Foster taughed. "They're a
good team. I hope that none of our
players get pneumonia from the way
they blew by us a couple of times."
Paxson added Foster's team to his
list of big-game heroics. The Dayton
native, whose previous scoring
sprees include 21 points at UCLA, 18
versus Indiana, and 22 in the win
against San Francisco, shot a blistering 9-for 12 from the floor and
finished the evening with 20 points.
"John has to be a scoring threat for
us," stated Phelps. "I think the last
SC pummels Notre Dame
with awesome offense
By DAVE DZIEDZIC
of the lady Gamecocks are 5-10 or
taller (including a 6-6 freshman).
The size problem was most evident
Mary DiStanistao, head coach of when Notre Dame's 5-1 playmaker,
the Notre Dame women's basketball Maggie Lally, tried to run the offense
team, was, to put it mildly, slightly while being guarded by 5-10 Evelyn
depressed Saturday afternoon.
Johnson (sister of NBA star Magic).
Her team had just been annih- "Maggie couldn't see over Evelyn,"
ilated by the 13th-ranked Lady DiStanislao said. As a result, Lally had
Gamecocks of South Carolina by a to sit out most of the game, and was
score of 124-48.
never a factor.
Ouch.
How could Notre Dame expect to
"They have an outsanding team," defeat a team as awesome as the
said DiStanislao."We just couldn't Lady Gamecocks? "We didn't expect
keep up with them physically."
to beat them,"said DiStanislao, "but I
Size was obviously the main thought we would do a better job
problem for the Irish in Saturday's
contest. Of eight team members, six
See OFFENSE, page 7
Sports Writer
two games he's been taking charge
and scoring the way we'd like him
to."
"I really don't know why that's
happened," answered Paxson when
asked the reason his best scoring
outputs come against Digger's
"power" opponents. "I've just said
all along that some games my shots
would be there and some games
they wouldn't. Lately, I've been
lucky, and my shots have been going
in."
Kelly Tripucka paced Notre
Dame's 62 percent shooting effort
overall with 26 points of his own.
Tracy Jackson pumped in 20 and
grabbed a team high 9 rebounds,
while Orlando Woolridge's 18 point
show pushed him over the 1000career mark. Although battling a
touch of the flu, the Tree's performance brought the capacity crowd
to its feet several times with his
spectacular slams, including a
behind-the-head dunk in the first
half
"I think our players were a bit in
awe of Notre Dame," explained Foster, who is trying to turn things
around at Carolina, "but we tried
our darndest. The last 40 seconds of
the first half and the first four
minutes of the second- that't when
the game got away from us."
Hot-handed guard Zam Fredrick
poured in a game high 34 points for
the visitors. That came on the heels
of a 39 point effort last Wednesday
against Hofstra. The 6-2 senior was
ranked seventh among the nation's
scoring leaders last week, but will
probably move up a few notches.
The fact that Fredrick had no assists
Saturday night didn't bother his
coach.
See HOOPS, page 6
By BRIAN BEGLANE
...
\
I
The "Big 0" slams it down behind his bead, making for one of the
highlights of Notre Dame's victory over South Carolina Saturday
night. (photo by Greg Maurer)
leers split with Minn.-Duluth
Sports Writer
Notre Dame's
baslll!rtt,~f."'l·eam suffered their greatest
defeat Saturday at the ~''"''-'.ilili.-c-"-"1: highly rated South Carolina
(photo by john Macor)
Gamecocks. See related story
••,.
T~E l HOSPORT
DULUTH, Minn - The Notre
Dame hockey team was about as successful at narrowing the gap between it and eligibility for the
Western Collegiate Hockey Association playoffs this weekend as were
car travelers attempting to climb hilly city streets here Saturday night after a five-inch snowfall.
Initially, the Irish made some
headway with an 8-4 victory Friday
night over Minnesota-Duluth. But
the Bulldogs stopped Notre Dame
Saturday with a 6-4 trimph and the
Irish slid back down to five points
out of eighth place, the last qualifying position for the playoffs. Four
weeks remain of the regular season.
The ninth place Irish take a 6-13-1
WCHA record ( 10-16-2 overall) into this week's showdown at
Michigan, one of three teams five
points ahead of Notre Dame. Duluth,
also five points ahead of the Irish
(Colorado College is the third), is 911-0 in the league and 14-14-1 overall.
"Friday I thought we got a solid
effort from everyone," said Irish
Coach Lefty Smith. "We moved the
puck well, especially on the power
play, and didn't waste any opportunities. And Dave laurion (Irish
goalie) helped a lot. He had a good
night."
Laurion stopped 25 shots, but the
game's hero was senior left wing
Kevin Humphreys, who sparked the
victory with his second career hat
trick.
junior
Dave
Poulin,
Humphrey's center, contributed a
goal and three assists Friday while a year. "I don't know what it was. I
right wing jeff Logan had a goal and guess it was sort of a lucky streak."
an assist.
Rex Bellomy added salt to the
For the weekend, that line
wound with a shorthanded goal at
produced I 5 points: Humphreys
14:50 and UMD's beGrio dosed the
with four goals and two assists; scoring on a power play at 16:42. It
Poulin with a goal and four assists; was Notre Dame's seventh straight
and Logan with three goals and an win over the Bulldogs at the Duluth
assist.
Arena. It also broke a five-game win"They came through with about
less streak for the Irish_
as good a weekend as any line has for
Duluth's Scott Carlst-m and
us all year," said Smith.
DeGrio helped snap that streak
Logan and Humphreys gave the Saturday. Carlston collected a hat
Irish a 2-0 lead in the first six trick and DeGrio added two conminutes Friday with goals at :24 and secutive third period goals for the
on the power play at 5:33. UMD's
victory. Four of the Bulldog goals
Dean Ekman made it 2·1 after one
came on the power play.
period with his first goal of the year
Three Irish defensemen were
at 10:38.
skating while hurt Saturday. Jim
Humphreys and Poulin then Brown, Lucia andjeffBrownschidle,
capitalzied on two straight power who had five assists in the series,
plays in the second period, at :36 and played despite being injured.
8:50, for a 4-1 lead. Don Gerarden
"We were hurt on defense," said
and Gary DeGrio pulled the Bull- Smith, "and we had a hard time
dogs within one, 4-3, with two goals regrouping five-on-five with so
in a span of3:19.
many penalites." The Irish were
Senior defenseman Don Lucia whistled for 13 infractions.
scored what proved to be the gamewinner at 17:41 for a 5-3 lead after
Notre Dame had fought back
two periods. His 30-foot slapshot twice from two-goal deficits and
went in off the right pad of UMD Humphreys' fourth goal of the series
goalie Ron Erickson, who was forced at 6:39 of the third period made the
to play both nights with top net- score 4-3 in favor. of UMD. But
minder Bill Perk! out with a DeGrio capped a four-goal weekend
fractured skull.
with two in a row, at 12:44 and
Kurt Bjork and Humphreys put 14:11, to cushion the Bulldogs' adthe game out of reach early in the vantage to 6-3.
third period. Bjork scored his first of
two goals for the weekend at 2:52
Logan got his second goal of the
and Humphreys collected his hat game at I 4:44 to make the score 6-4.
trick at 5: I 9.
Laurion, who totaled 33 saves, was
"I was just out doing what I always pulled with a minute to go but Notre
try to do," said Humphreys, who was Dame could not score. Erickson
born in Duluth and Jived here about made 29 saves.