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. . . Special treatment, page 3 VOL XVIII, NO. 68 the independent student newspaper serving not re dame and saint man's TUESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1983 Four die as explosive-filled truck rams into U.S. Embassy in Kuwait Police andfire officials examine the grounds o f the U.S. Embassy in Kuwaityesterday after a bomb explosion ripped through the U.S. compound. Several other areas o f Kuw ait City were also bombed including the French Embassy. Associated Press KUWAIT —Two terrorists rammed a truck loaded with ex plosives into the U.S. Embassy com pound and blew it up yesterday, and remote control car bombs went off in five other places around Kuwait. Five people were killed and 61 injured in the bombing rampage. Four people died in the embassy blast. The other bombs went off at the airport, killing one technician; at the French Embassy, slightly injuring two workers; and at an industrial complex, an electric power station and a residential area where many Americans live. “Holy War," an Islamic extremist group with ties to Iran, claimed responsibility for the bombings. The group has said it also was behind the destruction of the U.S. Embassy in Beirut in April — with a loss of 63 lives — and the Oct. 23 bombings that killed nearly 300 Marines and French paratroopers in Beirut. The Kuwaiti news agency said several people were arrested in con nection with the bombings, but did not elaborate. The news agency said five people died and 61 were injured and that no Americans had been killed or seriously wounded. Witnesses and hospital sources said it was about 9:30 a.m. (1 :30 a.m. EST) when the six-wheel truck smashed through the main gate of the U.S. Embassy compound and blew up in a parking lot. People of Praise members defend group’s community organization Editor’s note: This is the second in a three part series on People o fPraise, a charismatic group on campus. By KEVIN BINGER Copy Editor Two miles south of Corby’s on Jef ferson Street, stands the old Studebaker mansion, its towering reddish-brown walls and black slate roofs standing out as a bastion of old money even in this dignified neigh borhood. Inhabited by the Studebakers and the Bendix’s suc cessively, the mansion is now owned by the People of Praise, who run the Trinity School there. The Sisters of St. Joseph’s ran a convent here for thirty years and added several new wings to the man sion before selling it to the People of Praise. The modem, blocklike ar chitecture, although built of the same brick, is in stark contrast to the classic architecture of the main house. The iron fence surround ing the many acres of grounds was imported from Europe by Vincent Bendix. Standing in front of the pillar-lined courtyard is a statue of St. Michael thrusting a spear into Satan’s throat, a fitting symbol for its current owners, who actively seek God’s intervention to keep them from sin’s way. Trinity School currently enrolls 75 students in grades 7 through 11. All but ten of the students come from People of Praise families. Six members of People of Praise live here, including Notre Dame graduate student Tom Loughran and Dan DeCelles, one of the com munity’s 17 coordinators. DeCelles, a writer for the National Catholic Register, and the head of the social action division and public relations division o f People o f Praise, is very open in talking about People of Praise, and very proud of his com munity’s accomplishments. “There was a need for a spiritual renewal to accompany all the changes taking place in the church,” said DeCelles, explaining the atmos phere of the late 60 s in which the Charismatic Renewal started. “There was a hungering for spiritualism, and a disenchantment with materialim. You saw this in all the interest in Eastern religions. ” Notre Dame theology professor Bill Storey, who was one of the foun ders of the entire movement but quickly became disenchanted with it, agrees. “This was a great time for mem bers of the Church to get to know other churches, ” he said. “The Pen tecostal churches tend to be made up of the poorer, deprived people. We (the four Duquesne professors who initiated the Charismatic renewal), were very interested in knowing how they worshipped.” Pentecostal prayer groups, with their laying on of hands and speaking in tongues, served1as the modbl for many Charismatic communities that sprang up. The Pentecost is the celebration of the Apostles accept ing the spirit of Christ in their com munity. The explosion blew one of the two men out of the truck and he survived, but his partner was killed. The survivor was hospitalized, and was reported unconscious and in serious condition several hours after the attack, sources said. The blasts occurred during a period of about an hour and at wide ly separated locations. Extensive damage was reported at the French Embassy, but only minor damage at the airport, which remained open. Minor damage was reported from the other blasts, and most injuries were minor. “There was extensive damage to all the buildings including the chan cery,” said U.S. Embassy spokesman David Good. The administration building, which houses the cons ulate, collapsed, witnesses said. Ahmed Shama, an embassy recep tionist, was at his desk when the bomb went off. “The ceiling fell on our heads, but no one (in the sec tion) was seriously injured,” he said. “We heard screams outside, people asking for help but we did not know what happened to them ” Witnesses said the blast set several cars afire and hurled chunks of concrete into nearby buildings. Police sealed off the area and evacuated guests from the Hilton Hotel about 50 yards away. Alan Gould, director of public relations for Hilton International in New York, said guests could be out of their rooms “two to five days” while damage is repaired. W illiam M iller, a businessman from Cleveland, Ohio, and a guest at the Hilton, said he saw “people staggering around dazed” after the bombing. Some embassy buildings were afire, he said. “ I told my wife last week that 1was safe in Kuwait unlike Beirut,” he said. “But I don’t know. 1 am thinking of leaving the country right now. ” In Washington, State Department deputy spokesman Alan Romberg said four people, including two foreign nationals who did main tenance work, died in the explosion, and that two people were missing. O f those injured at the embassy, he said, 20 were Kuwaiti employees of the embassy. All Americans at the embassy had been accounted for, Romberg said, and none required hospitalization. see KUWAIT, page 5 This Pentecostal model is about all the two agree on. Storey is an out spoken critic of the Charismatic movement as it has evolved. He wrote several letters to now-retired Bishop Leo Pursley asking for an in vestigation of the People of Praise by the Church. Professor Josephine Ford, Storey’s colleague in the Theology Depart ment, is another critic of the People of Praise. Ford, who was active in the renewal in the early 1970’s, was for bidden to attend prayer meetings when she and People o f Praise leaders could find no common ground. “The problem I think they have with Josephine is that she is a woman and a scripture scholar, which they were uncomfortable with,” Storey said. “Their whole no tion is that women should be subser vient, stay in the kitchen and have babies. We thought this movement should be freezing up but it became a reinforcement of the status-quo.” “We patterned our overall structure on the model of the tradi tional Catholic family where the father is the leader. ” said DeCelles. “We believe in complimentary roles of the sexes but it’s not rigid. We en courage our women to dress femininely and our men to be chival rous. At the same time, some of our most gifted members are women. If a woman climbs to the top of the business world, more power to her.” see PRAISE, page 4 U.S. bishops, experts tackle economy letter By PAUL McGINN Executive Editor It may have been easier for U.S. bishops to write the recent pas toral letter on war and peace than it w ill be for them to write the upcoming letter on the Amet ican economy, said Notre Dame Presi dent Theodore Hesburgh last night. Hesburgh’s remarks came at a conference at which members of the bishops’ committee to draft the letter are meeting with clerics and lay persons to discuss what should go into it. The letter, the first draft of which is to appear in November, 1984, may be more controversial than last May’s pastoral letter on peace and war, according to busi ness experts who say it may con tain harsh criticism of American capitalism. Archbishop Rembert Weak land, O.S.B., o f Milwaukee has consistently argued, however, that the five bishops on the com mittee want to hear both liberal and conservative views about the American economy. Weakland has repeatedly said the purpose of the conference is to bring together economists, politicians, theologians and businessmen of different philosophies to advise the bis hops. Hesburgh called on the bis hops to draw up a letter which connects the moral obligation to take care of workers and the poor with the economic well-being of the nation. “Economics does not exist in a vacuum — it exists for people, ” he said. Hesburgh added the bishops must advise the U.S. Church about the American economy within "a rational and a moral framework that is acceptable to most people.” The purpose of the letter, he said, should be “to ask the right questions and lay out the situa tions in a way which is fairly ob vious." Hesburgh told conference members, “I hope we w ill take pride in our midwifery because that is where we are right now. ” Hesburgh urged participants to be open to all views. “You may disagree, but at least we have made a beginning.” The first day’s activities cen tered on economic planning and policy. Gar Alperovitz, Co Director of the National Center for Economic Alternatives, said the U.S. must change its philosophy about inflation and a planned economy. “We should not use employment as a way to reduce inflation,” he said. “There are lots of problems in our political system — it needs to be altered,” said Daniel Finn, chairman of the economics department and theology profes sor at Saint John’s University in Minnesota. One of those problems, Finn said, is an overemphasis on in dividualism at the expense of the good o f society. The U.S. should respect and “widen the scope of the decision making process,” he said. Finn added the process, however, is a slow one. “ People w ill never be able to vote on a planned economy,” he said. Marina von Neumann W hit man, vice president and chief see BISHOPS, page 5
Transcript
Page 1:  · ... Special treatment, page 3. VOL XVIII, NO. 68 the independent student newspaper serving not re dame and saint man's. TUESDAY, DECEMBER . 13, 1983. Four die as ...

. . . Special treatment, page 3

V O L X V II I , N O . 6 8 th e in d e p e n d e n t s tu d e n t n e w sp a p e r s e rv in g n o t re dam e and saint m a n 's T U E S D A Y , D E C E M B E R 13, 1983

Four die as explosive-filled truck rams into U.S. Embassy in Kuwait

P o lice a n d f i r e o ff ic ia ls e xa m in e the g ro u n d s o f the U.S. Em bassy in K u w a it yeste rday a fte r a b o m b e xp lo s io n r ip p e d th ro u g h the U.S. com pound . Several o th e r areas o f K u w a it C ity were a lso bom bed in c lu d in g the French Embassy.

Associated Press

K U W A IT —T w o te rro ris ts ram m ed a tru c k loaded w ith e x ­p losives in to the U.S. Embassy co m ­pound and b le w it up yesterday, and rem ote c o n tro l car bom bs w e n t o ff in five o th e r places a round Kuwait. Five people w ere k ille d and 61 in ju red in the bom b in g rampage.

Four people d ied in the embassy blast.

The o th e r bom bs w e n t o ff at the a irpo rt, k ill in g one techn ic ian; at the French Embassy, s ligh tly in ju r in g tw o w orkers; and at an industria l com p lex , an e le c tric p o w e r station and a res iden tia l area w here many Am ericans live.

“ H o ly W ar," an Islam ic ex trem is t g roup w ith ties to Iran, c la im ed respons ib ility fo r the bombings. The g roup has said it also was beh ind the d es truc tion o f the U.S. Embassy in B e iru t in A p ril — w ith a loss o f 63 lives — and the O ct. 23 bom bings that k ille d nearly 300 Marines and French paratroopers in Beirut.

The K u w a iti news agency said several people w ere arrested in con ­nec tio n w ith the bom bings, b u t d id no t elaborate. The news agency said five peop le d ied and 61 w ere in ju red and tha t no Am ericans had been k ille d o r seriously wounded.

W itnesses and hosp ita l sources said it was about 9:30 a.m. ( 1 :30 a.m. EST) w hen the s ix-w heel tru ck smashed th rough the m ain gate o f the U.S. Embassy com pound and b le w up in a park ing lot.

People of Praise members defend group’s community organizationE d ito r ’s note: This is the second in a three p a r t series o n People o f Praise, a ch a ris m a tic g ro u p on campus.

By KEVIN BINGERCopy E d ito r

T w o m iles south o f C orby ’s on Jef­ferson Street, stands the o ld Studebaker mansion, its to w e rin g redd ish-brow n w alls and b lack slate roofs standing ou t as a bastion o f o ld m oney even in th is d ign ifie d ne igh­borhood. Inhab ited by the Studebakers and the B end ix ’s suc­cessively, the mansion is n ow ow ned by the People o f Praise, w h o run the T r in ity School there.

The Sisters o f St. Joseph’s ran a convent here fo r th ir ty years and added several new w ings to the m an­sion before se lling it to the People o f Praise. The m odem , b lo ck like ar­ch itec tu re , a lthough b u ilt o f the same b rick , is in stark contrast to the classic a rch itec tu re o f the m ain house. The iro n fence su rround ­ing the many acres o f grounds was im p o rte d from Europe by V incen t Bendix. Standing in fro n t o f the p illa r-lined cou rtya rd is a statue o f St. M ichae l th ru s tin g a spear in to Satan’s throat, a f it t in g sym bol fo r its cu rre n t owners, w ho active ly seek G od’s in te rven tion to keep them from sin ’s way.

T r in ity School cu rre n tly en ro lls 75 students in grades 7 th rough 11. A ll bu t ten o f the students com e from People o f Praise families. Six members o f People o f Praise live here, in c lu d in g N o tre Dame

graduate student Tom Loughran and Dan DeCelles, one o f the co m ­m u n ity ’s 17 coord inators.

DeCelles, a w r ite r fo r the N ationa l C atho lic Register, and the head o f the social action d iv is ion and p u b lic re lations d iv is ion o f People o f Praise, is ve ry open in ta lk ing about People o f Praise, and very p roud o f h is c o m ­m u n ity ’s accom plishm ents.

“ There was a need fo r a sp ir itua l renew al to accom pany a ll the changes tak ing place in the chu rch ,” said DeCelles, exp la in ing the atmos­phere o f the late 60 s in w h ic h the C harism atic Renewal started. “ There was a hungering fo r sp iritua lism , and a d isenchantm ent w ith m ateria lim . Y ou saw th is in all the in te rest in Eastern re lig ions. ”

N o tre Dame theo logy professor B ill Storey, w ho was one o f the fo u n ­ders o f the e n tire m ovem ent bu t q u ick ly became disenchanted w ith it, agrees.

“ Th is was a great tim e fo r m em ­bers o f the C hurch to get to know o th e r churches, ” he said. “ The Pen­tecostal churches tend to be made up o f the poorer, dep rived people. W e ( th e fo u r Duquesne professors w h o in itia te d the Charism atic renew a l), w ere very in terested in k n o w in g h o w they w o rsh ipped .”

Pentecostal p rayer groups, w ith th e ir lay ing on o f hands and speaking in tongues, served1 as the m odbl fo r many Charism atic com m un ities that sprang up. The Pentecost is the ce leb ra tion o f the Apostles accept­ing the s p ir it o f C hrist in th e ir com ­m un ity .

The exp los ion b lew one o f the tw o m en ou t o f the tru ck and he survived, bu t his partner was k illed . The su rv ivo r was hospitalized, and was reported unconscious and in serious co n d itio n several hours after the attack, sources said.

The blasts occu rred d u rin g a pe riod o f about an h o u r and at w id e ­ly separated locations. Extensive damage was reported at the French Embassy, bu t on ly m in o r damage at the a irpo rt, w h ich rem ained open. M in o r damage was repo rted from the o th e r blasts, and m ost in ju ries w ere m inor.

“ There was extensive damage to all the bu ild ings in c lu d in g the chan­c e ry ,” said U.S. Embassy spokesman David Good. The adm in is tra tion bu ild ing , w h ic h houses the cons­ulate, collapsed, w itnesses said.

Ahm ed Shama, an embassy recep­tion is t, was at his desk w hen the bom b w en t off. “ The ce ilin g fe ll on o u r heads, bu t no one ( in the sec­t io n ) was seriously in ju red ,” he said. “ W e heard screams outside, people asking fo r he lp bu t w e d id not know w hat happened to them ”

W itnesses said the blast set several cars afire and hu rled chunks o f concre te in to nearby bu ild ings.

Police sealed o f f the area and evacuated guests from the H ilton H ote l about 50 yards away. Alan G ould, d ire c to r o f p u b lic re lations fo r H ilto n In te rn a tio n a l in New York, said guests co u ld be ou t o f th e ir room s “ tw o to five days” w h ile damage is repaired.

W illiam M ille r, a businessman from Cleveland, O h io , and a guest at the H ilto n , said he saw “ people staggering around dazed” after the bom bing. Some embassy bu ild ings w ere afire, he said.

“ I to ld m y w ife last w eek that 1 was safe in K uw a it un like B e iru t,” he said. “ But I do n ’t know . 1 am th in k in g o f leaving the co u n try r ig h t now. ”

In W ashington, State Departm ent deputy spokesman Alan Romberg said fou r people, in c lu d in g tw o fore ign nationals w h o d id m ain­tenance w o rk , d ied in the exp losion, and that tw o people w ere missing.

O f those in ju re d at the embassy, he said, 20 w ere K uw a iti em ployees o f the embassy. A ll Am ericans at the embassy had been accounted for, Rom berg said, and none requ ired hospita lization.

see KUWAIT, page 5

This Pentecostal m ode l is about all the tw o agree on. Storey is an o u t­spoken c r it ic o f the Charism atic m ovem ent as it has evolved. He w ro te several le tte rs to n ow -re tired B ishop Leo Pursley asking fo r an in ­vestigation o f the People o f Praise by the C hurch.

Professor Josephine Ford, S torey’s co lleague in the Theo logy D epart­m ent, is ano ther c r it ic o f the People o f Praise. Ford, w h o was active in the renew al in the early 1970’s, was fo r­b idden to attend prayer meetings w hen she and People o f Praise leaders co u ld fin d no com m on ground.

“ The p ro b le m I th in k they have w ith Josephine is that she is a w om an and a sc rip tu re scholar, w h ic h they w ere uncom fo rtab le w ith ,” Storey said. “ T he ir w h o le no ­t io n is that w om en should be subser­v ient, stay in the k itch e n and have babies. W e though t th is m ovem ent should be freezing up bu t i t became a re in fo rce m e n t o f the status-quo. ”

“ W e patterned o u r ove ra ll s truc tu re on the m odel o f the tra d i­tiona l C a tho lic fam ily w here the fa ther is the leader. ” said DeCelles. “ W e be lieve in co m p lim en ta ry roles o f the sexes b u t i t ’s no t rig id . W e en­courage o u r w om en to dress fem in ine ly and o u r m en to be ch iva l­rous. A t the same tim e, some o f ou r m ost g ifted m em bers are w om en. I f a w om an c lim bs to the to p o f the business w o rld , m ore p o w e r to her.”

see PRAISE, page 4

U.S. bishops, experts tackle economy letterB y PAUL McGINNExecutive E d ito r

It may have been easier fo r U.S. bishops to w r ite the recent pas­to ra l le tte r on w ar and peace than it w i l l be fo r them to w r ite the upcom ing le tte r on the Am et ican econom y, said N otre Dame Presi­dent Theodore Hesburgh last night.

Hesburgh’s rem arks came at a conference at w h ich m em bers o f the bishops’ com m ittee to draft the le tte r are m eeting w ith c le rics and lay persons to discuss what should go in to it.

The le tte r, the firs t draft o f w h ich is to appear in N ovem ber, 1984, may be m ore con trovers ia l than last May’s pastoral le tte r on peace and war, accord ing to busi­ness experts w h o say i t may co n ­ta in harsh c r it ic ism o f Am erican capitalism.

A rchb ishop Rem bert Weak land, O.S.B., o f M ilw aukee has consis tently argued, however, tha t the five bishops on the com ­m ittee want to hear bo th libera l and conservative view s about the Am erican econom y.

Weakland has repeatedly said the purpose o f the conference is to b rin g toge the r econom ists, po litic ians, theologians and businessmen o f d iffe ren t ph ilosophies to advise the bis­hops.

Hesburgh called on the bis­hops to d raw up a le tte r w h ich connects the m ora l ob liga tion to take care o f w orkers and the poo r w ith the econom ic w e ll-be ing o f the nation.

“ Econom ics does not ex is t in a vacuum — it exists fo r people, ” he said.

Hesburgh added the bishops must advise the U.S. C hurch

about the Am erican econom y w ith in "a rationa l and a m oral fram ew ork that is acceptable to m ost people.”

The purpose o f the le tte r, he said, should be “ to ask the right questions and lay o u t the situa­tions in a way w h ich is fa irly o b ­vious."

Hesburgh to ld conference members, “ I hope we w ill take p rid e in o u r m id w ife ry because that is w here we are rig h t now. ”

Hesburgh urged partic ipants to be open to all views. “ You may disagree, bu t at least we have made a beg inning.”

The firs t day’s ac tiv ities cen­tered on econom ic p lann ing and po licy .

Gar A lpe rov itz , Co D ire c to r o f the N ational C enter fo r Econom ic A lternatives, said the U.S. m ust change its ph ilosophy about in fla tion and a planned econom y. “ W e should no t use em p loym en t as a way to reduce in fla tion ,” he said.

“ There are lo ts o f p rob lem s in o u r p o lit ica l system — it needs to be a lte red,” said Daniel Finn, chairm an o f the econom ics departm ent and theo logy profes­sor at Saint John ’s U n ivers ity in Minnesota.

O ne o f those problem s, Finn said, is an overem phasis on in ­d iv idua lism at the expense o f the good o f society.

The U.S. should respect and “ w iden the scope o f the decision m aking process,” he said.

Finn added the process, how ever, is a s low one. “ People w i l l never be able to vote on a p lanned econom y,” he said.

M arina von Neum ann W h it­man, v ice p res ident and c h ie f

see BISHOPS, page 5

Page 2:  · ... Special treatment, page 3. VOL XVIII, NO. 68 the independent student newspaper serving not re dame and saint man's. TUESDAY, DECEMBER . 13, 1983. Four die as ...

The ObserverT : 131 J <

Tuesday, December 13,1983 — page 2

In BriefA m o to ris t d r iv in g h o m e from a party at 3 a m

dashed th rough a fie ld and in to a cu lv e rt to p u ll a man from his w recked and blazing p icku p tru c k just before it exp loded, troopers said. Robert Buckley, 29, o f Way land, N.Y., said he d ropped to the g round fo r p ro te c tio n w hen the flam ing tru c k “ made a coup le o f pops ... I though t she was go ing to b lo w fo r sure.” He con tinued to the cab, b roke a w in d o w w ith his fist and rescued Francis Ray, 23, o f West B loom fie ld , w ho was unconscious. State troope rs said Ray crashed early Sunday after fa ilin g to negotia te a cu rve on N ew Y ork 15A. He was in guarded c o n d itio n at a Rochester hospital. — AP

N e w Y o r k u r b a n “ homesteaders” w il l be able to buy vacant apartm ents in c ity -ow ned bu ild ings fo r $250 and get $ 10,000 fo r fixups. Housing C om m issioner A n thony G liedm an announced the program Sunday and said grants w o u ld g ive p o o r and m idd le incom e people a chance to ow n a hom e and get “ a head start on the rehab ilita tion w o rk ." G liedm an said applicants may select any vacant o r underused b u ild in g in areas e lig ib le fo r federal C om ­m u n ity D eve lopm ent m oney. A bout SI m illio n has been set aside tow a rd 108 apartm ents in I 1 bu ild ings in Harlem , the upper west side and the lo w e r east side in Manhattan; the South B ronx; and the G reenpo in t and Sunset Park sections o f B rooklyn . — AP

R e l a t i v e s a p p e a l e d yesterday fo r some con tact fromthe k idnappers o f the heiress o f the Bulgari je w e lry fo rtune and her teen-age son A rm ed bandits abducted Anna Bulgari Galissoni and G io rg io . 16, at the fam ily estate at Gampo d i Came, south o f Rome, on Nov. 19 The fam ily released the appeal yesterday to the news media. O n Nov. 24, the fam ily had called fo r a news b lackout, to u ch ­ing o ff specu la tion that the Bulgaris w ere negotia ting w ith the k id ­nappers The fam ily has refused to say w h e th e r it has been in con tact w ith the kidnappers. Mrs. Calissoni's cousin, G ianni Bulgari, another o w n e r o f the je w e lry store, was k idnapped in 1975 and freed a m on th la te r after the fam ily paid a ransom equ iva lent to $2 m illion . — AP

T llC T h a i g o v e rn m e n t has postponed ind e fin ite ly a request by N o rth Korea to open an embassy in Bangkok, o ffic ia l sources said yesterday. They lin ked the postponem ent to a te rro ris t bom b in g w h ic h k ille d 2 1 peop le in Rangoon, Burma, on O ct. 9. The sources said the Thai governm ent to o k the action after ev idence was presented at the tr ia l in Rangoon o f tw o captured N orth Korean arm y officers. The o ffice rs w ere conv ic ted on Friday o f the bom b ing and sentenced to death. O f the 21 v ic tim s, fo u r w e re m em bers o f the Cabinet o f South Korea's president, Chun Doo-hwan. Requesting anonym ity , sources said Tha iland was keep ing trade add o th e r ties, w h ich are now m in im a l, "a t a standstill." N o rth Korea made the re ­quest to open the embassy tw o years ago. Its envoy in Rangoon, w ho was also accred ited to represent N o rth Korea in dealings w ith Thailand, was expe lled in early N ovem ber. — AP

Of Interest

F U 1 3 T 1 C 1 3 1 A i d F o i m S fo r 1984-85 are available in the N otre Dame Financial A id O ffice. The FAF is the on ly fo rm the U n i­vers ity requ ires fo r s tudents to receive U n ive rs ity o r federal aid. Deadline fo r s u b m ittin g the FAF is M arch 1, 1984. — The Observer

T h e U n i t e d f i l m Hopes and Dreams” w ithM erlin Olsen w il l he show n in the Pasquerilla East Chapel ton igh t at 10. U nited Way representa tive Patrick Mangan w il l be present to answer questions about the U nited Way. — The Observer

D l * . J a m e s F r i c k , assistant to the p res ident at N otre Dame, is be ing honored today at the Great Lakes Regional c o n ­ference o f the C ou n c il fo r Advancem ent in Support o f Education in the C hicago M arrio tt Hote l. Frick, w h o stepped dow n as v ice p resi­den t fo r p u b lic relations, a lum n i affairs and deve lopm ent at the U n i­vers ity September 1, and is no w an educationa l consu ltant, w il l be c ite d fo r his service to h igher education. — The Observer

WeatherC l o u d y 3 n d c o o l t o d a y , n ighs m the upper 30s

and lo w 40s. A 50 pe rcen t chance o f ra in o r snow ton ight. Lows in the m id 30s. Rain like ly to m o rro w . Highs in the lo w and m id 40s. — AP

Christmas in collegeIt's beg inn ing to look like Christmas here in N otre

Dame, Indiana. But not much.I t ’s no t easy to get in to the Christm as sp ir it w hen six

inches o f p re c ip ita tio n on the g round outs ide serve o n ­ly to rem in d you w h y they named th is place d u Lac.

I t ’s d iff ic u lt to get exc ited about w r it in g long cheery messages inside Christmas cards w hen you know you have five b lue books to f ill w ith yo u r h a n d w ritin g be­tw een no w and Decem ber 21.

I t ’s hard to be festive w hen m ost o f the green decora­tions on d o rm w alls are adm in is tra tive d irec tives de ta iling the hazards o f deco ra tive evergreens.

C ollege life does no t always make fo r the m ost m em orab le o f yu le tide experiences. Between figh ting the c lo ck to get yo u r last papers done, fig h tin g yo u r eye lids to stay awake in class after an a ll-n ighter, and fig h tin g the throngs at U n ive rs ity Park so you ’ll have som eth ing to w rap up at hom e on D ecem ber 24, the re ’s no t a lo t o f tim e le ft fo r a festive atmosphere. Even the advent o f A dvent is no b ig event.

W h ile small “ Kris K ring le ” gifts are le ft at you r d o o r and strains o f a recorded “ Hark the Herald,Angels Sing" can be heard em anating from the to w e r o f Sacred Heart, the re ’s just no tim e to rea lly en joy the season.

I t ’s hard to be sincere about peace on earth when you do n ’t even have peace o f m ind.

One o f the w o rs t parts o f the w ho le deal is that Christmas isn’t rea lly Christmas u n til you go home.

D u rin g ch ildhood , he lp ­ing to tr im the tree and decorate the house really signaled the start o f Christmas. Christm as doesn’t rea lly ex is t u n til yo u ’re home.

The sm ell o f a food-sales pizza can’t even begin to com pare to the scent o f freshly-baked homemade Christm as cookies. Stockings hung by the ch im ney w ith care ( o r by the rad ia to r in new er d o rm s ) s till may not f i l l one w ith tid ings o f co m fo rt and joy. m

A plastic R udolph suspended in the d in in g hall doesn’t exactly signal visions o f sugarplum s to co m ­m ence dancing in y o u r head. And dashing th rough the snow to class and deck ing the halls w ith boughs o f flam e-retardent p lastic d e fin ite ly leave som eth ing to be desired.

A rr iv in g hom e on D ecem ber 22 on ly to collapse in a state o f exhaustion isn’t exactly in the ho liday sp irit.

Few students, facu lty m em bers and adm in istra tors w o u ld be w ill in g to give up that ha llow ed event know n as fall break to make it hom e in tim e fo r a real Christmas.

But i t m ight be w o rth the h u m id ity and d iscom fo rt o f sta rting the school year a w eek ea rlie r in August to be hom e in tim e fo r a real Christmas.

T h is w o u ld m ove the ca lendar ahead one week, so school w o u ld resume January 10, ra ther than the 17th. A fte r you attend a ll the post Christm as sales, make yo u r m erchandise exchanges and p ick up the latest hom etow n gossip at the N ew Year’s Eve parties, the re ’s no t a lo t to do beyond shove ling show drifts and p lo tt in g you r spring break plans anyhow.

Th is w o u ld also end the schoo l year a w eek ea rlie r in May, w h ic h is far m ore co n ­d uc ive to rest and last m inu te sum m er jo b p lan­n ing than the present schedule.

Perhaps the most lam entable aspect o f not be ing able to experience a regu la r Christm as d u rin g co llege is that you d o n ’t feel m uch d iffe ren t than the rest o f the year. You s t ill have all the w o rk to w o r ry about and the pressure is at its m ost in ­tense.

Christm as shou ld make you feel d iffe ren t. It should make you feel better. Christm as should give you

the tim e to th in k about peace and jo y and love and friendsh ip and a ll those o th e r th ings that d id n ’t seem applicable on H allow een o r the Fourth o f July.

That's w hat was so great about Christm as as a ch ild . T ha t’s w ha t made it so special.

I t ’s easy to forget about all that once y o u ’re hom e and the ho liday is over. I t ’s also easy to fo rge t that Christmas is a tim e o f renewal. Just because the ho liday is past doesn’t mean you shou ldn 't co n tin ue to feel d iffe ren t.

A fte r you get hom e and have a chance to rest and open a few presents, th in k about that aspect 6 f the season. Bl

In one way, a co llege C hristm as has a d is tin c t ad­vantage ove r a “ rea l" Christmas. In the real vLorld, Christm as signals the end o f one year and the beg inn ing o f another. I t ’s a beg inning, bu t i t ’s also an end. In c o l­lege, Christmas signals the half-way po in t. I t ’s a tim e to approach the second part o f 1983-84 w ith renew ed zeal and invo lvem ent. It's a chance to evaluate and plan to make the second ha lf better.

C o l le g e - (3 \rv S "H n » "6 ?

The Observer

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Hospitolity Center, Hyatt Ballroom

Tuesday, Dec. 27

Wednesday, Dec. 28

Thursday, Dec 29

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2p.m.-5p.m. 7p.m.-10p.m.10a.m.-5p.m.

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Margaret FosmoeM anaging Editor

Inside Tuesd

Page 3:  · ... Special treatment, page 3. VOL XVIII, NO. 68 the independent student newspaper serving not re dame and saint man's. TUESDAY, DECEMBER . 13, 1983. Four die as ...

The Observer Tuesday, December 13,1983 — page 3i >drr jo e

Compensation for government members hot topic’ for SenateBy JOSEPH MURPHYS ta ff Reporter

C alling com pensation fo r s tudent governm ent m em bers the “ new ho t to p ic " before the Student Senate, Student Body President Brian Cal­laghan said, “ I f w e took compensa­tion, w e w o u ld n o t be the on ly ones.I th in k som eth ing is needed. G overnm ent ac tiv ities take a lo t o f w o rk , and a lo t o f tim e.”

Senate m em bers advocatingm onetary com pensation said many students choose no t to ho ld o ffice in governm ent because they cannot af­fo rd the loss o f t im e o r incom e, since they cannot h o ld a jo b d u rin g th e ir te rm in office.

Callaghan said financia l com ­pensation “ has its plusses, b u t i t also has its m a jo r drawbacks."

“ I do n ’t like the idea o f buy ing ac­c o u n ta b ility ,” said off-cam pus stu­dent senator Rich Spolzino. “ I f w e ’re goir^g to pay people financ ia lly , w e stand the risk o f people do ing it just fo r the m oney.”

J i

The senate is cons ide ring o th e r form s o f com pensation such as scholarships and class c re d it fo r service. Senators Dave M cA voy and Rob B e rtin o jo in t ly said, “ W e firm ly back acedem ic c re d it as a viable al­te rnative . Its is a plus fo r the student body and fo r the student gove rn ­m ent o ffic ia ls becuase it gives them m ore tim e to do th e ir governm enta l duties. And by reduc ing one ’s academ ic w o rk load , one can s till ho ld a jo b to support h im se lf finan ­c ia lly . Thus the need fo r financia l com pensation w o u ld be e lim ina ted .” M cAvoy added, “ W ith the academ ic c red it, no one loses, and everyone gains. ”

Callaghan said a decis ion on what, i f any, com pensation w i l l be enacted w i l l n o t be made u n t il after break.

Any fo rm o f com pensation w il l no t take effect u n t il after the cu rre n t s tudent gove rnm ent o ffic ia ls have le ft office, Callaghan stressed.

D iscussing the recu rr in g issue o f the a lcoho l p o lic y on campus, Cal­

laghan said, “ The idea o f a d ry cam pus is no t be ing considered strongly. I f the p ro b le m is w ith drunkeness, w h y no t gear it tow ards the drunks. A lo t o f people can d r in k responsib ly. And I d o n 't th in k a 21 (yea r d r in k in g age l im it ) campus w o u ld be e ffective e ither. I t w ou ld send d rin k in g in to the closets. The p rob lem w o n ’t have been solved, m ere ly h idden.”

Robert B ertino , w h o is on the Senate A lco h o l P o licy C om m ittee said, “ I f y o u ’re n o t a llow ed to d rin k here, then you have to face the w o r ld in fo u r years w ith o u t the help available here.” He c ited psych o lo g i­cal services, recto rs, and peer guidance as supports w h ic h in s till the im portance o f d r in k in g in m odera tion .

“ The p rob lem . ” added M cAvoy, “ lies no t w ith the students, bu t w ith the ones w h o abuse a lcoho l. They should be treated strong ly , n o t the en tire s tudent body.

Campus groups received special treatment for Billy Joel lottery

I

A

By CHRIS WALTONNews S ta ff

Student U nion and Student Senate m em bers w ere am ong a g roup w h o rece ived B illy Joel co n ce rt ticke ts w ith o u t w a itin g in line.

Before the tic ke t lo tte ry , m em ­bers o f the tw o groups w ere a llow ed to purchase as many ticke ts as they wanted. Some o f the ticke ts w ere fo r fro n t ro w seats.

The staff o f the Ir ish Gardens rece ived a to ta l o f 35 ticke ts w ith o u t w a itin g in line.

Student Body President Brian Cal­laghan acknow ledges the p re fe re n ­tia l trea tm ent some rece ived regard ing tickets, saying, “ T h is is trad itio n a l p ractice , b u t i t go t o u t o f c o n tro l th is tim e. Some changes w il l be made regard ing th is p o licy .”

The B illy Joel conce rt is the firs t w id e ly popu la r co n ce rt to take place on campus in several years, Callag­han said. “ A lo t o f m istakes w ere made due to inexperience in han­d lin g an event th is big, ” Callaghan said.

Callaghan said that a lthough B illy Joel t ic k e t d is tr ib u tio n was no t handled p rop e rly , p re fe ren tia l trea t­m ent fo r s tuden t leaders is justified . “ I th in k that fo r the to p five s tudent body o ffic ia ls w h o p u t in tw e n ty to th ir ty hours a w eek serving the s tu ­dents, tw o ticke ts to a co n ce rt is fa ir co m pensa tion .”

Dave M cAvoy, a student senator from D illo n Hall, disagrees. “ I ran fo r th is o ffice w ith the understand ing that i t was a vo lu n ta ry position . There are m any people w h o vo lu n ­

tee r th e ir t im e on th is campus. W hy should the Student Senate rece ive special privileges? ” M cA voy has g iven the ticke ts he rece ived to o th e r students.

Life goes onJean H a rris , righ t, w ho is serv ing 15 ye a rs -to -life f o r k i l l in g Dr.

H e rm a n T a m o w e r o f “Scarsdale D ie t" fa m e , h o lds a fe l lo w in m a te ’s c h ild in a p la y ro o m f o r in m a te s ’ c h ild re n a t the Bedfo rd H il ls C o rre c tio n a l F a c il ity Thursday in B ed fo rd H ills , N.Y.

Factory closings affect SB area

B BGO IRISH, BEAT BOSTON COLLEGE

5-8 Mixed Drinks 2 for 1 8-3 M ichelob N ight $1.00

iOver Christmas, write something for the

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B y JEFF NIEKELSKINews S ta ff

The effects o f fac to ry c losings in the South Bend area was the sub ject o f a m eeting last w eek in O ’Shaughnessy Hall.

Am ong those present at t h e , m ee ting w e re E conom ics Professor Teresa G h ila rducc i, James Ridgeway, a W ashington D C. c o r­respondent, and M ike Matuszak, o r­ganizer o f the “ Save O u r Jobs” cam paign in South Bend.

The g roup proposed establish ing p lant c los ing leg is la tion, w h ic h w o u ld in c lu d e six m on th n o tif ica ­tion before a closing, re loca tion pos­s ib ilitie s fo r fired w orkers, d is incen tive laws fo r m ov ing plants, and g iv in g w o rke rs the firs t r ig h t o f refusal fo r purchasing c los ing plants.

Since 1945, app rox im a te ly 26 m a jo r industria l p lants have closed in the South Bend area, accounting fo r a net loss o f 30,000 jobs since 1961 .

The rem a inder o f the South Bend T o rr in g to n p lan t and the Dodge- Relience E xxon p lan t in M ishawaka have announced plans fo r p e r­m anent shutdowns.

Th is figu re com es from a recen tly com p le ted s tudy by fo rm e r N o tre

Dame facu lty m em ber, Charles Crapyo.

The “ Save O u r Jobs" com m ittee , a g roup o f unem ployed w o rke rs and concerned citzens, is a ttem p ting to figh t these p lant closings. Matuszak, a fo rm e r em ployee o f T o rrin g to n ,

saidu , ‘iQ W i t m s w adustria lized like many great cities, and we have to address th is p rob lem w h ile the re are s till plants in opera­tion . I m ainta in the b righ t fu tu re that South Bend is lo o k in g fo rw a rd to, cannot be atta ined w ith o u t a co n ­certed e ffo rt to re ta in ex is ting jobs, o r at the very least, to fo rce depart­ing co rpo ra tions to assume respon­s ib ility fo r the des truc tion that they have le ft in th e ir wake.”

A cco rd ing to statistics read at the meeting, results o f p lan t closings have taken the fo rm o f increases in rates o f unem p loym ent, death, and

c rim e , as w e ll as decreases in educa­tiona l funds, and social and p u b lic services.

An em ployee o f the South Bend D epartm en t o f Redevelopm ent said increasing energy costs, wage levels, un ions and w o rkm e n ’s com pensa­tio n are reasons fo r p lant closings and relocations. Many companies, in c lu d in g T o rrin g to n , are m oving to the South w here energy costs and wage levels arc low er.

Laura Rooney, p lanner fo r the D epartm en t o f R edevelopm ent, said, “ Emphasis has been on a ttrac­t io n o f new industry , bu t personally, 1 be lieve that m ore m ust be placed on re te n tio n o f p resen tly ex is tin g in ­dus try ."

Matuszak stated,“ The focal po in t o f o u r m ovem ent is a ra lly to be held on Dec 17. W e’re all just concerned w orkers , and w e 're hop ing fo r sug­gestions fro m the pub lic . ”

Superior, assistant named for Moreau

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B y BUD LUEPKENews S ta ff

Father John G erber was named su­p e rio r o f M oreau Seminary last Friday after a com prehensive search conducted by Father Richard W ar­ner, the Indiana P rovinc ia l Superior fo r the H o ly Cross Fathers.

Also appo in ted was Father Donald C. Fetters, p rinc ipa l o f Bourgade H igh School in Phoenix, Ariz., w ho w i l l serve as assistant superio r o f the seminary.

G erber is presently assistant p rov in c ia l supe rio r at H o ly Cross headquarters in South Bend. He w ill be rep lac ing Father Thomas W. Sm ith w h o is in his s ix th year as su­p e rio r at Moreau.

G erber described the selection process as “ standard.” A ll m em bers o f the p ro v in ce w ere inv ited to sub­m it names o f persons w h o m they considered qualified. A search co m ­m ittee, headed by Father C arl Ebey, rev iew ed each o f the persons

proposed and selected ten people to be in te rv iew ed . The in te rv iew s y ie lded th ree candidates, and W ar­ner chose G erber from these three.

The jo b o f superio r invo lves many responsib ilities. The supe rio r is “ the re c to r o f the sem inary ve ry m uch like a re c to r o f a hall,” said Smith. Sm ith also said that the superio r d irec ts sp iritua l and co m m u n ity g row th , as w e ll as the aposto lic and fa ith program s fo r the seminarians. The supe rio r’s p rim ary jo b is to su­pervise the seminarians’ personal and sp ir itua l fo rm a tion as they c o m ­p le te th e ir fo rm al education at N o tre Dame. The te rm o f supe rio r is renewable after th ree years.

G erber forsees no m ajor changes d u rin g his firs t term . His goal is to “ proceed in d ire c t c o n tin u ity o f w hat is already an exce llen t p rogram . ” Moreau Seminary has ap­p ro x im a te ly 30 en ro llm en ts per year and c u rre n tly has 86 sem i­narians enro lled.

Page 4:  · ... Special treatment, page 3. VOL XVIII, NO. 68 the independent student newspaper serving not re dame and saint man's. TUESDAY, DECEMBER . 13, 1983. Four die as ...

The Observer Tuesday, December 13,'1^8 3 page 4

continued fro m page IBeth Healy-Preuss, last year’s

Scholastic e d ito r and People o f Praise m em ber, states that People o f Praise is not sexist and says that one w om an in the g roup is in m edical school

“ W e have w om en w ho arc d o c ­to rs and lawyers and Indian c h ic k ," said Preuss. " It 's just not true ."

People o f Praise takes St. Paul’s statements about w om en ’s ro les in the N ew Testam ent very seriously. Both S torey and Ford com p la in about the lite ra lis l fundam entalist lean ing o f the Charism atic Renewal.

1 w o u ld sit at m eetings and listen to people give r id icu lo us in te rp re ta ­tions o f scrip tu re , ” said Ford, “ and they w o u ld n ’t let me speak because 1 am a w om an."

"She w anted to lead a prayer m eeting and w e le t her try it, bu t it just d id n ’t w o rk ou t, ” DeCelles said.

O ne th in g the People o f Praise arc adm itted ly fundam entalist about is dcm ono logy. “ We take those passages in sc rip tu re (w h ic hdescribe dem on ic possession) very seriously ," DeCelles said. “ We be lieve in the dev il and demons and 1 th in k that is p re tty m uch in line w ith C hu rch teach ing ”

People o f Praise m em bers pe r­fo rm an exo rc ism like ce rem ony w h ic h they call “ de live rance" o r “ sp ir itua l warfare ” Since on ly a c le r ­gyman may pe rfo rm an exo rc ism and the People o f Praise is no t a true chu rch , the ritua l is no t a true e x o r­cism . A ll m em bers be long to sacramental churches, n ine ty p e r­cen t o f w h ich are C atho lic , and ten p e rcen t Lutheran o r Episcopalian.

The T r in ity teaches bo th a C ath­o lic d o c tr in e and a Protestant d o c tr in e course. "W e want to make sure w e d o n ’t p roduce a generation o f non denom ina tiona l kids, ” DeCelles said. The sp ir itua l w arfare p roved to he the last straw fo r Ford. "They wanted to exorc ise me but 1 w o u ld n ’t a llow it," she said “ 1 d id n ’t feel that I had any dem ons ”

" I th in k th e y ’re d o in g harm to people in teach ing an ou tm oded, reactionary fo rm o f re lig ion , ” Storey said "Y ou can't just ignore tw o cen­tu ries o f learning. In p rim itiv e relig ions, eve ry th in g good that hap­pened was a ttrib u te d to God and e ve ry th in g bad that happened was a ttrib u te d to demons. I t ’s just a denia l o f secondary causality."

W h ile DeCelles doesn’t apologize to r Charisms the g roup practices — tin. speaking in tongues and p ro p ­hecy — he says the c o m m u n ity aspect is the m ost im portan t part o f People o f Praise

"People wanted to share m ore o f th e ir lives. People looked to s c rip tu re and saw the fo rm a tio n o f the early C hristian co m m u n ity w ith the co m in g toge the r and ca ring fo r each o ther's needs in the Acts o f the Apostles. But I th in k you can live a com m una l C hristian life in a way that is in the w o r ld hut not o f the w o r ld ."

In the last few years. People o f Praise have made an e ffo rt to reach o u t and he lp m em bers o f the larger co m m u n ity , b o th in d iv id u a lly and as a group.

O ne re tire d m em ber gave a Lao lio n im m ig ran t fam ily a house to stay in w ith o u t charg ing ren t u n til the fa ther found w o rk , and then made the rent app ly to ow nersh ip . He also to o k the fa ther to the various federal agencies and helped h im wade th ro u g h pa p e rw o rk to get the help he was e n title d to.

Observer

♦***

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. . . PraiseD eCelles like d the idea so m uch,

he is c u rre n tly o rgan iz ing a program to he lp all im m ig ran ts get w ha t they are e n tit le d to from the governm ent. His social ac tion d iv is ion also runs a food d is tr ib u tio n program fo r the needy and is o rgan iz ing a free day care cen te r fo r needy w om en w ith ch ild ren .

In fact. People o f Praise was able to purchase the Studebaker mansion o n ly because a benefactor, w h o was not a m em ber o f the g roup, donated ha lf the purchase price. They also ow n the LaSalle H ote l d o w n tow n , w h ich they purchased fo r o n ly S150,000. “ G od p ro v id e d the op ­p o rtu n ity w hen the p rice was lo w .” DeCelles said.

Storey said, " I ’m n o t a m ono ­maniac o n the subject. I ’m not all r ig h t and they’re not a ll w rong . But I ’d say to them , you ’re p robab ly good C hristians in sp ite o f w hat yo u ’re doing, instead o f because o f w hat yo u ’re doing. ”

The th ird a n d f i n a l p a r t o f th is series w i l l f o l lo w the careers o f the las t three e d ito r in ch iefs o f Scholas­tic, a l l m em bers o f the People o f Praise c o m m u n ity ..

M 9

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l . i ! I l l A P V h o to

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Page 5:  · ... Special treatment, page 3. VOL XVIII, NO. 68 the independent student newspaper serving not re dame and saint man's. TUESDAY, DECEMBER . 13, 1983. Four die as ...

The Observer D3C Tuesday, December I 3, 1983 — page 5

Bikes not to be stored in stadiumBy MIRIAM HILLNews S ta ff

Due to secu rity p rob lem s in the past few years, student b icyc les w il l p robab ly n o t be stored in the stadium before Christmas vacation, acco rd ing to G lenn T erry, d ire c to r o f N o tre Dame Security.

N orm a lly , b icycles are s tored in the stadium after the last foo tba ll game o f the season. Last year, several

b icycles w ere stolen from the stadium, so the N o tre Dame Security D epartm ent is “ try in g to deve lop a statem ent that w o u ld re lieve ( th e m ) o f any respons ib ility fo r the stolen b icycles,” T e rn said. A d o lla r fee is charged fo r each b ike stored to cove r the cost o f reg is te ring a b icyc le w ith the South Bend Police. Several parents o f students w ere u p ­set because th e ir c h ild re n w ere charged m oney to store b ikes that

w ere la te r stolen.

The security departm en t is c u r­ren tly searching fo r a place to store bikes that is less susceptib le to the ft than the stadium .

T e rry also no ted the p ro b le m o f s to ring b icyc les in the stadium has been postponed because the secu rity departm ent has been busy lately.

‘Days of weakness over’ Reagan tells war vets; justifies buildupAssociated Press

NEW YO R K — President Reagan to ld the na tion ’s w a r heroes yester­day th a t Am erica is fin ished w ith “ tu rn in g o u r sw ords .in to p lo w ­shares, h o p in g o thers w o u ld fo l­lo w ," and that w ith his m ilita ry b u ild u p “ o u r days o f weakness are over."

Toughen ing the rh e to r ic he has used la te ly to ju s tify his decisions to send U.S. troops in to Lebanon and Grenada, Reagan declared in a luncheon speech before the C on­gressional M edal o f H o n o r Society

that “ o u r m ilita ry forces are back on th e ir feet and standing ta ll.”

The p res iden t was flanked at the head table by com m anders o f the M arines and A rm y Rangers w h o took part in the invasion o f Grenada on O ct. 25, and some M arines w ho recen tly re tu rned from Beirut. M em bjers o f the audience stood and w aved th e ir w h ite napkins in salute as a m ilita ry chorus sang trad itio n a l service songs.

Reagan said h is to ry offers o n ly a few c lear-cu t lessons fo r those w ho manage the na tion ’s affairs.

“ O ne o f them is sure ly the lesson

wp DEADLINE . CSS MUST •e c d v e tk t BY MABCH I

School Year 1982-83COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP SERVICE OF THE COLLEGE BOARD -

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FAF due 3/1Deadline for submitting the

Financial Aid Form is March 1, and the Notre Dame Office of Financial Aid suggests that stu­dents submit the form by mid Februrary at the latest.

The FAF is the only form required by Notre Dame for students to receive aid. Direc­tor of Financial Aid Joe Russo advises all students to submit a form to the College Scholarship Service and not to assume automatically that they are not eligible for aid.

The office, Russo said, is hard pressed to give aid to students who miss the FAF deadline.

nd your IWod oul FAF lei«ge Scholeisnip Service

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that weakness on the part o f those w h o cherish freedom inev itab ly b rings on a threat to that freedom. Tyran ts are tem pted .” he said.

“ W ith the best o f in ten tions, w e have tr ie d tu rn in g o u r swords in to plowshares, ho p in g o thers w o u ld fo llo w . W ell, o u r days o f weakness are over. ”

Reagan addressed about h a lf the 259 liv in g rec ip ien ts o f the M edal o f Honor, the na tion ’s highest award fo r com bat valor. A few o f the w in ­ners w o re th e ir m ilita ry un ifo rm s o r the caps o f th e ir veterans’ organiza­tions, and m ost w ere in c iv ilia n clothes. B ut all, from the o ld m en in w hee lcha irs to the yo u th fu l veterans o f V ietnam , w o re the d is tin c tive m edals on pale b lue r ibbons w ith a fie ld o f 13 stars.

S ecurity was so tig h t around the Sheraton C entre H o te l ba llroom w he re Reagan was speaking Secret Service agents refused fo r about ten m inutes to adm it m em bers o f the W h ite House press corps.

Reagan became the firs t p res ident to rece ive the congressiona lly cha r­te red soc ie ty ’s Patriots Award, w h ic h has been presented since 1968 to “ d is tingu ished Am ericans” chosen by the group. Form er rec ip ien ts inc lude the late AFL C IO presiden t G eorge Meany, fo rm e r Labor Secretary Peter J. Brenan, Charles Johnson Jr. o f the Carpen­ters and Jo iners U nion, ac to r J im m y Stewart, the nation 's U nknow n Sol­diers, W ill Rogers and fo rm e r M ideast envoy P h ilip Habib.

Colum bia’s CrewC rew o f S hu ttle C o lu m b ia , w ith Spacelab in its cargo bay, in a

s ta r b u rs t lik e c lu s te r in the a f t end o f Spacelab d u r in g the 10 da y m ission. C lockw ise s ta rt in g b o tto m cen ter w ith m iss io n spec ia lis t Owen G a rr io tt, p i lo t B rew ste r Shaw, p a y lo a d spec ia lis t B y ro n Lichtenberg, m iss io n spec ia lis t Robert Parker, co m m a n d e r Jo h n Y oung a n d p a y lo a d sp e c ia lis t U l f M erbo ld .

. . . Kuwaitcontinued fro m page I

W hite House spokesman Larry Speakes said President Reagan was brie fed about the exp losions M on­day m orn in g bu t was no t awakened d u rin g the n igh t ’As always, we dep lo re acts o f te rro ris t v io lence and extend o u r sym pathies to those w h tiJ u s L J ,^ iL J jv e s . o r s u ffy e d in; ju ries,” Speakes said.

Secretary o f State George P. Shultz, w ho was in Lisbon, Portugal,

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to dedicate a new U.S. Embassy, ca lled the bom b in g a " tra g ic and dep lo rab le act." He said it was "an un fortuna te fact o f life ” that governm ent-sponsored te rro rism was increasing, bu t d id not spec­ulate on respons ib ility fo r the b om ­bing.

K u w a it’s p rim e m in ister, Sheik •Stiad. a l-Abduilah al-Sabah, he 'd an em ergency Cabinet session and vow ed to punish those responsible fo r the bom bings and to “ p u rify the co u n try o f all suspects w h o e x ­p lo ite d its hosp ita lity .”

Foreigners w ho w o rk in K uw ait make up m ore than ha lf o f the c o u n try ’s 1.3 m illio n population. The sheik d id not re fe r to any na tiona lity specifica lly. There are m ore than 300,000 Palestinians — the largest single fore ign g roup — and some 60,000 Iranians in K uw a it as w e ll as thousands o f o th e r Arabs and Asians.

. . .Bishopscontinued fro m page 1 econom ist at General M otors, disagreed. “ To use the o ld saying, ' I f it ain’ t broke, do n ’t f ix it, ” W h itm an said.

“ M ore sins have been co m m itte d aginst people in the name o f ex­cessive socicta lism than in the name o f excessive ind iv idua lism ,” she said.

The conference itse lf has breedcd some d isapproving v iew s from co n ­ference members.

N o tre Dame theo logy professor Daniel M aguire said the conference, at w h ic h there w ere no blacks, had fa iled to invo lve leaders o f a sig­n ifican t num ber o f U.S. workers.

M aguire urged the bishops to con ­cen tra te th e ir e ffo rts to g ive m ore a tten tion to b lack w o rke rs and un ­em p loyed blacks, many o f w hom live in abject poverty .

The con ference runs th rough to m o rro w and w i l l in c lu d e discus­sions on em p loym en t, the poor, and U.S. trade w ith deve lop ing nations.

Page 6:  · ... Special treatment, page 3. VOL XVIII, NO. 68 the independent student newspaper serving not re dame and saint man's. TUESDAY, DECEMBER . 13, 1983. Four die as ...

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el >< :Tuesday, December 13, 1983 — page 6

The useless ‘liberal and conservative’ debateW h ile obse rv ing and p a rtic ip a tin g in the

libe ra l conservative debate on th is campus I fe lt frus tra ted — the debatt is a stale one that has becom e all to o p red ic tab le and un ­p roduc tive .

Bridget SullivanGuest column

C onservatives com p la in about sim ple- m inded idealists, b leed ing hearts w h o cannot accom plish anyth ing because th e ir program s o ffe r no incen tives to people. Liberals attack conservatives fo r th e ir heartlessness, th e ir relentless d riv e fo r p ro fitm a k in g and th e ir dog eat dog ph ilosophy.

T he lit t le debate go ing on at th is campus is on ly a small exam ple o f the debate that has raged fu rio u s ly in o u r nation 's po litics . The con trove rsy is w ro ug h t ove r the c o n flic t be­tw een the r igh ts o f the ind iv idua l, especially that o f econom ic freedom and the desire to have gove rnm ent insure a m ore equ itab le dis­tr ib u t io n o f the co m m u n ity ’s resources.

C onservatives reigned d u rin g the laissez-

faire G u ilded Age in the 19th cen tury , du ring the H oover C oolidge years and n ow under the present Reagan A dm in is tra tion . Liberals had th e ir heydays d u rin g the N ew Deal and Great Society eras o f FDR, JFK and LBJ. This campus was active d u rin g the late 60s and ear­ly 70s, bu t has been com placent since.

No g ro u p has done m ore fo r the liberals and conservatives than th e ir opponents: each fac­tio n capita lizes on the fa ilures and mistakes o f the o th e r to leg itim ize th e ir position . Liberals can use the excesses o f unregu la ted big- business o r governm ent ignorance o f a w e lfa re safety net ( unfa ir labor practices, p rice -fix in g , un just incom e d is tribu tions, de fective p roduc ts and p o v e rty ) as evidence o f the e v il character o f the unrestra ined private sector.

Liberals have th e ir o w n lis t o f mistakes. The b a lloon ing g ro w th and cost o f the welfare state, the fa ilures o f busing and a ffirm ative ac­tio n and lo w e r p ro d u c tiv ity o f socialism serve to jus tify the an ti libe ra l position.

The ba ttle also has been waged in fo re ign po licy. M ora lity and hum an righ ts arc up against national secu rity and an ti­com m unism . Both sides at one tim e o r anoth­e r have advocated iso la tion ism and

in te rven tion ism .O ne is considered soft on com m unism , the

o th e r is accused o f supporting d ictatorships. These v iew s o f the Soviet U n ion re flec t the debate that is carried on w ith in the U nited States. One v ie w calls fo r increased arma­m ents to assert U.S. w il l and strength. The o th e r calls fo r coopera tion and be tte r d ip lom acy.

The debate con tinues w h ile the p rob lem s that face us becom e ever m ore d iff ic u lt to solve and increasingly severe. O u r Congress is no longer in terested in im p lem en ting in ­novative polic ies. Instead it creates c o m m it­tees to study problem s.

Last sum m er w hen figures ind ica ted that 15 percen t o f Am erican people are liv in g at o r be low the pove rty line, P resident Reagan ap­po in ted a com m ission to fin d ou t w hy, ra ther than im p lem en ting re lie f measures. Republicans and Democrats, liberals and c o n ­servatives, are locked in to a debate. Each side is conv inced that the o th e r’s po lic ies are d e trim en ta l to the national good and threaten people ’s freedoms.

As a co m m u n ity o f scholars and Christians, ho w do w e relate to th is debate? Are w e just a part o f it on a sm aller scale? I hope that people

at N o tre Dame are no t paralyzed by th e ir co n ­tem pt fo r conservatism o r disdain fo r liberalism . I hope w e have not co m m itte d o u r­selves to the debate ra ther than so lv ing the p rob lem s the hum an race m ust overcom e.

As a Christian com m un ity , w e are called to be an exam ple o f w hat is possible. Faced w ith unprecedented threats to the human race and to the env ironm en t, the w o r ld faces a crisis. W e m ust becom e invo lved, w e m ust be active in so lv ing the d ifficu lties .

Part o f C h ris tian ity is h u m iltity ; w e should recognize that o u r op in ions arc im perfec t and inadequate fo r understand ing ou r w o rld . N e it­her libera lism o r conservatism are insu ffic ien t responses. H u m ility should teach us to recognize o u r need to w o rk w ith and depend on each o ther. There m ust be a w illingness to en te r in to dialogue. The urgency o f the human cris is should shake us from tenaciously ho ld ing on to o u r ow n so lu tions and rig id at­titudes.

As Christians w e need to ask ourselves w fia t we arc com m itted to? libera lism o r conser­vatism? to co n tin u in g the argument? O r arc we active ly co m m itte d to C h ris t’s com m and­m ent to love one another? As w e regard po litics , w here arc o u r hearts?

The easy way to create world peaceW ith the recent dep loym en t o f nuclear

m issiles in Europe, and w ith the Am erican arm ed forces in Grenada and Lebanon, it seems the governm ent is not tak ing advantage o f its a b ility to make peace. The U nited States

Dan Prinster— i

Guest column

bu ilds m issiles as a d e te rren t fo r w ar and fights in fo re ign coun trie s fo r deve lopm ent o f peace.

I f the U n ited States rea lly wants w o rld peace it should u tilize its m ilita ry capability . T h is does not mean the invasion o f islands o r the dep lo ym e n t o f new m ed ium range

missiles. Instead, it means the p rem ed ita ted use o f long-range nuclear missiles.

Isolated conventiona l wars, as in Iraq and Iran, and in Lebanon, account fo r senseless b loodshed, p o lit ica l upheaval and unneces­sary c iv ilia n casualties. C onven tiona l wars, especia lly in isolated con fron ta tions, have been taking place fo r the past m illenn ium .

Though the names o f the coun tries have changed and peace treaties have been signed, the carnage s till goes on. Even today, govern­m ents disregard peace treaties and show no concern fo r the loss o f human lives when they feel that they have som eth ing to gain from the m ilita ry actions

A m erica fo llow s tw o means o f p reven ting conventiona l war: d ip lom acy and in te rven ­tion . Using Lebanon as an example, d ip lom acy has been nearly w orth less in p reven ting

Sidewalk careD ear E d ito r:

In response to Mr. Lord is le tte r that ap­peared in M onday’s paper, and to the many com p la in ts on icy sidewalks, I have a sugges­tion.

It w o u ld put to use the expensive Zam boni m achine in the ACC, m uch neg lected since the death o f the hockey program.

Each m orn ing , before students rise, the g rounds c re w w o u ld s im p ly sm ooth the ice, and the adm in is tra tion w o u ld p ro v id e ice skates. We w o u ld have not o n ly a m ore sure­footed w ay to traverse the campus, bu t the ad­m in is tra tion w o u ld o ffe r a valuable service to students and facu lty alike.

The proposed program w o u ld replace the need fo r freshman physica l education, w o u ld p rov ide free skating tim e to all s tudents and w o u ld enable hockey players m ore tim e on " the ice. ” Perhaps upon seeing th is new found in terest in skating, the adm in is tra tion w ou ld re tu rn hockey to vars ity status.

But aside from these, the m ere fact that such a program w o u ld enable us to trave l safe­

ly, q u ic k ly and en joyably across campus, w ith ­ou t the fears o f h u m ilia ting and dangerous falls, makes it a w o rth y considera tion.

B o b N ewbouse

Integrated dormsD ear E d ito r:

In M argaret Fosmoe’s a rtic le on the Saint Mary's housing changes, Dec 6, she says that because the in tegra ted dorm s at N o tre Dame w o rk so w e ll, it is su rpris ing Saint M ary’s has not in tegra ted the system sooner. Saint M ary’s is not N o tre Dame in any way. There is no reason w hy Margaret, w h o once was a Saint M a n ’s student, should th in k Saint M ary’s w o u ld do what N o tre Dame has already done.

Even though the tw o schools share very m uch, they also arc ve ry d iffe ren t. I am sure Saint M ary ’s has good reasons fo r w an tin g the dorm s to he in tegrated by all classes and in w hat m anner i t is achieved is up to the stu­dents and adm in is tra tion . Saint M ary ’s w ill not and should not do it just because N o tre Dame did.

M a ry L. B u rke

bloodshed. In te rve n tio n has no t o n ly been un ­successful, bu t has accounted fo r hundreds o f lives. I f a th ird means, the use o f nuclear weapons, w ere u tilize d there w o u ld be no un ­successful d ip lom acy and unnecessary loss o f Am erican lives.

W ith the U nited States’ nuclear missiles capable o f accurate ly s tr ik in g any target in the w o rld , and the m odern co m p u te r dep loym ent systems capable o f be ing program m ed fo r any desirable target, there is n o y p u n try on earth that co u ld disregard a peace u ltim atum .

This means that in the event o f any fo rm o f m ilita ry skirm ish, the U n ited States w o u ld issue a peace u ltim a tum dec la ring that the fig h tin g stop w ith in 48 hours o r the w a rrin g factions w i l l suffer nuclear devastation. In a sense, the U nited States w i l l fo rce coun tries to settle th e ir disputes peacefully.

The firs t coun tries not to heed the u l­tim atum w il l becom e an exam ple fo r the rest o f the w o rld . C erta in ly , a few lives w o u ld be lost, bu t the d es truc tion o f tw o w a rrin g coun tries can hard ly com pare w ith another m ille n iu m o f senseless bloodshed. A lthough nuclear weapons give m ankind the a b ility to extingu ish the hum an race, they also give us the capab ility o f w o r ld peace.

W ith in the past 40 years Am erica has becom e an in fluen tia l w o r ld force, w ith th is in fluence com es the respons ib ility o f insuring w o rld peace. It has been successful in some parts o f the w o r ld w h ile o th e r parts tee te r * n the b rin k o f war. T hrough the d e v e lo p m c n fb f nuclear weapons, the U nited States has /he capability and respons ib ility o f crea ting w o r ld peace by e rad ica ting w a rrin g countries. We should take fu ll advantage o f that capability .

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The Observer/ ' <). B ox <J. \ o l r e Dam e, / \ t(>556 ( - ! ' ) ) - .59 5 jt7 5

th e O bserver is the independent newspaper pub lished by the students of the Uni ve rs in of N o tre Dame d ll l.ae and Saint M an \ C ollege It does not necessarih reflect the p o lit ie s of the adm in is tra tion o f e ith e r in s titu tio n The news is repo rted as at eura teh and as o b je t tive b as possible I nsignetl ed ito ria ls represent the op inon o f a m ajority of the Ed ito ria l Board ( om m enlaries. letters, and the Inside ( o lum n present the \ iew s o f th e ir authors ( o lum n space is a\ ailahle to all m em bers o f the c o m m u n in . and the free expression o f van ing op in ions on campus, th rough letters, is encouraged

Editorial BoardE d ito r - in C .h ie f David D ziedzicM a n a g in g E d ito r M argaret FosmoeE xecu tive E d ito r Paul M cG innNews E d ito r Bob V onderhe ideNews E d ito r ....................................M ark W orschehS a in t M a ry ’s E d i to r ..................Anne M onastyrskiSports E d i to r M ichael SullivanV ie w p o in t E d ito r .................................K e ith R icherFeatures E d ito r ..............................Sarah H am iltonP ho to E d ito r ...........................................Scott B ow er

Department ManagersBusiness M a n a g e r .................. C h ris to p h e r O w enC o n tro lle r A le x SzilvasA d v e rtis in g M a n a g e r ........................ .Jcanic PooleC irc u la t io n M a n a g e r ................... '.'..Mark M io ttoSystems M a n a g e r .......................... K evin W illiam s

i". irli

Founded N ovem ber 3 ,1966

Page 7:  · ... Special treatment, page 3. VOL XVIII, NO. 68 the independent student newspaper serving not re dame and saint man's. TUESDAY, DECEMBER . 13, 1983. Four die as ...

Sports BriefsThe Notre Dame Sailing team is looking for

sailors w ith b ig b o a t rac ing experience to sail in the Kennedy Cup next spring. I f in terested, con tact C hris Hussey at 283-1150. — The Observer

Stepan Center w il l be c losed d u rin g exam week. — The Observer

Any interhall football equipm ent that hasno t been re tu rn e d yet should be re tu rned before tomorrow. The NVA w il l b i l l those w h o have no t tu rned in th e ir equ ipm en t by that tim e. R em em ber that in fla tion has affected the p rice o f foo tba ll u n i­fo rm s as w e ll. — The Observer

The Notre Dame Ski team is having an absolute­ly m andatory m eeting fo r a ll those w h o w an t to tr y o u t fo r the team. The m ee ting w i l l be held at 7 p.m. in the LaFortune L itt le Theater on Thursday, Dec. 15. In fo rm a tion about tryou ts , as w e ll as reg is tra tion fo r tryou ts w i l l be covered at the m eeting. A ll those in terested are ^velcom e to attend. I f you cannot attend, con tact Ju lie C u rrie at ^4 3 4 . — The Observer

J Boston Celtics’ forward Larry Bird wuinot make a road tr ip to N ew Y o rk because o f stra ined ligam ents in his r ig h t knee, the NBA team announced yesterday. B ird h u rt the knee against D e tro it last Friday and d id n o t play in the C e ltics ’ w in over the Hawks in A tlanta the next day. —TAP

NHLIn this year's NHL p layoff format, the top four teams

in each division make the playoffs, regardless of over­all league standing.

PRINCE O F W ALES CONFERENCE Adam s Division

W L T GF GA Pts.Boston 19 8 2 137 89 40Buffalo 18 10 3 124 114 39Quebec 17 11 3 150 109 37Montreal 13 16 2 115 122 28Hartford 11 13 3 103 112 25

Patrick DivisionN Y. Islanders 19 9 2 131 104 40N Y. Rangers 17 10 4 128 114 38Philadelphia 17 10 3 133 107 37Washington 14 15 2 104 111 30Pittsburgh 6 19 4 90 122 16New Jersey 6 22 1 87 138 13

CLARENCE CAM PBELL CONFERENCE Sm ythe Dvision

W L T G F G A P t sEdmonton 21 6Calgary 11 13Vancouver 12 15Winnipeg 9 16Los Angeles 7 17 (

Norris Division Minnesota 15 11 3Toronto 12 13Chicago 13 15St. Louis 12 14Detroit 10 16

173 119 104 120 123 129 120 145 122 146

4527272220

138 132 33126 137 28 107 116 28 119 126 27

96 126 22

Sunday’s ResultsBoston 4, Winnipeg 2

Buffalo 6, P h ilade lph ia^ Montreal 3, Pittsburgh 3 (tie)

Chicago 4, Detroit 2

Yesterday's ResultsNew Jersey 7, N Y. Rangers 3

Tonight’s G amesHartford at Pittsburgh Los Angeles at Detroit

Edmonton at N Y. Islanders Chicago at St. Louis

Quebec at Vancouver

Tuesday, December 13,1983 — page 7

. q v j

NFLNATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE

NATIONAL CONFERENCE EastW L T P e t PF PA

Washington 13 2 0 .867 510 310Dallas 12 3 0 .800 462 318St. Louis 7 7 1 .500 343 421Philadelphia 5 10 0 .333 226 291N Y. Giants 3 11

Central1 .233 245 316

Detroit 8 7 0 .533 324 266Green Bay 8 7 0 .533 408 416Minnesota 7 8 0 .467 296 334CHicago 7 8 0 467 288 280Tampa Bay 2 13

West0 .133 221 357

San Francisco 9 6 0 .600 390 276L A . Rams 8 7 0 .533 335 320New Orleans 8 7 0 .533 295 311Atlanta 6 9 0 .400

AMERICAN CONFERENCE East

339 375

W L T Pet. PF PAMiami 11 4 0 .733 355 236Buffalo 8 7 0 .533 269 320New England 8 7 0 .533 268 265N Y . Jets 7 8 0 .467 299 297Baltimore 6 9

Central0 400 244 344

Pittsburgh 10 5 0 667 338 273Cleveland 8 7 0 .533 326 325Cincinnati 7 8 0 467 332 282Houston 2 13

West0 133 278 440

L A . Raiders 11 4 0 .733 412 324Denver 9 6 0 .600 285 279Seattle 8 7 0 .533 379 391San Diego 6 9 0 .400 344 432Kansas C ity 5 10 0 .333 338 350

Yesterday's ResultGreen Bay 12, Tampa Bay 9

Friday's Game N Y. Jets at Miami

Saturday’s GamesN Y. Giants at Washington

Cincinnati at M innesota

w

ClassifiedsThe Observer Notre Dame office, located on the th ird floo r o f

LaFortune Student Center, accepts classified advertising from 9 a m. un til 4 p.m., Monday through Friday. The Observer Saint Mary’s office, located on the th ird floo r o f Haggar College Center, accepts classifieds from 12:30 p.m. un til 3 p.m., Monday through Friday. Deadline fo r next day clas­sifieds is 3 p.m. A ll classifieds must be prepaid, e ither in person o r by mail. Charge is 10 cents per seven characters per day.

NOTICESIS IT TRUE YOU CAN BUY JEEPS FOR $44 THROUGH THE U.S. GOVERN­MENT? G ET THE FACTS TODAY! CALL^ai 2) 742-1142, EXT. 7316.

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GERRY FAUST IS NOT A MAJOR COL­LEGE FOOTBALL COACH.

JACKIE WILSON SAID Wilson Driveaway! Cars to all points in USA, only 20$ and you pick up car in Chicago. Call 288-7060

Come to a studying party tomorrow night at 132 Fisher. The party will start at precisely 7 p.m. and will be hosted by Fis­her throat David Stephenitch. Please remember to bring your books and cal­culators as we will be pulling an all- nighter.

P ITTSBURG H-NEED RIDE, CAN LEAVE MONDAY 19. AFTER 5 CALL LARRY 1487

FACULTY/STAFF/STUDENTS G in­gerbread and wassail, a bountiful supply at the CSC this Friday; you re invited to stop by. From 3 until 4:30 - we will host our campus friends to thank you for your kind support, as this semester ends. - CENTER FOR SOCIAL CONCERNS STAFF

New Year's Dance Bobby Wear & Or­chestra, $ 15/couple. Knights of Columbus 112 Lexington Elkhart 293- 0341 4 -10pm

LOST/FOUND

LOST: Student season B-BALL TIX: Sec.2, row 8, seat 13 or 15. Please call Shelly x6955.

LOST P lastic Santa. Last seen swaying in the wind out 4th floor window Farley. MUST BE RETURNED BY DEC.24. Please report any information leading to his whereabouts to Farley Section 4A or North Pole as soon as possible.

Lost:Blue spiral Bio logy notebook on Monday 12-5-83, possib ly alter Emil's 11:00 class under seat 297. Needed to pass my final Call me-Jean pizza-face — at 4263 (003 Farley) XXOOX-XOOXOOXXOXO

LOST- SEARS 2100 SERIES AM /FM CASSETTE RECORDER! IF FOUND OR SEEN, PLEASE CALL JEFF AT 8917! $$REW ARD OFFERED$$

LOST or misappropriated; the sleeve of my leather jacket, unzippered o ff o f m y jacket at the Buzz Club party last Sunday night, Decem ber 11th. I don't know what your motives were, because I hardly see how the possession o f a si t ngle sleeve helps you. Don't be bizarre, and please return it to Robbi at 233-4260. Don't be a jerk.

LOST: TI55-2 CALCULATOR. LOST OR DROPPED WHILE LEAVING 10:10 EMIIL ON FRIDAY REWARD. NO QUESTIONS ASKED NEEDED FOR FINALS. CALL 3463.

LOST. ND M EN'S CLASS RING IN­SCRIPTION: JAM ES P. RYAN 85 PLEASE CALL 1780 REWARD OF­FERED.

Lost a pair o f prescription glasses in Engineering Auditorium or on South Quad Friday Dec 9. (In blue case) If found, con­tact Bo Oberg at 6945, 243 Badin.

Lost key ring with approximately 8 keys on it. If found, please call 3270. Handsome reward!

LOST-TEXAS INSTR. Tl 55-II CAL­CULATOR PROBABLY LOST IN NORTH QUAD AREA PLEASE CALL BOB AT 3047 REWARD OFFERED.

I LOST A RED, V-NECK, IZODSWEATER AT ALUMNI S CHRISTMAS PARTY ON SATURDAY THE 3RD OF DECEMBER. If you have the sweater, please call 7374.

LOST! Brown tweed English cap Last seen Thurs. 12/1 in 341 in Oshag. Great spiritual value. Please call Ed at 1542. Thanks j’.. *. $ /.. . . . •••V 'l1............. .'•••..Lost: A NAME-to the gentleman who was kind enough to make sure I got home friday night from Pangborn-I have your coat but not your name-call 4390

FOR RENTFurnished room and kitchen facilities $125 (Mr Garcia 282-2250)

Housemate wanted. 2-bdrm. house. $90/m o. & share utilities. One block from ND. Call Anne 272-5567.

Apts, for 2nd semester - $100-2 deposit. Call 277-6239

i plus

WANTED

Need ride to Columbus(W orthington) on Wed. Dec. 21st. Returning Jan. 16. Will share u's'uetr. David 3127.

NEED RIDE TO NORTH. NJ/NY AREA FOR BREAK. CAN LEAVE MORNING, DEC. 21. PLEASE CALL JANET AT 4673.

I need 5 Depaul Tix GA or STU (together) will Pay $$$ call Monica 284-5451

NEED RIDE TO D C . AREA - CAN LEAVE 12/20 - CALL CHRIS x1670

Rider needed to Baltimore or pts. nearby. Leave after lunch 12/20 call Jim 8752.

JOE PISCOPO. Ride needed. Maine. Boston okay. W hen? 21st or sooner Who? Keith at 283-8866 o r 239-7471 Be there.

Need Ride to Miami, FL. Leave 12/21 pm.Expenses &$.Call Khan 6764

W ASHINGTON D C. PEOPLE: Dad has given me early Christmas present. MUST SELL m y spot on the D C Club bus by 12/14 CALL TIM at 8671

Riders needed to Detroit, Toronto, North­ern New York, o r any stops on HGY 401.

Leaving 12/20. Call Bill at 1787. ENDAD.

Need RIDE to CLEVELAND.Can leave 12/20.Call Jack 1584

Need riders to Connecticut, Fairfield County area. Leaving Tues., Dec. 20. Call Nancy-283-6868.

WE WANT JEAN PIZZA FACE!!!!!!!!

RIDERS. RIDERS. RIDERS LOOKING FOR A RIDE TO CINCINNATI OR INDY AREA ON SAT., 17 OR SUNDAY? CALL EMILE X3770

ROOMMATE FOR NEXT SEM ND APTS $97.50 MO MARK 288-9070

N T eed ride to O HARE on Dec 21 Call 277- 7563-David.

Tom Mowle for Head Coach!

Need ride to PHILLY/ABE or DC.Leave 12/16 Call Karen at 1674

Rider needed to K.C.Mo. leaving early 12/20 call Janet 7937.

Needed 2nd year arhitect student to help on old house. Needs car Leave message at University Club. Care of JJ W eidner

Desperately need ride to Akron/Canton area. Will fork large bucks. Depart 12/21 Call Patrick at 4666 I even smell good

lost blue notebook in Cushing 12 /5 /83 ,Monday . after 10:00 Emil please return.needed for Bio. final. 4263. 003 Farley

Riders needed to ATLANTA or anywhere along I-75 or 1-16 & I-95 in Georgia.Leaving after finals. Call Alan at 1402................................................ ILKYillUf' i;

ONE RIDER NEEDED TO HOUSTON: LEAVING EARLY ON 12/21 CALL ROB 8102

Need 3 riders to N.W. burbs of Chic, on Dec 22 Call 6889

iO R SALE

LARGE HOUSE FOR SALE Near ND golf course, 5 bedrooms up, 3 baths, fireplace, carpets, garage and more. Fuel saver, low maintenance, warrenty. $64,000. 289-I687

NOTRE DAME HOUSE FOR SALE - $30,000. 4-bedroom, 15 mins. from campus. Good investment for parents. Call 291 -2152 in evening.

Seductress and O ld Man,I am not m ad at either o f you. But i f I am

to help, you must perm it it. I do care very much about both o f you.

A selfish liar

Jeff Yock is a man-god!

Put a Kempton in yo butt

Skies-Kneissl W h.star SL 200cm. withGEZE b in d in g s .^ ! o ffe/ ball Er,c 3 t M " . . 111 .̂. I . . . n u l l - . m u . .

Has the Notre Dame baketball program caught FAUST FEVER?? Quick. someone find the cure before it's too late!!!TICKETS

DESPARATELY NEED TW O LIBERTY BOWL TIKS CALL 272-3491

I NEED LIBERTY BOWL TICKETS! CALL JIM AT X1772 AFTER 6pm.

VILLANOVA TIX. HELP (G.A. OR STUD.) CALL LARRY 1487 MANY!

Desperately need 5 Villanova tix-student or G.A. Will pay $. Call Miriam-8075.

PERSONALS

Cure for MUNCHIES discovered! See coupons in the yellow pages of your Campus Telephone Directory!

PAYABLE UPON RETURN By Michael Varga. A story of loving friends and loving countries. Available Now in the Notre Dame Bookstore.

PAYABLE UPON RETURN A Juniper Press publication by Michael Varga.when roommates part and meetagain PAYABLE UPON RETURNAvailable in the Notre Dame Bookstore.

CARRIE ROWE Just a note to wish you lots of luck on finals.Have a very MERRY CHRISTMAS!!! Kris Kringle

DEAR BECKY,/H A PP Y BIRTHDAY TO THE MOST PROLIFIC WRITER AT THE NEW U. I HOPE YOUR DAY IS SUPER. SEE YOU IN A WEEK. AND BY THE WAY:

ROSES ARE RED VIOLETS ARE BLUE

AND I LIKE THE NEW ULOVEMARK

ATTENTION HOGS: Brother Bill is 21 today & I'm 1 st to say HAPPY B-DAY! cuz I can use his ID to hit all the wild S.D. bars. Question: Is the lake warm enough for a birthday swim?

MARCH FOR LIFE in Washington D C on Jan 22-23. Charter bus transportation $50. Contact the Right-to-Life office in LaFortune basement or call 277-5264 today. Show your support!

Tom, Pat. Steve, and John,Thanks for a super S-A-T-U-R-D-A-Y

Night!The Disco Ladies

TAKING THE M C ATS THIS SPRING9 STANLEY KAPLAN S MCAT COURSE BOOKS FOR SALE BEST OFFER CALL 284-5249

SCHOLASTIC FICTION CONTEST SUBMIT TO 3RD FLOOR LAFORTUNEOFFICE DEADLINE- JANUARY 20 MAX- Wendv S RiceIMUM LENGTH- 15 PAGES BE A is 21 todayPUBLISHED AUTHOR!! Look for the girl w ith the beer cap on her

SCHOLAST1CF,CTK)NCONTEST„

Please. pWase: p ta s e SAY SAY SAY b e ^ ^ ^ y ^ o n c e

you can give me a ride home for MartinChristmas. I live in New Jersey (I can't Happy Belated Birthday Have a merryhelp that) and I can t leave until 6:05 p.m. Christmas in Ireland C & Eon the 21 st (I can't help that either.) If youcan offer me a ride, please call Sarah at Tom1311 Will pay the usual. You re so cute C

MERRY X-MAS JEAN PIZZA FACE! URGENT Lost set of keys with 1121FROM 2 NO-BUTTS! printed on them (attached to Leprechaun

THE MIDDLE OF SOUTH QUAD NOONE IN PARTICULAR, JUST THE THO UG HT WAS FUNNY LONG LIVEEMIL AND JOHN HENRY! LOVE AL- KEENAN HALL THANKS FOR SAVINGW AYS GUESS WHO??? MY BUTT RANDY

KEENAN HALL THANKS FOR REMEMBERING THAT IT ISN T WHAT YOU GIVE JUST THAT YOU GIVE A LOT OF IT.

To Joe THE W OP Coscia Justwanted you to know how much fun I had Sat. night. You’re right up my alley! ha! ha! However, I think next time we should take our own supply o f diet coke with

, nutrisweet! N. B. B A LL the GOOD STUFF CHEAP engraver--------

HUNGERING FOR LATE-NIGHT AD­VENTURE??? Today is your last day to apply for n ighttime production work at The O bserver next semester. Make friends, have fun, earn respect. Some paid posi­tions available. Stop by the LaFortune office today to fill out an application. Or come to the meeting for all those who applied tonight at 7 p.m. in The Observer office. The schedule will be planned on a first-come, first-serve basis. Be there, aloha.

HELP-RIDE NEEDED to CLEVELAND can leave TUES 12/20 or W ED 12/21- Call JOANIE 283-7965

Dear Tim, Thanks for a great time Friday night. You really know how to dance. That's what I like about you. Seriously, you really mean a lot to me. Love, Mary

CONGRATULATIO NS BRIAN KAUF­MAN on your 101 avg in Informal Logic Quite a remarkable feat. PLEASE GIVE BRIANa call at 288 6489 to congratulate this genius. And.yes.BRIANwe still like you!

REPLACE Mike Sain w ith Gerry Faust

PHOBIA OF THE DAYGaming-C lub-ophobia: A fear ofsportsmanship on the basketball court.

LIBERALS. . .WHY???

T.D.’sT o p S1. Rudolph TRNR2. The G rinch WSC3. A Charlie Brown CS4. The Year W ithout ASC5. Santa Claus Is CTT

For I have g rown older,A nd you have g rown colder,

A nd nothing is very much fun anymore.

— Pink Floyd

Page 8:  · ... Special treatment, page 3. VOL XVIII, NO. 68 the independent student newspaper serving not re dame and saint man's. TUESDAY, DECEMBER . 13, 1983. Four die as ...

The Observer Tuesday, December 1 JE page 8

Broncos get into playoffs -

Elway leads second half comebackAssociated Press

DENVER — It should have been an ideal s itua tion. The C leveland B row ns and Buffa lo B ills had lost, and the D enver B roncos entered the lo c k e r room at ha lftim e kn o w in g that a v ic to ry o ve r B a ltim ore w o u ld ensure them o f a be rth in the N a tio n ­al Footba ll League playoffs.

The o n ly p ro b le m was that D en­ver had been te rr ib le in the firs t half, ge tting o n ly fou r firs t dow ns and 84 to ta l yards and tra iled the Colts, 16- 0. Rookie quarte rback John Elway, w ho had played his best game as a p ro a week earlier, was ine ffec tive in the firs t h a lf Sunday. He had co m ­p le ted 7 o f 14 passes, bu t had been sacked three tim es and fum bled once at the C olts ' 2-yard line.

It go t w orse after th ree quarters, the C olts e x te nd in g th e ir lead to 19- 0.

Fans began leaving the stadium. Those w h o rem ained booed Elway a fte r each incom p le te pass. They booed Coach Dan Reeves w hen the stadium scoreboard flashed an ad­

vertisem ent fo r his M onday n igh t te lev is ion program.

"There w e ren ’t a lo t o f people late in the th ird q ua rte r w h o th o ug h t w e co u ld w in ,” said Reeves.

Those people underestim ated El­way, the firs t p layer se lected in th is year’s NFL draft. In the fina l 11 m inutes, E lway fire d th ree to u ch ­d ow n passes, ra lly ing the B roncos to a 21-19 v ic to ry that p u t them in to the playoffs fo r the firs t tim e since 1979.

Elway fin ished w ith 23 co m p le ­tions in 44 a ttem pts fo r 345 yards, th ree touchdow ns, no in te rce p ­tions.

“John Elway can pu t po in ts on the board faster than it can add them up,” said veteran D enver linebacker T om Jackson.

"I’ve seen th is before ,” said Reeves. “ Roger St aubach ( o f the Dal­las C ow boys) go t his repu ta tion that way w ith great comebacks, and Dan­ny W h ite d id it after h im . N ow , ou r team is never rea lly o u t o f a game.

Schnellenberger denies he’s going to the prosAssociated Press

CORAL GABLES, Fla. — U n ive rs ity o f M iam i Coach H ow ard S chnellen­b e rge r yesterday den ied rep o rts that he was leaving fo r a head coach ing jo b in p ro foo tba ll, saying he ’d be "happy to re tire ” here.

T e lev is ion analyst J im m y "The G reek” Snyder said on CBS Sunday that S chne llenberger had been ap­proached by the N ationa l Football League’s N ew Y o rk Giants, bu t that he had an agreem ent to go to the N ew Jersey Generals o f the U n ited States Foo tba ll League.

Schnellenberger, w hose fifth - ranked H urricanes w i l l face No. 1 Nebraska in the O range B ow l on Jan. 2, said it never got to that p o in t, a l­though those teams and several o thers had con tacted him .

“ A fte r lis te n in g to them , I to ld them that my desire was to m ove th is foo tba ll p rog ram along and try to w in the nationa l cham pionsh ip ," said Schnellenberger, age 48.

"I’m ve ry fla tte red that everybody th inks I ’m qua lifie d to coach any k ind o f foo tha llteam in Am erica. It beats the a lternative. But I sure w ish these th ings w ere done in a m ore professional m anner so they w o u ld n ’t run the risk o f upse tting m y fo o tba ll team before th e ir b ig ­gest game ever.”

Snyder said Schnellenberger, w h o has th ree years le ft on his c o n tra c t at M iam i, had m et w ith Generals’ o w n e r D onald T rum p. S chnellen­

be rger made a tr ip to N ew Y o rk last w eek to h e lp p ro m o te the Jan. 2 O range B o w l game, in w h ic h his 10- 1 H urricanes w i l l face unbeaten Nebraska.

Last year, Schne llenberger re jec ted an o ffe r to be the head coach at the U n ive rs ity o f K en tucky, h is alma mater.

T ru m p issued a statem ent saying that S chnellenberger was no t a can­d idate and that he hoped to name a new Generals’ coach w ith in tw o weeks.

W alt M ichaels, fo rm e r coach o f # e NFU’-vN ew , X o rk JtUs„al#iO vyas repo rted to be u nder cons idera tion as a rep lacem ent fo r C huck Fair­banks as Generals’ coach.

Snyder said that the Giants, 3-11- 1, “ are lo o k in g fo r a new coach ” to replace first-year coach B ill Parcells.

S chne llenberger has a 40-16 reco rd d u rin g his five seasons at M iam i. He coached the B a ltim ore C olts d u rin g the 1973 and 1974 seasons before be ing fire d by ow ne r R obert Irsay. He w o rked as an assis­tant w ith the NFL’s M iam i D o lph ins before taking the head jo b w ith the Hurricanes.

T ru m p tr ie d to h ire D on Shula away from the D o lph ins ea rlie r th is year, bu t Shula recen tly signed an extension o f his con tra c t as coach o f the NFL team. Shula b roke o ff c o n ­tacts w ith T ru m p after the Generals’ o w n e r discussed the negotia tions on na tiona l te levis ion.

.Redcontinued fro m page 12 even easier tim e against the B ig Red, w h o suffer a substantia l he igh t d isad­vantage.

The m ain Irish inconsis tency has been in the backcourt. W ith jo e Buc­hanan unable to play u n t il January due to te n do n itis in his knee, Dan D u ff m ust take the reins as the flo o r leader. Joseph Price and Scott H icks also need to boost th e ir con fidence by taking m ore p e rim e te r shots ton igh t.

N o tre Dame coach D igger Phelps sees his team ove rco m in g the shoo t­ing d ro u g h t that has plagued the

They kn o w they can always com e back.”

E lway pe rfo rm ed his magic despite his rocky start, despite the adverse fan reaction , despite having to th ro w in to a defense that knew he had to th ro w , and despite the taunts o f Ba ltim ore defensive players, in c lu d in g linebacker John ie Cooks, w h o kep t te llin g Elway, "I’m gonna get you .”

Elway was dra fted by Ba ltim ore bu t refused to play there and even­tu a lly was traded to D enver, tr ig g e r­ing the ire o f C o lts ’ players, fans, and o w n e r Robert Irsay, w h o had hu rled ve iled threats o f b o d ily harm at the rookie .

Elw ay v iew ed the ou tcom e as a b it o f v in d ica tio n fo r the on ly knock against h im in co llege; he had never played fo r a w in n in g team. "After all those people ta lked about h o w w e (S tan fo rd ) never p layed in a bo w l game, i t ’s n ice to make the playoffs m y firs t year,” he said.

“ Everybody hung toge the r and fough t back,” E lw ay said. “ I knew w e had p le n ty o f tim e. I ’m a co m ­p e tito r.”

NBAWestern Conference

Midwest Division

m

Eastern Conference Atlantic Division

W L Pet. GB W L Pet. GBDallas 14 8 636 — Philadelphia 16 5 762 —

Utah 13 10 565 1.5 Boston 17 6 .739 —

Denver 11 11 .500 3 New York 15 8 652 2

Kansas City 10 11 476 3.5 New Jersey 11 9 550 4.5San Antonio 9 15 .375 6 Washington 9 12 429 7Houston 8 14 .364 6

Pacific Division Central DivisionLos Angeles 14 6 700 — Milwaukee 14 7 667 —Portland 15 8 .652 .5 Atlanta 10 12 455 4.5Seattle 11 11 .500 4 Detroit 10 12 455 4.5Golden State 11 12 478 4.5 Cleveland 8 15 348Phoenix 8 14 364 7 Chicago 5 14 .263 8San Diego 8 16 333 8 Indiana 5 16 238 9

Sunday's ResultsNew Jersey 141. Denver 130

Philadelphia 97, M ilwaukee 87 San Diego 118, Dallas 116

Portland 104, Golden State 101 Seattle 135, Detroit 131

New York 109, Los Angeles 98

Yesterday’s ResultsNo gam es scheduled

Tonight’s GamesBoston at New York

Atlanta at Washington Utah at Cleveland

Milwaukee at Chicago Phoenix at Houston

Detroit at Denver New Jersey at Golden State

Seattle at Portland

Getting There Is Half The Fun^ A s p * W zvecke?-. r a y c w w w .

A

lr ish since the open ing game. The team has shot at a .485 c lip fo r the last tw o games. A lthough that is no t a phenom enal percentage, it is be tte r than w ha t Irish fans have seen so far. Free th ro w percentage has d ropped as o f late, d ip p in g b e lo w 60 percen t fo r the season. To be a b e tte r team, N o tre Dame obv ious ly m ust h it m ore o f th e ir shots.

T on igh t, the Ir ish basketball team w il l be try in g to im p ro ve upon its 4- 3 re co rd and w in its second game th is season o ve r a team w ith a b e tte r than .500 reco rd (sound fam ilia r? ) — the firs t was St. Joseph’s.

Ever feel like you’re crossing the Great American Desert on your way to the ski slopes? This trip, make Omaha your oasis for an over­night. With special student discounts on many area hotels/m otels, Omaha will refresh your senses and leave a little greenery in your budget, too!Got the 1-80 Highway Blues? Warm-up in one of Omaha’s cozy restaurants, pubs or taverns! Build your strength for the slopes with a world famous Omaha steak or listen to som e red-hot jazz at one of the area’s popular nighttime spots. And, you can brush up on your ski tech­nique at Om aha’s own Trail Ridge Ski Resort just off the Interstate!Send in the coupon for your own special Omaha Student Vacation packet. Too bgsy to write? Then call us on our toll-free number. We will send you all you need to know to make your next ski trip the best ever!

□ YES!I ’d like more inform ation, plus money-saving stu­dent discounts on Omaha for my road trip!

N a m e_______________________________________

Address

City__State_ Z IP .

Mail to: The Greater Omaha Convention and Vis­itors Bureau, 1819 Farnam Street, Suite 1200, Omaha, NE 68183 OR call toll-free at 1-800-835-7427 ext. 201

Page 9:  · ... Special treatment, page 3. VOL XVIII, NO. 68 the independent student newspaper serving not re dame and saint man's. TUESDAY, DECEMBER . 13, 1983. Four die as ...

The Observer )odG Tuesday, December 13,1983 — page 9

Various Notre Dame T-shirts will be orxsale TODAY thru WED., DEC/14, in LaFortune M-4p.m.) and at the Dining Halls during Lunch and Dinner for only $1 and $2!

Quality shirts at LOW prices A great gift idea!

Battle of Bays d m rr t

Packers edge Bucs in overtimeAssociated Press

TAMPA, Fla. — Jan Stenerud, w h o had ea rlie r set an a ll-tim e fie ld goal record , k icked a 23-yarder 5:07 in to o ve rtim e to give G reen Bay a 12-9 v ic to ry o ve r the Tam pa Bay Buc­caneers last n igh t and keep the Pack­ers’ N ationa l Footba ll League p layo ff hopes alive.

Stenerud, w h o passed George Blanda’s NFL m ark o f 335 fie ld goals w ith a 32-yarder late in the th ird quarter, had fo rced the game in to o ve rtim e w ith a 23 -yard k ick w ith28 seconds le ft in regu la tion.

The v ic to ry enabled G reen Bay, 8- 7, to p u ll in to a first-p lace tie w ith D e tro it in the NFC C entra l D iv is ion. The Packers can w in the d iv is ion i f they beat Chicago and Tam pa Bay, 2-13, upsets D e tro it on Sunday. I f the Packers and Lions fin ish w ith the same record , D e tro it w o u ld advance to the playoffs by v ir tu e o f a be tte r reco rd w ith in the d iv is ion and G reen Bay w o u ld be e lim inated.

Green Bay to o k the k ic k o ff to start the ove rtim e and d rove fro m its ow n29 to the Tam pa 6 on a d rive that inc luded Harlan H uck leby ’s 20-yard

run that set up the w in n in g fie ld goal, w h ich was k icked on second down.

Stenerud’s ty in g k ick came at the end o f a 13-play, 75-yard d rive that quarterback Lynn D ickey launched after Tampa Bay’s B ill Capece missed a 35-yard fie ld goal attempt.

The key plays on G reen Bay’s ty in g d rive w ere a 24-yard pass from D ickey to James Lofton and a 7- yarder to H uckleby, a long w ith the rough ing the passer penalty on Tam pa Bay defensive end John Can­non that gave the Packers a firs t d o w n at the Buccaneer 8.

Tampa Bay had taken a 9-6 lead on Jack Thom pson ’s 4-yard scoring flip to Adger A rm strong w ith 7:33 rem ain ing, bu t Capece missed the ex tra po in t. The w in n in g to u ch ­d o w n came at the end o f a 10-play, 65-yard d rive that Thom pson, w ho has th ro w n e igh t TD passes in his last th ree games, fue led w ith com p le tions o f 20 and 19 yards to Theo Bell.

Stenerud k icked a 35-yard fie ld goal 2:55 in to the game to give G reen Bay a 3-0 lead. H is 32-yarder w ith 42 seconds le ft in the th ird quarte r gave the Packers a 6-3 lead.

' ■ -U r ;

JiHL

g o s o o c c o o e o o o o c c o e o o o o G O S o ;

N.D. SENIORS!!

Submit pictures of your Classmates NOW for: THE CLASS OF '84 COUNTDOWN CALENDAR (Feb 27-May 20)

84 pages, each page will include day, date, event for that day and a picture of groups of seniors.

| Send to Rm 329 Walsh or Student Activities § Office before break.

LALL PICTURES ARE WELCOME!!ooocoo9G 0050oeo9ooooooooasoosooooseoo

Capece k icked a 22-yard fie ld goal in the second quarter.

D ickey com p le ted 24 o f 36 passes fo r 278 yards and became the fifth man in NFL h is to ry to surpass the 4,000-yard m ark in a season.

D ickey w e n t ove r the plateau w ith a 22-yard c o m p le tio n to tig h t end Gary Lew is late in the second quarter, b u t had an apparent 36-yard scoring s trike to P h illip Epps w iped o u t by a h o ld in g ca ll against tackle Karl Swanke th ree plays later.

The N ew Y o rk Jets’ Joe Namath was the firs t man to pass fo r be tte r than 4,000 yards, th ro w in g fo r 4,007 in 1967.

San D iego ’s Dan Fouts, w h o set an NFL reco rd o f 4,802 yards in 1981, has done it tw ice , w h ile C leveland’s Brian Sipe passed fo r 4,132 in 1980, the year Fouts accom plished the feat fo r the firs t tim e w ith 4,715.

B ill Kenney o f the Kansas C ity Chiefs became the fo u rth p layer d u rin g a 4 1 1-yard pe rfo rm ance Sun­day against the Chargers. That boosted his season to ta l to 4,187, w h ile D icke y has th ro w n fo r 4,196.

D ickey h igh ligh ted the game- w in n in g m arch w ith com p le tions o f seven yards to H uck leby and 15 yards to t ig h t end Paul Coffman, then fe ll on the ball in the m idd le o f the fie ld on the p lay p reced ing S tenerud’s last fie ld goal.

Thom pson com p le ted 12 o f 23 passes fo r 171 yards and was in te r­cep ted th ree times.

. Busycontinued fro m page 12

N e ith e r the m en ’s n o r the w o m en ’s squads w il l see any action u n t il n e x t semester and, like o th e r N o tre Dame students, they are p reparing fo r th e ir fina l exams. W hen the Irish re tu rn from break they w i l l be hosting teams from Fer­r is State and Valparasio Universities.

O n January 3rd, the m en’s and w o m en ’s teams have tenative ly scheduled a tra in in g tr ip to Puerto Rico. A lthough Stark has not rece ived fina l approval fo r the tr ip from the U nivers ity , he said the tr ip w i l l serve as a w o rk in g vacation.

Green B a y ’s Lyn n D icke y became o n ly the f i f t h m a n in NFL h is ­to ry to pass f o r ove r 4 ,0 00 y a rd s in a season la s t n ig h t as the P ack­ers n ip p e d a 12-9 w in ove r T am pa B a y in overtim e. F o r m ore o n the game, see the Associated Press s to ry a t righ t.

y fh p p y T ‘Holidays

Do you need ND Christmas presents for your family and friends?

WmeM

University of Notre DameOffice of the RegistrarU n ive rs ity R eg is tra r

Daniel H. W in icu r, Ph.D.

A cadem ic in fo rm a t io n 239-7043

qis _ 9 t 6 t d

jo e noOrravnoC) e rism O is ls s iO ' sd T :ot lifiM I s lie r ,19- id m en is J P I8 I ,u 6s iu 8 molt

ATTENTION!!ALL CONTINUING STUDENTS

You must enroll for the 1983/84 Spring semester, even if you have advance registered.

Enrollment for upperclass and graduate students for the Spring 1983/84 semester will be held on Tuesday, January 17,1984, between 8:30 AM a n d 3:45 PM in the ACC. Freshmen will enroll at the Stepan Center between 8:30 AM and and 2:00 PM. These times supersede any previously announced times.Enrollment consists of obtaining and completing an enrollment form which must

be signed and given to an enrollment clerk, together with your student I.D. card.The clerk will stamp the form and give you a copy.

If you do not enroll by the end of the Add/Drop period (January 26,1984), even if you have advance registered, you will be removed from the revised class lists

Late enrollment will be permitted only under “extenuating personal circumstances.” Permission of your Dean is necessary and a charge of $25.00 will be assessed.

□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□Your Spring semester class schedule together with your Fall semester grade

report will be mailed to your

HOME ADDRESS (undergraduate students)LOCAL ADDRESS (graduate students)

Make sure you inform the Registrar’s Office (graduate students should notify the Graduate School)of any change of address* before you leave Notre Dame for the “break.” m oe o i d s s iz B its m O z o o m s ! b a q qm h Mid n f li •; A t

■ t i td g ln « lu q r .< j a’ f itn f i s i l t to s n o le sss t I m a im o nd wo? gm qm b if you do not haveHtTe class schedule whieh will be majlpd to you, you will be

able to obtains copy at the Registrar^ Office: However, this will entail waiting in line and could result in a considers b18 w a if (&nd a waste of your time).

q a n w o iu-. ro t iio g u o a s r i t n i b n » 8 I j o i JfiyPuJftave anyjquestions^.cdntact the Registrar’s Office (ext.7043).

i.sgtno ■11 H 11:

Daniel H. Winicur University Registrar

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Page 10:  · ... Special treatment, page 3. VOL XVIII, NO. 68 the independent student newspaper serving not re dame and saint man's. TUESDAY, DECEMBER . 13, 1983. Four die as ...

The Observer Tuesday, December 13,1983 —-page 10

College basketball poll

North Carolina retains No. 1 spotBy DICK JOYCEAssociated Press

N o rth Carolina, w h ic h rou te d p rev ious ly unbeaten Syracuse last Saturday, reta ined the No. 1 spot o ve r K en tucky in the w eek ly As­sociated Press co llege basketball p o ll announced yesterday.

M eanw hile , upsets caused a shuf­f lin g am ong the o th e r T op Ten berths.

N o rth Carolina, w h ich increased its re co rd to 5-0 w ith an 87-64 v ic ­to ry o ve r Syracuse, d re w 37 first- place votes and 1,215 po in ts from the panel o f 62 sports w rite rs and spo rt scasters.

K entucky, w h ic h rou ted Kansas, 72-50, co lle c te d the o th e r 25 No. 1 votes fo r 1,203 points. Last w eek the W ildca ts tra iled the Tar Heels by fo u r po in ts in the voting , w h ile each had 30 firs t p lace votes.

Houston, w h ic h has ree led o f f five s tra ight w in s after its open ing loss, m oved in to the No. 3 spot w ith 1,030 p o in ts after beating Louisiana State and St. M ary’s o f Texas.

Unbeaten DePaul, w h ic h upset

G eorge tow n Saturday fo r its fif th t r i ­umph, jum ped fro m No. 13 in to the fo u rth spot w ith 943 points, a no tch ahead o f G eorge tow n (901 po in ts), w h ic h had been rated No. 3. The Hoy as, 5 1, had beaten St. Leo earlie r in the week.________________________

AP Top TwentyThe Top Tw enty college basketball team s in The

Associated Press poll, w ith first-place votes in paren­theses, this season's records and total points. Points based on 20-19-18-17 etc. Notre Dame opponents are ita licized.

1 North Carolina (37)2 . Kentucky (25)3. Houston 4 DePaul5. Georgetown6. M em phis State

(tie) North Carolina St.8. Boston College 9 M aryland

10. Louisiana State11. Purdue12. Georgia13. St. John's14. Oregon State15. UCLA16. Louisville17. M ichigan State18. Iowa19. Wake Forest20. Texas-EI Paso

M em phis State, 4-1 and No. 4 last week, fe ll in to a s ix th place tie w ith N o rth C arolina State after losing, 50- 49, to M ississippi State. N.C. State, 7-

5-0 1,2153-0 1,2035-1 1,0305-0 9435-1 9014-1 7437-1 7435-0 6584-7 5924-1 5476-0 5215-1 5164-0 4312-1 4163-1 4012-2 2933-1 2543-2 2085-0 1985-0 161

1 and e igh th a w eek ago, dow ned W estern C arolina and Hofstra to also land 743 points.

Boston College, 5-0 after v ic to ries o ve r Puget Sound and B row n, ad­vanced from No. 12 to e igh th w ith 658 points. M aryland, 4-1 w ith w ins o ve r Penn State and Duquesne, m oved up tw o spots in to the No. 9 s lo t w ith 592 points.

LSU, 4-1, w hose o n ly game last w eek was a loss to Houston, d ropped one no tch to 10th.

Louisville, w h ich w o n tw ice last w eek fo r a 2-2 record, re tu rn e d to the rankings, jo in in g W ake Forest and Texas-EI Paso — each unbeaten in five games — as new com ers in th is w eek ’s poll.

D ropped from the rankings were W ich ita State, Arkansas, and Fresno State. W ich ita State was a tw o -tim e loser last week, w h ile Arkansas w on tw o o f th ree and Fresno State sp lit tw o games.

Iowa, w h ic h lost to Lou isv ille and O regon State, nosedived from fo u rth to 19th, and UCLA, No. 7 last week, fe ll to 15 th a fte r lo s in g to N e w M exico.

To continue fighting

Holmes says he’s people’s champAssociated Press

NEW YORK — Larry Holmes, w ho has g iven up the W o rld B ox ing C o u n c il heavyw e ight title , said yes­terday, "1 am a people ’s cham pion, and I ' l l co n tin ue to be as long as I f igh t."

And tha t w o n ’t be fo r m ore than tw o fights, H olm es said in a te lephone in te rv ie w from his hom e in Easton, Pa, the day after he gave up the W BC tit le on the fina l day o f that organ iza tion 's con ve n tio n at Las Vegas, Nev.

"M y m ain goal is to fig h t G errie Coetzee ( th e W o rld B ox ing Associa­tio n cham p ion fro m South A fr ica ) and re tire ,” said Holmes.

"B u t it takes a w h ile to pu t toge th ­e r a Coetzee fight. I'd like to defend m y IBF t it le one tim e ."

W h ile he considers h im u e lf the people ’s cham pion, the unbeaten H olm es said he also w o u ld figh t as cham p ion o f the fledg ling In te rn a ­tiona l B o x in g Federation, w ith head­quarters at Newark, N.J. A cco rd in g to A rch H indm an, the IB Fs e x ­e cu tive secretary, the g roup has th ree fo re ign m em bers — the Ph ilipp ines, Japan, and Korea — and e fforts arc be ing made to a ttrac t m ore.

“ Bob Lee ( th e p re s id e n t) to ld me the IBF w o u ld recogn ize me as cham p ion ," H o lm es said. “ I ’l l figh t anybody the IBF asks me to as long as it is feasible. The w h o le th in g is busi­ness."

" I th in k I d id the r ig h t th ing ," Holm es said o f h is decis ion to resign as WBC cham pion.

“ (P ro m o te r) D on K in g and I co u ld n ’t com e up w ith an agree­ment. K in g w o u ld n 't le t the Page figh t ou t fo r bids. "

Holm es had a co n tra c t w ith K ing to make a m andatory defense against No. 1 -ranked G reg Page. B ut Holm es said the 2.55 m illio n do lla rs he was to get w asn 't enough to figh t Page.

“ I w in 45 fights, and figh t eve rybody fo r pa rity ,” said the u n ­beaten Holmes, w h o was unhappy w ith purses he rece ived fo r some past fights fo r K ing, and w ho s till is rankled that he had to sign fo r a 50- 50 sp lit w ith G erry C ooney fo r th e ir f igh t June I I , 1981, w h ich H olm es w o n on a 13th round knockou t

The WBC was go ing to announce Sunday a com prom ise agreem t nt in w h ic h it w o u ld have a llow ed Holm es 30 days to w o rk o u t h is d if-

ferencs w ith K ing. Then Holm es re linqu ished the title , w h ic h he w on on a 15-round s p lit decis ion ove r Ken N o rto n June 9, 1978, and defended 17 times.

Page and No. 2 ranked T im W it­herspoon re p o rte d ly w i l l figh t fo r the vacant t it le on Feb. 24 at a site to be de term ined.

H olm es said yesterday that w h ile he was no t tied in any way to K ing, w h o has a p ro m o tio n a l agreem ent w ith Coetzee, he w o u ld fig h t the South A frican fo r K in g “ i f w e can reach a fa ir a g re e m e n t. .

And w h ile saying a figh t against Coetzee w o u ld be his last, Holm es

also said, “ I f G reg Page and I ever cross each o th e r’s path and w e can reach agreement, I ’l l figh t Greg Page.”

As fo r an IBF t it le defense fo r Holmes, possible opponents cou ld be second ranked P ink lon Thomas, w h o is unbeaten and fought a 10-

ro u n d d raw w tih Coetzee, and No. 3 ranked M ike Weaver, fo rm e r W BA Champion. John Tate, ano ther fo r­m er W BA cham pion, also is being m en tioned as a possible opponent.

The IB F s No. 1-ranked heavyw eight is Page, w ith W it­herspoon rated No. 4.

5-8 Mixed Drinks 2 for 1 8-3 M ichelob N ight $1.00

GO IRISH, BEAT BOSTON COLLEGE

\Uappy‘Holidays

SUDS presents:

The Final Study BreakWed. Dec. 14, 9:30-11:00 pm

Main Floor LaFortune All Students Welcome!

LIBERTY BOWL

HOLIDAY INN $ EXECUTIVE CONFERENCE

CENTERis s till accepting hotel

reservations fo r NOTRE D AM E FANS!

Location: 11200 E. Goodman Rd.Olive Branch, MS 38654 (25 minutes from Memphis)

Phone: (601) 895-2941; Contact: Alma Lyne Rates: $50/Single; $60/Double; $70/Quad

H o u s to n is w ith o u t s ta r fo rw a rd C lyde D re x le r th is season be­cause o f h is dec is ion to go h a rd sh ip in la s t ye a r's NBA d ra ft, b u t the C ougars seem to be d o in g ju s t f in e w ith o u t h im as they m oved in to the No. 3 spo t in th is week’s Associated Press co llege b a ske tb a ll

p o ll. D ic k Joyce d e ta ils the rest o f the week’s p o l l in h is s to ry a t left.

IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIL .

The ObserverA ttention a ll Typesetters

Or anybody else interested in computer typesetting for The Observer. There will be a short meeting Sunday, Dec. 19 at 3:00 p.m. to organize a schedule for next semester. If you cannot attend, call

Kevin at 239-5303

MESSAGE FROM COUNSELINE 239-7793As the end of the semester nears, we understand what it’s like to cope with all the various things which you as s student experience. We hope that you will consider using our services as a resource for coping with these last, hectic days. We are a free, confidential telephone service that offers professionally taped materials covering a variety of student concerns. Take a look at our list below, you may find something to help you as the semester draws to a close. Call us at 239-7793

Hours: 4:00 to 10:00pm, Mon.-Thurs.TAPE NO TITLE 1 F rie n d sh ip B u ild in g7 D ea lin g w ith C o n s tru c tive C ritic ism8 D ea lin g w ith Anger

9 U nd ers ta nd in g J ea lou sy and How to Deal w ith II

10 H ow to S ay NO16 B e com ing O pen to O thers 18 D a tin g S k ills30 A n x ie ty and P o ss ib le W ays to C ope

32 H ow to Deal w ith L o n lin ess33 H ow to H an d le F ears35 B u ild in g se lf Esteem & C on fide nce37 R e la x in g Exe rc ises38 C op ing w ith S tress39 F em ale Sex R o le -

C hanges a nd S tress

44 Le arn in g to A cce p t Y ourse lf 61 W hat is T he rapy & H ow to Use It 83 H ow to C ope w ith a Broken

R e la tio n sh ip 85 U nd ers ta nd in g G rie f 90 H e lp in g a F riend160 Early s ign s o f an A lco h o l P rob lem161 R esp on s ib le D ec is ion s Abou t

D rin k in g402 Se lf A sse rtive ne ss431 W hat is D epress ion432 H o w to Deal w ith D epress ion433 D ep re ss ion a s a L ife S ty le478 B e com ing In dependen t Irg m Parents479 D ea lin g w ith A lc o h o lic Parents491 S u ic id a l C ris is492 R eco gn iz in g S u ic id a l P o te n tia l

493 H e lp in g S om eone in a S u ic id a l C ris is

, - 3 - .4

Counseline is a completely anonymous service offered by the Counseling &

Psychological Services Center '• University of Notre Dame

For further information or assistance call C&PSC 239-7336 Counseline: 239-7793

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AP P hoto

Page 11:  · ... Special treatment, page 3. VOL XVIII, NO. 68 the independent student newspaper serving not re dame and saint man's. TUESDAY, DECEMBER . 13, 1983. Four die as ...

TV Tonight

VARIOUS mOTCST REALLY. ACTIONS AGAINST THE

ANP OCEAN PUMPING OFEATER? NUCLEAR WASTE, z

A CONFRONTATION OH, STEWART/ WTTH SOVIET WHAT'S ON THE WHAUNG SHIPS. SOCIAL AGENPA /FOR THIS AFTER- / _ NOON/ , / fg ?

WE GOT CARROT JUICE.

•12 :15 p.m. — Kellogg Institute Presentation,“ Fuerzas Armadas, Partitos P o liticos y T ransic ion a la Dem ocracia en A rgen tina — 1981-1983,”Andres Fontana, 1201 M em oria l L ib ra ry • 1 - 4 p.m. — Im m unizations, fo r measles, m umps, rubella, and tetanus, S tudent H ealth Cen­ter, Free•1.45 p.m. — CSTAE Symposium, The Poor and the Disadvantaged, M ichael Novak, CCE •2:05 p.m. — CSTAE Symposium, Graciela O livarez, CCE•2:25 p.m. — CSTAE Symposium, Dennis P. McCann, CCE•3 p.m. — CSTAE Symposium, Father Richard M cBrien, CCE•5:15 p.m. — CSTAE Symposium Mass, A rch ­b ishop Rem bert Weakland, Sacred Heart Church, O pen to the p u b lic•8 p.m. — Basketball, N o tre Dame Men vs C or­nell. ACC

GREAT.SOME "LOW BOAT. JUST GET ME

l A MARTINI.SHVFFIEBOARP

PhotiusYou've: u s t e m e d n m eWHEN I 'V E BEEN D M N YOU KNOW, YOU'RE NOT U K E

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MASHPM Magazine Joker’s W ildContemporary Health Issues Barney M ille r Family Feud Wheel o f Fortune Straight Talk A TeamThe MississippiJust O ur LuckNOVAHappy DaysRemington SteeleTuesday N ight MovieThree’s CompanyVietnam: A Television HistoryOh MadelineBay C ity BluesHart to HartThe Great Spirit W ith in the Hole NewsCenter 16 22 Eyewitness News Newswatch 28 Big Red Football Tonight Show Trapper John/M cC loud Thicke o f the N ight

M ellish Dave & DaveGEE2! i B o rn e o o a .a e a u y? i THAT TEST SO , THOUGHT IT NAS •AObf, I C AN . E A S T , I'M SUAE S t i l l TASTE IT . THAT I A l£D IT .

A N D SINCE TH E PROF IS A eooC FAiEND OF m y F A T H E R , H I i A i D THAT I f I H D t o n ON THIS TE S T i n o h l d n T h a t e TO Ta k e t h c f in a l

THIS M A K E S THREE E flN P T lO N S ON F lN A H THIS SEMESTER SINCE I

GOT A'S IN 'P H Y S IC S ' AMO ' a d ­v a n c e d s o n n e t v r u i n c . A l s o , I **V £ a n e a s t ta k e - h o m e f i n a l f o r

P H ilo s o F H i- ■ • • I .

AND Y E T I'M f i UNKING ASYCH0106Y. . >

ACROSS 27 Ancient 1 Cudgel porch4 Trepidation 29 — del Rio8 Wilbur —, 32 Naughty

Johnson 35 Raison d’ —cabinet 37 Egyptianmember lizard

13 — fide 38 — loss14 “Gloomy 39 Small plums

Dean” 43 Syn.’s15 Loomed opposite16 Comic 44 Cavort

Morey 46 Asian18 Haley book weight19 Construe- 47 Murray of

tion unit old movies20 Bilbao’s 48 Realms

country 52 Rock chain22 Old-timer 54 Literary23 Panic conclu-25 What to do sion: var.

with gears 56 Tell

Monday’s Solution

60 “ Dombey and —

62 Dors or Rigg

64 Wind indicators

65 Direction67 Netherland

port69 Flynn of

films70 Big bird: var.71 Gaelic72 Some

jewelry73 Character­

istic of a fedora

74 Poor grade

17 Acted the ham

21 “But — on forever”

24 List 26 Indian

district 28 Branch30 Ms. Ferber31 Fill up32 Unadorned33 lota34 Devices for

wetting cloth

36 Superlative suffix

40 Bireme item

41 — do well42 Raglan or

dolman45 Fruit seed49 Conundrum50 Yale man51 Flew high 53 Broke out 55 Troll57 Composer

Previn58 Twit59 Salinger

girl60 Stride61 Worthless:

Scot.63 Sun disk 66 Negative 68 Sound of

disapproval

The Daily Crossword

DOWN1 Frozen

dessert2 Goose

genus3 Crimeans4 Evergreen5 Termini6 Yawning7 Return to

custody8 Worldly9 Gold:Sp.

10 Lake Mead’s neighbor

11 Punta del —12 Place for a

fledgling13 Angler’s

needc C hronicle Features. 1983

Hold it right there, young man! . . . Are feeding the squid under the table again?

12/ 13/83©1983 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc All Rights Reserved

12/13/83

Today Tuesday, December 13,1983 — page 11

Bloom County Berke Breathed Campus

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S tu d e n t U nion takes you to ... ASPEN

8 in clu d in g 6 n igh ts c o n d o a cco m o d a tio n s !j| 5 day lift tick et |8 $ 2 6 5 .0 0 8J Start thinking about SPRING BREAK |

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Buses from Main Circle to Chicago December 21 & 22 - 6:30pm

Sign up at S.U. Ticket Office I Record Store

Page 12:  · ... Special treatment, page 3. VOL XVIII, NO. 68 the independent student newspaper serving not re dame and saint man's. TUESDAY, DECEMBER . 13, 1983. Four die as ...

Sports Tuesday, December 13,1983 — page 12

Big Red visit ACC

Irish to square off with CornellBy THERON ROBERTSSports W rite r

Before tak ing a w eek o f f in o rd e r to prepare fo r fina l exams, the N o tre Dame m en's basketball team squares o f f against the Big Red o f C o rne ll U n ive rs ity to n ig h t at 8 p.m. in the A th le tic and C onvoca tion Center.

A lthough C o rne ll re tu rns s ix o f its to p e ight p layers from last season’s 1 ()■ 16 team, fo u r o f the returnees are sophom ores. Last year the Big Red was plagued by a lo t o f incons is­tency. Coach T om M ille r ’s squad lis ts o n ly tw o seniors and one ju n io r on its roster, in add ition to the fo u r­teen sophom ores and freshmen.

C orne ll, cu rre n tly 3-1, re tu rn s its e n tire fro n t lin e from a year ago. Brad Bomba, 6-7 sen ior co-captain, leads the B ig Red in sco ring and rebound ing th is season, averaging 14.0 po in ts and seven rebounds per ou ting. Bomba is one o f fou r C o rne ll p layers averaging in doub le figures. S tarting at the o th e r fo rw a rd w il l be 6-4 sophom ore Len Palmer. Palm er le tte re d as a freshman, bu t sat ou t last season.

The B ig Red has p le n ty o f d e p th at

fo rw ard . Sophom ores Fred Hedengrcn, 6-8, and Eric K ing, 6-4, are firs t o f f the bench.

At cen te r w i l l be 6-7 ju n io r Ken Bantum. Bantum is c u rre n tly the second lead ing sco re r fo r C o rne ll w ith a 13.8 average. Co-captain Ban­tum was A ll-Ivy League honorab le m en tion a fte r lead ing the Big Red in scoring and re t bound ing last season.

The backcourt was to be a m a jo r conce rn fo r the coach ing staff, as bo th starters w ere lost to gradua­tion . To f i l l the vo id , D rew M artin , a 6-4 sophom ore w h o started a ll 26 games at fo rw a rd last year, has m oved to the guard position . M artin has a 12.5 sco ring average so far th is season, and is the team ’s second- leading rebounder. S tarting at the o th e r guard slot w i l l be freshman John Bajusz, w h o is having a fine roo k ie season thus far. Bajusz, w h o averages 12.3 po in ts pe r game, has stepped in w here there was an ap­parent weakness in the C o rne ll lineup.

Sophom ore Stuart M itche ll, a ta len ted passer and ball handler, lends some support in the backcourt o f f the bench.

The Big Red is o ff to its best start since the 1967-68 season. The team is com ing o ff its biggest w in th is year, a 74-64 decis ion o ve r N o r­theastern last Saturday.

Coach M ille r was very pleased w ith his young team ’s m ost recent perform ance. “ It was a great team ef­fo rt. We played smart basketball and showed a lo t o f in tens ity ou t there .”

“ W e co n tro lle d the tem po o f the game — som eth ing that w e had to do,” co n tin ue d M ille r. "W e also came up w ith the b ig plays w hen w e needed them .”

M ille r, w h o is in his th ird year at the helm fo r the Big Red, was p rev ious ly an assistant to Bobby K n igh t at Indiana. M ille r ’s team fo l­low s a s im ila r ph ilosophy as K n igh t coaches, runn ing a m o tio n offense and p lay ing s tr ic tly man to-m an defense.

A lthough N o tre Dame d id not ove rw he lm Lehigh, the team seemed to fin d decent play from its fro n t lin e against the outm anned En­gineers in the second ha lf on Satur­day. N o tre Dame should have an

see RED, page 8

Weekend swimming action

Men win two, women lose oneBy MARY SIEGERSports W rite r

I t was a busy w eekend fo r the N o tre Dame sw im teams as the m en’s squad defeated C leveland State U n ive rs ity and N o rth e rn 11- lin io s U nivers ity , 59-54 in bo th meets, w h ile the w o m en ’s team d ropped a heartbreaking con test, 71-69, to C leveland State.

N o tre Dame head coach Dennis Stark an tic ipa ted close fin ishes in th is w eekend ’s c o m p e tit io n and e x ­p lained, "A ll o f o u r m eets th is w eekend w e n t to the last event. ”

Saturday’s v ic to ry o ve r C leve land State was a tr iu m p h fo r the m en ’s squad since the Irish lost to the V ik ings last year. “ It was a great w in fo r the guys o ve r C leveland,” said Stark.

Stark exp la ined tha t w in n in g the firs t event on Saturday was the key to N o tre Dam e’s success. He c o n ­gra tu la ted the team fo r an ou ts tand ­ing e ffo rt and be lieved that ea rn ing many o f the second and th ird places he lped gu ide the Irish to v ic to ry .

W in n in g th ree consecutive dual meets th is season has sparked a lo t o f enthusiasm on the m en’s squad. “ It has g iven us a great deal o f m om en­tu m go ing in to finals,” said Stark. "W e re n o t on again u n t il after

January 20 th and the d ro p p in g tim es is encourag ing.”

O n Friday, the team rea lized that i t was in fo r a tough con test a fter the squad d ro p p e d its firs t even t to N o rth e rn Illino is . H ow ever, the Irish fough t back and w e n t on to w in the m eet in the last event.

Stark a ttribu tes F riday’s v ic to ry to the re lay team o f T im Bohdan, Dan Carey, A1 Harding, and W illia m Green. “ I t was the experienced relay team at the end that d id it fo r us,” said Stark. “ I t was o u r best e ffo rt.”

Sophom ore Blaise Harding, w ho w o n firs t place fin ishes in the 1000 and 500-yard freesty le races and in the 200-yard breaststroke, was a b ig facto r in Friday’s v ic to ry . Stark praised his pe rfo rm ance and said, “ It was a good e ffo rt.”

Stark no ted that veteran s w im ­m ers have ca rried the team in many

events in the last tw o meets and hopes some o f the younger sw im ­m ers w i l l earn s tronger pos itions on the team as the season progresses. “ As w e w o rk in to the season, I hope th e y ’l l be able to score,” says the veteran sw im coach.

A lthough the w o m en ’s squad lost Saturday to C leveland State in the c los ing m inutes o f the m eet, Stark was no t co m p le te ly discouraged by the results o f the meet. "They swam b e tte r than last year and it shows a ce rta in am ount o f progress,” said Stark.

Stark exp la ined that the Irish lost bad ly to the V ik ings last year and tha t there w ere some tough battles in Saturday’s meet. He was pleased w ith the perform ances o f d ive r Ann Furle igh, w h o w o n tw o second place fin ishes in the meet, and fresh­man Suzanne Devine, w h o earned firs t places in the 100-yard freestyle and in the 200-yard in d iv id u a l m ed­ley races.

see BUSY, page 9

Irish begin to prepare for Boston College

Chuck FreebySports Writer

Irish Items

H e llo again, everybody!W he ther you like it o r no t — w h e th e r you arc go ing o r no t —

G erry Faust and the F igh ting Irish fo o tba ll squad have alreatjy started preparations fo r th e ir Decem ber 29 L ibe rty B ow l m atchup w ith Bos­ton College. W h ile there d e fin ite ly w i l l no t be a national cham p ion ­ship o r a to p -tw e n ty rank ing on the line fo r the Irish, th is w i l l s t il l be a b ig game fo r Faust and Co. The seniors w o u ld like to go o u t as w inners, the underclassm en w o u ld like to use th is game as a “ stepping stone” fo r the fu ture, and the e n tire team w o u ld like to show a na tionw ide audience that N o tre Dame was not w ro n g in accepting a b o w l in v ita tio n w ith a 6-5 mark.

H ow ever, everyone know s by no w that Boston College w o n ’t he a pushover by any stre tch o f the im agination. The Eagles boast a 9-2 record , a Heisman T ro p h y runner-up, and a w ealth o f ta lent on bo th sides o f the line. M ost o f all, Boston College w o u ld love to de th rone N o tre Dame as the k in g o f C a tho lic foo tba ll. It w il l he up to the Irish players and coaches to respond to the challenge set before them.

Some Liberty Bowl Facts . . Bud D udley has w o rked hard to get th is m atchup toge the r fo r the 25 th anniversary game o f the L ibe rty B ow l, bu t he has also pu t toge the r some dandy m atchups in the past. The o rig ina l L ibe rty B ow l was played in Philadelphia, m atch ing Penn State and Alabama (n o t a bad pa ir o f teams, eh?).

A fte r fa iling to d raw w e ll in the C ity o f B ro th e rly Love, b o w l o ff i­cials m oved the game to M em phis w here attendance fared m uch better. W h ile i t has taken some tim e, the L ibe rty B ow l has been able to b ring back the b ig name teams such as USC, UCLA, Nebraska, Penn State, O h io State, and Alabama in the last decade. O f course, last year's game is p robab ly the m ost reknow ned Liberty B ow l m atchup as the legendary Paul “ Bear” B ryant ended his illu s tr io u s coach ing career at Alabama w ith a 21-15 v ic to ry ove r Illino is . H opefu lly , th is year’s game w il l p rove just as m em orab le to Irish fans.

For the Record . . These tw o teams have con tras ting h is tories in b o w l games. N o tre Dame ow ns a 7-3 reco rd in post-season action but, un fo rtuna te ly , lost in th e ir last b o w l game, 17-10, to Georgia in the 1981 Sugar Bow l. O n the o th e r hand, th ree N o tre Dame b o w l v ic to ries have resu lted d ire c tly in nationa l cham pionships ( ’25 Rose Bow l, ’73 Sugar Bow l, ’78 C o tton B ow l).

M eanw hile , Boston College ow ns a d ism al 1-2-1 slate in b o w l play, in c lu d in g last year’s 33-26 loss to A uburn in the Tangerine Bow l. The Eagles’ lone b o w l w in came in the 1940 Sugar B ow l against Tennes­see and resulted in Boston C ollege ’s on ly national cham pionship. The coach o f that Eagle squad was a man by the name o f Frank Leahy.

And, i f yo u ’re in terested in h o w the tw o teams have fared against each o ther, the Irish ow n a 1-0 advantage in the series. That v ic to ry came in a 17-3 w in in 1975 and m arked the firs t w in fo r Dan Devine as foo tba ll coach at N o tre Dame.

Scouting the Eagles . . I t is no secret to anyone that the Boston College offense revolves around the r ig h t arm o f Heisman T ro p h y runner-up D oug F lutie. The 5-9 ju n io r quarterback makes up fo r his lack o f size w ith q u ick feet and a r if le arm. H is statistics are im ­pressive, indeed, as F lutie has th ro w n fo r ove r 2,700 yards and 17 touchdow ns. He has p len ty o f support from th ree exce llen t rece ivers in Brian Brennan, Scott G ieselman, and G erard Phelan. Brennan is the b ig man o f th is tr io , as he has hauled in 66 aerials fo r 1,149 yards and e igh t T D ’s.

W h ile F lu tie paces a h igh-pow ered passing game, the Ir ish defense cannot afford to neglect a po ten t run n in g attack, led by sophom ore ta ilback T ro y Stradford. S tradford has rom ped fo r 810 yards th is season to pace all Eagle rushers, and his speed makes h im a breakaway th rea t at a ll times.

W h ile the offense has been strong, the Boston College defense has been fo rm idab le as w e ll. T r i captain Steve De Ossie spearheads the Eagle tacklers w ith 111 stops and fo u r fum ble recoveries. He has a fine defensive line in fro n t o f h im , led by sophom ore nose guard M ike Ruth w ith seven and one h a lf sacks. W hen the line can’t get to the quarterback, the secondary does a n ice jo b o f defensing the pass, having p icked o f f 24 o p p os ition aerials th is season. Senior Tony Thurm an heads the deep backs w ith five in te rcep tions and 14 deflections.

A Look at the Irish . . I t ’s also qu ite obv ious that the meat and potatoes o f o f the Irish offense com es in the fo rm o f a ll-Am erican A llen P inkett. The sophom ore sensation from Sterling, Va., ran fo r nearly 1400 yards and 16 touchdow ns d u rin g the '83 campaign. He gets good support from b ru is ing fu llback Chris Smith, w ho com p iled 421 yards on the season.

The question about the Irish offense loom s at the quarterback slot, w here Faust can go w ith e ith e r B la ir K ie l o r Steve Bcuerlc in . Both quarterbacks have shone b r ig h tly at tim es th roughou t the season, but n e ith e r has rea lly show n consistency. A fte r K ie l’s ou tstand ing perform ance against A ir Force, how ever, i t w o u ld be hard n o t to go w ith the veteran signal ca lle r

At the to p o f the lis t o f the Ir ish defense is sophom ore m idd le linebacker T ony Furjanic, whose steady play d u rin g the year resu lted in an amazing 142 tackles. He heads a tr io o f linebackers in Rick N ay lo r and M ike Kovaleski that has to rank r ig h t up w ith the best c rew s in the nation. For the m ost part, the defense has been solid, bu t has show n a great su sce p tib ility to the b ig play. A strong game w il l be needed from all perform ers, especially the beleaguered secondary, in o rd e r to stop the Eagle attack.

D o n a ld R o ya l p o w e rs in f o r a la y u p la s t S a tu r­d a y a g a in s t Lehigh as Ir is h te a m m a te Ken B a r lo w lo o ks on. N o tre D a m e is h o p in g th a t i t doesn ’t repeat its p o o r f i r s t h a l f sh o w in g a g a in s t the E n -

T he O bse rve r/P au l C ifa rc lli

gineers as they fa c e the B ig Red o f C o rn e ll to n ig h t a t 8 p .m . in the ACC. F o r a p re v ie w o f to n ig h t ’s gam e, see Theron Roberts ’ s to ry below.


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