12
.. .More Trivia — page 7 VOL. XV, NO. 75 an independent student newspaper serving not re dame and saint mary’s THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 1981 Carter greets hostages Change by-laws Senate discusses CLC By DAVID SARPHIE StaffReporter Changes in the organization of the CLC and the formation of a budget committee for this semester were among the topics discussed at last night’s Student Senate meeting Also on the agenda was the creation of a committee to discuss problems in the North Dining Hall and a proposed wager from the University of Maryland. The changes in the CLC’s by-laws, drawn up by Student Body President Paul Richie, would extend the juris diction of that council to all stu dents. Currently, only residence hall students are affected by CLC deci sions. Another proposed change would allow members of the Stu dent Senate to hold a majority of scats on the council. Voting on these amendments was postponed until the meeting next week. The Student Senate then dis cussed the formation of a budget committee for the spring semester. Chairman Don Ciancio emphasized the importance of the committee, noting that it administers over 80 percent of the Student Government budget. The Senate again held off on any decisions until next week. Also considered was a proposed committee to aid Fr. John Van Wolvlear in setting dining hall hours for next year. According to Van Wolvlear, the Vice President for Stu dent Affairs, the new hours will be necessitated by overcrowded condi tions in the North Dining Hall, due to the two new girls’ dorms. The meeting ended on a lighter note, as Riehle suggested a wager with the University of Maryland over this Saturday’s basketball game. According to Riehle, the Maryland student legislative body had con tacted him over the weekend about a proposed bet. The Senate agreed to stake one case of “Fighting Irish Wine” on the game. Many students signed up yesterday to forfeit their Wednesday lunches to help raise money for the World Hunger Coalition. (Photo by Rachel Blount) Ticket sales lag Mardi Gras future By MARY FRAN CALLAHAN Sen tor Copy lid itor Though this year’s Mardi Gras will follow the tradition of past Mardi Gras, the future of the event remains uncertain, according to Dan McKcr- nan, Mardi Gras chairman. Due to an archdiocesan regula tion which prohibits gambling in conjunction with church activities, Mardi Gras will have to undergo some drastic changes after this year. Bishop McManus of the local archdiocese, however, has allowed this year’s Mardi Gras to run as originally intended. "The money (from the gambling proceeds) does go to charities. We had also already promised the charities money, which they took in to account in their budgets. And we had purchased the car and the supplies for building the booths,” McKcrnan explained. At present, however, Mardi Gras raffle ticket sales, though above the level reached last year at this time, still need to climb McKcrnan said approximately 800 books have been turned in, but all Notre Dame and Saint Mary’s received the ticket books. “I’d like to see more tickets sold. We’re above where we were last year, but we still need to sell a lot more,” he com mented. Ticket books should be given to hall chairmen as soon as possible. The Chairman added that this year’s theme is “In the News,” and booths will feature “headlines from the past.” This year’s prizes for ticket sellers include all expense paid trips for two to the Bahamas and Colorado. To spur the incentive for selling i the raffle ticket books, the Commit tee has also been giving away smal ler prizes to students. Every student who turns In a ticket book automati cally has his name entered into a small raffle. Thus far, the Committee has given away a black and white TV and a trip to Chicago. The next prize to be awarded is an AM/FM stereo cassette system. The Mardi Gras Committee has also purchased a 1981 Oldsmobile Cutlass, which is the grand prize in the regular ticket raffle. Some of the charities which will benefit from the raffle include: Sr. Marita’s Primary Day School, CILA, Logan Center, Special Olympics, the Neighborhood Study Help Program and starving nations. McKcrnan said no plans have been made for future Mardi Gras, as the Committee is concentrating on this year’s event. He did say, however, that possibly a dance, with proceeds going to local charities, may replace the traditional gam bling festivites. “We’re just not sure now what we’ll do,” McKcrnan commented. “We won’t select a chairman for next year until later this semester,” he concluded. This year’s event is scheduled for Feb. 13-21 in Stepan Center. WIESBADEN, West Germany (AP) — Jimmy Carter held an emo tional meeting with the 52 Americans held hostage by Iran for 14 1/2 months and then denounced the Iranian government’s "despicable act of savagery." He added, “Our Americans in Iran were mistreated much worse than previously revealed.” The former president's descrip tion of acts of “barbarism" leading to “abominable circumstances” for the freed captives followed reports from hostages’ families and the State Department that the Americans suf fered physical and psychological abuse during their 444 days in cap tivity. The State Department issued a statement here saying, "On the basis of what we have learned so far, we have further evidence of serious mistreatment in a number of cases during the period of their captivity." It did not elaborate. Carter, who turned over the presidency to Ronald Reagan on Tuesday, was denied the chance of announcing the hostages’ freedom while still in office, but as Reagan's special envoy he said he was able to “express the thanks of a grateful na tion to the brave hostages.” Carter said afterwards they “were mistreated much worse than has been previously revealed. The acts of barbarism which were per petrated on our people by Iran can never be condoned. See HOSTAGES, page 5 Did U.S. taxpayers By R. GREGORY NOKES Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON - Did the United States pay ransom to Iran for release of the 52 Americans? Apparently not, but U.S. taxpayers will probably end up with some out-of-pocket ex pense. Ransom is money of one party demanded in return for a kidnap vic tim or hostage held by another party, and many Americans feel the Carter administration paid dearly — in pride as well as money — to free the former hostages. New York Mayor Edward Koch, for one, responded with an ex plosive, Baloney!” when a reporter asked whether he agreed with other officials that the agreement was not ransom. “In effect, we have paid a penalty to terrorists, a penalty to kidnap pers,” Koch said Tuesday. Former Vice President Walter Mondale has defended the hostage agreement, saying the U.S. was not paying “a dime of American money,” and Republican Charles Percy, chairman of the Senate Foreign Rela tions Committee, said “not one cent of ransom” was involved. To date, that is correct. The money paid to Iran, $2.9 billion, was from Iranian funds on deposit in the U.S. and in U.S. banks abroad at the time former President Jimmy Carter froze Iranian assets in November, 1979. It did include $800 million in interest, but interest would have ac cumulated anyway. Another $5.1 billion in frozen funds was used to pay off bank loans made to Iran and to settle future claims. And $3 billion or so may be delivered to Iran later, but that is also to be Iranian money. The potential liability fpr the tax payer falls in three areas: — Compensation to the hostages for the harm done them. — Com pensation for loss and damage to U.S. property in Iran. — Compensation for claims from unfulfilled contracts and other debts owed American business. Here in question and answer form is an attempt to answer these and other questions about the agree ment. Q. What about compensation for the 52 hostages? how will that be handled? A. The agreement lets Iran off the hook, even though Iran is to blame for their anguish and abuse, the loss of freedom and the 14 months lost from their normal lives. Instead, the agreement provides for establishing a presidential com mission to decide any compensa tion. It could easily amount to several million dollars — and tax payers would pay it. Q. How about damage to the U.S. Embassy and other U.S. property in Iran? A. Iran is absolved of respon sibility, despite there being ample precedent for compensation by host countries when damage is done to property of other nations. See RANSOM, page 3 Waiting for Bruce - first lottery, now lines. (Photo by Rachel Blount)

Mardi Gras future Did U.S. taxpayers · 1/22/1981  · Americans held hostage by Iran for ... Reagan’s habits are in marked contrast to his predecessor, Jimmy Carter, who arose

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    0

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Mardi Gras future Did U.S. taxpayers · 1/22/1981  · Americans held hostage by Iran for ... Reagan’s habits are in marked contrast to his predecessor, Jimmy Carter, who arose

. . .More Trivia — page 7

VOL. XV, NO. 75 an independent student newspaper serving not re dame and saint mary’s THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 1981

Carter greets hostages

Change by-laws

Senate discusses CLCBy DAVID SARPHIEStaff Reporter

Changes in the organization of the CLC and the formation o f a budget com m ittee for this sem ester w ere among the topics discussed at last night’s S tudent Senate m eeting Also on the agenda was the creation o f a com m ittee to discuss problem s in the N orth Dining Hall and a proposed wager from the University o f Maryland.

The changes in the CLC’s by-laws, draw n up by Student Body President Paul Richie, w ould ex tend the juris­diction o f that council to all stu ­dents. Currently, only residence hall students are affected by CLC deci­sions. A nother proposed change w ould allow m em bers of the Stu­den t Senate to hold a majority of scats on the council. Voting on these am endm ents was postponed until the m eeting next week.

The Student Senate then dis­cussed the formation o f a budget

com m ittee for the spring sem ester. Chairman Don Ciancio em phasized the im portance o f the com m ittee, noting that it adm inisters over 80 percen t o f the Student G overnm ent budget. The Senate again held off on any decisions until nex t week.

Also considered was a proposed com m ittee to aid Fr. John Van Wolvlear in setting dining hall hours for nex t year. A ccording to Van Wolvlear, the Vice President for Stu­dent Affairs, the new hours will be necessitated by overcrow ded condi­tions in the N orth Dining Hall, due to the tw o new girls’ dorm s.

The m eeting ended on a lighter note, as Riehle suggested a wager w ith the University of Maryland over this Saturday’s basketball game. A ccording to Riehle, the Maryland student legislative body had con­tacted him over the w eekend about a proposed bet. The Senate agreed to stake one case o f “Fighting Irish W ine” on the game.

M any s tuden ts signed up yesterday to fo r fe it their W ednesday lunches to help raise m o n ey fo r the W orld H unger C oalition. (P hoto by R achel B lo u n t)

Ticket sales lag

M ardi Gras fu tureBy MARY FRAN CALLAHANSen tor Copy lid itor

Though this year’s Mardi Gras will follow the tradition o f past Mardi Gras, the future o f the event rem ains uncertain, according to Dan McKcr- nan, Mardi Gras chairman.

Due to an archdiocesan regula­tion w hich prohibits gambling in conjunction w ith church activities, Mardi Gras will have to undergo som e drastic changes after this year.

Bishop McManus of the local archdiocese, how ever, has allowed this year’s Mardi Gras to run as originally intended.

"The money (from the gambling p roceeds) does go to charities. We had also already prom ised the charities money, w hich they took in­to account in their budgets. And we had purchased the car and the supplies for building the booths,” McKcrnan explained.

At present, how ever, Mardi Gras raffle ticket sales, though above the level reached last year at this time, still need to climb

McKcrnan said approxim ately 800 books have been turned in, but all N otre Dame and Saint Mary’s received the ticket books. “I’d like to see m ore tickets sold. W e’re above w here we w ere last year, but we still need to sell a lot m ore,” he com ­m ented.

Ticket books should be given to hall chairm en as soon as possible.

The Chairm an added that this year’s them e is “In the News,” and booths will feature “headlines from the past.” This year’s prizes for ticket sellers include all expense paid trips for tw o to the Bahamas and Colorado.

To spur the incentive for selling i the raffle ticket books, the Com m it­tee has also been giving away smal­ler prizes to students. Every student w ho turns In a ticket book autom ati­cally has his name en tered into a small raffle. Thus far, the Com m ittee

has given away a black and w hite TV and a trip to Chicago. The next prize to be aw arded is an AM/FM stereo cassette system.

The Mardi Gras C om m ittee has also purchased a 1981 O ldsm obile Cutlass, w hich is the grand prize in the regular ticket raffle.

Some of the charities w hich will benefit from the raffle include: Sr.

Marita’s Primary Day School, CILA, Logan Center, Special Olympics, the Neighborhood Study Help Program and starving nations.

McKcrnan said no plans have been made for future Mardi Gras, as the C om m ittee is concen trating on this year’s event. He did say, how ever, that possibly a dance, w ith proceeds going to local charities,

may replace the traditional gam ­bling festivites.

“W e’re just not sure now what w e’ll do,” McKcrnan com m ented. “We w on’t select a chairm an for next year until later this sem ester,” he concluded.

This year’s event is scheduled for Feb. 13-21 in Stepan Center.

WIESBADEN, W est Germany (A P) — Jimm y C arter held an em o­tional m eeting w ith the 52 Americans held hostage by Iran for 14 1/2 m onths and then denounced the Iranian governm ent’s"despicable act o f savagery." He added, “O ur Americans in Iran w ere m istreated m uch w orse than previously revealed.”

The form er presiden t's descrip­tion of acts of “barbarism " leading to “abom inable circum stances” for the freed captives followed reports from hostages’ families and the State D epartm ent that the Americans suf­fered physical and psychological abuse during their 444 days in cap ­tivity.

The State D epartm ent issued a statem ent here saying, "O n the basis o f w hat we have learned so far, we have further evidence of serious m istreatm ent in a num ber o f cases during the period o f the ir captivity." It d id no t elaborate.

Carter, w ho tu rned over the presidency to Ronald Reagan on Tuesday, was denied the chance of announcing the hostages’ freedom w hile still in office, bu t as Reagan's special envoy he said he was able to “express the thanks o f a grateful na­tion to the brave hostages.”

C arter said afterw ards they “w ere m istreated m uch w orse than has been previously revealed. The acts o f barbarism w hich w ere p e r­petrated on our people by Iran can never be condoned.

See HOSTAGES, page 5

Did U.S. taxpayersBy R. GREGORY NOKESAssociated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - Did the United States pay ransom to Iran for release of the 52 Americans? Apparently not, but U.S. taxpayers will probably end up w ith som e out-of-pocket ex ­pense.

Ransom is m oney o f one party dem anded in re turn for a kidnap vic­tim o r hostage held by another party, and many Americans feel the C arter adm inistration paid dearly — in pride as well as m oney — to free the form er hostages.

New York Mayor Edward Koch, for one, responded w ith an ex ­plosive, Baloney!” w hen a repo rte r asked w hether he agreed w ith o ther officials that the agreem ent was not ransom.

“In effect, w e have paid a penalty to terrorists, a penalty to kidnap­pers,” Koch said Tuesday.

Form er Vice President W alter Mondale has defended the hostage agreem ent, saying the U.S. was not paying “a dim e o f American m oney,” and Republican Charles Percy, chairm an of the Senate Foreign Rela­tions Com m ittee, said “no t one cen t o f ransom ” was involved.

To date, that is correct. The

m oney paid to Iran, $2.9 billion, was from Iranian funds on deposit in the U.S. and in U.S. banks abroad at the tim e form er President Jim m y Carter froze Iranian assets in November, 1979. It d id include $800 million in interest, but in terest w ould have ac­cum ulated anyway.

Another $5.1 billion in frozen funds was used to pay off bank loans made to Iran and to settle future claims. And $3 billion o r so may be delivered to Iran later, but that is also to be Iranian money.

The potential liability fpr the tax­payer falls in th ree areas:

— Com pensation to the hostages for the harm done them . — Com ­pensation for loss and damage to U.S. property in Iran. — C om pensation for claims from unfulfilled con tracts and o th er deb ts ow ed American business.

H ere in question and answ er form is an attem pt to answ er these and o ther questions about the agree­ment.

Q. W hat a b o u t com pensa tion fo r the 52 hostages? h o w w ill th a t be handled?

A. The agreem ent lets Iran off the hook, even though Iran is to blame for their anguish and abuse, the loss of freedom and the 14 m onths lost

from their norm al lives.Instead, the agreem ent provides

for establishing a presidential com ­mission to decide any com pensa­tion. It could easily am ount to several million dollars — and tax­payers w ould pay it.

Q. H ow a b o u t dam age to the U.S. Em bassy a n d other U.S. property in

Ira n ?A. Iran is absolved o f respon­

sibility, despite there being ample p receden t for com pensation by host countries w hen dam age is done to property o f o th e r nations.

See RANSOM, page 3

W aiting fo r Bruce - f ir s t lottery, n o w lines. (P hoto by R achel B lo u n t)

Page 2: Mardi Gras future Did U.S. taxpayers · 1/22/1981  · Americans held hostage by Iran for ... Reagan’s habits are in marked contrast to his predecessor, Jimmy Carter, who arose

News Briefsby The Observer and The Associated Press

A fem ale Notre Dam e student walking on theroad betw een Jake Kline Field and the ACC yesterday m orning was s topped by a man driving a small, brow n tw o door sports car, w ho then p roceeded to expose him self to the student, Security reported . The suspect was approxim ately 25-35 years old, m edium height w ith sandy brow n hair, and was w earing glasses and a suede coat. Any p e r­sons spo tting the suspect should inform the Security departm en t im ­mediately. — The Observer.

Ronald Reagan got h is w ake-up call at8:10 a.m. yesterday, had a leisurely breakfast w ith his wife in the ir new hom e and got to the office shortly before 10 a.m. for his first day of the job as p residen t o f the U nited States. He’d had a big tim e the night before, making the rounds o f one formal d inner and nine inaugural balls, bu t he arrived hom e at the W hite House at 12:25 a.m. — 40 m inutes ahead o f schedule, and aides said he w en t right to bed. He w oke up only 10 m inutes later than usual. Reagan’s habits are in m arked con trast to his predecessor, Jim m y Carter, w ho arose before daw n daily, often at 5 a m., and made appoin tm ents for 7:15 o r 7:30. In ano ther break w ith the recen t past, Reagan received no m orning brief­ing from his national security adviser. His counselor, Edwin Meese, said the CIA briefing paper was simply sent in to Reagan in the family quarters after he awoke. After breakfast, Reagan stopped in the W hite House East Room to a ttend the swearing-in o f his staff before going to th e Oval Office. T hen he d irec ted his staff to disregard the politics in w hich m ost o f them nave been im m ersed before they cam e to his adm inistration. — AP

Prof. A nthony M. Trozzolo, Charles l . HuiskmgProfessor o f C hem istry at N otre Dame, was the recip ien t o f the G regory and Freda Halpern Award in Photochem istry at the New York Academy of Sciences’ 163rd annual m eeting, held last m onth at the Tim e/Life Building in N ew York City. Dr. Parithychery Srinivasan. p residen t o f the Academy, p resen ted a certificate o f citation and 11,000 to Prof. Trozzolo in recognition of his outstanding con tribu ­tions to th e science of photochem istry. Prof. Trozzolo’s scholarly ap ­proach to the detec tion o f in term ediates in organic chem istry is renow ned. In addition to this research, T rozzolo’s w ork led to the invention in 1970 o f an excip lex dye laser w ith a w ide tunability range. To date, it still has the w idest tunability range for a single solu­tion dye laser. Trozzolo has been associated w ith the University since 1975, w hen he accep ted the Huisking chair. — The Observer.

DOZeilS o f t r a n s ie n t s are spending their nights sleep­ing on the sidewalk ou tside a one room mission called Baloney Jo e ’s because city fire officials in Portland, Ore., say it’s too dangerous for 100 people to rest inside. “There are people in this city w alking the stree ts at night just to keep w arm because they have no place to go,” said mission m anager Michael Stoops. “We alm ost had a rio t before we decided to let m en sleep on the sidewalk.” This week, Stoops began giving transients blankets to sleep outside at night. He contends the city is restric ting adm issions to the one-room mission to keep hobos ou t o f Portland. But Don Mayer, a spokesm an for the Portland Fire Bureau, said a fire hazard is at issue. The mission has only one exit, and city codes allow for a maxim um of 49 people inside, he said. “If Jesus cam e to Portland’s skid row, he w ouldn’t go to those chu rch missions, h e ’d com e to Baloney Jo e’s,” Stoops said. “The transients w ant to com e here because w e are always open and w e don’t hassle them. They do n ’t have to sit through a religious service to get a free meal.” — A P

A fo m iC r N«1Z1 ( len til c n m p guard w ho has lived in this country for 31 years m ust be stripped of his U.S. citizenship, the Suprem e C ourt ru led yesterday. By a 7-2 vote, the justices said 73- year old Feodor Fedorenko “illegally p ro cu red ” his U.S. citizenship in 1970 because he lied to im m igration officials w hen en tering the country in 1949. The federal governm ent now can strip Fedorenko of his citizenship and m ove to depo rt him. The co u rt’s decision made clear that even if governm ent p rosecu to rs did no t think it necessary to take away Fedorenko 's citizenship, the Im m igration and Nationality Act dem ands it. The ru ling appears to give the governm ent discretion in decid ing w h eth er to d ep o rt Fedorenko. The C arter adm inistration had sought it fervently. Fedorenko’s case now will re tu rn to a federal judge in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., for a final denaturalization o rder — the stripping o f citizenship. Then Fedorenko likely will be the subject of an Im m igraton and Naturalization Service deportation tion hearing. — AP

Sen. Edward M. K ennedy and his wife joan , side-by side cam paigners as he sought the D em ocratic presidential nom ination last year, announced yesterday they plan to divorce after 22 years o f marriage. They had been living apart — he in suburban W ashington, she in B oston — although Mrs. K ennedy appeared fre­quently w ith h e r husband during his failed effort to w rest his party’s nom ination from Jim m y Carter. In a statem ent issued by Kennedy’s Senate office in b o th th e ir names, the couple said “appropriate legal p roceedings will be com m enced in due course. ” They have three children. A spokesm an for Kennedy declined com m ent on w here the divorce proceedings w ould be initiated. — AP

Partial clearing w ith highs in the mid to upper 30s. Partly c loudy at night and tom orrow . Lows tonight in the low to mid 20s. Highs tom orrow in th e low to mid 30s. — AP.

Thursday, January 22, 1981 — page 2

History remembers CarterWe have had som e in teresting discussions recently

concern ing the fall o f Jim m y C arter from pow er. Al­ready, people w onder how history will reflect on this m an (so fiercely detes ted at p resen t), and many realize that the m etaphorical m irror, w hile no t nam ing C arter the fairest o f them all, at least will no t crack at the sight o f his hideous visage.

It has always been one o f o u r political beliefs that a presiden t must, for the overall good of the nation, make decisions w hich will anger o r alienate certain political o r sociological factions. The C arter W hite House took great pride during the past campaign in rem inding us that C arter did make many of these moves, disdaining m ore politically popular alternatives, and they at­tribu ted m uch o f his unpopularity to these actions.

This may be true, bu t to a lesser ex ten t that the G eor­gia clique w ould have you believe. Most people could find b e tte r reasons to vo te against Jim m y C arter — his failure to con tro l inflation, his amazing inconsistency, his am biguous foreign policy — than just one random decision, and as history has shown, incum bent p resi­dents, w ith all the advantages o f the office, are very dif­ficult to defeat. Keep in m ind also that C arter was a sham elessly political p residen t during the campaign, especially during the primaries.

Now in the post-m ortem s w ith lame duck C arterites on late night talkshow s like ABC’s “N ightline” o r NBC’s “Tom & Rona Ego Show,” w e often hear the phrase “History will show...” It seem s to be the ir form of solace, w hich is understand­able: They d o n ’t w ant to feel as if they’ve th row n away four years o f the ir life w orking for som e hapless boob. But are their claims legitimate? Let’s a ttem pt a b rief revisionist’s history here.

Iran, and specifically the hostages, seem ed to be theprincipal tho rn in the side of “the dem on w arm onger C arter,” as the dem onstrato rs used to lovingly refer to him. C arter will ultim ately be cred ited for securing their release, and lauded for his patience. His handling o f the crisis will be seen as appropriate, and the blame probably will no t fall on his shoulders, even though he was amply w arned of the em bassy’s im m ediate danger. R em em ber that presiden ts dating back to Trum an have had their hand in the Shah’s cookie jar, and it was their co llective influence m ore than C arter’s w hich crys­tallized anti American hatred in Iran. History tends to take a broad perspective in m atters such as this, som e­thing w e don’t always do in the present.

In the area o f hum an rights, C arter’s pet, the new ex may be seen as an innovator, a man w ith a vision, o r a dream er, a m an w ith his head in the clouds. Unfor­tunately, he will be view ed as the latter. American presi­den ts have learned the painful lesson that strategic alliances and m aintenance o f U.S. m uscle take p recedence over hum an rights. Carter, unhappily, show ed w hat he had learned last year by advocating a

Tom JackmanExecutive News Editor

Inside Thursday;

spot in the U.N. for Cam bodia’s cuddly Pol Pot. It was a typical C arter Adm inistration contradiction in foreign policy, and C arter will take the blam e for initiating a decline in A merica’s w orld standing.' C arterites w ere always quick to po in t ou t tw o of the ex’s biggest successes, the Panama Canal and Camp David. They claim that past presiden ts shied away from the Canal problem , and it is com m endable that Cater relieved the U.S. o f one o f its last vestiges o f colonialism. But the difficulty o f that task will be forgotten. The Camp David accords may be seen as a m ajor ac­com plishm ent, bu t only if the process continues, suc­cessfully. That could depend on the future of M enachem Begin and the longevity of Anwar Sadat.

Right now, bo th achieve­m ents stand out. C arter also signed SALT II, bu t that was largely a Kissinger- negotiated treaty.

T he best that can be said about C arter’s econom ic policies is tha t he kep t us out o f a depression. He did not balance the budget, he did no t reduce the deficit, he did no t decrease the bureaucracy, and he did start his ow n recession. Notice, though, w hat m ost p residents are no t rem em ­bered for the ir econom ic legacies: w hen you think of E isenhow er and the Fifties, you think of Laverne and Shirley, Elvis, and the Brook­

lyn Dodgers. You forget that he p lunged us into tw o fairly painful recessions, and ow ed a great deal o f his popularity to just plain hero w orship. Many now despise C arter for his econom ic ineptitude, but m em ories o f o u r cu rren t hardship will fade, especially as things get worse.

W hich brings us to this final question: How will his­tory view this election? Many are tossing around the term ‘conservative shift’ these days, as if describ ing a mass ideological exodus from the left, and liberals are indeed acting very paranoid lately. They shouldn’t. It was the anti-Carter vote, the anything will be better than th is’ a ttitude w hich made the Republican victory so resounding. The reasons for this vote may be lost on history, bu t the significance will not.

The Ford-Carter years can be view ed the same way, especially C arter — a harm less p residen t in a harm less time. That is probably how history will rem em ber Jim ­my Carter. But w e are en tering a new era now, accord ­ing to the cycle, and, for b e tte r o r worse, Ronald Reagan is at the helm. You can take that any way you w ant to.

_ „The Oh&erver _Design Editor.................... Margaret KruseDesign Assistants........................... Pat Fox

Kathy Crosset, Tim NeelyTypesetter.............................Bruce OakleyNews Editor ......................... Tom JackmanN ight News Editor.............. Bruce OakleyCopy Editors..................... Tim Vercellotti

Bruce OakleyFeatures Layout Scoop Sullivan

Tim NeelySports Copy E d ito r Michael OrtmanTypists ..................Cindy “Too Tall” JonesSystems C ontro l.................Bruce OakleyND Day Editor.................... Megan BoyleSMC Day Editor.................. John HigginsA d Design .................«.............. Dave WoodPhotographer...................... Rachel BlountGuest Appearances John Calcutt

(Exec. Ed. Em eritus) Mike Delaplain, Richard Benis

The Observer (U SPS 598 920) is p u b l i s h e d M o n d a y t h r o u g h Fr iday e x c e p t d u r in g e x a m a n d vaca t ion p e r io d s . The Observer is p u b l i s h e d by t h e s t u d e n t s of N ot re D a m e and Sa in t M a r y ' s C o l lege . S u b sc r ip t io n s m a y be p u r c h a s e d for $20 p e r y e a r ($10 p e r s e m e s t e r ) by w r i t ing The Observer, P.O . Box Q, Notre D a m e , In d ia n a 46556 . S e c o n d c lass p o s t a g e p a id , N ot re D a m e , I nd ia na 46556.

The Observer is a m e m b e r of th e A ss o c ia t e d P r e s s . All r ep r o d u c t io n r i g h t s a r e r e s e r v e d .

Do You Knofs “FIGHTING IRISH BEER”

available at yo u r favorite P u b , Saloon,

Bar, Tavern or d r in k in g em p o riu m ?

A S K — or con tact a L eprechaun . —

lll

llllll

II ,

Thursday Night

Corby’s Inaugural Special

The G ip p er turns up a s President,

let's turn o n e up for him.i

Page 3: Mardi Gras future Did U.S. taxpayers · 1/22/1981  · Americans held hostage by Iran for ... Reagan’s habits are in marked contrast to his predecessor, Jimmy Carter, who arose

The Observer Thursday, January 22, 1981 — page 3

Living p ro o f tha t Psych Services is indeed necessary a t Notre Dame. (P hoto by R achel B lo u n t)

By JEFF CHOPPINNews Staff

Tonight, students will have an o p ­portun ity to voice complaints, sug­gestions, o r ask questions to various alum ni at 15 different dorm s. The hall visitations will occu r at 9 p.m.

This is the third year that these visitations will take place. As was the case in the first year, the alum ni will visit alm ost every dorm . Last year the Alumni Board chose to use only tw o locations, Planner and Walsh. Due to poor scheduling, the atten ­dance on the past tw o occasions was poor. Even so, Tim Truesdell, an Alumni Board m em ber, said that things had "gone very well."

He also said that the Alumni Board and the students should use these visitations as a "com munications vehicle.” He said that the alumni use the m eetings to find ou t w hat is happening at the university in the eyes o f the students. The alumni, in turn, describe the various place­m ent program s for sum m er jobs that alum ni associations have set up across the country.

The Alumni Board m em bers start m eetings tom orrow that will carry them into the w eekend. The student talks, if effective, could play an in­tegral part in the meetings. The tw o student coordinators o f the Student- Alumni Relations Group, Mike Grace and Brian Glade, hope that

this will be the case.The dorm s, the alumni, and the

alum ni’s hom es are listed below. If tw o dorm s are listed together, the one in italics is the location o f the meeting. Students should take note of the alum ni hom e closest to theirs if they are in terested in sum m er job placem ent.

Alumni — Frank Callahan ’50, Tampa, Fla.

Breen P h ilip s /Farley — Greg Ericksen ’75, Indianapolis, Ind.

Cavanaugh — Anthony Mileto ’61, Baltimore, Md.

Dillon — Patty Dondanville ’78, Springfield, HI

Planner — John Kean ’51, Fenton, Mich.

G race/Pasquerilla W est — Paul Kruse Jr. '54 — Edna, Minn., and Wil­liam Reynolds ’54 — Glenview, 111.

People’s Court tries officialsEVANSVILLE, Ind. (A P) - The Na­

tional Prisoners Rights Union, made up of county jail inmates, their families and supporters, has set Tuesday as the date for a planned "trial ” o f local officials.

The trial by the so-called "People’s Court ” was postponed from this week to nex t after Jam es Bell Yager, the leader o f the prisoners rights group, was trans­ferred from the county jail in Evansville to a federal prison in O x­ford, Wis.

Yager, a 47 year old jailhouse lawyer, gained national attention for helping num erous jail inmates prepare their defenses. Last week, he chose to boycott his own trial in Evansville to p rotest Judge Thomas Swain’s refusal to grant him a con ­tinuance.

Yager was convicted in Vander-

Observer

Classifieds

burgh Superior C ourt last w eek on theft, forgery and habitual criminal charges. Swain sen tenced him to 42 years in prison.

Following Yager’s conviction, m em bers o f the prisoners rights group announced that Swain and o ther cou rt and law enforcem ent of­ficials w ould be tried by a people’s court on charges o f obstructing justice.

They said officials found "guilty” could face fines, jail term s or "worse. ” Yager said "w orse” translates into “public ridicule.”

Yager has said that if the “defendants” are found guilty, “our people will perform citizens’ arrests on everyone convicted, including the judge, and take them to the police station for booking. ”

The announcem ent prom pted an angry response last w eek from Sheriff Jam es DeGroote, w ho told Phyllis Short, executive secretary of the prisoners group, that he intends to stop the trial "by w hatever means, o r force, called for.”

"There is absolutely no possible way 1 am going to allow a n y citizens group to take the law into their own hands,” D eG roote said in an open le tte r to Mrs. Short.

He added: "if you and your "People’s C ourt’are so in ten t on

Holy Cross — Thomas McCusker ’64, Omaha, Neb.

H o w a rd /Badin — Paul Eide ’52, Fort Dodge, Iowa

K eenan /S tanford — Michael Read ’65, N ew Orleans, La., and George Williams '62, Norwell, Mass.

Lewis — Jerry McGlynn '60, San Rafael, Calif.

Aforrfssey/Lyons/Carroll — Ramano L Mazzoli ’54, Louisville, Ky., a n d jo h n Short ’74, Indianapolis, Ind.

P angbom /F isher — Mike Jolcc ’64, Pittsburgh, Pa , and Charles Per­rin '50, Pekin, 111.

Sorin — W alter Nashert, Jr., ’54, Oklahoma City, Okla.

Walsh — Michael N eum eistcr '69, Buffalo, N.Y.

Zahm — C lem ent O ’Neill ’56, San Diego, Calif.

follow ingjam es Yager (w hom I co n ­sider a psychopath, a liar, a cow ard, a parasite a societal mis fit and a true lo ser) need I rem ind each o f you w here Yager is . and will be for the nex t 42 years?”

In an open response to the sheriff, Mrs. Short said group m em bers “fully intend to pursue our endeavor to the ultim ate and to reach our goal, devoid of being further intim idated o r th reatened by your office an d /o r your associates.”

...RansomC ontinued fr o m page 1

Instead, the agreem ent provides for establishing a presidential com ­mission to decide any com pensa­tion. It could easily am ount to several million dollars — and tax­payers w ould pay it.

Q. H ow a b o u t dam age to the U.S. Em bassy a n d other U.S. property in Iran?

A. Iran is absolved o f respon­sibility, despite there being ample preceden t for com pensation by host countries w hen damage is done to property o f o ther nations.

LAST DAY for

Book Exchange Book Return

andMoney Pick-up

Thurs. 4:30—6:00 2nd Floor LaFortune

ThursdayFarley night

FridayTom Kovnick

9:00Sam Dismond

Gran Cleveland Greg Dallessandro and more

Saturday9:00-10:00 Greg Butler on guitar 11:00-11:45 Pat Byrnes with

com edy 12:00 ? Mark Davis with magic

Alumni, students exchange ideas

| All Clubs and_□ Organizati

y 2Final applications for ^STUDENT ACTIVITIES FUNDS are n o w be ing ta k e n .P lease fill ou t application in the Student Activ it ies office, 1st Floor LaFortuneDEADLINE Monday, January 26 ,5 .00 pm. |

VAN LINES IS BACKSTARTS THIS WEEKEND

Every Friday 6-12 pm Saturday 4-12 pm .50 round trip

Departs Main Circle ON THE HOUR (pay as you board, no tickets)

TOWN & COUNTRY — UNIVERSITY PARK — FORUM — and more

Page 4: Mardi Gras future Did U.S. taxpayers · 1/22/1981  · Americans held hostage by Iran for ... Reagan’s habits are in marked contrast to his predecessor, Jimmy Carter, who arose

The Observer Thursday, January 22, 1981 — page 4

Doctors battle faith

U ndaun ted by typ ica l Sou th B end weather, these joggers take advan tage o f the recent w arm tem peratures. (P hoto by R achel B lo u n t)

1NDL.NAPOUS (A P) - An offi­cial o f Riley C hildren’s Hospital ob ­tained a tem porary em ergency o rder w hich enabled physicians to give a 4 year old A nderson girl em ergency blood transfusions over the objectins o f her parents.

The parents, Donnie and Vickie W hittle, are m em bers o f Jehovah’s Witnesses. They refused to aut­horize the blood transfusions for Felicia B. W hittle, according to Riley

*OINE/f1/ll*thursday night film seriesA gro u p in g of d is t in g u ish e d films sh o w n in c o n ju n c t io n with th e c o u r s e COTH 320 (A sp ec ts of C inem a: Im age & Ideology) a n d s p o n s o r e d by th e D ep ar tm en t of C o m ­m u n ic a t io n & Theatre .All sh o w in g s a t t h e Annenberg Auditorium , the Snite Museum of Art, Notre D am e C a m p u s a t 7:30 P.M.Individual A d m is s io n s $1.00 S e r ie s Ticket: 13 f ilms for $10.00

Thursday, Ja n u ary 22

Bicycle Thief Dir. by Vittorio De S ica (Italy) 1948 O n e of th e g re a t m a s te r p i e c e s of the Italian Neo-real is t sc h o o l , th is p o ig n a n t film w a s in s t ru m e n ta l in e s t a b l i sh in g th e re p u ta t io n of De S ica a s a d i rec to r a n d of C e sa re Zavat- tini, h is f req u en t co llabo ra to r , a s sc reenw ri te r .

Thursday, January 29

A Nous La Liberie Dir. by R ene Clair (France) 1931 From the ear ly so u n d period, th is m e m o ra b le film by o n e of th e g rea t m a s te r s s h o w s th a t th e wonderfu l c o m ic spirit of t h e 2 0 's c in e m a w a s alive and well in F rance . A m u s t for a n y o n e w ho w a n t s a hear ty laugh at th e e x p e n s e of the tec h n o lo g ic a l soc ie ty .

Thursday, Februa ry 5Tom Jo n es Dir. by Tony R ich a rd so n (Great Britain) 1963 C o n t in u in g in th e co m ic m ood , th is rollicking a d a p ta t io n of Henry Fie ld ing is m o re th an a m a tc h for the February b lahs . With Albert Finney, S u s a n n a h York a n d Hugh Griffith having th e t im e s of the ir lives in baw dy Old England.

Thursday, February 12If . . . Dir. by L indsay A nde rson (Great Britain) 1969 A rhetorical q u e s t io n a sk e d in the fan tasy -r idden c o n f in e s of an English b oard ing schoo l . A brilliant a n d sp e c ia l film w hich e x p lo re s all the m eta p h o r ic p o ss ib i l i t ie s of the c in e m a in a s ty le full of wit a n d verve. With Malcolm McDowell in h is first m ajor role.

Thursday, February 19

Five Easy P ieces Dir. by Bob R af leson (U.S.A.) 1970 J a c k N icholson, Karen Black a n d S u s a n A n s p a c h s t a r in an in te n se an d though tfu l varia tion of the th e m e of the Am erican Drifter. The se l f -d ep reca t in g p e r fo rm a n c e by N icho lson is p robably o n e of h is b e s t , in th is in te l ligent s tu d y of a s id e of A m erican life no t a lw ay s t r e a te d with the kind of insight d isp lay e d by R a f le so n here.

Thursday, February 26

To Catch a Thief Dir. by Alfred H itch c o ck (U.S.A.) 1955 With Cary Gran t a s th e C at Burglar ( reform ed, of c o u rse ) an d G race Kelly a s ev ery b o d y 's favorite ice c u b e do in g a H itchcock fa n d a n g o a ro u n d th e u su a l " fabu lous ” jew e ls on the French Riviera.

Thursday, M arch 5

The C onform ist Dir. by B ernardo B erto lucc i (Italy) 1970 A s u m p t u o u s s tu d y of th e so c ia l d e c a y w hich bo th c re a te s , a n d is c r e a te d by, F a s c i s t id eo lo g ies . A lberto M orav ia’s tex- tu red novel is given a defin it ive t r e a tm e n t in B e r to lu cc i ’s version . D o m in iq u e S a n d a a n d J e a n -L o u is T rin t ignant give p e r fo r m a n c e s w h ich a re full of su b t le ty a n d r e p re s s e d p a s ­sion . A beau t i fu l film.

Thursday, M arch 12

The D iscreet Charm of th e B ourgeoisie Dir. by Luis Bunuel (France) 1972The old m a s te r is a t it aga in , tw eak in g th e n o s e of his favorite ta rg e ts : c l a s s privilege, so c ia l s tu f f in e s s , l inear nar­rative. A surreal so c ia l c o m e d y full of in n u en d o an d b lack hum or, light a s a souffle , rich a s a lobs te r . With F e rn a n d o Rey an d S t e p h a n e Audran.

Thursday, M arch 26

Will Penny Dir. by Tom G ries (U.S.A.) 1968 C har l ton H es ton , J e a n H acke t t , a n d Bruce Dern in o n e of th e g r e a t —th o u g h o f ten o v e r lo o k e d —of W e s te rn s . A dusty , tough , yet moving s to ry s e t in th e c la s s ic a l vein of th e genre .

Thursday, A p r il 2

Xala Dir. by O u s m a n e S e m b e n e (Senegal) 1974 B an n ed in its h o m e country , th is f ierce an d wildly funny s a t i re of the p i tfa l ls of in d e p e n d e n c e is a d e m o n s t r a t io n of th e so l id work by o n e of th e m o s t im por tan t of e m erg in g African d irec to rs .

Thursday, A p r il 9

Violette Dir. by C lau d e C habro l (France) 1978 C o n t in u in g h is m e t ic u lo u s d o u b le s tu d y of b o u rg e o is ie s tu p id i ty an d of the p a r a m e te r s of the d e te c t iv e genre ,C habro l here tu rn s to an ac tu a l c a s e h is tory of a young w o m a n with a d o u b le life w ho p o i s o n s her p a ren ts .As C habro l tu rn s h is a s c e t i c ey e on th e c h a r a c t e r of Viole t te Noziere (beautifully p layed by Isabe l le Huppert), w e s e e a w ho le o th e r d im e n s io n to th e affair.

Thursday, A p r il 23

The T ree of th e W ooden Clogs Dir. by E rm an n o Olmi (Italy) 1978The G olden Prize W inner a t C a n n e s in 1978 a n d of th e B est Fore ign Film Award by th e New York Cri tics Film Circle is a m u te t e s t im o n y of th e in a d e q u a c y of s u c h h o n o rs . It is, s imply, a g re a t work of art, s u f f u s e d with a p o e t ic narra t ive w h ich s e e m s to g row from th e L om bard e a r th in w hich it is se t .

Thursday, A p r il 30

W oyzeck Dir. by W erner Herzog (Germany) 1978 K laus Kinski s e e m s to have b e en born to p lay th is role, originally th e p ro d u c t of G eorg B u c h n e r ’s pen in 1836, jus t a few m o n th s be fo re th e p layw righ t’s d e a th at th e a g e of 23. A to rc h b e a re r of m o d ern ism , th is g re a t Work is given yet a n o th e r d im e n s io n by th e d i rec t io n of o n e of th e m o s t s ig n if ican t a r t i s t s of th e New G e rm an School .

NOTRE E i t l l V1INT TIJRTNcc/n/nuNnc/miONTHEOTRE

TH E_*/IHlSEU/H*

adm inistrator Charles A. Richmond.The girl was listed in fair cond i­

tion in the intensive care unit o f the hospital.

Judge Victor S. Pfau appointed R ichm ond as the girl’s guardian for 60 days.

In asking Monday night for the em ergency order, Richm ond told Pfau that physicians did no t believe they could wait until the scheduled 11 a.m. hearing Tuesday for G ood­man to make the b lood transfusions w ithout risk o f the youngster dying

Dr. Mark W inerm on, Riley’s chief pediatrician, said if the girl w ere not perm itted to receive the necessary trea tm en t "the deteriorating process will con tinue as it is continuing now. ”

The 31-year-old father testified briefly, saying that despite sta te­m ents o f the physicians, "I still have to go w ith my faith. ”

Afterwards, W hittle said he did n o t believe that he was stripped o f his constitu tional rights by G ood­m an’s ru lin g saying “No, no t really. He (G oodm an) let me tell my v iew s.”

Professor discusses understanding

“Should We Believe W hat We Do N ot Understand?” is the question to be explored by a University o f Notre Dame faculty m em ber in a talk at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, Jan. 22 in N otre Dame’s Memorial Library Lounge.

Dr. David Schindler, an assistant professor in the G eneral Program of Liberal Studies, w hich is sponsoring his talk, is in his second year at N otre Dame. Schindler leads great books sem inars and teaches philosophy and theology tutorials.

Since 1974 Schindler has been as” sistant ed ito r o f C o m m u n io In ter­n a tio n a l C atholic R eview , and his articles have appeared in several journals including C om m un io , The T hom ist and the In te rn a tio n a l P hilosophica l Q uarterly. He is chairm an of the philosophy com m it­tee o f a four-year study of the “Foundations o f Moral E ducation” sponsored by the In ter University C om m ittee on Research and Policy Studies.

Schindler earned his docto ra te at the C larem ont G raduate School in 1976 w here he studied theology and philosophy of religion. In 1974-75 he was a Fulbright Scholar at the Uni­versity o f Innsbruck.

Committee plans formal

The Senior Formal C om m ittee has announced that Saturday, March 28 is the date for the annual event.

Like last year, the formal will be held in the Chicago M arriott bal­lroom. The bid price, tentatively set at $60, includes an hors’ doeuvres d inner for two, and dancing. The rate for a single, double, o r triple room in the M arriott will run about $40. A raffle will be held at Senior Bar Thursday night, Feb. 26, to give away a free bid.

Formal registration begins March 2 and will con tinue through March6. Room reservations may be made at the same tim e bids are purchased.

In gathering inform ation co ncern ­ing activities in Chicago during Senior Formal w eekend, com m ittee m em bers found that M y Fair Lady w ith Rex Harrison will be playing at the Arie C row n Theatre.

Page 5: Mardi Gras future Did U.S. taxpayers · 1/22/1981  · Americans held hostage by Iran for ... Reagan’s habits are in marked contrast to his predecessor, Jimmy Carter, who arose

The Observer Thursday, January 22,1981 — page 5

The late a fternoon sun g listens o f f o f one o f the fe w rem a in ing icicles. (P hoto by J o h n M acor)

(AP) — Stories o f beatings and o ther physical and m ental abuse by their Iranian captors surfaced yes­terday as the 52 em ancipated American hostages telephoned hom e to assure their relatives they are now "doing fine.”

The reports prom pted U.S. offi­cials to accuse the Iranian militants o f “serious m istreatm ent” of som e of the Americans during the 444 days they w ere held hostage.

State D epartm ent spokesm an Jack Cannon said in W iesbaden, West Germany, w here the ex hostages are undergoing medical examinations, that evidence o f the m istreatm ent was gleaned from prelim inary con ­versations w ith the victims.

Cannon said officials have “evidence of serious m istreatm ent in a num ber of cases during the period of their captivity.”

In phone calls to their relatives back hom e in the predaw n hours W ednesday, many of the ex captives didn’t talk about w hat had hap­pened, som e suggesting there w ould be m ore to tell later.

Some did.A M assachusetts man said he was

beaten and placed in solitary confinem ent for a total of five m onths for repeated attem pts to escape.

A young Marine sergeant from Texas, w ho had a too th knocked ou t by an Iranian guard, said he was told by an in terrogater trying to extract information from him that his mot-

. . .HostagesC ontinued fr o m page I

"Criminal acts ought to be con ­dem ned by all law loving, decent people of the world. It’s been in abom inable circum stances that will never be forgotten.”

Some form er hostages gathered on a balcony outside their hospital rooms, waving and clapping as Car­te r’s limousine drove up. Several of them, including Marine guards, w ore only light T-shirts and blue pajama bottom s in the sub freezing night air. The Marines appeared to have new haircuts.

A C arter aide said the private, 80- m inute m eeting was “em otional to the point o f awkwardness” — so moving that a photographer was asked to stop taking pictures. C arter spokesman Jody Powell said that as the form er president shook hands w ith each freed captive, “tears w ere welling in everybody’s eyes, the hostages’ and C arter’s."

Form er Secretary of State Edmund Muskie said C arter and his party received “a very warm, very friendly reception .”

As C arter left the hospital after an hour and 20 minutes, he em braced

Bruce Laingen, the charge d’affaires and senior diplom at in the U.S. Em­bassy w hen it was seiged.

In his statem ent at the Frankfurt airport after m eeting the form er hostages, C arter said the takeover of the U.S. Embassy on Nov. ,1979 and the holding of the hostages until

Disney moveCenter to Midwest

RICHMOND, Ind. (A P)- Walt Dis­ney Music Co. says it will move its record and tape d istribution centers to this city on the Indiana-Ohio bor­der because of its location in the cen te r o f the nation.

The announcem ent was made Tuesday by John R. W ood, p roduc­tion m anager for Walt Disney Music Co., o f Burbank, Calif.

Wood, w ho will move here to d irect the d istribution center, said the local staff will consist of about 35

w arehouse and office w orkers.The Richm ond cen te r will con ­

solidate d istribution cen te rs now located in Anaheim, Calif, and New York City.

W ood said he expects the first shipm ents from the new cen te r to begin in late March.

The firm d istributes Disneyland Buena Vista R ecord Co. selections, w hich are primarily ch ild ren’s records and tapes.

The firm will be located in a large warehuse nex t doo r to PRC reco rd ­ing Inc.

h er had died. He d idn’t learn that she was alive until he arrived w ith the o th er freed hostages early W ednes­day at a U.S. military hospital in Wiesbaden.

A colonel from Illinois said he spent a m onth in a “dungeon” and that the Iranians ransacked his house in Tehran and took all his posses­sions.

“Most o f them lost everything,” ex-hostage Richard Morefield, con ­sul general at the U.S. embassy in Tehran, told his wife in San Diego. “I w alked ou t w ith my w edding ring, and I had to fight for that.”

M orefield’s wife, Dorothea, said the Iranians "played unbelievably cruel games.”

“His disgust for his captors cam e through in every way,” she said.

Elizabeth Montagne, w ho was

am ong the 13 blacks and w om en released w ithin a couple o f w eeks af­te r the storm ing of the embassy on Nov. 4, 1979, said in an interview Tuesday that the hostages suffered m ostly “m ental abuse.”

Ms Montagne, w ho w ouldn’t talk about her ordeal until the o ther captives w ere free, said the Iranian m ilitants forced her to play Russian rou lette in an effort to obtain in­formation.

Richard Q ueen, w ho was released after 250 days because of illness, said in television interview s Tuesday and W ednesday that he and o ther hostages w ere held for nearly five m onths in a w indow less w arehouse basem ent they called "The Mush­room Inn, ” w here they w ere forbid­den to talk and w ere allowed just 20 m inutes o f fresh air a week.

The can is g re e n I ------------The b e e r is g o ld en ! —

It was b rew ed by Leprechauns ?

Isuppose it's possible —

FIGHTING IRISH

their release on Tuesday “was a criminal act that should be co n ­dem ned by all law loving people of the w orld.”

He described his m eeting w ith them as “the most moving and gratifying act” in his life.

Stuffed Pizza

O ur S p e c i a l t y $ 1 .0 0 off any size stuffed pizza

with student IDco u p o n g o o d thru Feb. 2 8

HOURS: T ues., Wed , Thurs

4 to 10 Fri. & Sat

4 to 11

1123 Spring Street 2 5 6 -2 6 2 0

Photograph a w a rd

Cocktail Hour 3 -82 mixed drinks for the price of one.

$ 2 .0 0 pitchers

— x

Friday Night |

I I I I I I I I I

Beatings, robbery

Hostages reveal mistreatment

ND studentAn award w inning picture, taken

by John Eugene Macor, Observer pho to editor, will be on display in the Equitable Gallery in New York City, Feb. 3-27, as part o f a presenta­tion of 800 finalists in the Kodak In­ternational N ew spaper Snapshot Awards. He also received a Kodak Centennial com m em orative plate w ith an 1890 picture taking scene in the cen te r as a part o f the com pany’s celebration of its 100th anniversary in 1980.

The exhibit includes the w inners o f local sum m er cos;tests conducted by 152 new spapers In the United

States, Canada and Mexico w ith m ore than 375,000 entries.

Macor, a N otre Dame junior, is rep resen ted by a black-and-white p ictu re o f a m other and her child at lakeside during sunset. It was a w in­ner in the B ridgew ater Courier- N ew s’ sum m er snapshot contest and as such was subm itted to the in ter­national com petition w here it w on a certificate o f merit.

The Equitable Gallery is at 1285 Avenue o f the Americas and is open to the public, free o f charge, from 10a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday.

STUDENT UNION RECORD STORE.„

LOCATION : first floor LaFortune HOURS: Mon-Fri 9 : 0 0 - 5 : 0 0 W H A T : orderingMon-Weds 9 : 0 0 - 5 : 0 0

Thurs 9 : 0 0 -1 2 :0 0 noon

IN STOCK SPECIALS

Springsteen - RIVER Elvis Costello - T A K IN G LIBERTIES Grover Washington - WINELIGHT John Lennon- DOUBLE F A N T A S Y Earl Klugh - LA T E N IG H T G U IT A R Eagles - LIVE

LIST

J V E 'V E M O V E D /

PRICES:

YOU PAY TA PES

5.98 1 4.19 1 4 .69

6.98 4.85 5.35

7.98 5.45 5.95

8.98 5.99 6.49

Page 6: Mardi Gras future Did U.S. taxpayers · 1/22/1981  · Americans held hostage by Iran for ... Reagan’s habits are in marked contrast to his predecessor, Jimmy Carter, who arose

Editorials Thursday January 22, 1981 — page 6

Can business ethics, personal morality mix?WASHINGTON — As the na­

tion ’s leading banker, W alter W riston of C iticorp , the global pow er w hich has offices in 92 coun tries, can rightly com m and atten tion when holding forth on the value of m oney. It’s when he talks about values them selves — values based on moral and ethical codes — that trouble starts.

In a recen t New Y orker article on C iticorp , W riston told the in­terv iew er tha cu rren t “ values are topsy-turvy. It boggles the mind — the transfer of personal in­tegrity to institutional integrity. Now college students have a mixed dorm itory , men live on one floor and women on the next, and they all sit around w orrying about w hether or not G eneral M otors is being honest. W hen 1 was in col­lege it was different. We are con­cerned about personal values. I believe that there are no institu ­tional values, only personal on es .”

The W riston philosophy is chilling. Though he is to be thanked for publicly expressing so brazenly w hat o ther men of financial pow er d iscreetly w hisper only inside their clubroom s, W riston is advancing the dangerous idea that institu ­tions should be allowed to func­tion outside the moral and ethical order.

The W riston brow prefers to be furrow ed about cam pus hanky- panky. The m orality of a G eneral M otors’ decision, say, to delay the m arketing of life-saving air bags some years back, is not the public’s concern . A ccording to the thinking that institu tions should be value-free, a vice presi­dent fo r an international bank is right to restra in him self from stealing his sec re ta ry ’s purse which she forgetfully leaves on her desk when she goes to the w ater cooler. But he is expected to say nothing when an institu ­

tional decision is made that denies equal opportunity to w om en and m inorities o r decisions that ignore public health, o rju s tice .

This division of m orality into personal and institu tional realm s, and never the tw ain shall m eet, is not new with W riston. W hat is astonishing, though, is that som eone of his rank and pow er fails to understand w hat so many o thers see as fundam ental. In “ An A m erican L ife ,” Jeb M agruder, one of the W atergate crim inals, says of him self and the o thers that “ we had the private m orality but not a sense of public m orality .”

M agruder, like W riston, was the ideal college boy: a m oralist when among the coeds but am oral when reflecting on the use of in­stitu tional pow er. M agruder’s d iscovery that it w asn’t enough to be personally moral is one that is routinely m ade by o thers in governm ent. In the new book,

“ Personal V alues in Public Policy ,” agovernm en t consu ltan t was quoted as saying that “ a lo t of decision-m aking takes place in governm ent as adversary o r ad­vocacy proceedings ra ther than on the basis o f moral judg­m ents... You make the best argu­m ent that you can possibly make as a law yer would make it in litigating a case for his client — quite independent of w hether or not you think it’s the right thing to d o .”

U nderlying the W riston philosophy — or ra th er the philosophy that has W riston as its la test and blun test cheerleader — is the notion that institu tins (corporations, unions, banks, clubs, churches, governm ents and schools) function best under anonym ity. Faceless, they easily becom e soulless. Should they go fu rther and becom e law less, the outrage over their crim es is m uted because the victim ization is im ­

personal. The co rporate price fixer never sees those whom he cheats and the cheated all too of­ten never know that they were taken.

But the effect o f an institu tion ’s value-free o r value-blind deci­sions are felt, even if it m ust be described fuzzily as “ the decline of quality” o r “ the low ering of s tan d ard s.” In the end, institu ­tional behavior should be held to as much moral accountability as personal behavior. And perhaps m ore, because the collective pow er of a w ealthy m ultinational institu tion has the potential for g rea ter destructiveness than an anti-social act of the lone in­dividual. As the old English verse goes:

the law locks up both man and w om an who steal the goose froom off the com ­mon but lets the greater felon loose who steals the com m on from the goose.

Panic in the real estate marketSeveral w eeks ago, the stock

m arket w ent into a panic when a man in Florida, who runs a private service fo r investors, called up 3,000 of his clients and told them to sell all their stock. The nex t morning, Wall S treet was in a panic and everyone was selling. A pparently , thousands of sane, educated people, who handle billions o f dollars of in­vestm en ts, got caught up in the selling fever at the sam e time. And people all over A m erica started w ondering, if one man

could make so m any bulls into bears overnight, w hether the stock m arket was a safe invest­ment.

A lso, if one m an could affect the stock m arkt with one telephone call, w hat about the o ther m arkets — particularly the real esta te m arket, which everyone says is overinfla ted?

I have th is nightm are that early one m orning I am going to get a phone call from my real estate broker, L ongw orth, who savs. “ Sell you r house right away. The

Doonesbury Garry Trudeau

HI, HONEY! HI, DEAR! I'M H0M£!

I DID UNTIL TUB AFTER­NOON PAPER ARRIVED. LOOK AT TH/5 DRAWING OF ME AND FRANK SINATRA GOING 10 THE GALA IN GANGSTER COSTUMES !

X*

THOSE DAMN CARTOONISTS ARE.. ^ CUT!

price is going to tu m b le .”“ B ut you told me tw o days ago

it w as going to go up!”“ D on’t ask questions. I’ve

been studying the classified ads and it’s tim e to bail o u t.”

I w ake up my wife and say, “ W e have to sell the h ouse .”

“ W hen?” she w ants to know. “ Right now. I ju s t got a call

from L ongw orth and he says we have to sell im m ediately, o r w e’ll lose ou r shirts. I’ll go dow n into the basem ent and make a “ For Sale” , sign. You clean up the house and repain t the k itch en .”

“ At four o ’clock in the m or­ning?”

“ We have to move fast before o th er people in the neighborhood are tipped o ff.”

I put on my bath robe, and go dow n to the cellar and nail a piece o f plyw ood onto a stake, and paint “ For Sale” in large black le tters.

My wife is on the ladder, paint­ing the ceiling. “ H urry up ,” I tell her, “ before it’s too la te .”

“ W here are we going to live if we sell the h ouse .”

“ D on’t ask stupid questions. W e’ve got to get rid of this place before the m arket co llap ses.”

A t five o 'c lck in the morning I’m driving the “ For Sale” sign into the ground.My neighbor Ewing hears me and com es out in his bathrobe. “ W hat the hell are you doing?”

I say, “ I’m only telling you this because I’m your friend. The real esta te m arket is going to collapse as soon as the m arket opens this morning. I got it on the hot line from my b roker, and he hasn’t been wrong since I subscribed to his se rv ice .”

Ewing says, “ T hanks fo r tellng m e” and rushes back into his house to m ake a “ F or Sale” sign. A pparently , he tells Sullivan, who lives next door, and Sullivan

is soon ou t nailing a “ For Sale” sigh on his door. A few m inutes la ter, Sym ington has one on his house, and so does C afritz, C on­nolly, Seigel and W inston.

W ord sw eeps like a brushfire through the neighborhood. The T ow er A partm ents, the

W estchester and the C olonnade also put up “ For Sale” signs, and by the tim e the real esta te m arkets open in the morning, everyone is standing in front of his house o r ■ apartm en t building, waiting to sell. As each hour passes, every hom eow ner keeps low ering his price. H ouses tha t people w ouldn’t have sold fo r $200,000 are now going for $125,000. Then they drop to $90,000, $80,000, $70,000. But there are still no takers. G uggenheim , in despera­tion, offers to sell me his house for $50,000, com pletely furnished,

Art Buchwaldbut I offer to sell him mine for $40,000, and he says he’ll take it.

In my nightm are I m ove into a H oliday Inn and get a call from Longw orth, who says, “ Well, was I right o r w as I w rong?”

“ You cou ldn ’t have been more right. I’ve never seen the real esta te m arket in this tow n take a nose dive like this. I m anaged to sell out at $40,000.”

“ The reason I’m callng ,” L ongw orth says, “ is that I’v e ju s t been studying the new indicators and it’s now tim e to buy real esta te again .”

I wake up my wife. “ G et dressed. We have to go over and see G uggenheim about buying our house .”

“ For how m uch?”“ If he subscribes to

L ongw orth’s service w e’ll be lucky if he gives it to us for $200,000. ”

Box Q, Notre Dame, IN 46556 The Observer is an independent newspaper published by the students of the

University of Notre Dame du Lac and Saint M ary’s College. It does not necessarily reflect the policies of the administration of either institution. The news is reported as accurately and as objectively as possible. Editorials represent the opinion of a majority of the Editorial Board. Commentaries, opinions, and letters are the views of their authors. Column space is available to all members of the community, and the free expression of varying opinions on campus, through letters, is encouraged.

Editorial Board and Department ManagersEditor-in-Chief. Paul MullaneyManaging Editor....................................Mark RustEditorials Editor. Michael OnufrakSenior Copy Editor..................Mary Fran CallahanExecutive News Editor Tom JackmanNews Editor........................................Pam DegnanNews Editor........................................Lynne DaleySMC Executive Editor...................... Margie BrassilSMC News Editor.................................Mary Leavitt

Sports Editor....................................Beth HuffmanFeatures Editor................................ Molly WoulfePhoto Editor................................. .John Macor

Business Manager............................ Greg HedgesController .......................................,J|m RuddAdvertising Manager................... ....... Mark EllisCirculation Manager . ................ Beth HackettProduction Manager ................ Fohn McGrath

Page 7: Mardi Gras future Did U.S. taxpayers · 1/22/1981  · Americans held hostage by Iran for ... Reagan’s habits are in marked contrast to his predecessor, Jimmy Carter, who arose

Features Thursday, January 22, 1981 — page 7

I 1

MoreGeorge Thorogooti

and the Destroyers

More George Thorogood and the Des (Rounder)I t's becom ing m ore and m ore difficult to differen­

tiate betw een the blues and rhythm n’ blues w ith G eorge Thorogood, and that’s fine w ith me. Thorogood heads further away from the mainstream on More George Thorogood a n d the Destroyers, a reversal o f the trend you expect from most rapidly rising b lues/rock bands, while covering such m asters as Hound Dog Taylor, Elmore Jam es, and several o t­hers, conform ing their w orks to his ow n distinctive style.

Thorogood is a constant rem inder o f the value of that vanishing breed, the Independent record label. They expose us to varieties o f music w hich the con­glom erates aren’t willing to take a chance on, and they often discover future stars w ho have been passed up by the big studios. Marshall Chess, w orking ou t o f the trunk of his car, discovered som e of the greatest blues artists o f all tim e for Chess Records. Rounder Records, traditionally a blucgrass folk country label, took a chance on George Thorogood after he was snubbed by MCA. I for one am awfully glad they did.

It doesn 't seem like alm ost th ree years since Thorogood’s last release, M ove I t On Over, (disregard please MCA s release o f dusty vault tapes in the in ter­im ), hut he’s been using that tim e to sharpen up his blues licks. He has also added a sax player, Hank Car­ter, to the Delaware Destroyers. C arter gets to show off his chops early, on M ore's second tune, the in­strum ental “Kids Erom Philly," and it’s also a great ex ­ample o f T horogood’s facility w ith the blues.

Thorogood leads the band in its charging rhythm beneath C arter’s melody, and the twangy guitarist can make a standard ITV V IV 1 blues progression sound like a fresh new riff. Meanwhile, C arter is laying dow n a funky, baritone solo that sounds like som ething C larence Clem ons might have done if he w ere still w ith Jam es Brown.

The album 's opening cu t may be the standout, a super version of Willie D ixon’s “I’m W anted,” w hich sounds w ritten specifically for t this band. As in “Cocaine Blues ” o r “It Wasn’t Me,” T horogood plays the fugitive role well, w ith the band frantically ch u rn ­ing away as if they w ere running from som ething. It’s a typical tem po for Thorogood — fast.

Double tim e seem s to be the norm for the Destroyers, especially on a re-make of "N ighttim e,” w hich not only supersedes the version from the first album, but, sorry to say, blows the J. Geils version out o f the water. Thorogood’s guitar seem s to be ex h o rt­ing the rest o f the band to catch up to him as he chugs through these riffs at a wicked pace. It’s not an easy task, but d rum m er Jeff Simon and bassist Billy Blough are up to it.

Thorogood could be giving us an idea o f the d irec­tion he’s headed w ith an entirely different num ber, Johnny Lee H ooker’s "O ne Way Ticket ” T horogood’s guitar phrasing is very faithful to the Hooker style, and the arrangem ent is, like H ooker’s, very spare and slow. But Thorogood has the specter o f Hooker looking over his shoulder w hile he sings, and George just can’t m atch the angst that Hooker produces so naturally. I mean, w hen Johnny Lee says, “my baby left m e,” you just kind of nod your head and say, “yeah, too bad. ” Thorogood, w ho always had the tendency to make me laugh ("O ne Bourbon, O ne Scotch, O ne Beer,” “Cocaine Blues” ), doesn’t have that blues credibility yet.

G eorge is m uch m ore at hom e w ith stuff like Hound Dog Taylor’s "Just Can’t Make It,” o r Elmore Jam es’ “Goodbye Baby,” w hich is highlighted by the raspy vibrato o f sax man C arter as he honks ou t a fine bridge. Upbeat tunes like Carl Perkins’ “Restless” o r “House of Blue Lights" spotlight T horogood’s slurring, rollicking guitar style, w hile show ing off the num erous in­fluences that have m ade his music unique.

All told, More could be T horogood’s finest album, and it should excite those w ho w ere afraid M ove I t On Over foretold a sellout. In fact, Thorogood is headed in the o th er d irection — and I’m excited.

Tom Jackman. XT' / > ,

Dire Straits Making Movies (Warner Bros.)

W hen Dire Straits first arrived on the music scene early in 1979 w ith “Sultans o f Swing,” they w ere

hailed as one of the freshest and most exciting new groups in quite som e time. Both that single and their first a album, Dire Straits, made the top five on the charts. Lead singer and guitarist Mark Knopfler ended up doing session w ork for such standouts as Bob Dylan, and their distinctive sound becam e widely im ­itated, but never duplicated.

Such was the case w ith the ir second album, C om ­m u n iq u e , which, while a high quality album, was very similar to its predecessor. Possibly as a result o f this, the m id-1979 release had now here near the sales and chart action of the first album. Dire Straits was looked upon in som e circles as a one-hit w onder. However, the hand’s new album, M aking M ovies, should change all that.

Despite a layoff from record ing for nearly a year and a half, the shrinkage o f the band from four to three (David Knopfler, Mark’s brother, left the group), and their th ird set o f p roducers in as many albums, the Straits have com e out w ith their best LP so far. It com bines many o f the excellent features o f their debut album w ith the pervasive influence o f Bruce Springsteen and friends, and the end result is superb.

Musically, they have never sounded better. The amplified acoustic guitar w hich has becom e their tradem ark is still there, but it is not nearly as dom inant as it used to be. Instead, the th ree man band em ploys a session musician, som ething the usually self-

contained group has never done before. He is Roy Bit- tan o f Springsteen’s E Street Band, w ho plays various keyboard instrum ents. Thanks to the production of the band’s leader Mark Knopfler and Springsteen’s en ­gineer Jimm y Iovine, piano and organ becom e dom inant in roughly half the songs, most notably in “Tunnel o f Love,” especially its intro; and in the first single from the album, “Skateaway.” The w hole al­bum, as a result, sounds different than its p redeces­sors.

A difference is som ew hat evident in Knopfler’s lyrics as well. M aking M ovies is an aptly—named LP, for each o f the seven songs is like its ow n short flick. True, m uch o f the material on D ire Straits and C om ­m u n iq u e was similar in this respect. But while the songs on the o th er album s had a British feel to them, including geographical references obscure to most Statesiders, the “m ovies” scrip ted here are m ore American. In fact, som e of the settings ( th e streets, am usem ent parks, e t a l.) are vaguely rem iniscent of Springsteen's.

H owever, Knopfler manages to get around that potential problem . His voice, w hile not great, is b e tte r than Springsteen’s; and enough o f the old Dire Straits sound is retained to make claims that he is attem pting to becom e a British Springsteen basically unfounded.

Finally, W arner B rothers has list-priced M aking M ovies at *7.98, as opposed to the *8.98 list given to its o th er m ajor artists. Perhaps they are taking the relatively low production costs (on ly four musicians and a short tim e in the s tud io ) into account. Or, p e r­haps, they no longer consider Dire Straits a "m ajor” artistic group because o f the ir long layoff. M aking M ovies should change that, for it is their best album so far, and is deserving o f the same success their debut

Trivia Quiz X : True or False ?

Welcom e back, trivia fans! Again this sem ester, I will a ttem pt to stum p you w ith an assortm ent o f rock trivia quizzes. Also, the

*10 prize to the person w ith the most co rrec t answ ers is back. The answ ers to the last trivia quiz, w hich w ere inadvertently not published before break, appear below this w eek’s quiz. There was no w inner on that quiz. Six o f last year’s nine quizzes w ere that way, a situation I hope to see rectified this tim e around.

In pursuit o f that goal, the first quiz o f 1981 is a true and false type. D eterm ine w hether each statem ent below is true o r false. If you feel it is false, answ er the question in parentheses after it.

1. "W hole Lotta Love ” was Led Zeppelin’s only Top Ten hit single, based upon the B illboard charts. (N am e one o th e r .)

2. "Hey Ju d e” by the Beatles was the first single o f over seven m inutes’ duration to m ake B illboard's top ten. (Name the first, by title and artist.)

3. Billy Joe l’s first solo album was P iano M an. (N am e i t . )4. The first rock era group to have tw o consecutive num ber one

singles was the Beatles. (W hat group did it first?)5. The soul group known as the Moments, upon changing labels,

changed its name to Ray, Goodman, and Brown. (W hat group changed its name to Ray, Goodman, and Brown?)

6. The C arpenters’ album Ticket to Ride was originally called The Carpenters. (W hat was its original title?)

7. All o f the following sports heroes have made records: Muhammad Ali, Dave Schultz, Greg Luzinski, Terry Bradshaw. (W hich of these four has not?)

8. The biggest hit by a British artist on the American soul charts was "You Sexy Thing” by Hot Chocolate. (W hat was it?)

9. The song originally in tended as the American follow up to the Beatles’ “I W ant to Hold Your Hand” was “Roll O ver B eethoven ” In­stead, “Can’t Buy Me Love” was chosen. (W hat was in tended as the original followup?)

10. Seventh Sojourn was the Moody Blues' seventh album. (W hat was?)

The answ ers to the last quiz before break are as follows: ( 1 ) Paul M cCartney w ro te The F am ily W ay and the them e song for Live a n d Let Die-, ( 2 ) Roy W ood was the Move m em ber w ho form ed the E lectric Light O rchestra; ( 3 ) Cliff Richard was th e British Elvis Pres­ley; ( 4 ) Jeff Beck left the Yardbirds to form his ow n group; ( 5 ) Ian Stewart was the sixth Rolling Stone; ( 6 ) G ordon Sinclair was the ol­dest person ever to make the top 40, w ith his version o f “The Americans”; ( 7 ) Terry Jacks was the ex- Poppy Family m em ber w ho had a num ber one reco rd as a solo; ( 8 ) David Gates w ro te the tw o hit songs in the mid-sixties before becom ing lead singer o f Bread; ( 9 ) Vince Everett was the Elvis Presley sound alike; and (1 0 ) Johnny Crawford was the M ouseketeer w ho sang “Cindy's Birthday” and “Y our Nose Is G onna Grow."

Tim Neely

album had.

Tim Neely

Bruce: is itW ell, w e all lined up for the lottery, and we all lined up for tickets,

and now he’s finally here. 1 w onder if going to a Bruce Springsteen concert is w orth all the hassle?

O f course, people as crazy about the Boss as N otre Dame is w ould cross dozens o f m inefields just to praise the ground Bruce trods upon On the night o f the concert, th ere’ll be so many Springsteen fanatics drooling over th ier souvenir program s and "Boss" t shirts in the ACC, you’ll think you w ere in Hoboken, not South Bend.

This, in itself, isn’t so bad — heroes arc sparse these days, and the them es that Springsteen specializes in (loneliness, isolation, escape, and hope ) touch many young prisoners o f today's urban and suburban doldrum s deeply. This simply proves that the man is an artist w ith the ability to reach vast num bers in a highly personal way. Bruce’s music is, for many, thfc purest expression of their own frustrations w ith society and the establishm ent.

The last tim e the Boss perform ed in the ACC, I decided to go "just to see w hat all the fuss is about.” I rem em ber w hen he threw him self out into the audience in the m iddle o f the second number. "T here’s no way this guy is going to keep this m om entum up for long,” I said to myself.

But he did. For th ree hours. Nonstop. I becam e a believer.O ne w riter once said, “I have seen the future o f rock and roll, and he

is Bruce Springsteen.” After that concert tw o years ago, I w ould have to agree. Live, on stage, no one can touch him.

But the question is, is it w orth all the hassle? If Bruce repeats the intensity w ith w hich he played last tim e in the ACC, it will be. If he fails to do so, it will be one o f the biggest disappointm ents in my recen t history

I have to review the concert. I don’t really w ant to do it. I was disappointed by Bruce’s last album and I have the strangest feeling I’ll be disappointed by this concert. I keep w ondering if he can m atch the sheer vitality o f his last show here. G ood concerts are a rarity at N otre Dame, mainly because o u r crow ds are listless and passive — not a Springsteen sort o f ga thering But if anyone can instill a little ex c ite ­m ent into a group, the Boss can. If he does, the concert will be a good one. If he can’t, he probably w on’t pu t up w ith it and he’ll probably leave. As a result, the quality o f the perform ance depends m ostly upon the people w ho stood in line to see the show.

Therefore, h ere ’s a message to all those w ho bought tickets for the biggest musical event this year: d o n ’t make me w rite a negative review have fun, o r else.

O therw ise, it w on’t be w orth it.

Scoop Sullivan

Page 8: Mardi Gras future Did U.S. taxpayers · 1/22/1981  · Americans held hostage by Iran for ... Reagan’s habits are in marked contrast to his predecessor, Jimmy Carter, who arose

Today Thursday, January 22, 1981 — page 8

Campus•4 :30 p.m. — ro te awards: change of com m and, naval rote, stepan center.•6 :30 p.m. — organizational m eeting for prim ary day school, 2nd floor lafortune, north alcove.•7,9,11 p.m. — harold and maude, thursday and friday, engineering auditorium , II . •7 :30 p.m. — lecture: “should w e believe that we cannot un ­derstand?” professor david schindler, n.d. m em orial library lounge, sponsored by the general program o f liberal studies.•7 :30 p.m. — film: “bicycle th ie f’, annenberg auditorium , (sn ite m useum ), sponsored by the departm en t o f com m unica­tion and theatre.•7 :30 p.m. — basketball: n.d. w om en vs valporaiso, a c.c. •7 :30 p.m. — m eeting: faculty senate, room 202, c.c.e.•8 :00 p.m. - recital: professor b ru ce gustafcon, harpsichord, Stapleton lounge, smc.•8 :00 p.m. — lecture: "am erican pastorialism recon­sidered ,” professor leo r. marx, m.i.t., m em orial library auditorium . sponsored by evolutionary images o f man series.•9-11 p.m. — farley night at the nazz.

Molarity

A R E

JU S T THINKING

-I 'M M ' s s m JoHN LENNoN. B DE X OUEee you w o u lW t UNPEFfSTANV

IM **MV ARMS.

NO, I UAJPER5TANP. I REALLY LIKEP Hie MUSIC TOO

Michael Molinelli

How c o u l o youPYOU VON'T TAKE ANY DRUG 5 //

No s o r x HAVE DKU/NK 7UP TO EXCS6S

Peanuts Charles Schulz

HERE'S THE WORLD . FAMOUS LAWYER LEAVING

THE COURTHOUSE ~c&~

TKDClub -

resumespractices

The N otre Dame Tae K won Do Club resum es prac tice sessions on Tuesday, Jan. 27, at 6 p.m. in Gym 4 of the A.C.C. New m em bers, both novices and experts, are w elcom e. Call Ray at 3185 for additional in­formation.

CILAplans meeting

CILA (C om m unity for the In terna­tional Lay A postolate) will hold a G eneral M eeting on Sunday, at 6:45 p.m., in the Library Lounge. Old and new m em bers are encouraged to at end Final plans for the W orkshop

on Jan. 30-31 and the re trea t on Feb. 21-22 w ith Henri N ouw en will be discussed.

1981 U nited F ea tu re S yndicate. Inc.

THE JUDGE CALLED ME A NI6M EN06, A B0W YER AND A SNA FFLER!

I GUESS THAT'S WHY YOU 6 0 TO LAW SCHOOL

(_ /A.1ZO 7

. . 5 0 YOU KNOW WHAT YOU'RE BEING CALLED'

S T

< u / /

/ - &

The Daily Crossword

1 2 3 5 6 7 8 10 11 12 13

14 15

116

17 18 19

20

■ "22

_

■ "24 25 26

i

_

■ „ 28 29 30

31

■ . ■„

34_

■35

_

■36

37

■»

_

■ .

40 41_

■ .

43_

■44

45 46 47

■48 49 50 51

52 53

54 ■ " | .

57

1 " ■-

ACROSS 31 First rate 45 Jockey1 Choice 32 — and Eddie5 Flat-bot­ penates 48 Deform

tomed boat 33 Anais — 52 Shirk10 Screen 34 Fleshy responsi­14 Tract fruit bilities15 a Gre­ 35 Tend 54 Ballet

cian Urn" 36 Hat fabric move16 Woodwind 37 Before gram 55 Flynn of17 Job done or center films

perfunc­ 38 Light boat 56 Room intorily 39 Syrup tree Mazatlan

20 Trained in 40 Activate 57 Retaineda hospital a dead 58 Italian

21 Salem’s battery poetstate 42 Amy, for 59 Instrument

22 Did garden one suff.work 43 Emerald

23 Tribe Isle DOWN24 Complete 44 Market, 1 Indonesian27 Kind of job old style island

2 goYesterday’s Puzzle Solved: bragh”

©1981 by C hicago Tribune-N.Y. News Synd. Inc. All Rights Reserved

1 /2 2 /8 1

E A AE ■ dLi ImIe E KEA F 1 L 0 M A iM 1 s. A ■ w AE S T RL E TE X c H A A G ■ k R E A ■

A £J E ■ M E 1 N ■ ■ 1k 1 A A A Y■ i 1 A B fflJA R 0L A E A E ■ P T r E | ■ D U 0L ffiA s | A A K E S 1 A k A NA A E ■ 1 1 1 E A MA R TRj E H E A L E A■ 1 A E l K A■ ■ ■ 0.X 1 ■ A 0 k 1

P. E A o . A ■ 1 T A A I A E AB 1 A R M A l R l A E_ T | c A R ER I 1 E k 1 R E A A A kE A T A ■ 1 A A E_ A 1 A Y A E

3 Cult4 Kind of pay5 Hat6 Tacked on7 Peruse8 Political

party9 Student

10 Trice11 “Carry —

stick”12 Tolerable13 Sharp18 Began19 Exams23 Denounce

24 Superior25 Figure of

sp eech26 Copy27 Danish

is lan d s28 Bungling29 Cecil De —30 S tag e

d irection32 Thrust

forward35 B ecam e

sm aller36 M ost

rem ote38 Arab

cap ita l39 Slough41 W ent in a

certa in d irection

42 Rhine resid en ce

44 City in N. Dak.

45 C oleridge’s river

46 Annoy47 Line a roof48 Dawn49 Partly

open50 Shirt or

pony51 Israeli

s ta te sm a n53 FDR

agency

"The next day, John was at the river again with two of his disciples. As he watched Jesus walk by, he said, Look, There is the Lamb of God!’ The two disciples heard what he said, and followed Jesus. When Jesus turned around and noticed them following him, he asked them, ‘What are you looking for?’ They said to him, Rabbi, where do you stay?’

“COME AND SEE,”he answered. So they went to see where he was lodged, and stayed with him that day. ”

GENTLEMEN:

THE FRANCISCAN FRIARSINVITE YOU TO “COME AND SEE”,

VOCATION RETREAT JAN 30-FEB 1

FRANCISCAN RETREAT CENTER Mount Saint Francis, Indiana

For your reservation or for further information contact Friar Richard or Friar William:St. Anthony Novitiate1316 W. Dragon Trail Transportation will be providedMishawaka, IN 46544 for ND students(219)255-2442

SCUBA LESSONSSpring Semester

Com e to Room 2D LaFortune Center 7:00 PM — Jan. 22 Bring $30 D eposit

Find out about our

Bahamas Trip for Spring Break!

Call 272-8607 or 272-9780

A qu apro Scub a C en ter

Page 9: Mardi Gras future Did U.S. taxpayers · 1/22/1981  · Americans held hostage by Iran for ... Reagan’s habits are in marked contrast to his predecessor, Jimmy Carter, who arose

The Observer Thursday, January 22, 1981 — page 9

n

>

Squander lead

Belles drop to 64

Tfe/s ,v/«m d u n k by fre sh m a n Tom S luby p u t the Irish ahead o f visiting San Francisco, 61-55, w ith 5:48 to p lay. S luby later h it tw o clu tch free throw s w ith 1:52 rem ain ing to g ive Notre D am e a seem ingly com fortab le 72-66 lead. S luby p la yed 22 m in u tes last night, scored fo u r po in ts, b locked a shot, d ished o u t an assist a n d p u lled dow n a p a ir o f rebounds.

By DAVE WILSONSports Writer

As if reverting to old ways, Saint Mary’s com m itted a num ber of cost­ly turnovers in the second half o f last night’s basketball game w ith Saint Joseph’s College, and the Belles proceeded to d rop their fourth game of the year, 72-62. In a contest similar to Monday night’s loss to Taylor, the Belles played an o u t­standing first half and then seem ed to slip away under the strong defenses o f the Pumas.

“I think we played a super first half,” said Coach Jerry Dallcssio. ” 1

suppose if you had to pinpoint the key to the loss, it w ould be their defense. They had a 1-3-1 trap that just killed our offense.”

“Saint Jo e ’s d idn’t seem to miss a basket the entire second half,” he continued. “We tried all ou r defensive patterns on them , and no t­hing worked. I guess our frustration led to the large num ber of tu r­novers.”

Dallcssio does appear optim istic despite the loss. He poin ted out St. Joe’s impressive 10-2 record, as well as the Puma’s success against Saint Mary’s in the past. The loss d ropped the Belles to 6-4.

“We take our games one at a tim e,” he declared. “The losses to Taylor and Saint Jo e ’s have to be put behind us, because we have a tough Butler team on our schedule this Saturday, and the rem atch w ith N otre Dame next W ednesday.”

The Belles w ere impressive, both in scoring and offense. They held a 10 point lead at the half, 33-23.

However, the Puma’s cam e out roaring in the second half, and, w it­hin nine minutes, a 10 point lead belonged to them . Kelly Good and Rhonda H ellenburg led the Pumas w ith 21 and 20 points respectively.

For the Belles, Ann Armstrong p roduced another im pressive effort

w ith 17 points, backed by Maureen King w ith 11 points, Mary Pat Sit lington w ith 10, and Tracce Hargreaves w ith eight. G retchen Meyer and Mary Bayless bo th th rew in six, while Kim W orks and Cheryl Sweeney cam e off the bench to score tw o apiece.

Ailing Irish host ValpoBy KELLY SULLIVANWomen's Sports Editor

An ailing N otre Dame basketball team may get a shot in the arm tonight w hen the Irish w om en en ­tertain Valparaiso in the ACC at 7:30 p.m. Although four starters return from last year’s C rusader club, the visitors have never beaten Notre Dame in six previous outings, falling victim in a 65-55 contest last season.

But the Irish have had problem s of their ow n recently. Coach Mary DiStanislao’s charges w ere pounded by Division I schools Miami (O h io ) and Illinois Chicago Circle over the weekend. Still, the first year m entor has an optim istic outlook.

“W here there 's life, th ere ’s hope, ” she says. “We’re having execution problem s that we have to iron out, but as long as w e can see areas to im prove upon, it’s just a m atter of going back to square one. ”

Sophom ore Shari Matvey con ­tinues to pace the Irish In the scoring departm ent w ith a 15.1

point per game average. The Youngstown, Ohio, p roduct has hit double figures in her last seven games, and In nine of the last 10, en rou te to becom ing N otre Dame’s all tim e career scoring leader. She led all scorers on Sunday w ith a 29 point effort, and her 18 rebounds w ere a personal career best.

Freshman Jenny Klauke, one of tw o Irish players on scholarship, continued to show prom ise w ith a 30-point ou tpu t in the tw o w eekend games.

"Jenny's play certainly was encouraging, ” notes her coach. Her scoring, and the fact that now that she’s a little m ore experienced — playing w ith m ore poise — is hel­ping to solve som e o f o u r problem s at forward.”

After the 93-53 thrashing by Miami, DiStanislao started an en tire ­ly different line-up in Sunday's co n ­test w ith Chicago Circle, but doesn 't feel that will be necessary tonight.

See VALPO, p ag e 11

7 a L J1

NOTRE DAME STUDENT UNIONSPRING BREAK IN DAYTONA BEACH

MARCH 1 3 - 2 2 , 1 9 8 1

$207$195

4 PER ROOM(2 Double B ed s)

6 PER ROOM(3 Double B eds)

TRIP INCLUDES

• Round trip m otor coach transportation on first c la ss charter co a ch es leaving th e cam pus Friday evening M arch 1 3 and traveling straight through with plenty of partying to Daytona B each , arriving th e following day. The return trip d ep arts th e follow­ing Sat. in th e afternoon, and arrives back on cam p us th e n ext day.

• A full sev en n ights accom m od ation s a t th e Plaza H otel of Daytona Beach, Florida.

• A grea t tim e in D aytona with special p arties and activities.

• Optional trip to D isney World available.

• All ta x es and gratuities.

SIGN UP NOW AT THE TICKET OFFICE IN THE LA FORTUNE BUILDING 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. MON.-FRI.

OR CALL 2 8 3 -3 0 3 1 (after five 2 8 3 -6 2 8 3 )

Page 10: Mardi Gras future Did U.S. taxpayers · 1/22/1981  · Americans held hostage by Iran for ... Reagan’s habits are in marked contrast to his predecessor, Jimmy Carter, who arose

The Observer Thursday, January 22, 1981 — page 10

..

Jack McKinney

A b a ll-h a n d lin g O rlando Woolridge. (P hoto by Jo h n M acor)

MICHIGAN — =SNO-N-GO REPORTSSnow, ski, snowmobile and road reports 24 hours a day. Free literature available.

a

Call toll-free _ 800-248-5700

ATTENTION JUNIOR CLASSSeating for President’s Dinner

Junior Parent’s WeekendLaFortune Main Lounge

Thurs., Jan. 22, 7-10 p.m.Fri.Jan. 23, 6-9 p.m.

For Seating Arrangements the Following In­formation Is Necessary:

1 )Each person may bring 3 ID’s total (including his own)2 ) Parents’ full names and home addresses will be required

for each student ID.3 ) Number of people attending per family.

For those wishing to sit together involving more than one table, there m ust be one representative per table to make seating arrangements.

We will no t sign up anyone who does not have the above in­formation or who has not returned reservations for the Presi dent’s Dinner Maximum Seating Per Table: 9

IIIIII

!

RIVER CITY RECORDSNorthern Ind iana’s Largest Selection of Albums & Tapes a n d Lowest Prices!

Why pay m ore a t the mails?

$1.00 OFF!any regular album or tape purchase with this coupon.Limit 1 per person. Expires

JAN. 31, 1981

• Open until 10:00 every night.• ND/SMC checks cashed up to $20.00

over purchase amount.• Record crates available.

RIVER CITY RECORDS50970 U S 31 North

3 miles from campus next to Afs Supermarket

277-4242

!i

ii

iiI

Beating the odds—handilyCHICAGO — The game itself, the Indiana Pacers

against the Chicago Bulls in ancient Chicago Stadium, was nothing m ore than a m atchup o f tw o C entral Divi­sion rivals battling for a playoff berth in the m iddle o f an endless 82 -game NBA schedule. But it was also the con ­tinuation o f an ongoing, alm ost unbelievable soap opera o f sorts, that began on a fateful day in N ovem ber, 1979.

It was a sunny autum n afternoon in Southern Califor­nia, and the head coach of the Los Angeles Lakers at that time, Jack McKinney, was about to em bark on a friendly game of tennis w ith his then assistant coach, Paul Wes- thead. “The last thing I rem em ber was getting the bicycle ou t o f the shop and hopping on it,” McKinney says now. “W hatever happened after that is a total blank.”

W hat d id happen is no t exactly known; bu t as som e eyew itnesses tell it, as McKinney was riding dow n a steep hill, the bicycle som ehow malfunctioned. McKin­ney was hurled over the handlebars, and landed head­first on the pavem ent, knocking him unconscious. W hen the param edics arrived, tw o of them determ ined that he was already dead. O ne param edic, though, felt that McKinney could be revived because he looked, and indeed was, in peak physical condition.

Jack McKinney spen t ten days in a com a in the in­tensive care unit o f a Los Angeles hospital. D uring that period, he was listed in very critical condition and many of his vital signs w ere deteriorating. But, miraculously, he regained consciousness and — eventually — recovered to resum e his healthy, active life. While he was recuperating, it was agreed upon to let W esthead take contro l of the Lakers for the rem ainder o f the 79-80 campaign, and let McKinney regain his old job fo r the ’80-’81 season.

W hen Paul W esthead took over the head coaching reigns, the Lakers’ reco rd was 10-4, good enough for first place in the NBA Pacific Division. They w ere playing their best basketball since the early ’70s, w hen guys nam ed Chamberlain, West, Baylor and G oodrich w ere form ing a Laker dynasty. It was McKinney, though, w ho had laid the foundation for the ’79-’80 Lakers, in­corporating and stressing a team concep t on a team bur­dened w ith too m u ch talent — players like Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Magic Johnson, Jamaal Wilkes, and Norm Nixon. It was a difficult task, one that Gene Shue ( to cite one exam ple ) was unable to accom plish w ith Philadel­phia in the mid-70’s w hen he had Julius Erving, George McGinnis, Darryl Dawkins, and Lloyd Free on the court at the same time. But McKinney, it seem ed, had been successful.

W esthead’s job was simple, for he already knew McKinney’s system by heart. U nder W esthead, the Lakers w on the NBA C ham pionship last season, defeat

Ekis Needles ISperts W r i te r !

ing the Sixers in six games. But w hile that series was being played, ano ther off-the co u rt dram a was unfold­ing.

Before Game Four, Laker ow ner Jerry Buss, one of those greedy business moguls w ith lots o f m oney and little em otions, announced a decision that probably took him all o f tw o m inutes to make. In essence, Buss said, “Paul W esthead is my coach next season. Jaclt McKinney? W ho’s he?”

And so, Jack McKinney, w ho had built the fram ew ork for a Laker cham pionship, w ho had nearly lost his life, had now lost his job, thanks to the spur o f the m om ent decision of an insensitive idiot o f an ow ner. He was, in layman’s term s, pim ped royally.

“Jerry Buss never to ld m e anything about my firing,” said an em bittered McKinney. “Actually, I found out w hen I called hom e to see how things w ere. My son told me he had heard it on the radio.” But Jack is back inthe NBA now as head coach of the Indiana Pacers, an old ABA transfer that, before this season, had never even approached the .500 level, let alone the NBA playoffs. Now, McKinney has perform ed his magic once again, transform ing a perennial doorm at o f a team into a legitim ate playoff co n ten d e r in only h a l f a season.

“It really hasn’t been anything outstanding that I’ve done,” said McKinney in his su ite at th e Chicago D ow ntow n M arriott Hotel. “It’s been the players. They’re beginning to believe in them selves. My favorite expression has always been, W inning builds co n ­fidence, and confidence builds w inning.’ It took about 10 or 15 games this year, bu t I think the players finally have that confidence in the ir ow n abilities.”

On this night, the Bulls, thanks to a 76 po in t second half outburst, defeated the Pacers, 123-105. But In­diana’s reco rd stood at 29-20, nine games over .500, and they w ere in second place in th e Midwest Division, fourth overall in the Eastern C onference, and in excel­lent position to cap ture a playoff position com e April.

And they ow e their success to one man, a man w ho cam e perilously close to death last year, a m an w ho was unfairly rem oved from his job last season, a man w ho has overcom e m uch adversity to single-handedly change the fortunes o f a dying team.

A man nam ed Jack McKinney.

Sports StaffMANDATORY MEETING

ton ight 6:30 p.m .

...Cheer

Som e say FIGHTING IRISH is b re w ed under the Golden Dome —

Don't be l ieve it. Its b re w e d at the end of the rainbow by Leprechauns .

N ow Available — at the en d o f your

favorite rainbow & other drinking ________em poriums.__________

__

SPRINGBREAK

’81!

O cean Front Hotel Rooms in Lauderdale

This Spring Break?Student Suntrips o f f e r s :

♦ As low as $1 3 9 / p e r s o n / w k$ All m ote ls convenien t ly

located on the strip♦ Limited sp a c e ava i lab leFor Reservation Info, call tol l-free 1 -8 0 0 - 8 4 8 - 9 5 4 0

In Ohio 1 -8 0 0 -2 8 2 -3 4 3 2A R RAN G EM EN TS BY STU D E N T S U N T R IP S INC

C on tinued fr o m page 12B roughtdn

described, b u t said it was a com m on problem at universities around the nation. He also added that it was against his advisem ent that the squad drove to both Atlanta and N ew York, explaining that he had suggested that half the squad fly to each site.

“Most people don’t realize how dem anding and tim e-consum ing cheerlead ing is,” said McDonnell. “T here’s a lot o f sacrifice and com ­m ittm ent involved.

“The issue is no t settled ,” M cDon­nell said. “But that makes it sound like those w ere th e reasons for people leaving the squad. That’s what makes it incorrect.

“I feel very badly for Joe O’Brien (th e business m anager for the Ath­letic D epartm ent),” said McDonnell, w ho w en t on to explain how several o f the occurrences Broughton described cou ldn’t have been avoided. “The A thletic D epartm ent has been very good to us. 1 think som e of the kids might regret w hat was said.”

I think so, too, especially the ones w ho left th e squad for valid reasons. But I w o n d er if Paul B roughton does.

Buy Observer

Classifieds

Page 11: Mardi Gras future Did U.S. taxpayers · 1/22/1981  · Americans held hostage by Iran for ... Reagan’s habits are in marked contrast to his predecessor, Jimmy Carter, who arose

Sports Briefsby The Observer and The Associated Frets

Today is the deadline for interhall sign-ups in m en’s and w om en's volleyball, doubles racquetball and doubles handball. All participants must have p roo f o f insurance on file in the interhall office. Any questions, please call the interhall office at 6100 o r stop by C-2 of the ACC.

Oakland com erback Lester Hayes says hejust might catch m ore passes than Harold Charmichael in Sunday’s Super Bowl game. “If he wants to catch any passes, he b e tte r not go on my side of the field, 'cause if he’s on my side, he’s gonna have a hard tim e,” Hayes said yesterday. "It’s a fact; he’d b e tte r stay on the o ther side of the field, o r I just might catch m ore passes than he will.” Talk, that's just talk, replies Philadelphia’s tow ering w ide receiver. "If Hayes said that, it must be right," Charmichael responded later w ith a grin.

The W om en S Track Club practices every day in the ACC concourse at 4:30 p.m. Anyone Interested in participating is encouraged to attend. Be prepared to run outside. For m ore informa­tion, con tac t Cindy McNally at 8152 o r Rosannc Bellomo at 6896.

The Rugby Club will hold a m eeting tonight at 7 p.m. in the LaFortune Ballrooom. New m em bers are w elcom e.

GeiTy F i l l l S t w ould like any freshm en m en in tercsted in joining the student managers organization to attend im portant m eeting tom orrow afternoon in the ACC auditorium . Fau.st will address his urgent need for freshm en managers for upcom ing spring football practice. The m eeting is scheduled for 5 p.m.

Thursday, January 22, 1981 — page 11

. . .DonsC o n tin u ed fr o m page 12

pum ped in another 20-foot jum per to tie the Dons at 53. The tw o clubs

stayed close until the closing m inutes w hen Kelly Tripucka re tu rned from a slump, chipped in the majority o f his 20 points and put N otre Dame up, 68-60.

“We did not execu te w ith the ball in the second half like w e’re capable of,” said Barry, w ho also added that Notre Dame’s ability to shut off the 7-foot Bryant was a key factor.

“We started fronting him (B ryant),” said Phelps, "and they for­got to look for him in the second half-

Varner, Tripucka, and San Fran­cisco’s Bart Bowers and John Heg- w ood all fouled ou t w ith just m inutes remaining. The loss o f two key players w orried both benches, bu t especially that o f Barry, w ho ad­mits his club is basically a “five-man team .” The 6-3 Dailey pu t on a one-man show to close the gap. It was the Dons high po in t man who also pu t the 14-3 California club on top 75-74 w ith just 0:35 remaining.

Following a N otre Dame tim eout it was John Paxson w ho stole that w inning show w ith his prayer jum ­

per.“We w anted to get the ball to

Paxson, ” said Phelps, w hose team now stands at 10-3 overall and 8-0 at home. “And John hit a good shot.”

“We w anted to force them to the perim eter, ” said Barry, “and w e did. Paxson just zeroed it in. He’s a great com petitor. He seem s to be in co n ­tro l at all tim es ou t there .”

C ontrol and confidence are som e­thing Paxson expects. "You’ve got to have the confidence to play. If you don’t have it, you shouldn’t be out on the cou rt,” repeated the hero, over and over.

IRISH ITEMS: G ilberto Salinas, w ho was in jured in the first contest w ith the Dons, will undergo a scan tom orrow to d e tec t a possible tom ligam ent.. Tracy Jackson, injured in Monday’s gam e w ith Fordham, joined fellow senior Salinas on the bench in stree t clothes. Jackson, how ever, should play against Maryland on Saturday. . The Irish shot a m uch im proved .640 from the field w hile the Dons ended at a .582 clip after a phenom enal .773 in the first half. . . N otre Dame was again touched from the charity stripe, acing 16 of 22 attem ps, six o f w hich w ere added by Tripucka in the

closing minutes. . . last night’s game stays in the ND-USF mold, as both team s have yet to lose a game w ith the hom e cou rt advantage.. Bill Var­ner dished ou t a game-high 10 as­sists. . . Again, Digger Phelps defied his traditional liberal substitution policy, as he played bo th Paxson and W oolridge the full 40 minutes. Var­ner played all the way until fouling ou t w ith 3:21 to play, and Tripucka played 33 minutes.

. . .ValpoC on tinued fr o m page 9

"W e changed things around a little bit against Chicago Circle b e ­cause w e w anted to use a quicker lineup at the start o f th e game, ” she explained. “Some changes may be Imminent, bu t that w on’t be the solution — finding people w ho will execu te the fundam entals will be the solution.-

Following th e ir date w ith Val­paraiso, the Irish will visit neighbor­ing Saint Mary’s nex t Wednesday. The 1 game is a rem atch of a m eeting earlier this season w hich N otre Dame won, ’7l-52.

Classifieds All c l a s s i f i e d a d s n u s t h e i c c e i v e d by 4 4 5 p m , t w o d a y s pr i of To t h e i s s u e in w h i c h t h e iitf is ru n T h e O b s e r v e r o f f ic e wil l a c c e p t c l a s s i f i e d s M o n d a y t h r o u g h Friday, 1 0 0 0 a m *o 4 4 5 p m All c l a s s i f i e d s m u s t b e prfe-paid e i t h e r in p e r s o n o r t h r o u g h t h e m ail .

NOTICES LOST/FOUND WANTED TICKETSgod made notre dame 9

THERE’S MORE TO THE STORY THAN m eets t h e eye

free hcx Is not sold here, but if you received Christmas money and/or want to upgrade your stereo system, I have, for a limited time only, the NIJMARK EQ 2300, a professional studio 10-hand per channel graphic equalizer at an UNBEATABLE PRICE. For more information on this or any other Stereo Equipment, call Scott at EMERSON ELECTRONICS until 1 a.m. at 283-6811.

learn to fly with regional solo in less than 30 DAYS Regional Flying Club is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the train­ing of students. We offer you the finest equipment at the lowest rates In this area. Regional can take you from ground instruction up through solo in less than 30 days. Call us now at 683-9499 and start flying today.

professional typing. Term papers, theses, etc. Tape transcrip­tion. Last year's same low prices. All work guaranteed. aardvark automatic solutions. 289-6753.

pandora's BOOKS can save you many dollars on books for your classes, Try us first. We can special order books, both texts and paper­backs, and usually have the books within 3 days. Pandora's is a full- service bookstore with new and used books, newspapers and magazines PANDORAS BOOKS, 937 South Bend Avc., 233-2342.

sell your old textbooks o r trade them in for your spring textbooks. Immediate exchange or credit for future purchases. Good prices forr most used books. PANDORA'S BOOKS, 937 South Bend Avc., 233 2342.

new York Times now available in box outside store by 2 a.m. dailv PANDORA'S BOOKS. 937 South Bend Avc., 233-2342.

Saturday night baby you w ere born to run sen io r ba r springstein night many bee r specials

lost silver St. Christopher medal Thurs. 1-15-81 at Stepan call Frank 1740

lost; silver pierced earring (white enameled flower). Reward. If found, call 277-8819.

lost: Men’s gold class ring. P C High School. Orange stone. Phil 8338.

lost: room and car keys, near ad bldg. on an FBI ring. If found call 8700.

found; a watch in Stanford hall'S PARTY ROOM LAST FRIDAY (JAN. 16 ). CALL PAUL 8636.

lost: Woman’s Gold Watch on Friday: 6728 Sue or Christy 6734.

needed; one guitar for rent this semester. CALL EVENINGS AT 287-2057. MAKE SOME MONEY IF YOU DON'T PLAY YOUR GUITAR ANY MORE

help wanted - Earn up to *1,000 or more for a few evenings work. No selling. Just hang posters on your campus advertising our half- price tours of Europe. For details, write: TRAVEL STUDY INTERNATIONAL, 2030 East 4800 South, Suite 101, Salt Lake City, UT 84117.

need a jobO campus press needs a secretary/layout artist to work 1-5 Tues. & Thurs. this semester. Job in­cludes taking orders and poster set up no experience necessary. Need someone who'll be able to stay on for next year. Apply at Campus Press, basement of LaFortune, 1-5. Any questions? Call 7047 or Diane at 7922.

need 2 tickets to Springsteen. Floor or pads only. Call John Higgins at 8553 in the evening.

need 4 tix to Bruce Springsteen con­cert - will buy in pairs. Call Jim 4352.

need 2 GA TICKETS FOR ND UCLA BASKETBALL GAME. PLEASE CALL SHIRLEY AT 8661 OR 1715 BEFORE 5 P.M.

need four ga'S FOR SOUTH CAROLINA. CALL BOB 4641.

need ucla 232-0921.

3'S-CALL MATT AT

need 2 GA TICKETS FOR JAN. 31 SC GAME, CALL 6814.

FOR RENThouses for rent summer and/or next school year. Good condition, close to campus, partially furnished. For info call 287-5361 after 6 p.m.

house for rent, second semester and/or next year. Excellent condi­tion, close to campus, partially fur­nished. For info call 287-5361 after 6 p.m.

for Rent: Cozy apt. for rent near River & Park. * 150/mo. Call 232- 4549

graduate student looking for roommates to share clean five bedroom house. Fully funished including washer/dryer. *70 per month. 288-3109.

graduate student looking for 4 roommates for 5 bedroom house, fully-furnished, with washer and dryer SAFE NEIGHBORHOOD, *70 a month Call 288-3109

campus view apt. AVAIL. GREAT­LY REDUCED RENT. USA AT 2968 OR MARIE AT 277-3579.

need engineering economyand automatic controlengr. BOOKS CALL RICK 1932

need 2 GA Tix for UCLA-Will gladly pay big bucks. Call TJ, 3207.

want to sell your typewriterO call chuck 8705

notre Dame's student radio stations, WSND, has openings for sports production positions. If you arc in­terested, call Brian Reimer at 6397 between ten and eleven in the mor­ning, or leave a not in the station (located on the fourth floor of O'Shaughnessy ).

two Notre Dame students are looking for one or two roomatcs to live in five bedroom house. Call 234- 7988 and ask for Bob or Mike for details.

four excellent padded seats for Springsteen. Call Rob 277-0865.

senior student b ball ticket book for sale. UCLA ticket included. Padded seat. Call Marc at 1369

wanted: 2-4 GA s to UCLA and /or St. Francis basketball games. Top **** Call 1804.

need UCLA tickets: 2 student and 1 GA. Will pay megabuck ***. Please call Cyndy 8014.

will pay good money for several UCLA Tix-call Dan 8233

wanted; bruce Springsteen tickets will pay ** for good seats call Ron 4614

PERSONALS

FOR SALE

tl-58 Calc.Sale, Phil 8338

for Sale 1974 AMC Hornet. Good Condition. *200

boom boom ’S BACK FROM BREAK. SHE'S BETTER THAN BEFORE. CALL THIS GORGEOUS WOMAN OR KNOCK UPON HER DOOR. CLARE BOOM BOOM DEVEREUX IS THE REAL WOMAN 4089.

happy 21ST BIRTHDAY TO THE WHOLE GANG! CONG RA TULA TIONS SHIRLEY, WINNIE, DAFF, Fin, CUDDLES, KID, BUD, FAG, SCHNOOK1E AND MR. ED!

to whom it may concern: Many thanx to my special friend who sent me the roses. 1 also thank you for being here...and caring. Julie V.

jeff, You didn’t answer my last per­sonal...maybe arkies are slow... Hmmmm?!!!

Magenta

bill Lynch, I’ve been watching you forr quite some time. Thought I'd let you know th a t .... I’m interested!!!!! - Aphrodite - PS. My roomie thinks your tall, blonde, ROTC friend is cute, too.

dear Person in the Glee Club with the maroon jacket, HOD1E, Hopeful­ly the next time I run into you, it won’t be in Kroger’s. Lady Sunday

did you make it to the phenomenal Campus View bash last Saturday? Did you steal 2 dozen eggs, 1 pound of hamburger and 3 pork chops? You're a real winner buddy ..But we’ll not let this be a major deterrent...W e won’t veg on the intensity!! Campus View will strike again in the very near future...Probably a 30 kegger to prom tc Ken Stack for UMOC...

artificial birth control: Is there anot­her way? Yes, Natural Family Plan­ning is safe, healthy, effective. EVERYONE invited to learn more. Mon. Jan. 26, 7:30 p.m., Library Auditorium. Engaged and married couples call 288-2662 to registe for call starting Tues. Jan. 27th on campus.

oh god is coming to the kfc fri. & SAT. AT 7,9 & 11.

georgc burns and john den VER ARE COMING TO THE KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS ON FRI & SAT. AT 7,9 & 11 00 APPEARING IN OH GOD ADMISSION IS *1 MEM­BERS ARE FREE.

oh god is coming to the knights of columbus on friday and Saturday at 7,9 & 11:00. ADM IS *1 MEMBERS ARE ADM. FREE

-COPY EDITORS- Tim, Kelli and Kathy C , you have *** waiting from lalast semester; pick up your checks from Shirley. If anyone would like to change nights, call Mary Fran (7992 o r 7471). ALSO-Both new and old copy editors need to pick up the handouts wwith the new codes if they have not already done so. The codes are on the shelf in the newsroom with old papers critiqued.

bob Cooney Good Luck to you and your great basketball team! LG.

goose; arc you going to springstcenO call me ******* huff

tricia Burke, are there stars in your eyes?

good Luck to all present and future Kulpies. Excelsior! From probably the only person on cither campus that has not received a personal fromGoose.

this is for kcvin kclly o f fis- CHER HAU. AND OF RENOWN DARBY FAME WHO MAKES THE BEST AND MOST SADLY MISSED PIZZA THINGS IN ALL THE GOLDEN DOMED WORLD FROM THE DARBY PRINCESS WHO USED TO GET FREE FOOD BUT WAS PC>K< ED TO SURRENDER * 80 LAST TUESDAY NITE.HELLO.

looking for riders to FLORIDA over spring break. Comfortable ride In VAN!!! Call Kathic at 283 4395 after 6 277-7407.

eagles fans ** for important info regarding the gala Super Bowl pep rally and victory celebration call Tweety the Philly Phanatic at 41 4898

you’VE HEARD ABOUT IT, YOU’VE READ ABOUT IT, BUT DO THEY GIVE MATCHES?

tom McNeill, Why did you try to raise the depth of the Mississippi ten feet? It can’t be good for the fish.

it could only be an awesom e ad­venture when Keenan and LcMans go to New Orleans and take over the DeVun’s. WOA 6, the TAKEE OUTEE on wheels ..where’s Hollywood? try the Hotsy Totsy gutter ac­tion.M ugs losing lunch, kill de white man...Maggie caught a buzz?., grease the door, here comes Christy Bubba impersonated Jim Morrison to a T, but he didn’t wet his pants!? Ryan, are you JUST TOOOO SURE?...Kotck, was Molly able to catch her breath?...Mickey, how many times is it ppossiblc to go to the bathroom during a hom i­ly?...Pogo much to My Sharona, Buck?...Patty’s drooling again! Tom needs a translator... Danny, you and your wonderful parents deserve a big THANK YOU from all o f us!!! Was it too much, OR WHAT???

for Sale: O ne Springsteen ticket. Good bleacher scat. *10.50. Call 1279

Page 12: Mardi Gras future Did U.S. taxpayers · 1/22/1981  · Americans held hostage by Iran for ... Reagan’s habits are in marked contrast to his predecessor, Jimmy Carter, who arose

Snorts Thursday, January 22, 1981 — page 12

Sweet revenge

Irish stun DonsBy BETH HUFFMAN know s he made a mistake and heSports Editor

“As you can tell, it was an easy w in,” laughed Digger Phelps after last night’s anything bu t easy 80-75 Irish w in over San Francisco in the ACC. “But, man I’m tired .”

N otre Dame added another miracle victory as sophom ore sensa­tion John Paxson sank a 20-footer to pu t the hom e squad ahead 76-75 w ith six seconds to go.

“That was all they gave me,” said Paxson, w ho has a touch of the flu. “You have to pu t up a shot w ith at least six seconds to go for the of­fensive rebounders to have a chance.”

And O rlando W oolridge, w ho led all rebounders w ith eight, was ready. “If he’d have m issed it I w ould’ve gone at it,” said the 6-9 senior w ho joined Paxson as high po in t man for the Irish w ith 22.

Following Paxson’s p rayer shot the Dons raced the ball in bounds and Kenny McAlister did w hat he considered the w isest thing — called a tim eout. W hat McAlister forgot was the Dons had no tim e outs rem ain ing They had called the ir last w ith l:52 to play.

“Kenny McAlister simply m ade a mistake,” said Coach Pete Barry, w ho had w arned all his players that the Dons had no tim e-outs left. “He

probably w on’t make it again.San Francisco was slapped w ith a

technical foul, and the Irish w ere aw arded tw o free throw s. Paxson, a 6-2 po in t guard from Kettering, Ohio, calm ly stepped to the line and sank bo th tosses. Senior Stan W ilcox toyed w ith the Dons and pum ped in his only tw o points o f the game at the buzzer to account for the five- po in t win.

The tw o team s, rem atching after a 66-63 San Francisco win in overtim e just eight days ago, played even in the first half, changing baskets along w ith num erous turnovers. The Irish finally surged ahead on the shooting o f Paxson and W oolridge to build a 24-18 lead at the first halfs m id­point.

Paced by the ho t hands o f Q uinten Dailey and Wallace Bryant th e Dons caught N otre Dame and surged ahead. A nother long jum per from Paxson at the buzzer left the Irish b e ­hind 43-39.

The Irish closed w ith in tw o as the second half began on a layup by Bill Varner, w ho started in place of injured Tracy Jackson. But, again on the shooting of Daily, w ho had a game-high 29 points, the Dons kept the lead.

W ith 12:05 to play, Paxson

See DONS, p a g e 11W ith ju s t 0:08 sh o w in g on the clock, sophom ore gua rd Jo h n P axson le t it f l y fr o m 2 0 feet. The b a ll

g lided up a n d in, a n d the Irish h a d a n o ther o f their p a ten ted m iracle victories. P axson fin is h e d w ith a career-high 22 po in ts . (P hoto by R achel B lo u n t)

leers to host aim fo r playoffsBy BRIAN BEGLANESports Writer

The N otre Dame hockey team, in ninth place in the W estern Col­legiate Hockey Association w ith a 5- 10-1 record (9-13-2 overall), continues its fight for a playoff spot this w eekend w hen D enver Univer­sity pays a visit to the ACC.

The Pioneers, in th ird place in the WCHA w ith a 9-6-1 mark and at one point this season the No. 1 team in the country, have surprised many folks this year. Coach Marshall Johnston had faced som e big losses w hen G lenn Anderson tu rned pro in August and goalie Stuart Birenbaum was forced to take this season off due to illness. But a host o f younger players have com e through.

Remaining goalie Scott Robinson is tops in the WCHA w ith a 3.29 goals against average and w hile of­fensive production has not been high, it’s been consistent enough to get the P ioneers w here they are now.

Ed Beers is the leading goal scorer — he w ith just 1 1 — w hile Ken Ber­ry is the top overall scorer w ith 32 points.

“We really have our w ork cu t out for us,” said Irish Coach Lefty Smith. “D enver is one o f the best team s in the nation and facing a tough team for the second w eek in a row does not help any. We can’t afford to drop any further.”

straight series w hile O lson sustained an injury to the back o f his knee last Friday against N orth Dakota and is ou t indefinitely.

Senior left w ing Kevin H um phreys skates into the w eekend having scored seven goals in his last six games. Jeff Logan, w ho scored once and had tw o assists last w eekend, leads the Irish in scoring w ith 12 goals and 13 assists for 25 points. H um phreys and Dave Poulin follow w ith 24 points each.

Following th is series, N otre Dame em barks upon a th ree w eek road schedule w ith a series at M innesota Duluth.

IRISH ICINGS - WSND-AM will broadcast bo th games live this w eekend beginning at 7:30... Min­nesota’s Bryan Erickson was nam ed WCHA player o f the w eek after scoring four goals and assisting on th ree o thers last w eek in a sw eep of Wisconsin... Dave Laurion ranks fourth am ong league netm inders w ith a 4.04 goals against average.

•Belles losepage 9

•Jack McKinneypage 12

•Irish w om en’sThe Irish head into the series mis­sing tw o forwards, jun ior Dan Col lard and sophom ore Dick Olson, p f e o a m p Collard suffered a broken knuckletw o w eeks ago at Michigan Tech and page 9will probably miss his s e c o n d ------------------------------------------------

Cheer, cheer...Craig ChvalSports Writer

Things aren ’t supposed to happen this way. We ;.;i .up in o u r sterile, m iddle class world, w here o u r her - fit the all A merica stereotypes. The boy-next-door he’s big and strong, will grow up to be a football playt And his sister, w ith pony tails and an ear to ear grin. r\ iil be a cheerleader.

Today, things don’t always w ork ou t that way Sometim es, the girl-next-door is a basketball player in ­stead o f a cheerleader, and her b ro th e r is the ch ee r­leader. All o f this is perfectly fine, so long as ou r next-door neighbors still believe in Mom, the flag and Chevrolet.

But at N otre Dame, o f all places, there is trouble. Ii seem s that som e o f the cheerleaders are no t happy Those nasty ogres in th e A thletic D epartm ent did all sorts o f mean things to N otre Dam e’s cheerleaders, so five o f them decided to quit.

Last year, the Faculty Board in C ontrol o f Athletics decided to increase the requ irem ent for earning a m onogram from four sem esters on the squad to six. But it w asn’t until this fall that som e o f the cheerleaders realized how unfair they thought this was.

And all o f those crum m y places N otre D am e’s foot­ball team played this fall, cities like New York and At­lanta? Well, I don’t know w ho it was, bu t somebody forced all 12 cheerleaders to drive to bo th o f those cities. Probably because som e jerk in the Athletic D epartm ent doesn’t like cheerleaders and w ent out of his way to get them bum ped from the football team ’s ch a rte r flights.

W hen f read the reasons for quitting given by the for­m er cheerleaders, though, I w asn’t convinced. They just d idn’t seem like things the kids next-door w ould even dream o% let alone say ou t loud.

This can’t be right, I thought. So I called Dr. Jam es McDonnell, w ho is the D irector o f S tudent Activities at N otre Dame. Say it ain’t so, James, I pleaded.

M uch to my relief, he did just that. But w hat he did tell me, at least about one of the five, made me even m ore disgusted.

As M cDonnell explained it, tw o m em bers of the squad, Eileen Q uinn and Denise Offer, advised him during the fall sem ester that they felt they no longer could devote p roper tim e to bo th cheering and

academics. M cDonnell em phasized that bo th girls gave him personal and very valid reasons for leaving the squad.

The o th er th ree form er m em bers, including co ­captain Paul Broughton, experienced varying degrees o f academ ic difficulties. Now, N otre Dame is very serious about requiring its studen ts to fulfill their academ ic obligations first, and that is good. This is why N otre Dame ath letes are ineligible to com pete if they don’t m eet University standards even if they surpass NCAA minimums.

But Paul Broughton d idn’t talk that way in Tuesday’s Observer. He listed any num ber of sins com m itted by the Athletic D epartm ent against the cheerleaders as his reasons for leaving. What he d idn’t tell us was that he d idn’t have a choice.

“The stuff in the paper was pure, unadulterated crap,” said M cDonnell W ednesday afternoon. “He m ade it sound like he could have stayed, bu t he cou ldn ’t have. There is a problem , bu t that is no t the reason for him not being on the squad.”

M cDonnell expressed sym pathy for the conditions

See CHEER, page 10