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OD The nside Darby's Place. page 4 Poin-Counerpoin. pages 6 & 7 Vol. X, No. 28 serving he nore dome - s. mary's communiy Monday, Ocober 7, 1974 Proposed seminar ges mixed views by John DeCoursey Saff Reporer The proposed values seminar for seniors brough mixed reacions from sudens in an informal poll conduced by he Observer over he weekend. Sudens favoring he proposal generally said i was a good idea; hose opposing i disliked he idea of having an addiional requiremen; and some suggesed ha suden values wouldn' be changed by he course. The seminar is one of several proposals conained in he repor issued by he Commiee on he Course of Sudy. The seminar, if acceped, would be a required one-credi, one semeser course for seniors. The course, which would be graded saisfacoryunsaisfacory, would be organized along college lines and direced by virually all he faculy. is possible ha he course will be ready for he spring semeser. Chndiional approval Dave Dempsey, a junior from Holy Cross, was one of several sudens who gave condiional approval o he proposal. He said, "'d like o see i work for a year, o see wha would happen. f hey ge he righ people, i would be a really good course." Anoher suden who gave guarded approval was Dennis Dziemianowicz, a senior from Pangborn. " migh be a good idea, bu 'd have o know more abou i." Responses differ A more favorable response came from Max Chudy, a senior from Keenan: " sounds all righ. migh be ineresed in aking i." An unfavorable view was given by Seve Ledoux, a senior from Morrissey. " really don' hink i ha necessary. We did have some imprompu alks abou values in collegiae seminar. Mos of he people 've alked o aren' ha ineresed in i." Values consolidaed Several differing opinions were given on he subjec of values. Some sudens fel he seminar would be good as a consolidaion of values, while ohers resened i, saying ha iwould be a wase of ime because suden values wouldn' be changed. Dan Kopezky, a senior from Keenan said, "'s no ha bad of an idea. migh be a consolidaion of Nore Dame values; a uniform exposure o all sudens." Cahy Uhl, a senior from Lyons said, " hink is an excellen idea because afer we leave Nore Dame, i will be imporan for us o pu ino pracice he moral values we learn here. A course like his would make us aware of hose ideas which we should pu ino pracice." Negaive reacions The differing views were expressed by Seve Brehl, a junior from Morrissey and Besy Jaeger, a junior from Breen-Phillips. Brehl said " hink seniors have already formulaed a' srong enough opinion on values ha i should no be necessary o wase heir ime on a course ha can' be used owards graduaion." Jaeger noed, "'m opposed o i. would be a wase of ime. 's so general, don' see how i could be deal wih in any worhwhile way. don' hink you can change anybody's values. f you force i on hem, hey will resen i. 's one more example of he Universiy rying o make everybody he same." Exra requiremen _ Two sudens reaced unfavorably o he seminar, because i would be a required course. Ron Sedlacek, a senior from Dillon said, " have enough requiremens o fulfill nex semeser. 'd like o ake hree hours of wha wan o ake wihou anoher hour added on. don' hink hey should shove i on us he las semeser we're here. Maybe hey could se i up for fuure senior classes. Tha would give sudens a beer chance o plan heir schedules." Ann Pyynia, a junior from Badin said, "'m agains i. 's jus one more requiremen. wan a lile more freedom my senior year. migh be a wase of ime." Off campus sudens may qualify for food samps By Brian lv. Uancy Saff Reporer Nore Dame sudens presenly residing off-campus may be eligible for food samps according o Arhur Kopec, direcor of he food samp program for S. Joseph Couny. Sudens of limied means and income can apply o he food samp division in Souh Bend any ime during he week. n order o be eligible for he financial help a household of sudens mus possess asses no exceeding $1500. n addiion, he income of he sudens mus no exceed he monhly limi se by he federal governmen for he given number of persons in he household. Anyone applying for he food samps mus be able o prove heir need f9r he financial assisance. Once an applicaion has been filed wih he food samp agency, he parens of he suden are conaced by he agency and asked o verify heir child's need. f he noarized parenal saemen jusifies he suden's need for he funds hen he household is eligible for he samps. Sudens are warned however, ha falsely reporing funds could resul in prosecuion for fraud by local auhoriies. This program is only open o sudens living off-campus. Sudens residing in dormiories, boarding houses and hoels are ineligible. Figures regarding he number of Nore Dame sudens presenly receiving food samps were no available, bu he oulook for sudens applying his year appeared very dim. "Federal money is very igh his year," saed Faher Thomas Tallarida, direcor of off-campus housing. He furher commened, "Wih he money so igh, sudens are going o have o prove beyond a shadow of a doub ha hey need he money his year." SBA proposes due process lor accused sudens by Lonnie Luna Saff Reporer Due process for sudens involved in disciplinary proceedings is he proposal of he Suden Bar Associaion, announced Chauncey Veach, presiden of he associaion. "When any suden is accused of a disciplinary aciviy he will normally see he Dean. nsead of having an under-graduae counsel, we propose ha he suden use he law suden," said Veach. Law suden beer qualiified He added ha he did no have any complains agains he undergraduae counsel, bu ha he law suden has more confidence and is beer informed, hus making him beer qualified in defending he suden. He explained ha accusaions are so ofen hearsay and he winesses who make he accusaions are no sough ou and cross-examined. Veach commened ha casualness is a problem because he sudens are no aware of heir righs. 1.\bre flexibiliy "We wan more flexibiliy in he hearing process in ha he hearing is ailored o he paricular infracion," said Veach. He added he Bar Associaion is a he disposal of he suden body and eager o help. n special cases where a lawyer canno be afforded, he law sudens will handle he case wih no charge. Chauncey Veach : nsead of having an undergraduae counsel, we propose ha he suden use he law suden. (Phoo by Andy Waerhouse) John Mazza, one of hree developers of he proposal, presened he proposal o he Hall Presiden's Council meeing las Monday nigh afer i was unanimously acceped by he HPC and will now be presened o he SLC for approval. \Yi-ien sae:mn The proposal provides ha he Dean of Sudens give hesudena wrien saemen saing ha he may use an aorney, he law suden, before saying anyhing. The proposal also saes ha he Presiden of he Bar Associaion appoin a represenaive o he Judicial Board. According o Veach, he feels ha his is flexible, meaning ha he Suden Body Presiden may elec he represenaive if he wishes o. Several sudens se sudy sandards, sriving for supendous miderm es success. (Phoo by Andy Waerhouse)

2 he observer Monday, Ocober 7, 1974 warld briefs NEW YORK <UP ) - Former Whie House Chief of Saff Alexander Haig approached Presiden Ford nine days before he Nixon presidency ended abou a possible pardon for he former presiden, Newsweek magazine repored Sunday. Newsweek said Ford will esify abou his discussion wih Haig when he appears personally before a House judiciary subcommiee: According o Newsweek, Haig approached Ford Aug. 1 abou a possible pardon for he former Presiden Richard Nixon. Newsweek said Ford gave a negaive answer he following day o Nixon Counsel James S. Clair. S. Clair hen old Ford ha informaion would soon be released ha would force Presiden Nixon o resign, Newsweek said. JERUSALEM <UP) - Shneor Zalman Shazar, Russian-born scholar who served wo erms as Presiden of srael, died Saurday a Hadassah Hospial. He would have been 85 Sunday. A spokesman a Hadassah hospial said Shazar's deah was caused by "a kidney insufficiency, which precipiaed hear and respiraory failure." Shazar had enered he hospial one week ago, suffering from a variey of illnesses. ASHEVLLE, N.C. <UP) - Buncombe Couny auhoriies early Sunday arresed a Bryson Ciy man sough in he shooing deahs of wo veeran highway parol officers whose bodies were found in a locked room of he courhouse basemen. Edward Collins Davis, 55, was spoed walking aimlessly abou he main square in downown Asheville Sunday morning by a depuy Sg. W.E. McCurry, Jr. said Davis was unarmed and offered no resisance. CHAPEL HLL, N.C. <UP) - Former Gov. Luher Harwell Hodges, Sr., who served as Secreary of Commerce under Presidens Kennnedy and Johnson, died of an apparen hear aack Sunday. He was 76. Hodges was sricken while walking in he yard of his Chapel Hill home. He was aken o Norh Carolina Memorial Hospial, where he was pronounced dead a 9:35a.m. an c:ampus aday 5 pm -- vespers, evensong, log chapel. 7 pm -- meeing, flying rish club, flanner penhouse. 7 pm --meeing, psychology sociey, hagger hall room 124. 7 pm --movie, "cause", sudens working wih elderly,lib. aud.. B pm -- lecure, "nra-pary conflic n communis-ruled counries", prof. juergen domes, lib. aud. lounge. 12 mldnle-4:30 am -- coffee-house, darby's place, aforune basemen. daily 12 noon-5pm -- ar exhibi, eugene age ravelling phoography show, moreau main gallery. 12 noon-9 pm -- ar exhibi, waercolors, gerrude harbar, phoo gallery. 10 am-5 pm -- phoo exhibi, rusle american phoographs, minor whie, nd ar gallery. n 'he MN-MALL a TOWN & COUNTRY Shopping Cener BG BRAND NNAES SMC slaes program concerning asserive behavior in women When :1 person is highly unfair, do you call i o his or her aenion? Do you ever "fly off he handle" and say hings you laer regre? Can you express an unpopular opinion asserively in he face of majoriy opposiion? These quesions and ohers will be examined Tuesday, Ocober 8, in a presenaion "Toward he Developmen of Asserive Women," a 7:30 p.m. in Carroll Hall, Sain Mary's College. Conduced by Dr. Suzanne Areson, direcor of counseling a Sain Mary's, Tuesday's program will compare and conras he effeciveness of non-asserive, aggressive, and asserive behaviors. "All of us have had imes when we wished we had sood up for our legiimae righs in a way ha did 5,000 flies wach as record broken in cow-chip oss ODESSA, TEX. <UPil - Dave Compon's sae record heave in he cow-chip hrowing cones highlighed Texas' larges bicenennial celebraion of he year his weekend. Compon, 23, wound up and chunked his chip 214 fee, 4 inches bu i was sill shor of he world record se las year by Carl Engel, also of Odessa. More han 5,000 persons aended Saurday's bash which also feaured chili cooking, muske loading demonsraions and oher evens se in a colonial amosphere. The even was one of 47 bicenennial celebraions being held across he sae his year. The Observer is published dally during he college semeser excep vacaions by he sudens ol he Universiy of Nore Dame Md S. Mary's College. Subscripions may be purchased or $9 per semeser ($16 per year) rom The Observer &lx' Q, Nore Dame, ndiana 46556. Second class posage paid, Nore Dame, nd. 46556. no violae he righs of ohers," saed Dr. Areson. "Tuesday's presenaion will no only sress he imporance of women being properly asserive in heir ineracions, bu will also help men undersand he posiion of women, especially in business," she added. Through film, a variey of inerpersonal siuaions which call for an asserive response will be _presened- during Tuesday's program. A panel of sudens will reac o he film segmens. Dr. Areson joined Sain Mary's College in July 1973. She has conduced various asseriveness raining sessions a he College, and is a consulan o he Women's Carrer Cener in Souh Bend. She received her Ph.D. in educaion as well as her maser's degree in counseling and guidance from he Universiy of Michigan. She holds a bachelor of science degree in psychology from.. Wesern Michigan Universiy. "Toward he Developmen of Asserive Women" is par of he coninuing series, "Conemporary ssues in Business and Economics," sponsored by he deparmen of business adminisraion and economics a Sain Mary's College. For addiona! informaion, conac he chairman of he deparmen Dr. ~--- Culural Ars Commission presens Shakespeare on Film HAMLET sarring Nicol Williamson direced by Tony Richardson Monday Nigh, Ocober 7h a 8 and 10 pm Engineering Audiorium Admission only 25

Campaigning for Birch Monday, Ocober 7, 1974 he observer 3 Van Buren. Mrs. Bayh alk poliics a ND by Ellen Syburg Saff Reporer The re-elecion campaign of ndiana Senaor Birch Bayh moved o he Nore Dame campus Friday morning wih he appearance of he senaor's wife, Marvella Bayh and advice columnis Abigail Van Buren. The wo women spoke on many issues during he informal conversaion in Washingon Hall wih a small group of sudens and members of he press. Defending her husband's spending record which has come under fire from his republican opponen, Richard Lugar, Mrs. Bayh poined ou ha along wih he Democraic Congress "Birch helped cu 22 billion dollars from Nixon's budges and voed a budge limi 9 billion dollars lower han Presiden Ford's." Noing n Los Angeles, Milcm ha he senaor voed for a 5 billion dollar cu in defense and a 1 billion dollar cu in welfare she voiced hope "ha he ndiana voers won' be aken in by slogans bu will examine he record." Explaining ha he senaor is in favor of re-ordering naional spending prioriies Mrs. Bayh said, "We mus quesion i when our governmen spends 24 billion dollars in 12- h years o pu a man on he moon bu has spen only 4 billion since 1936 o find a cure for cancer which srikes 1 in every 4 Americans." Bayh has ried o insruman a move o roll back peroleum prices of he big oil companies she added. He favors his raher han a federal gasoline ax because "in his wave of inflaion while profis soar he average ciizen is insuled by wha he has o pay for gasoline and food." Miss Van Buren voluneered o campaign for Bayh because "we need inelligen, hones represenaion in he Senae". She lised several issues which she feels Bayh has been srong on : young people--"he has worked long and hard o promoe juvenile jusice and on ways o eliminae juvenile deliauency".; ERA- "Bayh is a long-imesupporer of i."; gun conrol-"he doesn' wan o confiscae all guns bu favors he eliminaion of he 'Saurday nigh specials' which are involved in so many homicides". ; drug abuse- "Senaor Bayh wans o come down hard on pushers and has been successful in legislaing o reduce he number of ampheamines manufacured". Van Buren saed ha Bayh's sand on aborion is more conservaive han hers "perhaps becl:!use am a woman." Mrs. Bayh hen explained ha her husband is agains aborion excep o save he life of he woman and in cases of rape. The senaor is chairman of he Senae subcommiee which is now considering an ani-aborion ammendmen. "Because of his responsibiliy o he democraic process and his belief ha he issue is so complex Birch is deermined ha boh sides will be fully heard before he commiee makes nay dicision," Mrs. Bayh added. Mrs. Bayh discussed her successful surgery for breas cancer. " hope ha my case and ha of Bey Ford's will encourage women o ake advanage of he self-examinaion procedure. We have he knowledge o save 12 ou of 15 women who will develop breas cancer bu i mus be caugh early and eiher fear or ignorance prevens his." She Weekend bombings hi TT holdings LOS ANGELES <UP)- A caller Saurday ~igh's blas a he World Liberaion Fron," claimed Chile. claiming o represen a group Sheraon Airpor ~n near ~e Los responsibiliy for a oal of four Police said he gunmen known as he "New World An~eles ner~ah~nal A!rpor., bombings direced agains TT. disarmed a nigh wachman a Liberaion Fron" claimed r~mg o deer~me s relas~onship Tha bomb also wen off in a he warehouse of Face-Sandresponsibiliy for a bombing which wih an explosi?n a he er~on woman's resroom. ard Telephone Co. <Fizzonasripped apar a resroom in a plush Palace Hoe~ ~ ~ Francisco n a wrien communicaion lef co), poured gasoline inside he hoel, police said ~unday. ~~d~esd.ay ~~. bl ~re were no a a San Francisco gas saion, he building and se fire o i. The Saurday mgh blas was njuries 10 ej er as.. group accused TT of creaing "a The fire caused an esimaed almos a duplicae of a bombing in Los ~ngeles P~hce ~~ld reign of error" in Chile by con- $12.8 million damage o he a San Francisco hoel h~s week, in Saurdf~ s ~l~, wh~h ~e:~:~ spiring o overhrow Salvador plan and equipmen, including which he bombers cla1med o be severr un. r ru: ha l g Allende he lae Chilean elephone exchange sysems ou o punish he nernaional schoo reumon a e 0 e llwas Preside~. manufacured here, police Telephone and Telegraph Corp. preceded by a e 1 ephone ca. o The wo-page saemen said. whic~ owns bo!h hoels. Rober Solon, 34 1 he mgh demanded h TT "implemen he The aack was he laes in a Pollee exammed he rubble off manager of. hd ehhoe release of all poliical prisoners" series agains TT subsidiaries So 1 on sa1 e rna 1 e ca 11 er. Ch'l d h ed furh h M'l p 1 idenified himself as a member of m. 1 e. an rea.en. er 1!1 e 1 an ar~a. rev1ous HR... he "New World Liberaion Fron" acion d~rec~ed agams he gian h~es and bombmgs caused and said a bomb would go off a he corporaion f he demands were mmor damage.. h 11. mi nues no me. The hand-prmed pamphle Co-Ex Ticke Schedule Oc. o e m seven f h ANSA 'lbo 'd "Bu i exploded a 10:17 p.m." TT's Milan Warehouse Bombed e m. e mai x...... ' he fire was se because 881 Solon sa1d, Jusfive mmu~ afer MLAN, aly <UP) - A fire "milian alians have no Oc. 7--Grace, Lyons he called. began elhn~ he se by four masked gunmen forgoen murdered comrades people a he desk and hose 10 he early Sunday caused an es- in Chile " a.. Keenan, Cavanaugh, Breen- lobby o leave and s~nd ouside." imaed $12.8 million damages Accu~ing TT of aacks Phillips Solon and a secuny guead or- o a warehouse belonging o a agains he working class on a 9.. Fianner, Walsh, S. Joe's dered 300 o 400 people o leave a subsidiary of nernaional worldwide scale i said "one 10 -Don, Farley, S. Ed's nearby ban9ue room. where hey Telephone and Telegraph, po- responds wih a' new f~rm of 11--Sanford, Howard, Sorln, Badin were ~endmg a reumon w~en he lice said. sruggle -he gun-and new 13--Morrlssey, Pangborn, Holy huddmg blas wen off 10 he A pamphle delivered laer o forms of organizaion." Cross women's resroom. The force of h ". he ex losion blew a hole hrough e Milan bureau of he alian The F1zzonasco warehouse 15Aiumnl, Zahm, Fisher h P 11 kn k d ile off news agency ANSA said he was burned because we Com e re~~oom wa oc e fire was a Communis reprisal muniss also mus experimen 16 -Grace, Lyons 17--Keenan, Cavanaugh, B-P ~e cellmg and rupured a waer for TT's role in he overhrow wih new echnology oward 18--Fianner, Walsh, S. Joe's pipe A~horiies, who did no im- of he All en d e g overnmen m a ways new o b' Jec 1ves, " 1 ' 881 'd. 20 -Dillon, Farley, S. Ed's Ocober 12 & 19: no ickes, SMC Sa. seak nigh. Ocober 14: no ickes, special nigh. mediaely idenify he ype of ************************************ explosive ~sed,.did no commen N 0 T R E 0 A M E & 5 T M A R y 1 5 : on he relaionship beween he wo * * bo~.b!ngs agains TT-owned : 50 C 1 A L C 0 M M SS 10 N S * fac1hhes. 1 n he San Francisco. blas., ~ p R E 5 E N T 0 C T O B E R f E S T 7 4 HHHUUHUH caller, also a man denbfymg ]f- lfhimself as a member of he "New * * ~----PRESENT-NG:--~ ijohn SEBASTANi he Monday niw! special 1! : : 12" pizza- $1.50!! 25 ~ DRAFT i : Ea, drink, and be enerained by live * music nighly <excep Tuesday) AT 1 1 : : V\11-iTE HOUSE NN : THURSDAY OCTOBER 17 * : 8 00 ~ 1.~o.w.::::!. no : : p.m. N COf\JCERT ~ ' 1.1!!~!. ~~3J' : STEPAN CENTER ; f 2 8 3 9 N 5h : TCKETS: $3.00. ON SALE MONDAY OCT~ : f Jus s mi. norh of he sae line. 683-9 842 ' :: 7 AT THE STUDENT UNON TCKET J Take u.s. 31 norh o Niles, hen norh on highways 3 miles. : OFFCE & TilE DNNG HALlS i. * ~ ----------------- J ********************************H i poined ou ha alhough breas cancer is he number one cause of deah in women age 40-45 ha he governmen spends only $2.52 per person per year on cancer research as opposed o $18 per person per year on foreign aid". Boh Mrs. Bayh and van Buren encouraged he audience no o become disillusioned because of Waergae. " hur all of us in public life bu he vas majoriy of poliicians are very dedicaed people", Mrs. Bayh said. She added ha "no one has he righ o complain unil hey have gone o he polls and voed." Poining ou ha in ndiana's spring primary only 26 of he eligible voers wen o he polls she asked, "How is democracy supposed o work when people fail o exercise his basic righ?" When asked abou he srain of being a poliician's wife, Mrs. Bayh acknowledged ha "public life does add some srain o a marriage. People seem o hink ha we have i easy: a maid and chauffeur and clohes ha appear auomaiclaly in our closes. Tha, of course, is ridiculous". Referring o a recen Time magazine aricle on poliical marriages she added, "Noice ha we weren' menioned. We have a very happy marriage bu 'm glad he sory is being old. is difficul and people should be aware of i". Mrs. Bayh and Abigail Van Buren's appearance was sponsored by he Culural Ars Commission and he Educaion Commission of Souh Bend. Mony Presen razy Record DRNK Mxieraim: The smalles bole ~ lkpr sold are 24 minim boles ~ Scoch \Wlisky markeed by im:! amrae Slglly 0>. ~ SaXland They cmain 1-m ~ an «UlCe!! DUNK UP!! source: Gulness' Book of World Records John Counsefl, Class of '64 e pnme Life insurance ailored o fi he unique needs of sudens and young professionals. For furher informaion call: 2 3 3-3 1 0 4 T'S GOOD TO HAVE M0NY N YOUR FUTURE MUTUAL OF NEW YORK The Muual Life nsurance Company Of New York

4 he observer Monday, Ocober 7, 1974 \ '-, ' ' r Darby's opens for ND nigh owls By Mauri Miller Saff Reporer The posers in he halls announce i as a "clean well-lighed place," and Fr. Griffin says "i's a place for he nigh person o go." n boh cases i's Darby's Place, opening in he basemen of La Forune a midnigh onigh. Darby's Place, or Chez Darby as Frenchmen would say, is he brainchild of Fr. Rober Griffin, Universiy Chaplain, and will serve he Nore Dame communiy as a place "for he suden who is ou lae for one reason or anoher" o go and drink coffee, hink alone, or enjoy he company of ohers. will be open Monday hru Thursday nighs from midnigh unil 4:30a.m. dea From Hemingway The idea acually came from Ernes Hemingway's "A Clean Well-Lighed Place," describing American Caholic hisory discussed a conference Alhough he Caholic Worker movemen, founded by Dorohy Day. generally is regarded as he firs and foremos expression of American Caholic lefis hough, i didn' develop from he American Lef nor from liberal Caholicism, bu i is a produc of he European Righ. This is one of he conclusions reached by hisorians aking a second look a American Caholic hisory during a conference Ocober 4 and 5 a he Universiy of Nore Dame. n a session on he Caholic Lef, Dr. Anhony Novisky of D'Youville College, Buffalo, New York, raced he influences on he Caholic Worker movemen's chief heoreician, Peer Maurin. According o Novisky, Maurin, like European righiss, reaced o he ideas of he Enlighmen which became he basis of American economics, poliics and sociey. have one faal flaw in commonhey all seek o change only he means by which men can coninue o acquire as much as hey are able." Novisky claimed ha Maurin condemns capialism because i pervers he meaning of man, viewing him only as a consumer raher han a person. Also, he said Maurin assers ha he only meaningful social reconsrucion is one which reflecs he Chrisian undersanding of he naure and desiny of man, and Maurin believes he Church should lead he way in ransforming sociey raher han rying o superficially heal he wounds caused by he injusices of capialism. Novisky said ha Maurin's views weren' uniaue bu also were used by he French Social Caholics, he English Disribuiss, and oher elemens of he European Righ. "n Maurin's view," Novisky Also during he session on he said, "all curren social ideologies Caholic Lef, Dr. Paricia McNeal <oher han he Caholic Worker) of ndiana Universiy a Souh Bend skeched he developmen of he pacifis radion in American Caholicism. She noed ha his radiion has been dominaed by he Caholic Worker and ha unil Vienam i was he only Caholic group o acively oppose war. For Dorohy Day, war was he mos exreme form of opposiion o love, and she mainained ha o be consisen wih he Caholic Worker ideal i was necessary o embrace pacifism and nonviolence in warime, he ndiana Universiy professor said. n addiion o he Caholic Lef oher conference opics included "Caholics and New Ehnic Sudies," "The Hierarchy: A Search for deniy," "American Caholic Theology," and "New Approaches in American Caholic Hisory." More han 20 hisorians from hroughou he counry discussed he reinerpreaion of American Caholic Hisory a he meeing sponsored by Nore Dame's Deparmen of Hisory. he need or a place where people can come, when he world around means nohing. The "clean welllighed place" in Hemingway's sory is a life-saver, as an old man who comes had aemped suicide nighs earlier. Griffin's "clean well-lighed place" is no inended o be he lifesaver, of sors, bu a place where he suden who needs some place o go can find company or silence. "Having o live in a hall dormiory," says Griffin, "here are a lo of people around a nigh, some of hem searching for a place o go and some of hem having somehing on heir mind hey wan o alk abou. Hemingway speaks of a place where people can come. For hese people who fear he nigh, he suggesed a clean welllighed place." "The place would be differen from he girly joins", he added, "a place where you can si and hink." "Darby's Place is for he suden who is ou lae for one reason or anoher, for he suden who can' sleep or wans o ake a break from his sudies --a place where you can find oher nigh-minded people and drink coffee and ge cheered up or cheer up ohers." he said. Alhough i is acually Darby's <O'Gill) Place, i will be operaed by Griffin, wih sudens helping whih he service. "Of course i's Darby's Place," says Fr. Griffin, "bu will run i and hope o be here every nigh." To Serve ND Communiy Wha is he need for a nigh spo on he campus, anyway? " hope for Darby's Place o be a service o he Nore Dame communiy," says Griffin. " don' clearly know he need for such a plan, bu hope he sudens will uilize i." " is somehing ha for a long ime hough 'd like o do, he says. "Darby's Place is no more han anyhing experimenal. A couple of years ago publicly indicaed ha my room a Keenan could serve as a clean well-lighed place, bu a person's room is no saisfacory. This place is where people can come and si quiely by hemselves and no one will argue wih hem." " is a larger place and has more of a privaeness, even being a public place," There will be no music brough in he coffee house, as Hemingway says should be so, bu, as Griffin says, "we may bring in a ransisor radio, or if someone comes in wih a flue he can play lonely unes, or even merry ones." Qualiy. No Quaniy, Sressed On wheher he coffee po will be widely used, Griffin says i really doesn' maer wheher he volume of people on a cerain nigh is higb The house is no a commercial business where quaniy is a necessary componen. Wha maers more, he says, is he qualiy. Tha people learn o use he house for heir benefi. "f one or wo persons come here during he nigh, i would be worhwhile," he says. Bu even wihou music and only a few people sraggling in on some nighs, he amosphere will remain he same nigh afer nigh, wih a coffee house open from midnigh o 4:30 "for he people of Nore Dame." :; - lr. l..

When he ND-SMC Theare opened is ninh season wih Kei Frings' adapaion of Thomas Wolfe's Look Homeward, Angel on Friday nigh, Ocober 4, he audience was reaed o a igh, unified producion conaining acing and echnical experise ha generally overshadowed a few disappoining performances. Frings' dramaizaion of Wolfe's largely auobiographical novel was firs saged in New York in November, 1957. Enhusiasically received by boh criics and audiences, i was awarded he Pulizer Prize for Drama and he Drama Criics' Award for he 1957-58 season. Se in he own of Alamon, Norh Carolina in he fall of 1916, he play focuses on he owners of he Dixieland Boarding House. A srange assormen of boarders form he background for he Gan family: he manipulaive, greedy moher managing Dixieland, he bohemian-spiried faher, flailing and fumbling hrough life, and he four children, sharing a common need o escape heir moher's siflin~ supervision.,_,. ~"'" ~- 1'. L =-... - - Monday, Ocober 7.,974 he observer 5 a boarding house and an angel Three o he children are now living he resuls of heir success or failure in fleeing, leaving Eugene, he younges, o sruggle for his freedom. Kirk Packo and Kahleen Rink as Mr. and Mrs. Gan give convincing performances, wih Packo winning he affecion, applause and laugher of he audience, while Rink arouses fiing disase and hosiliy owards he narrow. shrewd Mrs. Gan. f Packo's iniial falls and speeches are a bi overdone. he more han makes up for i as he seles down ino a confiden rendering of his role. His physical appearance could no be improved upon, and he faher-son relaionship he mainains wih Eugene rings a clear, rue noe. Ms. Rink's excessive use of fingerpoining and oher siff mannerisms, as well as her mainenance of one voice level hroughou he play becomes obnoxious- bu hen, his is perhaps he appropriae reacion o Mrs. Gan. One drawback o Ms. Rink's vocal inerpreaion can be seen in Ac, when momens of inense emoion are ofen los. ncreased anger is no con- Kah!een Rink, Kirk Paco and Michael Manier in Look Homeward Angel. (Phoo by Parick J. Gibbs),, ' veyed because her voice has been a screaming level all along. Michael Manier, as Eugene Gan, does an admirable job in porraying a ypical seveneen year old boy. Unforunaely, Eugene mus convey much more deph and he srugglings of arising mauriy if he is o be a all credible. Played by Manier as primarily he shy, unsure and oally submissive child, Eugene suddenly confrons his moher wihou giving any sense of he emoional build-up and r ;sonal growh leading up o his. Similarly, his ineracion wih Laura lacks any developmen; he resul is a shocked audience when Ac opens wih he wo in bed. The characer of Eugene would also benefi from furher developmen of his idolary of his broher, Ben, as well as of he loneliness he speaks of, bu never really conveys. Robin Salem, as Laura James, also fails o depic he developmen of any sor of affecion for Eugene. She is siff and proper unil he momen she is in bed wih him, and a hose imes when on sage primarily o suppor and comfor Eugene (,ii) she appears much more bored han concerned. Convincing performances were given by a number of supporing acors, mos noably Sara Paulis as he warm-heared "Fay" Per; Dan Daily as he harsh realis, Dr. Maguire; Dan Deziel as Mrs. Gan's broher and co-conspiraor, Will Penland; Jane Wilson as he sexy, easing Miss Brovm; and Richard Remley as Mr. Gan's drunken crony, Tarkingon. Kaherine Burke as a whorehouse madam was a brigh, enjoyable highligh. Bill McGlinn's porrayal of Ben, he elder Gan son, can only be called maserful. McGlinn's comforableness wih he role allows every bi of he characer's quie auhoriy and silen anguish o come hrough wih a ouching impac. Ben's incessan cigaree smoking and seadily worsening cough, easily overdone and made affeced, are here skillfully pu o he bes use. n he mids of several very compeen performances, McGlinn sands ou as conveying a realism and effeciveness ha no else seems o aain. The echnical side of he producion is a srong conribuion o is impac and uniy. The Boarding House se is boh ineresing and effecive, and he conrasing marble by aureen goers.--...... _ Kirk Packo, Michael Manier, and Robin Salem (Phoo by Parick J. Gibbs) shop is quie srikmg. Faih Adam's cosuming is mos imaginaive and appropriae; unforunaely, he make-up is no on a par wih he cosumes. The lighing is always capable, and ofen becomes excepional, as in Ben's bedroom scene. A urning down of he lighs and a greaer focus on he acion when i occurs in he bedrooms migh, however, be helpful. Excep for Jay Parks' ukelele-accompanied song, he music was only a disracion and ofen an impedimen o hearing he acors. Similarly, in he epilogue, he audience mus sruggle o hear Ben, who could perhaps benefi from a microphone. Excep for seeming over-direcion of Eugene's acions, Charles Ballinger has succeeded in guiding he majoriy of his acors ino capable performances. is hese performances, ogeher wih he mer:-10rable porrayal of Ben, he echnical successes and he over-all uniy which make he pla:r boh ineresing and enjovable. Look Homeward, Angel will run- again his weekend, Ocober 10, 11, and 12 a 8:00p.m. in S. Mary's O'Laughlin Audiorium. General Admission is $2.00; sudens, faculy, and saff will be admied for $1.50. Fify-five of us decided o forgo our home campuses his year. in search of wha we hoped o be more fulfilling endeavors in Rome. Even his early our expecaions have been me, for everyday has brough somehing new and, almos.always, a memorable even, he las hree weeks aking us from wearisome ravel o a beer undersanding of inernaional life. We knew his year owuld be a differen one for us if only for he ravel predicamens enounered our firs ime ogeher. Our midnigh charer fligh from J.F.K. Sep. 2 was delayed eleven hours. We had o figh our way hrough a crowded Paris rain saion, each of us weighed down wih an enormous amoun of baggage. Then o save ime, we had o load i overhead hrough he rain windows while our franic co-<>rdinaor was beseeching us o keep calm. Afer he loading ordeal was over, al, fify-five of us had o spend he nex fifeen hours in one car, rying o sleep in he few spaces no already aken up by our luggage. Forunaely, Rome didn' come oo soon, and wih i, a hree hour bus ride o Perugia, where we would spend our nex wo weeks. Despie wha seemed confusion hewhole rip, we did arrive in Perugia, Sep. 5, wo and a half days afer our iniial ake-<>ff ime <no as bad as i sounds -we spen a nigh in Paris), asking only for a ho shower and a sof bed. Bu o our dismay, we learned ha Perugia shus off all waer in he afernoon due o a drough, and each house ha's only enough waer for drinking wearisome ravel and rome and ligh washing a ha ime. Showers were for he mornings only, and even hen he odds agains geing ho waer were five o one. Anyway, we go a sof bed. Well, wha Perugia lacked in waer, he families we sayed wih made up for wih cuisine. Bread, pasa, fruis, chicken and morewere always pleniful. n fac i ook a lile geing used o he meals for mos of us. Many a suden can remember filling up on pasa during ha firs lunch in Perugia, only o feel fain a he sigh of he main course being served aferwards. They're a wonderful people - warm, undersanding, explosive, persisen (he men anyway, as he girls found) and fun o be wih.they always seem o have pleny of ime for some suden who painsakingly is rying o communicae in alian and when explaining o hem how difficul learning his second language is, hey assure you i's worh he ardor, because alian is such a beauiful language. We aended he Universiy for Forreigners in Perugia for wo weeks of inensive alian work. urned ou o be a Afer our seling down, ime finally ~ very inernaional experience for a walk allowed for meein~ wih he alians. down he hall would brin5! sounds of Greek, DOONESBURY ~~~~ r11 ~Hf:off::s ~~\) 50R.R.Y, PAVC. ON MY BACK H&AVENS_ NO. f BUT PR.ESPENT FOR A 570/?Yl AU. ST/RPAV FOR.P HAD A ODN'T HE{)() MR. FORP /AS o M7RMAL, /J(R(- ANYTHJN6 ROT- 57RA6Hl; OPEN ; N6 U/EEKENO. TeN AT AU?/ ANPPECENT. \ / '\ k/.,how ABOJT S/N:JAY'? (/'S'~ 51/NPA~ HG WAS PGVO/T. Al7HO/6H CWA" LATER fj'v N THe fi?/pay,111 1 eyenn6, HE k/a5 HT5 He C()(JM6 0{}S ANP Rff.ill!if'RY ajmpa5510nate.. ON FK/PAYl \ by jack d'aurora F'rench, Japanese or even a Bronx accen, all belonging o people who hope o one day maser alian, jus as we do. Much o ou own frusrai<'n hough, ha goal always seems years of alian classes away. Now ha our Perugia experience is over, we find ourselves in Rome, our home for he nex eigh monhs. Being here for only one week, i is difficul o convey anyhing general enough o cover his his grea ciy. One hing for sure, hough, is ha we have much o learn and undersand, for soon he charm of newness will wear off and we will reaiize ha we are confroned, for he curaion of our say, wih a counry very much unlike he U.S. in many ways. by Garry Trudeau ~Y, PAVe. ON FRM', TH& PRES/PENT WAS SCL.F-EiffAON6. " PAMNl 0 0 '.

Sex, d d he Su en Bo y,.. Professor Werge is an Associae Profes~or in he Engli~h Deparmen, former Direcor of he Commee for Academc Progress, and a member of he Suden Life Council rules commiee. and he SLC Professor Thomas Werg,( ~ ~ ( ( ( Sex, like he body, is here o say--a leas unil our dissoluion. Equally consan is he ension beween he desire for freedom, privacy, "doing as one likes," and such oher values as communal order, a common good, moral absolues. This ension becomes especially acue when an insiuion professing cerain religious as well as inellecual deals claims he general prerogaive of acing in loco parenis and he specific righ o penalize is sudens for violaing hose norms--sexual or oher--he insiuion esablishes. As he SLC ries once again o formulae an accepable rule on sexual behavior on campus, he quesion of wheher he universiy has he righ o ac in loco parenis or o esablish such rules seems o me poinless; i does, and i will. The idea of communiy does no preclude auhoriy or hierarchy. The real quesion is he kind of rule we will have. My fear is ha wo insisen posiions may dominae he debae. The firs--ha we have no rule a all and rus o he essenial goodness of human naure and he meaphysical lus of undergraduaes o form Meaningful Relaionships unil he enire world is Meaningfully Relaed--is ouching bu somewha unreal. The second--ha sudens who violae he rule be auomaically suspended or expelled--is overly severe. This pas spring, he SLC--righly, hink--refused o embrace eiher proposal. By an 11 9 voe, he Council passed a rule ha any suden violaing he universiy's regulaion ran he risk of being asked, or old, o move off-campus. Admiedly, his compromise had is flaws. s apparen assumpion ha off-campus sudens were Loharios living in Sodom raher han Souh Bend was in quesionable ase. Bu he proposal was, afer all, a compromise. Several who voed agains i may have hough i oo harsh; ohers may have hough i oo lenien. Given he slim margin by which i passed, Faher Hesburgh's veo was jusified. f poliics is he ar of he possible, however, raher han one group's imposiion of is earnes wishes on oher groups i considers perverse and unenlighened, some similar compromise is wha he SLC will have o work ou. do no hink he voes are here--nor should be here--for a policy of expulsion or for a lack of any policy. n more skepical and speculaive momens, have hough of several possible rules. Why no require, for example, ha all Nore Dame sudens be married o each oher as hey regiser? am sure ha Mr. Sullivan. he Regisrar, would be willing o work ou he logisics of such a process, hough have no ye spoken wih him abou i. Since men would ounumber women, some males would remain unwed. When hey were no sudying, hese undomesicaed males could swim, play a lo of baskeball, and wrie, depending on heir poliical leanings, appropriaely liberaed ediorials for he Observer or solemn admonishmens for he Nore Dame Repor. They could also babysi for he children of heir married fellow sudens whose numbers would be legion. n ligh of he slim chances for passage of such a resoluion, hope we are able o formulae and agree on some moderae proposal accepable o adminisraors, faculy, and sudens. should be inspired nelgher by he adolescen inaniy of Hugh Hefner nor he asceicism of he Deser Fahers. To hope ha everyone will be happy wih would be fauous; o acknowledge ha life here or anywhere else is filled wih compromise, disappoinmen, chagrin, and complexiy would be more realisic and o he poin. Saniy may prevail. The Righ may admi ha he hails of Nore Dame, finally, do no really resemble he Babylon of he Old Tesamen or he Carhage of S. Augusine. The Lef may admi ha human naure--yes, even n American undergraduaes--s imperfec, and ha love of whaever sor does no in fac conquer all. f so, a compromise ail can live wih, if no become ecsaic over, may emerge. Bu if he advocaes of he fanasy of "oal freedom," whaever ha migh be, or he equally unreal dream of "oal order," are adaman, he prospecs for moderaion will again be bleak. f so, he resuls of our deliberaions will prove as fuile his ime as hey did a few shor monhs ago. Cf. du lac, Page 27, Rule 8 Broher Jus Pac:zesny Lisen, Tom Drape, you asked me o commen on he human sexualiy bi wrien in our rules. Of all he opics o choose from, you had o pick he oughes o es me. Le me begin. Life s complicaed enough wihou muliplying laws. f here is a law exising, hen i follows ha anoher is no necessary o explain he original. n his day and age, would be easy for me o pu he responsibiliy on your young shoulders, more so han my parens did o me, and avoid ransmiing experiences from one generaion o anoher. To insis ha you learn ail he answers "on he go" pragmaically, by experimenaion, o preend ha in a few years you could discover he accumulaed experience of man is pure hypocrisy and delusion. None of us can maure in human sociey wihou guidance. For one generaion o raionalize our inconsisencies, cowardice and lack of principles, wih he excuse ha frees you from dependency does no help you o grow. Tha s why we have a "... deep concern for he growh and moral developmen of each member of he Universiy." And why we are... "Challenging each oher o develop aiudes owards human sexualiy ha are auhenically Chrisian." By your bapism, you have a Chrlslan commimen, which mus be an adul ac of self-giving. Therefore, in your growh as a Chrisian you should no reain he naive The Sexual WlNN R, l.l Soulll UN]) \ s..... ~AT 1M C!LC)l( NO"'N ~S Fo~ ' ST 'Pfl11ETAL"i GRPl WHO, WHRTJ+ Wlf RE" DATNG G~P'lE WHATS MY ljfiiie:'f N WLYWO G'R.M!. expecaion of insan reward. n he fourh chaper of he Gospel of S. Luke we see Jesus reurning o Nazareh and enering he Synagogue and opening a book where i reads, "The Spiri of he Lord is upon me because he has anoined me o preach good news (\he poor. He has sen me o proclaim releaselo he capives and recovering he sigh o1he blind, o se a libery ho\4! who are oppressed, o proclaim he accepable year of he Lord." Laer he scripure goes on o ell us ha Jesus' neighbors 1n Nazareh hen ried o kill him. The life of a Chrisian is no easy. nsan success is no a mus. Few aposles reaped where hey have sown. Wih Chris, ever compassionaed, filled wih empahy, never lsn'ii1 ~-- _"""... "!":!"... ".~~~ JoinedTh Broher Jus Paczesny is Vice Presiden for Suden Affairs, a member of he Suden Life Council, and former Recor of Alumni Hall. discouraged, always hopeful. pray ha be no a sumbling block o your Chrisian mauriy by muliplying rules. Our code of life s found in he Decalogue and Beaiudes and our moraliy s praciced under hese preceps. We answer o God for our acions, and o our fellow human beings as well, because we show our love for God by our concern for our neighbor. Occasionally, we need a push and a shove o keep us aler o our commimens. suppose we make addiional rules for encouragemen. 's very much like no parking signs n he circle a he Main Gae: one or wo could do he job, bu do you know ha here are sixeen - coun hem - sixeen no parking signs in he circle. Makes you wonder, doesn' i? \

... ~~--------~~--------------~----------------------------------------------------------------------.-----------------------------------~ Code De-Sioganizing Our Deliberaions Professor Waler Nicgorski.. Professor Waler Nicgorski is an Associae Professor in he General Program and a member of he Suden Life Council. Any newly eleced member of he SLC should know enough o keep quie for awhile. Tha sensible reflecion was very much a he fron of my mind as considered The Observer's inviaion o conribue o his space on he human sexualiy rule. Afer all, among he SLC's members are a subsanial number who direcly experienced las year's effors o deal wih he problem; furhermore, whasomeperson s anxious o make a public saemen on his difficul maer, and finally, wha good can come from ipping my ha, namely giving an early sign where sand. Beer, i migh seem, o approach he SLC's deliberaions more coyly, wihou a prined record of advocacy for one side or he oher. Those good reasons for silence were se aside by he hope ha my houghs migh conribue o he campus discussions ha usually precede and nfluence he SLC deliberaions. "Conribue o" does no mean "prevail over,"--bu does mean being a facor ha's considered and hough abou. And maybe in he end will ge he benefi of having by hough refined by he discussions ahead. n urn, dohopeha suden leaders and ohers who have expressed hemselves publicly and whose opinions are ouched on hereafer will be srong enough o approach he ssue as concerned leaders searching for he righ soluion and no as people playing ou supposedly expeced roles (e.g. he ani-adminisraion role or he suden freedom posure). The ssue has ncreasingly come down o a decision on wheher o mainain a rule, backed up wih real penalies, forbidding exramarial sex on campus or wheher o sele for a saemen of he moral posiion of he Universiy and leave accepance of-ha and compliance wih o he choice of halls and, or individuals. can honesly say ha am no sure which, under he presen circumsances, s he bes approach o sue n dealing wih fornicaion on campus. However, mplied n ha admission of my uncerainy here are wo affirmaions ha should be made explici. One s ha he Universiy mus care---namely be concerned wih he effec of is aciviies and environmen on he characer of s sudens. The second s ha a rule or law can be an appropriae insrumen of moral educaion. ~~you e.aub~.., :... {'~ - ~. ;~-"' Toward Jude Bremer is a Senior American Sudies major from Ames, owa, a Residen Assisan in Walsh Hall, and a former member of he Suden Life rouncil. On Friday, Sep. 20, he Universiy acknowledged our righ o hear a Communis speaker. Similarly, concede ha is a viable righ of he Universiy o sae a policy of sexual moraliy. The placemen of his saemen s he crux of he curren issue. no he saemen self. From he deep inside he proecive womb of Nore Dame, believe ha is ofen difficul for us o see beyond nex weekend. SSO easy o become ngrained wih he mmediae, ha we ofen fall o mainain an overview of our lives. We mus realize he necessiy o elescope our vision oward a credible picure of realiy. This ouward growh process s our main goal during our shor say under he Dome; he heme of he saemen of sexual moraliy s merely an affirmaion of his qrowh process. ----~._.places where men are men and women beer he ladies he sudens are no youhs. They Are, as Faher HesburRh pu i, youn~ aduls.."'nlcnever here is 11n!"'e~n o Adhere o he heory of prolon~ed ~~nlescence. a fnirly recen ~evelopmen in our hisory, here'~ P,oino; o be rouhlp. 'lorp D~ml", na ~e hnve ~P.Pn. h1s ~~n~~e~ o :>voi ~ h i..,-o.hl P, by re:>in~ iro,.- 'len no ~s chil.~ren bu PS yonnr ~,n1~. Bu "bove Pll., hn ~uhori ip here ~re no ~ fr~ i rl nf he yo nr, Ncre DrTDP. is S:"J.\'in!':... hp when ynu ren nf''lple like ~1ul. s,...; h <li ;"li -~~ ~n<l unrfers:~nli n~..he. bf"'r.ave Uke a<luls." --closinr, rem~r~s NBC FR:3T TUESTJ.\Y N KNOWLEDGE THERE S STRENGTH A few words abou each of hese saemens s all ha limied space allows. One conno speak of he Universiy's care ar acive concern for ls fudens wihou sirring up he charges of paernalism and in:, :o parenis. This charge or slogan ha preends o be an arguemen should be me head on. Tha any modern insiuion shouid be ouched wih some feaures of paernal or parenal conc~rn for hose whom serves should be an occasion of surprise and rejoicing. Wha could, afer all, be more reasonable han ha h~ insiuion which provides, among oher hings, a residenial communiy for young epople in heir firs years away from home should no enirely and a once break wih he love, concern and discipline ha characerize a good home. There have been and will be claims ha universiies should be neural on maers of personal moraliy and accordingly mos universiies and colleges have abandoned any concern wih heir sudens' lives ouside he classroom, library and laboraory. One is never, rus, o be inimidaed lno"runnlng wih he pack." Fuhermore, wha is happening elsewhere deserves more probing scruiny han impressionlsicmedla surveys ever dare o provide; my poin is o ral~e he quesion wheher posiions of neuraliy by adminisraors and faculy are explained by decisions of principle or by faigue, by, in oher words, an abdicaion or arophy of a sense of responsibiliy and heburdensha go wih i. No only does a Caholic Universiy, while ending o s immediae responsibiliy of inellecual deve'opmen, never forge he ulimae goal of all human endeavor, bu also, seems ha any universiy would be deficien f i negleced aspecs of s common life ha harmed he overall personal developmen of s sudens. To say ha a rule or law can be an appropriae nsrumen of moral educaion s no, of course, o say ha all moraliy should be "enforced by law" or ha "morals can be legislaed." does, however, recognize ha laws which regulae our over behavior, or he absence of such laws, can nfluence he kind of siuaions we are placed in, he moral colmae n which we are growing and, of course, he personal habis we form. n he naional debae over civil righs legislaion in he early 1960's, he poin was made again and again ha "you c~n' legislae moraliy," "you can' force whies o accep blacks." Tha poin s simply rue, bu s also rue ha one resul of he righs secured by ha legislaion has been o bring blacks and whies no more regular and ordinary conacs. Thaklnd of siuaion has encouragec myny whies o reassess heir prior general and prejudicial views of blacks; has, in oher words, conribued o a healhv moral developmen. You canno legislae morals, bu you can, by he presence or absence of laws, nfluence he formaion and developmen of personal moral codes. n his regard, he SLC's nquiry no he presen funcioning of parleals (soon o be known as "visiaion hours") s a very imporan responsibiliy; here mus be a horough and hones appraisal of how presen policies aid or harm he moral deveiopmen of sudens. The human sexualiy rule would be bes reapproached afer he wider ssue of parleals s fully considered. a Vision of Credible Realiy Jude Bremer Par of he rule reads: "Reverence for he person necessiaes a sruggle o make our acions consisen wih he realiy of our myopia, he occurrence of shallow, even degrading, sexual relalolnshlps is real. This profession of consideraion for he mean ha he rules should differeniae beween "firs degree sexual offence" and "second degree sexual offence"? This ype relaionships". The concep of realiy a individual is n complee accord wih he of legislaion desroys he feeling, or Nore Dame is difficul o even hink abou. ideals of concern ha are coninually expressed possible he occurrence, of rus mplied n here a Nore Dame. This concern s Overcoming he narrow-mlndedness ha is_ his communiy of acive care and concern. so everpresen here s one of our greaes challenges. The homogenley manifesed by a group of 6,000 individuals s unreal, feel ha he inolerance oward lndivldualiv s my greaes frusraion. Trying o prepare ourselves for "he real world" n an "unreal universiy" s mpossible. For his reason we mus respec each oher's ndividualiy no limied o he suden body bu ~ negraed among he faculy, sudens, adminisraion, even exending o he Souh Bend Communiy. feel ha he dissaisfacion and confusion arises from he fac ha his philosophy s disguised as a rule, a nebulous rule a ha. Anyone will agree ha here s n shor, feel ha we should no ry o legislae moraliy. The mere connoaion of a rule implies somehing o be avoided bu he deals n a philosophy are somehing ha one may srive for. feel yha by placing he saemen of sexual moraliy n he nroducion o he rules as a philosophy and we mus srive o creae our own unique a vas difference beween sexual ndiscreion would relieve he confusion and frusraion individualiy. This heme s wha would and sexual mmoraliy. Does his now associaed wih he ssue. like o have he sexual moraliy philosophy -------------------------------- mean o us nsead of a mere aemp o The SLC be d he a} de regulae biological urges. glds lsc\sson on sexu CO As a philosophy agains he crimes of day 30.a.L-. f1 b usery, s a fiing saemen n a Chrisian O a 4: p.dl. n U.l: mmer CJSemeni insiuion. Wih our penchan oward _j

\ ' ' P. Q. Box Q No Heroes Dear Edior, There are always wo sides o ar.y issue, however, proponens of universal amnesy do no choose o examine he oher side of he coin. An example would be Miss Manley's leer of Ocober 2 which sereoypes draf evaders as men moivaed by he 'courage of heir convicions" and all Vienam veerans as "drug addics... suffering from psychological disorders resuling from beinl' a pary o arociies." Such sweeping generalizaions are wholly biased and inaccurae, so les ge back o realiy. Having los a broher and a friend in Vienam and also being essenially a criic our Asian policies may perhaps enable me o shed a lile ligh on he subjec. Vienam was a ragedy for he naion and for my family in paricular. We are no vengeful and neiher are he majoriy of Vienam veerans have known. Bu no all he deserers should be applauded as heroes o some higher moral calling. Many of hose living in exile are having difficuly in he counries hey are living in. Some are felons and drug addics, and sill ohers are members of milian subversive organizaions and are considered undesirables in he counries hey are exiled in. would only be sensible o examine each case for is own meris. We should also remember ha exile is for less a courageous ac han acceping imprisonmen and concern ourselves firs wih hose who ruly followed heir consciences and acceped he penaly of he law. Also we should consider ha applicaions for defermen, conscienious objecion or plane fare o Canada were opions opened only o well-o-do middle class whies and ha in many insances he poor, minoriy groups and hose no brigh enough or rich enough o go o college wen and died in heir place. Tha had a deerioraing effec on he conduc of he war and on he services in general. We should be undersanding in our erms of amnesv bu we should no welcome hem all back as he rue heroes of he Vienam era. They did no refuse o servehey avoided serving and here is an imporan moral difference. A ruly conscienious objecor would no reurn, no maer wha he offer was, unil we had oally changed our policy in Souheas Asia. Now ha he danger is over heir consciences seem a lile diminished. They will condescend, i seems o forgive us. Because h<> war was conroversial ar. '~cause we are anxious o m l our counry's wounds, lenienc~ 'sa sound policy o follow. Bu don' hink he draf evaders quie warran a hero's welcome. :ough perhaps no raiorous, l.. were a leas irresponsible in heir acions. Once he amnesy issue is resolved hope we don' forge he 'cowards" who served and are jobless, in need of educaion or confined o Veerans Hospials for he res of heir lives. deserve a break oo. Sincerely, Sephen R. Judge Seak They To he Ediors, "Sudens wan more Seak," read he headline. A a ime when half our plane subsiss on one or wo bowls of rice per day and famine kills housands every ime he sun ses on Norhern Africa, Bangladesh, ndia and our inner ciies, my fellow sudens cry ou for more, no less of wha is rapidly becoming an expensive and disappearing luxury ha half he people on his earh have never seen, le alone ased. Wih acquiescence o his demand, our coninued gorgingly obscene preoccupaion wih fooball, our chauvinism and selfindulgen 'hell wih he res of humaniy' aiude, he large majoriy of our communiy coninues o make a mockery of he Jesus ehic. and coninues o hf\ deaf and blnd o he shorages of food, of resources, and more imporanly of ruly commied and conscienial people who could, if 'SHOW Ml SOMTHNG 'D WANT TO SJiND A DOLLAR ON!' only hey would look around hem, "see hings ha never were and say, 'Why no?' " More seak indeed, no wonder my uiion is so damned inflaed! Sadly, Parick Dillon '75 Losing Togeher Dear Edior: As a high school spors Edior wo years ago, wroe a column which was criical of our beaen fooball eam's play. Like our fighing rish ha high school eam had championship poenial. Like Pee McHugh's "Exra Poins" aricle of Sepember 30, my column was unnecessary, inaccurae, and unfair. f we won ogeher, we mus lose ogeher and pick each oher up as well. The ime is now o relinquish any bierness, bea he res of our opponens, win a bowl game, and le he polls ake care of hem selves. We mus do his ogeher, Mr. McHugh, for ha is he source of our pas and fuure greaness. Digger Walsh. '77 Twain Updaed Dear EDior: Mark Twain, while lecuring o pay off he many debs he had incurred, used o amuse his audiences wih he ale of an experimen he claims o have performed. He ook a rabbi and pu i in a cage, and ino his cage he gradually inroduced a fox, a sheep, a lion, a kangaroo, and various oher animals, and in a very shor while hey became friends and lived ogeher peacefully. Encouraged by his success, he caugh an rish Caholic, a Bapis, a Presbyerian, a Turk, and various oher ypes of men and pu hem in a cage. Wihin an hour hey were all dead. They'd killed each oher in a heological disagreemen. Twain found his curious. Recenly, a group of people ook up he dae on his experimen, and decided o ry again. The problem was, hey hough, ha Twain had pu oo much variey ino his sample. They sough o relieve his difficuly by repeaing he experimen wih only rish Caholics. They furher resolved ha he sample be young, of middle-class origin, and reasonably inelligen. This las requiremen proved a sumbling block o he rish, so he group was forced o accep Poles and Germans o fill ou he quoa. n all here were four female subjecs and seven male. Now, hey hough, wih so much in common, and wih so much o offer each oher, surely hese men and women will ge along peacefully. They, oo, had heir expecaions disappoined. The subjecs found i a firs difficul o disagree wih each oher, hey were so alike, bu hey soon found ou ha here was he one difference of sex, and quickly drew bale lines. The form of comba was novel: as i was unbecoming a genleman o srike a lady, and i was unbecoming a coward of eiher sex o own up o an opinion ha he or she held, hey ook o vilifying each oher in unsigned leers sen o he local newspaper. The comba was no as faal as he one ha Twain winessed, bu his was no he faul of hose who waged i, hey did he bes hey could. f Mr. Twain was alive oday, 'm sure he'd feel confirmed in his belief ha "man is he curiouses creaure on earh." Bias and Sincerely: T. Alexander Radgowski Blasphemy Dear Edior: is raher significan ha he Observer carried he piece "Bias Charged in Despres Appoinmen" (27 Sep.) wo days afer he leer o Edior from Peer R. Moody Jr. (25 Sep.) launched such a Blasphemous aack agains Jesus Chris (and Professor Rice) on he aborion issue! Le your readers refer once again o he 25 Sep issue of The Observer and heir obfuscaion over he Despres Kurz-Crosson-Hesburgh rhubarb migh be cleared up! Afer all, Nore Dame is (or was??) a Caholic, privae educaional insiuion!! Die Week Dear Edior: would personally like o hank he Food Service for heir newes meal program: Die Week. These pas few days have served as a grea incenive in cuing down appeies hroughou he campus. Paul Drzaic Laundry Lamen Dear Edior, Having jus experienced one of he wors hassles Nore Dame has o offer - he suden laundry service - feel compelled for he sake of personal saisfacion o air my feelings on ha "insiuion." One Thursday, walked ino he Souh Quad Laundry oule behind Badin Hall, as if i were any oher Thursday, ready o pay my $1.32 in coupons for puing oo much laundry ino he wash. Bu he laundry had surprises in sore - hey los my bundle of clohes. Believe me, ha wasn' wha disurbed me. realize ha many ND sudens lose he equivalen of a laundry bundle; excep heir loss is spread over he course of a year, whole los mine all a once. Wha upse me was he rude, dishones reamen he workers in he office displayed oward me. Reurning o he office he nex day o see if anyhing new had developed, had o wai 45 minues unil he "boss" finally srolled in, one-half hour lae from her lunch break. She reassured me ha she's "look ino i." When reurned one hour laer, as was old, he boss informed me ha she had locaed he receip of my laundry bundle, meaning ha my clohes had been given o anoher suden. Wha amazed me was how hey could have accomplished ha, since he workers check he names on he laundry bundles before giving hem ou. Unforunaely, i ook he boss 6 more days o figure ou ha he serial numbers of he laundry numbers of he laundry coupons pinned o he receip could be raced o he suden who received my clohes. Finally, he nex day, he suden was locaed, reurned my laundry, and was able o claim i. The laundry workers personally assured me ha hey had checked he conens of my bundle agains he receip and had found ha everyhing was here; bu decided o see for myself, and immediaely found wo aricles missing. Geing quie perurbed, hardly l:fegan elling he boss of my discovery when she announced ha she already knew of my los clohes and would "look ino i." Shocked, he only conclusion could draw was ha he laundry service had purposely lied o me, hoping ha would no discover anyhing missing and, hus, forge all abou he maer. Throughou hose weeks of checking and calling o see if my clohes, had come in, encounered a oal lack of concern )n he workers' par. n fac, he boss ook more pains in placing blame on a newly-hired worker han she did in locaing my laundry. only hope ha his siuaion can be correced so ha more sudens do no face his predicamen. Edward J. Murray CSC Sincerely yours, Professor Emerius Jeff Vier La"'_Jdrx No. 31140 1111111111111111111111111111111 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 nn lllmll llih HllliiiiM Nigh Edior - Rick Blower Ass' Nigh Edi Jr - Andy Praschak Layou - Maggl'a Walman, Marha Fanning, Kahy Skiba, Candy Frankovelgla Copy Reader - Bob Queakenbush Day Edior - Ken Girouard Ediorials - Fred Graver, Bill Brink Poin-Counerpoin - Fred Graver Feaures - J.R. Baker Spors - Greg Corgan Typiss - Jane Carney, Kahy Grace, Camille Arrleh, Nell V, Rick Huber Compugraphic Operaor - Bob Selnme: Picure Screener - Alber 0' Anonio Nigh Conroller - Dave Rus Happy Birhday, Griff!

Monday, Ocober 7, 1974 he observer 9 Vows respec for hosages Vargas lowe~s ra11som demands SANTO DOMNGO <UP)-- Presiden Joaqum Balaguer has n response o pubhc op1mon, hw of he governmen," he said. allowed o shou from he sidewalk Guerrilla leader Radhames offered he guerrillas, believed o newspaper ediorials and requess U.S. Ambassador Rober Hur- o Miss Huchison who repored Mendez Vargas, shouing from a number only six, nohing m?re ;from member~ of famil!es. of he wich and his Spanish and she was "okay" ~nder he cirwindow "'s ime o end his han safe conducs for leavmg hosages askmg mediaion o Venezuelan counerpars cumsances. busines~ " Thursday dropped his Sano Domingo in reurn for resolve he conflic, and whose requesed. he governmen earlier Archbishop Hugo Eduardo demand for a $1 million ransom for releasing he capives unharmed. requess have fallen on he deaf o allow a docor o ener he Polanco Brio, presumably a he seven hosages and offered o rim he lis of poliical prisoners he Among he hosages are Mi~s Huchison, U.S. embassy pubhc e~rs of ~he governmen, he Ja~. 12 Liberaion Movemen has decided capured building o rea Alvarado and a guerrilla suffering reques of he governmen, wih drew as he food-supplying waned exchanged. affairs officer; Venezu~lan consul o desis.in some demb:nds." from a bulle wound, apparenly mediaor Tuesday, leaving he "As revoluionaries we respec he human being, and here is no Jesus Gregorio and VCe con~ul Waldemar. Alvarado; Spamsh.H~ said he. guernllas were wllhng.~o alk ~h he goyernmen accidenal, in he leg.. Hurwich and he Spamsh guerrillas and hosages wihou food and waer for 36 hours. hrea a presen agains he pries Saniago Fuenes, and hree ~bou a ~ss1ble reducion of he Ambassador ook some food, Police had lighs and waer o physical inegriy of he hosages " Dominican employes of he con- hs" of pnson~rs o be released as waer, cigarees and medicine o he building cu off bu resored he he said. ' sulae. well as droppmg. ~e demand for he building shorly before mid- lelephone connecion from ime o The ransom concessions were Mendez Vargas suddenly paymen of $1 millu~n. nigh Wednesday. Hurwich was ime. he firs ones by he pro-casro shoued his rera~ion of he. Mendez Vargas said Venezuelan Jan. 12 Naional Liberaion ransom demand m a hoarse Vce consul Waldemar Alvardo Movemen since i occupied he m?nologue shorl~ before noon, w~s verr, ill an.d "worsening by.he consulae las Friday and asked usmg a make~h1f megapho!le mmu~e. He d1d no say wha ailed for release of hree-dozen poliical apparenly fashioned from milk he d1pl?ma:. prisoners and $1 million. carons.... Th:,. Siuaion ~~. he consulae THE NOTRE DAME-SANT MARY'S THEATRE needs The group se four differen "'!_'he governmen S drawmg hi,~ was msufferable and ha here CLOWNS deadlines for execuing he affair ou o ~y o w~ar.us down,, had ~o be an ~~emp o reach a hosages--including American he yelled. Well, JUS wo~.~ s~luwn soon or wha~ ~~ppens diploma Barbara Huchison--a work; Le here be an en~ s.oon. Will no be our responsibiliy bu for PROJECT HEAD START Clown Program Voluneer an hour or wo o make a youngser's firs days in school a memorable experience. silence on he concessions. lis had only 33 names. Oher ORGANZATONAL MEETNG: 6 P.M. Tues. Oc. 8 wo-hour inervals bu le each Mendez Vargas ongmally Kuns fl rs man pass. demanded freedom for 37 con- The governmen mainained viced exremiss. bu a submied O Walk around guerrillas in he consulae have NO enrollmen he enl re globe spoken of 35 and 38 comrades. increases over las semeser Enrollmen for he fall semeser a he Universiy of Nore Dame reached 8,651 his week, an increase of 65 over las year's oal of 8,586 las year, bu he number of women enrolled in he hird year of coeducaion jumped from 831 o 1,138. An addiional 377 women are enrolled in posbaccalaureae programs wih 93 among he 430 sudens in he Law School and 26 among he 184 enrolled in he graduae program in business adminisraion. There are 1,218 men and women enrolled in graduae programs, compared o 1,213 las year and 1,202 he year before. Enrollmen. in he undergraduae colleges shows 2,034 his year and 2,046las year in Ars and Leers: 1,382 his year and 1,266 las year in Business Adminisraion; 918 his year and 948 las year in Science, and 783 his year and 771 las year in Engineering. There are 1,701 enrolled in he Freshman Year of S for Program his year, compared o las year's 1,786. The enrollmen figures include sudens paricipaing in overseas programs in London; Angers, France; nnsbruck, Ausria; Rome; Tokyo and Mexico Ciy. Preliminary figures show 351 sudens from neighboring Sain Mary's College aending classes a Nore Dame, and 430 Nore Dame sudens aending one or more classes a Sain Mary's under a co-exchange program. ac:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;~:;:;:;:;:;:;. ~ *~''V"C!* ~~~~~ ~~: : SHOE SHOP ;:;: il BENEATH BADN ii :;~ COMPLETE SELECTON OF~~: ~; TOP BRAND FOOTWEAR ~;j ;;;~ KNAPP SHOES ~;; LEATHER AND ZPPER REPAR ACCESSORES QUCK SERVCE REASONABLE OPEN 8-6 MON-FR 9-4 SAT. : PH 283-1144 -: : l::::::::::..-::~=::~-:;:;:~:~:~:::::::::::~::*~ Room 228, Moreau Hall, Sain Mary's. Or call 284-4141 for informaion. "Aenion, journaliss!" he By LNDA THRANE 1 - cried o newsmen a half-block WASECA, Minn. <UP) - 1UCHJGAN STREET away a he police cordon. "Here Unil David Kuns srode ino : YJ 1.1. : goes an imporan communique: his rusic souhern Minnesoa :: ADULT THEP1HES :: Peru declare s communiy, no man had walked around he world. da ~urnin g Two legs and 22 pairs of.: Y 0,.,,._ X 2 fil1ud.: shoes carried Kuns 15,000 1Y~ for,...,.,e vicillb miles in 4 1;2 years o make him X BOCES'CJE :: ~WUA he firs man on record o walk Lima UP - Peru declared a day he globe-excep for he of naional mourning Sunday o oceans. commemorae he rising number " was a human hing, a : X LVE flcx:::fl SfiC) W : of vicims of a brief bu powerful fanasic accomplishmen for ~ earhquake ha shook he capial man," a weahered, gaun bu e 131 6 s~ wh MCHGAN STREET.:: and smaller coasal owns. beaming Kuns, 35, said Saur- '-1\.11 The civil defense command said day a he end of his rek. a laes coun 83 persons died and " ook wo legs," he said. CALL 282 120. fnr NfQDAAAJn 2,500 were injured in he wo- "There were no machines, : 'L.~ WH1 ~ minue quake Thursday ha didn' have o learn how o sail - damaged or desroyed 18,000 a ship or didn' have o fly a _= HARO L D ME DOW ==--==5 buildings. plane o do i." Thd~l deah ollb 00 h.as mouned There were no signs of he =====~sea 1 y as new 1es were un- anagonism Kuns had aroused = us covered in he rubble, bu he when ouspoken commens he ED CARS damage was nowhere near ha of made abou marriage, Waseca 5 he disasrous 1970earhquake ha and "damn dumb foreigners" = ~ ook an esimaed 67,000 lives in appeared in a newspaper ~==- AND TRUCKS 5 norhern Peru. aricle wo weeks ago. 5 As 500 building inspecors fanned "'m ouched," Kuns old he = =-;=== hrough Lima and he Pacific coas crowd. "There are a lo of _ owns o he souh of Lims, he really big people here oday." = damagesopropery_w_ere esimae<l' Kuns and a broher, John, ~ Lafayee a LaSalle = af'fore ;an ~~ ~l!~~- bl' lef Waseca June 20, 1970, in i ~ 'lda.gs egw a a f s a ka pu C he company of a mule named = ~ b m mgs:.roups o wor men ore Willie-Make- primarily for a Phone 233-2129 down bmldmgs weakened by he colossal advenure and also o! ~ quake. d f = raise onaons or UNCEF mewlllaluiuhuu.'dw'- r"m-.-u mwnunuiw11111111118 r--------------------~ ~ ~~~~~~~ ' ' i DANCNG LESSONS l ' ' FRAN DEMARCO l------------------------- ~-------..J

,. ; ~ "... < ) ~> 's 10 he observer Monday, Ocober 7. 1974 Day Care Cener offered o ND-SMC communi By Cahy Buso Saff Reporer The adminisraor of he Happy Day Care Cener, nc., Mrs. Pa Garreffa, defined he goals of he Cener a S. Mary's Friday. "We are here o help he children develop as individuals, said Garreffa. The main effor will no be o accelerae he child's developmen, bu raher o id-nify he sage he child is in and develop i o is fulles while offering ample opporuniy for advancemen as he child indicaes." The Cener is open five days a week and offers wo programs : a nursery school program for hree year olds, and anoher for four year olds which will parallel he day care services. Alhough i is locaed on he SMC campus, he Cener is privae and operaes as a small corporaion. The Cener is open only o Sain Mary's and Nore Dame faculy, adminisraors, and sudens. Mrs. Garreffa explained ha many of he children's mohers aend graduae school a Nore Dame. Now in is fourh year of operaion, he school has a oal enrollmen of fify children and a ~~ \- r.._,_...,~ Garrefa: We are here o help he children develop as faculy of four. The eachersuden raio is one eacher for every fifyeen children. Thiry children aend in he morning and weny-seven aend in he afernoon. Some children aend all day. n addiion o he faculy, over sixy voluneers from sociology and psychology classes work wo o hree hours a week a he Cener. A muli-media approach is used o each he children. According o.garreffa, ar, music and drama are being inegraed wih he new hngs hey are learning abou children and human ineracion in s. (Phoo by Paul Joyce) psychology, educaion, and socio\ogy o develop novel ways of eachlflg children. She offered wo examples of how he echnique is used: "A person rained in creaiv~ dramaics could help he childrefl o undersand sharing, o see alernaive ways o solve a Kagel's Flowers & Gifs 602 N. Mchigan S..~ Phone 233-2232 - F. T.D. - SMC THEATRE 1974-75 Our Ninh Season RESERVATONS 284 4176 Suden Faculy ND-5MC Saff $1.50' LOOK HOMEWARD, ANGEL Kei Frlngs' Pulizer Prize play based on he novel by Thomas Wolfe. proble or o see anoher person's poin of iew. Also, a variey of ar Oc. 4, 5, 10, 11, 12 a 8:00 P.M. exercise are being developed o O'Laughlin Audiorium (S. Mary's) each so e very specific per- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ cepual skil~." Garreffa added ha she would like o expand in he fuure because she has a waiing lis of hiry-five families who would like heir children o aend he Cener. Boson busing opponens bale desegregaion order Boson UP -Ani-busing forces opened he fourh week of heir bale agains cour-ordered school desegregaion Sunday wih a peaceful moorcade and he beginning of a hree days of religious observances. Abou 200 opponens of he busing program which has affeced abou half of he ciy's 94,000 sudens, ook par in a moorcade and demonsraion ouside he Saler Hilon Hoel in he business disric of he ciy. They aemped o enlis he suppor of he Massachuses Building and Consrucion Trades Council, which was holding a convenion a he hoel. The 100-car moorcade, horns blaring and placards waving, drove from Souh Boson o he hoel, where he demonsraors NCKlE'S TONGHT & held a rally. A represenaive of he demonsraors spoke o he council convenion, which laer passed a resoluion supporing qualiy educaion, bu opposing forced busing. Police repored no arress for incidens. Meanwhile, a spokesman for he Souh Boson Home and School Associaion, Mrs. Ria Growl, sa~ her organizaion was sponsoring hree-day rosary recial and h d scheduled an ecumenical service Monday as anoher par of lhe proes agains he buling program ordered by U.S. Di$ric Cour Judge W... Arhur Gariy. School Deparmen officials coninued heir prepara\6ns for he resumpion of classes Monday. More han 250 ransiional aides DlRNGEVERY NOCAY NGHT FOQlBAU. ~ and bus moniors urned ou Saurday for a half-day raining session a Dorches~r High School. The aides have been used exensively a schools o comba disorders arising from he busing program. Sae Educaion Commissioner Gregory R Anrig said Saurday he expeced ha school aendance would reurn o a normal 80 per cen level his week following he boyco Friday, which dropped aendence o 52.2 per cen, he lowes since schools opened Sep. 12. 1 of Souh Bend 52980 U.S.31 Norh 272-5220 presens frig~ jlroa. overland Sage co. everyhing from Clown-home luegrass o conemporary rock BEGNNNG OCTOBERS-3 SHOWS NGHTLY F R 0 M 9 :0 0-2:0 0 SUNDAY FROM 8:30-12:00 3 OlD 5mES FOR $1.00 FROV\ KCKOFF TO THE ANAL GUN! NON FEATURNG 5 PCXl. TABLES FeR ALL YOO PCXl. SHARK51

Monday, Ocober 7, 1974 he observer 11.. Bike regisraion schedule se "HELP US HELP YOU.... REGSTER YOUR BKE"- Tha's he moo of a bicycle regisraion program ha is being run his week under he sponsorship of he Dean of Sudens Office and Nore Dame Securiy. Regisraion will begin oday and coninue hrough Friday a several on -eampus locaions for he convenience of he sudens. The program is being sponsored in order o assis Nore Dame sudens in regisering heir bicycles so as o safeguard agains hefs and confiscaions. f suecessful, he informaion gahered will be uilized o help faciliae possible improvemens in bike sorage and winer sorage. The word confiscaions is included in he preceding paragraph in reference o he mandaory regisraion of bikes required in So Jh Bend. Unregisered bikes are subjec o confiscaion by Sough Bend police. Therefore, organizers of he regisraion program believe i is necessary for all suden bike owners o cooperae wih he program, as he ND regisraion will be recognized Brezhnev c!..emands an ear y end o alks BERLN <UP!) - Leonid. Brezhnev, general secreary of he Sovie Communis pary, Sunday renewed he Kremlin's demand for an early conclusion of he Conference on European Securiy, he Eas German news agency ADN said. The veeran Sovie diploma, in Eas Berlin o aend he 25h anniversary celebraion of Eas Germany's founding, old a Communis pary rally in Werner Seelenbinder Hall ha in he ineres of peace he conference should come o a conclusion "as early as possible". Gromyko had voiced similar demands in his recen alks wih C h a n c e 11 or Helmu Schmid and Foreign Miniser Hans-Dierich Genscher in he Wes German capial of Bonn. Gromyko old he Eas Berlin rally ha he Communis Bloc "is sreching ou is hand of peace and friendship o he oher counries of he coninen and hopes for consrucive cooperaion". Brezhnev flew ino Eas Berlin Saurday, accompanied by Defense Miniser Andrei Grechko and Foreign Miniser Andrei A. Gromyko. Brezhnev said ha agreemens concluded in recen years on a cuback in armamens "are no working badly. WEEKEND JOB ndiana's Larges Lake Developer Needs Several Ambiious Seniors Or Grad Sudens To Work Weekends Thru Ocober Near Lake Wawasee. Gas Paid. Free Housing. CALL C. STONE Minimum $50 (219)636-7189 as valid in Souh Bend. The regisraion coss only one dollar and is good for four years. Regisrans are requesed o have ready he following informaion: make of bike, ype, color, serial number, idenifying characerisics, and he usual basic facs such as name, local address, and phone number. Jim Panici, a Nore Dame senior, is coordinaing he program and any quesions abou bicycles hroughou he year may be direced o him a he Suden LOST & FOUND Los: Gold ring. niials JMA Call 3336--Big Rew<~rd! Los: Whie Ski sweaer, red, gold balck rim. Reward. Call 8674 or 8672. Found: Car keys a O'Shag Tues. afernoon Call 6917 Los: Whienauer gold ladie's wriswach. Los beween Morris nn and Dillon. Call 7181. Found: one male dashchund Thurs. nile. Owner please claim. Call Observer, 8661, or Mary, 4167. FOR SALE For sale: 6 sring acousic guiar wih case. Excellen cond. $75. Call Tom, 1409. Moel room for weekend of Rice game. Call Jane, 7076. 2 EP 100' Hi.fi speakers. S60 each. 282-2255. NOTCES Need a ride for semeser break? Wilson driveaway has cars going o many soos in he U.S. and your only expense is gas. For info call Jim Sco, 1694. Due o an abundance of cars going o Miami, special offers including parial or compl<:!le gas allowances are being made. Check i ou. HOCKEY GAME: CAMPUS 'VEW CRUNCHES VS. THE 1 ALUMN DOGS. TUESDAY, OCT. 8, AT 10:30, A.C.C. RNK. TO SGN UP, CALL CLFF AT 272-9895 AFTER 8:00 P.M. Money? Morrissey Loan Fund can lend you up o $150. Basemen of LaForune, daily, 11:15-12:15. GORDON LGHTFOOT TCKETS ARE NOW ON SALE AT THE STUDENT UNON TCKET OFFCE, 2ND FLOOR LAFOR TUNE. HOURS THS SEMESTER ARE 12:15-5:00 MWF, AND 11:00-1:00 & 2:30-5:00 TT. Legal problem, bu no money? N.D. Legal Aid can help. Call 283. 7795 M-F, 1-4 pm. T'CKETS FOR THE OCTOBER 20 AEROSMTH & MAHOGANY RUSH CONCERT AT MORRS CVC ARE NOW AVALABLE AT THE STUDENT UNON TCKET OFFCE, 2ND FLOOR LAFOR TUNE. Governmen offices <phone 283- regisraion service are as follows: 6413) Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, from 11:30 o 1:00, Norh Dining Hall <AB Lobby), Tuesday and Thursday from 12:30 l 1 : 3 0-1:00, Monday hrough Friday o 2:00, and on weekends or incase of emergencies call eiher 234-3559 or 289-6726. You may also use Souh Dining Hall (Main Lobby), hese numbers o repor he hef 11: 30-1: 00, Monday hrough or recovery of a bike. Friday Boh he Hall Presiden's Council and he Ombudsman The Huddle, 12:00-1:00, MOnday Service will be lending assisance hrough Friday o Panici hroughou his week's Main Lobby of LaForune, 3:00- program. S:OO, Monday hrough Thursday Times and locaions for he CLASSFED ADS Cree: 1 love you. eideically. Plao Cues, Thanks for a fanasic year. Love ya, CKM P.S. Floyd says Hi! Congraulaions T. R. You have finally enered he M.J.R. syn. drome. Roomies Sellar Keacher: Happy 21s Birhday! There was a big 'AKE' named Dwin, Wih girls he jus couldn' win, Now so lonely is he Call 1523 And bring your own bole of gin. Dear Blake: Did somebody rish ever have a Hear of Darkness? Besides, Kurz was from Long sland, no Con. necicu. Sick wih Ulysses... Jus singin' in he rain, Joseph Conrad Happy Birhday, Griff. The Observer Saff Thay Dan, Happy Birhday, Thwee 19? Look Sarah! M.B. H.B. Franklin E. Legally righ, have fun las nigh? M.B. To Ois H. (alias Seve) Remember us a he pary? No? Huh? Well, we remembered your B day. Love, Mom and M.B. Lady in Red, We've go o sop meeing like his. When can see you? The Slopper Lady Sreaker, Sreak or Shower. Le's Go There everywhere, here everywhere Egg Hun: a prize for he mos copies of local sur.erior reurned o Joe Gower, 203 - Ed's. MEN-WOMEN ~bs on ships! No experience required. Excellen pay. Worldwide ravel. Perfec summer job or career. Send S3.00 for informaion. SEAFAX DEPT G-13 P.O. Box 2049 Por Angeles, Wash. 98362 WANTED Need 8 ickes o Miami game. Call 255-7034 beween 10:00 and 5:00 Waned: 8 ickes o Miami game. Call 255 7034 beween 10:00 and 5:00. Need wo GA Rice ickes. Call Terry, 8922. House parens waned. Full ime live-in or par.ime live.ou. Girls Group Home. Near downown So. Bend. Excellen experience op. goruniy for sudens in Soc, Psych, or relaed fields. Salaried. Married couple (no children) or 2 women. Girls are 14 17 yrs. Eigh is capaciy. Reply o Mrs. Carol Wilken. 233 9491. Need ride o N.J. for Oc. break badly. Will share expenses. Call Ki, 6972. Waned: 1 Rice icke or else. Call me now. 284-4371. 4 Army G.A. ix. Call John or Kahy, 282 1568. Desperaely need Rice or Army ix. Call Pam, 5185, 233 1899. 4 Rice ickes, suden or G.A. Call 4774. Need 2 GA ix for Pi. Call Larry, 288 7375. Desperaely need wo GA fix for Army. Call Rahj, 1612. Bass guiaris needed; op mqjley; no novices. 234 5320 afer 5. Desperaely need 1 GA icke for Rice and 4 for PiH. Call Beh, 51<44. Needed: wo ickes o he NO Rice game. Call 272 0000. Need GA ickes for Rice, Army, or Miami. Call 288 3176. Waned: 2 ickes o Miami game. Call Dr. Maison, a 272-9895 beween 7:00 and 9:00p.m. Need ride o NYC weekend of Oc. 11, 12, and 13. Will share expenses. Call Dave, 1197. Needed: 2 Rice GA ickes. Call Terry, 8922. Desperaely need ride o Boson area for Oc. break. Call Jim, 8439. Needed: 2 rides from Navy game back o N.D. Call Mary, 6141 or Pay, 6804. FRDAY OCTOBER" S-111"' S~TJND~Y QCT( ll,,,_milllfa POL\l AVSACll RiSM FOliC DAMCi... DLLY DAfClllCO llla<k A"TS D:SPLAY OAE5K, UCAH~N Fo~ o.~mcng KAfAlf o.lh~fi6tf!a'fiom GERM.,. U er GAR 115. P».Sf HUNCARiAM FOLK OAle:iM' OACiNC UHDE:R 1KE :l'taa$1hcm1"" FRO" 7 \1 Pllll me CVC MNDED SHOPPNG CENTER 1 am doing a paper on Deah. f you have ever had an experience very close o deah (i.e., life passing before you, ec.) and wouldn' mind being asked a few quesions, call Joe, 3663. TALSMAN AVALABLE FOR PARTES, DANCES, CONCERTS, AND PREGAME PER FORMANCES. CALL 272-9895 FOR NFORMATON. PERSONALS T.F., Happy 1s anniversary from he rocking of he cradle o he rolling of he hearse, he going up was worh he coming down. Laer, Chas FOR RENT For ren: modern execuive 2- bedroom cohage locaed on 30 wooded acres of S. Joseph River fronage and Orch- d Hills Golf Course. Winerized cohage also feaures large fireplace, wall-owall carpeing, fully equipped kichen, and riding horses. Perfec for ou-of-owners on Nore Dame fooball weekends wih only a 20- minue ride o he sadium. SSO per week. Call 616-695-6043. Garage for ren near N.D. S8 monhly. Call 272.6174. Rooms for ren. 1 or 2 singles. O.C.. 1021 DeMaude. Convenien locaion, good neighborhood. S55 mo.. incl. uiliies. Call 232 2773. Need ride o Boson for Oc. break. Call Tim, 8591. Need ride o NYC area for break. Call Kaie, 5493. Need 4 GA fix any Oc. home game Call Mary Beh, 4704. May Fair Res waiers, 5 10 11 p.m. Parime or full ime. Mus be 21. $1.25 plus ips. 255 5517. Help! The Clan is making is firs rip ever o N.D. desperaely need GA Pi ickes. Call 3665. Ride waned o CALFORNA during Oc. break. Call Tom, 3191. Desperaely need 2 Rice ickes. Call 684 1010.,'\"

12 he observer Monday, Ocober 7, 1974 Back o basics. rish dump MSU ' ' n \ by Greg Corgan Spors Edior When more complicaed operaions begin o go awry, ge back o basics. A leas ha's wha Ara Parseghian hough and did Saurday afernoon as his rish downed Michigan Sae 19-14. Missing from he rish aack were he couners, misdirecion plays and reverses which :ypify Ara's high-geared muliple offense. Even more noiceably absen were he aerial acrobaics which Tom Clemens and Pee Demmerle perform o deligh he fans. Bu i was all according o plan. "We wen back o basics," remarked Ara. "We waned o go back o he fundamenals- blocking, running off-ackle and up he middle." "We decided o play his game conservaively," he added. "We had been playing inconsisenly, especially in he firs half, and we hough we'd buon up and play he running game." The ru'1ning game consised mainly of fullback Wayne Bullock, who according o Parseghian "gave a super performance." Super mean 127 yards in a recordbreaking 36 carries including some remarkable second, hird and even fourh effors. Bullock gahered nearly half of ND's 296 oal yards. " didn' expec o carry he ball ha many imes," said he senior from Newpor News, Va. " hough would run he ball prey much since i was in he game plan o go ino he middle agains hem, and righ now 'd say 'm prey ired." Wayne's effors were jusly rewarded. Bullock accouned for boh Nore Dame ouchdowns, he firs coming afer Kevin Nosbusch recovered a Sparan fumble on he Sae 27. A personal foul on Michigan Sae sandwiched around a hree yard gain by Jim Weiler and anoher wo by Bullock pu he ball on he 10. Clemens, who was hree of six passing for 35 yards, hi Weiler wih a nine yard oss, and on he nex play Bullock wen in unmolesed from he one. Dave Reeve was good on he conversion aemp and wih 4:46lef o play in he firs quarer, he rish were on op 7-o. The lead was exended o 10-Q early in he second period afer a 14 yard pun by Sae's Tom Birney gave he rish possession on he MSU 40. A Clemens o Robin Weber pass pu he ball on he Sparan 21 from where hree plays laer Reeve booed a 38 yard field goal. Ten o nohing became 16-Q seven minues laer when Bullock crashed ino he norh end zone from five yards ou. The ouchdown capped an official wo-play eleven yard drive bu was acually a 14-play, 59 yard scoring effor. The discrepancy arises since Clemens fumbled on he elevenh play, wih Sae recovering, and Clarence Bullock (no relaion o Wayne) fumbled i back on he welfh. Michigan Sae aemped a 26 yard field goal lae in he half bu i was wide o he righ and a inermission he score read 16-Q. "'ve said for a long ime ha 'm immensely proud of a eam ha can bounce back afer a defea," said Parseghian, "and ha's exacly wha we did oday." " is very encouraging o come back he way we did afer losing so badly o UCLA, hen spoing Nore Dame he lead oday," offered Sparan Head Coach Denny Solz. "We didn' qui. hink we are a prey good fooball eam." Forunaely for he rish, Parseghian was referring o he enire ball game while Solz was concerned wih he second half. "A half ime old he eam if OBSERVER SPORTS Linebacker Greg Collins and safey John Dubenezky close in on MSU's Charley Bagge. Bagge go he ball off bu was "bagged" anyway. Wayne "The Train" Bullock was he principle ingredien for he rish on Saurday. Bullock carried 36 imes for 127 yards and wo ouchdowns. Here he has a lile easier ime of ihan he did for mos of he afernoon. we wouldn' leave he ball down on he field," added Solz, "we could ge our running going and score a couple of ouchdowns in he second half." Solz go his "couple" bu ha was all. The firs came on a 99 yard 13 play drive aided by a roughing he kicker penaly on ND's Marv Russell. The score came when MSU quarerback Charley Bagge, who gave he rish fron four fis all day, scrambled righ and found flanker Mike Jones all alone a he ND five yard line, The pass wen for 26 yards and he Sparans' firs score. The rish scored heir only poins of he second half on a 32 yard field goal by Reeve. The offense had driven 65 yards, mosly on four and five yard runs by Bullock and A Samuels, bu salled on he Sae 15 afer Clemens' hird down pass o Weber was baed away. MSU ook he ensuing kickoff and wen 76 yards for a score. The big play in he drive was a 45 yard pass from he scrambling Bagge o igh end Mike Cobb. "Bagge is hard o corrall ou here," said Ara. "The mos difficul hing we had o do was o cach Bagge afer we forced him ou of his proecion. His scrambling gave us he mos rouble." Bagge hen hi Levi Jackson wih a 15 yard pass and six plays laer ailback Rich Baes swep lef end for he score, Wih 3:49 o play he Sparans sill enerained houghs of an upse, bu a well~xecued ime consuming drive, feauring Samuel's crucial en yard run on a hird and eigh from he ND 27 lef Sae wih only 12 seconds lef. Bagge's las second desperaion pass was inerceped by Randy Payne, "A he end," noed Parseghian, "when we had o, our fooball eam ook he ball and rammed i righ down heir hroas. f we hadn' come up wih a firs down on ha hird and eigh play, i migh have made a big difference. We jus wen back o fundamenals-no beaing ourselves,'' " don' care abou Leahy's record or anyhing like ha (Ara 's vicory pu him in second place on he ail-ime Jis), 'm jus really delighed abou our kids. They bounced back afer a loss and bea a ough Michigan Sae eam ha's a lo beer han mos people realize. " learned a long ime ago if you win, i doesn' make any difference wheheri's one poin or en. old, our kids, you did beer his year han las year. This ime you won by five poins, las year i was four." rish noes: Linebacker Coach George Kelly was hospialized Friday nigh wih ches pains. Kelly spen he nigh in he hospial Exra Poins and was released in ime o ravel back wih he eam on Saurday nigh. "The arge dae for Eric Penick is Nov. 1," said Parseghian afer Saurday's game. We're sill looking for key players, especially a he halfback posiion and if Eric were o make i back i would help us. Bu he has a lo of condiioning o go hrough, he has o ge his iming back and reacquain himself wih he sysem. f he came back anyime before Nov. 1 i would be a bonus, bu ha's he arge dae,,============:=======:=:========:::===========================:::::==============;===========:===================calling.ljack Nore Dame's 19-14 vicory over he Sparans of Michigan Sae Saurday afernoon may have aken on he look of Bo Schembechler's hree yards and a cloud of Asro-urf ype offense a Michigan, bu, as Ara said afer he riumph, " doesn' maer wha he score was, we won, and a vicory up here is a double vicory in my opinion." Tha "double vicory" culminaed five days of inense preparaion afer he Purdue defea. The feeling around campus was close o one of uer disappoinmen and despair. Someone even suggesed ha Ara migh sar playing freshmen and sophomores, in an aemp o give hem he needed experience for nex year, for our hope of being naional champions again was in heir words 'ou of he quesion.' The rish vicory proved he credibiliy of Coach Parseghian and his saff, bu more imporanly, he moral vicory he players received from he game gave hem he confidence hey desperaely needed. "'s sure ough afer losing because you lose confidence in yourself." said a jubilan Frank Allocco afer he game, "Beaing Sae up here makes up an awful lo from las week, and his may carry us on for he res of he year." For he firs ime his season, Nore Dame played a good firs half, somehing ha was a major concern o Ara. "n our firs hree games, we played good second halves, bu we never came ou o play in he firs halves. Today, we go 16 poins on he board early and decided o play a igh game he second half and no make misakes. Sae did make misakes in he firs half, and we capialized on hem." Also needed hough for he vicory, was Wayne Bullock, he Nore Dame offense for he afernoon. Waynebrokehe record for carries in one game for he rish, carrying 36 imes for 127 yards, and wo ouchdowns. Jus looking a he saisics, he rish ran 79 plays in he game, and Bullock carried in jus less han half of hem. "Wayne jus had an excellen game," noed quarerback Tom Clemens. "n our ough siuaions, we'd give him he ball, and his second effor (arried him hrough. We all had confidence in him, and he relally came hrough oday." Guard A Wujciak echoed Clemens' senimens. "Wayne had a fanasic game, and really read his blocks well. His abiliy o find he righ holes makes him a remendous hrea on every play. When we wen o him, we knew he could do he job." Sparan head coach Denny Solz was gracious in defea ' was a -MSU game, where he score would be low, and he game would be a quesion of who could hi harder. We spoed hem a leadwecould never cach up o. and consequenly, we los." was a hard-hiing game for boh sides, and a game where mos,of he acion was beween he 30's. Nore Dame was menally prepared o do he job necessary for he vicory. Wheher he margin of vicory was one or weny-qne poins doesn' maer; raher, wha couns is ha we won a game we desperaely needed. Wih Purdue behind us, Michigan Sae brough us back.