Observer the
The Independent Newspaper Serving Notre Dame and Saint Mary’s Volume 44 40 : Issue ??? 57
Wednesday, friday, NOVEMBER August20, 27,2009 2004
ndsmcobserver.com
Game-day arrests decrease this season A n d y Ad hoc committee established last year examined problems in stadium, on campus By ROBERT SINGER Assistant News Editor
The number of arrests on home football Saturdays has gone from 129 last year to approximately 30 this year after six home games. Director of Game Day Operations Mike Seamon said Game Day initiatives have not changed the policy of Notre Dame Security Police (NDSP), but instead have led to a collaborative approach by the various groups working game days and made fans aware of the University’s expectations for them. These two factors have helped lower the number of arrests, he said. Fan furor over alleged abuses
by police officers have lead to changes in the University’s approach to game days, but Seamon said complaints of unruly fan conduct on campus have decreased. “A lot of folks thought there was more disruptive behavior on campus than there should have been. A family came and the people around them in the parking lot or Stadium were being overly disruptive,” he said. “Someone else’s behavior was really offensive or was creating problems for the family.” To solve the problems encountered last year, University President Fr. John Jenkins estab-
By ANN-MARIE WOODS News Writer
“Some people might say that it’s just a pep rally, but I honestly believe that at Notre Dame it is a lot more” Seamon said the decision to hold the pep rally at Irish Green came after the football team decided to honor the senior players and their parents in the Stadium before kickoff on Saturday rather than during Friday’s pep rally. “We tentatively aimed for the Joyce Center and the reason for this was … we were going to do the announcement of the senior players and their parents,” he said. “And if we were going to do that we were going to do it
After many years of travel experience in Europe, senior Andy Steves is using his knowledge to help other college students navigate their way around Europe while studying abroad. As a part of International Education Week, a nation-wide initiative, Steves provided students with international travel tips Thursday night in Montgomery Auditorium in LaFortune Student Center. Inspired by his travel guru father, Rick Steves, and his own experiences abroad as a student, Steves saw the need for student-friendly travel sites and guides to help college students form ideal itineraries in order to make the most out of their sightseeing abroad. “When I was abroad, I realized there’s really nothing out there for the college student abroad,” Steves said. After returning from Notre Dame’s Rome program in the spring of 2008, Steves decided to create andysteves.com, a “for students, by students” collaborative resource for weekend student adventures, which includes blog entries, sample itineraries, travel tips and photos to help the college traveler.
see RALLY/page 8
see TRAVEL/page 9
see ARRESTS/page 9
JACLYN ESPINOZA l Observer Graphic
Last pep rally set for Irish Green Event was tentatively scheduled in Purcell Pavilion; students disappointed with change By LAURA McCRYSTAL News Writer
SARAH O’CONNOR/The Observer
Students cheer at Irish Green for the USC pep rally on Oct. 16. Tonight’s pep rally was moved to Irish Green.
Steves talks travel
Although the last pep rally of the 2009 football season was tentatively scheduled to be held in the new Purcell Pavilion at the Joyce Center, it will be held today at Irish Green, Director of Gameday Operations Mike Seamon said. This decision has caused frustration and disappointment this week within student government and among members of the student body, student body president Grant Schmidt said. “A lot of us are very frustrated that it’s not at Purcell Pavilion like we were told,” Schmidt said.
Notre Dame alum Equestrian team isn’t horsing around to discuss MTV job By AMANDA GRAY News Writer
By SARA FELSENSTEIN News Writer
After graduating from Notre Dame in 1995, Christina Glorioso did what many recent college graduates hope to do. She took a well-paying job in Chicago. But a few years later, Glorioso realized she wanted to take the plunge and seek a career she loved — a career in the entertainment industry. ”I wanted to live in Chicago and I wanted to make a lot of money,” she said. But three years later, Glorioso
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TODAY’S PAPER
changed her mind. “The position didn’t matter … the pay didn’t matter,” she said. Now vice president of Marketing Partnerships for MTV Networks, Glorioso will speak Friday about business in the entertainment industry. The lecture is sponsored by the Notre Dame MBA Entertainment Club and will be at 10:30 a.m. in room 162 of the Mendoza College of Business. Glorioso, class of ’95 and MBA ’99, has worked with MTV Networks since 2003. She has recently been working to pro-
The members of the Notre Dame and Saint Mary’s combined equestrian team have been successful in recent competitions and have bonded with each other on long bus rides —even when the bus smells like a barn. “There’s not much vanity in a group of girls who enjoy smelling like horses and have manure on their boots,” cocaptain Mia Genereux, a freshman, said. “Horse shows take up tons of time because they are always on weekends, but we love traveling together and bonding on the bus as a
Photo courtesy of Mia Genereux
see TEAM/page 8
Mia Genereux, co-captain of Notre Dame and Saint Mary’s equestrian team, rides at a competition in Minnesota in August.
see MTV/page 9
Students anticipate last home game page 3
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Scene advice column page 15
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Men’s soccer page 28
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Viewpoint page 12