Observer the
The Independent Newspaper Serving Notre Dame and Saint Mary’s Volume 44 : Issue 102
friday, february 26, 2010
ndsmcobserver.com
University looks to revise du Lac Robinson Student government proposes changes to Notre Dame’s student conduct guidebook “criminals.” “People make mistakes, and when you make something as rigid as the ResLife process, as du Lac is, you’re going to catch a lot of good people that maybe did something that they regret,” Saulitis said. The University is currently making revisions to du Lac, the student handbook, and student government will make recommendations for changes Monday. If accepted, the recommendations would update du Lac to make it more studentfriendly, student body president Grant Schmidt said. Associate Vice President for Residence Life Bill Kirk said du
By MADELINE BUCKLEY and SARAH MERVOSH News Writers
Editor’s note: This is the second and final installment of a two-part series examining the policies and possible revisions of du Lac, the student handbook. Senior John Saulitis has been on both sides of the University’s disciplinary process. He faced the consequences of ResLife himself and used that experience to assist others as a peer advocate. One thing Saulitis has learned is that students who are ResLifed at Notre Dame are not
By JOSEPH MCMAHON Associate News Editor
Dame. This was the group’s first time at this event, said Caitlin O’Brien, a Saint Mary’s senior on the team. O’Brien said even though this was the team’s first time competing together at the international level, all of the girls have competed at the national level before individually. Mary Miller, a Saint Mary’s junior on the team, said it was nice to finally come together with her former opponents to compete. “It was just so exciting competing with all my Saint Mary’s and Notre Dame friends,” Miller
When the Robinson Community Learning Center (RCLC) first opened nine years ago in the Northeast Neighborhood of South Bend, the Center’s director Jay Caponigro was not really s u r e h o w N o t r e D a m e ’s attempt at reaching out to the community would be received. “We weren’t sure exactly what we were going to do when we opened the doors,” he said. “We had some ideas from the neighborhood … b u t w e w e r e n ’t s u r e w h a t the best way to do that was.” Since that time, Caponigro, who has been the director of the RCLC, a division of the University’s Office of Public Affairs and Communication, since it first opened, has helped build long lasting relationships with community leaders while improving N o t r e D a m e ’s s t a n d i n g i n South Bend. “I’ve been here nine years since we opened the Robinson Center, and for me it has been a great opportunity to represent the University and work with a
see DANCE/page 6
see ROBINSON/page 6
see DU LAC/page 4
JACLYN ESPINOZA | Observer Graphic
Dance Team wins Ireland championship By ASHLEY CHARNLEY Saint Mary’s Editor
Photo courtesy of Caitilin O’Brien
The Saint Mary’s and Notre Dame Irish Dance team poses with their trophy from the All-Ireland Dance Championships.
Center celebrates anniversary
The Saint Mary’s and Notre Dame’s Irish Dance team was victorious over the weekend in their competition held in Killarney, Ireland. The group, comprised of eight women — five from Saint Mary’s and three from Notre Dame — took first place during the AllIreland Dance Championships, competing in the Ceili Club Competition Feb. 21. The team is coached by Deirdre Robinett, a senior at Saint Mary’s who won the 2009 World Irish Dancing Championships, and Katie Grennan, a senior at Notre
Dorm Drinks sold Students appreciate card swipers Friendly dining hall workers help greet patrons with smiles to new ownership By SARA FELSENSTEIN News Writer
By AMANDA GRAY News Writer
A popular campus beverage vendor is under new ownership. Dorm Drinks, the Notre Dame beverage supplier, changed hands in January, new Chief Executive Officer Marc Anthony Rosa said. “We took over in January, so it’s a relatively new thing for us,” Rosa said. Rosa, a sophomore, works with two sophomores — Chief Financial Officer Richard Gonzalez and Marketing Director John Paxton — to lead the company. “Even during our lulls we’re still seeing growth, so it’s a really excit-
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TODAY’S PAPER
ing time to be a part of it,” Rosa said. Rosa, Gonzalez and Paxton found out earlier this year that the previous owners, seniors Adam Heisman and Jack Jeffery, were selling the company, Rosa said. “Dorm Drinks was created [in 2007] essentially out of need,” Rosa said. “They and their buddies wanted drinks. They started delivering drinks to their friends and it turned out to be a very profitable company that worked out well.” The new owners have seen positive results, Rosa said. “It’s been extremely profitable,” Rosa said. “It’s profitable because
If you’ve ever been to South Dining Hall on “wing night,” John Ritschard will be sure to greet you at the door with his dancing chicken and a friendly reminder that delicious wings wait inside. Ritschard, who swipes cards during dinner, said he spotted the dancing chicken at a garage sale and just knew it would be perfect. “At the last wing night [John] had a stand in front of his card swiping station so that his dancing chicken could
see DRINKS/page 4
Jazz festival preview page 3
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Farley Fiasco page 12
SARA FELSENSTEIN/The Observer
see SWIPERS/page 6
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John Ritschard, right, swipes a student’s ID card as he enters South Dining Hall.
Women’s basketball heads to Seton Hall page 24 ◆ Viewpoint page 10