PDF for Tuesday, February 18, 2013

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The independent

To uncover

newspaper serving

the truth

Notre Dame and

and report

Saint Mary’s

it accurately

Volume 46, Issue 92 | monday, february 18, 2013 | ndsmcobserver.com

Bringing parents home Junior Parents Weekend offers families a look into everyday life at Notre Dame By MEL FLANAGAN News Writer

More than 1,300 juniors and seniors spent this past weekend providing their parents with an intimate look into their lives and experiences at Notre Dame at Junior Parents Weekend (JPW). Junior Parents Weekend allows students to both celebrate with their friends and give their parents inside access to their academic, social and professional activities. “[My parents] live down the road from Notre Dame, so I see them enough and they know campus very well,” junior Grace Hatfield said. “But showing them the lab I am a research assistant at, introducing them to my favorite professors and just hanging out where I love and study were things I’ve never been able to do before.” Hatfield and the other JPW participants began the

Council reviews discipline Observer Staff Report

hall. University president Fr. John Jenkins celebrated JPW Mass on Saturday night and

The Campus Life Council convened Friday afternoon to conduct a process review of residential life and rector-student relationships, incorporating student feedback with input from University officials, according to the minutes from the meeting. The Council discussed the possibility of different settings for disciplinary meetings, the need for communication with students and the role of hall staff, the minutes stated. The guiding themes for the revised Office of Community Standards will be transparency, education and a foundation in the Congregation of Holy Cross. The group planned a

see JUNIOR PAGE 4

see COUNCIL PAGE 3

KIRBY MCKENNA | The Observer

Mothers pose Friday night at the Opening Gala for Junior Parents Weekend in the Purcell Pavilion. The event featured music, dancing, appetizers and dessert.

weekend’s events with an Opening Gala held Friday night in the Purcell Pavilion at the Joyce Athletic and Convocation Center and

Joyce Center Fieldhouse. Saturday’s events included collegiate workshops for the individual colleges and luncheons in each residence

Graduate students celebrate ‘MMMBop’ inaugural Appreciation Week fundraiser returns By CHARITHA ISANAK A

By JILL BARWICK

News Writer

Saint Mar y’s Editor

This week’s first annual Graduate Student Appreciation Week offers graduate students the opportunity to develop their professional, academic and social lives in an effort to help them feel more included in the Notre Dame community. Mimi Beck, program director of Graduate Student Life, said the graduate population often feels invisible at Notre Dame, a place whose identity is defined by the undergraduate experience. “The hope is that our postbaccalaureates — who comprise nearly a third of the Notre Dame student body — will come to feel as welcome, as valued and as much a part of the university community as any other student on campus,”

Beck said. The week opens today with free coffee and donuts in the C1 and D2 parking lots and

ends Sunday with an Oscar Night Party at the Fischer

Diners at the Noble Family Dining Hall were treated to the song “MMMBop” by popular 1990s boy band Hanson during lunch hours Feb. 11 — all of the lunch hours. Junior Annie Kennedy, morale committee chair for Dance Marathon, was the driving force behind the Marathon’s new fundraising event, “Stop the Bop.” “We’re playing Hanson’s song ‘MMMBop’ on repeat until we meet our fundraising goal,” Kennedy said. “The premise of the fundraiser is that people will get so annoyed with the song that they will be willing to donate in order to turn off the song.” Senior Bridgid Hurley,

Fundraising PAGE 3

viewpoint PAGE 9

Scene PAGE 11

STEPH WULZ | The Observer

see GRADUATE PAGE 4

men’s hockey PAGE 20

morale committee member for the marathon, also worked toward the implementation of “Stop the Bop.” “Between this past ‘Stop the Bop’ and the next one, which is scheduled for the Monday before the marathon [which is schedule for March 23], we hope to collectively raise $500,” Hurley said. “Once we reach $500, the song will stop playing on repeat.” Kennedy said the Dance Marathon organizers wanted to tr y something new to garner the attention of the Saint Mar y’s community members who had yet to donate to Dance Marathon. The first “Stop the Bop” kicked off Dance Marathon’s Riley Week, and see BOP PAGE 5

men’s basketball PAGE 20


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