Observer the
The Independent Newspaper Serving Notre Dame and Saint Mary’s
ndsmcobserver.com
monday, march 7, 2011
ndsmcobserver.com
Volume 44 : Issue 101
Dayne Student competition to aid camp sticks to Bookstore Basketball Tournament to benefit the Jumpball Basketball Programme in Jamaica charity By VICTORIA MORENO News Writer
Activities at Rolfs Sports Recreation Center were in full force Friday, but Center Court One was temporarily out of commission. Irish quarterback Dayne Crist was taped to the east wall with purple, pink, blue and even cheetah tape. “ D o n a t e t o D u c t Ta p e Dayne” was the hook that drew Notre Dame students, faculty and staff to Rolfs Sports Recreation Center to a fundraiser for the Ameri c a n Ca nc e r S o c i ety’s Relay for Life event. RecSports partnered with Relay for Life to raise both awareness and funding for the event. “I wanted to do something truly different,” Lana
Photo courtesy of Chad Sutcliffe
By AMANDA GRAY News Writer
see RELAY/page 4
Students dance to raise funds
Photo courtesy of Chad Sutcliffe
Top: A young jumpball par ticipant takes par t in the warm up drills. Bottom: Melissa Lechlitner, former Notre Dame women’s basketball captain, shows off her dribbling skills.
Soon the sound of bouncing basketballs and cheers will sound around campus with the annual Bookstore Basketball Tournament during the month of April, but organizers wanted participants to know the event is about much more than the 5on-5 games on the court. The annual tournament benefits the Jumpball Basketball Programme, a free basketball day camp for children held in Jamaica, Programme co-director and co-founder Chad Sutcliffe said. Sutcliffe and the other f o u n d e r, B i l l M a l o n e y, a r e 1995 graduates of Notre Dame.
“[Kingston, Jamaica, where the main camp is held,] is very different from what you think of when you think of Jamaica,” Sutcliffe said. “It’s a very large third-world city. It’s very poor with extremely high crime rates. Many kids come from these backgrounds. When school is out, m a n y k i d s d o n ’t h a v e a n y thing to do. This camp gives them an activity. Parents and kids can come by and know they can have a great time.” The Programme was founded in the summer of 1995 from funds collected by the Alumni Club of Jamaica, and it had a little more than 100 children participate, Sutcliffe said. He was volunteering in Kingston as a teacher when
see BOOKSTORE/page 5
By BRIDGET MEADE News Writer
Dedicated students spent 12 hours on their feet to benefit Riley’s Children’s Hospital Saturday at the Saint Mary’s College-Notre Dame Dance Marathon, held from noon to midnight at the Angela Athletic Facility. Dance Marathon President Katie Fadden said more than 500 Saint Mary’s, Notre Dame and Holy Cross students and community members attended the event. Families of children who are treated by Riley’s Children’s Hospital also attended and were invited to speak about their experiences with Riley’s. “We had eight different families speak throughout the night,” she said. “Hearing the families’ stories is a great way to inspire the participants and also to
see DANCE/page 5
INSIDE TODAY’S PAPER
Bouts documentary hits silver screen By KRISTEN DURBIN News Writer
After nearly three years of production, the final cut of “Strong Bodies Fight” made its Midwest premiere at Notre Dame Saturday. The documentary film, which highlights the relationship between Notre Dame’s storied Bengal Bouts and the Holy Cross missions they support in Bangladesh, originally premiered in its “rough cut” form in November 2009. Since then, its creators have edited and perfected the film into the final product that was
shown at the DeBartolo Performing Arts Center, said Pat Ryan, a 2008 graduate and associate producer of the film. “In any project you work on, you look at it closer and find things to focus on,” Ryan said. “In two hours of footage and interviews, the overall message sometimes gets out of context, so we had to think about that.” Ryan said the bulk of the film has not changed, but such elements as color and sound have been improved. “Mark [Weber, producer and editor of the film] did a
SUZANNA PRATT/The Observer
see BENGAL/page 5
Bengal Bouts captains at the end of the finals Friday evening hold a trophy. The Bouts support the Holy Cross missions in Bangladesh.
OIS extends deadlines page 3 ◆ Viewpoint page 8 ◆ Super Mash Bros. preform at Legends page 10 ◆ Mens Basketball prevails page 20