Print Edition of The Observer for Thursday, September 5, 2019

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The independent

To uncover

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Notre Dame, Saint Mary’s

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and holy cross

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Volume 54, Issue 9 | thursday, september 5, 2019 | ndsmcobserver.com

McKenna Hall undergoes renovations Conference begins two-year renovation project to expand building, house Enrollment Division By ANDREW CAMERON News Writer

Driving down North Notre Dame Avenue, people may notice an empty construction site in place of a former hub for various types of debate and discussion on campus. That’s because McKenna Hall, Notre Dame’s on-campus conference center and former home of the Institute for Latino Studies, is undergoing a two-year reconstruction project and isn’t projected to reopen until fall 2021. The original hall, built in 1966, was demolished July

22 to begin the construction. With an original area of 64,000 square feet, McKenna will be expanded to have roughly 85,000 square feet, according to Mike Daly, project manager for the reconstruction. The renovated hall will continue to serve as a conference center, but will also house the Notre Dame Enrollment Division, comprised of the Office of Outreach and Engagement Recruitment, the Office of Pre-College Programs, the Office of Undergraduate see McKENNA PAGE 4

Saint Mary’s hosts student activities fair

ANNA MASON | The Observer

Construction crews work on McKenna Hall as it begins a two-year renovation project. The building will continue to be a conference center, but it will also include space for Notre Dame’s Enrollment Division.

SMC Office for Student Success helps Belles thrive By MARY MANSFIELD News Writer

The Saint Mary’s Office for Student Success is ushering in the fall semester with its Academic Skills & Strategies Workshops starting Wednesday. Diane Fox, director of the Office for Student Success, started the series when the office first opened 10 years ago with the hope to achieve

Photo courtesy of Kendra Osinski

Members from Saint Mary’s Student Nurses Association pose near their booth at the Involvement and Resource Fair Wednesday night. By CALLIE PATRICK News Writer

Saint Mary’s hosted its annual Involvement and Resource Fair on Wednesday, which showcased over 120 organizations students can participate this academic year. Representatives from school and social clubs, onand off campus-departments and organizations and local volunteer groups from the South Bend community could be found interacting

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with students. Students passed the time learning about resources and opportunities available to them. One such volunteer group was called Lot2545. “We work in Uganda with guys that are either currently or formerly called the streets home,” Amanda Jones, the organization’s founder, said. “W hether that’s going back to school, doing vocational training, starting a small see ACTIVITIES PAGE 4

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two goals: To help freshman get oriented and help upperclassmen stay motivated, she said. “Nothing is more frustrating than a professor saying to his student, ‘You should have studied more,’” Fox said. “I want to give students specific strategies to provide answers to all their questions about how to be successful in college.” Alexis Fady, a sophomore

majoring in business administration with international business and marketing concentrations, began attending the workshops the fall of her first year at Saint Mary’s. “The main reason why I went was because my professors offered extra credit if we attended the workshops but I kept going because of Fox,” Fady said. “She cares see SUCCESS PAGE 3

Irish playwright to present reading in Snite exhibit By MARY STEURER Assistant Managing Editor

Kicking off new Irish art exhibit “Looking at the Stars,” acclaimed playwright Marina Carr will present a reading in the Snite Museum of Art on Thursday afternoon. Carr is the first in a fall speaker series hosted by the Keough-Naughton Institute

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for Irish Studies. A native of Dublin, she is known for her modern adaptations of classical themes and has authored nearly 30 plays. Her most famous work, “By the Bog of Cats,” has been compared to Greek tragedy, assistant director of the Keough-Naughton Institute Mary Hendriksen said. “It’s some of the themes

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of the ancient Greeks, but in a modern context,” Hendriksen said. The new exhibit where Carr will be speaking, “Looking at the Stars,” opened Aug. 17 and features a number of Irish paintings and photographs, including some from University benefactors Donald and Marilyn see PLAYWRIGHT PAGE 3

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