Print Edition of The Observer for Monday, September 2, 2019

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The independent

To uncover

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Notre Dame, Saint Mary’s

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Volume 54, Issue 6| monday, september 2, 2019 | ndsmcobserver.com

OCC opposes housing policy changes The off-campus student-led group lists concerns with recent developments in Residential Life By GENEVIEVE REDSTEN News Writer

In recent years, the Notre Dame administration has made several changes to its housing policies, trying to discourage students from moving off campus. Administrators say the policies will strengthen the campus community, but off-campus student leaders argue that the policies will push students further apart. “It’s a family and a sense of belonging that I think they’re trying to take away from us,” senior Katie O’Sullivan, president of the Off-Campus Council, said.

Six semesters In September 2017, administrators announced the “six-semester policy” — the first of several major housing policy changes. The new rule requires that all Notre Dame students, beginning with the class of 2022, live on campus for six full semesters. Quentin Colo, the student senator for the off-campus community, said low-income students feel squeezed by the six-semester requirement. “Several students reached out to me and they said, ‘Look, I have to move off campus. I don’t want to pay $16,000 to live in the dorm. see OCC PAGE 3

Senior talks service abroad By JULIANNA McKENNA News Writer

Saint Mary’s senior Grace Erving traveled to Kolkata, India, this summer to participate in a missionary program with the Missionaries of Charity. The social work major made the trek to India with only a travel backpack, spending one month serving the dying and destitute at Prem Dan, one of the Missionaries of Charity’s six facilities in Kolkata. Prem Dan, meaning ‘Gift of Love,’ specifically caters to the needs of the elderly and dying in the poorer areas of the city. “These women come to Prem Dan because they have been abandoned by their families and have nowhere see INDIA PAGE 3

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NICOLE SIMON | The Observer

Pizza Pi celebrates grand opening By NATALIE WEBER Assistant Managing Editor

When Monica Mesecar heard there was a new pizza restaurant opening on campus, she was a little skeptical. But after the junior tried a ‘White’ pizza during the grand opening of Pizza Pi on Friday, she was sold. “I originally wasn’t sure because we already have so many options for pizza on campus but they have some see PIZZA PAGE 4

NATALIE WEBER | The Observer

Notre Dame students hand out Pizza Pi promotional gear during the grand opening on Friday. Campus Dining hosted the event, which included games, music and giveaways in celebration.

Keough School launches new major By MARIA LUISA PAUL News Writer

As Notre Dame strives to become a more globalized university, the Keough School of Global Affairs is officially launching its new Global Affairs supplementary major. “We are the poster child of that mission. We have always had Notre Dame International, but we

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represent a real integrative approach to that idea that being a global citizen doesn’t mean going to France for a semester. It means addressing this on a consistent level throughout your career here,” Denise Ayo, the associate director of undergraduate programs at the Keough School of Global Affairs, said. According to Ayo, the Global Affairs major aims

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to address contemporary global issues in an interdisciplinary manner. In order to emphasize the multidisciplinary nature of international issues, the Keough School decided to create a supplementary major, meaning that it must accompany another major. “I think philosophically [the Keough School] believes that we want to help students globalize their

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education, and we think that it’s very important that this Global Affairs focus is seen as something to augment students’ primary majors,” Ayo said. “We see this as something that could be paired with anything.” The Global Affairs curriculum consists of 10 courses and 30 credit hours — a greater amount than what see KEOUGH PAGE 4

ND Vollyball PAGE 12


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