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Volume 53, Issue 118 | wednesday, april 10, 2019 | ndsmcobserver.com
McGlinn Hall named Hall of the Year Duncan Hall, Welsh Family Hall awarded titles of Men and Women’s Hall of the Year By CLAIRE RAFFORD News Editor
The Hall Presidents Council (HPC) awarded the overall “Hall of the Year” title to McGlinn Hall during the Notre Dame Student Leadership Awards Banquet in Duncan Student Center on Tuesday. Duncan Hall and Welsh Family Hall were named Men’s and Women’s Hall of the Year, respectively. Outgoing co-chairs of HPC seniors Joe Trzaska and Brendan Watts said encouraging community between dorms contributes to a better experience for Notre Dame students. “We try and foster
collaboration and communication between the halls because we think the halls are stronger together than on their own,” Trzaska said. Trazka said HPC tried to promote this inter-hall partnership in many ways, but considered getting more students GreeNDot trained their greatest success. “Each hall has its own goals, we try to facilitate their reaching of those goals,” he said. “Our goals as chairs of the Hall Presidents Council were more meta-goals about the function of the council — like trying to improve collaboration and communication between the see HALL PAGE 3
Journalist presents lecture on omega-3 health benefits
CHARLOTTE EDMONDS | The Observer
Students from the hall councils of Duncan Hall, McGlinn Hall and Welsh Family Hall celebrate their wins at the Notre Dame Student Leadership Awards Banquet in Duncan Student Center on Tuesday evening.
SDH employees discuss theft in dining halls By MARIAH RUSH Associate News Editor
Beverly Skopec and her fellow monitors at South Dining Hall have seen a wide variety of things stolen from their workplace. Some of them stranger than others, Skopec said. “Mary Ann [Sobieralski, head monitor at South Dining Hall] saw some guys
KAY BONTEMPO | The Observer
Ocean conservationist and journalist Paul Greenberg presented a lecture on his research in the field of marine ecology Tuesday evening. By KAY BONTEMPO News Writer
Best-selling journalist and ocean conservationist Paul Greenberg discussed his recent book, “The Omega Principle: Seafood and the Quest for Long Life and a Healthier Planet” Tuesday in DeBartolo Hall. The event was sponsored by the Notre Dame minor in sustainability and the department of environmental
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engineering. Greenberg began the talk by introducing himself. “I’m not famous exactly — I’m fish famous,” he said. Greenberg has had a long career writing about marine biolog y, but recently shifted his focus to dive deeper into the trending topic of omega-3s, a fatty acid that can be measured in humans’ blood. see ECOLOGY PAGE 4
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take a big dining hall table, and she called security and they said, ‘Oh, we were just borrowing it,’” Skopec said. “Well, they should’ve told us, then.” Dee Michael, a fellow monitor, said she believes hundreds of dollars are being wasted every year due to dining hall theft — an issue she said is at its worst since she began working at Notre
Dame eight years ago. “I talked to a manager about it [Monday], and he said he has never — in all the time he’s been here — had to buy so many supplies,” Michael said. “Our glasses are going out the door — plates, silverware too — let alone the food. If you say anything to the kids see THEFT PAGE 4
Jesuit priests create community on campus By Jack Lyons News Writer
Although Notre Dame is a primarily Holy Cross institution, it is home to a handful of Jesuit priests who believe the two missions align well enough to live, work and attend classes on campus. The Society of Jesus — the official name of the Jesuits — began ministr y at Notre Dame’s location in the 17th
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centur y, and built the original log chapel which Fr. Edward Sorin later used with his Holy Cross brothers when he founded Notre Dame in 1842. However, the community of five Jesuit priests who currently live on campus came to South Bend more recently. Fr. Brian Daley, a Jesuit priest, first arrived at Notre Dame as a professor of theolog y in 1996 as a founding member of the community
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which today lives in a house adjacent to campus. Besides Daley, the current community consists of four Jesuit priests pursuing their doctorates in the fields of philosophy and theolog y. Even though Notre Dame is not an institution directly associated with the Society of Jesus, the Jesuit community sends young priests pursuing see JESUITS PAGE 4
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