Print Edition of The Observer for Monday, February 12, 2018

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The independent

To uncover

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the truth

Notre Dame and

and report

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Volume 52, Issue 80 | monday, february 12, 2018 | ndsmcobserver.com

Speakers reflect on sources of success Former coach Lou Holtz describes winning mindset

Mayor Pete Buttigieg urges thoughtful choices

By LUCAS MASIN-MOYER

By TOM NAATZ

Associate News Editor

News Writer

Former Notre Dame head football coach Lou Holtz is a man of many talents. He led the Irish to the 1988 National Championship, was a commentator on ESPN for many years and has given speaking engagements around the world. One of his lesser-known talents is that he is a magician. Before a crowd gathered in the Dahnke Ballroom in the Duncan Student Center on Sunday, Holtz performed a trick — ripping up a newspaper, folding it together and magically making it reappear to the applause of the crowd.

South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg spoke Sunday as part of “Life Beyond the ND Bubble,” an event designed to prepare seniors for their lives after graduation. Buttigieg’s remarks, delivered in the Dahnke Ballroom on the top f loor of the Duncan Student Center, were titled “Finding Your Why: The Value of Pursuing Your Passions,” and the mayor ref lected on finding a worthwhile career path as he ref lected on his own professional journey. Buttigieg began by underscoring the deep connection between South Bend and the

see COACH PAGE 4

KATHRYNE ROBINSON | The Observer

Former head football coach Lou Holtz delivers a speech Sunday regarding the importance of decisionmaking, faith and goals. “Life Outside the ND Bubble” offered graduating students real-world advice.

Fair promotes physical health, mental wellness By JORDAN COCKRUM News Writer

Saint Mary’s hosted its first student health and wellness fair, called “Win with Wellness,” on Friday in the Angela Athletic and Wellness Complex. Funded by a gift from alumna Kristine Anderson Trustey (’86), the fair was intended to generate more health and wellness programming on campus, Julie SchroederBiek, Saint Mary’s director of athletics, said. “[Trustey] gave a gift to the College, and with that gift she has charged us to do some more programming for health and wellness, so we thought that we would start it off with a wellness fair,” SchroederBiek said. Schroeder-Biek said this will be the first of many

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programs to provide students’ health and wellness education, which will begin to be introduced this academic year and will be kicked into high gear in the 20182019 academic year. The student health fair was structured around five prongs of health and wellness, Schroeder-Biek said. “We are focusing on five basically: mind, body, spirit, emotional and financial,” she said. “Those are kind of the prongs that we are really focused on.” Schroeder-Biek said in terms of focusing on the wellness of the mind, her goal was to provide students with methods of handling the stress they may be facing. “Because we are an institution of higher learning, we see WELLNESS PAGE 4

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see MAYOR PAGE 4

Flower shop prepares for increased holiday demand By LUCAS MASIN-MOYER Associate News Editor

As Valentine’s Day approaches, Irish Gardens — Notre Dame’s student-run f lower and balloon shop — is gearing up for the holiday season. The shop, which is located in the basement of the LaFortune Student Center and opened in the early 1980s, has students from Notre Dame and Saint Mary’s on staff and in management positions. They expect to see as many as 300 to 400 students place orders during the week. The shop, though, is in business throughout the year, helping students, faculty and staff make their special occasions the best they can be, junior supply manager Katie Lutz said. “W hat’s really nice is that we get to be a part of the best and worst moments of

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people’s lives here — like when people are celebrating birthdays it’s really exciting to celebrate with them … we’ve blown up so many of those big, huge balloons,” she said. “ … We’ve also had a lot of orders for when a roommate is sick or they’ve lost a loved one, so in [those] moments … it’s nice that we get to bring comfort.” The shop gets most of their supply from a partner in South Bend, and once the shipments arrive, employees are charged with preparing them for sale, sophomore employee Sammy Loper said. “Monday mornings we have to process the f lowers that come in,” she said. “We have to take the thorns off roses and the leaves off some f lowers.” Loper said one of the perks of working for Irish Gardens is that it allows her to be creative in designing people’s

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gifts. “People will come in — mostly guys — and be like, do you sell f lowers? ” she said. “And they’re like, ‘I don’t know what I want,’ so you can take their budget and create something that’s really nice.” Lutz, who began working for Irish Gardens during her freshman year after being recruited while studying in the LaFortune basement, said these usually-romantic orders create opportunities for some funny stories. “Usually people call us a week or two in advance if they want something delivered to someone’s room — usually it’s f lowers or something nice, something romantic,” she said. “But we’ve had instances in which the same person has called back to change the name on the order and sent see FLOWERS PAGE 4

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