Friday, December 12, 2008

A Spiritual "Indie" Christmas Music Collection

As a big music fan, I thought I would share one of my favorite Christmas collections with the blog, "Sufjan Stevens Presents Songs for Christmas." If you haven't heard of Sufjan Stevens, he is a singer/songwriter who gets labeled as an "indie-folk" artist, and who is one of my favorite newer artists.


Sufjan received some time in the spotlight from his single "Chicago," which was featured in the movie Little Miss Sunshine and came from his acclaimed 2005 album "Come on Feel the Illinoise" (Side note: The album is part of Sufjan's ambitious "50 States Project", where he is attempting to record an album for each one of the fifty states - so far, he has only completed Michigan and Illinois in the last five years - needless to say, the completion of the project is not looking good).


Sufjan is not only a talented artist who plays almost all the instruments on his albums (from banjo to flute), but he is also not afraid to express his spirituality on his records. While you will not necessarily find Sufjan in the Christian music section at the record store, several of his songs reference spiritual themes, both directly and indirectly. For example, his album "Seven Swans" contains multiple songs that address Christianity ("Abraham," "The Transfiguration"), and the song "Casmir Pulaski Day" from the Illinois album is a heartbreaking story of a young man finding out his lover has cancer, and dealing with his anger at God because of it. [A review of the album from a Christian perspective and referencing that song extensively can be found here]. Sufjan also exhibits a sense of humor, fun, and hope throughout his music, which separates him from other indie-folk musicians (who can sometimes drag into meloncholy), and keeps his spiritual ruminations from becoming preachy.

Sufjan's Christmas project is a collection of several EPs that he created every Christmas in an attempt to appreciate Christmas. According to his label's website:

"The recording process took place every December, for one week, usually at home, provoking collaborations with friends, roommates, and musical peers. Armed with a Reader’s Digest Christmas Songbook (and a mug of hot cider) Sufjan & friends concocted a musical fruit cake year after year, implementing every musical instrument they could find lying around the house: banjo, oboe, Casiotone, wood flute, a buzzy guitar, hand claps, sleigh bells, Hammond organ, and some tree tinsel. Did we mention sleigh bells?"

The result is an odd, yet compelling mix of Christmas standards and several original Christmas songs. Granted, there are some definite misses in the collection (I don't think the songs "Ding! Dong!" and "Get Behind Me, Santa" will reach regular Christmas rotation), but Sufjan's versions of "The Friendly Beasts" and "What Child is This" are definitely worth a listen.

Sufjan is definitely not for everyone, but it is nice to hear something a little different (yet still familiar) during Christmas time.

Monday, November 17, 2008

So long, Time-Warner. Despite the return of WDTN and ND home football to Time Warner Cable, Dish TV turned out to be a great switch for my wife and me. We picked Dish up and dropped TWC when Time-Warner dropped WDTN and our beloved Notre Dame games. The Dish picture is better and the cost is lower. We see if TWC comes groveling back—some how I doubt it.

Maybe our greatest tradition? I am a little late with my post this month as I was in Baltimore for the Navy game. Coach Weis, the team, and Mother Nature managed to make the game more exciting than it needed to be. I had the pleasure of watching the game from a corporate suite so the 4th quarter typhoon was not a big problem for me personally. I had the honor of being one of only 2 ND alumni in a suite with about 20 Navy grads. I have got to say that I truly love the commitment that the Navy players to play 60 minutes no matter what. I love the commitment of the typical Navy grad to their school and to country. When I am with these people, I am with kindred spirits. I know most of us are familiar with why this lop-sided series has continued unbroken, but if you aren’t I would encourage you to check it out. The Navy series may be perhaps the greatest tradition in ND football because it really is about God, Country, and Notre Dame. Go Navy!

Does anybody know… The ND Band has been in continuous existence since 1846 making it the oldest band in the country in continuous existence. The Fight Song was written 100 years ago. SO, what did the band play for the first 62 years? I'm just wondering.

Hesburgh Lecture Coming! Don’t forget to block out the evening of Thursday, April 30, 2009 for the 2009 Hesburgh Lecture. We will be sponsoring Professor Kim Kwan who will be speaking on “The Economics of East Asia and the United States: Possibilities and Prospects for Cooperation”. More to follow.

Saturday, October 25, 2008

A Quick Look at Negative Campaign Ads


Something weighing on my mind recently is how much of recent presidential campaign advertising focuses on the opponent's perceived flaws rather than the candidate's strengths. If our biggest strength in a healthy democracy is an informed citezenship, isn't this tactic undermining us well-intentioned voters?

Fortunately, brighter minds than my own are tackling this subject. Take a look at the this brief video in which marketing professor Joel Urbany takes a quick look at the rationale for and effectiveness of this particular flavor of political advertising. Timely and interesting!

The video is currently off the ND homepage: http://www.nd.edu/
Scroll to the panel titled ND Expert: Joe Urbany. Or you can find it on YouTube.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

20 Questions (actually 12) with Bill Evans


On October 23, 2008, Bill Evans will introduce himself and the House of Bread at our club luncheon. The House of Bread provides free meals to those in need, and Bill is its Executive Director. Dayton Domer Digest had the chance to ask Bill some questions:


What is your background?

My wife Rosemary and I are both UD grads (History and Social work majors respectively). We owned Evans Bakery for thirty-five years. We sold that business so that I could have this very challenging and rewarding second career as the Executive Director of the House of Bread.

How did House of Bread begin?

Our founder Sister Dorothy Kammerer started the House of Bread December 3, 1983. She said our guests did not have to show us a picture ID, have a proof of income, a place of residence, nor suffer through a lengthy interrogation. All were welcome. I have simply carried on with her original intentions.

How many meals does House of Bread serve?

Currently the House of Bread serves around 260+ meals per day or 80,000 meals annually in our dining room, plus 8200 children’s meals.

Where does House of Bread get its food?

The Food Bank is our major source of food. Our main private sector sources are Trader Joe and Gordon Food Service. Food drives and private donations from selected sources make up the balance.

How many people work at House of Bread?

The House of Bread employs five people: a full time Executive Director (me), a full time kitchen Director, a part time volunteer coordinator who doubles as an administrative assistant, a part time dish room/dining room coordinator, and a part time salaried bookkeeper. We have a very lean, dedicated staff indeed.

Are any of the employees former guests at House of Bread?

We reserve a part time dish room position for the hard to employ. We are very proud of that effort.

On whom do you depend for your funding?

Seventy percent of our budget comes from individuals, churches, and small business/organizations. Twenty percent of our funding comes from United Way, Combined Federal Campaign and FEMA. Ten percent of our funding comes from private and public grant sources. Our total budget is $ 270-300K

How has House of Bread changed over the years?

First of all, demand has increased and we have become more efficient. We wish to be the high volume low accost meal provider. We want to share our successes with others and learn to be even more attentive to detail as we serve the hungry. The great strength of the organization is that we have not changed very much at all. There is a simplicity and consistency to our mission that makes it easy to understand and get involved.

What has been House of Bread’s biggest challenge that it has overcome?

The House of Bread, faced with great challenges, moved into its own permanent location at 9 Orth Avenue on August 2, 2002. With a business plan in place, we secured a construction loan and then converted it to a mortgage. We now have the next major challenge to pay off the $275K mortgage balance so that we can expand necessary meal programs. Our current mortgage payment is $2900/month; current interest expense is $25K per year.

What are House of Bread’s goals for the future?

We want to continue to reach out to underserved populations. We want to further expand our children’s nutrition programs. The acronym SMART (Science and Math Attracting Ready Talent) is a well thought out enhancement to our core mission of nourishing hungry people.

What is the most significant challenge that House of Bread’s guests currently face?

More people who hardly ever imagined that they would be “food insecure” will face that difficult situation. We need to be responsive to changing needs and we need to be yet another bridge to beneficial community resources.

What is the most effective way to address those concerns?

We need to be able to build capacity, assure that we have adequate reserves and have the right people in place to insure that we will be always ready and available whatever the need may be.

How can we assist House of Bread?

The House of Bread looks for the same three resources from this organization as it looks for from any organization. I call it M and M and M’s. That would be money, muscle (manpower or womanpower) and momentum (special talent to assist us with our goals and objectives).

Thank you for the opportunity to submit answers to these questions.

Bill Evans
Executive Director
226-1520 or 673-0303

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Voting goodbye TWC and hello to a new president

First, my thanks to Marty Foos for offering me the opportunity to be a “poster” for our club blog. Marty said he was trying recruit bloggers from a variety of backgrounds in order to fully represent the make-up of the entire Notre Dame Club of Dayton. I guess I represent the over-50, computer impaired group.

Time-Warner. Thanks to the dropping of WDTN from the Time-Warner programming list, I’ve switched to Dish-TV. As it turns out, we will be spending less money for more stations. I’ll let you all know how it works out for us.

The Big (Catholic) Read. I’ve had the opportunity to participate in a Big (Catholic) Read discussion of the book The Catholic Vote—A Guide for the Perplexed at my home parish of St Luke in Beavercreek. The book, co-authored by Clarke E. Cochran and David Carroll Cochran, purports to illuminate a statement by the US Conference of Catholic Bishops entitled Forming Consciences for Faithful Citizenship: A Call to Political Responsibility from the Catholic Bishops of the United States. The series is being encouraged by the Cincinnati Archdiocese so hopefully some other club members have participated in these discussions in their home parishes. If so, I would love to hear your thoughts on the series. If not, and your parish is sponsoring the discussions, I would highly encourage you to look into it!

The purpose of the bishop’s statement is to provide a succinct summary of Catholic social teaching and how a faithful Catholic should look apply Catholic social teaching to specific policy issues. The bishops delineate seven “key themes” in the Church’s social teaching. These include:
- The Right to Life and the Dignity of the Human Person
- Call to Family, Community, and Participation
- Human Rights and Responsibilities
- The (Preferential) Option for the Poor
- Dignity of Work and the Rights of Workers
- Solidarity (the “oneness” of the human family)
- Stewardship of God’s Creation

The bishops go on to apply these themes to specific issues. Some of these connections follow with crystal clarity such as the Right to Life = Abortion is always wrong. Other applications require a bit more discussion such as the Call to Family = Parental Choice in Schools. In short, the bishop’s statement leaves the Catholic conscious with a fair amount of latitude it sorting out the issues. It is clearly neither a Democrat nor a Republican document. It is a “must read” for any Catholic voter, however, prior to November 4th.

Unfortunately, the accompanying Big Read text is not quite so non-partisan and this opinion seemed to be the consensus in my group. Without going into a book report, I found the book to be quite left-of-center. I will defer further comment pending discussion from any readers who may have come to a different conclusion. I believe a thoughtful person will have a satisfactory understanding of the Church’s position by reading the bishop’s statement (link above) and foregoing the Big Read “amplifying material”. The real value of the Big Read is in the discussion with fellow parishioners. Be aware that the discussion material is completely issue-based and there is little to no discussion of the weighing of issues versus the candidate’s character and value system. I know when I hire a new employee that the individual’s character and value system (as their past associates and references will testify to) is at least as important as their experience.

Again, if you have the opportunity to participate in a voter discussion group at your parish, I’d love to hear from you!



Thursday, October 9, 2008

Answers about the Sub-Prime Mortgage Mess


What happened last week with the bailout? What's happening this week with the stock market? Get practical answers from the Chair of Notre Dame's Economic and Econometrics Department, Christopher J. Waller, Ph.D. (Professor Waller is also part of the Kellogg Institute for International Studies.)


Professor Waller gave a talk on the Saturday before the Stanford game as part of the Saturday Scholar Series. Little did he know that his talk on the Sub-Prime Mortgage Mess would come one day after the bailout passed Congress.


Professor Waller is interesting and objective. He does not get into politics, just facts. Yet his talk is extremely interesting and informative. He explains the situation in terms that nonacademics can understand. This talk is simply the best explanation for our current economic condition hands down. I saw it in person and have been thinking and talking about it ever since.


Fortunately, the University videotaped the presentation and put it online. It takes about an hour and 15 minutes to listen to, and it is worth every minute.


Professor Waller explains that there is only a 2.7 % default rate on mortgages nationwide, and why all of us are feeling the pinch. He explains why the bailout is not really a bailout and why it is not likely to cost $700 billion. He gives actual figures for how much and why the investment firms were overleveraged. He reviews the history of mortgage markets since the Great Depression and explains how some of the problems from that time are resurfacing. The presentation describes what happened on the day credit froze -- September 17, 2008 -- and compares mortgage backed securities to Beanie Babies: "Nobody wants them, so no one knows what they're worth." (He also compared the onslaught of problems to Jimmy Clausen getting chased by defensive linemen in 2007.) Professor Waller answers questions about which regulatory changes and accounting rules had an effect on creating this problem and which did not. Finally, he disclaims knowledge of what will happen in the future, but indicates which problem areas might be on the horizon.


After the Stanford game, my friends and I spent more time discussing this presentation than we did the game (and if you knew the intellectual capacity of my friends and I, you would be doubly astounded). I highly recommend that you listen to his presentation.

Friday, October 3, 2008

Notre Dame Law School Professor Featured During Victory Over Purdue


For those of you who may have missed it last weekend, Notre Dame Law School professor Jimmy Gurule was featured in a video clip during the Notre Dame/Purdue game. The clip can be found here.


I do not know Jimmy Gurule as the former Under Secretary for Enforcement for the U.S. Department of the Treasury, or as the one-time Deputy Chief of the Major Narcotics Section of the Los Angeles U.S. Attorney’s Office (where he was dubbed the "Eagle of the Courtroom"). I only know Professor Gurule as one of the most well-respected (and often intimidating) criminal law professor at the law school. I had Professor Gurule for criminal law my first year at Notre Dame Law School, and whether we were discussing the far-reaching impact of anti-gang loitering statutes on society, or truly exploring the concept of self-defense from both a legal and moral standpoint, his class helped me become the "different kind of lawyer" referred to in the video clip.


More information regarding Professor Gurule can be found at his faculty bio page. As for the TV commercial, I feel it presents the law school (and Notre Dame) in a good light by focusing on one special member of its impressive faculty (and a voice-over by Regis never hurts anything).

Thursday, October 2, 2008

The Catholic Guy: Live from ND!

If any of you have Sirius Satellite Radio, the satellite radio home of Notre Dame football (you know the one with the little dog as the logo), then you know about the Catholic Channel. All the ND games are on it, but so are a series of pretty fun hosts. It's sponsored by the Archdiocese of New York. It's entertaining, which is not always the case with religious programming.


The host who has the main timeslot (from 4 to 7 weekdays) will be broadcasting live from Gate 3 of Notre Dame Stadium this weekend! His name is Lino Rulli; he's also known as the Catholic guy. His guests have included Ed McMahon, twelve-time World Wrestling Federation champion Kurt Angle, and Vincent Sapore from "the Sopranos" (as well as several bishops). Callers answer trivia questions with the hopes of getting a Pope Bottle Opener or choose "Who is the Better Catholic?" a competition each week between Lino and a New York priest.


Here is one of his segments:


Genesis 1:26 says:God said: "Let us make man in our image, after our likeness. Let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, the birds of the air, and the cattle, and over all the wild animals and all the creatures that crawl on the ground."Well since the show is called "The Catholic Guy", it seems that a Catholic guy should follow what the Bible says. We not only have dominion over the animals, but God even wants us to name the animals.Name an animal? Well, that's the latest contest we played on our show: "Name Your Pet Lino". We got lots of great offers...

-Lino the Lobster. It would be a short, but meaningful relationship. (Kinda like all my relationships!)

-Lino the Labrador. A seeing-eye dog. (Because I spiritually guide people? Please play along.)

-Lino the Cat. Its owner described the cat as: "Cute, yet strange looking all at the same time. He is always doing things to crack us up and finally he is not too bright." (That defines me.)

-Lino the annoying neighbor's dog who yaps all day long. (Annoying? Yapping? Yep, that's me.)

-Lino the Angelfish. A guy called all the way from Rome, Italy to offer that one. (And my real name is Angelo.)


The winner of "Name Your Pet Lino" is...Drum roll, please...



Lino the Boer Goat!




This 6 month old boer goat is now named Lino. And get this...he's got about 3 more
months to prove that he's good with the female boer goats. And if he isn't? He
will soon be goat meat for lunch.

If you are going to the game, look for the Catholic Guy!

Monday, September 29, 2008

2008 ND Forum -- Part 2

As promised, we'll try to summarize some of the more interesting parts of the Notre Dame Forum on renewable energy. The full video is located on the University's website. It is fascinating and you should view it if you can spare some time.


The speakers were Majora Carter, founder of Sustainable South Bronx, an organization dedicated to developing green jobs for some of the poorer neighborhoods of New York; Jeff Immelt, Chairman and CEO of General Electric; Ernest Moniz, a professor at MIT and the former Undersecretary of Energy; and Bill Ritter, Governor of Colorado. The forum was moderated by Anne Thompson, the chief environmental affairs correspondent for NBC News and a graduate of Notre Dame.

Majora Carter's main focus was on how poorer neighborhoods have felt the brunt of environmentally unfriendly energy usage. She described how to solve two problems -- poverty and pollution -- by creating green jobs, which she defined as any job that has a net benefit to the environment. She emphasized that the people of America want to give of themselves and contribute to the greater good, and the environment is the greater good for today. "Environmental justice for all is the civil rights of the twenty-first century."



Jeff Immelt said that he tries to view energy and environmental issues without emotion. He cited studies that have convinced him and his company that global warming caused by human beings is a scientific fact. He believes that the quest for renewable energy is a solvable problem -- and not just 20 to 30 years from now. He stressed the need for an energy policy in this country: "Right now, there is no energy policy." At the same time, he warned against pursuing any one source of renewable energy, such as corn-based ethanol. "We need to pursue dozens of new technologies so that we don't put our eggs all in one basket." Among those dozens would be clean coal (and cleaner than any of the technologies being discussed today), solar, wind, hydroelectric, nuclear, natural gas, sugar-based ethanol, and other sources. In Immelt's view, a policy would require no caveats; it would have to establish clear goals with no exceptions. Otherwise, nothing would get done as the exceptions would swallow the rule. He believes that the rest of the world is waiting for America to lead the way, and the companies of America, for financial and other reasons, are waiting on leadership from the U.S. government. The time to act is now because high gas prices are permitting the development of alternative fuels to be economical. (And Immelt believes that high gas prices have nothing to do with America's usage of oil and everything to do with China's and India's ever-increasing usage of oil.)


Ernest Moniz warned that, at the rate we're going, the atmosphere will have too much carbon dioxide in it to sustain healthy human life by the middle of this century. He talked about the need to develop zero-carbon and low-carbon fuels such as nuclear, solar, wind, and geothermal energy. Fossil fuels have been so successful because there is no better way to store hydrogen atoms than by attaching them to carbon atoms. He described the need to capture carbon dioxide before it reaches the atmosphere and to find a way to store it underground. China is working on this type of technology for coal plants, but the United States is not. Right now, American business is not set up to develop new energy technologies. Smaller companies are more entrepreneurial in developing the new technologies, but they lack the resources to do it. Larger energy companies lack the incentives to work on new technologies rather than to promote the types of energy they are trying to sell. Moniz views renewable energy as a matter affecting our nation's security, environmental, foreign relations, fiscal, industrial, and agricultural concerns, but the current structure of our government separates the management of energy issues rather than integrates them into a strategic energy policy. New energy sources will require new transmission lines, which will be expensive to build.


Bill Ritter talked about the ways Colorado is a leader in energy and conservation within the United States. Among other things, Colorado has established goals for renewable energy, provided economic incentives for energy companies to develop renewable energy technologies, and is working to better sequester carbon in farming operations. A new wind farm statute provides $500 to farmers for each windmill they allow on their property, and a windmill manufacturer has opened its U.S. operations in Colorado. One of Colorado's utilities has developed a "smart grid," which is essentially a computer that tells users whether they are using energy at peak or non-peak times and allows users to adjust their usage accordingly. The smart grid will shut down appliances when they are not in use and will adjust usage to improve efficiency and reduce costs. Ritter felt that the biggest hurdles we face are raising awareness among the greater public. For example, nuclear power is not practicle any time soon because the public will not allow plants to be built near its part of the country. He views corn ethanol to be valuable not because it is a good energy substitute. Actually, it is a poor one, looking at it from the point of view of energy alone; it requires a large amount of energy to produce, and it raises food prices. But it was successful in raising the public's awareness of alternative sources of fuel for their vehicles. Now, the path is open to develop alternative fuels such as fuels made from algae. One of the problems with solar and wind energy is that there is insufficient means for storing it. Ritter pointed to new technologies that are being developed for storing solar energy, and described ways in which regions that produce wind, solar, geothermal, or coal energy could all work together to supply continuous power to the grid.


We hope this summary is useful. While long, it is much shorter than the full two-hour video. But if you get the chance to view the video, you should as it is good enough to shape your views of this subject for years to come.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

2008 Notre Dame Forum

Today, the University hosted its fourth annaul Notre Dame Forum. The topic was sustainable energy. For those of us unfamiliar with the Forum,
The Notre Dame Forum is an annual event that aims to engage Notre Dame students in intellectual discussion about an issue significant to the nation, the world, and/or the Church. Instituted by Notre Dame’s President, Rev. John I. Jenkins, C.S.C., during his inaugural weekend in 2005, the Forum aspires to serve our wider society by staging interdisciplinary debate and discussion that calls upon the moral and spiritual values that help define Notre Dame as a Catholic university.
The idea is to gather experts from all different backgrounds to discuss the challenging issues of our time. Then, the University encourages students, faculty, alumni, and staff to continue the discussion in dorms, classes, and everyday life on campus. In other words, its sort of a theme for the academic year. The focus of the 2008 Forum on Sustainable Energy is described on the website as:

The 2008 Forum on Sustainable Energy invites us to take note of the issues; to review a variety of perspectives—from science, the Church, and the media; and to come to an understanding of our own individual accountability.
Take a look at this video, which describes the speakers at this year's Forum. Even better, take a look at this funnier video featuring the Notre Dame Leprecaun. (The Leprecaun is about the only way to make the issue of sustainable energy funny.)

In terms of research being conducted on campus, there are endless possibilities. For example, did you know there was a Notre Dame Energy Center, a Center for Building Communities, a Center for Environmental Justice and Children's Health, a Center for Environmental Science and Technology, the GLOBES Program, and the University of Notre Dame Environmental Research Center. (If you don't want to read about each of these programs individually, you can get a short summary of all of them at this site.) In addition, there is a new Office of Sustainability whose job it is to promote conservation and energy sustainability all over campus.

When John Affleck-Graves spoke at our Universal Notre Dame Night a couple of years ago, he talked about educating students one at a time (and also important your donations were to that effort). If you take a look around the sites linked to the Forum website, you can start to see strong contributions by individual students in unique opportunities to demonstrate real leadership. These opportunities for individualized education did not exist in such large abundance when you and I were there.

The video and transcripts from the Forum have not yet been posted, but a summary is found here. If any of the transcripts are particularly interesting, we'll provide some quotes in a later post.

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Did You Know? Ringer from Dayton


Javon Ringer, the powerful senior running back for Michigan State, is from Dayton. He played for Chaminade-Julienne in high school. He was part of the 2002 state championship team, rushing for over 200 yards in the title game. In 2005, Scout gave him four stars and ranked him as the fifteenth best running back in the country. The following is from the Spring 2005 edition of Vision, CJ's alumni newsletter:

Javon Ringer, who is ranked as the second best player in the state, signed with Michigan State. The three time All-Ohio running back rushed for 1,763 yards and 20 touchdowns last season before being sidelined with an ACL injury in week seven.
Notre Dame never made a scholarship offer to Ringer, but that was the year that our recruiting was divided between two coaches: Willingham and Weiss.
We're still rooting for the Irish this weekend. However, if anyone knew Ringer or his family, we'd love to know more. Share any stories in the comments section.

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Discovering the Origins of the Universe

A few years ago the Church exonerated Galileo Galilei. In March, it announced that it's going so far as to erect a statue of Galileo inside the Vatican walls.



In 1995, the Cardinal in charge of reviewing the Galileo trial gave this explanation and statement about the relation of faith and science:



Science and Faith

A second and immensely important area is the relationship between science and faith. I had the honour to be President of the interdisciplinary Commission that, at the request of the Pope, investigated the Galileo Case. That sad and symbolic episode, we discovered, was born mainly from the limitations of the culture of the time: it lacked the intellectual tools to distinguish between methodologies and fields of knowledge. Thus the theologians who judged Galileo were unable to see that the Bible does not make claims about the physical world as such. As a result they were mistaken in transposing "into the realm of the doctrine of the faith a question that in fact pertained to scientific investigation" (John Paul II, L'Osservatore Romano, English edition, 3 November 1992, pp. 1-2).

In the last century there were other tensions between theology and science in the field of creation itself: one thinks of the initial panic about Darwin's theories. But today what is striking is a new and mutual openness between science and religion. Undoubtedly this was helped by the clear recognition of the "rightful independence of science" by Vatican II (Gaudium et Spes § 36) and also by the healing of wounds through the initiatives of the Holy Father concerning Galileo. Besides, both science and theology have learned new forms of humility. Possibly the most significant shift within the field of science is the abandonment of a mechanistic model of reality and the move towards a new sense of mystery especially in cosmology and astrophysics.
How can we really grasp the staggering fact that the universe is about fifteen billion years old? For the theologian today, in fact "cosmic evolution can be considered as something entirely logical if one supposes that God did not wish to create a fully realized universe and that he chose to rely on the cooperation of natural causes" (Mariano Artigas, "Science et foi: nouvelles perspectives", in Après Galilée: science et foi - nouveau dialogue, ed. Paul Poupard, Paris: Desclée de Brouwer, 1994, p. 210). Here I am doing no more than evoking horizons of friendship between science and religion that were unimaginable in the culture of even a few decades ago.



This "new sense of mystery . . . in cosmology and astrophysics" is exemplified by the exciting new scientific experiments being planned to test the origins of the universe. The most recent is the Large Hadron Collider in Europe.




The machine is the $10 billion Large Hadron Collider, or LHC — the most powerful, most expensive particle-blaster ever invented. On Wednesday, Europe's CERN particle-physics lab is due to start shooting beams of protons through the LHC's 17-mile-round (27-kilometer-round) ring of tunnels beneath the French-Swiss border, near Geneva.
It will take months for the machine to reach full power. But eventually, those protons will be whipped up to 99.999999 percent of the speed of light, slamming together with the energy of two bullet trains colliding head-on. Underground detectors as big as cathedrals will track the subatomic wreckage on a time scale of billionths of a second. Billions of bits of data will be sent out every second for analysis.

Some of the key mysteries that stem from these clashing theories include why gravity is so weak, relative to the other fundamental physical forces such as electromagnetism and why the universe is so large. These issues come up because on an inconceivably small scale, the particles that make up our world seem to behave completely differently than one might imagine.

For example, if you are driving a car, your GPS tells you where you are, and your speedometer tells you how fast you are moving. But on the scale of particles like electrons, it is impossible to know both position and speed at once; the very act of trying to find out requires incredible amounts of energy.

If it takes so much energy just to try to pin down a particle, then, in theory, all particles should have temporary energy changes around them called "quantum fluctuations." This energy translates into mass, since Einstein famously said that mass and energy are interchangeable through the equation E=mc2.

"It makes it extremely mysterious that the electron, or indeed, everything else that we know and love and are made of, isn't incredibly more massive than it is," Arkani-Hamed said. A theory that has emerged in recent decades that claims to bring some relief to physics mysteries like these is called superstring theory, or string theory for short. Previously, scientists believed that the smallest, most indivisible building blocks of our world were particles, but string theory says the world is made of
extremely small vibrating loops called strings. In order for these strings to properly constitute our universe, they must vibrate in 11 dimensions, scientists say. Everyone observes three spatial dimensions and one for time, but theoretical models suggest at least seven others that we do not see.

Arkani-Hamed proposed, along with physicists Savas Dimopoulos and Gia Dvali, that some of these dimensions are larger than previously thought -- specifically, as large as a millimeter. Physicists call this the ADD model, after the first initials of the authors' last names. We haven't seen these extra dimensions because gravity is the only force that can wander around them, Arkani-Hamed said.

String theory has come under attack because some say it can never be tested; the strings are supposed to be smaller than any particle ever detected, after all. But Arkani-Hamed says the Large Hadron Collider could lead to the direct observation of strings, or at least indirect evidence of their existence.

In 2006, a physics professor from Notre Dame, Professor Anthony Hyder, gave the keynote address at our club's Universal Notre Dame Night. While most of his talk was on the state of the University, the professor answered questions afterwards. One of the questions asked, "What is the current 'big question' that physicists are trying to answer?" Professor Hyder answered something to the effect of "Where is all of the matter in the universe? Our calculations tell us there should be 70% more matter than what we know about, so where is the rest?" Among its many experiments, the Hadron Collider is expected to provide information related to the questions,
Why is most of that mass hidden?
Where did all the antimatter go?

Notre Dame physicists Mitchell Wayne, Randal Ruchti, Michael Hildreth, Colin Jessop and Kevin Lannon are responsible for the development of the optical readout for the hadron calorimeter in the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) detector, one of two large, all-purpose detectors that will be utilized in the LHC experiments. A research faculty member, a postdoctoral fellow and three graduate students from the University were at the LHC today as test operations began.


Here at Dayton Domer Digest, we're guessing they discover something unexpected and mysterious.

Friday, September 12, 2008

Play Like a Champion Today

Notre Dame has always enjoyed a good relationship with sports. Our new Athletic Director, Jack Swarbrick, said on his first day on the job that,

I believe in the academic environment there is no better classroom than the athletic field or court. I've spent a lot of time over the years having the privilege of being around great coaches. And when you talk to the student athletes who have been with those coaches, those who played for Ara, and you say, 'Other than your parent, who most influenced you in your life?' The answer is inevitably that coach.
That is the essence of the educational experience. In collegiate sports now we use the phrase 'student athlete.' Well, the corollary of that is educator coach. That's what the coaches at Notre Dame are. They have an opportunity to shape lives, which is not, as I said, incidental to the mission of this great university. It is one of the most effective ways to realize it.


Under this "Swarbrick Doctrine," sports are not just something to cheer for, or a happy coincidence that ND would have been good at football. Rather, sports are part of the core mission of Notre Dame.

In keeping with this serious focus on sports, Notre Dame has developed a program for youth sports (middle school and younger), called Play Like a Champion Today, that encourages participants not to take sports too seriously. The following explains the problems the program was meant to address:

Why do we need PLC? There is growing unrest around youth sports in our country. Sports that were once seen as enjoyable and nurturing are becoming instead hard work and of questionable developmental value. This affects all people involved in youth sport: athletes, coaches and parents.

There is increasing pressure on young athletes to specialize year round in one sport. These sport programs are becoming increasingly expensive often characterized by high stakes travel teams. There is a great devotion of resources to elite athletes while fewer opportunities exist for all children to play and compete. There is pressure on coaches to put winning above the good of the children – a win at all costs mentality.
Many parents have sky high ambitions for their children and are taking extraordinary measures to advance their child’s athletic career. There are increasing incidents of “parent rage” at all levels of youth sport. Just one story is of the father who was unhappy about his son’s playing time, so he actually pulled a gun on his son’s football coach. This man’s son was 5 years old.


Play Like a Champion began in school year 2006-2007 and is a series of programs for coaches and parents.

    • PLC is designed to educate all individuals responsible for ensuring that children have a positive and successful youth sport experience (coaches, parents, & administrators).
    • Every aspect of the program is research-based, incorporating the latest research in sports psychology, moral development, and character education.
    • Being child-centered, PLC works from the recognition that children are different than adults and a youth sports program should put the children’s needs first.

Several youth sports leagues across the country have been part of the pilot program for PLC, including St. Brigid of Kildare Parish in Columbus, Ohio.

Perhaps our club should make an effort to sponsor members who are coaches to attend one or more of the program's sessions?

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

First Post

Welcome to the Dayton Domer Digest, the blog of the Notre Dame Club of Dayton. It is accessible from the club's website, http://dayton.undclub.org. Stop back often for stories about Notre Dame and those who attempt to live according to its ideals.