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Wednesday, April 22, 2026
The Observer

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The Observer

Alumna founds clothing company

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With multiple duties of being an entrepreneur, a wife, a mom, a daughter and a sister, Courtney Schultz, a 2010 graduate of Saint Mary's College, is expanding her design company to include collegiate wear for women across the nation.


The Observer

Students experience D.C.

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WASHINGTON - Junior Mia Counts got a new ID card this semester - not from Card Services on campus, but for the Pentagon Building in Washington D.C.



The Observer

Pharmacy changes policy

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Thanks to a new service offered by University Health Services (UHS) in conjunction with Walgreens Pharmacy, it will now be easier for Notre Dame students to fill their prescription medications through private insurance companies. Walgreens at UHS is a new pharmacy management service offered by UHS allowing students to use private insurance for payment of prescriptions.


The Observer

Professor says fiscal plan needs work

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The contention over the United States fiscal policy has boiled down to a matter of rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic, economics professor Eric Sims said.


The Observer

Colleges unite with food drives

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The Holy Cross Harvest is rallying Saint Mary's, Notre Dame and Holy Cross campuses in a common cause to support the community through food drives. The drives will extend from Jan. 28 to Feb. 15 on the University of Notre Dame and Saint Mary's College campuses, and throughout the month of February at Holy Cross College.


The Observer

Development center to hold open house

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The Early Childhood Development Centers (ECDC) on the Notre Dame and Saint Mary's campus will hold a series of open houses in the next month for prospective parents to gain a better understanding of the program.


The Observer

Students plunge into cities

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Instead of spending winter vacation relaxing or earning money, several Notre Dame students donated their time to the underprivileged in their own backyards through the Center for Social Concerns' Urban Plunge program.


The Observer

Author lectures on democracy

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In an area plagued by conflict, a push toward democracy may appear reasonable, but when dealing with the Middle East, some question whether such tactics are actually a mistake. Author John Agresto presented his views on the issue at a lecture Thursday night supported by the Kellogg Institute and the undergraduate minor in Constitutional Studies Program.




The Observer

Controversy surrounds Te'o

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LennayKekua, the girl believed to have been former Irish linebacker MantiTe'o's girlfriend and who was reported to have died of leukemia in September, never existed. After an afternoon of questions and swirling controversy, Notre Dame Director of Athletics Jack Swarbrick addressed the situation, originally reported by Deadspin.com, at a press conference Wednesday evening. Swarbrick said Te'o received a phone call from the number he associated with LennayKekua while he was in Orlando in early December for an ESPN awards show that took place Dec. 6. "When he answered it, it was a person whose voice sounded like the same voice he had talked to, who told him that she was, in fact, not dead," Swarbrick said. Following the phone call that day, Te'o received what Swarbrick called "persistent" contact from the number; the frequency dissipated in time because Te'o stopped responding, Swarbrick said. Te'o waited to act on the situation until he went home for Christmas on Dec. 21 because he wanted to speak with his family about it in person, Swarbrick said. When he returned to campus, Te'o alerted head coach Brian Kelly and defensive coordinator Bob Diaco before Swarbrick was notified. Swarbrick said he met with Te'o on Dec. 27 and 28 after the linebacker returned to campus for practice leading up to the Jan. 7 BCS National Championship Game. In those meetings, Swarbrick interviewed Te'o about the chain of events. "I want to stress, as someone who has probably been as engaged in this as anyone in the past couple of weeks, that nothing about what I have learned has shaken my faith in MantiTe'o one iota," Swarbrick said. "The same great young man, great student and great athlete that we have been so proud to have be a member of our family is the same guy tonight, unchanged in any way, except for, as he indicated in a statement in his release, the embarrassment associated with having been a victim in this case." Following the meetings, Swarbrick met with University leaders and they made the decision to acquire the services of an independent investigative firm. Swarbrick said he met with Te'o's parents - Brian and OttiliaTe'o - on Jan. 4, and the family made the decision to release the story sometime the week of Jan. 20. Swarbrick refused to release many of the details regarding Te'o's perceived relationship with Kekua, saying it's "Manti's story to tell." He added that the University does not plan to publish the investigative firm's results. Swarbrick said he does not know the details of when or how Te'o plans to speak about this, but said it could come as early as Thursday. Swarbrick said authorities have not been alerted to the case, due in large part to the lack of criminal activity such as extortion. Swarbrick said Te'o never met with anyone claiming to be Kekua in person and that the entire relationship was conducted electronically and over the telephone. Te'o had spoken of falling to sleep in bed with Kekua on the line in a story that appeared in the Oct. 1 issue of Sports Illustrated. "There were lengthy, long telephone conversations," Swarbrick said. "The issue of who it is, who's playing what role, what's real and what's not here is a more complex question than I can get into." The comments contradicted published reports in October that Te'o met Kekua in person in Palo Alto, Calif., in Nov. 2009 when Notre Dame played at Stanford over Thanksgiving weekend. "I'll let Manti provide the details, but as I said earlier in this press conference, when Manti took me through the entire story from start to finish, when he first described the contact, he used the verb 'met,'" Swarbrick said. "For him, the fact that they connected online, that they met online, was consistent with using that verb. "Not one that I might have chosen, but it was for him. And the timing was consistent with the playing of that game." Stanford University spokesperson Lisa Lapin issued the following statement to The Observer regarding Kekua's alleged enrollment at the school: "We've had no student attending Stanford by that name or any other similar name." Additionally, Dan Anderson, an employee at the Los Angeles County Department of Coroner, told The Observer there is no record of LennayKekua or anyone with a similar name dying in the county from Sept. 11 to 13. It had been reported that Kekua died in Carson, Calif., sometime around those dates. Te'o released a statement to ESPN Wednesday afternoon in which he said the situation has been "painful and humiliating." "This is incredibly embarrassing to talk about, but over an extended period of time, I developed an emotional relationship with a woman I met online. We maintained what I thought to be an authentic relationship by communicating frequently online and on the phone, and I grew to care deeply about her," Te'o said. "It further pains me that the grief I felt and the sympathies expressed to me at the time of my grandmother's death in September were in any way deepened by what I believed to be another significant loss in my life." Until Te'o speaks in more detail, the controversy surrounding the star player who helped return Notre Dame to national prominence on the field will continue to build. But Swarbrick made it clear throughout Wednesday's press conference that Te'o has the University's full trust and support. "There's a lot of tragedy here," Swarbrick said. "There's a lot of sorrow here.  But the thing I am most sad of, sad about is ... that the single most trusting human being I've ever met will never be able to trust in the sam way again in his life.  That's an incredible tragedy."






The Observer

Championship game draws Irish faithful

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Despite the disappointing outcome of the BCS National Championship on Jan. 7, Notre Dame students and fans brought South Bend to South Beach for an entire weekend to support their Irish against the University of Alabama Crimson Tide.