Cadet parking cliarges 'misinterpretation': Stone sa.rs s, Jeanette Hamlllon Disciplinan· action has been taken agarnsr the instructors who allegedly rhrcarencd NIC cadets, according 10 Denn Ray S1onc \hhough S1onc would no1 di.\dOSC rhe name of lhl! rn ~t ructors or !he manner 1n which they were reprimanded. he soid rhe problem was one of commumca11ons and 1he misunders1anding would not hnppcn again.
In a rcccn1 speech 10 ;a Joumahsm class. Stone said he found that "tht' student, Ct'adet~I might ha,·e misin· tcrprc1cd the facuhy •· and the alleged ·hrea1, were mJde in ":i joking. kidding manner .. In the :-.o, I~ 1swe of the Carduul Review. a memo from the cadets addressed 10 'led S1uan. la" enforcement dm:ctor. was printed 1n pan.
uplaininll "h~ 1he cr1m1nal ;us11ce pr;ic1icum cla~, member~ resigned frl'm their duties ol JS\umg campus p.;irking tkket\. The memo said "In 1hc last nrne weeks I\\O of our members ha,e h:id facult" member~ mform them to ne,·er enroll. m their dass. One of 1he faculn· e,en <1:11ed he would ·gel e\'en' "ilh all lau enforcement for the Jctioll!> of
)CdRb1nal R€Vl€W Volume 351 Number 6
l'nc in 1~sumg him J parl.mg 11d.e1 •· The cadet\. An1hon, Dnsroll. Molh ,\mien, Eddie Todd. C:11herine Mor· 1.:rne. Ennquc Sanchc:i. Ke, 1n Fi11p,11nct and Shannon ~ cuh. stated m the memo thnt 1hi, tasl. "ha\ alwa,·s been :i ,"Oune~, J~ it is of , en lnilc , alue :i, a ir.unmg 1a~J..." But· Stone dbagrced \\ith this \IC\\. "The~ flhe cadets) need 1h1s 1vpc or 1r:i1mn1? b3dh." Stone said " With rooper:i1ion "e "ill get the c3dc1, bad, into their proper pl3cc •· Stone said the foculr~ 1hrea1s hln· some truth to them. bu1' 1he problem is also the foul! of the C3dcts. ··They tlhc ('lldets) should be taught a bener and less offenshe w3,•" to Jppronch the pl-Opie the~ :ire 1icte1ing. Stone s:iid.
Frid.a~. Dec. S, 1980
By 1,1ude nl bonrd
Decoration party slated A cl111\ feed nnd SUB dccornting pany will be 5ponsored by the ASNIC ~tudt'nt activities fund . I.aura lfnmnn, \ludcn1 octlvi1ic\ director. announced 111 lht' Dec. I srudent hoard meeting. Homan , ,1id the pnny will be held Mon(lny ut b p.m lifter lhl" \IUdcnr board mcc1mg. Occoroung the build· Ing and painting a window will en1i1le nny interested student 10 free chili and rcfrc5hmcnl\. she snid. Stude nt Actlv11ics Advise r Tony Stewart announced that the goal for the Founh Annual Mu~culnr Dysrro· phy Marathon will be m nt S20.000. NIC will ccMponsnr th e 28- hc,ur marathon \\ilh Coeur d';\lcnc Hrgh Sch110I ogoin this year. occording 10 S1ewJrt It will be held Jon. 9 10 in 1hc NIC SU B. A1 rhe o,•. 24 mccung the lx•nrd Jcccpr cd noor pion~ for the proposed lounge 10 be COMtructcd in the SUB ba,cmcnt. ASN IC l'tcs1dcn1 Ken Koh· II ,oid Gerry We ndi. l'Ollegl' bus1nc~, manager, fch :1tl l1>11~1ructil)11 could be
lin1shed within this school y~r. Kohli rcponed to the bo:l.rd th:u ma1cnah 10 construct conCTCtc ben· che, can be supplied from a Spokane manufocturcr at a 20 pcrccni discount. These benches. cosllng npprox1mately S60 per benrh. will be ~I up on the bench south of the dilc road. He said on}1hing con)tructed south of the dik(.' ~n be pa.mall~· fu.ndcd by the federal 110,•ernmeni as public property improvement Kohli snid he would 111.c 10 hn,c them installed bcfon: lhi\ ,pring. In olhcr action the board: -received a leucr from the Inland Empire Blood Bani. complimt'n11ng NIC for n job well done The college donated 118 pmb or blood. "ith 1he ~tadcmic Cnj(mCC~ rcce1\lng the sso nward for the club with the mo)t dono11011s. -\\ ns reminded b\ S1udcn1 J\ct1\l· IIC\ Coordtn11tcr Dcllll Benncu thJJ .in outdoor equipment swap "ill be held Dec 11 -12 In the Bound!') Room. Christ) Steinle) photo
Two concerts to enhanc e holida y The Communicn1ion-Ans auditorium u1II be the s.Ue for rwo concerts chis Chrhtm.i.s bca,on and will feature such 1alen1) a) the Spokane Concen Orchestra. TI,e first of these conC'tlrt!>, scheduled for Dec. 7, is lite "Christmas Re,els." presented by Co~no(sseur Concens. This perfomul!lcc "ill offer profession:il :mists from Spokane wnh instruments from the Renaissance Period. They will be accompnnicd by the Whitu onh choir who \\,U perform Chnstm:i.s Carol~ &om the Renaissance Period, along with contemporary song). Chn~!"'~ enrols from France and Old England "ill wso be performed. The Chnstmas Revels" isspon!>orcd by Nickel's Wonh. Ciciz.en's Council of 1he Art!>; and the NIC Music Depanment. Tic-ket:. are S2 for students and S-1 for the public. " The ":"essiah" will be performed by th e Spokane Concert Orchestra. ~crompamc_d by the N~C choir. Community Fes1h·al Choir Md a guest soloii.1 on cc. 14. Th1sconcen will also feature Christmas clll'Ols and "ill cost S2 for students and S8.SO for the public. ~I~ coming up in Janucuy arc 1wo more concens which will fe:irure classie3J e~~~ James Recd and the Spolane Symphony with guest conduc1or Norman
Ea,-~ doe, it Conductor Robert Singlet.sl) gufdes the l\orth Idaho Phllhannonlc orcheslJU through one of its performances a1 1bc No, . 30 concert. Addltlonal plerures are on page JS.
Faculty lot to be enlarged Additional fac:-ult) parting will be pro\'1dcd aert semester in an effon 10 de1er further problems. according 10 NIC President Barry Schuler. The presen1 area rescned for facult) v.ill be extended 10 the comer of 1he ~u1h side of the librlll'). but Schuler s:iid cbere v.ill not be any spaces alloned 10 ind1,1du:il msiructors. He s.:ud second semester p:i.rking stickers \\ ill be distributed 10 faculty members. and cars no1 displ:iJing lh~e speci31 stid:.crs 1<ill be ticketed. The des1gncned h:indicapped areas now :illoned will no1 be included in the focuhy lot. houe,er, Schuler said. In a o,. 14 o.nide concerning the faculty-c:1de1 parking problem. a cadet SIJICd that the problem could be solved if Schuler revised the present sicu:ition. (Sec related story on this p:ige.)
Dec. 5, 1980/ Caniinal Re,·lc,;, ·l-
('--__o_p_in_io_n_p_a_g_e_ _J Commercialization linked to fleeting Christmas spirit It ·s that time of year again when the lea,·~ ha,e all fallen. the mercury ii. dropping and dcp:irtment stores are getting crowded. Yes. it's 1he time of peace on eanh. good will to1,ard men and a good piece or money in the bnnl. for the business communit,. Not th:it there is :inything ,, rong with ba~me:.smen mal.mg a good hving. for tha1 b wh:11 our free enterprise :.ystem is all about But should a holy da) be commercialized 10 rhe point that the true meaning of it 1!. all but forgouen'? Should the day rh:it "3!> originall\' intended 3!> u d:sy to remember God'!> gift 10 tht' world of a Messiah be al10,1cd Lo be buried m tinsel? It seenu, 1h:11 every year the Christmas ad1enising stans just a litLle bit earlier and that "Xmas" makes a httle mort' head1,ay toward remo1 ing the Christ from Christmas. I do 001 claim to be any p:iragon of ,,nue. for I am far from it. However. I do I.now that the idea of plunging headlong into a Santa-and.Rudolph type of Chrisrmns is no w:iy to thank God for the most meaningful gift ever given. Nearly two millennia ago the God of Abraham gave a long-promised gift through the nation of Israel to mankind. That gift. ,,hose name is Jesus. gave Himself as a girt JJ years later so rhat man would not have to go through an ett'mal separation from God. The spirit 1h:11 prompted the first Christmas gift is" hat people used to try to recapture on Dec. 25. 'owadays. however. advcnisers and [heir clienrs would ha\'e the public beheve that all of the worthless and useless products that they devise to celebra1e "Xmas" with arc in keeping the Christmas spiriL Quite often these "gifts" are not really wanted anyway. and the motive for this giving is bast'd more on a feeling of obligation than on anything else. ls this the spirit of Christmas? It would also seem that once the gift giving is finished at Christmas rime. many people forget that the spirit of gh•ing. as inspired by that first Christmas. cannot be brought out of the closet just once each year if it is to be genuine. There should be a year-round desire for this spirit. With all of the ad\'antl!s made in tech nology. economics and education, hopefully in this the 20th Century. similar ad\'ances can be made in terms of :m ability to e:thibit the peace and good will that were so much a pan of Chnst·s message. Maybe too. people can begin to fi nd :i greater understanding of that message. for if it is sought. it will indeed be fou nd.
B.B.B.
Industry advised for finals W11h Thank<;g1ving o\'er. it t'> lime to look ahead toward Christmn,-. but bdore '>tudcntl> can thinl. about Christmas. they mu:.t fnce the nightmare called •·finals... Ye<;, folk,, once again firinls arc ,eroing in on NIC'. and rhe ax is about to come down on man) of those who ore on che block. .\!though final,; arc rough. mnny times they ore the la,1 chance for a pa-;sing grade. and m(lny times they ore the denth of n rhriving ~tudcnt. WhatC\'Cr the case ma~· be. they ore here to ~ta) . <;o l.ubmit ,~c muM. Finni~ week b nor only a <;train 0 11 the brnin. but coffee and ten s:iles ,oar at the local Mores. and the dreaded elee\ric bill jumps to its highest point nll year (from all-night cramming). Since all studenti. realize finals are just around lhc comer. it ·snot as if they come as a big 5urprhc. Maybe preparing in advance is the answer 10 thoi.e sleeple:.s nights. Ju~t think. reading the mnny unread chapters and notes before finals "eek arrives would be something new and exciting (like reading the reader board). especially if there i!> an ··A ·' at the end of rhe semester to take home to Mom and Dad. And preparing earlier alleviates hysierit'ally trying lo cram for two or more tests scheduled for the next day. So. put you r shoulder to the grindstone, your nose in the book and your nel'k 10 the blade (if that be the ca~e) and get ready for 1h01 strenuous week "hen confu,ion becomes a realiry.
(..___c_a_rd_z_·n_a_l_r_e_vz_·e_w____~ The CardJ.naJ Review Is published seml•monthly by the PubUcatlom Worbbop class Bl North Idaho College. Members o( the CB s laff wW .c.n.-e IO p..-at tbe news falrly, llCCUra_lely and without prejodlce. Opinion.I expreaed oa the edttorul page do not necessarily reDcct the .-Iews of the ASNIC or the NIC admbl.lllntloa· The CR ls entered as third-class material at ~ d ' Alflle, Idaho 83314. America.n Collegiate Prus AJJ-~rtca.a Newspaper IDllllaglng editor . . ...... .. .. ............. ..... ..... ..... . Jeanene~ news editor .. . ............. . ......... . . .. ... .... •· ·· ·· · · .. · ···· ~ ......
as50clate editor . ••• . ... .. , ••• •• ••• , , , , •• , , , , , · , · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · Kim EmGIIII s-ports editor ......... . . . .... · · · · · · · • · · · · • · · · · · · • · · • · · · · · · · · ~Slelale1 pbolOIUllpby editor • •••• .. ••••••••.• . • •. •• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5pr-,er
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edit.or •.. ... .•.••. .. ••• • .• ...••. , • •. ,•••••• .... •• ••·•• feature and ad edit.or ••....•• .• ••••• •..... . •••• ·· ····· • ·······
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Oreg DuPuls. Marla Parbtt, BW Bradshaw, 1allla Habbard, Glmda ..... Kathy Danbu, Mary Lalo(~ Kathi Berbermwi, Sbarly:n Dll:1UWI, Tom Gojdm, Grq Lyde, T...,
Joba.nseo , Sean Gilmore, MJke Jooe.,
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1980/ Canllnal Review .J.
more opmtons
Paradox By Kendra Smith
Door case open, shut The invcn1ion of the door was a breakthrough (literally) in the an of movement. This is a story how the student body of INIC headed for the dark age of doors or rather the dark age of ihe lack of doors (or is it 1he d:irk age of the nonfunctioning doors). I think I wiJI entitle it the Dark Age of the Misunderstanding Door. This ,;1ory actually begins when, on a cold morning early in Janua ry of 1979. a poor. unsuspecting freshman on his way 10 his firSt class in the Communication-Arts Building was unwillingly placed in frozen suspended animation. He fro1.c because he could not find an unlocked door. The reason he could not £ind an unlocked door was because some omnipotent (no, not impotent) bigwig decided that the unlocked doors cause cancer or something like that. Thi~ unfortunate accident soft ened the heart of the omnipotent bigwig in the sky. and he (a regular Solomon this person) justly decided to have some of the doors opened. This yea r on campus one has about a 5-0.s,o chance of entering the C-A Building on any side through a random pick of doors. This percentage has cut down on the number of b!)dies inadven ently being placed on ice, as it were. The locked doors, of course. ~ervc some useful purpose. Umm. let me think. Aha, of course. the builders could not pass up the deal they goi at George·., Door and Stoop Shop. No, no let us not underestimate the intelligence of the builder. Maybe the doors arc closed a~ n sort of prncticum for Mudcnts of energization (like on Star Trek) or of trnnsmogrification (look it up: I had to). Actually the rcnl reason the doors arc locked is because of NIC's infamous "ln,y Mudcn1 .. problem. The locked door,; on ;i wc1 day ore o perfect lesson in induMry. The second pnn of this story hnppen:. o lit lie more recent!}. On n dark. wc1 night. nnothcr un:.u~pecting frc~hman c:iught pneumoni:1 while trying to find the wny into the gym to piny volleyball. The poor innocent tried oll the cost en1r:1nce door:.. then naturally progres:.cd to the north entrnnce doors nnd finnlly collapsed from O\'erc>.posurc nt the south cntr:mce door. The omnipotent bigwig hnd n solution for this one also. but it must w3it until ofter part three. The third pan of this sad Mory deal~ with another n:11\'C student (another freshman) who took a trip through the gym LO look for ~ome friends and to pick up o vollcvbnll schedule. He did not find an, friends nnd so he:1dcd for the SUB. Wh~t h:1ppencd? • He was nttncked by a viciou~ Doberman pinscher held by 3n indu:.tnou:. work-study person lounging by the northern -gym doors. The poor. friendless guy wos mauled 10 deat h b) the dog and dissected by 1he nna1omy ond physiology clnss. The omnipo1cn1 bigwig had a solution for v1ctim number f\\ o. \\ hich was t~ p~int FIRE EXIT ONLY on the northern gym doors. The omnipotecc b1gw1g had no ~olu1ion for ,•ictim number three and said, "J\nvone "ho soc~ out a FIRE EXIT deser'l'es to be mauled to death." • . The founh and final pnn of this story happened when o young sophomore (1s nothmg sacred) wos lc:wrng the fodlities (th<.' b:1throom) in the Hedlund Vocational Building. He hod just gone through the first door (for those who hnve not gene in the Hedlund Building. oll the facilities ho,e double doors) when someone else entering the facilities opened the second door. 3nd the sophomore was tragically doorbanged . . The omnipotent bigwig said, "'Whot do you want me to do--put "indows m them (the facility doors)'! " This story is now over, nod the epilogue will now commence. The w~ole 1ale is'. of course, purely nonsensical fiction and wi1hou1 moral; do not think olherw,sc. but l did change the names to protect the innocent .. ... or were they guilty?
CR feature labeled 'turkey' De:ir editor: I re:id wich disguSt the "humorous" :micle regarding the Thanks,gi"ing holiday. which appeared in the NO\', 14 edition of the Cardinal Revie"'· Mr. Padget stated that "co waste a perfectly good day 10 give thanks for the last vear would be a mistake ... · Sir. you may not be pleased tha11urkeys cost more this year than the Inst. but you can bet that few Americ3ns will go to bed hungr~· on Thanksgh·ing night: you may not appreciate the midterm grades. but you obviously are taking for granted the unique opponunity to attend school: you sarcastically criticize the outcome of the recent election. but why 001 be gr:11eful that we live in a country where people have a ,oice in the government? If \'OU need something 10 be thankful for. I suggest chat you begin by looking around you. for few people arc blind 10 the beauty of Nonh mdaho; perhaps you should think about the inherent freedom given to the citize ns of this land which allows you to write such a derogatory article. In my view. if you hold such :i low opinion of the United States. you can relocate to Russia or Iran. where your anti-Americ:in sen1imen1 c:in be appreciated. Sincerely. Shanno V. Rutten NIC student
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Greg Du.Puls photo
Spilling over One of !he trash cans on the edge of campus overflows, thus making 2 dlrly Job dlrtle~ for coUege garbage c.re><s. !king sure one's uub makes It Into the can not only makes the pick-op job e-sler bol also l,eaqllfles the college gro1111ds.
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Dec. 5. 1980/ Cardinal Review +
1981-83 academic calendar a dopted a s compromise B~ uurn Habbanl
The 'IIC Board of Tru~1ccs adopted a calendar for 1<161 .&.J at Iii 20 mecung 1hat ~ a CClmpromt\C between 1he schedule preferred b, the faeuh) and the one "anted b,· 1he ~tuden1,. The calendar. "h1ch w;a rccom · mended by 1he college ~enatc and supporied b)· 1'lC Pres1den1 Bur) Schuler. will cut 1he number of dan a,oilablc rnr latt reg1,1rauon from 10 10 SIX, lnstruc:1or Bob K.ablcr rcprncnted 1he faruh, ;md told the board 1la1 .32 of the -16 \IUdent:. that had rci;:1~:ercd lote m his dos)es 1n 1ne pa\t r~... )eaI) had failed. :ind snid he felt 1hat the last da) or registration. which ~ after
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L.ibor Da,. :.hould be dropped also. Kecpin2 1he snth da). he s:11d. "ould onl) cause problems for both la.ult, and ~1udtn1s. Schu,er ,a1J th.u SO pcr.:en1 or the l>tuden~ 1ha: regi.51er late do w in the fim !he d3,\, and 1ha1 e1,1n2 them one r:,orc d:n wouldn°1 make ;h:11 much d1ffercnn:. He s;iid that he reh cumng 1he number of da)S for late rei:ntration b, four "'l~ suflk1cn1. "We •'OUld be deluged wnh people 1\1.mt: tar eiceptk,n\. ·· Schuler said. Schuler also said !hat the addi11on1ll ~·udcn~ v.lluld be needed. and tha1 1he~ would bnng in more revenue for
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· Our t,udgct picture doc,n't look 1ha1 good ;ilrcad~·:· he s:ud. He al!>O said that the ne" calendar "ould pro~idr a Sl.000 to S2.000 cncre, sn,·in~, for the college The board of ,ru~,cc~ al,o set n dc.1dline of -I p.m. on Dec I for illl a.pplica11on~ for the honrd'~ ,·:1can1 scat. This ,·acanC)' occurcd "hen ,·ice cha1 rmJn Ri ch ard B11r1on rcccnlly resigned Tht board me1 Der. 4 (after press umel to l'C\'ic" the 10 lem:~ alread) rcccived and .:any t1ddilionnl applications. The board al,o: -appro, ed ~ request b, Schuler lo nJme Dec. 2o an encrg, holid3y for alt
employees of the college. - .ippro, cd nn ASNIC requc,1 10 ,pend SSOO from the rc~crvc fund. The money will be u~ed for n mo,•1c prt1Jcc1or n11d a ttlc, i~ion \ct for the ll cdlund Building. -1old Schuler 1hn1 the college could go nhcnd nnd ,tan nc~olinting for lnnd tor next yea r"s carpcmn project -;ir.:cp1cd 1he nnml' Businc~~ Edu· c:1t1on An nl', for the college·, nc" icmpomry building. -delnyed n decision on the pur• c:ha~c of n diesel overlnnd bus for NIC until more information could be ob, tame d co nce rn ing cos ts and main, cnnncc or 1he vehicles.
Senate reaches agreement on next college calendar 8) Klm Johnson The great NIC calendar compromise tool. place dunng the 'lo,. 11 college senate meetin.2, Discussion on the ,•arious alternau,cs connnued for more than an hour before the sen31e ,·oted on 1he compromise. Smee there was such 3 di,·ersity of opinions. the compromhc calendar for I CISJ -S3 was formed os a solution bc!Ween the students' desire for an carh start :ind the faculty's desire for :1 pos1·l:1bor Day s1an. · The format title of 1h1s c3lend3r is the Ent'rg)· Sanngs Alternau,e. Upon :ipprovnl by the board of 1ruqees. the calendar calls for classes for the 1981-82 school year to begin Aug. JI. 1%1 with rcgi\trauon Aug. The ~ccond semester \\ill s1an J:in. 18 wi1h regb1ra1ion Jan. 14 The school }e,ar [or 19 2-83 will be arrnnged ~imilnrly. Bob Kabler. chemisrry instructor. said 1he poll of the student,; "lb "foolish" because 1he studems nre me.l'J)Cricnccd in the d1ffe~nt calend:irs and their ad,·an1agcs and because those who voted :ire enher lea,ing this year or next ytar. Thus they 3~ voting for a calendar Ul31 won't 3ffec:1 them. ASNIC Prcsiden1 Ken Kohli said that since an overwhelming majorit)' of students \\3nted 1he c:irl\ ~1:1n. ii should be the one to be o~~nted 10 the rrustecs. Kabler said he feels the faculty should be the ones wbo ultim3tely decide on the calendar because 1hey arc the ones who ha"e to work at NIC and have operated under different calendars. Thus, he said. thev kno"' whal is best. Tim Pilgrim. jounnlism instructor. included in the compromise calendar motion a stipu lation that the fall final exam schedule include some finllls on Saturday instead or breaking for the w~kend and continuing on the following Monday. He said 1hn1 this practice would 3llow the stUdent.s more time between finals a.nd C~ristmns. Finals for 1he spring semester will begin May 14, 1982. and graduauon w,11 be l\13y 21. K:ibler moqid 1ha1 1he time period for l111e registration be shonened from 10 class days 10 fa e days. He said i1 huns the students to come into cl:tss so late in the semester. Muriel Kirkpatrick. psycholog> u»U'Uctor. SJ.id those Sllldents wfio come into her class late usually do not get good grades or drop out because they are so far behind. Kabler said late registration is. in actuality. allowing studenlS to ha,•e a post·l.3bor Day stan. After heated deb:ue berwtcn Kabler and NIC Presidcn1 Bal'!')' Schuler. the sena1c decided 10 reduce late registration to si:t days in the fall and to five days in 1he spring. In other action. the senate t:ibled until the December meeting a proposal to allow students at NlC the opportunity 10 recch·c a second associale degree. As it is worded now. the propos:il would require the SllldenlS to complete an additional 30 sem~S1cr c:redits "ith a cumulati,·e grade point average of 2.0 (CJ or beuer. This proposal :trose bec:iuse of the increasing number of srudcn_ts who ha,·e enrolled in paraprofessional 11nd voca11onal-1echntcal programs after the,, ha, e already earned :in :issociate degree. • On other mauers the sena.te: -:''01:d 10 request th~t .lD appropriate college official investigate the charges ag:1mS1 mstructors and 1f the charges a.re found 10 be true, the official must take disciplina!)• action against the instructors. . The charges stem from a memo by law enfon:ement s1udents. which said some instructors have thre3tened them for ticketing instructor \'Chides. -ap~rovcd a recomm~ndation thlll v.ill change the disqualification policy 10 read 3S rewnucn by the pres1den1. This recommendation "'ill be sent 10 the board of trustees. -ac.eepted a proposed policy which will give NIC the right 10 restrict the number of ~orc1gn students from one coun1ry 10 a certain amount so the college may be able to insure more representation from many other countries.
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Greg Du.Pu.I, pl,oCo
Crammin' Freshman Jud) Plum ponders o,er some psycholog) for the upcoming flnaJt. Semester Dnals beg.lo at NJC D~ . IS and run throogh Dec. 18. Early reptradoa £or Students is under way now and wW continue until Dec. 12. S1odeata mllfl pfdi up pacl.eLS a.t the reglruv's office ud arranic their schedules with ad\'JaerS.
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I)«,
S, 1980/ Canlinal Re,·lew .5.
[~_c_r_s_po_r_ts__J Opponents may be scarce for talented roundballers By Tom Emond If there's any compe1juon out lhere . ....·ould lhcy please stand up? That ma) very well be "'hal NIC basketball fan.s arc saying right now. After NIC's first 1hree games. there definitely seems to be :s lack of competition. The C:llds have easily dispensed with lhc Alumni, Spokane Comm unity College and the Eastern Washington JVs. all by over 30 points. In oddiuon. the Cards beat Big Bend by 18 on Wednesday. Tonight 1he Cards will again ba1Lle Spokane Communi1y College in Spokane and will probably annihila1c them again. Although the Cards hllve been quite impressive w far. there are some things that they ha\'c 10 work on. and Coach Rolly Williams is cmpha..si1.ing th:11 qune he:trtily. "I 1hink ii'~ a lillle surprising we haven' t had any more dtfficulty so far. I'm not dhpleased 1hat we've won so far . but the ma nner in which we ' ve done it... he said. William., noted 1hat 1he team has a 101 to work on. mostly in the dcfcnsi,c departmeni. Also. they arc having w mc difficulty employing their complicated nITCn\e~. no1 tha1 the) ha,c had to. but it might come in handy later on in the ~eason when they conic up agninst stronger tea ms. especially 1n the le.igue. 01her ream~ 1h01 may present some problems to the C:1rds .ire. Wenatchee Valky. Yakima. Columbia Ba~in (who 1he Cardinals play Saturda) in Pa"CO) and. of cour\c. the league team ~ "hic:h nre Ricl:s, Treasure Valle) and the College or Southern ldnho. According to Williams. Rich ma, be the 1oughcM group that NIC .. ,11 face. "From ,,hnt I' ve heard. Rick:. 1s very Mrong," W1lh:ims said. Ricks has a t:ill man fur WihJcr 10 contend w11h also. He is o-foot,10 nnd supposedh's a verv ~criou, nfren\ 1vc lhrr o1 And Wilt1cr, NJC's resident ginnt . " having 1s problem\ w far Williams \tres~ed 1hlit WiltJer hn) not t,een playing :i ~ well :is he \hould be " lfr\ no1 pln ymg :inywhere nenr his potential." Willinm.'> s:11d. "He·s making mi,tilkc,. nnd moking them con~1s1nn1ly He'll have lo correct his <.-rrors like onvhud,• clw." Bui wi1h the ,1rong ploy th at 1hc Canadian nn11vc d1sployed last }Cllr belting men cnn put lhl·1r bucks do"n thnl Wihjcr will come 1hrough with some )trong p.:rformllncc) this year. Aud for 1ho q 1 who ha ven't seen the Card~ pin,·. "otch out for Chari~ Mcm,cthcr . ...,h,) hn~ , umc move, thnl haven't e\lm been 1mcnted. He ,~ 11 cnnsb1Jr1I ~cOrl·r. ond II ver) nn~hy ballplnycr.
Wres tl e rs fac ing challenge If" rcstling Co:ich John O" en "c!re feeli ng 3 bit depressed about this year· s se:ison. one could understand. With All·Americ3n Jack Nicholson 1niured for the ,eason, 1hc NIC matmen face a.n unexpected challenge. In spite of this misfortune. the e,er-confidem o.... en l!o optimistic and feels his 1eam has performed well in their first three rruuches. "Nicholson "ai a big loss," Ov.en said. "but I'm fairly ple~d "ith the team so for ... Another potential problem confronting Owen is the fact that this ye3r's squ:id is somev.bat lacking in experience. with two-thirds of the NIC grapplers being freshmen. Nonetheless. Owen faced this ob· sta.c:le with the s;ime pleasant opri· mi~m as the loss of Nicholson. ''I'm \'lm' pleased \Hh the freshmen." Owen said. "Thev ha,e made ti few misl3ies this sea.son. but I'm hoping that they ...,,JI leam from those mistake~ ... The 13 freshmen and the si~ ,ophomore marmen on the ...,,e,thng roster \\ 111 be gi\·en 1wo nddiuonal chances to sho" their strength and si11l before the Christmas holid.1,. "'h1ch "tll mark the end of" hat 0\\ en termed "the pn-·~:ison" of college \<TC'l"tfing. The te:lln v.ill tr:l\el 10 Gra,, Harb.,r on Dec. u for a.n open. n,,n team,
sconnR 1ournamcnt. .1 nd then to Ellstem W11shing1on for another open match o,,en e~laincd that he uses the pre·s('ason to prim.:1ri!J spend time on ,caching. and .1ner the Christmas holidays. the emphasis "ill be on c('nditioninJt. During 1he lim half of Janual'), 1hc v. restler> ,, ill 1rm el to Florida for a i.eries of three inv11 a1ionals - to The Sunblaicr Classic. in Miami: to Br<'" ard Community College in Fort lauderd.ile. and finnllv to Bre\'ard Commumt} College in CO<'Qa. The\· ,\ill return J:in. 10 to :mend the Gra)S Harbor Round Robm dual. :ind on Jan. 15, the,· will dual Columbia Basin College: O-,en hesitates 10 name a starting lin('·up for this year and noted 1he fierce inner-team competition. "I won ·1 decide .... ho 1$ on Ihe stanmg line-up." 01, en >aid. "They (the \Oorestlersf \Ii!!." o .... en also said that he docs not think 1hat 1l ,,ould be fair to the Jthletc> to pick from among 1hcm no1\ becau<e "'they arc all working so hud. · he <.1id. adding 1ha1 "inning is not the most important a,pect of the g11me "The most 1mportln1 concept ,n any ,pon ,, th:it ,·ou put C\'Cl"\'lhing you CJn mto 3 ~pc.Ir!." Ont·n s:iid.
Stu dent Activities
SUB Decorating Party Ch ili and refreshments for thos e who help
IP
6 p.m. in the SU B
Dec. 8 Movie:
Electric Horseman
BIT ING OUST- -Cardln al
starter Charil•, Meri" ether seor, ches the raft,•rs on the ,.•• ) 10 a slam dunk during tbc- No, . 25 game agalo ~t Spol.anc Commuolt) College. NIC takci, on SCC once again In Spol.ane 1onlgh t.
Dec . 11 3 p.m. & 7p.m. ~
, ~w. ,:(
/ / Muscular Dystrophy ;, { Dance Marathon January 9 & 10
~ Chris!) Steinle) photo
Contocl Tony Stewart if i nleres fed in porficlpoting
O«. S. 1980/ Canllii.al Re, lcw -6-
Sports chatter with Tom Em ond
Duran-L eonard fi ght called 'anythin g-but' h's kind of like John WaJ11e mo,1r:g to Russia. Ted Kenned~ bu~ing a ~un collection 'lr Gilltgan gemng a doctorate in nuclear phy\iology It"\ iu,1 \Omething that one would nc, er dream of. That ~ummed up m~ feeltng.. "'hen Roberto Duran abruptl~ luhed the fight berween he nnd Sugar Ra~ Leonard m their recent rem3tch. I couldn't behe,c 11, especially after p3ying the quite exorbiUlllt price 10 "1tneS.\ the St;PPOSED fight of the ceniurv on dosed-circuit tele. ision The fight us biUed 10 be legendary. "'hich II indeed would ha,e been. considering the brut3l war the No w;iged in \1onrre3l when Dur3D took Leonard·~ title awov from him. But ti Just w·asn"t to be. as earl~ in the eighth round Dur3D threw up this hlnd\ and wnlked away from Sugar Ray. much to the disgust of the cro,..,d. Hostile might be a VCI} kind dcscripri,e " ord. (I learned se,er:11 oe"' words in a rel.itivel~ short period or time.) During th e stoppage or the fight ii was SJ)C<'lllnted that Dura.n stoppc-d out or sheer Crusmmon. be('ause or the taunting. and Ali-r, pe stuff that Ray thIC"- at htm 1n the previous round. But this is 101111!~ absurd. A fighter •1th Duran's eiperiencc wouldn't h:we beromc frustrated if there "ere three Sug:ir R.i~ ·~ in the ring. Duran hns fought se,·eral fighters or this style and dispen'-Cd "ith them properh Then stomach cr:imps were proposed. ,,h1ch Duran !uer admitted himself. Stomach cra mps? Why would Duran. the ,·iciou) ~trc-etfiehter l\pe, ,top becau~e or siomach cr:imps? The old Roberto Duran would ha,e had 10 ha,e been dead before Mopping a fight on hb own accord. So the supposed Ogh1 or the ccnlut) turned out 10 be l big flop. The preliminary fights were much bcner than this bout! So Dur3n S3JS that he will nc,cr fight agam Good. I re~pccted this man as a fighter. but after this. l think i1 will be just as good th.11 he ne"er !igbts again I kno" that "ith the "ay the fight wllS progressing. Dur.in rould ha,•c beat Leonard. In fot't , in the third round he l"l!ught Leonard and staggered him. which proves that Duran was not being man-hand~d b~ the ex-champ. And now Duran says he wants J rematch. although i1 will probably never come about. So Du:ran can retlrc to Panam:i as a nation:11 hero spending his ill-gotten hordes of mone). while the fight game will constantly slide downhill. No"' after every figh1 people will be yelling fix. :md soon the sport of boxing "'ill be like pro \loTCstling. All I can say is 1ha1 when I think of Duran. I see a 10131 buffoon. and l hope that Leonard w•ill fight Thomas He:ims and adroitly get his head knocked off by Hearns' powerful right hand. To keep on deh ing lnto b!.zan,e sports happenings (this column should be labeled Emond's Believe It or Not.) What about Portland Sl3le? In a recent college football game Portland Sme rolled over hapless Deleware State b} the unbeliev:ible margin or 105-0! Call men liar. but thlS game is fact. The number-one passer in the country. Neil Lomu, threw for an unprecedented seven first quarter passes. Nothing more needs to be said. except that anybody who likes 1his son of game is some kind of sado-machostistic pervert. He probabh holds Charlie Manson as his hero! · Back on the local ~oe. watch out for the NIC men·s basketball 1ca.m. They seemingly have t~en lessons from . Portland State on how to massacre opposing teams. ihey may just pt1ss up their eighth pince finish this year-provided tha.t some team doesn't hire a hit man airer being annibihued by the hot-shooung team. Wit.h the playoffs nearing in pro-football. games are sun1Dg to we on the essence that something important is going on. Except for a few teams like New Orleans (jeer}. there seems to be more teams eligible for the playoffs at this point than ever before. And. if you·re one of lhose crazies (like me) who iosiSt on picking Superbowl teams. "'lllch for Phibdelphin and San Diego. But if I were )'OU, I "'Ouldn ·1 bet 3 penny on 3DYof this the way this season hllS gone. New OrlC:llls will probably "'in their only game of the season against Philadelphia. ..,. bich currently has the best rerord in the le3guc. One bad bettcT watcb oat that his favorite player doesn't Rel kicked out of the gam~ for looking at an official in the wrong tone of voice. Walter Payton, top runmng bad for the Chicago Bea.rs. was thrown out for touching II ref. Oh. Well.
Coach may be nervous w ithout starting players B) Ca.me Springer
Coach Greg Crimp m11y be sllling on the bench "ith his fingers mis~ed tonight The "-Omen's basketball 1cam piny~ their opening g:imc of the <eason tonight. rrunus t\\ o of their rerurnmg <tlrters. a cause worth, of worn· Sar3h Sulll\·nn nnd Lindcc bu son "ho double their athlcuc ab1lnie, in both vollc, b:ill and basli:C'lball "ill not play in the Wenatchee gilmc to111ght. be..:.iusc. said C'nmp. after only o \\CCk of pn1ct1tt the~ \\Ouldn 't be rcndy. Beside<. he ndded. "they need n "ee1.·, re,1:· Rcganlle\S. their bi1uc:1b11II 1nlen1~ will be sad!\• m1~:.td. " We could rcalh USl' them. We need Sulhvan·s hci~ht ond Lawson·, hu,tlc. · Crimp ..aid. i\nothcr le~, than bright a,pcct the team faces 1\ th111 Wenl\l chce i\ desrnbcd by Crimp os one llf the best communitv college womens' bnskcl• ball program\ in the North"c,1. L.1s1 >ear the Card\ lo,t both game\ 10 thi~ lC3m. Ho..,.evcr. Cnmp did some heavy recru1ung O\er the summer months. 3nd his effort~ resulted in n pns~cl nf incoming freshmen who nlmo~t :sll po<,scss some ~rt of basketball rerogmt1on t1tles. so the fin.1 game moy not
pre\cnt too many problem<. Ac-cording 10 C'rimp, lh1~ year', tenm hn~ a 101 of talent. " Last year the ten m hod to do II lot of thin~, to mak e up for the lack or talent. ' he said. "Th,~ year "C have the lnlcnt. .. Tonight', g11mc may indeed be a trio! of the younJ: rnlent of the incon11ng player~. With only ~i~ ret urn1ng team member~. Crimp 1, relyi ng heavily on the young tnlcnt. Frc,hm:in tenm mcmbllrs include Cnthy I ll'rbcrt "how~ ''ll!Cd the mo,t ,·nluobll' athlete Crom hor ~chuol in Vancouver. Briii,h Columbm; Vicki ll ori. who po,scsscs on nll -~tnte \crond tcnm title from Ooi~c: Jackie rl ct Crom Wo ~hington. who hold!. on .,11-cnnrercnce tltle; Tri~h Boyle. who wo, picked for the second tea m in the Big N111c Confe rence from Wn~hing• ton; ond remc Mort. who come~ on Idaho oll•confcrcntc title. Other frc!lhmcn include Ca rolyn Klice!, Vicky Orown. Kathy ClnITcy nnd Deo nnn Petcnon "The team thi, year ho, o lot of potential." Cnmp ,aid. "but it 1~ rcnlly 100 early to tell what we co n do. It will to~c n while 10 learn to pin) together.''
As team los es
Sullivan earns All-Regional Sarah Sulli,•on made the All -Region first team when NIC's volleyball team tniveled to the NJCAA Region 18 toum:irnent held Nov. 20-22 nt Mount Hood Community College. Although the Cardinals played well against their opponents, it wa!. not good enough to cam them beuer than fourth place in the competition. The) played Mount Hood. lhe defending champions in the tournament. in the first round of competition. losing 15-8. 15-0 and 15-2. Conch Len Atwood said tha1 both Oregon teams at lhc tournament were "c,u;cptionally strong" and that the calibeT of the tearm have improved sig~ificanlly over the years. "Mount Hood has one of the finest teams I've seen on the two-year level.'' she said. The Cards then went on t.o b3tlle Rids College of Rexburg for third and fourth place. and although NlC did not pull off a win. Atwood said they pl3yed the best they have played against Rieks this year. Atwood said that NIC had only three players on the coon who could match the caliber or the players on the other teams. Oack.a.mllS Community College of Oregon City went on 10 win the tournament, upsetting Mount Hood in the final round of competition. Atwood said Oackamas was a.n ..emotional" team. and said that they probably couldn't have taken the championship u they bad not been so emouonally charged. "They were really up for the tournament ... ~he said. Atwood said that the Oregon teams were ahead or Idaho teams because Portland was nearby, and the colleges had an excellent choice of players. She added rhal she thinks ldaho ....;11 evennwly catch up with the Oregon teams. Overall. Atwood said. the Cards bad a good season, despite a 16-16 season rlXOrd.
Uglies win co-rec volleyball titlE: Sign up for men's intramural bllS· ke1ball \\ill be &om Dec:. 10-19, and games will sun after semester brcu. Co-rec Director John Owen said. In intramural volleyball. the Uglies took the tournament Dec. I by
defeating the Executives. . . For other on-ca mpus ac11v11y ping-pong. roday is the sign up deadline. Registration fee is St. and prizes will be a..,.•:irded to tournament winners.
Ott. S. 1980/ CardlmJ Review .7.
THE TRAI~
OREAD
J1lc members o( !he crathe wrfdng club of North Idaho College, Orud, ~ pleued co praenl the following poems scleded by English lnsllUCtors Jim Mcteod, Fay Wright ud David Sba,p. AmNg the poenn i. one by George O. Sanford, 1111 a -Marine wbo fought In World Wu I ud 11n NJC ttucleor wbo attended a nlghl c1us In crea_th e writin~ las1 1prtng. Be tamed 80 on May 20 1 ud the other students of thlll dus ga"\e him a blrtbday party whJch culmlnaied In his dJscofng al the El Patio. George Oct. 19, three days llfter gM ng hJ5 Orst poell') rading at the Cor'Mfflanc Clnuch In Potl Palls. Be wu a generoas llDd ,Igo= man with a rich tense of ba:mor. We dedicate lh1t poet,y lmert IO him In hopes !hill b.ls spirit wffi in,est us >i ltb a atrong ,eme of the poulbWtles of a UCe Uved Cally llDd to the bUL
dJed
Palau Rem embered
Fhe m1nu1es befatt the old dock chimed I "ould 3,1,aken 10 listen in th:11 c;irl~ darkness For the sound of 1he coal rn1n JI 1he m1le-a"11~ crossmg Where m,· s1s1er :ind I laid nickles on 1he rail, To see ir°the Indian ,, ould ride the buffalo But he never did. On Janual) n1ghlS. the ,, his!le sounded clc.ir Arrowing through b3re Still frozen brn nchcs 0( Sug:ir maple. oak and Upcn to my windO\\ And I held my breath. hStcmng for 1he i~ tin.tie Of Crost swirls sli,ering :11 the sh:irpness 801 they nC\cr did. In earl~ August. sum ng of bmls mosked The crossing warning tha1 seemed 10 float :ind drifl Aw:i,· from the farm house on the hill And.my edge of sleep thought thnt tommoro" rd rise earlv ro catch the summer irain sound Bui I nC\Crdid.
Un<b Lee Farrell
He walked in bamboo laughter flashing i~land ways: whisper LropiClll tales of nighLS hunung alligators. bare hands glisten quick torches dancing narc brown. cnjo} raw lish with rice, but h:imburgers quensy in stomach. couniry and western Japillnese-sryle.
pecia l Wedding Pre ent G1,·e him that dav vou danced bet"'ccn first and $Cc:Ond b:1se in a pickle; He'd cnJoy seeing the foiling softball. glo, es in the ::iir.
I shall miss my island friend consumed by sod. Weathered form palms cairess. breezes wnft ancestral honor obeyed incarcerate locked fear lost face to 1owels end. Miles separate telegram nowers funeral sorrow tucked inside.
G,,e him tho~ thoughts from }·our le11ers to U\; ..He's ;i got'<! fncnd. you'd like h1s sense: of humor:· Gl\e him puddmg-in·J·doud. lunch in the b::ithtub tnd or 1re:11 C\'l~tume, .
I love you never ~polr.cn in dcnth 100 lotc to tell.
Gne h,m l"'c - no. 1ha1 ',; a silly present. He i\ 1he lo,e. ~ou can·, gi,c him 10 himself.
Frank
rl! 111\e him lo, e. I'll ghe him lo,c. Marb:1JJ.M G. Abstt
Tiu, .
0 11
11 Cllrdboard mansion v.i 1h 11 , IC"
of a tin-can garde n :ind o steal-rail country lane his lids hang loose over mad red ey~ loose as the diSCllrd sh4bbies covering his round shou lders hands " 'ilh knotted fingers d.arl from the sun and eanh curve to the bottle but can' t tie the 13~ of his boot cind
~oc
looks up and bi. C'Ontemp1 Sta"s. grunts . ...Tehc,ni look1n ' :11 kid' Th,o.t rm Christ come ag:ain!! uughs.
B.Sam.
I
l
PHOE.\'rY Time diminishes mount11ins. Even the sun is dying. 1 look down the years through the "TOng cod of 11 telescope. ThJogs I had lo,·cd or fcnrcd d" mdle. disappear.
M} first bom l:1) bleeding on a stranger's bed.
Stabbed m childish plaJ 11 mumblct) -peg
My father. once sturdy. cowering, huddles . ~hrunken . near the fire. his LOO-big p3nts nap 10 the rhythm of his rocking. w351ed dreams. a.shes 111 his feet .
Collisions or 111.0 str.ingen stn1ck my boy. A frre run rampant nearl) 1001: us.
Death you arc no stranger l'"e looked into your eyes and dra11.11 strength.
Yee - noching is lost. chcy say. Perhaps someday. someway, m an con, maybe two. ntl drcam-dusc will blow a nd blend , 11o1hirl. nnd finally burst mto n new stnr. Dorothy Plcwman Dean
Esther Webb
Woodsman ·s clothing /r ide rJ,e Wood~Jlllln 's clotlung lude tile signs. Games are meant for children Blending so "ell. I he11r you call. Hu it rained yet?" Opaque muniogs hide your fears. The "'-orld is kept at bay. Well-trained ye.a rnings get the best. Reality goes in-noticed. Are the dogs coming to eat? The question goes riding. Out of time and 001 of place. Durun! The mice have started ruoning. Chip your hands. Bang the bun. All the chickens are hiding. It does no good 10 swing the cat. The goose has already told them. Tors Lee
A lea thery thro,u c ut coo ~ blue rock
Can't Sleep Silence blisters m,• can My teeth clench • Ends of fra\'ed cords I am grounded in rubber And feel nothing Shoned-sockets ro.z:z The dark. Chris Stephenson
A leathery throat cut cool. blue rock too fine for the eye to say. Clouds Lhen ruined with hot. red mud and only a rock to hug curved round the eye once to kis.s a sharply softened throat. "Blue and red will ruin the cloud." mud was heard to say. for it had kissed the rock and curved 3Dother way. •· AU thro3tS are red ... I said, knowing mud had cut the rock.
It "as a cool. red cloud hugging an eye in blue 3nd kissing 3 leathery throat th:11 ruined one hot rock and cut the mud into sharp. soft pieces of sky.
Ott. S. l 980 Cardinal R"' ie- ·9-
THE EPIC OF THE BEDPAN COMME.'.'T: Arc you :1 P3ck m' I accumulate all kinds of things - ordina~ Junk - and special JUNQUE. There comes a rim" ,,:hf'n thett is no mo~ room. ~nd I must get nd of much that I h:i.ve a('('Umulated. It "35 at such a rime I found this poem. which I have no - a ect.100 wba:ie, er of having "'linen. But there it w;u in m,· ov.n handv,riting. 1 must ha,-e been unconscious or under secbnon ,,:hen I v.rote it. But my pack rat mind filed it awa) and DOV. I sh:arc it v.ith )OU. Ool~ those who have be<:n hospit~lized. and bav" struggled ,..ith a bedpan can fully apprcci:ate thts poem "'htch I ded1oi1e to )OU. When I v.cnt into the hospital. I daspl:iycd a lot of guts. I could u1ke it - smile and like it But the bedpan dro, e me nuts. At nature 's call I'd call the nurse And v.hen I called. she nm. And soon v.·ould have mv carcass Parked upon the gosh· dam pan.
Bold Type
I'd la) back on my shoulders. But the lever:ige wasn·t there. Instead of something doing. I'd shoot a flock of .air.
As I lay adrift in that grey land JUSt beyond awakening. an entire verse was typed on the back of my eyelids. It was Bill·s poem though it was really mi ne. Or was it? Anyway. something about Dad's keen obllhy to recognize all that lies behind our lines. I agreed. and began 10 rearranac a word here and there. think.log how easy th ey came. I repeated the last stan1a. 11 was n gh t now. My cors cX"ploded. words new like shrapnel. When my mind cleared. every hnc v.as lost.
When at last I'd get results. I'd feel around m} scat To see 1f I had hit the pan Or piled it OD the 1,hcct. Cold sv.-eat upon m} forehead As rd feel v.ilh coutious care And v.ith sighs of satisfaction Fmd no, a thing v.as there. ~nd nov. a ncv. con1on1on Would lea"e me "eak .ind pale. rd •ork and twist and squirm To •1pc m) poor old wl. I'd ruse m} siner - high m1d:11r This closed the gapping span My shakey hllnd •ould slip and then I'd grab the gosh d4m P3n. 1nc muscles in m~ neck would bulge:
I all but stood upon my head I'd make a fev.· v.ild pJSSCs And then fall back on the bed.
T IIERE I "" A POEM HERE SO" E~"'HERE It mocb me•············ ·
h11mei.···~pUD···temp1i. as an une>.om,td
And 11,hen I rang. the nurse came m And camcd off the pan. I v.ondercd •h~ on such a Job ~ didn't send a man. Then fin,Jh I'd ~nle down Wnh a 1,igh so, el) sv.ect. BUT WAIT A \ID1.i£! What'\ so v.arm And Cf upoo "1e httT
De-ii tn\1dc. But I v.111 get
I
11··········
v.111 " in and affttt , 1olen1h the outcome of ffl) poem. It I can find John Clari.
With I g.1\p of 1pprehcn\1on I'd ,k,11,I ~ ra1~ fflJ ~n. And 1ooe beneath m\ sitter Would be I blotdl o! brov.n ..\nd w h bed confinemen1 goc\ I'm a burly big He•m.1ll But Go~h! 11 simplJ burns me up WIien I l!'•ss the Gol-durn pan
11
George 0. Sandford
Oct'. 5. 1980/ Cardlnal Re,iew • 10-
A PARE:\'T' LA)IENT ON HER FOt;RTEEXTH BIRTHDAY Theda~ :im,ed: pl3oocd and ... e11 presented. A request to open gifu Fe;ir of l!nt1Ctpation lost prompts denial Second thoughts of just right moments ne- er r~pturcd Offer. up • changed reply.
Tne methodic un"Tappang of each ont!·s surprise Bnng\ no enthU\1astic cnes. Qu1rr.h she don\ all the "carablcs · Fill\ ,tie arm.\ ... 1th all the camables /\nd mo,es LDto her other "'orld Her eaacrncss -:.en disguised. E\(~ning and baci to 1he fold You must ut at !cut one vegetable she is told Curting of cue 1s done "1th three bosses A ie-, more criticisms follo" last compl:unt Sad!~ awart tt"s too l.1tc. Ann K. Cul'r:'
The Line of Tree!! A«b:uc 1dc:is: dinosaur. hts bones the words ,,.c no longer use. :i
She whi slled for his dog leaving you by the church. Th e rain c.1me but you didn't leove the s pot where ~he whistled. You ~mell wet dog and rolled leave, watching her bock dissolve . Howl to 1he trees wag your 1nil trot home. Tom Sce, ens
Borders. rh,mcs an·d order left now to rust. These branches mourn in January.
George Domijan
The Players With today's slam dunks on your mind You say I'm a. "Sweetheart." With him on my mind I'll sny, "You're cute·· Someone calls. '' Foul." With thoughts of your crazed fans, You praise my personality. With history on my mind I'll say. "You're interesting. " Someone calls, " J umpball." With tonight 's game on your mind You kiss my hand. With his g4me on my mind I'll smile nnd say, "Stop. " Someone calls. ·'Technical.··
Ea rl~· Fros 1 The ,,.ind nipp"i.o it all raw out there bagging Steel rutabagas reaming furrows ,,.;lh a hoe like a mad "'idow rocking empty cradles. scurtle tracks onh• rubb "in it in child's play in fresh pavement. At night, up with the owls who inhabit the attic chasing stl'3)' moons through grey almanacs Equinox ,,.oas not yet. Chrta Sc.q,bemon
With them on your mind You say. "Let's." With them on my mind I'll Sll)', ··Maybe tomorrow." Someone says, "Game's over." April Gallqber
Prlutas marb borrowed 6 - Symbols, Sip ud s,peta, by t:.- ....... compllmeata ol Dover PllblJlhlq Co.
Early spring registration availabk to NIC students W11h the fir<l ,emesier closing r3pidl) \ludenl\ have man~ thing.s on 1hcir mind,. bu1 1he one 1ha1 should be mosl impor1an1 1s registering for ,econd ..emester. Pre-reg1s1ra1ion for students ~e1um1ng 1.-ill be held unul Dee. 12 wuh a cos1 of S240 for re'iidenl and SSJO for ncin-rc,1dcn1 students. plus the cost of bQOh.
Academic \ludents who do not t.ikc advanwge of earl) rcgisrnuion .nd plan 10 ouend the \Ccond semester will rcgi\tCr Thursday. Jan 8. J 981 S1udcn1s arc a)ked 10 report 10 the gymna~ium according 10 this schedule 11hey will be 11dmi11ed only a1 these ,pec11ic 1imcs1: S1uden1, whose la~, names begin w11h STUVWXYZ report 31 8:30 a.m.; MNOPQR al 9:30 a.m.; AB at J0:30 a.m.: COE ot I p.m.: FGH 31 2 p.m.; IJKL at J p.m. The regl\lrar's oflice "'ill be closed 1-nday. Jon. 9.
Students should in· 10 ha,e their ~hedules planned Ji7id apprO\ed by their adviser before leaving for Christ, ma\ \'3C3tion. Permits 10 register "'ill be 1n students' packets \\hen they Jre a~ailable on 1he day of registration. There will be no packet, or permits available in the g) m for Studenu ..·ho have been disqu:i.lified or "'ho ov.e parking lines. fees. library fines or have other financial obligations 10 the college. Tu11ion ar:d ftes must be p;iid at the rime of registration. Anyone paying after 4 p.m. Jan. 8 will be charged :1 late reg1s1ra1ion fee of S5 for the first "'eek and SJO for the second 1<eek. rhis doc~ not apply 10 students "'ho~c 1ui1ion and fees are covered wholh b, ~cholar,hip~ and or grams. · • Incoming fre\hmen are required to wkc reading and Engli\h placcmeni IC\l~.
Shooters aim for conference place NIC\ nnc dub.~ C3UliOu\ly looking lnrward tu 11, 1hrrd conference motch Sorurdny nt Wa \hing1on S1a1e Uni\ cr\il\• " We hripc to do all right." faculty ~dviser Wnrren Rntcliff snid. "Then again Y.C n11gh1 gc1 tromped 100." rhc dub lin1\ hcd )eC'Ond and third 111 rwn prcvruu, ni:11chc,, and Rnr clrrf ,nid 1ha1 1hi, I) th<' lir<,I ,•cnr tire 1cnm ho\ really b~t:n compclitive agoin\l the fnur·veur ,,hnnh of the Inland Fmp1rc l!lllt• C'onfcrcncc. "rhl, 1\ the bc,1 uvcmll team we've C\'<:r hnd," h<' ,oid. Thi.' 1cnm, in thl' ronforcn<e nrc NIC, WSU. lWU. vonrnga and UI\ Na,•} ond Army ROTC 1com~. Ro1diff auributcd the ,'tlmpctilivl'· nc" or 1hi, \'Cor·, tcom to the <·~pl•ncincc of 1tic 1cnn1 member, nnd
,aid \omc of rhe shoOlcr, ha,e SC'\ eral vcar\ or experience. F.>.pcncnccd 1cam member, ;ire G,rnld Long. Kath y Tester. All)n Kerr. Sieve Da1le1. and Bnan Ward. Ward. who hold\ a top )pill on the 1cnm. has been ~hooting competitivelJ since he was 11 vcar.. old. Wurd and Da.iey panic1patcd m the Notional A~sociation small-bore compc111ion 01 Camp Perry , Ohio. las1 August. as members of the Idaho Junior 1cam The Idaho team placed ninth out of more than JO other ,rnte kam!>.
1 he utht-r rJcul11· :id,1\er. Tom Pncc. hst<:"d one of ihe advo.ntag<:"\ of ,hooung over other spon s Sh,1<>1inl( i, "11nc ,,t 1hc ''"' 'P<'"' 1ha1 11omcn rampc1c cqualh Y.ith mm .. l'rkc ,~ ,ti
In Wyominl! to urney
Speal,ers take sweeps takes NIC'~ forcn:.ic ~quad wrapped up 1hr: foll compe1111on by captunns the tc:im ~wcc11~1akc~ oward Oct. 15 at 1hc North"'c~t Communil) College Speech Tournament in Powell. Wyo. Competing with 15 colleges and un1vc11,ltic:. from Wyoming. ld3ho 3nd Utah. the group won 1he team n"' ard ll'iih a c.>mbmeC: effort of their deb31e te3ms .:md in~ivldual event competlton.. Jamie Deily. the team·~ only sophomore. rombrned -..uh freshmnn Dave Mudd to bent Ricks College 3,0 In the finab of ~mor deb.ite. giving NIC fi11,t pince. Mcordlng 10 Coach Tim Chrisut•. freshmen Rich Kud. .ind Brure Plldget fioc.hed lirst in rro:.s cx:1mination value debate. benting 01:.per College J..O in the fin:il round. Freshman Lc~lie Moon and Dnrcie Reimann finished second in the Junior division debate after 11 2·1 decision 11i1h Cenmtl Wyoming College. In 11dd111on, the teom rc1un1cd "'ith se1·er.il deb:lie spe:ikcr 111<ards. Dcily c:1p1ured lop senior debater a1 the 1oumnmen1, while. freshman Jeff Kuiu finrshed as SC<'Ond top :.penker. Reimann "ns mimed top speaker in 1he Junior d1\-ision. and Moo~ ti~l~hcd in fourth pince. In rnd1\•1dual event:., Padge1 placed tltird in oratory and Dcjly was a fintl.list in the 1mpromp1u speaker category. · 'Thi~ 1ournnment docsn 't ha,•e special s11 eepstali:es dh i:.ions betv. ecn communny colleges ,md four-vear insrnutions." Coach Chnstie S3id. "so our sweepstakei. ITOphy holds real ~1gnuic11ncc. · · The squa~ will. crave.I to _Tacoma in mid -January 10 compete a1 the P:icific Lutheran Univers1ty-Univers11y of Puget Sound S-...ing Toumnment.
Christy Steinle) photo
Oo~·.. life Pupplt'<. such as I.his trio arc not lhe onl) animals ll\'11.lh\ble nt lhl' KoolenoJ Humane
ocil'1, Anim.aJ Shelter. A roastsnt selection of pets ls a, ttllable a1 the shelter. Studc~i.s ,.bo ""&Ill 10 adopt an orpha.ncd animal can call Lhc society al 772-1019.
Veterans Uae your G.I. BIii educational benefits to atudy In the beautiful Northweat at the
University of Idaho Quality learning environment geared 10 tne 1nd1v1dual needs of the student Over 130 undergraduate subJecl areas Programs of special rnterest rnc ude Forestry. La N Art and Architecture. Mrnes and Geology Educa11on lett'3rs and Sc,ence Agriculture. Engrneenng Masters degree programs offered rn 72 areas. doctorates rn 21 areas Please send me 1nformat1on on the University of Idaho I am particularly 1nterested rn tne following program(s)
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~ Universityotldaho Office of Veteran•' AHalrs
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241 Moscow, Idaho 83843
Dec. S, 1980/ Catdinal Rc, lcw -12·
Poll shows CR widely read A recent surve,· conducted b, the Ca rdi nal Revie..i. re\'ealed U13l spercenl of responding .NIC students read the college newspaper . Approximate!~· 420 students. bo1h , ocational and ac:Ldemk. and -6 facult} members responded to \'arious questions dealing with the o,·crall iJppea rance. content and y, riting of 1he Cardinal Revie,,. The largest number of faculty members. 42 percent. scan headlines and pictu res for an intereMing story while another JQ percent claim 10 read the Ca rdinal Rev1e"' . A comparably l:uge studem group. 58 percent. also scan headlines and pictures for an inieresting story. but only IJ percent read the paper thuroughl}. according 10 the ,;un.·ey. Feature ~tone~ and pictures bead the list or a11en1100-recciving newspaper content, according 10 the s1uden1 responses. Feature stories also rate number one on the facult~ list but news l3kcs the nuber-cwo spot Only 16 percent of 1he students read -5.100 percent of the paper while 39 percent of the facult~ claim to read from "'S- 100 percent or the Cardinal Review. The 101al school population agrees that the Cardinal Re, ie..i. doe, co, er ne" s,,,orth) events: SS percent of the facul~ aod S9 percent or the student~ responded 10 the nc"s coverage. In overall appearance. content and writing the C:udmal Re, 1e..i. "as r31ed excellent by 34 percent of the faculty and 11 pen:ent of lhe s1udcnls. O, er 50 percent in each group felt the Cardinal Re,1e\, Y.J.S good. but I percent in each group rated it poor Responses 10 a group or ne"' spaper-relJted questions ~ho..i. that f>5 percent of the students read 3 dail~ or weckl~ nc" spa per regularh "'h1le SJ perce nt watch a 1ele,ision ne"s sho" on a regular b3sis. A larger majonty. 88 perce nt. of lhe faculty members re3d :i dail) or wcekl:, newspaper regularly nnd 64 percent "atch o tele,i~ion ne,, s ~how regular!~. On the lighlcr side. motorc)cle-repnir student~ almost un:immou'll)· req uested a ..good-lool..in· honey .. to deh,er the oC\,spaper. Several replies included 3dditionn.1 \\Titten comments - one of the mos1 frequent complaints charged thnt the Cardin;il Re, 1e" dc,·otes too much space 10 sports coverage.
(____c_r1_·t_ic_'s_c_h_o_ic_e___) 'Born Yesterday' tops in humor B) Bruce Pi:tdget
The snge s:iid ... A linle learning is :i dangerous thing.'· The current Coeu r d. Alene Communi1,· Thent re produc1100. ..Born Yesterday.. support~ 1hc $agc·s point. In the play." ntten by Gar~on K:inm and directed b,· Bob Brown. businessm:in gans1t'r Ha!T) Brock (pb~ ed by Dennis Craig) dttid~ th:i1 his mis1ress gun moll silent partner 8 11ly Dawn (Karen Moel is in need of refine men 1. Brock hires :i writer b, the name of P:iul Verall (Al Ports) 10 refine Bill). Paul is 3 radical for his lime. JQ-16. and 1c:1ches Billy about the conCt'J)tS of freedom. Brock's scheme b:id:fires when Bill~· begins thinking for herself. asking to do shocking things such as
reJding contrJcts before she signs them and questioning Harry·~ avthonry. Cr:iig. in the role of Brock. is a 101alh , i113.ll1ous ,i!Jam. the kind of person one (O\'CS 10 hate. Pons' Vernll is :in excellent portrayJI of a young idealist. a.nd Karen Moe porunys Billy as something deeper lhan the 1rpical dumb blonde she appears 10 be on the surface. The final performance,; of '·Born ~ esterday .. are tonight and Saturday night at 8 p.m .. at the community theatre at 1320 Garden A,e. The play b for Jn,one who likes idealist ic: heroes. e.At ,'lllains and 101.S of bawdJ humor
Pure cn thu11ios m Cazdlna.l cliccrlc11der Cath) Se, crtson C\'Okcs some !iplril Crom srudcnts :at a home b-skctball game In No, cmbcr agaln~t Walla Walla.
Possible college tuition overburden to students B) Kim Jo bn~on Be,ausc ol ;i .. hi~torical accl dcn1," 1uitiM 31 four-ycn_r IMtitution~ mny be .:h.1rgcd to ~tudcnl( auending 1ho, c college~. according 10 NIC Prc\ idcn1 Barry Schuler. When thl' Umvcr,ny of ld.1ho ( U IJ wos ,1:ir1cd, h wos pu1 under the Idaho Srn1c CoM1t1U11on, and al Lhn1 11ml' the need for tu111on was not prcvolcnt. he ~aid. The other four-year institution~ lh,u "nrtcd nftcr UI hnve Just assumed tha1 the}. 100, should nal charge tuition ah hough thl 'I wos not specified. rJ1cy do no1 foll under the Jurisdiction or the Idaho Stotc Cons1i1u1ion. bu t under the Idaho S1a1e Code. Schuler said But by the umc 1wo-ye11r inslitutlon~ were forming. Schuler said the oworencss ol the need for 1ui11on \\JS prevalent :ind the Idaho SHIIC Code required all junior colleges 10 chorge 1ui1ion. The code reads as follows: "All ~•udcnt.~ of Junior colleges ,holl pay tuition 1hn1 )hall be fixed onnunlly by lhe boo rd of tru\tccs 001later than the n,.,t day or Augus1 of each year ·· Idaho S101e Code II JJ-211 0. Schuler said the tuiuon will not affect NIC in any way, but ii will offcct the ongoing students. NIC's tu11ion is already nt the maximum 11 can charge. S200, unlc)s the NIC Board ofTruMecs lifts th e lid nnd rai,e) the llmJt . He said the people who decided not to charge tuition at the four-year schoob ongrnall) did not have enough fores1gh1 . but to charge ii now would be an unnecessary burden to the sludents. The schools. since they do not charge the students 1u1tion. have given them the ple:isure of paying for the multi-million doUa r othlelic buildi ngs. ond )O Schuler said he feels the Mudenis are already paying enough. Another reason why Schuler said he does nol favor the 1ui1ion addition is bcl.'.au!>C if added it could very possibly prompt students to pay a linle more money and go out of state 10 more prominent schools. thu) dropping Idaho's educ1111on enrollment figures. According 10 Schul er. the only w:iy tuition con be charged a1 the UI h ,r there ,s a consii1u1ional amendment. It onl} l3kcs s1a1u1e by 1he leg1.sla1Ure 10 change the Idaho State Code for other four-year institutions.
FAST / Transpar en cies & Cop ies on almos t a ny color & w eig h t o f pap er ~~
The Xero x 9400 Prints 2 sides and collates automatically Commercial Printing Co. 515 Sbcnnan An•nae
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Phone: 208/ ~-4516 COEUR D'ALENE, IDA.BO 83814
Thursday. January 8 Spokane Opera House 7:30 p.m . Tlckeis S5 & S6 now a,..nable: S.,nd ebedl with self-add resed STA. MPED envelope to: M & M Tlcket.s, 1101 N. Boward St.. Spokane, !~..:.!92°1 % Am) Grant Concert or Phone IS09J 3...,......,.,.
Hmong family find new home in Coeur d'Alene By Katby Jobauen "The reality is that they' re here- more arc going to come. Let"~ do "hot "c c:in to help them ma~c tt. ·· \.largr.iff said. The efforts and success of the ABE progr:im "ill be a maJor factor in pre\'enting an urban ghetto from forming. she said. and to help case their 1r;insition into our social and economic ~, )!Cm. The 1mnugra1ion of the Hmong 10 this :irc:i will c:iuse a grow1h for the ABE program. she s:ud. Through 3 gr:int from the lndo-China Relief Project of the ABE in Boise. Margraff said she has hired four additional mfr members. This grant will enable ABE 10 expand thei r refugee teaching to include dri"cr's educarion. home economic sen ices. cmplo)mcnt assistance. sponsor coordmauon . .ind additional ESL cla~ses. "The ,·oca,ional school is an ope n lab for introducing them to worlds of work... Margrnff said. She said she expects the Thao family 10 master enough English 10 enter a tr:iining program in one
Home. Freedom. Family. These are rc:nns so imbibed into our li~es 1ba1
their meanings become ambiguous until their loss is rhrearened. Appro.rima1ely one mon1h ago a family llrrived in our area - a family 1ha1 had Josi its home. nearly Jost its freedom. and managed 10 keep i1s immediate f:untly from harm. The family of Chai Thao is among the 25,000 Hmong of Laos who have been au1horized to emigrate 10 the United S1,-1es to escape death when Vietnamese Communist forces invaded their country in 1975. The Hm ong ("free men") are the mountaill tribesmen from the jungle-crowned L:lotian high· lands who won acclaim during the Vietnam war as the tough guerrilla fighters recruited by the U.S. Central In telligence Agency 10 fight the North Vietnamese. Since they seacd power in Laos. the Communists have 1:irgeted the Hm ong and sough1 revenge again\t the mountain people who aided 1he American and South Vietnamese force~. After living five years in a refugee camp in Thailand. Thao. h1~ wife YiaChuc Cha, their three children. Thao's mother Mee Va and her three children have come to. Post Falls. They have been sponsored by volunteer\ from two Post Falls chu rches. th e Presbyterian Church and Calgary Lutheran. Their living qunrters is the "'monse" or the house owned by 1he Presbyt<:rillJl church. Volunteer!> from 1hc two churches hove donntcd furnishings for the family. checked on food supplies. too k th em ~hopping and provided Lmn~portation to NIC where the parents and pre.school chlldren ore enrolled. In addition 10 overcoming o "life and death"' ~1tua11on and gruwmg for the Jou and separation or rcla11vcs. the Thao family encounters seemingly insurmountable problems doily that arc u,ually taken for granted by others. 1 heir inability to speak English is their largest obs tacle. not IQ mention th e ·· culture s hock." adjustments 10 \\Cother and all the electronic gndgets of our culture. TI1c list goes on nnd on. Chai Thoo, hts wife ond mQthcr ore enrolled III the English as a Second Language (ESL) program 1hrough the Hedlund Vocational Center. According to Adult Obie Education (ADE) Director Karh v Margrnff. who tutors them 10 hour~ n wee!., the prQgram 1& teaching the Hmong sun•h•al and cmploynicnt-rclatcd English. ·· we (A81!) arc involved for two rcn~on,. It i'i the rno~t pres\ing need our program hn, been o,kcd 10 deal" ith and second. the Hmong people can onl~ be
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··They hll\C a ,e,1 ~trong desire 10 be self. sufficient."" ;he iddcd. The children. Kaying. a fi, e-year-old girl. and Vue. a 1hree-ye3r,old boy. an cnd the ca mpus preschool C\'CI')' 3.fternoon. ACl:Ording to teacher Jcananne Mitchell. the t"o mingle with the other 13 children but do nor ,crbalh· commu nicate. "'They :ire not shy children ... said Mitchell ' "The> arc mtereSted in watching and then get in the 3CllOn •• She: !>3id that she rommumcates wtth them main!\ 1hrough bod~ language. demons1r:11ing octions :i~ ,he speak; Mitchell s:iid her goal 1s for them 10 c:,entuJII) underst:ind romersauon and ordinary dtrc:mon.il language. '.i11chtll said the 13 other preschoolers must :ibo :id111,1 to the pre~ence of non-English spea king children lnd th:11 it is an education for C\ Crvone. ACl:Ording to Mnchcll. the Hmong·s presence is ··not just a cultural barrier - it's everything.'' The prcscn ation of the Hmong cult ure and 1Jng11.1gc •~ of major importilnec. Margraff said. The rota.I speaking of English is no longer encouraged at home ~ a lot of feelings :ind thoughts are lost in the attempt to communicate .1 new J3nguage. ··The human qu:iliucs of laughter, compassion .nd emp:ith} ue :ill c,ident "hen you don 't speak the same l:ingUJgc."" she said. Margraff said she has found the Hmong to be humble. gncious. polite. industrious and gnueful people. The~ pursue hfc and learmng with a ··fresh appro.ich and a child-lil.e appn:cu11ion. ·' she said. "Thtl)IJeh the meeting of different cultures. we :ill lc:.im ,h<' s.aid
Kath) Johansen pholo FROM Tii£ BECTNNING- Clul 1noo, hl<i wifo YlaChue and his mother, Mee Va, prartkc number skills at 1hc ,ocatlonal center. w cccs~ful bi gaining English skills." MarJ!raff S4id. Survival Englbh is defined as every<by skilh b\ Margraff. such as telling time. making chanj:c. answering qu<'st1ons about fomtly !name and address) and developing convcrsauonaJ English. According 10 Margraff. cmployment·rclatl!d Eng· lish training begins "hen they an con\e~e in English. and ABE \\Orks with the Department o( Employment 10 develop English that " specific;llly related to jobs. At Lhat poin1 an ent~ ·le\el JOb I\ •ought: \he said this is the beginning of 1he buildmg of a job h1stol') for the refugee. " We ha, e ii tremcndoui challenge 10 get them mro enll')'·levcl Je>bs and to keep them here.·· )he ~a,d. According 10 Margraff. a problem with re~lemen1 may ci i\t in Spou.nc where 80-100 Hmongs arc am,mg mon thly and approrim:uel) 3SO are enrolled tn the Spol:3ne ABE. ESL programs. She , n1d official, fear •n "urban ghetto" might dc.-elop in Spo\.ane ,f that econom~ ~ nooc1ed "ith refugees ignornnt <1f the language or of joo sL,11;. ort h Idaho can expect ;ome of that m0111. M,1rgr1ft !>.'lld The State Dcp:inmcnt. coocer,,cd "11h 1amDJ rcun1 f1c3t1on. ,., loolang at the rur:il :arcu for rc, cttlcment.
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Pr ivate Gu itar Lessons
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Profess ion al Guitar Player I I f . 20 years ex perience ,n o il styles o music\i I
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~~~~ d' Aleae llJDOQ& ffliJdrea Kayiq and VH Tbas leani a rcw
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ii call for further information
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667-3897
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Dec. S. 1980/ Cardinal Re, lcw -14·
Presidential election not really voter landslide i'\ews Aru1hsls B) BW B. Bradsha w The November election has been hailed by some as a nationwide mandate for conservatism and the many Republican "ictorics ,.ould seem to be:ir this out. But exactlv ho" nauonwide was ti and is II the true desire of the people for conseiv311sm or is it for ch~nge? Out of on esumated IbO million eligible \'Oters. only an approximate 65 million. slightl v more than half. actulllly 11.ent to the polls. In spite of President-elect Ronald Reagan·s landslide of -$89 out of a possible 538 electoral votes. he only rece1\'ed iust more than half of the popular ,·01es. All of this add\ up 10 the next president onl} ha,ing ~n elected by a little more than one quarter of the eligible ,·oters in the count~ In addition to the pre\1denual race. man~ C S Senate and Hou-.c raC'ts "ere won or loSt by only a fe11, percen~ge pomts. For eumple. Jd.nho's Democratic Frank Church lost his bid for re-election 10 the Senate b~ such a narro'4 mugin th:u there ""IS ~·en talk of a recount and Washington's Deomocr:u,c Sen Wuren "iagnuson was defeated by JUSt O-'CT 100.000 votes. Idaho·s U.S. Rej>.-elea Larry Craig <RepubhcanJ and Eastern Wa.s.hmgton's Rep. Tom Folc} (Democrat) also won b, nuro,. margins The marginal success of spe<UI interest groups such as the Moral Maion" 2nd the N:11ional Consel'\•ati,·e Political Action Commmec I CPAC) also lend a degree of doubt to the lheor\' of a 11J1tional consel"·w,·e anitude. Of the eight races for House seats that the Moral Majon('. offioa.lly backed. only rwo succeeded in ge11ing e)ccted. The defeats of liberal Democrauc Sens. Frank Church of Idaho. Birch Bayh of Indiana. John Culver of lo"a and George Mc:<io,em of South Duota g3,e NCPAC a better track record lhan the Moral Majorit~. Howe\'Cr. Sens. Alan Cranston. D-California and ThoDl3.S Ellglcton. D·Mtssouri were also on CPA C's original '"hit lisl. ·· but lhey managed 10 sur\'i,e in spite or effons 3gainst them.
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This lack of totnl victory might mo.kc one doubt the claims of NCPAC spokes Terry Dolan when he s.iid that his organization could even elecl Mickey Mouse~;~ wanted to. Although the re_pu~licans no~· h~ve .a slight majority in the senate. they fell 30 seats shou of 1qno1ng II nrnJomy 1n the house. This hnrdly indicates o,e!"'belming demtmd for conservatism. ao What this no" indicates is merely the trnditionBI American desire for progress and change. In the 1920's conservtlli..-e Republicans ran the country. bul the Depression brought a need for change. nnd FDR"s libero.I Dcmocrtt1~ t'ame to power. By the end of the Korean Wa.r. the Democrats had run their course. and the Republicans took o,er for a fe,· years until frustration over McCarthyi~m Bnd the Cold Wor brought the Demo..Tnt:. bad.. , ow. after a qu ancr of B century of Dcmocrotic rule. their melhods and ideas ha,e become a bit stale sc, the people have again i.poken for o cht1nge. As the pn,;i ht1~ gone. so shall the future go: nnd ju.st 11s in 1980 the American voters have taken 3 politic-al move 10 the right. It can be ctpceted that in a few years the nation" ill again move 10 the left. Bnd then back to the right and so on. and so on. and ,;o on.. .
Trip
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Chitogo
Student wins photo contest By Sba.rlyo Dittman When NIC fre,hmon Brenda Mur· phy sem in the required m,uerinl for ., pholograph) eon te, t last June. ~he s:11d she had no idea she would be the 11l11ma1e winner in August . Murphy. a Coeur d'Alene native. is ihe Idaho S1.11e 4-H photography winne r. She will return today from o week-long su1y in Chicago. where she competed with winners from all over the United States in notional compeli· tion. Last June, Murphy subm iued o )t:1ndllrd fonn containing infonna1ion on her photography expe nence along ,. ith pictures she hod 1aken for state competition with other 4-H photo• graph} members. She s:iid )he was informed by telephone in Augu~t that she was the state winner. While in Chicago. the sta te winners will "get their say" concerning the future planning of photograpy work in 4-H and also do some sightseeing. Murphy said. The prize for the national winner is a S1.000 college scholarship. The trip. which began Nov. 28. was sponsored through the counesy of the Ellstman Kodak Company. She said she was told 10 bring money for 10 meals and her own spending money. ··1 don't expect to win nationals at all." Murphy said.
She ~aid her interest in photogr11phy began over five years ago through her father. She then joined a 4-H photography group and hM entered her projects in th e North ldnho Fair every yea r since. Her firsi ycnr she ~aid ,;he just won 11 blue oword. but the second and fifth year,; eoch brough1 a re~crvc ehampion award. Murphy ~aid ~he used a little inst:tmntie her lim year and hos been through several cnmerM since. She said she now u~es a Konica. Murphy said 1hat of1cr she go t intcres1ed in photography. she kept wnnting 10 learn more, ond her only dlscouragemenl wn~ when she de· veloped her firs 1 rolls of film. "They oll turned out loo block," she said. Candids of people and animals are her favorite. But she said she :ilw likes to take outdoor and natur:il pictures. While taking general studies al NIC. Murphy is putting emphasis on photography. She said she is taking Intro· duction to Photography this semester. because she >A•anis to review and there are still some things she has to learn. Next semester, Murphy said she intends to take both Photo Journalism and Creative Photography.
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SH$waciA1tfi H,way 95 . 3 miles N o f 1-90 Coeur d' A l ene
772-5695
24-BOOR SBOW INFORMATION MADNEES EVERY SATURDAY AND SUNDAY
Winning form-Sa.II.boats on Lake Coe111 d'Alene are captured by NlC freshman Brenda Murphy, who won an Eastman Kodak trlp to Chicago through lhe 4-B program.
NJC STUDENT TICKETS AVAJI.AJ'LE FOi SI .SO PICK UP TICKETS [N SUB, VO-TECH omCE AND C.A omCE
Dec. 5, 1980/ CanlinAJ Re,ie" ·15·
Mood y s t rin~tl
(" onccntra1ion
An unidentified phll harmonlc vlollnlst co mes In on cue. The orchci,tn Is made up or NIC student and area mUBlchU1S,
Cdloists Candace Flsbcr and Chip Schooler make music al the Sund&) philharmonic conccr1, "'hlch altl"llClcd an audience or about ~50.
Forsaki11~ nutrition not r<>romm e11dPd
Hurried life should not influence students' diet e, Glcnd.a Youni:
Nu1ri1lon \'Cl'\U~ COIICRC ruu1ine! Do you find your.elf skipping meol~ \incc roming to NIC? Is the cat-ii1Hhe-nin II fomilior hob11 thc,e doys? Mo\t find thcm,cl..,cs su caught up in da,sc ond eMrnrumculor :tcli\'ilics, 1h01 there JU\I docsn'1 ,crm enough 1imc for CYCl')thing. So one .:if th(' thing, 1h01 gel\ pu1 aside h .-.11ing good hclll1hv. nutn11om1I 111coh ' "S1udcnb forsBke eoung ,•itnmtn•packcd nuts. raisins ond fniit, for 1hc all,too,ca~\ and l'H'r· 1>0pulor lr<'nrh fr\ ," soid st'hool m1r~c Jo Marino, YICh.
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"I .:01 n lot or junl. food sinc-c I ,1aned school. 11's Just easicrto grab when you're in II hurry." srud IC M~dcn1 &I Sch" nnL. He ,aid he find, 1hat drinking n11l~ 1s good bcc-au,c ti 1s hand) :ind filling. Monno\'1ch said. ti would be "ise 1f 1hc student~ don.'t take ~he time 10 C31, 111 le:ist h> ,upplement their diet \\llh milk . "Student~ complaining or being 11red :ire some·. 11mc~ JU~I plnm run down bec11ust' of an msufficic:n1 \'h.amin ~uppl~." nccordmg to Mnrino,·ich. Shc :ilso u 1d she think~ thnt bummg the candle 111 bo1h ends docsn'1 contribute 10 a good hCJ1hh) student. Over a period of 11mc. 1he b.>dv cannot hold up wnhout rest and ,i13mln!i, Some ol the wnvs 10 get those vitumin~ is in 3 salad. Studcn1~ Debbie lnd Tcl'CSA O ark said the) go without Cllllng JUnl. food ID order 10 ) ave themsches for a 1ostada snJ:id.
Scan Gilmort' has h1~ o"' n \Crs,on of S3lad· sca..,.ccd
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"I lo,e to che"' on dried se3,,eed." ~:iid Gilmore. h sttms M h..s 9ui1e the .ippctite for the unusual .1nd s.11d he I) "ilhng h> 1r, anything from frog legs 10 snUe meat. S,h,.anz al;.o \.11d. ·sure I'd lo\'e to II) esc3rgot 311d frvg leg,. bu1 I \Ure do miss 1hc food 31 home " Studenb m.i~ be c.1nni: less and grabbing more bs1 foods. but 1hc} still dream of bcner things 10 e11 and ~ t ,Jtd !here's ,ull no1hmg 10 take 1he pl3C'C uf mother's ho1:1e cooking. Pop ohen rcplaccs more nutmiou~ things and Jud) Hov.mon >3ld \hi.- ·•gr:ibs a quick pop bcNccn das~\." Rae Hcnwn .:i1d ,he 100 drink, a lot more .oft drinu nov. 1h;1n before ,he \t.incd "hool." Hcn\On '>.lid ~he -.k1p\ eating 31 ,chool in order 10 ~3\t' hcr'lt'tr tor 3 full meal at nigh1 "ilh her famil} , ''It "'ould be bcncr 1f s1udcnts t;ike umc 10 fix carrot suets and ~lcr,, or orange, and apples 1han to end up ,tulfing them,ehes .... uh eve ryone's fa,ome popcorn ;ind. of coune. 1he good old !il~ndb\ m3caron1,' MannO\ICh S.11d. Popc;om 3.lld macaroni m:iy 1:1s1e great ond feel 1emfiC' in the: 1umm\, bur the) ha,·c no food ,3lue. she s:iid ~·fanno,,ch ad\l~ studenis not 10 fors3ke good eating for rhe fos1er pace of college life. "lf~ou hl~en't time to e:it 11 good meal then le:im 10 !iUpplemenr your diet ..,.,,h nutrien1s. " she s:iid.
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[__ n_ic_ no_t_ic_e_s __J PROBATION A.\1) D1SQUA1Jf1CA·
TIO!\ POLICY Th13 potlc, appllei. to CUI} s1udeot cliff) Ing IO or more credll hou~ at the e nd of 1he d rop / add per iod of an applicable sem~ter. A s1udent .. m be placed oo aca· d e mie proba1lon when bis her :-/IC cumuat he grsdc poln t a, en.gt' Wis b e low 1.75. The student bu one semester to ra.lse th4.' \'IC cu.mal.ath e grude point a,·c.ruge to I. 75 or bectcr. Fa il ure to do so wlll result la sus pension from school for a period of one semester, c.iclush e of summer school. A student who bas bttn suspended nnd returns af1e r a laps e of one semester or more . exclusive of sum• mer school. Is still conside red to be on prob11llon. Oaring lhc semester of the student's return , be/ she must ei ther 111ta.in an NIC cu.mulsth e gJ"llde point a,·erage of 1.75 or belier or DJIJUn 11 ..cmestcr gmde point average of 2.00 or heller. f ailure 10 do so will result In dlsmlssal . A srud cnt who has been dismissed ma) be rclnslAtcd onJ~· after pe tlllon to :ind appro, al of the Senate u,mmtn ec on Admls.o.lons and Academic Sllln· dard3,
l\n, student "ho ,. ishes to transfer to 'ionh Idaho Collt-ge hom another C'O.:lege or anhenlt~ a.nd '4b()S(' ca.ma· lath c grade point u erage Is belo" 1.· 5 ,.iJI be admitted 0 11 prob11lloc. A transfer student on probation mast attaln a.n /'.lC grade point a,erage of I. i5 or belier during bi~ her Orsi st-me\tcr II the college. Fallatt 10 do '\.O will result In saspensJoo from school for a period of one Rmcstcr. udu.she of summer s.:bool. A tranSfer ~t1:idcn1 "'ho has bttn suspended a.nd "''= after a laspe or one semester, exclas:h-e of summer school. mast meet the pro, l.slons as outlined In panign,phs 3 and J abo,c. " Christmas Re,cls," ,.ill be pre· se nte d on Dec. 7 al 8 p.m. b) Connoisseur Concerts In the CommuaJcation-Arts Balldlng aodhoriom. The c, cot is bdng co- ponsorcd b) lhe ~ickels Wonh.
Dec. 5 and 6 an: the dosing nights or the Com.munlt~ Theatre production of ·•Born \cstcrdu." Cana.In lime ls 8 p.m. S1adent ·,ldct~ a.re S2. For reset\ adons. call 667. IJ ?3.
\\ orl, stud, lime sheet for Oerem• ber .. 111 be due before noon o n Thor;daJ. Dec. 11. Studenl "Ul be 11blc to pick up their eb«k~ OD Frida~. Dec. 19. "The Mc~lab:· "Ill be prcscn ccd OD DCC', 14 11 1 p.m. In the Commun!· cadoo-Atls Bolldlng auditorium. h l4 IU'I Oratorio b, Handel and wlll featun.' the pokan'! · Conrert On.-hcslril .,.·Ith the NIC choir, co mmunlt) fe s th al choi r and sollsts. T he pr esen1a1l on will be by th e Synrphon~ Socle~ of Coeur d' Ale ne and the Idaho Forest lndustrl~ Chari• table Fooodatlons . Plt-·Niglslr'llllon ~ coming up 'IOOn and those s tudcnls In te rested In •'ritlng Dellon or poelr) may slg,n up fo r th e crea thc writing, fi ction or J)O('tt) c~ s . StodenlS who register for tho clus .. ru become mcmlxlrs or OREAD , a crcathe writi n g cl ub o n campus. For more lnformJ1Uon on iho creathe ,. rlllnjl classes or OR EAD , con ca cl Da,ld Sluirp or Jim McLeod OD the second floo r or the Admlnls cra tlo n
BoJJdlng,
The Camp°' Rct"ttatlon plna·ponJ to11.mamcn1 Sl lrt.'I Ott. 8. Students ma., ,tgn up in the ba_,cmc,ni of the SUD. The 1blrd lntemalloDAI Con~ocatlon Dinner " Ill be he ld at 6 p. m. Tuttda~, Ol.'C. 9, In the Kootenai Room or the SU B. An Aus1rlan- Hun11arla n mea l " '" be scncd with CDtertalnmcnt of folk dancers from EWU a.nd a ntm of Ao.stria. R- n alloM a.nd lkkets are a,allab lo In We• Hatch's In the SUi . A Sp«lal price I• offered 10 donn s tudents. An outdoor equipment s wap wlU be bcl.d Dec. II and 12. Partlclpub may bring u,ed outdoor c,qul pmt nl to the 1'1lacllon office In the buemenl or tho SUB anytime before Dec. 11. An cihlbU fealu.rlna NIC s tudent an wlll bo dlspla)'cd lhrouah nnau week oo the ~cc:ond Door or lhe Communk a, tlon,Ans Bulldln1t, New NIC pu king regulallOOt will be r un on the coll ege clo1ed circui t lelovlsloru.
Rock n' Roll
W ed. - Peabody's Party 75 c drinks , 50< beer all night
Ladies Free Drinks 7-9 p.m. Fri. Sat.
freebies 8-9 p.m .
Live Music Monday thru Saturday 24th and Mullan, Cd'A