nat Qev1ew Volume 36, Number 5
FridnJ. No, . 13. 1981
Council punishes pair after foosball 'prank' b.1 Broce P!ldge1
f>rl'11811re·s on Sophomore M•I) Schuerman Ice.ma nursing from the patient angle as ,be conlllbulN IO lhc 79-P'"I lotal collected Tuesda} b) rbe Spokane lnJan.d £mplr<'
Blood Bw.
N,•w roun,·ilm ,,,.
11t1 '\'11
No 'mini-Calif.' in CDA Hob Oro"n h gOmij to be dulng a lot of "homew<1rt" bcl\, cc n no" nnd Jan. S when he tole, hb ,t•nt on C'ocur d'Alene\ C'll)' Cou ncil.
Brown , "hn h NIC', as~ht~nl dm.,ctur ol voco1io11al educ311on, wo~ the l('adlng ,ote·11c11er 111 the c,ght, "ay roet on No" . .l for lhrte lVundl po\111on,. lit' \Old 1h01 sinl'l' the rommun11,· gave hun the u11ponunt1l' Lo ,cl'\ t' o~ the c.111ndl, for the nci-1 two 1111.'lnth, he "Ill try to become as "ell prepared a~ po~tblc \Oh l\l do the bt~t JOb he i-an lk odd1:d that thl' preparM111n ,, 111 b<' a "tr.-mendou., leomm8 pro..'Css." Om" n and the other rn o Cll) C'\\Ul\t'II "inner\, Steve ~kCreo ond Jim Michaud, and M11,or-ell:\'t J,m F'romrn "<'rt' oil cndor-.cd h) the ConCt"rncd C11iion, Con1m1tte,• (CCC), "h1ch hos been u moior \Upportcr 10 tht' Sht•tt lin<' llratcctlon lni11011,e Be>1de\ ~u1iponrng the 111111011,c , restncuoni. on la ke from .te,·clopmcnt , the CCC 1s mter<'~ted in impro, ing the trcalment or l'll)' cmplo> cc, and in mecung the needs of are~ scmor c1112ens A lO·)'CIH ,•ctcran of b<'hind-thc"c-en~ p(lllll<.>.tl work , Brown said tha1 he Is firmly opposed to an,· plans for high-rise buildingl> on the cit)'~ 1111.e,
orea~. ,urn u the aucmpt aC dcvclof)(·r Tl'm Ph1lhp\ to butld a 14-i.tol'\ cundom1mum al the Sill' no" occupied b, Inland Monn., lo.-ol buslnc,.:.rnen. re.hon dr,tl• oper-. ond othl'I'\ organurd 1hr C'ommlltcc for lxlOd Go,l'rnmcnt ,Cc.GI. "hich end1,l'\<'d Ra~ Ko,:r the un)U<"· ces.,lul ,and1d11tt' for ma,l>f and thrtt or the l(l)CI'\ 1n the cm culllh.-il ra« trc.1111
Tbl' CGG ,, in
ra-.,r of lot":ll g=h
and de,cll)pment w,·h a, Ph,lhp,' condom1111um proJt'<'t Both the CGG and the CC'C' agreed 1h01 1hr ,horehnc de,dopmcnt is.sue "a, the maJ<>r d1:c1d1ng fa,1or 1n th, CIC'\.'11on Bro""· .1 nau,c- of Ten~ and 1 Coeur J',\knt' ~dent :,tDC'l' 10-1, !>.11d th;11 h.1,:~ bu,mess= fcu that the ho~ltnc Prote<"t1.:>n ln111.ime " ill hurt area bui.ines, .ind the local No.,n,,m,· H, s.i1J th.it the or~1te ts uue hc.:.tu,r the hlc ts the major tounM auracti.on in Coeur d'Alt'~. and tht' J.rCa \\ ill not anra{"I touruu "b, mntng II a m,m.Cihfomu ... Bro" n added th.11 the 1n11u111H' ~h,,uld be lool cd upon 1, 11.ll enrourogcmeo, to busint',,.o, rnther th:ui i thre~t to it
Two NI(' students -.ett pl3,ed on proba11on :ind tcmporarih SUSpt"ndcd from athletic compe11uon II! m college Judiaan' Council he.inn!! :-00\ 5 for rem0>,ng a foosball 111blt from Sher• man Hall. William B1'3dlt'Y and Thomas "elson. both fre!>hm;n on the "rc,1hng IC3m. alleged!) took the uble from 1he dorm :at :appm11mau~h 11 JO p.m. on Oct. 25. Bradley :est1ficd th.it be :and :-.clson had tA:t'll the able a., a gag and mtcndt'd to mum 11. but the p31r were ~tcd by c~r d'Alene Cm Pohcc bt'forc the\ could do so. Br.adlc) and :-Oclson conres~cd 10 taking the 1:&b e &11:1 \IC' dropped cnminal chargr, of g~nd Ihm again,, them, "11h 1he undeaund,ng 1h;i1 they •'Ould .ippnr before the Jud1"1.tf1 Couot'II and abide b, us dcci~ion Dean of Srodera~ Ln Hopn illld the I\\O studt'nb lw:l &J)puenth ~gned an a1:r«-mcn1 IQ that effect, and ropui» of 11 •ere gi,t'll 10 the coo.icil. reprt'SCnau,-c of the colk~e "as present at the hearing 10 present a ca~ s a1n~1 Br.idle} :ind :'lel'4n .\lso, •Mn rounol Chairnwi Dame! Fi1zpa1• n<l asked the t•1> ,. bt'dtt'f 1hcy h2d be-en 1nflll"!Ded of 1~1r neh• 10 ha, c l faeull} advtse"r or an ~ttOmc) help tbt'111 "uh their defen.'\C , t ~ both ..iid 1ha1 Hog;JJ1 h.ld told Llm:i th11 the- had U) fatt tbe CVIHlcil alone Hov.C'\er. F'1:1pa1nd uJd that lhc stgnC'd agreemem bet,,, ccn Hogan and tht' r,,.o students C'C!Wttutcd a ~ fflC'1t'nt ca.e agalrat them Fmpamck aucd the \tudt'nt~ If tht"\ ,.,lhcd ~ ha, 1: 3.11 :ail\ tx"f hd p them <lJld I ~ bo..'lh ~-.ncd tlw n.,b1 Tht' ffl~II! \)(UC ID tht' he3riog
,ccmcd 10 be determining "hc1her th<' nomo,,l of the table "a, J prnnl Council member 1-l;lrJl~e Fo\~ j,k ed if an, pt:<1ple "ere prc,cnt JU~l before the table "a, t.il.cn "ho <'l'Uld tt'Stir. 10 the .1pp.1non1 intent of the t"l' ,rudcnVi Fi1zpatn,k Yid that there "J\ no e,1dencc 10 dl.'tern11nc "hcthcr 1hc incident "3\ a pranl. 1>r 3 theft In it> rin~I ruling the <'llunc1I ga,c the pair the benefit of the doubt in I he m:mcr The council unjn1mousl~ .1grced 10 tht follow mg pt"nJh1: --b,u<' "n11,·n reprimands to be rfa«d ,n 1hc ,tud~nh · permanent files afonii "11h C<1p1c, ,,r 1hc 5tJ!ncd agreemen t " "h H...gan. --Place Bradle, 311d Ncl,on on probation for the remainder or the ,1cJdem1c )ear If thc probouon i\ no1 , iobted and 1r thi! rulc, or thc college :tll=. the r«ord~ of th~ mcident "111 be 1al;t'n from the Mnckn1,· files --Suspend the ,1udcn1s from "l'l'>thnl( rompemion un 11I Nov. 14. The council ~tressed that ,·1ol.11ions of the probJtiM "111 be treated h.u~hlv. f,r,-imricl. informed Bradle, and \ el\On th.11 the~ can 11ppcal the ruling o ihe co,lcge pre~ident .\,cording 10 dormitDr) Director Bech Colfm.:m. :',IC President Barry Schuler ~•d la\t 1ear th.it dimpli nary ,mons on campu, "ould be handled bl nHI authonties if applicable. H .-c,;cr, Coffm,n )Jld that conside•111g the Hudent\ "ere first-time offenders and cons1dcnng 1he1 cooperlied ~lib polite. ha~1ng arrt\l record~ and spending • "cekcnd in 1011 WJS ptob~bh )U1fio1:n1 o~rl pumshmrnt.
(_·__in_s_id_e_t_h_e_c_r_ _ _J Stw:11.'DU »a) 'no· to rcquiffd PE ......................................................... pa.ge 7 ' Man oJ L a . \ ~' re,lc,,cd .............~..............................................page 5 \uu:unn cap~ la ptl"!UttS .........................................................pages 3-9
Oa, Ids takrs regional meet title ........................................................ page I I
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Will we know our children? The time h 1m. \\ 111 parents kno" "ho their children a.re? Thi\ ma,· sound like a ~illy quesuon right no" but \\ lien the year 1<>90 rolls around mam here at ~IC arc gorng to be parents. In 1990 children arc going to be raic;ed in the onslaught of the infonnauon age. Their generauon \\ill i.ec and be complete!; famih:ir "'1th such things :is computer ,1dco display 1enninals in homes. shoppin2 Sears ,ia the tube and pushbunon ordcnng of , inuall: an rommodiue.. and C\CD doing their home\\ork a1 the d1\pla) 1cnninal ir. •he den. Children t'Ould ,er. lii.cly go through :heir "hole \\Orting h,cs in the con line\ or their o·~ n home. lmainne inten·1e"' in2 for a Job. "orL.ing and c,cn wn,c r\ing "11h o:h~ mcmbe~ or the "office" - people "horn the) hu,c nt•,er nor \\Ill the) e,er see U1 pc™>o-all ,·u the ,1dCQ d1c;pla) terminal. Starting 10 get the p1t'ture'! The intent here is to call to mind the truh that are beginning to beset our generauon. Our \\hole ~1c1 \ "in tend to become more 1ntrovcr.cd a!> interaction with other human b·eing!> i<, reduced. Ho,,. ~111 anyone c,er get married? Many forms or pla)' v. Iii be supc~dcd by en1ena1nmcnt rrom the computer. If you 1hinL. games are mtercsun~ now . . just "ait: b: 1990 there will be something for , 1rruall~ e,eryone. The nctualit) that the informau,m age as coming upon U\ i'> for ccna10. Bur wilt our generanon be able to handle the sociolog1cal t'hanges that it will thrust upon us?
opinion page
n·
S.H.
laura hubbard
Short stick pointed? Going nboul things In the " rong "a) ,hould bl' con~tdercd pa.rt or the Amenc:an \13\. It S\'Cm:. like we alway, mi,:, :in IS:.UC when \\t' tr:, to change :.omcthmg· t'On$cquentl\ . we end up holding the shor. end of the pohucal ,tick. In the rl'cent Jtttmpt to recall Count~ ,\o\sessor Henry Nagel. "t' did II again. If Nagel is assessing propertJ uue lCCOrdang to !>late la" . as hts colle:igues around the !.late sa: he 1s. then ,,h\ ~ to change a bad la,, by gening rid of the mnn who enforces it? One ,, onders ,, hat ,, ould ha\'e happened if our forefathers had gone about political and :.oc1:il change io this manner. If ~'3nin Luther King h:id tried to gam righb for blacks by starting a n:uiom\lde "Recall the Pres1deo1" c:impaign I'm sure it wouldn·1 rnke much imagination 10 see where the black communnv ,,ould be toda\'. i':ot to mention King's name m the histor:,· books. ThomAS J ellerson !llld friends had lbe righ t idea when they chose to disobe) the laws which were at fault and wage outright war nther than rrying to ha\'e the King of England dethroned. And I should hope we wouldn·t ~ to change abonion laws by slapping a lawsuit on e\'el) doctor in the counCI) \\ho legally practiced it. Though these examples m:iy sound ridiculously ob\·ious. iso't what the recall election attempted ro do equally so? It might hn,e been interes ti ng to see .,.,llJlt would have happened if Nagel had been recalled. Would the \'Oters in turn recall his successor for follo";ng the law~ After the elecrion failed. one spokesman for the propert)' owners who had led the campaign for Nagel's recall said. "That's oka). I\C made our point." su re the) did. There are probably numerous legislators in Boise who are ha\'ing a good laugh over tbe \\hole episode.
rm
(____ ca_r_d_in_a_l_r_evi_·_ew __J The Cardin.al Review Is published semJ-mo nthly by the PubUcadom Workshop class at North Idaho College. Memben of the CR staff wfll 1trlve to presenl the ne ws Wrly, accurately and without prejudice. Oplnlom expressed o n I.he editorial page do not neceS8&rfly reflect the view, o( die AS:"(IC o r lbe NlC adminlstntlon . The CR Is entered as thlrd-clua material at Coeur d 'Alene , Idaho 83814. American Collegiate Press All -Amertcan NewspapeT editor . ... . . ..... . . . .. . .... .. . . .. . .. . ................ Laara Habbard new-s editor .. . ... . ... . . .. . .. . . . .. . .. . .. . ..... ... ...... BW Bnd,haw associate editor . . .. .......... . . . .......... . ...... . . . Sbarlyn Dlnmaa sports editor ... ... .. . . . .. . ..... . . . ....... . ..... . ....... · · Grea Lyde copy and £eanue editnr ...... . ... . .. .. ....... . .......... Bnice PIJdaeC photograph} edltor ..... . ..... . ....................... Brenda Mmphy arts and entertainment edltor . . . . . . . . ........ . .......•. Traci AU,ertlGII ad,e:rtising inao.ager . ........•......... .............. Sbarlyn DfUIDall adviser .... . ... . .. .. .....................•.•.. . .... . ... nm Pllpta
Genie;
cartooulst ..... . .•... . ..... . ........• . ............•...... staff members .. . ............ .... ..... . • , • ...... · ... ·· .Jadde Paal Baler, Bany Baker, Joseph Gramer, Staa R. Ball, Treu MclA....... Broce Mullen, Marcella Sanchn
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Nov. 13, 1981/Cardmal Re\ie~ .3.
more opm1ons Aid for students worsened by educated administrators Big Broiher. can you spare a dime? This could turn into the plea or the college students in the very near ruture if the Reagan adminis tration keeps swinging the axe at student financiaJ programs. As the cost of tuition rises and the job market plummets. the college Student finds himself in the awkward position of deciding what comes first-education or eating. A self-supporting student need not be remfoded of the difficulty or finding a part-time job and the effort i1 tales to go to school all day. ro wort at night and 10 do the extra reading it talces to get good grades. The 200 people on the work·S1udy waiting list at NIC didn't sign up just for the sheer enjoyment of ultimately being able to wash dishes in the SUB. They signed up for the program because they need the money. !l's time for our legislators to recognize these needs and to stop Reagan's auack on student aid. Should the dream of qua lity higher education be limited 10 an upper-income elite? Rising educational costs arc driving more and more potential students into the unskilled job ma rket. lo Canada alone this fall 20.000 people opted not to return to school and to take a chance in a slumping job market: 16.000 remain unemployed. If the trend continues and only o select fow are able to afford educations. the technological age that i~ rapidly approaching will overwhelm an uneducated and unskilled society. The presi.d~nt of the American Council on Education said perhapi. more thun one m1lhon students could be denied participouon in federal srudeat financial nid program~ because of budget chopping. Cut'> of this nnture will no doubc haven drascic effect on education plans of Che fulurc. A country that hos always taken pride in itself on its educationaJ opportunities cannot offord 10 limit it, capabili11c~ at a time "'hen education 1~ more lmportanc tha n ever. Remcrnber. il cook educated people 10 gee the Un1ted States inco a trillion-dollar debt. ond it i~ going to toke educaccd people to gee ui. out. Enough i~ enough. Let's limit the budget cuts 10 the prognms that truly have extra rat to trim. A nae ion whose secondary :.ehoob nre turning out people who cannot read or spell eannoc afford to deny l11gher cducncion because of fi nnnetal re3~ru. We may come clo:.c 10 o bolonced budget. but mo:.1 people won't be able to i,pcll the word.
bill bradshaw
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A bad choice of friends The eoncepc o( friends hlp is an Important one between nallons well as between indh-iduals. but recent events make one question the quality of some friendships. Suppose. for example. Canada made a deal with the Soviec Union that would allo"' the So\ iets 10 establish air bases in southern Canada Wottld 1ha1 noc make Americnns wonder abou t the real value of Canadian friendship? h works the same way in other pans of the globe. !he kc) to the defense of Israel has always been the abilicy to gain t.he upper hand by striking the first blow with its air forces. Ho"' then C3Jl the acquisirion of such sophistica1ed equipment as the Airborne Warning And Control Systems ( A \V ACS) planes b) a sworn enemy be considered anything less than a chreat to Israel's securi1\·? To 1op it :ill off. the sale of the sophisticated planes comes from the nation that "'as the fint to recognize the Jewish scatc in 1948 and chat Israel has ah, a)'S considered to be its best friend and its greatest supponcr Is thls lhe ••J \ merfcn treats Its rrfcnds? In addifon, the administration's quest for ne\\ friend~ could not ha\C cal.en n to a more unstable and unreliable region. faer since cherc has been on Arab \\Orld. it has been plagued by mtcr-tnb~ b1d;enng. assassmadons and corrupcion. E,en In IIS "anlted" aggres Ion a.gainst Is rael, che Arabs could ne\CT agree 11,ho 1,1,ould run the show, ond mili1ary decisions were al....ays influmced b} 3 dri,·e for glory in the eyes of fellow Arabs. E\en "'hen an .1pparen1ly 1J.ise Ara b leader does come 10 power. one that acthely ""Orks for peace (which is rare). some extremist or member of an opposing faction 1akes it upon himself to eltminote such 3 ·'rraitor" to the Arab ond Moslem cause. The late Anv.· u Sadat 1s a prime example of this. ~ forewarned Mr. President and choose your friends carefully. Remember Tehran. Remember Saigon. There are more powerful forces ch:in the Amenran dollar. as
Country's physical fitness craze here to stay Wha131 firsc appeared to be no more' than a fod. much lil..e the Huls-Hoop or the Pct Rock. ha:. nl>W 135tcd more than 3 dttadc. Sorry fellow junl..-food junkie:.. 11 appears the ph)sicnl fitness craze h3s moved In and gotten really comfortable . This mania hn:. even cre:ued new stCl"l.'-Otypes for the Amenc:1n adult. : rnd111nnally on~ sow the typical house\\ 1fe rushmg the children off co :;fchoorll :tnd hu rrymg through her housc,, orlo. nnd then sitting do" n 10 her :ivo le M)ap operas. Today, Stcrcotypicolly she s11ll rushes the kids off 10 school and hunie:. through her housework. But then she don:, her jogging shoc:1. grabs her s1oe"'.at~b. and :.he':. off 10 try 10 break yesterd:if s time. • sh~,s •:. apt ~o happen e>.cept, of course. on Monday and Thursda, "' hen . as a~robtc dance class from 9:JO a.m. to 11 a..m .• 3Jld the housework wans unhl she gets home. 1 li~e~ ise, the S!~reoi ypical man has unde rgone metamorphosis. d:':;~)~· the tradmonal "provider'' upon nniviag home from work sa1 1 newspaper and did no1 mo\ e (except co turn the pane) ~_ntil d.inner wasthe ready. .,
In general, men coo a.re altering their chil> routlne~. Instead of ooscdhing tnto the e,·ening ne,,.s, they"°" subJect their bod1e~ 10 a ri tual ofv.arm-up exerci)e!> before their tv.o·mde run. and then to a num ber of ~ubsequenc coohng-down methods. Corporate emplo}ers ha\e e"\en c3ught the fitnes~ bug. Many large rorpor;mons h,He consrructed 8}ffl1U1s1ums. 51,1,imming pools and 1he like for employee use. 1.ncenme is sometimes even provided; participa11on by exccunves 1s not compulso~. bu1 n Je3ds to faster promotion. Despite 3.11 this destruction of traditional concepts. one aspect of 1he Amencan wa} of life remains unscathed. There a.re still people our there m:uing "big bucks" off of this physic:il fitness craze. According to a recenc issue of Ttme magazine. diet nod exercise books h:i\'e rued in over S50 million. spons shoes over SJ billion, health food nnd vitamins over SS billion and diet drinks over S6 billion. If this keeps up. junk food is going to die II slo"' 11nd miserable death. And just think. wrthout Doll~ Madison whac will ever happen 10 Charlie Brown? T.M .
No,·. 13, 1981/ Cardlnal Rc,lcw -4.
F·o rmer Nazi relates memories of Third Reich b., BID Brtdsha" C)'CS. blond hair and abo"e-a, erage intelligence were JU\t what hts 2od ""s Jool.in2 for to help lead the ne~.1 generatton of the "ma\tC:r rice Martin Paulat's hair as mostlJ gn~ no" and ha, " •!'lh1p ha, \hsfted to the one trut Gud. but ha, memof\ 1\ clear about lhC' adulc~ent ..-ears he spent m the Htt ler Y,,u1h and hi\ se,·cral mceung, "11h Adolf Hultr v. hich he rclarcd ar a popcorn forum 'o' b a• NIC. Paulat "I\ born m June 193.l in :he East Pru"tan ,o,.n of Ttl\11 l.'l area "hach nc" belon11• •o Poland and the So, set L naon He had bttn ra1~ :o behe, e 1hn1 H11ler "a\ ~me sor: of me ssiah "ho had come 10 dehHr German,· from the ills It had suffered due to "·hat the :"'laz1s snad "u a "orld Jc" ish banking consprr:IC). He said that in carh 1942 be "" told 10 jom the Hitler , ·outh and "I) soon sent off 10 a 1r31nmg camp "here he and other bo\S were da!>s1fied and tested for future ser\'ICC 10 the Reich. Paulat did I\CII enough on the test to
His blue-gl'll)
be ",oluntccred'. for Schuwtaffcl 1SS rrammg. There he '11'1'- 1augh1 to ··.-ipe out al tra~ of God .. from h1> lt£e . to hate hi, parents and .111 those not of the •· \!) ii.II m3,te~ r.i,c" and to ,.onh1p and pra, 10 H1~ler For ht~ SS tra mng he \\IS sent 10 a conccntranon camp in s..,uthem Pol3nd near Krako,I, ~~ he am\'ed. he said, he ,2·A :1bou1 1.500 :o 2.000 people m the •oods The people. m~sth J~~. "ere baw d1ggml! and •hen the, had finished the, "ere m1chine £111U1Cd do- n b\' their SS guards Paulat said 1h:i• at ftn: he ,..as ~hocicd. but he •as taueht tha1 the~ people •ere "~bhum10" and "animals." He said that he remembered \\ti• ncss.02 Lhc ~me 1,pc o! thing at !cut 11 111:ies. Often he ,.:u a.mon2 the SS troop~ 1h11 baried the co~s ilfter chopp1n2 them mto ,m.aU piece~ ,. ~hO\ th. Once "'hen ht, "black uru• form "a~ rompleteh red "11h blood.'' he C1)Q)d t:ale 1t r.o longer and puscd out. He ,us pu.nsshcd for this "\\elk •
,,h
Voca tional council ponders • • • options on n ew const1tut1on
Paulat abo told of ~ l'\lng cxecull<'ln~ tn 3 ·~h1l\, er·· chamber thtll had .1 r~he tloor throul!h ... h,ch pn\Oner,; " ere dropped and crcma.tl'd ah, e b) naming ga~ Jets. Th" .111 p:in of the ', ui~' ··finll S.-tuuon" for dealing "1th Jc"', .ind other ",ubhum:,n~ " After e>:pla.mmR Httlcr', pc~,nB.l m.\itneui.m and his pl.in, for ra1~mg World War 1 Germ:im up 3fter defeat and po,t·\\3.r deprt<!>1on, P:tu• J;u ,:11d of the Hol,'C":iu,, ·'I'm m,1 Jll'itth ing 11 b, an, me.1n, h "J\ thl.' m(\,t horrit,lc thing th.it ,..,er hnp pened" He added, h<'"'\l'r, th:11 ht' "sonlt'· "hat doubted" that ;i:, millly :i, ~" m1lh.:,n Jc"~ dted ID Nu, comp, He \ptnl the l't'm.undcr of World \\ ar II h\lnit out naghtmllrc'> -1uch ;i, bcine bJ\oneued four ttmc!> bcf11re ~«:aping from the Ruu1a ns 3t StJlln· gr11d and finJII)· bctnjt ,·.1pturcd b~ the BntiMI tn \ pnl 19-IS. He "n' freed sh.irth thereafter arl au thorltl~ had told Paulat lhnt hn p.arent~ "'ere hanged 1n J()4J fnr crime\ again.,, H11l cr ~nd that h1\ \ibhngs "'ere Jl:.o dc:id. For the nc.u three ,·c:in he roamed Cenm1l Curope
";i,
11,
\\1th mhcr boys <teallng to <uNi\"t', Arter again being c:ought by and c\cap1ng from 1hc Ru,sil\n<, he mide h1< wa,· 10 We,t Germany In 1948, "here he h:ippened on 10 a Chmtian c"angclic-.ll group "hkh ":b holdin11 meeting, and offenng "help " Pnuli\l wa< not yet lo ~cars old and weighed 88 pou nd, He wa_, bleeding 1ntl'ma11, nnd had been told he had t•nh W\ \\CC~< to lhc fh thl'n, hc knew he ncedrd an,• hdp h,· ,·ould get '" hl' ncc:cptcd the c,·an1tcli,1,· llfkr nnd c~petted a loa.f nt bread or the l1lc lns iud , he wa.~ told to pray tu Je,u, for deli,erJn,c and 10 mvi1c the Lord nm, hl!> life. lit' did ,o ,and ril(ht ll\\'1IV fdt nn "elcctrsc <hock." lie Jumped uj, nnd looked (!found for the "lrc, but found none I le nlw notlc,:d that hh l>odv "~, healed. Thus began II new em 111 Poula1·~ lt(c. Hl' s,ud th3t looking bock on all of ht\ rnir .1culo11, c:,c:ipc~ fmm the g rim l't'1apcr, tht' reunion "hh ha, whole fon11ly whom he had bchc~cd dea d and the 11rco1 r h11n1ie an h1~ min d an d hcllrt, he know, that there i\ 11 " higher power" and that power 15 God
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b) Bruce Padget
Gc11sng organ111:d. both for tht) and for futul't' ,eus. 10\ the concern of the Vocational Student Council nt 11s No, . 5 meeting. Th,.. council appro"cd the outline of a ro11>t11ution 11 "Ill be drafung ~ the n:qucst of 1he ASNIC Student Board. "hich loM all club ronstllutions c:ui1cr 1h1s )CU. the ASNIC has requested that ne" copic~ or club con~murions be submmed 10 them by o,. 20 or funding will be frozen. According to VSC President Shelli Morcda. the council h.u nc, er had a constitution The ron~titution "'111 be rough!) patterned after the ASNIC Coastituuon. but a committee of freshmen from two-ye:ir ,ocauonB.1 progr:uns "ill be appointed at the end oi each ye3r to scr\'C as :1 core 10 get the council sumed the next year. Moreda said 1h111 the conunutt) of the council has ah• ays bttn a problem, since most ,w:111,)nal students are enrolled in one-ye:ir programs. Council member M:uk Tucker proposed that the ,·oacionaJ couoc:il not be totally under the control of ASNlC llS most clubs an:. since ,ocationaJ students ha,·e different interests from ac-:idemic- students. Ho"ever.1he general consensus of the council "as that \'ocutionltl students have been ITCated well b~ the student board and that :in ad,·ers:IJ)' relationship between the council nnd the bo3rd would be unwise. since the board. in the words of one council member. "has a lot more pull.'' Ho"·c,er. Moreda said that she would suggest to the student board th.u the VSC president be made a non-,-otiog member of the board. In other business at the meeting: - - Morcda said that the lener of pro1est about the appointment of Brian Scon to the rollege senate "-as presented to the ASNTC Board. and she complAined that it " ' :lS "1-:iken ctlremely lightly' · by ASNIC President Sena Bl'O\\er. --Allocated S152 10 the surveying dass for l" O field trips which had already beco taken and for a surveying seminar Nov. 14 in Spokane. Council Ad,iser Johe Smithson questioned S20 of the allocation. which ..-as intended to help p:iy the instructor's way to the seminar. and said that he bclie,.·es the instructor·s expenses should be pa.id by the college.
Sand y 8cene A.rt1s1 Carol Aleunder takes advan taae or a awmy day beach oear the colkge.
ID do a
UnJe lb&cbJDa oa Ille
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Ulhorn given $200 scholarship
Records/Tapes
Sherry Ulhorn won a S200 scholarship from the Coeur d'Alene cmpter of the Alpha Delta Kappa. "'hicb is a t~er·s mrority. Oct. 12. The Alpha Delta Kappa scholarship is a• •arded e,.-ery ye2r to educatioo majors anending NIC. Ulhom is in elemeoW)• cduatioo. An}' freshman education major interested in the scholarship may talk to Dorync Rogstad. education instn1C1or. • ·h~ office is in the Libn.ry Buildin&-.
509 Sherman Avenue Downtown
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Nov. 13, 1981/Canilnal Review .5.
'LaMancha': Impressive story within a story by a,,_ hdaet
According to tradi tional wi sdom. " musical" mea ns " c utesy : · The average person e xpect s a m usic al product ion to contain sugary swe cc Broadway-scyle production numbers. poincless kictlines and interminable mu88ing by the aciors. According to th is wisdom , s ta ge productions are an either-or proposic ion. It' s eiche r s eriou s d rama or musical: the two cannoc co-exist. The NIC produ ction of " Man of L3 Mancha" blows craditi'lnal wisdom all co hell . "Man of LaMancha" Is a m O!llcal s1ory wichin a ~Cory based on Miguel de Cervances· s tory, " Don Ou ccote."' The outer \iOry 1~ 1ha1 of Ccrva nccs· appearance before 1he Spanish lnqui, sition. The inner scory is the ~Cory of Don Qu1xo1e. The main problem wnh the slory· wi1hin-a-~1ory concep1 is keeping the
Sharp's •lnifn& ,-olce 15 Incredible. Even if the rest of the play was a clambake . Sha.r p's r~dition of "The Impossible Dream " would mate the play wonh seeing. Sancho Panza (J effrey Leonardi), servan1 to Cervames and squire to Quixote. is as comic:il as he is sincere in his cone.cm for bis mas1er. He wants 10 follow Quixote's quest. but. noc bei ng a madma n . he cannot quice grasp i1. However. he does have a lot of fun trying. Aldonza (Ma ria Mc Bain) sha res Sh11rp·s and Leonardi's sincerit}, but. her singing voice has problems. Either the music is ouc of her range. or she simply does noc have the volume to reach back into 1he audjconum. evcn with che help of noor microphones. Whichever ic is. her voice sounds qui cc slrained. T he Duke [J oh n S wanson!, who
The chor eogr nphy of two scenes could be more polished. Thc banle scene between Quixote and the mule· ceers and the gypsy dance scene both seem conuivcd. Eacsh a.ctor seems 10 be S3);ng 10 himself. "I ha,·e 10 get o,cr there. buc hov.· can I do ii w11hou1
jusc walking o,er:· Practice should make chesc sccncs more n111ural O,erall. the pla) is imprc~she. 3nd it 1s h3rd to watch it w·ithou1 wan1mg 10 tal.e up onc·s sword :ind follow Quixoce·s quest againsc che Enchancer.
[__k_a_le_id_o_s_c_op_e_J plollines diMinct. Under che d ireetton of Bob Moc. 1hcrc is no confusion bc1ween lh e two .stories. TI1c mo ln poin1 of the piny is ch at there ore two world$: the way 1hi11g) ar<'. and the way 1hing) ough1 10 be. Cervantes. played by English In• s1rue1or Oa .. td Shnrp, ls fao1 nstic. Sharp play& two rbaraclers with lhrce di~llnr t pcr\onalil lcs: Ccrvante5. ond lhc coun1ry squire Alonso Quinna.. whose fru,tro cion wich 1he world os i1 is lt'ad ~ him 10 have dclu\lOn~ of being Don Oulxnl c, kn ight errnnt of LoMnnchn . JOO ycnr~ oflcr 1hc Inst kn ight errant went off to the grcnt counyard 111 chc ) k) . The chrcc pcr~ n11li1ie'> of Cervanl e'> may ~ound confu ~ing on pa1>cr. b111 porcrnycd by Sha rp th ey nil ma ke ,en)e. Shnrp\ moio quali1y h bl' h <'VO· bllhv. h I, hard 10 h'>lcn 10 hun wi1hou1 wan.ling 10 join h1b que)t for " TI1e lmpo\~iblc Orcnm."
DON QUtXOTE--NIC Eng· ll sh In s tructor Do, Id S harp f115cin111es the nudlen~ whh hb performance of the knlgbc ermn, In " The i\lan of LaJ\lon, cht1. ''
becomes Doctor Corra~ in che Qu ixote story. is the nwn cynic (t.ra.nsil11c u~ "bud guy"). His cynirum 1s deep nnd well-founded. but not iocurable. n~ i, seen in che final scene. Swon~n·s ,inging ,•oicc is apparently uncnuncd. but 11 is adequace for l hc si nging he docs. and the extreme cynicism of hi, charaner more chan ~ake) up for his ,·oicc There arc onh• cv. o weak spots among the remainder of tht' cast. One 1s che Cnpcain of the lnqumoon (Joe Murphy) . His main p~l'.'C in tht' pin) i, :is o "Voice of God." but his ,oicc 1s more slurred than n is cemble. ll1l' ocher "cal. ,pol 1> of &II places. th e horse~. T:amm, McGov.an and SU2llnnc Gnffits . The, offer II cute and :unu~ing ~idesho", buc 1hcy rome dongerou~I) do~c to upstaging the mnin oc11on Bc,idc,. chc pb.) ':. sttong poinc is ns short:agt' of "cu1c "
Sw, B.aII photo
20&1771 7117
'PrairiP Hom e · wo rth hearing b) Joseph Gramer Lake Wobcson 1s no1 ft rc31 10-. n. Bue cha.nl s 10 the brilllant 1magui:mon of Ganison Kctllor, thh ltttlt' burg in Mmnesou ho. won lWer the hcMtS of thousands. Ketllor reln1cs I'.> the goings on m Lake Wobcgon-"1he htde 10'1\'Jl that ume forgot and 1h01 dcc:adcs canno11mprove··-ach " eek UI 4 lht' radio progr:i.m from St. Paul. Mmn. The sho" . "A Prairie Home Companion." also indude~ a n~b. colorful, a.net) of mu~1c including country. bluegrass 11nd Celtk bllll11ds. Muc~ of the mu~k. bu1 cspeciall) Keillor's ea.s)·gomg . do-.'1) home monologue. is done w1~h a d~·· novorful wuh 1h111 inspires not onl) laughter bu1 ~nous tlwughc concerning a simpler wav of life. The only commcmnb on 1hc:- sho" nre parodies. The most famous of these uc for " Powdcm1ilk Biscuits," which gi~t' "~h) people the m-eng1h to stlllld up and do what needs 10 be done." " A Prairie Home Companion" comes 10 the Coeu_r d' Alene arc:1 11 J p.m. e:ich Sa~urday counesy of SpokAne's KPBX- FM. 91 t on the dw.
Is there any oecai-ion that i.m ·, m fl dP a liulP more fp erial trith 1ri111•?
~o spoil yourself-flatter )'O ur g uPsts -c rPate
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jo.'fu l
atm osphere u:itl, the lo rP~v selection of ,rines f rom Tl1 P Trin p .Uerchant. Fine Trme-Beer-Classu:are -Cifts
6055 S . Gorernm ent Wa,·
Co ufllry hoppes
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Nov. 13. ]981/ Cudlnal Review -6-
New artist exhibits talent by Tracle Albttt5on When sitting in the Communication·Arts Building 1h1s month. ~ou may get the feeling that you are being watched. Do not be ahmned. it mny merely be the e) es of one of the paintings b) Northwest anist Mary K1rbood. who combines a great talent for re&bsm w11h n little awe only found m oil painilngs. On display 1h1s month in the upstairs gallery of the C-A Bu1ldin_g are n collection of pamun~ b) uns Moscow. Idaho an1_s1. Kirkwood was a profe)sor of an 11 the Univer~itv of Idaho from 1930 to 1970. when she reurcd Kirk" oood stated that pam1tng the human figure has been a monn_g interest for all of her producm·e hie. but as a young anist she was taught to be creative. which back then implied being abstract. "When they used the human body just as another object in the painting. it seemed 10 dehumanize 1t." she said Kirkwood said she soh·ed this dilemma by realiz.ing that nbstraction for her was nm something you had 10 invent. but was inherent in the shape of the form itself. Kirkwood's education in an includes
a B.A. dcgitt from the University of MonWJa. an M.F.A. degitt from the Univer:sih of Oregon a.nd additional studies ai H.arvud Uni\'ersit)'. Kirt.wood bu also nud1cd arl abroad m Sweden, Europe a.nd Mc.x1co. She has had one·person shows of her wort m Masscchuseus. Penn~ 1\'lnia_, Oregon. Waslungtoo a.nd lda.bo. She has also exhibited in io\.itational )hows. in llhnois. Colorado. Uta_b and the , onb.... es1 from which she has rccc1,ed numerous •"'am. Kuk•ood'$ ,..ork IS III the perm· anent collttUDn~ of Chene:, C~lcs \kmorial Museum m Spokane the Boi~ An Gallen Bank of Idaho and sc, r.al othu place,; She ~id that pllDung is noc ju)t 11 teduuque. or cscn ii •n)· of thinking . She wd u IS ii feeling •hich ts rooted m one's nature. .. It can't be a.ltcrcd for the Sode of mo,ing v, 1ui the times, but rather is up 10 each o.rttst to choose for h~lf." shes.aid. Some of th;imoungs Kirtv.ood has on dtspla) Uldude "Self In Studio," "Children's Game~ ... ··Tom and Rob· m·· and '"Miss at 12' b',"
"DA\ ID" - -Man) oll p11.l.ntlngs by Mary Kl.rlcwood such u 1hl_1 one are oa dlsp!A) on the second Ooor of the C-A BuJldlng 11nill Nov. 25.
Debaters optimistic after defeat
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in
Oregon
by Marcella Sanchez So ,·ou win a fe"': you lose a few. But losing is not going 10 stop Bill Jeffries from doing what he does bcsl··debat· 1ng . The NIC debate tenm ch:ilked up us first maJor loss 0<'t • .31 m Eugent'. Ore.. ~ four squads \\tnl 2-4 and one team brnke e, en at J.J. Although no one reall} knows "h) the teams d1d so poor!~. Jeffncs said 11 was not be,ause the teams were unprcp:ired. "This ,,as a verv clo~e debate.'' Jeffries said. "We·" ere in striking distance of brcal.ing into the finals.·· The NIC sophomore t>redited p:m of the poor sho"ing to the judging 111 the toumoment. 'Tm not giving c1.ruses for losiog. but the, (the host college) must h3, e found 1·hose judges under :i sk.id row bridge." Jeffries s:11d. "Our first jud!_?e had no i1ea about debate.
S1oden1
admilted
couldn't keep~. and at the end of the debate she 2\ked us. ho... 10 fill out the ballot. I sugge~ed th:it she let me fill it out. but she didn' t agree." ..\~cording 10 Jeffries. ,. hen the teilJII gc,c:. llltO :i deb:11e. the membc:1'$ must deb3te in nccord.lncc "ith the Judges.. ,\ judge who uoders111nds dcbaong is much e:is1er to "Oow" "ith. a.nd the debaters can concentrate on arguing their points. On the other hand. a judge who kno" s nothing about the subjl'CI must be persuaded. "Onl} r,.o judges kept up 11,ith the 3rgumen1s ou1 of six roonds." Jeffries said... We won those I'\\ o rounds a.nd lo:.1 the other four.'' The :i,·:iilabilit} of l:irger libraries giH·s 01her schools an lld\'antage o,'CT NIC. Jeffries said. "One major problem for us is that ,. e have to go to other colleges just to use their larger library facilities.··
Jeffnes 3ddcd that the new library NIC is building will help :i lot. . Jeffries Sl)'S losing is not as bad as 11 seems. "l..osmg L\good for 11!,," he said. "It doesn't let our egos get m the way.'' So what makes dcb:iung wonhwhile for Bill Jeffries? "Well. u·s a good feeling to know uia11he three initials 'NIC- arc enough to make the opposing te:im worry," he said. "Dcbauog is enjoyable to me be· ause not everyone has the ability to be a speaker.'' he said. "If you do, then that's your forte.'' "And I have no problem gemo up and taJhng in front of people... he added. According IA> Jeffries. debaung is no different from any other team sport . "Team,.orlt plays an imponant part in debating too:· he said. '·The team has to work together
beeau~c everyone h0,~ to research a topic. Someo ne h bound to find something on n topic another person doesn't have and will help tum out.'' J e ffries also enjoys working with his debate partner, Rich Kuck. " Without Rich, we: couldn't even compete He's an excclreni dcb:uer. '" None of Ub would be able 10 do anything withou t a decent coach either." he added . "Ju~, look at the reco rd~ . Tim Christie's coaching 1s al>ove e,icellent.'' Jeffne~ feels that thb year's debate te:1m is strong and will demonstrate their abilitic~ in upcoming debates. " W e may nol be 3 S brawny u football or basketball. but the strategy is still uierc:.'' Jeffries and the rest of the debate team ....~11 travel Nov. 14 to Powell, Wyo. fo r II d eba te at Nonhwest Communi ty College.
Cree
Concert scheduled Sunday The Romnniao Folk Fcsti\'31 ,.;11 be presented NO\. IS as the first co~uniry conccn of the sc3son. :ind NIC students will be able 10 attend the ~cnt without being t'harged. . . . . The cont'Cn. whit'h will begin 1118 p.m. in the C·A Butl~g Auditonum, DOrtn3;'JY cames :in admission fee. but because of a deal by N:IC Prestdent Sany Schuler with the oonccn committee. students can be 11dmined free by showing their ID cards. St'huler' s deal will also apply 10 the Empire Brass Quarte1 slated for Jan. 30 and for Stephen and Nadya Gordern. w·ho will perform M~h 31.
H1way 95, 3 miles N o f 1..go Coeur d'Al ene 24-BOUR SBOW INFO.RMADON MA11NEES EVERY SATUR.DA Y AND SUNDAY NlC STUDENT TICKETS AVAIUBLE FOIi SJ.SO PICK OP TICKETS IN SUB, VO-TECH omCE AND C-A OFFICE
No, . 13, 1981/ Ca.rdinal Re,·lew -7-
No PE requirement: NIC students say by Lama Babbard If the majority of NIC students had their '"ay, the present PE requirements '1'1)Uld go right down the locker room drain. According to a Cardinal Review survey taken Friday. 85.4 percent of the students surveyed indicated they prefer a reduction of the present PE requirements. A total of 184 students. or 54.8 percent. said tha1 they would prefer that no PE courses be required. and 103 students. or 30.6 percent. said that they would prefer 10 have only two :.emesters required n11hcr than the present four. When asked 1f they favored mandatory physical education course~ at NIC. 66.9 percent said "no." and JJ percent said '')·cs." However, or the 11 1 that said they did prefer mandatory education. 56.8 percent Indicated that they -.·ould prefer only two ~emcstcrs to be required. Only 11 percent of those surveyed said 1ha1 they prefer 1hc present amount of PE courses required while another 14.6 percent said that they want more than the present amount. According to the t111rvcy, 242 of the studenis, or 72 percent, ~aid 1h31 1hcy feel they benefit from taking phy:.1cal 11C11V1 ty courses. A ioial of 215 students. 64 percent. said they would enroll in spccinlized PE cour~e~ covering team sports, such as basketball, softball and volleyball if there were no PE requirements. Also, 76. 7 percent said they would enroll in lifetime sport~. such o\ hiking. camping and Jogging requirements. if there were no In determining the umount of physical cduc:uion dasses required to be token by 1h )tudeni~. NIC' hos bom>-.cd a concept from onl'ien1 Greece. It -.o~ the Greeb who renllv fathered the idea of bolnncc bc1wec11 1hc mind o~d body. It was their belief that the whole pcr~on wns one 1h01 1,a~ both phy~1cullv and mentally ~ound. To them. mcmal ond physical actlvlt1c\ were interrelated and ln1erh• mcd. Acrording to Rolly Willi11m~. NIC :11hletic dlreetor. th1\ i~ thl' concept bchmd 1he PE requirements. All full -tim e acad c mlr 11ud11nls at NIC 4rt' required 10 take four sc me~tcrs of 11c1ivi1y cour~c\. 'J\,o , cmc\tcr~ of thb requirement nrc taken m 1he lonnof PF 131, the gcnerol oe1h11Jc~ roursc. in the frc~hmon ycnr. After tnkmg thl~ cou1~c. \Ophomores mov enroll m other indh•ldunl ~pon~. ~u<'h o~ 1cnn1~. rnL-quc1boll. bowlin11 Or ,wlmmmg. Accortllng to the NIC <'Ololog. students JO years of ogc or ovor ond ~crvlre vc1eron~ arc no1 exempt from phy~ical educat1\ln actwny requirements. but ma) ~elect 1hc1r four ~cme)ters from any of the onivh) cou rse;, ro1hcr than ho\lng 10 enroll in PE IJ I. Some program~ ~uch o~ nur~mg nllo-. ~tudenl) to be C•Cmpted fl'\\m the PE requlrtmcnt. ho"evcr Student, following the Nl C aatalog, then. " 01tld )pend (over t" o ycnr~l 13t, hour., m PE classes os C()mparcd to 102 hours 1n English If 1al1og the rcqui~ rour,c~ (Engli~h 101 and 102) ooh· On the other hnnd. G\lnug:i Unher.,hy. F.a)lem Washington Unh·Cr\11)', the Um, er,;lly of Montana. 801,c Stntc Un1\CrS11\' and Wash1ng1on S1a1c Umver~lly. all nrc:i roll<'gc, many NIC \tudent1 mav lnlnsfor 10, require no phy,ical educnuon credits in their core curriculum outline,. Simllarl). thc Uni,·cnity of Idaho req111rc~ that tuo activ11y c:our~c, be 111kcn, each during a different academic scs\lon, for a tol41 or two crcdih in lhh area. U1 alto eacluda; lltlldeota wbo are JO vcars of age Or O!dC r. mothers and \'eteuns \\ hose m1hUr)' scrv1ct wai. of lit least one yc:ar's durauon. What 1s the college's rcnsoning. then, for
re
requinng more PE co1tr:ses than other 3rea colleges? Acoord10g 10 De.in of Instruction luy Stone. there is a four-pan philosophy behind NlC° s s«mingl~ "stnct' ph;sical education requirements. .Fbst, through the general ac1M1lcs coarse. ;Ill( hopes 10 1mpan basic motor skills 10 siudenlS -.ho come m v.nh none or ver. hnle of these skills. Secondly. n hopes 10 give people who have been out of school for 3 while an opponunit) 10 restructure I.heir body strength. which. he said. is csscnual 10 mental health. Thirdly. NIC wishes to gi,·c sophomores courses 1ha1 have hfe1ime value through the additional ~election of indi"idoal sports. Finally. physic31 ac1ivi1y. he said. offers students a mental and physical release after studying all day. Stone added that ~C does 001 neccssarilv ha, c an obligation lO do wha1 the other schools are doing. In addiuoo. Williams said the physical acti,,ry gained panicularly in the acti,,nes course can affect 11 student's me in many other v.ays. Pem.aps the most ob,loos is that since most people ore not interested 10 things they do not ha, c skill 1n, 1hc course l'llll\ offer additional avenues of m1crcs1 for 'Sllldents. • "Life ts a mancr of sales." he said_ "Everyone is out to sell something whether it 1s .i produet or themselves. And physical appearance 1s II big pan or tha1." According to Williams. there :ire too mam option~ open for studenlS os for as degree requ1remenlS go. This is C'l'idenccd, he said. by the fac, Chill \tudcnt~ score Im. er on SAT tests no\\ than the> dtd ::?O 10 JO year.. ago ~hen students hod less op1ioM open 10 them. 0
SITIL~G UP-
A PCclass member docs exercises.
" II •C left lt up to lhe smdents to <"hoose -.h.a1 the, ";ui1ed 1otalc," ht )31d "e,cr.one11,ould ooh tole ,'Our.cs that the, are good in. The student th;t doe, "ell 111 English ..,;11 ronunuc 10 take th~ r,~ of <'la~~, bcc:tu\C the, can do 11 "ell, but the Mudent "ho realh need~ it -.on't take n bccau'>t" he 1,n't good .at II," Th" problem. :icrordtog 10 Williams. 1lso applies 10 ph,~t,-.il edu,:uion. The students 11,ho need 1he bJs1c -,I.ills I he most are the ones who -. ould not 1:ike th\: rourscs Ph, ,teal educ:iuon Instructor John O-.eo ~d that PE course\ can be cl:a.ssificd -.1th J ,111ict\ of other eour..e, th"-t benefit students in the ruiurc ,:,,en though the tudenr 1113)' not cn)Oy t:iktog tht cl35s no-. He al~ ~d that one reason for mlm Students' dishlc ofph~:.IC'll acmit} ma) be 1h.1t 1e;r:hers 11 an elemental) level "run them (s1udt'nts) for punish· men1·· and tb!lt some s1udentS continue to thin.I. of PE in this conte.rt. Wllllams. O" ea and Stone aJJ agtffd th:11 NIC' s ph),ic:11 education program would be more effecti,e 1( 11 "ider spectrum of courses could be offered but
said tha1 the college docs not ha,e tht facilities to offer C\e111hing it -.01tld like 10. "I think we do 3 hell of a job \\ ith "hat " e've got.·· Williams s:nd. But C\ en if NtC did h:ive the fodlirics 10 offer more courses. WilliJ.ms said the 3cti\'ilits course "ould Still be required. He added that he belie,es in the concept of the c_xistencc of a silent m:ijOnl) nnd 3 ,oc:il minorit). The people-. ho do no1 like the ":iy the PE program is set up. he said. are most likely a minon1~· "ho wish 10 make II sound like they are io truth n m:ijori1y of students who arc dissatisfied. Be also SIi.id that he ..-:as conliden1 thiu most of the instructors 31 NIC "ere behind the concept of requmng four semcs1e~ of PE. When talking jbout 1he rc le,·ance of l'IIC~ ph~)iC31 educ:.iuon requirements. Stone said. "We ma,· be a linlc old-fosh1oncd nbout 1h1s. but it's n judgment th:tt v.c\,e chosen 10 make Whether thnt is right or not 1s 3 good question.·· Indeed. ' IC mo" be some-.•hat old-fashioned in term~ oi its PE requirements. This i~ probably c,~denccd mo~, bv 1he foci that many of the area uninirs1ues apparently ~ee no reason for making thl),c type, of courses mand:itory On the other hand. Willinm~ .ind Owen contend that ph~ :.ical educ;111on 1s not only necessary. but that if an) thing II is becoming more imponont 111 this a!lc of !I\ id joggers and emphasi.tcd fitncs,. There seems 10 be onl.1 one major dUJercncc bet" een 1he philosophv of ~ome or the other 1ns111u11on, 3nd 1h:11 of IC-\\ heth<'r or not student, ,hould be free to decide for 1hemsc1,cs if 1'1c~ \\.mt 10 be hcahh) m lcrms of ho" the college determines hc:ihh A~ the survey 1nd1c:itcd. most students do not ,,h 10 hiive m:ind:11on PE requirements-or QI le:ist v.ould prefer to h:i,c the requirement reduced. Therefore. n seems thnt the PE dcpnnmcm 11sclf m:i, not li:no-. the extent of the ~tudenh · apparent d1sli~e or 1hc requirement. since William~ soid he feh mos: students did support it. A m:i1on1, of the students surveyed also indicated th11 they -.ould enroll in te:im sports or lifetime ,ports ,r PE "'ere no1 required. Could the college's PE program be JUSI as cffecm c 1f ii required only l"·o semesters of PE nnd repl.iccd the ,cu, itit~ course with these team or lileumc ~pcm? Williams. 0-.en ind Stone all s:i1d 1h01 the main problem v.11h offenng these t}peS of course) 1s a 1:ick of facilmt"S . Bui 1f the requirement were lowered 10 t•·o ~erncs1cn, thcore111:all) onl~ one-half or the prl"Senl ,a.mowu of uudcna "ould be taking PE at one tmlt' and 001 u much equipment "ould be req111.rCd Also. WiJl~ms· point 1ha1 studenti do nor -.ont :lll\1h1ng lo be nundatOf)i ma\ be true. It i~ hard 10 ~) jus: ho" man} of che .,,udents "'ho said they ,.,ouJd ,otunt.1nh enroll 10 non-required PE courses "oUld actualh do so. Al an) rate. a bud look al the matl<'r ~eem~ 10 be .-.unnted. While m:in} agree that ph> sical ae11vit) 1, good for a pcrso>n percent of the studen ts surve>·ed felt ph,)rcal acmiocs cour)es bencfir them), scudents ma, 001 feel it 1s important enough to warrant requinng more hours of PE courses than other academic courses. Williams pointed Olli 1hnt 1f PE were 001 required. students -.ould JUSt h:ivc 10 take something else 10 ~· enough credits to graduate. This itself may be the center of the issue-if 001 so much PE were required. students could rake other courses in us place.
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No,. 13, 1981/ CardlnaJ Re,iew .g.
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DRYTNG UP- A Coeur d' Alc.nc s11.llor prepares 10 111ore the •'Colon.say" for the winier.
BURrED ALIVEYoung Ja;,en l:folcomb or Coeuz d'Alene &al.es a dhc ID the large letf piles the park nnd rel' depanmcnl ha, c stacked up througbool the d i) park.
fAU FLOW- E,en thc cul . rts ii hints or win ter's couch cans '~ ' ~-~wing down azid filling a-p with lea,·es as the first es e uw~pe co go Into hfberna.tloo.
BRA VI.NG T HE COLDYvette Wati. &11d Muyfru«t Dondcllnge-r or the atd,ery &Dd badmJo10a1Pf daa e*1- ,I the lui warm October days.
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No,•. 13, 1981/CardinaJ RcYicw -9-
SANDY WAV ES-The campus l,ea_ch of Lake Coeur d'Alene takes on a dJffcrcnl look when conJLnictlon machinery mal<es Its mJU'k on the sand.
btumn falls on Coeur d'Alene Ph oto ... by Brenda Mw7,hy, ,' 'tan Hall, Paul &iPr. . 'lta rly11 Dittman \L0,1~G TRACKS-
a nd Grel! LytlP
These rallro~d lmck<, on the edge ,i pre-,.•lnlcr blankc1
of lhe cl!) part. nclll campus receive of autumn lcues.
SMALL WONOER- -t bc <"olor£ul lca,cs provide a curlou1 Jeff Holcomb wllb i.omclhl ng 10 pla) "Ith In his frool yard before Ibey arc ral.ccl away.
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NO PICNIC--Wc1 fall weather bu broo.gb1 a.o end 10 the picnic season In Coeur d'Alene.
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Nighttime dramas really 'unope ned letters' by J~pb Gramer
From 1he da"'n of ume mlllJlund hu sought to discover the significance of dream~. Dream\-tho~ m, sterious dramas that tnhabn our minds a.s "'e sleep In 1his modern age of ,1dco games. mic ro" a,e o,ens. de\i11ner Jeans, fuel-effic1cn1 car1. eluir,ra•e stereo SHtem,. birth control d~-u:n. rommunist th reats ~nd a m1lhon other I\SUC\ 10 duce r ou r 111en:ion to ma1 cn1I lOn'lderauons dreams ha•e for the mo\t part b~cn rckpted ID tbt real m of \Upt r ,rn Jll Mon~ people rrport :.h.&t they do not even remember their drcacs Of thou "ho can rec•II their ,-h1011s of tJ:e ni ght. before the~ diutpate 1~ the morning light. fe"' \ttm to thutk much of them. You cannot eai tbete, d.,!ll them. ~mol:e them. cuh them ID, make love 10 them. nor "ill the, bl.1ld a bener car-so " h, bother for most, anal.ning dreams for &D) aesthetic purpo5e appears be tht task of bearded ps_,·ch1atnsa. emacintl'd holy men 11nd fll\ mg maru.a~ . In th e :incicnt "orld. ho" e, er. drenms were taken , en· •enoush The Bible places a good de31 of emphasis on the noc1umnl , ,~ions of Joseph and Daniel. 10 name ju51 l\>O, God, according 10 the book of Job uses dreams in his dealings "11h mto. " In a dre:im. in :i ,·1sion of the night. "'hen deep , Jeep falls c,n men u the, slumber in their beds. he ma, speak into their ear~ . " Evid.:nce of prophetic c,r 01hel'\, 1~e in,p1ra11on~I dreams .ire found m the hoh· writ of otht'r leading religions 100. :1, "Cit os Che htcran ,,orls (If Homer. Plato. DBnte 3nd Sh3kc<.peare. In former dJ\\ I.ind 1n mam "le~ sophis11c-a1ed" p11rts of the· "'orld 1c,d11~) dreams have ofien been cons1dcn·d to rontain dh me or demonic mes~ses The, ha\'e been used 10 diagno,c illnesses and to determine the cou"'e of an indh idual's spintual life. as m the Cl1l.e of ITl.ln, American Indian tnbe!>. Dreams hJl\e often sel'\ed as \o\lffl·
rngs (• bcther heeded or notl of 1mm1nt'nt uaged~ The hisiorical il.C· C'OU.DlS of dreams expenent'Cd b~ the
..,,es of Jul= Caesar ud Poanu.\ P1la1e arc eu:mp~ cl this ~era! fimou.s figurt's, indudml! ,\t,rahJ.JD Llnc-ol::i aod EDgli<.h poet Pere, B Sheik. a.re s.1d to ha,e had drums
hi\ o" o fig ht who studied under Freud. =d of the Freudian rooccpt "The bnm 1<., 1~cd a., an appendatic of the gcnual gl:lncb " In hi<. hfc and literatul"f.', Jung put mt>rc .: mph .is1, on rndl\ 1du.:il mc.1nin1t io the ..,, mbol, in,ohed \\1th dream<.. He (cJ1 100 lNII drums att a tnajor
mea n5 Qr 111pping the •·collective unconscious," "' hett the andC'nt rmn~n1, of m:ankind', ~piritual lifo he h1\ldcn bcnc.11h lhc dc~cn~nb.t'd ,., 51. ment, of the motlcm world. Fnr manv. th is grcnt fo,.,faraw over drcnms mt1\ SCt'm vcl) t«hnic31 and m1s11£\ tng Bui the final, hypothctklll n~~ull •~ pence of mind, 3 better und.:1~1anllin1< of hfc and the c,urdsm of p\'r,1\ICnt, p,ycht\ll'g1cal gh<•\ts. Writer f.rkh Fr,•mm ~aid that drc ;1m, ~re " thl" 11nc universal Jan, ~uo~.- the hunh111 race ha~ ever d<'veloped. the me for all cultures and thr,,u~hout hl,tory." But to undrr,ron<l 1hi\ longua11c, as Juoi;: pomtcd ou1, 111lu.• , 111tt'llc11cnct Orcnm 1n1crprr1,111on I~ 11111 for unlma, jllllUth t· mind, J111l require, an m, nt•J,t•d \elf ll\\Or\'OC\\, Onr, thlnl of ow lhl'I 1, a~nl In \ lt·,·p. I~ it wl\C 11, dl\ml" 1hnt panion uf our th,,, '" 11 mere me{ hanlcal
,u
~h11td1m n1
An unhn11 tu th,• Tolmud,
11 Jcwi\h
houk of wi~dom· "l)rc,1m, whi1·h arc 11111 1ntt: rprr 1<·d urc like lcllcr, which
hnl<' • h1ch forboded tlw!ir o"' n dc~hs.
The quc,11on rem:ain\: What are dream\ and ho• arc the} to be interpreted' Papert>ad.s oo dream tnlt'rpfCl&UOD UC &\2Jlable at almo<.t an) boohto:e but mo<.t of these do-11 'l'Ourielf booh arc about a~ rd1able h oc• spa per horoscopes. Orr m, lil.c fat h :and romanus. mu<.t b... t, ~MU!f'.l oo an ind1vidu.1I ba\1s Sw!T'uod Freud of count>, h a big n.:11rc ,n the dr~m aruh-sis bus1oe5s. F n:ud 1, to be ccmmcodcd for briogmg dr.. jm~ ba t mto a sdcnufk realm H1~ thC'Oric, !>t.Uc th.it dreams are ao indil'1diw·s •ay of acuog out h1ddet1 fantliie, or drives Th~ drives arc marnh considered to be associated ~ ith ~1ual repression Sintt then, ho,.e,er. man, ba,e bombastcd Freud'\ theories· for bemg too limited m their srope. Ca.rt J11Dg, 11 oot.ed psJchologist in
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brcn upt"nccl "
r···F~;·;·c;;·~-~~dl~~~;~·-·· .!•
Firs t Draft Beer Free on Fridays ID 's Required
:------------------------Coupon---------------- ----· 1
$1 .50
$1.50
Burger & Fries
Servin g Coeur d 'Alene and North Idaho for five years .
Fu jico
Rkoh
Canon
Kodak
O lympus
$1.50
Pentax
Camera Corral
Tuesday
v ;v;tor
Special
846 N. 4th St.
.i i
"Your Friends in the Photography Business " Under New Ownership The Established Cus tom er Satisfaction Store.
Film . Process ing, Darkroom Supplies , & Accessories Open Monday through Saturday 9:30 o.m. - 5:30 p.m.
I I.~ -
at the Fort Ground
l $ J•
5
Q Bdng coupon when you come$
J•SQ
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t - ---~~~~~~~....,~.-..-...................................................Ml~ O~ IMIMOMOMIMIMOMIMOMO~·-J
Nov. 13, 1981/Canllm.l Review -11-
DavidS wins regional crown; Cards place fourth ..,. Marcela s-die%
Tht aim of most cross country runners s,hen their season first begins is to run their best at regiorws. And that is just what three Cardinals did Nov. 7 in Salem, Ore. Chri sty Davids. Mit e Friess arrd Jes~ Gore were the runners from NIC to place in ihe top 15 pl~ in lasi wee.kc:nd"s NJCAA Region 18 Championships. qualifying them for the narional championships Nov . 14 in W1ch1ta, Kan. Davtci., u anal, Id Ont place with a run of 24: 12. while Priess captured 13th place with a rime of 25:31 and Gore ran 25:46 to crui~c into 15th place. Overall, the NIC crnu country ream captured fourth place by falling behind Clachmas of Ore., College of South· ern Idaho and Ll111e Community Col· legc. Other team members who placed high in rhe rankings were Don Martin,
32od ; J erry Arledge. 33rd; Mike Eggleston, 36th: and Joe Alward.
37th. Fr~hman Suzie Muwell • ..,,ho suffered a stress fract ure late in rhe
•
Cbri.11, Da•ich
f__c_r_s_po_r_ts__J Take-down event next b) Dru~,:, M,dlcn
1'he Cordlnol wrC\thng 1e11m open\ up its 1981 ,ampa1gn Saturda) b) pining 1111\I IU n do1.cn team \ in thr NIC 'I a~cd11wn Tournament, an all -day roumCJ hcg111ni1111 al 11 n.m Tl11' toumomcnt murk\ 1hr fi rst ofncinl m m~ 111,on for rhc Cards 1h1s su..on, althoul(h 1hcy had ~n unomc,al morch Nov. 7 ngain~t rhctr 11lumn1 lhc li,1 or panklpntlng team~ for the rnkcdo"n tourn<') I\ no1 ,erified )Cl, but C'oal.!1 John 010.c:n c:~rlmntr d thnr appNximnt.-1) 150 individual) be oo hand. Among Ihe lcom) olrcody vc:nficd arc 1-.astcm Wa~htn1J1Dn Unl\crs111. Montana Montana l11at1•, lllg Ot•nd. C'nlu111b1a Bn~1n ond Gro), llarbor O"rn ,u1d ht:' I, l>oth Antlou~ and opt1mh11c nhou1 gc111n11 inru campe11t1<>n. " We r.·Jllv havr an ,·, ~·Iring ream." he , n1d " Wr h,l\c ii roupk ,.,..a1, ,pot\. but ",: Im r ~Cl mon) 0111\tandinJl 111<11\ 1duah that "<' ,hould be a I cl"\ tough toornnmcnt 1cnm."' On,• ~p,11 "hero that dc1uh ti. quire ,·\ldC IH ,, at l'IO j)l'Und,. "htch ha\ 8111 C'a1n anti Tnm 11am, bn1thnt1 t.11 rhc t,1p , p,1t Caln dcfcarc.-J llarri~ b1 onh o~ pcunl 111 tht·1r fir-t chnllr ngc ma1, h lo~t " eek. a.nd O-..cn 1l11nu the battll• 11.111 Uftc on all
season. ran Satunhy and pl3Ced I th in the ...-omen·s dhisjou. Team csplaln Dan Brooks said the ream ,.'2s ouuanding and that Friess. Gore \.fanin and Arledge bad cxcellcn1 runs. "These bo\"S ran the best race 1ha1 the> ba~e all year:· be said .. You v.od: all year to do }OUT best in this race. and they '4et"e able ro do it. "Each and C\,CT)· one of these guys hu·t rully comributcd 10 rht ream and m3de tt wh;ir it is:· "This team is the best one that h3s C\,er come lhl'Ollgh NlC. • be added. Davich, ...-bo wear the entltt season undefeaied. did 001 fed good about th" course Saturday. " l h.ucd the mursc, •· ~ S.\Jd. ··11 •·as pretty pmmc. Thct"C is no .. ay )"Ou can USOC1ate cross coun~ .., ,th runmng in a p;uk.'" ··,u 1 •hole. the ream didn"r do as ..ell as '"<' could ha,e beau~ lhe cou~ we ran on differed £Tom •·har we were used to. This cou~ ,u.s re~y Oat and fa~:· Gort said. " \',,"e trained no lhe h1lh. and uben ,ou're used to that u s , CT) hard u, idJUSl." " \\ C had the poimtlaJ lo plat'\' ID the rop r•o spots. bur rbe t'.onrschAnd1cappcd u \. ht- .lddtd According to Gort-. •he compc:111on thu >car " as also mod: lw'dcr th an last vcar. ··11 .-u a n-al flit race and 1 1oo;h meet," he u,d. "This tells )OU o;ome1h1n1t aoou: tM rompt"',lllo..,." Chcrall. Gore thought ,1r did v.cll and inributC) a Ii>! of the sua.-css to
h.lrd "'orl :ind dedication. And rhe h:i.rd '"-ork is nor Just ph}sic:aJ-much of ii is psychologiC31. Gort belie,. es 3 person hllS to "'.\DI 10 run :ind should file ir. "l we ~erythiog. no maner ho" much ir huns. I just think about how beocfie1~ 11 is."· • It"s no fun. in the sense of getting our there:· Gore sJ.td. But after ,·ou do. it feds good.·· · "You ha,c to ha,e rhe mental anirude to keep you going. Chrmy is so far ad~anccd o, er us. II we get tired :ind slo11. dov. n. he· s I here 10 push u~ and kttp us going Chrisl} has nor onl~ helped u~ through his runmng. but also through his training and mental armudts ... · 'The big thing I did." Davids said. ··,.as 10 gel the guys going when they "en- rircd This prepllttd them mentllll}. lhou ·..-c nor strong. you lu!,·e to be ~m3n:· Team member; appear opumi.,tie obour the upcoming nt111onal meet. ··\\ ell I thinL Chri,11· will ,11n n,uion:ah ... Brooks snid: .. Nobodv c,·cn chilllenged him :11 regionals '"JcS5o: placed 48th last }Car. and rm ,ure he'll imoro,e. I :ilso cxpeu \,ltlc (Fne\s) 10 bc right 10.t1h him:· 00
00
,\ ccord1Dg 10 Dai ids. he's nor thinking .tbout n3tinnal~ right no". · 1 don ·1 rcall,· "'Oil) .ibour things like rhar." he said. "h ju\l iidd~ cxrru prcs~urc. The linle nm,: I hnve right """' to train 1, '<hat·) important to mt."
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\t'l\1111
ltcn1 Y" c1i:ht Onrryl Pc1c~n hi\ , hcd al~u1 50 round) ,mcc llbt sc:i. n • hen he ftn1\h~d 1hird at nnt1onah un d h ll\ look d ··real 1mpre.,,I\<'" 1n h1, challcn~ ,.,c,rlln,l, a, 1."(lrdlng 10 0" r n l.ilcwi,r tor fclltl\1 r.:1um111g 1\II· A\ mcn, .\n, J1di. ·,~hohon tlSOI and Bttnr Barnt, 1158). 1ht· future ~ccm:. bright. though the lanrr coold i;cr a ~trOng challcn,tt' from w phumon: Dan• C'ouls,)n, The 142 pound chi" al:.o aprcar.. e:.prc1alh rou~h t\t'n "'1thout \ lasbn t.ttc L"hamp1on R4nd,· l alv,, "'ho ,s "dcltnt-d intl;·finucl) "1lh ;a UIC'C 1nJim Ccwge Paucr:.<>n and Dan H11lligan arc ronre:.rmg tht· lJ~·pound ~l<>t. ;ind foJd Glbh)II and T.J Ncbon o.rc the ll'Admg candld.ilh .ir 121.1 Jim KIIX'ttcr. B r...o 11ml' ) lat e.' c-hnmp from \\ uhingron. i:. almo:.t re,.-o,cl't'd rrom the \h<>u!llcr wrgcl) heh.id ni ot " ceh ogo 11.nd should cllalltng(' tor that ,p.>1 also. 0'<cn ~aid. The l"'o h,1pcfub at 118 llN! Mau Wa\ rn and Bill Bradlc, T Airer the Tal cdown ToumC)', the Ca.rd:. tr'3, cl south foe rhe ~ St.i1c , oumamcnr No, . 20-21 and rhen return ra ho:.t the Unl\'Cl"SI!\ of Monrsoa the :?-Ith 1n their ftr..1 dual m~t of rhc :.cilSon. • In the alumni match the Cudinals pulled our a nam>"' JJ.JO , 1l."!Gr)' u heavyweight Darryl Peterson '"On a C>-3 dcd$1on and 12C>-pound Jim Kloc:tzcr $COtCd the only pin of the march. Blll Cain, Tom Harris and Rocky F'1SSc«c also sdded deet:.1011.) to bring the Cards bad from a J0.24 deficit, as did Todd Gasrun. Phihp ~ul. Ed Holt, Da,; d Coulson and Brian Krausse. 0
SMll.E \\1Dl.E YOU CA.'i-Alum.aw. I.an)' Rad.ford Qpi. aMacceufully for a.a f:Salf)e bdo.re !'1.lC fttdim&D Jim Kloccur scones a plD l.bal wu jua cooq.b ol • ~ lO &l'--e !he Card 'tO'Uders a 33.30 ,iclory o•cr the Ahz.mnl.
No,•. 13 . 19al/ Ca.rdlnal Review -12·
Trampolining beneficial, fun sport for everyone b) GN?g Lytle.
What is ii that LS so e.th1brating about escaping lhc bonds of gra, It}·• Manlund has had an ongoing obscs· s1on wnh becoming airborne ever smcc the Wright brothers succeeded 10 mainuuning night But e,cn if one ts hanging suspended in \pace for only a momem. the senso>tton ,, the ~me Trampohnmg. although DOI qc11e lile O}ing. 1, one ..... , 10 nou 1n m1da1r, su~pcnded onh b\ one's o,r.11 mc,uc,n and the fori:c of g•a\lt) . 1 he f1r\t dt\lCC 1n•cnted -.h,ch rcm<lti:h re)Cmblcd the moder :rampolme "'u called the "iups " Developed b~ coun J«tcrs In the ;:uddle age\, ltlp, v.erc consuacted or 1 reseltcnt pl3nk or 1<ood wppc.ncd b~ a block on e11her end Performing on th,, de\'lee :-eqi:.rcd COMtderable slall as ;he p cl •·as no; ,er- 1<ide «J foo1111 tbc mos: and did no1 pro"ide a son landing Nets used for rebounding unde: circus trapeze performcn "'ere the ne:irt step closer to lhe tnmpohne, a:id one such performer. a F~nchm..an. du ..Trampoline.·· "'as the mar. behind 1hc de\'elopment of the moocm :rampohne. portu:ularh lhe spnng suspen· '>ion \\ stem used tod3) The word "trampohnc.. 1s Spanish for dl\mg board. but 1od.- It dc~,gnotes the sport itself. Fi~, bccormng populJ.r dunng the /
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bcginl'ing of the second V.'Orld wu "hen the mned fol'C'CS introdu~ it mto their tnming prognm. tnuupoinmg has become an AAU-sancnoned compern.he ~port and 1S Ultcmationall} recognized. Wi:h the lir-;1 v.orld championships 1n London m 1%4, tnmpoh.ning has de- eloped lllto ooe of the youn~st compe11m e sports 10 gair inrern.atioaal Sia IUS ..\ rnodcra trampoline 1S cc,mpo<t'd of 1 mt'tal frame. a D\ Ion web bed I to I J -1 n<hes thkk and tn , M\1n11 ,;ucs) and a ser!C\ of c-il.hc: rubber cords or metal ~pnng,; sur.oand1ng the bed Then: are hundred, of st.,!h tlut can be ;;,c:rfcn:ied on the rramp.>linc. and to namc and explau: all ol thc-m "ould r~ut..--c too muc!1 space, oot to mcnuon bormg the: put~ off most of the rcadcn T•o of w more timple m,lllcu~en. •huh a:r :he ~ for w ad~an«-d t:racpoli..lll an: !be flip (front and b:u:l. from the feet. lDC!n, ,tnmai:h or ba.."1 , a:id tbc t•nt (performed "'llh lbc flip or :llonri. These i,.1:1 uWi rombmc to form the ~ of LIJ trarnpolme rouunes. Com• pliated JUmP\ lite the B.inn1 (a balf r-.ur n2 front somers.1ult feet to re1:t v.1th.la1ic,ing s1~ht of the bed I and the F',iffa double WlnCTs.lUII \O.llh i half r-.ut froi:t er b.idl :arc l\\o of till more
greg lytle
Dodgers deserved it What the Dodgers did to 'ew Yon ,.as one of the most ~T\l.ag World Series ,1e1orics r,c eHr seen. res. Dodger fans. they re31ly did It this time, after 16 years of collllllg close, it finally happened. And for my mot1ey. they couldn't have beat 3 more descr-'lllg team After losing l'\\O 10 the scemmgl) invmcible Yankees, the bo),s from L.A. tra,·eled to the West coast and left behind a barrage of headline$ inferring that the DodgeD were 001 even fit to play on the same fteld "ith the !Olghty Yaoks. Bo.t the ooc,e Brooklyn Doc1gel'$ pro, ed Yaakee lzigcoa!l) "'as nol enough to finlSh the JOb and send the Dodgers home once 3gain as losers. 11 seemed that pocuc jusrit'C ptt''lWcd 11Dd lhc Dodgers pulled off the s;ime miracle that NC\> York managed in lhc 19~8 series. whitewashing the opponent three straight at home after going lll iv.·o games dov,n. And It ,..oaJd be an anderstatemen1 to say tlw the Dodgers had a rough rime getting to the series. Ag111nst Houston in the di\isioaal mini-series foll011.ing the player strike. the Dodgers found themsc1'es do..-n ().2. L A. then woo three su:iight to :idnmcc to the N3tional League Playoffs where. a.her falling behind 2-1. they won two g11mes in Monttcc:i.J to cod up in the series. It Sttms that L3sorda and his comcbad tids th.rive on ~ c . not k.nov.ing what to do if they're not in desperate shape. But no matter how they did It, the fact remains thllt they did ,;,;in the World Series. And to some of as born-en-the-frontier 11;enerncrs, the series meant more than a victory O\er the Yankees. it was just as macb ll \'ictory o,-er the Big Apple. Nev. York.
d1fficul1 maneu,ers whic;h m11:h1 u l(e a
,c:l.l' of prac:ticc to master. ~
So. if the ide3 is to improve
coordina11on. to get in shape for u.ii or Just ~o have fun. the tnmpolln., ~ somcth1ng for everyone.
FLIPPING OUT- Tnunpollnc cnthuslut Jodi Warner dltplaya the aklll ..i eoordlnadon ncccs!>III') to perform a halr-twlstlna front tomel'1Wllt.
NIC girls basketball coach
looking forward to year by Barry Baker
Wich nine returning basketball pfayers. NIC Co:ich Greg Cnmp will perhaps have the leadership needed to put together another cha mpionship squad as they had a ycnr ago. Wit.h five of the lirs1 su scheduled games for the NIC girls buketball team being against fou r-year institll· tions. coach Crimp saJd, " I don't see an easy game on our 26-game schedule." Much individual work h.is been done o,er the past summer to improve the team's abilities which should help compensate for lhe lad of height and speed on thu ;ear's team. Jackie Flett and Trish Boyles arc the onl) l'\\o 5t.1rters rewming from last year. Vickie Han, i>·ho was mainly a reserve player last ycu. will also play a.a imponant role in the Sllccess of this ye.u·s game plan. The majority of NIC's ball players' tickets to play here ha.s been through
rccr111tlng. Only four walk-on, have 1ried ou t for Crimps squad this yw. " Depending on what position has to be filled for the upcoming seasoo. I took for a ballplayer who can fit into our scyle of baske1ball. Our game pllll depends on the personnel I have." Crimp said. Will i1 be a repeat of last yw1 Oa11 time will tell. Filling the shoes of Sara Sullivan. the team's leading reboaader a yCllr ago. will be difficult for Crimp, Two 01her starters 1ha1 will noc be bad are forward Kim Hulme and gutd Kim Tarply. . . This )'Car's ccam roster will u,clade Carolyn Kleid, Jann Cherry, Kay Hoff, Karin Robe rtson. Mindy Bowman. Vicky Brov.n, Deann• PetenOII, Kalb1 Cl3ffey. Terrie Mort. Trish Boyle. Jackie Aen and Yickic Han, Ci ndy Boylan. Kelly Wood= Michelle Laub will join the tum their duties as volleyball players c,,to an end.
No~. 13, 1981/Cardinal Review .13.
Lea:, lted li<'l.e r This O,c-monch-old pup " Ould nnhcr
~
chasing ca~ tluin ta.lJng o~icnct' l l"lllnlng; ho,. c,cr. his m~ler ~:n s .. no' ' l o lhe
mucb-lo,ed spon.
·
Brenda Marpb) pboto
Outdoor program offers end to student apathy byGre11 Lytle Student apathy: h I\ a famll, nr ~ubjcct. especially 111 NIC. TI1crc nrc 11 wide rnogc of reasons for not getting involved with cnmpu\ nclivhic:i.. nnd mu,t arc very 1100d one~. Working ~tudcnt'> borcly have the time to keep up with their Mudi cs. much less spend time g('lling Invol ved with s1udcn1 nctivl11cs. Ou1-of-1own Mudcnti. ~pend their weekend'> with the family and II lorge pan of the remaining Mudrnt~ con be found )pending their weekend'> patroniong one or two of the local ba~ or drinJung away the evening (and much of the morning) at a pany.
Bat If d.ere are~- able bodlef out there who arc Just a lluh: tired of th e umc old drcal)•. do" ntown weekends, then the :.olu tion to thl~ perturbing problem is nght under their feet . It ,s downstairs in the SUB "here th e Outdoor Recreation adventure begins. Once the decision 10 take that first '>tep u reached a.nd onr dares to enter the ominous office or Coordinator of Student Activities Dean Bcnncn. the rest ls downhill. Bennett will usher the interested party into the Outdoor Rccr~ation Hcadquaners (also down$talrs 1n the SUB) a.nd bemuse and befriend. baffle and brainwash the unsuspeaina student h110 a sutc ot outdoor ecstasy.
........ a.w,....., ...
Qamloe Is that ftra ~ tbe iahlatlve aad brealdaa out of the
boadaria of die awaap t'Ollca,etowa
weekend by enhblmg wnh Benncll's bunch anti opening up all ktnd\ of 1n1c:rc~llnK avenue\ a.nd 1ltema11v~ The prohh:m. ac.wrding 10 Bennen. b that \tudcnt, arr not gcnina the outdoor re<'rc111u>n mes:.age in front of them euough 10 get them tn1ercs1cd m the uuttloor 11hcmotil'e " At ~me or the bigger uni,crs ,ues. hke the Unl\er..uy of Idaho. -. here Ih\'y h11, c: 11 big, really re,•, ed up outdoor rc,. program," Bennet I \.1.1d " th~v 3rc in a ~i1ua11on -.here the) hove \ tudt'nts constant!) on campu... Dorm ,tudc: nt) outnumber olT·campu, (s1uden1 s) and II t ) a lot easier 10 find people that ort'n'c going home and are looling for some l md of outlet other thin hitting the bim." " llerc INlCI, " c J~c ao on d.e :u:.umption 1h11 there arc some sru• dents ou1 there :ind it':. JUSt th11t the)' h11,·en'1 rc'Dd ll :.1gn or ~ n mfonncd ot something by the reader board. " We're going 10 ha, e 10 hum those 5l\ldt'D1S OUI , " he addffl. The " assumption" that there arc 1n1ercstcd Students out there s.ttms 10 be valid one in spne of the lad: of interest. Bennett said 1ha1 when the outdoor rca-cation program displa)'Cd • sample of their wilderness gear 8\'&ilable for rcnr. the response wu good.
But when chc time came to have a
mcctiQa. only su people showed ~four ol them fxulty ~
n. . . ..., ..... tchcdulcd
10 get undcf"'a) I'> crt>~:.-.."l>llDI~ ~mg dm,~ Benncn "ill be dtre'Ctmg 1ll the Ol'Jr future The ehn,cs sre f~ and Are open 10 an~ nlerestcd studcn~. In the pu1 . /\IC hu rented croS\· coun1n '> l,a:. 2nd boob. But the program ~uffCT't'd some una,01dable problems v. 1th the ma.Jntcna:icc of the ~us and the program us dropped.
Dean Beanea
lknocn said that to gee the disCOWlt , Sludcnts must bnng the1r ID ards ro hi.$ office rmd he v.ill g1~e the Student a coupoa ,.;hi::h will ~ good for a discount on rcoul.s. This J'ear. the college will be opcntiog in conju:netioo v.ilh Wilderness Mountainrcring. a local sporting goods store. and ,.,jll ~ offering d!sco.nns 10 dlo5e students who •ish to rent Ol>SS<OIIJltr)' equiplDCSlt. A byulaa dbde la .... OD the
outdoor rec agcndl. but enough un til intent is generated. no mee11ng~ ",II be held. So far . .1ccording 10 Benneu. there ha, bc:en enough interest 10 keep the 1de.1 .11i\'C, bu t more input 1s required 10 mo, e .:, n 10 the n<'~l stop. securing pool time .11 the YMCA for the ehni~. In the )pnng. 1he ka~·3kers "111 be 1al1ng mps 1.:, , .inous ri,er~ m the .ire2. )Uch as the St. Joe. Upper Pries,. Coeur d'Alene and the Spokane rivers. Another altcrnatl\·e to the ordinary w~ , eod. and Bennett's latest sC'hemc 1uhe .,rgamu11on of a ski dub at NIC. The pouilriht} of funding from the school board nett yea r and the proponuon of joining the National Collegiate Ski As~uon were discvucd at the fU"lt mcctmg Nov. S. TM !'iCSA "m give the club the opponu<1r IO ~ nd m for ski films. poilrn :atld ma1l,ng buJle11ns. The fee far J01Dtng the "'CSA 1s S40 per club for Alpine slmng and SJO per club for ~ ordJC. Also 11 the mecung. a decision wa.s ma~ to combU1e those mtercstcd in Alpine md Cross-counrry skiing into one org~ iZ11t1on. The nc11 mecung of the ski club will be held today at 3 p.m. in the Koorenai room. adjacent 10 the SUB's main dming room. Bcnneu said that the one thing missmg from the outdoor recreation program is ,·cry similar to the whole reasoning behind the program. "The only thing we're lad.in& is people:· be said.
Nov. 13, 1981/ Cardinal Review -14-
Cheating carries genuine penalties Once upon a ume in the land of Aradcmia. 1here "as a man nam~ Sons. Boris was a s1udcn1 and a \•en· hard-11,orking one 11 that. He usually go1 abo\'e-averagc grades in his cla<,)es at Foghorn Commun1t) College (FCC) 110d planned ID ,io on after 1..-0 years 10 P1cc.idill> Un1vcmty for Spies (PUS). Ho" ever. near the cod f Bor-s · second ,·ear ar FCC he came up against 3 typical college p~em. He suddenl) rcalii~ thai he 1utl been letting his wo rk 10 one panicular course slide bccnuse of the press~s of other classes and outside activities (his job. his g1rlfneod ~awha, etc ) With a rest coming up. Boru decid~ that he had bcncr do something fast tf he was to keep up bis grade in tlus panicular class. so he fell b3ck on an old trick he had used in high school. As distastdul as the idea seemed. he decided to cheat oo the opct1mmg 1es1. After all. thought Sons. I got 3WLI) \\ith it in high school. And e,cn the one time I didn ·,, nolhing very drastic happened. Besides. 11 'll just be this once and if I don't. I'm ~ure to f_ail the 1es1. So Boris gave it a ti) . But alas. somethmg went wrong. and he \\3S cnught. Oh well. Boris thought. after the initial embarrassment of being caught was over, I'll probably jus1 get an official reprimnnd and ha,·c 10 rtpellt the course. But the unexpected hnppened and \\ithin a "eek, Boris wns out looking
SUB Basement Board alters plans again by Laura Sabha.rd Plans for C'ClllSl";Jction in the SUB basmen1 ace agllin being changed 10 help pre,ent po- s1blc theft there. On the od,,ice of NIC President Barry Schuler. the ASNIC Student Board votrd ov. 10 to plarc Cootdl nator of Student Activities Dean Bennett's office in th<' current ~,oragc place for the NIC Bookstore. Tb.ls. Schuler sa1d, would gh c Bennett a ~ to keep watch OVff genernl acti:vitv in the basement and the equipment there. The board "'a.s cspcciall,· co_nccmed about the loc111ion or the game room. which 15 near the west exit. lo addiuon to ha, ing Bennett in the nreti to watch <tudents, the board lllso dt.srus.<cd the possibilityorha~mg on clectncal alnrm sy"em placed on the door. Schuler and Director of Au:cila!') Services Wes H:itch also told the board 1ho11hcv could utilize the entire open 11rea in the basement rather than the small po-rt ion they " ere already building ln. The board has tentathe pla.ns to place addlilonal , - and vn,dlq machines there. Hatch once again womcd the board about a possible loss or income rrom g.uncs because of the rcloc111ion of the game room and about ~ccunl) problems they would be facing. The board al~o voted to relca•e SIS.000 of the restricted fund to nnlsh construction in the btJ.Sement Sin« the dcbau, ream, pep band and cheerlcadert "don't need government," and arc rea lly run by Instructors. the board reverstd Its c1111Jer dtet\lon 10 require con~titution, from these orgnnitutlon, on the request of Greg Tolbert. In other businC$S. the board: - -hen rd o rcpon from ASNIC Vice Prc)1dcn1 Randy Keefer that 100 people 1howcd up 10 give blood ot the annual Blood Drive Nov. 10. Of the I00, 'l l were lncllglblo, but ihc nu mber of people giving blood "'a\ up 13 from last year. - -henrd a repon from Activities Director Dione White on the upcommg Mu ~cmlar Dystrophy Marathon Donce being held Jan. 22-2J. Some of the pm~ will mclude o stereo nnd a TV, nnd the dance will be run on an md1v1dulll b:isls rather thon II couple basis thi~ year.
for a Job He had be-en cxpcll~ from FCC In adduion, be mev. th31 PUS ..-ould never ICCeJ>{ a nudcnt who bad been caught chemng. so all of his hopes for becoming a spr "ere cashed. The point of all of this is that cheaung docs OCC1l1 and can have \"Cr) ~enou.\ results. The pcnalnes lis~d 10 the AS\IC Student HAndbook range from a •T11ten or \CTbal wunmg to OC1tnght e:rpulsJOn. Dun of Student\ ~ Hogan uid 1hu non:all~ the that a particular case of cheaung 1s hand!~ is left up 10 the 111Structor of the guilty student. He uid that he hli found that mcxl of those a.ugbt chcatmg. ··are good students "'ho don't ha,e to cbe.it." ll JUSt seems to be a .,..., out ..,, hen the, "gc1 bebmd the eight ball." The m@idual stUdent has to d«ide if. in the long run. cbeaciog is rully wonh n 'The student bu 10 undem.a.nd." Hogm said. "that the primU) reuon for being in a course is to leans as much 3S posS1llle.''
.,.,y
One i~rrucror rcpo-ned that he had caught c1gb1 $1udcoh cheatint on tesu m hh clllSes last vear. Other instructors quest10ned also reponed ra1ching I fe-« cheaters e:ich year. Ho"'C\er Hogan said that be had read that mer an upsurge in cheating in the !%Os and 1970s. in 1980 a decrc:uc "'as ~howo. "But:· one inst:roctor satd. ··1hose are the ones tlw h3ve been caughr. The ones w1 are good 11111 we·u ocvcr ca1ch."
Campus security reports drug find The NlC campus securiry log shows that two marijuana joints were found in a c:ignrene pack on campus Saturday, Nov. 7. According lo lhe campu_s log. the joints were found on the gym floor on the day of the NIC wreslllng match ngolnst the alumni. , No further items of significance were reported on the log.
Annual smoke out Nov. 19 by Jade.le Appel
Brenda Murphy pl,010
READY TO PUFF-The American Cancer Soden 's Great Amerlcaa Smoke Out, which Is scheduled for No,·. 19, "ID ghe parllclpan~ a day w!thoa1 ,eno"' nails and smelly fingers- and perhans a chance al .,..n1:.... r- 11v1•
For the fifth consecutive year, the AmericaD Cancer Society is sponsoring the national Gr~t American Smolte Our. The smolte OUt focuses public anen1100 on cigarene smokers from coast ID coast. According to a survey conducted by the Gallup Organization, nearly 16.S millioo Americ:LD smokers attemped to give up ciga:renes on smo.ke out day in 1980. Just under five mi.Ilion people succeeded for a full 24 hours and one to 10 <bys later 2.2 million people were still not smoking. The chairman for the 1981 smoke out IS actor Larry Hagman. who was a oold-tarltey quincr. The goal for this year's smoke out is to get at least one in every five smokers to give up cigarettes from midnight to midnight on Tbu.rsday. N-·
10
Th,w,.- ,,,.ntno •
l::u,.. e•rt
however, are permitted to extend the 24-hour period as long as necessary past the deadline in order 10 pertid· pate. For those interested in panicipatiq in the smoke out, here are a few helpful hints 10 stop smoking: - -When the urge to smoke ClCJCDC$ Ulke a deep breath, hold it for 10 seconds. then release it slowly. -Spend the day in a place where smoking is prohibited. . -Eat rather than smote bol stid to low calorie, high nutritional foods. -Exercise to relieve rensloa. -Drin.k a lot of liquids. Although the perceause o(,molm continues to drop. 52 miJ1ioa /llllltl· icans still smoke. Lung caacer Is die leading cause or cancer des!hs 1111D1111 men. a_od by the late 1980s It ii expected to be the leadill& caae llor tenninal cancer in WOIDell,
No,. 13, 1981/ CudJnal Re,iew ·JS·
THERE'S ONE PLACE
TO GET $15,100 FOR
COLLEGE IN JUST TWOYEARS.
Soon you11 have your ai,r.oc:iatL'\ dewc.:e It'< =alv a Sl\ln!!'- pr,""!?f'3n> and the mon,"\· And 1£ you're chmkme of continuing your educaoon. t<; all ~·our; tor <.Choo! you know JUst how cxpcl\Slve that will be \ cAP bsurprmnglv simple Ii \'OU S3\C h..·Bui con\1der the Army. In the Anny, if ~'00 cwc:en :$~5 and : I\"~ each m()nth wlule vou 're m the paruormc m the Veteran-.' Educaaonal A""tstance Armv the 1.•ovemment will m.·uch \our '3\ines C\\ t.,. Program (VEAP). you can ;ia:umuLue SI 5,200 (or for-one And un t('or oi that. you might C\'\:n qu.ilf,· college m JU't two year... for the cxclw.1,e Arm}·educanon 10.:enmec.f ~.('(XI Th1t 's '1gnlf10Jm for rv.·c>rt.'a'.On\ Obw11.1,I}, AnJ rcmemN:r. in JU,-t C\\O V<?a~ \'OU 11 ~ that\ a lot of money But wha1 you may bad in~hool ~Vf»IOUTT'S nm have ri.-alucd 1s 1hai cwo vcars ~ the Ser\'ct ,-.:,ur counm a:. rou short<.-i.t military enlistment ,wa1L1ble ~f\<: \OUl"'CU Cafl "'1..\'·1~ 1--1,4]! :,,.. ..... "" VEAP 1~ a iacat way to make 11 \"ouS.... jll\.'lo s: ...~. In Caluomra. cill ~\'.'-:52-(\111 C.-.rA.ld. on your own Smee 11\ not a loon, you Alaska and Ha\\JII. -....~-·H l-Z2J-f : ..... t '-!,'\"" "'""'\ ' won't nec.·d a CC>-',ti:nl'r or colhm:ral Bener \CL b.,~ m the Ydkm Pa!!<-'l> T.-..1 ilo.'\'I \11~' And you'll never have 10 worry .ihoui ,,.,_,\J,j,, under "R~-cumn2 m.ikang payment-. after uradu:1110n ..... • N e-...SI<-.:._\ •• T,..1n.,....r""
""'"''"
~
~ l , n t . . . . . . . . .» ff
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I
No,. lJ, 1981/ Cardlnal Re,·iew .
t':6-- ~-----------------•••iiiiiiii
(__n_ic_n_ot_ic_e_s_) Thrre are 200 free Madeot tlckelS
a,allablc for the Romani.an fol.II Fest· hal to be held In the C-A Auditorium No,. 1.5 al 8 p.m. Anyone Interested can plcl. op a Llckel In the mAln office of the C·A Building from Muleen Bustos.
All sophomore ,rodents plannlDg on gradusling Ln the sprtng should ootif) the reith,trv's office, In writing, U theJ dcslrt' lo meet reqa1rcm'11lS !Isled In the new eat.a1011 r11ther than under the terms o( the e11t.alog In effeet al the lime of their en,ollmen1. fPlose rdu 10 pogc 9 of 1hc 1981-193.3 catalog.I
Th- ...-1.shlng 10 ba~ the Spob.ot' Spol.csm.an-Rt'vlt'w oe,rspaper In tht' morning on campus can 00" do so. A oe .. ~ r ~a:and Is located outside the &onl door of the SUB. All time sbt'elS for worl.•studv students mast be lgned by lb~
a.ad b) the C!TDpffl)ett and be turned In al the fiDaodal aids offitt
SDpCf'iSOT
bJ noon oo :,;o,. l .
Thr rmplo}rr·~ soclaJ suarlh numba ffllJSt be lndoded OD lbe lim~ i.bttt Of 00 check be lssvrd on
wm
\o,. 25. AU :.;1c Sllldl'OI.$ l'lshl11$! lo rutrr art "'orks la 1hr annual Cbrl<tm•~ art
\1C-n Public fol'II.DI KSPS,T\ ChlJUld 7
rxhibll .and salr ma} enter 1'orks door lhls sa!K!Sltt daring the boon oI J 2 to J p.m. , 0\. 13-2.5 In CA 253. Tbr drad!IM for mllT ls "/o,. 25, at 3 p.m.
Suoda~. ll:30-1 p.m.
JJ I JS 81 BarbJ Eide: "~on-,erbal Commanl•
.\ prneoutlon of cross-coantr ) QJ!ng In Camda and ~onb Idaho ,. W be held In the Borum Room the SUB Frida). ~o,. 20 at 7:30 p.m. Speaking
1100"
llt22, 81 SandJ' Emerson from CDA Chamber of
or
Commertt 11/29/ 81 M11r1ln Paula!: "Life o( AdoU l:litlt'r·•
.. w be
Ccnier.
Dant' Bams oI G.r, 's Sporu
Students ma) soon begin pldilng up lhclr 1-1o.anelal Aid Forms lFAFI at the fl.nanclal Aids Office upstairs In lhr SUB. S111dcnts should ttmember that forms po5tmmed prior to Jm. t, 1982 wW not be aret"pted and wlll be !ll'nl back to lbe <tudcnt. \n) one lnlcl't'Sled In 1tenrol0Jl' ma,
travel .,.;th the NlC Geneolo!Q Club 1~ pokanr Ott. 21 for a neld trip 10 c,t'ral llbrv!M theft'. Transpor1atlon Is pro, lded. The sltth Issue o C the Cardinal Re, le"' ls scheduled 10 be publl•hed O'- 25, the Wcdnt'sday bdorc TluanksgMng. Tot final Issue of the CR for the sc m«lcr ,.,mbe published
D«-. ll. IC staff ml.'mbers with nollccs s hould ubmlt them to I~ CR mallbo, In the mall room b, the Frida) prior 10
Foll-tlmt' student. .,.bo ba~e 801 plckrd up mldtn,n andes bum lbelf advisers s hou ld do 10 • • sooa aa pll!J.4lblc. Part-Ume •tadmta cu plcl their gradrs up al lhe Sladeat Service. om~ on the ll«Ond floor o( the SUB.
Studen ts who are l11aed parklaa vlolallon.'I lmc 10 acbool daya lo pay the One or mue olhrr amiaarme.ta for It, ttmoval. I( the Rne Is not paid la 10 da)S, $ 1 per ilChool day It added to tho total. Student., and 111.afJ AR wed lo lell 1tlath t'S and Mench that the colleae 1tgl~tra,·, offirc, will not •nver ..,. me&~c, e1cept ollt'll that are - .
gl'nc) messages
10
1iadeala ID daaa.
Stod rnts who may aeed a b1N4 donation for 11.!lY reuon ahoalcl t!Nllad Wt'll llat~b In &be SUB to ._
publlcatJon.
,telling blood from NIC'a blood bul,
For llll)OllC Interested In Joining the l'l1C kl d ub, there wlU be a meeting toda) al 3 p.m. In th4.' Kootenai Room lo the S1udenl lJnlon Building.
wl•hCll to remind all Atudcala tbal die area lo the 10oth of the llbruy II f• staff parking only.
Th e law e nforcemen t dMaln
Get feverized with 'High Fever' starting Novem ber 23
'High Fever' Nov. 23 'ARION' Nov. 13 & 14 24th and Mullan, Cd'A
Nov. 16-21 "Pamela Moore"