Volume 38, Number 6
Frida), Dec. 2, 1983
Reciprocity Trustees approve deal b., Ric J. Ka.st The ", IC 80.1rd of Tru<tce,. :1ppf\,,ed a n."C1procit~ agrcemeni between 'llC and Washington\ council for post-secondary edueltton that .... 111 J!lo\\ IS Kootenai Count, residents to :mend EJ~lern \\'a.,hmgton Cm, cr,it~ bcgmning m Januan "ith· out pa, in 11, out-of•'13le pnet.., ,\n ldJhCI· W;i,h1n~1on prop,.i,al ha, t-ccn dela~ cd b, the , ice pre,1dtnt~ ot ldahc'~ )t:ite collci,tc,. But the ,1:11c b,,ard ,1af1 hJ,; n,,1 r,11,ed <•h1c.i1on 10 ~IC enterine 1010 an, 11pe ut 1nd1,id11.1l ai:rct'mcnt th.it 11 \\Jnt, l>cl\\Ccn itself and \\;i,hmgton
In return tor :illo" in~ I~ KC1<'ll'na1 Count) re~1den1, 10 atund EW l, 'IIC h.1< 3jlrccd 10 :illo" 15 \\ a,h1ngton re\ldent, 10 Jllcnd ,chool n1 NI( p:inn~ ouh>f·)l, tc pn,c, 1 he rea<on for the different studl·nt lot JI\, according 10 0,1 en C.irg,:,I, associlte!' deun of tn,truct·-,,-. :it 'IC. " that 1he uut-01-,1.111: prire of auendin • ,._hool a, EWU 1< three 11mc, that of artendin~ \'IC at out-of-,t3t<' pnccs Par< ot the 3gret>men1 Cargo! ~aid. "~ that neither ~chool \\ould lose an} more than the other school in the "chanqe. In 1hi, Jgreement, EWU wtll s1:1nd to lo\c S2J.000 comp.1red 10 a lo!>s of Slo.000 ior NIC. EWL1 has agn:ed to :he propo\al be.:-au,e il would hke to sec ~me t) ~ oi reoproem progr:im be m1t1aled as soon a, l)O\Slb!e. according to C:irgol Koo1ena1 te'i1dent\ "'ho \\Ould like to anend EWU under thi~ proi;um mu,1 .:ontact the E\VU Adm~ions Office for an appl:cauon. C:1rgol )aid. lUld tho~ \\ asluni,on resident\ 11.1\hing 10 anend ~IC con:.u-. the .'<IC Adm1ss1ons Office for :in apphnt10n In other !lctlOII the ~rd appro\ed a proposal b} the :-;1c Fa.cult\"' ,\~~rcbh for the "'recmng nnd hsnni.: pl"O('C)~ of the ~... aCDdc:m1c , 1cc pre~1dent. Lnder the 2pprmed pro~I the a\\embh "'ill ek.t one ~m~r 10 ~e~e on the thrcr,mcmber screemnit rornmmce along v.nh ~IC"s pre\1dcnt and ,OC'3ttonal dtrcctor. ~,le Sund}, chairman of the .i,sembl1. '>-&Id 1bo11 \ ,rgtnia John~n. ~ IC\ Fngli$h cluirwonun . ....-as elc-c1ed to fill 1hat po,mon in n recent as\Cmbl· l!'Cellnit
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Cu n you feel it1 Tara StroUMl US('S a pair of probes 10 ,~t Sazie Rob&oo '~ ~lblthll) lop~ u.re b) Stting If •he can dls1lo11ulsb bc:1-.ccn one poln1 and h.o. The exp(!rimenl wu pan o! 11 recent Blol~ 101 lab lo Sehe r IWI.
Semester exams scheduled Ae:idemie final exams fonh1s ~eme~tcr 11rc scheduled for Ott. l "' 19. :?O 311d 21. Final grades will be mailed sometime during Chrutm~ ,aca11on. 11ccording 10 Reg1~1r:u- ltsuko Nishio. N1Shio ~aid 1ha1 i.,ncc 1hh 1s 1he !irs1 }Car gr:1de~ are gomg 10 be mailed. AD> students who have a change of :iddrcss l>hould nonf) the Rcgm:ru· s Office.
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cootln11cd on pa&c 15
inside the er
ColamnlsJ "lllllS to rest ln pe25
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lnstroelor ghes lnsJde oo Gremda coouo,ersJ ......... . ........... . , . page 10 Huntus duel.In :-.orth lcbho S'-II.IDPS .....••. . . . .•••........ . .... . , .•. pace 17
Dec. 2, 19&3/ Canlinal Rc.,·ic.""' -2-
Whitlock appointed activ ities direc tor b) l\,tark Wheeler
The A.S,1c Student Board unani• mou-.1)· aCC"Cpted Chad Whitlock o, 21 3S student 3cthm~ dll'tttor. thus filli ng :a , acan Q cau.,ed b) the res1ena1ion of former director. Tina Ph1lhpp1 Ph illippi submmed a letter ol rc~ig OJll" 1 i\S'IC Prt"'>ident Lee Cole th.11 ,,,as re:ad n a ',o, . 1-l meeting :uid t'iat "it.tted ~he "' a" rt~1gning from the p ,-; ·10n bccau~ she n~ded t.> dc, ote rrh·e Hme 10 her du,e!> .llld 10 r:11,e her p;rrade poin: :a, euge- o be ron,1 dc:ed f r :a lav. ~,holar-.h ;, pl't", ented b\ the l.Jni,cr,11\ or ld.thc> Whulod. a fre.,hman talung gcner.11 .!o•ud1e1., .. u Cole's appo1n1men1 to the ~111on bccau,t' Cole ~;11d "he ~um~ to be , en mom ated and h.t\ ,h<'" n ton\ider3ble intemt in the i,>b " \\.'h,lln.:i.. lo\t a ,en close clc-cu<1n 10 An:.?dJ JoHe earlier 10 the \ear for ao AS:', IC ..rn:ite St'at. • Bc-<:au<,e c,f the fact thlt Phill1pp1 failed to :mend the la,t , ..o mccung, pr=din;z her res11,\nJl11.'n, no :act1\I• 11e, h:a,e been ~chedulcd for the rt'm...1nder of the ..emc, ter Accordtnl? rn \\'hulocl :and ,\ cu, 11ie\ Coordin,itor Dc:i.n Bcnnen. 111, doubt• fut th3t there 1, enough 11me 10 coordin3te Jn, e,ent, belure lhc 11.'rm·, e11~ • The ,1ri; • •n abo Jed the b,,3rd h>
quc~tion the effmivencss of ru,~istnnt acth•ities director C;in Do14 ns. who. according to sever.a l sc n.at ors . "a~ seldom seen on c;impu, or helping coordm:11c ncth ltlf:<,. But Do.,.n, l3ter \3id 1h01 .,he h3d done much of the .. behind the .,,-c nc~" "'ork for e,·en t~ am.I th.11 ~he had filled in uh('n Philhppt could not mal e Jn e, cnt She ,:11d if 1hc1t "J, " problem concerning hrr po~111on. it " as dur to a lad of communieo11on c:i uscd t,, Ph1thpp1 . 1 foe! ti h.1,n ·1 b<!cn , er, org:in11ed... n, , .11,I. ·• 1 re.1th d,,n·1 1h1nl. l',e Ix-en , en informed .11>.1u1 thmi:~. I feel it ".1, 'her rc\(l\ln,1bih11 &or her 111 inform me " To a,111d \Uch problt.' m, in &h i.' Cu1urc Whnhx \ ha, ,chcdulcd meet• tnQ\ .,. ,th Do" n, ancl Bcnn l'll c, erv Thur,d.11 lie \.tld the, " ould nhn "rttc a calcnd.ir of l.'H' n&, for 1hc wh<1le , chntll \'eJr ,o th.it the current 1 a,uum 1n .1c1w111c, "ill no&happ,:n ugain Wh,rloc k \Jld he "outd lil c to 1,11,,e ~ poll to \ CC \l ha& ty pe nf OC ll YHh.• , \ &udent, 14nutd like. but for ngh1 n11w . ht.' ,aid h,· be 1ryinn h1 coordano1c \O m!' d3n cc\ and purcha,e ~o me mo1 1t\, ,uch a, the " RIX'h Horror P" 1ure Sh,l\\ ." ··If people qo, we· re going 10 have n
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good ume," Whillock said. "The main thing ,, gc11ing pl'Ople to to go.'' In other ore.i_.,, the board llC\'Cptcd the fotlo\ling budge& cut~ suggc~tcd b1 the budgct commiucc: to rompen. sate for o S).000 c,umnicd shortfall in tlu: budge& S 1.64 l rrom the alumni fund; S800 from the debate club; S!lO() from the motorcvctc rcptur ch:i,\ 1ra,·cl fund ; SISS from the itlcn1ific:11ion card fund : nnd s.is from the prc·reglstra· lion :.nae~ fund . C11k· \Jld 1ha1 nll fund, wt I\Crc monies 1hn1 were not goini: ll' he u,cd lhi, }ear or I\Crc 1n c,cc•.- af the 11mount ncctlcd In 01hcr action. the board. - -\\ Cllt 1010 o JO,minutl' ~xccuti,•c , c~\tOn for pcrsonol reason,. which. 11cn1rd111g 11, honrd 11dv1,cr Ton) S&C\\Urt . dhcu\\cd ;111cndnn,;4: requ1r· rnc nh for board member.. - -dt ddccl 1h01 S:100 ollocotcd ll• the l'O mputcr cluh nol be p~id u111il on 11wc,1ig111ion 1~ l"Omplctl'd 10 '>Ct: if &he some club 1s not drnwang nddhlonol £und~ from lhc voca1iono l council under II dlffcrcn1 nomc. - -dl\ru, sed &hut ASN IC funds co11nu1 he u,etl by dubs for off cumpu\ food unll·,~ fir,1 ~pprmcd by the dean or ,1udcn1, nnd prt'\1dent. 1111 the pa,t th1 \ ho, not been enfmrcd.
Title III Co llege receives grant by Ric J. Ka~t
,\ Tulc Ill gr.1n 1 fo r murr th,rn SJ I 1.000 ha\ been r,:.c:rved b\ NI(' occurdrng to fo.-.cphrne Webb .id m111iitl'illl\·c aS\l\&Jn t 10 the pre,1dcn1 Jnd Title 111 program cwrdin .. tur. Webb ,aid thar NIC did \l ei! con,idenng thc dra.-.uc cu&back\ 1mJ><)!,ed b) 1he federal g11vemm1:n1 and an ~alaung number of college, applying for the federal monies. More than 700 schools competed fo r th e funds thu year. Title lJJ News announced that th~ average amount rt'eeivcd by colleges nation11. 1de for Fiscal Year 1984 was S213.000 and that some schools re• ceived onl) 36 percent of the reques&ed amount. NIC's aw:ard is SI 00.000 over the national avera ge. but the am ount
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r, prc,cnl\ 71> p~l'Cl'lll uf the u.mouni rcquc,&cd. 3l cording ru Webb
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She ,,ud rhM &hi~ vcor', fund\ be ~pent In ,c,crJI arco, includ1n(< th~ cmplm men& of I I people. &he de, clup· ment of imprn,·cd adminrnra&I\C m:inagcmcn1. a rom p111 c-r, ba<,ed management anfornu11ion sy'>tcm Jnd the dc1clopmcnt of the college adm1)· \Ions office. Funding 1\ also direc ted toward improving academic programs rn de,c· topmen1.J education and s&aff &raining for ,upport of the learning disabled, Curriculum is being developed to phase s1uden1s from the licensed practical nursing program into &be as )ociatc nursing prog ram. Webb \:lid.
Burned-out student needs aid Squarin2 up
uaur!e Bristo" photo
~·ood,.orking I Stlldcnt Din e Harrison J»tthcs for perfection n.s he Unes ap the P1<'«S for the lid or II bo, he i~ making durio ~ 11 recent clAss in the loduslrial Aru Building.
Erme Abe) . m IC mo1orcycle repair s1udcn1. and his family lost all their household ncms in a fire. An) obJects or dothmg siuden&s and facuhy can don:11c _should be turned in 10 the mo1orcydc rcpafr shop or the vocouonaJ mam office, Contact John Smi1hson at extension 345 ror funher mform311on.
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JJ&. ], j@, Lluuuu "''' ,c,.
College Senate approves addition to conduct code by Dawn Morph} An amendment to the Student Conduct and Discipline Code aimed at conlt'Ollmg fighting among college students was unanimously approved at the Sov. IS ..'Ollcge senate meeting NIC Pre~1dent Barry Schuler. senate chairman. repTC~ntcd the dean of \tudcnts office ,n propO)tng an amendment v.hich \lilted that physical a)sauh or fighung on c.impus or during college related actw1ues IS strict!) forbidden According 10 Schuler, 1he condut'I code made pro\1S1oris for har.:issment but a clause was needed 10 aflo,.. for di~phnary action 10 be taken against students phvsically fighung . .. Pe rsonal confrontauons on the annual boat (Mish-an-Nock) cruise. which int'ludes lln annual fight, .. made the clause necessary, Scholer said. The ~n.11c .11~ unammou$ly approved an academic renNal poliC') which under ceruiin cond111ons gives NIC students the chance 10 eliminate previous poor "- Ork auempted at NIC or other colleges from the computation$ of credit), grade points. acade mic \I.anding und graduation requirements. Students have 10 pe111ion the registrar 10 remove an enure semester of 140rt which could include O('CCptable wort .:ilong with the poor. according to the pohcy which ,~ no11, m effect. The senate also approved an inve\1iga1ion by Schuler into the funding of the microcomputer center and 10 give a repon a1 the ne'tt meeting. After o motion by Leo Loebs 10 allocate SS,000 from an appropriate college rund to buv software for the lab was not pa~,ed, the invcst1ga11on b) Schuler v.as proposed 3nd approved. According 10 Leobs . lhe microcompute r lab i\ not being used because of a Jack of \OflwMc and lhcre i~ no funding :wailable for lhe materials needed.
Finland summer vacation offered to NIC students b) Sharl Aldcrm11.o A euhurnl i.ludy trip 10 Finlo.nd ha~ bcrn ~chcdulcd for June I!I through July !I nnd i, bt• 1ng offered 10 onyonr 11 ho is mterc:,u:d. nt'COrdin11 to Leona Has)c n , d1rec1or of the NI (' S1ud1· Abrood Progrnm nnd :inthropology lnmot'tOr Duke Snyder. Although Oigh1 CO\I~ urc MIii being nego1in1cd. the c~11111ntcd pnci: of the trip Is S2.280. Ho~~en ~nJd . The cos1 l)f th<' tnp b 1erl' good new, , ~nydcr said. 11, ii will 111clude raund-trlp nlr fare, all tran,ponotlon. lllll)t'Um odmi))IOR) in I he ~'O un try, food and hotel a(.'('Qmmod1111oni..
The group will I is,t ,•onous plO<.'C) in Finland. including Hehtnl.i,
11 htch
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th capi111J, Sa,nhnna ln4Ji .ind Turku . Sn~·dcr ,old Students ma, ,ta} one cura "'~It for 1111 add111onol SJOO 10 travel acrcx\ 1he Baltic Sea to ~Ionia. "'hich is o culturol center in the Sn, 1et umoo , Snyder said " 'fne lnp •~ a unique ,tud\ upponunily," Snyd('r i.111d. · Ji. "di a, lhe \O<"Ot1on of )"Our hie." t'an,dpnnu arc :iblc to appl} for h111er d111,1C1n ~c.idi:mit cred11 111 \IC and upp('r d111,100 acad<"mic crt"dtl from other collcgt'), Sn}·der u1d Accord111g 10 llos,en, a stud\ lour ha\ aho ~en pl:inned for Scot13nd. Applk-;i11on~ are .l\Otlablc: m her office for an1onc mkrc\led . ,he ~111d.
Engineering Club seeks neu' 1,
1 he NJC En~inccrini: Club lool , 8 for Ol"I' frc:,hmcn member~. a~~1ng 10 Virginia Marquc1, thl" ~lub ) trea,urcr. The club hn~ b<'en 011 cnmpu) for a1cr 20 }1!31"\, ,he ,:i,d. In 1h01 hml.' 11 ha, \(hcdult:-d field lnp, to Kc)lronlc\, the Wn)htngton Wiitcr P,, l'cr dam and ~J)('nsor,, the Energ_1 da) :,cien~ fair e:ich ye:ir.
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111 embe rs
Thi, l<'lr. the club pl:tns 10 11sit Sca111e·, Bocmg fa~ilit) ,(lmctimc in the \pnn1,1 ~cme,tcr. Club mceltnJ15 are usu.uh hdd on Tucsd:i}, ,11 1 p.m. in the Scuer H31l cngmCcnng Jab. S1udeoh "'h<> ore 101crt)ted ;arc encllur;aged to ,-,:,n13CI M:irqucz. The club·" ad""°" 1os1ru1.-t,,r,. .l1't" 8am Simon and Cun cl'<!n
. hade,
or , um mer
MC Crcshman Chip Oa~ dlspl.1~~ unique form rettncJJ nnr the baseball field.
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Dan Breeden photo
he 111temp1s 10 c'nl~h a Frisbee
Mulkey chosen VSNIC president Chm ;\fa)kl"\ u-;i, n3mcJ \"S\IC prh1dn11 11f1cr formrr p!e~1dtn1 \far· \tn O'Blenc~s submmed ht.S n:.ug::), lion 111 the :-;O\ JO rnuncd mecun
Ct unc' chat the ,oeational budget balance .. ;i, at SJ.-199 from the original ~ .000 ghen ro the 1oca11onal depanmcm by the ASMC S1udem Board.
\1ult.c:~ . a dr:1i11ng student u a\ cho,en ,.hen \ '1 .. c: Prc)1deo1 \ ern .\lien. cn;;mc rebuild: turned d..,.. n the
fhe t:arpen1ry cl.i.s\ 11, as gn en S264 for a rnp lo tour a mJJOr cnns1ruc11on
~1110
Also. the drahmg tc,hnicran, cla~, S3-o for ~.trtou, field trtp\ "h1Lh ,..,II lllk<· pbtt' 01cr the rour,c of the ~c.ir, ~. cording 10 \S'IIC President \.farvm O Blem,\
o·etenhs, 14ho i<s a dic~el mcch.in" ,1uden:, h qui111ng ,chool ~;au:,c of iln ;attend.incc-rctued prob·
lem
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A!Mi in the Io mttting, the council .. ppro\ed file budget rcquesb uhich ICA\C,, them ab<lut si .-oo [0 .,.orl "llh dunng the spnng seme,ter. We-, Haith firune1al a,h i,cr ,.1id 31 the ~-i. 10 mcellng of the \
s~,c
)IIC "'ll) allo11ed
A 101a! of S:-00 "•l\ gi\en to the "eldm;? cla,, f.,,r 14 people 10 a11end a J-da~ tnp to Brcm,non. Wash. In other .1ct1on 1hc council rc,cheduled 1h1: \OCational Chr1s1m3s plln) for Frida1. Dec. 9 a1 the Carpen1cr·) HJIJ.
Dec. 2, 1983/ Cardinal
Re,·lei;"·r=+:---- - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
No room for handgun in world of tomorrow Current!)·. handguns are geuing in the "'a) of progress Hopefully. progress will do oway \\ 11h handguns. It's only American that progress should "'in. . . TI1is na11on has come a long"' ay in the last 100 year,; and not JUSt m "'ays 1ha1 are mca\ured in footage of sk,.,crapcrs or tonnage or ye3 rl~ con~ump1ion. In the pa'\t ccntu!'). thi~ coun1n h:L!> become a safer and mo~ peaceful pince 10 h,·c. \nd 1t'., JU,1 a matter of ume before gun lcgislat1on.
(.. .___o_p_in_io_n_p_a_g_e_ _J dawn murphy
the ,chicle for remO\·mg handguns from society. is brought about to reach 0 higher level of humamt~. In whll used to be a niuion. of ca.rousing ~1:1.-shootcr-armcd dcsperados and barro_om br:iwls. tOd3y c-,;1sts n land which strive~ for peace. equality Jnd h.1ppmc . But handguns are getting m the w:I\'. Gun rontrol 1, an :in ,, l'r w nd us of muc.-h of today"~ 1'iolenec People will :ind h,l\C realized that. and they can c,cniu:.illy 11kc :u.:11on tu hring the.: m,ch e, to" 3rd human ii\. II 1, ,1uld he l!!nornnt not tl' ,lppl\ the ,:imc in,1gh1 to our nation '" we do othl'r rountric~. H1\\\ ,a.n J rounm that i, the fatherland ol pe!lcc, hnppine,, ond the impo~"hh: drt•Jm pt•rmi1 the \H',1pon that k1lh 20,000 nnu.1llv l<> run unchecked? • Ho\, l':lll a nation 1hJt dl·d,1rc, rlw 1mportrincc of nnn\"iolcncc and bn,thcrh1x'd tn the ,1orlJ all,m thl· h,111dgun 111 run rnmpant an 11 , oYin homclJnd~ It'" a Ii, ing. hn•.ithmi? parad11\, .lu,t a, men 100 \Car, .1go ,aid thl'}' \\nllld m11 hl' 11\l'll \\ 11hou1 the 1m11 on their '>ldl',, pc11plc wda~ tkd..in· the\ 1,1n11ut bl· \:.Jfc 111 a n,1tm11 wuhout the rold \tCCI m their dr,1,, cr. People\\ ith handgun, think 1hc1 h,1H· "1mt•thmg 11, und the powt·r to ,a, 11. Bu, 11b1 iou,h· 11 i,11 ·1 a ,cry ~11ud 1clc11 if It 1nkt, a .357 magnum 10 enforce.: II. Some people d,,n· 1bcht•vc gun, J.ill hul pt·uplc dn. But the ,aml.' could be ~.:11d for an intercontinc n1,ll bnllistlc mi,\llc. Frankly. people would be n hcll of a lot c,:ifcr "'ith1.1u1 them. J\<; Svdne1 J . llurri, put 1t "True; guns don't kill - bu1 ploplc Yillh gun., do. And for too oft en " 11 thl' pmt>lc.m ~llh gun, docs he in the human heart. u handi;un 1~ ea~icr to fo. W1-.c people knoYi gun, rely on pcoph.•: 1n1clligcn1 people don't have 10 rely on gun~. What Ame rica need~ is gun lnws 10 protect II\ people. Lcgblauon controlling handgun,; "ill du that. It's an msuh 10 Americans 10 say that they con·1 live in peace without a handgun pointed at 1he1r heads. tr people o" n handgun'>, they migh1 as well o" n b:uookas: one is just more convenient than the other. So you do not have 10 be crazy to own a handgun. but it help,. Whe n gun~ are outlawed. only outlaws will hove guns. Then people will know exactly who the criminals are in this country.
,u,
Dying without buying I ti,•c in an elderly neighborhood "'here death 1, " constant reminder. The QQ.,·ear-old lad) next door. for et3mple. ne,er let'\ \Ima (my 88-year-old landlady) and me forget "'ho ,.hcd }C,terda) and the da) before. and she says that ln) l_\oo) oH·r -o doc~n 't h:l\ e long 10 lh·e. Holding my breath, I ,, an, do,, n the stairs e, Cl') morning to see if Alma is still alive. She always 1s. !lnd I sigh "'tth rele1f \\'hi le she snores. More disturbing than their o,, n p:issing. is the fact ti.lat these two \\ ill more than likely end up lymg in laquered bo:ces while eulogized as fl awless people. This generic eulogy combined with the tradiuonal funeral does not reOect the realities or death. Dispo ing of the dead has become a waSteful and meaningless process. Not only 3rc embalming and vie"' iog the dead body unneccssa~ . but n's expensive. And \\hat do people get for their money? A made-up shell to reme mber. o Lhanl,. you. rm into remembering people alive myself. As for my remains. they are really at the mercy of whoever find) them and what my family decides to do "1th them. But frankly , I hope rm never caught dead in one of those veh·e1-lined boxes or ever left to take up precious space in some memorial park.
Just as l "'ant to be of use while rm living. I want m} remains 10 serve a purpose. Fcnilizing the garden would be nice. I can hear someone' s thoughts ringing through my ears already. "You ha\"C no respect for the dead:·· and ..evervone dcsenes a d~nl burial.·· · rm not agamst a decent funeral. Decent simply means modest. There is nothing modest :ibout a funeral that ruM 1010 tile hundreds or dollars. And as for respect, before 3 person dies is the time to show it. Even Rodney Dangerfield kno"' s lhaL. So Mom and Dad. if m\' time comes before \"OUl'li and I am granted a last word. I "ould ask that m> remains be burned and b~ricd in the garden near the rose bushes. This way I could help bnng Oowers to ~-ou e,•ery spring rather than you bringing them 10 me on Me monal Day 10 only rot like my body sL't feet below. . I woul~ e,en rather be remembered as helping 10 bring up a h11lc spinach or beets. rathe r than be among the crop of tombstones some other gardeners are trying to maintain.
M.W.
(___c_a_rd_,_·n_a_l_ri_e_v,_·e_w_ __,,,) The Ca.rdjnaJ Review ls pa_bUshed seml-mon1_bly by the Publlcatlom Workshop class at North Idaho College. Members of the CR staff will atrlve to present the news fairly, a.ccu.ra tely and without prejudJce. OplnJom erpressed on the editorial pages and In various news analyses do nol necessari.!y reOect the views of the NIC administration or the ASNIC. The CR is entered as lhlrd-elass post.al material al Coeur d' AJene, Idaho 83814. Associated CoDeg.late Press Five-Star AU-American Newspaper editor •.... ... .. . .. .............................. .. .. Dawn lHarpby news editor ..............•......... .................. Mm Wheeler a.ssoci.ate edjt.or .... . . .. . ...•.........•. . ..•..... ........ Ric J. Kut arts/ entertainment .......• . .............. . .... .. . ..... Craig John.too s ports editor .. ................. .. .......... . .. ... ...... Willy Weech photograph) edit.or .................. . . .........•......... BuO Franz ad,ertising manager ................................... . Marl.Ila Platt copy editor ....... ..... . ..... ... ................... Pam CUJlllingbam ca.rtoonlsts .. .•• ..... . •.....• ............ Troy Jolliff and Eric Pedenea ad,,iser ............. .. ... .. .... .. ..... ................. Tim Pllgrtm reporters and pbotog,aphers .............•............ Sharl Alderman, Dan Breeden, Laurie Bristow, Deanna Chapin, Ksthy Garrl10n, Rid, Ha.lmaon, Kurt.ls Hall, Sharon Heaney, RJta HoOJnpworth, Leau Moore, Bruce Mullan, Diane Opdahl, Don Sauer, Mike ScroggJe, Deaana SmaD, Sand.> Stambaugh, Wanda Stephens, Barbie Vaadea.berg, Kelly Ward ud An,gJe Wemhoff.
Dec. 2, lY!SJ/Cardin.aJ Ke,·iew
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(~_m_o_ri_e_o-=--p_in_io_n_Jt-------Letters to the editor Letters to the edl1or are ,. elco med b~ the Cardinal Re, ie,.. Those ,.ho subrni1 lellers should Umil them 10 300 words. sign 1bem legibl) and pro,ide a telephone number and address o that :iutbent.id~ can be ched,ed. Leuers should be brough1 10 Room 2 in 1he :'tteehankal Arts Building or malled to the Cardirull Re, ie,. lo care of North Idaho College. 1000 \\". Garden A,e .. Coeur d'Alene, Idaho 8381.t.
(__n_e_w_s_c_o_n_n_e_c_t_io_n_s_ J Viva fo r new NIC policy The colic ~cha, recent I~ pro,ided 3n oppor1un11y for dc1er mined. ~elf-disciplined s1uden1s 10 remo,e poor grade:. recel\ed during 1heir college , ears. Assoc1;11e Dean of ln!>truction O" en Cargo!. , IC President Bun Schuler. the college senate 3nd 1he members ot 1he Admissions and Academic S1and:1rds Comm111ee "ere m,ohed "uh the making .ind accep1ancc of an Academic Rene"al PohC\ 10 help s1uden1s "ho ha,c donl' poorlv in collej!e but are tr) mg ag3in
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The Academic Rene,, JI Polic~. re-.e;i rched nnd 1Hi11cn by Cargol. pro\ldC<, the opponunit) for ~tudent!> 10 rcmoH' a ,cmestcr of bad irndc<; from the romputations o' :1c.1dem1c qanding. gr3de points. credit!, .1nd graduauon rcqu1remcn1,. "hether the, ,, ere rece1, ed from NIC or another colle~c. Thi, poli~ rcu ud!> ,criou\ students "ho arc looking 1c1 complete an edul'Jlion. facn though the poltc) m.i, not be accepted :11 01her mstitulions. 11 t'i g~at 10 lnov. th.it lhl\ college is interest<.'d m gi, ing the s1udcn1s n '>Ccond 1'hancc
Today's problems won't fade with foolishness We're modi The c,rnbli~hmcm hn, '>trud 11ga1n . lliosc banana brnins bnd, 1n \V n,h1ng1on thinl. becau!,c only 5 pl•rccm of 1he college populace ,•otc,. 1hcy can gu lhead and build their m1v,1lc,. ,teamroll hulc nation, and m;impulate the ,ms of 1he c:1p11:1ll\lil '>\\lCnt .ind \\C 1q,n'1 do 3 thing about 11 But the) got another thing conlln8. We'll teach thost guy> th:n cnllcge ,tudc:nh on: informed. l'tllll'l'mcrl nnd .scme. \.\'c II ,ho11 them th:11 intclkc1U.1l peoplc hnH' 111telli~c111 ,oluuon, 10 toda~··!> problem\ We'll \\l':lr ,kmn) 11c, We'll hnng full\. bl3d. dkc from our rcary1ew min-or,. We'll c111 ,,ur hair ,honer than their'~ and then ,cc ho11 1hl'I feel. We'll a,,cmhlc ,,ccl.. h in thl' parl.ing lot, of bars. We'll mp the cstnbli,hmlnt at 1hc roob .tnd ~rclse :ind sptlc 11ur hair. piel\·c our 1111\e,. tear the linger<, Mt our lapi1alh11, Jtloves nnd \lam dance ,n pni1c,t W e ,,,,n'1 1:ikc thmg, II mg do" n The sh~er ones .. 111 "cngc the bl1,)d) deed'> b, not ,;ha, mg or ma~ be \\Curing morc-1hnn-a1 er.,gc laded Jean,. "I ou ran bet IN11hcr "111 put n rl'bell1ou" smell 111 1hl' nir And all of 1h,~ "ill ha,c ,1 trcmt.·ndou, alkct on go,emmcnt. Bui \\C \\On 1 ,top thl'rc We'll re, ,mr car engine!, a1 m1c~e..-11on'>. \\ e II bl:1,1 our ,1crco~ a1 home
mark wheeler \\c'II rn.:u.e ou~he~ he:1rd . We ' ll include tnd.y poli11C3l •\"lnucrdoe'> 111 our v. ritines and v.c·n cmirue them 10 death in the
SLB \nd t.h:u' ~ not lhe "hole eucni of 11. \\'h), 50me "111 denv hcm\che'> I ~ r ar .. ~ '1d nm 53) a \I.Ord. f'he!>e gU)\ will b,.\\ro:1 the \\hOIC' J:O\cmmcntal '>~tern and go :ibout their old ".1' J'> i( it d1dn'1 e,cn c11,1. W~ ! Bui ,c·n· ddin:m:I• ~l'·\"I~ 10 shov. 1hc world th:11 1h1, ,ountn '"
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The ne-11 time lhe Re:tgM admin1s1ra1ion g~s blm, 1or,h1ng \Or'c fore1en ~'Ountn .. c declare a colleg,:ite \late of mourning and hang our fuzz} dice ut half-st:iff. The real irrc,ercnt one, can "cJr those faded Len, a1 hali-ma~t. Th:11 will ,how ·cm. But if not. we could al"!I)'> pull our pJnt:. b:i.cl.. up \\here the: bdon~ and ge1 1he job done Jt the 101ing boo1h ..
Dec. 2. 1983 Cardilllll Re\iew -6-
(___m_o_r_e_o=-p_in_io_n_} Lazy whimps only students with parking trouble The McCormick Hou<.e, a century-old building that served as the offirer·s quancrs for Fon Sherman. "as recenth le\eled and made into an IC porkmg lot. The additional spaces a.re <.iupposedl) badly needed to pro\ ide ~tudent<, "ith easy ac-ces\ to the building~ of NIC. For \ears there has been talk around campus about a lack of parking spaces. Anyone taling a look at the :-:JC parkine situation, ho.,.,e,er. can see that the re is a great deal of parking space. A receni surve>· of the !','JC par.lung facihue, $bowed that there are about 1.500 parking spaces available on campus. A recent count of the a,·ailable spaces at 11 a.m. on a Wednesda~, "hich is one of the busiest umes of the week. revealed that at least 130 spaces 1,1,·erc a,ailable. In reality. there is not a parting problem at "IC There is a problem "ith
Reader ready to 'worship' zf writer truly omniscient Dear Editor: h was intcrcstmg for me to note th at acco rding to your article " Punks stick out like sore thumb on NIC c:impus." Mr. Cohen is al ways curious about people who make themseh·cs , isible. It seems 10 me that we ha,e some kind of ne,, 'witch hunt' going on here. E, erybody who does n' t fit into the norm (\\hot norm and declared b" whom?) and is somewhat different is alread,· declared os being bad. · I'm always curious about people who like to stick e\'eryone and everybody into a norm. For some people it seems impossible 10 imagine a world that is some,,hat more colorful than their nicely kept backyard. Why can't we just let everybody be himself and forget for a moment the wrong equation: different = bad? Funhermore. it is interesting to
note that it b "rong for someone to turn 1010 Punk to sc:trch for one's iden1i1,. however. It is correct for someone 10 appro3ch his sociolog} ,~truC'lor or an established church in order to '>earch for one's identit, . Who ,., there to judge ,,hich ~,a~ i, nght or \\rong. In our ~ociet} "here e\·erything depends on one's person meeung the beaut,· standard. Punk seems to be refresiung io 11s idea of turning ugly into beautiful and ,ice-versa. This ho\\ever was never mentioned in the article. Also that Punk was one of the fore runners against Nuclear Warfare and weapons is lost underneath a cover of stereotypeing B.S. In case that you, Wanda and Mr. Cohen. has all the answers. please con,·ince me and from nov. on I will worship you e,ery Sunday. Rich Haimann NIC student
parkers. The re is a large number of student:, thnt complain about the "parkmg problem" because the} cannot find a parking spot on Mond nv within SO feet of their 9 a.m. class. · Student!. :.cem to think that the college should provide them all with doorstep parking space:. so they will not hove to \\alk any distance to get to da~. It takes Jes, th:in five minutes to walk from the grnvel lot north of the C-A Building to any buildi ng on ca mpus. Anyone who com,ider:. thi~ on e~cesc;in• distance to walk ic; obvious!) n Inly whimp ond \hould not be going to college m the fin,t place. \ suney 1..'0nduc1ed several ye:irs ago by Owen Cargo!. NIC director of planninit. re,ealcd tha t most :.tudcnt~ felt thnt there was o parking problem at '-'IC Some of the swdents polled even c.uigested thol a porkade be built. A parking garage ,~ the very Inst thing NIC needs. Maybe in onolhcr few ,ears (~3)' 50). 1f the college t'> ovcrflowmg w11h money, it can build one right nc'« to the new libr111)"compu1er !>Ciencc building. There hi.1,e been report!, of some , 1udcn1'i crubing the campu~ for up 10 20 minute<; looking for n pince to pork . Thi, ha~ 10 be one of the mo,t absurd rhings someone can do. Anyone who'" ,;m3rt enough 10 go to college should! be able 10 figure out that parking on the outskins of the campu ~ and taking 'ievcral minutes to walk 10 his des11nation is much fo, ter. 1he entire parking "problem" boils down to students who are too laLy to "alk the disrnncc.
Hospice honors amateur actors Dear Editor: It is difficult to find the appropri· ate adjeC'live to express the extent of m}' feeling and gratitude to the NIC students who donated their time to helping Hospice of North Idaho. These NIC students s pent a very long day under difficuli circumstances to help raise money for Hospice and the terminally ill. Our students were up at S a.m. and served as extras in the movie "Vision Quest" from 7 a.m. uncil 8 p.m. Because of this dedication, Hospice is several thousand dollars
better off than before. My s pecial thanks goes 10 the ASNIC Student Board for their sponsorship of the event. The ASNIC Boord is always working 10 assist others. Again I wis h to state a special thank you 10 a very special group of people. Sincerely, Tony Stcwan Member Board of Directors Hospice of North Idaho
Name game with hookers offends Wallace 'Miner' Dear Editor: I ha1,-e just finished reading an article b, a Mr. Willv Weech. and I feel th.at I jus t ha\'e 10 say something about the Wallace Hooker situarion from the viewpoint of a lifelong Wallace resident. 0
First off. what's the big deal about Wallace's ladies? Give us a break! Does everyone who lives in Spoka ne. Scanle. Portland. Missoula (the list is endless) acrually
belie\'e that their fine cities are without prosrirurion? Wallace has a bad reputation just because we openly admit that the "houses" on Cedar Srreet exist. The, are there. they ho\'e been there since the late 1800s. and more than likely. will remain there long after all of us are gone. In Wallace the) are a faet of life. Secondly. " Miners" is a much better name for the athletic teams at Wallace High School. Now I kno" what your are going say. "Come on Wes have a sense of
humor about it." I do, it's jus t that I'm making a state ment - it gees old after a while! I could get crude and say something like " While all you guys are paying in Wallace. we (Wallace guys) are in your hometown going out with you r sisters and girlfriends," but I won't. Finally. dear editor and Mr. Weech. if I was a violent person. or if I was £ram Rathdrum. Hayden Lake. Bonners Ferry or Athol. I would want both vour heads. Don't yo u think that · a "journalist·· should th.ink about what he is going
to write (even in fun) before he writes it? I also found quite a paradox in the policies of the CR. Read the requirements for a letter to be published. You completely ignored No. 4 in your article, Mr. Weech. I have many more things to say about Wallace prostitution, and the anicle, but the word limit in lerters prohibits me. so I wiJJ let it go 3l that - this time. Wes Wilson NIC student
Dec. 2, 1983/ Cardinal Re,ie,. - 7-
[ er arts/entertainment
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St. Nick a commie plot, cynic says lry CraJg John§on
Come on. you mean to tell me I.hat an old . fa t man in a red get-up ll'immed in fur lives :ill yea r long on the Nonh Pole while pumping out toys 10 give 10 oil good hule girl~ and boys come Chri.\tmas morning? You mu~I be kiddi ng. First of all. it's g·· d··· cold up there. ll) any polllI be;ir kno1H The wind-chill r,u.· 1or al one makes taking a leak physically impos· sible. And how about all those cute, linle clvc), Snnto·s good-natured helper\, I ~uppo\C 1hc~ ca1 chocola1e-covcred snowball, .ind 1cidc\ au grau11n all vcar lone. · Nn wonder 1he reindeer Oy: thcv probabl y look pre11 v appc1111ng to lhn\C lr11lc be11g.irs. Spcnk,ng of reindeer. there ,~ no wa~ anynn~ ,~ going 10 J(Cl me 10 believe that Rudolph htt'> a now so bright ii glow\. Any '>CICnll\ l Cll ll tell )'O U W<'h n mu1ot1on ,., g cn c11c:11l y 1mp<)\\lble. t::,en If II were: true cmd ~anta did emploi Rudolph '~ neon no\ e 10 gc1 through the wor\l bli11ord in the h1'1 0ry of the lnnd of Chrislmn., . i1 is beyond rca)on 1hnt old S1. Nick and c1gh1 tin y reindeer co uld mu kc it 1hmu11h the network of corly warning rodnr ,talion, 1hn1 populate the Nonh· crn Hcmbphere If for '>Ome inconceivnbl<' rcn!t011 he wn~11 ·1 \PO ii ed by l hc rndor. 1hc
Russians would brand his night as a spy mission and shoot him dov.n for Y1olating thetr ;urspacc. And how, ma)' I ask. is a JOO.pound blimp w11h an equally bulk) bag of goodies supposed to slide dow'O a tin\·. bnck chimney? · Wb.a t am I U)ing? I don't ~en have a chi mney. Unless good St. Nick has forced a,r hea11ng systems figured 001. I'll leave my stockings on m~ feet where they v.iU do some good. Besides. I'd look. pre"y darn silly if I hu ng my socks on the baseboard heater, no11. wouldn"t J? Another ~,mbol of Chnstmas that h JUSI as hard lo ~w·allow a~ Sant.:1 Claus " Chrii.1mas rrec\. Chn \tm~\ trees• Chmtmas trees! Ju\l how gullible con W<' be? Each year million\ of innoccn1. evergreen sap· hng, arc ~awed off nt the knee, ,o Timnl\ Tnmm, .ind lil tl<.' Sun c:in slop popcorn ,1nni;:s and pl:i,llt' ;c,de) JII 01·cr rhcm. HeN! " e arc, pa, ing through the nO'>C for forei1:: n oil and 11,·hat do we do? Rl!)\' one of ~ur nation\ moM prized rc~ourc,:\ , drc~\ i1 up like a Sunday ,1 horc. then tO\S II out with the rest of 1hc holid.i, tr:ish. If ,·ou ask me. it :in Arab plo1 to m:ike u~ totnlly depe ndent on foreign oil source~ No. the whole idea of Christmas trees and Sama Claus undermines our free en terprise system . I mean if opera11ons lilc.e the Clau, business were allo,1ed 10 CKist. 1, ha t would be(Ome of Martel. Parker Bro1hcrs and Fisher-Price~ Behind Snnta 's curl~·. whue beard he~ the face of ~oc iahsm II hich threaten) lo topple the ,·en· foundauon 01 which our country w;is built - the maheruble right to make :i buck 3nd 10 pur~ue happineH (prcfe ra bh in a 0
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Cof\clle/
\lkCanh,· and his senate sub-com-
mmcc, ,ere .,.,a, off ba'>e when they attacked fine. up\Ulndmg membe rs of our wc,ety.
They o,erlooked the rt' J I red menace "ht·n the\ foiled 10 recognize S~nta Cl.1u<;e for 11. hat he really is, a Bol1he,·1k m;in,festauon of a Marxi~t plot 10 enhrow democrallt' govern· ment\ throughout the world. Belle,c me "'hen I tell you that II is thinki ng like 1hi, that keeps brillion1 bureaucratic Jead4:r~ hkc James W:111 and Ann Gorsuch from fulfilling their preordBJned destinies as torch lights for democracy. Santa Claus - it's down right un-American.
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,Bru~hini up F1'1'·) Clll·Old Jaime Woodman pruU~\ her artisUt' abilities recently at the Campus Fnendi Children'~ Ce nte r while her mother Is al · tc-ndlni;: l'IASSc, 11 NIC.
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craig johnson
Sophomore scores first in UI singing competition b) Diane Opd11hl
No place like Om '"Ommm, Ommm. Omm-my-god!" I said as th11t chrnn bull suned chnsing me across the p:isturc. Gening in touch ,,.,;th your inner beiog can be pmt) risk)· business sometimes, especially if you happen to be sb:mng a two-acre sprc3d with 100 or so cows :md one gnarly bull. Now, I am a C'ity boy at heart although I 8Te\\ up in the side-hill, gouger 1011 ns of Northern Idaho. I prefer baked Alasb to co"' pies and the aroma of :1 Brandy Alc:umder to the rancid smell of cllkken sh-· well. you get the picture. So ,, hen I decided to spend a summer ,,.,orkmg on a sma.11 farm in Central Idaho. I \\3S a linle skeptical :ibout m~ cl,ances of sun h al - a feeling thot bull w:1s soon to remforce. There is only one.> thing I like more thnn a ~-..cat-soncd, 14 hour cby, and that is 10 just kick b11ck 11ith a bm,, relu and meditate I .im not 3 fanati c when it comes to secrete mantras. h:itha yoga or even Yogi Bear, bu1 I do thnve on the feehng of reaching an inner depth of consciousness: one that involves the opposite p~ses of evel')day 1hinl:ing. 0-·er the roo:rsc of the day, we ha,•e 10 spre3d our anentioo across a "'ide range of things that must get done 31 once. Meditation. on the ot her hnnd. requires that one focus till lhllt mental energy on a single thought. ooncept or action. It may be as simple 3S repeating the -..ord Om. or 3S comples as a dervish dance. But the inteni is singular: to tune out 311 the static c:rap "'hich filtered into our minds during the day. Ho,•ing aroimplished this. the mind's focu.s of anention is as tight as a wicker crib and ready to experience th.it which our imaginations desire. Now, a bunkhouse filled with rowdy. under-sexed, post-pubescent cowhands is simply not the correct atmosphere in which to become at one "·ith the cosmos. So, -.'!ping grits from my face and trailing the last remnants of a three-bean dinner in the "ind behind me. rd slip out over the buck-and-rail fence. across 10 the far side of the pasrure to an old. burned-out barn. The cows grudgingly respected it as my S3Jlctuary - perhaps because of the firecraders I carried in case they got 100 cl~. In nny case. there I "-ould sit among co"' Oops and cedar stumps "bile furiously trying 10 become ill one with my inner self or nt least something close to it. This time. howe,•cr. I must h:ive become too fenent in m, recitations for. when I opened my eyes. no less than 50 head of top ·sirloin "ere s1:iring 111 me as if I were a srump come to life. Fl!t) damb, questioning £aces - 11 was too much for m} city blood to handle. In my haste 10 get the firecrackers out of my coat l slipped on a fresh CO\\ pndd) nnd fell smack in to the first row of heifers who "ere as dumbfounded as me. The) look off every which "'!I). that is all except old Torro who did oot take a fane:· 10 m) shan.inigans. In fact he "·as raging mad and intent on seeing just ho" fast I could run the 440. The moral of the story? Cows arc only cows. but when the bull is bre111hing do" n your neck. brother you can bet there is no place lilce Om.
An N!C ~phomorc mu~1, \ludent tool :i fir,t pl.le~ :11 1he N.ittonal A~soc1ut1on of Teacher~ of Singi ng compcuuon Nov 19. According to MorJory Hnh•or~on. IC music instructor and elght•ycor member of N,\TS. sophomore Steve Bra> finished firsi in the 18-20 ycor old m.ile di\i,1on nt the competition held :u the Un1~ers1ty of ldnho. Sharon Hendricks and Kevin Cope. both music mnjors at NlC. and D:1rcy Olm~tead. a Coeur d'Alene prepratory ~chool student. also took pan in the e,ent. According 10 the three :utending NIC. e:i.ch student pra<.'ticc~ 31 least an hour a dny in preparing for t1 compctiuon such as this. "It'& really encouraging to be as for ahead os a 5tuden1 from t1 four-year uni\'Cr511) :· Br3y said. Hal"orson agreed that the student~
put n 101 of hard "ark in to 1hc1r performnnCC\, .. Very fo" people undcrnond the phy,;ict1I ,1c~\ Involved,.. llalvor~on SOid, The qunlilicn1ion~ for n to p-level compcutlon ,uch 3\ this nrc ba,lcally to ho,•c 10 minutes, or th ree ,ongs. memoriled in two or more lnnguogcs. But n gre,u deol more Is involved than mere memoritotion. she ~aid. " ln this type of performing. you nllcmpt 10 become on cs1cn~lon of the compo)er," Halvorson ~nid. Thi\, for t.ome students, is one of the more d1Hicu1t ai.pects or perform· ing. Holvorwn said the competition i~ very tough, with s tudent~ mo~tly co ming from fou r-yea r universlltcs such as Wa,;hington Stnte, Centra l Washington nnd Whitworth.
Holiday blues only a myth by Kalby Ganison The Christmas season can unleash a variety of emotions 311d conflids in people, such as frustrations caused by incrc.ased dem.and.s for money, or increased pressure to int.eract with relatives. Many people think these frust.rnions can lead 10 a case of the holid~y ~lues. bur a study done by two University of Virginia Medical Center psychtatnsts proves olhcN ·isc.
No measure of depression has eve r shown a consis1on1 in_crease before Chrisuna.s. according to the two psychiatrists. James Randolph Hillard and John Buckman. The study indicates that the number of suicides. psychiatric hopita.!izations and ~·en letters to advice oolumns is relatively low during December. Dunng the cbys and weeks before Christmas, and on Christma.s Day it.self, the occurrence of prominent psychiatric illn~o:ss also decline. . The srudy by Hillard and Bucltman also suggests that too linle auentl~n is given to the positive psychologic31 effects of Cllrisun:is. Sup~ n from ~nends and relati,es and the increa.scd sense of hope that prevails dunng the holiday season arc rv.o positi,e effca.s that should be given more anenuon. Getting more exercise and using time more wisely a.re ways people can bea_t stress and the holiday blues. rux:ord1og to the study.
'Sousa!' to he performed Sunday The North Idaho College Percussion Ensemble, North Idaho J~ El?semble. and the North Idaho Svmphooic Band combine efforts un der d1rec11~n of Todd Snyder to perform "Sousa! Sousa! Sousa!" Sunday at 8 p.m. 10 the C-A Auditorium.
Dec. 2, 1983 / Cardina.l Re,·ie"'' - 9-
Beat holiday blues for $5 if you choose b) Kurtis !:fall
Dan Breeden photo
Scene from the pns t Chatla Hamcsi, Al Pot l!I and Anno McDowell p•use for a moment during the No,. 12 perfonnance o( " The Male Animal" In lhe C.A Auditorium.
[___s_c_r_e_e_n_s_c_e_n_e___J Bowie's film a cliche b) Craig J ohns on If you cun ,,ndc 1hri1ul!h the i.11b-111lc:,, impo,.,iblc Jap:mc"c accent\ and .'I hntchct Job on the \ccnc progrt's)1on. then mo\bc y11u "111 be obk 111 dl.'C1phcr wmc meaning from " Men)' C'hri\lmn:, Mr Lawre nce" The mm. \tarring Onvid Bo" 1c ond Tom Conti. dcp1c1, the hie ur Bnll\h S(>ld1er,. ~ubjern:d 1n the hrurnl care 1he Jnpancw 01 11 priwn camp in Jn, a during World W11r II. Opening scenes ~how u Joponc:,c and Dutch soldier being beaten \evercl} b, 1hc1r cnp1ors. TI1c Jnponcse officer roped the soldier ond " a:, about 10 be e,ecutcd for hi\ crime. But 11"1· before hc i~ :illo\\'ed 10 nncmpt h3n-1,.ari. he ,, nd1culed m front or 1he other men Mr. L.1wrcm:c. who throughout the mO\le tries to underst:ind 11nd deal \\1th the ntrocltie!> he 1111d the other pm,oners ~uffcr. in c, to ,top t he horrendous procecdingb. For hb cftort5 he too i:. beotcn and tuld . "You hn, en't !>~-eo a Japanese until you'\'e ,een him comm11 hnn-knn ." And so the rcM or the plot \\Orl. s off thh 1heme: the clkhc that J11p;1mbe. from .i ccrcn1omnl and 1dcali~11c \Cn~e of honor. o1rc ~ed.er~ or death. n11t onl\ for themsclle~ but ubn lor the people nround them as" ell. · No anempt b made tn uplnin from n p,ycholog1cal 11c,.-point "hat re:ill) mnkes thes(' men tirl:. The prcmi~e nlone - o Japanese ronccn1r1111on C3mp - ts forced to carry all of the symbolism the picture 1111cmph to crc:i1e. The plot, ho" to ~un ivc phy\icnlll• and emononolh Ill a death camp. ts st3ril'. As each ~cene fades 10 blnck anti bod. 10 yet nnothcr e:i:ompft or the senseless 1re~tmcn1 of prisoners. one c:innot help but a k of the director. " \\'hat are 1ou tclhng me 1h11t you haven't already told me before?'" . 111_c answer 1s not much, but one redeeming value 1n the mO\IC is Bow1e·s rl\'CUng ~creen presence. For thoi.e " ho nrc famihar "ith his " Ori. as a mu>1clan, in1ercsi m the pio:ture h mnl111;11ned ~imply becousc we \\3nl 10 see ho" ,,ell he cnn 3ct.
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And he ~on act. os he proves m on octing-dnss in!>pircd pantomime of 3 morning shavc. But S4 to see Bo"ic pretend 10 shave i~ a bit 100 much 100 as~
The hohd:i} ~ason fills the .i,er:ige college srudent wuh a mild form of panic. h 1s not nght 10 neg!~, an~ of one's fncnds. but on :1 budget which bJrel} perm11s eatmg. ho" c:io one e:tpress one·s holid:i) scnuments and a,oid the terrors or s1.1n3rion? There are a number of wa}·s to bring 3 linl~ holidll} cheer into someone's life (e,cn one's O"·nJ "'ithout biting into the month's grocery mone}. If S5 is .ill 3 person can afford. there 3rc still dozens of linle thmgs 10 make one's sentiments and grecnngs kno" n. Coeur d'Alene h.is 11 theaters which operate yenr-round: Jdmission to an} of them ne-er e.xeceds ~. The Sk:ue Pluo Roller Rini. offers en1ert:1inment, no,·cl"· and fun for a pnce that falls "ell belo" the budget line. · The vo.nous Ooml shops around Coeur d'Alene h11,e sc,cral small single-flower !fems for~ or under 1h:11 would bnghtcn the holidays for someone special. A bottle of , tntagc u.inc unfonun:11elv goes beyond the budget hnc. but .'I good bottle of holiday chnmp3gne or Cold Dllek m:ike. n dinner sp~i:il and at a price under SS. For the mischievous. or 1he young lo1cr, o .small spng of mistletoe along "·ith 3 hand-wnnen 1n111:i1ion to use it is a "onderful "J) 10 put .icross a mess:1ge 1h111 m3y otherwise miss 11~ m:irk. A li\·e polllscttia or Christmas cactus is :in me~pensi1e. long,lasung gtft for the g:irdener or plant-lo,cr. Sm31I, pracuc:il gifts - 011shlights. self defense 11cm . such as whistles or m3ce. ~1:itionen. bmerics - all 1he,c arc .11·3ibble for "ell under the s.; bud1?et line. · One c.in talk fo~r a consader:iblc time on a long-distance f)hone call w1thou1 passing the s.; m.1rk. RcJ.:h out 3nd touch soml'Onc \pe.:1al who ,ou h11,cn·1 ,;cc:, lateh · Put SS of ga~hne an. a car and t:ike s<imeone "ho i, vi\111ng on a liu le tour of the town .ind the rounm side· 11 male• 1hn1 person feel more at home. and II g1,e, one :i fet"ling m~ide thnt is "onh for more than the mane} \pent. Make :i donu1on to 3 fa,onte chanty: 11 "ill bt> Jppreciated and ,llmeone "111 h.i,'C :i. brtch1er hohda, season than 1hc1 would h3H' had u.itht.'ut that dan:11100 . Take "'mn,nc- ,pec'lal out for roffet' or pie. PanhJndler Pies hn~ o ple:i,ant a1mo~pht'rc. and 1he pncc and the pie .ire bllth ca~,· to ,walk"' . Writl· 3 le\\ ltttt'" 10 people u. ho me311 a lot - a p,J\tagc stamp (for o "h1lc :11 le:i,1 j b ,TIii onl) ~O C'Cnh. Lc11c~ mcln muc:-h to 1ho\C' who are far J\\ a, or loneh. Hai e· J ,,n~le ·ponn1t takt'n at one of the local km -.:ost studios. A ponr.'111 L\ a l!ih that last) ,inuall~ fo~H·r and ne1er lo,cs it. \'Olue. There arc dozcns of ~m:all. u\elul outdO<lr·spons itt'm~ 1ha1 :ire ine,pens11e. practical Jnd useful. Windproof ~ndlcs. \\3lerproof m:atche\. l1)•1)inl! matenal. ftshmg lurt>s Jnd much more are all well under the bud~t nwk The old ~widb, the Chmtmu rard. snll lift\ ~piri1s and brings ,mile<.. for a m101mum (tih ou!IJ~. And then thtte ~ the greatest and lea~, e~pens11e gill of :ill - good old·fa~h1oned hollda\ cheer. l.mdneu and lo1e - \\hich co~ts. of cour~. nothtng but .a. hnle nmc .
Bands zn bars all month on \Ion .• Dec. 5.
Local b.irs a~ the ma.an .icth m on the "eelends. 3.S man, coltege ·SIU· dents 1,.no". The bands tlut pLl~ at the b:irs a~ Jlso 1mporun1. After all. "ho "anh to (!O 10 a b:i.r w hert' there 1s :1 lou'i\ band? A IOU(\ band me:ins IOO)\ d.innng or no d.'ln;mg 31 all. .
Aiies 1s pll>IRR :it the Holiday Inn loun11e Dreamer 1s a11hc l'onh Shore Lounge un11I Dec JO. and at the C11tten Club 1n H.1 •den Lake. 1he Model) "ill be pl. mg un11I Sat Dec J. and Glider ..,jJI bc~m Mon .. Dec. 5.
The Idaho R1,er B:iod 1s pla,mg Jt tbe Dug<1u1 all through the month of December. and :11 the 81:lck Dog. Blaet Ros.: is pla)ing through S4t., Dec J F.uuuc "ill folio" Blad Rose
Lion is playing JI Pcebodv',, .ind Ci,s, S1Jr i) JI Sherrn.. n·s. II ·,he bu, ore no1 the ideal scene. rhere are 11" J) s 1he IOCDI theaters.
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Grenada--Oh w hat a bungling invasion~e bJ Rk j . Ka.SI The U.S. invasion of Grenada v.as a classic:- c:-asc of bungled foreign policie~. bu1 1h1s particular m,·as1on ,-a., 1he ngh1 than~ to do. a('('()rdrng to Michael J Miller d1rec1or of the inslruc:-Mnal media ~r11cc, at :-re Miller. who li,ed m Grenada for 15 month\ and 11.or).cd l<•seh Ith form er Grenadian Prime Mrn1,ter Maurice Bishr,p. ~1d 1ha1 1hc ~mer• ican student\· Ji,ci. were no: in an> immediate trouble. bu1 ra1hcr 11,cre an excuse for the Reagan adm.uustrauon 10 1akc over 1hc: 1iny 1i.llnd. ..The invasion "35 the ngln tlung 10 do.· · Mille r said. "but for all the wrong reasons... He said the lcfttst mihtu)' coup that killed Bishop and took control of Grenada in mid-October was a "bunch of grizzly Marxist 1hugs." The U.S. inn sloo saved Grenadians from a period of bruutl terrorism. because the people who did the killing were extremel y dangerous. Miller said. " I knew the people who "ere killed... Miller said ...and I knew the people who did the killing . .. In fo ci. hr added. 1he Prime Minis1er of Jamnica described these killers as a .. mad-dog government." But according to Miller. the "hole bloody scenario could ha,•e been avoided had i1 no1 been for 1he him•n of U.S. diploma1ic hostilities aimed ~. Bishop and his government. When Bishop deposed the Grenadinn Prime Minister Enc G:1irv in 1979 and es1abhshcd the People's Re,'OIU· 1ionary Governmen1. the U.S. im• mediJ1el} lnbded Bishop"s govern· mcni as M:irxisl r:idic:ils "hich. according 10 Miller. isn'1 true.
GAINING GROUNDl.111 980.
'·To paint Bl hop a~ a hard-hne Mux1s1 lS a great d1s1on1on of the truth.·· !',,filler Slld. \1 iller pointed out that Bishop hJd a ,en· pluralist econom~ and media. · B, thu I mean u ".is not I unified "1.n:i,;t model for either the cconom, 1r the prt:>S .. \ filler ..,.1,d ... Those are :he t• o fim clements tlu1 are truh ~fa.."llJit go\'cmment consolidate.·· '-hller ~d thar Bishop "a,; m:iking public \peecbe\ dunng the first four months ccntf)1n1t that Cree clect1ons v.ould take placr v. •thm one ve.u He ~•d that Bishop's gmemment ,. as publicly comm med 10 the conunu, :i.uon of v.e51ern s1' lcs of dcmocracv in
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·•E,er since the Orst day BiMiop took control or Grenada.·· Miller said. ''he had anempted to estAbli~h rell· rioa.s with the Unned States. "It ,. JS the United States that turned do11. n Bishop's inirw request for economic and diplomatic suppon . ·• B} the consunt diplomatic hostili, ues disp~~ed by the U.S. govcrnmcn1 t°"Jrd Bishop's go,emmem. Miller said Grenada "as pushed in to the Co ban-Sos 1ct amp. He said th~ hostilities were con· \tan1 beginning ,.,,b formcr-Prcsidem Jtmm) Caner and mcrc3.Stng under the Rcaean adm1n1stration. Miller ~;ud that while be was living in Grenada m 1961. there was 3 plot to o,enhrow the Grenadian go\'emment b~· mercenaries from both the United States .llld Dominica. He said the plo1 wns found out, aborted and well documented by the Washinglon Post 3Jld the Ne" York Times. He added that the United States has
A group of Gre.011.dlans launch the DAtlonal literal) campaign
Mk hae.l J. MUler alway, been hosiilc towt1rd any government pereeivcd to be a thrent to Amcru:an m1ercs1 in the region. Instead of rejecting the Cubanbacked Grem1dian leuder. 1he Rcogon admin1s1ration should hove taken the time to reall y get to know Bishop 11. hlch could have preven ted lhc Cuban-S,Met build up in thnt Carib· bean tS!nnd. According to Miller. Bishop wu n very compassionate and humane man. .. In fact ," Miller said, "the re~on he was probably killed by more radical members of hi~ own party was because Bishop was leaning more und more toward 1he We~lcrn Himispherc ' s political styles.'' " Bishop's government was jus1 a bunch of people who thought they saw the way out of povcny and dependency for their eountry." He said Bishop spent o lot of time talking 10 you ng people as well a..s oil citizens. " I ooce saw Bishop spend five hour~ talking 10 studen~." Miller s:iid. "He -.ould ask them things lite how they perceh•ed na11onol honor and what could they do to panicipate in their government. " You won' t find Reagan doing that." Miller wanted to go on record 10 male sure that his position was not misunderstood. He stressed that he did no1 want 10 have people think that he suppon ed a Marxist go"ernmcnt. "I disagreed w11h a lot of what Bishop's government did,•· Miller said " Bishop and I spent a lot of time discussing poli11cs. and I openly criticized the bureaucracy built UltO his go\'emment. " Bui so man) rimes I saw him expo~ a genuine humarustic concern for people." Bishop was in~trumcntal in improving roads, the Grenadian fishing fleet. agncul111re processing :ind canning. and education. he said. In fact, Miller said th:u Bishop h:1d engaged him to help Gre nadia ns become English literate. MoSt Americans arc not C\'en a-.-:ire that English
is the predominant lllllguage ~ 1 th~ .Caribbean 1~lands. he said. ' ' ( It see ms . d1ff1eult for AM .,,~rlt0 ci 11.cn.~ ~o J~'."~ ~ut or their 0.'11 li11Jc pe!".pcctwe, " 111lcr said, "and them~elvcs m the no,<iiion or I'll bod ' ..~ 111' ' Y "'h0 1' ~ trying to create SOWi change through a method ihc U.S go~ernment may not lean inward." He said l~I' rnuoa for th is 1, because AmeneoM are fed hall-tns\h\ nnd govcrnmcni3J.fihcred ncv.s 1~ Gre n:idn and lh c mas~ media ha, railed 10 take o more crilical aod objecth•e look at what has rnu1 hnpprncd and why. " It'~ en~y lo wn1ch kids comlai home from Grcnad3 and kis~ing iht ground:' MIiler said. " and say, ·~ boy. our actions were justified "' " It's rrighlc ning the way the mtdJ.i just took party lines all the way cSo.-a In Lhe downing or 1hc Korean KAL Flight 7 thing ," Miller said "Repon. e r~ 11rc ~imply not digging In aod asking the right questions; they 1tt doing the same thing in Grenada." He SBld there could be some stnm1 pnrnllcls be1wecn the Soviets' don ing of the K/\L nnd lhe U.S. invl.lllll of Grennda. " You might say tha1 theSovietssbr.1 down an airplane 11nd that the U1111rd States sho1 down 11n Island.'' Milin said. l.n a recent telepboac ronvmatloD wllh o Grenadian woman and mead Miller said the woman dcscnbed Ille cu rrem situation over there as chaocic and dangerous since the U.S. invUIOII ond 1he subsequent take-over b1 Governor General Sir Paul Scoon.
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Scoon has banned public meetings. authorized arrests wu.hout walTllnlS 111 and warned he will censor the pres~. It Miller said. and currently has about 1 250 Grenadian citizens that were ~ conoecred 10 Bishop's government II under arresr. I The NIC instructionlll media director s,ud that he has forwarded a visa in 11 hopes of geuing I.he Grena.dian woman ~ over here to auend NJC as an inremaiional s1udent. She worked as a Grenadian journalist. Miller sa.td. and he fears that she might have been one of rhe 250 Grenadians being held by Scoon's government. Mlller and his ,.-ife wunr lo sponsor lhe Grenadian for a two-year period. and hope to have her here before Christmas. Be Mid I.bat there cou Id also be some parallels between the Soviet ruling party and what happened to Reagan. " There is some evidence coming out now that suggests that Reagan wanted to bail out of the invasion at one Lime.·• Miller said, "but his military advisers told him it was jUSI too late. "One might wonder juS1 how much control Reagan's administration has over our military. " With all the sources av11ilable 10 the CIA, MIiier wonders how the menl41 ho1p1tal an Grenade could have been
AWARD WINNER- -Fo rmer Grenadian Prime Miois1e r Mawire Bishop gh es an award to a farmer who in,·eo1ed a coeonot shell ~cllc lnl.p .
bombed nccident2lly nnd why 11 look
6,000 solder\ lo knock over obout 600 Cubans. and why Americans were sent into that invbion with touri~I mops. "Let'• not llCCept simple an,wcrs," Miller soid. "The European countries
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Mkhacl Miller photo
·, , the capital o( Grenada , bu been the focus of
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could ,~ ,.ell drop lhear ~uppon of the plannc-d l S m1ss1les deploy· men1," And "h) "as Reag.111 so concerned about the huge airpon an Grenada! Miller a~u. h I\U a l' S -Bnush 1a~l fortt an 11n, 1ha1 recommended the bu1IJ1n11 of the airport. he said. lnd there v.cre 1- rountnes anduding a L .S prt.ate \ fi1m1 concern that created 1he l.111dlill ,ind -.ere m,-ohed 10 mal.ang 1h11 :urpon And v. hen Rcai::an ~,mph claimed that tber<" v.C're Amenc.u: ~tudenis· h,e~ at sttu.C'. \fallen added. 1he pro1Jc:n1 f.lalcd 10 mcmion chat the 1.e, mcdial-~hool ad.rmnistntDn had atr"e..ih t~1abh,hed a truce ,. ,to the ne" Gren.1d1an milttat) rouncil He sa1d ,~ mcdtcal adm1m)tra1or1. had been 1n)trumen1al an pl~,n;: rv,o ..\mmC"an d•plom.al~ on the t)l:lnd, v.ho "en- tn the proce)s of n<--go:1a11ng "uh the Re\olutionan \1iluan Council "hi~h h3d bttn ru"tin;: the counm for four or foe da,s. • "But the 1mpon:inr rhtn;; 10 re· member through all of this." '-tiller said. "1~ th:it thl) "hole 1btng could h1,e been a,01dcd 1hroueh more d1plomi11ic rela11ons bet\\ttn-lhe t..S. go,ernmen1 ;ind the Bishop's go,em· meot .. Miller said that he IS med of reading
edirori:ils :ind columns thnl onh· skim the surfacc and di,·orce the regional histOI') lrom the analysis proccs~. "It's gross!) naive 10 think that we can get the real picture of "hat happened ... Maller said. "when reporter, ~p~nd 20 minutes in inter· , u~" s. as~mg ummpon3nt questions and coming up "i1h 3 simplistic an JI~,.,~ to a , Cl') complicnted prob·
lem: \\'hJt happened, Miller wonders. ~, .. een the summer of 1082 and now
tha: brought on such an esculated d1\t\10n ber•.. c:en the Bishop',; go"emmen: He $aid 1ha1 when he left Grenada. ,t ,..ii..\ a beauuful Jnd pca,etul place 10 he he ,;iad. "at'\ no1 some· thmg ,.e c.in undcr\land in a 100-word 3naJyu~ 1•" a ,cq complicated 1,11ua1 n "'It'\ tied in ""h the hastc,n· of lJ S lor.:1sn -el.11100,. n , u~d an wnh the htstori uf economa, 3nd polttl(3l cond111on\ m the C.mbbcan .. \11llcr \JtJ !,c h,1pc, that Reagon ":II keep ht~ prom1~e to get the L, S. troop, out ol 1he 11n, C.1nbbe.1n 1\land as \OOn .1s possible and to let 1he Grenadian\ ge1 on wi1h the job of electang their O"-n go,ernment 3nd living thelr o" n laves.
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Library funding request unlikely state priority b) RlcJ. Knst Editor'\ nou?: Thb Is 1hc conclusion or o 1,. o,por1 nc,., annl)SI~ series conc-emlng i'ilC') s1rugglc 10 oblllln slllle fund~ 10 build a library /compu1er sclcnc-c building. With anh S~OO 000 lcr1 10 be recommended b, 1hc Idaho Permant'nl Buildinl! Fund Council and a long list of rcquc~ts. NIC "ill probabl) get J s1rikc three on II) requcMed funds to biuld 1he Jong-pbnncd librar\ compu1er )Cience building. NIC Presldco1 Barr) Schuler said some Idaho legisl:11ors have recom· mended tha1 NIC come up with half 01 1he reQues1ed fundml? as a '"show of good faiih 1oward really needing the focility ... He s.iid that this "ould mandate putting a bond before 1hc Kootenai Coun1y residen1s 10 ob1ain the money but 1ha1 there are alread) SC\'Cral bonds coming up 1ha1 would prevent NIC's chanct•s of gemng one for quhe some lime. This is a far cry from the IPBFC"s response 10 the firsl ycar·s rcques1 £or funding 1hat they appro"ed and recom· mended 10 the Legislature. With rhe
money belt gcumg tighter e,cry year and rhe emphasis roward teachers· pa) and re\'amping the state's educational sys1cm. NIC's long-needed libr:ir) project keeps sinking in the political quagmire.
news analysis The firsl general recommendarion of the Accreditation Evaluation Commit· tee of 1hc Northwest Association or Schools and Colleges. "b1ch visi1ed NIC on April IJ-15. 1983. clearly stated 1ha1 "the library faciliry. which is grossly inadequate. should be replaced with a st ru ctu re that is commensurate with the college· s mis· sion." NIC"s academic enrollment is now larger than that of the College of Southern Idaho. le" as-Clark State College. orth"cst Nazarene College nnd the College of Idaho, yel NIC has the smallesl library holdings of any ins1iturion of nigher learning in Idaho.
NIC Is the only public institution or higher education in Idaho that has not received a Joint Finance and Appropri· ations Committee recommendation £or fonding or a mnjor Permanant Build· ing Fund Project during the four fi~cal years of 1980 through 19SJ. And "nn the current cmp hasi$ toward revamping the state's educational system and making the criterin for admittance into a four-year college or unh•ersiry more stringent. NIC will see even more demanding numbers of enrollment. Students who arc unable 10 make the entn level criteria for Idaho's universilics will be maxing o rwo-ycar stop at NIC and other community colleges to receive the initial skills ne.:essary £or continued college e.tpo· sure. NIC Is rbe onl) communil) college tl\'ailablc 10 the North Idaho panhnn· die. and n therefore become, vital 1hu1 it maintains a well-rounded education· al program 10 offer its s1udcn1s. In Schulcr's latest request to the IPBFC. he mted 1h01 if this focilhy cannot be added soon. the quali1y or the educational programs at NIC will be impaired. compliance with the accreditation standards will be ad versely affcc1ed and increased librnry holdings will necessi1a1e £urther reduclions or sea1inJl. Ele suid the mus hrooming demands for tr:uned computer personnel will no1 be met. s1uden1~ will race impaired
access 10 compu ter-science careers and computer-aided instruction'11 opportunities. and Kootenai County will be unable to gain ground in its efforts 10 proi:notc economic de,clopmcnr by attracting computer- and elcctronic-relnted industncs. . The proposed balldlng would proVlde SJ.000 square feet of addition11l sp:ice, increase the libmry capQci1y to 100,000 new volumes and would 1riple a,•ailable study s tations. Additionally. the new building would house the college library, audio-visual mc<lia produC'tion censer. co mputer cc n1cr, co mputer science classrooms and offices, the lc:immg skills ce nter and administrative offic~ that rely most heavily on 1he computer for ncce~snry dBt:1 processing. Without C.tpanding lhe current fi. brary and expanding the co mputer science related instructions at NIC. it is npparenl thac s1udcnts will receive far less than they arc en111led 10 and perhaps foll for short or achie\'ing their individual goals. Hopcfull), Schuler will not be deterred from .:ichie,•lng the needed facility for NIC while facing continued rejections from the Idaho lawmakers And hopefully. the needed funds can be squeezed out or the si.ue·s budget before N IC takes its last breath and sinks below the su_rfoce of Idaho's politica l quicksand - permlnently '"out of sight - ou r of mind ...
screwdrivers , margaritas , pina colados
etc .
Burger and Fries in Basket $1 .50 on Wednesday
1st draft beer Free on Friday I
I.D. required
Sh owtime
MJlle Scroggie pboto
Actors and crew members prepare lO shoot a scene £or the a:iovle "Vl~lon Qo~ Nov. It, at Spokane Falls Community College. About 230 NIC stodenlS ,·ohml to be extras for the "'reslllng segment of the Olm.
Dec. 2, 1983/ CanlinaJ Review - 13-
MJke Scroggie photo
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The moon perches low In lhe sky like a lllrge sireet ligh1 o,·er She= A,·eoue In Coeur d'AJcne.
Much waiting involved in 'Vi,sion Quest' effort by Wanda Stephens .. Roll Lhc sound. Two cameras. ·A· camera mark. · B" cnmer11 mark. Action! Cull" This w115 a scene 1ha1 some NIC students were to wilncS\ mnny times during the long hours or filming or 1he Warner Brothers movie ··Vision Quest·· an Spokane Nov. 11. Approxim:11cly 2JO NIC students signed up as crtms to nppenr as 1he audience of a wrestling match in one segment of the movie. but only about 120 were nctunlly present 10 pllrticipiue. according 10 instructor Tony Stewan. coordinnlor or the event and a member or the Hospice of Nonh Idaho board or directors. Some students partieip111ed in two to four days of filming directly with the stars. A SJO sJlary per panidpnn1 was domued to Hospice of Nonh ldnho, an organization that helps the 1erminally ill and their families. For many of the students the dlly began 1114:30 a.m. Shonly after 6 n.m .• S1e"·an led the procession of limousines, school buses and n cuavan or cars on the student's trek to become movie stars. Upon llrriving nt Spokane Falls Community College the students. along with hundreds of other extras, 11•ere divided into separate groups and then led 10 different rooms to wo.i1. There they were served coffee and doughnuts until filming began 2 and one half hours later. Life in the movies became a reality llS the students panicip3ted in o,•er three hours of monotonous filming. Neuly 12 u1kes were needed before the first scene was finally accepted. and filming was just beginning on 1hc third :.cene "hen the extras "ere dismi~sed for lunch. nearly 2 hours behind schedule. After lunch, which was catered by the Ridpllth Hotel. the filming proceeded for nearly sii more hours without a bretlk before filming wos halted at Jlmost 8 p.m. . During the filming some extra:. were lo:ined school jackets and spirit ribbons in order to make lhe audience look as realistic as possible. Then at the end of the day. the entire audience was 1akcn to the opposite side or the gym. gi,.en posters. jackeis and ribbons of the other school and then were filmed as the,• cheered for the other team. • Students returned home that evening. happy they had helped ho:.pice. but many agreed that. they would really consider being on extra agnin. Many said they realized dunng the long da)' that movies were n linle glamour and a 101 of hard work. According to Stewm. the omount of money that was actually donated 10 hospice bad no\ been determined because the check for SJ.330 from Warner Brothers had not amvcd yet.
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95c wells BIG SCREEN TV WHERE ELSE?
Happy hour Mon., Tues.,
Thurs ., & Fri. 95' well drinks 5 · 8 p.m .
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Dec. 2, 19S3/ Cardinal Review -14-
Spring registration slated Regul:ir registr:11ion will be conduct· ed m the gym on Jan. 12 from 8:J0-11 :JO a.m. and again from 1·J:JO p.m •. ciccording to Gary Coffman. student services career counselor. Pavment of tuition and fees. record· ing of cl:isses and advising for new students will be conducted in the gym during these registration times. Coffman snid. The last day 10 avoid having to pay ll penalty charge for late rcgistro1ion is Jan. 12. Late registraiion. Jon. 16-20, Coffman snid will be from 9-11 :JO n.m. ;ind ag:1in from J .J p.m. New students should go 10 1he student services foyer area on the second floor of the SUB for advismg. Rcturnmg ~tuden ts !.hould check with their advisors. The busine~~ and regi\trnr offices "111 be open from 9 o.m. until noon and from 1·4 p.m. for rcgis1ration purposes and payment of tu1uon. fees and a SIO
late chnrge. Registrar hsuko Nishio said. Placement testing on Dec. S .7 and 9 will be conducted in the Banner Roo~ of lhe SUB at 9 o.m. for reading, 9:~S a.m. for English and 10:45 a.m. for math. according to Peggy Fcdje student services counselor. ' Testing will be held in the Hedlund Building in Room 2JJ on Dec. 8 during the same hours. Fcdje said. Testing \,~II be held at 9 a.m. and I p.m. on Jan. 11 in Room St of the librnry building for all tests. Fcdjc ~aid. No placement testing will be conducted on Jan. 12 the regular rcgistri, tion day. Plnccmeot 1csting during lotc re, gimntion. Jon. 16-20, will be conduct, cd in the Bonner Room of the SUB at 9 o.m. for rending. 9,45 o.m. for English nnd 10:45 a.m. for moth, Fcdje siid.
Senate needs vo -tech student Due 10 attendance problem, In his vocational cour~es. ASNIC Scnnior Mar.in O'Blenes\ h,t\ been forced to resign from hh voca1ional seat on 1he student board. Any fre~hman \•ocattonal l>tudcnl who is m1erested in being an ASNIC )Cna1or for 1he remoinder of O'Blcncss' term ~hould con1ac1 ASNIC President Lee Cole.
Hang in there. bab) A skeleton o( a human fetus "llS one of the many dlspla)S at the NIC bloloID dcpan:ment's open house beld Nov. 22 in Seller Hall.
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Sexuality wonderful thin g, forum speaker emphasizes by Sandy Stambaogb Sex in America 1odav ism a "neo-Victonnn·· era. Marv Lee Neil Tatum said a1 the Nov. II popcorn £~rum :u NIC. · In the Victorian era. anythtng remotely tesembling a human form was covered up. for exa.mple, cable legs were considered suggesrive and were covered with long cloths. Toda). according 10 Tatum. people have gone 1he other way. Pornographic pictures, diny jokes and magazine :micles :1re very common. and if children are learning abou1 loving from lhem. our socie1y is in trouble. she said. People 1odoy need 10 be educ:ned from birth to death, To1um said. ·• In the United S1a1es we believe we are successful if we ge1 the kids out or high school and out of 1he house ,.ithou1 them gening someone pregnant or getting pregnnn1. Tatum soid. "We have 1his wonderful thing. !hot when someone is in their 20s. ZAP. they know everything," she said. Tatum. who has made gues1 appearances on 60 Minutes, Good Morning America. 1he Todny Show and Home Box Office. said th111 sexuality is n gift. T:uum said people have a responsibility 10 kids and 1hemselves 10 be healthy. loving. and caring and to give 1hat to others while loving themselves as sexual beings.
Campus Friends Children 's Center ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR REGISTRATION FOR Spring Semester childcare for NIC Students only
reasonable rotes
activities designed to meet the need of each child Hrs. 7 :45 to 5: 15
Y, block from the NIC campus
664-8478
Dec. 2, 1983/ Cardlnal Re, lcw
15
Student counseling Need exceeds NIC capacity by Rita UoWngswortb The rario of students to counselors at NIC is not up to the national average even though a large percentage of the student body could benefit from counseling. according 10 Les Hogon. dean of students. The national a\•erage is one counsel· or to every 300 students. but NIC has three counselors 10 1.600 full-rime students. Hogan said. The lldministmion nnd board are a"·are of the problem. Hog;m said, but when President Schuler appeals for help. the stare Legislature does not re~pond. NIC could use additional counselors bCClluse a large number of students from this area have a problem with self.perception, he said. "A wge perccn~e of studen ts do nor feel good about their scholastic ability. motivation. direction or their day-to-day ability 10 handle life." Hogan said. Margaret Fedje. NIC's only licensed counselor. feels 1h01 Hogan is very perceptive in hi1> views of the student body's biggest problem. Fedje explained that students who attend community colleges do not generally have specific academic and career goals in mind. And ns a rule. they lack confidence because they have not had the opponunity to test their abilities. she said. Students who enter NIC directly out of high school have nol had enough life experiences to have teslcd th emselves. Fedje said.
She added that women who return 10 coUegc after being housewives have not had the opponunity 10 test \\hat they cno :ind can not :iccomplish. Ma.le students "ho are attending NIC to retrain for a nC\\ occupauon have, for the most part. worked in the woods or mines. and those jobs have not permiued them to test their abilities. Fedje sajd. Students who have not tested their abilities and limits. and ha\e not had the opportunity to determine their specific interests. can benefit from the suppor1 offered by counselors. Fedje said. Assistance and resources of all types ore available to students who need help. she said. but at a commuter enmpus it is difficult co gei infonnation about the available programs 10 the students. " People oomc In, go to classes. and leave campus,•· Fedje said. "They don't pick up the newspaper. stop in the cafeteria. or tolk 10 other sto· dents ... With assistance, t.hcse people can develop skills that can make them effective &iudents. Hogan said. "A carpenter does not build a house with his bare hands... Hogon sajd. .. He uses tool!> he has been trained to use." In order to be effective at college, students must leorn what resources are n"ailable on campus. where things ore. and where to go for help when they need it, Hogan said.
lo addition. the) must deve lop various skills such ru. taking notes and using the llbrar}. he said. Anything ond everything that SIU· dents need help ~ich is a,•ailable 10 them on an individual basis in the sn1den1 sen·ices office, Fedje said. "If they come in. we'll help them.'" But. she added, NIC srudents often have so many other things in their h\·cs to deal with. the,· don't seek the help they need. · M.an~ of our students are recenth· divorced ..;th children 10 care for. she said. Still others .ire retraining for jobs. Many NIC students are busy. and they have to get an education in a shon period of ume. Fedje said. These students need direction and suppon 10 get through college. and much of the counseling that is done on an individual basis can be given effectively in a group situauon. she Sa.id. Hogan said he "ould Ii.kc 10 institute a required class at NIC for all freshmen that would assist them in making career choices. teach them to use the facilities on campus and help them 10 develop sic.ill at toking notes and tests. Hogan said that 3 required class of that type would greatly benefit srudents and reduce the pressure on the counseling staff. Fedje said 1111cmpts to institute such a class ha~e been unsucce~sful for Se\•eral years. but she tigree!> that it would be effectwe.
In the mc:inumc. Fedje said that se\·eral classes are offered that can help peopl~ team to become effen1ve student:.. She recommended the ScmmM in Human Potenti,11 cl:iss. "hich is offered both semesters and is taught by Jim UpC'hurch. director of finandal nids. ''Who am I?" :ind ·· Am I impor· tant?"" llrc queStion~ that students can ons\\er tifter 1akmg the class. Hogan said. Hogan also suggested 1ha1 students rnke the C3reer Development and Life Planning class. It is offered both semesters and is instructed by Gary Coffman. career counselor. The doss 1s geared to help students 10 understand lhtit thC) have markCI· able skills and abilities. Hogan said. It lcJches students to sell those market· able skills and :ibilities. \1 rite :i good resume and apply for work. How 10 Study in College is also a class recommended by Fedje. II is a transferable elertive offered by the Academic Resource Center. The clnss co, crs many areas such as ho" 10 listen. budget time and take notes. Fcdjc said. Fedjc ndded 1hn1 people can be· come beuer students by doing the following: -gelling 10 know at least one person in C\'CI)' class so notes can be borro,.ed if necessary. - using advisors as a resourt'c and a link 10 information.
Reciprocity given nod continued from page I In oddition. the faculty assembly will select an adjunct commillee to a~sist in the screening and selection process. 111c adjunct committee will be composed to rencc1 the make-up of rhc faculty bv division. TI1e adjunrt commillee will review crcden1iols of o.11 applicants and rank in order the rop eandldo1es. They "'ill olso rcvie\\ credenuols of oll finalists nnd again runk them in order. 1l1e adjunci commiuce shall communicate with the joint focuhy-odminhimth•e commiuce through the focuhy rcprescntntivc to the joint committee. And the faculty adjunct commi11ec ~hnll ha\•e the opportunity 10 meet informally all final1~t~ ns they ore brought to compus. Bundy i.aid that he was happy with the board'~ npprovo.J of the proposol nod that thib proposal will give faculty mcmbl)~ at NIC :i chance to p:inicipnte and have their feeling~ heard during the hiring process. He snid that Johni.on will ma~ e autonomous decisi~n:. as pan of the three-member screening com~1llee but that the roculty adjunct commiue ,.;11 have input to the ~creening committee for all Lhrcc members 10 take into consideration. NIC ~sident Barry Schuler said that the proposal was quite acceptable 10 him. In addition. he said the procedure "'ould be Ubeful in serving as II future gov~rnme~tal m~c~anism for ha\"ing the faculty paniclpate in ndmm1stra1ive academic decisions.
Pu hing progre Orfglnall) plU1 of Fort Sherman. the McConnlc!. Hou.se on Gardea AHi. mue room for parkln.g.
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lc>"elcd No\. 12 to
Dec. 2. 1983/ Cardlnal Revie"'
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Idaho's exodus Lo1t, pay drives teache rs awaJ governor says b) Rid. IC.st Idaho teacher\ arc lea• 1nj! planning 10 lea,c: or ,.. 111 c,I\ c the) do nc,: see a suh\tanuJI pa inc:rca~e 1h1~ comml! year. according tr Go,·. John E,an\. In 3 rcccni mtcrnev., E, an\ said tha1 1earhcr's \:ilanes io Idaho ra.nked J<lth in the nation and l:i~t i:,.uhm the six conuguou~ \tat cs vqrh 'A h1ch the college competes "Our leat hers a.re recei, Ing SJ,000 belo,.. the nauonal a,cragc: E,aM i.aid...and SJ.SO() belou the \1ountatn Region stales in rcgardi. 10 pa~. ·
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fa ans said th:11 his tasl. force on Education for the 1980s has adopted 1he recommend:11ions made b, the Idaho T:isk Force on Higher Education that 1he equiry for Idaho 1eachers' p11y be made up within the nex-1 two _years.
He said 1he pay equity plan calls for 75 percent to be made up this coming year and 2S percem be made up the following year. Evans said a teacher told him last year 1h01 she would have 10 lca\'e Idaho. When E"ans nsked her why. she replied. "For four-thousand dol· l:1rs." She told Evans 1h01 she had ac· cepted a job in Sp0k.anc 1ha1 would pa} her S4,000 more 1han she ,,·as receiv, ing in Idaho. E,•ans said th:11 ldoho also los1 the services of its Dea n or the College of uiw at the University of Idaho \\•hen
W1~n~in offered him SSI .000 to do the same thmf. he ",1s dotni: here for S54.000. ''Thai's quite an mccnuvc 10 relocate." E,an\ ...atd ··we "ere fortun· ate 10 ha,e htm as Joni: a, we did · But E, an\ \.t1d 1h;u ra"ini,? ll'il· chers' pa) 15 not 1he pan.tC'c:.i or ld.lho·~ educattonal problems. He ,aid there are 'iC\ era! other .irea.'I m the cducauon,11 ~, stem th:ir w111 be altered 10 enhance hil!hcr quaht~ of learnine. The go, emor' s tasl. force h:i) recommended that adm1s,1on'I rnto the four-year colleg~ and uni\er)llil'\ be more stnngent. Also. tha1 a 90 perccn1 :111endance be mandJtOr} in high school. High school 1,1udents "ill also have to 311end six periods of instruction c,el') da). according to the 1ask force 's recommcndat1ons. Additionally. more stringent reccn, ification s1andards for counselors will be ,mplemeoted along with inc:cn1ives to anract and retain 1.aJen1ed tcnC'hers. E, ans said th31 Idaho taxpayers will support these demands if they c~n be :issurcd impro\'ements will occur nnd thnt the t~titutions :ind educators will renew thetr com mitmenl 10 quolity education He said be has already recommend· ed that the t.S-cent sales 13.% schedul· ed to end on the l3St day of June. 1984, be cootinued 10 properly fund educa, tion.
Go,·. John Evans Evan\ wa~ referring to the "Sunse1 Talt." which wal. implemen1cd Ins t M3rch 10 offse1 a Sb9.2 million budgo1 shortfall for Fiscal 'Ycnr 1982,SJ. " We're going 10 hove to provide Idaho's children with the excellence in education tha1 every child should h:ive the opportu nity to receive ," Evans said. He also snid th:it parents need to become more involved in their child· rens' education process. " We need to gel the pnrcn1s bnck into t.he school system." Evans said. ·'And all of us, business and individu:11 taxpayers alilte. need 10 recognize the re spo nsibili1y 10 pay the price for excellence in education."
H~ ~nid 1h01 cduc:111on wC1uld be turning toward h1ghcr-1cch in~lruction in Idaho. As p.irl of o long- rnn ge plan. 3 crcn unn or community college, will need 1n he implemented to help \ludent, reach the higher criteria for <.'nt cring ,1 four•ycur u ni vcr,11\· or C1Jllc~e. Evan, ,aid. · Tho go, ernor'~ task rorcc ha, recom mended that a lcgi,l:11ure,appuin1cd ,1.1m mi,sion ,houlcl he CMubli~hcd tv d,•vclnp n plnn for lcgi,lnuvc acuon~ tnward th11t end. And Che co ncept of co mmunity college~ will probably sec 1he money 10 ,upport thh ,ystem con11ng from the property O\\ ners or each community college locnli1y. Evans ~aid. On the issue of NIC'~ third con~ecu, tive request for funds 10 build a llbrnry / co mputcr science building, Evons snid 1hat he was no1 sure whether rhe N IC library proJeC1 would be on the priori1y list now in the hands of the ldoho Permanent Building Fund Council (IPBFC). The IPBFC has :already recommended :ill but SS00.000 of this year's building funds, and Evans ,n_id there is a very long list or needs to be considered by the council. The governor said that he had informed NIC Presiden1 Barry Schuler earlier this year th111 the situation did not look very promising coward receiv, ing ihe funds this year.
Lawmaker claims ignorance over NIC library need by Rlc J. Kast A member of the Idaho Legislature's comminee
on edue:1tion said recently that if NIC has :1n existing need for n new libr3ry building - she has not been mode aware of i1. S1a1e Rep. Hilde Kellogg. D-Post Falls. in a recent interview at NIC said the NIC request for a libr:iry/ computer science building had only been briefly mentioned during l:1S1 year's legisloti\'e session. Kellogg said tha1 she also recehed :i lener from NIC board member Don Sausser concerning lbe il>Sue. bu1 tho1 his lener was more directed a1 the lack of concern shored by the legislators th:in 1he needs of a ne\\ library on NlC's campus. The firs1-1erm legi~lntor said that she u'Ould hke to hear more from 1he student bod\' of NIC about \\'hn1 educational needs eust at 1he rollege. and not just from the adminii.1ra1ion. She ~uggcsted that lbose needs nre clearh• defined bv bener communicJtions b~1ween the students and 1heir state legi~lators. Kellogg atso suggested thot 1he ASNIC go,·emmg bod,· contact the local legislators. im 11e them 10 mcc1 wi1h 1hc s1 udcn1 board and discuss the cduca11onal ncedi, of s1udems at NIC Kellogg al,o prm idcd C:llmmcnt<, on sc,ernl other SUhJCC1'.
She does not think the newly adopted reapp0rtionment plan recently approved by First District Judge Dar Cogswell will increase the quality of legislative representation that b already in service. She was referring to the rc -dis tri c1ing plan de,·iscd by NlC political science professor Tony StC\\'3rt that introduces floterinl districts to Idaho. The plan 1s 10 be implemented in the November. 1984 elections. "IJl general. Kootenai County h3S enjoyed beuer represenu1tion during t.he past two years than ever before." Kellogg said. "All this court battle has done is cosi the sUlte almost SJ20.000 in court costs .ind anomev fees ." Bui KelJ~gg said that the citizens are not active enough in expressing their needs to the legislative representation in their voting districts. and that because of the lack of participation. 1he nuJority of the populncion remains uninformed. "Besides." Kellogg said, "the general public doesn't really care about their legislators: the public needs to become more informed nnd invohcd... Kellogg s;Jid she supported Go,. Joho V. E\'ans all the w:iy on his educa1ional policies conce rning funding. During last year's legislative session. that ended in a long. he:ited b:mle O\'er funding for education. Kellogg stressed that she supp0rted him on e,·ery issue. Bui sbc added thac the battle o,·er education tha1 resulted in 1he go, cmor putting red ve10 inlt on
educational items in the bud.eet and callin2 the Legislature back to Boise for n special session had nothing to do wi1h the educ3tional needs of the siale. "It wni. a bartle between the winners and the losers." Kellogg said. She said th:11 the Republie:10 GOP in the House shared very bit1er feelings toward Evans because of his successful bid for anothe r term in the executive orfice. Republicans took a "hard,line" against '111 of Evan· s policies, she said. Those same poUtJcal dlUeren~ are bound 10 re-surface again during the 1984 Lcgisla1ive session. bu1 funding for education will not suffer 1he conseque nces. she added. " I think the legislative members will be able_ 10 lay aside political differences and deal with 1he 1Ssucs 1his yeo_r," Kellogg 5aid. "and if 1he economr SIQ~S half-way healthy, educniion should receive ns fair sh3J'e or th e state's money. " . She said she is also very supp0nive of ge1ung Idaho's teachers more money in 1984 A mectln.g or the educatlon committee op~inred bv Go, . fanns met on No", 3. 1983 to discuss teacher's po} and other educational needs. Kellogg ~aid 1h01 education will receive as much monc,· as the economy can afford. If the economy remains st3ble Kellogg said lhat she would support a 20·pen:cnl increase in rhe area of educa1ionol funding b} the state.
Dee. 2, 1983/ Ca.rdinaJ Rc\'ie"
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17
er sports
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TAKING AIM--Shoorlog ducks can be ciclUng as wcll ns rcw!lrdlng.
Duck hunting: Everything it's quacked up to be photos and lul by Mike Scroggie
For lhrce months out of every year. dedica1ed hunter& slip on their eamouOoge clothing. load their sho1guos ond inv11dc the wetlands of America 10 ponidpnte in "duck warfare:· There nrc hundred.!> of waterwnys 1hat cu1 11trouah Nonh Idaho 1h01 on• idcnl plnccs for dueh 10 live. So which one does the hunter choose tor his hunting 11dvcn1urc,·? According 10 Jerry Ncuscle of U1c Idaho Fi~h nod Come Depanmem. the Coeur d" Alene nnd OnrL Fork river.. reC't'1ve :.ome of the henvicst u<;C from duck hunters. B01h rivers M'C obundont \\1th duck~ moM of 1he ,eMon. Ncu~clc also ~nid 1h1n the Koo1ena1 Wildlife Refuge ncnr Bonners Ferry is n popular spo1. The Pend Oreille River is kno" n for 11s large populations of both duch and hun1crs. Later in the season the duck\ come to 1he ri,er because other nrcn., u~uAII)' frec,c sooner 1han the Pend Oreille. Arter II humer hns dedded on ha) "b:111te field," he mu~t prepare ht~ pion of action. To cover 1hc hunter from lhc ducks' view, n blind can be buih. U~ually 1he blind can be made from material~ a,•ailnblc in lhe area. Cau:11ls and a )m3ll amoum of cluckcn wire work grcnl. To bnng 1he birds in10 )hoo1ing range. d~ys and calls can be used. The call stimulates the ducks' s~nse. of )Ound. nnd 1he decoy~ help the birds to pinpoint the locauon of their imagin:iry friends. After the ~untcr shoots the wa terfowl, a dog become) a big asse1 for reLrie,oing the birds from the icy water. Duck season began Oct. I and "ill continue through Jan 8.
E"en though deer ~eas on end s Su nd a~. the dedicated duck hunter will sull be p3ckmg hts three
doten dc~-O)S. his 12-g3uge sho1gun and his fai1hful reme,er 10 hi s fo,·ori1e Nonh Idaho wetland.
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CAMOUFLAGED B UNTER- -NIC So phomore Todd Meyer slls p111lentl.t In a bllnd o~eriooklng the Pend Oreille River.
Wres tling Team trave ls to two tourneys by Diane Opdo.hl For e1gbt NIC wre~ling team mcmbcri., a trip to l.'ls Vegos is on the agenda £or this weekend. According to Coach John Owen . eig ht tea m members will be participating in the Censn.r's Polocc lnvitotionol todoy and tomorrow. The e,cnt "ill begin Ill 7:JO n.m. ,\ 1<,o on the ogcndn for this weekend is lhe Grays Harbor Dual in Aberdeen. Wash. Dec. 2. nnd the Grays Harbor Open in Olympia. Dec
·' Among those traveling to Las Vegn,
ore Mark McKenno, Dove Singlercr,. Steve Meckel and Dennis Amende. Also mnklng the trip ore Bl')cc Hall. Steve Kluver. Tom Phclon and Roy Oescr T,1clve "rcstlcr~ wi ll be going to Aberdee n ond Oh•mp10 Michael McKibbin. Troy Buhl. M:n Arbuckle. Scon Close. Jeff Wnllnce. Scou Mortin. Tim Ecklund. WJdc S1ovcr. Gary Chandler, Don Brunde~. Corlton Pense and Dan Kobold will oil moke one or the two tnp~. On Nov 18-1 9. 1he ream traveled 10 Boise for the Boi~e State Tournament. where ,ophomore Roy Ocsc r cnptu red first place and Sr eve Kluver won ~econd. i\ccordmg to Owen. the teo m did well in the 1ournomen1 , but he fell th3t they needed more pr.1c1ice. ··we need more live,mnrch e,perience,"' Owen said. "'I rhink we would hove been close to ~ccond if anyone would hnve kept team points." Owen said that the tenm needed more cumperition. but they were m good shape so for. · "There are a re,, who need 10 be in be11er shape nnd a fow who need more practice, .. Owen said. " But this is such an individuoli,ed sport that they need to work out rhose things on their own."" For those intercMcd in wntching the team, there will be home motchc~ Dec. 7. ot 7:JO p.m. agninst E:lstern Washington Unjversity and Dec. 9 with Northern Mont:ina College. 31 2:JO p. m.
Intramural season to wrap up R£AOY. HITNIC Cresbm&n Brenda Nordin o[ the Ball Breakers sen cs a voile, ball to the Pub Uckcrs in lntr:umual action No, . 1-l In the &) m. The games are being pla)cd se,·crul time a 1< eek 11.JJd wlU C'C)ntlnue until the end of the semester.
With only three regular season gB mes left at press time. Spoptic leads to intramural CO·rec volleyball with a 6-0 record. Close behind is the Faculty 111 S· I and Sa under's Slammers ot 4,2. The Rookies. the Scorpions and the Bye Gones ore J.J. wh ile the Ball Bre3lters. Becker's Kids and the Good Enough~ ore all 2-4, and the Pub Lickcrs arc 0-6
Blundering bison drives columnist from NFL I hove always enjoyed "atching NFL football. but "ith each additiona.l hour or viewing it seems to be more of a mixed blessing. It" s not that the quality of play in the NFL has declined. and it's 001 the nptitude of the commenta· tors. J"ve even learned to wotch on entire Mondav • night game "ithout swearing 11t: How11rd. What bas deteriorated in rccenr years, and more than ever this season. is the moronic squadron or advertisements that pummel the ,iewer for 01 least onc•third of each game. One of the most :imusing nnd nauseating of these ads. and the one that triggered me to write this colu mn. is the new propaganda by Jeep. The ad featu res a Ne:inderthalinn. ruggedly handsome. blond man in a whue, nan.oel l3nlt top. tacky denims and bare feet nding a clumsy bison up a steep hill. It alternately focuses on a Jeep tr:insversing the same incline. while the s:iles pitch talks about how 1he power and gr:ice b so much like that or the bison. After climbing the hill lhc handsome 'leandenhal sv.eeps a passing blonde onto his bc3St 3nd dm·cs
across a stream. The Jeep dittos the panem. minus the l!irl. I guess the moral of the story is that if you buy a Jeep. and drive it with the grace and power of a bison. you're bound 10 pick up any lusty blonde that just happens by. It seems to me that a buffalo is just a hairy cow with short horns, however. I hope that the Jeep offers a bener riding experience than a rodeo bull. Bot. I guess I'll give the Jeep ad writers tbe benefit of the doubi. Maybe they're playing for American lodians :i.nd Bills fans' dollars. Beer commerdals have nlways been an integral part of any football game. but even some of these h3, e become ridiculous. An Olympia ad which has been 100 commonly :lired throughout my Sundllys shows a group of barroom buddies standing. sitting and cajoling around a table. They 3I'C suddenly inspired and the)' begin singing the Oly jingle. "hich is rath er nauseaung in itself. Let's be re31. barroom baddies don't e,·en smg along with the Pavarotti of the NFL. Don Meridith on
willy weech Monday Night Football. I seriously considered mounting my TV sci '!" the bad of my toilet after the rourth sho11.'lllg of this stomach,ehumiog ad one Sundlly. I don' t lhlnk I can put up with it much longer. These ads and olhers like them are driving me from my football. . l" ve tried changi ng the channels during rhe commercials. but there's not a lot t';) watch on Sunday afternoons. I can only watch Julia Child tour a salmon-curing factory for so lon8· I think I'll tr) to find something else to do nett Sunday afternooo. Mavbc ru tes1 drive II Jeep and see v. hat I can pick up. Hey. maybe rhey're not llS dumb as I thought.
Dec. 2, 1983/ Cardlnal Rc"iew -19-
Cardinals square off against Oregon teams b~ Don Sauer
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Team depth be a key ;t:, the :-.JC C:irdin:ih rnkc on 1wo o{ Orei:on·s 1radiuon3J junior college JlO" erhouses Dec. 3 3nd -1 According 10 head coach Roll} Willt:ims. one of 1he ~rcngths of 1h1s ye:ir'~ team" ill be J srrong bcnt'h 1h:i1 "ill be able 10 0$Sist lhe s1..1ning foe "hene,er needed. .. At this poin1 I rcafly loolo. :it 1his club "'·hh 3bout st, en or eight Sl3r· ters." Williams s:iid. The fi, e that Williams expects 10 get 1he s1a rt ing nod \\ ill be re1urning lettermen Greg Gauldmg. Dellondo Foxx :ind Ttm At\\ood and freshmen Cunis Goldston and Stc\e Fedler. Gauldmg is expected 10 resume his role as floor general and rc311) C'Ontrol thlllgs for tht Cards. Williams added. The bench will pl:i) a big p:u, in this year's effons. Williams s3id. and he cited Jerry Rimblen and Neil S1cphens as 1wo "ho will probably sec a lot of action off the bench e:irh. Wrlh:im\ :.aid 1h:11 "'.ith so much O\'ernll balance on the squ:id 1here ;ire no real \tandout\. ··one or 1he nice 1h1011~ about thl~
team 1~ 1h;i1 ea,h niizht ID pracuce somt>bod, diffe rent h1'l~> good:· he ~aid."" hKh I thin~ ,,ould agJin :it1e\1 to the depth lae1or or this group ... Tonighr 1he Cards travel 10 Gre)h· Jm. Ort 10 tale on Mt. Hood. "hrch Wilhnms ,ard 1, 3 pc:renm:il "innc:r in 1he region. Williams s:i1d that the same hold5 true for S3turda, s opponent. ChemekelJ l as1 year 1hc S:ilem i.chool \\On 11, region lnd they "ill probably be included ID .in NIC playoff picture thi) year. Linle is Imo" n about either dub since they :ire both new 10 the Card's schedule, Williams said. "The~ ·re good teams.·· he s:iid. ..:ind the biggest problem 1s tha1 we face both or rhem on rhe road " Williams s:iid rihat he i\ not looking too far do" n the road bec:iu~e he feels 11 is best 10 1ake rile season on,· ream at J 11me. The Card, MJrted rhc ,ca.son on an up no1e b, detcaung Spokane Community College -o-1 in Chn~1i11n~cn Gy mnas1um on :,(Q, 2t>.
Runners take 7th ,n nation b) Angie Wembo(f
Laurie Bris10" photo fTfNfSIII G ll /\RO- -rrc~hrnnn JO<' Weadlrk hclids Cor 1hc flnl,h line al lhe cro\~·eoun1ry n111lonol., In llulehln,on, Klln'>RS, No,. 12.
Also on Monday
Women face CBC tonight b ) WIil) Weech The NIC wnrncn'\ ba~kclbnll 1cam "'II ht plo~rng .it Columliia Ba"n C,,llcgc 1omgh1 nnd race 1hem ogn111 111 hume l\londo~ night 01 7:JO p.m. The Cord\, l-2. will be fat'rng o Columbia Bil~IO 1com which mclude, \e,en re1urn111g le11ermco ond three returning ~1aner. "l expect 1hem 10 be tough." Conch Greg Crimp ,nid. "lnc, ha,e a lot or c,pericnce." The Cn rdmab ' mo~, recent oc:cion \\O, Tue,do, No,·. 2Q "hen 1he, 10)1 10 Spol.nne Community College 67-59 in Spol:,ne. • The team·, tirM IO)~Ofthe ~ea~on came Saturday o, . 2o "hen 1he) fell to rhe more experienced College of Great Foils 7b,67. Great Fal b tim~hcd third rn their leuguc last year and returned all !he SIMtCr:. thr, )Cnr. Ahhough the women los1 to the Argo,. Crimp ~aid. "h :.ho"ed tht) can pl:i} "i1h JuM about anyone 11n th eir le, cl." Crimp ~oid chat he wn~ pleued \l'llh the c1tt11tion of the Cards Dt" defonse tn thi.' senson opener, 11 77-43 romp :11 Blue Moun1ain Communit) College. "TI1c dcfensh·c prc:.sure in the tir~t gnmc wa~ ,ery effectl\-e," Crimp .a,d. "It crcn1cd a Im of tumo,,crs." He also noted tho1 they sho"ed good depth in the Blue Mount:un game. Coeur d'Alene produ('t Kathy E:itinger i~ averaging I point) - including a 20-point game :igain\t Gre:11 Fall~ The Dec. S Columbia Basrn g:imc ,~ thc Ii rs1 of four ronsccu1i, e home g:imes for 1hc Cnrd~. "hrch include Wenatch~c Valle)' Communll) College Tue~d:i~ al -:JO p.m.. Ht ~hhne Communit} College Fndil) , DC?C q at 5:30 p.m :ind Blue '-toum:1111 Commun11y College !IJturdo,•, De,. 10 jl - .30 p.m.
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The NIC Men's Cross Count~ Team pl.iced -th out o( a fic:ld of 25 teams at naunnal, ',a, 12 rn Hutchrn,on Kan Accordmg 10 \111.c: BunJ, <"T•"' ('()t1nln roach. 1he 1c-am ,e1 ,e,·eral goal5 bdorc the mec1, and met e,en one 01 1hem, Thi.' tir.1 izonl "°ll~ 10 iuu: thl' men', team place rn the top 10. Th,, 1\11, ea,11~ JCcnmpli,hc 1 because e-enone rnn li good race. he ,Jrd Oa\ld Sn1111• rl:i~ !Jq and quahf1cd a, an \II· \ mcn,an Gord,m Hc.irh pl:iCC'd .;~nd. J hn Bursell linr\hed ~01h Wade Hoil,tnd ,,a, $2nd and Jo.: \\ Cl<fak placed ,o-,h ~klanrc C11nd1a·, al \\Js to place ID 1he iop 30 She pllc-cd 4bth and tini,hcd 11h1 la.o.1 ,e:ir. l.llune Bn~111" pl.iced -4th J.11d rcJ,hed her goal of placrn~ in 1h~ top hJlf l'f the ISO \\Omen rom~mor~. Bund, ,.11d 1h:it °' cr:i.11 thc tnp "a" J ,ucce\) :ind he ,1me, e,er~ ~eJr 10 get Im tNm 10 na11.:inah.
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J~ THE HEADMASTER:
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We
teoc~ :::,:~ess;onols of 0
Arti fic ial nails S 15 up
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Perms S/8&up Hair Cuts $4 up
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Braiding S3
Bring your student card
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SIO up
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Dec. 2, 1983/ Ca.rdlnal Review -20-
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(___n_ic_n_o_t_ic_e_s__) I The Amcrlcao Fcsth'lll Balle, will prc~cnl " The Nu1cracl.er Su.ilr" "ilh the North Idaho S., mphonJ Orchestra and Tocld Sn,dcr as conductor. Performances ,.II) be Dec. 10 al 2 p.m. and 8 p.m.
James Dick, pianist, wUJ be pre· sented lo the C-A Auditorium toolgb1 by the Kootenai County Commun.ii') Concert Association. Ad.miss.Ion Is b, com:munll) concert card or X-IC denl bodJ card.
"Sounck or Christmu, " whh the North Idaho CoUege Choir. Cardinal Chorale and Madngal Singen, " ill be presented Dee. 16 and 17 lo the C-A Audllorlum. Richard Frosl • Ill be conducting.
Anv , etcran 001 atttndlng school seron"d scmcsler s.boald noti.h ltsuldo Nishio of the rcgjstrar"s offi~ as soon as possible.
StvdenlS ..-ho ha, e WWJclal oblip· lions 10 1he college such as fees. oH·rdur loans or o, erduc libran books WilJ DOI be a1J0'4 CO to rt>gbler u.nliJ !heir debts ha, e been settled. Because of budgctal) coostn.l.as l. Bcne..-ab Couol) officials ba,c op· rioncd not to offer North Idaho CoOege classes throu.gb the Benewah Cou.nl) Sntclllle proj!ram during 1be 1984 s pring sc mcs1er.
There wlU br rooms a, Bilable for both mrn and " omro ln 1he dorms s 1ar1 lng second scme~1c r . Cootael Beck) Coffman 111 667-7422 cri. 317.
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ApplJClltlon~ for graduation Corm, att no" a,allable In the Rcgl~trar'< OUice. Studcols qoa-11CJ Ing for a deg ree or eerllnca1e lirs1 semester should ma.1.e the applJeatlon GS soon as po~lble. Those qu:i.lif) Ing Cor gnadoat.ion second semester ba,c un1ll Jan. 16 10 appl~. The college SCDllte bas added ti hem 10, Section C In 1be Student Coodut'I and Discipline Cod e lb e follo.. ing: "Ph)~lcal a.ssauh. Ogbtlng or "Ill· CullJ inflicting lnjW) on another pe rson on Lbc ClllDpos groW1ds, ln an) college boUding, during colll'gc-spon sored trips off campus or In ronnec:llon " lib &n) colJege -re la tcd acth ii) ,~ strktJ., forbidden fr-el."
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I STUDENT AID. II I~~ ~
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le cakes more than brains co go co college. It cakes money For cumon. room and board, and books. · The Army College Fund _is designed co help you gee that money for college while servmg your country: If you quality, you canjom the Army College Fund when you Join the Army. For every dollar you put m, Uncle Sam puts m five Or more. So, aicer JUSt cwo years m rhe Anny. you can have up co $15.200 for college. After three years. up co $20.100. To gee your free copy of the Army College Fund booklet call or v1S1t your local Anny Recruiter. le could be the most tmportanc book you've ever read.
Sergeant Fitst Class Wisdom
667-6404
Ladies only in the bar 7 - 9 p.m.
"FREE" drinks!
TH uRSDA y
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I~ I~ ARMY. BE ALLYOU CAM BE. I~ I~.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,,,.,,,.,,,.,.,,,.,,,,,.,..,.,,.11I
WEDNESDAY
Everyone
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after 9 p.m.
drinks beer
LADIES- NO COVER CHARGE
KEGGER & $1 DRINKS
starts at 6:30 p.m.