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b1nal Q€Vl€W Volame 38, Number 1
Friday, Sept. 16, 1983
Cekbrate NIC ma rks 50th year by Mark Wheeler A concen by a popular 1960s rock"n'roll band is jus1 one of several activities scheduled for Founders' Weekend Sept. 23-24. part of NIC's 50th anniversary celebration. Poul Revere and the R11ider.s. a group 1ha1 originated in ldruio in 1958 and played eneo.sively in Spokane in Lhe 1960s. will perfonn al 8 p.m.• Friday, Sept. 23. in 1he C-A Auditorium, according to John House. diree1or of NIC infonnotional services. The six-member band hosted the ABC TV series " Happening '68 & '69." and have appeared on Lhe Ed Sullivllll Show, The Tonight Show, and American Band.stand. Tickets for the concert Bre S8. On Sept. 24. Lhe North Idaho Symphony Orchestra will perform its 50th anniversary concen. which will include the work of Johannes Brahms , Wayn e Barlo10.•, Johann Bach and HowBid Hanson, accordIng to Conductor Todd Snyder. Snyder snid the evening', performnnce nl~o includes nn oboe ~olo by Coeur d" Alene native Ralph Strobel. Strobel i~ currcn1ly a proressor of mu.sic at Ball State University and a renowned oboe player. Snyder said. There is no odmission for the 8 p.m. concert. An all-school as~cmbly featuring spt11kers Roben Montgomery of Lhe State Boord of Education. Coeur d'Alene Mayor Jim Fromm. Kootenol Cou nty Commissioner Glenn Jackson. and An Manley. a former Idaho $late scnntor and 1936 graduate of NIC. will kick off Friday's cventi.. Hou)e said. Studenb will be excused from their 10-IJ a.m. clas\ to attend the assembly. House added. The ASNIC will hold its annual fall bnrbcque from 3-7 p.m. Friday for all NIC ~tuden1s. According to ASNIC President Lee Cole, o variety of games and activities will probably be coordinated 100. A 5.000-mcter run run ~ponsored by NIC and the Selkirk Company will )tart orr Soturdoy\ cvcni~ Pre-registration will begin tit 7:JO a.m. and the rt1ce will beRin at 8:30 a.m. In fron1 of the NIC dormitory. A brunch honoring the focuhy prior to 1940. the st~dcnts prior to 1960 3nd n.11 past clns~ officers is bcmg held ot 10 a.m. in lhc SUB Bonner Room. AU NIC students, put and present. arc wekome to help eclebutc the c,•ent. Man· Sorenson • · coordinator or the event, s,ud.
FrogiJe crea tion Ted McConnachle , Worley, uses a torch and glass tubing to make a glass clown during the North Idaho Fair Sept. 10 al the Kootenai Coun, ty Fairgrounds.
Basil fraru photo
ASNIC senatoria l petitions due Today ls the la.SI doy for students 10 submit petitions to run for one of the three freshman .~prescntoiive positions on the ASNIC Student Board. ~e pe1111ons c~ be picked up in Tony Stewart's office in L49 or from ASNJC Vice ~resident Barb K1tnn!ller. Prospccti\-e freshmnn cnnd1d:1tes n~ 10 g:ither SO ~1gna1urcs on the petition to ge1 on the ballot. f The general election for the oe4dcmie. vOC'ational and open scats will be held 9 a.m. to J p.m. Sept. 28, 10.ith polls in the odministrtition building cntrunce ~/oca1ion11.I h~I and ~e SUB ca~etcria from 11 a.m. to I p.m. • m orc th~n.suc candidates qualify by petition. 11. prlmar.· elct"tion IO. · ill be held Sept. 2I 10 hmn the field 10 six. •
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(___ in_s_id_e_t_h_ e _c_r___J Editor 6laps smdylng m) th ........................................... page 4 Writer ,.,;,es about Wright •........................ ................ . page 7 RC1lpll'sjeU)bean t:sctll'S analyzed ........ . ......................... page 12
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Sept. 16, 1983/ Cardinal Re,'iew -2r
College funding picture unchanged bJ Ric J. Kast
The l'IIC 1983-&l budget will allow the school to maintain operational functions a1 about the same level as the 1982-83 budget. t1ccordiog to NIC Presjdent Bnm Schuler. Funding for ailleges come from 1uition nnd fees paid by the students. governmental ngen~ies. ,·arious school depanment sales 11.Dd other m,sccl· laneous areas. The an:3 most publicittd is Lhc funding received from the stale nher being approved by the stnte legisl.11ure. The state t11located S2.0S0.000 for Fiscal JqSJ-84. an increase of SJS2.800 o,·er last year's budget Pumng the state·s share of the budget ,..,;th the , :uious other sourtts or income, the total budgeted amount that NIC 11.ill spend during the current fiscal year is S8.b million compa.red to million for last year. according 10 Scbu1er's budget repor1. Schuler said that he was satisfied "'ith the 1983-84 budget. Faculty members all received conlr11ct increases ranging from J percent to 7 percent. be said. While newer teachc~ recch·e a la.rger percentngc 1hnn long-term teachers. this is the normal progresshe increase for each additional yen.r of senice. Schuler said. The more seJsoned teachers have already acquired 3 IArger pa) scale and probably Wlll see the
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bottom-line J percent, be said. Bui 1hc president added tha1 for every 10 credi1 hours or completed cducntion by 1he 1cacher. an .idditional S400 increase would appear on the a£Tc.-cted 1encher"s paycheck. Schuler said NlC" s instrue1ors. as well as 1111 01hcr college ins1ructors. arc not receiving wage below the mid-r:ingc 1eachcrs' scale for the moun1nin region. but a propo ed 20 percent incrcnsc i.n 1he \1}84-85 budget will help bring the Mountain Region teachers up to p:1ri1y. The teacher.; pny )Chcdule rnnges from SIS.210 to
S2"'.o0i>. Schuler said he has already submitlcd the proposed 1984-SS budget to 1hc srnte tind ls conlident thnl lhe budget will hove no problems passing this year. He snid cduen1ors 11nd legis latures around the coun1ry nrc rcnlizi ng the need 10 Increase the teachers pay to become more competitive with neighboring regions nnd become more effective In ouracting and keeping qunlilied instructors. President Schuler s aid 1hc proposed budget for 1984-85 will ask the stntc for nn incrensc of 5426.000 over this year's budget and Lh111 lnnd owners In the are11 CllD expect another s mall hike in their propeny
taxes.
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Daycare ASNIC funding sought by \Vand• Stephens The new Cnmpus Friends Children Center will be placed under a bea,'Y financial burden if the ASNIC Student Council refuses 10 budget the operation . According to Cnrol Lindsay. director of the day center. there "'ill be some question as to v.·hether the doors v.·ill shut. The financial hardship will be tremendous nnd Lindsay is asking for S\,SOO a year. ·"I'm going 10 ask thn1 they budget ii every year." Lindsay said. The money " 'ill co,·er beginning costs. addition.al work-study costS wd general opcrarion or the ccmer. according to Lindsay. In addition. parents will pay S6 a full dny and S4 for n half dt1y. she snid. The center is only avrulnble for NIC srudenrs. with full-time single parents getting top pnonry. The center 1s open to children from the ages 2' ,.5 and is open from 7:-15 a.m.. S: IS p.m. 10 folio" the schedule of the college. Parents arc a,ked 10 provide a sack lunch without an) sweelS for their children. T" o snacks consis1ing of fruits. vegetables. crackers and juice nrc pro,·ided daily for the children. Linds:iy. "ho has a master's degree in early childhood. has ~t up learning centers for the children to piny in. Those areas consist of on an center, manipulnthe. a block area and housekeeping . .. h is our goal to teach the children 10 learn 10 control their OIA."tl beha,ior. ·· said Lindsav. Acrording to Lindsay. e,ening and summer progr:ims a.re anticipated. but the center will be closed this coming summer. She said she also hopes to join the U.S. Departmen1 of Agriculture hot lunch program next year. The cenrer will carry a maximum of 20 children. nnd n11 others .....11 be placed on a waiting list. The center is loca1ed nt 72-1 W. Garden Ave. in the second yellow house,
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Phillips named new security chief Don Phillips. a former miliu1ry intelligence officer and NlC law enforcement student. hns recently been appointed the college's chief security officer. According 10 NIC President Barry Schuler. Phillips will now be in charge or all security and reports or violation. Phillips will continue to have his office in Winton Hall. where he has been stationed for the Inst rwo years while employed ns a campus security officer. In addition to his military and low enforcement c:i.reer. Phillips has also been employed in real-estate and microfilm production.
Final touches Focmer NlCstudeot Shelly Se:rvlcll adds the last dabs to a mu.raJ abe palat.od ill !be Subway this past summer. Se:rvlcll, who Is now a.o arcbltedunl ~or at die Oolverslty of Idaho, worked eveey even.log Cora month to complete the mmal dial covers the east wall of the pme room.
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Sept. 16, 1983/ Cadlnal Review -3-
Trus teeS turn down new computer request bJ Ric J. Kase • A proposed mo1ioo 10 allow the
English depanmen1 10 purchase its own Kaypro II microcompu1c r was rcjcc1ed when a tie-breaking vote was cast by Dr. James Bllrton. chairman or 1he NIC Board or Trustees. Banon' s vo1e eame at the conclusion of a bea1ed deb111e betwee n board member Don Sau\ser and NIC's Director of Compuler Services Ray Myers. Sauser made tbe proposal during 1hc board's Monda y nighl meeting earlier chis week and said that I he English department desired a more portable system than the existing HP main frame. He said the microcomputer system, costing SJ.595. would be used primarily for word processing by English depa rtment instructors. Barton 1hcn we nl on record as opposing 1hc motion. He said that when the Title Three Program was implemen1cd 1hree years ago. part of 1hc objective of tho1 program was to integrate the data portion so every· body has access to i1. " lf we go to a micro-based environ· ment administrat ively. we could be in troub le," Myers said. ·· 1 oppose microco mputer& ns o bUbstitute 10 lntcroclive tcrminol to the moinfromc bcc11u~e I think we would be defeating our goal&." Sausser Insisted that microcomputer systc m,i. arc the answer lo the future needs of NlC. He snid 10 disallow individual departments to purchase microcomputers would put roadblocks in the future growth of NIC. Myer:. said when the HP mainframe comp uter system was purcha,i.ed, the compa ny promised 10 donate an y
software needed for the system. He said th3t SSJ.000 in soft,..•are ha.s already been donated and that NlC has only skimmed the surface of the syste m's capabilities. Be added that the Eogltsh depan· mcnt can buy into the mainframe at a nominal cos,, have instant availability to its use and have its own printer to work with. Myers said the HP ma inframe's capabilities have not been even part· ially realized. He added that as his sui ff becomes more famili3r whh the software on hand. these programs would be inlroduced to the faculty at NIC. M)ers l>llld he had nothing against the use of microcomputers. He said he used on in his office but added th:11 the HP moinfr:ime could be plugged into by mierocompuier systems without the monumental co,t fac1or. One cos1 saving factor according to Myers. is the maintcnonoe cost. The cost of a service call is S192, Myers Sllid. He said it would prove much less cosily to hove a seTVice man perform se rv ice on three or four terminoh from the A"P mainframe than to have additional sen•ice calls to indh•idual depanmems. Whe n the motion 10 nllow the English depanment 10 purchase the Kaypro II microcomputer WIIS rejected, a second motion, one 1ha1 ,..ould allow the English deputmcnt to buy lnco the existing HP mainframe. ,..as voted on and agnin ended 10 a deadlock. vote. Barton again Ca5l the tic-breaking vote in favor of nllov. Ing the English department 10 buy into the HP molnfrome.
Board wary of lawsuit by Mane Wheeler The ASNIC Student Board allotted SSOO to fund the new Campus Friends Day Care Ce nt er, bu t because of possible legal action 1h01 ma)' be taken against the center, future funding of the program ma)' be hailed. The board appropriated the money to the center during a Sept. 6 meeting. after day-care center director Carol Lindsay requested SI ,SOO to help operate the service. The board, however, went in to exe~utive session in a Sept. 12 meeting to discuss further aspects conccmini;: the: day-care center. An unidentified sou rce said that future funding of the day-care center Is doubtful because of a dispute between the Fon Ground Neighborhoo,i As· soc:iation and the center. The neighborhood group said the Campus Friends Children Center is violating an NIC oath not to eipano
east of Hu bb11rd Street, ,..hile the center says. although it is supplJing a se rvice to NIC students, 11 is not funded by the college. Acwrdiog to the source. funding probably will not be given to the dny-care center anymore bccllusc the board " d~n·, ,..'llnt 10 get in,·ol,..ed in any litigation." However. no official action hns bttn token, and AS IC President l ee ColC: :.:lid no deasion hos bttn m:ide. In other action, the board: - agreed to appropriate up to S2.000 for FoundCTS' Day Weekend if the college requests it. -appointed Tina Phillippi as i1ctivi• ties di rector and Cari Downs as assis1an1 al'thities di=or. - rcne,.ed con tracts with ASNIC lawye rs Norman Gissel and Ray Gh•ens.
Decision-. decisio ns Freshman JIU Sm,ggie looks o,,cr the seltttlon of books at the Publication Club book ,,.·ap Aug. 30 in tbe gym fo)er. The swap turned OH' r oen.,ly S4,S00 worth of used te:rts,
College enrollment sta ys s teady Unofficial figures show lhJt NJC enrollment for this semester is virtually unchanged from last yen.r's fall enrollment. aetording to a source close 10 the admimstrauon. About 2.350 fuJl. 2nd pan-time students ore anendiog NIC this fall unofficially. This does not include :ippro.rimatcl~ 100 mension campus students. last year, official fall enrollmem was 2.449 Students. Fall full-time enrollment for last )Ca! shov.cd a 12.8 percent increase o,•er 1981 . ,.hiJc pan-rime increased 4 percent and ,oc:itional enrollment sho"ed a rise of 11.S pcrocnt. Last yen.r's total f'alJ enrollment v.as up 8 percent O\'er 1981. Enrollment a1 t-llC totalled 2,576 full. and pan-time studen ts last spring.
F antasy
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Science Fiction -
Ga mes 4171h Sherman
Coeur d 'A lene
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Comics
Used Books -
Monday . Saturdo_,
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Sept. 16, 1983/ CudlnaJ Revle-.., - 4-
Letters to the editor Leners Lo the editor are welcomed by I.be Cardinal Revie-..·. Those who su bmit teuers should limit them to 300 words. sign them legibly and pro\•lde a telephone number and address so that authentlcit, can be checked. Although most letters are used. some ma) be returned beCJ1use theJ do not meet the abo\e requlremeJ1ts or because the~ [1) arc ~lmllar to a number or letters alread) recei\ ed on the same subject. 12) ad,ocaLe or aLtack a religion or denomlna1lon. (31 arc pl>Sbibl) libclou~. [.S J rontain -..on:ls or phrases that some miaht cons ider in poor t.a.SLe, (") are open leuers [letters must be addrc~sccl to and directed to the editor • or [6 are Ulegiblc. Leners should be brought to Room 2 in I.be )leclwiical Arts Building or malled to the Cardinal Re, ie-.. in care or :"iorth ld•ho College, IOOO W. Garden A,e .•Coeur d'Alene, Idaho 83814.
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dawn murphy
Irregularity runs on I've come to Lhe conclusion IC is full of abnorm~ :ind slighuy unusual stude nts in the terms of their stud~ habic,. Three weeks ago. instructors handed out their svllebi and ga,e their orientation lectures to the ne" students.· Almost e"erv instructor told the students. "Normallv. each of ,·ou will need t~ spend two hours out of class studying' for each hour in cle~s." Or the Instructors said something like. "l'suallv. students find they will do two hours of homework for C\'CI') hour· of class work.' · As I sat through this again. feeling ,·er)· :ibnormal bel.'3use my long-ago-developed study habirs did not reflect this style. I could ensily point out the freshmen in the same ways the sophomores had pegged my naivety the year before.
The freshmen were the ones " 'ith panic beading on their forehe?ds. eyes "idening and lower jaws slowly dropping 10 rest on 1he1r desk tops as the instructor explained the "normal" or "usual" study habits of a college student. Then, losi.ng all concentration on what the instructor was saying. their minds began 10 race. calculating. trying to aCC'Oum for ever)' minute of their day. "Let's see .. .l ha\'e six classes. one hour each. This makes 12 hours of study time. Add six and 12. that's 18 hours gone. Add 15 minutes of dri,,jng time. which is 30 minutes for bolh ways, not forgetting to add 15 extra minutes bolh wa,•s in the winter time fo r haz3rdous conditions. · " Added together. this totals 19 hours gone. Now, lel's see , it takes a half hour to park. if I'm lucky. It takes at least an hour a.ad 30 minutes to get ready in the morning, that is if I don ' t eat an)•thing constipating the night before. ~owed, lhis le8\·es me three hours to eat and sleep." Similar thoughts had sped through my mind the year before. By the time the lecture was O\'er. the freshmen were not onl" Standing ~Ut in the crowd, they \Vere bumping into tbe crowd they contmued 10 count the hours in a day on their fingers as the~· · made their way to the next lecture. A couple of weeks have passed since those lectures and the freshmen are.looking ali\'e and well. I can't imagine how the students the mstructors were descnoing as normal look about now. Most of the NIC srudents have tossed normalitv to the wayside and abnormalitv has set in. • After all what's norm'al about finding time to park your car, study and ler the Milk of Magnesia do its duty in tbe morning.
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cardinal review
The CardinAJ Review ls published semi-monthly by the PubUcatlona Workshop class at North ldaho College. Members of the CR staff wlll 1trlve lo present the news Calrly, accurately and without prejudice. Opllllom erpressed on the edltorl.al pages and lo various news analyses do not necessarily reflect the views of the NIC admlnJst.ration or the ASNJC. The CR is entered as thJrd-dass postal mat.erial at Coeur d ' AJene, Idaho 83814. Associated Collegiate Press flve-St.ar All-American Newspaper editor ... . ......•.......... ... .. .. . ..... . ......• ... . . Dawn Marpby news editor ................... . ...•.. ... ..... ........ Marie Wbeeltr associate edit.or ......................................... RJc J. Kast atts/ enterta.inment .... . ...... .. ................•.... . . CraJg Joludoa sports editor ...................................•....... Willy Weecb photography edit.or ............... . ....................... Bun Frao:i ad vertising manager ....................... ............ . Marllsa Plati copy edit.or ....... .. ..... . .. .. ..... ............... . Pam Cuoolo&bam cartoonists ....•..................•. . . ... Troy Jolliff and Erle Pedersen
a.ch iser .. .. ... ••..•• •...••...••.. . ..........••.......•. Tim Pll&Jim reporters and photog,apbers ......................... . Shari Aldennao, Dan Breeden, Lau.de Bdst.ow I Dean.u Chap~ Kathy Ganuoo, Kkb Baimarui, Kurt.ls llall, Sharon Heaney, RJta Bolllnpworlh, Lau Moore, Bruce Mullen , Diane OpdabJ , Don Saaer, Michael Saaader1, Mike Seroule, Deaan.a Small, Sandy Stambaqb, Wuda S&epbeal, e.,t,le Vandenberg, Kelly Ward and.Anp Wemhoff.
Sept. 16, 1983/ Cardlnal ReY!e1o· -5-
[..____m_o_ri_e_o-=--p_in_io_n_J.....-------AIDS could make game of LIFE difficult AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome) has become a medical phenomenon in Lhe last year and a half. One cannot help but notice the desperation of researchers who seem to b,e working day and night to find a cure. Recently. two infants died after receiving blood transfusions from one or more persons with AIDS. It might not be long before Milton Bradley adds a square 10 the many squares of its game, LIFE, indicating Lhe player has contracted AIDS. Children play Bradley"s game, feeling confident they can gather a plastic carload of plastic kids. bounce from payday to payday and race to the final square 10 win the game. The two infants had barely left stan before they had landed on the villian square AIDS.
Students should vote Every college smdent should be familiar with voter apaLhy. or at leas1 every NIC student that is. For NIC has a great heritage of voter apathy. far better than the Mickey-Mouse one that exists on the national level. In the last presidential election, it is estimated that SJ percent of the nation'$ eligible voters cast their vote. but in NIC-s last presidential election, only 10 percent of those eligible managed to make it 10 the polls. In the las t U.S. Senate election, approximately 65 percen1 or Idaho's vote rs were concerned enough to vote. At NICs last senate election, 8 percent were interested enough to vote. NIC's c:rcdcntials ore endless. LnM yenr's s tudent board was chosen by less tbnn 7 percent of the students. And the freshman on the board in 1981 were chosen by 5 percent of the studen1 body, that is 86 out of 3 total of over 1.700. The student board. although not the U.S. Congress. is a functional gove rnment. They. like the national government. make many imponant decis ions for the ir constituen ts ever y yco r. And like the national gove rnment, the student government handles o lot of your money, S80.000 is a lot of money. Vote in the nc>.1 election.
However. the games of LIFE in our area are not in jeopardy of revision. According to Kootenai Memorial Hospnal Laboratory Technician Pai Apodaca. there is ··no cause for alarm. as of ,·et" in this area. onhem Idaho is different from San Francisco and ew York where the disease is highly concentrated. In the game, the players can test their steps at each intersection and decide which path to take. The two infants had no choke. no test to determine the best direction co cake. lf blood donors in this area are honest and compassionate toward the blood receivers. the villi3n squares can still be the ones indicating a goat ate a neighbors orchard. pay Sl.000 or an uncle left behind a skunk farm . pay S9.000 10 get rid of it. instead of the square saying: You have AIDS. pay your life.
(__n_e_w_s_c_o_n_n_e_c_t_i_o_n_s_J Student needs should rule In an executi\'e session earlier this week. it was reponed that the ASN IC Student Board members informally agreed 10 halt future funding to the new Campus Friends Children Center because the board ··doesn't want to get involved in any litigation.·· The litigation the board is \\Orried about concerns a dispute by the Fort Grounds Neighborhood Association that the center breaks an agreement by NIC not to etpand rast of Hubbard Street. The people at the day-c3re center maintain that 1hey are federally funded nnd arc not pan of the college. but are just prO\'iding Sludents with o ..-nJuable sel"\·1ce Carol Lincl-.a~. director of the center. told the AS ·1c board earlier in the yea r 1h01 there is support and "overwhelming demand at the college for a dav-care center." from the srudents. She also added that it would be vinually impossible for the center to operate without student funds. Should AS:-.'lC fear outweigh student need?
Just whose side are you on anyway? I wos walking down t>th Street 10 take od\•antage or a sale on generic ice cream ot Sofewny In:.( Snturda) morning when a ,ommnndo sprang from behind n tree and fired rte me u>'ith a .50-cnlibcr .submnchine gun, leaving me nothing more th:in 11 standing mound of ncsh. Before collapsing 10 the warm pavement, ho\, e,·er. I nouced the commando was onl y a boy, probably about eight. 3Jld his mnchine gun only n shiny pl:.btic replic.-a. I ~hook off lhc pnin, unwrapped m) arms from around my ribs. nnd dcrendrd my reactions b) convincing myself n was "h:11 nny cownrd 111 prime draft age would do \\ ith all the stuff th:it's going on in N1earngua. I continued my quest for ice cream. \\ hile the kid w:i~ted nnother two clips of mnchine gun imitations on me. It wasn' t unril I polished off the ice cream nnd Scoob\' Doo was hnlf over thot it hit me. · It wns a GI Joe commercial showing an odolescent G. Gordon Liddy pushing a toy MX missle launcher o,•er din mounds th:it triggered it. I mean , here we are in :i world hungry tor someone to wnce n good novel, pro~uce a dll%7.ling play or man a new space launch. nod all we do is buy our prodigies machine guns ruid missile launchers 10 expand their imagination. At least in the Soviet Union they teach the k.ids ballet.
mark wheeler But. as usual. I realized after a "'hile that I wa\ looking 01 this \fter all, thl\ ..ociety has whole thing much too critic31l~. produced some great lenders. Take Frank Bum:. for example. ~o" I kno"' mosc of you chink he's only an actor. but I know u·s re31 government officials just like good or Frank that make 1t possible for us 10 ha\'e troops in almost e, Cf) L"Ountry 111 the world We' re plain oJJ right. Why should u.e want fill our soc1e~· \\llh siss} gunk like dance. poetry and piano w·hen we're just nou. beginning 10 disco,·er the full capabililies of Agent Orange and nuclear by-products? So the next time somebodv rries to calk vou into taking ballet lessons. just remember whose side you're on.
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Sept. 16. 19&3/ Cardlanl Re,·lew -6-
(...___m_o_r_e_o-=--p_in_io_n_)r-------Downing of Korean airliner totally despicable Flight 007. The mere mention of it induces images of 269 innocent people being blown out of the skies b; a Soviet Union heat-seeking missile in what has been called the most blatant case of barbari~m in 3\'I• ation history. Oo Wednesday. Aug. 31. 19&3. a Korean 747 jumbo jet enrou1e from New York 10 Seoul. straved 1mo the unfrie ndh• skies of ihe So\iet Union . After tracing the ch;lian flight for over 1wo hours. a So,;et SU-15 war·plane pilot fired at and hit the Korean - 47. thus destroying the plane and 269 passengers aboard the commercial Oight. Aboard Flig ht 007 were O\'er 50 Ame rica ns, including a U.S. congressman. There were citizens from IJ different countries aboard the night. and the mid-air massacre lef1 the imernational communi· ty in a state of shock. In the aftermath of this rragic event. emotions soared high and governmental officials from ~e,er:u countries demanded a complete explanation from the So,·iet Union. Violent demostrations denouncing the actions of the Soviets surfaced in many major cities in the international communil\. h took the So, iet Union more tha n three days to make a public statement regarding the mid-air massacre. But they admined no blame for the incident. ln fact, they openly denied any part in shooting do" n any plane but did admit that rhev h:id fired a .. warning shot" at a~ .. unidenti· fied intruder.. that was over sensi· ti,e So,iet airspace :ind then lost the unidentified plane from their radar. This sent more wa,es of shock across the globe. and tempers soared e, en higher than before. 3me calling :ind stronger demand~ "ere aimed at the Soviets from all directions. A meeting of the U.;,/. Securit, Cou~cil ,, as called and they bega~ heanng testimony on rhe situation. U.S. Ambassador Jeane Kirp3trick presented the securit, council ";th video 1:ipes containing the \'Oices or the Soviet pilot and the Soviet ground conirol as the Kore:in - -17 was monitored in the skv for over two hours. · The tape culminated with the
order 10 fire from the ground and the pilot's reply that he had launched the missile. :ind that the target was destroyed.
Sborth before lb.is hard evidence \liaS in~uced b) Kirpatricl.. the Soviets adm11ted they "might .. b3,·e shot down the 74-. mistaking ii for a U.S. RC-135 Sp) plane. This .... as assailed by the Uni1ed States as ,•et another blatam lie. President Reagan pointed out that tlbe Ko rean r,C and the C.S. RC -IJS were so much different in appe:irance and size that the S0,ie1s could not possibly mistake the - 4- jumbo-jet for the U.S. RC-135. Shortly after the tapes were introduced 10 the securir; Council. the So,iet Union fin:ulv admiued blowing Flight oo- out ~( the sky. but insisted th:11 it wru; reaJh II U.S. sp~ mission di.squised as a Korean commercial night. F11rthcrmore, the ambassador from the Sonet L'mon stated that the same aroon 11,ould be taken
again if the occasion repeats itself. Ambassadors from several na· tions issued strong demands at the security council meetings. Most testimony rntirized the S0,·ie1 Uo· ion strongly for trying 10 sho, e lie after lie down the world's throats about their pan in che mid-air rn assacre and all demanded a complete and accurate account of lhe incident from the So,•iets. The ambassador from South Korea issued the conditions for the So\'iet Union 10 comply with. and
these conditions were endorsed by the Unhed States and severnl other countries. The conditions were th3t: ··3 full admission. complete with 3 detailed account of exactly what happened be ubmined. --full compensation for the families of the deceased passengers of the night be insured. ··tangible proof that lhc Soviet Union would tnke steps 10 insure that 311 event like this would never happen again also be s ubmitted. ··the So, iet Union would allow other nations to enter the affected aren 10 look for signs of the "'Teckage and bodies and that a full investigauon be allowed by th e aff<.'cted countnc.s. lndivldoal s teps we re also rnken bv various countrie~. President R·eagan addressed the nt1tion on Sept. S. He continued the suspcn· sion of landing rights for Aeronot.
the So\'iet government airlines. \\h1ch had been suspended because of the Soviet's actions in Afghanistan and Poland in Decem· ber 1981. The president also placed restrictions on Soviet fishing catch in U.S. waters and limits on Soviet ship use in U.S. pons. The Flight 007 mid-air massacre will tonnent the minds of the \\Orld for a long time to come. The total effect of the Soviet Union·s barbar· ic act will be monumental. But make no mistake about it, the Jives
of those 269 people will not be satisfactorily p:iid for in anybody's mind. The actions that Presiden t Rcaga n too k we re crit icizcd by many ns not bei ng harsh enough, but under extreme pressure, the president displayed an enormou~ nmount or restraint a nd should be commended for it. This is a time for intcma1lonnl action In harmony. not on independent action by the United States. Critical analysis by the too will be introduced ln, futu re months by those in the political arena. While the full effect.:. or t he mid-oir massacre will not be known for months or yenrs to come. there arc the obvious impact areas that will be on the minds of millions of people worldwide. While the nrcn of foreiRn iradc might sec minor curtailment. 1hcre · will nparcntly be oo major cconom, ic ~a net io n,; evoked against the Soviet Union. The United Stntes hns already signed a five-year grain agreement with the Sovie1 Union. and some 500.000 tons or grain were purchased after night 007 we nt down. The nuclear arms negotiations in Geneva will continue, but those talks will be severel y strained by the night 007 incident. This tragic event could have spiraling effects on the nuclear orms race. President Reagan will face much less opposition i111 his plans to place the Pers hing c ruise miss iles in Europe and tbe United States Congress will be faced with even higher military spending towards nuclear weapons. Chances for friendly U.S./Sovict relations hips in the near future have plummeted with the occur· rcnce of Flight 007. Al t.be very least, che inctdent ha$ reminded the world or the t\•il goals of the Soviet Union. and pcrhapi.. rekindled a huge spark or patriotism for the international community 1ow.:ird achieving the goals ot hving m a free world. While the leaders of the international community press on toward a satisfactory conclusion or the Russian att:ick. let us bold the haunting memories of those 269 victims close to our hea rts and ma ke it the world resolve that those people did not die in vain.
R.J.K.
,
a Sept. 16, 1983/ Cardinal Re\'iew -7-
Dreams Wi1h DiPrima Daughters and mothers look.Ing down on turquoise pools Dh'ing perfectlJ 11·s easJ until lhe men 1oith !heir diamond watches their f:raglle giflS depart down lhe slllirs sa)ing I lo,e ,ou too Then it's cL!.rk there Is sea" ced o.nd a sUce of gl:i.ss The men on the cliff The women s-.·im on 31J mouths then e,cs the) ~d and cap 11 small blue bird to blo-. on and 1.-atcb d1S3ppe:tr.
fay Wright Illes tlme oat
from p aperwork
10 read some poell} In her office.
A poem bJ F11., Wright ,.ritten from the remnants or nine dreams of p:u-tidpants in II Centram workshop.
Basil Fram photo
The writer in Wright
by Craig Johnson
An explosion or pictures and prints danle the walls or her cozy college office lllte snatches of image~ burst from the poofs mind to dry there and solidify. Images that NIC English Instructor Fay Wright linds bustling in her mind, begging 10 leap from pen to page - wherever. whenever o.nd howe,,er. " I can be In a bar or n restaurant or on n bus," Wrighl said. "but if I need 10 wrhe 111 thOI momen1. then by golly. I'll lind n woy. •· ··rr I don·1 hove o pencil, I will osk someone for a pencil. If I don't hove paper. I will beg paper,·· she SO id.
Wright. who i, the author of II chapbook titled "Out of Season." is not sure why she feel s rompcllcd 10 write but gues~e~ that it moy come from ~ome ~on of Inner prompting. Tbis ~11111 mer. Wrl11ht port lo lly o~~uagcd I hat prompting by altcnding n two.week pol'lr)' worhhop in l'Qrt Town~cod. Wa)h. Havln11 ~n awarded n ~ummer stipend by the college 10 ottcnd Ccnlrum - o ~ummert1me fcsu,al of event~ for nll kinds of 3rtish - Wri11h1 pnr11cipn1cd in a ma,tcr chi~~ poet r) wor~~hop conducted by Dinne DiPrimo DiPrim11 is a nationally know11 P()Ct who has t3ught In i.chl)()b. prisons and on ccservot1011s, Wright ~aid. and she now teaches lo the Masters In Poetic:. progrom 01 the New College of Colifornia and ot Naropa Institute. Di Prima got to know Wright well and 11Sked her to participate in one of her tarot card readings. However. .the demanding schedule of events left the studenrs hnlc time for diversions. Poetry readlnp, workshops and lectures by such poets OS Howard Nemero,1 and Di.Prima kept Wright busy from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. .. It was real intense:· Wright ~aid. But Intensity is somethl.ng Wright docs not shy away from. She thrives on lhe e nergy of her poetry and the power of poetry readings. " It feeds me.'' she said as she pressed a pencil 10 hlcr temple. eyes squinting to two thin slits or p easurc. "I aet .-.:Y from being allowed to rcad and from hcanng other people read, .. Wright explained.
She said it comes from the surprise of bemng a special nIT3Jlgement of words that someone hits on every once in a while - a surprising juxtaposition of words that resonates in the inner car Ho..cver, Wnght s.i_id the audience for poetry. whether it be poetry readings or reading for pleasure. is small and getting smaller Poet:r) loci.a), she sa1d. has :1lm0S1 no ronn. and as a result, readers do not kno" 11.hat to make of it or
"hat 10 elpeci from it as they "ould from ~hon stories or novels. ' E,cn if you are a poet. you may not undersuind "hat in the hell this (poem) is." Wright said. ..I think ii lot of poets write highly personal m111enal. ·· she said ... ,.-~ OK. i1·s grent. but how can "e expect there 10 be nn Judicncc when the audience docsn·t k:no" wha1 to c.,pect? .. So no"· the lugcs1 audience for poetry becomes the poets themsel, es. she said. ··And 1h01 gets 10 be this rt'al incestuous group 1hat runs around patung e.ach other on the bock and saying ' Wow. that's real!\- good. no" "ould )OU read my book?.. Bui poetry still sun·hes and is read by millions of people because it fulfill~ a need. she said. "It helps u.s to pcrcc1,e the world and clarify our ideas. ·· Wright s3ld she believes in Jungian archetypal imag~ which are common among people the world o,er. "AO of os hne a sene, of common images: that's "hat mates music "ork. th:11 's 11. hat makes poe1J1 "orlt and 311 thc ans work .'. she snid. "Wh, en I appr=atc: p:unungs done 400 ycnrs ago b, some Japane\e ,mist - I don·1 know the people for pl.le~ he 1\ pamung. ·· Although Wri ght does not often think about the ~t~ le of poeUJ \he "'me~. ,he has formed nn idea ba.\ed upon "h.at people ha,·e told her. ..Some thint:?S people have said are that I create hnle ICOtb. Ii.kc Im.le pictures-very imogisuc little photographs.'· she s11td. Her e;es beg10 10 squint rem1.111"1CCntly again. .. Maybe I am a photographer who got stuck "'r\ung, •• she murmered. Wrlu she bu and always will do, a decision she ma_de her seruor year in high school under the inOuencc of an EngJish teacher . Wright is in the process of completing her second book of poetry which is about two-thirds finished . "I want this book to have a common theme or somerhing that pulls it together.·· she said. "I think tha1 is the difference between a chapbook a_nd a book. I "ant lhis one to get out. 10 go somewhere.·· Going pl11ces and seeing things is whar this Montan4·bom poet is all about. And 10 think that at one rime she wanted to be a chemist.
American Festival Ballet opens in C-A Auditorium "The Comedians" is one of three ballets performed by the American Festival Balle1 10 open tonight at 8 p.m. in the C-A Aud11onum D1rcc1ed by guess chorcogr:iphcr Samuel KurkJian from Boston. the ballet was wrinen for a plaJ staged by the Centrol Children's Theatre or Moseow, Russia in 1938. Also on 1hc program 1s another wort by Kurkjian called "Variauon< on a fh emc of Mozart ' and "Carmrna Burana." 11 popular choral 11.ork b" Carl Orff. Music for "The Comedians." composed by KabalC\'Sky. depicts a s~es of lively episodes in the carefree life of an itinerant company of buffoons. Kurkjian has used this musical theme 10 cre11te characters from the imaginary kingdom of Buchaderangill. including the beautiful LIi Favoriu1.
the ominous Grand Boss and Los1 loulS. who pines for his se-emingly uru1pproachable IO\'C. A medic-.il setting and mood will be the background for "Carmina Burana." the third p3.11 of the Amenca.n Fcsu,al Ballet program. This popular choral is based on songs and poems 11.nnen by tra\'eling srudcnts in the Middle Ages. Although these songs la) buried tn an a.nacnl 1DOD.1Slery for hundreds of \'Ul'S thn remain modem in their ireatmcnt ·or life and love and the tnc:ts of fonunc Tid:cu for these pcnornances a.re priced at. adults So.50. S.S.SO.S4.S0, children S5. and ~ The,, a.re on sale a1 the IC Tic:ke1 Office; the Coeur d" Alene Chamber of Commerce and Bun's Music Service.
BuU Fram pbolo
craig johns on Yankee doodle who? It hh been said 1h01 boredom is the :shriek of unused c:ap:ianes. No more clearly can 1h01 shriek be hen.rd than an 1he fan1astic drawings s1uden1s imbellish their no1ebooks with. NcX1 time you he:i.r :1 history teacher mercilessly tncing the e\'CDts "hich led up 10 the French Re,•olurlon of 1789. look O\'CC your shoulder at the students next 10 you. What do )OU think they arc doing? Srudiously taking 001cs? Wrong! Allhough 1heir pens are franricnlly Oying about their ootebooks. they arc not highlighting the verbal gems of wisdom spewing fonb from the inscructor·s milk-soft throat. lnstend. those nourishing pens arc tracing doodles in and around mBrgins nnd upcoming test dotes. h's n case of S1e"e Martin's happy feel gone to the ph:ilangcs. Doodling is a grc111 American college pastime; perhaps one of the fev.· \'CStiges of folk nn left to the modernized. computerized S1udent. Bot the bli::zare geometric 10 a symmcttical designs that a.re popular 3mong chronic doodlers should be a warning lO both teachers and s1udents: a warning thtlt hawks and spits of communication breakdown. It may not be essential for a science m3jor 10 know that the storming of the Bastille preceded the e=tion of Louis and Marie. It may not even be a maner of life and dec:e01 mid-term grades for an English major 10 know the family of oxygen-silicates responsible for forming a good many minerals. But really. can this information hun? Or is it all Sophisi drool drippiug off of the tongues of uncaring inslructors who have no more sense of an audience than Woody Allen h:i.s muscles. If lhls Is true , th~ we all should ask for tuition refunds and enroll in an schools. At least there our boredom would be reduced 10 simpering whimpers inste3d or the acapclla shrieks that threaten our development in other nreas of academi3 th3t ha\"C escnped our holy. sacred majors. lo the words of Thomas Ct1rlisle: "The man 11. ho cannot wonder. who does no1 habituall) -.·orship. is but :i pair or spectacles behind which there is no eve." WhJJe l1'11e~ "'ords may have been spoken. :i health,• dose of his advice is sure to cure a bad case of doodle-vision. • Educntion is an an and an is an education. If there is a reason wh,• they canno1 peacefully coexist. then I am a Yantce Doodle Dandy and you h:ive wasted 1ime rc.iding this column.
Los e tribute A sculpture '(IIS placed 1n front or lhc Hedlund BuUdlng this put 1ommcr In memory of former Ca.coll)' member Jack Steve.
Trestle Creek Review under way NIC's popular literary magazine. Trestle Creek Review. is in full swing for the year. . she .IS hoping . ,or ' a b"1g rurnou t ,or ' th'1s ycu.~ Magazine 11dviser Fay Wright s:ud issue. At least 200 works were submitted 1:ist year and more arc needed for lhts year, she said. Trestle Creek Review consists of various types of poetry, fierion, esst1ys and art work. The primary focus is the collgc and surrounding area, but submissions have been received from other colleges as well. . .. People who arc interested in contributing either 3.11 work or creative wn~g should send their entries to Trestle Creek Review, c/o Fay Wrighl. NIC English Department. Coeur d'Alene. Idaho 83814.
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Sept. 16, 1983/Cardl.anl Review - 9-
Art instructor Herreshoff recalls 1960s era by MartJsa Platt He sits comfortably at his desk, one of his legs resting negligently on the top. Robert Herreshoff. who has begun his firs1 term 01 NfC ~ ao an teacher. is a self-proclaimed peace lover who was eduated in Berkley. Ca. al the California Arts and Crafts College during the late 1960s Vietnam protest era. Herreshoff, who protes1ed the d raft, was eirempted from going to war because he convinced the Orange County, California draft board tha1 he was ineligible to fight because of religious and philosophical reasons. When he was going lo school, he protested in the Berkley State Follies. He was tear gas~ three times and narrowly missed more injury. .. , heard a billy club whistle pas1 my car.'· Herreshoff said. 'Td go to prison before I'd go in10 1he military, " he added. Even though he protested the Vietnam War from beginning to end. Herreshoff believes those who fough t should be treated with respect rather than made feel guilty for representing the United States.
He approves of nuclear technology. but at the mention of nuclear 11,·eapons. he shaltcs his bc3d from side to side .ind sa~·s "dumb. dumb." Ae~off blamed pa.rents as being llle major factor for ju,·enile dclinq· uency problems. Hcrreshoff. who taught :11 Fort Wright College in Spok3.lle during the early 1970s. became interested in psychology when he found himself
Ch rist ie lack lim e
Debate squad cancelled this year The lC debate club has been dropped for the 1983.s.4 school yenr. according to Tim Christie. l11St vear's debate coach.
the
Ar1 lm tnJctor Robert B en-eshofl
(___s_c_r_ee_n_s_ce_n_e___J 'Strange Brew' falls flat by Craig John.son Tnke a beer loving dog named Hosehtlld, the Elsinore Brewery and the inimitable McKen1ie brothers, miir well ond tl1e result 1s indeed a strange brew. The plot h, loosely stTucturod nrouod the auempt of bre" mll!.ter S1mlh. played by Mn.r Von Sydow, 10 control (he minds of humanity by placing a nund ahenng drug in the El~inorc stock. Bob 11nd Doug play 1he unwitting buffoons who arc too ~tup,d to stumble upon the plot even though they end up l11k1ng jobs in the brc"CI') . TI11s amiable comedy should nppt>nl mostly to mo,,iegocrs who a.re apt to 5111d.cr 41 flatulence, urine, vomit joke~ nnd the occnslonal " hoscr. " "eh" and "rake-off"' routine the tenm of Dave TI1om:is ond Rick Moronls mttlce famou~ on SCTV. In the case of "Strange Brew.'' no gng is too corny, boorbh. or i.tupid for tht pair to carry off, at the most, seml,succe~sfull). Troppcd in u vat with the b~wery·~ heiress, Doug McKenzie 1s forced 10 dnnlt 6,000 gallon~ of beer to keep them from drowning. The result b. of ooursc. n huge beer bhmp with n raging need to unnatc. lf the comedy of rhe Monty Python don is C3.lled dry humor, than this must be called wet - n, in blanket It b unfonunntc that the sud-sucking. p11i,ty-faccd duo were not llblc 10 tum m :, performance :h sparkling as the brew they crn ..e. Instead, 1h~lr rou1inc bC«lmes na1 and 5l&lc !S rhe points of the plot fall predictably into place. As an action-comedy. "Sirange Brew" is about ttS fun as a Mond11y h11.Dgo,·er.
Fall play auditions sla ted Tt)oalAI for •be NlC drama depart. me.at•, fall ro~y IU'O 1ebedufocl for Wcc!neld.ay In the C,A Auclltorhun. Dln:oc1ccl by lnstractor Rober, Moe "Tbe ttt ale Aolmal' ' calls for • omen and cJabt mco.
nv;
counseling the student) he 13ugh1. You .-an get u. ay. way in front of your suppon syStcm." Herrcshoff said of counseling . Herreshoff lms 3 bachelor of lits degree in prinunaktng. a master of ans degree in painting. is halfway through his master of ;ms degree in psycholgy. hos teachmg certific:ues in :111 and mathematics and is taking some computer courses at NIC
Tbo11c Inte rested In parts s hould audition at either 3 or 7:30 p.m.
The pla) , "btcb was "rltten b) James Thurber and EIJJot Nagcat , "lD be staged No, . 4,S,10, I I aod 12.
program was cancelled bec:iuse he is now chairman of the Christie said communication-ans depamnent this year and soid he feels he will not hove time to be both debate coach and chttirman. Another debate roach was not selected because no other personnel on cam pus has the eirpencnce n~ded. he said. The funds for 1he debate program were rransferred this year to the speech department , he said. adding tha1 money was llllocated for new video equjpment. Ac:cordmg 10 Chri.stie. this is only a one-time purchase. so the funds will be available next ye.,r for the debate program. . The debate club ma~ resume next year if 3nother roach can be found and ,f money is in the budget to silo" it. Christie said.
Sept. 16, 1983/ Ca.rdlnal Re,•ie1'' -10-
Summer school hairy experience for Shannon b) Pam Cunningham The FBI chooses people from ;ill over the United Statc<i who ho"e oppli~d to the school, 3Jld each pe rson is only allowed to anend once 11 yenr to make it possible for others to go. she said.
NIC Senior Cnminalist Shelley Shannon is in Alaska this -. eek working on a case and usmg the information she learned this summer at the FBI OC'3dCm\' 10 Quantico. Va For t,~o weeks in July. Shannon. v. ho v.·orks m the NIC Regional Crime Lab. anended \Choo! at the ncadem,· 10 stud\' ha1"" and fiber) "The· 1nform1111on that I learned ,..ilJ help me tacl.Jc 1h1s ca\e tn ,\lasb in a differen1 .. a,· than I probobl\ ,..ould hQH' before I wen1 back t school.·• Shannon said She now ha\ a set method to u\e v. hen in, eMigaung hair and fiber cases, she said The dll\S went in depth for c:.ne wee ii on hat~ and for one "eek on fiber\, Shannon said "'They don·1 expcn ,ou to become CXJ>f!ru in so short :i u me. but II is 'C'l: intense s:ud)mg. and }OU learn procedu re~. technique~ and updated liten· ture," s he said. ··You JU~t get a basis on v.hcre to begin if it" s n ne" field." She said her summer studies v.ere bcnefiew because the NIC lab does not get ma.ny lwr and fiber coses causing her to be mexperienced 1n that area. According to Shannon. the courses pro,ided bJ the FBI are offered to full-time criminalists from all SO states. It is ca.li ed the Fore nsic Science Training Program and the classes offered speci11lue in the areas of criminalistics s uch 3S odministran"e ad, anced J31eo1 fingerprints. latent fingerprint photography. arson. and collection and preservation of e,·idence.
Shannon said the reason the bureau provides this opportunity for cnmmnlisl\ is so more people ca.n bC('Ome !<pe<'i3li2ed In cerfain n.rCll,, les~cning the FBrs "·orkload . After n cruninolist applies to the ocodcmy. h m11 y be one to Ii, e rears bcforc hi s nome comes up ocrording 10 Sh,,nnon. ' She sa.1d shl' ll' nmed the three classes or human hoir ond ho" 10 identify rncc n(ld body 11rea. Shannon''> instructor at the ocodemy was the crimmafo.t who worke d on 1he Wayne William~ child-1.illing case 1n Atlanta. Gcorg10. " 80,1cally. the only C\'1dencc 1hey hod wo~ his dog·~ hn1r and fibe r\ from 1hc carpet In hi~ station wagon," ,he snld . " You h:1vc to 1t1kc o ~kirt or n blnnket nnd really lool. .it ii in o 110 11 .conrnmin(I ICd a reo wi th a micro~copc and with good light" in order to find 1hc c ,1idc nce. Shnnnon ~old.
Sbelle) Shannon dusts e,·ldenre Cor prints.
" II'~ not like they Choir" ond flbllr~) jump out 111 you like II fingerprint." s he s n1d . The work Is ve ry time consuming, s he said. adding " Espcclolly if you hnve on lny•bltty, onc•millimeter· long fibe r you wnn l to get on the ~llde :ind It ke~ps blowing owoy."
CR named All-American The North ld3ho College ne wspaper. the Cardinal R~iC'o'. v.~ =ntlv aworded a five-sur All-American rating by the Associated Collegiate Press for the spring semester issues. The rtuing. which is recei\'Cd b) about 40 college n~sp3pers out of 700 rated, is che 10th consecuth·e All -American by the Cardinal Re,it"'. According to Judge Ma11· He res of the Unwersrty of !'-fi.nnesota·based rating )Cr\ ice, che CR merited all possible marks of disrinction u, co~erage and content, 11rit1ng and editing. opinion content. design.and photognpby. :in and grapbi~. · ' Not only 1s your coverage thorough . bu1 your articles are li,el}' and "Tlnen in an interest·holding style," He res said. CR ad~·i~r Tim Pilgrim lnuded the " ork ohhe editors and staff for producing the award-wmntng pnpers. " Paul B:11er did :i superb JOb .1s editor. and the res1 of the staff did greaL. just grea1:· Pilgrir., said. "l just hope future staffs " ill be able to C".irry out the same quality \\ Ork .·· Along "ith B:uer. editors for the "innin.g p3pers were Marcella Sanchez. Stan Holl. Jackie Appel and Bruce Mulltn.
GENERAL SHERMAN 'S HAMBURGER
313 Sherman
GOTTA BE
One Per Penion
And
DR PEPPER
PEPSI
Sept 16th with this coupon
thru Sept 23
GONNA BE GOTTA BE PEPSI NOW
Basement shops under Photodyne
Pepsi Bottling Co.
Coeur d 'Alene
,
IiiSept. 16, 1983/ Cardi.n.a.l Review -ll-
Campus construction projects continue
Text and photos
by
Basil Franz
The new wheclchal r llrt on the Vocatlonal·T~-chnleal Bulldlna talce11 !ihape.
The remodeled computer room la the Mechanical· Arts IBuiJdlng h, ttadJ for SUldCDIS,
The new e n ~ lo NlC Is la full use.
A new emr:ince to NIC has recentlv been completed nnd is just pan of the changes th:11 are happening around campus. The Sl40.000 entrance project straigh1ened Garden Avenue as ii appronehes 1he college and pro,'ides addirional parlcing for cars and buses. Wort is currcnlly under .-·ay on a bicycle path 1ha1 will run parallel 10 1he dike road aroun d cbe perimecer of the campus. Accordi.ng to Jo Webb. assistant to Lhe president, the path .-ill be 6 feet wide .-ith a I-foot spnce separating it from the road. She said that Coeur d'Alene Asphalt is doing the work. but she would not disdose the cost of the project. In the compu1er depanment. Business Manajler Gerry Wendt said SI00.000 was appropriated by the st:lle to buy ne.-• computers. Ray Myers. direetor of computer services. said the money was used to buy II Hewlett Packard 2621 8 compu1crs to make a total of 20 terminals plus n line printer in the Mechanical-Ans Building computer room. The MA computer room has received new carpet and air condi•ioners. as well as a full-time :1ttendan1. J= Klingshcim "a~ hired to replace the workstUd\' students that usuallv wntch over the room. In· addition to the remodeled computer room. two rooms in the Sherman School Building have been remodeled to accommod:ue 2J Apple computers. Th1neen Apple llEs .-·ere bought to add to the Apple computers the college tilready has. according 10 the ne.- ly appointed lab director Susan Schrimsher, who is in charge of the Sherman School ~-omputer room. Another construction project recently romplcted 1s .1 "heelchoir lift "hich was ndded on to the \'ocatioMl·Technical Building to a,s1~t hand1c:ippcd students 10 the second noor. Clarence Haugh1, director of vocational education. said the S21.000 project had been planned for several )ears. but W:b alwo\'S put off because of a tack of fund~. The proJects mentioned represent only pan of the conslruc·uon scheduled for the campus os oart of the :-. IC Long·Rlllge Plan. Owen Cargo!. director of pl:uming. said other projec1s included: .. 3 new libl111) computer building. ..1he remo"al of the McCormick house for addit101W parlcing --the landscaping of the beach with a built-in sprinkler sys1em and la.- n. ··a reader board .-,1h 3 mop of the campus nt the nev. college entrance oo Garden Avenue. -lands.~prng the area behind the administration budding and addmg a \'ariety of trees. creaung nn &rboretum.
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Sept. 16. 1983/ Canllnal Re,iew - 12-
• tactic Central America jellybean Move to b) Ric J. Kast
Someboch· has slipped some kind of secret drug into Ronald Reagan ·s jellybeans. I( not that. what lO the name of .. peace.. compelled the presid~nt to send a S".OOO·ton baolesh1p to Join the aircraft e11rner Ranger and seven other ships m Central Amenca? The bauJeship Nev.• J~sey and !he other ships on the 11,4> to Central America :ire referred to as a .. surface action group.. The Nev. Jer~v lai both shon and long range miis1les. Re:igan said the pufJ)O'C for lhu mo"e is 10 .. unde~re U.S. \Upport of friendlv countnes in the region:· and 10 :1Ct as a ··peace shield.. 10 \l\a,& the region the United Stat~ is seriocs 0
about peaceful negotiations. Sound contradit'ton·? 11 1s This blauuu sbo"· cir s1tto2th b,· the Reagan administration could s1:i.nd in the wny 01 meamngtul peaccrUJ negotiations and set the :itmospbere for escalated fighting in the region. At 1he very least. it h:is made everybody concerned ' ' Cl)" nervous. The president msists these military• manuevers in the Cenm1l American waters nrc nothmg out ot the ordmat')' and thn1 militnry eicrcise.s ha,·e bet>n carried out for vears o, er there. He ~aid 1ha1 10 stop no" could send the ,vrong message to 1he region. While insisting no milit31') in,·oh C· ment 1s planned in Central Americ:il. he conce:ited 1hn1. if fixed 111. the military would be prepared to protest 1hcmsckes. He refused to rule ou1 U.S. milit31')' in,olvemcnt categoncal· l\'
• Apparently. the message that Nicarng un and Cuba got from the decision 10 send more troops 10 Central America is not one of peace. Nicaraguan Interior Minister
Thomas Borge said this mo,-e b)' the Reagan administranon represents "11 threat not onl) against Nica.ra2ua. but also ag:nnst Amcnca and the "wld. ·· Cub.an President Fidel u.stro de· scribed the Reap.n admmistrnrion a..s the most .. b111w and sin1s1er.. tlult has ~~!"'ed in W35h10gton since he took power 25 years ago In ,,C'I', or the present and ongoing teru10.o ,n the region. increased U.S.
nbboo commission was ~et up ptncing former Secretnl')' of Suite Henry A. KiS£Jnger 11t the he:id. The purpose or the comm1~1on is to cSt11blish long range U.S. policy in· \'oh,ng Cenu-al Amcnca. Considering KtSSing~ ·s trnd re.."Ord concerning mihtln in,ohemen1. this decision has been ~ct \\1th more than just II liutc skepuc,sm. Memories or the Vietnam w:ir loom
-~(__n_e_w_s_a_n_a_ly._s_is_·_),.___ _ m1ltta.r) occupauon aJJ)" here close cannot be appn~ as .. ,be norm ... Congress b~ to be a tnOe ncn·ous about the miuury presence tn Central America as v.ell. Right no" the president insists this 1s a normal mibtal') c1erctSc But • lut steps can Congress tue to force croop wilhdra• · al m the e-eot of I breuout of combat m,-olnng U.S forces! According to the W:u P~-ers Act LO 19-J. the president can dispatch troops without the consent of Con· gress. but must '1.ithdraw these troops \\ithin 60 cb}S unless reccinng ap· pro,·nJ Crom Congress. But In a recent Supreme Court ruling, the le~U\e ~e,o bas been stripped from the Congress lllld .my 1111emp1 for forced troop "11hdrawat from Centnl Amcnca could be me1 "ith D tangled mess of legal jargon possibly del;i~·iag troop wllhdrawal indefin11ely. To c:omphcaie things e,•ea more, JUSI prior to 1be announc:emen1 of sending the battleship New Jersey 10 Central America. 3 presidential blue·
out 31 this n:inon like a bnd dream. There are current!\ th ou~nnds of unsung V1etn.1m hcroc.-~ still having gre:at difficulties coping v.11h everydoy pres\Ul'C'I as the result of Vie1nnm. If htstor)' teaches the leaders of this countn ao}thlng al all. it teaches that thn do not learn anything rrom history
TM present admlnl.1tntlo11 seems so inten, on focusing hs attention on a disp lay or power that the original problems or Central Amc rka have long since been ou1 of the sight and mind or President Reagan. lns1eod of confronting tlhe giant soeit1l and economic problems of the region. Rct1gt1 n has npparcntly decid, ed to use Control America for II s111gc in which 10 gain political clout in the region. Now that the stngc hru; been set and Re:ignn ha~ nnnounccd 10 the world 1ht11 the U.S. h awesomely po"crfut. he will proceed to address the press with ~cry cnrefutly cho.~en words and hide behind the blue-rlbbo111 commi~sion. Let uJ hope this dedsiou to .. under• ~corr U.S. ~upport 10 friendly coun. tries in the region .. will not become a haunting nightmare for thi~ country. In the meantime, just to make sure. will ~omcbody plcn~c hide Ronnie's jetlybcnn~.
Tina Phillippi appointed ASNIC activities director noa Phtltlppi was appointed st udent nt'tivi1ies director for 1983·84 by ASNIC President Lee Cote after former director Sherry Smith resigned. Phillippi. a sophomore fashion merchandising major, applied for activities director last fall tu1d took tbe position when Smith left to ta.kc B full-time job. She s:iid the student activities committee waols to start having better coffee houses, ones which will involve rnore audience pan.ielpntion. ..You cun only look at :i piano player for so long before you get bored," she said. "The committee wanu 10 provide all NIC students with act.ivhies 1hey can panicipate in and enjoy... she said. "For ex.ample, 11 magician or a comedian." Phillippi said that in the coming year the traditional fall and spring barbeque and Mish-llll-Nock cruises will be held. but money was lost last year and the budget has been CUI,
She said she went 10 the Dave Sobol Theatrical Agency so she could get an idea what bands are being poid . ..The pnees of bands shocked me:· she said ... I'm in the WTong business... Phillippi said most small bands are charging an avcr:ige of S500·S600 a conccn and Rail is going for SJ.S00-S2,000. According to Phillippi. any student who wants to help with :,tudem activities is welcome to join the committee.
TINY'S
FORE 'N' AFT
Live Music 9 pm - 1 am Tuesday thru Saturday Ice cream drink Careful casting lndustri.al education snidcnt Dan Rtme carefullJ prepattS a Coundt) mold of sand before filling ll with Uquld aluminum during a class last w«k In the industrial Arts BuUdJni.
Y,
price with ad
204 Sherman
Coeur d'Alene
SepL 16, 1983/ Ca.rdin.al Re,•iew -13-
er sports
O:~ YO UR MARK--Cro'-S rountry ('()nch ;\like Sund) lns1ructs his runners.
Harriers off and running b) Shari Alderman The MC cros~ counm te.1m u. ill be opening IIS ~011 S.lturd3y b) sending members 10 t,r,'O dtffercnl meets. Retummg sophcmcr~ will race nt Whn:worth College Me:,11\\htle. nev. members v.1Il be IO\Ol~ed 10 a road race held in Sandpoint Cmmal team members sho" o lot of po1en1ial and will aJI be able to rnC't' thi.$ year, according to Cooch Mike Laurie Bristo-.. pbolo STRETCBING OUT- -Freshman cro1111 rountry r unner Th ereu Penteco 11 1 preplll'CS (or her dall) workoul.
Bund~.
Bu:iidy said be expecu sophomore 10 t~ top 20
Melanie C3lld1.i to place
1h1s year. ,f she run). As 3 freshnm,. Condio placed \/Cf)' high during a junior college meet in which she quolificd for notionols. Three returning (ordinals. John Bursdl. Gord,, He:uh . and Waide Ho1land ore all ~·cry promising. Bundy said. Oa,·c Smith, o transferring sophomore from Nonhwest Nazarene Col· lcgc. is .1nother team member who will add 10 the solidity of th e 1eam, t1ccording 10 Bundy.
ON PACEA trio of run · ncn, "ork out along Coeur d'
Alene We near campus.
Bull Fraaz phoco
Sept. 16. 1983/ CanilDAl Re,iew -14-
~
I Card basketball squad wants winning season by Dan Breeden
Enthusiasm 1s t.he one thing thu bubble~ o,er when 1;illang 10 the SIC Cardinal roundballers about the upcoming ~eason. As (er as prediction\ go, however head ba~ketball coach Roll} Wdhams
wos fairly resef\ed But man~ of his pta)ers were quick 10 speak up. ~d
the y all had ,isions of a ,..,,nniog seru.on. ·'La.st vcar "-C had 19 wins and 10 losses:·· sctond-1car man Dellondo Fou said. '" But ihis year I don't pwi on losing more than three. All good teams have to lose a couple of games in order to play their best ball.·· The freshman recruits that will be trying 10 achie,·e this goal rncludc Tarell Davidson. S-foot-10 from Los Angeles: Walt Wile~. 6-foot·l from Hamilton. Mom.: Jeff B,ord. t>-foot-2 and John Nilles. 6-foot-6 both from Spokane: 6-foot·S s,e,•e Fedler from Beaverton. Ore.: 6-foot-S Allen Phillips from Vancouve r . British Columbia. and Allen Hollingswonh. 6-foot-6 from San Diego. Rounding out the freshmen ,,11J be eil Stephens. 6-foot-8 from New Zealand nnd Kevin Williams nt 6-£001-6. a Detroit ITilnsfer student. Joining the new frosh will be sophomore recruits Jerry Rimblen. 6-foot-4 from Dayton. Ohio and Cunis Golston . 6-foot-S from Cle,•etand, Ohio. ··coach Williams did a realty good
job of recnnring this year,'" Fou said. ··we·u ha,e a lot more depth. speed and h~ght.' 0
Not ooh· docs the hsl of nev. men look impressive. bttt the Cardin.ls also ha, e four returnees from l&St season. three r,fv.hom ....eitt suners. The~ arc Fon. Tim Ai,,.1l0d. Greg Gauldmg and KC\1n Shu~s. "'ho drd oot ,lln last )Cat but came on strong off the bench on se\cral oa:uions. .. ~h biggest concern nght nov. is rcbouod1ng.' Williams uid. "lf "'e cu go up urong on the boards and then hn the our.let pass . .,..c·n be all right. But v.c\e got to be tough on the bo:uds •. 0
One thing the ununa.ls v.ill have lhts , car that they lacl:ed las1 }·ear IS depth. Williams and Fon ~d. A few impromptu basketb:111 sessions ha, e alttad\ been held and if the games folio-.. the· same pattern as the practices. t.he ~ o should be filled v.·ith fast brew. swtshes and sl3m dunks.
Willwns prepami for this by having new spnng-loadcd brcu -a11,ay nms installed. The Cardmals will test their talent "hen 1he1r season opeas Nov. 26 against Spokane Commwiity College. Although t.hctr schedule has not been finalized. the Cardmal league opener witl probabl) be in mid -January against Ricks.
Dan Breeden pbolo
Grand slam Woman voUeyballer VlrglnJ.a MllleT nne tunes her t.echnlqae lo preparatlon for I.be team's first meet. the team w(U tzavel lo Butte thJa weekend for the Montana Tecb Tolll'1l&men t.
Regular season far off for rookie students When I think of September, I don't trunk of leaves falling or fields burning or the han:esting of crops. For me September represents the beginning of Lhe regular seasons of my two favorite games: NFL football and college education.
Dallas Cowbo) stude.nt.s are the type m0st envied. and disliked by their sub-standard peers. These are the students who breeze th rough the semester passing all their tests, rccieving awards and rushing through deadlines with a 4.0 grade point average.
lo that mont.h wbea rear window defrosters regain their imponancc, 1 am reminded of the similarities between these annual institutions. I notice how the performance of some NFL teams parallels that of college students across the nation.
Cowboy st11dents are always eUgible for post· season scllolars.hips and sometimes win the coveted valedictorian honors.
Some students progress through lhe season like thc,Seattle Seahawk.s. They have the talent to be in the upper half of their class and possibly receive a scholarship. but instead they falter through most of the year until they arc out of the running for any type of post-season recognition. When the Seahawk students sec their failure to reach their potential. they surge with all of their dormant ability to prove 10 themselves that they still have it. and ro give their fans (their parents) a sliver of hope for nC%1 season.
On the other end of the spectrum are the students resembling the performance of the New Orleans Saints. These st11dents have never bad a good year. and their brilliant moments have been few and far between.
willy
weech the 1980 Oakland Raiders or the J98J San Francisco 49' ers and Cinc:inatti Bengals.
Another ve ry common type is the Minnesota Viking Students. They tend to excel! in most or a.II of their studies until the final tes1 at the end of the year. At this time they stumble and wonder what went wrong. They eoasistently fumble their notes, have a high St1:ldmt perfCll'IDIIIICe lo school may be comparable incompteted class percentage. are penalized for illegal procedures and are sometimes thrown out of to the performance of a cen.ain NFL team. but th~ is one essential difference between coUege educauon the game altogether. and professional football. Wh ile the NFL is New Orleans students hope to someday become perpetual and the highest step on the football those rare few, the surprise smdents. They hope to ladder. college is only an intra.squad scrimmage. The find a cavity of hidden talent and shoot to the top like regular season may be years away.
Sep t. 16, 1983/ Cardinal Re,1ew -1S-
1983-84 college faculty, staff add 16 new faces by Kath) Garrison Sixteen people have joined the North Idaho College faculty and staff for the 1983-84 academic year. David Lindsay. director of admissions. gradu3ted from the College of Idaho with additional Study at St. Mary's University (San Antonio), the University of Hawaii (HjJo}, and Boise State University. Prior IO joining NIC he was the Associate Director of Admissions Counseling at Boise State University. Debra Prather. the biology laboratory assistant graduated from Evere11 Community College and Eastern Washingion University majoring in biology and chemistry. She was formerly a te:iching/ researcher assistant at Eastern Wa shington University. Prather replaces Shelley Shannon who now works full-rime for the NIC criminalistics laboratory. Robert Herreshoff. instructor of art, graduated from the California College of Ans with a bachelor of fine ans and a master of fine arts degrees. He also did post-graduate work in education and psychology at Southern Oregon State College. Herreshoff has taught art at both Fort Wright College and California Community Arts College.
Vidor Duarte, the instructor of psychology. graduated with an Associate of Ans degree in psychology from city college of San Francisco and from San Francisco State University. He also received a Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota. Steven Meier, instructor of psychology, graduated from Washington State University with bachelor's and master's degrees in psychology. He was both a teaching and research assistant at WSU and has worked with several alcohol abuse programs. Judy Bostian, displaced homemake r program director, graduated with a doctorate in Higher Education from the Univenity of Arkansas and holds masters
a.nd bachelor's de~es from .the Uni,ersit) of Ark:111sns in counseling and literature. respecm·ely. Bosuan was former!) the direc1or of the Displnced Homemaker Pro.s,am for Spokane Communil\' College. Leslie Baird. auditorium technil'(Jj supeC\ isor. gmduated from the Colorado College with a bachelor's degree in an and fine ans. He has se,·eml years of experience as a high school teacher and :is a theater director. · Joan Klingsheim, aademic computer laboratory supervisor. attended North Central Bible College and has extensive e:rperience "ith bookkeeping. secretarial work a.nd computer processing. Massoud Laghai. ins1ruc,or of computer science. graduated from Ea.stem Community College and Eastern Wnshington Universil) majoring in biology and chemistry. Billy Richards. instructor of geolog) and geography. graduated in geology with n baccalaureate degree from Stephen F. Austin State Unhersit) and a master's degree from Kansas State University. Jean Schmidt. records derk-receptiorust. gradu.ated from Wilbur High School in Washington and the Kinman Business Universitv. Formerlv she " 'ns administrative secretary 10 Dean Stone and the faculty secrera'ry nt Nie: Maxine Schmit:1.. instructor of data processing. graduated with a bachelor of arts degree in m3thematics and French from the Universit)· of Montana. She also did extensive gradu.ate work in operations research. numerical :inalysis. econmetrics and statistics at the Uni,·ersiry for the Spokane Community Colleges. Susan Shrimsher. microcomputer laboratory supef\~sor. graduated from the University of Mont:inn in mathematics. education and computer science and has taught at both high shc:ool and collegi: levels. Christine Stewart. instru cto r of nursing, gradunted from Mon1an:1 ~tate Umversi~ and has worked at five different hospitals in Montana and Wnshington. J ean Miller, secretary at the Academic Resource Center. held secretarial positions in both priw1e industry and academia. She studied 111 Ulinois State University. the N~tional College of Education and the St1int Francis School of
Nursing.
RESERVED
Ann Stommes. secretary at the Communication-Ans Building. " 'orked for NIC for four years and studied secretarial science at the college .
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Starr
Band On 1nrge1 Drafting 61Udcn1 Darla S haul pracLices her l>Ul'\Cyl.ng l>kilh darmg • l'\'l'l'OI fleld pnictJce In the ,ocatlon1d parUng area .
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Monday night Football Happy Hours
Monday · Friday 5·8 pm
Twilight hour 11-Midnight 95c cockt ails
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Sept. 16, 1983/ Canllnal Review -16-
(...___m_·c_n_o_t_ic_e_s__)
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Work-study time sheeis must be sigued by the superv1.sol' and by the employee and must ln:clude tbe socJal security numbe r. Sheets most be turned In 111 tbe O:nancial ald.s office by noon 011 Sept. 23, or no check wW be IBsaed Sept. 30. All olbecr college time sheets iie due at the baslness office by Sept. 1.7. Discount tickets for the Showboa.t m Tri-ClnclllJIS are now a.vallable In tbe vocational malo office or Sub'"·ay Game Room. Tickets are $1. for students " 'Ith ID card!;. Students are limited lo two tickets a week. "Strategies for SuC1'£SS, '' a irrogI3JD for returning women s tudents a.nd lnlerested others. ..-Ill be beld In the Bonner Room o( the SUB Sept. 29 al 1 p.m. The topic will be "l\1a.t b Anxi-
ety." Students Interested In .12 caliber Indoor shooting cao look Into the college rlOe club. The club meets to shoot every Tuesd.ay at 3 p.m. In the Ca.rdlnal Room In the Wlnlon Build, Ing. All equipment ls furnished except !or .TI-l'lll'.lber long rifle ammunition. For more Information, contact Tom Price at exi. 349.
Tbe college grounds deputme n t asks that students and staff not back their ,, ehlcles l.olo puking spues became It lnhlblts clean.up of side11·alb and gutters. A.II lottamurw.l golf tounwnenl will ~ held Sept. 29 Ill the Coea:r d'Alene
Publlc Goll Coarse. Rosters mas1 be tamed Into the lntramuml office no l.&1.eY i.hao Sepl. 19. A S3 g:r:een ree will be charged Co:r each member Ill • team who has a stude:nl. body ~ - For more Info=· lion coota.ct Dean Ben.nett In the
S.ubway.
Any foll. or part-time studenl5 may soo Or. Eggleston wli.boul clb.arae In Student Health from 7'30 a.m. lo 8:l S a. m. Mo nday through Friday. Jo M.arlnovlch. student heal.lb nurse, ls available to see s tudents a.od staff from 7d0 a.m. l:n Noon and l p.m. lo
3:30 p.m. Monda.y th:rollgh Frida.y, Tho5e ridin.g bicycles to NIC 11n1 asked not lo clJ&ln lbelr hUres 1.0 trees or posts. The groa:nrui department said th.a.I h icyc:le nicks are located for convenient ose DCIU' most m,ajor col• lege buildings.
A famlJy history workshop presented by Evenon, a 111¥)r &enealoaical puhllshJ.na flrm, ...mbe b.eJd In the SOB Bonn er Room on Saturday Nov. S from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. If yon a beginner or a pi:o hi genealogy, tbli ls a good opportunity. Reglatrallon fee Is $13.50 before <k,t. IS and $15 after
an:
that date. The dcadJlne for signing up for womco's Intramural <p0wdcr pull football ls Sept. 26. Two teama will ~ formed, and lbc game wUI be played at S p.m. on Ol'I. 13.
Law enforeemcnl officlala are now All ~eten.ns with e~lred delimltlng dues who want enea.sloo:s for vocational training should contact the ~ete:rans afEaks office.
The Lo.ke Cit} Humoobers will present. "Show Tl.me Barbershop 51),le" S p.m. Saturday ID the C-A Aodltorlum. For m o_re lniormalloo, call the NJC Box Office B1 667-6331.
All students e.nroUed foy 10 Cfedlts
Stndents 1:o tercslcd In n1W11clal ald, PeD Grants, and s tudent loan!i, should c:ootacl J im Upcb11rc b lo 1 he NIC firumcln.l alds office for more lnfol'l'.DJI· don. A benetlt variety show wm· bc hcld at 6 p .m. and 8:30 p.m. Sept. 29 for the Kootenai Coun ty Search and Rescue. Call the NIC Box Office al 667'-6331 fo:r more (n{onn.atlon.
or more at1t'oma1ically b.ani stud.cot
health lnsunnee. For more lnformallo.o or clalm fo rms , see nurse Jo M.arlno,•lch l:n Smdent H.ealth on the .second floor of the SUB.
All Vet Club meetl:ng.s will be held the second Mood.ay of CJU:b month al 3 and 5 p.m. All coUcge stud.cots aro eligible and enreuraged to Join.
l~ulng Uckets Co:r can parked Wegally al NlC. Towing wUJ be enforced for CIIJ'8 piuked wl.thoot proper parking pennlts.
T ho NIC dormitories sllll have rooms a Yallable for men. Thoae lnlcrestt.-d can contact Becky Coffman at 667-7422, e:tt. 317.
Rosos In tho campWJ Oowerbeda wlll be cut back tho OoaJ week of SepJem· bcr. Students and staff 1boold rehaln
from tak in g addlllonal clipping, In o?dcr to a void 8Clvere dam.age i.o the llowen.
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0 "IS GLAD YOUR BACK"
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