North Idaho college Cardinal Review Vol 36 no 11, Mar 12, 1982

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Volume 36, Number 11

Friday, March 12, 1982

Opening nigh • Marla McBain and Ja, na Warn e r c,onaldeT If II ls wise lo lee Rn Dolgncr In lhe hove lo lhc play, ''Skin of Our Teeth," which opem conJghc. The play begios ac 8 p.m. and wmrun March tJ, 18, J9 and 20.

SIAD BalJ photo

Student Board makes sweeping voting changes by Laun Hubbanl

Erlcn~lve chan11cs were mode in lhe ASNIC Cons1ltut1on Bylaws concern• Ing electiOn5 at the Morch I ASNIC S1udco1 Board meeting. Former Vlcc Prcsidcnl Rondy Kee· fer, who acted as pres ident In Senn Brower's absence until Jim Brewer :aod Carolyn Pfister were installed into oflicc. rccommcndctl some ndditio nnl clau5c~ be added 10 Ankle IV of the byl11ws. Mo~l of these were 11imed 01 avoiding funhcr problems with condi· date eligibility. ~uch a5 tho~e fnced 111 the recent pres1den1l111/v1ce pre~i · dcn1lal primary election. Clouse three was nddcd 10 Article IV. section two to require office hopcJuls to present a ~igned offidov1t from the rcg1si rnr confirming their ehgib1lit y before they con rece i>•e petitions. The cuct " 'ordinll of the

forms was incorporated 1010 wbsequent claus~. By far the mos t contro\erslal change requested w~ one which would allo" campaigning b) candid:ucs to class. The bylows formCTly st:atcd that no ca ndidate could interrupt any ~he· duled doss 10 c11mpa1gn for office. However . the board m1rro"IY approved lhe revision after !i>ome debate The \'Ole wo, 1ied J.J, and Sen. Jaoe J effries broke the tic. The main opponen t of the proposal W Iil, Galen St'huler. "ho \t31cd that aJlo" ing cn mpnignmg in cla~ would I><.' .. reverse d1srnminatioo .. s10cc. he claimed, the \'OC:3tiMnl portion of the colle8c ti. cloi.er I.nu and teachers wo uld help studc111~ ou1 b) lcmng them interrupt clll.\s. Ac3demic 1ns 1ruc 1ors. he said.

(___in_s_id_e_t_h_e_c_r_~J Mlalwidled eleetloos led lo apathy, reader II), ..........•...........•...•......... . page J Wl"fttlel'II Win NJCAA aatJooal champlcnishlp ••..••.•••.••.•••••••••••••.•.•••.••.••• ~

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CleaJhity In college dcbale explored ................................................... page 9

would not be ,;o hlch to let student~ campaign in d3.~ Keefer argued that sl1ldeou; "'ere goml! to c.imp:ugn m cl;iss :uiywa) nnd t?ut the boo.nl lllld oo "3\ of "bab) sitting.. candidates 10 be sure 1hn did not , 1ol:1te 1hr rules. Other re, is ions tile bo;ird made m the b) h1"'s 1ocluded: --30 amendment "hich would allo" "ntc·in caodidues for the scmuonal elections onl) tn the pri-

manes (1he board alre3dy mode such 11 pro\ision for prcsidc:ntiol/v1ce prcsi· dential races). The ,·otcs for a writ e-in will be accepted only if tile candidate's name lS spelled rorTeCdy and if an " x" is placed 3fter the candida1e·s name. --an amendment that pro,ides £or a primary rnce in senatorial elections if more than six student s apply and qualify The prim:11')' would narrow the roollnued on page 4

Students 'mourn' library cut Black armbands. the u.S. flag at lulf mast and chants of "books not b:du" "m: lhe Wcdnesda\ highlights of NIC's Da> of Mourning. Coordin.ncd by student boud Adviser Ton) S1ewan and \'Oted on uniuumou:.h b) the s1udcn1 board. the day's actiVJues were 10 protest s1:11e funds gomg to Boise Sate uo,"ersn) for the ren0'1ation of an old 8) m for dusrooms mher than 10 1'1C for lhc beguuung stage of a new lib~ A crowd of 600 students and facuJt; members be:ird guest speakers Eugene Marano. Koo1eo:s1 County Democrauc Chairman. Cha rles Lcmpe:s.is. Kooterusi County RepubhCllJI Chairman and former st:tte Sen. An Mani~ gt\C their \1ews on the contl'O\Ccrsy. A telephone hookup to the s1:11e opuol in Boise also allowed ralliers to hear an NlC delegation of AS!'ilC President Jim Brewer. Vice Presid.e nt Caroh-n Pfister and 1nstrunors Jim M ~ and Richud Snyder. who had ~\'ellcd 10 Boise to State NlC's case.


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i\larcli 12, 1982/ Ca.rdinal Re, lew -2-

(____o-=-p_in_i_on_p=--------ag~e___,,J NI C deserves fair shake Well, the state hi' done JI co 'ilC again. ~ot only hu the legislature denied the college funding for ns ne-.a. hbran but also II has h11 belo11. the bcll 11.11h funding fa,·onusm 10 the s,u •h Acrnrd1ng to figures obutncd trom :,.;1c Pre~1dcnt 8:i.lT) Schu, r, :-.JC 11.a, recommended lut 11.cck bJ the Joint Finance and Appr(\pr,a on\ Committee for S2.102.900. ,a,h1ch is S!90JOO less thllll the S2.lCIJ.200 recommended tor 1he College or Southern Idaho ((Sil The real kid an 1he 1hroat 1s tha1 full-time-cqu1,alen1 ~tudcnt enrollment outnumbers CS l's I.~· "o 1.331. {And '\IC ha, grov. n - pcrrent since last JCar 11.hile CSI hu de<.rea\ed ta enrollment bj - percent ) The unfairness,~ C\Cn 2re:11e~ "'hen one com1dcrs that bl"rau\c of 1he difference in funding. \IC mu\t charE:c ns ,;udrnts h11,:her tu1tic>n and fees 1han CS! !S2o5 to s2r.S01 and must a"~~ the IOc.u 1a~p.1)ers 3 greater share of the fundmg 1Sl.4t>o 000 to Sl.335.000). And CSI ha\ a 111.0-count, lax base as opposed 10 onl) Kootenai Count) for ~IC Just what dn Idaho lcgi~lato~ thinl.. theJ are ge1110g 311.3) v.llh? They mu!tl. of course. thtnk that uninformed. bacl."oods people li,c up north 3nd 1hat the) will no1 nouce 1f the legislature ,hp\ a fe" cttri buck!. 10 n soulhern college. Well. "Take off, JOU hose.rs'." People in the northern pan of the ~me :ire tired of" ndmg the cc,311.1il," of southern colleges. J\o" 1s the ume indi,idu.ils ~hould express their opinions nnd let thl' lcg1sl:11ors lmo" just euctl) who they are ,~orl..ing for-northern colleges included.

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laura h ubbard

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Letters to the editor

NIC laws to study by Oh. what wonderful thmgs universal l3v.s art 1 What would "c do if those nea1 linle guidelines "eren·1 always around 10 give us some direction in life? Though we ha,c all had the more con, entional !av. s drilled into our heads beginning with 1he story of ~ewton and the falhng apple. a m:in named Murphy taught us ho11. strange bu1 lrue laws can be a few years 11go. In the spirit of those b ... s. here arc :.ome for the SIC student. I l The number or illegJII;. parked cars on the !'{JC campus is directly proponional to 1hc number of inche~ of sno11. on 1he ground. 2) The shortest distance between two poum ts comparable to 1he time it 13kcs one 10 go from one·s last class 10 a local bar on any gi,en Friday afternoon. 31More work is done in a el.ass when one is no11here than "hen one is there. 4) The difficulr:,· of a test increases as the number of hours one studied decreases (or as the amount of alcohol one consumed the night before increases). S ) The length of n meeung is proponional to 1he number of things ooe had planned 10 do after the meeting. 61The number of ryping errors one makes on an assignment corresponds with the ume one has left to complete 1he assignment. - i The loneer the distance between am n,o classes. I.he more rain. slee1 o~ snow will fall tor 11.;nd 11.ill blow) during one's passage between those classes. 8) The amount of financial aid one recei\'es is equal to one-half of the amount of time one spent filling out the financial aid fonns. rm sure Lhere are many more laws st work on the ' IC campus. and if you wish to share any you m3)' have noticed. please write and let me know.

Letters LO lhe editor are welcomed by the Cardinal Rc.,lcw. Those submhtlng letters should limit th em to 250 words, sign lhem and provide a te lephone numbe r or address so authenticity can be checked. Leuers should be broughl to Rol)m 2 lo I.he Mechanical Arts Building or malled to the Cardinal Review In care of North Idaho College.

(....__c_a_rd_in_al_r_e_vi_·e_w__J The Cardi.nal Re,,iew i.s published semJ-monthly by the Publications Workshop class at Nort h Idaho College. Members of the CR staff wUI striYe to present the news fairly, accurate!) and without prejudice. Opinions e.rpressed on the editorial page do not necessarily reOecl the "le ws of I.be A5="1C OT the NTC admln.lslralion. The CR Is entered as third-class material at Coeur d'Alene , Idaho 83814. American Collegiate Press AIJ,American Newspaper

editor ...................................................................... La1u11 Hubbard ne" editor ....................... ......................................... Bill Bradshaw associate editor ........................................................ Sharl) n Dittman sports edilOr .......... .........................................................Greg LytJe photography editor .................................................... Brenda Morph) arts and eoterta.inmeot editor .......................................... Bruce Padget ad, crtising manager ................................................. Sharlyn Dlum.an ach iser .......................................................... ··· .... · .. ·· ..Tim J>ilgriln cartoonists ...................................... Doug Allender and Cheryl 1.aali~ staff members .............................................................Jadde A bllD • Pau l Ba.ier, Barry Baker, J oseph Gramer, Stan HAJJ, Tresa Mcl.aa& • Brace Mullen, Ann Rauer, Marcella Sanche-i


Marth 12. 1982/CardinaJ Revie"'' -3-

(......__m_o_ri_e_o=-p_in_io_n_)t--------r

Letter to the editor

Board adviser, election creates ASNIC 'joke' Dear Editor: The hit comedy, " Primary Follies," which was written, directed and produ,=ed by Tony Stewart graphically illuwates why student government at NIC is not to be taken seriously and why apathy concerning voter tumour among academic srudcn1s exists. The plot of the comedy involves n small-town college instructor (Tony Stewart) whose negligence in perform ing his assigned duties in on ethical manner prior to the presidential primary election resulted in rwo candidates being found ineligible aJtcr the primary contest wa5 over. (This s urely mu s r h ave contributed to primary winner Sena Browcr's decision to drop out of school.J Now. Stewart wn., rig ht in every legal O\pect 10 determi ne that thci.e two candidates were ineli· giblc bccou~c the t\SNIC Con,tltu1ion clearly point \ ou1 that each candidate for president musl ha,•e o 2.0 grade point aver-age (G PA) bot h ror the prcviow, scmc~ter ~11d as o cumulnti vc nveragc. Th e problem b lh:11 the co n,titution don not spcci ly whe n n candi date·~ GPA must be checked. According to 11 ,tory printed in 1hc 1-'d.>. 2o 1\~uc of the Cardinal Review, Stewart only chet·ked on the 1·uinulatil'c GPA~ on the day M the prim:lr} election and not unt il , evcrnl doys later did he d 11.'ck on the pn,viuus H'lllC~tcr·, GPA!> wht•n nMtht•r cund1dn1c brought Art icle I\/ , ,cction fo u1 t" h il'h st.ifc~ th:it a 2.0 Gl•A rnu,t be 11, hic,ed lur the prcviou, ,.:mc,tcr) Ill Stc"art', a1tc11tion. In thl ,amt· i"uc ot 1hr p,1pcr a different ,tor) ro111aincd J s ta ll'· mcnt bv tC\\',1rt that u bu" ~rhcdulc l.cp1 him from chrckmg the cand1da11!, ' GPA~ before the pnnt:iry.

111b part of rhc c,>mcd, confo,cd me Was Stc.!wan to~ bu.,,• to properly check the GPA~ or didn't he know abour the full GPA requirement undcr Article IV section four? ' If Stewart didn't know about the

foll content of the anicle. r should find thi~ h:1rd 10 believe because Stewan has been involved with the writing of che ASNIC Constitution for the pa~t several years. If che man was too busy to do his job properly. then it is ume he gives the job to someone who will do it right. I am curiou s as to who the candid:itc is that brought the full content of Anicle IV, section four to Stewart's anention. Could this have been a plan ro get a candidate's name on the baJlot who was defeated in the primary? Anyone who has had Stewan for n political scicmce im,tructor knows hi!. favorite students are pre-law and political science students.

I u,;cd to think Stewart v.as n pcrS-On who hod :i strong sense of e thic!., bu t now l realize his ethics arc something he Just talks about. Even the at"tual ballo11ng in the lu~t t\\O clccuon, wasn't ethical. When \ludcncs \'Oted. thCY had to \11(11 their names to a list iha.t had number~ for e"ery name signed. In one clec11on. ir I remember ri~ht. my number was 110. Now at first I didn't think much ol lt until l ~aw that 110 \\OS abo ,, nnen on m\ ballot. There IS no wav with a ;,.~tern of ,01in'1 hlc thi~ (e,cn though it 'la\ for purpO\l''> ol a dra,\ ing) that "e h:JH' Jb.',l)IUtC pri\:IC~' in the \\ ,I\ \H' voted. Onl'l' il~ain the quc!>t1on ..:rntc1, around pto[l{'r ethic.-. I hen· 1, OO<' n1,~ thing th:11 ,'llllll'' fnlm Jlt ,•I thb thou~h· For tho,c ot \\lU ,111\, nc,.-r n>te don't fn•I guili) bccau,c l'\ en 1, hen ,ou ,oce II d,,c,.n'c count. .\nd tor th,)~ ot u~ ,,h,, ca~c b.:ilh>b I d\,n't ee .1nv re:i'>un "h) ,,e should ,'\lnt1nue i,uch an hont>rable practlct" "hen the pn..xcdure ii. SUl'h a joLc. Ton~ tewnn·,. l'OUn Jester-like nnuc~ :ind h1\ humoroul. corned,. ·'Prim:iry Folhes·· pro,c this. Too bad I Bm ho, 111g J hard time lnughing. Sincere!\ . Dn1·id Alderman

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bill bradshaw

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Racism: it's senseless Once again I.be coaJ-shattle, helmeted bearl of racism shows its ugly self in our otherwise peaceful area. Again we are reminded that a sick, racist element c:iuses a blemish even here in Nonh Idaho, as sh.own with the recent vandalization of a local Jewish man's propert) . And again we see that such an inhum3Jl and ugly thing as racism is not a German phenomenon of the JQJOs but that it can haopcn anywhere 311d under an~· guise such a:, chat perversion of ChriStianit\· that hides nonh of Coeur d'Alene behind the name of Jesus. · In a nation such as the United States. racism is noc only ugly but absurd. The claim th:ic one group is "more •\meriean" than another simply by virtue of its ethnic origin makes no sense in a land where no ethnic group is nat.11·e. Think about it. From whlll ethnic origin docs the American people come? ame the nationality. and there is an American who can find it in his famil:, tree. be it EnglishFrenchSpanishDutchlrishScottishAfricanEastern-EuropeanOriental or any other ethnic group on the face of the earth. We arc a nation of immigrants. Even the American Indians. mo:.c historians agree. originated on another connnent. Therefore. rhe term "aotive American" trUI) belonJls to llD)Onc and C\C!!') onc "ho was born here. The Indians ha,c JU~t heen here longer. The dctermimn~ l:ietor in ,, ho receives the racist's wrath seems rn bt. ,, ho I\ the most ob, musly of immigrant stock. Toda) It Is the blacli:s. Laun American:, and the lndo-Chinese. Ho\\ever. JUSt o,·er a centuf) ago ii was che ancestors or some of those 11, ho appear to bl~d into the white. Anglo-Saxon majority ,, ho "'en: among the most h:ited for their ethnic background . In tht. n11d-lSOO\ i1 wa.s the ''din, Micks." those of Irish ancc:.trv (of w horn I count m} people!. who w·ere .1mang the ~ost discriminilted agair~t E,enl1L1.II~ though the lri~h. as uith many other groups. blended into the popuh1 on. and anymore the~ only come out on St Patnck s Da:, . GMlffled. not all ethnic groups u ill or C\'en w;1n1 to coca JI:, blend n Bue 1f ,;u,h pomtle~'> hatred as racism disoppears with unronsc1ou,; eftort l~ 11 did tor m~ "\fick" :incestors. why ouldn' 1 JI rtle con •· u<, effort be directed to,,ard :i similar end'?

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(__n_e_w_s_c_o_n_n_e_c_t_io_n_s

\t tl~ .\ larch m.:cting the .\S:-. IC S ucll:nt Board again changed its meeting 11mc. \1a~be the board :,hould c..ke to heart t'i" fos-i hac manv ··s1and1ng'' boJrds h:nc set meetin; times from \ear to }ea!' and that they do this so that the public u 111 be c,er a" :m, of" hen ·he) can pre!>ent 1heir gric,.1nces or mput from rime to ume. At the \Cry le:ist. the changed time ~hould be pu blictzed . Offke hopduls should be "ilting co 11,ork their ~chedulcs around a set 11me-not qce,·e~. h's not tun, but 11's nece~sary nnd u's pan of being a public official. . One must :igrc:.- '4ith Jim Brc,,.,er's statement: "Part of holding office ts So:."lf-s:icrifice. W e're here to represent the people-no• to make ourselves comfortable.··


Computer reaches limit b~ Tresa kl.aualilln

Brenda l\1u.rpb) photo IN LINE--S1e ,e kKJnnis, ~Uchad Tbttllall,Jolm 8dl and Randy Rkhmood lypc 1belr programs lo a buff) alter g<'ttlnJ a long-1'l'alted turn oa the lfl'tl!.buJ.

NIC dc,per:1.tt-l) needs a oe" ~'Om· putcr, but due to current economic rondiuons the future d,lC\ not loot bm!ht. Oil"CCtor of Computer Sc",ce' RA) M)cr<> s:ud. The propO\al to pur,ha~c n new computer I\ an au empt 10 ~' 01d a potenuall) ~criou, probkm:· \hers YJd. But wnh the eronom~ a, 11 is. n is hard to ask the NIC Bo:i.rd of Tru,tccs for S200.000 to S2$0.000. he sa..d. 0.-er the l.s~t four )t'Jrs IC"\ depc:ndcne(' upon 1hc computer hr1, quadrupled ~hcr<i ,.aid In l'Pb there were% student~ enrolled 1n computerrelated clA.\\e, . Thti. \Car there .ire JI)() ,tuJcn~ enrolled For appnnimntel) JOO ul thc,c itudcnts, there arc only 1.1 a,·ail,1hll' computer 1crm1nah II 1s nllt t hdt un,ommon , M~er. ,aid. 10 see \tu dent, ,.all up 10 Jn hour ind ,1 hnlf 10 do a computer-applied homework OS· ,11tnmcot.

' 'I' m pcr,onn lly q u11 c concern ed "ilh our ah1h1,• to provide , uffid cnt rc,,1urce~ and ndcquotc tool~ for our ,tudent<; pur,uing computer goals." l\tr<i <,aid. Be\ldes the incren~e in stude nt dcm,,nd. ~i, odd1t1onnl apphc.111ons haH· ~en addC'd 111 \he romputcr·~ "'''rl. lo:id during 1hc lost 14 month,. 1nclud1ng rcg,,1rn1ion, linooc1nl aid ond hbrnt) charge out\. "We ha,c done cvcrythmi:1 posS'1ble h> rtno,ate the romputcr \\ C ha,e." M,~r. ,a,d. lnerc is, he ,aid. 1u,1 "nNhing left 10 he done." It 11 ,upplcmcnrnl machine i~ pur,ho,ed. he ,aid, NIC "ill ho ve a gnm th cJpDCl!y ot the current growth i.11c or ahi1111 live ycnl".. " If 1h1, propo,111 is rc1ectcd we " ill h.ive tu C'on1inuc turn ing , 1uden1~ ""OY from n1mputcr related cl.issc,." Myc:r1 ,01d " I will b<' very d1snp po1n1cd. I do not like being port of on in,111u11on that ,ay\ II ~.in't help."

Board alters constitution Joint legislative committee cuts college fundin u short b) BUI Bradshaw

NIC may be the fastest grov.·mg college in Idaho. but the share of sro1e funding II reeei"es from Boise seems 10 ignore 1his fact. NIC President Ban') Schuler aid last "eek after the Joint Finance and Appropriauoos Committee (J FAC) decided oo the college's share bu1 also decided 10 cut 311 funding for the new librar). "I don't understand ii." Schuler said of the JFAC's March I action on aCJdemic funding for Idaho colleges and unive rsities. "It seems 10 me ioconeeivablt that (the constant erlooking of North Idaho's problems) could continue to take place . . that fair-minded people could con(inue to perpetuate th:11 nod of injustice :ind ioequil). ·· The JFAC recently recommended to the state legislature that S4.4 million be divided betv.eeo 'IC and the College of Southern Idaho (CSI}. The main p roblem. according 10 Schuler. is the wa} this funding is dhided Boise has once again decided to dh•ide the appropration in the = e percentage as in pre,'ious ~cars. This is in spite of the fact that NIC has been the fastest gro"'ing collge in Idaho since iq- 6 and that ber,,,·een fall 1980 and fall 19 l the enrollment of fu ll-time eq ui"alent students incte!ISed 7.4 percent to 1.458. Uuring the same period. CSl's full-time equh·aleot enrollment decreased 6. perttnt to 1.331. This represents an increase in enrollment ofJ0.5 pert:ent for NIC and

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decrnsc of 3.5 percent for CS! )lnte ra111cr· HO\OoC\Cr, of the total IIJllOUnt llllOt· ted to the two junior colleges, the JFAC decided to recommend that S1.'.!96.b00 be gt\en to CSI and S2.102.900 be gi\·en to 'IC. This is about equal to what was onginally proposed in Go\·emor John E,ans· budget recommendation. NIC's ponion included an einra SI00.000, which was supposed to help make up for the imbalance in the "''av funding has been dl\;ded with CSJ ~ recent years. But instead of :igreeiog with the gO\crnor's recommendation, "h1ch as Schuler said...,..as a step in the nght direction:· the JFAC made another prnposnl. Schuler said that through t.he JFAC's action. '"in effect. CSI got our SI00.000." In a lllSt·dnch cffon on March 5. hO\Ooe>er. Rep. William Lytle. R-Piochurst. managed to con\tnee the JFAC to return SC19.500 to their recommendation for NIC. But at the same wnc. the JFAC rejected all recommendations for funding to be a.scd on the planning stage of the new library computer science building. The governor had recommended SIS0,000. and the Per· m:ineru Building Fund Commince lw1 recommended SSOti.000 for th1S proJect. ,.hich "ill oov. h.1\e to be dela1ed for at least one year. · 3

Con1lnued from page I field to six and 111 the C:l.\e of o tu: the person with the highest grnde point I\Crage would "''" the siuh slot for rhc general clccuon --an amendmenr naming the polling pl:1ces on campus for nil elections as one in the adminisr ration building. one in the Hedlund Voeational Building and one m the SUB flh1s one is 10 be open only from I l a.m. to I p.m.). No poll will be placed Ill the Commun1ca1ion-Arts Building. The board also received a letter from former president Brower Sll!Ung that ~he "";u not be anending NIC from th,~ date forward." Brov..er also claimed \he had been "severely slapped 10 the face" by members of the board and that she had suffered "pcrwnol abuse." Brower could not be reached for comment on the Ill.let.er. Jn some of h1s flrs1 actlon after he

look nflice, ASN IC PrC\idcnt Brewer 1old 1hc board March 8 thnl he will require a lcllcr of resignation with the date left blank 10 be turned in wuh every oppllc311on for the position of student activities direclor ror 1982-83. Brewer told the member, of the board that public ofliciab ~hould nor " ru n for office for glory" and that he will not allow unyonc 1n rhe office that will not perform his dutle$. " All it is is o little fear motivation," he ~aid. In other .ict1on, the board: - -allotted SJ,500 from the reserve fund for e1gh1 couches for the SUB basement. --voled to require lhal all long d i, tancc phone calls by 1hc members be placed on a phcm e log. This came afrer Brewer presented a phone bill to the board and claimed that misuse of the ~ystem is laking place.

.................................... ······ ................................... ···. Panhandle Area Transit, Inc. Did you know PAT likes college s tudents? We want 10 erve your 1rani!portation need8. Unlimited ridership on any of our 8 huseM. tudent d isco unt rate S16.80/ month

For more information caU 664-9765 6 a.m. - 6 p.m.

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March 1'2, 1982/Y.rdinaJ Re,lew -5-

• Andrews views dancing as ultimate art form by MA,ttlla Su,::hn

Now that danci ng is rapidly being acccpred as both a source of entcrrainment and ILS a farm of exercise, the competition for a dancing job is renainly ge11ing tougher. But one rising talent already knows where she wanrs to go and will not have much trouble gcrting there-to the rop. l'/IC student Erin Andrew5 says thar her Jove for the art of dancing encouragas h<ir to do nee whenever she can ste:il some rime frcm ber schedule. " 1 l~e to perform,'' Andrews said. "The fcehng ib so grear to get up on 3 srage. My heart jus-1 moves wirh the music," ~he added. According ro Andrews, she got a late ~tan in dancing. She sard that she began dancing jav in Wiscon~in when she wa~ 14 year~ old after her older si~rcr convinced her 10 try it. After recc1v111g encouragement from her in"rucror, Andrew~ e ntered the

Dance Olpnpics. a competition ea.mp put on b) some of the best dancers in the country. Here s he saJd s he learned techniques in modern dance. jazz and African daoce and was told by a prominent jazz dancer there I.hat she had the po1ennal to become a great dancer. Andrew~ said 1ha1 she funher srudicd the technique and rhy1hm of Africnn dance from a professional African dancer instructor at a dance !>eminar in Miami. Fla. ·• A lot of this type of dancing has to do with ancient rituals a.nd seasonals that Africans participated In." An· drews s:iid. " But I was mvohed more with tht: rhythm and technical aspect of ir... Andrews is prc~ntly enrolled in a ballet clas~ ;11 NIC, \Omcthing she believe\ will further improve her Jazz dancing abilities.

[__a_r_t_s_~_e_n_t_e_rt_a_,_·n_m_,e_n_t___J Up the arts

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Folk art or fak e art? by Bruce Padget While woJk.1ng down Shemian Avenue one afternoon. I c-nme to the conclu~ion th at much of whnt ,~ called "folk nrt" is not folk art at all The friend who I wa.s walking with "n, iclling me about folk square dances 01 th,· Iva Lee Moll in Posr Fnll~. Ha,•ing been a squnrc dance.r my!>clf for fi,·e ycnr\, nnd n caller for rwo. I pre~~cd him for details A, ii tL1rned out, none of rhe "square dancing" he hnd done bore In) r~·,l·mbloncc to 11h01 I hod danced and cnllcd. Rnr.hcr. he had been dotng the dance of SO·plu~ ycnr~ ago. To <11.'nnt folk art: "folk" come, from the German word ",oll..." "h1ch mran, the common people. Therefore tolk nr1 t~ rhc an t)f the people.'. 11 orking with media wh11:h nrc nr hand ond ,ubject, \\hu:h inv\lhe the ur11,1. All of u~ are familinr with fol~ ,ingcri. who wenr period CO\tumes and ploy reconstructed mMrumcnt1. ~inging wng, in l:njlhSh dtall'C't. l'rc11y though n, it may be, it is. not folk tlfl A true tolk anist doe~ no1 dress up (or down, n~ the ca:-.c nrn) be), or put on n pl1<:>n) dl:ilcct One needs no C?ffon ta h~· himself. The big advnntoge of folk art l, lh3t II I) not pretentious Ho"evcr. prctention doe~n·1 apply to putting on tu:1.edos. An) time :i perwn !"akes an cffon 01 appearing difkrent , whether 11 be to lool " eahh) or impoverished, uhrnmodern or histon c. it i, pretentious . .111d is not folk

· 'The combination of African chythm and the subltleness or ballet set up the dance technique for jnzz. ·· she said. "I can oow mo,·e quickly and with grace.·· Andre\\ s added tha1. lhroughout her career as a dancer. ,,arious instructors and professiooal dancers have encouraged her by sa~;ng that she has the ~·le and rhythm needed to be a great dancer. She said that her big break might come-earlv if she follows the advice of ins1ruc10°rs from the Un1,·ersi1y of Idaho and tries out for a jan position in the Amencan Festival Ballet being held at NYC June 21 throuRh July 23. According to Andrews. prep:mnioo for dnncmg takes a lot of dedicauon 1f a person wants to go far in the field. "l daoce whene, er I get the chnnce. · she said. "Righr no" I prepare physicalh b\ dancing an hm1r in the morning. on breaks :ind in m, class and then ar night on m) own for :ibout rwo to three hours. ''I'll start dancing ar night aod before I Imo"' 1t. u·s midnrght. ''When mv mascle'I St3r1 to feel like noodle\, thai's "''hen I knO\• 11·~ rime 10 quit.·· she added. Andrew~ !>atd that dancers also get a "natural high" to.bile dancing like joggers do when the}· run. ''It's the best {eelln.g in the "orld... she said. "You feel l,ie \'t'Ur soul ts out of rnur bod, and vou can feel boch he;, all around \'(>U-_.. Accordtng 10 Andre"\ v. hen a

person reaches a point "' here he actual!) stans to feel pain, he must o,erride thlt pomr. She said tha1 when one passes this plnteau, one gets a natural high. "Ir feels like you are dancing on a doud." Andrcv.·s said. Andrews also said t hat anyone who lo,es the an of dancing as much as she does will automatically get a natural high ju.st by realizing th:it they ha,·c actua.Jly accomplished something. " \ ou',·e got 10 d.a.nee for yourself,'' she explained. "'When you are out there d:in,,ng. you arc puttmg e, erything )OU know in10 performing the best W3\' YOU kno" hOI\. "Dancing IS an addiction with me. If I don·t dance for N"O d:i). I start ro feel slo" and run down." Andrews sajd, Andrev.-s :idded that she pl:ins to ,ontinue her dancing at NIC with the American Fesn,·al Ballet in the summer :ind then mo"e on to bigger opponuoitie~ such as a dance )eminar 1n Seattle, Wash. According lo Andre")- she will still pursue her greatest goal in dancingtt) enroll m a profes.sional daocc school in P:iris. "Dancing ro me is an a rt that uses c,ery muscle in the body nlong with mind control." she said. " I thin.k it is the greatest an in the "orld bec.-11usc you ne,·cr get stuck on n plateau. "There is al1,1av) room 10 strive 10 d,, something bctier."

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an .

Singing nbo111 n ,oiltn11-,h1p disostc-r I\ nor foll.. nr1 s.inging 3bout a noro~ou~ strct~h of h1i;:hwn> (a common thl'mc of modem rountT) music) 1,. (Seen ~ny soiltng ~hip, latel)•?l ~ fllonh Idaho nnist working with rurqull1se 1s nor II folk :irtist: a chornso1,1 sculptor h. (Turquoise b not common here. Wood and chainsa"s nrc.) As it turns out. man) of my folky aqu:11nton<'Cs tum up thetr noses Gt real contemporary foll an. If the various 3ntique foll.way re,hnls thnt abound ore oot foll an. rhen.whcre IS folk art found? On bathroom "nils in the fonn of gr3fli11. the _Jokes told in bars, anywhere 1ha1 rommon people nn. ";thou! fcchng rhe need to lool eilher n ch or SCUZ7) for the sate ofthl' audien,'C.

Sw, Ball photo GRACEFUL DISPLA \'-Erin Andtt"s finds t1me

t.o

pollsh her dandng,


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March 12. 1982/ Canlinal Re, lew -6-

NIC singles group formed by faculty, staff women b) hanyn Dittman

B~oda Murphy photo

Mu.. ical holdup Suaphone soloist Oa,·ld ,Se,ertson pntelires for the upcoming cabaret conct-n and dance lo be held SatU.rdA) beginning at 8 p.m. In the tpm.

(___s_c_r_e_e_n_s_c_e_n_e___J 'Night Crossing' harmless bJ Joseph Gramer Imagine an East German , crsion or do not compare "uh the hand.some the W:11tons. pined :ignfost the iron· mug of Christopher Plummer either. The film is tedious at umes. for the fisred tyranny of a CommuniS1 regime. En, ision them working night and characters often recite the1r lioes v.ith da) under the noses of govemmcn1 a lov. water poise typical of daytime police 10 build n hot air balloon. not ,oap operas. unlike the one "ith v. h1ch the wizard Tbe "poor victims of the nast, drifted out of Oz. In this cnse the Communists" theme LS a bit too thick. promised land is not K.insas. hov.e,er. especially JD the opening scene~. but 1he land or political freedom lniaal ettdibihl) come$ off like that or beyond the Iron Curt"llin. an :uui-drug documenlllr) or of a sci-fi Got the picture'> "Night Crossing." flick of the 1950s. the la1est brainchild of Walt Disne\ But ba-.au~ it ts Oisne, we can Studios. is based on 3 [TUC ston·. forgi,e a fC\I rornJ· mdLScretions ID the Streltyk flmily. aloog with. their plot. Once tht cincmauc potholes are friends the Wetzels. did indeed defect past. the ad,·emurc LS terrific. The to the West in a homemade balloon in harrov.in~ escape of the Srrudels and 1979. Pretzels-er, Screlzyks .tnd Wettels The Disne~ adopta1ion of their th3t is-does make for a joll) piece of esc:ipe 1s ,•er~ reminiscent of the harmless entenoinment. Trapp fa mil) ad, cnturcs ia "The So this dreamy-eyed pcrsel'\·crencc Sound of Music." but it does not come JOU! 1n .t chorus of "Somc,.•here o,er ne11r it m cxccllencc And not just because John Hun's ragged features 1he b:irbed v.ire .. :·

The

Let it be k.nO\\ n that NIC 00\\ has D smglc's group right here on campus. but 11 Cllmc, in the form of f.1,-uhv and staff ac.1dcm1c and ,oc:111onal "omen. The as.sembl\·. kno" official!, a, the Single, Supp<1n Group. wQ, org.in,ud dunng the li~t pan or Febninr,. and ii no" ha~ up 10 JO indl\ 1du.11, lnvoh ed. Thouah thcrt arc no actual lender), a re,~ of 1hc ",,men wh,, arc in1crc,1cd in lenmg the group be known arc Fttnch lan11uagc ln,truetc,r J"\ee Gui· ,en. Co.•rdinator or Home Fronnn11C\ and Ho~p11.11il\ ~rv1cC\ Bc1h Bhm and Bu~1ne~, Offi,·.- c3,h1cr nnd ,crn:1.1ry bnn Rl\hel The "omen decided 1hn1 \1ncC' !here 11.erc a l<'l of \tngk, on c11mpu,. Ilic) ,hould \IJn a wpporl group. The>· then h.id II meeting In ,cc how much intcrc~I there wa, in the formation of ,uch a group. A number or luncheon~ thu~ followed. \\ h1ch helped 10 gencr· .11e more m1ere~1 Around 4S p<:rccnl of the faculty 3nd staff women on c:ampu, .ire ~inglc. The group was formed purely on a '>00.al ba.s1~. Giesen siud that II was not formed 10 ~ a women's liberation group. and Blair added that since 1he women involved work. 1hey do not ha,c much ume 10 soc1alue "All <o.e're looking for 1, a comruda· I} here on campus." Richel said. " We know e~h other. yet we don't, so we wanted 10 get together and sec who has the same m1eres1s." Some or the identified actJvues the group has done so far have included going to movies. ba:.ketb311 games. luncheons and a regular hike around Tubb's Hill on Sundays. Richel said th:11 it is oomfoning to go ~mcwher~· and know that she an meet friend~ there. The group is aho car-pooling at times to 511ve gas.

" We nc-ed ,1 n:pcctablc WO) to add ,omc ~ocml act1vi1y 10 our live~ and find" wov to onl do it indcpcndcnlly," Blair \,lid "It·\ kind of nent 10 be n \IS1blc group." ,\long w11h the 1n1crc\1 many of the member\ shore. most of them hove children uround high school age. " It', more re~pcetoble and lcg11im11te to S3) )Ou'rc going out 111th y<lur group in\l('nd or b) your&elf. " Giesen ,o,d Hh11r ,,11d 1h01 peo ple need to bnl,,nce 1heir live~ between work and plea,ure, ,o "we're nnt l11p1ided." All three 11.omtn ,nitl Ili c)' get 1hc 1mpre,~i11n 1h111 ,111dcm, rh1n~ fucuh) nnd \laff hn v,: nn 01hcr hfo "Our \ tudcnt, need 111 know 1h01 we hav1.• active live,." 131n1r ,111d. Acc:ordang to G1c,cn. th e women , 1111 ho,e fun by doing tlnnit~ together. cvc:n if they arc no1 mct ung ,omeon~ or the oppo~uc: ,ex . " I gue,, thc lime wn~ righ1 (for the formation of a group). ond we hnvc received e nough support 10 conunue and grow.'' Blair ~aid. A':> one Jcllvily ends. 1hc women plnn the ne11 one. All the members ore checking 1hc paper, 10 ~cc obout ol her sl nglc'l group~ in lhc oreo.. The women h.ivc obo sensed thal some or 1he married women on ca mpu s have wnn1ed to be included. The group ha~ no t given much thought about lcning single men join as moM or the faculty and staff men 11rc married. and Lhcy have feh th111 the men might not be th:11 in1crc:~1ed. Howeve r. it 1s there 10 be seen lhat the s1ogle women on the foculry and i.1:1ff do have a need to eipress lhcm,clvcs 1n a way 01hcr 1han on-campus events and have found a very sausfo<'tory way 10 do 11.

'Skin' leads entertainment Tonight ts the openiog night of the IC production of "Skin of Our Teeth" by Thornton Wilder. Cura.in time is 8 p.m .. and admission is free for NIC students. There v.ill also be performances S31urday night and Morch 19 a.nd 20. .The Coeur d'Alene Community Theater, 141h and Carden. is opening March 19. -..,th the class1c comedy "lmllguury Invalid." writteo by Mohere. Skip Fru.er will be directing the play that ,,.3s written 200 years ago. Students v. tll be admitted for SJ and adults for S4. Saturd:iy mght the NIC Orchestra will present its cabaret in the gym starting at 8 p.m.

SUBWAY TOURNEYS Backgammon

March 17

Pinball

March 31 4 - 7:30 p.m.


Marth 12. 1982/ CardinaJ Re..iew .7.

-------1( c r sports J National champions! Peterson, Barnes take titles as wrestlers w in by Brvce Mallt'n Heavyweight Darryl Peterson produced one of 1he greate~t days in a1hle110 for North ldltho March 6and a d:ly of infamy for 1he "'Te~thng team fror., Cuya.hog11 Wcs1 Communiry College of Ohio. Peterson scored an csc-3pe wnh 1v. o second~ remaining m his utlc bout v.llh Greg Dabrowski of Cuyahoga to win a 6,5 dec1~1on and pu~ NIC pasl Cuyahoga for the National Juni or College wre~1l1ng title. Cuyahog:i. runner-up in 1981 as well. led the tournament all the way up un11I the finnl match. They ended up w11h 81 3.4 poin1~. while NJC pos ted 1hcir highest total :11 nationnl~ ever, 87 J,4. "I've never been under that type of prc~\ure in my life.·· Con<'h John Owen said. " I've never haa n more exciting moment ~mce I've been m wrcs11ing. '' Pe1crson·~ victory marked the first time in tournament hi\lOry that the team title wn\ decided o~ the final mP!ch of the nigh I. Ironically. NIC's IMI nouonru 111le wa\ nlso decided in a head-o n compe111ion from wre\1Jer,, from 1hc lop 1wo 1enms. Jeff Powell defcn1 c d a Tnton College wrc~tlcr In the finnls o.t 142 to gh·c the Card~ n 1ilk in 1978. 1 h1\ year Brent Bame~ obo cap· lu red 1111 lndividu11I cl'()wn. 1h11\ mnrkmg the lir,1 1ime ~Incl' 1975 tha1 1hc Cnrdlnals hnvc had ,..., o 1111tiunnl chnmp~. Barne~ ~cored 1hrec pin~ in th e tourney nnd won the n,rnl when Lionel

Ke ys of Triton defa ulted with an IOJUry.

first round of the match. he came b3cll. 10 beat Rohe n Gun of Northwest 7

" I ""l'Cstled real tough: I \\a.\ on a roll." Bnrnc'i s aid. " I w1Sh he (Ke~s) could have went on though because I 1h1nl. I would ha, c pinned him.· Pe terson :ilso had three pms over the weekend (he had six 10 las1 year's 1ournC) bu1 onl) placed third> and -Aas aw~rdcd the " quick pm" award for recording them in such rapid fashion lie pinned one opponent in 55 \e• cond~. Four ot he r C:i rd'> ach1e,cd All· American stntu,. (a -.chool record). 11s Tom Hnm 'i a nd Gl.-OrRe Paucnon took tlmd,. Todd G11s1on li m'ihed s1x1h and J~t k Nichobon \ CH·nth Pnltc r\o n, a fro'>h. c:ipped h1~ , en~on wit h a vcl'\ dram1111c victor) . Aft e r w fl cnng n brol.en nu~c 1ba1 ncnrl\ lmocl.cd him unron~11.1u, ID 1he

Wyoming 11 ·5 o... cn "'~ quite proud of P:iner,on "'ho also posted decl\1on~ of 15-8. JQ. JO and -4 hut 10~1 5-1 m the quarterfinal'> on a U.kedcn•n ,.,th '"'" ~cconds kh "He .... a, the mo~t t:1knted ,.n:)tlcr m the na11onal 1ournC)," O..cn ~id. H.1rru. ua\ m the tough~t ,.c,ght clas,. ,--. but pulled out third plac-c .... uh ,omc come-from-behmd heroic\. In ,,ne match he tnilcd 11 · - . 1hen came back to ue II up In O'emme he fell bcl11nd as::un, 4-0, but nllied to post .a b-4 "'" He "'"n his lin.11 Q.5 O\Cr Tood Kohlc of Dodge Cit) ',foum Hood "'Tcs1ler Roger Sa~les. "h<>m Ham, beat 11 the RC.?1on 1 tournament Sa~lc..' onl~ llh!i of the , e.an. c.iptured the , --pound utle 3110

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\\ 3 S !Llmed the ou1s1anding wrestler of the 1ourne,. G:is1on. ·who "'on all of his matches b~ deci)ion. s:11d tea m unit v was responsible for the triumph ID Wonhington. "'There are no differem groups. "e all mix together... the sophomore said. ·w e all like each other :md it makes strong.' The titk ":is the founh overall for 'IIC. and it ":is the second for Owen. ·t \lould ha,e been proud 10 take second ·cau)e it was a 1oueh 1ourna· mcnt." he said. 'but I'm prouder to 1akc first'" Owen credued his assist:int. younger broihcr Donnie. wnh prepnring the team :it n:11ionah "The team race "35 so tight that all the indindual perfornrnnccs were very 1mpor1an1." Owen s:i1d. " They we re prepared " hen 1hc~ go1 out on 1hnt m.11 ·• A statement by the younger Ov.·en ma, ha, 1: m3d<' the d1ffcrcncc m the linil match m fact OabnN ski scored a takcdown on the Cardinal hc3H\\ eight "ith IO ~cconds left and tied the )core. and 1he rwo men then tumbled out of bounds wilh four seronds 10 go. That obhgotcd Pcter)On 10 the do" n po\ition. and he needed an fS<'3Pl' or re, ersnl 10 win. "The last thing Donnie told me was 'nil one .:an hold ,ou down."' Pe terson rec.1lled "So " hen 1 got down there I J.neu from that 1h:i1 there w:is no way "'e "'ere going to lose it.''

• regional tournament Cardinals 'buried' ,n b) Greg I.) Ile The end of" hat rould huve been 111 lca,1 one of the hc,1 IC' t,;i,lc tball seJMn, came when lwo Oregon team~ proved rn be too much 10 hondle , i the Region I 1numnment la,1 \\Cdend T""' ~all,. ldnho wn~ 1hc buri11I ground, and Mt. Hood and Che mel.cta "'en: the gr:iv<,, digger, O) NIC fouled thCm)chc, 11110 l11M plaL'C m the 1oum:i.mcnt lo Friday's &2. 70 to,~ tu Mt, Hood. thrct• NIC s111r1er, fouled out :inrl tht' Oregon lcnm l'Onvertcd 29 of 40 free 1111•0", Cur .1 near 75 f>Cl\."i·nl 4venge Chcmcl ('t.i made 29of JS foul ,ho1, Sn1urda) for m·<' r83 pen.-ent en rout ... hl tht'1r 91-l\2 , 1,t~ . . Tournament champion CSI d1spost'd ol both the Oregon , thools :ind :id,·an~ into the n1111onnl 1011mamcnt to be hl'ld 111:irch Jt,. 20 .11 Hutchinson. J...10. C~rdinnt Cc,.1ch R11lh W1lhnm, cited the high number of fouls .:i nd poor shooting °' the '"'" b1gges1 problem\ m the los,cs. " We got m loul 1rouble both games." W1Jhams Sllld " It"~ l big fachn." The Cards shot 24 free thro", for both game, .1nd ron ..c ncd 20 for lSO pcrttnt lb compared tu under SO percent from the field o, er the tournament " I d1dn't 1hml. that our defense wo:. tbnt bad." h<' uid. " but whe n the other score, lh;it many from the line. 11 rcallv mal.cs it tough." Again~t Mt. l-lood. NIC led QI the bcgmmng of the se..•ond hllf but n.o :~scet"c'C Mt. Hood ba.:.l ch 11nd the beginning of IC foul trouble co'mcidl!'d 10 P I c :irds from c, er rcg,uning the lead

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Sophomore gu.ud D.1,1d Ponce. v.ho scored lb points the li~ t game and had :i g:unc high of 2& the ~nd. "'as the onl> MC player 10 make the All-1ournamco1 tca.m. In the ron..oLmon ea.me, Cb.:md.eu took iull adama~e of 'IIC's second-half foul trouble. a) both John R.1nda and Warren Shepherd had four fouls just four minute, 1mu the ~ d hali. Pon.e. b~1dcs ludmg the 5COnng a Ra.inst Chcrneie11, racked up 10 a~,ists. s11 ~teal;. "cnt - b perc-cnt from •.he f,eld and ~hht JOO pcr'"Cnt from the foul line

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Marksmen to meet 1n Moscow r

The' \ IC Rifle Ouh v. di be bus: ~pnl 2t> and compe1in1 in ~n 1M11a1ionnl nfle mtct held m '-!~"'. The nJlc te:im " tll be compeung .1gam,1 different ROTC :and vars ity teams from Mo!>CO"-, Eastern Washington lni\er..11:. Gonz:iga. Washington Sm c U01,·er, 1t} :ind se,C1'31 olh~ .\.:..'Ord10g 10 \\'arrcn R31cliff the club·~ ad\iser. there .,.,JI be ~ome tough rompe1111on .\1 the !\IC lnm.1uonal Feb 12. Bnan Ward placed third ilDd at the Gonzag:i ln\ltlllonal Feb. 13. he pll ced fifth.


March 12, 1982/Cardlnal Re ,·lew -8-

NlC ~rudeot Jeff Dflorlo p111cllces a few ka) aldng tttbnlques In the YMCA pool before attempclug a raging ri,·e.r.

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greg lytl e

Women take third place

at Region 18 tournament by Bany Ba.lier

Issue that never was Suppose that a pllrticular policy invoMng men's vs. women's athletics at NlC ~gtlll to lllke oo the qualities of an issue. Sensitive as this subject is. the impact could hit h:ird enough 10 CllUSe a few changes. Specifically. the policy is this: The men· s basketball team. once a yellI, takes an airplane to Twin FaUs. Idaho. while the women's team uses the college vans. Both teams ployed at Treasure Valley CC Friday. Feb. 26 and at CSI the nert day. Womeo·s games prelimed the men·s games on both nights. The question is. why do the men get to Dy. while the w·omen hit the con~ for o,er 10 hours? On the surface. it would seem that till mjustice w11s done. Questions of equal rights and fairness arc undoubtedly at the core of the issue. However. 11 ,·ery ,,a.Jid set of reasons exist that ~-crride any questions of right or "'Tong. NIC Athletic Director Rolly WIiliams related a few good po111ts. First: Considering the imponancc of the two league games. the two teams should not !Tllvel together m order 10 maintain the highest IC\·el of concentr11Lion possible. logkal, reasonable. Second: If the men would hove taken a bus (there aren't enough ~'311S for both teams). then the trip would have tllken two days both ways because of the eight-hour bus driver's limit. Third: If there were enough vans, no one "''Ould ha,-c Oow·o. Women's Coach Greg Crimp bas no qu3rrel with the arrangement. ··1 cert3inly ha,•e no problem with it myself." Crimp eirplained. "It's not 111 all unfair. Women's athletics have made great strides. but I don't think we can be considered equal because we don ·1 bring in the reve nue. The men do bring in the revenue. W e ha"e 10 earn what we get... So :i closer cxa.minatioo of the facts hlls led 10 this conclusion: No injustice " ':IS done. and the issue isn' t.

The NIC women·~ basketball team defeated the College of Southern Idaho "'1:irch 6, 54-49. in what Coach Greg Crimp called a tremendOU$ comeback from a March S loss to the evcntu.1J NJCAA Region 18 tournament cham· pion. Umpqua. 69-SI.

The tournament was held at Trea· sure Valley Communtty College in Albany. Ore. '.'I'm ver~ proud of the team," Cnmp said. "Urnpqua is very well coached. Ifs funny how motivation can play a key role." Umpqua is well coached; defeating ltnn-Benton for their fourth straight Region 18 tnle can prove t hat. Umpqua "'ill oo,,. play the winner of the Region I tournament. not available at press ume. Region I consiru of juoior colleges in Utah and Arizona. In Vicki Han's and Terri Mon 's lasi game as IC Cardinals. the women scored 12 and 10 points re-specu,·ely. " We played good defense the first half." Cnmp said. " When you get to this IC\cl of playing. you have to play well." NIC held CSI to just 14 points the first half and grabbed a 20.point l~d during the course of the game.

··They all played well." Crimp said. Wit h lin e pe rfo rm a nces in th e co nsola11on ga me, J acki e Fl e tt was named 10 the All -Tourname nt team and Vicki Han was picked to represent NIC in the second team All -Region. NIC had all they could handle in their tourname nt opener 3S Umpqua prepared 10 concentrate on de fense. "They (U mpqu a) tig h tened thei r defense right up in the second half, " Crimp ~aid. " We g ot into foul trouble." Umpq u3 ~hot 21 -26 at the charity stripe, while NJC only went to the line nine time\ and hit five. Patience could have been the Lady Cards' trouble, as three NIC players fouled out of the game. From the noor. Umpqua took 38 more s hots than NJC and made only one more that the Cardinals. Th e e nd of the J 981 -82 season brings the Cards' toUI record to 15-13. good enough for the Cardinals to win the Region 18 East Division a tJe with • 7-1 conference record.

Crimp will "Lake a couple of da~s off" 10 regr oup and will resume h11 off-season duties 115 he conuoues to work on recruiting for the ne,rt season.


M.tth 12, 1982/CardinaJ Re~lew .9.

Ups-downs, pros -cons of debating followed by Bruce Padge1

Ocbale is formal :irgumeot: 1h1S we all know. However. knowing the definition of debate is no preparation for watching an actual intercollegiate deba1e. Jo order 10 ge1 a feeling of what competitive (as opposed 10 courtJ'OOm or congressional) debate is all abou1 , one needs 10 wa1ch a few. Following a rearo around throughou1 3 1ournrunent is one way. The follo-.,ing observation\were talc en from watching the te311l of Rich Kuck and Bill Jeffries at the NIC 1oumamen1 March 5 and 6 (see story on this page). To stan with. deba1ers ha ve a thesis. 1eehnically called ,he resolu1ion. which they use throughout the semester. All teams are required at various times to argu e for or agains1 lh c resol u1ion, which 1his semcs1er sta1es ' "lha1 the American judicial system has ovcres11mated the ng,/11 s of the accused.·· Each team writes a ca~e or cases to prove lhe resolu1ion and briefs to counter po~sible cases. Jut as Lo cowt.t, the ruolallon is considered false unul proven true. or. in debate teams. 1he negative ha s presumpt ion. :ind the affir mative ha s th e burden of proof. Debate is IC3m sport. bu1 io an unus ual r.ense. Though team s do research together nnd give ideas to each 01her during the other team's speeches. while a person is speaking he is alone. h is illegal for him to communiC3tc -.•ith his partner in :iny woy while he is spea king or being cross-examined, and it 1s illegal for team members to receive any advice from anyone dunng 3 round. Debate speeches bear no rc~cmbl ance 10 what most or us chinlc of ns speeches. They sound like. and are. verbatim readings of the outlines of a team's arguments. This does nOI. however. mean 1hn1 1here i~ no place for sryle in a debate. Kuck and Jeffries. in the in1roduc1ion 10 their case. qu o1e Bryce Petterson: " Those who go into the future while looking into the post run a seriou!> nsk of a painful foll on rh e bun." Humor of lhJ1 ll0r1 abounds In dcbate1: - -From o Clacknmu!> tenm in the fifth round: (rcll!>Ons given that th ey should win): " h's my bin hday. and I hovcn'I had a good prc~cnt ye1. bO give us a win." and " If we don't win, our coach will oceubC u~ of not trying.' ' - - Another Cladamus team quoced " Hill Strce1 Blues" as cxpcn opinion - - Jeffries. after very fast speech: " I s-. eor. "'hen they do the autopsy on you, they're going 10 find 1h01 you're thrcc,quortcrs lungs.' ' Kuck and Jcffnc~ offer an intcrcMing rontrnst of iolylcs. whereas mo~t dcb111e teams look like clones.

Kuck " cars a three-piece suit and tie. Jeffries leans to swelters and co-.•boy boots. Rich has• ' et) professional, sure s~aking style. "I \\Ont this point.'' he says. the tone implying. "and I'm going to gei iL"

eim:pt for ertTCmc cases. like bnbery. the judge is 1he absolute fin:il authorin·. Deb3 ters. 3S a resuh. r.;, lo find out all thev can about a judge before lhey deba1e in front or' him. Important 1hings 10 be found out arc whether the judge is familiar with modem debate (lo sec how effectively highly technical argu ments can be used), wh:it might 3J!Wsc or offend a p:irticular judge and v.hcther he takes notes (the "no-flow" judge is the nemesis of all debaters) Failure to kno-. the judge can lead to major errors. lo the fourth round. a girl ga,•e the fastest speech of the entire tournament in fron1 of a " oo-flo11.•" judge. Jeffnes used lhe " fall on che bun" quote in the sixth round against Ricks. and lhe other team :md the judges 11.ere 0 0 1 amused. Knowledge of the judge can 3lso le3d to eBSy wins. One judge in the region is rcno"11ed for lecherous, ness. and one woman cnold " 'ID 3D\ round no matter ho"· poorly she argued. that he fudged simply by unbuttoning her blouse one bunon. Some coaches and judges S3) that it is unethical to scout out judges. but others feel th:11 the debater is simply lenming che tastes of his audience. which is n du!) of 31J public spe11kers. Teams arc also srouted by debaters. A negative ream c:in gain grcl!t Jd\'ontage by knowing 1he other te:im·s case in advance. Deb3ters send spies into rounds. sometimes in the gwse of judges or 1imers. :1nd they trade information and te1::p files of notes from old dcb11tcs.

J effncs 1s :i.lmost d01vn home. His Tens dra-.1 sounds more pronounced than normal. and 11.hcrc most deba1ers would say "hypothetically speaking. he says. "now let me paint vou some pictures" or " let's go into makc-bclic~c l3 nd." Just I.\ in courtroom.1.. the "red herring" shO'l\s up repeatedly. A red herring 1s an 3rgument that is ,cry weak bu1 C'aUSCio the other team 10 take rime 10 re.1.pond to it. Another common tactic is the "spread;· "'•bich mcaM g1H•n se,enll rcspon~es 10 e:ich argument. !lo" con this be done. -.hen all the speeches are lhe ~:1me length? Tall faster. and hope the Judge is L:t~mg notc.1.. Speech nues ~ someumes 400 wvrds n minute. ( 'orm11l 1s :ibout 150 ) The awn opponent oh debattt is tlie judge After :ill. 11 1$ the JUdj!c that must be con,inecd Also.

Counter-cspion:ige 3 1SO :ibounds. Throughout the tournament, Kuck and J effries spoke abou t n case in,ol,1ng child snatching whenever they were wi1 hin elr~hot of Moun1 Hood Community College (who rould t'a~ily beat 11. or so they thought). (Their case h.td nothing 10 do with child snatching. ) At one tournament. Jeffries st:1ned o rumor that he ,..:as using a cue on le3sh laws and even mentioned the subject 3t the beginning of rounds. In :iddit1on 10 the "spying" lhat goes on, a grea1 deJ.! of time is taken up doing rcsc:irch on one's case and bners ;igJinst other cases. some or which ;ire DC\ er used. As Jef&ies said before lhe firsc round. " What you s~ here ( the actu.1.1 speeches) is just the tip of the iceberg.''

Most debaters es11mo1te th at they spend 10 hours rntlrCbing for each hour of speaking. ond this is probabl~ a lo-. estimate. Bui even though it is lhc tip of the iceberg. 11 is a.JI the Judge has 10 base bis decmon on.

Debaters rank second The NIC debate tenm hn ~ plnced in each 1oumnm<'nl and h.ts bttn o fairl) compcthhe team. oroirding 10 debntc Coach Tim Christie. At lhl' prc~en1 time the dcbJ1c team i~ in second pince among communin ,'Ollegcs in lhe CEDA (Cross Exnmma1ion Deb111e Assoc1:111on). 111ion alh the tea~ ranh 32nd out Ill 300·400 college\ and universities ncro» the n:iuon. · Morch 19,20 NIC will hos1 the Idaho State Hig h School Dt>b.ite Tourna ment. The debate learn will then travel 10 Reno. Ne,·.• March JI ,1here they -. ill compete :it ~ c Univer~hy of Ne,•ada. The) -.•ill then complete their sca:.on April JO through O) I n1 Pon.land Community College in Portland. Ore. Over the weekend 1hc NIC d cb:itc tea m of Greg Tolbert and C'hns Joh nson

~~~~ted Mount HOod Community College in the finals M a tournament hosted b)

debate team is oow leading in 1he PaC1fic Community College ~ soci:nioo for 1hcThc W~tcm United States. ·

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H1way 95. 3 mtl es N o f 1-90 Coeur d'A lene ?.$-BOOR SHOW {!','FOR.MATION MATINEES EVERY SATU1U>AY M ID SUNDA Y ilC STUDE., T TICKETS AVAll.ABLE FOR SJ .5-0

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• • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• PICK U1' TICKETS (N SOB, VO-TECH OFF1CE AND C.A OFFICE


1a.rch 1'2, 1982/ CardinaJ Review -10Robert Frost :.aid of poc11y that 11 1s a metaphor-.. saying one thing in

Walls attract poets b) Joseph Cramer

terms of anolhcr " Perhaps 11tis IS • ·~ so many fail to ~c an) sense in 11 By the haghl} subJecthe rules or poetry. lo,c ma) indeed be a rose and passion ;i quu:kcning fire. Long before the appearance of telension, radio or C\en print. ballads and songs •ere a priman souTC"e of cntcn;irnment and knowledge alike. For most modem folk. the flame hns all but died out. But the s1e11dfast embers of the pocuc dri\ c burn snll rn the hea.ru or some as rettnt d~elopmeots at ~IC aodiate. English Instructor Fa} Wright 1s ucued about 1e.2cb1og poet ry and h<Jpes that ~he c-a.n coounue 10 do so-ahcmaung semesters wn.h Jam Mc~ Yet 10 her first semester at the reins of lhe class she has found a lack of senou~. popular interest-as have both Mc ~ and David Sharp, who presides o,er the fict1on·wntiog class. But late!), .tccording 10 Wright. a nc"' spmt b3s taken up res1deoC1? 1n the upper h.1.11 of lhe Adminimnuon Building thanks to a movement ca.lied. appropnatel) enough. " Poclf) on the Walls-·· So man) students feel thaa poetry is o,er their heads," Wright said. " The purpose of this 1, 10 mue it accessible to them.' '

The ~nd began with what Wright call~ "bumper sticker poetry." That is. brief passages from the work of publishro poets which arc printed on sheets of paper and taped to the walls at NIC. The~ h3,·e included such ,·crses n5 th~ b) Emil\ Dickenson: "The lightening is a ~cllo" fork From t:iblcs m the ~1:,, B) inad, crtant lingers dropped The a" fut cudcrv. .. There ha,·c been moic ludicrous p:i~s:age~ a:. "ell. ~uch a, this by Hilau·t' Bellac: ''I shoo1the hlppopota.mus wnh bullets made of platinum, Because it I use leaden l,ne~ his hidr is ~urc to flatten 'cm. .. " h's kind of corny and real avail, able." said Wright, the obvious ringleader or the posted poetry crusade. She began encounlmng opposition from Janitor~. though. nnd they kept teanng the poetf)' oIT the "oil~. They said the tnpc would damage the pnint. But 1n dogged determinouon Wright persisted in her rompaign whh "add· " add·a·hne" poetry. She selected a verse by an ttccomplished poet. added o line or rv. o or her own invention and left room for passing students to fol low SUit w1lh lines of lhcir own. In thls way students are directly involved. and their lnterc~t in nn art which (for the time being) has passed its zenilh may be aroused.

Has lhcrc been any problem with adding lines that are ob, scene? "I don't know what tha t means " Wright said, "but , omc or them hn~•e been rather graphic."

s t udcnts

For the most part. however. addi, t10n< 10 the ndd·a·linc poems were written in good t:\SIC, and several were quite imaginotave. Not at all the ~on or dog,gerJI found on the bnthn:iom wo.lls nt most locol invcm~. Ad dlton1l poelr) offerings have included \oyings attributed 10 the oncient Tao mo.,1er, Loo Tzu. Wh111c,•cr the outcome of nil thi~ 1110} be. the drifl towt1rd involvement hn'> certoinly increased. Even \Orne or 1hc writers of the Cardino! Review

hove Cl\ntrlbuted with u lnng lb t of vnrl.11ion, nn the philoiophcr Des· c11rtc~· 11\~Crtlnn: " I think. therefore I om." Wrigh1 i\ hovang a volume of her own poetry publiihcd. The work Is cnlled "Out or Se,ison," nnd ~he will be holding o promotlonol rending ot Soups Etc. on Wednesday, Morch 24. The event is free and will be held nt 7:JO p.m. Perhaps a, n wnrning ro potcntlnl buyers. o ~lgn on the woll or Wright', office rcod~. "A poet ,vho rend~ her poetry in public may hove other nnS1y habit~."

A t po pco rn f o rum

Agent Orange opposed by Ann Rauer

Icy spring High wlkr last wttk left lrs man; on CM

lffff bord.crlng ~W'

Sta.a Ball pboto d' AJe:oe lake.

The conLroversial chemical. Agent Or3nge. was discussed at the NIC Popco rn Forum March I , and talk cont'1!med the effects of spraymg the substance in the Idaho Panhandle. Charles Shcroke, a legal aide at· tornev m Coeur d'Alene, 1s the coordinator of Ciu:z.ens for Environ· mental Qualit) CCFEO) that is based in Oarkston, Wash. There were se,eral articles concern· ing Agent Orange printed in the Coeur d'Alene Press. The United States Forest Service (USFS) ga,·e the Press assurances 1h31 Agent Orange would not be used. Attording to Sherolte. this is 001 a true st.atemcnt. The CCEQ coordinator expl,uncd that 2.4-D was scheduled ro be used. 2.4.5-T is presently banned by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). However. Sheroke said 1h:11 Dow Chemical. a manufacturer of 2, 4.5-T. and the EPA arc having closcd·door conferences 10 oncmpt to lift the suspension. I! lhe suspension is lifted, which is expected too soon, 2.4.S.T would be considered for use in lhe panhandle. The USFS has creared 311 Intensive Forest Management Practice which invoh·es the coa:n:rol or elimination of vegemion and brush wlticb competes with young trees.

This underbrush. Sheroke soid. is servicebcrry. wild cherry. huckleber· ry. wild ro,c :ind others. Some or the herbicides. Sheroie said. that the USFS plans to use arc 2.4-D, 2.4.S-TD (Silvcx). 2.4.S,T. GarIon. Roundup. Amitrole j)nd others. The CFEO coordinator ond organa• .1.ation are opposed to the u~c or all herbicides for three reasons. Firsi. the herbicides are not sare. Second. they arc not 00~1 efficient and third , they resul t in the los~ or jobs for forest workers. According to Sheroke. herbicides are given .:i preference over people. James Day. another panehsr. c. rhe past edi1or an d publisher o r the Wellspnng newspaper in Moscow He 53id that af the Panhandle is sprayed, it will affect everyone from hikers :ind bclT) pickers to hunter). Frnnx Crary. publisher of 1he Pulp· wood Pre'>s, 53id rh3t 1he areas under possible considerntion for sprnyi ng is 18 percent or JJS.000 :icr~. which b approximately S9.900 ocres of l:and. The possible areas are the Avery. Wallace. Fernan. Priesr Laite and Oearwater Rimgcr districts and many others. A USFS rcprescnutive wu invited to appear on the panel, but according to Sbcrote. he declined lhe invitation.


March 12. 1982/Cardinal Rc , lcw .J J.

Iran 's form er finance minister turns student b> Stan HaJJ Being turned down from over JOO job mtervicws may not be a ne-.. s1ory lltOUnd Coeur d ·Alene. bur lhe former finance minis1cr or Iran found 11 frusmrnog. Abcd1n (Ali) Mcsba.h. SS. W'a.\ rhc mtniMcr of finance in the govemmcnr of Ir.in under the Shah for dose co JO )Ca~ and was the head of 1ha1 agency for mos1 of 1hose years bu1 i'> nov. .1 vocar1onal studenc al /'IIC in che machine shop. Mcsbah °l'SS granted lea~e from Iran for one mon1h 10 , 1<,i1 ht\ morher•inla" m Luxembourg JUSI before che Ayatollah Khomeini '~ v1olc:n1 n\C co power m chat councry "I wenc 10 Luxembourg co uve her hfo. and as ti turned out. she sa..ed mine." Mesbah ,aid While he wa\ gone. rhe government wa\ overthro" n. All of the heads of stare "'ere taken pri'iOner. nnd mO'>I were killed

"We lose e,•crything-finaoccs. property. cverych,ng." he ,aid. "We oould not go back. If we did we would be killed " The former department hcnd "as ollo,-cd 10 111ke only his immcdme fomilv wuh him to Lu1cmbC1urg. Mc,hnh no" li\'C~ in Coeur d'Alene "llh hi\ wife. Jaleh, the younge,t of ht\ '"'O son\, Shnhnb. who 1\ n \entor at Coeur d'Alene High School. and hi\ 90-ycar•old mother-in-law. Mc,bah tried for over II yeur nnd a halt 10 get a JOb in the United .State, ~nd could nQI even gel n job n\ n bookkeeper ''Nobody Wllntcd to hire nn Iranian lllT<1un1a111," he ,n,d. " I hope they will h1rl' an Iranian mnclt1111\I." In hi\ curl) )'Cnr, in the Mitll\tr1 nf Finance. Ali wn\ put 1n ch3 rgc of llCl.'Oumlng fur u Reynold~ Aluminum plnnt built in lr,m. o SI h,lhon proJc,t No" he cannot even get n job "ith them .

Ht~ frustration wi1h job hunting led him back to school. Ah and his famil> c;ime 10 Coeur d · Alene bcc3use hi~ brother-in-la" li,cs here and is an Amcncan ciuzen. He wamed to go 1nco !lolC'\ dat3 processin11: program. but the class \la~ foll. ~o he "ent for machine- \hop. 35 he also like, \lOrking "ilh hts hand\.

Alacdin (AU) \1e,;bab

In order Lo go Lo school Me,t,a h had to ha, c financial a,,1,1Jnn·. "h1ch included wnrk-,tudy The> set him up as a pnrt•t1mc book.keeper and stat1Sll· ci:in for the college boohrore. a task 1h01 I\ not c~actl~ chJlli:nJ.!tni: to him li e ~aid he i\ very glad 10 ha, e the Job lhouph. bc:c.iu,c II I\ 1n 3re3 nf cxpcrt1sc-cxpcm,t: 11,h1ch came from experrenct in fin.inc1al budgc11ng and accounting for a whole nauun The oflic1;rl 111 k he held "a, financ,ol l(cncr.,I managc.-r... h,ch l?J•e him total rc,pon,1bil11~ of prcpanng th e general bud,cct or Inn and ddcnd,ng 11 bdorc P.1rltamcnt. An) budget change\, altt:rauon\ nr tCl.fUC\I\ hnd 10 bt .ippr<1H·d b, h,m " I actual!~ held three J•>b\ "h,ch rc4L11n•d nbou, 12 to Ll hou" of" Mk a dJ\ . llcrc I \\Ur~ l-1 hour, .i "Cd," Mc,h.1h -.11d I h~ h1g11.-,1 rnntr.,,1 c;in l,t dra" n

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Petition d e a dline nears The deut1l111c lor lihng pct111nn, for 11<11111nat111n 11, run f,ir 1h, \:,'\fl :.,·natc 1 Wcdnl.'sdn), Mal"('h l t nt J p.m. Pc11uon, arc nm, n,nilubll• Imm Oc.u1 Bennett :ind Cm,hn J>t'i,1.:r 1111h, \Sl\l( ,1flil'e\ down\tn,r, In the SUB F.:ich nominee mu,1 obrnm :1 minimum of SO Mgnn1ure, llf ,1udcn1, holding curri:nt AS/'llC 1dc1111ficauon card!>. Nommecs muM be .ippnllCd by the cll'C1ton romm111c,· .ind m,-ct JII ~,·hol:i.,u, rciuiremcnh ~et forth in the ASNIC Con,tuution I rimary clccuons nre tcntn11vch \ct for Wcdnc,d;;, . April 14 11 mon- than "1 candidate, ftle nnd qunhh for th,· ,cnntc The 11cncrnl clcctmn "ill lw.• held Wcdnl·~d;i,, Apnl !I

Nursing n1 ee ti11g held o n co ,npus • Th_c Idaho Nur,rng Student A,~oc1.111on held 11, annu;il ,"On,cnuon at 1hc Edn11n1,tcr Student Unu>n 8111ldmg March S and o. Tiic loc;il chapter >pon,On!d the mceung. "htch mdudcd a H,,u,c t•f Delegate> conference and cducatmnru offcnng~ ro,cring ,uch 11cm, ~ State S.,.1J'd cums. pr1e,s1onal organi1.at1on, and burn trauma ,.ire. "O local Mudcnt, \\Cl'C elct'tcd to ~late offic.-, l\nnC\ lc1t<.'r "3> oamed J.> lrea,urer and Carol Fem, a, second ,,cc president. The di\ 1,100 of nu~mg chose Nanc) Shaw to rcprc,em thl' ~chool 111> student of thl· yc:ir

from the compcnsauon he recel\ed from lr:in compared to "hat he recci,es here Just belore he mer "1th h1, unfo,orable fate .\h s sal.u, "3~ equal to S5.000 ,n L.S . •urrcnc~ per month tfigurcd ..1 1hc ex.:hangc rate JI thJI timer Herc he is mai.mg S3.35 an hour E, en Lhoogh he was making 3 lot of monc', he claims he did not Ii, c fane;. His rdtl?lOUS beliefs keep h,m from Ii- ,ng lii.e 3 lmg "'htle other., ue tn po,crtJ. "I !he about the same here a, I did there. Ju,1 a modcr;itc hou,c. not fanC\." he said. :";o maner ho" toueh hie is here for Mc~bah , 11 will ha, C to do $IDCC retummi; to lrJn "ould mean cenatn death "It is a cnme o,cr there 10 ha,c been h1gh.ranlung official. .. he ,a,d. Fi,c •car~ a,?o h1, future "a, bnght and prumt>tn!!, but no" he do,:, n,•t I.nu" "hat the future hold,. "IJfe bll.S so manJ faces," ~ll'sbah ,:ud "I h,,pc ,·ou du not ha, c to ,L-c the \Id(', ,,f hrc: that I ha\'C \eCn." life in Coeur d'Alene 1, rcla11,eh comfonable for Lhe !'vlc,bah fam11,·.

but Ah b \!ill reluctant to spcal. :ibout poltucal matters. If he \\ere to ,a) an,1hmg that wa, no1 to Lhc liking of the current Iranian ito,ernment, n Li:>uld bnng harm to !.lmih member., sttll lhme there " T"o "cel.s ago thc.1 killed m~ bes, fnl.'nd. • he ,aid. "The~· (Shiit<' fundamcntalt,tsl d1sltl.e other religious 1:rc'lup,. '"Lite here is different than Iran in mam "JH... he said The b1ggc,1 difference he found is tha1 1he fam1hcs are much stronger and closcr,kn11 m Inn. 'A I mcmbcn of the same family h,c 1,,ce1hcr m thL· same house. I[ a ,on nurrie,. hi, '"fo ,-omcs and lives "ith htm tn ht\ fo1hcr's 'house." he ,.11d. "E,cnbod, here. a, wt.'11 as 1n Europ.;. 1~ mu~h more informal. "In m, counln nobo<h calls .im·1:,od th;tr first ·name e·~cept clo;e flmih and some lncnds." he said. But \tc,bah strc,sro ho" friend!) pt:oplc Jrc in the Unncd StJIC~. ' "' er h,n c I ,cen ,uch kind pc<>pl.: " ht.' ,.11d · \ ou should be ,·cry th;inltful that ,ou II\~ in ,uch a good ,,,untn "1th ,o much opjl<lrtunit)."


March 12 , 1982/Cardlnal Re,iew -12-

• • ( n1c notices

Brewer rips parking policy in first press conference b) Ronnie Anson sm· O\·er there. another o,·er here: w·e J im Brewer. 42. newh•-elected are all the same here." ASN IC pres1den1. said M,mh 2 that at He said tlut be docs not think 11 least a doten parking spaces could be affect,; the educational qualil}' of IC. added 10 the lot b, the hbrarv 11. 1thout added construcuo·n · but that 11 does llfl'ec:1 the amrudes of "There arc problem\ that people are students. not parkjng properh·. but I can't reall~ blame them JOO percent on that becau,e there 1\ not adequate parlnng facilities." Brewer said He said that he 1s again~t ~tudenu being ticketed for parking in the 3dm1nistr.11ion p:irking spacer 11. her. instructors do not get t 1ckea for parking m tht> general p.irktng area. "Where is the jusuce~" Breu. er asked. The president said that there ~ too many nutomobiles and not enough Other arc~ Bm-er 11.h.o sa1d be is parking spaces nnd that the college 1s .. the oldest and fa nest pre~1den1 the 001 providing adequate parking. student bod~ has c,cr elected,·· spoke Brewer. a marhinc shop and busi· about mcluded~ ness administration major. said that he -his pl..tn to SIMI II student 3.C'tlOD thinks there is an unheahh, d1,is100 commm~ made up of three to fi"c between the ,·ocntion al and· academic studcots to gather m!ormauon for the schools. Sludent board to WC 3.CIIOn oo. "There ha s been too much dh ision -1h.e possibilil\ ot u~iog the between the 1,,0 schools. We arc all \'OCationl.l students for more campus mem be rs of North ld3.h o College.·· construction and purung the sa, ings Brewer said. "Thnt is not one uni,ertoward sLudcnti' nttds.

Stodeois are reminded lhal April 5 Is tbc lut da, 10 withdraw rrom lndhlduaJ clas ses. The rcgls tru' s office ask5 tint students not wait untll the last cl9.y to get si(tlUIIU.N'!I from thclr lns1roctors and t.bcir ach Iser!!. The Single Parents Suppo rt Group meets Tbu.rsds~ nlgbts a 7 p.m. Ill the Ftr..t Christi.an Church located at <lth and Carden. lnfonnal topic dlscusslons are held " e rkl) and arc open 10 all slng le partnts. We c.,an •bare Ideas. thoughlS reOtttlo.n~ and re, elation_~ abou t the 51.ngk parent experlcntt. Child care b pro,lded. Call 66-1-987S or 667-52 I for more lnfonnatJon. The group I~ porrson,d b.>· the \\ omen's Center.

J

~ Jou Wlllu.re o( wbo your adYIJu Is or where he/ she Is IOt'&tecl'! Then chttlc with Studt'nl Services In the SUB to D.od out. Your advl&er cu be a big help with your education.al pro1trammlng needs and wit h anv problems a!fcrling your colle(te cxpc,;. lcncc at Nl C. Remember also tint midterm gndes .. 111 be distributed throurtb the advl· M:rll In Mateh.

A ll time s he ets for " ork ,s tud y s tudents mu ~t be ~lgned hy the, s upcn•lsor and th.> cmplo)re and ._,.. due for Marth on 1\1.an-h 23 in the nnnclal aids office. The emp lo,ec'" soela l st'e urll) number must he lnrluded on the lime ~heet or no check wlll be l~wed Man:h

J I. The NIC Veteran's Chtb wlU prelK'nt

Flna.ncla.1 Aid Fonns at1d Academic Scholarship Forms n.rc now avail.able In the flnam,lal Aid Offit'C for the 1982-83 acadcmJc ) Car. The FAF forms musl be malled in time lo be processed and returned 10 the rlC office b.> April IS, and tho AS forms must be au.med lnlo the Finan· claJ Aid Office b) April IS.

a , ldeo rum about the Dlu bled American Veteran's IDAV) Out Reach Program , whk h was founded In Denver. The 111m wUJ dhcu.ss the problem ol the Vietnam Stre11• Syndrome. The mcetlnrt wlil be held In the &ncwah Room of the SU D on Marth 16 at 3 p.rn. Mcmbon Md all othel'!I lnlcr• es tcd are welcome to attend.

MAKE $12.200FOR ca.LEGE WHILE lOU'RE GOING TO ca.LEGE.

Want a parMime job chat doesn't hurt you r grades?O r campus life?Give your local Army Reserve unit a weekend a month and a coupleof summersduringcoUege, and chey'Ugiveyou over $12,000 for college. Up ro $4,000 in college aid 1s yours JUSt for joining most units. Another $6,000for fqur years of monthly weekends and two-week summer stints. Plus over$2,200chac you'll earn during two summer training periods. AU while you're gernng the most our of college. And doing the most you can part-rime for your country. You don't have co wait for college to join the Army Reserve. lf you're 17 or older and a junior or senior in high school, Join us now! There's no better pan-rime 10 b in rown. lnteresred ? For more information abour the Army Reserve in chis area, call any of the telephone numbers listed below.

66 7- 6404

ARMY RESERVE. BE ALL YOU CAN BE.


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