Rbtnal R€Vl€W Co~u· :: :. ~,..~
dono
Volume 38, Number 4
Aatamn an Art ~todencs Path Bca1 and Gero Blinston b;u,h op on their "lier color tccltnlqocs In front of lhc C· \ Bolldln1t darlnjt some of aolll.mn'~ more £air "ealher.
Dan Breeden photo
College gaining ground on reciprocity agreement by Ric J. Kai.I The NIC Board of 1 rustcc~ at us October meeting nppro, cd nn 11grcc• ment 1h01 will allo,, studc-nh from NIC to con1inuc their cducnlion in v:iriou~ Wbhington colleges nnd univcrs111e, "'hhou1 pay111g ou1-o!-,111te 1111110n. Owen Caraol, dlrcc1or of plnnninjl at NIC. u\d 1ha1 if Gpprovcd by the SUllC of Washington and nlso agTccd upon jo111tly bet"ccn the s1aac of Idaho and I.he slat(' of W11~h111gton. I IS Mudenl!> from l>olh smes can bcgm aucnding schools 111 Jan. 1984 111 both Washing· ion and Idaho al ln-smc prices. Pamctpaung ~chools in Idaho nrc the Uni,·Cf!>ll)' of ld:iho, Idaho State Unl\N\ity, Boise Slate Unl\•crs1t) , Lcw1s:Clark State College and NIC In Was~ington, WI\Shington State Uni• ver~il). Ea:.tt'm Wa~hingi.1n Un1,cn,1\· Spolane CommunU) Coll1:ge, Wal• 1·1 W111ta Communit) Collt-gt' anJ p(l\"bl~ the Unl\Cl"'tll\ of W;i\hingte>n Ole .i11rctmen1 \\,h ~i1. month~ 111 th, mn,n .. ind "" h"t in1r,ll!u,c:d c.,
WSU b) an IC rommutee ronsmmg of Oa, id Llndsa) , director of adma\~ions. O"cn Cargo!, ~ocia1c dean of tn!>lruc11on. 11nd Bam· Schuler. NIC prc~ldcnt. Thl' board then n:JCC'led a proposal from Michael Bund, , cllatnllan of the facuh> asscmbl): 1hat " ould ha\ e clim1nntcd ~1dt'nt Bam Schuler from lhe mottal screening. of t"&lldi· date~ to fill a. ne" po,1t1on of an 11c:idcm1c \ICC president .at NlC The board hlld prcv1011sh appro\ed S,huler') Scptt'mbcr proposal 1h11 calkd f'1r a three-member screcn111g comm1nee. COll!,isting of Vocation.ti Dartttor Oarcncc Haught, one bruh\ mt"mbcr and huusrlf 10 ~=n apphc:iuons. intef\ It'"- c:i.ndidAtes and am,e at a Jcti~•on rompo\t"d ol the" th~ most qualified cand1d111~. Schult'r, .1cwnlm~ 10 hlS propo-.J.l, "'oulJ make the final s«:IC(11,'ln ;ind re,-ommcnd that on~ candidate to the b. rJ for approv;i
ThC' need for faculty input • as \ ~ b) the board 311d 3 counter proposal !"U s.ent bad: ..-ith Bundy to submit to the faculty as~hl) Thai coon1er proposal parlllleled the ongi• naJ thrci:-membcr screening tomm.11tee proposed by Schuler b111 •oold alJo,. for the facult 10 form a 12-member suboommmce. The )Ubcomm1ttec aould d1scoss t.he ongoUJg screerung and anttf'ie".
ing of undida1es nnd then send the f.lcuhy member of the three-member commincc back for a collective input toward all dcc1\iOn\. (See related analysi\ on p. 10.) The board alw took action on a lcncr rccei~cd from the Coeur d'Alene City Planning and Zoning Commission, whi ch )parked anger from sever.ii continued on page 20
(____ in_s_id_e_t_ h_e_c_r___J Pet'emd porlier prances past pla) er1 ................................. page:? Han, lJ'-lion shoe ..... ..... ... .. . .................. , .. , .•. , .. · · · · pmge 11 Baller bcal!. dilfereat drum ........................... .. , .. ... ... · · page 14
..................... .... .......
.... p~18
I
1
l
Oct. 28, 1983/ Cardlnal Rc,rlcw -2-
Baldwin: Times changing for energy consumers b) Don Saoer American~ on the average use I0 time as much energy as people in the rest of the world, but this trend is changing. ac:wrding to the director of environmental studie\ at the Uni· versi1y or Oregon. Spealung at Wednesday's convocation, Jolln Baldwm said that in surveys of personal energy u\C. people Ul the United Smcs have a rel11ivel) high average of around 100 while the people of other countries average around 10. Baldwin said one of the ne,a, trends thal was occurring in the United States is a move from indostrializatJOn to an information society - 11 mo,•e ,a,·h1ch will reduce energy use. "We are moving away Crom a materialistic consumptive society." Baldwin said, "to one U1111 is going to rely on information. compute~ and
Journalists - •·hich ,., ill be th e profcsSJOns or the future:· Industry is becoming more decentraliud. he sa.id. which is helping it to bea>me more effiaent and wi.11 slow its growth. This benefit is passed on to the consumer "There are many products coming d-·n the hne that will make us more 10dependent ... B:tld• in said. These Lhings are comblllmg to ghe more choices. B~d"'1n said. He 1dded that Americans are mo,i ng from traditional either or .. thin king to muluple-opinion thinking. " Wen- lu\e more opuons in the •ortplacc. in religion. foods and 10 our ethnic di\il'Sll) ... Baldwin Solid. These changes. he s11d. indicate that the old industrial ,;oocty LS losmg power. He added tint people have
begun to use new wo rds in their \'OC'Sbulary 1ha1 reOcct this change. Words such as inforrnn1ion. Interaction. stabili1, and ~ lf-relianre show that we are changing from an inefrficie nt " pioneer' community to 11 more efficient ''ecologic31" one, he $.lid.
Baldwin said all the change is mo,·ing in a posiuve direction, but he also had a "arning. " We can · 1 :ifl'ord 10 become complacent.' be said. "because it could nil easilv change.·· B:ildwin concl uded by snyin~ thnt 11 vcn 1mponan1 component of 1hi~ Iles m ed ucation. mfomu11ion c~change, communication and computers. "hich
he had ~aid earlier were the trends or the future. Bald" in suggested reading books such ~.":,he Third .~Yave," " Mega: trends. Eco1opl11, "Eeotopia E, merging'' and "The Nine Nations or ew York." He also emphasized 1he Importance or cduc~tion in the proccs~ or moving from high energy consumptiM to a less demanding level of energy use. Baldwin spoke earlier in the day on 1hc highly effective level of environ· mcnhd planning in Rajnccshpurem. Ore.. where about 100 square miles of n religious cult proc11ces 101111 recy• cling.
Grasping exponential significance key survival issue., Bartlett says by Diane Opdahl Mankind's gren1es1 shortcoming is the iruibility to understand the erponenrilll fonction··the dramncic size of growth. n professor of pbysi<"s told 'IC student~ and others at Lhe convocation keynote 3ddress on Monda). Speaking at 1hc C·A Audi1orium as t.he inilial spu.ker add.r«Si.ng the m n,'00.lion theme of resources. Albert Banlert said that both world population and the coal supply ore affected by erponenli41 factors and said that both a.re gening out of control. Bartletl soid that most people tend to believe what the)' read instead of using calculntions to figure out that the roal supply stands a strong chance of running out within the neX1 100 ycnrs. "Don·t believe prediction until you have cakulated," Banlen said. According to Bartlett ·s figures. if the United Snucs continues to use coal at the 1970 production rate, the coal will run out in 28 ye.1.l'S. This is certainly a different figure th.an the people have been hearing in the pa.st. he said. B:1rtlc1t stressed th:11 ii is time to take action and prepare for the furure. "Energy consumption has stopped growing," he said. ··u we understand the problem, we CM see what to do."
Saxvik tells of energy plan A pl:in for developing Northwest energy over the nen 20 years is being devised. a member of the Northwest Power Planning Council said Tuesday in an NtC convocation speech. Speaking in the C-A And.itorium, Robert Saxvik. vice chairman of the Northwest Powe r Planning Council since 1981. S:uvik said I.be cou.nciJ's mafo objective is to provide leadership in
planning £or a be:tlth) environment at the lowest possible cost.
Bull fnnz pboCo
The council began in November
1980 10 establish conservation on four pans: residential, commert'ial. agric:ultural and industrial.
IT'S QUITE SIMPLE--Or. Albert Bartlett auwera 24 preseatatloa in I.be CA Audl.torh1.m.
"Toe council tries to go forward and hopefully put our problems behind us." be said. " We have to learn from our mistakes."
Awarded poster, book
Streaking pig not cured =
A man described as wearing nothing but a pig =Ii: reportedly streaked across the NlC soccer fie.Id Sarurday. Oct. 15. during a event, according, to NIC Chief Security Officer Don Phillips. A girls' soccer team from Cannda was on the field when he "ran •cross the field once and disappeared from ,~e,., ." Phillips said. The maner is being taken seriously since the Ca.nadia.n team bad seve.nJ 12·year-old girls w~th them, Phillips said.
quadom aber bl, Oct.
Ruhinsky wins convocation contest The poster interpretation contest, which was run in conjuction with the week's convocation on resourc:cs, was won by freshman Josephine Robin.sky. Rubinsky wrote that the poster used a design that seemed to symbolize "the hydrocarbon Bicyclo (3.3.2) dccane in relation to resources," which reminded her of the dwindling amount of fossil fuels. She emphasiz.cd the importance of symbols and said that they represent man's most powerful resource. Fonner NlC an lnstruetor Patrick Veerkamp, who designed the poster. Slid his intent was to use images and colors to create an effect "rather than trying to get the message across through concrete representations." Rubinsky won :i laminated convocation poster and a book for her effon.
OcL 28, 1983/ Cardina.l _Review - 3-
ASNIC supports day care on campus
The ASN1C Srudent Board agreed in its Oc:t. 17 meeting to appoint the student actions comminec 10 help suppon the relocation or the Campus friends Children's Center onto the ompus. The u.nanimous decision came after Carol Lindsay. director of the day-are center. 1old the board thar a recent planning and zoning ruling allows the center 10 stay 11 its present location on West Garden Avenue only until June. The planning and wning decision was brought about by acuon 1alcen by the Fon Grounds Neigbborliood Associ.arion. The association said tha1 the Hcadstan .lnd children centers violated an oath by NIC nor to expand east of Hubbard Street. According to Lindsay. the long-term goal of the day-care center has been to move onro campus anyway, so the ruling is only speeding up the
process.
Bue Lindsay said 1ha1 the center is a service to NlC students and that the students, therefore. need 10 show their want for it. ''We feel the strong voice should not be coming from us." she said. " We feel that since the child care is a student service the voice needs to come from the students (through the student board)." Lindsay said she thought the administntioo would be fairly supportive of moving the center on campus.
by Marte Wheeler
but added the main question was exoctly where it could be locnted. Although the program is almost self-sufficient. .iccording to Lindsay. there is the problem of space. The center is required to have JS square feet inside and 75 square feet outside accessible 10 each child. The first student actions commiuee meeting should be in about a v.·eek 10 discuss possible solutions t.o the maner. In other :tction. the boa.rd; -heard a commiuee report from :ictivities director Tina Phillippi that 540 people artended the Rail conceI1 and S2.694 w;is collected. That is SJ26 more than the amount spent to put on c1te conccn. v.ith only food left to pay. -recognized the alumni association v.·11s not brought into operation this year and that the SI. 700 budgeted to c1tem is not going to be used. A decision regarding wha1 will be done with the funds wa.s delayed until a later date. -was reminded by President Lee Cole that ASNIC senators :ire allowed 10 miss only three board meetings. The announcement came after the board had to wait 17 minutes to have a quorum and agnin had to put off a budget repon due 10 a lack of senators.
VSNIC council downs pol~ settks for rebuttal ktter by Pam Cu.nnlngham An informaliPn poll of lhe vocational students. previously planned 10 be wen in ordor 10 di~prove o CR editorial on the dcan·s list, has been cancelled due to an 11bundanu: vf lcncr~ ,cccnlly published stressing the vocational point or \'iCW , ASNIC l're~idcnt Lee Cole sn1d at the Oct. 19 vocational counol mceung. " After the 111~1 is,ue (of the CR) 11 11:11 wo~ said on behalf or 1he voa.tional ,tudcnh from variou~ clas~c\ ond msrructors." Cole said. h en though a survey was no1 token the committee fell that some form of rcbulial lencr should still be sent to the Cardinal Review. he said The ~-ommhtec decided unanimou~ly 10 send B rebuua.l letter. and VSNIC Presiden t Marvin O"Bl,:nc~s rcod the uusigncd letter lo the committee members. b1ch reprcsentouve in the quonim \igncd h. In other action, the hudgc1commit1cc approved a budget request or SS(M for the computer ~cic nce chis, tn go ton )Cminar and a request or SISO to CO\"Cr capping cxpcn\es for the licensed prncticaJ nursing dt1.\s.
On Sundays
Library use monitored The NIC Library \\ill b( open Cl'CI') Sunday af1crnoon for the remainder of lhu )CmC!>tcr on 111rial bt1!>l!>, ac-cording to libronan Keith Stuns. The librDI')' " ill be open rl\lm I to c, p.m. nn Sunday~ and 10 n.m. to b p.m. on Sundny. De<'. 18. TI1e )torr "111 monitor the number of students u,ing the library and the hour) during "hieh U\t' ib the heav1c~t.
If enough blUdents ta.kc ad\ antllge of the "'" hours, the Ii bran v. ill continue to be open on Sunda}~ ncx1 seme~ter. Stuns )aid In 11ddl11on to the Sunda1 hours. I.he library IS open Monda) through Thu~da) from 7:4S a.m. to 10 p.m .• Frid.ay from 7:4.5 11. m. 10 4·JO p. m. and Saturda\ from 10 a..m 10 4 p.m.
One-woman sliow slated Playwright, act~ and stOl')1eller Deborah Blanche \\ill bring her on.e-\\Om3.Jl ov. 3.
show. " Women of the West," to the Bonner Room :11 noon on Thursday.
wn,e f~c ~rfo~ance ls sponsored by the NIC' Coo,•ocarion) Cummmce. the NlC omen s A!lsoc,11uon and the American Associalion of Uni,'t'"rsil) Women. The performance, 11 blend of storytelling and dnuna. is co-~ponsored bv Ute library and the Ros,..cll LirtJe Tbe:ucr. •
Balloon man Comedian Sui\'e Rossell of Suttle performs a lridc duriog a pcrform.aacc ID I.he SUB Oct. 19. Russdl, " bo bas appeared aJ bandrcds of schools ID the Padflc Nortb,.-csi, docs ltl5 comedy and magic act wblle wrapped ID balloons.
I
J
~~~-
Oct. 28, 1983/ Cardlnal Re,·lew - 4 -
dawn murphy
~ (...__o_p_in_io_n_p_ag_e_ _J
~
Letters to the editor Letters to the editor arc welcomed b) lhc CardEnal Review. Tho~e who submit lette rs s hould llmlt lhcm lo 300 words , sign them leglbl.> nnd provide n tele phone number and address so lhal riuthen1lclt)' can be checked . Althoug h mos t lcu ers ore used , som e may be returned because the> do no t mec1 th e nbove requlrern cnts or because they I11arc similar to a num be r of lelle rs already received o n the same s ubject, 121advocate o r attack n religion or denomlnallon, 131 are posslbl.> libelous , (41 contain words or phrases 1ba1 some might consider In poor tas te, 151 a re open letters flcttc rs must be addressed 10 and d irected to the editor), or 161are lllegJble. Lctt~rs sho uM be bro ug ht to Room 2 In the Mechanical Art& Bulldlog or malled lo the Cardinal Review In care of North Idaho College, 1000 W. Garden Avc.,Coe ur d' AJene , Idaho 83814.
Losing is a lesson OK. where did the jC)Ckey go? Ho" unluck) ('an n person get! I wo tched as each rnrehorse \\:IS guided around the '>ho,1 ing ring to be sized up by the wagere~. I figured lhe odd!> and compared their pa!>t records. I couldn't lose. I had J luck) feeling :ibout the horse I hod picked. Not a thing can go ,1 rong. I thought :is I pl3ced my fint·ner bet on him 10 win. I hod all the pos1t1,•c thinktng th3t I could mu!>ler riding on that horse. Howe\'er. none of the racing forms sJid this horse had a habit of losing its jockey along the way. And as m) su re·"-in horse rounded the last bend in the track, ,1 ithout its rider, I realized mv incredible unlucky srreal hod been underscored again. · Look. I told mvself. everyone has a bad da\'. But then a familiar humiliating fccl1ng came flooding back :is I remembered a race to my 9 a.m. go, emment class I had also lost a couple of da\'s before. · Feeling guilty for being late again. I opened the classroom door and tried not to look at the instructor. .a substitute. Whew! After going to m) seat as quietly as I could. I looked around and realized that my class wasn 't ha,·ing a substitute but that I had arrived 10 minutes late to the 8 a.m. socioJogy class. 1doo·1 have sociology at 8 a.m.-1 ha\'e breakfast. But what does losing a ber at the track have to do "ith arriving SO minutes early for a government class. you might ask. Well. as I said. everyone has a bad day. Fo r some. the days add up to a bad week. . No ~Iler bow csrefulty you analyze the information given you in a racing form o r how carefully you plan your morning to get to class on rime. there can be unknown variables just waiting to attack the situation. Mavbe this is what some caJI fate. Luck. fate or whatever it is. I'm just hoping the world leaders have experienced losing a bet at the track or the humiliation of walking into a wrong class so they can expect to lose sometime. The power: of ~sitive thinking does not always help that horse cross the finish hne first or a.larms to go off at the right time. I hope they can know all the variables in the race most of them ar~ ~cning on. _But for some reason my losing racing ticket says this 1s not possible. . h's not money or ego that's ultimately at stake here. One lost Jockey could , as the bumper sticker says. "ruin your whole day.''
(
cardinal review
J
The Cardlnal Review Is published semJ-monthJy by the Publication• Wo rkshop class at North ldaho College. Members of the CR staff wW t trlvt to present the ne ws l'.al.rfy, accunately and without prejudJce. Oplnloat expressed on the editorial pages a.od In various news ana.Jy,es do nol o.eccssaril.Y reflect the \ lews or the NIC a.dmln.lstntlon or the ASNJC. The CR is entered as thfrd-ews postaJ material a l Coear d' Alene, Id.abo 83814. Associated Collegiate Press Fi ve-Stu All-Am erican Newspaper editor ...... .... ..... ... ...... ................ . .. . ... Dawn Mmpby news edlto r ................... .. ...... .............. . Mark Wbeeler associate editor ..........•...•.....................•.. . . Ric J. Kati arts/ entertainment ... . . .... . .......... . .............. . CraJg Jobmon sports editor ............... . ...................... . •... Willy Weech photograph) edltor ............•. . ... . ............... . .... Bull Fram ad vertisin g manager ....... ........... . . .. ........... .. . Maril.. PlaJ1 cop) edJtor ........................ . ............... Pam Cwmlngbam cartoonists ........................ . .. ... Troy J olllff and Erle Pedenen ad \·lser .......•....•.............. . . . ........ .. . . ... . .. Tim PO&rfm reporters and photogn.pbers . ..... . ............ . . , . . .. Sharl AlM"::; Dan Breeden, Laurie Bristow, Deanna Chapin, Kathy Ganuon, Raimann, Kurtis Ball, Sharon Heaney, RiLa HoUJ.ogswortl,, .Leua Moore, Brace Mullan, Diane Opdahl, Don Sauer , MJkc Scroggie, Dca.a.na Small, Sandy St.a.mbaugh, Wanda Stephens, Barl>ic Vandenberg, KcOy Ward ud Angie Wemhoff.
OcL 28, 1983/ Cardin.aJ Re,'iew -5-
(__ m_o_ri_e_o=---p_in_io_n_J........._ _ _ _ _ __ Administration complimented on tuition pact approval If the reciprocity agreement recently passed by the NIC Board of Trustees is passed by the Idaho State Board _of Education an.d the Washington ~tate Council on Post Secondary Educa11on, students will. among other things. have a better chance of auend ing a school which offers the programs they are intereSted in - "'i thout ha ving to worry about out-of-state tuition. Although the new contract does contain :m abundance of stipulations. il is a step in the right direction. And ahhough it will be only on a one-semester trial basis. it will give administrators solid facts and figures 10 weigh while students cnjo} a better or more convenient education. For years , students have had 10 listen 10 excuse<; why such an agreement has been postponed. And for years. education has suffered. Bui now. if the agreement is passed by the two states. we will be in lhe doing process instead of the procra'>tination proces!i.. And it's pleasing ro know that it is members of the NIC administration that ho ve made the new agreement possible. Owen Carsol, NIC associate dean of instruction. along with Oao;id Lindsay. director of admissions, and NIC President Barry Schuler. has
(
news connections
J
It's your loss if you missed it As the 1983 Fall Convocation Week comes to a close, the physit'al ~cience/mathemntics and engineering djvision and the members of the convocn1ions committee deserve recognition for their work in organizing the week. Those who 100k advnntage of the excu~ed hours 10 hear the timely presentations on our resource~ will ha ve take n in more food for thought :1nd nourishment than the ones who took that time out for lunch.
....·orked six months to bring about the possibility of ldaho1Washington reci p rocil) . These people deserve to be congratul:11ed on their effon s. And just ns imponnnt. the sunes of Idaho and Washington need to be shown the significance of such legislation.
Just who's the punk? Dear Editor: Since it is said in the CR that letters to the editor should not contain words or phrases 1ha1 some might consider in poor 1as1e. I .... ill stay away from calling you what m) p.o.'d feelings tell me. According to your do,, n-to-eanh mmd. punk is nothing more than a sleazy woman dragged through a car wash that happened to gi,·e free paint jobs at 1ha1 momeni. Well I'm alv.ays glad to educate ignorant people. Punk didn't stan in Eddie's Five Cent Car Wash by a bunch of fast. nasty and mean l.idies. but in England in the ghettos of the povcny-striclten underprhleged. Punk "as and is not only being p.o.'d at a capilali\tic S)Stem. but is one form of \Cntilizing the aggression stored In people who dido '1 have nrne in their lives to
look at color books. One of the most important rules in journalism is that one should kno" his facts. You don·, seem to believe in this rule. Your piece of :m would probably fit great into the National Enquirer: however. for a college paper "hich has quite an award-winning record, it doesn't seem 10 fit. The onh· humor I could find in your anicie wns a good laugh a1 what you consider punk. Chrissy Hynde. Jo.in Jct. Pat Benat3r and Marianne Faithful have as much to do \\ith punk ns a po1n10 with a pudding desen. As far as clothing is concerned with your ideas. I'm s ure you \,ould make a model citizen in the coming year of 19a.l. Sincerely. Rich Hai mann NIC student.
Let's 'Twist and Shout' to a different tune I think rock' n'roll music hos n 101 10 offer this ins1i1u11on. h's not that I'm so hot on mu:.ic or th:11 1his isn't n good college already, it'~just that I hate to sec this pince \\ OSie so much of the ~tudenl\' lime. A convcrsallon with one of my friends the other d11y pointed out 1hnt we ulrcndy know whu1 we want to th ink, nnd \\ e JUM go to clas~ to hear the other :.ide. In other words . we team new lyri cs. but our tune wa.s picked ou1 n long time ago. Like old Peter, Paul nnd Mary songs. the lecture:> sag m our brain:.. We know the words. but ,, e just ne\ Cr get m10 11. Sometimel> it's all we can do ro ltecp from fnJling ns.Jeep. We never get the initio1h·e to reall~ get do,\ n on llll the jive. But you kno"'' how we love to motion to a notion from a good rebellious rocker. And I believe if 1c:1chers were rocl,; star.,, \\ e would be equally open minded wilh their funk . · We could dA11ce to their mu!>lc all day long - a_nd maybe e,·en longer. We would no longer doze off to no,,here land during clasi.. But this doe:.n'1 mean I thinl we need 10 replace 1he English depanment with the British Invasion. I ~on't e,•en feel we need 10 substitute the ,,a\ e theor) of mouon that we learn in science class for the new wave ideals we hear on ihe radio.
mark wheeler But "'hat I do think we should do 1s 10 imagine how we could rock the Y.Orld 1f our minds "-'t>Uld store the everlasting knowledge of the inslf'Uctors like they cling to the l;rics of 1he popular songs of todaJ that prob3bly woo '1 be around tomorrow - and most of all. reall> be able to S\\lllg 10 it's beat. If we could apply our yearn to learn the way we do the urge 10 move 10 the groo\e, this could be one bopping college. If '-C could be as opeo mfoded when we wal k into a classroom as \\e :ire when we buy a new David Bowie al bum. I thinl. we would find we "-Ould be d.ancmg 10 a different tune. We might even erperieocc a new wave of thought. We might find th:11 "The Other Side .. is prerry good dancing music. And even if \\e didn'1 go wnh the Dow and learn a few new steps. I still thin k we would experience some type of "Satisfaction .. \\-ith this new look-around sound. At least \\e wouldn't be tone deaf 10 the sounds of new tno"' ledge any longer.
' (..____m_o_r_e_op~in_io_n_)t-------Oct. 28, 1983/ CardlMJ Re,<iew -6-
r
vo-tech editorial off base, VSNIC members assert Dear Editor· Thil> letter 1s m respon!>c 10 the anicle ··Dean's List Pure Gravy for Voc:itiona l Students · m 1he Sept. JO. 1983 issue of 1he CR We are de manding an apolog) and a retraction. If the CR wanted reader feedback, the" could ha'l'e done it in a differe~t wa, other than slapping 1he 'l'Ocaiional-technical students and facuh, in 1he face and call ing them 3 bun.ch of dummiel>. We take offen~e at being called ··easy graded." They are b, no means easy grades: the} a re hard-earned and much-deser'l'cd grades. If you have 10 compare academic to vocational, do so in this way. We arc leo.rning n job. a job we ha,•e 10 know very well 10 compete wi th others that are trying for I.he same job. We are in our respe ctiv e classes six to se,·en hours 3 da ,.. five days a week. working with 1he same ios1ruC'tor and the s ome group of people dny in and day ou1. Some of the work we do is n join1 venture. We have 1he :idvnntnge of learning from other' s mistakes. We have about six to 20 students in
each clas,;, 1he a,·erage being about 12. Before an) of the!>e siudent!> get into a cla.s~ I.he) must fir)t sec one of the coun~elor<1, then tue a te~t 1( I.he, :ire competent enough 10 enter the class. We are learninl? a spccilie tcchniC':tl profes· ,;ion. All of our ,tud1cs lift' directed 10 that one cour.c. We arc not condemning the CR for brinl!tnc the rnbject of a ~cparate dean",, lbt up; we would \\Clcome web a chani:c?. Bui "e arc condcmnm~ them for the wa, it \\ as done. - ,hu~ bringing cmbar• r:tS::.ment to the ,ocaiional studenb \\ho" ant no more than to )urn the skills being 13ught and then go out Jnd put those skills 10 use to earn 3 lh'ing. When we :in: done Jnd when we get our eenifieatcs of completion, or our degrees. "c'll ha\'e me sk.ills ncl·cssan 10 follow our chose n profess1o~s 10 go out and e3m the money to pa) for our o"·n fourcouTse. grade-A steak dinner compliments of us. VoC'ational Students Of IC Council
Reader writes
Editorial lacks vo-tech input Dear Editor: There seems to be some flaws in your argument concerning grading practices in the \'OCational program here :it North Idaho College. One f13w I detected was that I found no input from the vocational students or ·instructors. It seems to me that fo r an unbiased ankle, you need input from bolh sides. Your article made no reference to the entrance aptitude test re· quired for admission to vocational programs! These tests eliminate a large percentage of students who would hold down the class grade average! Your article made no reference to the fact that in most vocational classes your assignments are grad· ed either A or F. This system is used because you can not almost rune a car. almost paint a fender, almost drive a truck. almost program a computer. almost type a letter or almost weld! . Another factor not brought to hght was one of student maturity.
A very large number of vocational students are adults who are being retrained back into the job market. More mature students are inclined to be more dedicated. They spend more time on assignments and more time studying. Another factor is class size; the classes are one half to one fourth as large as academic. This lets the instructor spend more time with each stO· dent. My hypothesis is if a student spends more time studying, more rime doing assignments. more time in class and more time with instructor's supervision, the student will get better grades. One thing is for sure. There will be hell to pay when I get a 95 on a test and receive a C so vocational will have parity with academic. because Joe Academic is too busy chasing women and drinking beer! Bill I.arson Vocational student
b) Da, Id Llndsa) Director of Adm ls~lons
My no.,c all\ ay~ geh \\he re I'm going lir,;t. It ·c; o phy,iological phcnumennn. I dun'1 have contr(I) over tt: unlc \s I walk bockword. r,c become ,en J\\,,rc of ,,h,11 rm no, .: doc" nnd ~cnM?'I J h.1,cn't li,cd in Cncur d'Alene vc n lonJ!t. l"hrcc 111011\h,; 111 fal,. and m) n,,,c ha, lo\'ed 11. Thi, cuv 1s ,imply in.1gnificcnt. The l.il.e, the mount.im,. the tree,;, Singk 111H .111y onc of thC\C cn1i1ies und 1hc scent~ tmgh.: vo ur !>inu ~c~ mto \O mcUung ~1m1lor too "1ld poll.a Mix them 1111 toge the r. ond 1he whole oom·pnh band graces your ci ha. The lnke smells clean , \\ Cl. untampered. The: nose goc~ close: no chlo rine. The tree~ !>mell ahve, as if they're cleansing everything around Lhem. T he mount a ins . well , the combinotion there is olmo~t overpowe ring. In shon . Coeur d'Alene smells like Vacation. I like Vacation. always hove. I' ve never lived anyplace where I could step outside the front door of my house and smell vacation. Walk around the place, breath in deeply through the snout: Vacation! But wait, I'm going to work, I'm not on vacation. That's the amazing part, I work and live here, I don't have to go anywhere to be here. lo the middle o( all this olfactory mesmerization is a college. Wha1 a great pl:ice for one. All the scents I mentioned above s urround the campus. I walk around Seiter Hall, incredible. I cross the dike. se nsational. I walk into Mike Bundy's office, unbelievable. Your nose can be accosted as well as embraced. Actually, I've been very impressed with the people I have met here at the college. Not only do Lhey smell good. they work good. It is very unusual to find such a high concentration of skilled smeUers in one institution of higher learning. I've read three of these newspapers now. All of you should read this paper with a critical eye. It is very, very good. It gives you a lot of information about our college. Afte r you ' ve read it; no. before you read it, smell it. Open it to the center page. place your whole face inside. now breath in deeply through your nostrils. Now that"s a guali1y newspaper. Something special about newprint and ink. SmeUed the new computers? There's plenty of them here for you to sniff. Seems somebody's thinking about the fuiure here. giving studencs the chance to catch the new wave. Choose your scent. Mkro or Main Frame. Take a couple of nice deep breaths around the buildings here. How about Seiter Hall. the Hedlund Center or the C·A Building. These arc simply cremendous facilities. These structures are available for student use at any hour of the day. You want to~ some enra wo·rk in an uncrowded environment? Stroll around tn the afternoon, you won ·1 have to wait in line to get into any labs or studios or faculty offices. Th e ma ny scents of education. Students at NJC have a cremendous opponunity to smell a great range of them. Our nose is very important. Remember. you're the one who's always following it. Go outside and have a smell around. Take a walk about campus and have a sniff for yourself. The North Idaho College bas • preny good scent.
OcL 28, 1983/ Cardlnal Review -7-
[ er arts/entertainment
J
Celebrate! Autumn! by Craig Johnson Autumn. Mcleish wrote, is a sun smudge on the smoky water. Keau described ic as the "season of mists and mellow fruitfulness." Autumn, a hacy season that speaks slo,.ly to our senses as dripping molasses. conJures up images or a person alone. sining somewhere warm by a window. Jc is a rich lime in which the anists spread fonh a banquet of iroage. hue. rhythm and the silence through which the leaves fall. It is the last bunt or maple, larch and oak into a kaleidoscope of colors that elicits 1n the mind a rummage sale of emotion. We rt>mcmbcr che leaves we pressed in wu paper and gave co our mothers. Mocher remembers the girl in sun.colored curls she gave binh 10. It i, 3 1ender, fragile season. The old. rn the gayes1 of funeral dress, make way for rhe young who musl gesiate lhrough the frigid winter. The young admire the old. their last di$play before they fade into something fetid. But ii is the silence :u,d smoke which makes autumn austere. The bird's chirp becomes conspicuously absent, deferring to the great power !hat will soon blanket the landscape in a manUe or white. Burning leaves in which kids once played becomes the incense which feeds the feeling of lhanksglving. After all, autumn is !he beginning or giving, a season of cclebra1ion, a pat on !he back in a climactic resolution that life is wonh living and always will be: a resolution thal makes all the barc·branched. skeletal CCTtlliolics of life bearable. So let"s jom in the autumn celebration. Let's endeavor 10 write our songs. compose our music or paint our pidures in a hymn that could best be summed up in these words from Nietzsche: "This secret spoke life herself unto me: 'Behold" said she. "I um that which must ever surpass Itself."
... t'
I
tJ.
'
Basil Fnuu phota
R.1.P.- -Tbe dying leaves of (aJJ muc their borne among the tombstones ofa~cw·y.
Mike Scrogle pbou,
r
BasU Fram. photo
~--ii
• • ••A•UT-U•MN-•AVENUE ___ - ~Y-e_Uo _ w_lea --'--"'v-e11_ b _lank __e_, _•_looe _ .Q _'_•_cree. __'_ ID _ Coeu.r _ _d _'_Al_eae __· - - - - - -~- wid - T-·O_ REST - --- ~ A_ vari _ e_ry_ or_ tea _ ,_·es _ ll_e_sca _ c_ce_red _ o_n_ tb_e_ _ _
Oct. 28, t 983/ Cardlnal Review -8-
moking
11010
The d r ummer fo r R•II b.nga
•w•y du_rln(l the OC?t, 20 concert In 1bc C· A Au d itoriu m. The
ASNIC-,pOll!JOred
ll\'CTII
people In 11.Uend.n~.
craig johnson
The stuff of dreams Berwe-en dusk a.nd night, when light bea>mcs illusion. my form congenls on a rock jutting i.nto the lnke.
I stand there. half shadow. half man, unable to IIIO\ e though the rocks form steps ll(T()SS the v.•ntcr. Somethlng black brushes b) and I'm petrified. As night n.nd fenr seal me to the- spot. I'm grnteful, for once. to awnke to the grating ooise of my nlnrm clock. Dreams :i.re :i shadow land where we lh·e out fanusies, sometimes terrifying, sometimes exceedingly pleasurnble. but always rich in hidden symbolism. The dream I described abo\•e is a reoccurring one for me which. doubtlessly. reflects some manifestation of my pcrsonnliry. But besides dreams being a therapeutic trap door through which psychologists and laymen investigate the unconscious mind, dreams .offer a rich world of image and emotion which artists ma) use when
CTC3ting an. Whether you are 11 poet. sculptor. painter or poner. the fodder of dreams is ripe and ready for the reaping ench night when your conscious mind goes slack loosening the resrrictions on your cognitive processes. While it is helpful to mow the several widely respected theories about why we dream and what dreams mean. dreaming a.s l\11 activity in itself is fun Md useful :is a tool for expanding our ,isua] and emotional concept of the v.orld. This expanded ,,Won, subsequently. should be reflected in the art we create. But for that to happen. first v.·e must re1Dembcr our dreams. the good a.nd the bad and all the savage linle utopias we visit at night when the lights go out. We must remember what v.·e say and do, bow we feel a.nd respond to the absurd situations that cou.l d only crnp up in our dreams. Freed from the rei.trictlons of logicul thinking, anything becomes possible, the possible unpredictable and the unprediet.ablc a truly meaningful insight. As corny as it may sound, we most dare to dream.
screw driver s, margaritas,
pino colodos
etc .
Burger and Fries in Bosket $1.50 on Wedne sday
1st draft beer Free on Friday I.D. required
lwl S40
Oct. 28, 1983/ Ca.nilnal Review - 9-
Latest fashions availnble for fall review at Dugout Fashion shows a1 the Dugout are a nev. nrea of interest. One may enjoy lunch and an afternoon cocktail while ~ g the season's latest styles. Every Tuesday. models from Style lotemarional Modeling in Spokane walk from 12ble to t.:1ble modeling winter 3.nd summer styles from suc:h stores as Mariposa and the Co\·er Up. The models display up to six different outfits and tell t.he price and mm or each article. This rype of style show• gives the fashion show audience the chance co look 31 the clothing cl~ly :i.od chat ,.;th the models person311y abour upcoming fashions. The style shows begin :11 noon on Tuesdays and last until I p.m. The Dugout is located at 1910 Selticc Way in POSI Falls. lo Coeur d' Alene the weekend enteruinment seems 10 focus around the loc::ll theaters. Playiog at the Showboat C'memas are "The De.ad Zone." "The Prodical." "Ne\•er Say Never Again." "The Big Chill" and "Eddie and the Cruisers." The Opera House an Spokane will feature two top bills. Jerry Reed will be in ooocen Friday. NO\'. 4 with shows at 7 p. m. and 10 p.m. Joan Baez will be in Opera Ho11SC on Monday, Nov. 6. Her concert will begin at 8 p.m. Tickets for either concert are nvaih1.ble at Total Eclipse located at 509 Sherm.in Ave. in Coeur d' Alene.
Basil Fram photo IN CONTROi,-- Sophomorc Rory Hanson adjusts some or the many Ugh ts used lo lhc C-A Auditorium.
Tech: Behind scenes magic by Craig Johot>-00 Editor', nole: This Is tho last In
11
1wo-pllli series on the Intricacies or producing • pl•y such ll!l " Tho Male
Animal." Behind every well-performed piny. there 1) n mynod or te<·hnici:tnb who. though ~cldom In the ,potlll(hl them~clves. ore In p11rt responsible for ma king the bloge, nrtor~ and the finished pruduct plcnbing 10 the audience. Ma~ter cnrprntcr) nnd electrician~. sound engancrr~. co~lumc coordina,. or\ ond wnrdrobc rnbtrc~!>c~ ore. but n few or the Invisible hondb fhnt fuss nnd primp the ploy along 10 it~ rlnnl production. Tl1c mon In chnrge of seeing that the job is done properly lb Le!> Baird. NIC's new auditorium technical dlrertor. From Colorado Spnngs. Colo., Bnird hh worn the hots of din:ctor, ne1or. critic ond tcchnlcinn over the many years he hab been im·oll•cd 10 the thcnter. His well rounded background in• eludes 11years of technicnl cs1;pcrien«working wilh 11 1he111cr compnny he helped form an Colorado. Currcnlly, he teaches classes 111 NIC in moke up design and stage.craft. Baird :.aid that he dr11ws his technicians from his stagecr11f\ class. which pro\idcs h1) studenb " ith muc-h needed hands on c.xpc_rience. ··1 have le.Ids io he~ who literally don't know how ro hammer II nail " Baird .said. ' "Some llrC intimidated by power tools, or they hove no iden where 10 get
propi. even though rhey have lived here all their lives. "So I have to ride their asses and brow beat them until the Job gels done. "Then the world opens up, the clouds break nod th ev are human agam." · · 'The) feel hl.e the\ a n "TCsde allig1110~ after that." he added . Baird b01d that he t'ipeeu a lot from hib technical cre\1 and that he enJO_\~ wort..ang "llh older students. Although the IC<'hnac.il UJ)Cct) of "Th~· Male Animal" are less complicated 1h11n a mus1c:il. Bllrd $I.id, technlClll design •~ DC\ er :.ample " h 's a one ,hot go e\er; night." be said. You C4n't edit out foul-ups hl.e you can "1th mo, re), Baird said "For eumplc." Batrd said. ··apes can brell).., lamp:. and 1nsuumen1s can go ou1. iictors can l ict holes in sets. sets Coln fall down or disappear and God tnow~ "b:11 eli.e." B.1ird ~aid that esperi111l) during production "eek, he 11nd h1:. ere" must wort.. , er;· methodically to decrease 1h11t m11.rg10 of e-1TOr. "Once th1u is done, things :.hould go well," he said. This year's 1eclinica.l ere"· for "'The Mole AoimaJ'' includes production Stage M11.nger and ~faster Elecuician Rory Hanson: ~faster Carpenter John Hughei., Sound Engineer Lonnie Keck , properties coordinators Chud Jennings 11nd En1: Boueo~. cosru_me coordin111ors Sue Holman :and Lance Babbitt nod Wardrobe Mistress Cbarleoe Goude.
(_____s_c_r_e_e_n_ s_c_e_n_e___J
'Dead Zone' a big dud bJ Craig Johnson "The Dead Zo~··: nc,er h;i,s there been a more descripuve title for a movie. It describes the entll'C middle se!VJ]ent of this la1es1 screen ndnp1ion of a Stephen King hom>r DO\d. The plot begins try unrodoong the chanie1ers of Johnny. played by Christopher Walken. :and Sanh, played by Brooke Adams. The) a.re high school teachers in love who teach middle,dass students in a small town Q!Jcd Cuilerod: lo a fev. short SC'COC$ •e lcMn that they are crazy about e3c-h other and arc going to so, e themselves for m.amage Bur one rain) nigb1. after the good-bye kiss on the doorstep. Johnny drives sm.ack LDIO I i:nilk t.mker W I bas cruhed on the road. The nen time be ......tes up. five years will h:ive passed. Shon!} after a rtto1en· that lta\·cs him pani.l.Jly crippled. Johnny learns that Sarah is roamed and has a kid. He also learns rb.at be bas some sort of empillhic. psychic ability which allows him to see tnlO people's minds. ~ he touches a nurse's hllJld. he sees her daughter hunched in the corner or her room that is bemg consumed by fire. In the vision be 1s in the room too, lying in bed and burning. When the grip is broken be tells ber to save the child, which she does. So Mr: King has pbyed his first card - a child's fear of being burned to a cinder - &lid IS tffec:tJ\-e. But for the aen 40or so IIWIUtes, the screen is unblessed with a petulant Wolken curnng bis r1.1e a.od ill·begonu g1fl A bnef spark IS rekindled v.hen Sarah visiis him. She bnnp her kid. they laugh, become fnends and consu mmate their previou.s desire. Then. ~he goes bJ.Clc to her basba.od, "ho, beLDg a camp.aign solicitor for senaconal eandid.:ue Greg Sll.llson, will fortuitously knock on his door one day. In the meantime 1,1,e receive I long-awaited spine ungJe:r when Johnny decides to help the wnff duawer Q;ho the Ca.stJeroc:k killer IS. When be touches the h:ind of the latest ,;cum, he is traa:sponcd 10 the time and location of the killmg. The tiller turns oat to be the shenff's deputy who slipped off u.nnoti«'d. The> find him at bome and before they can apprehend him. he jams his race down on a pair of long, thin-bladed barber's shears. Nice going King, but yoo could ha,e helped us gore fa.n::uics our sooner. From there, the IDO\ic churns on ro what all the preceding events were supposed 10 be building up to. And. )CJ>, )'OU guessed n. the future or the power-hungry Stillson is the cataclysm whicb forces Johnny to his lin3..1 a.ct. But if you w-.01 10 know what Johnny sees his future 10 be 3tld what be does abo11t it, )OU'll ha,-e to pny your bucks at the ridet counter like everyone else.
Sept. 30. 1983 Cardinal Re,·lc"'-10-
Game room fa.cilities big attraction b) Kelly Ward
From pong to pool. A.,tcroid, 10 Zuxon. the IC gnme room has somc1hing for e\el')one. De:in Bcnnen. quden1 ac:-m•ilics roordinntor and four-year caretaker of the Sub... a,· G:ime Room e,;tim11tc,; 1h,11 (>()()-800 people wi1lk through the door, of the cntcrumment C"Cnter e,eT) day There arc nll I.ind, of lhing, 10 do III the game room. Bennett ~.ud. B~idc~ the video gilmcs. there arc alw three pool 1ablcs. two pingpong tables. a TY lounge 11.nd 1,,0 ,terc\> loungci.. The ,·,dco games like C'ent1pedc. Donl.cy-Kong and Robotron nrc popular, Bennett said. hut use of the T\' lounge ho, increa\cd in lhl.' la\l )C,ir. The game~ and tables 3l'C ,upplied b) AII-Amcnc:-nn Amusement. 11nd NIC pro, ides the ,;pace. Bennett so1d. The outdoor rttre3llon program and the gnme room arc given funds for one budget b, the ASNIC. and according 10 Bennett. they budget for abou1S I0.000 1 year.
Checking results Student Rick Robinson demoostnues an Apple in the new mkTocomputer lab for NlC President Barn Schuler and Idaho Sell. Wllllam Moore. From bis po.slllon oa the Joint Finance· and Appropriations Com.mluce, Moore ..-as able to obtain SI00.000 Crom the Legislature last spri.Dg to equip the lab.
Vets club dance se t tonight The NIC vets club is sponsoring a Hallo... een cosrumc ball tonigb.t lit the Iva Lee Dance Hllll on Scltice Wav. Advnn~ tickets nre ;iv:i.il;ible in the SUB at the veterans information booth for a SI don:1tion and two c:ms of food, 11ccording to Oa,·c l.3hti, \'ct club coord1nn1or. lickcts will be a,·aih1blc nt the door for 11 S2 don11tion and ra-o cans of food. or a SJ donation. All food is donated to the Coeur d' Alene Food 8.utl,, Lahti said. Two bond~ will be perfonning, altemanng c,el'} hour from 8 p.m. to 2 a.m .. Lahti said. The Country Stars will be playing count.T)'·we.stcrn. and the rock'n'roll ~d IS not yet known, !Ahti S11Jd. Pnzcs u~II be 81\'en 101he cop four costumes. and dooc prue5 ...,11 be drav,n, Lahti :iddcd. A hnm. ;i turkey, free psoline, eases of pop. meat cenific:1ttes and cenifie:ues for free go.mes of pool ot the Comer Pocket are 10 be given 11way. Lahti said.
IC tudent to he used as extras in Warner Brothers production About 200 NIC students ore needed filming a new movie called "\'ision Quesi" on the week of Nov. 8-11 for the Hospice of North Idaho cha.nty Warner Bro1he~ is going to shoot a crowd scene 11 Spokane F:tlls Com· munity College :tnd donate SJO per person 10 1he Hospice Foundati~n. according to Tony Stewart II Hospice board member ond on NIC instructor. 10 help in
The filmmg will take all day. 11.nd two or three organi2a11ons will provide limousines for some of the NIC students. The rest will go in buses. "It's really ucittng." Stewart said.
The Hospice board of directors Is picking other members from the community but Warner Brothers
want~ mostly college-age people. he S111d. Some \lude nts will be needed for two day, because there will be wme clO\C· Up ,hots with the actors and uctre~scs. TI1c people t1ro11nd them will ho ve to come back for more close-ups. The Ho~p1cc Foundation was started in Europe 11nd has now spread throughout the United Stotes. The Coeur d' Alene chapter of Ho~picc ~erve~ the live northern countic, in Idaho ond has :about 82 people working for it. Locally, there 11rc two paid workers for Hospice and the rest arc volun teer. "We have 11 neat group of people involved here.·· Stewart said. Anyone wishing to pnrticipare in the movie should contnct Tony Stewart.
Trustees, faculty disagree over NIC hiring process b) Ric J . Kast NIC will employ an ac3demic vice president beginning July l , 1984, but just how the hiring pl'OC'Css will be conducted is still 3.0ybody's guess. In n propos11I to the Board of Trustees in September. President Barry Schuler proposed t.luu a three,member screening comminee, coos1sting of himself. the ,·oaitionaJ director and one facultv member. handle screening of the applications. conducting intcr\'iews ,.;th c:andidatcs and narrowing 1he choices down to three candidates. Schuler would then make the fina.l decision llS to u hich candidate would be recommended to the board. according 10 his plan. The board would then mnke the final decision. The board appro,ed Schuler·s plan in the September board meeting and we.re waiting for the facuh) assembly 10 elect the foculry member to be on 1hc three-member screening comminee. But 1nMead, the facull)' o.ssembly sent Micbe:lJ Bund}. the nssembly presidem. 10 last week· s boa.rd meeting with l counter proposal. Under the faculty 3SSCmbly's counter proposal. a "search committee.·· composed of one member from each academic di,ision. would conduct a national search for a "ire president and bring the three leading candidates to the campus for intenic,, s by both the search comminee and the presideo1. The ~cUdates would meet the faculty 11SSembly in an infonn11J r~p11on. The seardl comminee would then rank 1he thrtt candidates and forward this r3nk order 10 1hc president.
The president would then select one candidate to recommend to the board or reject all three a.od instruct the search comnurtee to continue its search.
subcommittee could discuss I.he candidates. make a collective decision and seod uhat decision back with lhe screening com mittee member for input. Bow the fuulty u.embly chooses to respond to that second proposal shoold be a decision well thought out by the faculty. The boa.rd was quite clear on one major point; President Schuler wi ll be: involved in the hiring process from day one. The academic vice president will be the administ· r3Live official at Ml that will have the most dtrect contact with the faculty. They will w:int lo have iU much input as possible. But H the faculty llS~bly rejects the board's second proposal. a pohucal merry-go-round could result. And even if they were successful in elimina1:"1g Schuler from the earl> stages of the screening process. the president could keep that merry·~ round going. rejecting a string of c11nd1da1es u~til the research comminee provides the three finahsts that Schuler wants 10 interview. It would be grossly naive to think a poliu~ ba~llc over the hiring process of the aca demic vice president could result In anything less th~n. bard feelings and political scars between the odmin1SUlll· ion and the faculty. , But if the faculty assembly nccepts the board s second propou!. it would be a wise political movt Co~ Schuler 10 full} oonsider a.ny input from the facull) member of the screening commiuec aod ihc subcommiucc's desires during the ongoing screen· ing process.
c:::·:::;;-~~i
board. se,•eral board members spoke out in opposition to the new plan. Beverly Bemis. vice pTCSident of the board. said the facul1y's counter proposal laded reasoning. .. 11 sounds too unreal." Bemis said. "ft sounds impossible." Bemis pointed out that the president's parucipa· tion must begin right from the Stan. The academic ,ice president would be second in command at NIC. she so.id. a.od that mandates that the president be in,olved in the screening process. But Bemis and the rest of the board stressed the imponance of faculty input and sent Bundy bad to the facult} assembly. suggesting a 12·membcr sub· committee be elected to ad,isc the one faculty member or the proposed three-member committee during the screening process. The board's second proposal sticks 10 the three-member plan previously appro~cd. bu1 nIIO\!o"S the f3culty member of th.at com.mince to keep the faculty subcomminee informed of the proc:eS5. The
OcL 28. 1983 Cardinal Re\ ie,- -11-
Campus hair styks -- the long and the short of it photos by Basil Franz, Dan Breeden and Laurie Bristow Tereu Balbi models the short look In hair.
Frcshma.n Am) Sped n ~ her r{ghl to freedom of upresslon by dyeing her hair thttt dlfftra1I mlon.
Mlccl ra, anl has beT own shle and Ill.es to cu l her ball' bersc:U.
Sophomore RudJ Federici hu ta .. en thrtt )hA lo 11ro• hi, ha1r !hat he uauall) "'can, 1n a pon) tall.
~1.etbaJJ pl•) er Je") ••JR" Rl.mblcrt 10 l.eep his hair i.bort for sporu.
tu.c~
Bob Johnson dons bl~ glasses and a plgtal.l-lil.c balr 51) le for the Ol'" ) ear at '\lC.
r
..
Ocl. 28. 19&3/ Canllnal Review -12-
Wide lolld Conslru etlo n conllnues on lbe six-fool-wide bicycle palb 1ha1 II being bulll parallel lo the dike road around lhc fl(lrlmc1er of the ram pus.
Bull Fram. pho«>
GLIDER October 25 to November 5
TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY cover charge $2 girls & $3 guys free drinks 8 to 9 THURSDAY Buck night
FRIDAY SATURDAY free drinks 8 to 9 $3 co\ler charge
_____ .,,
Hayden Lake
Oct. 28, 1983/ Cardinal Review -13-
• • dent in crime body instructor helps put Auto by Wuda Stepbem
What do people do when they find their car scratched from a fender-bender or car door and all that remains is paint from the vehicle that strud them? Most people would kid: the fender, but Oive Grimmett, instructor of the auto body shop at NJC, would examine the painr chips. determine the make and the year of the vehicle, and possibly deve.lop a surking as a volunreer with the criminalistic lab at NIC for five years, Grimmett has helped solve a variety of cases from hit-and-runs to boat wrew. The lab supplies him with the p.aint samples from the vehicle involved and with the aid of paint books. microscopes and erpcriencc. he must determine the make of the vehicle. Grimmett said because of his experience in seeing cars and working with paiors. he is often able to easily identify the paint samples just by looking at them. Look_ing at the top coat of a paint chip is not all that ls Involved in matching samples. however. Several times the lop will match but the undercoats or primer will oot. One case Grimmett assisted with rnvolved a Corvette made up of ports from several other Corvettes. The car had also been repainted many times. Grimmett was given red point chips scraped Crom the right dash and noor, yellow chips scraped Crom the left headlight. and black and white chips scraped Crom the right door. Hi6 task was to determine the original factory color and whether or not the yellow samples matched the yellow In II photo of the car. Grimmcu wai, able to find that the red paint came from the original 1963 Corvcl1e, the yellow came from a 1966 Corvette, and the white came from a 1968,1982 Corvcnc. The bind apparently matched the red , but he wiu, not oble lo varify the yellow as the same ns that in the photo. TI1c suspc<.1 in this case had been involved in a 1hcf1 r111g spc.cioli,ing in Corvettes. Grimmcll's expcnise led the police to the right suspect, a man v. ho wu later convic1cd of first degree murder io Clcurw,11cr County for 1he beating death of his son. according 10 Ned Stunrt, head of the crime lab "It is soti~fying to varify." Grimmett ,mlle.d. Approximately 25 of thc~c cnscs come into the crime lab a y1?11r, Senior Crirninalist Shelly Shannon \aid. and Gnmmcn ha~ been extremely benefid:tl LO 1hc lab in tho!>c case,. According 10 Shannon. Grimmcn hru, helped solve Cbes ~uch O!, boot wrccls by determining which boat struck which.
auu fl'8JI% photo A CLOSER LOOK-Ohc Grlm:mln cnmh1rs a paln1 chip throagb a microscope.
Grimmett said he once matched :i broken parking light lens 10 that of a Datsun pickup to help :.olvc I case. There is no w11y a criminalist person could p1cl: tho1 up." he said. So far he h.u not had to go to court to tesnfy on any of the cases, however. Criminal!S1 Wally Young ~aid that this is because he has a good reputation nnd his "ord hu nC\·cr been qu~oned. "Everyone knov.-s Oive Grimmett is the expert oo paint." Young said. One year v. hen cedar was e.rpcnsl\'e and \·Cf)· popular, Young continued, Grimmett helped the lorest scr\'iCC to catch a thief. The forest service marts the crtts that are ready
to harvest v.ilh p1in1 so they cnn be cut down. The suspect in this case mlll'lted his own trees and cut them down. He was caught. and because Grimmett determined that his paint did not mau:h that of the forest senicc, he was found guilty. Along ,dth 1e:1ching in the auto body shop. Grimmcn, a father of nine, is an nctive member of Ins chu rch, the Church of Jesus Christ of Laner D:iy Saints. in which he has ~rved as bishop. · I normally sandv.ich this criminolistic thing in bctv.eeo," he laughed. Gnmmcn. who has been with NIC for IS years, $lid he enjoys Ins Job immensely 3nd looks forw:i.rd to another IS years. He aJso added that he looks forward to helping solve more crimes.
LOOKING GOOD-- Grlmmcu watches as swdeot Robert Case paints a ca.r.
alUO body
Basil f'r&D:Z p
Oto
'Your race is your nation': Butler b) Bruce Mallen A basic pnnc1ple of physics states 1h:11 no l\\O objcns can occuP' the ~l me place 111 1he ume time. Follow,ng 1ha1 premise Pastor Richard G. Butler of the Aryan !'iauons Church of Jesu~ Chnsi Chmuan su.tes th at there is no room for l-lac:~J tn a world of ,.h1tes. Butler and his cbtmb ha"e been the fOCJII point of constant c:rtllctsm ~~ce he came to Nonh lcl2ho and cstab· lished hts church at Haydeo Lue 1n 1976. Thot criticism has come from area church leaders. public officws and la"' enforcement agenct~. Recently. the group has m:ehed national expo,;urc in People Maganne and on ABC\ Nightline news ~hov. So why docs Butler stay?
"'The reason rm here 1$ because "hue pt'ople nrc here.'' Butler !wlld ·· A 101 of people nrc hypocrites. TheJ mo\'C to Idaho from the big cities because they don·1 want their kids bent up by blncks. and they don't ".i.nt 1hcir dn11gh1cr. raped by bl:tcks. But th<'v don't want 10 ndmit it." On the ocher band, Butler is no1 3fro1d to stot e his beliefs. Wh11e is nght. he s:iid. adding th:tt his dor~ is to 1ry to prcsenc and pro1ee1 ihc \\ bite race
··t to,·e my own ltand. I h:ue what 3 101 or 1hcm do, bu1 I love them anywn} because I to, e the lnw of God."
tecoon. and substanance of our Aryan
Race and the o,ili:iation of our own iuml ',:irion....Tbe Chief Elerume of this Go,.Tmmcnt. no..- and fore\·er. IS Jesas the Christ.'· T"'em,·-~ght signatures an- affixed lO the bottom of the -10-anide doc:u· ment. ,.h,ch CO\·en e,.;erytlnng from c11izen~h1p io 1he na1ion to the e~tablishment of a Judic1ar~· and execu11~~ branch, a izn.nd JUI)" and a m1litl:i ~ lal ter bas b«o one of the ke1 1~suef that has J ~ local la" enforcemem offil.-., a.nd drav. n public cnll· a~m. ' Tbef re offici:&h) out lhttc tr~ mg to tell peoople tb:11 11,e J.tt e, 11 l>C'ause •e abide bv the !av.~ of n:&turc," Buller S:tid. • A, :a reference. Butler quote!> a Proiessor Wilson. u.ho pH! a Sp,!Cch at H:m"l!d regarding the prot«tton llf :a na.oon.
·• ...a nauon has a nght. and ts under an obhj?a1100 to p~n e it\elf and its member~: it h.a.s b, a necessan con~equ~~, a n~ht to do e, er)"trung It can do. 10 crder- to accomphsh and ,«-11re (~~ obJe-cts," Bui altboogb he Is ttld} to we up ,trm, " dc:f'end h~ oauon, Buller ts confident that hi~ words will be enough. "The reason I.be Japanese arc so £ar ahud of the rest of the wo rld
'/ hate blac J.·s because th ey are the oppo. ire of u·hites.'
HALLOWEEN PARTY at the
SIL VER MOOSE SALOON Monday Oct. 31st
Thlt to,e of God and of his fellov. man has led Butler to declare his church ~ a no.lion. sep:trate from the regulations and jurisdiction of federal and local la". •·Your race ls )Oar na.tlon;• asscns Butler. "'Thnt' s t.he lav. of God.·· So on Juh 10. 1982. the Ar\'an '11:iuons filed a common la" conrran in the Koo1enni Count, Counhouse that prod:umcd their so,ere1gnty from the L n11ed States. Under \:irural L:lv.. it 1s a reqwremcot for n group of people 10 get 1oee1her and determine their o"' n d~tin). Wi1h their document utled the Neheminh To"nship Ch:incr. that 1s ~ h:11 the Aryans did. ·•we the people, as signators and subscribers...do state lhnt our intent 3S herein expressed is 10 es1ablish self-government :imong ourselves nnd our ov.!Jl posterity. . ··we declare ;ind announce and intend that thts government and all terr!tory subject to its control is dedicated 10 the presen•ation , pro-
tcchnologiccll} is beouse the; h3.\'C racial pun~ 10 their country.· Bueler said. "I ean·1 think of a l'lllUI ...-ho lutes himself more than a man u.bo doesn·t u. ant to sta} v.ith his own people. ··u black.s lo,ed blacb, thC) would li\·e "'itb blacks." .\nother belief of Buller is tha1 there 1s no such thing as pcrfCC'I lO\c "'ithou1 perfen h:ite. '·I bate e, erJ tb ln g th:it is 1he opposne 01 ti!e Ten Commandments,·· 1he Pastor 5,nd. ··1 h:11e destrocuon of the etl\1ronment. rape. drugs. alcohol and other pencrsions tluu dcstroct the minds of our \""OUtb. and I hate bla.ck.s b~~aus_e they :ire the oppos11e of U.OllCS.
Buder believes tn bis cause. aod he say_s that eventually. people will recogmze the credibility of his st.atement.s. "The trut h has nevtt been really accepted by the world o,·cr.'' he said. " But Jesus v. a.sn't accepted either. If the world llCCCpts you. ,-ou are not of Him.·· •
COSTUME CONTEST
HIGHBALLS ALL NIGHT LONG
entertainment
by
WIZZARD
,
Oct. 28, 1983/ Canllnal Review - 15-
Reapportionment NIC instructor's plan wins judicial nod by Rlc J. Kast
Tony S1ev. an had a bener idea; that idea ha.s altered the course of Idaho's future. Srewan. a political-science profe~sor at 1\IC, was contacted m 1982 by a multi·intereq group of plaintiffs "'ho had sued the na te, charging that the Legislature·~ 1982 Reapport ionment ?Ian \·iolated the ~,a,ecun,111u1ion Alter bca.rlng!i in May, 1982, First Distnct Judge Dar Cog, .. en dcchm:d the 1982 Idaho Leg, ,lature'i; Rcapponionmcnt Plan uncon\tituuonal bcnu!>C 1t did nor follow county bciundc rics " hen re-d1sme1mg tbe stall He ,Rave the lcg,~laturc un11I Aprtl. 1983, rr, pro,·uk a re-di\lricung plan that wu ;,cccptable. Co~\"cll told rhe legi\lature that if one was not provided by April. 1983, he would adopt a plan of hi!. own. He al&O warned that this could result in a special 1983 ek'Cl1on to put the new reapportionment plan into effect before rhc 1984 legislalive i.es~ion. Srcwa.ri uld the Le~sl11ure gerrymandered the 1982 plan by forming districts to insure that no incumbent senators would face each other in the 1982 elcct1ons. According 10 Stewart, the Lcgislnrure's plan does foll within the 10 percen t popularlon dcvior on allowed by rhe U.S. Constitution. bu1 their pion splits city. county, language 11nd racial minority bounderic~ in 43 of 44 counties. " Disrric:r.s should nol be drawn In such a way for either party to pr-c-dclermine the: outcome of an election," Srewo rl said. "By doing thi~. they weakened the lnflucnc:e of rhe stoic' s voters.
" Thi• co n£uaes the voters nnd redu ces vorer turnout." He ~aid o good ex:implc of thb occurred ID Coeur d'Alene, where s1ic precinct\ from downto,..n "ere shifted from Koorcnol County 10 Sho~honc County. " In Coeur d' Alene, ns well os other citie~ in the ~loll!," St.cwort sold, "people living on opposite sides of the street voted in ~cp:1r111e dbtrlcrs.' ' The Le1tl&laturc's plan al"° split the C~ur d' Alene In dian Tribe into lour ,•oung district~. BS well h )pl111ing the Hi\pnn1c populntion of Canyo n County into three voting di)trkts. In June, 198.3, the Idaho S131c Supreme Coun confirmed rhc dcci~ion handed down by Cog~"cll, and )Cnt the.- eo.se bad. 10 him for further hearinK), Ar the conclu)ion of wee~~ of hc:iring in Jul) ond Augu~t. Cog~wcll once again dclarcd the 1>101e Lcgisla1urc's pion unconsihu11on:1I He 11dop1ed Stewarts\ plan 14,B and ordered it 1mplcmcntcd ID the 1~84 c:lec.-tion~ Stewan said he S()('nt 17 months ond mvested over 400 hours devising rco.pporhonmcn1 phns 3nd collected data for Idaho that adhered 10 the U.S. Constitution as well as the Idaho Constitution. Stewut'• plan, a1ao k:DoW11 u the Cogs....ell plll.Il, intro<luces " Ftoterial D1stri~" to Idaho. ThLS plan trimmed lhc existing plan from 35 to 33 districts while incorporating seven Oo1crial districts. The Oo1crial dist ricts add seve n senators and J,I representatives l'o the legblaturc.
A fiotenal district is a regional \'oting district containing se,·eraJ smaller legislau,·e districts Stewan said 10 bener understand how I.he Ooterial ~y'l:rcm works. one must c:umine one It wort.\ like this. In KootenaJ Cou.nt) , \oters '<ill ,ote m Distnct 2. There will be two sutt Senate sea1s in District 2. Each ~cat consi)IS of · ne seo.itor and t•o represcntathe\. Thus. each Kootenai County ,-otcr "·ill ,-ote foT oo.o ~n.ators and four repr~entati\'es. Bui m addiuon to that. Kootenai Count} ..,n be included ID Fl"'-1:rw Di'itrlct 4. Floteru.l Distnct 4 encompasses legt..l:.11,e vottnR District~ I. 2 :ind 3. This means th:it DiMrict I !Bonner and Boundet)· Coun11e,1. D1smc1 2 !Kootenai Counn I and District 3 CSho!>hone and Benewah Counties) 11. ill each ,-ore for their separate district seatls) on the ballot. and then the) will vote collect1\'ely m Floterial DistTict -1. Each Ootcr!aJ dJ.strict coo lairui one sen a tor and r,.. o represeni.tives Stew3n pointed our that this 5ystem. at minimum, au1oma1ically doubles the legi, lau"e representation for C\'ery ldah<>kn. 0
Stewart said thnr the plan· s populauon de,11-1100 is only 9.65 pc-rcent for the entire sute. a.nd that the Ooteri:il d1Mricts offer several other :ad,•anug~. One ad va nt age, he S3id. is that the noterial distrin1. fall v.uhin the similar bounderie~ n°"' used by the judicial and executive branches of the sute fo r srea representatio n. He soid this offers an opponuruty for nll three br11.nches of tht' go,cmme-ot 10 ,.. ork closcr together on various problems 11.11hin a ~pecific region. Ir also means tha1 ..-bile the Ootenal senator and re preseniati\'CS mav not li\'e in one's specific lcg~loth·e distrin. they " Ollld ha,c 10 re.\lde in one of tht' legr.slath·e districts within their no1erial and l'Ould campaign in each dutnct 1"hb cicpow~ all°"'s lhe voters of those smaller district) to become famih.u .,,,,h the andida1e·s poliue&J platform Addi tionalh . tf the go,·croor has a concern regardi ng a s pecific problem a.ilbin an) 8" en Ootcri:al dmnct of the sa1e. he oo conl4Ct that no1eri11l lcgislauvc delegation. ''The) cao u i.1,t '<Ith the spec1f1c lcgislath c problem from tbt' ~ ected arc• " StM>a.n said. He sud this manducs more commuo1c1uon ber,.. cco rbe leg1slau,e membc-rs. rcso.lUng 10 more :mcmion a.od inpm dealing v.1th the specific unpact
f
t
• • •
• • •• I•
legisl:ui,e bod} ~gaily l)liS legislation in 1984 before rhe NO\ ember elections. Srev.a.n said he •as very optimistic concern mg the pl:unnffs cue before the Idaho Supreme Court. He uid he uicd the aggregate rrua1hematil:ill mc(hod 10
lll"e'll.
dc-1sc the rcapporuonmeol plans for the plaintiffs.
Usu11II), in ca.,,es hl e !.his. the judge's decision •'iIJ be appealed b~· the defendants. But ID th.is c:ise, bc'C'au~c the defenda.ots 113, e indicated se,.eraJ stetb m thetr appeal that would be ume consummg, Coeur d'Alene attorney Ra) Givens filed an appeal IIIOCIOo with w Idaho Supreme Court to t':rped.ite the c:ise ~ Ida.ho Supreme Coun gJ'llllted uat motion, 11long "11.h • cross-appeal b} the defendants, and the ~ ..;n be uguec1 ~ - 1. Gi, ens said the plaintiffs were conttrncd as to whether the Legislature to convene in Janury would be a leg,J body, and l'llDStdering that the d1stricts "Trc declllT'cd W1consti1u1ion:al, could the p = i
''Wbca I wu ODouned by tb.e plain11ffs to draw up II re-d1s1 r1c11og plan 1h11 preserved co unty bordtts I v.anted to use the mathematical formula lhu the courts used:' Stcwan said. ·•1 didn't just pic.k the a.ggregue method because the plnintiffs told me to.·· He satd ~ chose I.he method that hos been t)picall) and 1r:1ditiooally accepted by the U.S. Supreme Cow,.
f,; •••
• • 'f. t • t t t I f t
Tony Suwart
t t I 110 ••• "'". t ••
Ste....-~rt said that ii has been an rnsp1ring and cduc:uiom l process 11.11d that he was pleased to be able to come up with a plllD that offers fair and equiuble legislative representation for all Idahoans.
-.... ..~. ....~
.
\\'h'" 1h, don" fee" ''"' ucdh 1he oooL ,.r,-,.,h••B '""" o{ s,og,o,n', 7 & 7UP /I •""''"' '"' ti• tl<e hgh< - beol gc<s·, 1ho, ... ..=. ··-~ . .... -.;o{Soog,om "'" & d•" 7 i: r Real ,ho,< WPP<'"' ond. '")'Y'd m modm«on-th, ,,.,feet po,tnm [o, d""" {"" ·-
----
Dance feier stirs with Seren & Seren Srogrtlm~
Oct. 28. 1983/Canilnal Re,lew - 17-
Bennett bends over backward for outdoor rec by Du B,eedea
Thett is no doubt >ou've seen b1m. He', about f>.foot-2. acears v.ire-frame glasses. ha, a big musuche and ,s consun~y gening thinner. PerhaJ)\ >ou·,e on!)' caupt ghmp~s of him in Oc:eting moments. but )OU ,e seeo him. "That'~ a re11l problem ... Dean Bennett -.11id . v.hcn calkmg on his ~ I ) ' "I try 10 let people knov. v.hett I am :all the umc. but II docsn·1 alluy~ v.ork." Bcnnen is usually hard 10 find due 10 his r.-,e or su official Jobs th.i come under one or more of the follov. 1ng rnle\ activities director. director of mtramuraJ spons, and outdoor recreauon program director As the outdoor recre111on director. Bennett is making plans 10 pro,.,1de interested -.1udent\ wnh weekend ae11v111es runinp in the near future Already on the agenda and 1n the final rugcs 1s a 1..,. 0 .night t.rip planned over the weekend of Nov. 4. " We'll be h1kmg up the Independence lreek Trail." Bennell said. "v.h1ch 1~ a low altitude backpac~. 1np 10 avoid being shot 111 by California hunters. The group will leave on Friday afternoon. Nov. 4. and return Sunday evening Even though l(roup excursions 11. 111 be planned th roughout the year. the Outdoors Ac11v1t1es Program (OAP) does have plenty of equipment IO rent to students. Bennett said TI1e OA P hos evcrythmg for the backpad.crs. from the major nems. such D tents. haclcpacks and ,lrcp1nl( bags to compact gu \to,·cs and pads 10 ,lccp on. l'or the aquauc -rrundrd pcr~on. 1hr program can wpph four-man raft\, kuyal\ and canoe• . plus all the equipment that gor, with cnch, 8enneu ,n,d I-or thn,c morl· into winter ,pcm, there ;ire: also ,no" \hnc, av11lablc, he added. The outdoor pro1<ram oho ,panwr~ "41mc 11.ccl.cnd cru,~ coun1n 11,unnR tn~ a, "ell :as ,no" campinp and sno" cav11111, Bennett ,11id As rar 11s 1mcc, go. the) arc l l' tualh quttt• rcawnablc. Ocnnc:11 ,..11d " We: ca.lied up all of the cullc,(e, 10 the ,um1und1ng aru and a\l..cd "ha.t the, chul(c:d. · · he ,aul "1hen "crook on o,cr1111c of 1ho,c: 3nd o,ct our prices " " We v.111 .ilw ncgo1111c on prn:c~. • Oenncll ,a,d "If 11 loob 111..e II might he o ,low "ec:1..cnd m11nc, ""c· "1: nught g1,c ,uu a better pnct on the ,ruff " In the po,,. dl..c<1un1 t1t'kc1, h11,c hct•n o,all;able 10 \ludcn1, to a nc.irb~ ,k1 rt\On Hn"c,cr, Bcnncn ,:aid Sch" l·111cr ,1..1 area 1s not gning h> oflcr 111:,count passc, 1111, 1ca1 for l'Oll('gr ,tudent\ M farnh, . "A, tar as I'm ~>no:rned, the, (~th"c111cr) are ju,1 culling th!'1r own 1hroul\." Bc11nc11 \Jtd "l',e 1101 {)() t.icult) member, "ho "ant u,C'r 300 d1"'"tlun1 p.i,,c, and can't get them. no, h> mcn111>n the ,1udcn1 bod,." But for tho,c "ho ~~n·1 or "on I bc h1111n~ 1hc \lopes ut ch"c11zcr. there arc 1rn1.111vc plan~ 10 ,pend Jon. I) 12 slmn11 in Jod.,on Hole. W~ o, Bcnnc.-11 \t.1d Other tnp, might include a ~pring-brcal.. tnp. either 10 the San Juan Island, or 1hc Oh mp,c Coa,1, a pos"blc four-da) tn(I o,er Th:anl.sg1HnQ. i cro~, roun tn bkl expedition 1hc 11.ce\.cnd of W3shinglun', b1nhda, and ~(lnng ri,cr tnp, in rafh, c.an~ and or h )fu "Wc',c nc,er rcall) had an1• trouble "1th tntcrc,1." Bcnncu \.lid "On, • 1hc-1ntctt)I beg,~ II \la\ualh '>13n) building and \nu11. balling 11\clf " For an~ lnformauon on the upcoming trip~. lntcn:\ted people ,hould 1al\. 10 Bcnne11 or chcd the bulletin boards on 1hc out)1dc of h1) offil:1!.
[
er sports
l
Dan Breeden photo Oalcloor rttmllJoa Ol.rtt1oc lku Ben.nca fiL, Internal supports made or ctbafoam Into the college' ) no bn alr.s for added stal>WI).
ClrrTl~C IT TOGEnfER-
PE.-;at PLSf:IEJl-
Dean fkn.
oe11 mulh o,cr paper woric In his ofllce la the SI.J.B b~mcnt.
I
)
--
j ,
\
-
01111 Brttden pbolO
Qi
Oct. 28, 1983/ Cardi.nal Review - 18--
(00k
soys nationals a possibility by Shan Aldt-nnan
l\5Uonals 1s not ju~t a pipe dream for the NIC women· s volleyball team. At'ttlrdiog to Conch Ro)' Cook. it ,~ 11 ,cry re:i.listic goal The team won only one or three matche~ 111 the fir~ regional tournament and mu\t,. mall three matche,; at the 1>crond reg1onol toumnmen1 th IS wcelr.cnd at Ricks College In Retburg 10 quahfy for nationnl<, ho,,ever. Cool. said that losing the team'< leading blocker to an .1nlclc injury nnd two other members to illne<s o.11 rontributed to the team's \\Caknesse< during the 11.Sl rcgionnJ tourm1.men1 held in Ontmo. Ore. • Despite their disnd"antngcs. the girl~ oll ployed Ilk~ they wanted to win," Cook ~Md "I belie\'e II was a good experience as it helped to improve their atutude5 and compt'tittve spirit under pressure." Coot s:ud he 1s generally pfeascd with the tct1m·~ crror1~ and sold he kds they arc putung the pieces together "We are ,,orkin8 togcther n lot better," team member Barbie Vandenberg said. "h JUSI took wmc time because we haven't played together very long."
Regionals Nov. 5
Runners at SCC Saturday
Miki! Scroggie photo UPfllLL BATTl.£-Cross roo.ntry 1"11.DMrs Ouid Smith and Joe Wcadlck SW1 !heir a&St!DI 10 the top or lbe hJll near PoU.lcli Mlll la C«-m d'Akue.
Nov. 6 in SUB
Pool pro to put on show If pool is your game. Jae:.. White is the name for tho~ mterested UI gllining first-hand koo"'ledge and mstrut"tioo about the spon. Billiards pro White will be dcmoOSU'llting his skills at 10-11 a.m aod 12-1 p.m. Nov. 6 in the Sub. White has been touring colleges and universioes for over 20 rears. Through the years he has rccei"ed numerous honorary degrees. including "Doctor of Poology," "Bachelor or Billiards" a.n.d "Master of Billiards Science. " The trick-shot artist is known for his special blend or coml!dy.
by Kathy CarrlJIOn mcer so for this yenr, however, Bundy The CardtnaJ cross country ream~ Mlid they ore the bes1 team he has ever will :igam try 10 outrun the Spokane hod. Community College tenms ar the "They' re more rnlcnred than any Spokane lnvitauonal to be held Saturwomen's team before, but they don'I da). have muc:h experience," he said. Winning o~er Spokane Community Experienced women harrie rs InCollege is something rhe ream really v,,tlJ anempt 10 accomplish, NIC ero,s clude Amelio Barril from Alula and Melanie Candia of California. Candia country coach Mike Bundy s01d. placed 6111 out of a field of200 at la.st • We beat the orhcr teams in the year'\ nation~! meet. Eastern Wuhmgton (University) In· Both teams are f!e11ring up for 111tatiooal. so our goal now is 10 bea1 reg1onnl competition Nov S ar T11•1n Spokane Community College." he Pall!,. NIC will be among a field of live said. teams tho1 includes the College of B110dy said he ci;peti:s the Cardinal S<lu1hern Idaho. Ricks College. Clachteams to do about the same o.:. 111~1 yc:ir mu \ College and Treasure Volley ill the Spokane Community College Community College. lnvitntional ar Spokane's Wandermere The men'\ tcllm will have eJCpcri· Golf Course. eneed $0phomorc~ Gordy Hea1h. John The NIC men's crou country team Bursell. Steve Abrams, Wade Ho1land ha.s won one meet and placed m the and D:ive Smith 01 regionals. Bundy top half of the field 01 all the other said. Smith, who was recovering from meets this year. These meets lire injury and an illness. 1s expected 10 agamst two and four year schools. run In th e weekend compc1111on. Bundy said. The "'omen's team hasn't won a Bundy said.
Forgive fisherm en--feve r forever inherent lf men .is o. whole have one primordial pastime. central diversion. one predispositiooed passion, II has 10 be girl chasing. I've rettotly noticed how similar this unrestrainable game is to another of men's favorite recreational spons: fishing. Almost nightly. the fishermen drop anchor at their favorite spots trying to lure a.od cbann tbeir reluctllJlt prey to we the illu.strious bait. Some will use clothing to catch their frill,, victims others will use canned wit or mod dance iiioves. ' ~en the.ca~~g is slow, and the possibility of b~ggmg their limit seems nearly impoSS1lile. some "''ill ~ to a snng book. This may come in the form of an almost authentic accent or heavy lies about wealth. ~ e this lllllY not bring as mu.ch pleasure as a genwne catch to the h~ngcy fishennao, who was ?DC
hoping for more of a challenge, the snag book is nsually more suecessful than any other method. A {ew of the les'I con.6dC1It and less competent sponsmen will wade around and try to net the slow undesirable fish. On the other hand, some of the more choosy anglers will throw bad catches that do not measure up. are out of season. or of the wrong species. But in the end most of them will ret11rn home cold and full-bellied and empty-banded, malting excu.scs for what ""Ctll wrong and formul.u:ing nev. theories and methods for their nut angling excursion. When they do get t.bat occasional rug on the line, however, the thrill they feel is even greater than an actual angler senses when an unerpected lanker tears at the end of his monafilameot. lt is simply an amplification of Lhal uncommon e:rplosion of adrenalin and body chemistry th3t
willy
weech temporarily heightens every thought and move of the sponsl!Wl. But we really can't blame these fishermen f~ haVUlg such seemmgly lustful attnudes toward their catch. The fishing fe ver ins tinct is so deeply ingrained in their life patterns th.it they luve DO control over it. So forgive them girls, lh.c y know not what they do.
Oct. 18, 1983/ Ca.rdlnal Re,·iew -19-
Grapplers to begin season by Willy Weech
The perenially powerful Cardinal wrestling team will begin their season with the rcd-gra) iotrasquad match Tuesday. Nov. I. in the gym.
pos1ed 34-11 and 36, IO records respectively. and were also regional champions These three wrestlers nnd the rest of the team will play host to a field of ten or more teams ill the NIC Takcdown Tournament Nov. 11.
This match v.ill give Coach John 0..-cn a clearer idea of each players potcnti11l. The team. v.hidi finished third in the nalion la.st season. will also test 1heir talent in the :innual alumni match NO\•. 5 in the gym.
Although the team is relatively untested on the oollege level. it has m3ny state cb:impion hig h school gr11pplers :ind -. ill probnbly be 3 contenders in an effon 10 win its fifth national championship in the last 13 years.
Returning from last year is Steve Kluver wbo finished his freshman year v.ith a 37-2-1 record, was a regional champion and won one match at nationals.
Horne wrestling matches arc free to NIC students -.~th 1.0. cards. includ· ing the rcd-grny match Tuesday and the alumni ma1ch Nov.S.
Also returning arc sophomores Randy Talvi and Tom Phelon v.·ho
69ers win
Intramura l tit le dec ided by Sand.) Stambaugh
Basil Franz photo GAINING GROUND-
The quarter back for the 69ers
l'llllS
for some yardage
The 69ers won the championship game of the NlC intramural footbrul tournament Oct. 2.S against the Hosers by a score of 23-6. The "'inners receive u:uramural particip:101 T-shirts and have team pictures taken, according u, mtramura.l director De:lll Bcnnen. To qu:ilify for the championslup ,Ramc. the Hoscrs defeated the Doomsdnys 20-13 in the semifinals. and the 69ers but the Better Lates by a score of 43-20.
darln& the clwnploathlp game Oct. 25.
Cheerleaders gain adviser; program gets reorganized by WIUy Weech
TI,e NIC cheerleading progrnm hos received a fnc:e-lift this year and will be more organiJ.ed than in the past. new chccrlcading advi ser Sharl WIiiiams said. Williams, -.,jfe of basketball conch Rolly William~. said that ~he recognl1ed the need for more organb.ation In lhe program after at1endlng all of the basketball games in recent yell.I'$. " I thought there needed to be a little bit more rontlnuity and unity In our program," she said. Sandy Vivian Hannemann. Stambaugh, Rita Carlson, Kim Ac:herman and Stacia Smith were chosen as cheerleaders at the tryouts Oct. 12. while Terri French and Rita Madsen were diosen u ahcmates. Williams said that she was hoping for some male cheerleaders. but no men tried out. She said that with mon: practices per weelc and more communication within the team, the program can develop into a more important pan or the school. . "W.~ want something really organ11ed. she said, "something 1he school can support."
In recent years, cheerleaders v.erc selected on a volunteer basis However. this yeu the cheerle11ders were required to fill out applications. attend mccung~. and try out LO fron1 of a board consisting of d1ncc mst:ructor Karen Moc:. Wllhams and Rita M3d)en. The cheerleaders recct\ed Sl.000 from ASNIC this year. For clothing. S<IOO was allotted. and S600 was gt9Ctl for travel expenses. Williams s&id that this is 001 oeuly enough to rover their expenses for the entire year, but they will earn some money selling concessions. programs and pornpons. Williams lllso said th111 she would eventually like to see II cheerleader alumni gt'Ollp or cheerleader sorority formed . She said thllt 11ny former cheerl eaders interested in such a program should oontaci her. She can be found at cheerteacling practice Mondays from ~t> p.m. in 1he Cardinal Room of the Winton Building. WMnesdays from 4-5 p.m. In the dancing room of the C-A Building and from S.-9 a.m. in the Cardin&! Room on Thursdays.
Help support
NIC Ski Club
at th e CDA Ski Swap Equipment check-in : Tues . Nov. 1
7 p .m . - 10 p .m .
Wed. Nov. 2 noon - 5 p .m .
Swap begins Wednesday Nov. 2 6:30 p .m . - 10 p .m .
Come join us for
Al I-you-can-eat Spaghetti! ! 6:30 p.m. Great ski movies
$3 per person 5 per couple
I
· 1
Oct. 28, 1983/ Cardinal Review -20-
(_• _n_ic_n_o_t_ic_e_s____J Anlmal,"
dlrccted by
Allie Karu. Vogt, art lnstroctnr Rt
Bob Moe, wUI be preseoted NO'. 4, S, 10, JI aod 12 by the NIC Ora.nu
!\1C. will be conducting a one-woman an show In the Coeur d'Alene Oty Hall Coundl Clwnbers throtlgh No>'embcr and Oeum.ber. ladiuiN In the show will be her first
"The Male
Dcpartmeol. Admission Is S4 for aduJcs and S2 for chlldnn. &tude11ts and senior cfthe:ns, NTC &tJJdealJi, bculty and staff will be admitted free. The play wlll be held 111 the C-A Auditorium. The NIC Outdoor Program will sponsor an lndependence Credt tn.11 hike Nov. 4-6. All lD.terested hD.en a.re urged to attend the ll)CCtmg 1'io,. 1 In
Dean Bennett's office dowlllStalrs In the Subway Game Room at DOOD to help prepare Cor Lhe trip.
plxe dra ,.-lng from the juried exhlbttJon of the First Annaal Western Women's Art SIJO'wcasc. ,.-hich ,.as held In September RI the Nonh Shore Comen:tlon Center. The \'e1nu1s Admlnistrat.Jon ln!or, mation booth in the er ol the SUB is
ro,
now open full lime. Chrck Ibero for \-eteran lnfomadoc before going to the 11p5i.lrs office.
The annual Vcl Club Ba.llowccn Cosnunc Ball "'m be held Frldnv Oct. 28 at the ha Lee Dan~ Ball on Seltlco Way. Adn.nced tickets can be bought at the \'ct Informational booth In lhc
The new hours for the NIC Bocik, store a~ 8 a.m. to 4 p.nJ. Moa~y through Friday. The bookstort wl1J no longer be open oo Monday and Tu-0sday even.lugs.
foyeT of the SUB for two C&hs of food and a SI donation, Students lnscre:stcd In llnJWr-lill aJd, Pl'll Grants, and sco.dent loans, should con tut Jim Upchorc-h In ihl1 NIC flnanclal aJds oflkc for more lu!orma· ti.on.
Mid-term grlldc~ 11ro a, allable from ndvlscn, for fuJl-tlm0 studl'nt11. Part, time ~tudcnls should pkk lhrm up al the studcol sen ltl'S offil"o ops!alr5 In lhc SUB.
Reciprocity gains ground continued from pngc I
A ~tory lo the Oct. 14 CR emmeous· ly sald that PeU Grant funds have been depleted. Pell Grants are stUI a,-.ilable to those who qualify.
lbe last day lo "·ithdraw from lndMdual cl.asses Is No,·. 7, according to the reglBtl'lU',
Thero will be a do1111tlon blood drivl' conducted b.)- the Spokane Blood Bw
In the Koolen_aJ Room of thc SUB Crom 9 a.m. un,11 4 p.m.
An) student ashJg VA educatlomal bene-61.s who retth·ed a le~r from Lhe St. Pa:aJ VA UISllrlDee a:nd Collectl.o11 Centl'r ln Minnesota regarding an o, erpa:) menl should disregard the letter llllks.s ht.' w-a:nts '\<'A to dedol'! the o,erpa:yme11t ln three mo111bl) lns1a:lh!M-nts. A table le onls tou.rnll.ment for uodl'tl~ "UJ be held ...ov. 10 at~ p.m. downstaln In thl' Subw1H Game
Room.
·
membel'!I of the board. The proposnl "'al to exclude a.JI of the orea east of Hubbard Street to anv dwellinK over n single.family unit. Board Vice Pre~idcnt Beverly Bemis si11d the city planning and ioning commission used offensive ond In· suiting language that referred to NJC as a "tletrimenull infiut:nce." The board dedded to stick to 1he origm.11 agrct."mcnt of nor proposing
any changes north of River Avenue. They nlso approved a motion to have
Schuler rc,pontl to th e proposal, informing tli e commission of thr bOllrd's rrjcctia11 an(] indkut ing 11ui1 the !011g1mK.:: was offcu~i\·c. In olher .10:t1on, the bourcl· -approved the lir,t outhen;lc NIC seul, compo\ed by Joe J()mis or the NlC an tlcp.irtmcnl -approved o notice
11f
HALLOWEEN PARTY OCT. 31
NASTY HABIT now through Oct. 29
USK starting Oct. 31
1111cnl rn
rcurc from R::iy L. Stonl', NIC de,1n of instruction. o nd lcttc-r~ of rr~igno1i~n from cu\tocl ian~ Joan Nowo1 und James A. Preli.