North Idaho College Cardinal Review Vol 38 No 3, Oct 14, 1983

Page 1

Volume 38, Number 3

Frida), Oct. I.I, 1983

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Convocation begins Oct. 24 by Dawn Morphy

"Resources: Increasing Demand - Decreasing Supply" is Lhe 1opic 10 be addressed by many rc~carcllers and cxpens involved in many areas of resources during Convocation Week, Oct. 24-28. a1 NIC. Albert Bartlett. professor or physics at the University or Colorado. will give the lteyno1e addres~ 01 11 n.m .. Monday. Oct. 24 in 1he C-A Audi1orium on "The Forgo11cn Fundarncouds of the Energy Crisb." A "Staius Rcpon on the Nonhwes1 Energy Pion lmplemcn1n1ion" will be given at 10 n.m., Tuesday. Oct 25 in the audiiorium by Hoben Sa:{Yik, vice chairman ur the Nonhwest Po11,er Planning Council. Following Snxvik's presentation, a panel consist· lng ol Mnry Lou Reed. cnvlronmcnu,ll~t: S1e\C· Ruppel. NIC compu1cr depanment; Ralph Donat. Bonneville Power Admimstrntion: Randy Barcu~. Washington Water Power snd moderator l...'O Loeb, l'IIC mblructor, will comment on the cou11cil plan and oddrc~s qucMlOnb lo Saxvik. TI1c development or windpower In the UniLcd Stoics will then be tr11ccd at 2 p.m. in the Bonner Hoom of 1he SUB by Ed Stern, director of communll} dc,•clopmcnt. Livingston, Mont. John Baldwin, director of environmcnt.11 Mudie~ 01 1hc Unh·cr,h)' of Oregon. will begin Wedncsd11}"~ tm1v11ic, wuh n 10 n.m. prcsenuuion in the Bonner Room addr~~ing lond dcvelopmcm. Bald11,•in 11,•111 then nddrch "Ecologicnl Fu1urc:.: From Ecotopu1 to Mc~otrend:." 11t noon in Lhe C,A Auditorium Folio" mg 3t 2 p.m. m 1hc Bonner Room will be Roge r Boo1h . Portland. d1sC'u:.slng the arrh11cchural de:.1gn crea1ed by Buckmin:.LerFullcr called 1he gcode:.ic dome. Maynard MIiler. dt•an of the College or Mining and Elinh ReM)urce:. at the Universtl)• of Idaho. "'111 speak Ill Cl 11.m. 1n the ouditonum on "A N,:,, National Crisi~ - The Minero.ls and lhe M111eriah Problem." contloued on i,aec 10

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inside the er

.No bell for thi.a pole Don Oldham and Roger Brod.bot! o( the NlC maintenan« depart11:1ent add a new coa1 or sll.-i:r patn1 to the campllS Oagpole , 1ocaud across the street from the Admlnlscn1Jon Balldlng. A ne•· Dag and pulley ..-ere also l.nstalled .,..hJle the ett>< had the pole dowo.

J Official enrollment up 80

Nantna pn,gnun ID aooc1 coodllloo ... . .......... ... . .. . ............... pageJ Vocational re.den poob·poob editorial .. ............................... paee 6 A woman preslclca1! ....• ...... . ..... .. ......••..•................. page 11

Stone Olea •Ith bobb) ... . ...... ... ................................. page 13

The 1983 official fall enrollmeni of2,249 academic and 280 voc111ion11I students reprcseors an tncrnsc of J.~ peTCent of rhe he:id count for fall of 1982. According ro o repon filed ,.;th the Idaho Depanmeni of Educauon b) l'IIC Registrar ltsuto l\ishio. there is an increase of 80 studems :mending the colleg~. The acaderruc enrollment is up by 81 students while the \'OC31ional enrollment 1s do11,n one The report shows that t.he full-nme equ" alenl total is do<rn to 1.55-l from l .589 in ICl82 Full•1ime l"CjUl\alem is the IOL31 credi1 hours divided by IS.


Oct. 1~, 1983/ Cardlna.l Review -2-

Co II

Olt'

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Or. Jame~ Dune~ of the ll'OII, "ood OplomctTk Oink rhttt, freshman Jeff Lo) al'a t')N In !ht "tudcnt hea lth re nter ON. s. Dunc) "u on i-ampu, to &ht f~ t)C eum11 to NIC ~ adtt1ta and farulty.

Ba~n rnuu photo

Financial aid demand puts burden on system b) Don Sauer

Over I. I00 students arc rc<:c1, in,g some form of fin:incinl aid nt NIC 1h1) foJI, am,rding to Jun Upchurch, director of financio] 111d. Thnl 1rnnsltuc~ to SO percent of NIC~ total enrollment, which is t) pica! of most colleges acro&S the nation, Upchurch s11id. Upchurch so.id the s1ru11.11on places a hea,1 burden on the ~y<.1em and U\U:IJI) me:ins that the mane) run~ out bclorc the applicant~ do. Al NIC. nll but two of the program~ ha,e ~n used up. he stud. Upchurch ~aid Pell Gr:m1s, Supplemental Educational Opponunit) Grant5. S1.11e Student lncenu,·e Gl':lnis. Direct Student Loans, and Work Stud) .ii ha,c been depleted. But he added 1ha1 Guaranteed Student Loans and Plus Lo3ns are sull a, ailable 10 those who quilih The Plus Loons :i.re ta.ken out b, the srudents' pt1rents at an interes1 rate of 12 l)C'rteru Wi1h more studenl5 going to college eve~ }ea.r.

the dem.1nd~ on the program hnc 1ncren~ed dn.m.tuall\ , he ~;ud But unfonunatcl), the fundi lrom the! federal gu,ernment ha,·c not. ~ mo!IC~ allocated tor most ot the progro.ms hos not 1ncreu,id \ ~ the 1980-al ~hool )'Car, and IIUII\ of the sections ha~e e, en ~uITcred budget am , Upd1urch ~d Thl5 vcar 1'1C ,..as given SJS0.000 10 11,ork with, he =d, :wdmg tlut th.ts rcnccts no increase from the Ptt\ iou~ , car At I.he same umc 1ppliciuions for :11d hi~e n~n considerably, the d1tce1or SA1d. 1·Uull. for one amount :ind get a much lower one.'' Upchurch S4uf " With no fonding increases and more students appl)mg. the money doesn't go 3.S fas- Consequently. r.bc school must rig up iLS own S) stem to distribute tbe monC). " We arc "orbng with a federal progr:im and have been forced to s.!t up our own rationing S)'sttm. And that's not always fair." The ratiorung system translates to a distribution

plan ba~ed on the itlco or nr~t come, nr\t ,crvc: l'hl, meon\ 1har mony ,1udcnl\ whu nrc clliilble. bur who do nor apply early enough. mi~~ out on ony help thry might receive. Upchurch ,trc~~cd tht· foci thot ~tudcnt, planning 10 npply for old ~hould do~,, Jong before the April IS de:idhnc. Students waiting unlit the 10~1 minute run the ri,k of ending up "dead In 1hc w111cr," Upchurch SOid

He al,o ~aid ~rudents ~hould check lhcir application\ for occurocy o.nd accountabllhy If a form has 10 be ~ent bock because or mbtllkes or question~. the funds may run ou1before the form hu a chance to be proce~S(.:d, he ,aid. Although 1he future of the program is up to the fedcraJ government, Upchurch is opuml~ie. "The worst 1s over," he \aid. " They (Congress) reafo,e the 1mporwnee of education and will do aU 1hey can to keep the program going.''

Brown explains vocationa~ academic grading differences b) Mark Wheeler Competen~ ·based education 1s JUsl one or sC\·er.11 re!I.SOns NIC' s \'ocJrion:iJ Dep:inmcnt has a higher o, erJIJ gr:ide point a, el':lge th:in the .1cademic sector. :iccord1ng to Bob Brown, assistant di~,or of ,ocation:11 educ:ition. ui response 10 a Sept 30 Cardmai Re,,e,. ednorial att3ding the number of, oc:ition.'11 students on the XIC de;1n's list. Bro"n l:i.st "-CCI.. ga,e su rc:1son~ "'hv he thinks vocat1on11l s1uden15 :ire justified m ha,ing higher gr.ides th:in academic students.

Compcten~ -based education. the s1·s1cm rhc \'OC3tiomll depanmen1 is required hy the Idaho S1..11e Board of Educauon 10 be using :is its official frameworl b~ the 1·e:ir 19 o. is a method where· a student is Judged on

the job~ i , able to perform and not on a curve grading system. And because 1oca1ionaJ students must master mand21ory skills of ~ r rrode before thC\ can move on to other areas. the} therefore get higher mdcs. Brov.-n said. - To illustrate this. 8roOA n said that if t"o S111dent~ were gi,en pe11cils to sharpen. and the first student did an accepmblc job lllc li:rst time but the second srudent did not. the sccood srudcnt 11,ould have to perform the job ;igain unul he reached the instruct0r' s standards. However. .-hen the! sta· dents are graded on their final produru. both receive the same grade for =mplishing the same wk. he said. Another reason =tioru! students hJ, e higher grades than academic

students is that all vocattonaJ students must p~ an entrance test with 11 minimum number of points (w hich ,:iries for each progr:im /. "hereas academic student\ la.kc no ~uch test, he :...1d. He said the test elimmates many of the Students who 14.ould be de\ervmg of a IO'A gr.ide and therefore eliminates the possibility of a curve-type grading S)stCm.

The facot that the a\'era.ge age of 1ocationaJ stud.enLs u moch older than the academic a1,erage 1s also a reason for higher , ocuional grndes, Bro'-'D said. Although be said age alone was wn a grading factor. he wd that the usu.al responsibility and experience gained with age does have a posmve effect on grades. The fact that "ocational students are

usually offered cmploymenl 1m.medi otely ofter their schooling is a1101her rcnson why grades arc higher. BrowP '-lld. He said 1ha1 vocauonal S1uden~ are able 10 be more mo11va1cd in sch<>OI becau~ of failer job pl.a.cement and more 1mmedia1e competition for a Job H1\ l:1s1 reason u.plaining the disparity in academic: and 1()('2~onal \ludenls · grodc\ i-; 1hal vQcauooal 51 udenL< n.re onh• ,n classes direcd} co ncerning tbei~ fields of ioreresr. whereas academic student5 are oftdl forced to take unrelated courses fulfill their graduallon rcquircme!llS

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For that reason. Brown said n •'OU!d be likely thar vocational srudeats would be more stimulated by the course material than the acadellllC students would be.


Oct. 14, J983/ Ca.rdl:nal Review - 3-

NIC nurses score high by RkJ. Kut NIC scnr 37 graduaung nurses to lhc State Board Test School Enmuution for Nursing in July; they returned with a 100 percent pass rate. Thu 15 the nu11h consc:cuuvc year NIC has produced a 100.pe=t pus me at the s11te tesung. according to Joan Brogan. director of the nnrsing program. Brogan said MC-s nursing program has bet'll rzted in the nauoo's lOp S perc,e?Jt for ycu,. She added thll lasr >ear's class SOOTed I00 poma over the mean score of rhc prcv1ou\ year's class. According to Brogan. California students v.ho took the identical test in July came awa} with a J6.perccnt pan rate. This, she said speaks "'ell for the qualit} education NIC studcnLS receive. ' We have a very stnngcnt admissions cnteru," Brogan wd. She also pra1~d the 5etence department at NIC. ··we hove a very fine science department here," Brogan said. ··1t gives oar students a good base from which to go into nursing " She said a lot of studcna ~pend a full year taking 5cience courses 11 :,;re before ~co entering the nursing program '"The nursing program II a very difficult program " Brogan saJd. "A basic knowled1<c biology and chemistry " a musi if a student is LO comprehend the comple11111e, of the nursing program." She ,aid that while II is nor mandatory 10 take that fi~t )tar of sacnce, 11 is e11rcmcly h•·lpful She alw u,d thi- srudrnt< in the nursmg program v.-cm 10 be more scnow. about thtir education than the average college 51udcnt "They know exactly what they arc here for," Brog,n uid. "They ~ their goals. ond go for 11 " The nur~rna program director ~aid NIC can be proud to ha\e Lhl\ quality of nursing proi(rlm in Nonh Idaho. ''I cnn\idcr II one of the be•t programs in the country " Brogan u1d

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NIC mock ekction snaps racia~ sexual discrimination b) Slta.rf Alcfo mun

S1muh11lon wa, the nilmt of the gamt. ~unda}, Oct 2. •hen pollllClll ~nee, ,111dcn,,. par11t1p.11cd In a mm· hour mo k Drmouati<' comc-ntion Altlwugh 11 '"'" a lnnp and C1>mphca1cd nrnal. the dcleg.ics '"<'rt' able to rompl c1c a prc\idcn11ol prlm11r), a non11no11ng convcntton and a national elccuon " I tl11nk It ,,. a very 11111Kl c:apcrkncc llrrnu,t 11 ~M~1 thc 111uden1s a ch:uic-c: to .ipplt tht 1hc111) and learn hu,. ,t ,.urk ' p<1h11,al ,ucntC' lnstrurtor lon, Srcv.an \Old CandldJIC'\ fur the l)('mo..ralll num11111ttlM ,.er,: ponra1<d b\ Paul /llcnd as Sen Bnkcr, fc1111c\\Ct·, Ann Wt·hh a, \'1,c l'rn,d,nt Canm,n llhno,,; D<:nr,11 Gom.agcn, Co,. Alkn, Ne" Yt1rl., ond Tony MO\,rc pla1lng \en Moore N,,. llam~h1rc. llamp~hln: \1udrn1, opcntd tht ninH nu.:in h\ dt'ha1tng the r,,an\ " c,entualh adopted platform lnr platform. 11, lurh addrn~cd tht· pan, ', \land on h\Ut fr m the Equal R111h1, Ammcndmc:nt 111 nurkar frct1c. 1,a, nut ador1C'tl unril ea,h dclc ate •u ,1111\0cll. Olen. each )IOtr lllbl It!> 1·ott'\ for a d1~11ogu1)hrd cai,d1da1c. Moor<' '"ll\ Ob\'IOUSh the Jllll't\ fi"'I rhOIC'(', although VOi Allen. ran a fllrl) Chl\e ra,e Ncit 11n 1hr ag,·nd.i thr da~\ held I puhh, debate bch•ttll both the Jcmoc:nt~ and rc11uhh(Jn cand1d11n Each 1,11c ,.,, Jiklv,cd It' a,I. qul')tKm, 11,htch •CTC rt ~ponded hl b) both. Afterward, 1he prnidcnunl rlc:ctond 1,,1c~ I\Crc talhC'd and hutol) '"I) made TI1r U \. lilc:e1or.il Colle~r <'ICC1ed 1hc f1r\t blacl. prcs1drnt ol tht Cnucd Su.its Ocmocut lon) Moore and frma.lc running matt' >.,m Acl.cnnao, p.,nr,n 11g Sc,i >.,m Ood11c l<>r , ,cc prc,1dcnt. 0

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Gimme a f ~ ' tu.er LnuJ

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Mike Scroggie photo

s.1,o,.., ber Kbool spirit ro thrtt Judges WedncsdaJ during

the~·, dattdndcr in-u ID t.br &o-er Room of lhe SUB.

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207 'h Sherman CDA

Journalism seminar slated F1H prnmrncnt 1uurn1h\t, from Idaho and Wa\h1ng1on" 111 be featured m Ntc·, annual ,oumah,m \Cm mar t'n Oct Ill. h> Shelled~. MoH,l" ldahoni n Pubhshcr, F Cumh Pctcn(ln, Spo· l.ii.nc Spol.c,man Re, ,c.. editor- and Bill Hall. l(-,.1\t<>n Mc>mm8 Tnbunc edll<>nal page cduor ;1J1d )\ nd1ca1cd columnm, compn ~c pan or the h\t of '"'ell-I. no,. n JOurnali5h These and Other d1,t1ngu1shcd Journahsts,. ill

c11nduct \pcc,alt~ ,c,t.<'n\ 10 tbc J.i, •Ion \Cmtnar.

H.ill,. ,11 katurc Tip\ for Edltorws .ind Column," m the Bonner Room of the SLB at 10 ;i.m Tim Ptlt:nm 'IIC m.a.usm Im• trurtor )aid ab.>ut JOO h, •b school ,tudcnb from \\ aslnngttlo '-fonmu and ld.iho arc ei;p«tcd 10 ancnd. Ptlgnm cmpbatjzcd thjt mtcrcstcd NIC student\ arc "'ckomc 10 ancnd.

Stationary by the sheet Off color cards Imported wrapping paper

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College vocational education meant to be vastly dzfferent Dear Editor: I am submining a copy of an article for vour 1ntercs1 and the interes1 or'thc Cardinal Re,1 C\\ rcnd cn. h wa~ taken from the September 1983 issue of \ oe Ed magazine. An additional comment concerning Lhe grnding procedure and the dean's list: Perhaps \\e should be using separate dean 's lisu for academic and vocauonal s1udcn1i, lt is my conteniion that you cannot compare apples and orangt>'>, and since vocntional education ,., so entirelv different. I would h3H' 10 agree ·,hat this would be a good

solu11on to 1he difference!> opinion v.~ seem to be hcanng.

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Mary Doughty \'OClltiooal placement

Editors' ook: The lcng1b, art.it'll' b} Morris Fowler from the SepL 1983 lss~ o! \ O<' ED ns titled "On Bdn,g Dl.ffereo1" and £oc:used WbJ \ocatiOoaJ edoe&.UOO WI &S created l.o be dlfi'ettnl than It'll • demk educa.tlon. The article saJd. "Oar •cll£Jerent· ness· Is wbll allow o lo be eUecth·e i n d our effecth enc OQ

gh es

OS

credlbffi~·.''

dawn murphy

[I]

Give elderly a break Researchers hn,·e recently done another study. a.nd this ume the conclusion held a fo\, surprises a.mong the aun) predictable results. The study :inalyzed th e mnjor problems in Idaho. And somewhere among the top five. some~herc becv.een teenage pregnancy and teenage alcoholism. was the dilemma of finding an altcrnath·e for putting the elderly in ms1itutioa.s. In II lime when lhc future belongs 10 the oen generation and the present soc1Cl) is submerged io high technolo&). the aging are no longer finding a sector in which to belong. It seems efficiency is 1he pas:;word 10 the future. Bui this holds problems for the elderly who rarely become more efficient. So where do they belong? I feel the elderly fit into sociery - exercising their min<b as one migh1 exercise his body in an attempt to postpone the effects of aging. Lea\'ing the elderly on nursing home steps 10 be stored convenienrly out of the way and visited only when guilt chews at 1he conscience. or a boost of nostalgia is needed. does nothing for the elderh·'s mental acthirv. It is so~ething comparable to an antique car ~·hich had been set aside after years of dependable service 10 be utilized only for an occ:isionaJ Sunda} dri"e in order 10 stir a linle "remember when" for a short while. Oh sure, many of these people look forward to. and need the professional anenrion and dose cnmpaoionship in an elderly complex. but man~ have accepted the care from an inslirut.i.on because a bener choice was not available. l\lan) elder!) can function in their own homes with ooh a linle supen ision. But many times. families get 100 inv~lved in b~min~ part of the future socie~·. and grandma getS left 10 veg11ate in a world where everything is done for her. St~ying ment~lly young involves decision making and the form10g of new ideas. The elderly can be stimulated by societ:, an_d. in tum. give the younger people around them sometlung to th10k about 11lso. Maybe large doses of nostalgia are the fouruain of youth. The you~ger generations should ta.kc some hearty drinks from this precious well.

~E.:> ,

WE.'~ l.'AT(\.\\NC:r

c~ d' ALE.NE:. Wr\lLE. -n·\E \JEOPL(: ARE. OOT Of= TOLi)\) . JUST TIE T'*-5€ ANTLOO O I\J AND

~OU' LL ~Ir 11\l N\C.E:L'-{- H~Vf- A l='Ufvl V\511 .

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cardinal review

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The CardioaJ Review Is pu blis hed scml-montbJy by the PubllcatJou Workshop class at North ldaho ColJege . Members of the CR stall will 11.rive lo present the ne ws Calrly, accurately and without prejudice. Opinion, expressed on the edllorl.a l pages and In various ne ws analyses do not oecessarll) reOed the views of the NJC adm lnls tn.tlon or the ASNJC. The CR Is en tered as third-class postal material at Coeur d ' Alene, Idaho 83814. Associated Collegiate Press flve-St.ar AU-American Newspaper edilor .. ... .................................... , .... . Dawn Murphy news edllor .......................................... Mark Wheeler associate editor .. .... •..•.•.....•••. ....••...•.. . •.•.... Ric J. K»l arts/ enten.a.inmen t ......................... . .... ...... CraJgJoba,on sportS edilor ......•............................••...... WIDy Weech photography editor ................................... . .. . Bull Frain advertising man.ager ................................. . .. M.arltla Platt copy editor ...•................... ................. Pam CunnJng.bam cartoon.isis ..............................Troy J olllff and Eric Pedetsell adviser .... .. .....................•... ............... . . T1m PllgriJII reporters and photographers ...............•.......... Sharl AJdermaa, Dan Breeden, Laarie Bristo"'"• DeannJ1 Chapin, Kathy Garrfton, iJcb Bal roa oo, K urtis 8AJJ, Sba..ron Heaney, IUta Holllngsworth, Leasa Mo«e, Bruce M u.llan. Diane Opdahl, Don Saner , Mike Scroeg.le, Deanna Small, Sand) Stambaugh, Wand.a Stephens, Batbie Vandenb.crg, Kelly Ward ...ct Angie Wemhoff.


Oc:11. 14. 1983/ Canl.inaJ Re,' iew -5-

( more opinion )t-------Coeur d'Alene Police: The wrong and right of it Martial law might be the only law in Coeur d'Alene these days. Only last "'eek a Cardinal Reviev, editor was walking op Third Street after working late at night oo a news story over a cup of coffee at TJ's Pantry and was stopped by a Coeur d.Alene police officer. The policeman inquired all the basics one would ask a thi rd·time-convicted murderer: name, height. weight. color of eyes, place of residence and place of destination. The officer could have saved time for both of them by just remembering the suspect as the man sipping coffee over a mound of papers in the booth nci« 10 his own at TJ's only a few minutes before. After passing the examination. the editor was allowed 10 be on his way. Bui being guihy of not fini shing the story the first night. the editor derided 10 again sneak down to Denn)"s the next night to do some late night work - and again he was pulled over by a Coeur d' Alene police officer. This time as a burglary suspect. The officer filled out & "field in1erroga1ion repon" on the ediaor. putting on file everything from occupation to nick-names. Bui 1he crime of ii all occurred even before the invasion of pnvacy was comn1111ed. /I f1er the officer osked only a few basic question"i. a C:lr skidded out of the Regina Tavern and ended up in the left lane of Spruce Street. "There's a good chance that guy could be drunk.'' the policeman said as he watched the vehicle scurry down the road. He whipped out his pad and proceeded with the interrogation repon .

Letters to the editor Lettel"ll lo the editor are welcomed by the CardJn.a.l Re,•le"'· Those who s ubmit lellers should limit tbem lo 300 words, sign them leg.lhly and provide a telephone number and address so that aut.hcnllclty can be checked. Although most lcllel'!i are uBCd, some may be returned because they do not meet the ab-Ove 111<julremenl3 or beau~ the} 11) an ~lmllar to a number of letters alrndy received on the same subjtict, (2) advocate or attack a religion or deoomlnalloo, 13) are posr,lbl.> libelous, 14) contain words or phrases that S-Ome mJgb1 coMlder In poor taste, ISi are open letters (leuer,; must be addrcs8Cd to and directed 10 the editor), or (6) arc DJeglblc. Lcuers should be brought to Room 2 In the Mcchanka.l Arts Building or malled to tJ1e CudlnaJ Re,.,le" In caro or Nonh fdabo College. JOO() W . Garden Avc.,Cocur d"Alcne, Idaho 83814.

Why the officer continued co in\'cstiga1e the suspect (it would have been hard for the edrior ro pack another pencil in his Pee-Chee. let alone stash 1001 from a burglary) when he knew where he could find a real criminal. is DOI kno11.n. Perhaps ii v.:a.s because business was a liule slow that e\·ening, and college kids are alwavs good for a thrill. Perhaps ii was bec:iuse the ediror was nn easier and safer target than a wild drun>:. But it sorel) wasn·t done bec:iuse it was the right thing to do. Although there 11.;11 probabb never be a delineation be~een public nuisance and public senant for any police depanment. there is going to ha\e co be a more definite line be~·ecn right and wrong for the Coeur d Alene police force. 0

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(__n_e_w_s_c_o_n_n_e_c_t_io_n_s

Dean 's list stand unchanged The reader response to the recent editorial concerning the dean's list has been commendable. and the editors at the CR encourage such feedback in the fun1re We v.ant 10 knov. what )·ou are thinking. The editonal reached the attention of students. faculty and admi nistrators. and "'e ha\e ,incc heard discussion on the matte~ from nll sides. However. no maner ho"' ll i~ rationalized, ,H· find it hnrd 10 see the cqu:11i1y bctv.cen competenet! 3Jld excellence or how 1he a,eragc grade can be an eJtcellent grade. We realize the amponant and necc~,;nr) differences between vocational nnd academic cducauon. and lhat is why we feel we need 10 distinguish tiet\\ecn ~oc:1tional llnd ;icadem1c students on the deon·s list. Apparent!~· the point h3S been considered seriously. for occordi ng to Asst. \'ocauons.l D1rtt1or Bob Brown. this foll's vocataonal and acndemic scudenrs v.,11 appear separatelv on the dean's list. In conclus10n, almost all leners r~e1ved 1\ ere over the 300 word limit. In order 10 fa1rl) publish each opinion. mony letters were edited. Also, readers .,hould realize that unsigned editorials are CR stoff opinion.

Let's not get buried in this cat box diplomacy On any given C\•cmng. 1'11 waken 01 2 o m to 3 Fredd\ Fender !>Ong 1ha1 rcg1~tcr'> no lcs, than :.C\CO on the \Ulume sc.lcctor of Ill\' roommn1c':, Pioneer ,tcrco. It 's a wre :.ijitn that m~ roommo1c, who thought he.' l'lilUldn·1 dl\rupt m l' cnuugh "1th hi nonng. d«1ded to dig his 1\ 3) out of uur I.nee-deep 111-lrn,-dirty·clothe:. bedroom nnd i:. 1mng 1n the living r\lom munching on the potato chip crumb:, I \13:, S311ng for brenl.fo:.1 h ~ccm~ 111.e ifthi:. guv 1~ not bu~y Sl'rntching my Bc.':itle :ubums or \\'Coring my red ~h1n wuh the "hite pm tripe aero :, the \houldcr~. he·~ lnughing at me bcc:iu:.e I acr1dc.'nth smeart"d :.hanng cream 10 my !l)C. He even insults my favorite tele\ i:.ion :.hov. i.. But that'~ where I dr:i" th e- line. 'Obod) i:, going 10 tl'II ml' "hnt_sho,\ lo " 01ch. And ~o \\ henever I feel the parily 1s brol..en l r,m1hate by forgeuing when it's my month 10 change the cat box. And I really lnud my:.cll on thnt . Bec3usc I honestly feel thot no moncr ho\\ "'e arc p3ired on this to.net, whether an opti~1i:,1 and a ~ssi~11:.t, s Catholic and a ro1es1nnt or :i commumst and a c:ipm1hst. ,..,,o-month-old cat rrnp 1s e_no~gh incentive to male us all ~et along once we come 10 the reahza11on th:11 \\ C all hn,e to li,e under the same.' roof. A?d 1ha1 's "h,• I think cat shit is just as effecti,e 3s nucle3r missiles.

mark wheeler h seem!> 10 me the same nuclear peace-through-force philosoph) could be acxomph:.hed by )luffing all our mimics and submarine~ "-ith the feline fett1 I kno.,., rm ool~ J9) can old and ignorant to most of the ways of the "orld, but I s11.ear I could 11,·e tn pe3ce 11.itb anybody 1f I was threatened v.ith the global smell of cat pooh-pooh But e,en though l feel the nuclear "eapon-p1ece of doo doo comp;uison 1s valid, I c-an·t help but feel th:11 therc:·s ~mething else "'e should examine before we dectde to waste che world II\ 3\.

I ·think v. here the crap might lie is with this popular ~ace-through-force amrode So wh, don°t 11.e slo11. down and examine this contradiction before the world re3ll} begins to SlLnk. Just take il from my roomm3le and I. There's no 1k1ory in this cat-box diplomacy - 3L any level.


'

Lq Oct. U , 1983/ Cardinal Revle• -6--

Reader says 'gravy' ladled from wrong container Dear Editor· On behalf of m~ fellow vocational compute r \c1ence st udents and m)·\clf I am 1rnt ing to object to the article ent11lcd " Dean's List Pure Grav) for Vocattonal Students" m the Sept. JO i\\Uc or the Cardinal Revie1,1,. I take excepuon to the 11rude Whoever ,vrote the article lhe or she did not c, en have the guts enough 10 sign it) did not do his homework before wnting it. U he had. he would have disco\'ered that in the vocational computer science

cour...c- almost all classes ha,e a much tougher grading scale th_an mo~t Clf the caulJlce test'> before ~ e 1,1,-ere accepted into the \'OC'ational computer sacnce c:ou.r;c Thal en:rance cum automaucall) ehm1nate\ most of the students v.ho mue 10\\er grade... \lost of us 1,1,ould be capable of mabng good grades rcgardl~s of ,.. hat side of the ampw. v.e ,..ere on. h the \Hiler suggesu ng t ha t ~meone should mtomat1call\' be nun ked in e"ery cla ss" Sa~ for Ulstance, if the a,·erage score on a

(__m_o_r_e_o=--p_in_io_n_J Earthlings all over campus Dear Editor: In response 10 the editorial of Sept. JO. I would definitely sny that most of the vocational students are as "Eanhling·· as the acade mk students. In foct. I would sa) that most of us arc probably more so simply because we have fomilie~ to suppon.

As nn offit't? occupations student. I need A·sand B's 10 ge1 certified. Doing C worl might keep me in school. but it sure" ouldn 't get me that job I so desperately need. lf our "easy-grading teachers" complimented us with A's and B's that weren't earned. then we wouldn't be well qualified. And that means it would be hard to pass those skills 1es1s that moSl of us will h3ve 10 take at the end of our course. It also means that employers would be dubious about hiring studems from programs that ha,•e

a poor reputation. So lhe mcenthes are high! For m:m~ of us. ic is a chance to better oursel\'eS i.a the \ Cl')' immediate future Therefore. 1,1,e a.re CJtreme· h acttll', studious and interested students. lnccnti~es are high. :i.lso, for the vocational school itself. lf i1 cannot produce studenlS who can get Jobs. then tht funds for lhesc programs " 11 stop. So these "easy-grading teachers'' spend a lot of time helping, encouraging and moth"3ting their studenlS 10 do their best . We are constantl y reminded that we are not here for the grades. but to become welltrained. productive workers - the best - not "average." I am a four year college graduate, and I never had to stud) as hard as ram now. Peggy Caldwell ,·ocational stude nt

test i,

Q()

and the lowest grade was

l>S. that the pt'rson-. sronng

QO

-.hould ge t a ' C" 3nd an) onc scon ng '5 should get an ' F' ? Would that he fair'> .-\h.t,. the ,ocational clas,es ha,c more cl ~-. hours for the credit, rece1,cd We get four credit<; for u cl.tss that invol\'eS IO clas,; hours o 1,1,ed.. That dvcsn't coun1 all the tfo1e pent outs ide of class doing homework or getting our programming projec;t on to the computc-r. That's a " gni,1 class" ?

I challenge th11t person lo; - tn kc n test ln one of the ,·ocational romputcr ~cicm:c class. es h) sec how easy they nrc. -check the grauc, the vocntton.il ,1udcn1i. mnkc in their academic dn<.se<.. Then Ih:11 pcr,on -;hould be ahle lo ~cc whv a high percentage of ,uc-atlonnl s tudents ore on the de.in', list. Knrcn Cecil vocntionnl student

Article 'plowed up snake' De11r Editor: I think you really plowed up o s nake whe n you slapped the vocauonal instructors m I he face by publishing an article (abou t the dean's list). The author. who hides behind the cloak of secrecy by not ha vi ng the guts to sign "i ts" na me. is obvious ly living in 1hc fantasy world of the national norm. What's wrong with teaching " A" students? ls it a crime to go to a college. or any 01he r school for th 3 l matter. nod e xpect to have your skills upgraded? I think "it" ought to wa ke up and see what the real world is like. After nil, it is the rcaJ world of work that dictates our vocntional standards. We must turn out as many " A" studems as we can or industry won't buy our product. How would you like to send any of you r family, except maybe your mother-in-law, on a 01gh1 with a "C'' airplane pilot? One that had an ''A" Ln takeoffs and an " F" in landings. yet bis grade point average was 2.0?

No. we feel the snmc wny about o ur SS0.000 trucki. and our S2SO.OOO trnctor~. we w.in1 the bc1l " e quipment doctors" wo can get. If we '!Ollie for '·just average," there soon is no more production. No p rodu ct io n, no job. Get the picture? No, vocntionnl education is a strong competency-based program whe re we a rc held pe rsonally accounLOble ror our s tudents. There arc only two "can'ts" in our voca bulary. If you can't do the work, you can't stay on the job. We 'll compare attendance (3 tard· ies I absence, I absence = I " F"), grades and placement with any. No, we in vocational education won't settle for mediocrity; too bad the newspnpe r will. I sign off all my work.

=

Eugene R. Sope r diesel mechanics instructor • P .S. I feel thaL it is asinine 10 compare vocational·lcchnical with academic anyway.

Vocational grades easily equal to academic Dear Editor: Although the anonymous autho r of ··Dean's List Pure Grav, for \locational Students" and Owen Cargol believe that vocational grades are not valid. " i th accurate information it C3n be shown that vocational grades are as valid as academic grades. ~ the context of the Compu1e r Science Business Applications (CSBAl Vocational Program. ac· ceptance standards are more ngorous than the minimum academic standards: hence limiting the acceptance of an aver:ige or below average student. According 10 Marv L\'nn \'OCa· tional counselor. 16-1 peo~le applied for acrep1:ince to the 19 :?,84

CSBA program: only 32 applicanlS passed a Computer Programmer Aptitude Banery and a slcills test. Of those. some students waited more than a year and onl} 18 were accepted. This is hardly your a,·erage student! lo co mparison. the min imum acceptance standards for academic students are: Cl) to lla\'e a high school diploma or equivalent; aJ. though anyone may be accepted on a probationary basis and (2) stand in Ii.Des and write a check. Clearly the le,·el of academic ability most be questioned. Since there is no measurable de \·ice used. it is quite possible. if not probable. that the proponion of 3\'erage students being accepted 10

"NlC academia" is greater than would be possible in our vocational program. As a final rest of vocational grades, the I9'82-84 CSBA class volunteered their grades for re· qui red vocational and academic courses. These required academic courses are not "easy." but include both semesters of account· ing. and English. finite math . algebra. and others. The cumulati,•e academic GPA was 3.4, where· as their cumulative vocational GPA was 3.5. It is inconceivable, given these facts. that anyone could conclude that ,•ocational grades are not \'alid, and academic grades are. The previous article reflected a

biased at1itude with unsubs1an11· ated accusations tha t vocational instructors are easy graders. If President Schuler supports Dr. Car gol's statement. how could be stand before the community at the SO-yea r celebration and claim "High Standards." unless he doc.s not consider vocalional programs pan of NfC. ln the worts of James Wart. "I have made a mistake. Mr. Pres!· dent ... ," may well be an appropn· ate response from Dr. Cargol. Tbe sopho more CSBA students work very hard for their grades and are awaiting an apology. Karen Contardo and 11 sophomore CSBA students


Oct. 14, 1983/ Canilnal Review - 7-

[ er arts/entertainment

J

Directing--the master's stroke by Cr:alg Johnson Direcung a play is like carefully preparing a canvas. JI/IC Drama lllstrUctOr Roben Moe said. .. First you appl) the background. and then you stan filling in the details;' he said. Those deuils may be as basic as creating effecthe nage pictures - an arrangement of actors 0 11 stage. stopped in motion like a photograph - or more complicate~ as in replacing the nw:e-up and accent o f a stereotypically pomayed ethnic origin. In the dra~ depanml!llt's upcoming production. "The Male Animal," the pan of Cleota is :10 example. "Many of the plays in the 1930s and 1940s \\ett wnnen \\Ith the stand&rd. step-and.fetch·tt blacks." 'Aoe ~d. ··Today. black mal::e-up for the purposes of corned)· ,~ taboo." Moc said he plans to change the mafr.e.up and accent of Cleota 10 something l~s offensi\'e to the ~Mibil1t1C'I of the public. Other than that, Moc s,1d he ";n sticlr. to a hterJI in1crprctallon of the ~pt. Brinsvng out the best in hb actors b a trick ~1oe

has mastered. Being able to size up the srrength Jnd "eaknesses of actors is b:isic 10 his duties as 11 director. he sllid. "I psych them out as to "bat l)pe of people they arc and whJt type of stimuli they will respond 10. •· he said. "Some lite to be pushed. some like to be c:1jolcd. some lil::e to be nunured or pampered:· Moc said be b1lilds on 1heir confidence. ··1 belie,e in the pD"er of oprimisuc 3ppro3chcs." he SJid. Moe is so oprimiStic th:11 he feels no n~d to cast understudiC5 or pro,;de prompters. "If you use a prompter. Wl ghes the .tctors the ideJ rhat something might go wrong. 11nd that someone needs to be there to get them going :umn he satd. - In the meantime. !\!oc IS plugging :iw:iy 1ow:ird the :-.o,. 4 opening night. Editor'

aote: The Oct. 28 lslioc

or the

CR

-.m

lndudc .m fa.depth look at the technical n.speets of proch:iclng • pla) such as ..The Male AntmaJ."

.s,.·

"..

~

.

'

Onsll fMlru photo

LONl::LY RtA DING··Fr~hma.n 0111 Odonc, and OIU Smith rcht'ar6c Lbclr pllrt" In the C·A A uditoriu m.

SIIO" TIMf. .• Chock Jennings n.'t'ltcs his pllr1.

Bn,il Fl'llnz photo

FO i i OW ING LEAD .. \o •<'tor rca4s tb.r ~pt.

TR\ IT .\G.\J:\··Dftt(1.0r Bob M~ lns1r11cts the acto~ during

• rc!ic=sl.


Oct. 14, J983/ Ca:.rdinaJ Review -8-

Finger picking, magic coffee house features by ShanJo Reaney A "idc l\~011mcnt or free entmamment in the form of coffee bOll$CS v.;n be pre\Cnted th" vear for students at 'IIIC According to Tina Philltppi. student actMtics chairman. entcru.inme11t aru 1lil1 be free to NIC !tudents in the mam lunch room of the SUB and •ill us:uall) be presented on Wednc:sda)s II I I :JO a.m. ··wednesda) scellb 10 be the best day for student anend&ncc. aod cntenaintts perform better for large audiences."' Pl11U1ppi sa.id.

acu.:·

··we 1n· 10 get a uM, of she added. Steve R·u~sell. a corruc and magicw.. •ill attempt to do bl) act ,.bile wunng a "suit" of 80 long. thin balloon, arowid his body dunng the Oct. 19 wffcc house. Phillippi said. Another coffee house scheduled for Oct. 2b v.ilJ feature Chru Proctor, the 19SJ U.S. Nationil Finger Picking Champion performing c:ontpOSWOtl5 frcm bu lie"' "Kicking Mule" album. Irish jigs. original \'OC&ls and musical t.tl1 talcs, Pl11lhpp1 said. She ndded thllt all coffee houses are spoMorcd by the AS:O.IC Student Government.

craig johnson Art lives, artists don't The late Amen= pltl)"'Tight Tennessee Williams onc-e ».id utistS c11n only find reality and satisfaction in their wort because. for them, the world or ordinBry events is less intense than the world or their imagination. Consequently he said, thel.l' lives seem insubstantial. _ Now, one does not have to be GJJ artist to knov.· that although God ts tn his heaven. all is not right with the world. Socia.I. ecooo.mic and poliLical problems plague society. Artists u.se them as blank can\as and empt} scripts which they bnng lo light and life. But to reach Lhal inner well where blue thoughts walk in ovet"COlllS like secretive men with blnck about their eyes, some artists feel they must withdra" from Lhe world of the peny and mundane which composes our daily events. The scenario o( the solitary. unapproachable artist burn.mg wuh an inward intensity that is so CODSum.ing he appears on the \·erge of incandescence. is common among the literary rude who are disciples of the image of the self-destructive artist. For these people. creathity is a cult. and clarity or \ision is their goal. Their higb priestesses and priests s.re poets lite Syhu Plath. W"dl.iam Blake and Dylan Thomas. all of ~·hom did not go gently into that good night. The) ma) wid sympathy and underStanding in the brush strokes of V311 Gogh or take II trip into the bizarre ,..itb the paintings of Goya, who v.'ll.S driven 10 GJJ asylum by the horrot of his \ision. They are comi.nccd thnt genius leads 10 mental illness or via: versa: a myth that is paniall~ perpel'Dated by stories about eccentric anist.s like the poet painter W"uliam Blue who saw \i.siollS of God .i.nd the angels. and fancied painting out in bis garden - start na.ted. But insanm is not :i measure of greatness. Drugs and in<a.ne beha\ior are not pra.cticaJ means to cultivate or clarify ,ision. Besides, the) produce headaches. hango\·ers and suicides. Anists who :ire C'3ught up in some srylized ide::i of ho" they should beba\e are overlooking !.he importance of v.bat artists do - aeate a.n. It doesn' t maner if they do it naked in the garden or alone in their studios. just so the Job gets done. Lr lbey become Thorazine rcttplllclcs in asylums. our culture is that much worse off.

Visions mon Gtry Grimm or Mou.nl.lln Vflilom changes a slide tray on one of lhe nine projedon oscd for hls Oct. 4 s.llde presente.Uon ln the CA Auditorium.

College concert choir to perfonn in Portland by Ric J . Kast

The Nonb Idaho College Concert Choir 112s been selected to perform March 29-31 at the American Choral Director 's Association at the Northwest D1vis10D

Convention in Pon.land. This IS the third lime music: director Richard Frost has sub,nitted a tape to the ACDA Performance Screening Committee. Frost said the selection was• long-awajted first for NIC's concen choir. The concert choir consists of 73 members. ranging in age from 18 to 60. accord111g lO frost. He said the group is unusulllly large for a two-ye.ar college. Frost also said the conccn choir is unique in its own right. combining the regular day srodents who meet four umc:s per week with the night students who meet only one night per weelc. He said the only time the concert rehearses as a unit is oo Tuesday nights. Aaxmiing to Frost. overcoming this obst3Cle is a real challenge in itself. But he grins as be adds that it is quite an honor LO be selected out of the numerous colleges in the Mountain Region. A lot or the credit, Frost said. must go to accompanist Michael Sulley. "'Without bis help. my job would be twice a.shard." Frost said. "Michael worts bard "ith both day and nigbt students. and he helps pull things together when the two classes meet."" . be Specified information as to the exact day a.od time of the coocet1 wtll 'd forthcoming as final program plans are made, most ftkely before Nov. I, Frost S&I •


Oct. J4, 1983/ Canl.ln.al Review -9-

[.. _ __s_c_~_e_e_n _ s_c_e_n_e___J 'Chill' thaws ice of life

Cardinal Revieu- humor

Punk: A colorbook look

by Craig JohNOD A lady's slender fingers WJtb long, red nails

by CraJg Johnson

are buttoning a man's trousers.

Slowly. almost sensually she dresses him in a suit, the camera never re,.·ealing more than her hands and his clothes. It Is not antO 9he palls his cuffs over his stitched up wrists tbat we know she is a mortician and he is a corpse...The Big Chill'' begins. Set agaiMt the bJckground or a Louisiana mansion and moss-rovered sycamores. .. The Big Chill .. is a stOry of lost hope, blurred ideals and the search for happiness in a sad, savage world. A tight•knit group of friends who met in college in the late 60s are reunited at the funeral of Alex - a discontent physicist who turned down a Rutledge Fellowship to work nt an endle~s number of blue-collar jobs. Al the plot develops, the character of Alex is revealed. He becomes a symbol of the noo-matenahstic idealist thot was instilled io each of the friends at a time when ~ocilil ond pohucal change was o dominant motif. Bur he wa~ a mnn who..e unc:ompromi5ing sense of values eventUJ11ly drove him 10 commit suu:ide. Twelve years later his friend~. all profcssional.s ranging from Meg. a lawyer who never found a loving relauonship wtth a man. to Nick. a pill-popping c1-psycholog1~1 who was emaS<'ulatcd In Vietnam, meet for a weekend 10 mourn Ale.r's suicide. la the procus, they discover that their fnc ndshtp is essential if they arc 10 maintain a healthy pcr~pccuve on rhe world. Although they know thot hfe 1$ filled with cruel inequit1C\ end that b3ppines.s doe\ not come easy. they also know that having friends with whom you can share your feeling) eases the burden of hvmg. Though the circumsl~nce of their reunion is grim. 3 comic tone runs throughout IJ1e movie WMn Karen, a mothe r a.nd a wife of a successful business man. ls asked why she i, certain that her husband will alwny6 be fo1thful. she replies that he is afraid of gcuing herpes. A medley of 605 hit~. including The Rolling Stones' ''You Cllll't Always Get What You Wnn1:· charges the lltmb~phere with a.Ii clectnc sense of nostalgia And when the friends dcp:1r1, you get the feel mg that it wtll not t:ike a funeral to bnng them bock together ognin As the weekend conclude~...TI1c Big 01ill" hu 1howed. allo"mg them 10 return to their lives w11h n revitalt1.cd pcr~pcctivc of whot it means to be human

Ta.kc a v.·ell-dressed woman in 11 print dress and necklace. throw a bucket of purple paint on her and send her through a car wash: the product. gentlemen. is pll.llk.

To complete the look. Grace Slick, Lena Lovi1ch and Marianne Faithflll ha,·e added g:iunt. g:iudy and grotesque, 1hc three g's of successful sleaze-hood.

The philosophy that ''No sense ma kes sense.·· "left is right"' and "the tighter the better •• means wearing your rtbe!Lion on your sleeve in the form of a .. fa.fa.fa fashion .. which by comparison ma kes Boy George look like Mister Rogers.

Worner, while the most ob,ious. 3re not the only ones who h3ve succumbed to the colorbook lool:. Men. ho"evcr slothfully. are growing liulc met3I protrubera.nccs from their ears and a.re ..-hipping their hair up into Stray Cat

If you see r.tinbows in the air, paint I.hem in your hair. lf you arc p.o.'d at a capn.1Jistic system o. hich seems caste, ..-car black pauper's gJo.. es. rub your eyes with su,,.cblacl; and bark at the moon: he"ll be sure 10 listen.

Black and white. checked deck shoes, Kamikaze rising-sun scar,..es and nuro .. silk. ties are essen tial accessories for II style that i:., if oot le3SI nc..• wa,e.

Chrissy H}'nde Joan Jet and P;at Benaw ha\e t3ught the !lOSptl of faSt, nast} and mean. 1hc first three pnnoples of lad~ punk.

But L~:-is still seem to h:i, ea grip on things. and so. for the umc bcmg. Bo) George look-alike contests m3y be for in the future.

StnllS.

screwdrivers, margaritas , pina coladas

etc

Burger ond Fries in Basket S 1.50 on Wednesday

1st draft beer Free on Friday Basil Fraiu photo

I

Ct-tting read)'

~ J ohn Huabcs COIUllrUt'U a RI lo the lliet ~ room behind the C-A ,.......orhun •iaac Od. 10.

I.D . required

\

r

•I

I

I


Oct. 14. 1983/ Cardlnal Review - 1 ~

Freshmen take seats as student senators

Convocation scheduled coallnacd from page I

by Rim RoUlnp-.orth

John 1...e,,;s, professor of pla.netary SC1cnces at the Uni,ersi~ of Arizona. will addrcs\ "An .Assessment of Space Rcsoorces" at 2 p.m. Frida) 's speaker\. Mike Som men die. Idaho state consen at ion officer. -..111 speak at 11 a.m. Ill the Bonner Room on the ··Loss of Ajtncultural Land. -:aut>nall) and Locally. · At I p.m. in the C-A Audnonum. Greua Goldenman. a rcpre<:ent.itl\e from the lnstinne for Food and Dc~clopmcnt Poh.cy, "'Ill ~peak on " The Pa:radoJ of Hunger io a Land of Plent> · Folio"''"~ Goldcnman' s pre~nt.ation, Gerald Ga!'cy. coonhn.uor of the lo.:al emergency food ~nk. will till on " Hunger io Idaho." and Gal) Doman,l.1. v.ho hand!~ mane!"\ rclatla.e. to heating for the need> ...~n address Cold m ld.iho " In addni~n to the lpcUt'r,, Cor.\'OCllllon Weck. sponiOrcd b) the physical science!> matherriauc\ and eng1nee:nng dw1S1on and b> the convocations comminec .. ,n offer films. ,,deo u~ and urub,u 10 further upand the theme

Thrtt oewl)-<IN:ted freshman semi• tor.. were S\' om i.o10 office Fnda,·. Sept. 30. Dennis Gorringe, Muvin 0' Bleness lltld Angela Joyce jomcd three sophomore ~,no.tors "ho "ere elected last ran to fill the 1q33.s4 senate set11,; on the \Sl'f1C Student Boord. Gomnge said he didn"t e'Cpcct 10 'Q,in the 11cademic ~t on the 1\ SNIC Student Board. " But I did pliln on giving 100 percent l'ffort to my c:impoign." he said

Council to poll vo-tech tudent b~ Pam Coaalaglwn

Th~ Vocational Students of 'onh Idaho College ,otcd urwumoosly m r~ Oct. I:? meeting to poll \'OCauonnl students and to .,..nte a rcbunJ.I lener 10 the Cardm.11 Revie"' :ibout the Sept. 30 editorial concerning the dun's list. The rouncil accepted ASNJC President Le(' Cote·s suggestion to sane\ students ~nd to write the lener justif}ing why more ,-oc3t1oaal srudenu ue on the dean's hst. Coi:nm1i_iee members selected for the LaSk ... ere Cbru ~fulke,. Greg Ferry. · Marvin O Blcness :ind Cole. In other action. the council ~cheduled us next mceung for Oct. 1Q,

G<>mnge gndu:ued from Coeur d' Alene High School I.ISi year. While in high «-hool he s!lld he ser\'ed a, ldnho st:ite pre~1dcn1 for the D1qtribu1ive Edocnllon Clubs or America (DF.C,\ ). G,.,rringc sold he decided to run for ,et1Ator bccau\e he felt the e1pcriencc ll'Ould be helpful. and becnu,e he "anted the opportunuy to "ork for the ~udcnts or NIC The voc;U1t>nal senate seal wn\ ... on b~ O'Blcne\s. And even though he ~u unopposed. O'Blencs) ~aid he ~till h:id n problem geumg elected. He hod 10 rush to get his r,ome on the ballot "l decided to run JU\t three dn)'s before 1he deadline." O'BlcnC\) said. As a member or the voc:at1on11l

~tudent council. he ,;aid he l\ aware of the problems 11hat face student govtm. mcnt. O'Blenc~~ ,aid that requests for funds m excess or the S4 .000 allotted to the VSN IC by ASNlC Student Board hllvc alrcitd)' been received. Stntc In" prohibits the u•e of vocationol school funds for field trips and ,c:mmar<,, so tho,;c AC'tivltles must be paid for w11h money from other plal-c~ such n11 Lhe ASNIC. O'Blenc,, ,oid. Even though he hold, the vocational ~enl. O'Blenes~ ,oid he in tends to cun~ldcr the ls5uc,. and be fatt to both HX'lltionol nnd acodcmic ~tudcnt~. O'Blenci~ 1\ from Libby. Mont. Angcln Joyce won the open ,cat for fre\hmun ~cno tor. J oyt"e ~nld ,he dernlcd to run for 1ht" ,cnotc scat bccousc 'ihC hos olwny\ been intcrc,t· cd in government. " h looked like it w11~ within my rcoch, ·' Joyce \Uid. "l \\OUld like to be o {U.S I senator ~mcdn)'," Joyce I~ from Ocruldinc, Mont. She \crvcd o.s ,tudcnt body vice president her junior )'COr of high ~chool and she wa~ pre~ident her ,en1or )'enr.

Now playing The Names October Oct. 14 through Oct. 21 Glider

Oct. 26 through Oct. 29

TUESDAY

$ 1 pitcher night

WEDNESDAY

Ladies night 5 p.m . to 8 p.m.

well drinks 50 q 8 p.m . on $1 drinks

Every Wed. night dance contest

THURSDAY

$1 Night

FRIDAY

Free drinks 8-9 p.m.

SATURDAY

Free drinks 8-9 p.m.

cash prizes and tee-shirts


Wh,'• bcol <'" /,ol. don<'('""""" • ·,th""'"'' rr("'''"' '"'" o( '•••"" < 7 « 7L'P /I also,,,~ ,.,,h 1h, /ophl = .. --~o( -thes,«•""" ,.,,,. ·, 1 & du•t 1C P. Reel ' '"' /OPP'"" ond. "'"'""' ,n mO<f'"'''""-''' ,,..,,,<I pa"""' '" done< ,,, ,c ';I-.

'

Dance ferer stirs with Seven & Seven Stngrnm·s


0 cc. 1-$, 1983/ CanUnal Re,iew -12-

Women Democrats declare 1984 power year bJ Rk J. Kast ''Mrs. President. Mrs. President. I ha,·e a question O\ er here." . Sound far-retched? Not really - considcnn_g the enormous political \trides "'omen ha,e :i.ccomplish· ed thu\ far. 1he \exual bmi~ chat ha•e confined v.omen's pohucal 1n,olvement to 1okcni\m are on lhe \\3\' OUI. 1n a ~ctnI Associated Pre\s reiea.se. ~r:. Ed"- ud Kenned) bcc;ime the founh dcmocrauc ~ffic,al to 1ell a mc:eung o( Lhe pan,· ,. nmc:n leader'> 1hat the sex barrier to the naunn'\ rop rwo office\ should (all. Add1tionallv Democra;ic Sauoiul Comrru::ice Vice Chairman L~nn Cutler called for a llOffl&n lO be nominated for the \1tr presidcnC) next yur. The pany's "'omen uc n:untng 11164 as their )CU of pov.er because or the "~dcr ga;>'' confrontin~ President Reag:i.n . And 11 "'ould be grmsl~ na1,e to think the women's struggle fo: eqoalrry· "'ould Stop short of the nouon ·s top slot.

( news analysi,s

J

And remem~r. "'omen ha,-c the m3JOnty vote.

Funhermore. the ' ational Educatton Association Bonrd of Directors recently vo1ed to suppon former Vice President Wnlter "Fritz" Mondale in the race for the Democratic nomination for the presidency. Mondale has repeatedly stated he "'ould consider :t womt1n as a running mntc. Ir Mondale wan1s 10 keep 1he EA's suppon. hc would do well 10 remember th:11 the EA president is n woman. ln foct. choosing n "omsn n.s a running

matc Ill.I) very ll't'll be thc winning combination foT

1984. The natlon 's political dimiue 1s npe for n chnng,e The tbrea1 or another Vietnam "pe11CC"-ket'ping" clemen1 increased m Lebanon when Congress ,01ed

to 3.llo11o Rcig:tn to mauitam military fol't'C., there for up 10 l months The nuclear arms nice <;eems ro be on the ,-e~ of running up m1htar;, spend mg bcyond one'<; ,,ildest dreams, and m:an, kcl thc bc:.t <iOlution i<i to "clwlge thc not "St3\' the course " 1n fact, Rcaaan·,; chan~ of l:>cing rc-electcd v.111 largely depend oo thc manncr tn "h1.:h he handle, Lebanoo and thc nudc3r arms nice. tr. m fact. he dcc1d~ to run for rc-clt'C'1ton. l! I.be Lal~ Si.ates elect$ the firs1 v.oman leader ,.,r the three super J>Ollcrs thc "course" ""ould change dr1ma11calh Russia and China would dcftniteh necd to f'C'\amp 1hc1r s1rotc.1t1c, v.hcn dcaling 11o 1th 1he l!nned Stnics. A. 9,,im1.n pre!>ident ma} not sec m11itilry <;trength as Lhc pana«a to \Cm1ti, e L$SUt'5 ,uth 3S nuclear arms and ~ ieqnng 1acucs that keep the \\Orld in 3 s1a1c of con\tant armecy. Ob,iou.sl)'. v.omcn·~ nghts \\Ould rccc1vc more than JUSt a ft"" toicn go-.ernmcn1al positions aimed at keeping them hoping. eage r to suppor1 the presidcn1,. ho hired them but con, eoaentJy out of the wa} •hcn ma,or deasions must be rnadc. Oomestlc programs at all leveh would po,sibly rece1,'t' more emphi1S\S :1t1d suppon from the federal govetnment. and cducatton m1gh1 finally get its rightful .mention. Adrruncdh·. when the ,·01ers or this nation decide 10 h~ o "Oman to hud the country. umc will be

cow."

To rom m i11ees

Cole makes appointments bJ

Mm

The student board and President Lee Cole made a variet) of committee appointments in thC' Oct. 10 ASNIC Srudcnt Board meeting. To fill one of the more notable posiuons of those vacant. the board ,•oted to make senator Carrie Smith president pro tern of the bo3rd. lt IS the president pro 1em's duty 10 preside over the sen.ne in the absence of the presidem and ,ice prcsidenl. The board also elected Smnh 10 the college senate along "itb fcllow senators Donna Lewis and Angele Joyce. The college senate is a governing body made up of students. faculty. aod administrators that appomt committees and make recommendarions_ The student board reappointed Tony Stewart as 1he board's faculty nd,iser. Cole. os the ASNlC president. had the responsibility of selecting people for 14 comminccs. o.nd submi111og !heir names to the board for appro..al. His appointmems for the srudcm actions commi11ee included Marvin O'Blencss. Hco ry Madsen . Barb Kitimiller. Shari Alderman. Chuck Whitlock t111d Dcnnis Gorringe. For the student affairs committee his appointments were O'Blencss. Andy Rice. Jo\'ce and Cole himsetr (ex officio membc.r). To 1he judiciary committee Colc

'Wheeler appointed Carol~n Pfister. Mite Eggleston and Kittmiller. Kim Ackerman. Dan Davis. Ke,in Lacy. Lls3 Lacy and Lewis wcrc his appointments to thc student activities commir1ce, while Jeff Loy3l. Joyce. Dcnms Gorringe and Smith were his selections for the studeot focihtacs commincc. Placed on the publicit) committee 11oerc Alderm3ll. Ackerman. Rice and Tina Phillippi (ex officio member). Other appointmcnts v.-erc: O'Blcness - curriculum committee. Gorringe - traffic appeals committec, Kitzmiller and Lewis - commencement comminec. Sally Finney and Roben Armitage - convocauoos com· mince. Cole - financial committee. Alderman - soci:iJ committee and Ricc "-Orking with O"Bleness as the Kildow Memorial Loan COIJlllllttce. All of Colc's appointments were Ullllnimously passed in a blanlcc1 vote or Lhc board. Ln other action the board:

~ndorsed the use of NIC students as stand-ins in a. Wnrner Bro1hers mone 10 be filmed later this month in Spokane. with S30 o student being dona1ed 10 the Coeur d' A.Jcne chapter or Hospice.

Bored c.tiff A maoneqo.in dJspla)S interes1 In a lecture ghen last week during a nJght cla.ss ln I.he Admlnlstratlon Bo.ild-

i.ng-

,.PEDER.SE needed to ndj11s1. Bui just Ima gi ne II news conference held by the fomalt c11cc:utlvc chiof about one yeo r IIJ1er bei ng elected. She wil l nokn owlcdge 1he rc pori er 's waving hnnds. and give him permission to ask his queition. " Mr\ . Presidcn1. I~ there any truth to the Equal Rights for Men·~ orgo niwtlon claim thot you have developed a serious gender gap?"


,

I Oct. 14, 1983/ Cardinal Review - ll -

Airplanes not fly-by-night for Stone by Wllly Weed,

"There's a ccnaio grace and inherent beauty in things that ny. .. This. according 10 Coeu.r d'Alene resident Carl ' ' Roclty" Stone, is ooe of the reasons he has been nying remote con trol and l'lldio-assisted model ai.rplanes for SO years. Stooe is on I.he board of directors of the Coeur d' Alene Aeronau11cs Modeling Society (CA MS). and a former vice president of the organization. Stone said CA MS bas beeo in existence for over IS years. although he has been nying planes for moS1 of his life. "The in terest in airplan es was prominent when I was a boy," Stone said. He recalled the fascination he felt when huge dirigibles would Oy over his home. "These huge shadows would come across the sky and roltle the windows 1n the house," he said Stone noted that hi6 childhood hero was Chnrles Lindbergh. " It Wll.\ an ero of great daring ond great occomplishmclll, •· he said. Stone said alth ough ihe remote control nlrcnft field hos changed drostic11lly over the yeors . the changes hove never come o\ fast ns they are nov, . especially in the radio technology field. "fl~d10 b never n stahonory lhlng, .. he said "·n,c \ Ull e of 1hc on keeps advancing." Stone said th a.t rnd io,co n1 rolled airt'rofl I, now the fn~tCSI gro"~ll8 lndu\lry in the sport nnd recreation field , with hundred) of millions of dollnr~ ~pent ycnrlY. oo it.

Basll Franl photo SILENT FUGHT--Ooc of lhc m-.ny planes In Carl Stooc' ..-orlcshop Is complete with Ogurtt of co-pilot Richard Utile and Stone.

( He said a person could spend 11.s li1tlc as $80 on a pl11nc v, ith one rnd10-controllnblc funcuon. or as much as S 1.000 on nn eight-cha_nncl plane He ~.ud that an a, erngc plane v,ould around S200, llltd 75, IOO houn

l'O~l

" Uuld need to be 1n,·es1~ tu m1l.c it fly He ,aid II wa~ \\Orthv. h1lc 10 go through the ume,consumi ng process of dc~ign,og. butldmg p1ett b)' p1e..-c, p11111ting ,1nd msu1lling ~~ntta.J 01gh1 equipment in each " h 'l> a hohby; 11'< o g ~at 1heraputic

er sports a~eot." be said. "It gi,cs one a sense or pride 1fter they build o!M' o( these llnn~. paint it and make ll 0) ·· Stone flies bis pl.io.es nearly e- Cf) v,eekcnd v.1th CA\1S al Fa.rngut St:ite Pan. north or Coeur d'Alene. He wd the part has btto , en cooperative and hclplul \\,th CA >,,iS. He expllUled th.at ,. htle CA.\IS has ool~ 25 members, 11 1s also .a pan of lhc nauoiul ~mo,c<oatrol airp~c OT· g.1111U1Jan kno,r.11 U the Acadatn) or \ lodel Acronaut~ (A~Al.

J

The Fa.rragu1 Flyers of Sandpoint and the Borons of Spokane nrc nlso AMA sponsored flying dubs.

The AMA h:i.s divided the country

mto 11 regions. nnd they hold compeutions m several different cntegories. The old-timers is one of Stone's f.a,·onte categories. It features types of plane$ from the beginning of the sport ID the 1920s and 19JQs. " h's most!} the geriatric: set of the modeling "orld " Stone said " Nobody gen cicited It'~ ,•ery lov. kc:y...

TOUCH CONTROL-· S tone demonstrates the radio controller th at operates the model planes.

Cari Stone


Oct. 14, 1983/ Cardlnal .Rcvlo• -14-

Gal hoopsters looking up b) Shari Aldennan Although 1hc bnttle mny be uphill. po1ential cnndid11tes, Cri mp said. women's basketball coach Greg Crimp He labeled Jamie Stnnhopc, Jana belic,es his tc:lm has all the potential, Greenfield lllld trlUlsferring Barbara aggrcsheoess nnd eo1husiasm re· Ehordt as intense pl.1yers. quired for 1 rewarding season. Crimp \Bid he hl'.S high hopes for AC'eording to Crimp. onl) three other players who arc presently involv, leuerrnen Are returning. so the team cd In other fall spon s. will be young and inexperienced. Melissa Hi!rvey, Lauri Samp.\ on and Sophomore Knth) E,uingcr will Teresa Conrnd arc nil freshmen volley, pl"O' ide lenderuip qunlitie~ ns ,, ell ns boll players. nod ThcreSQ Bcrkcr i, a sC\"lnn,g abilit) . E.111ngcr ~ancd last cros~<auntry nmncr. ,cu and led the Cudinals 1n field Freshman Angela J1>yce hll5 a lot of g<>ais Cnmp said. p1>tent111I. Cri mp soid. She: need~ Crimp -.aid he also <'1pcc1s lcttcrexperience, but s he has a good ml"n Sharl11 1.Jt,·an and TGmrny Meir, 1111itude. he said. hofer 10 contribure eipcrience and According lo Crimp. hh nrw as~is. leadership. tont, Vic Woodwocd or Po~t Falls. and A lot of ~omen an: C(1mpeting for veteran n1si(10111 Coth v Jones will goud postuoo\, he s:ud. c,.1mblnc 1hcir expertise· lo help the S,·d Lark. Jennift'r Wogner. Starla young tenm. Enckwn :ind K.i1 Schoonmaker arc nil

Volleyball coach's hopes rise, fall with squad's play

Up and in Women's roundbliller Starla Erickson goes up for an uncontested lay-ap at practice la.s1 week ln preparation for lhe team's 01. 25 opener ~ Blue MoanLaln Com.munlt) College ln Pcndle1on, Ore.

The NIC volleyball tcom hod not lived up 10 II, potcntiol until lhe firM regional tournament Oct. 7-8 in Ontario. Ore., Coach Roy Cook ~aid. The Cardinals "·ere 3- IJ before Inst weekend. ond in the 1oum11ment they won one of their three matchc~. Thai gives them a 4, 15 overoll record, and a 1-2 lcagur st:inding. Friday. Oct .... the opening night or the tournament, lhc:y beat Clackamas. Saturd:iy. Oct. 8 they were defeated in a cln5s mo teh by the home team, Treasure \ 11.lley Community College. This wns followed bv a loss 10 lcngue-le3ding Rids College. Before the tournJment Cook attributed the te:im'b poor record to fl lock of roh~1>·encss and 1n1ens1ry 111 cn11cal times. He lllso said that they hnd not Ji ved up to their potential, consideri ng the impressi,·e background\ of some of the players. However, the teams performance wa.\ much bc1ter 01 the Ontario 1oumamcn1, Cook said. .. We played like a team that came to ploy volleyball," he soid. I! the team wuu all three or their malches 111 the second regional 1oum amcn1 Oct 27-28 at Ricks. they will advance to nationals, regardless or the ir previous record. They could theoretically make it 10 nationals by winning two or Lhc lhree matches 3nd "innin.2 an additional playoff m:itch for second place.

Sports can't survive by technology alone Row far-fetched does this sound? You see a group of well-muscled photographic images of post-human juggernauts striding, pounding, punching. diving, racing and pulsing across and through the three-dimensional grid screen in froot of your favorite recliner. Technology is playing a larger role in sports as each season passes. Medical advances have enabled players to periorm bener. longer and safer. Bceaosc the design of padding in many sports h.a..s become more precise, protective gear is more effective. Coaches ha\'e recently started using computers 10 aid them in personnel IUld game plan decisions. Blorb)1hm readouts have been employed to more accur:uely predict players' game-to-gnme pc.rformance. Advances in communic:nions ha,·e affected the sporting world e\'en more profoundly. Television. radio. and on the field communication systems h:ive added ne..• dimensions to mOSI spons sin.cc their inception.

Whllt would Krune Rockne say if the game were suddenly stopped for a commercial breal. Things like that just didn't exist in bis time. Bat still the ad,·a.nces in the last years have not arri"ed as [11St as they a.re arriving today. and they do not compare 10 the snowballing progress projected in the future. So, maybe a world of android superheroes or holographic blurs somehow concrolled by today's space-age wbiz k:ids is not impossible. When technology is that far advanced, maybe there will be no grandsu.nds. but in.stead. only home viewers receiving their satellite and compu ter missions. Perhaps the day will rome when the connections between people and spectator sporu will be as flims) ns the wires and transmitters used by nameless geniuses to control their predispositioned pawns.

=

willy

weech lf this unlikely forecast were accunue, I believe the huma n race would lose the essence of its presently enjoyable pastimes. ~ compedtJoa would remain. although n might aid them in personnel a.nd gamc·pl3.D decisions. preseni in today's spons rould be fixated in the game computers somehow, and interesting mlltch· ups and formats could also be formulated into the system. But lhese factors alone would still build a stagnant game without lhe one thing a computer cannot accurately simulate: h uman emotion.


Oct. 14, 1983/ Canilnal Re,•ie-w -lS-

Bundy faces close shave if harriers go to nationals b} Dan Breeden Will the Cardinal cross countr) the first year we've done th3t well. .. teams go to natioll3ls this year? One of Bundy w tb also plell.Scd "ith the them ...;u ti,i,e co if the team -A"3Dts to men· s performance l3st Frid3 y in see its coach cle3.ll sh,i11en. Missoula. Mont. when Hea,h pl3ced ..The bet last ) ear was to get my ear fifth. Burrell sc,•enth ond Hoila nd pierced." Coach Mike Bund: said. came in I Ith agains, three four-ye3T .. But that was 3 linle out of hlllld. schools Jnd 3 number of un:mached ..This year rm just going to sh:ive runners. my be:ird ,r either of the teams The ,. omen h:irriers returning from qualifies for nationals. It's just to add last \ear·s te:im arc Amcli3 B:irril. :i linle inccntl\'e •· Alasi.:i and Californi:in Mel:inie The men'!> team ~nninh· h:is some Candia. w·ho qualified for n11tionah experience coming back in ldaho:in last year placing 61 out of a field of returnees Steve Abrams. John Bursen. 200. Gordon Heath and Wade Hoiland. " We ha"e more talent on the Bundy said. women's team this IC:ir than e,er Sophomore transfer student. Da,id before.·· Bundy siud. · "but not much Smith. Lev.'ISlon. v.·ill also be helping experience." the men on the eoad to nationals. as He said the other talented ones ....;11 freshman Craig Killin. Eugene. include Idahoans Theresa Becker. Ore.. Src-.e Nagorta. OC\·eland. Ohio. Laurie BrlS[O\\. Diane Kelly. Nora :ind Joe Weadick. Coeur d. Alene. Monon. Gail Sisk. Desiree Johnson. Howe\'cr. Smith wu recemly injur· Sou,h Africa, 3nd Theresa Pentecost. ed and. 11 is not known .,,hen or 1I he Lewistown. Mont. .,,.,JI return. Bundy said. The women harriers traveled to The men put on a fine performance Spokane SJturd11y but it 11•u more for a on 1heir On. I outing m l.agrande. good pracllce than an>•thing else. Ore.. swccpmg the first four places as Bundy said. well as si.nh place. according 10 In spite of ,he c:ou~c. Cnndin pl:iccd Bundy. I Ith ond Becker. "'ho h11dn'1 trained "We've won th,11 meet for the last with rhe tc11m for two weeks due 10 an fi~e )'Cllr$... Bundi· ~d. "but this is miun·. came in L5th.

Co min~ rhro u~h f'rei.bman John Nilles puts a move on Allen ltoUlngswortb during a basketball wortcoul lasl week. Thi' Cardinals wlll mcel Spokane Communh} ColJege In thclr nnu game on Nov. 26.

Campus lntramurals

Football tourney to begin by WIii) Weech

Toumamc111 ploy for NIC inlramurnl nag lootball '"ill beam Tucsd°'. Oct I& with a licld of \1i teams. Slnglc,cllminotion phl) will bc8m at 5 p.m . TuC',dB) w11J1 Thc Oogs faC1ng off agninM Bcttcr Lotc on Field I. while 1hc Rec. Club '"" be pla\lng 1hc.- Hoser, on Field 2. Thl• winner of lhc Dug~ ,~. Beller Ute l'<lntc~t 11ill fa~ thc unh.:11tcn t,')cn; l'hu~do\', Ott. 20nt S p.m. t>rl Field I Ille \\anncrofTuc~d.1,··~ ~c,"Ond i:ame \\111 pl:iI Ooon"dn1 n,ur.dny, Oc1. 20 at 5 p.m on 1:1<'ld 2 Th,• wanner 11fThur,doy', gomc~ will plJ) an ihr ch.impi.m,h1p Tu.:-,d:11 . 0."I :!5 at S p.m on Field I. Flnal rcgul~r , cawn ,1.111dmg~ before ,c~tcrda, ·, malcup ron1~1 between Doom,doy and Octtl'r Late were lb tolltmv l11c b<!cl"\ 11J\ -1,0, Doom,d.1, "~ 2·1: Inc Hu,crs 11 n:. 2 I. llcucr uitc ,, a~ l · l , fhc Rcc Club,, a, 1.J. llnd The Doc:. "as

0~.

.

TI1c 6Clt·r, rttic, ed nn nu tomntic b,e an rhe lin., round o( the t,,urnament. "tule all Other bcnh~ \\inc Sl'ht'dUICd b, r.1nd<1m dr.lW In the intramural golf tournament 111 Coeur d' ,\lent' Pubh, Goll Cour~e. the lo" <'SI 1nd11idu11I ~et1re at 40, ,, h1le hl~ team. ,1 h1,·h mduded Rand, Zit'glt'I' Bret Oo"c" and Durla Colicld, hod che lowe~t team :;core for th,: nmC:hole eou~ 111

a

208.

Larry Haupcmann photo

The ne~t intr:imurlll ,pon 1'11cd is C'O·rct , ollc, b:i.11 "ht~h " ill began \\ cdnesda, Oct. 2C>. . ••

Takedo" n tec hnique

The 1e:im entry deadline 1> On. 24 :it 4 p.m .• llnd ~-.-dule~ c:in be pictcd up :11 the 1ntr:imural board in the Sub"' 3) the follo" mg d11,•. All ffllltehe~ will be held an the gym. •

\\ restilng coach John O>rco demonstl1leS a move on 1\-la.t Arl>uckle while Sec>fl Close 1111d Joe Lapan ,o,akh the acdon for tips during a recent pnacllcc on the lawn behind the SUB.


,

OcL 14, 1983/Cardlna.l Re,•lew -16-

[..___n_ic_n_o_t_ic_e_s_ _ J Students lntuested In llrwlcl&I aid, Pell Grants, and st11de111 loans, shoald cont act Jim Upchu rch In the ~IC floanclal aids orJlce for more ln.l'orma· tJon. T he Nor t h Idaho Chor al Full"• ' Grand Conet!l1 "W be held Oct. 22 aod will feature the NIC Madrlg,al Slngen. The ron«rl "IU Ix> at 3 p.m. In the CA Audi torium. Admluloa Is S2 for adul ts, and SJ for chlldrcn, sui:dcots and senlon. Free admlulon for !'<lC studenti., Ca.c:uh) and swf, Gold Card holders and Commu1dlJ Cooev1 Can! holders. Those wbo lefl books for I.be pab d ub book swap sboald pldi ap all unsold books and/or mone, I.a Room 2 or the Meebanlcal Aris Su.iJdi.ag. Tnu and checks not clalmed b) Oct. IS

GALAXY

The annual \'ct Clab Halloweeo Costame Ban "W be held frlda> Oct.

UI a.t I.be Iva Ltt Dance Ball on Seltke WaJ. Adn.nced ticuts can be boaght at the Vct inlormatkmal booth In the ro,u or the St'B for r,.·o cam oI rood ~ a Sl domtlou. The last du to wlthdra"' rrom lndhidaal ~ 15 ~o,. 7, a«ordlng to the reglsr:nu' J oftkc. \1i orl.,stad, time sheets must bt '15t11ed b) I.be. ~ [,;or and b_\ tht emplo)tt and mllSl ladade the 50dal secwil} a11mbcr. ShttL, IDD-Jt be turned In IO the rUWJd.al aJds llfDcoe b) QC1, ?4, Or DO chm ... mbe ~ Oct. 31. ,\0 otht-r tlme sbtti.s ar due 1n the bus~

through Oct. 22nd

I -

Tbe \'ctenms Ad.minls&ratioa lnlo:r-

The MJcbscl Balle), FacuJI) Organ Recital will be Oct. 16 a.I 8 p.m. la the

ma.tJoa booth ili the fo,n ol thl' Sl:B IJ oow open fuD ~ - · Cb«!,. there £or •'l'trran Information before goJng to lhe apstalrs ollb.

j ~

I i

Happy Hours

M onday • Friday 5-8 pm

Twi light hour 11 -Midnight 95( coc ktails

Offiet! for more Information. The ne w houn. for the \lC Book· store are 8 a.m. 10 4 p.m. Monda)· through Frida). The bookstore ... rn no longer be open oo Monda) and Tucsda) c,cnlng~.

i

~fflJDUOD1mmnuou ,na1,Wttt111mm1nm mmm1mtttt·mn111nummm1mmu1"mmn1ttt""1ttlnuttwI

officl' bJ Oct. 26.

beoomc the property of the pub club.

C-A Audllorium. Utll the NTC Boi:

~nannn,..._....rmtlt'IMUl!l!llt.....1 J W 1 1 t t ~ . . . . , .............N.._wwwcww

Rall .. w be pla)ing Oct. 20 l.n the C-A Aadllorlam. Rapid Fltt 'Ifill open for them. a.ocl tkl.cts a.re S5 for NlC

foludt'llts .-1th ID cards and S6 for Lbc gtoc...I pobtle. llclets are on sale In the NIC Bu O~.

Oct. 10to0ct. 15

Oct. 17 to Oct. 22


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