Fed funding 'shafts' Idaho students: Upchurch b) RJi. Hollingsworth NIC students and other ldllho college studenu are forced 10 carry hea1'Y eduC:t111onal loans because campus• balCd federal aid is not dimibuted JUSt· I), according 10 Jim Upchurch, director of financial aids. In 1977 when 11 cc»t S2. 700 a year 10 attend an Idaho college, students re(C11 · ed S9 million in all t)'~ of federal financial w»1ance. It now costs about S4,800. and although finantial aid has increased 10 S30 million. over S20 million of that assistance is in the form of loans, Upchurch said. ·'Idaho tupa)trs send money 10 the federal government." Upchurch said. "The federal government sends 11 10
Maine, Vermont and New Hampshire 10 support John Affluent :11 private institutions like Danmouth. · • Upchurch said that an 1972 ld.lho, Mn.inc, Vermont and :Sew Hampshire rccci•ed about the same amount of campus-based funding because the money "'as alloeated b)' the state allotment formula "'hich factored the num~r of pose-secondary students based on populauon and income l~el. From 1972 10 1982, while Idaho's campus-based financial aid increased 42 percent from S2.4 million 10 S3.4 millton. Maine's grt"' from S2.6 million 10 Sl 2.3 million. a 369 percent mcrcase. Over lhJlt s11me period. aJd to Ver-
mont incr~ 3S5 percent. Crom SI.million to S8.J million. and the amount of assmance g11 en 10 'le" Hampshire incr~ from S:!.3 million 10 SS 9 million, a :!89 percent incre=, Lpchur.:h \aid The uojust distribution ~gan in 19i! "hen 90 percem oi the (und\ ""35 di<,ribu1ed b~ the \Late allotmeni formula and 10 percent "as left 10 be dist.nbutc:d at the dis..,ction of the comm1ss1oner of education.
The discrepancies 1ocrc apparent as early as 19""8 when \laine. Vermont and Ne"' Hampshire "'ere rccci\ing t'-'O and three times more aid than Idaho.
The Dtpllnmeot of Education admn· red that inequiti~ c,isted after they ,omplcted a ~tud> of the program, but the> IH·re un1111ling 10 come up "llh a nc11 iormul:i. Lpchurch ~aid. L .S. Rep. Paul Simon. 0-lll .• chairm:in of the Commintt 01 Education and labor, has propo<ed 1h:11 the state funding formula be eliminated and th~ money~ di.sb~ed on the basis of "'hat 1ns111uuons recci1ed l:i.st )ear. Upchurch said.
··He "ants e,·el') institution 10 r~1vc 90 percent of "hat they r«ei,cd last continued on page 16
,oA""o ~
0
i caRb1nat Review Volume 38,
umber 12
Friday, April 27, 1984
Creature featu re A photo of a deep-sen jell) nsh known ss Peripb) Ila pcriph31111 is part or n tra, cling f'hlbit or color prints called ··t:ofamiliu Ftluna of 1be Open Sfa." The Smilh<on.ian lnsti1u1e exhibit Is on di,pb) in lbt lobby of the UB Bonner Room until \la, 13.
Carol King to appear Monday ('--_ _ in_s_i_ d _e_t_h_e_c_r___) Carol King. "OCalist and political acth·m. wiU perform at IC Monda) :11 11 a.m. m the Bonner Room. King is making a num~r of appearances in the area on behalf of Democratic Prcs!dcntia.l candid1u.e Sen. Gary Hart and aarttd 10 be a poi>-"Orn forum guesL Kmg rose 10 fame an the late 1960s and is best known for her album, ..Tapcslr) ...
Tuition,
ftt
j2d, ed 10 S.307 ...................................... ··· page l
H Jdruulk lirl ru~ d1.S2grttmeot. ....... ...... ................. · • · · . p11gt S
Card, tool. 10 bur) TrttSUre (\'mlley) .. . ..................... ·,··· .. ,page 14
1
I
ApriJ 27. J984 1 Caniinal Re,iew- 2-
"
Tuition and fees Trustees raise semester total to $307
b) Rita Hollio~onb A 13.6 percent increase in tuition and a 6.8 percent increase 1n fees "'111 cost diMrict resident students an addiuonal S27 when they pa)· S30"' 10 register for clanes at NIC next fall The NIC Board of Trustees ,·oted wwumousl} 10 increase resident 1u111on from Sl32 10 SI 50 per semester at its mee11ng on April 19. The approved tuiuon and fee rates raised twuon for non-di.strict 1tudcnts rrom SS02 to SS60, an 11 S per· cent increase, and raLM:d out-of-sate tu111on 25.J per· cem from SS02 10 S630. The total amount of fee., •h•ch arc paJd by all ..;1c students. ":b increased from S148 to sis·. but the portion of fees paid by students 10 fund ..\S,IC was decreased S4 to SI 9 per semester. General fees "'"'el'e increased from S95 10 SIOS. a 13.6 percent increase. The board approved SSi ,000 lO upgrade three pantime teaching pos!Uons 10 full-time status and to hm a full-time secretary. NIC President Barry Schuler told the board that curriculum rcquirementS in speech and communication were bolstered in response 10 demands by busiru:ss and industry. and S17.000 to upgrade a pa.rt-time 1D5lrUC· tor to full time in that di,ision was appro,ed. chuler cited growth in the business div\Sion "'hen
be requested the approved S17,000 10 upgrade 13 pa.rt· nmc bUSUlcss instructor to full-time swtu~. The board also appro,ed Sehulcr's rcqu~t for
SI 1.000 so that 13 modem fomgn langu13.ge and ma.thematics mstruetor. "'ho Schuler said was ,'aluabk' and v~ule, could be hired full ume rather than pan ume next year. The boa.rd also appro, ed SI !.000 to hire a full-ume secretary bceaU5C Schuler Stlld NlC \\3.( .. paper thin in ~taffing secreww suppon ••, Tnm tt Don •~r' 1Tques1 to bcgm coostrucuon of the drmuig room and cuy<are add1uon to the out. door (tagC qs also approved. Sousscr told the board the adctition 11.ould cost about S60.000 but wttb contributions of cash and Llbor the cstimntcd cost. not melud.ulg 5,C'l,Cf hookup, is S2" .000. While no action v. ll5 taken on the repair or replacement of the gym noor, Schuler said that it would cost between S30.000 and s.io.ooo to replace 11 "'1th a maple floor and that he would like to have the asmtll.nce of the ld:iho ugislarure in funding a proJcct of that size. .. We shouJd ll'} 10 get one more year out of 11," Schuler said ··We've been successful in the past, abOut e,cry second or tlurd year, in ha,mg the 1ta1e fund some maior mlllmeoam:c proieeis "
Schuler ~old the board that while $90,000 "'IU a general csumate o( the cost of mstalhng a hydraulic lift in the orchestra 1111 10 move the singe up and down a specific t>id is bemg prepared. · Schuler said thnt if the vocntionnl students assist in the hydrnulic Ult projttt it might create insurance problem~ bc\."l\use the project requires a sophisticated safety S)-stem. In response 10 n board member'( comment that the hydrouhc lift was not o high priorhy Item, Schuler soid,''We'd like todo it O( soon as possible 1.1s the crell<} arc getting injured bncks lifting things up and down." " It might not 111ke long 10 ha,•c on Injury of SI00.000." he snid. The board accepted resignatio ns from Dave ' hcchan, instructor of welding and Dan Fitzpatrick, Instructor of nursing. They al(O ac<!epted Jack Bloxom 's resignation M as istnnt basketball conch. However. Bloxom will conunuc 10 serve ns baseball conch. Beverly Bemis was appointed to represent the boa.rd on a proposed committee 10 select an architect to design the library/computer 5cic11cc building. Sausser was appointed ns an oltcrnotc to the commillee. The board went Into CJCccutive session to dlscuss personnel ma1tcrs.
N IC's new official college seal shows 'excellence among beauty' by Nena Bolan
After SO years without an official seal, NIC now hos a uniquely designed creotion by Joe Jonas, head of the art depanmcnt. Last autumn the scaJ's design was philosophically born from the human quest of beauty, according to Jonas. The seal shows the sun pouring its rays across the sky above a mountain. trees and lake waters. Jonas gave this scene an attribute of movement by having a book unfold in the foreground. Jonas said the Latin inscription. ··Exccllentia Inter Amocnitatem" si mply means "excellence among beauty." The open book represents excellence of education, and the background repreStnts beauty, he said. Jonas expressed a desire to produce a relief carving of the seal on the campus, perhaps by the C-A Auditorium or at the president's office. Tbe seal will also be used on the NIC diplomas this year.
Trio elected to board Summer school just around corner Students who arc planning 10 attend academic classes at NlC this rummer may register on May 31 and June I from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Room 3 of the Administration Bwlding, according to the registrar. Summer session will begin on June 4, and cl~ will meet for eight weeks. A list of the scheduled classes, meeung days and times is a"3i.Iable in the registrar's office. Those enrolled in nine creditS arc considered full-time students, according to Registrar ltsuko Nishio, but students receiving veterans' bcncfiis must attend class for 12 clock hours each week to be considered full-time students. according 10 Ed Cato of the veteran's information office. The cost of auc:nding summer classes is S30 per credit hour. A minimum of 14 students must register for a clw to start. and if a class is cancelled, 100 percent of the tuition will be refunded.
NIC student body elections rC5ulted in one returnee and two new faces that will be serving on the student board for the 1984-85 school year. Tom Golden earned a scat on the board by collecting 87 votes and Gerald Kennedy was the other newcomer. tallying 98 votes. Hugh Smith was the only incumbent Lo be re-<:lected to the board wilh a total of 90 votcS. "It's very hard Lo lose when you have so many oulSWld.ing candidates." ASNIC Vice President Mike Gagliano said. ··There's no way we could have come out on the short end of the stick." Accorcting to Gagliano, 7.8 percent of the student body voted ID the election which is only 183 students of the 2,343 that roam the campus. "1 'm really excited about the results." Gagliano said, "but until the students make a more concerted effon to get out tot.he polls they can't expect 10 be fully represented." Student board adviser Tony Stewart said that the newly elected rcpresen· tatives would not be sworn in until next August but that they were co· couraged to sit in on the hoard meetings nov, lO learn tbc procedure.
April 27, 1984/ Cardinal Revie111
-
.""-~ ,·
'.
"',,, . . .
v.,
..
•:
.. \'
3
Board replaces Mulkey b> D1ln Brttden The AS1'1C s1udem board last "Celi propriated S-l-00 10 co,er "pc= ID accepted a reprcsentau,,·s rcs1gnauon. sending four delegate; to BSL this appo1n1ed a r~lacement and ap"-ttkend to help torm a .:ons111u11on for propnated S,100 for a 1rip 10 Bo~ State the intercollegiate leg1sl,1turc UmverSll). Tnp coordinator and ASNIC \ ice President ~ lil..e Gagliano" 111 attend the Board member Chris ~tulkey resignC\ent along '"llh AS:S:IC President ed h.is scat foUo,.·ing an extended illness Chucl. \\'hltlocl.. \lil.c Connell and Enc wluch has kept him from returning 10 Phillips. school. Mulkey. who has tal.en a job in :vtont.?na and was in 1he pro:~ of mo,"One of the maior gripes of this coling, was not a,·ailable for commcm. lege is that "' ha,e no sa,· in the governThe board unarumousl>· acc~ted the ment down in Boi~e." Gagliano said, resignation of MulkC} and followed i1 "3nd this is a "3) 10 changt' 1hat. ·· with the appointmem of Gerald KenThe iour people "ho v. ill be going to nedy to take Mulkcy's place. Boise met in a scminar, workshop last Kennedy rccci,ed the greatest number Tuesday in order to learn parliamentary of votes in the last studem body election procedure "hich will be in use during and was scheduled to be sworn ID next the proceedinp in Boise. Board adviser August. and govern ment Inst ructor Tony The board also unanimously apStewan conducted the seminar.
War professors brief student board on national defense, security issues I
The student board met April 19 at a noon luncheon "ith l"O U.S. Air Force professors, ,,.ho gave members a brief 1:111: on national defense and security issues. The two arc majors from Montgomcn. Al3 .. and tra~cl across the United States giving the scminan. According to Ma,or Da,,d Tallt)', the two-man briefing team has met with college students, church groups and ci"ic orgnnizations in 38 states. " We arc finding tha.1 the American people are very interested in defense and :ire quite well informed," Ta!Jc) sa.Jd "We arc suffering, hc,v.C\er. from a post· Viernam syndrome," he added. "Dialogue is defiOllcly missmg between men ID uniform and out." The pair discussed nuclear freeze. nuclear dl53rmnments. nuclear stability. peace and the need for a '·true" arms reducuon. "People asl. me ,,.bat do with those 'peace groups' 1hat 1,e tnll: to." Talley said. "They don't realize tha1 1 am in the biggest peace group we have." The men spoke on U.S. foreign poltC) ,.,th South Amenca and with the Sovie1 Union and told hov. dunng a "'ar. plans can change at the las1 minute, thus making the people in charge sudden!} nbon one plan and formulate another. "\\ ar IS lil.e a picnic," \1ajor Olson \l\id. "You plan tt out. and then everything falls apan "'hen you get there "
'"°'
Standing tall
Laurie Bristo w photo
Sk11ebo1rdrr Mau Kllpalrlck show~ orr hib skllls on a wann da> lai.1wttl.11 'IIIC.
Environment needs care,
Lustig says b> Crala Johnson
As long as people pertc1ve the co,,ironmcnt as propcn)', then n hu no ethknl value 10 them. according to the director or cnvironmcn1al health for Panhandle Health Distritl I . Ocvelopmg an ethical rela1ionsh1p to 1hc cnYironmcnt b something Kenneth Lustig. who oho leaches a mght ~vw~ in 1hc b1ologicnl sciences at ' IC, th1nk5 i~ or u1 most 1mporr.1n,-c " Wh en the Pilgrim, landed at Plymouth Rod., ~omebody said. '"c'II pu1 the bathroom!> o,cr there and the "'" o,cr here,' 1ha1·~ all pl:inruns :ind zoning ,~." L~1ig said. Be5idcs planmn.s and zoning and u,. suing pcrmib for the lo.:auon of )Ubdh t)1ons, Lustig 3nd his depJ.rtment deal \\ Ith md.l,idu31 and sm.ill community scw:igc dhf'OS.l). W'3tcr upptics, transpor1at1on of h3Z3rdous motcri3ls. epidcm1olog>, "'hkh b the .iud> of "atcroomc di5ease:, :ind spill rcspon,c. " \\'e de:il ba\tcally ID 1he acu, 110 of man and hi\ rclauonslup to the ennroomcnt and ho" the> rtlate to human ht'alth." Lusug said. Lu\tlg (a1d 1ha1 i~ why II i) ,o 1mpor· !lint Lo 1und and cnrn out ,1ud1e, that
,,.111 ffiabllih ju)I ho" much commercial and residential grcr,. th is poss_iblc 111 our area "uhout upsetllng the cm ironmcnt "\\'e ha,c ample 111-a_ter: The v.·ater IS of c.xccllent qualit)," he ~d. "But ncr,. ts lhc ume 10 cs1.at>l1Sh the carrymg c11pac1t) )0 ,,.e can s1.irt mal.:lng re;15orublc deruions " \ ly pb1losoph) 1>-.,..cU, lcl me we an aruilog}. l tlunl. 11 was St . Augi.._-.tmc "ho said, ·Lo,c God and do :a.s ,ou pie~.'
"What M inferred from that Ill If )Ou lo,c God, thffl }OU 1>-00·1 do &n)lhing that di~plebes him." Lustig ~d tha.1 11 IS l)O'Uiblc 10 e,trapol.ue from that an ethical relationship to the en, ironmcn1 . '"If \OU do indtotd IO\C the CO\'U'On• mcnt .. : he said, . ...,OU "'on'1 do an)1hing detrimental to " "One or the rhm,.- 1hat "'' h:i,e go1 to _;e1 .. handle on is the ::on.:-ept that no1 all gro" th is good. "It's not n~-es~ril) bad, but growth v.ilhOUl a SCD)C of d1rcc11on IS a malignan.q . "
All or those areas are cover~d specifically by regulations. he said. "The program that is ongoing and 1s really sigmfican1 and has been for a number of years is the protection or 1hc Rathdrum Prairie Aquificr," Lustig wd
According to Lusug. this "as the second aquifer m the nauon to be declared under federal la,,. 11 solt·\Ourcc "The vound ,1.-a1er that we use is the ooJ:, IOU!~ of dnnkmg water for the entire region for "llich there ,s no more potable M>1Jrce a~tulable," Lus11g \aid Lw:11 said there arc onh 11 aquifer~ 1h:!1 ha,e been declared ,ole~our.:c ID the nauon. Once they b«ome contaminated b) ~age d1\Cha.rge or IO\IC .,.;u1e spills. there 1s no '"3> 10 dean them up. he ~:ud "It's ,en· much lil.e ..i \I.Un ,n linen: It )OU don;, get 1t out, once it \Ch there i5 no "'3' to e~1ra.:t 11. LUSII!! said. "I s~ 1he area ,populauonl of Kootem11 Count) gro,,.IDg trcmendou~1>, • he said "I sa) thlll because Spol.anc ,,. ill !)('come the "holesalc center tor the Inland Empire •·
I
I
(
• • opm1on page
J
Columnist language 'disingenuous'; backbone needed, writer asserts Dear l:ditor:
dawn murphy Teasing season of spring Windows are open a crnd. and the clean spring air noats past sheeLs and nostrils. The sun peeks over the mountain, and sleepers peck over al clocks. In an effort to mo\e the still untouched homework, stretches and yawns take over, and dream!. chase away thoughts of getting up. Then, as if huge hands grab sleep} shoulders and shake them, the alarms sound-spring fever is here. Uke any season, spring effects people in different ways. Some can't wai1 for spring to arri,e and to feel the first pangs of the sickness. They run to the beaches in mid-April and May, donning their bikinis. bare chests and goose bumps to catch the first rays cutting through the gray clouds left from February and March. I'm among the few who hate the season. This time of growth. warmth and activity turns me cold. My blood Stans pumping, but it is noL because cupid is wanning up on his archery or that I've been out jogging, you understand . I hate the teasing season of spring because Lhe sun comes out and there is homework to do. The beaches look tempting, but there arc projects co get done. The grass gets green. but there arc finals to study for and take. Those term papers and final exams would be much easier to work on if it were snowing. or course, instructors get the illness just as badly as students do. If you don't believe me jUSt peek into some of their offices. I "~ll bet that their desks arc covered with travel brochures, and they are all in a huddle comparing the tans and bLLrOS they got over the weekend. Ob~ng this phenomenon is jUst a liule frustrating. I get spring fever too. But the remedy for the illness is so unbearable. Tonure in the classroom while the sun is shining outside and the beach is so close is not a comforting prescription. If the body and Lhe mind could find a happy medium between lhe urge for \\inrcr Lo be over and summer to begin. thc:n this frustration wouldn't exist. The body would want to get up in the morning and the mind would want to get the homework done. The rude awakening of the morning alarm is the same feeling I get when I realize that Lhere is still work to be dooe. And lik_e hands grabbing my shoulders and shaking, I realize that summer is not here yet, and I've still got a lot of work to do.
Regarding Crnig Johnson·~ Inst (I hope) column, "Backbone Needs a Brain." I offer this observation: If Johnson·s message had not been couched in eclec1 ic language, pcrhap<; mru1y of our blue-collar taxpayers would have become offended. Furthermore, Johnson's disingenuous literary s1yle is sure to gain no admirers among 1he members of that caste; certainly he may have even created some enemies among the more discerning of the "thickneclcs." This latest version of Johnson's
tedious biweekly convolutions illustrates that many of the blue-colltu workers arc, in fact, better than Johnson-belier in that they say what they mean, in honest and open communication. And, honestly speaking, I think that it is Johnson's backbone that is in need of a brain. (But surely s1udcm Johnson has or had a mentor. 0 Engli)h department, what hath thou wrought?)
Sincerely, John Lambirth NIC student and ex-carpenter
•r, . . .-··:-;,,·::;;:.s-: ·.~_.,.,., :,ii"';".
·.·
.J /· . ; ) ' .. .~:... • - . -~ ·I:;, . ; .! -·., . ;~,: ...... r
,
~
' - "<#
,,
·- . . •,' ...
•. : : .
1'
.
. ·.
J
. ,
•
The Cardin.al Revlew Is pabllahed teml-moatbly by the Pllbllcadonl Wol'.kshop clua at North Idaho CoUege. Members of the CR ttaff wm ltrfve to present the news r.1rly, accarately and wlthoGt prejlldlce. Oplaloal expttSSed on the edltortaJ pages ud In variou news ualysa do DOC necessadly reOect the views of the NIC adm.l.alstradoa or the ASNJC. The CR ls entered u third-cl.us ~ awertaJ at Coear d' Alene, Idaho 83814. Alsoclated Collegiate Praa Flve-Sw AD-Amerlcaa Newspaper
editor ...............•.......................•....... Oawn Mmplay news editor .......................................... Madi Wheeler u&Oclat.e editor ......................................... RJc J. Kast arts/ entertalnlnent .................•.................. Cra.11Jolulloa sports editor ...................••....... ... •.. . . . ...... wm1 weec11 photography editor .............................• . ..... , . · Beall Fnuu: advertlalng man.ager ... . •........•............ ... Bauble vuDeoBera copy ed.J.tor ......••.................... ... ........ .Pam Cantnaham cartoonists .............................. Troy Jolllff and Eric Pederlea ad viser ..............•........... • ... . ................. nm PIJadm
repenen and pbotogrspben . .. ... . ... . .. . ...• , .. · · · · · Sbarf Alderman, Nena Bolan, Dan Breeden, 1-rie Brtatow, Deaana Chapin, Carda o.hla, Kathy Garmon, Kurds Hall, RJta Bolllnpworth, I.au Moore, Doa Suer, Mike Sumden, Mike ScroaJe, Deaana Small, Kevbi Stalder, Sudy St:ambaap, Wanda Stepbeal and Barbie Va.aDeallffa
Apn1 27, 1984 / Caniinal Revie11â&#x20AC;˘-S-
L lo...--_m_o_n_e___ op=----in_io_n_)r--------
NIC students losing at the polling places If the old phrase, "What you learn in college will stick with you the resl of your life," is true, Nor1h Idaho could be going to pol. Take 1he NIC graduating class of 1984 and 1heir voting habits for ins1ance. , In its last two years, 1he NJC class has never had a higher voter 1umou1 1han JO percent for the ASNIC elections. During the 1982-83 school year, NIC had roughly an 8.0 vo1ing percen1age in 1wo separate senate elections and a 10 percent panicipa1ion for its presidential election. In 1he 1983-84 year, the voting percentages in the respective elections were 9 percent, 7.8 percent and 8.4 percent. These elections are probably fair enough backing to say 1hat NlC s1udent.s probably do not vote at all in other elections and probably never will. Basically, they are too lazy. When the current public has 50-75 percent voter participation. it looks as if NI C's class of '84 is heading to adultera1e an already apathetic society. Can 1he same be said for past and future NIC classes? People should hope not. If s1uden1s of higher education don't allow the time 10 vote be1ween term papers and the Collon Club, they are in fact missing out on the biggest reason for educa1ion: To live responsibly in 1oday's socie1y. Bui if students canno1 s1op bet ween classes LO vole when there is never a poll more 1han 100 yards away. are they going Lo register and drive to the polls 10 be ac1ive in a much more complex sys1em? Hopefully, NIC politics is jus1 a big joke and not a represen1ation of s1udents' true charac1er. After all, Mickey Mouse has been a writein candidate on campus ever since anybod)' can remember. But students should hope the same won't happen on the state, local and national levels. The joke will be on 1hcm. NIC students need to step back, examine what they are contribu1ing to government and then compare tha1 10 what they expec1 from il; af1er
all, democracy can only be what the people make it. So it's left up 10 the individual, but as a whole, NIC needs to improve its habits. Perhaps democracy itself has become an assumed habit. Bui we better break one before we lose the 01her.
(__ n_ew_s_c_o_n_n_e_c_ti_o_n_s___) Forget lift; focus on floor h is difficult to understand why I IC President Barry Schuler will 001 ask the board of Lrustees for the S30.000 it ,\!lll cost to replace NIC's wom-oUL gymnasium noor. Considering thal he is eager 10 request S90,000 to install a hydraulic lifl that would move 1he C-A auditorium orchestra pit floor up and down, his refusal seems somewhat ludicrous. While the lift sounds delightful, a gym floor that can be used by all students is a necessi1y. And since NIC's gym is restricted to a1hle1es. physical education s1Udents and intramural participan1s, most students are lacking an essential necessi1y of college life while the president iries 10 squeeze the funding for the floor from the Legislature. Schuler said 1ha1 he wants 10 get staned on the installation of the lift before a worker suffers a SI00.000 back injury from lifting heavy objects. It is almost certain 1hat 1he college carries insurance 1ha1 pro1cc1s it from such lav. su11s. and gi,en the Legislature's speed, a new ice age could come before a new gym floor is realized. NlC needs a ne"' floor no"' that can be used by all s1udents for alJ activities. and it v.ould be irresponsible for the 1rus1ees to spend $90,000 for a lifl \\hile forcing studen1s 10 wai1 one. 1wo or even 1hree years for a new gym surface.
Hoping it's more than just an American dream When I firs! heard 1he United States was secre1ly mining Nicaraguan shores. I thought we were expcrimeming wi1h new underwater gold-prO)l)Ccting techniques. When I round ou1 the Unilcd States was planting mines to blow up international trnde ships, I gasped for air. Although I'm old enough 10 remt'mber Vietnam, Watergate and more recen1 event~. I wns one or 1hc types that always believed that there was a reason for everythtng and that every cloud had n red, while and blue lining. Bui blowing up Nicaraguans? Bui then again, you're lh1enfog 10 a kid who feels like he's 10 feet 1all, ge1s red eyes and hQ.) a hard time swallowing when he hears the national anthem. I get all choked up. When I hear tbt letters U.S.A., I'm inclined 10 think about freedom, patriotism, the pursui1 or happiness and apple pie. But 1'm disillusioned when l hear about U.S.-backed government overthrows and CIA involvements in terrorist ac1ivi1ies. It's like seeing the Statue of Libcny Laking quaner tips at a house or ill repute. It huns-wa.y down deep. . I'd like to believe everything I've been taught about this country since the first grade. Equality, independence, self-determination: Those are the things that come to mind when I think of our heritage. But wha1 is an American who believes in American values supposed to do when his country turns around and tramples revolu-
mark wheeler 110ns tha1 a.re 001 so different lha.o us own reâ&#x20AC;˘, oh 200 years earlier? What is an American supposed 10 do when his country overthrows established go,ernmeots 10 replace them wnh worse ones? WM! is a bo) "'ho believtS in a peace-striving, fair America 10 think when h1S country declares it will pay no a11en11on to the opinions of !he World Coun? It makes him wonder w hetber he's the child of a country rich in the democraC) and heritage e,eryooe told him about in school, or the product of a weU-oiled propaganda machine. I really like to believe the more optimistic option that I am one of the forrunate to live in such a great country. The corners of a boy's dream can always be dulled a little by knowledge and age. Maybe I was expecting too much. Bui J pray 10 God that more knowledge docsn'1 sha11er those vis:ions. It would breaJc this American heart.
(__m_o_~_e_o--=p~,_·n_io_n_J,------A time for hugging 5tu~t column b) "ftkt Berndt £.oglisb I mtractor
~
Well, here 11 i,. Ano.ha Easter come &Dd gooe Some eggs d~cd. then bidden and found again, some Lamb ea.ten •1th lllllll JCJ). .ome thoug,bt gi"en to death and rcbinh. The s. C~\ mi&ht qUC5Uoo the nooon of rcb1rtb, txn death is undeniable, unavoidable Did you c,.cr wonder• betber hiding egs and then having them found 1s S)mbohc of dealh and rcbuth? Food for thou_ght! Where"''",..,? Pondenng death"'' •ere, and 111s a iubJeet .-hich b.u bttn on my mind lately. smcc Feb. 11 to be c:.ua On tlgt date I was invohed in an automobile acodem and spc:nt some ume thuu:iJ:I& that death "'""LI unl'lllnmt, I survived, but the idea keeps nagg111g me. So what, you sa)·! Well. it needn't talc a car wreck -.u.h ambulances and surgery and concerned lo,·ed ones to retlize you might dJC at an) 1lUJlute It can happen at any time. at any plat%, and iJl a split SCC'Olld. Today's )oung people have lh•ed all their lh es ...;th the k.ncr,,, ledge tba.t t.hc senile or t.he ma.d or the careless or the merdy stupid 10 \I. aslungtoo or Moscov. aught llllUate their deaths. Some people do "'bat 1.bcy can to dcc1'} this insaniry. but c,.-ery day our side produces six more nudcar "''3Ihe:ld5 and t.hc Ru.wans bustle 10 keep pace. So thcrt It Isl Whether we go sooner of latCf. ind.J,;dllllll} or " en mas.sc,•· go we will, and kno-.i ng that, -..e had best be ~ can or business. T'Mrt are really imponant maners to anend to, and no one kao.,,., ho-.. much umc there is to get things done. There is the matter of hugging one's cluldrcn Thu is a.n ursm1 maucr and mu51 be aucndcd 10 daily. Kids arc \\ Ondcrful a.nd need to be bugged. If "'C arc parents. \\C need to hug them. \\ e nttd 10 le• them lnov. lh.ey're special. We need to tell them stories. Wt' need to tal.c t.hc ume to watch them when rhcy'rc not aware or us. ~ e nttd to remtmbt r our parents We nttd 10 than},; t.bcm. for we can never rcpa)' them. They changed our diapers and tolented our gro"'ing pains. They alone loved us from the vcr) beginrung. \\ c need to be mindful that lhC}, too, are monal and be about the busmess or lo'"mg them. Friends and lovers? Do we tell our friends ho"' mucb they mean to us? Out loud? Do \\C sho\\ our (o\ed ones that "'' care all the time or do we tcn.d 10 settle in and gt't comfortable and 1.akc thing.s for granted? Somcu.mes "'' need to net as if rodny is our last da). and"'' need to let people k.no"' ho"' "'e feel. Because if it u and "'' don 't, important thin~ may nC">er be sa1d or done. Thert arr lots or other really important things 10 do, flo\\ers to smell and games to play. but strangely, none or them coinode with what we spend most of our lives doing. Nooe or them in'"olve "'Orking bard at ,obs wt hate just to make more mone)'. None or them involve efforts 10 make ourselves seem successful or cool. one involve the accumulation of morc and more power or sratus. Sometimes when the chips arc down, the \'ague and hazydiche' is jolted into clear focus. " Ha\ c you hugged your kid today?" That may be the most important question of the day, and if you don' t bavc a kid, hug someone, soon!
Li/e no place for finite \ 13th :.ud.s! There's no doubt about i1. .. no ifs. and~ or buts. Sucl.s plain a.nd imple. But to be more pecific, finite math sucks. Who really cares what Lhc probabilit y is of get11ng a red bnll out of an urn containing three re-cl balls and four wh11e? Who really cures what the probability is of getting u screwy bolt off nn ossembl) line of thousands of bolts? Come grnduntion dny the only thing students arc concerned about is the probability or find ing employment in a cruel, slide-rule-infested world. Bue yet fi nite math is required . Students will be using more basic algebra, with an occasional addition and subtraction problem from the ever-present 1040EZ, 1han they will statistics, probabilities and matrices. And the closest students want to come to talking about sets is under the covers with lights off, and then it's more fun doing it than discussiOJt it. There have to be more worthwhile courses out there that should be reql)ired than fini te math. Take knot tying for instance. How many times in an average person's life does one come upon an opportunity in which two things need to be secured. Surely, it 's al least a dozen times more likely than finding the probability of getting four aces in a friendly poker game. And what about beer drinking? Now there's a lost art. Too few people actually know how 10 drink beer these days, and it's time the college did something about it. Everyone knows there's more Michelobs than matrices explored by students in the course of a year. Just plain old goofing off i~ a talent that should be worth at least two credits a semester. Think about it. Just how much time in the next 50 years does the average person plan to goof off as opposed to working on his Markov process. After all, the things that should be taught in college are things that people can fall back on the rest of their lives. Right? Common sense says to uash the statistics and replace it with realistics while the time spent on normal distribution might be bener spent on the alleviation of fuU kegs in the area. Don't teach the kids about Venn diagrams-in this day and age perhaps diaphragms would be more appropriate. The average student nowadays is gelling showered with too many BS classes and is failing to learn some of the more important things in life. Give the students humanization, not permutation! D.8.
Hampering hallway hazards make mass moving messy Life is full of exasperations. Just driving to school in the morning can send a person crawling up the walls. It seems that almost every day some down will cut a student off in traffic or block the road by going too slow or stopping to talk to a friend. Then there is always the chance of getting broadsided ac an intersection. After endurinR these trials and arrivini safely al school the student parks bis car in one of lhe designaLed chuck.boles out in the back 40, and all the traffic problems are over, right? Wrong. Thanks to some unthinking people who operate lheir bodies like some people drive lheir cars, it slartS all over again. It's enough to make a person a candidate for one of those snug-fitting, double-breasted jackets that tie in back. Most of lhe stairways at NIC are designed to accommodate Lwo-way
traffic. But there are almost always a few people who manage to waJk slowly up or down them two or lhree abreast, blocking all traffic in front or behind, and that 's great when a person is in a hurry. J ust as some drivers fmd the middle of the road a good place to BS. with a friend, there arc a few who choose to catch the latest news oo lhe stairs or in the middle of the halJ. Oblivious co events around them, they force traffic to come to a stand.still or reroute around them. Theo there are the people who come out of doorways and sidc-~lls as if they are the only traffic in lhe building. And on many occasions lhe resulting collision sends books and words flying. After thi~ hap· pens several times it is tempting to send a well-placed foot flymg. Wby can't people show a little consideration and pull over to the side of the hall to have lheir little bull sessions, yield the right-of-way, or just plain park it?
April 27, 1984 Otrdin:il Re,ie,r-i -
[ er arts/entertainment
J
EOITINC- -Trestle Crttk Review t..dltor Craig Johnson sk.ims over • submission to be prloted In the ma,ta1lnt.
Pl BUSHED PLBI.JC TIO.:\- -SOO roplt\ or th t mag112ine "ill be ofrertd 10 :\ IC students nnd the publir the ~cond in Mu)'.
,.,,i.
Trestle Creek on its way by Kunis Rtll
Mil.I.' Sllrogglc photo PASTF.-UP- Cuulng out cop) b pan of 1ht lonit prorw or Pullin!! out II pubUcation.
Aspinng 10 create a I.Jtcrar) map.nne is one lhmg. Puttmg out ll.ll actual mag.&Dne i> sometlung else enurely. and thett arc 001 man) people "ho arc CGUaJ 10 the Job. Fonunatcb. there arc a 1, ... of tbc re ... at NI C. The Trestle Cr«\. RC\1e,., an annual 111.JJUme of poetr), ft~tion. ns:a> sand photc,craphs, 1s put out b~ mcmbcl'\ or Orcad. "l!C\ aeau,e wming dub. The map.zme contam~ ,ub~\JOnS from all o,cr the West, and it 1~ edsttd. IBJd out. and pasted up b} Orc:ad mcmbc~. F11, \\ n~hr. Engl1~h ,ruu~-tor and the Orcad ad' 1\Cr. ~1d that the m:i.gUUle 11~1 came out l~I )caI 3~ an outgrowth of Orcad 1belf Pnos to the Trestle t red. RC\ 1c". Ore:id fe.uured onl} a lo.:al publk:iuon "tth subnm£tons from '-IC "ming ~tudenb 3nd 13,ult) . "I cn\l,1oned ,omcth:ns that IAOUld en.coura.;e our "ntcrs to compete :inJ >tt "hJt tt , lll.c to put out a profNtonal m~:umc. • \\ nght ,.ild The m:igumc 1~ ..d,cnued 3(1 o,cr the "~tern limted States and recei,~ man~pb lrom some .. ,~I) pubh~ed 11.ntm. · Wnght said " \\ e get ~ubltfil,ions from L"t3h. "e" \lc.'U:o. C.Wiornu1. \\ aslungcon. ,c,acb-tbc "hole\\ 01," \\ ngbt s:i1d •·\\ e real!~ ge1 more submission~ from e\Cl'\'-'htre else 1han 11.e get from Coeur d'Alene · \\ light "anted Ore;id me.m~rs 10 not onh polish their "riling sl.i!h and le3rn to rompete bu1 10 le.3m cd.itmg and cnucal sl.ills 3S v.cll in semng up 1i1e
nagaz.ine and dtciding "hJt submissions IYOuld be printed Tbc magazim ma: also earn NIC a bit of recogniuon around the \\ est. "I llllnk u's drawing attention to the college." \\ nght wd. "I get qui:c a bit of corrtspondencc from 01her 11,nu.ng proiranu. and "'C probably saw SOO manuscnpu ,ubmmcd for this issue from over 100 dif(e:eru people." The maga.nnr's rmurc ls m doubt, how~cr. Wright said she ""Ill act be ad\llJng ncu year. "ll's a ,oluruar1 JOb &Lid I'm volunteered out," she wd. pparmtly 1: IS lasd to s11mula1c student in1eres1 in the mag;mnc. Four people did almCMt all of the ,,.or~ m,ohcd fn this ~car·~ 1 ue. Wright, Craig Johmon, Jim Parker and Mauie Codisooti ",,_ .:oup!e of us md up doing the whole 1hing.'' Wnght ~:iid. adchng 1ha1 1t v.111 be up to the studcnu of :s;1c 10 deadc "'hcther or not the Trestle Creek RC"\te" "ill eontsnuc, "hether Ore.1d v.111 go back to 3 Jo,:al pubhcation. or ,r Oread v.111 conunue to e,1s1 31 J.J1 A roul of SOO .;opie,. of rhu )ear's issue of the Trestle Crcc.. RC"\ :C\" 11.iU ~ published. One copy 1s a,lilablc free to each ,1c student and to others for S3.SO. The m3gaz.int "'Ill ht available in thr libr.u, and 11.1U ~ mailed out 10 subscn~rs in the fiw or second "e,ek of \la), Wright said.
April 27, 1984/ Cardinal Review-8-
Movies, 'Silence,' fashion top entertainment in area b) Wanda Stephens Scvcr:il movies lead the list or area from \lonwu State UruvCf<;lt). Tickets cntcnainmcnt this "«kcnd. Pla)•ing at 10 the 8 p.m \ 1a) I performance arc S.3 the Showboa1 arc "Police Academ)·," for adults, SI.SO fo, duldren 12 and "Hard 10 Hold." " Romancing 1he under and S7 .50 per family Stone." "Grcyi.toi.c the Legend of Tar· The fashion merchandising students uin," ond "Up the Creek." of MC ,,,ill present "198-£ •. A Bra,·e "Friday 1hc 13th, the Final '\cw World of Fashion Sllov." }.lav 10 in I.he C-A Auditorium The tjio~ is Chapter." "Chmunc." "Spla.\h :· " Swing Shift," ·•\toscov. on the Hudscheduled to begin at - p.m a.nd 1s free son." " Racing w11h the \loon. ;md to the public. "Children of the Corn'' arc pla}1ng at Ha\1ng "Pbun ,.Hh tbc \lus1c 1he Luirut) Thcarca. Dcpartmen: Ph.aculty" i< the focu1 of Pla}illij downto,.n at lhc \\1lma u tbc "Pharulty Phollies·· \1ay I~. The "'lcemnn."' Phollies bcgilu at S p.m. a.nd 1< al<o free Also. the vocal mu• 1c dcparunent 11 10 the pubhc. NIC will present "A Spnng Choril ,\ "countf) c~p" itamn,2 the Celebnuion" Sunda 7 in the C-A Thrasher Brothen ·•ill d~ the C\nm Auditorium. fo: \1a) Pr~ted b, I.he Kootcrw The event feature\ lhe '\IC Concert Count) Deputy Shcnfrs Auocia:ton. Choir. Madrigal Singer;, and J;w; rh( , ~ ll'ilJ btpn at S p.m. TrdClS •ill Company. be •. wblt lt the door for SIO NIC facultv. s1aff and studcn·~ v.ill Studcnu wtcrestcd in other C\ena s.:'lcduled :u the C-A AuJnonum c-an be admi11cd 10 1he 8 p.m. conccn iree. contact !.:athy \lani for more Leading the Ma> c,enb 111 the C-A informauon. Auditorium is "Theatre or Silence"
r
craig Johnson
The rights of rocks If you knew or someone" ho had a rclauoll)hrp "'i:h a rock, )OU .... ould probably thin!.. he was wmd. But 1f I.hat obJt.'"I of affcctlon v.c:rc a house plant, poodle or c:,cn a car. )'Our fe:m about his ~t) "ould be abated. It took mankind a lot of hard "ork and a fe"' thousand cn11uries 10 de,elop a sy~tcm or e1hic,-1he abilit) 10 Judge .in a.:-uoo ~ being right or "rong-th:11 encom~ more th3Jl the mdi,rdual's msunct to >urmc. Al some point 1n the pre-ethical past, man lhoui;ht nouung of dabbrng hi, brother O\C:I the head 10 get the meat he held m his bandi.. Today, murder. 111 mo•t conie,ts. is belit',cd 10 be "rong. Today. man's ethical constru~b ha~e c,:pandcd from sclf-onentcd survi~al insunc1s to include cthrcal beha, ior 10.,,ard the famil), tribe. nauon. race, mankind, mammals, animals and plant). This e,oluuon of ethics is succinctly defmcd h> Aldo Leopold m ",\ Sand County Alman:ic, •• and the thtnl1ng reader v.ould do -A ell to chc.:li; II OUI.
But ethical blind spob cxi.~t toda) that pm·em man from lrul) scei.ng his cn\'ironmcnt as something other th:in a commons 10 be ruthless!) e,ploitcd. Most people .,,ouJd be shocked 10 sec someone club a dog lo death. But few people would raise a.n eyebro" at the pe~on 11oho willfully runs over a snake, shoots a cro" or sprays an anthill with insecticide. The same pwple "'ho will coddle an Arrican violet "ill also lop off the top of an e"crgrecn for a Christmas tree. We've come a long way from the s1onc Clnd dub days. but -..c sull have ye1 10 define, teach and practice a land-based ethic tbal encompasses all things, living and non-ti,<ing. Pcrbops if we thought of rocks as having the same ethical status as ourselves or family, strip mining practices would rank on the order of genocide. Now, I' m not ssying that every rock a lcid lcicks down the block can talk, but if you believe that a divine creator's spirit permeates all thing.s. it becomes much harder for someone 10 exploit the environment based on a system of. as yc1, immature ethics. After all, stones. as Loren Eiscley wrote, arc "bcasu...of a kind man ordinarily lived too fas1 10 understand. They seemed inanimate because the tempo of life in them was slow."
Just hanging ar ound fl•t·>t11r-old T > 11.ova lch. "ho 11ttcnds the campus prnchool. hang, 11p1!de dc,"n on the rings behind the .,1cchanle11 I Arts 8uildiog.
Cruise, barbecue scheduled as campus events May 4, 10 A cruise on Lake Coeur d'Alene is planned for May 4 from 6 10 9 p.m.
According 10 A.51':IC Activities Director Carolyn PrlSttr, a no-host bar will be pro,ided, but nudents mus. show ID cards and have their hands stamped before being allowed to buy drinks. The cruise will cosc SJ for NIC students and S2 for guests. The boat wiU leave the dock at Independence Point, and boarding will begin at 5:30 p.m. Also slated as a campus cveru is a fr« barbecue for students and staff on May 10 at 4 p.m. The event is lO be combined with a ca.rnival complete with games, a dunking tank and con~ and surprise events. 1n addition, a SIOO prize will be awarded for the best coswmc worn lO the barbecue. The annual bed race wiU be held earlier in the day. and PflStcr urged scudcolS to get their teams together and lO check in the SUB for more information. Home baseball games for the rest of lhe season include a contest wit~ Treasure Valley Community College on April 28 at I p.m. and also a r~atcb wi~ TVCC at U a..m. on April 29. A game against Spokane Falls Commuruty College IS slated May 8 at 3 p.m.
I
April 27, 1984/ Cardinal Rrvir" -9-
------Creative taleol NIC art studenl5 display their work upst1Jrs in lhe C-A Buldlng as part or a student art ~how.
------
Lcas11 Moore photo
[_ _ _s_·c_r_e_e_n_s_c_e_n_e_
__J
'Iceman' quite rewarding b1 Kur1h llall Whn1 do you do "wilh o 40,000-ycar-old Neandcnhal man "ho'\ froten ~lid? Well, 11 you're the doc1or1 ond ,.:icnl"l\ " orktnp lor Polam \11nms 6;; Cht"TT11~aJ Inc • you tha\\ him 0111 nnd rrv1,< lmn Ami ,f )Ou'rc ihrect,ir Fred Schcpm. 1ou ma~l' J ,u,rm111gly 11cll-donc and cnjo1-.1blt' mo11c obou1 him t"allcd "Iceman " "Iceman" begin, w1lh 1hc d1\c01Cr) ol a 1mm1111c, man lrMrn man \ni,· £l&c1cr Once cu1 om ol 1hr 11h1,1cr and 111,ktJ ,111ch 11110 a lat>or111or), lhe .r1ogem lh fro,cn Nc,mdrrthnl t\ r,anuncd l•> ., team <'f c1cn1t~h. h<"3dcJ b, Ur tanlc) !ihcphml. rtnvcd b, hmolh) Hut1M, and Dr L>1.111c llr.,J,, roma,cJ t,, Land\a) Crou,c. Tl1c Nl'a11dcnh.1J, plnycd by John lone," rc111cJ 1hrnugh 1hc "onJcr,of modern ,t,cnce nnd ,, rlaccd 1n on en, 11on111rn1 mud1 like h1\ 01111 Aller a debate bct\\ttn Iluuon and ('r.,u,c 01er "hcthi·, or not to t\plo111hc ,a1en1.1n 3\ a ,pc.:,man (\\ hr,h Huuon, on the ,1dt of I.our, \\tn\), H111111n enter, the .:a,cman\ rndo,urc to C)tal>lL,h commun1c,11mn 1111h him A Inenthh1p of t1 rud1mcn1ar) )Ort rr,ult~. cind the mo, ,c ,on,rntratt'\ on Lone, "ho ha~ been n:1mcd Charlie, a~ he ,eel., 10 undc1~1anJ the ~1q(dmlljl \\Orld he I~ 00\\ in The mo, le gcncrntcs a good dc:il ol tmo11on ai. Hut1C1n and Lone g11c .::on, mnns and exccllcn1 pcrfomrnncc) ol tht nmhropologist ,,uh :i heart and 1hr .:oniu.,cd. knowlcdgc-sccl. mg, childlike Ncandcnhal. When Lone obscrv~ a hehl'Optu o,cr ht> dome, he ~hCH'S it to bt hi) God and goes into a religious frcnt). When he cscnre~ hi> enclosure and ac.:,dcntall) kills an employee of the laboratol)' 11nd then cs.::npe.s 10 the outside. he 1s tnJured b> lhc hclicop1cr he worships. The denth of 1he cmplo)'CC sparl.s 11 c:ontro\'ersr in which Huuon argues on behalf of lone aguinst Polarh Inc. e,ccutil'C.S who \\ant 10 1crminn1c the e:-tpcrimcnt and ship Lone 10 the United States for )tUd)'. Hutton and Lone e1·cmu11Uy m out alone 10 cscnpc the lnborntory complc., nnd "'alk across the Arctic wastes. The ending is rilled " ~lh o bmcm,ctt mixture of sadness and tnumph, and the lilm winds up l'Cry rewarding. " Iceman" is pll)fog at tbt WIima Tht11ter In Coeur d ' Alene.
Fort Gro und Tavern Lunch Specials Everyday ex. Burger and Fries in Bosket only S1.50 on Wednesday
Mon. thru Thur. 3 p. m. to 5 p.m. screwdrivers, margaritas pino coladas
on ly $1
1st draft beer Free on Friday I.D. required
April 27, 198~/ uirdinlll Rc,iev. -10-
Salary struggle b) Ric
J . Kasi
Instructors, administration trade proposals
Now thm Boi<e h:u di~hcd ou1 nc'I year 's educauonal al!ocauon,. \;JC teacher\ nnd admimwa1ors conunue 10 jocke) for pom1on O\Cr inmuctor pa) for fiscal 1985 Initially 1he facult> negouaun~ commmee asked for a 22.S percent increase in pay, a figure that 11,ould bring bad. the buying po"' er of 1969, according to commn1cc member Michael L \11ller. According to documents , rrnlaung among facuh) mcmbcn la.st •,1,cck, '-'hilt "current dollar \3lary" run 1ru::r~d from S6,880 m 1%9 to 1hc current cn1ry Iese! pay of S15,ll0, 1hc "C"•wan1 dollar salary," or "bu)1n[! po11,er or this year 1s actual!~ only SS ,61 ~ Thal's II decrease of 18.~ percent 1n 1ruc bu)'ing po11,cr. according 10 the documcntS.
But lhe \;J C adnunistra.tion's •eturn offer, a pro~ J.! pcrccnl pa~ m· ere=. came back .,.ilh a ring of fuwil), according 10 ,ti!lcr And v. h.ile 1ha1 1.1 peret:nl oficr migh1 ikc a good amount 10 lhe public. \tiller said th:u ll "'111 on(\' lea~e 'l;JC ie:u:hers on :he bo11om end the <chool d1unct's pa) ~ale :mer all the d1~mct ha!. 'ina •cd \alan nqo11111ons. Tbt ,tC lrUStttS \Oled WI "'tt 10 rat,e tUl'1on bcgmrung in the fall ~ e r a mo,e. acrordmg 10 ,1c President ~ Schuler, ncct"-W) 10 In· crca.se teachcn' pa) 10 be compaublt with the rc:11 of Idaho's lca.::hcr1' pro• Jected sncretie ror foal 19~5. \fillcr l)Olnted ou1 1ha1 the IJ percent 11,1U take a hule O\er S200.00010 unple· mcnt, and that uu~ ,.-as v.dl •11hm the
=
of
Graduation set May 18 b) Otann• mall Gradua1ion is 5<'heduled for Frida) , May 16 at 10 a.m. this }eat 11,11h the ccmnorucs 10 be held in the NIC gymnasium. Martha Hesse, assistant sccretar) for the '!Wlagcmem and adnunmr:mon from the U.S. Dcparuncn1 of Encrg)' in W:uhington D.C., will be lhe guest speaker. according 10 rcg1Strar ltsuko ishio. Presentation of the graduntcs v.JII be g1"en b}· Dr Ov.en F Cargo!, ducc:tor of planning and associntc dean of instruction. Presentation of the diplomas will be gi\'cn b) Dr Jam~ Barton. chairman or the NIC Bonrd of Trustees. The Sister Carol Ann Wa.ssmuth or St. Pius X Catholic Church •ill give tht in· vocation and benedicuon. Songs at graduation will be performed by the IC Concert Choir under the direction of Rick Frost. "You'll Never Walk Alone'' is one sclecuon the cbou will sing. Other selections arc still undecided, according to Frost. Michael Sulley will play the orgar. for the pro..--essional and the recessional. Studcnl.S on the Who's Who list will also be announced at graduauon. These studcnu were named in the April 13 usue of the Cardinal Review. According 10 the registrar, approximately 350 studenLS arc graduating in May. However, not th:u many students are taking pan in the ceremonies. After graduation. the board of trustees is hosting a luncheon for the faculty and administration. There is no charge for the staff. according to Pauline Irvine, SCCTetllr} to the president.
tumon pay hike But \.tiller S3ld that Schuler has also indicated l\n increase m the mill-levy ta'Cntfon ~nin.<t local propm, owners 1ha1 "1U bring nn e<nmated add111onal S600.000. "He\ (Schuler) iustified twtion increa~~ 10 students 10 ra.1 e teachers' pa):· \hllcrqid, "and no" he .,.;11111~0 indicate 1us1ific:111on of mcrcasmg propcrt) ta.,cs for the same reason. .. , b11d fell th.11 a good-faith compromi,t' "'ould ha, c been 15 percent " \ nd v.lule the 1.1 percent pro~ in crease b) the board "as not "ell rcce1, ed t,~ the racul1~ nejo11n11ng comm1ttcc. \hller "3.ld that he had no idea ho" 1exhrn wdl rc,pond. bultr ~ ould not comme nt on thr on-going ncgouauon\ on the mailer. ~) ma 1ha1 n 1, JU\t "too earl) to comment 01 1h1~ ume .. But in .lll earlier in1cn acw regnrdmg tca.:hcn' pay for 19 ~. S.:hukr 1ndu::ucd 1ha1 tht' board "'as well o"arc or the nttd 10 rai\C teachers' pay .ind that ccrt..11n mta.sur~ .,.ould be taken 10 insure 1h01 :-JIC teacher\ rcccivcd compnrabtc pay increases wuh their peers ncross the state and in the Mountrun Region. He 111 o poin1cd out that he had bten fighung for more money 1n this year's
lcgl\lnt1, c ~on 10 insure teaebc" • pny 1ncrea,c, for NIC fn,uh) Miller <aid that Schuler, o~ he hnd dcl1,ercd the board'< 1.1 rcrccnt prop<X· cd mcrt':l..c for trachers, painted ou1 lh,11 th1s inc-rcasr would plo~c NIC number mnc "1thm the MounLOin Region )Ullc<' 1umor college pay <calc Rut, Miller ~ 1d, that 1, companng thc 'IIC board', propo,,.d lor fiwal 198S with the s.ilarie..< of the lountnm rciuon during the 1984 )car. "Arter the rc<I ol thc figure<. come in from the region, \\C will be right bock on the bouom of the pay-hcup, ·• Miller said. The facullv ll\scmbly met Thur~v 10 d1scu,~ the board's propcxcd 14 percent pny mcrcim~. but at pre\) time, no result, o( thn1 meeting were avn1latih:. The currcm entry· level pa) for 1cnchcrs with a mu.\lcr '\ degree und no expcncncc cu NIC 1, SIS. I29: the 14 percent lnm·nse 10 thoi b'"c f1gurc will mean a $2,129 mcrca,c for NIC That still ploccs NIC teacher) obou1 S1,000 below the pny received by 1cachcr, n1 E.'Utcm Wn,hington University, bcrore any raise ror riscnl 198S, nc· cording 10 documents 1n the hnnds of the faculty.
84K RAM Z-80 microprocessor 9-lnch Monitor 80x24 Display Dual Disk Drives $1595 $1295! Total Support
At $1595 the KA YPRO II was a business com· puter as complete as machines costing $2000 to $3000 more. At $1295, this completely in· tegrated system could be considered a steal! Sold with a comprehensive Word Process· ing/Speller, Data Base Management, and Finan· cial Planning software package, this learning tool is an excellent investment in your future.
Call us concerning demonstrations Financing Available Ask for your campus representative 666-1511
April 27, 19S4/ Cardioal Review- 11-
UNDER ROOF- Th, house tha t t ht carpenlt) class is building i.5 no rl) compltled .
Raising the roof photos and text by Bas:11 Franz
LOOK II ERE - Instructor Walt Corlsoo d~cussc~ Lhc house plans with owntr~ tcve 11nd J an Meyer.
UP AND OUT--Jlm Mornu or N1clon1I Glass pla«s a '"I nd ow pane In one or the studio sl()•llghts.
The nine students in the NIC C3Jl)Cntry Prog.r:im are gelling plenty of practical apcricncc tlu.s year b) building a large house in Coeur d'Alene Under the supervision of Instructor Wah Ctrlson. the students have been building n 2,500 squarc-foot home overlooking Pondcros.a Spnnp Goll Cou~. According to Cnrlson. the students st.aned the projce1 in mid-October of last year and v, ill firush the house at the end of May this year The tv.o-level house has three bedrooms, tv.o bathrooms, a tv.o-car garage, studio and greenhouse. The house features \';iulted ceilings and sk> lights in the studio.
PO UNDl~ G- -Cupcntry stud ent Ll oyd Marsh works on the outside of tht house. Carlson said some of the work still remaining to be done includes pulling on the siding, building scvcrnl decks. sh«i rocking the interior and peuring concrete for the dri\'eway.
The house is being buih for Coeur d'Alene resident Steve Mc)·er. v, ho O\\DS and operates the Bookseller. Carlson said that the college ndvenised in the spring of 1983 for a house to build. and people submillcd tht1r plans. The advisory committee for the carpentry program then selected the house that they thought would give the students the best experience. t1nd they chose the house that is currently under construction.
r
Legislative redistricfi~~...; b;;;;i~n hurting Idaho by Ric J. Kast
Redimicting Plan l4B has become a pttpetual headache for many Idaho lawmakers. bu t that's just the medic:ine prescribed by the Idaho Supreme Court 10 rectify a cond111on called " gerrymandering." A decision handed down earlier this month caught lawmakers by surprise: the Supreme Court ruled the Legislature'\ red1mic1tng plan. House Bill 746. unconstitutional and ordered that the natc's elecuon:s be earned out under an earlier coun--0rdercd plan label· ed 148. The court ~ald that a voter deviance of 34 percent offered by Plan 746 was agamst both the \~te and the federal cons1i1utions. They ordered that 1h15 year's elections be carried out under Plan IJ B, composed b} NIC poliucal science Instructor Ton) Ste,,.11!1. Plan 149 has a voter deviance of 9.S percent. Plan 149 was ordered b} First D1S1riC1 Judge Dar Cogwell in August of last year. and the .u1e's lawmakers have been knocking heads together e,;er since trying 10 come up w11h an acceptable red~lrict· ing plan 10 take 14B's place. In fact, the issue preoccupied man> legislators' ume for the duration of Idaho's llurd lon!!est 1'8)Slati,, session, which passed Plan 7J6 on the last da) of the session. After riodll) gelling House Bill 746 passed through both houses and signed by the governor. candidau:s quit filing under plan 149 and began filing under the new lawmakers' plan. But the Supreme Court pulled the rug out from under that plan, and the filing of candidotcs had 10 again be changed back 10 IJB. So now, while the filing deadline 15 behind them and Plan I.SB 1s m cffe1:1, lnwmakers arc agam bad. at the drawing board working on another plan 10 rtplacc the cour1--0rdered 149.
State Anomey Geneml Jim Jonl!S bas asked both the s~tc and feder-.tl suprcmt couns to put :i "~13)" on tht plan and mo\e the clec:tions 10 August. rather than the Moy 22 pnmilI). all0\\1DS more time to defeat plan l4B and replace 11 "'i tb one of then own.
"It's n ,ictory for the U.S. Con5li1u1ion nnd the Idaho Constitution," Stewart said. "Therefore, it's a , ictory for democracy. " In a democracy, you play by fair rules and you let lhc peopk de1:idc who wins."
But Cotur d'Alene auorney Ray Gi,cns told reporters thal he didn't think the Supreme Coun \l. ould hear the appeal befon: the May 21 pnmar)'.
1tw1r1 said that this 1s nnotbcr mll~tonc in voters' rights. The muggle that women and blocks or 1h1s coun1r1 fought for and nnnlly won wru. a mnior v\ctor) for ,o,crs' right5 and ~o i~ the issue or gcrr)mnndcnng, he said. " Rt'apportionmcnt is the heart or democracy," Stewart s:iid. "You ju,i don't prcdctcrnunc election rcsulu " Con~idcring th.u thi~ two-year bnll le over rcdlstnc· 1mg has found every prof)O!,nl or the Lcgi,loturc'~ redistricung plans declared uncons111u1ionnl. 11 seenu a bat absurd to many obst'r-er( for the lnwmal.cu 10 continue to bent this dead hor)c over the head.
( news ana lysis ) Giveru. representtn, 8111 and Gretchen Htllar of Coeur d'Alene. tool.. the ,,arc to court tn 1982. Hellar said the ,me defended us pl:ln bccnu,c 11 uphrld the "one-man. onc-,otc" princ1plt. Bur the lllwmalers' plan ,,.as thrown out by Judge Cogs-..ell because distnct Imes cro,scd count; boundaries. The legi.slarors also 3rgucd .:igrun,1 Plan 148 because it :idded flotcrial dLStricts. but House BBi 746, passed by the Legw;iture and signed by the go,ernor. also included nomiab Acconlinit to Plmo 148 author Tony Ste-..nn. the court's derision 1s a ,·tctOI) o,·er gerrymandenng in Idaho Ste-..an \\Orked for 17 months and put in o~cr 400 hours composmg a number of redis1ric11ng plans that v.erc introduced 10 Judge Cogswell. from which Cogs\\cll ,hc>lle Plan 149.
When )'(11.1 cons, ldc r the foci that the nuorney fees to figh1 this losing bottle over reapportionment by the \llllC come from the 10,1tpnyers. 11 seems even more abrnrd. Let·~ face it: the fnircst woy 10 decide the votmg d1~1ric11 of n state 1s by a c1v1c commiucc, composed of people in the various rcg,onnl nrcas and u)ing ex• pcrtisc in , uch mnueN. Some lc&iblntor~ admit to being inclined 10 gcr· rymander 1f given the chance; everybody want, to pro• ICCI his JOb. It's ume to put this nonscn,c of redistricung ond gerrymandering behind us and get on with the bu.,,inc:ss of running the muc-with fair rcprc~en101ion for oll and with o more hone11 and compeiitivc Legislature,
! Norm's Army/Navy Store I !ff'D*UUlUUflm1,mmuwu1u11muu111m1uuu1111111u1.UWIIIIIUtlllllllltUIIUIIIUHltlllllllllllllllllllllllll&NIUUUIHtllllllt.....
~
I
I
I
~
Q~..
i ·_ i
_j
.~
I ~
~
~= ~
~
~ = =
Du Breeden pboto ASNIC Rep. Andy Rice chalks up ~ott totals following the student senator eltt:tloo April 18. Gerald Kt.11.0tdy came out the big winner with Rugh Smith u d Tom Colden also ea.ming seats on the board. Ktooedy was later appointed 10 rm Chris Molkty's 'fleaK)' for the mnai:odcr or lhls )'tar. but bt ud lht olber two will serve on the board all out yesr. (See dttlloo story on ingt 2.)
I_=
i
I i =
Rafts - 2-man from $21 -95 - - All sizes
available upon request. Tents - many sizes and styles to choose from_ - ... beginning at $59.95
~
Vote tally
i
KangaROOS - lightweight hikers and joggers-------$23-95
=
~
I
Baseball shirts - men's and women 's-------$3-95
Get
:E::::::~
i !
I i
•j
I i
::i ; 1
:::~D~~rchase
Coeur d'Alene, Idaho 208 667-6829
J
,
1
ApriJ 27, 1984/ Canlinal Review- 13-
KEEPl.' C FIT-- Tim Chri-1,e, Ceori:t h b . Jim Lpl'hurcb and \-\arnn r>ucolc
, ~ercist b) running dmil).
Laurie B~IOW photo
f
er sports
]
Faculty running crazy by Dan Breeden
It's a bird. 11'5 a plane. No, h's five NI C employees out ror 1hcir daily noon run. "Running," \aid Associate Dean of Instruction Owen Cargo!, "is a way of reducing 1hc nress level which results in sining at o desk dealing with people and people problems." Out 1ha1 i) just one or many mo1ivcs 1h01 college nd, ministn11ors o.nd lns1ruc1ors have ror mcc1 ing in 1hc gym everyday 111 noon prior 10 their onc,10-fivc-m,lc jaunt in the lnkcsidc area. ll 's a baulc with the fn1.' ' sold Denn Bennc11, NIC activltcs coordinator. And spcc<:h lns1ruc1or Tim Chris1ie echoes these thoughts. Asked why he s1nr1cd running , ChnSlll' replied, "About 10 pounds," HO\\cver, there ore those "ho rur1 for 1;h)'S1Clll fitness as well os a means of wc1gh1 loss and/or !.uc,,;. alleviation. Both four.and-a-half-rear vetemn!, of run111ng, Director of Financitd Aids Jim Upchurch nnd C4reer
Counselor Warren Ducote started running 10 get in bcuer ph)')icol condiuon. The noon bunch, which coMists of an)"' here from one 10 a dozen runners, just son of fell 1oge1hcr according 10 its members. But most of them a.grcc that running with compan)' is the way 10 go. "I 1hink I run farther and faster when I'm ,mh someone else.'' Christie said. "Even if you don 'I 1nlk 1here's a caml\rodcrie present," he added. Bennett «hoed Christie's feelings as \\ ell. "I like 10 run with lh~ group," Bcnneu mid, "because there's enough diversity l'ithin it. " If you wa.nt to run fast, you run .. ilh Owen
(Cargol) or George Ives," Bennett wd. "and 1f ~ou wan1 10 sluff off, )'OU run \\1th (Jim) Headley and (Mike) Bundy." Though most of the runne~ ha,c set COUJ'\CS the) like to run. the distances run by C3ch member ""ill 1;.u;. Chri\tte said he 1ries to run bet'"ffil four and fo·c miles 3 da)', and Ducote said he lil cs 10 co,-er from 18 to 20 miles a ..eel.. Upchurch has sci a tl'o-milc daily minimum for lumsclf "'bereas Cargo! F'U1l!, &n)'\\herc from one to fi,c miles each day-depending on the amount of ume he has " I'd lilc to conunuc to ,.car the s.une clothes I hase no .. ," Cargo! \Oid "I rr:ll.l)' enjoy running after the first quarter of a mile or so," he added Christie and Upchurch prefer runrung tn the early hour) some,.hcrc 11f1cr S a.m ,u Upchurch put 1t, "Thal '"ll)' I get II done and over .. Although .ome of the runnen tu, e run ID3!3thoru in th<' 1)3.St ruid sull mo~ of tts member) hope to run one some da), the group d()C) 113• c 1u s!..epll~. Cargo! ga~e a "no" and a sl\31.e of the held for lili response, ttnd Upchurch said, "I doub111 'er) smous-
,,b "
1) ...
Chrisuc~. ho"'c,cr. said there is a ch.incc that he may run one. "'bile Ducote said lili c ~ of running 11 marnthoo arc better than 50-50. "It would be great to I.no"' 1h31 I '".IS at thiJt IC\el of ficness," Ducote said. "I thml.. I ha,c a gJCJt enough apprcci111ion for ~crcisc 10 run a m.anthon. · · But Christie 113d a d.ifieren1 reason "I just want the T-shirt that sa)S 'I ran a marathon' on it." he said.
OmCE RELIE.f- ~oda1t Dean or l ns1rur tion O"cn Clrgol pn:pares 10 leave his Sll'ffl bc:hlnd and Join the res1 of 1hc noon bunch prior to lhcir run a.round 1hc lakesidt are11.
April 27. 1934/ Cardina.l Review-14-
I
Roller coaster Cards could host regionals
I
b) Don
The rights to pl:i) ho<t 10 the ~JCAA Region 18 Baseball Tournament \\ill be up for grabs thi< "ttkcnd .u the: Cardin.ili begin a thrtt-gamc home <tand apirut Treasure \ all<'I Communit\ College. Jccording to· Coach Jae~ Blo'<om. The thrtt games on S4turda) and Sundll) will end a su.-gamc series that beg.in on April 20 and 21. The winner of the \Cncs will h.ivc the homc-tacld ad,antagc "hen toum:iment nction begins l.lter t.his spnng. The Cardinals lead the scnM ofter taking two of the three sames played at T rcasure Valley the previous weekend. In the opener on Friday. April 20. NIC rolled to an 11-3 ,;c,ory, but had some trouble in the s«ond game or the doubleheader as they dropped a 7-0 dedsioo. The team milted on Saturday and handed its TVCC opponcnlS an 8-4 loss. The Cards have been struggling late· ly, and Bloxom said that the team will have 10 iron out a few problems, e3peci:llly in defense, before Lhc series with TVCC. "It's not one specific player." Bloxom said. "It just seems like we find
some way to make one very c:only mistake defensively each game.·• He added that the team has been let· ting one error turn into two or three runs
aucr before: the linal out is made. Bc«tdc, 11opp1ng the oppos1uon from putting runs across the plate:, the cardtnal~ have be-en havmg their own pro· blcms scoring. "We h(lve be-en having n great deal or difliculty Ill this umc geumg the big hit in the ball$llfflc, ·• Bloxom said. "We arc gening people on base and in scoring posiuon, and no one is toking charge: enough to go out and get the buc hit to score n couple of runs ror us." The Cords hove not bttn hilling well as a team. The ovcrnll 11veroge of .2SS is about SO points below what it should be, Bloxom said. He added that currently on even bigger problem bas been that 1he bottom third of the batting order has "barely been hitting their weight." That group is averaging almost 100 points below where 1h01 part of the lineup needs to be hitting, Bloxom continued. Bloxom said he hopc.s all these problems will be behind the team before 1he contcsLS with what he called a "veteran" TVCC team. Treasure Valley is returning live starters from last year's squad, and Bloxom said thal they arc o very good bunch bollplnyers. He added that the Cards will need to be in top form if the team hopes to play host to the tournament.
or
Bloxom resigns basketball position
I 'II get it Roy Oestr of the l'l'as!} Dogs S"ings aw'll) during II reetnt intra.mu nu sol"lball gam, on the soccrr field.
NIC baseball coach Jack Bloxom resigned his assistant basketball coach position at an NIC Board of Trustees meeting Thursday April 19. Bloxom. who bad been with the basketball program for 17 years. said hts resignation will have a positive effect on the baseball team. "II will give me more time to work with the kids," he said. "But I'm sure I will miss it after so many years." Bloxom said Lhat a replacement will not be sought for him, but Dale James, who 1s another NIC assistant basketball coach, will gain more responsibility. Bloxom added that he has been considering the resignation for two or three years.
Make room , boys-here comes the shrink willy weech
A few weeks ago a psychologist came out 11,ith a repon that Lheoriz.ed basketball puycrs miss frtt thro"'s because of a subconsoous need 10 please everronc in the cro"d. ln other words. Lhey miss once m a while jus1 10 mnke the opposing fans happy. With all or these psychologbts deh1ng into the human mind, I expect to sec many more reports on why athletes behave the "11Y they do. If thesf tbtories become accepted, the nw step will be their 11,idespread apphcn1ion throughout the ~pons world There (beside the cooches, managers, trainers and the second· llnd th1rd-stnng players) •rill be a ne" ad· v,~er on e,cry bench and sidchnc m the nation. This ne" position will of course be the team PS}'Chialris1. Maybe LhC) could even have a draft. I C'llll
hear Merlin Olsen and Dick Enbcrg during a time-out on the licld "Well, Merlin, the, got Dr Jones last ~·car m the first round. Another great one from Stanford don't you think'l'· "\'es, Did:, with his Ph.D. in clinical and an \1 .A. in child psychology, I t.hink he'll be a strong addition to the Scaha11,k lineup." "\\'ell as )OU can sec. \lerlin, Dr. Jones is treating Jacob Green on the lield right no". Our mitial report indicate5 tlut Green is having some 1)1,C of problem wuh his superego. You can clearly sec the tears sueam1ng down his face; he's whimpering about something. I really hope it's not serious, Merlin." "Ob me too, Dier. llc's such a crmcal pan of this club.\\ ait-wait, I'm not sure. but I think he scream· ed something about has mother being too dominant
as thC) carried
him off the !icld." "Well, this JUSt came in, Mtrlin: apparently Green's superego has completely overridden his id and ego. and morality is his only objective. He soys football is mcarungless violence, and he refuses 10 play any more. "Dr. Jones said that Green will be msutuuonali.ud for a1 least two months •· "Well. they're ready 10 resume play again, Dack, so on "ith the game "
II
April 27, 1984/ Cardimd Re,ie\\- 15-
I
Flipping the disc NIC S1uden1 Keiger Bowman wees advan .. ge or one or ln l week's olctr d1)S 10 perfecl his Frisbee skills on the soccer flc:ld in rro nl or 1he gymnasium (background).
Curt Dupuis photo
Sports slated for sum mer Beginning 1cnni~. racque1boll and Jogging arc among the IJSt or classes which "-ill be offered a1 NIC this sum mer for 1he 1984 summer school program. All athlc1ic classes will meet four day& n wccl. for c1ghl weeks beginning June 4, unlcs~ Olherwisc specified. Cliusc~ meeting Mond3y 1hrough1 Thursday in 1hc Chm11anson Gym mdude: Beginning Oolf Ill 7 a.m. nnd again 01 8 a.m .. Run ning/M:1r111hon Training at~ a.m .. Jogging al 8 a.m. and Erfectlvc Training for Coache~ at 9 11.m. A hikmg and ligh1wc1gh1 camping class will meet on I ucMlnys in the gym at I p.m. The Coeur d'Alene Alhlcllc Club will be the ~ile of the 7:IS a.m. racquetball class. The beginning tennis class will meet on the NIC coum at 7 a.m.
Cash paid fo r your
Ogan clears first hurdle on way to Olympic dream by Sharl Alderman
NIC wrestler Phillip Ogan placed first In both the Greco-Roman and fret-style classes in the Western division of the U.S. Olympic trials held in California last weekend. According to Ogan, the wins enable him to attend another Olympian trial in Mlnnesotn. and if he is able to plan! there he will then nttend another trial in Iowa. " It WO} a great e>.pericncc to" in the matches," Ogan said. "I was also able to learn a 101by watching other nthletes 1ha1 I will have to wrestle during the tournament in Minnesota.'' According 10 NIC wrestling coach Joh~ Owen. Ogan won the 1983 Spon~ Festival Championship in Colorado Springs which was an impOrtant ,,ctory for the \\Testier because it estnblishcd his nalion11l ranking. Ogan has also been
Bring them to the
College Bookstore Monday thru Wednesday
named the number one \Hestler in l:is 105-and-a-ha.l(-pound weight class in the Pan Am tri:lls. O"en ~d the NIC Cardinals will be ancnding a (01lcgia1e Canadian open nationll.l 1oumamcnt in mid-Ma).
3 Days Only May 14 - 16
A pril 27. 1984/ Cardinal Review-16-
(__ n_i_c _n_o_t_ic_e_s__J 1uden1s ,-ho b:ne applied for finan• dal assblance should \lop b) the fimin· cial aids office 10 m:al.c \ure 1b1u ever} thing hu bten 1ccura1tb prOCCS!,fd. ln•51ale. ou1-of-dhtric1 ~•udenh ,.ho are plan nlo,t 10 rtlurn lo 'I<. ont semester ~hould hut cenmcates or resldenc) sent 10 the admi.s<ion\ office as soon as pos,lble. This Issue II ill b( the final iuue of tht Cardin al Re, le,. untll tbr r111t semnter. An> students -.i.sbJng to beconu 111rltm or pbo1ogr11pbtn on the CR must sirn up for J ournalbm 117 (Publicatlom Workshop) and must also 1al.e or had J ournalism 121 (:-.e-.s \\ rihnrt.
ti.,,
Financial aids "'Ill be)!ln mailing out leuers the week or April 23.
&"ll'!lrd
The NIC grounds department rt· quests that those rldlng bikes not chain th em 10 trees, posts or other objects on campus. Bike racks are coovenieoll> located our most buildings.
The Theater or • iWIKT from \1oolanl t:ni•mu, .. m (M'rlorm 11 '1C Auditoriom on Toe\da,. \11) I 11 S p.m. The proenun for dtaf and bnring audjeoc:e,, i, pan of Dof A ~ ~tel. April 25-\b} :! and lndud~ mime. pOt'U,, ii20NI ~ooa and dance. Tickets lrt 1•aD11ble II the C-A Bo, Omce. for mort 1Dfonna1.1on all • tar Euthene 11 666·1881. 1a1e
Tbe \ IC\ tttrans' Oob Is spo1t~orin2 1 gamblers' bu\ trip 10 mo. :-.ev .. on "'1 1) " ~· Cost for the trip t\ SSO (M'T ptrson. and pv11dpaots most b( ?I yair" old. for mort infornu_tion. ron11c1 the ,e1·s booth rtp,,_olllhe In 1be l.,8 .
Any S&11dpolnt sto deots hulng
lc!onnatioo aboat the rumored alst· eoce or I strange aoJmaJ / creatore IM.og In Lake Pend Orlelle 1tt u .ked ol contlc1 Fran Bahr or Jim McLeod In Sherman Ball, Room 8, or Duke Snyder In Meclwilcal Arts. Rocrm S. The three are collectlng conOdentW ln!ormation as p:art of • project.
~ t ,. catalogs buc arrhtd ttnd .. 111 continue 10 arri•t In tbt rorelgo l1ngu1gt depar1mro1 con~mlntt indhiduaJ stud) abroad program~.
\ n) Hit"" ~bo plans to aucod ~Um• mer Sl!m~ltr al ',IC should contact tbt repscrar'· office as <oon as posslble.
Tbe ne~ "Transition,," a resour« guldc to budget tra,el, work and stud) abroad. ls In. ff Jou \\ Ould lll.t 10 ltike lo Grtttt. camp ln .. 1ucrlt1nd. trtk in Equador. stud) in Me,ko or ~·ork In Euro~. p!An ahrad. top by Room JOA and n Leona Ha < en for more information. Grad" wlll bt m_alled on apprO'<· lmattl) Ml) J-0 to permaoen1add~. 1uden1s hould notify 1he registrar's omr, of any change of add ress.
It Is not coo hue to appl) ro, a Pell Gnni ro, the 198-'·85 ~(' ffltSltr . rudrnl5 ma) pick up a form in student
sef'kes.
'llC Is goln1t abroad again this <ummcr lo F'lnlaod. l.apland and E.~lonia and Scotlaod. for more Information. contact Leona tlas~n. Room JO • \JI ,1udenl~"Ith 'lational Dlrtt1 1u. drnl I oons or °'lu~lna tudcn1 Loans <hould ron1ac1 Oa, id Porl.rr lo 1he b1L<inN officr for an f\11 inlrn lt\\but onl} If lht) 11rc ln"ln11 NIC afltr thi semestrr. llldent:1 ,. Ith Guarantred • tudenc l..oan, shou ld con111c1 the bank that issued !he loan.
Classical guha ri(I l)avld Mln ti wlll give a facu h) rl'dt11l 1onl1,thl In the C-A Building and on May 4 In the Music Building of Whi tworth College In pokane. Doth recitals wi ll begin 11 8 p.m. ind arr open to the public, free or charge wi th donations to lht rtn$tnl Spokane Clu~lca l Guitar Society l(l'fltdull7 accepted. Miu' program con~IJts of works by J. . "B1ch, Leo Brouwer, Napoleon Coste, Manuel Ponce, John Dowland and WIiiiam Walton.
Federal cutbacks hurt students year." Upchurch said. "II would allo"' states to bcnefi1 from the prcsttge or what they got before." Upchurch said that he "'ill 1c~tlfy a1 a hearing on Simon ·s proposal 10 Sacramento. Calif on April 30. The campus-based financial aid program 1s designed 10 allow both aettSs and choice to college students. Howc,•er, only access is pro,ided to s1udems from kindergarten through grade 12. Upchurch said. " We don't fund Gonzaga Prep," Upchurch said. ''but once 1hey gel out of the 12th grade. Y.C want to give them a choice." Upchurch said !~payers cannot af. ford 10 fund tuition and fees that cost SI0.00010 SIS,000 a year, and since the average cost to ancnd a four.year public
institution is S6.000, the federal program should 1mJ)05e a mling on aid at the S6.000 access I(\ cl. "The studmt can make a choice 10 take S6.000 10 Hanard. get.- loan, get an endo,,.mcnt grant or an endowment loan, or .some other type of financial aid, .. Upchurch ~id. "But it isn't fair for lli to ha,c to bear 512,000 to SI.S.000 for his tuition." As long as the distribution of federal aid is tied to tuition costs, states who do not fond post-secondary education will have an ad,11n1age, Upchurch said. ''Taxpayers in Idaho arc pa)ing state taxes to keep tuition down.·· Upchurch said. "People in Vermont arc putting their money m their pockets and letting Idaho ta:cpa)m fund their institU· lions."
Fall registration dates set Students who arc planning 10 return 10 NIC ncxi fall should apply for readmission before lhc end of this semester. according to Director of Ad· missions Oa,·id Lindsa). N~ students ha,c umil Aug. IS 10 send lhdr applications in. Summer school a1 NJC ~ns June 4, Lindsay said. Current NIC students who arc planning 10 take classes during the summer do not need to apply. People who an 001 an ending NI C classes at present should have their applications in by May 16. Rcgisua1ion will be May 31 and June I for all students. Registration for the fall semester will be held Aug. 23 in Christianson Gym. Early ~is1ration is tentatively planned for Aug. 6-15, according to Lindsay. At this time students will meet with ad,·iscrs, create their class schedule and register for classes. The first da)· of fall classes will be Aug. 27.
Rock-n- Roll Every Friday and Saturday 7 p. m. to 9 p.m.
Friday - Al l the draft beer you can dri nk for $1.99 Saturday - Show your Student ID an d get 50-cent Kami Kazi's
ALL DAY Accepting appllcations for summer emplo yment