,nat R€Vl€W Volume 37, Numbe r 4
Frida~, Oct. 19, 1982
No longer alone: Help a t hand for ha ttered wives by Ronale Anson Everv 18 seconds a woman is bc:uen. Some call for help: ~OSI do not. The call usu3lly comes in 1hc middle of the night. It could come through Open Line. from a 13w enforcement agency or from :i minister. It docs not mouer where the c.-nll onginotcs: the advocate ,s committed to aid Lhe victims of domestic ,,iolence. ··There is no typical vic11m: you cnn't really pick 3 persona lit) type." said Karen Downing. volunteer ndvoc:ite and domestic violence counselor. "There are some lhings that seem to bear through that have a common thread to it: one thing 15 low ~elf-cstcem--the people "'' ho stay have lo"' self. esteem." Another common thread seem\ to be 'hat she 15 a mothcnng-type. She feels responsible for the man, Do"'•ning said. "If they (the baucrcd women) hong in there, and they are the very best perM>n, then maybe he 'It change,'' Do,.•ning sn,d. ""They think 1h01 somehow they can toke the responsibility and change him." Bat final!) one nigh t tt is 100 much to 1:ike. She calls for help. The advocate explores the victim'!> rc~ourC'cs. ls it :i real emergency ~itu3tion? Docs she ha,e ~omcwhere 10 go? Docs i,hc need 10 go 10 the hospital? Do the police have to be called? If the woman has 10 get out of 1hc house, the 11dvoca1e will me et her at o ncu t ral pince and intervi(•w her 10 be sure tho1 !>he ,s realh· in need. because focihties arc scarce in c~ur d' A·lene. The baucred ..·oman Is then tnken to n "\nre·· hou~c which pro,•idcs all the comfons for the victim and her children for three days while ,;he consid<.-rs her altemn1ivc~. The odvocntc meet\ with the vie1im the next day for coun~cling and to examine the situation. The victim makes her own decbion concerning her future. "We never try 10 tell them what 10 do: it's up 10 them. We're supportive,'' Downing snid. "We understand. most of U\, why they're in thnt situation, :ind it') up to 1hem to make that decision." If the v1C1im decides lhat she wants 10 le:l\'C her hu~band, the volunteers 111 the Coeur d'Alene Women's Cenler will a~ist her in any way possible. Acconllng to the FBI, SO to 60 percent of nil married women hn,•e been battered at le~t once,
and only one in 10 coses is reponed. In Kootcn:ii County. :ibout six domestic dis1urb:inccs :ire reponed in a week. No one enjoys being beaten or deser ..es it. Dome\t ic violence occurs in all classes. races. profession<; :ind religious groups. Everyone in,ohed with domestic violence b n ,•1cum. In addition to the woman and 1he children. the man i<; a ,·ictim too. All of the ,•,ctims get trapped in the ""b31tered-wife svndrome."· A thrCC•Slage cycle, •he "'ba11cred•\l.ifc svn, drome·· s1:1n, "'ith the tension building pha.se. Nothing the "'omnn docs or docs not do can appease the \ituation. The second phase (crupuon) can be anything from verbal abu'ie 10 ph)·Sical beating. Then the m:in feels remorse (the honermoon phase). promises 10 ne\'cr do n again. and gives the w 1fe peace offerings of some ~on. This cycle continues until one of 1hrce 1hmg) hnppcn\. the couple scpanucs. someone is killed or the , ictims get counseling. " h 's frustrating for the ,oluntecrs 10 "'Nl \I.Uh some of the victim~:· Do... ning ,.iid. "'becau,c: the) 're not really ready for change--they do fl.O b3ck a lot. '"They keep going b:ick 10 their husbJnd.5 o,er and over again." ,he ,aid. "The typic-.11 wom.tn lea.cs the husband 10 times before she actuallv lea,·es.' Children of all ages 3re affected by "io.lencc in the home. Infants ho\'e poor ,lecping h11bi1s. )'Oung children show fc3r b} hiding or may try to protect their mother. pre-teens may block 1hc1r mother's <urTcring from their consciousness. and some 1eens may e,·en join thcir father in bellling their mother. In some cases the woman " ·ill no1 leave her husb:10d until he harms one of the children or another famil\' member. One women's C'Cnter ,olunteer told of a strange love hate rel:monsrup bcrween the <'hildren of a baucred woman. The brother "'ould hun his sister until she cncd out in p:iin. Then he 11.ould comfon her and tell her that he lo"ed her. According 10 Richard Gelles in ··Toe Myth of Battered Hu )bands.'' if a child is expo,ed 10 violence in the home and 1s 1he "ictim of parental ,•,olcnre, thnr child i) qune likely 10 gro"'' up and use
(___,,_·n_s_id_e_th_e_c_r___J Columnist "prabft" NlC eat.ertalrunent ............................... ~e 2
EdltodahayuctMtles laeklng, oot iplrit ..•.•...••..•••..........•... . pageJ
Dean Stone wlclda blgatkks ................................ . ... .... . page S
Tbls Halloween muqaerade u macabre mutants .. ...................... page 6 Who cooent 1ucceslifally blends ne w and old .••.••.••..•...••••...••.• page IO
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Ston l:lall photo WHERE TO TURN- -Baucred l<"h es do have so me place to go In North Idaho but mu~t decide to reach out for help. , 1olencc ag3ins1 a child or spouse. Domestic ,iolence does not always happen somewhere else: u could be happening next door. Cc,cur d ·Alene social ngenc,e~ reported seeing at least --i bauered "'omen las1 venr. In California it "'as legal fo~ a man 10 kill his "'ife or children in the line of d1~ciphne m this century. according 10 Downing. Public aultude lms to change before there will be a lo1 of progre~s m soh ing the problem of domestic ,iolencc C'Ontinued on page 10
Concert slated Saturday "Saturd:iy Nigh1 at the Movies.' 3 concert gi,cn b>· the North lduho Symphony Orchestra. "ill be held in the Communication-Ans Audi1onum on Saturduy 111 8 p.m. The roncen, a bafancc of classical Jnd popufor music. will be performed by the orchcsrra, wh,c-h combines 60 NIC studen1s :ind communuy musicians. The o~hestra w3s staned a ye:ir Jgo b) Todd Snyder. NIC music: instructor. . The conceri is free and according to Sn}der. is armed 111 · · gemng 11" .. audience."' The prognm. v.hich t3kesoffon the Boston Pops ,den. ,.;11 include "S111r Wars. ··2001 Space Odyssey·· and ··ause Enroun1ers.''
Oci. 29, 1982/ Cudinal Rc\iew·2·
14E.'(1 l-{ARRY 1 HAVE YOL.l ~EAl?D OF PcfER PoDtJNte?
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F\GLJRE.S •••
HE'S PLA.'(IW~ DV~R AT
NIC.!
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[___o~p1_·n_io_n-=-p_a-=--ge_) paul baier
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What next--a prom? From the moment that I firsi set foot on the campus of Nonh Idaho College. l've heard critics desc-ribc the school as nothing more than the fifth year of high school. Well. I think 1ha1 we finally have the ammunition 10 shoot these pooh-poohers down. All that even the hardest cynic needs to do is look at what goes on at this Madison Square Garden of onhern Idaho. When school could lay claim to the excitement of an event lilce the egg toss that took· place at the NTC barbeque earlier chis \'enr? · Certain!) not Western W)oming College in the sprawling metropolis of Rock Springs. Wyo. The closeS1 they could come was a concert starring Juice Ne\\10n. And che) call themselves a college? And what institution could match the intoxication of an NIC Skate night? Casper College [Casper College?) in Casper. Wyo .. gave n a try but could only come up with Barry Manilow. Ricks College. the hotbed of Southern Idaho. even got in the act by trying to cop NIC's evening with the Normal F1Shing Tack.le Band with a night of Osmond family wholesomeness. I suppose that these other schools will use the reasoning that for their size they aren't doing too bad in providing entertainment for their students. J ust because the Osmoods would be Ricks equivalent 10 the Rolling Stones and Barry Manilow is the biggest thing to rut Casper since they named :i ghost after it doesn·t me.in that they are topping our entertainment. I mean, just think if one of those eggs in the egg toss would break! Now that's ent en ainment' Juice Newton. eat your heart out. So lhe next time tbnt I bear someone say the NIC is Just like high school rm going to prove them wrong. And I'd skip home-room and sell m\· prom tickets Just 10 see the ir face:..
Reader says
Hunters have feelings too Dear Editor: In response to Mike Tntko's "humor," I'd like to say that. having neve r killed on nnimJ I myself. although I cal meat, I know of no hunter who hasn't fe lt a twinge of guilt while pulling the trigger. I know of no hunter who likes 10 kill. nor do I see hunting :is torture or deer as being se nseless. How many people pork out eve ry night not givi ng a second thought to the "poor. senseless animal" they are devou rin g? Americans are so removed from the source of their food tha1 th ey
coll th e meat beef or pork or venison. instead of the animals' nomc. Instead of toking responsibility fo r I heir food. 1hey (myself in• eluded) buy it tinted. tenderized and plas 1ic wrapped. MoS1 hunte rs I know work hard to win their catch and thank the spirit of the forest that they have been granted a decent l>hot. So think about that next time you go to the Mr. Steak or Y-J's to beef it up. Doreen Shababy Blake NIC stude nt
[__c_ar_d_in_a_l_re_VI_·e_w__J The Cardinal Re-view ls published semi-monthly by the PabUcat.lou Workshop class at North Idaho College. Members of the CR staff will strive to present the news Wrly, accurately and without prejudice. OplnJons expressed on the editorial pages and In varloos news analyses do DOI necessa.riJy reOeci the views o[ the NIC administration or the ASNIC. The CR Is entered as lhlrd-class postal m.a.t.erlal at Coeur d'Alene, Idaho 83814.
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edltor ....................... ... ..•...................... news editor ........ . ......... . ..... · · , · · · · · • · · · · · · · Marcella Hall associale editor ......... • ............. , .... , · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · Stan Appel arts and entertainment ed.lt.or .. , .. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • · • · · · · .JackleMallu spo.. ....~ ed.I•Ar "' . .. . .. . . . . . . . .. . .. . .. . . . . . . .. .•.•..•...••• Bruces BaD photography editor ......... · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · tan Raaer .Aall Baker copy ediwr . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . Barry assistant sports editor ...... · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • · · · · · · · · · · · · adde Appel advertlslng manager .. · , · · · · · · · · • · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · .J I Laaalter - ""~ -•-t • · · • • • • • • • •• ' • . • . • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • ........... Chery ....... ..,.,w.a 11m PUplm
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ad\iser .. . .. .. .. . ....•. , , · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • · · · • · · · · reporters ..... . . .. . . .... , .. , ..... · · · , · · · · · · · · · · ·: · · .AllsaR~ Ronale Anson, Pam Cu_nningha.m, Jodi Darur, Lon Davis, ose wn English Basil Franz Craig Johnson. Ric Kast, Greg Moreland, Da Mu.rph;, NanC) Payn~. MarU.sa Platl, Allene Samuel~, Mike Tadio, Weech and Mark Wheeler.
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Oct. 29, 1982/Cardinal Revlew-3·
- - -- - -----;(___m_o_r_e_o-=--p_in_io_n_) A ctivity fund spending should represent students Student reprcsent:n ion. and not school spirit, is lacking at NIC when ii romes to student activities. The ASNJC spcnr S600 of the student activity fund for a dance held 011 Oe1. 15 during World Hunger Weck. In addition to the SI fee. one can of food was needed for admission. But due to low attendance. very little food was collected. and only Sl80 in admission fees were collected 10 put back in the fund. One of the ASNJC senators commented th:it such a dance should have eas ily paid for itself. The senator blamed it on poor school spirit. But it is doubtful that NJC students have any less spirit than Students of other colleges around. h is more likely that students are not participating in acti vities s ponsore d by stude nt gove rn me nt, especially the Student Acth•ities Commi1tee. beca use t hey are not activities student~ arc interested in.
An Oct. lJ coffeehouse. planned and paid for by the Student Activities Committee. had most of the students off 10 class a ret'Ord 20 minutes e:irlv. The few acti\ities of the past which did catch the student's spirit. such as "The Rock)· Horror Picture Show·· on campus arc non-existent. Over si-.000 in Student fees is set aside for Student activities: the Studem Acthities Committee is in charge of most of that. Lo" auendance at recent acti\'ities. such as the Oct. 15 dance and lack of some activites. shows that this money is not being disrnbuted back 10 the majonty of students. Now there is nothing ne" about a school spirit pep talk. It is a lecture man} of us ha\e heard annually by enterprising high school presidents. lhely cheerleaders and OO\\ AS:-:IC senators. Well ma~ be SI -.ooo is just enough 10 make NIC students show student government just how spirited they are.
Sports columnist not fair, provoked readers charge De a r Edi t o r : We feel the sports article con· ce rning "no n:ime " compe titi ve runners in the OC'I. IS issue of the Cardinal Re,•iew wa~ compleu:ly un called for and written from a heanless point of view. Bruce Mullen. !>ports editor for the p:iper. made many cru el stole· mc nt s s uch as: " Runn e rs like Pierce do not place fear in the hearts of mnny opposing runners un n race day." Steve Pie rce, or \Vh om thi s nrticle depicl!>. ju,t ~o happens to be puuing hii. heart ond c;oul into running for our school. What gh es Mullen the riglu 10 ro mparc Pierce with runnerc; like Christy Dav ids. Al Solazar and Prank Shorter? Who doe!t he think he ic; any\, ay. the author of " Who '~ Who in Sports? "
Maybe Mullen's intentions were good because he did ~,ate that runner:. like Pierce. although they do not place in the top 10. are still good run ners as fnr as "how the game is played". but in his sports edirorial he did no1 give us. the readers. that impression. Since he was issued the rc:.pon· !tibility of editing the sports CO· lumn. Mullen !>hould have the stvle and tech nique of writ mg dO\\ n ~ell enough to get hi, intended mean· ing across clenrl). But instead. the article wo\ interpreted by many to be in\cn!titive. sorc:istic and \O.Tittcn with no thought of the damage ii might cause m mind. HO\\ can :i runner hkc SteH Pierce continue 10 run enthusu1s11c· oily ofter being public!) condemned and embarrassed 10 front of hi, fello" ,tudenh, "horn
he was running for in the first p!ace? Some people have no consideration or appreciation at all! Furthermore. if the paper would not dedicate so much space 10 Mullen's "Let'~ criticize our student bo<h'" column. there would be plenty of room 10 honor our cross countrv participants b~ listing the names of all of the people who
place, "hether they are first or 91st. In our book. Steve Pierce is for from being a "no name." but ... WHO IN T HE WORLD IS BRUCE MULLE ?! Sincerely. you r readers, Barbara Kinmiller Mary Kitzmiller ' IC student.s
(. . . _ n_e_w_s_c_o_n_n_e_c_t_io_n_s __)
A closed m outh gathers no foot Recent e\ ent.s 31 an , IC meeting had the concerned porties worrying about whether the Cardinal Re\;e" "as going 10 print matters tha t would be slondcrou:. or libelous. The Cardinal R~iev. is a rcsponc;1ble. ethical public:ition that will fairly reprc!>ent both sides of any issue presented in the paper. It LS ~mmendcd that an1one worried about what they have said appearing m pnnt. think tv. ice before saying an)1.hing damaging.
Halloween 's new torture form--it's a killer The moon glares slnl.stcrl) through n patch in the den)e pillo" of ebony cloudi, thnt undul:ue hke fe rvent wa\'eS of the ocean frosty air :.ting:. your throat m.c a dozen tin) needl~s pncktng your linger a:. you bril.kly "'alk along n lc:if-1:iden rood You 1\ atch the i.mall billu\, s of misty vnpor S\\ irl :1bo1c your head ns your wurm breath hill, the cold crispness of the air. ('ls you tread on, the bundle }ou ClllT) 1s grow inJi hea\ 1er each nunute, and 11 feels LO you ns if 1he temperature has dropped at lc:i51 6 degrees in the last JO :.econdi.. 1 here :ire Other:. lrl.e you \\ ho trundle Jnboriousl\' \\ ith their 011'11 bundles, and they too seem to feel the bite of the cold in the enveloptng darkness. "What sheer ngony an:i I purting myself through?" you ask yourself. What could possibly ha\'e enough dri,•ing force 10 make you force yourself onward tnto the darkness in ne:ir sub-zero weather?
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We all In younger da)s have experienced the same grueling the reward and memories of the night make it almost 1rresmible to pass up. October J I. the eve of All Saints' Day, the cx:cnsion for pr.inks
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marcella sanchez and for children requesting treats or threatening tricks. Halloween. ~is time.of having_ fun _gathering as much goodies as you can while endunng the bhstenng cold and darkness of the eery night made it truly something to remember. Ho" I miss the old times of torture. But a nei. form of tonure has replaced the old--HaJloween week.end is the time 10 squeeze into and out of costumes to prepare for a wild night of "rocket fuel" and other divergencies of alcohol. Where has the tonure gone? Oh, my aching head!
Oct. 29, 1982/Cardinal Rc,•lew-4-
NIC trustees vote to buy $600,000 computer b> Stan Ball After considering the opuons and altemauves. 1he NIC Board of Trus· tees voted to commit the college to a S600.000. flve-year lease-purchase contract for a new computer. The board approved the purcha.se with nn opuon 10 batk out before the 60-day sh1pp1ng period on Ma> JO. fll lC President Barr) Schuler S1Jd that he would li~c 1,. be .lblc 10 ,..,.11 and sec wh111 kind of rundmg 1\IC l(et~ from 1he \late next , car before being 1otalh rommmcd 10 the parchai.c The ne" He-.lett -Pad.ard mainframe computer" di more 1han double the ex~ung cnpaot~ of 1he pre~n1 model and ,..;n allo11 for much greater e~pansion. espec:iall~ in the area of remote terminals that arc pnmaril} for student educational u~. Rn, '.l-1 \1:r. director of computer sen1ces uid. The board agreed that all students in the As~ociatc of Arts dej?ree
Bob Bro" n. assistant director or the ,-oca11onnl department. told the bo:ud 1h:a1 100 percent of the "ora1ion3l m,1rue1ors are also oppo:.ed to the increase of part•time m,tructors. Pre<;idcnt Schuler :,~id thot the app:ircnt mCT'easc m administrator:. "as due 1:inicl..- in part to fillinll the m1ndatory requirement~ for federal granu S<huler said that he would like 10 addre~s the facuh~ ond di~eu,, the ~itu;uion fulh \\1th.them. Ra~ Stone. NIC de3n of instruction. cnuc1zcd the long-range plnn nnd said 1h01 11 I'> much too detniled: ;i l.ing-r.ingc plan ,hould he a gcncr.11 document. he s:ud. citing his 12 ycoN e1pcricn~ on the ~-ollcgc 11ccrcdi1:11ic,n bo:ird On :inother 1\~Uc, Schuler rcponcd 10 the board th:it the ~131c has bet'n reducing the lev<.'I of funding to NIC
programs. as u.ell a~ those in the Associat e of Science progr.im. be rcqwrcd to take :u le:ast IUI introduc· tion da.s~ in computers. The proposed college long-range plan u.as brought up for discus<.ion but the board decided to hold off on appro, al unul SC1me or the delllils lltt w-orked out. One of the nt-ms needing re, is1on. acCC\rding 10 Ken Wnght ch~rman of the 'Ii IC facult, committee. i~ th e c>n,t'rD of facult~ that ::,/IC i~ hinng too m11n, adm1nistrator5 and not ennugh facuJI) memben.. \\ right s;ud that NIC has one of the highest ~tudent per inStructor ratios in the st.1te. Anolher gne, an~ of I.he f.roh) IS the college' s trend ton.ird hinng an increased 111110 of pan-time 1n)tructors .
and that this is a political area that Norih ldoh o11 ns wlll have to u.aich clo~cly. In 01her action the board: --H~aid rcpons from the building c:ommmcc th1111he Frederick Post Hall remodeling i~ completed , that the c3mpu\ mall dc,clopmcnt is completed for now and thni the city or Coeur d'Ale ne ic; ~ending men 10 work on the dike nny time they have spare time to clean up the ce ment block~ that were dumped there ycnrs ngo. ·· lt card o request from th~ ta-. cnforten11:n1 department to C\"invcrt a clo~~room inlo n lnbortuory. ·-Accepted the resignations of Jean Schmidt. ndmmisl rntlon ,ecrctnry or 14 )'t'O"· )nd V. Dole Loper. ~curity. who bmh left 10 tnkc other job,. ·· Appro,•ed 64 gronts -in•nid for Sl 7,4SI.
Student board makes pair of bylaw changes Two changes tn the bylaws of the ASNIC Cons111u11on. I\\O executhc sessions nnd o group of emo11onal cheerleader) hvened up the action at 1he Oc1. 19 and lo student board mecungs. The b} la" ch:1ngcs ,, ere propo~ed by Sen John 011 in nn effort 10 overcome vo1e1 apathy and inrrease vo1cr 1umou1 at NIC elCt'tions. On's proposal "ould ha,e allo\\cd cnndidntes 10 submu a single sheet of paper on clemon da~ ,, hich contained any infomuuion the candidate wished. The p:ipers would then be plJced ne:u polling areas. Vice pre:.idcnt Carolyn Pfister then submined her o-.n propos;i.l with the stipulation that ondidates submit their po.per 10 the election comminee for inspection. On argued that it u. as none of the board's business who.1 the candidates printed on their papers. "This cquab censorship on the p11rt of the board:· 011 said. ··we c:in·11ell these people what they can and cannot put on there.·· Aner n lengthy debate chc mouon u.:1s aettptcd and added 10 Amcle IV. sec tion 7 clause 2 of the bylaws.
"h1ch pre\ 1oush hod stated that camp:ugn po)ter, must be remo,cd che night before ;in elec11on. Ott·., )coond proposal. -. hich was iccc.-ptcd b~ the board . ....;u be odded 10 An1de IV. se-.'t.1on I>. clause 3 and will .illou. absentee ballots for anvone Jb~ent due to a dei.ignatcd s~hool 3C'll\'II~
The board ,·oted to go into exccuti\'e session nt the Oct 19 mee110g 10 discuss a s~s1ri, e personnel issue and "as forced 10 call :inother executive session at the Oct. 26 meeting. The second e:itecuthe session "as called when the cheerleadiog squad 3Skcd the bo;ird to drop the :ilternate position on the sqWld. The discussion then took an emotion:il tum, and the board decided it would be better if the m:mer were no1 discussed publicly. In other matters the board: ··appro,ed an employment contr3C! with Norman Gissel 10 continue to pro,ide NIC stud~ts with legal aid ser"ices. --appro,·ed Rn)mood Ghens as a second auorney should circumstances require it.
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Oc t. 29. 1982/Ca.rdinal Re,·lew-5-
Stone thumps boredom (__a_rt_s_~_e_n_t_e_r_ta_i_·n_m_e_n_t____J as big drummer (hoy!) by Lori Da, Is
Summer boredom and o needed change of pace convinced R:i> Stone. NIC dean of the college, 10 return to his old hobby of playing the drums. S1one W3\ influenced by his mother, an old time piano player who played for silent movies. "She was a fantastic sigh1-reader." S1one said. "As a kid I c.. uld s i1 for 1wo hours s1ra1ght nommg songs. and my mother would play one after another. She never m,s,ed one... Stone stancd playing drum\ when he "as 12 vears old " I u,ed '" pla> lor 1hc Grnnge dances: you could hnrdl)· ~ee mv head over 1he drums:· he ~31d. He played 1n co ncen band and or,hc\tra m h1Rh ~chnol a, v.ell a~ dance bond, every Sa1urd31 n111h1 While m the: Arm,·. he played wmc: Job, w11h big band,. Afte r lhl· wor, Sinnc: J0111cd u group called Joe Doniel\ Band. L,Hcr he "ent on to have h Is "" n band "While going 10 ~hoof a1 Wh11"11r1h. I plan:d "i lh a trio evcrv Sn1urda> 11i11h1." he ,aid. Nnl he had u ,i~·plc<"e l:iond 1h11t Included Jim Bum\, on NIC binlo1n m,truetor. "That wa~ .i good band." Stone ,aid "We were nll cdur111or, except one kid on boss." Stone hn\ mi ce pln ycd Jobs nil nr11und nurth Idaho ond hi s .:urrcnl b.111d, 'nic Roy Srnnc C'ompony. fen1urcs mu,ic from the ,wmg era . " Wr do \Omc commcrl·ia l Jaa like Mi,ty, son1r ,wing like 1 uxcdo June· t11>n, mu,k from 1hc JO\. 40'~. nnd early SO\," lw so1d. " We ul~o do snmc: country nnd Lo1111 Am e rtcan mu~1c, "hich I !mt 10 plo1 " The Rny S1une (ompnny is a quorte1. 'I he bo~) plnl'er i, ('urol Wilson. an CXCl'Ulf\'l' \c:t'l'CIRI) for Ihe Old Nnllonnl Onnk 111 'ipokonc, nnd 1hc p1onh1 b Ucbru l)c~rlo11 0. "ho opcr·
a IC$ Vin tag-:: Fashions and teaches jazz c., ercise. "Debra does our singing:· S1one said. ··she is a blues singer." The Ouglehorn pla}er. who also doubles on trumpet and clarine1. is Oa,,d Candia. manager of the Coeur d. Alene Athletic Oub. "Da\e is the re.ii musician of the i:roup; he pfoyed 15 yea~ professionally III San Franeiso." Stone said "This is fun: 1he group reall: gets along. If II becomes a has.sci. I will gel OUI Of 11 ••
" I believe there 1s a real market for ~"mg." he added. "I "Ould love 10 add tenor !Ml.I. lead guitar. and trombone and do more Diucland." he ~aid.·· 1am not m it for the mom:1 but if you add more 1han four membe" 10 ~ band , no one makes .tn\ mvnc\'. ·· "By the \\a}." Stone ~aid , · l'(oing as 1hc Rav Stone Company 1\ nnl some sort 01 ego tnp I "ant 10 be able to ink·: the band as 3 duo_..,"' ell i» a six or sc1cn p,ect bnnd • "W11h lhi, mu,1c. rehenr~in11 1\ 1mpor1:in1 · he \aid . · 'We uwall) pruCllcc one<: .1 "',·ek. W c do not pla, b, enr "c rend ,hart... " "I have two m11111 hubb1cs One 1~ rc11d1n11 I huve grc:11 interest 1n 1he Cwtl Wor and American H.morv. MY )Ccond hobb1 I\ 11olf." ·
Stone enior~ clas\1c:i.l mu~ic nnd c3n h,1cn 10 ,-oumn· for II\\ hilc but he love, good "1"0.bca1·· danc-c mu.,1c. He ~Old The Ra, Stone Compnn) I\ pla)mg c,er, Saturda1· e,cnmg at 1he C'oour d'Alene F.11.s C'lub lrnm b: '\() to 12 .30 pm. ond i\ nJ..,, pla,mg e1er; Wedne.da1• c\Cning a I the Happ, Hour 5uppt'r Club from 8 h> 11 p. m ··our mu,ic h mo\tl~ gcJrcd 10 a JS-}car-1,ld and older cro\\d, ahhough some younger jX.'Oplc apprcc1a1e 11." h,· ~01d
Language interest on rise The 1ntercs1in foreign language) ha) increased grentl~ this ye.u for both NJ(' da, classes and ~pcc1al in1 crcs1 night ch1).'.t~ A.:corolng to Lrona f·la"-\Cn. foreign language d~ctor. thc French and Spam~h cl3)\CS arc full,, 11h nppr,,ximatel) 2S ,tuden1. 111 each . .ind the second ,·car da,)es arc ovcrniing 14-IS student~ per clns:. · Along "ith Sp.mi)h nnd French. 1hc German. C'om·crsat1onal Germ.in and luhan lntcres1 has incrca~cd. NIC nbo offers clas~cs m Finn~h. !'10Neg1an :ind s. . cdish A lnngunge lob Is uITered for ,tuden,~ in1crestcd in learning nt their o"n pace and can be taken for one or two t't'Cdll:>. Hai,;c~ ,aid that there ii. n Spamsh Club il.nd a French Club offered to .ui, ~1udcn1 mterci.ted. Tht~c clubi. arc ouc.1dc 3C11,1tic~ " hcrt the srudent h.is 11~ opponunu~ ~o lc:im abou1 the cultures of their rei.pecu, e counrrie~. All\'One mterc1-1ed 1n Joining e11hc~ club ron eont:iet Mri.. Leonn Has:.en, Sp3ni!.h inscructor, or Joi.ec Giesen. Frt-nch 1~1ruc1or
L'. THE MOOD-~lC Dean Ra) Stone p1'11ctlc-es his hobby of d rummlni: al a n.<ttnl dant'<'. Stone. the name member of the Rny Stone Company, has been tapping his stk,~ slnt'<' he "as 12.
Es teem. abo rtion on forun1 slate L'prommg poprom forum topi~ u.·ill rlnge from g3mmg ~elf esteem to nuclear \\Mfarc. U'C()rding to Ton, Ste\\an, chairman of the popcorn forum committee. The next popcorn forum will fc31ure roun~elor Tom Champoux "ho will t.i.lk obou1 ho"' to g,11n self esteem 11.nd feel good about oneself. Champoux hu a m.u1er·s degree in guidil.nce counseling from Seanlc University. i\ ~ former public s.:hool teacher of I~ \cus and has opcra1ed his own counseling firm \111,:e 1q-4 The forum .....11 be held t-.o,. I 31 I p.m. in 1he Banner Room of lhe SU B. l.31cr 10 Nm·ember an llbortion deb,tle a.'ill be held between the Right to Life ond the R1gh1 to ~ organizations. but the fin:il date has 1101 yet been sct. Sic• art ,lid he i, nirrenth ~ ing to put 101:ether a four-day symposium on nuclear ":i.rfare for ne.11 semester. S,e.... an Yid he ;al~ hopo 10 get ps~ cholog1st Dr. Fr~ak o~anka to iolk on 1he ms.init, plea. but bvlh of th~ forum" arc i.1111 m 1hc pl.inning stage~
Area entertainment on tap The Spok.snc Opc:r.1 H.ousc h.:is m.1.n, fe:iturc, th,~ month that "111 le:id ..rea emem11nmen1 Ch~rlc, Pride "'111 be III concert there Saturdo\ Xo\. ~O. 31 - aoJ IO p. m licl.ets are SQ 3tld S10 Kodo Drummer\ Jnd D.incer\ or S..do Jap.in ....;)I be then, S.11urdaJ .._.,\. a . at p.m. lid:ct.S stla.n at s-. The oper:1 Rigoleno by \ erdi u. ill ~ performl'Ci there b> the Westem OJ)<'ra
The.itre. Saturda,. ~c,,·. 27, al 8 p.m. Tidle1~ m:- S8.50. SIO and S12. Bob Bro""· J\\1Slant din:c1or o r ,oc:111onal educauon al NIC. has the lc:iding rok 111 the produc ti on of ··smie lime Next Ytar." .i three net li•e 1he21re pre)tnmion ponrnying the 3.nnual ··rendelvous" of o couple tn fo,e Ol'er a 25-year period. It will be pla)·ing a1 the C'oeur d'Alene Com· munit) Theatre No, 12. IJ. 19 nnd 20.
OcL. 29, 1982/Cardinal Re,•le'"·-6-
• something slimy for Halloween Ooze into by Cnalg Johnson This Halloween be bold. be innova• tive--dress up like mulllnts. Anything scaly. slimy and nauseating 10 look al would be perfect. Pretend that it is the )·ear 2982. a shon thousand years aher an tmagi· nary nuclear holocaust has de\astated the earth. The entire planet is a vast wasteland twisted like a hickory suck. The , uo ~h1oes • dull red through the mom ing·s mist of tn\·1sibie radiation and ifO'"'S a host of un)peilible things: things that ~hther and h,ss. things that hang from branches hide under boulders or squat m ca,·cs. It would be great fun to am\e ;u pt1nies al> your fovonte muLant. but be \\'arncd. \'OU nill ha,·e to use )OUf powers of imagination as you ha\·e ne,•er used them before. ln past yea.rs you got off the hook easy--drcssing as 11.itches. hookers, gamblers. ,•ampires and s keletons. The whole spectrum of spectres and goblins has been represented. It is rime for a cht1nge. After all. this is the 20th Century. Now get out your scissors and paste. your t1xle grease .1nd body puny and set to work on the most horrendous costume that you can design. U you are ha,ing trouble mating up your mind on a suitable design. go to a medical encyclopedit1 and look at pi ctures of lepers. Howe,•er. they would only be classified as first stage mutants who have not undergone the full chain of mul:ltion. In addition to losing body pans. you may want 10 t1dd a few, such as tentt1cles. antennae. fly eyes. a tusk or ru·o and severnl dt1ws. Stay awt1y from fangs, they arc too Bella Lugosi. Gills look nice and would be quite fashionable. Do not be afraid to overdo it-·there is no such thing as modcntion when it comes to mutant costumes. The farther away from humt1noid features you can get the bener. Try w remember n.11 those squiggly linle ameobas and protozoa you saw under the microscope in biology class.
Use them as models. Lr your preference is animal mu· t.ancy, some coslU.me designs you may 11.ish 10 conSJder a.re the future sewer suckers. the desert dingo-whippets and the pra~1ng ganurua-rads. As 1he11 names suggest. they re· scmble members of the anina.1 ling· dom··the lites of which M:ulin Perkins has oe,·er imagined in his ,.. ,Jdest m~htmares.
sembles II sm;ill greyhound. Their features ba,·e been adapted considc.ra.bh to allow lhcm io li"e in this po.nic:~llll'J harsh environment. The) ha\'C snuccMhnped eyes hooded with a filmy membro.ne which protects them from lhe s harp duM p:inic:lcs th e wind constnntly kick, up . Since , isibility is usually poor or non·c~ment. the dingo-whippets muM rel) on a highly refined sen~e of smell
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~ ..er sud.er$ thrh e tn the mJltru of c11y se\ll·ers benuth conc rete. steel and asphalt nJl.llS the world over. They sn: a m.ued breed of slug. snail and celOC3mph. The Suders grow phosphorescent yellow in the blackness or thei r h11bita1. They secrete a sucky ooze th;u enable them to adhere to wa.Jls and ceilings from which they d rop lil:e blobs of thick 111pioca on to their unsuspecting \'ictims. The prey is quickly smothered. then absorbed through the sucker· s skin. thus leaving no rrace what-so-ever of its ,ictim. The desert dingo-whippets prowl the barren 11.ind-blown ,..· astes co,·er· iog most of the eanh"s surface. They arc a cross between the Austr:ilian dingo (a mute canine killer) and the lightening quick whippet which re-
and hearing to track down their prey. They ha, e bat-II.kc cars lined with hairs that function like moth antennae and hundreds of tiny pores that pickle the ridge of their snout through which they breath and s mell. They h:ive no hoir. and their hides have the texture or llciiblc leather. The praying g:imma·rods are one of the most highly developed mutants or all. In out"-·ard appearance they cannot
Debaters look to Powell tourney The NIC debate team's second challenge awaits them in Powell, Wyo. on Nov. S and 6. The team or Stanley Bialey and Robert Armitngc had five wins and three losses at the Oct. 15-17 match at Gonzaga University where there were 27 colleges reprC'Sented from throughout the United States. The team of Rich Kuck and John Ott h3d four wins and four losses. The firSt debate for Lyndel Turner and Tom Kolberg provided them with experience, and according to Coa.c.h 1im Christie. they s howed good potential.
For ~ov. 5-6
History conference slated Over 40 exhibitors from northern Idaho. c:;istern Washington and western Monuna will participate No" 5 and 6 in t1 histoncal conference 31 the NIC Student Union Building. The gathering of historians. gene.1logiru, folklorists. a.rchneologists. teachers. 1ibrari:1ns :1.11d others 11. ho arc interested in local culture join for a two-da) e\'ent C'tllled " Interpreting Local HistOI') and Culture:· Frido.y·s sessions begin :11 8:45 :i.m. and ... consist presentations that deal with such issues :is e\·aluating oral histOl') materials. using a.nifacu for research :ind N:1,'li\'e Americans. On Friday evening at 8 p.m. in the North Shore Convention Center. the Idaho Commission on the Ans will present a frte public concen. of Norwegian. Finnish. labor :ind famih music. Beginning tit ·g :1.m. Saturday. exhibits will be sho11. n by local schools. historical societies. libraries and other groups nnd individunls who ha\'e undcnaken pre,iou.s projectS in history. genealoID· nnd folklore. In addition. the Idaho Commission on the Ans will sponsor numerous fol.tlife dcmonsuutioos during the day such as Greek embroidery. bobbin and lace, unning saddle making. rawhiding :i.nd pyansky (Easter egg decorating).
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be distinguished from their distant nnctstors. the praying mantis. How, c, e r. they can grow as large as IS feet toll and weigh as mueh a~ 1.000 pounds. These domestic Cl'Clliurcs have oo n:itural enemies and build their cities m :ill cli mates throughout the world. What makes tkm 111\lque is that th ey do nnt feed on organic: ~ubstnnces: they \Uck radiauon and gnmmo my\ frnm the ntmosphcrc, pl11nt~ nnd dcnd onimnb. They arc pcnccoblc bl.'a\n who live in cto~c-knit fomily unit!> within tribnl ,truciurc\. Since food Is plontiful and CJ\1ly obruml•d, they \pend mo,1 of their 11mc in the purwir or the am. ·n1c1r culture hos rcnched the level of the anc,c nl Grech nnd Roman~. The proylng gnmmn-rads show ,lgns or becoming the dominont lire form o n the earth. Some people mAY prefer the human c lement or mutnntcy. The elephant mon ts n good cxomple to follow. Much ca n be learned by ~tudying h~ featu res. Noucc the word ··tt~." which means thnt 1t 1i. perfect ly acccptnblc to abandon all ~en1c of gender. Mutnnb either hnve none or .several undcfinc· able genitilio. Pick nnd choose as you plea~e. If you are still finding it h3rd to think of a costume that fits your personality and s pecinl environmental adaptation and you just cannot seem to get into the creative spirit. wa.tch old document ories on the aftermath of the bombing of Hiroshima and Naga.saki: they arc truly awe-inspiring. U all else falls, write your congress· man ond nsk for his opinion as to what direction human mutantcy might take. I' m s ure he would be glad to help.
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Oct. 29, 1982/ Canllnal Revlew-7-
Regional berth on line in Rexburg tourney by Barry Baker
The NIC womcn·s volleyball 1eam is in Rc;,rburg. Idaho, today for round rwo of I.he divisional playoffs. which will de1ennine who will represent I.he Easlcrn Division in 1hc Region 18 tournament. The Ca rd inals will be competing agains1 Treasure Valley and Ricks for 1hc divisional 1itlc. These 1hrec teams will combioe 1heir respccuve records for both rounds of play to determine the represcn1a1ive. In round one of 1he Reg, on 18 Eastern Division play-offs. Oct. 22 and 23, Ricks College 100k 3 quick lead jumping out 10 a J-0 record . Oackamas is in second 01 2-1 folio" ed by Treasure Valley. 1-2, and hosting NIC. who dropped all three of 11s matches.
Taking 1he co mbined reco rds of round one and round rv.·o. N'IC will have to t:noct: offTreasure Valley rwice to gain a s pol in th e regio nal 1oum3men1. Two community colleges from Uuh will fill out the field for the Rexburg 1ournamen1--Dwc College. located in S1. George. and Snow College. located m Ephraim. The winner of I.he Rexbu rg 1ournamcn1 will !ravel 10 OTegon 10 mcc1 I.be Western Divis100 clwnps. who ..;u hos1 1he Region 18 1ou rn ey. The winner of that tourney earns a trip to Ca ntons\illc. Md .. for nationals.
"lfwe continaed 10 communicate " e woald be competitive.·· Cook snid. ··w e go l.hrough streaks nnd then our communicarion will bre:u. down for li\'e minutes, taking our defense with i1.·· The urdinals piny a 6-2 offense which allo"'s Cook to use the bench a lot. Sue Surton is the most impro\·ed player in Cook 's eyes. But Cook's biggest suprisc 1s walk-on Donna Shove. She just med out for the 1c;i m right after Roxanne Hansen was injured. "M} God 1here she "·as... Cook
Coach Roy Cook rnd that they h,wc to play perfect ball to be compelirhe m the tourn amen1
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said about Shove. Shove said she did not 1rv ou t in the begmnmg of the season bttause of her hea,·y load of 19 credits. Cook said 1hat Sho,·e is m3inly used for defensi\'e purposes. but can also jump pretty high. "Being smnll. you havl.' to learn how to set.'" Cook said. "1ha1 's how I got into this glmc." Dc:~pne a loss 10 Yakima Valley Oct. lob" scores or -.1s. IS-3. 10-15 and t,.15: Cook said lha1 his plnyers have impro,ed .:uid showed 1t in the ma1ch.
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Alumni wrestlers return to test defending champs Wrestling coach John Owen face~ a rn sk 1h1s ~ aw n thnl very few ind1v1d· uni\ hnve been able to accomph~h: 1mprovmg on II cl11ss1c. In ull realll y. O-. cn "'" probably not era,c the memory of lll\ l yenr 's team thol won the na11onnl champ1onsh1p wuh a victory 1n the los1 mo1ch of the n,111onnl 1ournnmcn1 over 1op-C3 nked Cuyahoga Wc}t. But that doc, not mcnn th1& year·~ teum cannot be Just n~ good. " TI1e hardest 1l11ng about dcfrnd1ng o notional chnmpion,hip is comin11 to grip, with 1hc fol.'I 1ha1 you arc no lunger notional champs." O"cn ,n,d. " Thai Y.(I.S ·s2 orul thl~ b '83. so we hove to develop our own identity." Twu "'rcMlcT\ who 10~1cd the 1ndivi dual glory al nn11onol, ln.:.1 veor ore back. I~ ing 10 rcp~at their ~uccc,'> or lhe ICl81 ,82 seo\un Gcorgc Pnncr,nn reN rdcd a ~chool record of 150 tnkcdo\\ n\ la,1 vcn r cnroutl' 10 n Jg.J record nnd won the ou1~111ndlng wrc,tler nwnrd 31 lhr..-c 1nurnome111s during the w o,un before winding up 1h1rd at nnuonob. Pa11c rson inJured his kne<' tn o motOro)'C k n~c1den1 o, er the , ummer and rcrccntl) underwent wrgery. hut he should be rend,· to fill th e 134,pound ,lot tn a lew week~. To m Harris olso plnccd third a t nationals for NIC la,1 }Car 11nd hod a 37-5 rerord . ,cC\lnd on the team onh· to Pnttcr,on. • At the 142,pound dlv1,ian. NIC has 3 \hght problem: they hn, e fh e high school ,t31e <'hampion, trying for a single s1aning position. Mon ta nn ~ophomoreT.J . Nelson will have to battle with follow s111tc champion~ Mike Hagglund (Hawaii). Todd Berry (Mon1ana), Rand,• TaM {Alaska) and Dennis Amcnde ildaho). Brian Kn1ussc and Nathoo C11JTOII
125·9. first 01 regional~) alw re1urn to ,upply power at 1he 16-· aod Pi· pound slots. The ISO-pound posuon hu \Cveral ponibih tit!i. Ed H;ilt I l"-6J returns along w11h Philip P.iul 120-15). and Tom Phclon from Pleasanr Gro, e. U111h, is back tn school after bcmg on 1 mi,sion for three vears. Steve Kluver. Sandpoin1, ,, nl!.o· ti) iog for one of the ,pol~. Al phon~o Phillip~ is ll sophomore trnn~fer from Drake Unl\'er,11, land a coustn of P1111cr~on1 but 1s ineligible for the fi m semester of competition. Ton,· D11goc trnMfcm:d from Grav\ Hnrl>or ofter fini~hmg in e1gh1h place for them 01 nn11onnh. bu1 he is also Ineligible for the: nm ~emestcr. Jamie Webber. "'ho tran~fcrred from Grnn llnrbor along \\1th Dague. 11, eligible though. :ind he ,ho"ed his Jhi1i1, las1 sen,un b~ ddeaung NJ(' lh)ll\V\\ c1gh1 D:irr, I Pc1cr~on I" ho " ''" the no11on31 tille) I°" 1cc in three ml'<'!lngs. " Wc"re DOI going Ill be 100 lCIU!,1h in dunl meet~ culy on.'' O"en ~aid. t Harn~ I} also meh~ible for the first hnlO. "but it 111~~ a -.btle to dl-.elop a 11:am and <1 e·11 be toush l3ter on ·· Btll Bn1dle) CI ·SI .lnd Jm1 t.loctzcr return tn 1hc lo"er \\eights, .tod CDA Freshman S1c,e Medel \\On the 120.pound c:'l'O" n nl \ l3IC l:ist "'inter In '111. ICI former ~IJte chmp1on~ !Ill on 1he Cnrdmal 1eam and there should be :i fe-. more on the mats 'ov. 6 \\hen th~ Cords npen their SC3SOo ";th the nnnu3J Alumm ma1ch. The , :m.ity bell the alumni 33-30 h1s1 year. but e~-C:irds Chuck Woolery (,erond 10 na1ion. 1972. thml m 19.,J), Jim Hc ndrid,s (second in 19-2). Da,·e Coulsoo (tltird in 1981) return :\long with pas1 natio nal champions Mike Reed and Stc,·c G3noon to in· to tuC11 things around. ·
BasU Fram photo
LIFTING BlGB- -fttSbman Troy Bahl p~dces Dague lo a rettn.l "-rfftl.lng pnctlcc.
a tak.edown
on teammate Tooy
Oel. 29, 1982/Cardinal Re"lcw-8-
Region 18 title at stake for cross country team b) Greg Moreland
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After a disappointing pcrfonn.incc in 1he Eastern Wn.shmgton Uruvers11y lnntarional l\• O weeks !IRQ, the IC cross country sqm1d is no" setting 11s sight~ on regionals. Head coach l',h~ c Bund\• ,~ no l O\'erlv concerned "1th the sh·o"i ng or his runners :11 1hc EWU meet tind docsn "t think ii will hll,·c MV 1mplleauons on h,~ ,cam·~ pe rformance tit regionals. · We didn't run ,, ell as n group." Bund, uid. "bul our runners will be re3d) for rcg1onah. l" m , ery optimls· tic.'" Christy Davids, the top runne r in 1he d1mict. fimshed fourth M EWU a nd will ha, c 10 impro,e on hi~ perfor· m.1ncc. Bundy ~oid. The fate of the 1cam. ho" cvcr. re lics mainly upon the pe rform11ncc\ o f NIC's second through si11h runner\, Joe Alward. Gordy He:11h. Mike Eggle~1on, Wodc Hoilnnd. Sieve Pierce and John Bursell. The dis1anccs or ru nmng in prt1c· 11ccs h:i,e been cum11led in pre p· nrauon for regionals. The teams have been concentraung primarily on qua!· ity--running shorter ond harder d istance\.
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" This is when cvcr)·onc want~ to be doing "ell." e.:rpl:11ned Bundy. " fa. erybody dcvu1cs his whole ~cason with one gOAI in mind , ond lhnt Is to peak at this time of year."' Regional< wall be hosted by South· Oregon Commun11y College in Coos Bnv. Ore .. on Nov. 6.
\\CM
Southern Idaho is lhc defe nd ing eh11mp1on. but the favorites at 1his point look to be NIC. Lane Communny College ond the second-ranked team in the n t1 llo n. Cl:ic ka ma, Communil y Co lleg e. NIC hns olrcll dy defeated Clncknmns once this year. The 1e11ms th a t fin ish nrst and second will odvllncc to nntlonals In Utica . N.Y. , along with the top IS individuals. who will go regardless or thei r tct1m ·s overall pcrformnncc. Ke lly Wood~. Sutic Mu wcll and Me lonie Cn ndia finished 271h. 30th a nd ) 2nd respectively at ewu. and all three are s trong hopefuls for indivld· uol berth, 10 nniionals. Tomorrow the Cordinnl teoms travel Spo kan e for th eir fina l regu lar season meet 31 the lnvilatlonal.
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Animals win grid playoffs
SCENIC STRI.DINGCross coanll') runner, Christy Dnlds, puts In some miles on lhe NlC buch. The s tark nature or lhc phow was achehcd by prinllng It without • balfU>ne sc~n.
The Woodl:ind Animal~ have been crowned 1he 1982-83 NIC in1ramurnl Oag football champions af1er- a convincing 25- 14 wan over Wrestling II. The Animals, who went in10 the playoffs wi1h a 6- 1-0 record. had to beat 1he Co....-boys 10 get 10 the chnmpionshi p. The Wrestlers had to pull off 11n upscl to get there by beating the previously undefe:ited Oe(cnding Champs in the senu-finals. Wilh roo1ball over , co-recrcationol volleyball is ready to begin. Today is the last day to turn rosters an to the recreation office. A SJO depos it is required for each team. h can be pa.Yed m !he b usiness office. League piny bcgms this Wednesday in 1he NIC gymnllSium. The program is open to all students carrying six or more credits.
NFL strike: Will mom and apple pie be next? Armchai r q ua rterbacks all over Amc ric11 got sacked Sepl. 21 when the Nation B.I Football League Players Association (NFLPA) went on strike de· m11nding a wage scale from the owners. And llS thoSt! home jockeys lay sprawling on lhc backfields of their living rooms, the networks arc scrnmbling to pick !hem back up. Th e NCAA took all of 1h ree days afte r 1he an 11ounced strike to gnat appro,•a l for Suodoy rollegc football . Canndfan foo1b11II , the neglected bu1 cager aod admiring linlc brother of !he NFL, lirullly got the cha.nee for the e.tposure th:11 they've waned for for so long. And ovcrnigh1. boxing matches sprang up from the WBA. the WBC and I.be NABC bet"'\ een all sons or sevenlh- and twelfth-ranked contenders. Tbc pla yers have also count e red by s taging
bruce mullen All-Star games m01chang players from one division against pl:iyers from another. These substilutcs can help the fans back on their feel tigain. but bow willing will the fans be ro continue playing injured! \Vnile Ed Guvey of !he players association and Jack Donlan of the owners· ncgotiaung team exhibit the 1cchniqucs of a Mexican-stand-off, pro football fans can no longer cnjor the 'ol American-sit-dov,--n on Sonday afternoons.
The right or the players 10 strike and still play All-Star games brings 10 min d the current Right-toWork bill in Idaho !hat is heaung up 1his fall's election. Oops!. that's mlxi.ng sports nnd poUtics. I almost forgot that the NFL is exempt from the normal laws and regula1ions put on other busi· nesscs. Thes e players a re su ppose d to e njoy playing football. Why , !here arc r.hou.sands or players out !here wbo would play in the NFL without pay just for the thrill. righ1? The NFL players seem to be forgetting that. they arc in !he same league with mom and_apple pie . . Why. i1 is almost gen ing to be a bUS1ness. Whats next. striking apple pies?
Oct. 29, 1982/ Carditul Re\·iew-9-
o more nukes Members of Oflsbool Mhnc per· form "Poor Mlnales lo Mid night," a mhne aboal the no-win slluallon of a nuclear war. The Oc:t. 20 presentation was held In the C.A Ba.lld1ng Auditorium.
Basil Fnuu phoco
US K OCT.
27 - 30
Celebrate Halloween at the Cotton 's Halloween Party! Prizes For Best Costume ! Wednesday Nights FREE Drinks 8 to 9 ; A fter 9
No Cover Charge For Ladies - Drinks I
2 for 1 •
Every Thursday Night is Dollar Night. Drinks , Pitchers & Cover Charge are only $1
N. Govt. Way
Hayden Lake, ID 772-5411
MACHINE NOV. 3- 6
Oct . 29. 1982/ Cardl.nal Review-IO-
Who Band's Seattle concert nostalgic by Bruce Mallco
"Who is on fi.rsr?'" "' Right." "Okay, so Wh1t1 1s on second'" "Wrong." " Well. "ho 1s then?" "Righi " CooUV) to what Abbou and Costcl· lo say in their fomous romcdy rouune. the Who covered all the bases Oct. 20 in its north,. cst mvuion al Scanfe's Kingdomc . There were no guitars smuhed. DO wild drunkedness by all}· of the band members and no cro-..d n oting al this performance. Just good. loud rock and roll by one of the industr} ·s most profession3f. popular :ind dur&ble bands. Aner 30 uninspiring ~orma.nce b} the Closh. in "' hich cheer~ ,i. erc occasionally d.rowned out by chanu of '' Who. Whooooo ... ," and 3 J().m1nu1e break. the s111ge lights quiet!) Iii up the stage as bassist John Enrv. 1stle and drummer Kenney Jones plunged into " Mv Gener.iuon." A fe,.: seconds farer, Roger Daltre,· ond Pete To" nshend came galloping on \toge 10 add the lyrics and fe;id guitar. and the crowd ofS0.000 re:icted like an army of Mannes 01 a Marylyn Monroe srnp sho\\. It was Indeed a £111log opemng number since the band 1s on its last tour of America. and though the members arc still m top form. the) :ire nearing 1he end of "their" gener:irion. After a couple of cub off their ne,, album " h 's Hard." the band jumped swiftly back to 1978 and pulled our :i livcl,· version or "Siste r Disco." -nsend began prancing around the s1:1gc II hilc mcmlessh beating on his long tortured Telecaste r and throwing his ,ocals into the microphones of Dalrre) and EnN tstle. Next. 1he 1yp1coll1 stoit' EnNistle deli,·e red a p:issionnre b:illad titled •· Flo" er," and the giant "ideo screen hovering above the band focused on
ro..
the bus player for one of only a re-.. umes during the e"ening. Oallrey and Townsbeod jumped back into 1he1r antics v.ith the high· po"ered mle track from thetr 19 ., album. then relued 3S Dalcrey ~lipped 1nto the mello"' begmnmg of a I er I hn. " Behind Blue E)es · A \mglc spotlight shone on the lead ,10ger throughout the N'O and a half nunute uuroducrion. then the to" enng " Who" logo 10..,.~ bt up in bbndtng v.hne light u TO'A~hend Jumped high m the air and began the fast-paced ~ d pnn1011 of the <nng'. TOQ.nshend Oa1lin11 ht~ iunar O\Cr and o,er in a motion s1m1lar 10 the .. bolo-punch" or \iuhammed Ali. Daltrc, ;icrobauc:llh twvhng and t~srng bis m1crophon~. and the sudden· ly spmted Jones tnin,:? 10 "eu hole\ lhrouS?h the canas of his drum ~1. This is ,.- tar the fans h;id been "-a1ting
for. Mo t of the ero•d had come eX"ptttmg tJus r, pe of perfomunce. but ~ounger fans "ho had ne,er ~cen the Who before -..ere soon won o, er 3~ the band d.ro, e through .. Baba O'R1· IC\:· "I C:in See For !ltiln .ind Mile'>," " Dre,., ncd • .ind "The: M.1n' '> Back." -..1th equal mtensltJ Thc Bntoru. ronunued ro Jump back ;ind fonh 10 umc 10 pull out .-.cfccuons b~ gomg from 11ra v.nh "Who Are )ou ... 10 1%Q ,i.ah a somev,har sulrf) , cr\100 of '' Pm ball Wizard" by T1>,.nshcnd. Their secmingh endless repertoire rode from one crest 10 another and backed do"''D on!) occasion:ill>· to :i.Jlo" the audience to catch iu breath from all its h:ind,clappmg. crooning and cheerine. As a parting shot a.fter the band had left the suige and the bghts Clime on, a (e\\ fans ga"e their own rendition to the retiring heroes. "Long li,•e the Who.' ' they sang.
Nancy Payne photo
Acr iden1 vir 1i111
em Porter. 806 Mullan, " ca.refull.~· extncted by nremen from the van he WU drlvlng &her It colUded Tuesday with a Yehlclc drlven by Stephanie Moore, 67SI N. J 5th St. The accident occu.rred on the edge or campu!I at the lntersectJon or Garden and Hubbard. Porter was t.ueo to Kootenai Memorial Hospllal and wu IJJ stable condition al prciS lime. Moore w11, nor Injured.
Help available for women who are battered continued Crom page I In Coeur d'Alene help is u •ailable through the "omen's center. a non-profit volunteer organization that provides aid 10 ...-omen in the communit). The ctnter's Altem:itives to Domestic Violence Project pro,ides 24-hour emergency shelter care. crisis counseling and ad,"OCllC) for abused women and their families. The help that the ADV Project , ao give to the victims is limited because it is dependent on volunteers and is funded mrunly by contributions. There are ooJ..\ three sale hoases in the aren at this time and nor enough time can be gi\'eD to tbe victims. according to N:incy Mjelde of the Women's Center.The Women's Center is looking for more volunteers. " We want a ncN-otk of women helping v.·omen," Mjelde said.
A broad spectrum o( Idaho women seeing the need for help in the o.rca of domestic violence formed a
co3.lit ion and sponsored a bill tba I the Legislature passed to est.ablish a "domestic violence project aCCOUDI. ••
The Idaho Council on Domestic Violence was creaced 10 set ~tandards and distribute the funds to regional domestic ,•iolence proJects. The governor appointed SC\en members lO the council, one from each mental health region or the state. An additional fee of SIS has been added as of July I. 1982. 10 the regular fee for marri3ge licenses 10 fund the ..domestic: ,iotencc project.s:' The revenue w;u be appropruited b) the council to the seven mental health regions in accordance to the number of licenses bought. Mjclde, "'ho is on the board of directors of the Coeur d'Alene Women 's Center. has been appointed to the council from region number one. lo order 10 be ellgJble fo r g ra nts from the "domestic ,•ioleoce project accounc." the loul
agencies must provide safe hou~es and a 24-hour crisis line. The Coeur d 'Alene Women ·s Center hopes to be able 10 purch 3Se a large h ouse 10 use as headquarters and a safe house " '1th funds from the "project account." The Center is presently localed at the Community Center :11 820 N. 7th St. But 1hey are looking for a location that would 3llow them 24-hour access . With lhe funding from the governor's council ~d more public awareness of the problem of domesuc ,,iolence. perhaps the cycle of abuse can be broken for some victims, Women do nor have ll> be silent about abuse. Help is available. All they have to do is 10 pick up the phone and call 664. J44J m Coeur d'Alene. for they are nor alone.
Oct. 29, 1982/Cardlnal Re,·iew·ll·
Law enforcement teachers use expertise
courtroom
by Pam Cmml.a&bam
Three NIC instructors arc helping to keep criminals behind bars. Ned
S1uar1 . Wa lly Young and Shelley Shannon testify frequently in various court situations. Ned Stuart, director of the criminal· is1ics labor,uory. specializes in finger· prini lll)d glass analysis. According to Stuart. he travels all over the United States and testifies in an average of about one and one-ha.If cases a month. but on ly one case in 20 actually goes to court l)ccause many defendants plead guilty to a lesser charge when faced with the evidence.
For IS or 16 years Stuart has been testifying io coun, but be has only been lllith the crirn.inalisucs laboratory since 1973. N IC was the first community college to have a crime laboratory associated with it. But nov. there are se,·eraJ • community colleges that have labor· atones. Stuart said that the cnme laboratory is getung assistance from the state because of the work that is dooe for the criminal justice system. Also because of the erposu re the law enforcement
students are recel\ ing through the laboratory "hich provides an educa· tional adantage for NIC gradu:ites. NIC Criminalis1 Shelle,• Shannon " orks mostly "ith oblite;a,ed senJ.J numbers. striation marks and bu.llet and cartridge comparisons. Shannon said that she is a crimin· alis1. not a criminologist because a criminologist deals with the sociological aspects of wha t makes the person c-0mmit the crime, but a criminalist analizcs the physiC3l e, · idence only.
h is not unusual for Stuart and Wally Young. law enforcement in· structor. to be threatened during or after a trial by the person being tried. " I have been threatened before. during and after (the trial), 3nd have been shot at, .. Stuart said.
In one of the most interesting accident reconstruction cases Stuan was asked to determine the speed of a vehide before it left the road and turned down a Sleep bank. He used physics and other techniques to de· 1crmine how fast the vehicle had been traveling. "The accident cases are always quite inicrcsllng because they arc quite complex," Stuart ~aid. "You hove to put quite a few different things together to come up with o :.olution ...
:-.ancy Payne photo
GETilNG TBE GOODS-Us.Ing the crlme lab 10 analyze evidence are Ned Stu.a.rt , Shelley Shannon and Wally Yoong.
When using the s1raat1on 0111rk procedure. Shannon explained that she tries 10 match rwo ends of o wire and then determines if the rwo pieces were actual!\' from the same wire or 1wo different-...-ires. She can then say if the tool used to cut the wire is the same tool the ~uspect used. \\'hen dealing "ith bullet compan· sons. Shannon determines what type and size of the "capon that was used. Sh:innon was enrolled in law enforcement nt IC last vear and """ teaches a biolo~ 13bo~toa;. Before coming 10 NIC she ancndcd Whit· ,.•onh College in Spokane. W:1Sh. and e3rned a bachelor· s degree. Young also works as a criminolis1, but handwriting anolysis is his major concern. Young has sometimes 300 to 400 cases a year inst in aoal~'Zing the h11ndwriting on forged checks. "I ha,e bee n working on hand· wri11ng :tnalysis for eight years but l have only felt comfonablc testifying for N'O)·cars." Young s aid. " I learned ir through reading book~. hill'ing practical expe rience and t.ilking 10 other experts 01 d11.~scs ... Everything that is taught in the low enforcement classes is utilized in the laboratory. :tnd cvea;'lhing used in the laboratory is taught in the low cnfortt· mcnt classes. according 10 Young.
Ca mpus s tress
Coping with college life by Mllcc Talko Stress ond pres~ure nrc two of the main problems facing college students todoy, according 10 Peggy f cdje, counselor nt North ld:iho College. "Adjusting 10 n different life-style. thot is high school 1c, college, puts strain on some :.tudcnts." Fcdje snid. She said thot ihc fll'lll few wcch nwoy from home and 01 college nrt' ob,•iou~ly the hordeM on the student\. " Making new friend~ ond getting u~cd 10 yollr surrounding~ ore just t"'o of the 1r11n&lllon:. :.1udcn ts hove to make, .. Fcdjc ,o,d. "Celling to know ya ur rnommnte l:. another m:iJor transition." Ft'dJc said that many of the prob· lcm1> studt:nt:. face c11rly In the year are prcdit'tablc at thi:, ~toge of their schooling. " When ,1udcnh first get :t\\G)' from home they 11re Clpccted to ha, e :,ome difficulty adjusting." she !>lltd. "Mos, of thb b ,cry predk tnblc." Aecord111g to Fcdje, these feelings of dcprc!>s1on usually occur at thl' s111n or school and after Thnnlsgiving bre11l. "When students come back from Thnnl..sgivmg ,•11c1uion the,• tend 10 be <'mOtionally drain ed and thnt put~ th ~m in depressing moods." Fedjc said.
Coun~elors arc available to deal" ith i.crlou~ problem~. but sometimes a fncnd. rcloLivc or M>meone ehe close con help -.-ork out problems. FedJt ~n,d th111 in rcccn1 ve11rs she hn'> kepi truck of how students have progrt'sscd ohcr seeing her " I try to keep ,n touch v.11h c,·cn·one," she said. ··or roul"ie, 1h111 i~ nimo~t imJ>QS;.iblc. but I do hear from a lot of s tudent'>." l~edjc Slltd that midterm and finlll e"am ttme nbo can put students m dcprc ..,ed moodl.. "Tesh are one or the v.or..t thing'> n11d1crm> and finals e:.peciall~. · ~e 5aid. "Just~ not 10 get uptight. JUSI rclu." " A regula.r excrCtSe program 1s 11 j!ood 1h1ng 10 get 111to if n s1uden1 ha.s troubk preparing £or this,·· FedJe ..:i,d. "Ph> s1cal acti,it) relax~ you and help!> reduce :.tress and pressllR' in ,-our bod1 ... Student~ -.ho feel depressed about being 3\1 ny from hilme or 11bout uproming ICSI!> :s.rc experiencing nor01111 feelings . Fedjc urgi.-;. them 10 1:ilk to . omeone who ,s close or to :.ec a coun selor if the) iire ha, ing nn) problems.
NIC nurse offers hearing chec k If you hne been listening to your Son) Walkman I.I full ,'Olume lately. you may possibl~ be crearing ear problems. According 10 'IC nurse Jo Marino· ,sch, too much music at !ugh volumes can damage the inner ear This is most!) "hen listeners use e:irphoncs and the music gOC$ direct!) into their cars After extensi\'e loud music. the high tone~ become muted. If this happens. students should get 1he1r e:in checked The nurse can check ears in her
office in about 10 min utes. If s he thinks there mighr be a problem. she will have Dr. Egglesron check them also. Then tht', will decidc if th e student needs 10· sec an 11udiologi~1 or not. Other thi ngs 1h:11 moy offet"t hearing tests are w3)( build-up and n rold. but these are only temporary problems. Audiologists are concerned with the loud music levels people listen 10 :ind the possible damage done. Charles E. Ne~'Jil;\Jl is the audiologist in 10,.,n and 1s located at 916 Ironwood Drive.
Election Tuesday Sk etch git·en of rarious Idaho races Elce1ion da} 1s next Tucsda). and student vote~ "'ill be casung ballotS for n1111onal. s111c and local c1nd1· date\. Al l Idaho residents w.ho are re· gis1crcd will ha,e the opponun1t~ •D help select a U S. House or Re!)'e· sen tn ll\le member. In 1hc first d1stnn clecuon. Republican lal'T) Craig b i,cci:lng rc-dec11on 10 the Hou,.e His campollgn slogan is "At work for Idaho... Craig i,. for crt'aung ,ob< in ld.iho and against increased tuci. on tnd1,'id· uols. Democrnt Lill'T) LaRocco 1s Craig s opponent in the first district r:icc LJRocco'\campa1gn ~lol!.in 1s "On the job ... for you " l..lRo.:co 1s for small business :ind 3eo1nst gun control. In the ~econd d1,-tric1 race \in Southern ldahol for congre•sman. Rep George Hansen is )Cel..mi; re· election. Hansen is for prescf\ mg Jobs and at the some time pro1c:c11ng 1hc environment Democr:u Richard Stallin!ls 1\ Han~c n's opponent and is for helping peopk acquire skill& '>O thJI the) c:an wor~ In the Idaho i:10,·emor's race. both the candidates consider the problem or
unemployment as lhe most pres.sing 1SSUC facing Idaho l1. ~ - Phil E. Ban the RepubhcaJ1 candid:uc for go,crnor. tavor~ the nght-to-... ork bill on the- r;:rouo~ that 11 •ould be an rnccnme 10 oc" bu<iness. De!Tlf)(ntlJC ~ . John E\'an< op· P' sc lie bill beC'lu~e Idaho is not a predommatcl~ un10nued M:ale and the right-10-,.wk bill ,.-ould not make a luiec effect throughout the \I.lite. The Republican c:ind1da1e for hcu, 1cn1.111 l!O' rrnor 1s .A nomc, Gener.ii D,n 1d H Lero~ Pushinl,l hard for bu~mes\ :e,i,11.l 1s an 1mport.lnt re· sponsibiltn of the hcu1en.ant gmcrnor. .lc.:-ord,ng to Lero, \1w: P \1 itchcll. Dcmocr.111c t'anJ , Id ate for lteu1enan1 j!o,ernor, said th.it the mnior 1asi. for ld:iho " econorrur such :i.., the dc:\c:lopmcnt ol m.'" n:ari.el\ for Idaho', resource~ \'01crs "'111 :iho choo<t I lreutcoan1 go,crnor. :inomc, g~er.11, ,upenn, 1cnd.:nt or public 1n\1ruc11on. ~tate tre;hurer. ,u1e :iuditor and ~ccre1.1n l)f \:311.". Democr:n Jim Jone, :and Republ11.·3n J D. Wilham, arc running for the: po,,uon of Idaho \ttorne~ General. Jones bd1e,es that the m~t 1mpo.r· u1n1 JOI> ht Wi>uld ha,e 1r elected to the
posnon -.ould bell' impl'O\'C the s1;i1e leital s,-stcm. He alsc, supports the multiple use concept on the State land
boud. Withams too ,uppons muluplc u,e on the l"1d board He- 1s mterc~tcd 1n the P"" mon of qu:ilit~ lel,llll ~<'mC'C al the- lo"c" J>l>'\1blr ro,t to the 1.11pa, cr Democrat \t11rinnr Ruth Monn ond RcpuM1,lln D<i,1le C. Miner nrc "Ying for tht S1a1e Trc.i,urer ~cnl Both randal.ltc, feel that in-,tatc m, c,1ment 1~ .in 1mportan1 pari or the trea,urer JK''111,1n, Idaho aul111or r:incltd,11c, .uc Joe R \\ ilium,. ,1 Dcmo,.r.11 . .ind Nol.in C, \ ouni:. a Rcpubh,Jn W1lh3m, bl'11c1<·, 1hu1 the 11rt'n1c,t , hallcngc hr "'111 [Jee I\ tu pro1>ide clllc1cn.:, 111 minimum ,..,,, to lhc IUp;i\••r ,
\ (,ung feel\ that hi\ po,utc,n tncorp or111c:~ prm 1d1ng clficu,nt tnformJt1nn 10 the go\cm,:,r Jnd l.e,RisJ.1111rc Ill help them mJke mtclhgc:nl financial dccl• sion~. Pete T. Cenarru~a. cunenl ~ccrc1ary 01 ~t:ite, l\ runnmg for the some office unoppo,cd. He con~idcf\ , 1a1c: land mJtll'~ 1mJ)l)n,m1 10 ht\ po,111on
The local lcg1sl:11ivc races ~hapc up rono... s: State senate -.eat, 01, trk t 2-·Thc rO\'C for lhi, po~111on mntchc, iocum, bent Bill Moorc-R. ngainM Florence ,\\ crv- D 8 01h condidn1c, place cmpha~1\ on ldnho education 01 Jll lcvch. Jnd the need for more Job, in Idaho. Sum, scn11c ~cat, Ol,trkt 3.. Ruil· ning for the. p<l\ll1un arc incumbent l'crr:, 'wc rdstcn-R ond forn1l'r lddho Sen Art Monie,• D
a~
Stole ,cnatc ~cal, 0 14Lrlct 4-- lnwmbc111 Vrrnon lJnncn-0 , I, t·,1mpa111n 10l(Ul(01J1, 1 l)n,c Suhr-R l1<1mc 1mpor 1,1n1 l\~UI'\ in thl, rnct' Jrr cduc,11111n and coc,i,tcnrc or nut urnt cn\'lr,,11mt·111 ,, 1th indtl\lrY m North lduhu. Stoic Rcpre,cn1111h c ,eat\ A and 0, Ol~t rkl 2 I h,:,e ro,·c, ~111 F-ronk I 1mll,I\ -R. :1gat11, 1 Bu rt Kocntapp- 1>. Jnd 1neu mhc11 1 ( ume run 1-ullmcr-R Jl(llln,t I hide Kd log- l) h luc,111011 ond crnple>vmt•n1 nrc 1mp,1rt,1n1 l\, uc, 10 thb r;"c. S111ie rcp rcscnlllth t• ~cat.oi A and B, 0 1,.1rlc1 3 In the n1,e for irat A. IO(Umhc n1 !3nb 'it,lle~ R, i, runntng ogJtn~I .lc:inne Gi,cn\· D Dt.'on Ila agen\nn-R. 1~ running ug111n\ t Mal) Lou Recd-0 . in 1hc rncc fur bCa1 B.
REMEMBER THE NEW NIC LIBRARY THAT BECAME A REMODELED BOISE STATE UNIVERSITY GYM? Dear fellow Swdent: We NIC stade ot5 " ls b to publlcl) thank Ari Mllnley for his 1U1" a, ering s upport of orth Idah o College as e,ldenced by bis appcan.occ at the 1982 spring campus rall) for the proposed coUcge llbl'tl) bailding. Ari also tdcpboned bis friends in the Idaho ~nate urging their support an.cl ,ote-5 foT full funding or the N'IC Llbrat). Wh ile Art l\taruey was " orkl og for our llbrary, State Senator S,erdsten was , otlng agal.nst the SJ50,000 nc Ubl'tl) approprlallon blU and on M.areb 17. 1982, S,erdstea told the CoeW' d'Alene Press, · 'The Idaho Leg,islatutt dJd ,' iorth Idaho College a fa,or th1s week by refusing to fund $150,000 for the dcslg.n of a new ~hool Ubrary." Please join us In ,·oun.g for educa.tlon's Criend, Ar1 Manfo) foT District 3 senator. Sincerely, Margaret Faablon Thomas Glo,-anelll Douglas Wagg Kem Fiddelke Ou'C Wleocla" Cn1thla Ro,.•le,• MAI} Klamlll;r Pam Mcferren Connie D. 'onlqllisl
James B. Morton Muta J. JohoSQn JClllleUC R. WJmer \'\'illwn Casper Caln Abd, llAh Jaked Gena.Pe~ Linds A. Oontler Trad Lindsuom Debbie Sheaffer
Jim BN?wer Richard Kuck Oa,e CbristmAD EUen Me)er Sherry Smith Norman L Cole lwidaU L. Chilson E,e Lepinski Pamela Jones
Carolyn Pfister Brwi Bruil Deborah L. Heady KeUy :"11aloney CoW1l>e) LaPointe Rand) A.rtell Caren Boland Khalled Ja.red Val Stnducr Carol Kienow Che"'.' Umi Vicki E. Bn,wn Rober1 Armitage Susan Reed Rooda Bussell Jen:nl!er Leul Tarun McCow11J1 Todd M. Griffith
BUI Glisson Pam Nye Iris Lilly Scott Markley Jon Ou Lois Buller Karin Pasteur Kin Blan Gino White lbra.hlm Andas Roi') Sanson Todd Be") Sharla Litvin Rlcll Mllrt John Randa Eh-In G. Han_sen Dean Knapp Am> Koep Glen GUman Angel L Candelarlo Bany Loe Ma,y A. Gttr Lester Shaw M Ucs Lane Jodee Sc011 Rick Bacldwn Dan Crttd
NOVEMBER 2 VOTE ART MANLEY FOR DISTRICT 3 SENATOR - EDUCATION'S FRIEND Paid for b) NTC Yoong Dcmornus' Club (Thomas Glo,anelD, president]
Student survey shows approval of procedures By Dawn Murphy Rcprc:scnmivcs chosen for student government position~ should be SC:· leeted in the same way. a poll of NIC srudenrs shows. NIC Director of Planning. Owen Cargol. surveyed rhe academic and \'OClltional $1Udenri at NIC l~t year to ger their opinions on the student governmenal w~tem. curriculum. ac· adcmic advising. tullion and fee). hClllth benefits. the controvt"TSial park· ing situation and ocher areas that affect NIC students. A IA>tal of 230 11Ddenl8 were given the ASNIC Survey of Student Opinion. The number or voca11onal ,tudent\ 1h01 were polled wai 85 compared 10 the 145 academic students surveyed. The majonty of student!. polled felt that rhe ASNIC should continue tO elect \enator~ along the trad11ional guidelines. The traditional way 1s to guarantee three scats 10 sophomores and three to first-year students. The three sophomore senators and one fir)t·ycar student senator are elected on n campus-wide basis. One fil'\t•ycar student sent b allocated to :in elected vocational student nnd one sent to an clccccd ncadcmk student. A majority or vocotionnl student) and 57 percen t of the academic sudcnt~ polled indicated 1hnt they did noi undcr,rnnd rhe Mructurc ond purpose of the NIC student govern· mcnt. Lc~s than one percent of each group stated that lhey would hkc to kn ow more about the ASNIC or become more involved. The renson that the ~tudents did not wont to become more Involved with student gov('rnmcn l was bec11u1c th ey hnd more concern for their classwork nnd nlso because they felt they did not know enough nbout ~,udenr govern• mcnt 10 vole . E.-cn tboagh ~ m~rUy of the ~rudcnb did nor wont 10 become more mvolvcd In i.tudent government. they slated that it would be helpful if mnre student\ were included on rhe vnrinus college commiucclt nnd council,. Both acodcrmc nnd vocational ,tu· denr~ were nblc to get mu~r of the cour,e, needed in their curriculum during the term rhcy "tinted them .
The rruijorit} of both student groups that are planning to tri111Sfer sa.id that the NIC catalog eurriculom 1n their vocatioo:il or academic imerest closely matched the similar lo" er d1vis1on cumculum at the transfer college. A boat hall of the vocational students sun~yed indicated the> were s.-itisfied with the academic :uh-ising received 31 NIC. Some of the neg;itive comments were that the advisors needed to become more familillr "·ith the different curricula and courses 31 fouryear colleges in the Northwest. and some of the students in the vocauonal department seemed to feel that the ad visors were not concerned about their individual needs. Of the acade· m1e students surve}ed. oS percent felt positive about the academic advismg received. Almost every ~tudent pay~ .!>Ome money into NIC m the form of tuition or fee\. yet 50 percent of the ll()('ltional i.tudents ~nd 54 percent of the academic students do nor understand "h-:rc their monc} goes. An average of 48 pe r cen t of all Mudents surveyed understood health benefit$ offered throuRh student health insurance and the part-time c:ampus doctor. Most of the rest that did not kno" had a desire 10 find out about the benefits oftered 10 them The 230 srudenti were asked how the parking &i tua11on could be 1m· proved 111 NIC. Man, of lhe sruden rs ~uggc,tcd 1h01 bus senicc pro,·ided for student~ 1n and around Coeur d'Alene and Kootenai Count) could en~c rhe parking problem. Mao, other. felt 1hot no cha.nges "ere 1n order. rhe park ing 11 NIC ,-u adequate. S\1mc i.uggestcd that a patk1dc could be built Others co11s1dercd that the parking around 'IC should be free for all . no dc~1gnated p:u-1.mg for the teacher~. Vcl') Cew o/ the 230 thought tha.l a p.1rl.1n8 fee to help lhe co~t of p:aHng the non · pn, cd parl.mSt area, clluld m1pl\),e the parl.1ng ,nu:ittM Most tell that ba,1c11lh· morc p:arl.ing :i.rcll!> arc needed .
n$wDDAitii
After
the treflting
Those j:i.ek.o-la.oterns tlat fall to make It into a pumpkin pie ,-UJ like!) end up as these---.alt.lng to put one last scare into the trash man.
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YES ! Compare our " PROTECTION PLUS" Healthcare coverage-and our prices, too. OPTION A-$200 DEDUCTIBLE:
M ALE FEMALE through age 29 ..... S 17.80 $ 28.00 30 through 39 ..... S22.90 $ 33.10
40 through 49 ..... S3 l. IO $40.60 - - - - -50 through 59 $4 1.90 $ 49.50 Blue Shield ol ldabo', 60 through 64 S52 .50 S57.50 ··ProtecllOft Plus'' OPTION 8-$500 One Child ..... S 15.90 OEDUCTTILE COSTS Two or More Children $28.00 EVEN LESS! CAU US! AU HlilTHCAAE PROGRAMS ARE SUBJECT TO APPLICABLE EXCWSIONS HD WAITING PERIODS. Olll£R MEDICAL PUNS MAY " SOUID 6000" BUT IF TlfE UNEXPECTED HAPPENS, JUST HOW 600D ARE TllfY? Bl.UE SHlElD OF IDAHO DOES WHAT TlfEY PROMISE. CAU US FOR C8MPtETE WWIRS TO YOUR QtJ£mONS.
H1way 95. 3 mrles Nol 1-90 Coeur d ' Alene 772-5695
NIC TICKETS AVAILABLE FOR S2.00 PICK UP TICKETS AT THE SUB AND voe. CENTER
CENTER PLAZA BUILDING. SUITE #4
P . 0 . BOX 2505 COEUR O' ALENE IOAHO 8381 4 12081 664·8432
Oct. 29, 1982/Cardinal Re,IC'-·14·
Reagan shirt-sleeves cuff Idaho with lack of aid by Ric Kasi The U.S. Con~ress has dcal1 Idaho a low blow by cuning rcderal funding for higher cducauon 11) , - percent ";th the blc~sing~ and suppon of Congress· man Larry Craig Craig ha\ apparcnily been so bent on holdin11 on to Prc<idcnt Ronald Reagan·~ ~h1n-slce,;c that he bas lost s111h1 of the need\ of Id.tho One of the Ont bills pw,ed throu~h congrc\\ ~fter Rc..gan took off= ,.as the Reconcihauon Act of 1%1 (8111 S-2852) ..-uh the so-called Rcdmua l:inguagc. Redmon refers to Senator Rcdmun from cw Hampshire "'·ho. •1th foresight of the funding situation insured that his state retti,cd three times as much federal £uod1og as Idaho. His language. which has become par1 of the Rccooriliatioo Act of 1981. insures thnt the dollar amount :illocatcd 10 each state comes from the Conditional Gu11ran1ce Act of 19i'Q.SO. Redmon put this language in to insure 1hn1 the formula for allocations did not go back 10 the fair share formula adopted in about 1965. which
spread the monc} out fairly equal bet,,.een the s1a1es. ~I that time. 90 pen:ent ...-u d1v1ded :imong the states b~ a f:ur sh.uc formula used by the fcdcnl go"em· mcnt lllld pl'0'1dcd I.he re111.11ntng 10 pcrttnt a\ a cushion for the ~tatcs th.it h:id ~pecial need~ for addmonal fund· mg :,."' Hampshire. along \\lib \.er· mom and ,\iaine. requt,ted \Omc of tha I C:U(h1on c-c~ ,ur until their base allotment a~ m~ch higher than Id.tho re«1vcd. When the Coodmooal Goar· 1n1ce Act of JQ-9 was passed. all three of these stale\ had cnabh\hcd t,~ guarantee:. that almost tnpled Idaho'~ allocation b~. When Congress passed the Rcco_ncili.a1100 Act of 1qs1 these State~ "ere guaranteed at least as much as the} WCTC rttening m 19~9. th;inh to the Redmun language, ruthcr than gomg back to the f.tir share formula that would allo" for 11.]I the states 10 Sllln DUl fairh C"en. When' the cuts cmc in 1981, Idaho was slashed b) 11 percent while
Stan Hall pboto COMING UP SHORT- This could be a realll)• If student loans and school funding keeps getting CV1 at the pzaenl rate.
:-fa.me. ~cw Hampshire lllld Vcrn,ont ruts r:1Dgcd from 3.4 10 5.5 percent. All three of these ,;131cs sha.rcd m11.nv rommon dcnomm:uors for consideronon rcg:1Iding the .imount each state would be illloc3ted. \II ha,c ipprotimatley the ~amc full,ume student enrollment, a,eragc ,·euly in""mc 11nd ,tatc populations. After the cut\, Idaho ~cti, ed SJ.S m1llioo. Maine. S12.8 million; cw Hamp~h1re ~-2 million ond Vermont. SS. million.
news analysis It docso ' 1 1akc II m:11hcmotical scholar 10 sec thot in all nrcos of consideration these 11a1cs arc ve ry dose. Clcept ooe-ldoho. llus represents n gros~ mi~oppro· pri1111on of federol funding from the governmen t 1ow11rds higher ed ucation. When the amounts for these four ~uucs .ire broken down to a "per full-time student" basis, ldoho re· ccivcs S84, Maine. S291 : Vermont. S287 and new H:impshire. S1 90. This miustice has placed nn eve n luger financial burden on ldahoMs and has forced the students 10 ,etl loons from private banks 01 high interest rates while they and 1he1r p:irents pay even more in stllte tucs for higher educauon. Private loons for higher educ:3tion increased 8 percent in the 13St year while the other three states have ,een o drop in private loans. NIC OnanclaJ aid Director J im Upchurch said th11t there wa.s absolute· ly no JUstific.:ition to the mass differ· cnccs in allocations between the three ca.stem stales and Idaho. Upchurch said that he and other student aid directors around the state :irgued with our congrcssionl commit· tee back i.n 1979 lllld again in 1981 as to the unfairness in :ippropriotions to thc!>t states in regard to the huge gap between the base allocations for each stale, but the pleas and arguments went unheard. ·'That is Just plain political games· ma.nship." Upchurch said. ··and this is what has transpired because of it." At the state level, Idaho appropri· ates more than two times that amount !hat Maine, New Hamp!>hire or Vermont do tO\\ :i.rd higher education and vet receives about one-third as much from federal funding. Upchurch said that 1h1s h:is es· calatcd totally out of hand and he is not at all pleased ";th the sirua.uon. " Wh} should the cltlz.eos of Idaho pay io about the same amount of federal taxes for higher educauon as these other three states and 001 receive our fair share ba.ck. ·· Upchurch said. ··tn essence. the citz.ens of Idaho arc footing the bill for their children· s education while at the same time, footing the bill for all those sru.dcnts on the East Coast." The Idaho Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators has
tried, on several OC\'O.Sion,, 10 rectify the ongoing problem. In September of 1970 the ndoptcd a resolution asking for rcstorn11on of equity in the 3llocauon or s1udc n1 floone111l aid among the ~talc~ ond sent it 10 nil Idaho lcgi\l:u(lr. nnd nppropritltc committee chairmen m the Houw ond Senate ' They received no re~uhs. In November (If IQ7Q, the then Ida.ho State Board of Education l'rc\idcnt Clint Hoopes wrote Idaho'\ U.S s~nntor~ 11.~king for their help. The ~itualion did not improve. Again on May 29. 1981. ldnho's Congressional delegation wn~ given a complete review of the problem. Ago.in, no resul ts. More recently Informal disc~sions on the mnttcr with the staffs of ntttlonal legislntors have obtained no re~ ult!.. Whe n CongrcH man Craig wos osktd why this lnJU5tit'e wru. being laid on the people of Idaho, his response was that the.: co~1 or higher education in th e three eastern Mates In qu~tlon were much higher thon ldnho'~ and therefore needed more money. He said thnt It wns jusl more c~penslve in pnvnte colleges. Man y obse rvers arc finding It difficult to de1crmlne jus-t what Craig does or not support. Wt ~ummer Craig ~upportcd the Graham-Latta budget which cut higher education funding by SJ million. In March of 1982. he W8$ quoted in the Moscow ldahonian as opposing funhcr reductions in student nid. In May or 1982 he voted against the Conte Amendment 10 restore student aid funds without increosing the budget defici t. Just prior 10 that In March of 1982. 145 members or the House of Rep rese nrnt ives signed 11 bipart isan resolution calling for suppon of student aid funding (H. Res 442). Craig was not one of them. ln June of 1982, Craig voted for the Rouselot Budget Substi1u1ion, a radi· cal measure calling for a S4.2 billion cut in education end training pro· grams. In September of 1982. he voted to su$tain the Presidcn1· s veto of the Supplemental Appropriations Bill. Craig. riding the Reagon Admini· stntioo's bandwagon. seems bent on pulling away from higher educ:ition. the very thing that has insured U.S. supremacy over other nations. Craig mentioned to a booing and hissing cro,.d at NIC on Oct. 11. during a popcorn forum. rh.11 he would run his House the way he wants to. The ~ndula.m bas been sw-ingiog ooc way for so long that it will probably t11kc ye ars of somebody willing 10 stand up lllld fight for Idaho rights befort it will start swinging both ways on an equal basis. But apparently. until then. I ~ families will continue to subs1d1zc education for their own childreo and also for Lbe $tudcnts who go 10 school iD Maine, New Hampshire and Ver· moot.
Oct. 29, 1982/Cardinal Re"lew-15·
Jancrslle IAC. or Coea.r d'Alene pat on a dcmoastntJoo Oct. 20 la the Kootea.al Room lO acqaalnt t tudeots with the prognun. Jazursi~ coo~otnteS on mental 81ness, rcUc,inR &tre88 and allowing the person to forget about daD) pressures.
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GAMEROOM
Come In And Sign Up To Win The Atari Video Football Game That 's Been Donated By All American Amusement THE DRAWING Will BE HELD NOV. 79 AT NOON!
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Oct. 29. 1982/ Cardlnal Rc,'1c" · l 6-
(__n_ic_n_o_t_ic_e_s__J Students who do nol know "'llo their adviser Is can chttl.: llst.s posted on mo( I campus buDeuo boards or by contacting the ;;wdent services office lo the Studcol Union BaD.dlng. Ad, isers can bt helpful ID deflnJJ>g ohjcl'thes, cducallonal pwmlng, oblalnlng lnfonu_atloo o-r aoM.og problems, • ccord log to Gar} CoHmaa, carcc-r rounsdor. Mid-term grad.c,, sboald bt a,aIJ. able No,. 3 att0rdlng io the Regl· s1n.r's omce. FuD-timc nudcntS csa gel their grades &om 1hclr ad,l&eB. Part-tlmc s tudcot.s gndei will be al the student SCr\lce~ office I.a the Sl""B.
All motom-clcs are to bt p&ri:ed 1n dcslgoated ~as " blch are located b, the bicHle racks across the screet &om the Bcdlu.od Vocational Building. behind the SUB or behind the Communication Art~ building. The Norch Idaho Chor-al Festh al Grand Concert Is slall?'d o,. 6. Tbl' concert "Ill be held lo the Chrisllanson Gymnasium and wlll feature aru school choirs :md small groups a.od the North Idaho College Con«-11 Choir.
Students are 001 allo'""ed to pad.: their ,ebldes along the hedges a.od shrubs ID the paddng 101 across from the Comm11.11lcatloo Art bulldlog. ~ are to psrl.: bead-ID agalnst the lojp that are there. All ,eblclcs parted on campu~ mast ha \l' a parl..lng permJL As or toda~ .
.. arolng lict.ets .. m no longe r be Issued. \ ebldes "ttboa:t permlts "lll either be ttcke1ed, '"heel-toeked or co-..ed awaJ. A.DJmie • l'ihtng 10 bang pMters ln the Sl"B ronta.ct Haith, director of aoxllllln sen Ires. or hh assht2nt of IJllillan ·senlces, K&l"O'll'O Senlet.. befort puul.og them op. Tbue shall be no b.t.D_gl.ng of post.en oai.slde.
"es
On '\o,. 11 Chris Procior. ilte L .S. 'iatlooaJ Champion finger Pkklng "l.o.oer of Kansas for thl~ ) car. "m be lo the Kootenai Room of the SliB from 11 :30 Lm. to l p.m. A popeom Corwn Is scheduled for No,. 111 I p.m. In the Bonner Room of the Sl"B. Speat..lng oo the topic or "Setr-csterm for Students" "Ill br Tom C111mpo1u.
V oc council airs conce rn b) Ann Rauc-r
Financial aid C"Ontems dominotcd the Oct 21 meeting of the Vocal!onal Studen~ o( North ldJho College. Lee Cole, \ 'S 'IC pre~ideni. pre• ,ented the rounc1l "uh peuuons thnt wtte recei\ed from the AS IC council. The p<"ut1ons are aoout the federal financial aid funds that looho school, did 0<'1 re«'i, l' According 10 Cole. the re:ison for che pennon, i~ that student, arc ,eeking corr«111m in the financial iud. lntere,ted ,1uden1~ nrc cm:our11gcd 10 contact council membet<; for further mformauon 01 10 s1jtn a pc1111on. Cone1:m ,1,er 1hc pm~,: of ticket) for the Chn,tma, p;im· c~pre,,ed to the rounc1I. It pa~~cd a motion for 11.:kc1 pnte\ 10 l>r 51 r.-r ,tutlrnt~ aud SI.SO for m1n-studcn1,. The council plan, for a II\C b,tnd 10 wne JS c:ntcrt31nmrnt M the por1y. and Coh: and l\u Moore. d,11a prt'ICCS· smit. reque,ted lhnl tht• member-. of
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Ve t club party scheduled tonight The 'IIC Vc1cr3n·, Club I\ h11ving its H;illov.c:cn cu\lumc party at 7.JO pm tonight .11 C.1rpen1er.. H.ill luc.11cd o• -121 Ltkc~1dc Pru.c:. "'ill he awordcd for the mo,1
Get Ready For The Halloween Costume Party
Oct. 30
.; .• .'• .r NOV. 8
13
NOV. 1 - 6
24th and Mullan Ph. 667-9057
ongm11I nnd bc,1 cosiumr that i, worn m the p:irty. There nl,o be n 1111-hos1 bnr. where beer will be SO ce nts u gl11ss. or three for SI. nnd m11cd drink.-. "ill be SI each.
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DINNERS ARE BEING SERVED STARTING AT $5 . 95 FROM 5 p .m. to 9
Cos h Prizes! Music By The NITE!
FOOT LUCY VOYAGER I
the caunt'il get band ,uggc~lions from s1udent~ The nursms deportment. rcpTCScnl· cd by Ellco Mellen. r<:qucsicd SI()() for the department'~ capping ccremonv. The council pll\scd the motion. Moore nd,,iscd the council that i dn1a protc:ssin11 ,cmin11r h upcoming in Oc~ml>cr. The rouncil a~p1cd Moon:·, requc\l thut the rouncll fund SI Cl4 for the dnto proce~~ing student~ to uucnd. T"o fund-rnising c,•cnt~ "Crc ~uggc,ted l(I the council. One idea was d1scu~~cd by Kurt Kimberling. ma· chmc ~h(lp, 10 \,Wt lhc ulummum caM from the SUH nnd ,·o-tcch lunchroom~. Cole prc~c111cd an idcn uf ,aving c1111tly "rapper, for refund, Both C\Cflls arc h.:inj.! ni,o:archcd for fur thc r lnformo tiori. The next VSNIC l'()uncil mceung "ill bt• hchl No~ 4 al I p.m In Room IJ,1 or the llrdlund VO\:ol1onol Build,nll
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DANCE TO
OCT.
29 - Nov. 13