Classroom climate: Chilly for NIC women? b) Rita Holllap•Ol'th Women seem to command less 3ttenuon and respect tban men na1ion• ally in college clas~rooms ~ of differences in their speech patterns, and 1he ume may be 1rue It :-TIC. According 10 li rcpon called "The Classroom Clima1e: A Chilly One for Women?," faculty member~ may per· ceh e male \peech panems u inteJJi. gent and au1bori1111e , v.hile both fac ull y and s1udcnt, may regard female speech partern.s aJ> "unfocu.sed and unsure .. Spu li laa pallern• tbal occur 1n formal groups made up of both males and females outside the classroom can rcsuh In a "chilly ch mal e for women· ·
in the college d:lllroom. the repon said Se,eral studies 1nd1catc that 10 formal groups the follov.mg speaking
pancms occur: - Men 1'11: more 1han v.omcn. - Men wk for longer periods than wome11. -Me11 ale more mrns at sputing than "'omen. - Men interrupt v.omen much more frequenUy than v.·omen interrupt men. - Men's interruptions of women often introduce trivial or imppropriate personal commen ts that b ring 1he di.scuuion 10 an end or change its focus.
Inside tbe cla.ssroom, instructors may feel that an asscnl\c impersonal and competitive spea.king st) le com· monh used b,· men indicates 1n1elh· and autbont}. the report ).tJd When v.omcn spe:u. i.:1 class the~ .ue likeI> 10 hesirate. qualify. que5tion and apolog11e. The report said that ..-omen' •peecb h.ibits include 1he foUov.1ng: -Hcsnauon and false runs, l"I think... ! v.as v.ondenng ... ").
geoce
-Tag questions. ("This is reall) unponant. don't )'OU 1hink!").
-Using qu:ihficrs. ("Don't you thm~ thJt maybe someumcs... "). - \pologmng. ("This ,s probably no1 1mP"1n;in1. but .. "). According to ihe report. v.omcn may
be dtSCOuraged b} faculty who mnd, mently use tea~hmg mclhods that C'&U$e fem:tle ~tudent~ 10 belic-;e their comments in da.ss are not cxpttted. encounigcd or appreciated. W11hou1 encouragement from instructors 10 panicip:ue, "omen may doubt their abilil) 10 develop m1ellcctulll}. and the) may also doubt the
-Use of ,oice intonation 1ha1 males a statement sound lite a ques11on.
continued on page II
Frida),
Volume 38, Number 5
T his blood·s fo r
No,. 11. 1983
Bull Franz photo JOO
Ftubman Uaa Kemple doaaln of bu blood durta1 1 blood drhc eoodu<Ud b) the Spobne Blood Ram In the Kootena.1 Room of the SUB Nov. 8.
Sex, attitudes forum topic Varying )csual 111ilude) and bcha, illr) v.111 be disc=cd dunng Popcorn Forum #178 10 be held at 10 a. m todll) in the Bonncr Room of the SUB Mary ~c Neil Tatum. an edun1or, lecturer. autho r a.nd consultant on hom.:UJ scsua.hty and family hfo, 1s scheduled ro addrcs~ the topic "Sex m Society: Comruts ln Human Bclu111or." Her presentation. free and open 10 the public. ,.;.u focus on the place of se1u:llity in hfe and Jo,eing. A woruhop, cnt1tled "Sexual Leaming In Adolescence: Stills for Undersu.nd1Bonnng and IRntcn·cnt10n," -.ill be held from 9 a.m. to J p. m. , 53.mrda\ No, . t 2 in the « oom. •
(.___ _ _ in_s_id_e_t_h_e_c_r___J Flgb1 for1'11C lJhn.r) ~~wed ........................................ paae 3
Pll:n.k pcrt1pce1:h e prollled ...................... , ... .. ............... paae 11 81ms a y Alpl'elllldal aD W'e( . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . paie 13 ToDJUe-ln-dleek colwiuml tln.kcrs ,.-tt.b tnm iaa• ...................... paae 14
Nov. 11 , 1983/ Car.dlnal Revln• - 2-
Future looking uncertain for campus day-care cente r by l\<tark Wheeler There appca~ 10 be oo place on campus for a day-care ccmer lhat will conform with Idaho ~late regufations. Manin O'Blcness of the ~tudeot action, commillcc told the student bo:1rd In an Oct 31 meeting. O'Blencss. al!>O the AS1'<1C vocation· a.I :.enator. told the board ht the student actioM committee failed to find any building on the NIC campu~ to house the da.y-arc center. The idea of relocating the umpus Friends Children's Center oo campus was gi'"en lo the student ac11oos committee by w·n} of an Oct. 1 i decision of lhe student board According 10 O'Blcness. Idaho state regulations require indoor space of 25 square feet per child, outdoor space of 75 square feet per child and fences 10 protect children from areas near lakes. bu~y streets and other hazards. Regulntions also require that !here be a separate room t'omfortabl) rurni shed for children suspected of hnviog commumcnble diseases. a sepnrotc slee ping room "' ith cots or Ooor
mats. a washstand and toilet for C\en· 15 children and that ocher stipua1ion,; be met. O'Blenes~ qid he talked \\1UI NIC Pres.dent Barn· Schuler and the, ame to the conclus~o there is "no pl:ace" for the Ct"nt« on ampus. "In order 10 do it (re locate the crater oo campu\l we would la'"e to take essen11ally one of the best buildings .and rooms on campus," he
wd ASNIC ~idcnt Ltt Cole .as.ked for a cop~ nf the repon m wnong to help him in di'>CUssmg the nuttcr fun.ha "-uh Carol L,ndsay, dirtoctor of the day-care ceme. Al~o donnb the- meeung. We-~ H.\lch. board financial a.,hi~er, went over the AS:-;Jc budget report for the month of Seprember He also !>olated. that due to a lowu overall 11t1eod.linct' than estunllted. the AS1\1C budget will be approX1m11ely S-1,oOO ~hon of its SS0.000 projection.
Faculty to ponder hiring propo sal The NIC Facull} Assembly will meet for the second ti~ oe:n \\'ttlt to discuss a counter proposal from the NlC Board ofTrustces regarding the hLnllg process of an academic vice president. Mike Bundy. the assembly president. told the Spokesnun Renew that the matter had been discussed, but there were still some details to w·ort out. In any event. Bundy said it appears the board is receptive to the concept of faculty participation in the hiring process. The faculty assembly is to meet Tuesday, Nov. 15.
Early spring registration scheduled to begin Nov. 28 Early registration will begin Nov. 28 and continue throu~h Dec. 9. acrording to Gary Coffman. student services career counselor. Coffman said the first week of early registration. Nov. 28 through Dec. 2. returning students should go to their ad,<iser offices to set up an appoint· ment for guidanct' in deciding their second semester courses. The second week. Dec. 5-9. Coffman said new students registering should go to the Srudent Services Office on
the second floor of the SUB for ad,ising. The bu!>iness 3.Dd registrar offices will be open for registration purposes during the second week for new and returning students. according to ltsuko Nishio of the registrar's office. Nishio said the hours for registrarion will be 9-10 11.m. for vocational students and 10 a..m. to 4 p.m. for academic students. Nisb.io said that on Dec. 1-2 the offices will tale returning students for r egistration ptrrposes
al.so.
Council sets Christmas party The Vocatioaal Students of Nonh ldabo College. in the Nov. 2 meeting, began mlllcing pln.ns for the vocational Christmas party. Adviser John Smithsoa said that he will try to reserve the Iva Lee Daace Hall for the party" hich the council scheduled for Dec. 15.
AND THE WINNER IS -M asters of Ceremony Dennis Osborn and Wuttn Ducole read off the list of costume winners a l the Vet Oub Halloween Ball held Oct. 28 a l lhe Iva Lee Dance Ball.
Vets collect food for hank The vets club raised S.300 wonh of canned goods for the Coeur d'Alene Pood Ba.nk Oct. 28 in its annual Halloween costume ball held al the Iva. Lee Dance Hall. S3lmon and Kayleen Rashidi. w ho came d ressed in ninjii cos1umcs. took first place in the cosru me contest. while second place went to John and Debbie Shepherd disguised as a barbarian and a saloon girl. Third pince went to a couple dressed as Raggedy Ann and Andy. Fourth went to Steve Turne dressed as a scarecrow and Diane Perry in a big. blue. bug costume. The baads The Country Stars and Totnl Kaos a lternated playing music throughout the mght for the estimated JJO people in a1rcndence.
Form er eduortops too
CR regional Pacemaker The Cardinal Review recerved word Monday that it has been named a regional Pacemaker for the second straight year and that its former editor has been chosen as one of the top college editorial leaders in the nation. According to Paul Buys. director of criucal services for the Associated Collegiate Press. the CR was one of 20 college newspapers om of over S00 honored Saturday night at the ACP convention in Chicago. Buys said thar the CR was named the only Pacemaker newspaper in the Mountain Region, which consists of Colorado, Wyoming, New Me.rico. Utah. Monuna and Idaho. Only pnpns that had been given All•American ranking~ ~ th fhe marks of distinction both semesters of the J 982-33 academic year w·ere ehg1ble for the Pa.c emaker honors. Paul Baier, editor of the 1982-33 CR, was named 3.loog with five other editors as National Editorial Leadership Award Finalists at the convention. .. Baier. who submitted editorials and supporting letters to the compeuoon last spring. -.. as the only two.year college fin.uist. . . Edirors from Auburn University joined him as runners-up LO Phil Gums, Pennsylvania State University, who was oamed the top leader in the United Sutes. Baier is cummtly the news editor at the University of Idaho A;gonaut. The CR was one of only s.i.1 two-yeu colleges named as regional Pacemakers,
Nov. JJ , 1983/ Canil:nal Review -3-
NIC's library -- a look at the battle b) Rk J . Kasi
EdllOr's oolC: Following Is the the of a rwo-part reaJU.re on NlC's ballle wllb lbe scale 10 obtain fonding for a new llbnry / eompu1cr S<'leoce baJldJ.ng. Patt one wfU expand on too bl~IOr) of rbe Issue. Parl two will appear In the Dec:. 2 Issue and .. m upand on rhe present sia1us and ongoing qvesl IO pro, Ide North Idaho Colleae wi1.h a ne,. huIJdlng. Nonh Idaho C-Ollciie has been the lo\test growing college in Idaho \inee 1976, increasing by 60 percent in full-rime enrollment from 1976 10 the foll of 1982 In response 10 th31 enormous grow· rh. NIC President Barry Schuler in the foll of 1981 rcque~1ed ~tote funding 10 build a badly needed library/compu1er science building. rhe NIC Library ... as rhen. and \lill Is. the smalles1 in the state. having only 34.000 volumes 10 se rve over 2.000 regulor s1uden 1s and hos 11 maximum scaring capac-i1y of 140. Addi11o nolly. the NJ C computer center 5upports a full-rime vo<1nional dnu1 processing training progrom. 12 academic computer '>c,enee clnsse5 per semester nnd numerous ndminism1· rive applications. In rho faJJ of 1981, Schuler requested SS00,000 from the ldnho Permanent Building Fund Council (IPBFC) for Phase I of the library projeC'I, includ· Ing th e designing ond early stages of actual con~lrucllon. The totlll co~! of the proJect was e)hmutcd nt SJ.2 million ond would increase the library's holding!> to over 100.000 volume~ triple the seating co r>ocir y and expnnd the co mput er ~tience dcpnrtm ent a~ well ns other admlnlst rntive fune11on1.. Schuler hoped to sec the building completed by the foll of 1984. TI1e IPBFC approved Schuler's re· qucs1 and recommended 10 the ld~ho l.egbhuu re on Ot't. 22, 1981. th111 SS00.000 be approprlnted to NIC 10 1mplcmcn1 the llbrnry / comput cr ~ckncc building conmuctioo project. Idaho Governor John E, llllll mtide n r<:C1>mmendt1tlo11 of SIS0.000 lo the Legbloturc for the :.nme rcnson, nud the lnwma.kers were 10 ,·ule on the rcquc,ts m March. 1982.
n"1
In January. 1982. Schuler tmvelcd to Boise 10 prese nt NIC':, 1982-83
budget request ;ind to urge the Legislature to approve the lPBFC"s SS00.000 recommendation for the Ii· brary project 111Stead of the governor's SI S0.000. The Idaho Joio1 Finance and Appropriation, C-Omminec IJ FAC) usu3.I· ly goe~ "'ith the IPBFCs funding reque'>I for education grov,1h. Schuler said. Bui on March 5, 198'2, the JFAC voted 10 deny an~ funding for '>IC"s proposed library project. while dishing 001 S372,800 to Boise State Uni,·« sity to remodel a gymnasium that v. ould soon be replaced with a SIS million structure.
pcmunent bad seat m Bo15e during the 198.3~ buditct-semng legislari,c session. The governor did not e,cn ha•.e ',IC included in his recommendJUons to the l.el!'.islature. but both the IPBFC and the Idaho Board of Educauon recommended SJ00.00010 begin Phase I of the libr.tf) project. The esril'!Uted completion <'OSI of the project h3d nseo by SJ00.000 betv.een the first and second n•nr of continued fundmg request for the libraf) proJCC1. UnfortunaUI). Idaho "'as facing a So9.2 million shonfall for the existing J982-8J fiscal year. and the Legisl:i· ture imposed 8Jl across-the-bo.rd 10.5
[___n _ e_w_s_a_n_a_ly_s_~___J Thot 11c11on ignited a strong protest from the NIC populatio n. The ASNIC Studen1 Board passed a resolution declanng March 10, 1982. os o "Day of Mourning." and urged all ~ludents. faculty .ind staff to wear a block ormband Oil th.a t day. Add UJonalJy, 1 noon rally protesting the JFAC'\ ac11on WI$ lteld on MllrCh 10. 1982, on the campus of NIC. A hoord of protesters. black 11m1bonds in place. met and joined together ch8Jll· ing "books, nor blllls." Al the same ume. a NlC delegation cons 1i.ting of ASNI C President J im Brewer. Vice President Carfoyn Pfister ond two foculr y members, "'ere in Boise presenting NJC's case to the c11pi10.I. Telephone hook· ups were es tab · fished to allow coexisting NIC ral licrs to heor the proccedmgs Ul~mg place in Boise. The NIC Cardlna.J Re, Jew blasted the stole for den) mg NIC funding for the library projCC1 . Schuler told CR rcponer5 that the J l'AC ignored the fa.et that NIC v. as the fo ,test growi1'g roUege in Idaho by culling the requesied funds. With the 1982-83 fiscal budge1 alread~· out of the ques11on. Schuler bt!gan working on the 1983-&I fundmg requc.!.t for the hbr&r) computer science b111Jdlng proJect. The neec!Jt or NlC seemed lO lll~e il
Nursing p rogram caps 10 s tude nts The NIC nursmg cllll,s of 1984 was rccogmzed o, . J in :i capping cc~mom m the Bonner Room The OCC3\ton signified the end or the fim nu,e " ee~s of the 1l ·m.,nth nursmg program. Ille student\ will no... rontinue their rram1ng both a1 1hc C'Ollege 3od at Kootenai Mcmunal Ho,pual, acrordlng 10 hmruetor Zella Fye. ··nus (('lipping ccremon)') h the first mile,1onc in the srudcnh ' o:du~auon, · Fye ,atd Capped \\ere Charlott e Ca\htan , Jeri Ed.ert , Garr<'! Ellenbe rger, Gv co lohn~n :ind Pat t.fa~h Barbara 'anon. C,n1h111 PJ~lcur. \ tck1 Rl·ed, P3tt~ Rhh,e\\. and Tona Spnngcr 1, ere :il,o capped
percent cul m state spending. This reduced l'IIC"s budge1 by SJ.35.000. ln Febu;ary of IQSJ, the legislature rned to push House Bill !JO past the go\"emor·s veto stamp. This omnibus bill was the mul11·purposc bill de· signed 10 bail Idaho out of the existing S69.2 million budget shortage. The bill included a one•C'Cnl sales tax inen:.ue that v.~s to generaie Jo addmonnl S 12 million before the end of Fiscal Year 198.J on June JO, an S8 million 1n accelented income and sal~ tu payments b> w-ge corpor~t>ons and more than S 17 million in additional agenC) budget cuu and tnnsfer of dedicated Cunds. This •ould h:i,e chopped another SS0,000 &om NlC's
Fisol Year IQ 3 budget Bur E, 11ns sl:uomed the \C!lO ink on cduc:11ion31 line items in rhc bill thJ1 amounted to almost SS million. lnd the omnibus bill .,. ent into cffeci \ fan:h I. fQSJ, "llhout 3dd1tional cuts m educ:i• tion. As J resuh of E, an ·s ,·c10 acuon. the sutc l3V."Tl'l3ke" were in no mood to :ippro,e an~ funding for educ:11ion to\\ard the fbcal JQSJ.64 budget. And "hile the go,·cmor :ind L.:g,sl:1· 1ure fough1 b1ncrly n,cr the proposed 198J.$.l 3ppropri3tions for educnrion. rhe hope~ or obtaining the request.:d funds to begin \\Ork on 1he libr.iry project follo"ed the paperworl.. into tho: 1rush c:in Schuler pointed 001 that the hbrary compu1er mence building ",II toke about four years 10 complete. 1ha1 1he C'Ost hb nsen almost SI million s10c1: his onginal 19 1 requc~, and tha t if NIC doe!>n·1 get srancd v.·ithin the next ,car or S(t, il .,.;u fall "' IIV shon of pro,•iding the growing needs or educo1ion for North Idaho. The NlC president h:1s recentl y presented the IPBFC with a funding req uest for Fisc3 l Yea r l'l85 of S200.000 to s1ar1 a badly needed libr.ir-y projee1 - for the third consecuti,·e ye:ir. But the IPBFC hos already made some rt'C\:lmmendauons, and with only SS00.000 lefl 10 recommend ton-3rd buildings. chances arc 1ha1 NIC will ag;iin foll ,ietim 10 the state's long· held belief 1h01 North Idaho ls ··out of sight - our of mind."
UGRT OP- ~1C lllll"$log s1udent G" ea Johns~n fires up her cuidJe du.ring 1M LP~
capping cucmonJ last " eeL.
I Mike Scroggie photo
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Q cq
No ... ll, 1983/ Ca.rdinal Revic" ' -4-
Letters to the editor Letters lo tbe editor a.re welcomed b) tbe Cardinal Re,iew. Those who submit letters sbouJd limit them lO 300 "·ords, sign them legibl) and pro,·lde a telephone number ll!Jd addres so that autheoticil) can be ebccked.
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• • opm1on page
Allhouj!h most letters a.re used, some au) be ren1rncd because the) do not meet the abo,e requlrements or because the) (JJ a.re similar to I number of leu.ers alrcad~ rccehed on the same s ubject, f21 ad\C>C.a.te or altack I religJon or denomln.atlon, 13] a.re posslbl) Hbelous, HJ contain -.ords or phrases that some might consider in poor taste. 5 are open letters [letters must ~ addressed lO and dJrccled lO the cdJtor], or 16} are Uleglble.
Lcllcn. should be bro11gb1 to Room 2 in the Meclwtlcal Ans BuJldlng or mailed to the Ca:rdlna.l Re,lew in care of North Idaho
CoUege, 1000 W. Garden Aie .. Coem d'Alene, ldtho 83SJ.t
dawn murphy
A smile does it I used to think a thick quilt and a big. comfy chair 10 front of the TV were the only sure cure for the "I h:ne life - don·, "ant to get up" mornings 1hat everyone experiences no" and then. On a recent morning my chance to hate hfe tud armed. It was evident by the runny. barely-cooked. supposed-lo-be-hard-boiled egg shining. or should I say sliming, up at me from the toast oo my plate that it was not going to be an ovc-reasy day. After deciding to s kip the brerucfast. I got ready for school. packed all of my junk ouL to the cnr and found a dead banery to further frustrate the situation. My stomach nnd I then decided to grumble dov.n lhe sidewalk togeth e r toward the college kno" ing that even the best long-distance runner couldn't make it to NlC in time for my first class.
I was hating life as if I had never liked it before. Even the neighbor's ferocious German shepard cowered from the distance of the porch as I trudged through the chilly fog. About halfway to school, a small bundled form came down lhc sidewalk toward me through the mist. A little kinde rgarten girl with a huge smile brushed past me and whispered "Hi.'' The linle brat had the reminents of a properly cooked breakfast on her face. How could she. belly full and seemingly 10 have onl} the responsibility of getting to school whenever she arrived, look me in the eye and smile a congenial bi? This kid had more nerve lhan lhe neighbor's dog. A fe\, more ha.sty strides do"·n the sidewalk and I felt a piercing chill do" n my spine. and I could teU lhe kid was staring at my back.
I turned around Jnd that linle girl was standing in lhe fog with th~ same questioning smile. I managed a guilty half smile. She raised her hand. waved and then turned. walking do\!.n the meet in her same goalless manner. The cour.igeous and darin.g brat had not only m:ide me smile. but I realized halfway through the day that she had made me forget all about myself and the minor problems I thought I had. Fro m that little girl I got more comfort than my quilt or chair could ever provide. and the mileage on my banery could ne\'er compare to the mileage rm gerting on that smile.
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cardinal review
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The Cardlnal Review Is published seml-mont.bly by the PubllcaiJons Workshop class at North Idaho College. Members of the CR s taff wlll s trive to present lhe news fairly, accurately and wlthoul prejudJce. OplnJons erpressed on the editorial pages and in varlous news uwyses do not
necessarily reOeel lbe views of the NIC admJnlstnllon or I.be ASNJC. The CR is e ntered as tblrd-class post.aJ ma.terlaJ at Coeur d ' AJe:ne, Idaho 83814. Associ.aied ColJegjate Press Flve-Star AJJ -Amerfcan Newspaper e<lilOr ...••••••••••••..••••••••••• . .••••••.••••.•••• • Dawn Murphy news edilOr •••••..••••••••.•.•••••.•••• . •.••.•••••••• Mark Wheeler
associate edllOr ........•................................ RJc J. Kasi arts/ entertainment . .................. ..............•.. CraJg Johnson s ports edit.or ...... .. ...•..........• . ............ . .•.... Willy Weecb photography edllOr ••••••••••••••••••• . •••.•••••••••.•••• • Bull Fram ad vertislng manager ................... . . . ........ . ... .. Marllsa Platt COP ) ' edllOr ........................................ Pam Cwuwigha.m cartoonis~ ....... ....................... Troy Jolllfl' and Eric Pedersen ad,,lser ................. . ........................ . • .... Tim Pllgrim reporters and pbotognaphen ..... ... ..... . ............ Shari AJderma11, Dan Breeden, Laa:rie BrislOw, DelD.DA Chapin, K&tby Ganison , Rid! Raimann, Kurtis Hall, Sharon Heaney, RJta Hollingsworth, Leasa Moore, Broce Mullan, Diane Opdahl, Dou Saoer, Mlke ScroggJe, Deanna Small, Sandy Stambaugh, Wanda Stephens, Barbie Vandenberg, Kelly Waud and Aogje Wemhoff.
1 [-...__m_o_ri_e_o=---p_in_io_n_J...-------Nov. 11, 1983/ Canllml Re\iew -5-
Ignorance will not cure resource depletion Yes. sometimes it huns to think. To imagine that someday we will run out of the resources that we currently depend on daily to carry out our lives is a disturbing thought that is far from pleasing. And the thought is fact - not theory. Most of the people who anended Albert BanJeri' s convocation speech close to three weeks ago do not need to be reminded of that. For the people who did not see Banlen·s speech. or aoy convocation speech for that matter. basically what was said was that unless some cosmic Santa Claus comes and restuffs the Eanb with the resources we have been selfishly and grossly devouring. we will eventually run out - and because of exponential growth. that will probably be within tbe next SO years. l'erhaps what could use reinforcement , however. is the fact thar ignoring the problem docs not mean it does not exist. Although it is doubtful that any of the students at NlC will provide the solution (if the re is II solution) to the problem of diminis hing rewurces. all people should remember that they own an inherent share of today and an equal piece of tomorrow. It is up to the people 10 determine their invesrmcnr. The lcnst people can do is to educate them~elves on the mauer. (Whot could be :i better place to learn than at a college?) A good reference ~ource would be Barllerr~ " Forgotten Fundamentals of the Energy Cri~b." The 12-page booklet wa,; handed our during Banleu's , pcech ond can still be found crammed away under the seat!> of the C-A Auditorium and in ;in occo\ionnl cluttered notebook. Ask wmeone for a copy. • from the fact -pocked booklet. people could learn a fev. thing~ about world population, the limitarion!> of the Earth's resources. the exponential factor. the alnrming nttitudcs of the induMrial nations. and. most of all. the world's future - or the lock of one. J us1 as~ i.omconc for a copy.
The NIC library has other information on the subject. But no maner what you read. keep in mind Banlen's erponential formula. If people IA Ould do that. they would know the truth. And then it would only be a hop. skip and a jump away to the nearest conservation group.
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(__n_e_w_s_c_o_n_n_e_c_t_io_n_s
Nuke movies-watch, think ''The Day After." an ABC (Channel 4) movie to be aired Nov. 20. is causing a major stir on both sides on the nuclear armament issue. This film. an account of world-wide nuclear ,, arfare which focuses on Kansas City near one of the fictitious American disaste r sites, has been called the passage necessary to understand the realities of nuclear war. While disarmament groups are already using pirated versions as an educational tool at antinuke fund ra.isers and organiza11ons such as the American Sccuntv Council are saying the mo, ie advocates that deterrence "ill foil. Director Nicholas Me)er contends that the production simply states that. wrth no political strings atrnrched. "nuclear war is horrible.'' This contro\ers~· (and the fact tha1 ad,enizers are not eager to become associated "'rth the film) has not halted plans for airing the S7 million production nor discouraged Paramount Pictures from making a similar film. "Te!>tament." Fe-... can argue that e~pcricncing a celluloid nuclear "ar. complete with popcorn. ts not equal io lhmg through an acrual nuclear bombing. But becau,e mfonnation IS the key to a good argument. people on both side\ and in the middle of the banle need to warch this tele"ised nuclear disaster in order 10 mue the pa~sage to realistically based argument.
Dear Mom: I just wanted to say • • • mark wheeler
Mom. I wa~ planning to nvo1d whnt I'm about to do b) becoming n Dolin~ Co,1 boy wide receiver and saying "Ht Mom·· on notional 1clc1•1sion c,•ery lime I scored a touchdown. But, Mother. you fed me 1he 11rong vegetable~ or ~omething because you robed n Ib4 1h·pound wimp ,~ ho spl'nd!> most of his 1i111e ju\t trying 10 rel-eh c passes in college courses. And e,en though I think I've gained \OntC pretty good ya rdngc m the lns1 couple of year~. l',c never gollen nny be1ter a chance to ~pili.e one 111 the end lOne for you. So even though I can't make an authentic touchdo11n. I think it ', time I evened the score II hnle. I "''ant to thank )OU for putting on uch a good sho11 ,, hen I brough1 my first girlfriend o,,er for dinner. It wns the perfect ume for )Ou 10 gcr e\'en with me for 17 years of never "1ping m, feet by unle:i,hing a ~tockpiled arsenal of ''Mark's most emb:il'Tbsrog momcnu.." Bur you didn't. Instead you fabricated good pomts liken fiend and somehow. for some reason. made me looli: decent. And I haven't forgo11en the time in junior high when you got horn~ from ,,ork and stayed up half the mght SC\\ ing the np in my fash1onnble. green. bell-bo11om cords so I ,, ouldn' t have to wear those dorky strnight-lcg u:vis to school. From e,erything from milk mone) to gas money. you "·ere like n tube of loothpaMe 1h11t I could alwn) s squeeze ju I a little more from. I ha,c a bani time rcmc.-mbcrlng all the time · )OU co, ered up for me, but you're a queen for rhe time vou told Dad thllt it "asn't me "ho ran over Fred, the hunting dog. Speaking of Dad. male sure you s11, hi 10 him for me. J kno"
he'd rather heu it on Monday !'light Football. but you were al11a)~ the best io breaking the n~s of my shoncomings to him.
~ om. rf the No )·eal"i that I've been awa,· at college have taught me an) t.hing. it has to be that you are a heck of a lot better l'OOk than I thought )OU "'ere. And not only that. but what you taught me at home evel'}d:1) for free can't even be touched by \\hat Han:trd offer.. for SIO 000 .i • car Althoagb) ou ne~er '-l'Dt to college. Mom, I don·, think there is a p~ycholog) or phtlosoph) test m3de that you couldn't pass. There isn't :i math class offe~ v.here you wouldn't add up. I gu~ 11hnt rm trying 10 sny, Mom. is all this political science 3Dd journalism and chemistry re3fly hasn ·1 had 10 big an effect on me. No maner ho" man) credits I at1nin or how far away I get from home. I can ·t help but remember that mothers like )OU mnke thts "Orld go round. o ma11er ho" m3m· things people point out to me in college. I'll aJ\\a}s remember 1h31 it's the good points that you have that is b:istc to re.1.1 success.
(___m_o_r_e_o=-p_in_io_n_Jr-------North Idahoans not all kooks as media suggests Several weeks ago, a national news magazine got word somehow of a group of neo-Naz1 "fanatics" in Hayden Lake aod deci~e~ to turn Nonh Idaho into a racial battleground for the amusement of millions of readers. The mag:usne de\.'oted se\eral pages to the exploits of the Aryan Nations Church in the woods near Hayden Lake and another page or so to a neo-l az.i in Post Falls. The general impression gi\en ~med 10 be that Nonh Idaho wa.s a gathering pince for psychotic racists and that a\'erage citizens were not snfe in the Coeur d'Alene area. A review of the record of these pohtical orgamzations turns up notb10g warranting the fear now being expressed b; penoos who ha~e relathes in this area. The organizations occasional!) make the local newspapers and television newscasts, but they are far from the radical group of fanaucs
ponrnyed b} the nauonnl news mngnz.incs in question. There is a good deal of resentment in the area for the unasked for. and somewhat cnsational publicity in\'Ol\'ing the white-supre macist organi, zat1on5, and certainly not all of it is e\'pressed by the members of the orguniations thcmseh·cs. The message seems to be di~ctcd nt the joumnlists who wrote the anicles. and read bosicall; as follows: " We didn' t nsk for this to be spread all O\'Cr the countrv. tr we feel that this situation warrants national e <tpo~urc. \\C \\ ill ask for thn1 exposure. Until then. plea..~e don't cnuse u~ to have these problems again." Listen up. fellas.
K.H.
Blanket midterm grades do disservice to students Midterm grades were recently filed but because some bl!nket grading occurs. c:iution needs to be observed by students retti..ing these repons. After examining midterm grades. some students get the impression that they could keep a questionable dass on their schedule and possibly recehe a passing grade. At 1he end of the semester ,\ hen the final grades come dO\\ n. some or these students are going to be more than J linle disappointed. This method or grading creates a false sc~c or ,crurity. thlC> c:iusing students to feel they :ire making positi\ e progress "hen. in reality, the grade is \'Cry low and nn e.~ceptional amount of tfiort 1, needed to bring it up io pa:.sing le\•el. Students arc gi\'en midterm gr:ide~ so thcy <-"In C\ :lluate their progress and determine the amount of effort need~ to get through a class with a desired grade. The last day to drop classes is romementl) '>Ch<.·duled soon after midterms so students can decide \\ hether to drop a class or not. This underscores the 1mponance of accuracy in midterm grading.
Writer says
Punk shows individualism Dear Editor: Though I found your overl y funny anicle, "Punk: A Colorbook Look ... to be a scream. I think you have forgotten a main journalistic rule: know your subject. tr you are going to put something down. know what it is that you are putting down. Too bad that vou did not realize that punk is ~ore than a lad). purple paint and a car wash. The differen t clothing symbolizes independence, creativity and noncon· form it)·. It also show:s that a person likes to have fun with "fa.fa.fa. fashion ." Being p.o.'ed at the capitalistic system is only a small part of punk. In today's society. morals and values are, for the most pan. borrowed . h:ind,me-downs from parents :ind friends. inste:id of decided upon or developed by the individual. Punk rebels against this process and stresses th inking for yourself. Being a hum:in photocopy
is easy. while being cre:icive and different is harder. yet much more fun. I also think you need to check your punk family photo album. I doubt you will find Chrissy. Joan or Pat. because thev are all rockers. Joan might wear ·a little "rebeUion on her sleeve'' but she's a far cry from punk. Grace Slick is a singer for Jefferson Starship. a rock band from way back. Something that is gaudy to one person might be \'Ogue to another. I hardly Lhink that a girl is a sleaze because she wears something other than Le\•is and a blouse t hat matches the ones a hundred other girls are wearing. Being a sJeaze
doesn't make you punk either. Perhaps you would like the Russian fashion of one military uniform for all. No gaunt. gaudy grotesqueness there! Amy Speck IC student
The blJnkct grading mclhod dcfcnt:. the whole purpose or midterm e, aluauons. To a\'oid blanket grading. perhaps midterm 'lhould be o halFway point or the matcn:ll given in o course. But "'hcthcr bljnket grades are Riven becau~c of :1 lock of grndenblc m3tenal or because instructors arc too laty to figure studcn1s' grades, such a \)'Stem is definitely harmful to o 'itudent trying to juggle schedules and ~ubjcct'> 10 order to receive o g rade. Studenb' abilities arc diverse. ond their grades should be a reflection of this. It is impo~sible for every student to be o., average ns blanket midterm grades would have us believe. IF this were the cnsc. then grades would not be necessary at oil.
Wide angle world view will bring better perspective of global reality Could you go for somelhing Gordon's? How about a cor that brings you n step ahead? Do you go places like Players do? Cruisers on Saturday night li"e o ut their dreams in dnddy's car, magnetized by the flickering neon god. Now. imagine if a beautiful beach as seen in one of the latest ads happens to be in Beirut. For some strange reason , Lhe drops of spilled blood do not seem 10 be quite as cute as the blonde with a d.ark tan. The intereS'ling group of people posing for a soft.drink product could also represent the parents of children in Sahel-zone. where a sip of water is more precious than the newest '84 automobile. While Westerners can still drown in some all-Lime favorite brown juice, someone else might be drowning in the muddy brac.k,water of o typical monsoon rain. Maybe it is time to explore the dark side of dreams and to widen the focu s away from money alone. Going from close-ups into the wide-angle will add funher contr:ist to the view of the world. ls there a connection between the blonde in the centerfold in Playboy and the 14-year old prostitute in Siam? R.H.
Prisoner requests replies Dear Editor: I have been on Death Row for five years and have loS'I contact with all my family and friends. So I was wondering if you would run this ad in you r campus newspaper or pin it up on the campus bulletin board. Death Row prisoner, caucaslan male, 37, desires corre6ponde11ce
with either male or female college students. Wants to form some ldDd of Criendly type relatloDJhlp and mon or less Just en:bange put experiences and Ideas. Write; Jim Jeffers, Box 8-38604, Florence, Arlt. 85232
Sincerely. J im Jeffers
No,·. II, 1983/ Cardinal Revie w - 7-
College clay
J
[ er arts/entertainment
• creations by Rich fWman
The use or cla y 1n ma king pouery prececds recorded human hisiory. and pottery rehc, arc a major record of pas, civilizouons. Today. 1hii. same mate rial 1s still the maJor ~ubsu1nce used in poucry and sculpruring. Clay enable<; rhe studenr 10 develop a personal exprcrnon JUSI as a brush or pencil does. according lo Lisa Daboll, NIC po11ery inslruc:tor. DaboU provkles her stodents w-ltb eumples of pollery lhroughout history 10 s how the m rhe endle~s varic1y or possible designs. For aample, Japan has very inrercstlng dcr.igns to offer in hs long hi'ilory or pouery. she said. Daboll added that so called primitive 50cictics in Afrla produce some of the most wonderful and cleg11n1 pieC!es. For Che , cudents In he r po u e ry class those refe rences 1hroughou1 rime are helpful g uides when H comes 10 the making of 1heir artwork. she said. To s1art a prOJCCl. the s1udeo1 must firs t shape lhe clay Into the desired form. This happens either by hand. she: ,aid, or wi1h lhe help of the po11ery-whcel. Daboll explained 1ha1 lhe grcenwore, the clay product before It Is burned. then hos 10 be exposed tn a certain heat before II can take on any kind or color. Al~r the nmlshln1118 complete, the artwork b pu t lnco the ove n or ldln. whe re l1 is exposed 10 2J 1hnu~oncJ degrees. Dnboll said. "While crcoting 1hc 11r1work. e"cry art iM leave., hi~ or her Qwn 1>cm,onn l stamp on 1hc c.leslgn." she , aid. " Ju,1 II\ it I\ pos\iblr 10 no mc lhe o.nl\l of a poi nltng b> fool ing ot 1hc hru\h \lrol:C\, 11 ,, nlsu rx,, , lblt· 111 name 111l' Grt"1 nf o p11·ce tlf pom·r> b~ cx amln11111 11\ dc,i11n," ,he ,111d Tht cl11,, mrr1, for three ond ~ hnlr hour\ onC'c • wed ond "ill b1· htl\ m~ n CJ1rbtnu1, >llll' fcotoring ,0111~ ,,r lh C' "'url. pn.1dun d clurinit the ,rme\lcr 1)111,nll , u1d While pv11n, " more conu:rocd ,, uh the producuon u r prnclttOI u1cn,il, ll flh Jrlt)lf1.· tll'\lftn,. ,rntp1urlnit b 111, o n>n1."t·rnC'd ll llh proJucin~ m111,.'1.·, of hie nnd lhc· :1fl1,1', r<'ah1,· " I , ,·n though llt' do cup, tire. ,,ur "a' ,,r appro3ching ii "qu1tc difkr~nt lrunt painting." J<X' Jumh tht .,culplunng m,1ruchtr ,aid, While a palnllol! I, on 11 1\1\l d1mcn\l,,n11I plane. a Mo1uc "' thn.,· d1111cn~111nal. he ,aid l he \ludcnl\ 1hi, tlr.1 \\·mC)h'r are >1011.tnj ,,n dc,11,t11111g II hNd ~nd 1'11,t n11w 1,,r" h1~h o per,on is u,cd 11> a model, Jona> ,.ud. ( 1111· " .iddcd around 11n 1mn nng hi torm II boll out Ill "hi.h 1hr arll\1 cle"~"\ chc head b, aJJing and 1lrnppini;i .flt hc ~~id Scud enh In ad , an ced daue~ pr.,ducc mllrt" '"mpk, art\\\lrk ,u~h "' ;i. ,1n1ng ,1ld mAn ,,r a p,.,l;i.r bea r b, ,'tlp\'lng trum p1,1urc, and ><'Tltchc,. Jon:isa1d It..- add,·J 1ha1 "h1lc ~cu,lem, in thc fi"t h ·mc,tcr ",•r~ c nurcl) "11h do, . 1n l:uer ~cmr-1,·n the, Ix 'Untc 1mro.1u,'l'd 10 >1,>rt.lng wnh "'""' a1,d r,,t
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the 1udc11t\ an ,mprC' , on
f the
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MOLDING THE ~IASS---Stodm is can spin a wei . blob or cla1 oo tM wbttl io crttU whare, er their mind dc51:tts. ln !hi> ~ . a cop.
p<K\1b1li11c\ or da}. "'ood and rock an ~lpturing. a numb« offilm~ 11n the subJcctarc ,ho,.u duruig the \cmr\l<'r, he ,a,d Sin~ h taJ.n OM ~meskr to complete m<.~I pmJC 1 • the: eta, can become a probkn:i for the ,1udc:n1 ~,n,"t' the ma1cn.al 1s onJ~ plastK' \\hilc II ls "cl, Jona, lw!ld. Hi:- e1pl1.U1C'il tut da, sa~s h:ne ID be kept we: 31 all 11mr\ 1<b1lc the arll$t u orkq on the project II the eta, dnes ou1. 1he :nu: hu lO stan all o,er aia1n \ ,'OOfdtng 10 Jona\, I~ ,~ thc mag1e aam~r £or the C..\Uf"C' " II" th<" mm1mum and the muunum at I M ~ ml"mCnl, hr !>.lid "Tbc ( ' O ~ can't l\"l <taru'd 1f In, than 1.2 pc,.•pk '18" up., el due 10 hm11cd )pa,._"e. there ts 001 l'O(lm fOf tntm' llwl 11 pco!* II! dli\ whcr." Jon_, 1, h,,p1nc for a luger \tUdio scmmme m LIie fotun:. " 'fore roon:i wculJ enJ.blc, tht- = e 10 use ;1 "1Jtr range of marenal." be -.zld. \ c t. !\Cimcurnc~ it :al.so .,.orries him to {UJd moash p, •i, e 1gn up for tM course. he uid "'Sollltl p«,pl:e th.in). tJas1 UIC') ,vuld ba,c to $peru! 1 'l r- ,nc, for n:iat!'nab 1n '"lllptunns roursc " JQILll~ ,111d. 'Ht!'Ac-.-r, lh1< ~,rr:p I b DOI true • Daball ;in.:I Jom~ both >llld thc:v hope to 113.-., exh1b1ttom of the: tudcnt 5 Ami.ad; m the ccar f tl:c ~p:tn SCl!:CS er M
Mlkc Scroggie photo
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<:"L:\ l CRHTIO:',-Rlcbard Whhc "oru cardul· h on his pone~ proj1..-c1 during a ncenc l'f&M,
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Future of high schools studied in PBS features
ho\\ 1ime
Basil f nuu photo
Playwrlgh1, actress and SlOI) teller Deborah Blancbe stirs up some lnlttbt In her one-woman sbo,o•, ' ' Women of the Ww," dllling btt Xo,. 3 pcr{ormantt In the SUB Bonner Room.
craig johns on Green bean fever Our college fimmci:il aid system ds\,des studen~ into two maan groups - dependent nnd independent. But within these di\bions lie a oontinuum of lifestyles each unique in their :ibil11ies 10 pro\ide students with :, blllance of educauon nnd support. On one cod of the spectrum we h11\·e the young frosh spanked out of the womb of high school into a post-amniotic eD\ ironment th:i1 verges on the bnnk of culture shoct Their lifesl)·le will depend on :i) whether they live at home b) ID a dorm or c) an off-campus dwelling. But more import-ant is the bottom hne of 1heir parents' income w forms whieh will determine the amount of financial aid for u hieh students are eligible. Tate, for ex.ample. o student from a low-mcome Cami!y who lives ID cl an o_ff-ca~pus dwelling. His eligibility is high. and he will mOSt likely recewe a ud~ sum from the government and college in the form of loans 3nd gr3nts. This means be will probably live in the b:id; of a used CilJ' lot. eat a gross I\Jllount of cnnned green beans from mother's garden and drive an uninsured Pinto that runs on at least tw·o out of fotu cylinders. Howe"er. w;thin this lower echelon of financial dependence lies a funher subclass of starving srudent uho, for one reason or nnother, receives little fmnncial aid and parental support. While he moy have the lu.i:u.ry of o toaster-oven - a conventional stove used for moking t03St - his refrigerator is sure to have been inopcrath·e for se..-cral months and is coated v.itb a mold that mav make a scientist a Nobel prize winner someday. ' Such are the fortunes or misforrunes of a four-year college career. Bat as long as they arc kept in perspective, the less fortun11te ~hou~dn 't ~nd it too hanl to ..... ate up with a srru1e on their faces and an idea m thetr mfods. . After ~1..that is "''hat we arc here for: and, hey, pass the green beans, Im starvm.
The Public Broadca.<llng Svstem !PBS) is gcncrull) t nov. n and mildly nd1culed b) college \tudcnt as the ..t1dd1e channel" or other lesi.-thancomplimcntary rusmc,. but in rulil) it (lf{er; .i. great deal of\ .ined entertain· ment. from setcnrllic doeumcntnnc, to li1er&r\' elo~\JC\ in ploy form. This month'\ ~chedule on PBS, wh1eh bl'\)lldc.1~ts m tht' Inland Fmpl rc on KSPS-T\ (Channd 7), indudc, such program, a\ " Thi.' Ciladel." o IO· episode presentation of A.J. Crunm·~ bes1-,clhn1t no\·1.'I nbout 11 ,•oung Scomsh doctor "-Orking in the t·oolmmmg rciton or W:1lc\ .. The C'1111 del" premiertt Nov. 20 ut 8 p.m (In Muterp1tte Theater. The NIC Pubhc Forum will be presented on PBS Nov. 20 nt noon. 'IOV A. a sc,cnufic program dealing with ,cience. medicine 11nd tcchnol OB), lllrS week.I}, Tuesday~ at 8 p.m. and Thur\dor) at 11 11.m. F'or r l'S I
of
Othe r scheduled programs that mif?ht prove lntcrc\tlng include the weekly prc~cntntion of "Great Performances, .. which airs Monday~ at 8 p m and eon~i,t;; of a variety of clts\lt plo>'' prt~cnt.:d in a ,erk\ or episodes. owmber·~ ''Grl.'at Performance~" ore n conununtson of "TI1c Life of Verdi," detailing 1l1c life or Italian compo,.:r Gu1\cppc Verdi. On Nov. JO a1 Cl p.m., 11 Olm entitled " I llgh School~" will be ~hown <ln PBS. portraying the Ctlnd11lon\ of United Si.ik~ high school\ bo~cd on 1hc 198.1 C'orncgle Report on ihe Amer1can 11,gh School. If the battle fur the future of Am!lrico •~ being fought In 1hc nnhon·~ l11gh ~chool~. are we winning or lo,ing? ''High Schooli" addre,ltcs 1hi, 1~~ue. rar from being o "kiddie ehannel," PBS ilt a hlghly etluca tional and mfomuuive broodco~ung network with a grea t deol in oner.
.~PIIIPS lf>r
Musical events scheduled Desp11c a csnc:ellauon in one up~-ommg mu~•~ cvcn1 . 01J1cr produtt 1011~ ~pon'>Orcd b> the North Idaho College Performing Aru Series ore ~chcdulcd throughoui December in the C A Auditorium.
A c:onccn Ceatunng piansM James Dick scheduled for Dec. 2. has been cancelled, according 10 Todd Snyder, conductoT of the North Idaho Symphony Orche~tra. However, the North lduho Symphonic Bond ond Jon Ensemble will be presenung "Sou,111 SouSll! Sou1,a1" with NIC irumpe1 Instructor Christopher Cook performing a comet solo, Sunday. Dec 4 111 8 p. m.. Snyder " 1id. Admission is free for NIC students, faculty, staff and gold card and Community Concert card holders. Adm1ss1on i\ S2 for aduhs and SI for children, ,tudents and senion. Also. the Fire Fighters v.111 be pre~nllng a Christmas varie1y ~how Dec. 6 a1 6 p.m. and &:30 p.m., Snyder said. On Saturda). Dec. 10. at 2 p.m., and again at & p.m.. the Amencan fesu~ Ballet will present "The Nut Cracker Suite" with the North ldllho Symphony Orchestra and local dancers, Snyder said. The North Ida.ho College Concert Choir, the Cardinal Choir and M.dngal Singers \A.ill be presenting "Sounds of Christmas." with Richard Frosi conducung. on Dec. 16 and 17 at 8 p.m.. be said.
For crea tive writers
Bulletin board ready by Sharon Beaney Students a.nd staff al NIC have a different opportunity to stru t thei r ereati~e stuff. OREAD bas placed a creative writ· ing bullet.in board on the second Ooor of the Administr.uion Building near the top of the stairs. The bulletin board is there for club members as well as non-members. "Anyone not in the club who wishes to share poetry or stmies c:in post them on the bulletin board," said fay Wright, English instructor and club membet'.
Wright said the club is not a duS but interested persons ean post a request on the bulleti n board for workshops or special meetings. According to Wright , other uses al the bulletin boud can be for reqaest· ing of "readings." communication between members and others, re· source m.nerlal and idea eidwl1es, While officers for the creative: writing club must be full -time N«th Idaho CoUge students. club memberS can consist of anyone in the com· mu.nit) v.•ho is interested.
Nov. 11, 1983/ CardinaJ R~iew -9-
'Animal' probkms, ruc kus force shorter production by Cn.lg JobnM>o t,,bke no mis1akc abou1 11. thea1er is and mus1 be a collaborative 11n, or so fl/lC's drama dcpanment has learned over the cou rse of preparahon for Lh1s week's production of "The Male Animal."
Although 1he play surfered 1v.o major set back, when i1 lost the directorial skills or Roben Moc. and lead actor Lance 82bb111, which resull· ed in the c!lllcella1ion of 1he Nov.4-6 play dales. the cast and crew has survived and wall conclude their per· formance S3tu rday nigh1 in the C-A Audiuinum /\CC()rding to fl/IC Technical Director Le\ Bai rd . the man who :is~umed Moe's duties os director. 1he experience which had the potcn11al for clQSang the ihow, actually brought the department do.'icr together and gave them a sense or ensemble which is important when working with a number or people. many of whom Baird wu unfumilinr with.
Alan Pons. a Huding school 1cacher and member of the Coeur d' Alene CommunllY Theater. took Babbit's place as Tommy Turner. an intellectual collc1tc professor Baird said that Potts has done an c:xccllen1 job an Jeanung Tommy's role and that the play 1s bound to be a success. "I've come 10 truly respect the people: that are puuing this together." Baird u1d. addtng um the first thing he hlld to do was to gam the trust of the cast. He said that he had ai.kcd the cast and crew whether they wanted to proceed with 1he show, and that they responded with an enthusiastic. " Yes." But Baird said that the key is to know when to be upset. "And that is only when it is productive 10 do so." he said. "I've been m theater long enough to know that the only lhing that can be c-pecied h the une-pccied." he said.
\ Ch a nging ~ea1,on
As rain drlpS from a batt bird, limb, a lone leaf pa_tlenl) awaits Its Cate part of the conglomeration on the ground belo".
(___s_c_r_e_e_n_s_c_e__ ne___J
'Deal' nukes no joke
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by CraJg Johnson
llumor, at It, bc,1. 1~ not mt'rcly 11 ,lap~tack. haph111.ard form or en1cn.1mment; 11 i, ~ ,om1c ,-oy uf mnl.lng a poin1 thnt could not be mode in a me>rc ~enous tone. "1 he Deni e>f 1he Cen111ry." Morring Chevy Cha\c. fits this de)cnp1i1>n of humor lu 3 IC<: What is lmng ridiculed Is Reagon') peace through strength pohn and the less than morn! pract1t·<: of defcn,c rontractOl"'i I\ ho ,ell their products as 1f thev •ere a\ frm1lou, ti\ ton.~te~ or uM:d can C'ho~. on the ,;,imc bocl. lrnm folhng bu1-officc populant) rise) to bnef pinnacles of cum1c J!Cnm~ as Lddie Muntz. n ,mall,umc arms dclllM "ho i, onl} intcrcsted ID 1un11ng II buck. lib comic foal I\ the pure ludkrou~ nnturc of\\ hat nuclear v.capon:. rcprc:1.ent 101111 de)true1iun. After nn unsucces,ful arm~ dent" 1th Third World l,lUCmll.u.. be h held up b, a dc)peratt criminal "ho 1) ,detding a Soturdo) nigh1 spedal. When he i, forced to reach into his car for II gift-,.rnpped t>oi the criminal >av. him carrying. he pulls out o Lnr~ RIX ..et launcher and quicU} turns the table:.. Ju)t ~ a phtol I) no mnt ch for :i rocket l11unchcr, 11 remote controlled drone plane I) no match for a ronvcntional jct - or so people at the Ludup lndu,me) thuik. The) art' the plant' dc,igncl'\ "ho "3nt 10 sell their billion-dollar "Star W11~" produ(t 10 the defense dl'panmc:nt Bcc:uuse or malhon-dollnr budget o,-cmdes nnd fault,• pans supplied b> greed) )Ubconmaetor~. the plane, to,'ingly ntcl..named the " Pcac:emu:er," i s ~ o,-er by the big boy) v. ho are in the m11.r..e1 for other state-of-the-an toys at 11J1 international armb )ale. The ~ surrounded by all the fri,'Oht)•of a. Shriner') con,enuon :and pro,idc) the means by v.•hu~h tbe movie romc) 10 climactic: l"Csolution. Gregory Hines, or " History of The World Pan I.·· pl11y) the ex-test pilot a.nd Chase's partner who finds religion 11nd the guts to steal a French Mll'llge fighting pl1ne and threa1eru. 10 blov. up the ~le. The invcnton. or the Pcaccm:il.er. who only need 10 pro,-e th:11 the p!Ge is combat ready to complete their S4les negotiarions, send their prorige off to deStrO~ th, Mirage. . S~cular dogfight scenes, reminiscent of "Foxfire." follow a.nd end in the total destruction of the arnu; sale. As an audience member, you will go for the laughs. but as you v.,pc chat llll smile off IOUr face, you may reallze thnt this absurdity which kept ,'Ou laughi.Qg for an hour and a half is defimtely no Joke. ·
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Dan Breeden photo 10
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NOV . 7 through 19 •• •
at the Holiday Inn • • • • •.L-._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___. • •
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No,. 11 . 1983/ Cardlnal Re,lo - 10-
Systems analyst explains opposite sides of self bJ Don Sauer
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Whal do ,ou 11:e1 ,.hen ,ou a s,s1ems a,;alvst -.ho •~rh io tbe ~p1dh .ad, ;i.n~n~ ,. : d of con:pincn and a ron,en~llonahs.t •ho 11hocatcs slo-.. c1u1lous progrcs, • More c,hcn than not )OU •-ill end up ... uh a heated argul!IC'llt Bat lhne dl\cne 1dco ha c f od a com mon round 1n th pcnon f s~ Ruppel Ruppel h~) been the , 11cm\ aru• Int at /\IC for lour ,-ear• and baidcs keeping the m.arb1~~ tlllm!.'lg i.::::ioth I). he de, clops prcgrallll WI •ilJ hdp lhc school's staff and t~ computer "ork togc1 her more effC'Ctl\ cl} He said he 1s currenth -.orkini: on a system 1hat will emplO} the ;aid of tM computer to bener milldl co1.r1~lon r.o studc01,. This side of Ruppel " monng .at a high rn1c of speed. "I hnH! 10 keep rc,1ding coMuntl~ 10 keep up ",th all the changes lha1 arc happening in the mdustl') · Ruppel said While Ruppel find the rapid pro· grcss of the computer industl') exciting. he has quite :inother ne-. when it comes 10 maners of ccolo8,.' .. rm , en consernu, e. ·· he wd "'and I fee.I 1h01 the Unned Sme, need5 10 mo, c ~lo"'I)' ond cautiously when II come\ 10 de, et,,pmcnt of our nnrural re~u r..-cs... A\ a member of the ld1ho ConseNa· tion League, one of Ruppel"s main area.s of conC'Cm is the U\e of n111ionAI forests. "' I m1, be 111 oddio "ith :a lot of m,· cohorts. on the idea of multi•use n1111onal forests, · he said, ""but I belic,e the\ arc :i ,aluable 1001:· He "en1 on 10 s11, 1ha1 mulu-u\e forc~ts arc, tlluable bcc;iu\c thev aJlo" US to U\t' the fCSOUrC'C>. but the 31"C3\ ;u-c lcit in a cond1m>n that nukes lhcm de.1rable for recrcauonal u,e. "'There 1s no doubt that \\c need the timber · Ruppel \aid. "but the big que<11on 1\ ho-. much 0 '" Ruppel said be SttS one soluuon to our i.rcat need for lumber 10 eanh· shcli~: uvU\IO'l E.anh-,heltcr housin.-i make~ use of structure, that .1rc built underground and u,e more ccmcor and canh th:tn umber. "If umber ,.~ pneed :11 hat II is rc;iV wcnh:' he ~d. "'man} people "ould find e:irth·shclter homes more pref<rablc Ruopcl ,aid 1ha111 "ill be \Ome :1me before ,.e m.atc the tum to thb n-pc o! housmi::. He '1dded tlut people "ill probabh continue to erect ··stick· built"' hou<m11 for qu11e ',()fflC ttme '"The problem 1s that "C :ire lootini:: 111 boll IAC ha,c al\\'2\\ used thcs~ m.i•crul\ n the past in,tcad of bov. e rould put them 10 better use. Kuppel sa,d Ruppel said he 1, :a Mroni: behe, er In ra !IC ni: \\lut he ad,~t ~ H s futur :ms call for bu, n a :!:Jail :acr e and
c&nh·~eltcr home. Anothn aspttt of con.<ott> llioa that Ruppel llhocat~ u =tC\. <b.uuP. "We ha,'t' a tor nus goods." Rappel said 'Ju•· loolt an m, izara~e.
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"Thcrc \\OUld be DO rc&\OD 10 gel up t~ momin~ to go I<) \\ Ofk. 1r \ \e didn't talc care <>f this ,,,uc." he \.11d . He p<11ntcd out a p1l"turc th.it hang, In
on the ,,all direct!,· tn fron1 or hii. d"klt 1s a p:11ntm1t of a ca,e man. llub in h.ind. stand1n11 onud the rubb!(' or an .anmh1IJ1cd ml.'dcm cm . " We Jr(' lookrng 01 a ,11ua11on "h1:rc ne" .111cd ninn "111 gu nut." he ,a,tl ':ind 11 "c \Uf\1\c. th~t I\ the prcd1, ,1me111 "'t "111 be: fa11n11 " Ruppel ret-1• lbat !he! •••na• t1t1lfn ncc1h to k "''" more ah\1111 nuclear 11 c11pon, 1111tl the '"t>ogu, , ulctv" tht') pnw1dc ' \\ e hll~l' 111•1 h• ,1np treaung thtm J, ,<'nu: "''" ,,f t>111ger c.1nn11n a, many nuclcor "'cup11n\ .idvocate, would h.ivc u, bclitwc." he ,:iid Ruppel ~~•d 1h111 the w lu1ion lie, in .i redu,·111,n t'r nude.ar cipahllhitt and JbU\C all. the hu1ld1ng nf trnt hcl"<'Cn n~11,1n, A\ for hi, future, Ruppel sen l11m\elr becoming IC~\ polhkally ac:tlve and more famil) oncnlcd. He added th .ii h1~ ... ork w11h computer, will rcmiun in high grar He say, while h1, political activtty will be le,~. hi, concern over these Issue, will remain 11s stron11 as ntr.
Laurie Brblow photo BCSY MA.\- ~1C Computer Analyst S1c, e Ruppel In te rrupts some compuler • or\ to rttt"he • m~e. an yoo t\. run) ncms t.lL1t get hnlc or ao use: It lilts the u~ of man, resources to make these goods, and 1( they arc not being U~, ~ fC$01lrCC~ JfC being ..astcd, ~ u.id Herc a am Ruppel prac,t«S ,,..hat he prcad!cs. One or his fa ,onte pas11mcs. he sa}s, 1s r,fung Instead of buying a r:in :s.nd ha\lnil II sit :iround much of the um<". he rtnb. one. "Let s.-.me"ne else use 11 on the "'eekends. rm not " he wd The Ile that blod.s the n.o sides of Ste, c Ruppel together he S;lid is that he learns fn,m .1u1om.auun .and aoph 11 10 his • c.ri. 10 consen-auoa. Ruppel saJd tha1 robouuuon. the linking of compuier.. and mxluacs, \lolll h:i,·e a Rrcat effect on us m the nc11 tore~~ '"The \\Ork that DWI) people such as auto •-ori.crs do u munwe," he s.aid. screwdrivers, margaritas , .. An mtclhgco1 mxhine could cuil> ck the ~me Job ... pina col adas etc. Ruppel said tha1 machines will c-f these jobs. rcpl:lcc ulcn in Thli 111 rum u;JJ le;id to more people l'.a,ing more free umc, and thi\ •ill Burger ond Fries in Basket ha\ c qunc :an impact on the ea,,ronmcnt. the added. People "111 tum to the out ot doon S 1.50 on Wednesda)' for more of their recre3uon. Ruppel slid. ldduig be hopes thu, \\'Ill ha~c lmlc nc;;:itn~ tl'i,act "" •he en meat. Tbt'rt Is, ct anoth-tr 1"1!e I ,.ii Ste-..: U. Jct!\ ch ed ID th ht ~ S hA.!t :in m!ke·IIC'C au other areas oi his
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h!c. Rt:pj)C the form.:r ch~n o:f a 1:n,up cal cd C \NY.'BCiuzcn.\ Apmst ~uch:-~ 'v\ capco\ Extcmunauon.) H \lo th s rcl:ites ro h 1s Job 11nd ort he made crv
, st draft beer Free on Friday
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Nov. Jl, 1983/ Cardinal Review - 11-
Punks stick out like 'sore thumb' on NIC campus by Wanda Scq,bem
Sparsely populating tbc campus of North Idaho College are the advocates of the New Wave - or Punt Oad in faded denim outfits and wearing crew-cut hair styles, somcrumcs multi -colored and greased into spikes. punt s are more noticeable in Coeur d' Alene than a large cily. They stand out ''like a sore thumb," said David Cohen, NIC sociology inslJ'Uctor. True punlers display a great deal of inwarddirected violence; however. all punters carry with them a message. According 10 Cohen. that message may be. " I'm different. I'm rebellious, or I'm not lit e the rest of you." " If they want to be accepted and they arc not and
this is their way of dealing Y.'lth rejection of nonnal integration. that is sad." he s:iid. NIC student Amy Speck has been punl for two years and enjoy'S showing her independenn: and individuality. It is mostly "against the conformist society." she said. Originating io Britain during the mid 1970s. the punl mO\·cmem began among the working-class youths who were economically deprived. Dressing outrageously with pins in their CilTS, noses and cbecb . I.hey lashed out in total disregard of British values. Punt spread to the United States through the British rod band, Sex Pistols, and Later broke into New Wave. Another such roct band is the Dead Kennedys.
With Ne"' Wa,·e cnme sl:im dancing. a ,iolent and aggressive form of dancing v.•bere the dancers s!Jm their bodies against each other This form of danc:mg spread quietly throughout San franclsro during 1981. The punt scene is typical of such ciries as San Francisco aod Los Angelos, but 001 the norm for this campus or for Coeur d' Alene. However. NIC is typic:il of a collegiate ntmospherc ••here diffe rent ideas are fo rmed aod trends followed, Cohen said. M0st of the punks are generally white. middle· or upper-class yoaths. very rarely any blacks. ''True punkers are arrogant and irreverent !llld io many v.avs anti-social." Cohen saidBut for°many. it is a fod. a new rashion or 2 search for identity. Punic is trendy "ith some counte r-culrure overtures. Cohen s.1id. but punl:ers mal:e themselves ,isible. ··f am al"ays cunous about these people who mate themselves visible." he said. "The) thinl that they arc the forerunners of 3 trend 1n the communit}," Punk is a more soph1stiC'3ted ~tyle of the 1950s mo,ement v.ith a more ,·iolent and nggressive fonn of rejection. It u~uall) appe.1h to lonely or alienated 1ee113gers. Some do not see much of a future ahead of themseh es. But just v. hnt is their future? Man) of them will JUSt drop back into society, he said. They mostly drop in through religion. Cohen said adding. the cults are really aurnctivc to them because the) recch·e n sense of belonging. " They go from one enreme to another," he said ~ cults gt,·e them something 10 belie\·c in. !llld the, •=1 to belie\Ci in something. Cohen said. Others drop in through different routes Onh ttme "111 show v. hether Punk is o fad that will wash ·o,cr, no matter the significance II presently ~a~ f-,r llS follO"-CfS. Speck ~1d that \he plans to continue with the Nev. Wa,e as II change~ and bclie,es 1ha1 soon it will be morc ac.--epted by society.
Does discrimination exist for women in classroom? coi,tlnued from paae I teriou,n c~~ of thei r academic and · career gooh becnu~e they feel their chances for profes5ional ,ucccu nre limited, the report said Tudieni can permit thi~ negative effcc1 on the academic o.nd profession al potential of women student,, lit· cording to lhc rcpon. wit h the follow. ing teaching hobib, - Addrt~~lng mole~ by name more often than women. - Interrupting women m1>rc often than males or pcnnmin11 ,1uden1s 10 lntC'rrupt them more often. - Rei.ponding 10 commcnh made by men while overlooking comments that arc ma.de b) women. -Crediting a male'1, comment by saying. " A~ Bill pointed out," but Riving orcd11 tn a • t:11 emcn1 by a female to a mAn who merely restates or develop• her comment. - Asking '"'Omen ques11ons th at require factual answers, but asking males quc~tions that require cntical thinking and personal eva.lu111i1>0. Daralyn Mauc l, NIC Engli•h lnstrut1or. said that after 1>he read the
report 11nd as scs)ed her teaching hobit), ~hC' v.~ !>hocked to find that &he " II) doing the things she h11d been cullun11ly ronJ1tioned LO do " I found mpelf doing the same thing• that I thought I " l>uld pcn.onaf. ly 001 do." Mane, .said. " It wu • b11 ,hock to me. I wll.S betng •eXJst tn my cla\il'OOm "hen it v. » ~ important to me no1 10 be." Several other NIC in:.tucton. v. ho are fo m11iu "ith the rC'port haH· al· tempted 10 c, eluate ,heir teaching method •. English Instructor Fay Wnght and Tim Pilgnm. journalism insll'IICl<>r. said the} ha, e not nouced thst the) treat males and females dlfferentl} in the cli1ssroom. " I don't catch m> .cir domg those things," Wnght 1>.ud "I ,,ould nttd an ®Jective SUT\l'}or 10 help me." Pilgrim sa,d he dido '1 noli.:e &n} big d11>CttpcnC) m the " ll) he commUm· cate• with studcn~. but be added th:at he found the infonnauon in the rcpon mtere•ting and is also re=ing bis teaching mrthods. " I would likl' to see 11 •llf'\-e)· done on
tht ',1C campus." Pilgnm s.ud He $Uggested an interested group on campus could pemaps do .i su.ne) of instructo~ to !>CC tf the results to the report ha,c any ,aJ1dit) lonlJy The ,cud, ~id some bel!C"e "'omen should adopt the m.iscultoe speech ,,nle, ,.-bile 11 also said that comments made b, •omen v.ho assume the mascuh~e style may be rejected because 1hey arc percl'hed to be hosttle and aggressh e rather th.in 0
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~ report did oot recommend that v.omeo abandon thl'tr method of speak.tog tn f3,'0I' or the aa~e Style beause re~:i.rch u beginning to sbov. that some of the panems ,.11mcn ll5l' such as 14g q u ~ or ,-oicc ln1on1tion. Ill.I) uu:ttll.Sl' paniapation m discussion and lead 10 the cooper•· 11\e dc\clopmcnt of ideas. The rq,on further said tb.u parori· pat10n or bolh males md females is significantly htghl'r 10 cluses instructed b) Mmcn. M:ue fucult) ma} be more likely 10 Cllll on males. 1t said. Class:room tttatmcnt such as 1gnor-
1ng ;ind interrupting women and failing ro gi,e them credit for their ideas may go unnoticed by both v. omen students and faculty, the report said. because it is an established pattern of rommuoication. To impro,e the classroom climate the report suggested v.·omcn: -Do an tnformal U1lly in n typical c~ ~ •uch for treatmcnr thnt folicJIP.s .uw.J panems. -0nC't1ss perceptions of classroom climates •1th other female students. -Ducuss sexual discrepancy wtth 10\tructor as a group -Ha,e a group conference with the department heod or dean 1f necessary. -Comment about clusroom ell· mate, either negatively or positively, on student e-,aluation (onM. -<ii,c posiu,e feedback 10 tnmuc, tors v.ho attempt to balance clas~ d1SCUSsions -AsL other students for comments :lbout their personal speaking ~• ylc. - Check the spccch,communication dcp...nment for classes th:it de,·elop skills in argumentation.
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Dance feier stirs with Se,en &Se,en Srogrnm~
Nov. ll, 1983/ Canilnal Re\ie"' -13-
er sports Alka-seltzer's the remedy for Butler, blacks say by Dan Breeden A North Idaho white supremacist
should be ignored an d allowed to .. fiole ou1:· according 10 at least two blacks "'ho attend NIC and who play basketball for the Cardinal ~. Cunb Gol~on and Delondo Foxx
responded wnh disma} to an Oct. 28 uucle 1n the CR. "'hich profiled the Rev. Richard Butler and his Aryan Nation Church of Jews Christ Chrisuan. In add111on. the Aryan r-.ations have
Dan Breeden photo STUDY TIME- -Dclondo Pon qulne1 Curtis Golston In bis dorm room as the) go over 110mc notes In prepantlon for an up('Omlng tc.i .
been receiving nauonal co,·erage hue!) b) both m:igazine and tcle\isioo. which. according co Golston 3nd Fon. isn't helping maner... Even though 1he,· have no doubts that Butler bcuC\es in what he is doing. they ,ie" the publicny as fuel to the fire. "Why give a madl113D air time on TV?" Golston said. "This gu) "ill c:ilk 10 anyone. We should ignore him and JUSt let htm fizzle OUI like Alkaselucr:· BC<'3use of Butler and his organiza· tion. both Golston and Foxx. who are vying for starting positions on the Cardinals. ha\.'e become concerned as "ell u fearful: Concerned for how some people may begin to view the black race a.nd fnghtened for their lwes. "Some people in this school ha\ e had limited. if aov contact \\tth blacks ... Golston said. "so the) pick up the newsp~r. read this amcle and automatinlly thmk bad of us Butler talks like onl) blacks beat up on kids and rape daughters . The pnsoru. are Cull of v.;hit,.\ who h.1\e done the same thing ·• All we wan! 10 do 1s goo to '>Choo! and plav ball. • he a.dded. Golston and Fon a.re also II hnle coo fused lb 10 "h, the black n.ec is bemg smgled out. "Wh> docsn '1 he IBllller) Sll) he hates lndi:ins or Chinese. they a.rcn ·,
whire:· Gol~on said. And "lull 3bout people's anitudes. Golston added. Some of the people ,.,. ho re:id about the Arvan narions and "h111 the~ Stlnd for a~ gotng 10 ~tln fechng som for blacks. and they :ire going to mn paymg more 3llenrn>n 10 them out of svmpa1h~. .. We don't ".Int 1hc1r S)mp3th) ... Golston ~id. "I JUSI "301 people 10 rake me for "h3t I Jm - 10 like me for "ho [ 3m... Foxx. \\ho camel> from San Diego and Jr,es off campus. was especially fearful for his life. I can't go aoywhcre w11hout looking over m\' shoulder:· Foxx said ... and thai's ;o, right."" Golston. a transfer student from Cleveland. C.:els the same "ay. .. ,r Butler or his people were out lookrng for bl3c:ks for :iny renson. 1vhcre \\Ould they go? .. Golston said. .. Here to the college. There's more blacl.s on campus than nnywhere else in Coeur d'Alene."' "And what kind of security do we ha\e? .. he added ...They could just walk into the dorm nnyume and just blo" us all aw11y ... Both Foxx and Golston said they enJO) going to school 0.1 NIC nnd enjoy the fnends the} have made. but since the surge of publicity towards rhc ArY3n N:itions. the\· have had second thoughts. . ..College is supposed to be fun, something 10 tell your kids about, .. Golston said... but I'm no! going 10 W..IJII to tell my kids about the Ary11n :-.:mons ... Becau...: both men come from l:irger c111es "here open rar:1al prejudice is non~xistem. this "hole business is nev. 10 them GoJ,.,ton s:iid. Bur neuher one can sav the\ haven ·1 ~en 1: before. Golston · for instllnce. "'" :attending c,:,llege in 1980 in West \ irg101:i. "'here he "'3tchcd in horror one night from hi~ dorm1101;, wtndow a, 11 i:roup of people burned a r:ross on .i hill °'crlooi:1ng the 1ov.n . .. Cross burning h by far 1hc m1rics1 ~hmg I"ll c-,er ,ee in mv hfe," Gol\ton .s:ud, reca[hng 1h:tt fearful night. Though Butler conunue\ 10 ~penk our :against bloci,;s and 1.1lb mnre Jnd more :abou1 gc111ng rid of them complc:td). Golston and Fo:n: :1dm11 the\· be:ar him no animo~m . •.-, don't hate the guy· (Bu1ler)," Gohtoo s111d. "I can·1. The Lord say~ DQI lO .
Om Breeden photo ONE ON ONE- -BccalliC of an area "bite supromadst group, black buketball pl.a)ers on tlN! NlC team ba\C bad llttOnd tho11gbts about aacnding the college.
.. \\1131 Butler docsn ·1 realu:c IS that we cbl:icksl didn't come here from another pl3nct. I come from my mother's "omb,JuSt like he did. And 1l "3S God that made us aJJ. He made everybody."
No,. 11, 1983/ Cardinal Review -1;$-
Basketball Women look strong , Crimp says b) Olanc Opdahl The "omcn·s ba,\ctball tc:am i, <llT tt> a ,1rong <r.lM iind i, l1'l•k1ng forn arJ 1,:, a ,u«e,~rut '-tas<!n. a~wrd1n11 to Co.a,h C.rci; Cnmp. With t>nly four !'t'turning pfi,vcr<; Crimp ~aid the tc.im h.i, limited e,pen~ntt. bu1 the, make up for 11 "ith hird "1>rr.. ,nd tc.im err. . n "Our team unit\ 1~ a stmnR (111tnl ... Cnmp '>llid. "It will be J rontril>utmg fac,1)1' 11> our \Ul-cc,,. ·• Relumm,t tor .ino1her ~c~lln nrc l\ a1h, lfarinitcr. who a,trnRed 18 potn s per game la\! ycJr, and SharlJ Lit, in , "ho averaged nine point, per
game . \ho on th~ II\I of rt turmn,t plo,•er< uc Karen Bu1tcrr1ctd uni! Tomi(' ~c1rhofer. Amon11 the frc~hman plu,cr~ arc four 11uar1h. Jt-nmfcr W:1gncr, Syd Cl:irk. K.ay ~hoonmol:cr nod Starin Encb-On. Cnmp \~1d :all four ore good gu.1rds a lot o r hu\tlc.
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Fre<hnton Jnm,c S1n11hopc wUJ btplaymg ,tui1rd. m)1dc and ,1ut<ide. as .. ,.II 11s forwnrd. wuh J.inet Greenfield .,J,o plan11g th<' forw11rd f'lll'lhon. C'cnter po,it1on 1, filled by wphoml\fc Eat anger. wh h L1h·1n plav111g ~uord. ulong "1th Mcirhofcr Crimp ,,ud he ha, introduced a nc" tldln,c '>'h.'111 lhi~ \'Car. and the pl.lycr, Ol'l' learning II qu1ckl) '"lhl'\ rr,pond to 1hc teaching dt'meni "rll," Crirnp ,old. C'rimp s,ud th.ii hl' would h:we to see the player\ In n ,crirnmJgr \ltua1ion bcl<lr,· he: C\lUld mnkc o dc,t"1on ubnut the \IArting lineup. but that he prnb11bly \\ Ou ld u~c two ,ophomorcs for c,pcril'nc,·. I hrcc V\l llcyholl plti)•cr~. Tcrcu Conrnd, Lauri Sornp,on and Meh\,;.t llnrvev. ore c,prctcd l•l join the 1com al ,1 lo1cr da1c. a\ well O\ Thcrc\a Oed er rrom the ems, euuntry 1eam.
Match tonight, tourney Saturday for young Card wrestling squad
8&511 'Fnuu photo
FLYING IDGB--Sopbornorc Mark McKenna geLS a lesson I n ~ from 197S gl'llduate Terry Durtancl darlug the IIJlllual alamnl m.aicli Nov. 5 In the gym. The alumni bea1 the nment NIC tCtlll 46-19.
One of the younges1 NIC wrestling 1eams ever "ill face Gray's Ho rbor College here tonigh1 111 7:30 and will play host for 1he NIC Takedown Tournament tomorrow 111 10 a.m. The urdinals, who are relatively untested so for thb season. have o nly three returning swrters and o tot.al of seven sophomores. Coach J ohn Owen said he e:tpecls the team to do fa ir ly well in the wedown tournament, as they have done in the past, although t heir inerperience will be a factor . "It's gonna Ill.kc us 3 little while 10 ge1 the depth ," Owen said. "E.xpen· ence is a very natural thing."
Icorns cn1cred In the tournament are the University or Montana, Gray '~ Harbor. E.'ISte rn Woshington University, Big Bend. No r1hwcs1 Nazarene. W ashington Stoic Unaver,i1y. Norlhern Mo ntana and Western Montana . Owen said he feels he has found the leadership necess ary for any good t ea m In re turn ing sta rt e rs Randy Tnlvi, Sieve Kluver ~nd Tom Phelon. He also said 1h111 he was impressed wilh 1he auitudc of the freshmen in the progrom. "They have good work habits." he said. "I thinlt by March we'll have• good team ."
Forget ye llow brick road, follow Maniacs I guess I'm from the school I.bat belie,'CS a 1eam's name sbouJd renec1 so me facet or the city it represents. The Orolioo Maniacs is my fa,-orite team name in Jd.3ho. considering Orofino is kno wn for its lnrge sta1e mental facility. Would n't a Slale loa_ded with these more accurotcly nruned 1eams be a break from a "''O'tld full or lions and Tigers and Bc:irs. ob my. and Cardinals and Vikings and lndinns too. To the north or Coeur d'Alene we could have the Hayden Hitlers llnd the Rl11hdrom Devil Worshil)pers. faen farther nonh would be the Bonners Ferry Faggots and the Smell. from Athol. A classit- match up ro the sou1h of us would be the Plummer Pipe Wreoches ,·ersus. of course. the Worley Birds. I m1gn1 1\1!>0 oc mteresung 10 see the Rexburg Monnons go up agl.lnst the Sam, Manes C:ttholics
"itb the Bliss Utopias wa.i ting in the wings for the
\\iMers. While the Wallatt Hookers eat ap the Kellogg CoTllflakes, the Post Falls Downs could come out smoking against the Smelterville Inversions. Whether you're a fruit and vegeuble nut or a junk food freak. you could liod 3 fa,'Orite team symbol in either the Fruitland Citric:s or the Madison Dollies. Who could ignore the creativity of a state with teams like the Rope Despairs, the Haley Copters. 1he Nampa Auto Pans and the New P lymou1h Pilgrims. Nonhcra tea.ms would )eatl) cross many county boundaries onl\' to face the Meridiaa Lines. and many teams might be surprised by the Troy Ho=. Even Mr. Andropo, would follow the progress of the Moscow Reds and the Amcriea.n Falls Overseas And "Kho wouldn't "'ant to \ t t the Burle:, Dudes
knoc:lt heads.
Coeur d'Alene caa.ld
{esro:cc one of lhe biggest
willy
weech intra-city rivalries io the stale with I.he Lue City Shoreliners ba11ling against 1he Coeur d' ~lene Hagadone:s, wit.h the Downtown Merchants ,mp•· tiently waiting fo the res ults. . It would be oic,: lO see a change. 1J would bc ruce to see the Ketchum Up~, ihe Stanley Laurels an~ the Salmon Eggs go upstream from where conveotioo2l team 112JOCS once WCTC. The l0\\1l of Hll.mer just won't ~em comfortable until it gets ia Slacks. M3ybe we should folio" the rnani~ for a change. and give the swe o ne,. name. It could be Wilder Than facrS.
Nov. 11 , 1983/ CaniinaJ Review -15-
Williams wants right mix for this year's Cardinals b) Dan Breeden
Tricky moves
Bull Fran_i photo
Pool pro Jade While dcmoONtratcs lhe One art of bllluds d uring bis Nov. 4 show In the, SUB Came Room.
Volleyballers downed at regional; three named to dream team by Kalb)' Canl~ o
1l1rcc: Cnrdln11I volleyball pla)1crs were named to the AII-Rcg111n 1c11m follO'l'mg the NJCAA Region 18 Vollcyboll Toumnmcnt m Rexburg lo\t month. Freshman Tcrc~n Conr11d Wlb nomed LO the All-Region fir..t learn. v.bilc frcshma_n Lynn L:iucr ond ~phomorc Shonnon Sullivan were ,•oted 10 che i,t(Ond team, according to NI(' Coach Roy Cook. The Ciudlnah loi.t m three 11amcs to Trca.\ orc Vollev Community College to their fir\t tournomcn1 nction Bl Red,urg, ond then 10~1 to 011ck:imus College 10 ft,e game, Ricks College. th e volleyball po"er or the NJC'AA Region I , do"ned NIC In lhrcc 11amcs in the Ca rdinal '~ lost m111ch of the 1ourn11mcnt Cook attnbutcd the NIC' losi.c~ 011nin\l Cloctnm~ ai. :i lad of cooccntr:iuon. " We h~d good hoMl c nnd good pl,wl> and vollc~s." he said. "but ou r e.i.ccution of the ba~1~ - and c:i.pcdRII) our loci. of C\)nccn1rntion - wasn 't good alter 1h11 los~ h> Trc:11.\urc Valley " The lo~, to R1d,i. apparcnth did not come a. n ,urpri\C 10 thl' team. 11r-ronilng 10 Cook. "We were unable to beat them befort... the: coach !>lid "The, ha,c 1 , .Cl) sound, tough team." · Rk~\ and Trc11surc Valle) both earned berth> at the national tournament, "' bile Clacbmus and NIC tied for third pllce ofter tht' , erond round of tournament pl" ended. 11~rJin11 10 Cook. • Although the Cudin al team wai. JUSt 5-18 after th,,. ~ o . Co.». said the) were 11 good Improvement over la.st yea_r's bqu:id. The team will lose only two sophon1orcs. Sulliqin and Lon Lauer. to graduuion ncx1 year. Cook said _1ha1 although he hopes all eight freshm3-0 will return next year, NIC vollcyball lubtOry has i.ho" n th111 only half of the freshmen .... ill return to the team. C~k will hold tl)·out5 for high school seniors 11nd NlC &c~hrncn interested in ~ ng for the women's NIC' volleyball squ11d neJt faJI. The tl)'OUts v.iU be held • 3 and 10 at 11 a.m. In Chrii.tianson Gym.
The answer is team chemistn. The ques1ioo: How to take the ~IC Cud111al men's basketball team to 01111onals this year. According to Coach Rolly Williams. th3t is the team's main objcai\e. "What "'c: b.ave to find is complc:· meming iod,~iduals ... Williams said. "Tbe best players don't alv.ays mnlc: the best team." But nght no"' the: team has been plagued w11h a number of minor inJunes such as pulled ligaments, sore: bads. commom colds and Oo. These ailments arc slowing the: sevi:h of finding the: winnmg combinations. Williams said. A team can al"'a)s plan on some: injuries. he s.iid. HowC\'er. \Villiams expressed more concern "'ith mental injuries rather than physical mjurics. "We're tt)'ing to elimmate $Orne of last year's problems when we lost about six people because of acadermcs." W"tlliams said. "We: had one team the fim semester and anolher I.he: second." Tb:at mnles "'inrung a linle more diHicult. but Williams said he: is pleased thus far "'ith the pc:rformllllcc of his ncv. rtcrun.s. 'T d like to think thev are 311 ouuunding." William~ said of his nc:"' roundballer~ . " We hnc: good balance and a lot of depth I feel v.c: ha~c a number of players ,.ho v.ul contribute." The Can:tiAal's offense ,~ b.1s1e&lly the same as in pa.st )Can, ,.h,ch, 11cconhng to \V'tlJ131ns , is pnnc,pally a pnssing game,
Dcfeosi\·ely the roundballers run mosd) man to mJn, but "different sttw11ions d1cme differcm defenses." Williams said. adding. 1he C:irdi. will ho1,·e to be -lble to thro" a zone into a ball game when needed. Staners for the men· s team are still up in the air. Williams stated, because injunes lllld illness arc keeping some From prat:tictng. Ne... freshmen who -.;11 be ,')'ing for starting positions include Tarc:11 Ua,,a. son. Walt Wiley, Jeer Byrd. John Nilles. StC\·e Fedler. Kevin Willfams. Neil Stephens and Rand) McGo"em. Sophomore m1nsfc:r students arc Jern Rimblert and Curtis Golston. "hit~ Tim Atwood. Greg Gaulding Delondo Foxx :ind KC\in Shuss arc returning Crom lasr ye ar 's Cardinal team. "Right no"' we're just tt}ing to see "·ho·s going to be: able to function at "hat posiuon." Williams said. " We h:i,·e got some nice-looking kids, and it's a mauer of getting them where "·c "''ant them." Although the: men's crucial games do not st:irt until the middle of J:inuary. Williams s.iid the Cards arc gening ready no" for plnyoIT situations. The bcncr :i team's rtcord 1s at I.he end of the: ~ell.Son. the bc:ner their chances arc of hoi.ting a playoff ga me. WUliams said. "Home noor has a tremendous ad\'antagc: come playoff time." he said. The Cardinals open their season at home ov. 2t> against Spok:lnc Communit) College:.
Nationals Squad running in Kansas b, K.ellJ Wud
lbc eot.trc M C' men's cross cuuoin, team and r,.o runners from rhe "'omen·~ tC'irn \\tll compete in the rui10rw meet S.irDrd.1) after placing htgh at the Region 16 meet lut ..eek.end in T"1n Falls. ln the li\'c,mile rourse. ~IC Sophomore Gon1) Hc:.ith placed third :ind Da,-e Sm11.h placed fifth. Other quallften from the t-.lC men's team were \\ idc Hoilam!. Jahn Bursell, Joe: Weadic:l and Steve NaRQrb. 'li.ationals v.111 be held al Hutchm!IOII , Kan. For lhe ..-omen ~ team. k>J>homo~ \felarue Candia "ho took 61 st out of 200 runners 11 nauoral.s 13.Sl year. placed Dintb a1 the regional meet to qui~ for nauOll.lh agam. '4hile freshman Laurie BnSlOW's 14t.h-pl:icc: finish ns 3.lso good tor :a benl! 11 ft.lllOnah. ln the men's dl\lsion. Heath ran the course m 26: 18. Smith in 2o:27. Hoiland in 27:0,l, DurseU in r:23. Wc:adick ui 2o:OO, and Nagort:1 m Jl :JO. lo the ""omen's race, v,bich covered 5.000 mc:tc:JS, Candia had a time of 20:07 and Brurc,v. ran the cowse in 20:48. The o ther "''Omen &om the ream wbo did 001 qo:a!_ify for the national meet were G:i.i.l SLSt. Amelia &rril, Theresa Peo1ecos1. Tberc:s:i Becker and Dillnt KeD}.
No,. II , 198J ' Ca.rdina1 Re, lew
( A chamber moslc recl Lal wlll be held No,. 20 In the C-A Audiorlam. reaturing soloists from the North Idaho Sympbon) Orchcs1n1. AdmlMlon ls S2 for 11dull5, SI for chlldren, JtJJdenf.s and seniors. NJC s111dcnts, Cacull) and s tall, as "ell as gold card holde rs ....w
- 16-
• • n1c notices
The ~lC Ubrv) ...-W be open from 1~ p. m. on Sa:odays during !\o,em• her, and f:rt>m I~ p.m. on Ott. .i and 11. On Sa:oda). Dec. 18 the library vill be open from 10 a.m. lo 6 p.m. Snu:knt 11sc 'l'ffi be mo.nltorcd IO de1crmJoe ll SimdaJ opcl.ngs •ill co111lnoc.
be adrnJtted uec.
)
AnJ student llSlnlt \ ,\ eda catlorual beoefi~ "' ho retti\ ed 11 lct!cr from the SI. Paul , A l nsuran~ aod CoUe<-tloo Cc-olcr lo '1 lnoes o1a regar d in g ao o, crp.a.> mcnt sboqld dls r e~ard t he lcttl'r oolcss he "'tD!S YA lo deduct lhe o, crpa) mcnl lo 1hrec m o nthlJ lnstallmeo 15.
Allie: Kurtz \ "oi,. an lns1JUC1or al
NIC will ob~nc Tlwtk.ighlng •~ a bollda). No classer. ..-w be bcld NCI\. 24 or 25.
~,c. ..-m be co:ncfoctlo1t
II W*-"l\ 0 D1lU1
an show in I.be Coeur d' Aleuc 01} H.aII CouudJ Chambers t.broogb oH!mber aod Dcttmber. lndodcd in the d,o... "lliil be ber rll"St platt d,..., ing from I.be juried nhi· blllon or I.be Flrs1 AAoaal W° ~ lem
Because or 1be Tham.sghlng holid ay , oo Cardlnal Re , le" wlU be pobUshed No,. 25. The oen ISSllt! or lhc CR, which will be the 6naJ lsr.ue or the semester, will be publlshed Der. 2.
ConHnlloo Cckr.
T he lass day 10 wllbdra• from school Is No'- 23, acconll.ag 10 the Registrar's Office.
Snrdeots are lo, lted to jolu a oc" IJ formed Btble srud1 g,oop lmll mee" \ Jonda,s aJ noon In lhe Shoshone
AJl sl'Udcnts enroUcd for IO c-redlts or more nqtomallcalh bll,c slUdeDJ hcahb lnsllrllllcc. Fo; more lnfomatlon or clalm form s, bl!C nurse Jo Marino, lcb In Sl'Udco1 Bulth on 1be second floor or the SL'B.
The oe" how, for the NIC Bookstott arc a.m. lo .i p.m. Mon~ thrt,ugb Frtda~ . The bookstoro wll.l no lon ge r be ope n on Monda) aod l'ucsdA, Cl' cnlogs.
\\ o.m cn's Art Sbo" C&SC'· w-blcb w&S held ID Sccptc~r a.I I.be 'Jorth Shore
The Vl'ler&M AdmlnlsrraJlon lnfor• ma lion boorb In th e fo\ er or the SU"B I~ now open full 1lme. · Check there for \clenan lnfonn&tlon before going 10 lhe opsllllr'I offit'c .
JOA.
, ..._
Wo rk-slody 1lme s heet, maat b• sig ned b~ I he s upe r visor and U.e cmplo,t-e and ln(-1~ the cmpio,ee•, SO<"IAJ "4.~ urll;t n1U11ber. Shcc111 ·...., be l amed In to the 0DaMIAJ aide oftke b) noon on Nov. 21, or no check wWbe ls ~ucd No,·. J O. All olher colleae time s hecb are d ue a l the hu loua offlc.e by Nov. 2..1. All ,cc dub meetloa• wlU be held the St-cond Monda) ol eath month at 3 and S p.m. All c:oUegc 1111dco11 an ellglblc and cneouragcd to Join.
Law cmfort1!mcnl
omrw,
wlU be
1owln1t I WI) CITII parlced In lbe middle 1ho Sherman School partiioa lot. Th111 area 1111 an cnforeed low -away 1one.
or
Room nf lbe Sl'B.
The college grounds deparlmcot asks lha1 snrdenc.. and staff ru,f bad their •tblde1, ln10 parl..laa ~pac:r~ ~ ll Inhibit, clcaoup or \Ide• a.lkl ud gvurn.
NJC Is go ing abroad •&•In nest ~umme r to Flolaod , Lapland aad E,1onla and Sc-ollaocl. For more laformatloo, ronlllet Leona llasset o -
l o conjane rloo " llh IC's 50 th Aonhersary, the NIC SloloSI..) Depart · mens ,.11_1 bold an Open House on To~,. 'lo~. from II 11.m. 10 J p.m. oo 1hr .....,ronJ Ooor Seller l!JIII . Rclreshmenls, dlsplaH an d door prlu-.. "'Ill be olkred.
n.
USK to Nov. 12
LOOKER Nov. 14 LION starting Nov. 21 featuring in December AVENGER AND FANATIC
ur
All vcronms whh etplrcd dcllmlUna dale\ wbu "anl .-~1cnslomi for vocallon11I t ra lnln Jl & old roo t1 c1 lht YC le raM nfftoln ofnl·e.'