The North Idaho College Sentinel Vol 53 No 13, May 11, 1989

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Lights, camera, action!

'Let 's go out to the ballpark'

College video festival hosts a compilation of video vigneucs produced by RATV practicum students.

Cardinal baseball team must win to stay alive for post •season play.

Library funds probable The elusive new library/computer science facility Nonh Idaho College has been pushing for may become reality. according to optimistic statements made by Gov. Cecil Andrus Friday, May 5. A surplus eliminator bill, approved by the Idaho Legislature this spring, promised NIC a S3. I million s_harc specificially for college building projects if proposed state revenues exceeded projections. According to a Coeur d'Alene Press anicle, Andrus said the economy has improved enough for his administration to be confident the money will be available by June 30. NIC President Rohen Bennett said groundbreaking will be delayed until the college raises another S600,000 locally.

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The

Sentinel North Idaho College

Volume 53 Number 13

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Thursday, May1 1, 1989

LIBRARY

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Coeur d'Alene, Idah o

Vo-tech expands courses

NIC plans to add logging program Certified sa wyers added to North ldaho job marker by Darrel Beohnor

In nn effort to offer courses more closely related to 1he North ldoho job market and to help ot· tmct more busines~es to the area. the North Idaho C'ollegc Vocarionol School is C'tpanding the number nnd variety of clnsjcs thllt have been offered in 1hc past, soid Bernie Knupp, director of postSC<!Ondnry education. "We're booming; (private) business i, booming," Knnpp ~aid. "We can help them (new buslnCS$cs) do cu)tomiied 1roining; we cnn don lot or things ror them.'' Courses related to businc~ ond Industry hnvc ncnrly doubled in the IMI year, Knnpp said. The vocational department hns rc«ived nearly SS00,000 in gmms this year, compared 10 S300,000 hut year. One of the new courses being offered through NIC's vocational

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school is on tree falling and logging safety. The six-week class will be stoning Moy IS and will ncco111modo1e 12 students who will be taught 10 be safe sawyers, accor• ding 10 Knapp. The logging program was developed 01 Flathead Community College (FCC) m Montono. "That school (l·CC) wanted o $2 million liabiliry Insurance policy

so they would be covered, but you con'l buy S2 million worth of the insurnncc for eight weeks because it's 1101 cconomicnl." Many area logging companies arc interested in the cOul'$Cincluding Potlatch, Plum Crttl.. , Louisinn11-Pocific, lmcrmount:iin Forest Industries Association, the Department or Labor and Industrial Scn•iccs, plus many smaller independent loggers. Knapp said. "After this initial program goes, we're going 10 suirt a sawyer safety certification course," Knapp said. "That will mean an instruct.o r going out into the field, onto the job sites at the request of the companies 10 test their sn11o1·ers. If the sawyers don't pas.sit, the instructor will up grade them on the spo1. When they (the sawyers) pass the test, they will be a certified sawyer." Knapp said. ''In the ruturc it may become a requirement lhat all sawyers be certified ...

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by RoMma,y Pe1tr1111

Celebrate Idaho- - The Centennial balloon visits Coeur d'Alene on lls trip around the state.

Budget stalled by lawsuit by Randa ll Green

That money Is tucked a,,..11y a cmificate of d(l)OS1t ae00\lllt, draWUJg i.nle!'CSt until bt OlStrict Court Judge Richard Magnuson, Associated Stud(IILS of NIC (A51'1C} and their anorney. Norm;in Gis.s<I, decide iu fate. Tbe college will ha,e to absorb attorney's recs, according to NlC President Roben Benoeu. He said estimated auomey fees will be about Sl2.000-Sl3.000. '•We a.1,,.-a )'5 SCI a.si<k 8Jl emergellC) coruingmcy fund to co,cr these kinds of unforscen coru." &~u said tn

Rca50ns North Idaho College's administration broke faculty and stllff salary ocgotia · Lions are varied, but until lhe judgment regarding the senlemen1 over the disputed ''Outdoor Facilities Fee" is resohed, administrators are treading water in the sea or budgetary restrictions, according tO RoL1nd (Rolly) Jurgens, dean or administration. " If the college has 10 go out and look for runds. salary increases could be affected. but the fate of the SJ00,000 ,.ill ha\c no errec1 on sala~." Jurscns SJ.id,

Implications or the sun will arrect ruturc consuuc:tion related to the library because the college won't have that money (l300,000) to help defer some of the project cosupavtllg the adJommg parkmg lot, et.c., Bennett said. That moll(') v.ill ha\e to be absorbed out or the maintenance and operauons budget or another source. "About 72.S percent of our total operational budget is for salaries; the remaining 27.5 pcroenl is (or maintenance and operations." Bennett said.

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Terrorism likely to be around for a long time by Shannon Hayward Terrorism will be around (or a long lime, according 10 Detcclive Sgl. Varon Svoray of Israel. Svoray spoke on the topic or terrorism a1 lhe Popcorn forum on Friday, April 28, in 1he Communication·ArlS Auditorium. Most of his rnlk deah wi1h rirsl•hand ac· counis of confroniauons with 1crroris1s as a member of hr:icl's Ceniral Police Command Unil. "Terrorhrn is crrcc1ive and h's cheap. And becau\e it's cheap nnd errcciive. ii will be around for n long lime," Svoray said. " I crror l\m is n \CriOu\ problem because somehow we hove a misconception about whni II i\."

"Terrorism is effective and it's cheap. And because it's cheap and effective, it will be around for n long Iimc." ·1hi\ m1sco11ccp1ion come\ lrom 1hc media in 1hc form of boo!.,, umglllinc:s and 11-grudc 1110, 1c~. he ,uid, whkh tend 10 ~nM1tiounll,c 1hc role or u tcrrornt. "Whn1 do 1ciro1hts do?" Svorny 11il.cd, "Tcrrorhts 1crrori1e. They try 10 111:hic,c Iheir goo I~by any wny they i:w,. When the} di,cove1 demoancy dOt'\11'1 worl., the) 1c,or1 10 violence." Ofll'n tcuorim' ,•ioknl nCI nrc agam\l 1hcir own f>eople, he ~nid. rorsc1\ arc

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Roumal) Pelersen

Yaron Svorary

unimportant 10 a terrorist and serve as a horrendous way 10 bring exposure to the terrorist organiwtion, he said. ''Terrorism is bad because terrorists arc nothing more than murderers," Svoray said. There ore over 217 terrorist organizations worldwide, Svoray saJd, and some arc notorious. sut'h as the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), Red Brigade and the Irish Republican Army (IRA). Other smaller organizations consist as a revenge vehicle for a particular group of in· div1d1duals. he said. Svoray said terrorism aro~e in the late 1960) because of a worldwide belief lhat a revolution was coming and as people joined 1ogc1hcr 10 prepare, the result was terrorist group) The theory of 1erromm was wntten in 1967 by the kingpin of 1crrorism, Carlos Marlegclla, in a book cntulcd "The Urb3n Guerilla's Warfare Guide." The book por· uaycd 1he police force as ineffective. Ac· cording 10 Svoray, Marlegclla said, "Most police around 1hc wolld arc no1 equipped to deal with wcll-organi,ed tcrrori\l groups." Thi, phllo,ophy h~, pa\cd the wny for more groups, 5, ora> ,aid. l he rcalhy of terrorism, ac~orthna to Svc,my, ore the young buy, who arc gunrnn1ecd trnin,ng Ill ~ "o man and n I rtcdom righ1er " Monyyoun3 people ml) sec 1lm n, n w11> 0111 or on oppre\\hc fil"c\1ylc, he \B1d, bu1 actuall> rc,;cl\c onl)' three or lour w-cck\ of training (automatic wc"l!pom, grenades, ,omc e,plos1\CS) and arc 1old not to II orry b~:au<,e "nothing will hllp(l('II" ~,ora) ,;ud most (l('Ople cn,1~mn lcr· rom1, n, mon,ter,. bu1 what he ha, s«n hn,e t,ctn ,t.inn~ 15->car old. lonr·haircd l>o}~. drc)scd in running ,h~. tom blue Jc.in, and 1 -shirts. lfe hu ~ctn poor!> trained I ~-)ear-old mrori\1 bo>, hold do,en\ <)f )Choolch1ldrcn hostage and l.111 \C\ eral others and throw their bodies out of windO\\S, The.SC "lerrori,ts" -.ere stonncJ b> pohce in the )Choolhousc 1tnd not able to use their ,1eapons propcrl> and " ere shot b> poti<'t', ht ~1d. "This 1s the reaht)' of terrorism." s,ora) ~1d. "Th~c )Oung bo)s ha,t no ,atuc to the 1errorut, ~ust they att c\pcndablr." "To fight ttrrorism, there 113.) 10 be a will," s,om} said. a "ill that he 53id b loclins in the world tod3~ ··Toe "ar on tcrrori<m depcn<h on us. lhe ptaple.'' s,ora) <..atd Ht ga,c 1he 19 J bombing murders or l J I Marines in Lebsnon, which w.u e\Cn· 1uall~ linlC\i 10 Syrian 1n1elligcnrc, as an e,:implt ''But what h.3,c )OU hc,ard about ii l )riln 1n,ohcmcn1)' ,01hing'" be i.aid "Thc:.t !JI were not imporunt enough to <c, er 1~ 11 uh Srru The) •ere t-\pell· dable." "You tu\C: 10 light terrorism "ith understanding," s, 01'11) said. ··Terrorism c.in be (go1tcn) nd of. but for a price .. usually 1he h, cs of innocent pcoplccaught in bctw~n the crosslirt."

pholo br Ro1tm.iry Ptltraon

Student mlner--Gerald Chapman demonstrates Jock-leg drillIng lor Sierra Sliver Mine 1ourts1s

Silver mine serves as a college classroom by Rosemary Peltraen The S1crr1 S1hcr Mtne near \\ allacc

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h.n b«n a d.iwoom a, m11ny a, 18 !':onh Idaho College 1udems dunn1 the

l hi. ·on,111u1cd the u\C or 11bout I SO pounds of e~plO'i111n .i.nd hand trammel in& lpu1h1na1 ,1 me,h.iniuJ, moun1cd mud1m1 n .1 hme 2,0 feet 10 1he cxm1de and then ba,k an uptull 10 the Job site, Amon\On \aid , r-ornuUy, there are rout ma voup 11onh a teacher for ure1y and c.,pcd1cn I:'/ of 1cadung, and in the Sierra there wu a chance for ca,h penon to learn 10 do c•cf)thma. Amoni,on said. "II 11,a.s good for the 11udtnh to do some public: scr-1ct "'ork and at the ,ame umc learn more about underiround mmmg," Caron said. There is funding for this type of cl.a.st unul lhc middle of 1990. Trairung will conunut un1il the money runs ou1 or~ long a.s !here IS Job potential for mmer\

l,:m ~tmcstcr. John Amonson, mlmn1 ,t.111~ teacher 11 SIC, and 011.~ Caron, coordm.,1or bc1111cm the colltge and the mane, ,-aid they arc cnuius1u11c about the r~ul!) ol the cl.a!.> that ran from Jan 23 10 graduauon on April 21 The m10c 1s • non-v,orkrng bu1 1uthen11c ~her rrunc that bu flSCUla:'!'d man) ,·i.\itors an the wt few )tan ....~n 1hC') tu.ct~ S1crn S1h CT Mme lour. It is nOI aJ11,n)-s CU} to 11,alk through some: of the 1WT0111cr places, so W~e\ ma)Or, Mo Pclfu.Jer, suggested that the srudenu from ",IC -..bo "ere 11,ork.ing m the Atw \tint uamu:g area migh1 tile 10 do \OlllC worL for Sierra The U1 the area, AmoOM>n laid. The cwrcn1 class of 18 lrudenn 11• the studenu could gel moJC c.~pcncn.e wod.ang underfTO!.llld thC'fc, Amonson Atlas 1U graduate II lhc end of July, Atro...on "1id. <Sid. Sm"" the students didn't recene any lht:3ll) l.beSt siudenu ,.-o:lld be lea.rill.II~ and "'orl:.mg pan of the umc pa) for I.bu "-Oik experience and ttlJJl· :i•oond •he out>Jde ol the AtLn MIM 1111, Amonson said. they only 1001; the 1 and :he re-· of the trme in the c~oom. Sierra Siher Job because t is a non· .\t the icrr3 thC} got 1he opportwuty profu org3.111Z8uon . The: tours of the Sietra Sihcr ,\line, to be 31..'tUall) underpoond and learn the D«eSSal) s..ills or widerung lbe IWlDCI 11,bJCh d ~ from the Wallace: Mining b> muct.iog ou1 Lbc b:u:k, Amomoo Museum, began Ma~ 6 amt will conunuc said

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Thursday, May 11, 1989

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New officers to guide student board throughout '89-90 NIC. school year by Linette Freeman

The A.ssocia1cd S1udcn1S of Nonh Idaho College (ASNIC) sele(;led 1hcir leaders for 1he 1989-90 school year and the student board will be under 1he leadership of presidcn1-clec1 Joe Newman. Newman is 22 years old and hails from Corvallis, Mont. He currently works for the Osburn police depar1mc111 and is a criminal jus1ice major. One of the currcnl ~ophomorc scna1ors, Elianc \Vilches-Pena, will be assisting Newman in 1he role of vice presidcn1. Wilchc-$-Pcna is a Coeur d'Alene resident and is majoring in pre-law. The poshlon of ac1ivhies director will be OIied b>• child development major Lisa Vnndcnwan. Vandenwan is from Priest River. ·n,e three sophomore scnn1or positions ore being filled by Katy Curry, Greg Johnson and Mike Davi~. Curry's major is a1 1his lime undcddcd and she is from KingMon. Dnvis is a pre-medical major who plans 10 con1inue in 1hc chiroprnc1lc field. He is originally from Bonners Ferry. Johnson il from Old1ow11 and i\ n l11w cnforccmcn1 major. Some of the new officers hove nlrc.1dy token ovtr 1hcir respective l)O\hions. Newmon Is 1hc :!Cling president, \Vilches-Pena I~ 11tc oc1ing vice-president ond Cu1ry ho\ token the pince of Wllches-l>cna a, o vo1lng senator for the rcmolndcr of the year.

i\,'COrdlng 10 Wilches-Pcnn one of the goals for ncx1 yeor, boord If 10 work on decrcas111g ~tudcn1 npa1hy ond incrcnsl' studc111 i1wolvcmetll.

photo by Aprtl Muh•

New ASNIC officers- -New student leaders for NIC next school year are (from tell) Mike Davis, Joe Newman, Katy Curry, Lisa Vanderiwan, G,'la Petri (secretory) and Ellene Wllches·Pena.

New Sentinel editors chosen to lead staff As 1poru ed11or. Brusn Walker from Moni .. 11 replac1na 'ihan• \\ 1th the end or )pnns Kme11er non Ha)llliard. Walker', aHhtunl ha, como the end or lhc 19o&-89 Sentinel not been )Cle,;tcd . editor tenure and the bqlnrung or 1hc Dan>[lc Batley from Wall.ace rcpl.lccs n~ cdnor 1enurc Jim Drake-1.apo, u photo cd110,. \\ 11b lhe 111creasmg v.or ~ load this BadC) '1 WlllUIJII II not 1electcd. Draltc-Lapos, from Mtiloul.l, 1 new past )ear's cd11on hl\C cxpci icnccd, this coming ~ear editors •ill ba~e as1istanu bUS1nt11 manigcr. Ams1ing DrakcLa~ u Patty Gallagher from Twin 10 aid in the resporuibility. Lakes All cdnors and lhnr miswiu recci,c LeaVU1g 1hc campus, Green will ma a nominal gnn1 and a.re paid a 1mall jor tn 1oumalum 11 1M Uni\tnity of wage fOI lhru " ork Replaring RaDdail G1«1, as chief Monwia. Turk plans lO attead college 111 "es1crn Washing100, and Hay.i,a1d cduor asc co<d.nors Darrd Bedulcr from Murra) and ROSClll3J')' Pet~n plans lO 'wOtk Ill print media and WC oigh1 courses R01, plans 10 remain a1 from \\ allact. Colleen Perron rrom N.I C oc:u fa.II Spokane is an assbWll cduor Each of lhc eduors and their ·~'S editor is UMt1e Freeman from Post Falls in plact of Rain« Turk . Her umunu sa) they look forti-ard to !heir jobs and for~ a lot or \\otk ahead or assisWll IS Robbie Kleoholz, also from lht-m Post Falls Btthner sums up h.ia 1n.'1.ic1y b, sayD.n-id CanbofT of C«ur d'Alme IS UlC ans and crueram.men1 cdnor m ing, "As cxxaprau, or tlu, sb,p, l lhtnk pl3ce of Walter Ross. AUi5ting the fint question 1,,c need to ask is, Carl.huff is \Ionics Kiddie from C«ur 'W'buc tbc hdl u thb sh p 1,0U!g?' Rig/It D~ I h3\ C D<> idea." d' .\Jene.

by Ralnte Tul'lt

'89·90 Sentinel editors- - (Top, from left) Nils Rosdahl, adviser, Jim Drake-Lapos, Brian Walker; (bottom from left) Linette Freeman, David Ca1khuff, Darrel Beehner. Rosemary Petersen and Oanylle Balley

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Environment abused 11 's a prc11 y easy guess 1ha1 nearly everyone on Lhe NIC campusfocuhy and students alike- are chomping al the bit waiting for the summer break. Graduates arc probably looking toward summer with a little 1repida1ion because finishing school also m~ ns find ing job5 or getting ready for another scigc of classes in a bigger four-year school. In any case, summer will be a welco me change from th e long winter, rainy spring and all the pres,urcs of school lests, deadlines nnd late-night study msions. This lost semester seemed lo cause much stre\1 for most everyone. Many s1udcn1s were trying 10 juggle 100 many crcdil~ pl us o job and somc1imcs a fomil y. ·n,cs11 oin of commu ti ng for mnny hos been relieved with 1hc mclling of 1hc ice ond mow, und one more prc~\nre !, off for a while. So, ii\ lime 10 hil 1hc bcache\, hlk· Ing troll\, fuvori1e ri,hu111 hole). wo1c1 ski~. varations n1 th e ()(eon, 1110111110111, or dcm ts ond kick bacl, and rclnx for u while. 11 's ol!o ti111e 10 I OOK n1 our sur 101111<.llng\ 11 11<1 opprcclote the girls 11111111c hos given u~. 'I hlll mean~ 10 keep them the wny they li re 01 make them belier. Oon'l throw thO\C aluminum cnns n" oy. Do n't even pick u1> a plns11c 1011111 food co111t1iner they 101:<' SOO yea rs to di1.,ol"t imo the ground nnd produce

a toxic gas when burned . Using liquid soap ins1~ad of phospha1e-filled powdered types wiU keep the lakes crystal clear instead of growing in1 0 meadows. Each 1imc a paper 1owel (or unnecessary reams of 1hem) is used, it helps 10 use up one more tree. If jus1 one Sunday edition of lhc New York Times was recycled ii would save 75,000 1rees. Until recycling is made easier to do in Coeur d'Alene, each individual will have to be re5ponsible for 1heir own share of casing the wasle crisis. When photographing, or jus1 en· joying, wildnowcrs, be careful whal you slcp on on 1he way 10 1hc "good ones." In some high ete,•auons destroyed planLS don'1 return for 30 ycan or more. It looks ill though mos1 people arc b«oming concerned with the quali1y of 1he environment (quali1y of life). I 01 in!itancc, the recent nc"' wa\lC·lO~nergy plant propo\ed for Spol.ane. the curb-\1de rc,ycline sy~lcm in mony cnrcs and the No11h Idaho pho\pha1c bam 10 pro1cc1 1hc lakes and stream,, and the h1111c aluminum recycling ccnicr ut Rathdrum Prairie arc nll \lCP\ rn the rlgh1 dircc1ion. After nil 1hi~ hi~lory. gco11rnphy and 5clcncc , nol 10 mention p~ychology and reading wc\c heen wbjcctcd 10 in the l11Sl few month,. we should oll be more nwarc of 1he world around us ond c:in be C\ample10 01hcrs on ho" 10 1oke care of it.

Skinhead harassment real Sentinel Editor: Since the sl.inht'ad convcniion in Coeur d 'Alene, I hn"c been reading several article nbo111 rncitm nnd equal right . I often ask myself. " Do Ar)'MS and 5k1nhcads really har:b s people righl here in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho?" Well, my question has b«n l\n)\\trcd- a couple of sl.inhcads harassed me in our home town, Coeur d'Alene. I \\ BS at work. A linhl'nd came in 11nd told ml' that thl' driving age should be mi ed 10 21 b«ausc his friends dri,•e t1round and l ill " nigscrs." Then he asked me what time \I C closed and said. " I'll be sure to come bacl!" As he "'as \\alkmg ou1 the door, he made some more rncist commen1s, then Biked me if I "as scartd. I was! I was tmificdl I hnve honestly never fell tha1 I had 10 be any difrcrl'nt from an}one else. Why nm I dlriertn1jw.1 becawt 1 am half \'i('(namcse. \\i lh black hair, bro"' n eye$ and a dnJk complc, ion? I don't l no\\ . This c'tpcrience was the one thing I feared most thing in Coeur d 'Alene, and J\·c lived here a lifetime! It has happened, and no" I feel I.hat I am different from C\'Cl)"Onc else. I'm paranoid about people staring! ts lhis fair? Elaine Heston

Sentinel has banner year; new goals set by paper Meader• m11y not be a"'are that rh1\ hu\ bttn a banner year for r he Senonel. llohttm.l by an encrgclk, rt\pon,1Me tee¥. of rn.rca\cd 11umbcn of \luden" (ho, mng around 30 compared lo I.S 20 rn other years), f be Scntanel lh.h!C'ed \C,e11I "firs1s" th1\ s,hool year This ablt ~Ttw has produttd \lgrllficanLI) more pag~ than 1ho)(! publuhcd any other year The paper has a,craaed at lus1 :?4 page$ per i»uc, compared to 12 16111 mO\l recent )t.lrs The all-umc high 01 28 paeci has been notched four Lime. Color pho1os (a.ho a f'int) garnuhcd 1he coH·n or three 1SSUC$,

These achic,emtntS ¥. CR accomplished through ded1cauon on 1he part of all sr..aff members, good managcmcn1 or I.he larger staff by I.he editors and a ucmendous increase m ad,ertismg-botb 1n llle amount of ad, erll$r5 and the amount of funds collected. The funds "e-re gra, cly needed to co,er increased eosu caused by the crua suppl.Jes needed 10 produoc lllc Larger papers and to supplcmen1 !he sliced budget allocated b) llle school. We pray to the Grea t God of Pnm llw su«--ecding rears will be so suoc:ess-ruL ~1ost of the credi1 goes to the leadership of Editor Randall Gree:n and Business Manager Bob 8arua. They wcrc assisted by editors Rainee Turk, llC'9iS; Wwr Ross

und l>A.,,,J C,unlcr, urh und enter1ainmen1; Shannvn Hu)"'atd, ,J"QrU, nnd Jrm l 111>0\ Drake and (hri\ OJhn. photo lk-..au-e of 1he ln,rcn'i<d workload on the mdMduJI ed11on, four 11,,1.111111 cd11or1 ¥.ere commr,\ioncd lor ,prlng \Cllleilcr and not Khool >Car Other Scnuncl )Uc.:c.:1m come, from 1he drHr\11)' of backpound\ w11hin the •taff, They range from recently ou1 of high school to some rn their 20, and 30s ond al letit four m !heir 40s, including three r,randmo1hm M01t of the s1uden1t hold ou1-of-Khool jobs, and several have famihcs 111 home, Mos1 ba.,.e decided that some form of .1ournahsm it lhcir best way of ua,ring 1he almighty dollar. Others use The Scnunel to fulfill thC1 r 1pedal mtercsu m wriun,. photography, art, compu1er design and advertising The studen u come 10 NIC from all over Nonh Idaho and Western Montana. Most of these studenu will be back ne,ct ) ear. To use thi3 a penencc to best adYll.D· r..age, the editor, plan to publish The Sen· liMI 11,ctkly. Thu Ibo "'i II better even the 'll"Orkload and beucr scn,e the readers and ad, erusers. Details about ne,it year's staff are on page three of today's paper. And alter !he last page, we're out of here' (Have a grca1 summer.)

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Sport.I Edit«


ThUf'®y, May 11 , 1&89

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Writer says students are not the priority linette freeman A very distressing situation has come 10 my atten, tion this ycar-s1udcnts arc not the priority on this campus. Herc at North Idaho CoUcgc the concerns of the administration seem to lean more toward n pretty campus th an s1uden1 welfare and needs. The currcn1 ndministmtion and the board of 1rus1ecs have shown me time and time: again 1h01 I am right. Last August the board of trustees initiated a lawsuit against 1hc studcnt1. Thi~ is che first time In 1hc hiltory of Ida ho thal a college has ~ucd itS own students. According to th e 1rus1ces, the lawsuit was filed to nn~wer n quc\1ion ns to whether or not the outdoor facilities fee was legal. It was not, according to Judge Magnuson, however, I think that ls not the case. In their original letter, the '87-88 student board DEM ANDED 1hat 1he trustee, ~top charging thi\ fee

and return all the money collected to the students who had paid the fee smce 1982. The bottom line is 1hnt che trustees don't like to have anything demanded of them-especially if it comes from students. When che lawsuit was originally filed, the students and their counsels. Norm G~~d and Ray Givens, maintained that they were not the proper defendan1~ and requested 1ha1 Magnuson declare the case a class action suit and name: a class of defendants. Unfortunately, the judge decided that a class action was not appropriate and officially dcda~d the Associated Students of North Idaho College (ASNIC) the proper defendants. Immediately after ASNIC was declared the proper defendants, the students t00k steps toward negotiating with the board of trustees. During lhe negotiations, which occured behind clos· ed doors, the representatives from ASN IC-Gayle Jennings, 4(), and Mary Jo Hansen, 3S-and their counsels Givens and Gissel mcl with trustees Detty McLain and Bob Ely and chcir coun~I Sieve Weucl. Also present at the negotiations were ASNIC adviser Tony Stewart and NIC President Bob Dennett. At one poinl during the negotiation, Fly told ASNIC that because they "demanded" tha1 the trustees •top charg1n1 the fee the trustee• took e,cep tion to the word (demand) u•ed Fly then told I lonscn that the \ludcnl\ need to learn hnw to tolk 10 1hr tru\tccs in a mannl'r bcfiuina their position. lie then

s~id to Jennings and Ha,mn that "This (NIC) is the big le~gucs, and wc'r.e not in high school anymore.·· (Remmder: Ilanscn 1s 3S and Jennings is .io). . "I keep comi ng back 10 that reference ('This is the big leagues,. and we're not in high school anymore') and as rh c 11me goes by I don't thinl. it ever becomes less offensive to me. 1've been m the workforce for 24 years end h~vc been involved in many ncgo1ia1ions. I have never m my upericnce tried \O hard to find common ground with someone who was so absolute· ly opposed to it," Jennin~ said. Larer on in the negotiations the students asled the board to simply work with them to redefine the code and then they could seule out or court and pul the money toward the library, "hich would be beneficial 10 everyone. Ely then informed Hamm and Jcnnlll&s 1h111 he hnd no intention or 1pcnding h" Cr« ume workmg wuh 1hc •t11dcn1, I thm k the i,c.1plc o( the c<lmmunity, faculty member\ and \lutlent, nm! to t.11,c a •criou, lool. 01 1hc 11dm1nb1rollli'n ol thn ,,,llc&e und qucsuon whc1hcr or n<>t e,e1)'thm& 1\ m the proper pcopccmc. I behve the 111111111.le ~,f the adn11nim.ition 1oward the ,111Jcnh "ti<-<,t ,ummcJ IIJl by Jennlll8,\ "fhc 11dmm1,1rn1ton h(ohc,M th.u thl1 t\ ll wonderful plucc 10 haH n culkllc, and it would be even bctm if"" could IC'l rid ol tho,c J mn •tudcni, "

Volkswagon turns out to be dangerous liaison colleen perron Well, I made it through one or the most brutal winters I have ever experienced, no thanks 10 my VoU:swogrn, whom I ha,·e come to lnow tlS " Night Shade" because shc-'s always trying 10 kill me. For tho c who don't know what night shade is, it ls a poi onous plnnt that genteel women of brce<ling used to put in their husbnnd's brandy, 10 bump them off. Fi1'$ t of nil. let me preface my story by sari ng that I hn,-c only bttn drh<ing for about St\'CJ\ years. No par· ticular rl'ason why I never learned before age 32. Just one day, I decided I wanted to dri,e, and l\c been hard 10 hold back ever in<X'. My husband rclucuintly allowed me to pmctke with his Ford Gnlliuy SOO. and it was wonderful. Arter about six months. thoush, the tmnsm~ion blew up, due app3rcn1ly 10 the lad.. of tnnsm~ ion Ouid. Husband asked almost inaudibly, "txarcst, didn't you notice anything "unusual" as )OU were dri\'ing the car, like a noise?" I said, "Well ...yes, as a matter of fact. I did. It just got louder and louder." He said through clenched teeth. "And what did you do when you heard this ·noise,' Otar hcanr•

"I turned up the radio, Ptedous," I '4id shccp1<hly, bad.in_g awa)• slowly • Well, later I fell heir 10 an old brown Chevy 111 uoO\,agon or an un~nown ,1n1Agc and had prnty good luck with it until m)' brothrr-in-law, 1 cab drher, bor· rowed it nnd ripped one of it~ doors orl while dn, 1n1 someone 10 the airport. He had this nawy habn or ha•· Ing "spells" just any old umc he felt hl.e it, or not Ul.e ll, as the case may be, but m any C\cru, I wu whccllm again. I had a Datsun that hterally fcU 1pan on me wlulc I wa.s drh mg it. One C\ cning, u I wu carttnmg dov,,n the freeway on my w11)' home, m) nick sluft came ofr in my hands. It did no good whalSOt\cr to II)' 10 force 11 back into tts little hole. A few weeks later, the bra.l;es turned to dust and the wheels seized to the L\lc. That ' '3.S a real ucat. An a.U-<ime favorite was an old, ora.ngt', pancJ uud: that ,.. c cfftct.ionatcl)' called, The Pumpkin. It bad no noor. You could stc the U11.D.Slll.issioo turning as you dro"e along. When M had company sitting ID t.bc front scat, it was the drher's responsibiltt) 10 sa), " FEET UP!' ' when ,..~ went o, er a mud puddle oo ramy days And up until last rear, I bad a van, v. h.ich I callcd Vanessa. She v."l\.S great! She v.a.s blue! She v.-as room)'!! And then one day, sbc surted making ll0t5CS. noises that sounded like a lot of m~·- So, I sold her And I bought... Night Shade. Night Shade is small and rute and UD3SSUmiDg. But unda her hood lurb lhe ny-wheel of a killer. I bought her from my brother ,ho said. as he gnbbtd ID) moot\ and sueded for the bus siation, ''I just put a rebuilt cnsme in it, ncv, brales. and v.ith a sso rune• up she "'i ll Int for ytan." \\ ell. he didn' t sho.,. me ,a, berc anything ,.-as. or

how an)th1n1 worlN, ~ I wa fairly my,1lhcd when I couldn't ncn drop the hont )C.11 forw~rd ,o ll\ 10 &ct 10 1hc back ~t I h.1d 10 \QUtt1c through the \11\Jll ,p,1tc bccv.ccn the front '!Cai, to jet inlCJ the bad. sc.-at, 111J 1n)one •ho know, me, lnow, I am not 1 ,mall, drftale llO""Cr, Whtie i.;roungmg around m the back ~,. I beg.in 10 ,mcll imoke. and then KC ,molce, and ,1\ I looked around franucally to \Ce where 11 ,ould be coming from, I happened to glance II my ltnee which wa1 on fuc. I cannot tell )ou ho.. "thin" I became, as I ieusoned mywlf from my back scat while the front scat, .,.ere stcadfa.stJy 1Cflxed 10 their upright posiuons. Juu let it be ltoov.n that tt can be done A few months ago, while I was at my bank window, I uncllcd gas; not 1nytlung unuuw by now, u I u1.ilf my car contJnually. I got out 10 see what wu going oa, and my p.s h05C had fallen over the manifold and bad burned tn half. pouring gas all o~er a ,cry HOT C!JllM. 11u.nking quiclct,, I dr<r, c across the sitttt and a \ Cry rcluctam gas aucndattc clamped my hem with locking grips. 1t 's a}v.-ays somethmg. f ,.ouJd expect that a bug that

is IS

)C3.11 old is going to ba,e problems and need ongoing mainttna.oee. But thmg., that go wrong wah th.ts bug, a.re things Iha t wu Id kill me. I suspect one of these days, I will be found~uue dead, lying under m) Volkswagen a.long.side I.he free...-ay The police ,,.;_u, of course, impound Nigh t Shade, but will they grill her until she confesses 10 my undoing? l'-o They will sdl her at a police aucuon and some other poor. stupid sot ,.ill owu her, and Nigh! Shade ...-iJJ co1111Due co be .the " VOLKSWAGEN FR0 ~1 HELL '


The NIC SenllnOI

6

Complied by Robb Bren· nan and Claudine Cha ndler

What are your views on abortion?

Mike Luzynakl- nurs lng

"I 0111 ngah1$t obortion. but

I'm pro-choice. I would li~e to )CC more money spent on the nllcrnntivcs: cducotlon, contraception end plnnned parenthood. I noi against th~ govern• 111cm lcglsh11ing morolit y."

Ro s ie Wllllams-

eccountlng "Personally I could 1101 ever hove one, but I believe II is every woman's choice. The sovcrnment should 1101 have a right 10 make it illegal because thl~ is America, and "e con mnkc our own choices."

Cy nth ie Goodsoneducation "I think a pcr\OII should be able 10 have an abortion 1f they don't wont their child. It pi\\" me off bccau~ the law) have been 1n cff~1 for ycan. The result or ,ner turmna Roe v~ Wade would be mo~ unwanted children and 111 :gal abNllon,."

Ron Crea- business

Samantha Smith-general

"I fctl it is up 10 the mother 10 decide the question of abortion. She should be oble 10 make the decision about her body. bu1 it should be an in· formed one. "

I don't think the government should decide whether abortion is wrong or if it should be legal. I believe in freedom of choice. II is the woman's body; let her decide."

Sandy Foxcommercla l art "I am pro-choice. It ls up ta 1hc Individual womnn 10 decide, and I don't think the nntl-nboruonim ~hould put God', name into it 10 u~ os R gu1h foClor. Thi, 1! not o rchgiou, i\Suc."

Cathy Teufel- business

" I nm r rctt\• mu.:h ncu1rnl. l 'm for the "01111111 ·, n11h1 10

dc.:lde, bu t then I'm 111oim1 l.1lhng bab1<1. 1 he gov(rnmcn1 should h,I\C fund111g ov11lllable for "omen in ,redo.I clrcum\tance,. hkc rai,c for in

,,nn~c."

I

I Spring brings dreams of summer travel wecl..cnd jaunts to the ,talc park, but she and I ha,c

bigger dream\.

aspen mountjoy Whcn I he dO.)'S s111r1 gelling no1kcabl)' lonscr in car· ly Fcbrul\r)' , m)' feet start ht>hing. Toda)'. when the sky is ck:ir, dear blue and the sun is almost wann. l s111r1 thinl.ing, "The sleeping bag is in the trunk. The sc:us so down, nnd I can sleep in the car (it's not like t haven •1 done h ht-fort'). M)•rddin, the gold setter. \\ould hear me and come running through the woods if I " histlcd from Lhc road. I could do it-I could 1al.c off and just keep going." We could go 10 the ocean, where the sal1wa1er. seabird, rollcn•musscl-and•sca\\ ccd smells OC\'cr stop. Or to the mountains where the red cliffs and aspen trunl.s come orange in the morning, gold after ram, and purple as dusk deepens 10 dark. We could go to the desen, to the Alps. 10 m«l the penguins at the Pole. M) rddin ·s toes I\\ itch in his dreams, and I Ml hap· picst "hen m)' dC$1iru11ion is an)'whcrc !bat promises open air. long strides and the bump of a "'liter bonlc on my hip. ~ub1e, the Subaru. just hit the 200,000. nulc marl An aw fully lot of Subit's miles came from

This spring, m)' dream) have ma.inly been of the OCC3n. I feel like I could spend years 1mclingbeacha, barefoot in the ~urf. a rucl.sacl. CU) on my bad,, drinl.ing "llltr charmed from the garden UIJII of Malibu beach houses belonging to mom stars The days arc always golden \\-ith that paniculas haze 1hn1 softens coastlines and daydream). The Irish set· tcr spends his days running after seabirds, and there's c,'ffl a wisp of color bounding a.long the chfllinc, keq>ing us in sight. I spent last summer exploring the Scan.le area, ad· ding to the memories of a summer 10 rears ago, when fresh out of college, a theater LrOUJ>C friend and I spent hours in the Qas\\orks Park watching the boats go by. We explored Uni"ersiry A,enuc in the summer rain. sang ' Michael from Moumains' to the prisms in the puddles, and in spite of m) ho~lmcss for Colorado. I fell in lo, c v.ith Scat Lie. Paul and I did not ba,"C a car, so we nC\cr made it to the ocean, and I didn't last = e r cilhcr, although I learned about OCC3.ll smells from Puget Sound. Ha,ing grown up in Colorado, I ha,e only a f("ili' memories of the ocean. \\'hen I was 10, aod then again the summer l was 13, my family era, elled by uailcr cara,-a.n to Mc.'cico I remember Muatla.o in lhc '60s. before the beach was a chain of large hotels and fanC'} tourist resorts. We SUI) ed in a peace full} seed} trailer coun n_g.ht on the

shore. In my memory, that beach n a 1encs or 1unlh lone -du)ly palm ucn. the ydlow-aolds or sand and th.at blue 11rccn w11er. I spent hours uand111g Just where the wave, broke, ltuing the 1u1er catch and tumble me, IC¥l and arms hmp, to the .. hite foam on the shore. We ,.,.am on the rocky coa.u at Guaymas, where 1hc iurf ..-u much hanher, and there was an added thrill of danger IQ body , url'ing the breakers 10 JWI short of the black rocky shore Another summer, we t.ra.t.ltrc:d from Colorado 10 the Red,.ood forC$U and then up the Oregon coast, &JV· ing tinges of reality to my hippie-era dreams of Highway I. In the Redv.ooJ Forest, 1.bc huge trees were a deep shade of llict green that doesn't happen an a Colorado pine rorest, and v.e run up and down the paths to the bead!, bright summer S'llocatshiru against grey mist and dull v.a.ter E,·cn a huge driftwood log sitting crossv.ise to the swf added only v.buc to the specuum of fog. Our Colorado lunp gloried IQ the sea·level oxygen. Perhaps we also ran to keep warm in the cold fog. I remember the strands of canb-bound cloud a.s friend· I}, though, and chased suea.mcn of it aloog the needle· ladro path I.bat twisted through a stand or great uees that so shaded the ground the usual dense California undergrowth was missing. I ran lbrough wet tree trunks following the uail. then losing it, then foUowing it again in lhe mist. I Lluok: "'C ha, e to go 10 the ocean this summer.


Thur6day. May 11 , 1989

7

Faculty members resign by Russell Carlberg

Besides the students 1ha1 will grnduate from NIC this spring, several staff members have also decided 10 move on. S1udcn1 Health Nurse Jo Marinovich said she resigned 10 do something new. " I'm retiring ear-

ly. I'm going 'to run away to Mexico and visit different places," Marinovich said. When asked, "Why Mexico?" Marinovich replied, " I've always wanted 10 1ravcl. The Mexican people arc nice, there are lots or different cultures, the weather is outstanding and, of course, it is cheaper to live down there." When asked ir there was any other reason for her resignation, Mnrinovich said, "There is nothing conrrovcrsial, but in regard to Prc-sidem Bcnne11, the students arc not the top priority here." Also in store for a change or venue is Susan Cappos, the director of NIC's [Placement program for Student Services. " When I wos hired by NIC to develop a placement program for our academic S1Udems, I knew I would be here for a limued amount of 1ime due to fundina." Coppos said. "After 18 111on1h, the program is up :md running with o great deal of success. ·1 he seric~ of spring workshops wos well rN--eived by Mudcnts who ~ere imcre~ted in shorpening 1heir sl.1lls in resume

writ ing, interviewing and job hunting," Cappas said. The program's placement rate.\ arc good regarding students gaining jobs in their career interests and has been integrated into several programs 011 campus including law enforcement, journalism and business. Cappas said. Cappas said she will be moving 10 Sun Valley and become involved in marktting, in which she has her degree. "I'm going to miss NIC, the students and my fellow coworkers. especially David Lindsey, who has been such an inspiration 10 my career," Cappas said. Also ahead in Cappas' future arc the sounds of wedding bellsher own. Student health and placement arc not alone in losing Slaff. Law enforcement has lost Don Stuart, a security employee. While criminolog1s1 Doug McPhcnon refu~ ony comment, Stuan·, immediate supcrvhor wid he kft h1, po~ition for 11 hi1ther p11yin11 Job tn marine repair. Stuart wa~ work1n11 111 hi\ new JOb and was not available for i;ommcnt.

Sandra Saathoff

Saathoff nominated in national honor contest North Idaho College student Sandr11 S011t hoff received recogniuon for dhtinau1,heJ student ~ hol11r in Junior ,ot lcge, lrom the Amtrkln Msoclatlon of Communny and Junior College,. Soathoff wl\1 cl101cn bv NIC'A l'hl Theia t,.1111pa (o M tlonol or11onm111on tllr hMor ,tudents) 10 apply for a '14:hol.u •hi('I offered by 1hc Ai\CJ{ Only one "udcnt rcr JUnK>r col lege i\ 11Hn the opportunity to

appl) pph.:a11on1 "ere c~omincd 111 the rc11on,ll, Sl&lt' ond na11on.1l lcHl• /\t thi< time, I0 ~mt. rmah,t~ ore in cumpctilion for the oCfered 1chot,mhip, accord ma 10 S.mthoH. /\lthouah S.lnthorr h 001 n •cn11 rinali,t. ,he l• •nt1\0cd ,~uh 1hc oa1111lon and the plaque ,he rccc,~cd •· 1... ouJd'1,c lflc:d the money, but I'm happy."

,c..

IF IT'S WORTJ-I REMEMBERING, IT'S WORTH FRAMING ,

'"I

See Sample at the NIC Bookstore

As Low as $20 for aSingle Picture or Certificate

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Frame Your Graduation Including: • Your Picture •Tassel

• Your Certificate • N.I.C. Cardinal

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10 a.m. - 6 p.m. Monday - Saturday

118 N. Second, Coeur d'Alene

Phone

667-6889


8

The NIC Sentinel

Department chair takes leave by Randall Green

Tim Christle

What staned as a dream 10 share his wildlife photography experiences with others may become reality for Com,nunication-ArLS Chairman Tim Christie neic1 year. Christie will take a sabba1ical from hb teaching and adminis1ra1ive duties at North Idaho College 10 work on a book project he hopes to complete by early January, 1990. "The idea came 10 me during a photographic trip I was on in the Canadian Rockies about SIX years ago," Christie md. "As I hiked along on rugged terrain called Parker Ridge. I hod the oppurtuni1y 10 sec and photograph elk, bighorn sheep and mounuun goaLS all in the same day; I 1hought it was a shame that more people couldn't experience the same thing.'' Christie said the tentative title for the coffee table-style book will be Wild Rej1ecrlon.s. However, at this paint, he is still negotiating with several publishas and has nol settled on format or s1ylc of prcscmation for h~ library of wildlife photography, he said. "I am most concerned that each species covered in the book wtll be adc quntcly e,;prcued," he ,aid. "I plan 10 use a format whh lilerary c~ccrp1i com

bined with my photographs; there arc some wonderful written snippets about animals out there that project very clear images of these animals." Christie said he has been acti\'c)y pursuing his pho1ographic interests since 1980 and after much support and encouragement from his ,,..;fe, Mary, began submitting some of 1hem for publication. In 1982, he landed a shot of a mountain goat on the cover of Amt'rican Humer, a National Rine As.socia1ion sponsored magazine. From 1hen on, Christie has had his photographs appear on rhc covers of many prestigious outdoor and wildfire magazines.

This is a preuy extensive project-to 1ell a story in a concise number of pages for such a broad subject os 1he animals of North America, he said. Leaning back in his office chair, he though1fuly cicpiessed that his grea1e.s1 challenge lie, in researching the right literary insrcdients and then to jump 1hc hurdle, gaining permission to reprin1 the written m11cnal of 01hcrs. "The bulk of chc photo ,,..orl. i\ done," Chri."le aald. "I plan lo spend nc.trly two mon1h1 In Alaska thh ,um mer and fall photo&raphlng loon, onJ bean to Iii! In 1hc voids in my hi~ "

New directions expands horizons by Rosemary Peterson The North ldnho College Cc111er For New Oirt'\:1lons h one of Sil rrogr:um lor di,plnc<'d homemakers in Idaho. 1:ct1cml h\\1s ht11c mnde 1hi~ 1ypc ofprogrnm 1110nd01ory in every s1111e. C'orol Joseph hn\ been 1hc dirt\:tor for olmost 1hrcc )•cars. The pr-0gr11m i~ for 11omcn and men \\ho find thcm~cll'es in the po ition of single pnrcncs or homemokcrs, displnl·cd homemakers (people who hiwc 10 makt' ii new home for thcm~elvrl, u<uall)• because of dh•orcc) and single, pregnant women. Mnny proplc come 10 Jostph for just n onc-11mc s~ion to Ond oul h0\1 to get bnd. into school, get thl'ir OED (Ocneral liquh·alency Diploma), linsndnl nid or ho" 10 go nbout getting a JOb. Joseph al~o d~ ongoing indil'idual 11omcn's counseling. A 101 of domt'Slk I' iolcnce coun<cling is directed 10 her from 1hc Coeur d'Alene Women·~ Center. nctording 10 Joseph Usunll) 111 lease 11\0 supp011 groups arc going nil the time, Joseph !,B.fd. These concern rcltitionship 11ddiction ("Women Who Lon~ Too Much" is a l"alchit'r phrose. she ~id) ond divorce rte01·ery. A class called .. PossibUittcs." ltiS1ing sl~ 10 eight wttks. is run pcnodicall) through the Center. Some of 1hr situa-

lions COl'Cred nrc: going back to school, work men mnnogemcnt, goals, legal problem,, hcnhh care, career choices. resumes, planning employment nnd al(o ho" to research these problem.<.. Somctimt'S people alrcad) ha,c a four-year degree, but it 1sn'1 In a possible career area, so 1hcy have 10 decide how to find something else 10 do, Joseph 5ftid. Joseph soid the cJas5 is CSJ)CClally needed for women in some l.ind of life transition. Usually 1hey arc ne\\l) dil orccd and/ or are sing.It' mothers. S0mc1imc:s 1hcy hal'c bttn "idowed ond finally 10 1hc point of wanting to do somt'thing "ith their !hes •'The dm is l'l\lW1ble bcca11Sc there is n 5true1urc. a pbct' to be four da)s a " ttl. at the samt' t imc and s«ing people "ho a~ going to be ghtd to .stc them " htn the) gel there." J05eph said. "Also thl') form a I aluablc support nee· worl.. It's human nature 10 foUO\\ otbcf good e,amplcs." A group force is o moth aung thing, Joseph said. The students ue caught ho,,.. to rcco, er cmotionall) from rejection, ho" 10 deal ,,..ith their emotions. They leun to make th<" cransition of ncgMi, c sdf·pcrttpuon 10 thinking positi\'cl)' about themsehes From there 1hcy can gee bacl. in10 the real "'~Id. Most enroll in school, so the class works

a recruitment or o college prcparu tion, JC>Kph ~1d u111c1ally, 1 rt'portcd 43 i,trccnt of the people "'ho come 10 Jl>j(ph for beli, enter school or the JOb marlct, bul ,he fee ls that 1n rcalt1y. Ir the rcpon wa.s made six months ofter their fir)( contact, lht' pcrct'ntagc "'0Uld be mu,h htgher. The "'Oman '>'ilh 1he most dramauc story of su~> LS Joan Mongeau She ,,.. as umn ailablc for comment, but Joseph and SC\cral other NIC ffllpk,)ces said thl'y "ere \Cf} unp~ed by her ac:complbhmcnu. Mongeau came to the Center for NI:"< Directions SC\"l'ra.l ) can ago 10 II} to get hcrsdf back 1ogcthcr after a dJ"orcc. Soon she 113d earned her GED and then attended NJC for tbrcc )'CU'S. 'o"' she is graduating from Gonzaga Un11enuy ~ ith a ba,bclor's dcytt in social ..i;or~ She i> in bt'r earl) Sl>s ond b pla.n.ntng to go into the PC3ct Corps or 10 NI!'\ ad3 ior a master's dtgrcc. Tht' center sponsors man) programs on Sarurdays ond l!'\mings of spcaal mtcrcst 10 both men and v.omcn. A moolhl} nC'\\'Slettcr descnl>cs all the acthiues. Anyone "'uhmg to f'CCCl\,C the free lct1c1 or arrange for =lmg or the Pos.sibiht.ics classes tthe oat one staru June 26) can call 769-344S or go to the Center for N~ Otrectio.os in the Hedlund \ ocatiooal Building on the NIC campus. 8'

or

Congradulations graduates on a job well don e!

Good luck in the future!

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ThurJday. May 11, 1989

9

Dream may come true

Future of college library no longer dim by Robbie Klenholz As ihe reality of having a new library on 1hc North Idaho College campus beglns 10 sink in, a few ques1ions arc being asked. One of 1hcse ques1ions deals with how NIC is obtaining 1he funding necessary for the construction of a new library/compu1er science ce111c,. According 10 the Board ofTrus1ecs, 1he money is being given 10 1he college by 1hc s1a1e. According 10 House of Representatives Bill No. 418, the S1ote of Idaho has

a General Account 1ha1 cannot exeted 1he duding the University of Idaho, Lewis, amount of S29.200,000. When funds ex- Clark State College, College of Southern ceed this limi1a1ion, money is trans ferred Idaho and Idaho State Universil)', to the Permanent Building Account to be Another important ques1ion being askmade available for improvement projcctS ed about the new library concerns its locafor schools in Idaho. tion. StudentS want to know where they ore At the present time, the General Account going 10 park since the building will be raisexeteds its limit by Sll.503,000. Since the ed east of the Fort Sherman Officer's NIC library heads 1he list or school pro- Quar1er~ in the diri parking 101. jects, pan or this ovcrnow, S3.08S.OOO. will According 10 NIC Dean of Administrabe awarded for a new library and computer ccnttr. The remainder of this excess will be uon RoUy Jurgens. Ihm~ are as many as di,tributed 10 other colleges in Idaho, in- 150 parking spaces in 1hc diri lot 1h01 are

unused, even on NIC's busiest days. The plan wou ld be for the new building 101ake up just this amoun1 of space so that no parking would actually be lost. Also, 5aid Jurgens, 1here will be classrooms in lhe n~ library. so students might actually find it more con\cmcnt 10 park a1 the eas1cm-mos1 end of the 101. Another possible bencfil of 1hc librat>· projeet is the probable pavinp. of the dm 101. making ii easier for Hudnm during the wei ~in1er momhi

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ldahost to conduct courses for hospitality training Idaho business nre encouraged to sign up now for the Idahos! hospitality training courses 10 be conducted at North Idaho College Tuesday, May 23 from 9 a.m. 10 4 p.m. and Tuesday, June 6 from 9 a.m. 10 4 p.m. in the Hedl und Building. " May is the best month to train before summer comes and businesses gc1 100 busy, " ~aid Dawncen Blnke~lee, Idahos, Coordina1or. "The Centenn ial celebration !~ fast approaching and busi nmcs need 10 gel ready for nil the 1ouri~1s."

Idahos, courses arc being taught statewide by 20 professio nally tra ined instructors. Over 3,000 people from a wide variety of businesses have already attended. The si:{-hour training course costs SIOand 1s designed to teach visitor hospitality techniques 10 all types of businesm, Blakeslee said. It will also provide parLicipanlS wit h accurate infor· mation on Centennial and Idaho cvenLS. "Customer ~er, ice is key 10 the success of any business." Blakc:i lee said. "We want all Idaho businesses to nourish, and the ldehos1 course really can assist them in making that happen.·•

Over 1.S mill ion v1mors arc prc:dicted 10 visit the stole du ring 1989 and 1990, accord ing 10 lllokcslcc.

To sign up for the Ide host hospi1ali1y training course contact Janet Boyer at NIC, Coeur d'Alene, Idaho 838 14, 769-3444.

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Law enfor ce ment grad s- -The first graduates or the revamped NIC program gather lor group mug shots.

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Law enforcement program to graduate first class by Jim Orake,Lapos The ncwl>' formed North Idaho College

t aw Enforcement Program hn~ been a big success. al'COrding to Frank Willey, progrC1m dirc.:tor. On May 19. IS students will bt' graduating with an Associate of Applied Science (A.A.S.) degrtt in htw enfon..-e· mcnt. This degree will enable them 10 ch11llenge the Peace Officer Standards and Training (P .O.S.T.) certification test. Throughout the last li\'c months tht' la" enforcement students hB,·e gone through extensive training. They have completed man)' cou~~ ,·t1r)'ing from Patrol Procedures, Basic Police law, and ln\'cstigntions 10 Polke Ph)'s icot Fitness. Ln" enf on:cment student Andy Mace said, " The new program gives )'OU an idea of .,.ha, 10 cxpc<:t in the real world, as before "'c had no idea of "hat 10 e,pcc1."

To mnny of the studcnLS the program h:is helped them along in their futurt' carcc_r in la\\ enforcement. Another student, Vince Fr.uitr Sllid, "With the training l\c received in this progrnm the job market 1w reall) opened up for me." Alrnd)• four of the studcnLS ha\'c nttained jobs in , arious la" cnforctmcnt agencies around ldnho, said Wilkc:y. The people that hll\'C: made llun.gs run smoothly arc Will:ey and D.'>ug McPherson. "Frank and Doug h:i,c been put through a 101 this semester. They ha,e brought a program to Nonh Idaho College that should turn the heads of a lot of agencies," said student Darrell Stidham. Ac-cording 10 \\'ill..ey. for this being the first )car of the program, it has went prct· t)' smooth!). " I "BS blessed 'l'ith a great group of students this fim go around and ll made the work \'Cry enjoy-able." Wilke)' said.

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Th\JfWDY, May 11, 1989

ARTNld

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pooto, by Aostm,1,y Ptte110n

Lights, camera--RATV students Mark Murray and Kyle Blacketer film clips or the NIC RATV Video Fosllval

Drama department sets new season by Monica Kiddle The Norch ldnho College drama dcpartmcm hn\ plnn~ for 1hrcc mojor produc1ions nc'1 year, including n musicnl, nccording 10 drnmn irmruc1or Tim Rarkk. Allhough 11cx1 year'~ dmmu schcdult' i} no1 yc1 dcflnilc. Rarick snid 111111 drnmn s1udcn1s will team up with 1hc mu~ic dcpnruncm in 1hc fall for a musical, pcrh11ps American plnywri1c Ocorge Gcrsh,.in's 0/ Thl!f l SinR. Rorick said 1h111 he no1 only pllln\ 10 do diffcrcnl 1ypcs of plnys, he also wnn1s 10 include 1hc wor~s or different l)'t>C~ of nu1hors. "\Ve hnvcn'1 decided ror sure " hat playl wt' will be doing nex1 year, bu1 I do know 1hn1 we plan 10 do n musical in 1hr foll. Wt''II be fl(rforming plays by dif· fcrenl nu1hors. I wnn1 10 do ti con,t'dy by Shnkespeart, nnd we'll probably do n non-musiC41 by a con1cmporory American wri1er," Rorick uid. The S1111k~pcarcan comt'dy Taming of tht Shrew is bt'ing considered for 1hc drama departmcn1 's "inlt'r play, t1nd Rarkk hol)('s to have II gues1 d1rcc1or for 1h111 production. Since NIC workt'd \\ilh lhc Coeur d'Alene Community and Summer Thca1cr for this )'car's produclion of Life with Father, Ra rid. hopes to "ork \\1th 1hcm again nc.x1 spring. He said he tentatively plans 10 do Tht Night Thomiu Spent in Jail, "a mixture of serious drama and comt'd)• aboul the cont't'pl of passh·c rcsis1anct." The mos, rcct'nl production by the drama depart· mcnt is Ibsen's Htdda Gabler. Rarick 100k the pla)' "on 1hc road," giving 1wo pcrfomlBJlces a1 Lhe Panida Thea1er in Sandpoin1. "h worked ou1 really " ell," Rari~k said. " I'm looking forward to Laking another production on the road ncx1 year." Rarid. said 1ha1 since 1hc drama department 1ool.. a play 10 Sandpoin1 this year, nc.,t year's destina1ion may be the Sih•cr Valle)', but lha1 is not )Cl certain.

Show boasts broad cast of students by David Carkhutf Ready in s111d10, rtady in booth Fadt up, Camrra 1 and nlll.11c. Disso/1•c to booth. Camtra "· Camtra ,t, zoom Into mtdrum shot of talent D&olvt lights ,n studio, Camera J, lost mum:. Optn mrkc Cut roltnt

The proct'durc " eni smoo1hly, in bo1h the 1mall con trot boorh 1111d the larger s1udio beside it A~ North Idaho College s1uden1 Marl Mu rray i\sued 1hc commands 1n10 lus headset microphone, the NIC RA TV Video I ei.tial en1crt'd i1s finishing nagcs. Murray peered through 1hc boo1h \\indo11>1111 camtra opcrn1or Marc Harger Bnd program h<XIN JcM1fcr JaeglU', She in1roduct'd 1he fcuival, a eompilauon or video vigncucs product'd by RA TV (radio tnd 1de-mon) 298 Prarucum s1udcnu. ''We're going 10 satisf) your dciirt' 10 " orl oo indh~dunl in1crests," Darrin Cheney. educational 1clC\'ision coordina1or, 1old s1udcn1.s bcginrung their projea.s crud· semcs1cr. "h's all to be assembled into a 30.rruouic program.''

'~ lot of this is made up right on the spot. Anything goes for us. " Mark Murray The NIC RA TV V',dco Festival ma) onl) last half an hour, but it required long. tiring v,ork from srudenLS and siaff. Cheney said he "'Orked SO, o 60 hours each .,.tti during production, \\hilt' program producm Murny and K>•le Blacl..c1cr ftlmt'd Jacgar's narration O\~ and o,cr. "A lot of this is made up rigb1 on the spot." Murra) said. "Anything goes for us." Four major sqmcnLS arc included on the tape. "Coeur d'Alenr; A Video Post Card," relays imag_esof the com· munily in a mus.1c video ,. ilh narration. Bladmcr product'd this opener.

"Same Ttmc Nc'i \t.ir" bt',m lhc title of the \IBgc play and 1hc Luer mo\lC w11h Alan Ald11- ,.11h which Murray made h1, do,;umcnhuy Murray p1oduc«I "Same T1mc Nc,1 Vrar·• 111 1hc fall of 1986, bu1 ii wa, never 1ho\\n unul he add«! II 10 1hc re,11val Murray al\O produ~cd "S<o-ual l)e,;Mon Mak 11111." ''h's a dialogue bt't"ccn a you ng couple tho1 lw\ been d111n1 bul h,u no1 had •u." Mum,y \aid fhc program ma) bt' u\Cd by family planning prorc"ional,. he said. F111all), " RA TV Rod, 1" ,omb1nc, 11 mut1c video and a documentary, JO produun Murray and Woody McE,cri dctm 11 a rodurmnt.ary Golh.lm, a local band, p<rfor med in 1he RA TV 11ud10 up11am in 1he Communglion-Aru Bwldrng for 1hi, sq,ncn1 m che video fcsuva.l " h was done panJy 10 promoce 1he radio TV depart· mcn1," Murray said. " It "'llJ i!lso done 10 g.ive 1he band c'J)OSUrc." Various lhoncr ~gmenu, inr.erspc!Kd with inlloducuoru and uamiuonaJ narration by Jacg.ar, complete lhc tape. II follO"'l the formula of PM Maguv,it, a telcvisJOo IIC"'S program, Murray said. "h's all ,ery s1ructurcd and scripted," McEvcn nid. " ,cry much like lhc lhca1er. " Screenings will be downstaJ.rs m the Studem Union BuildJni loda) a.nd Thursday, May 18, at J p.m. Chan· ocl 22 will br~ca.R lhe video festival at 7 p.m. on lhCMC dB)'l. "It's kind of like a promouonaJ pw:ce," McE,cr, saJd. Srudcnu invoh>ed in the fcscr,al, many of whom saJd the RATV department at NIC is ia.rJely Oo/Crlooked, hoped their film ..,. oukl inform nudcou of lhc acuvitic:$ RA TV participates UI. ''This )eat there ha•c been a varicry of proj«u, raog-

ing from jazz COO<%rt cable casu and live !healer productions 10 a bodybuilding con1es1," Jacgar said in I.he dos· ing narration. ··The segments in this •idco fC$Uval 11.cre produced totally b> students." Rt1ld;~. dtSSOl~e Camuo 4 and litllfs. Fa~ up, music and dose milce. Dissoht to Camera 1, /adt ta black and lose musk. That's a rap.


12

Tho NIC Senlinol

Alliterative antics aggravate david gunter Jeering journnlisl.S jockeying for jobs or pandering pu rveyors of pitiful prose? While we wonder what whim~ical wave has wrested 1hcse writers' wisdom. the Sent inel staff surrenders 10 the suspect sport of Mooping to ~enseless s1rings of sibilants and plosi ves placed purposely 10 piny on 1he pc11ies1 of principle,. It is a headline hysteria heretofore unheard of. r' ar be it from me 10 fracture so rair. so fragile a fraternity, but, frankly, I'm frightened . Careful consideration of consonanu cannot carry compulsive cub reporters to competency. What, then, will we whisper while they wield words willfully? The problem lies in these three things: Limp leadership; lnckadal~lcnl learning and, lastly, leftist leaning\.

I'm 1emp1ed to take their teachers 10 task, but the blame belongs between both bases. Readers rarely react retroactively, and rightly so. Bui a grassroots group is growing grim at the sophomoric silliness some sec as stylism. I'm not a nay-sayer by nature, nevertheless, no one needs nonsensical news. Unless we issue an ultimatum. unbridle a uniform ululation in answer to this alliterative BSininity, subsequent Sen1inel scions shall surely say, "Our mentors managed merrily, why not \lte?'*

Everyone exploring English evokes an admirable aura of adventure, be it daring or devoid of discipline. Even so. each must cam enough editorial effectiveness 10 el:e out 1his empirical enigma: excellence. Ncx1 month: Assonance-a vicious version of vowels strung vine-like for all 10 view.

Heinous ,

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Reviewer re

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. k's ·Rivcisons fleets on Rane

photo by Apr11 Muhs

Art show--Scoll Glltel and friends

• Artists show off port folios 1n Union Gallery by Walter Ross Work \ of 011 co111c III mnny dilfcrcni ro11m . And whc1hcr they be :rn in1crprc1i\•( rendering llf nn ethereal lancl\cape or 1md,ngc, or onmml feed, 1hcy' rc ,1ill \, orks oi RII .

1 uduy nnd I'm.In) 111111k 1hc ln\11\,o da)·, ,,1 1hc conuncrcinl urt majors' 1989 1'011folio Show 111 1la· Nu11h ldnho Collcl!C Union (inllcry. The ~how, winch bcttan n II\O \\Cck run M.i) I, ,·l'.irm1i1h c,arn1,1c, or Cl'CI\' po,~ibk genie kno,\n to man (.ind nd,erllscr,) lrom cu111pu1cr graphic, nnd

dr,J.;1op pu bli\hing 10 pencil drawing\ and 1hc , cnturics-old n11 of pa1,crmal.ing. I he \ how 1\ a collc.:tion nf "'or!. 1omr or which ore po"en NK , 111dcn1, ma) have alr eady ,ccn around ,an1pu~producrd over the ln,11\\,1 )t,11\ 1hn1 ,un ,cn1 rn1e\ un 1hc nrc.1, "'here the 111J1\1dual h 1he 1110\1 1iablc It al,u ,ho11, thrn \•ell round,·dnc\~. uccordin11 rn Nil po, lloho ln\lruc1or I num llm1h11n "Wha1 I 1ry 10 do i\ prcp:ire ,1udcn1\ tor \\ Ork once the) lcm c 1ehool, (lo pro, 1dc thrm l\ilh) •kill, 1h01 \\ ill help them ~c,;ure lutu re cmf)loymcr11," Urn1hun said, noling

thn1 " 1he mhcr im1ruc1or, hrre do n lrcmcndou, job" preparing \l udent, tor 1hc rea l wurld I calurcd 111 1hc \how arc 1he pttt1 1uht" nr Sco11 <,i11cl. n .w1t1 I lancy, I ,1111.11,1 l..uhu, I lame l'hi hr,\, "-a1hy Rau, l oren Robb, M,mhu I Santu,d, Juh Sl;h\\.ul,. DJwn Sullivan ond I ,tura lleth I ate

Some ot the arm 1, h.1~c alrc.1d) \\On na 11onal and lo.:al award\ K.ilhy Rau "'011 a nauon.il p,,,1cr cun IC">I \pon,orcJ b} lhe P1c,,1Je111 \ Commtt tee on Lmplovmcnt or People \\. uh

l)1,11b1h11~ I he po, tcr, which hnd n patr io11, theme 1111d ,purtcd 1hc 1lo11nn " D1~co, er the Potcni i.11 llirc the l ap.ibl<-," won lt,111 ,1 SI ,OIJOca,h " holar \h1p ll om tht P111aly1cd Ve ter.in, or ,\mcn,.1. A11,11hcr .1\\1ird winner i, Oo, 1d llaney I le ,.,a, 1hc arm, who ,reaicd 1he po,,tcr for l.i,1 )cJr\ Juul cu I l11ncy c,111 ul,o be \k\\cd rc11ula rly in 1hi, r,ubh~.irion where he due, duty a, 1111 cd11 urial canooni,t " l 1h1nk the Poruollo Sho"" i, an imr,or tant fnulc 10 two year\ of hard work," In mu~tor Um1hun ,a,d.

Cosmic corn grows in 'Field of Dreams' by Shan non Hayward

Take 1hc gnmc of bn cbnll, ndd some drc:1m<, ~prin~lc ii 1\ ilh mngic, ,1ir inn liulc bi1 of humor, o pinch ol nos1algia and seruon with popcorn and hot dogs. The rrsult Is "Field of Dreams." The ~IOI)' line begin} \\ith fom,cr 1960s nnMsts Ray Kinclln (l-e\•in Cos1ner) and his wire Annie (Amy t-. lud lgnn). who lh•e in 198th Iowa \\i lh their youns daughter Karin (Gnby Horfmnn) as corn fnrmrrs. Ont dB)' as Ray stond~ in 1hc "ast com field, n whisixr .:omcs from the ~~y ...If you build i1, he "ill come." E\'m though Ray 1s confused nbou1 1he \ 01ce, before he I.nows it, he ha$ built II baseball field righl mac!. in 1he middle or hi~ crop, much 10 1he amusemen1 of 1he IO(al 1own foll. who thin!. Ray'$ crazy. Winier nrrives and "he" still hw.n·, come. One e,ening as Ray and Anmt go over tht'ir fin3n.:es and begin 10 feel the pinch of the lo~t .:om crop, Karin swttll) informs him, ''Daddy, 1here's a man on your field." As Ray appron~hes the field. he r~liz.es he is loo\.ing a1 the one and only "ShodtSS" Joe Jackson (Ray Lio1to) or the Chicago White Sox. foci.son and sc\cn 01her White Sox players 11ere accused or thro'\\i ng the 1919 World Seri~ and banished for life from 1hc game

of baseball. Ra) 's father, who had once played ba~eball in his earl) yca11, 1doht ed Shoclw. The fim encounter bct"ccn Ray and Shocle>s is human rcacuon at ns fin~• as each man e.,pcnenccs "onderment at "'hat he secs before him Shocles~ asks Rn) ...Is thlS hea\en?" It's a genuine question from someone v. ho Just "ants 10 pla) b.ucbalJ forever. Soon enough, the other Whi1e So., pl.ayers jom Shoeless, and the Kincllas ha\ e baseball right in their fron1 yard. The\'oicc "' hispcrs agam for Ray to "ease lus pain," v. hich leads him on a search for Tcrrcncc Mann (James Earl Jones), an older radical writer from 1he 1960s. As Ra) and Terrence team up, the name Archie .. Moonlight" Graham (Bun Lancaster) poP5 up, v..bo me) dis..-over pla}ed onl} pm of an mning long ago The , oicc is persistent and again tells Ray to "go tht' distaJK:e. " As the stol'} mo,-es along, Ra) is in a'\\c of " ha1 is 1ranspuing before him, although be is no1 )'ti able to Wict.ly figure how all the pi«es fit together. Most of all, Ra) is no1 sure 11,bo "be" u. Bui somehow ht' knows he mus1 follow it lhrou,gb uruiJ the eod.

All the rig.hi clements in the righ1 proportions makes "Field of Dreams'' work. II comains dreams I.hat come

true, but not "'llh 1he \ pookinrn usually au oc,ated 'il.llh wm. Just when the story sums prcdJctablc, an eltmcnt of surprise ari,n to lead it in a new direction. The cu.sung 1s superb-Conner a, the confukd t0 wive 1hc m)stery of 1he voice. Madigan as his spunky wife 11,,ho iniuaJly thinks Ray is crazy bu1 strongly belitves in him. Jones as a propbctic writer who once prca.:hed "peace, 10\'e, dope" aod Lancaster as a kmdly older gentleman with a magic wink. Lio1ta plays an easily moved-intotbe-1980s Jackson, complete wrlh a pol:eat Ty Cobb, and )OUDS Hoffman ii absolutely charming as she lIU· ly excmpWies the phra.M: "out of the mouths of babes. " lo"a's sides in the film v.cre cxtTemely colorful, thanks 10 some ou1.SUU!ding pho1ography. Coupled 11,it.b the li.gbts from I.he ballpark and the endless com ro~ as a backdrop, i1 makes for a pleasing , 1SU3.1 COOi· position, much like an artistic painting.

rarmer 11)1118

The mO\ie is magic:nl-there is no other way to descnbe ii-and C3511y crosses all boundarie1 of age and groder. It's a m~ie of b=ball and dreams, and it ca= one 10 Lea,e the theater with a warm hean and smiling face.


Thuud,T/. M1y

13

11. 1989

Beach party ends year

BELLAMY-LoNG

by Monica Kiddle

Frisbees sailed 1hrough 1he air, water balloons broke on unsuspecting con1est.an1S and hamburgers and watermelons disappeared in a '1ash at the year~nd beach par· ty pu1 on by the 1988-89 Associated S1udents of Nor1h Idaho College (ASNIC) friday, May S. About 200 people showed up throughout the day, and ASNIC coodmators were ple,md. "I'd say 1ha1 h's a good turnout," ASNIC secre1ary Gina Pe1ry \llid. "We planned for IS0-200 people, and there's been a good number here )0 far " ASNIC member& grilled and served ham· burgers and ho1dogs with nll 1hc ri,ings, whllc ,,arty-goers jammed Lo the 1unei. of "The Nameless l·cw," a band from San Diego. ASNIC activities dircc1or 13ecky Toucn said 1ha1 \he met the group at a 1ntcn1 contest, and hs block-booking in this nren coincided with the bench parly. The band played current hits such os R.e.M.'s "S1:1nd," as well u some orig1m1l 1uncs of hs own. Oc1wecn eating 11nd rocking, students found lime 10 piny vollcybull. kick a fool· bog around nnd Oing frisbcc, back and forth . In o w111er balloon tO)S, pnrtnen mkrd gelling soalcd 10 1hrow- and catch- thrir balloon &he fnrth~t distance. The winners were D1wid Haney nnd Luke Yeller, who}C reword was s1nyln11 dry. Allhough 1hc wen1hcr wn~ wnrm for 1hc party, the wn1cr w,u still cold, nnd only a few brave souls dc-c1ded to dtve 111 . With summer JU\l around the comer and

&

Congratulations to the graduating

[{ass of 1989

KEGS TO GO Uu<l or Bud I ight (II) Rl'tlUtrl'll) p hOIO b r Apnl M uht

The vi ctory l ap --Davl d

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The Kootenai Commumt) Concert Mso.:iatlon (KCCA) will Ix holding three cOnl"trt\ in &he 19 9 90 eason The pril 4, 1988 9 cason closure, orrcrt'd 1hc Colouu.lo Children'} Chorale. a troop of ) oung actor} and \tngm 1 he duldrcn, age 12 and under, pcrfomicd "11h C\l-Cptional di,dphnc and 1alc111, according to Maribel Samuelson, publicity ,·olu111ccr and 20·)'car Hlctnn of tht' 11.CCA. ,, ~thcl9S8 9Se:1<onrndcd,thene" one ts plannrd. Peter 'ero, rcno\\11cd pianist. composer, conductor and ar mnger, "ill pcrfom1 N1.w. 17, 1%--g. at the F~u~al of Fine Mu,k. TY.o )CB~ ago, he ~'Onductt<I a ~pc,:,al 50th an· ni\l:rsar) s;ilute to meri,an com~cr George C,cl')h"'rn in St. Paul Nero CO\t'r! more 1hnn a quarter of a ccntun of musical ~rfonnancc. Hi.~ inno"nth c programming Wilm\S his audicnc:c, Samuel.on '31d. Spiro Malas. b3s.s bamonc, will CAcr· CISC his ,oc:il abilities Jan. 20, 1990. He pla)cd thr rolr5 ofTc,)'t' m F1ddltr On tht Roof and Emile in South Pacific.

COMPANY, P.A.

architecture planning interior design 115 S. 1th Street • Coeur d' .Awt.e. ID 8S8l 4 • 208/684:-o267

"I thml hh stage pcrlormnncc \\ill be fnntas1ic u he drrssa up and pl.a)) charucte" for the 1uJ1cncc," S2mucbon $!11d The Dalla\ Br~. a cl.a\)IClll, JUI. S\\ing nnd pop group, w-ill perform March 22. 1990. The en~mblc's unique tn)trument11t1on enables the four mcmbcfi 10 pcrfonn :in att'I) of m ~ )I) lcs. .. \\'c do plirn 10 ha,e a 'ef> good e:ison th1 fall.'• Samuelson said. The scasonol 19 9-90shouldsc11SOO-I.OOO :~~t;.~~!'~us~cd~o~=~ ror one concert i> a,aiLablc, and onl) d I h members can ancnd. A u I c lJltC b S:?.S. student, SIS and fam1hb of :in) sue arc S60 An)'onc mt~tcd in bu)llli tickc'b 10 hear 'ero, Mitlas and the Dallu &a\) should mal e chccl.~ p3).tble to 11'.ootcmi Commurut) Conc:cn ~lioo 11 6824 N 16th. Coeur d'Akne, or call 77:?-S776. Emm:i Wcd...s. dri\e cbaD:J'c'r· ~on, can be reached 11 664-2J4S. Carolrn \\ ood. president, 667-4859, or Samuelson, public:11), 773-4673.

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Birthdays, Get Well, Hang In There, & Graduation We Deliver Too!


The NIC Sentinel

14

Pete Jenner's World

Poetry corner Da ncin' Death The while limo purrs too su,p right ouL~1dc my door. I look up from my lifelong wor!.; rve ~n lhJt c:ir before. A lllll. llln man. top h31 and toil~. motions with his cane, I le OflCll~ the door, gl\'CS men smile and offers me ch3mp:ignc. I 1cll him I'm 100 busy. but then the v.allL begins. Then he ~ys, "This d3llce ,s mine, you ha,c no choice my mend."

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The Kiss of Dea.th L ady Death, scarlet timekeeper. wearing her red leopard sp3nde,, rode up on a llnrley. undaunted by the numbers or her task. S miling sensually. teasing hair, she whispered. "Let me show you plcasutt

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asked. "Do you we Ma51trch311;e or \11sa· "Your choice," ~he replied • "Pleasure now. p:l)'ll\3nt I.Ji.:r.

Wc rode aero~, the Sllld.\ orumc 10 the nroo cit). We Slopped 81 the tOV,'Cf ol lu I

on t,lS) ,lf«t In her rrom w l°<'kltJ tn(' n1 1hc bcn,h Clf the grc.11 Judge

Brook Song C ome he w1' me by yonder Brooke By laughing waters sholl we look Each mto the olhcr's eyes TIii all rcmauu hc.tnbcaLt and ~,ghs An Languid rhtthmie molded thighs An nnu!lhl '11JII I.now ht one or tv.o 111 sortly merged, a song come~ 1hru A m, 1or ume ..nd find, nur not1I.. Of un, 1wcc1 warmth and t ,ughmg Bru,1!. llct1.•yS.l .,,,..,

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CM (hllcl ,ti,: "1!J, "You·11 he hrrt l1,rctcm1t)."

and h:lnJ.-J me II ml rOIC

v. 11h only rnc: tlkll11 Apnl 198<l I ~,1u11 1lj C-c,11•'- nu'< , . _ 1.wmn Bctm,,,,.• .,,tl\lCIC< Oc•1•tl'II by fmJ7 l>.kont<.,t "ll<uooe I t\tuJJ ',u,. -...,.1.~ Dt,\11 ")

'Geo, Bob, rna1 AK ~7 IUtO c»o1 m.iJ.e up 101 )Out oo~, •,Q11111.ineur

CONGRATULATIONS! NIC GRADUATING STUDENTS \VE ARE PROUD OF YOUR ACCOMPLISIIl\1E'-!1 S Ai\D \\ ISi I YOL THE VERY BEST I

YOUR FUTURE CAREERS!

K001''E NAI MEDICAL CENTER WE CARE FOR NORTH IDAHO! 2003 LINCOLN WAY COELIR D'ALENE, IDAHO (208) 667-6441


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. . .:. ;. :.Thur:..;__6doy:. . M.,-=---y1,.:.._ ;__ .1989 _____

Looking to Nationals

Tracksters go to Texas by Craig Bruce Wi1h Regionals behind them, 1he NIC track team and head coach Rob Conner are looking forward to nmionals, which will be held May 18·21 in Odessa, Tex. ''We have five women and two men qualified for nationals," Conner said. ··All or 1hcm have a shot at All· American."

"We have five won1en and two men qualified for nationals "

photo by Apnl Muha

Go Cardln al s! --New cheerleadlng squad members Ronnie Pasllla, Shawna O'Nei ll and Mike Doran practice stunts. New members not pictured are Lee Watson, Cindy Bleek and Kristi Jefferson

To qualify for All·American, o track~tcr ha\ to pince ,i~th or better nt n ationnls. Todd Stoner nod Dill Ryon both quollned in 1he hi&h jump, plo1:m11 th1rd and fourth wnh Jump\ of 6-9 1 , Ryan tind Stoner 111c roommoU.'\ a, NI(, Con ncr ,,,id.

Women qualifying were Darcy Aldrich at 10.000 mc1crs, Stacey Olson in lhe javelin. Marcy Bakes in the high jump, Alane Schwartz in I.he Heptathlon and Diane Annsuongat J,OOOand S,000 meters. Armsuong also is the ras1es1 junior college female al 10,000 meicrs. "Diane broke her wrist the nigh! before," Conncr~id. "She was mo 101 or pain, so ~he rcall) ran l'>cll " Conner also said lhat Aldrich hod seriou, problmn wi1h blbtcn during her third pla~-c lmish al 10,000 meters To quahh for na1ional~. n1hk1h mu,1do bcncr 1h.,n stl )lanJ..irtb, Con· ncr "11J. He adJ.cd lhJII olher 1rncks1ers 1umcJ ,n l'(r<onal ~t, '-1thou1 beating 1he 1111nd~rd\ , "0.11t Hubb, rnn 1he 1,500 in 4.().1," Co nner \!lid ''Con,idcring 1hc 4,800 fool 0lt11ude and 80 degree 1rm~raturC\ ~c had lo tompclt' with, lhl\ w,>uld be 11 hfcumc bcs1 for him. " J\>hn l11dcy oho took ,ccund 111 10,000 mcicr~ while Kelly Gon\er nin 11 fl'r.onal bot m lhe 400 mclcr hurdlei.

A I Treasure Valley Saturday ...

Cardinal ball players confront must·win situation preuy good ball

by David Carkhu tt

said. "They've gol

A couple or 1•nrinblc~ plnguc 1hc Nonh Idaho College Cardinals as 1hc ball team fnccs playoffs. Wilh o "deccm record" of 2J.IJ 01·cmll. coach Jnck Bloxom st1ld 1hc Cardinnls face an unccnnin fu1urc as I he weekend nppronchcs. The game schedule ror May 12 and 13 depends on n double-header between Ricks College nnd lhc College of S0u1hcm Idaho. A CSI vic1ory would dc1cm1incl~riday, M~ 12, as 1he dny or reckoning for NIC nnd Treasure Valley Communily College in 1heir season closer. Then, 1hc Cardinals would bt tha1 much closer 10 playoff competition. "\Ve s1ill have to win 1wo ond Ricks lose 1wo 10 rench playoffs," Bloxom said. The mosl hopeful variable is the match be1wecn Ricks and CSI. aocor· ding 10 Bloxom. "Ricks' chooces of beating CS! arc lypically slim," Bloxom said. Bo1h Ricks and Treasure Valley ha,e a league rte0rd of S-S, making comparable 1hc chances of an advanced \\CCkcnd elimination game and 11voidan.:c of such climimuion by 1hc Cardinals. '' Hopefully, we co n gel 1hcm (Treasure Volle)') in Friday.'' Bloxom

Dlo,om has II hcahh> resp((& for 1he Chui.on, 1\ho beal lhe Cardinal! 10-0 and 9:3 on Apnl 29, their la1cs1 match 10 dole. "We're n<ll de.id, but y,e're not hcahhy," B10.\om said 1ha1 Sa1urda) . f\ mon1h earlier, lhc forfCMt '<as brigh1cr for NIC. The Cardinals left lhe March 24-26 Banana Bell Toumamen1 in Le1\islon l'klorious over Treasure Valley 10.9 in their ma1ch. Ho1\e, er, "hatever the outlook. tile Cardinals face the Chul.ars at Treasure Volley's diamond in Ontario, Ore., this wtel.end. NIC reached regional 1oumsmen1 each or the las1 three years but always missed the championship. " We just h11ven'1 done whal we ha,·c had 10 do 10 win the rcgionlll championship," Bloxom said. As the 1988-89 s~on 1<ind.s downin ,·ictory or defca1 for 1he Cardinalsaboul nine sophomore team members will leave !heir jcrst)'S for upcoming freshmen . Pl11 ns rmwn lcnulli\e for uansfcrs. "I don't lhink 11n}'Onc knows for sure "here the) arc going.'· Blo~om said. Meanwhile, he is beginning 10 setl recruits from m11inb the orth"-est.

(I

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oy Jim 0,.1\e

Home run- - An NIC batter attempts a home run off Le.vis and Clark JV's pitcher.


Tho NIC Scnllnol

16

1····-,······························--·---------····-----··t : As sophomores exit... : ' '

.~ Coaches

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land recruits

by Brian Walker and Kim Glrtman

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Nonh Idaho College women', baskcl· ball Coach Vic Woodwa rd has six pro· mising recruits for the 1989-90 season. Lead ing the way is S-10 forward Kris Gruber from Colville, Wash. During high sc hool Gruber was chosen as first 1cam AII-S101e, received the Mos1 Valuable Player Award in 1hc Fronlicr League and averaged 19 poinis a game. Kris ti Challcrlon, a 5-S guard. will 1ransfer from Idaho S1a1e Universit y where she red shined lasi season. Chattenon was second team All-Stole while 31 Uoise lligh School. Al m recruited was Mlchclle Saodholm . a 5.11 power forwa rd from llclena. Mont. She averaged 14 points n game :ind wus selected a~second team All·Sinic in cla~s /\A . Shnndu Tebo)', n 6-foot power forwo rd from 1>nsco. wn,h.. wa~ chO)c n first lcam llig 9 Conference ond averagcd 13 poinl ~ o gnme. Also from Pnsco 1\ 5-8 guard Kcntll Keene) who wn~ ~elcc1cd \ccond team Uig 9Confcrcnccondn,•eragccl IOpoi nts n go mc. Lo.:ally, 1-:nn Mo~ from l'os1Fn!l•w:J, recruited. Moc i, ll S-6 guard who wn\ 1clec1cd first tcnm Dis1rlc1 I nnd ,cccivcd honornblc mc111ion All-State. m ~:c;~~:::r1~\ 0;:i~ln~:/ looking to l·o11r of th e fh e sophomore, nrc go, ing on to piny bo~kctbnll and one ha~ cho\cn not 10 pursue b11~l..c1boll ony further, according 10 Woodwa rd. Chrrl S huri, plans 10 nuend Oonzogn Unilc1sil)', Trina ltun1t<' is going to Pep· pcrdinc Uni\'crsil)' in Malibu, Calir., Darla , mhh plnn~to nuend Cal S1a1e in l os Angeles, hell) ' leltilemcn is going to l!ltstcm Montano in Billings nnd Lori f'rcb is going on 10 the Univtrsity of Idaho bul won't pursue bnsl..c1bnll any further.

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Men's basketball conch Rolly Wlllinmssaid1worecrui11ha"esigned lrucrs of inieni, 1hough scvmtl others have e,prcss.-d interest. John Pauon, n 6-foot·6, 220-pound forward, will transfer 10 NIC from Or~on State where hncdshined before playing las1 season. Pauon wuJ an all1 I · 1h'I r · b ti H' h ~~~r ~ t~c: )': ~~h.ml er ne ig "Hi~ ma1uril)' and experience \\ill be of lu 1 " \\,.JI' 'd 1 ,•a e o us, iams sai . He sold Tim Johnson, a 6-£001-6 small forward 01 190 pounds. also signtd. Johnson aucnds Rh•ersidc High School in ChatGroy, Wash.

wrest Iin9

North Idaho College wreslling coach John Owen has looked ne,a r and far for wres1ling recruits for nexl season. Twins Robtrt and Rkk Edtlburg from La keland who were bolh 1989 A-2 Champions a1 11 8 and 126 have chosen to auend NIC. Brady Jl11rrlson from Minneapolis, Min n., who was second at state in 1988 and was a Na1ional High School Placer, will wrestle al 167. A· I State Champion Rick Durbin of Post Falls also plans 10 wrestle for 1he Cords al 11 8. Robby llfrgcr of Clarkston, Wash., who caplured fim in his weight class a1 Tri-State Tourney and was AA Champion in Washington in 1989. will also at· tend NlC. According 10 Owen, only five wrestlers have chosen NIC and he is awaiting for replies from others. Six ~ophomores arc planning 10 con1inuc 1hier wrestling careers, Owen \aid Gre 11 Dullrrb who placed rirs1 at Na1ional\ this year and founh in 1988 hos chosen 1he Univenhy of low,1. Scoll Flllus fini,hed 1ccond at Nntionnl~ in 1989 and 1h1rcl m 191!8 plan~ to go on 10 Northern Mo1111m11 in Harvc. Doul,l l"e rharl.. i~ undcdded bul hn, ofret\ from Cornell Unive1}i1y 1n New York :md Padfk Uni~mity m Oregon . Conll l,acrol,, who fini!.hcd fourth at Nntionnl~in 1988, plnns to auend Boise Stale. lr"art Kl1n·tr plans to pursue \\Totiing at 1he Oregon lnstilu te of Technology. Robby Benjamin, who 1001.. firs! in 19S6 and third in 19S9, may auend Alnskn Pacific. Doug Pttha plans 10 au end Washington Staie, but hns decided not to pursue wrestling any further. 011cn said stveral key \\'fCSticrs will be bacl.. next year including AU· Amcric:in John Sehnert. "We've improved lhc schedule a lot compared to la.s1 years, and added several home ma,ches and new schools," O"cn said.

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Cross Country :• Track and cross counlr)' coach Rob Conner announced signings of recruilS for the foll season. Joining lhc men's team will be Gal') Cucuof Univcrsil) High School, Mark Ftttl of Ccolral \/alley and Jim Ht DI')' of Shadle Park. All 1hr schools arc in Spokane. Karn ~•is of Richland High School 'Wash.), JUI Sa-• r of Bums u;nh v .. , , • "6 School (Ore.) and tad Pttppemau of Shelton High School (Wash.) will competc on Lhe "omen's team. Conner said.

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Thur$day. May 11, 1989

17

Area lakes offer wide fish variety by Darrel Beehner As the semester winds down 10 1he last couple of frantic days, many North Idaho College students may be 1hinking, "I'd rather be fishing." So, do it. According 10 Jeff Smith, owner of a Coeur d'Alene fishermen's outfiuer called Fins and Feathers, 1hcre may be no better time to fish 1han the present. "The early spring fishing is some of the best you're going to find," Smith said. ''The nex1 30 10 4S days arc probably going to be the best fishing of the year un1il September." Although fishing season doesn't open in the rivers and streams un111 Moy 27, Smith said lhc variety of fish In the different lakes In the nrca offers a diverse and pleasant challenge to local anglers. "If you like croppie fishing or bns, fishing, we have that . If you like v. hhc (fi~h) we have those. As fnr '" ihc irout goes. we have K11mloo1u, cu1-throa1s and Mnckinnw. You name it nnd it'$

out there some where," Smith said. When fishing for K.amloops, especially on Hayden and Pend Oreille Lakes, Smith recommends 1hc use of surface lines with a size 9-13 rapala or lyman plug. On the smaller lakes, such as Fernan. Kelso and Hauser, trout fishermen might want to use rooster tail spin ners, needle fish spoons, super duper spoons, or troll with mes, Smith said. The chai111 lakes-Medicine, Thompson, Killamey and Cave are a haven for bass, crappie, Nor· them pike and catfish, Smith said. "You've got potcntiol 30 pound fish," Smith said. "That's a big fmh water f1Sh, especially for those small lakes." When fishing for pike in the spring. Smith said some good baits ore Johnson silver minnows and dare devil spoons. The lower three chain lakesThompson. Olue ond Anderson, arc catch and release for ba~s un111 July I, Smith cou11oncd. During the early part of 1he yeor, the bai.s become very octtvc,

Smith said. Smith said rubber liuards, jigs wilh pork rind or spinner baits used for pike will work well for cat· ching bass. The best all-around fish in the chain lakes arc probably crappies. Smith said. ''There are good crappies in every one of those lakes," Smith said. "Everybody is so busy going for the big pike or the big bass, they forget obout the little crappies, but they're about the best eating. They're really easy and in· e.,pcns1ve to fish for." Bullheads or catfish arc also easy to catch in the chain lakes by fi.shing off of the bouom with night crawlers. Smith said.

spinner with a glo-hook baited with a maggot. The limit on blueback is 2S. Mackinaw trout ore the major prize to anglers fis.hing in Priest Lake. Smith said. "They're really aggrl'S$ivc there because there is a lack of a good food base there," Smith said. · 'There's not too much you can put in there that won't work on Priest (Lake)." Due 10 occcss, Smith said the best fishing ~ done from boats.

''.If you have the opponunity 10 go in a boat. you should definite· ly do it because you're kind or limi1cd from the shore," Smith said. "There lssome good fishing in close to the shore 1hough because a lot of fish will be mov. ing to shallow watl'r." "As far as fishing goes. there are very, very few places in the coumry that are going to top our area," Smith iaid, "and mos, of it's right out our back door. That's why v.e lhc here."

"It's no1 uncommon to catch 100 to 200 bullheads in one evening," Smith said. "But 1hen you ha, e got the hard job of cleaning them. Don•, cntch more than you can clean " Spirit La~c specioh1es in blueback, man)· of which ore c;aught v.,ith h.ind·hncs or jis~. Smith '81d, """' o beild chain

Athletics boast banner year ing last year's 18-16 mark) d~p11e sporting oril) 1v.,o sophomores. Coach Bret Taylor 1>ald the tum was young, but 11 was a good ume to get experience

brian walker It would be an 1111dcrs101emen1 to say North Idaho College hos had n SUCCCS$ful year in t11hle1ics. All of the programs hove pro1•ed 10 themselves, the college. fans nnd opponents that NIC has continued itS strong tradition for athletic cxetllcncc this year. In addition to kctping the tradition alive, 1hc success will be an inspiration for future years. High goals will be set using the seasons as a roundt1tion 10 base from. This creates an 11d1•antage for nC.\t year to be a bright one as well. Let's take a stroll do\\n memory lane 10 recapture some of the accomplishments of the 1--arious prognuns. The Cl"O$$ country team faced the difficult assignment of meeting last )"car's women's national cham· pionship and men's fourth place national, finis.h. Sophomore Diane Armstrong, after placing. first at regionals, claimed All-Amerkan honors with her third place national finish. She will be attending Montana ~tatc Unh·ersity. The men's team, which will return several kc)' run· ncrs, finished eighth at the NJCAA championships at the College of Southern Idaho. The volleyball team ended its season at 20-18 {equal-

The Cardinal wrestling team, a nauonal powerhouse, brought home a third-pluc fimsh from the nBtional tournament in Glen Ellyn, Ill St, V.TC'.otlm qualified for the event With sophomore Greg Buucris claiming the 190-pound national utlc It marl.cd the ninth time In the last 10 year, the team placed 11 least third at nationals. Not 10 be o,·crlool..ed, the team 11,00 rcciorws by less than a point o,er rival Clackamas. NIC v.on the previous four national championships. Another title is already in the sights of next season's team. I, for one, would not bet against them. The women's basketball team also asserted il.S(IJ a.s a national contender The Lady Cardinals posted a school record 31-4 marl... The)' captured their second straight region title before winning their opening round game at nationals in Tyler, Texas. After the sea.son. eo<0ach Greg Crimp ~ed it the best sophomore class he has ever coached. Among the iophomores "'as Lewiston ruuh-e Da.rlll Smith "'ho v.-as selected LO the All-American second team. The men's basketball team pro,ed it could pla)' ...;th any team in the llllUOo when it.<fefcated rival College of Southern Idaho at home in January. Tbe ca.gm finished with a 23· 11 overall muk after winning their first nine games. Tbe men flDWled founh in the leag11e and placed the same at regionals at CSI. Sophomore sensation Mario J acltsoo signed 11,i th Oregon Stau: during the rc-."Tlliting season. Tbe basketball g1lllles and 'lli'Testling matches

"-Ouldn 't have b«n the \aJIIC wuhoui the cheerleader\ and the Cardinal ma,cot They added life 10 1hc ~cene and pl.lycd an 1mPortan1 role in makina the event\ SUCCHful Fim year track coach Rob Conner &aid 1he team Is 1mall 1n quantity, but not qualny. Thb was ev1den1 when JC'icral athletes met nadonlll qWllif)'Ulg times and dtSWlcei. The na11onaJ meet will ht held in Odessa. Teus, May 18-W. In add111on to the v.eather, ba.tcball toacb Jack Blo~om u1d the team had to rebound from what he called one of NIC'1 wor11 Call ~a.son,. The team won the Banana Belt Tournament In Lcwmon early in 1he season for the $«Ond 1traight yeu. The Cards played better than the coa.:h e.xpccted early, but the team u in a musH•in lituatlon at Treasure Valley SatUiday 10 keep iu playoff hopei all1-e. Tbc mtramural program kepi studcnu, faculty and staff busy with various acuvi1ies throughout the year. First-)cas director Scott Pmrson wa.s concerned with getting the college involved. Overall participation numbers 11,ere up from last year In addition to tum atth ities sucli aJ b.ukctball, softball and volleybaJJ, the program also offered skJ trips, ping pong, a fun run, pool, bov.Ung and more. NIC featured a. ro.,.-ing team for the first year. The cre'i'' competed in meets at Gonzaga, Columbia Basm and WSU. going up against U'laal foUI-year schools. The spon added a new dm!cnsioo 10 the school and should grow in fururc years. All paniciparu.s, coaches, trainers, the booster dub and those a.ssocialed with athletics dc:scrve credit in making the year suc:cssful. Hopefu.Uy. fu1urc years will folio"' this CJWDplc.


Tho NIC Sonllnel

18

First-year rowing club gains experience by Robb Brennan Fun was the name of the game for the North Idaho College rowing club at the Tri Cities Collegiate Spon.s Festival April 29. The men's novice team plac· cd third. The JV eight-man crew staned out first off the line against Washington State University, but a "crab" threw off the rowing sequence, coll.'iequcntly tak· ing th em out of competition. A " crab" is when a rower plunges his or her oar 100 deep in10 1he water, causing a whiplash effect on 1he rower. In 1his case, the rower lost his scat. ''I think we did real good, comidcring 1hc competition we were up agamsl, "said crew member Owen Seau. The " Crew," as the rowing team likes 10 call themselves, faced sliff compcti· tion from the West. TeAms such as 1hc Umvcrsi1y of California al Berkley, University of San lo Clora, three school, from the Seaulc area, WSU and rival Oon1nga com1,cted. The NlC Crew hus the deck stnl.cd ogoi11'1 1hem when compe1ing ngain,1 the four-year schools Most 1eam\ are nblc 10 worl. out during winter months wilh rowing innchinc\, nnd muo lly arc on 1he wi11cr by Februnry. NIC, In con·

trast, can't afford expensive rowing machines, and must wail until April 10 gain experience on the water. Also, NIC docs not have o four-man shell and must rely on other schools such as WSU 10 borrow one to compete v.ith. Funding is also a problem facing the crew. Since it is classified as a club spon, and not a varsity sport, the bu rden of funding rans mainly on the panic:ipants. Coach Bob Siegwarth has been in· ~Lru mental in combing the community for donatioll.'i. The crew members end· ed up paying about SIOO each for the season, which is small compared 10 S7SO Gonzaga University rowers must pay. The crew will not be able LO par1icip01c in the Northwest Regional Championships scheduled for May 20-21 due to the ract 1ha1 most of the members will be leaving the area arm 1he semester ends. "It was a fun year. I got 10 meet rowers from all over the west. A good aspect of the crew is the team cffon, we all had to work hard together. The crew is also a great opportunity to travel." rower Marty Weimer said about the spring season. Those inicre\ted in par11,apa11ng nut rau or for donatioru 10 the dub can conmet Tim Hertzog 01 772-7978 or Hi<c Donnel,on at 772. 7009

Nic's for summer fun by Shann on Hayword Alth outth , chool 1, cooling down, Nie', 01 the Oen,h h bound 10 be the ) 11111111cr "hot ~r,01." acco1ding 10 Stu· dent Acti1i1ic~ DirC"Cto1 lkan Bennett. "Not 1h01 many studcnl) nrc in 1hc area in the ,ummer," lknnc11 )Jid, · ' )O cverylhlnjl mo,c~ down 10 the beach." Oc1111c11 ~Old "lot, of thing,·• arc planned during the ~um mer months, in• eluding 11in1hurrcr r:ace,, 1olleyball 10111nnmcnt~ 11nd Hobie C'at sailboat rn,cs. Dntcs for the c, cnts ha, t' not yet betn finnlizl'd but ore e, pcctcd 10 be firmed up within the new few wccl.s, he ,oid. ' ,,011 Pcter<icn, mtrnmurnl~ dirtttor, "ill be in chnrgc of the N,c·s 11c1hitic. and NIC s1udents II ill 11orl.. in the conCe$SiOn mind.

"It's the place to be,'' Ocnncu said. To 111d 1hosc interested in ha,·ing fun this ~ummcr, c:anocs, fins and m:isl.s. in-

nrrtubes, \lindbo:ir<h. Hobie Cats and Mono Hull day sailbo:m arc a,ailt1blc: ror tent at Nic's. A deposit is rtquirtd on all items in addiuon to the rcnllll recs. Rental equipment 1s a, :iilable to s1udents at a discount. 11hile public rates arc ,lightly higher. For e,ample. Students C3n rent a

canoe for SJ nn hour or Sl.S for eight hour, ond public rates arc S.S nnd S30, 1c,pcctil'ely. A rental price li\t can be picked up in the Sub11ay game room. lltnnell \aid the rcrllnl~ ha"c been \O well rccc11 cd by both the student, and the public, nnd ln\t )car's rc\cnuc doubled that of the first year Bc~ldc, rcntols, Nk 'l 11111 )ell the U\ual "junl. food" hot dogs, cool.ics, pretzel,, .i; well as f)OP, popsidcs and cand) Future ~nsion 01 N1c's 11ill 1ocludc the addition of a secondary I olle) ball coun, Bcnncu said. Bcnncll encouraged people 10 v.a1ch for lhe uix-omiog christening of the nev.. ly renovated sailbo:11 donated to the col· lege b) Greg Matelich, former 011 ner of Matelich Mnrinc. Most of the rcno1a1ion was done by Bennett v.ith help from the Voe-Tech department. A oanung COntC$t for the bo:11 v.ill be held as soon as rcno111tion is complete, Bennett said. Thin)' pcoplt signed up for the summer sailing cl3SS, Bennett said, ex. cecding expcaations. lo order to accommodate the large class, the fim SC$Sion 11ill include all 30 3nd instruct them on sailing procedure and safct)· guidelines. AC1er tho.1, the students 11 il1 most likel) go out on the boat at :usigned umes in groups of four m order that e1cr;one gets a chance 10 sail, Bennett sll!d

photo t>y C/ler1 Wohllalb

All aboard! - - Crew member Greg Hudson prepares ror take-orr.

SPO R TS SHORTS f hc ,oflb:111 ,h11mpionship i• today at 4 A golf 1ournnmcn1 will round out 1hi, year's intramural :1c1ivitic,. 1 he c,cnt will pm be held Friday on the Coeur d'Alene goll ln1 riunu1.il dsrc~1or Seim l'cterion ,aid course 111 3 p 111. II i\ or,en 10 1111 m1dcni,, h~ r,le.i,cd 1hn1 the participJtion level focul1y and '1orf. !or the year Wd\ up f1om hl\l yenr·~ tolol

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C

SPoRrs CALENDAR

M1y

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tn,,.mural S0llb1II Ch1mplon1htp 1n1,.muref Oolf To"rn•r

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12

Coeur d'Alene Golf CourH, 3 pm T,.ck & Fl•ld

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.

B1Hb1II NIC 01 Treasure Valley CC B111b11t Regtonals a1 South wlnnes • . Track & FJtld

riauonalt et Odon.. Tuos

EBOARD

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--~-----

Jump-2 Matey ea~u 5-2, , Al•ne Sch.,,a/\Z 410; T,.ck & Field· Pelluer lnvotll,o,._J II SFCC April 28 Heptathlon 2 Alan,, Sc;hwaru 3.831 poln1s, M,n-1,soom-1 Cllrl1 Co• 4:088. Mau ,~erctt 10,000m,3 DarGy Aldtloh 41 U05; 8hol Put A 408 8. Mall< wa.11a, 22 9 3,000m 4 Clint Gtnjt Mona Ha,111on 37-41, , 400m ·• JOf wag11 71 3, 8.49, S Joe r.ian,n 8 51 1 Oi,e Hubbs O It 5 100~ Su,1e Cope 133A, 200m~ Susie Cope Stuan Duncan 9 14 1 M,u 8"'mley 9:28. Bnatt 26.82', 5,000m-2 Dia,.. Atmatrono 1&'02 08, Tripi. W•'•" 9-49 9 Pat Higley 10'.26 2 110m hunlln~ Jump-4 Alane Sch ,-a,u 3:J..71'.

em R)an 183", 400m hurdlu-3 Ktilf G01>ser , $631 , IIOOffl. Tony ~es 1:5o.05, Ramon Esl)lnOl:ll 1'00.08. Ma111n 21)2 Tttple Jump .3 Pat Gravelle 4~. High Jump-I RyanU. Todd Stooe, 8-4. 200m-Man Fems 23.95; IOOm-Matt Fe<rts 11.62 Pat Gnmslle 11 71

Wom• n- 100m Susie Cope 13.05; ~ Long Jump-3 Scn ..-a,n 1.c.10; High J u ~ Sch..anz !>-0: JneDn·2 Stacy Olson 129-9, 100m hurdlu -4 Sc-WU 17.BS. ~ Kai)' Mcelhenney 2:29 64, AMS re...it 2:30.81, Joy Wagar 2:,e. 3,.000m.J Doane Anns1rong 10:24.5 Regionals at Rieu . Mat ~ (al r.sults finaO W.n-Hlgh Jwnp,3 Todds6-9"' 4 81I Ryan 6-9\ , 400m hurdlu -5 Keily Gonsar 56.28, 5,0()0m.4 Cl,nt Genie 16:02 75, 5 John H,ekey 16-1)3.51 aoom-5 Ramon Espinoza

26 4, Tliplt Jump,3 Alane Sen-AIU

33-3~•.

2;01.J.J. 10,ooom-2 JoM Htcke1 3318.02. UOOm-3 OaYe Hubbe 68. 5 Oermou Shor· 1au 32: Tr1ple Jump-4 Pat Gra•e •e ~~ Women - Jtvefln.3 Stacey Olson 126S 3,0()0m-2

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T,naure Vallar 10, NICO

TIUlllrt Valley 9, NIC 3 Yal<lma va•trt 12. tllC 6

Apnl 29

Aptll 30

Yakima Valley 12. NIC 6 • NIC 8. Lt.vis-Clark I' 3 NlC 8, lkNI...Cfar)' 1, 0 ..

R>cks 12, NIC 7 NIC 5. Rlel<.S 4

.

Ma/ 2

.

Colle(le of Soulbem ldl/lO 5, NIC • NIC 3. Cotege or Sournem Idaho 2

lnlf1mu,., Sof1.baU Flnal Standing,: B~ZoO 8-0 Flaming ~am,s IJ.2 H1•:t,llhM . IJ.2 CRUSH IJ.2 FAST 43 OS Orphans

Choad Maslt~ 8ul1t1S1ThomS Tne Bui ~11 nal sin,

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May 5 /1.af 6


ThlKsday, May 11 , 1989

pholo br Che,, Wo1>11a1b

Students take advantage of 80,degree weather for a stroll on the campus.

C

NOTICES

Mony of Americas top companies feel tho leodershlp training required by Army ROTC Is slm llar In many respects to the ir own management train ing programs. Enter Army ROTC by attending o six week readership ond managemen t course during the s um, mor botwoen your sophomore and Junior year. Get pold to a tt end, there Is no obligation, and you can leave at anytime. Contact the Deportment of Mllltory Science at th e college or university you pion to transfer to. Or coll tho local Army ROTC ropresen, totlve ot (206) 767,9301. The Mu,culnr D)>lrophy ,\ ,sod:111on's (MDA) Summer C'amr on Lnl..c Coeur d'Alene i, lool.ing for male coun~elors. cabin leaders and lifeguards for the week of J une 10-17. \ olun1cer l"Olllhclors are O\>igned 10 worl.. with c:impcrs on a one-to-one basis, providing the care. close nacntion and ~upcrvision thtll children with mu,ctc disease need. um mer camp offer, 11 widc ran,gc of nc1iviti~. espccillli)' designed for childl't'n and tttn~ who hn, c limi ted mob11i1y or u~e \\ httlch111r~. If you arc I yenrs or older nnd want to b«omc part<'[ this tt'" -arding c., pcrien.:c. contact MOA at E. 905 Third A Ht, S1111r 21, Spol..a nc. Wo~h. 99202. or cnll (509) HS-9065 or (~0 ) 342,3302.

)

. . . . - - - - ( CLASSIFIEDS ) - - ~

1 o cclcbr ate the Idaho <tntcnnml. the ldnho Gcncalogi~al So.:1c1y i, ollcrin@ the Idaho Pioneer Cer11ricatc. ava1lohlc 10 unyonc whose on,C)to1 wa\ " pioneer ldahonn {i.e. rn Idaho on n prior to 1890). Sontl' proof i~ rcqurred-brnh ccrufl.a1r-. bnptr\mal record,. census records or ncw,pnper onidc\ will fit the bill The \talf at the Idaho Genealogical L rbral) arc a,ailoble for help in 1hi, area. 1 he ccr11ficatc~ arc SID per dcxumcn1, 11rr a11rac thr and lramoble. The "rtil1Cate applic ... tlon, and information arc available al the Id oho Gencalog1,ul l 1brar). ,all 3)-1 -230.S or \\rHC Idaho Gcncalogrc.:il Soc1ct), 4620 o,crland R,l3d, Number !04. Bol\c, 10 83705-2 67

Tho Adult Basic Education Program at North Idaho College offers a free Youth Education for Employment Pro, gram to any out,ol,school, oconomlcally disadvantaged youth between the age,s ol 16 to 21 years of age. The Nonh Idaho Mineral Club 1$ ha,·ing it's tmnual Roel. and Gem Shov. on Ma> 13 and 1.; at the Kootenai Count)' Fairgrounds Hours will be rrom 9 a. m to 8 p.m Saturday. Ma) 13 and 10 a.m. to S p.m on Sunday. Ma) l-1. 6-dmi;s1on ~ SI and duldren (under 12) arc rrcc. For inform:u ion call Pro1dcn1 Ruth Brooh at 664-3956 for rnformauon.

... , 1; r CO/\S r NANNl~S We offer the be,t pl.acrmcm progmrn. ~ " ""' r "' ':I)(' C , , ,\1 One )'tar work mg with kid, in c ,change ~ VI,, , , , ~v \ --. U for \;tl.Jr1cs up to SlOO per week, room .f' D\,\ I ,lnd llOOld. oufarc. l>cndit, oncl travel opronunuic,. We offer 1hr l>c,t chmcc, Lo".'\Y'O. \-u.. 0. I Ot'\~ • m f..n11IM , arid lo..,1tron,. Con~1t:t Su ••m \...OUC.. 0..:\..W~) Wmom Jl Helping llnnJ~ Inc. f h,1 '(> .; Rccrnrtmcnl Con'4:1Pr (2CJI) U,.1 0399 ,-.._,,.....c."'-- -...__=...,_:....,.;'-=,,.=..-----1 (1\1 hwclnrrc nnd n 1..:nrmn.

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\\llll'l t IIOUSb NANN WS... F,p.,ri,;nc,J hfo m then ,tJon\ r.ipiltll 'fop scr«ncd. We plocc )OU with thc: h. 11 Traruporwuon p:r1d Good \JIJI). f'onl!ICt /',,l!tnt, now, for Qfl)' m.iy 1nttrvrcw. (4MJ 721 11-12

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fhe Senunel • luuo W. Ga.nicn A\e • Coeur d'Alene. ID S.3814 Salu Man ageu

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For more infonmtiCln on ndvenising in the Sentinel pie~ C3.II Jim Dr3kt-L3pos at {208) 769-3388/89

-


The NIC Sentinel

20

VO-TECH from p.l

BUDGET from p. J If the college stays with th is budgeting ratio, funds for new construction and salary increases will have to come from somewhere, causing the college to give up some other things in the maintenance and operations budget, according 10 Bennc11. He said the give and take is likely 10 nffcc1 the numerous student services like computer labs and special counseling services. " We have asked the staff and racuhy alike to sit preuy 1igh1 in respect 10 raises, but you can't ask them to do that forever,'' Bennett said. "So, this year I know we have 10 try and give them n raise." In ord er 10 do this. the college would probably have to raise recs. which would make NIC's recs more in line with recs charged by other colleges in Idaho and the Inland Northwest, according to Benncll. The worst port or 1his kind of a decision i~ 1h01 it is coming "on the heels" of the Board of Tn,stees ,,s. ASNIC lawsuit, 13cnncll said. "So I am faced wi1h a very dirncuh polltkol problem or rai\ing rec) thnt would seem like o reac, lion 10 the lawsuit," he said.

According 10 Milt Turley, chair of the facully Meet and Confer Commi11ec, an emergency board of trustees meeting was scheduled for Saturday to discuss the meet and confer process. " This is not a negouauon process,'' Turley said. "We arc nol a union: we gwe our input so adminiSlrators can take these suggestions 10 the board in a package."

"So I am f aced with a very difficult political problem of raising fees that would seem like a reaction to the lawsuit."

Turley said, arter the lawsuit, our next scheduled meeting was cancelled. Inquiring why, he said, administrators replied they were not exactly sure where the college was money-wise or what the implications or the lawsuit would be. "Faculty and staff have been hurting for mi,cs; we have had on· ly slightly over n I percent increase: for the Inst three years," Turley said. " lnnation has eaten 1h01 up complc1ely." "Dul, in rcallly, it has nothing 10 When the slight faculty/staff do with mnking our budgc1 pay increase occurred, the deans work."

received a 4.S percent increase. In light of this, the faculty reques ted no increases be granted for administrators until faculty/staff receive an increase, according to Turley. Tuiley said that although the lawsuit should not affect salary negotiations directly. it should shed a little legal light on what the trustees can do in regard 10 raising fees . Turley said many or the facuhy members realize a change in rec structure may be the only answer 10 their increased sala ry needs. Dramatic increase in student enrollment, but limited amounts of revenue from state and local sources have been some of the causes of budgetary problems, according 10 Turley. "We have experienced more growth than there is money 10 pay for it," Turley said.

''We'll teach the students how 10 fall a tree and how to get the most board feet of lumber out of it wi1hout waste and how to do all of this withou t getting hur t, Johnson said." Tree ralling and logging safety nJe the only aspects of the logging

industry now being taught at NIC, but Knapp said he hopes to eventually stan a cl0;5s that covers more

of the job, such as choker setting. The two inSLructors for the class, Dan Johnson and Dennis Bradbury, will each work with three two-man crews on a logging she furnished by Inland Paper Company. While NIC will provide the saws, the students will be required to furnish any other equipment such as axes and wedges, Knapp said.

For the short term, Turley said

as rar as he could tell. the college has put a complete stop on hiring new personnel. The board elected no1 to put a ceiling on class sl1e because they deemed this an open in)titu11on and would not restrict enrollment So. the college i, try· ing 10 get by with those on board without hiring odditional l)(r,onncl, Turley ~id

May fl owers salute sp ring.

photo by

Danyllo Balloy

r- ;.~:s.:F; -1 Ir- - -- --,I 1v1111<1 Sa11

411 B0s1

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Coeur d' Aleno, ID 63814

(7-11 Mall)

[ci~P,~

~ - \ ~-. VIDEO SALES AND RENTALS

667-4073

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