Coeur d'Alene, Idaho
Friday, September 25, 1992
Volume 69, Number 2
Rolly Will iams celebrates 31 years at North Idaho College.
InsLnJctor shares views after African trip. North Idaho College's Student Newspaper
CAMPUS NEWS, Page 22
SPORTS, Page 16
'Gritz racist' Task Force announces by Jerr Selle Assisra111Nt ws Editor
Kootenai County Task Force on Human Relations fulfi lled its duties last TI1ursday by informing the public of o possible racist movcmcm tnlcing place in the urea. Tony S1ewan, president or the KCTFHR, held a press conference Tiiursdny September 17, in the Kootenai room of Student union Building to expose the questionable racist tics of presidential hopeful and Populist pany prcsedcntinl cnnd idnte Do Gritz. Stewart provided four reasons for the 1osk force's decision to take a stnnd ngainst the Gritz campaign in n lener composed by the task force. According 10 the letter, Gri tz. gnvc n Nazi salute during lhe Rondy Weaver smnd·Off, praised the racist Nazi Skinhead group. is running on the Populist party ticket and Gritz is n self- proclaimed White Separatist. the Jener said. "We are not taking his candidacy seriously. He will not be the president in I993, but every voter should know these facts," Stewart said. "If he hos been able to fool ccnain individuals, it is our responsibility to point out what his platform is, and what his associati ons are." Stewart showed a picture of Gritz apparently giving a salute used by the Nai:is in World War II too crowd in Naples. which included Neo-Nazi Skinheads, duri ng the Weaver stand-off in early Scp1ember. 'The Nazi salu1e has s1ood as a symbol or murderous contempt for the United Sintes, its cons1itu1ion, its people, i1s Ong, its character, iis institutions. and its military forces that have fought so hard, and died so bravely in the defence of our country," the letter s:iid. In a soundless video account of the stand-off. Gri1z also appeared 10 give the salu1c 10 a group of Skinheads standing ot the back of the crowd. Stewan·s prcsen1a1ion did not go on-opposed. Lonny Hall. claiming 10 be the Nonhwes1dircc1or of the Gritz campaign, yelled for S1ewan to tum up 1he volume of the video account so tha1people could hear what the candidate said during 1hc salute. Stewan refused 10 increa.~ the sound and told Hall 10 hold a press conference or his own. Stewan continued to gi\ e more suppon 10 the ullcga1ions by quoting n Spokesman Review ~1ory primed ,\ug. 30. He snid 1he story reponcd Gritz companng the Skinheads to young mari nes. and wa~ dlr~ tly quo1ed <,ay ing "The Skinheads are doing a greni JOb. S1cwnn explained 1hat lhe Skinhead~ had been
see STEWART Page 5
photo by Richard Duggan A LITTLE BIRD TOLD ME - NIC student and wrestler Frankie Ferraro recen/ly had a wild feathered friend borrow his shoulder for a perch.
Freshman senators chosen by Patricia Snyder £uc111fre Editor A 10101 of I62 valid votes were cas1 in the freshman seno1or elections Tuesday and Wednesday - about 40 more than in 1he last election. Tiffaney Gail Clayton 100k !he open posiion wi1h 75 voles 10 Karl Vogt's 67.
Clay1on gradua1ed from Wolf Poi m High School in Wolf Point, Mont. In high school. she wos secre1ary and treasurer of her class, presid~nt of th~ pholo club and lctt.:rmnn's club and secretary of the National Honor Society. Clay1on 1s mnJoring in psycholog)
and said she would like 10 meet NIC student needs. She enjoys writing poetry and playing intramural spons. Jo Lajoie took 26 votes, I6 more than Diana Laru, to win the vocational posi1ion. Lajoie is a machinis1major who enjoys planis. camping and hiking. "I would like to encourage those who have been our of school awhile and vocational students 10 fed inlegrmed with 1he S<'hool: Lajoie. o non-traditional ~1udent, said. Lon Shepherd, 54 votes. won the academic stat over Chmta Mani~ with 31 and Jon Anderson with 20 votes. Shepherd gradua1ed from Pos1 Falls
High School. She is a general siudies major considering a degree in teaching. She was high school class vice president, secretary and represen1a1ive. She lenered in volleyball and was voted a member of a pc.er counseling group. Shepherd said she would like to be more involved and aware of campus evems. A si muhaneous poll on 1he I Perce nt ln itia1ive hod 97 res pond ers: 13 we re for ii. 58 against. 18 marked no opinion and eight said 1hey didn't care.
Page 2 Ton) s,~"an Bn Gnu n.1,pt1nd~ Africa and P~hJ Job h<ung
TI1e NIC Scn1inl•I Pa!!ti 4 Pag,· 5 P,tge 2:! Page:!.\
CAMPUS NEWS The Sentinel's Campus WatchDog
Friday. Scp1cmbcr 2S, 1992
Best friends arc 1wo people who share the same soul.
Edited and Designed by Lori Vivian
ASNIC has big plans, changes, activities scheduled by P11tricio Sn)dfr Ere(IIOl't' l:.ait/Jr
The student government board for the Associated Students of Nonh ldlho College (ASNIC) hns big plans for the coming year, nC'COrdmg to ASNIC President Shantanu Roy. Among the planned changes nre the arranging of a monthly campus-wide meeting between the board and the students. the organiwtion of an Inter-Club Council 10 make clubs more active and accountable. n new method of club funding and the publication of n newsletter. • Open Forum E:ich second Thursday of the month, beginning Oct. 8. ASNlC will hold an open board meeting. S1ude01s will be allowed 10 sign up 10 be on the agendn and air questions. suggestion~ and complaints, Roy said. "I think that ASNIC is a very impon:mt pan of the s1udcn1 body because we nre basically the link between the ndmmmmtion and the teachers and the student body," he said. "Unless we know of the complaint. we can't really do anything." Ro) said he hoped the Open Forum would make people more aware of what ASNIC is and how it functions. Those who wi~h 10 be on th.: Open Forum agenda should see Sc!Cl'etnry Trace.: Nicholson in the basement of the Student Union Building at least l week before the scheduled meeting date. "College Nlucntion Is not just an education that you get from books and mstructors," Roy said. 'There's something
more than that." Those who do not wish 10 speak in public arc welcome to visit the ASNIC offices in the basement of the SUB. Roy said. • Accountnblllty. Arranging work hours so an ASNlC member will always be available is another aspect of the new ASNIC board, Roy said. ''111cre were times last year when you'd come nnd (not) see anybody." he said. The board is developing a code of ethics for ihe officers. he said. Also. a new method of keeping track of ASNIC expenditures will make the board more accountnble, he said. In the past. information was kept in bits and pieces. he said. Now, it will all be in one place and wrinen down, he said. • Inter-Club Council ASNlC is in the process of setting up an Inter-Club Council. The council, comprised of representatives from all clubs. is on effort 10 r11ake clubs more accountable and to make students more aware of ihc activities offered on campus, Roy said. 'T ve noticed before that people come. study and take off," he said. "We'd like it 10 be n bit more than that." In addition to unifying the current clubs, Roy encouraged people 10 set up new clubs and become involved. Information packclS on the lnter-Clu~ Council were distributed this week by ASNIC Vice-President Maureen Slichter. who is in charge of clubs. She said she hopes 10 hold monthly meetings of the council beginning the Inst week in September. depend mg on the feedback she gets
from club members ond advisers. • Club Funding. AS NI C's funding of cnmpus clubs is toking a new twist this yenr. Clubs will only be granted S200 instead of the S400 they received last yenr. Clubs will hove to hold fund raisers to earn matching funds of up 10 S200 more. Slicht,!r said. The new policy is to encourage compus and community involvement. she snid. If. by the second week of Man:h. clubs do not use or tell ASNIC they're going 10 use the gront money. the S200 will be placed 1010 a pool and made ovo1loble 10 other clubs, Sllchter sn1d. The process for requ~$tmg extra funds has also changed. Clubs mutt fi~t submit n wrinen request for funds d~tailing, why they need the money. The second week clubs must present an om! request during a mceung. Oonrd meetings arc held Mondays at 5 p.m. und Thursdays ut noon ASNlC will vote on the funding request tht third week. Hearings for next yeru-'s club budget have been mo,cd up from Mnn::h 10 January. • Newsletter. ASNIC will be distributing a monthly newsleuer !>.:ginning Oct 5 to increase awareness and encourage more cnmpu~ panicipauon, Roy said. • Community Involvement. ASNIC will be taking steps 10 bring the college clos~r to the community, Roy snid. A(livitie~ - such as Adopt-a-Highway, a liner control progmm which ASNIC began p:1nicipating in 11151 year will continue and expand, Roy said.
College identification card system receives upgrade by R} on 8 l'OIN)l'I Spom&J,rnr NIC has detoured from 11s bland and nimsr student itknuficatlc>n c-Jfd~ lhb )ear and nl.lde it easier for students to put their Ollds 10 u..e. 'fl1e allooatoo budi:et for the new computer system used 10 make the cards "as nppro,imotely SIS.000. acconhng 10 ~ Bennett. rwrc.ition dirct1or. "The money for the new sy~tem came from n cnrry-over swphi.~... Bennen said. "E.wa money that W11.Sn·1 $pent last ye.ir goes into a pot and cnn be u.scd the ne\l yc.ir for things like this (the Olld sy~cm)." About $1,000 was ~nt for the acrual c:in1s. Bennen said. "We bou(!ht obout 10,000 curds:· Bennett. who h.,s die system in his olTice. "3id.. ·1m1 should la~t us for about four or live ye.us." The system COll5i~~ of :i digitlll 1m:igc cilmern. computer system and a prinll.Y. The end rcsult is n computer image of each stu&!nt th.lt receil'es 3 card. Studfflts ru NIC will keep lh<-1r curd throughout their= at NIC. Bennett said. A sticker will be placed on cards nt the beginning of t',ll'h semester. The card.< ha1-e many uses. including library book creek 001. ~ of the comput<Y la~. checking out equipment in the gym, renung equipment in the rompus remotion oflice and ca...tiing chcclcs ai the college. It will trulblc studenLs 10 1o<e dwing c:impus t'ltctions. 10 gei into spon1ng events and ASNIC-sponsored events such as dances, comedy nights, boot cruises for a discount prie1: or free. Bennen li~cd ime tmin rca<.ons thai NIC changed to the new
card. First, students needed a picture 1.0. because it was inconvenient for studenlS to h:il'e two fom1s ofidcntific:ition (one of which had 10 h.wc :1 picture on it) 11hen the old cnru, were 10 be used.
Although the computer ,y\tcm wa, very cxpcn~1vc, tht new cards will actually <ave the college money in the next couple ycar1., Dennen ~11id. "The cost for each new computer card is ,omewhere around 52 cents," Bennett snid, "but the cost of a lnminnted card (the! kind that most high schools use) is about S1.50." Students will face a S5 repl.1cemen1 charge with cards stolen or lost. Rtplacemcnt cards are available in the NIC Camp~ Recreation office in the basement of the SUB.
Next. the faculty and Ol'Jlllltizeni 11C1Xbl u way 10 control ewnlS. Studl!nts would gil-e non-studtmts their canl so n friend could get Student diSl."OOntS. Flnolly. NIC's library will bi going 10 a new system somewhere toward the end of September which would require students to have their 1.0. card to ch~ck out books. The cards have the students nnme :ind an identification number which is really only a bar code number. The bar code number will be essential for a student if they wish 10 check out any books from the library, Bennett sold. The cards can also be used 10 check books out from the new Goni.aga University Library in Spokane. according to Sm/Isl you're on candid computer·· N/C student Dani Lewis rsclsvss hsr student ID Bennett. from Rscrsatlon Director Dsan Bsnnstt. photo by Mary Oflv/,r/
Friday. September 25, 1992
CA~IPUS NE\l'S
Psychology instructor receives recognition for outstanding work b•• Christopher Cloney
s;,11,nrl Rrpona
The "'inner of this ye~ Outstanding fn<1ruc1or award is Don Sprague. Nominated by peers and selected by a com mince (also peers and past winners) Sprague said. it was a "real honor" 10 hove received the awnrd and to be acknowledged in this way. 'Tm fairly cynical nbout these son of things." but considering !he process by which he wns chosen. "it means o 10110 know that I' m appreciated by my peers." Sprague. a ,•eteron instructor nt NIC with 22 years of e~perience 01 the college. said it wns prim:irily the work thnt he has done with the learning disabled that go1 him the annual award. "When I was at the University of Washington. I tried to find ways to educate students with learning disabilities," he said. According 10 Sprague his effons were largely successful. Don Sprague After leaving UW,Sprague came to teach ai NIC where he's been ever since. "When I began teaching at NIC some students," with problems similar 10 those at UW. "who had learned of my work came to me for help. I began ad,•ising them and they began 10 succeed." he said. According 10 Sprnugc. 11 is this aspect of his job he finds most rewarding nbout his work. "I like 10 affect people's lives in a
positive way.'" As n studc1111 ut UW Sprnguc said he was a "clnssil' undcmchicvcr" th:11 is until he was inspired by an instructor who changed the woy he thought nbout his usefulness nnd potential. "She wouldn't let me sit on bun" he joked. " Until I met her, I was never nwure or my own ability. She pushed me 10 do well. I don't tlnink I would have went on 10 become n professional if It hadn't been for her innuence," Sprague said. Sprague said he regrets not having had a chance 10 thank her before she died . As It turned! out he did go on to be a professional. e.arning his Bachelor of Arts and Master of Science at Eastern Washington University in Cheney. He continued his education seeking n Ph.D from UW. " I began work on my disscna1ion but never finished.:' he said. lnstcnd he 1umed his nnention 10 helping disadvantaged learners. ''I've always liked 10 dabble in research. but I never really wonted to devote all of my time to it," he snid. "I like to teach and I would rather 1h01my tenure be continued for teachinB than," ns is the case with many or colleagues at UW. "for how many times a year I can get published," Sprague said. Occasionnll y he does go 10 UW where he can work on projects with colleagues in hb field of study, mnny of whom arc also friends-conducting research, but his real interest lies in education. Currently Spmguc is an instructor of psychology at NIC with courses in Introduction Psychology. nnd Developmental Psychology. In the future Sprague suid he intends 10 continue ns an educator at NIC und hopes that. as in the pasl, he con make a posi tive contribution 10 its students.
New trustees swor.n in; remodeling proposal, annual audit approved b)
Patricia Snyder
E.rec111ive Eduor
New Trustee Je.innie Givens and rc-ek'tted Trustee Judy Cema Meyer were sworn mm la.\l WeJn~ay's Boord of Trust~« me.:tlng. Nrw offll'\'rs " ere selcc1ed. with Beny McLain cho)en U$ chair, Norm Gi\SCI as ••ice chair. Judy Centi! Meyer as secretary nnd Roblm Ely in the new posit.ion ofu"tasurcr. Among lhe duties of the tre~urer will be to look o,er the monthly financial repon. The new board approved a $146.000 proposal for rtmodeling on campus. ApproQfflltdy S136.000 of the money wus allocated for the renovation or the second noor of the Hedlund Vocational Building, which ~as closed following protCSIS over alleged poor air q.uallty. The building is =iving a new heating. vcntilallon and air conditioning system
in anticipation of a January re-opening. The rtmodeling dollars will be used 10 outfit the culinary ans nnd dmfting progrums, rencctin11 a revised archetectuml plnn ror culinary ans b<.'1:nu.<e the college ct1uld not afford the original plans. Culinary ans will s1ill have a working kitchen. and the college is plnnnmg a long-1cnn remodeling of the new
area.. The rest or the remodeling dollars will go toward miscellanrou.~ campus projC<lLs. The truSttts received n presentation on the Nonhwl'St Accreditation Self Study. which is continueing to be revised, and they approved the annual audit repon The board changed the November meeting from the rounh Wednesday of the month to the founh Tuesday to avoid con0ic1 with Thanksgiving.
The NIC Sentinel
NEWS NOTE Student Health Services needs special help Student Health Services needs your help. according 10 Lindo Michal. director of Student Health Services. Anyone interested in making a difference in the quality of health care offered 01 NIC or in organizing specinl henlth care events should contacl Michal 01 Ex.J70 and/or nnend the first meeting noon Oct. 6 in the Shoshone Room. ''Please come." Michal said.
Student ID cards are available in SUB Students need ID cards 10 use the library, nnend sponing e,·ents or most anything else on campus. Cards nrc available in the Recreation office in the basement of the Student Union Building. Although the hours have been reduced. cards arc still nvoiloble III the following times. 8-10 am nnd 5-6 pm Monday. Wednesday and Friday, 3-6 pm Tuesday nnd TI1ursdny. U of I nnd LCSC students should check their respective offices beforw anempting 10 get their ID cards due 10 computer difficulties.
ASNIC Annual Fall cruise tickets on sale ASNIC is hosting its annual Foll Cmisc tonight night nboard the Mish-a-nock. and tickets ore available for S5 in the Student Union foyer fromm 11 am 10 I pm. There will only be ndvnncc ticket sales. No tickets will be sold nt the dock. You must present your student ID card to pun:hnsc the ticket nod to board the boat. "Afler Dork" will supply the music for the evening. The boat leaves Independence Point at 7 pm and returns 01approximately 9 pm.
Women's Center begins training volunteers Training for Women's Center volentccrs begins Oo1. 24. Traing will include alternilives to domestic violence, rape crisis, coun advocacy nod general suppon. Interested panics should call the Women's Center n1 664-9303 Monday through Friday.
NIC students, faculty, spouses invited to Japan for spring break NIC Mudents. faculty members and their ~pouses have an opportunity 10 go to Jopnn over ~pring break The Morch 6- 14 trip to Nonhern Kyuushuu will be ho,tcd by NIC~ Japanese ~istcr school. Nagasaki Junior College. Panicipnnts will stay with host families. They will sight-see in the 13ay of 99 l~lancb and view the first original Dutch and Christian S,mlcment in Jnpan. Costs for the trip hnve not been finalized. but last year's trip L'OSI S 1.200. Group leader, are looking for fund-raising ideas. The money will be due by the end or February. Tho,e interested in going to Jnpan should contact Kathryn Lnnge. community cduc:11ion coordinator. 01 769-3402 by Nov. 1.5.
Math, Science study center finds new home The Math/Science ~1udy center has moved from Room L-51 10 the l.earnini Center ( the old library). The centers hours ore 9 nm-noon and 1-3 pm Monday through Friday.
Remember, no classes Oct. 2, due to faculty in-service workshops
Page 4
CA~IPUS NEWS
The NIC Sentinel
HATRED: by JrfT Selle Ani11an1Ne-11 Editor
Bo GnlL. Populist Pony pre$identiol candida1e, claim, human rights advocates unfairly labeled him as n mc1,1 during a press conference held September 17. Tony Stcwllrt, president or the Kootenai County TJsk Force on I lumnn Rela1ions, held 1he press conference Inst Y.eck to denounce Gritz by providing evidence of his rnciol ties. Grilz said thot 1he group and the press hnve used "code words" in an attempt 10 categorize him as a racist. "They mnke 1heir money off of racism. hatred, bigo1ry. bil\S," Gritz said "What if there wasn't any hotrcd, bigotry and racism? They \\Ouldn't have a job." Gritz said l,!rOup, like S1c"an's t'rca1e trouhlc. He ,aid if there isn't any rn~hm prevalen1. 1hc~e group, ''lake 1heir 'J>Oll"' and ~tir 11." '111e only hnircd I hnve 1 e,pcrienced in the political nrena htL, hecn groups like Stewan·, ... Gritz said. lie snid such groups ,cem to "ooze" and "e,pou,e" hmred Ik '111d. wtthout 11. they 11ould 1,,: 1111hou1 a job or mcomc. TI1ey ha,e no secnung ,oc:1dl purpo'C The)' uw "code 11ord\'' h> ,11gmJti1e people into )pec1tic group,\\ 1lh specific belief,•. md he ,,ud that
"[Stewart is] an anal orifice. If he would have been there, he would have known whai he was talking about, but he was probably sitting in a nice ·warm house somewhere seeing how he coHlcl write tp more trouble." ,,Bo Gritz
According to Bo Gritz, human rights groups are the cause of it
1hey would be bcucr off to run for polilical office because 1hcy nt'l likl' politicrnns. ''I think they should be given a sack of rnncrctc, so they con bury 1heir heads in It. Then then they would have some social purpose. We could use their back sides for bicycle rocks," Gritz snid. The press hns tried 10 trap him in10 a racist category by using thcir"codc words." Gritz said "If these guy~ (reponers) would ever get a thing acc11rn1e. muybe they should get some kind of joumalis1ic award other 1han a hot fudge enema:· The task force said 1h01 Gritz was quoted in an Oregon newspaper saying that he was a "Whi1e Scparntist." Grit, denies 1hc fact 1ha1 he is an ac1ual White Sepnrotist and claims 1hat the media quoted him ou1of contcx1. Gritz said !hat he was jumpin@ on a reponcr for colling Randy Weaver a White S11premacis1 becnusc weaver hod rejected 1he Aryan Nation~. Ile: said 1hc reponcr corrected him~lf :Ind coiled Wc,wer o White Scpara11onist. Gritz asked the reponcr. "Am I while'>" and then he t<>ld the reporter thot Weaver lived wi1hin three miles of the nearest bread. Jnd then he wld him that he him,dflivcd 50 miles from 1he nc:arc,t bread and milk. So. he ~aid, I guc(, you could call me a Whi11: Scpar,lliM. but you can't call Weaver thttt "Mnybc 1herc i, something "ron~ "1th me wunung to live awuy from the cit). Is it unAmcrKan to not have n 7-Elcwn "ilhm wnl~1ng di,rnncc?" Grill ~nid. lk said thnt the nc11 spapcrs tried 10 label him"' an Identity Chrh1inn using the ,ome tar11c~. Gri11 \Uid that maybe ~ome of the,e people
FO R
Friday, September 25, I992
should read his book before placing judgments on his racial beliefs. He said 1ha11n his book 1hcrc ore testimonials by several friends from many diffcrcm races, creeds and religions. "I don ·1 care wha1 your color. creed, sex. oge, disability or whether you' re handsome or ugly. Ii makes no difference: you're American. We are nil pan of one fnmily," Gritz said, Grit-i soid he dldn 11 hnvc the some religious belief~ as Randy Weaver, who held up in his cabin in Naples. for 11 days anemp1ing to ovoid prosecution for selling illegal firearms 10 federa l n@cnts. But Weaver is still nn American. He said Weaver did not deserve to be treated the way he was; that is why Gritz felt he should hel1> him, not because of his religious beliefs. He snid, "As far a~ the "puke-heads'' that run around and do thb hate work they do,-ealling thcmseh·c~ hunmn d1gnity--if on.: of 1hcm get, in 1roublc 1hcy can l'all on me too, a, a matter of fact, they bcucr kc<!p my telephone number .. Gritt. e;,,plai ned if 1hc po,ernmcnt 1,n't restored 10 a constitutional government. the human nph1s advocates would b.: needing ,omebod) to ,mnd between them and the New World Order bccau~e they nre not going to have the nghts they have now under a global ,y,tem of go,crnment Grit-i could not understand how unybody could coll him o racist when he ha\ adop1ed two Vietnnme,e children. Accordmp to Stewun. th1~ i~ not proof that he is not rnciM 11fter all. he said, Hitler's best friend wa.'> kwish, and that did 001 ~top 11101 from ancmp1ing to annihilate 1he race. "Someblxly told me Huler "~ a Je11.. l>O what\ the poin1?" Gritz said. "He is lull of ,hn-m one word. Sony. but when I'm spcal..mp about this pcrson (Ste"anl, I'm u,mg the proper languuge " Ste,rnrt said that Gntz was qumed in the Spoke,m,in Re"iew companng the Skinhead~. present nt 1he Weaver ~tand off. \\ ith young ~lannc, Gruz ,aid, "What an anul orilice If he 11ould ha,e been there. he \\nuld ha,e ~no11n
"They make their money off racism, hatred, bigotry and bias. What if there wasn't any hatred, bigotry and racism? They wouldn't have a job. ,,Bo Gritz
see GRITZ Page 5 Presidential candidate Bo Gntz signs books at the Preparedness Expo ,n Spokane, Wash. Gntz is presently travel/mg across the United States ro present his platform and gam support for his campaign.
CA~ll'US NEWS
Friday. September 25. 1992
The NlC Sentinel
Page 5
GRITZ from Page 4 "hat he wuI toll.ing .ihout. bul he was pmhably silltn!l in a ruce Wtlml home 50mcwhrre seeing how h,· could "rile up more trouble." When he ".i, inlking about the Skinheads, he wn\ joking with them, he said. He ,md that their hair cul~ reminded htm ur the l\ larines. Ste\\,1rt showed a picture and n "ide11 :tccoun1. nt 1hc press conference, of Gritz !living the seig hcil salute 10 n 11roup of Skinhc:1ds m the end of the Wca\'er stand-off.. Gritz said the Sl..inhend~ helped to get Weaver down off the mountain. ond after Wcn,er agreed 10 l'Omc dO\\n, he asked Gritz to gi"e them n 5pccial salute for hold ing a ,•,gil and praying for lus fami ly. "When I got 10 the bottom of the hill. before I forgot about it. I w115 looking for these three Sl..inhcad~. I sponed them in the very back. and I rai~d mv hand lil..e I do~ lllilll\ time~ 10 make a point, and I 'Mey. }OU guy. th,ini. )OU for the lcncr }OU wrote be\'atL<e the lener helpoo to gel Rundnl out. Me a.~ked me 1ogi,c you all n ,pt't'iol salute for keeping the ,igil for him." It's my mannerism because I am a military per-on:· Gri11 said "If I wanted 10 make n N01i salute. ii would be done: properly I' m :1 soldier I' m 001 going to m.u.e an improper or sloppy salute to anybody. My purpo!.e wa.( I wanted 10 say thnnk~:· In the \'ideo Gntz said, "Dy the wny he (We;wcr} told me 10 give you guy~ n <alute. Mc said lhtll you know what thnt ts." The video showed the \kinhcads in 1he back of the crowd return GrilL's salute with a scig hcil salute nnd n thumbs-up sign. S1ewan c,poscd the fact thot GrilL ran for vice. president under David Duke, the presidential candidate, on the Populist Pony 11cke1in 1988. Gritz is now the pre,idential cnndidn1e for the Popul ist Pany, which S1ewan calls a haven for Kltlllsmnn and Neo-Nozis. Accoring 10 GrilL he was nominmcd and ncccp1cd before he knew that Duke was going to be running mate. As soon n.\ he found out about what Duke stood for ii only took him fi ve days to decide 10 drop off the ticket. Gritz said that groups like Stewru, are so far behind the times they s1ill 1hink 1ha1 Willis Cano. publisher of the Spotlight an Anti,serni1ic tabloid, is still the head of the pany. Me said lhnt Cano hasn' t been nc1ive in the party since 1989. "I haven't had anything 10 do with the party since 1988.'' Gritz said, "Until Don Wassel (the new leader of the pany) asked me 10 be their candidate in 1992" Gri12 said the only way he would agree 10 run as the Populist candidate was if he was allowed 10 write the entire platform; they agretd, so he ran. "If you look at the platform, you can see that none of that is the Populist pany: every bit of it is Bo Grits," He said. Gritz said that he is only running on the Populist ticket in five stales. He said lhnl he is running on the Independent ticket or representing the America FtrSt Coalition in 42 other $!ales. The Populist pany is "belly-up;· Gritz said 1 haven, heard from the leader of the party in five months." "I have this feeling that they are ka-put. Pass the word on 10 the ADL and Stewart. What are dlcy going to do now1 Maybe 1h31 is why they are btching on 10 me because lhey realize the party undtr Cano is bellyup II lhis lime," he said. (This story was wrlmtn by both Jeff &/It and Lori
~;d,
VIWan.)
Gritz supporters respond by Lori Vi,,L1n Nr ll's f;ditor
Cnmpnign supponers of prC$idcn1iol cadidruc Do Gntz held n press conference in response 10 accusalions made cttrlicr in the nf1cmoon by the Kootenai County Task Force on Murnan Reln1ions Sept. 17 n1 7:30 pm in the Kootenai Room. 111c crowd listened 10 Lonn~· Hall. who introduced him,;elf a.~ Gritz's Nonhwcst Rcgionul Rcprc~cnt.11ivc, ~pe;ik i11 defense of Grill. Although, when Gritz wn.( lmer que,tioncd on Lonny Hall's position as a campaign manager. he said that Mnll w:is ju,1helping out. Gritz said that Mall wa., doing a very good job, but there was "just n hulc misundm1nnding." Approximruely 100 people from the surrounding communitie~ anendcd the pre~, conference. 11,c mnj11ri1y of the audience was ,;enior citizen, "ilh a few youitg fa11111ics thrown in for good measure Iloll ~howcd n, idco in response to the silent video 1hn1 S1ewun had played earlier. Moll ..aid that S1ewan had run a "Kangaroo Court" 1ha1afternoon. ''S1cw:1rt nc:vcr turned up the ,·olumc on 1h01 video. I told h11n 10 let the people hear Do. but he [Stewart! wouldn't listen,'' Mall ,;aid. Moll told the aud ience that they should call down 10 NIC and ,;;1y 'we would like to take another lool,. 111 whut's being 1nugh1 down here, and the man who put on this program.' In response 10 the KCTFOHR's accusations 1hn1 Bo Gritz wns a neo,nnzi, Hall smd Gritl was being persecuted by the media. Al the end of the m~ellng. in responS(• 10 audicm:c questions, Hnll ~id, "We told them let's ge1the country bock in shape fin;1, then we will worry nbout what color everybody is and whnt religion they ought 10 he and cvery1hing else."
KCTFHR accuses Gritz of Nazism, white separatism
photo by Jeff Selle Roben Mertens sells T-shirts to support the Gritz campaign efforts in North Idaho.
STEWART from Page 1 observed giving Nazi salutes and directing obscenities toward law enforcement officials when children were present. and the fact that some of the Skinheads were arrested for concealing rines, including one fined with a bayonet. Stewart said Grill is running on the Populist Party ticket. "which is n haven for Klansman and Neo-Nazis." He said ii was founded in 1984 by Willis Cano, publisher of Spotlight an anti-semitic tabloid. The party is comprised of many other well known racists he said. Such as Joe Fields, who believes Hiller had the right idea. K. A. Budinsk. who is the sergeant of arms for the Populists in the Itatc of Washington and a well- known advocate of White separatism as well as a leader of the Nonhwest Knig.hts of the Ku Klux Klan: David Duke, ex· wizard of the Ku Klux Kfan who was the Populist presidential car\did:uc in 1988. Grill was Duke.'s running mate for for a shon time. Griu·s campaign manager in Oregon, Richard Flowers. was quoted in the Aug. 27 - Sept. 2. issue of the Willamene Week saying, "The Bible says 10 stone them (homosexuals), bot I'm not sure we could gel away with that in today's society, bot you really wouldn't need 10 shoo! many of them 10 get the point across." In lhe Seattle Pos1-ln1elligcnccr Grit.z was quoted saying. "I am a White Separatist."
Former World Wnr II verernn Jim Shepard expressed his concern with the Gritz campaign. He spoke about how he was compelled 10 do something about the Neo,Nazi movemen t in Nonh Idaho ofter a friend of his was harassed by the Aryan Nations. Shepard said that he couldn't face the though t of telling his grandchildren that he sat idly by while something happened to his friend. Thal was the beginning of his stand on racism. he said. Shepard said that he heard about Gritz a1 a convention in Indianapolis a few weeks ago. "I heard about Bo Griu after reading his pamphlets. I thought this guy was great. He had an outstanding war record. and after the war I understand he received several masters' degrees," Shepard said. Shepard said that he could not unders,and why Gritz wasn't speaking at the convention instead or him. After returning home, he realized Gritz wa.s affiliated with the Neo-Nazis, he said. "Again, what am I going tell my grandchildren? I don't want to tell them I sat idly by without doing something about this guy." Shepard said, "I don't know exactly what we can do, bot I know I want 10 do something."
The NIC S~n1incl
Mail Jeuer 10 the editor or drop by 1he office. Include a phone number or address.
0PINION•EDITORIAL "An exchange of ideas for the edification of humankind."
Friday. September 2S, 1992
"I wish we could keep the 'edit' out of editorial page." --------- any columnist
Edited by Patricia Snyder
Multiple spouses: a matter of liberty Many people fon1nsize aboul hnving more 1haJ1 one Jover. Some people go as for ;is wan1ing to mlllT)' more than one pe™>n 10 fulfill these fantasies. And some wish to have multiple pMnm in life because or their religious beliefs. Mnrrfoge is an ins1ilution lhal has taken o ~ignifican1 bea1ing m the lost couple of decade,,. With the sexual revolution, women· s liberation and changing ,•iews on how two lovers should express themselves as a couple. it hns become harder 10 deline a desirabl~ role for ci1her or the people involved. For thousand~ of years societies around the world have prncliccd polygamy Cmarrfage 10 more than one panner). Thi~ does tend to bring to mind 1hings like harems and slave truding th:11 infringe on the righis of oth<:f'\. mo~1 orien "omen. Out I feel that our liOciel) i~ now ndvanccd enough to tJ.kc un the challenge of Alex Evans free choice 11hen II come~ to Opinion marriage and how many partner.. you can have. Wit) 1s 11that the moral minority makes so many of our ~r.;onal dC\':1\iOn~' Even If they are in the majority. they don't hnve the right to t!C\':ide how oth.:r.. lhe their liv,-s. Another thing 11U1 giouJd be changed along with thN ~ingle partner mnrrio1,,e lnws are the law, agrun~ homose,ual marriage. Ir <omeonc w,c; 101ally In lo1e wilh ano1her pcrspn and they both wnn1ed 10 <pcnd the re<1 of !heir h1·e< 1011c1her. the l)Ol'cmmcnt ,hould not M\C the po"~ to be telling d~m 1h01 they rnn't Ix-cause these Born-Again Chri<tinn, think ifs n sin. Yet "e obey and nt,.:r ~m to q11cM1on the lnwi. a$ if we 11a~ little children 111th no seJf.w11l or mo1i1a11on. I t~nd to wonder ho" blocl. slave~ were e,er freed b«ausc "e :ire <o lethnf1!1C \,hen it coml!". to enforcing 1hc right of fl'ffilom th.it "as ,uppo~ly gmntcd to us "'hen ,,e "er.: born in this counuy. Women, block< and children are still lil)hting for equality, and everyone i~ fishting for more fn:eJom. Some "ill sa) tha1 1~ 1011,s protl'CI people. I agn.oe; they pro1ec1 peopk from them,;ch~ nnd 1h.:ir own per.,onal exploro1ion. If pain 1~ ou1lo\\cd. <o 1s life. When human being< make nd,-ci~i11n. th.It means they"re able lll make one nnd no on~ should stand in their \vay unlc~ their choice, nre infringing on <om,'One else·~ freedom or causing 50meone el~ pain. Tv.o. three. four or more people dl'Ciding that th.:y want 10 spend their hi~ 1ogc1hcr is a choice they can make 1og.:1hl>r and they might JU\I create n 10101 di>11>tcr The onl) pcoplt that might pe1 unwillingly hun ore the children thru could be inl'Olved, but they would be bctta off 1tuin children trnpp..'d in a traditional dil'Orce with only two people involved b..-cousc they would have more care givers to help them through ti~ si1untion. The smnn indh•idual will realize 11u!1 there are ways :iround laws. If someone truly wishes to marry more thnn one person. they c:in always mnt.:e up their own ceremony and live out the rest of their lives togc1her, but ii would be a Ii fc of lies to protect themselves from the lcgnl ramific31ions of a society which reslricts their fttcdom.
I
EDITORIAL
I
Bo knows hoodwinking Ri~ing unemployment. unconirolloble deficit,. homclc<Snes:., demililruizmion. a crumbling inlrn.<uucture ~y~1em. burdening 1ax hike.~ ... 1111!:',e arc jlht a few of the frigl11cning words being bandit'd nbout 1hh election rcnr. "I can lix it wuh my simple one-step-no-grief-to-you plnn" is the b.'l<is of 1hc campaign prom1Scs being offered by ~idcminl candicl.11c l3o Gritz. h is so very easy 10 shut down the voice or common sense and believe the easy-fix promi-es. After all. it 1nke,; the le:J!,t :imoun1of cffon. Nothing is exp,..'Cted of you, all the wortd·s problem~ lll'l! 'iOlwd, ru1d you c:111 tum your :mention to more imporu1m issues: like whm ti~ vice president is going 10 say next nhout Murphy Drown. Unfonunniely. it has tnken a couple of generations to crea1e the fal1ering condition or the Unit~'tl Simes. 1l1ercfore. ii is jlOing to take some serious :mention. pan1dpation and sacrifices 10 restore II to a healthy stnle. When l'andidnics make their platform S!)l'CChes. ii is und,'l'Stood tha1 th,: elect-me rhctonc is ju,t that ... rhetoric. But C\cry once inn \\hilc. a candioo1c COITh.'S along who has~ running rhetoric that lends a false (Cnsc of security ro the VOiing pubht". l3o Gri1z has a plan. A plan 10 heal America quickly nnd painle,sly A ~nd-no-n10ney-no" . JO.day.free-trial-plan II 1sn·1fngh1enmg that this rondidlue has n pltlO; it tr 1emfying t11.111 p,x,ple wt belie\•ing i1. Let's godo something fun now - nil the b3d scary stuff is being deal1 with. We no longer have to \\Orry or pay auention to our federal J!Overnmeni in Washington. Good ol' boy l3o Gritz is running ii with his 11.00J nothing-on-their-agend:ibut-the•tnklng-of.Qipi10J-Hill army. The federal reserve will Ju.q be bought 001, relieving the
Americwi taxp.1ycr of the burdening $-l trillion nn1ional debt with one fell swoop or Bo Gritz's mighty S\\Ol\l. Sun: sounds good. Lcl"s jus1kick back nnd n:lu.x. Good or 130 i\ .it the helm. nnd the going is ~mooth. Yep.the Anll'.rican public i, safe. Yeah. about ru; safe n.r, the ~potted owl. Al a l3o Gritz prel,S conference held on campus la,1 week, npproximaiely 100 people <;at at rapt auentic,n ,ucking in Grill propaganda with n reverence that 1~ ~ually rt:.ervt-d for a pra) er meeting. If the confc:rence had been auendcd by a bunch of ~kinheaded. anti-everyone mi~fi~ or some other fringe clement. Gritz could be wrinen off a, another David Duke and forgo11cn after the media became bored with b.iiting him. The reality of the situation is different. The conference thar drew communi1y auention wns auended by mainly senior citizens. Un Like college Mudents, senior citiun, are tht biggest , oung blocl. in .\merica. They 1·0te locnlly. state-wide ilOd na11onnlly.1bey are USWllly well-infonncd. con....:med 1·0tm. Gritz i, i.tnding a m~ge of hope into their and othtrS' hcans. Lcfs face it. hope is a powerful m~ge. The truth is hope wilhout foundniion can be desuuctive. The reallly is Griu ha., a plan. Abolbhing the lxi,;1nmen1 of Education and EnefID' is pan or that plan. ~elcasing a.xoun1abillty of the federal go, ernmen1 from the hands of the people is pan of the plW1. Hoodwinking the public with his good ol' boy routine is the most importMI pan of that plan. We need a plan that includes us. It will take be a joint efftx1 to " fi.l:"' America. So. ignore the hypnotic soothing casy·fL, message. Don' t lJllde responsibility for tyranny. A1ld remember, when someone like Gritz offers you an easy-don'!· "''OO)'·l<an-fL\·il·go-back•te>-slcep-messnge. he is lying.
Fridny. Scptcmbor :!5. 1992
FORUM
~{
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\ ?') \ ~ ,~ 47 (... (,o AHEAD\ AND SIICO't ./ ..__ --,
NO SMOKINb
ANIMAI-S SAATE Bo4~t>..S
'R<tU:R.SWS 'BIG.Yc.L.£5 ~Llf.R~.S
The Senllnel • 1000 West Garden Avenue, Coeur d'Alene, Idaho 83814 • Tel ephone (208) 769-3388 or 769·3389 ,\,, ,-.: 1.11cd t •II ~1.11< Pre" Fl,c-S1ar All,Amtrican New(p:iper 3nJ :-IJ11onal PJ,cmal.cr • 191>~ Rt,~n f KcnucJ, ·\\\atJ ~'"Cl\"' Prolc"1onal Joumah,1, Gcncml faccllcncc A\\Jrd • NJ1iun:tl IIJII ol Fan.: . I u, \n~ctc, rune, ~~uun.11 Eduori31 U .1Jcr,h1p ""an! · Rocky \loun1nin Colk111.-1c Pre\, G,eocrJIE·,,d cni;c ,\" ;ird EDITORIAL STAFF Patri cia Snyder Kevin J. Brown Lori Vivian Mark A. Jerome Dominic Howard Ryan Bronson Rich Duggan Bo Meckel NIia Rosdahl
Executive Editor Production Manager News Editor Ans & Entenainment Editor Recreahon Editor Spons Editor Photo Editor Adven,slng Editor Adviser
The NfC Sentinel
R EPORTERS, P HOTOGRAPHERS AND ARTISTS
Marcy Ankrum Kelii Austin Chris Clancy Crystal Currie Alex Evans Jeff Green Kathy Hostetter
Daren Johnson Ct,risline LaBang Karin Lau Dani Lewis DeAnna McDonald April Muhs John Myers BryonOHara
Mary Ohvien Leigh Raines Jell Selle Erin Siemers Justin Smith Debbie W1thams Rachel W1ll1ams
tAtlt'1 Polley: The Scnllncl ,.,•Jrornc, IA-tic" ,.,,he F.dU11< ~ ..,,.,,ul>mll k1tcf\ mw llmi11bem 10 10(/ ,.onJ<. ,iin 1licm lci:ibly ,nd provi.J< • iclcphont number w .ctdre$, 110 lhal 1uth<n11,ny C111 t,c •tnf1''1. /lhhwfh nlOII kum ~rr Ukd 11>n.: 11\,ly not be printed br.-ausc or 1 ~ l11ni1.11""'' '" htnol« lhty l) •tt <1mdar 11, a numh<r 1•rte11tt< .Jl~y ro«i,td i,n the, umt ,ubJ('<t, 2) &11: po-.s1bl) lihtloo, 3) Jtt itlcJib)c Wt ram-e !ht rishl to c,ti1 lc1lcn. Lfflen mar br blt'ua)II 10 Room l ol tbc Sherman Sd>ool Butldln1 or rnulcJ 1111be S<nuncl.
Puge7
Give a half hour: Stop the fruitcakes Aw, come on. How hnrd can ii be, folh? All you hove to do is rill out a piece of paper, swcor you arc n U.S. citizen and 1hen vote for your choice. It tnl<es less thon n half hour out of your life to panicipote in the protection of your freedoms. I know you've heard nll the arguments before. God knows outlined them for you before in other columns and editorials. But before you stop reading this. drirt off or tum to the spon section. I'd appreciate you laking 1he time to listen j ust one more ti me. See? I'm asking nice and I promise not to coll you npathctic donkeys. whiny crybabies, l,1zy incompetems or scllish uncaring rtjects from a defunct generation like before. So, listen up! I know the general ronsensus nmong college students is "My vote doesn't count. so why bother?" How do I know this°! BF.CAUSE THE LOWEST VOTING BLOCK IN TIIE U.S. 1$ COLLEGE Lori Vivian STUDENTS. Opinion Yes. folks. it's irue. The group 1h01 is universally known for liberal free thought, the group thnt prides ilself on 1hc destn1cuon of inJu stu:c, the group 1hnt ~peah out ut every 01hcr opponuni1y on every other issue. docs not bhnk an eye when II come~ time 10 vo1c. Vo1ing i~ for 01her Americans. it seem,. Our voico: is sil ent. Then II should come n~ no surprise 10 you when foderal fundir.g for i:ducation i, cut or when the minimum wnge (for which mo,t work) isn't nu'>l!d. Don't complain to me when you can't qualify for o loan or affordable huu\lng. Don't you dare misc your ,,1ic.: in prot11st when 1he IRS tnl:e\ more of your payched.. home lhJn you do. After all. you couldn't Ii.: bmhered to ,pend J h.ilf hour 10 1:a,1yuur vote rn dcfen,c Jgmn,1 thc,e ac1ion, Rcmeml>cr "hen you wen: lillle Jnd him angry )llU l'«time \\ hen Momm, Jnd D.1dd) \\-ouhJn·1 h,1cn to >ou·1 Remember 1hu1 nmigam parcn1 Jllltudc ul Youha\'e-no-pi.11\er-,o-do a,-1-,u) • \\'h,,;:,cr 1s running 1hc po,crnmcm. plattormmg the i"ue, and dc.:1drnl! your late hu, the ,amc condescending Jt111ude Wh) '! Becau,c \S ·\ GROUP YOL DONT VOTE. Th~relorc. \ SA GROL'P YOU HAVE NO POWER Pol11tan\ ~no,~ thi, om.I .r,• not ou1 10 protect ) OU Why? B~ au...: ) OU "'on't complain wi1h \\ho1coums-a ballo1 Prcny ba~,c huh'.' So wa~e up, get off your Inly, IYhin)'. cryb,,b) buns and ditch your npnihe111: a11i1ude,. Regis1er. re,e:irrh and raise your ,01cc VOTE ! Why? Because one da) your children will t1.,k you "hy you didn'1 stop fru11cnke\ Clike the! Aryan Nuunn) from l!aining accc!s., 10 tht Whi1e House. 1he dc,1rui:11on of personal freedom~ and 1he ubolishmcnt of their right to cnst a vo1e. Aod you con :ll1S\\tr them" uh: "Sorry bub.:. I d1dn'1ru.ke .i half an hour oul of my hfe 10 pro1ec1 the entire future of your~:· That's why.
r,·e
Page 8
The NIC Sentinel
OPINION
Friday, September 25, 1992
TARGET ..-MARkErEd
C~okEc~ERRiEs "Suitable for framing, wrapping fish, training puppies or lining bi rd cage bottoms." Freshman ~enutor cumpnign te<.'hniquc~ ccnainly were more orcntivc than in pa-t ycm Troditional "Vote for Fill-in-Numc-Hcrc" posters were liberally adum.:d wnh comput~r 1,1r:iphic, and au~mCnll-d b) t.iblc tent< in the Student Union Building and signs looped over the chain fencing in rront of Lee Hall. One ~ntcrpri\ing ~andidatc h,indcd potential votcN Dum Dum< (the candy} with her campaign plcu taped to them. Hopefully, the campaign enthusiasm and creath•i1y will be turned 10 ,crving the student, with equal vigor The Tissue Issue continu es. Folio,, ing protest\ nbout the thin and eo<ilyrendable toilet tissue. 1hc college upgrnded 10 n highcrquaii1y bmhroom supply. Ustrs can no" l,!O 10 poi with relative Sl'Curi1y. Finnll} this pluce apparently has enough parking spuccs with the paving and slripml,! or 1he lo1s around 1he new library. Some students, howe,·er. still @Cl understandubly pcnurbed when they can' t park close to an) buildings while many spaces marked "Starr· remain empty right up front. (till in 1hc mid-morning hours. This grievance is heil,!lllcned by 1hcse Mud~n~, ~ing c~ wi1h "siarr· permits pnrkcd in student spaces while student< cannot use the empty stnff spaces. Students l,!tl 1icke1ed for u~ing stnff sp:icc~. nnd employees don ·1 gel uckc1cd for using student space,. This policy benrs 1hc odor or stale gasoline. This is n s11ua1ion in which ASNIC ,hould gc1 involved 10 @Cl the swff ou1 of 1h~ ~1uden1 ,pace( and the ,tudcms mlo vacant staff spnces. MeJn\\ hilc. the seldom-used school bus is always parked so that ii uses up se\eral ~paces in a central aisle of 1he st udent 101 behind 1he library. At least ii ~hould be parked in 1hc nonhcas1 comer 10 allow more student parking clo~cr 10 the school. Wh) do the sprinklers run c,cn in the rain'l Considering 1he wm~r shonuge in much of the country. is il 100 much trouble 10 add a rain sen,or'I Talk 11bou1 taking school home. One woni.tn pa,scd the ivy-covered wnll scp:u.11111g the llcdlund Vocauonnl Ouilding pruling 101 from Oo~well Hall. ,towed. \\Olkcd over 10 the 11reen draped bricks, fingered 1hdvy and then walked away with J handful of clippin!?'· Guc~s 1he nmbinnce or NIC really grew on her. Crubr control. Tonight\ crui,e is limlll'U 10 ~1udcn1s wnh idcn1ifica1ion rards. Too bad if ,ome or 1hem hav,· non-Mudcn1 ,pouses or >1gnitican1 others who" t<h 10 go w11h them ti'~ undcl'\tandoblc ASNIC would w1m1 10 n1.1kc 1hc ac11,•11y available primarily fnr s111dcn1s. but what's wrong "i1h allowing people 10 ,hnre 1hc c,pcricncc "11h someone they care about? Al lo<t bike racks Jr,· 'lhO\\ing up in con,en1en1 locn11on, around the campu~ (iu11 m time for fJII we.i1hcrJ. Ahou1 ume 1h1s happened. since bicycle, were dcclar..'tl "ou1" of lhc building, Thi, cncoural!r, more c,cn:i~c and less pollution Jnd u,< of natural rmiurce<. A tc,'°n 1\ 1ho11hc trim p,:oplc ride 1hc hikes while the chubb) folks u:.c cJr~ Thi> short end or the chulk. ln11ruc1or Judnh Syllc. prcparinl! 10 writ<' chnlkb();trd no1es for her H1s1ory or Ch•1li1niion class .i11he !>.!ginning of the scmc,1er. diseovercd she only hnd 1wo ~mall p1l'CCS of chalk ·1·,c heard of budge, curs. but 1ha1·~ a linlc c~treme." she said. Column closer: "Why con we remember the 1inits1de1oil 1ha1 tins happened 10 us nnd no1 remember how many limes we have told ii 10 the some pen.on." - - - - - - Francois la Ro.::h<foucnuld
photo by Dani Lewis TAKING OFFICE- (Center) new Trustee Jeanne Givens was swom in and joined her fellow electee Judy Canta Meyer, who ran unopposed. at Wednesday's board meeting. (Right) New Chair of the Board Betty McLain takes a final look at departing Trustee Jack Beebe's name plate while New Vice Chair Norm Gissel stands left.
Have a voice. Make a choice.
llt;1/IC ttrre11t Lve11ts- lft/1/!C t);e,lf fol'Wff: UtJ1~ 1~ tJfif boaJ<-I /ffUttffj. At l(tJtJ"1 Oet. 8 1~ tk tfootel(tu' !'/ff, tJI( tie /ffat~ /fool' of t/te, cf. tf 8.
Friday. Scptt•mber ::!5, 199.! "Hoppancs,. depend, upon th,• lighting ~pint or ,·.1.-h per.on. n,c big tl11ng ·~ nDI "h.11 h1111pcn, 10 u, in hfo . hut "hat "c do Jbou1"hot happen, to u, C,n>rgr 1/1,•11.farm.-r NFl cc>c1d1
INSTAN'F CULTURE
The NIC Sentinel
Page 9
"Love cure\ pcoplc--botlnhco nes who give it nnd the ones who receive 11."
The Sentinel's Arts & Entertainment Section
Karl 1He1111i11ger
Edited and Designed by Mark A. Jerome
Music department anticipates upco1ning season Sy1nJJhony, Pep and Jazz bands prepared b\ Rad11•l \\ illiam,
\, ,11,..-1 R, 1, r Int, }l'Sf :-.1c·, mu,,~ 1kp,11tm.:111 l>nn~,
.1 t't'nglon1tr:ttt~
ol ixr1m11,m,·,·,. Ilic j:w ,md ') m11h,1nic t,,,nJ.s. d1r,-.:1w l>y TtTI) Jon~,. h.i,c i,,,._,n pr,·r,,m1g lur urcnnung !Jkl\h .1ml ,poning cwnin~ NIC' Pq1 JlJnJ ,~irtnl <>UI Sept. 17. playmi; .11 d h,>mc ,ull~)b.1ll mutd1. Tite b.:imt. oon,1,1ing of 1'JC mnkn1~. In~ b<.Yn Jl<'rffe 11111! IO n,•1, 1une.,, in ,iJd11io11 ,,, ~O of their pa,1 "11111,. ''fhr l>Jnrl l~l\ <'nly nddl'd etnc ne,, mcmb.!r Mnet la.~t y,JJ," Jone, ,.lid. 11,e b:ind pl,m, 111 pctfon11 during l1;1,kctb;1ll [?ulllt",. ,H..:,tling m:udre, and r11llow111r; 'IIC ,·olleyti.~I rnatC'he.<. fl joint concen i, schedukd for Nov. 1:1, nnJ "111.:onlain mu,k Jnd ,inging h) tht fav llanJ ,md Jau. l:n~mhlc. "bcmng ol J.in" will include u wide v;uicl) of piece.< rdnfllll? lr<>rn 1h1• big Nlld cr.i to con1cmporary ~tylc!> surh ,I!> mck and fusion. The cn's'mblc will be p.:rfom1ing :,nmc piece. rur.u1ged hy the en.~mbll· dir.xmr, fon Brownell, wbik 1he b.1nd oovt·/'\ Jupall\.-sc an<l ltulinn themes. The two f?l'OUIJS wlll .ilM:1 be pt·r1orming n c11uplc of numbers together The Jazz !land con\1s1s of half NIC ,1udcnL< um! half rnmmunily ('('p
p.1nic1p.,n1,. ;111d the c,nsernhle< n1e1n!-,crs ,,n; pnmanly ,tuJ.:nh. On th,· N," ~I, thl: S, mplij1ru• 8.111d ,, 111 pm.:nt '" li/'\t p.,-h11111.ui.,·. Ille liJnd ,'Clebr,11e-. ii'< 21•h unmwr..:uy "1th ,1 wn,,TI ,~lk<I '!he lin;1l lronticr · ,\11 nl thc piece., pt'rtonn,-d "1ll 1mplic,11c th,.• fn1n11l r th~llll: ·n,,: Jirst p1cc:c. "C),cnun: 10 Orpheu, m ll1<· l111derv.<•rld. will k.iturc ,ncrJI NIC' h1cul1y n1<mbt1 The ,wcnnrt "Ill end with the tlll-hunili,1r tune of '1l1t l ,m·Cln .. 'Ilic "th\' lin ..11 lnmticr', " pmf!rc,, through ptecr> likt Ole! &.i, n,e We<t, flight In Space und Plancl,V)' Mmcm~nt and couclude-, \\ uh o pcrfonnancc known .t\ th.! "I .unai I ripuck." ''I un.u 1 npuck," c,,n1p."-t!J b., NIC \'ittlin in,tru,, tor Gt-rurd M:uJu-. i, d.:,igi1L'tl c,du..,1w l) ror ., ~ymphonic b:,nd .111J indudc\ ,m ,dtu ,;;mlflhunc ,01,1. S.1, mMrurlor lxnn" Carey will pt·rform the.• !.Olo. Wh,11'5 Jonl'S's op1n1on on lht' "I un.11 Tripticl..''' "h's r.:.1lly wild; it :L,k., the banJ to do things lh,•y' n.• nm trJdit1onally ask,\! tu d11:· "Th,,•sc nr<' potentially 1hc ~I iroup, l'\'c h.1d," Joni.', .aid. He :tlM15aid he'~ thought thnt e,·ery year. but they tthc b.mds) jlL\I k.:.:p gelling heUL'I',
Concert Choir starts on high note b, (. hri,tophl·r (
IOIIC)
\ 111/llc'I R,pt111t r
In the up,0111111i )~.If. o, 111 th,• pre, 11111\ ,inc, 1lu• \;nrih ldnhu 'i) mr,hun, Urchcqr.1 .111d t 11n,~r1 tho,r \lo,ll hC!!•n th,· nc,1 ,c.ison ,,n ,1 h1['h 1w1,• .icce,rdmi; 111 ,nnJuctor T,lJll Sn) ,l,•r .. \hhuuph th~ 11"1 ,nnccrt 1c.111mng anv 111 thc !!1u1111, 1, n111 ,ch~llul~J •m11J m1d-Octuhcr, 1h,· mu,1C'1,111, .,nJ ,oc.11,,h h,l\e a Ire ,Ill} hf~nn to r,•Jw:ir,c tor ·h~1r premier rnnccrt .:· Sn)1kr ,,11J "I h,l\c ,pcc1l 1l cou1' fnr the !?fl'Ufl' :n 1,•rm, ot qu,1lit> Gnah, 1h1nu~h rclw,1r,ul, c .m become a gre.11 rerlorn. •nee One •I the"' g11a l, i~ 111 ,un ,,r cro"·pnlhnulc 11uul11u:, 11[ b11th ,, mphon} nr, hc,tr,1 .mil ,·nnl'en chnir tn c:nh,mCl' the t\\ cr,111 wuuJ ul cJd1 !!rOUfl ., want the IIIU\ICi,,n~ 10 {?1\C ll1c1r 111s1rnmcn1, ,1 ,oicc ,1nJ the ,ocJlish 111 k,,rn tu 1n,1rumcn1nl dhc1phnc,." New 1h1, scu,on .11 N IC I\ a group compo,cd or 12 choir ml)mber, di\'idt·d into group~ or sopr,ino, alto :md ba\\ vocolisl\ who~c purpu,c i~ 10 fR•rform ensemble chamber lllU\IC C.1 lled l\ladrliial\. the iruu(l \\ ill rcplic,11c a form of cntt'rl,1mmcnt dcvelopNI during the Renn1~,ancc Period in Wc~lcrn Europe. Snyder said. ··Jn that period people
u11Jn t h,1\'c JII) ,,r the modern form, entt'rt,11nme~1 th.11 "eh,,, c." \IJ,lntJI "•" Jlllnf! ,, 11'1 pla}' .,ml nr,hc,trn nnc •II the t,r,t lorm, ul p,1pul.1rl) ..-nJ") eJ cntcrt.unmcnt m I ur,•pc "I knc" that th,rc \\ere m,•mbcr, 111 1h1· chnir "ho \\ere tntcr\',t,·d .md quJht•cJ .:n,,11 ,t, to p,1rt1np.1tt' 1n 1h1, ,.,rt ol .,.:11111, sn,der ~J1d "The member, ol the \l,1dri1, .11 ,ire th, hc,1 etf th, choir , 'lt, member, ,1ml .ire 1n1cndcJ tn palurm "'' .,I, lll ., mur.· relined nJtur,• " ,\ IC\\ l11phlt!lh1, or 1h1, ,cJ"'" indud,· ,om, 111 the m,"h:rp1cl\'\ of ,:J,1"1,.11 I urop,•.1n ,·11mpchl!IIH1 lrum ,u,:h \\ ell kno" n ,ump,"cr, ·" MP1,1rt .11111 ll ,1vJ11 In ,1thh11un ll1 th• ,, the ,1nnuul Chri,1m,1, ,hu", fh,· Sound, <'f Clm,1111.is," a 1r.1Ji11on 11n campu, rur more th,1n 20 )Cdf\ th,11 1, c,pectcd Ill 1ndude J ,ar,et> nl ,elc,t ,nn, \\Ith empha"' on ., globul theme I hi, . ,,nJ 1vhat Sn)dcr dc,tnbe~ a, "a very d1\Cr,c body ol work,," Jrc whu1 to ~,pcct JI 1h1, year\ performJocc, The lir,1 of thc,c conC'erts "ill be 1111: ,ymphon1e, dchut Oct 17 and "Iii bc hc!ld m the Performing Ari, Auditorium of Doswe ll Hull. J: veryone 1, m,•11cd 10 auend. Jnd ,tudcnl\ will be udm111td tree.
'Back Porch Blues' delivers the real thing by Korin Lnu St'ntinrl Rr(l<Jner An under!) mg sense of pain nnd dcsper:uion lurks wilhrn the hlue<o, diumg nnd burying 11~ roo1, deeper and deeper 11110 open hc.im until they tighten their clutching nnns and ~ucc,c e,cry known cmntion out or every li,1enmg ,oul. Bod Porch 131ucs ployed their chosen styh: the way 11 ,hould lie plo)ed' p,1,,ionate. grungy. ~pintual :ind eanh). hco,) and IAdcn with tear, and J lu,1 for life. In nn em of electronic mnnipul,itiun .ind unplugged gatherings. 1h1, l>.md mode n call to r.iturn home for a 111gh1 "11h them. to their imaginary hJck porch nn \\hich stood four highly tnlentcd musician,. to rtlvcl rn the rOOI< of what is no\\ kno" n as Am~rican mu,ic "TI1c Voodoo Woman," .1, "S" ect Lip1," him,clf .1ffec11ona1el)· cnlkd sint?Cr Sheila June Wilco~wn. sang h r hardened-din ,·oicc to Jilucs lync\ ol a lining dnncn'1on lor 1992. a umc known poli11cnlly a.s ·· rhc Y,•ar or the Woman .. No more \\Omen-arc-evil. wonwn-cause-all-pJrn
words Oh, no. Wilco~son changed the tune, baucring men with imp:t.\\ion~'<I pleas of decent 1reu1men1 ,ind re\pcct. Her male-mOucnccd blue~ VO<.'al, were ple.t'lilntl) 111inted \\ilh remnant, or u J1(l"1blc go~pel upbrintJing Nothing b pure in her voice. but it i5 moluss.es smooth ,11th a rich nnd fullbodil'<l On, llr kfftl) "S\\i:<:t L1pf' Da" kin, lived up to hi, hannonic,1· plu)d, nicknume. Hi, httle tune,, rt,pondmg to Wilco,son. chugged into temprntiou,. :,,,~~1 note and buck agJm into the h11m-blo\\ ing $Ound\ of nn old steam engine pa\~ing by on tr.id, made offonncr i ln,cs· ~"'cat Alternating from ,tide 10 .1.:ou\lk. gu11.imt Whit l)rJpcr ,ofll) "ailed the ,tufl that mode Ro~n John<0n u blue, legend. The r.:JI crno1mn that underlie, the tilue, d,1m;cd ,, uh c,crv finger ,1rokc und pluck Not ,rncc th<.- l.i1c Ste\lc R.t} Vaughn Jppt·Jred in Spokane ha, blue, gull.ll' sounded ,o haunungl} do" n hom~ llo\\cs.-r, nt•I mu,h can 1,c: ,aid lur b.;"i,t M.irl- French F.ithcr he d1dn I plJ} much or h1, ,ulumc control \lo.I.' neJr
the off point The band's seducthc music provoked some m l'mluy night's audience 10 rcka~ their pent up emot ion b) u,mcing in the aisles. Three men dug in deep. gnndmg and wav,ng Jnd bobbing their bod1c, m front of the ,tugc and cro\\d. Blut·,. "hen plu)ed close to 1L, root,, 111.:nc, 11, li,tencr, 10 hre.ik the opprc"i\e baml!I', th,11 g,1,c 11\ b1nh and ew,tencc. Thc!>c! three men ckNtO) ,'ti 1hc ,1crC01)'flC 1ha1 only "omen dance" uh 1r,.,. ,Jme ,e, ,n public Too bad the audience ,, ,1, ,mall. The b;md dc;..:n cd \O much more th,ln \\h;u it recc1,·cd The tum uu1 1\a, p111ful considering the gift the mu,1ci,m, slwed liJt:k Porch Blue, ga,e their ~uoh .;nd those of their prellccew1r, m mu," und h1slClry \nd the, took the blues out of the bal">. ,, hen: drunk, ,luhbcr m ;r their ..ellish and dc,truCU\'C oiwn} and playcJ 11 "htre niu~1, 1, mo,1 meaningful· in the wrnp;,n)' 111 t•pcn ht.in, \\ slhng c!,po,ure 10 h111er enc\ trorn the r.1,1 ;ind expre(\ion of lrttdom in th<? pre,cnt.
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Page 10
Friday, September 25, 1992
I NSTANT CULTURE
The NIC Senlinel
The Painfully Shy ask: Authentic Japanese cuisine at 'Takara' D's use Is chivalry really dead? S4.95by Karin Lau S,•111i1lt'I Rt'/IClrtu
DJIIO.(!. The.' \\t>nl i, t'n<>ugh to c.,u-.t palpitauon, in lhc !lean of
c,cn the most <{>(tall~ Jdepl. let altioe th<'se memb.:rs of tht' PJ1nl'ull) Sh:,- -ex ial ca.,1c Memhcrs ,,1 the P,1infull\ Sh> are ,1mt1ng the ,iJent mJjont) (,iknt ti«.su,...• the, ·re 100 rmbarrn,\t'J or 100 ner,ou, t>r 100 ,...,U\"d to .i,~ <-0meonc out). Some chaructcrhtk, indudc con,c:r,;auon m1~,'ll w1th ,l\,k\,anl p.1U',('<, aud Jr.muc. d.1r1mg trH."~mcnt, "hcne,er 11 pottnual (!Jung specimen Jjl~Jn. The 1'-.unfully Shy arc !host "110 r.r.ilitc I\\O hc>ul'\ arter the fact someone wn., -endini them ",111n.1b .. Signals. l11Jt s the trouble. It us.'tl ll> be ,1 wonrnn Patricia Snyder could dmp a handkcrchiel Ponlification (unu~. prefcmblyl and. if :1 m:m wn., in1cre,,1ed. he would pick ii up and gallnntly h,ind 1t 10 her. A clear signal of interest. It \\a.< a reco~iz.ed method of signaling with n handy method of ~,•ing face - if the guy didn't pick the handkerchief up. the "oman could pretend sh.:'d dropped it acddcnmlly. The trouble with dating today, or actually gelling to the dating stage. is that the recognill!d signuls have blown a fuo;c. The ''Stop" and '·Go" have lo~t their ~ub1lcty nnd fine~. Girl\ proctically have to slap o guy 10 let him know she's 1101 ln1eres1ed (or u~ the "I like )Ou ns a friend" spe,>eh). Leuing J !!UY I.now ,he·s inu:rc\lc!d ,s twice a, hrud and twice ns p;unful for all invohcd. Simply .i.1~ing somi.-onc out is an option, olbcit n very egothreatening on.:. What w11h the mO\lel·thtn imngc nnd the 1up,lH•oman life,tyle 10 comp.!te w11h, a girl hanlly nc.-cl, more 1hrc.11s to her ci;o. T1lC quc,tion of a facc,,n,•ing out for bolh .i,ker and a.,i..ee linger< to haunt the would-he daters Wh.1t·, left,, th.! c)e·11lnnc.-. ,h)-,milc, a~l.-aboutht>nw:,,on. .111 ...mp1, ,11 llinin!? thu1 the guy may or may n\ll tnll'rprel COITl:(11)' \\'hat', c,cn \\oN: "tnterprcunr rru111 1w> ,. r,r,...:1.111> \11} one, ,\ m,n.1J ol 4Ul'\1tun, pl,1pu,• thc lcm,llc', nund 1, lw: ,m1hng .u me <If 1, he JU'I h,IJlP> • 11 he i- 1mcrc,1.:,l m me, \\h\ h,t,n'1 he J,l.cJ me out' l),)<!, he ~"''" I'm 1ntcr<',tl'<l m h1111·1 11<m d<i I let h1111 l.1ao" I m 1111.:f\+\tL-d m him'! I, h, lool.mr tor the -.an1c t) pc ut rcl.mnn,lnp I ,1m·> 'l'hc same qu-.-,111,n, ,U'l! rcn,'\:t<'<I IR the male mind s,,. tho: P.1infull> Sh) ,it in , lJ'"''· ",ilk the hall, und ,tumble thruugh thc Pnme DJtmg Y,-.m. occNonall~ c,changmg unlru11tul gl,1n..·c1 "1th other mcm~r. of tlll!ir c.i,te Maybe time lk!lps them bn:.11. throuzh the ,h> ness for J bncf moment 10 find ~omcbody M,l) be thl!y are re-c:ut'J from tli.: d,ueli"' , oid by n Social btro,.:n The.' trouble 1~. the Pa,nfull) Sh) end up mhmg children in their own hfostyle (Xlllcm. A \\hole ne" grn.:nuion of Pamfull> Sh) struth for ~1gna1' and opponunitic\ for :1 chance at o rcl:111t•n,hip. MeJn\\h1le. "progr,.._~.. m the daung \\orld call, for boldne._,, The walk,right-up-and·:i.~k-tlll.'m-out society i, slowly lk<troying the sip11n1, nnd signs used by the Pnmfully Shy dlroughou1 lusiory. May~ a few ,till carry around hlndl.erch1cfs hopefully. mo,t end up trusting their relo1ion.,h1p future 10 fat.- and the hope t/1Jt \Ome11mc. somewhrrc. for a brief but ncc~-.w)' moment, c,omeon.: will b~k through thm Painfully Shy relationship b:irricr.
Until c.irlkr thi< )Car. A,itm food wn., hntited 10 Amcric.tni1cd Chinese ht.>aped with unhealthy pon1on, of j?Ol'IC}' sauces und C\ .1poratL'<l gre,L,e. Then T,tkarn opened 11< doors on l akc,idc A ,cnuc, and l\\1Un food chJnged dramatically 11,c JnpJnc,c fare ta,tc, ,o much like real food: lre,h and unadultcrcd h cl') lunch me:11 i, ~ncd w11h u howl ofm1w soup with 1.m.oen onion, and ,on1e1hing that looks lik.: soggy Rice Kri,pb and a tin) bowl nf
delicious p1ddcd vcgcmhlcs, like cucumbers and kombu. 1l1c prices range from S8.95 nnd su~hi co~ts S8.95 and SI 1.95. Dinner prices arc hil!her. Chicken D<lnbun. u combinution of ,picecl chicken and s:1utecd carrots and yellow and green onions s.:rvC'd on <teamed rice. 1~ a j!reat dc,d for S4 95, c~pccinlly for those with a ~mall stomach. lltc spiced chicken hud a mcsqui1echicl.en-fmm-Supcr I na\'or without the ma~,ive greuc;c. It ta.\lcd like it hud marinated for
hour.; in u light soy-based liquid with live-spice powder mnybc, then sm11ced without any oil. The carrots reminded me of those m beef stew slightly overdone bu1 full of rich navor - nnd the grilled onion~ were those of gounne1burgcr quality. Although this d1~h had an A mcrican flavor. it still ta~ted Japane!oc!. Takara olso ha, other dishl!!>. <,uch .lb yak1udon. thut arc full-fledged Japanese food. The mnin dimng room's atmosphere is pleJ5nnt with hrick walls and for<!'it gret.!n carpel But it luck\ the
brightness of the comparable Jimmy and could some more lightening At the time. this probably mnk~ for a wonderful mu mute evening atmosphere. Taknru also accommodates diners wit/1 private 1:unm1 rooms and a ~ush1 bar. That, along with the great price,, only enhance thi: alrcJdy delecmblc Jnd ,a1i,fymi; food. A good deal 1s hard 10 come by these day<. bu1 here " one that cmt> Ju,t J rnuplc dollurs more thun ,1 mc,11 at l\.ld)onrtld', and doc,n · 1 ta,tc hke thr ,11111,• old tl11ng.
0
"!!"·"'
'Anne of Green Gables' surprisingly fun by Debbie WOlinrn.~ SmJinel Ri!pcmcr
My fric:nds w:1111cd me to watch the movie, "Anne of Green Gablc:s Pan One" on o Friday nig)n with them. I rcmcn1b.:f rcoolng the boo~ when I Wlb O cliild. I liked it. but I thoughl. ''Who.1! Wait a minute, bn't 1ha1 for kid'IT' I ~11rpri5ed myself :1rKI wa! irbtnntly cngros,;cd In lhc imagion1ion, risk and rt•mnnce or the story line. "Anne of Green Gabl~" isn't ju.1<1 for kids: it's for p..'Oplt of all age$, although I wouldn't rccom,~nd thi~ movie to people who an: looking for n blood and gUL~ ,i.:tion movie. 1lic main tiul111C1m were: Annc or Grt:l!n Gable:.. who rcmin~ me of Pippy Long,tockmg, u ,kinny, Mll.U'I ,tnd ~punky orphan. Marilin Cuthb.:n. n pnK'ti.::il 1md ,tri<.i lad) m hcr (..OS, "ho. cxp....:tmg a h<>y, hc.,itutingl) 1u~..... in Anne, 11-foth,:w Cuthhc.'11. Marilla\ 1¥utlwr. a quiet cld<-rly m.m "ho '{'Oil, Anoc, l).tnlll! \11~·, ho.'4>111 lri.-nd. Jilli Gu1lhcn. Ann~·, n,,111n>111 lht first d.ly nf !11:IIOl,I woo, ,11<" b1c.1'. \ hi\ ..:Jutll..ooard ,l.ue o,w h1\ hc,tJ bc..:.,111c hi: rcfc.r. to b.·r l~11r ,i- ,d/T<'l, "/\line: OI Gl\'t'O Gahl~" vrcn., to b.:.11111rul v11}lin 11111.,ic a, i\nnc:. r.imaJllk.ill) .-ngi1:,-.'-.:d in ht•r hool.. ,,.i11,., tht<'•ugh Ire('$ .utd ~tJ., tilt' p~m "L:id) of 01.llo1·· Anne .imat,'tl l'\l.:ryvnc \\ 1th hL-r inwn,c 1ntJginn11011, from lh,.• cre;ition ,1f h.:r mimlr lnc.'ml K.u,e 10 her lk'>aiplioi1, like ''White Wavc IA'light' dc,.c. rihing GR.'t'n 0Jhb Md "Lakt' of Shining" <bcribing. the pond on Gl\'t'lt Gnbl,-s. But lh<>y .utldl.al Anne: uJ\O. ·'Don't you ever imog.111e thing~ dilfeiently front wh.:it dicy an''.'" Anne .isktXl Marilla. ''No." "Oh, Marilla, How mu.;h you miss!-
I ogrce with Anllt': w,: need Oltr unni,~nation 10 touch our onlinruy lh~ Book.s, pocm.s :tnd Ilic ;ibility tn lhink deeply enhanced AMC S imagination. !Hint) To..,sc 1liro.: conccp1.\ may be beneficial therapy for p,:ople who need v:icatio~ lrom won. and !'thool. Out sometime', her imagination got the ~ of her, which can happ..'1110 people ii they le1 it get out of control. When Anne spmined her nnld~ in the "Hntmled h,rc:,t." ~he ~id "I moy ~ loo:cd to l,1int if my 1mnginntitln gcLs tlte best of me." and~ did. Anne'\ tcinguc al'-0 now.cc.I the towns people "Sh,: could talk o hind leg off 11n old muk," Mn.. C'uthbetl ~id. E,pli111ution, that rould be m,ldc w ~1mpk were e\JgoTd!cd. like when Munlin ,imply .1\Jced Anne: 10 ,ty h,:r mght-time pruyt'n.. Anne: refusal ~,,,u\C ''Gi'ld m,.Jc my h.lir red oo PWJX>'C .ind l\ e ri.:1tT .:.in:d for hnn ,111ee.' or when M,uill,1 .i,1-td Anne to ;1polllg.11..: lo Mn. Lynrit It'll' ...~line h,.,- a lat pig. Anlll! -.iitL '-You can 1,-.:l. nw up in ,1 cl.:ep darl. dung,'On und l~I -.rial.c:s bite ,ti m) l«t. bol I CdllllQ( .1poll>gill 10 /I !rs I .ynne.'' b~n An~ ackll-0\\ led~ ~r mnguc. dc:lc:n.,1,'l!ly ~ymg, "I t'h.lllc.'f on far too mud1. hut ii you only l.new tl'c thing.\ I WW\I I0,..1y and don't" Risk was anotherquality Anne: C1)Uldn'I ignore. JI \OtTICOIJc: dm her, no m:ut,T wha1 the ri~ :Jtc l'lt'\'tT tWlll'd away ·1 sh.Ill w-Jlk tltu tiridge polt or p.,n~h." Anne replied to GuilbeJt her d.lrcr. The ron1an.:e in lh1s movie: is unhid.lbk', C\'el')' time I 11x,kcd up ut my fri<:nd., they 1w I~ srrnl~ on thetr IOl.'eS with SIMy t}C'S and ktpc oohing 0
and;1.'linng. Some of the el~'ltlCnL, of the: rnu, ie\ romaoce were the mu.<i.:. the country scenes nnd the Sc.'\.Tel 1ruu G111lb.:n b in l1>1'e with Anne lllt! coonuy sight of Annt" und Dianne walking through the gn,~ lield~ by th.: llghthou~underlhc blue skies us they rcoo rom:mt k' books nnd ix-cm~ imagining their little he,1ns nwoy jw.1 made my friend.~' lte:trt., nod mine.• own go pim:r,paucr. 11ic romance i~ hot when Guilbm pass1ona1ely sp1t'S on Anne :l.\ stic and l)i11nnc run through the gru.ss. :w1 ,ind dune.< and a.~ they \Ullld on !ht: bri<lgc owr the I-Ike of Shining. Not only II till;' mu.,1c, sccnl!'> nnd Guilbert'~ ~'\:tl:t r,1mru,1ic, but Anne', int~ru.e imaganatuJn 1~ ,ll',('I wildly rum.intic. Anne ,111..J three ofhrr tri~nJs 1ire1rnd the} re ,11 t1 runmll 1c, !ht-~ ..iio,c the runo.:, ,..,lh ,\nn.:, lymg m II, t.kaJ, into th,: L..ikc vi Sl11mng as ~he ro11wn1ic;t1ly recites; 1nm J/k' w,m c• b) mgl:1 mid den c1 wlmed n·cb •Hl/i col,m .~.1· <he ·1 li,;nrd a w/11,p,r .l(l) cJWJ".(t'l.'.lc•11hrr
ifsl,c Sia) to /,,ok ,!,111 n on Cum<'lut
c111d 011/r<' rl,nv,g r,f,11,., da) m11hc broad srrcam
b,m1nJlJc1ratray u11d m
rl," bcKU had 1,•,Ju1lfl a/0/tg
he h,,c1nJ /1cr singurg
,..., /as1 .fc1IIJ/ the lady <'Ifcli,u1H. Ann( touched the hean of ~ooes and tutnc.'ll them to gold. nie story's mc:..~ wa., :t link: im.igiruuion, ru;I,. and mm:u,.:e Clll1 pUI ~Vc'IIIW\' intO the ll10SI mftn:vy of lives. 00
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The NIC Sentinel
INSTANT CUl ,TURE
Friday. St?ptembcr 25. 1992
Page 11
'Public Enemy' creates chaos & Angel Dust goes on sale by Rich Oui:gon
1•tJlll~I.(: l~Nl ~~IV
Ph()t<> £d11<1r ~ Special C()rresp(}lu/0111
Fnilh o l\lorc- "Angclll~t" The panem has lx.-en broken l11at nnnoying paucm of good l>.1nd~ folio\\ ing up good albums with glOS.\y, 01-erproduced r11.us of garbage. 11icre is hope. Faith Nti More tu~ pro1cn. Wi1h Angel Du,t. Fanh No More actunlly ~hnmes 1he prev= relca.\e, The Real Thin@, This new one is a dnrk. Y.C1rd. r,c1ting and complc:1 offering. Singer ~lil..e Panon ·s 1·ocnb are spanning a much wider range uf 1onc\ .ind m111udes. Forget the nearly cu1e Y.e1rdnc~~ he di~played in the past. The rual Mike P31lOn ha~ b<:en l~l c,ut now - a dclicn1e blend of gas srntion Jlltndant. altar boy. prisoner. circus clown, murderer and pcrven Hey. "hy not? Pauon c,m ~ing ,ind vocali ze like a man pos$e~sed, bu1 he i~n·1 a great P.R mnn. "l bet thm you foci preuy stupid ou1there" and "What the f''cl. are you looking at?" arc only a couple of pearls he recent!) ca~t before European nud icnc:cs of 70.000 - plll\. Ke)•boardist Roddy D011um is all over the pince with his playing-piano. carnival. church orgun. accordion and other demented sounds reeling out from his fingertips. The songs on thi~ ulbum contain 1lte 1·nstly different views of the bnnJ member; bu1 arc unified by 1he clements of weirdness and c,ccllem musicinnship. Bassist Billy Gould and drummer Mike "Puffy" Bordin provide strong suppon so gm1aris1 Jim Mnnin h:i.~ the opportunity to go out on n psychotic limb when he reels like it. This one i~ well wonh gcning: 13 tracks and they" re all great. so just go ahead and buy Angel Dust.
.
" ~~
Public Enemy- "Grelllest Misses" Without any quick-stepping or excuo;e-making. Public Enemy give premises to support nll past. pn:M:nt and future arguments they make concerning social nnd economic problems. According 10 n P.S. in the liner note/., this rclea-e is not an album. The 1993 release will ~upposedly be the rc:-al thing. bul don'1lc11hat fool you. Grea1~1 Misses is a timely pil'Cc of work 1ha1 tackles issues tha1 demand immedi:uc uucntion An unfair media cin:us. drug addiction. crime and racism rear their ugly heads 10 do battle with 1he "Prophets of Rngc". The nlbuin title refer.. 10 the six remixed cuL~from pas1 albums. 111c remixing is so good that these might ns well be new
songs. The new SOn!lSare up 10 par with (nnd possibly better thnn) past works. All or this comes together in a shnrp production that is 1hough1 ou1 and highly encrgcuc. Hnrd - rhymer Chuck D continue~ to 5harpen hi\ styl~ and Mand by his views. He gets more confident each release and expands his rhyme schemes as well. Cohan 11nd i;elf-profc~d joker Flnvor Flnv rcmwn., consi~1an1 nod tricky. a focc1ious son or fun~tcr who me.5hC( well with Chuck's ~tyk. ll1e foundmion of 1he Public Enemy sound 15 DJ Tem11m11or X wi1h hi( 1umtablc, and sound board pro1•iding big Ilea~ and tricky nm. but he do,...., have plenty of help. Producer Hank Shockli.-c him><!lf (houd be lbtcd ns a band member. con\1dering how much he contribute.( to the PE wall of wund He cm1t.?s ~ide-by-Mde wuh the group. lif11ng wund bill",, beats and riff\. :umngmg them 1010 :in organil<'d ch,10,. Some criuc, \\ould hl..c to blame mu\lcians for problem, in society, bu1 the wor,t thing Public Gnemy ha, done is hold up a very big nurror They'd li~c 10 g~t people thinking about who! they ~oe. Rolx'rt Cm) - " I Wos Wonted" Seattle area "Roci..10· Rhylhm and Blue{' musician Robert Cray come, back wuh a unique inver,inn - u smooth , bnlli,1111 ,1lbum thm main1a111s the ,rnrk reality of the blue~. With some d.mhng help from the: Memphis Horns, Cray spins IO nc" tail'' 1hni will never foil to move 1he listener. The lyrics pnmt very vivid images of love Inst. new - fou nd love, thr har~h setbacks nnd sweet rewords of life. Ju51 lis1en 10 tlus release nnd you'll 11011cc 1h01 it very well could stand os nn ins1rumcntal. Outs1:indin11 mu,icinn(hi(l is found o n this nnd all previout Cray works .
....________ C_A.L _ END ______AR _ _---J,
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Compiled by Mork A. Jerome /11su1111 Culture Editor Friday, Sept. 25 7-9 p.m.-Fall Cruise ·92 on 1he Mish-n-Nock leaving from Independence Point-City Park . S5 general admission for NIC students with ID only. Thursday, Oct. 8 8 p.m. · The Spokane Symphony with Fabio Mechetti conducting and special guest violinist Karen Adam. Friday, OcL 9 8 p.m.-Comedy Nite ·92 SJ general admission fee for NIC students with ID. S5 for the general public. Monday, Oct. 19 8 p.m. -'Toe Blizzard of Bucks" crazy game show. Student Union Building in Bonner Room. Open to the public, Saturday, OcL 10 9-12 -Dance after Volleyball game SUB in Bonner room S2 admission for NIC students with ID, S3 for guests. Sunday, OcL 18 4 p.m.-Tommy Dorsey Orchestra
conducted by Buddy Morrow in Communication-Fine Art Building. Frldoy, Nov. JJ 8 p.m.-Loose Tics in Concen Commu111ca1ion~-Fine Ans Building in Boswell llnll $3 admission for NIC students. S7 for the general public. Tickets uvllilable at the door, Fridoy, Nov. 20 8 p.m • Bill Evans Dance Company in Boswell Hall Auditorium. Tuesday, Dec. 8 7 p.m. · "A Chnstma~ Carol" by Dickens and performed by the Nebraska Theatre Caravan in Boswell Hall Auditorium. Wednesday, Dec. 9 8 p.m.-The Gong Show featuring local talent Communications-Fine Arts Building in Boswell Hall. Open to the public. Saturday, Jan. 16 9-12 • Hawai ian dance after men's basketball game S2 admission for NIC students with ID, SJ fol guest.
I
Page 12
Friday, September 25, 1992
'l'IIE Y UPPI ES FnO~I llEt.L CAl&TOON P AGE
The NIC Scn1incl
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The NIC Sentinel
Friday, September 25, 1992
Page 13
.
\.
nie Aug. 29 Block Happy show mNonh Idaho College wos unusual not bealusc of NICs lock of cn1cnninmeni but rather for Coeur <fAlene's lack of ,•enues for its own rising s1ars IO piny. The S-membcr band hos been gaining popularity in Spoklmc. Seaulc, Ponl:md nnd even Boise. Although Block Happy is not a ..grunge" band, it is a unique sound 1ha1 works like a gear that meshes well Above left, the crowd gath~r., with other regional oonds and their sounds. One pnnicular cxp..'Ctantly for the band's arrival. distinguishing feature nboul Black Happy is their use of 1wo Above, from lcf(. Jay Carkhuff. trombones nnd a saxaphone. Mike Hn$crics, Paul Hemenway, While maintaining n No. 5 position in the Scaule magn,Jne llie Dnryl Elmore. Greg Hjon ond Rocket for sevcrnl months. Block Happy ha.~ also made apperunnccs Mnrk Hemenway kick off lhe show in mruiy national maglll.incs, including lhe USA Today Weekend with n blllSt. Not pictured nrc magazine, which has n circulation of 33.5 million readers. drummer Scou Jessick :ind Soles of the bnnd's current release, "Friendly Dog Salad," percussionist Jim Bruce. hove been impressive ond far-reaching, including many overseas shipments. According to man~og~c~m'.:c.'..'.nl'.:_•.'..'.•h::c~b~an~d:.':v.'..'.ill'..__J__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...L_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1 not rest on its laurels, and plans lo go into the studio this foll 10 record ano1hcr full -leng1h album. It seems as though the band nmy be in grave danger of gelling signed by n major label soon. Maybe then Coeur d'Alene area venues will magically appear and make w11y for the friendly undcrdois. photos by Kevin J. Brown
Above right, brothers Poul nnd Mnrk Hemenway. Al right, Mnrk, Mike, Joy, Paul, Greg nnd Daryl work up n crowd of several hundred in the fading light of dusk. Several would-be stage divers are visible 01 the froni of the stage (security for the show was minimal and proved unneces~ary .)
Page 14
Friday, September 2S, 1992
The NIC Sentinel
AStudent Checking Account At First Security Comes With Some Added Features. ot on ly will you en joy First
lectures. And, as a First Security
Security's customary checking ben-
d1ecking account customer, you're
efits like a check
invited to apply for our special
guarantee card,
s tud e nt
credit card~ ATM
credi.t card
access, no service
services-a
charges on your
program
To11 lcu11/111g yo11,CD
first 10 checks
speci flea II y
is ensy.
per month, and
des igned
no minimum beginning balance,
to help you
you'll also qualify for special features. Like
TI,c cnssel/e player lets you record your fa11orite CDs.
Opc11 n sh1dC11t cl1ct1kiug ncco1111/ nt First Sac11rity n11d yo11 mny bet/re l11cky wiu11cr of II Hitnc/ri CD Player.
Tiir llitnc/,i 32 Scleclio11 CD Player offrrs ra11do111 progrn111111i11g.
establish a history of good credit. With all these grec1t features, a
high-speed dubbing, a remote sensor,
checking account at First Security Bank is lhe obvious way to
headphone jack, sleep button, and so
go. And if you're one of the lucky ones who take the sum-
on. Sound unusual? Not when you
niers off, no worry. You can leave your
open a student checking account at
d1ecking account open continuously.
First Security and enter' a drawing to
So, if for no other reason than you have
win a free Hitachi CD Player.
a fetish for designer water bottles, we
And just for opening an account, you'll receive a colotful 1
water bottle-free. This thirst quenching flask is the perfect take-along for those seemingl y endless hours of note-inducing Opm a stude11t
cl1uki11g nccou11t a11d receive a
rnstom desig11ed water boHlenbsolutely free.
extend an invitation to open your account today. Co11trol your tunes from a dista,ice w ith tire lrandy remote.
Hitacl,i's S11per Bass lets you feel tl,e music.
First Security
Bank(!p
Currently¡Giving 110% and a CD playet Manbttf.QLC
..
Friday. Sep1ember15. 1992
Rolly Williams Woodsale
The NIC Sentinel
SPORTS
page 16 page 17
The Sentinel's Competitive Sports Section Edited and Designed by Ryan Bronson
Page 15
Spons arc sports. Li vcs are lives. Sports aren't lives. Or arc they?
Volleyball ladies inconsistent but improving NIC Cardinals rebound from Ricks setback b~ Domin k Ho,<:1rd Rl'rr,•111i1•11 nb111r The NIC ,olleyball learn hos been plagued with incon\i,tl·nc~ \O far this year a., ii is off 10 a 9-13 o, eraII and 0-1 league record tn ,tan 1hc ,cason. 111c Lady Cardinals ployed in the Rick~ Tournament and the Spokane lnvitn1io1rnl ovrr lhc post two weekends. interrupted by n loss to lc.1gue rival Ricks College. After a 1-3 showing in its lirs1 1ournnmcn1 of the year. NI C impro,•cd 10 4-5 in the Ricks Tournnm e nl and 3-4 in th e Spoka ne lnvirntional. The team sho wed incon si, tc ncy. according to Conch Bret Taylor. "We have been playing inconsistent all year.'' Taylor said. ··we are up and down 100 much. We have 10 be consistent." The Cardinals ha, e bee n mixing 1hings up in order 10 beco me more effi cie nt. Taylor snid. .. We have been trying differcm line ups and pulling people in different pos i1 ions hoping to li nd ,ome con\i,1ency:· Tay lor ,aid. "W,: ha,c to impro"e hy the 1imc " <'
gel in10 league and regional pl:1y.'' Dc(pitc th e mediocre 1cnm ploy. several players hn, e !been playi ng very wdl, Taylor
•.
~:ud.
"Carly Killen (hi ller), Krb1a Elliot ,ind Amelia King (both defens ive ~pccml,qq huvc l~cn playi ng well ,o far.'' T,l) lor ,aid. Ta) lor was disappointed with 1hc result, of the Rick~con1est. "\Ve go1our buns kicked ag.11ns1 Ricks:· Taylor s.1id. Ilowcvcr. 1he I .ndy Card, cJlllC out 1hc ncx1 d.1y a nd played in the Spoka ne In, iuuional. lill.ing home lounh pl.ice. On Mo nday. 1h,: Card, shu"cd ,n me cnn~i,tcncy as 1hcy bcn1 up (HI Big Bend Community College m S1ra1l) h1 sc1s 15-2, 15-2. 15-6. "We playe d very we ll ng:1in, 1 Big Bend," Taylor said. "When we play a1 1ha1 level and in1cnsi1y. we can compe1c wi1h anyone in 1hc league. We need 10 play like that all 1hc time." Lendi ng the Cardinals in sc r,·ing arc Jennifer Je\\•cll and Elliot. Killen leads in 101nl kill s und is near the lop in hlocking wi1h Ellio1. Kristi Rau nnd Bc1h Raynur. King and Karri Miller lead the 1c.1n1 111 dig, TI1e Cards hope 10 coniinuc 1hc1r 11uality piny this weekend wi1h n ,olid pcrtnrmancc photo by Jett Selle in 1hc Walla Walla Tournament and agains1 DUCK-Kr,srt Rau tries a spike over a Rick's College defender. NIC lost to Ricks in Wall a Wal lil on Monday al NIC They three games and is 0-1 m league. NIC's next league match 1s against CS!. conli nuc lcng uc pl,1) ng,.1in~t Coll ege of S0u1hern lduho on Oct. 10 .11 home
Cross Country develops expectations hy l\lnrc) ,\ni,rum S,•1111111'1 R,•1111r1, r
photo by Erin Siemers Coach Christy Davids discusses practice with his runners.
The NIC CardinJh ~rt1,s·coun1ry tc.im opened ih ~ca.~on lu,1 S,uurday ,II the \\'human lnv11J11onal in WJlla W:1lla, Wa,h The men', teJm placed lounh in the lmilc " hilc 1hc g1rh pl,1ccd lilth Audre> D.1, 1d\, a-..,,~tani cro._,-couniry coach for 1hc women', team. , aid ...The guy, looked reall y. re.i lly pood. They JUSI need to clo~e 1he gap bcl"een 1he second and lhird-placc runner, on the team.'' When commenting about the women':, p.:rforn1ancc, she said ...The girls had a good meet. Knicri Mydlnnd wos a big ,urpri:,c as " as Barb Kerns... The 1wo lini\ h.:d second and third on 1hc women·\ tenm and 27th and 32nd respcc1ively for 1he ovt"rnll meet. .. Bnrb came into the se:l!ion in good ,hnpc but didn't have any real college cross-country CApcricnce !>..'Cause ~he red-\hined la,1~ear:· Davids (aid. .. Early in the race Oarh wa~ back in 1he p.icl. bu1 made a bn:ak towards the middle and m11de up a 101or ground." Da vid~ ~aid thill all the rrc~hmen cumc into the season with a good. ~,ra ng ba\e 10 s1an off with. They hod all accumula1cd o,·cr 40 miles a week ia running disiance.
She Jbn ,did 1hat 1hc} arc ,ill vel) mature Jnd contidenl and have dc1m11,: goah in mind The 1eam \\Oulu like 10 gu \u NJliunal, in No,cmb.!r bu1lhC) rc.ih1.c 1h11t ll v.ill rnl.c h.irJ \\ork and dcd1l,illOn 1301h co.t,h<:, arc excited for the: r.:iurn ut wphomorc runner Jo,c Gun,aks. lie i, m Stoul, Kurea. al the World Junior Traci. and Field Champ1un~hip,. l),wid, ~J1d ,he wa, lool..ill!! for\\ard to hi\ r.:1urn .ind 10 ~ec: ho \\ he lin ished in Seoul She b .11'0 e\C it ed for him to comp.:te wuh 1he cro"-coun1ry team at 1hc1r n,·" mee1. Some cxpt.-c1mion, 1ha1 Da,ids hii!> for the ) eJr arc 10 send the men· s team to Se;111le and \how confidence. Th,:y need 10 clo:.e the gap be1wcen 1he second and third runners and bet\\Ccn all ot the runners on 1he 1eam, shc said. Tot v.omen are beuer lhan wn~expec1cd, Du, id~:.aid. "They ni.-ed 10 be o 101 mor,: aggres~ivc and they ol~o need to clo,e those gup) between 1hc runners:· Davids :,oid. Oavim also talked about their e~p,.-c1a1ions. ..Our main goal, of course. is to m.ike ii to National~ in AriLOna. but for nov., the kid, need 01 auainable goal~ and 1hen try to improve and rcoch 1hdr goals a1 eac h meet.'' she said. The nex t meet will be 01 Missoul a. Mont .. for lhc Mounwm Wcsl X-C Classii: on So1urdoy.
w,
Page 16
The NIC Sentiuel
S POl11'S
Friday, September 25, 1992
Woodsale almost over, successful b, Oomlnk
110 11 ard
Rt,·rt11tu r.lJ110 1
Thr :I:(( 80.•,tcr cluh i, Oil\\ h<•ldmg 11, anouJl \I oud ,Jk h ro,rs \70 a ..:t>rJ tn h,1H· l11c Mxlll •pin dn,l 1kl11crcd Thr ,uirl. 1, done h~ 1'1c •J'Orl, 1ra111~. nn,l th.· m1,nr~ c,unc:J goe, to funJ ,ch, 1t.1r,.h1p., h) 1'11: Nii"'" duh \, ,11 \\'eJne,llJ) mCltTIIOf the,· Nd l(OJJ ,, c(lfd, 1'111 the ~,u,1) loLll h•r I~ vt"ar 1, .i~ \\ r~llllli,! C11.id1 J,1hn O,\l'n 'JIU l..l~t ) t:u' the) drt11 acd 60 runh The .11hlc1i.: lt;im, d1,11k up 1h.: \\1•1 I::(\ cnl~ J' 1heJ e.1ch 1.1k1· .:cmm JD~, of th!" "c.'t'I. in \1 hid1 u, ,pin anJ Jeh,er the \,ood. Th~
"'"'d i, ,pht "i1h h) Jr.1uhc ,plinen. J!ld lhl"n f1,:1drd onto NIC' ,chicle, k•r ,kh\·l·r" I he \\11<>d uwJ lur l11r\wod d<JnJlt'd l>) nc.ttb) m1IJ... Th,•
is
"o,,d ".1 mnturi· "I r.:J tir. "hire fir ,1rnl \I hi(~ ru11: 111C') .ire "/"'r,llini; bth1nJ l,foho Fmr•t 111,lu,tric, un Scl11ce \,,. h.:t,wt"n ( 1-..:ur rl ,\km~ and
"'"' r-~111
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tont.u t Juel. Rl,1\0111. hc,1J t\J,,·t,:111 cu.1d1 anJ ,urcn '"'r nl 1hc ,dk IJc c:an l~ rc.'ad1ed :II l .xt
.,;.1
American Heart Walk tramples heart disease h) ~lark \ ..h-ronll' lmcam C11/c11r,· Editor
,\ celebrJliun nf hc,1hhy hc;im will be tal.m!:' pl.Ke SJ1urdo~, Ori. '· m K,101enni ('nunl) 1, 1th 1h.: Amcrn:,1n Hean t\,\ou,11ion·, upcoming "H~.,rt \\,Ill. " The Ameri cnn lf e.tr1 W~II. h \chcdukJ 10 1akc pl.1cc rrnm 8 n.111. 10 noon on Sa1urda). Oc1. ~ C'hecl. 10 will 1111.c place a11he Po,1 Fall, Cit) Holl, ~08 Spol..mc S1 The ,\ mcnron lleart \\'all. ,, a ne11 na11nn.i l e"ent 1h01 11 ill Jnin 11all.er, :1cro\\ 1he coumr) in lhc non-compc111iw. JUSt·fnr.fun ,•,cnt thJt fucu,e, on 1h1• fil!hl afainsi cardill\ a~cular d1,ca,c The \\J(I. will aho p,11n1 out 1hc 1mponunce of c,crci,r in a hr.in hcJhh1 hfc,I\ le. ,\lllmullh n1.1n1• lu.1h~Jn, t~i,c,e 1he1 ho1c ,1 gencr.111) hrallh}, 1hc ,1a1e r,1n1.·, 171h 1n murialit) frc,m c,1rd10,a,cul.ir di,rJ~r The 11,111. mule \lifl 1,11.C pMllt'IPJrll\ 0
"Basically our goal is to have 300 walkers with $1 00 each in pledges. "
Katie Mans NIC Team Leader ,,n the Cemcnmal Tr.111 .1ml 1hruu!!h ,omr 01
1h,·
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bc.1u11rul JreJ, of Pn-i l·Jlb
'
plioiobyl:rl n Slemers FROM LEFT· Rick Moreno, Mark Echevaria, Shane <;:ass and James Watkins sp/lr wood
on "hal 1s hoped to be o he:m1iful uu1umn da), He.in Woll.t:rs II ill qu.llif) for pri,c, by r.ii,inll money pkdg~d by friends. coworl.cr). fnnnly nnd 01her\. Pme, \\ 111 range front t\mcm:nn Ikon Walk Tsh1rt, ,ind ,wca1,hir1s 10 18-,pccJ ull1c rrain bicycle~. Sony portnhlc Watchman tclev1,1on,, por table CD pluycr,. watchc, :ind Wnll.mnn,. Pn,c, "111 h,· aw.irJed acc o rding to cuch 11alkcr's level of pledge, ream le,tdcr fnr Nonh ld nho College i, Ka1ir ~h1n,, 11 ho ,1111 hnvc pledge lorm, and pri,c 111fornmtio11 "It'~ i:oing 10 be .1 beauulul ,·1.mr,c" Mnn, said. "B,1,icall~ our goal " 10 have 300 wull.cr, wilh ~ 1()() C3l'I, m pledge,, 11hich \1 ill be a 101,11 01 530.000 for the A111cri\';1n Hc.1r1 t\\\lX'1,umn." The NIC t.:am still ha, J fc,\' 1,~wning, on it, ru,ll'I ;o :in, one th.it 11 oulJ hi.<' Id run for hc,11th, h.:art, ,hnuld cunt,1ct MJO\ . P1d up inle>rm.11ivn lrnm the lio, nlllce i\londa, • l'ndJ,. no1>n • 5 p.m. or (JII c.\t -114 lnr Jn) quc,1mns. For inrorrna1i1,n call R.mdl Juh,ni-cn ,11 1hr \mcrk .111 ll t:iirl \"oc1.111un at M7-0S-10 or Ron ~l u~c, 01 Pincac,1 ,II 6(1h- I 14 I or their 1011-lrcc numl>tr .u I 800- '95- ~OO!i Rand, Sha" lr,un Qh 1dc11,mn 1, Kon·, ,l>·chmnnJn tor th1, e.,~m
PORT SIIORTS by Ryan Bronson-Spons Editor On un 1111' no1c--h,rmcr NIC "rl!,tling he.i,·),,c,ght Jumc, "R11,1er Wut~in, made Ju, loo1hb,1ll h\•,1d cu:1d1ing dd1u1 ta,1 \ICi.'I. for Jun,ur !acid~ h>(llb.111. Wrcsiling Coach John Owen 1h11ugh1 11 "·•' nct"c>'a~ 10 mcn11on 1h01 "Bu,1cr'' "u,n'1 , cry ,uc,c,,ful Wail.in,· 1c11m 10,1 2!1-0. From lhl• 1m,t--Fonncr NIC ,ollcybnll , tar ,md rnptam f>aul.i Mooprr "doinp rcwlly 11 ell at her new home at I.cw" und CIJik S1a1e College. No1 only" she doing 1\ell, ,he mudt· 1hc 1\II-Tournumcn11cam in 10~11ournumcnt.
lntrnrnural\ need, hdp·· lllc 11•,1m, pm1cipa11ni: m tht• mlf,1mur.1I ll,1g fou1bJII lc.11!W ur.: :t liul ... ,h,irt on \\omen playcf\. Any women intcr~,rcd in hn, '"!! o t!(){>d um~ playmg a ,pon with hnle contac1(u, lvnll a., you Jon·, gc1 nnyonc mud ,II ~ ou I ,houhJ po 10 ,cc UM Taylor m th.: m1ramur.1I uflke down,t,1ir, of 1hc Studclll Un1lln Bu1ldm11 From thl' cdltor··J\n)onc h,1,•ml! ,uggc,111111, ullou1 1hc ,pon, ~cction, or ,my other pun of 1hc new ,pnpcr. ,hould wrne them down and brint1 lhcm o,cr, and plc,l\e, hove tnouph l!Ul, 10 ,1gn your name.Oh. ond d,m'1 call me ''DUDE ...
ALEND Cross Country
October
September
2
26 Mountain West X-C Classic Missoula, Mont.
3
October
3
3
Finch Arboretum X-C Spokane, Wash.
Big Bend CC Away 6 p.m. Yakima Valley CC Away 1 p.m. Cent. Wash. Univ. JV's Away 6 p.m.
lntramurals Volleyball
The intramural flag football is
September
played Monday through
25 Walla Walla Tournament 28 Walla Walla CC Home 6 p.m.
Thursday between 3 p.m. and 6p.m.
The NIC Sentinel
Friday. September 25, 1992
NIC's coaches prove re Iiab iIity Ev('ry season, ei ther before. during or nhcr 1hc season, you cnn count on ~~cing some coaching changl!~ in an array ot different spons. t.lore or1cn thun nol. a conch i~ being hirtd or lircd somewhere 1n the world of uthletics. It's part of the gomc. Yc1. in spite of the C.\trnordinory amount of ( different way~ a 1cam cnn lose o coach, NIC h:1s mnnoged 10 keep i IS "linest" righ t at home in Nonh Idaho. In fact , if someone were to C'ompi/1.· the Ryan Bronson amount the years that the Sports Editor currcn1 head conches have conched ot NIC, it wou ld be clo~ t0 91 years. And, if one were 10 m·l!rage the amount of years 1h01 the current head coaches have conched, it would be about 13 yenrs because seven coaches cxis1 01 NIC and 91 divided by seven is. well. you know. Dcspi1c these Jmnzing fact~. it could prove 10 be 1n1eres11ng 10 know these facts: ( I.) Only one of NIC's active coaches hru, had previou~ experience as a heod coach in college and (2.) Out of the trio of coaches thar have been here nt least a decade, none of them have had nny previous college coaching experience before nppcanng nt NJC. Rolly Williams ( Basketbn ll ). Jud Bloxom tUawball) ond John Owen (Wrcsrling) 1ogc1her have coached a ioml of 75 years. "hich is probably 1he mos1 of any three t'Ombined coaches from one M:hool in the rcgwn. If it isn't, it will be eventually bccau~e all thre,· concncs seem happy wi1h where they are at. Mnybe a more inreresting s11bjcc1 of di~cussion wou ld be how long the coaches Ihm ha\'cn'i been around long plan on staying. Well. 10 an~we r th at question. we must firq ans\\cr the que,tion about how happy the more recently ahdueted coache~ are .11 NIC. Bret Taylor (VollC'ybull J hns been here )e, en ye~ and get, along grea1 "'ith \tudcnb and athletes. Unless he get, a b..:11er offor, he'll be around. Dcl-l aven Hill (Women's B0,ke1bull) b the o nly coach " ith prcviou, college conchi ng e~perience. He', been here for four long year- and you can't tell whut could happen ,, 11h/10 him f:rnu Rhinehan i~ in her ~ccond year co.ichmg the cheerleader~. She ha~ ne,•er coached checrlendi ng before but h~ ex perience with g)·mnustic~. Christy Davids seems pre11y well rc\pccted u, n conch for trnck and cross country m the eyes if the majority, but there is a minori1y. also. Too bod some of the minority nre runners on his tenm. He's n to~sup. In conclus1on, NJC's coaches are actually prcuy good coaches and we should reali1.e that they could be a hell of a lot worse if they wonted 10 be.
(:) ,,
Page 17
ONE OF A KIND--N I C a t h I et i c d i r e c t o r ··s
program 31-year product Williams won 't hang up whistle for a while by Ryn n 13ronson Sports £1/it(lr "Longevity. fecundity and vigor" rm: ~aid IO be the three elements 1h01 measure the strength of a people. according 10 Funk nnd Wngnalls New Standard Dictionary of the English Lllnguagc. Out 1f those word~ were used to dc~cribe a person. head basketbnll coach and athlcric director Rolly Williams would lit the bill. li e would delinitely rcprcscnl "longevity." William, has been the head basketball coach since the bn~kc1ball program began 31 years ago. He is a mascot of "fecundity," Williams ha, proved his productivity by fcni lizi ng good a1hle1cs and turning them into great basketball players a, well ns great students. He is a ponrnit of "vigor." Williams ha~ conched some powerful teams. both physically and 111cntnlly. II~ has helped mature anxious ndolcsccnts into patient men. So, what do you rnlk abou1 with a guy who ha\ already occompli,hcd more than enough 10 be rc,pcc1cd'! Well, lei', talk nbuu1 oil.I time\, Rolly Willi;1nis wu~ born and roi,cd in a small town culled Wardner, Idaho. ju,1 ou1,ide of Kellogg. He gradun ted in 1956 from Kellogg High School nnd ~pent five year~ playing baskc1bn ll at the Univer~i ty of Idaho. but he ployed ba~kctbnll befor<? he went 10 U of l "Obviously, played basketball in high sc hool," ~c1id Williams, wit h o g rin. "but, before that, when I was in Jun ior high. the teams 11crc set up by we ight classes Ro/Ly instead of by age." Durinti hi> stay at U of I. William~ alw;1ys came back dunng 1he summer 10 worl. In the mines near Kellogg. "It's very d1flicult to explain 10 somebody who' \ never been underground what u's like," Will iams said. "I was born and raised in Kell ogg. so the idea of working underground was never a problem for me."
"It's very difficult
to explain to somebody who's never been
underground what ii 's like. The idea
of working underground was never a problem
for me."
Williams
Hometown: Wardner. Idaho High school: Kellogg High
Graduntecl(H.S.):
1956 College: Univ. of Idaho '/ Gr:idualed!U of l): 1961 Rolly Williams Coaching Head Basketball experience: 31 years Coach/ exclusively nt Athletic Director Nor(h Idaho. Willinms r~·<hhirtcd in his wphomore year for ldnho. Afier live year< Jl U of I (the Inst year mainly spcn1 on upper p,y.:hology coum:~). William\ was drnhcd 10 play pmrcs,ionnl bn,kctball for 11 minor-tca[!uc-typc club in Cnli fornin. He had previously bee n asked 10 coach u high school team bu1 rcjcc1ed the offer bec:,u\c he wa, mrnous to try out for a professional team. Then he got the call. Actually, hi~ wife got 1hc call. She 1hcn proce1:ded 10 call William, in California 10 tell him thnt Nonh Idaho College wanted him to be 1hc heJd coach for ~ men·, ba.,l.etball team. Yet, he wa., ~till he\ilant. "I wanted 10 play profe,sional ha~ketball, but I go1 cut and CJme home." William, said. Home 1, wher<! he's been for over 31 ycor~. When Wi lliam~ fir,t umvcd ut NIC. 1hc college tlidn't reully have a ba~kctball team and it dclinitcly didn' 1 have a ba~kctball program. 1-fc was 1he new bnsketbnll coach/athletic director/physica l cduca1ion director. and thJt's what he was for 30 years until he \HIS rl!lieved of his P E. rc~ponsibili11cs last year. "Last y,m wa~ the best couching year I' ve hnd m 11uitc a while," William~ ,aad. "'mainly lx.'Cdu,c I didn't have 10 deal with the P.E. department and lhnt enabled me to concentrate on basketball." After such a long career at one plJce doing one 1hing. you migh1think rhut hi~ job 11m monoronou~. Not true "I've enjoyed thl\ school OH•r the }'Car~. I continue to enjoy it, Jnd I'll cnJOY II until I'm finished," William, said lim1ly. "Everybody hns days when they feel m.e doing someth ing el,c. bu1 by enlarge. I've never regrcned what I'm doing." Williams ~aid he could rctir~ by June. 1996. It would be n sad, yet an apprecia1 ive retirement. Still. Williams likes whtu he's doing and his work di NIC may never be fi nished in his own mind. You never kn ow, Coach Williams might be: around until they send him back underground .....for good.
The NIC Sentinel
R ECHEA1'ION
Frida)'. September 25, 1992
P:igc 19
Intramural season in high gear b)' Morey Ankrum St11li11d Rrponer lnlfllmuml spans hove shifted into high gear 35 co-rec Ong foo1ball is under way wi1h many 01her even ls yet 10 come. A tennis tournament was held 01 1he couns here a1 NIC and the winners were Darian Robbins and Chiko Watanbe. There were only two women in 1hc tournament ond nine men. Robbins went up againsl Dane Wilson in 1he finals. and Wa1anbe defeated Stacy Cozby fn a tough 1ournament sci of 1cnnis for the championships. They
received in1ramural champion T-shins for their effons. Flag foo1ball s1arted Wedne~day with 1hrec games. There are eight 1eoms in this league and it is not too late to ge1 on a 1eam people ate usually needed, especially women. Flag football is just like powderpuff football from high school. A mountain bike ride took place this pnst weekend. It was from Fernan Saddle to Honeysuckle campground wi1h a batbecue toafterward. Howeve r. only 10 people panicipatcd in this event after many more
had signed up.. "I was very disappointed 1ha1 1hc people who signed up to go did no1 show up," ln1rnmural Dircc1or Dret Taylor said. "Especially after I bought all the food for the barbecue." Open noor hockey will be played in 1he N!C Gymnasium this weekend during 1he East Koo1enni-NIC Exchange. Hockey s1ans a1 10 a.m. Fifteen East Koo1cnai Communi1y College students are coming down. Eost Kootenai Community College is NIC's sister college i11 Cranbrook, Bri1ish
Columbia. After noor hockey people arc invi1cd to join D.:nn Dennen and the East Kootenai studcn1s as they go out 10 1he dog track for an exciling night of gamhling on the greyhounds. NIC goes to Crnnbrook :ifter Christmas for 1heir holf of the exchange. "We go up there after ChristmJ~ :ind usually play games the first night and go skiing at Kimberley 1he nex1 day," Bennett said. Taylor is planning on having month ly pool. pingpong and bowling 1ouraments.
Bombs away(Right) Intramural flag football action got started Wednesday in high gear as Pimp Palace, The Packers and The Sentinel Bombers recorded victories. (Left) Assistant Volleyball Coach John Jensen shows off his powerful serve m rhe NIC tennis tournament which Darfan Robbins and Chike Wetanbe were the champions photos by Erin Siemers
What is the most dangerous thing ·you've ever done? "Climbed to the top of chimney rock." Dean Bennett Recreation Director
"Played chicken with a train on my mountain bike." Chris Thompson Biology
"I jumped out of
an airplane." Kathy Flaherty Criminal Justice
"Bungee Jumping.• Chris "Paco" Kline Nursing
"Walked into bar that had half naked women.• Kim Reed Business Mngt.
The NIC Scnuncl
l lECH l,;ATION
Friday. September 25, 1992
Page 19
Intramural season in high gear by Morty Ankrum Smti11tl Reponer lnuamuml spons have shifted into high gear :is co,rcc nag football is under way with many other e,•cnis yet to come. A ccnnis 1oumnmcn1 was held ac the couns here a1 NIC and the winners were Dnrinn Robbins and Chika Wo1anbe. There were only 1wo women in the toumnmenl and nine men. Robbins went up against Dane Wilson in lhe finals. ond Watanbe defeated Stoey Cozby fn u tough tournament set of tennis for the championships. TI1cy
received intramural champion T-shins for their effon.s. Flug football sinned Wednesday with three games. There are eight teams in this league ond it is not too late to get on a team people nrc usually needed. especially women. Flag football is just like powderpuff football from high school. A mountain bike ride took place this past weekend. Et was from Fernan Saddle to Honeysuckle campground with a barbecue toaftcrward. However. only 10 people participated in this event after many mort'
hnd signed up.. "I w:1~ very disappointed 1ha1 the people who signed up 10 go did not show up.'' Intramural Director Bret Taylor suid. "Especially after I bought all the food for the barbecue:· Open noor hockey will be played in the NIC Gymnasium 1h1s weekend during the East Kooienai·NIC fachonge. Hockey s1ans a1 10 a.m. Fifteen East Kootenai Community College students ore coming down. East Kootenai Community College is NIC's sister college ia Cronbrook. British
Columbi:1. After noor hockey people art invited 10 Join Denn Bennelt and 1he En~, Koo1enoi st udents as they go out 10 ch<! dog trac k for an exciting night of gamhling on the greyhou nds. NIC goes to Cranbrook :iftcr Christmas for their half of the exchange. "We go up there after Christmas and usually play games the lirst night and go skiing 01 Kimberley the next day," Bcnnel! said. Taylor is planning on having monthly pool. pingpong and bowling touromenis.
Bombsaway(Right) Intramural /lag football action got started Wednesday in high gear as Pimp Palace, The Packers and The Sentfnel Bombers recorded v,ctofles. {Left) Assistant Volleyball Coach John Jensen shows off his powerful serve In the NIC tennis tournament which Dar/an Robbins and Chika Watanbe were the champions. photos by Erin Siemers
What is the most dangerous thing ·you've ever done? "Climbed to the top of chimney rock." Dean Bennett Recreation Director
"Played chicken with a train on my mountain bike." Chris Thompson Biology
"I jumped out of an airplane.• Kathy Flaherty Criminal Justice
"Bungee Jumping.• Chris "Paco" Kline Nursing
"Walked into bar that had half naked women." Kim Reed Business Mngt.
Page:W
Thi.' NIC Sentinel
IIECRE,\l'ION
Friday, September 25, 1992
Clubs: something for everyone b! Jcff Gr~n
lllustrnlioll.', by John l'l lyers S,11r111d Rq,on~n
Welding Clu b • The \\'eldinl! club ;u N!C i~ au1hori1cd and has a con,1i1u1ion ,ind b)'·l:l\h TI1i\ profo"1onJI. )l'I ,ocrnl. club pro\ ides 11udcn1~ ,,uh "eldmg e,penhc. 1l1c club', field lnp< include tmvclinp 10 SpoLan,• \\ here there i~ J ch•prer or the American Welding S0t·1et). Members 1i,1cn 10 ~peaLcf'j, \\hO 1a!L abou1 wh,111s going on in 1oJ,1) ·, indu,11). This ,1,·11\e club al,o provide, lamil) barbecue, during Chri\lmJ, 11mc ond 1?rJduill10n. Accordinl! 10 1hc b) -law,. Jn}one enrolled m ".:ldmg and prior ,1udcn1s are members. Th( advi,er, ate Mill Turle) and Dnhl Dooge. whom can be reached JI 769-3-1-13 or in Hedlund 12-1.
The club ~l~o ~ele<:ts n reprcsenuuh c 10 ~en e on the Kootemu County TMk Force on Humnn Rclo11ons The club i~ ulread) 31 membel' ,1rong nod more nre cxpccrcd. The club mec1, I\\ ice n month at noon Thur~dnys in Lee--16. 1lmw who arc interested nrc cncoumgl'd to con1oct 1he ad,·ber. Tony Stewan. 01 769-33'.!5 or in l.ec--19.
the pn~t. various Republican oflidul~ hnve spoken 10 rite member~ o( 1his club. For cxnmplc. former Idaho Sen. Larry Craig mode n vi~il 10 the campu~. and some members have even gone off campus to wor'-
club ulso visits 1ronsfer insti1uuons, ~uch as Gon1agn and U or I. 10 chcC'k out rhe schools and !heir programs. ln addition. 1hc club's sociul g.uhcrings include n potluck around Chris1rnas time and ,1picnic m lhe end Qf rhe year. TI1cse gnthcring, involve members nnd in area politicril orliccs for Republican internships. The club~ of the pa.sl met nr lea~t their families. The prcsiden1or thi~club i\ Tiffany Roddick, and she is 1he firs, lcmale once a month. h's up 10 1he srudcn1\ prc,ident in 1hc hi~1ory or thi, a,~ocia1ion kudcr;hip. desire and energy. Those who Thi5 sociul cluh mecl) once a monlh in one wan, 10 gel lhis club Mnn~d nr.: encouraged 10 call 1hc ad\ i~cr, Pat Pidcock, at ex lens ion of 1hc lab\. The ad"i,cr. 10 contact are Barry Simon nnd Curt Ncl\on. who con be reached 326 or in Lcc-44. :11 769-3-197 or in Scihen 101
~
=-
Young Democrats ClubCampus Crusade for ChristThis club is an lnterdcnominnrionnl, s1udcnt, Chri~1ian orgnnizarion seeking 10 provide n spiritunl environment for s1udems. The club has a chancr \Vilh 1hc Univcrsi1y of Id aho. and lhe members work wi1h 1he U of I group frequently. Bill Bright is the founder o( this organi zation. and it is scattered 1hroughout cnmpuses all over 1he Uni1cd States nnd Canndn. In December. members tm,•el to Ponlond for leadership ll"Jining that gives them background in the field. During the summer some members are sent to different missionary fields. A study group will olso be started by this club. The campus represcn101ive is Dave Shanks. and he is the one who decides when 1he meetinl)s are until thinis get ioing. Those in1eres1ed are encouraged to comoct Dave 01(509) 9260575 or the adviser, Mary Nelson Brown, at 769,3247 or in Library 282.
The framework of 1his club is established, yet ii need, 1he dc,irc of the , 1udcn1~ 10 fini sh ii L,1>1 )Car, 1hc club had orgnni1a1ion~I mcc11ng\ and hruin,1orming projects. The club hnd 1wo nrco\ that people wanred 10 11ct involved wirh. One wn~ \\'Orkin!! on campnigns :ind being active, and rite 01hcr wus discu)sing philosophically obou1 1hc positions of being Dcmocra1s or Republicans. The club also was cnttrtnined by an nrray of speakers: these were infoniinl question and answer periods. For those who wanr to cons1ruc1 this club, the adviser to conract is Len Ma11ei, who can be reached at Ext. 398 or in Lee-33.
Students for Human Equality ClubThis energetic club is in its fiOh year. and 1~ purpose or 1his club is 10 promote hum 1111 nahts. The club also works to eliminare prejudice and bigotry. The club's chief projttt ~ the celebration or Manin Lulher King Day. On rhis d11y, about l ,200 school children a.rri,·e ot the NIC campus: ihey are prepartd and do lhe celebration program themseh't.S with the help of the club members. The college students then celebrate with guest speakers and music.
North Idaho Theatre Arts Clubir you love drama, then this is the club m join. The objective of this club is to promote the learning of theater ans on campus. This club suppons area productions by volunteering time and experience 10 local 1heaters. This social club generally attends an array or plays throughout the region. According 10 Kathy Hatcher, a member of last ycar·s club, this is o good way to sneak people in 1hc back door of acting.'' The club's first meeting was Sept. 24, ond it consisred or electing officers. planning the year, fund-raisers, and social activities. A member docs not have to be a theater major. so anyone is welcome to join. The man too contact is Tim Ra.rick, who can be reached in Boswell 205.
Student Educational Awareness League-(SEAL)
Engineering Club-
Young Republkans ClubThis club has not )'et been constructed, however a club could be in the making. In
This club is dedicated to expose studenls in engineering, computer and physical science to the worlt world. The club accomplishes this by taki ng field trips to induslries and businesses in the Nonhwest. In the spring, the members travel to Seaule to sec real-lire Dpplka1ions in 1hcir field.~. The
This organization gives people the opportunity to possess a formatted education on environmental Issues. This club has run the recycling program for two years. In 1he past, the club has shown tapes and had an Eanh Day celebration. Those who want to get involved are encouraged to contaet the adviser, Dale Marcy, al EAt. 491 or in Sieben-301.
The NIC Sentinel
Friday, September 25. 1992
Computer information network links NIC nation-wide, world-wide by 8110n O'llarn Smtinel Rqxmer An information network links NIC to lhe ,,orld. Phone Imes and sntcllites will bring colkge~ rcgionwide. na1ionwidc and worldwide to every desktop computer on c:impus. With the implemcniution of o Local Arco Network (LAN). any personal computer on campus con send informn1ion 10 ony 01hcr computer. according 10 Michael Lasher. computer operations supervisor. Printers and fox machines can be shared while Soft wore, such as Word perfect and Sprcadshec1, cnn be easily distributed 10 each machine. This can cu1 down on software licensing fees. Along with 1he abili1y 10 store data on o central device, rather than fnilure prone magnetic: disks. any computer user can obtain qualified help without ge11ing up from his or her chair. Scuing up n LAN is no simple 1ask. Firs1 a coble netw ork must trnn~mit lnrgc quantities of data, This data must be in the ~a me electncnl configuration ~o all connec11!lns ntUsl be of 1he ~nme t)'pe. Each comput..-r must abo be fitt.:d w11h n interface card, which give~ each compu1~r u·s own "addre~~." Lasher ~aid. N !C u,e, a ~tar-,haped ne1worl.ing lop<llogy, M pau,m. call ed ElhrrNet. Thi~ ')\!Cm allow, Ml\cral different type, ot network ,or1ware to be run O\'l!r the sumc ,Jbl~. which i\ 1mpor1an1 10 ,m org.im1.111un hl.c NIC 1h01 ho, several diffcr.:nt type, ot
machines. he said. 1\n o1hcr ndvanrnge 10 1hc sr1cm 1s individual computers can be disab led withoul alft!c1ing 1hc eniirc sys1cm. Af1cr all 1h1: dutu is able 10 now. thcr.: must be a Ne1w ork Operating Sys1cm (NOS) This program, Novell 3.11. i~ s1a1e of 1hc an and will reside on a powerful HP 486 located in the new library. La~her said. This system controls the now of data and handles securi1y with each user having his or her own tile righ1s. Without the nppropria1e ~gh1s :machcd 10 one's user code, it's vinually impossible IO access another person's, Lasher said. According 10 La~hcr. 'There's nothing for a hacker 10 see." All thi s COSIS money. The HP ,186 1h01 con1rols the network comes with u $75.000 price tag: the (NOS) will cost approx.1ma1ely S 125,000. Al 1his point, 1he new l1 brury. Seiter Hall, the Communication /\rt, building and 1hc Shemmn Building :ire un the nctworland cable has lx.-cn run to 01.her., he ~nid. The hanlwarn and labor tu conn1.'Cl 1he,e four buildings will co~, around $100,000 $50,000 of which ,:,1me from u ~intc !ll':lnt. NIC ts nnancing 1hc n·st through a ~eriou, cummi11nen1 and crc;11iq~ finuncing. L1\hcr -aid. A, a goal, LL,hcr ,aid h~ \,ould li~c m '<'~ everyone on campus having accc,s 10 ll•;immi: rutd u1ili1ing the new \) \lcm. "We have ~ technology lo .i1,.1.·t,s the world from right hem\" l..ash,ir ,1id, "lnform,uion i, 1hc 1-.cy."
NIC prepares short-term training for new business h) Dani Le,, i~ Se111mrl Reporrrr A con\ultant from Nonh lduho College i~ on ~ile at llarpcrs, a lorgc manufoc1u1crof uflicc. ,uppllt\ in Californin, 10 plnn Imming progr,1m, 1ha1 \\ill begin here. in January NIC rcpre,cntill\c Trod, Kalb and Bob Puller from Job\ Plu, of Coeur d' J\knc arc developing pro11ram\ to 1rmn hundreds of Nonh ldJhOlln\ for JOb, \1 nh 11:irper,. Kolb and Poucr ha, c met "nit Vii ian Manin. 1h~ plum pcr~onncl manuger. to ticim J nced,,a,,e,5ment procc,, tin 1he I) pc of 1ram111g NIC and Spol..1m· Communll} College ,hould offer for Harper, employment i\ former Nonh ldahoun, Kalb h,I\ a conwltmg lirrn an Snnia Barbara. Cahl. She " 111 bl: on cnn,uh,tnt ,1.111" until 1hc bc!!tning of 0.:101>,?r Then ,he \\ ,11 Join lhe NIC ,iaff a, a cu\lOmizcd !raining
cOQrdinmor Director of Shon Tcri11 Training and Community Educa1ion Roben Ketchum ,aid that Kalb will ,pend a \\CCI. on the plant tlour gelling informa1ion th;u NIC and SCC w,11 u,c 10 cultivate the con1en1 of curnwlum und dc,ign 1hc dcll\cry of shonterm Imming. Ketchum cx~t, cla~~e, 10 beg,n no later 1hun Jonunry. he said Since most of 1hc: po1cn11nl employee, .,re e, pcctcd 10 come fmm 1hc local worl. force rather than uncmplo\ mcn1 rank\, cln,,l', \\ ill be held 01gh1, .md \\C~l.cnd~. he ,a1J Cl,l\\c, \\ ,II , ary from 20 10 80 111,tru,·11011.11 hours The) arc c,p,:cieJ tn tncludl' blu~print r,•admi:, m:1th r<'trc,h,•r c11ur,e,. ,he~1-1nc1.1I \\ork. \\Clding painung ·"'cmbly and cn111put~r 111,trurnnn TI1c lurgc,1 numht'r ot emplt" ce, ",II b.: on the plunl ll0<1r. but ,omc HJining \\ ,II I~ .umed JI oil ice work. Kc1d1u111 "1id
Page 21
Northwest Writers Conference chooses NIC English instructor According IO 13nhr. many write~ or ficlion. non-ficllon. playwright,. poetry, mystery. romance and Nonh Idaho College English children's s1orics anendcd the ins1ruc1or Fran Bahr wos one of I0 conference. Also nnending were finali,t~ in n wnting compc1i1ion. The publishers. writing ag,mts, and compctilion was pan of the Pacific published authors. Bahr said there were Nonhwcs1 Writers Conference held on "a 101 of great people who wri1e." Ju ly 24·26. The conference held workshops Bahr said, "I wos jusl shocked when that iaught nbotll writing and held I was no11fied." compc1i11ons in the diffcren1 arens of - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , wri11ng. she said. Bahr', en1ry was a non-fic1ion au1obiography abou1 Gladys Buroker lilied "Winging 11° According 10 B~hr. Burol-.cr ran 1he flight progrilm n1 Silvcn\ood Pnrk. She c,plnincd that Buroker, 76, begun nying in 19.lO "hen, Buhr ~;tid, "Girl~ were ,uppo,cd 10 bc girl~ and bo)'> \\ ere ,uppo~ed 10 be boy'\.'' She behC\ cs 1ha1 Buroker i, u c:1.1rnordm,II') wunun. "I lo\e to write ab<lul rem.ukablt: pcuplc.'' H,1hr ,aid. According 111 Bahr. interc,1 wu, sho\, n for her bu!>I.. "'hich is nm yet finished .•,11he conlcrcnce. "h's ccmunl) gomg Ill be a piece of valuohk I" mg lmtor) ," 1311hr ,.ud ·1 he .1nil'lc, "Winging Ii''" riucn bv Bahr. i, puhhshcJ in 1hc Joum,11 ··011 1 IJahu," which is ,1va1l,1hlc 111 1hc NIC library by Kelli Austin
s~111i11el Reporru
Center for New Directions offers three student support groups during lunch hour by Leigh Rnines
M1ch;1cl. nul'.c pra,·1i1ioner ;11 NIC. will help indh idual, ,e1 up u progrJm to help Three \tudcnt ,uppon !!roup~ :ire being them auain a betll.'r ,.:lf-imugc (iuc,I\ offered through 1hc Ccn1e r fo r New mclude a nutn11001,1 from 1hc ho,p11al Dircc1ion,. All ,m.• op,.-n lor ~1uden1s of Toward a HNllhy Weigh meet, c,ery an~ age 10 anend ll any time Wednc,day during 1he noon hour III th.: •,\ ,uppon group ror rciurmnt! or li~t- Hedlund Building 11me ,1udcni- meet, ,:, el) Tuc,duy dunng •Student, mJJonng in bu,1nc~~. 1he noon hour 111 the 13cm.' " 11h Room. The ,c.:retanal ,1-,11, or educatmn c,111 no" gruup 1~ Jc,1gncJ to help ,1udent, "uh JOIO m a ,uppon group gearcd al de.ihng their concern, ab<.1111 rciurmng 111 schuol. \\ 1th ,1udcnh' concern, ubou1 juming 1hr ,\c11, 111c, ,u,h ·" leJrning ho" 10 ,tudy wurl. for,:.: The group meeis e, .:r) and 11111,: 111.1nagtml.'nt Jrc ulfcred Thur,dJ) durinp the noon hour 1n 1he Sho,honc Room S1udc111\ ,hnuld tiring ,I lunch For mon: mlorm,mon. pl"d't c<•nl.JCI •Tu\\,1rJ .i Ht.ihh~ w,..1gh ,, tor people C{tnccrneJ ab,•ul 1h,:1r \\Clght ,tll·IOIJ!!<', Donnn Runge JI 7119-J'.!70 or 76'1 34-15. caung hab11, ,iml t,er,'l'I.' hahn,. Linda S1•11t111l'I R,•porter
Page 22
Friday, September 25, 1992
C 1UIPUS NEWS
The NIC Sentinel
Science instructor shares African vacation by Kathy Hostettrr Sn,ri,,c/ Rwonrr
Wh.11Moulay L~mail and science iMtructor Bill Pech., have in common is no1 800 children and 100 wives, but a desire lO the and ~struld lhe Moroccan culrure. Lost summt.'I" Pech., and his "ife S:irohyl l!);plored nonliem Mricn during n one month expedition from lhe Canary l•lnnd.~ lhrough Morocco. "We sp:n1 n IOI of 1ime on an oasis in the Sahara desert and 5lll)ed inn 1cnL°' Pecha said. ""An oosi.~ is in1eresting: it' s like a big s11 amp of stMding wmcr. with frogs and crickets. A typical OJSis might have n ,'alley river with lu.1h gnrdens and 3l?ricuhure. a couple miles long and 200 yard\ wide. Th,m at lhecndofit. Ilic river goes u~nd in dcscrtsand...just 10 feet no.ay from the oasis you don't seen thing growing,"" he snid. Mnrrckech is o center of agriculrure and irndc in Morocco. with a miJuwc of differen1groups of people from Arnbinns to
longwise and a.re converting lo lshun fnith. He claimed \\llmen in Morocco do most the work and men bnsic:illy do nolhing except sit around and drink coffee or tea nll day. In a woman· s spare time she will make the famous Moroccan carpet of natuntl camel hair. all hand knoned. Pechn said he wns told Ihm the cnrpet he bought took the woman 18 mon1hs to make. ""If a marriage brenks up. women rue set 10 powny and beg the rest of their lives,"" Pecha said. "h's very difficult for a woman lo re many bccnuse she i.~ supposed to be a virgin. She can save her money lo have an (hymen) opcrasion to convert the problem. A woman is supposed to bleed and il°s very irnponam in their mruital religious beliefs. But even after the opcmtion, it still doesn't guarantee she will get a husband. "'Parents of ncwlywedswill trndi tionnlly check their bedshcclS for signs of virginity. When n girl is not a virgin, sometimes chicken blood is dabbed on the sheet 10 fool the JWenlS. he said. Pecha said an0ther unusual Cll~tom is not using your left hand. l10l even to eat with, ''Ballll'OOm facilities is squaring over a hole while holding a bucket of wa1er and that's whru you use the left hand for," he saicl Pecha teaches a nutrition ct:is.s and said he is interested in foods of llie world. He said most of the Moroccan food is a combination of French and Nonh African cuisine. Tajinc, a method of slow cooking in a cloy pot, L~ used to cook a stewtype food for hours 10 kill off potential bacteria. Their 00
~
'Toe Berb.~ are lhe original people from Morocco who came out of the Atlns mountains and Snh:un descn. and were al,Qly th.'l'C when the Ar.lbs came from the Middle East to
1nke over,"" Pechn snid, "But the Berbers ore not real bright people. They never went to school and don"l have a wriuen Jongunge. NOlhing is wriuen down; not any of their histOI)', nOI c,-en nbirth ccnifiaue," he said. Pedui said the Berbers C3J'T)' on tradition in Morocco and nrc basically slnves to the Ar.lbs. Since there nrc no wriuen words in Berber history, they nre now lenming the AI'Jbic
common starch is cous-cous, a processed grain similar 10 our grits. He said an unusual runouni of·olives are usoo in their menls, which he heard comes from Morocco's 10 million olive trees.
He said Morocco has its elite groups: some of the French und Arabs do well and hnve some of the world's belit hOlels, chllrging about S300 per room. per night. "I think the most disgusting lhing I saw was in a factOI)' where they lllll hides for shoes and clothes" he said. " It was
primitive and stunk from old hide, hnir and vntS of chemicals. They gave us mint leaves 10 pul up our nose so we wouldn't h.1,'C 10 smell it, nod yet the people work in it all day long. "I think the saddest lhing I remember was when a little girl was trying to sell me something,"" he said, ''and her eyes were so infected that llicy were covered with mes: she must have hnd 20 10 30 mes on her face. It's disgusting 10 see a linle > year--0ld girl covered with mes. begging. and who hn5 iwents who probably don' t do anything about it" Pecha snid he enjoyed the divrnity of his journey: from the valleys of beautirul olive trees 10 the mountains. from the true hard-core desert 10 n lush oasis. and from a modem city 10 down the rood where you can go bock in time. "I enjoy Third World countries because you see Jl<.'Oplc as people. living on the basics and within their mean.~. They li\'C on the land, put b."lek what they don't use. and they don't wen lot of high qunlity energy like we do. They lh't! n real ~implc life and n lot of them nre very happy. Maybe this is wh.11 society is really suppore 10 be like."
Short-Term Training,Community Education join forces for long term by 0-.ml Lewis S(,11fi11tl nponer
The Oc1x1nmen1 of Shon Tenn Training and Community Education personnel excited about the long term program llll!y are \\ orking on. NIC is joining forces with the local busine~scs to educate the public in .1r1s 3nd literature. businc,s, career developmcnr and b:;illh.
"The f()Uf mrun goals of thi.~ progr.un nro 10 promote e1.-onomic progress in U"ilining \,orkers 10 nlC!.'t employ~,,. need.~. promoce studenL~ with the foundation skill~ and per..onnl capabilities ll'quired for occup.11ional SUC'Ct'<:.~ mt'l.'t students' needs for $JX'ClflC ,"<X'lllional muning in selccted occup:itionnl progr,1ms. nnd ns~ur<' ;t\.~C~ 10 \'OC'.uion:il m1ining for :ill jXlllicif\'1111 groups nnd tlldividuals. The purpose is 10 Cfe.lte cln.,...:s that meet
photo by Kathy Ho,tattar Out of Africa- Science instructor Bill PBCha models an authentic costume brought back from Africa .
1ndustrlnl contr:icl training criteria. Contract training exi~ls in 75 percent of Communny col~cs todny. Some of the lQJJics and cla.o;ses avnilablc are: Arts ond Uterature: Poetry in Russin, Ru_~ ian religion an. beginning and intl-nnediate drawing. gronLSmnnship. writing non-lic1ion, calligrophy. Business: reUJil advertising, business plnnning. dealing with IIPl<-'1 CUSlomers. con0ic1 nl:!Mgement customer satisfaction, dtlegruing
responsibility and nuthority. enpo"'cm1o:nt, high JX.'l"fonn,,nre hiring. nwkeling. motlvntion skills for .employees. nego1in1ions. presenuuion skills team building and time mnn:igemcnt Career Dc\'elopmenl: ~hicr tr:aining. job interview preparation, quoltro pro, teaching odults, inwel agent/nirlinc re!>en,llion training. Windo"s 3.0 and WonlperfocL I lcallh & Nutrition: Certified NI\JtSCS' Aide (CNA) !mining in medk-ruion nnd CNA training ~ a home he:llth aide. ergonomics, food ~ . food habit nlnMpellX'llt. fund:unmtnJs of dcntol :i.~i~tinl.!. mdus1rial emel'J1ency first aid/CPR C'()Wl',C, i).'.(!Inuic r~1aid, rv training for LPN. LPN m:uugemcm training. quit smo'king clinic. and wildcrncs~/off-road pnttem occessang clinic. Some of the other clo.sses availablt are: personal grow th. real esta te appraisa l. 1t'Crea1ton. technical s~ills. electrical trade and OUlll'.JCh CO\lfSe$.
G asses are ovalloble 10 bolh NIC s1udcnlS and the publk. The course times vory from six to 100 hours. Prices depend on how long the clu.o;s lasts. The Shon-Term Training Depanment sen1 out the 1992 Foll Closs Schedule in early September. For information concerning short term training contaet Dr. Robert Ke1ehum in the Sieben Building. Ext. 222.
Robby's Family Restaurant
We Gladly offer I 0% off all meals for students with student I.D. cards Open 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. 612 Sherman Ave. Coeur d'Alene
Friday. September 25, 1992
C,u1.-us 1n ,wS
LCSC, NIC host international marketing consultant Chin-Ning Chu NIC ,tudent,, faculty nnd stnff are invited to he,1r l\ls. Chm-Nmg Chu. one of 1he na1ion's foremos1 nuthori1ics on undmtanding the Asian business philosophy. giw n free prescnrn1ion entitled. "Achieving Success and Generating Prosperity Asian S1yle--strotegies and strength." The program. co-sponsered by Nonh ldnho College, is held in l-Onjunction with u:wis-Clark's 12 Annual lntemationnl E.~chnngc Conference on "The New World
Order: lmplicn1ion~ for 1hc Pal·ilic Rim." Chu'~ Ce.uur..'tl p~sem:uion wi ll begin .it 7 pm on Oct. 6, in 1hc Donner Room of the Edminster Union Building. f'ollowlng Chu's prescnrn1on, a rcccp1ion will be held for her nnd copies of her books will be available for signing. f'or more infom1a1ion abou1 the 12 Annual ln1ema1ional Exchange Conference in Coeur d'Alene and Lewiston, call the LCSC office at 666-1551
Self-defense seminar shows women how to protect themselves by Christine LaBnng Se111i11el Reponu
On Saturday. Sept. 19, North Idaho College, together wilh 1he Women's Cen1cr. hos1ed a self-defense seminar. Siar Eu1hcne, director of 1he Women's Cen1er, presented a speech on rape and (?3Ye examples of how self-protection could be used. "83 perccm of women roped arc raped by someone they know and trust. and women need 10 learn how 10 pro1cc1 1hcmselves," Eu1hene $Old. Brion S1rnin and Jane Brighi taught hands-on self-defense techniques and everyone participated in learning. Displayed 10 purchn\e wen: n variety of
tools from the$ I whistle 10 the $20 highfrequency alarm 10 be worn on the body. The Kuboton was 1he most harmful "1001" and drew the most interest. It is a miniature nightstick thni i~ ligh1weigh1 and carried on n key chain. 1l1e police department will be working wi1h 1he Women's Center in December or January to arrnnge for treading on 1hc use of the Kuba1on. Linda Mlchnl. director of S1udcn1 Heahh Services ai NIC. said uny student interccd in learning self-defense techniques during n lunch hour a1 ,chool should coninct her nt 769-3170, and ~he will try to arrange for ~ome hour-long classes throughout the semeMcr
The NIC Sentinel
Page 23
;Jou LISTINGS NIC offel", n job locouon and development program 10 provide s1udent) with local employment opportuni1!es. Jnne1 Ncihouse in the Financial Aid Office r.x:t'ivcs new job information and updates the lis1ings daily. To receive current information. cht.'1:k lhc job board a1 the top of the stairs in the Student Union Building. Student~ do not need to contact the job placement department 10 apply. For additional assistance contact Janet Neih-Ouse 769-3370.
PART-TIME SALES - Mariposa in Sil ver Lake Mall, come in nnd complc1c application. SALES ASSOCIATE in lingerie and accessories. must be remale. JCPcnncy. $4.25 hour. con1ac1 Monn 762-2222 CLEAN UP PROPERTY. some pninung. 1-1 1n dny job, SIOO for job when complc1c. contact Charlie 6677236 RECEPTIONIST. data entry, and telephone exp erience required, 40 hours n week, $850 lirst month, con1na1 Becky 772-6034 PART-TIME JANITORIAL. c,enings, 15-20 hour week, start at S5 00 hour conwct Alvin 664-2994,lcavc message PART TIM E Of'FICC: WORK. rccci,•ing and making ca lls. evening work, flcAible hour~. must enjoy miking, no c,pcrlcnce ncrc,snry. con1ac1 Mike 773-0034 LIVl:-IN FEMALE for cider!) womnn, Room nnd board, conrnc1 Jessie 664255 1 NIGHT-Tl1'1E JANITORIAL, 2-4 hour~. flexible hour,. S5.00 hour 10 s1an, conmc1 Vnl of Marcie 667-6633 RETA IL S,\LF.S. ne~ible hours and ~cekend~. in Pos1 l·nlls, S,.l.75 hour 10 , tart, comac1 Beverly or Wonda 773. 6248 1. IVE-IN BABYSl1TER, one 8-ycar
old . prefer female. 5 p.m. 10 bed1i111e. SI 00 plus •room. con1ac1 Betty 66 7.
0943 NEEDS 6 ENERGETIC people. -1:308:30. S20.00 per shift and bonuses. contact Barbaro 773-8434 PART-TIM E. 20 hours a 1Yeek. fleiliblc. S5.00 10 S6.00 plus commission. conmct Karen 762-233 1 CHILDCARE for twin girls. occa~ional weekend and overnight. once a week 5-9, contact Lisa 772. 5457 EXPl:RIENCE IN f'OOD Service und Hos pi tnl i1y pre fc rrt:d. ou1go1ng personuli1y and avnilabh: to work 111 knst 2 mornings a wee~. Mon.-Friday. Room/BoarcVSalory. comac1 Chris 6679660 PART-TIM E VISUAi. DIS PLAY llo:lpcr, 18-25 huur~ week. Mon.· Friday bctwe1:n 8-5 p.m.. w,1nts ~omconc with crcu1lvi1y. $4.25 hour. co n1uc:t Duv1d 762-2222 Pl IONE PEOPLE 10 sci uppoin1mcn1,. Mon.-Friday, 5-8:00 p.m.. und mnybc Saiurd.iy. Energc1ic pcr,on, con1act Jona1h11n Day nnd evening ,hift,. pan-1ime, uniform provided, friendly. outgo111g, energetic. compc1i11vc w,1gc,. paad vnca1ions. insurance, come 1n and comple1c applica1ion.
Compiled by Dani Lewis
CLASSIFIEDS •SERVICES• SHORTENDED PANTS and jeans. $3.90. Jeans tapered and shortened. S12.50. Tailormode shins. Serving Coeur d'Alene since 1982. Clo1hcs Clinir. -105 Wallace Ave. 667-2396.
See the NIC Counseling Services in the Student Union IIUILdl'\9 for help.
•ANIMALS• FREE KITTEN. Grey and while manx female Swee1. to,·ing personality. To good home only. 765-8723.
•LOST AND FOUN[)o LOST PARROT. Green with red under
wings Been sigh1ed at Cd'A Park, McKuen Field. Re~ard. Call if ~igh1ed. 765-8723. •PERSONELS• DEA TH ROW PRJSONER. caucn.~ian male, age 46, desires corre~pondence with ei1her male or female college studen1s. Wants to fonn a friendly rela1ionship and morc or less exchange past or present experiences and ideas. Will answer all leuers Jnd exchange pho1os. Prison rules require a complete name and re1urn address on the ou~ide of 1he envelope.Jim Jeffers. Ariiona Staie Prison. Box B-38604. Florence. AZ 85232.
Page 24
CA~IPUS NE\\'S
The NIC Sentinel
Friday. September 25, 1992
Foreign scholars fear for future ...
Students say 'Au revoir' to financial aid by JdT Selle 1Vsis1am fl/ell's Editor
ln1ema1ionnl s1uden1s nre having n tough time ancndlng NJC this semester. Luca Marioni hns been a music student at NIC for the pas1 three semesters, but this semester he is being forced 10 go bnck 10 haly without his degree because of budget cuts "If a bag full of at N!C and new federal Jaws. money fell on Mario11i is documented in this table right medical Journals as the first human being in the universe 10 now, I am not 1cs1 1wo experimental drugs. He sure if I would did this, he said. 10 cam the put myself money 10 come 10 America and through it study jazz. music. Mc cannot get a de~ce in any type of music again " --Luca Mariotti other than conservatory in his country. Mario11i ~,id that he is tired of fighting 1he bureaucracy. Mc said after ho: heard about the new Jaws imposed by the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS). he thought he still might have been able 10 anend NIC this semester. but when he came back 10 school to register he found out for the first time that there were not any funds for grants 10 foreign students. "That \\ OS the lost straw," he said. "If n bag full of money fell on this tnble right now, 1 am not sure if 1 11oould put myself through it again," Marioni said. Shantanu Roy. president of A~ocinted Students of Nonh Idaho College (ASNIC), is registered this semester. bu1 may have some trouble transferring 10 a rour,ycar insiilu11on if~e a1tends NIC nexl semester.
$6,000 $5,000 $4,000 $3,000 $2,000 $1,000
10 be any turning away of students. ii should fin.I be done to 1hose who arc living outside 1he couniy," Benne11 said. Benn ett said 90 pcrcen1. including voca1ionnl money, of 1hc total budget comes from state ond local taxe.s. Therefore. the decision wa.~ made to make all the scholarship money available throughout 1hc various academic disciplines ns well as n1hle1ics. Then 1here would be no discrimination because anybody could have an opponunity 10 apply for 1hc grams whether they live in Koo1cnai County or in another country. he said. "I ho ve told Shnnrnnu 1ha1 my door is open and I am ccr1:iinly willing 10 lis1cn," Bcnnc11 said, "No1hing is cu1 in stone. A1 1he time it was purposed by the dean it seemed logicnl, and it s1ill docs seem in the ligh1 of how we are funded. like 1his is 1he faircs1way 1ha1 we could use 1hese dollars." A rccen1 survey tnkcn in the five coun1ies of North Idaho shows 73.6 percen1 of the taxpayers polled bclie,¡c "... my door is NIC docs benefit from hn,â&#x20AC;˘ing open and I am foreign sllldcnis ,mend 1he certainly college. willing to The survey foiled IO ask if 1he inxpoyers fnvortd funding listen. scholarships for academic Nothing Is in1erna1ionnl studcnLs: written In however, ii did ask if they stone" favored funding a1hlc1ic -NIC President in1erna1ional s1udcnt Bob Bennett scholarships. and 75.2 percent of 1he taxpayers were opposed 10 1he idea. According 10 Gene Leroy. in1erna1ional s1uden1 adviser. there was some talk nbou1 culling the grant in aid budge1 Inst year. bul he sajd nobody told him 1ha1 1hcy cul his budget comple1cly. " I didn 't know 1ha1 I would not have 1991-92 any money for grants un1il I came back this fall for registration." Leroy said. Leroy said he was told 1ha1 his s1udents 1992-93 would have 10 apply for grants in 1he same way every other s1uden1 had 10. It ~ seemed seemed fair un1il he realized A. Art some of his students didn'1 have a major B. Business and the way the money was dispersed C. Computer Service did no1mean tha1 each depar1men1 D. Drama would have extra money to help fund E. English/Foreign Language his students. F.Joumalism He said he reels that NIC should be G. Musical: Choral offering incen1ive for foreign students 10 H. Musical: lnstrumenlal anend our school because 1he cultural I. Nursing value is tremendous. J. Physical Education Leroy said 1ha1he was coun1ing on K. Physical Science some of his s1uden1s 10 help him with L. Social Science transla1ions at 1he lnternationul Human M. Telemed,a Righ1s conven1ion thnt will bt held in N. Academic Affairs (New) Coeur d'Alene next year. 0. 810Jogical Science (New) " I just \I L,h the people 1ha1 made this P. Musical: Lessons (New) decision would reconsider," ht said.
Roy said he has n specific nmount or money to budgc1 for the year, and if he has 10 pay full tuition nexl semcs1er. he will nol be able 10 pay 10 1rnnsfer 10 anmher school. "1bus1my bull to go 10 schOQI here. nnd I may not be able 10 make it," Roy said. Roy nnd Mariotti agree 1hcir presence ns foreign s1ude111s at NJC is an a.~scl 1ha1 should be encouraged. They both understand 1h01 money is 1ighl for NIC this year. bu1 1hey feel 1ha1 somebody should have told 1hcm 1hcy would have 10 pay 1he full 1ui1ion this semester, so 1hey could plan for it. 801h students were under 1hc impression that they were going 10 receive 1heir usual S550 grant per semester from NJC. but when they went 10 register this semester they were told 1h01 1he Jn1cma1ional Student fund was eliminn1cd from the 1992-1993 budget. Budget problems 111 NJC is not their only worry 1his semcs1cr. The INS has imposed new work restrictions on them. The new law only allows 1hem 10 apply for a job 1ha1has been posted for 60 days. The law was designed to allow Americans the first opponunity 10 npply for U.S. jobs. According 10 Roy, NIC President Robcr1 Bennet 1old him 1hc fund was cut because local llUpaycrs were 001 m favor of paying for in1erna1ional s1udcn1 ~cholurships. Benne1t said he did recall discussing 1hc ma1ter w11h Roy. but he did not realize 1hc studcni5 had no1 been 1old tha1lhc funds were cut Jns1 semcs1er. "I think I told Shnn1nnu that 40 percent of our 10101 IWI base comes from local mxes and there was some concern expressed by taxpayers last year 1ha1 if there was going
"I bust my butt to go to school here and I may not be able to make it. " -Shantanu Roy
D II