The North Idaho College Sentinel Vol 69 No 5, Nov 13, 1992

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Friday, November 13, 1992

Coeur d'Alene, Idaho

Volleyball season ends Page 11 Runners go 10 nationals Page 11 Men and Womens Basketball Page 9

Check out the

voting roundup

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Campus News, Page 2

Volume 69, Number 5

North Idaho College's Student Newspaper

Sports Section, Page 9

Cd'A Police patrol campus streets seeking speeders by Leigh Ralnrs Sc111111cl R, 11rm,·,

photo by Jeff Selle FAREWELL TO FALL- The last brilliant glimmers of the fall sun color the sky above Lee Hall and Christianson Gymnasium days before the first area snowfall heralded the approach of winter.

Vandals create dormitory havoc by Jeff Selle und Polrkla Snyder Stlllintl Staff

Rcccmly, a routine mondn1ory nll-rcsidenl meeting deah with dormitory vandnlism and disre~pec1. The meeting was nnended by approximately 30 fcmnle residents ond six mole residen1s. ac:cording 10 one ancndee. NIC President Robcn Denneu, who had been invi1ed 10 anend lhc mce1ing as n infonno1ionru speaker some weeks earlier. depaned and rc1umed wi1h five more male residents. The bi-semes1er mec1ing wns designed 10 deal wllh such topics as food servlc:e, ac1ivilies. programs and the fncili1y. ~cording to Direcior of Housing John Jenson. However, following Jenson's discussion of vandalism problems. Dennen said he fell it necessnry 10 deal with lhc subject. "I cenainly didn't in1cnd for it 10 be nn1agonis1ic:." Dennen said. However. he said, he found it necessary 10 make the ndminisuo1h•e position on the recent vandalism clear. Acts of dormi1ory vandalism occur most oflen on lhe mole

side of 1he dom1s. according 10 a female resident. According 10 residenL~. some acts include: eggs dipped in nammable liquid, Iii and 1hrown down 1he halls, shaving cream sprayed libcmlly throughou1 lhe hallways. loud music 01 all times. the depositing of feces. urine and vomil on b3lhroom noors and seuing off fireworks indoors. Dennen said s1udents who panicipJle in such acts. regardless of !heir 1alcn1s or a1hle1ic abilities. are unwelcome. "I don't wan1 1hosc k.inds of people either in 1he donn or on lhe campus: I simply want them ou1 of 1he college. Period," Bennett said. "If lhcy e1n'1 undcrsiand wha1 i~ expected of lhem as college students. then they don't belong here.• Evic1ion is dciermined by the ncquisi1ion of four demcri1 points. A student may cilher receive one poinl - for activi1ies such as liuering, unreg istered guests and running in the halls or 1wo points for such viola1ions as alcohol or lirearms possession. verbal/physical abuse of staff or students and

see DORM Page 4

Student~ ~p,:edi ng on WeM Garden Avenue now face o lughcr ri<I. of receiving a cita1ion from 1hc Coeur d' 1\lenc Police Dcpanmcn1. 1\ s a result of complain1s made by in~1ruc1ors abou1 1hc ewe me ~peed s1udcnts drivr on G,1rdcn A,(nuc. Rolly Jurgens. dcnn ol aJm1 n1 \1ra11un. \Cnt a lcllcr 10 Coeur d'Alene Police Chief D.1~c Scales. This prornpll-d St·J1c~ 10 begin u~mg mclar on Garden A, cnuc. According Ill Sca1cs. the police dcpat1111c111 " ill "'uc ci1,111on, 10 Jnyonc Jri, mi; ul lt,1,1 Ill mi le, over 1hc 25 mph ,pec<l li11111. The c11.111on,. which curry fine, rungmg 1rom $-10 10 S 100, go on one·, Jnvmg record W11h winier nJ!hl JrounJ 1hc corner. 1hc danger ol poten u:il ,1,c1dcn1~ 1nt· rcll,c, Sc,11c~ ,.uJ The pohcc dcpJrtmcn1will i\\ue cirn11on, to drn·c" trnvclinj! fas1cr thJn "rCJMln,iblc and pnidcni" when 1hc roJd~ nre wet or 1q, he said. "Whal we're hoping for i~ 1hu1 peoph: will slow down." Sca1c~ ~aid. l'ohce arc pauolling 1he r~I of the campus as a prevcn1a1ivc mea.\ure. The biggest problem on NIC's campus is conges11on. Police are not necessarily looking for moving violations. bu1 1a1hcr wan1 to get 1he message ou1 1ha1 they·re around. Scates said. Scates sugges1c.-d 1ha1 pedesuians use crosswalks as a preven1a1ive measure. He said using crosswalks can funhcr de1er an accident from happening. "What we care abou1 is gening people lhrough 1hc area safely and wi1hou1 hining someone or being involved in a traflic accideni, .. Sca1es said. The police depanmem hns also increased pauol of Lincoln Way at 1he comer around Memorial rield. Scates said that people drive around 1he comer much 100 quickly. Sca1es scm Jurgens· lcner 10 lhe recnginetring commiuce in hopes 10 gc1lhc: Govemmeni Way and Nonhwest Boulevard in1ers«1ion improved. Righi now the in1ersec1ion causes many accidents, he said. Plans 10 re-engineer 1he in1erscc1ion are now on the City Planning Commission's list.


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Friday, November 13, 1992

The NIC Sentinel

\\.'h<, "''" tle.:1ion~

A IQOl ,II Cl11.:.1go TriplrlS on l"ampu,

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P.conomy i\ going wilhou1 ',(,n1e1hing yt\\l do wun1 in CMC yuu ~hould, ~omcday, want something you prol)Jbly w<,n'1 wan1.

Edited by Lori Vivian

United Way campaign's monetary success on campus benefits Center for New Directions b) Juslin Smith Stntmtl Rqxmrr The tOIJ.I ,um of money don31ed to United Wa) b) faculty

and ~•aff mcmbe~ during the Cx:1ob<'r Fund R.lising Drive "~ SJ.935.!5. The pt~nt.1ge of emplo}ecs donaung was up 1his year and monet.1n donauons ";is up S1.000 from lus1 )tar. Last )ear 14 pc~nt of IC employees donated. this yenr 36 perttnl pledged raising S3.5f>.I The rame collcctl-d ano1her S.371 25. "Our g0.1I -. 3S 10 get as many people 10 pledge and buy niffie 11ckets C1S we could,'' Glenmnr Fuller NIC accouniant. said The) also hJd a contest be,,,.. een secretaries where v.hoever sold 1be most rafne tickets -.ould get a $25 gin ~miicate 10 the restaurant of 1heir choice. In the r.ifne. Sheila S1arker. Lewis Walkins, Barbara Krieger. John Fe~ll and CarlJ Basenbery all won reserved p;irking spaces for a month. Rod Jones won the soiling cruise with David Lindsay. Marie Wolden won o meal for four al lhe Beachhouse councsy of lhc Culinary Ans Deponmen1,

and Chri~tic Collins won 1wo ticket~ to the Bill Evon~ Dance Uni1ed Wny to set up a 1cen parents progrnm, which will focus on 1hc needs of teenage parents. by selling up a Company. "We tried 10 mok,• ii more fun." f'ulmcr said. She said counseling progrom and a suppon group for teenage parems, that the rcnson thnt there w:1s a higher r.:sponse to the Carol Ilaugh1 coordinntor for Center of New Directions.said. Haugh1 said lhnt 1hc process of applying for funding from campaign this ycnr was 1hn1 they stressed panicipn1ion. not Uni1cd Way takes three 10 four month~. Any agency wishing money. One pan of the cnmpaign 1his year stressed 1h01 all the to get funding mu~l firs1 ~ubmil a wriucn application ~oney would be s1nying in Kootenai County since the local containing information on how 1hcy uM: 1hcir mhcr fund), chapter decided not 10 pay dues 10 the national organizaiion, and what 1hey would do w11h the money ,r United Way Lynn Babb. member of the NIC fundrnising com mince. snid. decided 10 gram their request. This npplica1ion then goes before n panel. which reviews The campaign begins with local orgn nizn1ions approaching the United Way agency with a request for the information nnd 1hen interviews a ~pokesman from the funding. United Woy then decides how much of 1hc amount organization requcs1ing the money. ~lnugh1 said. Even though the fund.raising drive is over. Haught said, requested they will meet. Babb said. One of the two agencies on campus that will be benefi11ing the Cenlcr doesn't cxpec1 10 see any money until about from 1llc money raised by United Way will be the Center for March. Because mos1 of 1he donations don·, s1:111 coming in10 New Directions. Which will be one of only 1wo new United Way unlil Jnnuruy of 1hc following year. The S 2.500 rcques1 made by the Center was granted in orgnniza1ions 10 be added 10 1hc rosier of agencies receiving full by United Way and wi ll be paid 1n four quarterly funding from United Way. The Cemer will use the money it will be receiving from ins1allmc:nts 1hroughou1 nex1 year.

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Burns Life Science Award recipient

Career counseling has guidance for students by Patricia Sn) der

Editor The Career Counseling Center offers a~si~tancc for ~1udents seeking career. school and financial aid guidance. The Idaho Career Information System <CIS) ollow~ s1uden1s 10 access information from a computer data bank. CIS has tips on career e.,plorn1ion and job hunting. sample forms for cu,er lcuers and re~umes. transfer information on regional in,1i1u1ions. job ova1lab1lily informauon and financial aid 1nformauon. h also offer.. a shon 23·ques11on intere5l ~uf'\e)' ,,..h,ch matches student m1crts1s with po1cn1ial occupa1ions. While an oppoin1m~n1 isn·1 necessary. ~1uden1s may ""h 10 make one when they use the CIS program for the li~1 time. said Gary Coffman. director of Counseling

'has best of everything, terribly passionate'

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Stl'\'ICCS

"Pnrt of making II good decision in your lire is being informt!J of all your op11on). Coffman said Studcn1s m1eres1cd in usmg the Career Coun~eling Ccn1cr ~ervice~ ~hould con1.1c1 1he center, loca1ed upm1irs in the Student Union BuildinJ! near 1he S1udcn1 Services ornce. A CIS compu1cr ,, loca1cd '" the Career Coun~ling Crnier and ano1her one h localed in 1he 1-kdlund Vota11onol Building S1ud~n1 Services Office. 111c one 10 1he ccn1cr doc~ no1 currently have prmling copabilhy. The\e ,cn•kc\ are offered free 10 nil ,1uJen1s Smdcnl\ 1ntcre,1cd m an 1n-dcp1h anoly\i~ ~hlluld ,·all !or an appoin1mcnt. 00

Kathy Hosteller Se111inel Reponer

NIC student Bill McKeen is the 1992 recip:cn1 of1he W. James 13ums life science award. An award's luncheon wns held in his honor lllSt month ot Henry's res1nurnn1. The luncheon was :mended by Mckeen, life science smff, W. James Oums. Dean of lnsiruction Gerry Gee and Dean of /\endemic Affairs Ka1hy Baird. The award is given annually in honor of W. James Bums who 1nugh1 "Your i e's science nt NIC for 29 ultimare rask is finished when rhey years until re11ring in 1988. sho1•e rhar firsr McKeen. a nursing lhovel of dirr in student, wns your face; bur from nominated for 1hc award hy an:11umy the rime you're and phy)iology bom 10 rhar firs/ in-irwtor Peter ll10. shovel.. ir's rlre ·111e ba\1c cri1cria time to ca111i1111e ro for nor111n;11ion i\ learn c,11d grow a,Jdenuc cmd be your bes/. " c~cdkncc:· 7~10 ~a,d. "and 1ha1\ whai I ,aw in Oill Bill Mt Kecn l\lcKccn: one of 1he ~1inmyA&I'

clnsses." Z.io said that McKren was ulways looking for 1ha1 extra bi 1, for seeing whnl mukcs 1hc picture clear. "Moc (McKeen) was never sn1islicd wi1h just 1he book nnd lmurc," Zao said. "He always dug deeper and his questions were always chnllengmg, which renects his undcrsrnnding." He said n teacher can get locked into a perspective and think like a scicn11s1 lie added 1h01 s1uden1s' questions. like McKcen's, can offer n fresh ou1look; "Oawlo.:ss on logic. bu1 lacking n liule piece of knowledge 1ha1 can unlock the punk." Zao snid i1 docs make an instructor look at somo.:1hi ng from n differen1 nnglc. ~lcKeen 1< in 1hc nur<ing program, taking 10 nedi1s. and working full lime al NIC a~ an electriciun. In his spare time he in\lruc1s for the American Henn A<,ociation. nnd is a 1c0m leader m the Panhandle Oock Counuy l\lctlical Re-cue Team. He h.i\ mughl in 1hc ,·oca1ionol and con1mu111ll ctluc,111on progr.m1<: rdrigerntion, dcc1ronics. dcctnc.11 11pprcn1kc,h1p,. "l',e al-.,,y< wantt'd 10 be u nur,c," Mt>Ke~n ,aid "NIC 011cr, un e,ct'llcnt

nursing program wi1h high success mies in 1cs1ing and employment. 1 think communi1y colleges arc wonderful; it's one of the things 1ho1·s great nbou1 education in America." He said the ins1ruc1ors 01 NlC • nre so stimulating 1h01 ii makes ii ho.rd 10 fail and easy 10 get on I educo1ion. Bill McKeen "Your life's uhimatc 1nsk i< finished when they shove 1h01 first ~hovel of din m your face: but from the lime you're born to lha1 lirst , hovcl. .. i1's the time 10 continue 10 learn and grow and be your be~I." McKccn ~.,id. He ~a,d his pion\ do not mcluJc lcu\•ing NIC when he become, a nurse, but 10 do volunteer nur.iing during 1imc off. Ho,picc comes Ill 111, mind. "I 1hmk he will make an c~ccllent nurc:e," ,uill zao. "lie has 1he bcs1 of C\'Cry1hing. he'\ good in uc.idcmic~ und he\ tembly pas,iona1c."


The NIC Sentinel

Friday, November 13, 1992

Election '92: campus political :· participation, results round-up HJ. R. 4 Constitutional Amendment on Gaming Yes ...........................................................................273.:?6-I No ........................................................................... 198,678

One Percent lnitinti\lC Yes ....................................................................... 163.500 No .............................................................................310,821

.. Senator Dirk Kcmpthorne ....................................................... 270, I22(R)

U. . Representati"e 1st District Lan; L..tRacco ......................................................... 140,89-l(D)

State District I Tim Tucker............................................ s~nator(Dl MonicJ Beaudoin.................. Rcpre$en1011ve Po~ilion A(D) Jim S1oicherr......................... Reprcsen1a1ive Position B(D)

State District 2

llarbam Chombcrlnin...............................Scn,11or(D) llildc Kcllogg....................... Represeniativc Pos111on A(R) Wnlly Wright ................................ Rcpresen1a11vc Position B(D)

Strite Dis trict 3 Dennis Da,•i$ ................................................................Sen:uor(D} Marvin Vnndcnbcrg........................ Rcpre,em:niv~ Po~i1ion ACD) Janel Jcnki11s...................................Rcprc\cnrn1ivc Po,i1ion D(Dl

State Dis trict 4 l'- lory Lou Rc.:d...........................................................Scnu1orfD) Louis llurvnih .................................. Rcpr.:,cn1n11vc Jlli,1111,n A(l)I Gino Whitc....................................... Rcprc~cn1,111vr Pos111on BtDl

Voters Visit Kootenai room - Patty Duke (Anna Pearce) and her husband Mike Pearce come to NIC and cast their vote on election day.

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NEWS NOTE Donations collected NIC and Koo1cnai Medical C.:nter ore compc1ing m a rooo drive for 1he Koo1cnai County Food Bank. 111c winner will bl.- determined by pounds of food <'OIIC(ted before 1onigh1. Collection bo11es :ir.: located in :111 th,· building\ on campu~. °'1nation~ nce<l to be dry food-s1uffs or conned goods. Dsma1ion~ can also t>e dropped off at the food b.1nk loca1cd 01 21 I Coeur d'Alene Ave.

ISU offers scholarships Idaho S1.11e Univcr..ity i~ offering \d1olar~l11f}~ to sophomore studcnlJ. on NIC campu\ that are planning 10 1ran~fcr 10 IS U tor 1he 1993 spring :-.:mcstcr. S1udcn1s n111.~1 be sophomo~,..•. t':ll'l)' ,1 minimum GPA ofJ.O and ~ubmi1 th,: rcquir,'<i application infonna1i,,n by M,,nJoy to tho.' f'inancial Aid Oflice. lnfonn:111on nnJ npplkuu,,n) arc avaihlhle in the Financial Aid Offic,• from Jlllc Shank:lr, dircc1or ,1f linan<'1ol nid.

Raffle for refrigerator HVAC i~ planning a Christmas rnfnc. hem~ 10 be ramc<l off, 0 reftigcrmm and doll bo, with o:mdl~. aro! on dt~play in the Hedlund Building. • Tickets arc ,1va1lablc from any HVAC member or from 1hc \N:retari~ in 1hc lledlund Admini,1ro1tinn Ccnt,:r Office. Dr:1wing will be on ~ . 11. Winn~N need not be present to win. Rnffie Tirkcts arc ~I .

Blood drive on campus "I'm doing this for the students " -Rol/y Jurgens spends his lunch hour to protest the 1 percent initiative.

ASNIC h spon~oring thl' annual fall Blood Drive Wcdn<!Sdnv. S1udcms and faculty :ire cncourng~ ,\SNIC "1() help build the nccouni of NIC w11h the Inland Blood B:snk." Pre-rcgi~1ration table( were set up this week in ,·arious buildini, on campus. The prc-reiri~1ra1ion help, !'he srnff of the blo«I bani. 10 pion ahead Pre· registration i\ nol required for studt!nL~ and f.i~ully who want to give blood on Nov. I&

hy

uncommitted voters to vote a Republican straight ticket on election day. The truck was strategically parked outside the Student Union Building. photos by Jeff Selle

Spring Registration schedules are now available. Pre-registration begins Dec. 2. Stude111ts should see their advisers as soon as possible.


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Friday, November 13, 1992

The NIC Sentinel

DORM from Page 1 ,·nndlll1~m. S1udcn1, were issued warnings before 1hey received 1hc onc-poinl infrae11on<, nccording 10 Jenson. ·1r 1hc <1aIT thinks 1hn1 people hnve been wnmcd enough. 1he ~ituation "arnn ts an infracuon notice." ~ said. According 10 Re1iidcn1 ,\ d, isor Shan1anu Roy. 1he ".unmg >)Sltm crcnt,-d difticult1es. "l 1hm~ lhe) (problem ~<ident~) art very lucky 10 ho.,e 1heir educa1ion and living e,penses p31J for. he St1id ' I don·1 feel like I should h.1,t' 10 ~ lhe one 10 1.1ke 1ha1 away from 1hem So I nm more lenien1 01 limes. and !hey 1ake ad, anrnge of 1ha1.' Since the mce1ing. no1ice6 ha,•c been pos1td on lhe bathroom doors infonmng of the elim111a1ion of the wuning <ystem, something Roy s111d he appreciale5, ' l am glad 1he new no-.-:iming polic)' is now in effec1 because it sh1fls lhe blame off me," he said. As of las• "eek. nppro~imattly 10 of the 90 dormitory residents ha,·e dcmeri1 points, Jenson <aid. The 90 residen1s share damage which cannot be a1tribu1ed 10 anyone in particular. Jenson <aid. Tot cost is di,ided equally and taken out of the residents' deposits. Vandalism is n commo n problem, according 10 Gar) Cofrman. director of coun<ding ser-1ccs. Coffman and his wife

mnnng,•d the NIC dormitory for 14 years c:ndmg m the ,pring of 1991. V.1nd.1ls ma) uct out of 11 need to n:bcl qcmming from the maturing pruccs~ or bccnusc the y arc bored, Coffman said. Becau~e ,·nndalbm 11sunlly begins wi1h n small group ond cscolntcs, he suid, some ~cmesters :ire worse 1hnn others. S1uden1s in the dormnory have admitted to :ic1ing in rcmlin1ion afler being provoked. Aficr not being able to sleep bccnu$C of ln1enigh1 noiw. one re~idcm \aid he was driven to wake up 1he cnlirc dom1i1ory by playi ng 1he "Star Spangled Bonner" on his electric guitar m 6:30 a.m. According 10 Jenson. a dormitory should be n plucc for students 10 learn, grow and m:uure. "The dormitory is nol a negative place," he ~aid. "It's a po~i1ive place." Some residents disagree. "I hove u paid r.:sidcncy here on campus. but I live off ca mpus because some of 1he rule~ ore too strict, and you cnn't sleep and study," one student said. "If you wan1 IO comp:1rc ii 10 some1hing, compare ii to 'Lord of 1he Flies."' another residen1 conclude.I. "These people move into the dom1s and degencr:ue." Life following lhe meeting has improved to a cen:iin degree, ~omc residcn1s agree. "ll's gotten o 101bencr. but I still can'1smy here on the weekends." one residenl snid. ''Friday-Sunday I have 10 sleep off-campu~."

Meet the NIC Family by Justin Smilh Smri11rl Reporter George Ives. English ins1ruc1or nnd c.i mpu~ wise guy. has been a pan of 1he campus ~i ncc 1969. Ives 1cochcs English Composition, ln1roduction 10 Li1era1urc nnd Mu.\s Media in Free Society. and he hns been known 10 tench o jogging class every now and then. He said really enjoys 1eoching English 99 because the s1uden1s are jus11rying to gel a basic grasp on 1hc English language and 1ruly appreciate the ins1ructor's help. In his spore time, Ives is involved in politics and An on the Green. Ile was President of the Ci utcn's Council for the Ans. "I have reached 1hc position of eminence," he said. "and I am now in charge or 1hc buns for the ho1dog wagon." Ives is also involved in politics. "I like someone who 1clls you what they believe and stand behind it," Ives said. "You ~houlun· t have 10 read 1hcir lips: you can see ii in their uc1ions." He ha~ been uwolveJ in Mary Lou Reed's campaign since the beginning and was media director for the Rock Wa1son for Sheri ff ..:ampmgn 15 years ago.

As for why he hos s1nycd at NIC for so long, Ives snid 1ha1 it hn\ somc1hing to do with the people nnd 1he vnrie1y thn1 1hey bring with 1hem. In 1he pas1, l ves held other jobs. such as hucking 1hc green chain :it a plywood mill or bucking bales, but they didn'I provide the cn1enainmeot 1ha1 education docs,hc said. "NO IWO George Ives days are ever ali ke, and I like tha1," Ives said. Ives said 1hnt he has outstanding colleague~ here ttl NIC, nnd th.it he chnllenges anyone 10 compare lho: siaff of nny similar school 10 thnl of NIC's, "Thai makes it fun: · he suid. "(13ill) Pecha is a Chicugo g11ngs1cr m hcan," and he said "Monn Klinger can si1 down 10 the piano bnckw:ird and play ii."

Sentinel story takes second quuli1y met de,1gna1cd ,rnndnrd, and 1hcy " ere tluin~ e\'erything they could. The ,tor) co\crcd bolh the Thrs>e tall 11)(11 Sentinel ,taff admini\1rJ11on .ind 1hc , 1udcnt side to memb.:r. nxcntl) re.:e" cJ national the ~llUJIIOn. honor. "II wa, hard bec,1u~c rnw humnn Pu1ncia Sn)tlt:r. Deborah Aker\ and Mike Saunder, -.on ;,econd place in the emo1ion, were involved and ii took a great deal of cffon .md work to deal A~~ocrn1C\l Pres.\·Lo, Angeles Time\ Nauonal Story of 1he Year compc111ion w11h 1hc chemical and t1rchitcc1uml inform,uion." Snyder said. Following for a wric< of anide~ about the Sick 1hc filing of 1he daim. 1h.: Building Syndrome in NIC\ Hed lu nd aJm1mwa1ion was adviwd by coun,cl Vocational Building. no110 1alk 10 the pre\~, some1hing Al :1.n Oct. 31. awatd ceremony in Chicago. th.: three "ere recogni,td for Snyder ,aid , he found both fruwaung their cffons. Since Snyder was the only und difficult. "II took a 101 of team effon. member of the wri11ng 1cam to go to e~peciolly from Akers: she pu1 in a 101 Chicago. ,he accep1ed the award. of work into the s1ory, a 101of hours," The series of articles wa., about Snyder ~aid, describing 1hcir working \ludcnt~ and emplo) ces allegedly getting sick aflcr occupying 1he ,crond relniionship. noor of 1hc Hedlund Building. A, a The Obser-er. from Nonh Essex result of mr quality complaint<, the Commum1y Collcl!c in llnnford. second noor was closed and remains Mass.. won fim place. Their wries wu) closed. A former student who uttendcd on the misuse of student nctivi1y funds clos<cs in the building filed a $500,000 Lansing Community College of claim ag:un)t 1he college, Qlaiming she Lansing. Mich., won lhird place wi1h was physically damaged because of 1he its ~ries on the hnssl~, of chnnging collel!c· s negligence. A la-. sui1hos not from quoner sy51cms to semc51cr been filed. Administro1or~ said the air systems.

by Duni Len is St111t11tl R,·p,mer

A§~IC

emorable moments

• Blood Drive Nov. 18. • 9 a.ni.- 3 p.m. in the J(ootenai Room,

}i}i Loose Ties Concert J)J) Nov. 13 at 8 p.m. in the auditoriiun $3 student $7 public f{:;J I<ildow Memorial Scholarship applications are being accep ted in the financ ial aid office

Sadies Hawkins Dance Nov. 20 in the cafeteria. Minimal charge


Friday, November 13, 1992

The NIC Sentinel

Pages

Chicago: Bright smiles, big city

TOP LEFT-Ancient Aztec sculpture displayed in the Art Institute of Chicago. TOP RIGHT- Street musician plays his sax for change on Michigan Avenue, Chicago.

BOTTOM LEFT- One of two lions standing sentry to the Art Institute of Chicago. BOTTOM RIGHT- Lori Vivian and Christine LaBang standing m Union Sta/ton. Chicago.

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photo by Rich Duggan


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Friday, November 13, 1992

The NIC Sentinel

Election day is over. Now tlze work begins.

o~,1\,-EJ,,Uo~ Edited by Patricia Snyder

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Teachers strive beyond lessons, offer friendship When you go off 10 college. it's like saying your vows..."Do you. Johnny Joker. promise to love. honor and obey your teachers, in sickness and health. ror (L( long as you both sha ll surviver "I do." Then. like any marriage. school reality ~e1s in. No more 1imc 10 play. e,p..>crntions arc made. stress set, in. the I.id, gc1 more a11en11on. money become~ a prt1blem and you· re never home. 81,1 1c.ichcr-qudcn1 r~ln11o~sh1p, don't have 10 Kathy Hostetter end in divor,c. In fac1. 11 is Opinion \Cl') hard 10 go 10 school for 1"0 )l.'Jr,., qud} ,uhjem }'ou Jr<' in1ere,1cd in and not be abie 10 ha, c common 1n1ere,1' w11h )OUr 1eacher.., "htch c.. n be ,1 foumluiion ror a frttnd,h1p. I ha,, seitrul 1ea:hcr-rric11d\hips on campu,. bu1 ,omeumc, I feel hke a woni.1n who·~ ,h~a1rd on hrr hu,b,lnd bccau,c llf 1hc ,1ignrn ,ocicty ha, dk1a11."d - th.11 teachcf\ arc no1 ,uppo,e III lr,11crni1c "uh ,1ud,•nl\ M) 1cachcr-triend,l11p, arc non-1cxual. t>ut I dt1 ,hare ~ommon m1erc,1, T.:achc1> ar.: human, 100 The} h,I\C fnenJ~h1p ne~·1h ,ind man} ,pend 1110,1 1h..-1r hie on c,,mpu, "here ~tuJcm, inv.,Jc their ~p.1ce butiblt and in1crpcr,onal rdJllonship, ar~ hn1chcd. I r,in remember when I mo,cd 10 Coeur d'Alene two }Cilrl J!!O ,ind umc, \\ere ruu!!h I ,~a, 1.2()0 mile, J\\J)' fmm c,..-ry friend I I.new ,ind JU\l lo,1 my mother 10 cancer l)n ~1mher', D,1y. full1ming ,I schuul lil'ld trip. I wen! dfl\\ n 10 1he bc,1ch Jnd lei lou,e all 1he cmouon, I t?Jthercd up since her death. M) geolugy teacher found me crymtz and pu1 h1, hand out 10 help me p1l'I, up lhc pieces. hl.e Humpty Dumpty 1hu1 had :i gre.u fall 11,m could I not feel J friend,h1p'1 I 1ook ,1 cro,, countf) sl.iing eta" \\h1ch my biology teacher tautiht In da~s. I rcspet:1cd hun J\ 1hc 1c;1chcr, but ho\\ could I no1 gcnerJlc J friend,h1p wuh him ,ind his w11e \\hen ,pend111g all day in a friendly ,l.1 environment I had a ,p..-ceh te.icher who ho, ~pent (('\•cr.11 scmes1crs helping m,· build Ill) ,elf c,1ccm. She makes .i "ondcrful friend In fac t. ,he hns been a fnend 10 many ,1uden1, and \\JS c,en a c1Mch during ch1ldb1nh for a pa:.1 s1udcn1 I r«en1\y found out thnt one of our ,cience tcachcn; ,, my neighbor. llow cnn I not be friends w11h a neighbor. juM l><.>cause he i, n 11•achcr'/ My journah,111

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Unite in peace at the future's brink In cullegc. w,• learn abo111 humnn grcatne..,,.Wc lc.' arn 11hou1 1hc nobility of chamc1cr and the dc,1rc 10 ,1ri\ e 111 be 1hc b.!M. II is on college campu~e~ 1ha1 ~umc uf our prcate,t lender\ and achicv~mcnl\ arc formed. Unfortunntcly. it i, in our l'Ollcge dor11111oric, that wmc of our wor,1 c11111c111p1 for the hum.in spirit is di~playcd. Ide.illy. a donnitory should be a pince "here smdcnt, cun learn from one another. It is a prc:11 opponunity 10 learn or 1he h,·igh1, and dcp1h, of the human cxp;!ricnce. II i, J ch,mcc Ill cummunc 1, ith .1 vnric1y ()r pe<1ple from diver,e buckground~. II •~ n ,hared c;,.pcricnce in lire ,I.ill,. llow ~.ill 11 1s 1hn1 ,uch an npcnenc.: can be ruined "11h the hurl•aril' and chihJ"h nm pcrfonned b> a snmll faction of 1hc rc"\Jem,. lnMc,1d or., glonou, lcJrr11ng c,pcncnce, college bl.'Comc, a ,ccond bJby,incr. a rcgrc~s,vc c,pericncc 1ha1 c,cn lrc~hmcn Mraipht out of high ,chool lind immmure. Gmnu:d. J certain amount of pan) ing and prac1k.il jol.ing 10 rclic,c 1hc Mr<'S~ or college lif.! i~ c,pec1ed But "hen the practical jol.ing become, , andali,m and the pJ.nying bt:rnme, lighting. it only crcn1cs 111oro: strC$S. Thow ,1udcnl\ "ho feel 1hey ,ire abo,c 1he ordinal')· ruk, tho: rc,1 uf the ~tudents have 10 lollo\\ - for wha1c,er r<'a111n - arc onl)' fooling thcmselvc~. Wor1c. they ore doing great damage 10 1he hope for !heir future. Our culture i, hieing \ornc of the mo11 ~erious problems II hus e,•cr faced. Riots rod 1he inner cities. De~pair roi- the hcanlund,. And here. in the ,cry pl.1.:c "'here people ha, c 1,1athcrcd together 10 learn 10 ~olvc 1hesc problem, .inu guide our wnrld. people can't c1 en manage 10 net t·1,·1lly townrd one nnother!

ln11c.id, 1hcy )eem to find ~omc 1mm,11urc plcJ,urc in dc!-troying properly and physically or mentully tormcniing 01her1 . llow can people even dream l1f ,otv1n11 the problem~ of our c()un1ry or our worh.l. even imJginc ending rJcial ~trite .ind realizing true equality. c,cn hope for the future. when they can't even \how a liulc rc,pe~l for !heir next· door neighbor in a college dormnory'! llow do people plan 10 unite and change 1hc face of hbtory "hen they hide silently alon,: in 1hc face of ,ocinl a11.1ck tot!Jf! If people can'! unit,: 10 deal w11h a common problem in a s1uden1 domlllol). how can th.:y prc1end tO unit<' m deal wnh ,timclhmg l:ul!gcr? Ultimately. we arc here at NIC 10 learn. While this include~ learning facts and figures, it ahu include\ learning 10 work "ith lellow human,. a\ any coach or in,1ruc1or will be thc fi~110 ~Jy. This i~. perhap,, thl.' mo~t impor1an1 lesson. Failed cl'<.>dll\ can be made up. but oncll the vuluable opponunit} 10 karn 10 live 1oge1hcr in peace i~ gon,·. i1 ,, hl\l fore,cr The que$tion of living with one ano1hcr is not mercl} a mailer of gc111ng along with the gu)' (or g1rl1 n~\I door. 11 h a fundamental question of ~uf\ i",I. How much lnnger can .i group of people, an idea• .i country i:ontinue 1f it~ members cannot di,plny 1he ~1mples1 ol common counesies? W!! are standing on !he 1hr,:~hold of the future We can either choos,: 10 )lep through 1h~ door with 1he hope of po:acc .ind !he dettrminution 10 work for a be11er undcr..1anding or one another. or we can tum our bacl.s, take another drink and play another "pr:ic1ical JOkc " The con~uences or the fu1urc lies m the hand.., of 1he indh idual's deci)ions today.


The NIC Sentinel

Friday, November 13, 1992

International students have NIC value Edilt)f' ((lunl me one of many on campu, "ho fed lhl' prnscncc of an1ema11onal Mudenh ,s a viral pan of our 101al NIC l,•aming c,p,.•ricnce Though I don·, cln,m to know ,ill 1he in, and our, of the recent dcc,~ion 10 suspend gr,ml\-in-aid rumterl> ~"rmarl.t'd for imcrnntiomtl student\, it concern, me. nnd I hope we'll rcthinl. it. There arc pknty of ,olid philosophical rc.1,on\ the college should do e,•crything in 11, power 10 increase. not decrease. in1crna1ional s1udcn1 cnrollmcm. Bui the arguments I' ,c heard raised aga1ns1 11 bo1h off and on campus are u~ually de)cribcd ,,s "strictly prac1ical" - i.e., dollars 3nd cen1s, realism as opposed 10 idealistic semimcm, our obligation to our own taxpayer$ before we can open 1he door 10 1he world. So lc1·s look at s1ric1ly 1hn1 hnrdJ,eaded, pmgma1ic line of reasoning. For even the most invc1era1e bcnn-counrcr or trut revolter. discouraging international studen1s is shorrsighted and wasteful. All benefits 10 the foreign student~ aside, high in1erna1ional cnrollmenl is just plain in our own self-in1ercs1 where local s1uden1s are concerned. Every recent major srudy of higher education and the ways il's got to do a better job of preparing 1oday·s students for rcol life in a real world s1resses the vito l importn nce of multi -cultural and international perspectives. They have become a basic sur,•ivaJ skill in everything from an elhnicnlly diverse (and oCren 1ense) America 10 a global marke1place to a world community in need of mu1uol understanding and pence. Yer

her.: we urc m Nonh Idaho. one of 1hc nllN c1hnicillly nnd .:ultur,1lly homogcniLcd places on canh f.oll.,. rno,1 of the reM ol lhc world ju,1 i~n·1 like Nnnh ld,1h11. And yl!s, even Nonh ldnho i, ro~, becoming more like the rcM lll' 1h.: world· dhcr~e nnd 101.:rdt'pcnJcnt. S1udcnh ,,ho lct1,c h,·rc wi1hou1 firsthand e;,.pcriencc with culluml d1vcrs11y luck an c~~cn1iul wrvivnl ~kill. Thank heaven~ many of our Mudcn1s 1hcmsel,·es arc savvy enough 10 know 1hb. even if some of 1hc communi1y doc~n·1. They know they don't know much abom o 101 or 1he res1 of the world. and 1hey wun1 to do some1hmg about ii. Ideally. we should all get out of Nonh Idaho in10 the rest of 1hc world for some firs1hand prnctical experience of 11lobal diversi1y. We have some excellent opponuni1ic~ at NIC lo do jus1 1ha1, and a number of us in 1hc faculty .and adminis1ra1ion are working IC> crcntc even more of them. Bui in 1erms of bang for 1he buck, it's a lot cheaper to bring some of 1he res1 of the world to u~ than to mkc all of us 10 the resl of the world. A s1ro11g in1cma1ional program docs 1h01. Don't gc1 me wrong. I'm 001 making a case for callously exploiting our in1cma1ional s1udcn1s. Bur I do sny we should do every1hing we can to bring 1hem here. for our mu1ual benefit. In my view 1h01 educationol goal is nt least as dcser.•ing of specially cannnrked grants in aid as any 01hcr programs we've got going. Judi1h Sylte Depanment of His1ory Humani1ies Director

Reader lauds Sentinel From the editor: Editor: Nils Rosdahl (Sentinel adviser) came in10 the Bookstore 1hc 01her momin11. I thought this wns the person to tell how impressed I was with 1he Scn1inel. You see. I had been reading the last several issues of the paper almos1 cover 10 cover. I kepi sa)•ing 10 myself: Wow, the 1olen1 in 1his paper. This is almost better than the Press, and my train of thought wasn't distracted by spelling errors! Anyway, back 10 Nils. He said, "Don'I tell me. 1ell the s1aff." So 10 you the Staff of 1he Sentinel: You·re grcn1 reponers. Thank you for superb rending. Billie French NlC 8ook.s1ore

Readers: The Se111i11el rece111/y rerelved a lctrer claimit1g mass gassi11gs did 1101 occur d11rl11g the Holaca11s1 a11d that a Zio11is1 co11spirocy exists. \Vhi/e the Semi11el does 1101 rejtct copy based 011 polit/c'ol coment, /1mrr writers sl,011/c/ be (lll'(lre that prefere11cl' will be givt11 10 tellers written by students a11c/ staff rather 1ha11 local or 0111-of-statt co111rib111ors. /11 11ddi11011, tellers s/ro11/c/ be wi11ii11 JOO wards. \Vhlle /011ger /c11ers may be primed i11 their em/rety if space permits. they may be subject 10 rd/ring if space is 1111a1•ailable. The Se111i111'/ rejects libelous materral. The Editor

The Sentinel • 1000 West Garden Avenue. Coeur d'Alene, Idaho 83814 • Telephone (208) 769-3388 or 769-3389

A~socialcd Collegiate Pl't$S Fivc,Stnr All·Americnn Ncwsp3pcr and Rc1?ionnl Pncemakcr • 1992 Robcn F Kennedy Award Socitl)' or Profc~\ional Joumali\lS General fuccllcncc Award • Nauonal Ball or Fame Los Angeles Times National Edi1orial Lnde~hip Award• Rocl.y Moumain Collegiate Press Gentml ~cellcncc Awnrd EDITORIAL S TAFF Executive Edrtor Production Manager News Editor Aris & Entertainment Editor Recreation Editor Sports Editor Photo Editor Business Manager Nila Rosdahl Adviser

R EPORTERS, P HOTOGRAPHERS ANO ARTISTS

Patricia Snyder

Kevin J . Brown Lori Vivian Mark Jerome Dominic Howard Ryan Bronson Rich Duggan Bo Meckel

Marcy Ankrum Kelli Austin Chris Clancy Alex Evans Jeff Green Kalhy Hostetter

Daren Johnson Christine LaBang Karin Lau Dani Lewis April Muhs John Myers Bryon O'Hara

Mary Olivieri Leigh Raines Jell Selle 8inS1emers Justin Smilh Debbie Williams Rachel Wdlrams

l.ctkn Polk7: Tot Snltin<t weltom<s letkrs 101bc Edi10,. Thole ..,1,o 1Ubnu1lc11m mlN llnu1 \hem 10300 ,-cnb. 11gn \hem k11hty and l'<O•-ide • l<tq,ilont 1111mllcr AN!~ U> lhal ••lh<Nic11y c:lll be , rnlled Alihougb mOS1 lel1cn :If< used <Om< nuy DOI be pnnitd t,c,c,\15C <If SJ'l<< tunl111ron$« bo:au..-1hty t) ,m, finular 10 • nunlb<-r l'f lcum :ilrudy rccchcd on !ho: <o1T1C wb)<CL 1) an: pa,.s,M) libclou.._ 3) ,ro ,Ucgiblc. W, icant lht ngbl 10 cdl1 kncn Ltneo nuy be bJooght 10 Room t of 1hr Slr<11Nn Sdrool Building or im,lcd 10 lhc Scn1rncl.

Page7

Competency Exam unfair Every scmcs1er. rhe 1:ngh~h dcpanmcnt forces 11s Engli,h 10) Muden1~ to tJl.c 1hc Wri1ing Competency El(;1m. The idea 1~ 1hu1. in 1wo hour\, 1he studem will com~ up with n relinble r<!pre\cn1a11on ol his wnting skilb nnd knowledge of Englh.h grammar. This i~ bunk I cnnnot counl the number of umc~ I have hccn cri1ic1.ted for my tendcncic~ 10 make na.~h deci~ions about pe1)ple nnd thing~ wi1hou1 b:i,ing them on any reliable infomin1ion. You would think thal lhl! iMlitution~ or h111hcr learning in the area would be able 10 find :I way 10 rc.1ch 1hc truth 1hrough o rclmhlc ~y~tcm, not some son of ,•oodou mcthooology. Just think about it for n while. You would think thn1 w.: would be encouraged to do our beM nll 1he time, nor just none-rime ~hot every couple of mon1hs. The Compe1ency Justin Smith Exam encourages mediocre Opinion performance from the students with n minimum of work for 1he ins1ruc1ors and sroff. And is it possible 1ha1 a group of English instruc1ors could come up with clearer 1opic? I don't mind dealing in ambigui1y. bur when nn entire semester of schooling is nr stoke. I would like 10 know exnc1ly who1is expected of me. I do not know someone who ha.\ 001 had n bad day, or who hn~ hod an exceptionally good duy. The exam reOects luck as much. if 001 more. than it show~ skill. Reliability canno1 be dctemtincd through one sample. It is as much an insul110 1he teacher as ii is 10 s1udcn1. I hope thnt my ins1J1Jc1or is qualified 10 judge whether or nor I have been doing n good job. If not, I want one that is. How can I learn from someone who i~ not qualified 10 de1ermine if I am learning wha1is being 1augh1? I admi t it; I fo.i led the exam. I am annoyed by the fact 1ha1 I failed because I did not follow directions. I am ou1raged that I am now considered "incompetent" and cannot move 0010 English 104. This is bunk. I am nor on outstanding wri1er. just a medio..--re studen1. and I do not claim to be an expcn m lhc aflairs of the English department. I hope I know what is gOOd for me a.s n s1uden1. 1hough. It wouldn ·, be hard 10 !ind an altema1e method of de1ermining whc1her or not a s1udcn1 may proceed m10 other English classes. One method as called trust. The English depanmen1 needs 10 learn 10 IJ1JSI its m~tructors· juclgmen1. Af1cr all. 11 has entrus1cd our educa1ion to them. Maybe after spending a semc.~,cr genmg 10 know a studenr's work and his abihtie~. on inMruc1or would know that Bunk. h is just a whole 101 of bunk.


Page 8

Friday, November 13, 1992

The NIC Sentinel

FACTORY REj ECT

CHokEcH ERRi Es "Now Al nock,borroM pnicES. 11 Sign struruiles. Signs recently po~tcd along Gurdcn A,cnuc ..,.,\ming driver~ to ,low down and watch out for pi.'destrion, had a ,hon life. 111.:y were removed by the ell) lx.-cau,t of plJccmcnt ,iolauons. While the city nnd the ,chool debate who pu1, "hich ~ign~ ,1here, thc ~tudcnt, dcbJte whether or not they will ~urv1ve cro,Mng the ,uu1 10 get 10 cl:is,;. On the other hand, 1f the campus didn't have :1 roud running through the m1Jtllc: of n. ,tudents wouldn't hnH' to WOIT) about dodging car~. S~aking or c.-ors, Prc,idcnt Rohen Bennett cenninly has acquired a goodlooking Lincoln Con11ncn1:1L Even if many of the students are driving beat-up and rough-running automobiles. it's nice to know our leader is being transponcd in style. On n posith•e not e, NIC employees admirably kept their I Percent lnitiutivc opposition actions separat~ from their worl, n1 the college. Rather than use their inOucnce as educators and administrators, they generally united tlS indi viduws with a common goal - preserving the college's financial integ.rity. Kudos!

photo by Jeff Selle " THE BIOLOGY B OYS" STRIKE AGAIN- Barb Davis's cow tapestry is currently undergoing many changes. She said the latest thing is the 'Name That Cow • contest. Take entries to Sailer 205.

FRIENDSHIP from Page 6 Speaking or money, ever wonder obou1the elected officials' retirement plan? The 88 members of Congress who were either voted out of office last week or

chose not to run will get a pension of S118 million. Although he was president for just over two years. former President Gerald Ford gels n pension of S'228.000 a year. The president currently is pnid $200,000. These figures arc according to the national taxpayer's union.

The recent play "The Effecr of Gamma Roys on Man-in-the-Moon Mariitolds" needed a little more irrigation. One time, a door wouldn't stay shut so someone had to go backstage and hold it. Another time. a phone continued 10 ring oner someone ruiswercd it. Flnally, actress Monn Klinger enthusiastically but accidentally knocked over a table. The experiences didn't wilt the pcrfom1ance. Responsible ~x?

teacher is o friend 10 everyone on staff. but I cspecinll y remember last Christmas he look two studcnl~ home for Christmas because they did not have family here to spend the day with. How could you not feel friendship? Everyone kn ows teacher-swdcnt friendships have 10 be limited in rhe classroom for bia~ re.,sons. But in o world where people crnve companionship, it would be sad to pnss up n friend just lx.-cousc he or she teaches. Not all teacherstudent friendships work. but then. neither do nil marriages.

L ucy W//1/sms of the Registrar's Office was surprised by s wadding proposal st work. She said yes.

LOOKING FOR EXCITEMENT? Join the Sentinel news-gathering team! We are seeking creative talents for writing, photography, artistic design. advertising and other newspaper activities.

Photographer Jeff Selic cJptured ~omc c,omplcs of the numerous condom~ Mrcwn ulong the parl..ing 101 ~ide of the nJJle dorm. Printed on on nirline ~afety pamphlet: "If you arc sining next to an exit and cannot rend this pamphlet, please tell n crew member."

There is absolutely no sub~ti1ute for a genuine lock of prcpnrn1ion.

The Senti nel offers: v' 1 credit for first-time members, 2 credits for returners v' a chance to publish in an award-winning paper v' valuable employable experience v' the opportunity to read the news before the rest of the campus! How to join : The Sentinel meets Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, noon to 12:50 p.m. It is open to students who have passed Newswriting or who have the adviser's permission. For information, contact Nils Rosdahl at 769-3389 or drop by a staff meeting in Room 1 of the Sherman School. ·


The NIC Sentinel

Friday, November 13, 1992 l\'restli11x Volleyball

Cross Counlr)• Calt11dar

Pagr 10 Pagl' l I Pax, II Page 12

Page9

Rwmers Jose Gonzales and Edited and Designed by Ryan Bronson

Augie Lenhardt will be going to nationals on Nov. 21.

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Men spank Lethbridge, set sights on Cariboo "Evans gel~ a head or s1c:un J!Oinl,! :ind you're in trouble," Le1hbridgc conch Jo,on North Idaho College's men's baske1bnll Vnll,!nrdson said. "We jus1 couldn't gc1 a team opened its scnson Saturday in n big hnndle on h,im. I felt pre11y goud 11bou1 our way. ~panking 1he Le1hbridgc Community lirsl hair; we ployed them rcnl close. I knew College Kodiaks 82-66 in front of a spnrse ir they go1 going in the second half we would crowd or 300 gathered nt Perry Christianson be in trouble." Gym. Also pacing the Cardinals 10 victory were The Cardinals played like two different sophomore forwu rd Lewis Lorton, who teams. The 1eam 1hn1 showed up for the lirsl threw in 14 poinis nnd grabbed n game-high hair s1ruggled offensively and derensively eiglu boards. nnd freshman forward Damien and seemed more 1hon a li11lc doz.ed ond Edwards. who collected 12 points and four confo~ed. Mier being down al several points boards. As n no1c. someone needs 10 tell dunng 1hc lir.,1 hair, NIC was finally ahle 10 Edwards 1hat if he's going 10 jump so high gain a 33.37 lead agains1 1he scrappy going for rubounds he needs 10 wmch hilling Cunndinns by hatnimc. his head on 1hc rim. which he came close 10 TI1c Cardinal 1enm 1h01 showed up for 1he doing a fow times. ~ccond hnlf1old a complc1cly diffcrcni s1ory. For Lethbridec. bo1h Roben Kruger and From 1hc ou1,c1, NIC played with desire. Dallon Rowland finished with 16 poin ts. and 11 ~howcd. The Card, s1opped the Kodiak Rowland nlso had 15 rebounds. offense cold \\'ilh n ,warming defense 1h01 "They arc u well-coached club and 1hcy crea'.cd several 1urnovcr( and brenk-nway ployed hard." Wi Ilia ms said. "They are lay-ins. They al<,o \pr~:id the o.rren ~e. deliniiely one of 1he be11er Canadian team~ crcaimg more opponuna11cs for their r:mer we've ployed, though when we watch 1he gulll\l~ nnd hag men, who 10<.11. :td\'nntngc of films we're going to sec some ugly lhe Kodiak~. . basketball. I wa.s disappoin1cd with our lirs1 Sophomore guard Trncy l;\'ans did mohs1 half We didn' t play wi1h enthusiasm nnd we or the dunrngc 10 Lc1hbndge a\ he led I e d' d ·. • • css they goi thei r I n I e,cc~'.c we 11 · 1 gur h Cardinals with o game- hi gh 20 point, and h, grabbed four rebounds. The speedy E"nn, f1rs1 game J•llers out o t e way. In I c ol~o nccoumed for ~e,•eral ~•ca l~ und second half we reall y got..afler 1hcm and fo~1breaks a, he harrn.\sed 1he Kudinl. guards Muck i1 10 1hem prell) good every 1imc down ihc noor. NIC next hi1s lhc hardwood on Sunda~ 01 "Our defense wosn'1 reac1tnl! 1n the lir\t home against Cariboo College. Tip or 1s half," Nonh lduho coach Rolly Willinm ~ scheduled ror-l p.m. . said. "bu1 in the second hair we ,iolc 1hc ball The Cardinals lirs1 league conte~t "on t and ran with ii. I like 10 run Jnd TrJcy j\ real 1ake pince unlll Thursday. Dec. J. "hen quick, but \\C had 10 open up 1he noor and 1hey'll 1akc on nrch-rhal College of Sou1hern give him some room 10 operate," Idaho u1 Chris1ion~on Gym al 7:30 p.m. b l\lnrk A. Jerome

J,~10111

C111111re tdltor

Women have experienced sophs, athletic freshmen by Ryo n l.lronson

Hol1mnn from llelenu: Perry from Missoula ond Corrie Gibson from Clark TI1c women's baske1hall 1can1 will Fork. open up i1s sci1son ngnin\l Cariboo I!ill analyzed NIC's pcrrormnncc College Sundoy 111 2 p.m. in versus LCSC, u rour-ycnr school. Christianson Gymnn.s1um. "LC dido nice job running their TI,c Curdinnl,, 19-12 ln.q year. bring offense," ll ill suid. "They put pressure bock livevc1ernns. including re1uming on our dcfon((! and worked the ball sinners Heather McAdams and Kris1i w-ound really well.· JohMon. who is from neorby Post Fall&. Becnuw the 5<:ore was 1101kepi Chnri Aeschlimnn. Tova Sands und during 1hc scrimmage. it is hnrd IO suy Alison Landvo11cr also return for NIC. just how well NIC did. Landva11cr. 015' I I" , came on lnte last The scrimmage consis1ed of four year and emerged in10 a solid force off different periods: three 20 minute the bench. periods and one 15 minute period. Even wilh the experience the sophollill wanted 10 ge1some time 10 some mores bring. coach Del-lo\'en Hill ndplayers before the s1an or 1he season. milled his 1eam hns work 10 do before "We had ,,..,o hours 10 fill und we tangling wi1h the Kamloops. B.C.. team. playt'd ror 1wo hour..," Mill ~aid. ''The "In 1he scrimmage on Sa1urday (with more repc1i11on our players ge1, the Lewis and Clark Staie College), we be11er they'll be prepared when 1hc ba.~ically played \,·ell." Hill !IUid, "bu1 I season s1ans. wou ld have liked to stt us ,how more "Hopefully we'll keep ge111ng beuer intensi1y on dercnse. and be11er as the season progre~~\." he .., " as impressed with the p,:rformsaid once of the freshmen:· he said. Hill will need tough play in the Freshmen, indeed The Card, have middle from an inexperienced group of e1gh1 freshmen on the squad. none or girls thJt may be shorter 1han any NIC "hich "ill red hin unless 6'1 '' center 1eam ,n r«cn1 past. Kim Perry doesn't rCCO\'er from her With 1he loot\ of 1eam leaders Gin,1 linger injury. Bellegame and Kris1cn Singer, the Fn.',hmen un the Lnd> Cardinab Cards will ho, e 10 improve inside and team mclude: Lon Mader from Couonrocu, 011 s1rong guard play. Hill said. \\ood, Jdnho; Mcli~,a Derby and Tirliny The I.Jdy Canlmal\ pla) in th~ Spok,mc Lopez rrom Rathdrum: Shawna Johru.on Tournumcnl on Nov 28 and then ha,.: from Whi1eli\h. Mon1.; Linsey 1he1r home kJguc opener with College Mortensen from Gre:u Falb: Jessie of Sou1h<:m Jd:iho on Dec 3. Sporrs editor


Page 1O

1

/vlagic battles disease, peers instead of Bird 1

Friday, November 13, 1992

The NIC Sentinel

r-.ir.·in 'MJI!"" John"'" and Llfl) Oirc.J made the gome o f bu,~ctball what it i~ toda) Hov.c,cr, tilt'} ha,c rcurcd Birc.J Mired b<:cau..c or inJunc< and 1'1agrc b<:c,m~ other ba,1,.ctbull pla)tr, ,uy tht) urc ,c.ircd to phi} .1gain,1 hun bcc,,u..e ol the lllV ,·iru~ Their mulr) agn1n,1 each other g;1ve the NIM i1, true 1denlll) For 10 year. they led their great te am) to a total of cighl world champion<hip,. A 101 of ~ports fans <ay that Michuel Jordon can take Magic's pl:,ce and continue to mnkc the NBA more popular. however. I strongly disngree. Bird nnd 1'1ogic had 1he ~pecial gift of making everyone on the coun bcuer by being unselfish. Jordan doesn't. They made everyone better by mal..ing sure that everyone was included in lht! gnmc. Dominic Howard They would have included me, a 5'6" Opinion while boy who ca n't jump, in 1he game. and mude me look like I could really play 1he game. which I really can't, They would have been able to do thnt because both of them were willing to mal..e 1he great pass !>.?fore making 1hc great \hOt, un,elfohncss. However, Jordon 11ould rn1hcr be the one in the highlights by makinp 1he great <hots. Now th3l 1-.lugic i~ pone bccau~c opponcnh discrimino1cd :igain~, him because he hos 1he HIV viru~. I hope 1h01 they feel really guilty about. especially Kori Molone. Mnlone had no objection( 10 Mngic playing in the NOA All-Star game or the Olympics w11h him. but now he doc~. The only quc\tion is ,1hy?Doc1or~ who l~eat patient, with AIDS ore 01 a much l11pher nsk than arc playing in a g.ime of ba,ketball 3~arn,t someone with AIDS. Malone based his >talemcnt on the foe1 that one holian soccer player gol AIDS ~upposcdly on th<: wcccr field. Howc\'er. the) li,ted every way po\,ible 10 get HIV except through hctcro,exunl ac1h•11y which '' more thnn hkely the way he wa< infected "ith the deJdl) v1ru, No mancr hnw good anyone is :u 1he gnmc of basl.c1ball no one v. ill be ,tblc II) ,-:,y thnt they ho, c more mOucnce on the game than Magic John~on. lie come into the league "hen 11 \\II.~ in low gc~. po~Mbly one \\llh n dead baucry, anc.J Shtft<d II all the way into ovcrdrh·e. which is where the NBA h today. Unfortunately for the re,1 of u~. Magic still had, ,r he (toy,'d healthy. al lcnst five more very strong year.. lcfl ,n him. God II would huvc been nice to v.otch Magic for 5-10 more years.

Wrestlers look to shut down Big Bend again b> JcfT Green S(11ti11d R1•ponu The NIC "rc\lling squJd ha\ begon i1, queM for the Nutinn;1I Junior College 1\thlc1ic Associniion crown that they fell just shon or ln.1 year. Under the leadership of Conch John Owen. Cardinal wrestling tenm~ have claimed the notional crown nine times in the 10,1 16 year<. During the past two week~. NlC has bnn lcc.J it sci f, 1hc Big Bend Viking, ond NIC wrestlers or the po~, The annual Rcd/Groy lntro~uad

match kicked offthe SC,ISOn on Oct. 29.

photo by Erin Siemers

Jsson Denton barely misses a pin in the closing seC()nds against Alumni Pat Edelblute.

With the music rodin' the darkened gymnasium, 1hc wre5tlc~ were introduced. TI1e Gray sc1uod bcni the Red s11uad 25- 1J. The mos, thrilling match of the night wa~ at 126 pound, when Mau Paulwn of the Grny cnmc from behind 10 beat Ch.id Hendrick~ with a 2-poin, ncnrfoll in 1hc clo~ing <et·ond~ uf 1he fina l period. Owen said 1h01 intrnsqund matches nrc good for "developing mot <tratcgy" ond for wr~s1lcrs "dealing with pressure." The intrniquud is olso a ranking process. wilhin 1hn1 concept, Owen said. ll wns teacher (Owen) ,•s. s1udcn1 (nn Owen national chnmpion product), the ma,ter vs. the apprentice. the Cards vs. 1hc Vikings. NIC took i1s nc1 on the road ns they traveled 10 Big Oend Community College 10 foce 1he Vikings conched by former NIC wrestler and :wismm coach. Murty Boday. With a shufncd lineup, the Cards blani..ed 1he Viks 45-0 in the $Cason opener. Jason Demon. a true freshman, started 1he nigh, offwi1h o 15 point decision 3l l 18 and Darin Lent, the I\\O-li mc Stale chnmp from St. Maries. bent hi~ mnn due 10 an injury dis11uolifica1ion. Mike Smith. a state champ from Cd'A, handk<l his opponent lll 1-12, whom Conch Boday calle<l hi~ be;.r wreMler. with an 8-0 deci~1on. The e three victories mopped out ,1 hat wns soon 10 follow. Owen ~:11d. "Bouom line. aflcr we got ahead, we pu~h<!d the .1c11on: and the ,core." Thai definne ly "a.' the case: Mork Echevnrrfa. 1he reigning NJCAA 150-chnmp. Eric- McDowell and Dann Ga1111cn .111 collected pins in the duo I. Todd Wcm~A. v. ho nom1nlly ,~rt·,1tc, at 177. beat the Vil..'s hcnvyv..eight by a 12-l dec1s1on: Owen ,nid 1ha11he heavy,,e,ghl was around 235 pounds. NIC wrestlers of ~·csterye:u- v..ert rounded up a.s 1he annual Alumm Match entena,ncd a crowd of over 200 fans on Nov. 7. After the opening introductions. the Alumni requested a

prny ond chanted "Go Oldies." "ll1is i\ 1he ~tronge;.r Alumni crea1uring 12 fom1cr AIIAmcricansJ ever pu1 1ogc1hcr," Owen said. The dual consisted of 17 motchC!>. most of 1hem foirly clo~ beeau,c 1he rounds were shortened 10 one minute apiece. Some of the Alumni wri:Mler1 thought three minutes of ,~•rcs1ling was qui1c enough ns they were "~ucking 011" dunng and aflcr the matches. The look of total cxhau\lion by some or the Alumni and the quick wit or commentator Bill Pcchu kepi the crowd in lnugh1cr for 111051of 1hc night. Shawn Sudduth, two-time Tri Stale champ, staned the Cards of on the right foot wi1h a 4-1 victory ovtr Phil Ogan ( l983-85) which was followed by Pat Edelblute earn mg the Alumni's firs, victory v.hh a 5-3 dcci~ion over Denton The next three matches belonged 10 the Cards a.~ Lenz, wh~ hnc.J the best win of th<: night according 10 Owen, beat Ernie Molena (88-90) 3-2. In what seemed 10 be a welter· weight boxing bout, Brei Stubblefield. second in the nation ut 142 Inst year. boxed and wn:stlcd his way 10 fight off Pete Trc,•ino with a 3-0 ,•ictory. Smith defeated TJ . Pilchard 4-2 to pul the Cards up I2-6. Bob Sicgwnnh (79-81 ), 1he head coach or the Alumni. beat Ja.<on Holtz. 10-1; Siegwarth, however outweighed Hoh, by a few pounds.. Echevarria and Mil.e Hill (88-91) titd 1-1 at 150 pounds. Afler a few, ic1ories by the Alumni. ii was all i..noue.d up 14- I4 nt in1erm1~sion. NIC's Ted Hill recorded a win o,·er ''F8)t" Eddie Aha (3· I): this. howe\•cr would be the l1!$t "ictory for the Can.hnals. The evening concluded wi1h seven straight Alumni victories. Boday (85-87) dnuled the crowd" ith his uni4ue tosses during hi> match. A~ording to Owen. Sh.:ine Cass did a "heck of n job" ogains1 Pot Whitcomb in a losing cause. Whncomb. who 18)1 )Cnr wre>1led for the U.S. team nnd

see WRESTLING Page 11


The NIC Sentinel

Friday, November 13, 1992

Page 11

Spikers fi nish season Cross country runners without trip to regionals head toward nationals b) Dominic llo11ord R'< r,·,11ic>11 ed1tt1r The NIC volleyball team'> 1-Cn,on ,.imc to Jn end Saturday when the) lost to Ricks Junior College Th<y linhhed the ~ea.,on with 3 25-25 record am.I 2-1 m lcogue. They lo,t 10 Rirk, 15-2. I5-13. 15-8. " \Ve , tnn,-d out , tow agam,1Ricks, but then came on ,1rong in the middle ,111d thc11 fodcd 01the end." Caoch Bret Taylor said. "lfo11c1cr. Carly Killen. Kmrn Elliott. and Jennifor Jewell ployed very well." Despite being 2-4 in league the had a chance Lady Curds hod a chance 10 make regionals going into the last weekend. "lfCSI would hnvl! bentRicks on Friduy, and we would have beat Rick~. we would have ployed Ricks at a ncu1rol site to determine who went regionals." Taylor snid. Even though the)' did not mnke regionals. 11,h1ch was their goal before the season srnnNI, they had a good ovcrnll scnson, s:1id Taylor. "We had n good middle which included a 10-mntch winning strenk, (including the

Wall a Wlllln Toumnment) ... Taylor ,aid. "01 crull I got to work with n lot of grcnt pcrsonulitie, and they ,ill worked hurd." "The ,ca\t)n went well, the girl~ lcamcu ,, lot and became belier players," n.,mtant conch John k n,en ~;tid Ta) lor said thnt Killen and Ellion would hal'C 10 be lhC Co-MVP\ for th~ s('.1\00. Carl y led the taem in kill\ and El!iou led in dig, with Amelio King right behind her 01hcr leader.; ror rhe season were Kri,1y Rau in blocks and Jewell m assbr, (set~). "Our biggcsr disappoimmcm on the season was that we did not play ni the level needed 10 win ar the end of the season." Tnylor said. "And our biggest positives for the season wa:, the JO-match wi n streak, and play of Carly. Krisrn. Kristy and Jennifer: · Taylor said 1ha1 he will have 10 do some major rccruiling because he is losing I 0 players who nil have 1he ubility 10 go on and play III a 4-year school. ond he said that n couple of them have the ubility to piny Dil•ision I.

especially al 1-12 and 126."' Due 10 urn ing. rhe results will be in our nc.( t iswc Schools from nil over will bl! 111vathn)! Chri stian~on Gymna~ium. On Thur,dn}, rhc Cards mixed it up aguin wirh vi,11in{! 131g Bend in rhcir season home opener. 1 he Card~ wil l bau le a pair of \Chools 1nmgh1: High!inc at 5 p.m. nod Pacific Lurhcran Univcn.iry at 7:30 p.m. The Card~ ho,1 the NIC Tukcdown Tournament Saturday, which wrnp( up a packed week of non-stop wrestling. Afier Cenlrnl Washi ngton University visits NIC for a dual match on Nov. 17. the Cnrds face a tough road trip. h's lirst and most crucial slop will be al Ricks College on Nov. 19. Ricks is ranked No. I in the notion nnd nrt' in the some region as NIC. Owen snid earlier 1hn1 havinp Ricks in same region is a plus bccaU'ic it will provide o.n outcome of how rhe tenm rcacrs under pressure early on. NIC has n double-header right nftcr that on Nov. 20 as rhey go up against NonhweMem Wyoming and finish with llismnrck Srnte photo by Erin Siemers College 10 end lhc GOING DOWN-Bret Stubblefield takes down Pete Trevino. road trip.

WRESTLING from Page 10

recorded the only pi n in o stu nning upscl against a fom1er Russian champion. edged Coss wirh n nnrrow 3- 1 victory. James "Buster' ' Watkins (90-92) ended the night 11,•ilh n pin for the Alumni. The Alumni had a "slight" weight advantage in most of the matches which helped contribute in rheir victory. no110 menrion t~e qualiry of 1nlen1. Owen admi tted 1h01the Alumni "kicked the dickcnf ' out of his squad , bu t he came back to say "Heck, I coochcd every one of them: · The Cards tangled in another intrn_~quad Tuelidny at Gonwgo which Owen snid should have "answered some big questions.

by ~lurcy Ankrum S1•11ti11d rcp,int•r NIC ao,s country runners Jo,c Gonzales and /\ngcla Lenhardt will compete at national< Nov. 21. in Ari,ona Lenhardt nnd Gon1:1le~ placed fifth and ,hth re,pectil'cly fur the C1nlina1', women'< nnd men·~ teams .il the R,•g1on XVI(( Cross Country Chump1un,lup, held Su1ur1.1Jy. No,• 7 The men pl.,ccd third and the women placed founh Ol'ernll 10 lini,h off the <c,1,on. Coach Christy Da"ids said th,11 bor h team, ran well. cspcci:illy the women. "TI1c tiirl< had n he<:k of o race,'' David< ,aid. "Everyone mn hard and 1hcy knew ,-hat rhcy hod 10 do:· Lenhardt ran the best rucc of her cMccr since running at NIC. coach David, said. " I didn·11vam wha1happened 10 her at our home mcer 10 affect her nice Snrurdny. I didn'r want her to come back nnd approach the rncc li~c <he had a point 10 pm1c."' Dnvid, smd. "Angie hn, a h, n)S had that l)(lC of mcc in her but )he ha< always hccn too tentative," Dovid< commented. The men hud 11101011) Jlffercnt rnce. "Guys alwuys nrc more nggrc,(ivc in running. Thq do11·1wuit ond foci out 1hc

compc1i11on They nre aggri:,,i-c nght from the ,tan ,md arc not a~ afr.1id of di,comton." Dal'ids ,aid. Gon1:1Jc, ,hincd once J{!ain for rhc Cardin it I< ullying up .inothcr personal best with a time or 25:46. Hew,,.,, in tenth pl.ice enrly on in rhe rJcc but \\Orkcd hi< wuy up toward ti~ front 0 1 the pack. D.11 itl, , ,,id. The 11:,1 of the men\ ream 1\,1., in the second hatr of the pJd, and had no one 10 pas< There was .1 hig g.1p hctwccn the lifrccnth runner and our runner. Norm Rou,cy . .ind he hJd no one 10 rncc agoin,t. according ll' D,I\ 1d,. "He was 100 concerned ,1bou1not making a mi,1,1kc lfhc "ould ho, c run a~ con,i<tcntly ,i, he usu:11ly doe,, he would ha1 e c.imc in in nm1h plac:e:· David, <aid. "In cro<-, country. 11'\ not nccc~<anly hc,ng the fNc,1. 11·, raking ~our live runners and mal..ing. 1hc least amount or nmrnkes." David\ siud "Our tCJOl\ rnn we ll ond rnn hard The c11mpc11tion 1\ 0> IOU)!h, but I wos plcJ,cd wirh the pcrtom1onces of c.ich ,1nc of the kid,." Dul'1d< ,aid. N111iunals 11111 I>.- S.11urday. Nov. 21 m Aritun,l. Gonn1lc; 1hould be in good con1cn11on for placing. us will Lcnhnrdr, nccordmg 10 D.1v1d~.

It's Winter Time! So Help Support the SKI CLUB.

Located in the Kootenai Room Dec. 4-6


Page 12

Friday, November 13, 1992

The NIC Sentinel

ALEND Wrestling November 13.... Highline ................ 5 p .m. 13.Pacific Lutheran University ................................ 7:30 p.m.

14..... NIC Takedown Tourney .................................... All day 17.... Central Washington ....... ................................. 7:30p.m.

19.... Ricks College.... 7:30 p.m. 20....Northwest Wyoming ........ . .......................................6p.m. 20 ... Bismarck State College.. .. .... ..............................7:30 p.m. 21 .Northwest Wyoming Tourney ...................................... All day 27 .. .Western Montana College .......................................7p.m. 28.. .Westem Montana Tourney .... .................................. All day

December 3..... Lassen College....... 6 p.m. 4..... Las Vegas Invitational. ...... ......................................All day

Men's Basketball November 15... Cariboo Co/lege .... 4 p.m . 18... Lewis-Clark JV's ............. .................................7:30p.m. 20 ...... Whitman College JV's . ................................. 7:30 p.m. 21 ... Central Washington JV's ................................. 7:30p.m.

The Gym.,. g,., Men and Women

.-- - Special College Rates - - -• $20 for Varsity Athletes and $25 for All Other Students & FacultY-- - - -1

No Initiation Fee or Long Term Contracts

28 ...Spokane C.C.....7:30 p.m.

December 1... Walla Walla C.C .. 7:30 p.m. 3 .. College of Southern Idaho . .......................... ...... 7:30p.m.

Women's Basketball November

I0.000 lbs. of Freeweights

Stair-stepper/ windracer bikes

Co111i11g Soon- Ladies Full Locker and Ollly Workout Sessions Shoi,ver Fncif ities And Mur:h Mur·h More .

Located jusl off U.S. 95 in Sunset M all ! Call any time for more info. 664-62 13

Monday-Thursday... 6-10 Friday ....................... 6-8 Saturday.................. 10-8 Sunday.................... .1 -8

28 ...... Spokane Tournament.. ... ..................................... Allday

December

PORT SHORT

3 ...... College Southern Idaho .................................5:30 p.m.

Compiled by Ryan Bronson

HOME MATCHES IN BOLD

Union Building ha., a new Baseball players S1uden1 snack bar. play in SWAC All-Star game Cardinals to host Takedown Tourney Cnrdinnls T,'IT}' McKaig. Jason Scott Walton drives m for a lay. up. The Cardinals beat Lethbridge of Canada 82·66 m the home

Ailor and Rob Lumm played in 1he annuul Sourh We~t Athletic Cunferenc:c All-Star game. Mc Kaig plays iirst b:1,c, Ailor pla)s cl'nter lield and um,on is a sourhpaw pircha.

The game tool. place in Salt Lake City. Urah. and ~lcl.aig apparently Y. Cnl 3 for 5 ut rhc plmc.

opener.

photo by Erin Siemers

S ub has snack bar in basement E, en though JI rcall} dc1C\n'1 rel.ne 10 spon,. rhe t,,1,emcnr llf rhe

NIC will host its annuJI lilkcdown tourney on Saturd.ly. \V~5tJcr; comp<tc until ~ iakeJown i~ regi\lcrcd, and rhcn !he)' get back up go at 11 again Tiic ,vrc tlcr "ith the mosr tak~'<lowns wins the rhc march. The ,,'Tesrler "ho records lhe mosr mkedoY. ns lhrou[!hour lhe 1oumomcn1 will be named the Mo,1 Ou~mndmg Wrestler. La!,1 )Car.. " inner ,vas Dan

Schumochcr with 27 Ulkcdown~.

&Iii/Jr's 110/e· We tl1d not r~ic,c lhc resulL, of Thursday's match bet\\t:en Big Bend Communiry Coll~ge and NIC in ume for deadli ne. Re~ulLs from th<: matd1 "ill b.: in lhe next i.,,,ue.


The ~IC Sentinel

Friday, November 13, 1992

Intramurals ............page 14 Edited and Designed by Dominic Howard

Page fa

If you do not know how to spell a word, how are you supposed to look it up?

by Oomiuic llown rd

Recren1ion Editor The gome room. 1hc Sn11ing Club. Rowinl! Club and NIC'~ .111hc Beach :ire just a lcw ol 1hc proprams 1ha1 D~an Bcnncn. dim:1or of Campu, R~-creation and lntrJmural Spons. hos goncn ,taned ,incc hi, am,·,ll UI NIC in 1978. Dennen wa~ born and raised here in Coeur d'Alene. He first wem to college here :11 NIC before transferring 10 the Universi1y of Idaho. where he has a bachelors degree in Dean Bennett

recreation. On Nov. 20 Bennen will be taking the 1cs1 10 anain his masters degree in Ret.Tcational Management from UI. Benncn has organized an endless list or activities for s1udcn1s, from aomcdy nights to ski trips to Adopt-A-Highway. said Bret Taylor. Bennen's assistant Bcnncn listed the top programs that he got stancd here nt NIC: I) NIC's at the Beach, 2) Sailing progmm. 3) Game room in the SUD, 4 ) Boosted the Ski Club. 5) ru a \tudcnt in 1975 he heljX.'d John Owen stnn the outdoor equipment rental program. 61 Adop1-A-H1gh""Y· 7) Shier collcgt exchange with Eo,1 Koo1cnu1 Commu1111y College III Canado.. Rl ldcnufic.umn card~> \to:m ,inned ju,1 lhis pN yaar. unJ 91 The .,d, 1,cr of the Ro" IRJ! Club the first >ear 11 1101 gomi; He nddcd 1hJt 1hc proj!r-Jlll' 1hn1 he "a., working on now "ere 10 get II pan time ou1door recreation progmmmcr here on campus nnd 10 have n recrco1ional mo.nagcment major rrom the University of ldllho run NlC's 011he Beach for their internship. "Dean i& very s1uden1 oricnto1ed,"

photo courtesy of Dean Bennett Spirit- Bennett shows off his school spirit by running Bloomsday In the Csrdinal mascot suit about.

BENNETT'S GOAL:

making student lilestyles better Taylor snid, "und he is alwnys looking for ways 10 make all siudems lives bcner on campus." "A positive an i1udc toward more n.'Crcational pursuits for students is one of my biggest goals," Dennen ~aid When he 1s not making life bcner for ,1uden1~. he 1nkes pan in hi, hobbie, He is an :wid fly fi~hermo.n, sailor, loves 10 b.1dpnck and goo:s camping almO\t ~1Ny weekend that he 1~ not dump ,1udcmoricn1a1cd thing, Con\1dering 1ha1 h~' b alwuy, mnl.ing s1utlcn1 life bener. the onl~ timr he !!Cl\ 10 ,amp i~ during 1he \ummer Taylor ~id that his top cxp,!riunccs wuh Bcnn.:11 ha\'C been 1he making of the vollc)'b311 couns al NIC's nt the Beach, playing intrJn1Ural~ wi1h him O\'er the years. going IO ~ka1mg and hockey mgh1~ and 1hc moumnin bik~ rides thm 1hey ha,·e orgnnized and participated in.

Dennen lis1ed his 1op experiences nt NlC: I) His No. I e~pcrience happens on n daily ba(iS, mc.:1ing and gelli ng 10 know the s1uden1s m NIC, 2) Woy back in 1975 when he was o s1udcn1he won the 178 pound weight class in intramurul wrestling. 3) Seeing the college grow as suong as ii has over the Inst 15 years. 4) The trips students o.nd him have 1akc11 to the Olympic Peninsula and. 5) Almost winning the championship in inunmurol 5 on 5 basketball I.cit year. A l.01 second shot by Mike Grilley won the ~ame for Bru1al 95-94 for the title.

photo courtesy of Dean Bennett Made it- Dean Bennett, second from !eh, and the rest of his rock clrmbing crew take a break after reaching the top of Harrison Peak.


Page 14

Friday, November 13, 1992

The NIC Sentinel

WWF claims intramural volleyball crown b) Jeer Green Scn1ind Rcponi:r ln1r.1mur.1I ,ollc:}ball \Ca,nn came to ,mend Mond:1y night a, WWI' 100k tht ch,m1piom,h1p, and nre rnuny c, cn1, yet 10 come. WWF ,H,n 1hc rerulur <t·o,on .md wa, gi\'cn a fiN round bye in 1he pla}ofh. WWI' beJI Unc Grande ZiZi in 1he ~cmifinal m:uch. Then Unc Grande ZiZi foughl back through the lo,cr, br.ickc1 b} beJting Pnln and U-Dig for the riphl 10 focc WWI' in lhc finals. WWF 1hcn bc~I Un¢ Grande 7.iZi in the ,;hampion~hip game. The intramural ,pon~ and recre;11ion department ha~ hccn bu~y ,cuing up 1ournnmcn1~ for s1udent~ 10 panicipalc in In 1he "eeks 10 come. cribbage. bowling. JXKll and ping pong 1ournuments will be held. Card \harks :ire invi1e.d to show off 1heir skills in 1hc fir~, cribbage 1ournamcn1 of 1he year. II will be held 4 p.m Monduy. and rcgisirntion is due by 1odny in 1he rccremion office. The pri1.c~ include 1he famous muamuml championship T-shin, cribbage boards ,rnd more. Ano1her bowling tournamcnl will take place on 9 p.m. Thu~doy n1 1he Sunset Bowling Cen1er. Teams will consist of four hi~h rollers, and 1he ros1 will be $5 per person for u lhrcc game scrie,. T -shins will be awarded for 1hc highest 1cam score, highest single game score and highes1 1hrcc game series for men's and women's tlh•isions. An 8-bnll pool tournament will be 3 p.m. Wednestlny in 1hc Sub"'ny Gnmc Room. This 1ournnmcn1 is open 10 oil s1uden1s. focuhy and s1aff who wanl 10 show off 1hcir skills on the pool rnble. According 10 Bm Toylor. in1ramurol tlin.-c1or. a pin!l·pong 1ournamcn1 is scheduled for lhc end of 1he mon1h, nnd 3 on 3 bn~kc1bnll srnm on Monday, ge11enms in no la1cr lhnn noon on Friday. A Nco Geo video game 1011mamcn1 n13 p.m. Tuesday. For informuuon nl>0u1 nny of 1hesc 1ournamen1s, conrnc1 lhc recrention dcpanmcnl n1 769-3366.

Photo by Erin Siemers Champions- Bret Taylor passes the ball during the champlonshfp game of intramural volleyball which his team won over Une Grande Monday night.

z,z,

TREETBEA Why do 7-Eleven's have locks when they are open 24 hours? "To lock themselves in when they go insane at night." Steve

'To confuse those who work there." Dan Forrester Pre-Med/ Music Compiled by Erin Siemers

Delconte General

,,

"So they can invite their friends over for a 99 cent stogie party." Kim Perry Elementary Education

"So when they need a rush at 2 a.m. they can lock the doors and break out the Lucky Strikes." Clair Neeser Physical Education

"So when they go to the bathroom they do not get robbed blind." Jeremy Pascoe Accounting

FREE ADS AVAILABLE The Sentinel now offers each club registered with ASNIC one free 1/8 page ad (approximately the size of this notice) per year. The information for the ad must be delivered the issue prior to when it will run. The ad will run if adequate space is available. If not, the club will be informed one week before the issue and will have the option of running the ad for half price. For information, contact Business Manager Bo Meckel at 769-3389 or the Sentinel office in Room 1 of the Sherman School. The Sentinel reserves the right to reject copy.


Friday November 13, 1992

"Love is something if you give away. you end up having more." Malvina Reynolds

The NIC Sentinel

Page 15

"The grcar pleasure in life IS doing what peopll! say you cannot do.~ Walter Babl'lwl

Edited and Designed by Mark A. Jerome

Jazz Ensemble & Jazz Co. get ready to swing by Mark A. Jerome l11S1ont C11/111re Edi/Cir

The Nonh ldoho Jau Ensemble ond Jau Co. gels its season in10 full swing os they ready 10 present their first con.:en of 1hc year, which will lake place Saturday al 8 p.m. in 1he Communica1ions/Fine Ans Auditorium 01 Nonh ldnho Colh!ge. Th~ Jau Ensemble is under 1hc direction of Nonh Idaho College mu sic ins1uc1or Terry M.L. Jones. The concerl's progrnm will reprC\Cnl a large diversity of jazz. from old fomilinr standard~ 10 new ~wingt•rs. The concert i\ al\o dcd1ca1cd 10 a former NIC foreign ~1udcn1. Luca Mam1111. who wns pon of 1he NIC mu,ic dcpanmen1 bul had 10 go home due 10 linnnciul d1fficul11e,. Th.- Jaa bn~emble will open

up the evening·s performance wilh a piece wri11cn by Jerome Richardson emi ilcd ··Groove Mcrchnnl'" and follow up with ··My Funny Volentine·· by Rogers/Han. They will next perform o lune called "Seven Come Eleven·· wrillen by Goodmon -ChriMian and will feature solo performances by Greg Hjon on fiddle and S. Justin Mahoney on oho saxaphone. Jou. Co.. which is comprised of 13 vocalim. will then 1akc 1hc siagc and open wi1h "Mello Young Lover," by Rogers/ 11:unmcr~lt·in nntl will lcmurc Alben l!ins1c1n Lns,11cr on

1rumpe1. '"A New Kind of Love'" by Fain/ Kahn/ Norman will follow fea1unng Jennifer Macklin. Allison Brown and Marvcy Gerard on vocals along wi1h '" Again" by Cochran/ Newman

featuring Gigi Henderson and ending with "My Romance·· by Rogers/ Hnn. Following a intermission, the Jnn Ensemble will swing bock on srnge and run through '"Too llip For 1he Room·· by Po1rick Williams. fea1uring Mahoney on nllo sax.

~ax and Ja\on Malltl} on 1romhone Nc~I

on 1hc program" '"13mk,:n lmal)c,·· ll) l.c, llonp,:r. fc:11unng l•lmorc on 1cnor JRll

,u,.

"No Scurne Shufne'" by Dominic Spera. featuring Mahoney on allo sax. Elmore on tenor sax. LMsi1er on 1rumpe1. Malloy on trombone. Adrian Morgan on trombone. pianis1 George S. Conrod nnd ~IJrk Rake~ handling 1he bass chore~. The Jau Ensemble will finish 1hc e,•,:ning·~ progrnm by JOining force~ wi1h Jazz Co. for ··cone... Song."' fra1uring ,ocals by Jeff KnJpp and ~lelissa V1llarrc,1I. and Cy Oh,•d; ··Opu~ No. I:· Jon Br(I\\ ncll i\ 1hc cum:nl J1rcc1or !or J.tn Co. as \\CII o, 1hc chnr,1l 1hrccwr ,II Sandpoint lh11h School Tid.c1, arc ,l\,ul:iblc fur 1hc cnnccn in advance or ,II 1hc door Pricc, Jrc S5 for ,1duh,. S} 1,11 ,~nior c1111cn, Jnd SI lor d11ldrcn ,ind ,1u,Jcn1, NIC \ludcnh ,tnd ,wt I MC: adn1111cd free with college id~n1llitu11un

N IC h as flood of diverse musical and cultural events h appen ing Jewish Klezmer band to perform Explore 'The Final Frontier' by Rachel WIiiiams Srn1111rl R<'/Wrtfr

Nonh lduhu College \\t·komc.., bad, Sc:11lk·b.1wd Klc,mcr b.md The: l'>fillchnne~ on Sunday :11 7 p.m in 1hc S1udcn1 Unmn Uonncr ROQm TI1c /llt11,Chonc~ will prc~clll Jn c, cnin!? ot ethnic mu~ic and dunce. Th~ir performance la,t yc.ir brou(!hl rave re, 1cw, from 1ho\C .111ending. Kle11ncr i, the 1hc ~oul ,1irting mu,it' of Cenlr,11,md Ea\1cm European fr"' "hich ml\c, 1hc litldle. ch1Tine1 and other m,1ru111cn1, .1long wi1h ,0<..11\ .ind dunce:. One ru, ,ewer t·allcd 11 "'an c,crdw of joy ·· TI1e mu,il r,•nec1~ lC:n1urk, uf rnhurJI hcn1.1pe from 1he mnn) cou111rie, in \\h1ch Jew, 1hn1 hvcd II range, from jouy numben. to hauniing lameni, 10 l,raeh hMa, You may r~oimze the Kle,mcr ,1ylc m the fom,liar ,ound, of 1hc ""fiiJdlcr on 1hc Roor:· by Benny Goodman ··0on·11hml. you·u be able 10 ,i1 and li,tcn."" ,:ud Judith Syhc, NIC humnmuc~ chairpcr\On. ""The band ah,,1~, lil.c, 10 leach the audience n fe\\ of the 1r.11lilionol dances 1ha1 grew wnh the IUnc~. and even the hardcore. non-dancers soon find lhem'>Clvc~ on their foe1 h"s o high-energy experience .. This year·, conccn is ~pon,orcd by 1he NIC Humani11cs Network ond Convoca11on ,cries. On Monday lhc band will be 111:rforminti 3nd di,rn"llll.! their mu,ic with ..._., tr JI NIC cl.1s.,e,.

The grass will be way blue by Roch~! William,

by Chri~topher Clnncy .'frnrind Re11ortrr

5tnrmel R<'JHmt<r

Ne,1 wt·ck w,11 be tht: Jehu I of lhc Nonh IJ~ho Collt"t1c Sympho1111: 1J:111d performing ·'Tltt: l'inal I ronlicr,. The perfom1nnce "'II be Sa1urlloy. No, 11. 01 8 p.m. m lhc Commun1ra1ion-l-ine Arb ,\udiloriurn Bo,"cll llall. Thu ~l11w is conducted hy Tcrry Jone~ The pro11r.1m ,1111 con:.iM of a v:u il'lY of sek,11on\ from ~cveral fnm~u, comros.:1' ~wh a~ John Phillip Sou\u :ind Jucquc, Offcnbuch. One M the conCl'n'~ highlight~ i~ an orig ma I ,omp,Nllon by faculty member Gerard Mathe5 dubbed ··1. unur Tnpl}d1 .. The piece i, Ill in~lude 3 vu.:al clement in addition lo in~Lrumcn1:11il)n anJ 1s to be.' Mathe\' debut os 11,mmpo\cr at NIC Also lcJIUr\"d: " O,.:r:11ur~ to Orpheu, m 1hc Und~rworld'" by Otfonbach.""Sca Song~.. by Ralph Vuughnn Willitun\. "The Banle of Shiloh.. by C.L. Barnhvu,.:, ··w,:,10:rn Dance·· by Clare Grundm;1n. "Gallum Sc,cmh"" b) Sou~.i. "'Cho:,1er.. by William Schuman. ··v,~1on~ ot Flighl'' by Roben Sheldon. ··11:111 10 the Spirit of Libeny·· hy 'inlhJ and "The Phmc1> ~ by Gu,1av Hob1 Admi~~ion fur adult, i, Sl. for children'> I. S1udenL\ prl')<'nting n ~1Ullcn1 ID will be admi11cd tree. For iolom1u11on conrnr1 Jone.\ m 7b9-3258 ur Mathe\ a1 7b9 31'.!0.

,\n invtn11vc hlucgnL\\ quanc1 named ""l.uo,e Tic).. 11111 ,•1:,i1 Nonh ltlahu College wnigh1 JI 8 p m tor a con~cn in 1hr Cummun1ta11onvhnc An, Audnunum 1.oo~e T1c\ retel\cd fiN-pl.u:c honors JI 1he 19116 Telluride Bluegra\\ f-c\ll\al in Colomd" Since 1hcn thq hJ,...- pla)ed Jno,, 1hc na11on lrom Sc.iuh: 10 Ne" York to N.i~h,ille. They .ire JI'><> one of the 84 JllMS ,ell!C1cd 10 be pan of1he We,1crn StJ1c, Performing Am Tour for 1hc 1991~ 93 ,cne, .tnd UIC ehg1hle 10 recci1.: under-M111ng trom 1he WL'\lcm S1a1e, ,\n h1undJ1ion. Loo>e lie, include, Phil Round on elecmc oo."· Ted Well~ on bJnjn. Ben Wm,h,p on m.indohn and Jo.:I Kusserman <•n gu11ur. They di,p111y a wide rnnge (If mu\1cal innueno:e. anti 1he1r mu,i,· ,~ performed on 1radi1ionJI blucgr,"\ insl!Umcnl, \\llh po"erful 11\ree and four-p.in harmonies The arrangement~ arc h11?hl) inno, ali\'c. mnucnced by ~wing, blue,. coumry. ja1.1.. reggae nnd 1rJd111onal blu.igra~ k,. General adrni,sion 11cke1s are a"ailablc ,n ad,·ance or m 1he door. The co,1 I\ S7 for the gcner.11 public and S3 for NIC ,1uden1s Fur informa11on plea!ie co1110,1 1he Nonh Idaho College Bo, Ollice Jl 769-3415.

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Page 16

Friday November 13, 1992

The NIC Sentinel

Metal was not m ade for mass consumption I ,a" a Nd<0n t·\htn at a recent l\lcrnllica conccn. l'-'t'Cdlc:,, 111 '3y. I ...:,er.ii other; wanted to I) nch the llla<ph,,mcr and bum lurn 01 er ,1 pile of old Bun Jo11 Jlbum,. What the hell "going on" It'~ really ,.id \\hen I Jill torcl'<l to mcnuon l\cl,on and l\lcmllic:'a in 1h~ .... me: ...:n1c11cc Since \\hl.'n arl.' formul,ucd bullhlcgum pop-rockers con\ldcrcll m the \llmc league a, J ~oup of true ilrli\t\ 11 ho pracucally invented their 011n j!cnre llf mu,icul c,pression·• At till' con~cn I looked J1.To<-, the arena Jt thnu,,ind, ol ,notno,ed punk, "h<> only nncndc'tl the ,ho11 because I\ lctallica "'a' the "cool" thing I could ulre111.ly h~ar them t>raggmg about the ,how antl prctcmling they'd been into the l>Jnd , mcc way before "l: ntcr Srindn111n," ll's not that I dc1c,1 nc" l,m, nockinj! tu:, band that dc\Crve_, u little rccognitmn ·· it\ ju\l that I hutc 10 \CC on an fom, turned into a nwl-cting ,tmt,'!l)', /I ktnl and grun~c h111·e lx.'(;omc Kevin J. Brown big hu,ine,,. e1·en more of Pont1fication a lOlllmerl'iul \UCCC\\ thnn \:mi u,ed r,tp. /11:tiur recordmµ lut-e!,. !or c,amplc. h.tve gone u.lt,:r Seaulc in a twdmg lrcn,). ,mclling 1h,· rr~,h hlood of Nir,Jn,1, P,·arl Jum, ml 1111u1t·,111111. I'm J'<'r\Onulty llrcd of h.:,irmg .1hou1 the lluc,t font,l\tit nc11 lind in Scatlk. C\fl<.'\:1,1lly \\h~n I kno11 a Im ul cwdlcn111><:ul mu,1u,m, "h,, ,ire liHnj! oil Tn(l Rumen and ~trngj!lin!,' 1,111ct rccoim11cd ~lmn,1n:.m1 ,1c,cpt.1ncc i,n'I really the go,11 · 11 CWr)OOd} ltl.cd y1,u. }Olc°d 0.: the O,'\'j!CC\ (NUT a W,1) nc\ World rcfrrcncc.1Mum,trc.1111 succ,'" ... nrnyb.:. ~1.un,tream rccogn11111n. )'''· her) t11>dy 11Jnt, a httk a,knowlcd!,'cnwnt for 11hat 1hcy \c done. and 1h,· murc JX>tlplc II hu kmm .,bout 11, 1hc better. But II hen I ,ec a m11tion I.id, 11 htN'. .1lhum coll~1ion indudc< e•,'r)thing h) \\'.1rr,mt ,tlonJ! \\ilh t!w lutc,I Public En~m) , I p,•1 .111no),'1l Wh,•n 1 hear \0111c11nc tn the haltw.,y \JY, "lt,11c y,1u hL',t.rd uftlu, nc\, b.md Queen~ I heard 1hm ,mgcr JU\! d1t'<l of AIDS' ' I 1?ct re,tlt) tc•lljucd. \\'hen I sec., Ncl\nn 1 shin a, ,1 ~ktJlhc.i ,ho11. I jll't homicidal I pl,1) ,pn'tl met.ii {lunar fll)~II I rnnJ!c Jt the thought nl ,om,'<lnc turning my 11111,1c intu a c11mrncn:1.1I. M,11n,1rc.1m '"'1t't) h,l, ,1ln:.1d) cannlhahll•J ,o much, ahd ,In ,ind r,•gurj!n.u,'<l n .,, mol\· rodder tor ,uhurban n1.1~, ,·on,umpt11m rurnmg 1he ntU\1C of m, fnlOnte ,Ull\l, into .1 pre" rck,1w for corp.:,mt,• Amcric,1 i, gomg loo l,lf I don't mmcl 1f you hstcn to the \Jllll' kind o( mu,1c I h,tcn to I don't cure 1f a m11hon !','Opie do. Ju•t don't make 11 into the lntcM hip trend ,md rub tlw :mi~th of the , .ilidnuon .ind rccoj!nition lhC} dtscrw Their htlfll''- ,ire for n long and ,uu,f) mg career. Don't tum ,omconc's dr,·.1m into a unc-hn wontlcr. Unlcs,. lil.e Nelson. they h.:iw no rl'al , nllduy a., mu\lcions nnd dcscrvt' to be 1umcd into ajoke.

Warren Miller skiers do it 'Steeper and Deeper' by Dominic llo,\nrd Rccrenrio11 Editor W.1rrcn Miller hu~ been crc,1t1ng c~cillng \kt film~ once a year for u, long a< I con remember This year\ lilm. "Steeper and Dcept'r," 11 a\ the J>.:st um: yet. About two hours before the lilm I wn, ,iHing in my b:a,crncnt when i1 began to ,no\\. At thot point I WJ$ gcuing very c,citcd .1oou1 the night~ movie ond the upcoming ski ,cuson. W,nching !his lugh adl'enturc movie. which bordered on high danger at time,, wn, the? perfect wuy 10 ~tan off the 1992.93 ,ki ,enson. Ewr) yc.ir when his film, come out I say 10 my,df, '1'h~rc rnn' t be anything new thi, yeur thut he h,L, not done in the puM." 1lowevcr. every year he com.:., up with nc11 pl.ice) and tricks to oma,c the audience w11h. That·~ quite imprc<\11'1' for a guy who 1101 lus liN pair of , ki, in 1937 a1 age 12 and i, now 57 ycm old and still mnking audience\ 0011 nml AH H il\ the NIC c1owd of around 600 did at 11111ny time~.

II was quite ironic that, besides poing outside the country. moSt of the movie wa~ filmed in ldnho. Montana, Utnh and very liltlc in Colorndo and in Southwc~tern Canndn.... very close to u~. A& the film rolled on I a~ked myself. "Where is that place." nnd then he would u,unlly say ,omcwhrrc witlun a day's drive or NIC A lot of the film \\,l~ ~hot in ~lontana al Oil! Mountain ;and Big Sky ~ki resort~. and the helicopter sl-11ng was shot about 150 mil e, ~,m ight north of Coeur d'A lene in the Kootenai 1llountn111\ of Brimh Columbi11. The ,now nnd the hill, are trul) ",1ccpi!r and deeper" ju(t to the north At time, the lilm would roll on for IO"\econd, and you couldn' t ,cc a skier bccau,e 1hc ~now wus npng around. due to how deep 11 wa~. What makes all ,1-1 lilm, ~o impres,il c 1s that we do not sec the c;1mctt1 men. ·1he) have to be able 10 go everywhere. and 1hc,c p,ychoskicr, .ire gn1nl! ra,1 while

carrying 50· 100 pound, of camcrn equipment on their bncks. Going down cliffs that have an nngh: of 60· 75 degrees with weight on your back is preuy tough. The part thnt got the most laughs wn, nt Panorama Ski Resort. about 250 mile~ from here to the west in Cannda They had n contc~t where contc~tanls had to make a fokc ~kier, put him on ski\ and ~end him down the hill where nt the bonom wns a big jump. ifhc got that fur, thut all the sk ier~ went off. Thcrt were two winners. one for mo,t mr ,ind one for brcakmj! 11110 the mo,t pam One of the few that rm1dc II Jll thl' "'·') .and jumped the fanhc\t "a~ J Gkn Plake lool.,a like who nc11 :1l'i1u1 1~ fc,•t up and 50· 75 feet in d1,1.1ncc. That con1c,1ant w<ln that n11npc1111on He did not hnvc muc:h compcutmn. ,eeing th:111110\I of the ) l.tl'rs 11<1und UJl running O\Cr th,· c:rnw,J tit.It llJ\ lined up on the \Ilk~. lk1ng 111 .1 W.1rrcn Miller film I\ ju~t one ol 111) few dream, 1n lik thJt I wnuhJ do j11,1 .1hout an)thmg lur

Bill Evans Dance Co1npany prances into NIC by Mnrk A. Jerome /mtcml C11/t11rc• filitrir

" 111<.• Bill E1J11, D.u1ccComp.m) ... l\'\tcknt proh:-..,.omtl cornp.lll) ol thc Uniwrsity or New Mexico. will uppe:i.r :u tl1e Nonh ltl,tllO C'ulltg,· CommuniL~uion.Jl~11e Art, Auditorium on l·ndJ). Nov. 20. ,II 8 p.m The comp.111) of cipht 1cNtilc ~rforrncn, 11111 pn."11:nt an c1cning ol J,ll.J. t.1p .111d u~.11 c:ontcmpoouy d.un-c 1on111,i<'h) Bill L1an,anJGlenn/lhllcr and hi'IWl11."t.r.L Toe pnigram 1t 1II ~ "..... hu1h to .1 ffil\l d·pk,l,lfl!! p.•,t). II Ith ,1\1) )i\h, lm,·tuml 1\illl/. -.ome mnmwblc \\ling d1111a.,t\l l'i> an t•,1,•n1W mp '<'qlk'nc:c. ;ind pull,'\111\ll ,tll ,tc~-.. tor .1 bla1ing Jittcrt>ug tin,1k ..... !)l)rolli) S11m l', 0.ulC<? ~lat1J1111,: h .in, ;, .u1 "'"-.:1.11e prot.,wr;llld the oo.td of d.lJl(c .11th.• L'ni,cr-11) uf Ne" l\k,ico 111,-\lbuqucniuc ,Uld till.' aru,uc J1n.'l:tor of the B,11 E, .111, Dance Compam, founJ,>tl in 1975. and the Bill F1Jn.\ Summ,•r ln,titutl':> of D.in..-c, foundl."'11 in 197(1. Ik ,, the n-.:1picnt of the Guggenhdm ~110,hh1p and or 28 other rcllo" ships or !lfllOt:. from the N.11ion;tl Endown11:n1 (cir the M\ or fmm the ~Ultc, provincittl. city or count)' :in nllinncc:,. He h:L~ chon:ol!nlPhcd I I711 oo.s for 95

pmk,,1\mal haller .u-cd mnJcm ,LUKc rnmp;m,~" 111 al I ~0 ,wt~,. CanJd.i. l'Urtlf'! .111J Nc11 /..c,11,IJld . indudmg 13.lllct WC\t, Chi.ago BallcL Berlin Bullet, North Ctmlina D,m1.-c Tik!,1trc. Conwn D,,ncl' Comp.my of BQSl()f\, P.icilic NtJ111111N Ballet. Rep.:no,y Dant."\' Theatre. Chi<:.tgo Rcp..'ft!Jf) 0.UIC\' l:n.scmbk, Rmt'· \\'11cxlbwy 0,111(\!

Comp.my and man} l'lhm JlclJ;b a BA m Engli.J, and m b.llkt .ind ,111 MFA m m,xkm d.mc..'I! from the Um,er.-tty of Utah. \\ hl>re 00 I'll.\ alll,sllc coordm.uor and l~Jdmg J.tnct.-r and chl)l\'Ogr'.tpher of the Rl'fl'"l10I)' 0.JllCt! Theatre for ..:,en )C.irs nnd a; an a~i~tnnt profc,..-..or of modem daoo: for two )'t'arS. In 1\pril of 1990 he inmit.'ll!d a oow so!oconcen in honorofh~ 50lh year, and some of the "'Ol'k from that pesfomunce will be sho11 n nt Nonh Idaho College.

The ~'" i~ presented by the Coeur d'Alene Performing Ans Alliance. Tickets are Sl6 and Sl4 (half pnce for high school :ige and under) and are a\':Ulable :u the NIC Box Office al 7693415.


Friday, November 13, 1992

The NIC Sentinel

Page 17

NIC's Theater tries to remind us 'Our Fate is Our Own' by Mory Ann Olivieri Stntitttl Reporter

You're never too old to be an actress

"..... Or perhaps this part of me became lo.ft /11 a terrible beast. or became part of c, huge bird that flew above the primeval swamps. "Attd Ire said tlus thing was so small, this part of me ll'as so small it could11 ·1 be sun. but it was there from tire b11gi111ri11g of the world. "Attd hi' called this bit of me w1 atom. J\1111 whe11 he 11•roto the word. I /ti/ i11 /ove with it. J\10111..... Atam..... wlrm c, bea11tif11/ word,"

"The Effect of Gamma Rays on the Man-In the-Moon Marigolds" was a play of tragedy, yet a beautiful and powerful play that led me back into my childhood memories of n mother and daug_htcr tom between love and laughter, hate and hun. It was o play that left my mind wandering and my hean searching for the answer to a question that we as parents often ask ourselves from time 10 time. "Am I a good porcmT' It was a ploy that will live on in my memory and my heart. as it is a play that forced me lo stop nnd question my own strengths and weaknesses as a mother, as a daughter. as a wife and as a human being. 11 was a piny or not ju~t sadnc~s. c>.trcmitics and tragic reality. but a play tl1Ul extends a message 10 all of us: to seek and lind our own inner beauty and power and then hold fast for "Our fate is our own." II was a nine-pcrfomiance piny deserving a very wam1 applause not only to the writer Paul Zindel. but to Director Maureen Gri, Producer Tim Rorick and tht cast, which includes Monn Klinger (Beatrice), Snrah Montgomery {Ruth), Cory Rosdnlt l (Tillie). ldn Sundlcr (Nanny) and Tracy Test (Janice Vickery). TI1t1nks nlso 10 technical director Justin VnnEmon. a~sistanl technical director Joe Dion. !>Ccne designer Denn Bourland. Scene construction was done by Jnck Green. Dean Bourland and NIC's Stagecraft d~~. Other workers included: , toge mnnngcr Ryan Moore. light crew Joe Dion. Jim Irwin anti llc.tthcr Il~mlhon. ~ound by Tywn Bowman und Paul 13unch. prOJl~ by KriMm Kilm~r and V;rnes~n MtJhler. hair nnd makeup by Kathy I lntchcr. nnJ co~tumes by Lindo Straub and Shannon Cnrlbcrg.

by Mary Ann Olivier! Smri11el Reporter This slight, pretty woman with a twinkle tn her eyes sat ocros~ from me with her hands fold,'<! in her lnp ns Sil<! brieny reminisced and shored bits of her life with me. Ida Bell Sundler. 75. whom you may al~ rocognii.c ~ ·'Nanny" in ·'The Eff~1 of Gnmmo Rays on Man-In-the-Moon Marigolds."' not only perfonn~ in plays. but is nlso an an stud~nl at NIC. Sundler was born in Grangeville in 1916. She sllid thru c,'er since she was a linle girl she wnnted to perform in a piny but never really hod on opponunity. In 1~5. she mruricd Fredrick Sundler and they had three dllughtcrs. "Their children were grown and had children of their own when in 1988 her husband~~ away, leaving Ida alone with j11-~1 Susie, the si~-loed ,:at. to l:«p her o:oinpany. "With so much time on my hand~. I juM knew 11~11 I had 10 get out and do )()mething.'' s:ud Sundler. Thal is when she decided to tnkl' theater cla.i,.<;e~ at NIC. "It's different going back 10 school nt my age, you know. I'm probntily the olJe,1 ~tud~nt here but cr.:ryonc i, real nice. My family and (riends ati." alC<l very cncour:ig.ing." Sundlcr b the gr.1ndr1101h.:r ol ~iit and tn Dc.:embt>r will b(> 11 [!r.:.11-gr:111llmntlter. Prior to ha pan a~ "Nnnny,'' Sundl,:r recited 11 M:rie,of"l't,cm, Imm the Nonhw~t" :u tho: l.;1k.: City The,11cr l:c.t ~cur. She will ol'i0 li1",: a pan in

Seventy- five- year· old Ida Bell Sund/er decided to take theater classes at NIC after always wanting to perform In a play.

1he up.:orning "Oh, Pion,-er.;". When ask what her '\ieting" goof~ w,•re, Sundkr said, "fo {:Cl ti.:n.:r nil the tim.: and 10 g.:1 gO(id part.\." She thton ,;aid with II girli~h grin on her f:lcc. "I guc.~ fnl)w.t a ham .. Sundler pl,1n.~ 10 contmuc taking clM:.e~ nt NIC. 1lw 1,. "at lc,L\I until they !!t!l ltred ol m,: ~nd ">end me home."

'A River Runs Through It' shows life's good and bad by Debbie Wlllloms

S<'llt/11<'1 Reporter Missoula i~ the land of fish. rivers and tree~. the pl(ICC ~ome mny gu w cast all their "orries free. "A Ri"cr Runs Throu{!h

It." now playing at the Sho\\'bont Thentcr. 1~ the kind of movie nbout Missoula !hut I'd been wn11ing to sec. Thb mo,•ie come~ :t for more realistic message than just the sic~ie sweetness of lif.!: it show~ the hillersweetnes~ of life. I like this movie because it didn't lie. Craig Sheffer plays Norm Maclean. the older brother who narmratcs the story. Brnd Pit plays Paul Maclean. the younger wilder brother. and Tom Sknrret plays Father Maclean, the wise father. "A River Run~ Through it'' stnns out with a scene from 1917 when Nomi and Paul arc liule boys nod their father teaches them how to lish. The scenes were pn.'Cious because the wilderness the boys run through symbolizes fr~om. happiness and childhood memories. But. as I learned in

my social probkrns cln(s from .1 piny called "The 7.oo Story:· you can't l.::im or m:11ure from nll good things alone or all bad things alone: that's what thh movil' i~ all about Norn, nnd J)nul couldn'1 lo?nm from th~,r e~p..>ricncc of the free outdooors until they had learned from their subjC<.'ted studying. TI,c next set of scenes sho"'s the bo} s grown up. It's 1926. and Norm h:i.s just graduated from colleg_e to be an English 1ruchcr and Paul has become a news rcponer. Nomi is home for the summer and will. unfortunately. learn from the fonun~s and tragedies of his present life. One of these fonunes that become a tr.,gedy is the friendship and fellow,h,p Norm hod with his brother Paul that summer. Together. they go down 10 the Big Blackfoot River and fish as they hod during their childhood. Their conccntrntion and the grnccful motion of the fishing line nying through the wind ns they cast their fishing poles is sensed. "I was witnessing perfection. Fm: from

all iii> law,, lil..c n \\Ori. of art My brother ,tood suspended above the earth." Norm

REVIEW described Paul as he "atched him fish. "But, I knew that life didn ·1work that "ay," Norm said. contrasting his brother's life, which wa, free from la"s. to the realistic life of all mankind. in which it is ,'inually impossible 10 a,•oid laws. Later Paul is beaten 10 death. This movie's message is deeper than deep. truer than true and sharper than sharp. Father Maclc.in re,<'llls the movie's message when he couldn't answer his own question."ls there an)thing I don't I.now about Paul?" Norm replits, "May be all I know about Paul ,s lhnt he was a line fisherman." The wise fJther McClain hn., a bener answer as he learns from this tragedy and

dhtingu1,hc, the dil'forence b<twecn helping people hkc his ,on and not helping him. "E1thcr we don't know what p.in of u, 10 g1 ve or we can rove them completely without completely unde1'tanding." The last !>Cenc show~ Norm as an old man lishing alone in the river that he and Paul alwa>, u~ed 10 lish. "Now. nearly nil those I loved and didn't underst,md are deJd ... Norm ~ays. The hope that a lisb "ould nse ~ he casts hi$ fishing pole 10 the river keep~ hrm out there. The message from this movie is that life has good and bad. gain and loS\, fonune and tragedy: so live with it or die. Norm affirms this idea as he concludes his itory, saying. "All things merge into one and the river runs through it," with the "things" symboliling the good and bad. gain and loss and the tragedy and fonune and the "river" symboli:iing fife.


Page 18

Friday, November , 3, 1992

The NIC Sentinel

'Birds' take flight b1• Rirha rd Ouggnn

«

f'i1<110 l;,/i11Jr Sperial Carresp,mdrm The Union Gnllcf)' i, hoMing. through

No,·. 27.•1 di~pluy of vnriou< works by nrti(I Mary Frances. "Birds. Birds. Birds" may :n Cira sound like a show Mric1ly for birJ lover... bu1 France< offer.. a show 1h01 ha\ something for nnyone "ho enjoys brilliant visual 1muges. Frances u~es a 1cchniquc of applying her pas1els in lo)er~ (up 10 1wch·c or founccnl and ,napm!! Joye~ with u p.1le11e knife and re-applying pigment She uws 1h1< 111c1hod w achie, e textures and blend\ "hich "c,an result in many e~Clling mi<mkcs and ~urpnscs" Rich l:!rccn~ and blue, blend on while fea1hcrcd ~urfacc< and plJy off of deep purple< and orange~. Shupe and lini: pro\'1llc u venue for 1hc,c inno,a1he colnr ~chemc\ m pla~. In her 011 pn,1cl p,nnung, am.I other mi,~d mcdhl piece,. Fr,m,,·, u,c, llird, ·" ",1,ubJcCI mancr of <tmplc ,hope< und hnc, 1h:u allo" for 1he c,pl11m11on of 1e,1ure. color .111(1 dc,,gn "nh nil pa,1c1:· The,e piece, arc accompamcll by ,nmc m1"·d mcl11,1 \\Ork,. \ornc nf "h1ch mcludc dry. Oat, dead llird,. Tr.1g1( re,1li1) i, tuuchcd on ,md mmlc

visually in1crcs11ng and ironicall y humorous by Frnncc< in "Road Killed,'' "Co111pos1" and "Bird Crossing." Another piece, "Peace through Strength," i~ compri~cd of a broken ceramic do"c splayed uiop n plaque and ponially ,upponed by o broken piece or branch. The clu.s~ic ,y mbol for peace looks damaged and hclples~. No1nil of France.,· birds have such ~CriOU\RCSS. The ~how.~ bnck!!rOund recording of Oowing wu1cr and chirping bird~ compliments 1he more plnyful 11nngc~ such us the bickering "C,1rdinal and Loon" or the perky "Kingfi,hcr." Although mo~! of 1hc piece, in France,· ,how ;ire lllll cnlircly nb,trnc1. there arc ,omc p,unting, that s1rp m so clo~cly 1ha1 ii i, almo,1 difficul110 rct·ogni,c !he claw,. beak, am! k1s,mg birds. Sc,cr.,J smaller painting, work wcll 10 uc 1oge1hcr 1hc show wi1h truthful , tud1~, in bird bchaviur, gcs1urc ,md p,·r.nn.1h1y. Fronce,· u,c ot colm. lnturc :ind cnrnpmi1i11n 1, c,rnm~ .111!1, lb1.,n1. ,11 it 1hc 1i1lr of 1hc ,l1C111 ,ound, like 11', for the bird,. 11·, time 10 rcl.'on,idcr

ALENDE Fri do). No, . 1.l S p.n1,-I oo,c Tic, in (.\1m:cn Cm11111unica1i11n,-hnc 1\ n, 13u1ld1111! in ll'""CII H.tll SJ admi,,am for NIC ~1utl1°nh. ~7 for 1h1· g,•nernl pu"11c T1ckc1, a, ;1ilablc ,II 1h,· d110r. ·111urd11y. •o,·. 1-1 8 p.111 Nonh ldnho J,111 lsnwmblc :md Jan C'o , 1hr,>ct1>tl by Tell) Jone, nnd Jon 13111\\ ncll General Admission <;5, SJ.S I Sunday, Nm. 15 4. p.m. - Choir FN1vnl ho,1cd by Nonh ldnho College Choir OJ)c.'n 111 thc

Frltln) . Nu, . l O S,1,hc Ila" J..111' Dance after lhC h.1~J..e1b:11l 1:!illl1C , Cr(U\ \\'hnmunJV, rn the cafc1errn rmm 9 to n11dm~l11. S11 t11 rdn). 0 1. 21 8 p m Nonh lduho S) mphoni[ fJand prcsen1, ·1he l•mal l-ron1id' cundu~1cd by Terr) h>nc,. G,·ner,11 Admi~smn S.5. SJ .ind sI. nturdo) nnd Sunduy, Dec. 5 & 6 Sound, of Chris1m.1~ Conccn with the North ltfaho Conrert Choir ond North ldJIW 5) mphony Orchcm a. General .1dmi\sion tickeh are S5.

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Tu,~dny, No, . 17 10 am .md I p.m•. Seh1ce Mcnwm,1ry prc"-Cnt, P,1ul 0\\~11 I.C\\I\, author Of "DJ,c) , D1cam" 1n nuthor rc\tdcnnc,. Fridll) , No, . 20 8 p.m · B,11 E,·an\ Dunce Compnn) 1n Bo,"cll H:ill

Tue~dU), Dec. 8 7 p.m - ",\ Chn(lnl.l', Cuml" b) 011·kcn\ nnd p.:rt ormcd bv the Nebr.i\kJ Theatre C.1r.1van in Ro," cll Hull Auditorium. Wedn esday. De.:. 9 8 p.m.-The Gong Show featuring local talent. Cnmmun1ca11on,-l'inc Ans

Compiled hy Mork A. Jerome /111111111 C11/t11rt' f:'di111r

Audrrunum.

lluildrng in Bo, " cll Hall. Opcn 10 !hi.' puhhc. Wl'dnc,dny, Ik e. 9 8 p.m. • Great Kur.mkc Sing on. Open 10 1hc pub he. /llu..i prc-rcgiMer wi1h ,1uden1ne11,·111c, drrcc1nr, Down Angele JI 769-3367. Thon. doy, Der. I0 7 p.m. • Harding l!lcnmt1.1ry Chri,1ma, Mu,ic prngram. Optn to the pubhc. Wed nesday. Occ.16 7:30 p.m - CJ'A ll igh School Band and On:hestrJ in conccn in 1hc Communicniion,/hne An, Audi1onum. Sunday, Dcr.20 10 n.m. • Bethel 8Jp1i,1 Christmas Sen ice. Op,·n 10 pubhc. Soturdo~·. Jan.16 S p.m. - S"ce1 Adelines pn.•,cnt~ "IIJrmon) m Color " Prire, Tl3A. Snturdn), J on. 16 9- 12 · Ilawaiion dance ahcr men'< hu<ke1b:tll game. S2 admis\ion ror , 1udcms " i1h ID, S3 for gucs1.

Bill Keylon. a North Idaho College business student, admires one of the many bird paintings in /he Union Gal/ery The exh1b1t runs through Nov. 27.

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Page 20

Friday, November 13, 1992

The NIC Sentinel

Just trip trip tripleting through the triplets T"'o se ts of triplets nre busy confusing 1cochcrs and students on campus this semester. Anno Marie, Collee n and Bonni e Donohoe and Lori. Lisa and Kyle Harmon agree they don't hove the sibling rivalry children in nonmult iple births grow up

experi encing. They don't spend mu ch time fi ghting or arguing and relish each other's company. they said. Accord ing 10 the Encyclopedia Americana. being part of a multi ple birth is one chance in 7.500 binhs. most fn.-quently occurring when the mother's age is 20 to 35.

photos and stories by April Muhs

The Donohoe girl~. ot first. look identical, but they don't think they arc. TI1cy think they nre unique indh•iduuls, they ~.1id Annu Murie. Colleen and Aonnie ~hare n common cnrccr goal and plan 10 Moy together, tr.ivcling and cntennining in the music world. They think 11 would be re.illy grrai if they were to foll in love \\ ith another ,ct of triplet, and get married, the) ~id They nrc senous about u t·ountl)· music career. they said. 1l1cy arc currently enrolled in two music clos~t·s. oucnd modeling classes ond ha, con agent. They prncticc their mu~ic rogulorly in addition to holding down pantime jobs at Senor l'roggy's. In their "rare" spare time they go out 10 their mother'<ranch in the Hayden area and ride horses. 111c Donohocs oil a11endcd the i..1mc St·hool and were in the same cln~sroom in grade ,chool. One doy. in the third grade. the girls switched name tng,. dc<ks. clothes. books and evef) thing. or so they thought. One ~mall detail they had forgotten wo< the one the teacher had memorized in keeping names straight·· shoe~. "That's the first and last time we ever tried anything hke that," Bonnie said. The girl< experienced a downside 10 the oniqueness

und :ltlcntion they received, they ag reed. When 1he Donohoe girl s were very young, they fc ll lil.c "freaks" hccau<c people would <top and stare und point finger<at them. they snid. TI1cy didn' t know whnt i1 wa, nil about. Grode ~chO\ll wn, n negative experience due to 1ea<i11g :ind the lnck of friend~. they ,aid. M1>st ohcn. the other child ren found it in1imidn1ing :111d 11 ould n'1111ukc the effort 10 s1.1rt a friendship, the girls said. One reason for this. the girls spccuhucd. wns because making friend) with one of them was like muking friends with u group. Hil)h school in Oonncrs l'crry wasn't much belier in 1h01 their classmates couldn't or wouldn't take the time to find out who wn~ who. they said. They wouldn't hn,•e it ony other way though, the)' said. TI1ey like being part of o group. They know they are very different nnd nre blessed with mnny talents and a wonderful famil y, they said. "You hove two best friends." Bonnie said."You never feel alone. You know 1wo other people Jovr you unconditionally." They plnn to share their uniqueness by going into the cniertarnment field. ploying and singinf! country western music and telling their story.

CLOSE TRIPLETS- (From left) Lori, Kyle end Lisa Harmon are not Identical triplats, but they are very close. The three enjoy doing many things together.

The Harmon tripl ets are not identical. While True to the popular image of multiple-binh Lori and Lisa look nlike, some say Kyl e children. the Harmon~ have tried swi tching resembles one of his favorite country singers. places. Gnnh J3rooks. Lisa said her dnd thought the girls should go Kyle and his sisters have a great deal of to separate schools in order to get indi, 1dunl rc$pec1 for each other. they s:,id. The Harrnons aucntion. One day her dnd thought it would be spend qui te a bit of free time toget her playing "pretty funny" to <wi tch the ~irl,. she ,aid All card,. sending ou t for ice cream. goi ng to the went smoothly until clo~c lo the end of the day mo\Jes. bowling and li~tening to country mu\ic. whe n word leaked out uhout thl' ,w11ch. Lori S0mc11rnc~ Kyle \ing~ for them said. "We 11cre delivered had. 111 our '11:hu(•I~ by When a,kcd if he would \\Ont to be a country the print·1p,1l. It h,1d almo,1 worl.cd" mu~i, performer. Kyle replied. " If I had J The llarmon tnpkt, .ire 11111 J ,n1,1JI family chance. I'd take 11." They hn"c an older hrothcr .ind ,1,ter and ,, When .1,l.cd if ,he ,-.,ultl prefer to he a younger <i\lcr at home in H,1miltnn. Mont ·n1c ,mglc-tnnh child. I.on \.i1d ,he '"'uldn't \\,lnl 11 llnnnun, gr.1du.11cd fmm lln1111lton l11gh Sd1ool any othen ""Y· ,he .liw,1)\ h,1, ;1 l,c,t lricnd and before con1111g to NIC: the other~ i111u111,cl) know \\h.11 ,he 1< 1h1n~mg. l.1sa pl.in, tu tran ~fcr to Oni,c S1,11e "Sincc I' ve alway, hccn a tnpkt. I'd nc,w Univcr\llY 1111d nrnJor 1n hu,inc,, eJucntion. know what 11 would be like not 10 be one." ~he Kyle und l.ori ,har,• plan, IO ma1or in low suid. enforcement.

COMMON BONDS- (From left) Colleen, Anna Marie and Bonnie Donohoe not only share

features, but they also share horseback rides at their mother's ranch.


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