The North Idaho College Sentinel Vol 39 No 7, Feb 1, 1985

Page 1

Volumt 39, 'iumber 7

f ridn). Feb. 1. 1985

Ex-NIC students file $400,000 suit b) Ed ~tcOowd .\ >l00.000 la"wll ag:uns1 ,orth ldahn Colleg~ :ind an e\-, OCJUon;il inmuc10· h:h bttn 1iled m Fim

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e~ . pbOIO

EurcJ..u? P1bl hll, re hlrn1 I C'ro, lhn,on probe, lbt' dep1b, or COC'ur d' "l,ne lilt -.11h I mrUI drltt· 1or..., ou rind 11 101 of old ,wrr," lhut-on ,:aid. " h bn'c -. ortb :an~tlung. buc ii' run 10 lool. a1,"

( inside the sentinel

Di~tr:cl Coun by ··our formc• \/IC '\IUJeniThe ~u1t, filed ..,.o, !9 .:13uru 1ha1 Rus~II \\ 1d.,1rom, Bru~ ~nne11. h.enncth H.i.~h .ind h.e,in R):in did no1 re,1!1\C adequate 1r:11mng rom rna.menancc me.:han1~ lmtru"or Charles Ch:1,1arn t>elorc gradua11ns la.s1 :-Ola) 0cc o: the former ~1udem,. \\ 1.:1..mom, had b«n named on 1hc 'IIC Dean·~ lt)I for fall 19 .i. Cha\ta1n, a :enu•cd m)tructor. re,,~ned las1 June b«uuse Ol l)Cr,onal re~ons alter 1nsiructtnt! at 'IIC :he pres tOU\ f•,e ~ecars. The ~ludents claim 1hat they h3d .:omplamed 10 the .1drn,mstn11on that Chasiam "as no1 gr, mg ad~uate rn,tru.:tton Cl.um~ Hau1ht. director or ,1c·s ,·ocauonal te.:hm,:il ,.:hool. ~.1id 1h31 he: did not re.:c1,e J compl.lim 1he prC\ 1ou, four >ears tha1 Chan.tin had taught the oour'f The plain1im contend that the mechanic~ mamtenan.:e .:oum: offered b) :-:ic f:11led 10 qualify them tor ~mom as "cntry-le,d journeymen," " hich a brochure describing 1he .:13\S had 1mphcd Alrbouitb tbt amc statement 1s not p11nted in 1he offiaal college cntalog, the NIC brochure mucs: "Graduates of the trnaintenance mechanic) program are qualified for emplovmcnt :n entrv-level j.:>U!W}men in pos1uon~ that.require mainten;nce of m«hanical equipment." Haugh1 said that the languJge used in t.1e brochure should no1 h.\,e been 115ed and tha11hc: director of in· iormauonal ~1~ should h3,e caught the trror btforc 1t "'15 publl.\hed In addiuon, there ~ really no su.:h thing as an "entl)-le'\el Journeyman," H3ught -aid He wd tlK "'ord iourneym3ll means master craft1:n.1n, and somebod} Ju11 ou1 of school does not quabf} for th.u d1,una1on. Haa,bl said l~ brochure d~ no1 really ma11cr bt.:a~ :be ::oll(Se catalog i, ac1ualh the official contrxt a ~udcm and a college. The ,1111 rtq~: tha: paymcn1 of l~l Y.3gcs and ornefus be p;itd 10th: formc· s1uiknts. Wid1trom is 1ttl.ing SJl.560; Eknnctl, ~U:?Q: R~.in, SIS,100: and H;uh. S30•.WO

~=

conuautd <ln p,,it I~

J Vocational students strut their stuff

Con, ocation to focu ~ on holistic life .... .........•..... p. 3 Grading polic) run oul of J?U • •••••••••..•.•.•.•.•.• •• p. 6 Music man no1es pro~m.., .............. . ............. p. 7 Sauer creams imported puds .................. ...... p. 18

The \IC' ,o.:-llrocw prosnm ~r11 be on display rn The ~lall Feb. 8, 9 and 10 in honor 01 ,:1110113.1 \ ocauon:d Edu;:3uon \\ ed.. Pro,r.ur~ ~i..:h J> m01.orcyclc rep.ur. computer~ and Y.Clding "'ill be on ditpl3Y in The Mall. located on ApplC\\.t) and Go,ernmtnt V. ay. Bob Brov. n. :u.sistaru dua.'tor of, o.:~tronal edurouon. said rhc program has r«c1,·· ed o,'tr--helm1ng ropon.e.


Feb. I. 1985 NIC Sentinel- ?-

New VP to serve on student board b) D11.n Brttden A new vice pre1 <lent and a5\1'tanl ac-.i, 1110 d. ·ec· !Or IACrC 3ppointed 10 '.c \S,tC board al ltS Jan 28

mecung Kn Dunning wu unarumO\;\J) \'()icd 10 ~ , M the interim·. c pre•1dcm aftC'r !he offi:% was \'11.:3ted 1.. 0 .,.cc~ ago b1 ~!,kc Ga~liano Gaahino was 1neligil>!e to continue bis ;iosl ... t,en he re.;c1,·cd a fallil";- gr.ade ~ I\ ak'\1111, ctan w1 ,cme~tcr. Thestudent handbook 1a10 that a 1•11ckm board member must earl} 10 acd1n to ~ c on the board, and 1~ Ion of the: four..:rcdit d:us put Gagliano belo,,. 1ha.t number. Denise: Lit:ihcn wai accepted 10 fill the: assuwn 1ivi11cs spot when Darla Cofield Ltt ?raruftrred to Utah State Uru,m11)' Lit.ilicr"' , a ii Derum GOJ. ringe, who returncd a.t the •emcstct u a.:tinties director. In 1hc fan. 21 mtttinl!, ~IC DollllltOT) Otm::or Becky Coffman came before lhe board and requo1cd SI ,000 to cover the cost of decor.u:on•, pnm il!ld rcfre-shmcnts at the :tnnual casino ru~t to be held lam in the semester. Coffman ruse requcstcd SSOO 10 bu} tlAO Merco receivers for the dormiton. dining room and the dormitory gameroom in the basement or Sbcnnan H.111. The board ~ked Coffm:in to rubmit 3 b~"'Cl.cd list of th ing~ needed for casino night 10 Oo1T1nge, •ho would also look into the rece1,ers. On Jon. 28. S500 ,1 as approprinrcd 10 ca!J.lllO n:~ht wi1h the pos~ibiht} of more at a later elate Concerning the rcce,,crs, "IIC ,tudcnt ~lhc Ground5 suggested 1h01 1hr monc} the do1m n:Jir.r:s on cMino night could be u~ed 10 pur.:hast llS ~n rC'Ceiver 1Aithou1 113, ing 10 take mone)' frcm ~S\:IC

•=·

furuh The ,na:tcr "'Ube dc:ih "''ht-} comm11t~. Conccm:ng the ,alenttne, Janee l,' 1:,c held f-cb. 15. (;,cc rda:ed <tor)' m p. 9) Gomnge 'l.l1J que<ttt,,nn:ure<> for the compu:er d3Ung same "tll be di,tributed th;ough oc,t Tac,da\ There b n,, prcltmmar) .:O\t for the pmc. but Sludcnt~ "JI be .).)1-.cd for a SI ftt to fi.nd oat "ho lheir "perfect d-3·e·· " The .:0,1 of the dao.:t be $1 tor \,udent< and ~~ tor t:ue,h.

Sm. Hu.- Sr~ announced that h,r the nc\t IACl'1' 1..r u I be pl.l.:ed m the l B c.1lc1cr1a to rollc.:t mQllC\ 10 be St'llt 1.:i [th1op1<1. The bo.1rd t~ iuk · lllg !ha.I exh stUd(TII il\C up ODe ffl¢ill nc\l \\CCI.. a.nd donate the S~ 10 the rchcf fund. The bo.uJ hopr, to a coJ1ectiL.

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SJ.000 10 Knd

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SIC Ot-an of lnsuucuon Q\.cn C.Uttol aJdre<.,ed the board conccnucg hli,,. ort.. to dt\ek,p a ~,ate" 1dc core cumculm (rm.tee! stOI) on r 11 l T~ 00.11d rn3Ee-\tcd

the) draft a letter 111 fa,or ot the plan to send to other student boards m tbc hope~ tn.at the, too,,. ,fl wrrort ii at thnr ropccu,c colleges. lo other acuon, the board -addreutd the t,· uc o! h.lving more open hour\ for c~m use ti} all \;IC ,tu<lenu. "IC<>ll~hl Rolh (W1lhanh) donn't ,,.ant people •hoo11ng because II mcsi.cs his Ooor up," Gorringe said. ••11,;u informed by \\ cs Hatch. director ol aux1liilry \.Cf\iccs. that the board u lool..mg at a $4,000 dcfku budiet (or thl' year. --dl5':us_\ed tliiJbiht) requirement\ for ~tudcnt board

mcmben. --voted 10 sptnd SS?..S on more movie 11cl.et\ thar arc a,a,lable 10 studrnl} in the Sub.,.ay for S2 each

lthonda Lilytarl photo

Snow girl Flsc·Jt'ar-old Nicole o.. en, daui:hter of NIC ,.nsll· Ing couch John Owen. dtllRhh in the slrdlc§s thrill or 11 cam pu, ~nowb11nk.

Former NIC nursing student loses appeal Dan Brttdm A ~ccond-ye:u IC nursing student lost the first round or appeals Jan. IS in an effort to be reinstated into the college's nursing program. Jeri Rutherford, 32, and the mother of three children, said she ,,.as dropped from Lhe progr.im la.st October" hen her ad,iscr informcd her that she had too many .. uo. sausfactories" (U's) in her clinical "-Ori.. The clinical program is on-the-job training at Kootenai \lcdical Center. where nudent nurses get hnn~-oo cxperlcmx. r\cx:ordmg to Rutherford, the maJorit)' of her unsausfac:tone, were in sptlling and charting or patients. ''It rl'all)' 1Aasn'1 a surprise," Rutherford said. "I had talked to a r~ girls who bad went Lhrough the same thing. and it was just like a prophc:cy.'' RuLherford said that thl' ,,.omen ,,.ere abll' to predict exactly v.bat "'as going 10 happen and when it ,,.ould happen and that took most of the shock out of being dropped irom the program. Rutherford. wbo made the dean ·s list last semester, said that all of her nu~ing grades had been Bs and As up until midterm lasl faU 3nd that she "had no problem" ,,.~th the pr0gram. Then. soon after the midterm exam, Rutherford said SM was called mto her ad,iser's office and told she ,,. as "borderline satisfac:tory" and lhat l.ll two ,,. eeks sbe would be "re-evaluated" because she bad received eight U's in her clinical "'ork. Two weeks later when Rutherford went to her ruMscr's office. she said sh.e was asked to sign a contract listing her problem areas. Her adviser told her that "'beo signed, it meant that if she received one more U in clinical she wollld automatically be dropped from tbe program. According to Rutherford. she obtaincl eight U's the: wbolc ftm half or I.be semester. and then she rcccivcd eight more in one day-the same da) s.hc ,,.as asked to sign the contract. Rutherford said she didn't sign the coot.raet and, "That"s when I decided to get a lawyer." According to Rutherford. when nursing students get too many U's in clinical. they arc au1omaticnfly given a failing grade in all of their classes and arc dropped from the program. ''Oinical is very subjective," Rutherford said. " Some instructors said, ' Do it thts way,' and some said to do it another WO)'. "

When Rutherford appealed carhcr th i1 mon th 10 the Commt11ce oo Adm1,s1ons and Academic Standards, she and her lawyer Anne Solomon Mkcd that 1he be rctrut.ated on a probationary penod with an advocate (a neutral observer) and that ,he have her midterm exam corrc<:ted in its cn ritcry. Rutherford s.ud she is dyslexic, .,.hich is a disorder cnu~1ng difficulty in reading and spelHng, and she felt she should be given more time on written c~ams. "\\ e lost everything," Rutherford s.aid of the appeal. but added that the ma11er 1s 001 finished. She said she will now take it 10 the: dean of instrucuon and higher ,r necessary Rutherford added that if she lost all the appeals at tbc college level that she would file a law suit against NIC and the nuu1ng program. ''But even if i win the appeals, I've missed 100 many clinicall and lirn week lee· tures," Rutherford i.aid. " I spent three yea~ in school and I Wai one semester away from making it." When contacted NIC Director o( Admi~sions David Lindsay and Steve Schenk. dircct0r or infonn;tiooal services. said they could not give out any details or the appeal because it infringed on the studen t's right to pnvncy. . At press time, the ow.come of the appeal with N'IC Dean of lnslfUCIJon OVlcn Cargo1 "'-a.5 not known.

Schuler elected president of NA CTC NIC President Barry Schuler was dccted president of the Northwest Association of Community and Technical Colleges at the organization's annual convention. Thirty-seven presidents of communi· I)' and technical colleges attended tbe convtntion whicb was held in Portland. Ore. Dec. 3 and 4. Schuler was elected b)' his colleagues to serve as the organization•s 33rd pre:si-

dent and had previously served as secretary and vice president. Scbu.ler's responsibilities will include addressing the co.nccrns, devdo~ments and issues confronting community cOI· lcges and technical schools lo the Northwest. He will al.so be responsible for organizing the program _for the J98S convention Dec. 9 and 10 in Las Vegas.


ftb . I, 1985 , ' (C StnliMl-3-

Convocations Speakers to focus on future b) Rbond1 U ) 11r1

"The An of Life \1md-Sc1 for the Fu1urt" 1o1,i }I be the lhcmc of 1lus seme:Ma'~ comocalion scheduled for Feb. 11 through 14 Leona H3~~n. convocauon c:omm,uce c:hair\'oman, s.iid 1ha1 1h1) it an open-ended con,ocauon de11gncd 10 be a m1nd-opc:nang l'CCl. touching on many field), \UCh u 'ltitualll). prejudK:c:1. children, married bfe, 1he en•1ronmcn1 and the an of h'1ng. Jcanann( \1nchc0, member or the com ocauon com· m111ee ond home economics in\tructor, ~id 1ha1 1his comoca11on'11pcalcers wtrt ch~ with an C)e 10 the hohM1c: approach 11 mal.ine an 1nd1vidual health) in spam. mind ;ind bod) The i.c,nott address. "Cclebra11n2 Life Health, t.01e and Joy," wlll be given by Dr Harold H. Bloomfield on l·eb. II a, 11 a m Bloomfield as a prae11cm1 l)lych1a1nsi and director or JX)Chtalf), ix>chotherap) and heal1h training at 1he "-'orth County Hohiuc: Hc-4hh Center an Del 'vfar, Calif. I le completed his psychiiitric training at the Yale University School of Medicine and is a world rcnov.ned lecturer. ~m1nar leader and be\l selhn& author B1oomficld'1 la1cs1 be11 .cller. "Mal.in& Peace v.ith Your Parents," hJs been featured m national mnga11nes

Author Carol) n Bird ...ill ~ i Feb. 11 at 10 a m. on the theme from her ne,,. boo.:, "Tht Good Yean: Your Life m the 2ht Ctntun " According 10 Business V. cci. magazine, ' Bird, as an interpreter of 1he here and nov. . IS a genuine nauonal resource · Bard's an1def ha,e appeared in Fan1il) C11.:le. Woman's Da) . \1 CSQ\Ulc and in OC\\~papcrs across the country. She ha~ also wnucn the follov.ing books: "The Inv ,1ble Scar," " Born Female." "The High CO§t or Keeping \I.omen Dcr,,n... "Caie Aga::u.: Coll~" and 'The Tv.o Pa)chcck \.iamage.'' Bur1on L. \\ bitt, regarded .u the country's foremost authont> on the cducalional de- elopmen1 of 1nfams and toddlers, will speak Feb. 13 at JO a.m on "The First Thr« Years \lake Your Life. " \I. hne i the founder and director or rhe Center for P.uent Educauon. SC1DOr COrbU.IWll lO ~! =n's ~ rv. Parents as Teachers proJCCI, author and ho~• of the TV seri~. "The First Thret Years.'' The Re> William Harper HouCCv.iU spcal Feb. I~ at 11 a .m. on " Realities \!ale and Female.'' Hough rcccl\ed has B.A. 10 chcmutry from \l.illiam and 'vfary Collepe and earned has \I A and Ph.D in

chani~t!} a1 \hch.g.an St3le Uni, cr~ll~ "htre he 31,o taught and did r=ch for fi,e , cJrs. Arter Hourr cottred the m1rum~. he o.ucndcd Starr King School tor \hnm(} v. here he rccei,·ed his B.D. Houif lus ,;encd 3S 3 t:n11anan minister n Red· "ood. Calif.. Seattle. \\ ash., and for the 1)3\I I ~ ,can !le tu~ ~~eel .n Spol.ant ,\II of lhc main sl)C'Cl:hcs v. ill be held Ill the C· A AudJtonum v. ilh a qu~ uon and an;v. er scs.1on follo" • 111! ID the SuB Filiru and, ,dC<l' v.ill be mo" n 1hrouehou1 the v. ccl. in tht Bonner Room of the SL B. Some oi the , tde<>\ 11' be a,a1lablc 1n the lib•an for student u<c A -.omto's burr,1 lunchton v. nh Carolyn Bird will be held 31 noon on Tu~dJ, m the Bonner Room The him ' What ,\re , ou \\ om.in, .. "111 be featured J I the lund1con. ln1=1ed "omen m.i~ contact Len \131· 1c, at 66- --.i~ e\l 191 for more 1n1orm:111on

'- u~ing faculty, student, 3l1d area hosp,cr workers will meet ""ith the ipc.ll..crs on \loodJ) at 1.30 p m. A ·1cr con,o.'311on wccl., 3 ,ar1e1~ oi mini ..CS\ions i, planned v.11h v.orl.~ho~. film\ and speal.m 1h:11 v. ill co•er a w1dt .irca 01 rubJttt\ dcahns v. nh the an of li\lng

Boise neglects NIC: Schuler b) Rita llollln11,~or1b NI( Pmidcnt Bu rry Schuler will ad· rc~ourco m accordance 10 v. here drc:H the Idaho I eg1slo1ure and request students choose 10 anend colkae.'' S2 8 milhon 10 fund the 198S-1!6 '<:hool So.: huler \a1d. And 111 a ipec11I mct"tmg Jan. ::1, the ~car Addt~\Jnll the board of ltu\lCn 81 IIS board appro\cd the lea\C-purchasc of a mceung on Jun 17, S.hulcr ,a,d 1h01 1973 o,crland coach for SBJIO. The l>ern1\c NIC i. bcmg \honed by the coBch , hould be dch~ercd in late I c111,lo1urc. lcxal tWl()O)CH and \tudents 1-ct,ruan , accordmg 10 Dour.las Halli· .irr forced to bear an unfau poruon or d.iy, accounta nt NI("\ c-0\I H11l1da> ~•d 1h11 ,o-tcch h;u an 'i.:liulcr ,upponed hi• or9umcn1 of rn1me tha1 .:an bC' rebuilt and mnallcd 11nlmr fundinii h>• pomtinf ou11hu1 NI( 1n 1hr cooch v.hcn II bc\.-omcs OCCC$511") cnroll, 6. S pcr,cn1 of 1hr ,1,1tc's \nd at 11, mee1rna on Dec 19, the a,adcm1c collerc ,1udcnl\ t>u1 that 'Ill ( ~ard apr,ro, cd ~hula's proroscd rolon!) rc,cl\c, 2 9 fll:rcent ol the 11cneral lct;e ~•lender tor 19, ~ • ~c~t fall, uccoum dollar al1<·11: ,lied h, I hr eta,~ v. rll bczm on .\uiJ. 26 and end I egl\huurc Ill l11nd h11:1hrr cJu,·:111on lk, . :'!O. \nJ sprin11 , cmC$tC'r •111 start 'ichuler ,,iJJ I hilt v. h1k NI("~ \HIIC' :ud ,111 Jon. lJ and end \la~ I<, hJ1 111,rc,1,rJ 111 pcr,cnt ,1111. IY7ti,7i, In nJJiuon, the ~ d a1,1ccd 10 spend lundmr lr.un l,x·al rropcrt) 13\t'!> ha, S<i.:~~ hl rurdt.uc 1hc murucuonal T\ mcrc:i,cJ ~li!i percent and 1hc am,,un1 cqu1rmc11t 1h:it ts nffilcd w 111:11 arC'll rd"cd rrom 1u111on nnd let\ has i:<>llc up 11.in,trr sd1ools ,1111 conunuc 10 a cpt IMO per,cni NI( ncd1" 111,m 11s T\ and radio In ndJ,11011, s,huler ah,1,u1d tha t ht' br<)JJ.-s,11nl! ,·uur!>C'5, -.,11 agnan rcqut<-1 $:? n11lh,111 Ill be~111 lnc b.'l!d al.o arf'l"O\tJ S.:hukr's n-,on,1ru,11on ,,1 1hr ht>fa1' ,.imputt'r qur,1 1,, ' fll:nd an appro,unate SI ::,3 ,,,en.-e hu1hl1ng "-:hulcr ,a1J 1ha1 11, rrrla~e the tu~ m 1hr <mall b.'11ln. although Nil \ enrollment,, 0011 1111hr s,.-hulcr told thr i-.,.irJ that the tubc, ac1 nuddle <1f ldah,1\ m,utution\, ma v.ere no1 repl.i..c.l. the r n11rc boiler 'Ill(_ 's libr.uy ha\ l,o1h 1hr ,mall~• ""ould need tl"I be n-pla.:ed at an appro\;· holding, and thr ,mallc:,,t -.,lumC) per mate .-0-1 or ~:.ooo. studrnt ho"er room, and r~roorn, " 111 be "V. r can't bu)· tht' bool., 1f v.r 'ol3nt .:,,nMru.;tcd b) ,o-tteh \tudtnh belund to," Schulc1 1111d during II IBlt'r 1n1cr• the outdoor ~tagc, 11ccord1ng 10 Schuler. , 1cv.. "We ha\e no pince 10 d1,pl:i) The: bu1ld1ng "ill be used for " Art oo them or 10 put them." the Green" durll\S the ummer a.od for Schuler said 1h01 the 11a" can afford the child dC'\clopment prosram dunfti to adequate!) fund NIC but that hr)l 11 tht school )car, Schuler wd. must rccogm1c NIC as the fastest grov.. The bo.vd also nppro,td an honoran mg college in the state. cilwnni av. ard rrogrum that v.-as propo:S· "We need to better 11lloca1e the ed b) Dean of Instruction Qv.cn (Mgol.

,r

Heari ng aid Dunng tM ~hJI,_ of 2 at• ,ound \"tnn for tht bt:i.nnt 1mp2irtd. Chn t (,a, nt ad· b1 rtt\'1•tr. •h1rb .. ,u pid, up radio •11•h from 2 1nin,mi11tr :ind 'CDd tht ,ound through 11ubf around hr., ntd,. T~ted ,n tht C-A >\ud11onum hut ,.ctlo:. lht dt•i« Is olltd 1hr \\ illitms As5istl\t Ltuning ,,1,m 2nd :illov.s ptoplt ,. Jth hearing d,fficullitt 10 undtrsllnd "'h:11 i., bf1ot !>lljd durinjl pt'rformanct--.

JU•b


Feb. l. 1985 ,1c

~ Idaho drivers slammed dan breeden

Montanans sure catch a IOI of fo:es up here on the Panhandle from the Bertha and Bob ee,,e,;-Than-Thous 11.ho anhabat the area Idahoans tell \font.anan ,okcs. bahhhhhhhb out onc-linm about sh«p and make casual crach m the claurooms. And that's cool. I can li~e v.1:h it. In fact, I 1eU as many Montanan jokes as tile nc:xt infidel. I figure it doesn't do any good to er) about it, so 11.e ~lontanans might as 11.ell laugh about it. Right? But, I tell )'3, after living bc:re almost 111.0 )ears. I 113\e found that there is at least one thing that Monla.n.a.ns can do that Idahoan\ can't, and 1ha1 's drive in the 11oin1enime I've noticed in the past sno11o -<:o\ered 11.ecks that Idahoans are still perplexed by a natural phenomenon Montanans refer to as "ice." It's amazing stuff. Some Idahoan-born scientists theorize lha! this 'ice" ~ caused b> water that has reached a temperature sub-32 degrees Farm.hcit. But studies are still being done. The Idahoan answer to this ''ice" seems simple and strrughtforward enough-they know that once the) stop, the tune it takes to get started again is great I)' increased. So, natural]). the Idahoan thing 10 do is not to stop. The problem the)• don't seem to reahz.e 1s that 1f the) don't plan on stopping, then they have to clear the inten«uon much quicker in order to ovoid any bruises 10 the car bod). So they punch it. However, when it comes 10 ice. there 1s a direct correlation between stopping and starting-you can't do either one in a hurry. An Idahoan Bertha nearly hll my \lUJ the other da> m Rosauers' parking lot. She then actually had the gall to Jump out of her car and point an accusing finger in my direction. I jumped out and pointed an C\en longer accusing finger at her. " What are you doing impersonating a driver?'' I said to her as I restrained my cool. "Young man." she answered. ignoring m)' statrment, "you almost made me hit you!'' ·•Wait a minute. Let me write that one down," I retoned. "Tell me, how many bo~ tops from Fruit Loops did it take to get your driver's license?" A passing patrolman apparently r.a" the CiOUd of hot breath enruc· ling our bodies and stopped to lend a hand. "I want this lad) arrested for drh'ing while under the inOuence," I informed the officer. The officer jerked his head in Bertha's direction. Bertha was astounded and stumbled backward as if hit in the bead by a shot glass. "I haven't had a drink in 20 years," she s1uuered. "Not alcohol." I said. "You're ob\iously driving under the influence of an Idaho dri\·er's license." That "·as a mistake-the nice police officer also bad an Idaho driver's license. Even as I left the spud-head Stale on my Christmas vacation and pointed Mob} 's {my great white van) nose east toward shecpland, I passed no less than a dozen cars in the borro11o pit between Coeur d' Alene and Wallace alone. And then, just when I thought it was safe to go back onto the h.igbwa)'s, a woman near Laurel, ~font. came off a sno11o-packed exit ramp, applied the brake and skated into the back end of a hay truck. As I passed, I noticed the proverbial potato state statement emblazoned on the license plate. And, just for the record, the truck was 001 headed for a sheep farm. o the next time you Idahoans talce a deep breath preparing 10 tell a Momanan joke, remember that I've probably got a funnier one. And if you think you are better drivers. I would probably have to say that you're full of bahhhhhhloney.

ntinel-4-

(__op_,_·n_io_n_p_ag_e_---..,,1) Boosters bounce student parking School L bad. in se sion. night classes have resumed and once again s1uden1, ha\'e been kicked in the jock s1rnp by the proverbial " big bananas." The other doy. students poured onto the campus jus1 a fter 6 p.m. to :mend their re pective mght cla:-scs. A 1he c educational-bound )l udcnt neared the SUB 10 take a left toward the administr:uion building. they aw. much to their hearts' disma). that all the parking places between the SUB and the gymnasium were reserved. Has the governor of Idaho called for a state of the state address? Has George Hanson come nonh to seek campaign funds? Have Ronald Reagan and his idckick Nancy come to 1hc college 10 1ell students why funding for education was cut again? Or has the honorable Richard Butler called another pro-Hitler press conference?

NO! NO! NO! And NO! The answer? Time was a n NIC men's basketball game, and all those spaces were reserved for NIC booster club members. Of course! Why didn 't they think of that? As NIC's fee-fi nding, tuition-tackling, education-enduring, text-toting students walked 30C to 400 yards in sub-freezing temperatures 10 their classrooms to team. the booster club honchos drove LO the same college, minutes before the game, in their warm cars, knowing that a parking place awaited them not more than 50 yards from the basketball court cheap seats. Not only is that section o f park ing the best lit on campus which makes ii much safer for female students, it is also the closest to the SUB cafeteria in which many students sit prior to and after their night classes. S0me1imes it is rather hard to dis1inguish whom this college is serv· ing: the athletes who get bigger audiences because of close parking, the boosters who visit the campus maybe twice a week, or the hard-working, average-American, seeking-to-learn student who pays his own Luition and fees only to find that all the empty parking places during his night classes are on the back forty. It's time the administration ta kes a look at its priorities.

(_ _se_n_tin_e_ls_ta/J~r__] The North Idaho College Sentinel is published sem.1-monlhly b> lht Publications Workshop class at North Idaho College. Members of the Sentinel SUH wW strive to present the news fairly, accurately and without prejudice. Opln· ions expressed on the editorial pages and In various news analyse$ do not necessarily renec:t the views or the NIC administratlon or the ASNIC student government. The Sentinel is entered as thlrd<lass postal material at Coeur d'Alene, Idaho 83814. Associated ColJegiate Press Five-Star AJI-Americ:an Newspaper Associated Collegiate Press Regional Pace.maker Columbia Scholastic Press Associ11tion Si.Iver.Crown Newspaper editor ..........•..... .. ...... . ...... . .• . ..... . .. . .... Dan Breeden ma02ging editor .......... . .... . .. . .............. . RJlJI HolUngswortb oews/ sportS editor ....... . ..............•... .... ........ . Don Sauer a.rtS/ entert.ainment edltor .............•..... ... . . ....... .. Kurtis Hall photograph} editor .............•.... .... ..... . ..•... . Mike Scroggie assisUlnt sports editor ........... . ..... . .. .... .. . . .. .. Sh.a ri Aldermaa advertising lllllDJlger ... . .... . . . .. . .. . .. . .... . .. . .. Barbie VanDenlkra cartoonists .... . ............ . ... . . ... . Troy J olliff and Uu Pemntb adviser .... . ..... . .. . .. .. ...•..•... . .. .. . . ... . .. ... .... Tim PllJrim reporters and photographers ... . .... . . .. ... . ... . . . .. Jeannie AJJtnbffl Laurie Bristow. Christine Butler, Steve Fenton, Rich HalllUlnn, John Hupes, Kim Hurlbert, J ohn Jensen, RJck.i John Kast, RhondJI Laytart, BriaD LeallY, Doon• L) nn, Ed McDol12ld, Leasa Moore and Paula Sc011.


Feb. I, 19851:-.IC Seotioel-5-

~

~

~ ~ e:,. LINES? WHAT YELLOW LINES'?

Students' memory clouded after first snowfall There has to be some correlation. Probably no one is aware of ii, bu1there must be one because it happens every year on the NIC campus. As soon as 1hc first heavy snowfall comes and s1ays around for awhile, almost all NIC students who drive can seem 10 lose their memories. 11 's 1ruc; they really do. Maybe ii 's 1he extra moisture in the air 1ha1 snturotes their brains, or maybe af1er they frill on the ice a few time~ the> suffer some mild brain damage. At any rate, no sooner do the yellow and white fin~ get covered \\1th solid precipitation thon students outommically forget " here they are. There have been cars parked evcrywh<.'re on campus. It's almost reminiscent of the professor who" a studying the leaping ability of the frog . The profes or would cut off a frog ·s leg one at a time, and after each one he would yell "jump" to the frog and then record the di~1ance of each jump. Finally, when the la.st leg of 1t,c frog was rcmo,ed and the professor had yelled "jump" several 1ime , the conclusion wns ob,1ous: after a frog lose~ all four leg~. ii becomes deaf. Of course, everyone knows that there is no correlation bet\loecn a frog's legs and its hearing just~ there is none be1,,een the lirsi nowfall and an NIC student's memory--but you'd ne,·er lno\l, it. It's a great excuse. One student sat in his car with the engine idling in the middle: of the: street while he waited for the car in from of him to dri, c on. After about live minutes he noticed that there was no one in the other car and that the car wasn't running. The owner of the unmoving car had apparently park.ed it there in the middle of the street and had gone 10 class. The student knew he was safe. If he got a ticket all he ,, ould ha, e

10 say w~. ''I didn't kno\\ I couldn't park there. I didn't see anyycllow paint or signs. Ho\\cver, the couns ruled many, many moons ago that ignorance is no defense. So the next tune any of you 1 IC students get this inspirational nash 10 park in a crosswalk or in front of a fire hydrant because you can't ~ec any yello\\ paint. remember-if they catch you and cut your arms and legs off, just stare at them as if you can't hear.

Letter ~ riter ars

School needs athletic supporters Dent Editor

,u an a,,d sport fan and a lo}al ~ IC student, I :un disma>-ed with the auenctmce oi students at ~IC sporting e,ents .. IC bas a rich tradiuon of excellence m sports and has hem represented in oauonaJ tournament) in C\Cf) sport that ~ IC participates 10

at the 1'JC ..\A le\el This ma)

s«m mino1 unless you consider the sill' of "!IC compared 10 most other Junior colleges. The IC'\ el of e, cellence is cspecia!J~ 1rue in IATCStling v.here :-OIC has won se, eraJ nation11 cl!amp1onships. h mus1 be discour:lging co be a rumonal champion and com~te before an empty house a1 home. I could >et a possible reason for s1udents 001 ,mending sporting

C\':nts if they had 10 pay 10 auend lhem, but as a s1Udent of NIC. admission is free, so the price is right. There could be a connic1 w11h ~,ud es but a look at the Fon Ground 1ells me that the students aie not s1udymg 100 percem of the time . I. for one, 'NOuld like 10 sec the ~tudents of NIC auend all the spor· ting C"\,eats and ~how our a1hle1es that -..e are behind them and maybe v,e v,ilJ ha\C some new national champions. It .... ill give NIC some nat ional recogni1ion and we all will have more pride in our school and maybe in oursel\es. Sincere!),

William A. Larson NIC s1uden1


F,b. I, 19851NIC

ntin,1-6-

Ji-----------

(___m_o_re_o_11_in_i_o_n__ Grading policy runs over average students 11 's hke dn ..ng a ne" ..:ar do"n the high 3) and ha\lng the engine fall out It'., no big deal really. "!l's JU\t one of tro\e ti ings that n~ to be worked out," ASMC Pres1Jcnt Chuck Whit ocJ.. -..aid m r~ponse to a na"' in the nc" grading pohq. Man) "!IC \tuden: probabl> could ha,e cared le~ about the ne,, grading polic). or for thal matter. v.hat their final grad~ .,..ere The ne\\ polic; undoubtedh benefited (Orne qudent • ho.,..C\er. for others it was probably a defeating "'reck~~J>C'Ct3ll) after the} recm ed their grades o,er Chri~tmas break. It 's tough to work all the bugs out oi a oC\\ poliC). and undoubtedly, whenever one is enacted, a fe11 fenders ""ill be bent. \\ nh the ne"" grading policy, it is the people at the lowest Je-,el of the "a,erage'' s.:a.le who might find their bumpers squashed. While the world's greatest philosophers and ps)chologist:, ha,..e ne\'er been able 10 give the term "a,crage·· a \\idel) acetpted definition, colleges everywhere boldly say that a,erage is determined br the C grade. But under the new grading polic), C isn·1 e'{actl} tl\crage. So. the people who wind up under the "heels of the ne-\\ grading policy are the C-minus students. Currently, because of the new grading polic}. a C-minus is worth only I. 70 in computing cumulative grade point a\'eragcs. And since the NIC Student Handbook states that a student b pla~-ed on academic probation if his GPA falls below I. 75, an "a,erage" student whose cumulati"e GPA is 1.70 can be srusp,ended and is ineligible for graduation. "Personally," Whitlock said, " I don't feel that anyone who gets a

C-minus a,crage should graduate." So take that all you ,l\cragc students. The ne,1 polic, \\ as e~tablished to give 111s11 uctors greater lalitudc m grading, \\hich ii doe . but it ,1as not C'>tnhli,hcd ti\ puri of n gel· tough polic) on a,·crnge ,tudents. The adminb1ra11on, cumculum council, ~tudcni board and college senate all failed 10 realize that a shift in one policy would ncccssnate a fair ~h1f1mg in related policies. Perhaps it's time tor the policy mai...cr:i of NIC 10 reconsider the gradinf ,ystem and mai...c it consis1cn1 with the policy of academic pro. ba11on and ,u,pen~1on.

(

press ethics

Accepted gifts can blur objectivity Free g1f1s and other considerations arc one problem of journalism cthie5 1ha1 affects all levels of reporting and editing. Pre~ents, free lunches, admirnons, membership~. tnps, 1ickets and other benefits 1ha1 are readily accep1ed by any businessper~on or corporate official should be returned immediately or refused by journalists if they are 10 remain free of innuence in doing their job. The NIC Sentinel does not hove adequate funding to buy tickets 10 all sporting and cuhural events, but ii doo pay for the eJCpcnscs of reporters assigned 10 cover luncheons or banquet, of political group~ or board~. For TRUE NEWSPAPERS, the rules governing what 10 accept is simple: Accept nothing of value in any form.

Club's new deal can blossom into 'big deal' Tl•(a

I " as nervous when I walked into Peabody's. Rela."<ed when I walked out. And since J hadn't expected 10 have a good time, I "'as surprised. But playing "Vegas.style" blackjack with funny money at Terr)' Eastman's club was a pleasant experience. ·'Mom," my daug~1er K~lly said as I left home, "don't speak to anybody. Peabody's 15 nothing buc a meat market." "Don ·1 worry Kell}." I 1old her. "Those carnivores are not interested in .iQ.year-old beef.•· She didn't laugh. Instead she reminded me to park near the door, lock the car, get my keys out of mr purse before I left the building and not to loiter in the parking lot. An attendant handed me SIOin fake money v.hen I entered the casino. I was disappointed. I Jove blackjack. h's fast. h's fun. And it's exciting. And the more money there is on the table, the more exciting the game is. I ,,amed to be a high roller. but with a measly SIO bankroll, I knew I'd have 10 play tough, use good money management, grind it out, build it up and pra} for luck. But 1ha1 short roll made playing blackjack wilh funny money fun . The game became more like the real thing and less like pretend. I was delighted when my friend was dealt three blackjacks in a row. envious of players who could afford 10 risk SIO a hand and chagrined when I lost, but delighted when I left. The evening cost onJy S1.25, the price of a beer. Although I bad a ball. I'm not surprised the boys at the sherifrs office are nervous about the mock casino Eastman began operating Jan. 9. After all the sheriff and his staff are paid to be suspicious. And although Northerners ha,e been talking about gambling e,er since 1he slots went out. it LS illegal in Idaho. Actuall}, people don't gamble al Peabody's. they play blackjack. However. the sherifrs office is v.orried that once lhe players lose interest in the game, gambling will begin. Kootenai County Undersheriff Larry Broadbent was quoted by The Spokesman-Re\1ev. :u saying, ''Give it a month and then sneal. dov.n

)

hollz•ngsworth

there and sec if it hasn '1 degenerated into something." However. I'II lay odds that Sheriff SLaJder and the boys will be covering Peabody's as close as green felt covers a crap table. Eastman won't have a chance to let his "I 00 percent entenainment" degenerate into gambling even if he wants to. But I doubt that Eastman wants to let his game degenerate into gambl· ing. Eastman's tables are fun. They're :i great ice breaker. People can relax, drink and LaJk while they enjoy playing cards at no cost. II looks as though Eastman has a great idea. Aad that's the problem, of course. The problem may not be degenerating, ii may be blossoming. Ir the idea is popular with the public. others may follow Eastman's lead, and with enough tables in enough clubs, someone will stoop low enough 10 pick up the lightning-fast bucks that can be gleaned from illegal gambling. And the gamblers will know where the paying tables are a long rime before the sheriff will. After all, Stalder doesn'l have the man power to police very many mock casinos. The number of two-bit poker macmnes that were operating in the area before the law finally picked up five that were alle,!edly oaying off ought 10 convince Boise or 1ha1. Perhaps legislation is the only sure winner 10 1his losing proposition. A lav. , closely paralleling Washington's, 1ha1 closely defines and pro· hibit.s gambling equipment is in order. Until then. let the good times roll.


ftl>. I, 1915/ NJC Statinel- 7-

Conductor Snyder's job becomes 'labor of love' Conductors are ancient re1Jows in dust) tuxedos with 1mpossibl) long coa.J· tads, who stand up before an orchestra or band and v.a,e their batons til e a dumpanuc wnh spasms. Right? Wrong, at least in case

,,c·,

Todd Snyder 'IJIC's conductor and a mu,1c instructor, 1s scarcely 30 ycan old and dcfinnel) the 1ntithe,1, of the musty, boring conductors or Holl)""ood portr•>•I

Ralj('(J In lo"•• Snyder 11,as mvohed ,..,th mU\IC early m lire and by age 16 "'" ahead) stud) mg mu• ,c.al ~or~ to undcmand mu\1C rrom a conduc1or'1 point of view Attending the University of lo,..a. Snyder met • conduc1in1 in\lrue1or .,.,th .,.horn he formed a \lx-;car teaching rela1Jon,h1p which gave him the talcnl\ and the skills he has today "I ,..orkcd my ,hoe\ ofr." Sn)der laughed '"The mmuctor wa, dcman ding. but he apparently felt that I was .,.Orth II " 'intdtr rttt1~,d t,..o dettrees-an

undergraduate degree in percu,sion performance and mu,ic educa11on, and a mtuter's degree in conduc11ng. Arter graduating, Snyder worked at Alma College in M1ch1gan a, u conduc 101 for the collcje band and the com mumt) orchestra for two years, then "enc brien) 10 Ne"' York and back 10 Michigan before coming 10 NIC in 1981

(

arts/entertainment

)

"I came bccawc Alma College was as good 35 it .,.as going 10 gei," Sn)dcr said "The po1en11aJ had bcffl reached, and I "''U in the position of Just keepmg II going " I •101cd 10 g.h c ~mcthmg producu,e 10 a communll). and thal°s exactly v,.ha1 '1,JC had 10 offer,°' he said.'"\\ e had a new building. an administrauon tha1 "as definite!) suppom,e or the an•• a.nd a great deal of po1enua1:· After three )ea!\, Snyder reels lhat the potential 1w not even been full} tapped at '-IC "There arc I I '.hangs 10 be done, iull a~enues 10 go upon," he said, dai,pla>· mg h11t usu.ii cnthusia•m about music and the art, n)dcr • orks •ilh and 1eac.hes the NIC orchestra. percu~,,on ensemble. ,ymphon1c band, Jaz.z en\C:mblc. and a ne,. group called the Coeur d'Alene Chamber Pla)cn, amonr 01hcr classes and du11cs He also teachc\ a \p«1al ,cmmar each )tar, thi, 11mc focusing 1,pcc1r1c.1lly upon conducunl!. Be,,.een teaching, conducting. reheur,mg. :ind manngma 10 e\lSt. Snyder has found 1ha1 there 11, httlc or no 11mc for ~aal hfe or hobbies m h \Chedulc " I guess m> Job 11, my hobby,'' he rcOc,.;icd. "Somcum~ lhc Job is'<> bu\) that I don't tal.c 11mc 10 \ta)" in shape or even cat ngh1 " One or Sn)der'\ par11cular mtcrC'II\ 1s

Text by Kurtis Hall photos by Ed McDonald

\l,.tt ~, 1n,1ng--,a,dtr p111.> oat som« nut) •hilt dir«tmg lht- '- IC -.~mpboOIC 81111!.

Conducting students- - 11) dtr orr,~ uu~liotl) 10 the ~,udtau in his

1hc suo-c, of !I.tau:: cwi, he tea.:hn for non-m= mAJO!'\ He cnJO>°' the oppor, IUOII\ 10 .:ommumi:"lJ'C some1hln1 that L' ,cl) 1mpon:uit 10 h1m 10 a group of people •ho arc Olbervo~ ~ncnlig.luenC'd abo'Jt music "I h.1\t' in hour C\C'T) \1onda), \\ ~ ' and Fn<b, 10 sh:uc some of m, "' ~h •1th people,'' he said "I'm aho able to use the groups I ,.orit "' 'l 10 commurucate m, n intents and the mrems ot the composen v. bo,. ro:e the

condutll n1 ~mtnar ''"' ·

mU)1~.··

°"'

,a,

d(r lnttod tu l<ttp "'or I.mg Bl '-IC and dcvclop1n1 the po1en11al unul ,. 100. u c..,hauucd---h1ch won't be .n,tune soon, according to him .. \\ c ha.\c muulcd "Sn)dcr s:a1d of the mi."11. ckpll!tment "\\c ha,e worLcd hard \lllh our 11udcnu and behind the )<.-encs 10 pu1 \l>mcthmg together here, and '"c arc u cttd1ng " II Todd Sn,der t)p1c.1t or the at· 111udcs m :-.. IC', mwa, dcp,mmcn1, 1ha1 department ... ,11 do more Ihan su.xeed-11 ... ,11 nourash.


Feb. I. 1985, NIC Scntinrl-8-

Public poetry reading scheduled for Feb. 6 b) 11.urth Hall

Creath e beginning Ari s1udrn1 Jeff P11ul I..O{:)btrgh ,i..e1rh,, a fi,iurt ,a bi, fbblon illu,1n11lon elllS~.

,

~ Minds seize wrong songs kurtis hall

A song followed me home just the other day.

I was tapping away on a typewriter and desperately not listening to the vaguely musical din emanating from the stereo system behind me. 1 really detested the song that was on, so much so in fact that I got up and left halfway through it. Bad mistake. The subconscious pan of my brain, not being endowed with either intelligence or taste, kept trying to finish the song by itself, and I'll bet I sang the darn thing 30 times 10 m>·self that day, seemingly independen1 of my conscious will. Sometimes I think musical artists do this deliberately, so that tortured individuals like me will buy their albums just to hear the end of the song and put our subconscious recorders 10 rest. I can see a group of band members giggling into their Saturdaynight beer as they plot to turn our minds against us: "Okay. we're gonna take that (chuckle) third verse and slick it in their heads like a broken record, and (har ,har) watch the profits go up!" Really, though, l guess it's more the bad taste of my subconscious than the underground plot of some musical guild. l say to myself, "No more heavy metal! L'm going back to the easy stuff before my ears rattle loose!" And this rotten lillle voice in the back of my mind says, "Wanna bet? One, two, three!" as the guitars begin to crash. Since shutting up the lillle voice would require suicide, I suffer more or less in silence. I know it's gonna be a bad day when half my brain hates the other half. and I go through the day in a glassy-eyed daze, absently singing some combination of Quiet Riot and B.J. Thomas. If you should see me in this state, just remember I'm not really a lunatic. I've just got a song following me home again.

"

\n c,emng oi roc1r, rcaJintl b, P.iul larz,,l.1 Jnd B1>b \\ ngl~, '"" be prc-.enteJ on l·cb. o .tt our,. Ek in C,,cur J'Alcnc. 3,,."0rwng 10 Enslt,h In ,1ructor Janw, l',l.;Leod Doth J)()(t, 11n: "1Jd) knl'"n m the , or1h\\ e-.1. and 1ht pubh, 1< m, 1t<'d ll' Jllend The reading 1, bnns 101nth ,pori,orcd b, ,he ' IC Ln11h,h Jcpa rtmcnl ,111.J Orea.I. the , 1c c1ca11,·t' " nllnf d uh, \lei «id ,;uJ 7.irzHl..11, a \h,,oul.i. \lont rode,, Cl'" bo, Jml a ,elf pro,:t.umcd 111e en 1hu,1a,1 "ho ha, rut:ih,hed numer1111, l'<'ICTII' and 11n1holo.:1c,. ,J\ " ell ,\\ I\\ O ,olum~ or f!OClr )•,"( 'all l'.le I ucl..v" and "The \J al c·UP of k e ' ' 7..art),l l re.id ,II 'IIC in 1974, 197S, 19~6 and 1981 He \\J \ a Iricnd ond form~ ,tudcn1 of ano1hcr orlh" C\I poc1. the I.lie R1churd Hugn Lauded b) one cnllc a, the " incornnuon of poct·hcrocs of yore,·• Zarqd.i Vi mdccd an unu sual combinauon: :i Polc-1umcd-cowbo)•turned·poct who display, as much ialcnc m his ongmol comp())111ons as he doe\ 111 a rodeo saddle. As a \\nter, he I ) the equal of any contcmporar) paet from 1hc fine-am field of h1gh<lass uncversi ucs. A long-time bronc rider, Zarzysk1 \\nttS paeiry that IS as powerful nnd un. prcdicLilblc as chc 3nunols he rid«:l. In addition to his riding skills , he 1s a qualified college foremy and English instructor and a visiting lecturer, w11h a degree from the Umvermy of MOO· Lana in crca11, e "riling (wuh emphasis on poet ry), and a degree from rhc

Umvcr,11) ,11 \\'i,_.on,m in Cngli,h nnu b1,1lnf!). l ;Ir t Hl..1 ha\ been rullh,hcJ m , .ir1,,u, mag.i,h1e, nnd perillJ1cal,, m• duding the ~l,1ntJnn Prn,pe,1ur. 1hc t•on land Re, 1c11 , ()1111nerl) \\ c,1. Sl\11. l..1-.llcr Rc11c11 and \\c,1crn \\ 1ldl.rnd, Aho J..no11 n i1' ., rue c111hu,ln"· or "pl,:.ro111.111i.1~... /.cr1),l.1 h,11 ,r,cnt m.ul\ un h11u1 111 rc,taur.inl\ and J..11 .:hen, . ,amphn11 e,c, vtlune fr I'm 11oo<1 <11' Of!f!lc hi 1uur cceam nml fill\111 "Pie ,, 11 1100d no111r~d 1hmg." he rcmJr l..ed once, durmg on 1n1cr\lCI\ "Not hkc l!,11..e Cnl..c I\ 111~1 " llob Wn11k} 1111, publi,hcd two col· lc~t11in, 01 poetry, .. rhc S111k1ng Of Cloy C11)·· and "The Glo" ," and he i1 on tH\OCtoic profc,~or of Pnglhh JI I e\\l\·(.1:irk S1rue College 111 L~w111on. Wrigley\ work ha, been pubh1hcd 1n ,•nt1ou, moga11nc!, including 1hc J\mrrican Poeiry Review. Par11,an Rcv1e11. l' oc1ry Nonhwes1 und rhe Ohio Review Wrigley Im, received 1wn wrulng fcllow,hips from 1hc Nn1ionnl Endow. mem for thC' Ar,,. I hs third collec11on of f!OClry. "Moon in 3 M:uon Jar," ho, recenily been acccplcd for publicnllon by 1he Un1vcrmy of llhno1s Prc~s and should appear early in 1986, McLeod said. The combined rending, 1he f'in1 done by the 1wo p()<:ls 1ogc1hcr m almo~t n decade, will take place at 7:JO p.m. 01 1he Soups. Etc. res1auran1 on lron..ood Drive For more informa11on. coniac1 Mcl..eod 111 667,7422. Ext. 309.

'Night Music' rehearsals to begin b) J ohn Hughe~ Rehearsals begJn this week for the NIC spring musical. "A Liule Nigh1 Music" b) S"phen Sondheim. The play opens March IS and will include performances on March 16, 21, 22 and 23. The pla)•, bas«! on the 19S6 film. "Smiles of a Summer Nighl." by Ingmar Bergman, will be directed by Robert Moc. "The fact that all the mu}iC in the play i.s in 1hrce-quam:r 11mc makes rhe piece unique," Moc said. The music will be directed by NIC music Instructor Todd Snyder. Others on 1hc st.a ff include Le$ Baud, set and light design; Denms Craig, vocal direc1or; and Carol Woodbu.f). chore.ograpber . Auditions "ere held earlier this week. so a list of cast members was not available a, press Lime. .., . "A Lmle Night Music." wluch won a Tony Awa1d and a Drama Cnuc s C1rdc A11,,ard for best musical. is billed in promotional material as "a fairy talc f?r adults. set in the enchanted birch groves of Sweden at rhc ,urn of the cen1ury. mhabned by leisure<la.ss people "'hose most pressing problems revolve around their pa5l, pre· sent and future affairs of the hean... d "Even though• ight Music' is a musical. it doesn't fit the mold of the StaJldar American Broadway mwical form ·• Moc said. " It doe5n'1 have a dancing chorus of hundreds or the obligatory ballet ~r w foot-swmping, barn-burning dance numb(r . . that is the customary close of act one in many shows." Moc said that the musical score features many numbers wcll·known rn !"u,1cal th~tcr circles, but most viC\\'ttS will recognize ''Send in the Clowns,·• which wti popularized by Judy Collins. . .. M saJd ··1t's really a very fllle p1= of theater. with music m lhr«_. qu~ umc. .oc · All performances "ill be held a1 8 p.m. in the Com'!lum~~uoo-Arl.S Audi1onu~: Tickets will be S4 for the general public and S2 for semor cm~ns and sruderns. A mission 1s free for NIC scudents.


Feb. I. 1985/NIC Senlincl-9-

(____s_c~_e_e_n_s_ce_n_e_ _J 'Country' tear-tugging tour into bumpkinland b) Dan Brttilen

II seems J' ve been in love with Jessica Lange ever since her scducuve housewife/wai1ress rou1ine in "The Postman Alwa ys Rings Twice." However. when I vie1Acd the movie .. Coun1ry," starring Jessica and Sam Shepard, I tried 10 keep my objcc1i,i1y intac1 . It wasn'I easy. The s1ory unfolds in the cornfields of a rural Iowa communi1y in which Jewell (played by Lange, and the name itself a symbol) and Gil Ivy (Shepard) own 180 acres of land and a s.ack full of sheep. Afler two disappa,nting years of crops, falling prices and U.S. embargoes 10 other coumrics, the FHA demand, payment in 30 day\ of the $96,000 1hat is owed it. The plot revolves around the Ivy family's plight and their auempt 10 save the farm thal has been in Jewell's family for over JOO years. Jewell's fa1hcr, Otis, played by Wilfred Bnm-

I), Ii\~ on the farm as well and \I.Orks as a hired hand, but the burden and blame for the unpaid debt rem squarely on the shoulders of Gil Sub-plots include Gil's failure 10 fight ad\er-

sity \I.hen he is prepared 10 thrO\I. in the to.... el to the FHA. and loss of his son's respect "hen be turns 10 drinking ra1her than farming. The Mory, I'm sure, is based on true facts and depicts v.ell the ba11lc bet"een 1he small-farm tillers and the large pa'Aerful banking monopolies. The mo\ie def'initely pulled a1 m} no~talgk mmgs and made me long for the good old da} s "'A hen this bank used to loan money on the man. not on the numbers." "'eedless 10 say, Lange pulS in an ovationd~-serving performance as she pulls herself up b} her apron straps and rallies her famil) and neighbors 10 ba11lc the monster that is knocking at all their doors. The movie is well cast. and Shepard also does

'I do! I do!' presented The Broadway music:al "I Dol I Do!'' will be pre!>Cnted 1onigl11 and tomorrow nigh1 nt 1he Coeur d'Alene Communit y Themrr on Gorden Avenue. The play, which opened Jon. 25, will ol~o be prcscn1ed on l;cb. 7 and 8, w11 h the nnol performance on Feb. 9. "I Doi I Doi" is 1hc mu,icol ,1ory or o mnmage bc1wecn n )'Oung couple, Michael nnd Agne5, plo)•cd b) Alnn Poth and Kun Le ... ,,. Tite \lory 1roce\ them rrom 1hrn wedding dny through life into old o~c. Wrh1cn by Tom Jone( nnd I lorve)·

Schmid1 , "I Do! I Do!" ha$ enjo)·cd great populanty on Broadwa), and one crillc after the firsl Broadway performa,ncr ~aid thal "this mu\1cal ma)' run forever." Skip Fr:wer will direct the musical, and Carol Woodbury 1S ,n charge of chorcogrnph). Set dc,1gn 1s b) Jac I. Green. and Leigh Murrell and \large Ricken arc lhe co,1ume dc\1gncrs. J'or more mformuuon, call the C'oeur d'AleM Communn, Theatre :11 667 1.323.

Student nurse receives scholarship NI( nu"ing ~1udcn1 c ,nd> hm wJ, 1he tc..,p,,cnt or 1hr SJOO I \ta 113\ln Scholar,h1p at 1hc o«cmbcr t, mccung ol 1hc NIC' Nur\lng S1udenl\ i\,,oc131ion. a,cord,na 10 Jnnicc Sonier,. ,ccrc1nr) ol 1hc I S1\ Somer~ ,nid 1h1111hc II\\ nrd i\ b.i:.cd on ,chol11r,h1p, nctd .ind P4rl1~1p;111on ,n the INSA. Money ror 1hc ,chola1 ~hip ,~ ri11,ed b~ ,cllmg mcd1C:1l ,uppht'\, bunon,, entr.inct' re~ from ,pnn11 ..cminar\ nnd n ln,ngno teed. "luch ,, ,,hcdulC'd lor Feb. 15. SQniC'I'~ \Uld. l·nrr 1, 11 ,econd•ycar n,,oc1111c degree R • st udcnt.

Valentine dance scheduled Frida)', Feb. IS b 1hc ,c1 dnte for the AS IC \alent1nt''s 03} 03nct' The dnnl-c begin, 01 9 p.m. ,n the Ul3 gam~ r()(\m follo\\mg the men', l!:Ul.t'tball game agam,1 lht' Collctic of Southern Idaho fhe b:ind, Rare ronn. "ill be there to ,uppl)' the mu~,..., nccordmg 10 1\SNIC' \.:11,it,c, Director Denn" Gomngc. Rcs~lts of the Computer Dat1n1t Game '"ll be pro,,dcd 1or the charge of SI. and 11 \~~1111 ,ong "'II be pln)'ed tor those "ho .ire motched and "i,h 10 dnnCl' \\1th their computer dntr. Comngr \ Ute! Thcrr "'ill t1lso bt- food and prize, a,;ulablt' ,\dm1s,1on " 'll be SI per pcr<.:>n. for more tnformatton, ,onta(I Gomn~c 01 ,t,a~.,.s::2 t'\I ~6-

a good job as 1he fa1her broken man \\ho is O\Cr· shado\\.ed by his "ifc:'s will 10 iight. Their son, Carlisle. pla~·ed by Levi Knebel. gi\es a classic la1e-T,, entie1h-Cemu11 farmboy performance. and the old man. Otis. gi"'tS the mo\ie enough comic relief lo smooth ou I the tensionrilled moments Even being the macho man 1ha1 I am. if I hadn't been so bus} taking notes, thoe mo,ie ~ould ha,e been and is a mild tear-tugger. Other than Lange. the best performance in the mo,·ie ,,as a mmor role by Jim Osterkamp. \\ ho pamays a retarded neighbor boy by the name of CO\\bO\. Co,\ bo~ is used 10 symbolize the nahete of the rural farm people as the} tr} to strike back at tht.' banking mons1er that always ,,ms in the long run. The movie ise,cellenth done and on the Dan Breeden 1-thru-1 iilm seal~. 11 gets a .i. 101 a"ard. And. oh. just one more 1hmg-1hank~ Jessie.

AS NIC ACTI VITI ES Intramural Co-Rec Racquetball Entry Deadline - Feb . 15 at 4 p.m. Play begins Feb. 23. All entries must be in the IM office in the Subway on time. Open to all full- or part· time students. faculty or staff of NIC. Part-time students must be carrying 6 credits.

Jon Sirkus Catch a ris ing star Wednesday , Marc h 20 Outdoor Rec Spring Break Trip Meeting

Noon on Feb. 6 Rec Office in the Subway


Feb. I. 198Si NIC Sentinel- IO-

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I

Dean's list honors 63 b> Paula Sro11

The '-ortb Idaho Coll~ Dc:ln's Lisi for 1hc fall semester of I9S4-SS has b«n reln,ed " 1th 30 acndelll.lc studffla and 33 \<X.IUOnal s1uden1S being n:uned. S.udcnu "ho rccri,ed I gndr pom1 a~~ of 3.-s ind abo\c compr-~ 14.J percrnl of the 2"0 \OCation.al <tudcnu enrolled 31 'IIC. and I. ~-cn1 of the Z.,005 full-1imc aadrnnc <ludents \\CIC named to the dean·s list Student\ named to the 3;adem1c Dean\ LL•t arc a< rouo... \. From c~..· d' Alene llrc Laur3 Doutt3.U, ._cnncth Ha,mna,i R.11a Holling.worth, Donna Ho\·l;ind. John Ja.:ob- \j~C) Plan. Cameron mart. Jen me Lamb-Topp, E'lcn Turnbull and John \\ nhero" l\odemiC' ~1udcob fr0'11 Po-.1 Falb arc Carol Fo• ler \luione H Sharon John,l.ln .ind Jon k.O)l).

Other ;.::Ddcm1c studt"'II< •nC'luJe EIUJ1be1h f-r;ink, Jud) Hodge and Laura T"°'a.h H.a\dcn La._,, Cath) Campbdl and Patno.1 ~Ile, S.tndroin1: Chmtinc Grcs.g, Sonnen Ferr• S1. an H,11k) and Delore, .Stc-'eru, Rathdrum: \IJDd~ S•c,rmon and Linda Lim• phr~ \\ all:l.::t,

Thom.u G

,d(n.

Spml Lal.c. \h,helc

\\ t: It, ~dl<>u: and Lorre <;,ro;ut, \l~,l.l\\ Si .i.Jcnt~ from \loni.an.i arc Ed,..ard B001cck1, fl, ,..,n .on Falh; Came !1:c,1er, Pla1M, .and \hchacl

l'-loore , East Helena. \ oca1ion1t ~ludcnlS from COt'ur d'Alene are Ja.<on Au<tin, Ronn 01,on-Bro" n, Charles Bre\\cr, Kelly Cope. Barbnra Fra.1cr, Ethan ltolromb, John Hum, i\lark Mcrhab and Da,,d StommC), Vocauonnl <1udcn1s from Po~! Full< include Craig E11ck,on, Cnlc (lhddcn. Phyh,< ll ntlcy, James McCormnd, , Kmu Pope. Dougln, Sncvc nnd Theodore Corncl<cn 0 1hr r •001ion11I Mudrn1s include Penny Brndburv and Vickie Mo, cr, Rathdrum; John Tucker, Sand. point. I c~hc B3rbcr, Napk,: \ rthur Widener, Bon· nc~ Fcl"T}': Randoll Bedwell, St.Mori"'; Scou Svingen and Vernon I 31".on. " cllogg: 5'1.lll Daugherty, O<born: Jo,cph I hi" I. in, , Poca1cllo; Willinm Rcma~lc. Co11011wood. John Long, Pinehurst; and Jame, Enik , Orofino L,o n11mcd l o !he HK:allonol Dean', L1<l from 0111 01 ,101c arc \\ O) ne Cri,morc, Ploln,, Mont.; Dnrrcn J.icl.<on, Pabon, t-lllDl : Mar l. Warnken, Superior. i',10111 : and John White, C.onncll, wn~h T\\<che <tudcrus \\ho aim 111.1dc 1h~ llcr111'< li-1 ore Included 111 the percc nlUgc,. bu1 1hc1r numc\ nrc 11Q1 indudcd in the li,1 hcc.1u,c 1hcy dad not 111\ t NI{ per· mi~,1011 10 rdca,c i11lornm11on ohl.lul 1hc1r ucadcm1t pcrtormam:c.

Students to be rechecked for TB 1'1,IC nur~ Joanna l',,1aonov1,h said tha1 nil 111berculo~1s tcm conduclcd or,cr o ca,c "'as found on c:impu\ la\t mn~1er proved nc11n11vc. 1\ \ludcn1 contrat led the contagiou\ di,Cll!ie in November ond Marinovich \Jld oll 67 people 1e,tcd a., n rc,ul1 will ha~c 10 be rctC"Slcd in l·cbruory. The 51uden1 "'i1h tuber,ulom I\ under 1he care of a ph)·\ician and hns moved out of s1.i1c ~ilh her family. 1\ rtcr 1wo yeim of mcd1cu1ion, her tubcrcul ~ 1, will pro· bably be comple1cly healed, Morinovi,h \Old.

!r--------------------------• The Video Station! I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I

Rent 3 movies & VCR for $9. 95 for 24 hours with coupon. Offer Good Monday Thru

Thursday Expires Feb. 7

Security Required

765-3474 Sttvc fcD IOD photo

Bird bout :-;1c C:irdin1I Tro~ Jolliff ,n1erta.lns the cro,.d during a ...-reslling m_a1ch by tryiot: 1 1111.edo"n on ,.-r~ lltr Ken Rucker.

501 W. Appleway E Coeur d'Alene, Idaho

I I I I I I I I I I I

a.------••••COUPON.----•-••-•.I


Feb. I, 1985/ NIC Sentinel- 11-

Solid core curriculum on horizon? b> J'1!Jlllit Allenbtrg

All Idaho colleges 1113} ha, e 1he same core cumrulum for fre,hmm and ,ophomorC$ if the Board of Educa1ion approves a plan prCS<'nled by :S:IC Dean of hmruction O...cn Cargo!. Cargol's proposal is, in pan, intended 10 ease \tudmt confusion o,cr general education requirement$. establish a standard Idaho College General Education R~uirement and Idaho Core Curriculum and reduce credit loss for tnmsfcr srndenr, ,, nhm the state. Goals for the General Edue,ation Requirement are as •'ollc\\\ ~• English 3nd )ptt,:h. nine semester hours: mathematics. thrce-fi\e StrnC)ttr hou~: 13borator~ !>Cien.x. eight semester hours: social sciences. I~ semester hour~. huma.nnie,. nine <CmcStcr hours: and cultUTJJ clivcrnl). si~-cight ~csm hours. Wh.lt this means 10 the uudem, Cargo! said, 1, that n "ill bt' ro~s,ble 10 1ran>for credits easily 10 an} institution in the state "11hou1 thl' disappomtmcm and add~d cost of ha,,ng 10 take an t"ma sem~ter or l"O oi ,,.:hool in order 10 mJl.c up for cred1ts lost m the transfer. Cargo! s:ud the proposal and an accompanymg leucr ha, been sem to ea.::h ot the states' si, colleges and uni,ernnes r~ue\tm@ their con<iderJll(ln and :.upport. So far, the proposal has been \lell-r~tt,ed and the re,pon,I!'- ha,c bttn gcnc:rall} fa,·or:ible. Cargo! added. ''The '-IC Board of Trustees "Cnl on record as arrro, m~ 1ht pro~hal con.:cpt,·· Cargo! ~d. "and "ill be m com:5pondc111:c \\ 1th the Bolrd of Edu,atil)n to en,ourJge it 10 endorst 1he pro~nl and help c,pcd11e 1hc tru1rion. ·· Clrgol also said that he 1135 =i\cd "ia\orable comment · irom Bo~ Start L rU\er\11) Le,,.1s-Clarl S1a1e College and the Lnl\ernt) ol Idaho. When the .\cadem1c Affain Council oi the Board of Educauon meet- in latt Febru3r). Cargo! ,aid he ,,.,II pr~nt h1, proro<aJ, alons \\ith commem, .:ind 1deJ\ he recn,~ m the meantime from an) or" the other m,111uuons in the ~ta1e From there. hope full~ w11lun <i, month~. 11 '"II t,c prc<entcd 10 the Board .:,f Educauon. C'argol S3ld 1f the prOl>(NI then rc,:ci\c\ the final :ippro,:il. ea,h 01 1he Idaho m· ~t11u11on• ,,. ,II 1n.:ludc the change> m their 19 - lall .:atalog Cargo! s:iid thJt the propo!Mll "dra,\S on m:in} c,f the be,1 feature, of the general education rcqu1Tcmen15 of ta.:h (If the s1a1e·, ~i, .:ollege, Jnd un1,er-i11~:· If accepted, h~ Dian \\ tll be the f1r,1 of it< I.ind m the na11on

1111

Kim ll urlbtrl photo

Forns poin t

Rit hurd ll tilman tokt'\ ;11111 at pholOj!r11ph) l nqructor Mllrk Bunn and ht\ Jlnl) drnchgrt .

,1t,

NIC English essay contest announces three winners b) t.d McDonald Winner, have been nnnounccd lor the ,er) ltule for the 1ror1. Nonh Idaho College Cngh1h 01,i\ion And I 1r,1c Ill\<" a hN pcrwn a,· h \llY Conte)t. count of'" arm mt· b.:es 10 her (S~' 111(. Ac.:ordlng to Virginia John1011, td "Thr Summer ol the Ott.. " chnirf)('rso11 of the NK r n11h1h divmon. 1 he rnntl">I rc,;c1,cJ .:0 cn111c, lrom t hr« ,, inn en ,,. ere cho,cn li) .i rinnd ol ,rudcn11 "ho hJJ "nllcn e1...a1, m their Judge1 "ho ,011,1dercd pun, tuauon. ,1>mp<h1t1on d.i"c<,, John,on \aid, 3d organ11.u1on .md ho" "cll 1he scnrrncr<. drn!l thar the con1c,1 mu,t t.>e a:umng in ,oncd \\1th rh)1hm ooJ cmphom :t(l· P\ll'!Ul,UII\ 4\ onh I$ cntrtC\ \\CCC ,ub111 orrintc 10 the meanm11 ol the c,,11) mnted l,ht ,cat. J1)h n\011 ,,ud th~ \\,nncr, cho,c:n 101 " \\ nun~" a ,ur\l,al ,!-tit m roUc,;c lhc contc,t "ere Sue Haile). lir-1 rme: .ind 1, hJ.rd \\ Ori. 1->r ,tuJents.'' Ca ndoce I l)her, ,c,·oml. and L, ndn Johman ,aid " \\ e \\.lllt 1,) cn,,,urage L1~\,e. t lurd the lmr "nuns "c 1..n,rn ,1udcn1, ~n Johmon ,a,d 111oncta1) pn,c, ol S.\S, do." S2S ond SI S respect heh \\NC 3\lurdcJ TI1r contN " 11l l:'C open c.1d1 \Clllt"'ler to che "mner\. 10 l· n,gh,h 101 ,tudcnt, and pt"rh3r, to Joh1hon added that 1,,0 honornblc s1udcnh c."nrolled 1n EO$h•h 10~ 1h1, mcn11on C)~:I)> \\ere rccog111zcd b) 1hc 1cm~trr. Johmon ,3id Judge, and mduded John Bentham and \lu,h the ,u~, or the ,onte51, hank Fr, t1<'1."0rd1~ to John.on."~ due 10 1he ctllailc) ;~ winning c~,a) \\J.5 tnlcd Ion, of ms1ru,to~ JanC't Elkrb) and "Ne" ub,pec1c oi Man round in orLen M:111ci,,. ho coordtnattd the rontc,i, them ld(lho" and ga\c an amusing acJohn,on Jho 11,t. no" !edged t!te concount of a sub~~ic, she labet~··11omo tnbutor) eltorts of the Judge\ "ho tn• subere1.-tus. •• duded Jo Ano Nelson. Jeanne EmerIn her ~y "The Came· or So Bad son, Gene Lero). Tom Flint. Jo}et After All." Fisher c;,.plalns ho" roo1ball Bo,wcll. Shnr.:,n Bos\lcll, O.,en Cargo!, can be rascirui11ng 10 som«>ne who cam Cums Nl'l)()n :ind Tim Pilgnm.

1,r

664-6417


I

Feb. I. 1985 :\ IC Senuoel- 12-

Laws need changing for NIC to collect b) Rk l.l J ohn Kllst H \flmcllnc o-.. e• } ou monc>. and )ou·,c tned c~Cr)thmg under the la"' to collect 11. 11nd mu ,1111 -.tt no resah. dan°1 ial.t muucr• in10 your o,.n hand< and don°1 tJJ..e , 1c :oun-Ju\l haH th< la" chanacd That what 'IC Prcrnknt B1r11 Schuler 1s :iucmpung 10 acco:r.rli\h n order to collcc1 almO\I S2SO ()(..(i o-ed 1he college ror dehnquem 1umon fen from the four ou1-of-dJ\tnC1 < untie\ 1n North Idaho. In a letter 10 State Rep. Robert Seate<;, R-Po;t Falls, Schuler S3Jd that Bonncr County O\\CS Sl5J,J89. Bene,,.ah o-..e1 SSS,419, Boundar) O\\e; S1~0 and Shoshone owes S8i.21S. Schuler <tud that abou1 S~0.()0(1 ha\ been collt-.:1ed since the leuer "a.< "mten He said the basic problems that countic\ have experienced in mecung their 1ui11on obligations ha,·e been that t,cn though ~•udcnt enrollment\ h:i, e increased ,1gnificantly and tunion rate; have been raised to meet inflation. the coun11es could nm increase the local propcn) 18.\ accord1ntil> due 10 the lim11a1ions ol the Idaho I Percent lnniati,c. NI C\ curren1tuition r:110 for an out0

\

of-dum.:t run-t1me Studcn ts Sl.1:0. or that. ou1-of-di•t11.:1 cououcs arc obligated 10 pa} SS:!O. anJ SJOO t< paid b) the mweru .

o\dd,tionalh. ttll <tudent ,"3l'!Ort~ pa) (tt<, of S314 ptr )ctr. B~ <ub<ichz1ng :he out-<1f-<lts1nct 1u11ion. tho~ s1uckn~s end ur pa)1ng a 10:.ll ot S61J per )ear 10 a11cnd SIC JWI ,1' Ult. in· d.:stri.:t s1udcna do. ~hulrr ~id the I Per.:ent lruu111,c is a clar cootrad,c1•on 111 the rre\tnt "ii(U!C:.

"Oa oi:re band the rouolle,, arc re-

quired 10

Pl}

ror 1hnr studcnu

urx,n

Sc-ates hll.S prtpartd leg1,Jnuon 1hn1 11,ould exempt count) 1u111on P:,.)mrnb 10 'flC from lht Jinut:11ion\ of the I Per cent truuall\c.

Bui before he could mtroducc the bill m 13<mt. ht ot>t:11ncd a memorandum from a deput} ~,ate nttorn('y gtncral v. hi.:h ,tatt, that ,-ount) 111., ((', i" tor ~mmunit~ coUrgt< arc t1lread,· e,emp1 rrom the pro,1,1on~ or the l Pcrct"ni

lnma11,c. The memo, dated Juh II, 19 J, carne from Dcpu1, \ ttorncy Gener.ii Charles .\ 03\\

(__n_e_w_s_a_n_al_ys_is__J proof of re<lckncc •n 11,at count}," Scu!cr Qtd , ··and on the othff hand. th~ a.R" prorub1tcd from raNng the ll"\) suffictcmly 10 full\ pa) their b1Jh " lo:ooten.a: Count, t) the onh :-.onh Idaho count} nduccd 10 'IC;) 13.'lmg dmnc-t. 8cnt"A3h, Bonner, Boundan and Sho,honc .:OUntl(S ue obligated 10 p11ch m the S'>;O per student. and the> ha,c all fallen bch..,d.

~111,, ,11Jd tbu1 Bonner, Boundary, Bcnc"3h and Sh1nhone counllc\ have been underpaymg 1u111on ,upriort for 1he1r re\1dent\ ,mending NIC on rhc grounds that rhcy could nos legnll) in crC3.,c property ta~ for communuy collego by more that S percent in ony one )C.lr Counties arc supposed to pay p~rt or the 1u11ioo "'1th a poruon of their shore of the state liquor ta., and the rcmoinder

If All Else Fails Give

'

Sheer Illusions A Shot. The sexiest little lingerie shop 1n town .

Sheer Illusions 412 Sherman

667-5655

Karma Sutra, lotions, potions, lingerie from petite to 3-X, 10 percent off for all men along with free gift wrapping every day of the year.

through a propc:rt)" levy La., originally not 10 c,cecd .06 percent of morl..e1 value. ·ates said thnt the ou t-of-di\trk1 coun11~ ,hould be able 10 rai~c their commun1t) college mill lC\ y to the m:1.,1mum dbtrict rate or 16 pc:rcco1 of 1hc marl.ct, :due this vcnr nnd nay off their 111dl\1dunl debt, 10 NlC But ~c,crnl lawmnl..cl') ha,e quC\IIOrt• cd whether the memo,, nuthenuc. o r ii the I Perc;.cnt Init in11v4.' wa~ properly in1cr11rctcd. So c11tt, has prc\cntcd the memo 10 the ,hue nuornc) gcncrnl\ office for verihc:ntion. Ir ldnho i\llornc)' Cicncrnl Jim lone( \DY\ the memo t\ au1hen11c nnd correct, the ,1ffc~1cd cllun11c, could 1.ilo.c 1mmcdm1c \tcp, to mcrea,c their levy m,mg leveb.

If the memo i, found 10 be 111 wor, c;.;n,c~ <aid he will mtroducc h,~bill and pu~h 10 have II pa~1cd. ~('lift ~ ,uld NIC could lJkC the out of-di.mict counue, 10 court 10 collect the debt. bur he added that suing would on ly end 1n ill feelings with NIC's neighboring coun11e~ and possibly put n dent 1n long-term rclu11om between the school and the coun11cs.


Ftb . I . 1985/ NIC Scnt inel- 13-

Co ntrast~ ditT , nu\\ :.amJ i(,· ,·u, ,•r :.a ru1.·~, ridt:.,· 11, rrl11ol.mi: I :ii., ( 11,•ur tf \ k n,··, \\ 1111 I ud!(t Ra,.

'lil.e NIC ha~ a ne"' director of public relations aflet the position WII\ re>1gned b> John House last AugusL Stt \e Schenk, 34. former!} of Thermopolis. Wyo .. came 10 NIC in the fall of 198J afler he and h~ sold their interest ma v.ctlly ne...-s-paper of v.h1ch thC) were pan 0"' ners and co-pubhshers. Schenl. "'ill be in cltarge of publK and media .:on1ac1, for NIC In managing the Khool'1 puhlK and media contacts, Schcnl. said his first goal ... ,1111c 10 01al.e the ..choors catalog more a11r:i.:11,e 10 the r")l>h,: ··1 "'ant the book 10 IIISUilll}' '3) \Omethmg ~111\e about the college:· Schenl. \aid l\1akmg NIC's bro.;hurt'\, pouer\ and l"ther pubb.: contact, more attractite 1~ anollter 1a,~ M ..aid he "'anl\ 10 complete Schenl. "'111 also manage the school\ \!'(al.er~· bureau The bureau 11 compn~ of fa.;ult\ members " hon~ "'ilhng 10 tall. 10 public groul):) ,u.:h :is Rol31) lnternauonal and church group, Aflcr ,pending a \CM a, dir~tor of msutu11onal rclntiom for Central \\ 1 ommg CoOcgc m Rl\enon, S..·ht'nl. "orl. cd for four ,ears on ,he .:ommurut) rebuon, rn1fl of .i large 1umor ,ollq!e d1mi.:1 Ill St Lou...

,.,fr

NIC catalog first priority for PR man b) J ohn J tn~rn

roei1e photo

ne,.,papcr, m :-tis.oun and \\ yommg. He also spcnr one: ,ear doing pubhc mtormation " Ork " ilh <c:rondlr, ,.:hools m the \\'ind R11c:r Indian Rc:scna11on m ,c:ntral \\'~oming Schc:nl. 3nd his iam1I) arc: no"' ti, mg m pol.one but plJn 10 mo,c: to Coeur d'Alene: wnhtn the: m,,nih.

Mo

<;~hc:nl. ~r:1dua1cd from the: Un1\c:rnt) or \!Moun School of Journalum m 19~1 .ind 11,orl.ed for daih

r.===========================================~==================,i Lunch Specials Daily First draft beer free on Friday Students welcome ! ~/

Fort Ground Tavern d


Campus dark lot newest hot spot by RJIA Holllnpwortb A wide variety of cuccr 1raining is available at 'IIC. according 10 Wally Young, cnmuwut He explained that some etuz.ens are getting a free educa1ion in the unli1 parking lot aaoss from the CA Building. "It's good ground for anybody 1lw .,-anu to prac1icc being a thief," Young said ··11·s ideal. Young explained that three reports of gas siplloo· ing have been received by NIC s«uril)' m I.be w t fc--,i. weeks. He also said 1ha1 someone is takmg ad\"anta~ of the darkness and rining through cars. In 1hc l:11est report on Jan. 23. a pan-time UlSU'UC· tor notified sccuri1y thal someone got UIS'idc her Jec:p while ii was parked in the lot. Students and faculty do not have 10 contmuc to permit their cars to be used as guinea ptgs b> :i.spiring criminals, Young said. "There is no reason 10 park there,·· Young Qld. ··and give them the opporturut)' 10 rip us off. There arc plenty of lighted places to park." Young explained that security docs patrol the lot but 1ha1 it i.s impossible 10 maint:tin constant supel' tSion

l.aurlt Brbtow photo

Intense workout The , IC tncl. t~m. led b) mcmbtr Kann Johnson, btglM !hei r sprlnjt "°11Son b) dol n11 arrohks in tht bastmcnc of tbc C-A building.

Vocational students sue college continutd from p.agc I though Cbasuw1 had ne\ cr co~ercd the ma1mal dealing v. tth electromc:s. Aoothu t:u.mplt. Ha.sh said, was ho"' ChasUllD co, cred the area or hydraulics for the course " I got A's m hydraulics. and I know nothing about hydraulics," Hash said. Hash said that another "'11Y Cbastam let his students down was his failure to maintain regular class hours. Hash said that Chastain was oftcn late, sometimes an hour or more. to begin lhe 8 a.m. class. Furthermore. the class was scheduled 10 last until 3 p.m. but rardy lasted past I :30 p.ro .. Hash said. Haught declined to comment on Hash's allegations because of the pending suit. Duriag the fh·e years that Chastain h:id instructed the maintenance mechanics course, students who had completed and graduated from the course were surveyed to find out whether or not they had found employment after graduating.

The plaintiffs arc also requesting compensation for loss of anticipated increased earnings: Wiclmrom. S2.i,544: Benneu, S50,000; Ryan, SS4,000: and Hash, S62.400. The former s1udcolS arc also seeking compensation for other damages: Wickstrom. SI0.000; Benneu. SI0,000: Ryan. S12,000: and Hash, Sii ,500. In addition. the four men arc also requesting SS,000 in legal fees and S40.000 in exemplary and punilive wunagcs. Evcrtn Hofmeister, a Coeur d'Akne a11omey, is reprcscnung the former students in the lawsuit. Hofmeister refused to comment on the lawsuil saying that he would rather not have the media invoh-ed at Lhis time. Hofmeister did say 1ha1 the purpose of the lawsuit was not an ancmpt by his clients or himself 10 "besmirch" North Idaho College. Kenneth Hash. the only one of the four plaintiffs that could be reached for comment, said he was not trying 10 discredit NIC with the la,.·suit, but was only tr~ing 10 help prevent what had happened to him from occurring again. Rash said th:l.1 his biggest complaint had 10 do with Chastain. Hash said th:it Chastain failed to meet his obligations as an instIUctor by failing to provide proper guidance and coverage of lessons. Hash said that Chastain pro\ided grades for classes th:il "'ere never covered in class. "All I know is that we got grades for classes we never took ," Hash said. Hash said that the grades Chastain gave to students for a scgmeo1 of I.be course d.eal.ing with electronics was a good ei1ample. He said that students in the class v.cre given C grades on report cards even

Suf\ ey results show that in 1980. 90 percent or the graduating studenu indicated on the survey that they had found work in maintcnance mechanics or a related field. ln 1981. 7S percent indicated they had: in 1982. 60 percent: m 1983 • .io percent: and in 1984. 70 percent. Steve Schenk, d.irce1or of informational services fo1 NJC. said that the Sur\eys taken over the five years Chastain bad taught at the college show a strong correspondence with changing economic conditions. "\\-'hen things were booming, placement for graduates was too,·• Scheok said. "but when the local cconom)•dipped, placement did too."

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

: CONVOCATION SCHEDULE

: ART OF LIVING: MIND SET FOR THE FUTURE

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MO:','OA V, FEB. II 11 11.m. - C.A Auditorium Kt )note 11ddttss by Dr. Harold Bloo mOeld -.:oon - Bonntr Room Fltm: ' 'The Art of Btlng fully Human" Noon - SUB Informal qucsc lon ptriod 1:30 p.m. - Bonner Room Bloo mf'kld mttlS with nursing stude.nLS and facult) I p.m. - Bonner Room FIims: " forever Younf ' 2 p.m. - Bonner Room "Shopping B11g Lady" 11Dd "The Girt ,.Jth lbe Incredible FttUng" TUESDAY, FEB. 1.2 9 a.m. - Bonner Room film: " The Art or Btlng full) Hum.an" 10 a.m. - 8oDJ1tr Room Address by CllroUnt Bird :',oon - Bonner Room ~1C Women's Group lunt:h and Olm: " Whal Art You Wolllll.ll?" I p.m. - SUB l'w rsi.ng students and facult) cblll •llb Bird and films: I p.m. - Bonotr Room Films: ''Shopping B.ag Lady," "Sugsr and plcc" aad " for,,cr You.oft"

"Unicorn In lht Cardtn" Noon • Bonner Room fllm : " forever Vounrc" I p.m. - B4>nntr Room Films: "The Clrl wllh the IMrtdlhlt Ftellng" and "Unicom In !he Gardto" 2 p.m. - B4>nntr Room Video: ''Tbe Art or Btlng fully Human'' THURSDAY, F'EB. 14 9 a.m. - B4>aotr Room fl1111J: " Marritd Uvrs Today," " Tbt House 1ba1 Jack &111" and "Tbt Fable of Ht 11Dd Sht" JO a.m. - Bonner Room FIim: " Whal Are You Wo111J1a?'' 1J a.m. - C.A Audlcorium Address by Rn. Wm. Harptr Houff· " Dtcislon Making • Suual Dlf· ferences?" r,; 000 - Bonner Room rums: "Supr and Spia" and " Manied Uvn Todsy'' I p.m. _ Sonner Room films : ·'Of Broccoli, Ptli(llll$, Ctlery, and SHts;• " BoomsvUlt'' and ··flower S1orm''

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fRJDAY. fEB, IS : Boootr Room t Films: " Miradt of .Life," ·•fable or He t and She'' t and ··Tbt Rouse that Jade &lie'· t JI a.m. - Boaacr Room • 10 .a.m. -

WED~ESDA y . fEB. 13 9 a.m. - 8oDJ1et Room fUms: " MIBdc or Wt," " Whllt Art You Woman" and ··Boomsville" 10 11.m. - C-A Auditorium Address by OT. Burto11 Whl tt - "Tbt First Thrtt YtarS Mlle You.r We" ' t I .a.m. - Booou Room film5: •·Sugar and Spice," ud

Film: ··Manie Ll•ts Today ''

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Nooa - Boauer Room t FllmJ: ''Of Broccoli. PelksDS , Ctltty t aod Seals." ' ' Boomsvllle" .and "f.ablt t of He a.Del Slit" :

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f eb. I . 1985/ ~ IC Sentinel -JS-

Convocation week to offer variety of films A series of rums will be presented Feb. 11 -15 in the Bonner Room in the SUB as pan of the spring convocauon, which has 1he 111Jc, "'Ari of L1,1ng: Mind Sc1 for 1he Future. " "The Ari of Being Fully Human," a film fea turing Leo Buscaglia, ... i11 be sho,,.--n a1 noon on Feb. 11 , 9 a.m. on Feb. 12 and 2 p.m. on Feb. 13. "Forever Young,•· a film 1ha1 takes the \Ugma off growing older, will be shown a1 I p.m Feb. 11 , at 2 p.m. on fcb 12 and al noon on fcb. 13. Two shorter films, ·'Shopping Bag Lady," a uory of a teen Jge girl's encounter wu h a lone!)· old lady, ond "The Girl ,,.111, the Incredible Peeling," a look a1 composer Ehzabc1b Sv.,ados, will be shown Feb. 11 a1 2, p.m. and a1 various other limes during the week. "Whar Arc You Woman'?" 1s a film 1ha1 prmnts through the ans lour viev.s of women and will be shown at noon on Feb. 12 in connection ,,.,1h the '1JC Women's Group luncheon v.,ith speaker C3Ioline Bird, a1 9 a.m. on Feb. 13 and a1 10 a.m. on Fc:b. 14. "Sugar and Spice,' ' a film that anvcs11ga1es the sex role stereOI) pcs of children. will be shown Feb. 12 a1 I p.m., a1 11 a.m. on Feb. 13 and a1 noon on Feb. 14. Also scheduled al 9 a m. on Feb. I J are "Maracle of Life" and "Boomwille,'' two shorter filrru. "Boomsville" is an animated film about the dcs1ruc1io11 of a virgin I.and by man, and "Maracle" i~ a

Unofficially

Enrollment drops by FA McOon1ld Enrollment for spring semester nt NIC hiu unofficlolly declined by seven percent when compa1cd 10 IO\I semester', itgures. according 10 David Lindsay, director of odminions. Lindioy snid lhor unof(iciolly the rcgisirar's office has tallied 2,110 \tudcnt~ who arc oucnding NIC 1his semester, or abou1 165 kss than the 2,275 who were regi\tercd lost foll. Compared wilh enrollment itgur~ for 1he 1984 spri ng scmes1cr, cnrollmcru is down opprox1m1ucl y 10 percent this spring, Lindsay soid. He said 1h01 the decrease wo1 no1 101ally unc~J')C(tcd ond explained that cnrollmc,n1 figure~ for 1hc second scmc~ter of a 5thool ycor normally shov. n dcchne. Lindsay said th111 11101 or ~•udcnu decide 1h01 col· lcgc i~ not really what they want 10 do, and they Icon: ~chool in scorch or n job if they do no1 nlrcody ho, c one. Lmd!>u)' suid tha1 only about l S8 people 1001. pince· mcn1 c~orm to attend NIC 1his sen1c.-.1cr And hr added thnt most 1mtuu11on\ m the )late ore probably aho c~pcricncing o decline in student cnrollrnen1. Ofitc,al enrollment stntl\tii:s ,hould be ovailnblc ofter all cla~!>c), anduding night ond )atdlitc (OUl"SC\, hove mcl, l md~> ~o,d. Ile lpcculoted thnt the ortioal itgurc) would be :11':ul:iblc somemnc Mier tcxlO>,

Lasagna feed slated A la~agM feed, ~ponsorcd b) ahc IC tudcnt Nurse, Mso.:11111011 i, )Cheduled for Feb. IS Danner ,,.ill be served from 4:30 10 7:30 p.m m the 11.o..,tcnai Room Thr money 1h01 i, nuscd ra1)ed ,,,11 ~ U>td 10 fund &cholor~h1ps for NIC nursing ~1ud"m, 3ccordu1g 10 Mary t-.kRcynolch, INSA prt"-1dcnt, who s;ud 1ha1 the ~)oc1ation av.ards :11 lc:ut l"O SJOO scholorsh.l ps c:i~h )'ear.

Ticket) arc SJ.50 for adults and S.l5 per ,c:ir tor children under 11 ·

microscopic look at fenilization and cell division and de,clopmcm until the first heanbcat. "Unicorn in the Garden." an anunatcd mm based on Thurber's fable, ... mbe shov.n a1 11 n.m on Feb. 13 and later a1 J p.m. " "famed Li,C$ Toda)," a snuiu,e documenun of lhc li~es in three different mar.i.agcs, ...;u be shov. Feb. 14 at 9 a m and a1 II a.m. on Feb. 15 Tv.o thort films, ··Toe H~ th3t Jad, Built" and "The Fable or He and She" ,..ill be shov.n a1 9 a.m.

n

on Feb. lJ and 01 10 a.m on F.:b. 15 "Of Broccoli, Pehc3ru. Celer)'. and Seals, a film <':I.· plonng 1he long -range resultS of pcs11,1dcs being sprayed in C:ilifomi:i. and "Flov. er Storm,·· an anunated film from Iran about the fu11h1> of".u. v. all be shov.n Feb. JJ ,u I p.m "Of Br~coh'' ,,111 also be ,hov.n at noon on Feb. 15. · ·faponenti:il GrO\\lh .ind You" and "Birth of a Child'' will also be a,a,ll!ble tn the lib!Ul') on •ideo!llpe until the end of the semester


Feb. I, 1985, ~lC Sentinl'l-16-

Touchdown! Perennial powers play 'Honky-tonk bowl' b} hurl Alderman Eo§r of the colkge metropot. Coeur d'Alrne, lie5 !he rural to.,.n of Post Falls. To many pa~ersby, Lhl\ Spo1 on the northern Idaho map ma>· <ecm too small to 0011cc. Bui ~ liny lilllr town has a secrcl J..no.,.n LO [ev,, yet maneled at b) many. Pos1 Falls LS the proud hoo 10 the ·'Honk)· Tonk Bowl.'' The Honky-ton I.. Bov. I is played OD ~ field or a small 1own bar before a v.a\e of loyal p31riou . I'm no1 exactly a cheerleader. I'm a cigarette girl making a li"ing. If only Ho" ard Cose.II cot:.ld be here with me: he'd recognize the game plan. It may oot be JFK stadium, but for lhc:suporu fons the dimly Iii, smoke-filled establishment is second t0 none. Nighl after night, 1hc players and spectaton hand their 1ickets to 1he man at the door. He's no fool He remembers the day when he .,..as the fim round drafl pick of every woman in the place. Even 1hough he is an alumni no.,.. he has 001 forg0tten how to play. But now he assumes the role of referee, just in cnse of any unnecessary roughness. Early in the evening, 1he crowd begins to stir. Kickoff lime is 9 p.m., and the sounds of Waylon and Willie send the playrn out onto the field "'ith one goal in mind: score often and win the game. Fans don't need binoculars 1ospo1 theco"bo> 1h111 just execu1cd a quarterback sneak. But the rtlly "00'1 play her pan, and he is penalized IObeers for iUegal use of hands. The first half ends scoreless. The teams rctreat to

thru porccl.un loc ·er room~ and the countf) and ,\estern pep band tal..e1. a C1_.nre11e l',re:lk. Durini; the sc,:ond half a raider is nc11ktabl) plundcn~ hJS "'I} through the ,ro.,.d en route m what he hopes v.:D bea fil"it dO"'n. But an e,,'ttdiogl) slick· haired o lcr \U(l' b> 10 ma.l..e the tac~lc So much for pas~ mterfrrenc:c

lial. and c-.iry• mo,e is o po~1t,le point. C\:Ond half i~ becoming mu~h more crudal. The pla,ers ho,c really hyped thcmseho. II'• 1lmr 10 moJ..r the round~. hll harder and hopefully get the ultimate ~d. Benn)· and the Ruds don ·1 gi,c a •1•1 hccau1e the) 11rc off to the rodeo. The corncrb:ick and 1hc holfhock ha" one or 1ho~e tnkl-tmclc Huckleberry Hound look~ 11bn111 them, probubly becau<c those rookic1, Jose Cucno :ind Jncl. D:1111els {thcli 1oughc11compctiton), JU\! got a ,,a1N back from Shirley Templt. Well, the 11dc turn1, tlDd !he crowd is roaring. rhe bnr1cndcr (Co.ich) has con,•inccd the ployer\ (aflcr many tnps to h1~ slick wooden bar) 1h01 victory h possible. A bh11 is called, ond o soint ls hauled orr 1hc danceficld by u ~afcty. h seems he and 1wo 01her< collided during on apparcni nca nicker; the piliful dcrclic1 was lramplcd by 1he end sweep.

Dov.non the 1~-yard line emerges a licry bronco read) to rope an awesome colt, bu1 he Jumps offsides and u intn-cepted by II pc:rccp1ive hav. k, and the: LO· eligible recie\er is ltft downfield. It is no.,. possible 10 regroup in the locker room once again. E.tch pllyer seeks a linle brown-bo1lle courage,

and cad\ coo1empla1es a new strategy. Time is cs.sen-

Some wild turkey callJ a11cn1ion to himself with o.n embarrassing false stan. He uses a liule sign language wilh his favorite opponent, but I guess he re.illy jus1 won1ed 10 say, "Hi, Morn. We're numbc.r I. " The music slows nod even1ually f:u.tes as docs the crowd. Some wander away pouting from 1hc shu1ou1. Others parade their vic1ory prize: before those they have defeated. As I clean the coliseum and remember the scenes played out before me, a tune comes to mind. Dandy Don Meredith and I sing, "Turn out lhc Ilgh1s; the pany's over."

Weighty problem resolved by Rita Bollings•ortb Weigh1, once lost, bas a habit of miraculously reappearing. 11 is seldom, however, that a scale, once lost, reap~. Acrually, it is seldom that a scale disappcan ar all. But II lost medical scale has been regained by NIC. The once missing S268 scale, which was reponed stolen from the \loTCStler's shower room on Nov. 19, was found just before Christmas break, according 10 Al Wylder, athletic tramcr. Wyldc:r said that he doesn't remember j us1 when o_r where I.be scale showed up but that it was found by an employee "''ho was going about his regular duties. "My gosh, here it is." Wylder said. "Tb.is looks like the scale we've been m.iss:ing. •· James Headley, administrative assist.ant lo :uhlttics, e,.-plained lhal a night instructor borrowed the scale. Headley said although the instructor nouficd someone LO the athletic office, the employee forgot that the scale had been loaned out.

March deadline set for candidates by Rieb H:iimun Govcrnmcota.l procedures do not senators will take office the first week have to be just a cut and dry cla.s.sroom of the 1985-86 fall se=ter. c.'{J)Criencc at NlC. According lo Stewart. any SIUdcnt Anyone interested in learning bow carrying al leas1 IO credits and who has democracy works can get directly inmaintained a cumulative GPA of 2.0 volved in those procedW"es on campus. during previous semesters is eligible to according to Tony StC'\\'3.11, political run for office. science instructor. Stewart added !.hat beside the insights ASNJ C president and vice president into 1be political arena, elected offi.cers offices arc up for grabs, Ste\lo'llrt said. will also receive a wage. He explained that all students who are According to Wes Hatcb, dircttor of interested in running for cith« office must file by the third ...-eek of March. aUJCiliary SCf\ia:s, the new president and Primary elect.ions will be held the sevice president ,..i ll receive a scholarship cond week of April, and the fi.nal clec· ror one year while the sen.ators will be lion will take place during the third week given a one semester scholarship. or April, Stewan said. The president v.i ll also receive S.452 The newly elected presiden1 and vice and the vice prcsideot will be paid S2S2, president will 1akc of[ice the week after Hatch said, and he added chat senators the elect.ion, and three new))' elec1cd will receive bct,1,een S5S and S77 each.

Valentine's Week Val~ntine 's Week . F b Call begins February 8. Calf 8 . . d begins e ruary . ..t t dav or v1s1t us to av. or v1s1 us o . $ and up 10 $15 and up

FLORAL

and

GIFTS

w.

501 Appleway . Appleway Square

765-5751


Feb . l. 1985/NIC Sentlnel- 17-

(1,.___s_e_n_tin_e_l_s_po_r_ts_)

-Big difference- - Crou counlry boots and bindings differ from downhlll In orckr 10 be llgh1weigh1 and allow the sider more mobility.

Text and photos by Dan Breeden

Lakeside s k i - -1 IC student Lisa Perzen1 k11 lllkes ad,·11n1age of a re«nl snowfall 10 ski acr~ the white btach of

Lake Coeur d 'Alent.

No snow skiing like skinny skiing The do,.nh,11 ,klc,: - wakes nt S a.m. in order 10 grl a pince in the lilt llne. ··H>Cnd, ~ on ~kl cqulpn1cm " Ith "'hkh probe for rocks. ··spends over S130 on n ski out t1110 impre,.1 the other people whn nlrcnd)' have one lil.c it --drivc1 3010 200 mile\ 10 find a lull""" \now on h and enough smdc 10 blow hi\ hn,r hack -,11\ m the ~hnlct and drlnl.1 ~ol let became 11 sm ,oltl >to11dln11 m 1hn1 lilt line. ··I0<:1. > up hu sk b nnd lo~~ tbc l.c)' 01 doc,n'1 lo..-k up hi1 ~I." ond losc1 the 1k,,. .,,pend! SIJ-Sl710 ride ma chair 1h01 wnt undoubtedly ,1op at lcaM 1hrct 1,rnc~ "hlte he u; in Ii durm~ Che ,our,c of the dny ··brral.s his le~. ·-run1 o,rr I.id) nnd 1lo1'rr 11.itll \<llh llb ilOO "Ollh or ~I.I rqu,pmcnt. The rros, country 1l<irr: -sleeps tn bt.:ou,c the MIO" ,, wniung for him ou111dc his bod, d,1or. ··•11'nd1 Im than SIOO on n complete )l.i

10

dl'3d.ant01lt'S Like 3.ltnosl anytlunJ else 10 llu v.orld, u \ a mo11cr or personal preference. tr a ixr,on ha~ 1he mont"). a mcan< of tra:n,porta11on, the proper cloihlng, the ti.ill. the p;111en.c to "'ait in line cmd a desire 10 ~ around a lot of people. 1hcn do-..nh1ll ~1.ung 1> • prcm good 11me. llut ,t 1ou nre an «onl'nucaU~-mappNI college <I\Jdcnl . .. ,th<>lll a au, "Im "'C'an l "' 11 and " 0011v.rntrn, can "alk, ;u,d bas a desir e 10 lr.1,e a, iht.auon bdund. thm sl.mn\ 1~llna II the "'t to go

1t·s bard 10 bear cro" count!'\' slun1 tor r,r1ci\c Mo~1 peorlc ,.ho arc out of illll~ nnd 1ry 11 can r~I ,t m •~ 1.1ms. lcgl and ,ho11lde11 niter a mere mile or ,o II uruall} nrouw1 mu,lcs that hA•c ti.d Rip Villi

\\ 11h the ad, :m.:es made m sktnn) <kiin@ eqmprucrn ti II no,,. pouib'c IOC'Omb,nc 1hr

best of both v.orld,-cro, .:owm~ and do..,nhill

\IOlllJ1aJD«nnJ slJJ ~ a t)J!C of crosi rountr) sJ..lS v.11h mew cdgr, for the darcde-11 "ho en1o~s 1clcrurl.Jn,: 011 downhill , I ~

And, 10 add wll another dimension, any crou country am,m will tell no,ices tha1 lhC\ ha•·• not \ kied until they've skmny <kied at night by the light o r a full, or nr:ir-ful l moon. Dodging moose llrtU moguls after sun<el is • 1hnll fell by 100 fc"'.

So. skinny skiers of Amcnro. lift up your 11.1poles and be r«ogn1ied. There's powder out there 10 be bushwhacked,

Cros, c<"Untf\ sl.irn a,-m d1,1.11h= u o.)

r«lmg In the ..orld quite hl.c ,ml.ms out on

•\\cars Lc\lS nnd n " 001 s"t3tcr - wnll:~nnd or d1 lses less thBn nvc mil~ 10 find <ti.,,. ~ol.J enouph 10 ,I.I on.

a crup. clear monung tn 1nchc, uf untoo.:bcJ po"dcr "'1th notlung brt"(ffl them and natu~ C\~'t'J'll a pall' of , \,i., And lbor O'il>11 ,tamlnal llm11&1to1U. Cro,, rount.f\' <l.nllJ ll'~ the slier • ~h3n« to a~u,til txptri~Y tile ~-oun~ hr 11 1ra,ernng. I ;il>o givn the <lihtsett • mode io ,. bkh 10 stt ns.tUT'( undtr a clont.: .:if,. inter count() that usuall~ r=ns un-

h,, brandy.filled bota bas and sl.15 on. ··lra,r; hi, ,l1, behind n trtt. •-gentrall) docsri 't brcal. an,•thln& c,,~pl a good , ,.cat -run, uvcr snow, bt:cnu1e that's i<ha1 1t·s there for. " o• '. 001 t • t i') on, i~ going 10 aJrtt "ilh this li,1. but nil 10 all 11\ fAirl) accurate. Each sp0n has something 10 .,(i~ the "it11rr rnthusmst, Jilli M each hill \Olllc

anJ u

Cross roun!l) ond do"'nhlll skiing can al.so be wed rffecrhel) as complemrntary s(X)m~thcr one 1~a ple:uam d1angc from the other

\\'ml.le tenJm,t<'> 111« btnb It\ nlulam11ng, fun. almost tree, good for the bod) and can be done b, altn<hl i1J1)'\lnC almo11 an)"' brrc.

11oclagr of good qualny

->h>ttt II h~c Mill on tu~ sl,,. Lalcs a 0111 fiom

h's i1J1 cs::;i...,. from ~ . pcu, paper 1111d personal prot,Jcins a ,.av of ,1r,l.1ns ou1 on tbt!lt o",i and punina a .. ,mny. "hitt d1s.wi~c bet" CCII tbctll ind ~m. or thm,

1mn·tcd ~u>,(' ol dcq, ~nov. . Man) ru11nrn tal e up ,l.inn) slung durtni the off ~-:uon 10 ord~ 10 su,· 1n shape, and c,«-um a ~ finding ll an c,.:el.lcru "3.) to allt"' lite on-the-Job ~1rc,,

Sc.-enk beau I~ - -\\i1hou1 rh, u.se of "sl.Jnn, "oold not bt possible.

skis.·· rbi> • le,. of Mt. Wallace


Feb. l , 1985 NIC Se:ntio,1- 18-

Ricks next for Cardinals as league play gears up The Cardmah dash \ 1 uh Ricks College Saturda) mght m Chri•tinruon G)mnasium n1 5: IS p.m. 10 open the "omen·\ ba..,J.ctb.111 leJguc <eru.on. LcaJ1ng 1hc Card< \\111 be the team\ leadmr .:om 11nd rrboundcr, Mnr, AnJcr,on. \ ho pa..:mg the teJm \\ill be Jcnmler \\ agner. leading in ,1cnl• nml ,l\,t!II~.

,,..-orJ1nst 10 Co.i,·h Gre11 t rimp. 1he team h,l\ lcht a lot of it\ e,perienced pla)t"f\ becau,c ol "11hdro\1.1ls from .,.;hool and injuri,..,. l\l~t rt.·cmh, J;im11: Stanhope dropped ot f the re.am and out of \chool Crimp ...ml 1ha1 he 1, e,~1ins a tough IJame lrom Rid., and thJI dunns ~ague pla) he aho e,pt'C't, ,11 ff compel iuon from thc College or Southern Idaho

later this ,ca.son in Twin Falls ond 01 NIC on Feb IS. ''The team hos o good ~hot 10 get to rc1uon:1l~." Crimp ,oid. " ll\ hard 10 compare. but we could beat 10•1 year·• let\111" In n game marred by SS foul,, th( Cord~ defc.ttcd \ o~imn Vt11lcy 81 62 on Jun 19. i\lnr> ndcr,o n 1murcd 111 29 Pl''"" a~ NIC tirol.c o~n (I do~l' game in th.: clo,1ng minute, The Card\ con1111ucd 10 Clla,t ar1er posting,, 78-40 vic1C11y Jan 18 ,1&111n\l l·larhcud Vnlky. I lawcvcr. the women ~hot n d!lmnl JS per(enl ltt.~t /1,fonduy 11glii11~t Columbia B:ism nnd wcrr dcrc.iled 67-(fJ. The 1cm dropped the 1eom ·s record to 13-2.

Twelve athletes strike out by Shari Alderman

Twelve NIC athletes ha\e been dclermined 10 be ineligible for plJly because of failwc 10 meet grade requirements. The Cardinal baseball team 1011 IO athletes and the 1vre<,thng ~uad lost two bec:iu,e of a National Jumor College Athletic Aj5()Cja11on policy which re· quires the athktc 10 maintJJD a 1.5 grade point average during the first ~cmc,tcr or the fr~hman year, and a 1.7 overage in lhe !iteond S<"mcs1cr, according 10 Jtm Headly, admini5trathe assistant Lo athletics for NIC. Baseball coach Jack Bloxom said he considering all the time 1pcn1 in an hour and half study program requ11ed of hii team membcn 'll!ondays through Thur~ays and the ex· 1ens1ve training programs which v.erc also provided. tS quiu disappointed.

Chris Bulltr photo

AbO\l' the crowd--Fo~ud ~1:11') And,r..on trie~ for t"o poinb during tb, Jan. 22 j!Sme 11g!l1DSI Columbin Basin.

"We lost five quaJiLy athlct~ who

would have s1or11:d," Bloxom said. "In a couple 5itu niion\ the athlete~ who were not able 10 continue their athlc1ic careers could hove been (eligible 10 participate). llut in most instance~ rhe blame lies with 1hc student h1m~elf. ·• According to wre5tllng coach John Owen, ,ome athlete, would prcrer 10 major in chgibihy, ah hough he fttl5 1ha1 !'/IC docs nor offer any cushion course,. Owen \aid 1ha1 \Orne )tudcnl\ ju\t have difficulty adJu\ung to an en· v1ronmenwl as well as acadcm1cchange. Ou1 he added that it is j us1 a matter or r~pomibili1y. "There ,s only so much each coach can do," Headly ~aid "Academics come first, and :uhle11cs second. Each can complement lhe other. But studcms in general (not only the a1hlc1~) ~hould realize thal there is a 11me commi1menl involved.••

Idaho athletes getting nipped 1n the spud I

I just wanted lo say a few v.ords on behalf of seemingly non-existent imn on the NIC sports menu; the Idaho potato. If you look at one portion of the school's sports bill of fare you will sec that all of the potatoes have been imporced, from either another state or, in some cases. another country.

a

Now don't get me wrong, there is nothing wrong v.ith the quality of the potatoes they are sening now. In fact, they have parboiled all but one of their opponents this year, and 1'm not just saying that to butter them up. But it just bakes me to S!:l' that the talent being dished up doesn't include spuds from even the great polato farms or Southern Idaho. After all, this is Nonh Idaho College not North

Ohio or North Berlin College. Why don't we. have some local spuds in the smorgasbord? NIC spends a good deal of money on potatoes

each year. Granted, many of them do get processed at tbm O\\n expense, but the money that is spem on the imports goes out of the state after the growing season is over. If some of the same money were spem on lbe locall)·-grown product., cham:es are the invesuneru \\Ould stay in the state and possibly filter back to the college. And the Joa.I population would better savor the overall menu if there were a llille more local flavor included. People enjo)' it when a local spud does well. They relish headlines like, ''Hometown Tater Bags 30 Points In NIC Roast." Tbe iliipped-in potatoes do less to se1 community l3Stc buds tingling. Maybt there is a good reason for the absence of Jdaho spuds th.is year. We have had them in past years, but perhaps this year's crop was bad; potato bugs, poor cultivation or a fungus among us.

don sauer

f8l lilJ

Or it could be that the college buyers failed to take a serious look at the local marketS, what wWi the surplus supply in orher parts or the counlf}'. l t probably wasn·, a matter of the local P?tatocs not having their eyes on NIC. A fter all, 11 does

have a winning tradltion. Idaho pot.awes have real appeal. I wish the people doing the shopping would give the Idaho spuds a chance. Besides, they arc what has hcl~ Idaho to sprout and blossom in the first place.


Feb. l, 1985/N IC Sentinel- 19-

Card wrestlers experiencing ups and downs b} D on S»oer On again. off again is the bes1 "ay ro dcscnoe 1his year's ,He:stling squad. Coach John Owen said rhe team's youth :ind ine,perience has caused them to be "incredibly inconslStent. ' ' For e,,:ample. in JanUM)' 1he team took on defending PAC 10 champion Oregon State l,niscr111}' lnd came away "ith four \"ictories, and except for a lasrsccond takedo" n against Wa} ne Sharp and a foriei1 at the I :!6-pound class. NIC could have "on si~ matches. After the tremendous shov.ing against OSU. the squad mrnrd right 8Iound and had a rough time against Ea.stem \\ aslungton. a team Owen said his group should ha, c handled easil). ''I guess that's the peaks and \"alleys of young people in competition.'' Owen said. Ov.en added tha t 11 is a credit 10 the NIC wrestling prasrarn to ha'"e a school the caliber of OSl.i respect :-;1c•s rq,utation enough to compete ag:unsl them. "Oregon ga,e us a chance to compete against some great compc1iuon." Ov.cn said. ··You don't look at the ream score, ~ou lool.. at the indhidual matches." Outside of some tnJunes and illnesses rh:u ha"e sidelined sc~eral v..Tcstlers and ,-aused some problems, Owen said Lhat he is waiting for someone to cmeiie ai IS 10 ·•ger 1hr job done for us.•· Tonight the Cards "ill take on Big Bend Communily College in a dual mctt 1n M~s Lake. Washington. and °"ea said he 1s expecting his squad 10 "" alu: o,er" the competition.

Mike Scroggie pholo

Gr'.ippling contest- -f.Wl "resller Robin MucAlplne Irks 10 overpo,.er Jeff Seml'lld during their 134 lb. match held J Qn 21. The Cardinal, won tht O\>M'llll tum competltio o 30-12.

Men Cards explode into league play b)' Sharl Alduman

There will be no repeat performance in Lim yei.r's regional tournament by the NIC men's ba~k~ball team, according to bead coach Rally \\illwns. La,1 year dunng 1he regional tournament lhe Car· dmals los1 ou1 earl> According 10 \I. 1Uiams, the te.i.m has been ptar1ng o much more balanced PJ'lC, and the pla}tr\ comphmcn1 each 01hcr \Cr)' "'ell a., opposed to las1 s=on. ' ' We've got an undefineablequal1ty of chenustr)," we are con,cntraung oo Wilham~ \31d "Right our c\cculion and 1he rec<>l:1n11ion or man-10-man pla~'S as "ell a, the zone." According 10 Williams. the Cardinals' long-tenn ~oal i~ lhe na11onal cha.mpiomhip, but before that i, reoh.lcd, mon 1mm,ed1a1e goal, neced 10 be reached. su,h ns f1msh1a11 fint m the league, v. mning t~ regional 1ournamcm. IUld Stt'Uring an inner-regional toum~ IIIIC The 1eam 1, on 1he nght track oov. , \I, ill1ams said, nduing 1ha1 conceotn11H1g on tht more unmedi:uc goel.s " ould be 1rnponan1 1n ddeatmg u~-omrng lea.me

"°"

lntramurals

Racquetball , basketball slated League piny for intramural bn~l.etbnll v. 111 get under wa)' on Februar) 6, accor· ding to Dean Bennc11, coordinator or intramural sports. Plt1)' will consbt of 1v.o league<, mode up of ~cHin 1c:ims C'ach. At the end or the sca-.on rhc top four teams of each league' will bt placed 111 a climinniion toum:une.ot 10 decide the championship, OC'Cordins to Bennru. Due 10 a tight gym schedule there "111 be no maJ..c-up sames ~hould a 1.-ontest bt mi~scd fo nn> rt2\0ll . Intramu ral racquctba.11 will get in 10 full sv.ins as rarl) as Feb :B. Benneu said Mn11.'11cs will be played 01 the Coeur d ' Alene Athlctk Club. lknneu added tl'l:it tt3!1l rosters and liabilily fonns musl be turned in to his office no later than Feb . IS. The NIC outdoor r«rea11on program "ill hold a met"ung 31 noon on \\'cd:-iesd11}, Feb. 6 in Benneu·s oCfkc to discuss plan) (or the annual spring brcal. trip. The Snake Ri,•cr Canyon, Olyn1pi, Peninsula, Banff N!!tional Par~ aad the Grand Canyon arc possible ~i1es for the trip. For more information on On) of the e event,. rootact lkan Benncu in th.c SUB game room or call 667-7422 1:x1. 267.

~trongholds ~uch as Rick's, CSI and Treasure Valley. \\ 111iarns said that , ariom players ha,e been in~! umental to the Cardinals' Success, such :is Sven \fe}Cr 11.Ild rcrurn" Stne Fedler. Alan Phillips has also 111J1de some very sigmfigan1 \tndo tlus season acc,ording to Williams, as have Jerry Rtmblcn and John Niles, "ho ha,e become very sohd athle1e5 a.ad definite assets. Most or all. Williams said he 1s pleased wirh the allaround ream that has emerged this ~ason. adding thnt he fctls ver) secure about the r~crvc strength of the Cardinal ball dub "hich he f~els has added tremendously to the menglh of hh 15-1 team. A coach ...;11 alwn~·s e~pect more than a team can rea!isucall>· supply, according 10 Williams. Cooches don'1 thml that the-re has evtr been o perfe.:t basketb.lll game pbred. so 1hey try not to dwell on rnisraJces bu1 mstea.d corourage positive progrc,s. " Wtnnu;g is met," Williams said. ··But I' m also concerned ,.-,,b ho" we go about 11."

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Feb. 1. 1985 , 1c Senlintl- 20-

( , s:

VETl:.RA H )OU ba•t been unemplo)td ror IS o r morr ,.ttlu )OIi m13 bt tllgiblt for up 10 SI0,000 or V.A. OJT mont} for eoll)-k>tl jobs afm you graduate. To quahf} )OU l1lll,I.I ba,·e been :a Kort11n Ht from JoM 27. 1950 lhru Jan. 31, 19SS or t \ lelDIID u1 from Aug . 5, 196-1 lhru Ma~ 7. J97S. For more loformalion . contact Ducote, ex1 . 268.

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Jim Upcburcb and bis si.rr "'Ill bt a.-tillble Feb. I I rrom 7 10 9:JO p . m.

In Ilk! Bo natr Room of lhe LB 10 1n•,.tr quesuons and btlp t"2.h mlt 1 Ulldtal', qalifiadons to rfffl•t Ooto· cb.l aid 1.1 lhe 15-86 school )r&r, All amold tnb aod cbttl..s from 1bt spring 1.atbook swwp mus, bt p,cl.NI up fro m I.be pablka tioes dub i• t A ? b) Ftb. l5 or books I.lid moM)' b«omt tbe propeny ar tbe pub dub.

111d,ni.,, mu I sign the rub or lbcl r Ooandal aid chtcl.s ",n Ir 1U th, fund\ 1tt btI011 ktpl b3 the colltgt 10 pa) lul· lloa aod or dorm f~. tud,ots "ho ha,, not s~ntd Lbtir cbtt ~ must go 10 tM b ~ o frkt 10 do so l11.1mC'Cllll1t1) .

ing o Hcrcd b) lhe I or111ional-lcdlDical school ,chcdulrd 10 btgin in J uh o r AURUSI.

Tbtrt u-r still OptlUJlV for ,ocatlonal niib1 cla.ssu from t• iog to 11 cigb1 control. f or mort i.nformauon caU 667-7411, r\l. 234.

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rdc,isiou r~ir, St>:\ .n- "'"-""• .. R.,, .. ,s-.., Pr,: \14" '999""

Located by Penney's .

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Dancing under the sidewaJk

F<X 100 AMII M .. f'll'I llrJ 11/!l (Ill

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$1 well drinks 50 cent draft beers

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P·~ 119• 0.1~ t.lJ"'• 7!9 F 1J,1c•1,..,..,.N1 ( ,mtt

From 5 to 7 p.m.

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Happy Hour--

( , '<I 110

"" U 1(1 \l( X t) V )00 :1,,,. ,.._.,,.,w

JUST FOR THE FUN OF IT!

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Week encl Audio / Vidco Sale!

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Come in and try a hand of blackjack

subjtcli. S1udtnl\ 111ho dt!l rt lht Str· or 11 pttr 1u1or <hould rom, 10 1bt Shtrman Building. Room 11, dall) btl· ~rto noon and .) p.m. 10 ~ hl'dult sc .... lons .

\ 1arch 6.

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Tiny's Fore 'n Aft

Tu1orial ~l'\'kt• •rt a, 1l11ble frtt of charge lo 1 11 ,1udtn1J In a 10 ldt ninat or

Tbt t·cab )mpbon.) Orchc,1r1 "Ill bt 1ppnring in Cot ur d'Aleo( on

S1odents should plan 10 col!lplett

regis1ering b) Feb. 4 for prugnims bt·

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nic notices

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Sundown AudioVideo

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