University of Idaho - Gem of the Mountains Yearbook (Moscow, ID)  - Class of 1987 Page 1  of 278   
 
 
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S          THE          WEATHER         ’         HOW         Keeping          parents          informed          about         Moscow's         mysterious          climatic         changes,          students          wrote          of          an         unusually          warm          fall,         a          mild          but         foggy          winter          in          which          the          first         snow          was          not          recorded          until          late         November,          and          the          first          spring          in         three          years          where          the          ground         was          green          instead          of          white.          (Mor         gan,          Hayes,          Hayes)         WT),          7         TTT         TTT          HH          HH          Hh)         FAN          MAIL         From          Nampa          to          New          Meadows,         hand-written          letters          were          not          the         only          way          students          kept          in          touch         with          far-away          relatives.          En-         thusiastic          fans          at          an          Idaho-BSU         mens’          basketball          game          sent          short         but          sweet          messages          home          to          the         Treasure          Valley          via          KIVI          Chan-         nel          6,a          Nampa          ABC          television          af         filiate.          (Morgan)         ml         WH         }                  As          graduates          grabbed          diplomas          May          16          and         Judge          Wapner          jetted          back          to          his          ‘‘People’s”’         courtroom,          students          scrounged          Palouse          Empire         Mall          dumpsters          for          packing          boxes          in          preparation          [=         for          summer          break.          And          as          they          piled          possessions         into          Mazdas,          Mercuries          and          Mavericks,          students         finally          understood          the          meaning          of          the          five          let-         ters          the y          encountered          upon          moving          to          Moscow.         No,          the          letters          weren't          something          found          on          a         doorstep          or          even          in          a          mailbox.          They          were          I,          D,         A,          H,          and          O.          And          together,          they          spelled          out          much         more          than          just          the          name          of          the          university.          Be-         cause          together,          the          people          made          Idaho          their          sec-         WI          HH          HT          HH          HT          Hy}          H]          WH         |                            :         M         )         1 Oeg@e7.          Sack          M         _          UNIVERSITY          OF          IDAHO         Volume          85          Copyright          ©          1987         Student          Union          Bidg.          Associated          Students         Moscow,          ID          83843          University          of          Idaho         (208)          885-6372          Enrollment:          8,584         ;          ee          ty         iministration          Building,          University          of          Idah         Administraty          :         TO          WRITE          HOME          ABOUT         HH)         HH                  i]         ——         |                  TO          WRITE          HOME          ABOUT          (          HH         |         The          longest          letter          in          the          world          couldn’t          have         told          the          entire          story.          But          that          didn’t          stop          stu-         dents          from          taking          15          minutes          to          jot          down          their         free-flowing          ideas,          lick          tangy          22-cent          stamps,         and          send          personalized          messages          homeward         bound.          From          postcards          to          packages,          students         sent          word          of          a          year          in          which          things          that          ‘‘just         don’t          happen          at          Idaho,”’          did.         During          August          rush,          fraternities         replaced          beer          kegs          with          rootbeer         taps.          Although          the          state          drinking         age          was          19,          Greek          houses          opted          to         go          “‘dry”’          in          anticipation          of          future         legislation.          Also          dry          were          ASUI         student          government          coffers.          After         correcting          a          $61,000          shortfall          in          1986,          fall          budg-         ets          were          back          in          balance          for          the          first          time          in         three          years,          despite          a          $27,000          “Argonaut”         deficit.         As          first          semester          wore          on,          students          stopped         writing          home          for          money          after          they          received         checks          in          the          mail          from          Uncle          Sam.          The          IRS         returned          $466,000          in          Social          Security          taxes,          er-         roneously          collected          since          1981.          Meanwhile,          as         football          Coach          Keith          Gilbertson          wrote          his          team         a          ticket          to          the          NCAA          playoffs,          university          police         officials          issued          a          $40          parking          citation          for          his          pos-         session          of          a          bogus          ‘“‘protest’’          permit.          And         although          the          coach          won          his          parking          appeal,          his         team          lost          its          bid          for          a          national          championship.         Between          the          headlines,          students          survived          the         daily          routine          of          classes          and          quizzes.          They         munched          on          McDLTs          and          Taco          Pizza.          And         whether          they          attended          a          GDI          Week          tug-of-war         or          a          Greek          exchange,          there          was          always         SOMETHING          TO          WRITE          HOME          ABOUT.         MH         |         ———         =—         at         A         )))         (         y          Opening         HOME          COURT         Forwards          James          Fitch          (33)         and          Brian          Coleman          (42)          re-         bound          against          Montana's         Wayne          Tinkle          (44)          during          the         Vandals’          102-76          win          over          the         Grizzlies          in          the          Kibbie          Dome.         (Dahlquist)         CHAIN          LETTERS         Crying          the          letters          I.D,A,          H         and          O,          fans          cheered          the          foot-         ball          team          on          to          a          21-14          victo-         ry          over          Boise          State.          Students         traveled          six          hours          to          Boise          te         see          their          team          win          on          the         Bronco          “Smurf          Turf.’’         (Morgan)         SPECIAL          DELIVERY         At          the          starting          line,          Tau          Kap-         pa          Epsilon          Seton          Foster          ex-         Plains          bed          race          strategies          to         other          team          members.          The         Greek          Week          event          was          held         March          30          in          60-degree         weather.          (Hayes)         meee          wSE228         ELM          SEE         “eas          ry          |                    3          fe         }          ae          ee          on         sigue          (Epadel:         MSeeg5          alekegaa          a         mlceese2          iHigagss  $                   i)          As          a8          8          3          re          a         mie          og          ee          mies          eau         4,039          ,8          O}          2                    sleePati          |eleszees          :         Bisgeeei          Isleseaea          :                    ))y )          yn)          i         NY          yy)          NN          NY         0)         i         HT         Cc         0900859083508          08583          NN         Hy          HW          i]          axe          HTT          HH          HT                           AY         Sadat         °3          é         EE         382236         a          Pe          b-8-]         sees         33325                   Bag          82%         g S          ses         PLEPEE         sg          aaes         608855         ————         —S—=—S=                                     NK         w          I)         Tn         il         A         iy         Hy         AK         NN         4          Campus          Life         Valerie          Engles,          Andy          Jeffrey,          Becky          Asker,         Nanette          Morken          and          Angie          Hasenoehr!          said          the         Homecoming          parade          was...         TO          LIVE          FOR         Weekends          may          have          been          made          for         Michelob.          But          weekdays          were          made          for         a          stronger          addiction.          ‘‘Mail          call,’          stu-         dents          shouted          into          campus          TV          lounges         at          12:30          p.m.          daily.          In          an          effort          to          keep         in          touch,          friends          jumped          to          get          the          mail.         Minutes          after          sorting          through          personal         letters,          credit          card          offers,          and          those         dreaded          bills,          students          returned          to          a         more          civilized          composure.         On          the          weekends,          they          lived          for          an          ear-         ly          Homecoming          football          game,          a          frigid         Mardi          Gras          parade          and          a          sold-out          Lionel         Hampton          jazz          concert.          And          whether         planning          a          weekend          party          or          week-long         trip          to          Mexico,          students          always          had         SOMETHING          TO          WRITE          HOME          ABOUT.         C-A:M:P-U         —————          ——————          ——         —         1)          i)         a         ll         =         ———         —S=         NY         Campus          Life          )         Lapping          it          Up         Pressing          Santa          for          details,          Delta          Tau          Del-         tas          Jim          Hlavacek,          Steve          Green,          Craig         Knots          and          Steve          Clardy          utilized          the          jol-         ly          old          elf’s          presence          at          Palouse          Empire         Mall          to          ask          for          more          than          just          two          front         teeth.          (Dahiquist)         6          Holidays         Sing          in          the          Season         The          Chamber          Choir          provided          a          musical         diversion          during          dead          week          on          the          step         of          the          Administration          Building.          Alec          Hurt,         Dwina          Howie,          Karen          Lechner,          Liane          Hyer         and          Alane          Olson          tried          to          keep          students’         holiday          spirit s          from          dying,          (Morgan)         Holiday          Handcrafts         For          the          Christmas          season,          the          College         of          Art          and          Architecture          held          a          ceramics         sale.          Sales          were          brisk          according          to          Jeri         Stewart,          who          manned          the          booth          with          the         heip          of          Jim          Montz          and          other          art          majors.         (Dahlquist)         |          Twas          the          month          of          December;          and          throughout         houses          and          halls,          philanthropy          started         seheion          ChRHEY          All         +          ManitatA.          haunted          howsgedi{         ZN          sai          Decenbiy         ‘Rothe:          Tyeales          i         Pn          Fey         eee          ie          rn          eh         fradinonat:          trigf:          OUetth          aaa          i         Deena          Ree          ee          jel          |         Cheery          Cello         When          William          McConnell          held          his          first         Christmas          in          Moscow          during          the          late         1800's,          he          probably          never          expected          the         hoopla          that          would          surround          his         home's          100th          Christmas.          Brian          Merz          and         the          university          bass          and          cello          choir          ap-         peared          at          the          McConnell          Mansion's         Christmas          party,          in          commemoration          of         It's          recent          renovation.          (O'Bryan)         Holidays          7         Students          Stirring                   Continued         Tau          Kappa          Epsilon          opened          their         homes          to          poltergiests,          offering         tours          to          raise          money          for          Childfind         and          UNICEF          charities.         As          chilly          November          winds          failed         to          materialize,          midterms          met          stu-         dents          warming          up          to          help          others.         Students          skipped          meals          for          Fast         For          A          World          Harvest;          500          dormi-         tory          residents          and          members          of         eight          Greek          houses          donated          the         cost          of          uneaten          dinners          to          help         feed          the          needy          in          third          world         nations,         “ We          were          looking          for          about          50         percent          participation          in          the          fast,”’         said          Stan          Thomas,          organizer.         We          didn’t          get          that          but          the          num-         A          Limb          Up          for          Hospice         The          ‘Christmas          Tree          of          Lite,’’          held          in         Moscow's          Friendship          Square,          provided         funds          to          help          the          Hospice          of          the          Palouse         buy          much          needed          equipment.          For          a          $10         donation          a          bulb          was          placed          on          the          tree         in          honor          of          a          loved          one.          (Dahiquist)                   Holidays         bers          were          up          from          last          year          and         the          Nov.          20          observance          was          well         attended          by          the          off-campus         populatation.  ’         The          Christmas          ‘Tree          of          Life’’         in          Friendship          Square          raised          money         to          buy          equipment          for          the          Hospice         of          the          Palouse.          For          $10,          visitors         could          place          a          bulb          representing          the         life          of          a          loved          one          on          the          tree,         Two          blocks          away,          the          McCon-         nell          Mansion          celebrated          its          100th         Christmas          with          a          party          to          show          off         it’s          new          Victorian          trappings.         The          candles          William          McConnell         originally          placed          on          his          tree          were         replaced          with          modern          lightbulbs,         brightening          the          house,          which          had         been          restored          as          part          of          the         Split          Decision         Traditional          Christmas          shopping          for          some         can          turn          into          a          sort          of          living          hell,          fight-         ing          marauding          crowds          of          purchasers          in         search          of          the          ‘‘perfect          gift.’          Mike          Swan         said          it          was          an          unpleasant          but          necessary         experience.          (Dahiquist)         Moscow          Centennial.          A          university         cello          and          bass          choir          performed          at         the          mansion          during          the          gathering.         If          students          did          not          feel          like          leav-         ing          their          homes          for          celebrations,         Santa          could          come          right          to          door-         steps          with          help          from          the          Moscow         Police          Department.         Operation          Whiskers,’           a          joint         venture          by          the          March          of          Dimes         and          the          police          department,          raised         money          to          help          prevent          children’s         birth          defects.         As          students           headed          home          the         Friday          of          finals          week,          the          snow         had          barely          started          falling.          And         charity          kept          holiday          spirits          from         falling          around          town.         100th          Holiday         To          ring          in          the          Christmas          season          and          the         mansion's          new          Victorian          trappings,          a         party          was          held          at          the          historical          home          of         William          McConnell.          Members          of          the         university's          chamber          orchestra          attend-         ed          to          provide          musical          accompaniment.         (Dahiquist)         votecrip          4         BE          PASE          OR          AS          Ore,         He          In          t         Remember          when          your          mom         used          to          threaten          to          ship          your          din         ner          to          Africa          when          you          refused          to         eat          your          peas?          Remember          how          she         tried          to          induce          guilt          by          telling          you         horror          stories          of          starving          kids,         bloated.          bellies          and          third-world         blight?         Through          the          efforts          of          Fast          For         a          World          Harvest,          college          students         had          a          chance          to          make          good          on         moms’          threats          by          donating          their         meal          money          to          starving          people          in         other          countries.         For          more          than          10          years,          Oxfam         has          sponsored          the          fast.          Oxfam,          an         international          relief          organization,         was          founded          after          World          War          II         to          help          the          needy          and          homeless          in         Great          Britain.         The          proceeds          from          the          fast         went          to          assist          the          hungry          in          third-         world          nations          with          self-help         projects.          According          to          Stan          Tho-         mas,          university          organizer,          the          idea         Not          a          Hand-Out         The          World          Harvest          ceremony          at          St.          Au-         gustine’s          Community          Center          featured         modern          dance          symbolizing          the          relief          ef-         fort.          (Fritz)         ast          Lane         behind          the          aid          was          not          to          give         food          away,          but          to          provide          the         needy          with          the          skills          to          become         self-sustaining.         Through          the          efforts          of          Thomas,         the          Campus          Christian          Center          and         St.          Augustine’s          Community         Center,          approximately          500          dormi-         tory          residents          and          eight          Greek         houses          participated          in          the          Nov.          20         event.         Off-campus          ‘students          also          do         nated          food          or          money          at          a          Thanks-         giving          observance          held          in         Moscow’s          Community          Center.         Thomas          said          Oxfam          hoped          for         50          percent          participation,          but          the         level          was          not          realized.          ‘‘We’re         happy          with          the          results,          and          the         off-campus          contribution          was          good         also,’’          he          said,         So          by          taking          moms’          threats          to         heart,          hungry          tummies          in          Africa         were          filled          and          a          pile          of          messy         envelopes          and          boxes          was          averted.         World          Harvest          )         =         Diamond          Life         A          staple          for          American          travelers,          Hawaii         pulled          in          its          usual          spring          and          summer         vacation          influx          of          students          from          the          ‘‘up-         per          48°           states.          Boating          trips          around          the         extinct          volcano          Diamond          Head          proved          to         be          popular          with          collegiate          mainianders.         (Hill)         One          Cool          Dood         Ski          Club          members          like          Jeff          Dood,          sped         through          the          powder          during          the          slalom         competition.          Members          spent          nearly          $250         on          four          days          of          skiing          at          a          Jackson          Hole,         Wyo.,          resort.          (Houlihan)         Expo-sing          Yourself         Travelers          from          the          U.S.          made          the          trip          to         ‘the          world          next          door’’          and          attended         Expo          ’86          in          Vancouver,          British          Columbia.         The          four-month          event          attracted          iarge         numbers          of          students          from          northwest         schools.          (Morgan)         l0          Student          Travel         Pool          Hustling         Organizers          said          one          of          the          goals          of          stu-         dent          travel          packages          was          to          bring         together          college          students          from          through-         out          the          nation.          Poolside          parties,          with          in-         expensive          or          free          beverages,          provided          an         opportunity          for          students          to          mingle.          (Col-         lege          Tours)         aking          a          Powder         and          other          cures          for          boredom          offered          to          student          travelers         Want          to          get          away          from          it          all?         Has          school          got          you          down?          Be-         tween          midterms,          term          papers          and         vocabulary          terms,          the          common         classroom          diagnosis          was          often         “‘terminal.’”         So          you          took          a          vacation.          There         were          plenty          of          companies          target-         ing          your          very          needs,          as          well          as         those          of          other          college          students         throughout          the          nation,         The          most          popular          company,         College          Tours,          has          sent          more          than         210,000          students          to          Mazatlan,         Mexico,          in          its          12-year          history.          Ac-         cording          to          Lou          Man,          local          College         Tour          representative,          his          compa-         ny’s          three-week          spring          break          vaca-         tions          were          a          non-stop          party.         ‘‘We          provide          a          lot          for          the          stu-         dents          also          in          the          way          of          sight-         seeing          tours          and          local          activities          like         snorkeling          and          para-sailing,’’          he         said.          ‘‘In          addition,          we          have          par-         ties          and          get-togethers          just          for          the         students,          so          they          can          meet          each         other.”’         Gerhard          Widtmann,          program         director          of          Student          Travel          Interna-         tional,          said          students          jumped          at          the         chance          to          explore          new          lands.         ““We          like          to          get          one          age          group,         s ay          20-25,          together          in          a          different         environment          than          their          home-         town.          It          puts          them          on          more          of          an         equal          footing,          and          by          the          end          of         a          month-long          tour,          a          group          of          40         people          will          be          pretty          well          acquaint-         ed,’’          he          said.         In          addition          to          the          advantage          of         associating          with          one’s          own          age         group,          some          students          saw          other         benefits          in          going          on          ‘‘college         only”’          tours.          Darry          Jaquot          was          a         spring          break          tour          veteran.         ‘ Most          people          who          travel          are         more          middle-aged          and          have          made         enough          money          to          go          on          extrava-         gant          vacations          with          all          the          extras,”’         he          said.          ‘‘And          most          tour          packages         are          geared          to          them.         “ College          tours          take          out          a          lot          of         the          frills          that          students          just          aren’t         interested          in.          This          way          a          the          tour         costs          a          lot          less          and          focuses          more         on          what          we          want          to          do,”’          said         Jacquot.         Even          reduced          college          tour          costs         were          not          always          affordable.          Jac-         quot’s          plans          to          spend          spring          break         in          Mazatlan          ended          after          his          friends         discovered          they          were          ‘“‘too          broke         to          travel.’’         “Most          of          the          friends          I          had         planned          on          going          to          Mexico          with         found          their          second-semester         finances          too          tight.          |          really          didn’t         want          to          go          alone.”’         Aside          from          tours,          students         found          other          excuses          to          get          away         from          it          all.          Ski          Club          President         Terri          Farmin          spent          Christmas          va-         cation          dodging          moguls          on          the         slopes          of          Jackson          Hole,          Wyo.,         while          participating          in          in          the          Na-         tional          College          Ski          Association          Ski         Week.         ‘ Each          year          NCSA          gets          together         about          8,000          students          from          all          over         the          nation          for          this          event,’’          he          said.         We          took          56          this          year          to          Jackson         Hole,          at          a          cost          of          about          $250          a         piece.         Framin          said          the          trip          was          a         “good          deal’’          for          skiers,          offering         five          nights          lodging,          four-day          ski         passes          and          free          movies.         Student          Travel          I]         While          some          students          w         ne          §          s          were          unhappy          with          a          Sept         Homecoming,          they          proved          that          it’s          never          bad          a         Coming          Home          Early         Still          adjusting          to          the          regimen          of          attending          school          after          a          three          month         hiatus?         As          the          first          full          week          of          classes          comes          to          a          close,          the          Vandals          play          their         second          game          of          the          season.          And          oh,          by          the          way,          its          Homecoming;          so          invite         Mom          and          Dad          up          for          the          festivities.         Homecoming?          But          the          dust          from          everyone          moving          in          has          barely          settled         and          Greek          row          has          only          recently          recovered          from          rush,          Also          recovering          was         student          enthusiasm          in          support          of          a          ‘‘Celebration,          Vandal          Style.’          Accord-         ing          to          Homecoming          organizer          Mary          Kay          McFadden,          students          were          screalm-         ing          and          cheering          throughout          the          entire          week,          as          evidenced          at          a          Thursday         night          bonfire.         “There          were          600          to          700          people          at          the          bonfire,          a          turnout          that          we          were         quite          pleased          with,”’          said          McFadden,          also          the          associate          director          of          alumni         relations.         McFadden          said          more          students          attended          Homecoming          events          than          in          past         years.          An          early          fall          Homecoming          caught          students          with          spare          time          on          their         hands,          she          said,          ““because          they          weren’t          really          into          classes          yet,          and          test          time         Continued         A          ae          F          Rs         =          a          ”         oe          novel          Guard         sgulsed          as          secrot          service          agent         8,          P         peer          ecos          sere          McCallis,          todd         ,          n          Andres          and          Steve          Graf         agents          the          parade          route          providing          peri         or          the          Homecoming          Queen          and          h         court.          (Snyder)          =         2          Homecoming         How          do          you          feel          about         an          early          homecoming?         Having          Homecoming          on          Sept.          20          allowed         us          to          include          some          new          activities.         Mary          Kay          McFadden         With          it          coming          so          early,          we          had          little          or          no         time          to          prepare          for          it.         Toni          Denny         If          we          had          more          time          to          work          on          floats,         maybe          the          parade          wouldn’t          be          so          boring.         Teresa          Gunter         WwODSWOL         I          like          an          early          Homecoming.          It          should          be         at          the          beginning          of          the          year          when          every-         body          arrives.         Derek          Flynn         Bul         Here          Comes          ‘‘the          Guv’’         The          parade          provided          a          backdrop          for          po-         litical          candidates          in          an          election          year.          Two         months          after          his          Homecoming          appear-         ance,          Cecil          Andrus          beat          opponent          David         Leroy          in          the          Idaho          gubernatorial          race.         (Snyder)         Kappa-ing          Off          Decorations         Homecoming’s          Sept.          20          arrival          did          not         deter          student          participation          completely.         Kappa          Kappa          Gamma          sorority          joined         other          Greek          houses          in          ‘dressing          up”’         the          campus.          (Snyder)         Homecoming          [3                   Continued         hadn’t          come          around.’’         The          bonfire          provided          a          blazing         background          for          the          crowning          of         Homecoming          Queen          Terryl          Shar-         ples          of          the          Alpha          Gamma          Delta         sorority.         I          can’t          believe          I’ve          won          this          so-         called          title,’’          she          said.          ‘‘It’s          really         exciting          and          an          honor,          but          I’m          still         Terryl.          I’m          still          me.’’         Also          highlighting          bonfire          activi-         ties          was          the          annual          skit          competi-         tion.          Fresh          off          active          showings          in         GDI          Week,          Houston,          Targhee          and         Borah          Halls          placed          first,          second         and          third          respectively.         The          third          annual          GDI          Week         coincided          with          Homecoming,         lending          support          to          both          events,         McFadden          said.          An          ‘‘Uptown         Celebration’?          added          to          the         Homecoming          agenda          also          helped         increase          participation.          Friday          night,          as          street          lights          be-         gan          to          flick          on          and          the          day          began         to          die          in          downtown          Moscow,         Main          Street          came          alive          to          the         sounds          of          two          local          bands—         Fourplay          and          the          Rockafellers.         What          McFadden          called          ‘‘a          surpris-         ingly          large          crowd’’          danced          from          5         p.m.          to          midnight.         McFadden          said          students          en-         joyed          the          new          ‘“‘twist’’          to          tradi-         tional          Homecoming          activities.         Freshman          Joe          Hughes          agreed.         It          was          a          good          idea          to          get          every-         one          together          outside          for          something         14          Homecoming         Home          Early         like          this,’’          he          said.         The          Uptown          Celebration          was         only          a          warm-up          for          bigger          doings         on          Saturday          morning.          Despite          un-         seasonably          cold          temperatures          and         a          less-than-favorable          weather          out-         look          for          the          day,          Saturday          morn-         ing          found          the          Vandal          Marching         Band          poised          and          ready          to          begin         the          Homecoming          parade.         In          his          sixth          decade          at          the          univer-         sity,          Grand          Marshall          Jim          Lyle          fol-         lowed          the          marching          musicians         down          Main          Street.          Following         closely          behind          were          67          assorted         mobile          entries          consisting          of          floats,         bands          and          political          candidates.         “Tt          went          over          very          well,’’          said         parade          organizer          Jim          Rice.          ‘‘I          was         impressed          by          the          amount          of          com-         munity          involvment.”’         Although          community          participa-         tion          was          high,          the          Sept.          20          parade         date          left          only          a          short          time          for          stu-         dents          to          build          Homecoming         floats.          As          a          result,          only          13          of          more         than          30          campus          living          groups         paraded          entries          down          Main          Street.         Members          of          Beta          Theta          Pi,          Gam-         ma          Phi          Beta          and          Theta          Chi         teamed          up          to          win          the          float          com-         petition.         After          the          parade,          onlookers          and         fans          moved          indoors          to          the          Kibbie         Dome          for          the          weekend’s          main         event:          the          clash          of          the          Cal          State         Fullerton          Titans          and          Vandals.         According          to          Coach          Keith          Gil-         bertson,          defense          was          the          key          to          the         Vandal’s          game          plan.         “Our          guys          played          a          fantastic         defensive          game          all          day,’’          he          said.         ““When          they          went          into          the          locker         room          at          halftime,          I          was          a          little         concerned          being          down          17-9,          but         we          kept          it          up          through          the          second         half          and          the          offense          came          back.  ’         Using          a          play          previously          en-         dorsed          by          Washington          State          Head         Coach          Jim          Walden,          the          Vandals         winning          touchdown          brought          them         to          a          25-17          victory.         Just          proves          its          never          too          early          in         the          year          or          late          in          the          game          fora         celebration,          especially          Vandal         style.         Fired-Up          Crowd         Students          sat          in          the          pre-dusk          gloom          to         light          a          fire          for          the          Vandal          football          team.         The          bonfire          featured          skits          by          living         groups          and          the          naming          of          the          Homecom-         ing          Queen.          (Hayes)         Uptown          Fashions         Homecoming’s          newest          addition          was          the         Uptown          Celebration.          The          event          featured         dancing          and          music          by          the          Rockafellers         and          Fourplay.          The          celebration          began         with          a          fashion          show          by          the          Prichard         Gallery,          featuring          student          modeis          like         Mary          Heffner.          (Snyder)         Stokin’          Joe         Joe          Vandal          played          host          at          the          Homecom-         ing          bonfire          to          what          was,          according          to         Mary          Kay          McFadden,          the          largest          au-         dience          in          many          years          to          witness          the         naming          of          the          Homecoming          Queen.         (Hayes)         Homecoming          Queen:         Terryl          Sharples,         Alpha          Gamma          Delta         Parade          Grand         Marshall:         Jim          Lyle,         first          full-time,         UI          Alumni          Director         Float          Winner:         Beta          Theta          Pi,         Gamma          Phi          Beta,         Theta          Chi         Poster          Winner:         Phi          Gamma          Delta         Game          Attendance:         12,500         Homecoming          15         A          Textbook          Case         With          the          skyrocketing          cost          of          obtaining         textbooks,          students          used          credit          cards          to         make          bookstore          purchases.          (Morgan)         Sporting          Propositions         Credit          card          companies          began          a          new         push          for          the          college          market,          offering          spe-         cial          student          deals          to          entice          them          into          the         credit          world.          John          Fritz          found          his          new         bankcard          useful          in          many          areas          of          pur-         chasing,          from          sporting          goods          to          gaso-         line.          (Hayes)         16          Credit         Eating          Up          Credit         The          local          Modern          Way          Thrift          store         offered          Moscow          residents          the          con-         venience          of          buying          their          groceries          now         and          paying          for          them          later          —          with          in-         terest.          Bankcards          could          be          utilized          to         bring          home          the          bacon          or          procure          the         produce.          (Hayes)         iving          Credit         Where          Credit          is          Due         Early          man          survived          the          Stone         and          Bronze          Ages;          people          of         medieval          times          lived          in          the          Age          of         Iron.          Modern          man          lives          in          the         Age          of          Plastic.’’         Tiny          polystyrene          cards,          no          larg-         er          than          an          ace          of          spades,          have          be-         come          important          factors          in          student         lives.          Why          pay          now          when          you          can         pay          later?         Credit          cards          used          to          be          the          do-         main          of          the          upper          class          or          solidly         established          consumer.          Now,          with         the          help          of          strategic          targeting          by         issuing          companies,          a          whole          new         group          has          opened          its          financial          eyes         to          the          wonders          of          credit.         Jim          Bland,          vice          president          of         marketing          for          American          Express,         said          his          company          has          been          active-         ly          persuing          the          student          market.         American          Express          was          the          first         major          card          company          to          specifical-         ly          offer          the          ability          to          charge          to          stu-         dents,          and          we've          been          doing          so          for         quite          a          few          years,”’          he          said.         ‘Students          are          the          most          likely         group          to          have          high          income          in          the         future          and          therefore          use          credit,’’         said          Bland.          ‘‘We’ve          also          found         college-age          students          to          be          good         credit          risks,          since          they          obtain          the         We          are          very          actively          pursuing          the          college         student          market         Jim          Bland—American          Express         It's          a          good          idea          as          long          as          students          under-         stand          the          risks.         Amy          Scholes         It’s          nice          for          us          to          be          able          to          get          them          and         show          that          students          are          responsible.         cards          to          build          a          good          record.”          Other          companies          have          seen          the         college          market          as          an          extension          of         their          usual          card-using          population.         ‘ We          have          not          been          specifically         going          after          the          college          student          as         a          credit          card          user,’’          said          Guy         Eberhart,          marketing          vice          president         for          Sears.          ‘‘We’ve          been          pursuing         increased          consumer          awareness         across          the          board.”’         Eberhart          also          stressed          the          im-         portance          of          students          as          first-time         card          carriers.         ““Many          times          students          have         never          had          a          credit          card,          which         makes          kind          of          a          catch-22          when         trying          to          get          credit.          The          best          way         to          get          a          credit          card,          we          think,          is         through          a          retail          store,          and          Sears          is         trying          to          offer          this          possibility          to          all         consumers,’’          he          said.         Students          said          they          like          having         the          ability          to          say          ‘‘charge-it,’’          but         realize          the          dangers          of          uncontrolled         credit.         “It’s          a          good          idea          to          build          up          a         good          credit          history          now,          while         you’          re          still          in          school,’’          said          Amy         Scholes.          ‘‘When          you          get          out          into         the          ‘real          world,’          you're          already          es-         tablished          credit-wise,”’         Now          all          Students         can          qualify...         But          students          understand          the          risk         involved          if          they          get          in          over          their         heads,          she          said,         So          how          can          students          get          credit         cards,          when          they          don’t          have          a         regular          income          or          previous          finan-         cial          history?         Meredith          Naples,          of          the          College         Credit          Card          Corporation,          recom-         mends          several          plans          of          attack.         “Obtain          an          extra          card          as          part          of         an          existing          account          of          your          par-         ent’s          or,          even          better,          get          a          card         through          a          co-signer,          such          as          what         American          Express          uses.          Also,         many          card          companies          are          making         special          arrangements          for          college         students          to          obtain          cards,          so          check         their          displays,’           he          said.         Jeffrey          Shepard,          a          student         bankcard          holder,          says          the          credi         tors          and          users          benifit          from          the         availablity          of          cards.         “ There’s          a          big          market          for          the         companies          with          students,’’          he         said.          It          could          be          a          big          risk          on         their          part,          but          they          seem          to          be          will-         ing          to          take          it          for          the          possible          big         returns.          Students          just          have          to          be         careful          not          to          overdo          it          and          try          to         pay          off          ‘maxxed’          out          cards          with         student          loans.’         —         because          we          believe          in          you.         Right          on          Target         When          card          companies          decided          to          pursue         the          student          market,          they          brought          out         fast-paced,          graphically          designed          dis-         plays          to          advertise          the          availabily          and          ease         of          obtaining          credit.          (Wendt)         Credit          i         The          Far          Side         Eyeing          the          BSU-UI          game's          progress          from          the         sidelines,          Head          Football          Coach          Keith          Gil-         bertson          had          a          crowd          of          Vandais          behind          him,         or          at          least          to          the          side          of          him,          in          the          end          zone.         (Frates)         ruliaie         PATA          NOTE          Rohe          en          Rae         erty          Ban         Since          1982,          the          football          rivalry         with          Boise          State          University          has          fa-         vored          the          Vandals.          Five          games         later,          Moscow          students          graduated         having          never          seen          Idaho          lose          to          its         southern          brethren         Looking          for          a          fifth          win          in          a         row,          Moscow          students          hit          Bronco         Stadium          for          the          Nov.          22         match-up.         Along          with          the          crowd          came          the         largest-ever          manifestation          of          the         Vandal          Marching          Band          —          220         marchers.          Director          Dan          Buckvich         said          he          wanted          to          ‘‘show          the          peo-         ple          of          Boise          that          Idaho          was          num-         ber          one          in          the          state          and          maybe         impress          them          just          a          little          bit.’’         Months          before          the          Boise          game,         BSU          officials          decided          they          should         have          a          comparable          marching          band         of          their          own.         ‘They          announced          that          their         band          would          soon          surpass          UI’s          in         size          as          well,’’          Buckvich          said.         To          show          the          Broncos          a          little         about          ‘‘          Vandal          Pride,’’          Buckvich         said          he          decided          to          increase          the          size         of          his          band.          Non-band          students         called          ‘‘plugs’’          marched          in          the         Boise          Holiday          Parade          posed          as         Vandal          players.         Most          of          these          ‘‘plugs’’          became         part          of          the          tuba          section,          ‘‘making         a          disorderly          group          even          that          much         more          rambunctious,’’          Buckvich         said.         All          the          marchers          were          reward-         ed          with          free          seats          to          the          sold-out         game.         18          Rivalries         Stray          Cat         Neosia          Morris          took          an          opportunity          to          rub         the          Weber          State          Wiidcat's          fur          the          wrong         way          following          a          reception.          The          Vandals         won          31-17          in          front          of          the          smallest          sized         crowd          of          the          season.          (Hayes)         Paper          Chase         The          BSU          Broncos          found          no          friendly          faces         in          the          UI          crowd.          instead,          they          found          only         @          sea          of          newspapers          in          the          stands          for          the         teams’          second          meeting.          (Morgan)         ride          and          Prejudice         Vandals          hold          grudges          against          neighbors          and          rivals         Sugar          Ray          Leonard          and          Marvin         Hagler          were          less          than          the          best          of         friends.          The          Dodgers          hated          the          Gi-         ants          and          the          Los          Angeles          Raiders         earned          everybody’s          antagonism.         University          students          were          no          ex         ception          to          the          tradition          of          athletic         aggression,          Students          held          grudges         against          Boise          State          University,         Eastern          Washington          University         and          Washington          State          University,         just          to          name          a          few.         Organized          athletics          may          have         brought          out          character,          but          they         also          brought          out          rivalries          in          the         heat          of          competition.          Kindly          ath-         letes          who          would          help          the          han-         dicapped          and          take          in          stray          puppies         underwent          a          metamorphosis          on         game          day.          The          field          became          a         demilitarized          zone          and          players          be-         came          fierce          competitors,         Fans          found          the          hot          lights          of          the         Kibbie          Dome          conducive          to          show-         ing          their          feelings           against          neighbor-         ing          universities.          Everything          from         scholastic          prowess          and          accredita-         tion          to          marching          bands          became         caught          up          in          the          university’s          rival-         ries          with          other          Big          Sky          Conference         foes.         Moscow          students          vented          their         passions          most          vehemently          against         their          southern          neighbors          at          BSU.         Be          it          football,          basketball          or          chess         club,          Vandals          wanted          to          rub          Bron-         co          snouts          in          defeat.          They          had          just         that          chance          at          Bronco          Stadium          in         November          when          the          two          Idaho         football          powers          met          for          their          an-         nual          showdown.         According          to          the          university          tick-         et          office          workers,          the          number          of         Vandals          purchasing          tickets          for          the         game          jumped          from          a          normal          300         to          more          than          4,000.         Players          said          they          were          excited         about          the          game.         This          is          my          favorite          game          of          the         season,’’          said          Troy          Ballard,          defen-         sive          tackle.          ‘]          would          like          to          play         BSU          10          times          a          year.”         The          Vandal          Marching          Band          got         into          the          act          as          well.          The          band          took         more          marchers          that          ever          to          the         Boise          Holiday          Parade          and         Bronco-Vandal          match-up.         For          the          fifth          year          in          a          row,          they         watched          the          Vandals          beat          their         Boise          rivals.         To          the          north          of          Moscow,         another          Inland          Empire          athletic         power          stirred.          EWU          flexed          its         muscles          against          the          Vandals          in         1985,          beating          both          the          men’s          foot-         ball          and          basketball          teams          in          three         out          of          four          contests.          But          the          Van-         dals          reversed          the          trend          in          1986.         A          mid-season          football          game         brought          Vandal          pride          to          the         Spokane-based          crowd.          The          Van-         dals          won          the          contest,          beating          the         Eagles          in          their          own          nest,          27-10.         The          Evergreen          State          also         provided          Idaho          with          an          opponent         in          the          form          of          the          WSU          Cougars.         Athletics          gave          the          university          a         chance          to          compete          with          a          Pac-10         rival.          In          basketball,          the          Vandals         lost          three          out          of          four          games.          Yet         the          lone          Vandal          victory          was          a         59-56          win          at          the          inaugural          Inland         Empire          Classic          tournament          in         Spokane.         With          the          entry          of          EWU          into          the         BSC          as          of          July          1,          1987,          Vandal         rivalries          with          the          Eagles          height-         ened.          Before          EWU          could          sink          its         talons          into          the          Vandal          players,         though,          the          Vandals          had          to          fend         off          other          conference          rivals,          all          vy-         ing          for          athletic          dominance.         Rivalries          19         20          paying         id          Pool          Dries          Up         Students          forced          to          come          with          liquid          assets          for          college         A          Wall          Street          broker          wouldn't         plop          down          $20,000          on          a          risky          ven-         ture          with          unsure          returns.          But         despite          the          high          cost          and          fluctuat-         ing          returns          of          higher          education,         college          students          were          asked          to          do         just          that.          And          their          investments         came          in          an          era          of          rising          fees          and         reduced          financial          aid          monies.         In          a          series          of          moves,          the          Reagan         administration,          under          the          direc-         tion          of          Education          Secretary          Wil-         liam          Bennett,          drastically          cut          the         amount          of          federal          aid          available          to         students.          Grants          and          direct          stu-         dent          loans          were          hardest          hit.          Re-         quirements          for          the          remaining          loan         funds          also          became          more          strict.         The          repercussions          of          these          ac-         tions          were          felt          across          the          nation         and          in          the          farming          area          of          the         Palouse.          Dan          Davenport,          univer-         sity          financial          aid          director,          said          stu-         dents          had          to          come          up          with          larger         fractions          of          the          cost          of          their          own         education.         “The          federal          government          has         made          the          requirement          for          financial         independence          based          mostly          on          age         and          marital          status,          so          it          will          be         much          harder          for          students          to         separate          themselves          from          their          fa-         mily’s          income,”’          he          said.          ‘ Parents         are          going          to          have          to          foot          more          of         the          bill          for          their          children,          and          the         government          is          going          to          figure          this         increased          contribution          into          the          cal-         culations          for          the          amount          of          aid         deserved          by          students.’’         Aid          Epidemic         Registration          was          often          a          harrowing          ex-         perience          for          students,          with          long          lines         and          last-minute          changes          awaiting          them         in          the          Kibbie          Dome.          One          ever-popular         desk          belonged          to          the          financial          aid          office,         to          which          an          increasing          number          of          stu-         dents          had          to          turn          to          pay          for          their          educa-         tion.          (Hayes)         When          the          pool          of          grants          dried         up,          a          trend          that          began          in          the          late         ’70s,          students          were          forced          to          sink         or          swim          with          the          help          of          student         loans.          In          1975,          grants          composed         80          percent          of          the          student          financial         base;          a          decade          later,          they          only         constituted          47          percent,          with          loans         taking          up          the          slack          as          50          percent         of          students’          college          resources.         According          to          a          Carnegie          toun-         dation          report,          the          increase          in          stu-         dent          debt          has          shaped          student         choices          as          to          majors.         “Undergraduates          are          preparing         themselves          for          careers          in          the          lucra-         tive          fields          rather          than          those          fields         that          interest          them          the          most,’’          the         report          said.          ‘‘These          findings          sug-         gest          that          students          who          borrow         heavily          are          concentrated          in          fields         that          promise          good          job          opportuni-         ties          after          graduation.”’         The          report          found          that          students         who          were          forced          to          rely          more          on         loans          wanted          to          go          into          fields          that         would          give          them          the          best          ability          to         pay          their          bills          off          and          to          make         their          investments          worthwhile.         After          the          federal          government         reduced          its          commitment          to          finan-         cial          aid,          states          were          left          to          handle         the          problem          themselves,          Daven-         port          said.         “‘The          trend          with          the          feds          has         been          to          put          more          of          the          responsi-         bility          for          grants          and          direct          student         loans          on          the          state          governments.         The          states          themselves          have          enough         of          their          own          financial          problems,         though,          and          it’s          going          to          be          more         difficult          to          keep          people          in          school         without          aid          funds,’’          he          said.         For          the          1987          school          year,          Ida-         ho          was          the          third          smallest          state          in         terms          of          financial          aid          given          to          stu-         dents.          Unlike          many          states,          Idaho         was          still          disbursing          non-need-         based          forms          of          assistance,          Daven-         port          said.         Students          said          they          were          appre-         hensive          about          their          college          futures         due          to          the          cutbacks.         “I’m          going          to          have          to          rely          more         on          Mom          and          Dad          to          keep          me          in         school          without          a          change          in          the         financial          aid          requirements          from         the          way          they’re          going          now,”’          said         Dave          Grote.         The          traditional          plan          of          working         over          the          summer          to          pay          for          college         also          became          less          plausible.         ‘‘My          summer          earnings          used          to         get          me          through          the          whole          year,          but         now          I’m          lucky          to          make          it          through         the          first          semester,’’          Grote          said.         ‘When          money          runs          out,          |          can         take          a          personal          loan          out          from          the         bank,’’          Todd          Buschorn          said.         Anymore,          it’s          easier          to          do          that         than          to          try          and          qualify          for          a          stu-         dent          loan,          much          less          a          grant.”’         In          the          registration          line,          students         found          the          financial          aid          table          a         stumbling          block          of          sorts.          But          for         many,          it          was          their          only          chance          at         a          return          on          their          investment,          short         of          insider          trading.         Picking          up          the         SLACK         UI          students          receiving         financial          aid         1986          -          1987         55%          GRANTS         41%          LOANS         4%          WORK         1975          -          1976         80%          GRANTS         17%          LOANS         3%          WORK         In          the          Director’s          Chair         Dan          Davenport,          director          of          financial          aid,         warned          that          tightened          budgets          and          new         requirements          for          financial          aid          would         make          it          increasingly          harder          for          students         to          be          able          to          pay          their          way          without          addi-         tional          parental          contribution.          (Dahiquist)         Book          Buying          Blues         Students          young          and          old          found          triple-digit         totals          greeting          them          at          the          cash          register.         Fees          weren't          the          only          aspect          of          college         that          became          more          expensive          for          regis-         trants          braving          the          fall          semester          Book-         store          rush.          (Hayes)         Paying          I         Divine          Presents         More          than          their          older          or          out-of-school         counterparts,          student          newlyweds          looked         to          wedding          presents          as          4          way          to          stock         a          new          home          until          graduation          allowed          a         career          to          begin.          Randy          and          Emily          Hayes         discovered          Pyrex          at          their          gift          table.         (Spiker)         2?          Weddings         Itared          Plans         came          with          student          marriages         First          comes          love,          then          comes         marriage,          then          comes          midterms,         and          finals,          and          papers.         This          may          not          be          the          normal,         white-picket-fence          view          of          young         newlyweds,          but          it          became          a          reali-         ty          for          scores          of          students          who          took         the          plunge          into          matrimony.          Life-         long          commitment          to          spouses         didn’t          always          compliment          college         commitments,          though.         “The          toughest          year          was          the         senior          year,’          said          Jennifer          Mah-         ler.          “‘If          you          can          make          it          through         those          last          semesters          without          seeing         each          other          at          all          and          studying          all         the          time,          then          you’re          home          free.”’         The          Rev.          Jim          Worsley          of          St.         Augustine’s          Catholic          Church          said         he          watched          newlyweds          confront         similar          problems.         “ Students,’’          he          said,          ‘have         concerns          about          their          ability          to         balance          school          and          a          marriage,         whether          they          will          be          able          to          spend         enough          time          with          their          spouse          to         make          the          marriage          work,          as          well         as          maintain          their          academic         standards.”’         A          number          of          students          entering         the          marriage          game          looked          only          to         their          immediate          goals          of          gradua-         tion,          Worsley          said.         According          to          Matt          Bertagnolli,         pressures          sometimes          kept          him          and         his          spouse          from          planning          ahead.         We          just          want          to          work          towards         getting          out          of          school          keeping         whatever          jobs          we          have          to          in          the         meantime,”          he          said.          ‘‘We          can’t          be         planning          for          a          family          or          the          ex-         tended          future          until          we          know          what         that          future          might          be.’’         Worsley          agreed.         Most          of          these          students          are          ad-         justing          to          a          new          way          of          life,          com-         ing          usually          from          a          group          living         arrangement          of          one          kind          or         another.          They          only          can          plan          for         the          next          one          or          two          years,’’          he         said.         Worsley          said          students          worked         hard          to          make          marital          relationships         work.          Amid          rising          divorce          rates,         they          were          also          more          practical         about          relationships          than          their          par-         ents          may          have          been,          he          said.         “ Students          don’t          want          to          repeat         the          scenario          their          parents          went         through          with          divorce,”’          he          said.         “ With          the          rate          of          divorce          on          the         rise          for          the          past          decade,          having         separated          parents          is          more          the          rule         anymore          than          the          exception.          How         they’ve          dealt          with          divorce          as          chil-         dren          affects          their          feelings          on          how         well          a          marriage          will          work          out.’’         Young          marriages          can          also          be-         come          strained          due          to          financial          har-         ships,          Worsley          said.         For          Mr.          and          Mrs.          Joe          Corsini,         the          birth          of          their          first          child          in-         creased          the          financial          pressures          the         couple          was          already          facing.         We          can’t          plan          for          a          future          or         a          family          yet.         Matt          Bertagnolli         “It          will          all          work          out          somehow,”’         Joe          Corsini          said.          ‘‘A          baby          costs         about          $2,500-3,000,          and          we          don’t         have          anything          near          that          to          spend,         “There          are          programs          to          help         pay          for          the          medical          expenses         though,          so          that          should          be          taken         care          of,’’          he          said.          ‘‘It          will          be          hard         to          find          the          time          though          to          go          to         school          and          raise          the          baby,          and          pay         for          it          all          on          top          of          that.”         The          Corsinis          and          student          cou-         ples          like          them          discovered          few          op-         tions          when          faced          with          the          realities         of          love          and          college.         Said          Corsini,          ‘‘In          this          situation,         though,          what          else          can          we          do?’’         A          Mother's          Day         Molly          Walker          needed          the          helping          hands         and          guidance          of          her          mother          on          the          faith-         ful          day          at          the          altar.          Students          found          the         support          of          their          parents          important          for         juggling          a          marriage          and          a          college          career.         (Walker)         A          Familiar          Ring         Despite          tight          budgets          and          tighter          finals         schedules,          Joe          Corsini          and          his          fiancee         hit          local          jewelers          in          search          of          that          per-         fect          ring          for          their          May          wedding.          (Clark)         Balancing          the          Books         School          and          marriage          provided          a          difficult         mix          for          students          as          they          tied          themselves         down          to          a          family          and          a          major.          Keeping         the          ‘‘books          balanced  ’          academically          and         financially          kept          newlyweds          on          their          toes.         (Clark)         Weddings          23         betecrip          4         ADesigner’s          Hell         There’s          only          one          university          class         where          students          received          three         credits          for          investing          hundreds          of         hours          of          time          and          promising          to         work          a          week          of          all-nighters.          And         it          was          the          only          course          where          stu-         dent          work          was          critiqued          by          more         than          8,000          people.         Creative          Process          and          Design         (CP  D),          gave          students          the          chance         to          complete          a          group          design          project         under          ‘“‘real          world’’          conditions,         according          to          instructor          David         Giese.         Their          first          mission          in          the          second         semester          of          the          class          was          to         decorate          the          SUB          Ballroom          for          the         Mardi          Gras          Beaux          Arts          Ball.          Stu-         dents          also          designed          and          built          the         floats          that          have          become          the         hallmark          of          the          Mardi          Gras         celebration         “The          students          can          be          involved         at          various          levels,          from          the          nuts         and          bolts          to          the          supervisory,          de-         pending          on          their          standing,’’          Giese         said.          ‘ The          seniors          will          handle          the         supervisory          work          and          the          decorat-         ing          of          the          mall.          They          can          all          also         enroll          for          two          additional          work-         shop          credits          for          decorating          and         clean-up.”’         Those          taking          CP  D          aren’t         given          much          to          work          with          by          nor-         mal          standards,          Giese          said.          They         can          only          use          black          and          white          paper         on          the          decorations,          and          only          the         latter          on          the          floats.          Aside          from          the         economic          considerations          of          nar-         rowing          the          materials          down,          the         students          respond          better          to          the          im-         posed          color          and          materials,          he          said.         “With          only          white          to          work          with         on          the          floats,          the          students          can          let         their          creativity          run          wild          and         produce          ‘mental          colors’          with         shape          and          texture.          Their          minds         don’t          get          slowed          down          with          choos-         ing          which          colors          to          use,          et          cetera,”’         Geise          said.         So          why          do          students          put          them-         selves          through          the          torture          of          work-         ing          on          a          tight          deadline          schedule         day          and          night,          only          to          have          to         throw          it          all          away          the          next          day?         Julie          Benton,          an          interior          design         major,          saw          CP  D          as          a          chance          to         stretch          creatively.         “‘We          are          given          only          minimal         guidelines          on          how          to          start          on          our         floats,          and          we          take          it          from          there.         It          is          a          great          deal          more          work          than         I          had          first          thought          —          what          with         having          to          handle          all          the          moving         and          cleaning          up          ourselves          too,”’         she          said.         For          Art’s          Sake         Design          students          like          Brian          Duffy          and          Car-         rie          Grey          were          responsible          for          building         floats          for          the          parade.          In          addition,          design-         ers          decorated          the          Palouse          Empire          Mall         and          the          SUB          Ballroom.          (Fritz,          Fritz)         License          to          Spud         Unwilling          to          go          through          the          Mardi          Gras          pa-         rade          without          the          comforts          of          home,          parade         marchers          took          a          few          necessitites          with          them.         (Hayes)         24          Mardi          Gras         In          its          ninth          year,          the          Moscow          Mardi          Gras          generated          interest          similar          to         its          sister          celebration          down          South.          For          the          media,          everything          from          the         parade          to          the          Beaux          Arts          Ball          was          all          there          in...         Black          and          White         Standing          Room          Only         More          than          1500          people          attended          the         Beaux          Arts          Ball,          filling          the          second          floor         of          the          SUB          to          capacity          and          causing          fire         inspectors          concern.          The          afternoon          of          the         dance,          officials          ordered          David          Giese          to         take          down          most          of          the          student-produced         decorations.          (Fritz)         Juggling          Priorities         Lead          by          President          Mike          Sherman,          ten         members          of          the          Juggling          Club          tossed         their          way          down          Main          Street          during          the         Mardi          Gras          parade.          (Morgan)         Mardi          Gras          25         A          Stone’s          Throw         For          the          first          time          in          Mardi          Gras’s          nine         year          history,          Washington          State          Universi-         ty          floats          appeared          in          the          parade.          Idaho's         neighbors          arrived          in          prehistoric          fashion         as          the          Flinstones.          (H ayes)         26          Mardi          Gras         Paper          Mall         Using          Palouse          Empire          Mall          as          a          back-         drop,          design          students          promoted          Mardi         Gras.          According          to          Charlotte          Buchanan,         the          paper          statues          and          streamers          did         their          job.          (Fritz)         Parade          Entrant          Awards         Best          Musical:         A          Century          Smiles,         Moscow’s          LOOth         Crowd          Pleasers:         College          of          Law          Brief         case          Brigade         Best          Float:         Dragonslayer         Most          Original:         The          Bug          That          Ate         Moscow,          Portable          Por-         ceclain         Prettiest:         Spanish          Galleon         Black          and          White                   Continued         Charlotte          Buchanan,          Mardi         Gras          co-coordinator,          said          the         event          continues          to          grow          each          year.         This          was          the          best          Mardi          Gras         we          have          produced          yet,          and          it          will         definitely          add          to          the          credibility          of         our          press          releases.”’         The          Mardi          Gras          parade          was         more          than          a          university          event.          It         encompassed          the          entire          Moscow         community.         “‘We          had          teenagers          there         through          people          in          their          60s,          so          I’d         say          we          had          a          really          good          represen-         tation          of          the          community,’’          Bucha-         nan          said.         “‘It          was          a          riot,’’          said          Ken          Bux-         ton,          Latah          County          sheriff.          ‘‘I’d         estimate          the          crowd          at          8,000.”’         The          crowd          represented          half          the         population          of          Moscow,          the         WLLS-New          Orleans          reporter          said         during          an          on-camera          interview.         Despite          dire          predictions          by          fore-         casters          that          rain          or          snow          would         greet          parade          participants          on          Satur-         day          morning,          the          sun          shined          on          23         hand-carried          floats          and          a          number         of          other          entries.          Entries          included         everything          from          the          UI          Juggling         Club          to          the          Law          School          Briefcase         Brigade.          Some          paraders          showed         up          at          the          very          last          minute.         “ ‘We          won’t          keep          anyone          from         participating,’’          said          Esther          Louie,         co-coordinator          of          the          festivities.         While          the          parade          crowd          brought         few          problems          to          authorities,         another          Mardi          Gras          entity          did.         The          culprit?          Black          and          white         paper.         “It          was          hard          going          through          it,’’         said          Catherine          Rouyer,          vice          presi-         dent          of          the          Mardi          Gras          Board.         “‘At          4          p.m.          the          day          before          the          ball,         we          were          told          just          about          all          the         decorations,          which          cost          a          total          of         $12,000,          had          to          come          down.          It          was         a          gut-wrenching          experience          for         David          and          me.”’         Students          said          they          were          disap-         pointed          about          the          decision,          but          re-         joiced          when          given          a          chance          to         deck          the          malls’’          with          black          and         white.          They          filled          the          Palouse          Em-         pire          Mall          with          various          life-size         paper          statues          and          a          fountain,          in         commemoration          of          the          upcoming         ball.         Giese          called          the          project          ‘‘a          teas-         er          of          what          the          Beaux          Arts          Ball          is         all          about.         ‘ We          think          this          is          an          excellent         vehicle          to          grab          people’s          atten-         tion,’’          he          said.         According          to          Buchanan,          the         pre-ball          hype          worked          to          attract          a         large          turnout.         ‘There          were          over          2,000          people         at          the          ball          this          year,          considerably         more          than          1,300          last          year,’’          she         said.         Fresh          off          a          three-week          hiatus,         the          Crazy          8’s          from          Portland          found         it          ‘‘in          the          cards’’          to          make          their          se-         cond          appearance          at          the          event.         Their          return,          according          to          Andy         Hairston,          helped          draw          a          larger          ball         audience.         T          heard          that          the          Crazy          8’s          were         really          good          last          year          and          I          decid-         ed          this          year          I’d          go          and          see          for          my-         self,          as          did          several          other          people          I         know,”’          he          said.         Dancing          wasn't          the          only          draw          at         the          ball.          New          activities          helped         spread          the          spirit          of          Mardi          Gras         throughout          the          entire          second          floor         of          the          SUB.         The          Associated          Miners,          in          con-         junction          with          the          Washington-         Idaho          Symphony,          convinced          par-         ticipants          to          ‘‘dig          deep’’          and          gam-         ble          for          high          stakes          with         sym-phoney”’          money          in          a          casino         set          up          in          the          SUB          Appaloosa         Room.         Next          door          in          the          Silver          and          Gold         Room,          a          live          cabaret          show          com-         pleted          the          image          of          a          traditions)         Mardi          Gras          on          the?          ussissippi          Del-         ta.          The          show          featured          the          dixie-         land          band          Snake          River          Six          and         was          staged          by          students          in          the         Theater          Arts          department.         To          avoid          problems          inherent          to         a          party          atmosphere,          buses          shuttled         bar-hoppers          from          one          watering         hole          to          the          next.          Five          establish-         ments          joined          in          the          shuttle         program.         On          Sunday          morning,          the          more         unfortunate          participants          tried          to         locate          themselves          and          figure          out         why          they          weren’t          in          their          own         clothes.          Giese,          however,          could          be         found          outside          the          SUB,          picking          up         crepe          paper          discarded          during          the         evening’s          revelry.         Said          Giese,          ‘‘Part          of          the          art          of         the          whole          thing          is          the          temporal          na-         ture          of          it.          The          work          is          more          pre-         cious,          for          the          time          that          it’s          here.’’         Several          activities          were          added          to          the          M ardi          Gras          celebration,          ac-         cording          to          organizers,          to          increase          participation          in          the          whole          event.         During          the          Mardi          Gras          parade,          a          mask          exhibit          and          sale          was          held          at         the          Biscuitroot          Restaurant.          (Morgan)         Doing          their          best          lip-sync          to          “Surfin?          USA,”          the          Beaches          came          in         second          at          a          Show          sponsored          by          the          Moscow          Downtown          As-         sociation,          KZFN,          and          Theatre          Operator's          Inc.          (Jones)         The          Beaux          beth          ip          Dati          weal          Soper          b          um          wi          ai         SUB,          partly          through          the          introduction          of          a          casino          sponsored          by          the         sr          oihiget          Associated          Miners          club          and          the          Washington          Idaho          Sym-         phony,          (Fritz)         Mardi          Gras          2]         ippies          to          Yuppies         The          “me          generation          looked          for          stability,          security         In          the          ’60s,          students          on          Ameri-         ca’s          college          campuses          were          trying         to          ‘‘find          themselves.’’          Today,         their          college-aged          children          say          they         also          want          to          find          themselves          —         preferably          behind          the          wheel          of          a         BMW          following          graduation.         As          college          costs          increased          and         conservative          attitudes          stretched         into          new          areas          of          the          nation,          stu-         dents          flocked          from          traditional         liberal          arts          majors          to          the          job          secu-         rity          of          business          and          engineering         disciplines.         ‘Increased          student          interest          in         career-specific          majors          such          as          bus-         iness          has          been          accompanied          by          ris-         ing          materialistic          and          power          values,         while          decreased          inter est          in          educa-         tion,          social          science,          the          arts          and         humanities          are          reflected          in          declin-         ing          alturism          and          social          concern,”         said          Alexander          Astin,          co-author          of         The          American          College          Fresh-         man:          Twenty          Year          Trends,         1966-1986.’’         During          the          past          25          years,          stu-         dent          attitudes          have          changed          dra-         matically,          he          said.         Changing          Student          Attitudes         28          Majors         1967          1960          1971          1973         1975         1979         1977          1961          1983          1985         =          ee          ee          eee          Doveloo          a          meaningful          philosophy          of          Me         Be          financially          well          off         ‘“Twenty          years          ago,”’          Astin’s         survey          said,          ‘‘83          percent          of          college         freshmen          were          attending          a          univer-         sity          to          ‘develop          a          meaningful         philosophy          of          life’          while          in          1986,         that          number          had          dropped          to          29         percent          and          the          percentage          of          stu-         dents          in          higher          education          to          ‘be-         come          well          off          financially’          had         risen          to          71          percent.’’         According          to          Kenneth          Green,         Astin’s          partner,          students          have          be-         come          preoccupied          in          insuring          that         their          futures          will          be          secure.         ‘ A          lot          of          what          we          see          is          port-         folio          building,’’          Green          said.          ‘‘Stu-         dents          are          thinking,          ‘I          don’t          want         this          type          of          risk          in          my          future.          I         want          to          be          sure          everything          is          go-         ing          to          be          okay.’”’         Meanwhile,          a          Carnegie          Founda-         tion          study          concluded           that          in-         creased          college          costs          have          left         students          concerned          about          getting         jobs          that          would          allow          them          to          pay         off          loans.         “There          is,          of          course,          a          well-         documented’          shift          towards         careers,’’          the          Carnegie          study          said.         But          this          may          simply          reflect          the         students’          concern          about          their          in-         debtedness          and          a          hard-headed         recognition          that          the          job          market          is         changing.          Indeed,          there          is          some         evidence          that          students          who          take         sizable          loans          may          major          in          such         fields          as          business          and          engineering,         that          offer          higher          salaries.’’         Galen          Rowe,          dean          of          the          Col-         lege          of          Letters          and          Science,          agreed         that          economics          determine          a          stu-         dent’s          curriculum          more          often          than         not.         Students          can’t          afford          the          lux-         ury          of          just          going          to          college          for          the         sake          of          going          anymore.          This         forces          them          to          make          their          career         decisions          early          on          —          often          not          in         an          area          they          are          very          interested         in,”’          he          said.          ‘ School          is          too          expen-         sive          to          not          get          a          job          out          of          it          right         away.””         In          Moscow,          students          like          ar-         chitecture          major          Todd          Buschorn         said          that          potential          career          earnings         influenced          their          choice          in          a          major.         I          did          pick          a          major          I          liked,          I’ve         Continued                     A          Sea          of          Mortardom         The          next          step          for          graduates          after          leav-         ing          the          Kibbie          Dome          was          going          into          the         real          world.’’          Liberal          arts          majors          could         look          forward          to          lower          opening          salaries         than          that          of          their          fellow          graduates          in          en-         gineering          and          business.          (Hayes)         Plan          tO          major         In          USiness,         Plan          to          pursue          elementary         or          secondary          teaching          careers,         yo70         From          “The          American          Cofege          Fresh         man:          Twenty          Year          Trends”          by          Alexander         Astin          and          Kenneth          Green         Scholarly          Slide         Diminishing          interest          in          the          liberal          arts         was          Illustrated          by          decreased          class          size         in          subjects          like          philosophy.          Nick          Gier’s         world          religions          class          only          attracted          five         students          for          the          spring          semeste r.         (Hayes)         Majors          29         Is          a          liberal          arts          degree         worth          getting?         A          BS          in          Sociology          is          a          ticket          to          nowhere         —          some          attention          to          marketability          should         be          law          for          government-sponsored          schools.         78          Sociology          Graduate         Perhaps          the          most          valuable          experience          |         gained          in          L  S          (the          College          of          Letters          and         Science]          is          that          I          learned          how          to          learn          all         sorts          of          things.         82          Communications          Graduate         Shouldn’t          students          get          the          best          possible         return          on          their          investment?         Lynne          V.          Cheney         I          don’t          have          the          time          or          money          to          fool         around          with          my          education.         Scott          Yore         I          think          that          electives          allow          you          to          gain          more         out          of          going          to          college          than          just          a          job.         Todd          Buschorn         Major          Dec         Keys          to          Success         As          business          has          reached          the          computer         age,          so          has          the          business          class.          In          Ac-         counting          204,          Jolene          Bacca          gained          prac-         Skil          Very          Important         Written          communication          Percent          tical,          hands-on          training          in          computerized         Oral          Communication          62          financial          techniques.          Students          like          Todd         81          Buschorn,          however,          argue          for          a          more         Mathematiés                    Stats          16         Computer          jiteracy          $4         Creative          thinking          60         Problem.          solving          66         {nterpersonal          ‘skills          75         Business,          econ          {3         From.          @          1OB6          University          survey         diverse          education          in          preparation          for          a         career.          (Jones)         Wool          Gathering         As          director          of          the          university          Career          Plan-         ning          and          Placement          Center,          Charies         Woolson          has          amassed          a          large          library          of         employment          practices          and          procedures         for          several          companies          throughout          the          na-         tion,          In          his          experience,          Woolson          has         found          that          companies          are          willing          to          hire         liberal          arts          majors,          providing          they          are         willing          to          put          forth          an          effort.          (O'Bryan)         0          Majors         ippies          to                   Continued         always          liked          to          draw.          But          I          do         have          to          admit          that          architecture          is         a          good          fie ld          job-wise,          and          that         helped          my          decision,’’          Buschorn         said.         Money          considerations          also          in-         fluenced          the          number          of          non-         required          courses          students          took          to         round          out          their          education.         It’s          taking          me          four          and          a          half         years          to          graduate          anyway,”’          said         Scott          Yore.          ‘Why          delay          it          by          tak-         ing          classes          I          don’t          need?          I’m          pay-         ing          for          college          myself,          so          I          don’t         have          the          time          to          fool          around.’’         Buschorn,          who          also          paid          his         own          way          through          school,          dis-         agreed.         “The          extra          time          to          take          electives         was          worth          it.          They          relieve          some          of         the          pressure          from          major          classes         and          give          you          a          better          general          view         from          higher          education,’’          he          said.         University          alumni          tended          to         agree          with          Buschorn.          In          survey          by         the          College          of          Letters          and          Science,         researchers          found          alumni         “ respondents          believed          that          one          or         two          courses          in          business          and          com-         puters          would          have          enhanced          their         chances          for          employment.’’         Although          more          students          were         signing          up          to          become          business         majors,          the          Letters          and          Science         survey          indicated          that          employers         had          not          forsaken          liberal          arts         graduates.         Risky          Business         Registrants          late          in          the          day          found          busi-         ness          classes          in          short          supply.          Between         1985          and          1986,          the          College          of          Business         and          Ecomomics          was          the          only          university         college          to          increase          its           enrollment.          Other         departments,          especially          engineering          and         liberal          arts,          saw          enroliment          dropped          6          to         13          percent.          (Hayes)         Yuppies         A          liberal          arts          degree          has          many         uses          and          is          valued          by          prospective         employers,’’          the          survey          concluded.         A          liberal          arts          degree          affords          mo-         bility          within          an          organization,          and         is          especially          helpful          in          administra-         tive          and          managerial          positions.”’         In          a          University          of          Virginia         alumni          poll          of          liberal          arts          gradu-         ates,          91          percent          of          the          respondents         recommended          liberal          arts          to          un-         dergraduates.         ‘Although          first          employment         paid          relatively          poorly,          the          median         annual          salary          for          current          jobs          was         $30,000,’’          the          Virginia          survey          con-         cluded.          ‘ Thirty-five          percent          said         a          liberal          arts          graduate          may          hold          an         edge          over          someone          with          a          business         or          professional          degree.”’         According          to          Woolson,          the          Vir-         ginia          figures          were          close          to          those         experienced          by          Idaho          graduates.         “It          comes          down,          in          many          cases,         to          the          applicants          ability          to          inter-         view,’’          he          said.          ‘‘A          liberal          arts         major          can,          and          I’ve          seen          this,          go         into          an          interview          with          Boeing          and         if          he          sells          himself,          get          a          job.”’         ‘We          have          to          remember,”’         Woolson          said,          “‘that          an          engineer         can          be          trained          in          marketing          just          as         easily          as          a          history          major          can.          For         a          liberal          arts          major          to          survive,          he         has          to          have          more          than          just          his         school          knowledge,          while          business         or          technical          majors          can          get          by          on         just          that.”         Majors          }          |         167          to          Grow          On         For          Susan          B.          Anthony’s          167th          birthday,         the          Women’s          Center          heid          a          potluck          com-         plete          with          birthday          cake,          sampled          by         Jennifer          Rod,          to          honor          the          auspicious          oc-         casion.          (Morgan)         Lunchtime          Lectures         [ee         zi         “Nei                           Audiences          brought          their          brown          bags          and          inquiring          minds          to          the         Women’s          Center          for          noontime          programs.          (Morgan)         Betsy          Thomas          contributed          to          a          round          table          discussion          on          domestic         violence          with          Patti          Gora.          (Morgan)         A          lecture          by          Carol          Moehrie          on          Acquired          Immune          Deficiency          syn-         drome          packed          the          center          to          capacity.          Moehrle,          a          registered          nurse,         discussed          measures          to          avoid          AIDS,          and          testing          procedures.          (Morgan)         In          a          new          look          at          an          age-old          topic,          Susan          Palmer          of          Rutgers          Univer-         sity          presented          the          results          of          her          research          on          sex-based          division          of          labor.         (Morgan)         ?          Women’s          Center         ot          for          Women          Only         Women’s          center          catered          to          community          needs         Stress          management,          sex-role         stereotyping,          right-to-work,         Supreme          Court          decisions,          tax          re-         form,          student          burn-out          and          alco-         holism:          these          topics          are         far-ranging,          and          not          necessarily         for          women          exclusively,          but          they          all         could          be          found          at          the          university’s         Women’s          Center          during          the          course         of          a          year.         The          Women’s          Center          serves          as         the          focal          point          for          women’s          con-         cerns          at          the          university          and          in          the         community,’’          said          Betsy          Thomas,         director          of          the          center,          ‘‘That          may         sound          kind          of          ‘ivory          towerish,’         but          the          center          is          basically          a          place         for          all          people          to          explore          ideas.”’         Noon          programs          sponsored          by         the          center          not          only          provided          a          fo-         rum          for          ideas;          they          provided          a         workshop          environment          for          gather-         ings          to          foster          campus          and          commu-         nity          relationships.         Most          of          the          people          that          come         here          are          more          mature,          non-         traditional          students          —          people          that         have          a          lot          in          common          but         wouldn’t          otherwise          have          a          chance         to          meet,          since          they          aren't          involved         in          a          living          group          or          anything          like         that,’’          Thomas          said.         Off-campus          students          like          Helen         Jackson          took          advantage          of          the         center’s          offerings.         The          center,’’          she          said,          ‘‘gives         people          the          chance          to          be          aware          of         issues          that          they          would          otherwise         not          be          exposed          to.’’         As          a          “‘focal          point’’          for          issues,         Thomas          said          the          forums          gave          stu-         dents          a          chance          to          obtain          informa-         tion          about          and          get          involved          with         serious          campus          issues.         ‘In          several          instances,          we          didn’t         want          to          sit          back          and          allow          in-         justice          to          occur,’’          Thomas          said.         We          had          to          do          more          than          inform         the          public.’’         Thomas          and          some          of          her          ‘‘regu-         lars’’          did          just          that          in          a          highly          pub-         licized          trial          of          Washington          man         accused          of          rape.          Both          the          UI’s          and         WSU’s          women’s          centers          were          in-         volved          in          supporting          the          alleged         victim,          a          local          17-year-old          woman.         A          Washington          judge          authorized         a          background          investigation          of          the         No          Longer          Alone         in          February,          the          Women's          Center         showed          the          film          ‘‘No          Longer          Alone,          which          asserted          that          domestic          violence         occures          in          all          walks          of          life          —          affecting         six          milllon          women          annually.          After          the         presentation,          a          discussion          was          held          with         Betsy          Thomas          and          Patti          Gora,          director          of         Alternatives          to          Violence          of          the          Palouse.         (Morgan)         woman,          after          defense          attorney         Bruce          Charwell          said          that          the          case         hinged          on          whether          the          woman         consented          before          the          alleged          in-         cident.         Our          interest          was          piqued          when         the          defense          in          the          trial          began          the         probe          into          the          victim’s          private          life,         including          her          dating          habits          and         ‘patterns          of          consent,’’?          Thomas         said.          ‘‘The          Rape          Shield          Law          was         passed          to          prevent          this          type          of          in-         vestigation,          and          the          Washington         court          seems          happy          enough          to          set         that          aside.’’         Thomas          and          her          counterpart          at         WSU,          Marlene           Howell,          gave          the         alleged          victim          support          at          the          pre-         trial          hearings.          And          according          to         Thomas,          these          actions          were          exten-         sions          of          the          center’s          role          in          the         community.         ‘ We          have          a          valuable          resource         here          for          everyone          in          the          commu-         nity          to          come          and          use,”’          she          said,         “but          also          to          take          to          their          needs,         be          they          at          a          potluck,          an          ERA          ral-         ly,          or          a          rape          trial.’’         Center          of          Attention         Women's          Center          Director          Betsy          Thomas         described          the          center          as          a          place          for          peo-         ple          of          the          community          to          exchange          ideas.         Jennifer          Rod,          Carolyn          Castes          and          Susan         Falk          often          took          advantage          of          the          facill-         ties          to          keep          abreast          of          women’s          issues.         (Morgan)         Women’s          Center          3         With          the          dedication          of          the          Lionel          Hampton          School          of          Music         during          the          jazz          festival,          the          “king          of          the          vibes”          brought          his         association          with          Idaho          from...         Twenty          to          Lite         rears          usually          isn’t          4         Tei          aon          ae          the          right          to         te          oe          right          to          be          treated          as          all          au          Ee         ail          right          to          drink          anywhere          —          9         in          -          year.         my          gai          nel          Hampton           Chev          SS         a          real          hit          that          sil          :         things          were          anything          ae          har          sae         For          his          efforts          on          bel          soa         ‘versity          and          for          the          adv          anc          ane         sel          in          general,          Lionel          Hamp         ‘a          for          the          music         came          the          namesake          for          th         es          ‘a7          festival,         ga          the          weekend          A          in         n          We          rarded          the         ton          was          awat          ne          re         ase          of          Idaho          Gov.          meee          See         president          Richard          Gibb          and          0         Continued         A          Note-able          Singer         Senior          music          major          Lisa          Wilson          sang          at         the          festival          after          having          sung          the          praises         of          Lionel          Hampton          at          the          music          school         dedication          ceremonies.          Chosen          to         represent          students,          Wilson          said          she         would          be          proud          to          graduate          from          Hamp-         ton’s          school.          (Jones)         4          Jazz          Festival         Hampton’s          History         Lionel          Hampton          has          been          a          fixture          at          the         jazz          festival          for          20          years,          but          performing          at         Idaho          concerts          is          only          one          of          Hampton's         projects,          The          “king          of          the          vibes”          is          also          ac-         tively          involved          in          charities          and          scholarship         programs          at          the          University          of          Southern         California          and          Duke          University,         As          «          performer,          Hampton          helped          break         the          color          harrier          in          American          music          when         he          became          a          member          of          the          Benny          Goodman         Quartet          in          1936.          He          later          introduced          the         vibraharp,          or          “vibes,”          to          jazz          and          introduced         jazz          music          to          the          presidents.          Since          Harry         Truman’s          inauguration,          Hampton          has          played         at          seven          similar           post-election          events,         Unable          to          attend          Hampton's          Idaho          con         cert,          Vice          President          George          Bush          relayed          «         video          message          of          encouragement          to          his          long         time          friend.         “Tam          very          lucky          to          have          Lionel          Hamp-         ton          as          a          friend,”          he          said.          “And          we          all          are         lucky          to          have          him          as          a          musician,          He          is          a          na         tional          treasure.”         Bucking          the          System         Near          the          end          of          Lionel          Hampton's          finale         performance,          he          was          joined          on          stage          by         university          faculty          members.          Among         those          accompanying          Hampton          was          Dan         Buckvich,          percussion          and          marching         band          instructor.          (Hayes)         Leader          of          the          Band         During          the          four-hour          finale          show          on         Saturday          night,          Lionel          Hampton          came         out          from          behind          his          vibraphone          and         sang.          His          version          of          ‘‘!          Guess          That's          Why         They          Call          it          the          Biues’’          drew          cheers          from         the          Kibbie          Dome          crowd          of          more          than         8,000.          (Hayes)         Taking          in          Talent         When          not          entertaining          crowds          at          the          Kib-         bie          Dome,          the          professional          artists          at          the         festival          conducted          workshops          for          univer-         sity          and          high          school          students          attending         the          event.          Dianne          Reeves’          session          drew         rave          reviews          from          the          aspiring          musi-         cians.          (Hayes)         N         Jazz          Festival          3         This          Time’s          the          Charm         in          her          third          consecutive          jazz          festival          ap-         pearance,           Dianne          Reeves          entertained          in         the          Kibbie          Dome          and          rubbed          shoulders         with          future          artists          in          workshops.          (Jones)         The          Future          of          Jazz         Aside          from          concerts,         exposure          to          jazz          was         sometimes          difficult          for         university          students          to          find.         The          genre,          according          to         Buddy          Roker          of          the          Ray         Brown          Trio,          got          little          air-         play          outside          of          major         cities.         “You          can’t          just          turn          on         the          radio          at          2          a.m.          and         hear          jazz,          especially          in         Idaho.          All          music          is          good,         but          if          you're          interested          in         jazz,          you          don’t          want          to         hear          rock          and          roll,”          Rok-         er          said.         According          to          Lynn         Skinner,          festival          organiz-         er,          through          the          efforts          of         musicians          like          Roker         (top),          Lionel          Hampton         (center)          and          Al          Grey          (bot-         tom),          students          hacame         more          aquainted          with          jazz         and          more          interested          in         keeping          it          alive          as          an          art         from.         “If          somebody          didn’t          try         to          help          these          young          peo-         ple          understand,          rub          shoul-         ders          with          the          best,          we         might          lose          jazz          al-         together,”          Skinner          said.         (Hayes,          Fritz,          Hayes)         No          Bones          About          It         For          the          Friday          night          show,          Lionel          Hamp-         ton          brought          on          his          all-star          cast          of          hired         guns.          With          Carl          Fontana,          Benny          Powell         and          Al          Grey          on          trombone,          Hampton          and         the          rest          of          the          ensemble          performed          for         three          hours          to          a          sold-out          Kibbie          Dome         audience.          (Hayes)         4          Jazz          Festival                   Continued         and          local          dignitaries.         “TD          ve          received          gold          records          and         played          with          some          of          the          most         talented          musicians          ever,          but          this          is         the          greatest          honor          —          bar          none          —         that          I          have          received,’’          he          said.         Students          like          Lisa          Wilson          said         they          were          pleased          to          attend          the         newly          named          school.         ‘Mr.          Hampton          definitely          per-         sonifies          excellence,          and          we          will         have          the          honor          to          graduate          from         the          Lionel          Hampton          School          of         Music,””          she          said.         After          the          dedication,          Hampton,         a          New          York          native,          resolved          to         spend          more          time          out          West.          His         plans          included          writing          textbooks         on          jazz,          lecturing          on          the          universi-         ty          campus,          and          writing          songs          for         the          bands          of          ‘this’’          school.         The          dedication          was          only          the          be-         ginning          of          Hampton’s          ‘“‘birth-         day.’’          He          was          also          honored          at          a         banquet          after          Andrus          proclaimed         Feb.          20          Lionel          Hampton          Day.         Mingling          at          the          invitation-only         event          were          180          of          Idaho’s          politi-         cal,          business          and_          social         heavyweights.          Afterwards,          Hamp-         ton          had          enough          energy          to          host          a         three-and-one-half          hour          finale          to         Twenty          to          Lite         the          week’s          festivities.         The          week’s          three          concerts          fea-         tured          Hampton,          Dianne          Reeves,         and          the          Ray          Brown          Trio.          Perfor-         mances          were          moved          to          the          Kibbie         Dome          after          festival          officials          decid-         ed          the          Memorial          Gym          was          unable         to          accomodate          increased          turnout.         Lynn          Skinner,          director          of          the         festival          and          professor          of          music,         said          sound          quality          did          not          suffer         by          moving          the          festival.         ‘ People          were          pleasantly          sur-         prised          at          the          sound          in          there.          We         hired          a          San          Francisco          engineering         firm          to          improve          the          acoustical         conditions,          and          the          audience          also         appreciated          having          a          chair          with          a         back,’’          Skinner          said.         Aside          from          the          concerts,          the          fes-         tival          has          another,          and          some          would         argue,          more          important          purpose          —         to          educate          students          of          music          and         give          them          career          counseling.         “This          festival          is          remarkable          in         that          it          involves          adjudicated          com-         petition          for          young          people          and         gives          them          the          chance          to          rub         shoulders          with          the          greatest          in         jazz,’’          Skinner          said.         ]          never          got          the          chance          to          go          to         clinics          when          I          was          learning          to          pla         A          First-Timer         During          a          chilly          Saturday          afternoon         ceremony,          Lionel          Hampton          became          the         first          jazz          musician          to          have          a          music          school         named          after          him.          Hampton          said,          ‘i'm          so         glad          that          I          was          the          musician          you          chose.         I'll          be          spending          more          time          out          in          idaho         in          the          future,          |          believe.  '          (Hayes)         the          bass,””          said          Ray          Brown,          back-         up          singer          for          Dianne          Reeves.         Brown,          Reeves          and          other         professionals          appearing          at          the          con-         certs          explained          their          success          stories         to          students          at          afternoon         workshops.         ‘Although          the          UI          has          good         music          teachers,          a          playing          musician         can          tell          students          what          it's          like          to         be          a          performer          and          how          to          get         started,’’          Brown          said.         Reeves          told          students          about          ef-         fective          voice          exercises,          the          impor-         tance          of          communication,          and          the         need          to          “‘listen          to          as          much          music         as          possible.’’          ;         According          to          Skinner,          it          is          be-         coming          more          difficult          for          most         American          students          to          tune          into         jazz.          But          he          said          that          with          Hamp-         ton’s          help,          Moscow          students         receive          valuable          exposure          to          the         music.         “After          Saturday          night’s          con-         cert,          some          of          the          guys          came          up          to         me          and          said          they          couldn’t          believe         it          when          the          young          people          got          up         and          started          to          dance,”          he          said.         “This          was          the          first          time          they          had         actually          seen          it          on          this          side          of          the         Atlantic.”’         Jazz          Festival          oy         Altered          management          and          budgets          at          ASUI          Productions          meant          drastic          changes         in          the          programs          the          department          provided          to          students.          New          Director          Jim          Rennie         spent          most          of          his          time          checking          the          pulse          of          student          attitudes          and...         Setting          the          Pace         As          the          new          manager          of          ASUI         Productions,          Jim          Rennie          decided         to          start          a          new          program          that          could         be          described          as          existentialist.         The          PACE          series          exists          only          in         the          minds          of          the          programs         board,”’          said          Rennie.          ‘‘We          want         ed          to          develop          a          new          series,          if          only         in          name,          for          better          promotional         purposes.          PACE          is          a          package          un-         der          which          we          can          put          various         ASUI          Productions          activities.”         According          to          Rennie,          his         department          created          PACE          after         dropping          its          cooperative          affiliation         with          a          Washington          State          Univer-         sity          performing          arts          program         called          Palouse          Performances.          The         new          program          was          designed          to          bet-         ter          fit          student          wants          and          needs,          he         said.         “With          the          Palouse          Perfor-         mances          thing,          and          Washington         State          in          general,          we          got          burned,”’         he          said.          ‘It          cost          far          too          much          for         us          to          promote          the          concerts,          and         they          got          most          of          the          profit.          ASUI         Productions          in          general          was          far          too         much          into          the          fine          arts,          which,          as         we          saw,          the          students          weren't          in-         terested          in,’’          Rennie          said,         According          to          Rennie,          ASUI         Productions          became          more          flexible         with          the          restructuring.         Productions          can          now          be          any-         thing          we          want          [that          caters]          to          stu-         dent          needs.          It          allows          us          to          change         and          adapt          to          changing          trends          and         not          just          re-hash          whatever          has          been         done          in          the          past,’’          he          said.         As          part          of          the          new          PACE          pro-         gram,          ASUI          Productions          worked         with          the          College          of          Letters          and         Science          to          arrange          career          planning         programs          for          that          college’s          stu-         dents          through          the          Planning          and         Placement          Center.         ‘We          wanted          to          introduce          stu-         dents          to          graduates          who          are          suc-         cessful,          but          not          super          students.          We         brought          in          people          who          were          just         normal          students          with          GPAs          under         3.0,  ”          Rennie          said.         “Students          are          more          interested          in         their          careers          after          graduation          and         practical          matters          than          in          the          arts,         and          we          wanted          to          provide          for          that         changing          attitude,’’          he          said.         Rennie’s          programs          reached          fur-         ther          into          areas          other          than          job         placement          presentations.          ASUI         Productions          became          involved          with         National          College          Television          and         brought          in          a          variety          of          controver-         sial          lecturers          through          a          serics          they         called          ‘‘Issues          and          Forums.’’         We          also          have          become          more          in         volved          with          already          existing         campus-wide          events,          such          as         Homecoming,          the          rodeo          and         Mardi          Gras          and          we          will          be          par-         licipating          in          Parent’s          Weekend,”’         Rennie          said.         In          the          wake          of          budget          cuts          and         departmental          changes,          Rennie          said         he          was          able          to          get          started          on          his         primary          goal          for          ASUI          Produc-         tions          —          giving          the          students          what         they          paid          for          and          what          they         wanted.         ‘We          lost          money          with          [former         Director          Barry]          Bonifas’          thrust         towards          the          fine          arts,’          Rennie         said.          ‘ You          can’t          just          force          feed         students          culture          when          what          they         want          and          need          are          tools          to          deal         with          a          rapidly          changing          culrure,”’         he          said.          We          want          to          be          at          the         leading          edge          of          their          desires          —          it         is          their          money.”          The          Beasley          Performing          Arts          Coliseum,          which         usually          enjoyed          an          influx          of          Idaho          students          ev         ery          year,          had          a          sparse          season          to          offer          the         Palouse.         The          artists          that          did          play          the          Coliseum,         however,          were          not          the          kind          to          attract          the          same         types          of          crowds.          Both          well          established          acts,          Van         Halen          and          Stevie          Wonder          attracted          a          variety         of          fans,         Delayed          flight          plans          left          Wonder          wondering         whether          be          would          arrive          in          Pullman          on          time          to         perform.          But          after          arriving          nearly          an          hour          late         to          his          own          concert,          he          was          greeted          by          6,000          en-         thusiastic,          cheering          spectators,          Flanked          by         an          enormous          rotating          array          of          electronics,         Wonder          entertained          the          audience          with          his          “ol         dies”          and          a          few          newer          hits.          His          predominantly         W-and-over          crowd          enjoyed          “Castle          of          Love,”         a          song          from          his          latest          album,          “In          co          ag          Cir-         cle.”          Wonder          ended          the          concert          with          a          group         of          older          hits          which          appealed          to          listeners          of          all         ages.         Although          David          Lee           Roth          was          pursuing          a         solo          career,          Van          Halen          was          still          able          to          pro-         vide          their          college-age          crowd          the          fast-paced          rock         which          has          become          their          trademark          over          the         ve         Crossing          Age          Boundaries         ars,         Sammy          Hagar,          the          group's          new          vocalist         brought          the          audience          up          with          his          solo          hit          “IT         Can’t          Drive          55,           and          never          let          them          down.         The          band          dipped          back          a          few          years          into          their         cover          collection          for          their          second          encore.          To          ap-         pease          the          audience,          they          performed          the          Led         Zeppelin          classic          ““Rock           n          Roll,”          a          song          that         the          Wonder          generation          grew          up          with.          (Morgan         Kough)         3          Productions         A          Hidden          History         An          avid          UFO          researcher          since          1967,         Robert          Hastings          said          during          a          PACE          lec-         ture          that          the          U.S,          government          has          knowledge         of          the          existence          of          UFOs          and          is          deliberate-         ly          covering          it          up.          His          30-minute          slide          show,         “UFOs;          The          Hidden          History”          depicted          in-         cidents          from          the           40s          through          the           80s          that         had          either          leaked          or          become          declassified.          On         his          findings,          Hastings          said,          “the          information         we          have          now          is          tablescraps.          Regarding          the         nature          of          UFOs,          no          one          really          has          a          handle         on          it.”          (Sperry)         A          Nation          Apart         During          1986,          North          Idaho          received          a          bad         reputation          around          the          rest          of          the          nation          for         racism,          in          part          due          to          the          activities          of          white         supremacists          in          the          area.          Peter          Lake,          a          free         lance          journalist,          infiltrated          the          group          called         “The          Order”          for          three          months          in          1983          and         spoke          to          students          in          January          regarding          his         experiences          in          the          Hayden          Lake          organi-         zation.         He          described          his          view          of          the          white         supremacist’s          attitude          and          urged          Idahoans         to          protect          their          rights          from          The          Order          and         other          white          supremacist          factions.          ‘These         people          are          truly          evil,”          he          said,          “ members          of         the          community          should          make          it          uncomforta-         ble          for          them.          Demonstrate          in          public          and          let         them          know          that          [The          Order]          isn’t          welcome         in          Idaho.”          (Datiquist)         Helter          Skelter         Vincent          Bugliosi,          the          man          responsible          for         putting          Charles          Manson          behind          bars,          an         swered          for          a          crowded          SUB          Ballroom          the         question          he          was          most          asked          in          his          travels:         why          does          the          Manson          family          still          generate         so          much          interest?         The          case          ended          in          1972          with          convictions         for          Manson          and          several          of          his          followers          for         the          Southern          California          murders          of          Sharon         Tate          and          others.          Bugliosi          said          the          Manson         legacy          continues          “because          it          was          the          most         bizarre          mass          murder          case          in          U.S,          history,”         Manson          gained          control          of          his          followers         through          sexually          perverse          orgies,          drugs,          and         daily          sermons,’          Bugliosi          said.                    These          kids         weren't          weirdos,          either,          (hey          came          from          aver         age          American          backgrounds,          just          like          many         of          you.”          (Jones)         Productions          9         4()          Productions         Double          Exposure         Sporting          an          acoustic          guitar          outfitted          with         an          electric          pickup,          and          swaying          like          a          throw-         back          to          Jimi          Hendrix,          Michael          Hedges          per-         formed          his          unique          blend          of          jazz          and          folk         twice          at          the          university.         The          first          time,          as          a          solo          artist          in          October,         Hedges          suprised          the          audience          with          his          abili-         ty          to          play          melody          and          harmony          simuitane-         ously,          making          his          performance          sound          like          an         entire          band.          He          then          returned          in          January          to         back          up          dancer          Tandy          Beal.         Of          his          style,          Hedges          said,          ‘I’m          trying          to         get          as          much          sound          out          of          the          instrument          as         possible.          That’s          my          drive          —          to          just          play          the         heck          out          of          the          thing.”         More          pragmatically,          The          “Milwaukee         Journal”          observed,          “he’s          not          just          a          folksy         glued          to          a          stool.”          (Hayes)         A          City          All          Its          Own         With          Halloween          still          a          couple          of          weeks         off,          things          in          Moscow          were          already          getting         a          little          weird.         Chicago's          Second          City          Touring          Compa-         ny          came          to          the          Administration          Building          Au-         ditorium          for          two          sold-out          shows          featuring         skits,          mime,          and          their          famous          improvisations.         The          Second          City          was          the          cradle          for          come-         dians          John          Belushi,          Bill          Murray,          Chevy         Chase,          Gilda          Radner          and          others          who          have         become          household          names.          Although          a          new         generation          came          up          from          the          ranks          to          replace         them,          the          traditional          social          humor          was          still         the          company’s          trademark.         Members          of          the          Second          City          National         Touring          Company          included          Chris          Barnes,         Noelle          Bou-Simon,          J.J          Jones,          Evan          Gore,         Mark          Beltzman,          Laura          Wasserman,         Michael          Franco          and          Barbara          Wallace.         In          Search          of          Enemies         As          the          U.S,          press          complained          about          cen-         sorship          in          Central          America,          former          CIA         agent          John          Stockwell          asserted          there          was         more          censorship          in          the          U.S.         Stockwell          spoke          from          personal          experience.         After          writing          “In          Search          of          Enemies,          A          CIA         Story,”’          he          said          he          was          told          to          withold          profits         from          book          sales          until          it          was          submitted          for         CTA          rexjew.          Concerns          stemmed          from          Stock-         well’s          assertion          that          the          CIA          be          abolished.         (Dahiquist)         Mardi          Party         The          Portiand-based          Crazy          8's          made          their         second          consecutive          appearance          on          the         SUB          Ballroom          stage          for          the          Beaux          Arts         Ball.          Lead          singer          Todd          Duncan          led          the         band          through          two          encores          for          the         standing-room-only          crowd.          (Fritz)         Crazy          8S          Saw          Moscow          In          the          Cards         Todd          Duncan          received          another         rejection.         It          was          another          entry          in          what         could          have          been          a          diary          of          record         companies          who          refused          to          sign          the         Portland-based          Crazy          8's.          But         Duncan,          the          band’s          founder          and         leader,          said          he          was          optimistic.         “Tf          [had          a          bulletin          board          for          all         of          our          rejection          letters,          it          would         have          to          be          six          by          nine          feet.          [can’t         really          get          too          strung          out          about         Warner          Brothers’          opinion          of          the         marketability          of          our          band,”’          he         said.          ‘“We          have          other          options          we         are          looking          into          to.”         After          five          years          touring         throughout          the          nation,          the          Crazy         8’s          were          making          their          second          ap-         pearance          at          the          Mardi          Gras          Beaux         Arts          Ball.         “ We          really          like          coming          back          to         Moscow;          this          town          has          given          us          a         lot          of          support          through          the          Mardi         Gras          and          KUOI,”’          Duncan          said.         The          Beaux          Arts          Ball          is          pretty         wild          too,          with          the          bar          shuttles          and         the          costumes          and          everything.          The         crowd          is          enthusiastic          and          they          love         to          dance.’”’         Fresh          off          a          vacation,          band         members          said          they          were          ready          to         get          back          into          playing,          and          get          back         on          the          road.         ‘ ‘We          were          anxious          to.          practice         again          and          start          playing          some         gigs,”’          Duncan          said.         Before          that          hiatus,          the          Crazy          8’s         were          busy          marketing          their          unique         blend          of          ska          and          rock          fo          listeners         in          Chicago,          Philadelphia,          New         York,          and          Boston.         They          were          also          working          on          new         material          with          hopes          to          release          it         through          a          major          recording          compa-         ny.          Their          first          two          albums,          ‘“‘Law         and          Order’?          and          ‘ Nervous          in         Suburbia,”’          sold          a          combination          of         nearly          30,000          copies.          That          num-         ber,          according          to          Duncan,          was          low         Radical          Resurgence         due          to          poor          distribution          of          the         albums,         “‘The          indies’          [independent         labels’}          distibution          system          doesn’t         have          the          power          the          major          labels         do,          and          they’re          often          pushing          their         own          product.          We          want          to          get          on         a          major          label          break          out          of          that,         like          Husker          Du          did,’’          Duncan         said.         Without          a          major          record          con-         tract,          Duncan          said          the          band          con-         tinued          to          tour.         We're          happy          to          polish          our          act         on          the          road          in          the          meantime.         Things          are          going          too          well          to          let         something          like          Warner          Brothers         get          us          down.”’         As          more          than          2,000          Beaux          Arts         Ball          dancers          cheered          the          Crazy          8's         back          on          stage          for          two          encores,         Duncan          said          that          he          was          just          con-         tent          to          be          in          Moscow.         Complaining          that          students          use          college          as         a          “yuppie          training          camp,”’          in          November,          Ab-         bie          Hoffman          pleaded          for          students          to          become         emotional          about          the          major          issues          of          their         time,          as          students          in          the          ’60s          did.         “People          should          see          Central          America          as         another          Vietnam          already,          not          in          the          future.         Don’t          necessarily          believe          the          press,          they          are         the          media,          interested          in          selling,”          he          told          the         capacity          ballroom          crowd.          (Hayes)         Productions          4|         For          1,078          UI          graduates,          years          of          scholastic          toil          ended.         Ceremonies          in          William          Kibbie’s          arena          pronounced          their          col-         lege          education...         Over          and          Dome         One          limped          in          on          cru         astic          razorback          ca         anglin         ‘          commen         slightly          in          format          -          ees          ests         For          the          13th                    there          was          a          cap-         say          a          few          words          to          the         Continued          p            A          Debut          Appearance         Although          the          governor          of          idaho          has          ap-         peared          at          every          graduation          for          the          past         10          years,          it          was          Ceci!          Andrus’          first          time         at          the          commencement          podium.          The         newly-elected          chief          executive          reminded         graduates          of          their          roots          in          the          ‘Gem         State’          and          asked          them          to          use          their          edu-         cation          to          benefit          the          state’s          economy.         (Jones)         4)          Graduation         Legal          Proceedings         Law          School          graduate          Lisa          Vargo          listened         intently          to          Judge          Joseph          Wapner's         graduation          address,          looking          forward          to         being          in          her          own          ‘‘People’s’’          courtroom         someday.          (Jones)         Proper          Chemistry         As          chairwomen          of          the          department          of         chemistry,          Jeanne          Shreeve          had          seen          her         share          of          commencement          proceedings,         but          kept          a          stiff          upper          lip          through          the         92nd          graduation          ceremony.          (Jones)         Teach          the          Children         Hazel          Peterson          and          Mark          Freer          donned         robe          and          cap          to          distribute          diplomas          to         the          1987          class          of          future          educators.          The         College          of          Education          graduated          176          stu-         dents          during          the          Saturday          afternoon         ceremonies.          (Jones)         ;                  +a          .          1          j                  by         (Rais.          A          Yk         Graduation          43         Anticipation         Two          p.m.          proved          to          be          too          long          a          wait          for         Kelly          Wheeler          to          receive          her          diploma,          as         she          anxiously          mounted          the          steps          of          the         stage          for          the          College          of          Education          gradu-         ation          ceremonies.          (Jones)         Clowning          Around         Not          to          imply          that          the          graduating          students         were          ‘‘bozos,’’          Steve          Anderson          of          Coeur         d'Alene          sported          a          multi-colored          wig          in         addition          to          his          architecture          hood          for          the         graduation          ceremony.          (Jones)         Holding          Court         Taking          a          break          from          his          normal!          duties          In         the          ‘‘People’s’’          courtroom,          Judge         Joseph          Wapner          spoke          to          UI          Law          School         graduates          regarding          their          responsibili-         ties          and          duties          as          future          litigators.         (Morgan)         44          Graduation         Cc         Te         How          do          you          feel          about         graduation?         [SS          nen         It’s          about          time.          I          think          they         should          consider          giving          us          life         students          tenure.         Chris          Manis         Once          I          get          the          cap          figured          out,         I'll          probably          be          ready          to         The          Real          Worid         Greg          Kilmer          had          a          lot          to          look          forward          to         after          leaving          the          Kibbie          Dome          on          gradu-         ation          day.          The          communications          graduate         left          the          arena          to          join          the          real          world,          al-         ready          in          progress.          (Jones)         graduate.         Tom          LeClaire         gins          now.         Jolene          Bacca         Graduat         Ove                   Continued         departing          throng.         The          duties          of          issuing          the          com-         mencement          address          fell          upon          Rus-         sell          Mawby,          chairman          of          the         board          of          the          W.F.          Kellogg          Foun-         dation.         Mawby,          like          so          many          speakers         before          him,          praised          the          graduates         for          being          responsible          and          under-         standing          individuals.         Hopefully          you'll          be          shakers         and          shapers          of          more          than          just         champaign,”’          Mawby          said.         Coincidentally,          six          corks          were         blasted          by          graduating          seniors          dur-         ing          the          general          ceremony.         Similar          to          Mawby’s          address,         Gov.          Cecil          Andrus          urged          the         members          of          the          class          of          1987          to         give          freely          of          themselves          and          sup-         port          the          state’s          educational         system.         “It          is          really          within          your          power         to          make          your          mark          on          society,  ’         he          said.          ‘‘Remember          you          have         I          feel          like          partying.          Real          life          be-         se         r          and          Vome         been          educated          in          Idaho.          Give          the         very          best          you          have          to          offer.         “Idaho          will          be          better          for          it          if         you          stay          here          and          help          us          build,”’         Andrus          said.         Following          Mawby          and          Andrus’         remarks,          Gibb          conferred          a          pair          of         honorary          degrees          upon          Curtis          Ea-         ton          and          Elena          Sliepcevich.          Con-         spicuous          by          his          absence          was          the         third          honorary          degree          recipient,         Lionel          Hampton.         Hampton,          an          internationally         known          jazz          musician,          headlined         the          university’s          spring          Jazz          Fes-         tival.          In          February,          the          university         recognized          Hampton's          musical         achievement          by          naming          the         school’s          music          building          after          him.         After          awarding          the          honorary         degrees,          Gibb          surrendered          the          po-         dium          to          Lt.          Col.          Donald          Harve          of         the          U.S.          Army.          Harve          delivered         the          oath          commissioning          20          mem-         bers          of          the          graduating          class          into         the          Army,          Navy,          Air          Force          and         Marines.         Finally,          it          was          Gibb’s          turn          to         confer          graduate          and          undergradu-         ate          degrees          upon          the          black-clad         mass.          The          respective          groups          rose         en          masse          to          receive          Gibb’s          bless-         ing.          They          remained          standing          as          the         crowd          and          newly-conferred          gradu-         ates          sang          the          university’s          alma         mater,          ‘‘Here          We          Have          Idaho.  ’         It          was          all          over.          About          75         minutes          after          the          ceremony          had         begun,          graduates          marched          one          by         one          toward          Dome          exits.          As          they         filed          out,          the          band          played          John         Philip          Sousa’s          “‘Stars          and          Stripes         Forever,”’         For          the          205          graduates          of          the         College          of          Letters          and          Science,          the         9:30          a.m.          general          convocation          was         merely          a          portend          of          things          to         come.          Because          following          the         general          ceremony,          the          graduates         of          the          university's          largest          college         received          their          diplomas          in          the         Dome.         Graduation          4§         46          Academics         THINK          SNOW         Tests          for          Physical          Education         106          couldn't          be          held          in          a          regu-         lar          classroom.          Instead,          stu-         dents          cross          country          skied          for         credit          on          the          university          golf         course.          (Hayes)         ON          THE          LINE         A          fishing          wire          and          wooden         clothespins          held          up          signs          dur-         ing          August          26          registration.         Bach          half          hour,          students         climbed          on          chairs          to          cross          out         “closed”’          classes.          (Hayes)         SECOND          THOUGHTS         The          field          of          teaching          isn't          for         everyone,          author          Mark          Smith         told          students          in          a          creative         writing          class.          Smith          was          visit-         ing          from          New          Hampshire.         Outdoor          temperatures          hit          the          70s          during          spring         dead          week,          but          warm          weather          did          not          keep          Ka-         thy          Trail          from          having          ..          .         TO          THINK          ON         Other          Northwestern          universities         offered          ski          courses,          but          how          many         schools          boasted          Potato          Science          470?          Only         one.          Other          programs          unique          to          Idaho          in-         cluded          the          Borah          Symposium          Commit-         tee’s          successful          bid          to          telelink          local         students          with          their          Soviet          counterparts.         Meanwhile,          engineering          students         deserved          extra          credit          for          producing         NASA          computer          chip          plans.         Aside          from          special          events,          the          daily         routine          of          classes,          quizzes,          term          papers         and          tests          gave          most          students          enough          to         think          on.          And          for          more          than          500          who         were          recognized          at          the          spring          Honors         Convocation,          high          grades          became         SOMETHING          TO          WRITE          HOME          ABOUT.         A:C A:D E Mel-GeS-         Academics          4]         Boning          the          scenes,          students         working          on          KUID          TV          and          com-         munications          projects          like         “Mostly          Moscow’’          gained          ex-         perience          from          working          with         real          television          equipment.         worth          as         Video         much          as          $60,000          could          be         checked          by          students          involved         in          special          projects,          (Hayes)         EXTRA         CREDIT         What          faculty          ad-         viser          helped          most         behind          the          scenes         at          ‘‘Mostly         Moscow?          Agcording          to          students          inter-         viewed          on          the          set,          KUID         chiel          engineer          Ken          Segota         Sarnéd          praise          by          volunteer-         ing          time          to          monitor          trans-         missions          and          repair          video         equipment.          ‘'i'm          there,’’         Segota          said,          ‘‘to          make          sure         the          equipment          operates         properly.”’          (Hayes)         |          Feeep          rey           pre         the          air,          floor          director          Russell         Strawn          motions          to          ‘Mostly         Moscow  ’          host          Clarissa          Brown.         Using          hand          signais,          he          let         Brown          know          it          was          time          to         “wrap          things          up.  ’          (Hayes)         48          Mostly          Moscow         |          the          KUID          television          control         room,          technical          director          Jeff          Tuck-         er          checks          the          evening's          ‘‘Mostly         Moscow'’          script.          Meanwhile,         Joseph          Jacobs          watches          video          mo-         nitors.          (Hayes)         Hisancsn          helped         link          Neif          Hahn          to          stu-         ho’s          on          first?          What’s          on          second?          I         don’t          know’s          on          third.          And          ‘Mostly         Moscow’’          is          on          eighth          —          local          access          channel         eight,          that          is.          The          30-minute          student-produced         public          affairs          program          aired          exclusively          on          a          lo-         cal          cable          TV          channel          after          a          two-week          shell         game          concluded          and          area          Public          Broadcasting         System          affiliates          rejected          offers          to          play          the         show.          Washington          State          from          the          beginning,          but         University          officials          kept          thought          we'd          give          the         Mostly          Moscow’’          from          other          channels          a          chance          to         airing          on          their          Pullman          run          it          too.”’         station          and          instead          sought          Although          alternative         support          for          KWSU          pro-          offers          were          rejected,          a         grams          —          ‘‘Community          team          of          more          than          20          stu-         Focus’’          and          ‘‘Grass          Roots          dents          was          given          permission         Journal.’’          Also          refusing          to          to          use          KUID          television         run          the           live          weekly          studios          and          School          of         production          were          officials          Communications          equip-         at          Moscow’s          own          KUID,          ment          to          produce          the          show         citing          state          budget          cut-          during          the          fall,          Lifton         backs          as          responsible          for          Said.         reduced          levels          of          local          ‘Students          wrote,          shot,         PBS          programming.          edited          and          produced          the         According          to          Alan          program,’’          he          said.          ‘ For         Lifton,          communications          the          most          part,          they          were         adviser,          original          plans          for          on          their          own.”’         Mostly          Moscow’’          called          Students          involved          in          the         for          the          show          to          air          on          project          earned          as          many          as         channel          eight.          3          Communications          378          or         “It          was          no          big          deal,’’          478          credits          for          weekly         he          said.          ‘‘We          planned          to          production          work.          On          the         run          it          on          channel          cight          set,          ‘‘Mostly          Moscow’’         UNABLE          TO          BROADCAST          ON          PBS,         PRODUCERS          OF          “MOSTLY          MOSCOW”         ASKED          CABLE          TV          TO          HELP          THEM          IN         CHANGING         TO          A          NEW         HANNEL         students          got          hands-on          ex-         perience          with          production         equipment.         According          to          Lifton,          UI         students          had          better          access         to          television          equipment         than          students          at          most         other          universities.         Equipment          used          includ-         ed          expensive          lights,          TV         cameras,          video          remote         units          and          a          computer         graphics          generator,          Stu-         dents          learned          how          to          oper-         ate          equipment          while         filming          local          sports          events         and          segments          for          ‘Mostly         Moscow.”’         According          to          Russell         Strawn,          the          course          work-         load          was          heavy.         “Sometimes          you'd          go          to         film          a          segment          and          they         wouldn’t          be          ready,          or         maybe          you’d          forget          some-         thing          and          have          to          go          back         yourself,’’          he          said.          ‘A         typical          story          could          take          six         to          seven          hours,          easy,          after         you          film          it,          edit          it          and          put         on          the          finishing          touches.’’         Workloads          aside,         Strawn          said          ‘ Mostly         Moscow”’          gave          him         valuable          experience.         “We          had          a          real          TV          sta-         tion          to          work          with,’           he         said.          ‘ ]          don’t          know          many         other          college          juniors          who         are          working          with          multi-         million          dollar          equipment.”’         Mostly          Moscow          49         §0          Legislative          Interns         Ower.         Pa          January          through         March,          interns          worked          for         legisiators          at          the          capitol         building          in          Boise.          (Frates)         According          to          intern         Lynn          Major,          her          ‘‘class-         mates’’          became          active          par-         ticipants          in          the          state’s         largest          political          arena.         “Initially,          the          legislators         treated          us          a          little          like         grade          school          kids.          Once         they          realized          we          were         adults          with          thinking         minds,          however,          they          be-         gan          to          respect          us          and         listen          to          us,’’          she          said.         Working          in          Gov.          Cecil         Andrus’          office          with          three         other          interns,          Major          said         her          duties          included          attend-         ing          committee          meetings         and          computer         programming.         We          worked          to          create          a         computer          program          to         track          all          the          legislation,”’         WITHIN          THE          WALLS          OF          THE          IDAHO         STATEHOUSE,          THE          LEGISLATURE         WAS          TURNED          INSIDE          OUT          WHEN         THE         KIDS         HIT          THE         APITOL         Its          what          made          the          Statehouse         hum.          And          as          nearly          500          bills          traveled          the         rounds          of          the          Idaho          legislature,          eight          university         students          ran          in          circles          for          various          state          officials.         Unlike          high          school          pages,          however,          these          stu-         dents          had          more          brewing          than          coffee          and          more         to          deliver          than          handwritten          messages.         she          said.          ‘‘Interns          fol-         lowed          bills          from          their          for-         mation          to          passage,         keeping          tabs          on          their          sup-         porters          and          opponents.”         Interns          also          privately         voiced          their          opinions          con-         cerning          the          drinking          age         and          educational          funding.         The          governor          was          al-         ways          willing          to          listen          to         those          of          us          working          in          his         office,’          Major          said.         Although          he          let          the         drinking          age          go          up,          it          was         not          without          considering         student          viewpoints.”         Other          interns          worked         for          the          Legislative          Budget         Office.          For          Sean          Wall,          it         was          the          first          time          a          job         placed          him          in          an          office         setting.         “ Things          weren’t          as          for-         mal          as          you          might          think,”’         he          said.          ‘‘And          you          never         had          time          to          get          bored.”’         An          instructor          can’t          ex-         plain          in          class          how          they         really          work          down          here,’’         Wall          said.         “ “Some          of          the          legislators         aren’t          too          bright.          But         some          people          have          the         power          to          make          and          break         legislation          on          their          own,”         he          said,         Experience          did          not          come         without          a          price          tag          for         legislative          interns.          Just          like         their          friends          in          Moscow,         interns          paid          $520          to         register          and          receive          univer-         sity          credits.         “On          top          of          that,          there         were          living          expenses          and         unexpected          costs,’’          Wall         said.          ‘‘The          worst          thing         was          just          the          cost          of          lunch         everyday          —          you          had          to         eat          out,          and          downtown         Boise          can          be          expensive.”’         During          the          90-day          ses-         sion,          intern          Jeff          Friel          said         he          spent          more          than          $900         on          expenses,          aside          from         room          and          board          costs.         “But          the          cost          was          really         worth          it,’’          he          said.          ‘‘After         all,          how          many          students          get         to          be          real-life          politicans?”’         PERG          GeO          a          a         EXTRA         CREDIT         oe         (eeeeecee          =)         9          gh          Pa          +i         “f=         any          hours         terns          work?         Ss          nt          interns          like          Sally         ara          toiled          from          8          I         -i@          5          p.m.          during          the          n          support          of          Idaho          higher          edu-         90-day          legislative          ses-          cution          Govatoar          Cecil          Andrus         sion.          For          their          efforts,          in-          cleared          off          his          desk          to          solicit          ad-         terns          received          up          to          nine          vice          from          university          students,          In-         Political          Science          459          terns          Lynn          Major          and          Jennie         credits,          (Frates)          Davey          gave          Input          on          a          controver-         sial          transportation          bill.          (Frates)         NEP.          NEIBAUR         Legislative          Interns          5]         Every          full-time          student          was          en-         titled          to          one          free          hour          of          tutoring         a          week          in          subjects          ranging          from         mathematics          to          music.          A          portion         of          their          $32.25          ASU!          registration         fee          helped          cover          program          costs.         (Moore)         )2          Student          Tutors         Aiithougn          students          came          in         quest          of          a          free          tutors,          they          first         found          themselves          taking          Learning         Resource          Center          study          skilis         tests.          Those          with          deficiencies          in         reading          and          math          skills          could         receive          additional          help          from          the         center.          (Jones)         A;          with          any          university          program,         forms          had          to          be          filled          out          includ-         ing          student          identification          num-         bers          and          campus          addresses.          A         week          of          classes          under          her          belt,         Ann          Monger          registers          for          her          free         tutor          at          the          beginning          of          the         spring          semester.          (Jones)         Sicaents          signed-up          for         tutoring          services          in          record         numbers.          (Jones)         NEED          A         Tutor          2          |         Fill          ovt          av         CLIFF          NOTES,          CRAM           SESSIONS          AND         CHAPTER          SUMMARIES          DIDN'T          CUT          IT,         SO          700          STUDENTS          SIGNED          UP          FOR         THE          REAL         HOMEWORK         t          was          a          real          learning          experience.          After          all,         Each          semester,          about          70         students          received          at          least         $4.50          an          hour          to          tutor         some          of          their          700          peers,         according          to          Judy          Wallins,         coordinator          of          the          Learn-         ing          Resource          Center         (LRC).          Graduate          students         were          paid          $5.50          an          hour         to          teach.         “Its          a          mistake          to          think         those          signed          up          for          tutor-         ing          are          the          down          and          out-         ters,’’          she          said.          ‘‘The         typical          student          who          comes         and          gets          a          tutor          is          above         average.          They’re          the          ones         motivated          to          improve          their         grades.”’         Nearly          two-thirds          of         students          tutored          were          up-         perclassmen,          Wallins          said.         ““A          freshman          doesn’t          al-         ways          know          what’s          wrong         there          were          not          many          other          universities          in         he          nation          where          the          student          government          paid         undergraduates          to          instruct          other          students.          But         then          there          were          not          many          other          schools          in          the         nation          that          gave          people          the          right          to          one          hour         of          free          tutoring          a          week.         or          what          they          need          to          work         on.          By          the          time          they          reach         their          sophomore          or          junior         year,          they          know          exactly         what          they          don’t          know,         and          they          come          here          hop-         ing          to          fix          that,’’          she          said.         After          doing          poorly          on          a         Math          140          test,          Dale          Lime-         sand          signed          up          for          weekly         sessions.         “‘My          first          test          score          con-         vinced          me          that          I          needed         some          help.          After          my          first         tutoring          session,          I          was         hooked          on          it,’’          he          said.         “Since          then,          my          quiz         grades          have          gone          up          quite         dramatically.”’         Limesand’s          tutor,          Paul         Thomson,          said          he          had         taught          more          than          a          dozen         students          since          he          began         working          for          the          LRC          in         ELPERS         1985.          According          to          Thom-         son,          a          new          computerized         scheduling          system          made          it         easy          to          help          several          stu-         dents          a          week.         “ Now          that           its          all          com-         puterized,          its          a          lot          easier         for          me          to          schedule          more         hours          of          actual          tutoring.         It          gets          difficult,          though,         when          midterms          arrive          and         everybody          wants          me          to         give          them          extra          time,”         said          Thomson.         Computers          also          helped         the          center          track          the          num-         ber          of          times          students          and         tutors          missed          appoint-         ments.          Those          who          missed         two          sessions          lost          tutoring         privileges,          Wallins          said.         To          help          students          review         for          major          exams          in          core         classes          like          Biology          100         and          Economics          151,          the         LRC          also          sponsored          free         test          reviews,          But          Wallins         said          that          neither          the          study         sessions          nor          tutoring          ses-         sions          were          an          adequate         substitute          for          regular          study.         Students          enrolled          in         tutoring          often          raise          their         marks          about          a          letter         grade,’’          she          said,          ‘‘but         only          if          they          put          the          help         they          get          here          to          good          use         by          developing          good          study         habits.’’         EXTRA         CREDIT         qualifica-         were          neces-         s          to          be          hired         as          a          tutor?         A          ding          to          Learning         rce          Center          Coordi-         udy          Wallins,          tu-         tors          were          upperclassmen         who          had          earned          a          ‘ B’’         or          better          in          their          teach-         ing          area.          LRC          secretaries         used          computers          to         schedule          tutor          appoint-         ments          with          students          like         Rob          Gordon.          (Jones)         Student          Tutors          §3         branches          crackle          with          energy          as          they          become          tan-         gled          in          an          attempt          to          escape          destruction.          This          was         a          very          strange          kind          of          storm,          however.          That’s          be-         cause          in          ‘‘Cap          Full          of          Wind,’’          tree          trucks          were         PROFESSIONALS          FROM          THE          AMERI-         CAN          FESTIVAL          BALLET          HELPED         DANCE          THEATER          STUDENTS          CREATE         A          CHORUS         storm          breaks          with          a          sudden          ferocity         causing          trees          to          tumble          and          roll.          Their         actually          the          human          torsos          of          Dance          Theater         members          Amy          Sweetwood          and          Julie          Alder.         54          Dance          Theater         Students          from          different         fields          combined          their          ta-         lents          for          the          ‘ ‘Dance         Theater          and          Friends          Con-         certs.’’          Original          choreogra-         phy          added          sparks          to          the         diverse          collection          of          per-         formances,          ranging          from         classical          ballet          to          modern         dance.         “The          variety          existing         within          the          different          dances         holds          the          audience,’’          said         dancer          Tamara          Erickson.         The          university          co-         educational          dance          group         consisted          of          students          in-         terested          in          participating          in         all          aspects          of          production.         Professionals          from          the         American          Festival          Ballet         encouraged          students          and         gave          them          an          opportunity         to          work          with          a          company         in          preparation          for          their          ex-         hibitions.         Auditions          were          held          be-         fore          two          months          of          studio         rehearsals          and          showings         started.          Company          mem-         bers          also          lended          their          abil-         ities          to          various          campus         programs          and          made          guest         appearances          in          the          com-         munity          at          events          like          the         Moscow          Centennial         Celebration.         Responsibility          for          the          fi-         nal          outcome,          however,          fell         upon          the          dancers.          Not         only          did          they          rehearse          an         average          of          two          hours          a         week          per          dance;          they          also         belonged          to          a          committee         in          charge          of          technical         dance          theater          aspects          like         LINE         HUFFLE         publicity          and          costuming.         “ I          learned          a          lot          about         how          to          deal          with          people         and          it          taught          me          a          lot          of         responsibilities          through          my         committee,’’          Sweetwood         said.         As          in          any          performing         art,           dancers          said          they         hoped          to          convey          their         ideas          clearly.          According          to         Erickson,          this          magic          must         be          initiated          by          the         choreographer.         Some          choreographers’         intensions          don’t          always         come          through          and          that          is         the          most          frustrating         thing,’’          she          said.         But          when          they          do,          it         makes          all          the          time          worth         it,’’          Erickson          said.         For          her          work          with          the         company,          she          earned         credit          in          Dance          105.         However,          dancers          like         Erickson          said          that          their         greatest          motivation          was          to         perform.         According          to          Sweet-         wood,          after          working         together          to          perfect          an          en-         tertainment          program,          the         dancers          felt          a          special         bond.         There          was          a          strong         sense          of          warmth          and          sup-         port          within          the          communi-         ty,’’          she          said.         Dawa          portrayed          trees          in          a         Hartung          Theater          dress          rehearsal         of          “‘Cap          Full          of          Wind.'’          Robin         Ecret,          Julie          Alder,          Ellene          Harwood         and          Nancy          Mink          followed          the          ad-         vice          of          choreographer          Lynn          Rig-         by          to          create          a          violent          wind          storm.         (Danhiquist)         Greener          Tom          Ralabate         coordinated          seven          dancers          in         preparation          for          the          Centennial.         Members          included          Karia          Green-         field,          Cynthia          Wraspir,          Stephanie         Essor,          Barbara          Olson,          TeresaWor-         mington,          Anne          Decker          and         Tamera          Erickson.          (Dahiquist)         q                   eo         =         Le          Moscow          Centennial         Celebration          featured          members         like          Karla          Greensfield,          Stephanie         Esser          and          Cynthia          Wraspir.          Per-         forming          ‘‘Imagine          You're          Gene         Kelly,’’          they          kicked          their          heels          up         in          support          of          the          city’s          100th         birthday.          (Hayes)         Dance          Theater          §5         56          an         I          richard          art          fans          viewed         exhibits          from          9          a.m.          to          9         p.m.          (Hayes)         FROM          NATIVE          AMERICAN          CULTURAL         STOCKING         THE          NIGHT         ALLERY         t          was          a          dark          and          stormy          night.          A          shot          rang         out          —          but          it          wasn’t          from          a          smoking          gun.         Instead,          from          the          downtown          Prichard          Gallery         to          the          SUB,          art          was          receiving          a          shot          in          the          arm,         thanks          to          the          efforts          of          local          students          and          faculty         members.         In          October,          senior          Blue         Leitch          displayed          her          oil         paintings          on          the          SUB         Gallery          Wall.          The          paint-         ings,          which          focused          on          na-         tive          American          culture,         included          mountainscapes         and          natural          crystals.         “ Deep          down,          I’ve          al-         ways          been          an          artist,”         Leitch          said.          ‘I          haven’t         been          happy          unless          I’ve         been          painting.’’         Her          ‘‘Crystal’’          series         diplayed          a          bold          and          varied         use          of          colors.          Misty          quali-         ties          and          geometric          shapes         were          emphasized          to          create         the          likeness          of          quartz,          to-         paz          and          diamond          crystals.         Later          in          the          month,         faculty          members          were         showing          off          ‘‘jewels’’          of         their          own.          The          Prichard         Gallery          opening          of          ‘‘Be-         yond          the          Real’’          spotlight-         ed          the          works          of          eight         different          artists.         According          to          Johanna         Hays,          director          of          galleries,         the          ‘‘work          is          surreal          in          the         sense          they          conceptually          be-         gin          with          images          from          the         concrete          world,          modifying         their          normal          contexts          and         meanings.’’         “For          this          part          of          the          ex-         hibition,          the          figure          and-or         ‘self’          is          fundamental          to         developing          a          matrix          of          as-         sociations          and          images,”’         she          said.         Featured          artists          included         Gaylen          Hansen,          James         Finnegan,          Dick          Ibach,         Scott          Newkirk,          Paul         Pratchencko,          William         Wiley          and          Stephen          Tse.         Their          works          included         sketches,          sculptures          and         mounted          photographs.         In          January,          faculty         member          George          Wray’s         neon          light          show          opened         with          a          bang          of          excitement.         Wray’s          exhibit,          ‘Smokin’         Cheap          Cigars          and          Makin’         Neon,”          consisted          of          neon         sand          sculptures.         ‘I’m          interested          in          light         as          it          changes          our          percep-         tion          of          space,          the          ways          it         affects          space,          but          always         as          a          painter.’’          he          said.         “I’m          intrigued          with          the         way          complimentary          colors         interact          and          the          way          color         creates          its          own          space.””         Works          in          his          exhibit          in-         cluded          several          large          neon         installations,          and          smaller         individual          works          and         drawings.         Using          as          much          as          25,000         volts          of          electricity          to          cre-         ate          his          neon          art,          Wray         said          he          managed          to          sub-         jugate          the          technical          de-         mands          of          his          medium.          —“s                    “I'd          been          trying          to         achieve          these          brilliant         colors          for          years          in          my         painting,’’          he          said.         Accompanying          Wray’s         exhibit          was          ‘‘Speaking          of         Light,’’          electronic          sculp-         tures          by          Jack          Dollhausen,         a          Washington          State         University          associate          pi          6         professor          of          art.         Unlike          Leitch’s          native         American          art          or          Wray’s         neon,          Dollhausen’s          project         used          computer          technology          to         change          with          its          environment.         All          this          filled          the          night         gallery.         A          =          4         ‘          od         -          eo         a                   r                    ro          .                   a         i          October,          native          American          art         was          displayed          on          the          first-floor         SUB          Gallery          Wall.          Student          Blue         Leitch          showed          nearly          a          dozen          of         her          works.          (Sperry)         se          Sarees         ABTA         ‘ty         apes         Tete          eke:         sy         BEE         Aiithoosn          there          were          no          formal         art          shows,          photographers          like         Randy          Hayes          filled          collections         with          scenic          shots.          Taken          on          the         university          golf          course,          ‘‘Palouse         Winter’’          was          one          of          more          than          20         shots          available          in          his          portfolio.         (Hayes)         Sina          glass          and          neon          combined         to          form          ‘‘Light          Mounds,”’          a         P richard          Gallary          exhibit          by          Ge-         orge          Wray.          The          10          square          foot         work          was          displayed          for          free          trom         Jan.          16          through          Feb.          8.          (Morgan)         Cana          Joel          Schantz         used          computer          technology          to          tel-         elink          Borah          Symposium          panelists         in          Moscow,          Idaho,          to          Soviet         citizens          in          the          Russian          capital.         The          link          gave          students          live          audio         sound          and          computer-generated         photographs          of          Soviet          panelists          in         Moscow,          Russia,          (Fritz)         58          Borah          Symposium         T          cictinxs          broadcast         Rozanne          Royer’s          image          to         Soviet          citizens.          (Fritz)         But          for          three          evenings         in          the          late          spring,          a          select         group          of          Soviets          were         marching          to          the          beat          of          a         faster          drum.          From          March         22          through          March          24,         computer          technology         telelinked          Soviet          citizens         with          American          students         and          speakers          participating         in          the          Borah          Symposium.         An          air          of          expectancy         filled          the          SUB          Ballroom          at         9          p.m.,          Sunday,          March         22.          An          audience          of          about         200          attending          the          symposi-         um          fixed          their          eyes          on          a         theater-sized          screen,          which         displayed          a          video          shot          of         a          local          panel          member.         Then          the          first          sounds         were          heard          from          what         some          people          felt          was          a          to-         tally          alien          culture.         Hello?’’          a          Soviet          stu-         dent          said          with          an          accent.         Audio          communication         had          been          established          be-         A          TWO-WAY          COMPUTER          TELELINK         SYSTEM          ENABLED          IDAHO          STUDENTS         AND          BORAH          SYMPOSIUM          PANELISTS         TO          SPEAK         WITH          THE         y          American          standards,          time          passes          slowly         in          the          Soviet          Union.          The          government’s         military          and          economic          policies          are          much          the          same         today          as          they          were          five          years          ago.          Russian          citi-         zens          don’t          own          fast          cars.          And          instead          of          eating         fast          food,          Soviets          sometimes          wait          in          line          for         hours          to          buy          meat          and          produce.         tween          UI          students          and          stu-         dents          from          the          Soviet         Union’s          Moscow          State         University.         Members          of          the          au-         dience          leaned          forward,         straining          to           understand          the         Soviet          speaker’s          response         to          the          a          panel          member’s         question.          Suddenly,          a          pic-         ture          began          forming,          strip         by          strip,          top          to          bottom,         on          the          theater          screen.         Taken          just          seconds         earlier,          it          was          a          candid         shot          of          several          Soviet          stu-         dents          clustered          around          a         computer          terminal.          The         symposium,          titled         “Moscow          to          Moscow:         Channels          for          Peace,’’          was         off          to          a          fast-paced          start.         From          Sunday          through         Tuesday,          students          and         speakers          discussed          topics         ranging          from          international         relations          to          U.S.-Soviet         foreign          policy.         OVIETS         Attending          the          symposi-         um          were          William          Court-         ney,          of          the          U.S.          State         Department          and          Vitaliy         Churkin,          first          secretary          of         the          Soviet          Embassy          in         Washington,          D.C.         Professors          George          Bres-         lauer          of          UC-Berkeley,         Nina          Tumarkin          of          Welles-         ley          College,          and          Basil         Dmytryshyn          of          Portland         State          University          also         provided          scholarly          back-         ground          and          opinion.         Joel          Schantz,          a          San         Francisco          citizen-diplomat,         was          responsible          for          the         communications          link          that         made          the          discussions          pos-         sible.          Using          an          inexpensive         portable          computer          and         phone          lines,          he          transmit-         ted          the          unofficial          confer-         ence          calls          between          the         Soviet          Union          and          United         States.         Unlike          ‘‘Satellite         Bridges’           that          link          far-         away          nations          with          live         video          reproduction,         Schantz’s          freeze-frame          sys-         tem          used          individual          video         stills.          Transmitted          every         few          seconds,          the          pictures         were          reconstructed.         According          to          Schantz,         his          system          was          designed          to         help          battle          what          he          called         the          primary          problem          fac-         ing          U.S.-Soviet          relations:         “ the          failure          of          communi-         cation          between          cultures.’’         Pa          is          a          two-way          street,         according          to          Borah          Symposium         panelist          Vitaliy          Churkin,          first         secretary          of          the          Soviet          Embassy         in          Washington,          D.C.          Churkin         likened          Soviet          support          of         Nicaragua          to          U.S.          support          of         western          Europe.          The          symposium         was          broadcast          live          on          Channel          8         to          Palouse          area          residents.          (Moore)         EXTRA         CREDIT         y         ia          |          ae         fe         A         Sensi          see         pate          in          the          symposi-         um          from          their          own         munications          skills.          Cam-         pus          interviews          were          heid         in          early          March          to          choose         students          from          idaho.          The         Sunday,          March          22          panel         included          David          Dose,         David          Blakely,          Erika         Johnston,          Richard          Kuck         and          Burke.          (Fritz)         Borah          Symposium          49         theater         production?         A          ding          to          students          in-         t          ed          backstage,          the         siiunusual          set          piece         built          for          a          theater         production          was          the          wag-         on          used          in          ‘‘Trojan          Wom-         en.’          Set          designers          made         the          moving          machine          from         plywood          and          four          large         wheels,          each          covered          by         a          hub          cap.          The          front          end         of          a          bicycle          provided         power          to          pull          the          wagon,         carrying          female          ‘‘Trojan  ’         prisoners          across          the         stage.          (Hayes)         60          Theater         Bianco          a          rock          and          a          hard         piace,          Alvin          Warnberg          portrays         Megs,          a          Vietnam          veteran          with          a         crush          on          his          best          friend’s          sister.         ‘Strange          Snow  ’          featured          Angel         Katen          as          Martha,          Meg's          love          in-         terest.          (Ellis)         Cite          Jeanette          Puhich         ‘frigid,’’          Richard          Concannon         pressures          her          to          find          herself          a         real          man.  '          ' Beyond          Therapy”         featured          a          compiex          but          romantic         comedy          of          errors.          (O'Bryan)         mu          A         gnes          of          God’          star          Sally         Anne          Cox          describes          the          first          time         she          saw          ‘‘The          Lady.  ’          Her          expiai-         nation          included          a          vision          in          which         the          sun          became          a          cloud,          and          later,         @          woman.          (Dahiquist)         A          rabbit's          foot          brought         luck          to          Alvin          Warnberg          in          Strange          Snow.  ’          (Ellis)         DRESS          REHEARSALS          AT          THE          HAR-         TUNG          PREPARED          ACTORS          AND          UN-         DERSTUDIES          FOR          PRESSURES          FELT         WHEN          THE         URTAIN         GOES          UP         inutes          before          the          performance          begins,         a          bustle          of          backstage          activity          rustles         the          theater          curtain.          In          the          sweltering          heat          of          the         makeup          room,          a          few          actresses          and          actors          apply         the          finishing          touches          of          cosmetics.          Next          door,         their          counterparts          pace          or          sit          in          the          Greenroom         assure          that          props          are          in         their          proper          places.          And         overseeing          it          all          are          the         directors,          who          give          last-         minute          advice          while          check-         ing          every          detail.         Meanwhile,          one          by          one         spectators          wander          through         the          door,          check          their          re         cently          purchased          tickets         and          locate          their          assigned         seats.          Looking          through          the         playbill,          they          wait          patient-         ly          for          the          lights          to          dim,         the          music          to          start          and          the         curtain          to          rise          on          another         season          of          theatrical          per-         formances.         The          fall          season          opened         in          the          Collette          Theater         with          the          comedy          ‘ Beyond         Therapy.’’          According          to         Director          Kim          Lenz,          a         graduate          student,          the          play         criticizes          psychiatry          and         therapists.         “Tl          am          not          trying          to          give         quietly          rehearsing          their          lines          and          awaiting          their         cues.          The          stagehands          arrange          set          decorations,          and         people          this          message          that         says          ‘don’t          got          to          an         analyst,          it          will          screw          you         up,’’’          Lenz          said.          ‘I          just         want          to          take          a          light          look         at          relationships.”’         The          play          told          the          story         of          the          straight-laced          maga-         zine          writer,          Prudence,         played          by          Jeanette          Puhich.         Prudence          seeks          her          Prince         Charming          from          newpaper         personal          ads.          Through          the         ads          she          meets          Bruce,         played          by          Alan          Wilke,          a         Washington          State          Univer-         sity          student.         With          Wilke          playing          the         leading          male,          his          perfor-         mance          initiated          a          col-         laborative          effort          between         the          UI          and          WSU.         The          harmony          between         the          theater          departments          at         the          UI          and          WSU          is          pretty         intense          right          now,”’          said         Angel          Katen,          the          show’s         producer.         In          late          October,          the         Hartung          Theater          opened         with          “ Tea          and          Sympa-         thy.”’          An          American          clas-         sic,          the          play          centers         around          a          boy          named          Tom,         played          by          Dale          Hitsman,         who          is          falsely          accused          of         being          homosexual.         Director          Forrest          Sears         said          the          play          is          not          just         about          being          accused          of         homosexuality,          but          is         about          people          being          denied         due          process          of          the          law          and         their          civil          liberties.         “ It          is          very          pertinent,         and          it          says          something          to         the          new          generation,’’          he         said.         ‘ Strange          Snow,”’          a          play         dealing          with          the          post         Vietnam          experience,          was         presented          at          the          Collette         Noy.          20-23.         A          haunting          narration          of         film          footage          from          the          war         opened          the          play          and          set         the          tone          of          emotion          for         the          performance.          The          set-         ting          for          the          drama          is          the         home          of          brother          and          sister         David          and          Martha,          played         respectively          by          Mike         Christensen          and          Angel         Katen.          When          David’s          war         buddy          Megs,          played          by         Alvin          Warnberg,          comes         for          a          visit,          conflict          arises         as          the          three          characters         deal          with          the          memories          of         the          war          and          its          effects.         Continued                     Asem          Kathy          Siegler’s          Queen         Aggravain          takes          advantage          of         King          Sextimus’          silence          by          spout-         ing          off          her          opinions          in          ‘'Once         Upon          a          Mattress.'’          Sextimus,         played          by          Mike          Christensen,         could          not          speak          due          to          a          curse         placed          on          him          earlier          in          the          play.         (Duffy)         62          Theater         Eaves          went          wrong          at          a          din-         ner          party          that          became          the          focus         of          the          April          production,          ‘‘China-         men.’’          Angel          Katen          and          J.          Owen         Henderson          portrayed          Jo          and         Stephen,          a          couple          that          set          up         separate          tables          to          keep          rival          din-         ner          guests          away          from          each          other.         (Mooney)         WHEN          THE                   Continued         An          adaption          of          Euri-         pides’          Sth          century          play,         Trojan          Women,”’          was         brought          to          life          at          the          Har-         tung          in          December.          Fa-         mous          for          its          controversial         anti-war          theme,          the          play         deals          with          Greek          revenge         on          the          island          of          Melos          af-         ter          the          Trojan          War.         URTAIN         GOES          UP         that          arises          when          Sister         Agnes,          played          by          Sally         Cox,          gives          birth          and          the         child          is          found          dead          a         short          while          later.          With         Agnes          facing          criminal         charges,          the          court          ap-         points          psychiatrist          Martha         Livingstone,          played          by         Kimberly          Lenz,          to          evalu-         ate          her.         Two          one-act          plays,         “‘Chinamen’”’          and         Mi          made          Mike          Christen-         sen's          face          look          withered,          wrinkled         and          40          years          older.          Christensen's         half-hour          application          produced         King          Sextimus          for          the          spring          Har-         tung          presentation          of          ‘Once          Upon         a          Mattress.           (Duffy)                   t’s          a          small          department,         “ Graceland’’          were          per-         but          a          good          one.          The          stu-          formed          in          the          Collette         April          9-11,          The          45-minute         comedy          ‘ Chinamen’’          told         the          story          of          a          middle-         dents          are          offered          a          lot          of          oppor-         tunities.””          —          Nancy          Zaremski         According           to          Director         Roy          Fluhrer,          professor          of         theater          arts,          the          play          was         chosen          because          a          large         pool          of          female          talent          was         available.         T          felt          that          the          women         that          we          have          plus          the          fact         that          we          had          not          done          a         Greek          play          here          in          a          num-         ber          of          years          warranted          the         selection,’’          Fluhrer          said.         After          choosing          the          play,         Fluhrer          decided          to          aban-         don          the          classical          sets          and         costumes.         Under          Fluhrer’s          direc-         tion,          designer          Nancy         Zaremski          worked          to         achieve          a          futuristic          “‘Road         Warrior”          effect          for          the         costumes.         The          spring          theatrical         season          began          in          early         February          with          ‘‘American         Buffalo.”’          Set          in          a          junk-         yard,          the          play          evolves         around          three          characters         and          their          plans          to          heist          a         rare          coin.          But          according         to          Director          Bill          Watson,         the          play          is          about          the         breakdown          of          human          rela-         tionships          in          a          commercial         society.         A          few          weeks          later          the         department          presented         “‘Agnes          of          God.’’          The         play          explores          the          conflict         class,          average          couple          who         hold          a          dinner          party.          Trou-         ble          erupts          when          the          couple         accidentally          invite          their         friend          Bee’s          ex-husband         and          new          husband          to          the         dinner.         In          the          second          play,         ““Graceland,’’          two          women,         Bev          and          Rootie,          fight          to         be          the          first          to          see          the         home          of          Elvis          Presley.         The          musical          ‘‘Once         Upon          a          Mattress’’          was          the         final          production          of          the         season.          Based          on          a          chil-         dren’s          fairy          tale,          the          play         is          about          a          domineering         queen,          played          by          Kathy         Siegler,          who          decrees          that         no          one          in          the          kingdom         may          marry          until          a          suitable         bride          is          found          for          her          son         Prince          Dauntless,          por-         trayed          by          Robert          Morgan.         To          prevent          that,          the          queen         puts          each          potential          bride         through          a          grueling          series         of          tests.          The          prince,         however,          later          falls          in          love         and          marries          Winifred,         played          by          Jeanette          Puhich.         As          the          curtain          dropped         on          “‘Once          Upon          a          Mat-         tress,’’          the          audience          stood         applauding          and          cheering         the          performance.          And          so         marked          the          close          of          the         theater          season.         Tie          aunt          of          Agnes,          Mother          Miri-         am          Ruth          said          she          believed          her         niece          was          ‘“‘touched          by          God.  ’         Barbara          Dreier          played          the          sup-         porting          role          in          the          February         “Agnes          of          God’’          production.         (Dahiquist)         Theater          63         i          ee          at          $10,000          each,         computer          chips          were          hand-         tested.          (Jones)         AFTER          LANDING          AN          $800,000          CONTRACT,         GARY          MAKI’S          MICROELECTRONICS          TEAM         CONCENTRATED          ALL          THEIR          EFFORTS          ON         CHIPPING          IN          4         FOR          THE          NASA         OMPUTER         a)         EXTRA         CREDIT         vs          U          a:         a          AYE                  much          has         niversity         ton          NASA         computer          chip         research?         A          ugh          no          exact         fi          $          are          available,          En-         ng          Professor          Gary         aki          said          the          university         has          poured          $100,000          a         year          into          the          project         since          1986.          NASA         financed          $800,000          to         produce          the          chips          and         Hewlett-Packard          donated         $1          million          in          computer         equipment.          Team          mem-                   ale         bers          like          John          Shovic,         Peter          Feeley,          Sterling         Whitaker,          Carrie          Claflin,         Peter          White,          Jay          McDou-         gal          and          Pat          Owsley         helped          design          and          test         the          chips.          (Hayes)         =          Set          a          eG         «  .          ut          ny          Me          rn                    aie)          ar          rs          vai          rae’         i         64          Computer          Chips          i         —-         -—          ee         Working          on          the         $800,000          NASA          project         were          seven          students          and          a         team          of          university          profes-         sors.          Their          task?          To         produce          five          tiny          error-         detecting          computer          chips         to          replace          more          than          2,000         t          used          to          be          you          only          had          to          reinvent          the         wheel          to          get          a          little          attention.          By          1987,          you         had          to          reinvent          the          computer          chip          —          to          change         designs          that          some          Rockwell          International          offi-         cials          said          were          virtually          set          in          stone.          And          to         risk          $10,000          and          three          months          turn-around          time         on          each          chip          designed          for          the          National          Aero-         nautics          and          Space          Administration.         When          complete,          the         chips          would          be          used          to         beam          error-free          messages         from          earth-orbiting          satel-         lites          to          tracking          stations         Wrinanpos          chips          had          to          be         checked          individually          for          produc-         tion          flaws.          Graduate          student          Car-         rie          Claflin          hooks          one          up          to          a         Hewlett-Packard          computer          to          veri-         fy          that          every          part          of          it          has          been         properly          produced.          (Hayes)         According          to          Maki,          his         team          was          venturing          into         new          frontiers.         Student          designers          like         Carrie          Claflin          found          that         doing          the          ‘timpossible’’         meant          that          they,          too,          had         to          keep          accuracy          rates         high.          According          to         Claflin,          she          sometimes          lost         sleep          over          the          project.         “There          are          so          many         things          that          could          go         Aion          20          percent          of          the          com-         puter          chips          tested          by          Peter          Feel-         ing          were          defective.          Those          that         tested          positive          were          shipped          off         to          NASA          laboratories,          where          they         would          be          used          as          prototypes          for         satellite          computer          chips.          (Hayes)         wrong,”          she          said.          “If          any-         does,          of         work          and          $10,000          may          go         down          the          drain.”         Although          student          foul-         ups          were          rare,          Cla’         speculated          on          the          conse-         quences.         “The          guilt          trip          would          be         ,”’          she          said.          “It         would          make          Mom          look         like          an          amateur.’         Although          designs          were         double-checked,          the          actual         fabrication          of          the         fingertip-sized          chips          was         an          imperfect          science.         “Out          of          every          50          chips,         we          usually          get          about          40         good          chips,”’          said          John         Shovic,          electrical          engineer-         ing          professor.         But          even          an          80          percent         Success          rate          was          above         average          for          silicon          chips,         he          said.         Suan          worked          side-by-side         with          faculty          members          to          insure         the          success          of          the          project.          Their         work          produced          chips          that         processed          information          five          times         faster          than          conventional          methods,         and          which          could          correct          up          to          16         errors          per          255          pieces          of          informa-         tion          transmitted.          (Hayes)         Computer          Chips          65         66          Studying         Es          balance          notebooks          and          busy         schedules,          students          attempted          to         learn          the          art          of          time          management.         Books          had          to          be          closed          and          time         set          aside          to          eat,          sleep          and          work         outside          of          class.          (Hayes)         Wiriner          students          admitted          it         or          not,          one          secret          to          academic         success          was          to          study          on          a          regu-         lar          basis.          Senior          mechanical          on-         gineering          student          Burnell          Wimer         cuts          an          all-nighter          short          by          nap-         ping          in          the          Library.          (Hayes)         Daa          Week          gave          students          a         chance          to          catch          up          on          homework         in          preparation          for          finals.          Tests         were          forbidden          during          the          week,         as          students          scampered          to          com-         plete          papers          and          projects.          Shirlee         Carbaugh          of          Campbell          Hall          post-         ed          her          finals          schedule.          (Fritz)         Registering          were          Scott         Robinson,          Bob          Larson          and         Jim          Larson.          (Hayes)         etting          smart.          That’s          what          students          came         WHEN          IT          CAME          TO          ACADEMIC          SUR-         VIVAL,          STUDY          SESSIONS          AND          CLASS         CRAMMING          TECHNIQUES          BECAME         THE          MOST         IMPORTANT         to          college          for.          But          after          less          than          a          year         are          the          signs          that          an         ter          study          session          is         i          gress?         ©WHu          spend          more          time         ing          about          upcoming         t than          actually          learning         new          academic          material,                   Avoiding          caffeine          free         7-Up,          you          instead          pur-         chase          6-packs          of          Jolt          Cola         and          boxes          of          No-Doz,                   Running          from          building         to          building,          you          desperate-         ly          seek          a          photocopy         machine          that          hasn’t          closed         down          at          11          p.m.          with          the         rest          of          the          campus,                   You          quickly          dial          the         numbers          of          local          radio         stations          KZFN          and          Q104         every          time          they          mention         contests          or          open          request         lines,          and,                   To          avoid          studying,          you         organize          your          class          notes,         iron          your          socks          and          wash         behind          your          ears.         at          school,          they          learned          to          distinguish          what          was         written          in          textbooks          from          what          they           really          needed         to          learn.          And          in          the          process,          they          answered          three         of          the          most          important          questions          about          education:         makes          studying          at         different          than          study-         in          other          universities?         ©'WWen          bomb          threats          don’t         instructors          from         g          class          outdoors          and         giving          tests          on          the          Ad-         ministration          Lawn,         ®          You’re          at          the          only         university          offering          a          class         called          Potato          Science          470,         ¢          Students          complain          that         the          core          classes          are          more         difficult          than          upper-         division          courses,         ¢          Computer-graded          ‘‘scan-         trons’’          make          more          errors         in          grading          tests          than          you         made          taking          them,         ¢          The          university          is          larger         than          most          students’         hometowns,          and,         ©          Students          have          to          block         out          the          noise          from          the         campus          barn,          complete         with          mooing          cows          and         clucking          chickens.         ESSONS         makes          life          during          fi-         eek          different          from         t          st          of          the          school          year?         °WHu          join          more          than          500         students          gathered          at         .          ®fugustine’s          Catholic         Center          for          ‘‘Panic          Mass,’’                   You          try          to          reschedule         tests          sO          you          can          see          the         cliffhanger          episodes          of         ““Dynasty,’’          “‘Dallas,’’         Knots          Landing’’          and         ‘ Falcon          Crest,’’                   You          figure          out          the         highest          and          lowest          possible         GPAs          you          could          earn,         ¢          You          avoid          studying          by         compiling          four          different         possible          versions          of          your         next          semester          course         schedule,         ¢          Using          IBM          wordproces-         sors,          you          find          ways          to         write          10-page          term          papers         in          less          than          5          hours,         ¢          You          take          more          study         breaks          than          study          periods,         ¢          You          complain          about          the         3:30          p.m.          Friday          spring          fi-         nal          that          almost          everyone         has          been          scheduled          to         take,         e          You          install          a          late          night         hotline          to          Pizza          Perfection         and          Dominos,          and,         ©          That          $42          textbook          you         bought          during          the          first         week          of          the          term          is          only         worth          $5          when          you          sell          it         back          to          the          Bookstore.         Studying          6]         love.          They          loved          to          learn.          They          loved          to          laugh.         But          what          made          their          hearts          pitter          patter          the         loudest          was          their          love          to          argue.         68          Moot          Court         Jorn          Hansen          and          Doug         Emery          prepared          arguments         for          regional          competitions.         (Dahiquist)         THE          TRUE         COST          OF         OURTING         Washington.”’         According          to          Manwar-         ing,          law          students          spent          as         many          as          two-months          time         hey          were          lawyers          in          love.          Or          perhaps          more         accurately,          they          were          17          law          students          in         Moot          court          provided          a         forum          for          law          students          to         strut          their          stuff          in          a          cour-         troom          setting.          And          ac-         cording          to          law          student         Kipp          Manwaring,          those         competing          in          regional          and         national          competitions          had         a          great          deal          to          gain.         “I’m          not          certain          that         moot          court          actually          por-         trays          reality          or          even         resembles          the          way          real         world          courts          operate,’’          he         said.          But          we          still          learn          a         lot          about          style          and          gain          a         sense          of          simple          demeanor         from          it.”’         Topics          discussed          ranged         from          civil          to          criminal          law,         and          often          concerned          pend-         ing          U.S.          Supreme          Court         cases.         Idaho          moot          court          teams         competed          in          four          regional         and          national          tournaments         throughout          the          year.         Preparation          for          the          events         began          in          the          early          fall,         when          the          Board          of          Stu-         dent          Advocates          (BSA)         held          interviews          for          team         positions,         “‘Candidates          were          given         a          ‘limited          universe’         problem,’’          said          John         Bush,          BSA          president.         They          had          four          days          to         compile          logical          positions         within          the          parameters          of         that          universe.”’         Students          with          the          most         innovative          solutions          to          the         problem          were          selected          to         join          BSA,          and          were          later         separated          into          four          teams.         “ Each          team          attended          a         regional          moot          court          tour-         nament,’®          Bush          said.          ‘‘We         competed          against          law         school          students          from         Montana,          Oregon          and         at          40          hours          a          week          prepar-         ing          legal          briefs          and          other         documents          for          moot          court         competition.          Teams          also         videotaped          and          analyzed         oral          a rguments          in          bids          for         improvement.         At          each          tournament         there          were          between          200         and          225          other          teams          en-         tered          from          throughout          the         nation.          Hot          public          policy         issues          like          euthanasia          re-         quired          that          our          teams          real-         ly          know          their          stuff,’          Bush         said.         Manwaring          agreed.         “ You          had          to          be          really         up          on          everything          to          keep         from          getting          left          behind.         The          hardest          thing          is          apply-         ing          yourself          to          put          in          the         time          and          pinpoint          the         major          issues,’”          he          said.         Although          the          university         team          failed          to          garner          any         first-place          awards,          Man-         waring          said          his          love          affair         for          argumentation          was          far         from          over.          And          consider-         ing          that          law          school          is          a         three-year          engagement,         prehaps          the          true          cost          of         courting          was          time.         Vices          cameras          recorded          Gerald         Langan          debating          in          the          Law         School          Courtroom.          Moot          court         teams          consisted          of          four          to          six         members,          who          spent          two          months         researching          legal          topics          before         presenting          their          arguments          to         lawyers          and          judges          at          regional         competitions.          (Dahiquist)         lamcling          to          find          important          evi-         dence,          Gerald          Langan          listens          to         Jodi          Moore's          opening          statements.         Students          participating          in          moot         court          were          members          of          Law         School's          Board          of          Student          Advo-         cates.          (Dahiquist)         Tw          university's          Law          Library         contained          information          vital          to         moot          court          research.          Team          mem-         bers          spent          30-40          hours          a          week         gathering          information          to          prepare         50-page          briefs          concerning          various         legal          topics.          (Dahiquist)                  1         eat         EXTRA          (opsorepareor”         CREDIT          pb          tr          compe-         B          students          traveled          to         r          al          competitions,          they         rd          in          Boise          by          Ida-         ho          Supreme          Court          justices.         Also          critiquing          the          crew         were          members          of          the          feder-         al          government's          Ninth          Cir-         cult          Court          of          Appeals.          Once         in          competition,          students          like         Jodi          Moore          were          judged          by         law          school          instructors          and         other          legal          experts          from         throughout          the          United         States.          (Dahiquist)         Moot          Court          69         CHEAP          APARTMENTS,          UNCROWDED         CLASSROOMS          AND          85-DEGREE         TEMPERATURES          KEPT          STUDENTS         STAYING         FOR          THE         UMMER         ake          off          that          swimsuit,          turn          in          the          tanning         oil,          and          check          your          towel          at          the          nearest         locker          room.          They’Il          be          no          balmy          beach          bum-         ming          for          you.          And          forget          the          word          vacation.         The          only          wave          you’re          in          for          is          a          crest          of          June         midterms.          Wake          up          and          smell          the          espresso:         school’s          in          for          summer.         10          Summer          School         That’s          the          message          that         more          than          1,000          students         enrolled          in          summer          school         were          tuning          in          to,          From          as         early          as          May          18          through         July          31,          they          traded          beach         balls          for          books          and          picnic         baskets          for          backpacks.         With          26          core          curriculum         classes          and          more          than          100         upper-division          courses         offered,          students          could         freely          choose          where          on         campus          they          wanted          to         spend          their          summer.          Susan         Hamlin          picked          Renfrew         Hall,          where          her          inorganic         chemistry          course          was         offered.         ““We          had          lecture          five         days          a          week,          lab          16          hours         a          week          and          recitation          one         hour          a          week,”’          she          said.         ‘For          lab,          you          had          to         wear          long          pants          and          long-         sleeve          shirts.          The          windows         were          shut          and          you         couldn’t          wear          Birken-         stocks,’’          she          said.         “ I          skipped          lab          quite          a         bit          because          it          was          too          nice         out,’’          Hamlin          said.         Other          students          also          had         reservations          about          spend-         ing          the          summer          inside.         “ I          was          a          stress          cadet,’’         said          Anne          Rafetto.          :         ‘Weeks          after          finishing         one          of          my          most          difficult         spring          semesters,          I          found         myself          back          in          another         classroom          with          homework,         papers          due          and          more          tests.         Yuck!”’         Taking          a          full-time,          nine-         credit          workload,          Rafetto         said          going          to          school          made         the          summer          more          difficult         to          appreciate.         “It          took          all          the          fun          out         of          getting          a          tan,’’          she         said.         To          pay          for          school          and         earn          money          for          the          fall,         students          took          on          part-time         summer          jobs.         According          to          Lisa          Cly-         da,          an          office          coordinator         for          Personnel          Services,          the         university’s          “‘Learn          and         Earn’?          program          hired          47         students          during          the         summer.         ‘ We          gave          preference          to         students          taking          six          sum-         mer          school          credits          and         who          would          be          returning          in         the          fall,’’          Clyda          said.         ‘Each          job          had          a          different         pay          scale          and          paid          accord-         ing          to          people’s          skills.’’         Although          there          were         some          clerical          positions,         more          than          half          those          in         the          program          worked          for         the          Physical          Plant          as          cus-         todians          and          ground-         skeepers.         Outside          of          the          program,         students          applied          for         specific          jobs          from          univer-         sity          departments          like          the         College          of          Agriculture.         Rafetto          said          she          was         hired          as          a          computer          lab         monitor.         “I          worked          about          15         hours          a          week,          which          was         enough          to          live          on,’’          she         said.          ‘‘But          between          school         and          my          job,          there          wasn’t         really          much          time          left          to         enjoy          the          summer.”’         Mz          than          20          summer          core         classes          were          offered          to          students         paying          $53.25          a          credit          hour.          Most         courses          were          offered          in          the          early         morning,          but          afternoon          instruc-         tors          also          took          advantage          of          warm         June          temperatures          to          hold          class-         @s          outdoors.          (Morgan)         W          oconas          were          made          for          Boy-         er          Park.          Located          just          more          than          30         miles          from          campus,          students         flocked          to          the          sandy          Snake          River         beaches          in          record          numbers          to         soak          up          the          sun.          (Wendt)         ie          sun          was          out          and          tanning          be-         gan          as          early          as          10          a.m.          through-         out          Moscow.          Students          browned         their          bodies          in          85-degree          weather         beside          buildings          like          the          Theophi-         lus          Tower.          Nighttime          summer         temperatures          often          dropped          into         the          low          50s.          (Wendt)         ———          provided          warm          temper-         atures          for          outdoor          workmen          like         Mike          Krogseth.          The          physical          plant         employed          nearly          25          full-time          sum-         mer          school          students          to          work          on         the          college          grounds          through          the         university's          “‘Learn          and          Earn’’         program.          (Dahiquist)         Summer          School          7I         SOMETHING'S          UP.         High          above          the          ground,          Jug-         Gling          Club          member          Maureen         VanHorn          rides          a          unicycle          and         tosses          pins          down          a          city          street         in          preparation          for          an          upcom-         ing          parade.          (Dahlquist)         HOMEWARD          BOUND          _         Joe          Nelson          escorts          a          friend         down          “Hello          Walk.           Students         have          greeted          each          other          on         the          path          since          1920          when         President          Alfred          Upham          start-         ed          the          tradition.          (Hayes)         }                  MH                  HH         HH         i         Z         )))         HH         Mh         |         |         |         |         HII         |                                    )))         SENIOR          SMILES         Decked          out          in          caps          and          gowns,         seniors          smiled          for          a          Yearbook         Associates          camera          in          the          SUB         Vandal          Lounge.          The          pho         tographers          were          on          campus         from          Oct.          17-83.          (Morgan)         |                  |         Hl         =          22           SST         —————————         —————         =          —          —          ——s          —          —          =          =         SS          ee          eae          eee          ee          eee          ee          ee          eee         SSeS          OOO          ae          ee          —— —          —=           —         ——          ——          Se          nn         ——          —          ——————         ——          ee          =         =          —         ——          —                    ————         ——          ———_—_——_——————         )))         )         Rooting          for          teams          at          the          Gamma          Phi          Beta          Track         Attack,          statisticians          like          Laura          Woodworth          and         Amy          Bradford          had.          .          .         “TO          SMILE          FOR         Even          the          hectic          pace          of          juggling          school         assignments,          work          schedules          and          living         group          commitments          didn’t          prevent          stu-         dents          from          remembering          to          be          friendly.         Idaho          was          the          kind          of          place          that          people         said          ‘‘hi’’          to          just          about          anyone,          whether         strolling          down          Hello          Walk          or          passing          on         old          Greek          Row.         Educators          were          smiling          proudly          Oct.          3         as          they          opened          the          doors          to          an          $11.2          mil-         lion          Life          Science          Building          addition.          In         December,          underclassmen          beamed          after         discovering          that          Christmas          break          had         been          lengthened          to          three          weeks.          And         for          those          attending          a          first          class          com-         mencement,          graduation          grins          were         SOMETHING          TO          WRITE          HOME          ABOUT.         “ll          i         i         m         I)         (         |         i         |                  }         People          2B         James          Abee,          Fr.,          Coeur          d’Alene         Kelsey          falar          Fr          .,          Hayden          Lake         Paul          Allee,          Jr.,          eo         Brian          Allen,          Soph.          .,          Moscow         Stephanie          Bailey;          Fr.,          Buhl                   Kelly          Baltzell,          br.;          Postal                   Thomas          Barber,          Fr.          McCall         eo           Eric          «Dee           Moscow         Beth          Barclay,          Fr:j          Boise         Cathleen          Barely,          Fr.,                   Spokatic,,          Wash.         Peled          Barley,          Jr.pPatisades,          Calif:         Jaime          Siro,          “e          Twin          Pails         Fred.          “Shoshone”         ate          Benen,          Fr.,          Twit          Falls         tt          Benson,          Er          Lewiston         Matthew          ‘Bertagnolll          Sr.)          Wendell                    Beckie          Bettinger,          Soph.,          Sagle         Elizabeth          Bickett,          Soph.,          Gooding         John          were          Fr.,          Boise         Michelle          Bish          ,          Cambridge         Stefanie          gt          Caldwell         Brian’          Blakeley,          Soph:;          Boise         :          Gigi          Blick;          Fr.,          Casticford         Dawn          Bobby,          et          Sandpoint         Heidi          Boch,          Fr,          Viola         Laura          Bokor,          Jr.,          Moscow         :          Hester          Booth,          Fra          d nchorage,          Alaska         Lori          Booth,          Fr.          ,,          Kamiah         Janine          Bortz;          Fr.,          Declo         Scott          ott          Boe          FE          _          Dayton,          Wash.         randt,          Jr),          Orofino         Russell          Braymen,          Soph.,         :          kane,          Wash.         Heidi          adhead,          Fri         Yakinia,          Wash.         Jon          Brownell          Tr.,          Cdeur@’          Alene         Janet          Bruce,          FregiLas          Vegas,          Nev.         Damon          Brunmeier,          Fr.,          Nampa         14          Adams Brunmeier         Outdoorsmen          enjoy          Idaho          wilderness         xcitement          101.         Although          no          class         carried          that          title,         nearly          60          students          en-         rolled          in          an          Outdoor          Pro-         grams          kayaking          series         faced          a          thrill          a          minute          as         they          paddled          their          way         down          wilderness          rivers.         ‘We          tell          them          that         kayaking          is          the          most          ex-         citing          thing          they          can          do         here          during          a          semester,”         said          Michael          Beiser,          assis-         tant          Outdoor          Programs         coordinator.         A          lot          of          people’s          per-         ception          of          kayaking          is          of         danger          —          forcing          youself         to          your          limits,’’          he          said.         “But,          we          try          to          talk          about         the          sport          in          terms          of          con-         trol          and          safety.’’         For          $60,          students         received          instructional          lec-         tures,          an          indoor          practice         session,          and          a          weekend         trip          in          the          Idaho         wilderness.         According          to          Beiser,         separate          groups          of          10         traveled          three          hours          to          the         Lower          Salmon          River          for         some          very          wet         weekends.”’         “The          most          difficult         thing          is          trying          to          teach         people          to          relax          and          over-         come          their          fears,’’          Beiser         said,         ‘We’ve          intentionally         created          what          we          feel          is          a         very          safe          trip.          But          people         have          anxieties          about          even         getting          on          a          very          flat         river,””          he          said.         Once          on          the          river,          Beis-         er          said          he          works          overtime         racticing          in          the          Swim         Center,          students          learned         to          control          kayaks          on          calm         waters          before          floating          down         wilderness          rivers.          Instructors         taught          proper          ‘‘rolling  ’          tech-         niques.          (Moore)         to          help          students          stay         relaxed.         “In          a          panic          situation         when          a          kayaker          flips          on         the          rapids,          things          can          get         a          little          tense,’’          he          said.         “So          I          paddle          up          to          them         and          calmly          smile,          saying,         ‘you          did          really          well          —         now          get          back          in          your         boat.’”’         Student          river          guides         also          floated          beside          begin-         ners          to          help          them          adjust         to          kayaking.          After          six         hours          on          the          river,          the         group          spent          the          evening          in         a          secluded          campground.         “ Its          some          of          the          nicest         wilderness          in          the          immedi-         ate          area.          Learning          to         kayack          on          it          is          like          icing         on          the          cake,”’          he          said.         [S]tusen          guides          taught         peers          proper          kayaking         techniques.          Instructors          from         other          northwestern          universi-         ties          liked          the          Moscow's          pro-         gram          so          well          that          they          called         Idaho          ‘‘Kayak          U.  ’          (Moore)         Outdoor          Programs          3         Resolutions          prove          hard          to          keep         he          clock          reads         11:47          p.m.          on          De-         cember          31.          An         anxious          student          quickly         glances          at          the          timepiece,         counting          the          remaining         minutes.          Reaching          into         his          Levi          jacket,          his          fingers         scramble          to          secure          a         Marlboro          Light.          Finally         finding          one,          he          strikes          a         match          and          takes          a          drag.         “ Well,’’          he          says          thinking         to          himself,          ‘‘this          is          the         last          one.          I’m          really          going         to          do          it          —          I          am          going          to         stop          smoking.”’         As          party-goers          scream-         ed          ‘‘Happy          New          Year,”’         they          threw          out          handfuls         of          confetti          and          mouthfuls         of          promises,           Whether         goals          were          to          kick          the         smoking          habit,          break          out         the          books          more          often          or         shed          unwanted          weight,         students          found          promises         easier          to          make          than          keep.         T          resolved          to          not          skip         n          ‘‘Argonaut’’          survey         found          60          percent          of          stu-         dents          resolved          to          study          more         often.          Brooke          Fisher          and          Chris         Wuthrich          found          the          SUB          the         perfect          place          to          crack          the         books.          (Hayes)         16          Resolutions         any          classes,’’          said          Natalic         Naccarato.          ‘I          haven’t         missed          one          yet          ...          but         there          is          always          tomor-         row.”’         Students          like          Karen         Roe          said          they          wanted          to         turn          study          lamps          off          and         turn          on          to          social          activi-         ties.          ‘‘I]          want          to          get          to         know          more          people          this         year,’’          she          said.          ‘‘Every-         thing          you          learn          isn’t          just         from          books.”’         Less          than          a          month         later,          Roe’s          resolution          re-         mained          untarnished.          ‘“‘I         haven’t          hardly          cracked          a         book          yet,’’          she          said          in          late         January.          ‘‘About          75          per-         cent          of          my          time          I’m          flap-         ping          my          jaws          —          but          I’m         talking          in          a          productive         way.”         Both          men          and          women         resolved          to          lose          weight         during          the          new          year.         Anne          Raffetto          made          mul-         tiple          vows.         [E]          xercising          and          dieting         were          popular          student         New          Year's          resolutions.          Ted         Egerton          worked          out          in          the          Kib-         bie          Dome          weight          room          to          keep         his          body          in          top          shape.         (Dahiquist)         “I          plan          to          stop          smok-         ing          and          lose          25          or          30         pounds.          Somehow          |          also         want          to          get          a          tan          and          have         a          three-point          GPA,”’’          she         said.         Raffetto          commented         on          her          progress          in          early         February.          ‘“‘I’ve          blown         the          smoking          resolution          all         to          hell,          but          I          have          lost          five         pounds.          I’m          going          to         Malibu          beach          for          spring         break          so          maybe          I'll          be         able          to          get          a          tan.          Grades?         Well,          I’m          optimistic.”’         Campus          leaders          also         lined          up          to          make          multiple         promises,         “My          resolutions          in-         clude          becoming          more          or-         ganized          and          exercising         more          often,”’          said          ASUI         President          Brian          Long.         ““Also,          one          of          my          New         Year’s          resolutions          is          not         to          make          any          more          resolu-         tions.          They          are          too          hard         to          keep.”’         -         Sy          Peg          aes         Carol          Bruns,          Fr,,          Eden         Susan          Brans,          Jr,,          Eden          ¢         Sandy.          Bubler,          Soph.,          Bellevue         David          Burgess,          Fr.,          Eagle         Jennifer          Burlage,          Fr.,          Ashton.         Tim          Burnside,          Pr.,          Post          Falls         Chellae          Butikofer,          7          r.j          Idaho          Falls         Brenda          Butts,          Fr.,          Cambridge         Stanley.          Case,          Fr.,          Grangeville         Cindy          Chase,          F          fr,         Dave          Chehey,          Jr.,          poeta         Tonja          Clemens,          Fr.,          Nampa         Craig          Colley,          Soph..,          Caldwell          Nick          Conant,          Fr.,          Idaho          Falls         Robert          Copyak,          Fr.,          Idaho.          Falls         Angela          Cornelison,          Fri,          Pocatello         James          Cox,          Fr.,.Grangeville:         Kim          Coxe,          Fré,          Boise         William          Crew,          Soph.,          Idaho          Falls         John          Crow,          Eri,          Nampa         Kristen          Cuddy,          Jr.,          Juliaetta         Inga          Cun          my          Fr.          Boise         Leslie          Daniclson,          Fr,          Genesee         ie          Darchuk,          Fr.,          ‘Moscow         Elizabeth          Davis,          Fr.,          Moscow         Eric          DeBord,          Soph:,          Payette         Michelle          Depew,          Soph,          Wendell         Darla          Deppe,          Soph.,          Caldwell         Heidi          Diestelhorst,          Fr.,         Quincey,          Wash.         Gwen          Dighans,          Soph.,         Richland,          Mont.         David          Dolan,          Soph.,          Moscow         Jeff          Dood,          Irs;          Boise         Becky          Dowden,          Fr.,          Boise         Daye          Edson,          Jr.,          “Meridian         Daniel          Fidam,           Soph.,          Boise         John          Fidam,          Fr.,          Boise         Steve          Ellis,          Soph.          1          ah          Falls         John          Emig,          Fr          ikan,          Alaska         Gina          Ensunsa,          rene          verbilord         Jon          Erickson,          Jr.,          Caldwell         Carolyn          Evans,          Fr.,          Salt          Lake          City         Anissa          Faddis,          Fr.,          Kuna         Troy          Falck,          Soph.,          Boise         Stephanie          Fassett,          Er,          Twin          Falls         Darla          Felton,          Fr.,          Lenore         Doug          Fiess,          Soph.,          Edwall,          Wash.         Bruns Fiess          7]         18          Geology          Trip         pproximately          10          mil-         lion          years          ago,          the         ]          area          currently         known          as          the          Palouse          was         formed          as          part          of          the         Columbia          River          Basin,         providing          a          basis          for          the         agricultural          economy          of          the         region.          Centuries          later,          the         basin          now          provides          Geology         101          students          the          chance          to          be         rousted          out          of          bed          early          on         cold          Saturday          mornings          to         find          out          how          it          all          happened.         Blurry-eyed          pupils          rode         yellow          school          busses          past         Lewiston          to          make          the          same         trek          that          more          than          2000          of         their          predecessors          have         made.          Their          goal:          to          inves-         tigate          local          rock          formations         that          hold          the          key          to          the         region’s          past.         John          Bush,          associate         professor          of          geology          and         veteran          of          several          semester-         ly          jaunts          along          the          Snake         River,          cited          two          main          rea-         sons          for          taking          the          students         out          into          the          cold          canyon.         We          want          to          give          the          non-         majors          a          feel          for          geology         and          what          the          geologist         does,’’          he          said,          ‘It          also          helps         them          with          the          lecture          by          giv-         ing          them          a          sense          of          scale          for         some          of          these          formations.’”         According          to          Bush,          non-         Geologists          roadtrip          though          Snake          River          canyon         geology          majors          comprised         the          majority          of          his          students.         But          that          may          be          because          Ge-         ology          101          is          one          of          the          more         interesting          core          classes,          he         said.         “You          can          actually          learn         some          interesting          stuff—         things          that          you          can          see         around          you          every          day,”’         Bush          said.         Every          year,          roughly          15         non-majors          continue          geolo-         gy          coursework          after          taking         the          introductory          class,          Bush         said.          Upper          division          students         also          go          on          outdoor          field         trips.          Some          spend          the          sum-         mer          in          the          scenic          locales          of         Alaska,          Idaho          and          the          desert         Southwest.         Not          all          of          the          trips          cover         the          far-flung          past.          Bush’s         students          learn          about          recent         Northwestern          geologic          ac-         tivity,          including          eruptions          at         Crater          Lake          and          Mt.          St.         Helens,          Ore.         While          not          digging          too         deep          into          the          subject,          Bush         said          field          trips          give          first          year         students          the          chance          to          ex-         perience          geology          first-hand.         ‘Even          if          they          don’t          go         further          into          the          field,          at          least         they          can          relate          better          to         those          who          do,”’          he          said.         fate          Ren          eiser         [Dy          glasses          protected          Darry         j          Jacquot’s          eyes          from          early         morning          sunlight.          Jacquot          and          Julle         Lees          examined          mineral          deposits          on         a          chilly          Saturday.          (Clark)         wo          by          a          small          group          of          ob-         “servers,          graduate          student          Bill         Rumber          explains          the          proper          method         used          to          collect          samples.          Pebbles         from          the          canyon          indicated          the          area’s         geographical          history.          (Hayes)                  eae          i          ii          fat          iW         eras          Boiat          a         by          gets         Fink           Hobson          79         High          school          seniors          explore          Idaho         ditor’s          Note:         Explore          Idaho         is          an          annual         recruitment          program         sponsored          by          High         School          Relations          to          pro-         mote          the          university          to         regional          high          school         seniors.          The          following          are         excerpts          from          an          article         written          by          Explore          Idaho         student          Nancy          Brisbane.         In          the          beginning...         ‘““Now          what          do          we         do?’’          we          thought          after         registering          and          receiving         our          information          on          Ex-         plore          Idaho          weekend.          We         had          plenty          of          time          —         two-and-a-half          hours          to         find          our          living          quarters         and          eat          lunch          before          at-         tending          classes          and          tour-         ing          the          campus.         Class          notes...         Attending          classes          was         our          first          college          ex-         perience.          We          tried          to         blend          in          with          the          students         ewiston          senior          Bob         Forter          was          one          of          280         students          visiting          campus          Feb.         6.          With          help          from          Matt          Pet-         tinger,          Forter          practiced          target         shooting.          (Jones)         80          Explore          Idaho         and          casually          enter          and          sit         down          as          if          we          belonged         there,          but          our          campus         maps          and          bright          yellow         folders          gave          away          our         identity.         Eating          it          up...         We          had          the          choice          to         eat          at          the          Wallace         Cafeteria          or          to          attack          the         fast          food          row          we          passed         on          our          way          into          Moscow.         The          food          service          and         housing          pamphlet          didn’t         quite          capture           the          essence         of          what          dining          in          the         cafeteria          was          really          like.         Although          the          meals          wer-         en’t          as          good          as          Mom’s         home          cooking,          they          wer-         en’t          as          bad          as          the          rumors         we          had          heard.         Ballroom          blitz...         ““What          is          it          really          like’’         came          later          and          gave          Ex-         plore          Idaho          participants          a         chance          to          ask          a          board          of         UI          students          questions         without          intervention          from         the          adults          who          were          run-         ning          the          program.          The         fear          of          seeming          naive         caused          the          questions          to         come          slowly,          but          before         the          end          of          the          session          a         wide          variety          of          questions         had          been          covered.         Friday          night          live...         On          Fr iday          night          we          had         the          choice          to          follow          the         activities          provided          for          us         in          the          SUB          or          to          venture         out          on          our          own,         Although          the          video         dance,          bowling          and         movie          attracted          most          of         our          group,          the          curiosity         got          the          best          of          us          and          we         headed          out          to          explore         other          forms          of          entertain-         ment.         In          the          end...         The          trip          home          gave          us         plenty          of          time          to          specu-         late          about          what          college         life          will          really          be          like          for         us          in          less          than          a          year,         when          it          becomes          a          reality         rather          than          a          weekend          va-         cation,         -_         =          Vie          Bcc          Alig          eS          —         Keith          Hoene,          Fr.,          Boise         Lisa)          Holloway,          Fr,          Princeton         Carrie          Holman,          Fr.,          Boise         Raymond          Horton,          Firs,          Moscow         Brian          Houlihan,          Fr,,          Anchorage         Amy          Habbell,          Fr.,          Mountain          Home         Laura          Hulse,          Fr.,          Boise         Delayne          Hume,          Fr.,          Lewiston         Connie          Jackson,          Soph.          ,          Boise         Nancy          Jefferies,          Fr.,          Boise         Kay          Jensen,          Soph.,         Anchorage,          Alaska         Charlene          Johnson,          Fr.,          [daho          Ealls         Shawn          Johnson,          Soph.,          McCall         Deborah          Jones,          Soph.,          Nampa         John          Kavanaugh,          Fr.,         Coeur          d Alene         Jeff          Kernodle,          Fr...          Sandpoint         Andy          Keys,          Soph.,          Nampa         Eric          Kim,          Fry;          Anchorage,          Alaska         Cheryl          King,          Soph.,          Boise         Allen          Kitchel,          Jr.,          Careywood         Heidi          Kleffner,          Fr.,          Moscow         Kevin          Kleinkopf,          Fr.,          Twin          Falls         Kristen          Kludt,          Fr.,          Orofino         Betty          Knoles,          Jr.,          Hayden          Lake         Mike          Kohntopp,          Soph.,          Buhl         Andy          Kowal,          Jr.,          Idaho,          Falls         Larry          Kraut,          Jr.,          Coeur          d'Alene         Audra          Krussel,          Fr.,         Walla          Walla,          Wash.         Dan          Kurtz,          Fr.,          Chugiak,          Alaska         David          Lambert,          Jr.,         Kennewick,          Wash.         Scott          Larkin,          Soph.,          Colfax,          Wash.         Sarah          Lau,          Sophi.,          Soda          Springs         Valerie          Lavender,          Fr.,          Buh!         Fric          Leatham,          Fr.,          Rathdrum         Ramona          Lee,          Fr.,          New          Plymouth         Julie          Lees,          Soph.,          Orofino         Brian          Leffler,          Fr.,          Blue          Hill,          Neb.         Jodi          Lenkner,          Fr.,          Twin          Falls         Paul          Linnerud,          Jr.,          Tacoma,          Wash.         Susan          Little,          Soph.,          Caldwell         Ellen          Logan,          Fr.,          Idaho          Falls         Lisa          Lorain,          Fr.,          Meridian         Steve          Lussie,          Fr.,          Idaho          Falls         bag          aca          Fr.,          Granada          Hills,         Louise          Mainyil,          Soph.,          Weiser         Katherine          Malsch,          Soph.,         Wenatchee,          Wash.         Shelly          Manchester,          Fr.,         Clarkston,          Wash.         Hoene           Manchester          8          |         Angela          Marti,          Soph.,          Cambridge         Jim          Mashburn,          Soph.,          Mtn.          Home         Steve          McCallie,          Fr.,          Renton         Barry          McClain,          Jr.,          Newport         Larry          McClain,          Soph.,          Newport         James          McDonald,          Jr.,          Grangeville         Melissa          McMichael,          Fr.,          Boise         Tina          McMillan,          Jr.,          Rathdrum         Christy          McNew,          Fr.,          Moscow         Jan          Meeker,          Soph.,          Sandpoint         Belinda          Metcalf,          Fr.,         Wilbur,          Wash.         Mark          Meyer,          Fr.,          Moscow         Michelle          Michelson,          Fr.,         Walla          Walla,          Wash.         Lindsey          Miller,          Fr.,          Moscow         Nancy          ger          pa.          Caldwell         Mills,          Fr.,         be          sstietiy          Kati         Nancy          Mink,          Fr.,          Kuna         Peter          Moloney,          Soph.,          Boise         Bradley          Montgomery,          Soph.,         Moscow         James          Monti,          Jr.,          Moscow         Jerry          Mooney,          Fr.,          Nampa         pee          Spokane,          Wash.         Morrisrog,          Fr.,          Boise         Judy          Moulton,          Fr.,         Mountain          Home         Tamila          Mouradian,          Fr.,          Moscow         Sara          Muckler,          Fr.,          Sandpoint         Roxanne          Neal,          Fr.,          Ephrata,          Wash.         William          Neal,          Soph.,          Carey         Eric          Nelson,          Fr.,          Coeur          d'Alene         Taren          Nelson,          Fr.,          Arco         Wa          Ngo,          Fr.;          Moscow         Dawn          Nicholas,          Fr.,         Mountain          Home         Pam          Norrie,          Soph.,          Boise         Julie          Oberle,          Soph.,          Gooding         Sherrie          Olaveson,          Fr.,          Menan         Robert          Palmer,          Fr.,         Enterprise,          Ore.         Carmella          Parks,          Fr.,          McCall         Tracy          Peel,          Fr.,          Lewiston         Lily          Pham,          Soph.,          Boise         David          Pierik,          Ir’,          Gresham,          Ore.         Thad          Pike,          Fr.,          Hayden          Lake         Randall          Pipal,          Fr.,          Boise         Chad          Piquet,          Pr.,          Golconda,          Nev.         Caroline          Poor,          Fr.,         Douglasy          Alaska         Ken          Pratt,          Gort          Emmett         Price,          Jr.,         St.          Albert,          Canada         §?          Marti Price         oney          made          the         SUB          go          ‘round.         In          an          effort          to         provide          students          with          cas-         ier          access          to          their          ac-         counts,          Idaho          First          Bank         and          the          First          National         Bank          of          North          Idaho         jointly          installed          automat-         ed          teller          machines         (ATMs)          in          the          north          end         of          the          SUB          in          early          May.         Following          five          years          of         planning          at          the          university         and          local          bank          level,         Dean          Vettrus,          SUB         manager          and          Wade         Griffith,          marketing         manager          of          First          Nation-         al          Bank          of          North          Idaho         decided          to          go          ahead          with         the          long-awaited          project.         “We're          excited          about         the          ATMs          installed          at          the         university,’’          Griffith          said.         “It’s          a          plus          for          the         university          since          it          will         make          it          a          little          better         Se          ee          ee          ee         SUB          adds          automated          teller          machines         place          to          work          and          go          to         school.’’         Discussions          between         Vettrus          and          Griffith          even-         tually          led          to          Idaho          First         and          First          National          being         selected.          These          two          banks         were          chosen          because          they         provided          the          best          access         to          virtually          all          banks          in         Idaho,          Griffith          said.         The          bank’s          systems         were          interconnected          by         telephone          with          other         western          state          banking          sys-         tems.          This          aspect          was          es-         pecially          attractive          to         Vettrus          and          the          SUB         Board          since          their          goal          was         to          provide          the          broadest         possible          service          for          stu-         dents,          faculty          and          campus         visitors.         Idaho          First          provided         access          to          Masterteller,         Visa          and          American         Express-Cash          while          First         National          offered          service         to          the          Handibank,          Plus         Systems          and          Exchange,         the          largest          shared          ATM         card          in          the          Pacific         Northwest.         Jerry          Nielson,          Moscow         branch          manager          of          the         First          National          Bank          of         North          Idaho,          said,          ‘‘be-         tween          the          two          systems          we         use,          we          cover          probably         half          the          students          of          Ida-         ho,          and          Idaho          First         covers          about          the          other         half.”’         Although          the          universi-         ty          owned          the          ATM          struc-         tures,          both          banks          paid         rent          for          the          use          of          space.         The          banks          also          main-         tained          upkeep          and          took         care          of          any          technical         difficulties.         So          if          money          made          the         SUB          go          ’round,          it          was          the         ATMs          that          kept          it         spinning.         ee          66          G8         oa          42           G1         “a          1         a9         he          ability          to          ‘‘touch          n’          go”’         was          easier          for          students         like          John          Sims          once          two          auto-         matic          teller          machines          were          in-         stalled          in          the          SUB.          (Sperry)         Teller          Machines          §3         Scott          Pyrah,          Fr.,          Carey         Shelly          Ralstin,          Soph.,          Lewiston         Sally          Read,          Fr.,         Hampshire,          England         Vicki          Renfrow,          Jr.,          Troy         Elwood          Rennison,          Fr.,          Meridian         Jennié          Rice,          Fr’,          Idaho          Falls         Susan          Riemann,          Fr.,          Desmet         Brian          Riggers,          Soph.,          Craigmont         Phillip          Robinson,          Fr.,          Hailey         Rob          Robinson,          Soph.,          Idaho          Falls         Scott          Robinson,          Fr.,          Nampa         Elaine          Roe,          Jr:,          Colfax;          Wash.         Briana          Fr,          Homedale         Tracey          Rose,          Fr...Colville,          Wash.         Bekki           Rusholt,          Fr.,;          Twin          Falls         ey          eae          fa         Ber          Aigus:         T           he          Brown          Hornet,          also         known          as          Charlie          Williams,         biasts          out          a          tune          on          his          costume’s         best          known         net.          Willlams          donned          his          hornet         costume          and          toured          campus          dur-         ing          Halloween.          in          December,          he         added          a          set          of          antlers          to          a          home-         made          elf          outfit.          (Spiker)         84          Pyrah Shillam         harlie          Williams          is          the         university's          modern-         day          equivalent          of          a         Medieval          musical          trouba-         dour.         Whether          strolling          past          the         UCC          or          playing          the          nation-         al          anthem          at          volleyball         games,          Williams          made          his         presence          felt,          and          heard,          on         campus.         Williams,          whose          goal          was         to          ‘‘entertain          people          and         have          fun,’’          not          only          per-         formed          at          sporting          events.         He          also          played          in          the          univer-         sity’s          Homecoming          parade         pa          Sigma          float,          Williams,          with          the         aid          of          Carrie          Dirkes,          blew          his          horn         to          the          delight          of          the          parade          watch-         ers.          (Hayes)         and          serenaded          diners          at          the         Wallace          Cafeteria          during         Halloween,          Thanksgiving         and          Christmas          meals.         Williams          said          he          was         never          alone          in          his          endeavors;         his          cornet          was          always          close         at          hand.         “I          just          wanted          to          share         my          music          with          others,’”          he         said.          And          share          he          did.         A          28-year-old          California         native,          Williams          worked          at         odd          jobs          for          several          years         before          moving          to          Idaho          to         major          in          music.          Previously,         he          studied          under          ‘‘Bumps’’         Blackwell.         While          in          Moscow,          Wil-         liams          toured          campus          build-         ings          in          a          Brown          Hornet         costume          and          played          the          na-         tional          anthem          at          home         volleyball          games.         T          was          just          initially          going         Williams          totes          trumpet          to          campus          sports          events         to          play          the          national          anthem         and          then          leave,’’          Williams         said          of          his          volleyball          game         exposure.          ‘ But          it          expanded         from          there. ’         By          the          end          of          the          season,         spectators          said          Williams          had         become          as          much          a          part          of         the          volleyball          team          as          any         player.         “Pam          _          Bradetich,          volley-         ball          head          coach          thanked          me         an          awful          lot          throughout          the         season,”’          he          said.          ‘‘At          the         last          home          game          they         thanked          me          with          a          sign          that         said          ‘Thanks          Charlic.’          I          ap-         preciated          that          too.”’         Although          Williams          refer-         red          to          himself          as          ‘‘an          old-         style          coronet          soloist,’’          he         was          not          adverse          to          playing         pop,          rock          or          TV          theme         songs.         “‘T          like          pop          and          Top          40,”’         Kirsten          Rosholt,          Pr_,.          Twin          Falls         Mathew          Roy,          Sophy;         Walla          Walla,          Wash.         John          Samuelson,          Jr.,          Post          Falls         Jeanie          ler          Fr.,          Boisé         Pam          Schultz,          Fr.,          Reardan,          Wash.         Jay          Scott,          Fr.,          Coeur          d’Alene         Sid          uk,          Soph.          ,.          Moscow         Nick          Sewell,          Fr.,          Stin          Valley         Tammy          Sharp,          Jr.          Nampa         Terry!          Sharples;          Jrg Moscow         Jeff          Sheppard,          Jr.,          Moscow         Scott          Shern,          Pt.,          Concord,          Calif.         he          said,          ‘but          when          it          comes         to          the          trumpet,          I          like          the          old         coronet          solos.          My          goal          is          to         become          a          concert          trumpet         soloist          like          Harry          James          or         Raphael          Mendez.”         But          as          far          as          fans          were         concerned,          Williams          can          sit         in          for          James          any          day.         “T          got          a          few          regulars         who'd          ask          me          to          play          this          or         that,’’          Williams          said.          ‘‘My         most          requested          song          was         ‘Louie,          Louie’          an d          my          se-         cond          most          was          ‘Tequila.’’’         Other          songs          Williams         played          included,          the         “Theme          from          the          Pink          Pan-         ther,’’          ‘‘Woody          Woodpeck-         er,’’          ‘ Popeye’’          and          the         ‘Vandal          Fight          Song.”         Most          of          them          just          came         to          me          at          the          spur          of          the          mo-         ment,’’          he          said.          ‘And          I          take         requests.”’         _          Anchorage,          Alaska         Trumpet          Player          85         Sve          coe         Barbara          Skavland,          Soph.,          Mullan         Jerry          Skinner,          Fr.,          Orofino         John          Skodi,          Soph.,          Eagle          River         Jennifer          Smith,          Soph.,          Moscow         Todd          Smith,          Fr.,          Twin          Falls         Mark          Snyder,          Fr.,          Rathdrum         Kimberly          Sorensen,          Jr.,          Moscow         Stacey          Stands,          Fr.,          Twin          Falls         Melissa          Stansbury,          Soph.,          Boise         Brant          Steigers,          Fr.,          Juliaetta         Eric          Storhok,          Soph.,          Idaho          Falls         Will          Stratton,          Soph.,          Troy         Gail          Strawn,          Fr.,          Eagle         Jeff          Stucker,          Fr.,          Meridian         Lodi          Sutton,          Fr.,          Midvale         Stephen          Szewe,          Fr.,         Bagle          River,          Alaska         Marita          Szubert;          Fr.,          Twin,          Falls         Andrew          Taylor,          Fr.,          Meridian         Deborah          Teraguchi,          Fr.,         Idaho          Falls         Tony          Theriault,          Jr.,         Victoria,          Canada         Robynn.          Thiclman,          Fr.,          Wallace         Daye          Thomas,          Fr.,          Boise         Lorraine          Thompson,          Fr.,         Yucaipa,          Calif.         Michelle          Timm,          Fr.,          Boise         Kathleen          Trail,          Fr.,          Moscow         Roger          Trail,          Soph.,          Mascow         Michael          Tuell,          Fr.,          Lapwai         Cara          Tylutki,          Soph.,          Moscow         Terry          Uda,          Soph.,          Homedale         Robert          Vance,          Soph.,          Spokane,          Wash.         Kim          VanKomen,          Fr.,          McCall         Erica          Viola,          Fr.,          Moscow         Kari          Voorhees,          Fr.,          Meridian         Jeff          Walker,          Fr.,          Boise         Cathy          Wall,          Soph.,          Molalla,          Ore.         Laura          Ward,          Fr.,          Nampa         Dave          Wascher,          Fr.,         Kennewick,          Wash.         Robert          Watson,          Fr.,          Post          Falls         Sydney          Watson,          Fr.,          Twin          Falls         Mark          White,          Soph.,          Lewiston         Anne          Williams,          Fr.,         Lake          Oswego,          Ore.,         Lyle          Wood,          Fr.,          Bovill         Laura          Woodworth,          Soph.,          Rupert         B          Workman,          Fr.,          Troy         Cynthia          Wraspir,          Fr.,         Hayden          Lake         Tina          Wright,          Fr.,          Payette         Chris          Wuthrich,          Soph.,         San          Jose,          Calif.         Lisa          Young,          Fr.,          Lenore         Tamra          Zumwalt,          Fr.,          Meridian         86          Skavland Zumwalt         Phantoms          lurk          in          campus          dwellings         ho          ya          gonna         call?          Spooky          as         it          may          seem,         various          places          on          campus         have          been          the          site          of          un-         explained          supernatural         events.         Delta          Chi          fraternity         members          have          two          the-         ories          to          explain          ‘‘Madi-         son,”’          a          ghost          they          claim         roams          their          house.          Some         members          say          that          years         ago          a          pledge          died          and          his         ghost          still          haunts          the         house.          Others          say          that         during          Prohibition,          a         pledge          and          the          house          still         were          crushed          during          a         basement          cave-in.         Delta          Chi          Mike          Semick         said          he          encountered         Madison          while          doing         laundry          in          the          basement.         Mysteriously,          a         400-pound          oil          drum         which          had          moved          from         against          the          wall          into          the         doorway,          he          said.          Semick         said          he          ran          out          of          the         room          after          getting          past         the          oil          drum.         Madison          was          spotted         again          during          a          party          at         the          Delta          Sigma          Phi         fraternity          house          directly         behind          the          Delta          Chis.         According          to          Semick,          this         sighting          took          place          before         the          Perch          Grocery          Store         was          built.          While          gazing          at         the          Delta          Chi          house,         someone          observed          a         greenish-type          haze          going         in          one          window          and          out         the          other.          The          ghostly         sighting          frightened          the         on-looker          so          much          that         he          vowed          never          to          set          foot         in          Delta           Chi          again,          Se-         mick          said.         Next          door,          the          men          of         Kappa          Sigma          fraternity         said          they          experienced          un-         usual          ghostly          happenings.         In          the          1950s,          a          member         of          their          chapter          died          in          a         car          accident.          Members         claim          ‘‘Glen”’          liked          living         in          the          Kappa          Sig          house          so         much          that          his          spirit          never         left.         Across          campus,          eerie         events          have          occured          at          the         Hartung          Theater.          While         relaxing          backstage,          form-         er          shop          foreman          Pat         Moon          and          two          bystanders         said          they          heard          a          wom-         an’s          blood-curdling         scream          from          off-stage.         Much          to          the          listeners’          dis-         may,          all          the          doors          were         locked          and          there          were          no         other          people          in          the         building.         Other          encounters          with         ““Oscar,””          the          Hartung         ghost,          were          reported          dur-         ing          past          rehearsals.          Form-         er          students          Charles          Miller         and          Karla          Capps          said         they          were          going          over          lines         when          nearly          a          dozen         doors          to          the          lobby          opened         and          closed          rapidly.          They         say          the          event          later          repeat-         ed          itself.         So          the          next          time          you         get          the          feeling          you’re          not         alone          in          an          empty          room,         just          try          to          figure          out         “who          ya          gonna          call.’’         scar,          a          ghost          which          al-         legediy          haunts          the          Har-         tung          Theater,          floats          through         the          aisles          moving          toward         center          stage.          (illustration          by         Ghosts          87         von          calling?          Nope.         A          Reach          out          and          touch         someone?          Not          quite.         ‘ Hello,          this          is          the          Universi-         ty          of          Idaho.”’          Right.         It          took          thirty          phones          and         eight          weeks          to          complete          the         fifth          Annual          Fund          Phona-         thon.          When          finished,          eager         student          callers          had          dialed          up         more          than          $240,000          of         alumni          support          for          the         universily.         Keith          Nyberg,          chairman         of          the          phonathon,          said          living         groups          took          turns          calling         their          alumni          throughout          Oc-         tober          and          November.          Stu-         dents          groups          were          asked          to         work          two          hours          a          night          for         three          evenings.          The          tax-         deductible          donations          solicit-         ed          from          alumni          could          be         directed          to          any          university         department          or          placed          in          the         iB)          Ipha          Tau          Omega          membars         Lynn          McGlothin,          Jim          Gray,         Callin          Branter,          Kirk          Niblock          and         Craig          McCurry          spent          three          hours         calling          nearly          200          alumni          for          do-         nations.          (Hayes)         university          general          fund.         Fundraising          participants         were          members          from          37          living         groups.          Each          night          of          the         phonathon,          members          from         two          or          three          living          groups         met          at          Sweet          Avenue          House         to          place          phone          calls.         Earning          the          most          alumni         pledges          for          the          university         were          the          men          of          the          Phi         Garena          Delta          fraternity.          Al-         pha          Chi          Omega          sorority         generated          the          second          highest         number          of          alumni          pledges.         “The          purpose          of          the         phonathon,  ’          Nyberg          said,         is          to          contact          alumni          and          let         them          Know          that          as          students,         we          are          concerned          about          the         university,          and          we          hope          they         are          too.”’         Linda          Williams,          coordina-         tor          of          the          Annual          Fund          for         the          Alumni          Foundation,          said         —          ee          a         eae         the          phonathon          offers          a          more         personal          way          to          keep          in         touch          with          alumni          than         sending          letters.          It          also          gives         alumni          a          chance          to          talk          to         students,          she          said.         Preparation          for          the          event         started          in          early          September.         According          to          Williams,          a         phonathon          chairman          was         chosen          based          on          his          ability         to          organize          and          communi-         cate.          Recommendations          for         the          job          were          taken          from         members          of          the          alumni         office          and          the          Student         Alumni          Relations          Board.         After          becoming          chairman,         Nyberg          met          with          student          liv-         ing          groups          and          Moscow         merchants          to          solicit          support         for          the          phonathon.          Commu-         nity          donations          included         refreshments          and          door          prizes         for          student          workers.         —                  ree         Dayid          Abraham,          Agricultural          Engr.         Karla          Adams,          Education         Alan          Ahlschlager,          Electrical          Engr.         Ajay          Ahuja,          Grad.,          Business         Ken          Altman,          Management         Lori          Arnzen,          Education         Rose          Arrubarrena,          Foreign          Language         Benjamin          Atmore,          Computer          Science         Sheila          Avery,          Home          Economics         Joelen          Bacca,          Office          Administration         Becky          Bailey,          Recreation         Randal          Baker,          Civil          Engr.         Susan          Barker,          Home          Economics         Alan          Barnes,          Accounting         Kim          Barnett,          Computer          Science         Pamela          Bartman,          Marketing         Ann          Baumgartner,          Chemical          Engr.         Carolyn          Beasley,          Journalism         Richard          Becker,          Electrical          Engr.         Gustay          Bekker,          Forestry         Lori          Bennett,          Child          Development         Cory          Betts,          Finance         Erik          Bevan,          Electrical          Engr.         Gerard          Billington,          Geography         Brent          Bjornn,          Education         Lisa          Blackburn,          Advertising         Joseph          Blackstock,          Agriculture         Laura          Blackwell,          Education         Tallis          Blalack,          Electrical          Engr.         Dawn          Blattner,          Animal          Science         Abraham Blattner          89         Andy          Bolt,          Civil          Engr.         Thomas          Bonasera,          Chemistry         Ross          Borden,          Cartography         Heidi          Borgen,          Communications         Maria          Bourekis,          Communications         Teresa          Bowman,          Education         Ron          Branch,          Marketing         Joan          Branson,          Accounting         Brian          Brazil,          Chemical          Engr.         Sandra          Bremner,          Zoology         Teresa          Brewster,          Management         Jim          Briggs,          Crop          Science         ifth-year          students          like          ar-         chitecture          major          Elaine         Moore          stood          in          the          same          lines          as         their          fellow          undergraduates          dur-         ing          spring          registration.          (Morgan)         ven          before          Leigh          Ro-         bartes          started          his          encore         year          at          the          university,          his          sched-         ule          was          getting          cramped.          A          form-         er          KUO!          disc          jockey,          Robartes         took          over          as          radio          station          manager         before          fall          classes          began.          (Hayes)         Qi)          Bolt Byrne         UCT         sonny                  _—                  _-         a         -         —_         William          Brockley,          Accounting         Geoffrey          Brown,          Management         Patricia          Brown,          Theater         Robert          Bryant,          Accounting         Brian          Buckles,          Cartography         Troy          Buenneke,          History         Alice          Buerkle,          Botany         Brett          Burdick,          Electrical          Engr.         Richard          Burke,          Political          Science         Darci          Butler,          Education         Keith          Butler,          Computer          Science         Catherine          Byrne,          Political          Science         Super          seniors          stay          an          encore          year         t’s          something          you         just          didn’t          talk         about.          Students         like          Kristin          Sheppard,          a          1982         high          school          graduate,          once         thought          they          faced          only          four         years          of          college          before          es-         caping          from          florescent          lights         and          screechy          classroom         chalkboards          forever.         Four-and-one-half          years         later,          Sheppard          and          40          per-         cent          of          her          classmates          found         out          they          were          wrong.         I’m          still          here,          aren’t          I,”         Sheppard          said.          “‘The          majori         ty          of          people          I’ve          met          have         been          here          longer          than          I          have         or          will          be.’’         According          to          national         studies,          60          percent          of          to-         day’s          college          students          fail          to         graduate          within          four          years.         Thomas          Bell,          university          aca-         demic          vice          president,          agreed         the          trend          is          toward          longer         college          careers.         Many          students          don’t         graduate          in          four          years,”’          he         said.          ‘‘First,          there          are          a         number          of          students          who         work          part-time          and          take          less         than          a          full          course          load;         others          drop          out          to          work.         Another          is          a          phenomenon         we          are          seeing,          especially          in         professional          programs.”’         Bell          said          fifth-year          stu         dents          are          enrolling          in          more         than          one          major          at          a          time.         For          chemical          enginecring         student          Karrie          Dupont,          an         extra          college          year          gave          her         time          to          go          on          a          Florida          stu-         dent          exchange.         ‘My          family          encouraged         me          to          gO          On          an          exchange,”’         she          said.          “‘Last          year,          when          I         could          have          graduated,          |         looked          at          everything          and         decided          that          staying          the          ex-         tra          year          has          been          a          benefit          to         me.’         In          her          tenth          semester          at         the          university,          Dupont          said         college          costs          have          become         easier          to          pay.         As          an          older          senior          I          can         grade          papers,          making          $4.50         to          $5          an          hour,”’          she          said.          ‘‘!         also          earn          more          money          dur-         ing          the          summer,          now          that         I'm          qualified          for          internships         from          companics          like          Rock-         well          International.”’         Not          all          students,          however,         were          so          enthusiastic          about         shelling          out          an          additional         $5,300          and          a          year          of          their         life          to          become          a          ‘“‘super         senior.          Said          Sheppard,          ‘I          was         happy          to          get          out          without         having          to          go          one          more.”’         Super          Seniors          9]         r=          ——          ai         :          aL          a          S          tS          Eee         SF          Bist          Eeicm          AS         Teri          Campbell,          Bacteriology         Lori          Carroll,          Advertising         Catherine          Carson,          Math         Clint          Casey,          Management         Edward          Champagne,          Architecture         James          Chase,          Agricultural          Ed.         Erik          Clar,          Telecommunication         Patti          Clar,          Public          Relations         David          Clemen,          Electrical          Engr.         Garay          Clement,          Architecture         Lisa          Cochran,          Philosophy         Richard          Colburn,          Chemical          Engr.         Patrick          Collins,          Foreign          Language         Kelly          Cooper,          Math         Matt          Cooper,          Art         Shawn          Crea,          Mechanical          Engr.         Brent          oe          Electrical          Engr.         ete          Cruz,          English         Joseph          Cyancara,          Bacteriology         Robert          Dammarell,          Accounting         Eileen          Davidson,          Architecture         Greg          Dayis,          Civil          Engr.         Jackson          Davis,          Accounting         Ila          Denison,          Management         Peggy          Desy,          Finance         Ethan          Dexter,          Music          Ed.         Joseph          Deyo,          Management         Byron          Diehl,          Telecommunication         Karoline          Diven,          Biology         Albert          Dodd,          Mechanical          Engr.         9)          Campbell Dodd         Halloween          fog          raises          party          spirits         t          could          have          been         straight          out          of          a          cheap         B-rated          horror          flick.         Dodging          students          dressed          as         everything          from          killer          bees         to          male          Homecoming         queens,          Halloween          partiers         celebrated          at          more          than          a         dozen          separate          campus          mon-         ster          mashes.         Students          began          Halloween         festivities          a          day          early          by         sponsoring          activities          for          lo-         cal          children.         Houston          Hall          members         joined          Snow          and          Chrisman         Halls          to          sponsor          an          after-         school          party           for          youngsters.         According          to          party          organiz-         er          Kathi          Simeone,          the          activi-         ty          helped          the          halls          be          more         visible          to          the          community.         “Our          goal          is          to          make          it          a         traditional          community         project          for          the          residence         halls          to          promote          better          pub-         lic          relations,’’          she          said.         Meanwhile,          three          Greek         houses          teamed-up          to          sponsor         events          for          the          children          of         Friends          Unlimited,          a         Moscow          youth          program.         Members          of          Sigma          Chi,          Al-         pha          Chi          Omega          and          Phi         Gamma          Delta          hosted          an         evening          of          pumpkin          carving,         trick-or-treating          and          haunt-         ed          house          touring.         Sigma          Chi          apple          dunkers         Brian          Houlihan          and          Paul         Greenwood          learned          lessons         of          their          own          while          showing         children          how          to          grab          apples         without          using          their          hands.         By          the          time          the          bobbing          was         over,          the          two          were          soaked         with          water.         A          backdrop          of          thick          fog         covered          Moscow          hillsides         Oct.          31          as          students          crept         through          haunted          houses          and         danced          at          living          group          ex-         changes.         Adults          paid          $1          to          tour          Tau         Kappa          Epsilon’s          dimly          lit         halls          during          their          11th          annu-         Continued          =          early          475          lucky          individuals         won          tickets          to          KZFN’s          an-         nual          ‘Bump          in          the          Night          Bash.’          Held          at          University          Inn          -          Best         Western,          guests          enjoyed          music,         refreshments          and          dancing          on          Hal-         loween          evening.          (Fritz)         rmed          with          sharp          knives,         representatives          of          each         sorority          spent          the          evening          of          Oc-         tober          28          carving          pumpkins          for         selected          dorm          women.          Volunteers         like          Delta          Delta          Delta          Katie          Jeffer-         ies          gathered          at          the          Delta          Gamma         house          to          transform          the          orange         fruits          into          jack-o'-lanterns.         (Dahiquist)         Halloween          93                   Continued         al          haunted          house.          Children         traveled          up          creeky          stairs          and         past          unusual          creatures          for         half-price.          Proceeds          from         the          project          were          also          donat-         ed          to          UNICEF.         Less          than          a          block          away,         residents          of          Targhee          Hall         were          scaring          up          donations          of         their          own.          Their          second          an-         nual          haunted          house          was          co-         sponsored          by          Steel          House,         Snow          and          McCoy          Halls,         Dominos          Pizza          and          Mingles.         Money          raised          from          the          event         went          to          Childfind,          a          pro-         gram          for          missing          children.         Zani          Kral          _          traveled         through          Targhee          as          midnight         approached.         At          times          things          weren’t         scary          at          all,’          he          said,          ‘‘but         it          got          more          realistic          at          the         end,         and          I          actually          got         04          Halloween         scared.’’         During          Targhee’s          tour,         many          students          were          trapped         in          a          basement          ‘‘mirror         maze’’          for          more          than          five         minutes.          Bright          strobe          lights         flashed          into          the          maze          as          Hal-         loween          ghouls          chased          those         who          lagged          behind,         As          the          Administration         Building          clock          struck          mid-         night,          campus          living          group         dances          heated          up.          Erin          Fan-         ning          led          a          group          of          Kappas         to          canvas          the          campus         dressed          as          Robert          Palmer’s         video          dancers.         Following          the          Kappas         were          Brad          Cuddy,          Brian         Long          and          Brad          Drussel          don-         ning          white          sperm          costumes.         Not          to          be          left          out,          law         school          students          said          they         tried          their          best          to          be          ‘‘out          of         order.’’          No          one          objected,         however,          when          two          students         arrived          exposing          briefs.         The          serious          law          students         loosened          their          collars,’”          said         party          guest          Kelli          Kast.          “‘A         couple          dressed          as          the          Fruit         of          the          Loom          guys,          wearing         purple          balloons          as          big         grapes.          One          wore          a          giant         pear.”’         Across          town,          residence         hall          members          danced          under         a          false          ceiling          of          balloons         during          the          Gault          Halloween         Bash.          Guests          had          mixed         reviews          of          the          dance.         In          general,          the          party          was         disappointing,’’          guest          Lisa         Hughes          said.          “‘It          was          only         attended          by          those          wanting         free          beer          and          cheap          thrills.”’         As          parties          ended,          the          fog         began          to          lift.          And          what         started          as          a          spooky          evening,         ended          in          dead          silence.         ressed          in          a          white          gorilla         suit,          Shane          Nilsson          delivers         a          singing          telegram          to          Debbie          Her-         nandez          and          her          Alpha          Phi          sisters         during          the          week          of          Halloween.          Shane          and          his          brother,          Shawn,         own          the          Crazy          Clevis’          Singing          Tel-         egram          Service.          (Hayes)         Say          Sq          =a          so         Jude          Donato,          Math         Cathleen          Donohue,          Marketing         Karen          Dowling,          Telecommunication         Harry          Dudunake,          Advertising         John          Duffey,          Mining         Julie          Duffey,          Recreation         Licia          Duren,          Agribusiness         Curtis          Egli,          Architecture         Debbie          Ehri,          Accounting         Gregory          Eiselein,          History         Lee          Ely,          Accounting         Patricia          Epling,          Education         Matthew          Faulks,          Economics         Peter          Feeley,          Electrical          Engr.         Michael          Felton,          Finance         Lance          Fish,          Architecture         Geraldine          Fitzgerald,          Agribusiness         Mary          Fitzpatrick,          Home          Economics         Jacquelyn          Foggia,          Management         Dianne          Foote,          Public          Relations         Charlotte          Forbes,          Wildlife          Resources         Leonard          Forkner,          Biology         Clayton          France,          Agribusiness         Melanie          Francis,          Music         Elizabeth          Frank,          Chemistry         Danette          Frederiksen,          General          Studies         Karen          Frederiksen,          Psychology         Laura          Fry,          Accounting         Ron          Garner,          Spanish         Steven          George,          Computer          Science         Donato George          95         SFr          ABs          CA         Larry          Ghan,          Mechanical          Engr.         Mary          Gillhoover,          Education         Janice          Gimbel,          Physical          Education         Katherine          Ginnetti,          Anthropology         Thomas          Golden,          Architecture         Janine          Gosselin,          Bacteriology         Kellie          Grayelle,          Education         Mary          Green,          Education         Kay          Greenwalt,          Pre-Nursing         Angela          Groeger,          Home          Economics         Andy          Gustavsen,          Economics         William          Hagler,          Chemical          Engr.         Gerald          Hagood,          Education         David          Hahn,          Mechanical          Engr.         Frederick          Hahn,          Foreign          Language         Andrea          Hall,          Accounting         Christopher          Halton,          Management         Vernon          Hansen,          Finance         Debra          Harbuck,          Civil          Engr.         Cynthia          Harmon,          Fashion         Anthony          Harrison,          Public          Relations         Deborah          Harroun,          Marketing         Heidi          Hart,          Psychology         Kristi          Hartell,          Marketing         Norma          Hasbrouck,          Finance         Grant          Hatch,          Political          Science         Jeff          Hathhorn,          Electrical          Engr.         Keith          Havens,          Computer          Science         Richard          Hawkes,          Agricultural          Engr.         Andrew          Hazzard,          Political          Science         06          Ghan Hazzard         s          winter          break          ap-         proached,          students         nearly          froze          their         fingers          off          en          route          to          class,         braving          temperatures          in          the         low          teens.          Then          a          Christmas         day          storm          dumped          seven         inches          of          icy          slush          on          the          red         brick          sidewalks          of          the          cam-         pus          core.          But          the          worst          was         yet          to          come.         By          the          first          week          in          Janu-         ary,          time          had          literally         frozen.         Moscow’s          best          known         landmark,          the          Administra-         tion          Building          clock,          quit         ticking.         The          date          of          the          clock         breakdown          was          unclear.         Few          students          were          on          cam-         pus          to          notice          the          timepiece’s         Administration          Building          clock          quits          ticking         halted          hands.         “Usually,          it’s          not          been          off         more          than          a          day          before         someone          calls          us,’’          said          Don         Baugh,          university          electric         shop          foreman.          In          this          case,         he          said          it          may          have          been         several          days          before          anyone         noticed          the          breakdown.         One          factor          leading          to          con-         fusion          may          have          been          that         the          broken          clock’s          chimes         continued          to          sound.         According          to          Baugh,          the         chimes          are          separately          locat-         ed          a          block          away          from          the         clock          in          the          Music          Building.         Vibrations          from          the          183          tiny         bronze          bells          are          picked          up         electronically          and          amplified         more          than          a          million          times         through          speakers          above          the         with          toolbox          in          hand.          (Hayes)         clock.         After          the          breakdown          was         finally          reported          on          Jan.          7,          a         week          passed          while          universi-         ty          physical          plant          workers         waited          for          clock          replacement         parts.          As          students          returned         for          their          first          day          of          class         Jan.          1S,          a          repairman         climbed          steps          to          the          reach         the          clock          motor          and          replace         a          set          of          worn          ball          bearings.         The          chimes          of          the          David         Memorial          Carillon          con-         tinued          to          ring          on          the          hour,         playing          the          Vandal          fight         song          at          10          p.m.          daily.          And         the          clock,          which          has          only         broken          down          three          times          in         the          past          30          years,          was          tick-         ing          again,          just          in          the          nick          of         time.         [A]          fter          climbing          steps          to          reach         the          Administration          Building         roof,          Physical          Plant          repairmen         Henry          Nygaard          replaced          a          set          of         worn          ball          bearings.          He          also          reset         the          timepiece          before          packing          off         he          hands          of          the          Administra-         tion          Building          clock          froze          at         10:29          for          over          two          weeks.          The         David          Memorial          Carillon,          however,         continued          to          ring          out          every          hour.         (Morgan)         Broken          Clock          9]         |         ]          Toll-free          calling          links          Ul          to          Pullman         }         a          -509-335-3564.          ““We’re                   sorry,          your          call          cannot                   be          completed          as          dial-         ed,”’          replied          a          computerized         operator.          ‘‘Please          hang          up         and          try          your          call          again.”’         The          first          week          in          Septem-         ber          was          something          to          call         home          about,          at          least          if          your         parents          lived          in          Pullman.         That’s          because          deregulation         of          the          telephone          industry         meant          no          more          $1.10          long         distance          charges          on          calls          to         Moscow’s          sister          city,          locat-         ed          a          short          eight          miles          away.         Also          gone          were          the          days         of          remembering          the          “‘1-509”’         prefix          for          Pullman          calls.          In-         stead,          students          could          reach         cross-border          coeds          as          easily         as          dialing          across          campus.         And          they          could          once          again                   —         save          their          quarters          for          laun-         dry          money.         ““With          lines          to          Pullman         open,          I          can          find          out          what’s         playing          at          their          theaters          and         contact          high          school          friends         attending          WSU,”          said          Allen         Chapman.         “If          I          want          to          get          involved         with          a          girl          from          Pullman,          I         don’t          have          to          worry          about         phone          bills          making          me          go         broke,”’          he          said.         Toll-free          service          didn’t         come          without          some          costs,         however.          General          Telephone         Co.          raised          money          for          the         $2.5          million          computer          sys-         tem          needed          to          handle          the         switchover          by          increasing         monthly          phone          bills.          Month-         ly          increases          totaled          $.87          for         Moscow          and          $2.07          for         Sarah          Heath,          Communications         Karen          Helbling,          Computer          Science         Meile          Herman,          Education         Bruce          Higgins,          Forest          Resources         Jeanne          Higgins,          Forest          Resources         Frank          Hill,          Grad.,          History         Otmar          Hofstetter,          Agricultural         Ed,         Wade          Hoiland,          Education         Tracey          Holbrook,          Crop          Science         Jeffrey          Holman,          Electrical          Engr.         Timothy          Hoogasian,          Computer         Science         Charles          Horgan,          Architecture         98          Phones         Pullman          residents.         While          extended          service          left         Pullman          phones          ringing          off         their          hooks,          a          survey          of          100         students          found          that         Washington          did          not          have          the         only          clogged          lines.          In          order         of          popularity,          most          often         phoned          numbers          included:         1.          Friends         .          Parents         .          Boyfriends Girlfriends         .          Pizza          delivery         Movie          information         .          Grandparents         .          Employers         .          Other          calls         .          Time          and          weather         10.          Radio          request          lines         Less          popular          phone          num-         bers          included          flight          informa-         tion          services          and          dinner         reservation          desks.         eoContawlwn         ea          tet          LP          es          ee          EY          aus         re         ed          Rae          eT          BIO          eS          ee          Fee          woe         —         oS          eS          eS         f-campus          students          like          Sal-         ly          Cox          were          offered          the         convenience          of          free          local          calling         from          telephones          in          the          lobby          of         the          SUB.          (Hayes)         .         [W)          betnes          calling          friends          or          }         relatives,          students          like          Re-          ¥         gina          Bailey          found          the          telephone          Pi          @          modern-day          appliance          difficult          sa)         to          live          without.          (Hayes)          f         RO          a          ee         Paul          Huber,          Mechanical          Engr.         Tacy          Hulse,          Accounting         Jeffrey          Hulskamp,          Finance         Laurie          Hustoft,          Accounting         Scott          Jackson,          Civil          Engr.         Kathleen          Jenny,          Music         Douglas          Johnson,          Education         Jana          Johnson,          Chemistry         Thelma          Johnson,          Business         Amy          Jones,          Finance         Connie          Kaschmitter,          Management         Gregory          Kawai,          Marketing         Heath Kawai          99         =€          x           —=         =         $11.2          million          science          addition          dedicated         rother,          can          you          spare         a          million?          Amid          ris-         ing          college          costs          and         decreasing          student          enroll-         ment,          administrators          decid-         ed          in          1983          that          students         couldn’t          spare          an          additional         dime          to          spruce          up          the         university’s          timeworn          Life         Science          Building.          So          they         turned          to          the          state          legislature         for          support,          where          they          won         an          $11.2          million          grant          to         remodel          and          expand          the          fa-         cility.         Constuction          began          in          the         summer          of          1984.          Two          years         later,          the          dumptrucks          and         bulldozers          drove          away          rev-         ealing          the          newly          remodeled         and          expanded          Life          Science         Building.         On          Oct.          3,          the          College          of         Letters          and          Science          formal-         ly          dedicated          the          addition         n          Saturday          Oct.          4,          the          Life         Science          addition          was          open         to          the          public.          Visitors          had          the          op-         portunity          to          view          the          new          facilities         and          equipment.          (Dahiquist)         100          Science          Addition         with          a          reception,          followed         by          guided          tours.         Ceremonies          began          at          1         p.m.          in          the          Administration         Building          auditorium          with          a         welcoming          address          by          Tho-         mas          Bell,          vice          president          for         academic          affairs          and         research.          Following          Bell’s         remarks          was          a          review          of          the         construction          by          Joanne         Reece,          director          of          facility         planning,          with          a          video          pro-         gram          explaining          accomplish-         ments          of          faculty          members.         “The          new          building          addi-         tion          has          helped          tremendous-         ly,’?          said          Matt          Berria,          a         graduate          student          and          zoolo-         gy          teaching          assistant.          “‘It          has         up-to-date          equipment          which         continues          our          research.         Without          that,          the          university         wouldn’t          have          a          quality          pro-         gram.          I          wouldn’t          be          here         [Pl          isarers          of          the          Life          Science         addition          preserved          the         historic          university          core          by          careful-         ly          blending          the          new          architectural         style          with          the          old.          (Dahiquist)         either.’’         Although          construction         started          in          June          1984,          plan-         ning          began          in          the          spring          of         1981          with          a          study          describing         the          need          to          modernize          and         add          to          the          existing          building.         By          the          time          construction         was          complete,          workers          had         added          56,000          square          feet          to         the          north          side          of          the          original         building.          Also,          25,000         square          feet          of          remodeled         office,          classroom          and          labor         space          allowed          faculty          mem-         bers          to          move          to          new          offices         and          laboratories          in          January         1985.          Classes          transferred          to         the          remodeled          area          at          the         same          time.         Teachers          have          undoubt-         edly          used          the          additional         space          to          make          their          research         classes          more          worthwhile,’’         Berria          said.         BE          A          ets:         eS         Jody          Kemp,          Computer          Science         Catherine          Kennedy,          Political          Science         Wendy          Kerr,          Accounting         Ahmad          Khalid,          Electrical          Engr.         Mark          Kingma,          Wildlife          Resource         Bridget          Kirkland,          Education         Randall          Knapp,          Physics         Lorena          Kreisher,          Economics         Ken          Laintz,          Chemistry         Bonnie          Lambers,          Wildlife          Resources         Cari          Lance,          Foreign          Language         Raymond          Lance,          Chemistry         Michael          Larson,          Education         Richard          Law,          Education         Richard          Lawless,          Electrical          Engr.         Lin          Lee,          Electrical          Engr.         Jeffrey          Lester,          Mechanical          Engr.         Domenica          Letizia,          Journalism         Lance          Levy,          Journalism         Matthew          Light,          Metallurgical          Engr.         Karyl          Lolley,          Agriculture         Brian          Long,          Journalism         Michael          Long,          Journalism         Scott          Loomis,          Electrical          Engr.         Nicolette          Luper,          Physical          Education         Randy          Lybyer,          Accounting         Leslie          MacDonald,          Civil          Engr.         Scott          MacKinnon,          Computer          Science         Henry          Madsen,          Political          Science         Edward          Mai,          Electrical          Engr.         Kemp           Mai          10]         Margaret          Maloy,          Child          Development         Nancy          Manderville,          Clothing          Textiles         Christopher          Manis,          History         Cordelia          Manis,          English         Joseph          Marek,          Civil          Engr.         Robert          Marr,          Forestry         Caroline          Masar,          Education         Joseph          Masters,          Zoology         Steve          Matthews,          Marketing         Malia          McBirney,          Advertising         Scott          McBride,          Electrical          Engr.         Kent          McCarthy,          Electrical          Engr.         Stephen          McCollum,          Forestry         Clifford          McConville,          Geography         Jay          McDougal,          Grad.,          Electrical         Engr.         Tracy          McDougal,          Marketing         Susan          McHargue,          Bacteriology         Shawn          McIntosh,          Bacteriology         Timothy          McKinley,          Chemistry         Mitchell          Mead,          Management         William          Meulink,          Mechanical          Engr.         Galen          Millard,          Political          Science         Paige          Miller,          Education         Patrick          Mills,          Management         Andrea          Misterek,          Computer          Science         Joseph          Mitchell,          Electrical          Engr.         Mark          Montiville,          Forest          Resources         Elaine          Moore,          Architecture         Rex          Moore,          Agribusiness         Zimri          Moore,          Civil          Engr.         I(2          Maloy Moore         Youngsters          introduced          to          the          martial          arts         o          ahead          and          choke         your          partners,’          the         man          in          the          dark         short          robe          told          14          tiny          faces         as          they          grabbed          and         squeezed          at          each          others’         throats.          ‘‘But          gently,”’          black         belt          Jeff          Soltez          quickly         added.         For          the          65          rambunctious         children          enrolled          in          univer-         sity          karate          classes,          Saturday         morning          lessons          meant          the         chance          to          learn          the          art          of         self-defense.          For          parents         waiting          for          weekly          lessons          to         end,          there          was          time          to          do         college          homework.         “ There’s          usually          a          lot          of         us          parents          here,’’          Ronald         Glaze          said.          ‘“‘Many          study         while          our          kids          are          working         out.’         A          special          education         major,          Soltez          said          karate         classes          gave          him          a          chance          to         practice          student-teaching.         Joined          by          instructor          Nancy         Hrusa          and          Robert          Pierce,          a         WSU          veterinarian          student,         he          taught          three          classes          for         pre-teenagers.         ‘‘We're          in          training,’’          he         said          to          his          pupils,          some          as         young          as          age          six.          ‘Remem-         ber          the          bigger          thcy          are,         the          harder          they          fall.’’         According          to          Soltez,          after         completing          a          few          semesters         of          lessons,          children          knew          the         basics          of          hitting,          kicking,         throwing          and          falling.         “ But          it          takes          a          lot          of          work         to          get          good          at          it,’          he          said.         A          lot          of          my          students          say         they          want          to          be          like          the         Karate          Kid.          But          they          know         it’s          just          a          movie,          like          God-         zilla          is          just          a          movie.”         Six-year-old          Ryan          Dudley         said          his          brothers          asked          to         take          karate          lessons          after          see-         ing          Bruce          Lee          and          ninja         troops          on          home          videotapes.         They          make          it          look          easy         and          like          it          doesn’t          hurt          in          the         movies,’           he          said.          “The          first         time          I          fell          down,          it          hurt. ’         Once          children          learn          to          fall         properly,          Soltez          said,          there          is         little          chance          of          injury.         “ They          know          how          to          han-         die          themselves          well,’’          he         said.          “‘The          big          reason          |         probably          lose          students          is          that         it          takes          sO          much          time          and         work.          But          who          knows?         Some          of          these          children          could         be          black          belts          someday.”’         Nine-year-old          Brandon         Dudley          may          have          been          head         Continued                   cS                   {         ‘Gin.         here          was          room          for          young-         sters,          parents          and          karate          in-         structors          on          the          floor          of          the         Memorial          Gym          Combat          Room.         While          Jeff          Soltez          taught          children         the          basics          of          karate,          parents          com-         pleted          college          homework          assign-         ments          on          the          side.          (O'Bryan)         ©         ?,         orm          became          an          important         aspect          of          karate          training          for         youngsters          enrolled          in          Saturday         morning          classes.          Washington         Sjate          University          student          Robert         Pierce          served          as          a          helpful          side-         kick          during          karate          practices.         (O'Bryan)         Karate          103         Brian          Moran,          Electrical          Engr.         Deann          Morgan,          English         Patty          Morgan,          Architecture         Stuart          Moser,          Physics         Tim          Mosier,          Computer          Science         Jacqueline          Mount,          Journalism         Farshid          Moussayi,          Electrical          Engr.         Kathleen          Murphy,          Zoology         Karolyn          Nearing,          English         Chris          Neary,          Chemical          Engr.         Shellie          Neeser,          Communications         Ann          Nelson,          Advertising         eated          during          the          closing          of         karate          practice,          children         paid          tribute          to          Jeff          Soltez          and         each          other.          The          ceremonial         ‘‘dauche’’          gave          youngsters          a         chance          to          meditate          before          head-         ing          home.          (O'Bryan)         104          Moran Ong         Kirk          Nelson,          History         Lori          Nelson,          Marketing         Kara          Newbill,          Landscape         Architecture         Donald          Newman,          Physical         Education         Karin          Newman,          Computer          Science         Larry          Newman,          Mechanical          Engr.         Marsha          Norgard,          Political          Science         Francis          Ntlale,          Range          Science         Barbara          Nutsch,          Cartography         Anthony          Oliver,          Computer          Science                   Continued         ed          in          that          direction          after         earning          his          yellow          belt          early         in          the          fall.         “It’s          really          exciting,’          said         Nancy          Dudley,          Brandon’s         mother.          “‘My          children          have         adapted          well          to          the          class.         said          Wilson,          ‘ He’s          even          got         his          little          sister          believing          she’s         going          to          get          hers.          She’s          only         four.”’         Other          parents          had          praise         for          the          program.         “The          instructor          really         stresses          to          the          kids          not          to          use         Henriette          Olsen,          Civil          Engr.         William          Ong,          Agriculture         Ecomonics         sons’          classes          so          well          that          she         continued          taking          night         karate          classes          with          other         adults.         ‘I’m          a          nurse          during          the         day,’’          she          said,          ‘‘and          I          have         to          be          nice          to          everyone          at         work.          But          at          karate          classes,         Jeff          stresses          that          karate          this          stuff          out          on          the          1          can          release          pressure.”’         should          be          used          only          asalast          playgrounds,’’          said          Ron          Children          also          released         resort,          which          makes          me          feel          Glaze.          ‘‘My          son          Jessie          pressure          through          karate,         a          lot          better.’’         Education          major          Leslie         Wilson          said          her          son          Adam         has          had          similar          success.         “ He          feels          so          good          about         it,          it          would          be          hard          not          to         like          it,’’          she          said.         He’s          convinced          he’s          go-         ing          to          get          his          black          belt,”’          ocked          in          holding          positions,         karate          kid          hopefuls          attempt         to          knock          each          other          down.          Young-         sters          learned          the          proper          way          to         fall          so          that          they          would          not          be          in-         jured          during          practice.          (O'Bryan)         knows          not          to          use          it          on          his         friends.’          According          to          parent          Carl         Anderson,          his          son          became         more          confident          after          taking         a          few          lessons.         I’m          sort          of          new          to          this         whole          thing,’’          Anderson         said.          ‘It          seems          to          be          a          com-         bination          of          physical          educa-         tion,          mental          discipline          and          a         little          philosophy,          as          opposed         to          blood          and          guts          and         Rambo,”’         Nancy          Dudley          liked          her         Soltez          said.          At          the          ceremoni-         al          ending          of          each          lesson,         children          sat          in          two          rows          fac-         ing          Soltez          for          the          ‘‘dauche.”’         ““Okake,’”          he          says          —          sit.         Rey.”’          The          children          bow         to          one          another.         “ Sensei          ni.’’          They          bow          to         their          instructor.         “ Mokuso.”’          A          time          of         meditation          is          at          hand.         The          lesson          finished,          the         karate          kids          had          to          keep          their         hands          to          themselves,          at          least         until          the          next          Saturday.         SET          siti          chAcys         =         —s         Edmund          Orcutt,          Forest          Resources         Neil          Overfelt,          Finance         Linda          Palmer,          Management         Gregory          Parker,          Electrical          Engr.         Keli          Patton,          Communications         Jan          Pence,           Range          Resources         Francesca          Perrell,          Geology         Gregory          Peters,          Electrical          Engr.         Scott          Peterson,          Recreation         Skip          Peterson,          Education         Lanh          Pham,          Electrical          Engr.         Tony          Pham,          Chemical          Engr.         Robyn          Phillips,          Mechanical          Engr.         Laurel          Phipps,          Chemistry         James          Pierce,          Finance         Ken          Pierce,          Accounting         Leslie          Plucker,          Computer          Science         Joseph          Plummer,          Electrical          Engr.         Donald          Polla,          Mechanical          Engr.         Nola          Pollock,          Psychology         Nongpange          Pookayaporn,         Architecture         Christine          Powers,          Public          Relations         Mark          Pratt,          Agricultural          Ed.         Shelley          Prouty,          Management         Wesley          Prosty,          Chemical          Engr.         Bradford          Rabe,          Communications         Carol          Rakozy,          Biology         Julie          Reagan,          Journalism         Vonda          Redden,          Computer          Science         Andrew          Rice,          Finance         106          Orcutt Rice         Hi         Hoffman          lectures          against          campus          apathy         mid          the          hot          lights         and          rapid-fire          ques-         tions          of          reporters,         Abbie          Hoffman          gave          the         media          and          other          students          in         the          bookstore          lobby          a         challenge.          He          would          relin-         quish          a          $100          bill          to          the          first         person          to          give          him          the          name         of          the          opposition          newspaper         in          Nicaragua.         Hoffman          was          able          to         pocket          the          C-note.         He          attributed          the          lack          of         takers          to          what          he          called          a         trend          among          college          students         who          ‘‘are          generally          apathet-         ic          to          the          political          events          go-         ing          on          around          them.”’         Students          in          the          sixties,         Hoffman          said,          broke          the         mold          and          were          the          main         source          of          social          protest          on         campuses.          Now,          he          main-         tains,          the          situation          is          much         different.         “American          Campuses          are         little          more          than          yuppie          train-         ing          grounds          now          where          peo-         ple          go          to          work          on          their         careers          or          get          married.          It          is         not          only          conservative          and         apathetic,          but          as          a          popula-         tion          as          a          whole,          college          stu-         dents          are          certainly         anti-worker.”’         After          more          than          two          de-         cades          of          political          activism,         Hoffman          is          once          again          in          the         public          eye.         Helping          various          environ-         mental          groups          and          protest-         ing          United          States          involyment         in          Central          America,          Hoff-         man          was          on          the          lecture          cir-         cuit          urging          students          to                   ah         t          an          afternoon          press          confer-         ence,          Hoffman          answered         questions          regarding          the          recent         Idaho          elections          and          ‘‘the          gener-         al          apathy          across          our          nation,          spe-         cifically          students.’           (Hayes)         oppose          what          he          called          ques-         tionable          government         policies.         Despite          the          general          situa-         tion          of          apathy,          Hoffman         said          he          was          optimistic          about         some          things          he          has          seen.         “I          have          seen          ripples          form-         ing          at          colleges          once          again          in         opposition          to          apartheid,         CIA          recruitment          and          other         issues.”         During          his          visit,          Hoffman         challenged          students          to          stand         up          for          their          rights          as          previ-         ous          generations          have.          And         regarding          his          challenge          to         the          press,          he          said          the          oppo-         sition          paper          in          Nicaragua         was          “‘La          Centra.’’          Accord-         ing          to          Hoffman,          the          editor         of          that          paper          had          his          hands         cut          off          by          soldiers.         ;          int         PAY          L          +          4s         ithout          resorting          to          the          an-         tics          that          earned          him          fame          in         the          “‘Chicago          Seven”          trial,          Abbie         Hoffman          ignited          the          audience         with          his          call          for          students          to          take         an          interest          in          politics.          (Sperry)         Abbie          Hoffman          07         108          GDI          Week         ake          seven          somewhat         unusual          but          competi-         tive          events,          add          to          it         24          eager          residence          halls,         throw          in          some          beer,          skits         and          songs,          and          what          do          you         get?          The          answer,          of          course,         was          the          third          annual          GDI         Week,          held          Sept.          15          -          20.         According          to          one          GDI         Week          coordinator,          Carla         Greenfield,          the          third          time         was          a          charm,          After          ex-         periencing          some          difficulties         during          last          year’s          events,          the         chief          goal          of          Greenfield          and         other          coordinators          was          to         have          a          smooth-running         celebration          of          dorm          pride.         “It          went          a          lot          smoother         than          last          vear          and          it          gets          bet-         ter          each          year,’’          Greenfield         said.         Another          committee          mem-         ber,          Jackie          Foggia,          said          that         additional          planning          and          an         earlier          start          by          the          commit-         tee          eliminated          some          of          the         olding          a          basketball          between         his          legs,          Whitman          Hall         member          Dan          Moore          races          towards         the          obstacle          course          finish          line         during          the          GDI          Games.          (Dahiquist)         riday          night          the          ‘SOs         returned          when          French          Hall         members          Cammy          Brown          and          Joan         Lohse          a          scene          from          the         Halls          unite          for          third          annual          GDI          Week         problems          experienced          last         year.         To          start          off          the          week,         five-person          teams          gathered         for          a          scavenger          hunt.          Forced         into          completing          pointless         tasks,          the          teams          quickly          tried         to          count          the          number          of          win-         dows          on          different          buildings,         obtain          autographs          from          par-         ticular          individuals          and          learn         the          names          of          designated         fraternity          and          sorority         officers.          Borah          and          Houston         Halls          managed          to          out-         scavenger          their          opponents         and          take          first          place          in          the         Monday          afternoon          event.         Later          that          evening,          resi-         dents          gathered          downtown          at         the          Capricorn          Bar.          While          the         audience          chanted          the          name         of          its          favorite          hall,          five-         member          teams          competed          in         the          beer          chugging          challenge.         In          the          men’s          division,         Borah          placed          first          with         Chrisman          Hall          finished          a         close          second.          Forney          Hall         took          the          beer          drinking          title         in          the          women’s          division,         while          Campbell          and          French         Hall          tied          for          second.         Surprisingly,          none          of          the         competitors          reported          sick.          In         addition,          Greenfield          said         there          was          not          much          of          a         mess.         ‘There          was          six          to          eight-         inches          of          beer          on          everything         last          year,’’          she          said.         With          the          beer          mugs          emp-         tied,          residents          returned         home          to          find          frisbees          in         preparation          for          Tuesday          af-         ternoon’s          frisbee          golf          tour-         nament.          The          next          day,         Graham          Hall          and          Houston-         A          flew          to          a          first          place          victo-         ry          after          tossing          ‘‘nine          holes’’         on          the          golf          course.          Mean-         while,          other          residents         designed          costumes          and          re-         hearsed          lines          for          Tuesday         night’s          skit          competition.         Continued         Nancy          Richard,          Education         Brent          Richardson,          Management         Larry          Richar dson,          Communications         Edward          Richman,          Computer          Science         Holly          Rickett,          English         Rebecca          Robideaux,          Communications         Keith          Robinson,          Political          Science         Scott          Ross,          Mechanical          Engr.         Richard          Rounds,          Architecture         Scot          Royal,          Chemistry         Lisa          Rugg,          Education         Maria          Santos,          Architecture         Kendra          Schamens,          Communications         Lola          Schiefelbein,          Geology         Art          Schultz,          Civil          Engr.         Karl          Schweier,          Chemcial          Engr.         Larry          Seid,          Management         Dawn          Shannon,          Home          Economics         Ted          Sharpe,          Civil          Engr.         Kenneth          Shavlik,          Computer          Science         Barbara          Sheffler,          Child          Development         Mansour          Sheibany,          Recreation         Kevin          Shoemaker,          Electrical          Engr.         Damayanthi          Silva,          Bacteriology         Dinendra          Silva,          Electrical          Engr.         Cheryl          Silver,          Education         Scott          Simcoe,          Computer          Science         David          Simon,          Agribusin ess         Matthew          Slaney,          Mechanical          Engr.         Barry          Smith,          General          Studies         Richard Smith          1(9         Serena          Smith,          Accounting         Kristina          Sorenson,          Journalism         Darin          Spalinger,          Education         Michelle          Spencer,          Finance         Steve          Start,          Electrical          Engr.         Richard          Steckler,          Public          Relations         Bekalyn          Steigers,          Plant          Protection         Lana          Stephenson,          Fashion         Scott          St.          Marie,          Computer          Science         Mary          Stork,          Anthropology         Molly          Stowers,          Education         Ray          Stowers,          Animal          Science         4          [T]          he          GDI          Games          concluded         a          with          the          tug-of-war          compe-          .|          _          tition.          In          the          men’s          division,          Borah         |          Hall          pulled          a          first          place          win,          with         ||          Whitman          Hall          taking          second          and         ||          Chrisman          Hall          placing          third.         ‘          (Dahlquist)         |          l0          Smith Thompson         Adrienne          Stromberg,          Psychology         Earl          Stroschein,          General          Studies         Keith          Stutler,          Mathematics         Kenneth          Swanson,          Wildland         Resources         Sara          Taft,          Communication         Katherine          Taylor,          Economics         Marcy          Taylor,          English         Patricia          Taylor,          Art         Brian          Thomas,          Chemical          Engr.         Debra          Thomas,          Home          Economics         Richard          Thomas,          Accounting         Kathryn          Thompson,          Wildlife         Resources         Held          in          the          SUB          Ball-         room,          Houston          members         treated          the          audience          to          a          skit         called,          ‘‘Mrs.          Roger’s         Neighborhood          in          the          Vandal         Zone.’’          Steel          House          con-         ducted          its          own          College          Week         version          of          ‘Wheel          of          For-         tune’’          with          contestants         Muffi,          Deborah          and          Kim         competing          for          prizes          and         money.         The          Borah-A          skit          featured         the          Happy          Chef          and          his         ‘Happy          Kitchen          Show.”’         The          Happy          Chef          introduced         the          new          Vandalmatic          appli-         ance,          which          was          guaranteed         to          crack,          smash          and          beat          op-         Homecoming          bonfire.          Carey         Christoper          played          hostess          Vanna         White          and          helped          the          audience         and          contestants          spell          out          the          win-         ning          phrase—‘‘Homecoming          GDI         Style.  ’          (Hayes)         posing          football          teams.         Borah-A          and          Houston          gar-         nered          first          place          honors          for         their          performances.         On          Wednesday,          residents         gathered          in          the          Kibbie          Dome         for          the          third-annual          GDI         Games.          Each          hall’s          team          at-         tempted          to          out-build,          out-         throw,          outru n          and          outpull         its          opponent          in          four          events         —          a          pryamid          contest,          keg         toss,          obstacle          course          and         tug-of-war.         “I          was          shaking          before          I         got          up          there,”’          said          Derk         Chiong,          who’s          climb          to          the         top          of          Graham          Hall’s         pyramid          earned          it          a          second         place          finish.          Top          placers         during          the          evening’s          event         included          Hayes          Hall          in          the         keg          toss,          Targhee          Hall          in          the         obstacle          course          and          French         in          the          tug-of-war.         On          Friday          night,          it          was         standing          room          only          as          near-         ly          600          residents          watched          the         second          annual          Air          Band         contest.          Targhee          captured         first          place          with          its          rendition          ||,         of          the          Honeydrippers’         ‘ Rockin’          at          Midnight.’’         And          a          dance          number          from         the          movie          “‘Grease”’          brought         the          first          place          award          to          the         women          of          French.         After          a          Saturday          morning         Fun          Run,          the          week’s          final         tallies          were          announced.         Borah          captured          the          men’s         division          with          833          points,          and         French          took          first          for          the         women          with          785          points.          As         a          reward,          the          winners         received          an          all-expense          paid         cruise          on          Lake          Coeur         d’          Alene.         With          increased          participa-         tion          by          all          halls,          coordina-         tors          proclaimed          the          week          an         outstanding          success.          And          as         Donnett          Noonan          of          Neely         Hall          said,          ‘‘It’s          so          exciting,         and          it’s          a          new          experience          for         me.          I          love          it.”’         GDI          Week          lll         ;          andering          by          Cava-         .          naugh’s          Motor         A          Inn          is          seldom          a         traumatic          experience,          But          on         the          weekend          of          Sept.          19-22,         the          motel          became          home          for         4}          all          sorts          of          creatures          —          from         }|          aliens          to          artists          and          huck-         sters          to          hippogriffs.         It          was          not          the          latest          dream         ||          experiment          by          the          psycholo-         ||          gy          department.          Instead,          it         was          Moscon,          the          area’s          only         science          fiction          and          fantasy         +}          convention.         Entering          Moscon,          how-                    |          ever,          made          some          visitors         ||          clammer          for          ray-bans          and         phasers          to          protect          them-         }|          selves.          Dressed          as          zany          space         creatures          and          storybook         characters,          participants         milled          about          the          lobby          of          the         motel          on          their          way          to          discus-         |          sion          groups.          Others          hurried         ||          from          room          to          room          to          ex-         1}          perience          the          myriad          of         |          I          Moscon         _          ——         Sci-fi,          fantasy          fans          trek          to          Moscon          VIII         events          packed          into          the         48-hour          conference.         According          to          John         Gustafson,          coordinator          of         the          eighth          annual          Moscon,         Moscow          resident          Steve          Fah-         nestalk          originated          the          con-         ference.         “Steve          just          pounded          the         idea          in          to          us          until          we          all         agreed          to          do          it,’’          he          said.         ‘Then          we          just          went          from         there,          trying           to          get          through         the          logistics          of          getting          one          of         these          things          off          the         ground.”’         In          it’s          eighth          year,         Moscon          had          become          a          center         for          science          fiction          and          fan-         tasy          art          in          the          Northwest,         and,          according          to          Gustaf-         son,          the          world          of          science          fic-         tion          in          general.         Moscon          is          one          of          the          few         art-oriented          conventions          in         the          country.          You          can          pick         up          some          real          bargains          at          the         a3          3          ee          Sea          i          Pee          ae         S28.          Soh          ss          See          2          Se         ae                    =         auctions,          where          prices          can         range          from          $20          to          $2000,”’         he          said.         For          Moscon          VIII,          guests         of          honor          from          the          science         fiction          world          included          artist         Michael          Goodwin,          as-         tronomer          Rob          Quigleyide,         author          Dean          Ing          and          speak-         er          Bryce          Walden.         While          Gustafson          stressed         the          importance          of          the          ses-         sions          and          art          exhibits          to         Moscon,          he          said          the          confer-         ence          also          had          a          social          at-         mosphere.          This          included          a         Friday          night          ‘‘white          tie          and         towel’’          jacuzzi          party          and          a         Saturday          evening          masquer-         ade          ball.         “Tt          has          a          lot          going          for          it,”’         Walden          said          of          the          confer-         ence,          “‘the          art,          the          guests,         and          especially          the          feeling          of         friendship          that          everyone          has         here,          I’ll          be          back.”’         he          mainstay          of          Moscon,          ac-         cording          to          organizers,          has         always          been          its          art.          Lynn          Pollot         was          one          of          numerous          dealers          and         exhibitors          at         (O'Bryan)         Moscon          Viil.         1;          1         I         apes          ight          Cry         cea          |          bee          S;          al          SS          oe          —         Kelly          Tiegs,          General          Studies         Betsy          Tomjack,          Accounting         Darel          Tracy,          Civil          Ener.         Peou          Tun,          Computer          Science         Carl          Tyrrell,          Computer          Science         Steve          Ugaki,          Chemical          Engr.         John          Venable,          Civil          Engr.         Terry          Waldron,          Management         Greg          Walker,          Mechanical          Engr.         Carla          Walton,          Physical          Education         Lisa          Ward,          Political          Science         Scott          Warnke,          Plant          Science         Tom          Watson,          Theater          Arts         Paul          Way,          Electrical          Engr.         Barbara          Weber,          Advertising         Mary          Westerwelle,          Public          Relations         Gino          White,          Political          Science         Jeff          Whiteley,          Civil          Engr.         Richard          Wight,          Bacteriology         Holly          Williams,          Office         Administration         John          Williams,          Computer          Science         Lisa          Willson,          Music         Linda          Winheim,          Education         Darren          Woods,          Psychology         Eddie          Worrell,          Architecture         Trisha          Wright,          Management         Christian          Yardley,          Computer          Science         Drew          Yoder,          Public          Relations         Lisa          Young,          Recreation         r          Matthew          Zekes,          Metallurgical          Engr.         Tiegs Zekes          |          3         President          Gibb          cruises          toward          his          final          flight         cing          the          father          for         8,000          college          students         can          be          thrilling          —          es-         pecially          if          you’re          President         Richard          Gibb.          To          him,          peo-         ple          are          what          the          university          is         all          about.          And          he          affection-         ately          refers          to          himself          and         his          wife,          Betty,          as          ‘‘Mom         and          Dad          Gibb.”’         At          parent’s          orientation,         Gibb          announced          that          he          and         his          wife          no          longer          have          one         son          and          one          daughter;          in-         stead          they          have          8,000.         “It’s          corny,          I          know,’’          he         said.          ‘‘But          I          just          don’t          even         want          to          get          too          busy          that         students          feel          that          they          are         {part          of          a]          computer          prin-         tout.          We          want          every          student         to          know          that          there’s          some-         one          here          to          help,’’         [A]:          the          Alpha          Chi          Omega         sorority          performed          ‘‘The         Homecoming          Queen          Has          a          Gun,”’         President          Richard          Gibb          cracks          a         smile.          After          bonfire          skits          subsid-         ed,          he          crowned          Terry!          Sharples         the          university's          Homecoming         Queen.          (Hayes)         [14          President          Gibb         As          president          for          10          years,         Gibb          has          promoted          his          one         objective:          to          provide          the          best         education          possible.         President          Gibb          keeps          in         touch          with          recent          graduates.         While          in          various          parts          of         Idaho,          he          contacts          graduates         just          to          see          how          they          are.          In         fact,          during          a          visit          to          New         Orleans          three          years          ago,         three          students          spotted          Gibb.         Being          a          self-proclaimed         neople          person,’’          Gibb          in-         vited          the          students          to          dinner.         “It          was          wonderful          seeing         the          students.          That’s          the          best         part          of          my          job,’’          Gibb          said.         Surprises          are          also          part          of         Gibb’s          enthusiasm.          Often          he         shows          up          unannounced          to         have          lunch          with          living         groups.          And          he          dares          to          turn         off          much-watched          soap         operas          playing          loudly          in          the         TV          rooms.         Students          also          have          ways          to         surprise          the          president          with         special          invitations          to          lunch         or          dinner          of          just          by          stopping         by          to          say          hello.          A          special         event          occured          during          an         Army          ROTC          banquet          held         last          winter          when          the          unit         made          Gibb          an          honorary         colonel.         ‘ Towards          the          end          of          the         evening          they          suddenly          called         me          up          to          the          front.          I          was         very          surprised          and          moved,”’         Gibb          said.          ‘‘There          aren’t          any         other          honorary          colonels          ap-         pointed          by          the          ROTC          at          the         UI.          It          really          is          a          symbolic         honor          for          me.”’         Aside          from          winning          high         honors,          Gibb          spends          some         of          his          spare          time          as          a          high-         flying          airplane          pilot.          This         hobby          has          also          deepened          his         appreciation          for          Idaho,          he         said.          And,          he          added,          it          gives         him          a          better          perspective          of         what          Idaho          means          to          him.         “Idaho          really          is          a          gor-         geous          place.          My          wife          really         couldn’t          see          ourselves          retire         in          any          other          state,’’          he          said.         Following          his          long-         awaited          obligations          for          the         Centennial          Celebration,         Gibb          plans          to          step          down         from          his          office.          However,          he         said          his          loyalty          will          always         be          with          Idaho.         T          couldn’t          be          as          enthused         about          being          a          president          at         another          school.          The          UI          is          a         truly          special          place.’’         Richard          D.          Gibb         President         Thomas          Bell         Vice          President,          Academics         David          McKinney         Vice          President,          Finance         Terry          Armstrong         Executive          Assistant         Paul          Blanton,          Dean         Art          and          Architecture         Larry          Branen,          Dean         Agriculture         Don          Coombs,          Director         School          of          Communication         Raymond          Dacey,          Dean         Business          and          Economics         Dale          Gentry,          Dean         Education         Arthur          Gittins,          Dean         Graduate          School         John          Hendee,          Dean         Forestry          and          Wildlife         Donald          Kees,          Director         Student          Counseling         Maynard          Miller,          Dean         Mines         Robert          Miller,          Director         School          of          Music         Bruce          Pitman,          Dean         Student          Services         Galen          Rowe,          Dean         Letters          and          Science         William          Saul,          Dean         Engineering         Matt          Telin,          Director         Admissions          and          Registrar         Dean          Vettrus,          Manager         Student          Union          Bldg.         Sheldon          Vincenti,          Dean         Law         Administration          |          15         like         Steve          Adolph          were          joined          by         their          Carter          H         ill          at         the          annual          Borah          Hall          bar-         8         member         Hall         FEAST          FOR          50         Coals          fired          a          sizzling          r         becue.         ij         Md          (                   ANY         )         HH         all          little          sisters         MT         {                           .           (Dahlquist)         for          the          ‘‘pig-out         (         |         W          @          Oc                   be          a         ataas         Peegs         Ep          =         Blas          =         Olassaqe         ae                   lg          mons         lol§aA°Ssa         Als          ,en3,         Bist          buBs         BOER          SS         MiRAgs          see         PIE          ROSA         miSO.8u          3         oles          sss.         4so0c         mid          EamMad         |         A         HH          HHA                            yn)         aa         if                  ))))         IH         i         MTT         ))))         }         HHT         Little          Sister          Rush          parties         brought          off-campus,          residence                  NN         Wy)          HHH         i         WHT)         hall          and          sorority          women          to         fraternities          for          dancing         in         drinks          and          ‘small          talk          late          March.          (Hayes)         }         a         MM         )))         HUH         (         A         )))         Hi         Y         Wh}         HH         NN         NN         Hh}         i}         HE         {tt         Y         M))         i)}}|         MY         (         116          Groups         ANI          MN          AI          N          COE          EEE          ERE:         })          |         HH          A         HAT          Hf          HHT          HTT          HH          WH          Hy)          H)          WH)         il          (((          |          ((          i          HH          cq          (          Hl         representatives         Greek          Row          houses,         Later         more          than          800          hall          mem-         negotiated          cheaper          housing          costs,          and         s          refused          to          sign          new,          year-long          hous-         anyone?          Or          is          a          bed          race         ing          contracts.         FOR          EVERYONE         st         ————         G-R-O-U-P-S         S=——         cue         200          for          a          local          charity,          everyone          had         oO         c         o         £         ©         ®         2         =         oO         rm)         a.         7         re)         oO         e)                  —         oO         c         o         128]         fe)         £         chen         S)         i         w         =         ®         Pe         =         In          Augu         ber         Barbe         more          your          speed?          From          Wallace          Complex         residence          halls          to         ,         convinced          officials          to          turn          up          the          heat         in          their          home          rooms.          Across           campus,         campus          groups          were          reserved          for          mem-         SOMETHING          TO          WRITE          HOME          ABOUT.         percussion          units’          halftime          performances          in          the          Kib-         bers          only.         bie          Dome          offered         $3         ———                   A         —-_—_—_—                   AY          tt          UIIKtt          A         ———         mf         —         ——          Se         ———oaS——         —          ————         —$=         ——         a7         ——          —         SS         SSS         ——         ———         SSS         Sz         7         |         Groups          |         HENEVER          nation-         al          political          parties         get          together          to          host         post-election          functions,          tension         runs          high          as          election          returns          roll         in.          Similarly,          even          at          the          univer-         sity          level,          candidates          say          elec-         tion          night          waiting          is          both         gut-wrenching          and          nerve-         wracking.         On          Nov.          19,          nearly          1,900          stu-         dents          voted          to          elect          a          new          stu-         dent          body          president,          vice         president          and          six          senators.          Two         hours          after          polls          closed          at          6:30         p.m.,          the          first          returns          were          in.         “ This          is          so          exciting,’’          said          ex-         iting          Sen.          Reagan          Davis.          “‘l         mean,          in          a          while          people          will          be         crying.          This          is          a          big          deal,          a          real-         ly          big          deal.’          Over          the          course          of          four-and-         one-half          hours,          the          leadership         of          the          ASUI          was          determined         for          the          following          year.          And         while          election          returns          were          be-         ing          counted          in          the          SUB’s          EE-         DA-HO          room,          ASUI          dignitar-         ies,          past          and          present,          gathered         to          wait          out          returns          at          election         ROADCAST          live          on          KUOI,          the          Po-         litical          Concerns          Board          sponsored         separate          forums          for          senatorial,         presidential          and          vice-presidential         candidates.          During          a          Tuesday          night         session,          candidate          Brian          Allen          spoke         in          favor          of          increasing          financial          sup-         port          for          student          tutoring          services.         (O'Bryan)         118          ASUI          Senate         central          —          the          SUB’s          Vandal         Lounge.         ¢          8:30          p.m.          —          three          precincts         reporting.         “These          three          precincts         [Forestry,          Law          School          and         Education]          are          so          small,          they         don’t          even          count,’’          presidential         candidate          Brian          Long          said.         Long,          who          led          the          presiden-         tial          race          with          63          votes          after          the         first          returns,          added          ‘‘I          think          it’s         just          too          early          to          get          too          op-         timistic.””         “It’s          awfully          early,’’         presidential          candidate          Norm         Semanko          said.          ‘‘It’s          still          early         too          early          to          tell,          but          it’s          going         to          be          close.”’         “What          will          be,          will          be,’’         presidential          hopeful          John          Van-         derpool          said.          ‘“‘l          can’t          worry         about          it          too          much          and          I          can’t         change          it.         “But          I          don’t          expect          to          be         here          all          night.          I’ve          got          to          get         some          studying          done,          if          you          can         believe          that,’’          he          said.         The          problem          with          our          elec-         tion          system          is          that          somebody         has          to          lose,           said          David          Dose,         vice          presidential          candidate.         4         CANDIDATES          AWAIT          FINAL          VOTE          TALLIES         ¢          9:40          p.m.          —          six          precincts         reporting.         “I’m          not          dead,          but...”         Semanko          said          after          the          Agricul-         tural          Science,          Theophilus          Tow-         er          and          Jansen          Engineering         Building          precincts          were          added         to          the          total.          Semanko          trailed         leader          Long          38          to          175          votes.         “You're          dying,          you’re          dying,         you're          dead,’”’          former          Sen.         John          Rauch          said          to          Semanko.         ‘It’s          still          too          early,’          Long         said.          ‘ But          I’m          feeling          a          lot          bet-         ter          than          I          did          at          dinner.”’         The          SUB’s          got          John          Van-         derpool          written          all          over          it,”         Dose          said          of          his          running          mate’s         chances.          With          six          precincts         counted,          Vanderpool          trailed         Long          105          to          175.                   10:45          p.m.          —          presidential         candidate          Scott          Speelman         arrived,         “Tt          ain’t          over          ‘til          it's          over,”         the          former          senator          said.         “ Hey          Norm,          where          did          you         vote          at?           Speelman          asked         Semanko.         “ Here          at          the          SUB,”’         You've          got          a          friend          at          Fore-         stry.          I’ve          got          three,           Speelman         said.         ©          12:20          am.          —          eight          precincts         reporting.         Yay,          I          could          lose          this          one         by          another          50          to          60          votes          like         I          did          last          year,’           Dose          said          af-         ter          the          SUB          and          Renfrew          Hall         precincts          reported.          In          1985,         Dose          failed          in          a          bid          for          the          vice         presidency.         “But          you          never          know,          there         is          still          another          700          votes          out,’’         he          said.         “I’ve          been          whooped,’’         Semanko          said.          With          only          three         precincts          remaining,          Semanko         trailed          Long,          168          to          359.         °          lam.         reporting.         “I          feel          really          good          about          the         number          of          votes          |          received          as         well          as          the          overall          voter          tur-         nout,’’          President-elect          Long         said.          ‘ I’m          speechless.’’         “ I’m          glad          you’re          in,          bud,”’          a         defeated          Vanderpool          said          to         Vice          President-elect          Dose.         “I          wish          we          were          both          in,”’         Dose          said.         —          all          precincts         «Election          Results+         PRESIDENT:         Brian          Long         VICE          PRESIDENT:         David          Dose          398         SENATORS:         Mike          Gotch         Chery!          King         Wende          Welsh         Scott          Carter         Brian          Allen         Geianne          Blick         Molly          Weyen         Jennifer          Smith         645         988         907         794         732         701         678         677         672         Gio          in          front          of          an          election         tally          blackboard,          political          candi-         dates          and          observers          watched          tick         marks          and          precinct          totals.          Kathy          Trail         gives          a          thumbs-up          as          Robert          Watson,         Andy          Hazzard,          John          Landreth,          Eric         DeBord,          John          Rauch,          Matt          Bertagnol-         li,          Cheryl          King,          Scott          Carter          and          Mol-         ly          Weyen          await          further          results.         (O'Bryan)         AU          Kappa          Epsilon          fraternity         brothers          joined          the          election         bandwagon          in          support          for          Teke         senatorial          candidate          Mike          Gotch.         Hans          Weger          and          Seton          Foster          unrav-         el          silver          duct          tape          to          secure          their          can-         didate’s          sign          on          the          west          wail          of          the         UCC.          (O'Bryan)         ASUI          SENATE          -          Fall.          Front          Row:          Kim          Ackerman,          Jim          Pierce,          CherriSabas          ASUI          SENATE          -          Spring.          Front          Row:          Jennifer          Smith.          Gigi          Blix         la.          Second          Row:          Grian          Long,          Paul          Allee,          Brad          Montgomery,          Eric          DeBord.          Back          Carter,          Kim          Ackerman,          Cherri          Sabala.          Second          Row.          Mike          Gotc         Row:          Norm          Semanko,          Gino          White,          Richard          Burke,          Jeff          Friel,          Dave          Dose          Wende          Weish,          Eric          DeBord.          Back          Row:          Norman          Semanko         Weyen,          Brian          Allen         ASUI          Senate          119         KUOI          deejay          flung         open          the          door          leading         to          the          student          publica-         tions          offices          and          announced,         ““we've          got          a          bomb          threat.”’         “He          left          this          name          and         everything          and          says          its          going          to         go          off          at          9:05          p.m.,”           the          radio         show          host          declared.          ‘I          think          its         a          joke.”         An          editor          looked          up          from          his         computer          and          briefly          over          to         the          clock          hanging          on          the          wall.         Under          deadline          pressure,          the         editor          glanced          at          a          nearby         reporter          and          said,           ‘‘we've          got         six          hours          before          it          blows.          Keep         typing.””         The          bomb          didn’t          go          off,          but         other          explosive          issues          rocked         the          student          run          departments          of         the          ‘ ‘Argonaut’’          newspaper,         ASUI          Advertising          and         KUOI-FM.         Just          two          weeks          into          the          fall         semester,          ‘“‘Argonaut’’          Editor         Shawn          MelIntosh,          ASUI          Adver-         tising          Director          Jennifer          Mahler         and          the          ASUI          Senate          were          sur-         prised          to          find          the          ‘‘Agronaut’’         NTERING          corrections          for          the         March          9          issue,          ‘‘Argonaut’’          Edi-         tor          Roger          Gaboury          uses          an          IBM          com-         puter          linked          via          a          network          system          to         a          Compugraphic          typsetter.          Staff         members          consulted          dictionaries          and         the          Associated          Press          Stylebook          in          an         attempt          to          make          the          paper          error-free.         (Hayes)         120          ASUI          Communications         previous          year.         According          to          John          Pool,         operations          manager,          the          deficit         was          the          result          of          overspending         in          captial          outlay,          payroll,          and         operating          expenses.          In          addi-         tion,          income          projections          wer-         en’t          realized.         Close          inspection          of          ‘“‘Ar-         gonaut’’          financial          reports         showed          the          paper          made          only          87         cents          on          every          dollar          of          adver-         tising          sales.          Pool          said          the          13         cents          per          dollar          loss          covered         general          business          expenses          such         as          bad          ads,          credits          to          adver-         tisers,          commissions          to          national         advertisers,          and          upaid          debts          to         the          paper.         By          the          end          of          September,          the         ASUI          Senate          passed          a          bill         covering          the          deficit,          but          the         number          crunching          had          only         begun.         With          reduced          revenues          in         mind,          the          senate          determined         that          the          ‘‘Argonaut’’          and          ad-         vertising          departments          were         overbudgeted          by          nearly          $41,000         for          fiscal          year          1987.          In          order          to         prevent          future          problems,          they         with          a          $27,000          deficit          from          the         voted          to          trim          $24,500          from          the         ““Argonaut’’          and          $16,500          from         advertising          budgets.         Cuts          were          made          in          payroll,         operating          expenses          and          travel         by          McIntosh          and          Mahler,          but         they          said          they          were          unable          to         cut          the          entire          $41,000.          The         governing          body          of          student          pub-         lications,          ASUI          Communica-         tions          Board,          agreed          that          the         entire          $41,000          couldn’t          be          cut         without          drastically          changing          the         papers          operations          and          recom-         mended          an          increased          subsidy         for          the          departments.          The          senate         agreed          with          the          recommenda-         tion          and          declared          that          the          budg-         et          crisis          was          over.         During          spring          semester,          the         ““Argonaut’’          and          advertising         departments          teetered          on          the         Borderline.’’         A          cooperative          publication         between          the          Washington          State         University’s          ‘‘Evergreen’’          and         the          ‘‘Argonaut,”’          ‘“‘Border-         line,’’          appeared          cach          Friday          in         both          school’s          papers.          With          a         magazine          format,          the          insert          co-         vered          entertainment          happenings         Continued                     WENTY          KUO!          disc          jockeys         dressed-up          as          shopping          cart         ladies          provided          an          alternative          entry         in          the          Moscow          Mardi          Gras          parade.         Bernadette          Winig          took          time          off          from         announcing          her          album-oriented          rock         radio          show          to          participate          in          the          Feb.         28          event.          (Hayes)         ARGONAUT          STAFF          -          Fall.          Front          Row:          Cinay          Snurtitt,          Snawn          Mointosn         Lindy          Garland.          Chuck          Winegar.          Anissa          Faddis.          Back          Row:          Matt          Heimick,          Michon         Harb.          Larry          Richardson.          Angie          Curtis.          Greg          Hilker.          Geianne          Blick.          Brian          Letfier         ARGONAUT          STAFF          -          SPRING.          Front          Row:          Roger          Gaboury.          Second         Row:          Alan          Solan,          Beth          Howard,          Jody          Mandrell,          Erik          Simpson          ,Kirk          Laughlin.          Back         Row:          Larry          Luther,          Lindy          Garland,          Matt          Heimick         ADVERTISING          STAFF.          Front          Row:          Kari          Narder,          Sue          Perry,          Jennifer          Man          ler,          Julie          Lees,          Paul          Pecukonis,          Back          Row:          Brad          Teed,          Rick          Ricks,          Tod          Burr,          Scott         Reese,          Li          Tadeo         ASUI          Communications          12]         AJOR          campus          and          community         events          had          to          be          photographed         for          both          the          yearbook          and          the         newspaper.          During          the          Moscow          Mardi         Gras          parade,          photographer          Tim          Dahi-         quist          concentrated          on          shooting          both         spectators          and          parade          entries.         (Hayes)         UO!          disc          jockey          B.J.          Hargrove         checks          the          length          of          a          song          dur-         ing          her          weekly          Tuesday          radio          show.         Student          announcers          were          required          to         file          for          a          Federal          Communications         Commission          license.          (Sperry)         OOKSTORE          Manager          Martin          Gil-         man          heard          weekly          sales          pitches         from          Jennifer          Mahler,          director          of          ASU!         Advertising.          Mahler          racked          up          more         than          haif          of          all          ‘‘Argonaut’’          sales          dur-         ing          her          year          long          term.          (Hayes)         12?          ASUI          Communications                   Continued         in          both          Moscow          and          Pullman.         “Our          primary          concern          in         producing          ‘Borderline’          was          to         provide          our          readers          with          infor-         mation          they          can’t          get          anywhere         else,’’          said          Matt          Helmick,         managing          editor.         However,          problems          with          the         experimental          publication          soon         surfaced.         “ At          first          it          was          really          good,         but          soon          we          found          advertisers         were          pulling          out          of          the          ‘Ar-         gonaut’          and          only          running          in          the         ‘Borderline,’’’          Jennifer          Mahler,         advertising          director,          said.          ‘ We         did          get          a          few          new          advertisers,         but          it          hurt          us          overall.          It          hasn’t         failed,          but          it          hasn’t          worked         out.”         By          mid-semester,          Communi-         cations          Board          decided          that          the         Argonaut”’          would          pull          out          of         the          project          at          the          end          of          the         year.         Things          were          not          quite          as          ex-         plosive          down          the          hall          at         KUOI-FM.         Following          the          resignation          of         controversial          KUOI          Station         Manager          Rosellen          Villarreal-         Price          during          the          summer,          Leigh         Robartes          stepped          in          to          assume         the          position.          However,          unlike         his          predecessor,          Robartes          said         he          had          no          intentions          of          telling         the          volunteer          radio          show          an-         nouncers          what          type          of          music         could          be          played.         You          have          to          encourage          a          lot         of          little          innovations          to          keep          the         excitment          building          at          the          sta-         tion,’’          Robartes          said.          ‘‘You         have          encourage          the          staff          to          be         creative          or          they          won’t          partici-         pate          in          the          program.”’         Robartes          said          KUOI          and          al-         ternative          radio          ‘‘keeps          people         sane.”’         “ It          allows          them          to          hear          mus-         ic          that          would          be          totally          ignored         by          the          medium,”’          he          said.          ‘ We         play          about          a          dozen          types          of         music          that          you          can          rarely          or         never          find          anywhere          else          in          the         radio          market.’         In          addition          to          various          musi-         cal          formats,          the          station          con-         tinued          providing          new         programs.          While          still          presenting         the          Lady          Vandals          basketball         games          on          the          airwaves,          the.sta-         tion          also          broadcast          the          Borah         Symposium,          the          Hanford          Sym-         posium          and          Mardi          Gras         parade.         Through          lawsuits,          rebudget-         ing          and          bomb          threats,          ASUI         communication          departments         continued          to          inform          and          enter-         tain          the          university          community.         DITORIAL          staff          members          like          Edi-         tor          Roger          Gaboury          and          Managing         Editor          Matt          Helmick          spent          Monday         and          Thursday          nights          laying-out          and         pasting-up          ‘‘Argonaut”’          pages.          After         completing          paste-up,          negatives          were         shot          by          camera          technicans          and          sent         to          the          ‘‘Idahonian  ’          presses          for          print-         ing.          (Moore)         COMMUNICATIONS          BOARD.          Front          Row:          Carolyn          Beasley,          Robert         Gleiser,          Jennifer          M ahier,          Jon          Erickson.          Back          Row:          Tom          LeClaire,          Erin          Fanning         John          Pool,          Russell          Strawn,          Leigh          Robartes         KUOI          STAFF.          Front          Row:          Cass          Davis,          Bryan          Clark,          Scott          Rash.          Back          Row:         Dave          Knauts,          Leigh          Robartes,          Julie          Lees,          Tim          Waterman,          Bernadette          Winig,          Keith         Selin         ASUI          Communications          123         ATE          nights          and          entire          weekends         were          spent          working          on          the          year-         book.          Paul          AlLee,          Jon          Erickson          and         Bryan          Clark          discuss          a          student          life         spread          at          3          a.m.          Saturday,          March          21.         (Hayes)         IFFUSED          lighting          in          the          Kibbie         Dome          caused          problems          for          pho-         tographers          shooting          Vandal          athletic         events.          This          was          just          one          technical         difficulty          Randy          Hayes,          ‘‘Gem’’          pho-         tography          director,          had          to          teach          his         eight-member          staff          to          overcome.         (O'Bryan)         GEM          STAFF.          Front          Row:          Bryan          Clark,          Frank          Hill.          Back          Row:          Lindsey          Miller         jon          Erickson,          Paul          AlLee,          Stacey          Pack         GEM ARGONAUT          PHOTO          STAFF.          Front          Row:          Tim          Dahlquist,          Ran-         dy          Hayes.          Patty          Morgan,          Mark          Jones.          Back          Row:          John          O'Bryan,          Henry          Moore,          John         Fritz         f          ¥          .                   124          “Gem          of          the          Mountains         T          was          the          same          old          story.         Madonna          posters          still         tacked          to          the          wall          of          the         Gem’’          office          while          a          getto-         blaster          blarred          hits          from          her         “True          Bluc’’          album.          Mean-         while          the          five          editorial          members         of          the          ‘‘Gem”’          staff          filled          out         photo          orders,          entered          stories          on         IBM          computer          terminals,          laid         down          border          tape,          and          scoured         magazines          for          creative          headline         ideas.         And          just          like          the          year          before,         the          staff          started          discussing         theme          slogans          and          story          ideas         weeks          before          school          began,          and         didn’t          finish          until          the          final         touches          were          applied          to          the          last         yearbook          page          in          June.         But          according          to          third-time         Editor          Jon          Erickson,          produc-         tion          of          the          85th          consecutive         Gem’           was          more          than          just          the         same          old          story.         ‘ This          was          the          first          time          in         four          years          that          ‘Gem’          opera-         tions          ran          smoothly,’’          Erickson         said.          “‘l          mean,          we          didn’t          have         major          problems          with          photogra-         phy,          staff          retention          or          missed         deadlines.”’         However,          he          said          there          was         one          major          difficulty          -          finishing         the          1986          volume.          Erickson          and         his          staff          worked          through          Sep-         tember          completing          the          1986         book.         When          the          cartons          of          year-         books          finally          arrived          in          Novem-         ber,          Erickson          and          his          staff          were         able          to          turn          their          full          attention         to          the          1987          volume.         “We          wanted          a          completely         different          look          for          this          book,’’         said          Paul          AlLee,          managing          edi-         tor.          ‘‘We          realized          that          for          far         too          long          college          yearbooks,          in-         cluding          the          ‘Gem,’          have          been         too          conservative.          We          want          to         put          ‘fun’          into          the          book,          but         without          sacrificing          the          jour-         nalistic          quality.’’         A          separate          photo          staff         marked          another          change          for          the         “Gem”          staff.          Up          until          the          1987         volume,          photo          services          had         been          provided          by          the          ASUI         Photo          Bureau.          Mismanage-         ment          of          the          department          during         the          previous          year,          however,         resulted          in          the          breakup          of          the         bureau.          The          split          left          both          the         “Gem”?          and          the          ‘‘Idaho          Ar-         gonaut,’’          with          their          own          photo         staffs.         ‘The          new          system          really         works          better          by          eliminating         tons          of          paperwork          and          red         tape.          Also,          now          an          editor          has         total          control          over          the          publica-         tion,’’          Erickson          said.         In          February,          Erickson         learned          the          1986          ‘Gem’’          would         receive          a          Gold          Crown          Award         from          the          Columbia          Scholastic         Press          Association.         “It          is          the          top          award          given          to         journalistic          publications,”’         Erickson          said.          ‘Only          two          col-         lege          yearbooks          in          the          nation,         the          Ball          State          Univeristy         ‘Orient’          and          the          ‘Gem,’          won         the          distinction.’’         During          Spring          Break          in         March,          Erickson,          AlLee,          Bryan         Clark          and          former          ‘‘Gem’’          Edi-         tor          Gary          Lundgren          traveled          to         New          York          to          pick          up          the          Gold         Crown          and          26          Gold          Circle         Awards.         “Tt          means          a          lot          to          us          that          this         one          little          ‘hidden          away’          publi-         cation          has          been          judged          to          be          so         good          -          to          know          we          have          done         something          better          than          schools         like          Stanford,          UCLA          and         Washington          State          University,”’         Erickson          said.          “‘It          gives          us          a         great          deal          of          credibility.”         FTER          a          three          month          delay          in         delivery,          the          1986          Gem  ’          ar-         rived          on          campus          during          Thanksgiving         Break.          Andrea          Harter          took          a          few         minutes          to          find          photos          of          herself          and         friends          after          picking          her          yearbook          up         in          the          SUB          Ballroom.          (Morgan)         “Gem          of          the          Mountains”          {2         )         tt         AT          the          time,          there          were          15          or         so          other          guys          who          wanted          to         do          it,          but          nobody          wanted          to         be          first.         -          Jim          Evans         ——p-——         126          Flag          Corps         HE          generation          that         gave          us          our          first          female         Supreme          Court          justice         blurred          the          lines          between          the         sexes.          In          the          military,          women         wanted          to          carry          a          gun,          and          at         the          UI,          men          wanted          to          carry          a         flag.         Jim          Evans          saw          the          flag          corps         as          a          way          to          put          some          variety          in         his          life,          as          well          as          going          ‘‘where         no          man          has          gone          before.”’         A          veteran          of          the          award-         winning          Marauders          Drum         Corps,          Evans          was          not          alone          in         his          desire          to          join          the          team.          But         lack          of          initiative          on          the          part          of         other          interested          men          left          him         the          only          man          to          participate.         At          the          time,          there          were          15         or          so          other          guys          who          wanted          to         do          it,          but          nobody          wanted          to          be         first,’’          Evans          said          of          his          deci-         sion.          ‘‘Since          they          didn’t          have         the          guts,          I          decided          to          be          the         one.”’         According          to          Evans,          the         transition          was          not          as          difficult          as         he          had          first          speculated.         “The          only          change          in          the         shows          was          just          that          I          didn’t          do         the          more          feminine          stuff,          like         curtsying.          We          did          have          to          have         separate          accommodations          on         the          roadtrips,          though.’’          he          said.         Not           everyone          was          waving         flags          for          the          corps’          new          compo-         sition.          Members          Stephanie         Sheard          and          Lena          Johnson          said         they          liked          having          men          on          the         team,          but          wanted          a          more          even         male-female          ratio.         “‘We          like          having          guys          in          the         shows,          but          with          just          one,          you         just          can’t          do          very          much,”         Sheard          said.         With          several          more          guys,”’         Johnson          said,          ‘‘we          could          do         pairs          work          —          really          utilize         them.          One          serves          more          as          a          dis-         traction          than          an          asset.’’         Evans          said          his          membership          in         the          flag          corps          has          increased          the         likelihood          that          men          will          think         twice          about          participation          in          the         group.         We          should          have          quite          a          few         more          men,”’          he          said.          “‘In          addi-         tion          to          the          large          numbers          of         women,          we          should          have          a          pret-         ty          big          corps.         “‘There          are          some          guys          that         have          committed          themselves          to         doing          it,          and          I'm          going          to          make         sure          they          go          through          with          it.’’         HILE          Jim          Evans          moved          from         percussion          to          the          flag         corps,          women          were          also          moving         into          less          traditional          roles.          The         Vandal          Marching          Band          included         women          as          everything          from          per-         cussionists          to          tuba          players.         (Dahlquist)         VETERAN          of          the          award-         winning          Marauders          Drum         Corps,          Jim          Evans          traded          in          his         drumsticks          for          bright          colored         flags.          Evans          was          the          first          man          to         ever          join          the          Vandal          Marching         Band's          flag          team.          (Dahiquist)         AIRS          SOCIETY.          ‘Proat          Nea          Chea          Sitipac,          ohn          Siveet          1          Lisa          Ward,         Kini,          Karla:          Bowden:          Bridgett          Field;          Sammy          Meyers;          Paul         Dovek          Avionell          Echo          FO          ‘Russ          Goodwin.          Galen          Millard:          Stephanie          °.         ihn          Givens,          Michael.          Weaver:          Jeff          Cox,          Kyler          Gueres.-Back          Row:          Dave:          Thir-         Baktus,          Cameron                    Reddy          Marlatt,          jae          Vojir,          Todd          Scholey,          Tommy         )          Ieper,          reas          aks         Flag          Corps          12]         Ke         Shr.         IRST          a          guy          with          a          mo-         hawk          started          screaming.         Then          about          eight          fans         sitting          in          the          front          row          stood          up         and          shouted.          Audience          mem-         bers          were          sitting          on          the          edges          of         their          Administration          Auditori-         um          seats.         They          were          there          to          discover         the          secrets          of          Idaho's          band.         About          200          people          in          the          con-         cert          hall          burst          into          applause          as         low          notes          from          an          amplified         synthesizer          gently          vibrated         through          their          bodies.         “Ladies          and          gentleman,”’          an-         nouncer          Russ          Strawn          said          over         the          loud          speaker,          ‘‘Riden-         baugh.”’         Five          silhouettes          appeared.         Students          running          ITV          Chan-         nel          8          television          equipment         moved          in          for          close-ups          of          band         leader          Scott          Bledsoe          as          he          sat         down          at          the          keyboards          and          be-         gan          singing.         “Although          the          night,         Is          often          lonely,         It’s          in          the          night,         That          I          see          myself.         N          the          second          half          of          the          Riden-         baugh          concert,          Tom          Green         strummed          a          3-minute          guitar          solo.         Green          piayed          an          Ibenez          guitar          and         used          Mesa          Engineering          amplifiers.         (Sperry)         128          Ridenbaugh         In          this          busy          day,         I          live          like          someone          else,         But          in          the          night’s          loneliness,         I          finally          meet          myself.”’         Bledsoe,          originally          from         Kooskie,          was          met          on          stage          by         four          other          Idaho          natives.          Join-         ing          him          were          Ridenbaugh          key-         boardist          Blane          Petersen          of         Kellogg,          guitarist          Tom          Green         of          Twin          Falls,          bassist          John         Kavanaugh          of          Boise,          and          per-         cussionist          Mike          Peterson,          also         of          Boise.         Together,          the          student          band         performed          nearly          20          original         pieces          during          their          April          24         School          of          Music          Guest          Recital.         “Nighttime          tells          your          secrets,         It’s          your          only          chance          to          look         at          you,         Your          only          chance          to          see          the         truth.”’         Dubbed          ‘‘Idaho’s          band’”’          by         manager          Leslie          Plucker,          the         origins          of          Ridenbaugh’s          name         was          no          secret.          Bledsoe,          who          be-         gan          studying          composition          in          his         high          school          days,          had          logged         more          than          1,000          hours          of          prac-         tice          time          in          the          university's         Ridenbaugh          Hall,         ‘Are          you          alone,         You          need          a          story,         When          you're          alone,         You          can          write          your          own.         They’ll          be          no          audience,         To          watch          your          private          show,         But          you          may          find          some         things,         That          you          don’t          want          to         know,”’         As          Bledsoe          sang,          back-up         singers          Kim          Bartelson,          Wendy         Allen          and          Debbie          Tremmell         offered          vocal          support.         “Yes          nighttime          tells          your         secrets,         Unlike          the          day          reflecting          all         you          do,         The          night          absorbed          your          ev-         ery          move,         And          speaks...”         “Vo          see          Ridenbaugh          is          to         hear          the          influence          of          many         bands          and          composers,’’          wrote         David          Pierik,          ‘‘Argonaut’’         music          critic.         ‘‘Nighttime’s          a          precious         hour,         Nighttime’s          a          precious          hour,         For          you...””         And          for          Ridenbaugh.         EAD          singer          Scott          Bledsoe          per-         formed          18          songs          with          Riden-         baugh          during          a          spring          concert.          The         concert          was          later          aired          on          ITV          Chan-         nel          8,          the          university's          cable          channel.         (Sperry)         IDENBAUGH          consisted          of          John         Kavanaugh,          Mike          Peterson,          Scott         Bledsoe,          Tom          Green          and          Blane          Peter-         sen.          Students          were          asked          to          give          $3         donations          to          the          band          to          see          their         April          24          School          of          Music          concert.         (Lamoreaux)         Ridenbaugh          129         4          4          OU’RE          not          go-         ing          to          believe         this,          but,          I’m         the          only          one          who          could          make         Greek          Week          controversial,’’         said          Cherri          Sabala,          Greek         Week          co-chairman,          as          she         rushed          around          the          student          pub-         lications          offices          dropping          off         press          releases.         In          the          weeks          preceding          the         March          30          start          of          Greek          Week,         Sabala          and          Co-Chairman          Steve         James          had          formulated          plans          to         boost          participation          in          the          annu-         al          spring          event.         “We          thought          maybe          we         could          team          up          one          sorority          with         two          fraternities,’’          Sabala          said,         so          it          would          take          less          people         from          each          house          to          make          up          a         team          for          the          competitions.”’         Panhellenic          Council          was         really          excited          about          it,’’          she         said,          ‘‘but          when          I          brought          it          be-         fore          the          Interfraternity          Coun-         cil,          I          thought          they          were          going          to         HOUTS          of          encouragement          came         from          Theta          Chis          Robert          Watson,         Scott          Freiburger          and          Chris          Harris          dur-         ing          the          Greek          Week          tug-of-war          com-         petition.          The          support          helped          Robert         Pickering          and          other          Theta          Chi          team-         mates          take          second          place          in          the          event.         (Dahiquist)         130          Greek          Week         literally          throw          me          out          of          the         room.”’         While          the          ‘‘team-up’’          idea         was          scrapped,          Sabala          said          in-         volvement          was          still          up          overall         for          the          week          due          to          a          new          par-         ticipation          trophy.         After          weeks          of          planning,          or-         ganizing,          and          informing          17         fraternities          and          eight          sororites,         the          festivities          were          ready          to         begin.         On          Monday,          March          30,          the         Greeks          gathered          on          the          field          be-         hind          new          Greek          Row          for          the         pyramid          building          contest          and         mattress          race.          Coming          out          on         top          in          the          pyramid          contest          were         Tau          Kappa          Epsilon          and          Alpha         Chi          Omega,          while          Delta          Tau         Delta          and          Pi          Beta          Phi          placed         first          in          the          mattress          race.         That          evening,          individual         houses          matched          wit          and         knowledge          in          the          SUB          Borah         Theater          for          the          Greek          Bowl.         Outsmarting          the          competition         were          the          Delta          Chis          and          the          Pi         Phis.          Across          the          hall          in          the         Ballroom,          the          milk          chugging         and          pie          eating          contests          were          be-         ing          held.          The          Phi          Kappa          Taus         and           Kappa          Kappa          Gammas         drank          their          way          to          victories,         while          the          Lambda          Chi          Alphas         and          the          Pi          Phis          ate          their          way          to         first          place          finishes.         According          to          Sabala,          the         purpose          of          the          milk          chugging         was          to          reduce          the          emphasis          on         alcohol          during          Greek          Week.         On          Tuesday,          a          series          of          com-         petitions          held          at          Ghormley         Park          pitted          fraternity          against         fraternity          and          sorority          against         sorority.          The          men          of          Farm-         House          and          the          Kappas          scam-         bled          a          win          in          the          egg          toss,          while         the          Phi          Gamma          Deltas          and          the         Pi          Phis          finished          first          in          the          egg         spoon          relay.          For          the          longest         throws,          the          Sigma          Alpha          Epsi-         lons          and          Alpha          Chi          Omegas         won          the          keg          toss.         After          an          early          Wednesday         leadership          breakfast,          the          Greek         baking          contest          was          held.          Earn-         Continued                   AMOUS          for          her          singing          and          hu-         mor,          Madge          Brown,          owner          of          the         Perch          campus          grocery,          closed          the         store          and          headed          over          to          the          Phi          Del-         ta          Theta          fraternity          for          the          Turtle          Der-         by.          Delta          Sigma          Phi          Shane          McNevin         discusses          the          Perch          turtle’s          chances         in          a          skit          preceding          the          race.         (Dahiquist)         ARMY          ROTC          (MS          302).          Front          Row:          witiam          Siora,          Christine          Lothen,          Steven         Danner,          Ken          Nygren,          Gene          Gussenhoven.          Second          Row:          Matt          Hall,          Mike          MoCurry,         Rod          Dennis,          John          Webster,          Bhan          Neild.          Third          Row:          Mike          Duncan.          Mark          Light.          Dean         Sink,          Matt          Voile,          Andrew          Moinay.          Back          Row:          Greg          Thompson,          Chad          Kline,          Dan          Cross         ley,          Greg          Anderson,          Brian          Pollard,          Major          Richard          Taylor         Greek          Week          [3]         N          their          marks,          getting          set          and         ready          to          go,          Alpha          Chi          Omegas         Margaret          Dau,          Heidi          Boehl,          Karen         Pivett          and          Stacey          Burr          squeeze         Valerie          Lavender          into          an          old          mattress         for          the          Greek          Week          mattress          race.         The          Alpha          Chis          placed          second          for         sororities          in          the          event.          (Dahiquist)         132          Greek          Week                  ry         id         -          C         ve                   im          as         hb         at         AMED          the          best          dressed          turtle,         Oscar’’          races          toward          the          finish         line          of          the          Phi          Delt          Turtle          Derby.          Os-         car's          trainers,          Kappa          Kappa          Gammas         Jennifer          Smith,          Barbie          Featherstone,         Kristin          Myers,          Chris          Carter          and          Deb-         bie          Brockway,          stand          by,          cheering          him         on.          (Dahiquist)                   Continued         ing          top          cooking          awards          were         the          Sigma          Chis          and          the          Pi          Phis.         Later          in          the          afternoon,          the          tug-         of-war          competition          occurred          on         the          Administration          Lawn.          Af-         ter          a          few          mighty          pulls,          the          Del-         ta          Chis          and          the          Alpha          Gamma         Deltas          won          the          event.         The          tugging          completed,         fraternity          and          sorority          members         rotated          between          houses          for          the         progressive          dinner.          A          bowl-a-         thon          held          at          the          Bowlerama          late         that          night,          raised          $3,200          for          the         local          charity,          Stepping          Stones.         According          to          Sabala,          the         money          raised          helped          the          organi-         zation          buy          a          new          van          to          trans-         port          handicapped          individuals.         With          the          official          competi-         tions          concluded,          Greeks          spent         the          rest          of          the          week          working          for         the          community,          collecting         awards          and          relaxing.         Thursday          night          at          the          Greek         Awards          Banquet,          speeches         praising          the          Greek          system          were         given.          Before          dinner,          the          Phi         Beta          Phis          and          the          Delta          Tau         Deltas          entertained          with          a          med-         ley          of          Broadway          hits.         After          dinner,          the          buses          start-         ed          rolling          up          and          down          Greek         Row          headed          towards          Ratz          bar         for          the          all-Greek          exchange.          In         an          effort          to          cut          down          on          drunk         driving,          Campus          Link          buses         were          used          to          transport          the         Greeks,          Sabala          said.         After          a          night          of          partying,         Greeks          headed          to          the          arbore-         tum          intent          on          doing          some         cleaning          and          replanting.          With         the          project          completed          and          the         dirt          washed          off          their          hands,         they          then          headed          to          the          Ad-         ministration          Lawn          for          the         Greek          barbeque.         After          devouring          hundreds          of         hamburgers,          fraternity          and         sorority          members          traveled         down          ‘‘Hello          Walk’’          to          watch         the          Phi          Delt          Flicks.          At          dusk,         audiences          saw          the          motion          pic-         tures          “‘Animal          House’’          and         ‘ Fletch’’          on          the          side          of          the          Phi         Delt          house.         Greek          Week          concluded          ear-         ly          the          next          morning          with          the         Phi          Delt          Turtle          Derby.          Accord-         ing          to          member          Scott          Nicholson,         nearly          $400          was          raised          from          the         event          and          donated          to          Meals          on         Wheels.         “ We          had          the          biggest          turnout         that          we’ve          had          in          a          few          years,”’         Nicholson          said.          ‘‘We’re          just         grateful          the          weather          held          out         and          all          of          those          students          and         parents          showed          up.”’         During          the          derby,          officials         also          announced          the          winners          of         Greek          Week.          The          Fijis          and          Pi         Phis          walked          away          with          the         coveted          top          trophies.         RYING          to          avoid          yolk          on          his          face,         Kirk          Niblock          of          Alpha          Tau          Ome-         ga          reaches          skyward          to          catch          grade         AA          produce          during          the          egg          toss          com-         petition.          The          ATO’s          placed          second          in         the          event          and          fifth          overall          for          Greek         Week.          (Dahiquist)         Greek          Week          133         S          TRUTTING          their          perfectly          con-         ditioned          bodies,          Body          Build-         ing          Club          members          Ted          Egerton,         Rick          Bunch          and          John          Claycomb         pose          to          the          song          '!          Want          to          be          a         Cowboy”’          during          the          benefit         show.          (Clark)         [34          Cub          Scouts         REAT          things          come          in         small          packages.          They         also          come          in          Packs.         In          October,          members          of          the         Sigma          Chi          fraternity          decided          to         get          in          on          what          they          called          a         great          thing          by          sponsoring          mem-         bers          of          a          local          Cub          Scout          Pack.         According          to          Chris         Wuthrich,          Sig          public          relations         chairman,          the          fraternity          want-         ed          to          get          involved          with          the          Cub         Scouts          in          the          hopes          that          other         fraternities          would          follow          their         lead.         It          worked.          Soon          after,          the         men          of          Alpha          Tau          Omega,          Sig-         ma          Alpha          Epsilon          and          Phi         Gamma          Delta          fraternities         joined          the          program.         According          to          Mark          Carr,          den         master,          the          sponsorship          pro-         gram          began          as          an          experiment,         but          appeared          to          work          very          well.         “‘T          have          parents          coming          up          to         me          saying          it’s          the          greatest          idea         they’ve          ever          seen,’’          Carr          said.         In          an          attempt          to          get          away         door-to-door          sales,          Moscow         Cub          Scout          leaders          came          up          with         the          idea          of          obtaining          sponsor-         ships          to          raise          money          for          the         dens.         Groups          were          asked          to          pay          a         sponsorship          fee          of          $50          per          den,         Carr          said.         Although          the          program          gener-         ated          money          to          buy          awards          and         craft          supplies,          he          said          the          most         important          aspect          of          it          was          the         interaction          between          the          boys         and          fraternity          members.         Carr          also          stressed          that          the         sponsorship          program          was         brand          new          to          the          Cub          Scouts.         In          fact,          the          Moscow          dens          were         the          only          ones          in          the          nation          in-         volved          with          fraternities,          he         said.         On          Feb.          20,          the          annual          Cub         Scouts          Blue          and          Gold          Banquet         was          held          at          the          Latah          County         Fairgrounds.          According          to         Carr,          the          celebration          was          espe-         cially          successful,          due          to          frater-         nity          involvement.         Sigs,          ATOs          and          SAEs          used         from          the          traditional          practice          of         the          occasion          to          introduce          them-         selves          to          the          crowd          of          more         than          300          and          to          explain          some          of         their          plans          and          goals          as          Cub         sponsors.          They          also          presented         the          organization          with          sponsor-         ship          checks.         Carr          said          the          kids          and          par-         ents          got          a          big          kick          out          of          an         ATO          who          came          to          the          banquet         dressed          as          a          gorilla.          The          boys         also          thought          it          was          ‘‘neat”’          that         the          fraternity          members          did          yells         and          sang          songs,          just          like          they         did,          he          said.         Later          in          the          month,          177          in-         dividuals          took          part          in          a          Scout         roller-skating          party          at         Skatetown.          The          help          of          the         fraternities          was          really          ap-         preciated,          Carr          said.         A          lot          of          those          kids          couldn’t         even          skate,’’          he          said,          ‘‘but          the         men          [fraternity          members]          just         took          right          over          and          helped.’’         Wuthrich,          who          has          never         been          a          Cub          Scout,          said          he          was         impressed          with          the          organiza-         tion.          He          said          the          group          promot-         Continued                   ——          Ee         I          HAVE          parents          coming          up         to          me          saying          it’s          the          greatest         idea          they’ve          ever          seen.         -          Mark          Carr         —          6s         Cub          Scouts          135         ANDAL          cornerback          Richard         Carey          sits          among          members          of         Cub          Scout          Pack          324          after          his          and          fel-         low          football          player          Leland          Alien’s         breakdancing          performance.          (Clark)         Saas         136          Cub          Scouts                   Continued         ed          good          sportsmanship          and         that          he          felt          the          Scouts          gave          kids         a          sense          of          worth.         Aside          from          the          skating          party,         fraternity          members          watched         movies          with          the          Cubs,          invited         Scouts          over          for          rootbeer          floats,         and          bowled          with          them.         On          April          25,          the          four          frater-         nities          joined          with          the          Cubs          to         present          a          benefit          show          in          the         SUB          Ballroom.         The          benefit,          which          was         scheduled          as          part          of          the          Scouts’         “Showtime          Month,”’          drew          a         crowd          of          nearly          500          people          and         raised          $285          for          the          Wishing         Star          Foundation.          The          North-         west          philanthropy          used          the         money          to          help          make          the          wishes         of          terminally          ill          children          come         true.         a          |          nothing          but         praise,’          said          Carr          concerning         the          show.          ‘‘It          went          really           well.’’         Carr          said          fraternity          members         enthusiastically          participated          by         helping          with          the          skits          and          stunts         the          Scouts          perrormed.         Other          local          and          regional          acts         volunteered          to          perform          at          the         heard         benefit.         Vandal          football          players         Richard          Carey          and          Leland          AI-         len          demonstrated          their          coordi-         nation          as          they          popped          and         twisted          during          a          breakdance         routine.          Moscow          High          School         student          Missy          Spevacek          sang,         Nick          Burr          and          Craig          Curtis          per-         formed          bluegrass          music,          three         competitive          body          builders         posed,          and          members          of          the         university          Juggling          Club          per-         formed.         We          also          wanted          the          boys          to         understand          the          purpose          behind         the          show,”’          Carr          said.         He          said          the          Scouts,          who          were         7-12          years          old,          understood          and         were          glad          to          be          able          to          help         other          children.         For          their          participation          in          the         Cub          Scout          program,          the          Sigs,         ATOs          and          SAEs          shared          the         university’s          Greek          Public          Rela-         tions          Award.         BENEFIT          show          held          in          the          SUB         Ballroom          featured          skits          by         Scouts          and          fraternity          members.          Al-         pha          Tau          Omega          Jerry          Love          plays          a         fairy          in          a          skit          called          ‘‘Little          Bunny         Foo-Foo,”’          (Clark)         cc         n          _         3         s         =)         ]         nn         P=)         s         0         |          38          Navy          ROTC         N          September,          Col.          J.E.          Givan          deli-         vered          the          keynote          address          on          be-         half          of          families          of          prisoners          of          war         and          soldiers          missing          in          action.          Ameri-         cans          must          not          forget          these          men,         Givan          said.          (Sperry)                  a!         wna         =         1          sede          PA         ye          es          oe          |         a          Be          od          es                   we         SLEEK,          steel          warship         slides          through          the         Mediterranean          Sea          at         30          knots,          keeping          a          vigil          in          the         troubled          Middle          East.          Seasoned         veterans          of          the          Navy          man          the         tiller          and          engine-room          watches.         But          at          their          sides          were          college         students,          barely          out          of          high         school.         They          came          from          Groton,         Conn.;          Phoenix,          Ariz.;          and         even          Moscow,          Idaho.          With         backgrounds          as          diverse          as          their         hometowns,          Navy          ROTC          mid-         shipmen          spent          four          weeks          of         their          summer          vacations          on          the         high          seas.         While          friends          from          school         were          working          or          gallivanting         around          Europe,          these          students         got          their          first          taste          of          salt          spray         and          chipping          paint          on          U.S.         Navy          ships.         The          university’s          Navy          ROTC         unit          sent          about          100          midshipmen         on          summer          cruises.          Those         preparing          for          their          senior          year         took          assignments          as          junior         officers.          Their          comprehensive,         on-ship          training          session          was         designed          to          teach          the          specific         officer          duties          they          might          be         responsible          for          after         graduation.         Soon-to-be          juniors          had          the         chance          to          experience          a          potpour-         ri          of          the          naval          services.          They         spent          each          week          working          with         professionals          from          the          warfare         specialties:          flight          training,          sub-         marine          services,          surface          ships         and          the          Marine          Corps.          Before         tackling          their          sophomore          year,         midshipmen          were          sent          to          ships         to          serve          with          the          enlisted          crew.         Students          said          they          liked          the         opportunity          to          see          what          the         Navy          was          like          on          the          high          seas.         “It          was          great          to          actually          put         some          of          the          stuff          we          learned          in         naval          science          class          to          use,’’          said         Brian          Buckles,          a          midshipman.         “ T          particularly          enjoyed          the         junior          year          cruise,          to          get          a         chance          to          see          how          the          different         parts          of          the          Navy          worked         together.”’         Midshipmen          did          _          not,         however,          spend          all          their          time         riding          the          waves.          During          the         school          year,          they          rode          the          crest         of          academics          to          keep          up          with         Navy          grade          guidelines.          Mid-         shipmen          were          required          to          main-         tain          grade          point          averages          equal         to          or          above          the          average          in          their         college,          which          varied          from          2.2         to          2.6.          Students          in          other          Navy         programs,          such          as          the          Nuclear         Enlisted          Commissioning          Pro-         gram          (NECP)          had          to          keep          at         least          a          3.0          GPA          to          remain          in          the         program.         Officials          said          the          influence          of         prior-enlisted          students          was          im-         portant          in          the          Navy          ROTC         unit.          Comprising          approximate-         ly          one-fifth          of          its          members,         these          NECP          and          Enlisted          Com-         missioning          Program          (ECP)          stu-         dents          brought          to          midshipmen         their          knowledge          of          the          fleet          and         the          Navy.          College          became         another          duty          station,          where          stu-         dents          continued          to          draw          pay,         but          were          expected          to          earn          high         Continued                     O          one          was          safe          from          the          pistol         team’s          aim          during          their          skit          at         the          Northwest          Navy          Send-Off          Dinner.         The          dinner          provided          a          chance          for          the         unit          staff          to           serve          the          midshipmen         dinner          before          their          departure          to          Cor-         vallis,          Ore.          (Schlacter)         Navy          ROTC          [39         ANE          Judd          attempted          to          recruit         new          members          Into          his          Navy         ROTC          unit          during          the          Northwest          Navy         Send-Off          Dinner.          At          the          meal,          Idaho         participants          were          encouraged          to          do         their          best          in          the          upcoming          Northwest         Navy          ROTC          competition.          (Schiacter)         =         140          Navy          ROTC         RADITION          dictated          that          the          Navy-         Marine          Corps          Ball          be          opened          by         cutting          the          cake.          Col.          Janice          Scott,         the          first          female          commander          of          a          Navy         ROTC          unit,          helped          commemorate          the         210th          anniversary          of          the          Marines          by         slicing          the          first          piece.          (Schiacter)                   Continued         marks          in          return.         The          NECP          students,          drawn         from          the          Navy’s          enlisted         nuclear          power          program,         represented          a          major          thrust          of         the          maritime          recruiting          effort.         The          nuclear          Navy          provides         the          U.S.          military          with          the          mo-         bility          and          independence          it          needs         to          further          American          interests,”’         said          Lt.          Vince          Gomes,          assistant         professor.          ‘‘It          represents          the          fu-         ture          and          present          of          the          fleet,         with          all          our          active          submarines         nuclear          and          the          big          carriers          po-         wered          in          the          same          manner.”’         An          area          where          no          recruiting         effort          was          needed          was          pilot         training.          Young          men          had          been         scrambling          for          their          wings          be-         fore          ‘ Top          Gun  ’          came          around.         But          according          to          Lt.          John          Wil-         son,          flight          option          adviser,          the         film’s          impact          increased          interest.         ““There          never          has          been          a         problem          recruiting          people          for         the          Navy’s          flight          program,’’          he         said.          ‘‘Our          main          thrust          now          is         to          keep          it          going          and          recruit          also         for          the          Navy          in          general.         “The          only          regret          I          have         about          it          is          seeing          the          despon-         dency          of          a          student          who          can’t         make          it          as          a          pilot          because          of          his         physical,’’          Wilson          said.         Recruiting          was          one          of          the         main          goals          set          out          by          Marine         Col.          Janice          Scott          at          the          outset         of          her          tour          of          duty          as          com-         manding          officer          of          the          univer-         sity          Navy          ROTC          unit.         “I          want          to          recruit          for          the         naval          service          as          a          whole,          not         just          the          Marine          Corps,          and          not         just          the          Navy,”          she          said.          ‘‘One         rule          I          follow          is          that          I          wouldn’t         urge          anybody          under          my          com-         mand,          or          the          incoming          mid-         shipmen,          to          do          something          |         wouldn’t          do          myself.         ‘ By          that          same          token,          I          like         to          stress          nuclear          power          to          stu-         dents.          It’s          a          field          that          I          myself         would          like          to          go          into          and          one         that          the          Navy          needs          urgently          to         fill,’          Scott          said.         When          Scott          took          her          assign-         ment          at          the          university,           she          be-         came          the          ffirst          female         commanding          officer          of          a          Navy         ROTC          unit.          Scott          said          she          was         happy          with          the          honor          and          felt         that          women          would          gain          more          in         the          military’s          future.         “I’m          glad          that          I          made          this         gain          in          the          Marine          Corps.          I         feel,          though,          that          I          was          chosen         because          I          was          qualified          and         available          —          not          because          of          my         sex.         I          believe,’’          she          said,          ‘‘that         women          should          be          able          to          stand         with          men          in          all          aspects          of          the         military,          from          being          a          C.O.         [commanding          officer]          to          carry-         ing          a          gun          in          combat.”’         Scott          used          her          organization-         al          skills          to          coordinate          not          only         Idaho          Navy          personnel,          but          also         Washington          State          University         midshipmen.          The          Navy          ROTC         unit          encompassed          midshipmen         at          both          universities,          in          an          at-         tempt          to          keep          government          costs         to          a          minimum,          she          said.         Through          the          efforts          of          stu-         dents          and          instructors,          WSU         was          incorporated          into          unit          ac-         tivities          and          athletic          teams.         “ It          seemed          like          sometimes         WSU          got          ignored          or          lost          in          the         shuffle,’’          Wilson          said.          ‘ We         wanted          to          let          them          know          they         did          count          and          that          we          support-         ed          them          as          well.’’         Support          was          something          the         members          of          the          Navy          ROTC         program          said          they          appreciated.         And          it          was          something          to          hold         on          to          when          there          was          nothing         but          ocean          around.         O          give          new          program          entrants          a         teel          for          the          art          of          drill,          team          mem-         bers          Rick          Seagrist          and          Rich          Campbell         gave          a          short          exhibition          during          fresh-         man          orientation.          (Schiacter)         Navy          rote          [4]         ESIDE          spotted          fillies,          volunteers         lead          riders          around          the          corral.          Bi-         weekly          sessions          lasted          from          one          to         two          hours,          after          which          program          par-         ticipants          discussed          their          progress.         (Moore)         ASHINGTON          State          University         students          worked          hand          in          hand         with          idaho          volunteers          to          help          riders         mount          their          horses.          Within          a          month,         most          participants          had          mastered          basic         riding          skills.          (Moore)         TUDENTS          who          had          never          ridden         horses          before          were          given          special         attention          by          volunteers          in          the          Partner-         ship          In          Equine          Therapy          and          Educa-         tion          program.          At          least          two          volunteers         walked          beside          each          rider.          (Moore)         14?          Equestrians         DITOR’S          NOTE:          The         character          in          the          follow-         ing          story          is          a          compila-         tion          of          interviews          of          students         involved          in          the          Partnership          in         Equine          Therapy          and          Education         program.          The          disabled          horse         riders,          who          say          that          ‘‘han-         dicaps”’          can          be          overcome,          re-         quested          that          their          identities          be         kept          confidential.         Anne          sat          up          in          her          silver         wheelchair          as          nearby          volunteers         u ntied          an          ivory-colored          mare         from          a          wooden          fence          post.         The          horse          seemed          to          get          larg-         er          as          its          guide          gently          pulled          it          by         the          reins,          bringing          it          closer          and         closer.         As          the          mare          came          within         touching          distance,          Anne’s          voice         trembled          a          bit.         ‘ Now          if          only          my          legs          looked         that          good,’’          she          said,          cracking         a          smile.         Horses          were          new          to          Anne,         who          lost          the          use          of          her          lower         limbs          in          a          auto          accident          during         her          senior          year          of          high          school.         “ l’ve          never          ridden          one          in          my         life,’’          she          said,          reaching          out          as         if          to          pet          the          animal,          then          pull-         ing          hack.         “It’s          okay,’’          the          volunteer         said.          ‘‘She          won't          bite          or         anything.”’         As          one          of          a          half          dozen          Ida-         ho          students          in          the          Palouse          Dis-         abled          Outdoor          Group,          Anne         rode          horses          during          one-hour         lessons,          twice          a          week.          Washing-         ton          State          University          co-         sponsored          the          PETE          program.         Horses          were          provided          free-of-         charge          at          WSU’s          Hilltop         Stables.         Barbara          Brock,          PETE          pro-         gram          coordinator,          said          she          got         involved          with          the          project          while         doing          dissertation          research          con-         cerning          horseback          riding          for         disabled          adults.         “This          is          not          a          program          to         say,          ‘Look!          We          got          a          lot          of          dis-         abled          people          to          ride          horses,’’’         she          said.          ‘‘It’s          teaching          equita-         tion.          People          come          away          with         skills          in          horsemanship,”’         Aside          from          teaching          impor-         tant          physical          skills,          Brock          said         the          PETE          program          helped          dis-         abled          adults          build          self-esteem.         The          program          is          really          about         developing          a          confidence.          The         people          here          learn          there          is          no          big         difference          with          disabled          peo-         ple,’’          she          said.         During          class          sessions,          volun-         teers          helped          groups          of          six          stu-         dents          mount          their          horses.          At         least          two          volunteers          walked          be-         side          each          horse          to          make          sure         participants          rode          safely.         As          a          result          of          group          involve-         ment,          everyone          benefits          from         the          experience,          said          Pat         Gauylke,          coordinator          of          volun-         teers.         “It’s          really          neat          watching          the         relationsh ips          develop          between         the          riders,          horses          and          volun-         teers,’’          Gauylke          said.         For          Anne,          that          relationship         started          as          she          fastened          her          safe-         ty          helmet          and          two          men          lifted         her          carefully          onto          her          horse.         Volunteers          stabilized          her          un-         til          she          felt          comfortable          on          her         own.          Slowly,          they          lead          her         mare          around          the          corral.         By          her          third          week          in          the          pro-         gram,          Anne          said          she          felt          com-         pletely          comfortable.         They          told          me          I’d          never         walk          again,’’          she          said,          tears         forming          in          the          corners          of          her         eyes.          ‘‘Who          would          have         thought          I          would          gallop?”’         She          left          riding          on          her          white         horse.         ELMETS          helped          protect          student         riders          from          possible          injury.         Although          tame          horses          made          students         feel          more          comfortable,          extra          safety         measures          were          also          practiced.         (Moore)         Equestrians          143         144          SArb         URING          Parents          Weekend,          Stu-         dent          Alumni          Relations          Board         members          guided          campus          tours.          Kar-         ma          Metzler          points          out          the          Delta          Chi         fraternity          before          taking          the          group          up         Hello          Walk.’’          (Dahiquist)         IGH          school          students          followed         Student          Alumni          Relations          Board         members          to          the          SUB          during          Explore         Idaho          weekend,          held          February          3-4.         About          275          college-bound          seniors         later          listened          to          lectures          about          cam-         pus          life.          (Jones)         SIDENCE          HALL          ASSOCIATION.          Front          Row:          Amy          Lewis,          Heather          Her         ‘ret,’          Michele          Pare,          Jackie          Foggia,          Valerie          Morrow,          Uisa          King.          Second          Row:          Marie          Her-         “berry          Lynde          Kain,          Tom          Freund,          Scott          Risan,          Connie          Jackson;          Tanya          Young,          Kathy          Kenyon;                   Lor          Manthe.          Back          Row;          Robert          Scers,          Randy          Knutson,          Vern          Hansen,          Jake          Gillam,          Onris         Heitstuman;          Paul          Prekeges,          Dave          Hardy,          Doug          Heikkila..Fred          Triplett.         N          the          ’60s,          students          rallied         to          the          call          ‘‘never          trust         anyone          over          thirty,’’          or          for         that          matter,          trust          a          college         graduate.         But          in          1987,          students          rallied         to          make          connections          with         graduates          to          uncover          the          secrets         of          success          in          life          after          college.         The          Student          Alumni          Rela         tions          Board          helped          to          bring         these          two          groups          together,         Since          1969,          the          60          members          of         SArb”’          have          been          promoting         interaction          between          students          of         all          ages.         “They          are          ambassadors,’’         said          Mary          Kay          McFadden,         SArb          adviser          and          associate         director          of          alumni          relations.         “‘They          are          strengthening          stu-         dents’          awareness          of          their          role          in         the          university          and          as          alumni.’’         As          ambassadors,          SArb          mem-         bers          represented          the          student         body          ak          reunions          and          helped         host          alimni          functions.          They         also          gave          campus          tours,          spon-         SASS          tr          oe         Motes)          noes          oe         «te          Karma          Metzler,          Jenn         (anyon,          Went          Reclienc          onda          ater         sored          receptions          for          freshman         scholarship          winners          and          or-         ganized          campus          events          like         “Silver          and          Gold          Day.’’         To          provide          these          services         since          1981,          SArb          has          collected         §0          cents          a          year          from          each          stu-         dent’s          registration          fees.          In          ad-         dition          to          ambassodor          activities,         SArb          sponsored          receptions          and         career          days          for          graduating         seniors.          For          undergraduates,         they          distributed          ‘ Finals          Week         Survival          Kits.”’         “The          connection          with          the         university          can          be          long          lasting,”’         McFadden          said.          ‘ The          people          in         SArb          realize          that          they          are          gain-         ing          from          the          university          and          that         their          contributions          make          a         difference.”         Students          had          to          be          inter-         viewed          by          a          panel          to          join          the          or-         ganization,         According          to          McFadden,         students          were          chosen          based          on         leadership          skills,          dedication          and         willingness          to          participate.         According          to          Karyl          Lolley,         past          club          president,          member-         TUDENT          ALUMNI          RELATIONS          BOARD.          Front          Row:          Beckie          Bet-         Stanko,          Valerie          Ashbrook,          Bonnie          Rose,          Nancy          Johnston,          Licia          Do-         ¢          ‘Kopcaynaki,          Karolyn          Nearing,          Kelley          Keogh.          Second          Row:          Kary!          Lolley.         ane          sear          nl          recive          Terry!          Sharples,          Vicki          Mesenbrink,          Julie          Ober-         Avani          molthiey          sch          0ch          Loulse          Mainvil,          Kelli          Kast,          Kathy         hird          Row:          Doug          Crum,          Jim          St.          Marie,          Pete         Maloney,          Brent          McClure,          Ed          Orcutt,          Dan          Skites,          Richard          Burke,          David          Chehey,          Keith         “Nyberg,          David          Ward,          Tim          McKinley,          Mary          Kay          McFadden.          Back          Row:          Lee          Ann          Bar-         =          stow.          Mike          Bull,          Mike’          Graft,          Alan          Rast.          Kevin          Hanigan,          Ken          Altman:          Eric          DeBord.         ,          55          aie          ‘Peter          Richards,          Sharon          French         ship          in          SArb          proved          to          be          an         asset.         “ The          club          has          allowed          me          to         develop          my          personal          and         leadership          skills          more          than          any         other          club          I          belong          to,’’          she         said.          ‘“‘SArb          gives          me          the         chance          of          being          with          a          group          of         people          that          are          outstanding          not         only          academically,          but          in          every-         thing          they          do.”’         SArb          members          did          more         than          just          work          together.          From         Christmas          parties          at          the          Corn-         er          Club          to          annual          SArb          Bar-         beques,          they          also          interacted         socially.         That          gave          SArb          members         time          to          learn          more          about         university          life,          according          to         Terry          Armstrong,          executive          as-         sistant          to          the          president          and         coordinator          of          student          services.         “They          are,          without          excep-         tion,          a          very          outstanding          group         of          men          and          women          who          give         willingly          of          their          time,’’          Arm-         strong          said.          ‘‘It’s          an          honor          to         be          a          part          of,          but          it          is          a          lot          of         work          too.”’         sarb          14)         TUDENT          fire          fighters          Tom          Cross-         ler          and          Steve          Baxter          watched          Phil         Gatlin,          Moscow          assistant          fire          chief,         spread          smoke          throughout          a          vacant         Ash          Street          house.          The          September          16         training          exercise          concluded          after          stu-         dents          rescued          a          dummy          victim.         (Spiker)         N          exchange          for          free          board,          James         Ackerman          and          14          other          students         volunteered          to          fight          blazes          for          the         Moscow          Fire          Department.          Ackerman         examined          the          roof          of          a          back          bedroom         damaged          by          a          February          19          fire          on         Paradise          Drive.          (Spiker)         pier,          Deanna          Motgan:.          Kim          8         146          Fire          Fighters         T’S          alarming          to          wake          to         the          sound          of          an          ear-         piercing          siren.          But          that          is         exactly          how          15          volunteer          stu-         dent          firemen          knew          it          was          time         to          get          to          work.         Scuffling          to          pull          on          boots         and          fire-resistant          clothing,          the         volunteers          readied          themselves         to          fight          blazes          throughout         Moscow,          all          at          a          moments         notice.         “Fire          comes          in          streaks,’’          said         volunteer          Tim          Shultz.          ‘ We          just         had          a          streak          at          the          end          of          the         year          when          the          Pike          house         burned,          Karl          Marx          Pizza         burned,          and          Gritman         {Memorial          Hospital]          had          a          cou-         ple          calls.”’         The          fire          station          came          com-         plete          with          a          fire          pole          for          quick         exits,          he          said.         Once          at          the          scene          of          a          call,         students          worked          with          older,         more          experienced          firemen.         At          times,          I          was          one          of          the         first          guys          in          there,          though,”’         Shultz          said.          ‘Il          was          the          guy          in         front          of          the          hose.’’         Student          fire          fighters          wore         oxygen          masks          called          air          packs,         he          said.         “Sometimes          you          can’t          see         anything          but          smoke.          You          have         to          find          the          source          of          the          fire          by         crawling          around          on          the          floor,”’         Shultz          said.         Volunteers          arrived          at          fire         scenes          with          more          than          trucks         and          equipment.          They          also         brought          experience          with          them.         On          your          first          few          runs,          you         learn          a          lot          from          just          watching         other          people,’’          Shultz          said.         Students          also          learned          fire         fighting          techniques          from          a         30-hour          basic          training          course         they          were          required          to          attend.         Sessions          lasted          about          two          hours         each          week.         “ You          just          had          to          learn          to          be         responsible,’’          Shultz          said.          “‘If         I’m          running          the          pumper          and          I         turn          off          the          valve          and          shut          off         some          guy’s          water,          he’s          in          deep         trouble,”’         Aside          from          demonstrating         maturity,          students          were          re-         quired          to          pass          physical          agility         tests.         ‘‘There          are          three          different         parts          of          it,”’          said          volunteer          Dar-         ryl          Riedinger.          ‘‘They          include         how          fast          you          can          do          things,          and         how          fast          you          can          think          in          pres-         sure          situations.”’         To          gain          experience          using          fire         hoses,          fire          fighters          spent          their         weekends          washing          down          local         parking          lots.          In          the          process,         they          also          earned          money          for          the         Moscow          Fire          Department,         Riedinger          said.         Fire          department          officials          es-         timated          that          they          saved          at          least         $800,000          by          using          volunteers.         Students          also          benefited          from         the          program.         It’s          sort          of          like          a          dormito-         ry          here,’’          Riedinger          said.          ‘‘All         15          volunteers          live          together          un-         der          one          roof,          and          share          the         same          kitchen          and          showers.”’         Shultz          drew          a          different          com-         parison,         “Actually,          its          more          like          a         fraternity,’’          he          said.          ‘‘The         difference          is          we          don’t          have          to         pay          rent.”’         Aside          from          saving          about         $750          a          semester          in          housing          fees,         student          fire          fighters          built          close         relationships,          Shultz          said.         I          probably          spent          80          percent         of          my          time          down          at          the          station.         I          tried          to          be          there          as          much          as         1          could,”’          he          said.         Fire          Fighters          14]         7         J         AY         r4         THE          GIRLS          NEXT          DOOR         EING          part          of         new          Greek          Row         had          its          fair          share         of          advantages,          according         to          members          of          the          Alpha         Chi          Omega          and          Alpha         Gamma          Delta          sororities.         For          the          women          of          AL-         PHA          CHI          OMEGA,          the         wide          open          spaces          above         and          below          their          house         provided          plenty          of          room         to          hold          their          annual          Fris-         bee          Golf          Tournament,         On          Sept.          27,          teams         lined          up          by          the          “‘l          Tow-         er’’          to          begin          the          competi-         tion.          The          object          of          the         tournament          was          to          aim         frisbees          at          designated          tar-         gets,          such          as          a          poles,          and         try          to          hit          them.         Teams          paid          $25          entry         fees,          said          Alpha          Chi         member          Stephanie          Dar-         chuk.          Proceeds          from          the         tournament          were          donated         to          the          Alpha          Chi          nation-         al          philanthropy,          cystic         fibrosis.         The          Delta          Chis          flew         away          with          first          place.         Along          with          a          first          place         trophy,          they          received          a         pony          keg          for          their          efforts.         After          the          tournament,         the          Alpha          Chis          used          the         M         rest          of          the          semester          to          get         to          know          each          other         better,         “Our          pledge          class          was         really          close,’’          Darchuk         said.         As          evidence,          she          said         that          the          house          attracted         five          snap          pledges          during         informal          rush.          They          also         worked          together          to          raise         money          by          having          a          slave         sale          and          selling          singing         telegrams          for          Christmas.         In          the          spring,          the          Al-         pha          Chis          again          used          their         new          Greek          Row          location         to          their          advantage.          They         showed          up          in          full          force         for          Greek          Week          activities,         held          on          the          field          below         their          house,         After          all          the          Greek         Week          events          were         finished          and          the          points          to-         taled          up,          the          Alpha          Chis         had          won          second          place         overall          and          third          place          in         participation.         Two          doors          away,          the         women          of          ALPHA         GAMMA          DELTA          said         they,          too,          benefited          from         their          new          Greek          Row          lo-         cation.         According          to          house         member          Mary          Arvin,          the         ALPHA          CHI          OMEGA.          Front          Row:          Sally          Gilpin,          Tonja          Clemens,         Lori          Booth,          Cathleen          Barclay,          Valerie          Lavender,          Nancy          Miller,          Jodi         Canfield.          Second          Row:          Sarah          Zenzic,          Karen          Privett,          Sydney          Wat-         son,          Heidi          Boehi,          Lisa          Holloway.          Ronda          Hall,          Kim          Van          Komen,          Beth         Barclay,          Stephanie          Darchuk.          Third          Row:          Carmella          Parks,          Karma          Met-         zier,          Stephanie          Bailey,          Brenda          Ogle,          Candice          Wilson,          Lisa          Stuk,         Brenda          Buck,          Michelle          Bott,          Becky          Asker,          Julie          Adams,          Venus         Smith,          Andrea          Martell,          Robynn          Thielman.          Back          Row:          Ty          Gibson,         Noelle          Giddings,          Brooke          Fisher,          Terri          Beebe,          Wendy          Jakich,          Julie         Fromdahi,          Anne          Wright,          Jana          Ptefferkorn,          Lisa          Duff,          Barb          Hinkle,         Ruth          Tarbet,          Lisa          Gust,          Margaret          Dau,          Stacy          Burr,          Cathleen          Tarp.         A          i          ad         N         4          148          Alpha          Chi          Omega                  A          l          A          p         O-         Alpha          Gams          had          room          to         expand.         “This          year          we          had          a         full          house          and          were          grant-         ing          out-of-house          mem-         berships,’”          Arvin          said.         The          house,          which          holds         65          women,          recruited          23         pledges          and          two          snap         pledges.          They          also          had         nearly          40          women          return-         ing          from          the          previous         year,          Arvin          said.         “It          made          the          laundry         room          a          little          harder          to          get         into,”’          she          said.         But          having          a          full          house         taught          members          that          peo-         ple          can          get          along          with         anyone          if          they          work          at          it,         Arvin          said.         In          the          fall,          the          Alpha         Gams          remodeled          a          base-         ment          bedroom          to          make         room          for          computer          fa-         cilities.         We          put          in          new          com-         puter          and          drafting         rooms,””          Arvin          said.         “The          drafting          room          is         really          neat          because          we         have          several          girls          in          the         house          who          are          advertising         majors          or          art          majors.         They          can          get          a          lot          done         down          there,’’          she          said.                    @%         Zs         .—         LPHA          Chi          Omega          pledges         Beth          Barclay          and          Sally          Gil-         pin          spent          $4          to          watch          the          Sig-         ma          Chi          pledge          class          ‘‘bare          it         all’’          during          the          ““Sig-n-Dales  ’         fundraiser.          Barclay          offers         dancer          Wesley          Proudy          a          tip          for         his          performance          during          the         Noy.          7          event.          (Morgan)         HE          final          activities          of          Sigma         Chi          Derby          Days          were          heid         on          a          rainy          Saturday,          Sept.          13.         The          sun          peeked          out          from          the         clouds          long          enough          for          com-         petitors,          like          Alpha          Gam         Hester          Booth,          to          participate          in         the          beer          chugging          contest.         bas          Ps          etigegae®         OO          ot          aes         aes          eee.          ies         ALPHA          GAMMA          DELTA.          Front          Row:          Lisa          McMurray.          Dixie         Miller,          Hester          Booth,          Lindsey          Miller,          Heidi          Broadhead.          Second          Row:         Mary          Arvin,          Marita          Szubert,          Terrie          Gosack,          Haze)          Boyce,          Stephanie         Sheard,          Wendy          Guisto,          Melanie          Mason,          Stacey          Stands,          Kelly          Vin-         cent.          Third          Row:          Pam          Moore,          Susan          Hamlin,          Ann          Marie          Gilliland,         Adare          Reynolds,          Melissa          McMichael,          Aileen          Sterling,          Anne          Rich,         Betty          Bickett,          Tamra          Haun,          Tammy          Kline,          Teresa          Gunter.          Fourth         Row:          June          Bieren,          Julie          Lees,          Pam          Stone,          Tina          Johnston,          Tanja         Kitchel,          Gwen          Chamberlain,          Janet          Bruce,          Dawn          Blalack,          Tina          McMi-         lan.          Back          Row:          Bekki          Jamison,          Heather          Wall,          Cheryl          Harding,          Ter-         ryl          Sharples,          Lena          Johnson,          Bonnie          Hazelbaker,          Jan          Meeker,          Sandy         Buhler,          Melanie          Matthews,          Jennifer          Smith,          Vonda          Trapp,          Brenda         Hollis,          Kristen          Cuddy,          Paige          Miller,          Stacey          Pack,          Toni          Denney.         :          a          oe         Alpha          Gamma          Delta          149         T          j          1          :                     ry         ro         M          P         4         ’          Sb         [Be                  M         150          Alpha          Phi         EPRESENTATIVES          of          each         sorority          carved          pumpkins         as          gifts          for          selected          residence         hall          women          during          a          Pan-         hellenic          Council          event          held         Oct.          28.          Aipha          Phis          Teri          Camp-         bell          and          Kimi          Henggeler          used         sharp          knives          to          perfect          their         Jack-o’-lantern,          (Dahiquist)         -          A         r         uw          is         =          i         eet         4           Az@         My         LAUNCHING          ANOTHER          CLEAN-UP         OU          can          always         tell          when          spring         comes          to          Elm         Street.          Its          when          the          front         yard          of          the          ALPHA          PHI         sorority          fills          up          overnight         with          aluminum          cans.         The          Alpha          Phis          tradi-         tionally          use          the          cans          to         decorate          for          their          annual         ““Bohemian          Ball.’’?          But         this          year’s          decorations,         hand-me-downs          from          the         Alpha          Tau          Omega          ‘“‘Tin         Canner,’’          proved          that          a         fraternity’s          treasures          can         become          a          _          sorority’s         troubles.         According          to          Chandra         Zenner,          Alpha          Phi          presi-         dent,          the          cans          required         sorority          sisters          to          literal-         ly          clean          up          their          acts,         We          had          a          lot          of          alum-         ni          visiting          the          house          that         week,’’          she          said.          ‘‘The         university          was          holding          a         reunion          for          the          classes          of         1937,          1927          and          the          Gold-         en          I’s          then,          and          we          just         couldn’t          greet          them          with         a          yard          full          of          beer          cans.’”         After          the          cans          were         cleared          away,          the          Alpha         Phis          got          on          with          the          bus-         iness          of          entertaining          their         guests,          Zenner          said.         They          also          greeted         ALPHA          PHI.          Front          Row:          Denise          Bunch,          Stephanie          Esser,          Kimi         Henggler,          Caria          Clifford,          DeAnn          Morgan,          Annie          Spence,          Chris          Bo-         nar,          Marnie          Linhart,          Pam          Gwin,          Jill          Nelson.          Second          Row:          Carolyn         Stonebraker,          Teri          Campbell,          Chandra          Zenner,          Ronda          Goin,          Wen-         dy          Allen,          Maxine          Tobin,          Krissi          Henggler,          Michelle          Timm,          Kristen         Ward,          Nora          Morton,          Karleen          Stroud.          Third          Row:          Heather          Linhart,         Melanie          Steinkamp,          Kelly          Cooper,          Deena          Harbin,          Bretta          Vigue,          An-         drea          Knoblauch,          Amy          Pugmire,          Robin          Saxvik,          Kym          Thornton,          Jann         Saindon,          Sue          Kelley,          Sheila          Keegan,          Shannon          Nash,          Ton!          Adams,         Lynn          Saindon,          Traci          Stout,          Kim          Wilson,          Laura          Ward,          Natalie          Knud-         son,          Holli          Crawford,          Katherine          Eaton,          Michaele          Kaserman.          Back         Row:          Raini          Reid,          Julie          Paller,          Sue          Falash,          Heidi          Olson,          Shannon          Coe,         Daria          Deppe,          Kathy          Willard,          Amanda          Brailsford,          Laurel          Steinkamp,         Jodi          Lenkner,          Leslie          Danielson,          Nikki          Ames,          Laura          Johnson,          Deb-         bie          Hernandez,          Margie          Schmidt,          Jody          Stover,          Liz          Wallace,          Gretch-         en          Morgan,          Kim          Cross,          Kendra          Denny.         ATA          Pp         alumni          with          a          National         Field          Representative,          for         the          third          year          in          a          row.         Field          representatives          trav-         el          to          Alpha          Phi          sorority         houses          throughout          the         nation,          giving          advice          and         filing          reports,          Zenner         said.         “Teri          Campbell          is          a         field          representative          this         year,          and          Kristi          Hanson          is         doing          it          again,          too,’’          she         said.         “‘That’s          pretty          out-         standing,          considering         they're          chosen          from          Al-         pha          Phis          all          over          the          na-         tion,’’          Zenner          said.         “T          don’t          think          any         other          house          has          had          three         field          representatives          in         three          years,’’          she          said.         The          members          weren’t         the          only          ones          helping          the         Alpha          Phis          clean          up          their         act.          A          new          pledge          class         also          offered          support.         According          to          Zenner,         no          other          house          could         boast          initiating          22          new         women.          That          figure          was         one          of          the          highest          on         campus,         “We          got          24          pledges,         and          amazingly,          all          24         stayed.          We          initiated          all         but          two.          That’s          never         happened          before,’’          she         said.         ‘ They’re          a          strong         class,’’          Zenner          said.         While          the          Alpha          Phis         were          promoting          new          field         representatives,          the          men         of          ALPHA          TAU          OME-         GA          were          trying          to          estab-         lish          themselves          as         outstanding          in          the          field          of         public          relations.         According          to          ATO         President           Norm         Semanko,          after          launching         a          campaign          to          improve         campus          relations,          they         were          on          to          bigger          and          bet-         ter          things.         In          the          fall,          they          held          a         sorority          relations          forum.         At          the          meeting,          sororities         offered          suggestions          as          to         how          the          fraternity          could         improve          their          image          and         reputation.          Suggestions         from          the          forum          con-         vinced          them          to          resume         participation          in          the          Greek         Week          competition          for          the         first          time          in          years,         Semanko          said.         The          ATOs          also          scored         PR          points          with          the          wom-         en          of          Delta          Gamma          when         they          named          Sherry          Mor-         rison          queen          of          their          ‘‘Es-         quire          Formal.’’         According          to          Eric          Carl-         son,          the          ‘‘Esquire          For-         mal’’          received          its          name         from          “ Esquire”’         magazine.         “Each          ATO          chapter         use          to          submit          their          queen         in          a          national          competition         and          the          winner          would          ap-         pear          on          the          cover          of          ‘Es-         quire,’’’          he          said.         By          springtime,          their          ef-         forts          were          beginning          to         pay          off.          At          the          Greek         Awards          Banquet,          the         ATOs          shared          the          fraterni-         ty          Public          Relations         Award          with          Sigma          Chi         and          Sigma          Alpha          Epsi-         lon.          In          ___          addition,         Semanko,          who          served          as         an          ASUI          senator,          was         named          Greek          Man          of          the         Year.         So          spring          cleaning          for         the          Alpha          Phis          and          ATOs         meant          picking          up          alumi-         num          cans          and          awards.         SING          a          makeshift          sling-         shot,          Norm          Semanko,          Lee         Magnus          and          Craig          McCurry         prepare          to          send          a          water          bal-         loon          skyward,          Alpha          Tau          Ome-         g@          members          spent          an         unusually          warm          March          Tues-         day          bombing          neighboring         fraternities          and          sororities.         (Spiker)         itgerath,          John          Lagerquist,          Tom          phoactt          aay          Paul         .          Rich          Eveland,          Brad          Teed,          Steve          Sell.          Back          Row:          Steve         ,          Steve          Root,          Mike          Aldrich,          John          Landreth,          Joe          Jordan,         R.J,          Johnson,          Steve          Williams,          Callin          Branter,          Sean          Mordhorst,          Bri-         an          Gehien.         Alpha          Tau          Seas          15]                  g          Fr         S          ut         B         M         Po          H         eee         FO          |         IBS         7.         M         ae:         a                  A          S         ©)         Sh         |          |          Demet         M          man-hours          planning          and          work-         ing          on          the          ‘‘Sixth          Street          Beau-         tification          Project.  ’          Using         materials          donated          by          area         merchants,          Scott          Gipson,         Doug          Korn          and          Ron          Gipson         construct          a          gravel          pathway.         (Hayes)         BETA          THETA          PI.          Front          Row:          John          Clausen,          Jason          Kelly,          Greg         F          Vic         Jeff          Brown,          grey          rosy          Thom          Gough,          Frank          Ng,          Joe          Keegan,          Tery         7A          ,          as          ieee,          A         1§2          Beta          Theta          Pi          :          O          M          |         ATA          p          4          X         F          B          P         Bb         Ox         T          Q         BRIDGING          OVER          THE          GAPS         RY          ideas.          That’s         what          the          men          of         Beta          Theta          Pi         and          Delta          Chi          fraternities         faced.         Months          before          the          state         legislature          raised          the         drinking          age          from          19          to         21,          the          university’s          Inter-         fraternity          Council          voted         to          ban          alcohol          during          fall         rush          week.          Supporting         this          move          were          the          men          of         BETA          THETA          PI.         We          had          no          problems         with          it,’’          said          Joe          Keegan,         house          president.          ‘‘It          kin-         da          takes          out          the          dirty         rushing          and          it’s          good         PR.”’         Besides,’’          he          said,         “‘you’re          more          set          to          get         the          good          guys          when         you’re          not          concentrating         so          much          on          partying.”’         The          entire          fraternity         _          system          has          been          feeling         the          squeeze          of          increasing-         ly          strict          alcohol          policies,         Keegan          said.          But          under         the          direction          of          Beta          Ter-         ry          Reynolds,          Interfrater-         nity          Council          president,         everything          has          been          fair         and          legal,          he          said.         Rush          was          not          the          only         thing          that          the          Betas          were         trying          to          improve.          Ac-         cording          to          Keegan,          they         also          spent          an          undisclosed         amount          of          money          bring-         ing          their          house          up          to          fire         safety          standards.         “It’s          mostly          little         things,          like          our          stairwells         were          three          feet          wide          in-         stead          of          four.          We          have         started          on          one          and          may         have          two          new          stairwells,”         he          said.         While          the          Betas          sup-         ported          dry          rush,          the          men         of          DELTA          CHI          were         supporting          dry          pathways.         Until          they          decided          to         help          the          Moscow          Centen-         nial          ‘ Sixth          Street          Beau-         tification          Project,’’          many         off-campus          students          wad-         ed          through          mud          and         climbed          over          railroad         tracks          to          get          to          class.          Af-         ter          the          Delta          Chis          were         done          working,          the          walk-         way          next          to          Ghormley         Park          was          graveled          and         landscaped.         The          project          began          in         December          when          the         Moscow          Centennial         Committee          contacted         Delta          Chi          PR          Chairman         Tod          Burr          about          the          pos-         sibility          of          decorating         Main          Street.         Later,          Burr          said          he          did         the          calling.         “Since          I’m          the          PR         chairman,          I          got          the          idea         to          call          the          mayor          and          ask         if          there          was          anything          else         we          could          do.          He          put          me         in          touch          with          Mary         Hamilton,          the          chairper-         son          of          the          beautification         project,’          Burr          said.         The          Delta          Chis          spent         $300          of          their          own          money         on          the          project          while          also         soliciting          donations          from         area          businesses.         “‘Central          Pre-Mix          do-         nated          a          whole          bunch          of         gravel,’’          Burr          said.          “‘A         nursery          in          Peck,          Idaho,         donated          more          than          $300         worth          of          trees.’’         After          completing          the         project,          Burr          and          fellow         Delta          Chi          Todd          Merrick         were          appointed          Moscow         city          commissioners.         LIMBING          on          top          to          finish         off          the          Beta          Theta          Phi’s         Greek          Week          pyramid,          Frank         Ng          uses          Kelly          Smith          and          Pete         Sprague          as          support          rests.          The         third          row          consisted          of          Jason         Kelley,          Tony          Crane          and          Russ         Biaggne.          And          at          the          base          of         the          pyramid          were          Brian          Nieid,         Brett          Kleffner,          Chris          Boyd          and         Herb          Sprinkel.          (Dahiquist)         SUGAR-coated          snack         provided          by          Kappa          Kappa         Gamma          Julie          Robideaux          gave         Beta          Theta          Phi          Terry          Reynolds         the          energy          needed          to          continue         playing          in          the          Sigma          Nu-Beta         Softball          Marathon.          (Hayes)         DELTA          CHI.          Front          Row:           Scott          Gipson,          Jeb          Wilson,          Jim          Mash-         burn,          Mike          Pugsiey,          Ira          Stancliff,          Mark          Light,          Brad          Frei.          Second          Row:         Tony          Kyle,          Kevin          Price,          Darin          Hibler,          Travis          Caudle,          Andy          Muir,          Bob         Thomsen,          John          Summers,          Ryan          Wise.          Third          Raw:          Kevin          Esser,          Da-         mien          Ovald,          Russ          Hoisington,          Ted          Arnzen,          Rob          Spencer,          Kevin          Car-         penter,          Cari          Carbon,          Corey          Edwards,          Dave          Wimer,          Todd          Marek,         Bryan          Higgins,          Alan          Grant.          Back          Row:          Mike          Walrith,          Rob          Lyons,         Brian          Jefferson,          Jeff          Hackley,          Hon          Gipson,          Doug          Korn,          Richard         Townsend,          Tom          Haener,          Steve          James,          Kevin          Brocke,          Tim          Haen-         er,          Lee          Croft         K         pk         =         rm         event         Ir]         I         DE         ECRUITS.         That’s          what          the         women          of          DEL-         TA          DELTA          DELTA         M          were          looking          for          during         fall          rush.         4q          But          trying          to          find          25         high-quality          pledges          is          no         A          easy          task,          according          to         ,          Sarah          Kroos,          house         ,          president.         Rather          than          give          up,         however,          the          Tri-Delts         rushed          28          new          pledges         from          all          corners          of          Idaho,         Kroos          said,         4          aN          We're          really          proud          of         4          them,’’          said          Kroos.         ai          “They're          one          of          the          big-         gest          pledge          classes          on         campus,          and          they’re          real-         ly          strong.”         According          to          Kroos,         the          best          feature          that          the         pledge          class          held          was          in-         tegration.          Because          they         make          up          half          the          house,         l          they          have          to          participate          in         both          campus          and          com-         IVE          from          the          Homecoming         bontire,          Delta          Gammas          in-         cluding          Sara          Hanes,          Janet          Da-         vis          and          Cindy          Bressette          broad-         cast          their          ‘‘DGTV  '          skit.          The         women          told          the          audience          that         the          football          team          would          easi-         ly          ‘‘vandalize  ’          the          Cal-State         Fullerton          Titans.          (O'Bryan)         ‘9         A         4          154          Delta          Delta          Delta         ATS          Pp         O         munity          activities,          she         said.         Kroos          said          Tri-Delt          en-         thusiasm          was          especially         evident          in          April,          when         house          members          pulled         together          to          host          the          Spe-         cial          Olympics.         “‘We          put          on          the          entire         regional          competition          for         Northern          Idaho,’”’          said         Kroos.          ‘‘Our          philanthro-         py          chairman,          Kari          John-         son,          was          in          charge          of         organizing          all          of          it,          and         she          worked          on          it          for         months.”’         Tri-Delts          volunteered         as          timers          and          the          staging         crew          for          track          and          field,         soccer,          swimming,          gym-         nastics          and          bicycling,          and         also          set          up          entertainment         booths          for          all          the          par-         ticipants.         As          officials,          they         helped          choose          Special         Olympic          winners          to          ad-         vance          to          national          compe-         IN          SEARCH          OF          SOME          NEw          SISTERS         tition.         While          the          Tri-Delts         worked          to          integrate          their         new          pledges,          the          women         of          DELTA          GAMMA         searched          for          a          new          recruit         of          their          own.         It’s          tough          being          a         prospective          Delta          Gamma         Anchorman,          said          contes-         tant          Jerry          Mooney.         After          two          weeks          of         grueling          skit          competition,         exuding          charm,          and          smil-         ing          till          your          cheeks          crack,         Mooney          said          he          was         Kevin          Cornwell          of          Pi         Kappa          Alpha          swam          away         with          the          Anchorman          title.         Before          he          was          actually         crowned,          however,          he         had          a          chance          to          partici-         pate          in          the          Anchor          Splash         Tasmanian          Yahoo          com-         petition.         The          swimming          race          re-         quired          more          than          swim-         ming,          however.         You          have          to          get          in          an         inner          tube,’’          President         Regina          Bailey          said.          ‘“‘And         then          you          yell,          ‘Yahoo!         Yahoo!’          all          the          way          up         and          down          the          pool.         “ We          have          real          swim-         ming          races,          like          freestyle         and          backstroke,”’          said         Bailey,          ‘‘but          we          have         some          Feally          funny          things,         too.’         The          Delta          Gammas         also          tried          to          recruit          wom-         en          for          the          Anchor          Splash.         ‘We          tried          to          get          the         other          sororities          involved         this          year,          but          there          wasn’t         any          real          turnout,”’          Bailey         said.          ‘It          was          the          first          year         for          that,          though,          so          it          was         hard.’’         N          an          updated          version          of          the         fairy          tale          ‘‘Cinderella’’,          Tri-         Delt          Lori          Thompson          searches         for          the          proper          owner          of          a          Bir-         kenstock          sandal.          The          Tri-Deits         ed          the          skit          as          part          of         the          Phi          Delta          Theta          Turtle          Der-         by.          (Dahlquist)         DELTA          DELTA          DELTA.          Front          Row:          Jennifer          Cutier,          Holly          Boyer,          Holly          Lockwood,          Katrina          Dasen-         brock,          Lisa          Lorain,          Janet          Hobson,          Brigid          Callinan.          Second          Row:          Kay          Harrison,          Susan          Dillingham,          Mary         Hess,          Gretchen          Friche,          Karen          Runge,          Kari          Johnson.          Third          Wo          Be          Sarah          Kroos,          Leann          Pratt,          Beta          Pet-         tibon,          Nicole          Reeve,          Cindy          Palmer,          Sarah          Lau,          Amy          Aman,          Julie          Francis,          Elayne          Mussman,          Bonnie         Rose.          Fourth          Row:          Glenda          Woodall,          Margaret          Ourada,          Lori          Thompson,          Julie          Oberle,          Stephanie         Sanders,         Kristin          Gunther,          Julie          Lyon,          Dawn          Nicholas,          Garole          Bruns.          Back          Row:          Crystal          Wilson,          Jenny          Patter-         son,          Belinda          Metcalf,          Lauri          Foster,          Becky          Bettinger,          Laura          Poston,          Mondae          Hutchinson,          Marie          Schmidt,         Norene          Schmidt.         (Dp         ™M         =          mri          v;          AL          ull         a          “          )          ay         ES         3s         DELTA          GAMMA.          Front          Row:          Janelle          Jurvelin,          Caprice          Pollock,          Tammy          Everts,          Jenni          Rice,          Robin          ETTING          carried          away          with         Killien,          Terri          Hatch,          Cindy          Bressette,          Sherry          Morrison,          Vicki          Bressette.          Second          Row:          Anne          Stewart,          enthusiasm          during          Sigma         Jill          Morgan,          Lisa          Alexander,          Tami          Dickey,          Darla          Armacost,          Lori          Humberger,          Sara          Matzinger,          Jacque-          Chi          Derby          Days,          several          Delta         fine          Jakomeit,          Laurel          Simmons,          Heidi          Gabrielsen,          Ann          Robison,          Charlene          Johnson,          Kristin          Durbin.          Third          Gammas          and          Sigs          engaged          in         Row:          Susan          Perry,          Cherie          Sproed,          Sara          Hanes,          Tina          Syring,          Ann          Elvin,          Lisa          Pullen,          Becky          Mallane,          song          and          dance          between          after-         Michelle          Shine,          Kami          Riggers,          Nancy          Kempton,          Dawn          Duncan,          Lou          Baxter,          Lori          Carol,          Raeanne          Wickie.          noon          events.          Both          Delta          Gam-         Back          Row:          Keily          Davis,          Kristy          Griffith,          Kari          Cline,          Ann          Nelson,          Tami          Thompson,          Susan          Rench,          Andi          ma          members          and          pledges         Wolf,          Shaunie          Lutz,          Janet          Davis,          Simone          Savage,          Debbie          Clayvilie,          Brooke          Gustav,          Regina          Bailey,          participated          in          the          week-long         Jilann          Jurvelin.          competition.          (Ellis)         Delta          Gamma          155         )         an         -         7          ya         |          fer]         E          ,          :          renee          ee         er          ESA          nS         _                    —_——T                             ee                   .          —          e         —-           Jeg         -          .          .          ”          ¥          r          “          .          .                   .          :          bd          :          “           a,          ?                    '         :          .          a          ae          rr          -          Py          °          .          +4         ,.          i         ’          °          ys          .          ,          2          RA          he          te          oe          7                    7         ‘2.          -          ;          -          .          %          -          ;          ‘          ee,          ee          .                   .          ,          ”          ‘“          e          s te                    7          2          .          .)          v          sa?                   eee          .          :          :          .          -                    :          -          re         c          -          =                                        a.          .          ns                    “                    .                    .          «?          ses          +5          .          .         ‘          fi          oo                     ri          wt          -          42          “+         v          De          Bn          :.                    ¥         if          .          7         _          =          ’          .          My          .         ae          a          ewan          aoe         ©)          L         helped          carry          the                   paper          float          “‘Fun          in          the          Sun          down          the         Mardi          Gras          parade          route.         (-)]          Morgan)         ..         5          rae          fe         hide?          5          nee          2K         .          .          anf          “          :         Se                   arte                     |         Se          ce          ,O7                    @,          B,          «          eI          ,         156          deita          sigma          Phi          ro          |          -          EB          4x          M         ATA          Wi          Ni          ae          we,          ,         AY          hh         MASTERS          OF          SPLISH          AND          SPLASH         HEN          it          rains,         it          pours,          espe-         cially          when         fraternity          men          have         spring          formals          planned.         Temperatures          were          chilly         as          the          men          of          DELTA         SIGMA          PHI          prepared         for          their          ‘‘Sailors’          Ball’         weekend.         After          all          the          work          they         put          into          their          yard,          mak-         ing          a          sandbag-ringed          pool         and          rigging          a          waterfall          on         the          roof,          some          said          it          was         kind          of          disappointing          to         feel          the          first          few         raindrops.         Fortunately,          members         said          they          were          having          too          much          fun          to          worry.         “We          didn’t          notice          it          at         all,’’          said          Karl          Dye,          house         rush          chairman.          ‘‘We’d         had          a          track          meet          all          day.         and          it          was          cloudy.          Later         FEATURE          attraction          at          the         Delite          Tau          Delta          house         Jimmy          Vo          took          the          opportuni-         ty          to          slide          down          the          mucdtined         plastic          path.          (Moore)         it          rained          off          and          on,          but         it          wasn’t          too          bad.”’         Those          who          got          wet          had         more          to          blame          than          rain,         however.          According          to         Dye,          it          was          customary          for         ‘Sailors’          Ball’’          goers          to         get          dunked          once          or          twice         in          the          sandbag          pond          or         doused          under          the          water-         fall.          This          caused          a          lot          of         havoc          on          the          dance          floor,         he          said.         Not          too          much          danc-         ing          went          on,”’          said          Brian         McGregor,          house         president.         ‘“‘We          got          an          inch          of         water          on          our          floor          from         people          getting          out          of          the         pond.          It          was          more          like          we         slid          across          the          floor,”’          he         said         While          the          Delta          Sigs         were          slipping          and          sliding         on          the          dance          floor,          the         men          of          DELTA          TAU         DELTA          were          getting         their          dates          soaked          at          their         annual          ‘‘Russian          Ball,”’         held          on          the          same          day.         The          Delts          had          spent         months          gearing          up          for          the         big          event.          The          week          of         the          dance,          anticipation         started          heating          up,          even          though          the          weather          was         cooling          down,         “We          had          the          Russian         serenade          on          Wednesday,         and          the          tarp          throw          on         Thursday          at          all          the          sorori-         ties,’’          said          Tom          Albanese,         house          president.         During          the          serenade,         Delt          members          traveled         from          sorority          to          sorority         singing          fraternity          songs          to         their          dates.         Each          serenade          ended         with          the          Delts          making          a         separate          sorority          cheer,         Albanese          said.         After          they          had          crusad-         ed          throughout          the          cam-         pus,          the          men          returned          to         their          chapter          house          to         continue          celebrating.         On          Thursday,          a          25-foot         square          tarp          was          taken          out         of          storage.          At          each         sorority,          the          Delts          would         form          a          circle,          holding          the         tarp.          Then          separate          mem-         bers          were          bounced,          one          at         atime,          by          the          whole          crew.         For          the          fireball          throw         on          Friday,          Delts          stood          on         the          roof          of          their          house         and          threw          fiery          gasoline-         soaked          rolls          of          toilet         paper          to          other          members         on          the          lawn,          who          threw         them          back,          Albanese         said.         Although          no          one          has         been          hurt          by          the          tradi-         tion,          there          was          a          risk          of         injury.          Rain          helped          keep         the          flames          under          control,         however.         “‘When          we          came          back         for          the          fireball          throw,          it         was          raining,’’          Albanese         os          Kl                  hy         Furs          through          the          air          with         ease,          Morrie          Berriochoa         represents          the          Deita          Tau          Del-         ta          fraternity          in          the          Gamma          Phi         Beta          Track          Attack          long-jump          M         event.          The          early          November          7         competition          took          place          on          the         track          located          behind          the          Kib-         bie          Dome.          (O'Bryan)         said.          ‘“‘You          can          see          how         we          really          scorched          the         lawn.”’         Saturday          afternoon,         the          day          of          the          dance,          the         Delts          gorged          themselves         on          a          Russian          feast.         “You          name          it,          we          had         it,’”          Albanese          said.         They          then          spent          the          rest         of          the          afternoon          dodging         the          storm          clouds          by          hold-         ing          the          Deltonian          Masses,         an          informal          gathering          on         Moscow          Mountain.         Said          Albanese,          ‘‘We          even          had          a          couple          SAEs         and          Betas          show          up          who'd         left          their          own          dances          —         they          knew          where          the          real         party          was!”’         DELTA          TAU          DELTA.          Front          Row:          Terence          Tumer,          Mark          Lavin,         u         cb         is          =          ae         Delta          Tau          Delta          157         L         s          rr                  AY         il         IB         S          the          men          of         FARMHOUSE         .          grew          older,          they         found          themselves          running         into          more          and          more          situ-         ations          where          etiquette          was         important.          And          to          find         out          which          fork          was          for         the          salad          and          which          was         for          dessert,          the          48          mem-         bers          and          pledges          found         themselves          running          to          ask         their          housemother.         Grace          Wicks          served          as         the          “‘Miss          Manners’?          of         A          FarmHouse.          As          one          of         only          two          fraternity          house-         mothers          on          campus,          she         attended          their          dances          and         visited          the          house          for          din-         ner          twice          a          week,          member         Phil          Kowash          said.         “We're          proud          of          our         housemother,”’          he          said.         She’s          been          here          for          17         years.          She          gives          good          PR         |          for          the          house,          too,          by         bringing          VIP          guests         over.”’         While          FarmHouse          was         proud          of          Wicks,          she          said         |          ELPING          High          School          Rela-         tlons          prepare          a          recrult-         ment          video,          FarmHouse          mem-         ber          Russell          Strawn          spent          the         afternoon          of          March          30          record-         ing          memorable          scenes          from         the          Greek          Week          pyramid         buliding          contest          and          mattress         |          race.          (Dahiquist)         vA          M         A         a          158          Farm          House         TTA                   M         she          was          equally          proud          of         them.         Freshman          Scott          Carter         held          an          ASUI          Senate          po-         sition          and          was          named         fraternity          Greek          Pledge         of          the          Year          at          the          Greek         Awards          Banquet.          In          addi-         tion,          Silver          Lance,          an          ex-         clusive          senior          men’s         honorary,          invited          John         Vanderpool          into          mem-         bership.         According          to          Kowash,         the          house          members          were         also          proud          that          they         achieved          their          scholarship         goals.         ‘SA          lot          of          coordination         went          into          getting          every-         one          in          the          house          to          work         harder          at          their          classes,’’         he          said.         By          the          end          of          fall         semester,          the          house          had         run          up          top          honors,          earn-         ing          the          highest          grade         point          average          of          any          Ida-         ho          fraternity.         Meanwhile,          the          women         of          GAMMA          PHI          BETA         STAYING          ON          THE          RIGHT          TRACK         were          also          in          the          running         for          top          campus          honors,         In          November,          they         hosted          the          second          annual         Track          Attack,          bringing         campus          living          groups         together          to          race          for          top         prizes.          The          men          of          Sigma         Alpha          Epsilon          ran          away         with          the          traveling          trophy.         ‘ We          had          a          really          good         turn          out          and          a          good          time.         We          hope          to          continue          this         fundraiser,’’          said          Val         Rossi,          Track          Attack          coor-         dinator.         Each          group          donated         $25          to          enter          the          competi-         tion.          All          proceeds          collect-         ed          were          given          to          the         Gamma          Phi          Beta          philan-         thropy,          Camp          Sechelt,          a         summer          camp          for          under-         privileged          girls.         In          addition          to          their         Track          Attack          competi-         tion,          the          Gamma          Phis         slowed          their          pace          to          pro-         mote          community          service.         In          just          an          hour          of          hik-         ing          through          Moscow         neighborhoods,          they         raised          $350          in          door-to-         door          donations          for          the         Mothers          March          of          Dimes.         According          to          Keli         Nicholson,          chapter          presi-         dent,          the          track          meet          and         hiking          put          the          house          in         the          running          for          national         awards.         By          late          spring,          they         were          recognized          as          an          Ef-         ficiency          Chapter          by          their         international          headquart-         ers.          They          were          the          only         chapter          to          receive          the         iz         prestigious          award,         Nicholson          said.         And          at          the          Greek         Awards          Banquet,          they         received          the          sorority         Chapter          Excellence         Award.         N          November,          Jill          Hammrich         raises          the          flag          signaling          the         Start          of          a          race          during          the          se-         cond          annual          Gamma          Phi          Beta         Track          Attack.          Proceeds          from         the          afternoon          event          went          to         4]          is          -         ih          T                    :         SS           2         b                   FTER          executing          a          stylish         toss,          FarmHouse          member         Mitch          Mooney          awaits          the          land-         ing          of          his          frisbee          during          the          Al-         pha          Chi          Omega          Frisbee          Golf         Tournament.          (Dahiquist)         Moulton,          Shelley          Watson.         ATA          A         re          .          ¥          —         Np          4                           H         ia          Ur          |          A          L         FARMHOUSE.          Front          Row:          Scott          Carter,          Mark          Becktel,          Todd          A          I         Wilder,          Mark          Krugar,          Darryl          Smith,          Paul          Langfield.          Second          Row:         Mike          McDonald,          Jack          Blattner,          Brian          Workman,          John          Simms,          Chad         Pratt,          Jim          Vanderpool,          Marc          Thiel,          Steve          Rahe.          Third          Row:          Rick         Brown,          Phil          Kowash,          Matt          Faulks,          Bill          Lickley,          Fred          Croson,          Bart          QO         fk         Gustavson,          Chad          Smith,          John          Baldus,          Jeff          Sheppard,          Tony          Noe,         Scott          Bledsoe,          Doug         Larson,          Craig          An-           i         GAMMA          PHI          BETA.          Front          Row:          Heidi          Kettner,          Kelli          Robison,          Patty          Albanese,          Sue          Hasbrouck,         Mona          Swanson,          Sharon          French,          Caroline          Granger,          Trish          Gotsch,          Kathy          Lewis,          Kris          Ramsey,          Teresa          N         Harrington.          Second          Row:          Laura          Woodworth,          Kristin          Bjorkman,          Valerie          Rossi,          Lisa          Hall,          Bekki          Rosholt,          i         Tia          Heimgartner,          Tiffany          MacGowan,          Audra          Krussel,          Ann          Hamilton,          Ann          Lynch,          Julie          Morris,          Nancy          VM         Jefferies,          Kirsten          Rosholt,          Anna          Ross,          Betsy          Louthian,          Molly          Weyen.          Barbara          Renshaw,          Jill          Poffen-          4         roth.          Back          Row:          Annie          Flood,          Rachel          Van          Horne,          Keli          Nicholson,          Gina          Ensunsa,          Kari          Voorhees,          Chery!          3         Schmidt,          Sandy          Swan,          Kathy          Trail,          Kathy          Harris,          Janell          Blomdahl,          Jill          Hammrich,          Anne          Williams,          Tiffa-          K         ny          Bennett,          Carrie          Borchard,          Gigi          Blick,          Beth          Diekmann,          Cathy          Kennedy,          Stephanie          Fassett,          Judy         ‘                  .         oe         Gamma          Phi          Beta          1§9         Ty         ANTED:         |          KAPPA                   KAPPA         GAMMA          pledges.          Must         M          |          be          beautiful,          over-                   achievers,          and          able          to         play          football          and          collect         .          donations.         A          Well,           maybe          not.          It         was          just          that          the          Kappas         liked          being          intramural         champions          so          much          that         they          almost          made          it          a         prerequisite          to          pledging,         according          to          Kalyn          Karl-         berg,          house          rush         chairman.         af          ‘It’s          our          house          joke,”’         she          said.          ‘ We          were          wor-         ried          that          since          our          quar-         terback          graduated          last         year,          we          wouldn’t          have          a         good          team.”’         According          to          Karlberg,         the          Kappas          were          able          to         recover          the          loss.         We          had          someone          else         step          right          in,          and          we         won,”’          she          said.         N         :          160          Kappa          Kappa          Gamma         ATA          p         During          late          October,         the          Kappas          changed          their         focus          from          s ports          to          fun-         draising.         They          wanted          to          raise          as         much          money          for         UNICEF          as          they          could,         Karlberg          said.          To          do          so,         house          members          dressed         up          as          ghouls          and          goblins         to          ‘‘terrorize’’          local         neighborhoods.         “We          got          together          in         groups          of          five,          divided          up         areas          and          competed         against          each          other          to          see         who          could          make          the          most         money,  ’          said          Karlberg.         “It          was          really          exciting         because          we          were          compet-         ing          with          two          other          groups         in          town          that          we          didn’t         know          about,”’          she          said.         ‘Besides,          it          gave          us          a         chance          to          trick-or-treat,         which          some          of          us          haven’t         done          since          we          were          little         kids.”         While         the          Kappas         ED-hopping          on          the          field         behind          the          Aipha          Chi         Omega          sorority,          Kappa          Sigma         members          Mark          White,          George         Parisot,          Chris          Brown,          John         Gallagher          and          Ken          Marlow         listen          for          the          whistle          signaling         the          start          of          the          Greek          Week         mattress          race.          (Dahiquist)         ,O          A          xX         AAA         THE          ART          OF          PLAYING          AROUND         wanted          new          pledges          and         donations,          the          men          of         KAPPA          SIGMA          said         they          just          wanted          to          have         fun.         According          to          Kelly         O'Neil,          the          Kappa          Sigma         Basketball          Marathon          for         the          Mountain          States         Tumor          Institute          provided         the          perfect          forum.         “It          went          over          really         well          and          was          successful, ”’         he          said.          We          had          a          lot          of         participants,          too.””         Playing          in          the          tourna-         ment          were          registered         teams          from          campus          living         groups,          the          theater          arts         department          and          the          ath-         letic          department.         Teams          paid          $25          to          par-         ticipate          in          the          24-hour         tournament.          Proceeds         from          the          event          were          used         for          medical          research.         In          December,          the          Kap-         pa          Sigs          wanted          to          do         some          research          of          their         9)         fi.          A”         +          A         own.          This          time,          they          were         looking          back          through         house          photo          albums          to         find          out          more          about          what         O'Neil          called          ‘‘the          oldest         party          on          campus.”’         About          75          years          ago,         when          members          lived          on         Almon          Street,          they          had         an          exchange          with          the         women          of          Gamma          Phi         Beta.          According          to         O'Neil,          once          the          women         arrived,          they          were         ‘ocked-up”’          in          the          house         for          12          hours.         Three-quarters          of          a         century          later,          members         rounded          up          a          posse          to         capture          participants          for         another          12-hour          party.         And          whether          their         guests          wanted          to          or          not,         they          too          were          locked-up         for          a          half          day          of          fun,         thanks          to          a          ‘“‘washed          out”’         bridge          in          front          of          the         house,          O’          Neil          said.         KAPPA          KAPPA          GAMMA.          Front          Row:          Mitzi          Parkins,          Cathy          Limbaugh,          git          Sed          Jeanie         Winnett,          Dori          Peck,          Chris          Carter,          Heather          Johnson.         Second          Row:          Jill          Robison,          Jaime          Bariow,          Molly         Glazier,          Kimberly          Oliver,          Kristin          Myers,          Ann          Ferries,          Kris          Erwin,          Barbi          Rawlings,          Michelle          Knox,          Bobbi         Purdy.          Third          Row:          Michelle         McGinnis,          Marnie          Anderson,          Laura          Hall,          Julie          Robideux,          Stacy          McMurray,          Tina         Kalyn          Kariberg,          Mimi          Hall,          Julie          Zanot,          Brenda          Reuter,          Andrea          Amone,          Beth          Ann         Luisa          Jaca,          Cindy          Keliner,          Annalisa          Moore,         Vicki          Renfrow,          Monique          Carroll,          Judy          Kleffner,          Kim          Privett,          Becky         Kelley          Sims,         Dilorio,          Lisa          Crane,          Linda          Akers,          Workland,          Maureen         ht.          Fourth          Row:         Romaszka,         Helen          Jackson.          Back          Row:          Kelley          Keogh,          Jill          Pagano,         Robideaux,          Nola          Pollock,          Whitney         Hoffman,          Betsy          Havey,          Erin          Fanning,          Merry          Parisotto,          Janet          Kelly,          Ann          Mires,          Becky          Guenther.         .         To         KAPPA          SIGMA.          Front          Row:          Mark          White,          Hank          Lim,          George          White,          Darrell          Kilgore,          George          Parisot.         Second          Row:          Russ          Claflin,          Dennis          Schaffner,          Chris          Laraway,          Dave          Edson,          Ed          Parsons,          Chad          Piquet,         Chris          Heistrom,          Kelly          Stepp.          Third          Row:          Drew          Davies,          John          Gallagher,          Chris          Brown,          Bill          Hendrick-         son,          Doug          Fiess,          Troy          McDonald,          Kelly          O'Neil,          Mike          Rourke,          Rex          Moore.          Back          Row:          Craig          Derrick,         Joe          Pachner,          Rob          McEwan,          Rod          Hall,          Kerry          Gowland,          John          Barrutia,          John          Wilson,          Dave          Wagers,          Jim         Bockenstette,          Scott          McBride,          Pat          Trueba,          Gavin          Lewis,          Sam          Johnson.         -          y,          P          Avy          ry’          mt          Uy;         K          Kp         STREET          dance          in          front          of         their          house          kept          Kappa         Kappa          Gamma          sorority          mem-         bers          and          new          pledges          on          their         toes          as          they          celebrated          the         conclusion          of          women's          rush.         (Spiker)         ILVER          and          gold          streamers,         a          few          dozen          balioons          and         ae          huge          ‘Go,          Vandals,          Go  ’         poster          decorated          the          outside         of          the          Kappa          house          during         Homecoming.          Pledge          Mitzi         Parkins          spent          an          hour          wrap-         ping          crepe          paper          around         banisters.          (Synder)         He                   a         Kappa          Sigma          161                  ae,         =         poked         1          a         =         aa         Q2          REPARATIONS          for          Home-          S          part          of          a          six-member         coming          kept          Phi          Gamma          team,          Ken          Pratt          and          Chris         Be          Delta          member          Brendan          Arm-          Nichols          downed          tall          glasses          of         strong          and          Delta          Gamma          Deb-          milk          and          helped          the          Phi          Taus         bie          Clayville          busy          decorating          place          first          in          the          Greek          Week         the          Fiji          house,          (Synder)}          chug-off.          (Jones)         q          HI          Gamma          Delta          members         Scott          Bowles          and          Brian         Andres          found          laying          out          on         their          front          patio          in          the          warm         %          April          sun          more          pleasant          than         °          studying          for          classes.          (Fritz)         PH!          GAMMA          DELTA.          Front          Row:          Brent          Sisco,          Darren          Crow,          Mike          DiLorenzo,          Mike          Kuntz,          Richard         Steckler,          Rob          Hursh,          Tom          Bonasera,          Brad          Schaffer.          Second          Row:          Todd          Smith,          Eric          DeBord,          Scott         Johnston,          Ryan          Clayeux,          Mike          Gray,          Andy          Stibal,          Brian          Hobson,          Jeff          Esser,          Andrew          Rice,          Nick          Sewell,         A          Eric          Watson,          Tim          McKinley,          Todd          Armstrong,          Dean          Pierose,          Bryan          Dingel,          Steve          Peila,          Peter          Moloney,         sh          Juan          Butler,          Dave          Ward,          Pat          Hauge,          Tom          Barber,          Kevin          Kleinkopf,          Scott          Robinson,          Back          Row:          Bren-         dan          Armstrong,          Jeff          Walker,          Robert          Copyak,          Tom          Green,          Matt          Robinette,          Matt          DiLorenzo,          Brian          Andres,         Kelsey          Aldrich,          Dave          Hanchett,          Matt          Gustavel,          Steve          McCallie,          Steven          Graff,          Thane          Liffick,          David          An-         derson,          Shane          Peterson,          Scott          Bowles,          Robert          Larson,          Thad          Pike.         =          Ss          ..O°          2.          @,           ,          3          cl          ——         4         4                     .          J          |          :          a         162          Phi          Gamma          Delta          _          M          i          —_          i          Ax          M          x         a                    BY          RK          ee         =         IRACLES         M          don’t          come         easy.          And         most          of          the          time,          they         don’t          come          at          all,         For          the          men          of          PHI         GAMMA          DELTA,         however,          the          year          could         be          characterized          as          some-         what          miraculous.         Before          rush          began,          car-         pet          layers          and          repairmen         were          busy          helping          house         members          complete          reno-         vations.          Spending          nearly         $70,000,          the          chapter         remodeled          their          living         room          and          kitchen,          and          set         up          a          new          computer          sys-         tem.          Later          in          the          fall,          they         replaced          part          of          the          chap-         ter          house          roof.         “It’s          the          first          phase          of         what          we          hope          to          be          an         ongoing          renovation          of          the         old          section,’’          said          mem-         ber          Keith          Nyberg.         Besides          physical          reno-         vations,          the          chapter          was         PHI          KAPPA          TAU.          Front          Row:          Alan          Rast,          Curt          Housley,          Dave          Churchman,          Ken          Pratt,          Chris          Nichols,         Marlin          Roberts.          Back          Row:          Tim          Chatburn,          Lance          Bethke,          Paul          Saiskov,          Brian          Rast,          Todd          Bailey,          Dan         Vaught,          Brent          McClure,          Mark          Pratt.         involved          in          improving         campus          and          community         service.          For          their          efforts,         they          were          recognized          na-         tionally,          placing          third          for         the          prestigious          Phi          Gam-         ma          Delta          Cheney          Cup.         We          have          had          a          Figi          as         Homecoming          chairman         for          the          last          four          years,”          said          member          Andy          Rice.         ““We          have          an          ASUI          sena-         tor,          the          president          of          Blue         Key,          and          even          a          Rhodes         Scholar          finalist.  ’         In          April,          the          university         honored          Phi          Gamma          Del-         ta          by          giving          it          the          frater-         nity          Chapter          Excellence         Award.         Less          than          two          blocks         away,          miracles          were          hap-         pening          on          Idaho          Street.         On          a          campus          that          has          al-         ready          seen          two          Greek         houses          close          down          in          two         years,          the          11          men          of          PHI         KAPPA          TAU          have         managed          to          keep           their         DK         §2          I]          .          3          Some          KIND          OF          WONDERFUL          _         doors          open.          And          they          say         they          couldn’t          be          more          T         proud,         We          had          probably          one         of          the          most          successful         rushes          for          our          house          since         1974,”’          said          President          Ken         Pratt.          ‘‘We          got          11          pledges         and          retained          seven.         That’s          outstanding,          con-         sidering          we          had          two          guys                   rushing          this          summer          and         six          coming          back.”         Pratt          attributed          this         success          in          part          to          rules         that          banned          serving          alco-         hol          during          rush.         Low          numbers          didn’t         stop          the          Phi          Taus          from         earning          a          Greek          Week         participation          trophy,         either.         They          won          the          award          by         participating          in          every          |                    Greek          Week          event.          And,         Pratt          said,          for          a          house         with          1]          members,          that’s          a          %         small          miracle.         OR          their          dance,         '49er          Fling,’’          Phi          Kappa         Tau          members          transformed         their          chapter          house          into          ‘‘Fort         Phi          Tau.’’          Members          Dave         Churchman,          Tim          Chatburn         and          Lance          Bethke          put          the         finishing          touches          on          the          deco-         rations.          (Dahiquist)          -         ‘1         af         Si         A         N         ye          Fie         Phi          Kappa          Tau          163         |         “          s          rT         Mi          P         g          KEEPING          UNDER          CONTROL         Bd         M         HEY          didn’t          want         to          return          it.          The         Greek          Week         trophy          was          one          of          the          lar-         gest          on          campus,          so          the         women          of          PI          BETA          PHI         decided          to          win          it          for          a          se-         cond          year          in          a          row.         According          to          Stacey         Johnson,          house          presi-         dent,          the          Pi          Phis          earned         extra          points          at          the         songfest.         ‘We          had          five          women         from          our          house          and          five         guys          from          the          Phi          Delts         do          a          Broadway          medley,         and          we          ended          up          winning         first          place          for          the          event,”’         she          said.         After          Greek          Week         competitions          were          over,         women          from          the          house         continued          working          with         the          men          of          Phi          Delta          The-         ta          to          rack          up          awards.         The          Pi          Phi          pledge          class         won          a          special          trophy          at         the          Phi          Delt’s          Turtle          Der-         by          for          collecting          dona-         REPARING          to          pull          with          all         their          might,          Pi          Beta          Phi         members          Jennifer          Copeland         and          Kim          Kennedy          tighten          their         grip          on          the          Greek          Week          tug-of-         war          rope.          The          Pi          Phis          placed         fourth          in          the          Wednesday          April         1          event          held          on          the          Adminis-         tration          Lawn.          (Dahiquist)         cs          RB         4          164          Pi          Beta          Phi          ,         ATA          D         rm         tions          for          Meals         Wheels.         ““We’ve          raised          the          most         money          for          the          Phi          Delt         philanthropy          every          year         on         they’ve          done          this,’’          John-         son          said.         While          the          Pi          Phis         worked          hard          to          keep         trophies,          the          men          of          PI         KAPPA          ALPHA          made         little          effort          to          win.         Imagine          getting         psyched          up          for          a          tough         intramural          basketball         match,          just          to          have          the         other          team          purposely          try         to          lose?         That’s          what          the          Pike         team          did          to          their          oppo-         nents.          Known          as          the          ‘‘B-         Bombers,’’          team          mem-         bers          lost          every          game          they         played          for          the          eighth          con-         secutive          season.          And          they         kept          on          smiling.         They          loved          it,’’          said         Andy          Keys,          house          presi-         dent.          ‘‘All          they          did           was         go          out          there          and          have          a         ve          OAL         —         O                    A         J         .          ;          T         vn          l         5         Sued         good          time.         ‘ That          kind          of          annoys         the          people          they          play,         though,’’          he          said.         According          to          Keys,          the         Pikes          had          a          more          success-         ful          volleyball          team.          After         spiking          their          way          into          the         intramural          championship         tournament,          they          won         first          place.         Off          the          playing          field,         the          men          of          Pi          Kappa          Al-         pha          also          showed          determi-         nation,          Keys          said.         The          day          after          a          sleeping         porch          fire          caused          thou-         sands          of          dollars          damage         to          their          house’s          third         floor,          the          Pikes          recovered         their          possessions          and         regrouped          for          their          ‘‘Joe         Bonats          Campout.”’         The          camping          trip,          the         location          of          which          is          kept         a          secret,          gave          house          mem-         bers          the          chance          to          get         away          from          the          fire          and         think          more          clearly,          Keys         said.         Pl          BETA          PHI.          Front          Row:          Jenifer          Olness,          Diana          Daniels,          Khris          Bershers,          Cindy          Chase,          Jennifer         Smith,          Annette          Knox,          Tracie          Manning.          Second          Row:          Stefanie          Bistline,          Eva          Hallvik,          Ann          Bennett,          Ka-         thy          Gillhoover,          Andrea          Noland,          Lori          Frey,          Dawne          Talbott,          Diane          Fredericks.          Third          Row:          Cathleen          Mac-         Gregor,          Patty          Powell,          Teresa          Runge,          Leslie          Pierose,          Debbie          Wold,          Katie          Overholser,          Mikki          Schini,         Michelle          Rimel,          Jodi          Carpenter,          Mechelle          Uren.          Back          Row:          Kim          Beck,          Lisa          Haas,          Lori          Bennett,          Peggy         Caron,          Cathy          Dick,          Brenda          Walker,          Molly          Williams,          Teri          Stokes,          Jill          Daubert,          Mary          Kay          Green,          Laurie         Hustoft,          Jill          Hill,          Melinda          McCabe,          Jody          Wagner,          Tina          Browning,          Marci          Swindell.         cD                                        r          LA          M         oot!          i          K}         x          a          1          r          -                    AS          se          K          K          A          ay         ITH          a          loaner          from          the         Moscow          Fire          Depart-         ment,          Pi          Kappa          Alpha          mem-         bers          like          Russ          Stevens          and         Mike          Miller          rode          atop          a          shi-         ny          red          fire          truck          for          the         Homecoming          parade.          Seven         months          later,          on          May          2,          Pike         members          were          in          need          of         more          assistance          from          the          fire         department          when          a          blaze          des-         troyed          nearly          one-third          of          their         chapter          house.          (O'Bryan)         1          Phis          Patti          Powell,          Sandy         Gillette,          Lori          Frey,          Missy         Tomjack,          Jennifer          Copeland         and          Lisa          Haas          await          the         results          of          the          Phi          Delta          Theta         Turtle          Derby.          (Dahiquist)         Pl          KAPPA          ALPHA.          Front          Row:          Chad          Slaybaugh,          Kent          Miller,          Brian          Merz.          Second          Row:          Eric         Hilierns,          Bryan          Ropp,          Mitch          Ramsey,          Vern          Shea,          Shawn          Knight,          Enrico          Gonzales,          Kevin          Cornwell.         Third          Row:          Dave          Chehey,          Steve          Colwell,          Jeff          Loveng,          Teresa          Runge,          Fred          LeClair,          Mike          Mitchell,         Tor          Owre.          Fourth          Row:          Tom          Ouren,          Kirt          Brown,          John          Lydrikson,          Russ          Stevens,          Bryan          Riggers.          Back         Row:          Mike          Niederauer,          Phil          Boyd,          Spade          Howland,          Dewey          Haeder.          Bob          Jones,          Jeffrey          Hill,          John          De-         lay,          Jim          Henderson,          Paul          Nordby,          Rob          Lumsden.         ()          )          ;          P          ©          a          B          —          r          We          ‘          L          gio          Alpha          ;         :          THE          SECRETS          TO          SUCCESS         pb         ees         M         A         N         me         ©)         a!         =         a          166          Sigma          Alpha          Epsilon         ih         rr         HAT          was          the         secret          of          SIG-         MA          ALPHA         EPSILON’s          success?         Perhaps          it          was          con-         sistency.         ‘“ We          won          intramurals         again          this          year,’’          said         President          Sean          Wall,         ‘not          because          we          won          a         lot          of          events,          but          because         we          consistently          partici-         pate          and          sometimes          place         second          or          third.          Those         points          really          add          up.  ’         The          annual          SAE          Olym-         pics          was          again          consistent-         ly          spectacular,          Wall          said.         Two          torch          bearers          that         opened          the          ceremonies          by         escorting          sorority          compe-         titors          to          the          SAE          house         nearly          lit          up          a          few          trees         along          the          way,          but          made         it          back          to          the          house         safely.         Wall          said          the          SAEs          be-         lieve          so          much          in          con-         sistency          that          they          decided         to          help          instill          their          tradi-         tions          on          youngsters.         “We've          taken          on          a                   .          si          ’         —          ATS          p         Cub          Scout          troop,’’          said         Wall.          ‘Our          downstairs         has          become          a          kind          of          a         den.          Since          we          have          four         Eagle          Scouts          already          in         the          house          as          members,         we've          been          able          to          use         their          experience.’”’         For          their          efforts          with         the          scouting          troops,          the         SAEs          received          the          frater-         nity          Public          Relations         Award,          However,          they         had          to          share          the          honor         with          the          SIGMA          CHI         fraternity,          which          started         the          scout          sponsorship.         ““We          saw          the          Moscow         scouting          program          some-         thing          worthwhile          to          in-         volve          ourselves          with,”’         said          Geoff          Brown,          Sigma         Chi          president.          ‘‘We          were         the          first          to          get          started         with          it,          and          were          very         proud          other          fraternities         have          followed          our          lead.”’         Aside          from          campus         honors,          the          fraternity         received          consistent          atten-         tion          from          their          interna-         tional          headquarters.          Two         VJ         weeks          before          school          start-         ed,          former          house          Presi-         dent          Mike          Trail          received         the          Balfour          Award          during         the          fraternity’s          leadership         workshop.         “Only          one          graduating         senior          from          all          197          Sig         chapters          in          the          U.S.          and         Canada          receives          the         award,’’          Brown          said.         From          athletic          competi-         tions          to          international         awards,          the          men          of          Sigma         Alpha          Epsilon          and          Sigma         Chi          proved          they          knew          the         secret          to          success.         RESSED          down          for          the         ““Deck-a-Sig’’          contest          dur-         ing          Sigma          Chi          Derby          Days,         pledge          Brian          Houlihan          and         Delta          Gamma          Kari          Cline          dis-         cuss          the          competition.          Funds         raised          from          the          event          when          to         the          Cleo          Wallace          Center          in         Colorado.          (Moore)         N          intense          but          friendly         game          of          volleyball          bet-         ween          SAE          members          and         prospective          pledges          kept          the         men          entertained          and          out          in          the         sun          during          Thursday          after-         noon          of          men’s          rush.          (Hayes)         FF          and          running,          SAE         Chad          Cooper          hands          the         baton          to          Jess          Spencer          in          the         mile          relay          race          during          the         Gamma          Phi          Track          Attack.          The         SAEs          won          the          meet.          (O'Bryan)         SIGMA          ALPHA          EPSILON.          Front          Row:          Stacy          Ivie,          Mike         ,          Shane          Jeffries,          Nick          Haight,          Scott          Benson,          Dan          Roe,          Dar-         ren          Sarver,          Second          Row:          Todd          Burns,          Jim          Dunn,          Dave          Stock,          Gregg         Higgins,          Scott          Sparrell,          Steve          Farley,          Bob          Vance,          Brett          Drummond,         Sean          Wail,          Art          Eccies,          Kevin          Moore.          Third          Row:          Mike          Wright,          Doug         Richards,          Bob          Founds,          Ritchie          Thurston,          Terry          Uda,          Dave          Bouch,         Lonnie          Lindquist,          Tim          Beukelman,          Pete          Richards,          Andy          Zachary,         Chad          Cooper,          Jeff          Bergdorf,          Brent          Heikkila,          Craig          Dowdy.          Back         Row:          Mat          Roy,          Jess          Spencer,          Mike          Nevin,          Devin          Dufenhorst,          James         Aliman,          Rick          Sherwood,          Grant          Kimball,          Michael          Neary,          John          Arnold,         Todd          Hoiness,          Mark          SerVoss,          John          Kendall.         SIGMA          CHI.          Front          Row:          Brent          Mullins,          Ray          Sutton,          Dean          Fuller,          Mike          McKinney,          Tracy          Scott,          Paul         AlLee.          Second          Row:          Andrew          Arnot,          Paul          Greenwood,          Brian          Allen,          Kevin          Holman,          John          Eidam,          Tedd         Adams,          Benjamin          Prohaska,          John          Hodges,          Ken          Fate.          Third          Row:          Mike          Trail,          Dan          Eidam,          Tom          Scrupps,         Brad          Drussel,          Jerry          Mooney,          Phil          Robinson,          Will          Greene,          Jerry          Skinner,          Jeff          Kernold,          Ted          Mabbatt,         Roger          Trail,          Dayne          Steed,          Jon          Erickson.          Back          Row:          Will          Neal,          Ray          Bolen,          Jeff          Dood,          Darry          Jacquot,         Ps          Dodd,          Brian          Houlihan,          Geoff          Brown,          Doug          Gibson,          Scott          Pyrah,          Arie          Friling,          Chris          Wuthrich,          Todd         hipman.         V7         Pn         oO         b          |         ——         tony         S         +         B          A          u          7          Y          |          Sigma          Chi          167         Pp         wy          ©         |          p         a          THE         M         SIDELINE          SIDE          STEPPERS         Oe.         7          Jie          ask          Mark         Ye          Spitz          or          Frank         Shorter;          there          are         M          some          people          who          aren’t         happy          with          being          on          the         sidelines          or          watching          the         “ Wide          World          of          Sports.”         These          individuals          don’t         a          want          to          be          scorekeepers.         A          Instead,          they          want          to          rack         up          participation          points.         Members          of          Sigma          Nu         and          Tau          Kappa          Epsilon         shared          this          philosophy.         Instead          of          acting          as          spec-         tators,          they          became         Fa          sportsmen,          running          the         aks          bases          and          running          on          Ida-         ho          highways.         As          students          were          read-         justing          to          attending          class-         es          after          a          three-month         summer          break,          the          men         of          SIGMA          NU          were         swinging          bats          and          sliding         into          bags          during          the          Sig-         ma          Nu-Beta          Theta          Pi         Softball          Marathon.         During          the          48-hour         game,          the          old          Greek          Row         contenders          raised          $3,000         for          Stepping          Stones          Inc.,         a          regional          charity          for          the         handicapped          and         disabled.         The          weekend          event          be-         gan          at          noon          Friday          when         Richard          Gibb,          university         president,          and          Terry         Armstrong,          assistant          to         the          president,          served          as         honorary          captains.          They         tossed          the          first          pitches          to         yells          of          ‘play          ball’’          from         the          assembled          crowd.         The          cheers          died          out         quickly,          however,          as          ac-         cumulating          rain          clouds         drenched          the          evening’s         festivities.          The          drizzle         continued          off          and          on         throughout          the          rest          of          the         competition.          Rain          fell          as         the          game          ended          Sunday         afternoon.         The          score?          The          Betas         beat          the          Sigma          Nus,         429-352.         The          university          football         team          had          a          score          of          its         own          to          settle          later          in          the         fall,          and          the          men          of          TAU         KAPPA          EPSILON          were         there          to          offer          support.         As          the          last          football         game          of          the          regular          sea-         son,          the          Vandals          had          a         winning          streak          to          uphold         against          their          Boise          State         University          rivals.          While         Moscow          students          brought         a          desire          for          a          fifth          victo-         SIGMA          NU.          Front          Row:          Eric          Fotinatos,          Brian          Pollard,          Paul          Bias,         Stephenson,          Jeff          Runge,          Tom          Amzen,          David          Blas,          Sean          Cher-         ry,          Kelly          Grief,          Ralph          Shawver.          Second          Row:          Mike          Sabin,          Duffy          Da-         vies,          Whitney          Davey,          Mike          Dodge.          David          VanBuren,          Dale          Renfrow,         Jimmy          Vo,          Carl          Backlund,          Steve          Zimmerly,          Craig          Smith.          Third          Row:         Bubba          Kinkaid,          Jarred          Blankenship,          Tom          Cahill,          David          Mahan,          Alan         Ahischiager,          Jeff          Hennig,          David          Gorringe,          Michael          Britton,          Jack         Meeitoff,          Jon          Areitio,          Ben          Dover,          John          Swallow,          Kim          Cannon,          Mike         Schodde,          Mark          Blas.          Back          Row:          Eric          Miller,          Tom          Sabin,          Joe          Mallet,         David          Fisher,          Max          Downing,          Tim          Vaughan,          Dan          Goff,          Rob          Stoichett,         Darren          Curtis,          Doug          Favor,          Wes          Stanaway,          Mike          Ealy,          Todd          Mur-         phy,          David          Thielges,          Greg          Himes,          Tom          Nards.         4          168          Sigma          Nu          ;          :          MW                   ry          in          the          row,          the          men          of         Tau          Kappa          _          Epsilon         brought          the          game          ball          —         on          foot,         Bloomsday          was          noth-         ing          compared          to          the         300-mile          jog          the          Tekes         had          in          front          of          them          from         Moscow          to          Boise.          They         embarked          on          Highway          95         to          Lewiston          Thursday         evening          as          dusk          set          in.         The          run          was          not          only         to          benefit          the          Vandals,         but          also          to          help          raise         money          for          the          Teke          na-         tional          philanthropy,         UNICEF,         Before          leaving,          mem-         bers          solicited          donations         from          Moscow          residents         and          businesses          for          each         mile          traveled          on          foot.         More          than          20          members         of          the          house          ran          in          the         event,          with          others          provid-         ing          vehicles          and          rest          facil-         ities          for          the          runners.         According          to          house          mem-         bers,          this          proved          impor-         tant          coming          down          the         Lewiston          grade          and          up         Horseshoe          Bend          hill.         Although          the          road          was         a          long          and          narrow          one,         the          Tekes          had          nothing          to         be          sad          about          in          Boise.         The          Vandals          beat          the         Broncos,          21-14.         Meanwhile,          back          in         Moscow,          the          Tekes          were         running          up          some          records         of          their          own.         For          the          fifth          year          in          a         row,          a          member          was         recognized          for          outstand-         ing          service          by          their          na-         tional          fraternity.         Nathan          Perry,          former         house          president,          was          one         of          only          eight          graduating         seniors          from          306          active         chapters          and          colonies          in         the          United          States          and         Canada          to          receive          the         Top          Teke          Award.         The          chapter          also          won         the          Outstanding          Alumni         Support          Award,          the         Alumni          Relations         Achievement          Award,          and         tied          for          the          New          Frontier         District          Top          Teke          Chap-         ter          Award.         EFORE          hitting          the          road          to         Boise          with          the          game          bail         for          the          Ul-Boise          State          Univer-         sity          matchup,          Tekes          Pat          Col-         lins          and          Dean          Metzger          watch         President          Richard          Gibb          sign         the          special          delivery          pigskin.         (Spiker)         Mw         8)          |          oe}         zs          Ber          .          .          P         A,          4          Eo         4                   I          p         x          82          —         IGMA          Nu          Joe          Travis          hits          a         fly          ball          into          left          field          dur-         ing          the          early          hours          of          the          Sig-          K         ma          Nu-Beta          Theta          Pi          Softball         Marathon.          The          Betas          won          the         48-hour          battle,          429          to          352.         (Dahiquist)                  (yy         RACING          himself          for          the           A          4         Greek          Week          tug-of-war,         Rob          Stoicheff          tries          to          pull          the          Sigma          Nus          to          a          victory          over          the          £         Delta          Chis.          After          a          few          minutes          |         of          tugging,          the          Delta          Chis         managed          to          pull          the          Sigma         Nus          past          the          marker          and          win          N         the          event.          (Dahlquist)         Ma          KAPPA          EPSILON.          Front          Row:          Brett          mye          ech          Pat          Col-         s,          Dave          Simon,          Rob          Hash,          Paul          Tissue,          Mike          Gotch,          Second          Row:         tas          prot          Ray          Heida,          Gari          Reeb,          Dave          Conn,          Seton          Foster,          Hans          “         Weger,          Derek          Flynn,          Jim          Robertson,          Back          Row:          Dan          Jennings,          Dean          2          ’         ||          Metzger,          Mike          Kelley,          Kim          Munson,          Dan          Hanes,          Bill          Thomas,          Bra-         dy          Nieder,          Matt          Walo,          Scott          Hammons.         ;          —          «ALY          .          2          K                   H          M          O          ay          o,          Kp          f          1          :          S          |         Pw          P          A          B          7A                     Y          Tau          Kappa          Epsilon          169         Sd          X          .          p          a0          al          Wr          A          L                    n         (aed          .          |         IGHT          on          target,          Brett         Turley          and          Eric          Boyer          of         Borah          Hall          practice          axe          throw-         ing          during          the          hall’s          annual         pig          roast          held          at          Laird          Park.         The          May          2          event          was          attend-         ed          by          more          than          50          residents,         Carter          Hail          little          sisters          and         friends.          (Dahiquist)         ITH          clothes          in          hand,         Theta          Chi          Shon          Parks         makes          the          move          from          one         chapter          house          to          another.          The         new          Theta          Chi          structure          cost         nearly          $745,000          and          took          nine         months          to          build.          (Dahiquist)         efore          the          start          of          each         Vandal          athletic          competi-         tion,          spectators          like          Dave          Bar-         ton,          Jenifer          Cutler,          Becky          Bet-         tinger          and          Shawn          Johnson         covered          their          hearts          and          ad-         mired          ‘‘Old          Glory.  ’          (Hayes)         =          Sf          i.         THETA          CHI.          Front          Row:          Dave          Barton,          Shon          Parks,          John          Kumm,         David          Pierik,          Lyle          Martindale,          Louie          Fitzgerald.          Second          Row:          Dan         LaFoe,          Tad          Peterson,          Elwin          Grout,          Shawn          Johnson,          Brian          Mathis,         Scott          Freiburger,          Zimri          Moore.          Back          Row:          Nathan          Dallolio,          Keith         Hoene,          Jon          Laird,          Skosh          Berwald,          Mike          Mick,          Chris          Able,          Mark         Sams,          Mac          Brandon,          Drew          Yoder         110          eta          coi         10         437         NEw          Guys          ON          THE          BLOCK         OVING          every-         thing          in          the         dead          of          winter         can          be          like          a          bad          dream.         And          for          the          men          of          THE-         TA          CHI,          the          move          be-         came          a          week          long         nightmare          on          Elm          Street         —          620          Elm          Street,          that          is.         Before          the          move          actu-         ally          occured,          members         recruited          13          men,          swelling         the          size          of          the          pledge          class         from          seven          to          20.         According          to          Dave         Barton,          house          president,         this          caused          slight          living         difficulties          prior          to          mov-         ing          into          their           new          and         larger          home.         ‘ Because          our          old         house          couldn’t          accommo-         date          as          many          as          37          pco-         ple,          it          was          uncomfortable         for          some          guys          since          they         had          to          sleep          in          the          living         room,”’          he          said,          ‘‘For-         tunately,          our          new          house         can          hold          enough          people         so          our          chapter          member-         ship          will          never          go          below         40          men.”’         Construction          on          their         new          chapter          house          was         completed          the          final          week         of          January.          Barton          said         members          stumbled          back         and          forth          between          their         new          house,          carrying         things          like          stereos,          com-         puters          and          gigantic          boxes         of          clothing.         To          celebrate          their         move,          the          37          inhabitants         held          an          open          house          bash         on          January          31.          Nearly         350          people,          including         several          university          officals,         toured          the          new          building,         Barton          said.         In          addition,          a          formal         dedication          was          held          on         April          4.          On          hand          were         Theta          Chi          national          Presi-         dent          George          T.          Kilivos,         university          President         Richard          Gibb          and          other         officials.         Barton          felt          strongly         that          the          new          house          got         people’s          attention,          there-         by          attracting          new          people         to          join.         “People          didn’t          pledge         Theta          Chi          just          because          of         the          new          house.          They         came          here          because          they         like          the          guys          here.          The         house          simply          got          us          no-         ticed,’’          he          said.         While          the          Theta          Chis         recovered          from          moving,         the          men          of          BORAH         HALL          were          handling          a         nightmare          of          their          own.         Imagine          yourself          in          a         room,          watching          Julia         Child          prepare          your          dinner         with          a          blowtorch.          Wel-         come          to          the          ‘‘Happy         Kitchen          Show,’’          where         the          Borah          Hall          Happy         Chef          fixes          your          very          own         GDI          Week          meals          with          the         Vandalmatic,          the          biggest         sledgehammer          you          have         ever          seen.         The          skit          won          first          place         for          the          Borah          team,          and         helped          the          hall          to          eventu-         ally          take          first          place          over-         all          for          GDI          Week.          Hall         members          chugged          beers,         tossed          kegs,          and          dragged         opposing          tug-of-war         teams          past          the          marker          to         sweet          victory          for          a          second         year          in          a          row.         For          their          efforts,          they         won          a          shared          cruise          on         Lake          Coeur          d’Alene         Victory,          however,          did         not          come          at          all,          much          less         sweetly,          in          their          annual         Softball          Tournament         benefiting          Child          Find,          an         organization          that          locates         missing          children.         “ We          were          right          there          in         the          cellar,’’          said          Mark         McMulkin,          hall          presi-         dent.          ‘‘We          haven’t          wona         game          in          the          three          years         we've          done          this.”’         —__ -4—         PEOPLE          didn’t          pledge         Theta          Chi          just          because         of          the          new          house.         -          Dave          Barton         —bo—.         BORAH          HALL.          Front          Row:          John          Bischoff,          Dave          Price,          Darin         Spalinger,          Steve          Adolph,          Brad          Pollard,          Kevin          Warner,          Doug          John-         son,          Brad          Backlin         Cary          Nukaya,          Steve          Frisble.          Second          Row:          Toha         Hasan,          Will          Stratton,          Mike          Fleming,          Ray          Horton,          Bart          Bowne,          Tra-         cy          Gudgel,          Mike          Carlson,          Russ          Braymer,          Scott          Strobl,          John          Emig,         Will          Halstud,          Sam          Biby,          Sammy          Nishex,          Mike          Green,          Bob          Stratton,         Bruce          Hedemark.          Back          Row:          Robert          O'Malley,          Steve          Lee,          Mark         Amick,          Dallas          Crandall,          Mike          Dinneen,          Jeff          Miller,          Eric          Askerman,         Eric          Boyer,          Eric          Remaley,          Jason          Woodie,          Vern          Hansen,          Robert         Kovaleski,          Bruce          Chinich,          Brian          Kirkland,          Dan          Akins,          James          Show-         ers,          Mark          McMulkin,          Casey          Gudgel,          Kevin          Graf,         4         3         “ua          230         o         7         127         6         DRIVEN          By          A          FEW          DEGREES         EMPERATURES         were          below          freez-         ing          in          November,         but          for          the          women          of         CAMPBELL          HALL,         things          were          heating          up.         After          spending          what         seemed          like          hours          on          a         bumpy          bus          ride,          the         women          arrived          at          their         vacation          destination.          Ac-         cording          to          Lisa          Overman,         hall          social          chairman,          a         North          Idaho          ski          night         provided          an          exciting         break.         ‘It          was          new          and          differ-         ent,’’          she          said.          ‘No          one         else          rented          North          South         Ski          Bowl          for          a          party.”’         For          one          night          in         November          the          hot          tubs,         dance          floor          and          hospital-         ity          of          North          South          Ski         Bowl          became          the          winter         playland          for          nearly          all          of         the          70          members          of          Camp-         bell          Hall          and          their          ‘Screw         Your          Roommate’’          dates.         ‘Everything          just          came         together          that          night,’’         PRIL          25,          Virginia          Porteus         danced          with          Joe          Venkus         during          Campbell          Hall's          semi-         formal          ‘‘Screw          Your          Room-         mate          Ball.'’          Party-goers          aiso         stood          under          pink,          blue          and         white          streamers          while          much-         ing          on          catered          hors          d’oevres.         (Blair)         Overman          said.          “‘It          was         neat          to          get          out          of          Moscow         and          nobody          got          out          of         hand,          We          just          had          fun.”’         Back          on          campus,          the         women          of          Campbell         showed          National          Student         Exchange          students          Ginny         Porteus,          Jane          Scheer,         Sara          Thompson          and          Hol-         ly          Hankins          what          life          at         Idaho          was          all          about.         Chilly          mud          football         games          during          autumn         downpours          and          early         morning          ‘‘Welcome          to         Campbell          Hall’’          showers         were          mandatory          events         for          new          hall          members,         Overman          said.         The          temperature          was         also          rising          quite          a          few         degrees          on          CARTER         HALL.         In          an          effort          to          update         their          academic          standards,         Carter          members          placed         individual          ‘‘temperature         gauges’’          on          their          doors          to         monitor          in          degrees          the         test          scores          individuals         received.          To          help          increase         the          heat,          they          also          reor-         ganized          their          test          files.         Temperatures          were          also         “hot’’          at          hall          exchanges         and          room          parties,          accord-         ing          to          Amy          Lewis,          hall         president.         We          have          a          great          time         together          and          we          have          hall         happy          hours          and          par-         ties,’’          she          said.         Happy          hours          included         munchies          and          drinks          pre-         pared          exclusively          for          hall         members.          The          parties         served          as          a          prefunction         before          athletic          games          and         other          parties          in          an          effort         to          unite          the          women          of          the         hall,          Lewis          said.         Other          popular          events         for          the          hall          included          a         Valentine’s          semi-formal         dance,          a          cruise          on          Lake         Coeur          d’Alene,          a          wake         for          the          19-year-old          drink-         ing          age,          and          ‘‘The          Soda         Pop          Sock          Hop          Screw         Your          Roommate          Party.”’         3         CAMPBELL          HALL.          Front          Row:          Pam          Schultz,          Jessica          Pelton,          Tamara          Schmidt,          Caria          Greenfield,         Dawn          Zebley,          Amy          Adams,          Becky          Wohischlege!.          Second          Row:          Heidi          Peterson,          Brenda          McKinnon,         Jennifer          Cornwell,          Whitney          Bolon,          Carolyn          Lee,          Ginny          Porteus,          Kim          Carpenter,          Wendie          McCurdy,         8          Julie          Morrisroe,          Melissa          Millard,          Joan          Pike.          Back          Row:          Lisa          Young,          Lisa          Holden,          Gail          Strawn,          Wendy         7          McCormick,          Tina          Ruffing,          Jane          Scheer,          Sara          Thompson,          Jackie          Foggia,          Caroline          Masar,          Karen          Reil,         Carrie          Holman,          Susan          Paider,          Shawna          Lolley,          Kim          Coleman,          Kelli          Enterline.         429         eee          T         :          1          0         :                    08          f          A          sh          hh          nes          fe          ER          Bane         Xa)          ?          9          7          20            y          3          7         9          02          4          8          5         CARTER          HALL.          Front          Row:          Cami          Schultz,          Judy          Magonigle,          Trinity          Derr,          Lisa          Hughes,          Joan          Holup,         Kelli          Kast,          Michelle          Depeu,          Anna          Foreman,          Pam          Bartman.          Second          Row:          Joyce          Nouwens,          Amy          Lewis,         Barbara          Hill,          Kelli          Haroldsen,          Mary          Williams,          Cindy          Shurtliff,          Kim          Denham,          Lisa          Geaudreau,          Kim          Wil-         liams,          Jennifer          Koch,          Pam          Cromwell.          Third          Row:          Stuart          Davis,          Martha          Richards,          Candi          Bernhagen,         Molly          Provant,          Heather          Swan,          Connie          Hepworth,          Lynn          Pence,          Leanne          Mercy,          Mary          Lofstedt.          Back         Row:          Laurene          Holland,          Rita          Menard,          Kellie          Kuster,          Melanie          Butcher,          Chery!          Maiorana,          Liz          Hewitt,          Sandi         Selland,          Lesiie          Bischoff,          Donna          Villenueve,          Claudia          Callow,          Paulette          Davis,          Gina          Caldanaro.         PRING          temperatures          melt-         ed          the          snow,          giving          Chery!         Mariori,          Connie          Hepworth          and         Heather          Swan          a          dry          spot          to          sit         on.          The          Carter          Hall          women         rested          on          the          lawn          in          front          of         the          UCC          between          afternoon         classes.          (Dahlquist)         FTER          combing          city          dump-         sters          in          search          of          moving         boxes,          Campbell          Hall          resi-         dents          began          packing          up          for          a         May          16          moving          day.          Known          as         the          ‘Brady          Bunch’’          Heidi         Peterson,          Shelly          Press,          Melis-         sa          Milland,          Shirlee          Carbaugh,         Lisa          Holden          and          Brenda         McKinnon          get          down          to          work.         (Fritz)         Susan          Krajic          had          to          western         swing          with          each          other          during         the          spring          get-together.          (Fritz)         ETWEEN          dances,          Chris-         man          Hall          resident          Greg         Hare          mingles          wiih          Susie          Jack-         son          and          Melissa          Stansbury         during          the          March          28          Snow          Hall         Gault          Ball.  ’          (Dahiquist)         CHRISMAN          HALL.          Front          Row:          John          McOmber,          Ron          DeRoche         Salvador          Hurtado,          August          Cizmich,          Dan          Kurtz,          Steve          Szewc,          Rus         sell          Mills,          Dean          Inouye,          Second          Row:          Rich          Elsensohn,          Mario          Lar-         kin,          Scott          Nilson,          Mike          Crider,          Brian          Leffler,          John          Nelson,          Mike          Crow         Chris          Harris.          Back          Row:          James          Teave,          Gene          Breeding,          Jim          Had-         den,          Shawn          Bell,          Dan          Bauer,          Andy          Taylor,          Noel          Brevick,          Jeff          Hol         man,          Karl          Schweier,          Joe          Neumayer,          Eugene          Theriault,          Tom          Best         FORNEY          HALL.          Front          Row:          Bonita          Winkler,          Martha          Jackel,          Lisa          Loveday,          Kristin          Simeone,          Darla         Felton,          Christy          McNew,          Gaye          Beal,          Andrea          Martel.          Second          Row:          Trish          Loucks,          Suzanne          Brixen,          Michele         Pare,          Cindy          Drake,          Andrea          Harter,          Michelle          Spencer,          Sue          Baker,          Nikki          Harman,          Trudy          Ackley,          Tracy         Ringquist,          Christy          Cafterty.          Back          Row:          Carla          Morgan,          Shannon          Loveley,          Tina          Reid,          Shelley          Lane,          Kim         Schmidt,          Debbie          Nordin,          Tracy          Morgan,          Beth          Davis,          Susan          Franc,          Kristin          Kludt,          Lisa          Forsman,          Lodi         Sutton,          Paula          Engel,          Joyce          Webber,          Shannon          Brooks,          Cindy          Moore,          Cindy          Yarmamoto,          Lynda          Kain         Kerri          Scrivner         F          there          was          a          trophy         for          determination,         CHRISMAN          HALL         could          have          received          it,         along          with          the          other         awards          they          won          during         the          year.         “‘From          the          beginning         of          the          year          we          wanted          a         trophy,’’          said          Robert         Beers,          hall          president.         They          were          able          to          com-         plete          the          year          by          making         some          additions          to          their         showcase.         I          think          we          participat-         ed          in          everything,’’          said         hall          member          Shawn          Bell.         Capturing          the          in-         tramural          championship         accomplished          the          men’s         goal,          Bell          said.          They          also         broke          the          independent         men’s          hall          point          total         record.         ‘“‘We          destroyed          it,”’         said          Rob          Hindberg,          hall         intramural          manager.         Chrisman          members         thought          they          would          have         received          another          award          if         if          their          airband          had          not         been          dis qualified          during         GDI          Week,          Beers          said.         Performing          to          the         Robert          Palmer          hit          single,         Addicted          to          Love,”’          they         dressed          as          female          band         members,          while          a          female         friend          portrayed          Palmer.         Having          a          women          in          more         than          a          minor          role          result-         ed          in          a          their          disqualifica-         tion          from          the          event,          Beers         said.         Less          than          a          block          away         in          the          Theophilus          Tower,         the          women          of          FORNEY         HALL          said          they          were          de-         termined          to          improve         inner-hall          relations.         ‘ Hall          relations          are         what          I’m          most          proud         of,’’          said          Lynda          Kain,         hall          president.         “Every          year          around         Christmas          time,          we          have         our          Secret          Santa          Pro-         gram.          Everybody          gets          lit-         tle          gifts          and          messages         from          their          Santa,          like,         ‘Good          luck          on          your          fi-         DOWNRIGHT          DETERMINED         nals’          or          something.          It         really          draws          us          together,”’         she          said.         The          women          of          Forney         also          celebrated          with          two         special          ice          cream          socials.         We          set          up          a          bunch          of         different          kinds          of          ice         cream          and          a          few          top         pings,’’          Kain          said.         “Since          it’s          usually          a         Thursday          night,          we          all          get         together          and          watch          ‘The         Cosby          Show’          and          ‘Fami-         ly          Ties.’’’         This          is          not          to          say          that         Forney          is          ultra-exclusive         or          that          they          don’t          care         about          the          university.         According          to          Kain,          hall         members          volunteered         hours          of          their          time          in          Oc-         tober          working          on          the          An-         nual          Fund          Phonathon.         ETTING          away          from          the         books,          Chrisman          Hall         members          like          Tim          Grubham         and          Pat          Carison          met          at          the         Rathaus          Pizza          Shoppe          for          a         pizza          and          beer          party          held          dur-         ing          spring          Dead          Week.          (Duffy)         EACHING          out          to          alumni,         Hays          Halis          volunteers         Mimi          Pham,          Jan          Van          Patten,         Christi          Sobotka,          Angela          Cor-         nelison          and          Xan          Wirth          spent         an          October          evening          helping         the          Alumni          Foundation          dial-up         donations          during          the          annual         university          phonathon.          (Ellis)         176          French          Hall         OWN          but          not          out,          Hays         Hall          member          Anita          Keene         races          toward          the          finish          line          of         the          GDI          Week          obstacle          course.         The          hall          didn’t          place          in          the         event,          but          later          took          top         honors          with          a          31          foot          7          inch         landing          in          the          keg          throwing         competition.          (Dahiquist)         FRENCH          HALL.          Front          Row:          Kim          Kiligore,          Shannon          Fuchs,          Valerie          Mandiloff,          Shelly          White,          Jen-         nifer          Dilorio,          Pam          Soward,          Lori          Nelson,          Nora          Fuentes,          Melissa          Fuentes.          Second          Row:          Andrea          Mis-         terek,          Carolyn          Callahan,          Tracy          Mayer,          Kristin          Reinke,          Jala          Bement,          Darci          Butler,          Tia          Burgess,          Carmen         Perez,          Christi          Frost.          Third          Row:          Synde          Selvid,          Denise          Fortner,          Liisa          Perkins,          Ronya          Hemenway,          Bar-         bara          Wehe,          Marie          Henberry,          Ramona          Lee,          Cherylyn          Peters.          Back          Row:          Kim          Smisek,          Stephanie          Nel-         sen,          Shelly          Manchester,          Sandra          Stewart,          Laurie          Blackwell,          Angie          Hasenoehri,          Tari          Aldrich,          Jolene          Bacca,         Kara          Wenzel,          Carolynne          Poor,          Christine          Schussler.         ONE          MORE          BUSY          SIGNAL         T          wasn’t          exactly         Paris          on          FRENCH         HALL          last          year,          but         for          one          weekend,          it          was         Huckleberry          Heaven.         Twenty          women          from         the          hall          traveled          to          Elk         River’s          famous          lodge          in         March.          They          celebrated         their          final,          ‘‘ladies          only’’         fling          before          going          their         separate          ways          for          the         summer.         Houses          go          on          retreats         a          lot,”’          said          Marie          Hem-         berry,          hall          president.         Residence          halls          usually         don’t.          It’s          really           un-         common.”’         The          women          spent          a          few         crazy          hours          in          the          bars,         Hemberry          said.          ‘‘Just         girls,’          she          said,          ‘“‘but         that’s          okay.”’         Then          they          returned          to         the          lodge          to          roast          ham-         burgers          and          each          other.         The          next          morning          the         lodge          staff          treated          them         to          huckleberry          pancakes.         Earlier          in          the          year,          the         women          of          French          Hall         had          a          retreat          of          a          differ-         ent          kind.          They          retreated         into          overalls          to          repaint         their          TV          lounge.         ““‘We          wanted          to          get          it         done          by          Parents         Wecekend,’’          Hemberry         said.          ‘ We          did.          We          final-         ly          finished          it          the          day         before.’’         By          that          time,          hall          mem-         bers          were          prepared          to         serve          refreshments          during         a          special          slideshow         presentation.          Candid         shots          taken          of          the          wom-         en          during          the          year          showed         what          hall          members          had         accomplished,          Hemberry         said.         Rather          than          retreating,         the          women          of          HAYS         HALL          spent          their          year          in         the          attack          mode.          They          at-         tacked          everything          from         pumpkins          to          Santa          Claus.         While          celebrating          their         hall’s          60th          anniversary,         they          rang          in          each          holiday         with          cheerful          activities.         HAYS          HALL.          Front          Row:          Connie          Jackson,          Zani          Kral,          Debbie          Peck,          Xan          Wirth,          Dawn          Deiss.          Se-         cond          Row:          Mimi          Pham,          Suzanne          Jennings,          Kelley          Baltzell,          Christi          Sobotka,          Melinda          Tannler,          Karolyn         Nearing,          Heidi          Klinger,          Lily          Pham,          Kathy          Gay.          Third          Row:          Rhonda          Vedvig,          Amy          Arendts,          Briana          Rogers         Anita          Keen,          Heidi          Hart,          Keli          Patton,          Kim          Colee,          Back          Row:          Merry          Clifton,          Tricia          Hall,          Echo          Fink,          Katherine         Maisch,          Kristen          Friberg,          Christina          Hendricks,          Kirsten          Peck,          Ana          Outhet         For          Halloween,          they         carved          pumpkins.          They         used          the          goulish          jack          o’         lanterns          for          lighting          dur-         ing          the          hall’s          dress          dinner.         For          Christmas,          hall         members          revealed          their         secret          Santa’s          to          each         other          and          donated          stuffed         animals          to          disadvantaged         children.         Santa          also          paid          Hays         Hall          a          visit,          in          the          form          of         ASUI          Senator          David         Dose.         In          the          spring,          smiles          lit         the          eyes          of          children          intent         on          di scovering          the          Hays’         Easter          eggs          at          a          commu-         nity          hunt          held          in          Ghorm-         ley          Park.         ‘Our          hall          has          a          lot          of         people          who          like          to          help         others          and          be          involved,”          said          President          Connie         Jackson.         The          women          of          Hays         also          joined          forces          with          the         Delta          Delta          Delta          sorori-         ty          to          help          participants          in         the          Special          Olympics.         —§¢          GF          —         OUR          hall          has          a          lot          of         people          who          like          to          help         others          and          be          involved.         -          Connie          Jackson         —s4—         COMMITMENT          to          commu-         nity          involvement          kept          the         women          of          French          Hall          decorat-         ing          hard-boiled          eggs          on          the         night          of          April          16.          The          eggs         were          used          for          the          Lion's          Club         annual          Easter          egg          hunt          held          in         Moscow’s          East          City          Park.         (Duffy)         Hays          Hall          I77         MorE          AMAZING          STORIES         NOWN          for          their         unbeatable          tuck-         in          service,          the         women          of          HOUSTON         HALL          also          tucked          away         quite          a          few          outstanding         accomplishments.         Receiving          the          Women’s         Hall          of          the          Year          Award         was          a          pleasant          surprise,         according          to          Kathy         Kenyon,          hall          president.         During          GDI          Week,          the         hall          also          won          the          frisbee         golf          competition,          the         scavenger          hunt          and          the         skit          competition.         In          their          skit,          a          ‘Mrs.         Rogers’’          visited          the         ‘ Vandal          Zonc,’’          twilight         style.          Rather          than          getting         caught          up          in          the          cosmos,         however,          hall          members         walked          away          with          the          first         place          Homecoming          skit         title.         Overall,          the          hall          placed         second          in          GDI          Week.          For         their          finish,          they          won          a         free          pizza          party          with          the         men          of          Targhee          Hall.         Houston          Hall          also         sponsored          its          own          compe-         tition          in          search          of          a          new         Houston          Hunk.”’          Con-         testants          participated          in          a         scavenger          hunt,          a          beach         attire          fashion          show,          and          a         tall          tale.         “ It          was          kind          of          fun          be-         cause          you          got          to          see          their         personality          through          their         story,’’          said          Michaele         Mooney,          hall          member.          Dean          Metzger          of          the          Tau         Kappa          Epsilon          fraternity         claimed          the          Hunk          title.         Second          semester,         Houston          joined          with          the         men          of          Upham          Hall          to         hold          a          ‘‘topless’®          car          wash         to          aid          the          Wishing          Star         Foundation.          The          involved         individuals          washed          the         ‘ tops’’          of          cars          for          an          ex-         tra          50          cents.         Unlike          Houston          Hall’s         outstanding          certificates         and          awards,          LINDLEY         HALL          produced          its          own         brand          of          special          papers.         A          controversial          bi-         monthly          newspaper,          the         Lindley          Lance,’’         brought          attention          to          the         independent          living          group.         ‘ It          started          out          as          a          hall         thing          to          get          members          in-         volved          and          together,’’         said          Tom          Freund,          hall         HOUSTON          HALL.          Front          Row:          Kathryn          Thompson,          JoAnne         Worley,          Sue          Marangelli,          Kathi          Simeone,          Sue          Baily,          Roxanne          Neal         Second          Row:          Catie          Grey,          Christine          Lothen,          Debbie          Bittel,          Carrie         Grey,          Susan          Cory,          Michelle          Michaelson,          Lindy          Garland,          Anissa          Fad-         dis,          Third          Row:          Sherrie          Olaveson,          Christina          Graves,          Eilene          Harwood         Ann          Funke,          Shelli          Jacobs,          Becky          Shillam,          Tracy          Michniewicz,          Louise         Mainvil,          Nancy          Seamans,          Kathy          Kenyon,          Michaele          Mooney,          Jen-         nifer          Henage.          Back          Row:          Muffie          Varady,          Kristin          Pressey,          Signe          Jen-         sen,          Maureen          Kopezynski,          Deanna          Morgan,          Jean          Lund,          Kim          Akins,         Andrea          Sandford,          Betty          Knoles,          Jody          Gants,          Kaye          Williamson         178          Houston          Hall         president.          ‘‘The          ‘Lance’         is          not          necessarily          clean,         never          has          been          and          never         claimed          to          be.”’         The          publication          has         been          in          existence          on          and         off          since          1927,          according         to          Greg          Coupe,          ‘Lance’’         editor.          Topics          such          as          hall         functions,          cafeteria          food,         and          problems          within          the         Residence          Hall          Associa-         tion          were          covered.         One          of          the          ‘ Lance”’          ar-         ticles          revealed          a          peculiar         ity          in          the          _          hall’s         constitution.          A_          statute         states          that          the          third          floor         lights          must          always          be          left         dimly          lit,          and          that          the         fourth          floor          must          always         be          the          physical          floor         above          the          third.         On          Dec.          31,          however,         hall          members          can          legally         call          the          third          floor          the         fourth.         UST          hanging          around,          mem -         bers          of          Lindley          Hall          Wes         Gossage,          Mark          Hudson,          Scot         Stacey,          Erik          Geidi,          Bert          Hoffnik         and          Gary          Hurt          take          a          break          be-         tween          classes          to          climb          a          tree         in          front          of          the          university          green-         houses.          (Ellis)         HOCOLATE-chip          cookies         and          milk          were          just          part          of         the          Houston          Hall          tuck-in          serv-         ice          held          in          late          October.          For         $2.50,          Delta          Sigma          Phi          Ken         Herzog          heard          a          tale          and         received          a          kiss          from          Houston         Hall          members          Kathleen         Navarre,          Cassie          Davis          and         Gwen          Dighans.          (Hayes)         LINDLEY          HALL.          Front          Row:          Matthew          Pettinger,          Gary          Hurt.          Wes         Gossage,          Young          Han,          Louis          Sukovaty,          Jeff          Ceruti,          Greg          Holden,         Doug          Carpenter,          John          Cowgill.          Second          Row:          Jeff          Probart,          Mark         Shamion,          Mike          Kinner,          Mike          Black,          Tom          Freund,          Aaron          Boston,         Bruce          Lowther,          Mark          Snyder,          Cecil          Ramsey,          Perry          Eng.          Third          Row:         Paul          Freund,          Tony          Perkins,          Bob          Shackelford,          Morgan          Bates,          Tony         Halilan,          Ronny          Koester,          Tim          Gilbreth,          Pat          Roddy,          Eric          Shepard.          Ty         Bryan,          Scot          Stacey,          Greg          Coupe.          Back          Row:          Gordon          Roberts,          Jeff         Myhre,          Thor          Holder,          Troy          Falck,          Bob          Gibson,          Kurt          Fickeisen,          ish         Kabible,          Paul          Diebels,          Alan          Heikkila,          Brad          Shamion         Lindley          Hall          179         BORROWED          evening         gown          and          hot-red          lip-stick         helped          Snow          Hall          resident         Shawn          Mcintosh          take          the          title         of          Snow          Queen.          The          contest         occurred          during          the          hall's          se-         cond          annual          ‘‘Gault          Ball’’          heid         in          late          March.          (Danhiquist)         180          Snow          Hall         SNOW          HALL.          Front          Row:          Kenny          Bunce,          Virgil          Adams,          Robert          Orton,          Tom          Bender,          Scot          House         Daryl          Rogers.          Second          Row:          Ja          Cox,          Eric          Storhok,          Stacy          Smisek,          Louis          Orndortf,          Peter          Holiday         erflut,          Mike          Connolley,          Paul          Nelson.          Third          Row:          Steve          Davis,          Jeff          Finn,          Paul          Gier,          John          Schiaefer,         t          Gilbertson.          Back          Row:          John          Zehetner,          Joe          Covill,          Jeff          Smith,          Dennis          Sims.          Rob          Robinson         Webster,          Mark          Stephenson,          Bill          Laird,          Fritz          Dau         Home         Rooms         JusT          IN          THE          NICK          OF          TIME         NNOVATION          can         make          the          difference         between          making         things          succeed          or          watch-         ing          them          flop.          For          stu-         dents          living          on          SNOW         HALL,          last-minute          solu-         tions          helped          make          things         run          more          smoothly.         Problems          confronted         the          hall          from          the          first          day         members          returned.          The         first          problem?          There         wasn’t          really          any          hall         government          to          help          or-         ganize          events.         During          1986,          hall         members          had          voted          Todd         Price          in          as          their          fall         semester          president.         However,          Price          was          una-         ble          to          return          to          the         university,          and          hall          mem-         ARGHEE          Hall          mixed          some         dough          and          sprung          up          with         Mr.          Bill          as          the          main          character         for          their          Homecoming          skit.          Mr.         Bill,          played          by          Bruce         Hoagland,          commented          on         “frat          boys,’’          the          new          UCC         sidewalks          and          the          Cal-State         Fullerton          football          team          during         the          performance.          (Hayes)         bers          returned          to          Moscow         without          any          designated         leader.         Matt          Helmick,          a          form-         er          Snow          Hall          president,         said          he          decided          it          was         time          to          take          some          action.         According          to          Helmick,          he         helped          restore          order          to         hall          affairs          and          get          mem-         bers          focussed          on          working         together.         Once          the          government         had          been          reactivated,          hall         leaders          decided          it          was         time          to          get          more          socially         active,          Helmick          said.         To          do          so,          they          threw          an         End-of-Summer          Bash,’’         followed          by          thei r          tradi-         tional          ‘‘Casino          Party.”’         During          the          spring,          hall         members          banded          together         to          throw          more          parties,          he         Said.         ‘‘We          wanted          to          make         Snow          Hall          number          one         again,’’          Helmick          said.         Snow          threw          its          tradi-         tional          ‘Gault          Ball’          as          well         as          the          ‘Fantasy          Girl          Con-         test’          in          which          many         TARGHEE          HALL.          Front          Row:          Trent          Tillman,          Danny          Noy,          Bruce          Lambert,          Tim          Burnside,          Richard         Schoonar,          Randy          Knutson.          Second          Rew:          Andy          Kowal,          Mike          Long,          Ron          Gerhardstein,          Farrell          Good,         Genny          Ryker,          Bruce          Hoagland,          Gary          Lindstrom,          Mark          Eggleston,          Normand          Varin.          Back          Row:          Aaron         Atkinson,          John          Samuelson,          Greg          Wilson,          Terry          Quinn,          Michael          Tetwiler,          Chris          Taber,          Bob          Bealan,         Darin          MacFarland,          Scott          Christensen,          Don          Heckathorn,          Mike          Finn,          Todd          Edgerton,          Jetfrey          Pullin,          Joseph         Seet.         sorority          and          residence         hall          women          competed          in         a          contest          of          personality,”’         Helmick          said.          ‘‘Sandra         Scantling          of          Delta          Delta         Delta          won          the          contest.”’         While          the          men          of          Snow         Hall          were          dreaming          up         new          ways          to          reinvent          the         party,          TARGHEE         HALL          members          were          in-         volved          in          innovations          of         their          own.         For          example,          when         they          couldn’t          find          the         volleyball          net          poles          for         the          Targhee          Hall          and         Steel          House          barbecue,         they          decided          to          change         the          rules.          President          Ran-         dy          Knutson          explained.         We          just          set          the          net          up         about          chest          high           and         made          everyone          play          on         their          knees,’’          he          said.          ‘‘It         was          more          fun          that          way         anyway.”’         After          dozens          of          ham-         burgers          had          been         devoured          and          the          volley-         ball          game          was          completed,         the          men          of          Targhee          con-         RESSED          in          bikinis,          Tar-         ghee          residents          Bruce         Lambert          and          George          Ma          lip-         sync          to          ‘‘California          Girls  ’          for         a          GDI          Week          skit.          (Dahiquist)         tinued          their          reputation         for          creativity,          Knutson         said.         During          GDI          Week,         they          used          some          last-         minute          ideas          to          capture         first,          second          and          fourth         places          in          the          lip-sync          com         petition.          Hall          members         assembled          airbands          to         perform          three          popular         and          somwhat          diverse          hits:         ““Good          Rockin’          at          Mid-         night,’’          David          Lee          Roth’s         ““California          Girls,’’          and         the          popular          nursery         rhyme,          ‘‘Old          Mac-         Donald.”’         “Two          guys          from          the         hall          decided          they’d          do          it         just          for          the          fun          of          it,”         said          Knutson.          ‘They         dressed          up          in          overalls          and         stuff          and          when          they          got         to          the          part          about          the         animals,          they’d          squat         down          and          squawk,          or         whatever.”’         Targhee          Hall          placed          se-         cond          overall          in          GDI         Week          events,          Knutson         said.         Targhee          Hall          18]         DISCOVERING          THE          WILD          LIFE         OMETIMES          ap-         pearances          can          be         deceiving.         Unlike          most          living         groups,          the          men          of          UP-         HAM          HALL          changed          the         appearance          of          their          hall         to          look          like          a          street         New          Orleans’          ‘Bourbon         Street.”         Hall          members          decorat         ed          their          third          floor          like          a         paved          street,          complete         with          signs,          bricks,          and         billboards          to          lure         Houston          Hall          women          to          a         little          sister          party.         “ It          was          our          first          time,         so          it          was          something          new         and          everyone          enjoyed          it,”’         said          Doug          Heikkila,          hall         president.          ‘ The          hall          plans         to          make          it          a          tradition.”’         After          the          success          of         Bourbon          Street,’’          Up-         ham          planned          a          dance          and         cruise          with          members          from         Houston          Hall.         The          Lake          Couer          d’A-         lene          cruise          was          to          be          fol-         lowed          by          an          overnight         campout.          However,          ac         cording          to          Heikkila          the         campout          was          cancelled.         With          the          bad          weather         this          year,          it          didn’t          materi-         alize,’’          he          said.         Aside          from          the          cruise,         hall          members          participated         in          several          campus          events,         including          the          Borah          Hall         Child          Find          Softball          Tour-         nament          and          GDI          Week.         The          Upham          men         claimed          the          second          place         title          in          intramural          compe         titions          among          indepen-         dent          groups,          although         they          didn’t          win          in          any          sin-         gle          category.         ‘ The          reason          we          did          so         well          was          because          of          our         participation,’’          said          Dan         Emery,          hall          intramural         chairman.         Members          of          the          hall         also          practiced          for          what         Emery          called          ‘‘some          of         the          greatest          water          fights         on          campus.’’          They          joined         Houston          Hall          in          a          “ Top-         less          Carwash”’          to          benifit         the          Wishing          Star          Founda-         tion,          Emery          said.         But          the          fundraiser’s          ti-         tle          may          have          been          a          little         deceiving.          Houston          Hall         women          kept          their          shirts         on,          and          instead          told         motorists          that          ‘‘Topless         Carwash’?          meant          they         washed          everything          but          the         tops          of          the          cars.         Motorists          desiring          to         have          their          entire          car         washed          were          charged          an         additional          50          cents,         Emery          said.         While          Upham          was          go-         ing          nearly          topless,          the         men          of          WHITMAN         HALL          were          sporting         somewhat          dece ptive          ap-         pearances          of          their          own.         Although          hall          members         said          they          were          not          de         generates,          they          let          them-         selves          go          during          October         Slob          Month.”’         The          tradition,          which         has          been          around          as          long         as          the          oldest          hall          members         could          remember,          reap-         peared          at          midnight,          Oct.         1.          To          become          ‘‘slobs,”’         participating          hall          mem-         bers          voluntarily          quit          shav-         ing          for          the          entire          month.         “This          is          a          chance          for         everyone          to          grow          beards         at          once,’’          said          Roger         Gaboury,          fall          hall         president.         ““A          lot          of          guys          look         really          ugly          with          beards,         but          when          they’re          doing          it         all          at          once          they          don’t          feel         as          bad,’’          he          said.         As          a          reward          for          their         scruffy          appearances,         Whitman          men          held          an         end-of-the-month         celebration          bash.          The         evenings’          highlight          was         the          ceremonious          crown-         ing          of          the          ‘‘Best          Looking         Slob,’’          Gaboury          said.         Aside          from_          these         events,          Whitman          Hall         made          a          ‘‘presentable’’         showing          in          both          in-         tramural          and          GDI          Weck         activities.         For          the          fifth          consecu         tive          year          in          a          row,          hall         members          showed          up          in         full          force          to          ‘ demolish         the          competition’’          and         claim          the          intramural          Ulti-         mate          Frisbee          Champion-         ship,          Gaboury          said.         The          guys          just          banded         together          and          won,’’         Gaboury          said.         Their          winning          streak         was          also          diplayed          during         GDI          Week,          where          hall         members          worked          together         to          capture          third          place         overall.         UPHAM          HALL.          Front          Row:          Cari          Fite,          Deron          Schmidt,          Will          Woh-         leil,          Tom          Wadsworth,          Duane          Tribe.          Second          Row:          Keith          Dixon,         Michael          Tuell,          Ha          Dinh,          Elwood          Renninson,          Gregg          King,          Tim         Steffans,          Tony          Wofford,          Jeff          Stucker,          Rich          Feole.          Back          Row:          Pa-         wan          Bali,          Bill          Truesdell,          Ron          Young,          Glen          Garland,          Jim          Chase,          Craig         Wesselman,          Steve          Jones,          Paul          Huber,          Jay          Pence,          Bruce          Jones,         Brant          Steigers,          John          Johnson,          Roger          Heckroth         182          Upham          Hall         ITH          spring          finals          com-          O-REC          volleyball          gave         pleted,          Upham          Hall          resi-          Carter          Hall          members          Mary         dent          Carl          Fite          had          time          to          Williams          and          Lynn          Pence          the         challenge          opponents          to          a          chance          to          join          forces          with         game          of          backgammon.          Aftera          Whitman          Hall’s          Dean          Thomp-         roll          of          the          dice          anda          strategic          son          to          defeat          an          off-campus         move,          Fite          won          the          board          team          during          spring          in-         game.          (Fritz)          tramurals.          (Dahiquist)         WHITMAN          HALL.          Front          Row:          Joe          Deyo,          Joe          Hughes,          Matt         Jenkins,          Roger          Gaboury,          Sam          Fraundorf,          Matt          Zekes,          Paul          Rod-         man,          Kent          Storey.          Second          Row:          David          Clemons,          Larin          Crossley,         Dan          Ahlstrom,          Brad          Saul,          Andrew          Provant,          Mike          Pettinger.          Back         Row:          Dave          Young,          Arick          Branen,          John          Cook,          Jeff          Curtis,          Jake          Gil-         lam,          Dwain          Fagerberg,          Brent          Richardson,          Bruce          Holubetz,          Scott         McKray,          David          Waterman,          Jim          Kennedy,          Glenn          Monson.         Whitman          Hall          183         ALL          FOR          ONE         Soccer          club          practices          found         goalie          Aaron          Boston          on          the         receiving          end          of          his          team-         mates’          kicks,          Boston          tallied         three          shutouts          during          the         10-game          season.          (Fritz)         SKYWRITING         The          men’s          basketball          team         climbed          out          of          the          conference         cellar          and          Tom          Stalick          (13)         skyed          high          against          Idaho         State          to          block          George          Davis          (32)          shot.          (Dahlquist)         ‘.          4%                   was         a          ew         J         )         |                  THREE          CHEERS         First-year          Head          Coach          Keith         Gilbertson          rides           out          of          Boise         State's          Bronco          Stadium          on          the         shoulders          of          his          players          fol-         lowing          the          Vandals‘          21-14          vic-         tory.          (Frates)         184          Sports         As          the          football          team          beat          the          Cal-State          Fuller-         ton          Titans          in          the          Kibbie          Dome,          Vandal          fans          found         they          always          had...          .         TO          CHEER          FOR         Red          paint          dripped          from          the         whitewashed          cinder          block          barrier.          Let-         ters,          words          and          symbols          littered          the          wall,         as          if          locked          in          some          grotesque          dance.          Late         one          night,          the          campus          had          been          subject-         ed          to          a          case          of          Vandalism.         Vandals          also          worked          during          the          light         of          day.          The          Vandal          football          team          rushed         to          its          third          playoff          appearance          in          five         years.          Freshman          tennis          sensation          Cathy         Shanander          racked          up          16          straight          singles         victories          on          her          way          to          being          named          to         the          all-conference          team.          And          the          Sigma         Alpha          Epsilon          fraternity          captured          the         campus          intramural          crown.          Whether          on         the          court          or          in          the          crowd,          Vandals          had         SOMETHING          TO          WRITE          HOME          ABOUT.         Sports          185         Keith          Gilbertson          inherited          a          winning          record,          a          veteran         quarterback          and          16          seniors.          He          was          faced          with          continuing          a         winning          tradition,          and          thus          by          featuring          the          pass          and         emphasizing          the          defense          the          team          was         Wes          Dennis          Erickson          ac-         cepted          the          Vandal          head         coaching          football          position          in         1982,          he          brought          with          him          a         staff          that          included          a          33-year-         old          pass-minded          offensive         coordinator          named          Keith         Gilbertson.         Four          years          later,          after         Erickson          had          departed          for         the          wide          open          spaces          at          the         University          of          Wyoming,          the         man          called          ‘ Gilby’’          led          the         Vandal          football          team          into         the          Kibbie          Dome          to          begin         the          season.         No          longer          a          mere          offen-         sive          coordinator,          at          6:39         p.m.          on          Saturday,          Sept.          6,         Keith          Gilbertson          and          _          his         players          officially          penned          a         new          chapter          in          the          history          of         Vandal          football.                   Portland          State.         Opening          the          season          in          the         Dome,          the          Vandals          defeated         the          Vikings          42-10          in          front          of         8,500          fans.          The          win          marked         the          first          time          since          1922,          a         first-year          Vandal          coach          won         his          debut          game.         “This          game          was          a          real         learning          experience.”’          Gil-         bertson          said.          ‘‘I          was          proba-         bly          the          most          inexperienced         guy          out          there          tonight.         T          mean          when          you're          in         charge,          about          26,000          things         run          though          your          mind.          Do         they          have          their          knee          pads          on         right?          Was          there          too          much         at          the          pre-game          meal?         Gosh,          I          even          forgot          what         it’s          like          to          take          a          TV          time          out         after          every          exchange.          I         didn’t          prepare          our          kids          very         well.”’         ¢          Cal-State          Fullerton.         Following          a          34-21          loss          to         the          Division          I          Central          Michi-         186          Football         gan          Chippewas,          the          Vandals         returned          home          to          take          on          the         Division          [I          Titans.          The         Homecoming          game          attract-         ed          more          than          12,000          fans          to         the          Dome          as          the          Vandals         prevailed          25-17.         “Everyone          comes          at          us         from          soup          to          nuts,”’          Gilbert-         son          said          referring          to          the          Ti-         tan’s          innovative          offensive.         “By          the          time          a          kid          graduates         from          here,          he’s          seen          it          all.          I         think          we          saw          it          all          today.  ’         Not          only          did          the          Vandals         win          the          game,          but          lineback-         er          Tom          Hennessey          estab-         lished          the          school          record          for         most          career          interceptions         when          he          picked          off          his          se-         cond          pass          of          the          game          and         14th          of          his          career.         It          feels          great,’’          Hennes-         sey          said.          ‘‘It          was          something         I          really          wanted          to          get.”’         Fullerton,          EWU          and          ISU         games.          ‘We’ve          come          out         three          weeks          in          a          row          now         and          got          it          going          in          the          third         quarter.”’         Indeed,          after          trailing         14-10          at          halftime          the          Van-         dals          scored          three          touch-         downs          in          the          third          quarter          to         take          the          lead          for          good.         ““You          don’t          have          to          get          af-         ter          these          guys,’           Gilbertson         said          of          his          team.          ‘‘These         guys          are          smart          who          come          to         this          school.          They          know         when          they          need          to          do          some-         thing          different          —          something         to          win.”’         ¢          Northern          Arizona.         Following          a          week          off          and         a          loss          to          the          eventual          league         champion          University          of         Nevada-Reno          Wolf          Pack,         the          Vandals          found          them-         Everyone          comes          at          us          from          soup          to          nuts.          By         the          time          a          kid          graduates          from          here,          he’s          seen         it          all.                   Idaho          State.         After          traveling          to         Spokane          to          beat          Eastern         Washington          27-10,          the          Van-         dals          returned          to          the          Dome         on          Oct.          4          to          play          the          first          of         seven          consecutive          regular         season          Big          Sky          Conference         games.          Owning          a          3-1          overall         record,          the          Vandals          upped          it         to          4-1          and          1-0          in          conference         with          a          38-26          win.         ‘ This          has          been          a          murder-         ous          four          in          a          row          for          us,”’         Gilbertson          said          referring          to         the          Central          Michigan,         KEITH          GILBERTSON         selves          on          the          short          end          of          a         24-0          whitewash          at          the          hands         of          the          Lumberjacks.         The          shutout          marked          the         first          time          the          Vandals          had         been          blanked          since          1978.         The          game          also          featured          a         NCAA          record-setting          per-         formance          by          NAU          kicker         Goran          Lingmerth          who          boot-         ed          eight          consecutive          field         goals.         “ ]          guess          congratulations         are          in          order          to          the          kid,”’          Gil-         bertson          said          of          Lingmerth’s         Continued                     RONCO          BUSTING,         arely          eluding          the          grasp          of         Boise          State          defender          Matt          Rogers         (94),          Vandal          quarterback          Scott         Linehan          (10)          lunges          for          five          yards         and          a          first          down.          On          the          day,          Line-         han          rushed          for          16          and          passed          for         223          yards          as          the          Vandals          defeat-         ed          BSU,          21-14.          (Frates)         Football          187         Nari         ew          Advise          ANo          consent.         Be          ssistants          Barry          Lamb          and          Jim         Senter          helped          Keith          Gilbertson         become          the          first          head          coach          to         win          his          debut          game          since          1922.         idaho          won          Its          opener          against          Port-         land          State,          42-10.          (Frates)         t          is          said          a          pic-         ture          is          worth         a          thousand         words.          But          what          about         a          memory?         What          of          those          images         frozen          forever          in          the         recesses          of          the          mind?         Years          from          now,          when         Vandal          fans          are          asked         to          recall          their          most          vivid         memories          from          the         home          football          season,         perhaps          the          three          most         often          cited          plays          will          be:         ¢          Scott          Linehan’s         71-yard          naked          bootleg         touchdown          run          against         Cal-State          Fullerton.         e          Todd          Hoiness’         30-yard          run          on          a          fake         punt          in          the          third          quart-         er          versus          Idaho          State.         ¢          Northern          Arizona         kicker          Goran          Ling-         merth’s          NCAA          record-         setting          eight          consecutive         field          goals          in          NAU’s         24-0          win.         KYJACKER.         ixteen          times          in          Tom         Hennessey’s          (38)          Cca-         reer,          he          intercepted          pass-         es.          He          plucked          number          15         versus          Idaho          State,          (Frates)         188          Football         ued         performance.          ‘That's          all          I         have          to          say          about          it.         ATCH          AS          CATCH          CAN.         lutch          saahciserar          aad          by          Virgil         Paulsen          earned          the          cornerback         He          hars          joacrt          wha          iamsntra         93-yard         against          Boise          State.          gr         ‘It’s          not          that          we          didn’t         respect          them,          we          were          as          flat         as          the          floor.          Our          only          bright         spot          was          that          our          defense         kept          them          out          of          the          end         zone,’’          Gilbertson          said.                   Montana          State.         With          any          hope          of          a          second         consecutive          conference          title         ond          ZONE         Portiand          St.          42          —          10         C.          Michigan          21          —34         Cal-Fullerton          25          —          17         E.          Wash.          27—10         Idaho          St          38          —          26         Nevada-Reno          13          —          17         Montana          St.         Weber          St.          31          —17         Boise          State          21—          14         1-AA          Playoffs         Nevada-Reno          7          —          27         Won          8,          Lost          4         dashed,          the          Vandals          looked         to          secure          an          at-large          playoff         berth.          But          in          order          to          obtain         a          spot,          the          team          had          to          win         its          final          four          games.         After          beating          the          Univer-         sity          of          Montana          in          Missou-         la,          the           Vandals          returned          to         the          Dome          on          Nov.          8          to          take         on          MSU.          The          final          score,          UI         ERE          WE          HAVE          IDAHO.         eading          into          the          Kibbie          Dome,         members          of          the          football          team         charged          out          of          the          East          End          lock-         er          room          prior          to          the          Idaho          State         game.          Playing          all          home          games          in-         side          the          climate-controlied          Dome,         the          Vandals          recorded          their          first         conterence          win          under          first-year         44,          MSU          17,         ““They          were          great,          the          best         team          we've          played,”’          receiver         Brant          Bengen          commmented.         Bengen,          who          caught          10          pass-         es          versus          Montana          one          week         earlier,          gathered          in          nine         against          the          Bobcats          for          182         yards          and          two           touchdowns.         Continued                     Head          Coach          Keith          Gilbertson.         Leading          the          charge          onto          the          field         against          the          Bengals          were:          Ernest         Sanders          (8),          Kevin          Johnson          (31),         Darin          Magnuson          (7),          Scott          Katz         (61),          Troy          Wright          (63),          Daryn         Young          (55),          Greg          Ulrich          (71),         Shawn          Nilsson          (35)          and          John         Friesz          (17).          (Hayes)         Football          189         19)          Football         HAKEN,          NOT          STIRRED.         tung          by          the          injury          bug          at          Boise         State,          tight          end          Chris          Slater         received          a          trainer's          attention          on         the          sidelines.          Slater          recovered         and          caught          five          for          73          yards          in          the         21-14          Vandal          win.          (Frates)         IRED          UP.         ootball          and          b onfires          have          been         a          Homecoming          tradition          since          the         1920s.          Head          Coach          Keith          Gilbert-         son          fanned          the          fires          of          en-         thusiasm          by          leading          the          crowd          in         a          yell          prior          to          the          game.          (Hayes)         “ They’re          secondary’s          got         some          real          nice          guys,’’          he         added.         The          win          also          assured          the         Vandals          of          their          fifth          con-         secutive          winning          season.         “Hey,          that’s          a          winning         season          for          the          Vandals,’’         Gilbertson          beamed          after          the         game.          ‘‘I’m          really          proud.’’         We’ve          got          good          people         in          this          program.          We          played         well          last          week          and          better          this         week.          We’ve          got          to          keep          it         going.’’         ©          Weber          State.         And          keep          it          going          they         did.          Playing          before          only         6,700          fans,          the          WSC          contest         marked          the          final          home          game         for          16          seniors.          And          for          the         16          seniors,          they          exited          the         Dome          on          a          happy          note          as          the         Vandals          won          31-17.         I          can’t          believe          it’s          over.         It          was          a          quick          four          years,”         senior          linebacker          and          co-         captain          Mike          Cox          said.         “It          was          funny          playing          for         the          last          time          in          the          Dome,”’         senior          safety          and          co-captain         Mark          Tidd          said.          ‘I          have         been          here          five          years          and          it         has          been          great.          It          has          been          a         great          experience          for          me          and         it          sure          will          be          weird          not          play-         ing          in          the          Dome          again.”’         ‘There          are          a          lot          of         memories          here,’’          senior         quarterback          and          co-captain         Scott          Linehan          said.          ‘‘I’m          go-         ing          to          miss          the          Dome          for         sure.””         “ It’s          kind          of          hard          to          look         back          on          the          last          five          years,”’         senior          running          back          Steve         Jackson          said.          ‘‘It’s          a          little         nostalgic          for          me.”’         Yet          the          one          thing          on          each         of          the          senior          player’s          minds,         was          the          impending          game         against          Boise          State          in          Boise.         “The          season          and          my         career          have          gone          by          fast         here,’           senior          defensive          tack-         le          Troy          Ballard          said.          ‘‘It         seems          like          yesterday          that          I         was          just          getting          here          and         now          its          over.         “But          my          favorite          game          of         the          season,          BSU,          is          still         ahead          of          us.          I          would          like          to         play          BSU          10          times          a          sea-         son,”          he          added.          ‘“‘It’s          the         one          I          look          forward          to.”         “Boise          State,          they’re          a         great          defensive          ball          club,”         senior          co-captain          Bengen         said.          ‘‘It’s          for          all          the         marbles.’’         After          finishing          the          home         season          with          a          5-1          mark,          for         the          16          seniors          and          their         teammates          there          remained         one          game          —          the          BSU          game.         And          on          Nov.          22,          the          Van-         dals          knocked          off          the          Bron-         cos          for          the          fifth          year          in          a         row.         The          21-14          win          not          only         prevented          BSU          from          record-         ing          a          winning          season,          it         upped          the          Vandals’          record          to         8-3          and          earned          the          team          a         berth          in          the          NCAA          I-AA         playoffs.         Thus          the          work          Erickson         started          back          in          1982          paid         dividends          once          again          in         1986.          For          the          third          time          in         five          years,          the          Vandals          ad-         vanced          to          the          1-AA          playoffs.         And          another          footnote          was         added          to          the          Keith          Gilbert-         son          chapter.         OLDING          THE          LINE.         ands          raised          in          joy,          Mike          Cox         (48),          Dan          McCanna          (40)          and          Kord         Smith          (99)          celebrate          an          Eastern         Washington          failed          fourth-down         run.          Idaho          won          the          game,          27-10         and          following          the          win,          entered          the         national          rankings          in          the          No.          17         spot.          (Hayes)         RY          De          ee          wg                   ee          2         AFETY          FIRST.         haken          out          of          the          pocket,          quarterback          Scott          Linehan          (10)         has          nowhere          to          turn          when          Boise          State’s          Peter          Kwiat-         kowski          (71)          closes          in          and          drops          the          senior          Vandal          signal-         caller          for          a          safety.          The          two-point          safety          made          the          score         14-5          in          favor          of          the          Vandals.          Although          Kwiatkowski         celebrated          the          safety          and          sack          with          teammates          Jeff          Hunt         (60)          and          Lance          Sellars          (43),          the          Vandals          prevailed,          21-14.         Linehan          avenged          the          embarrassment          by          completing          10         of          24          passes          for          223          yards          and          one          touchdown.          (Frates)         Football          19]         HEN          TIME          RAN          OUT.         as          It          fate          or          destiny?          Regardless          the          question,          by          the          fourth         quarter,          the          Vandals          trailed          27-7.          Neosia          Morris          hopelessly         stretches          for          a          fourth-quarter          pass.          After          rushing          for          16          yards,         Wolf          Pack          runner          Charvez          Foger          (32)          is          corralled          by          Nolan          Harper         (52).          Following          a          16-yard          completion,          Nevada-Reno          tight          end         Scott          Threde          (46)          is          tackled          by          Virgil          Paulsen          (29)          and          Tom          Hen-         nessey          (38).          (Frates)         QOTING          THE          BILL,         or          punter          Darin          Magnuson          (7),          the          shadows          and          clouds          of         Mackay          Stadium          sought          to          highlight          an          already          gloomy          after-         noon          as          the          Vandals          lost          to          the          Wolf          Pack,          27-7.          In          addition          to         averaging          30          yards          per          punt,          Magnuson          afso          played          wide         receiver.          (Frates)         19)          Football         Lk.          football          team’s          chances          of          winning         a          national          championship          could          be         likened          to          the          saying,          ‘“‘I’ve          got          some         good          news,          and          bad          news.’’         The          good          news:          the          Vandals          earned         the          16th          and          final          spot          in          the          Division         1-AA          playoffs.         The          bad          news:          the          Van-         dals          traveled          to          face          the          then         No.          |          ranked          team          in          the          na-         tion          —          the          undefeated         University          of          Nevada-Reno         Wolf          Pack.          This          was          the         same          Wolf          Pack          team          that         beat          the          Vandals          17-13          in         October.         Was          history          doomed          to         repeat          itself,          or          could          the          8-3         Vandals          upset          the          11-0          Wolf         Pack?          Chalk          one          up          for          his-         tory,          because          when          the          final         gun          sounded          in          Mackay         Stadium          at          2:57          p.m.,          Nov.         29,          the          scoreboard          flashed,         “UNR          27,          Idaho          7.”’         UNR          advanced          in          the         playoffs          and          the          Vandals         returned          home.         “It          just          wasn’t          meant          to         be,”’          said          quarterback          Scott         Linehan.          ‘‘It          was          a          real         physical          game          and          we          made          the          mistakes         that          cost          us.          That’s          how          football          is.’         Indeed,          the          Vandals          committed          four         turnovers          compared          to          UNR’s          one.         Reno          is          the          kind          of          team          that          has          no         weaknesses,’’          said          Keith          Gilbertson,         head          football          coach.          “‘If          you’re          going         Ee         o          PAE         The          Titanic          sunk.          This          event          was          not          supposed          to         happen          —          but          it          did.          Idaho          was          not          supposed          to          beat         Nevada-Reno          —          it          didn’t.          Because          just          like          the          Titanic,         Vandal          hopes          were          a          case          of          too         to          beat          these          guys,          you          have          to          come          in         and          play          the          best          game          of          the          season.”’         Although          the          Vandals’          season          ended         with          a          loss,          individual          members          of          the         team          continued          to          garner          awards.         Linebacker          Tom          Hennessey          was          chos-         en          for          the          All-Big          Sky          Conference         defensive          first          team.          Lineman          Kord         Smith          and          safety          Mark          Tidd         were          named          to          the          second         team,          while          cornerback          Vir-         gil          Paulsen          and          lineman         Peter          Wilkins          were          selected         for          the          league’s          honorable         mention          squad.         On          offense,          six          players         were          named          to          the          leagues’s         all-conference          second          team:         Linehan,          running          backs          Fred         Lloyd          and          Steve          Jackson,         tackles          Greg          Hale          and          Paul         Taggart          and          receiver          Brant         Bengen.          Neosia          Morris          and         Bengen          were          picked          for          the         league’s          honorable          mention         team          as          receiver          and          kick         returner          respectively.         Four          football          players          were         also          recognized          for          their         scholastic          achievements          by         being          selected          to          the          league’s         all-academic          team.          Taggart         (accounting)          led          all          Vandals         with          a          3.56          GPA,          Kendrich          Jackson         (mechanical          engineering)          tallied          a          3.21,         Hennessey          (agribusiness)          recorded          a         3.15          and          David          Parker          (marketing)          col-         lected          a          3.14.         Thus          the          UNR          loss          closed          the          book         on          Gilbertson’s          first          year          as          head          coach.         ACEHORSE.         unning          off          left          tackle,          Steve         and          into          Nevada-Reno          k         Jackson          gained          10          yards          and          a         first          down          on          the          run.          On          the          day,         the          senior          tailback          tallied          41          yards         as          the          Vandals          lost          to          UNR,          27-7.         (Frates)         Football          193         The          ghosts          of          volleyball-matches-past         hung          around          the          Memorial          Gym          and         winced.          Owning          a          9-26          record,          the         volleyball           team          recorded          its          worst          win-         loss          total          in          university          history.          Despite         the          poor          record,          the          team’s          combination         of          senior          experience          and          underclass         enthusiasm          possessed          them          with         ieee          a          ‘‘winner”’          or         a          ‘‘gamer’’          sometimes         proved          to          be          a          difficult          task.         But          for          Pam          Bradetich,         volleyball          head          coach,          the         job          was          as          simple          as          ABC.         Or          in          the          case          of          the          yolley-         ball          team,          make          that          PRG.         Terri          Plum,          Robin          Res-         lock          and          Nellie          Gant          were         three          players          tabbed          by         Bradetich          early          in          the          season         as          being          the          players          to          watch         for          the          Vandals.         In          essence,          their          play          be-         came          a          barometer          for          Va n-         dal          success;          if          three          played         well,          the          spikers          would          prob-         ably          win,          if          they          performed         poorly,          the          Vandals          would         probably          lose.         But          although          the          spikers         finished          with          a          9-26          overall         record,          the          play          of          the          team         did          not          reflect          the          perfor-         mance          of          the          three          individu-         als.          Because          just          as         Bradetich          had          predicted          ear-         ly          in          the          season,          of          the          12         players          on          the          team,          the          only         three          to          be          recognized          for         their          individual          achieve-         ments          throughout          the          year         was          the          trio          of          Plum,          Res-         lock          and          Gant.         Plum          became          the          first         player          to          garner          an          individu-         al          award          when          in          mid-         September          she          was          named          to         the          all-tournament          team          at         the          Colorado          State          Invita-         tional.          Although          the          Van-         dals          finished          fourth          in          the         tournament,          Plum          recorded         As          a          leader          |'m          not          really          rah-rah.          Because         we're          so          young,          I've          been          an          example          —          not         as          a          team          captain,          but          as          a          senior.         194          Volleyball         NELLIE          GANT         34          kills          in          the          four-match         tourney.         Plum          admitted          she          was         pleased          with          her          own          perfor-         mance          during          the          season,         but          wished          the          team          could         have          finished          the          year          with          a         record          better          than          9-26.         We          could          have          obvious-         ly          done          better,  ’          the          6-foot-3-         inch          sophomore          said.          “‘Last         year          I          really          wasn’t          a          factor         on          this          team          because          I          was          a         freshman.          I'm          happy          with         what          I've          done          over          last         year.          I’ve          had          a          lot          of          fun.’’         Reslock,          meanwhile,          was         named          to          the          all-tournament         team          at          the          Cavanaugh’s         Idaho          Classic          held          in          the         Memorial          Gym          at          the          end          of         September.          She          totaled          42         kills          in          four          matches          and          net-         ted          a          .262          hitting          percentage.         “T've          always          been          a          strong         hitter,’’          the          sophomore          out-         side          hitter          said.          “‘My          role          on         the          team          is          to          put          it          down         when          they          need          a          strong         hitter.  ’         Yet           for          all          of          her          ability,         Reslock          was          still          disappoint-         ed          with          the          way          things         Continued                   UT          BACK.         olished         blocking          skills         aided          Marianne         Moore          and          Net-         lie          Gant          in          the         team's          win         against          Mon-         tana          State.          At         season's          end,         Moore          was         named          the          co-         winner          of          the         team's          most         improved         award,          while         Gant          was         picked          as          most         inspirational,         (Hayes)         FALL         |          VANDALISM         Whitworth         Washington         Washington          St         Boise          St,         Boise          St.         Washington          St         N.          Colorado         Northwestern         Colorado          St         S.          Ilinois         Pacitic         Gonzaga         Simon          Fraser         Portland         Utah          St.         Portland          St         Portland         VELT          I         @GQO-BOWSBNOOCSO--—-o         .          SPIKE         Portland          St.         San          Francisco          St          1—3         Sacramento          St.          o-—3         E.          Washington          Oo-—3         2—1          Boise          St         Washington          St.         Idaho          St         Weber          St.         Montana         Gonzaga         Bolse          St         Montana         Weber          St         Idaho          St         HWOOONBHWWHA®         Washington          St.         Montana          St         E,          Washington         Montana          St         Won          9,          Lost          26         Foe)          if          Wi          TS          hl          Ws          a         OUWOWHONBHOHOW         OOCOBVBON=-WOOwWONO         |         ONE          WERE          THE          WINS.         rim          winiloss          records          seldom         gave          Head          Coach          Pam          Bradetich         a          reason          to          smile.          She          entered          the         season          with          a          two-year          career         45-31          mark.          But          despite          a          9-26         record,          in          her          third          season,         Bradetich          cracked          a          smile          during         a          win          versus          Montana          State.         (Hayes)         ESLOCK          BOP.         eady          for          the          season          to          begin,         Robin          Resiock          practices          serving         during          pre-season          drills          in          the         Memorial          Gym.          Resiock's          dedica-         tion          paid          off          during          the          regular         season          as          she          led          the          team          with         36          service          aces.          (Hayes)         Volleyball          195         196          Volleyball                   Continued         turned          out          for          the          team.         “It's          been          a          frustrating         year,’’          she          admitted.          ‘‘It          was         frustrating          because          we          lost.         I’m          not          really          happy          with         my          performance          when          we         lose,          because          I          feel          I          could         have          done          more.”’         Nevertheless,          Reslock          led         the          team          overall          with          36         aces,          368          kills,          a          .197          hitting         percentage          and          393          digs.         The          final          member          of         Bradetich’s          designated          trio         was          senior          co-captain          Gant.         Gant,          who          started          off          the         year          in          the          hospital          with          a         kidney          infection,          rebounded         late          in          the          year          to          earn          a          spot         on          the          Mountain          West          Con-         ference’s          honorable          mention         team.         “I          expected          more          wins,         but          the          first          half          of          the          sea-         son          we          didn’t          really          come          on         strong,’’          Gant          said.          ‘ But         toward          the          end          of          the          season         we          realized          we          can          beat          these         teams.          We          were          much          more         confident          in          the          second          half         of          the          year,”’         And          just          like          the          team,         Gant          rebounded          in          the          con-         ference          half          of          the          season          to         lead          the          team          with          a          .276         league          hitting          percentage,          21         solo          blocks          and          30          assisted         blocks.         In          addition          to          leading          the         team          during          the          12          confer-         ence          matches,          Gant          found         herself          in          a          leadership          posi-         tion          all          season          long.         HISTLE          STOP.         henever          officials          ‘‘blew  ’          a         call,          Vandal          players          reacted          in         varying          forms          of          disgust.          Terri         Plum          (32)          and          Nellie          Gant           (14)          ar-         gue          with          an          official          at          the          idaho         State          match.          ISU          won          the          match,         3-0.          (Dahiquist)         Ki           SPIRIT         “ As          a          leader          I’m          not          real         ly          rah-rah,’’          she          said.          ‘ Be-         cause          we’re          so          young,          I’ve         been          an          example          —          not          as          a         team          captain,          but          as          a         senior.          I          just          had          to          do          some         things          sometimes.”’         And          for          her          effort,          Gant         received          the          team’s          most          in-         spirational          award          at          season’s         end,         I’m          pleased          with          every-         one’s          improvement,”’         Bradetich          said          referring          to         all          the          members          on          her          team.         “ They’ve          matured          as         players.”’         And          afterall,          Bradetich         should          know.          She          seemed          to         have          the          gift          of          recognizing         a          ‘“‘winner’’          when          she          saw         one.         TUMBLING          BLOCKS.         pikes          put          Whitworth          players          in         trouble          when          Kesha          Christensen         (23)          and          Robin          Resiock          (20)          guard-         ed          the          net.          The          two          players          col-         lected          four          blocks          during          the         Vandals’          four-game          victory         against          Whitworth.          (Moore)         T          A          GLANCE.         season          of          memories:         Terri          Pium          (32)          and          Susan         Deskines          (22)          block          an         Eastern          Washington          spike,         Melinda          Varns          celebrates          a         win          at          Montana          State's          ex-         pense,          Robin          Reslock         breaks          out          of          a          huddle         against          MSU,          and          Julie         Hansen          scores          against         Washington          State’s          Cindy         Baker          (6).          (Hayes)         Volleyball          197         198          Cross          Country         Running          cross          country          is          one          of          the          most          solitary          sporting         events          known.          Alone          with          their          thoughts,          runners          have          time         to          think,          to          plan,          to          be          alone.          And          whether          running          in          warm         weather          or          over          frosty          earth,          in          snowy          woods          or          along          a         frozen          lake,          a          harrier          always          has         §°          BEFORE          |           i?         ae          the          cross          country         season,          the          men          and          wom-         en’s          teams          appeared          to          be         searching          for          the          same          thing,         but          for          different          reasons.         Both          groups          looked          for         someone          to          come          to          the         forefront          and          lead          the          team.         For          the          women,          it          was          a         chance          to          continue          the          win-         ning          ways          of          the          past.          For         the          men,          it          was          a          chance          to         get          out          of          the          Big          Sky          Con-         ference          basement.         It          will          take          a          miracle          for         us          to          get          out          of          the          cellar,’’         said          Mike          Keller,          men’s         cross          country          head          coach,         early          in          the          season.         Yet          miracles          do          happen.         Led          by          captain          Tony         Theriault,          the          team          received         its          miracle          when          the          men         knocked          off          the          University         of          Nevada-Reno          at          the         league          meet          to          place          seventh.         The          seventh          place          finish         marked          the          first          time          in          four         years           the          Vandals          climbed         out          of          the          basement.         And          for          leading          the          team         out          of          the          conference          cellar,         Theriault          was          named          the         team’s          most          outstanding          and         most          inspirational          runner.         “Our          primary          goal          this         year          was          to          get          out          of          the         cellar,          and          we          did,’          said         John          Trott,          men’s          assistant         coach.          ‘This          is          a          positive         step          for          the          program.”’         And          while          Keller          and         Trott          found          that          miracles         still          occurred,          Scott          Lorek,         women’s          cross          county          head         coach,          apparently          received         miraculous          performances         from          a          pair          of          under-         classmen.         Freshman          Kim          Denham         and          last          year’s          top          freshman         Cathy          Wall          grabbed          second         and          fourth          place          respective-         ly          at          the          Mountain          West         Conference          meet          held          in         Moscow.         “I’m          excited          about          my         race.          |          felt          I          ran          well,          but         there          is          always          room          for          im-         provement,’’          Denham          said.         And          the          improvement         Denham          expected          proved         prophetic          as          she          was          named         the          team’s          most          improved         runner          at          season’s          end.          Wall         was          picked          as          the          team’s         most          outstanding          runner          and         Louise          Mainvil          was          selected         most          inspirational         Thus          the          team          that          was         picked          by          some          coaches          in         pre-season          polls          to          finish          as         low          as          sixth,          captured          third         place          at          MWC          champion-         ships.         “Our          younger          runners          ran         well,’’          Lorek          sa id.          ‘‘Not          too         many          people          thought          we         would          do          what          we          did.          The         girls          were          up          to          the          challenge         we          were          faced          with          and          re-         sponed          well,.’’         LOTTING          A          COURSE,         articipants          and          coaches          alike         examined          the          diverse          features          of         the          university's          golf          course.          Tony         Theriault          and          Assistant          Coach         John          Trott          discussed          pre-race         Strategy          prior          to          the          Vandal          Invita-         tional.          Trott’s          advice          paid          divi-         dends          as          Theriault          finished          in         eighth          place.          (O'Bryan)         ROSS          COUNTRY         FF          TO          THE          RACES.         na          windy          day          in          November,          the         men’s          team          hosted          the          Vandal          In-         vitational.          The          men          finished          third         out          of          four          teams,          and          leading          the         Vandal          charge          were          Tony          Theri-         ault,          Mitch          Drew          and          Chris          Wil-         liams.          Theriault          captured          eighth         place          and          Williams          finished          tenth         overall.          (Fritz)         UGGING          THE          WALL.         appiness          is          a          congratulatory         hug          after          completing          a          3.1-mile         run.          Jackie          Mount          (facing),          who         finished          24th          at          the          league          meet,         receives          a          hug          from          Cathy          Wall.         (O'Bryan)         Cross          Country          199         ASS                    REVIEW.         raised          for         their          academic         achievements,         former          Vandal         decathiete         Trond          Knaplund         (top)          and          foot-         ball          linebacker         Tom          Hennessey         (above)          were         recognized          by         Athletic          Direc-         tors           Kathy         Clark          and          Bill         Belknap          during         ceremonies          in         the          Kibbie         Dome.          Both          ath-         letes          were         named          to          the         Big          Sky          Confer-         ence          All-         Academic         team.         (Dahiquist)         200          Athletes’          Grades         ,          E          dumb          jock.”’         Johnny          can’t          read,          but          Joe          Vandal          can.          And          Joe          is          reading         better          all          the          time.          Due          to          procedures          set          up          by          the          athletic         Most          everyone          has          a          men-         |          tal          picture          of          one          of          these         creatures.          The          stereotypical         dumb          jock          is          characterized         as          a          beer-bellied          football         player          with          protruding          buck         tecth,          who          carries          his          books         around          for          show          and          an-         swers          all          questions          with         grunts          or          nods          of          the          head.         But          the          dumb          jock          image         is          changing.          Although          the         typical          athlete          may          not          yet         be          ready          for          a          three-piece         suit          or          pink          polo          shirt,         studies          at          this          university          rev-         ealed          that          the          dumb          jock         myth          is          just          that          —          a          myth.         Based          on          a          study          conduct-         ed          by          Hal          Godwin,          Student         Counseling          Center          psychol-         ogist          and          NCAA          faculty          ath-         letic          representative,          45         percent          of          the          male          athletes         who          enrolled          at          this          univer-         sity          from          1975-1978          graduat-         ed.          This          number          compared         favorably          with          the          44.7          per-         cent          of          the          general          male          stu-         dent          body          that          graduated.         Female          graduation          ratios         were          tipped          even          more          in         favor          of          the          athletes.          Of          the         female          athletes          who          enrolled         from          1975-1978,          50          percent         received          a          degree,          while          only         34.1          percent          of          the          non-         athletes          graduated.         Despite          the          figures,          God-         win          said          he          not          was          happy         with          the          end          result.         “I’m          not          satisfied          and         neither          is          the          athletic          depart-         ment,’’          Godwin          said          of          the         statistics.          ‘‘We          feel          the         department,          a          player’s          intelligence          was         IDAHO          fe          WV         V          INSIGHTS         graduation          rate          should          be         higher          and          we’re          working          to         make          it          so.           To          raise          athletes’          gradua-         tion          rates,          athletic          depart-         ment          officials          proposed          and         implemented          a          fall          orienta-         tion          workshop.         ‘ We          start          with          an          oricn-         tation          meeting          before          the          fall         semester          starts          to          familiarize         the          athletes          with          the          college         system,’’          said          Kathy          Clark,         assistant          athletic          director.         At          the          meeting,          student-         athletes          were          given          sugges-         tions          on          how          to          improve         academically,          Clark          said.         Recommendations          included         advising          atheletes          go          to          class         and          sit          in          the          front          row.         At          the          meeting,          the          ath-         letes          were          also          introduced          to         Godwin.         “IT          introduce          the          notion         that          there          are          rules          that          they         have          to          abide          by,’’          Godwin         said.          ‘‘I          tell          them          my          job          is         to          enforce          them.”’         Once          the          semester          started,         the          job          of          monitoring         student-athletes’          progress         was          accepted          by          coaching         staff          members.          Although         mid-term          grades          were          used         as          the          primary          means          to          in-         dicate          progress,          Vandal         Basketball          Head          Coach          Tim         Floyd          and          staff          took          a          more         active          interest.         Floyd,          who          came          to          the         UI          from          the          University          of         Texas-E]          Paso,          hailed          from         a          program          where          30          of          his          33         UTEP          recruits          graduated.         “T          feel          lucky          to          have         worked          for          a          guy          [Don         Haskins,          UTEP’s          head         basketball          coach]          who          re-         quired          the          players          to          work          in         the          classroom,”          Floyd          said.         “ We          had          a          lot          of          success         with          that          system,          so          I          know         it          works.”’         And          Floyd          figured,          what         worked          at          UTEP,          should         work          at          the          UI.         Floyd’s          system          was          sim-         ple:          players          that          do          not          go          to         class,          do          not          get          to          practice.         And          players          that          do          not         practice,          do          not          play.         Floyd          assigned          Randy         Bennett,          a          graduate          assistant         coach,          to          monitor          his         basketball          players’          atten-         dance.          In          addition          to          regu-         larly          calling          professors          to         update          players’          progress,         Bennett,          “‘will          occassionally         drop          by          a          class          to          see          if          they         are          there,’’          Floyd          said.         In          conjunction          with          other         athletic          department          officials,         Floyd          also          conducted          a          team         study          table.          Although          the         study          table          provided          no          ex-         tra          tutoring,          the          table         provided,          ‘‘a          structured          time         to          help          the          athletes          with          time         management,’’          Godwin         said.          ‘‘Many          students          need         that          kind          of          structure.”’         Thus,          through          the          efforts         of          Godwin          and          the          athletic         department,          the          university         did          its          utmost          to          remove          the         “‘dumb’’          from          the          term         dumb          jock.”         ASY          GRADES.         very          member          of          the          women's         cross          country          team          contributed          to         its          success,          both          in          class          and          on         the          racecourse.          Cathy          Wall,         Maureen          McGinnis,          Jackie          Mount         and          Paula          Parsell          line          up          prior          to         the          league          finals.          (O'Bryan)         Percentage          of          male          students          Percentage          of          female          students         who          graduated          from          the          UI         who          graduated         from          1975-1978.          from          1975-1978.         KL          asta         he          women’s          cross         country          team          went         the          distance          in          more         ways          than          one.         Not          only          did          the          team          fin-         ish          third          in          the          Mountain         West          Conference          meet,          but         the          ladies          finished          the          season         with          a          3.22          team          GPA.          The         group’s          cumulative          GPA          was         3.28.         “We          don’t          recruit          border-         line          students,”’          said          Scott         Lorek,          women’s          cross          country         coach.          ‘‘They          work          really         hard          on          their          own,          it’s          noth-         ing          that          I          do.          These          girls          are         a          good          example          of          what          col-         lege          athletics          can          do.”’         One          person          who          benefited         from          Lorek’s          academic          strides         was          freshman          harrier          Kim         Denham.          Denham          not          only         finished          the          season          with          a          4.0         GPA,          but          placed          fourth          in          the         MWC          finals.         Although          Denham          skipped         two          early          meets          because          she         was          concerned          about          her         grades,          Lorek          worked          around         her          academic          schedule          to         schedule          practice          sessions.          By         the          end          of          the          season,          Den-         ham          had          been          named          the         team’s          most          improved          runner.         For          Lorek          and          his          team,          it         paid          to          go          the          extra          mile.         Athletes’          Grades          201         HE          KID.         hose          who          remembered          Dan         Akins          (40)          from          his          prep          days          at         nearby          Potlatch          High          School          liked         what          they          saw          when          the          freshman         center          scored          12          points          and         grabbed          eight          rebounds          in          his         debut          college          game          against          Si-         mon          Fraser.          Clansmen          forward         Bob          Hieltjes          defended          Aikens          as         the          Vandals          won,          96-55.          (Hayes)         OMINATING          DEFENSE.         efensive          pressure          by          Vandal         point          guard          Vinson          Metcalf          (14)         against          Weber          State’s          Robert         Maxwell          (12)          helped          the          Vandals         to          a          71-48          victory.          Metcalf          scored         six          points          as          he          and          his          team-         mates          presented          Head          Coach          Tim         Floyd          with          his          first          of          six          Big          Sky         Conference          wins.          (Hayes)         OT          SHOT.         e          was          twice          picked          as          the          Big         Sky          Conference’s          Player-of-the-         Week,          named          to          the          league’s          all-         honorable          mention          team          and         selected          as          the          MVP          at          the          Inland         Empire          Classic          tournament.          He         was          Andrew          Jackson          (30).          And         against          Hawali-Hilo,          the          Vandals’         leading          scorer          tallied          28          points          as         the          Vandais          won,          70-63.          (Hayes)         202          Men’s          Basketball         Lost          —         the          term          had          become          all          too          familiar          for          Vandal         basketball          fans.          Over          the          course          of          the          previous          three          seasons,         the          hoopsters          finished          last,          last          and          last          in          conference          play.         The          losses          initiated          change,          and          when          Tim          Fl oyd          was          hired         to          turn          the          basketball          program          around,          he          did.          And          what          of          the         Vandals?          They          were         No          ve          AND          NOT          ws         0...          one          other          head          coach         in          the          history          of          Vandal         basketball          tallied          more          wins         in          his          debut          season          than          Tim         Floyd.         Floyd,          whose          16          wins          were         surpassed          only          by          Charles         Finley’s          17          victories          in         1947-1948,          led          the          Vandals         to          their          first          winning          season         in          four          years.          And          he          did          it         according          to          a          plan          he          deve-         loped          over          the          summer.         Back          in          July          if          someone         had          told          me          we’d          win          16         games,’’          Floyd          said,          ‘‘I’d         have          told          them          they          were          on         drugs.””         In          any          event,          the          Vandals         finished          the          regular          season         with          a          16-14          mark          and          were         seeded          sixth          in          the          Big          Sky                   Conference          tournament.         To          finish          the          year          with          a         ¥           winning          record,          Floyd          said         the          first          item          his          team          would         have          to          overcome          was          its         fear          of          losing.          In          other         words,          Floyd          said,          winning         was          contagious.         And          the          Vandals          proved         Floyd’s.          prophecy          true         throughout          the          season.         After          opening          the          season         with          upset          victories          over         Eastern          Washington          and         Washington          State          at          the          in-         augural          Inland          Empire          Clas-         sic          tournament,          the          Vandals         closed          out          the          year          with          a         win          in          the          opening          round          of         the          conference          tourney.          The         63-62          win          against          the         University          of          Montana         marked          the          Vandals’          first         league          tournament          victory          in         four          seasons.         ‘One          thing          we          wanted          to         do          this          year          was          be          as          com-         petitive          as          we          could          be,”’         Floyd          said.          ‘ And          I          thought         we          were          in          every          game          we         played.          We          tried          to          rekindle         some          of          the          old          enthusiam         that          was          here          during          the         [Don]          Monson          days.”’         Yet          an          increased          competi-         tive          spirit          was          only          one          area         Floyd          hoped          to          improve.         The          second          aspect          Floyd          said         needed          upgrading          was          his         team’s          defense.         And          improving          the          team’s         defense          was          more          than          a         goal,          it          was          a          necessity.         We          knew          coming          in          that         we          would          have          to          put          our         emphasis          on          defensive          end         of          the          floor          and          rebounding         because          we          were          so          average         in          terms          of          overall          size,’’         Floyd          said.         Floyd’s          defensive          empha-         sis          paid          dividends          as          the         Vandals          notched          a          12-1         record          in          games          where          their         opponents          scored          less          than         65          points.         Although          Floyd’s          anxiety         about          his          team’s          lack          of         height          was          a          source          of          con-         cern,          Vandal          fans          discovered         that          pulling          for          the          underdog         and          undersized          team          to          bea         timately          scored          11          points          as          the         Vandals          defeated          Hilo,          70-63.         (Hayes)         Men’s          Basketball          203         at          the          buzzer         Ul          Opp         96          —          55         76          —          65         59          —          56         62          —          55         70—74         85          —          41         71          —          66         69          —          68         568          —          79         53          —          72         70          —          67         69          —          63         64          —          66         71—          48         60          —          54         Simon          Fraser         E.          Washington         Washington          St.         Gonzaga         New          Mexico         E.          Oregon         Puget          Sound         Portland         Oregon          St.         Washington         Mississippi          St.         Hawaii-Hilo         Washington          St         Weber          St.         idaho          St.                   Continued         cause          celebre.         “ T          think          the          people          start-         ed          to          come          back,’’          Floyd         said.          ‘ The          crowds          were          still         decent          at          the          end          of          the          year         and          better          than          they          were         last          year          so          that          was          en-         couraging.”’         And          perhaps          the          names         cheered          most          were          the          Van-         dal          players          with          southern         roots.          In          addition          to          being         coached          by          an          all-Deep         South          staff,          four          of          the          Van-         dals’          top          six          scorers          hailed         from          the          states          of          Alabama,         Mississippi          and          Louisiana.         And          the          top          offensive          and         defensive          players          on          the         204          Men’s          Basketball         Men         Won          16,          Lost          14         E.          Washington         Boise          St.         Montana         Montana          St.         Nevada-Reno         N.          Arizona         Idaho          St.         Weber          St.         Boise          St.         Montana          St         Montana         55          —          45         60          —          50         57          —          74         63          —          66         72—74         61          —          67         41          —69         64          —          88         44          —          62         81          —          86         102          —          76         N.          Arizona          62          —76         Nevada-Reno          68          —          76         League          Playoffs         Montana          63          —          62         Idaho          St.          63          —          82         Nor          vs”          AND          CERTAINLY          NOT         team          were          two          of          these          four         athletes.         Andrew          Jackson          led          the         team          in          scoring          and          re-         bounding          averaging          14.1         points          and          6.7          boards          per         game.          Additionally,          he          was         twice          named          the          Big          Sky         Conference’s          Player-of-the-         Week          and          was          tabbed          the         MVP          at          the          Inland          Empire         Classic          tourney.         ‘ Andrew’s          scoring          inside         has          been          a          big          plus          for          us,”’         said          Kermit          Davis,          assistant         coach.          ‘‘He’s          gotten          a          lot         better          and          I          think          his          inten-         sity          has          gotten          better          too.”’         ‘ He’s          shown          flashes          of         greatness,’’          Floyd          said          of         VER          THE          TOP.         ne          of          five          new          players          recruit-         ed          by          Head          Coach          Tim          Floyd,         James          Allen          (22)          ied          the          team          in         assists          and          steals.          Driving          to          the         basket          against          Boise          State,          Allen         scored          over          Doug          Usitalo          (30)          and         Arneli          Jones          (42).          BSU          won,          62-44.         (Dahiquist)         Jackson.          ‘‘His          intensity          just         keeps          getting          better          and         better.’”         But          while          Jackson’s          forte         was          found          under          the          offen-         sive          boards,          teammate         James          Allen’s          speciality          was         defense.         Allen,          who          led          the          team          in         assists,          was          assigned          repeat-         edly          to          defend          the          opposing         team’s          top          player.         ‘James          Allen          is          our          best         defensive          player,’’          Floyd         said.          ‘‘No          matter          who          it          is,         James          guards          the          other         team’s          best          guard,          forward         or          center.”         “His          intensity          is          what         makes          him          good,’’          Davis         pss          TALICK          ELECTRICITY.         enior          Tom          Stalick          (13)          suffered         8          broken          nose          and          separated         shoulder          during          the          season,          but         still          managed          to          play          in          26          of          30         games.          Against          Hawaii-Hilo,          Sta-         lick          tallied          three          points          and          two          re-         bounds          as          the          Vandals          prevailed,         70-63.          (Hayes)         said.          ‘‘He’s          never          going          to         be          a          guy          who          puts          up          big         numbers.’’         Allen          agreed.         “ Scoring          is          not          my          deal,”’         he          said.          ‘‘I’d          rather          play         defense,          handle          the          ball          and         record          about          nine          assists         than          score          anytime.         “ When          I          play          hard,          that’s         usually          when          I          play          my          best.         My          job          is          to          make          sure          they         don’t          score.”’         And          if          Floyd’s          winning         tradition          continues,          he          could         become          only          the          fifth          coach         in          the          8l-year          history          of         Vandal          basketball          to          record         winning          seasons          in          his          first         two          years.         NNOYED          FLOYD.         rguments          ensued          at         the          Boise          State          game          be-         tween          a          ref          and          Tim         Floyd          due          to          bad          calls,         not          name          cailing.         (Dahiquist)         odney          Danger-         field          claims          he         gets          no          respect         If          this          is          true,          then         Men’s          Basketball          Head         Coach          Tim          Floyd          gets         even          less.         While          touring          the         state          with          Vandal          Foot-         ball          Head          Coach          Keith         Gilbertson,          Floyd          was         mistakenly          addressed          as         “Coach          Foley’’          by          the         head          of          the          national         Vandal          Booster          Club,         Keither          Gregory.         When          ‘‘Smith          and         Street’”’          released          its          an-         nual          college          basketball         preview          issue          in          Octo-         ber,          the          head          coach          of         the          Vandals          was          incor-         rectly          listed          as          ‘‘Joe         Risnag.’’         “I          think          its          been         fun,”’          Floyd          said          with          a         smile.          ‘‘I          came          in          the         one          day          and          they         changed          my          name          tag         on          the          door          to          Risnag.”’         Floyd,          nevertheless,         took          the          identification         indignation          in          stride.         “You          have          to          earn         that          type          of          respect,’’         Floyd          said.          “And          if         those          preseason          maga-         zines          that          were          picking         our          team          eighth          were         correct,          I          really          don’t         care          whether          they          know         Tim          Floyd’s          coaching         this          year          or          not.’         Men’s          Basketball          205         The          Lady          Vandal          basketball          team          celebrated          its          10th          anniversary          in          an          unusual          manner         —          with          an          8-19          record.          After          finishing          with          a          2-16          mark          in          its          debut          season,          the          team         never          tallied          another          losing          total          until          it          turned          10-years-old.          The          losses          mounted,          but         the          team          was          seldom         Wes          a          team          finishes          its         regular          season          with          an          8-19         record,          armchair          analysists         might          conclude          that          they          had         a          ‘ bad          season.”’         Underline          the          word          might.         Although          the          Lady          Van         dal          basketball          team          ended         the          season          with          an          8-19          over-         all          mark          and          finished          sixth          in         the          Mountain          West          Confer-         ence          with          a          3-9          record,          the         lady          hoopsters          did          not          have         a          bad          season.          Or          at          least          that         was          what          Women’s          Head         Coach          Laurie          Turner         thought.         “ T          really          don’t          think          our         record          was          indicative          of          how         well          we          played,’’          the          first-         year          head          coach          said,         he          trio          of          senior          guards          Krista         Dunn          (12),          Lynn          Nicholas          (11)          and         Paula          Getty          (14)          played          on          Vandal         teams          that          participated          in          NCAA         and          WNIT          tournaments.          Prior          to         their          final          home          game          against         Eastern          Washington,          the          seniors         were          presented          with          bouquets          of         flowers.          EWU          spoiled          the          finale          by         winning,          74-71.          (Dahiquist)         206          Women’s          Basketball         ‘ There          were          five          games          in         particular          that          came          down          to         one          or          two          points          with          less         than          two          minutes          to          play          —         games          that          could          have          gone         either          way.”’         But          regardless          of          the         ““what          ifs,”’          “‘maybes,’’          and         “‘might          have          beens,’’          the         defending          1986          women’s         NIT          champions          found          them-         selves          struggling          in          1987.         “There          were          a          lot          of          out-         side          factors,’’          Turner          said,         Everyone          was          hurt          at          one         point          in          time.          I          think          most         teams          in          the          conference          were         up          and          Idaho          was          definitely         in          a          rebuilding          year.  ’         rhe          word          ‘“‘rebuilding’’         took          on          a          double          meaning         for          the          Vandals.         During          the          season,          the         INE          PASS.         orward          Christy          Van          Pelt          (20)         passes          the          ball          beyond          the          reach         of          Eastern          Washington's          Brenda         Souther          (54)          and          Lisa          Danner          (50).         Van          Peit          started          in          all          27          Lady         Vandal          games          and          led          the          team          in         rebounding,          assists          and          blocked         shots.          Although          she          scored          10         points          against          EWU,          the          Lady         Vandals          lost,          74-71.          (Dahiquist)         ‘Dilown          ano          ovr          oF          BasneTBALL          iil         lady          hoopsters          were          forced         to          rebuild          physically          after         sustaining          six          cases          of          knee         tendonitis,          four          knee          surger-         ies,          a          broken          nose,          a          sublex-         ating          shoulder,          a_          broken         finger          and          various          ‘minor’’         injuries.         “‘Injuries          played          a          part,”’         Turner          said,          ‘‘but          I          don’t         want          to          use          it          as          an          excuse.’’         With          each          injury,          Turner         said          her          rebuilding          task          be-         came          more          difficult.         ““We          played          at          least          one         good          game          against          every         team          in          the          league          with          the         exception          of          Montana         State,’          Turner          said.          ‘‘We         never          really          got          on          track         against          MSU.”’         Other          MWC         agreed.         coaches         “‘Idaho’s          got         team,’’          said          MSU          Head         Coach          Gary          Schwartz          fol-         lowing          his          team’s          71-53          win.         They          had          us          kind          of          wor-         ried.          They          have          so          many         players          who          can          beat          you,         but          we’re          just          pretty          hor.”’         l          thought          Idaho          clinched         us          in          the          first          half,’’          said         University          of          Montana          Head         Coach          Robin          Selvig.          The         Vandals          led          the          Lady          Griz-         zlies          42-33          at          halftime,          but         lost          the          game          65-60.         “I          thought          Idaho          had         us,’’          said          Weber          State          Head         Coach          Joan          Campbell          after         her          team’s          75-71          victory.         ‘Idaho’s          improved;          they         played          with          a          lot          of          intensi         ty.          They          came          roaring          at          us         Continued                   a          good         CORE          IT.         treaking          past         Eastern         Washington's         Brenda          Souther         (54),          freshman         Lori          Elkins          (21)         drives          for          two         of          her          10         points.          Etkins         started          for          the         Lady          Vandals         in          10.0f          12          con-         ference          games.         (Dahlquist)         ONG          YEAR.         osses          ‘could         not-knack         rookie          Head         Coach          Laurie         Turner          to          her         knees,          but          a         close          ball          game         could..The          Van-         dals’_74°77          loss         to          Eastern         Washingfon         marked          her         19th          and          final         defeat.         (Dahiquist)         VANDALISM         Women's          Basketball          207         OP          DUNN,         hree-point          shots          were          Krista         Dunn’s          (12)          speciality,          but          the         five-foot-seven-inch          guard          could         drive          the          baseline          as          well.          During         the          season,          the         ry,          netted          17          points          in          her          final         college          game.          The          Lady          Vandals         lost          to          Eastern          Washington,          74-71.         (Dahiquist)         ELL          DUNN,         ell-rounded          performances         earned          Krista          Dunn          (12)          not          only         a          broken          nose,          but          a          spot          on          the         All-Mountain          West          Conference’s         second          team.          Against          Eastern         Washington          Dunn          guarded          Roj          Jo-         hal          (14)          and          limited          her          to          13         points.          EWU          won          the          game,          74-71.         (Dahiquist)         208          Women’s          Basketball                   Continued         in          the          second          half          with          that         full          court          press          of          theirs.         They          did          it          right.         “I’ve          got          to          give          credit          to         the          Idaho          kids.          How          can          we         shoot          70          percent,          out-         rebound          you          and          only          be          up         by          nine          at          halftime?’’         “ T          think          Idaho          hustled          a         lot          more          tonight,          then          when         we          played          them          in          Cheney,”’         said          Eastern          Washington         Head          Coach          Bill          Smithpeters         after          his          team’s          74-71          win.         “They          played          much          better         here.          They          were          hustling          and         rebounding          hard.”’         ]          thought          we          did          a          bet-         ter          job          of          covering          [Krista]         Dunn          in          the          game,”          said         Boise          State          Head          Coach         Tony          Oddo.          ‘‘And          that’s         something          we          tried          to          do.          I         was          pleased          with          our          defen-         sive          effort          on          her.          We          tried         to          contain          her.          As          Dunn         goes,          they          go.”’         Dunn,          who          led          the          Van-         dals          in          scoring,          averaged         15.2          points          per          game,          ranked         first          in          conference          freethrow         shooting          at          87.9          percent,          and         fired          in          39          points          against          the         Broncos          in          two          games.         Thanks          in          part          to          the          Dunn’s         shooting,          two          of          the          Van-         dals’          three          conference          wins         came          at          the          expense          of          BSU.         ““We're          going          to          miss         Krista,’’          Turner          said.          ‘ She’s         been          our          most          consistent         performer          all          year.          She’s          go-         ing          to          be          difficult          to         replace.””         In          addition          to          Dunn,          two         other          senior          guards          finished         their          careers.         Four-year          letter          winner         Lynn          Nicholas          ended          the         season          scoring          a          total          of          224         points,          second          only          to          Dunn.         And          Paula          Getty,          who         missed          only          one          game          during         her          four-year          career,          was          se-         cond          on          the          team          in          field         goal          percentage,          shooting         47.1          percent          from          the          floor.         “ They’ll          all          be          hard          to         replace,’’          Turner          said.         URE          SHOT.         enior          Lynn          Nicholas          fires          in          two         of          her          15          points          in          a          losing          effort         against          Eastern          Washington's          Roj         Johal          (14)          and          Sonya          Gaubinger         (10).          Prior          to          her          final          season,         Nicholas’          best          game          had          been          12         points.          Nicholas          scored          a          career-         high          18          points          against          Concordia         College          of          Portland          in          December.         (Dahiquist)         ROUBLESHOOTERS.         he          eyes          of          Texas          were          upon         Moscow          when          the          defending         NCAA          Champion          University          of         Texas          Lady          Longhorns          chal-         lenged          the          WNIT          champion          Lady         Vandals.          The          Longhorns’          lineup         featured          former          Moscow          High         School          star          Andrea          Lioyd.          Lioyd,         who          was          guarded          by          Sheri          Leh-         mer          (30)          and          Lori          Elkins          (21),         scored          16          points          as          3,250          specta-         tors          watched          Texas          prevail          87-44.         The          Vandals          trailed          44-17          at          hal-         ftime          and          in          the          second          half,          Van-         dal          forwards          Kim          Chernecki          (24)         and          Lehmer          (30)          boxed          out         Doreatha          Conwell          (50)          under          the         hoop.          (Fritz)         2(9         Women's          Basketball                   an         N.          Arizona         ONGRATS          CHATS.         Boise          St.         CATT          Paty          pls          ia          hacsisedt          cada          ;         bie          th                    7          Detniék(174)          following          his          pertor           «         i          idaho         vr          soa)          mancératért          Aprn  quatifangular          t }          Weber          St.         rrat          et.          6          meet          belt.at          Waghingtog          State          Ai™™|          !daho          St         MwA          ALY          rat          ¢7          theoWSY          meet,          Demick,          figiahed?          |          ‘|          Nevada-Reno         7?T,                    third'In'the          800-meters          with          a          time’          Montana         ’          45          r'          ?           '6f4:51.8,          Four          weekslater          at          the’,          Montana          St.         Nl          7          Big          Sky          Contotohdd’          meet?Bemick          +         re          TY          ea          ty          LORCA          again'placeertnird,          por          wen          ©          t?         ’          =          tt          2                    Umoarotyt:          9°,          96.7          Fifa’,          '         at          47          Tre          ele          at          :          ri          tres         210          track         “Here          they          come!”          the          announcer          screamed.          “Only          100          meters         to          go,          and          they're          neck          and          neck.          The          crowd's          on          its          feet,          peo-         ple          are          yelling.          It’s          Patrick          Williams          and          Andy          Brass.          Williams          and         Brass.          Williams          and...         i          se          8          wii          F          :          F          ,          I.         7         2          to          start          of          their         respective          conference          track         meets,          Men’s          Head          Coach         Mike          Keller          and          Women’s         Head          Coach          Scott          Lorek         each          predicted          his          team         would          finish          in          fifth          place.         Events          at          the          meets,         however,          proved          them         wrong.         Keller’s          team          finished          two         spots          higher          than          predicted,         coming          in          third          in          the          Big         Sky          Conference.          Meanwhile,         Lorek’s          ladies          dropped          two         notches          and          placed          seventh         in          the          Mountain          West          Con-         ference.         For          Keller,          victories          in          the         sprints          propelled          his          team          to         third.          For          Lorek,          a          seeming-         ly          endless          stream          of          fourth         place          finishes          doomed          his         team          to          the          MWC          basement.         Leading          the          charge          out          of         the          blocks          for          the          Vandal         men          was          Keller’s          most          valu-         able          runner,          Patrick          Wil-         liams,          Williams,          who          was         named          the          team’s          MVP          at         season's          end,          won          the          100         meters,          200          meters          and          an-         chored          the          _          victorious         400-meter          relay.         In          addition          to          his          thre e         first          place          finishes,          the         Jamaican          sophomore          estab-         lished          a          new          league          record          in         the          100          meters.          His          time          of         10,29          broke          the          five-year-old         league          record          of          10.32.         Williams’          victory          in          the         200          meters          (20.97)          marked         the          second          consecutive          year         he          won          the          race.          And          Wil-         liams’          anchoring          of          the         400-meter          relay          marked          the         fifth          year          in          a          row          the          Van-         dals          ran          away          with          the          short         relay          race.         Joining          Williams          on          the         relay          was          the          trio          of          sopho-         more          Dayo          Onanubosi,          and         freshmen          Lenford          O’Garro         and          George          Ogbeide.         Although          Williams          won         three          conference          events,          he         was          not          the          only          sprinter          to         tally          points.         Onanubosi,          who          battled          a         hamstring          injury,          managed          a         second          in          the          100          meters          and         Pei          t8ht,         Lieansppaansai          iis          af          see         Pappeaeeedsy          tt          se.         U          v         |          os          pssaty         iy          O08:          PALTIEE          TTT          dbsdd         hag?         a          fourth          in          the          200          meters.         Onanubosi’s          second          place         finisk          in          the          100          meters          was         especially          pleasing,          Keller         said,         The          reason          for          Keller’s         delight          was          due          to          the          fact         Onanubosi          was          not          sup-         posed          to          place          so          prominent-         ly.          Ogbeide,          who          was          seeded         second          in          the          100          meters,         false          started          and          was         scratched          from          the          finals.         But          Onanubosi          rose          to          the         occasion,          Keller          said,          and         captured          second.         Ogbeide,          despite          his          false         start          in          the          100          meters,          still         collected          a          win          in          the          long         jump          and          followed          up          that         leap          with          a          second          place          ef-         fort          in          the          triple          jump.         Keller’s          second          surprise          of         the          meet          was          O’Garro’s          time         in          the          400          meters.          The          fresh-         man          from          St.          Vincent          en-         tered          the          meet          owning          a          time         of          49.2          seconds,          but          at          the         Boise          State-hosted          league         meet,          he          turned          in          a          time          of         47.30          to          capture          third          place.         Continued                   RIPLE          THREAT.         op          Vandal          sprinter          Patrick          Wil-         liams          (187)          pulls          away          from          his         competitors          at          a          meet          held          at         Washington          State.          At          the          Big          Sky         Conference          meet,          Williams          won         the          100          meters,          200          meters          and         anchored          the          400-meter          relay          to         victory.          He          also          qualified          for          the         NCAA          national          meet          in          the          100         and          200          meters.          (Fritz)         Track          I          |         AINSTAY.         ller          Louise          Mainvil          tallied         top          five          finishes          in          two          events          at         the          Mountain          West          Conference         meet          held          in          Boise.          Mainvil          placed         fourth          in          the          6,000          meters         (18:44.49)          and          fifth          in          the          10,000         meters          (40:40.89).          (Jones)         Montana         Boise          St.         Montana          St.         7th          Mountain          West         212          Track         ae                    Continued         While          the          men’s          team         sprinted          its          way          to          a          third         place          finish,          the          injury         plagued          Lady          Vandals         finished          in          last          place.         Although          Lorek’s          team         scored          35          points          in          13          events,         the          women          still          finished          one         point          behind          sixth          place         Eastern          Washington.         “From          a          team          standpoint         I          would          have          to          say          the          meet         went          poorly,’’          Lorek          said.         ‘But,          individually          we          did          as         well          as          we          could          have          expect-         ed.          Everyone          on          the          team         ran          their          best.’’         And          although          the          Lady         Vandals          ‘‘ran          their          best,’’          no         university          thinclad          finished         higher          than          fourth          place.          Six         Vandal          runners          finished          in         fourth          place,          three          tallied         fifth          place          finishes          and          five         others          placed          sixth.         Among          the          women          finish-         ing          in          fourth          were:          Louise         Mainvil          in          the          10,000          meters;         Caryn          Choate,          100          meters;         Sally          Read,          800          meters;          Pau-         la          Parsell,          3,000          meters          and         Tammi          Lesh,          long          jump.         The          400-meter          relay          team         of          Choate,          Read,          Lesh          and         Monica          Langfeldt          also         finished          in          fourth          place.         But          the          big          winners          for         Lady          Vandals          was          the          group         of          Mainvil,          Choate,          Read,         Langfeldt          and          Lesh.         In          addition          to          their          fourth         place          finishes,          Mainvil         placed          fifth          in          the          5,000         =         %         meters          and          sprinter          Choate         collected          a          sixth          place          tally          in         the          200          meters.         Read          and          Langfeldt          com-         bined          with          Kelley          Carmody         and          Michelle          Navarre,          to         finish          fifth          in          the          1,600-         meter          relay.         And          Lesn,          who          was          voted         the          team’s          most          valuable          and         most          inspirational          member,         collected          4,860          points          and          a         sixth          place          finish          in          the          hep-         tathlon.         Thus          once          all          the          smoke         and          dust          had          settled,          the          fi-         nal          marks          proved          that          cor-         rectly          predicting          the         outcome          of          the          meet          to          be          as         fleeting          as          the          races          them-         selves.         +         Pee         EE         ah          TaPt          TTP          er          ett          Tet          Me          Pe          ee          eet          RT         OP,          SKIP          AND          BUNCH.         igh          above          the          long          jump          pit,         freshman          Denise          Bunch          glances         skyward          following          a          triple          jump          at-         tempt          at          the          Idaho          Invitational         meet.          Although          Bunch          placed         fourth          in          the          triple          jump          at          the         Moscow          meet,          at          the          conference         meet          in          Boise,          she          set          a          new         school          record          with          a          jump          of         37-feet-4-inches.          (Morgan)         NGLISH          READER.         xchange          student          Sally          Read         sped          to          a          first          place          finish          in          the         400          meters          at          the          Idaho          invitation-         al          meet.          Read,          who          hails          from          En-         gland,          finished          fourth          in          the          800         meters          at          the           league          meet.         (Morgan)         r         Ky         T%         t         s+                   a          a         an         0          tw          sg          Ae          tae          at         .         .          .         =         —f-         _                  -         ee         wee         A                             Baw         4          Vea          es         a         P                    -         cok          a         emer}          Ath          te          PARSE          MAREE          O          ee         Track          213         HOT          GUNNER.         tatuesque          Efrem          Del          Degan         sets          himself          to          return          a          lob         against          Lewis-Clark          State,          Del          De-         gan          not          only          downed          the          NAIA-         Warriors,          but          at          the          Big          Sky         Conference          tournament          he         defeated          all          league          opponents.          He         finished          the          season,          30-7.          (Jones)         OME          BACK          SHANE.         enter          court          action          saw          Shane         Ristau          defeat          his          former          team-         mates          from          Lewis-Clark          State.         Ristau,          who          transferred          from         LCSC,          played          No.3          singles          for          the         Vandals          and          tallied          a          3-3          record         at          the          conference          tournament.         (Jones)         Big          Sky          Playoffs         Weber          St.         Nevada-Reno         Boise          St.         Idaho         Montana          St         N.          Arizona         Idaho          St         Oakwn—-o         i          BP          dal          eh          |         Won          23,          Lost          11         214          tennis         “Skosh”          pulled          the          fedora          low          across          his          brow.          He          grabbed          a         mud-splattered          overcoat          and          wrapped          it          about          his          shoulders.         “Come          on,          ‘Skosh,’”          Eliot          Ness          grunted.          “We've          got          work          to          do.”         Untouchable          foes          forced          ‘Skosh”          and          his          teammates          into         ie,          only          thing          the          Vandal         men          and          women’s          tennis         teams          had          in          common          was         that          they          represented          the         University          of          Idaho.         Oh          sure,          both          teams          post-         ed          winning          records,          but          how         they          went          about          racking          up         their          victories          were          two          en-         tirely          different          matters.         The          men’s          team          combined         experience          and          consistency         to          record          a          23-11          record          and         finish          fourth          at          the          Big          Sky         Conference          tournament.         The          women’s          team,          mean-         while,          lost          its          top          player          but         fought          and          scratched          its          way         to          a          18-8          record          and          a          fifth         place          finish          in          the          Mountain         West          Conference          finals.         For          the          men,          it          was          busi-         ness          as          usual.          For          the          wom-         en,          it          was          a          struggle.         “Coming          into          the          year,         we          thought          we'd          have          a         good          team,          and          we          did,’         Tennis          Head          Coach          Pat         Swafford          said          referring          to         the          men’s          team.         “ We          didn’t          lose          too          many         matches          to          teams          we          should         have          beaten.          It          was          a          good         team,          and          fairly          consistent,’”         he          added.         And          the          players          who         perhaps          best          personified          the         team’s          consistency          was          the         nea          into          the          year,          we          thought          we'd          have         a          good          team,          and          we          did.         PAT          SWAFFORD         trio          of          Charles          ‘‘Skosh’’         Berwald,          Efrem          Del          Degan         and          Shane          Ristau.         Berwald,          who          played          No.         1          singles,          was          the          emotional         leader          of          the          team,          Swafford         said,          Berwald          recorded          a         17-15          mark          at          the          top          singles         spot          and          was          named          the         team’s          most          inspirational         player.         Del          Degan          was          the          univer-         sity’s          lone          representative          on         the          all-conference          team.          Del         Degan          won          the          No.          2          singles         championship          at          the          confer-         ence          tournament          posting          a         6-0          mark          and          finished          the         season          30-7.          For          his          effort,         he          was          named          the          team’s         most          outstanding          player.         Ristau,          meanwhile,          was         named          the          team’s          most          im-         proved          player.          The          Lewiston         native          ended          the          season          with         a          20-15          mark          at          No.          3          singles         and          combined          with          Berwald         to          form          the          university’s          top         doubles          team.         Continued                   UST          A          SKOSH.         ovial         ““Skosh’’          Ber-         wald          leaves          his         feet          to          wallop          a         forehand          return         against         Washington         State.          Voted         the          team’s         most          inspira-         tional          player,         Berwald          beat         WSU          and          end-         ed          the          year         with          a          17-15         mark.          (Moore)         Tennis          15         BUN          §         PSS          Ph          ewd          ass:          te5         PEDSTES          LIC          ear                   eeee          SE         ’          ‘          444)         iS)          1PM         Aphis          é'         4epnyyp          tt          ¢         00D          GOLLY          HOLLY.         finish          at          the          Mountain          West         ference          tournament,          in          addi-         tion          to          being          named          to          the          all-         conference          squad,          she          was         named          the          team's          most          inspira-         tional          and          co-most          outstanding                   Continued         Meanwhile          on          the          wom-         en’s          side          of          the          net,         Swafford’s          lady          netters          were         dealt          a          smashing          blow          even         before          the          season          started;         the          team’s          top          player          did          not         return          to          school.         Anna          deLa          Cueva,          who          in         1986          was          named          to          the          all-         conference          team,          did          not          en-         roll          at          the          university          because         of          personal          reasons.         Player.          (Morgan)         ‘ We          ended          up          18-8          with         only          two          players          on          the          team         with          very          good          records          in         singles          matches,’’          Swafford         said.          ‘‘On          paper,          it          looked         like          we          were          in          trouble.”         But          as          it          turned          out,          the         people          in          trouble          were          those         schools          opposing          the          lady         netters.          Because          with          senior         Holly          Benson          playing          No.          1         singles          and          freshman          Cathy         Shanander          starting          at          No.          2         B          laste          THE          WOMEN'S          TENNIS         standing          award          with          Benson,         was          her          freshman          teammate,         Shanander.          Shanander          end-         ed          the          year          with          a          26-3         record          in          singles          play          and         combined          with          Lynda         Leroux          to          tally          a          23-7          mark         in          No.          |          doubles.          And          like         Benson,          Shanander          was         named          to          the          all-conference         team.         “Tf          either          Cathy          or          Holly         lost,          we          were          in          deep          trou-         with          a          problem          —          it          took         five          match          victories          to          win          a         contest,          Benson          =          and         Shanander          accounted          for         only          two          wins.         Enter          the          rest          of          the          team.         With          Leroux          playing          at         No.          3          singles,          Jodey          Farwell         at          No.          4,          Jolene          Bacca          at         No.          5          and          Shelia          Moore          at         No.          6,          the          women’s          team         somehow          managed          to          win         more          often          than          it          lost,         “‘Anytime          you          lose          your          singles,          Swafford          had          a_          ble,’’          Swafford          said.          “‘They          Swafford          said.         No.          |          singles          player          the          day          reliable          one-two          punch          atev-          had          to          win          for          us          to          have          a          ““At          every          match          we'd         before          registration,          you’rein          ery          match,          chance          at          winning          a          match.’’          have          four          girls          play          well,’’         a          lot          of          trouble,’’          Swafford         said.          ‘‘We          weren’t          banking         on          her          not          coming          back.’’         But          even          with          deLa          Cue-         va          out          and          only          two          seniors         on          the          team,          Swafford          and         assistant          coach          Dave          Scott         bankrolled          the          team          into          a         winner.         216          rennis         Benso n          finished          the          year         with          a          22-6          mark          in          singles         play,          was          selected          to          the         league’s          all-conference          team         and          named          the          most          inspira-         tional          and          co-most          outstand-         ing          player          on          the          Vandal         team.         Sharing          the          most          out-         Indeed,          Swafford’s          words         rang          particularly          true          in          that         Benson          and          Shanander          ac-         counted          for          60          percent          of          the         team’s          singles          victories.         Yet          even          with          the          “‘given’’         that          Benson          and          Shanander         would          win          their          singles         matches,          Swafford          was          left         Swafford          said.          ‘‘Then          the         next          time          out,          four          different         ones          would          play          well.          They         just          constantly          found          a          way         to          win.”’         And          finding          ways          to          win         was          something          both          the          men         and          women’s          teams          had          in         common.         Wa?         ts          as          £         MY          1          Vy.         eH          I         Mountain          West          Playoffs         Weber          St          9         Idaho          St.         Montana         Montana          St         idaho         Boise          St         E.          Washington         Won          18,          Lost          8         Tennis          2          |          7         It          is          estimated          that          during          an          18-hole          round          of          golf,          the          average          linkster          will          have          walked         more          than          four          miles.          Although          that          may          not          sound          too          difficult,          imagine          what          it          was         like          for          golf          team          members          who          played          36          holes          in          a          day          while          toting          around          a          25-pound         bag          of          clubs.          An          arduous          task,          but          not          too          difficult          when          one          is         RIVEN          TO          SUCCEED          AND         an          when          it          looked          like          the         Vandal          golf          team          was          on          its         way          to          becoming          a          Big          Sky         Conference          powerhouse,          the         league          office          assessed          the         team          a          penalty          stroke.          The         league          canceled          its          post-         season          tournament.         With          only          five          schools          in         the          conference          having          teams,         they          decided          to          cancel          the         tournament,’’          said          Kim         Kirkland,          head          golf          coach.         ‘Hopefully          in          the          future         they’ll          try          and          get          it          going         again.”’         One          reason          Kirkland         hoped          to          get          the          tournament         started          was          due          to          the          wealth         of          talent          his          Vandal          team         possessed.         “T          had          a          good          group          of         golfers          this          year,’’          Kirkland         said.          ‘‘As          a          group          they          have         EED          OFF.         eammates          Steve          Johnson          and         Bill          Thomas          tee          up          shots          on          the         university          course.          A          Canadian         born          in          Trail,          British          Columbia,                   Johnson          was          named          the          golf         team’s          most          valuable          player          at         season’s          end.          (Dahiquist)         more          potential          than          any         team          I’ve          had          in          10          years          of         coaching.”’         And          perhaps          the          linkster         with          the          most          potential          was         the          golfer          Kirkland          tabbed         as          his          most          valuable          player,         sophomore          Steve          Johnson.         Johnson,          who          finished         fourth          at          the          Big          Sky          tour-         nament          in          1986,          finished          se-         cond          at          the          fall          Oregon          State         Invitational.         Kirkland’s          most          inspira-         tional          award          was          shared          by         juniors          Darin          Ball          and          Bo         Davies.          Additionally,          Davies         took          home          top          honors          when         he          carded          the          lowest          in-         dividual          total          at          the          Oregon         State          Invitational.         Yet          Davies          was          not          the         lone          Vandal          golfer          to          cap-         ture          first          place          at          a          tourna-         ment.          In          the          fall,          Brad         Harper          won          the          Idaho          In-         ONG          DISTANCE.         (Dahiquist)         engthy          tee          shots          were          one          of         jui-ior          Darin          Ball's          trademarks.          At         the          end          of          the          year,          the          Lewiston         )          golfer          was          named          the          team’s         =           most          inspirational          player.         vitational          and          Matt          Gustav-         el          won          the          Boise          State         Invitational.         “This          team          had          a          lot          of         balance,’’          Kirkland          said.         “ I’d          take          five          guys          to          a          tour-         nament          knowing          that          any-         one          of          them          was          capable          of         winning          it.’’         But          while          the          Vandal          gol-         fers          enjoyed          a          successful          fall         tour,          the          linkster’s          luck          hit          a         bunker          or          two          in          the          spring,         “‘They          and          myself          were         disappointed          that          we          didn’t         play          better          this          spring,”’         Kirkland          said.          ‘‘At          every         tournament,          we          had          two          or         three          play          well,          but          then          the         others          would          have          an          off         round          or          two,         A          couple          of          times          in          the         spring,          one          of          our          guys         would          be          leading          right          up         until          the          final          hole          and          then         lose          it.          It          was          kind          of          disap-         IN'T          NO          LIE.         fter          driving          his          ball          onto          the         green,          freshman          Matt          Gustavel         lines          up          a          birdie          putt.          During          the         fall,          Gustavel          won          the          Boise          State         Invitational.          (Dahlquist)         pointing.”’         Yet          Kirkland’s          spring          dis-         appointment          was          not          reflect-         ed          in          the          attitude          of          his         players.         ‘ Another          really          good         thing          about          this          team          was          its         motivation,’’           Kirkland          said.         “If          you          have          five          guys          who         are          really          good,          you          have         nobody          pushing          them.          But         we          have          about          eight          guys         who          are          all          on          about          the         same          level,          so          they’re          really         motivated          to          make          the          team         to          travel,         “On          this          team,          there          was         really          more          pressure          on         making          the          team          to          travel         than          there          was          once          play         began.”’         And          with          the          current          play-         ers          at          his          disposal,          all          that         Kirkland          now          waits          for          is          the         Big          Sky          tournament          to          begin         again.         oth          how         Dual          Meets         Won          4,          Lost          0         Oregon          St.          Invite         Idaho          2nd          of          9         idaho          invitational         Idaho          ist          of          5         Boise          St.          Invite         idaho          ist          of          4         Sacramento          St.          Invite         idaho          11th          of          23         Portland          Invite         Idaho          3rd          of          14         Boise          St.          Invite         Idaho          4th          of          11         Washington          St.          Invite         Idaho          2nd          of          4         Portland          St.          Invite         Idaho          6th          of          22         idaho          Invitational         Idaho          2nd          of          5         RIVER'S          SEAT.         uring          a          warm         spring          after-         noon,          Darin          Ball         and          Darin          Da-         vies          took          in          a          ;         round          of          golf         on          the          universi-         ty          course,          Ball         and          Davies’         older          brother         Bo          were          named         the          team's          co-         most          inspira-         tional          golfers.         (Dahiquist)         RAPPED.         ee          shots          that         went          awry         sometimes         wound          up          out         of          bounds          or          in         a          bunker.          Darin         Ball's          shot         found          a          sand         trap          and          the         linkster          did          his         best          to          dis-         lodge          his          ball.         Ball's          effort         paid          off          as          he         parred          the          hole,         (Dahiquist)         ne         Golf          219         ome          court          advantage         was          portrayed          at          basket-         ball          games:          during          the         announcement          of          the         contest's          starting         lineups.          When          an          oppos-         ing          player          was          named,         fans          hid          behind          copies         of          the          ‘‘Iidahonian  ’          to         show          their          distespect.         When          a          Vandal          player         was          announced,          the         newspapers          went          down         and          @          cheer.          came          up.         (O'Bryan,          Moftgan)         220          Media         Newspapers,          radio,          television          and          magazines          repeatedly          recorded         the          rises          and          demises          of          Vandal          teams.          But          what          about          the          folks         A.          a          rule,          people          do          not         usually          invite          strangers          into         their          homes          on          a          daily          basis.         It          takes          time          to          establish          a         rapport          between          individuals.         One          must          be          trusted,          to          be         invited.         So          it          was          with          reporters.         Although          people          welcomed         the          area’s          morning          papers          to         their          breakfast          table          and         listened          to          Vandal          adven-         tures          on          KRPL          radio,          one         item          necessary          to          any          medi-         um’s          existen ce          was          credi-         |          bility.         And          when          it          came          to         covering          the          Vandal          athletic         teams,          credibility,          agility          and         ingenuity          were          the          attributes         necessary          to          any          successful         sports          reporter.         “My          biggest          problem          is         just          meeting          my          deadline,’’         said          Dave          Bolling,          writer          for         the          Spokesman-Review.”’         ““But          just          as          long          as          the         game          gets          over          quick,          I’m         happy.         “Fortunately          this          year,         the          Vandals          moved          their         football          starting          time          up          to         6:30          p.m.          I’ve          got          to          have         my          story          finished          by          10:15,         so          some          of          those          longer         games          I          was          pretty          rushed.”’         “It          wes          worth          it          for          the         $20,  ’          said          Greg          Kilmer,          a         writer          for          United          Press          In-         ternational.          ‘‘The          only          pres-         sure          was          staying          awake         during          the          football          games          —         they          were          boring          as          hell.’’         Yet          meeting          a          deadline         was          seldom          a          problem          for         reporters          from          the          ‘‘Ar-         gonaut’’          or          Moscow’s          ‘‘Ida-         honian.”’         I          think          we          have          an          ad-         vantage          al          this          paper,  ’          said         Chris          Schulte,          ‘‘Argonaut’’         sports          editor.          ‘I          think          our         stories          can          be          a          little          bit          bet-         ter          written.          Because          we          don’t         have          the          deadline          pressure,         we          can          take          a          little          more          time         and          hopefully          do          a          better         job.”’         There’s          not          really          much         pressure          around          here,”’          said         Bob          Condotta,          writer          for          the         Idahonian.”’          ‘‘For          a          Friday         paper          [published          on          Satur-         day]          I’ve          got          to          be          done          by         12:30          a.m.,          and          I          haven't         seen          any          Vandal          game          run         that          late.”         Yet          despite          the          relatively         lax          deadline          schedule,          ob-         taining          post-game          quotes         could          sometimes          be          rather         difficult          —          especially          if          the         game          ran          long.         At          the          Mankato          State         game          last          year,          I          snuck          down         and          got          a          quote          from          Eric         IDAHO         Vandallsie         Yarber          just          to          have          one          be-         fore          the          game          was          over.”’         Bolling          said.          “‘If          [1985          Head         Football          Coach          Dennis]         Erickson          had          seen          me,          I         think          he’d          have          shot          me.          But         sometimes          in          this          business         you          have          to          be          a          little         sneaky.”’         Because          of          how          late          our         paper          comes          out          after          the         game,          I          try          and          give          our          stu-         dent          body          a          different          per-         spective          on          the          game,’’         Schulte          said.         T          use          more          quotes          from         the          coaches          and          players,’’          he         added,          ‘‘I          try          and          give          some         insights          into          the          players.          A         lot          of          students          have          players         in          their          classes,          so          maybe         they’ll          get          to          know          them          bet-         ter          through          the          ‘Arg.’”’         “It’s          interesting          to          cover         Idaho          women’s          sports,””          said         Condotta.          Condotta,          a         former          sports          editor          of          the         Washington          State          ‘Daily         behind          the          mike          and          notebook?          What          was         Evergreen,’           compared          the         Vandals’          women’s          program         with          the          Cougars’.         “ Student          body-wise,          Ida-         ho          draws          a          lot          more          crowds         than          Wazzu,”’          he          said.          ‘‘Es-         pecially          last          year,          even          in         volleyball,          WSU          and          Idaho         were          about          even,          That’s          real-         ly          odd          because          Idaho's          half         the          size          of          WSU.          Women’s         sports,          for          some          reason,          just         aren’t          as          popular          at          WSU.”         “‘The          media          in          this          area         are          very          respectful          of          the          size         of          the          two          universities,”           said         Rance          Pugmire,          women’s         sports          information          director.         “‘Wazzu          feels          we          get          more         coverage,          and          we          feel          they         get          more          coverage.          But          over-         all          I          think          it’s          pretty          fair.’’         Equality          in          coverage          may         have          been          due          to          the          lack          of         competiton          between          papers.         It’s          not          cutthroat          around         here,”’          Bolling          said.          “I          think         the          reason          is          because          there         isn’t          a          tremendous          amount         of          competition.          Everyone         pretty          much          has          their          own         circulation,          and          for          that          rea-         son          there          isn’t          a          lot          of         conflict.’’         “There          aren’t          any          real         problems,’’          Pugmire          said.         ‘Football          is          the          biggest         headache          because          it’s          so         much          of          a          media          event.          Es-         pecially          when          visiting          TV         comes          in,          then          it’s          a          little         frustrating.          We          have          X-         number          of          media,          and          Y-         number          of          space.”’         Regardless          of          the          frustra-         tions,          deadlines          and          compe-         tition          with          WSU,          the          job          of         media          members          included         covering          away-games,         previewing          upcoming          events         and          ‘‘featuring’’          players          in         stories          and          columns.          And         through          the          efforts          of          local         sports          reporters,          Vandal          ath-         letes          became          strangers          to          no         one.         OOLS          OF          THE          TRADE.         ight          ball          games          pilus          deadline         pressure          caused          reporters          to          con-         sume          inordinate          amounts          of          Pep-         si          or          coffee.          Writers          recorded          the         events          of          the          game          by          using          vari-         ous          combinations          of          shorthand,         notes,          quotes          and          scribbles.         (Dahiquist)         ICTURE          PERFECT.         erched          on          a          platform          behind         the          northside          bleachers          in          the         Kibbie          Dome,          Mitch          Wasson          and         Tal          Metzger          captured          the          action          of         Vandal          basketball          for          KUID          Chan-         nel          12.          Home          Vandal          football          and         basketball          games          wero          broadcast         over          the          university          channel          on          a         taped-delayed          basis.          (O'Bryan)         Kap         OUND          AND          THE          FURY.         portscasters          Tom          Morris          (right)         and          Jeff          Brudie          described          the          ac-         tion          of          every          Vandal          basketball         game          to          fans          listening          to         KAPL-1400.          In          addition          to          describ-         ing          basketball          games,          Morris          co-         vered          football          games          for          KRPL.         Dennis          Deccio          (left)          handied          the         public          address          system          at          all          home         football          games.          (Dahiquist)         ND          THAT'S          THE          NEWS.         fter          handing          out          copies          of          the         ““Idahonian”’          to          students          attend-         ing          the          Boise          State          basketball         game,          cheerleader          Angie         Hasenoehri          demonstrated          the         proper          way          to          greet          the          Bronco         players.          By          holding          newspapers          in         front          of          their          faces,          Vandal          tans          at-         tempted          to          mock          the          Broncos’         presence.          The          attempt          failed          as         BSU          best          the          Vandals,          62-44,         (Hayes)         Media          22         INNER          TAKES          IT          ALL.         hether          it          was          wrestling,          foot-         ball          or          softball,          intramurals          con-         ducted          contests          from          September         to          May.          Sigma          Alpha          Epsilon         wrestler          Steve          Nash          attempts          a         reversal          against          Travis          Morgan.         Nash          helped          the          SAE's          win          the          in-         tramural          wrestling          competition          by         taking          first          place          in          the          168-pound         weight          division.          Neely          Hall          mem-         bers          Melanie          Gepford,          Shahna         Paul          and          Dawn          Black          flag          down          an         Olesen          Hall          rushing          attempt.          Soft-         ball          slugger          Sean          Vincent          rips         into          a          slow          pitch.          Vincent's          base         hit          proved          to          be          ail          for          not          as          his         Hydrology          team          lost          to          catcher         Ray          Ramierez's          Sluggers,          9-6.         (Dahlquist,          Moore,          Fritz)         22?          Intramurals         It          all          began          with          football          in          early         September          and          ended          on          a          blustery         May          day          on          the          outdoor          track.         Intramurals          brought          students          of          all         shapes,          sizes          and          abilities          together          and         shared          the          idea          that          these          games          were         UST          FOR         Wes          il          came          to          in-         tramurals,          the          Sigma          Alpha         Epsilon          fraterntiy          was          like         the          little          train          that          continu-         ally          said          to          itself,          ‘I          think          I         can,          |          think          I          can,          ...”’         Because          although          the         SAE’s          won          only          one          in-         tramural          event          (wrestling),         the          house’s          persistence          was         rewarded          when          for          the          se-         cond          time          in          as          many          years         the          fraternity          captured          the         university’s          overall          in-         tramural          championship.         ‘We          competed          in          every         event,’’          said          James          Allman,         SAE          intramural          manager.         “We've          got          a          lot          of          athletes         in          the          house;          guys           who          real-         ly          get          into          sports.”’         And          the          house          needed          ev-         ery          participation          point          it         could          gather,          as          the          SAE’s         total          of          2,766          points          was          just         enough          to          top          the          1985         university          champion          Beta         Theta          Pi’s          tally          of          2,722.5         points.         “What          really          helped          us         was          we          were          the          only          house         to          make          the          play-offs          in          the         big-point          sports          —          softball,         basketball          and          foothall,”’         Allman          said.          ‘We          didn’t         win          them,          but          we          did          well.”’         Chrisman          Hall          was         another          living          group          which         also          ‘‘did          well’’          as          the          Wal-         lace          Complex          men’s          dormi-         tory          won          the          residence          hall’s         championship.         Chrisman’s          2,146          points         easily          edged          defending          resi-         dence          champion          Upham         Hall’s          tally          of          1,684.5         points,          Chrisman’s          upset         win          marked          only          the          second         time          in          the          last          five          years          Up-         ham          failed          to          win          the          dormi-         tory          title.         Women’s          competition         also          saw          the          crowning          of          a         new          champion.          The          Gamma         Phi          Beta          sorority          recorded         1,347          points          to          outdistance         the          Delta          Delta          Delta          sorori-         ty’s          total          of          1,185          points.         Two-time          defending          wom-         en’s          champion          Campbell         Hall          finished          fifth.         The          Navy          ROTC          broad-         sided          its          way          to          the          men’s          off         campus          championship.          The         ROTC          team’s          580          points         sank          the          Law          School’s          se-         cond          place          total          of          468.5         points.          The          Tri-athletes         finished          third          with          378         points.         Thus          once          all          the          dirt,         dust          and          sweat          had          cleared,         the          intramural          department         crowned          two          new          living         group          champions          and          saw         the          SAE’s          reign          continue.         And          similar          to          the          “‘little         train          that          could,”’          these          vic-         torious          groups          proved          that         persistence          paid          off.         LITZED.         roken          field         running          proved         to          be          Heather         Herrett's         speciality          as         she          and          Neely         Hall          teammate         Kristi          Adels-         bach          scramble         for          a          first          down         against          Olesen         Hall.          (Moore)         KY          DRIVE.         lam          dunk         contestants         such          as          Greg         Lance          soared         through          the         Kibbie          D ome         air          during          hal-         ftime          activities         of          the          Vandal-         Weber          State         women’s         basketball         game.          Lance         placed          second         in          the          intra-         mural          competi-         tion          with          a         dunk          score          of         37.5          out          of          60.         Tal          Metzgar         won          the          event         with          a          score          of         58.4.          (Moore)         INTRAMURAL         |          VANDALISM         O-REC          CLOUT.         olortul          shorts,          a          floppy          shirt         and          a          properly          executed          bump         pass          enabled          Marsha          Norgard          to         assist          the          SUB-3rd          co-rec          voliey-         ball          team.          Although          Norgard’s         technique          was          correct,          her          team         lost          to          Carter Whitman          15-8,          6-15,         15-1.          (Dahiquist)         University          Champion          Sigma          Alpha          Epsilon         Residence          Champion          Chrisman          Hall         Women’s          Champion          Gamma          Phi          Beta         Off          Campus          Champion          Navy          ROTC         Men's          Football          Beta          Theta          Pi         Women's          Football          Kappa          Kappa          Gamma         Men's          Tennis          (singles)          Ralph          Totorica         Women’s          Tennis          (singles)          Jolene          Bacca         Men's          Tennis          (doubles)          Paul          Migchelbrink Ralph          Totorica         Women’s          Tennis          (doubles)          Julie          Harrington Heidi          Kleffner         Co-Rec          Tennis          David          Wagers Teri          Stokes         Men's          Golf          Troy          Falck Rob          Dammarell          (tie)         Women's          Golf          Von          Tersch         Soccer          Chrisman          Hall Pi          Kappa          Alpha          (tle)         Co-Rec          Soccer          Shoup          Hall         Men's          Racquetball          (singles)          Jonn          Wong         Women's          Racquetball          (singles)          Deb          Bittle         Men's          Racquetball          (doubles)          Joe          Winkelmaier Sean          Vincent         Women's          Racquetball          (doubles)          Dixie          Miller Shelly          Stigele         Men's          Volleyball          Pi          Kappa          Alpha         Women's          Volleyball          Gamma          Phi          Beta         Co-Rec          Volleyball          Mashers         Bowling          Beta          Theta          Pi         Ultimate          Frisbee          Whitman          Hall         Men's          Turkey          Trot          Salvador          Hurtado         Women's          Turkey          Trot          Lisa          Taylor         Men's          Handball          (doubles)          Jim          Karabetsos Royce          Milasky         Wrestling          Sigma          Alpha          Epsilon         Men's          Badminton          (singles)          Javed          Munir         Women's          Badminton          (singles)          Becky          Shillam         Men's          Badminton          (doubles)          Ron          Tang Barry          Young         Women's          Badminton          (doubles)          Amy          Yardley Nancy          Mink         Co-Rec          Badminton          Ron          Tang Kay          Garland         Men's          Swimming          Delta          Chi         Women's          Swimming          Delta          Delta          Delta         Men's           A           Basketball          Runnin’          Rebels         Women's          “A”          Basketball          Volleyball         Men's          “B”          Basketball          Corner          Club         Women's          “B”          Basketball          Nets         Men's          3-on-3          Basketball          Sixers         Women's          3-on-3          Basketball          Blues         Men's          Table          Tennis          (singles)          Kaizad          Sunavala         Women's          Table          Tennis          (singles)          Darcy          Derganc         Men's          Table          Tennis          (doubles)          Wade          Brown Stuart          Markow         Women's          Table          Tennis          (doubles)          Ann          Nishihira Kim          Lien          Ngo         Men's          Skiing          (individual)          Robert          Beers         Men's          Skiing          (team)          Delta          Chi         Men’s          Paddleball          (doubles)          Bob          Liston Andy          Gustavson         Men's          Horseshoes          (doubles)          Norm          Semanko Eric          Carison         Women's          Horseshoes          (doubles)          Mary          White Teresa          Gunter         Men's          Softball          Beta          Theta          Pi         Women's          Softball          Golden          Girls         Men's          Weightlifting          Delta          Tau          Delta         Women's          Weightlifting          Campbell          Hail         Men's          Track          Delta          Sigma          Phi         Women's          Track          Houston          Hall         Intramurals          223         EN          PINS.         iming          and         T         touch          were         skills          Jeff         °         s         vo         oc         a=          =         3         Qe         20         3         sea         2         @         i         ss         2a         2“         ae         ot         Ea         £$         ==         =z         s=         £o         a          4         gs         =3         zB         -         a4         3S         a)         224          Athletic          Clubs         Toiling          in          the          Kibbie          Dome          and          SUB,          the          cheerleader          and          bowling          teams          performed         in          front          of          crowds          big          and          small.          Yet          one          thing          the          groups          shared          was          their          location.         Because          whether          cheering          in          the          cavernous          Kibbie          or          bowling          in          the          claustrophobic         te          bowling          club          and          Van-         dal          cheerleading          squad          were         two          groups          that          seldom          saw         the          light          of          day.         Toiling          in          the          incandes-         cent          darkness          of          the          SUB         basement          and          Kibbie          Dome,         the          bowling          team          and          cheer-         leaders          forever          applied          their         athletic          talents          in          the          great         indoors.         The          14          members          of          the         cheerleading          team          made         their          presence          known          at          ev-         ery          home          football          and         basketball          game.          By          leading         the          fans          in          yells          and          songs,         the          cheerleaders          not          only         provided          support          for          Vandal         athletic          teams          at          home,          but         traveled          to          two          football          and         two          basketball          road          games         as          well.         ‘ We          received          letters          from         boosters          saying          how          much         they          improved,’’          said          Ad-         viser          Shari          Donatell.          ‘‘Sever-         Oregon          Bowling          Conf         Men          7th         Women          9th         Washington          St.          Invite         Men          Sth         Women          1st         Boise          St.          invite.         Men          7th         Women          3rd         Idaho          Invitational         Men          3rd         Women          3rd         Div.          14          Regionals         Men          3rd         Women          2nd         idaho          St.          Invite         Men          tst         Sectionals         Men          8th         Women         al          football          and          basketball         players          made          comments          that         the          kids          have          really          im-         proved.’’         Donatell          credited          the         team’s          attendance          at          the         United          Spirit          Association         summer          cheerleading          camp         in          Santa          Barbara,          Calif.,          as         having          much          to          do          with          the         team’s          improvement.          She         also          cited          the          return          of          Joe         Vandal          to          the          squad’s          ranks         as          aiding          the          team.         The          man          behind          mascot         uniform,          however,          was          no         stranger          to          the          cheerleading         team.          Dwayne          Broome,          a         four-year          member          of          the         squad,          performed,          in          the         words          of          Donatell,          ‘‘really         well,          I          think          he          did          a          really         good          job.”’         And          just          as          the          cheerlead-         ing          team          found          itself          on          the         upswing,          so          too          did          the         bowling          club.         According          to          club          Vice         President Secretary          Sara         IN          BALL          WHIZ.         oilsed          and          ready,          Dan          Olson         takes          aim          at          the          10          pins          set          up          in         an          alley          of          the          SUB          Underground.         Olson          helped          the          men’s          team          to         a          third          place          finish          at          the          Idaho          In-         vitational          tournament          held          in         January.          (Dahiquist)         y          ETTING          THEM          v?          AND          KNOCKING          THEM          ic         Taft,          the          women’s          team          had         one          of          its          best          seasons          ever.         ‘ This          was          the          best          wom-         en’s          team          we've          had          in         years,’’          the          four-year          veteran         of          the          bowling          club          said.          “‘It         was          the          first          time          we          beat         Washington          State’s          team         since,          like,          1972.’’         The          October          victory          at         WSU          also          marked          the          wom-         en’s          lone          tournament          victo-         ry          of          the          season.         Nevertheless,          Taft          felt          both         the          men’s          and          women’s         teams,          “‘improved          a          lot.”’         “I’ve          seen          definite          im-         provement          and          an          increase         in          the          number          of          women         playing          this          year,’’          Taft          said.         The          men          have          always          had         lots          of          guys,          but          this          year         there          were          about          10          women         out          for          the          team.”’         Head          Coach          Leo          Stephens         echoed          Taft's          remarks.         “The          team          had          its          mo-         ments,’’          he          said.          ‘‘Overall         we          had          a          lot          better          team          than         EADS          UP,         eld          high          above          the          Kibbie         Dome          floor,          Jan          Van          Patten          ex-         horts          the          men's          basketbal!          team         on          to          victory.          Van          Patten          was          one         of          14          students          who          comprised          the         cheerleading          and          song          and          yell         squads.          (Morgan)         SUB,          when          it          came          to          fans          and          pins,          the          two          groups          were          continually         any         the          results          ended          up          show-         ing.          Plus          there          were          more         womén          participating          this         year          than          there          were          in          the         past.’”         And          the          increased          partici-         pation          reflected          in          the          team’s         overall          performance.          At          the         regional          bowling          tourna-         ment,          the          Vandal          women         bowlers          finished          second          and         the          men’s          team          placed          third.         “There          is          an          awful          lot          of         goodwill          and          interest          at          ev-         ery          tournament          we          go          to,  ’         Stephens          said.          ‘Even         though          the          kids          pay          to          go          to         the          tournaments          out          of          their         own          pockets,          at          every          tour-         nament,          some          alumni          or         booster          always          comes          up          to         me          and          tells          me          how          great          it         is          that          Idaho          is          represented.  ’         And          if          the          bowling          and         cheerleading          teams’          im-         provement          continues,          the          ac-         complishments          of          the          groups         will          be          increasingly          brought         to          light.         Athletic          Clubs          225         Fy         ti          Apu          wns         aia          SPR         226          Athletic          Clubs         te          ae!         ;          Ry         Ms         ee          Paes!         Whether          it          was          racking          up          goals          or          piling         on          scrums,          the          soccer          and          rugby          clubs         played         Wren          one          thinks          of          the         great          outdoors,          images          of         blue          sky,          fresh          air          and          warm         sunny          days          come          to          mind.         Seldom          does          one          conjure          up         images          of          mud,          icy          winds         and          bone-chilling          cold.         But          as          members          of          the         university’s          soccer          and          rug-         by          clubs          discovered,          playing         games          in          the          great          outdoors         all          too          often          brought          these         adverse          images          to          life.         Yet          despite          the          Pacific         Northwest's          tendency          to          rain         on          the          clubs’          parade,          the         soccer          and          rugby          clubs          mud-         dled          through          their          seasons.         Bolstered          by          the          play          of          its         three          forwards,          the          soccer         club          finished          the          season          with         a          5-5          record,          said          Ron         McFarland,          adviser.         “Chris          Sande,          Eduardo         Pereyra          and          Jim          Knapp          were         solid          all          year,’’          he          said,          ‘‘and         having          [goalie]          Aaron         Boston          in          the          net          didn’t          hurt         us.”         Although          the          team         finished          the          year          with          an         .500          record,          the          club          started         the          season          off          on          the          wrong         foot,          McFarland          added.         “ We          started          off          in          the          fall         and          played          pretty          awful          in         our          first          three          or          four         games,’’          he          said.          But          as          the         weather          warmed          in          the         spring,          ‘‘the          team          really         jelled          together.         ‘One          problem          was          having         too          many          people          at          prac-         tices,’’          McFarland          said.         “ We          received          good          publici-         ty          in          the          ‘Argonaut’          and         consequently          more          people         showed          up          for          practices.          It’s         ROP          KICK,         espite          a          bleeding          knee,          Chris         Sande          outkicks          teammate          Reza         Oskui          during          the          soccer          club's         season          finale          against          Coeur          d’A-         lene.          Oskui          scored          two          goals          and         Sande          added          another          in          the          5-1         win.          (Moore)         a          problem,          but          it’s          a          great         problem          to          have.’’         Similarly,          the          rugby          club         had          problems          as          well.          But         they          were          difficulties          of          a         different          sort.          The          rugby         team          found          collecting          victo-         ries          to          be          a          problem.         Last          year          we          had          a          pret-         ty          successful          season,          but          10         out          of          our          15          starters          gradu-         ated,’’          said          Matt          Hansen,         club          president.          ‘ So          this          year         we          were          left          with          a          lot          of         people          with          not          much          ex-         perience.          We          had          to          do          a          lot         of          rebuilding.”’         The          season          also          marked         the          rugby          club’s          10th          an-         niversary          as          a          university         sport.          And          to          celebrate          the         milestone,          the          ruggers          host-         ed          a          reunion          tournament          in         February.         “The          weather          was          really         bad          early          in          the          season,’’         Hansen          said.          ‘‘We          played          in         snow          for          about          three          weeks.         But          rugby’s          a          rain          or          shine         game,          you          play          in          any         weather.’’         During          the          season,          the         ruggers          recorded          a          0-6-1         league          record          and          tallied          a         6-8          mark          in          tournament         games.         We          didn’t          score          much,”’         Hansen          admitted.          “‘But          any-         time          anybody          scores,          it’s         more          of          a          case          of          being          in         the          right          place          at          the          right         time.”’         And          according          to          Hansen,         those          ruggers          most          often          in         the          right          place          and          time         were:          Dan          Pitts,          Steve          Zagyi         and          Dan          Brennan.         Despite          the          team’s          losing         record,          Hansen          said          partici-         pation          was          up.          ‘‘We've          got         38          names          on          our          roster,          but         due          to          injuries          and          gradua-         tion          we          dwindled          down          to         around          30.”         And          if          experience          gained         by          the          two          clubs          continues,         the          two          teams          can          look          for-         ward          to          blue          skies          on          the         horizon.         Tourney         Won          6,          Lost          14,          Tied          1         SOCCER          CLUB.          Front          Row:          Salvador          Hurtado,         Lewiston         Lewiston         Lewiston         Coeur          d'Alene         Grants          Pass         Oregon          St.         Eugene         Humboit          St.         Eugene         Coeur          d'Alene          5—1         Won          5,          Lost          5         Athletic          Clubs          22)         “Wheel          of          Fortune,”          Las          Vegas          and          Scrabble          —          America          is          fascinated          with          games          of         chance.          But          America          can          have          its          Trivial          Pursuit.          Who          needs          it?          Vandal          fans          don’t.          With         the          “Gem”          sports          trivia          quiz         occurences          that          took          place          at          this          university          or          on          the         Palouse.          So          if          you          consider          yourself          a          Vandal          sports          trivia         expert,          try          your          luck          with          the          ‘‘Gem          of          the          Mountain’s’’         Super          Sports          Quiz.         Each          question          is          worth          five          points          unless          noted          otherwise.         Answers          are          located          on          page          267.         (100-80          correct,          apply          to          be          ‘‘Gem’’          sports          editor;          79-60,         apply          for          the          head          basketball          coaching          job          at          Ball          State         University;          59-40,          enroll          at          Washington          State;          39-20,          enroll         at          Boise          State;          19-1          apply          to          be          ‘ Argonaut”’          sports          editor;         0,          try          again.)         ji          seasons          have          ended,          the          lights          have          dimmed          and          the         images          have          faded          away.          Soon          the          sporting          events          of          the         1986-1987          season          will          have          merged          with          the          competitions         of          years          past          or          of          seasons          to          come.          One          day          the          Vandals’         on-field          accomplishments          will          be          but          memories.         But          in          an          effort          to          holdback          the          hands          of          time,          a          Vandal         sports          trivia          quiz          was          compiled          so          as          to          make          the          events          of         the          1986-1987          season          distinct          from          all          others.         The          100-point          quiz          was          based          on          events,          players          and          trivial         1.          The          Vandal          men’s          basket-         ball          team          opened          its          season         against          Simon          Fraser          in          the         Memorial          Gym.          For          one         point          apiece,          name          the          Van-         dals’          five          starting          players.         2.          The          Vandals          were          elimi-         nated          from          the          Division         1-AA          football          play-offs          by         conference          rival          the          Univer-         sity          of          Nevada-Reno,          27-7.         For          five          points          each,          what         was          the          Vandals’          seed          enter-         ing          the          play-offs?          What         team          eventually          eliminated         UNR          from          the          play-offs?         3.          Name          the          basketball          play-         er          suspended          by          the          NCAA         for          one          game?         4.          Name          the          first          runner          ever         to          log          a          sub-four          minute          mile         in          the          state          of          Idaho.          A          hint:         he          accomplished          this          feat          in         the          Kibbie          Dome.         228          Sport          Quiz         §.          What          do          Brett          Kleffner,         Darin          Magnuson          and          An-         drea          Lloyd          have          in         common?         6.          During          the          men’s          basket-         ball          season,          rookie          Head         Coach          Tim          Floyd          instituted         a          fund-raising          program         called          the          Vandal          Dunk         Club.          The          fund          raised         $2,547.50          for          Vandal          athlet-         ics.          For          five          points,          how         many          dunks          did          the          Vandals         tally?         7.          What          is          tennis          player         ‘‘Skosh  ’          Berwald’s          correct         first          name?         8.          Who          was          the          ‘‘Ar-         gonaut’s’’          sports          editor?         9.          For          one          point          each,          cor-         rectly          identify          the          uniform         numbers          worn          by          the          follow-         ing          seniors:         Scott          Linehan         Tom          Stalick         Nellie          Gant         Brian          Coleman         Nolan          Harper         Krista          Dunn         Tom          Hennessey         Lynn          Nicholas         Paula          Getty         Chris          Carey         10,          Who          was          the          public          ad-         dress          announcer          at          all          home         football          games?         11.          This          Pacific          Northwest         school          was          admitted          to          the         Big          Sky          Conference          on          July         1.          Name          the          newest          member         of          the          league.         12.          The          year          was          not          a          ban-         ner          one          for          either          the          wom-         en’s          basketball          or          volleyball         teams.          Both          teams          posted         losing          records,          and          for          five         points,          name          the          team          which         tallied          the          most          losses,          the         hoopsters          or          the          spikers?         13.          On          his          first          collegiate          at-         tempt,          this          freshman          jumper         established          a          new          university         record          in          the          long          jump.          For         five          points,          name          this          leap-         ing          whiz.         14.          Match          the          head          coaches         with          their          sport:         .          Pat          Swafford         .          Kim          Kirkland         .          Scott          Lorek         .          Pam          Bradetich         .          Bill          Belknap         .          volleyball         .          women’s          track         golf         .          athletic          director         .          tennis         YVRLN-MOOe          Pro          Picks:          The          fol-         lowing          four          questions         deal          with          professional         athletes.          All          questions         are          worth          five          points.         15.          This          ex-Vandal         basketball          player          had         his          number          retired          dur-         ing          ceremonies          at          hal-         ftime          of          the          Northern         Arizona          game.          For         five          points,          name          this         former          NBA          All          Star.         A          hint:          he          wore          num-         ber          43.         16.          Name          the          former         Vandal          who          participat-         ed          in           the          1986-1987         NFL          football         play-offs.         17.          This          all-star          base-         ball          player,          and          friend         of          Basketball          Head         Coach          Tim          Floyd,          was         welcomed          back          to          his         alma          mater          during          hal-         ftime          ceremonies          of         the          UI-Gonzaga         basketball          game.         Name          this          former         Vandal          pitcher.         18.          The          Denver          Bron-         cos          fell          to          the          New         York          Giants          in          the          Su-         per          Bowl,          39-20.          In         what          Palouse-area         town          did          Broncos         starting          quarterback         John          Elway          attend         elementary          school?         ELCOME          BACK.         hen          this          university          alumnus         returned          to          the          Kibbie          Dome,          he         received          a          plaque          from          Bill         Belknap          (right).          Solve          question          17         and          discover          this          all          star’s          iden-         tity.          (Dahiquist)         ASSING          REVIEW.         layers          such          as          Scott          Linehan         led          the          Vandals          to          an          8-3          regular         season          record,          but          in          play-off          ac-         tion          the          Vandals          lost          in          the          open-         ing          round.          For          more          play-off          trivia,         solve          question          2.          (Frates)         Sport          Quiz          229         HOME          STRETCH         Dressed          as          pigs,          community         members          like          Palouse          Empire         Mall          Manager          Tony          Viola         oinked          while          marching          with         students          in          the          Moscow          Mardi         Gras          parade,          (Morgan)         HARVEST          HOME         Dressed          in          autumn          colors,         dancers          celebrated          ‘Fast          for         World          Harvest           day          in          late          Oc-         tober.          Students          donated          the         cost          of          meals          to          help          reduce         world          hunger.          (O'Bryan)         CLOSE          CALL         Gusty          winds          made          landing         difficult          for          a          parachuter          in          a         Parents          Weekend          exposition.         The          event          was          sponsored          by         the          Residence          Hail          Associa         tion.          (Fritz)         230          Community         For          students          like          volunteer          referee          Mike          Hull,         Moscow          Parks          and          Recreation          soccer          fields          be-         came          centers          for...         0  )         CLOSE          TO          HOME         A          year          before          the          university          was         founded          in          1889,          Moscow          citizens          parad-         ed          down          Main          Street          to          celebrate          their         community’s          first          birthday.          A          century         later,          students          marched          beside          their         community          counterparts          to          celebrate          the         university’s          Homecoming,          the          Mardi         Gras,          and          the          Moscow          Centennial.         While          local          legal          issues          slowed          the         university’s          bid          to          move          the          Bookstore         off-campus,          students          found          state          and          fed-         eral          laws          hitting          close          to          home.          On          April         10,          the          drinking          age          increased          from          19         to          21.          Meanwhile,          notable          reductions          in         federal          financial          aid          programs          left          stu-         dents          worried          about          the          future,          and          with         SOMETHING          TO          WRITE          HOME          ABOUT.          SSS         r          ——}         eS         ——         ——         =         Ss         —          ——         =         ——}         =         z=         —         ——         —}         ——         —         =         —S         ——         _——F         =          =          SSS         ——_          _———           ———          —————          ———           $           ———          SS          Haase          —__— }         Community          23]         232          Moscow          Centennial         hirley          Nilsson          built          a          five-foot          high         snow          sculpture          in          front          of          her          home.         Bagpipers          from          the          Border          Highlanders         wore          kilts          as          they          marched          down          Main         Street          in          30-degree          temperatures.          And         Sara          Emery          kicked          up          her          heels          in          front         of          an          audience          of          nearly          500          people.         Why?         To          celebrate          Moscow's          100th          birth-         day,          with          a          smile.         On          Jan.          21,          the          festivities          were          liter-         ally          kicked          off          when          about          130          march-         ers          paraded          from          Friendship          Square          to         the          Moscow          High          School          Auditorium.         Luminaria.constructed          by          the          Trailblaz-         ers          4-H          Club          lighted          the          way,          and         Moscow          police          kept          traffic          from          inter-         rupting          the          march.         What          followed          was          a          90-minute          Cen-         tennial          Gala          filled          with          song,          dance          and         poetry.         “ T          feel          like          I’m          putting          on          the          biggest         birthday          party          ever,          said          Linda          Wallace,         chairwoman          of          the          centennial          arts          com-         mittee.          ‘‘Isn’t          it          great          to          see          all          those         people          stream          in?’’         And          stream          in          they          did.          By          the          time         Moscow          Mayor          Gary          Scott          and          univer-         sity          President          Richard          Gibb          took          stage         to          make          opening          remarks,          the          750-seat         auditorium          was          full.         “‘When          Betty          [Gibb]          and          I          came          to         Moscow,          our          expectations          were          high,”         Gibb          said.          ‘‘]          must          say          Moscow          has          ex-         ceeded          even          our          high          expectations.          We         really          feel          privileged          to          be          here.’’         Scott          emphasized          the          spirit          of          volun-         teerism          in          the          community          and          asked          au-         dience          members          involved          in          any          sort          of         volunteer          work          to          stand.          By          the          time          he         was          done          listing          various          groups,          more         than          half          of          the          audience          were          on          their         feet.         ‘ That’s          what          we’re          all          about          here,”’         he          said.          ‘‘The          spirit          of          volunteerism          is         alive          and          well          in          Moscow          today.”’         Next          came          the          unveiling          of          Moscow’s         official          centennial          logo.          With          the          word         Moscow”’          in          gold,          the          logo          featured          a         horizon          of          evergreen          trees          and          tower          of         the          Methodist          Church.         Following          the          unveiling,          the          Moscow         arts          community          spent          more          than          an         hour          remembering          the          city’s          history.         Student          musicians,          dancers,          singers         and          actors          gave          performances          reflecting         every          decade          from          the          1890s          to          the         1980s.         In          the          center          of          the          auditorium,          a         special          section          was          reserved          for          Moscow         ‘ pioneers,’”          most          representing          the         founding          families          of          the          community.         Rows          of          gray          heads          swayed          to          a          chorus         group          singing          ‘‘A          Bicycle          Built          for         Two,’’          and          those          same          gray          heads         bopped          to          the          Big          Band          sound          of          the         university          School          of          Music          Jazz          Band.         The          evening          ended          with          performers         and          audience          members          joining          to          sing         ‘Our          Moscow.”’          The          melody          was          writ-         ten          by          resident          John          Fiske          especially          for         the          centennial          celebration.         After          the          gala,          Moscow          residents         celebrated          the          Centennial          during          the         Moscow          Mardi          Gras          and          the          Renais-         sance          Fair.         Participating          in          the          February          Mardi         Gras          parade          were          100          marchers         representing          each          year          of          Moscow’s          ex-         istence.          Children          wore          masks          as          they         carried          a          banner          proclaiming          the          city         celebration.         During          the          Renaissance          Fair          in          May,         the          Moscow          Centennial          Commission         sold          T-shirts,          sweatshirts          and          banners         announcing          the          city’s          birthday.          Com-         memorative          wood          blocks          were          also          sold         to          raise          money          for          the          year’s          festivities.         But          even          after          the          floats          had          long         since          past          and          Centennial          T-shirts          were         fading          in          the          wash,          the          people          of         Moscow          were          still          smiling.         ocal          children          marched          in          the          Mardi          Gras         parade          wearing          centennial          shirts          and         carrying          a          banner.          Paper          plates          were         used          to          create          perfect          ‘‘smiles.’’          (Hayes)         oetry          readings          and          songs          representing         each          decade          of          Moscow’s          history          were         performed          by          university          students          at          the         Centennial          Gala.          (Hayes)         early          150          individuals,          including          student         Beth          Scrimger,          marched          down          Moscow's         Main          Street          on          Jan.          21          in          support          of          cen-         tennial          activities.          (Hayes)         FURNITURE          [D0         Moscow          Centennial          233         nan          effort          to          reduce          liability          and          improve         public          relations,          fraternities          served          non-         alcoholic          beverages          during          Little          Sister         Rush          In          March.          (Hayes)         S          part          of          Moscow          police          officer          Dale         Mickelsen’s          presentation          on          the          affects         of          alcohol,          he          had          Snow          Hall          member         Ken          Yates          take          a          sobriety          test.          (Jones)         234          Drinking          Age         he          party          was          over,          at          least          for          those          less         than          21          years          old          on          April          10.          That’s         when          Idaho          lawmakers          finally          raised          the         drinking          age          from          19          to          21.         Under          threats          of          losing          $4.5          million         in          federal          highway          funds,          state          legisla-         tors          made          a          compromise          agreement          to         raise          the          drinking          age,          while          retaining         consumption          privileges          for          those          who         had          turned          19          by          the          April          deadline.         Gov.          Cecil          Andrus          signed          the          bill          into         law          after          stating          that          he          belived          it         would          help          save          lives.         Before          the          deadline          took          effect,         however,          students          were          both          bracing          for         the          change          and          lobbying          against          it.         Early          in          the          fall,          members          of          the         Residence          Hall          Association,          Panhellenic         Council          and          Interfraternity          Council         took          measures          to          decrease          campus          alco-         hol          consumption.         Citing          liability          concerns,          university         housing          officials          restricted          residence         halls          to          six,          limited-alcohol          parties          and         two          parties          in          which          unlimited          amounts         of          alcohol          could          be          served.         Later          in          the          fall,          the          same          officials         banned          future          unlimited          parties.         Meanwhile,          campus          Greeks          were         eliminating          alcohol          from          fall          rush          ac-         tivities.          According          to          Mark          Brigham,         fraternity          adviser,          the          men          decided          to         make          the          change          nearly          a          year          before         the          drinking          age          was          raised.         Opposing          a          raised          drinking          age          were         a          majority          of          Idaho          students          and         Moscow          merchants.          Student          body          offi-         cials          passed          a          resolution          in          support          of         keeping          the          19-year-old          drinking          age.         Citing          a          1986          survey          conducted          by         former          ASUI          Sens.          Richard          Burke          and         Paul          AlLee,          Sen.          Norm          Semanko          said         an          overwhelming          majority          of          students         opposed          raising          the          drinking          age          for         any          reason.          The          same          survey          indicated         that          nearly          70          percent          of          Idaho          students         believed          their          student          government         should          take          a          stand          on          the          issue.         uring          Derby          Days          activities,          Sigma          Chi         Jeff          Dood          enjoys          a          cool          draft.          However,         the          fraternities’          traditional          ‘‘all-campus”’         party          was          canceled.          (Moore)         Across          town,          Moscow          bar          owners          fo-         cused          on          opposing          state          drinking          age         legislation.          According          to          Brad          Brede-         son,          co-owner          of          the          Spruce,          the          21         drinking          age          contributed          to          the          spring         closure          of          his          tavern          and          Mort’s          Club.         Eight          owners          and          managers          of          local         drinking          establishments          said          they          would         lose          40          percent          of          their          business          within         two          years          of          the          passage          of          a          21-year-         old          drinking          age.          And          according          to         John          LoBuono,          Chamber          of          Commerce         executive          vice          president,          city          officials         expected          to          lose          $2.5          million          a          year          in         alcohol          sales.         Across          the          state,          individuals          whose         19th          birthdays          fell          on          April          11          mourned         the          new          drinking          age.          However,          student         Kelsey          Aldrich          still          celebrated          by          visit-         ing          local          bars.         Aldrich          was          one          of          38          people          in          Ida-         ho          who          temporarily          made          the          new         drinking          age          —          with          seconds          to          spare.         Due          to          unclear          wording,          Latah         County          Judge          William          Hamlett          ruled         that          because          the          drinking          age          bill          took         effect          at          12:01          a.m.          April          11th,          Aldrich         could          legally          drink          for          the          first          59          se-         conds.          Therefore,          that          right          couldn’t          be         taken          away.         “After          I          looked          at          the          law,          it          seemed         I          ought          to          be          able          to          drink          because          it         went          into          effect          on          my          birthday.          If          not,         they          would          have          been          taking          away          my         legal          right,          which          I          had          for          one          minute.         I’m          was          kind          of          pleased          about          it,’’          Al-         drich          said.         Hamlett’s          ruling          limited          Aldrich’s          bar         choices          to           the          local          area.          Aldrich          tested         Hamlett’s          jurisdictional          ruling          at          vari-         ous          bars          two          days          after          the          deadline.         He          was          turned          away          from          Ratz          and          the         Garden          Lounge.          The          Nobby          Inn          served         the          19-year-old          in          accordance          to          Ham-         lett’s          interpretation.         That          was          Aldrich’s          last          legal          drink.         Because          later          in          the          week,          state          liquor         officials          ruled          that          he          would          have          to         wait          until          his          21st          birthday          to          legally         drink          again.         ““Well,          I’ve          got          bigger          things          to          wor-         ry          about,’’          Aldrich          said.         Drinking          Age          235         Fire          damages          Pi          Kappa          Alpha          frat         ay          2          fire          blazed         through          the          third         floor          of          the          Pi          Kappa         Alpha          fraternity,          leav-         ing          two          students          in-         jured          and          causing         thousands          of          dollars          of         damage.         As          of          June          15,          the         cause          of          the          fire          had         yet          to          be          released,          but         officials          were          examin-         ing          the          possibility          that         electrical          problems         sparked          the          blaze.         Campus          officials         called          the          fire          the          worst         living          group          catas-         trophe          to          hit          the          cam-         pus          since          the          early         “We          haven’t          had         anything          this          substan-         tial          in          the          past          15         years,’”          said          Bruce          Pit-         MOSCOW          Police          officers          and          university          security          person-         nel          check          the          UCC          for          a          bomb          on          the          morning          of          April         23.          The          classroom          building          was          roped          off          during          the          In-         sepection.          (Dahiquist)         236          News          Magazine         man,          dean          of          students.         “It’s          just         devastating.’’         Of          the          44          fraternity         members          living          in          the         house,          all          escaped,         with          Chad          Slaybaugh         and          Mike          Miller          sus-         taining          minor          injuries.         said          Don          Strong,          assis-         tant          fire          chief.         Third          floor          damages         from          the          blaze          includ-         ed          burned          mattresses,         melted          bed          frames,         broken          windows          and         holes          in          the          roof.         Smoke          and          water         We          haven’t          had          anything          this          substan-         tial          in          the          past          15          years.          It’s          just         devastating.”’         Bruce          Pitman,          dean          of          students         The          fire          started          ona         sleeping          porch          on          the         top          floor          of          the          build-         ing.          It          later          spread         down          the          hall          and          into         student          study          rooms,         damage          also          extended         to          the          building’s          se-         cond          floor.         After          clearing          their         belongings          out,          frater-         nity          members          were         housed          in          campus          resi-         dence          halls          for          the          fi-         nal          two          weeks          of          the         spring          semester.         The          Residence          Hall         Association          and          the         ASUI          coordinated          a         collection          for          Pike         house          members,          Pit-         man          said.          Other          cam-         pus          groups          donated         clothing,          toiletries          and         textbooks.         Dara          Sellers,          Pizza         Perfection          manager,         said          her          business         offered          a          helping          hand         by          giving          a          pizza          party         to          Pike          house         members.         “They          brought          piz-         za          and          Cokes          for         everybody,’’          said         Andy          Keys,          house         president.         ASUI          President          Bri-         an          Long          said          he          was         impressed          by          the          com-         munity’s          response          to         the          fire.         “ It’s          very          encourag-         ing          the          kind          of          support         everyone’s          been          show-         ing,’”          he          said.          ‘Some         of          the          guys          lost          every-         thing          they          had.”’         Insurance          represen-         tatives          who          examined         the          building          said          the         house          was          scheduled          to         be          repaired          in          time          for         the          next          fall          semester,         Pitman          said.         SEARCHING          for          clues,         Moscow          Assistant          Fire         Chief          Dan          Strong          and          Jim         Price          inspect          the          third          floor         of          the          Pi          Kappa          Alpha         house          for          the          cause          of          the         May          2          fire.          (Jones)         Bomb          threats          shake          campus         Bomb          scares          kept          students          out         of          class          and          security          personnel         searching          campus          buildings          dur-         ing          the          week          of          April          20.         At          10:04          a.m.          Tuesday,         Moscow          Police          Department          offi-         cials          said          they          received          a          tele-         phone          threat.          The          caller          said         bombs          had          been          placed          in          the         UCC,          the          Agriculture          Science         Building          and          the          Janssen          En-         gineering          Building.         At          approximately          10:30          a.m.,         students          and          faculty          evacuated         the          three          buildings.         “ The          buildings          are          down          and         they’re          [security          officers]          making         the          routine          sweep          of          the          facilities          -         to          determine          if          anything          outward                   is          noticed,’’          said          Terry          Arm-         strong,          executive          assistant          to          the         president.         With          the          inspection          complete                   and          no          explosive          devices          found,         the          buildings          were          reopened.         On          Thursday          morning,          another                    UCC          threat          was          called          in.          Again,                   students          and          faculty          were          advised         .          of          the          threat          and          told          to          leave          at         their          discretion.          After          a          brief         search,          no          bombs          were          disco-         vered          and          classes          resumed.         According          MPD          Capt.          David                   Williams,          bomb          threats          are         sporadic          throughout          the          year.         Williams          said          he          believes          stu-         dents          make          the          threats          to          get          out         of          tests          or          to          enjoy          the          warm         weather.         ‘‘Bomb          threats          are          difficult          to         discourage,’’          Williams          said.         “They          often          remain          anonymous         inless          someone          comes          forward.”’         —  _          Be          Se          ad”          eal         AMERICA         IRAN-CONTRA          AFFAIR:          A          secret          plan         to          sell          U.S.          weapons          to          Iran          in          exchange         for          American          hostages          held          in          the          Middle         East          was          halted          after          reporters          broke          the         story          in          November.          President          Reagan          de-         nied          direct          involvement          in          the          transfer,          but         supported          arms          deal          organizer          Lt,          Col.         Oliver          North’s          actions          as          those          of          ‘‘an         American          Hero.”         FRIENDLY          SKIES;          On          Dec.          23,          Dick         Ruktan          and          Jean          Yeager          completed          their         25,012          mile          flight          around          the          world          in          the         tiny          Voyager          aircraft          without          refueling.         AIDS          EPIDEMIC:          The          Federal          Public         Health          Service          rted          more          than          two          mil-         lion          Americans          been          exposed          to          the         deadly          Acquired          Immune          Deficiency          Syn-         drome.          With          no          cure          in          sight,          the          agency         estimated          that          by          1991,          annual          dealth          tolls         would          exceed          54,000.         THE          HOLY          WAR:          Evangelist          Jim          Bak-         ker          in          March          as          chairman          of          PTL         Ministries          after          revealing          he          had          extramar-         ital          affair,          Later,          Bakker          began          fighting          his         replacement,          the          Rey.          Jerry          Fawell,          for         control          of          the          organization.         HART-BREAKER:          Democratic          presiden-         tial          front-runner          Gary          Hart          abandoned          his         campaign          after          a          May          3          ‘‘Miami          Herald’          story          implied          he          was          having          an          affair          with         actress model          Donna          Rice.         JAILBIRD:          After          serving          five          months          of         a          15          month          sentence          for          submitting          false         financial          disclosure          forms          to          Congress,         former          Idaho          congressman          George          Hansen         was          paroled.          However,          Hansen          allegedly         broke          his          parole          and          was          returned          to          a          Vir-         gina          federal          prison.         MILESTONES:          Celebrity          deaths          includ-         ed          pop          artist          Andy          Warhol,          pianist          Liber-         ace,          fashion          designer          Perry          Ellis,          dancer         Fred          Astire          and          actors          Cary          Grant,          Jim-         my          Stewart,          Ted          Knight          and          Jackie         Gleason.         News          Magazine          23)         238          News          Magazine         While          President         Reagan          warned          young         adults          to          just          say          no’’         to          pre-marital          sex,          stu-         dent          body          President         Brian          Long          was          sing-         ing          a          different          tune.         “Tf          you’re          going          to         play,          play          it          safe,’         Long          said.         He          was          referring          to         ‘ safe          sex,’’          an          infor-         mation          campaign         designed          to          inform         young          adults          about         sexual          practices          that         can          help          prevent          dead-         ly          diseases          and          un-         wanted          pregnancies.         Nobody          is          promot-         ing          sexual          activity          in         any          way          by          starting          up         a          ‘safe          sex’          program,’         Long          said.         The          program,          he         BRIAN          LONG         said,          is          designed          to         educate          those          who          are         already          sexually          active.         In          April,          Long          pro-         posed          that          the          student         government          distribute         “‘safe          sex’’          brochures         and          sponsor          a          one-day         sex          information         campaign.         “Eventually,          we         have          to          wake          up          and         smell          the          coffee,’’         Long          said.         Rather          than          seek         student          Senate          ratifica-         tion          of          his          proposals,         Long          formed          a          student         committee          to          work          on         the          project.          When         school          adjourned          May         16,          plans          were          already         in          the          wo rks          to          distrib-         ute          ‘‘safe           sex’’         brochures          at          fall          regis-         tration.         The          issue          is          serious         enough          that          we          want         to          make          sure          it’s          han-         died          in          a          professional         manner          and          that          it          can         benefit          the          most          peo-         ple          possible,’’          he          said.         ““We’re          just          running         out          of          time          to          make         sure          we          put          enough         planning          into          it          for          it         to          be          effective.’’         Local          glass          thieves          arrested         Tougher          anti-theft          policies          at         local          bars          dampened          souvenir         glassware          collectors’          spirits          as         doormen          made          several          citizen’s         arrests.         Moscow          restaurants          and         taverns          started          strictly          enforcing         willful          concealment          laws          after         they          noticed          their          glassware           bills         were          skyrocketing.         “Our          bill          to          restock          glassware         after          last          semester          [fall,          1986]         was          in          the          thousands          of          dollars,’’         said          Mike          Curtis,          manager          of         Ratz.          ‘‘We          felt          there          was          quite          a         loss          in          theft          and          we          decided          to         start          pressing          charges.’’         A          patron          attempting          to          leave         with          glassware          was          placed          under         citizen’s          arrest          by          doormen          at         Ratz          until          the          Moscow          police          ar-         rived.          He          or          she          was          then          cited         for          willful          concealment,          Curtis         said.         =         .         .         .         .                  .         7                  =         .         .         ©          .         .         .         .         .         .         .         .                  ”         ,.         os         .         .         ,         ©         o                  Latah          County          Magistrate          Wil-         liam          Hamlett          said          he          heard         charges          of          glassware          theft          from         Gambino’s,          the          Mirage,          the          Nob-         by          Inn          and          Ratz.          However,          he         said          he          did          not          treat          the          glass-         ware          thefts          lightly.         ‘For          any          type          of          theft,          I          tell         them          they’re          going          to          jail,”’         Hamlett          said.          Three          days          was          the         maximum          jail          sentence          for          willful         concealment.         When          Washington          State         University          students          and          other         out-of-state          residents          were          arrest-         ed          for          stealing          glassware,          they         were          taken          to          the          Latah          County         Jail.          To          be          released,          they          had          to         post          bonds          of          $250          to          assure         their          presence          in          court.         According          to          Curtis,          enforce-         ment          of          the          law          helped          lower         glassware          theft          attempts          and         decrease          tavern          glassware          bills.         PORTIONS          of          Third,          Line          and          Sixth          streets          were          closed          while          two          large          cranes          hoisted         the          new          boiler          into          place          behind          the          power          piant.          The          boiler          weighed          nearly          160,000         pounds.          (Hayes)         Campus          readied         for          Centennial         wr          the          1989          cam-         pus          centennial         looming          on          the          hori-         zon,          university          offi-         cials          said          sprucing          up         the          campus          core          was         one          of          their          top          priori-         ties.          And          after          sinking         $11.2          million          into          a         new          Life          Science         Building          addition,          they         turned          their          attention         toward          improving          core         sidewalks,          the          universi-         ty’s          heating          system          and         SUB          services.         Students          dodged          ce-         ment          trucks          and          bull-         dozers          on          their          way          to         summer          class          as          wor-         kers          dug          up          University         Avenue          between          the         Art          and          Architecture         Building          annex          and          the         Kibbie          Dome.         Workmen          narrowed         the          street,          adding          woo-         den          planters          and          two         rows          of          bicycle          racks         next          to          the          UCC.          The         new          ‘‘walkway”’          was         made          of          custom-cut         red          brick.         Similar          brick          was          in-         stalled          on          Idaho         Avenue          from          the          Life         Science          Building          addi-         tion          to          old          Greek          Row.         Campus          lanterns         placed          on          the          street          be-         fore          school          started         were          also          finally          con-         nected          to          nearby          elec-         tric          lines.         In          October,          con-         struction          began          on          a         $3.5          million          wood-         fired          heating          boiler.         However,          state          offi-         cials          fined          the          univer-         sity          $3,800          in         November          after          dis-         covering          the          UI          failed         to          obtain          a          proper         building          permit.         Ken          Brooks,          chief         of          the          Idaho          Air          Qual-         ity          Bureau,          said          the         Environmental          Protec-         tion          Agency          was          con-         cened          more          about          air         quality          than          about         building          permits,         however.         A fter          comparing          the         UI          boiler          to          the          perfor-         mance          of          a          similiar         plant          constructed          at         Central          Michigan         University,          the          AQB         estimated          that          the          Ida-         ho          plant          would          not         mect          state          air          quality         standards.         When          the          plant          was         completed          in          the         spring,          President          Gibb         agreed          to          install          a         $3,500          air          quality          mo-         nitor          before          it          could          be         activated.          The          new          fa-         cility          was          expected          to         produce          cheaper          heat         for          the          campus          and          al-         low          researchers          to          ex-         periment          with          different         fuels,          he          said.         Students          using          SUB         services          benefited          not         only          from          the          new         campus          heating          sys-         tem,          but          from          SUB         remodeling          projects.         On          the          first          floor,         two          outdoor          Automat-         ed          Teller          Machines         were          installed          in          May,         allowing          students          to          do         their          banking          without         leaving          campus.         News          Magazine          239         Administrators          eye          a          Bookstore          move         oing,          going,          gone         —          maybe          not.         From          September         through          May,          the          fate         of          the          campus          Book-         store          changed          with          the         seasons.         In          the          fall,          an         anonymous          caller         phoned          the          ‘‘Ar-         gonaut,”’          stating          that         university          officials         were          planning          to          move         the          Bookstore          from          its         cramped          quarters          next         to          the          SUB.         Confirming          the          pos-         sibility          of          the          move         was          David          McKinney,         240          News          Magazine         financial          vice          presi-         dent.          John          LoBuono,         Moscow          Chamber          of         Commerce          vice          presi-         dent,          suggested          in          Sep-         tember          that          the          store         might          be          moved          to          one         of          two          downtown          lo-         cations,          McKinney         said.         According          to          Gil-         man          Martin,          Book-         store          manager,          the         store’s          campus          loca-         tion          was          too          small          to         accommodate          _          the         many          textbooks,          office         supplies          and          university         memorabilia          that          stu-         dents,          staff          and          faculty         members          desired.         Terry          Armstrong,         executive          assistant          to         the          president,          said          that         moving          the          Bookstore         might          also          provide          a         new,          larger          space          for         Student          Financial          Aid         offices.         Student          reactions          to         a          possible          move          were         divided,          he          said.         Talks          froze,          how-         ever,          as          winter          set          in         on          the          Palouse          and         students          left          for         Christmas          break.         Later,          at          an          April          21         meeting,          Chamber          of         Commerce          members         and          others          in          the          busi-         ness          community          met         informally          with          univer-         sity          officials          to          discuss         the          possibility          of          a         move.          The          Chamber         passed          a          resolution          en-         couraging          the          universi-         ty          to          relocate          the         Bookstore,          said         Joseph          Walker,          Cham-         ber          president.         With          less          than          two         weeks          of          school          left,         student          leaders          com-         plained          that          university         officials          did          not          give         them          an          adequate         chance          to          give          their          in-         put          on          the          proposal.         Less          than          a          week          af-         ter          student          leaders          ex-         pressed          similar          con-         cerns          to          U.S.          Sen.         Steve          Symms’          office,         President          Gibb          post-         poned          a          final          decision         on          the          Bookstore          move         until          September          1988.         FOR          more          storage          and          dis-         play          space,          administrators         were          considering          moving         the          Bookstore          downtown.         During          spring          finals          week         Doug          Manion          selis          back          his         textbooks          to          Luke          Lion-         berger.          (Fritz)         In          February,          stu-         dents          had          a          cause.         According          to          cam-         pus          organizer          Debbie         Kivioja,          February          was         ‘Students          Against         Multiple          Sclerosis         Month.’’          The          month         also          marked          the          begin-         ning          of          UI          student          par-         ticipation          in          the         program.         SAMS          was          con-         ceived          under          the          as-         sumption          that          students         would          want          to          help         fight          MS,          the          major         disabling          disease          which         ‘short          circuits’?          the         central          nervous          system         of          more          than          200          addi-         tional          young          adults         weekly.         Kivioja          said          the          pro-         gram          encouraged          col-         lege          students          to          both         Students          help          bust          MS         raise          money          for          MS         research          and          raise         awareness          of          problems         associated          with          the         disease.         “If          we          can          help          by         raising          some          money          on         campus          and          at          least         getting          people          aware         that          MS          exists          and          who         it          effects,          then          we're         helping,”’’          she          said.         MS          should          be          a          big         concern          in          Idaho,          she         said,          since          the          Pacific         Northwest          is          the         highest          risk          area          in          the         United          States.          It          is          also         the          second          highest          risk         area          in          the          world,         Kivioja          said.         In          cooperation          with         MTV          and          the          Ford         Motor          Co.,          SAMS         sponsored          a_          three-         phase          fundraising         event.          Kivioja          said          80         percent          of          the          money         raised          on          campus         Stayed          in          the          area,         while          the          other          20          per-         cent          was          spent          on          na-         tional          MS          research.         IN          a          colorful          burst,          campus         organizer          Debbie          Kivioja         releases          nearly          200          bal-         loons          in          front          of          the          UCC          to         raise          money          for          SAMS.         (Jones)         Taxes          levied          on          financial          aid         Congress’          Tax          Reform          Act          will                    reach          college          students          through          =         books,”’          he          said.          ‘‘The          university         has          no          record          of          the          amount         their          wallets,          at          least          those          that                   paid.”         receive          financial          aid          or          are          taking                    out          student          loans.         According          to          Dan          Davenport,         director          of          university's          finacial         aid          office,          the          act          made          scholar-         ships,          fellowships,          stipends,         grants          and          other          forms          of          finan-         cial          aid          taxable          income.          The          act         also          removed          interest          paid          on         student          loans          from          the          list          of         authorized          tax          deductions,         Davenport          said.         Students          will          be          required          to         Start          reporting          such          aid          on          their         1987          tax          returns.         Tuition,          fees,          textbooks          and         supplies          will          be          deductible,          but         room          and          board          will          not          be,         Davenport          said.         “ It          is          important          that          students         keep          their          receipts          for          tuition          and         eeeeeeeeeeeweeneeveeeaenee         However,          Davenport          believes         “‘a          majority          of          the          students         won't          be          affected          that          much’”’         under          the          new          tax          law          since          an         individual          has          to          earn          more          be-         fore          he          or          she          is          taxed.         According          to          Jerry          Reynolds,         university          controller,          his          depart-         ment          planned          to          track          the         amount          of          aid          students          received         on          federal          1099          forms.          But          as          of         June          15,          financial          aid          officals         said          that          they          may          not          have          the         staff          needed          to          process          the          forms         for          more          than          2,500          students         receiving          aid.         Without          1099          forms,          students         may          be          left          on          their          own          to         figure          out          the          exact          amount          of         financial          aid          they          must          report.         News          Magazine          241         24)          Advertisements         Oe          NS         The          Palouse          Empire’s         ‘Finest          in          Flowers         and          Gifts          for          all         Occassions                   POSTERS                   INCENSE                   CORSAGES                   BOUQUETS         ®           CARDS         ®          CERAMICS         ee          :          i         CO          ae         Ps          AR          Doth          |           ,         a                   NOVELTIES          6         WORLDWIDE                   DELIVERY          BY          N         Moscow          Florists                    Giits         Serving          the          Palouse          area          for          over          30          years         208-882-2543         6th                    Main,          Downtown          Moscow         LIBERAL         DISCOUNTS         ON          GROUP         ORDERS          OF         CORSAGES.         Weekly         Specials         Phone          Orders         Welcome         1222          Pullman          Rd.         Moscow          883-0678         SSSHDRDIREHSD          DY         BE          A          PART          OF         THE          GROWING         TRADITIONS         OO          F         ¢          Take          part          in          the          diverse         programs          offered          by          the         University          of          Idaho          Alumni         Association.          Together,          we         form          one          of          the          underlying         strengths          of          our          great         university.          ®          Over          56,000         alumni          from          the          U          of          I          have          shared          the          tradi-         tions          and          experiences          of          being          a          part          of          Idaho.         The          Alumni          Association          enhances          the          bond          be-         tween          alumni,          their          memories          of          Idaho          and         S          w         yary          ‘erry          es          aw         Crem          Satels.          (below)         D          AHO         2         future          Idaho          alumni.          ¢          The         Alumni          Association          encour-         ages          high          school          students          to         attend          the          university,          gives         scholarships          and          awards           to         outstanding          students          as          well         as          recognizing          deserving         alumni          throughout          the          world.          ©          Silver          and         Gold          Day          is          celebrated          by          alumni          throughout         the          nation          on          April          7          with          dinners,          music          per-         formances          and          memories          of          Idaho.         4          Alumni         SdSdISD          FSFEBSBdsssHSHSS          4H          dS          dD         Advertisements          243         ASUI         Advertising         Serving          the         oe          ee          ee         Idaho          Argonaut         Italian          Restaurant          Gem          of          the          Mountains         308          W.          6th,          Moscow          Dy          4)          Ig          KUOI-FM         University          of          Idaho          Students         Something          to          wrttehome          about!          Hl]          FF          US          FOR          YOUR         ®          Luncheon          Specials          Daily         ;          ere          Dinners          ADVERTISING          NEEDS         Home          of          the          famous          885-6371         Fish          Bowl          3rd          Floor          S.U.B.         Pool:          $2.50          an          hour         per          table         2          for          1          Pitchers         Check          the          Argonaut          for         Coupons         e         $         $          4         $         $         $         $         $         $         $         $         $         $         $         $         $         7         BIC          L1ARD,           DEN}         $          $         611          S.          Main          Downtown          Moscow          Latah          Distributers          Moscow          882-4021         LP          PMP          Dodo          LD          PV          Oe          VQayewesewd          ov)          Weaww         244          Advertisements         Moscow          Pullman’s         Hottest         Advertisements          245         DOMINO'S          PIZZA         SPECIAL          ilies         308          N.          MAIN         PULLMAN         322-8222         205          S.          GRAND         all!         One          coll          P         :          paevens         Cafe                  Lounge         Proudly          serving          breakfast,         lunch,          dinner          and          of          course          our         famous          COCKTAILS.         Martha          says          “Hello”          to          all          whose         close                    far          away.         226          W.          6th          Moscow         SddFdS          FUVBFHFIFBSKHSHdSA          DOSES          DOD          D         246          Advertisements         CKECKCR          EEE          HESS         MURDOC’S         W.          415          6th          Street          Moscow          882-8172         The          Original         Rathaus          Pizza          Shoppe         Presents         The          Family          Fun          Center         Weekly          Specials         All          American          He-Man         Sandwiches         The          Ultimate          in          Pizza         Party          Room         FA          FH          FHF          HH          FH          HF          HH          FHF          FHF          SH         Business          Meetings         Parties         Banquet          Facilities          a          HAUT         School          Functions          ad         Call          for          reservations          Y's          p         208-882-4633          Divan         215          N.          Main          in          Moscow          mworrt         ‘DLS          S          DSi          pees         Advertisements          247         ee          ee          ee          ee          ee         1          Every          Tuesday          °         ‘)          Tuesday          Pizzazz         Order          a          Large         Pay         For          a          Small         FA         ‘The          1          Selection          is          Pizza          Per fection!”’         062-111         428          W.          Third         In          Moscow         Universityorldaho         BOOKSTORE         On          Deakin         Next          to          the          SUB         FOR          SUPPLIES         885-6469         FOR          TEXTBOOKS         885-7038         FOR          PAPERBACKS         885-6368         Bookstore          Hours         n]          Monday          -          Friday          8:00-5:20                   Saturdays          9:00          -          4:00         Sako          ib          eras                    dW          ms          !         Ge          —f          CG          GH          fF          Ff          FH          HH          FH          SH          HF          KH          FG         a          FA          A          AH          FH          HAH          HF          HGH          SH         A         248          Advertisements         =           N         All|          Pao          ee         oO         ys          J         North          Idaho’s          L argest          Covered         Shopping          Center          -          64          Stores                    Services         a          PALOUSE          EMPIRE         MALL         Bringing          People          Together         And          Growing          With          The          Palouse         5          Se          f°          Sf          8          oi          eC          Cass         saluting          the         volunteers         (students,          staff         and          faculty)         who          make          the          UI         a          better          place          to         The          ASUI          Communications          Services          Department         ro          $          offers          the          UI          community          a          full          range          of          process         etj          camera          and          typesetting          services          at          reasonable         rhe          A          m          ¢          prices.          Find          us          on          the          3rd          floor          of          the          SUB.         SPace.g,,          ,PUlsating          plAcy.          :         anyone                    lag          g          eo          lash          id         Or         t         “Quality          Always          a          Bargain”’         JET          ur          ann          GO         TO          THE          LOCATION         NEAREST          YOU:         310          N.          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BO          ES          ES          ic          pe          o'e!c          wasergy          156         Adams,          Dave...........          147          Andres,          Brian.......          12,162          45,89,176,216,223          Bath,          SMW,          0:          0:4.          4:6005:4:9-4-0          174         Adams,          Julie...........          148          Andrus,          Cecil...........          13,          Backlin,          Brad...........          171          Bell,          Thomas          91,100,115         Adams,          Karla...........          89          34,37,42,45,50,51          Backiund,          Carl.........          168          Bellitto,          Mike..........          .227         Adams,          Tedd...........          167          ‘Animal          House’.........          133          Baertsch,          Bilair........ .          269          Itzman,          Mark..........          40         Adams,          Toni...........          150          Anthony,          Susan          B........          32          Bailey,          Becky............          89          Belushi,          John...........          40         Adams,          Virgil..........          180          Antonelli,          Derek........          $27          Baileys          WG          (sci          eee          cee          74          Bement,          Jala........          74,176         Adelsbach,          Kristi.......          2a          ALOUD,          COM          s          5          x)eeiiasieigenb          168          Bailey,          Regina..........          99,          Bender,          Tom...........-          180         Administration......          114,115          Arendts,          Amy..........          177          145,154,155          Bengen,          Brant.          ..189,191,193         Adminstration          Building          Clock          Argonaut          Staff.........          121          Bailey,          Stephanie.....          74,148          Bennett,          Ann..........-          164         Calas          Sit          1          LOM,          COTTE          ..97          Armacost,          Darla......74,155          Bailey,          Todd...........163          Bennett,          Lori........89,164         Adolph,          Steve.......          116,171          Armstrong,          Brendan.....          162.          Baliye          Sues...          we          ecccns          178          Bennett,          Randy.........         Advertisements          .....          242-251          Armstrong,          Terry.......          115,          Baker,          Cindy...........          197          Bennett.          Tiffanv.....          143.159         Advertising          Club........          126          145,168          Baker,          Randal...........          89          Bennett,          William.........          20         Advertising          Staff........          121          Armstrong,          Todd.....11,162          Baker,          Sue.............          174          Benny          Goodman          Quartet.          .35         Agnes          of          God.........          60,63          Army          Reserve          Officers’          Train-          Baldus,          John.......          127,159          Benson,          Holly..........          216         Ahischlager,          Alan....89,168          ing          Corps.............          245          Bali,          Pawan............          182          Benson,          Scott........          74,167         Ahistrom,          Daniel.....          741          83          Army          ROTC          (MS          102)....129          Ball,          Darin..........          218,219          Benton,          Julie............          24         Ahuja,          Ajay.............          89          Army          ROTC          (MS          202)....129          Ballard,          Troy.........          19,191          Bergdorf,          Jeff..........          167         Akers,          Linda...........          160          Army          ROTC          (MS          302)....131           Baltzell,          Kelley.......          74,177          Berner,          Nancy..........          143         Akins,          Dan.........          171,202          Army          ROTC          (MS          402).          .          a          Barber,          Brian...          .129          137.1          56          Bernhagen,          Candi.......          173         Akins,          Kim.............          178          Army          ROTC............          114          Barber,          Thomas......          74,162          Berreth,          Jon...........          131         Alahmad,          Mahmoud......          74          Arnold          Air          Society          Pledge          Ciass          Barbut,          Eric.............          74          Berria,          Matt........          100,143         Albanese,          Patty.........          Lin          me          SPUR          NCES          POORER          OE          128          Barclay,          Beth.....          74,148,149          Berriochoa,          Morrie......          157         Albanese.          Thomas.          ..138,157          Arnold          Air          Society......          127          Barclay,          Cathleen....74,148          Bershers,          Khris.........          164         Albee,          James........          74,129          Arnold,          John...........          67          Bareither,          Randy........          141          Bertagnolli,          Matt.          ..22,74,119         Alden,          John.          ...........          137          Arnold,          Pat............          157          Barker,          Susan...........          89          Berwald,          Charles          ‘Skosh’         Alder,          Julie...........          54,55          Arnold,          Tom...........          227          +          Barley,          Peled............          TA)          (kteseeereeaes          170,215,228         Aldrich,          Kelsey......          74,162          Arnone,          Andrea........          160          Barlow,          Jaime........          74,160          Best,          Tom:          .....5...5...          ws         Aldrich,          Mike...........          151          Arnot,          Andrew..........          167          Barnes,          Alan............          Beta          Theta          Pi...........         Aldrich,          Tari..........-          176          Arnzen,          Lori............          89          Barnes,          Chris...........          40          15,152,153,157,168,169,          50          Alexander,          Lisa.....          133,155          Arnzen,          Ted...........          153          Barnes,          Fred............          74          223,Cover         AlLee,          Paul.............          74,          Arnzen,          Tom...........          168          Barnett.          Kim............          89          Bethke,          Lance......          129,163         119,124,125,167,269,Cover          Arrubarrena,          Rose.......          89          warney,          Linga..........          135          Bettinger,          Becky........          74,         Allen,          James.......          ate          Bet)          Wad’          Vy          SOR          reece          eee          toe          56,57          Barrows,          Jim...........          141          145,154,170         BilOn          MOV          soso          ee          sss          ys          74          Arvin,          Mary.........          148,149          Barruua,          yvonn..........          461          .          Betts,          Corps.          560s.          cee          .89         Allen,          Brian............          74,          Ashbrook,          Valerie....74,145          Barstow,          Lee          Ann.......          145          Beukelman,          Tim.....          09.          108         116,118,119,167          Asker,          Becky.          .          .5,           74,          148,          oa          Barteison,          Kim.......          74,128          Bevan,          Erik...........-          .89         Allen,          Leland...........          136          Askerman,          WAG          vines.          occeess          Bartman,          Pamela.....          89,173          ‘Beyond          Therapy’.....          60,61         Allen,          Wendy.......          128,150          Associated          Foresters.          .          4          Barton,          Dave........          170,171          ronal          nuts          pase          8          eb          152,153         Allman,          James......          167,222          Associated          Miners.......          27          Basketball          (Men’s)...202-205          Biby,          Sam.............          171         Alpha          Chi          Omega........          4,          Astin,          Alexander......          28,29          Basketball          (Women’s)...206-          Bickett,          Elisabeth          Syasuars          74,149         88,93,          114130,132,148,          149,159,          ASUI          Advertising.......          120,          209          Bieren,          June...........          149         160,270          122,244          Bates,          Morgan..........          179          Billiard          Den..........          ..          244         Alpha          Gamma          Deita.....          14,          ASUI          Communications          Board          Bauer,          Dan............          174          Billington,          Gerard........          89         pe          Se          CT          CR          en          BO          SAN          Gacy          ty          Meese          wees?          120,123          Baugh,          Don.............          97          Bischoff,          John,......          74,171         Alpha          Phi          Omega.......          127          ASU!          Communications          Services          Baumgartner,          Ann.......          89          Bischoff,          Leslie.........          173         Alpha          Phi........          WESIOU          NOR)          boca          aa          saarsctinee          sweeten          260          «Baxter,          LOW          co.45:65cse          155          Biscuitroot          Restaurant...          .27         Alpha          Tau          Omega.......          88,          ASUi          Communications..120-          Baxter,          Steve...........          146          Bishop,          Michelle.........          74         94,133,135,136,150,151          123          Beaches,          The...........          27          =«=CBistline,          Stefanie........          74,         OC          Ig          I          LI          IP          ce         a          oe         Oe          Oe          Pe          Cte         2          Ie          LR          Ic          GOO          PO          a          aa          Pp          I          Rage         FF          i          a          a          eh          i          a         164,224         Bittel,          Debbie.......          178,223         Bjorkman,          Kristin.......          159         Bjornn,          Brent............          89         lack,          Dawn...........         Black,          Mike............          179         Black;          (BOG          ssc          vccece          ons          157         Blackburn,          Lisa..........          8g         Blackstock,          Joseph.......          8g         Blackwell,          ‘Bu          Saieaacs's          85         Blackwell,          Laura...          ...          89,176         Blakeley,          Brian.......          74,146         Blakely,          David...........         Blalack,          Dawn..........          149         Blalack,          Tallis...........          89         Bland,          ‘sim          eran          eH          orien          17         Blankenship,          Jarred...          ..          168         Blankenship,          Jim.......          151         Blanton,          Paul...........          115         piss,          Devidl:......          2245.05,          168         Blas,          Mark............-          168         Sem,          PRU.          6+          6  2-          «06.05          168         i          RC          Tere          89         Blattner,          De          Pe          icles         Bledsoe,          Scott...          128,129,159         Blick,          Geianne..........          74,         118,119,121,159         Blomdahi,          Janell........          159         Blomdahli,          Jayne........          143         Blower,          Michael........          146         THUOROV)          vo          acatacey          133,163         SD          ain          nies          scaeuitae          ints         Board          of          Student          Advocates         Pe          ote          duper          urceevt          68,69         Bobby,          Dawn........          74,269         Bockenstette,          Jim.......          161         Body          Building          Ciub.....          134         BOG,          HOI...          vivre          cco          4,         74,132,148,270         Boise          Holiday          Parade.          .18,19         Bokor,          Laura............          74         Bolen,          Ray.............          167         Boll:          Sah          iiccee          ees          227         Bolling,          Dave...........          220         Bolon,          Whitney.........          172         TS          FE          ae          $0,127         Bonar,          Chris...........          150         Bona          Thomas.......          90,         133,145,162         Bonifas,          Barry...........          38         Bonnell,          Sandy.........          131         Edinb          eterbs          231,248         Booth,          Hester........          74,149         BOG,          Lottycssiasvar          74,148         Borah          Hall,          ...          2.65          00.05:          1         108,110,111,116,170,171         RUUD          Sone          65:3          47,         58,539,123         Bore          Carrie........          159         einieibictpipiatptecmes          90         Borderline..........          120,123         Sn          ree         Bortz,          Janine............          74         Boston,          Aaron.          .          .          179,184,227         Bott,          Michelle..........         Bou-Simon,          Noelle.......          40         Bouch,          Dave...........          167         Bourekis,          Maria..........          90         Gen,          ENC.          icc          west          128         Bowden,          Karla..........          127         Bowlerama          Bowling          ge         ee         Bowles,          Scott........          74,162         Bowling          Ciub.......          224,225         Bowman,          Teresa.........          90         Bowne,          Bart............          171         Boyce,          Hazel...........          149         Boyd,          Chris........          152,153         Boyd,          Phil..........          bia         BOOr          PAIK          6          cs          0:0          oocesees         Boyer,          Eric......          170,171          ar         Boyer,          Holly............         Boyle,          Brendan.........          186         Bradetich,          Pam.........          85,         194-196,228         Bradford,          Amy...........          73         Brailsford,          Amanda......          150         Branch,          Ron.........          90,227         Brandon,          Mac..........          170         Brandt,          Alison...........          74         Branen,          Arick..........          183         Branen,          Larry..........          115         mson,          Joan...........          $0         Branter,          Callin.......          88,151         Brass,          An dy............          211         Bray,          Stephen........          Cover         Braymen,          Russell...          ..          74,171         Re          OT          Rie          ace          Hae          90         Breeding,          Gene.........          174         Bremner,          Sandra.....          90,146         Breneman,          Sherry......          269,         Brennan,          Dan..........          227         Bresiaver,          George........          58         Bressette,          Cindy          154,155         Bressette,          Vicki.........          155         Se          ere          eter          174         Brewster,          Teresa.........          90         Bridgers,          Don..........          131         ial          PRLS          US          ANT          eRe          ae          90         Brigham,          Mark..........          137         Brisbane,          Nancy.          ....-          80,269         Britton,          Brian...........          141         Britton,          Dan......._....          138         Britton,          Michael...          .          _..          168         Brixen,          Suzanne........          174         Broadhead,          Heidi.          _..          .          74,149         Brock,          Barbara......_..          1         Brocke,          Kevin..........          153         Brockley,          William........          91         Brockway,          Debbie.......          1a         Broken          Ciock............         Bronco          Stadium.          .          .18,19,          isa         Brooks,          Shannon........          174         Broome,          Dwayne........          225         Broughton,          Stephen.....          151         Brown          Hornet.........          84,85         Brown,          Cammy.........          108         DOM          aa          vite          156         Brown,          Chris..._...          160,161         Brown,          Clarissa......_...         Brown,          Dan............          152         Brown,          Geoffrey.........          91,         145,          186,          167         Brown,          LODE          an          ate          152         Brown,          Kirt............          165         Brown,          Madge..........          134         Brown,          Margaret........          136         Brown,          Mick...........          136         Brown,          Patricia..........          91         Pa          I          ag         Sl          a          i          a          all         Michael          Jackson         “Captain          EO”         Vl          ctalle         “ Aliens””          —          Providing          the          audience          with          a          roller         coaster          of          action,          Sigourney          Weaver          battled          the         galaxy’s          worst          enemy          in          the          summer’s          biggest          hit         movie.         “Back          to          School”?          —          Rich          Rodney          Dangerfield         joins          his          son          at          college          and          becomes          the          ‘‘oldest         living          freshman.’’         Karate          Kid          Il’?          —          Ralph          Macchio          and          Pat          Morita         journey          to          Okinawa          in          this          sequel.          The          film          earned         more          than          $114          million.         “Crocodile          Dundee’?          —          Paul          Hogan          leaves          Aus-         tralia          and          travels          to          New          York.          The          film          earned         more          than          $229          million.         “The          Color          of          Money”          —          Tom          Cruise          and          Paul         Newman          starred          in          this          sequel          to          ‘‘The          Hustler.’’         Newman          received          an          Oscar          as          best          actor          for          his         performance.         “Star          Trek          IV:          The          Voyage          Home”’          —          Regarded         at          the          best          “‘Star          Trek’’          yet,          the          entire          crew         travel ed          back          to          present-day          Earth          to          save          two         whales          in          this          holiday          release.         “Platoon”          —          This          saga          of          the          Vietnam          war          was         voted          the          year’s          best          picture.         “The          Secret          of          My          Success””          —          Fresh          out          of          col-         lege,          Michael          J.          Fox          becomes          an          executive          in          his         uncle’s          corporation.         A          FLYING          SUCCESS.          The         top          grossing          film          of          the          year,         “Top          Gun’           earned          more         than          $171          million.          Tom         Cruise          and          Kelley          McGinnis         starred          in          this          summer         release          about          a          young          fight-         er          pilot’s          training          at          an          elite         Navy          school.          While          a          finan-         cial          success,          the          movie         earned          only          one          Oscar.         Ms          Oe          Ve           le          ees         index          293         254          index         INGCWULI         Brown,          Rick........          137,159         Brown,          Steve...........          157         Brown,          Wade.......          147,223         Brownell,          Jon...........          7         Browning,          Tina.........          164         Bruce,          Janet.........          74,149         Brudie,          Jeff............          221         Brumbaugh,          Ed.........          138         Brunker,          Michael.......          .          129         Brunmeier,          Damon.......          74         Brunner,          Chris.........          127         Bruns,          Carol.........          77,154         Bruns,          Susan...........          77         Brush,          George.          .          vee          198         BONE          A          Maid          pire          oss          b0e.0          v0          'a          179         Bryant,          Mike........          ++          138         Bryant,          Robert...........          91         Buchanan,          Charlotte          ar         Gr          TAKEN          50          'a''a-ass'e          ecw          es          1         Buckles,          Brian.......          91,139         Buckvich,          Dan........          18,35         Buenneke,          Troy..........          91         Buerkle,          Alice........          91,143         Bugliosi,          Vincent........          39         Buhler,          Sandy.......          77,149         Bull,          pal          eget          gpa          te          be         te          BAO.          sce          oe         ‘Bump          la          the          Night          Bach’         Bunce,          Kenny..........          180         Bunch,          Denise......          150,213         Bunch,          Rick............          134         Bu          og          SOR          egeeereae          91         Burgess,          David..........          77         Burgess,          Tia...........          176         Burke,          Mike............          152         Burke,          Richard..........          59,         91,119,127,145         Burlage,          Jennifer........          77         Burnes,          Kyler..........          127         Burns,          Todd...........          167         Burnside,          Tim........          77,181         STING          sw          e.«          -          orte-0.          cared          136         Burr,          Stacey.          132,148,224         ae          C:          ee          ae          121,153         Buschorn,          Todd.........          20,         28,30,31         Bush,          George...........          35         Bush,          John...........          68,78         Butcher,          Melanie........          173         Butikofer,          Chellae........          77         Butler,          Darci.....          ....          91,176         Butler,          Juan........          137,162         fl)          21          Berar           Wer          ara          91         Butts,          Brenda...........          77         Buxton,          Ken............          27         Byrne,          Catherine.........          91         ee,          ———         5         Cafferty,          Christy........          174         Cahill,          Tom............         Cains          PaO          cos          ts          138         Sa          a          ge          ges          tae         Callahan,          Carolyn.......          176         Callinan,          Brigid.........          154         Callow,          Claudia......._.          173         Camp          Secheit..........          158         Ca          PERO          Siac          pinata          fo          66,         108,172,173,222,223         Campbell,          Joan.........          206         Campbell,          Rich.....          141,227         Campbell,          Shannon.....          227         Campbell,          Teri.          ..92,143,150         Campus          Christian          Center.          .9         Campus          Life          Divider.....          4,5         Campus          Life...........          4-45         Campus          Link...........          133         Canfield,          Jodi..........          148         Cannon,          Kim...........          168         Capps,          Karla............          87         Capricorn          Bar..........          108         COP          GUNG          sue          o.036:0i0'0's          18          2         Carbaugh,          Shirlee....66,173         Carbon,          Cari,..........          15         Career          Planning          and          Place-         ment          Center............          30         Carey,          Chris...........          228         Carey,          Richard.........          136         Carison,          Eric...          .150,151          os         Carlson,          Mike...          Be          ieiarave          Swix         Carison,          Pat...........          +s         Carison,          William........          138         Carmody,          Kelley........          212         Carnahan,          Donn........          157         COVOU          ON          i          cote          niece          ss          155         Caron,          Peggy..........          164         Carpenter,          Doug...          .129,179         Carpenter,          Jodi.........          164         Carpenter,          Kevin........          153         Carpenter,          Kim.........          172         Care,          WEAK          oe          saa          0's          135,136         CONTI:          OTE          s          6-5.0:5          0          010-4.0-¥          es          92         Carroll,          Monique........          160         Carson,          Catherine........          92         RTI          OR:-          CIOS),          0          54:5.6.          ch          esa.07d          16,         170,172,173,183,223         Carter,          Chris.......          132,160         Cartef,          SG0R:...          ...          05...          118,         119,136,158,159         Case,          Stanley...........          77         Casey,          Clint.............          92         Castes,          Carolyn.........          33         Caudle,          Travis..........          163         Cavanaugh’'s          Motor          Inn.          .112         Central          Pre-Mix.........          153         Ceruti,          Wee          Cte          179         Chamber          Choir...........         Chamberlain,          Gwen.....          136,         149         Champagne,          Edward.....          92         Chapman,          Allen.........          98         Charwell,          Bruce.........          33         Chase,          Chevy...........          40         Chase,          Cindy........          77,164         Chase,          James.......          92,182         Chatburn,          Tim......          129,163         Cheerleaders.......          224,225         Chehey,          David          77,145,165         Cheney,          Lynne          V.........          30         Chernecki,          Kim.........          209         Aye.          PRE          ee          a          1         Child          Find.....          8,94,171          pe         A.          CLELL®eSsSes         Na          a          gg          a          Pg          Pg          OR          Pa          Pei          gg          OO         Childress,          Eric.........          137         ‘Chinamen’..........          62,63         Chinich,          Bruce.........          171         Chiong,          Derk...........          111         Chipman,          Todd.........          167         Choate,          Caryn..........          212         Chrisman          Hall..........          93         108,110,174,175,222,223         Christensen,          Kesha.....          196         Christensen,          Mike.....          61-63         Christensen,          Scott......          181         Christopher          Carey......          111         Chronic,          Kim........          .          126         Churchman          Dave.......163         Churkin,          Vitaliy.......58,59         Cizmich,          August........          174         Clafin,          Russ............          161         Claflin,          Carrie.........          64,65         Claflin,          Russ...........          161         Chat,          EAS          oo          ecuis          cere          92         Glas,          Path.          .ccee's          seins          92         Clardy,          Steve.........          6,157         Clark,          Bryan.......          123-125         269,Cover         Clark,          Kathy...........          200         Clark,          Todd............          127         Clausen,          John..........          152         Claycomb,          John........          134         Clayeux,          Ryan..........          162         Clayville,          Debbie.......          127,         155,162         Clemen,          David...........          92         Clemens,          Tonja......          77,148         Clement,          Garay..........         Clemo,          Heather.........          126         Clemon,          ;          Chris          ..4.0.6.5:6          60          1         Clemons,          David.........          183         Cleo          Wallace          Center          166         Cleverly,          Scott..........          152         Clifford,          Carla..........          150         Clifton,          Merry..........          177         Cline,          Kari.........          155,166         CHORIN          oe          ce          ee          270-272         Ce          ae                    ee          ee          70         eS          RI          bee          245         pie          ch          eae          157         Cécivens          (68s          .55..35          92         Coe,          Shannon..........          150         Coke-Cola          .............          246         Colburn,          Richard.....          92,152         COs.          BAN          Gc          ead          n          141         Cole;          Craigs          scien          128         Colee,          Kim............          177         Colee,          Rusty...........          151         Coleman,          Brian.......          3,228         Coleman,          Kim..........          172         College          Credit          Card          Corpor-         QUOI          cos          noe          oes          17         College          Tours.......          11,269         Collette          Theater.......          61,63         Colley,          Craig............          77         Collins,          Dan.          ..:.          6.525%          157         Collins,          Patrick..........          92,         133,168,169         Columbia          Scholastic          Press         Association............          125         Colwell,          Steve..........          165         Communications          Board.          .123         Community          Divider.          .230,231         Computer          Chips.......          64,65         Conant,          Nick............          77         Concannon,          Richard...          ...          60         Condotta,          Bob..........          220         Conn,          Dave............          169         Connolley,          Mike........          180         Connolly,          Tami.........          133         Conroy,          Shawn.........          227         Conwell,          Doreatha......          209         Cook,          John...          .....505          183         Coombs,          Don..........          115         Cooper,          Chad..........          167         Cooper,          Kelly........          92,150         Cooper,          Matt...........          .92         Cece.          Jennifer.          .          164,165         Copyak,          Robert.....          oats          Ys         @Y,          SUSAN...          6.          cece          ee         ison,          Angela.          .          air         Corner          Club........          145,223         Cornwell,          Jennifer......          172         Cornwell,          Kevin...          ..          154,165         Corsini,          Joe..........          22,23         Corsini,          Maria.........          22,23         Cory,          Susan............          178         ‘Cosby          Show,          The’......          175         COS,          GOL          so5.          vis          ene          128         Cottrell,          Tracy..........          127         Coupe,          Gregory........          141,         178,179         Courtney,          Willlam........          58         Covill,          Joe.............          180         Cowgill,          John..........          179         Cox,          James.........          77,180         (a)          st          A          a          Ree          nee          1         Ce          RS          is          teco          ye          sido         sae.          Sally          Anne...          .60,          43,          rH         Crandall,          oO          Oe          171         Crane,          LIGe.          sosectey         Crane,          Tony.....          .           152,153         pes          MONE          aa          1         CHO          BG          oa          oe          39          27,41         Crazy          Clovis”          tied          aaaie         Crea,          Shawn............          bo         Creative          Process          and          porns         ig          SE          Seat          Pee          16,17         Crew,          William...........          77         Crider,          Mike...........          174         Crofoot,          Bill...          ........44.          227         Croft,          Lee          ei.          hasan          153         Cromwell,          Pam.........          173         Crosby,          Brent..........          -92         Croson,          Fred...........          159         Cross          Country......          198,199         Cross,          Kim...          .......555          150         Crossingham,          Paul.          .129,156         Crossler,          Tom..........          146         Crossley,          Dan..........          131         ‘A          PRiid          ove!          a          crarere          183         Crow,          Darren...........          162         Crow,          JONN.........0205          77         Crow,          Mike............          174         Crum,          Doug............          eo         Cruz,          Pete............-.         Cub          Scouts.....          134-137,          ies         Cuddy,          Brad.........           119         Cuddy,          Kristen.......          149         Curtis,          Craig...........         Curtis,          Darren..........          168         CUPS):          WOiaccekuin          es          183         Curtis,          Lisa.          .....          6002.4          143         Cusper,          Tom...........          137         Cutbirth,          Don..........         Cutler,          Jenifer......          154,170         Cvancara,          Joseph........         Dacey,          Raymond........          115         Dahil,          Jaimie..........          Cover         Dahiquist,          Tim.........          122,          124,Cover         Daily          Evergreen.....          120,           —         ‘Dallas’         Dallolio,          Nathan........          Ris         Dammarell,          Robert.......          92,         126,223         Dance          Theater........          54,55         Dangerfield,          Byron......          133         Dangerfield,          Rodney.....          205         Daniels,          Diana..........          164         Danielson,          Lesile.....          77,150         Danner,          Lisa...........          206         Danner,          Steven.........          131         Darchuk,          Stephanie.          ..77,148         Dasenbrock,          Katrina.          145,154         Association............          133         Dati,          Petttic          os          oars          ecco          180         Dau,          Margaret......          132,148         Daubert,          Jill........          146,164         Davenport,          Dan.......          20,21         Davey,          Jennie...........          §1         Davey,          Whitney.          .          alge         David          Memorial          Carilion.          .         Davidson,          Eileen.........          tl         Davies,          Bo.........          218,219         Davies,          Darin...........          219         Davies,          Drew...........          161         Davies,          Duffy...........          168         Davis:          Beuts          +          5-5          cee          174         Dade;          Ovs6..-..          005.65          123         Davis,          Cassie.          .....,...-          179         Gee:          Ear.          ao          hese,          151         Davis,          Elizabeth.........          77         Davis,          George..........          184         Davis,          Grog.............         Davis,          Jackson.......          92,126         Davis,          Janet........          154,155         Davis,          Kelly............          155         Davis,          Kermit.......          ++           204         Davis,          Paulette.........          173         Davis,          Reagan,          ..118,127,136         Davis,          Steve........          129,1         Davis,          Stuart...........          173         Deardorff,          Paul.........          156         DeBord,          Eric............          77,         119,127          136,145,162         Asse          AR          YT          CRIN          135         tee          eww          ne         DeKlotz,          Larisa.........          143         Del          Degan,          Efrem.          .          .214,215         dela          Cueva,          Anna......          216         Delay,          John............          165         Delmar          Co.,          The........          269         DeLoach,          Whitney......          pi         Dalia          (CIs          sade          Kies          se         130,133,144,152,153,169,          Belg         Delta          Delta          Delta.......         155,177,181          ,222,223         Delta          Gamma...........          93,         150,154 ,155,162,166         Delta          Sigma          Phi.....-....          87,         131,156,157,179,223         Deita          Tau          Delta..........          6,         130,133,156,157,223         Demick,          Rob...........          210         Denham,          Kim...          173,198,          apse         Denison,          WS...          .5          65:2           se          ean         Dennis,          Rod............         Denny,          Kendra.........          130         Denver          Broncos.........          228         Depew,          Michelle........          77,         173,224         Depner,          John.......-...          127         Deppe,          Darla........          77,150         Derganc,          Darcy.........          223         DeRoche,          Ron..........          174         EROET          PSUURY          oss          0-0          neuroses          173         Derrick,          Cralg..........          161         Deskines,          Susan........          197         Desy,          Peggy............          92         Dexter,          Ethan........          92,146         arate          ee          ioe          92,183         Dick,          COTY          si          tin          cwie          bs          bss          1         Dickey,          Tami...........          155         Diebels,          Paul...........          179         Diehl,          Byron............          2         Diekmann,          Beth........          159         Diestelhorst,          Heidi.......          77         Dighans,          Gwen.......          77,179         Dillingham,          Susan......          154         DiLorenzo,          Matt......          77,162         DiLorenzo,          Mike........          162         Dilorio,          Jennifer........          176         Dilorio,          Rosalyn.........          160         Dingel,          Bryan.......          127,162         SN          |          a          eee          AIT          182         Dinneen,          Mike..........          171         Dirkes,          Carrie...........          85         Diven,          Karoline..........          $2         Dixon,          Kelith...........          8         Dmytryshyn,          Basii........          58         Dodd,          Albert............          92         Dog          AT          es          oss          Cece          167         Dodge,          Mike...........          168         Dodson,          John...........          77         Dolan,          David............          77         Dolihausen,          Jack........          56         Domino’s          Pizza.........          67,         94,246         Donatell,          Shari.........          225         Donato,          Jude............          95         Donnelly,          Paula.........          143         Donohue,          Cathieen.......          95         Donohue,          Charles.......                  BANGL          LES         ccguttease          Light”         “Live         v2          ”         «The          Joshua          Tree         BRUCE          SPRING         JANE         Boys         “Licensed          to          Ill'          HE:          SRS          f°          “ANS         75          Bs         1975.g57          index          299         156          Index         ee         eee          ere          ee          eee         ey         Duncan,          Dawn..........          155         Duncan,          Mike..........          131         Duncan,          Todd...........          41         Dem,          NOR          os          anise          ese          167         Dunn,          Krista...          .          206,208,228         Dupont,          Karrie.          .          SRM          Ge          Seretes          91         Durbin,          Kristin..........          155         Duren,          Licia.............         Dye,          Kari.......          137,156,157         TEIYTOEY,          a5          koi          oe          siete          Ses         ,          er         Pie                   8          aS          feasts          141         Ealy,          Mike.          ............          168         a          ee          Be          1          CORE          Le          177         AUN,          COUTTES          20.6          el          evelecei0'c          e's          45         Eaton,          Katherine........          150         Eberhart,          Guy...........          17         Of          2          ae          i          167         BOK          OUNTR..          2          cin          cimne          v6          157         Eckbiad,          Bill...........          143         Ecret,          Robin............          55         Edgerton,          Todd......_..          181         Editor's          Note...........          2         Edson,          Dave.........          77,161         Edwards,          Corey.........          153         Egerton,          Ted.....          76,129,134         leston,          tL          OR          LCRA:          181         Egil,          Curtiss.          .co08          95         Ehri,          Debbie............          95         Eidam,          Daniel........          77,167         Eldam,          John.........          77,167         Eiselein,          Greg.          95,133,136         Eisman,          Diane..........          28         Elkins,          Lori.........          207,209         Ellis,          Steve........          77,Cover         Ellison,          Bernard....          .          és          .183         Elsensohn,          Rich........          174         Ra          Ig          IO          I          I          ag          O_O          IIS         AP          tO          tg          Pa          I          CO         Ensunsa,          Gina.......         Enterline,          Kelli.........          172         Enyeart,          John..........          127         Epling,          Patricia..........          95         Equestrians          ........          142,143         Erickson,          Dennis.......          186,         191,220,245         Erickson,          Jon...........          Ths         123-125,167,269,Cover         son,          Tamara......          54,55         Eriksen,          Mark..........          157         Brin,          Kriticc          cia          es          160         ON          baie          vine          we          leaaress          162         Esser,          Kevin...........          153         Esser,          Stephanie.          .          .54,55,150         Estrada,          Rafael.........          141         Evans,          Carolyn.,........          77         Evans,          Jim.........          126,127         Evans,          Pauia...........          1         Eveland,          Rich..........          151         Everts,          Tammy.........          155         Explore          Idaho........          80,144         ERNE          oa)          n          3,9          316-0          10          (aor          10         Eyrse,          Margaret..........          77         Faddis,          Anissa.          ..77,121,178         Fagerberg,          Dwain.......          183         Fagerstrom,          Kevin......          203         Fahnestalk,          Steve.......          112         WOIAMIS,          SUG          65          50-3546          0m          150         Falck,          Troy......          77,          si         Fao          Creagh”.          o05.0          5.00008         FAI          MATE          o's          es          cene          seed          3         “FQIY          TOE?)          «5          0.0.          9-9.4:9.  -4          175         Fanning,          Erin...          .94,123,160         Faraca,          Tony...........          135         Farley,          Steve.......          137,167         FarmHouse          .....          130,158,159         Farmin,          Rob...........-          6         Farmin,          Terri............          11         Farwell,          Jodey..........          216         Fassett,          Stephanie...          .77,159         Fast          for          a          World          Harvest.          .          .          8,         9,230         Pate          Oo          sinc          aah          cate          167         Faulks,          Matthew.....          .          95,159         Favor,          Doug............          168         Featherstone,          Barbie...          .132         Federal          Communications          Com-         pO          7,          BARRA          INNS          122         Feoley,          Peter.......          64,65,95         Felton,          Darla.........          77,174         Felton,          Michael..........          95         Feole,          Rich............         ee         Finn,          Mike.............          $a         Finnegan,          James........          56         Fire          Fighters.......          146,147         First          National          Bank          of          North         MIMI          5a          gh          oats          ala          ia          sha          aoe          83         Firzlaff,          Jim............          127         Fish,          Keith.          ............          135         Fish,          Lance.          ...2:..66.5  .         Fisher,          Brooke.....          76,78,148         Fisher,          David...........         Fisher,          SM.          osc:          saes          .          243         Fitch,          James..........          3,203         Fite,          Carl........          .          182,183         Fitzgerald,          Geraldine.....          95         Fitzgerald,          Louie........          170         Fitzpatrick,          Mary.........          95         Flag          Corps.........          126,127         1         Foreman,          Anna......          hag         Forkner,          Leonard........         Forney          Hall.....          iod,i74i76         Forsman,          Lisa..........         ek          ee          RR          ee          ‘40         Fortner,          Denise.....          138,176         Fortun,          Veronica........          147         Foster,          Lauri........          143,154         Foster,          Seton.....          3.119.169         Fotinatos,          Eric...          ...          135,168         Founds,          Bob...........          167         Fourplay          305          Ks          14,15         Franc,          Susan........          78,174         France,          Clayton.........          95         Francis,          Julie..........          154         Francis,          Melanie.........          95         Franco,          Michael.........          40         Frank,          Elizabeth.........          95         Fraser,          Rob............          227         Fraser,          Simon..........          202         Fraternities.........          148-170         Fraundorf,          Sam.........          1         Fredericks,          Diane.......          164         Frederiksen,          Danette...          ..          95         Frederiksen,          Karen.......          95         Freer,          Mark.............          43         IRGLUPM          ACGCrESSES         ee          a          a         ee         Frans          Uniimited........         Frigez,          SOW          ics          cia          cs          ok          189         Friling,          Arnie...........          167         Frisble,          Steve..........          171         Frith,          Marcy..........         F;          John.....          16,124,Cover         Fromdahli,          Julie.........          48         Frost,          Christi...........          176         Fey          EMR          iseisca          2st          oe          95         Fuchs,          Shannon........          176          Fuentes,          Melissa........176         Fuentes,          Nora..........         Fulfer,          Clay............          152         Fuller,          Dean........          138,167         Funke,          Ann..........          78,178         Furgason,          Steve........          137         Fusk,          Henrik...........          157         =           ¢=         Sno         Gant,          Nellie...          ..          194,196,228         Gants,          Jody.........          78,178         Garland,          ia,          Rta          3          Drawers          -         Garland,          Kay...........         Garland,          Shady,          121          ‘raate         Gatlin,          Phil.........          Bhi         Gaubinger,          Sonya          209         Gauylke,          Pat...........          143         Gay,          Kathy.............          177         WOOK          256          5o5          2          Sate         181          3182         Geaudreau,          Neer          173         Gehien,          Brian..........          151         aaa’          Randy.........          151         PAO          ee          ee          178         er          ee          ee          ee         Gem          of          the          Mountains.          oe         125         Gem Argonaut          Photo          Staff         124         oe          ee          ae          ee          ee          ae         eee          ew          teens         i          a          a          a          a          ee         Sole          a          Graham          Haill........         136,167          Granger,          Brad..........          157          )         Gibson,          Robert.........          138          Granger,          Caroline......          136,                   Gibson,          Ty.............          148          143,159         Pag          He          Noolie........          sb          Serena          ss          Pe          ae          =         Gier,          Pan          aie          Graves,          Christina...          =.          478          peo          ao          pane:          ah          Pierce          ri         nay          saree          ik          iy          oe          Sa          am          cage          utstanding          Senior          Women          Award:          Keli          Patton         Gilbert,          Tyler...........          152          Gray,          Mike..........          78,162          Outstandi          it          ;         iberson          Bryer          macs                    areek          Awards          re)          0,          188          Donald          Crawford          gran          sats          res          ot         14,18,184,186,188-191,193,205          Greek          Weok.............          3,          :          .         sgt          ae          ig                    ae          bhai          eg          —o          ER          IES          AES          Sen          aac          Rian          Walians          eeeonkey         Gillette          Sandy...          188          oreok          Baan          148470          Frank          Childs          Award:          Holli          Crawford         |           RRRITY          So          .)o-:0-¢          WL          a          u          j          :         Glove,          May          ee          139          rer          Mary          Mai          wala          a          e4          bit          —          Kappa          Award:          Troy          Falck          and          Susan         Gitttand,          ‘Ann          Marie.          78,149          Green,          Stove          Sis          eta          6,          187          Shae          Seg          oe          y          Memorial          Engineering         |          n,          Me          vscceses          reen,          Tom...........-          .          0          p:          David          Johnson         Gilpin,          Sally........          148,149          128,129,162         Gimbel,          denice          Sie          06.224          Greene,          wu          or          .78,1          36,167          Fs          ar          oiee          kene          ret          one          Research         Gin          .          therine.......          reenfi          RTD          0          0-9          oo          0:9          .         ant          sane          vaeenne          lees          er.          ky          s          John          B.          Cones          Snee          James          Seal         ese          tM          pits          hs          linscte          mma          dana          Seth          eel          ee          Presser          Music          olarship:          Jon          Brownell         athe          Meth,          aes          Graney          Ra          a,          Pel.          7ees205          |          Lindley          Letters          and          Science          Award:          Greg          Eiselein         ouee.          Kart.          Nie          42          87          ae          Bek          eRe          ee          Living          Group          Academic          Achievement          Award:         a          aa          ,          oR          ean          shat          FarmHouse,          Delta          Delta          Delta,          French          Hall          and         Givens,          John...          .427          Grek,          Kelly.          e¢¢          |          Graham          Hall         Glaze,          seosie.          eae          gts          brig          any          Bit          tae          dies          ae          Guy          Wicks          Award:          Scott          Bledsoe         Sopra          hes          pee          eae          :          Di          pln          DSR          Rootes          William          Lowell          Putnam          Competition:          Math          Team         iGlaleer,          Roben....114gs          Gattis!          tole          |...          Lage          |          Placed          60th         Godwin,          Hal............          200          Grijalva,          Kim............          78          Harry          S.          Truman          Scholarship:          Troy          Falck          (         me          ee          tse1a3          nn          Memorial          Hospi,          |          Phi          Alpha          Theta          Regional          Competition:          Col.          Janice         Goin,          Ronda...........150          (          Angeles          ds.          5:          g¢          |          Scott,          Ist          runner-up          in          graduate          division;          Dixie          (         averand          aid          ae          ee          Ne          en          Gronbeck          Paul          case          a          Miller,          Ist          runner-up          undergraduate          division          (         Me          sseipewe          ts          ik          Baye          se          sce          cast          Outstanding          Senior          Awards:          Patricia          Albanese,         Boller          esses.          218218          Groupe          Diviéer......416,17          |          Ken          Altman,          Teri          Campbell,          Holli,          Crawford,         poses:          ¥          yah          pp          a          oH          aoe          PEO          eae          be          Joseph          Cvancara,          Reagan          Davis,          Licia          Duren,         ee          cayee          a          goer          and          Greg          Eiselein,          Alexis          Erickson,          Theresa          Gosack,         Good,          limes...          cs.          ..487          Qudge,          Casey...2.2          471          |          Tacy          Hulse,          Mark          Lavin,          Tom          LeClaire,          Mariet-         Goodhue,          Chris.........          159          Gudgel,          Tracy......          171,227          ta          Leitch,          Kary!          Lolley,          Majorie          Marshall,          Ter-         Goodman          Quartet,          Benny          Guenther,          Becky......          -160          |          ence          McHugh,          Ann          Nelson,          Keli          Patton,          James         TTS          IS          Oe          11a          Guitar,          Torees..43.449'223          |          Pierce,          Kenneth          Pierce,          Leslie          Plucker,          Shelley         Goodwin,          Russ.........          127          Gunther,          Kirstin......          79,154          Prouty,          Larry          Seid,          William          Shreeve,          Traci          Stout,         Gora,          Patti...........          32,33          Gussenhoven,          Gene.....          134          Jeff          Summers,          Steven          Ugaki          and          Trisha          Wright.         Gordon,          Rob............          a          Gust,          Liswis)          ei.          ines          aa         sha          Uae          ea          |          A          e          W          eA°®          ReDe          S         Sl          alli          ea          —         Index          phy          |         a         i          i          i          a          a         “           ___          ™         =         re         Rs          a          Og          I          SO          FE          i          Fr          iF          gt          eS         258          Index         Gustavson,          Bart........          159         $,         Hackley;          Jeffs.          csc          ess         Hadden,          Jim.........0          174         Haeder,          Dewey.........          165         Haener,          Tim............153         Haener,          Tom...........          153         Hagar,          Sammy...........          38         Hagerott,          Dawn.........          146         Haggart,          Jane......          ES         Hagler,          Marvin...........          19         Hagler,          William..........          96         Hagood,          Geraid..........          96         Hahn          Davie.          5          loses          96         Hahn,          Frederick.........          96         GORI          UNOTE          is          coir          cae          viee.ecs          49         Halon          INIGK.          6          os          oe          eee          167         Hairston,          Andy..........          27         TC          et          eee          es          193         Hall,          Andrea..._.....          96,126         PRU          SIGONY)          cease          ses          iaiaceres          141         MON,          LOUIH          2.1.02.          160         Hall,          Lisa..............          159         Hal          Mattes          oscccaad          131         LL          PRCA          160         RBM          RNG          15          atu          ne          ha          (ace          a          sds          161         Hall,          Ronda..........          79,148         Hall,          Trisha..........          79,177         Hallan,          Tony...........          179         Halloween.......          ...          7,93,94         FIRB          cag          Sine          0          3's           0          ister          171-183         Hallvik,          Eva............          164         Halstead,          William........          79,         171,227         Halton,          Christopher.          .          .          96,138         Hamilton,          Ann..........          159         Hamilton,          Brett.........          136         Hamilton,          Mary.........          153         Hamiin,          Daniel..........          143         Hamlin,          Susan.          .          .          .          70,127,          ed         Hammons,          Scott.          A          eceoeenacers         Hammrich,          Jill......          158,          He         Hampton,          Lionel..........          5,         34-37,45,Endsheet         TIDE          NII          3          50          sea,          orntu          twins          179         Hanchett,          Dave.........          162         RURTONE          TDOID          hos          ace          nce          ees          169         Hanes,          Sara........          154,155         Hanford          Symposium...          ..          423         Hanigan,          Kevin.          .....          145,156         Hankins,          Holly.......          79,172         Hansen,          Dave..........          157         Hansen,          Gaylen.........          56         Hansen,          John...........          68         Hansen,          Julie..........          197         Hansen,          Matt...........          227         Hansen,          Vernon.........          96,         144,171         Hanson,          Kristi..........          150         Hanson,          Mike..........          227         Hanusa,          Jodeen........          146         Hanusa,          Louise..........          79         Harb,          Michon...........          121         Harbin,          Deena..........          150         Harbuck,          Debra..........          96         Harder,          Karl.............          11         Hardy,          Dave............         POTOSI          So          -s:y.0          6:          aca          bares          74         Hargrove,          B.J...........          122         Harman,          Nikki,.........          174         Harmon,          Cynthia.........          96         Harms,          Kathieen.......          4,79         Haroldsen,          Kelli........          173         Hater,          BYAd.          o.cnoceces          21         Harper,          Nolan.          ..187,192,          pr         Harrell,          Greg...........         Harrington,          Dave........         Harrington,          Julie........          223         Harrington,          Teresa......          159         Harris,          Chris.....          79,130,          Ls         Harris,          Kathy...........         Harrison,          Anthony........          sp         Harrison,          Kay..........          154         Harroun,          Deborah........          96         lee)          Co:          96,177         Hartell,          Kristi............          96         Harter,          Andrea......          125,174         Hartnett,          Steve.........          135         Hartung          Theater...          .61,63,87         Harve,          Donaid...........          45         Harwood,          Eilene......          55,178         Hasan,          Toha...........          171         Hasbrouck,          Norma          Sue..          .          96,         159         Hasenoehrl,          Angie........          5,         136,176,221,224         Hash,          Rob...          icc.          169         Haskins,          Don...........          200         Hastings,          Robert.........          39         Hatch,          Grant............          96         Hatch,          Terri............          155         Hathhorn,          Jeff...........          96         Hauge,          Patrick.......          79,162         Haun,          Tamra........          136,149         Havens,          Joff............          79         Havens,          Keith...........          96         Havey,          Betsy...........          160         Hawkes,          Richard.........          96         Hawkins,          Bill...........          156         Hawkins,          Will........-..          269         Haworth,          Pete...........          79         Hayes,          Emily............          22         Hayes,          Randy...........          22,         57,124,Cover         Haygood,          Andy.........         Hays          Hall.......          411          Prret         Hays,          Johanna..........          56         Hazelbaker,          Bonnie......          149         Hazzard,          Andrew........          96,         119,151         Heater,          Roger..........          141         SEGMENTS          CN          Gai          0rk          66-055          50,000          157         SHOR          BOTON           ci-0          6k          025          98         Heckathorn,          Don........          181         Heckroth,          Roger........          182         Hedemark,          Bruce.......          171         Hedges,          Michael.,.......          40         Heffner,          Mary...........          15         CAPIOR          RAY          So          nici          eres          xo          169         IRSCUIIN          AACCLESSCS         Pea          Re          OS         Heidemann,          Greg.......          152         Heikkila,          Alan..........          179         Heikkila,          Brent..........          167         Heikkila,          Doug......          144,182         Heimgartner,          Tia........          159         Heitstuman,          Chris.......          144         Helbling,          Karen..........          98         Helmick,          Matt..........          121,         123,181,269         Helstrom,          Chris.........          161         Hemberry,          Marie.......          144,         176,177         Hemenway,          Ronya......          176         Henage,          Jennifer...          ..          79,178         Hendee,          John..........          115         Henderson,          Jim          Owen.          62,165         Hendricks,          Christina.....          177         Hendrickson,          Bill.......          be         Hendrix,          Jimi............         Henggeler,          Kimberly.          .          “30,         143,150         Henggeler,          Krissi.......          150         Hennessey,          Nate........          157         Hennessey,          Tom.......          186,         188,192,193,200,228         Hennig,          Jeff............          168         Hepworth,          Connie...          .79,173         Herman,          Meile...........          98         Hernandez,          Debbie.          .          .94,150         Herrett,          Heather.........          79,         144,222         Herzog,          Ken...........          179         HOSES          MOI.          8          oo          ane          154         Hewitt,          Liz.............          173         Hewlett-Packard...          ....          64,65         Hibler,          Darin...........          153         lek;          Riches.          sc25o.5          131         Hicks,          Dave............          138         Hieb,          Rocky............          224         Hleltjes,          Bob...........          202         Higgins,          Bruce..........          98         Higgins,          Bryan.........          153         Higgins,          Gregg.........          167         Higgins,          Jeanne.........          98         High          School          Relations.          .          .          .          80,         158         Hilker,          Greg............          121         Hill,          Barbara...........          173         CUE          rank          sac          o          ss          wave          98,         124,269,Cover         Hill,          Jeffrey............          165         MEL          I          ost          cnna          se          79,164         SUNN          ROI          aco          cieetsecresce          227         Hillerns,          Eric...........          165         Hilltop          Stables.........          143         Himes,          Greg...........          168         H indberg,          Robby...          129,175         Hinkle,          Barb........          148,224         Hinthorn,          Kristi.........          129         Hitsman,          Dale...........          61         Hjort,          Jamie............          152         Hlavacek,          Jim.........          6,157         Hoadley,          Heather........          79         Hoagland,          Bruce...          .          180,181         Hobson,          Brian.......          79,162         Hobson,          Janet..........          154         Hodges,          John..........          167         Hoene,          Keith........          81,170         Hoffman,          Abbie......          41,107         Hoffman,          Whitney...          ....          160         Hoffnik,          Bert...........          178         Hofstetter,          Otmar........          98         Hogard,          John...........          146         Holland,          Wade..........          98         Hoiness,          Todd......          167,188         Hoisington,          Russ.......          153         Holbrook,          Tracey.........          98         Holden,          Greg...........          179         Holden,          Lisa........          172,173         Holder,          Thor...........          179         Holiday,          Peter..........          180         FROM          OA          YG          oo          ove          seco          isve          ates          6-9         PRON          CBU          a          carci          ecsiearers          ze          eie3          141         Holland,          Laurene.......          173         Hollis,          Brenda..........          149         Holloway,          Lisa.......          81,148         Holman,          Carrie.......          81,172         Holman,          Jeffrey......          98,174         Holman,          Kevin..........          167         Holubetz,          Bruce........          183         Holup,          Joan............          172         Holup,          John............          si?         Homecoming          ..........++.         5,12-15,          85.1          154,161-163,          a8         178,231,243         Honors          Convocation......          47         Honors          Student          Advisory          eer         FIOOES          SOTE          bien          tieiecers          tase          1         Hoogasian,          Timothy.          .          .98,          St         Hopkins,          Patti..........          126         Hopper,          Scott..........          127         Horgan,          Charles.........          98         Horton,          Raymond........          81,         138,171         Horton,          Ron............          151         Hospice          of          the          Paiouse....8         Hoss,          Ray..........          136,156         Houlihan,          Brian......_..          ni          FS         81,93,166,167,269         House,          Scot............          180         Housley,          Curt..........          ‘=         Houston          Hall...........         93,108,111,178,179,182,          aaa         Howard,          Beth.......          121,269         Howell,          Marlene.........          33         Howie,          Dwina............          6         Howington,          Randy......          227         Howland,          Wade.....          165,227         Hrusa,          Nancy..........          1         Hubbell,          Amy...........          81         Huber,          Jim...          ..........          129         Huber,          Paul.........          99,182         Huck,          Matt.............          129         HUCK,          Rigi          isos          6          157         Huckleberry          Heaven.....          177         Hudson,          Mark,.........          178         Huffman,          Jim...........          224         Hughes,          Joe.........          14,183         Hughes,          Lisa...........          7         Hull,          Mike.............          231         Hulse,          Laura............          81         Hulsey)          TOCV          ie          oul          aiesakcace          woe          $9         Hulskamp,          Jeffrey...          .99,141         Humberger,          Lori........          165         Hume,          Chris...........          152         Hume,          Delayne..........          81         Hunt,          Jeff.          6          ooscce          191         Huntley,          Christopher...          .126         Hursh,          Rob.........          127,162         ae          I         ee          ee         120,122,123,125,1          28,220,227,         228,251         Idaho          First          Bank.........          83         Idaho          Statehouse........          50         Idaho          Supreme          Court.....          69         Idahonian.......          123,220,221         plo          EON          TN          Re          RT          2-269         Ing,          Dean...          .......065.          112         1         Intercollegiate          Knights.          .          .136         137,153         Intramurals          .........          222,223         Hite,          Sthoys.          visanescanes          167         r=          —         ,          —          4         SACRA.          LUISE          iio          ss          ces          160         Jackel,          Martha..........          174         Jackson,          Andrew...          .202-204         Jackson,          Connie........          81,         144,177         son,          Helen......          33,160         Jackson,          Kendrich......          193         Jackson,          Scott..........         Jackson,          Steve......          lb         Jackson,          Susie.........         Jacobs,          Jim...          ......5..          By         mn          a          eee          48         aitsaiateieleiea7n          126         Jacobs,          Shelli..........          78         dJakich,          Wendy.........         ,          Jacqueline          155         DTI          EG          onto          ccs          tjars          eere.s          1         James,           Day          aoe          159         wees,          MAY.          0...          600-095:          85         ee          130,153         Jamison,          Bekki.........          1         Jasper,          Brett...........          169         Jazz          Festival......          4,45,34-37         Jefferies,          Katle..........          93         sete          ewww          ee         ae          eeee         eee          wee          ee         ee         Johannsen,          Gen........          135         Johanson,          Harry........          146         Johnnies          Cafe                    Lounge         WR          SO          Se.          gg          eee          46         Johnson,          Charlene.          ..81,155         Johnson,          Dan..........          131         Johnson,          Dave...          ...          136,156         Johnson,          Douglas          99,171         Jonnton,;          Ed...          2.          .....          157         Johnson,          Heather...          ..          160         Johnson,          Jana...........          39         Johnson,          John.........          182         Johnson,          Kari..........          154         Johnson,          Kevin.........          189         Jo          a          FO          RA          150         Johnson,          Lena......          126,149         Johnson,          R.J..........-          151         Johnson,          Rob..........          135         Johnson,          Sam..........          161         Johnson,          Scott.........          137         Johnson,          Shawn........          81,         129,170         Johnson,          Stacey........          164         Johnson,          Steve.........          218         Johnson,          Theima........          9         Johnston,          Erika......          59,136         Johnston,          Nancy........          145         Johnston,          Scott.........          162         Johnston,          Tina.........          149         Jolt          WASicinc          Ses          Sees          67,247         JONes;          AMY...          oS.          99         Jones,          Arnell...........          204         Jones,          Bob............          165         Jo          Greases          esses          182         Jones,          Deborah..........          81         WONG:          CIEE:          515          :  -0574.6b          ee          ci          126         pW          et          Ra          rarer          rr          40         Jones,          Mark............          124         Jones,          Steve...........          182         Jordan,          Joe........          137,161         Judd,          Dave.........          138,140         Juggling          Club..........          25,         27,72,136,137         Jurvelin,          Janeile........          155         Jurvelin,          Jilann.........          155         Just,          Adam............          156         ——,                   =,          ——         Kabible,          Ish............          179         ‘etecalignemn         Vl          cotcble         SITUATION          COMEDIES         The          Cosby          Show,”’          starring          Bill          Cosby,          consis-         tently          maintained          the          number          one          spot          in          the          Niel-         son          ratings.          Meanwhile,          top          ten          ‘‘Cheers’’          said         goodbye          to          Shelly          Long.          Other          popular          sit-coms         included          ‘‘Who’s          the          Boss,’’          ‘‘Family          Ties,”         “‘Night          Court’’          and          the          ‘‘Golden          Girls.’’         SOAP          OPERAS         “Pam,          it’s          over.          None          of          that          happened,’’          said         Bobby          Ewing.          Writers          of          ‘‘Dallas’’          explained          away         the          entire          previous          season          as          a          dream.          ‘Dynasty,”’         “ Falcon’s          Crest’’          and          ‘Knots          Landing”’          also          con-         tinued          their          prime-time          ratings          success.         NIGHTIME         The          war          was          on.          ‘‘Hello,          Johnny?          ...Click,’’          said         Joan          Rivers          about          her          phone          call          to          Johnny          Car-         son          announcing          her          new          TV          talk          show.          In          May,         however,          Rivers          was          replaced          on          the          show.          Stu-         dents          also          viewed          ‘‘Late          Night          with          David          Let-         terman.”’         DAYTIME         America          tuned          in          daily          to          see          the          most          popular         game-show          hostess,          Vanna          White,          turn          the         Wheel          of          Fortune”’          letters.          And          at          noon,          students         were          tuned          to          ‘‘Days          of          Our          Lives’’          to          see          the          birth         of          Bo          and          Hope’s          baby,          and          Steve          and          Kayla’s         romance.         MINI-SERIES         For          14.5          hours,          America          watched          ‘‘Amerika.’’         Starring          Kris          Kristofferson          and          Robert          Ulrich,          the         controversial          movie          showed          the          United          States           10         years          after          a          takeover          by          the          Soviet          Union.         TeEeLeEeVeleSeleOon         gg          tg         index          259         ef          Gl          Og         a          a         gon         a          .         ae         260          Index         87,160,161         Karabetsos,          Jim........         KOTGID          50655          sie          e6          8G          a          00          105         Karl          Marx          Pizza.........          47         Kariberg,          Kalyn.........          160         Kaschmitter,          Connie......          99         Kaserman,          Michaelie.          129,150         Kast,          Kelli.......          94,145,173         Katen,          Angel.........          60-62         Kate,          Seott.:          sce.          osc.          189         Kavanaugh,          John,          81,128,129         pees          Gregory..........          99         Mm,          JO@........          152,153         Resean          SHI          6          ocssonins          150         Keene,          Anita.......          176,177         Kees,          Donald...........          15         Keller,          Mike.....          198,210,211         Kelley,          Ja son...........          153         Kalley,          Mike............          169         Kelley,          Sue............          150         Keliner,          Cindy..........          160         Kellum,          Robert.........          141         Kelly,          Janet.....          Sacha          ass          160         Kelly,          Jason........          137,152         Kemp,          Jody............          101         Kempton,          Nancy........          155         Kendall,          John..........          167         Kennedy,          Catherine...          ..          101         133,159,136         Kennedy,          Jim,.........          183         Kennedy,          Kim..........          164         Kennemur,          Anthony.....          138         Kenyon,          Kathy.          ..144,145,178         Keogh,          Kelley.......          145,160         Kernodie,          Jeff...          .81,133,167         Kerr,          Wendy...........          101         Keys,          Andy..........          81,164         Khalid,          Ahmad.........          101         Kibbie,          William..........          42         Kibler,          Judith..........          146         Kibler,          Nathan.........          .146         Kilgore,          Darrell.........          161         Kilivos,          George.........          171         Killgore,          Kim...........          176         Killien,          Robin..........          155         Kilmer,          Greg.........          45,220         RIM          MEG          ss          ice          ceaece          ek         KG          ws          a          hcc          aes          ees          127         Kimball,          Grant..........          167         Kimmet,          Matt...........          138         King,          Cheryl............          81,         118,119,136         King,          Gregg........-..-          182         King,          Sige          50.0562          cous          144         Kingma,          Mark..........          101         Kinkaid,          Bubba.........          168         Kinner,          Mike...........          179         St          Rn!          TET          157         Kirkland,          Brian.....          .          128,171         Kirkland.          Bridget........          101         Kirkiand,          Kim.......          218,228         Kirschenmann,          Robb.          .          Baers)         Kitenel,          Allen...........         Kitchel,          Tanja.......          ‘igdag         MIVPTV          cae          wercaas          Endsheet         Kleffner,          Brett......          153,228         Klefiner,          Flip......          iow          wae         Kleffner,          Heidi...          .81,159,223         Kleffner,          Judy..........          160         Kleffner,          Russ..........          153         IRGUULM          AGCLESSES         a          IO          a          Se          eT          oe         Kleinkopf,          Kevin...          ...          81,162          Laird          Park.............          170          Lester,          Jeffrey..........          101         Klimek,          Dennis.........          TA7-          Lal          BMS          soc          sii          aiare          180          Letizia,          Domenica.......          101         Kline,          Chad............          $33          Laird)          Danese          cccce.s          143          Levanduski,          Mike.......          143         Kline,          Tammy..........          449          Laird,          Jon.          ...0.6.65.85          170          Levi,          Hank..........          126,131         Klinger,          Heidi..........          177)          kako,          POs          ice          39          Levy,          Lance............          101.         Kiudt,          Kristen........          81,174          Lamb,          Barry............          188          Lewis,          Amy.....          144,172,173         Knaplund,          Trond........          200          Lambda          Chi          Alpha......          130          Lewis,          Gavin...........          161         Knapp,          Jim............          227          Lambers,          Bonnie.......          101,          Lewis,          Kathy...........          159         Knapp,          Randall.........          101          147,224          Liberty,          Brian..........          157         Knauts,          Dave...........          123.          Lambert,          Bruce.........          181          License          Plates.........          oe         Knight,          David..........          126          Lambert,          David..........          81          Lickley,          Bill............          |         Knight,          Shawn.........          165          Lamoreaux,          Mark.......          269          Life          Science          Building          sadition         Knoblauch,          Andrea......          150          Lance,          Cari............          40%          ret          creees           he          keke          73,100         Knoles,          Betty........          81,178          Lance,          Greg........          159,222          Liffick,          Thane..........          162         ‘Knots          Landing’.........          67          Lance,          Raymond....101,133          Lifton,          Alan.............          49         Kets.          Craig          nis          oicis-cceis          on          6          Landreth,          John.........          119,          Light,          Mark.........          131,153         Knox,          Annette..........          164          137,151          Light,          Matthew.........          101         Knox,          Michelle.........          160          Lane,          Shelley..........          174          Lim,          Hank........           v  ieel          he         Knudsen,          Jay..........          157          Langan,          Gerald..........          69          Limbaugh,          Cathy.......          160         Knudson,          Natalie.......          150          Langfeidt,          Monica.......          212          Limesand,          Dale..........53         Knutson,          Randy.....          144,181          Langfield,          Paul.........          159          Lindley          Hall,.......          178,179         Koch,          Jennifer..........          173          Laraway,          Chris.........          161          Lindley          Lance..........178         Koester,          Ronny.........          179          Larkin,          Mario...........          174          Lindquist,          Lonnie.......          167         Kohntopp,          Mike......          81,159          Larkin,          Mark...........          224          Lindstrom,          Gary........          181         Konrath,          Kevin.........          137          Larkin,          Scott............          81          Linehan,          Scott.........          187,         Kopezynski,          Maureen...145,          Larson,          Doug...........          136          188,191,193,228,229         178          Beene          tore          67          Lingmerth,          Goran          186,188         Korn,          Doug.....          127,152,153          Larson,          Michael........          101          Linhart,          Heather........         K          SADON          s          sruces          0h          156          Larson,          Robert....67,81,162          Linhart,          Marnie.........          150         Kough,          Barry...........          269          Larson,          Shawn.........          159          Linnerud,          Paul..........          81         Kovaleski,          Robert.......          171          Latah          Distributors.......          244          Lion’s          Club............          177         Kowal,          Andy.........          $4;161;          ‘Cad.          Dotven.          —-..3.:.sncee          81          Lionel          Hampton          Day......          37         Kowash,          Phil          143,158,159          Lau,          Sarah..........          81,154          Lionel          Hampton          School          of         Krajic,          Susan...........          174          Laughlin,          Kirk..........          $20          (MORC          Sherk          gehen          dae          34,37         Ute          0           a          ee          a          94,177          Lavender,          Valerie........          81,          Lionel          Hampton Chevron          Jazz         Kraut,          Darren..........          129          132,148          |          ae          eet          Seen          34-37         PRR          sc          ss          the          os.          61.          Lawey          Marks...          2.2          157.          Liposchak,          Rick.........          1         Kreisher,          Lorena........          101.          Law,          Richard...........          101          Lisac,          Shelley..........          143         Krogseth,          Mike..........          71          Lawless,          Richard.......          101          Liston,          Bob..........,.          223         Kroos,          Sarah,......          133,154          Lawson,          Sharon........          147          Little          Sister          Rush.....          A          a         KRPL-AM...........          220,271)          ‘Laver          TaGies          b          b..2s          i208          250          Little,          Susan..........         Krugar,          Mark...........          169          Learn          and          Earn.......          70,71          Lloyd,          Andrea......          ‘Gooaas         Krumpe,          Ed............          147          Learning          Resource          Center          Lilo          POO          Ss          aisiens          sts          .          193         Krussel,          Audra.......          SUES)          awakes          seen          tltas          52,53          Lockwood,          Holly........          154         Kuck,          Richard...........          59          Leatham,          Eric...........          81          Lofstedt,          Mary..........          173         Save          presses          ocea          48,49,221          Lechner,          Karen...........6          Logan,          Ellen..........,.81         Kumm,          John...........          LeClair,          Fred...........          Lohse,          Joan............          108         Kummer,          Jeff..........          159          LeClaire,          Tom........          45,123          Lolley,          Karyl........          101,145         Kuntz,          Mike........          136,162          Led          Zeppelin............          38          Lolley,          Shawna.........          1         KUOI          Staff.          ...........-          423:          Lew;          Bruce.          oo.          10S:          tong,          Baan:2.5.3..  s05           76,         KOOGPIR          55          552s          41,          Lee,          Carolyn...........          172          94,101,118,119          ;         118,120,121,123,          Lee,          Galen..........          3469          Long,          Michael          Poise          101,181         Kurtz,          Dan..........          81,174          Lee,          Harry.............          131          Loomis,          Scott..........          101         Kuster,          Kellle..........          $73:          OOP          4AM          ss          oss          es          4101          Lopez,          Babin:          i          cucccsss          157         Kwiatkowski,          Paul...138,191          Lee,          Ramona........          81,176          Lorain,          Lisa.........          81,154         RWSIPTV          eek          soca          ce          es          49          Lee,          Steve.............          171          +Lorek,          Scott...........          198,         Kyle,          Tony... ..........          153          Lees,          Julie...........-..          79,          201,211,212,228         Seiweis          eh          orale          27,67,93          81,121,123,149          Lothen,          Christine...          .131,178         Li          174         Lowe,          Scott         LaFoe,          Danicc.s.cccees          170          Leonard,          Sugar          Ray......          19          Lowther,          Bruce.........          179         Lafrenz,          Tom...........          135          Leroux,          Lynda..........          216;          Cabiny          ROD          re          oasis          6033          143         Lagerquist,          John........          151          Leroy,          David............          13.          Lumsden,          Rob..........          165         Laintz,          Ken............          101.          Lesh,          Tammi.......          212,213          Lund,          Jean............          178         Magnuson,          Darin.......          189,         192,228         Magonigle,          Judy........          173         Mahan,          David..........          168         Mahler,          Jennifer.........          22,         120-123,          Cover         Mai,          Edward...........          101         oi          Bees          Oe          129         Mainvil,          Louise..........          81,         145,178,198,212         na,          Cheryl........          173         Major,          Lynn.......          50,51,269         SR          RSE          es          28-31         ee          Se          SE          era          65         Malarchick,          Charlotte          126         Malliane,          Becky.........          155         MAGE,          SOG          isis          's ed'seee          168         Maloney,          Pete......          136,145         Maloy,          Margaret........          102         Maisch,          Katherine...          .81,177         WARS          LOWS          ieee          tea          1         Manchester,          Shelly.          .          .81,176         Manderville,          Nancy......          102         Mandiloff,          Valerie...          ...          176         Mandrell,          Jody.........          121         Manis,          Christopher...          45,102         Manis,          Cordella.........          102         Manning,          Tracie........          164         Manson,          Charles.........          39         Manthe,          Lori...........          144         Manwaring,          Kipp.........          68         Marangeili,          Susan.          .          146,178         Marauders          Drum          Corps.          .          126,         127         Marboe,          Mike.          .137,Endsheet         March          of          Dimes.......          8,158         Marching          Band........          4,117         Mardi          Gras......          5,24-27,41,         Marek,          Joseph..........          102         Marek,          Todd...........          153         Marine          Corps.......          140,141         Marineau,          Gerard.          133,159         Mariori,          Cheryl.........          173         Markow,          Stuart.........          223         Marlatt,          Peggy..........          127         Marier,          Mike...........          137         Mariow,          Ken...........          160         Marr,          Robert...........          102         Marriage.....-.......          22,23         Martell,          Andrea...          --          148,174         Marti,          Angela...........          82         Martin,          Tom............          138         Martindale,          Lyle........          170         Martinez,          Thomas.......          147         Masar,          Caroline...          ..          102,172         Mashburn,          Jim.......          82,153         LEE          |           223         Mason,          Melanie.........          149         Masters,          Joseph........          102         Mathis,          Brian...........          170         Matthews,          Melanie.          .          .127,149         Matthews,          Steve........          102         Matzinger,          Sara.........          155         Mawby,          Russell..........          45         Maxwell,          Paul..........          129         Maxwell,          Robert........          202         Maybon,          Aaron......,..          135         Mayer,          Tracy...........          176         PARP          E          BUI          5          y          wce          mins          crates          269         McBirney,          Maile........          143         McBirney,          Malia........          102         McBride,          Scott......          102,161         McCabe,          Melinda.......          164         McCall,          Ester...........          224         McCallie,          Steve...          .12,82,162         McCanna,          Dan..........          191         McCarrell,          Billy.........          152         McCarthy,          Kent.........          102         McClain,          Barry..........          82         McClain,          Larry...........          82         McClure,          Brent...          ...          145,163         McCollum,          Stephen.....          102         McConnell,          Douglas...          ..          147         McConnell,          William...          _-.          7-9         McConville,          Clifford...          ..          102         McCoy          Haill.............          94         McCurdy,          Wendie......          146,         147,172         McCurry,          Craig.          ..88,150,151         McCurry,          Mike..........          131         McDonald,          James........          82         McDonald,          Mike...          ..          131,159         McDonald,          Troy.........          161         McDougal,          Jay.......          64,102         McDougal,          Tracy........          102         McEwan,          Rob..........          161         McFadden,          Mary          Kay.          .12-15,         145         McFarland,          Ron.........          227         McGeoghan,          Sean......          138         McGinnis,          Maureen...          ..          160,         198,201         _.the          best          fireworks          since          Nero          set          Rome          on          fire.”         —          New          York          Mayor          Ed          Koch          said          of          Lady         Liberty’s          100th          birthday          celebration         “I          like          challenge          and          controversy          —          I          like          to          tick         people          off.”          —          Madonna          referring          to          her          anti-         abortion          hit          single          ‘‘Papa          Don’t          Preach’’         You          can          be          a          part          of          helping          to          bring          in          this          final         million          and          half.          Step          to          your          telephone          right          now.         ..We          are          so          close.””          —          TV          evangelist          Oral          Roberts’         plea          for          enough          money          to          save          his          life         “I          tried          to          get          him          off          me.          He          couldn’t          get          enough.         He          had          to          find          new          things          to          do.”’          —          Jessica          Hahn,         referring          to          ousted          PTL          Ministries          leader          Jim         Bakker         “Clearly          under          present          circumstances,          this          cam-         paign          cannot          go          on.          I’m          not          a          beaten          man,          I’m          an         angry          and          defiant          man.””          —          Gary          Hart’s          withdrawal         from          the          1988          presidential          race          after          news          broke         of          his          alleged          affair          with          model          Donna          Rice         “Everybody          was          yelling          and          screaming          to          get          every-         body          out          of          the          house.””          —          Andy          Kees          said          of          the         UI          Pi          Kappa          Alpha          fraternity          fire         “It          was          a          policy          of          mine          not          to          ask          questions,          and         just          to          follow          instructions.          I          believed          in          Colonel         [Oliver]           North          and          what          he          was          doing.          I          had          no          right         to          question          him.”’          —          secretary          Fawn          Hall          on          shred-         ding          national          security          documents          concerning          the         Iran-Contra          affair         Gee          Oe          T«e          es         8          a          i          i          i          i          i          i          a          a          i          i          i          aid         Index          61         ee         a         262          ines         IRSTULM          ACGALreSSES          _         II          ag          eI          i          ee          ee          a          egg          Rn          _—          =          Og          Pe,         McGliothin,          Lynn.....          88,151          Miller,          Nancy.....          82,148,224          Morrisroe,          Julie......          82,172          Neal,          Roxanne.......          82,178         McGregor,          Brian.....          166,157          Miller,          Paige...          .102,127,149          Morrow,          Valerie.........          144          Neal,          Will...........          82,167         McGurkin,          Joe..........          227          Miller,          Robert..........          115          Morton,          Nora...........          150          Nearing,          Karolyn.......          104,         McHargue,          Susan...102,143          Miller,          Ted.............          420,          (MOQCOIR:          355          Sep          acese          es          112          «=6145,177         Mcintosh,          Shawn.......          102,          Miller,          Wade.........          11,151          Moscow          Centennial          Neary,          Chris...........          104         120,121,180          Milligan,          Bob...........          272          Celebration.............-.          8,          Neary,          Michael.........          167         McKenzie,          Shannon,....          138          Mills,          Patrick...........          102          54,55,153,231-233          Neely          Haill..........          111,222         McKetta,          Charlie........          131          Mills,          Russell........          82,174          Moscow          Downtown          Association          Neeser,          Shellie.........          104         McKinley,          Timothy......          102,          Milwaukee          Journal.......          AOS          eaieweavae          eagsiiiecelieae          27,          “Nelda:          Ban...           .-20%6005          131         138,145,162          Minas,          Mike............          7”          Moscow          Fire          Department          Nelsen,          comenente          Sager          176         McKinney,          David........          TES,          “MUNGIOE          oasis          se          cece           cevvcovigas          cise          146,147,165          Nelson,          Ann...          .104,143,155         McKinney,          Mark.....          126,127          Mink,          Nancy......          55          es          Moscow          Florists                    Gifts..242          Nelson,          Brett...........          156         McKinney,          Mike.....          135,167          Mires,          Ann.............          160          Moscow          Mountain.......          157          Nelson,          Eric.............                   McKinnon,          Brenda...172,173          Misterek,          Andrea....102,176          Moscow          Parks          and          Recreation          Nelson,          Hal............          157         McKnight,          Corey........          146          Mitchell,          Joseph........          Ly          Sy          Peng          RRA          T          EIT          IFC          231          Nelson,          Jill............          150         McKray,          Scott..........          183          Mitchell,          Mike.......          136,1          .          Moser,          Stuart.......          104,138          Nelson,          Joe.............          72         McMichael,          Melissa...82,149          Mocaby,          Wes............          Mosier,          Tim...........-          104          Nelson,          John...........          174         McMillan,          Tina.......          82,149          Modern          Way          Thrift          store.          18          Mostly          Moscow.......          48,49          ONE)          BRUEKG          s           o2           careiere          105         McMonnies,          Chris.......          127          Moehrie,          Carol..........          Moulton,          Judy.......          82,159          Nelson,          Lori........          105,176         McMulkin,          Mark.........          171          +Molnav,          Andrew........          in          Mount,          Jacqueline......          104,          Nelson,          ce          See          180         McMurray,          Lisa...          ..          143,149          Moloney,          Peter.          .          82,127,          i.          198,199,201          Nelson,          Taren...........          82         McMurray,          Stacy........          160          Monger,          Ann............          Mountain          States          Tumor          Nelson,          William.........          141         McNevin,          Shane........          131           Monnie,          Pat............          sa          SGT          oon          a:styce          8.016          ¥.4.4          160          Nesbitt,          Quentin........          159         McNew,          Christy......          82,174          Monson          Don...........          203          Mouradian,          Tamila.......          2          Nees,          BNO          ssc          ccccs          oe          215         McOmber,          John........          174          Monson,          Glenn.........          183          Moussavi,          Farshid.......          TD4=          MB          cl          tan          ted          serene          .          223         Mead,          Mitchell.........          102          Montgomery,          Bradley....82,          Mousse............+4          242          Neumayer,          Joe....,....174         Meals          on          Wheels.......          133          119,131          MICK          DGI          5          o10          tc          cinrsivenic          227          =Nevin,          Mike............          167         Tne          RE          ETOCS          220,221          Montgomery,          Eric.......          227          Muckler,          Sara...........          82          New          Year's          Resolutions.          ..76         Meeker,          Jan......          82,136,149          Monti,          James............          $2:          WES          ANG          io          cence          ss          153.          New          York          Giants........          228         Meeltoff,          Jack..........          168          Montiville,          Mark.........          102          Mullins,          Brent..........          167          Newbill,          Kara...........          105         Mellinger,          SCO          5          sxe          NEL)          Move          SIs          6c          ovs          son          6,7.          Munir,          Javed...........          223          Newkirk,          Scott...........          56         Men’s          Basketball....202-205          Moon,          Pat............5.          87          Munson,          Kim...........          169          Newman,          Donaid........          105         Menard,          Rita...........          173          Mooney,          Donna.........          BOS.          'MOTAOC          ES          2          oe          rine          cs          cares          247          Newman,          Karin.........          105         Mendez,          Raphael........          85          Mooney,          Jerry..........          82,          Murphy,          Chuck.........          137          Newman,          Larry.........          105         Mercy,          Leanne.........          173          154,167,269          Murphy,          Kathleen...104,143          News          Magazine.....          236-241         Merigan,          Todd..........          126          Mooney,          Michaele.......          178          Murphy,          Todd..........          168)          ING:          Ftanie..)........5          152,153         Merrick,          Todd..........          153.          Mooney,          Mitch.........          159:          Murray,          B......          ...0-+-s          40          Ngo,          Kim          Lien..........          223         on          ee          ae          7,165          Moore,          Ahnalisa........          160          Mussman,          Elayne.....-..          a          Wa          a          a          ney          146         Mesenbrink,          Vicki.......          145          Moore,          Cindy...........          474)          ||          AMOUR          ONG          Sn          eer          152          ORE          ne          wis.0          pints          82         Metcalf,          Belinda......          82,154          a          en          ae          108          Myers,          Frank......          269,Cover          Niblock,          Kirk.....          88,133,151         Metcalf,          Vinson.........          202          Moore,          Elaine........          90,102          Myers,          Kristin.......          132,160          Nicholas,          Dawn......          82,154         Metzer,          Kim...          ..          Pte          pons          224          Moore,          Henry.....          124,Cover          Myhre,          Jeff............          179          Nicholas,          Lynn.........          135,         Metzgar,          Tal........          221,222          Moore,          Jodi.............          69          206,208,209,228         Metzger,          Dean.          ..168,169,17 8          Moore,          Kevin........          82,167          Nichols,          Chris......          162,163         Metzier,          Karma.........          144,          Moore,          Marianne........          194          Nicholson,          Keli...          ...          158,159         145,148,269          Moore,          Pam............          20          we          —          A          Nicholson,          Scott........          1         Meulink,          William........          102          Moore,          Rex.........          102,161          Ss                    ww          Nieder,          Brady..........          169         Meyer,          Mark............          82          Moore,          Shelia..........          216          Niederauer,          Mike.......          165         Meyers,          Peggy.........          146          Moore,          Zimri........          102,170          Nield,          Brian............          153         Meyers,          Sammy........          127          Moorhead,          Jay..........          146          Nield,          Shawn...........          161         Michell,          Mike...........          146          Moot          Court...........          68,69          Naccarato,          Natalie.......          76          Nielson,          Jerry...........          83         Michelson,          Michelle.          ..82,178          Moran,          Brian...........          104          Nachbar,          Nick.....          ye          deg          R          OOO          CINMIDOTIS          SHOES          sie          as          area:          y:cis          174         Michener,          Hoyt.........          157          Mordhorst,          Sean.......          137,          Nakamara,          Sally.........          51          Nilsson,          Shane.......          94,146         Michniewicz,          Tracy......          1          138,151          Naples,          Meredith........          17          Nilsson,          Shawn......          94,189         MGR,          AIO          os          ans          170          Morgan,          Carla..........          174          WNarder,          Kari............          121          Ninth          Circuit          Court          of          Appeals         Migchelbrink,          Paul.          ..157,223          Morgan,          Deanna........          104,          Nards,          Tom............          ROO          Tercwtessiecacact          venieres          este          web          iate          69         Milasky,          Royce.........          223          146,150,178          NASIR          iso          2oc          ios          there          ae          47,64,65          Nishex,          Sammy.........          171         Milhollin,          Dianne........          143          Morgan,          Gretchen.......          150          Nash,          Shannon.........          150          Nishihira,          Ann..........          223         Millard,          Galen.......          102,127          Morgan,          Jill............          155          Nash,          Steve............          222)          NODOZ.          viscies          vnc          swe’          67         Millard,          Melissa.....          172,173          Morgan,          Patty..........          104,          Natale,          Nick............          227).          ‘NOB.          TORV          emesis          cisions          159         Miller,          Charies...........          87          124,Cover          National          College          Ski          Noland,          Andrea.........          164         Miller,          Dixie........          149,223          Morgan,          Robert..........          63          Association.............          11.          Noonan,          Donnett........          111         Miller,          Eric.          ............          168          Morgan,          Tracy..........          174          National          College          Television          Nordby,          Paul...........          165         Miller,          Heidi............          146          Morgan,          Travis.........          BOO:          aside          cao          oe          ETE          eS          38          Nordin,          Debbie.........          174         WO          BONE          rosie          as          cries          171          Mork,          Theyne..........          143.          Naughton,          Mike.........          131          Norgard,          Marsha...          .          105,223         Miller,          Kent............          165          Morken,          Nanette.          ..5,136,224          Navarre,          Kathleen.......          179          Norman,          Liz............          133         Miller,          Lindsey......          82,124,          Morris,          Julie...........          159          Navarre,          Michelle.          ......          212          Norrie,          Pam.............          82         126,149,Cover          Morris.          Neosia....19,192,193          Navy          ROTC........          138-141,          North          South          Ski          Bowl...          .172         Miller,          Maynard.........          115          Morris,          Tom............          221          222,223          Nouwens,          Joyce........          173         Miller,          Mike............          165          Morrison,          Sherry....150,155          Nay,          John.............          157          Noy,          Danny............          181                   es          eI          Re          ees          ii          OO          a          Og          On          I          Ey          gO          rag          Ogg         NROTC          Alfa          One.......          138         NROTC          Alfa          Two........          138         NROTC          Bravo          One......          138         NROTC          Sravo          Three.....          141         NROTC          Bravo          Two......          141         Ntlale,          Francis......          105,227         Nuclear          Enlisted          Commission-         ing          Program...........          139         Nukaya,          Cary...........          171         Nutsch,          Barbara........          105         Nyberg,          Keith...........          88,         127,145,163         Nygaard,          Henry..........          97         Nygren,          Ken...........          131         —          ——         i          ——         O'Bryan,          John...          .124,Cover         O’Bryan,          Stacey........          138         O'Garro,          Lenford........          211         O'Malley,          Robert........          171         O'Neill,          Casey..........          141         O'Neil,          Kelly........          160,161         O’Sullivan,          Bernard.....          157         Oberle,          Julie.....          82,145,          i         Obermeyer,          Mark.......         ORO          ONG)          6.5:6.5.0:0          opia's          208         ,          George.......          211         Ogle,          Brenda...........          148         Ohweiler,          Ed..........,          147         Oliver,          Anthony.........          105         Oliver          tS          FF.          oreo          es          144         Oliver,          Kimberly........          160         Olness,          Jenifer.........          164         Olness,          Michael........          141         Olsen,          Henriette........          105         Olson,          Alane.........          6,146         son,          Barbara..........          55         Olson,          Dan.........          224,225         Olson,          Heldi...........          150         Olson,          Jett.          6.          152         Olson,          Todd...........          169         Onanubosi,          Dayo.......          211         Ong,          William...........          105         Onzay,          Mike...........          156         Opening          ...vs-  asi2          sie          b=          3          2.3         Orcutt,          Edmund........          106,         145,224         ae          Se          PIC         Orient,           he          Ball          State          diniver.         ONSET          LEO          125         Orndorff,          Louis.........          180         Orr,          Loren..........          131,157         Orton,          Robert..........          1         Osgood,          Gordy..........          11         Ourada,          Margaret.......          154         Ouren,          ‘Tom          So          Wietkeaaterv          ics          165         Outdoor          Programs.......          75         Outhet,          Ana............          177         Ovaid,          Damien..........          153         Overfelt,          Neil...........          106         9g          gl          Oa          a         Overhoiser,          Jay.........          134         Overholser,          Katie.......          164         Overman,          Lisa..........          172         Outs          (TORiss          scares          165         Owsley,          Pat.............          64         a         —          a         ——         PACE.          6          icsracraie          sieeve          38,39         Pachner,          Joe...........          161         Pack,          Stacey.          .124,149,Cover         Pagano,          Jill........006..          160         Paider,          Susan..........          172         Paigh,          Ere...          cnn.          227         Paller,          Julie......          ..127,150         Palmer,          Cindy..........          1         Paimer,          Linda.....          106         Palmer,          Rick...........          146         Paimer,          Robert..._...          82,175         Palmer,          Susan...........          2         Palouse          Disabled          Outdoor         CUMMING          ais          reine          oper          as7ets          143         Palouse          Empire          Mall...          .6,24,         26,27,230,249,          Endsheet         Palouse          Performances...          .38         Panhellenic          Council...          ...          7,         130,143         PROG,          I          oreo          c          tenes          127         Pare,          Michele.......          144,174         Parents          Weekend......          144,         230,270         Parisot,          George.....          160,161         Parisotto,          Merry........          160         Parker,          David...........          193         Parker,          Gregory.........          106         Parkins,          Mitzi,......          160,161         Parks,          Carmella...          ...          82,148         Parke,          Shon...........:          170         PORTE,          CROOW          66          4          ea          aes          82         Parrish,          David..........          141         Parsell,          Paula.......          201,212         Parsons,          Daren.          .......          156         Parsons,          Ed...........:          161         Partnership          in          Equine          Therapy         Asivaen          ehations          142,143         Patterson,          Jenny........          82,         145,154         Patton,          Keli.........          106,177         Paul,          Shahna...........         Pauley,          Robert.......          moh         Paulsen,          Ralene........         Paulsen,          Virgil.          .189          Miia         ho          Ln,          PREC          EE          20,21         Peck,          Debbie...........          177         POCK,          DOP          5243-5..455;          160         Peck,          Kirsten...........          177         Pecukonis,          Paul........          121         POM.          TBOV          ioc          ecuss          82         Peila,          Steve............          162         Pelton,          Jessica.........          172         Pence,          Jan............          106         PONCE;          JOY           .          secs          182         Pence,          Lynn,.......          173,183         Pennington,          Angelique.          .136         People          Divider........          72,73         UE          -Setearet;          See          ood          Os          scine          ete          n          cette          .          $520.00         Large’          “Pizza          Perfection?          i035          ).sa5.554%          $13.25         University-4          movie          ticket...............          $4.25         Gallon          of          regular          gasoline...............          $.88         Bold          3          laundry          sOap..........c00eee00:          $7.99         Bud:          Light          Sk-pack          «6:0          6.          o.6:002          seaman          sales          $3.18         Bartles          and          Jaymes          wine          coolers..,.....          $3.70         Karmelkorn          pop          refills..................          $.69         Diet          Coke          six-pack.           5          +s:          e0ccc0%0          eae          $2.73         INOUE          on          i5          5          ais          osc's          cen          4k          oa          4s          SSSI          ate          okals          $5.53         Boxed          Kraft          Macaroni          and          Cheese.......          $.51         Mead          100          sheet          notebook..............          $1.36         Monthly          TV          cable          service.............          $12.95         Crest          pump          toothpaste...............0.          $1.99         “PROVEN!          (CONGOMIB.          ics          eee          arse          $3.29         McDonald's          ‘Chef          Salad...           ccanscawnak          $2.49         LIBRE          OMIOY          05          SERN          ote          OL          ee          ah          PE          $.50         “Gem          of          the          Mountains’’.............          $17.00         BOOK          BUYING          BLUES.          The          average          cost          of          a          textbook,         according          to          Bookstore          representatives,          was          $32.          However,         at          the          end          of          the          semester,          students          like          Jarrad          Markley          only         received          a          few          dollars          for          each          returned          text.          (Moore)         PeReleCeEeS         index          263         ReEtuUrmD          Addresses         POTN          O          52550          eons          see          72-115         Perch          Grocery,          The.....          131         Pereyra,          Eduardo.......          227         Perez,          Carmen.........          176         Perkins,          Lilsa..........          176         Perkins,          Tony..........          179         ih          lt          TORE          ROI          ETE          247         Perrell,          Francesca.......          106         Perry,          Nathan..........          168         Perry,          Susan........          121,155         Peters,          Cherylyn........          176         Peters,          Gregory.........          106         Petersen,          Blane.....          128,129         Peterson,          Betsy.........          135         Peterson,          Hazel..........          43         Peterson,          Heidi.....          172,173         Peterson,          Mike......          128,129         Peterson,          Scott.........          106         Peterson,          Shane........          162         Peterson,          Skip..........          106         Peterson,          Tad..........          170         Pettibon,          Beta..........          154         Pettinger,          Matt.          .          80,141,179         Pettinger,          Mike......          138,183         Pfefferkorn,          Jana.......          148         Pfeifer,          Pat............          126         Pfenninger,          Bruce.......          129         Pham,          Lahn............          106         Pham,          Lily..........          82,177         Pham,          Mimi........          176,177         Pham,          Tony............          106         Phi          Delta          Theta.....          131,132         154,164,165,270         Phi          Gamma          Delta.....          12,15,         88,93,130,133,135,162,163         Phi          Kappa          Tau.          .130,162,163         Phi          Sigma...          066.0000          143         Phillips,          Robyn.........          106         Phipps,          Laurel..........          106         Phonathon.......          88,175,1          as         164,165         Pi          Kappa          Alpha.....          147,154,         164,165,223         Pickering,          Robert.......          130         Pickett,          Rodney         Pierce,          Ken............          1         Pierce,          Robert         Plerik,          David............         126,128,170         Pipal,          Randall         Piquet,          Chad........         Pitman,          Bruce..........          415         RHR          ATION          sis          lela          oorese          etd          shoes          227         PRR          EMITS          occ          cicero          eine          227         Pivett,          Karen...........         Pizza          Perfection......         Plucker,          Leslie.........         127,128         Piummer,          Joseph         Poffenroth,          Jill.........         Pogue,          Dave...........         Porteus,          Virginia         Poston,          Laura         Powell,          Benny         Powers,          Christine         Pratchencko,          Paul         Prichard          Gallery.          .         Primoll,          Cathy         Privett,          Karen         Prohaska,          Benjamin         Prouty,          Shelley         Prouty,          Wesley         Provant,          Andrew.....          baie         Provant,          Molly         Pugmire,          Amy         Pugsley,          Mike         Puhich,          Jeanette...          .         Ce          ey         Quigleyide,          Rob         a          a_i         Rabe,          Bradford.........          106         Radner,          Gilda...........          40         Raffetto,          Anne........          70,76         Raia;          StONG          yo).          cco          opiecsse          9         Rainey,          Thomas........          138         Rakozy,          Carol..........          106         Ralabate,          Tom...........          55         Ralstin,          Shelly...........          84         Ramierez,          Ray..........          222         Ramsey,          Cecil..........          179         BASSO)          HTIS          So          sintnc)          meee          159         Ramsey,          Mitch......          136,165         Rape          Shield          Law.........          33         Rash,          Scott...          62          es          123         Rast,          Alan......          137,145,          be         Rast          Brian...          oo.          te          ect         247         Rate:          BOR          se          ae          133         Rauch,          John........          118,119         Rawlings,          Barbi.........          160         Ray          Brown          Trio.......          36,37         Read,          Sally......          84,212,213         Reagan,          Julie..........         Redden,          Vonda.........          106         Ree;          Cars          oci.          tes          169         ea          ery          eee          248         Reed,          Rodney..........          141         Reese,          Joanne.........          100         Reese,          Scott...........          121         Reeve,          Nicole.......          136,154         Reeves,          Dianne.......          35-37         Reggear,          Mike..........          131         Registration.          .........6.6:          21         Rehbein,          Dean.........          138         Held.          ASIN:          sc          ceyisices          150         Ret.          TING          casei          aan          ts          174         Reil,          Karen............          172         Reinhardt,          Dennis.......          138         Reinke,          Kristin.........          176         Reisenburg,          Paul.......          151         Reishus,          Bill...........          138         Remaley,          Eric..........          171         Rench,          Susan..........          155         Renfrow,          Dale..........          168         Renfrow,          Vicki...          .84,145,160         Rennie,          Jim.............          38         Rennison,          Elwood...          .84,182         Renshaw,          Barbara.......          159         Residence          Hail          Association         5          cd          en          CR          eS          144,178,230         Residence          Halls.....          171-183         Reslock,          Robin......194-197         Resolutions..........+4.          76         Reuter,          Brenda......          145,160         Reynolds,          Adare...          .136,149         Reynolds,          Terry........          137,         152,153         Reynolds,          Troy.........          227         Rice,          Andrew...          .106,162,163         Rice,          Jennie.........          84,155         SIGE          SHIN          oo          steeds          deleen          14         RIGO          TOY:          csiecviacriacctas          128         Rich,          Anne.....          eres          £5         Richard,          Nancy.........          109         Richards,          Doug.........          167         Richards,          Martha.......          173         Richards,          Mike.........          167         Richards,          Peter.....          145,167         Richardson,          Brent.          ..109,183         Richardson,          Larry...109,121         Richman,          Edward.......          109         Rickett,          Holly........          Rerey          3)          )         EUS.          GS          ai          121         Ridenbaugh........          128,129         Riedinger,          Darryl........          147         Riemann,          Susan.........          84         Rigby,          Lynn.......          Bolg          55         Riggers,          Brian.......          84,165         Riggers,          Kami..........          155         Rimel,          Michelle.........          164         Ringquist,          Tracy........          174         Risan,          Scott............          144         Risnag,          Joe........          205,229         Ristau,          Shane.......          214,215         Rivalries          .............          18,19         Robartes,          Leigh......          90,123         Roberts,          Gordon...          .179,227         Roberts,          Marlin.........          163         Robertson,          Jim.........          169         Robertson,          Mark........          162         Robideaux,          Julie...          .153,160         Robideaux,          Rebecca...          .109,         160         Robinette,          Matt.........          162         Robinson,          Keith........          109         Robinson,          Phillip.....          84,167         Robinson,          Rob.......84,180         Robinson,          Scott.          .          .67          ale         Robison,          Ann..........          155         Robison,          Jill...........          160         Robison,          Kelli..........          159         Rockafellers..........          14,15         Rockwell          International.          .          65,91         Rod,          Jennifer.........          32,33         ROG,          Patsoines          cocsatnee          179         Rodman,          Paul..........          183         ROO.          DBR          aos          on          slaeoes          167         Roe,          Elaine.............          84         Roe,          Karen.............          76         Rogers,          Briana.......          84,177         Rogers,          Daryl..........          180         Rogers,          Joe............          128         Rogers,          Matt...........          187         Roker,          Buddy............          36         Romaszka,          Beth          Ann          160         Root,          Steve............          151         Ropp,          Bryan...........          165         Rose,          Bonnie          136,145,154         Rose,          Tracey............         Rosholt,          Bekki.......          84,159         Roshoit,          Kirsten......          85,159         PORT          SATIN          To          8          heck-y          er          9-0          970          Ae         Ross,          |          ee          RR          es         Rossi,          Valerie.          .          .136,1          saase         Roth,          David          Lee          Deltas          s          38,181         Rounds,          Richard........          109         Rourke,          Mike...........          161         Rouyer,          Catherine........          27         Rowe,          Galen.........          28,115         Rowe,          John............          157         Roy,          Mathew.........          85,167         HOVAU          GOOG          oes          ece1sz          .          109         Royer,          Rozanne..........          8         REC          DAVE          Te          sce          os          wre          143         RUGS          FEU          se          ete          nc          esas          127         Ruffing,          Tina.........          weille         Rugby          Cilub............          227         Pe          RS          Cancion          ngs          vats          109         Reimber;          “Blas          o s          eee          78         RE          a          BI          gO          ea         Runge,          Jeff............          168         Runge,          Karen..........          154         Runge,          Teresa.........          143,         164,165         Runnin’          Rebeis.......          223         Rush,          Clarance.........          270         Rush,          Evelyn...........          270         Rush,          Jenifer...........          270         AVN;          ND          ins          9:5          bcare'e          parses          156         Ryker,          Genny..........          181         Schultz,          Cami..........          173         Schultz,          Pam........          85,172         Schussler,          Christine...          ..          176         Schwartz,          Gary.........          206         Schwartze,          Eric.........          152         Schweier,          Kari......          109,174         Booth:          (Daves.          h          esses          216         Scott,          Janice.......          140,141         BOO          SAV          6-5          sree          trier          Baars          8         Scolt,          Tracy.          ....          sven          167         Sabin,          Mike.........-..          168         Sabin,          Tom............          168         Saindon,          Jann..........          150         Saindon,          Lynn..........          150         Salskov,          Paul.......          129,163         Sams,          Mark............          170         Samuelson,          John...          ..          85,181         Sande,          Chris.......          141,227         Sanders,          Ernest........          189         154         Sandford,          Andrea...._..          178         Santos,          Maria..........          109         Sanyal,          Nick...........          147         ngton,          Steve......          161         Sarver,          Darren..........          167         wet,          Brag          ea          cick          183         Saul,          William...........          115         Savage,          Simone.....          129,155         Savedge,          Charies.......          69         Saxvik,          Robin..........          150         Scanfill,          Maria..........          146         Scantling,          Sandra.......          181         Schaffer,          Brad..........          162         Schaffner,          Dennis.......          161         Schamens,          Kendra......          109         Schantz,          Joel...........         Scheer,          Jane...........          172         Schellekens,          Anne...          ._.          127         Schiefeibein,          Lola.......          109         Schilliam,          Becky.........          11         Schini,          Mikki...........          164         Schiacter,          Dennis.......          269         ao          Oe          180         Schmidt,          Cheryl........          169         Schmidt,          Dale..........          147         Schmidt,          Deron.........          182         Schmidt,          Kim..........          174         Schmidt,          Margie........          150         Schmidt,          Marie.........          1         Schmidt,          Norene........          1         Schmidt,          Tamara........          72         Schneiderman,          Jeanie          85         Wee          ei          1         Scholes,          Amy...........         Scholey,          Todd..........          2         Schoonar,          Richard......          181         Schrom          Ken,..........          2         Schulte,          Chris......          peer         Segota,          Ken.............         ST          ELD          ee          eee          109,         133,136,145,156         Selin,          Keith........          123,227         2          ee          eee          151         Selland,          Sandi....._....          173         Sellars,          Lance..._.__..-          191         Selvid,          Synde......__..          176         Selvig,          Robin......._...          206         Semanko,          Norman.......          85,         118,119,127,150,223         Semeniuk,          Sid.......__..          85         Semick,          Mike............          87         Seniora.............          88-113         Senter,          Jim...._.......          188         SerVoss,          Mark..........          167         Sevieri,          Mike...........          152         Sewell,          Nick.........          85,162         Shackelford,          Bob.......          179         Shadiley,          Jeff...........          151         Shamion,          Brad.........          179         Shamion,          Mark.........          179         Shanander,          Cathy......          185,         216,217         Shannon,          Dawn.........          109         Sharp,          Tammy...........          85         Ss          ROG          cane          ee          aaseae          109         Sharples,          Terryl.........          14,         harples,          Terry!         15,85,114,127,136,145,149,         Endsheet         Shavlik,          Kenneth........          109         Shaw,          Terry............          131         Shawver,          Raiph....__...          168         Shea;          Larry...          ..          5.6:          1         Shen,          VON          sss          ces          165         Sheard,          Stephanie.          .          .          126,149         Sheffler,          Barbara........          109         Sheibany,          Mansour...          ..          .          109         Sheltry,          Joe............          138         Shepard,          Eric..........          179         Sheppard,          Jeffrey.          .17,85,159         Sheppard,          Kristin........         Sherman,          Mike.......          25,137         Shern,          Scott.........          85,157         Sherwood,          Rick.........          167         Shetty,          Kalidas.........          143         Shine,          Michelle.          .          SS          Ses          5         Shoemaker,          Kevin.          ..109,133         Shorter,          Frank..........          168         a          a          ce          i          i          i          i          ee          ee          ce          ee          ee          a         “Skosh”          Berwald         |          Ylotalle         BASEBALL         The          New          York          Mets          unraveled          the          Boston          Red          Sox         in          the          World          Series,          four          games          to          three.          Met          third         baseman          Ray          Knight          was          named          MVP.         YACHTING         The          America’s          Cup          floated          back          to          the          United         States          following          the          Stars          and          Stripes’          4-0          victory         over          Australia’s          Kookaburra          III          in          yachting          com-         petition          off          of          Freemantle,          Australia.         DALLAS          BOUND.         Senior          quarterback          Scott         Linehan          tosses          a          sideline          pass         versus          Idaho          State.          During         the          season,          Linehan          complet-         ed          231          out          of          407          pass          at-         tempts.          In          the          spring,         Linehan          signed          a          profession-         al          football          contract          with          the         Dallas          Cowboys.          (O’Bryan)         FOOTBALL         The          New          York          Giants          rode          roughshod          over          the         Denver          Broncos          on          Jan.          25          winning          Super          Bowl         XXI1,          39-20.          Giants          quarterback          Phil          Simms          was         tabbed          MVP.         The          NCAA          envoked          the          ‘‘death          penalty”’          against         Southern          Methodist          University’s          football          program         canceling          the          1987          and          later          1988          seasons.          The         Feb.          25          edict          was          the          harshest          penalty          ever          hand-         ed          out          by          the          NCAA.         Former          Vandal          wide          receiver          Brant          Bengen          and         quarterback          Scott          Linehan          signed          professional         football          contracts          with          the          Seattle          Seahawks          and         Dallas          Cowboys          respectively.         Se PeOeReTeS         index          265         a)         ng          i          Ig          tg          Fag          ®         ——         in          i          od         —          ca         nti          i          i         aad         =         ee         -         a         —s         ——         LaF         OO          OO          I          I         Pre          ine         ZF         gfe          ee          E         266          inaes         Shoufler,          Bret..........          157         Shoup          Hall.............          223         Shovic,          John..........          64,65         Showers,          James........          171         Shreeve,          Jeanne.........          43         TT          AOS          0c          Rea          ERLE          SO          147         Shurtliff,          Cindy.....          121,173         Siegler,          Kathy........          62,63         Sigma          Alpha          Epsilon.          .          .          .          130,         135,136,          150,157,158,166,167,         185,222         PIM          CU          asc          ccsscintck          yao          ine          4,         93,116,133,135,136,          149,          150,         155,166,167         Sigma          Nu.............          153,         168,169,Endsheet         Silva,          Damayanthi.......          109         Silva,          Dinendra.........          109         Silver          and          Goid          Day.....          145         Silver          Lance........          145,158         Silver,          Cheryl..........          109         Simcoe,          Scott..........          109         Simeone,          Kathi......          93,178         Simeone,          Kristin........          174         Simer,          Laurie...........          146         Simmons,          John.........          157         Simmons,          Laurel........          155         Simon,          David.......          109,169         SIMPIOR          USD...          5          6          0c          157         Simpson,          Erik..........          121         Sims,          Dennis..........-          180         Sims,          John.          .          .83,136,143,159         Sims,          Kelley...........          0         Sink,          Dean.............          131         Sisco,          Brent............          162         CT          CP          te          EOC          OTE          223         Skatetown.............          135         Skaviand,          Barbara........          86         SROUY):          (BOs          ries          ene          es          38         SEIT          eae          ab          aesesh:          0c          10,11         Skinner,          Jerry........          86,167         Skinner,          Lynn.........          36,37         CU          S|          ee          Sena          145         Skodi,          John.........          86,129         Slaney,          Matthew........          109         Slater;          CRIB...          26...          190         Slaybaugh,          Chad.......          165         Sliepcevich,          Elena.......          45         Slora,          William..........          131         Smisek,          Kim...........          176         Smisek,          Stacy..........          180         Smith,          Barry...........          109         Smith,          Benny...........          143         Smith,          Brian...........          151         Smith,          Chad...........          159         Smith,          Craig...........          168         Smith,          Darryl...........          159         Smith,          Jeff.............          yy         Smith,          Jennifer.........         118,119,132,136,149,160,          tea          Smith,          Kelly...........-         Smith,          Kord........          en          4         SMM          OS          sei          vo          ctarce          ss          143         Smith,          Mark.............          46         Smith,          Serena......          110,126         Smith,          Terry...........          138         Smith,          Todd.......          12,86,162         Smith,          Venus..........          148         Smithpeters,          Bill........          208         Snake          River          Six..........          27         Sneed,          Robert..........          141         Snow          Hall...          cece...          93,         94.174,180,181         Snow,          Keith............          129         Snyder,          Gerry..........          269         Snyder,          Mark........          86,179         Sobotka,          Christi.....          176,177         Soccer          Club........          184,227         Solan,          Alan.........          121,269         Soltez,          Jeff.........          103-105         Sontgerath,          A.C.........          151         Sorensen,          Kimberly.          .          .86,136         Sorenson,          Kristina......          110         Sororities          ..........          148-170         Souther,          Brenda.....          206,207         Soward,          Pam...........          176         Spalinger,          Darin.....          110,171         Spanbauer,          Steve.......          151         Sparrell,          Scott..........          167         Special          Olympics....         Speelman,          Scott...          .118,138         Spence,          Annie.........          150         Spencer,          Jess........          .          .167         Spencer,          Michelle......          110,         135,174         Spencer,          Rob..........          153         Sperry,          Skip.          .          .136,159,Cover         Spevacek,          Missy........          136         Spiker,          Scott...........          269         Spilker,          Ahren..........          128         Spitz,          Mark............          168         Spokesman-Review......          220         }          2)          RE          228,229         Sports          Divider......          184,185         et          A          TR          LO          84-229         Sprague,          Peter......          129,153         Sprinkel,          Herbert...          .152,153         Sproed,          Cherie..... ....          155         St.          Augustine's          Catholic          Center         SOs          IANO          EMOP          IOI          er          Gree          9,22,67         St.          Marie,          Jim..........          145         St.          Marie,          Scott.........          110         Stacey,          David..........          141         Stacey,          Scot........          178,179         oN          SC          184,         203,204,228         Stanaway,          Wes.........          168         Stancliff,          lra...........          153         Standley,          Pat...........          167         Stands,          Stacey.......          86,149         Stanko,          Tamara.........          145         Stansbury,          Melissa.          .          .86,          ee         Start,          Steve.          cc          icc:         Steckler,          Richard.......          1          c         126,127,162         Steed,          Dayne...........          167         Steel          House......          94,111,181         Steffans,          Tim...........          182         Steffens,          Jeff...........          152         Steigers,          Bekalyn.......          110         Steigers,          Brant.......          86,182         Steiner,          Hon...........          12         Steinkamp.          Laurel.......          150         Steinkamp,          Melanie.....          150         Stenback,          Jana.........          143         Stenger,          Chris......          143,157         Stephens,          Dave.........          211         Stephens,          Leo......          224,225         Stephenson,          Lana.......          110         Stephenson,          Mark.......          180         Return          Addresses         Stephenson,          Peggy.....          131         Stephenson,          Spike......          168         Stepp,          Kelly........          137,161         Stepping          Stones...          .133,168         Sterling,          Aileen.........          149         Stevens,          Russ..........          165         Stewart,          Anne..........          155         Stewart,          Jeri............          6,7         Stewart,          Sandra........          176         Stibal,          Andy...........          162         Stigele,          Shelly..........          223         Stock;          DAVG@.          5          ..-           5          167         Stockton,          Kim..........          146         Stockwell,          John..........          40         Stoicheff,          Rob......          168,169         Stokes,          Teri........          164,223         Stone,          Pam.........          143,149         Stonebraker,          Carolyn...          .150         Stoneman,          Mike...          ..          137,156         Storey,          Kent...........          183         Storhok,          Eric........          86,180         Stork,          Mary............          110         Swe          eRe          cos          150         Stover,          Jody...........          150         Stowers,          Molly.........          110         Stowers,          Ray...........          110         ‘Strange          Snow’.......          60,61         Stratton,          Bob...........          171         Stratton,          Will........          86,171         Strawn,          ee          =          cee          86,1          iS         Strawn,          Russell.........         49,123,127,          128,          138,          ida.ise         SUGR          COR          cs          e.pcecoriness         Stromberg,          Adrienne.          .          E:          ‘          ;         Stroschein,          Earl........          111         Stroud,          Karleen.........          150         Strychartz,          Theodore...          .138         Stucker,          Jeff.........          86,182         Student          Alumni          Relations         BORG.          «ante          88,144,145         Student          Travel          International         PS          5          A          Eee          ee          ee          A          11         Student          Travel........          10,11         Student          Tutors........          52,53         Studying.............          66,67         STUN          RIMM          co          ev          e-cpeereie          148         Stutler,          Keith...........          11         Sukovaty,          Louis.........          179         Summer          School.......          70,71         Summers,          John.........          153         Sunavala,          Kaizad.......          223         Super          Seniors...........          91         Sutton,          Lodi......          86,136,174         Sutton,          Ray............          167         Swafford,          Pat...          .215-217,228         Swallow,          John.          piloce          eceiolaws          168         Swan,          Heather..........          173         Swan,          Mike...........          8,152         Swan,          Sandy........-...          159         Swanson,          Kenneth......          111         Swanson,          Mona.........          159         SWICK          os          sis          poe          es          ee          248         Sweetwood,          Amy........          54         Swim          Center............          75         Swindell,          Marci.........          164         Syring,          Tina............          155         Swindell,          Marci.........          164         Syring,          Tin@...          66          cas          ou          155         Szewc,          Stephen.          .86,129,174         Szubert,          Marita......          86,149         Taggart,          Paul...........          19         Talbott,          Dawne.........          164         Tanaka,          Guy..........,          224         TONE          NOM          ee          iice          oe          oter          ese          re          223         Tannier,          Melinda........          177         Tarbet,          Ruth...........          148         Targhee          Hall.............          7,         14,94,111,178,180,181         Tarp,          Cathleen.........          148         PMG          a          ARITRNOE          Sos          oa          os          wes          ware          39         Tau          Kappa          Epsilon.......          3,         8,93,119,130,168,169,178         Taylor,          Andrew.......          174         Taylor,          Katherine.......          11         Taylor,          Lisa............          223         Taylor,          Marcy..........          441         Taylor,          Patricia.........          111         Taylor,          Richard.........          134         Tea          and          Sympathy.......          61         Teare,          James.......          141,174         Teed,          Brad......          121,126,          bt         TOMY)          PURER          Gale          eho          5          00          :0  09,-0:5          115         Teller          Machines.........          83         TOUTING.          8          APuic          bins          av.          214-217         Teraguchi,          Deborah......          86         TOGO          VON          oo          os.          oe          eins          223         Tetwiler,          Michael.......          181         PROTA          SRE          oo.          5          st0p6.69          60-63         Theatre          Operators,          Inc...          .27         Theriault,          Tony..........          86,         174,198,199         THOR          IGDE          see          oh          oe          14,         15,117,130,170,171         Thiel,          Marc............          159         Thielges,          David.........          168         Thielman,          Robynn...          .86,148         Thirtyacre,          Dave........          127         Thomas,          Betsy........          32,33         Thomas,          Bill........          169,218         Thomas,          Brian..........          111         Thomas,          Dave.......          86,151         Thomas,          Debra.........          111         Thomas,          Richard........          111         Thomas,          Ron...........          128         Thomas,          Stan...........          8,9         Thompson,          Dean........          183         Thompson,          Greg........          131         Thompson,          Kathryn.          .111,178         Thompson,          Lorraine.....          86,         145,154         Thompson,          Michael.....          128         Thompson,          Sara........          172         Thompson,          Tami........          155         Thomsen,          Bob..........          153         Thomson,          Paul..........          53         Thoreson,          Tom..........          51         Thornton,          Kym.........          150         Threde,          Scott..........          192         Thurston,          Ritchie.......          167         lll          tl          a          a         Tiegs,          Kelly........          113,131         Tillman,          Trent.......          138,181         Timm,          Michelle......          86,150         Tinkle,          Wayne............          3         Tissue,          Paul........          ..          169         BAO          OIG          oo.          Vig          opie          peiceiecs          8k          1         Tobin,          Maxine..........          150         Tomjack,          Betsy.........          113         Tomjack,          Missy.........          165         SEO          TERRI          5s:          =          sioiiete          sree          141         Torrens,          Max...........         Totorica,          Ralph......          157,223         NOWGH,          ROG).          cs          cscarne         Townsend,          Richard.          .136,153         PERG          88S          bx          6.cleitkes          oid          210-213         SIRGV          DOO          03.2,.          59          51h          co          113         Trail,          Kathieen..........          47,         86,119,159         Trail,          Mike.........          166,167         Trail,          Roger...          ..          86,136,167         Trapp,          Vonda..........          149         PIRVOEEAS          Cy          hc          cheer          10,11         Travis,          Joe............,          169         Tribe,          Duane...........          182         Trigsted,          Kirk..........          157         Trimmel,          Debra.....          128,146         Triplett,          Fred...........          144         ‘Trojan          Women’.......          60,63         Trott,          John.........          198,199         rig”          SU          |          erage          per          61         Truesdell,          Bill..........          182         Truman,          Harry...........          35         Trumpet          Player..........          85         Tse,          Stephen............          56         Tucker,          JOH.          66          cs          ccceak          48         Tuell,          Michael.......          86,182         Tumarkin,          Nina........          ae         UN:          POOUS           5.          0o-6.5          ssn          30          113         Turley,          Brett.........          ..170         Turner,          Laurie......          206-208         Turner,          Terence........          157         Uc          ORE          pret          Sagar          52,53         Tylutki,          Cara............          Cr)         T          U          Cath          tt          ocincs          113         Tyson,          Tommy...          ...          127,151         ort         —         ce          oe          eet!         a         ORB          sp          BEDE          ea          86,167         Ugaki,          Steve...........          113         UI          Alumni          Association.          .          .243         UI          Bookstore...........          248         Ul          Centennial          Celebration         SE          TO.          ae          Pinte          114         Ulrich,          Greg...          .........          189         Underclass          ...........          74-87         UNICEF...          ..          ..          .          8,94,160,168         For          Ee          ee          ts          225         Urie,          Cooper...........          159         Urquidi,          Rich...........          ae         Usitalo,          Doug...........         oe         Valentine,          David........          203         Valverde,          Omar.........          131         Lg          Re          ee          38         Van          Horne,          Rachel......          159         Van          Komen,          Kim........          148         Van          Patten,          Jan........          176,         224,225         Van          Pelt,          Christy...._..          206         VanBuren,          David...____.          168         Vance,          Robert...          .86,137,167         Vandal          Cheerleaders...          .          224,         225         Vandal          Marching          Band.          ..14         18,19,127         Vandal,          Joe.........          15,225         Vandaleers          .............          146         Vanderpool,          Jim........          159         Vanderpool,          John......          118,         133,143,158,159         VanHorn,          Maureen...          .72,137         VanKomen,          Kim.....          ...          86         Vaonis,          Nick...........          137         Varady,          Muffie..........          178         Vargo,          Lisa.............          43         Varin,          Normand.........          181         Varns,          Melinda......          133,197         Vaughan,          Tim..........          168         Vaught,          Dan...........          163         Vedvig,          Rhonda.........          177         Venable,          John..........          113         Venkus,          Joe...........          172         Verflut,          Erie.          ......          --          50,          180         Vettrus,          Dean...._...          83,115         Vigue,          Bretta.......__..          150         Villarreat-Price,          Roselien.          123         Villenueve,          Donna...          __..          173         Vincent,          Kelly..........          149         Vincent,          Sean......          222,223         Vincenti,          Sheidon...._..          115         Vinson,          David...........          17         Witla          BPIOR          S60          iuie          «          eter          a          86         Viola,          Tony............          230         Vo,          Jimmy......          beable         Voile,          Matt.............         MOMs          MOO          iin          eile          che          gras          oie          137         Volleyball.......          194-197,223         Voorhees,          Kari.......          86,159         BOXING         In          a          controversial          split          decision,          ‘‘Sugar’’          Ray         Leonard          toppled          defending          WBC          middleweight         champion          ‘‘Marvelous’’          Marvin          Hagler          on          April         6.         AUTO          RACING         Al          Unser          won          the          India napolis          500          becoming          only         the          second          man          ever          to          win          four          Indy          races.         Sports          Quiz          Answers         (Answers          from          page          228-229)          12,          Volleyball          (9-26)         He          Brian          Coleman          Basketball          (8-19)         James          Allen         Steve          Adams          13.          George          Ogbeide         Ken          Luckett          (24-feet-5          1 2          inches)         Chris          Carey         14,          A          3         7%          No.          16          B          3         Georgia          Southern          32         D          1         3.          Krista          Dunn          E          4         4.          WSU's          Jacinto          Navarette          15,          Gus          Johnson         3.          They          are          all          from          Moscow.          16,          Eric          Yarber         6,          i          17,          Ken          Schrom         y          F          Charles          18.          Pullman         8.          Chris          Schulte         %          10          2          Coach’s          Corner         :          Laurie          Turner          Pam           Bradetich         10.          Dennis          Deccio          thfoa          acne         Il.          Eastern          Washington         SePeOeReTeS         index          26]         IRNGUWULIM          ACCULESSES         a          Ne          IR          ag          IO          FO          aD          TI          i          a          a          a          a          a          a          a                  Wagner,          Joseph...          ..          141,157          Whitaker,          Sterling........          64          209          Yamamoto,          Cindy.......          174         Waoner,          Tom..........          151          White,          George..........          161          Women’s          Center......          S233).          ¥OROOE          ENC?          pcs          esecsys          es          220         wahineokai,          Cameron...127          White,          Gino........          113,119          Wonder,          Stevie..........          38          Yardley,          Amy..........          223         Wakefield,          Bob.........          137          White,          Mark......          86,160,161          Wong,          John............          223          Yardley,          Christian.......          113         Walden,          Bryce..........          112          White,          Mary............          223          Wong,          Po-Ping.........          243          Yearbook          Associates....          .          72,         aiden,          Jim............          14          White,          Peter............          64          Wood,          Lyle.............          86          269         Waldo,          Matt............          129          White,          Shelly.......          128,          bets          Wood,          Michele.........          126          Yochum,          Doug.........          129         Waldron,          Terry......          113,138          Whiteley,          Jeff..........          Wood,          Steven..........          126          Yoder,          Drew...          .113,137,170         Walker,          Brenda.....          bate          Whitman          Hall..........          soa.          Woodall,          Glenda........          TEAS          VENUS          NEE          se          soco          sod          ew          bers          129         Walker,          Greg...........          113          =©110,182,184,223          Woodall,          Lance.........          157          Yore,          Scott.......          30,31,137         Walker,          Jeff......          86,136,          162          Wickle,          Raeanne........          155          Woodie,          Jason.........          171.          Young,          Barry...........          223         Walker,          Molly.........          eoQe?          WICKS          GIB66.          ioc          :sn-e          nce          158          Woods,          Darren.........          113          Young,          Dana...........          135         Walker,          Paul........138,157          Widtmann,          Gerhard......          11.          Woods,          Vic.......          .++++180          Young,          Daryn.........          189         Wall,          Cathy.          .          .86,198,199,201          Wight,          Richard......          113,143.          Woodworth,          Laura.......          73,,           Vouteg,          Daves          :..o-::  :0j0:05%          183         Wall,          Heather          Bn          i          Mae          149          Wilder,          Todd...........          159          86,136,159          Young,          Lisa......          86,113,172         Wall,          Sean.          ..          .50,51,166,          ver          Wildland          Recreation          Manage-          Woolson,          Charles.....          30,31          Young,          Ron............          182         Wallace,          Barbara          sage          Pe          rane          S          On          Sie          oe          Ee          eae          147          Workland,          Betsy........          60         WEERCO          DIPS          ois          s-scns8          ec          ia          Wiley,          William...........          56          Workman,          Brian......         Wallins,          Judy...........          LTT          SEY          ol          ie          8          eee          61          Worley,          JoAnne........         17M)          Sa          rae          ee          169          Wilkins,          Peter..........          193          Wormington,          Teresa         Walrith,          Mike...........          153          Willard,          Kathy..........          150          Worrell,          Eddie..........         Walton,          COR.          Wares          is          113          Williams,          Anne.......          86,159          Worsley          Rev.          Jim         Wapner,          Joseph.........          43,          Williams,          Charlie......          84,85          Wraspir,          Cynthia......         ce          Williams,          Chris........          126,          Wray,          George.........         Ward,          Dave.....          127,145,162          157,199          Wright,          Anne...........         Ward,          Kristen..........          150          Williams,          Holly.........          113°          Wright,          Mike...........         Ward,          Laura.........          86,150          Willlams,          Jeff..........          152.          Wright,          Tina.........         Ward,          Lisa.........          113,127          Willlams,          Johnathan.113,129          Wright,          Trisha..........         Warnberg,          Alvin.......          60,61          Williams,          Kim..........          473:          Weg,          otroy                    s--         Warner,          Kevin..........          171          +          Williams,          Linda..........          88          Wuthrich,          Chris.........         Warnke,          Scott..........          We          Williams,          Mary......          173,183          86,135,167         Wascher,          Dave......          Williams,          Matt..........          126         Washington-Idaho          MERA          ed          Williams,          Molly.........          164         OTA          Pe          AS          TERA          27          =Williams,          Patrick........          211         Wasko,          SONS          hd          Wicks          ...224          Williams,          Steve.........          151         Wasserman,          Laura.....          ..40          Williamson,          Kaye.......          178         Wasson,          Mitch.........          221          +          Willis,          Cindy...........          143         Waterman,          David..          selteies          Willson,          Lisa...........          113         Waterman,          Tim.........          Wilson,          Adam..........          105         Waterstradt,          Kurt.......          ao          Wilson,          Candice........          148          :          :         Watson,          Alan..........          138          Wilson,          Crystal.........          154          The          staff          of          the          1987          ‘‘Gem          of          the          Mountains’’          wish-         bites          3          ee          Peeieblecaiateislere          ace          tty          yh          SEARS          pean          es          to          thank          the          following          people          for          their          support         atson,          Eric...........          son,          Jeb........          i          :          ae          ne          ;          ;         Watson,          Robert.          06,119,190          Wiieen          dob          441,46)          and          assistance          in          producing          this          volume:         atson,          LOY          5          ett          159          Wilson,          Kim............          150          .          .          .          .         Watson,          Stephanie...          127          Wilson,          Leslie...........          105          Mike          Beiser          |          Jennifer          Major         Watson,          Sydney.          86,148,          270          Wilson.          Lisa..........          34.37          Dawn          Bobby          |          Lynn          Major         Watson,          Tom...........          wWimer,          Burnell..........          66          Nancy          Brisbane          |          Jim          Mays         ied          i          seen          tees          143          Winegs          sphders          bee          ceees          bb          ‘“‘Chinook”’          Staff          |          John          McCartney         BT          Bes          oe          eee          r,          WOK          acca.          :         Weart,          Cralg...........          137          Wingard,          Eric..........          133          c          Todd          ag          ee          peak          aay         Weaver,          Michael........          127.          Winheim,          Linda.........          113          ommunications          boar          ynthia          Mita         Weaver,          William........          152          Winig,          Bernadette.          .          .          121,123          Ricky          Emerson          |          Donna          Mooney         help          atl          Wark          wie          ae          ol          eras          sl          Joe.......          223          Tim          Frates          |          Jerry          Mooney         .          Me          iepec-s-0'9.          eae          nkier,          MORON          ote,          05:9          press          174          Roger          Gaboury          Sue          Perry         woe          OUR          sae          aig          ose          ix.          131          Winnett,          Jeanie.........          160          Lindy          Garland          Cherri          Sabala         Oe          LA          Ce          Aa          180          Wirt,          Chris.......          Beta          esac          146          Will          Hawki                   Weddings............          22,23          Wirth,          Xan.........          176,177          ill          Hawkins          |          Dennis          Schlacter         Weger,          Hans.......          119,169          Wise,          Ryan............          153          Matt          Helmick          |          Chris          Schulte         wet.          gpilnety          i          fexbone          sia          Wishing          Star          reaneeton          Herff          Jones          Yearbooks          |          Sigma          Chi         OS          PATNI          ese          ene          MOS          OR)          Neleu          ep          siale:          wceVigeaw          :178,1          ;          i         Weinman,          Ed...........          157          Witherspoon,          Michelle.          ..143          mae          pagan          robs          i          Se         Welsh,          Wende......          118,119          Wofford,          Tony..........          182          ar          am          Ola         Wendt,          Chris...........          269          Wohleil,          Will...........          182          Veralee          Jones          |          Scott          Spiker         Wenzel,          Kara...........          176          Wohischlegel,          Becky....172          Barry          Kough          |          Tullulah          and          Scruffy         secon          cris          waeitiies          182          otbelonsiaieosey          Seta          a          wse          227          Mark          Lamoreaux          |          Dean          Vettrus         esterwelle,          Cake’          113          ohischiegel,          Steve.....          227          :                    “hric         Weyen,          Molly...118,119,159          Wold,          Debbie...          __.          164          Be          er          ae          co         Wheaton,          Scott.........          157          Wolf,          Andy............          155          ran          Long          ino          White         Wheeler,          Kelly..........          44          Women’s          Basketball...          .206-         268          index         CeOeLeO ePeHeOeNn         Graphics          and          ne          cennconee          foarte          ie          f          the          Gem          of          the          M         ‘or          ume          0!          sie          o          oun-         tains’’          conform          to          the          following          specifications:         The          COVER          was          four-color          lithographed          and          laminated,          PMS          327         (aqua)          and          PMS          200          (red)          were          used          a s          the          thematic          color          scheme.          The         cover          was          designed          by          Jon          Erickson          and          Paul          Allee.          The          ENDSHEETS         utilized          glacier          paper          stock          (Delmar-120)          with          the          same          PMS          ink          colors         used          on          the          cover.         The          THEME          LOGO          was          designed          using          Rage          Italic          (Letraset          PR11)         and          American          Typewriter          Medium.          OPENING,          CLOSING          and          DIVIDER         copy          and          captions          were          set          in          American          Typewriter          Medium          with          head-         lines          utilizing          Rage          Italic          and          American          Typewriter          Medium,          Thematic         spot          colors          were          also          implemented          in          varing          percentages          on          four-color         and          black          and          white          theme          pages.          Specialty          film          (Letratone          188)          was          used         for          the          theme          package.          The          post          cards          attached          to          the          title          page          were          pur-         chased          from          North          Country          Enterprises,          Inc.          of          Erma          Idaho          and         were          placed          in          the          book          by          ‘‘Gem”’          staff          members         With          the          exception          of          theme          pages,          10 10.2          English          Times          Roman          and         8 8.2          Helios          Bold          were          used          for          body          copy          and          captions          respectively.          All         copy          was          entered          by          the          staff          on          video          display          terminals          and          typeset          by         pape          Publications          typesetters.          Most          display          type          was          set          using          trans-         er          type.         In          CAMPUS          LIFE,          a          six          column          with          two          floating          plus          columns          de-         sign          was          used.          Main          headlines          in          the          section          consisted          of          either          Alligraph         (Chartpak          477)          and          English          Times          Bold          (condensed          and          expanded)          while         headlines          used          English          Times          Bold          (condensed)          and          Univers         pak          334).          Other          display          type          included          Helios          Bold          and          Modern         20          (Chartpak          331),          The          ripped          I          lines          were          drawn          by          section          editor         k,          and          mezzotint          screens          (Chartpak          011,          076          and          077)          were         used          inside          of          ripped”’          areas.          PMS          327          (aqua),          187          (red)          and          165          (orange)         were          used          within          the          section.         ACADEMICS          utilized          an          eight          column          with          two          floating          column          de-         sign.          Headlines          included          varing          sizes          of          Stymie          Medium,          Stymie          Bold          and         Stymie          Extra          Bold.          The          drop          letters          on          copy          blocks          and          captions          also         used          Stymie          Bold.         The          PEOPLE          section          featured          main          headlines          in          Good          Kids          (Chart-         pak          462)          with          sub          headlines          in          Helios.          The          drop          letters          and          logo          were         designed          using          Helios          Bold.          This          section          follows          an          cight          column          design.         PMS          102          (yellow),          199          (red),          266          (purple)          and          320          (teal)          were          used          in          the         raise          ea          All          student          portraits          were          taken          by          Yearbook          Associates         °          Ue,         GROUPS          used          combinations          of          English          Times          Roman          and          Freestyle         Script          Bold          (Letraset          4413)          for          headlines.          Freestyle          Script          Bold          was          also         used          for          all          logos.          The          fade-down          was          accomplished          using          a          graduated         tone          mezotint          (Letratone          308)          screened          to          40          percent          black.          Fraternity         and          sorority          saaneieare          were          designed          using          Greek          Symbols          (Geotype         105),          while          residence          hall          backgrounds          used          Helios          Bold.          All          living          group         photos          were          shot          during          a          four-day          period          by          Yearbook          Associates.         SPORTS          followed          an          eight          column          with          one          floating          column          design.         The          main          headlines          appreared          in          Helios          Bold          (condensed)          and          Demian         (Letraset          4314).          The          leadin          headlines          were          in          Helios          while          drop          letters         were          in          Helios          Bold          (condensed).          The          mini-theme          logo          also          used          Helios         and          Demian.          Symbol          screens          were          used          in          accordance          with          the          individu-         al          sport          seasons;          fall-' jumping          skicrs  ’          (Formatt          7164),          winter- ‘snow  ’         (Formatt          7134),          and          spring-‘‘palm          trees’           (Formatt          7113).          Varing          percen-         tages          of          PMS          286          (blue)          and          375          (green)          were          used          within          the          section.         The          Gem  ’          is          a          member          of          the          Columbia          Scholastic          Press          Associa-         tion          and          the          Associated          Press.          The          1986          ‘‘Gem’’,          edited          by         Jon          Erickson,          received          the          Gold          Crown           award          -          CSPA’s          highest          honor.         In          addition,          CSPA          presented          the          staff          with          26          Gold          Circle          awards.          After         teceiving          a          Five          Star          All-American          raking          from          ACP,          the          1986          Gem’’         also          won          the          association’s          Pacemaker          award.         The          ‘‘Gem  ’          is          a          department          of          the          Associated          Students          of          the          Univer-         sity          of          Idaho.          The          yearbook          was          produced          entirely          without          faculty          su-         pervision.          The          1987          ‘Gem’’          is          copyrighted          by          Jon          Erickson.          No          part          of         this          book          may          be          reproduced          in          any          form,          except          for          educational          pur-         poses,          without          prior          written          consent,         For          additional          information          contact;          ‘Gem          of          the          Mountains’’          Editor,         Student          Publications,          Student          Union          Building,          University          of          Idaho,         Moscow,          ID          83843.         Dear          Readers:         After          a          turbulent          start          as          editor          of          this          yearbook          three         years          ago,          I          can          sincerely          say          the          experience          has          not          always         been          ‘‘fun,’           but          it          has          been          educational.          Since          taking          over         the          reins,          the          ‘ Gem            has          reclaimed          its          title          as          one          the          best         college          yearbooks          by          receiving          all          major          journalistic          awards.         Of          this,          Iam          very          proud.          However,          it          would          not          have          been         possible          without          the          help          of          a          few          very          special          individuals.         And          so          to          these          people,          I          would          like          to          present          my          own         awards          as          thanks.         No          editor          can          survive          without          a          good          printer.          But          when         you          work          with          The          Delmar          Co.,          you          have          a          excellent          printer.         To          SHERRY          BRENEMAN,          FRANK          MYERS          and          all          the         Delmar          technicans          I          present          the          ‘On          Time          Delivery          and          Per-         fect          Pages          Award.  ’         Editor          of          the          UI's          first          Gold          Crown          and          Pacemaker          year-         book,          GARY          LUNDGREN          is          responsible          for          teaching          me         almost          everything          |          know          about          putting          out          a          journalistic         publication,          For          his          ability          to          make          a          profit          off          of          year-         books,          I          present          the          ‘Rip          Off,          Inc.          Award.’’         If          it          hadn't          been          for          COLONEL          CHARLES          E.         SAVEDGE,          the          father          of          modern          yearbooks,          I          wouldn’t         have          ever          applied          to          be          the          editor          of          the          ‘‘Gem.’’          He          is          in-         deed          the          man          responsible          for          putting          yearbook          ‘‘magic’’          into         me          and          thousands          of          other          yearbook          journalists.          To          him         I          present          the          famous          ‘‘Now          Loooooo00000K          Award.”’         Gem          staffers          FRANK          HILL          and          BRYAN          CLARK          have         stuck          with          me          through          hundreds          of          chocolate          chip          cookies,         captions,          stories          and          disagreements          during          the          past          two         years.          Their          creativity          and          hard          work          are          truly          appreciat-         ed.          For          their          ability          to          disrupt          the          office,          I          present          the          treas-         ured          ‘‘Agitation          Award,”’         Managing          Editor          PAUL          ALLEE          is          responsible          for          the          86          and          '87          Gems          literally          making          it          to          the          presses.          Had          he         not          be          around          to          help          me          with          the          thousands          of          tasks          in-         volved          in          publishing          the          yearbook,          I          don’t          what          I          would          have         done.          While          we          sometimes          got          tired          of          one          another,          our         friendship          weathered          all          the          storms.          Upon          him          I          bestow          the         Aeon          My          Best          Friend          and          Sigma          Chi          Fraternity          Brother         ward,’          Jon          Erickson         Editor         Ne          Oo          AE         Index          269         210          Closing         RUSH          ORDER         On          Parents          Weekend,          Jenifer         Rush          hosted          guests          at          the          Phi         Deita          Theta          Turtle          Derby.          Her         grandparents,          Clarance          and         Evelyn          Rush,          were          on          hand          to         watch          the          races.          (Dahlquist)         HANDLE          WITH          CARE         With          silver          spoons          in          their         mouths,          Sydney          Watson          and         Heidi          Boeh!          of          Alpha          Chi          Ome-         ga          sorority          scramble          to          a          se-         cond          place          win          in          the          Greek         Week          egg          spoon          relay         (Dahiquist)         HOME          SWEET          HOME         As          students          headed          home          May         16,          they          passed          Palouse          land-         marks.          Creaking          windmills,         wooden          barns          and          grain          silos         dotted          the          rolling          hills          sur-         rounding          Moscow.          (Hayes)         vit         eden         —         .         See         :         .         at          PEt          ree         %          a         s         TaN         a         =           S_HH_!_  B          a         _          TO          WRITE          HOME          ABOUT          Y          In          final          letters          ho me,          students          ran          out          of          ink         trying          to          explain          shocking          second          semester         changes.          Big          campus          controversies          over-         shadowed          the          little          things          that          made          Idaho          spe-         cial          —          like          friendly          student          smiles,          and          squirrels         bouncing          across          Hello          Walk.          In          February,          stu-         dent          government          officials         launched          a          letter-writing          cam-         paign          designed          to          convince          state         representatives          that          the          drinking         age          should          remain          at          19.          Threat-         ened          by          the          potential          loss          of          fed-         eral          highway          funds,          state          law-         makers          raised          the          drinking          age          to          1.          As          students          who          turned          19          before          the          April         10          deadline          counted          their          blessings,          Moscow          bar         owners          began          writing          off          their          losses.          By          the          end         of          the          semester,          Mort’s          Club          and          the          Spruce         Tavern          locked          their          doors          forever.         Students          also          wrote          of          bomb          threats          to          the         SUB,          UCC          and          the          Administration          Building.         Some          instructors          moved          their          classes          outside          to         the          Ad          Lawn,          while          others          required          Friday          even-         ing          make-up          examinations.          Later,          the          men          of          Pi         Kappa          Alpha          found          themselves          temporarily          relo-         cated          after          a          May          2@          fire          blazed          through          the          third         floor          of          their          fraternity          house.         After          dealing          with          disaster,          students          focused         on          improving          their          chances          for          academic          success.         During          Dead          Week,          they          filled          Library          cubicles         and          jammed          into          SUB          study          rooms.          And          whether         walking          through          the          gold          line          with          1,078          other         graduates,          or          attending          Judge          Joseph          Wapners’         Law          School          commencement          address,          the          year          was         SOMETHING          TO          WRITE          HOME          ABOUT.         SS—S—  =         SSS         S85         Bz          8         SaaS         Saas          =         BSZEQS         SS         BSZzs         S55         aSS5SS  S=         zs         esSS555         Nas         sss         SSeS          Bas         SESS         Ss         SSeS         RAZ         Sas         =         S         =         =         =         =         =                    =         SS         =         S=         S         —S         SS         =—S         }         Closing          21         |          |                                                |          |          TT          “ll         K                     AY          AN          AY          |         ]         N                                                 ))          MI)          }))))n         y )         fh         chided          cramming          for          semester         exams,          but          also          meant          finish-         ing          up          semester          term          papers         gan          huddles          on          the          third          floor         of          the          library          jotting          down         Graduate          student          Bob          Milli-         footnotes.          (Spiker)         ENDNOTES         Finals          pressures          not          only          in-         TO          WRITE          HOME          ABOUT         1                    r                    NY                    r          Ai)          AY                    Ni                             N           N          NW                    KY                             }         HH          I}          }          }}         Hi]         AA          |          NAA          ((         1         
 ” 
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