Montana State University - Sentinel Yearbook (Missoula, MT) - Class of 1972 Page 1 of 212
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WINTER... : LDITOK ItrSlNESS MANAt EK llKAPHlf ARTIST riclf ball r ' mmKJKAPHlC staff loinscJiukz iniritiutiiti Ti% ' Hlrt — Dr. H. G. MerrloFfi., Dr. r..ll Myer . Bob Brtisosi. IIjiI Malht-w. Ehm i-fciMin.K hv rcrest Svc, Thi- Bis McHintadsi. i ■. ■. M l ' ■Hi. Greg SipUt, Have Line lllij-.iT.id..,! ' . •.iit ' i! SSjjk ' . R.itI WhtU ■[HM ' ijI .Ls i ijtirt— Linda CkvlBrld Jennifer Ely, S ' liairi li. ;ii]cJ, Lj ' s. Burdrn, RoKtI Pfrhaj? and UvUy Wurl FHONT Kairriir n if bv Dan Burden INSIDE WINTER IN ]I ' : [ 1K]A 1 The Sentmcl Stalf pays silcnl Iributc lo the era of 3-15 ihe yearbiiok, 5 s ret-orded in changes of style: and reprodiicljon oi illusuottons and classic ads. Wc $ot aistt ihu iransformiitiun front smiall intiiruite universily where t veiybody kno s everybody throiigh a gradiiial loss of indlviduaUly, lo a com- ptit rizcd tcinriormw. TO THOSK WitfJ An encounter, nelatccf by Hal Malhcw. leads us SOMEHOW SURVt ' E into an IntruspQClion. If survivji]! rests on knOwl- Kige of self, Surminrfings nnd sltuattons, this will stTV f as an importanl prinacr. THEY nm THAT? CALENDAR (Iil!jerL Dr. H, CJ. MtfrriaiTt, author of The University of Montana ... A Histor ; ' eon[nbutos crnct again lo the Unlvtfaiity, adding ijn tght into ihi? sludent «f yeslerday— 1920-1970. What can w f say . . .? WINTER 2U 41 26 IN DEFENSE OF WINTER dan burden 27 WINTER SCENE . . 28 SKltNC; doM xchwertneseti 52 SKI HIKING . . . bob b nsort .34 SNOW SHOEING . , . dr. frill myen 36 PICTORAL POEM . . . javk bali td 37 SNOW STUFF . . . d iTi buriieti 40 THE CREMATION OF SAM McGBE . , . roljerU Si rvicC With iiurchasc ot the $7M YOURBOOK package (SENTINEL) vou will receive your choice of ihi: above poiiter blou ups of Ussoiila mnd Western Montanii ads as they appeared in t-ady im) J ENTENK LS. In lieate your free choice on ihe questionnaire on page 3, Additi«hal po. ters can be purchased f r $139 eaeh NOTE EDITOR Wekomc lo WINTER! . . . The first of three pajblications issued during Ihi 71-72 schuol year. WINTER will be Iollowc ! bv SPRFNG and SUMMER this ytwr All trial publica lions. Righi now we are a curiosity. Our staff consists of a business manaeer, editor, graphic artLst and two ph.oloj;raphers unfamiliar witn a quiirturly pruducliorL. Yet, feel we can succeed. The campLis has ( jTQwn lo a sii e to i bipj for a small yearlw k: and is nesullingJy left in a nriddle ground wtthtuj t n ppriodical. Although a. daily newspaper and weekly feature section can keep up with more important happenijiigs, a gap is left, The Kai-min, for inst nue, nnt have suHicip ' Bt funds lu run a IS page feature of the fine arts on a paper stock that withstands lime, A photo essay is spoiled In the msss of advertising needed to pay for such a section. And a con prehensive feature is difficult to !ichedule, research and Write Ih the short period Qf a Wtfek. Our format for this quarter is cautious. We are unc4 rtain both of sales and desired coverage. Your reaction is no ' dt- t. To help us with future issues, and In the design of a worthwhile L:ajnpu p ub- iication please lake Lhe lirru? to fill in the closed quE ;tionnajre (pg. 3 , We are seekin( additional criticism and recomtnendation.3 from the Department of Journalism and campus publications across the nation. By summer wt will knew wh re we .-iland. By then W4. ' will h ve gone Ihraugh nutnerous refinements. Addilk nally, we need to expand our volunteer staff, Obviously, one editor and one graphic artist cannot represent the campus. It takes many experienced in writing, photography and art to make a lively and comprehensive magazine. We ne ideas fnr both photo and written coverage. irnfortun.ate}y,. if we fail this year it may be many yeiars before another publication can hv attempted. It is difficult to putl to- getiier the necessary fundinjjr equipment, staff, and desire. Your enthusiasm, as ejcpressfd in a completed questionnaire or rwjte h neE ' ded Our next issue. SPRING, will be available at Spring Registration. The format wiU depend targtly un, your rei ponst in uur queiitionn lr$ (page 3), However, ws; are leot tively sc hed- uiing the fnUowing articles We appreciate ad- ditional reeommendations. Bicycle Touring A detailed article on planning, packing and tid ing a one day, weekend and Extended bicycle tour, I uinerous maps are being prepared of sugg st local 2S, 50, 75 and IftO mile tours. Rock Climbing An article of intnxluction, empliasi ing safety equipment and where to get inslruetJoii. Kayaking Rafting Huw Ui get started in the brisk excitement of riding the spring riinoffs downstream over and around rocks and boulders. How lo stay afloat survive if dunked read the river, and selection of equipment. Sugge ited routes for both raft- ing and kayaking, based on stream depth. Review of The Arts Covering literature, music, crafUi, prints, the dance  nd drama. Education ■special feature! covering the educational pro- cess today ... A close look at the Round River Project,, Blaclt Studies events, new courses and programs ... a mL ntJon of things t eomt. COMII design your own. magazine AI(li£ LLj h wc K now a magaune, not ywrbook, this yv r wc Iwvc the capatilkics tjf rct ordins in n final isiuv any ayf iht followjf g Help us put to£ :ttwr an tKckin campus ittaga .inc — Fill In die t nclcts i qucsrk n- nairc, fo] rape, and drtip in a mailbox — wc [ray Ehe posia c:, Then, waiih for im- pffivL-nit ' iirs in the SPRING isiut. PUfASr: MAIL JiV JANUARY l TH HOW MllDf COVERAGE Sports □ □ □ nr □ □ Stxial Life o O □ □ □ □ Class PhoHH o □ □ Other D □ n YEAILBC50K VS MAGAZINE (Check owe tnr more) □ Dpqp Yearbook { Run lunal Flicm Essiy in Mjl£iiziiir □ Keep Ycajbixtk and MA nnc O Use Haidbouiid Binder toi Marine O Drop VmbooJc and MaRazine n Other EXPENSES VS QUALITY (M Severat Chalces, Nudvbw in Otcter) □ Tasteful Advertising □ lncr  Prifc □ ASUM Ftmding □ Place On Acuvity Ticfeci □ Other FREE POSTER Haw Should We Finance OlA If ynju purchiied the $7.D0 yeattsiok packR ym 4rc entiitJd lo utic fret posiw, K be iliMributed Storing Regii- uraikin. (Sw ad pg ] Checlc chokf Mom, 02B 0 3C O- D 05f If WeEspanJ. WhKh l Ymi Prefer Jf WeCui flack WhKh Dd VcHi Prefer □ Cotor O Add r ll luue □ More S|ie£ial$ ( i.e. Calendar n Additional Pj □ Olher □ Reduce Pigc DlmcrLaon.% Q Fewer Pigw □ Owapef Pipet Stock □ Other 06F on 08H Sl ' ATUS ' Cfinitn.ueJ t K ' ABOUT . . Chctit Sceeiuns You Ulc«! Indian Studied Secticm □ Ycaffjoilt Review Ulack Snwlies Secrion 1 Student Today Wtimcil ' S Lib Section Q] Wknrcr IxatLire fXjO Action ftevieu- Q {l l J 0t pi .- EdiTfjltional Review Stsorts Review HOW DO YOU RATE THIS IS.SI.3E YOUR STATIJS □ JrchaKd S7 Y t-n rlj ' J( k Q Punchasftl TEiij Jsaue Only Received OMnplimcntary Cop lifted This tstte □ B uehi Yeatbmik Each Yeir in £clt« jl □ □ Q Studenr Booksnnc i TjutjI Btxiksniri? I ' Outdoors Sror - ' tl mji[ FIRST CLASS PEIiMFT NO. 2 MISSOULA. MONTANA BUSINESS REPLY MAIL N PcMtjgc Samp Ntxjcaiiy If Mailed in ihc Uniiicd. 5 cites POSTAGIf BF PAID BY I m seniinei unitJPDSitp of montana mig outa. mmitatia 59801 Class Fights Th freshmen arul sopho- more classes are the |)rinei| als in this yearly event. It is an all-year stnipple. Thinjrs start with hair elippinfr. I ' ollowed by the sophomore proclamation ans vere l by the freshmen, after which the freshmen «l )n their j;reen caps and paint the M. Later in the autumn the tub rush is held, tojjether with the sack rush an l ob- stacle race and interclass wrest lini bouts. The final time that the two classes meet is the tujf-of-war held in the sprinpr to determine whether or not the Frosh will ajr-iin don their u ' reen caps. The Girls TKej) Didn t Lea Je Behind Titree Co-eds in tfie Service As ail HupluUic diMitnl (cf lh ' fjrmTal j[ inlim hii tln ' iv whs iictthing for ' |.hi girk ihfv Ji ft hi ' hiiur ' to do bttt knit iiiid wuit nht r Uic 2ttO or imira State I ' lii ' iTifity riu ' n .jfriiiinl ttn ' ' ' f lnrs, tlir( t! vvonifh nf thc= varsity voliinJefrecl their servif ' iw 1o AiiuTi -a hikI vv{ rt accrpt -tL Thf first t(j wan Alplin Rusr. Wt, ubo wa.i (toiiij post-ffrjidnsJlc work in the jniirimlisin Neho4;l whvii .she rtveived an sippfjiTitnu ' nt to a, jjrhvernnjent pffsilion nt Wjisliington, D, t ' .. havinfj sntN -ssf nlly pa t eJ ?i civil servii-t cxiiminatitniK On XoVE ' iriber 19, 1!117, Miss Knse trft for thi . unlioiial riipiluL Ili-r first ivork wjis in tht ' forest rv hea !(|uarrt r,s, nii she was soon tnmsfprred to Ihe war flepiirtment and workt d tLrre ntider the direction of Billy Sunday ' s «on, Xiju ' slie is ill the aviaticin setvier, oet-npyin ii i-onfidendal ]H sition, in chariie of thf ltnlJlllari iTlL ehjirtinir ami s curiiifj: of iiifornuition uhie-h shonkl he l roufiht to tilt- attcntimt of thy ehief of the division. Till ' Ktx ' oiid of the to-t ' tl trio is Kthsd rTohnston, ' 2(J who also p;Lw:d tin L ' ivil scrvir i examination with honors. AUhon ' h she had not yet n ' cerved h T ap- pointment, she tfMik i ehjiiiee and left fur Washiiifrtoii uUh Miss Liuse, and t ' now u ' orkinj with thi Ameriejin tfi?d ( rttss t ' ottneil at the nalionol head- fjnarter i. And tilt ' tliinl is ll ' h ii McCarthy, ' 18. Urt pfwiition in the military i.s nidquc. She is ono of thr+M woincii ivlitt Eire j ' Uiphiyefl ns ff filial hostesses for the soldi -rs in the training t- mps of ihi roiled States. Mia McCarthy in fusKisst int to the manii ef of ree real ion for the troHips at Camp Lewis and a nirmiier of the eom- mittei ' that reeominynds rooms for the use of the jjoldiers while they aru in Ta- eoma. Ht idt this she houd i a movi-ment to raise $JiOJ)fM) tfi Imild dub rooms for the hoys in khalii. Tnder her supervision danees and other cnterlsiinmt ' nts are prui ' itletl fur the Saiitioi ' eK, Itolli in the eit ami at (fie f ' amp. GOOD BYE 5h- Out -a Bijou Picture Palace q Thcgnly HIGH CLASS flicker less PICTLRKS in the city. Program churtgcd fhrcc Times each week; STRICT- LY MORAL, til eer rain- ing znd instructive Wt cater to ihe ladies and children. Privre Matinee every Sztvr- day. We strive to hsse y u. BAKER Ltf VEl]Cl , S Top. KKT k Ai. ElDE ,- AKl !1 FiA IX I iVK Tfi ICATI V ; ■■■' ■Fmirs and ( and ils Barber Marshjill Air I-if« Messenger Parcel Delivery lOc. Service Klght Dtlivt rr LSe, fn tha iit L ttlPSBER 106 West Pine Street Hennessy s The Leading Store in Montana Write Us for Anything You Want We Certainly Have it and Can Save You Big Money Everything for Everybody fur iM- ' tr r,itli re anit mMllM ' Dk rhrkr xlmors ii4l bnilhrnk. fr in unilrr «.ur  i.. kii K ••nd icbtvfN lu NultH. r tuinrK. wmtiii. iue-kviK, h t ami Butte. enneSSy S Montana Get the ELECTRIC HABIT FOR DOING vol R WORK RKADV WHKN VOIf WAN I IT Missoula L i K h t a n d W a t c r C o m p a ii y Do You Want a Home ON TMK Great Flathead Reservation MHin I.. ij - i ' t ,t.M lo M-ltli ii) nl ' Wril.- 11 fur iMiiiplili ' l nikil |w r1ti- Wt hm r lUtrtiU ' il Ijtn tn for nilr at prttrna mndnc from tl .Oft (• taOflO |irr •Pfr; nino Cily Propt-rt) iMM or wriu iia. W. H. Smead Co. Mis ;iii L.A. Montana TO TKtlBE WHO SOMEHOW Sl ' lt IVE Forj iVL this hfisCily written dticOErifnt ll was dijue ihp satnt ' night wp heard the ter- rible news and is intended as si s ftni-histori- cal picte— sotneihing those cif you who suf- vived and we prayed that iii jkt that some- how a few waulii. I ' iitn: use as a mvI af famier ' K almanac ftu t U ' ftituru. Soniclhiiig to learn trom and guide ynu sJonfl a sflrifT path. This is, admitledly, wii !inaly$ta uf a mitio- eosrri— a university an l w Reeky T euntains at the cenfltjencti of five valleys a hool made up of just short of 9,000 studenU, Bwt at the eiid of the nigKt wt deeided this Uni- VTrsity was a bir represeiitatiart at ihv whale, It was a strangely Lftlm, irttrttiEpetHive night it] view of Its significance. A group of people, and believe me ft was a trass-sjction of iht campus, was sitting around a table ir? the University Center having; coffee when a side door whooshed open and a fellow not at all fitting to the cnvironnnont dashed in and stood busily a few feet from otir table. Our eonversatians stopped haltingly as one and then another spatted him. The first thing T noLieed was his feet. While others entered the room wiih s;nnw on their shoes; ur boots, thi:j man had stiot and it feJI off onto the carpel around him as (■innamon from a doughnut. He glanced ner n.;-.ly :.ih , x the futsm and then scurried tg qili- i.:ih!t- ri:ici asked if he could sit down, Whcsn n.mt. ' t. ' ci he asked if he could tclE us some frif litenuig news and we ajjreetl th at Lhia ||ene nation was hardened to that snrt of [hing and that we. while not ea e la hebu ' mor-e. euuld eertatnly tolerate mere. What follows is the terribly, terribly im- portant story of Joseph Ybarra, a man with hair like tug, yam. eyes like hot coals and elothe,i that generally seemed too long for him. He (uld us he had chartered a small plane out of Newark, N.J., in lime to avoid the com- Elete death by fire of his neighborhood and ad spent the last two days hoppin from city to city to find out what sort of madness wa ii goinfl on, He finally retreated lo Missoula, ' They re eomini; this way, he told us. The eitius have filled up and there ' s no room any- where except here. Theyll be here soon, Such fervor itt ihi$ man. ' They ' ve filled up? nteone questioned. What about the suburbs? Stiburbs jslimubtirLK ; ' Josieph Ybarj a nap- fjt ' d. There s nca more njom man. From Al- nnta to Albuquerque the people are elbow to elbow iind hostility runs rampant. There ' s na tiTKsd to eat, wator lu drink or air to breathe. He then deiieribeti stops in Hilt ;- biirfih where bodies lay in heaps; m Chicago where Lake Michigan had, without anyone else apparently learninnj of it, been filled in and developed as Daleyburg Heights, now burnings in Lineoln, Neb., where corn still tries to push through the paved over farm land; in Dalla,s where oil welts heave up bar- rels of dry sand with each stroke of the pump; in Washington where the entire town of Mount Vernon has been literally lost for months in an impenetrable smog, and an. You ' re crazy, someone at the table of- fered. This is craay talk. You re nothing but an old fool. ' Old fool in it Joseph Ybarra said stead- ily, and then not so steadily, People are mo ' - Lng enmasse directly toward this stattt, this eily He jro«e. ' The populace has erupted. They ' re coming on foot, but they ' re coming. They ' re trampling one another disregarding family bonds, screaming, kilMng la escape the holocaU4ii. You ' ll think old fool young man when they trample you to death. Now if you ' ll direct me to the nearest mountainlop I ' ll take my leave And with that he left, not waiting for our directions. We honestly didn ' t take his tale too serious- ly until someone came by and told us that none of the TV networks were broadcasting. A culleetive chill ran up our spines. But .-yome- how out of the horror came a resignation and we decided the only thing of any signifieance we could do would be to set down, for poster- ity if you will, a kind of picture of this place as it was before It died. gn ahead and read it, what el;ie have you got to do. Oh, and after you read it, find i mething to do will you. It was the lethargy of the masses that started this whol mess in the first place. Sunday. Sopt. 19. 1 171, was s wutin md heautiful day— the dny ihfr Utiivufjifctv 0r Mon- UiTia crfliTipus tJi- ' gart t fill up auam }U5t like It alwaj ' S did in tke fall. Only theris iveru to be a It ' w changes Ihj-s ytiar. Tbcr rreahmnn had been escaping h ros iiient more srnd more ov v Ibe pasi scVora! years ond fitially tl is year were iiidj Uiij ' iiish ' abSiL frum othtr studenls. The younfj peo[)]e of America had demonstrai d I ng ajjaiiist se|;r?giitibEi and dii ricniitfLtiuEs that H seemed off q ourse lo discriminate a iainHt 0at $. fal- low sludunt ju-sl hocause hi; happened lo hp o fitjWccinior. For that same lesson tht?rc wjis far firsi lime in yi ars fto Uvo labor availahlo to climb Mount SLTLtincl ajid give the iJianl M n new cojit oJ white paint, SomwmetriE il lo bri( hlvn l Hp iitt pfL vioLis prin with a muJtiliitdu of colors iti the fashion af the day. Bui even lhal paint had t ded by lalL Man wjis beginning !□ k ' rri la li av( mounlains and the Like to their own destinies. Bui stifl the way that M was faiiini ' away up there seemed some- how symbolic. For the first tlmt; in as long as anyone could rtimumher Ihcre were no new iaculW members awaitlnf the students. The slalp S budget was criaplt d in lht previous Jcglsia Live se ion ajia UM decided to cut cctrners by niJt hiring any new leaehers- Thf fraiMrniUes and rorititiii died ,11 littlo more that yi-ar iba« ihey had a yti ' ar before, the dormitorits weru becumtng more lib- erated. Nob dy felt the preasuru tn bL ' cttm a Greek like iiUidcnt had m the i«arly fiO ' s and hefore, and no one. notiubly felT s, wanted tQ Jive a clui tered dorititttiiry hfft So both systems wifTv charging. Many stu- dunt fell that the slruclurtr and snobbery inherent in the Grtyk way of Me was just ibe sort of thing that was dividing America. Dorm rej Sd nls were demanding and gelling a number of new freedoms— abolition, cff hourfi, the right to have visitors uf either sex in their nmna 24 hours a danr the rtghl to delermine dorm reguJa lions, fhere was even a strong movement afoot to crt-at a n w co- ed dorm where males and females would Jiavt i iH nts on the same floor. There were nt. vir and experirtjonlal aca- demic programs la alleviate the drudgtyry tif the old world academia. Thy Indian and Blaek studies progran!$ were addt.d in recent years and were experimenting wlih new approath- es Id educaiion, A Ford Foundatitm grant al- lowed the creation the Round Eiver Ex- perlmtfnl. a project thai iewed the whol E rth as a university, A lotal of IIIQ sludentA wt ' re selected for tht year-lrtng prognmi vnd they isp l Ume in the woodsi, time in c: ss$- rooms, time with government, lirfit together, tinne alone trying to learn more about them- selves and their places in the universe. The program was dciftgned to help people fit in with tho natural cycle of life. Students were entering and continuing in school with absolutely no assurance thai thcjy would have jobs in their fields when they graduated. All evidence indicated that the college degree was losing value even more quickly than the great American dollar. The Spring Cif 1971 Whs one of despair foj ' the col- lege graduate in the job market, hut the spring of 12 promised to be even bleaker. Many of tbe studenis on campus in ihv fall ol 7l were (iflh year people— thojsc in no hurry to enter the real w ld because there seemed to be no place f  r them out there, A gigantlt new library was being construc- ted on campus alihough there was no assur- ance that the University would have enough montjy ip fill at with books pt even to finish constructing iL The library was being built on ihe site of the old football fieldK which was somehow appropriate beeauite many students were so concerned with hax-lng a good library and sound academic: program they were threatening to all but eliminate student fund- ing of athlolics. Both athletic direclttr J nek Swarlhout and business manager Calvin Murphy agreed that woyld spell a death blow to organized sports. At that limi students were allotting S7 of their $15 activity fee to athletics. Those opposed to sfiending that mueh muney there argued that contpctltive sports should he supported lety by those that eitjoyrjd them and wanted ihem. Mean- while, Swart houL had a wtnnln : fooib ill team guing hut cDuId nal be certain there would even he mganized athltrllc on campus a year frym then. So there were changes that year, indeed, but the biggest cliange of all was in the stu- dent. The-re was in the fall of ' 71 no longer a Joe College lypa. If you could stereotype the student at all it would be by saying that he was aware of a need for change, that he ' was poUticaUy 3rienlt ' L The demonstrations that began in 1 4 in Berkeley creait d a new sense of power in the American student. He learned that hv could direct a lot of attention toward hiscaust ' by simply assembling in a mass and being noisy. Unfortunately he also learned at Kent Slate and Jaeksan Slate thai he could gel killed and that he could set his eause back. The demonstration did come to Montana. There was a strike two years before and h march or two the next year, but interest waned in the deuiuiisiraljpn as a v ehicle for thftnge and by the fall of ' 71 it djdn ' i appear that (here wc uld be any more significant oem ' - onslrotions at UM, or anywhere in the U.S, fur that mailer. The war in Vietnam wajf, everyone flnaiiv had 10 admit, really winding down, although Vietnamizatinn was still very fatal le a lul of American soldtei It was a time for pre- ventive medicine — a tinie for a new approatrh tn foreign and domestic policy, so students began to get involved in parly work. The iS year olds got the vote and could perhap. ' S save the world, although disappointingly few of them Were registering. From a small high hool tn a town near Mi uula came word Clockwise below. S«n. Fred Harris. Mike Seeder. Frank Dunklr. Stuart Udall. Gene McCarthy. tbal the sludcntii hcJd a mock elcclion on sev- eral issues and v led for d pil l punishment and against women ' s liberation. mony oth r things. It didn ' t look good. UM students began lo gel behind the Now Party when it sounded like consisnser dvu- cate Ralph Nader mis hi run for president. He quickly rejeeted the n Hion, however. Semi- ea.ndidat.e G ne McCarth ' . foi whom students had bled in Chicago, stooped by cfimpus in the Fall qI 11 and it was sadly clear tbat he would make a yaod poet. cn. Fred Harris, a de- clared presidential candidate, dropped irt a while later with a charminfi and even promis- ing papuhat party proposal, but announced he was dropping; out ol the race the day alter he left eampus. Environmentalist Stuart Udedl visited the campus that fall too. Students JiIIenI the ball remm and were bors. ' d silly for two hours, We Icntw all that siuH- Wc wanted to know what he was going to do about it, but he didn ' t say. One of Montana ' s leading environnientalisis, Frank Dunkle, was here for, d, night and jfmilcd stupidly when asked if he was going to run for governor. His heart didn ' t seem to be in it. By D«Gmber it became apparent that 11 months hence ih re would be a presidential race between Humphrey and !NisDn and a Montana [?ubernatoriaE race bct wct ' n ii ocan ' didat SF5 wi ' sa wouldn ' t do the state Nny good. And still the students worked. It was nice that some people were trying so hard. It ' s just too bad that the trying came too lat . But wait. Don ' t get the idea that every stu- dent at the University of Montana was Out campaigning to save the world. That simply was not true. There were still tbo se upper middle elass products who drove sports cars, who w r beautiful, handsome, resplendently dressed, who skied in the Winter, boated in the sum- mer and ruefully awaitcd the return ot the panty raid tradition, To them the University was just another in a long series of play- grounds. They were headed toward the country club and the corporate . ' ilrueture,, both selE-destructing institutions, as we were to so rudely learn. There were still athletes who belie ved the world revolved around their interests and who relused to venture out$idL that world. Everj ' ortcountitr was a physical! onu jjiwI ihey would still ]x tulking aboul, their accuin; ]jsli ' menis, in bars many yeans later, unai are thai There would no bars or people in them to Hsten. And there wre still the slobs and blobs who bad never dont and would never do any- thit for iinyoEif else. They would finish EChCKj], marry aomwne equally indifferent, have a bunch of kids, raise them indifferently and spend their whole lives bating their jofci and thf. ' trtselvea but direetiiig their anger lowatd anyone different Irom ' .hn mselves, Atid ihere were stIU the oddballs ;:uid out- casls who bad absoltitoly rejceted any motion of maili ng this A palalable world. Called hip- pies, freiikii, flawer children, the counter culture, ibey were ibe ones hateful people oftcji directed Iheir hate toward The long hairs who used druj s and rejected traditidnul values were blsmed for the ills of the world. But they weren ' t to blame. They were simply a product of a chaotic, erring world. Really just another minority roup, albeit an inter- esting one. They bought and sold drugs de- spite rtdicubusfy naa ive campaigns to pre- vent ihcir iran ctions. They wore ragged clothinfi and long hair despite derision from all quarters. They had their own language and their own hfo style and seemed to be having the most fun of anyone. Thev hung out at the mfamous Eddy ' s Club where they loved and laughed and! yes. fought. They st c-med at the time the best equipped of any- •K to survive the holocaust. Hy dawn wo had pretty much completed thi- ument and someone at the table was sud- nly caught up again in the horror wc all f felt earlier. He jumped up and ran to the door and we followed. We watched from the balcony as he ran to the parking lot and began kicking away furiously at the snow cover. When he reached bare g ' round he knelt down and laid his ear to it in the manner of the plainsman listening for the thunder of buffalo. The expression on his face changed slowly from apprehension to total astonish- ment. He jumped to his feet to yell something at us but was. as luck would have it. promptly run over by a student who told us later he was late for a class. After the accident it was very quiet outside. Up there .somewhere on the wind-swept mountain was Joseph Ybarra and on the other side of the mountain some- where was the end. MILITARY ■■I ir t rirnins n ' turnitift homo for an rdttrniinu. rs H ' t itilly from I or ICar II. uifluvnrt ' il stuflrnt iillitiiiivs ami so- hrrtul llti ' r iffi ;« . ' liiCf did Ihar no iroudev - tubrnts! from antiniutp Dunn ; the ycmrs aniund 1920 Mudrnts were in culir til Mqviirc knowledge. c ilturc. «arus. They felt arvl were erKinirji ;e(i by «xiety xo feel ifut Jhc tud not « bejiun to live, that teal life «xiuU begin ftcr gradu tKm TJicy wxirricd litik- about tiukiiig a living; when real life heipin. tidixamn. urging y ua|( peijple to f t to lollege. autired them, quoting stjtisticv fh« the would then earn triore tnnnc) than p T«.in5 without a college cdukatioft Students accepted ilut fact contplakentl). They had. a« a KaimiH cdjtur pot It. mo e than an rven chance The) therefore auutncd a bearing; of u-lt lonfidetKr. were not up«ci or confufrd and not bent on attertiny their iitdependence They conformed unque%noninj(iy to tocteiy s regubtl In and tntiratity 111. . a.r.ii . ..tl.J Wai 1. Ill ihc ' X Stmtmti editor, briviloi with war tKws and pfii liJ colutnns were demoted to Mustard Gas ai d S iulf, ' such interest passed with the end of the war rrtiors wxindered why students in So«th Amcricj I . rope were thoughtful abotst and active in jiku; ■pctially political affairs and students in the ' ••itcs seldom venmred. physically and intellcttualU ■! f campus It ti¥ k X ' orkl X ' ir II ami the Ki rca: icmam Wars, the invention of the A aitd H bomlv ■Air mtvvles. prolonged fear of rjommunLsm and imme ■Ai fldw de communication to brtn students in the I n Mrc to their present concern about life and society . - fid even ts and conditioiL NX ' ar v«cTan returning home for an editcarion. espcciall ru m X ' i rld X ' ar II. influenced srudenc attitudes and - Sctevl the campts They freed the campus of traditMin« ;kc freshmen wearing green cap like many hitlicrt iiiLiified aiki unimportant trailitioav Tl e veterans wtrre i.Jcf persons They were men and women of a certain Mfi! expcrietxe To them education was all-imporunt itic) had no time for foolishness, even for mosr stxial •trivitics. TraditHins however silly or unimportant die hjrd: we find in 7 ' Kjimim as late as l ' M8 writing jNuit lack of loyalty to the L ' niversjty as shown in cheering at games, about littering the lawas with coke botiUrs. The Great Depression of 1929 and jears of tlic catl) 19K)$ came as a shock to students, as to people generally It made aitciKiing college financially difficult. It forced many, nuny snidcnts to work for their expenses or ptui « f them, and such wxirk trade going to college riHire ot a reality than it had formerly been taken to be. The ! mating dnire of students was for securirv Like v • in general, they were frightetwd Oiocern about m • a living after graduatNin ran «tn ng. Some students to feel that society owed tlicm a living All student. coj tied themselves with little veil -con fidencc. An alunuiusi of the i ' iO s. s -aking at a Scboi l of Journalism meetii in the I9(i0s. wuisdcrcd how he atkl his nintem iiraries in college could have been so frightened and injciive. sn d nu hing. Students of the late 19)0s and the 19Hlv. gave themselves to fun with little buoyancy. Sen. ■editor wrote. As I tememba 1951 it was a winter ot {lair, ' bur fell com}ielle i to add, but it was the vprin hope. and Tlicse were the best and wnrst of time . the best seemingly a bow to convention. Students werr beginning to question aisd doubt. Still, in the 19-lO ' s and I9 0 s they accepted (wuprieties. - were polite, dressed conventionally, went to church, and used the bad four-letter words only in moments of as- sumed daring. Genuine questions  tre being asked by studenrs in the I9 0s about student government tlut « tild genuinely be theirs an l about meaningful partaipatMin in their ed- ucatuia In w« rld affairs titey were dominated by fear of G rofnunisni The whole country was beyorsd all reason disriubed by C tmmunism and the disease had been caught by studentv As earls as 19 0 Th KMnun cditorulMrd on •langcrs i f subversive elements m this country. ' y-xx did not abate until the I(V 0 ' s Thar fear riity ramr to nnmlrr in thr l Kt(fs why (IS stitdrnt llwy n orc not an artit e fHirt of xM-ivty. n ity their vnvrfiy and in ' trllificnrc shtuihi not hv used in the in- terests of s H-iety. n hy they should wait for firtiduation tit live real life. Students had been told b) ' their ciders for gencfjimns thjii u|x)n (hrm. Jtfter their radtatioM. would rest the ucl fare ( f Hxict). that the wmld be in the driver s m u This was an inescapable condition, of course. The) ' tame to wonder in the 19f 0 ' ! wliy as students the) were inu an active part of society, why their energy- and intelligetuc should not be used in the interests of s«xicty. why tlicy should wait for aduati .x) to live real life. Must education be a thing, apart from living; actively? Gradiully tl)e realized that security in life is not pi sstble. That life i challen and not acceptance That to be in the driver seat th ey must posscvs self kiMiwled e as well as ktvowU.-ilj;c of society aitd tl e world. They came to ask. NX ' ho are we. anyway. ' Who am I. ' X ' ho is everybody, black and white ' and red and yelJim . ' ' What is nKicty. What is education. ' By artd large, the prt)gressiiMi of students was from a protected, self-satisfied and self-confident perstm to .1 questioning, dotibiing pcTson. to one craving security, to itK thinking of life as impernuiKni, to one finding society uns jund, to one knowing that a new society is today in the nuking H C. Mini . The students of iho ' e day lot ed fun. a huhhliiifi and irresponsilde fun, a gaiety that u as almost unknown to stu- dents of the lOfUTs. in defense of winter... Mimy i i lis inrt ' tid to get outdoar in iht v. jn[cr, bur riimet liti. In cxd remain ojohnoJ, gninj; imm one arfn sbt El to unmht-tr. IfwsS; iut and (rcad tht st-Ason. How kwlish ' . For «t htyojid dK- hutiL-d und t-lt:- viccJ liiH ' s of clwtrit ind as out btj ' on { rhe last pjLWfd mad is j land fj( wlqkc, trisp anrd Jcticirt cold. No iirdsc is capabk of tarvmg, rn jldin and rran toritiing water into a singk- sSiape [u p t;jllf l J fnjst iinttt fftv, tKiw dttfecd loroM wind bkH n ridgt or kt lined river bank. Then: h m miij;nifi- tenet to tomprt- wnh vtiiHur. i singular. Winctr drivfs iis in, Ie h1 planned linn; of quitf. A time of fvfkxmm, rimt for indm r LTift, nd reading. One scastMi H. D. TlKJrcaii rcflttted, Win- Etf, with its inwar lnt-ss, is upun u i, A m.m is con- strained to m down iind rhinl: Wt- do well m hi low [1T5 isibm. And j ' tt at ihe same time don ' t be fooltsi into thinking th E nil of winter l uld be spent imla r! . arc threatened with a coutinLKHLS Jifc of tccli- aoloj-y. Wn as wc tr vtl into the country e taLt- it with ui. Part a! the reasqn w fear. learn early thai Eherv at t; toj nianj ' dangef s in the wild. Dangers of frt eJi- ing, betiii hut, iir brt-jifcfni! a bont in a fill, Un fottiinatt ' l}-. for many of usi thi- aUsvt: h irue. Vt have proj res®t?d into jt state oi dependence. DLpLnJ- ence upon technolo4?j ' . ft! few htiinans, even gjovtrn- mcnts. However; There wrncs a tirtii itt one ' s life, .li well as Jn the life man where lie muiit IirtZard lum a-lf to the elrnjent of naiurvs or els ; butMtje kast m ,1 Mtm permanent W3 . We nec«i rbest dani TS cuf the wild. X ' c tieecd to know firxihani) tlw: h r(,e of winiet. It is mtt-ssat} to Itiirn how, inaiiinEfitant vve an u a wtnter iiofni, ire n;on ' fragile than the inn dtlitatt jte LffSfal. In the niidsE of a winter furi.-r we are a single liny black dot. Niatbin irwrv In tribute to winter, on the fallowing pa gei have gathert i i|i;eibet kntJ ' w ktigt.iblt artirlesi 4 downhill skiitig snowshot fii;. $ki htkinj.;, and mr ter tampiti ;, Perhaps the iirtiifes will enonir.L.i:-: some at leaiit to intend to take of! into the u nm r wilderness. Oi course our mformfltiofi h not complete ' ; 1 onij ' intendecf as an intrcKluition. t.il raries and K. 3i sio res nire full of manusils trn leibnique. One we ' d espectally like to ttconimtnd is THE SIHUKA CH [i MAMLJAL OF SKi MOf JKTAIMFERING. Fnt 9= . jot! can ' t go wrong. Remember, w inter ni.vxl not b Jiwdtlcn plunt L If your outdoor wi$il!om is lirniteti, lust tratnpje.L litrlt beyond ctvi fixation Do not burty. A trek itsto thv high twntry i- n snow j-ou sydde nty. Montiio.i peaks freY|uentiy experience sudden antic condiiionN. In the suniniiT am makv many mistakes rt |x a edlJ Jn the winter you get but one. Do not be on unfrti ndly terms With winter. Treat it neither as a force to be conqucretl, nor as a phc jumien in to bt ridden thniugb in u math] tie, Taat and love w ' tnttr lor wliat ir is. glorinus, glorious winter! You wj|l iw;vtr master winter, Insiead lean to ma ter the art of stirvival under bb rd coiufi- tions Equip ynurself proptrly. Learn tite Jor and wisibn) of the mountain men, Eiach winter scjs jn y m will become enchanteil and drawn dei:per and deeper into winter wtldeTness. And slowly, not all at onu, w Enter will eomt .thve, with you, Ycrti will find yijur eff, free as the ind blows. tiod, bless wintcrl b y Don Schwennesen Musoub, Mootana, u on ittc vny rdgr of ii c kituwo w irlrf. a San Franciicu friend rrccoily wn tc roc bcfurc undertaking a trip here VC ' aich uui, f n it t ii fall off the niee. yMi end up in ( %hud kT  Karuda ' His coflj(ue-in-«:heck onljr half bmpcxins die way Mon- tana K typically viewed, if ytxi live   i)f Omaha, wew of the SiefTai or K)cth f f the • 2f d farallel. Ask a Chkagnan what winicT i like in X ' e«crn Monuiu, and hell con- tsJe that tlkc pUte hibernate from Ociobcf to May. under hundreds of feet of lacul nc anil uiow, Phii miMkfn mythrikni;y— u}{ed by the opening and Lkninji; of Lr x« Pa — fus kep« Montana skiing well out the limelight If )x u don t believe it. check the pt puUr ••ki nu inev Ijm year SHimn bn ke the pristine siIcikc while chcckin); out a rutiM r ahout Chef Huntley and a j lote called Big Sky The author hung an und long enough 111 coin a new gei graphical term. Bitter Root tno duubt fhinking of Pugo and Aunt dranny ' s Bitter Brmle Root). Sh nuga ine got pfetty iIomt. with a paragraph or two - bi uf Ja4.kass. Idahct Ai HoliJ y not exactly a ski mag- mne i e en li«ed Big Mcnmuin among its ten brw in the WcM Of ciKiTK-. HoltJjy i always on the loobxii for un- usual, out-uf the way vacation spots The same issue pushed vacations in Baja, Mexico. Chn Huntley is trymg hard to shove Muniaiu skiing into crotCT stage — but fo tunatcly, popular myth does no die easily. One day very scxrti. the rest of America will wipe the smog from its cfvllcctive eyes and sec Monutu tor wtur it really iv In the meantime, we who are already iK-re have a good thing going Montana has some of the finest skiing in tfK- workl It is virtually unkn wn. and (lie pcH ' es are incredibly cheap! MISSOULA AND ENVIRONS Talk skiing with the average Miswulun aivd you re likcl) ui hear enihusustK accounts of Big Mountain and Bridget, ititerruptrd by CKcasional wistful glances toward Banff, iin Valley and resom fanhct afield But in moments of LMTidity even the most cynical will admit tkit. after all, . fis« uU IS rahly endowed Few cities in the nation (or i ir that mancr. the world can U ast two respectable ski ircas within 12 miles of City Hall Those wf o arc Uteptical ought to try commuting from IVnver to Vail— or fr« m Munich to the Zugspitze, or tn m Sacramento to Tahoe. of from Geneva to tfie Valais. Lvcn Aha is a gooJ 0 miles from Sak Ijdce Ciry. and thcres a kx more tra fic. In MisKKila there is actually a fair amount of night life. iiHividcring the sue of the city. There ' s novice rock music at tf c Monk ' s Cave, there ' s authcntK C crman fo«n l at the Hctdclhaus — right down to the fuuball table 1. 1 didn ' t say It was good food, unless yout taMc runs in that direction). i d there ' s Mario s, the kxal cause celebre, whose Greek ! Kxl IS as superb as his Italian is had. and who will achiese kHiius if lie eser geu a license to serve retsiiu Marshall ar d Snow Bowl are fairly unabaslKd about the tict thit they iplit Misstnilas vki market somewhere near riic middle Begintsers and intcrmedutes head for Marshal], itavc ituermcdiates and experts take Snow BowL Howcser. .1 itx-kIcsi battle f jr the middle market may be shaping up this year The new packing machine at Snow Btjwl seems desjgtscd to nuke the descent from tlie top T-bar less des- jwiie for the average intermediate. There will still be j owder up on Griidy — but as every skier knows, a bt more pctiple talk about powder than ski in it At Marshall, a new snow-making machine will make tite ■x-ason a bit k nger and the conditions more dependable O iti lower-lying vite 1 If hi:n; uin fki Snuw (kmE, ychi cin ski m ' whcH in iht  i.if W, u ' CH.irdiRf (u U trf M Sl(j touch Kasry Lfcms — and its tiaid to Eind a jir K o ' jrnplsmjefirtry, f a more chal- tm ifl assKsmenc. However, inictJiMciiaiei ttk y find Mch renurks vciy issurin sim] hegiiFifKf s, ifiay iFtnd Lheqi di.iwii)rij{hT cmifyji . .Ejki a hAv4n Iwriil powJn skins, Snow Uowl bcascs (cifjiin fast tflou ux| a p atOngJm co hive attractcvi ihc U.S. Aipint Clui ' nj:ibn(Klups i f |%7. Brvjw BuwJ v v jtsiani: Minagcr Sun Cohtn ilit ateit !v]p rj (l ttr r W ' drtid Cuj cumpci iiion ont of eIkic y afi — buc in iht Enearyiwi. ihc manajscincnt aims tj pfoi ' idc f;roi:i[iinJ sto .-n and ej(f a idrJ liast Usdge f«i|pcjn to arcraci (he average sktcri who in carltM -ents l st t irU gful the tb( uj;hf uf [3.11 mogiiils md unmued. [ki lEetschnec. BoginDcn i lL mlEI eu sra on rht Down iSapcs. SiKra- Bi;w| skiing Tiadii iojiiUy- scans Huniksj LVLns on (Ik: tippet sftipei, jind by mid- Dctcjnbw ilw eniirc faciiiiy is nDcnultjr in ojxfj isni. Hfiwo ' er, ii m.i Id wmref Iws brcn kipu ' n to dcb ihc -unuiMi uDiil OiriitmHi. Oil Ehe Esther ti indi snow linj trs uncil laEC sfnin 01:1 S kiw Bo«Vi umny kjxi— usually uuilasiJnj Eht skitrs in spine o( the area ' s. - fuElicm i;kp( !Hiic, Last yctit uzoardii co OoJicn, Imidw Liowl di?s d in Apri] for Uck ( J: oiHunms. I ' hr- snow J-i ' iEtxl •A-tU nia tJLiy. i tEhou h Cohm ittmt Sitijw Pow| rli ll po Jt s 11% L I imp4r(S(.Mi [41 iiiff , moi ' i dJaEuiE Dm ei LEii:in it Whiw ii h E3r«d|;rr Sijiwl. jnin vLuroij dm Eutr rcc. 2iaid Hiic C jintuhtfi skirr, inunEiLn Eias nnjrc am bui Tfiif, Snow ISow] wlLI rwvtr ri al HuriEk- ' i ilifj Sk - (L CiifiKlOAlintum cmt« for wcililiry CiU.(cirn ians. E ut ■a many IfiCaEi, ihii Cftrrtes as ik diwppointraHiE. To Ecajch Smjnf Eitwl, tjLc ihD Rivrr - ' i. ' S r - r i-vii on InrrruaEt Itcad CKHEh up [ ir.mi jick nd FliJIhiw iht stgns unEifl she mad pcrcrs uui l,i iL- mjcl .m ' rr uquijipipH for (he trip Thwijjh fcbiively sl irt, ihf j i;ui is unfiav d futd ClFl gtc r rhn CKCLEinj;. tJon ' t sell Le shiWE. MaJjthall viEl tlcv r how the Winter OJyrapi.ci, buE it CcaTium %ysnt F thr pofnjJsy rtleniti«5 — incLudii nighi skiinj;, a ski jkjEnooE and an l wruhn- COftl t« . The elevation is lower ba tJcya inu ' ijMXl ' ft. ai f p]3{ to JMV} ft. ai Snow Ikiwl), scj Ehe season ii a biE ihi)tter. Thi. j car. fti« nuna|;rnKnit hopes tv supplnncfir lucurc widi 1 mow-jmkinfi nid hiii« ' , JestgfveJ to Itirtify the simjw covn- on ihe more welE-ifaveELcd hc noct ' j. ! hpc P4id on the hciulwali ibove Ehe loclj . A snow-maJiiCf in Mociiao proE bly 4o!ms to fii]E sumcwhcre bcn ' cen haesf and atiuirdiE) ' . SEill, Swerflfrs and Midwesterners will ■ouch frara anfi VLpttitnce thit iltt inftrnaL tfrachincs Jay down a pretty dKent base. !ilELLFi throuj h a m it ' tcta blizzard IS a veriiable mind-fredc, especially ar nJj;hi. It ici ' x pOw kr, but for this trK si bcglfflmtn at ref ul — and rE T ty aliH d ftf ice, gntsi aod i avel. Ttiere art som chaikfljfinfi runi d wn Marslull ' ii imd- section, and the area ii i pot-id pluce to prxtice for almikSE aiijr skier uf any abiJity. An ll diy ' tq:kc;t ii oniy I .W for iduEii, ot $2.2 HE niijht Ami lakt- ie fifm dtp, hat■■To ft tti MitthilJ, [JiF the Ha-M Mivuwt? ffiit tum alboui nra miLcs md lain Itfi t. nfuth ) fin M ihilt Cl««)( Krjdhi when ymi sh [he sit i uca ii n. WESTERN MOr ANA VICFNITY ]fv i(}dJtnjn to ihc twr liK-pJ ski jims MusscniliiiiiB can tliotH ftrnun s fjI mher rwirfj whkh juc within ihc iMt [i ' i!T bcnc[m fod a tttAig,i ttt% witt Last— flfiiDCHEi Bowl Ucih Jui mi ititaiff yt) ihc jiowfjcr ft)w nurkct, mag- u tnc kit m-titt-iEhujndin . Uridgcr hjs v ' nic fjf bnt snow inf ind i deceni unuunc i( itun hic ni gii with ][ l[ is j rAinal[y cunsidcKKl a iia At! tirtiikr, bvt in the iimc le-j ue with, Bi Mijum-iin. Ax sucli it ulf i hu t-ariciy of Etrfain. nocaljEy jt futr itf tnoMi juj hawli, lath nHiipc J with a Ituvdj ' hciilwill A clair-.j f.hjirlil ' f ss iM.-drin;i{ Jti Lun., an .t it i hi c ■furcKer i Kt whit vtm ncvtt crnwdci! lift lines m bv- gin With I ' ve hcuii udl clur the hit6g.ei Linrs hivr gotTicn u Imtg $ EWfciiy jnirnuies on a. raic crrmrded weekend IaMis iiv«r« no oiDiv iJwi to lU minuTcs c cn inl cfijwdftJ Jiysi, htHMvtr, uidl this ti pjctry tTnwwLl} ' iru ; thrm thi it Monuni. l onmUf die linn are even shufK-r. Ejf iiHMnex i cDf. And ihMs ■■ouQsighf j for an-jtifl whii has tvtt s«jiiJ in d New lingland lifi lijIS t it (nimttt-. OF kif cr. tlvt ntji ht bd mg bec«mes a rckvifK £i. ptc when pju j H as iiT afitld from MiswuU m lVid ' Poi l Iciwsiau W mxwnluTanJinj;, ihc 200 flfttk Jfivc will lake jou Wdl iwer chrec hoursv Ewn i( y£ «Ji dfiv? like in lulun. I jdgiini! is no tifHjt lpn1 iC j-h.hj hjtvtf ftimli i iw can mjii:f J frwl at l oi uiU UnivcTsiEy in nearby Botefnan. t tJierwt«, Theft vti ih uiuil virictjf of moicb— ind you avi iL -Jihlt M find d decent double fur no mnrr thvn SUM. Dna ' i ht afraid to shop ansund bcitrr deiil CaO lie fijujul, p« :bl]y tf you don ' t insist on TV m i privacy. Thf Eloicraan Hotel used to offer a bH arid mturh . Ji i n. ' i (he Savny, buT iiA MHy ahem] a |Xkmb]e Bf!|:.MDNT Lj[ cate4 at MuTimBe, nwih nt Hd«H, this a maW ta o| t! Ein |?jinci|dlly an vttkttuh acid h4)|iday4h Muh nas ait $-i.W pcf day, but accwdLn w ihe attw VS. Ski Assji Mujihcrn DLiPctofy, Bdjiii iii oEfns baii-- price dcJtf s tu Nurtbcrn Division USSA mcmtwrs. There- fijief it might be of iiKtrrcM U M SIti C3ub mcmhen uliij to n mi aft}- EifKK in HtkfW rhis wanw. North — Bic Molniain Tliii is Hsnufu ' s bi j t, and in Jocattil about L O jnii[« ncHch of Missouti 1al oiJT the sajne disnnce is (jdjcier hirkl, iusi cMtisidc WbireJisb. AUww tliiee txmrs vti Jast Btj; Muunmn [ f fcrs d Icii of mti and a Mtd disncf s:icy of tH m. TTwry keep rhc tnoguh from cyvertuoniing ihc pliuc, jiikI thr bii (ipficr bowJs ppKifc«bly von ' c uvenvhclm [he in- ccriftcdvtic itier- In £FnFTP.I, thp slt pcs arc i tJ! gruonKd, The uta btlb Lcielf a$ a iam[yt}t TtKut wmJ rcahic«t Eamity ski h4£a[jf n pcka es Ci3in]7(«c with tkit- IJi ton ski ' SpeciaJ, iTi.in« item MinDnfALis utd Snctle. WhkctFish is tocaicii in a snow bch of softs: Thwefoit, dnr iMson is rdaiifvdf long uid dcpcndabic ar flij; Moud- nia Ocv tht other bind, TW-hitcfith gets more rhao its fuir diinr r.i.f ;:kKids and fiiSg. Thetc 2tt iLixommaiitii Jii m the nif chf $ki lU , bui it mi hi br dwapw in town. More IfNj in i« antuI- ab3t in Ci ]unibtA FiHs (seven milei «ui} aud in KahapeL il miks iouch). Locit Cbinne food freaks ULserr thii ibr besT ihts side of Ci iy is served ar Freodiiir — kj ji ' mi mpgbt Jo«p that in mind if jmi hir Kalispetl at dtnner- LociiEtd tbd ' c KdJogg, [his uea it vfi-athl-ormting jin .i lite [hjou -imffK tcni to keep Lootowt Paw fairly pnssi- blc. Ai ifl[Er i;LK 90 nears corapLetion, {ontv MiHoii | an- iv ixjund xo disoovfl Jat kass SIti DowL ' Itic are Jias a kn SMinn irtd pushes sprinj? skiir . Aivl 1 r(pii|y within easy atikiag diji tKe of Mis ub (aJw.ui L iQ CDi] , Kellogg is on ttit; main wviz Spjistoc, an I ii is hi Ei eiwiugh ixj be above Kello WBtog, (Those whn. rhiolc HJs ( v[a h« been pdundercd fa bi£ bu4in« wight t take a IVjok it rhis town] ) Other diao thjit ycnit on yo tr own. I ' U be ?.lr. uy: .Uctasa for die fttsi limi this w. too. IMH — MjiVfiftlCK : ' r.jbibly moit peopJe wIkj jwincy lilts far afield Ul .-! Up ar BriJgcr Bowl. To ftach Maverick, you muit rii WUlb on U . 1?l just bfflut (ben backtrack iiJiwesi ttKHihcr IB miles after jym ra«:h DiLIwi, local Ji ts apjund 200 miles. N ' evcrtheleis, [htr are go™ re|mf[i abcw[ Mavfrid The place li n uippua wiih a double chijHif[ and a fJuii - • ftiill Etkhorn Hm Spfinnit HtppOrti an ouhkior pool it.: Ommiy TO midiamratr tunxiff, tbefe ts nu new chiirlir: thii yiw. Tbis II a souU ansa, m tbs MMitaiU-ldabo lim. sobili lif Kamillon at Lost Tfail Pi j tg., on VS. 9i. iJ.t maia te tu Sun Valley, i U i$ uncmtvdvd secluded und lEiunchty ji|ip port«d by a small nuclciu of hm. r ' AHlHHR APt£!-D Don ' r abandon the pfHup«rti for a lon vrfckend ar places «-s di l tiTii ' $i Banff, Sua Valley, Bogus Aasin or JacJfitw! Holt. Tlu! firsT two are fealli relarively accw siblc (rom Missoula — provided yo t don ' t stJedt a w«t ?flit when STOckmen s warnings hsnrr been fOittA. South of MisHnila in IdaJiO (he Salinon Rivcf Valley 14 ajricHisly sh |[(tFl ttom inTef snows artd US. witicb fol:L( w it trt Srtrn Valley- is onJjf complicaTcd bjr cwy pajtn. LoH Trail ixnd Gik-n Sum mi t. iNnjtb of WhPteEish. rmighty in (be Utitiide of Gbdft Part, fou hir a snow belt tlat Ei«kt meat iooui the farther drite— until pra htg,la la feet like fou ' ve ac- Ctdentilly $nlJn IJ J onto ihe- TruurAlaskan Higbvay. DtLt ckMIy C ij ti, ibe snows taper off after the Cana i :!) f«)nu«. The jesc of the tun ii eas-y gttmg as fw Radium Hor Sprij]gs C bring ymtr bdithiflg stuit— iw Of per day}. F om Radium there a« tm) Mutei ihifliigh the Ptovincta] Park 10 Banff. Usually it kast not of them is open. If ymi driH- to Cma . you might consider a detwir vi:t Ui. 2 and 5?5 i th bonJci adssing at E stpi]itt, Idaho. Utert ' s a duty fice border store at Eastpon, It ' s juEi an old boaid-front j coeial store, bvt the booitfi prices arc f ijaiasTic. Voj ' re allowed ' 1i2 ou. duty free when Bnteriiy; Canada. Ordy ode hitch: you have m drink ir all before you coanc bKk, UnkSJ you kiok loIly freaky, chances are the bofJcf uatdj won ' t hassle you. Sur be careful— we hxve gf d fticnds who have been thiuugh bad bwiii Ves, Virginia, Montana mlly dCKS hive sonu: fanastic skiijjg. f itb any kind wf It k at nil we can keep it a deep dark secret for aflutticr ten ycats. Maybe even longerT UkjIi ai hi w li inji tht Swias wejc Ic to htde the Vabis! Ski hiking offers a ho i of ra -ai is — solitude, clean in i ;urj?irj|? air. healthful exertion, k w coit, and escape from •t.. iitic and !Ui p«. Toufinjj. trtisi country, and ski ' i kmi; .ifi rclatcvi atki mcrUppin ; terms, but here well dciiEii ski hikinj( a having twu basic objectives, co hike al(Mi i. r up a hill and to ski down. These two objective require a cumbinarion of equip- ment that IS different from both downhill I Alpine or x .yo skiing) ami from NordK ski racing: iXiwnhill involves hc -y Kiots. prevision skis and bindinp . and usually an n;:iv h h: tltxil.li 411.I i:ni . i nu ny . ..rc- ..m-J to: fast jxKc atrovs flat or nilling terrain. Ski hiking requires bxh li|;ht weight and flexibility to alkiw hiking up the hill, ant! « me control to get dow n. But This doesn ' t mean a Vh of expense. Until a few years ag j most ski hikers adapted and impjovised old wrtxl skis for light weight. To this, cable bindings were hooked by a pair of front hooks to allow the fixn to lift and flex while climbing, with additioful rear iMioks for dciCetHjing In ad- dition. ■beartrap ■toe picce% or safety toes were used that c-ould be tightcnixi down fast for the hike up or hail a special atuthmc-m to prevent sideways Kiot movement 1 he c..::;pi r - ,.,:-f,r ,rt.! m: !. .,r p ;.,,r u( h..,i. rh.,I H More rccenfl), tompictc binilinji;s have been d«.- cli pcd especially for hiking. ak)n wiih mcdiutn wtdth liji;ht ski (m t as narrow as racing skis) Time is well spctn brows- ing the kxal shops. Seconal Jund stores and tmtdoor cau- k) ;ucs while getting; f ntt up Add a pair of poles — fairly long with big baskets for powder snow aiki yiju re almost ready Except that skis slide, so you need wime way to get iractinti gf ing up Climbing waxes provide t tc lightest, cheapest and most challenging traction — ar d the most frustrating, because each snow cotkiition requires its own special wax. Climbing skins strips of sealskin or mohair fastttie ! to the ski with straps) arc heavier, but reliable A rvjvel ai l inexpensive device is to take a pitxc of water ski ri w n pc. kmnting and criss n)ising it artnind tlur ski to make a pair of chains tlut can be slipped off for the descent. Olher equipment necvlcd for safety and comf ort shtiiild include a small back or belt pack for U td, wax, extra mit- tens, etc. Do not use a frame. a.s it will catch braruhes in heavy brush, And it can be a hazard in a fall. Also neces- sary arc extra ox. and a plastic water bottle chewing on sttow dries out the mouth j. SomcoiKr in the party sh nild have a first aid kit and an ctivrrgency fire starter such as Sterno. High altitude s «n on snow is fierce Therefore take sun lotion, lip junk, and sunglasses. Gimmon sense ck)thing for high country includes layers of light, warm materials, with a snow repellent otiter shell. Make s«irc all clothing i nwmy. Aikl so f ff to the hilb. IXm ' t go akmc, or into stcrp country after big snowfalls. Avi id cornices and obvious avalaiKhe paths Seek cxperietKfd hikers — locally the R4xky Mountaineers can give you help and alvo lead hikes. Test your gear Ixfore starting, the bune of a trip is the guy who can ' t get his skis ui suy on. And DON ' T burn up all your energy i n the hike up. Yoii ' ll be skiing down late in the day, on gear ihat ' s not optimum for downhilling, af d on snow that always seems to turn icy. crusty or Iwavy. Almost any mountain or canyon around MissiMiLi iiffers «jmc ski hiking The main thing is to get up where the snow is deep enough to covct rtxks, k gs junk Lf lo pa.vs is a gtKxl shakedown area with gentle terrain; but of late tlic snowmobiles arc pretty thick. Same at Patter Canyon. The trails in«i tlie Bittcrnx)ts are spectacular in winter, .ind the ridges tlut parallel the canyons are even more breath- taking They are also more exhausting going up and ex- citing coming down. St. Mary peak lookout is a good one day hike once you get the kinks out of your legs and equip- ment. By cheating a bit and riding up the Marshall or Snowbowl lifts yiHi can spend a day hiking at timbcilinc One last note: When you get good, Itouiked arwl insane, disregard the earlier note abtnit packs ai d bad up a pack- | franxr with tent. bag. etc for a night or two on skis. SNOWSHOEING... or hew to walk across snow without falling in itK hish CKHinCiy m sprmjf. The lefiicm has a vjiiety i f ro chiUmjimg ((.THin SLuwhtc I ' or bo[h iiuwskH.ii|{; . -I uhwsIkkt wn (nvt-E tun lt -e: tawa ot un an uphill fpi t ab(jut w rupidl i« ttit sfcLmufcr. Of course on ti - (kiwnhilL iJt jnr the slflKHirtf has tht iJ aniaffc over ■It ' s ira y [i gtt itittvii in «ioinil ocin . Ilic mecfv-- n cripntei ' ic :ntk iit:% fif Tht intwshnKj, ihindinf;s, md - pilrv TJh- nifjft ' jhcics aw usimLI) ' mjitJlc i f ish wood .n - : tuvkiA: 4 1F tt«ar1 r| jciihcri. IE varnished rtj hrly SiM)w:illWke$ jlfe v« fy tlunJjIt and will la;i fof mtnf yuM v Of 4 ur the J«w tut iTHtii Ik TaJccn as with i j?t.Kxi p-nr of iJeit — don ' t cpus fiddi wiih heavy stumps, brush JP roclt ' i juM bck ' W ihi surface. Ski arc ELKful, d,tElii: u 1i not n«i:c uir - ' , and ahnoac any pair ol '  kt puics -will juffiu;. aD[hou| wJJc bisktcs are hdlpful in p jwder fmiw. Th«t arc several np« of snowshoti. Mtm of ihirw be Ltlicaincd in Missoula sporting ijoodi storn; and nil ot ■hem are available Thrij rj:li n ttdi ' Mnr tatalofiMes aiHi fi major ciiiri Ttic firit [jrjM , nlfa? Alvik uttl shiJt. is the kiflj(«t, nieai LrLDg 10 x 56 inchrt, twJ ji tulned-up Fitn3( and lonjit lail. I[ Li preUffixJ hjf dunv uiw hiLKirs, pair k lib rl - whcn ifavciicft in dnrp imi - cn whictl «rrj-ing a htsxy pact. Thtit ' is Lu a sbtwitf vrtiiknn this Mw sh( f. luvi.ni; dLCDCusuiflii tfi Hi x ' iit Amnhvr lype at snt:iwsJi!i)i : k ilie Mjille i|c.iir Mithij;.ii itflc, somewharr wide , WMTh u tMNied-ijip Hmtt aitd a uiAuJly liS )c 16, A tliird Ij ' pc ihe Circcn MotLniain In ■|ja« Hic ij the iJMjrtir t, nuasuiinp 10 x ! 6. fjval.sJi.i | with no ail dfij witJumr a [imicd-Uip front. Uea ■J.•, have [he Qdvantaj;c tij bi;«iii si mewhjT rmwc mancuvin.ii . n wcpiiJt?d MtJi. th±ii the litngtr shoes lijch of these i n ■• cff snowshiJM citu aiwgt 3iOi: ll, v ' hite ihe hmdirips art- .1:. aildiTHinil Fijr ilw i hrifij- mimJecf, a viiiT m thit- local six md hatml tortv t il often bring j fiond piij ri f irnder S t«.00 F r goFtig uphill, tt hc ' Ipv ici wrap roogh totd jrotind ihc Jidn 4nd brKP.tm mf iht iniwiKie jim beneath ihc feci. UMjIly (his is d«)ne iJi aJvaitte, ajid « serve 10 jgivt con 9iiktrlfk tTKftim. Don ' i ' c rtj ' i Vhkih .ue hip and thi h mu Kln The}- ire comnwii t J tin- J cginner, sjnce sivtv- shtxiiij ifMM muscles for teg Jjliinj: ntft gencialk used in walking Irt Miowshoeinfj clu Jtrji njvemcjii n stmilat dnat ijwd when hicytlmj; Diwi ' i Li cr«cend yourself; be iii Willi ihttfi hiliiri wiih modcuit !mc«it. The h«f{inncr shtn l.! join uLth jj ure fxpe ienteJ hiltt-fs lor his fiFs few rrif« 1 he RiA:ky iVfixpntjimeers uutiiiji iirjjadiatwn regularly schedutci trif i fen- huih vnowilntti attd  l(r tourers duTus ihe winier anci pfing. These oufjn ;s at jb;enerjlly (mt •if}- trips iin Sarimti): mii Sundaj-i . Watuli fur wMk-l-i iji (Ijc K aim in and MLSSCHfUAN 1ji pbru]ijij J Pinife eIk U.S. Cieohj icul Sututj ' nupy. OJK htlptut From ilt«nr, ir ib five fif avalini±e p.nth5 atwl niiicf luj rd; cin he dcrer niiml ( av jid 10 ultjp .- ! federal iftterc ttnp sthjwiilKx.- (rips arwuiid AliwinFa ajp I. i. mtxnii j f.j «i f i (efcvaiiou ' OCW t( et 1 Stjri frum th I ' ijttif l uiyiHnr jMcnac aro, ;uad iv iJt up (he fifj A io tin- kiiiijfi: jit the summii ej( Linjvchitj,- Mlkiu- rain lTehij d Mijuni Scfitirwl. Thtv is an eas-y ii p, Tequirln.i! I ' himr ' III rtath the biwin, And I h iur nt firtOfH mum f PIhjCu UiD.A. FOREST SERVIO-i 2 JJj ' JJ? . (hJif.- j l1rj iJi;j n! I jrl(, .;ii;iiHi fvim Jcci .1 iiart l. ne iriile beyxnfeJ rlre I ' itt t Omjun. pKuit at rhc po ' ijK where iJae rusd tit s.i«i Dfiir Cniek. Wilt up th i roud which jt ijis (he im ' m frwd btf( fe Deer Ct tlt crosstrtg. At Ji jUfKiffort H «nik tike ilie rc d lmi rt«; rishi, up the wttt Euft of D«t Cwfc. Afttr idwit 1 nute rhtte U « 3wL(i.hh fc ed the f iy l vr (Ite riuJ mii am- tinut- up a n-iiiMjf niiid up ihe wtu f irk. Aftet atKiur mltej, tht- fij e httween Part r Otck sjid Milk-f Ctttlt i-v readied. (hi ML ' tu i ri (Itt Ittn rid ' fur anoditr I mila ti r kch the tiip Lif t  n Snmv Mouniain uvtflcitfkin Mts JuLi rum the ;i uiliwf .r. This irtp wtll rakt . 2 Ikiuji tu iJtan Stmie Mi;i Linc.iin and h urh to return ■1 f 3T [ am Stone MfmnJtiirt, sure ant milt; heytmii t ti I ' sitw Canj m pitiik area ar [ht p: ini whtne the mad. cfos- tVffT Cwtk. V ' M 5 whicl] juiru iht main f tad jiu!i:[ licfLWf . rossinjit Ai a punttujn M milt. ;t. This road qakfs «hc M)i:iW.sh0Cf tifii E n: ; : ..jxnii ll ' i mi]ci, thcii ir STU ' ilchbacJcs m the- Il-K, ajid, aJiivr jjjiit3ii,T [[ miJrs. reaches n saddle souch of iliLUIt Rocd: Mc unta.! n. Fnjm ihe uddle. it tihv 1 htHir coi cravel up the r.ailit ),ietp in Sliilr Rixk fH.]u C3.pn. This is an cxctUcni iti widi iittv views nf [ti( flMtwrHKH Ranjjc and ihe Mis ula Valley. ( Ffir all (lirtt :l the tri ps deKriixiJ above, usa: tbt: Sfnith- fiM fis£nub c|u ijrjini|i1e I r 2:4UOO scale uiLtiJi, •I. Cfift l f ' ffrit KoaJ Celtv-aihin woo J Start frum ihe McHi[ana-I dahi lniHtr iit I Lo P{isii. Climb ihr $ih:iwt nk on iht ji ;hi aidi- il iJif Jiijijiway aitd watk dlon ihr rufld, fjjf abouc :i mUv an thv K mtaiia side cTosj a hib joddije ru che EdalK) scdc, arut (niiiiluc hv .-itxMii j mirife mik tu the hif jj tlrir on iIk Montsiiu- iiiahi} btwdcr. This ifSp |;ivc5 jfewd vjctt-i inic lii hn nd riw w«[ sjttc 0i ihe BrEivrhcHii; ran je. Use ihv I jJu Hut Si:.ririss KnudlrjDj le i: .i()flO £jk- fStiS majv I On J . t ievacion 200 ivtM ]Jmc suu dn on U.ii. 9 no Hamilcan, turn ri ln ixrvt d-ru ' e lu the bludj eci Licck Tiailliead rhe mouih 4if Blitcij rir Cani ' fi, Thr rrail fffjcs up [l e saaih side of BLodf eci { ' Irec.-k for 3 ntttct, providing exceElenc viewi cii ihe |j«x [. ' uUt clifh ;u)d ibutCiKscs ofi ihr nofih side oi BUvifiHH Criymi. Ai m ik ' S, the crai] trosn;; hj che ncwih sidf itJ HIcd etE f jcel; SljHJfi;!). ' thet af(cr the snowsht cr can see a naiuraj ji :lt iKi lU? y Niie On the south sjde  f. che eaniiKn. Af m k (t ' Hn ihe stiirtfnj; point, ibete is a cascade cm BtxJ| e[i Cinc k wl!Li4,h ifijikft-s a f fXMl tunch stuj?. Thii; is an eiuy iTif uth ]]!ik ' i ' ltiptj;e itf elevitkm and f xtd views. It h ill takt- ' ■liuiJEs Us tt!3 h the trascade, anJ 2 hottr reiurci. the inct Rid quadfAfiRle 1 :2 ' i[MX) LlStlS map. There afc i nuaAtet tjf i rher ifiterestms mowshoc crijta iej fimernajc cinpn {stufH « B«ir Creek, Bass Creek, and Frtvj BvifT Creek } aitd llirtttlcM ri lgts t such as rhc ridjg.e b4, ' [T .Teri U].«t ;«t tireeli anJ Mtll 0 rfi. and the rid c bc- [wci-ii Afdl Creelt and Sheafnun O li j Ahu. Nfurmcm FV.ilt Hiltiiu . WiiiiJurcst nf M issoirh neair ihr tt vwn of IjjIu, ,iiid Mardi ]] M TUiitain:, noriheasi of Ml . ;nti1[i n«9r Mar- ?.hall slit afea arc jps xJ nfjwxboei nj; trf|Ti My ittv. expctieoix with winter Lumprnj; nlmim tMai m ijiii«$i«r like mtuf tnhm not sj forruiriiil ;, wc (nnJc ucie RLiiuh . . pitched uut tcnr in th« acUlk hc t«fl iwo an ihe midst of i Nmm Thir wind Jk Uji] during [he! cii br 3,i a nvw vtoim mirvcii m. WtncU i ir i m KiptL, nurty folding [be tcnr m ha t. The ncitt riNirniaj;, dticr hurried padcinj of our fn hsen j r iind iciic (sJihiMd hikt « ' er« ' uHiicd wtth jnchcv t f iLie-) wc iiriC4;fwln3 j(K t xt tii find chc Bavm wi rahinji; plii ' e Linly iici th fiink . Ljct char clten ix chc first l!c K n nf vintcr It 1? tfuiw idfe ici vtfinirr uut ta winm. bur if pla-m jtt? inouic for gotnj5 h ck deep witbin rhe whjir. pr-rpaxe ytiuridvcs kv a. sudden shw m. The sky € chan|;e ftum a licit btut CO vihne, ihna f y And bLick in lcs than an liiMir, brin njt wtch it cuJd winds j uii K ' LXjIdn ' r believe. I luJijrrunaicly, in CDCiirjJir ui nuner camping La the wia- u-t )-ou af« ilWfd one mtstaknT . . . ynui last. To hvlp yixi in ycur pbinciinjit ktep cite fiijlowinj; points ■n mji d. Sucvivil in wintef r«« ilmosi pDrijeljr on oraniffr- . tinfi of hiid.) ' Ib«[ A }iMson can die i: f eKpuur« in icm- ; cfituffs abiwe SC of cm b comfumfikr and sa£t ar fjO ' beh]w ztfo. Much d«[vndi on bc k ' nu j re dreued, yoiir Leepin djy aiid finding shelter in The vvtni of d «tiHrn, The f{ill }win fMTS, pn: ntn] in Th« Siet C.luh i Man- n«aj of Ski Mouniainrcring iJ tntld helfi ' vOn in a liaiic urtdctsrartJir of ctjdd wenrticr s irrivBL Fusi thf all. nrgw-dirtjq body fiancrioni the sJtin auto- nuriciUy sbuis yff surface bknod circutarion -tfhm tupKe i to cold, jcdtLcmg 5 he hcsit lo t (hfOugh iJ e skin nor- mal Akohul flucterj tht (berrntwut. fe nlNOj;; in Mpid Jms .f hear from the body. THtrpfcjrf, ne -er iSim t fTi ir thu rtr dwrinf; a wmrer inicinp. niu body fgfihet [(.tJiKK rritcu Lirion m she entrtinitjcs, j!i rtvc Ktttn fgtui coid . Tbis ii a nofirul re iion lo pra- Ecxr ihe vital organs. As a r«uU. bltx d lo the hands and t t ii reduced li, mucb as fifteen [ijn« From cnaiiimum. Freezing and frnsibtEC in time, would na in. UndcfSdrtdably Ehwi. IE ii m imporunt tit puf an an extra swicaTef is dry initrcns ai d soclu. In fact, tlie sneatcT ii L«s$ restricting to cifQulaiton than glavti or iocbs When JI3 camp,, relaxiry . or slrej n , keep haodi and l rad protected. Even tbough you may iwt be co u the time, thr reiukLnji heat to wILL liter affect ymL To (irtidtit Iveftt. vi j ms accn;i!« is best. Yuu cui in- Lttw your lk«4E owrfvi by Hf nmeh ats 16 uincsu Be sutz, liowocr, nttt E  andk i i w«m when vtt ijinji imv y. I Vice yBLf cJuwhts jjre f;om fiCT!piral4 jn il is but a short labile until yrwi be in fttair . 5blv4ijEi£ nm f doubles nitu hear ouEpuE, If yoy shiver 4W ym m l irtEo your Jeepinj- baf! aE ni hi ajj imm« i;iEe bwt btciMup will keep Ti i3 es-cni wirm. AaheIict ttDd method ejI prodiicii beat is eu eat. Thf rn 1 uf dif tinn produces cxceiLS ticat passm our of iIjc 1 3 ' c increase is: immediaie fur catbijbydE-JE|:%, mtif c : i.iicd and hightT fur pnradaisi, and s3ivw ktt {mvl h i ill i-jt jiuit hfffujre puinjt to stetp u bciJtfii bj- ibt htaj If ijur band or f« i ne ;i| w-,irifilinR a bit. we nufijiiCii !JK folkiwin . Hajidt— M e he utiJvr tbt armpits trick. he feet can be mopt iti a fPibVm. Wf 3Jjy;f t ywj find an .- p -tiil ' tj i sxt friend iji ' iEh a ■a.-atin iEnrtL i;li i Rjrrrrr ' ' Jr STUFF . - tins, ■■■-■■Thpiij kiii i-m fi t mmiht. Vixu ' ll J Hke a dAjiin ftMt 3 m y si ' TjUd ti-uie 4nd i t ie. b si ffiistbitc rcaltj hurts. Di .-Dtiisit Jiaiqi: l rnddfi. ss mrticwncrl in the iTpc j- j W s m- j+jHjijijr. •■ells of feikimo WomtJi warrninif t huntris fc« under tbdi alnpl bosoms- I . ItIIc, bodvj [fl(iiiKfc(li ( i.e. fishiKi unclef «,r, loose wMve ' ' TTO0J ' 4iitip and ;jfliMj[s, wool KJCki). Always «rry an extra s [ of dry clmhs. Pbn on hit % into ity nicks at ]unch- «iwe, snd Imih soclt underwear bcfcwe falliflg asleep. VXTiefl dre in£ ftsr an outing use the cnion prtfurtfl — many rhin [jjws. This Tna|M waim tit bCE -ten Jaii-cfs, and aJluws jfuu Hi ihH 1-jr dun aa eiicn sweaihrr needed. Ko need to litich ' leftde j inj s bi. Tlur Exid ' s nacuial oiJs help wich in ubfHin. And althou irii u oild djj- a k-wd boccHncs luaviJjr crusted with ice, tli« weight is nie li Je, and heat tfja ftf.m the face is fft uffid. Besides, ii locTtb ellirtic. Wit d can be a hiJsltf A ten-miJe an hour wind undef ■viinle ctrndirjocti is crfuivsilent m a towtrin of the exranal CouriesK US.D.A Ff)RF5T Sr.RVlCL INDIVIDUAL EQUIPMENT CHECK LIST WEAftINC: uveimills wool Jlners or wmjIcci gkvea f Kirtii Hjr irH3 shi rt Ijjlai-iju-ji WF Eoque hlitrE Iwoul) IN SHiftT FOCKETS: nii ' ileMli 111 I V jiiewif platter ttt-.nni ktcenex [j u Ih ' ! IN PANTS POCKET: c]ia|! ! |LH:k bandana j r It iikcrchief sour or hard l aiidk-N Vnifi ' in vi .ili-r |frcMsf cfltilaiiMif ON OUTSfDI Of PACK: :nl p)n h RCf attd crAin|irt i« IN BOTTOM OF PACK: - ■1 iif I ' .tnf: Johns rifiiol Hcarin l I jir, rMr.Ti knieker soclts fN TOILET KIT; timift towif ItLttS! — 2 fml- dB. f tuoLh hcu li, powder, and camh metal niLrror ti ilet p..iiii F IN PACK POCKtTSt PJodEIG hu A fuf JlnrtM comlsi-plicrs fit! yfax eeraper IplaHEie windshield i 2 lash e HF k fi ' hleenex pack l gi |Epfe l arrlrtT hcji-ing J ■LvnJflnt:he c rd (kii . ' k C4 ver Cljr e pIs Lbc bagl extra Isqvt bce fire £t f j-ji one lar; iptn n ■me larf;e cup wfller botllf l 4tnd; iiia fla hlrphl - cxira hallf;rl«M iiiH aid kit Ondivtdual) I ftflcl; iAt pw 1 pair 4 ' 1 pair 3 - diftc rcnE ealora m SLECPING BAG: InfUK jtihns Lfid MHdkii i r dijwn ho(iiec i jili i:piiig: tuc|pe IN TOP OF PACK: wuid fihirl ot pjirkji wind panU wool twcater down jAtlitI o -crmi.lts M-iiid I in or n ijfkten silovi ' - h.d t l H? ur iJuqiji- tcm j tiiEqirr rurcEKt LDatiw a wind will luvc tiEck ' a JiiiciL-MiiJ Cwlmg rfi i if urinJfiricHjf clorhin ii, ojTHinJ [he flrtiM and fact SHELTER In contrui tu mmnKT tunpmg, shdrcf is m j( QliitE n«Cirni(y. On n mountain j xccvm may lasc far UM ' es ' ji lityi. m i flpft ' tt. Lffllcw yvn rec on the odje citf ihe sia m, acuJ curfi ufcij- tnct tJiit, j MJ- hat bcf IS n xt up camp. AJwj)-s tarty a windptoof twt faJbrk } uf a design rc wjiJiiiaml SCTCit nifkl. Tltc M( jn U alsij brcaihe (altow pauage body moiuuHT) , od be simple m set up inJ akv dcy n. A nice fcaiure for mtr (. ' JiDping lenis is iw havt j small vnribu in [Ik fmnt for i; rtltin|i. A Tilnxvc mtranLc ar iht u h« eni is tk inblf A planted cailicr, sdcccjcun ( ii sheltered cjin[s Ii (mjxirtanr. Fiirchcr impm vcmtnfi t f tTscmplii the snow a iifiifui-m flat suiface for iht? ton site, Jind dtvelopmtnt tit a WPhd shidd arc worth ihc I ' lme ifvnt. If th sjkjw h Itcatjf and duAp [jtocki can be mt to form a wall Ever r«ci and: wixmJ ri; ;itsi effective if snofr i% tint pctwdtry ■. ■v :v■o!!y7 p . ■■' ■■■■• ■V ti.Kkkinj:; iitlf Jit dir|; it tin ' virnt- iimt- fnir eclix inii irn fi ' jirmth keep ihv trujl mhic ft M ui j mmtinnin If espetkaUy heiv) ' wiftdj ire cx|kceciI a m w c vc hunld he huilt (ftjm a drift. For only i snow cav csa pru -fde ibpiLutely irell atr. Hptathing is noi j probkm, (i mKW ii ij«ite pwncMS. Matcc jwre jtmr djesi n pbcis the Me fimj; ate hifibcr chin ihe cnttjjxie, Ci trap body hear. A small One bst iddition, h0i ' tvti. Tilse alor i pjittecbodt novel Of tww by Jack LunttiJB. ll a «iddcn btbuard t«ii c3. up, dig in and spend the ntsti days reading Tfl fiw; f( f-, While Fm ' . or ' UiK  the Ot hav on St winter afternoon The Cremation of Sam McGEE Thfrd are sirangir tkingi ont in iht midnight mn By the mm t ko mait for gold; The , ffk irails have tketr stfcrei t iki Thai tLoiild make yaitr Iihad ruK latd; The Nttrikerti Ught$ hm e icen queer aghts. But the qutereit they ever did see Wai that night on the marge of Lake Laharge i cTcmaied Sam McCee. Now Sam McGcc was from Tennessee where the cotton blooms and blows. Why he left his home in the South to roam ound the Pole, God only knows. He was always cold, but the land of gotd seemtJ to hold him like a prll ; Though he ' d often say in his homely way that he ' d soonef live En hell. On a Chrtsfm4T Day we were muiihirg our way over ihc Dawson trail. Talk of your cold! through the parka ' s fold Et stabbed [ike a driven naiL If ottr eyes we ' d close, then the lashes froste till sometimes we couldn E see; It wasn ' t jTjuch fun, but the only one to whimper was Sam McGee. And that very night, as we lay packed tight in our robes beneath the snow And the dogs were f d, and the stars o ' erhead were dancing heel and toe. He turned to me, and Cap, says he, TM cash in this trip gutss And if I do, I ' m asking that you won ' t refuse my last request. Well, he seemed so low that 1 couldn ' t say no; then he says with a sort of moan lE a the cursed cold, and it ' s got right hoW tilJ Tm chilled dean through to the hone. Yet tairt ' t lieing dead — it ' s my awful dread of the icy grave that pa ' tn ; So T want you to swear that, foui or fair yoi-MJ cremate my Jast remains. ' ' A pal ' s last need is a thing t k heed, so I swore I would not faih And we started on at the streak of dawn; but God 1 he looked ghastty pale. He crouched on the sleigh, and he raved all day of his home in Tennessee; And before nightfall a corpse was all that was left of Sam McGce. There wasn ' ' t a breath in that knd of death  and I hurried horror-driven. With a corpse half hid that I couldn ' t get rid, because of a promise given? ft was lashed to the sleigh, and it seemed to say x Vou may tax your brawn and brains, But you ptomiscd true, and it ' s up to you to cremate those last remains, Now a promise made is a debt unpaid, and the trail has its own stern code. In the days to come though my lips were dumb in my heart how I cursed that load. In the long, long night, by the lone firelightt while the huskies, round in a rtng Howled out their woes to the homeless snows — O God I how 1 loathed the thing. And every day that quiet clay seemed to hea T and heavier grow; And on I went, though the dogs were spent and the grub was getting low; The trail was bad, and I felt half mad, but [ swore [ would not give in ; And I ' d often sing to the hateful things and it hearkened with a grin. Till I came to the marge of Lake Lcbarge, and a derelict there lay; It was jammed in the ice, hut 1 saw in a trice it was called the ' ' Alice May. And 1 Eooked at tt, and 1 thought a bit, and ] looked at my frozen churns Then Mcrc, said 1, with a sudden cry, h Mome planks I tore from the cabin fioor, and I lit the boikr hrc: liomc coal I found that lying around, and 1 heaped ihc tutl higher ; The flames jusc soared, and the furnace roared Such a hhze you seldom scei , iid I burro -ed a hok En the glowing cdaIj and ) stuSed in S ani McGee. Then f made a hike for T didn ' t like to heir liim 5i3 7,le 505 And the heavens scowled and the huskies howled, and the wind began to b1on It was icy cold but the hot sweat roHcd down tny chceksp and 1 don ' t know why: And the greasy smakc in. an inky cloak went Streaking down the sky. 1 do not know how long in the uiow I wrestled with grisly fear; But the stars c mt out and they danced about ere again I ventured near I wat sick with dread, but 1 bravely said: Til just i ike a peep inside. 1 guess he ' s cookcdn and it ' s time I looked . then the door I opened wide. And there sat Sam, looking cool and calm, in the heart of the furnace roar And he wore a snnle yon could see a mile, and he said; Please close thit door. iCi Hne in hcrc , but I greatly fear you ' ll let in the co]d arid storm — Since 1 left Plumrree down in Tennessee, itS the first time I ve he«q warm. ' Th ere arc j trance iMngf dontirt the m idni hl luit By the men who moit for old; The Ardk traits have their iieret taies That wosild vtuke your blood cold; The Northern Lights have teen queenighti. But the ffueerest th y ever did fee W as that m fit on the marge of Lttke Lebar e I cremated S m AIcGee, iMitLUjjiitttmiJi HNjid it ijjjij ttmji tLLiijii utiiijj.„.tiujjjiiti|||j, f[ BOB WARD A SONS Sh ii (M. PU h iXfM. H i VfV, f t s o ivsuoi: vfv. At a cp t vii v tiUi j DOWNTOWN RUARY 19T2 MONOAV TutSDAV WeONESOAV TMURSDAV FRIDAY SATUROAV MA3CH 1972 SON TU6SDAV WEDNESDAY TMURSDAV SATURDAY ) 4 % 6 7 a 0 11 12 13 1 Ifc . i« i«  j« a 23 34  7« 27 n 29 AFCUL 197S 5ATOROAV WIULT 1972 SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEONCSDAV THURSDAY APRIL J « % 6 ' • U 10 11 tl 13 14 1?i •« O l« 1« X) « 71 3 K 2t 37 a  14 MOTHERJOAV 15 16 T3ir 18 19 J r 21 Y 22 23 r 202) JULIE 197S TUESDAY WEONESDAV SATURDAY I 4 i • r   10 (• 12 (3 M 16 •S i; 18 l| JO 21 22 23 24 2% 2n 27 m 2V JUUY 197S WEDNESDAV TMORSDAV SATURDAY « 7 B a HI It 13 13 U IS le   H Ifl w 71 n n 74 25  27 n 29 X 31 . y V y vj 20 21 30 31 V y V y V. 27 y V y 29 AUGHJST SUM DA V WONDAV TUESDAY SE: TEMBER 197S TUE5DAV weONESOAV THURSOAV SATURDAY  2 3 4 i 0 ; 8 « 10 ti t2 13 14 IS l« 17 18 10  31 n n 3 n  77 2B 29 X J1 . ) 2 3 4 ! 6 7  « 10 11 12 13 14 15 Ift 17 l 1«  21 22 23 74 2S 26 27 28 y v (9 y V y V y V 13 Y 14 Y is r ie y V _y V y V y V. r 17 Y ® V 1 Y 2o Y 21 _y v_ y V y V. y V y V y V o r 30 OCTOBER 1072 SuNDA WONDAV TufSOAV weciNE CJAV THURSDAY FRiGAV SATuPtOAv r 1 r r r V yy ji v v y yy 7V r 151) Y 16 r 17 18 Y IS Y 20 21 NCTFEMBER 1972 TUE5DAV OCTOBER ( M T W T   ! J 3 4 S 6 7 8 9 10 11 7 13 14 t% 16 17 It ID 3D 7 n n 24 n 26 27 n SATURDAY Aa soots 9 r 12 Y 13 la ) IS V 16 r T7 r 19 Y 2o© r 2T 11 1B y V. 11 C 30 Y 24 r s _y V SUNC AV MOIN Ay TUCSDAV WEDNESDAV TNV FiSDAy BATUFTPAV 31 26 Y Z7(LV 28 V 29 V 30 Wc took on a neu- format this year. Several of them. The gradual loss of interest in yearbook publications left us espeiially uneasy this year. I st spring ( ' 71) the student governnK-nt turneil tlown a retjuest for financial support. An offer of frcx- photos to entourage class pictures drew 2 () out of neiirly 9,000 students. Eight organiza- tions purchased pages. The athletu department. Forestry Club and Stu- dent Government showed no interc-st. So our first change was major. We went to a magazine, and in- cluded a questionnaire to learn student wishes. Only 60 came back. The magazine idra seemed too costly for the return. And so, a second shift. AikI our final publication A photo essay by the few who remain observing. editor: l an Burden contributors: lacqucs Ik)rdclcau Ttim Scliuliz Frank Lazarcwicz Carl Hansen Jim Clayborn Penguin— Monte lX lack William Neriles 6mm s d6 ware as«cena ©- ' send vb [MB cucenden. fr. L atoend r4, fr. ad- -I- sam- dere to climb — more at scan] vi 1 a : to roov« gradually upward b : to slope upward 2 a : to rise from a lower level or degree b : to go back in time or in order of genealogical succesalon vt 1 : to go or move up : mount 2 : to succeed to : occupy — as- cend«at)le or as«cend lble 9- ' sen-d3-b3l adj syn ASCEND, MOUNT, CLIMB, SCALE mcan to move upward or to- ward the top. ASCEND implies little more than progressive upward movement; mount implies reaching the top or attaining impressive or dangerous heights; climb suggests effort and the use of hands and feet; scale suggests an essentially vertical ascending requiring the use of ladder or rope aS ' Cen.dance or as cen.dence 3- ' sen-d3nCt)s n : ascendancy as.cen.dan.cy or as.cen.den.cy 3- ' sen-d3n-se n : governing or controlling influence : domination syn see supremacy ias.cen.dant also as.cen.dent 3- ' sen-d3nt  [ME ascendent, fr. ML ascendent; ascendens, fr. L, prp. of ascendere] 1 : the point of the ecliptic or degree of the zodiac that rises above the eastern horizon at any moment 2 : a state or position of dominant power 3 : a lineal or collateral relative in the ascending line aascendant also ascendent adj la: moving upward : rjsino b : directed upward an stem) 2 a : superior b : dominant as.cend.er 3- ' sen-d3r. ' a- n : the part of a lowercase letter that exceeds x height; also : a letter that has such a part as.cend.ing adj 1 : mounting or sloping upward 2 : rising upward usu. from a more or less prostrate base or point of attachment as.cen.Slon 3- sen-ch3n n [ME, fr. L ascension-, ascensio, fr. ascensus, pp. of ascendere} : the act or process of ascending as.cen.sion.al Xs- ' sench-nal, -3n- l adj : of or relaUng to ascen- sion or ascent Ascension Day n : the Thursday 40 days after Easter on which is commemorated Christ ' s ascension into Heaven in 11 12 13 14 f crowd Tcraud vb [ME crouden, fr. OE crUdan; akin to MHO kroten to crowd, OE crod multitude, Mir gruth curds] vi 1 a : to press on : hurry b : to press close 2 : to collect in numbers vt 1 a : to fill by pressing or thronging together b : to press, force, or thrust into a small space 2 : push, force 3 a : to urge on b : to put on (sail) in excess of the usual for greater speed 4 : to put pressure on 6 : throng, jostle 6 : to press close to crowd n 1 : a large number of persons esp. when collected Into a somewhat compact body without order : throno 2 : the great body of the people : populace 3 : a large number of things close together 4 : a group of people having a common interest syn THRONO. CRUSH, MOB, ROUT, HORDE: CROWD implies SL masslng together and often suggests a loss of individuality of the unit or member; throng carries a stronger implication of movement and pushmg; crush stresses compact concentration that causes dis- comfort; MOB may be a casual intensive for crowd but specifically implies a disorderly crowd bent on destruction or violence; rout and HORDE apply to a rushing or tumultuous crowd icy.cle ' s:-k3l, 6 also ' sik-olX n, djten ' ttrib {F dr hU F, ft. LL cyclus, fr. Gk kyklos circle, wheel, cycle — more- at wheel J 1 t an interval of time during which a sequence of a recurririg sucJce ion of events or phenomena is completed 2 a : a course or series of events or operations that recur regularly and usu. lead back to the starting point b : one complete performance of a vibration, elec- tric oscillation, current alternation, or other periodic process 3 : a circular or spiral arrangement: as a : an imaginary circle or orbit in the heavens I) : whorl c : ring 10 4 : a long period of time : AGE 6 a : a group of poems, plays, novels, or songs treat- ing the same theme b : a series of narratives dealing typically with the exploits of a legendary hero 6 a : bicycle b : tricycle G : motorcycle — cy«clic ' sT-ktik, ' sik-llk or cy cll cal sT- kli-ksl, ' sik-li- adj — cy.cli.cal.ly -k(3-)le adv acy.Cle ' sT-k9l, VW r ' also ' sik-dl v6 cy Cllng ' sT-k(o-)lio. ' sik(-3)- v 1 a : to pass through a cycle b : to recur in cycles 2 : to ride a cycle; specij : bicycle vt iXo cause to go through a cycle — cy«cler ' sT-k(3-)l3r, •sik(-o)- n cy Clist ' sT-k(3-)l3st, •sik(-3V n : one who rides a cycle tu 18 21 icy-cloid sT-,kldld n [F cyclotde, fr. Ok ' kykloeides circular, £r. 23 24 dra-ma-tize ' dram- |tTz, Mram- vt 1 : to adapt for theatrical Sresentation 2 z to present or represent In a dramatic manner vt : to be suitable for dramatization 2 I to dramatize oneself m 2S Em umw YpwvF if X vf 1 ; to move under the Influence of gravitation ft t to move toward something b : to become attracted vt : to move by gravltatloB grav4. taction  grav-r rta. hdn n l%i a force manifested by ac- celeration toward each other of two free material particles or bodies or of radiant -energy quanta h : the action or process of gravitating l on to something — giftT-l ta tlon al -shnal, -shan- t adj — giaT.l ta Uon iil4? -« a fv — giaT l ta-tir« V grav-9-.tat-lv adf tii . ' : 7 1 ijtvt ' ]Tv n [origin unknown] I : swing music or the dancing performed to It 2 a slang ; glib, deceptive or foolish taOc h : the jargon of hipsters c ; a speciat Jargon of difficult or skuig term ijive vt I slang : KID a : to dance to or play jlvo — n 1 sUing : TEASE 2 i SWTHO S til 35 36 37 ftelf-con-trol ,self-k n- ' tr5t n I restraint exercised over one A own Impulses, emotions, or desires — soil-con  trolled - ' tr61d 38 sell-crit.i cism - ' krit-3-,siz-3m n : the act or capacity of criti- cizing one ' s own faults or shortcomings ILl 42 45 44 sen-re.al.iza.tion ,scl-,fre-(d-)l9- ' z5-shan n : fulfUlmcnt by oneself of the possibilities of one ' s character or personality til 46 itn der«aclliOT«er ,3n-d ra- chc-v9r jt ; a student who falls to achieve Ms scholastic potential %t wait-a-t}it wat-r -,bit n [trans, of Afrik wag ' ft-hietjicj : any of several p3;int!i hearing thorns or sttff hooked appcntlaj es 51 56 the land th.u in i;. a in. a, tint is the true iionic. — Yu Ch ' ing 62 63 65 69 70 71 74 75 76 S3 84 is Advertising Supplement to MONTANA K AIMIN IVidiiv, May 26 ALLTWCB£CRVOUC( NPI?INK Live MUSIC BIG SKV C0OM112V BAMts TEHT BSi GRE N Al liU IO ' AMD ' M J ( f STACTTHE SUMMER OF IGUT ALL PBXEEP6 GOTO LIBRARY FUND PDNATION OF AS VOU ENTER IP WIUL BE. CUtCKCb JUNE F@ DEER CREEKCBONNER fiats) STARTS AT 2:OOPM. — lAStSTILLTHE NIGHT ENI35 89 91 motitana white site Climb the mountains and get their good tidings; Nature ' s peace will flow into you as sunshine into flowers; the winds will blow their freshness into you and the storms their energ)-, and cares will drop off like autumn leaves. — John Muir 100 lOI TOP (Itftiorighl) Goldhfttin DiroJ Hokason Norma Waltkn Sarah Emerson Loui GifLnning Patricia KcUy Julie Wilson Jo Smith Jant Anck-rson Sally Jitnsjicn Linda Golirick Lvnn Hiiupfman SECOND ROW { kf r to right) Irene Grxik Gndjf BaFd ' ell Marcj ' Do)Mc Peggy WLliion Grace Schoeneii ( HtJiBSviTOsrhcr) Nancy Long Gretchen AcidcriJun WiJindu Morast TIIJKDROW Uth [o right) ColleerL Kdly Laris Martin Norma Woody WocxItxntKocnil Ca fid J ' Miller TOP ROW (left to right) Jane Lindscrand Sharon Collins Fayc Hansen Rica Garrison Janet Perkins Jeanne Yunck Ann Butorac Rene Grassell THIRD ROW (left to right) Michele Learj- IX-anna McDonald Mary Jo Walla Peggy Clapp Pam Fritz Mary Glynn George Dorothy Orr Barb Locpp Jan Daly Margaret Edsall SECOND ROW ( left to right ) Bobbie Williams Elaine Madsen Lynne B(x th Kay Kovath Mary Remole Jane Fellows Karen Schipf Kathv Kelley BOTTOM ROW ( left to right ) Joanne Dillon Judy Gilbert Mima Lundsten Cathy Pike Margaret Shannon Judy Altwein DELTA GAMMA 113 SAE 114 TOP (Idi uj riglii:) Hans Hok Bill Mi Bier jQiiy McCarthj ' Keith Hanson Paul Singer Rugga Mather BorroM Sieve Schmir Tom Forsj rh Sceve Bennyhoff Dave Durchttt Dan Doj ' Je MikeDillofl Rick March Phil Mehclish Steve Hopkins Dan Bitnc) ' SIGnHANU 116 TOP ROW (Icfttorighi) Larfif ' Shuster Jer f Shuscer Daisy Dan KnOttiftghain John Matsko Jim Carlson Eril Hanson Pat Mahir Bill EUingson John Ly c SEOOiVD ROW ( left CO righi) Jerry Ham jack Swarchomr Churh Hariig Mark Clark Andrew McFarLand Gres Onarak I af rel Percerson Tob Hendcrictcson David Whtat Chris Maurcr THIRD ROW (left to right) Robert RichHon Ronald Koan Kit Haddow Leonard Syfctrfr Currly Qilp Jim Smesrud Joe College BACK ROW (Icfctorighi) Shcrri Corning Susan Thraiilkill Suzjf Wierzbinski Katie Grove Margaret Warden CarJa Wilyif d Nancy Jordan Barb Ptnner Julie Taylor Liid Britktr Liz Poorc Ann Spicola Donna WhiEEin oon Joy TayJor Ames Chandler Kathy Sboup Marsha SrtiEth MIDDLE ROW ( ]cf c co right ) Sandy Utrich Jan Hill Carhy Berg N nty Rogers Fam Gullard Wcncfy Fraser Mary Sale Jo Ann Madden Jan Johns ; n Polly Lyman Saraii Simmons BeEsySthmoll Pattl Babb FRONT ROW (left to righr) Lcs Huleci Shcryl Huntley Lisa Curran Marda DeJ no Mar aa Buthcr Debbie Nelson Palmii Sandell Barb Gullard Lindsay Walierskiffhen Karen King 120 FRONT ROW ( left to right) Debbie Clark Dee Phillips Jan MacPhctson Mary Pai Jeub Molly Harrison Karin Olscn Sue McKcnzic Debbie Adams Nanty Perkins Karen Storie Ellen Miller Chris Switzer MIDDLE ROW ( left to right ) Cathy Haser Donna Gorton Mrs. Allan (Housemother) Rene Wedin Ann Petterson Sue Jolley Jeri Polston Jo Ann Mc Donald Jo Mariana Sandy Miller Denise Turcott Sandi Hainer Jackie Rahn Kristi Bengston Paula Penfold BACK ROW (left to right) Cheryl Brox Kerin 0 ' erfeli Marilyn McDonald Marsha Stokke Jeanic Beary r cbbie Hawcs Debi Beall Mariam McCall Jane Qinner Theresa Verlanic Jane Bush Ginnie Murphey Jane Bowman Chris Mahoney rWl Barbara Wempner J[ A JL Carol Stoick Kim Randak Monica Bcrgston ElT Karen Anderson Betsy Husbands Kathy Carman Gael Mullen 121 Seniors THOMAS ANDERSON SUSAN BALLOU PAM CX}DD MARVEL ANGEL BEVERLY BARNES MARY ANN CLARKE ETHEL AUSTIN SASAA BRIOALOW LINDA CXXJLEY ALLEN BALL MIKE CARLSON DICK EUlORE W. GEORGE FULTC ROY ITO NANCY KEY WAYNE D. FUTS HO Jt ARD JOHNSON KATHRYN KEARNS CORBIN HOWARD EDWARD KARGA( IN PAT KIN(. KIRK HUBBARD ROBERT KAUFMAN LUKE KONANTZ Juniors } iA t Mltrt Ivaq Bwjsr Dtrbbk B«l! Pirn Bcoik-ee Ll ficrucn KwbefT BliiKhcf Cvnthia jf nf kk JatKt Cic] Sue Bubodtth Shirtry Bfook Randy Boehnkf Uvori S« bbH;(E Juik? CotJiuIni Rklurd FrylKTvee Abnru G(K:3iinpur JLmrji ' ] Vx Lynn Evrteit Jim Dixilcttk Mif acn Hik- ' RJcli ilatchrr Ool H4il( nM n Mkhid Holm Tiici Holm Scart If rjle-y 129 Sutau lutuli Wesley Jonn Gordon Lcr Atan Lightncr Drbbtc Loslcbcn Grcfcory Lucolch KAthlcrn Maaifon Rkk March Rick Matkin Jiihn McE«xn Lcr Ann McKeniu Duryl MtVickrr Tnl Morris C tol MuUany Rick 0%cthru juhn Paitoo Kriui Paulion Gail Pmano JouRrbkh Kmny Robbtnt Grrald Rubb Keith Rush Jan Srhmid CaraJ Schmxnd Margaret Shannon Dran Solhcim Gary Staudingrr Sandi Stc-oibt r Mary ju Stcplicni jack Sri Mk, Robctt Stutboil Mike Stcvcnu- Tim Taync Robert Thaatk B. Thurnton Mvlvin Tkns alii Russ Tocn Tt S(cphcn Turkiwi Henry Twmcn tofinic Undcm Gail Vaujctuo Everett Vtxain Mar« rct Wu6cn Wctlcy Winkler Gloria Wchir 131 omores Ken Locke EUioc M«di ' n Dona Jo Mainland Wonda Mufui D vc Muric Ruth MuUra Donna Noble Stephen Owi-n VCilliam Paike Nkole PetctMin Doug Rk H7 Mark Ryan Robert Suuffcr Mar|:arct Ann Tubke Tom Valaih tharlw Wallace JuJy Wang Mike Watson Elaine Whalcy Marun Wii d Pc«y Wilioo Beijie Wong Thel Wong Jfcbce AaVrsr Cute A- AIjuIi lll bt T A, AnJnriion Siiu Aiktcrson Di fifu AutiLfi )vMnic Hcacy Chi ' if timna IXivpIs Bftht«ld Gcrfbo Benka Hatty EteataQ Ch u Bwawo Otol V. Dra n Nimry Bul nHb k bwc fowne Paul Buck III Btny Bukliiul Cbcr l Btirtf lagric CarM 1 b !L Syp Carlson AdriM Clufktd pHfkij D. tJirfe PitrtCii Cofiftjd A!kc Cimrvrv Lci. CriwftnJ €107410 Q DUviitbon Joiha H. Ouckwof ch Rklurd IXiiudn Erie File Siirvr EdwarJi Virginia Atdi ltucn ArrEM ufK-r Msck Rrj usrHi jnha Fidkr OMrolcttc FpiliJ Bcutr FuIImtswi Scit trjilinkn liilifcn GilbjthKr JrJnncGilli Rica Cs ((iKm Thacnu Gillclpic 134 Stllr Gfafor ' Louise Granninj; Pam Grcttncort Stroud Gtiinn Mi(.h cl HaltomTll Din« Hardinpr Suun Harris E Ann (larrell Mircia Hcntcl Sur Hrnunrf) Nancy Hcrshry Bruce Hill Michael Holder Lynda Holland Jamct Howertun Gary In ro n David A. Iriun David R. Iriun John Ka tzs Lcn Kenny C.harlo Krtting jcff Kule Pat Kubeth Ruk Lander Jeii Lan on Mary Ann Lanier Jody Lamb Monica Lewii Don Lovetr Maria Lupo Dtnnit MiCall Ma (|tie McDunald Jack McRac Janet McCurdy (.hrit Mahonry Gail Midtlyng Ciait Miller Mary Jarvr Moorr Stephen Morris Cindy Norman CJuEloitCr O ' Hiri S ia l. OStil ti vi J fJnlw; lit I ' jiiil tWjil M.k . .h VirginLj Kiisnuiw n D«vkl Scuf hxk Dta Shufom Ann Sbikk Suiikac Se tkh Thopui Sftiftli Na niar; Spunsptlo IjnJa 5 a.[Kblidd Six SunchhM VieiUf Sjdftbeeg Piul SdckDcy Oniiv SwwScir Juhn TlMjinpwn Jlinc Ticonc Chf ii Van ik-te-r Sara Watiin Jcfkn WJKiti.rLifi RobcnWick Cif«r Rk WtlLiis Sherry Williu PliilipWe Akn VouOjj: T mi, ' 2zmiuUi 136 }iooa(iiioir
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