arbiter, october 3 - corebuisnessman, rancher, legislat-or, lt. governor, and the experience of...

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Boise State University ScholarWorks Student Newspapers (UP 4.15) University Documents 10-3-1977 Arbiter, October 3 Associated Students of Boise State University Although this file was scanned from the highest-quality microfilm held by Boise State University, it reveals the limitations of the source microfilm. It is possible to perform a text search of much of this material; however, there are sections where the source microfilm was too faint or unreadable to allow for text scanning. For assistance with this collection of student newspapers, please contact Special Collections and Archives at [email protected].

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Page 1: Arbiter, October 3 - COREbuisnessman, rancher, legislat-or, Lt. Governor, and the experience of serving almost 2 years as governor. He also said that students should look at what the

Boise State UniversityScholarWorks

Student Newspapers (UP 4.15) University Documents

10-3-1977

Arbiter, October 3Associated Students of Boise State University

Although this file was scanned from the highest-quality microfilm held by Boise State University, itreveals the limitations of the source microfilm. It is possible to perform a text search of much of thismaterial; however, there are sections where the source microfilm was too faint or unreadable to allowfor text scanning. For assistance with this collection of student newspapers, please contact SpecialCollections and Archives at [email protected].

Page 2: Arbiter, October 3 - COREbuisnessman, rancher, legislat-or, Lt. Governor, and the experience of serving almost 2 years as governor. He also said that students should look at what the

Evans opposes tuition: supports alcohol policyby Rick MllttOOD.

Go~ernor John Evans said ina. recent interview. that he'believes students should 'nothave "to ·pa.y tuition. to entercollege. He said that this woulddisallow some students from

. entering school, and noted thatIdaho citizens have paid for thisin the past and would be willingto do it more.

Evans added that fee increas-es is another matter. He sees

. fees gradually going up, as theneed arises.

Evans supported the StateBoard of Education and itsemergency procedures concern-ingalcohol oricampus.He saidthat students' should be allowedto hold liquor in the privacy oftheir dormitory rooms, but feelsthat allowing alcohol on otherparts of the campus, includingth'e . strident union:'woulddowngrade theeducational pro-grams, and give-Idaho people-the wrong image of their'colleges.

Evans also supports the StateBoard of Education's exemptionfrom the Administrative Pro-cedures Act (ApA) , to somedegree. He recently met withmembers of the. Board anddiscussed issues which theBoard wants to be exempt from .the APA. He noted thescheduling of classes as one ofthese.; On the question of a student

appointment to the State Boardof Education Evans saw this 'asunnecessary. He noted that ascitizens, students have the"free opportunity to participate

t···.··

···.. ~' .

;j

'o.ndby DIane DIUT

On Tuesday, September 27,the ASB' Senate approved theallocation of $10,549 to threestudent departments and .gave .the go-ahead to a variety 'ofstudent appointments from Bu-siness Manager to members of

, the, Juliici!1ry., .

In' the distribution of ASBmonies, .Student Servict<s' re~celved $9,750 toward the pur-chase of computer time for thedepartment and the payment of,a student operator. Don Clark ofthe'Les Bois, was reimbursedfor the expenses .he irieurredwhile attending a works~op' forTaylor Publishing Company inSpokane, Washington' during-the summer. Clark w,as unable,:to .secure the money tht:Oughregular summer Senate chan-riels becaiIse .of the. Senate'sinability to do;businesswithouf'a quorum: The, Programs, Board

. (supb) \Vas allocated $580 to payfor full page advertising in the

'ARBITER for the montll ofOctober. Presently, the ARBIT-ER has establised. sPlilcific

and' present testimony beforethat State Board.t'Peoplc mustbe 21 to tun for the Board' ofEducation.

Evans said that studentsshould look at the background ofthe person who runs fergovernor. He noted that he hasan excellent background asabuisnessman, rancher, legislat-or, Lt. Governor, and theexperience of serving almost 2years as governor. He also saidthat students should look atwhat the candidate believes asfar as issues are concerned.' Henoted the three' areas ,of

_ ,e!lvironmental control, energy,and education as issues he willdeal with. .

Evans believes in conserving"the beautiful environment the'State has." He- gave the lowerSnake River area as lin examplewhere ..he would ·like Statemanagement and Control of thatarea to keep it wild and scenic.He said a dam in that sectionwould create environmentalharm. He also added that thecreation of the Central IdahoWilderness would involve over 2million acres for protection.

Evans said that the Stateshould delay the construction ofa coal-fire plant and. secureenergy from other areas. Hegave hydroelectric energy aridgeothermal energy as two primeareas where energy can bemade available from. He notedLucky Peak as one area close toBoise where a generator can bebuilt for 'hydroelectric energy.

.Another area is' the Shoestringsite near Buhl where a dam

t'.".·,

"o,

could be constructed for multi-purpose use.

Evans noted that the Bonne-ville Power Administration willsoon be· selling energy topreferred customers. Govern-ment or private institutions canbe· regarded as preferredcustomers, and Evans wouldlike to see Idaho's governmental

departments .enter this pro-gram. He said it would reducethe energy cost on Idaho'scitizens.

Evans said he would like tosee an increase in public-schoolsupport at the state level, thusreducing support lit the . localand property tax level. Headded ·that he would like to

strengthen the Department ofEmployment so that whenstudents graduate, they can goto the Department and they andprospective employers can use itas a "clearing house."

Next week: Evans's mainoppOlients for governor will befeatured. .~

KBSU gets on-air shockby. Dud HUmphrey

KBSU radio and its listenersgot a mild shock on September22 when announcer RemonaMoore gave notice over the airon her early afternoon show thatshe was. quitting.

Moore, who' had been withthe Boise State Universitystation since it started broad-casting, said there was adversereaction to her program and shebelieved a few of the announ-cers "were getting together't-toforce her out of her positiori.

Program director Robb Cam-pbell said, "The only people

.that conspired against Monawere her audience.

"We have all these differentinterests to take care of," addedCampbell. "Daytime program-ming in radio is general. Wedon't get into specializedprogramming in the middle ofthe afternoon:" He said Moor-e's programming had its ownaudience, but· some listeners"had called to complain becausethey couldn't relate to anythingshe was playing."

Moore herself, who described

Senate meetings are held. each1'ue!;dayin' the ; Senate

chambers on the second floor of'the· Sua. Student. participation

'and· attendance is' appreciated.

advertising inch rates forstudent departments and orga-n'izations. The. direct fiscalimpact on ASH departments isbeing discussed in an effort todetermine-the advantages anddisadvantages of the situation.

President Mike Hoffman pre"sented a 'list of names referredto him by the PersonnelSelection Committee for someopenings in,tlte. ,ASB..The.Senate unaminousIy' approvedthe .selection of Mike Fischer,Arts and Sciences Senator;Chris Hansen, .Business Mana;ger;JohnRiche . and JamesMessinger, Financial AdvisoryBoard (FAB); Karen Brownser,Student Union Board of Gover-

. ~ors; . Deborah Silver;Haye!J,Election Board; Barry Takenchi'and Brenda Bull, Business-Ten-ure . committee; . and JohnFlewelling, J.d. Findley, JerryOstermiller, Korey Olson, andGayla Wilson, ASB Judiciary.Broa4cast . Board appointmentswe(e held .'until the remaining

. two positions on thebonrdoouldbe filled following' PersonnelSelection intemews. .

The Senaie' Student: Affairsco'rrirllitteereleaSed its report on .athletic fees and their r~Iation-

, ',', .... ' ,"'. _" .. ,' .. ~ .. : .. .'0 •

her musical tastes as' "anythingbut hard rock," said thepurpose of her .show wasexposure of music-that was not-familiar in Boise-. -blues,. cou-ntry, ethnic and feminist music."There's a minority of people,but they are there, that knowthis music. (I played) music forthe minority, and music for themajority who had never heardit," she noted.

When she was informed thather programming. was unsatis-

, factory for the time it was beingpresented, she was offered"special programs in theevenings, but there reallywasn't any evening I couldwork." .

Dave Schwartz, general man-ager of KBSU,.stated that the"progressive" aspect of the,station was aimed at "utilizingevery aspect of music we haveavailable ... switching from rockto jazz to country rock to soul,and keep it revolving, And do itin such a manner that theaudience . doesn't get bored .That's progressive; that's artis-try. "

"I told Mona." relatedCampbell, '~I would like you toplay something for everybodyevery once in a while, instead oftwenty minutes of 'all women,feminist .... music.' "

Moore said there were alsopressures within the stationamong the other announcersthat forced her nut. "I felnheresponsibility (for progr.ammingof her show) was one person's.and I heard things from otherpeople that I didn't feel it wastheir place to say. I felt likethere were people' gettingtogether to do this."

Several annoucers at KBSUallowed that there was content-ion within the station; "I knewthere were conflicts, but I didn'tknow people were being . that.paranoid about it," said oneannouncer who asked not to be .identified. "I never experiencethat kind' of underhandedness."

"There arecontlicts betweenthe DJ's and the staff-'-therealways will be," .declaredCampbell. "There's alwaysresentment' over the fact that

[~nt. on page 11)

ARBITER I October 3, 1977

. Graduate school reps'visit BSU q.~ringOctoberCareer & Financial Services

has arranged for Jour graduateschools to send representatives

'. to BSU during the month ofOctober. On Monday, October10tlt, Tim Nissen, Director ofAdmissions' for the George H.Atkinson Graduate School ofAdministration, Willamette Un-iversity, Salem, Oregon, will beon, campus to discuss theirunique graduate .masters pro-gram in. administration. OnMonday,October 17th, ArthurH. Herbert, Recruitment Officerfor the California Coiiege ofPodiatric: MediCine' in' Sal1'Francisco, will, be avaihible tospeak to student~ and faculty .interested •.in a . discussion ofPodiatric' Medicine and. thecollege.

Senate OpSB.appointments

ship as a source of support forthe' athletic program. Approxi-mately 27 per cent'of theAthletic budget for 1977-78 iscomposed of student fees.Subsequently, 27 percent of thetickets to football games andover .one-halfthe tickets. tobasketball games are madeavailable to students. on- thatbasis. The committee recom-mended two courses of action to

; the Senate: (1) Print the 'mostimportant facts o.btaincd by thiscommittee and distribute t~emto BSU students. (2) That areferendum election be held,following the dissemination. ofthe facts on athletic funds, to'determine the students' opinion'as to whether student feesSh6Uld be raised. No specific~ction was taken on the reportduring that meeting. . .

In other action, aresolutionrecommending thatfamilY's~imhours in theBSU pool bechanged to Sunday, VVednes-day, and Friday.

Insiae ..

Students and faculty interest-ed in, obtaining informationabout. one or more of theseprograms should Contact Careerand Financial Services, room117, Administration .Building toschedule an appointment ..

On Tuesday, October 18th,James Stull will be on campusduring the afternoon to discussthe Graduate School of Manag-ement at Northwestern . Univer-sity lit, Evanston, Illinois: OnTuesday. October 25th, . arepresentative of ,the AJ!lerican

'.Graduate School of Intemationnl.. Management, Thunderburg

ampus, Glendale, .Arizona, .willbe .on campus tp discuss' the,irprogram leading ..' to Interna-tionaiCai:eers.

Campusnews >....•. , ...•..• page2·Opin.ion.,:, .•.•. ~•..•.•• .-....•.• ~.:page4·. Roving Rep()rter <••• ~.;.page6Entertalnm~nt .•.• '.~"",:,." .•..-...... ';.~ge 9 .Sports ..•.••. , '•. ~.....• page 12Classifieds .. ; ..•........•....••.• page 15 '

.~: .' .-. '. . "," .' - :'; -. _. -. , '.

'.

Page 3: Arbiter, October 3 - COREbuisnessman, rancher, legislat-or, Lt. Governor, and the experience of serving almost 2 years as governor. He also said that students should look at what the

i .

..Page 2/ ARBITER. / October 3,19n

Bowling·scholarshipavailable

Career and Financial Serviceshas announced that the follow-ing scholarships are available:--The Boise Women's Bowling

Association is offering a $200scholarship. Students must de-monstrate their financial needand have a minimum 2.0 GPA.Preference will be given tobowlers. The scholarship appli-cation and AcrCommon Formmust be flied by October 5, 1977and the FinancialReport mustbe received by Career andFinancial Senrices by NovemberI, 1977.--An unspecified amount is

being offered by the CaldwellMemorial Hospital Auxiliary.'Candidates for this scholarshipmust be enrolled in ahealth carecurriculum, be a resident of theCaldwell Memorial Hospitalservice area, maintain a "C" orbetter average, demonstratefinancial need and be in byJanuary IS, 1978 and include: atranscript of grades, threeletters of recommendation, anda lett~r explaining the need for ascholarship and· stating . theamount needed for the currenttraining session. Please sendinquiries and applications to:Mrs. 1. Haensle, CaldwellMemorial Hospital Auxiliary.

campus news. .

IWUA offers scholorshlps--The Idaho Water Users

Association is offering two $500scholarships (sponsored by theJustad Insurance Center). Thestudents applying for this mustbe enrolled at an Idaho collegeor university an be involved inthe study of water. resourceutilization or conservation. Theapplication' deadline is October12,1977: They may be obtainedat Career and Financial Servicesbut they must be submitted tothe Idaho Water User's Associ-ation Office, 4706 FairviewAve., Boise,:·83704.--The Order of the Eastern

Star is offering two $500scholarships to any sophmore orjunior attending an Idaho 4-yearinstitution and studying in thefield of Arts or Science. Thestudents may be members of theOrder of the Eastern Star or besons or daughters of MasonicEastern Star parentage whohold Idaho membership. Applyto: Ms. Blanche Senft, 503

- North Third Ave., Sandpoint,Idaho 83864.--Six $300 scholarships are

available through the J. R.Simplot Company. The scholar-ship recipients must be a son ordaughter of a J:. R. Simplot Co.employee, have a minimum 2.50

GPA, file the ACT CommonForm and the Simplot Scholar-ship application by NoyemberI,1977. Preference will be given toBusiness. Administration, En-gineering, Chemistry and Vo-Tech majors.--A scholarship will be given in

the amount of $185 by the VinceAguirre Memorial Ski Scholar-ship fund. Selection is made bya committee of the Bogus BasinRecreational Association and isbased on· a combination ofacademic achievement (2.5 GPAminimum) and involvement inskiing .. The recipient must bepresently active in some form ofskiing or working towards a

-career in the. ski industry.November 'I, 1977 is theapplication deadline.--The National Hispanic Schol-

arship Fund (NHSF) is offeringone $100 and one. $600scholarship for graduate andundergraduate students of His-panic background who havecompleted at least one semesterof college work. Selection isbased on academic achieve-ment, personal strengths, abil-ity to complete a college degreeand financial aid. Three applic-ations arc available at-Careerand Financial Services and they

Nellie Shy always had t~ serve the boss' coffee and laugh pt his bod jokes,

13.utnow ... no matter what yourcolleqernojor, there's a place foryou in rodov's Ncvy ». os anofficer. And you'll share. equalopportunity with men in.pay,duty assignments and bene-,fits. (The only place we con'rsend you is on board a ship..,. butwe're worktnq.or: that)

Put your education to work, livein your own apartment andspend .30 days a year seelnqrhe

. world cit bur expense.

.will be given out on a firstcome-first serve basis. Studentsshould apply directly.to NHSF.--A.A;U.W. American Fellow-

ship.s is offeri,!lg -an unspecified ,amount for U.S. women at thedissertation level or post-doc-toral level or -the final year ofstudy in' selected professions,A.A,U.W. International Fellow-

ships are also available in anunspecified amount for womenof other countries (not U.S.citizens) who are· pursuing 'agraduate degree. Applicationdeadline for both of thesefellowships is December 1,1977. For additional informationwrite to: Beverly Harden,PhD., Director of EducationalFoundational Programs ofA.A.U.W., 2401 Virginia Ave-nue, N.W., Washington, n.e.20037.

For further information con-tact Career and. FinancialServices which is located in theAdministration !3ldg. room 117.

'Shenandoahtickets

on saleGeneral ticket sales for BSU~s

"Shenandoah-Something Spec-<ialfor MSn" performance andthe cordon pleu Shenandoahsupper will go on sale October 3to October 7 on campus at theSUB Inf~rmatiori Booth. Thecost of the ticket which includesboth the production and thesupper is ,$7.50.

;.THE

FOREIGN SERVICEOF THE

UNITED STATESOF AMERICA AND THE

- U.S. INFORMATION AGENCYANNOUNCE

A written examination 'for. potentialForeign Service. Off.icers and U.S.lntormation/Cultural Officers-will beheld on December 3, 1977 at 150cities throughoutthe U.S.·and abroad.AppliCants must be. U.S. citizens,and 20 years of age. Applicationdeadline is October 21. For furtherinformation and.appltcations write to:

BOARDOF EXAMINERS. ROOM 7000 -

SA·ISDEPARTMENT OF STAfE

WASHINGTON, D.C. 20520

THE DEPARTM~NT OF STATE IS ANEQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPL9YER

*.~ .•.~~

Who's whonomineesopen

Boise State University hasagain been requested to submit -nominees for inclusion in the

. annual publication of. Who'sWho 4mong Students InAmer·lean UnIversltleli and CoUeges.This annual selection is open tojuniors and senior on collegecampuses across the country.In order to submit Boise Statestudents for consideration, nom-inations are requested from allinterested individuals, studentorganizations, departments andschools. When considering pos-sible nominees, the nominatingindividual should consider thefollowing: the- student has junioror seniordass standing; thestudents scholarship; his/herparticipation and leadership inacademic and university relatedextracurricular activities; his/her citizenship and service tothe school; and his/her promiseof future. usefulness. All nomin-ations should be submitted nolater than October 7, 1977.

For further information con-tact the Office of the Vice-Pres-ident for Student Affairs in theAdministration Building, room110. .

ISAdelegates

chosen.Twenty-seven BSU. delegates

were selected Thursday. to.attend the Idaho 'Student As-sociation(lSA) Convention inMoscow, Idalto October 7,8 and9. However, Chris' Rudd,ASBSU vice-president, .saidmore alternates are needed forthe trip. Alternates can go to theconvention and actively partie-

. ipate ill all the.discussions, butcannot vote. when roll is called.

This is the second year for theISA convention. Rudd said thatlast year's was on of the first ofits kind in the nation, wherestudents from all the state'scolleges and universities metand built a common platform.

This year, again, a platformwill be drawn up, which the ISAwill' use in its lobbying efforts.·during the Idaho legislature'

.rneetings.Last year the-IS'" successfully

lobbied. for a Landlord-Tenantbill and a-gains! a tuitionproposal. This year, Rudd said itis'expected that the ISAwiIIagain lobby against a tuitionproposal, .

Ten cornmitteesvareiformedfor the convention. They includeHealth and Welfare, HumanRights, . Higher Education,Primary and Secondary. Educ-ation, Energy and Environment,Labor, Tax Reform, State andLocal Government, . FederalFederaLGovernment, .and ,Res-.olutions. From· these Commit-tees will come proposals vit~l toBSU and Idahostudents at:largepassed. .. . . .

Page 4: Arbiter, October 3 - COREbuisnessman, rancher, legislat-or, Lt. Governor, and the experience of serving almost 2 years as governor. He also said that students should look at what the

October 3, 1977 I ARBITERlPage 3

Sorority plans activities

Beard contest setDelta Delta Delta, one of the

four leading, sororities on theBSU 'campus, ,is 'once again'holding its annual King BeardContestfor Homecoming activit-ies. The great shave-oft' willtakeplace on October 5 from 8:30 to2:20 in the lobby of the StudentUnion Building.

Judging will take place duringHomecoming Week, giving theparticipants four weeks tocultivate the curliest, longestand most original beards.

TIle members of the sorority,equipped with shaving cream,razors and. after-shave, willpersonally shave all willing and

brave participants with guaran-:tees of no fatalities. Prizes willbe gift cert ificates from selectBoise merchants, including adinner for two for King Beardand free beer for each partie-ipant. ' '

, King Beard is only one of themany activities that Delta DeltaDelta engages in. They 'host theannual. bar hop,' during' GreekWeek, hostessing various func-tions, raising, money for theirscholarship and philanthropyand tumorous cancer in chit,dren, and supporting thecampus activities.

ASBSU offices

to be filled

Interviews for the followingASBSU, positions will be heldshortly: Health Science Senator;Broadcast. Board-one position;Building and Structures-chair-person and two' students-at-large; International 'Students;Promotion; Tenure; FinancialAids-two-students: AthleticBoard of Control-one student;Acad'cmic Standards-two stud-ents} StudentHealth Advisory- "two students; Recreation Board-0I1e student; Student UnionBoard of Governors-one positionand Public Relations-State Co-ordinator.

Trial enactment slated'

Rodeodanc~' scheduledBoise State University Rodeo

Club president Dan Kiser'announced that club will hold itsfirst public fund-raising danceof 1977·78 in Murphy, Idaho,Saturday, October 8.

Dance time is 9,pmthrough 1am, with music by the "CountryBoys," a popular, Treasure r----------..;",,JValley country-western' group;Proceeds from, this dancc andothers scheduled in, the areaduring, the year will 'build thefund through the 'BSU ,Clubfinances .the annual Buster

.Bronco Days spring rodeo at theWestcrn Idaho Fairgrounds.

BSU Rodeo Club, membersopened tiICirl977. 78 corn-petitionschcdulc ' with otherRocky Mountain rodeo clubs atthe.vannual BYU Rodeo" atBrigham Young University Sep-tember 23 and 24.

John.Scopes only meant it asa joke, but it gave rise to themost spectacular trial of theearly twentieth century (per-haps superscdedonly by Water-gate)., This trial has beendramatized in Lawrence andLee's inherit the Wind, which isbeing presented by the TheatreDepartment as the first produc-tion of a five-show season.Beginning October 12, inheritthe Wind will run throughOctober 15 in the Special EventsCenter., The trial was the famousScopes 'case which drew world-wide attention to a carnival oforatory in 1925,in the little townof Dayton, Tennessee. TIle,beginnings' of thisllffaif that'spilled over the, newspaper~ of

the world for many weeks werein a decision by a high schoolbiology teacher named JohnScopes. He dccided to make atest case of a new stateevolution law which forbade theteaching of Darwin's theory ofevofution to see what the resultwould be and to perhaps resultin some publicity for the littletown of Dayton.

As a semi-fictional account ofthe Scopes case, inherit theWind offers an exciting eveningof theatre. The large cast (38members) has already' put inmany hours of .rehearsal andstudy' for their roles, and islooking- forward with' anticip-ation to opening night in one .week, The set, designed by .'Frank Heise arid constructed, by

'For those BSU students whowant to work on 'or' ride in rodeoevents, the club will hold" itsnext membership meeting Mon-day, October 3 at 5:30 pm in theMinidoka room 'of the StudentUnion Building.

students, is completed andstands ready, waiting for thevoices, movements and lights togive it light every night. Toenhance the realistic impact ofthe play, costumes arc set in the1920's. Student assistants Mel-anic Yellcn and Nan Harmshave been in charge of buildingor finding aU,thentic periodclothing. '

Dr. Charles Lauterbach, dir-ector of Inherltthewlnd, saysthe play "is ideal material foruniversity theatre. It deals withideas, but it presents them inastartling and exciting manner. It

- is a challenge to all' concernedand it is hoped. that ouraudiences will.be equal to .thatsame ch1!llengc."

N·A·E·A·

e Brtnqold skis and sell on consignment.• Break aski last season? Find a mate!

o No downhill equipment allowed. The only skiswap devoted ,100% to skinny s~i fanatic~: .'o Come and get a real bargain and plentyofknowledgeable help. '

(Free lessons this season for renters.)

homecoming,On Wednesday O~tober 5

there will be an organizationalmeeting fur the newly formedstudent chapter of the NationalArt Education Association in LA208-A. Faculty and studentsinterested in the teaching of artare invited to attend. Anyquestions may be referred toN.A.E.A.Student chapter spon-sor Betty Copeland of the ArtDepartment.

Applications for HomecomingQueen and Mr. Bronco may bepicked up at the Program Office,(2nd floor of the SUB).

Canidates must be full-timestudents, not on .academicprobation. Applications, and a5" x 7" black and whitephotograph must be turned into

the Program Office no later than4,p.m. Monday, October 10.

~ndAnnual

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Page 5: Arbiter, October 3 - COREbuisnessman, rancher, legislat-or, Lt. Governor, and the experience of serving almost 2 years as governor. He also said that students should look at what the

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Page 4'I·ARBITERI 6ctober3,1977.

Victoriar

t

Garbage glut chokes Americans

r

WoMEN PRIEa1'"~1'.NONflEN8E IIIGOt> MAPE MANIN Hi5 oWN IMAGEANl>LiKENE55.

by Mike Hughes

.Two bodies glide effortlessly thru the crystalclear mountain lake; The sun plays with theripples caused by the fan shaped wake, thepowerstroke of the' swimmers drawing themcloser to shore. They run up the sandy beach,water droplets dancing across their glisteningbodies; a. look of serene enchantment isconveyed as they stare into each other's eyes.Slowly they move closer to each other, ready 10embrace, wanting to hold this moment forever:Suddenly a cry of, "Geezus!" 'pierces theair-the romantic interlude occupies 'a back seat

c to the searing painbrought on by. an unseen poptop slicing the toe. "Reality wins!

Trash, my friends, trash! Curse of our.forefathers; never-ending haven for vermin ofall sizes and shapes! Hordes of litterbugsinfiltrating our schools,. stealing our young,creating a future generation of packagepitchers. The mystery of the century: where toput the ever increasing mound of junk? Typicalof the Seventies that an ages old problemshould become a central issue in this resourcedepleted. decade .. Before you throw this' paperon the ground Iif you're one of the offenders),you might want to-read on; there might just be acure for this horrible affliction, .

The garbage glut has all kinds of peopleworried these days. Not only Congress and localgovernments, but engineers, scientists, waterhydrologists, clergymen .and citizen actiongroups are only a few of the furrowed brows.What it boils down to, bub, is our disposalhabits and how to getall of us to change. Who,me? Why, just the other day Lthrew out my

, three. month supply of newspaper. No untidymess around my castle IBut the dilemma is not

.only what we throw out, it also revolves aroundour perannum average, about 1300 Jbs. perperson. The total residential and 'commercialsolid waste in one year isa 144 million tons.Add to that 5 initlion tons, dry, of sewage, and45million tons of junked autos and building'demolition, you can readily see we're gonnaneed that. space under your bed . real soon.Unless, of course, you can be persuaded someother way.

With the passage .of' the 1976 ResourseRecovery' .and .Conservation Act, .Washingtonhas thrown ·the full weight of the EnvironmentalProtegiol\ A$ency into the trash tussle .. Thislaw a~ually updates a 1970writ,·only.now theFedsare pinpointingresoutce recovery as aeffeCtiye ..solid waste management·. tecluiique.Resource recovery teams will be made availableto city and county governments to aSsist them itt··

In' light of the "Bobcat Massacre" staged at Bronco StadiumSaturday evening. Boise fans can once again hold their headshigh' while conversing football jargon amongst friends.Ahh ... Big Sky Champions once again. Bronco spirits have beenlifted to the heights and that certainly is good news to FrancisScott Key, author of the national anthem.At the Nevada Las Vegas-BSU game, as is customary, the Star

Spangled Banner began and the announcer asked everyone. tosing. Well, not very many people wished to participate. In fact, ifit hadn't been for the music, over 20,000 people would have beenstanding ina stadium with "hand over heart," looking at a flag,in total silence. I'm not sure why this was the case; however, it'sinteresting to note that the Broncos had suffered a terrible defeatthe week before and the fan's spirits were somewhat low.This past Saturday marked an improvement in the crowds

participation in the singing of the Anthem: .. somewhat weak, butnever the less an improvement. It could also be said that themasses were in high spirits after the. unprecedented win over,.:Nevada Las Vegas the previous week. .Now by way of forcast, if the Broncos go on to win their next two

games; the Northern Arizona-BSU home game should begin withan all time high crowd participation of the National Anthem.Better practice at home because the embarrassment will, come to ..those that don't sing versus those cantors of the past games.

J.P.

I!I II'pinion

the implementation of these techniques. Localautonomy, surprisingly, is being encouragedsince communities differ greatly as to their.major waste problems. During the infant yearsof recycling, most everyone was concernedabout the energy cost involved in reclaimingmaterials. However, recent studies indicatethat, as you might expect. the figures used by"cities and counties ill their landfill budgets areconfusing. It was found that often times theseagencies seperate the cost of the landftllsitefrom that of equipment and vehicles. Likewisevirgin ore extractors, miners for short" don'tinclude the cost of government' soil analysis,subsidies for' mineral exploration and specialtax laws which favor this form of extraction. TheEPA sees as one of its major goals theresolution of these bureaucratic inconsisten-cies.. As for you and I, the writing is on the wall,

a subtle portend thatthings aren't what theyused to be. Those venerableJandfills, poorperson's bargain' bin , will be nothing more thana memory byJ983. With our current recyclingefforts accounting for a seven per cent returnrate, lawmakers see the landfill abolition as astarting point to upgrade our recovery rate to 25per cent. Much of this would be accomplishedby a phasing out of nonreturnable bottles andcans, along side a massive paper reclamation'effort. Manufacturers of containers are' alsolooking into ways to make longer lasting, moredurable packages. Likewise the thinner metalused in car bodies is in conjunction with theseefforts.

So 'what can you do starting today? Oneobvious method is to keep' the wrappers andpackages you use during the day pressed closeto your heart until aeontalner comes .into view.If you're a resident of the North End of Boise,start collecting you newspaper and alominuJll;Through the combined energies of severallocals, house to house collection will be offered.to residents within the. project area. Theboundaries for this. 'source 'seperation exercise'are fort St. on the south, Hill Road on thenorth, Eighth Street on the east and ,Harrison

..Boulevard on the west. The thrust of thisexperimerit was concelved by the organizers to

. be an opportunity. for •..local citizens toparticipate ina recoveryeffoit·Wi.thouthavingto·' do ....anything more than. just ,·.the: •initiallICPeratioD.· The· regular tiaslI.· collector, •~elParks, is donating the trucks and IllfIDpowel,'toseeifd90r t() dooreollection can't get off theground in the City of Trees. Thefo~ at BoiseReCycling, jvhooperate the, Landei'. Street

,. ',' " , c ,~.• , ·.[_._: •. .!tII

1BOJSE'SfmUNIVERSITY .sruDENr NEWSPAPER

EDITOR-IN· CHIEF: John PriscellaASSOCIATE EDITOR: Bud HumphreyNEWS EDITOR: Mary Struhs .FEATURES EDITOR: Terry .McGuireSPORTS' EDITOR: Freddie Vincent

, LAYOUT EDITOR:' Mike IsbellLAYOUT STAFF: Julie Brattin, Mona St. Clair, Kristin MoeAD MANAGER:' Helen Christensen .AD LAYOUT: Debby StanardAD SALES: Brad Martin, Jim Thomason, fIonn ClarkCOLUMNISTS: Chuck Bufe, Jean King.STAFF ASSISTANTs: Loretta Jones, Annette Guidry; SuzanneGraeschPBOTOBuREAU: Ron Ferguson,llick Taylor, Patti Quong;Dick Selby" Rob Williams .

. EStJ1blished 'May 1%8. the, ARBITER is a weekly pul?1icatmn.ofthe -.~ed Sti!dents. o(·BoiseStat~ UniverSity; . .Articles an, hitters "to the. editor must be sUbmitted· to' theARBITER office prior to~:CM,>Thutsday before publication; must,be typewri#e~ and muSt bear a legible si8Jiature. The ARBlTEB ,)resclWS the right to edit. for libel and taste. .. " .'OpinloD$'exPressed in the ARBITER are.1hose 9£ the author andnot D~ly, those. of the Student Administration, University

.Aodministfatlon or ~e ARBITER staff.. .' ' ..... .The AlmffER is amember of and subsc:riberto ~oUege ~S$

SerYice,'CoIJegiateHedJines ad UnitedFeatu~ Syndicatei .The offkesof tb" ARBITER are located aD the 'secoDdflo<Jr' ofi

. the StUdeDf'l1nioD . BviJding. Boise, state .lJniv~;"1910:'. uoiWnity,Drive, Boise, 1cIahcJ1,83725· ,", sroJrrSt385-19tO''.·,NBWSuO 3.8WCt1·.··.· .'.. ...• .·AD~~'

.. ,..; , ,: ,'. '.:.. ' -. '." ; :>.' ..

Page 6: Arbiter, October 3 - COREbuisnessman, rancher, legislat-or, Lt. Governor, and the experience of serving almost 2 years as governor. He also said that students should look at what the

ad(-----

I II

I ntletters to theeditor-]

Shenandoah: musical for MSTIEditor, the ARBITER

Boise State University hasrecently been asked to take anactive part in the cancerdonation drive for MountainState Tumor Institute. Thecommunity is heading this driveto provide new 'equipment forresearch at MSTI. BSU's ownFred Norman is directing amusical .for the cause. Themusical is "SHENANDOAH"whic'h isa story of freedom andthe struggle to find it! Thismusical is an award winningmusical and broadway hitlThe ASBSU has developed a

strong sense of commitment tothis cause and we feel that everystudent on this campus shouldat least have a relativeunderstanding of the magnitudeof this dreaded disease we allare aware of, jf not personallytouched by. The community hasoffered to allow BSU to have the

Editor; thee ARBITER:

There are some people wholisten to a lot of music. I am one

. such person. There are move-ments in the trends of youngmusic today which KB~U doestake notice of. They are right upin the latest releases ofcontemporaryjnusic.. I have heard a variety of music,and bought albums as a result of ,listening-to KBSU. Here are afew of, the people I've, heard:P.D.Q.Bach, George Telernann,Stravinsky, Strauss, Tomida,Weather Report, Keith Jarrett,John Klemmer, Jon-Luc Ponty,Earl Scruggs, Emrnylou Harris,Segovia; Joni Mitchell, NortonBuffalo, Ry Cooder, B.B. King,charlie Musslewhite,FiresignTheatre, ,,'Monty Python, BobMarley, and Bette Midler,I. have also heard operas,

country, 'and disco' music,although I don't like it much ..

first night's showing of themusical for their own personaldonations. The, ARA foodservice has agreed to provideone of the finest meals moneycan buy to go along with ourfirst nights showing of "SHEN·ANDOAH." The meal and the

show will be provided to all BSUstudents, faculty.' and theirwives or husbands, custodians.and administrators. Ticket saleswill be announced prior toNovember 10, 1977.This cause is growing rapidly as

the' coordinator of this event,work to raise public and nationalconsciences. Boise State thisyear wants to come closer to thecommunity and make a lungeforthe cause' we're attacking.We have challenged over 500nationally known colleges anduniversities to match or betterour efforts in our drive forMSTI! The" homecoming com-mittee has formally dedicated

They do play an awful lot ofrock, but that's the path ofmusic many of the people atKBSU have grown up with (a lotof it is damn good, by the way),

Sure KBSU has a few faults "yet, but everyone who lovesmusic has their own 'conceptionof what the perfect' radio stationwould play. None exist, howev-er, so' a person has' to buyrecords. They'll never be able toplay what everyone wants butKBSU is trying to give thelisteners what they feel isquality, which is somethingmost Boise stations don't careabout. I hilled, detested hearing'the same 10 songs over and oyerfor four months. I heard that thedormies voted for ,that kind ofsituation ,so you" know 'whlfretheir heads 'are at (no offense tothe-hlp dormies).

I Hate Spam,Aleta. Fairchild

!'~

Homecoming to Ray. Mittleiderour own, who lost his life at theage of 19 to cancer. Ray was oneof BSU's former. quarterbacks.

I hope every student who trulywould like to assist in our causewould honestly come forward!Boise State needs to standtogether in this battle and showthe community and the countrythat we care enough to give 100and 10% for the Greatest

.Victory this school has everattempted, "Defeating Cancerin our own Life Time!"

.P.S.On October 6. 1977 in the Nez

Perce room from 3 to 5 p.rn., allinterested parties and organiza-tions are invited to an Orienta-tion on BSU's role of Shenan-doah.

Sincerely yours,Jerry Bridges

ASBSU P.R. Director

October 3, 19n 1 ARBITER I Page 5

Hoffman tells all

Fellow students,During my years of involve-

ment in student government, Ihave continually been frustratedby the poor lines ofcommun-ication between the studentgovernment and its constituen-cy. There exists no effectivemethod by which the feelings ofthe general student body can beascertained. Because of this theexecutive and legislative bran-ches of the ASBSU areconstantly making decisions forpeople whose thoughts theyknow little about. It is thereforeimpossible for the personinvolved in the decision-makingprocess of the student govern-ment to know whether or notthey are pursuing the programsthe students want them topursue. voting on issues the waythe majority of students want

. them to vote, etc. In short; wehave no way to gauge thedegree to which we aresuccessfully meeting the needsof the general student body.

In an effort to combat thisproblem, I am setting up anorganizational caucus, i.e, ameeting of representatives from

. all recognized campus organiz-

Apology extendedTo the public: .

In the September 19th issueof the Arbiter, a 'letter was

r: published from officerX. It.' concerned his apprehension

with Idaho drivers.The letter was written and

intended to be a 'private joke. Toany and all parties offended bythis entirely ficticious letter, thehumblest possible, apology isextended. It was intended to beharmless, and portended nomalice. e.

I repeat. the letter contained.no truth and leaked idiocy, and

KBSU offers voriety all damages and repair bills maybe sent to the responsible layouteditor.

Layout EditorMike Isbell

ations at which issues of interestwill be' discussed. This get-:together is set for Thursday,October 13, at 7:30 in the SenateChambers. Refreshments willbe served;, '

It is my hope that thismeeting will, produce ' somediscussion and input on theissues listed below (as well asany other concerns that comeup). '1. The pavilion concept2. Alcohol on campus3. Possible boycott of the

Mardi Gras ".4, Fee increasesI have chosen these issues

because they seem to be the. cnes I am asked the mostquestions about.

Not only will the organization-al caucus' give organizationalleaders an opportunity toexpress their views and views oftheir group to student leaders. itwill.also give them a chance tomeet students from othergroups. Hopefully, ~this will.spawn more inter-organizationalfunctions, ,something on whichBSU is sadly lacking at thistime:

Please, help make thisproject .a , success 'by activelyparticipating in it. Take advan-tage of this opportunity toplayapart in the governance of the ,university and of yourself. Don'tlet others make your decisionsfor you.

[Note: ThIs meeting wasre-scheduled Irom Sept. 29 for anumber of reasons.l

J.

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Page 7: Arbiter, October 3 - COREbuisnessman, rancher, legislat-or, Lt. Governor, and the experience of serving almost 2 years as governor. He also said that students should look at what the

�ge6 I ARBITER I OCtober 3, 1971 ,

seenSophomore'metarnarphosi.sby SaDy Thomas

You can always rell afreshmanby his eager, trusting look.

You can always tell a senior, by his worn and dusty book.You 0 can always tell a junior

by his casual ways and such.You can always ,tell a sophomore

but you can't tell him much.

Somehow this ,little ditty,which I've heard since highschool, doesn't seem as funny tome this year as-it did last year.Maybe the fact that I'm in mysecond year of college' hassomething to do with its loss ofhumor. And 1refute the impliedidea that sophomores think theyImowevcrything.-Itjust isn't so.,although they do know all theimportant things, like when tocut class safely and how muchone can drink on the nightbefore' a final exam and what thelimits are an talking back to

Denise DIDon, senior: It is goingto be hard on the student whodoesn't have very much money.And 1 can see us voting on itnow and having the people ofthe future paying for it. Somaybe there ought to be someother way to fund it-besides thestudents funding it. But I don'tknow how much the studentscould bring in, or if it could evenbe feasible. But one thing 1 amconcerned with is the studentsthat are going to college by theskin of their teeth. The ones whodon't have any extra money to'be putting into the fund. So 1don't see how It (the fee) could.be too' high. Maybe 510 asemester, but would that doit?

teacher and when to hit dad upfor a buck.

Curious as to how sopho-mores become so smart, seeingas how they had been freshmenonly the year before, 1asked one

• of them to tell-mehis secret.

"You remember the trustinglook I had' ,last year,' as afreshman? Well, 1 looked thatway because 1 trusted every-body. But what else could 1do? Imean, here 1was, not knowinganything and surrounded' bypeople who knew something ifnot everything. So, when they'dsay 'trust me,' I trusted them."

"What happened?", ,"The first person I met

borrowed SIS' from me. I told,him that ,I needed _t~c moneyback before Friday so 1 couldbuy my math book. 'You can

, trust me, 'he said .' '.. And .... '.. And, 1never saw him or the

JohnB. Cornett, sophomore:Yes, 1 think that BSU needs apavilion: I think that we (thestudents) should not have to payfor more than';' of the totalcost.

Victor Ros,s,' sophomore: Yes, I 'think they (BSU) should 'have ''one. I think it would beinteresting, but what would beplaced in the pavilion? Would itbe a skating rink, indoor tenniscourts? 1 know Ului 'we i.l~eadyhave a swimming Pool. I think:that half of the priCe' of 'thepavilion should, be paid by thestudents and the other half bepaid by the State of Idaho or theFederal govern~ent.

Wes Yeates, Junior: This is my ,first year down here and I don'tknow what Boise has to offer.' So,I really do'n'tkfiow what they

have out at the fairgrounds. LikeMOSCow"IdailO - it isa smalltown and so they have' to buildeverythingaround 'the' Univer-

, silY to house any kindof largefunction, it' has iobe allcontained within the University.Here it would bea ,lot moreconvenient, to have somethinglike that here on campus or' close,to the college for those people,who don'fhaveanytran'sportil- - 'tion. S10,a semester' would be "

'good; then try ': to make.' it ',,;self-supporting.' "

SIS again. I found out aboutthree weeks tater'that he wasn't,even a student here, but he sureknew all about freshmen'"

"Man, whata bummer.""Yeah, but that's not all. One,

, of my profs told' us he expecteda paper from us and he would

, givens'the topic andthe duedate in a few days. Well, henever said any more about it, sosome of us asked him. 'Trustme,' he said, 'I'll give you' theassignment in plenty of time.'So we trusted him and he told usthe day before it was due that heexpected a 10-page paper on themating habits of the tse-tsefly."

"That was a mean trick.""What makes it worse is that

the, paper was for' a businesscourse. Boy, did, I get thebusiness. ""I can see how you could beginto feel a little less trusting afterthose two experiences.'

"rnE,nOVlfIGnEro l1Tilt ~

QtillSTlON: Woald yoa likeesu to have a multi-purposepavlllon? If so, wlu\t ShOIJldthe.,student contribution be? ' , ,

by, Andy DesUet

"Then at Christmas I went,home to see my girl. 'I'll be trueto you,' she'd told me in the

, fall, 'you can trust me.' Itrustedher, even when she stopped

'writing about Thanksgivingtime. I just figured she was busywitli 'school work and all. Shewas busy, alright, but not withschool work. ,When Igot home Ifound out she'd married mybrother Joe two weeks before."

"How awful."..And my old man told me

he'd used up the money' I'd·trusted him to save for me and 1only had enough left to go tocollege for one' more semester."

, "What did you do?""Oh, I came back to school

and tried to get it together bymaking new friends but someofthe shine was gone. you know?'"

"I hope you had' a bettero experience with trusting peoplethe second semester,"

Marilyn Leeulng, sophomore:It's something that the com-munity needs and could be usedby both BSU and the commun-ity. There has been theargument that when the com-munity tried to put it through,and it didn't wash, but 1 reallythink it is needed. I think thereare a number of speakers and,entertainers that could' use thepavilion. I think that the'students shouldeontribute som-

-ething, but that would be veryhard to say until we' knew theoverall cost. I don't think thatthe students should 'have topay for the whole thing. I don'tthink that it should exceed morethan ... sllY 520 a year for the-student.

"Not really. My new friendstalked to me about relaxing atnight so I could do better inschool during the day and Istarted drinking and smokingand staying out late every night.'Are you sure, this is the way?I'd ask them. 'Trust us,' theysaid. I found out that theyweren't to be trusted. but it wastoo late."

"What 'do you mean, toolate?"" "I got my grades, you know?And' then I discovered I'drelaxed a little too much but by

, then it was too late,""But you're back in school

now," I pointed out. '"Yeah. I found a summer job

and talked to the Dean and sohere I am."

"Well. if you ever need anyadvice, you can trust me .....

"I don't want to hear aboutit," he said, walking away.

ChrIs HaIWllY, sophomore: Ihave always favored a multi-purpose pavilion. In a way Iguess I am selfish, because Idon't know what the studentcontribution should, be. I thinkthat everybody has a tendencyto want' something for nothing,and that is kind 0,£ my feelingstoo. 1 want to getit;but I don'twant to have .to pay for it.

.•..

123111 E I III 7 •

ClndiCnskey, sophomore: Yes,0' I would like to see one built; I,

ttiink that it would help thestate, so I think. that the stateshould pay for it~' , ,

Steve Swo;yer, oophomore:, Ithink it would,be good for thecollege. I think that ~hey shouldraise the, tuition in order to getsome,contributlon~ ,maybe ,$25or;$30'8 semester •• - " , " ..

Page 8: Arbiter, October 3 - COREbuisnessman, rancher, legislat-or, Lt. Governor, and the experience of serving almost 2 years as governor. He also said that students should look at what the

_October 3, 1977 I ARBITER I Page 7

. This constant pressure to be"on stage" -at all times; thiscontinual "spotlighting" of allyouthful.appearances and func-tions handicaps the youth of ourcountry tremendously. Youngerpeople are so involved withbeing and doing the "in" thingthat they often miss the boatentirely. Instead of using theiryouth las they do in othercultures) to grow and to developthemselves into the type ofperson who can make life a timeof fulfillment for themselves andtheir associates, too many of ouryouth are trying to catch thebrass ring. When they do catch itand find out, alas, that it is onlybrass, listen to their wails ofdismay]

"Do everything now, beforeyou are too old!" "Well, whatdo you expect? You're no springchicken anymore!" "If youdon't do it now, man, it'll be too

library issues discussed

"Editor, the Arbiter:

The letter to editor "Libraryhours questioned" clearly statesa concern shared by many,including students, staff andadministrators. "Old Petroon"

'isQbviously not alone in wantingthe Library open on Saturdaynight; although in terms ofexpanded hours the. Saturdaynight period ranked below other.times according to an informalsurvey' conducted last year.. The point to make here is thata specific need for ~ccessibility

"to Library informational resour- .ces is.not being me~. There aremany such examples . and tosome degree various competingneeds will not be adequately

" met because required resourcesare available to neither theLibrary nor the .University.

Nevertheless, issues such ashours, services and imforma-tional resources need to .beaddressed. For my' part I shallmake the hours issue a topic forthe Faculty Library Committee,continue to include increasedstaffing strength as a part of the.Library's budget request. andwelcome comment from the

. entire campus concerning anassessment of our. priorities.The Faculty LibraryCommitteehas student representation' ap-pointed by the. AssociatedStudent Body, I encouragestudents to use .this means ofcommunication and I alsowelcome students to write to ormeet with me personally" tomake respective needs known.

Timothy A. BrownUniversity Librarian

latel" what is the big rush,anyway? Scientific technology islengthening man's life expec-tancy phenomenally. Slow downand really examine some ofthose trite old quotes. We,liavethe time, really we dol

Too old for what? Why is itthat an allegedy enlightenedsociety, such' as ours . issupposed tobe, is one of the fewcultures in the world that does.not honor and respect its oldergeneration? Knowledge is acomparative process and so isexperience. It should follow thatbeing older might really add tothe enjoyment of at.Ieast a few

.of those thingstliat the younghave a tendency to ~rush intoheadlong. The frenetic activityofthe younger generatlon mightbe compared to a ride aroundthe block in a fire engine ... wemight not have seen much, butboy, did we ever go fast!

Garbage... J-eont, from pnge4Center, have been working withinterested individuals in gettingthe project off the drawingboard. Volunteers from theBoise Consumer Co-op aretaking' care of the canvassingpart of'.the exercise, with ableassistance from Lander Streetrecyclers and students from Dr.McCloskey's Mal). and hisEnvironment .class, The firstcollection date is Wednesday,Oct. Sth, and every Wednesdayafter that. If you don't live inthis area, call your city councilpersons and air, your feelings on .recycling. Seriously;' they're

_seeking. input and trying togauge' city-wide interest. .

Final food for thought-if youthink recycling is some form ofZen exercise for ecology buffs,consider this; if all that garbagein the landfill, .continuouslyburied year after year, shouldhappen to pollute the under-ground water table there's Iii>solution, except that you'll needevery container you can 'lay youhands on and a never'ending listof places to spread yourproduct. .

Who really wants. to be aspring .chicken anyway? Ayoung chicken spends its timelooking 'down after food orchasing its companions aroundthe barnyard, unaware of itslimitations. The wise old hen orrooster has already flown up outof the dirt to the top of thefence, where he or she at leastcontemplates the rest of theworld.

Too late for what? Would youexpect a first grader to know allthe things there are in the worldto' do? Why thendo we expectandindeed force our young tomake value judgments' withoutever having had the experienceof gathering valid data uponwhich to base their decisions?

Our American society as-. sumes certain fallacies aboutthe aging process to" beincontrovertible facts. For in-stance: "older guys who makeout with the young chicks mustbe quite the studsl" So,therefore, if an older guy chasesafter young chicks and scores,'this proves his virility to the restof the world (and himself). Whatit actually does is make him look.like an older guy who is soinsecure about himselfthat he ischasing after the younger chicksto prove that he still has what ittakes.

Older women have beensocialized into thinking that onlya youthful appearance is attrac-tive. Many older women makethe mistake of trying to' adoptevery ,youthful fad that comesalong instead of using their

. knowledge' and experience todevelop their own unique style.They also emphasize their ownfoolishness., .

•.Why do we allow society totell, us that when a personreaches "X"' number of years'that they are· (a) no longercompetent either physically ormentally, (b) are uninterestingto listen to, .and not stimulatingto talk to, and (c) immediatelywithout all sexual desirability?

In many cultures, a younger

man achieves a very high statuswhen he can capture and holdthe attentions of an olderwoman. It is assumed that hemust really be with it if he canfulfill the desires (both intellec-

~ tually and physically) of an olderwoman to the extent that shedoes not. easily tire of him.

Younger people often putdown the extremely aged byexaggerating the elderlypeople's infirmities. This ac-complishes two things. It, no.I:causes the older person toretreat farther into isolationand,no. 2: cheapens the imageof the younger. person who isinvolved in the.put-down e , Whynot use the time of our youth to 'investigate-all of the a~enuesor-------scientific technology for moreand better methods of 'prevent-ing the inroads of the agingprocesses in the future. Why notapply that knowledge to theyouth ofthe world so that futuregenerations will be free to enjoytheir mature years without thelimitations that lack of. concernand physical care have imposedupon older, people in the past?

Few of us will walk throughan orchard and select green fruit .for our enjoyment. We willunhesitantly reach for themature, ripe, and oh so sweetfruit .~. right?

AT EI M!Does that word conjure visionsof evil to you? Craziness? If so,maybe you should be interestedto know that it is actually a greatAmerican tradition, agreed toby the likes of· , ThomasJefferson, Thomas Paine,Abra-ham Lincoln,' Thomas Edison,Luther Burbank; Linus Pauling,Margaret Sanger, ElizabethCody Stanton, and others.Would youlike to find out more?Would you like· to help educateyour friends? Then please.cometo

.BannacklAaamin the SUB.Sunday,

Dct:S,.emt813m.

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There will be a $2.00 prize towhoever can answer the. sur-prise question,'

Remember antl-snperstltlonneeds yonl

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I Tf\e eire ~'La teo ' Ji· ogettrF. d~~. I·

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0.u~.~::::~~~ ~~~;~~e~~~I~I..d for ,J I dinner of your choice Jsaueage and meatbiillsexcluded lfrc.e D--....---------...-J S, refilllj on spagetti. AI! beer or Soft drinks during coorseof meal •

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Page 9: Arbiter, October 3 - COREbuisnessman, rancher, legislat-or, Lt. Governor, and the experience of serving almost 2 years as governor. He also said that students should look at what the

Page 8 (ARBITER I October 3, 19n

The annual BO·IDAPEX '77 Stamp Exhibit was helt October 1 and' 2 In the Student Union BuDding .. FoUi'Wen dealers from throughout the Northwest were present to buy, sell and tradelitamps to Interestedpersons, Sp~nsored by the, ~Ise State University Stamp Club, the exhibit was BoltZe's largestphllllteUc show with 166 frames.

t e e tm r I' I "

6. What building in Los Angeleswas Sen. Robert F. Kennedyassasinated in?7. In which Abbot and' Costellomovie" did' Bud and, Louaccidently end up at the MardiGras?

8. What number, was LenDawson of the Kansas City ,Chiefs? _,9. Who sang the song "Volun-teers?"10. Who played-John Wayne'sdaughter in "Circus World?"

, Answers on page 11

~, ' D1 CORSC~L5 "'SToR'( Wf;V~~ ,of . OIlL'( WOl~WE. GAME 'AAO -mATINAS

BIaalIYlA1Il!l " ~A\I-lST A ~ COU.[GE:. .••~ClJl,g'~~

AAD OUR SCI-\OOL N'~\9lAM( \S... ,,- ..• ,t • "

TIlE f'IGml~ FRI,!!T HUSKS •••

c,

by Mark Brough

" ,

1.Who was the blonde whodrove a white T-bird in themovie" American Graffitti?"2. What kind of gan did Sgt.Saunders use in "Combat?"3. What was the name of thecow the Douglas' owned in"Green Acres?"4. How did "Odd-Job" die in

,"G1>ldfmger?~' ,5. Name the pitcher who 'threwBobby Thompson's home runball in the'1951 playoff game'between the Giants and theDodgers.

;KHHHK~ SColTi~Ul-/ ••• li?lotI OOE5IT L£O/:. OVER. \CV~ SI-tlULOcP..TOWARDS 1H1f THERE A.urMBs~

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SU«E cAf'l1!•• ,~KHHtjKt

o

c,W. McCALL. MWAYSTOW) ME I'D HAve 0/1'15.

L-IKfTHIS.---..., ---..,--~

Page 10: Arbiter, October 3 - COREbuisnessman, rancher, legislat-or, Lt. Governor, and the experience of serving almost 2 years as governor. He also said that students should look at what the

October 3, 1977-rARBITER I Page 9

entertainmentBoise Civic Qperapresents Lo Traviataby Terry McGuire'

With the help of outstandingindividual performances andanimated chorus arrangements,theBoise Civic Opera presentedLa Traviata, with some minoracoustic -difficulties hinderingan otherwise professional per-formance.

Kathryn Bouleyn in the role ofVioletta was surprisingly adept.A trained voice to. be sure, itechoed through the Capital _High auditorium with power andtempered clarity; a sweetmelodic voice in the classicalvein of Maria Callas or BeverlySills, Miss Bouleynhandled thedemanding role well.

Sam Thompson, well knownto Boise music buffs andstudents alike, complementedMiss Bouleyn with, an equalmeasure of resonance andgrace. His role as Alfredo is asexacting as any in the operaworld and sufferen not fromThompson's fine tenor voice.We're lucky indeed to haveThompson's expertise in Boiseproductions. -

Neil Wilson as Alfredo'sfather Giorgio brought theIinkneeded by the production toround out the three major parts.Filling the role -of protagonist!antagonist, with - gestured ofsubtle wickedness 'and rnelan-choly bitterness, Wilson-brought a tight, astute force tothe difficult second act; iris one-of the, toughest for bothaudience and performers to getthrough, but it was carried outby Wilson as well as Bouleyn.

The, chorus, filled with pro-fessionals and -amateurs alike,

.was magnificent: the ball scenein the third act impressivelyfilled the void left by aprolonged intermission, whichhad the audience rustling Fridaynight. It was a fascinating sceneas the gypsy dancers walkedonto the stage with color, powerand provocative energy.

Trunk opens.'Magnolia'October 14

Preston Jones' _hilarious com- :Iedy "The Last Meeting of the I

Knights of the White .Magno- I IIia" opens Theatre ina Trunk's 'sixth season October 14. The"play will run October 29- withthe exception of Mondays andTuesdays. StudentNightfor thisproduction 'will be iSunday.:October 23.

Daniel Stem, conducting theBoise Philharmonic, returned toform, although the acousticplacement of his musicians lentdifficulty to both performers andaudience: in La Traviata thesmallness of the auditoriumhindered the clarity of the

translated words. Sam Thomp-son seemed able, however torise above the strings withprofessional savvy, adapting hisvoice to the-rising momentum of

-the orchestration.In all the audience seemed

appreciative of the perform-ance; hopefully the positiveresponse will spark interest 'inmore productions in the operaticvein. Many of the crowd hadprobably never seen an opera,but judging by their enthusi-asmvwill attend many more ifthey arc made available; As asometimes member of the SanFrancisco War Memorial OperaHouse Dress Circle, I have seenmore elaborate, better orches-trated .pieces, yet Boise's "LaTmvlata" was performed withequal vigor and genuine delight.Bravo.

by Dcbby StanardEngUsh art crltfc John Ruskin.once said art Is, "the expressionof one soul fJilldng to another."ThIs Is certa1uIy thc case withAnton RasmUssen'and Larry E:Elsner, exhibitors In the "TwoUtah ArtIst" sbow currentfy ctthe University Gallery, locatedIn ~c Liberal Arts' DmldIng.

LADIES 'NIGHT CHANGEwill change form MONDAY to

WEDNESDAY Night. $2 Cover & ALL YOUCAN DRINK FREEfrom 7-9Ladies Admitted Only,

TUESDAY COLLEGE NIGHT

Admitted FREEwlthColleqe JO '

,THURSDAY COLLEGE NIGHT

One. FREE Drink-with College 10

The show. consists of abstmctand representatlonal paintingsby Rasmussen, Cemmlc artobjects are presented by Pro-fessor Elsner of Utah Staf.j:lUniversity.

Resmnssen's' palDtlngs ,aremostly nature-abstractfons withemphasis 'on the microscopeworld. Thc paint appears to be

Just thrown at the canVIl.S, bntcontemplation of his worltSmake you realize they have beencarefully thouWJt out.

Elsncr's ceramic pieces arevery earthly, simple, and basle,The blend of shapes, earthcolors, and textures createsubtle, grand wor!w of art.

"N'EW' MENS NIGHTMONDAY Nights starting Oct. 10. Pay$2.50 & all the beer you con-drink FREE,

during Monday Night Football '~with' GIANT -TV SCREEN

OPEN SUNDAYS'Starting, Sunday, Oct. 9, the 1 2 1

open for SUNDAY FOOTBALL.with Giant TV Screen &

Giant Beers for 50~

is

FE TURIN:'

THE WEST COASrS TOP ROCK 'N ROLL SHOW

playing until OCTOBER-a

,Don't miss BIGHORN !

, I,

Page 11: Arbiter, October 3 - COREbuisnessman, rancher, legislat-or, Lt. Governor, and the experience of serving almost 2 years as governor. He also said that students should look at what the

Page 10 1 'ARBITER I OCtober 3, 19n

THE PROGRAM BOARD PRESENTS

F1'i_37," he

et.1Itnessa"

Directed by Frederic Rossif; original title: "Le Temps du Ghetto;"Englishversion directed by Thomas Craven; screenplay by MadeleineChapsal; English adaptation by Vince Pereira; music by Maurice Jarre.English narration by Viveca Lindfors and Michael Tolan.

Frederic Rossif (TO DIE IN MADRID, THE ANIMALS) compiled thisstartling film from footage taken by the Germans in the Warsaw Ghettobetween 1940and 1943. It depicts the unmitigated torment suffered by .600,000Jews, all but SOOofwhom died at the hands of the Nazis. Sur-vivors tell of their 'shocking experiences; and Madeleine Chapsal'spoetic screenplay heightens the impact of their words. I

" ... it documents Jews attempting to maintintheir religious practices, 'the education of their young, picking up their dead from the streets,attempting always to save a few from among the many, and always,somehow to survive .... How much greater this bravery is than thebravery of the warrior is up to the viewer to decide. Frederic Rossifmakes very little comment of his own. Comment is hardly necessary."

--:-Hollis Alpert, Saturday Review

e,,.•.... ".f

,,'

·STUDENTS ".215'

Page 12: Arbiter, October 3 - COREbuisnessman, rancher, legislat-or, Lt. Governor, and the experience of serving almost 2 years as governor. He also said that students should look at what the

October 3, 1977 I ARBITER I Page 11

The Last Word

Book lacks•••

" personal awarenessby Terry McGuire .

Had Charles Reich not attem-pted his now famous work, ThllGreenIng of Amerf~, he mayhave floated away into relativeobscurity: That not being thecase, his sequel, The Sorcerer ofBolinas Reef, came to myattention by the strength of theauthor's name alone.I try to cast no aspersions on

the name of Charles Reich, butthe- book held no grace; it'svirtue lay solely in not beingtossed aside" before the initialprinting.

Admittedly I come forth nowto say that I had never readGreenlng,but heard fromknowledgable,sources that it'smessage was good enough, as itturned "out, to carry Reich'sname to the best-seller list in1970. I conclude ,that itprompted, at least somewhat,the authoring of Bolinas. Itwould be impossible to makecross-comparisons of the twoworks. Suffice it to say. that·Bolinas left me beyond words.Suffice it to say it left me beyondanything. Bad book •.

.Among the reading audiencethere arethose who have readReich's latest, and I speculateenjoyed it. Perhaps for you hismessage came through,' somemeta-physical feeling, that nodoubt Reich had'intended it to.

Yetthe book was a potpourri01 bad feeling, bad experiences,and even worse reading: Havingleft my masochistic yearningssomewhere behind; hurryingthrough the book at an alarmingspeed was my only: consolation.Fear not,' though; 00 word wasmissed. Any spiritual meaningoverlooked? Maybe, but I

'answers totrivia rot

page 8L SuzanneSommer~ who playsChrissy inthecurrent T.V. show"Three's Company,"2. A Thompson machine gun. "..3. Eleanor4. He' was electrocuted whilefighting Bond inside Ft. Knox.S. Ralph Branca '6. The 'AII!basSador Hotel7. "Abbot and Costello go toMars" ' '8.#169.}efferson Airplane, 196910." QaudiaCardinale

Now hiring

layo~fasSisfants

SUB, ' ,

Arbiter office. '

wouldn't bet on it.Taking the mood of the book

to heart, Iheld a dreary frame ofmind all through it; the shots at..spiritual awareness rail to upliftthe reader even though Reich orperhaps his collaborators nodoubt spliced them carefully into the text.,

Basicaily it holdsvalidity as an autobiographicaltour through a lonely man's life:from Washington lawyer, toenlightengd Yale professor(post-1967) to a disillusioned

ghost haunting the Polk Streetsection of the' City by the Bay.San Franciscans or those famil-iar with it know what thatmeans. No doubt most ofReich's tiC/Berkeley experi-encefueled Grccnlng, but itburnt to a dun, somber brown inthe conception of Bollnas.If the reader weren't burd-

ened with continual, depressing. reminiscences of the Washing-

ton days, then the over-dramitized, over-played -sexualscenes turned into a testimonial

Re.iCh took us step, by stepthrough forty years of his life,

, hoping the' reader might gainclues to his immense personalIoneliness and confusion. In theprocess" he introduces peopletouching his life, never to bring

'" them back;non,fictionthough itmay be.rthe man needs help.

We struggle along with him', not knowing the direction of his

life or his book. Have you evertried to read the writing on a carof a moving. roller-coaster? Takehint, such esneriences await,

One minut; Reich is' account-ing intense personal emotions,then in a blink of an eye is offcastigating the evils of modemAmerica. No transition lendsitself as a bridge; the continualtopsy-turvy flow of the book did,however, lend itself to, myexasperation and eventually, tomy case against -Reich.

, As soon as I am settling into aReich lecture, concerning thelack of personal awareness (thatgives me no sense of purpose,according to him) I find myselfon a reef north of San Francisco.Charles is as lost now as he wasforty years back. The search hastaken no tum for the better, noseeming direction, just alongthe path again.

The sorcerer has shown me nomagic; he has alienated thereader, made him tense anduneasy. There is a passage thatbest exemplifies Bolinas interms of its substance: .... .1imagined myself Captain Char-les, ruler of the universe, withrocket ships and a magic

·wand." .Circa 1940. HaS anything,

changed since? Not so. ~

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there's always more rock in-theplaylist" than any other style ofmusic. Campbell stated that thereason for this was that "thedaytime audience is oriented

. toward rock in one form oranother." .

A good deal of the recordsKBSU receives are sent fromlarge record companies forpromotion. Schwartz said; "Theonly people who are able,

.economlcally, and willing tosend us promotional LP's arethe larger record companies,and unfortunately for many. thelarger record companies deal .almost exclusively .... with rockmusic,"

Moore said when she has a 4am to 8 am show she heardnothing concerning program-ming guidelines', saying "Itdidn't come up until I (started)working Saturdays from 12 to 4.I was supposed to implement'

!.n~ COUPON ·· · · ·a '

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Page 13: Arbiter, October 3 - COREbuisnessman, rancher, legislat-or, Lt. Governor, and the experience of serving almost 2 years as governor. He also said that students should look at what the

"

.,

page 12 I ARBITER I octobera, 19n

.'...~ '. collegiate_games

rizzlies ontlcipote BSU Broncosby Freddie VincentArbiter Sport8Edlto~

The Boise State UniversityBroncos travel to 'Missoula thisweekend to face the Montana'Grizzlies at Dornblaser stadium.Last year's contest was "One'hell of a fight," according to onefan in the stands, in which theGrizzlies defeated Boise State17-14 on a last minute field goal.

A blend of seasoned veteransand promising new playersgives the University of Montanamuch to look forward to in 1977.. -The Grizzlies have another bigand impressive offensive line,experience at the quarterbackposition and some young butexperienced defensive players.

Although Montana lost firstteam little All-American freesafety Greg Anderson through

, graduation, a host of talentedplayers return. UM head coachGene Carlson begins his secondyear with 23 lettermen back.Eight seniors, 17 juniors, 21sophmores, and' 22 freshmemare in the Grizzly camp, In this,group are six junior collegetransfer students, one collegetransfer'imd four walk-ens.They are expected to provideimmediate help in key areas.

The offensive line is the mostexperienced area on the Grizzlysquad: Four seniors and onesophmore are expected to start.Tackles Ben Harbison (6'6",260) and Murry Pierce (6'6",260) arc headed for what shouldbe their finest season atMontana. Center Ron Lebsoek(6'2", 223) and 1976 Big Skysecond team guard Terry Falcon(6'3W', 255) complete thefoursome .of senior lettermen.All are conference honorscandidates.

SopQomore letterman GuyBingham (6'2", 235) has naileddown the other guard spot.Montana's offensive line shouldbe one of the finest in Division IIfootball. But the Grizzlies havedropped two games and wononly one since the start of theseason, losing to UNLV andNorthern Arizona, Their winwas-over Portland State by a.

to fill at the split end post. spots in the secondary.Cooley was a first team All-Big For the fourth straight sea-Sky wide receiver IU3t season. son, the kicking' chores will be

Montana's defense is basic- handled by 1976' second teamally inexperienced. The defen- All-Big Sky place kicker Brucesive line has good candidates in Carlson. Carlson made 19 of 20Sam Martin, Joe Sobansky, Joe pat kicks and 12 of 17 field goalsShupe and Matt Van Wormer, last season. He also handles theThe linebackers are a major punting and is backed lJP byquestion mark, while the gradu- Allan Green. Montana's '76ation ofAII:American Greg record (4-6) last year was notAnderson puts a big hole in the quite in the cellar and wasn'tsecondary. Senior Jeff Carlson considered a major threat in theand sophrnores Greg Dunn, Big Sky: Then again they

. Scott Ferda and Kelly Johnson weren't picked to beat Boisehave inside track at starting State either. Need I say more?

Field hockey opens

40-25 margin. Still, this is onlythe early part of the season, soMontana may get it together.

In the Quarterback depart-ment Mike Roban has the size(6'2" , 200) and speed (4.6 'in the40) to be outstanding. Robansaw part-time action last year.Junior Tim Kerr (5'10", 175)walked-on this past spring anddid an outstanding. job. Heearned an athletic grant-in-aidand a shot at the number oneposition. Sophomore Pat Sullivanand three promising freshmenwill give' the Grizzlies plenty offuture depth at quarterback.

The backfield was hardest hitby graduation. Four runningbacks who rushed for 1,618yards last season must bereplaced. Sophomore Doug Eg-bert and junior college transferMonty Bullerdick will share theduties at tailback. Junior GrantKleckner has switched fromtight end to fullback. SophmoresGreg Bitar and Wayne Harperand a.host of freshmen will alsobe given an opportunity toperform in the backfield. Soph-more letterman Allan Green(6'2", 218) will start at tightend.The graduation of Paul Cooley,UM's finest single-season passreceiver with 33 receptions for607 yards in 1976; le~ves a void,.

te nuclear Navy. For physics,chemistry, engineering and moth rnojors', '

cruising along the bottom is the fosresr way to the top.Today's Navy operates more than half the reactors in

America. Our nuclear training program is thebest anywhere. And nuclear officers move

rapidly through theranksearningexecutive level solortestsrcrt at $14,000),

_ So, If you're looking foro careeranywhere in thenuclear fiE?id~the

NavY con give youthe boost that willsene! you right to

therop.

by Nancy PhillipsThe BSU women's field hockey

team opens their horne schedulethis weekend hosting a round-robin invitational tournamentFriday and Saturday.In addition to the BSU team,

also attending will be Washing-ton State, Brigham Young,University of Idaho and North-west Nazarene College.

"This should be a goodtournament with a lot of good,well-played hockey," comment-ed Coach Jayne Van Wassen-hove,

..All the teams are very strong.BYU and WSU are traditionallystrong and U of I is improvingall the time," she added .... Ithink we will play really well.We looked good in the first bythe gym, Saturday, the gamesare on the astroturf with BYU at

r- 10:00 and WSUat 2:30.Sophomore Alice Myers scored

two goals to lead the BSU team. . Ii

past NNe Sept. 26, 4-2, on theNampa field. Senior ElaineClegg and juniorTrudy Erb, theco-captains of the team, eachscored a goal to round out thescoring.

"I was very pleased with ourplay against NNC," statesCoach Van Wassenhove. "Wehave some weakness to work onbut overall we looked 'reallygood." .The JV team tied the College of

Idaho, 1·1 when they met Set..28 in Caldwell. SophomoreLinda Hampton scored the lonegoal for the BSU team.

"With it being the first game,they played really well." com-mented JV Coach Trina Mich-aelis. "With another week ofpractice we should be able tobeat their varsity, the sameteam we played last week."

, That 'rematch is scheduled' for'this Wednesday at 4:00 on thefield by the gym.

Jorgenson finishes high ~\

.Ior BSUwomen at laneBy Allee Myers strom. "Jorgenson starts out

that way and moves up well.Cindy Jorgenson. lead the The last three quarters of her

BSU. Women's Cross Country race is run hard.". runners, against a field of 120 Buchan' finished 24th amongcompetitors, at the Lane Com- the runners, apparentlytur.iingmunity College Invitational cr- her ankie and falling twice oveross country meet, held Saturday the mucky course.With overcast skies and foggy Arlene Bartlome, the onlyweather, in Eugene, Oregon. other BSU runner to make the

With just three runners trip to Oregon, placed 48thmaking the trip, team scoring among the large field.was not kept : and individual "Individually the girls aretimes for the' BSU women improving," Dahlstrom stated.runners were not available. "They could score well against

The race, .at 4000 meters was the other teams if we just hadlonger than the usual 2.5 miles' more depth."run by the women and according Dahlstrom praised his run-to their coach, Basil Dahlstrom. ners, .stating that the girls. ranthe women . wereruniling well considering the numberagainst some good competition. ' and qualify of the participants;

The field ofrunners included ,"The terrain was flat, but it'600 entrants from theelemen- was wet and soft." Dahlstromtary, junior high; high school,' said: "It.had rained earlierjunior college and college level. . making the, weather cool forthe

. Jorgenson led the BSU, runners." .women with a 12th place finish, Thenextmeet for the Broncostarting out .slow and running women will be. October 8thwhen.behind Boise' State's Barb they- travel to Portland State.Buchan fo~the first part 'of the University 'for some '''excellentrace. At the half "1i1c mark, competition" -.against OregonJorgenson -was placed about 'and Washington runners .

..5Othin the field, then began to The.fcllowing weekend bringsmove up; .. the women's cross.countryteam.., "Thefirs.t of the race should .to BOise for their first homebe conServative," statedJ)ahi> meet .

. '~:'):":'?-i4~·:~~.'::;;<:'i-~'\,-.,~ •.-.~:~'.:~.'. ',~'~..;~ '-~:.:-+.~,4':.,'.r-s'.r ..:11',.:~~~:-::~~.c'.~~;'~"~r,'I ;,~.~;l.~~l,~:r;1:.)~'~t.:~·~;T)~I.f~~j~:~

• or any science majorwith a year of calculus

and physics,

Page 14: Arbiter, October 3 - COREbuisnessman, rancher, legislat-or, Lt. Governor, and the experience of serving almost 2 years as governor. He also said that students should look at what the

I "October 3,19n I ARf3ITER 1 Page 13

Crds~ counfryseconc:Jto Oregon at Lane CCby CbarlIcWlttner Portland was fourth 'with a total

of 94 points while Pudget Soundwas fifth with 119.The Boise State " University

cross country team; running in avery, classy field, finishedsecond in the Lane CommunityCollege -lnvitational last Satur-day: The Univel'sityof Oregon,

, was the winner ofthe meet withonly 15 points'; Bolse State wassecondwitti '63 points andOregon State University wasthird with 82. The University of

The race featured many of thetop ,runners in the nation,including one Olympian. AI·berto Salazaof the Universityoforegon was the winner wit" atime of 29 minutes and 22seconds. Craig Virgin, whocompeted at the 1976 OlympicGames in Montreal and now

Volleyboll at Uof I

. ~\

running for the NlkeTrackClub,finished second with a time of29:27.Steve'Collier led theBroncos ,With a' seventh place,finish at 31 minutes flat. ScottBlackburn was the next runnerfor BoiseState when he finishedninth. Blackburn's time for the10,000meter course -was31:31.Karl Knapp was the Bronco'sthird man when he placed 12that 32:32.DaveSteffens and StanLink were the Bronco's fourthand fifth men as Steffens placed16th and Link came in 20th.Mike Henry and Gene Stone

also ran in' the meet, and werethe Bronco's sixth and seventh,men.

The race was ron on a coursethat, was wet and muddy fromexcessive rain the day before.Although there, were' two eleva-tions the runners had to cross,the 'coursewas mostly flat.There were over,200 Competi-tors in the race which made thestart of the contest a picture ofmass 'confussiou. The runnersgradually spread out over the 6mile course, however, so that

the finish was not nearly 50crowded.

Coach Ed Jacoby was pleasedwith his team performance,noting that the gap between the5tband'6th runners for the teamwas starting to lessen.The Broncos' next meet will be

at Missoula, Montana' whenthey run against the Universityof Montana. Montana is ratedby many, to bee a strongcontender for the- Big SkyConferencecrown and should bea real test for Jacoby and hisyoung team. '

BroncolInebulcer "ChllIy" WillIeBeamon crunches Mj)nt.anaState's Delmar Jones.Rumor has It that Beamon, who led the Broncos In' tackles with 13 [2 assisted j washeard, to chuckle to himself after this hit. .

r

and WSUtheteam really playedBy Bette Will team, ball." commented coach'

Boise States women's volley- Ginger Fahleson, "WSU hadball team was on the road this some really strong hitters whoweekend to Moscow.' The really placed-the ball. We wereUniversity of Idaho hosted an . just out classed by the largeInvitational tournament Friday college schoolsjhowever, I feltSeptember' 30, and Saturday the team played their bestOctober 1; where the teams of - games as a team unit againstEastern Washington, Northern MSU and WSU."Idaho College, Walla Walla Co-captain Janet "Emery iscollege, Montana State, Wash- lost f e season. Emery, oneington State, Boise State, andU of t' am leaders and aof I participated. valu ayer both offensively

Boise State walked on the and \ltensively, underwentcourt Friday against Northern surgery on her, knee FridayIdaho college for a victory (15-7) September 30. Missy Bennett,(15-3). Later they played Mon- who was injured in the Boisetana State for a long fought State Invitational the previousmatch (12-15)(15-11)and (8-15). weekend, was cleared for actionSaturday the Bronco women and made the trip to Moscowtook on Washington State's A providing valuable talent. Fel-

,and B squads for' some low, player Bev Ballard waseyeopening and solid team work injured in the Moscow Tournymatches. Washington State during the Montana State_participates on the large college match. Itwas reported to be justlevel andis rated among the top a sprain but howsevere leaves itin the northwest, while the other questionable if she'll see actionschools invited all participate to this week. !rn$U!(ij**3##)ltllt:m*####3!Pm:l'll:$:i«J.l,tm-¢ni)'Ut.*:j:llil3U«~#**3:tWjbi3?*:IIjla~ ,

~~:t:md~~;;~~~;O~I~vi~~;;h~~i~; vo~~;:~~~~~::~O~~llC~w~~:s~i;, §IDllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllll1Il11l1l11l11illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllll!1I111111111!!§ ';)'Vashiiigton State, A team will 'take on Eastern vOregon -(5.15) (5·15) and B team (9·15) Tuesday at La Grande 'fora 4.(10-15)finishing the tournament p.m, match. Then ,on Thursdaywith a 1-3 record. they' travel to Ontario to play

"The matches against MSU TVCC. '~U~~,~~~~"""""'~'~~~~ , , .' "~

I " 's ~ =f1MEflIC,.FI=. ~ ~ .~ ~ =' SPEEDREFIDIN~ ~ --~ I.•,- ~~Il!! EM~ b d;, ~= firL41 a DElI WrCJflar, ' . ,~ ~~, .~ aisE's IdEll PnE! B ~~ ~~ ~ SPEEDREAOINGcourses now offered in Boise. ~f ='~I youore interested in. a State Licensed' "'"~ to telI the student body of ~ Speedreading Course with small classes, licensed :~ ~ teachers, and guaranteed success, call and make =~ ~ - =~ BOISE STATE .~= an appointment with our ReQ.ding Counselors -_~ I=for a free" e,valuQtio,'nO,fyour pre,'.se,n1 r~ading skills~='~ 'about some unusual career opportunities available to ~

.. ~, ~:~ ~~:d:a~:.e~;~~I~~~;:c~::e:np~6~~~sa~?~~~~;, ~ TAKE.ADVANTAGE OF- SPECIAL ~,~',. b~~i~:~~n~a~e~~~~rit~~~c~~~n:'j~:~Oanif~~~~~~c:~~ri~ ~',STUD~NTRATES\IVITHACrIVITYi,~ }~~t~,e~~~~~'\~~)?I~O~~~~~~~tilitary,Findoul all the I,' 'CARD,,'SAVE,$$$$$$$$$$$$'$$, -i Tue~F~;. O.ct. 4-7 I·~.. . .'G~9tJrRJ-\T~SAL~9AVAll..xB~E. • ....-_.'.•I . g'30am- 3'30 pm. I· = Remelllbir,: rr(]dln!;J.lsthei~(JScls,~f(Jll-

t..~:;:~:.-~~~~J-_D--~~. ,. , ' .' - - '. ", -0)

Page 15: Arbiter, October 3 - COREbuisnessman, rancher, legislat-or, Lt. Governor, and the experience of serving almost 2 years as governor. He also said that students should look at what the

CedrIc MJn~r [201 threads through the MSU defen~e. MInter led'the Broncollwlth 105 yards In 17, carries •

Broncos cnnhiloteMontana- Bobcats

Page 14. t ARBITER I October 3 1971-'. '.. .'. ., '.

."

Broncos Ilft Coach' Criner lifter big victory over MSU.

Lonnie Hughes leaped high for this pass from' Hogan.

Photosb ·R······.·· .y:on, .

"Fergusonand Rob

WilliamsI'

t:

Dctober firsf.was a clear, cool' ,night at Bronco Stadium whenthe National Champions Mon-tana State Bobcats came to playthe Broncos. The Bobcatsbrought 3 wins under their beltincluding a impressive 24-14victory over Fresno State, thesame team that annihilated theBroncos 2 weeks earlier, 42-7.Unfortunatly for the Bobcats,they didn't realize the Broncoswere patiently awaiting . theirarrival: Starting with the open-'ing kickoff, B.S_U. gave M.S.U.a reception they wouldtnever

, forget, sending ,the DefendingNational .Champions, home asshut out' losers 26-0: The'

'Broncos were not alone, they .were-supported by the largestcrowd everto watch a Big SkyConference game of 20,552 onlookers.' .

Twenty three out of. the,twentysix points scored .came in

, the first half. WitTl 10:36 to play, in the 1st quarter Fred Goode

took the ball 6 yards for the firstpoints of the gamev.after TomSarette 'kicked theextta pointthe Score was Boise ,7; MSUO;Nick Aridrolowicz also-got intothe aet when, with 13.:39 to playinthe second quarter. he ran theball over. from 1 yard out to upthe Score to 13-0; Saretternissedthe extra point. Less than 5minutes later,Hoskin H9ganhit

.Steve Woodward with a '3. yardpass. after, Sarette made-this

.'.aile. good';' the, score waS. move'd-

I.·. ,

by Tony Bertliold

"BIg" Alva LUes ['OJ clears the WilY. for Fred Goode.

to 20-0.' Tom Sarette thenconnected on a 27 yard fieldgoal with 5:37 remaining in thehalf making the score: ' Boise23,Montana State 0 at half time.The last three points came with2:36 remaining in. the thirdquarter of play. when 'Sarette

.kicked a' 52 yarder finishing thescoring for, ~he night. '

Personal standouts for, theoffense werc. vq.b. HoskinHogan who completed 8 out of16 passes for8S yards and 1touchdown, R.B. Cedric Minter

, gained 105 yards on 17 carries,R.B. Fred' Goode' gained' 95yards on 18canies, and PuntReturner Mike Bradyreturned 4punts for 49 yards. This weekthe .Broncos added to .theirsquad a new punter named Cory ,Bridges, .a .freshman fromC~eur d' Ale~e who' punted 5times-for 139 yards. '

Defensive standouts were: S5Sam Miller 12 tackles, LBWillieBeamon had )3 tackles and afumble recovery, LB Dave

.. Williams had 8.'tackles and theinterception that-set up-the firstT.D.,and NG Doug Scott made8 tackles. Along with Beamon ..Ed Deine alsorecovered a MSU

'. fumble. . .. '.

When the final gun soundedthe Broncos Committed 8infrac~

.. tiolisfor,lII·. yards, .wMe.the,·Bobcatsonly committed 4

~n~ltiesfor arnl?te'S8 'yards';-

Page 16: Arbiter, October 3 - COREbuisnessman, rancher, legislat-or, Lt. Governor, and the experience of serving almost 2 years as governor. He also said that students should look at what the

October 3,19n I ARBITER I Page 15

NCAA Power Packed Action SlatedBy Tate Simmons

•••..we came in from the 'dark, toa shining light atop a mountain,so high., .. so.fair. And from it'shighest point did come a sound,'as sweet as we did ever hear inour days upon this land. It spokeof wisdom, .of pain, of theheights that the .ll1un~aneamongst us dared notreach to.In our. eyes did show theuncertainity of our age; the fearthat clung to the most learned ofour kind. And it did not 'makegames of our search for truth, in 'the darkest of our, days. Ontothe path of late autumn did itpromise to take us onto therighteous way of life. We drewcloser and could see it'smessage so clear, so plain. Weheld no more fear, we saw that itwas good. It said 'Watch forTate and Jerry each week in theArbiter.' .

Jerry has the day off, so I'mhere with this weeks festivities.Last time 15-5, for a total 68-24,a .733 percentage.

ALABAMA AT SOUTHERNCAL The Bear's Tide can'tmake up their minds, whether tobe non-chalant good 01' boys orthundering meanies. SC's Tro-jaris know only one thing: win atany cost no matter who the oppo 'nent is or how much charismatheir coach has. How long canUSC remain at number one? Seeya at the Rose Bowl. Signed:UM.USC 24 Alabama 19MICHIGAN AT MICHIGANSTATE .

The Wolverines played as ifthey were truly the tops lastweek; cross-state rival .MSU

, played like a sandlot club we'reproud of. This will be fun, but.watchout when State gets windof this prediction they'll be mad.So what'.Michigan 28 MSU 17OKLAI;IOMA ~S. TEXAS. INDALLAS

Texas has earned a reputationfor pouncing on unsuspecting

) nobodies. Oklahoma has no timefor bullies or for reliving oldrivalrie's- from: way back when.But then again Okie has no timefor Texas ...Oklahoma 38 Texas 10PURDUE AT OHIO STATE

Choose one: a Boilermaker isl)a na!?ty littie drink that makesmince meat out of your head: 2)a nasty little team that causes allsorts of trouble; 3), the one thingWoodey Hayes doesn't need tospoil his day or night. Hint:OSU 24 Pui-due 13UT AH STA TE AT PENNSTATE,

Penri is taking the loss toKentucky, with the genteel,manor befitting kings. If, youbelieve' that, then U.S.U. ,is'claiming their. right to numberone. Take your pick. However:Penn State 51 U~ St. 3pm AT FLORIDA

What to do about Pitt: 'loseyour coach, your, quarterback,

, your ace rusher, tilen beat the 'tar outof'any unfortunate thatcomes your -way., is thereI anything sacred in college~~. . f()Otballlike predictability? Not

so. ,Pitt 34 Florida 14

, OKLAHOMA STATE ATCOLORAI!0'~ " ' . '. ', Here'~fhe ~stmeaty,a~~" ". '

~ ~ .." ~". ,.-' ( ~"" ., J,"I • '. • •

of a long Big-S struggle to thetop. Colorado has had smoothsailing, Oklahoma State has hadtyphoon conditions. No Coolin'.around guys, the folks inNorman are starting to sit prettyfat:Colorado 20 Osu i9MISSISSIPPI STATE ATKentucky,

Kentucky is a wonder: theylose to slouches, they knock offcontenders. Mississippi State isamazing--tliey win, but atwhose expense? Yup.MSU 19 Kentucky 15TEMPLE AT WEST VIRGINIA

West virginny plum, beatthemselves into a frenzy,narrowly escaping from awe-some(?) Virginia 13-0. Templefell to their knees in salvationafter whipping Deleware 6-3.What to do? Call out the RedCross, there's goin' to be amassacre.W.V.31 Temple °

win, Jim Criner and the boys arereally high but had better watchout: The Grizzlies are grizzlyand mean, especially at home,and particularly after losing to"Weber State.BSU 31 Montana 18

WEBER STATE AT MONTANASTATE

'The boys from Bozeman arenone too happy about· lastweek's Fiasco in Boise. Weber,well we don't know what to dowith a team like that. Let's justlet the Bobcats handle that one.MSU 35WSC 17NORTHERN ARIZONA AT CALPOLY- POMONA

NAU kinda fizzled out as oflate, playing he-hum football.Pomona is tough but then againso is shoe leather. And they'llsee alot of it as NAU walks allover them.NAU28 Pomona 13IDAHO STATE AT IDAHO

The big thing this game is

that yours truly Tate Simmons isgoing to be there. If you canidentify him, , tell it to theVandals, they need some extraspark of anger to rise abovemediocrity., Idaho 21 Idaho State 3

'/~·ARBiTER~'lelIA SSIFIEDslI, .Phone 385-3401

~_iEl!SEMESTER In London or IDAvignon with BSU credIt. II$1,205.00, pays for winter term; IIII Includes' homestays, 2 meals- Elliii day, !lJooks,tuIt1on, exCurSions. IIApply by Nov. 1. See P.iiiSchoonover, ,LA 212. [Your I1\11 financial aid or veteran's bene- II18ts appUcable.] 'iI~~IITURNTABLE: AR·XA Belt Im drl. ven, fully manual with shnre ~ ,IM91. Call Greg at 345·7584. ,til

-I ~W!J I11976CJ5 JEEP: Excellent iiiIcondition, fltlll under 5 year I:fjfit 50,00,0 mile warranty. Call I,Ill 375-6301 after 5 p.m, I!GMC 69 1IAN: Runs good for Itil 5950. Home Mon.·Thurs. 2:00- IIII6:00; Fri.-Mon. 9:00-12100. 701 IIIFranklin #5. - II LUlllll!UJi1JJJ I\I UNIVOXPOl;lTABLEORGAN:1Ill! Almost ,new. . Sounds like I,'I Hammond B·3. !!i1,000 new. tl39 Mak,coffer •., 344',2682 eves. f1.l

:,.Ill weekends. - ' I.R GUITAR AMP:' Peavey stan- I-Idard 130 watts RM~ call i·1~45-75~. , . I'~ lItI!].CLlJltJ, _I.,g MODELS WANTED fdr GallClY IIMagazine, girl next-door con- 'mItest. 342-3720. ' til .m'~1'.'.! ATHEISTS UNrJ;E,! Do yen Im thlnk that the-human need to mIcooperate for survival is the only m, bl18lsfor morality? And', tha~ IIIsuperstltutlons [I.e. Chrlstlan- '11:11.lty] just get In ,the wl;\Y?See Ad iiiIi on page 7. IiIi' ~ I

YOGA·DRAMA Theatrical Ax· Ichlteelure. Rules: 1] No IToucblng Uote We GetARaga IiYoga Blood Test Together. 21.il!lYogaSutras Cond!lct.3} $25,00 IGroup Fee. 'Gary J.' Warrell' IJjP.O •. Box, 625, Nnmpa, Idaho liD,83651. ' I

III

U.C.L.A. AT StanfordThe Bruins return to Pac 8

wars after a vho-hurn journeythrough the Big Ten. This mightbe a sure bet for them.df it werenot' for the fact that we likeStanford. But then. again wearen't Divine. Are the Cardin-als? Nope.U.C.L.A. 24 Stanford 13RICHMOND AT VIRGINIAMILITARY INST.

This one's for Fast Freddie'sparents. The Richmond Spidersshould make your stay in thatfair city a pleasant stay. ForVMI? We could only wish suchhappy journeys.Richmond 24 VMI 14BRIGHAM . YOUNG ATOREGON STATE

What else is there but theGifford Nielson Air Raid?BYU 45 Oregon State,10Big SkyBOISE STATE AT MONTANA

Coming off the Montana State

iDl"77 ,IDS SCHLITZ BREIVINC; CO, MILWAUKEE, IVIS

THE DEAN OF ramrs QUICKIE QUBIIIQ: Chill-Lagering is': ' '

a) A popular German country and western singer.b) A Scandinavian winter sport played without clothes.c) A'new ethnic 1V comedy about the owner of an ice

cube factory. 'd) The right way to age beer.

A: (d) Sorry, Chill-Lageririg is not Olga and Svendrunning around in a snowstorm in their birthdaysuits. Chill-Laqerinqis the way Schlitz ages beer.They age it cokLVery cold. Down to 29.5 degrees.The resuTtis a beer with sparkling clarity.Abeer that's crisp, clean and bright.I suggest you look into one right now. .

THERE'S JUST ONE WORDfORIlEER.

ANDYOU KNOW It

Siglinda$teinfiill~r, D~p. of Beer

.-.Ul.

~-..

Page 17: Arbiter, October 3 - COREbuisnessman, rancher, legislat-or, Lt. Governor, and the experience of serving almost 2 years as governor. He also said that students should look at what the

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Reg. . Now; SEUN.

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