Boise State University ScholarWorks

Student Newspapers (UP 4.15) University Documents

4-10-1978 Arbiter, April 10 Associated Students of

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Threegubernatorialcandidates advocate reordering Questions of educational priorities answered on

A reordering of educational develop solutions to problems. compromises were necessary to bureaucrat who thinks BLM is a pre- priorities was one, change Amyx said that his record as keep both business and environ- foreign car. II Larsen said that advocated by three Republican Boise's mayor showed that he ment in a heatlthy condition. jobs and a quality environment registration gubernatorial candidates during knows how to "let government Otter stressed, "The federal were opposites, and that by a meeting held at Boise State have a heart" and how to solve government is buying control properly managing the state's by Solly Thomas last Friday. The three candi- problems locally, rather than over us with our own money" resources both could be preser- Now that students are actually dates, Butch Otter, Jay Amyx relying on the federal govern- and that it was time to bring the ved. Larsen applauded nuclear engaged in pre-registration, a and Allan Larsen, were on ment. control over 's resources energy as "the type we should number of questions arc being campus to address an' open In the area of growth and back to Idaho instead of letting go for" to keep a good discussed around the coke meeting of students sponsored environment, Amyxsaid that decisions be made by' "a environment. machines. Suzanna Holz, Re- by Omicron Delta Epsilon, the gistrar at Boise State, gives real BSU economics club. answers below to some of the Asked to address priorities in questions most frequently asked higher' education, Otter, a by students. former state legislator, said that Q: Is there any priority basis "public 'bucks should be spent for the scheduling of classes on education," and not only next fall, or are the classes marginally related activities. He awarded on a first come, first criticized the low faculty salaries serve basis? . at BSU and advocated changing A: The system is set up to read the state constitution 'in the area the cards in this order, graduate of higher education. student, senior, junior, fresh- Allen Larsen, state legislator man, and lastly, undergraduate from Blackfoot, said that the special--AS LISTED ON THE "constitution should not be BOTTOM OF THE WHITE blamed for they priorities in DEMOGRAPHIC CARD being education" and that strong turned in with the pre-registra- leadership was necessary from tion form.-' the governor to' make sure true Q: What does the term, education came first in the "undergraduate s p e c ia l ;" state's higher education pro- mean? gram. A: It defines the students who "I knowhow to get the proper have not fully matriculated. If a management" to solve the' student received a letter to that problem was the concept stress-. ~ . effect a few weeks ago, and took ed by Jay Amyx, a former Boise whatever steps were necessary mayor, in addressing problems to complete their matriculation, ,at the state's colleges and yet their card still shows universities. Amyx characteriz- -"undergraduate special," 'they ed himself as "an American.that should. notify the registrar's listens 'to all sides" in order to [cant. on page 13)

April 10, 1978 I ARBITER f t • f '.

BSU to investigate alternative proposals to pavilion

On Friday, April 7' Idaho's Bullington estimated that be- Faculty Senate Salary Committ- tract time period begins on July in Bronco Staduim and Gym- State Board of Education tween seven hundred and a ee. 1, 1978 and runs to June 30, nasium and the exclusive tood directed the administration. of thousand signatures had alread- 1983, and the contract may be service rights at the Student Boise State University to go y been acquired during the Eighteen additional out-of- renewed for five additional Union Building. The terms for • back and investigate alternative drive. state tuition wavers for women one-year periods. Saga Food both contracts are the same as proposals to the proposed $20 ASB president Mike Hoffman were authorized beginning in Service received contracts for outlines for the vending' award- million multi-purpose facility for was called upon to report the 'the fall of 1978. That increase the exclusive concession rights ee. BSU. '. figures gathered through an brings the total number of The direction came after ASB survey' conducted during out-of-state wavers for women ,discussion in the Board's February.and March along with to twenty-eight. Delegates gather to executive committee session the results of a poll taken during The amount of $12,500 was about the proposed $50 stagger- the March ASB general elect- approved toward the purchase ed fee increase to fund half the ion. President Bullington stated of sound system equipment for costs of the structure. The board ttiat although approximately the Special Events Center. The- discuss future of ISA accepted the withdrawal of the two thousand students were monies will eminate from the proposal and suggested that surveyed,. faculty members at . Building Bond Revenue Fund further plans for any type of BSU who are familiar with surplus. Installment costs for Representatives from five col- responsibility to a single person, pavilion project for. BSU be survey procedured had estimat- the equipment will be addition- leges and universities in Idaho lack of communication, and staff expanded to encompass other ed that between 700-800 would al. met to discuss the future of the rivalry were aired by memebrs proposals. ' represent the opinion of the A proposed fee increase for the Idaho Student Association (ISA) in attendance to the meeting. When asked the real meaning students. University of Idaho was post- on Friday, April 7 in Pocatello. All members appeared to of the Board's action, ASB .In other action by the State poned until the May Board Delegates from Idaho State agree that the structure of the president-elect Rob Perez state. Board, a motion inviting propos- meeting. The Board concurrent, University, .University of Idaho, organization would require a that the impact was two-fold. alsconcerning the creation of a Iyasked that some type of policy Northwest Nazarene College; change to facilitate the desires "I think, first, that we're non-profit state student loan be put together that would Lewis and Clark State College, of all the institutions involved. going to have to take another fund program passed with no outline a procedure for the and Boise State University What exactly that change will be assessment of student opinion dissenting votes. The proposal presentation of any fee hike gathered to outline their needs has yet to be decided. The 'and second, we'll have to had the backing of all four proposal other than meal or and desires for the formation of majority of delegates attending develop some alternative plans university and college presi- housing fee increases. Board an ISA type organization. Most asked that they be permitted to ... a few more designs." dents. member Janet Hay suggested students. present, with the take home a basic structure During the course of the The Board also accepted a that increases seemed to come exception of U of I, seemed proposal to their own respective discussion on the' issue, Interim proposal that outlined-the Merit in to "balance the budget." interested in .continuing •some governing bodies. Most wanted President Richard .Bllington ' Pay Criteria and Procedures for The Boar£! approved the type of unitedeffortsirnilar to 'to sound out the feelings at ';.." ...... , st,ated.thatthere was a-group-of 'members of the BSU 'faculty. awarding of three contracts for what thc'ISA' had attempted to home and firm up their' 'own students gathering signatures The document was the result of services for BSU. The vending establish in the past three years. particular desires to such an on 'the petition that would. ask the work, of the school of Arts contract went to Idaho Automa- Complaints about the method of organization. the State Board to postpone any and Sciences Merit committee, tic Sales Inc., a Division of financing ,in the' past, the No date was made for further action o!} the fee increase. and was later revised by the Canteen Corporation. The con- delegation. of authority and discussion of the issue. Page 2/ ARBITER / April 10, 1978 u n w

BSUstudents ottend other Alpha Kappa Psi to hold annual universities under NSf spring banquet Apri I 22 Feeny Griffin, owner and problems NSE coordinators and Jeanette Wilson; North Carolina The Alpha Kappa Psi. Profes- Twenty-seven students from -.operator of Betty Feeny's their programs face in the areas State-Kathi Burgess; Indiana- sional Business Fraternity will Boise State will be 'attending Decorator Shop, the Annex I, of recruiting, administrative Purdue-Clint Clark, Jaquie Lar- hold its annual spring banquet other universities around the and the Lamp Shade Shop, will - cooperation, and future growth son; West Chester-Tim Dean, . on the evening of Saturday, nation under the auspices of the receive the "Entrepreneur of of the NSE organization as a Tim Lamott, Kristin Moe, Susan April 22, at the Holiday Inn. National Student Exchange pro- the year" award, and Fred gram (NSE) according to Mau- whole. Stingley, Julie Woodall; Towson Two prominent businessmen Norman, Director of the BSU reen O'Keeffe, NSE student The NSE pregram itself is State-Donald Dunn; U of Dela- will be present to speak at this Student Union Building, will coordinator. unique in that it allows students ware-Robert Gossett, Tim Lam- affair. Richard A. Blott, vice- receive a civic award for his Twenty-nine students from the opportunity to attend ott; U of Utah-Lynn Laughrie; president of Sales and Market- outstanding public service. other universities will be attend- another member university Fort Hays-Tammy Lynch; U of ing for the Ore-Ida Foods, will Tickets for the Alpha Kappa ing Boise State during' the without paying out-of-state tui- Mass. at Amherst-Denise Min- speak on "what' employees Psi Spring Banquet are $8.00 course of the '78-'79 academic tion for the year or semester the or, Pattijo Paullus, Andy Dan- should expect from their em- each. For further information, year as well. student is at the host institution. iels; Rutgers-Robert Moore, ployers, " and Thomas H. Allen, contact Miren Totorica (342- The exchanges were made at Those students scheduled to Denise Tracy; U of Hawaii at senior executive vice-president 7881) Jan Buchanon (345-2476), the annual NSE coordinators' leave BSU and the schools they Manoa-Cindi Smutney, Julie for Idaho First National Bank, or Shane Bengoechea (343- conference in Chicago on March will be attending are: U of Wilson; Jackson State-Denise will speak on "Profits." 2895). R.S.V.P. by April 20. 14 and 15. The conference also Oregon-Janet .Bates, Robert Tracy; U of Wisconsin at Green Several awards will be present- featured workshops and an Gossett, Kathleen Robinson Bay-Kathy Van Lith, Greg Hill. ed to worthy recipients. Betty Guzienamed exchange of opinions on the Mary Struhs, Colleen Brennan, Applications for exchange dur- ing the spring of '79 are now recipient of music being accepted. For further Position open scholarship information contact the NSE office on the second floor of the for Resident Boise State Senior Music SUB or call 385-1280. student, Andy Guzie, has Director recently been named the recip- Nursing programs ient of the new $200 composition .get accreditation 1978-79 _ scholarship award by the Tuesday Musicale Club of The Associate Degree program The Office of Student Resid- Boise .. The Scholarship -was in Nursing at Boise' State ential Life is taking applications awarded on the basis of -the University and a cooperative for the position of Resident knowledge of strict harmonic nursing education program be- Director for 1978·79. The - writing skills, formal structures, tween BSU and Northwest position requires a Masters originality, creative process and Nazarene College, Narnpavhave , Degree in a related area." or talent. The decision was .made been granted continuing accred- equivalent life experience.vand on the submission of a chorale itation through the Fall or" 1985 experience in a group' living' arrangement and an original by the National League for situation. Duties of the position piece, Scherzo for piano. This Nursing. later work was premiered by According to Dr; JoAnn Vahey, include supervision- and man- .agement of a residence hall, Prof. Carroll Meyer at Guzie's BSU Chairman of the Depart- counseling, community develop- senior composition recital last ment of Nursing; the accredita- ment, conflict resolution, crisis De~ember. tion by the NLN: Board of Mr. Guxie has also won Review certifies that the pro- management, promotion of stu- consecutive first and second gram has .atained the highest dent, development, and pro- gramming. Renumeration will place composition awards from. [eont, on page 12] be' $7,000-$8,000 (9 months), the National Federation of Young, Democrats depending on education and Music Clubs (the state winner of .urged to attend experience, plus room and Compton's Composition Con- board. Applications are now test) in 1976 and in 1977. meeting available from the Office of Charles Bufe, also a senior All students interested in Student Residential Life, Room composition major, received forming a Young Democrats 110,' Administration Bldg., first runner up in the Tuesday student organization are urged Boise State University, 1910 Muscale Scholarship, for his , to attend the second meeting on University Drive, Boise, Idaho chorale and piano piece Fourth Thursday, April 13, at 5:30 pm 83725. Application must be in Attempt. in the Bannock room ofthe SUB. by April 15, 1978. Boise State Andy and Charles arc composi- Guidelines for an organizational University is an equal opportun- tion students of Dr. C. Griffith constitution will be drawn up at , ity Iaffirmative action institu- Bratt (emeritus) and J. Wallis the meeting. tion. Bratt.

New course on druqcbuse.to be offered in fall of '78

by Chuck Bnfe with ,the top down to Las According to Dr. Duke, the "We were somewhere around Vegas ... And a voice was purpose of the course is purely Barstow on the edge of the screaming: 'Holy Jeaus! What informational. He has no philos- . desert when the drugs began to are these goddamn animals?' " ophical ax to grind concerning take hold ... And suddenly there «Hunter Thompson, in Fear and the use of drugs. While noting was a terrible roar all around us ~athIng In Las Vegas-· that he believes that there is They're flirty, fluttery and feminine! and _the sky was full of what Use and Abuse of Drugs is a "no such thing as a victimless Shimmering opal butterflies! looked like huge bats, all new course which will be offered crime," and that society must a. Opal pendant, $80 'swooping and screeching a- this fall by the Health Sciences protect the "uninformed," he round the car, which was going b. Opal stickpin, $85 Department. The instructor will agrees that criminal prohibi- about a hundred miles an hour be Dr. Victor Duke, head of the tions of the use of' drugs c. Opal ring, $90 1 department and a- psycho- generally do more harm than All in 14 karat yellow.gold. . pharmacologist. Although the good. . course has not been previously Use and Abuse of Drugs IS f Charge it! offered at BSU, Dr. Duke has designed to be comprehensible Open a Zales account ,~r use taught it before-vat Montana to any student; Dr. Duke states one of five national credit plans State" where it was quite that "you don't have to be a Zales Revolving Charge _ Zales Cuslom Charge popular. Biology major"to understand VISA _ Master Charge _ American Express Diners Club _ Carle Blanche _ layaway The two credit cou~se will the material he'll present. focaus on the physiological and The course number of Use and psychological effects of "recea- Abuse is H-l09.Two sections Z LEI tional" drugs. The effects of will be offered, one on Tuesdays The Diamond Store -- commonly used and .abused aJfd Thursdays from .10:40. to nook~tore drugs, marijuana, LSD, barbit- Il:3Qam, the other on Thursday Hillcrest Plaza Phone 342-4341 455 Main Belgravia urates, cocaine; etc., will be evenings from7:oo to 9:00 pm. 336-7722 covered. . There is no limit on enrollment. April 10 1978 I ARBITER I Page 3

Brown Bog Foru Advising coordinators for continues in pre-registration announced

April Advising coordinators for advising for continuing stu- The Women's, Program Boise State University pre- dents. Committee of Boise State registration for Fall Semester, June 22-24: New and returning University continues with the 1978, have been announced by student' summer orientation and Brown Bag Forum, the topic for Dr. Gerald ,Wallace, Executive registration. Student must be April is Women and Economics. Vice President. incoming freshman or transfer There are many questions Assisting with the computer- student and submit an accepted about the impact of women ized system of pre-registration application to BSU not later than .working and potential problems directed by Registrar Susanna June 15. ' facing both women and men. Holz will be Dr. Margaret Peek; August 11: Last day to submit 'What are the career choices? School of Arts and Sciences; Dr. application for fall semester to What resources do women have James Doss, Business; Dr. be assured of registration in making those choices? Anne Nelson, Education; and materials at open registration These issues will be discussed Elaine Durbin, HealthSciences. (August 29). Students submit- during the Brown Bag Forum. This is the first time the system ting applications after this date Tuesday, April 11, in the' has been used at BSU. must register during late- Clearwater Room, S.U.B., at TIle coordinators will be registration which begins Au- Noon, hear from Cindy Wiber, available to assist faculty gust 31. Manager of Professional Staf- advisors in the pre-registration August 16: . Last day for fing, Boise Cascade Corpora- steps for Fall Semester. pre-registered students to com- tion. Students will register according plete financial arrangements Tuesday, April 18, same place to the following timetable: and pay fees for fall semester. and time, Nancy Jarvis, Busi- April 3·14: Pre-registration and August 29: Open registration. ness Management Assistant of. the U.S. Small Business Ad- Workshop to expiore ministration will discuss SBA's role in assisting women in of business. wildlands Alaska This is the year of Alaska. The national parks, wildlife refuges, Position open Boise State University Outdoor forests and wild rivers. Activities Center is sponsoring a "Congress must decide the local workshop on Alaska that fate of these magnificent federal On Saturday, approximately 3,500 walkers participated in the March of for will explore the wildlands of wildlands this year," Lowe said. Dimes 20-mile Walk-a-Thon. They raised over $99,000 for this Alaska and the decisions that "The question' before our organization. ,Student Assistant are being made about them. national representatives' is not The 'Office of Student This program will feature two whether these lands will be AAUWtohold Activities is accepting applica- outstanding color films, One national or state lands, but what New lunchroom tions for the position of Student Man's' Alaska and Land in the status the federal lands will Assistant to the Assistant Balance. Guest speaker will be 'have: parks and refuges or Biennial open to public Director: , Paul Lowe, executive director of. Bureau of Land Management." The position is for' the the Alaska Center for the In Boise, the, workshop will be Convention academic school year 1978-79" Environment. Accompanying held on Monday, April 10, at • BSU's Food Service' and is a 10-morith job involving LOwe will. be John Adams, . 7:30 p.m, in the BSU, Student Technology division of the approximately 20 hours pet Culdesac, coordinator of North- Union Big Four Room. The The Idaho Division of the . Vo-Tcch school opened its new week, including evenings and ern Rockies GrouP. of the Alaska program. is free and'the public is American Association of Uni- lunchroom two weeks ago. The ,weekends, paying $3.00, per Coalition. invitt!d.' . . versity Women will hold its lunchroom is open to the' public month. Individuals applying This vIJ>l'kshop is one of nine , 'The same week, workshops Biennial Convention May 5-6-7, between 7 am and 1 pm; must be Juniors or Seniors being held throughout Idaho to will be held in Sun Valley, Twin 1978: at the in breakfast is served from 7 am during the 1978-79 academic acquaint citizens with legisla- Falls, Pocatello and Idaho Falls. Caldwell, Idaho. The theme, until II am, and lunch is served year with no less than a 3.0' tion before Congress that would Previous workshops have been "Dedicated to the proposition from 11 am until 1 pm. GPA. protect about 95 million acres of held in, Sandpoint, Lewiston, that all ... are created equal", The food served is good, as is Duties for this job involve public lands in Alaska as new Coeur d'Alene and Moscow . .reflects the issues of equality we the service, and prices are low -- working with student organiza- face' today. . for example, coffee costs 15 tions; initiating and coordinat- TIle convention agenda is cents (with free tefills), and a ing new projects; assisting with. , filled with impressive speakers: .breakfast of two" eggs, hash the development and imple- Pauline Fredericks, newscaster: browns, and bise~its cost only mentation of social, recreational Dr. Lawrence Peters- author of 60 cents. " and educational programs with- The Peter Principle; our AAUW The lunchroom is located at in the student activities frame- President, Dr. Marjorie Bell 1311 University Drive (by the work; conducting correspon- Chambers and Regional Vice- stadium parking lot). It will be dence with other educational President, Anne Voilleque. The open through the end of this institutions regarding the status banquet will feature authentic semester, and will be closed of their extracurricular activities Micronesian food -md dancers in over the summer. It will re-open and' compilation of reports, their traditional costumes. The at the beginning of the fall manuals and informational bro- dancers and waiters are Micro- , Cont, on page 6 nesians attending the College of .semester. Idaho. AAUW Members and the public are invited. For further KAE'SANNEX 1 information for registration, please call Shirley McCullen at Presents: 376-0031. r------..... Kotrenka Lynn Mon & Wed 10-9 & (from Sun Valley Fri & Sat 9-6 Salon) Daily 10-9

Specializing in PERMS s CUTS for. MEN&WOMEN For Appointment ph.'377-0171 LOCATEDin the Mini Mall 5200 FAIRVIEW Page 4 I ARBITER I April 10, 1978 oprruonIII II

EDITORIAL • Whalwill you pay? n meric n You can't have your cake and eat it. An old, abused, hackneyed phrase, but when you get down to ground level, it's as good a statement as any of one of the fundamental laws of nature: you get back from any venture only what you contribute, one way or another. cc S5 t r The Arbiter has, for the last few years, tried to operate on a something-for-nothing basis. It has printed material according The assault on the English Language has not by Chuck Bore to the whim of whoever's in charge (which has sometimes been South Korean businessman, and reputed slackened in recent years. On.one front, there valid, sometimes not) and never mind what the people paying for is advertising; locally, we're forced to endure, Korean CIA operative, Tongsun Park testified the sheet wanted to see. Policies concerning cooperation with week after week, ads touting "delishus" food, before the House Ethics (sic) Committee, last student organizations or on-campus events have not been That's enough to make my teeth grind, but it is, week, that he made payment~ to 30 determined by how a paper can serve best, but by what the fortunately, not as bad as the recent microwave congressmen totalling $850,000. Park, who is Arbiter can get out of it. In short, we don't ask for your money, oven ad boasting that a certain oven could 43, maintained that he was a "young man" we take it; we give you a newspaper, take it or leave it. gauge the proper degree of "doneness." when he began lining the pockets of Realizing the need either to put ourselves back in step with the More insidious, however, are the deliberate congressmen (Park's involvement with certain Boise State community or to shelve the idea of a student congressmen ended only two years ago), and distortions of the language seen week in and newspaper altogether, the Arbiter is going to make an effort to said that, "in retrospect, I wish I had not done week out in the pages of Time and Newsweek. obtain the information necessary to shape the newspaper to Particularly galling is their practice, when certain things that I, did." BSU's direction.' Next week's Arbiter will feature a survey , According to Park, he was acting merely asa reporting skyjackings and the like, of referring designed to find out, broadly, two things: 1) what your priorities to heads of state in terms like ,"tough" and private businessman, not as a KCIA agent, are concerning the content of the student newspaper; and 2) when he made the nearly $1 million in "courageous." An outstandingly.nauseating information we can use to make the newspaper more attractive to payments. He stated that:"l'm sure I made example of such journalism; is the report on the advertisers (thus easing our financial load, and helping you save some mistakes. I have no problem admitting Mogadishu skyjacking in the October 31, 1977 money by presenting more information for making choices about that ... But I want to tell you what I have done. " issue of Time. The object of the periodical's what you buy and where to buy it). , . . constitutes an American success story on a adulation, in that instance, was West German At first glance, the survey will seem lengthy. We could have Chancellor Helmut Schmidt; Schmidt ordered a shortened the questionnaire to try to make it more palatable, but small scale." Special Counsel Leon Jaworski apparently' commando unit to storm the hijacked jetliner, in the end, it would have resulted in a hollow effort: no use to us, agrees with Park (this should. come as no rather than bargain with the skyjackers for the no use to you, There are many considerations to be made in surprise to those familiar with Jaworski's release of the hostages. putting together aquality publication. We're asking for your conduct as Watergate special prosecutor). Last How can that decision Possibly be termed help, a little of your patience, and around 15 minutes of your Monday, during a television interview, "courageous." Schmidt was in no physical time. No more. Jaworski, said that few sitting congressmen danger; he had no relatives among the After all, you never get something for nothing. Without the faced the' possibility of Justice Department hostages; and he stood to reap great political input from our readers, and that means you (you're reading this charges because (think about the following rewards from a decision which could have paper right now, aren't you?) we cannot serve Boise State statement for a' moment or two), he' believed resulted In: the deaths of,.dozens"of innocent; : according to the needs and desires of its people. With that that in "some, instances ~. . people accepted people. information" we car make the-whole venture worthwhile. Helmut Schmidt: callous and calculating? Thisis an opportunity the Arbiter has never presented to its money innocently." , Picture this scenario: Park (proferring an Yes. "Tough" and "courageous?" No. readers before. DON'T LET IT GET- AWAY. envelope containing $10,000): "A token of my Orwell must have just finished reading a copy of Time when he coined the term B.H. esteem." Congressman Bonzo (no relation to the Space Dog): "Why ... why, thank you. "d~ublethink." C' Due to an unfortunate circumstance, the plc.ture whfch wns You wouldn't want something for this, would meant to be on last week's cover of the ARBITER wns you?" Park: "You silly boy ... why would I • • • substituted by a phantom In the nlght. It was Just as much of a want anything in return for such a trifle?" surprise to us ns It was to you. • Probable? No. Buton the frontiers of free M.S. enterprise, anything is possible. If anyone thinks that I'm making a case for skyjackers, s/he should rest.assured that I most certainly am not. Most of those referred to as Letters to the Editor(more on page 5) "terrorists" in the media are no' better than the GIVE GENEROUSLY Schmidts, Carters, Huas, and Bre~lmevs of the Fellow Students: world. troth groups, the official terrorists Well, my year in office has come to an end. In this, my last A charity outfit identified by the acronym (heads of state) and the unofficial terrorists, are column, I'd like to thank some of the people who've helped to CHEAR has been running ads lately on KNX equally ready and willing to use the lives of make it a good one. Rene Clements, who has worked as Student news radio. The following is an excerpt from innocent people as pawns, in their' political Services Director, has done an outstanding job. She and her one of their spots: "Often, hearing loss is not power games. staff have gotten the student data processing center off the, detected at birth. This lessens the chances for ground. More and more of its potential is being realized each early detection." - GOOD SPORTSMANSHIP week. Dave Schwartz and the rest of the KBSU people have done an excellent job of providing quality radio programming for On a lighter note, Gene Mauch, manager of BSU's students and for the city of Boise, If you keep in mind the GEORGE ORWELL WON'T YOU PLEASE the Minnesota Twins, made an interesting inadequacy of the KBSU facilities and fundings, you will realize COME HOME Cont. on page 5 " the magnitude of this achievement. I would also like to thank Will Roy for his hard work as ISADirector. He has, over the last three years, done more to promote the unification of Idaho's PHOTO BUREAU: Ron Ferguson, Dick Selby, students than any other student in the state. Chris Rudd also Patti 9uong, Rob Williams, Andra Douglas deserves special thanks. Her work on faculty evaluation will, in Established May 1968, the ARBITER is a the long run, come to be regarded as one of the most important weekly publication of the Associated Students. contributions ever made by the student to the university. Icould of Boise State University. " go on and on handing out accolades. Ron Ferguson, Donn Clark NEWS EDITOR: Mary Struhs Articles and letters to the editor must be and the people at the Arbiter have spent many long hours FEATURES EDITOR: Terry McGuire submitted to the ARBITER office prior to Spm producing student publications. I very much appreciate their SPORTS EDITOR,: Freddie Vincent the Th~rsday before each publication, romt be work. Programs Board, under the leadership of Steve LAYOUT EDITOR: Mona St. Clair typewntten and must bear a legible signature. Robertson and Bill Kassis, has provided quality entertainment LAYOUT ASSISTANTS: Mary Fowler, Bob Letters mmt be limited to 350 words. I,' for us all. A specialthanks.goes also to Jerry Bridges for the Irusta, -Bud Humphrey, Chuck Bufe ' The ARBITER reserves the right to editfor libel three yeats he has spent in Public Relations. AD SALES: Donn Clark, Brad Martin Terry and taste. The ARBITER will not be responsible As I've said, there are so many people who have done so much. McGuire ' ' for unsolicited material. There is just o_nemore expression of gratitude I'd like to make. AD LAYOUT: Kevin Merrill Although I'm a supporter of the pavilion, I appreciate the Opinions expressedln the ARBITER are those COLUMNISTS: Chuck Bufe, Jean King. Mike cf the author and not necessarily those of the individuals who have taken an active stance against the Pavilion. Hughes, Sally Thomas ,.' - ~ITER staff, the Student Administration or I respect the fact that they care enough to try to do something REPORTERS: Bud Humphrey,lfett~Will, Fred the University Administration. about it. They can be sure that I will express their sentiments to Davis~ Rick Mattoon, Colleen Brennen, Bob The ARBITER is a member of and subscriber the State Board this weekend. I feel a bond with these people to Goar, Donn Clark., Diane Barr Col,lege Press Service, Collegiate Hedlines and because I think we are conscious of a common truth, that is, to COlCULA110N: Larry Blanc' United Features Syndicate . fail to act is to fIliI to live. ' .. STAFF ASSISTANTS: Peggy Middleton, .The offices of the ARBITER are located on the I thank you. for giving me this opportunity to serve:~ Suzanne Graesch - Sincerely, sec:ond floor of the Student, Union Building, BUSINESS OFFICE: 385-3401 Mike Hoffman Bo!Se State University. 1910 University Drive, '., ADVER11SING: 385-1464' BoI$C, m., 83725. " " . April 10, 1978 I ARBITER I Page 5 Letters to tJ', . ~udget cut means Senate votes to approve budget The next Senate meeting will by Diane Barr Administration $23,341 . be held on Tuesday, April 11, at By a vote of 8-1-2 on April 4, Arbiter $19,635 less entertainment 4:00 in the Student Union the ASB Senate voted to Minority Cultural Board $4,200 Edltor, The Arbiter: have been combined so that Building on the second floor. approve a budget of $192,140 Recreationai Board $10,000 .April. brings to the ASB a there will be one film shown a There will be a meeting of the and recommend its adoption to Photo Bureau ' $825 madness known as "Budset week (some additional money '77-'78 Senates-which will I)e the incoming Senate that will be SUPB $~4,640 Fever." 11.11 student organ~a- hasbeen allocated for a special followed by the swearing in of sworn next week. Student Services $8,291 tions and ASB Departments film -festival). all newly elected ASB officers The action was taken in order National Student Exchange must fight tooth and nail to We at the Programs Board for '78·'79. A short business to comply with the recently $1,344 . receive what they believe is realize that we are not the only meeting of those Senators newly passed Senate Act 22 which Lobby $430 their fair share. The FAB and ones who feel ripped off: The sworn-in will follow that cere- states that the old Senate must ' Election Board $1,844 ASB President and Treasurer yearbook and other organiza- . mony. All students are invited , furnish the incoming president Theatre Arts· $11,000 ultimately determine what each tions were cut out completely. to attend and participate in this with a proposed budget, and Public Relations $7,000 organization and department is But 'because we provide a direct process. that the out-going president KBSU $11,580 to receive. service to students, they should must furnish the incoming Service Awards $44,940 This year, because of a know in advance why they will Senate with a proposed budget. Les Bois -0· projected decrease in' next get less next year. This year, the proposals will be Beta Sigma Lambda Ada "0- Contestants needed year's enrollment, we have all The budget will be finalized exactly the same, as the budget Athletes for Christ -0- been forced to cut back in our and approved April 18. Any Personnel Selection ·0- outlines approved by the '77·'78 forMiss BSU programs. Unfortunately for students .requesting budget Senate was submitted to them students, the Student Union information can get it from the by President Mike Hoffman Programs 'Board has suffered a ASB offices. Any students Scholarship Pageant after he had received a list of Samoan to present disproportionate cut in funding. ' wishing to make their opinions Contestants are needed for the recommendations from the Fin· Our budget next year will be known may talk to their Miss BSU Scholarship Pageant ancial Advisory Board and plano lecture-recital $39,365 .(our 1976 budget was Senators, the ASB President to be held May 20 at 7:30 pm in pared a $210,000 figure to the $80,000). It may be interesting and staff, and Student Union the Special Events Center. The $192,140 sum. There were no Boise State University Music to note that service awards and Programs Board. We in student Department graduate assistant winner will receive a $500 government have no way of amendments added to that scholarship. To obtain an salaries will cost $65,511. proposal, although several fail- Sherilyn Samaan will present a Therefore, students can look determining your opinions un- application, go to the Activities ed after a short amount of piano lecture-recital April 13 at forward next year to fewer less we hear from you. 4:40 p.m. in the BSU Recital office on the second floor of the debate. SUB or call 343-5127 and ask for concerts, coffeehouses, and Tentative recommendations Hall. The public is invited to lectures. There will not be a Thank-you Kevin Carpenter. are: attend without charge. fine arts series. Our foreign, Bill Kassis pop, and classical film series SUPB Chairman PresidentthcnksAkf' American success story ]------EdItor, the Arbiter; awareness and understanding of Cont, ftomPage 4 rather than take off to care for satisfying their own sick needs). I have been honored to serve business. Such committees observation following the Twins his mother during her terminal, as President of AKP this term. were; . regional convention, One partial solution to the . opening day loss to the illness. . It is obvious that this group of Spring Banquet, Audit & problem would be to pass Mariners. Referring to mariner Teng's acclaim, however, is individuals is one of the most Finance, Alumni & Faculty; legislation mandating that every shortstop Craig Reynolds' game not universal. Japanese news- dynamic on 'the Boise State Professional Speaker, Fund hundred thousandth cigarette Winning home run, Mauch said: men stationed 'in Peking report Campus.' Raising, and : Membership' manufactured be impregnated : "My , grandmother could hit . that Teng's fellow workers think AKP had avery productive ,Pledge & Social Committees. with a deadly poison. A desire, home runs in this ballpark." As he's nutty as afruitcake." year, The members became Consequently, AKP members for revenge against smokers no.one on"Mauch's team proved (Thanks to the industrial involved in community profes- , learned how to invest our , would dictate that a poison, such capable of slugging a round- Worker for the information used sional, and social activities. " monies, work' with the outside -as, bot ullin toxin, which produ- ctripper, one is led to wonder in this section). . Some of the community business' world, plan, organize, ces a slow, agonizing death, be whether' Mauch is planning on activities that highlighted the and function as professionai used; humane considerations, inserting his grandmother in the .' KISSING A SMOKER past year were; Phantom Ball business people. however, dictate that something Twins' lineup as designated IS LIKE for MSTI, donation of S5OO.oo to ,In summary, Alpha Kappa Psi ,. . LICKING AN ASHTRAY fast-acting, like cyanide, be hitter. MSTI for Shenandoah, Valet members are .hard' working, used instead. There would be at motivated, aspiring. and intelli- parking for the MSn fund-rais- WORKING CLASS HERO A fellow Arbiter columnist put least some advantages in using ing dinner, and other various gent business people. They are forth a modest proposal last cyanide .- if you were sitting in «' community activities. AKP active .in many facets of restaurant, and an inconsiderate The Peking l'oople's Dally week: that the amount of tar certainly did its part to .help • business with diverse perspec- slob pulled out a ciggie, you reports that there is a new hero and nicotine in cigarettes be MSTI reach its goal. tives of the business world. In could at least hope that as soon for Chinese workers to emulate. increased so as to kill off In addition, AKP members my college career I have served as the' cigarette touched the The model worker is Teng smokers faster, That'S a good became involved with many on many committees & partici- creep's lips, s/he would be face Hsiang-erh, a coal miner from idea, but it simply doesn't go far professional activities such as, pated in many organizations. I 'down in the lettuce -and Shantung Province; Teng has enough. Sterner measures are professional speakers attending have traveled extensively and thousand island, rather than demonstrated his heroism in the needed' to combat the hordes of • our meetings, professional bus- met many professional business polluting the air you'd be following ways: in 28 years on pulmonary rapists (smokers -- iness-type meetings, and a people. However, I' must say breathing with a foul smelling the job, he's never taken a the term is justified because general professional attitude of the members of Alpha Kappa carcinogen. vacation; when he married, he smokers, like . rapists, assault members. For instance, AKP" Psi are impressive people. I I know this will never come to refused to take time off for a the bodies of others -- respire- wish all members the best in pass, but what's life all about if members assisted in coordinat· honeymoon; he works on his ton' systems in the case of ing the Ruckyeser lecture and their future. I know my learning " you can't dream? days off; and he stayed at work smokers' ..-- in thea course of assisted in chauffeuring busi- experience as a member of ness law professors to and from Alpha Kappa Psi has been one the airport for a business law of-my best, and one I will not conference in Boise. forget. Iu U and I, NEWlOCATI Most importantly, members Shane Bengoechea participated in fraternity com- ************************** President, Alpha Kappa Psi \!nittees that expanded their BLANCHE B.EVANS

Your Molenaar's FINISHINGAND MODELING Rt3presenfatives, 'SCHOOL\MODEL on Campus MANAGEMENIAGENCY 114 N.9th Suite No.1 0 (BroodbentBldg.) Pat Rick * INTERNATIONAL METHOD MODEL TRAINING * oose From Qualified students may attend the lntemotlonot Fashion Our Selection of Model Association's Convention for compettontlon Diamond Jewelry ,Watches Jewelers Earrings Pendants & Workshops at New York's Waldorf-Astoria, and much more 1207 BROADWAY ONE· .OF YOUR "STUDENT BUYING POWER CARD" , " .'ENROLLNOW ',. ' REPRESENTATIVES- 2 BLOCKS SOUTH OF BRONCO. STADIUM ' call 344-5380 or' 342-4263 Page 6 I ARBIT.ER I April 10, 1978

American Indian Positions open Entire Music Department goes on Institute slated in ASBSU Apri/13 government tour at one time The following positions are were the Opera Theater and the The Student Union Building it was finalized by the end of open in the ASBSU Student in the past, the large University Symphonette. Ap- wi1l be the site for the' Seventh January." The tour was Government: Arbiter Editor, individual musical ensembles, proximately ten faculty mem- Annual American Indian Insti- scheduled on the basis of Personnel Selection 1), Inter- such as the Meistersingers or bers and nearly 100 music tute, sponsored by the Depart- responses to a letter the national Students 2), Judiciary the Symphonic Band, were students spread their talents ment of History on April 13. department sent out to various 3), and Senate (all schools.) accustomed to touring separ- from school to school, giving The program will begin at 9:15 schools in the area. "The letter Below is a brief job description , ,ately. This year the BSU Music clinics and concerts to high a.m, in the Senate 'Chambers said something similar to this:" Department went on tour all at with a panel of Indian experts of each of the above mentioned explainedElliott. "'The follow- school music departments or one time, "It was a new project student assemblies in such discussing present day prob- positions: ing groups will be in your area ArbIter EdItor: Put together for us .. .' commented Wilber towns as Pocatello, Soda lems and current Indian legisla- on such-and-such a day. Would weekly student newspaper. Elliot, Chairman, " ... touring Springs, Idaho Falls and Rex- tion. The all Indian panel will you request in your order of Personnel SelectIon: Responsi- as a full department as opposed burg. Prior to touring, the be led by Mr. Lonnie Racehorse. priority whether you would like ble for interviewing applicants to touring in individual Department performed a pre- Chairman of the Idaho Inter-tri- a clinic or concert and if so, for 'all ASB committees and groups." Elliott believed that tour concert in the BSU bal Policy Board. Representu-: which groups and what time of related boards; making recom- on the whole, the tour was very gymnasium., tives from the National Tribal day, etc." successful. "There are prob- Upcoming ensemble perfor- Chairmen's Association, the mendations to ASB President. The groups that wenton tour lems, of course, that come up National Congress of American internatIonal Students: Estab- during the week of March 27 to mances include: anytime you try something Indians, and the Northwest lishes a body to meet the needs April I were the Meistersingers, April 23 - Jazz Ensemble new." Poor attendence during 11, Special Events Center Affiliated Tribes will partici- and problems of foreign stu- a choral group of approximately the evening performances April 28 - Percussion pate. 'Mr. Cody Bearpaw, dents. thirty-eight members, directed seemed a common occurence. Canadian Cree Indian and JudIciary: 'The ASBSU Judici- by Wilber Elliott; the Symphon- Ensemble, Special Events Cen- Whether the small crowds were Country- Western singer will ary has the power to determine ic Band, directed by Melvin ter due to a lack of publicity or a AprIl 30 - Symphonic Band, entertain over the noon hour in the constitutionality of any Shelton; the Percussion En- lack of communication, no one the Snack Bar. The program ASBSU action, to interpret the semble, directed by Dr. John Music Auditorium. really knows. will conclude with a public ASBSU constitution, to have Baldwin and the Jazz Ensemble, All performances begin at 8:15 , "We started working on 'the lecture at 7 p.m. in the Lookout, original jurisdiction "involving directed by Michael Samball. p.m. plans for the tour way back in featuring Mr. Vince Little, alleged violations of ASBSU Also involved in the touring the fall," Elliott said. "Most of Director of the Portland Area regulations. "Lunar Petrology" Nonpartisan symposium to be held in Office of the Bureau of Indian Senator: The Senate shall be the supreme policy-making Washington D'C' Affairs. All events are open to tooic of lecture the public without charge. This body of the ASBSU, shall ions and thoughts concerning initiate and approve all by-laws "The Presidential Classroom" year's Institute is being held in "Lunar Petrology: The Study our nation's present leadership. , 'or student regulations, shall is a nonpartisan symposium conjunction "with the annual and Interpretation of the Apollo In past years, the forum has grant official recognition to which will be held in Washing- Idaho All Indian Conference. Samples," will be the topic of, welcomed influential speakers campus organizations, and shall ton, D.C. this summer. The Events of that conference ~iII the Sigma Gamma Epsilon from both the House and the have legislative authority over purpose for this forum is 'to begin at the Rodeway Inn on lecture April 11 at 7 p.m. in the Senate, the Supreme Court and all ASBSU' funds. provide government employees, Wednesday, April 12, 1978. : Big Four Room of. the Boise' White House Staff. The $400 Applications for the above teachers, school administrators State University-Student U~ion tuition fee includes hotel' ac- positions may be picked up iii and university students with an Building. Speaker Ray Guille- comodations, seven meals in Climatologist 'to the ASBSU Office, second floor' opportunity to' study, first-hand, mette, BSU research' associate coordination with scheduled ofthe SUB, last hall in the north "the structure and substance of speak April in geology, will discuss Lunar events, transportation to and 13 end of the buildin . c the Feder~i government.'1 thin-sections, microscopic slide's' from seminar locations, trans- During three two-week. ses- of Moon rock, -on loan from the' portation and fees for scheduled Distinguished climatologist , sions, participants of the presi- National Aeronautics and Space tours. Dr. W. Lawrence Gates will Assistant dential classroom will meet in : Administration. The public is The three two-week sessions ' speak on "Climate: - Past, seminar, to discuss their opin------,,from, invited. are from June 18,July 1, July Present and 'Future," April'13' Cont., page 3 chures; serving as special 2-15 and rn;ni July 16-29. ,_A at 7:30 p.m., in the Nez Perce representative to Greek fratern- 'limited number of partial tuition Room of the Boise' State al organizations, and serving as scholarships are available University Student Union coordinator of Student Organi- 'mainly on the basis of need. For Building. Dr. Gates, whose zational Faire. more. information, stop by the appearance is 'sponsored by the Those persons interested in Honors Program Office on the BSU chapter of Sigma Xi, applying for this position should' fourth floor of the library or honorary scientific research go to the Oftlce of Student write: Executive Director, A fraternity, is Chairman of the Department of Atmospheric Activities on the second floor of Presidential Classroom for the Student Union Building; the Science. Oregon State Univer- Young Americans, P. O. Box deadline for application is April 19084. Washington, D.C. sity, Corvallis. The public is 11, 1978. 20036. invited to attend. ' CLARKS ARTESIA CURIOS 1146 N. Orchard, TE T next to the Golden Star LEA VINCi DOISE -iliAY 29 Turquoise Jewelry Wide selection of hand made RETUI\N JUNE i3 moccasin, leatherware, woodcrafts, and line drawings Hand-Tooled Leather Many Specials up to 50% or more off

Gift Certificates for any amount Layaways-up to 60 days

STOREIII HOUR5--= lobolTravel ,~onday-Thursday '10-10 Friday 10-4:30 MAIH OFFICE 1iii .MAIN" 342-9351 Closed S.aturday & Sunday • UNIVERSITY DRANCH 2285' UHIVERSITYDR. 336-4560 April, 10, 1918 I ARBITER I Page 7 BSUPr gra s Board presents 5 ial Ev nts eek

onday April ~o. torn Scott in concert 8:00 p.m. at the Ada Theatre .$4.00 stud 55.S0gen i~~:~~g~~~~~ .8:0 pmSUB Ballroom FREE

:-' :'"-...... ~dnesdoypriI12 . Tlrauifsday _pril i:) ".World Frisbee Champion . Victor Macafronte '. lecture Demonstration

11:30 - 12:30 - Clinics 0 follow all day in the· Quad "'.

ThUtru April 13 .' Same as Wednesday Frisbe Tournament -10:00 a.m. - on, SUB lawn Tom Scottin Concert- $4.00 Students- $5.50 General Pinball Tournament _. Games Area Pin~cWeTournament -7:00 p.m., w/trophies 8:00 p.m. -- Ada Theatre Pinball Tournament - Games Area Fri u April 14 - ROTC Repelling the Special Events Center All afternoon . Picnic, Julia Davis Park, 4:(}0p.m. Live Bands All students, faculty. and staff welcome 'The Gong Show' - 8:00 p.m. Prices to be announced. SUB Ballroom - FREE! International Films - "Smiles of a Summer Night" Croquet "7""" 10:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m, - Quad 7:00 p.m., Boisean Lounge Pinball Tournament - Games Area Pinball Tournament - Games Area

Wed a April-12 Sat. April 15 Croquet - 10:00 .m. - 3:00 p.m. ~ Quad I.K. Spring Fling - Roby Creek -2:00 p.m. World Frisbe Champion, Victor Macafronte [FOODand BEER] - Price to he announced 11:30 a.m. -clinics to follow all day. .. Mel Brooks Film Festival 12:30 p.m. -Frisbe Lectures- Quad 50c Students ."- $1.00 General Pinball Tournament.,... Games Area 2.:00p.m, and 7:00 p.m. - BoiseanLoul1ge Page 8 1 ARBITER I April 10, 1978 f r

" Hot LBaltimore " definitely Idaho Civic Ballet not worth seeing a gr~up effort been a bit worse, the lack of again to a tired whore after a by Sally Thomas by Donn Clark remarkable lady of early this timing could perhaps been hard day's work. The Idaho Civic Ballet in century. vintage had an insight construed as being part of the Jacky (Ginger Scott) is a fast Performance at Boise State "It's seven o'clock" starts the into ghosts and spirits of the jazz routine. Alas ... talking. schemming young lady SPEC Center April 7 and 8 had a laughter and the amusement of past. She knew a slave, strange "Episode." A fitting title for who has plans. Unfortunately ragged beginning. With their "The· Hot L Baltimore" men, and even' a girl who had this rather stupid and silly peice the ideas had no end result, the timing off, one could almost written by Lanford Wilson. been murdered. Millie had a of ballet. Soap-opera sexism in goals were never accomplished. hear the dancers count one-one Hotel Baltimore is an old hotel number of stories to t~1I about all its vulgar glory went on and Jamie (David Alphin) is one-one, two-twotwotwo, three- doomed for the wrecking ball, the ghosts that she knew and on and on--exhibiting little . Jacky's younger brother. Jamie thrcethreethree, rurn-turnturn- but more important than the always captivated the audience sense of life and no sense of was usually just present, being turn, for that is about the building itself is its residents. each time she told one. human dignity. Three subjected told what to do or not to do. sequence with which they did it. Mr. Katz (Doug Coupsey) Mr. Morse, (Rod Jones) the women chasing after the typical After hours of playing checkers The beauty of the "Black and who owns and operates the other Hotel Baltimore oldster, is (for this kind of trash) man with Mr. Morse, they end in a White Ballet" was almost Hotel Baltimore is young and an old koger of seventy. He is provided the downright insult - physical fight. totally lost in .the annoyance prestigious. Obviously Katz is partially deaf and definitely set ing message and the flat, insipid Suzy (Victoria Holloway) is suffered by watching rnistirned bored with his position at the in his selfish old ways. Always dancing only added to the another prostitute residing at steps, turns, leaps, and pauses. hotel but lives with it anyway. complaining about his health, the hotel. This energetic, hyper, The dancers seemed adequate injury. He simply puts up with the Morse's problems are caused by What is thereto say about the lovely lady is in the prime of her in their individual roles, but a hotel's residents. the conditions (either too hot or next offering? Reading the career. Unfortunately this scat- group effort it was not. The girl (Diane Foster) too cold) at the hotel. billing, "Djernil and Nourreda; terbrained beauty just can't The second number, "Faran- answers to many names. Young April, (Seelye Smith) a A Grand Pas de Deux in a more pull enough together .to get dole," fared a bit 'better. Not and beautiful are her only prostitute with a very flavored modern idiom with an oriental involved. that the timing problems had attributes. Although she is a past, is quite calm about most flair," this reviewer scarcely Other members of the cast been solved, no. But, because it prostitute, she hasn't had the events that happen at the knew what to anticipate. It soon hotel. April stands on a wandered on stage and stayed, .was a jazz number and the cast exposure that years in the became obvious that the billing gruesome view of life. She is or just passed through. Bill seemed to have fun doing it, it business would give her. Her won out over the performance. truly many characters in one. (Steve Welker) the night clerk, was easier to be forgiving. With immaturity is revealed by her Once or twice it seemed as Each minute of the play changes looks like someone out of the the movements being just a bit eagerness to delve into any though the mechanics so neces- late 50's. He lives well with the out of sync, though, annoyance exciting opportunity. her mood, her attitudes, and her [cont, on page 12] residents, enjoys the other's Millie (Rebecca' Woodworth) .ideas. She works well in moving again set in. Had the problem excitement, and probably in- .was one of the two longtime from a flaunting lady of the residents of the hotel. This night to aFrcnch-rnaid and back [cont, on page 13) .TRAVElING LIGHT e

: . .

". } '. . . .< r. ,···n'" . 5 C. . m o spent the next several hours 'three of us, my two brothers .and a lot of 1110unds to serv.e as by Sally Thomas waste land of alkali and decoys. .When the word was frantically digging up the end of Ali! Spring in Jdaho. Spring, sagebrush, and on the west by myself, were playing at the bottom of the bean field, The given, the two turned around' that field. when the wind blows 'and the hundreds, if not thousands, of We couldn't find the shoe. crop had been harvested and the and frantically dug into the rain falls and the skies are grey .. acres or' desert. Strung mounds. Whoever found the , Here, as they say in the old Spring, when it's raw in the . randomly across the place were ground disked down to a soft smoothness. Bored with racing shoe got to hide it next. novels, the gentle hand of mercy morning and cold at night; when several piles of rocks measuring It was John's turn to hide the draws the curtain over the the sun teases one out of one's" approximately IS' x 20' x 4' each other across the end of the field and bored with .hearing shoe. Mike and I turned on following scene. jacket before ducking behind a high; every rock hand-picked each other's old jokes, often signal and tore into the mounds. cloud for the remainder of the from somewhere on that farm When the drama re-opens, I heard before, we decided to play No shoe. We dug deeper. Still day; when the mortality rate for before being carried to the pile. no shoe. John sat back and somehow haze another pair of fruit blooms reaches gO percent Where the rocks didn't grow, "hide my shoe," Actually, my brothers made the decision as to laughed. shoes and am found skipping overnight and the rain, failing the morning-glory and ground- "Hee, hcc, hee. Fooled you. I blythly across one of the huge for days without end, completes' cherries did. Add the factor of which of us would volunteer a shoe to be hidden and, as usual, didn't put a "mound over it." rock piles which littered the the work.. Spring -- Idaho's seven growing children to The shoes were less than a. farm. I poised and leaped from ugliest time of the ~ear. support and .voilal Constant I got to volunteer. The rules of the game were week old. They were also "the one huge boulder -toward two What is it about this season, I poverty. only pair of shoes you'll get this smaller ones, but, misjudging Because we were short on simple. Two of us turned our wonder, that often makes me winter -- so take care of them." my distance, I landed in the money, :we became long, on backs, no peekin', while the think of the time we buried my It did not take the hand of God crack between the two. My foot imagination. It was in the fall, third buried my shoe in the field shoe in the bean. field? writing in the sky to get the was stuck fast. Pulling and' It was a small farm, bordered on a Saturday afternoon when and heaped a mound of dirt over the spot. The trick was to make message across. The three of us twisting, I finally jerked it free. on the south by the dry forty, a the sun was still warm, that the While I stared at my stockinged Academy Award foot in horror, I heard the shoe fall down, down, down, into the documentary to center of the rock-pile.

Super DiscountApril13th Only show April 20 A phenomonal record! Two left shoes lost in less than one SUB Lobby "Hearts and Minds," winner week. As I trudge, in tears, of the Academy Award for best toward the house _. shoe foot. documentary feature of 1974, sock foot, shoe foot, sock foot -- j',. ~~;;>lI;i' -_.~-r~.~,Josten's BSUMen's Ring will be shown at no cost to. the merciful darkness once again 1 ~~ '~)' student on April 20 in the descends. Bosiean Lounge ofthe SUB. The ~\~.'~ ..•'r.IY! in}~rgentus~s.i1~er ~\.' 4~ film "gives a side of the We never round the shoe in ~~, &.ladles Fashion Rmgs\. Vietnam War that I'm sure most the rock pile. It could not have people have not seen," says more effectively disappeared Michael McNeil, who has been had it fallen to the center of the -:J/!;f In 1OK gold $5· 9· 95· ~\ the main instigator in obtaining earth. But we did find the ~(~ • plus tax n the film.. Sponsored by the bean-field shoe. 'That is, my .~, * A unique blend of classic silver and Sociology Club and financed by father found it during' spring Societal and Urban Studies, the plowing some two years later. precious paladium which is durable and non-tarnish- Military Science Department, By that time, it was better off ing,thus retaining its beauty and brightness for the Communications Depart- buried. year'Sto come, . ment, and the Social Work Department, "Hearts and But that was fall and this is Your school ring symbolizes personal achievements Minds"is an exploration of the spring, the season of change . and thosP'pr.eciousco"ege!TI~mories. American psyche and a look at and growth and new begin- cherished ideals incontlict with nings .. To paraphrase a famous way to Your CollegeRing is the best rememberll cont. on page 16. quote, "Growingup is hell," - Specicllnsert Paid for by the DSUBaha'I Association

..,., I

48The'eatthis.but. on.country~. . ..."'andmankinditscitizens/'l1. -DCllh6'u'1I6h .. • Ii I Ie t t

major faiths. It is difficult to visualize, for example, the establishment of any BAHA'I: genuine world government while various segments of the world's population differ World Faith for Modern Man so markedly in their fundamental atti- tudes, _purposes, and values. What is needed is a new spiritual approach which Nature and Purpose will at once reconcile the basic contradic- The Baha'fFaith is a new, independent, tions in major religious beliefs. be consist- universal religion, whose goal is to revital- ent with modern scientific and rational ize mankind spiritually, to break down principles, and offer to all peoples a set of the barriers between peoples, and to lay values and a meaning to life that they can the foundation for a unified world society accept and apply. To meet this need the based upon principles of justice and love. Baha'i Faith presents a challenging set of Teachings, founded on the concept of The Faith recognizes that the major progressive revelation. problem of our age is the resolution of a series of deeply ingrained conflicts which Progressive Revelation are in terrelated and penetrate various levels of society: conflicts between ideolo- The main stumbling bl~ck to religious gies, na tions, religions, races, and classes. unity has been the insistence of each Such conflicts, when combined with the major faith that its Founder and Prophet weapons of annihilation our age has pro- possesses some degree of exclusive author- duced, threaten the future of civilization ity or finality. The Baha'i Faith teaches as we know it. They misdirect the efforts that this traditional division has resulted of science and technology at a time when from a misinterpretation of the symbolic man is beginning to discover the myster- words of these great spiritual figures. In ies of interplanetary space and harness the Baha'i view, the unknowable force new sources of .power, They consume an which is responsible for all creation, God, inordinate proportion of our productive guides and assists the apex of His creation, energies and divert attention from the mankind, by periodically sending an Edu- conquest of our natural enemies: igno- cator. This Educator, a man physically rance, disease, hunger. like other men, has been selected by God world opinion increasingly recognizes and divinely inspired to carry out three that the solution of these conflicts must functions: (1) to restate the eternal spir- be applied on a world level to have a last- itual truths, such as the Golden Rule, ing chance of maintaining peace. The which are to be found in most religious conviction also grows that all of these Teachings: (2) to bring laws and teachings con Oicts have as a root cause the lack of which apply to the needs of society at a 'spiritual dynamic, a moral 'or ethical His particular time but which are not nec- power strong enough to counteract divi- essarily meant to be permanent; and (3) sivesocial forces and channel rnen's efforts to release throughout the world a spiritual. in constructive directions. Yet when we force intangible but .vcry measurable in

inspired, speaking the Word of God,occu- ing of a new Prophet, d pying a level of existence well above that source of wisdom and of ordinary man, Baha'is revere Them in . Bringing this concep Their exalted position of spiritual leader- • • age, !3ah4'is believe t1~a ship and as a source of man's knowledge tory is com parable III of God, but they do not worship these the ages in the past wlu Messengers as God incarnate. By accepting cts have come to cnligh ~~\~~':to:~:_J1:~~~~~~q~~~~~p;I~!'i2j ';:~ji;'; the Revelators of the existing major faiths, kind. Certainly the \VOl Baha'i Fahh in ,~~ d,vt~~~1 Krishna, Buddha, Zoroaster, Moses, Jesus from religion, at least Haifa, Israel, the .c~·" Christ and Muhammad, as equally occu- an influence and inspi golden-domed ~~ ..... pying the station of Manifestations of live's and actions of !afl As a result we ar~ lac Shrine of the God, and recognizing the religions They established, as being genuine and true ex- ity and have permittee Bab [Prophet- , Herald of the _' :;.- -,""l~,,-1. Baha'i Faith] ~--~ ~~" graces the slopes An 9ffPatlfeligions havti pi of Mount Carmel. of Q universal teacher ,~ look at the field of religion, the historic its effects, which eventually causes mil- source of spiritual guidance and assist- lions of people to respond to the Prophet develop in which COl ance, we find that the major religions are and His Teachings, recognizing both as pressions of God's message, the Baha'i and become the dom sharply divided and are themselves one of being from God and enabling the new view reconciles the basic concepts of these cal problem of our the principal areas of conflict. They exist religion to be themajor impetus for the faiths without requiring that loyalty to are looking for a spi exclusive of each other and have, down next cyclical upturn in civilization. -orbeliefin the divinity of the Founders but are divided as tc through the centuries, developed in their Of any of them be repudiated. Wide dif- followers widely diverse attitudes toward ,The key to the Baha'i interpretation ferences in their Teachings today can be If the lessons of the 1 it will come, but rhrc life which hinder general understanding of the meaning of religion in the develop- explained by the alterations made by suc- and cooperation among peoples. ment ofrsociety is its emphasis on the cessive Prophets in the laws applicable to ofa great new spiritl periodic, evolutionary nature of this in- the changing needs of society, and by the than from the renew; , Since a lasting solution of our political fluence. If God chooses to guide mankind fact' that many of the current teachings gious institution's of t and economic problems can only be at all, it is logical that He would do so of the orthodox churches stem, not from And that is exact achieved on a world level, something must from the very beginning of man's exist- the original words of- the Prophets,but Faith claims has hap first be done to bridge the vast spiritual ence as a species and continue this help from subsequently, added dogma and Who founded the F, gap existing between the followers of the indefinitely. And since change and orderly interpretations 9f fallible church leaders .. Baha"is as the Prophet progress _are characteristic of _all other In effect the Baha'is, regard all of these possessed of the ,same Excerpts. from Baha'I: World Faith for aspects of our lives, why should they not major faiths -as being a part of the same spiritual dynamIC as Modem M~ Copyright ©1960, 1972 by the evolving religion, which has been restated Moses, and the other National' Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of also apply to our spiritual development? and reinvigorated periodically by the com- to the world to perf the , reprinted by permission. By regarding God's Messengers as divinely -- ~- .,'. ~.. - - ---~'-'-._.-.-'-----

CD I I tif I tl The oneness of mankind "Ye are the leaves and fruit of one tree, the flowers of Baha'i one garden, the waves of one sea." Individual investigation of the truth' 'Man must seek the reality himself, Teachings forsaking imitation and adherence to mere hereditary forms." Common foundation of all religions "Every true Prophet hath regarded his fora message as fundamentally the same as the Revelation of every other Prophet.. .. "

New Harmony of science and religion' 'Should.a man try to fly with the wing of religion alone he would quickly fall into the quagmire of superstition, whilst on the other hand, with the wing of science alone he would also make no progress, but fall into the despairing slough of materialism." -.

Equality of the sexes' 'The chief cause of the mental and physical inequalities of the sexes is due to custom and training, which for ages past have molded woman into the ideal of the weaker vessel. "The world in the past has been ruled by force, and man has dominated over woman by reason of his more forceful and aggressive qualities both of body and mind. But the scales are already shifting - force is losing its weight and mental alertness, intuition, and the spiritual qualities of love and service, in which . woman is strong, are gai riing ascendancy. Hence the new age wi II be an age less masculine, and more permeated with the feminine ideals - or, to speak more exactly, will be an age in which the masculine and feminine elements of civilization will be more properly balanced.

Elimination of prejudice of all kfnds "All prejudices, whether of religion, race, politics or nation, must be renounced, for those prejudices have caused the ,world's sickness. "

Universal education "To acquire knowledge is incumbent upon all, but of those sciences which may profit the peoples of the earth, and not such' sciences as ' begin in mere words and end in mere words."

The world-famous il]ternational C;luxiliary language "Generally speaking, the whole people of the Baha'f House of Orient are not fully informed of events in the West, neither can the Westerners 'Worshfp,'located on put themselves in sympathetic touch with the Easterners; their thoughts are the shore of Lake enclosed in acasket - the intemational lanquaqe will be the master key to open Michigan at Wi"lmette, 'it. " Illinois, is dedicated to the unity Qf the huinan Abolition of extremes of wealth and poverty "One should not live in excess whi Ie another. has rio possible means of existence.' race, and is open to the . 0 ~ .~ people of all nations, . races, classes and Universal peace upheld by a world government "The'well~being of mankind, its creeds.' e peace and security, can never be achieved unless and until its unity is firmly established." . Q)

:t, drawing on the same functions. He is believed to have the same md spiritual power. decisive potential for counteracting dom- inant negative influences and for leading Passages from the written and spoken words of Baha' u'ilah and' Abdu' I-Baha ccpt down to our own mankind to new level of peaceful, uni- that this period in his- a : in many respects to fied, and constructive existence. when the great Pro ph- . lighten and guide man- On May 23, 1844, a young Persian world has turned away The 1',3ational declared that He was the forerunner of an ast in its pure sense, as important new spiritual Figure, and took, Spiritual Assem- nspiration in the daily bly of the Baha'Is 'large bodies of people. the title of Bab (Gate). His Teachings were lacking a basic moral- profound and' poetic and were widely of the United .ttcd a state of mind to accepted throughout Persia. But they States reflects the divers~-ty of the _ American Baha'i communi-ty. promised the QPlP~-QfCnCe whe win unite mankin(dL~ rrurnsters, who from an early age had Figures with the modern world and every- shown more interest in spiritual concerns day problems. Yet Bah.i'u'llah not only lived in our time but was contemporary in were also considered heresy by the fanat- than in the world of politics and society. conflier has prospered the fullest sense of the word. His Teach- ical Islamic mullas, who taught that He embraced the Babi Faith in its early lominant fact and criti- ings are extremely advanced and person- Muhammad was the greatest and the last stages and demonstrated a profound grasp sur time. Many people, of the deeper meanings of the Bab's Teach- ally He had a profound influence upon spiritual revitalization of the Prophets and who feared that the ings. In 1853, while in prison because of all who came in contact with Him, an s to how to achieve it. Babis represented a threat to their efol- His Babi activities, He had an intimation influence which will continue to spread, he past are meaningful, trenched position. Therefore the Islamic that He was the great Prophet foretold by for centuries. A distinguished orientalist of th,rough the appearance clergy combined with the corrupt govern- the Bab, but He did not announce this Cambridge University, Professor Edward iritual Educator, rather ment to stamp out the new Faith by force. publicly until 1863. The title He usedj- G.Browne, who visited Baha'u'llah in 1890 iewal of any of the reli- During two decades more thanZO,OOO Baha'u'Ilah (Glory -of God)-had been and was one of the few Westerners to have of the past. Babis were martyred, often being cruelly given Him by the Bab. Most of the Babis the privilege of such a meeting, wrote viv- cactly what the Baha'i tortured first. The Bab Himself was public- accepted His claim and became Baha'is idly of Him: "The face of Him on Whom 1 happened. Baha'u'Ilah, ly shot in 1850 before some 10,000 spec- (Followers of the Glory), though there gazed I can never forget, though I cannot : Faith, is accepted by tators. This period is one of the heroic and were some defections on the part ofdis- describe it; Thosepiercing.eyes seemed to ahet-of God for this day, dramatic episodes in modern history and appointed would-be leaders. read one's very soul; power and authoriry : irne divine guidance and deserves to be better known, in the West- Many people today tend to think of sat on-that ample brow; whilethe .deep as Christ, Mt,1hammad ern World. lines on the forehead and face implied an One of the most active Babis was Mirza Prophets ,in terms of past ages. It seems', her Prophets, ;nd com; hard to connect these remote and holy age which the jet black hair and beard perform the same three Husayn 'All,son of one of th~ government mmistrator have been considered by flowing down in indistinguishable luxuri- Baha'IS as the product of divine guidance ance almost to the waist seemed to belie. granted to him in his position as Inter- No need to ask in Whose presence Istood, preter of the Baha'I Teachings. as 1 bowed myself before One Who is the On November 4,1957, Shoghi Effendi object of .r devotion and love which kings passedaway in London of a heart attack. might envy and emperors sigh for in vain!" At the time of his passing, there were Because of continued persecutions by U Man must be e lover. of the light twenty-seven persons known as the Ha~lds the Islamic hierarchy and the Persian and of the Baha'i Faith who had been appoll1t- Turkish governments, Balui'u'll.ili and His no 'matter from ~hQt day-spring ed by Him to cMry on the un.ified teach- close foUowers were kept prisoners until ing work and to protect the interests of Bah.i 'u 'll.ih 's death in 1892 and for six- it may appear •••• tIe must be Q the Faith. Through their efforts the first teen years thereafter. The last years of Universal House of Justice was elected in Balui'u'llalr's life were spent in the Holy seeker of the truth no matter from 1963 by the fifty-six National Spiritual Land, at the fortress city of 'Akka and at Assemblies (the nationally elected admin- nearby Bahji. During all these years ofim- istrative boards) existing at that time, in prisonment He actively worked to estab- what seuree it comes.... A rose is accordance with explicit provisions in the lish a firm foundation for the new Faith Writings of Bah,i'u'lIAh and 'Abdu'I-B~ha through copious and inspired Writings and for the election of this supreme institution through administering its affairs by corres- of the Baha'i Faith. While democratically pondence and contact with a stream of elected, The Universal House of Justice, visitors. His strong letters to the reigning functioning as an entity, is the recipient of monarchs of that time accurately foretold divine guidance as assured in the Writings the trend of modern history. His spiritual of Baha'u'llah. It acts as the supreme leg- Writings represent the Scriptures of the islative body.in the Baha'i world, applying Baha'f'Faith, in which for the first time the Teachings of Baha 'u 'll.ih to specific the Holy Bo'ak of a major religion is avail- conditions and problems, and providing able in the authenticated handwriting of the necessary adaptabilitv to new circum- its Founder, or signed by the Founder if stances essential in this fast-changing age. in the handwriting of a secretary. These Writings are accepted by Baha 'IS as the Word of God for this age, and animpor- tant portion of them are now available The Balui'I Faith is a religion, a society, in English. In His Will, Bah[l'u""ih appointed His and a way of life. It reoffers spiritual eldest son, 'Abdu'l-Baha, the central figure truths the world needs but from which it in the Faith after His passing.'Abdu'I-Bah;i has turned away, and it provides lawsfor is in no sense of the word considered to be regulating society that arc new and suited a divinely inspired Prophet like Bnh.i'u'llrih to the requirements of our own age, and the Bab: but He is regarded as a per- In the words of Shoghi Effendi: "The fect exemplar of the-spirit of Bnha'u'Ilah's principle of the Oneness of Mankind, .. Teachings as applied to one man's life, and represents the consummation of human His explanations of the meanings of these evolution-an evolution that has had its Teachings, written in a somewhat more - earliest beginnings in the birth of family westernized style than His Father's, are' beautifulln' whetseever gorden it· life, its subsequent development in the accepted as authentic. He was a saintly achievement of tribal solidarity "leading in' man and was loved and revered by all who turn to the constitution of the city-state, came in contact with Him. maY,'bloOM ••••ln order to find truth and expanding later into the institution 'Abdu'\-Baha and His entourage were of independent and sovereign 'nations. freed from prison by the Young Turks we must give up out pr~juduces" Revolution in 1908. He moved to Haifa, .. '. " ... "The principle of the Oneness of Mall- and today' the international headquarters .eur own smell, trivial netlens, an kind,as proclaimed by Balui'u'lhih, carries of the Faith are there on Mount Carmel, withit no more and no less than a solemn where a beautiful series of Shrines and open, reeeptlve mind lsessentlel." .r, assertion that attainment to this final gardens have been constructed. 'Abdu 'l- stage in. this .stupendous evolution is not Baha visited Europe in 1911 and Europe -' Abdu'I·Doh6 only necessary but inevitable, that its and America in 1912, where He spoke to realization is fast approaching, and that audiences from coast to coast. He was nothing short of a power thatois born of knighted by the British Commonwealth God can succeed in establishing it." in 1920 forblis humanitarian activities

during World War L He died in 1921. tn;:!M': It·'· Uk ' . iM ' "-$ "11 r E-M . 'Abdu 'l-Baha's Will established the insti~ tutioil of the Guardianship and appolnted , His grandson, Shogh~ Effendi, .then a stu-

'0 dent at Oxford, as Guardian. For th~ty- six years Shoghi Effendi labored strenu- ously to strengthen and develop the Baha'I 445001\1 win thepresent"doy Otd~f be foiled up, Administrative Order. His own writings, many of them in English, have expanded . and a ne\v one- spread out in its stc&ad." " ' the horizons of the Faith and have given' ' it direction during an exceedingly difficult Daho'u'liah period in its history. His vision of the Faith, his understanding of world condi- tions, and his superior 'abilities as an ad- r~------~------'I " Baha'is live in more than 70,000 localities throughout over I I am interested in the Baha'i Faith. Please provide me with 310 coun~ries and territories around the world. They come I from all different classes, cultures and religious backgrounds, I information about it. I would prefer: I finding in the Baha'i Faith a basis of unity which appreciates I o literature sent to me the richness and value of diversity. I I o teachers to visit me Baha'is at Boise State University ,invite you to investigate I o to attend study classes t~e pr?mise of the Baha'i Faith: firesides (informal I I, o information on how to join diSCUSSions)are held the first and third Saturdays of each I month at 2116 Madison St., Boise at 8 p.m., or you can.wrH~ I Name for information to the BSU Baha'i Association, c/o Student I Address I Activities Office, 1910 University Drive, Boise, Idaho 83725, Town/State _---'- ,-- Zip, _ I or the Information Office at the National Baha'i Center 112 I I Telephone Linden Ave., Wilmette, Illinois 60091. ' I Remarks: I RAW ¥ I I I I I I Baha'i' students at BSU wUI present a literatur() display In I No Donations Accepted, I the SUB lobby on Wednesday and Thursday,AprU 12 and 13, L_~_~~_~--~-~~__~_--~---~ -~~~--J from 9:30 to 3:00. Feel free to drop by a.ndoffer any questions., April 10, -1978 I ARBITER I Page 9 Insight from the old and the new • • resl ents I e interviews by Bud Humphrey both on the individuals in office Board, he said. "We blocked an wants to evaluate himself; in legislature. "Boise State's been On Tuesday, April 11, a and on the observer. At any increase for dormitories, ten addition to this, it provides a leader irr unifying the students student government wUl be, rate, Hoffman cites some of dollars, that nobody even knew standard questions to be used of Idaho. We haven't played relieved of Its duties and a new what he feels arc mostly positive about; blocked an increase for across the university. It'll give isolationist _. we've tried to go contingent wlU take Its place; accomplishments by the exec- athletics, with a unified effort, us a better idea as to what out and compromise, to make Presumably, the new blood will utive branch of the ASBSU last among a lot of students. We also departments, .. , what instruc- people aware of the importance be eager to start shaping and year. were able to get the State Board tors are most responsive to of a unified effort among dlrcctlng the ASBSU toward Even though the original ... to review the role of student needs." students in the state. II better ends as soon 'as their intent of the ASBSU's alcohol- intercollegiate athletics in the Students' reactions to the The ASB's mistakes this year can be learned from, assured nervous hands meet the clay. on-campus suit was, ultimately university. I think that's pretty pavilion question (recently And In all probability, the old lost to a State Board of important; it shows they are shelved by the State. Board) Hoffman. "Some people think the way we handled the pavilion guard will "jump .at the opport- Education ruling, Hoffman as- listening to us, they are paying showed, Hoffman, said, a issue was a mistake·.... We unity to get a few overdue term serted that winning the suit on attention to what we have to healthy interest in what is being made a big. mistake in trusting papers out of the way and grab a technicality, thus wiping out say, Even if they're just done with student government. the ISA, someone who wasn't that extra hour to do their taxes, the State Board's original listening to us to placate us, ''I'm happy about the fact the trustworthy, and lost a, lot of , finally. alcohol rule, was important on that's better than nothing." people got together to put money," he said, referring to The most Influential and two grounds: "It assured us that Potentially the greatest con- together a petition .;. it shows Bob Lemmon, former director of representative spokesman for the Board would have to follow tribution of this year's student someone cares about some- the Idaho Student Association. any organization Is almost . the Administrative Procedures government to BSU, Hoffman thing," he said of the recent who was convicted of misusing Invariably Its chairman, mayor, Act, and ... established that we felt, was the initiation of circular protesting the ASB's ISA funds during his brief ombudsman, governor or pres- did have the right to sue, that research into a new advising information campaign on the directorship last year. Hoffman ' Ident. Both the Incoming and we were in fact a viable entity." system and a standard faculty structure. noted that procedures in the outgoing presidents of the The groundwork laid by this evaluation program. "The flex- "I think the trend's been university business office have Associated Students of Boise legal battle provided the means ibility of the (evaluation) system toward being less selfish at the is great -- the teacher can Boise State level," he remarked been tightened as a result. State University expressed very for the successful complaint the [cont. on page 10) little besides outright positivity ASB filed on behalf of the evaluate himself in the areas he on the lobby efforts in the Idaho 'about Its past and potential women's athletic program .: 'The accomplishments, understand- fact that we filed the complaint ably. Mike Hoffman 'and Rob with Health,' Education and Perez, during this l!1tervlew, Welfare .- coming to an showed all the expected signs of agreement with the university .- the nearly-past and almost- ties the university to doing some present leaders of any govern- things we believe they should ing body: Hoffman, exhausted, have done by now;" making lIght of the entire affair "Expansion of legal services at times and at others exuding a is important," he continued, tired satisfaction with a job ju,!t "coupled with the, capacity for about done; Perez, anxious, data processing. Those are two seething with a nervous energy of the most important elements, only partially bidden by a' in forming a public interest rational composure. research group, W.e have' the' means for doing the research, ",' '" and also a means for doing the Mike Hoffman has headed a case law work." The computer student govern'ment disting- terminal hookup the ASB uished from its predecessors by ,bought last year, with the a marked laek of ;J1fighting and future addition of a larger usc 0 djssension, at least orr the upper capacity, will have "a lot 'of ' . Sa~eup to 40 /0.on Big Boy's AII·riffle" Favorites level. Whether this is basically • potential for a lot of different Now 2 for the combined price of $2.99 (with coupon) positive, resulting in a singular uses," he said.. direction of energy and resour- Little known accomplish- ~ ~m_.*_= a~B~~ ces, or negative, making for a ments by the ASB this year were cluster of yes-men, depends made for BSU in the State .~~ll~ PATTY ,I BIG ~,. L ~, , ELT II BOY COMB01 COMBO Salad & Fries ,II Salad & Fries

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Page 10 I ARBITER I April 10, 1978

_p_r_e_s_id_e_n_t_s_'_in_t_e_r_v_ie_w__ s ~)~--~------

Another high priority on his [cont. from pt'ge 9) number' of people attaining to they can absorb some' of that films and.programs ... that will list is to "get a lot of surveying The only unresolved regret positions of power. increase," he said. "I also sat in take place through the Prog- done" with the help of the Hoffman stated was, ironically, "I felt they'd hold off for on the university budget hear- • rams Board. Say Athletes for communication and sociology that he did too much. "I made awhile." he said of those who ings, where the heads of the Christ .... the Minority Cultural departments, to be used as mistakes, personally, in not had approached him for spots as schools ... gave proposed Board wanted a film.i.. (they) needed by the Programs Board. delegating better ... trying to department heads well before . budgets. and talked about would have to go through student lobbies or the ASB in get too much done through the he was due to take office, and proposed cuts." Programs Board." He noted general, he said. "It would give executive office -- I just tried to even before he was elected. "I 'The budget of the ASBSU that due to the financial the students a lot more under- handle too many things at one wasn't aware' that there were itself is what Perez sees as the shortage'; films and other standing of ASB. and secondly. time ... · that many people seeking some major deterrent to the progress programs had to be cutout of of those positions. I've been of the student government. the budgets outside of the get some information. pertinent • • • to what we're doing." Another Rob Perez, unlike Hoffman kind of busy listening to people "This year, we just haven't had SUPB. project in the works is mailing who had served as senator and talking about why they want the any money --in the past, things Perez and Steve Botimer, brochures on student govern- vice-president of the ASB before job. I've been listening to all have been more lucrative; we vice-president-elect, have taken ment to continuing students being elected president, had not kinds of ... rhetoric about why had the, money and we could it upon themselves to keep in during the summer to activate been involved in the core of they're the person to choose. develop some programs. Now better touch in the future with interest, he noted. ASBSU government until his "I thought I'd be spending the programs have been devel- the dozens of. ASBSU executive "The trend I'm trying to election. His first surprise more time on issues, that type of oped and the money's less. 1 committees and- university combat right now is the same involving the body has been the things." How much has. he yet hesitate to cut back on the boards with student members. done as far as making decisions programs, but there's nowhere "I'm assuming they don't feel people always frequenting this on issues with information he's else to go. their capacities are very signif- place, always the same people . gathered since he was elected? ''It's a kind of thing where icant ... we are having a high applying for the different jobs," "At this point," he said, you're cutting off your nose to turnover, people' quitting,' he Perez said. "Anyone '" can "nothing. At this point, I've spite your face," he said of the , noted. "I think that has a great have access here, .can feel been tagging along with Mike supremely "frustrating" job of . bearing on how the adminis- comfortable about coming here, ... talking' about personnel in determining priorities for bud- tration perceives the students. I though they're not a part of the cabinet positions ...... get cuts. "We had $353,000 in think it's crucial they see us as people that are always around. " Perez has been attending requests, and we had to cut it responsible people." What has to take place, he said, many presidential functions down to around $185,000, which In general, what Perez wants is "realization" of the value of with Hoffman, and has tasted a we' didn't quite do, We to accomplish first is "polishing student government, that "we few of the complexities, road- budgeted quite opt imistical- off what's already been started can make a difference here." blocks and bottlenecks involved Iy.v.." .... We're going to have to find a "One big problem I see: I just in the job's decisions. "We One .step toward making the way to keep Student Services lookout the window, and I see a dealt with some health insur- ASBSU able t() function with functioning in a way where we lot of people who really don't an.ce matters yesterday -- less money, Perez feels, is a don't have to reinvent the wheel give a damnabout what. goes on students may have to exper- consolidation of programs to every year. I'd like to look into a up here." ience a five-dollar (per year) eliminate duplication of serv- dental care program -- right now Because of, for one thing, the increase in fees due to an ices. "All publicity, public that's not feasible because of ASB's control of -money for increase in health insurance relations ... will take place the cost. but I'd like to look into various extracurricular prog- costs. We've talked to the ,through the Public Relations' a minor dental care program," rams, Perez feels that it has a athletic department to see if Department," he said: "All he said. "Great impact on the education- afexPcric·ncc'. This year .... since we're not going to have a heck of a lot of money to work with, we're going to be turning down a lot of requests ... I'm going to have to be held accountable to a greater degree, Ithink, than any other student body president' for a long time." Sounds perilous. But docs he' expect an enjoyable term of office? Without' hesitation: "I do." Stump Trivia Rat~,

1. In what Hitchcock film is a cigarette ground out in a fried egg? 2. What group in 1968 turned the children's game "Simon Says" into a hit?

3. In the television series "Star ;j' Trek." what was Dr. McCoy's nickname? 4. "Fatso Judson" was played by whom in "From Here to Eternity?" S. What song by Jefferson Airplane is based. on Alice in Wonderland? 6. Name both pitchers who resorded at least 3,000. strike- .outs in their career. 7. Whom did Walter Cronkite replace whim he became the CBS nightly anchorman for the news in 1963? 8. Errol Flynn portrayed what historical figure in the 1941 film ".They Died with their Boots On?" 9. Who was Captain America's sidekick? 10. Who was the .host of "Hullabaloo?"

't April 10, 1978 I ARBITER I Page 11

EIiI@l5====W EVERY w;;;; .+Ii

"

., Page 12 I ARBITER I April 10, 1978

ballet )cont from page 8 Pat Thomason , Senator. speaks out sary to ballet would be overcome ~o that the dancing could showthroughvbut neither of the efforts quite made it. The the many open hearings and the opinion poll. The total count and ill this the 'Pavilion would effect was similar to that of two by Sally Thomas information campaign. It was "In the past, several efforts amounted to 1134 YES, and 255 ; benefit the university immense- Sunday ponies assaying to pass the most viable attempt on were made toward polling the NO in the survey, with the ly. themselves off as sleek, spanky behalf of the ASB to inform students to get input as to how election tal1ies at 531 YES and The idea of a spectator trotters. , 'students, They were set up and they felt about the pavilion. 510 No. orientated facility is obvious The score so far was Intermiss- well publicized in order to get None of the previous methods It was made clear on the because of the out-front design sion 2, Performance O. student input which we needed, used were felt to be adequate election poll that students who ,of the biJilding which will be Then came a gay Parisienne we asked for, we wanted, and .had had the opportunity to have built to accomodate several comedy and, with it, life and because there was a lack of we gave students every conceiv- input on the pavilion were not to thousand people for concerts, color and dancing. For the first information as to the benefits to able opportunity to respond. If vote a second time. The tennis matches, basketball time that evening; the dancers be received by the students some students chose not to take suggestion has been made that games, etc. Many students who actually danced their' way from the pavilion. advantage, it is their own fault. In order to get a valid input some students did not follow sat in on some of the through their numbers, as We tried. from the students concerning procedure and did vote a second information sessions clearly saw opposed to the previous drudg- The information campaign -the pavilion and the accompany- time. If that is the case, lthink how the University would ing efforts. And, for the most was simply an information ing fee increase, it was that the type who -would vote benefit in ways other than part, they danced in sync with through spectator sports; the campaign. It was structured to necessary to instigate an in- twice would be those who were each' other while exhibiting intramural sports, which are a highlight a lot of benefits that formation campaign. We want- against the pavilion because it spontenaity and grace. Especi- would be derived from the ed the students to be fully aware seemed that those against were big part of campus life for ally enjoyable were Duane facility and in that sense, yeah, of all the ramifications of more adamant than those who example, and room for student Stippich as the clown" Jackie a positive approach was taken. accepting the pavilion with its were in favor. organizations to meet. On this Shults as the glove seller, Bruce However, in the pavilion pre- accompanying fee increase. As a student, I ,ani . not campus there arc better than Carroll as the Baron and, of sentation, the open hearings, There have been comments overjoyed lit the thought of the ninety students organizations course, the CanCan dancers: and the election poll, people made about the poll taken at fee increase. I can no more and this facility will centralize Doris Ann' Asmus, Karalee were given every chance to 'registration. The votes taken afford the extra dollars than their office and meeting space Leavitt, Andrea Mansigh, Dana voice negative opinions or then were not counted in with anyone else. I am in the same needs which are lacking terribly Williams, Glori Herod" Cindy thoughts or factors they might the figures released about the financial situation; but it is on this campus: Michalk, Pam Hawai, Monica have had, which would have pavilion although 80 % of those important to remember that the Many people allude to spectat- Boyle, . Lisa Holtz, Jennifer carried just as much weight as voting were in favor of the pavilion is for the future needs or things because the main Gould, Sherrie Pate, Julie would have the positive remarks facility. They were not consider- of BSU. People like me, I'm a arena is built to seat thousands Andrijeski, Susan Boyle. in the eyes of the Senate. Again, ed as valid votes because of the junior, will not directly receive of people. It' is the less The quailty of dancing and student input was asked for, lack of information available the benefits from the pavilion. It spectacular benefits that a choreography shown by this last every type of input. '~ to the students at that time. is a bit selfish to .keep passing number of uninformed students number was approximately The fact that the negative input The count used as the 'final the buck. This pavilion will fail to recognize. what one could expect of such a is .so slow in appearing is figure for the preparation of the benefit BSU in a variety of When I think of the comments relatively young ballet group. interesting. It is widely known senate decision to recommend functions, not only sports. This that the information campaign For the sake of aspiring Idaho and accepted that there is a buildlng-thepavlllon was drawn is not going to be a "Jock- was ineffecient, I revert to the dancers and Interested Idaho large amount of student apathy from both the questionaires palace;" No Way! It is true it old cliche, "You can take a audiences. the troupe should on this campus. The ASB, in filled out after the classroom will enhance sports, but I'm also horse to water, but you can't continue what they have begun their attempt to neutralize this surveys and the general election talking about intramural sports. make him drink," becasue of in the hopes of soon offering a - apathy factor, went out with truly fine presentation. Howev- their information campaign: I er, again for the sake of the personally ,belive that the dancers and the audience, spare lateness ,?f some negative I/S the schoolchild stiffness and responses is evidence of this shallowness that characterized apathy. There are basically two so much of last Friday's people who initiated a petition performance. condemning the methods used " . in getting student imput, They have, gone out into the student, Answers' , community and generated sign- atures for their petition. After to ' [cont. on page 13J Trivia Rat 1. "Dial M For Murder" (WB, 1954) 2. 1910 Fruitgum Company 3. "BONES" 4. Ernest Borgnine 5. "White Rabbit" 6. Walter Johnson (3,508), and Bob Gibson (3,111) 7. Douglas-Edwards 8. General George Armstrong Custer

THE PLACE I 9. Bucky _. TANG·SHAN, CHINA 10. Trick question; there was no THE DATEtJULY 28, i976 . regular host. A guest host took , THETIMEI3140 A.M. charge each week, EARTHQUAKEI J'cont. from ___nursing.....,;__ ~. page 2 MornIng lIoht hod yot toappoar on that stormy day In PokIng measurable standard of excel- whon over tho horizon was lance for nursing preparation in hoard tho first, ominous rum- blings of anothor Mlltnlc uphoav- the nation. 01. AftorthttdobrlshadMulod About 80 per cent of locally tho toll waa tak"nI655,000 employed registered nurses doad, 779,000 InJurod. Oo'or. have been educated in the BSU i 6 haura hod olapsed tho cIty of Tientsin was joltod andlng program. Dr. Vahey says, stroams of rofuo.os Into tho Accreditation shows that the capitol to Jl)ltnd tholr nlghu In BS'u program Is flexible and thlutro.t. progressive and meets the changing needs of society Dostructlvo oarthqu(lkals oro on through sound educational me- tho riM and thor. Is a reason for thods and a humanistic ap- It I tho Christ Iscomlngl Requeat our FREE booklet on the subject proach, according to NLN Board and ,wo'lleven retum tho post- standards. aoe. ItUhat Important! "your Federal fun'dssuch as student copy does not arrivelniOdaYI, loans are available to the p1oas. contact your post office. accredited program. addition, Write, In many' schools which ,'offer TEE', CIIIIISUBELPHI"I'tI$ advanced nursing degrees re- Po O. B.~,n~5 quire that their students be D/U'IP". IDlu.e 83551 graduated from an NLN accred- ited school, Dr. Vahey reports.

. ' , "" .. '\""'~;;. '~""''''''''"4''~-~l ..ir'~:Jr-~~:"'~_~., •.C'',i;..-:.-c'':,r::>r;O_'',':'~:'A~'~"',7 ,T::/'·~·~";~'!'7"'''?:~'!~·'~'·'':·· n t f Apr~110,1978 I. ARBITER 1 Page 13

"j).:.._re_-.!:: ...r.e_g.;..·_ls~tr_a....t....io.· ._n-:,·.. "'"""':'"-:--~)t---:-~-~------. Cont from page 1 office in order to have their card A: A~ a service to the students, classes? _H_O_f_L_B_O_'_ti_rn_o_r_e 'JI------processed in the correct order. "we Willhav~ tables set up at the A: Payment is due in August. It Q: What difference will it mak~ same place In the hallway where" is VERY IMPORTANT THAT if I register for a few credit students picked up their forms THE ADDRESS ON THE Cent, from page 8 'The Hot L Baltimore will play hours and someone else regist- between .M~y Band 12. WHITE DEMOGRAPHIC visions himself as a man about through April. 15th at the ers for a lot of credit hours? " Q: What If I m not sure whether CARD BE CORRECT AND BE town. Theater in a Trunk, 1625 W. A: The system will consider or not I'm going to pass a ONE WHERE THE STUDENT Mrs. Bellotti (Sue Galligan) is Bannock Street in Boise. seniors, for example, who have course, . and I need it for CAN BE REACHED IN JULY. If the sly old mother of one of the registered for the largest graduatl~n? '. a student _ fails to return unseen residents who has been Student inpu~I- _ number of hours before it reads A: If you re really c1~se, sign up payment prior to the due date; evicted, Mrs. Bellotti talks of the cards of those who have for the class for this fall and their registration will be cancel- her son's oddness as she steals th d . ' 'f d registered for fewer hours. en ~op It I .you 0 pas~. led and they will have to register an empty coke bottle from the cent, from page 12 Q: The more hours I register Otherwise, you Willhave to walt all over again in the fall. We rack. It is as though he must viewing the technique that they for, then, the better chance I for fall to add. . cannot take responsibility for steal the bottle or have incorporated in getting signa- will have to get my classes? Q: What happens If I change my the student who says, "I didn't withdrawals. In the latter half of tures, I couldhonestIy say I A: There is no built-in safeguard mind and want to drop or add a get my card in the mail." the play she passes through - could turn around, use the same in the system to prevent class? Q: Where do the Vo-Tech carrying her son's possessions technique and at least double overscheduling of credit hours. A: There will be a drop/add students register? from his room (a teddy bear, a any number of names they could However, each student who period in the fall, much as there A: Due to the unusual nature of box of junk and a stuffed deer come up with. The reason I signs up for more than eight is now. Vo-Tech, we will handle their head.) make this statement is because hours must obtain" the signature Q: What if I don't pre-register? registration in a more traditional Paul Granger III (Jon Os- I'm very experienced inthe of their advisor and we certainly A:. Th:re .is no penalty for way. They know what they need trove) is a traveler. This young communications field and in think an advisor would not pre-registering. If a student and they are set up for their own man is looking for his grandfa- my opinion the technique they encourage an academically un- decides he doesn't want to programs. ther who once stayed at the used for getting the said sound practice. If we find that continue in the fall, all he needs Q: What is the major error you Hotel Baltimore. Granger be- signatures relies more on the system is being abused in do is n.ot return the payment are seeing on the" cards? comes disallusionedafter his emotional response to the fee this respect, we will certainly form this summer. If a student A: Students, are putting in as attempt to locate the old man increase rather than to the take steps to correct that abuse does not pre-register" and alternate, another section of the fails. He had complained about benefits to be derived by the in the future. decides to attend BSU"next fall, same course, rather than the lack of help, but then is students from the facility itself. Q: What if the computer screws there will be open registration another course. This is unneces- completely unable to accept the As a final point. I resent the my schedule up? August 29. sary as the computer will scan girl's interest. . personal attack Mr. Martindale A: We will seperate those cards Q: What about alternate select- their requeted schedule to see if Other pass through charact- made in last week's ArbIter on and the students to whom they ions? another section of that course is ers are Steve Marker who plays President Hoffman and the belong will have the chance to A: The alternate listed across open to the student. a drunk john for Suzy. Natalie student senate, referring to add up to 15 hours to their from anyone class is the only Q: What if I have any more Shanefelt plays the hard nosed their capabilities of represent- schedules in order to qualify as "one that will be considered fur questions? assistant to Mr. Katz. T.H. ing the student _body of BSU in full-time students, primarily for that class, however, an alternate AI Come to the Registrar's Wolfe is the cab driver, and this issue. To my knowledge, no financial aids purposes. can be listed more than one office and check with myself, Gerry Fields is the delivery boy. one person from the senate, nor Q: How was the figure for credit " time. ." "Jack Bugge, Debbie Christian- Placing this cast of strange Mike Hoffman, is out to make a hours to date determined? ' Ql Who is eligible to pre-regist son, or another member of the characters on the same stage name for him or her self from " A: That figure includes all the er? staff. If the student will take the results in a very humorous play. the pavilion issue. The charge hours earned to date, including AI All full or part-time, day or time to read the instructions on 'The Hot L Baltimore'" as that Mike Hoffman wants to the ones being earned this evening continuing students. page 5.of the Fall '78 Class directed by Barbara McKean is . make one big splash-for himself semester. It does not figure in The only requirement is that a Schedule booklet and go definitely worth seeing., The before he goes out of office is a anticipated summer hours. student must be enrolled in the through the mock-up on page 6, humor is adult jn nature, so, I manifestation of the emotional. Q: When _willI find' out what current spring' semeste~. ' it lot of t,Jlcif questions will be wouldn't advise taking your technique used by Mr. Martin: classesJ get? ;. Q: -:Wh'at ."about , paying for answered. ' grandchildren. " , dale and his petition drive. .

o

•••••••• Page 14 I -ARBITER I April 10, 1978 rt tw fr m ofl earned runs; he walked three by Joe Friday striking out five. Brian Stokes. while walking four and striking hit. walked six. and struck out who took the loss for U of I. also out eight. Loser Tim Martin none. Scott Morse finished the and struck out two. The final score of the second Saturday was not 'a good day turned in a complete game. He worked two-thirds of an inning. game for the Vandals and game was BSTJ 11, Vandals 3. for the Vandals. They came to gave up eight hits. three earned allowed six earned runs on one allowed nine. hits and five Boise hoplng to take a double- runs and five unearned runs; he header. but came away humili- walked six and struck out nine. ated instead. All that was The second game was decided missing was an on-side kick. in the first inning. In that frame. Intramura/s get rained out The, Broncos took the first the Broncos sent thirteen game 7 to 4. BSU's offense batters to the plate and collected LEAGUE E was led by fielder Jim Dawson nine runs on only four hits-Van- Sorry about the bad weather- Mankos rained out Holes and Poles 17 who provided 3 RBI'swith a daIs hurlers walked six Broncos REMEMBER· Captains of Red Hut Pokers 7 homer and sacrifice fly; short- in the inning; center fielder teams that got rained out, Ballsofts stop Dale Baldwin and right Kent Hollingsworth earned two please leave a note as to a Strike Slip Hummers rained out, Zaugerts fielder Wally Foster also had RBI's with a triple; Dale preferred make-up day; either D Chris' Bells rained out good days, Baldwin went three Baldwin slugged two hits in the Sunday or Friday. Just call the Opis for four, scored two runs and innings. one an' RBI producing Intramural office or drop by. Padres rained out Poland Storm Troopers bye drove in one. while Foster went triple; and third baseman, Mick The games will be rescheduled two for four. and drove in two Marchello also made it on base real soon. More schedules can LEAGUE C runs with a triple. twice in the first with a walk. be picked up outside the Oly' Fliers 11 LEAGUE F Kappa Sigma, Mark Pederson went tne and RBI single. In the second. Intramural office. In the mean- Sig Ep-Gamma 9 Soviet Socialists All Stars distance for the Broncos. Wally Foster and first baseman time, keep hoping for sunny CCPO Express 20 allowing only three hits. one Pete Borras. both slugged solo weather, especially between Easysliders 4 rained out earned run, and three unearned home runs. That completed the 4:00 and7:00 ... 11 runs; .he walked' four while Broncos' scoring for the after, Martyrs 1 A-I Wackers noon. RESULTS OF THE WEEK TKE Delta 0 forfeit TKE Diana 17 t ·· · ·..COUPON , The Vandals scored three j times in the second game, all LEAGUE A LEAGUE D three runs resulting from Joe and Co. 13 Rednecks sig Ep Tri Delta II bye ,I:T;~~~~~~EY.:I. bases-empty homers; in the The Scrawny }{onnys 12 Gus Gang rained out FAIRVIEW & WILDWOOD third inning. shortstop Rick , Britt hit a round-tripper. and in Igor and Co. 18 Condors LEAGUE STANDINGS the fourth right fielder Kelly Diamond Demons 14 Sig Ell' Tri Delta rained out These will not be posted due to Davidson and left ,fielder Bill the overwhclming vnurnber of Stokes slammed back-to-buck Havana 'Daydreamers 1 Magicians rain-outs We'lI try to include home runs. Heroes o forfeit Bats and balls rained out, .this exciting item next issue. Tom Willi'ams turned in a complete game for' BSU and LEAGUE B allowed t"fee runs on six hits, PUBF Triple Crown COU I~,be excifinq o -." by Fred Davis· has won eight of the previous' It's the first of April, and "} Kentucky Derbies.' and would THE: TVPICAllDAHO MitN9~ triple .Crown Horse Racing is like to make in nine witli Alydar. , just around the corner. Alydar has impressive enough Will this be the year for credentials. with wins ln seven NA\JV LOCKE:R. another Seattle Slew. who won of his 12 career starts. Four of the Kentucky Derby. the freak- those losses however, came at ness. and the Belmont Stakes to the hands of Affirmed. The two become horse racing's tenth raced against each other six \\t know Idaho's a Triple Crown winner. and the times last year, and Affirmed hard place to leave. But if first to do so with an won four of those and the you think it looks good umblcmishcd record? national championship for two: year olds.' The two times that now.just wait till you come Slew went on to win the first ten races of his career, before Alydar won however, were very bock ...oftervou've skledin getting beat by J.O. Tobin by 16 impressive. Alydar won the the Alps, fished in New lengths at Santa Anita Park. Champagne Stakes by a length. Zealand, hiked in Spain, Will this be a year in which a and a half. and the Great and gone swimming in the horse will win the first two legs American Stakes by 3 and '/2 ofthe crown. and then lose the lengths. Aegean .. .os a Navy third as happened to Bold There are several other officer. We really aren't Forbes in 1976? horses that need mentioned as klddinq when we say, This year will probably have possible contenders for the "Join the Navy and the most avid players on their Triple Crown. One of them is see the world." toes, as there is an excellent Balzac. field of three-year olds to vyc for Balzac is the hard luck" horse honors in the three big races. this year. He has run nearly all The first horse mentioned by of his races against either most people is Affirmed. Affirmed or Alydar, and there- , Affirmed won seven of his fore doesn't have the classy nine races last year. and was record of either. He is perhaps named two-year old of the year the most consistant of the three by the nation's sportswriters however. and will give both of and trackmen. This year Affirm- them a run for their money on "You don't have to ed has won, both of his starts Derby Day. leave Idaho behind to easily. if not impressively. Thelast of the main characters Join the Navy," Affirmed is owned by Harbor in Sensitive, Prince. Sensitive View Farms, trained by last ' Prince was lightly raced last year's leading trainer Laz year. but has won six straight Barrera, and ridden by jockey stakes races this spring. sensation Steve Cauthen. last He hasn't competed against year's national champion. Come" any of the three horses above, May 6.' Affirmed may be very but is definitely a contender THE NAVAL OFFICER INFORMATIO~ TEAM tough to beat. He has every- with the times he has compiled. WILL BE ON CAMPUS APRIL 12 - 14, thing going for him. This horse knows how to win; The second favorite of this and if any of the leaners slips, 9:00 TO 4:00 DAILr, IN THE SUB LOBBY year's three-year oIdsis ,Calu-, .-. Sensitive 'Prince will be there to met's Alydar. Calumet Farm win. AprW-1O, 1978 I ARBITER I Page 15

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