University of Montana ScholarWorks at Associated Students of the University of Montana Montana Kaimin, 1898-present (ASUM)

4-13-1984 Montana Kaimin, April 13, 1984 Associated Students of the University of Montana

Let us know how access to this document benefits ouy . Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper

Recommended Citation Associated Students of the University of Montana, "Montana Kaimin, April 13, 1984" (1984). Montana Kaimin, 1898-present. 7589. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper/7589

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Associated Students of the University of Montana (ASUM) at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Montana Kaimin, 1898-present by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE MONTANA Inside; Gentle btowgun...... page 4 The Kryeko Kid-Sports...... page 5 KAIMIN Rocky Mountain Fever...... page 7 ‘Splash,’ Arts...... page 9 Vol. 86, No. 87 Friday, April 13, 1984 Missoula, Montana UTU will take legal action against 4 faculty members By Alexis Miller who has led the battle against Only one of the original Kaimin Reporter the security clause, said he be­ twenty-two faculty members The executive committee of lieves that he is one of those to failed to respond to a letter the the University Teachers' Union be sued. The other three are U TU sent out last week, re­ has decided to brjng legal ac­ probably Rahul Ohesi, assist­ questing that these faculty tion against four University of ant professor of computer sci­ members meet with the union Montana professors for not ence, Robert Banaugh, profes­ to discuss their, compliance complying with the security sor of computer science, and with the security clause. clause of the union’s collective Gene Schiedermaydr, assistant As to the other 17 faculty bargaining agreement, UTU professor of computer science, members who have not com­ President John Lawry said yes­ Briggs said. plied with the security clause, terday. All four "met with the union Lawry said the cases are "so According to the security last week, and all four told untypical of the rest of the fac­ clause, all faculty members them they wouldn't pay," ulty that we have to do work must do one of three things: Briggs said. with them.” join the union, pay dues and According to Briggs, the In a related issue, Robert not join the union, or contribute union has "selectively chosen” Jensen, administrator for the the comparable dues amount him and his three colleagues Montana Board of Personnel to a charity. as “test cases.” Appeals in Helena, said that The clause says that the UTU If the union does sue him, the board will reinvestigate will take civil action against Briggs said he will ask that the Briggs’ unfair labor practice university employees who fail case be transferred to district charge against the union. to comply. court. Briggs charged that the secu­ Twenty-two UM faculty mem­ Lawry said the four faculty rity clause is not legal. bers have failed to comply, but members to be sued will be The five-member board will Lawry said only four of the fac­ notified of any impending ac­ decide on Friday, April 27, ulty members will be taken to tion by the union's lawyers, whether to uphold Jensen’s justice court. Lawry would not Joan Jonkel and Dan Kemmis. earlier decision to dismiss the name these four nor reveal the He added that the union "is try­ complaint. department for which they ing to lean over backward to Jensen ruled that the com­ work. get something worked out” that plaint was “frivolous" and that Walter Briggs, assistant pro­ would be beneficial to both there was not enough evidence fessor of computer science, parties. to prove Briggs’ allegations. Summer work ads not always truthful By Julie T. Sullivan $5 brochure listing jobs in the for Student Development and Kaimin Contributing Reporter Northwest last year. The adver­ the Career Resource Library Jobs! Alaska! Australia! Be­ tisement ran in newspapers have facilities to locate authen­ ware! University of Montana throughout the country. The tic employers nationwide. students should be skeptical of “brochure" turned out to be Polutnik said students are advertisements that promise want-ads the man clipped from better off relying on their local summer jobs in faraway the Missoulian. Job Service to find summer places, the manager of Missou-* Dorothy Kinsley, UM associ­ jobs. He said about 1,000 stu­ la's Job Service says. ate director of financial aid, dents register with the Mis­ Charles Polutnik said that also cautions students about soula Job Service in the spring Photo by DOUG DECKER these advertisements are often answering advertisements for and summer. Most of the work Sighting down his double-cut saw while practicing misleading and don’t deliver jobs in faraway places. available is in the service in­ his ripping technique, Chris Partyka, senior in for­ what they promise. For ex­ “It's a good thing to check dustry, including hotels, bars estry, and his fellow woodsmen prepare for com­ ample, he cited the case of a the employer out,” Kinsley and restaurants. petition. See related story page 12. Kalispeli man who advertised a said, noting that the UM Center See ‘Jobs,’ page 16.

By Michael Moore not been determined. Kaimin Contributing Reporter Bill Berg, recently hired pound master for the city-county The University of Montana should have an animal warden pound, said Wednesday that UM needs its own dog catcher within a month, Jerry Shandorf, manager of maintenance if it wants to effectively control the campus problem. Berg services at the Physical Plant, said Thursday. said the city doesn’t do much business on the campus. The campus has been without a warden since 1982, and a “Generally, we get a few calls a week, mostly about dogs contract under which a warden from the city pound patroled that have been tied up and become vicious,” Berg said. the campus has recently expired. Dogs that are running loose on the campus probably won't Dogs' days Shandorf said UM is trying to recruit its own animal war­ be caught until the university gets its own animal warden, he den to relieve the burden that Physical Plant employees are added. on campus under by having to act as dog catchers in addition to their Sabe Pfau, Missoula police chief, said Wednesday that other duties. the city pound has plenty to do without going onto the cam­ are numbered The contract UM had with the city said that a city animal pus. He said the city would be willing to work with the uni­ warden would patrol the campus at least one hour a week. versity if UM does not hire an animal warden. Since the contract's expiration, Physical Plant employees The city pound has been in the news recently over allega­ have been catching dogs when they have the time, Shandorf tions by the Missoula Humane Society that the pound's ken­ said. He said the university will hire someone with previous nels are "breeding grounds” for deadly diseases. experience In animal control and that the person hired will Berg said the pound has had some problems, but that the also perform other maintenance duties for the Physical kennels have been cleaned and disinfected. The pound's Plant. operations are back to normal, he said, but added that the Shandorf said that the final salary for the new position has office is still understaffed. Opinion

I-f you sta rt *f'CCtcA>n0 creationism m Jchoolt We pay, we should know U/ifl etj preuch euoh\t>on in ch u rch f

it's a case of the public's right to know versus an indi­ vidual's right to privacy. The Board of Regents is meeting in Helena today, and one of the things they will be doing is evaluating the presidents and administrators of three universities in the state: Western, Northern and Tech. These evaluations are partially closed to the public. Ac­ cording to Leroy Schramm, attorney to the Board of Re­ gents, the evaluations are held about once a year, and last an hour and a half. During the first hour, the meeting is open, and the Regents ask the president general ques­ tions about activities on his campus, and what he per­ ceives as the strengths and weaknesses of his admin­ istration.

Editorial

After the first hour or so, Schramm said the Regents close the meeting so they can ask the president ques­ tions they feel deal with “personal matters,” such as his job performance. The Regents say that any public inter­ est in the job evaluations of state college presidents is outweighed by the privacy rights of the people involved The Right Hook------by Richard Venola in those evaluations.

In effect, the public is denied the right to know how a "Credit where credit is due." university president may be performing his job. University of Montana President Neil Bucklew, whose Policemen scare the hell out of me. They’re alism or hostility (incidentally, all three arrests performance and administration will be evaluated May high school grads, armed with large-caliber were for victimless crimes). I’ve also had more 17, said in a Kaimin story Thursday that closed meetings handguns and backed by our Victorian legal than my share of traffic tickets, and the ticket­ are more effective because they allow the president and system. It's the stuff of which nightmares are ing officers have acted like everything from my the Regents to freely discuss confidential information, al­ made. An officer’s discretion is all that stands favorite uncle to society’s avenging angel. lowing the board to make better informed decisions. between you, common sense and our thou­ I've been here a year and have already had sands of petty laws. University presidents are public officials, whose sala­ run-ins with the local gendarmes, as both jour­ If you’re a basically law-abiding citizen, the ries are paid with state taxes. They are hired by the state nalism student and transgressor of the law. I officer himself is the judge, jury and execu­ to perform a public function, and their job performance know this won’t sit well with some readers, but should be a matter of public record. tioner. Whether or not you are convicted does I think the local cops are all right. I've yet to not matter. You spend time in the can and time Indeed, this was the argument used by the Missoulian find a bad egg. They are professional, con­ and money is wasted on the legal system. If an in a 1980 lawsuit protesting the closure of a May 3, 1980> cerned and helpful. officer decides to be a hard ass or to play it by Regent's meeting dealing with presidential evaluations. Last year at the Tubes concert, some reserve the book, your life can be ruined. Hang up re­ The Missoulian's suit, appealed to the Montana Su­ sheriff's deputies manhandled a citizen during sponsible jobs or employment with the govern­ preme Court, was finally denied in January of this year. a search. When an incredible storm of protest ment: You are a marked person. In a Jan. 24 Associated Press story, the court said that: arose out of the incident (rightly so), I viewed it Pissing on the wall behind the Top Hat can keeping the evaluation information secret "served the as proof of Missoula's otherwise professional cost you a career. In the same manner, rolling public's interest in good college administration.” law enforcement. When such violations of civil through a stop sign at 1 mile per hour will run The Board of Regents discuss many matters dealing rights and common sense become so com­ your insurance up hundreds of dollars over the with individuals at their meetings. Among these are ap­ monplace as to go unnoticed, that’s when I'll years. peals by students of their residency status for tuition pur­ get paranoid. If the incident had occured in The officer siding with common sense won’t poses. A student's financial, job and school history, is New York, Chicago or L.A., the man would get a pat on the back for his social concern, talked about in public. If a student’s private life, as it per­ have been instantly judged a petty criminal and can end up with a reprimand. The officer tains to the Regent's residency policy, is made public, a and the full weight of the officers' hostility and who decides to give a warning to the traffic university official’s life, as it pertains to his or her job per­ the judicial system would have fallen on him. formance, should also be public. violator or negotiate between hostile collegi­ Here in Missoula, common sense and a con­ It’s a fine line between an individual’s privacy and the ans in a bar dispute has got nothing to gain. cern for civic decency prevailed, and the inci­ public's right to know. A university official has a constitu­ Except the hope that his public relations work dent remained just that. will pay off down the line. tional right to a private life, free from public scrutiny. To The police here are also personable. I went make such information public is indeed wrong. I’ve known a lot of cops in my time. Some of into one of the offices here to get some infor­ But the Regent's policy is also wrong. There is the dan­ my best friends are cops. And in a disturbing mation on a story. I had a beard and looked ger that the public could remain ignorant of a situation, number of cases, I’ve seen the pressures of like I'd just crawled out from behind the Ox, such as extreme personality conflicts within a president’s the job turn them into vindictive cynics, view­ and although there were some raised administration, which could affect that president's ability ing anything different as wrong and deserving eyebrows, they still treated me better than to perform his job credibly. The public has a right to of contempt. Legally, they never take off the when I’d worn a suit and tie in L.A. know such information. badge and are constantly on duty, thus isolat­ Additionally, I’d much rather be an innocent The Regents should redraw their policy, allowing ing themselves from society. Being a psuedo- bystander in Missoula than, say, in Chicago evaluations to be completely open. A university official’s outcast and hearing petty insults on a daily because the cops here seem to know how fire­ job performance should be a matter of public know­ basis can really twist someone's id. If the of­ arms actually work. Their colleagues in the big ledge. ficer lacks strong moral character, it can lead city are scarily ignorant of firearms and barely to a vengeful outlook toward the rest of us. understand the ones they carry, let alone know Some of my friends became so calloused that I how to shoot them accurately. — Pam Newbern could no longer feel comfortable around them Maybe it's the climate or the social attitudes and the friendships dissolved. that lead to my strongest impression, maybe' I can empathize with cops, but I’ve also been it’s the screening process, but...God forbid...L in jail three times, so I know what it’s like to be trust Missoula's cops. I just hope I never have on the receiving end of an officer’s profession­ reason to change my opinion. 2— Montana Kaimin • Friday, April 13, 1984 Forum

of current openings and have BLOOM COUNTY Berke Breathed all the information as to The Kaimin welcomes expressions of all views A(4P MY OPTMfON 6 , . ANP NOW YOU'RE / from readers. Letters should be no more than scholarships, grants, and fel­ i B r i va rriffK N C , 300 words. All letters are subject to editing and jOPfre MY Hfp* - lowships. A65QCimb \ A condensation. They must include signature, otwjr URLS, your HITH LARCpB - V I valid mailing address, telephone number and The principal problem with not job. YOUR CL01HC5, student’s year and major. Anonymous letters 'll* . ^ and pseudonyms will not be accepted. Because first year teachers is where to yourcarmpwr )WPflfI5y JLc? of the volume of letters received, the Kaimin find the jobs! OfWWIflNk MIRK0R6D CBIUHb/ cannot guarantee publication of all letters, but Our information and bro­ / every effort will be made to. print submitted material. Letters should be dropped off at the chure is free and comes at an Kaimin office in the Journalism Building Room opportune time when there are 206. more teachers than teaching positions. Should you wish additional Might transfer information about our organi­ zation, you may write the Na­ Editor: Why is our school tional Teacher’s Placement system so far behind? During Agency, UNIVERSAL TEACH­ registration there are many ERS, Box 5231, Portland, Ore­ BLOOM COUNTY by Berke Breathed students especially those at the gon 97208. We do not promise every 1% M W M -l * NOT ANP1 f&use TO f&l GUITV f C K W L H 6 R 6 I bottom of the list who have to STAVING WTO WATCH TV WTH a b o u t rr/ in fact, i pla n to sit down and try to put some graduate in the field of educa­ VOJ TONIGHT. HOT TONIGHT. act mtespoNsieie. up m u m m >of get into the classes they them with a wide range of hun­ HOtfGN you HMUNE MG WITH IN dreds of current vacancy YOUR WORST M IGHT- wanted. i/MKEif Not only do we get farther notices both at home and behind and become students abroad. on the 10-year-plan, but the John P. McAndrew, money we all spend is ridicu­ President Foreign & Domestic lous! Do you know, how, Teachers Association, Port­ depressing it is to write out a| land. check for hundreds of dollars' each quarter for a bunch of classes that just happened to Published every Tuesday, Wednesday. Thurs­ day and Friday of the school year by the be alternatives to the ones you Associated Students of the University of Mon­ really ^wanted? tana. The UM School of Journalism uses the Oh yes, and of course we Montana Kaimin for practice courses but assumes no control over policy or content. The “Everest: The Canadian Challenge” were probably going to have opinions expressed on the editorial page do not preregistration beginning this necessarily reflect the view of ASUM, the state A slide show and lecture on the or the university administration. Subscription fall, but now the Registrar's Of­ rates: $8 a quarter. $21 per school year. Entered 1982 Canadian Everest Expedition . . . fice says that maybe (and that’s as second class material at Missoula, Montana only a big maybe) we might 59612. (USPS 360-160). the human side of mountaineering. have it for winter. For years now MSU and Eastern have presented by had very successful prereg­ istration programs, then why is Alice in Bill March, team leader it taking us forever just to fig­ and professor at University of Calgary ure out how it works? Weatherland Just answer us this one April 16—8pm—SC 131 question— how long does it Although the bat had dis­ take for a university that has appeared, its huge grin 4 men died, 8 turned back on been around since 1893 to de­ remained suspended in the this dramatic ascent velop a system that would ben­ air above Alice's car. Alice efit us all? Maybe our best bet threw her reporter’s steno Sponsored by ,UM Outdoor Program would be to transfer. pad at where the bat's body Cyndi Hiiyard should have been. Sophomore, R-TV The notebook passed Carina Van Leuken right under the smile without Sophomore, Bus. Ad. any disturbance and landed Maureen Knapp on the ground. Friday The 13th Party Sophomore, Psychology “I told you to scram, nui­ Joan Breiner sance!” Junior, Pre-Law-Honors For a moment Alice thought the voice was di­ 2 for I s rected at her, but then she 8 to 10 P.M. realized the woman was tal­ king to the Cheshire bat. As the air warmed and the sky Jobs in education became mostly sunny, the ** Surprise Punch $1°° speaker came into view— along with a high of 55 and a Editor: The Foreign & Do­ low of 26. The young woman M u sic b y FREELANCE mestic Teachers Organization was holding up a gargan­ needs teacher applicants in all tuan silver gun taller than fields from kindergarten herself, struggling to keep it through college to fill over six from tipping over. hundred teaching vacancies She pulled the trigger, and both at home and abroad. a large gap appeared in the middle of the bat's smile. Since 1968, our organization "All I want for Christmas is C m w h g ., has been finding vacancies and my two front teeth," sang locating teachers both in for­ the bat, as it finally vanished NOT JUST A BAH ... ITS A PARTY! eign countries and in all fifty completely. states. We possess hundreds IXJU'JIfOU'll— l 'IKlex if « ' .

Montana Kaimin • Friday, April 13, 1984— 3 UM researcher 1finds ! More Igentle' way sedate animals By Brian Mellstead Leverlock syringes and cuts off I tranquilizers while they were in through the animal, the velocity “Most of the time they were Kalmin Sports Editor the finger hold. He inserts two a tree and some of the darts in which it hits them and the drugged with a jabstick be­ A University of Montana re­ plungers and puts yarn in the were . going right through speed of the injection cause cause a guy would be too close search assistant has found a end plunger to serve as the them," he said. "We didn’t have massive bruising* and tearing,” to shoot them,” he explained. more humane way of tran- tailpiece. any die but we had to keep a he said. “But a jabstick isn't very safe. quilizing animals for research He closes the opening in the couple under observation for a The drug enters much more The snare is the best way to purposes. end of the needle with glue and while.” slowly through his modified catch them and the cable they Dan Pond, 28, from Stevens- drills a small hole in the side. Not only will small darts go blowgun dart because it enters are snared with is five to eight ville, developed an effective The conventional way of tran- through small animals, but the animal through the side of feet long, giving the bear room way of using a blowgun and quilizing animals is with a .50 Pond says he’s seen seven- the needle, he added. to move.” dart which he says causes caliber Cap-Chure rifle and, cubic-centimeter darts go Harry Carriles, a graduate Carriles backed this up with a much less damage to animals according to Pond, the alu­ through elk. A seven-cubic- student working on the Border story about a researcher in than conventional rifles and minum darts are fired through centimeter dart is about eight Grizzly Project, has tested California who was trying to darts. the rifle barrel with .22 caliber inches long and one-quarter Pond's darts and says now he tranquilize a snared black bear "The blowgun and dart put blanks. The maximum range is inch around. doesn’t use anything else. with a jabstick. He said the less physical and psychological 70 yards and the rifle can shoot Another problem he finds "They're great because they snare wasn’t tight enough and stress on the animal,” he ex­ darts that range in size from with the conventional darts and put less stress and trauma on the bear got loose and injured plained. one to 20 cubic centimeters. rifles is the speed in which the the animal and they’re safer to the researcher. Pond, who works part time in Pond says the maximum drug is released. He said a use,” Carriles said. Pond said darts like those he the university’s Montana range of a blowgun is 15 feet. conventional dart releases the Pond explained that grizzlies makes can be bought commer­ Cooperative Wildlife Research . “Obviously the blowgun only drug straight through the nee­ are captured in one of three cially but they cost between $6 Unit, didn’t invent the process. works when the animals are dle in 0.001 second and this ways: lured into a baited cage, and $8. The Cap-Chure darts "I only modified the darts and restrained somehow but that is causes muscle tissue to tear. snared or drugged while cost $8-$12. He said it costs introduced the technique to how most of this work is done “Even if the dart doesn’t go asleep in dens. him 50 cents, plus his time, to this area," he said. anyway,” he explained. make a dart. The darts he makes for blow- He saw the need for change guns are considerably different while participating in a re­ Soviet newspaper wants video craze to hit U.S.S.R. from the ones used in a rifle. search project on bobcats. MOSCOW (AP) — Complain­ the newspaper Literary Gazette the emergence of cinema and He buys disposable, plastic “Bobcats were being shot with ing there has been too much on Thursday, chiding official­ television.” "chit-chat” about the evils of dom for being too slow in Soviets have been ardent Western video, the Soviet realizing the importance and video enthusiasts for years, Union’s leading cultural publi­ usefulness of the medium. with tapes and players being cation says it's high time for the “One thing is clear— the so­ bought up eagerly at five or six M legions of Leninism to join the cial role which the video cas­ times Western prices. video revolution. sette is to play in our life is But newspapers regularly “Video equipment opens up huge,” wrote author Valery print attacks and scare stories fantastic opportunities," said Kichin. "It is comparable with on the video craze. Western \ y | / W 'A u films have been ridiculed on ANNIE U HALL ideological grounds, the me­ Coke - Coke - Coke dium itself scorned as "mind- Hours: num bing” and stiff punish­ ments handed out to black- 11 a.m.-1 a.m. Sun.-Thurs. market video rings and illegal 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Fri. & Sat. clubs where citizens arrange showings for their friends. Domino’s Pizza Delivers Free The article in Literary Ga­ zette, the weekly newspaper of the Writers Union, represented a virtual about-face on that 2 FREE Cokes with any pizza policy. Kichin criticized Western films that contain themes con­ 721-7610 trary to Communist dogma or South Ave. at Higgins too much sex or violence. “We Coupon Expires: 6/8/84 fight against lies and violence, Sunday, April 15 8:00 p.m. UC B and we will continue to fight,” Students $1.00 General $2.00 Our drivers carry less than $20.00. he said. One coupon per pizza. Limited delivery area.

Now Appearing CHEAP DATE Barry & Jay Walkers EVERY MONDAY IS MOVIE NIGHT AT ROCKING HORSE Friday through Saturday

f o o t i n g H o r a e 8:00 * front st., mis sou la, mt.

4— Montana Kaimin • Friday, April 13, 1984 Sports Krystkowiak more than star basketball player

By Eric Williams if they had heard of me, and were not the same. Kaimin Sports Reporter said none of them had. I just "My father and step-mother Larry Krystkowiak has a big laughed." wanted me to study my butt off day planned Sunday. But Krystkowiak said, “I and then go into the service.” He's going fishing with his thought it was kind of neat that He said they didn’t want him to "little brother” Daniel. And after he brought it up.” He added play basketball or do other he and Daniel spend a few lazy that it is important to him that things most high school kids hours fishing and BS'ing, he and Daniel "can talk about do. Krystkowiak will have to go anything.” So he moved from Shelby to home and finish packing for his He said his childhood had a Missoula and immediately Monday morning flight to the lot to do with his becoming a made Big Sky a Montana bas­ Olympic basketball tryouts in Big Brother. “It was great when ketball powerhouse. Bloomington, Ind. my older brother was around.” A lot has been said about his “Krysco" is one of 74 players But Bernie grew up and moved character. But Krystkowiak has selected to take part in the away, and Larry was “stuck let his basketball speak for it­ highly-competitive tryouts. He without someone older to look self. is also only the second UM up to and talk to.” His senior year in high player in recent history— Mi­ He now lives with Bernie. school, he dominated the state chael Ray Richardson was the Bernie's wife, Marla, passed AA and was named MVP. other— to try out, and is one of away Nov. 22, and Larry, who His freshman season at UM a handful of underclassmen lived with Bernie and Marla he averaged 5.8 points and 4.4 with the chance of making the during his junior and senior rebounds in the Big Sky Con­ team. years at Missoula's Big Sky ference and was named the He also may be the least self- High School, moved from the league's top reserve. centered player at the tryouts. dorms back in with his brother. This past season the 6-foot-9 UM Coach “Larry gave up a little of his sophomore scored 18 points said Krysco "has given a lot of college life to be With his broth­ and pulled down 10.5 boards a his time to others. He has al­ er," Montgomery said. contest and was named MVP ways been really willing" to But Bernie said Larry’s mov­ of the Big Sky. speak at banquets or help out ing in was a “mutual type But he has said winning the at the YMCA. thing” that worked “to both of MVP and being selected to try He spends nearly every Sun­ our benefit." He said Larry now out for the Olympic squad are day with Daniel, his brother in has more privacy and time for tainted by the Grizzly team not the Big Brothers and Sisters his schoolwork, which is impor­ winning the conference. And program and said he and Dan­ tant to both of them. when he says things like that, iel have become very close. Bernie added that Marla gave it’s easy to see it isn’t rhetoric. Daniel went to a few of the Larry some needed guidance. Krystkowiak means it. Grizzly games last season, but "I credit her with a lot of Montgomery said Krystko­ basketball is far from the focus changes in Larry’s attitude.” wiak should take the “logical of their relationship. Soon after her death, Larry approach” in trying to catch the "I get away from the basket­ decided to dedicate last sea­ eye of the Olympic coaches ball part,” Krystkowiak said, son to Marla. He said the sup­ over better-known, flashier “because he rarely brings it port she had given him "remin­ players. He said “Larry will do up.” And Krystkowiak is not the ded me of my mom.” what he can do and not try to type of person to bring it up Krystkowiak’s mother died do things he can’t.” either. when he was eight. “When I Those things he hopes to do Recently Daniel did mention was a little kid, she was real are well, play tough Krysco's selection for the supportive of my playing sports defense and set good picks. LARRY KRYSTKOWIAK walked the out-of-bounds line tryouts. and other things,” he said. to save a pass in a game against Northern Arizona “It's just going to come down “He told me that he had His father remarried, and to how I’m playing that week.” this season. (Photo by Hugh Kilbourne) asked the other kids at school Larry openly admits things See ‘Krysco’ page 7. Sports Talk "" by Brian Mellstead National League's best are Giants, Cardinals This week it’s the National two games a piece when the' 11. Those three combined for fore, and finished 10th in the League. York. final one is played. more wins than any other three league with a 3.79 team ERA. For all of you who didn’t read NL West NL East pitchers on a single team in the The personnel is the same The Padres and the Dodgers this column last week, it was a The case here is why the NL. this year with the exception of are most prognosticators’ fa­ sneak preview of which team Cardinals will beat the Expos. Unfortunately for the Expos, a new pitching coach. Mike vorites. will win the World Series and The answer to that is simple. they slumped in the end. Mon­ Roarke, who has been tutoring San Diego can be called the which four teams will enter the Because Montreal traded-away treal lead the division by one- playoffs. Bruce Sutter for the past few National League’s “natural” Al Oliver and they expect Pete half game on Sept. 11 and fin­ And then a semi-comprehen­ years, will try to redeem the team. The Padres won 67 Rose to start in leftfield and ished eight games behind with staff. sive look at the Am erican play considerably. games on real grass last year, the trio winning only four St. Louis has made only Legue. Today we get a semi- the most in the National Montreal brought Terry games and losing seven during minor changes from last year's comprehensive look at the Na­ Francona back into the lime­ that stretch. League, but only 14 on artificial tional League. squad and they made only turf. light to replace Al Oliver and St. Louis had the best pitch­ minor changes last year from Watch for a San Francisco- The Padres had the major Francona can’t fill Oliver's ing in baseball in 1982 when it the championship team. St. Louis playoff. Yes, I say that shoes. league's poorest home-run won the world title. The team George Hendricks and Ozzie even though both clubs are The stats on Rose don't need ratio, hitting 93 and allowing didn’t make any major changes Smith lead a team of seasoned playing around .500 right now. to be repeated, except for one. 144, and ranked fourth overall to begin the 1983 season but winners. Last year was a fluke. Like I said earlier, it’s too early He’s 42 years old now and he in stolen bases with 179. last year's final statistics would The Cards will get another NL to get excited...at least in the can’t play every day. The Dodgers don’t have Mike indicate that it did. Eastern Division title. National League. Steve Rogers and Bill Gul- Marshall, Ron Cey or Steve The Cards' heralded pitching The rest of the division will This playoff will go five lickson were both 17-12 last Garvey anymore but they still staff allowed 115 home runs in finish in this order: Pittsburgh, games. In fact, it will be tied year and Charlie Lea was 16- ’83, 21 more than the year be­ have to be reckoned with. L.A. Chicago, Philadelphia and New See ‘Sports Talk’ page 14. Montana Kaimin • Friday, April 13, 1984— 5 Reach for the high calibre light beer. Coors Light.

6— Montana Kaimin • Friday, April 13, 1984 Rocky Mountain fever rare in West but can be deadly, doctor says

By Julie T. Sullivan victims if not diagnosed prop­ tain spotted fever "knocks you own body carefully and if they Paulson said there are two Kaimin Contributing Reporter erly. off your feet” within one week, find a woodtick, to remove it types of high altitude sickness. Rocky Mountain spotted Paulson said. with tweezers and wash the High altitude pulmonary fever should be called "non- Consequently, Paulson said, area and their hands with soap edema, an illness that one in Rocky Mountain spotted fever” during spring and early sum­ Symptoms include head­ and water. every 200 people gets at altitu­ because most cases occur on mer, doctors must be careful aches, chills, a fever ranging des above 8,000 feet, can the East Coast, Richard Paul­ not to mistake the symptoms of from 103 to 105 degrees, The common woodtick also cause fluid to accumulate in son, a physician at the Univer­ the infection with other com­ muscle aches and abdominal transmits Colorado tick fever, the lungs, causing difficulty in sity of Montana Student Health mon ailments, such as the flu pain. Within two to six days which is caused by a viral in­ breathing. A comatose state Service, said yesterday. or measles. after the symptoms start, a fection, not by the rickettsia or­ and death can follow. rash will form on the person’s ganism. The symptoms of Col­ Paulson, in a lecture spon­ Paulson said Rocky Mountain extremities and then on his orado tick fever resemble High altitude cerebral edema, sored by the UM School of spotted fever is an infection trunk. Paulson said the rash those of Rocky Mountain contracted by one in every Pharmacy, told about 140 caused by the rickettsia orga­ looks like "blood blotches” be­ spotted fever, except only a 1,000 people at an altitude people at the Chemistry-Phar­ nism, which lives in the com­ cause the blood is in the skin, faint rash occurs. above 13,000 feet, consists of macy Building that only five in­ mon woodtick. Woodticks are not in the vessels. brain swelling, causing severe stances of the infection were usually found in the canyon headaches and hallucinations. reported in Montana last year. areas of the mountains. When If properly diagnosed, Rocky Paulson said another prob­ He said a more common infec­ the snow begins melting in the Mountain spotted fever can be lem people should be aware of Paulson said if a person re­ tion in Montana is Colorado spring, Paulson said, the successfully treated within one while hiking or climbing in the turns to sea level or even to tick fever, of which there were woodtick sits in the brush and week, Paulson said. He added mountains is high altitude ill­ Missoula at 3,200 feet, the ill­ 20 cases last year. "waits for something warm to that the infection- can be pre­ ness. When a person is active ness will go away. He said a walk by.” vented by avoiding woodticks. at altitudes above 7,000 feet, a good rule is to “climb high and However, while Colorado tick decrease in oxygen in the body sleep low” to give the body fever is rarely fatal, Rocky If a woodtick carrying the His advice to people who tissue can cause headaches, time to adjust to the higher alti­ Mountain spotted fever can be rickettsia organism bites you, don’t "stay home from April to weakness, insomnia and a loss tudes. fatal in 5 to 10 percent of the the symptoms of Rocky Moun­ August” is to examine their of appetite. Krysco- Continued from page 5 makes, he will spend more best this week, and hasn't M o ntgom ery adm its tfyat time away from UM and make given the outcome much Krystkowiak's chances of mak­ this quarter more difficult to thought. LUCKY FRIDAY THE 13TH PARTY ing the team are slim, but he complete on time. But he said Maybe Sunday he and Daniel thinks Krysco has a chance of he's concentrating on doing his can talk it over. making next Saturday's cut. T.G.I.F. “From there you’re cutting an THANK GOD IT S FRIDAY All-American to make room for ALL DAY TILL 6 Larry,” Montgomery said. But CHINA he quickly points out that 500 SCHOONERS Krystkowiak’s making the tryouts is a "tremendous ac­ GARDEN 1.50 PITCHERS complishment.” Krystkowiak's grades speak Restaurant 900 HIGHBALLS for his dedication to school. 10-11 With all of his other activities, he has managed to carry a full • Take Out 100 BEERS load and has a 3.8 GPA in Orders business. 1.50 PITCHERS He said he would like to fin­ ish school in four years, but Banquets & Parties 750 HIGHBALLS that’s not imperative. “I’d rather Up to 40 People go five years and learn more, 93 S t r ip - rather than cramming it all intd 2100 Stephens, South Center Mall (406) 721-1795 four years and not doing that ^Behind Holiday Village • 6 Days a W eek—11 a.m.-lO p.i well.” With each Olympic cut he

FRIDAY THE 13TH PARTY

ONE HOUR 9:00 'TIL 10:00 130 BEER — Hamms Draft

P f ' C' n& 130 POPCORN

Custom Team Shirts Available FREE DRAWING EVERY HOUR 9— 10 o n 13 FREE BEER SHIRTS 13 BEER HATS 13 SIX-PACS HAMMS BEER TRADING POST SALOON SOUTHGATE mfiLL 549-5216

Montana Kaimin • Friday, April 13, 1984— 7 P I I R L I O

$ 500,000 worth of BRAND NEW STEREO & VIDEO EQUIPMENT, TOOLS AND MUCH MORE, including the remaining inventory of a major west coast chain of stereo stores, will be sacrificed at public auctions! Name your own price on a portion of this gigantic inventory! All merchandise auctioned will be sold to the highest bidders, NO MATTER HOW SEVERE THE LOSSES.

MONDAY - APRIL 16 CAROUSEL LOUNGE 2200 Stephens Avenue Auction Preview 6:00 p.m. Missoula, Montana AUCTION 7:00 p.m. (next to the Manor)

A T T C M T I O N - S T E R E O LIQUIDATORS BUYS AND SELLS BANKRUPTCIES. CLOSE OUTS. OVERSTOCKS, ETC., SPECIALIZING IN M l I I l w l l « STEREO & VIDEO EQUIPMENT. SPORTING G000S, HOUSEWARES. FURNITURE AND GENERAL MERCHANDISE CONTACT US AT THE ABOVE LOCATION FOR FULL DETAILS. ALL INQUIRIES HELD STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL! J/IDEO RECORDERS*COMPUTERS RECEIVERS* AMPS*TUNERS T V ’s ATARI

JVC '/o: Values to $499.95 ^Panasonic/ LL l Values to| a $229.95 and more!/ . Q O O O n l l i P ICASSETTE PORTABLE! DECKS STEREOS Technics JVC KINWOOO a r»io iveerc and more S O N Y rA L L B I D S S A N V O r$ S A N Y O S T A R T A CROWN P I O N E E R 0ft ONKYO V*ljj**l0 AWIA $399.95 and more! JVC , and more! TURNTABLES |CAR STEREO S*SPEAKERS' Values to $265.00 AMPS MISC ^ P I O N E E R Stereo Fumiturt, i i i i i T V Back Packs, Cutlei, i l L - ^ Sets, Housewares, Loci? K E N W O O D ing Knives, Digital W atched P IO N E ER JENSENA HOME SPEAKERS Pool Cues, Calculators, Blank1. SONY Tapes, Telephones, Telephone _ and more! | Answering Machines, Wrench Sets/ — JVC I Values to J r B 0 S E lPlier Sets, Screwdriver Sets, Socket Sets!) $399.95 JENSEN Video Computers and Games, Cassette ^ EPI and more! Tape Carriers, Portable Stereos, Car Stereos, — Turntables, Amps, Receivers, Speakers, Cassett? Values to $900.00 Pair i Decks, Plus 100’s More Items!

WARRANTY INFORMATION NO DEALERS! £ An merchandise .s BRAND NEW a»d carries th Auctioneer Bob Hamel, licensed and bonded (not responsible lor Occidents). AH sales FINAL All items in limited quantities (ell products similar to illustrations), some items advertised may not " t Manutaciurers factory warranty be available due to prior sale, and earty advertising deadlines STEREO

TOLL FREE ffcrhl

TERMS OF SALE "n p N .iU a n s p ie r fro Cash. Certified checks, or Benk cards only. All laiee FINAL

8— Montana Kaimin • Friday, April 13, 1984 A rts and Entertainment 'Happily ever after' lives on By Rob Buckmaster Kaimin Contributing Reviewer comedy about falling in love. sweet innocence mixed with a In the golden days of Holly­ Except that one of the young raw sexuality, and comes up wood, films like “The Wizard of lovers is a mermaid. We learn deliciously charming. A nd Oz" and “Peter Pan” were big how they meet, how ibve she's beautiful. box-office draws and big creeps in, and— this is where The guy Hannah falls for is money-makers. These fantasy fantasy takes charge — how Allen Bauer, played by Tom they live happily ever after. Hanks (of T V ’s “Bosom Budd­ epics stimulated imaginations DARYL HANNAH IN “SPLASH”: sweet innocence mixed Director Ron Howard (Opie; ies”). Hanks offers a subtle, and brought out the child in ev­ with a raw sexuality. eryone. The public doted on "Happy Days”) has filled this straight reading of Allen, a Dorothy singing “Over the happy story with magical mo­ regular guy who simply falls flat (Mermaids do that.) As an is hilarious as Allen's girl­ Rainbow” and fell in love with ments that surprise in all the for Madison. actor, Hanks has many choices watching brother Freddie. A the idea of a make-believe land right ways. And the mermaid Take the scene set in a res­ how to react. He takes the per­ veteran of “S C TV ,” Candy has like Oz. Madison (after the Avenue) is taurant. Madison, unschooled fect one: smile and continue finally proved to Hollywood that A new era began in the early perfectly played by newcomer in our manners, bites into a eating. It's easy to root for him. Seventies, with a new turn to­ Daryl Hannah. She gives us whole lobster, shell and all. In a smaller role, John Candy See ‘Splash,’ page 11. wards realism. Instead of “Oz,” we now had “The French Con­ nection.” 223 Railroad Once in a while though, a film Brunswick 549-5518 like “Splash” comes along. A Food on Fire! perfect blend of the real and Gallery Bulk Tortilla Chips ...... $1.00/# the fantastic, “Splash" is a Installation by Pure & Simple Hot Sauce $ 1.35/ 12 oz WOODY AL.LEN Diane Keaton RICHARD POSNER Dos Equis ...... $4.00/6 pk Gallery Hours: Love and Thurs.-Fri. 4 to 8 p.m., Sat. 1 to 5 p.m. Death H o t Stuff! FRI. & S A T.— 7:00 & 9:15 Rainier 16-oz. California 7 u u < 3 6 Z .-H H H 7 Bottles Cooler K y f 515 SOUTH HIGGINS ASUM HAS *2.85/6 pk. $3.50/4 pk. 728-5748 The French Film Festival FREDDY’S THREE SALARIED 1221 Helen 549-2127 starts SUNDAY! FEED A N D READ POSITIONS OPEN Catholic Camput M inistry Christ tha King Church • Student Action Center Director • Programming Director Sunday Social— • ASUM Complaint Officer A time for fellowship, Applications and job descriptions are available at discussion and prayer the ASUM Office in the UC, 105. SAC applications All Students Welcome! are due today at 5:00. Complaint Officer and 7:30 p.m. Sunday, April 15 Programming applications are due on April 20. in the lower center

PLAY IT SAFE THIS S p ellbo u n d Friday the 13th FRIDAY the 13th!! SPECIAL and get on down to the

ROCKING HORSE A l l N ig h t

Blow It Out with Seattle’s Finest Show Band Louie Fontaine

LOUNGE • 2200 STEPHENS • 543-7500 Rocking Horse

Montana Kaimin • Friday, April 13, 1984— 9 A soul of pure rhythm: John Bayley sets spirits free devils at the Trading Post and simple fact that I W AS going— hear your favorite tunes 1 of the night. steal the show, but my recol­ off I went to the Carousel to re­ cranked out live. He didn't ex­ A lot of his lyrics tended to­ lection of just what made Bay- fresh my memory. actly play songs, but rather 20- ward “ba rum bum cha chica ley so good was a little hazy. I With those first few notes it minute medleys of whatever rum bum bum cha rica rum,” remembered a packed dance all came back to me, as ig on a seemed to suit him. which, after a few dozen rum floor and a lone singer, but I warm Caribbean breeze. John And what suited him the and tonics might have meant wasn’t sure what had brought Bayley is one hell of a lot of most was making people something, but to most of us the show alive. I mean, how fun. He laughs a lot, smiles a dance. The closest he came to doesn't mean a heck of a lot. much energy can one guy put lot and plays a mean reggae playing anything familiar to the But of course it was how the ly­ By Jerry Wright out? beat. crowd was a mid-medley rics were sung that made them Kaimin Senior Editor So with guilt for blowing off He energized this packed rendition of The Beatles' "Obla- count. The man has a soul of It’d been three years since I yet another Monday night of dance floor easily with "positive di, obla-da,” which seemed to pure rhythm. watched John Bayley warm-up school work well established— energy,” as he put it. This was push him away from the pure "Life’s too short!! Rejoice and for the Ozark Mountain Dare­ but quickly discarded by the no concert where you came to reggae sound he favored most have fun!!” he’d yell, and then he’d let out a roar like the 7-Up guy used to after saying "sim­ THEATRE ply maaarvolessss.” A huge Under the rDial-A-Movie- smile would break out under­ Green Awning neath Bayley’s Rastafarian 130 W. Pine ‘BRING” THIS AD, AND dreadlocks and spread con­ SEE Mi tagiously through the crowd. - He used an echo device and Spring Party V played a miked tambourine Q'nn with his feet— but other than that, it was all Bayley and his The Way of Montana FRI., SAT., SUN. guitar making the people work Presents: up a healthy sweat. “Set your spirit free!!" he commanded. Those not danc­ Custer’s Last Band ing could only claim injury as an excuse, otherwise nothing April 14th Low Cost could have kept them down. 8:00 ’til C lo sin g N o C o v e r Air Fares Bayley hit all the usual reg­ gae topics: fighting against Hawaii Holiday repression with faith and love(“l’m a lover not a fighter”), A n c h o r a g e ...... $476 $659 smoking the "ganga” (“Mother B o s to n ...... $418 • round-trip air fare from raper, father raper leave the FREE ...... $299 Missoula ...... $299 • 7 nights hotel ganga man alone”) and con­ accommodations DELIVERY M ia m i ...... $468 tinual instructions to enjoy life • lei greeting ^ S / N e w Y o rk ...... $399 no matter what. You get the ...... $418 distinct impression he takes his ...... $249 own advice very seriously. The PIZZA ATTACK S t. L o u is ...... $299 smile never left his face. S an Francisco ...... $249 TOPP T a m p a ...... $468 You know when it W ashington, DC ...... $349 TRAVEL T-shirt sales happens and h happens 728-0420 802 Milton, Missoula, M T 59802. =a NG,£UKE fast! It makes your help monkeys mouth water, your eyes get a glassy look, and NEW YORK (AP) — Souvenir you have a craving that T-shirts and posters of the kind only one thing ban used to promote rock ’n' roll satisfy. * stars are turning up in the remote cloud forests of Peru as You know you’re having a Piiza [Attack part of a campaign to save the When It Happens, call! t i t yellow-tailed woolly monkey from extinction. 728-6960 549-5151 m The unusual public relations 1 South N orth campaign, to be launched offi­ z cially in Lima in May, is an ef­ <2 z fort by the World Wildlife Fund- At Midnight May 31, Stageline U.S. to make the monkey a symbol for conservation in Will Draw Four Names 5 f Peru, as the giant panda has become for China. Grand Prize: $100 The unwitting object of this 2nd Prize:. 50 C > attention is the largest and m v most endangered Peruvian pri­ 3rd Prize 25 mate, an animal that stands 4th Prize 15 l three feet tall, weighs 25 pounds and was thought for al­ I" most five decades to be ex­ No Purchase Necessary tinct. It is found in the so-called O cloud forests, the mountainous, NAME mist-shrouded forests of north m central Peru. ADDRESS The monkey was rediscov­ (A ered in 1974 by Russell Mitter- PHONE meier, director of the primate program of the U.S. branch of Submit This Coupon for 1 Free Quart of Pepsi the World Wildlife Fund. Mitter- with Any Pizza Purchase meier is also responsible for the campaign to elevate the 134 WEST FRONT MISSOULA MONTANA monkey to stardom in Peru. 10_Montana Kaimin • Friday, April 13, 1984 Next week in M issoula Monster pop, Chicago blues claim city

ByJohnKappes Kaimfn Arts Editor The New York Times Concurs With Livin’,” more people than ever You can still see the Monte “most impressive"— downright have heard— and liked— Huey Dolack poster tacked to an oc­ enthusiasm. Lewis' punchy brand of power casional dorm wall, like a Perkins, who played with pop. The News’ latest, Sports, souvenir of some bygone Sonny Boy Williamson and has already produced Top golden age. When Muddy Wat­ Bobby Bland before he joined Forty monsters "I Want a New ers played the University Cen­ up with Muddy, is usually sin­ Drug" and "Heart and Soul.” ter Ballroom five years ago, he gled out for his pounding solos The band will be in Missoula, made blues believers. And his and distinctive vocals. Chicago red suit and all, next Friday, backup band, led by Pinetop roots are in evidence, of April 20, at the Adams Field- Perkins on piano, sounded course, but “Pinetop’s Boogie” house. THE LEGENDARY BLUES BAND, who will play the Carousel good enough on its own even could turn into Little Richard’s Eddie and the Tide, a on April 17: "Awwww, they’re so great.” - then to get an audience of pur­ “Lucille.” Attitude counts. “straight-ahead” rock crew in ists at New York’s Bottom Line Said Kim Wilson of the Fabu­ the vein of Tom Petty (accord­ on its feet and cheering. lous Thunderbirds, who've had ing to their manager, in a re­ Splashi They’re the Legendary Blues more commercial success, cent telephone interview), will Continued from page 9. Band now, and they return to “Awwww, they're so great, handle opening chores. water (a young Madison). He Missoula next Tuesday, April man, so great! More people Lewis is confident that his he can handle movie parts as was obviously entranced. 17, at the Carousel. The raves have gotta hear ’em." The show new audience will stay with well as the slapstick of TV “Splash” is a movie that come with them: Variety insists costs $5, and starts at 9 p.m. him. "It seems to be working,” skits. Hanks and Candy work promises to please a wide that “there isn’t a better bunch Ever since MTV began heavy he says in his press kit. Tickets very well together too. audience with its pleasant of blues players around,” and airplay of ’’Workin' For a are $10.50. Dody Goodman deserves blend of comedy and fantasy. mention as Allen’s outrageous Trying to make an audience secretary, who is zapped by believe in mermaids is im­ lightning and subsequently possible. The trick is simply goes wacko and does weird making us want to believe in NOW things, like wear her bra out­ the impossible— or unlikely? side her blouse. This is why it's so similar to One of the problems the the oldies like “The Wizard of INTERVIEWING script has is Allen’s motivations O z.” As in Dorothy’s song, once he finds out Madison is a “Somewhere over the rainbow mermaid. He acts utterly sick­ / skies are blue / and the ON ened and repulsed. Why? dreams that you dare to When he was a little boy, he dream/ really do come true.” was dumped off a boat while Even if only for two hours, the CAMPUS vacationing with his parents “happily ever after” syndrome and saw a mermaid under­ lives on. We are now accepting applications for management positions in the U.S. Navy for: Tropical Montanans • BUSINESS MANAGEMENT Get Away to A • NUCLEAR ENGINEERING • AVIATION THE MANSION • LAW • MEDICINE • INTELLIGENCE STRAWBERRY DAIQUIRIS • CIVIL ENGINEERING AND • SHIPBOARD OPERATIONS MAR GAR IT AS \ Friday and Saturday — 4:30*2 a.m. 102 BEN HOGAN 728-5132 Applicants should be no older than 28 years old, have a BS/BA degree (technical degree preferred) or be within 18 months of graduation, be able to pass aptitude and Grizzly Grocery physical examinations and qualify for security clear- nance. U.S. citizenshp required. April's Wine of the Month Martini To make an appointment, call Navy Officer Programs Johannisberg Riesling toll-free: • In Washington — 1-800-562-4009 6 p k s. • Montana/ldaho— 1-800-426-3626 $4.89 maxx$1.59 Or sign up at the Career Placement Office for our campus visit on: ■UMSHRC Man Open 7 Days a Week Corner S. Higgins and E. Beckwith Til Midnight 721-2679 April 17

Montana Kaimin • Friday, April 13, 1984— 11 U M Woodsmen's Team axes its way through the spring By Julie Heath Ax-throwing contests are just This spring, the 18-member Chris Partyka, member and the all-around top male and Kaimin Contributing Reporter one of several types of events team plans to travel to six former co-captain, says he ex­ female competitors. Approaching the line, a team featured at the meets in which meets and to sponsor one. Al­ pects 10 of the 21 teams to at­ Through its activities, the member grasps the wooden the University of Montana though competitors usually are tend the convention. The teams team encounters "gobs of handle, warms up with a few Woodsmen's Team particip­ students from colleges and will represent schools from costs,” Morris says, with equip­ preliminary swings and, as the ates each spring. Other com­ universities, the Woodsmen Montana, Idaho, Washington, ment purchases and trans­ crowd watches, combines ef­ petitions include pole-climbing, also accept challenges from Oregon, California and Ari­ portation being the team’s fort and concentration on the sawing and accuracy-felling. former UM teams. zona. major expenses. pitch. Hard-hit and speed-chopping "What it is,” says Partyka, "is Tree-climbing gear alone The crack which follows events, which test strength and The highlight of competition a chance to show off our costs about $150, he said. brings cheers from the crowd quickness, and log-rolling this year is the Association of school.” To help meet expenses, the as the team scores; the ax has races on water are also com­ Western Forestry Colleges The convention agenda in­ team participates in money­ lodged solidly in the bull’s-eye. mon. Conclave April 24-28 in Mis­ cludes local and out-of-state raising projects such as setting soula. guest speakers. Tours of Gla­ up concert stages. Members cier National Park, the Bison also cut and sell firewood from Range and some Missoula the Lubrecht Experimental For­ businesses are also planned. est. Triangle C Competitive events are In addition, the team will re­ scheduled for Logging Day, ceive $200 from the ASUM ac­ Attractions April 27. According to Greg tivities budget for the 1984-85 Morris, team captain, the school year. & ASUM events are characteristic of Although forestry students those at all meets and reflect constitute the majority of the Programming old-time, logging-camp com­ team, membership is open to petitions. all, Morris says. Present. . . The events will begin about 8 The team practices on the a.m. and conclude with the west side of the university's AND THE NEWSI ------= presentation of awards about 4 golf course on Tuesday and p.m. Winners in each event will Thursday afternoons and, as receive boots, axes and knives, Morris said, “anyone is wel­ Tickets on and the coveted Bull-of-the- come to come out and give it a Woods prize will be given to try.” Sale N ow Coors' beer boycotted With Special Guest Eddie & the Tide By Dan Dzuranin as last year. Kaimin Reporter Mark Watkins, co-x>wner of If you want to “taste the high Freddie's Feed and Read, said 8:00 pm Friday, April 20, 1984 country,” you will have to go to he joined the union boycott as places other than the Union a show for civil rights. He said Reserve Seat Tickets *10.50 Club Bar or Freddie’s Feed and he recently received Coors Harry Adams Fieldhouse Read. publication that was “self in­ These two businesses have criminating” because it implied Ticket outlets; University Center Box Office, W orden’s Market, Grizzly Grocery, been observing an AFL-CIO that Coors was treating its em­ Budget Tapes and Records, Eli’s Records and Tapes boycott of the Adolf Coors Co., ployees poorly. of Golden, Colo., since 1977. Lovely said that the most visi­ In 1977 Coors employees ble effort of the boycott in Mis­ went on strike because union soula occurred when the Mis­ members felt the company was soula Trades and Labor Coun­ discriminating against minori­ cil and several civic groups ties and mistreating workers by were successful in getting asking them to take lie detector Coors beer banned from the tests and answer questions last Aber Day kegger in 1979. The about their personal lives, Tim Recently, William Coors, Lovely, a member of the Mis­ Coors chief executive officer, soula Trades and Labor Coun­ was quoted in a Denver paper Legendaiy cil, said. as telling a group of minority The questions, Lovely said, businessmen that blacks "lack Blues asked for the names of organi­ the intellectual capacity to suc­ zations the employees be­ ceed.” He added, “One of the longed to and their sexual pref­ best things they (slave traders) Band erence. did for you is to drag your an­ (Formerly the During the strike, Coors hired cestors over here in chains.” some new workers who held an Coors' comments caused an Muddy Waters election and voted out the outrage by Denver black lead­ union. This prompted the AFL- ers, and the leader of the 200,- B a n d ) CIO to call for the ban, Lovely 000-member Fifth Episcopalian said. The boycott continues, he Church called for a national added, because the ousted boycott. workers never settled the Ulysses Doss, University of strike. He also said the basic Montana Humanities professor, management policies which said he was aware of Coors brought about the strike have comments, but he declined to not changed much. make a statement other than Evidently the boycott is work­ saying he can only ignore such ing. According to a study by a comment. “Beer Statistic News,” sales of Alan Thompson, Center for Performed with: The R o llin g Coors' beer in 1983 dropped Student Development counse­ Stones. Eric Clapton. 5.7 percent. However, a Kaimin lor and minority adviser, said B o b D illon survey of ten Missoula bars he was not aware of Coors' lat­ Appeared in the showed that even though most est comments, but said such Blues Brothers Movie Missoula area bar owners were comments will probably hurt LOUNGE • 2200 STEPHENS • 543-7500 aware of the boycott, Coors sales in areas that have a large beer is selling about the same population of minorities. 12— Montana Kaimin • Friday, April 13, 1984 Committee to decide where student building funds

By Donna Clark to do fine projects that other­ Harry Adams Field House. and two advisers, Williams and Regents must approve projects Kalmin Reporter wise wouldn’t be done (and) to •$25,000 for the Physical J.A. Parker, director of Univer­ exceeding $25,000-. make the campus a better Plant to use on small, ongoing sity Facilities. The committee For a project over $200,000, The ASUM Building Fee place." projects. reviews requests and makes a student referendum on the Committee must decide how to •$17,000 to remodel the recommendations to President proposal must be passed be­ spend $120,000 left in this All the money must be used equipment room in the Jour­ Bucklew, who has the final say fore a request can be sub­ year’s building fee budget on on projects that improve either nalism Building. about where the m oney is mitted to the Board of Regents about $2 million worth of re­ UM buildings or university fa­ •$I0,000 to remodel a kitchen spent if the amount is $10,000 for approval. quests. cilities that will benefit stu­ in the Lubrecht Forest Lab or less. Last Winter Quarter a refer­ dents, Williams said. owned by UM. Although Bucklew has the endum that would have con­ Glen Williams, University of •$I0,000 to remodel a pho­ authority to approve or disap­ tributed building fee money for Montana vice president of About $550,000 of the money tography lab in the drama and prove projects, Williams said a new stadium failed to pass. fiscal affairs, said that one of collected this year was used to dance department. the building fee committee Gullickson said the stadium the largest requests is to reno­ pay off bonds on past invest­ •$2,000 for an annual cam­ does a good job of reviewing referendum probably failed be­ vate the Grizzly Pool with $160,- ments made to help pay for pus art award that pays for a requests and he doesn’t know cause the students either didn’t 000, and one of the smallest is building projects, including the statue or piece of art work in­ of any project that Bucklew understand that the money to buy window shades for the Grizzly Pool, the University tended to beautify the campus. hasn’t approved. would come from building fee Forestry Building with $500. Center and, more recently, the The building fee committee is The Commissioner of Higher money, or they wanted the Requests were submitted in new Fine Arts Center. comprised of two students, one Education must approve ex­ money spent on the regular February. Greg Gullickson, ASUM busi­ staff member, one faculty penditures between $10,000 campus improvement projects ness manager, said most of the member, one administrator and $25,000 and the Board of instead of a stadium. The committee will review the $350,000 left after paying the requests and make recommen­ bonds has already been allo­ dations to UM President Neil cated to projects the commit­ Bucklew, who will make a deci­ tee felt had to be dealt with sion within two to three weeks. right away, such as: •a five-year, $160,000 loan to The $120,000 is what is left of build new bleachers in the G e t’em about $900,000 collector? this year. The money comes from students, who pay a $20 build­ ing fee at registration each quarter. while they’re FRIDAY Williams said the purpose of the fund is to "provide money 13th SPECIAL hot! Weekend------Horror Flicks *1 OFF At Bakke Tire Service FRIDAY From now through May 5, save up to $20 on these great Dayton Road King radials. Choose a dashing, sporty look •International Wildlife Film Festival, 7 NEW and feel or a quiet, no-nonsense tire. Either way, you get p.m.. Underground Lecture Hall. •Narnia’s movie of the week, "Future fuel efficient radial construction, smooth riding polyester Shock,” 8 p.m., 538 University Ave. Arrivals cord body, great looks.

SATURDAY ★ Sudden Road King Tlirisimo G T Impact •"Wildlife Films of the World," panel dis­ Steel Belt Radial cussion, 1:30 to 3:15 p.m.. Underground Lecture Hall. ★ SACRED •"Super 8/Video and Rimmaking Mar­ Size Regular Now Only kets," workshop, 8 a.m., Underground Lec­ GROUND ture HaM. 155R12 $42.53 •"The Committee on Education: A View $31.08 on Film," by Western District Congressman ★ STAR 80 155R13 45.37 33.15 Pat Williams, 11:30 a.m., Underground Lec­ ture Had. 165R13 48.92 35.75 e"Video vs. Rim , TV Wildlife and Getting ★ RUMBLE Wildlife on the Tube," by Shad Northshleld, 175R14 54.58 39.88 CBS, 3:30 p.m.. Underground Lecture Hall. FISH 165R15 •"WltdlMs Mythology and R im s," by Bill 54.45 39.79 Klttredge and Annlck Smith, 4 p.m.. Under­ ground Lecture Hall. ★ DONNER •Wildlife Rim Festival, 7 p.m., Under­ PASS ROAD w^KlNG ground Lecture Hall. Road King Radial I ★ THE SUNDAY Size Regular GETAWAY Now Only P155/80R13 $49.70 $36.32 •“Anthropomorphism In Rim s," panel ★ NATE & P165/80R13 53.72 discussion, 8:30 to 11:15 a.m..Underground 39.26 Lecture Hall. HAYES P175/80R13 55.61 40.64 •Video Incompatibility," Jeffery Boswell, BBC, and Megan Wood, WWF, 11:15 a .m .,* P185/80R13 57.45 41.98 Underground Lecture Hall. No Club •"Underwater Biology: The Biology of It P185A75R14 59.04 43.14 All," by Phil Motte, underwater zoologist, Membership and Jack Stanford, UM Biological Station, 1: P195/75R14 61.07 44.63 30 p.m., Underground Lecture HaU. •"Filmmaking In Montana," by Gary Call for Reservation P205/75R14 64.50 47.13 Wonderland, 3 p.m.. Underground Lecture Hall. P215/75R14 66.68 48.73 •"What to Watch For In a Wildlife Rim ," 728-6677 P205/75B15 66.21 by Bob Landis, freelance cameraman, 3:30 48.38 p.m., Underground Lecture Hall. Hours: P215/75R15 63.72 •Wild gam* feast, East Missoula Com­ 50.22 munity Center, 6 p.m. Weekdays 10-8 P225/75R15 72.30 •"Future Shock," 5:30 p.m., 538 Univer­ 52.84 sity Ave. Fri. & Sat. 10-9 P235/75R15 76.11 55.62 •Photography exhibit by Mona Vargas Daniels, University Center gallery, reception Sunday Noon-7 at T p.m. Price includes mounting. Balancing available: $5.00 MONDAY BAKKE 340 West Pine 543-8341 Downtown TWDF C n H i W 1012Kensington 728-2010 Bakke Tire Southside P U " wC/flrl|#£, 507 North California 728-4331 Truck Shop •HOPE meeting, 3:30 p.m. In the Copper Commons, under the clock. Montana Kaimin • Friday, April 13, 1984— 13 Classifieds KAIMIN CLASSIFIEDS W AN T T O invest a productive hour fighting the co-op/intemships N EEDED — RIDE to Seattle, leave Friday 20th; lost or found return Sunday 22nd. Will share gas and $.60 per line— 1st day. MPC rate hike? We need you Sunday after­ SUMMER INTERN­ driving. Call Moira. 549-5284. Leave message LO ST: O N E gold-rope chain bracelet, on $.55 per line— every consecutive day after 1st noon. Call 721-8040. MontPIRG. Tanya. Julie SHIPS NOW AVAIL­ ______87-4 campus. Has high sentimental value. Small insertion. or Russ. 84-4 ABLE: Pay n’ Save Cor- reward oflered. Call Marie at 243-4555. 87-4 5 words per line. N EEDED — RIDE to Denver/Boulder area YO UR OWN endowment fund for higher educa­ poration Manager Cash in advance or at time of placement. Friday the 20th — return 22nd or 23rd. Share LO S T: G O LO “Elgin" watch on 4/6/84. If found tion getting low? Wisely invest what money Trainees dl 4/24/84, Transportation and lost and found ads free. gas and driving. Cali Keefe at 549-5284. please call 549-1725.______87-4 you've got left by renting an ASUM garden Western Energy Com­ ______42-72 plot. See ASUM for details. U C 105. 84-4 ______87-4 LO S T: AODRESS book. 3!A by 2’A in. Green and pany Range Management PITCHERS CO O R S lite $2.25. $2.00 off all large N EEDED — RIDE for two to Minneapolis covered w/masking tape. 728-2267 after six. Intern dl 4/27/84. Mon­ and medium pizzas. Salad bar. all you can eat. following finals. Please call 243-4339. 85-4 Ask for Al. 85-4 tana State Personnel Division, Dept, of Admin, 5 p.m.-1 a.m. April 13 only. ______87-1 dl 4/27/84. Governor's Office. Governor's Aide SO M EO N E T O carpool from Hamilton. Leaving LO ST: PULSAR diver's watch. Analog and help wanted dl 4/30/84. Harris/Larsen and Associates. 8:30. return at 3:30. Call 363-4136 or363-6781. digital display. Fieldhouse area. 4/5. Reward. ADM. ASSIST.: NICSA study abroad prog. Coors Campus Comer Computer Consultant dl 4/11/84. Fish. Wildlife. Ask for Doreen. 84-4 Call Soren, 5503 or 721-0187.______85-4 Coming soon to your local bars — C OORS Typing, filing, creative. $4.30/hr. Apply by Parks Recreation Intern dl 4/27/84. Don Driscoll LO ST: OLIVE green cosmetic bag in the locker LIG H T GRAND PRIX RACES. Watch for 4/16, LA 313.______86-2 Campaign Intern dl 4/13/84. Martin Marietta room at the Fieldhouse Annex. Please turn it details.______87-1 JO B S IN Alaskal $800-2000 monthly! Parks, Business or CS Intern dl 4/13/84. Buttrey Food Stores. Auditing/accting Intern dl 4/28/84. IRS into the Annex Lost and Found office. Thank WE'RE SLEEK, we're fine, we're out the door. fisheries, resorts, oil industry and more! 1984 you. 85-4 Summer Employment Guide, employer Tax Auditor Intern dl 4/20/84. MANY MORE for sale We shan't be the players any more! 87-1 POSITIONS OPENING UP DAILY. Come into listings. $4.95. Alasco. Box 30752, Seattle. WA TEN N IS ANYO NE! Must sell rackets. 2-yr-old LO ST: MALE Griffon. 2 yrs. old. brown tinge FLY EA ST in June. $175. Call Louise. 542-2269. Cooperative Education Office, 125 Main Hall, 98103. 84-8 Head Vector, mid-sized, gut strings. $50; new w/white. Lost in lower Rattlesnake area. If ______87-5 243-2815 for details and application assistance. found call 549-3660.______84-4 84-1 Wilson Jack Kramer pro-staff, $35; Wilson T - KRIS! SURE I'll go to the Sadie Hawkins' Dance 3000, $25. Call Mike Halligan. 721-3399. LO ST: BLUE and red down vest. B.A. 312 on with youl Who gets to give the goodnight ______88-2 Thurs. the 5th. Call Mick at 549-8345. Reward kiss? Scott______87-1 for keys.______84-4 work wanted ______SINGLE H EALTH membership for The Club. W ANTED: Models for U.M. Calendar. Males and services______HARDW ORKING English senior needs employ­ Call 721-4763. ask for Wendy.______85-3 females. Call 549-2941.______86-2 TU TO R IN G S2.00/HR. We have qualified tutors ment. Excellent references, office experience, S ELF-PR O TEC TIO N Tear Gas Spray. Safe, personals______' in most classes. Up to 10 hours per week of great typing. Call Kathleen at 549-2935. effective. Avail. U.C. Women’s Res. Cntr. tutoring are available to all students. Come to HEY S C O T T! Will you be my date for the Sadie PREGNANT? NEED help? Birthright, 549-0406. 86-3 ______84-8 Hawkins Dance? Kris.______88-2 85-30 the Center for Student Development or phone 243-4711. ______85-7 G UILD D-25 acoustic guitar with Grover machines and hard shell case. $300. Kelly. 728-1334,______84-4 typing ______KING SIZE waterbed, complete. Moving. Will­ ing to dicker. Delivery possible. Call Robyn, M ULTIPLE LE TTER S 2.00 set-up .75 each. 243-2972 or 549-1435. 84-4 Resumes 2.50. 549-8604,______80-8 1.00 PAGE — MARY. 549-8604. Spring ______80-12 Shamrock Secretarial Services for rent______We specialize in student typing. N EXT T O G R EEN O U GH PARK. Spacious, 251-3828 or 251-3904. 80-35 modern apartment. Fully furnished, all TY PIN G AND Word Processing — Ring Binding utilities. paid. Walk to campus. Available — Photocopies 5C. “One Stop" — Sandy’s May-1st. $320/mo. 549-9088.______87-2 Office Services. 543-5850 — 1001 North SPORTS Russell. 80-35 wanted to rent H O U S E — 2 bedroom, under $260. 721-5484. transportation______84-10 NEEDS' RIDERS N EEDED to Bozeman or Billings today. Will leave after 10 a.m. and will return Sunday after 3 p.m. Call 721-8466.______87-1 roommates needed NEED RIDE to Lewiston, Idaho around April IMMEDIATELY: 3 bdrm. house. $135/mo. 728- 29th or 30th. Will pay part of gas. Call Susan 7300. 85-3 A MITT FOR EVERY BALLPLAYER Conrath. 728-7652.______87-4 Sports Talk Continued from page 5. will improve Giant hitting. He is hit 146 round-trippers last year the lefthanded slugger they've and the pitching allowed only been looking for to compliment 97. The trouble with the Dod­ the bats of righthanders Jack gers is they don’t have any lef­ Clark and Jeff Leonard. thanded hitting aside from Ken Last year relief pitchers Greg Landreaux. Minton and Gary Lavelle The Giants will suprise a lot earned 22 and 20 saves re­ WILSON & RAWLINGS of people but only if those spectively to give San Francis­ A s people underestimate the play co the first-ever 20-20 bullpen. of Al Oliver. The Giants haven’t done any­ Much The Giants had more errors thing drastic to last year's dis- A s 4 0 % . , (171) and fewer double plays mal team, they’ve only BALL MITTS (109) than any team in the ma­ strengthened some positions. jors. Oliver will strengthen the The youngsters will perform fielding at firs base and free better and the Dodgers and ONE LARGE WILSON OR agent second baseman Manny Padres will stumble. Trillo, who was recently signed, The rest of the West looks SELECTION PENN will strengthen second. like this: Atlanta, Houston and In addition to fielding, Oliver Cincinnati. NIKE TENNIS NEW BALLS MARY’S PLACE BALANCE OPTIC YELLOW AND OR ORANGE TIGER RUNNING SHOES CAN OF 3 929 Missoula Bluegrass NEW GRASS TO COUNTRY MUSIC FRIDAY AND SATURDAY VISA SPORTING GOODS & JEWELRY 121 W . M AIN

14— Montana Kaimin • Friday, April 73, 1984 Christmas cheer gets sour here By Jea nine B ohannan Kaimin Contributing Reporter Margaret Miller didn't realize when she was shopping for a gift last Christmas Eve that it would lead to a court case this month. Miller is being sued by the Altogether, a Southgate Mail clothing store, over a dispute centered on the store’s no­ cash-refund policy. Miller has responded by countersuing the store. Miller, 44, a University of Montana freshman, said in an interview that she bought a pair of jeans for her daughter, Brenda, 16, at the Altogether last Dec. 24. Trouble started, Miller said, when the jeans didn't fit and Brenda tried to return them on Dec. 26. The store has a firm no-cash- refund policy, and Brenda couldn’t find anything at the same price or the right size to exchange the jeans for, Miller said. "Everything was $15 to $20 more and we just didn’t have the money," said Miller, whose husband had been out of work since October. Miller said she went to the store herself and talked to the owner, Gary Anderson, who once again refused to return her money. Miller said she then stopped payment on the check and consulted with an assistant county attorney who told her to return the jeans, which she did. “He said that if you return the merchandise, you've broken no law,” Miller said. Two weeks later the Alto­ gether responded by filing a civil suit against Miller for the price of the jeans, $24.95, plus $50 to cover time involved in the case. Miller took the case to Bruce Barrett, director of ASUM legal services, who filed a counter­ suit on Miller's behalf for her own loss of time, inconven­ ience and charges she in­ curred. The suit requests $74.95 plus $6 for canceling the check. Anderson refused to com­ ment. However, there are prominently displayed signs behind the counter of the Alto­ gether stating that the store gives no cash refunds. The Kaimirt surveyed eight comparable stores in the Mall: The Wardrobe, Stevensons, Conrad's Mademoiselle, Jean Nicole, Jay Jacobs, Foxmore Casuals, Maurices and Brooks. All allow refunds on sale items. Miller, who hopes to go on to STARTS FRIDAY AT THEATRES EVERYWHERE law school, said that the whole affair has been upsetting: “He wasn’t out anything and I wasn’t out anything. I can't see his gripe. I had no intention of trying to rip the man off.” The trial is scheduled for April 30, in Missoula Justice Court. Montana Kaimin • Friday, April 13, 1984— 15 New drug to bring relief, but not cure to herpes sufferers By Jeanine Bohannan usually last a week. In the first other drugs tested, he said. soula is about average. I’ve abortion, or may persist so that KiJmin Contributing Reporter week lesions develop, starting "We can’t kill the virus; we treated three people in the last the child is born with herpes, A new medicine, Acyclovir, as red bumps and turning into are killing virus reproduction.” year.” Thompson said. has proven to be effective in blisters that form into ulcers Thompson said. Women with genital herpes "The lay press has created a the treatment of primary, or that crust over, accompanied By stopping reproduction of have problems in bearing chil­ lot of hysteria," Thompson first stage, genital herpes, ac­ by pain, swelling and itching.” the virus, the severity of the dren, with three- fifths of said. “It's nothing to become cording to Dr. Daniel W. Complications of genital her­ symptoms and the chance of the children dying, one-fifth hysterical about. But it is a Thompson, a family practi­ pes can be non-fatal meningi­ complications is reduced, having severe neurological major public health problem; tioner in Missoula. tis, urinary problems and tonsi- Thompson said. The time that damage— possibly blindness or we can't whitewash that.” Acyclovir is not a cure, but it litis, Thompson said. The pain the lesions last is reduced from retardation— and one-fifth es­ A person who contracts her­ can reduce the time and sever­ alone can be so severe that 21 days to nine, he said. caping unharmed, Thompson pes usually enters into a ity of the virus' initial outbreak, one-third to one-half of genital Genital herpes can reoccur at said. Fortunately, this is pre­ depression accompanied by Thompson said. herpes sufferers have to be unpredictable times, but usu­ ventable by Caesarean section, anger, despair, guilt and help­ There are two types of her­ hospitalized, he said. ally with less severe infections, which will keep the baby from lessness, Thompson said. pes; herpes I, consisting of Acyclovir is effective because Thompson said. A woman can moving down the birth canal "Herpes sufferers shouldn't cold sores around the mouth, it stops the herpes virus from have a minor reoccuring infec­ and being infected with herpes. feel that they’re lepers," he and herpes II, genital herpes. reproducing, Thompson said. tion and spread the disease However, if a woman acquires said. “Avoid intercourse but "Most people have a six day Enzymes within the cell activate without knowing it, he said. herpes while pregnant, a Cae­ not intimacy during a herpes incubation period in the pri­ the drug, in this way normal, “About 20 million people in sarean section won't help her, infection. Some people can get mary episode of genital her­ uninfected cells are not the United States have genital Thompson said. The infection reoccurrences once a month. pes,” Thompson said. “Then harmed, which is a problem in herpes," Thompson said. “Mis­ may lead to a spontaneous Affection is very important for they develop fever, headache, those people.” muscle aches and pain that cffl^raujj Jobs i Continued from page 1. Polutnik said he expects Srvrn Crown 1984 will be a good year for finding employment through the Job Service because of the general improvement in the economy. Students should register at the Job Service two weeks be­ fore school lets out, then come in every three weeks or so to make sure their names stay on the active rolls, he said. Students shouldn’t be dis­ couraged if they still don’t have a job by July because the For­ est Service often hires people for late summer work, Polutnik said. Some jobs also are available at UM during the summer, Kinsley said, when 600 to 700 work-study positions are open. Not as many non-work-study jobs are available because the biggest employer on campus, the Food Service, is closed during the summer. UM students can also find summer employment through the local R O TC recruiter's of­ ______- ,■ , 7 Up* or Seagram s 7 fice. Maj. James Desmond, whenyousturw^ R O TC recruiter at UM, said ~ u p som eth in g^ " thebeat is even about 50 students participate , r'r[nc. to hot music, Member, stirring in the R O TC summer job pro­ While you chart toppers. Just gram. They spend six weeks at and diet 7 up. . thinesstirring. either Fort Knox, Ky., or Fort moderation. >s Seven gets tnmgs Lewis, Wash., and earn $600 in addition to free transportation Seagrams and room and board. Students who participate in the R OTC program and receive a com­ mission upon graduation are then obligated to spend from three to eight years as reserve officers. For students who can't find jobs, there is always summer school. About 2,600 students attended UM summer school in 1983, according to Mel McCoy, summer programs director for the UM Center for Continuing Education. Of those, 1,560 stu­ dents had been in school the previous year, and the other

1,040 students were profes­ 0 1984 SEAGRAM DISTILLERS COl. N X NY AMERICAN WfSREY-A BLEND sionals continuing their educa­ 80 PROOF "SEVEN-UP” AND "7 UP" ARE TRADEMARKS Of THE SEVEN-UP COMPANY tion, he said. 16— Montana Kaimin • Friday, April 13, 1984