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

11-19-1982 Montana Kaimin, November 19, 1982 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, November 19, 1982" (1982). Montana Kaimin, 1898-present. 7420. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper/7420

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]. University system presidents to meet By Theresa Walla "in force” because higher educa­ Kaim in Contributing Reporter tion financing is one of the impor­ tant issues facing the Legislature In a change from the past, in 1983. The tour is a "unique Montana’s higher education units opportunity" for the legislators to are joining forces to represent learn about the needs of Montana's their needs before the 1983 university units, she said, adding Legislature. that she expects the meetings to The presidents of Montana's six have a “powerful effect on the con­ university units and Irving Dayton, stituency" of each legislator. commissioner of higher educa­ The system’s priorities include tion, will meet in Missoula Sunday financing of work-study, low- to discuss the university system's interest loans and research, legislative efforts. building maintenance and es­ The meeting, scheduled for 7:30 tablishing cooperative programs p.m. at the Village Red Lion Motor between university units, accor­ Inn, 100 Madison Ave., is part of a ding to Sheriff. statewide tour by the presidents. Each president, she said, will The tour begins Saturday with address system-wide needs during stops in Bozeman and Butte, his speech. For example, she said, moves to Dillon Sunday, and ends If UM's President Neil Bucklew in Kalispell Monday. addresses long-range building The tour has been spearheaded needs, he won’t talk just about by Deanna Sheriff, executive UM’s needs, but those of the LANAE MILLER, A SENIOR in elementry education, plays the “Pandemonium” In the University Center Mall director of the University of Mon­ system. yesterday morning. Miller’s performance was part of a half hour of musical presentations put on by students tana Alumni Association. She said This cooperative effort by the from UM Associate Art Professor Richard Reinholtz’s elementary school art class. (Staff photo by Jim the forums are held to gain units will eliminate competing LeSueur.) "grassroots" support for a system- demands at the Legislature, she wide coalition to lobby the said. Legislature and to promote the The tour has been arranged by benefits of higher education. Mike Easton, UM's vice president M o n ta n a Sheriff said she expects legislators to attend the meetings Cont. on p. 6 Massacres in Lebanon occur daily, says speaker Friday, November 19, 1982 Missoula, Mont. Vol. 85, No. 29 thousands. aimin By Charles F. Mason Kaim in Reporter After Sidon was captured in June by Israeli troops, all of the Massacres are occurring daily in men, including Giannou, were Lebanon, the former medical paraded before a hooded informer Causes of hunger discussed at forum director of a Lebanese hospital and Israeli soldiers. Those picked said last night. by the informer were marked with By Greg Moore “ In most of the world, land is he said, are in the interest of the Speaking before about 50 peo­ an X and taken to prison camps. Kaim in Contributing Reporter becoming an increasingly scarce corporations that manufacture ple at the Episcopal Church of the Giannou was picked out by an and precious resource," Koehn them, but not of the small-scale said. Holy Spirit, 130 S. 6th East, Dr. Israeli officer and marked with the World hunger is caused primari­ farmer. Chris Giannou said Phalangist and X. ly by the inequitable distribution of Koehn attributed the scarcity of “The Green Revolution has other right-wing forces are enter­ "This was the most terrifying land ownership, said Peter Koehn, agricultural land to two factors: simply bought a little time at future ing villages and raping and moment in my life,” he said. University of Montana political concentration of land in fewer and expense,” said Koehn. murdering the Palestinian in­ Giannou said he was initially science professor, at a noon forum fewer hands and exploitation of Koehn said small-scale, habitants. kept in a yard with 500 other yesterday at the University Center the land which destroys it ecologically sound farming could Giannou was the medical direc­ prisoners. He said he witnessed Mall. ecologically. out-produce heavily fertilized, tor of a hospital in Sidon during the numerous beatings by Israeli The forum, "Why are People Koehn said the “Green Revolu­ machinery-intensive farming. Israeli bombardment and invasion sojiders. Two of these beatings Hungry?” was the educational tion” has been counterproductive. Dietician Minkie Medora said of that city in June. At one time, resulted in the death of the victims, component of the annual Fast For The Green Revolution Is a world­ malnutrition is a “vicious circle 4,000 people, fleeing the Israeli he said. World Hunger Awareness Day, wide scientific and economic ef­ that keeps perpetuating itself.” fort to provide third world coun­ bombing, took refuge in the Giannou said the beatings were said Rev. Lynne Fitch, minister She said malnutrition affects the tries with advanced agricultural hospital operated by the Red random but were not comfnitted by with Christian Campus Ministries. brain and central nervous systems, technology and new strains of Crescent, the Arab version of the ail of the soliders. The forum was sponsored by resulting in stunted sensory and Red Cross. campus Christian organizations, seeds. motor development, low in­ “Some of the soldiers tried to The hospital was bombed six ASUM and the Student Action The Green Revolution, said telligence and apathy. stop the beatings,” he said, "but times. Center. Koehn, requires massive Victims of malnutrition, she said, the officers did nothing to stop “They (the refugees) thought a Panelists included Koehn, Mis­ applications of chemical fertilizers hospital would be immune from them (the beatings).” soula Community Hospital dieti­ and insecticides. Those practices, Cont. on p. 6 attack,” he said. “They were Giannou, who was not beaten, cian Minkie Medora and District XI wrong.” was taken to a prison in northern Human Resources Council Ex­ Giannou said the Israelis Israel later that month. After ecutive Director Jim Morton. The dropped cluster and phosphorous pressure from the Canadian Human Resources Council is a bombs on heavily populated government, he was released at federally funded organization that refugee camps, killing and injuring the end of June. deals with the problems of poverty. Increased enrollment prompts plea to Legislature for fund supplement By Bill Miller senate: resulting budget problems have Kaim in Managing Editor • heard a report from the new been a primary topic. General Education Task Force Also in preparation for the Due to increased enrollment • approved a temporary session, Bucklew issued copies of system wide, the Montana Univer­ procedure of reviewing the UM the University of Montana sity System will ask for a supple­ administration Legislative - Report to senate ment of funds at the next • received a new handbook members. This booklet outlines legislative session, University of which will be used by the Universi­ the progress UM has made with the Montana President Neil Bucklew ty Planning Council for the 1982- funding from the last legislative reported yesterday. 83 fiscal year, which will begin in session and includes explanations Bucklew, who was addressing July, 1983 of requests UM and the system will the monthly meeting of the UM • unanimously approved Chris be making during this legislative Faculty Senate, said he met Field, associate professor of session. Bucklew said the report Wednesday with the Legislative geography to the Executive Com­ will also be given to legislators, Finance Committee. He also mittee of the senate. alumni and all interested in UM. reported that members of the Bucklew said the meeting with A voice vote taken by the senate Budget Committee of the Montana the Legislative Finance Committee unanimously approved a tem­ Board of Regents expect the was one in a series in preparation porary procedure of evaluating the KOEHN, UNIVERSITY OF MONTANA political science request for more money will be for the legislative session, which UM administration. According to professor, speaks during a forum entitled “Why are People Hungry." The partially responded to. starts in January. He said that forum was held at noon yesterday in the University Center Mall. (Staff Also at the senate meeting, the increased enrollment and Cont. on p. 6 photo by Jim LeSueur.) O p i n i o n s The Innocent Bystander Go, Wolf Pack? Happy WW III by Arthur Hoppe Let's hear it for Nevada-Reno! Old cynic that I am, I was frankly entrance while our fellow motorists, she said afterward that it was "grody to A lot of people are probably thinking "Nevada-Reno? We dig surprised that World War III worked out waving and smiling, took turns enter­ the max,” and that's not good. the Griz!” Well, that’s exactly why you should cheer for the Wolf pretty much the way our civil defense ing the on-ramp. But once on the road As for Glynda and me, we whiled Pack. officials had planned. we cruised along at a steady 55 miles away the hours reading, playing Scrab­ Of course, the Russians were per hour. ble and taking long walks. It was sure generous in giving us eight days notice The only untoward incident came restfuf to get away from the hurly-burly instead of the five we had expected. So when Malphasia lost her copy of Teen of city life for a bit. K a im in editorial when Ambassador Dobrynin handed Scene out the window and I had to pull All good things must come to an end, our State Department a note that into the right-hand lane and stop. though. After three days, we had to bid Monday saying the Soviets would Luckily, it landed on a windshield eight farewell to Mark and, promising to Tomorrow, if Nevada-Reno beats the University of Idaho, launch a surprise first strike at 2:47 p.m. cars back. The driver laughingly hand­ exchange Christmas cards, we headed a week from Tuesday, we had plenty of which is in first place in the Big Sky Conference, the University ed it to me as the others in the stalled back to the city. time to prepare. * line grinned at my embarrassment. Naturally, after a thermonuclear war, of Montana will be tied with Ul and Montana State University I checked the newspaper and found At the Gerbiiford city limits, we we expected some damage. Sure with five wins and two losses apiece. that because our car was a red, 1976 passed under a paper banner reading, enough, three windows had been Now don’t worry about those other would be co-champs station wagon with odd-numbered ■WELCOME EVACUEES." And on broken in the living room and a direct because the Grizzlies beat both teams earlier this season in plates, we were scheduled to leave at reaching the Gerbiiford Motor Court, hit had taken out the coreopsis bed. 10:32 a.m. on Thursday. Our destina­ league play. we were greeted most warmly by the Luckily, they had finished blooming. What this means is that if Nevada-Reno, which is out of the tion would be the little community of proprietor, Mark Hawkins. He said conference race, beats first-place Idaho, the Grizzlies will be Big Gerbiiford, a pleasant two-hour drive. apologetically that Glynda and I would But as I said to our little family at dinner: “ I’m sure we'll all agree that Sky champs for the first time since the early seventies. I could tell our son, Mordred, was have to share a double bed as he was all World War III wasn't nearly as bad as it What are the Nevado-Reno’s chances? Well, the Wolf Pack delighted by the news as he had a out of twin-bedded rooms. But I said history test coming up on Friday. But might have been.” has a good running game and could possibly score some points what the heck, we didn't mind roughing Malphasia, our daughter, was it for a couple of days. Well, you know Malphasia. "If there's against the tough Idaho defense. recalcitrant. "There's absolutely a World War IV," she said. “ I hope you'll Mordred got a bit restless when we It also means that UM would have a shot at the NCAA l-AA nothing to do in Gerbiiford,” she tell those bureaucrats to ship us off to had to wait 20 minutes for a table that playoffs. There is also the possibility that the Grizzlies could get wailed. "Can't we go to the Lake Lake Wenatchee instead. It's got a evening at the Gerbiiford Surf 'n Turf an "at-large” invitation to those playoffs. This could come about Wenatchee Resort Lodge instead?" disco.” Grill. I explained that such in­ if they beat Oregon State University this weekend in a non­ I merely looked at her sternly. I'm afraid I blew my stack. “Look conveniences were inevitable as Ger- “You're forgetting, Malphasia," I said, here, young lady," I practically conference game. * bilford was playing host to 769,417 "that war is H-E-double-toothpicks.” shouted. “I'm certainly not going to An at-large invitation is awarded when a team is not a visitors. And I must say Mordred’s As fof my dear wife, Glynda, she was complain about our civil defense conference champ but has a good record or has beaten a good spirits revived the next day when he understandably worried. “ I haven’t the officials. All things considered, I think team such as Oregon. caught his first fish ever — a 2-pound faintest idea what to wear," she said. they're doing a pretty darned good job Such an invitation should be welcomed, but it wouldn’t be as smallmouth bass. But I said IthoughtWorldWarlll would when it comes to planning ther­ great as winning the Big Sky Championship. be sort of a come-as-you-are affair and Malphasia, however, remained dis­ monuclear wars.” So, once again, let's hear it for those the Wolf Packl she seemed reassured. consolate. A group of very nice local If you're concerned about this championship race, be the Big Day arrived. We were youngsters invited her to the Rainbow (Copyright Chronicle Publishing Co. conscious of the Wolf Pack as it takes the field against the held up for a few minutes at the freeway Girls Box Supper & Square Dance. But 1982) Vandals. And when you're sitting around Missoula tomorrow afternoon (if you’re a religious person) say a little prayer and William Raspberry****** face southwest. If you’re not religious, just hope for the bgst. German answers And finally, good luck to the Grizzlies as they face Oregon WASHINGTON — Critics of high-technology industries that are industry is that it overemphasizes tomorrow afternoon in Corvallis. American industry have been urging crucial to the German economy — as short-term profitability at the expense U.S. business executives to look to well as motivated and responsible. of serious long-term concerns. Say the Bill Miller Japan as an example of how to do it "When young people are trained by authors: right. industry, not by the state, and are given “Customer orientation in German There's no question that the considerable work experience and means something quite different: the Japanese have chalked up a series of responsibility at an early age, they delivery, on schedule, of finely industrial miracles. Just look at the become very attractive to future engineered products that will not only Toyotas and Datsuns, the Suzukis and employers. These employers are will­ sell well but sell well over time. Backed Any questions? the Yamahas, the Nikons and the ing to furnish whatever retraining is up by a reliable service network, such Sonys that are grabbing ever larger necessary because they have found, products generate a self-perpetuating By Missoula Planned education to birth control, sexually shares of the American market. through long experience, that appren­ reputation for quality, which German Parenthood transmitted diseases and pre-natal But since the Japanese are so tices adapt well to different work en­ companies regard as the best possible information. Planned Parenthood different, culturally and socially, from. vironments.” marketing tool." Planned Parenthood will be answer­ offers Askable Parent Workshops, a Americans, their example might be The German system, in other words, As a result of its progressive outlook, ing readers' questions in a semi­ film rental service and a lending library. hard for us to emulate. Perhaps we is producing young workers with Germany, with its relatively small regular column in the Montana Kaimin. Planned Parenthood believes that shoulp look instead to Germany. precisely the skills our experts say will businesses, high labor costs and The frequency of the column will each person has a right to accurate That, at least, is the advice Joseph be in increasingly short supply here in dearth of natural resources, is more depend in part on the number of letters information about reproduction health Limprecht and Robert Hayes offer in the coming years. than holding its own in the world written to the clinic to be answered in and birth control, as well as an un­ the current issue of the Harvard Hayes, a professor of business market. How? the column. derstanding of one's own body. As part Business Review. Not only are the administration at Harvard, and Lim­ “The not-so-glib answer," say the of our commitm^Qt to public education Germans more like Americans, they precht, a career foreign-service officer authors, “ is that one must first ensure and awareness, we,are eager to reply to say, but they also are outstripping us in who served in Germany, note long-term survival. Who can grow the Forum your questions. two critical areas: employment and- something else about Germany's ap­ fastest or show the highest return on product reliability. What is their secret? proach with implications for U.S. in­ equity are, to a German manager, Autumn is a time for taking stock, a "If the Germans have had any secret dustry: secondary, almost frivolous Recall those questions you've har­ season for taking care pf loose ends weapon during Europe's post-1973 The U.S. tendency is to rely on questions." The Japanese couldn't bored since your ninth grade sex before winter sets in. Before those long economic difficulties, it is the technical market research and responsiveness to have said it better. northern nights descent on us, why not education class, the ones you couldn't competence of their work force, which customer complaints, in an effort to give some thought to yourself, to your ask Dear Abby? . is in turn the product of their appren­ boost sales quickly. Indeed, one of the ® 1982, The Washington Post Com­ own body. "Will birth control pills make-me fat?" ticeship system," the authors contend. most common criticisms of American pany j “What is a pap smear?” "How can you We will provide you with information, Fully half of Germany's young people get herpes?” “Can condoms be re­ referrals and a better understanding of leave full-time school by age 16 to DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau used?" matters of concern to you. Let's clear begin a three-year apprenticeship in stnefTSH&tt! toW ON* HFK Now is your chance to get answers to IH0ARY0U7B WXVJB, the air and get some answers. their chosen trade. One result of the MSSIAKStC srm&CNve imrrjusrmot these and other queries. Questions mum VJSL OF LDRUHftOMO \ unmnuio/m approach: Germany's mid-1981 teen­ OH LOB AL&ADY! m u ClfUTUBUT nnJUHXH ' l£T»B6BBUD 'iSnSSf K»Oi(fFGtS submitted to this column on such Send your questions to: *Z.H£R vuiaek€> v'a/*ttmxTwm BETTER THAN age unemployment was only 5.1 per­ topics as reproductive health, birth Planned Parenthood eP** cent — slightly less than the rate for all control, pregnancy and sexuality will 235 E. Pine St. workers. By contrast, the youthful be answered regularly. Missoula Missoula, Mont. 59802 jobless rate in America is triple that of Planned Parenthood's staff of medical As in all of Planned Parenthood’s adult workers. personnel and counselors will con­ work, confidentiality is assured. Letters Both government and unions favor tribute their expertise in responding to need not be signed. We will answer as this (voluntary) approach," say Lim­ your questions. many as possible in the Kaimin. precht and Hayes, “because it helps Planned Parenthood, a family­ address the problem of youth un­ GARFIELD® by Jim Davis planning clinic, has an active Speakers Montana employment by providing teen-agers Bureau and Education Program, with with a marketable trade and good speakers available for groups and discipline.. . . Industry likes the classes on subjects ranging from sex aimin K system because it builds a work force S______r that is highly skilled — especially in the Letters policy Editor ***** L. Rygg Managing Editor______Bill Miller Letters should be typed (preferably tripled spac­ Business M anager______Jackie Peterson “Expressing 84 years ed). signed with the author's name, class and major Advertising Manager Anne Berg (as well as address and telephone number, for News Editor Joanne OePue of editorial freedom” verification purposes only), and mailed or brought News Editor Mark Grove Published every Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday to the M ontana Kaim in. J206 Letters longer than 300 Senior Editor------Pam Newbem and Friday of the school year by the Associated words will not be accepted, and shorter letters may Senior Editor ------Laurie WilliamsStudents of the University of Montana The UM be given preference Unless otherwise requested in Associate Editor______Kathy GallagherSchool of Journalism uses the Montana Kaimin for writing, the Kaim in will correct spelling and Associate Editor Chris Johnsonpractice courses but assumes no responsibility and capitalization errors and put letters into our usual Fine Arts Editor — .. Shawn W. Swagerty exercises no control over policy or content. The format but make no other corrections, except when Montana Review Editor Ann Joyceopinions expressed 6n the editorial page do not necessarily reflect the view ol ASUM. the state or the over-long letters need to be cut The K a im in is under Sports Editor ------Dave K^yes university administration. Subscription rates: $8 a no obligation to print all letters received; potentially Graphic Artist Tim F. Benson quarter. $21 per school year Entered as second heious letters wilt be returned to tttf authors for Columnist Charles F. Mason class material, at Missoula. M ontana $9612. • ind anonymous and pseudonymous letters Photographer t arry Crnich (USPS 360- 190) Photographer Jim LeSueur 2—Montana Kaimin •Friday, November 19, 1982 S p o r t s ------— ------An ad in yesterday’s paper erroneously stated that there was an omelet special Griz hopes lie in UNR-UI game this Saturday and Sunday at If Idaho defeats Nevada-Reno, By Dave Keyes banner season. Their 0-8-1 record the SANDWICH SHOPPE Ul would win the Big Sky Con­ K aim in Sports Editor puts them in the cellar of the While the University of Montana Pacific-10 Conference. The only ference with a 6-1 record. 540 Daly. Grizzlies have no control over their bright spot on their dismal record If Idaho were to lose to Nevada- Reno there would be a three-way The Kaimin regrets this error. destiny in the Big Sky Conference was a 14-14 tie against Washington tie for first place with Idaho, race, they will have a lot to say State earlier this season. Montana and Montana State each about the result of tomorrow’s The Washington State Huskies having identical 5-2 conference game against Oregon State Un­ were rated number one in the nation in The Associated .Press records. The Grizzlies would be iversity. Oregon State has a tradition of Poll going into the OSU game. crowned champions because they defeated Montana State and Idaho beating up on the Grizzlies. Of the The Grizzlies will have to wait to B R E W P A R T Y see whether they will be con­ earlier this year. The Grizzlies 13 games Montana and Oregon NOON TO 6:00 ference champions this-weekend. would also get an automatic berth have played, OSU has won 11; 304 SCHOONEERS $1.25 PITCHERS If the Grizzlies were named con­ in the Division l-AA National there have been two ties. The last 504 300ZE DRINKS meeting between the two teams ference champions, it would be the championships. was in 1950, when OSU defeated first time in history that a team with HOT DOGS Chicken Drumsticks UM 20-0. two conference losses had been Lady Griz 35$ Ea. 10/$1.00 If there were ever a time to cut named champion. 10:00 — 11:00 into a lopsided win-loss record, For the Grizzlies to be the begin season 54 BEERS $1.25 PITCHERS this weekend is the time for the champs of the Big Sky, Nevada- 504 BOOZE DRINKS Grizzlies. Reno would have to defeat the The University of Montana Oregon is suffering less than a University of Idaho this weekend. women’s basketball team will open the 1982-83 season tomorrow night as they compete against the UM swimmers home this weekend Washington State Cougars-at 7:30 p.m. in Dahlberg Arena. By Jerry Wright points. On the way to winning the meet, The game will kick off a M ontana Contributing Reporter the Grizzlies ran up a score of 681 marathon of eight games in 17 compared to 433 for Puget Sound, days for the Lady Grizzlies. From The University of Montana swim 358 for Wyoming and 301 for All ten letter-winners are return­ team, coming off a first-place Seattle Washington State. The team set 10 ing to the Lady Grizzlies. finish in the Grizzly Invitational last of 19 possible school records, and Washington State also has 10 week, will participate in a dual W qualified 9 girls for the NCAA returning letter-winners and w swimming meet with the University Division II Swimming and Diving finished last season with a 15-14 of Idaho, tomorrow, with action h Championships next March. h beginning at 2 p.m. in the Grizzly record. School records are not usually The Grizzlies and the Cougars a a Pool. broken until the last few meets of met twice last year, and Montana The women’s swim teams of the the season, said Coach Doug was victorious both times. t t University of Puget Sound, the Brenner, adding that he expects The Lady Griz will play Carroll University of Wyoming and more new records will be set by College Monday and College of BOOZE — BEER — WINE Washington State University next quarter. Great Falls Tuesday. Both games learned this weekend that Grizzlies “We are right where we should start at 7:30 p.m. in Dahlberg T HADING POST can indeed swim. be at this point in the season,” said Arena. At the Grizzly Invitational Swim Brenner. “We’re doing well in our Probable starters for Montana SALOON Meet, the Lady Griz dominated distance events, and our sprints— are Barb Kavanagh, Cheri Bratt, their guests, beating their closest 50-yards ,to 1QQ-yard rac£?—will Doris 6eden,,JuU Eckmaon and competition by more than 200 get faster next quarter.” Shari Thesenvitz.

\ GO* . o f y

*

G o V . ® \6

Montana Kaimin • Friday, November 19, 1982—3 Kaimin classifieds Social Adjustment Hour lost or found IMPROVE YOUR GRADES! Research catalog—306 CHRISTMAS BAZAAR pages—10.278 topics—Rush $1.00 Box 2S097C w ith Specially Priced Drink* in the LOST: KEYS in leather covering. If found, please call LOS Angeles. CA 90025. (213) 477-8226 1-30 Garden Bar Tues. thru Thur*. 243-4386.______29-4 and 5-6:30 p.m., Fri. 4:30-600 f ir * BAKE SALE LEASE TIME available. Zenith H-19A computer TO GIVE AWAY — FOUND: 6 mo. old gray tabby w/modem. Shamrock Professional Services. 251- Serving FREE Tocos in (he Gordin Bar Only S.H male Housebroken. Likes to sleep in your Christ the King Church 3828.251-3904 14-23 lap. 721-2097.______28-4 1400 Gerald GENERO US REWARD for Chinese blouse ‘’lost" typing______§ Sat.. Nov. 13 on campus. Please call if have any Saturday, November 20, 1982 information on its whereabouts. Will pay no E D IT-TYPIT — typing, editing, word processing, questions asked for Its return White satin w/blue 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. theses, dissertations, resumes, letters, apps trim, high collar, long sleeves and ornately ______29-1 South and Higgins. M-F 9-5, Sat. 10-3 728-6393. ' ______i______29-109 embroidered Much sentimental value. Please! C ASINO NIGHT! Friday, Nov. 19th, 8 p.m. — Poker. *145 West Front—Downtown Missoula Call 251-3897 & ask for Alicia.______27-4 Craps, Black-jack. Have fun, drink beer, and help SPACE-AGE TYPING service, fast, reasonable We LOST: BLACK male Newfoundland/Lab cross with world hunger. Can of food required to enter, come correct spelling, punctuation. 549-8591 29-11 white spot on chest. About 75 lbs. Friendly. Silver have agreat time. 501 University Ave. (across from PROFESSIONAL MANUSCRIPT SERVICES choke collar on. Lost 9/8. Call 721-4184 27-4 F redd/s).______28-2 IBM Selectric typing. Editing and rewrites LOST OR stolen: gold nylon wallet w/brown trim. USED AND TAPES at DIRT CHEAP Guaranteed superior quality. Competitive rates. Fieldhouse Annex men’s lockerroom on 11/15 PRICES. Unconditionally guaranteed. Memory Personalized service. about 9 p.m. Please return it!! Keep the money. Banke (next to Skaggs). 22-8 Convenient U-district location. Many items, photos, etc. Call 549- 14K GOLD WEDDING BANDS PRICED 50% Papers. Theses. Scripts. Grant Proposals. 5515 if found, no questions asked. 27-4 BELOW RETAIL. Memory Banke. Holiday Village 10% Discount to new clients. 728-9174. 27-5 / “HILARIOUSLY VULGAR! THE GUESTS DRINK, ARGUE, ^ LOST: A brown Goretex coat. Left in Elrod parking (next to Skagga).______22-8 TYPING — M. Edwards. IBM Selectric. $1/pg. 549- § FLIRT. DRINK. EAT. MAKE LOVE. GET CAUGHT. BRAWL $ lot. Offering reward for return. Call Erik at 243- TROUBLED? LONELY? For private, completely 9741.______22-16 2627.______26-4 AND DRINK SOME MORE!" - Vincent Canby. N.Y. Times 8 confidential listening, come to the Student Walk- TYPING — REASONABLE rates 543-8868. 22-25 FOUND near U.C.: A white crocheted hat with in, Southeast Entrance. Student Health Service QUALITY EDITING and typing. Call Marty, 549- “BAWDY, FASCINATING, COMPELLING \ earflaps, toddler size. Call 549-3094.______26-4 Building. Weekdays 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Also open every 1478, for appointment. 21-18 STUFF!” ■ Rex Reed, N.Y. Daily News night, 7-11 p.m., as staffing is available. 22-18 LOST: Black with gold trim 'Cross' pen. blue ink. It’s EXPERIENCED TYPING and editing 95C a page a keepsake. Please turn in at the Purchasing Dept, “VERY STRONG RECOMMENDATION... 721-5928.______20-17 in 'the Lodge. I think I lost it in the LA Building. help wanted A REAL TREAT!" Your honesty will be much appreciated. 721-6677. THESIS TYPING SERVICE — 549-7958 • Andrew Sarris, V illage Voice j ______26-4 NEED 2 House Boys at Sorority. Call 728-7416. 14-34 ______27-3 “RIP-ROARING 100-PROOF COMEDY!” J FOUND: Pair of gloves in ladies’ bathroom in the EXPERIENCED TYPING and editing. 2S1-2780. , - Kathleen Carroll. N.Y. Dally News Social Science Building. Call 243-2995 and ask for OVERSEAS JOBS — Summer/year round. Europe, ______13-24 Rene to identify. 26-4 S. Amer.. Australia, Asia. All fields. $500-$ 1200 “NOT TO BE MISSED! A REVELATION!” X monthly. Sightseeing. Free info. Write IJC, Box SHAMROCK PROFESSIONAL SERVICES • Archer Wlnsten. N.Y. Post 52-MT2, Corona Del Mar, CA 92625. 22-12 Word processing for all your error-free typing “TAKE THIS AS AN INVITATION personals needs, also weekends and evenings by appointments. 251-3828, 251-3904. 1-33 . GO!” ■ Judith Crist. WOR-TV ATO LITTLE Sister Wild Turkey Party is cancelled for Nov. 20.______29-1 services Q UALITY IBM TYPING. All kinds. Lynn, thesis specialist/editor 549-8074. 1-36 A NAUGHTY time was had by Todd and Peggy. OLDE-TIME STRING band available for Christmas functions. Dance tunes and tasty vocals. Expert Indeed, it was very knotty. (That’s what she said.) DON’S caller. Yahoo! 721-7164.______29-3 ______29-1 4 HR. EKTACHROME/B & W dev/custom transportation w C.D. — JOYEUX anniversaire a mon amie av coeur. Tu me manques. 29-1 prints/PhotoPro/337 East Broadway. 721-5550. DESPERATE — RIDE needed for 2 anywhere on PARflr ______29-84 West Coast for Thanksgiving break. 243-4997. POKERI FRIDAY and Saturday, downtown at ______;______29-3 Directed by Corky’s, 121 West Main. 29-1 LEAVING YOUR Garfield? Let the Cat Lady babysit. Call Nancy. 243-2641.______29-1 RIDE NEEDED: to Spokane. Leave Wednesday and BRUCE BERESFORD FROGMAN ("Breaker Moran) ) RED STAR on your cash register receipt wins an come back on Sunday (Nov. 24-28). Call 243-4997, Have Goggles preferably late at night. 29-3 Will Dive O le’s T-shirt. Several given daily. O le’s Country Store and Beer Depot, 624 East Broadway. 28-2 a m o m release 29-1 RIDE NEEDED to Seattle Dec. 11 or 12. W ill share m gas. Call 243-5347. 29-3 GREG W RIGHT! Greg Wrigl)t! W hy aren't your lips DRAFT COUNSELING 243-2451. 1-109 —MONTANA PREMIERE— tight?______29-1 FROGMAN SAYS: Slurp, lick, dribble, drool, burp, An outrageous comedy from the croak. Ribitl FROGLADY Says: Oooo, aaah, Director of “ BREAKER MORANT’ mmmm, Todd, I'm cu...... I Sigh! 29-1 REWARD J.M.G. — HOW can you account for being a quarter STARTS TONIGHT! century old (young?) on Monday?! J.R. 29-1 Would the occupants of a white, 2- door vehicle with Montana plates who took Lisa Anderson and her friend to the Student Health Services Building on the SHOWS AT 7:00 & 9:15 P.M. GETTING ENGAGED? We can save you money on University of Montana campus on November 13, 1981, between 11:00 p.m. and new wedding and engagement rings. Memory 12:00 a.m., with an injured leg, please contact Don at 549-4121 days, 251-5794 Banke. 28-2 evenings and weekends. Occupants were male driver, female pasenger and male passenger answering to the name of Scott. Incident happened at the Southgate Mall Drive-In Bank in Missoula. You may be eligible for a cash reward. Insurance Company of North America

World Theatre 2023 S. HIGGINS PHONE 728-0119

NOW SHOWING, SHOWTIMES 7:00 & 9:10 The story of a boy suddenly alone in the world. The men who challenge him. And the girl who helps him become a man.

“Only a turkey should be stuffed like this on Thanksgiving." There's a better w ay to ge t there this Thanksgiving. Greyhound is going your way with trouble-free, economical service. You can leave directly from campus or other nearby locations. Most schedules have stops at convenient suburban locations. And THEi nr.iTiAiirmwi MAN FROM talk about comfort. You get a soft, reclining seat and plenty of room for carry-on bags. NOWY R 1VEK So next trip, go with the ride you can rely on. Go Greyhound. S

Friday: Missoula...... Lv 8:35a 3 1 Op MICHAEL EDGLEY INTERNATIONAL«nd CAMBRIDGE FILMS pn Butte ...... Ar 11:15a 5:50p .GEOFF BURROWES - GEORGE MILLER Production KIRK DOUGLAS • JACK THOMPSON.» Sunday: Butte...... Lv 11:00a 4:15p 7:30p Featuring “THE MAN FROM SNOWY RIVER" Missoula ...... Ar 1:35p 6 35p 10 05p TOM BURLINSON • SIGRID THORNTON • LORRAINE BAYLY STe'JS^byA.B.(‘,BANJO” ) PATERSON s™»pU,JOHN DIXON.*4 FRED CUL CULLEN • Service also available to Ellensburg. Seattle and Bismarck Executive Producer. MICHAEL EDGLEY and SIMON WINCER Marie BRUCE ROWLAND Producer GEOFF BURROWES iuncueGEORGE MILLER For convenient daily service and complete information, call 549-2339. !PG; WMMTA CUOMO MTOB H. I I || O a jV IT — Q A T-rotirth frot.ry K« K. Schedules operate every weekend except during holidays, exam week and semester break Prices and schedules subject to change Some service requires reservations. Sleep Club Funny talk and fast food. Late Show 3 00 GREYHOUND Fri & Sat—12:00 And leave the driving to us. e i*i &***«, undine. Matinee D IN C ft— ‘ Sunday—3:30 MGM UNITED ARTISTS

4—Montana Kaimin •Friday, November 19, 1982 • Patagonia • Lowe • Life-Link • Sierrawest1

ORIENTAL RUGS, Olefin, easy clean. 4‘ x 6 \ $59.95. 2 BR. BASEMENT apt. $150. 728-3627. Montana RIDE NEEDED to Spokane Tues. or-Wed., return 22-12 Sunday Kathie. 243-4734 ______29-3 Gerhardt Floors. 1358 W. Broadway._____21-15 RIDE NEEDED to Lewistown. Leaving this Friday. SMALL CARPET remnts.. up to 60% off. Carpet Nov. 19. return Sunday. Call 243-5268 after 7 p.m. samples. $.35-$.85-$1.50. Gerhardt Floors. 1358 roommates needed ______Wilderness ______. 28-4 W. Broadway, 542-2243. 21-15 FEMALE ROOMMATE to share 2 bedroom house: RIDE NEEDED to Helena for Friday, Nov. 19. return furn. $125/mo. + util. After 8 p.m.. 543-5733. 27-2 Sunday Please call 728-5787 In the evening. automotive______ROOMMATES NEEDED — $125/mo.Jncl. utilities. ______27-3 Outfitters FREE POPCORN with any Gasohol purchase at Call 543-5881 alter 5 p.m. Rattlesnake Area. 27-3 RIDERS WANTED to Spokane. Leaving Wed.. Nov. Ole's Country Store and Beer Depot. 624 East 24. Returning Sun.. Nov. 28. Call Bonnie. 549- Broadway.______28-2 8548______r______27-4 co-op education 363-1820 RIDERS WANTED to Great Falls or Shelby. Leaving motorcycles ______Friday. Nov. 19. Returning Sun.. Nov. 28. Call Internship positions Everything for the Rona, 243-4875.______27-3 1974 HONDA 550.4:1 header, fairing, backrest, aral available for majors in all helmet. 14000 miles. Extras. $900. 542-2426. RIDE NEEDED to Billings Can leave 11-24-82. fields. New internships Negotiable.______27-3 serious X-C skier Return 11-28-82 Will share S. Call 721-5626. being advertised include: ______27-4 Anders Office Equipment, and mountaineer. coffeehouses Radio Free Europe. RIOE NEEDED to Seattle or Bellingham. Leaving Western Heritage Center Lower Prices. Tues. or Wed. Please call 7-8 p.m., 243-2665. in Billings, BLM Co-op. ______27-4 TIM MARTIN and and Fish, Wildlife and Parks in Missoula. RIDE NEEDED to Helena for Friday. Nov. 19. return Legislative internship positions now available Sunday. Please call 728-5787 in the eve. 26-4 DOC HALSELL with: the Missoula Chamber of Commerce, Video-Fax, the Commission of Higher Educa­ LEAVING FOR Billings Nov. 20. Would like person to tion, Helena. Nursing Association, Montana U.S. 03 N. Hamilton share driving and expenses. One-way trip. 273- Guitar and Bass Guitar 2730. Doug; 273-2730. 273-6805. Debbie. 26-4 Coal Council. Montana Pro-Choice Coalition. Montana Audubon Council. Seasonal Park Nov. 19th, 8 pm, UC Mt. Rm. 361 Service applications available in our office. For Quality equipment for the tor sale______more information and application procedures, come in to Cooperative Education Office. 125 serious wilderness traveler SUNGLASSES SALE — 25% off on any of our great FREE FREE Main Hall. 243-2815. selection of fashion sunglasses at Ole's Country 28-1 Store and Beer Depot. 624 East Broadway, 923 Patagonia • Lowe • Kazama • Chouinard • North Orange.______28-2 for rent______GASOHOL — 100% Montana product. No engine Special Announcement: modification needed. Improves mileage, eliminate $110.00 + V* .utilities. 4-bdrm. house, great place. STUDENT CONSERVA­ need for gasline antifreeze. Easier starting, Woman preferred. 543-4338. 28-3 TION ASSOCIATION cleaner burning. Both regular and no-lead at same GRIZZLY APARTMENTS Studio Apt. with all PRESENTATION. On low, competitive prices. Ole's Country Store and utilities. Furniture & laundry available. Starting December 1, 1982, in Beer Depot. 624 East Broadway.______28-2 winter quarter. Move your things in before Xmas Forestry 106 at 7:30 p.m. UNIVERSITY DANEE ENSEMBLE OSBORNE I Personal computers, word processing, break and rent starts Jan. 1. $200 mo. Call 728- (after the Forester's Ball meeting), Dan Hingle, spread sheets. BASIC. All in one package. Call 2621.______27-12 Director of SCA will speak about opportunities 542-2034, evenings.______28-5 3'A-BDRM. HOUSE, large garden space, well for internships with the association. All In­ GQNEERT MUST SELL airline ticket, Chicago-Missoula. Tom, insulated. Pets and kids OK. Call 549-4220 or 726- tel ested persons invited. 4587. 26-5 3823. $300.00. 27-3 '82 W orld new s WORLD told Bignone the Argentine from approving oil and gas • The president of Argen­ public could not accept a leases in federal wilderness November 17,18,19,20 tina has rejected President meeting with Reagan so areas for another year, the University Theatre 8-OOprn Reagan's proposal for a quickly after Argentina’s prohibition also covers areas meeting during Reagan’s defeat by Britain in the in national forests that have tour of South America next Falklands Island crisis. The been formally designated for meeting was to have taken study as possible wilderness month, The New York Times Tickets $4 General place at a location along the areas. The subcommittee reported Thursday. Presi­ $3 Students/’Seniors also attached a provision to dent Reynaldo Bignone in­ Argentine-Brazilian border Box Offl.ce itially was in favor of the during the trip, set for two the bill prohibiting Watt from 243-4581 meeting, but was convinced weeks from now. approving offshore oil and by his advisers in Buenos NATION gas leases on some nine Aires not to go through with • A House Appropriations million acres of the outer /it, according to unidentified subcommittee voted yester­ continential shelf lying off northern and central Califor­ sources in Brazil and day to prohibit Interior Sponsored by ASUM, Department of Drama/Dance UM School of Fine Arts Washington. The advisers Secretary James G. Watt nia.

K ~ ‘M* Store CLOTHING CLEARANCE SALE \ HOODED SWEATSHIRTS ...... YOUTH 14:50 11.95 ADULT 1 A 9 5 1 2 .9 5

V-NECK SWEATSHIRTS ...... YOUTH VhS O 14.50

Long and Short Sleeve a d u l t 18r75” 16.50 FOOTBALL PRACTICE JERSEYS ... ]A50 12.95 CHILDREN’S T-SHIRTS ...... & 9 5 2.95 STOCKING CAPS ...... 6*00 5.00 COWBOY HATS ...... 24^0 19.00 COFFEE M U G S ...... 2*00 1.75

FRIDAY, NOV. 19, MONDAY, NOV. 22, TUESDAY, NOV. 23, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 24 Field House Lobby 9am -5pm ^^^

Montana Kaimin • Friday, November 19, 1982—5 Dorm resident found guilty University. . . Causes Increased... Cont. from p. 1 Cont. from p. 1 Cont. from p. 1 By Ann Hennessey room before putting the gun back Kernvn Contributing Reporter into Winslow's car, where it was of student affairs, who said each are incapable of doing hard labor. senate member Harry Fritz, UM A Craig Hall resident was found usually kept. unit has cooperated in the coali­ Malnutrition is "quite professor of history, the senate guilty of criminal mischief Tues­ Winslow was lying on his bed. tion systemwide. widespread” in the United States, bylaws state that the president and reports said, when Von Doersten Medora said. his vice-presidents must be day, two weeks after he accidently As a preparation for the tour, the pointed the gun through his open She said Missoula teachers have evaluated by the senate each fired a gun into Duniway Hall. Montana Alumni Network sent a window. He thought the gun was told her of children who are biennium. However, since Vice Greg Von Doersten, 18, was also questionnaire to the legislative unloaded, but the gun discharged smaller than normal and who have President of Fiscal Affairs Glen charged In Municipal Court with candidates in Montana, asking when Von Doersten pulled the learning and discipline problems Williams and Vice President of discharging a firearm within the their positions on “key” issues city limits, but that charge was trigger, Von Doersten told police. until they eat lunch. Student and Public Affairs Mike affecting the state university Easton joined the staff last dismissed. The bullet went through the Jim Morton, Human Resources system. summer, only Bucklew and UM According to police reports, Von doors of Rooms 48 and 49, but was Council director, said that the food In addition to informing the Academic Vice President Donald Doersten borrowed the gun, a not found in Room 49. Police stamp program is not reaching as network of each candidate's stand, Habbe will be evaluated this bien­ Magnum .44 Ruger handgun, from reports said someone apparently many people as it should. Steve Winslow of Duniway Hall on took the bullet. Sheriff said the survey helped nium. Morton said Americans' attitude Nov. 2. Von Doersten reportedly Afterwards, Winslow took the educate the candidates by making Jim Flightner, UM associate toward food stamp recipients was going to shoot the gun in the gun and put it in his car, Von them aware of the system’s needs. professor of foreign languages, inhibit many people, Including the woods. Doersten told police. senate member and chair of the Another benefit of the survey, elderly, from participating. Von Doersten returned to the Judge Wallace Clark deferred according to Sheriff, is that the General Education Task Force, campus at 8:45 p.m., the report Von Doersten's sentence until network can ask for support from "We as a people sometimes think told the senate that his committee said, stopping outside Winslow's Dec. 16 on condition that he pay those candidates who responded less of those who participate in a has met and will soon produce a food program,” Morton said. “ By for damages and commit no positively on the questionnaire. list of the goals it hopes to ac­ offense for 30 days. our own actions we are placing a complish. The committee was A second tour is planned for barrier in front of people who need instigated during the 1981-82 December, when the presidents the program,” he said. planning process to give general Tax institute Soviet expert will go to Helena, Havre, Glasgow, Morton said Americans have education at UM a more coherent Miles City, Great Falls, Giendive become dangerously reliant on The 30th Annual Institute academic focus. Bucklew said at and Billings. commercial food sources. “ If the on Taxation and Estate Plan­ to speak the beginning of this quarter that The tour is financed with diesel runs out we're going to be that effort is a major priority during ning will be conducted Fri­ An official with the State day and Saturday, Dec. 3 and donations to the alumni network. hungry," he said. this academic year. Department’s Office of Soviet 4, at the University of Mon­ Union Affairs will speak in the tana. University Center Ballroom Mon­ Deadline for early registra­ day at 9:30 a.m. tion and a fee payment of $75 Larry Napper, an international is Monday, Nov. 22. Fees for relations officer, will be the registration after Nov. 22 will keynote speaker at the Montana be $80. Model United Nations program. The institute is sponsored High School students from across by the UM law school. the state will take part in the annual Though open to the public, mock U.N. the institute is designed for Although the topic of Napper's lawyers, accountants, in­ address was not known at press surance agents and trust time, it is expected that he will talk officers who handle tax or about Soviet-U.S. relations in the estate planning. post-Brezhnev period. For more information or to Napper is an expert on Soviet register, inquire at the law foreign policy and served as vice school or call 243-4311. consul in the U.S. Embassy in ______Moscow from 1975 to 1977.

N o v e m b e r S a l e on a ll Im ports & R egg ae

QUA/

c a x c L § ) la o e

1 0 1 S o u t h 3 r d — 543-5921

j u s t w e s t o f H i g g i n s B r i d g e

SAVE with LOW AIR FARES

Travel must commence by Dec. 15, 1982 on most fares.

ROUND TRIP AIR FARES

__ 289.00 299.00 B altim ore...... 299.00 Phoenix ...... 229.00 Chicago ...... 299.00 Reno ...... 249.00 Dallas ...... 239.00 Salt Lake City __ . 115.00 Denver ...... 149.00 San Diego ...... : 249.00 Kansas Citv ... 229.00 San Francisco __ 249.00 Las vegas ...... 229.00 T u lsa ...... 229.00 Los Angeles ... . . 249.00 Tucson ...... 229.00 Minneapolis ...... 249.00 Washington, D.C. . . 299.00

MANY OTHER LOW FARES. Call us and Compare!

Plus . . . Tickets Issued by Thrifty Travel Mr. Boston Schnapps. carry $150,000 Insurance* at no cost Look for Mr. Boston s two new cookbooks, the Cordial Cooking Guide and the Spinted Dessert Guide. ‘ Underwritten by Mutual of Omaha Available at bookstores or through Warner Books: 75 Rockefeller Plaza. Special Sales. Dept. B. New York. New York 10019 M r Boston Schnapps. 5 4 .60. and 100 proof. Produced by Mr. Boston Distiller, Owensboro. KY. Albany. GA c 1962 127 N. HIGGINS 728-7880

6—Montana Kaimin •Friday, November 19, 1982 F in e a r t s Tension propels Mercede’s quadrilateral compositions upcoming exhibition, she found but I haven't been able to let go of it tions because somehow I’d student artist takes. According to By Shawn W. Swagerty that her self-imposed canons were yet, and I haven’t wanted to. I want thought that representational art Mercede, “One thing that happens Kaimln Fine Arts Editor beginning to shift and crumble. to make it work before I let go of it." wasn't as intellectually challeng­ a lot in graduate school is that A. Nevin Mercede is an artist “ In the New York work,” she Another restriction Mercede ing or conceptually developed as people are being told what to paint, who fuses issues — intellectual, says, “ it’s pretty clear that there's a sees for herself is her continuing abstract art, but I've come to learn and they're painting it: they’ll deny emotional, functional and formal different thing going on outside use of representational as op­ that you can be conceptual and it and the professors will deny that — into modes of expression that the square than inside. With the posed to abstract images. "At this still have recognizable visuals they’re directing someone. I just make her creations coherent, going on." never thought that working under absorbing and ultimately gratify­ Criticism plays an important part somebody was something you had ing. Her frankness with herself in the refinement and evolution of to do, but then you have to develop concerning what she perceives to any artist's work. Mercede is these relationships in order to be her limitations and her strengths careful to digest responses to her survive in the department. It couple with her talents and her work from both peers and public, happens all over the university, not concern for personal expression to and to weigh the responses from just in art.” In spite of all the push- vivify her work, to give it its power. her audience with or against her pull, she insists, "It's worth it and, own ideas about what directions generally, I really like the she wants to take with her art. program.” ReviewI * After the opening of her New Finally, economic forces exert Some of Mercede’s recent York show, she was surprised to influences upon the artist. Hard landscapes will be featured in an hear another artist "really hack" at times tend to diminish the exhibition entitled Outside In: her work. At first she walked away economic viability of the painter or Works on Paper, which opens at from the experience feeling quite sculptor almost immediately. the University Center Gallery Sun­ disillusioned, but when she had "People just don't have the money day at 7 p.m to continue through considered the work of her critic right now,” says Mercede. December 17. she realized that “the things he was Moreover, when contact with Mercede is 29. She spent most of saying were probably gearing me money sources is established, her childhood in Philadelphia and toward working more like him.” buying power can translate quick­ received a degree in print-making The experience was also tempered ly into artistic dictation. in Oakland, Calif., before coming by a much more favorable “When you make it,” says the to Missoula to work toward a response from another artist painter, "when you get a gallery, Master of Fine Arts degree. Her whom Mercede respects. they can manipulate the hell out of background in print-making joins Nevertheless, she views the un­ you, about the work that you make, other factors in influencing her favorable responses as a profitable because they're selling it. Even­ approach to her current work with experience, saying, “ I was able to tually this can feed into the idea of paper drawing media. Mercede use things he said.” the characteristic look of your uses squares within larger rec­ Then there are the people who work, and you can get trapped tangles to represent conflicts and are not artists who provide insight making this one thing from now interactions between her percep­ into the work. “The question,” she until forever, until maybe one day tions and the external world, a says, “is whether you want to everybody’s going to stop wanting world that includes the percep­ relate to the public or to your your one thing. The artist thinks, ‘I tions of others and ideas of objec­ peers. It's a big issue. Anybody can have to make all the money I can tive reality. respond to a work, and that before that happens, so that if i fall “The squares came out of work­ response will be subjective, but it’s from grace, I’ll be protected.’ ing in print-making," Mercede important, because that’s why “ It’s like working the same job explains. “When I was taught how people exhibit work, to see if from now until you're 60. It’s all for to print, one of the objectives was anything in that response sparks the future." It’s a trap Mercede to be able to make prints — that anything new." wants to avoid. “ I’d rather give my Lake landscape to be featured in A. Nevin Mercede’s upcoming U.C. had borders which were always Academic politics may give an work away and not have it sell,” she Gallery exhibition of landscape paintings on paper. Says the artist, “I was clean and pristine, so that you added push to the direction a declares. wouldn’t have to mat them, or so sitting on a hilltop by the lake and I was intrigued by how the land and the you could print a portfolio of works water meet, how the land reaches out into the water.” and not be ashamed of just show­ landscapes, there’s a changing point,” she says, "I feel as if I need Reviewer gets catty ing the pieces of paper that they mood. I wasn’t holding to the the crutch of the specific, if it is a By Ross Best Walter Huston. Jack Thompson as were printed on.” absolutes that I had held to in New crutch. I've always seen it as a K aim in Contributing Reviewer the seldom-seen but very reassur­ Mercede chose that format for York. The forms themselves con­ crutch and people ask me why. ing Clancy is a mysterious super­ her work by taking the “very tinue from inside to outside, but “The work that I did before I THE MAN FROM SNOWY RIVER. cowboy. Australia plays itself. traditional look at painting as mood is more via color or via came here was representational Starring Tom Burlinson, Sigrid For years the “Mob” — a swarm windows on the world and inten- surface texture.” rather than impressionistic. Part of Thornton, Kirk Douglas and Jack of truant horses — has terrorized tionalizing it,” she says. "Originally But the artist is not beyond coming to grad school was to give Thompson. 1982. Rated PG. the countryside. Jim’s father dies I worked only on the square, but I seeing her vehicles as potential myself the space to explore while trying to corral them, so Jim kept getting paint on the white part snares. "One thing a lot of people abstraction, but every time I’d get a Man against Man. Man against finds employment in the lowlands outside.” urge me to do is to get rid of the little bit ‘out there' I’d get lost and Nature. Man against Himself. Man with Harrison. When The Colt is set On one piece, of which she was square,” she says. “I’m at the point go back to having recognizable against Postal Service. The classic loose to become a "mobster,” Jim particularly fond, Mercede found it where I’ll thinkaboutwhattheysay things. I realized fairly recently conflicts. But while most of us in proves that he is just the man to impossible to remove the paint and feel that maybe they’re right, that I’d wanted to explore abstrac- grade school were sloshing break horses two dozen at a time. which had violated the border. She through biographies of Amelia But there is much more, since The began to paint a blanket color Hill’s portraits, landscapes Earhart, George Washington Man From Snowy River is as full of outside the square, but ran out of Carver, and Luther Burbank, a plot complications as a 19th cen­ that particular mix with only a mute moonstruck minority was tury Russian limerick. couple of inches left to fill. “ I just featured at city museum thrilling to the equine eroticism of The acting is all family oriented, started throwing all sorts of colors Forty oil paintings and ink Southwestern vistas or Arizona My Friend Flicka, Black Stallion so it is fortunate that the camera in and from that evolved the sketches by Abby Williams Hill will and California’s Laguna Beach. and Misty of Chincoteague, so ogles the landscape. The dialogue extension of the imagery from the be exhibited at the Missoula Hill was trained in Chicago and don’t forget Man against Horse is generally grade “G," but oc­ square into the rectangle,” she Museum of the Arts from tomorrow New York and was married to a and Horse against Nature. casionally we catch the glint of rich says. through Jan. 10. Hill’s work spans Tacoma doctor. She educated her nuggets of wit; and the sound is In Mercede's paintings, the use the years from 1880 through 1930 four children, three of whom were Review vastly superior to that of other of the shapes evolved even further and includes a variety of Western adopted, at home. The curriculum recent Australian releases to reach to involve representations of inter­ landscapes and Indian portraits. spanned three languages, two Horses aren’t cats. The book 101 Missoula. The biggest surprise is nal and external worlds. “My idea musical instruments, history, Uses For A Dead Horse will never the director: George Miller, who is that the larger rectangle may The Missoula exhibition, which geography and field biology. be written (even though the film made Mad Max and Road Warrior, represent a visual impression of an is drawn from the collection at the The family traveled together rights would bring a fortune). John two fascinating but gruesome exterior self, or the way other University of Puget Sound and through the West while Hill painted Wayne never rode a Persian, and demolition derbies. people might see me, even though financed with the aid of several the scenery and people around no Angora ever won the Derby. Minor problems: Jessica’s (and the images aren’t me. The inner local businesses, will contain her. Though she maintained that Would the gates have swung open her aunt's) feminism seems a bit square might represent the inner some portraits and early 20th she painted for her family rather for the Trojan Cat? Was ever an ripe for 1888. Her aunt harps on reality.” century photographs of the artist's than for financial gain or notoriety, Appaloosa tangled in a ball of sexual equality while trampling on But perceptions are not static, Flathead Indian friends. Hill Hill did do some commission work yarn? Don't be silly. freedom of information. The ledge and the artist found her concept of travelled to several reservations for railroads. The Man From Snowy River Jessica falls to at night is not the the relationships between the and befriended members of the Special events in conjunction starsTom Burlinson, Sigrid Thorn­ same ledge she wakes up on the shapes changing. When Mercedes Sioux, Flathead, Nez Perce and with the Hill exhibition will include ton, Kirk Douglas, Jack Thomp­ next morning. And why does she was summering in New York, Yakima tribes. She wrote many an opening reception with catering son, and Australia. Jim (Burlinson) have an electric lamp at her bed­ creating the work which would years later that her great regret by the Queen of Tarts tomorrow at is a mountain boy just waiting to be side? eventually come to be her Twelve was that she had not learned the 1 p.m., a discussion of the museum made a man, Jessica (Thornton) a Views of NYC and Points East Indian languages. Some may say that the horses in on Dec. 7 at 10:45 a.m., and a film proto-feminist one-woman (showing at Urbane Renewal for The Man From Snowy River are The greatest portion of Hill's on American landscape painting of finishing school, and Harrison the past several weeks) her ideas unconvincing, two-dimensional, work and of this exhibition is the 19th century at noon on Dec. (Douglas) her capitalist father were "really clear, because I’d but they will be pleased by nothing dedicated to Western landscapes 15 at the museum. intent on controlling the means of written down exactly what I was less than an all-horse production, ranging from the Cascades, the The Missoula Museum of the production. Douglas is also Spur, a doing," she says. When she began so let's not worry. Here's a film you Tetons, the Grand Canyon and Arts is located at 335 N. Pattee frowzy gold miner combining to visualize the landscapes for her can see with your cardiologist's Yellowstone Park to the Street. elements of Walter Brennan and blessings. Montana Kaimin • Friday, November 19, 1982—7 The Spinning Wheel Autumn dance extravaganza -YAR N & GIFT SHOP- By Shawn W. Swagerty some, but to be expected when, in Dancers On and On,” Elizabeth Kaim in Fine Arts Editor the self-conscious post-modem Brown a.nd Susan Roberts's strict­ The Kind of world, pre-modern forms are ad­ ly pop piece, performed to the Tom Yarn & Gift Shop The Dance Ensemble’s fall dressed. Tom Club's “On, On, On, On.” The You Always Hoped presentation, which began No such clashes occur in "Three two spring about like recalcitrant Wednesday and plays tonight and to Find tomorrow at 8 in the University Theater, is a fascinating collection • FINEST OF DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED YARNS of choreographed vignettes. The • NEEDLEPOINT - EMBROIDERY - CROSS-STITCH show's artistic coordinators, • LATCH HOOK RUG SUPPLIES drama/dance assistant professors Ella and Mark Magruder, have • A FULL SERVICE YARN SHOP arranged a nicely paced and highly in the “ South Center"—-2100 Stephens Ave. varied two hours of entertainment. Week Days—9:30 to 7 P.M. Sat—T ill 6. Sun— 12 to 5 The presentation’s first piece is Review

“Le Spectre de la Rose,” choreo­ graphed by Gregory Swingley, after work by Michel Fokine, to j0ss The Footbr, music by Carl Maria Von Weber. Swingley dances this romantic duet with Cheryl Hill. Hill’s reading lends a comic irony to the piece, (conoco) while Swingley takes a more MEMBERS OF THE University Dance Ensemble cop an outdoor pose serious tack. The resultant tonal from Mark Magruder’s Menagerie. e GROCERIES ® BEER • OIL® GAS® ambiguity is somewhat trouble- M i c h e l o b ...... cheerleaders while Roberts' 8mm 2.99 film of a grade-schooler’s living- 6-PACK BOTTLES room performance to the same music is screened stage right. This Heidelberg ___ 3.39 VITOS is a period of Warhol-resurrec- tionism, and this dance piece, 1 2-pack bottles which shifts foci and undercuts MEXICAN RESTAURANT itself sans-smirking with effect M i l l e r L i g h t ...... 2.29 • c o u p o n « comparable to that of some of Andy's more innocent concoc­ 6-pack bottles University Favorite tions, is tons o' fun. What they could do with Lydia Lunch’s "Lady Chill Relleno, Scarface.” With C oupon O nly: 60(p Bean Tostada, Associate Professor Juliette and Beef Taco 395 Crump choreographed and P o l i s h S a u s a g e a n d dances “ Far Afield,” a portion of a WINE — BEER — IMPORTS project required for Crump’s re­ S m a l l C o k e Open Friday and Saturday Till 10:00 cent certification in Laban Move­ 130 E. Broadway 728-7092 ment Analysis, a reductive ap­ • Good thru 11/20/82 ater 5:00 p.m. with c o up on ^ proach to human movement. Ripley Schemm reads excerpts from Pearl Price Robertson’s jour­ MISSOULA’S FIRST nal Homesteading in Montana as well as Schemm's own poem, “View From the Kitchen,” the Mormon Tabernacle Choir wailing in the background. Crump's F O O D F A IR abstractions flatter Robertson's prose, in which sentimentality seems to cheapen the sentiments (as is too often the case in the “restaurant-wall” genre that Mon­ tana Art has largely become to be; will that Chinook never thaw that T poor cow's hind quarters and pull Western Art past that hard T winter?). Schemm’s poem, the striking costume from Deborah O Lotsof and Crump's unusual adap­ O tation make this a special piece. Plains Artists, here is your vortex! M Blast your sniveling, anachronis­ M tic Romanticism and let Crump's work stir you from that fishing-trip ! O Mary Roesler's "Walls,” danced O to a musical landscape by Morton Feldman, also manages to make R something attractive from rather R tired themes. The agents of persecution and confinement are R clad in black, their world-weary victims in white, collisions aboun­ R ding amid the chaos. What to do, then, but make art, while cruel O walls bang themselves against EXHIBITORS one's head? With a stark set by • Acapulco O • Hursh's Steak & Pizza Louie Getty and Eric Barsness, • Athen s Greek Food • The Lily W • Baskins Robbins • Magic Mill and an uninhibited musical perfor­ • Big John 's Sandwich Factory • Mansion Overland Express mance by Roesler, Getty. Sheila • Captains Fish & Chips Restaurant • Coca Cola W • Montana Territory Meats McNaughton and Barbara Wood, • Deelkious Pie Company • Pepsi Challenge Roesler faces the ubiquitous quan­ • Dogs Al La Carte • Pit & Pub • Edgewater Restaurant • Potomac Natural Foods dary, the “overwhelming ques­ ■ 4B's Restaurants • Press Box tion.” If Roesler moves past this > Godfather s Pizza • Queen of Tarts acquaintance with the question • Great Divide Exchange ■ Rocky Mountain Ribs 1 Great Harvest Bread Company » Ruby's Cafe onto some possible solutions, the 1 Hansens Famous Ice Cream Store results could be quite interesting. “Walls” bodes well for further ADMISSION FREE developments. "La Clase Por Los Hombres.” a Novem ber 20 • University Center Ballroom piece by visiting artist Alan Lynes, Hours: 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. • For more details listen to KZOQ • KYU set to some customary Copland, strays not too far from the canons 8—Montana Kaimin ► Friday, November 19, 1982 an astonishing performance Always 540 DALY 25$ Across from Jesse Hall Coffee of Copland ballet. The ideal West, from an environmental panic. The mance. The youth of many of the the stern Latin cameraderie, it’s all choreographer pits order against participants promises that things anckyid* there, and so is the vague hint of chaos, familiar against alien, will progress even furtherfrom this Breakfast Special mockery (Lynes inserts a hilarious planned against random. The jaw point. This point is quite satisfying, oppe Saturday and Sunday mass flamenco at one point, and is yanked downward in astonish­ though, and a trip to the University - doesn’t miss other opportunities to ment. Bravo. Theater this weekend would prove 2 Eggs Any Style, Hashbrowns and cut with the far edge). "La Clase" is The dance division has had a worthwhile for many. Tickets are $4 Toast, 4 Strips of Bacon 2 25 a strong type piece and a tidy end most productive quarter, from the for the general public, $3 for stu­ Hours: Saturday-Sunday 8-12 to the evening's first portion. indications given by this perfor­ dents. with this coupon The Magruders open the con­ cluding portion with their collaboration (Ella's chore­ Danzer gets Broadway break ography, Mark's music) "Element Kathy Danzer, a former Missoula Danzer began acting at the age ." Radically panned and resident and a UM graduate, has of 12 at the Old Brewery Theater in double-tracked flute stylings por­ joined the Broadway cast of Beth her native city of Helena. She tray wind, warmth, water and sky FORESTERS Henley’s Pulitzer Prize-winning appeared in numerous roles there, (elements for the most part alien to play Crimes of the Heart. including the title role in Gypsy. Empedocles), as six dancers supp­ Danzer has also appeared at the ly physical representations. Ella Danzer, who received a bachelor Bigfork Playhouse and was a Magruder's moments alone are of fine arts degree from the UM founding member of the Fort Peck The Peace Corps needs over predictably the strongest, though drama/dance department in 1976, Theater. there are no real slouches among plays Meg Magrath in the much During her career at UM she 200 Foresters this coming the other dancers. lauded comedy about the Magrath appeared in several productions, Wilson Burnham has picked his sisters of Hazelhurst, Miss. Melvin including A Midsummer Night’s summer. subject matter well. Burnham Bernhardt is directing the produc­ Dream and One Flew Over the knows classical guitar and his tion, which has won the New York Cuckoo’s Nest. Danzer has also Your skills are needed "Trois Pieces," danced by Wendy Drama Critics Circle Award and is performed in off-Broadway shows, Brooks and Gregory Swingley to currently the only comedy playing at the Lincoln Center and on to work against deforestation compositions by Alexander on Broadway. television. Tansman played by Segovia, are in the third world. tasty and light. The music and the performance serve one another to happy ends. Swingley's strength is better focused upon subtlety in this dance, and Wendy Brooks a For information and applications displays considerable comic tu e/t^omss see Peace Corps talents, impeccable timing among B U B l i a i B a . STEPHEN^A V E NUE « l them. p r e s e n t s ... Campus Representative. "Valley of the Moon,” Marianne Smith’s jazz spot to noodlings of SC 411 Bob James, faces some challenges Rockitt 243-6167 inherent to the form. Big challenge: avoid tedium. Related The Battle of the Bands winner and almost-as-big challenge: featuring special guest act isolate those elements in the musical piece which somehow THE BLUES BURGARS prevent the piece from becoming the muzak of poseurs. Smith 2 FOR 1 DRINKS—7 to 9 BU-FFY doesn't seem to sweat much. She plus . . . 75* SCHNAPP SHOTS all night handily disposes of both problems by implying a tension between the Sainte~Marie wistful and the ominous, and the dance is thus propelled. r ( L a . Friday and c ia 4 No bones, "Menagerie," music ^CKer Saturday by visiting jazz ace Dartanyan Brown and Mark Magruder, physics by Magruder, is the showpiece. Pilobolus is put on *tSor ley's wheels and given a good hard push ir\ this one. As Brown accompanies tljg recorded flanged, overdriven and otherwise modulated and changing the multi-tracked sound of his Gibson bass (Brown jams abstract music into musique concrete with jolting results), Magruder stacks human fa ce o f upon human, rolls human over human, redefines functions of human limbs, and parades across the stage new, strange forms of With Special G uest...... Singer, , Peter Alsop random biological garbage every fftissoula bit as convincing as urchins, pus­ Thursday, December 2,1982 8:00 pm spitting lizards and human beings. University Center Ballroom Magruder, in a moment to himself, TICKETS: 86.00AJM Students 87.00/General Public portrays some jittering organism 121W {Main I fekcts Available al iJic I T bookstore, Hudj'ei Taj>cs and Records, h li’s Records and Tapes, ( irizzlv (iroccrv, and which must eventually be subdued Won lens Market.

This Weekend The Quarry Saturday Special Friday Special ^NOVEMBER 16-20 9:00 to 11:00 9:00 to 11:00 Shot of Schnapps * or house whiskey 1.00 plus a draft Kamikazes $1.50 FREE Sandwiches at 11:30 145 W. Front Below the Acapulco 134 W EST FRONT MISSOULA MONTANA

Montana Kaimin • Friday, November 19, 1982—9 Weekend TOO AY All-Indian Speech and Debate Tournament, 8 Lecture a.m., uC Montana Rooms. 0Hontana anSiix Environmental lecture, T h e Importance of En­ dangered Species." Hank Fisher, defender of SATURDAY wHdfife. speaker. 12:10 to 1 p m.. Social Science 356 Meetings CLOSE TO YOU AT THE U I Bisexual support/rap group. 5 p.m. every Satur­ Coffeehouse day. For more information call 542-2664 total 133 W. MAIN Tim Martin and Pat Doc Halseti. bass and guitar. 8 confidentiality p.m.. University Center Montana Rooms Free 721-2776 Narnia Coffeehouse. 9 p.m to 12 a m., the Ark. Miscellaneous 536 University Ave. Hot cider, tea. coffee and coca, All-Indian Speech and Debate Tournament FREE SHA VE ISC a cup. breakfast. 8 a m.. UC Gold Oak Room All-Indian Speech and Debate Tournament. 8 Miscellaneous a.m., UC M T rooms WITH STYLE Representative from the State of Montana Office KYLT Food Fair, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., U C Ballroom. of the Legislative Auditor will be in Lodge 146 Narnia Coffeehouse. 9 p m to 12 a.m., 538 interviewing graduating master's degree candidates University Ave (REG. $4.50) interested in an auditing career. Sign up for individual interviews at the Placement Counter in SUNDAY Lodge 146 Montana University Presidents' Tour, 7:30 p.m.. Village Red Lion Motor Inn, 100 Madison Ave. All six University System presidents will speak on es­ tablishing a stable funding base for the Montana University System. Food Fair Gallery reception for A. Nevin Mercede. UM Good 1 FREE SHAVE graduate art student, 7 p.m., UC Lounge. The KZOQ-KYLT 1982 WITH $4.50 STYLE Food Fair will be tomorrow MONDAY For Meetings from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. In the Mendelssohn Club. 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.. Music 216. AND THIS COUPON University Center Ballroom. For more Information call Rustem Medors at 549- Representatives from 3413 after 5:30. various Missoula eateries will display foods in categories such as seafoods, Pre-Holiday Festivities meats, breads, candy, ethnic T IE M A I3I 09 dishes and health foods. OfE1LAIB CIPRESS RESTAURA1T Airships—Hannah Admission to the fair is And More by Andy Rooney—Rooney free, but food tokens will be five for $2 or 10 for $3.50. The 95

SPIRIT OF PEACE COMMUNITY

an alternative Catholic community Sunday Liturgy 10 AM 333 University Avenue

Fourteen oz. glass mug for sale. It’s the two-fisted way to drink to good times and salute your great taste SEEK in drinks. Why not start a collection? Please send this PROFESSIONAL coupon, along with a check or money order for $4.95 HELP per mug (no cash please) to: Seagram’s 7 Crown Mug kinko's copies Offer, P.O. Box 1622, New York, N.Y. 10152

531 S. Higgins 728-2679 City______-T ip -

a complete copy, Specify quantity. .A m o u n t enclosed $_ binding & resume Offer expires June 30,1983. No purchase necessary. New Ybrk residents add 8.25% sales tax. service Please allow 4 to 6 weeks for shipment.

quality Seagrams copies © 1982 SEAGRAM DISTILLERS CO.. N.Y.C AMERICAN WHISKEY-A BUND 80 PROOF "Seven-Up" and "TUP" are trademarks of the Seveetlp Company 10—Montana Kaimin •Friday, November 19, 1982