Vol. IV, No. 2 The MonthlyNewstnllfllllile Of Boise State Univtnity Pavilion, Architect- Approved One of Boise State's most pressing building needs was eased this month when two key state agencies gave the school the green light to proceed with construction of a multi-purpose pavilion on campus. First came a State Board of Education vote that allows BSU to raise student fees $40 per semester to help finance the project. Then, one week later, the Permanent Building Fund Council approved the uni­ versity's architect selection, thus ending the procedural steps necessary to get the building started. The pavilion will include space for several classrooms, large & small meet­ ing rooms, and a sports arena seating between 10-12,000. It will be constructed directly between the present gymnasium. At the State Board of Education meet­ ing Oct. 5 in Moscow, opposition mostly centered around the timing of the pro­ posal. Members argued that the vote was ill-timed because passage of the one percent initiative in November could cut into educational programs. "If we approve this, it will appear to the people that we could care less about reducing costs in the state," said board president Leno Seppi. But other board members said the pressing need for the pavilion will not go away, and any delays would result in higher costs later. "The timing is poor, but I've never found a good time for raising student fees. This is a critical need," said board member A. L. Alford. STUDENT studies and recreation in The final 4- 3 vote showed J.P. Mun­ the '80's will take place in a building son, J. Clint Hoopes, and Leno Seppi close to what architect's project in against, and John Swartley, Janet Hay, this model Iabove), while alums from A. L. Alford and Cheryl Hymas in favor. the '40's might remember using this The vote was equally close at the Per­ hanger-turned-gym (left) for their in­ manent Building Fund Council's vote door activities. Oct. 12 in Boise. There a move to delay selection of the project architects until space needs could be studied was defeated when Homecoming Events Ready Rep. Emery Hedlund cast a tie-bre.aking vote, thus clearing the way for the They may not have realized it then, Then, in 1934, the yearbook proudly take their pick of a coaeert by Jack approval of architects Cline, Smull, but that fall afternoon44 years ago when talked about a style of football that bas Otterman and the Not So Famous Band Hamill and Associates of Boise. a fledgling BJC team pulled on their becometraditional here. at 8-10 p.m. in the SpeeialEvents Center Further study on the project would leather helmets and prepared to battle "In the second Homecoming Day our or a piteber 'a' peaauta celebration at have delayed construction for at least six the University of frosh, they were Broncos took the heavier University Casey's Beer Depot. months because a student fee increase beginning a rivalry that today has frosb to a cleaning in the best game of A more gentle version of Bronco foot· couldn't be implemented until next fall, become Idaho's version of the "Big the year. ball will be staged Tuesday evening [CoatiDued oa pap] Z Game." "They were outweighed fifteen pounds when women's powder puff teams kick­ to a man, all of the frosb standing helmet off at 6:30 p.m. in Bronco Stadium. Men and shoulders above our men, but the from the Intercollegiate Knights and Broncos couldn't be stopped." Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity will get Arts & Humanities Recommended Nov. 4, 1978, a capacity crowd will their turn to play in the two decades-old flow into the concrete comforts of Bronco Toilet Bowl starting at 7:15p.m. Ooly one week after the State Board of Edueation voted to approve Boiae took Stadium to see yet another Vandal­ Later, the pop film "Silver Streak" State's pavilion request, a second major state ageacy important first Bronco Homecoming match-up that will provide late evening thrills to stepsto relieve another important building need. promises to be every bit as thrilling as moviegoers. It starts at 10 p.m. in the Oa Oct. lZ the state's Permauent BuDding Fuad CouaeD recommeaded that its 1934 ancestor. SUB Ballroom. the 1979legilllature appropriateSl millioa toward the eveatu.l constructioa of But further resemblance between the Homecoming takes an academic turn au aud humanities building here. arts 1934 Homecoming and the 1978 version on Wednesday when the only event That aetioa followed au earlier State raaJdng that plaeed BStrs Board will be slight. Earlier, only a post-game scheduled is a talk oa doaing by Arts & for structure near the top of their for appropriated bulldiq request the list party was held to celebrate the young Sciences dean William Keppler. That moaey.- BJC victory. will begin at 8 p.m. in the Speeial Events Tbe Permaaent BuDding Fund Couaeil's recommeadatioa will to the go This year, Homecoming is an excuse Center. legilllature, where aetioa will probably be takea this winter. U appropriated, will be for a week packed full of an unusual Winners of the contests for Homecom­ the Sl millioa eaough to complete the pJ.aaai.a« ltqe1 aud also coatri· blend of academic, social, and sporting ing queen, Mr. Ugly, and distinguished bute the construetioa phases of the bulldiq, aeeord.Jas to BSU presi­ toward events on the BSU campus, Oct. 30-Nov. faculty will be announced at the conclu­ deat Joba Keiaer. - 4' sion of the lecture. Totalcost of buDding will be about mDlloa. It will houae the depart· the S4.8 Monday, BSU students will keep alive The queen, who will receive a $400 menta of commuaieatioa,art, musie, andtheatre arts. an old BJC tradition when they kick-off said has scholarship to the John Robert Powers Keiser the artsaud humanities bulldiq beea BStr1 toppriority for the Homecoming fun by buraillg the "B" modeling school and a diamond necklace appropriatedmooey ever sillee the education buDding fuaded. wu on Table Rock. Sigma Phi Epsilon and from Molenaar's, will be chosen from a

"The •.. aeedfor the faeility is obvious Rob Perez [studeat body presicleat], Intercollegiate Knights will touch off the pointedthat out said. list of ten girls. other ltudeats,and faeulty my firstweek oa eampu," he blaze at dusk, but everyone is invited. Then, Homecoming celebrants can (C..tia..t•,...3] _, 8toaJS3

Sociologists Meet

Boise State University sociologists Corbin, "Labeling and Attitudes Toward and their students will play important Violence;" Pat Dorman, "BSU Attrition parts in the first annual conference of Study, 1977-78;" Michael Francisconi, the Idaho Sociological Association when "U.S. Imperialism and the Corporate it meets at BSU Oct. 27-28. Structure;" and Deborah Froeschle and Meetings centered around the theme Carita Shawchuck, "Birth Intentions of "Teaching Sociology" will be held in the College-Age Women." Nez Perce room of the Student Union Building. Organized by Richard Baker of BSU, the conference will highlight about 20 flyers Win research papers on Saturday from 9:30- Boise State's Alpha Eta Rho flying noon. team beat seven other schools, including Among the BSU presenters are: Mark the Air Force Academy, in air competi­ Garlock, "Religiosity and Premarital tion last week in Utah. Sexual Permissiveness;" Maureen Brier­ Coach and advisor Wayne. White ley and Mark McCain, "Religious Senti­ called the victory "the most outstanding ments as Influenced by Traumatic Situa­ in collegiate aviation competition." tions Encountered While River Rafting;" Schools participating came from five Kathy Robinson and Nadia Fialdes­ states. Montana State, Treasure Valley Ferrari, "Social and Academic Adjust­ Community College, Denver Metropoli­ ments of Foreign Students at BSU, tan, Air Force Academy, North Col­ 1977;" Carol Harvey, "Scapegoating in orado Community College, Boise State Two Idaho Disasters;" James Christen­ and Westminster were entered. sen and Michael Arte, "Body Images by The top finalists included Boise State, Soc. 1ogy Students, 1978;" A. Robert Air Force Academy, Westminster Col­ lege, and Treasure Valley Community College. "IT MAKES PEOPLE who are elected think about those that elected them," Dan DeHart, senior in Aviation Man­ said John Chancellor, co-anchorman for NBC Evening News of California's � agement at BSU was declared as the top Proposition 13. At rap session with Boise State students September 29, Chan­ Candidates Here pilot for the two day competition. Dan cellor didn't favor such measures as the Idaho One Percent Initiative, as he took first in the power off landing event, feels passage would cause the "cutting of services people want." "We need State and local political candi­ · third in power on and third in computer. different Ideas on how to tax people," he emphasized. dates at Boise State ednes­ will be W Also placing first for BSU was a day, Oct. eet and greet stu­ 25 to m foreign student team. Dariush Safar­ dents and faculty. Fashandi was declared the top winner in Candidates will be in and out the message drop event. His pilot was between 8 a.m.-5 p.m. in the SUB Rare Math Group Meets Yuji Matsuyama. lobby. Tables with literature on the Leo Zimmers took sixth in power on, Boise State is now on the map, at least The conference was sponsored by candidates will also be set up, and a eighth in power off, eighth in preflight as far as some mathematicians are con­ Boise State because three professors registrar will be on hand to register and eighth in computer. cerned. here (Kenny, Rick Ball and Jo Smith) are students and pass out information among the handful that specialize in on absentee voting. Team points gathered by BSU gave Earlier this month BSU hosted a dis­ lattice-ordered groups. That evening at 8 p.m. some can­ them the championship win. tinguished company of experts in lattice­ ' didates for governor, House of Rep­ and the Air ordered groups, a specialized branch of resentatives and the Senate will Force Academy will compete against 26 mathematics that includes only about 30 ' deliver short speeches and answer other colleges and universities for practitioners nation-wide. Counselors Coming questions at a forum in the SUB national honors .at the national intercol­ About half of them were at Boise State "Vocational Education and Industry­ Ballroom. legiate air competition meet April 25-27 Oct. 16-20 (or what turned out to be the Equal Partnership" will be the theme of in Monroe, LA. most significant conference of its kind the annual vocational-technicalcounselor ever held, according to organizer Otis day at Boise State University Oct. 27. Kenny of BSU. Greeting registrants at 9:30 a.m. will Among the persons attending were be Dr. John Keiser, BSU president; Don two of the world's authorities on lattice­ Miller, director of the BSU Vocational­ ordered groups, Paul Conrad of Kansas Technical School; and Larry Selland, Pilot Visits and Charles Holland of Kansas. In addi­ administrator of Idaho vocational educa­ tion, Yuri Gurevich from Ben Gurion tion. FLYING expert Ed Boyles visited avia­ University in Israel attended. The counselor day activities will tion management classes in late Sep­ include a tour of BSU vo-tech facilities tember to talk about his experiences. Other experts from Germany, Egypt, and a panel discussion at 1 p.m. featur­ Boyles is vice-president of Globe Air, Australia, Canada and Uruguay ex­ ing area vocational technical advisory Inc. in the Phoenix-Mesa, Arizona. He pressed interest, but weren't able to is one of the few pilots in the U.S. who council leaders. attend because of the expense, Kenny has collected hours in both helicopter noted. and fixed wing aircraft. Boyles re­ ceived national publicity when one of During the week 14 mathematicians his crash landings was used in the presented their research papers. Those Boise Cascade movie "Tora! Tora! Tora!" He also has will be compiled into a book on lattice­ worked at cleaning oil spills and air­ ordered groups that will be published lifted cars on top of mountain tops for Funds Study next summer by Marcel Dekker of New television commercials (Volkswagen). Boise Cascade Corporation has con­ York. tributed $2,000 to supplement a research grant by Boise State University to study the future personnel needs of Idaho busi­ ness and government. Grant recipient Dr. Howard Kin­ slinger, Associate Professor of Manage. BSU Prepares for Big Homecoming Celebration ment at Boise State, will attempt to identify the specific skills and knowledge [Continuedfrom page 1] Ed Sullivan Show style. lot, where scores of alums from the needed by organizations in their future They include Vanessa Clark, Nancy Curtain time is 8 p.m. in the SUB Ball­ classes of 1937, '47, '57, '67, and '77 are employees. Louie, Patti Crepps, Mary Ann Lebsack, room. planning to gather for a tail-gate party He will also·identify the various types Terrie Rowley, Kathleen Whyte, Jody Friday evening alums and students and reunion, starting at 11 a.m. of positions that government and busi­ Asplund, Rhonda Gaskins, Cindy Cas- will gather at the Rodeway Inn for the Yandals and Broncos will put a cap on ness will need in the future. .. key, and Molly Hoffer. annual Homecoming dance. the week when they renew their football Once complete, Kinslinger says the Nominees for distinguished faculty are In the biggest social event of the rivalry in Bronco Stadium. Kick-off is survey will: Gary Craner, Sherm Button, Ken Hol­ week, dancers will be on hand to revive 1:30 p.m. -Provide business and government lenbaugh and James Christensen. forgotten steps that were popular back Early football fans will be entertained organizations in Idaho with information . New to the royalty this year will be when BSU was BJC, and before. Dress by the Vandal Marching Band prior to to assist in their manpower planning. Mr. Ugly. Winner from that contest will is informal, and there's no charge to kick-off. Then, at halftime, Nampa High 7"Help organizations reduce training be the man who can inspire the most renew old acquaintances and dance 'till School will perform. Distinguished facul­ and employee turnover costs. voters to cast their ballots for a penny midnight. ty, Homecoming queen, Mr. Ugly and -Give information to Idaho colleges apiece. Proceeds from that contest will The dance floor will open at 8 p.m. and the winner of "Friend of the Alumni" and universities that can assist in grad­ go to the American Cancer Society, and early tickets can be picked up at the SUB award will also be presented to the uate placement. the winner will also receive a John Information Booth or the alumni office. crowd. -Aid in student advising and course Robert Powers scholarship. Party goers and others will get the The people responsible for putting all changes so education will be more Students will be center stage on chance to enjoy breakfast, Alpha Chi the times, dates and events together are responsive to employers' needs. Thursday dancing and singing their way Omega style, on Saturday morning. student M.ry Ann Talbot and alumni­ Kinslinger, an industrial psychologist, through the first-ever ''Great American That sorority will host its annual pan· director Dyke Nally. says the study will be released next Talent Show." cake feed 7:30-10 a.m. in the SUB snack A complete schedule of Homecoming spring. It will be published in a BSU Organizers say some of BSU's most bar. events complete with ticket and price Center for Grants and Contracts publica­ talented students.will be center stage to Action will move from there to the details is available at the SUB Informa­ tion and will be available to Idaho offer an evening of entertainment in'true southeast corner of the Stadium parking tion Booth, phone 385-1448. businessand government agencies. -::..

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Homecoming Two Sociai'Events,'·Talent':"ShoW BSU will By Dyke Nlllly alumni have two chances to Gees. Then Saturday, Nov. 4, alumni from renew old acquaintances during social Students from BSU dance classes will 1937 on are welcome at a special tail-gate functions near the end of Homecoming be ready to demonstrate the Big Apple This year's Homecoming will be a very party and hot dog feed at the southeast week. or other "old time" steps to alums. special one for Boise State University. corner of the Stadium parking lot (at the Up to 2,000 alums and friends of BSU Records will start spinning at about 8 corner of The Alumni Office has had more involve­ Broadway and University are expected to crowd the dance floor of p.m. Admission is free. Drive). ment by alums and more alumni interest the Rodeway Inn Friday, Nov. 3 for the from outside the area than any year I can annual Homecoming dance sponsored by remember. Many hours of work have the BSU Alumni Association. gone into Homecoming '78, by the entire Alums will get the chance to revive a BSU campus community. few forgotten dance steps, too, because I feel that the students, faculty, tunes from each decade since BSU's alumni and staff of Boise State Univer­ founding in the '30's will be played. sity have joined together with a common Dancers will be treated to a "who's goal of creating a new and exciting who" of music as disc jockies dust off Homecoming program for BSU for this records from the likes of Tommy Dorsey year and in the future. In the past, there and Benny Goodman. Then they'll prog­ wee a few individual efforts, and never a ress up the ladder with Frank Sinatra, combined total campus effort, to plan Perry Como, Elvis, the Beatles and Bee and implement a quality Homecoming program for all. One of the most significant committee achievements this year for Homecoming is the big dance at the Rodeway Inn. The dance is usually scheduled for Saturday evening, following the game. The Com­ mittee decided to have the social and dance on Friday night, prior to the game. They decided we could get more participation and involvement on the � night before the game. Guess Who? Please join us for a very special eve­ ning at the Rodeway. Dr. John Keiser Try to identify these familiar faces as they looked in their student years here. and Coach Jim Criner will be featured at Then turn to page 6 to see how sharp your memory is. Intermission. See you there!

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••••••••••• Alumni ln �ouclt... �. �� ·· .······························· Jobs a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Political Christy VanPaepeghem is a recent Fairfield. He will teach sixth grade and ...:-: Science and Public Administration. BSU grad with a B.A. in Elementary coach 7th and 8th grade boys' track. He New staff members at Minidoka Education. She is teaching sixth grade taught and was the elementary school County Schools include Melocly Martin, Mrs. Kraig Willis is teaching first this year at St. Paul's Catholic School in principal in Camas between 1957-74. He who will teach 5th grade at Lincoln Ele­ grade in Parma. Mrs. Willis is a 1978 Nampa. She previously taught at Eagle turned his ranch over to his sons and mentary. She received her B.A. Degree BSU grad, while her husband will be Elementary. wishes to return to teaching. from BSU. attending for one more year. They are Sweet has a B.A. in Education from making their home in Caldwell. Tony B. Flowers has graduated from the U of I, and has completed 30 hours Charles Stoddard is a new teacher in Air Force basic training at Lackland toward a masters from BSU. the Grace High School this year. Carole Kitamura teaches eighth grade AFB in Texas, and now is in Chantue reading and English in the junior high AFB in Illinois, for specialized training David Murakami, a 1976 BSU grad­ uate in mathematics, received his Captain Russell L. Johnson has school in Ontario. in fire protection. arrived for duty at Randolph AFB, master's degree in math from Washing­ Texas. Captain Johnson is an instructor Dee Pickett, calf and team roper from Two new teachers in Kendrick include ton State University in June. Murakami pilot previously stationed at Reese AFB Caldwell, is an outstanding prospect to Colette Cozortand James Alford. is pursuing his interest in pure mathe­ in Texas.He received his B.A. from BSC win the 1978 PRCA Rookie of the Year Cozort i� taking over the high school matics at the University of Kansas at in 1972. title. science classes. She holds a B.S. in Lawrence, and has been awarded a Mar­ The former Boise State quarterback biological science from Boi&f!State. shall scholarship covering tuition and Publisher James H. Simpson of the has won about $7,000 this year. Alford holds an M.S. degree in math fees as well as ateaching assistanceship. Weiser Signal has announced that Jim from BSU and will be teaching math at Virginia Simpeon, Jr. has been promoted to the Airman L. Chfttock has grad­ the high school. Sergeant John D. Neely is now serv­ position of Assistant Publisher-General uated from the U.S. Air Force Technical ing at Eielson AFB, in Alaska, with an Manager of the newspaper. Simpson has Training course for Communications David Mordhorst has been named Air Force Communications Service Unit. been a full-time employee of the news­ Operations Specialists. for the Farm Insur­ Sergeant Neelyis an electronic-mechani­ brokerage manager paper since 1972, and worked part-time ance Brokerage Company in Pocatello. cal communications and cryptographic and summers since 1964. He is a 1973 Genuy Popplewell has received her equipment systems specialist. graduate of Boise State University. masters degree from BSU. She teaches M. Lee Nelson, A BSU graduate in in Twin Falls at Sawtooth Elementary accounting, has been appointed Techni­ Mrs. Marti Newbauer of Gooding is Carol Collins, a recent grf.duate of School. cal Services Controler of Ore-Ida Foods, the new fourth grade teacher in Home­ dale. She is a BSU grad with a B.A. in ...... BSU, is teaching first grade in Parma Inc., in Ontario. this year. She has lived and worked in Elementary Education and has taught David Hallis helping out with physical the Parma community for several years. Nurse Captain Dana D. Park has two years in Gooding. education and coaching duties at the Her husband, Jim, is a carpenter for recently completed an Army Nurse and Meadows Valley Schools. Hall received a Petzoldt Construction. Medical Specialist Corps Officer Basic Eddie Reed, Nampa, is a new sixth !Jachelor of Science degree from BSU in Course at the Academy of Health grade teacher also in Homedale. 1977, with a physical education major Dwain Pruitt, presently the Energy Sciences of the U.S. Army. Capt. Park and minors in U.S. history, general Coordinator and Program Director for attended BSU and Idaho State, and science, and coaching. Jan Tuekness, formerly a Special Edu­ the South Central Community Action received a bachelor's degree in 1970. cation and Elementary Major at the U of Agency in Twin Falls, has been named I and Boise State will teach 2nd grade. Idaho's Outstanding Handicapped Em­ Intermountain Gas CoJilpany has ployee for 1978 by the Governor's Com­ recently promoted LorenTurner to Mar­ RoUDDe Genette is teaching Gooding mittee on Employment of the Handi­ keting Manager. Turner has been with elementary P.E. Her degree is in P.E. Robyn Metz Riggers has completed a capped. Intermountain for nine years. He will with a science minor from BSU, which master of art degree in piano perfor­ Pruitt attended College of Southern assume the responsibilities of Marketing she received in 1976. mance at Washington State University, Idaho, BoiseState and Baylor Manager for the company's Owyhee Also new to the Gooding School Dis­ Pullman, where she is presently a University in Waco, Texas, and he holds Division, headquartered in Nampa. trict this year is William Sweet from faculty member. She has been perform- . ------

-.oa.s Events, on Alumni. Homecoming Schedule Special attention will go to members conclude in time for the 1:30 p.m. kick­ year. Already some 26 hopeful acts have of the classes of 1937, '47, '57, '67, and off between U of I and BSU. In place of the traditional "big name" signed up for auditions, but only about '77. The lot willbe sectioned off for those speaker or concert group, this Home­ half of those will ever get to show their Talent Show Planned groups, with signs to help alums locate coming BSU students will showcase 15 stuff before the crowd that will gather their classes. One of Homecoming's "headline" variety acts in what has been billed as Thursday, Nov. 2 at 7:30 p.m. in the That event will start at 11 a.m. and events will have a student touch this the Great American Talent Show. Special Events Center. In a re-take of the old Ed Sullivan Show, acts will include ballet dancers, comedians, magicians, vocalists, and impersonators. Acts willcome from a pool of student, staff and faculty talent. A BSU jazz group will handle the musical interludes and the crowd will be treated to the humor of local radio per­ sonalities Don Kelley and Jack Arm­ strong between acts. Adding incentive to rehearsal sessions is a $750 pot of .prizes and gift certifi­ cates that willgo to the winners. The contest is being sponsored by the ASBSU public relations office in conjunc­ tion with Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity and the BSU Alumni Association. Tickets for the event can be picked up at the SUB Information Booth. Costs are 50i for students and $1 for others. Firms donating gifts to the show include: Hal Davis Jewelers, Budget Tapes & Records, LockStock & Barrel, Joel's Bar & Grill, Bogus Basin, Rocky's New & Used Records, Riley's, Purcell's, Harmon Travel, the Bon Marche, Sound West, Idaho Sporting Goods and Bach Photo. Meet at ISU

AllBSU alllllllliaDd frieacls are u;vited to attend a pre-BSU vs. ISU pme no­ host cocktail party spo��Mred by the BSU AIUJDDi All80detioa Oet. 28, 6 p.m. .t the Pocatello lliltoD. Get yoar .,irits up ud join thefull. Rooms for those .ttencliag the game willbe made available at the CottoDtree ' Inn ud the new Hilton IDD. Reserva· tiona C&D be made by cont.ac:tiq Kathy Kadlub, Global Travel, University Bruc:h, Boise, [208] 336-4560. For fw· ther information or que.tions, contact the AIUJDDi Offiee, [208) 385·1698.

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ing extensively in Washington and Ore­ A July 15 ceremony united Rhonda County Deputy Sheriff, and she works in Marta Rust became the bride of Gary gon. Thorne and Kent Seherapp. Scherupp is the District. Court Office. Vu Voorst on Aug. 31. a 1976 graduate of BSU, and is currently The former Miss Kopczynski attended The bride is a BSU grad, while her employed at K-Mart in Twin Falls. the U of I and BSU. Schmidt served four husband has studied here also. They will Alumna Dr. Shirley Fredericks has years with the U.S. AirForce. live in Boise. been named acting vice-president of James Larson and Kelli Cathermu The couple was married July 22. Adams State College, Alamosa, Colo­ were married May 20. The bride is a University of Washington students rado. Dr. Fredericks has been a profes­ graduate of Boise State University. Cynthia WDeox became the bride of David E. Wynkoop and Debra A. Gris­ sor of history at the college for the past Kim Williams on Aug. 4. The bride som were married Sept. 9. 12years. attended BSU. The bridegroom is a BSU grad, study­ Lanny Waldermer and Carrie Yoc:um ing law at the U ofW. BSU geology graduates Pat Cava· were married June 9. He is a graduate of Married Aug. 24 were Raymond naugh(1975) and Jerry Willis (1976) are BSU Vo-Teeh program, while his bride · Fleherty and Ranee Tborngren. Flaher­ Boise newlyweds are Judith Hopt and currently employed by Burlington is also a graduate of BSU. ty is a BSU grad employed by Chandler wnson Chestnut, married Sept. 9. NorthernRailways, Billings, Montana. Supply Corporation. The bride is a BSU graduate, and her Making their home in Craigmont are husband isemployed at Boise State. Ric:hard Young of Twin Falls has por­ Mr. and Mrs. Steve Maynard, married On August 19, Patty Davi• became trayed four roles in four summer produc­ June 17. She is a graduate of BSU and is the bride of Larry Bauseher. Making their home in Alaska are tions at Washington State University. employed by the Craigmont School Both are Boise State graduates. They Dium Lee Hurd and Dan Lee Haynes Young is a 1971 graduate of Boise State Distrir:t. willlive in Fairfield where the groomis a who were married July 29 inWeiser. University. rancher. She graduated from Boise State and Greg Frederiek and Marilyn Messing­ teaches in Alaska. bam were married June 10. Greg is a Joy Barinaga and Ensign John M&BOD graduate of BSU. Weddings were united in marriage Aug. 19 in Janice Schmidt and LoweD Gardner Castleford. were married Aug. 26. He has attended A June 22 wedding united Elizabeth Doug Hollinger and MarlfeOdell we� Ensign Mason graduated from Boise BSU. Mark Gray to Anderson. Mark is a Boise married July 28. The bride graduated State in 1975. They willmake their home State University graduate. from BSU. in Oak Harbor,Wash. September 1 was the date of the mar­ riage of Elaine MacKenzie and Maek A June wedding united Patrice Rebeeea Jenkins and James Van Exchanging wedding vows on Sept. 16 Baehmu. Bonadimento Steve Gibson. The bride is Sickel were married Sept. 9. She were RobertConway and Jan Schafer. The bridegroom, who has attended a graduate of BSU, and is a teacher at attended Boise State College for one Conway attended BSU, and is working Boise State, is employed by Signs, Inc., Memorial Schoolin Rupert. year. Her husband has completed two for Time Automotive Distributorship Boise. They willlive in Boise. years at Spokane Community College. here in Boise. Boise newlyweds are Rodney K. Laf­ Kathy Helekar became the bride of ferty and Beverly A. Binford, who were William Burns and LeandraA iJuJDeade Karen Marie Roa.h and Elbert Len Edward McCarroll on May 27. The bride marriedAug. 11 inWeiser. were married in St. Maries on Aug. 19. Houck were married in a traditional graduatedfrom BSU. The couple lives in Binford attended Vo-Tech School at Leandra is a BSU grad employed by the candlelight service Aug. 19 at the First Portland. Boise State. Her husband is employed by State Department of Employment. Baptist Church, Boise. The bride is a InternationalEngineering. Burns is a U of I grad working for student at BSU majoring in radiologic Suzume Sousley and David Evans ill Coopersand Lybrand Company . technology while the groomis a sergeut united Lin Burgess and Melanie Givens were They willlive in lJoise. at MountainHome AirForce Bue. were in marriage Aug. 12. married Aug. 12 and will make their The new Mrs. Evans is a graduate of home in Boise Duane Schmidt and Rebec:ea Kopc:aya· Terrie Mecham and David Lawley Boise State's School of Nursing. The bride is a BSU grad, and her hus­ sld will make their home in Grangeville, were married Sept. 23. Lawley majored The couple will be residing at band isemployed by BurgessDiesel. where he is employed as an Idaho in geology fromBSU. Monterey, Calif.

�--,....,-� - �..-�- ...... J. . ,�_....__.... -4... .. Bronco Stadium: � •' IJ � Past EtPresent

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Married Aug. 5 were Kay Ferris and holds an M.A. degree from BSU and is Management. around the state as an Emergency Medi­ David MaBey. employed in the Meridian SchoolDistrict Bratton studied at BSU also and cal Technician instructor. The bride is attending BSU and is as a teacher. Tom is employed with works for the Idaho First National Bank. Samuelsen had graduated fromBorah employed at the Bon Marche. Her hus­ Ernst & Ernst. High School and attended BSU for three band attended Boise State and is Denise Plaza and Inigo- Ugarte were years. employedby Tudor Engineering. Ann Renee Bittleston of Nampa and united in marriage on July 23. The bride Bobby D. Jones of Twin Falls exchanged met her husband while studying in Services for Fay L. Whitley, 36, of Making their home in St. Anthony are wedding vows Aug. 12 in a garden wed­ Onate, Spain through. a program spon­ Marsing were held Sept. 7. Mrs. Whitley Paul Oakes and the former Sallee ding. sored by BSU. died as the result of an automobile acci­ Weber, who were wed in Boise on Aug. The bride graduated in May from BSU dent in Nevada. 12. Both are Boise State alumpi. and the bridegroom has attended the She attended Boise State College from College of Southern Idaho, the U of I, Deaths 1960 to 1961, and night school in 1963. David Barclay and Goldie Okazaki and Boise State University. Rosary for JayleeDeAna Graham, 27, were married Aug. 12. Barclay is attend­ who died Sept. 19 in an automobile acci­ Guess ing Boise State, and his bride a BSU Donald W. Cox and Katherine A. dent was recited at Cloverdale. J aylee graduate. The couple willlive in Boise. Johnson will make their home in Omaha, was born in California and moved to Nebraska where he is employed by Coeur d'Alene as an infant. She attended Who? Cynthia A. Lind and John J. Ulmen Jantzen Clothing Company. They were grade schools in Coeur d'Alene, grad­ were married Aug. 5. The bridegroom married in Portland on Aug. 5. key Alums, and the uated from Boise High School and Here 11 the ane-r graduated from BSU in 1972 and The bride graduated from Portland yearbook date of their plcturee are (1) Bethlne attended Boise State. manages the Hertz car rental in State University. and Donald attended Clark Church, '42, wife of Senator ; (2) Dwight Dicky, '51, former BSU administrator; Lewistonand Pullman. BSU. Services were held for Douglas G. (3) Will Overgaard, '46, BSU chairman of political Gilkey, 24, who died Sept. 21, in an auto­ science and philosophy and Marge Krenhold; (4) Jim Lawson and CiDdi Wenger were Married Aug. 12 in a lawn wedding mobile accident. He had attended BSU, Ben Hambleton, '70, director of BSU educational wed Aug. 5 in McCall. They will make were Art Troutner, Jr. and Carolyn and was working for the forest service. media services; (5) Dr. Keith Taylor, '48, Boise their home in Boise. Lawson works at Smith. orthopedic surgeon; (6) Bill Roden, '48, Boise the Lock, Stock and Barrel. Both The bridegroom is attending the U of attorney; (7) Ron Turner, '54, BSU budget direc­ Kenneth W. Jackson, 42, of Weiser, attended BSU. · I, while the bride is a BSU graduate. tor; (8) Jean Boylee, '53, BSU education teacher; died Sept. 3. Jackson came to Boise in They will live in Moscow. (9) Larry Jackson, '50, state representative and 1973, where he attended Boise State. He Aug. 11 was the date Matt Newton former candidate for governor; (10) from left, worked at Horner-West Insurance and Harry O'Neil, Tom Wakefield, Theron Roberts, and Lisa Muldoon were united in Rene Peterson and Patrick Maloney Real Estate in Weiser at the time of his Nat Adams (architect). Dan Cahill, and Bart marriage. Lisa attended the U of I pre­ were married Aug. 25 in Idaho Falls. He death. Br81sey (banker), '42; (11) Ernie Weber and Dyke is currently attending BSU and is viously, and Newton studied at Boise Na lly, '68, BSU alumni director; (12) Dick Nelson, State employed by IBM. She has attended Services for David M. Connolly,19, '48, education official and former candidate for BSU in the past and is now employed by who died in an automobile accident superintendent of public Instruction; (13) Jackie Idaho First National Bank. '48, administrative assistant to Beeky Taylor and Barry PriDclle were earlier this month, were held in Cald­ Hannn Ca11ell, married Aug. 5 in Boise. Becky is a BSU The co1,1ple lives in Boise. BSU president; (14) Cheryl Hei11 Hymas, '58, well. He attended the College of Idaho member of State Board of Education; (15) Ed grad employed by First Security Bank. and was enrolled at Boise State at the Her husband also attended Boise State Married Sept. 16·at the Union Pacific Lodge, '55, administrative district judge in Cald­ time of his death. He was a guard at the well; (16) Ken Davies, '47, Boise advertising and is employed by Household Finance train depot were Debra Atkins and Idaho State Penitentiary. executive; (17) Jim Harris, '66, Ada County Co. ·James Peterson. Both attended BSU. deputy prosecuting attorne.y and candidate for They will live in Boise. Martin Samuelsen, 28, co-captain of ' prosecuting attorney; (18) John BelUe, 48, BSU in are Making their home Boise Mr. the Fire Department Dive Team, professor of education; (19) Robert Rose, former and Mrs. Thomas Toevs. The Toevs Calvin Gabert and Nancy Bratton drowned in Payette Lake early in Sep­ school of business dean; (20) Dr. Don Papa, '48, were marriedAug. 12. were married Sept. 3. Gabert is a BSU tember. Samuelsen was a driver for the Boise dentist; (21) Chartn Hu(nmel•, '«, Boise The bride, the former Bebeeea Davia, grad employed by the Bureau of Land Fire Department, and also traveled architect. --. �7

Homecoming Pride Perspective By P!tJSidtJnt John KtJisBI

As a newcomer to Boise State Univer­ ·is not very busy at Homecoming sharing sity, I am unfamiliar with much of the memorieswith nearly everyone, and our A Quiet Step Fovvard detailed tradition which elicits institu­ present faculty is just too good not to tional affection when graduates return have lifelong admirers among former The $14 million pavilion reached up and grabbed headlines this month to campus for Homecoming. students. while a more quiet bit of news left BSU's community of artists and musi­ Yet, your spirit and pride burst out Tradition emerges from these rela­ cians encouraged about the future here. everywhere and, more than anything tionships: blaming the university for Few people outside the university know that earlier this month the Per­ else, led me to request the opportunity certain missed opportunities in your own life; gradually recognizing that nobody manent Building Fund Council (PBFC) started the political wheels turning to serve as president. prevented you from carefully reading toward eventual construction of an arts & humanities building here by Chaffee'sDipfty more of the books in the library on your recommending that the legislature next session appropriate $1 million I can easily imagine the sources of particular problem; and, finally, being toward the $4.8 million price tag. some of it. Most appealing is the unmis­ grateful for what somewhat wiser pro­ Most were caught unaware. True, the State Board of Education set the takable fact that the University exists fessors made available in spite of your­ stage when it moved the building up to fourth on its priority list. But few because it meets a compelling need, self. because its students, alumni, and com­ expected the PBFC to look kindly on the idea for another year or two. FriendshipsHere Lut munity want it. It is special; it is yours. The cost has been set, and planners have a pretty good idea how big it You recall countless examples of the And, of course, friendships among stu­ will be (3 or 4 stories), where it will go (near the Special Events Center), courage, dignity, and grace of former dents made during college or university and what will go in it (art, music and theatre arts, for sure). Departments President and Mrs. Chaffee as they years are of a very special and lasting haven't worked out too many details beyond that. successfully met the challenges of the kind. The move did come at a time when students and others were worried difficult early years. You know how for­ I personally believe that our present that a "BSU's got enough" syndrome would sweep over state decision­ tunate the institution was to have an logo does not capture this tradition or makers after the pavilion approval. The PBFC's action should ease those accomplished faculty dedicated to stu­ adequately express what we are. Its �worries. dents and academic quality during present mountains and trees, I suggest, depression and war. I would have felt should feature prominently in their J But campus artists and musicians shouldn't pack their bags just yet. privileged to study with them er to be midst a symbolic representation of the \ There is still a long political road to follow before the money arrives at 1910 their colleague. seat of state government (perhaps the c University Drive. c Surely the beauty and constancy of state capitol building), as well as another The PBFC's recommendation is enough to get the item before the all­ r the river and the surrounding mountains presenting the enterprise which made r important Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee in the legislature. If made both the examinations and the Boise City grow into the dynamic com­ I purse strings are drawn unusually tight, priorities for the PBFC money udear John" letters you faced as fresh­ munity it has become. 1. may change. men, about Thanksgiving time, seem Most important, it should contain a I. Since it is at the bottom of the PBFC's shopping list, the $1 million could more bearable. And the little chapel on more prominent sign of the University, f Broadway undoubtedly represents giant whether it be a lamp of learning, an open I be vulnerable ifcuts are made. • If the money does survive the political test that is ahead, BSU will have memories and events for many. The book, or something less traditional but carillon and the fountain should remind more identifiable. I ( enough to complete the planning stages, with enough left over for eventual I construction. some, as they do me, of the importance of tranquillity, of time to think, which Write about Logo Then those who have waited years for Boise State's arts facilities to �. . you had here. If you agree and have any ideas, I ,, move into "big league" status will have to wait even more patiently until would appreciate hearing from you. � the rest of the money can be appropriated in following years, Smith Is Tradition Symbolism is an important part of tradi­ For now, the awareness and concern the Permanent Building Fund The Broncos themselves contributed tion, and I will not tamper with it unless T Council has shown over BSU's need for better arts facilities is enough to more bamburning incidents to Satur­ you agree it should be done. � daYs in the fall than most universities Regardless, I believe my oft-stated li keep us smiling, until January at least. have a right to expect. There is tradition goal that every graduate of Boise State � Enjoy the Nostalgia there, and you can see it walking around University should exhibit the conscious­ f\ in the person of Lyle Smith. Somehow ly imparted characteristics of literacy, J In case readers haven't guessed already, this issue has a special Home­ the grit and determination of former public affairs, love of learning, and J coming slant to it. Through the magic of off-set printing, FOCUS photog­ President John Barnes and the faculty mastery of an academic discipline was and staff which turned the college into a not lost on you. rapher Chuck Scheer was able to copy old, nostalgic yearbook photos L university must have built enough esprit There are too many successes and dating back into the '30's. IIi to satisfy a great number of alumni. examples of academic achievement K We've scattered these through the paper, just to jog the memory of They knew that a University was a among you for it to be otherwise. We those who played an earlier role in BSU's history. And for those who didn't, who are privileged to be at the Univer­ IIi place dominated by the values of truth, we hope the pictures will give you an idea of how far we've come Ill in such a beauty, and merit manifested in a sity now value the many forms of appre­ K short time. myriad of activities, and that academic ciation and supportyou have shown us. K So, alums, enjoy "your" issue of FOCUS, and we hope you'll be back in a quality occurred here when teachers and So, while I am not an "old grad" 'of K couple of weeks. students met in and out of the classroom. Boise State University, I hope the pride IV Too many people have kind things to in being one is not lost on me. We hope LJ say about Dick Bullington to believe he you enjoy Homecoming '78.

IV p Focus Reader's Comment IV Lc R PJ M ·sleepless Nights' D reports that this means faculty must be reduced. The M By Dr. Richard Baker can pursue my interest in Skid Row research. Then too, Fl chairman attempted to allay my anxious expression by AssoclateProfessor of Sociology there is the gloomy prospect of our department losing our M half-time archaeologist because for the last two years the saying that at this time it is only an exercise. I told myself D1 I awoke in the middle of the night. My thoughts were administration has not been able to fund this as a full­ to have faith in our administration since they reeei 1e at M troubled and confused. My spirits were low. My wife, a time position. These circumstances jeopardize the possi­ least double my remuneration. Besides, most of them Cl social worker, told me to get up and write it all down. bilities of ever establishing an Anthropology major at received five times the amount I did in merit pay last M This, she said, would allow me to clarify my predicament Jt BSU. I forced myself to stop this line of thinking. Any­ spring. Philosophically, I know that it is the nature of M and take the appropriate action. Ifit didn't work at least way, this is certainly not enough to awaken one in the administrators to administer unworkable directives to NC she could get back to sleep. middle of the night. those they administer. However, there may be cause for N1 Why were my spirits so low? I vaguely recognized Maybe I am being troubleq by the 1 percent initiative, less than a peaceful night's sleep. Be through sleepy fog that it had something to do with the which still appears likely to pass. This threat to BSU's Oh yes, the administration has planned to house my University. I made and drank coffee. I began to sort out budget would, as the President says, return us to junior department on three separate floors of the new Science­ c my thoughts. I had started this fall at BSU refreshed and college status. One can hope (if desperate) that the state Education building. My departmental colleagues' efforts ' eager to start a new academic year. It is hard to believe legislature will save us. This is still not enough to awaken to suggest problems in this arrangement were carefully that the semester started only six weeks ago. How could one in the night, is it? noted; however, our suggested alternatives were my morale have dropped so low so quickly? What bad Ah ha, I did read the Statesman yesterday morning. rejected. el happened? This may have affected my equilibrium. Joe Munson I began to wonder ifmy colleagues across campus were Cl $] Yes, the Pavilion project was given approval by the retiring from the State Board of Education thought it having similar problems and similar emotions? I decided State Board of Education, but I expected this to happen. would be a good thing to freeze professors' salaries so they probably were. I also decided I have good reason to Si Athletics over academies is a traditional problem facing that the Board could increase the incomes of secondary wake in the middle of the night: I believe my thoughts those of us in education. It did bother me that the and elementary teachers. There is nothing like robbing can also explain the twinkling of home lights that I see sc proponents of this project claimed that their endeavors the poor to help the poor. Joe is retired from the Board, flicking across the Boise horizon. st would not deter from the academic programs at BSU. I but doeshe reflect their thinking? Anyway, this was only What can I do? Oh-oh, one must reject those radical le naturally recalled my chairman's recent reminder to me a newspaper article. graduate school thoughts. One should join the AFT. One fil to tum in my travel request for the Pacific Sociological Maybe my sleepless night was due to the administra­ could also write a letter to the Focus. It probably won't co Meetings. BSU is awarding me $100.00 in travel tion's recent request (jargon for demand) that our depart­ do any good but I need something to do in the middle of expenses for a trip that will cost me $300.00 with accom­ ment comply with a new zero-based budgeting of 85 the night. st modations at the Amigo Motel. This could be interpreted percent of last year's budget. Next year they want to My only hope is that I will not be responded to by the th as advantageous because with these accommodations I reduce this to 65 percent. The chairman reluctantly Executive Dean for Troubled and Confused Professors! -.aa&a Homecoming Headaches Usual i'n·BJC Days

By larry Burke

One year boisterous sophomores kidnapped the Boise High School cheerleaders. Another time sneaky students with arson running in their veins torched the school bonfire in the middle of the day. No, those aren't more zany Homecoming scenes from the hit movie "Animal House." Those are just two incidents that added spice to Boise Junior College homecomings back in the Fabulous Fifties era. While Homecoming parades and other acti­ vities in those days seemingly went off without a hitch, they were always teetering on the brink of disaster for one reason or another. The frustrations of Homecoming organizers then must have been painful indeed. But today, reports they submitted make for some interest­ ing reading. Take 1960, for example. That year student mischief reached an all-time high. A stern report from Homecoming chairman Lois Chaf­ fee to the Student Council speaks for itself. ·� flaming B wlis scheduled to burn on Table­ He continued with a litany of annoying 'There were two m11jor blunders In the home­ rock. Permission for this was obtained from the occurrences that probably kept him awake at coming festivities. Rrst, the students serpentined Forat Service because of the condition of the night. in the streets 11nd tried to brfl8k up 11 BoiSll High renge gmss In that arH. The B failed to burn pep r11lly by kidn11pplng their chtHJrltNJders. This bfiCIIuse of the materials getting wet." m11y sound funny, but it ne11rly c11ncelled our f/011t "Our attempt to further an Alumni Association resulted mostly in failure. parade. To put the finishing touches on his ulcer, the "You are on trial this yflllr. Any repetition of this "In spite of a good dHI of publicity, the atten­ pep rally that year was a bust. sort of conduct could call off your f/011t parade. dance at the football game was not at all good. " "Also, following the pep parade, the band and '7he Pep Rally was very poorly attended. The cheerleaders went out to Borah High and BJC Pep Band played and the cheer leaders tried And to top it off, students that year planned disrupted classes. Please talk to Mr. Best and Mrs. to stir up some spirit but there w11s not much an alumni luncheon at the Elks Lodge. Even at Painter about this so that they c11n warn the enthusiasm. Even the football ttHJm and coaches, partiBS involved. " who were to be honored by the festivity, were not $1.15 a plate, interest was so low that the event there." was canceled. That Homecoming may have strained BJC's There was almost an "us against them" tone With disaster lurking over their heads, Home­ community relations. But the 1952 celebration to the report that chairman Charles Gunnerson coming chairmen usually kept their sense of must have put a permanent furrow in the brow submitted on the 1950 Homecoming. Again, humor. John Larsen, probably in a hurry, of chairman Howard Atkins. students had lit the bonfire early. penned this classic about the 1956 Homecom­ Nothing seemed to go right. ing queen selection committee. '7he one thing that almost marred the celebra­ '7he school's truck was used to assemble some tion this year was the attempt by a few unrespon­ '7he committee men were assembled in short 130 ties abandoned by the railroad company nflllr sible students to ruin the Pep Rally. They burned by mugging Case in the dorm and Eisenbarth was Black's Creek. Bunkers were built of these and the bonfire prior to the rally on Thursday night. tripped ltHJving the student union and a bystander filled with trash 11ccumulated by local trash collec­ However, their action was met as a challenge by helped the chairman pin him to the sidewlllk until torsand by the Intercollegiate Knights. the serviceclubs of the school and the bonfire was his consent to help was offered. Hill and Carter '7he pile was so high that the City Fire Inspector re-built larger than before. This, In my estimation, escaped through an open window in T-1 so they declared it dangerous and prohibited its burning. was one of the best cooperative efforts I've seen were not along on the beginning of the commit- 1 "Several hours before the pep rally, unknown on the BJC campus and is Indicative of what can tee's work. individuals fired it despite the Inspector's warning. be done when such a threat occurs. " '7hese three members of the committee went ill It continued to burn throughout the rally but to the Carr studios and with the help of great feelings were developed between the city admin­ Chairman Gunnerson was frank if'\his assess­ oratory and general obnoxiousness succeeded in istration and the school. " ment of the events he orchestrated. \ getting the pictures. This took until Wednesday. When all was said and done, Gail Fulton, Joretta Chairman Atkins's problems didn't end "In a sense, it is remarkable that Homecoming- Moeller, Judy Williams, Ardis Swan, and Sheri there. 1950proved as succfiSSful as it did/" Purvis were elected. "

Election of the queen in 1955, the year before, was embroiled in campus politics. Todd Sagraves reported his ideas to the student They Had Homecoming Headaches... council.

"I would like to recommend to you that the final selection of the Homecoming OutHJn be taken away from the football team and turned over to the entire male student boc!y. The reason is that this year the general election to narrow the field from sixteen to five was an overwhelming victory for one girl, yet because of an article written in the school newspaper. the football team completely reversed the popular vote and elected another girl.,

Sagraves also suggested that year that the Dean of Women set up a "date bureau" of undated girls who would be willing to attend the dance with one of the visiting football players. There weren't too many feminists to anger then, but the idea was dropped anyway. Homecomings at BJC were remarkably low budget affairs. In 1955, for example, chairman Sagraves reported that he spent a grand total of $75.90 on Homecoming. The biggest hunk of that, $33.50, went to flowers and gifts for the Homecoming queen contestants. By the way, Sagraves cut enough corners to underspend his original budget of $82.50. Despite the frequent anguish, Homecoming chairmen from the '50's unanimously point to how enjoyable and educational their organiza­ tional efforts were. And even if their other events were not as successful as planned, one thing was certain back in the '50's. The football team under Lyle Smith woul set things straight. Only once, in 1955, did th Broncos loose a Homecoming football game.

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By LarryBurke Dimes, Easter Seals, Cancer Society, accepted? ties exist," she says. blood drives and others ... that Greeks Bax thinks several things are respon­ One suggestion has been to move here support. sible. "Greek Week" from the spring to the fall I The Greek way of life is catching on at I Boise State. In addition, Greeks are beginning to "People today are looking for identifi­ when more new pledges could be I At least that's what the latest statis­ emerge in more campus leadership posi­ cation in small groups. We are learning attracted. Greek organizations are also I I tics indicate as BSU fraternities and tions and are an important force behind how to rush (recruit) better here, too," beginning to print posters and other sororities enjoyed the best fall recruit­ many Homecoming activities. she says. materials to spread the word. ment season in their history. Sorority members last year main­ Walker thinks even more students But the 'key to recruitment, says Almost all sororities reached their tained above a 3 point grade average, would be interested in Greek living here Walker, is with high school students. quota during fall rush, and fraternities which is well above the student body at if publicity were better. "When we've been able to personally are full, according to assistant director large, Walker says. "People come to Boise State and aren't go into the schools and visit, response of student activities Christa Bax. Why has Greek living become more even aware that fraternities and sorori-,.. has been good," she says. That's welcome news to Greek living groups that have waited almost ten years for their style of living to take hold here. AOPilooks "It's been an uphill struggle, but now the future looks very exciting," says Bax. Boise State has four sororities (Alpha On IWayUpl Chi Omega, Alpha Omicron Pi, Gamma Phi Beta, and Delta Delta Delta) and Alpha Omicron Pi (AOPi) is on the three fraternities (Tau Kappa Epsilon, way up. At least that's what the mem­ Sigma Phi Epsilon, and Kappa Sigma). bers think after hopes were buoyed this Their current membership upswing is fall by a large pledge class and acquisi­ a far cry from the early 1970's when tion of their own house. Greek groups here and across the coun­ Chapters in the regional organization try plummetted in popularity. of AOPi seem to share that optimism.At BSU came back from that period with their spring meeting, the nine sororitiP-s_ slow, steady growth. This fall about 58 in the Northwest voted the BSU house women pledged sororities, and 50 men as the most improved in the region. pledged fraternities. Both are all-time . AOPi is the smallest of the four sorori­ high numbers. ties at Boise State. While at first glance One Boise investor seems to have so that may seem like a liability; chapter much confidence in the Greek system president Jan Naugler sees it as an here that he wants to help finance and asset. develop a Greek row. "We stress quality instead of quantity. Several chapters are interested in the Our small size calls for more involve­ prospect, which could become reality if ment, it provides more opportunities for suitable land can be found. leadership," she says .. In the meantime, there are other "We feel we expect more from our important signs of stability. members than the other sororities do." For one, almost every Greek group Naugler is quick to point out that owns a house. The lone fraternity that there is no typical AOPi. "Everyone poesn'tis negotiating and should become here is unique," she says. homeowners soon. Most of the houses If there is one trait they share, 'are in neighborhoods within walking dis­ though, it is grit. Members just won a tance to BSU. battle with the Boise City Council and For another, growth has been so protesting neighbors to occupy th-eir encouraging that there is talk of either new house at 1906 Potter. Last year inviting other houses on campus or rais­ they lived in rented quarters, and before ing membership quotas for the sorori­ that, in a dormi�ory. ties. The house should be a boon to future Evidence of that growth was seen last growth of AOPi. year when Sigma Phi Epsilon attracted The national organization provided so many members that its national funds to purchase the house, which was organization moved it from colony to a strong sign of confidence despite the chapter status in just one year. chapter's low membership. Absence of the traditional "Greek "They know we're a strong chapter .. row" isn't the only difference between We've proven that through the years, BSU and other university systems. says Naugler. "I don't think girls here are so That strength is likely to grow in the infatuated with the idea of a sorority, coming years, especially if the sorority says Pan hellenic president Gaea Walker. optimism runs a high as it does now. Because most houses are small, mem­ "We don't think we're on the way up... bers must live in dormitories or off­ we know it," says chapter treasurer Lee campus.That means there is more cross­ Ann Cromwell. campus contact between Greeks and other living groups here, she adds. Walker says Greeks at Boise State ,,. undertake more philanthropic projects -· ��--� than their counterparts on other cam­ FOR BSU'S GREEKS, parties and philanthropy mix with classes and home­ puses. Noted Therapy work to provide balance to university living. TKE's this year joined the She points to a long list of causes ... national toga party craze ltop) and Kappa Sig's a few years ago were active in cystic fibrosis, arthritis, March of the "Great Sandwich" promotion for charity. Expert Coming

Noted author and human relations therapist Dr.Albert Ellis will be at BSU .TKE's Win National Improvement Honor Friday, Nov. 10 to teach a one-day course on emotional adjustment. Ellis, a psychology professor at Rut-· Lately the TKE's have been running reap prestigious national acclaim last their charity run, and restored their 100 gers University, has devoted over 30 around a lot. year when it was named the most year old house. years to clinical practice and research. No, they aren't skipping study table improved of the 300 TKE fraternities "We want to help individuals get the He has published over 500 articles and is for the Boise nightlife. No, they aren't nation-wide. most out of their college careers by the author or editor of 40 books. hazing their pledges. That reward came one short year after involving them in campus and com­ Several of them, such as Sex Without The local TKE's are merely getting the BSU TKE's were rated near the bot­ munity projects," Nelson says. Guilt, How to Live with a Neurotic, Sex legs and lungs in shape so they will be tom of the heap by their national organi­ The TKE house at the end of Broad­ and the Liberated Man, and A New ready to help their northern brothers at zation. way is one of Boise's oldest.Rumor has it Guide to Ratiorud'Living, have made the the run the game But in that one year almost everything that President Teddy Roosevelt once · best-seller lists. ball from Moscow to Boise for the Home­ improved . . . grades, alumni contact, slept there. Now about 20 TKE's call it Ellis is also the founder of the rational­ coming battle Nov.4. more pledges initiated, more service home. projects, and living quarters. What does the future look like for Tau emotive theory that has become one of They1l pack the ball halfway, from the main "schools" of psychotherapy. Chapter president Jeff Nelson says a Kappa Epsilon just two years after it Riggins to Boise. The object, besides At Boise State Ellis will talk about fun: good fraternity provides service to its was rated so low by its national organi­ having some to raise money for St. psychological blocks to emotional adjust­ members, its campus and its community. zation? Jude's Children's Hospital in Memphis, TKE's here take that so seriously that "Bright," says Nelson. TKE is BSU's ment and methodsto overcome them. Tenn. He will cover the topics of anger, they even dress as Easter bunnies to largest fraternity, with 53 members and depression, self-pity and addiction and TKE's these days seem to be taking on entertain youngsters at child care cen­ pledges. This fall 20 new pledges were methods to combat those. lots of community-campus projects like ters and kindergartens each spring. signed up. The course will run 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. in that one. In October, TKE's sponsored a Red "We've produced results in the past .. . the BSU Student Union Ballroom. It is Their evident enthusiasm is probably Cross blood drive, helped organize we're working hard to keep a positive open to professionals in health science what caused the Boise State chapter to several Homecoming events, trained for public image," says Nelson. and human services as well as persons interested in self-improvement. -.oaJ510

Broncs 3-0 With Ca/ifotnia,· 0-2 WithMontan�

By midseason Boise State University's "wrong" conference, at leastas far as the offthe Spartans, BSU joined a fraternity Boise State University sophomore tail­ Broncos found themselves leading one Broncos are concerned. In the one that that includes nationally ranked Colorado back Cedric Minter continued his assault Californiaconference, but last in the Big counts, the Big Sky, BSU at the halfway and Stanford. on the BSU football record book this Sky. point in the season was winless after The Broncos will remain the mythical month and became the first Bronco ever BSU will finish the season with a per­ dropping close games to Montana and leaders of the PCAA for a few weeks, to gain 1,000 yards in a single season. feet 3-0 record in the Pacific Coast Ath­ Montana State. but their stay in the Big Sky cellar Earlier this month, Minter erased two too rushing records, for most net yards in letic Association after beating £al State­ Coach Jim Criner called the game probably won't last long. With four one game and longest touchdown run. Fullerton, Long Beach State and San against San Jose.the "best team effort" more Big Sky games on the schedule, a 4-2 to The first record was held by Minter, and Jose State. the Broncos had all season. In knoe�g mark would probably be enough But those three schools play in the put BSU in a solid second spot. was set last season whe_n he rushed for In the meantime, sophomore Cedric 210 yards against Cal Poly SLO. He Minter continued his assault on the BSU broke it against Northern Michigan record book this month, and became the when he gained 261 yards on the ground. first Bronco ever to rush to 1,000 yards The second one was set by John Smith in a single season. against Cal Poly SLO, when he broke a

Will Visitors Win This Time?

By Bob Rosenthal BSU Sports Information Director

The Boise State-Idaho football rivalry is actually a relatively young one, beginning in 1971. Previous to that, Bois.e Jr. College had played the Idaho freshmen on several occasions. The Broncos hold a 4-2-1 series lead over the Vandals, but in this short period of time, the rivalry has become intense and at the least, very interesting. It's interesting because the visiting team has fared better than the home team over the past seven years, holding a 4-2-1 edge. Back in 1971, the game was played in Boise but was considered an Idaho home game, because although scheduled that way, the Kibbie­ Dome was in its first phase of construction and not yet ready for use. The Broncos carved out a 42-14 win, but since the Broncos were not the home team, the game goes down in the visitors win column. In 1972, Idaho won the game in Boise, 22-21 on a late-game two-point conversion. Then in 1973, for the third straight year, the visitors won as Boise State downed the Vandals in Moscow, 4 7-24 to open the season. The trend was altered in 1974 when the Broncos won 53-29 in the season's last home game in Boise. The Broncos opened up the 1976 season at home against the Vandals and dropped a 16-9 decision, giving the visiting team the win once again. ,,_ Last season, BSU closed out the football campaign with a 44-14 win in Moscow, giving the visiting team and BSU a 4-2-1 edge in the ser.ies.

It America� Favorite As Pictured In The '38Les

EW-. �. Ko

The pledge offour million dollars from the Bronco Athletic Association for the building of a multi-purpose pavilion at Boise State University is a great chal­ 'Jell' ThiS Fall. lenge for the association, according to Jayne Van Wassenhove, BSU field "We're still developing and jelling as a BAA president Tom MacGregor. hockey coach, hopes that next year's team. Our players actually know now "The next step for the Bronco Boos­ hockey schedule will have more home that after our great match with ISU dur­ ters is for the group to meet its commit­ games and considerably less traveL The ing our tournament we are capable of ment, and I have no doubt that _we will Bronco women play at home only twice playing good, competitive . do just that," he said. this season and travel for five weekends We'll continue to work on developing "The people in the city and valley will to schools in the Northwest. consistency, especially in our defensive be funding the four million dollars and Van Wassenhove said the team has play." we expect a great deal of civic participa­ improved through each game it played Regarding individual player improve­ tion in this project," he said. "Lori during a tournament weekend at BSU ment, the coach said Willmorth, a Commenting on the State Board of Oct. and6 7. freshman hitter, is very strong at her Education's 4-3 vote approving the BSU "We are definitely young and lacking position. student fee increase, MacGregor said in experience-we have no senior player Freshman Tammy Pearson from Ha­ "The future will prove that the State german is "playing better each match, on the team. Consequently, we rely � Board was wise in its decision. It took while junior transfer Cindy Simpkins is heavily on our junior 'veterans' and our courage to vote in favor of the increase · an inspiration to the whole team with one sophomore, suzan Schenk from in view of the current political atmos­ her defensive and offensive skills." Rupert." phere. There is no question as to the The junior veteran players are Twyla Susan Veitti was also cited by the need for such a facility at Boise State coach for her brilliant spiking ability as Bulcher from Jerome, Treva Hunt from University and I realize that it was diffi­ well as for her strong defensive play. Nampa, and Boiseans Donna McCurdy, cult for the students to vote themselves Laura Rosecrans, Shari Ward and an increase in fees. The Bronco Booster president said Donna Weast. that he felt ASBSU Student BodyPresi­ "Our seven other players are all fresh­ om) ran his way into BSU record books men and not all of them played high Gymnasts e season, while Jim Criner celebrates a dent Rob Perez gave a fair representa­ school hockey. Donna Phelps and Ann iAA team (left). BSU's defense stopped tion of the students' viewpoints. "Rob Bryant of Nampa and Karla Romero unning back Kevin Cole but a quick fairly represented the students and from Capital High School, Boise, are >avid Hughes open up the middle. looked out for the students' interests in Host Meets -Scheer photos three frosh with considerable potential," the whole project," he said. Boise State University will be the site Van Wassenhove said. of two major regional gymnastics cham­ pionships for women in the next two Cross Country years. The United States Gymnastics Feder­ ation has accepted BSU as the site for its Improvement on Boise State's wo­ Class I regional championships April men's cross country team has been 12-14, 1979, it was announced at the rapid, according to coach Basil Dahl­ USGF Annual Congress held in Okla­ strom. homa City. ''I'm really happy with them. Six This meet will feature the top ad­ weeks ago we were eleven newcomers vanced lege! USGF qualifiers from a six and one 'veteran' - Cindy Jorgensen, a state area, and will be a qualifying meet junior from Boise." to the USGF nationals. Traditionally the "We've developed very well and we're Coaches Gather best club gymnasts ages 10-18 are in this a strong, solid team now. Within the meet. team, we have super competition, while The NAGWS Coaches' Conference, Westside Optimists and BSU Women's at the same time each individual is com­ sponsored by the BSU Women's Athletic Athletics are co-sponsors of the event. pletely supportive of the group. This Department on Sept. 29 and 30, The NCWSA awarded its 1980 Re­ help us grow and develop as a team," attracted more than 130 coaches of girls' gional Gymnastics Championships to Dahlstrom says. and womens' sports to the campus for BSU, it was announced in a meeting last Dahlstrom cited Boise sophomore intensive two day sessions with inter­ weekend in Corvallis, OR. The meet, to Cherry Gardner for "an excellent race" national caliber womens' coaches in bas­ be held in March, 1980, will include the at the Montana meet earlier this month. ketball, volleyball, gymnastics, and best collegiate teams and individuals Freshman Beth Rupprecht, from Filer, track and field. from the five state region. It will serve is becoming a very competitive runner, Coaches from Michigan, Alaska, Iowa, as a qualifying meet to the AlA W Divi­ also,Dahlstrom said. and Canada attended as well as coaches sion I and Division II national champion­ from the western states. Judy and Jody Smith, freshmen twins ships. 1-2 BSU women varsity athletes on the from Ontario who finished against "Events like these help Boise get on and volleyball teams served the University of Montana are, accord­ the map gymnastically," said Ed Zim­ as demonstrators for volleyball clinician ing to Dahlstrom, "exceptional runners" mer, BSU coach and co-director of the LuAnn Terheggen, and basketball clini­ with great potential for being competi­ USGF meet with Bruce Swanson of the cian Sue Gunter. tive in the Northwest region, Dahlstrom Optimists. added. Because the two regional champion­ ships lead to the nationals, people from Vollsybsl all over the country will be interested in OlYMPIAN Olga Connelly was what the results are in Boise. Hosting among the famous coaches here Off to a slow start this year, BSU's such meets successfully is an indicator of for the NAGWS coaches' confer­ volleyball team is beginning to jell as a how fast interest in gymnastics is grow­ ence at BSU. team, says coach Kendra Falen. ing in Boise,Zimmer said.

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Big SkyRefs Don't Suffer From Pro Malaise

By Larry Burke eyed coaches who view flicking game each game the officials also grade each When refs do get in trouble with the films the day after the game. coaches, it's not for what they called, but Compared to the groans of agony echo­ other and submit their reports to the Big But even if llig Sky officials could be more for what they missed. ing from the professional football ranks Sky office. put under a microscope, conference com-' this fall, coaches and fans in the Big Sky But probably the most important To keep those mistakes to a minimum, missioner Steve Belko .is confident are quiet as church mice when it comes judgement comes at the end of the Belko says the conference gives yearly they'd stand the test. to openly griping about the quality of season when coaches meet to talk about rules tests and circulates a weekly bulle· their officials. "We don't receive a great deal of com­ the officials. tin to iron out problems. If coaches But even with all the checks and safe­ Fans in San Diego are still mumbling plaints ... it's really not a serious prob­ agree someone is doing a bad job, Belko says he'll do something guards, Belko is quick to point out what about the three man "fumble play" that lem," says Belko of Big Sky officiating. about it, like reduce his number of game every fan knows, but hates to admit: allowed the Oakland Raiders to beat "Ours as a whole is very good . . . it assignments. officiating is an inexact science. their Chargers earlier in the season. equals the Big 10 or Pac 10 in my opinion." "Nothing is fool-proof. There is no And each Monday night the nation is short cut to hard work," he says. treated to at least one or two official boo­ It may come as a surprise to most foot­ boos exposed by none other than ball fans to learn that about 40 percent of Howard Cosell. the officials used in the Big Sky come from the Western Athletic Conference But nobody's talking about an open (WAC) or Pac 10. Those officials are Game Films season on Zebras in the Big Sky. They used as their schedules permit, Belko probably won't, either. says. It's not that Big Sky officials are that much better than their pro counterparts. One ref in the recent BSU-Montana Travel More It's that refs in the Big Sky are protected game worked a Rose Bowl, for example. from the scrutiny their big league col· Big Sky officials range from the The Bronco Athletic Association has leagues receive because calls are usually Canadian to the Mexican borders, he expanded its showing of Boise State forgotten by emotional crowds that don't says. Like the professional referees, weekly football game films according to have the tools to second guess, namely those in the Big Sky make their living Jim Faucher, BAA Executive Director. instant replays. doing something else. "VVe have had very good reception Instead, scrutiny comes only from red- Many are former coaches, Belko says, from boosters throughout the state and but also in the ranks are a banker and will be showing the Bronco game films in cattleman. Eleven are from this area and five different locations each week," live in places like Gooding, Grangeville, Faucher said. .t the Ro e Show and Jerome as well as Pocatello and On Mondays weekly Bronco Ath­ Boise. letic Association lUDCheons will be held A film on Kyle Rote, Jr., national all­ "They are all dedicated people . . . in the BSU Student Union BuDding. The star soccer player, will be shown Oct. 23 they referee because they want to films of Bronco away games only will be at 7:30 p.m. at and remain active in athletics," says Belko. shown in Mountain Home at 11:45 at the Oct. 25at 7:30p.m. in the Teton Room of While the bigger conferences scout EIRaneho. the Boise State University Student officials, the Big Sky hires largely by The Magie ValleyBronco Boosters will Union Building. The film, which will be recommendation. Rookies are worked see all the game films every Tuesday free of charge to the public, is sponsored ' into the system slowly, doing only 2-3 night at 7 p.m. at the Turf Club in Twin by the Treasure Valley Fellowship for games a year. Falls. The films will then be seen VVed­ Christian Athletes and Boise State Uni­ And other conferences don't hesitate nesday at noon at the Eastside Cafe in versity Athletes for Christ. to rai.d the best officials from the Big J Ontario by the Treasure Valley Bronco The Treasure Valley Fellowship for Sky. Boosters and on Thursday at noon the Christian Athletes and Boise State Uni­ "There is no limit on the experience an Canyon County Bronco Boosters will versity Athletes for Christ will conduct a official must have. If we see that they view the game films at the Thoroap­ in Christian testimony refresher course can do the job, we put them to work, bred Restaurant Karcher Mall. open to the public beginning Oct. 19. The Belko says. "VVe certainly urge fans in these to classes will run for five consecutive Just because the fans don't get a various areas see the films of the I also indica­ Thursdays at 7:15 p.m. in the Senate chance to disect the performance of the games. think this is a fine Chambers of the BSU Student Union officials doesn't mean their mistakes go tion of the widespread support given the -Building. For further information, con­ unnoticed. Bronco Athletic Association and Boiee tact Dave Tillstrom, 336-6670, or Dr. Every team has a home spotter who State University from throughout the David Sim, 385-9328. grades the work of the officials. After state," Faucher added. •

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UNUSUAL DONATIONS TO BSU are admired as Vo-Tech practical nursing students above use audio visual equipment from Helene Fuld Trust Fund Grant; Librarians Tim Brown and Don Haacke, center, receive original ' frontier doctor journals from Elizabeth Lusk Lundy, and geologists Richard Hardyman examines petrographic microscope donated by Bill King, lower right. Interesting, Valuable Donations Enhance BSU ·Teaching Efforts Some valuable and interesting items Dr. Davies' diaries and other papers have been given or awarded to BSU record lecture notes from his classes at departments this year. Rush Medical College, Chicago, and These donations enhance the efforts of accounts of cases he attended on the our teaching staff and the education of western frontier a century ago. our students, and we'd like to say thank Terry's daughter, Beth Bryant Merrill you to the donors and let our readers shares the family interest in history: she share our appreciation. is now working on completion of her master's degree in history at BSU, and Praetieal NursesGet Equipment was recently appointed the first curator A $30,000 grant received by the of oral history for the Idaho State His­ Vocational-Technical School practical torical Society. nursing program has given students in that field access to audio-visual equip­ MechanicalPhilanthropy ment including over $3,000 worth of Mechanical philanthropy is widely evi­ reference books, individual study car­ dent in the BSU Vocational-Technical rels, cameras, projectors, transparen­ School. cies, filmstrips, and other educational Last spring, J.D. Equipment Co., ment, Voigt Refrigeration, and Emery "Bill" King, of Minex Corp. The micro­ materials. Boise, donated parts of three different Bryant Heating and Air Conditioning, all scope is used, together with several Students now may view audio visual trucks to the school from which diesel Boise. lenses and samples of polished sections material in their classrooms and may mechanics students of Charles R. Till­ GiftsAid Geologists of minerals, in optical numerology and film their own procedures in class, as man h,we "rebuilt to the last nut and The Geology Department has received petrology-petrographic research. well as at clinical facilities, and view that bolt·· a tilt-cab large {ruck of the Ford several gifts from generous donors t.his work later via closed-circuit TV. 800 series, with frame refitted and air year also. The grant, funded by the Helene Fuld brake equipment renovated. A digital seismograph valued at Scholarships Given Health Trust, was obtained through "It's hard to get such good donations," $100,000 has been donated to the depart­ The Steele-Reese Foundation has efforts of Willa Chaffee, former coordi­ Tillman said. "Not too many people will ment by Geophysical Service, Inc., a awarded an unrestricted grant of $2,000 nator of health occupations here. turn you loose with a $12,000 truck. This subsidiary of Texas Instruments. to Boise State University for scholarship was a quality piece of eqw"pment." The seismograph, a renovated model purposes. The Helene Fuld Health Trust is an Also donated by the Gowen Field­ EFS-3, will be used in geothermal and The Foundation was created in 1955 outgrowth of a foundation established in based company was a White 1968 uranium studies, as well as petroleum 1935 by Dr. Leonhard F. Fuld to per­ freightline truck used in engine rebuild­ research. and has provided scholarships for promising high school graduates of petuate the memory of his mother, a ing instruction by Rudy Alonzo, teacher The geologists have also recently New York City health educator of the of mechanical technology. received a collection of historical jour­ Lemhi and Custer counties. 1880's. Another mechanical gift to diesel nals, maps, books,microscopes, and sur­ A $2,500 grant has been made to BSU mechanics is an 8V-71 Detroit diesel veying equipment valued at over $10,000 by the Margaret Cobb Ailshie Trust, FrontierDiaries at Library engine, donated by General Motors from Maynard Boos, Denver. . Inc. The Boise State Library was the Corp., Truck and Coach Service Devel­ Boos and his wife, Dr. Margaret Boos, The grant is unrestricted and goes recipient of original journals written by opment Division. a former professorof geology at the Uni­ toward the University's scholarship Dr. Edward Gomer Davies, a frontier Further philanthropy was in evidence versity of Denver, collected the items, fund. doctor who was the great grandfather of at Vo- Tech this fall as air conditioning which include surveys for the first U.S. The BSU Foundation has received BSU associate professor of history, equipment from Williatn P. Jordan, transcontinental railroad. At his wife's $2,115 from Dr. Fred Nolan to establish Phoebe Terry. Boise, arrived. 'Ihe collection of com­ death, Boos donated the collection to the William F. Nolan Memorial Scholar­ The journals were presented to the pressors, motors, switches and coils, BSU where the journals and books are ship in memory of his son. Library by Terry's mother, Elizabeth valued at $1,200, will be used in the now available in the geology reading Together with an additional $115 Lusk Lundy, and transcribed by geneal­ refrigerationair conditioning program. room. given to this memorial by family and ogist Laura Hebert. Both the original Other recent donors to that course are A petrographic microscope worth friends, Boise State will be able to pro­ and the transcriptions will be available Jim's Heating and Cooling, Evans about $18,000 was donated this summer vide a scholarship in Environmental for original research. Refrigeration and Restaurant Equip- to the Geology Department by W.A. Education inthe fall of 1979. •

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- . · . - s· ....- -,.., .- • . . - A-I_u., ·mn1.·� · - c-- · ommur11tY,...... F>r1e . rl'- d · Key A university becomes known and gains the high regard of its con­ Mr. Earl F. Chandler Mr. Don C. McCarter Chandler Corporation McCarter & Tuller temporaries through its teachings, the knowledge passed on to its Mr. & Mrs. Harry L. Clark Mr. James D. McClary a highly functional physi­ graduates, and through the developments of Ms. Tammy Clapp Mr. Roger L. McDonald cal plant which serves both the students and the community where it Ms. Carole J. Clemens Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Nolan is located. An essential ingredient for achieving this reputation is Mr. RobertWarren Compton Nordling Parts Mr. & Mrs. Edwin R. Croft Mr. David L. Nordling through the support of the community. the alumni and friends. Mr. & Mrs. A. Crouch Otis B. VictoryCo. pages are listed the names of those alumni, friends, On the following Mr. & Mrs. Lonen C. Curtis, Ill Mr. & Mrs. Jose C. Ortega faculty, companies, organizations, and foundations whose contribu­ Mr. & Mrs. RobertR. Dargatz Mr. & Mrs.William F.Pecora tions were received through the Development Office during a twelve Mr. & Mrs. James W. Davis Mr. John Pengilly month period from July 1, 19n, through June 30, 1978. The contribu­ Ms. Carol E. Dawson Ms. June R. Penner Mr. & Mrs. Donald M. Day Col. John M.Plckarts tions during this period exceed $329,000; a testimony that the purpose Mrs. Lilly DeCialr Mr. & Mrs. Owen D.Pipal public it serves. of �oise State is understood by the Mr. & Mrs. Roger Dedman Ms. Camille B.Power Mr. & Mrs. Lee R. Denten Mr. Donald V.Pritchett Mr. Scott R. Mellon Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Dixon Mr. & Mrs.William Quong Memoriat'Donon Ms. Allee K. Mendel Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Drake Mr. & Mrs. E. A. Radke Mr. & Mrs.Warner C. Mills Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey Dumas Mr. & Mrs. Grady Rawls Mr. & Mrs. R. C. Moreland Mr. & Mrs. Ernie Dunlap Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Reynolds Mr. & Mrs. Alan R. Hausrath Mr. & Mrs.W. J. Mullins Mr. & Mrs. Alan Ellert Mr. Mark L. Riley Ada County of Educational Office Juliette B. Mustard Mr. & Mrs. John Elliot Ms. Hazel Mary Roe Personnel Mr. Don Nesbitt Mr. William N. Foxley Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Rolley Dr. & Mrs. Howard E. Adkins Mr.William D. Nielson Mr. Walter P. Freestone St. Stephens Episcopal Church Mr. & Mrs. Harvey D. Aeschbacher Dr.Patricia K. Ourada Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Fulwyler Mr. & Mrs. Gary 0. Scarlett Mr. & Mrs. George Tinsley Faye Z. Pankey Col. Norman J. Furth Mr. Matt Sedlvec Mrs. Edgar A. Aitchison Mr. & Mrs. Frank Payne Mr. & Mrs. Terrence L. Gabriel Mr. JohnP. Shaffer Vehpa and Vanna Andresen Dr. & Mrs. John L. Phillips, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Gardner Marcia Sigler Mr. & Mrs. Dick W. Armstrong Mr. & Mrs. C. Harvey Pitman Mr. Mike R. Gibbons Mrs. A. Skirmants George A. Atkinson Insurance Agency Mr. & Mrs. H. T.Plumb Mr. Robert S. Golse Mr. & Mrs. Emerson B. Steele, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. George Axen Mr. & Mrs. RobertPotts Mr. & Mrs.W. R. Gregerson Mr. J.P. Stewart Mrs. Gladys E. Bales Ms. Dorothy J.Powell Mr. & Mrs. Vern L. Gurnsey Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. Syverson Mr. & Mrs. Laurence E. Bauwens Ms. Camille B.Power Ms. Dorothy A. Hacker Mr. Hal K. Takahashi Mr. & Mrs. John A. Beckwith Mrs. D.W. Powers Mr. & Mrs. Edwin N. Hamill Mr. & Mrs. Morris W. Taylor Mr. & Mrs. John Beitia Mr. Dick Rant Mr. Edward E. Hedges Mr. & Mrs. E. A. Thierhause Mary Jean Boeslger Mr. & Mrs. George H. Richardson Mrs. Berneta Heideman Fred P. Thompson, Jr. BSU Upper Division Department of Ms. Dorothy M. Roberts Mr. Jerry Henke Mr. Leland W. True English and Music Kirby & Irene Roberts Mr. & Mrs. Thomas N. Hennessey Mr. & Mrs.William H. Tuller Dr. & Mrs. Robert R. Boren Mrs. Genevieve Robertson Henry Rust & Co. Mrs. Berniece F. Turner Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Burkett Mr. & Mrs. Laurence L. Robertson Mr. & Mrs. Ranse L. Herzinger Mr. & Mrs. Raymond J. Theis Ms. ClaraP. Burtch Ms. Hazel Mary Roe Ms. Elaine H.oke Mr. Steve C. Thurston Mr. & Mrs. Richard E. Bullington Mr. & Mrs. John 0. Roning Mr. Jerry Hollingsworth Mr. & Mrs. DavidP. Torbet Mr. & Mrs. C. H. Busee Rotary District Conference 77 Mr. & Mrs. Edwin A. Hopper Mrs. Ann Corak Urresti Mr. & Mrs. John A. Caylor Mr. & Mrs. HerbertW. Runner Mildred Houk Mrs. Robert H. Vincent Mr. & Mrs. Eugene B. Chaffee Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey Sadler Mr. & Mrs. AlbertB. Hunt Mr. & Mrs. C. W. Walker Mr. & Mrs. Calvin Colson Patricia A. Salllard Mr. & Mrs. Donald L. Huston Mr. & Mrs. Earl Wheatley Mr. & Mrs. John Comba Mr. & Mrs. Dale L. Schmaljohn Idaho Bank & Trust Co. Mr. & Mrs. John D.White Mr. & Mrs. Gene Cooper Mrs. Helen M. Schupe Mr. & Mrs. Wm. E. Irvin Mrs. Phyllis McQueen Wolfe Mr. & Mrs. E. J. Corlett Ms. Dorothy Seely Mr. & Mrs. Charles A. Jaeger Mr. Pete Wyman Mr. & Mrs. Norman F. Dahm Mr. & Mrs. Robert Sell Mr. & Mrs. Brad Janas B. C. Zimmerman DARPioneer Chapter Beth Sellers Mrs. Maxine Gross Johnston Mr. & Mrs. M. E. Zink Ms. Suzanne Davis Mr. & Mrs. Frances N. Sellars Mr. & Mrs. Michael W. Jones Mr. & Mrs. D. C. DeBeaumont J. M. Bettis & Charles Shafer Mr. & Mrs. Gary L. Kaiser Dr. & Mrs. Robert DeNeufille Mr. & Mrs. Earl N. Simpson Dr. & Mrs. Paul W. Kantack Ms. Mariana Allee Devine Mr. & Mrs. Ranlaykha Singh Mrs. Edith Miller Klein Miriam Dilley I� Mr. & Mrs. Milton Small Mr. & Mrs. William J. Kline Mrs. Bene Donahue Mrs. Agnes Forbes Smith H. J. Heinz Company Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Charles J. Doupe Ms. Dorothy Smith Mr. & Mrs. Ronald G. Korthals BSU Contributors Mr. & Mrs. Bill Eddy Mr. & Mrs. Jess S. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Keith Kramis Mr. C. T. Edlefsen & Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Smith Mr. & Mrs. David T. Lambert Mr. Mrs. Jerry Adams Mr. & Mrs. Delbert R. Edwards Mr. Rolland H. Smith L. F. lesser, M.D. W. K. Adams, D.D.S. Elementary School Secretaries Mr. & Mrs. J. B. Spulnik Mr. & Mrs. George C. Lenfest Aileen S. Andrew Foundation Mr. & Mrs. David J. Ferguson Mr. & Mrs. Donald Stephens Mr. Mark Lewis Xi Alpha Alpha Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Mrs. Ruth C. Field Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Stitzel Mr. & Mrs. Ronald L. Lightfoot Alpha Delta Sorority Ms. Betty Joe Fisher Mr. & Mrs. Harry R. Stivers Mr. & Mrs. Mark W. Lilteras Altrusa Club of Boise Mrs. Opal Fisher Mr. & Mrs. Leon R. Street Mr. James A. Little Aerojet Nuclear Company Dr. E. Coston Fredrick Students in Dr. McDonald's Mtn. Home Mr. & Mrs.Walter Loder Albertson's Patricia Fujii Class P-312 Mr. & Mrs. Dominic Manfredo American Bridge Association Georgette M. Gambling Mrs. Rachel Terry Mr. Fred Mares American Federation of Mineralogical Linda Kay Goar Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth V. Thomas Mr. & Mrs. Paul J. Martin Societies Mary Helen Gotsch Terry Tounsend Mr. & Mrs. Robert T. Martin David G. Ashbaugh, M.D. Mrs. Marianne Gray Mr. & Mrs. Earl Tyner Mr. & Mrs. Errol R. Maus David M. Barton, M.D. Ms. Louise N. Green Ms. Sherrill Ulring Ms. Lois N. Merritt D. L. Bell, M.D. Ms. Nancy Gochnour Mr. & Mrs. Bruce Van Curen Mr. & Mrs. Ben Miller Beta Chi Mr. & Mrs. John G. Grant Mrs. H. S. Vernon Ms. Ella M. Miller Mr. Donald J. Binkerd Mr. & Mrs. Rich Grossaint Richard 0. Vycital, M.D. Mr. & Mrs. William T. Minor Marie Blanchard, R.N. Mr. & Mrs. William G. Guernsey Mr. & Mrs. HarryWaller Mr. & Mrs. Wayne Mitchell Boise Cascade Mr. & Mrs. RobertJ. Hanson Mr. & Mrs.W. F. Wallich Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Morgan Boise Choristers Mr. & Mrs. K. D. Hartwell Mr. & Mrs. Robert R. Walston Mrs. Velma V. Morrison Boise Neurological Clinic Ms. Alice H. Hatton Mr. & Mrs. H. Allen Warner Mr. & Mrs. Robert D. Mueller Boise State University Foundation, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Koyn G. Hedrick Mr. H. Westfall Mrs. Violet H. Held Ms. BettyWeston Mrs. J. K. Halferty Francis A. and Elizabeth R.Wiley Mr. & Mrs. Gordon G. Henderson Mr. Hugh E. Wilson Mr. & Mrs. D. L. Hicks Mr. & Mrs. Ronald M. Winans BSU Campaign Begins Mr. & Mrs. Angus Hill · Mr. & Mrs. EarlWinn Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Hill Mr. & Mrs. Bruce Wixon By Dave Lambert Ms. Elizabeth S. Hltt Women of the Moose Mrs. Dorothy 0. Hoshaw Mrs. E. MarianneWorden Mrs. M. Arloine Howard Boise State University will start its Third Annual Fund Campaign in November. Mr. & Mrs. Herbert 0. Hultz While the first mailing is scheduled to begin in November, each yearly campaign Mr. & Mrs. Sidney E. Iverson runs concurrently with the fiscal year of the University. The 1978-19 campaign will Dr. John Jensen once again be directed to alumni, friends, and the Boise business community. Mr. & Mrs. Spencer Joslyn Annual Fund Contributon "Boise State University's most pressing problem is the lack of financial support Mr. & Mrs. W. B. Joy for certain programs," President John Keiser recently said. "We are increasingly dependent on the proceeds of private philanthropy to assist us in advancing our Mr. & Mrs. George M. Judd Mr. & Mrs. Earl F. Aiken programs. The university's future direction and major emphasis will be determined, Ms. Laura Kehne J. A. & Kathryn Albertson Foundation at least in part, by the financial resources made available from the private sector of Mrs. Mariana Ketchen Mr. Thomas H. Allen Mr. & Mrs. E. 0. Kindred Mr. & Mrs. Carl G. Asburg our economy," Keiser said. . Last year's Annual Fund received increased support from alumni and friends, and Mr. & Mrs. Vester Kindred Robert D. Ayers, M.D. donations were received from all parts of Idaho as well as many other parts of the Mr. & Mrs. George F. Kinkaid Mr. & Mrs. C. F. Barnes Dr. William F. Kirtland Mr. David B. Bailor nation. The ranks of those willing to give to Boise State has increased substantially over previous years. (Please note Honor Roll of Contributors) Mrs. John E. Knickerbocker Ms. Linda Beatty This year's Annual Fund will consist of three major mail campaigns coupled with Mrs. Harry S. Kramer Mrs. Fawn L. Benn smaller special Interest mailings. Boise State urges all our friends and alumni to Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Kuntz Mr. & Mrs. Allan R. Benson help us again this year. Those who choose to contribute to the Annual Fund will Mr. & Mrs. David T. Lambert Ms. Claribel P. Benson have an opportunity to restrict gifts for a specific area. or to allow gifts to be used Mr. & Mrs. John R. Lightner Mr. Patrick Bertsch in the area of greatest need. Such unrestricted gifts permit the university officers to Mrs. ForrestW. Lunstrum Boise Cascade Corporation apply the donations where the greatest financial needs exist. Areas needing finan­ Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Maberly ·Boise Kenworth Sales, Inc. cial support at the present include student aid and student loans, library and art Mrs. Joseph P. Maloof Mr. & Mrs. Richard C. Bogle acquisition, school and department support, and campus improvements. All of Ms. Ruth A. Marks Ms. Mary Dean Bruns those areas have more needs than the dollars available, and BSU would be most Mr. & Mrs. Gordon McAUister Mr. & Mrs. Marvin Bryant grateful for your support. Mr. & Mrs. D. C. McCarter Mr. & Mrs. R. T. Bushby This year we hope to see even greater growth in the Annual Fund and we encour­ T.W.McCoy Mr. & Mrs. John J. Canning Mr. & Mrs. Earl R. McGhee Mr. & Mrs. Randy M. Capps age our friends and alumni to take an active part in the private financial support of Mr. & Mrs. Michael K. McMurray Mr. Lynn L. Carlson Boise State University.

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�15

To··UniVersity Fund Development.-

BoiseWomen's Bowling Association Elmore County Chapter March ofDimes Collister Cultivators Loan Fund Physician's Memorial Loan Fund Bogus Basin Recreation Assoc. , Inc. Bank of Idaho George A. Cornforth Memorial Fund Rosa Putnam Memorial Loan Fund Dr. R. E. Bullington National MeritScholarship Corporation Data Processing Management Jeanne G. Stearns Memorial Student Maurice M. Burkholder Mr. & Mrs. C. M. Newhouse Association Loan Fund Business and Professional Women's NorthwestSavings and Loan Esther J. Davis Loan Fund Sears-Roebuck, Boise, loan Fund Foundation JuliaS. OberdorferFoundation Lon Davis Fund John R. Shell -Journalism Student loan Mr. & Mrs. James Carpenter Scholarship Trust Clisby T. Edlefsen Loan Fund Fund ChapterW. P. E. O. Sisterhood Idaho Dept. of Education Jim Edmonds Memorial Fund lloyd Charles Stenger Student loan Chemetron Corporation OregonState Employees Association Janeal Fitzsimmons Memorial Fund Fund Chevrolet Division Pendleton Roundup Lions Club Lucille T. Forter Loan Fund Doris Hoyer Veach Memorial Loan Fund Mr. BillStirling, Manager Ms. June R. Penner Hattie Gesner· Mildred Cecil Fund Ida M. Warner Memorial Fund The Clara Abbott Foundation Pennsylvania Higher Education Otto S. & Adelia Gottenberg Memorial Lylas WorthingtonWasson Memorial Mary 0. Conway Assistance Agency Fund loan Fund DaleD. Cornell, M.D. Mr. JamesW. Perry W. L. Gottenberg Fund Dale E. Watts Memorial loan Fund Frank W. Crowe, M.D. Mr. Earl Pickett, Treasurer FernS. Hart Memorial Fund Lucille Wilkie Loan Fund William F. Crapps, M.D. Potlatch Foundation for tiigher Idaho Peace Officer's Association, Inc. J. D. Wolfe Memorial Loan Fund and DAR Pioneer Chapter Education Loan Fund Stella Wolfe Esther J. Davis Charles L. Robertson, M.D. Intercollegiate Knights Loan Fund Consolidated Loan Fund Mr. Delane King First National Bank lois June Johnson Loan Fund Citizens Loan Fund D. P. M. A. Central Idaho Chapter Mr. & Mrs. Michael Scales D. W. Kennedy Memorial Loan Fund Steven White Loan Fund Mr. & Mrs. DonaldDick LedaS. Schrimsher Nelle Kerr Memorial loan Fund Women of the Moose Loan Fund Dr. Victor H. Duke Mr. KeithSchultz Mary E. King Memorial Loan Fund Fung Loan Fund Mr. & Mrs. DennisDyer Mr. & Mrs. Chat Schwerd Myrtle McClary Memorial Loan Fund Dale Conti on Loan Fund Roy J. Ellsworth, M.D. J. M. Bettis & CharlesShafer Robert McEwan Memorial Loan Fund Bert Perkins loan Fund Filer Kiwanis Club Mr. Gary Brown, President Cennie McFarlane Fellowship Loan Fund Mike Wentworth Loan Fund FirstSecurity Foundation Carol H. Short H. Albert Neal Memorial Fund Steven D. Petterson loan Fund John LynnDriscoll Jr. Scholarship Trust J. R. Simplot Company Estella Aney Neumeister Student Loan Max C. Fleischmann Foundation Dorothy Smith Fund Northern Lights Branch 2S6 Edna JacksonStenger RobertJ. Newell Engineering Memorial �'rank GannettNewspapercarrier Treasure Valley Chapter AS PA Loan Fund Memorial Scholarships Scholarships Treasure Valley Traffic Club Gary O'Connell Memorial Student Aid Robert Frazier, M.D. The Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands Fund RobertS. Gibb- July, 19n Linda A. Frye, R.N. Twin Falls Bank & Trust Company Alice J. Pecora Fiscal Angus McDonald, Jr.-December, 19n Mr. & Mrs. Robert Fulwyler Union Pacific Railroad Company Mr. & Mrs. John Gaige United Methodist Women GannettNewspaper Foundation U.S. Bank of Oregon AssociatedStudent Body Dr. & Mrs. W. L. Venning W. Gnuechtel. M.D. Donald E. Walker, M.D. Grant Process Outlined Gooding HighSchool Doris M. Weaver Gyro Club of Wallace Elva M. Weible By Gerald Reed Mr. & Mrs. HaroldD. Hafterson Mary B. White Mr. & Mrs. Russel Hayes Mr. AI Muccia, Service Manager, Hecla-Bunker Hill White Truck Sales andService Helene Fuld Trust of Omaha, Nebraska Whitefish P. T. A. Boise State University has an internal "sign-off procedure" for grant Helms Foundation, Inc. The Whlttenberger Foundation Rodney H. Herr, M.D. WindbreakerWivers Club applications and proposals. Dr. Earl Fry, Professor of Political Science, Hewlett Packard Women of the Moose commenting on this procedure in his recent booklet entitled Grant Mr. & Mrs. Ted Hietala L.S. Wood Charitable Trust Opportunitiesfor BSU Faculty, remarks that "this process may at times E. Quentin Howard, M.D. be quite tedious and time-consuming" (page 3). Idaho Association of Mexican Americans Student loan Funds Yet, another faculty member who has experienced the Idaho Depart­ ' IBM ment of Health and Welfare's internal sign-off process makes the encour­ Idaho Bank & Trust aging comment that "BSU's internal procedures required prior to grant AssociatedWomen Students Loan Fund Southwest Region Idaho CPA Wives proposal submission are very simple and well-organized by comparison." Association Ballantyne Educational Fund The Idaho Angels, Inc. John BeckwithMemorial Fund Well, let's say "it can be" if a faculty member will work with the BSU Idaho HighSchool Rodeo Association Boise Rotary International Fund Center for Research, Grants and Contracts from the very beginning of Idaho Migrant Council, Inc. Henry M. Bray Memorial Fund the application. Actually, the Center will do much of the extraneous R.C. Bullington Memorial Student Loan Miss Idaho PageantScholarship Fund work for the proposal writer particularly if there is close liaison on the Idaho Public Employees Credit Union Fund R. D. Jenkins, M.D. Campbell Loan Fund project. Jim's Heating and Cooling Preston Capell Fund For example, copies of BSU's Guide for Grant Proposal Preparation Junior Achievement of Southwest Capital Kiwanis Fund and Project Management are available upon request from the Coordi­ Idaho, Inc. Elmer�- Chaffee Memorial Fund nator of Grants and Contracts (telephone 1585/1586). This publication, Grace Lynn Marie Chaffee Fund Laura Kehne among other things. has an excellent article in the back (pp. 16-24) which Mr. & Mrs. Veri Kersey Chatburn Educational Fund Kershner and Mashburn Consulting provides a formatlor both the narrative and budget of a typical proposal. Engineers The Guide also provides an example of a recommended "title page," and Mr. & Mrs. Henry B. Kingsbury BSU's internal"Request for Approval of Grant, Contract or Agreement" Mrs. Edith Miller Klein form. Kiwanis Club of Boise Foundation Kiwanis Club of Orofino But in addition to this BSU Guide for Grant Proposal Preparation, the KTVB, Inc. BSU Center for Research, Grants and Contracts will provide (1) counsel Mr. William C. LaRue on writing the narrative (the proposal writer must, of necessity, be the Laura Moore Cunningham Foundation, Names New "expert" on the content1, (2) suggestions for budget categories and Inc. amounts, (3) needed Federal Title VI, Title IX, Section 504, and Human Mr."& Mrs. Homer H. Lewis Subjects Assurance forms, (4) A-95 review forms (fill them out and Patti lind Trustees Mr. & Mrs. R. L. Lingenfelter submit them for you), (5) personnel to hand carry the proposal for Louisiana Pacific Foundation Eleven new'trustees and one new "authorizing" signatures on the title page and face page (ifrequired). RobertW. Matthies director have been selected to serve on Quite often, and especially when there has been continuous liaison Marshall IslandsDistrict Legislature the Boise State University Foundation, between the proposal writer and Center personnel, the entire internal Ms. Alice K. Mendell Inc. procedure can be completed in less than an hour (that is if appropriate David K. Merrick, M.D. They were announced at the Founda­ Mr. & Mrs. Merlyn Mews tion's annual meeting at BSU Sept. 19. administrators are available to provide initials and signatures.) Florence M. Miles The new director is Tom MacGregor, It might be well to comment, also, on BSU's requirements for in-kind ModernWoodmen of America president of MacGregor Triangle Co. He and cash match (contributions to the cost of the project). If the budget of Dr. & Mrs. Bruce Moody Mr. & Mrs. James Moore is currently president of the Bronco your application or proposal shows a cash or in-kind contribution of Clayton C. Morgan, M.D. Athletic Association. people's time, office space, equipment, mileage, etc., it is required that Morrison Knudsen Company, Inc. MacGregor was selected to fill the the proposal writer include in his/her proposal package letters of confir­ Julliette B. Mustard unexpired term of Thomas Allen, who mation from the contributors stating that they will in fact, as of a Mr. & Mrs. Michael K. McMurray recently resigned from the Idaho First specified date, provide such and such match (and show how the amounts NCO Wive's Club National Bank to take a position as presi­ 1131 of the contributed funds, services or hardware was arrived at). NampaSchool District dent of the Bank of Omaha. Boise Chapter March of Dimes In other words, verbal commitments for financial or in-kind support on New trustees named are Hatch Bar­ if rett, president, Boise Kenworth Sales, grant budgets are seldom, ever, honored by BSU authorizing officials. Inc.; Vernon Brassey, state senator; Another area that requires written confirmation is the one of indirect Scholarship Given Gordon Brookover, president, Brook· costs (overhead charges). Unless a granting agency has a written policy Elizabeth Dempsey, a BSU student in overs, Inc.; Louis Cosho. attorney, relative to allowable indirect costs that it will permit, BSU will apply its elementary and special education from Clemons, Cosho, Humphrey and Samuel­ own HEW approved indirect cost rate to the proposal budget's salaries Caldwell, was recently the recipient of son; and wages category. (BSU's 1978 HEW approved indirect cost rate is $100 from Beta Zeta Chapter of Epsilon Samuel Crossland, executive vice­ 34.4% of salaries and wages.) Also, where another State agency is to be Sigina Alpha. president, Morrison-Knudsen Co.; Ber­ the granting unit, BSU is required to apply an indirect cost rate of 15% & The sorority each year provides a nie Gratton, Bernie Gratton Co.; to total direct costs. On the other hand, ifthe granting agency (Federal scholarship in special education to a BSU Charles Hall, retired vice president and or private foundation) has an established rate it will allow for indirect student who meets the criteria of excel­ general manager of Mountain Bell Tele­ costs, either a copy of this policy or a 1etter attesting to the allowable lence in their program as well as having phone Co.; financial need in meeting educational David Light, executive vice-president, rate must come from the agency and be included in the proposal. be costs. Chandler Corp.; Larry McEntee, vice­ The above-mentioned items, plus many, many more, can facilitated The scholarship was presented to the president, Asphalt Paving and Construc­ by the Center for the grant application or proposal writer. Come in and student by Bonnie Thorne, President of tion Co., and Edward Sullivan, manager, see us- we are anxious to be of help (Room 319-320, School of Business the sorority. Campbell andCo. Insurance. Building, Telephone 385-1571/1585/1586). fiH:IaJs 18

Dig Reveals Ancient ·village

Archaeologists working at the Hatwai Other remains, left from migratory that early migratory Indians also fished site in northern Idaho have uncovered Indians, date back as far as 11,000 years at the site. remains of what could be the North· ago. The dig was co-directed by James west's oldest Indian village. Artifacts from that era include 1,500 Green of Washington State University. Located on the banks of the Clear­ stone flakes and tools that were depos­ It was funded by the Idaho Department 6 water River about miles upstream ited in a now-buried bank of the Clear­ of Transportation, which is expanding from Lewiston, the village has been water River. the highway over the site. dated between 3100 and 4100 B.C., Ames thinks those prehistoric people according to Ken Ames, the Boise State used the Hatwai beach as a place to Crews of up to 25 students spent two archaeologist who directed the dig. make stone tools. There is also evidence summers digging at the Hatwai site. The discovery led to national coverage on the CBS Morning News last August. Ten houses were identified in the excavation, and another 20-30 remain in the unexcavated portions of the site, Ames says. The houses were built by digging a square or round pit about 20 feet across and three feet deep. A roof was then put across the excavation. Ames says this type of house was used over much of North America during the last 3,000 years.

The village opens up a new chapter in Northwest archaeology because it proves that human populations in ·central Idaho were much larger than previously believed, Ames adds.

Researchers recovered 6,500 tools, 30,000 bone pieces and 55,000 stone flakes. Archaeologists will be analyzing ARCHAEOLOGISTS working for two the material over the next four years to summers In the above excavations un­ put together a picture of village life. covered the oldest Indian village in the But archaeologists found more than area. Students In the top picture are the village during their digging at working In a house over 3,000 years Hatwai. old.

workshop on effective classroom rela­ the Snake River Personnel and Guidance taries August 16. In Education tionships for the Bruneau-Grandview AssociationSept. 17 meeting in Nampa, Dr. E. Coeton Frederiek conducted Schooldistrict at their fall in-service ses­ and has also been speaking to health the workshop "Language Arts Spec­ sion at Rimrock High School, Bruneau. classesat East Junior High, Boise. In Foreign Language trum-Intermediate and Junior High" Dr. Schmaljohn has been appointed a October 5-6 at Meridian as part of the member of the Commission for Humanis­ Dr. Max Callao is the co-author of Several BSU foreign language teach­ International Reading Association fall tic Teacher Education established by the "Psychology in Action: National Asian ers helped organize the annual Idaho conference. Participants included Lois Association for Humanistic Education American Psychology Conference" pub­ Association on the Teaching of Language Henoao, E1Ulice WaUaee, Loi• Emereon, and Development. lished in the July issue of American and Culture's meeting held earlier this Basin. Richard Leahy and CoDD.ieLee. Psychologist. month at Bogus Dr. Frederick attended the World Loi• Hermaa conducted a session on Penny Schoonover directed public Congress on Reading in Hamburg, study skills for the August tutor training Dr. Aaae Marie Neleon attended a relations, John Robertson arranged Germany in early August, where he was workshop sponsored by BSU Student clinical hypnosis workshop in Seattle entertainment, Jerry Joseand Luia Val· chairman of a discussion session on non­ Advisory and Special Services at the during August. In September, she verde directed the Spanish section and formal literacy training involving teach­ Sawtooth Camp north of Fairfield, in attended a seminar on legal education in George Jocumsis chairman of the articu­ ers and linguists from many countries. August. Portland. lation committee. While in Europe, he toured Germany Keynote speaker for the meeting was and Denmark, and also attended an Dr. EdWalker was recently electedto Darlene PliDe administered reading WSU foreign language chairman Jean invitational seminar of educational edit­ the presidency of the Idaho Council for diagnostic tests for 36 employees of Ore­ Powell-Seigneuret. ors in Hamburg. the SocialStudies. Ida at their plantin Burley, Sept. 5-6. In History Dr. Lamont S. LyOIUI has been certi­ Dr. Robert Friedli has published test Mary Cozine attended the annual fied by the Northwest Regional Educa­ text, "The Basics of Instruction," in meeting and conference of the National Rolaado Boaaehea attended the NEH tional Laboratory as a broker in cooperation with the Emergency Medi­ Associationof Educational Secretaries in National Review Panel meeting Oct. 5-7 experience-based career education. The cal Services Bureau, Idaho Department Dearborn, Michigan, in July. She has in Washington, D.C. He also delivered a training was offered by the Idaho State of Healthand Welfare. been national in-service development lecture at Georgetown University's Departmentof Education. chairman for 1977-78. She alsoconducted Latin American studies program on the Dr. Dave Torbet was the guest a workshop on the effective educational Cuban Revolution and the United Dr. Pltyllia Sduaaljolua conducted a speaker on "Personal and Paranoid" for office for 31 elementary school secre- States. ,.., GRlcus17

Foreign· Students Enjoy·Boise� Easy ·Pace

"To do something Ddt only for the Other new officers of the international "Cultural adjustment, academic prep­ when he recommended BSU," Balla foreign students, but for the university club are vice president Edward Deleon, aration and language problems are remembers, "but I actually thought as well," is the hope of Razmik RanJbar, Guerrero, Saipan, Mariana Islands; always there," he says. "For this reason, Boise State was one of the United States Teheran, Iran, who was recently elected treasurer, Barbara Ernul, Pacific Trust the international union serves them in then." president of the BSU International Territories; secretary, John Romero, giving them a social organization where Balla, too, talks of some of the prob­ Student Union. Texas, and public relations officer, Linus they can feel comfortable and talk to lems Stafford reports students from The organization did "something for Amanaha, Nigeria. others with the same problems." other lands have in dealing with a new 140 the university" last year by giving an There are about foreign students culture. Alumni internatio,nal ,dinner, an enormously on campus, including immigrants as well From Liberia "It was very difficult to make com­ successful event at which dishes from as those here temporarily for their uni­ One of those who have been involved panions," he says. many countries were served and enter· versity studies, according to Steve Spaf­ with the club's activities is Johnny Balla, tainment included a potpourri of multi· ford, foreign student admissions officer Monrovia, Liberia, a BSU graduate this The small size of Boise was a surprise national talents and native music. Plans and advisor. summer with a B.A. degree in account­ to him. Taken to downtown Boise by are to hold the gourmet event again this "They all have the same problems any ing. Balla is now working in the financial McDowell after arriving here, he didn't year. of us might expect in a strange land," planning division of Idaho First National realize he had been to the city center. Ranjbar, of Armenian descent, came Spafford says. "Their financial problems Bank, and has enrolled in a master's pro­ "People from Africa," he says, "think of to BSU, choosing "a quiet, relaxing are sometimes magnified by political tur­ gram with the School of Business here. the U.S. in terms of New York or Cali­ place" in contrast to the teeming moil around the world." Then, Spafford Balla came to BSU after meeting fornia." Teheran population of 4-5 million. He is a says, "they never know how their former BSU reference librarian Robert "Idaho is very quiet," he says. "I've graduate of the Judicial and Administra­ families are or whether money can get McDowell in Spain. taken lots of pictures, as my folks don't tive Affairs College in Teheran. out of their homelands to them." "I was confident of Mr. McDowell have any idea what things are like here." Program Honors Percussionists The Boise State University Music While attending the convention, the Department percussion ensemble will ensemble will attend workshops with perform at the third annual Percussive other top percussion performers includ­ Arts Society international convention at ing Ed Shaughnessy and his big band; Arizona State University, Tempe, Oct. James Blades, English percussion his­ 26-30. torian; Vic Firth, Boston Symphony; Charles Owen, formerly with the Phila­ The group, one of only three chosen by delphia Orchestra; Robert Schietroma, audition for the honor, is directed by Dr. North Texas State University; the John Baldwin, BSU associate professor Harry Partch Ensemble, and Tintinna­ of music. bulum, a professional Los Angeles quartet. The 14 member ensemble will perform Percussion ensemble members are: in a special session under the direction of Mike Barry, Gary Bassett, Ronda Booth, Armand Russell, University of Hawaii, Tad Doyle, Shari Rhoads-Tompkins, in "Interflow,"a composition written by Wendy Salinas, Doug Spangler, and him especially for them. The work Molly Wisdom, all Boise; Dave Booth, includes bass marimba and two octave Weiser; Debbie Coiner and Mona set of crotales or antique cymbals, Elledge, both Twin Falls; Kevin Paus­ instruments uncommon to percussion tian, Meridian; Neil Vickrey, Nampa, l' ensembles. and Alan Layh,Newhall, Calif. Visitors Boost Cuhural ·.Scene

Basso Benjamin Matthews Brass historian Gerald Endsley National Performing Arts Theatre Flamenco Dancers

which also gave him an award for nine in the Bilingual/Multicultural Teacher Personnel and Guidance Journal by the In Biology years' serviceas secretary-treasurer. Training program in Caldwell. She is board of directors of the American Per­ teaching elementary physical education sonnel and Guidance Association in Dr. Richard McCloskey has been Bill Jackson, department of Account­ methods to 30 Mexican-American stu­ August. appointed coordinator of the Governor's ing and Data Processing, presented a dents. This summer she attended the Wildlife Education Task Force. McClos­ paper entitled "Information Sciences at International Conference on Dance for key also participated in an August BSU" to the Association for Systems In Vo-Tech Children at the University of Alberta in Department of Agriculture workshop in Management on September 14 in Boise. Edmonton, Alberta Canada. Wayne Rodgers, coordinator of adult Montana, which focused on the effects of Coordinating a recent conference on programs, and Vocational-Technical logging and mining practices in the Flat­ Mike Young coached at the U.S. Teaching Economics in U.S. history Schoolcounselor, Chick Quinow1ldparti­ head National forest, Glacier National Junior World School Boy courses for Treasure Valley social cipated recently in a U.S. Navy spon­ Park, and adjacent private lands. Team in August. The U.S. team won the studies teachers was Dr. Gerald Draay­ sored training conference at San Diego championships held at Albuquerque, er, executive director for the Idaho naval facilities. For a first-hand look at New Mexico, receiving 22 out of 26 gold In Business Council on Economic Education. Speak­ recruit training, they toured the air ing at the conference were Dr. DeDDia medals. Dr. Roger Roderick, department station Mirama, training schools, the Flynn and Dr.Robert C. Sima. chairperson for Management and Fi­ In Psychology recruit training command, a repair ten­ nance, presented a paper at the annual Dr. DoDald B. Billings and Alex der, and the U.S. ships Prairie and Kitty Dr. WyllaBarme•aconducteda work­ meeting of the Academy of Management McKinnon presented papers this sum­ Hawk. shop in assertiveness training for the in August. mer at the seminar "Impact: Credit Crunch," to about 300 real estate repre· national convention of Extension Agents t1J!J Dr. David Nix, associate professor of 17 sentatives. The seminar was sponsored August in Boise. She was also key­ Management, has successfully completed Dr. Wallaee Pond, Management and by the Program for Real Estate Educa­ note speaker on professional women and the Certified Management Accounting Finance, Dr. Wylla Barmen, Psychol­ · tion and Development (PREED). competition for the Northwest Associa­ examination. Carol tion of Women in Banking in Sun Valley ogy, and Dr. Rinnert, English, Dr. Tom Stitzel, Dean of the School of last May. ted seminar workshops for Federally In Physical Education 13-15 Business, was recently named director Dr. Harry Steger was appointed to Employed Women, Inc. October at the Rodeway Inn, Boise. of the Western Finance Association, Pbym• Bowman is currently teaching the board of consulting editors of the CWlaJS18

Consortium Memorializes Charles David Wright Noted American poet William Stafford Wright; who had originated the W ednes­ the farm, "wherever we looked, the land will appear in Nov. 1-2 programs of the day night poetry reading series at the would hold us up." Boise Readings Consortium series as Boise Gallery, and had coordinated Stafford has published his poetry in part.of a year-long memorial to Dr. efforts of the consortiumto bring Ameri­ Atlantic, Nation, Harpers, The New Charles David Wright, poet and Boise can poets to Boise under a grant from Yorker, Northwest Review and Yale State professor of English. the National Endowment for the Arts. Review. He received his B.A. and M.A. Stafford, professor of literature at degrees from the University of Kansas, Lewis and Clark College, Portland, will This year's series is sponsored by the and his Ph.D. from the University of read at the Boise Gallery of Art Nov. 1, Associated Student Body of BSU, the Iowa. He has been a traveling lecturer and in the BSU Student Union Boisean Boise Public Schools, Boise Gallery of on in India and the Lounge Nov. 2. Both readings will begin Art, and The Book Shop. Middle East, at 8 p.m. His works include four collections of Earlier in October, poet Richard Both Hugo and Stafford appeared in a poetry published by Harper and Row: Hugo, now editor of the Yale Series of 1975 readings and discussion series pro­ duced by KAID-TV and the BSU Trav el£ng Through the Dark, TheRes­ Younger Poets, read from his works in Department of English. In that pro­ cued Year, Allegiances, and Someday; the first program of the series. gram, Hugo read from his poems of the Maybe. . This year he has published the The poets were scheduled as part of small American town, which he said, prose volume Writing of the Australian the readings consortium tribute to Dr. "endures like ivy," while Stafford said of Craw� views on the writer's vocation. New York Troupe Brin_gs Tborpe Drama

Two performances of "Jim Thorpe, All Institute sponsored by the BSU Depart­ American" will be produced at the Boise ment of History and Dama Soghop Club. State University Special Events Center An afternoonperformance at 1:30p.m. Oct. 25 by the New York City Perform­ willbe reserved for high school students ing Arts Repertory Theatre. with tickets sot. The evening production The musical drama about the famous at 7:30p.m. is open to the general public Indian athlete is brought to Boise as part for $2 per ticket. For reservations, order of the Eighth Annual Indian American from the Boise State University History Department, 1910 University Drive, Boise, ID 83725. Enclose a stamped self­ addressed envelope. Killmaster Recieves Thorpe, Sac (Sauk) and Fox Indian, was a football, and track star and winner of two gold medals in the Governor's Award 1912 Olympics. Once called the greatest athlete in the world, his life was filled For Art Excellence with the drama of a sudden rise to fame and a tragic fall. Boise State University artist John Saul Levitt, author of the drama, has Killmaster was given the prestigious woven elements of the Indian heritage governor's award for excellence in the into the story of Thorpe's life, creating arts during the Governor's .Conference an exciting theatre piece with the use of on the Arts held Oct. 7. Indian ritual, sports events, music, Killmaster is best known for his large dance and drama. porcelain enamel works that are fea­ tured at the entrance to the Boise NEW YORK CITY PERFORMING ARTS Repertory Theatre troupe performs in Gallery of Art, the BSU Special Events "Jim Thorpe, All-American" musical drama about the famous Indian athlete Center and the old penitentiary site at Ricks Indian Expert Oct. 25 at 7:30 p.m. in the BSU Speccenter. The production is part of the the end of Warm Springs Avenue. Eighth Annual Indian American Institute on campus Ckt.25-26. Killmaster has also won awards for his work in photography, illustration, water Speaks On Conflic- coloring, drawing, painting and sculp­ turing. Dr. David Crowder, Ricks College, �old-drill' Solicits Manuscripts will speak on "Indian-White Conflict in He will represent Idaho in the Southern Idaho: Causes and Effects Oc­ If you write poems, essays, plays, or to the English Department, Liberal Arts Western State Biennial Invitation Ex­ tober 26 at 10:40 a.m. in the Senate short stories, and would like to see them Building, room228. hibition, a two-year show that will be Chambers of the Boise State University published in the national award-winning Authors whose work is selected for displayed in Denver, San Francisco and Student Union Building. The public is BSU literary magazine, the cold-d� publication will be notified by mail by Washington, D.C. invited free of charge to the speech, you have until December 1 to submit December 15th. Material not selected He alsois the first Idahoan asked to do which is part of the activities of the work for the forthcoming issue. for publication will not be returned a major art piece for the state building Eighth Annual Indian American Insti­ Typed or handwritten manuscripts unless the author has attached a program sponsored by the Washington tute sponsored by the BSU Department should have the author's name and stamped, self-addressed return envelope State Arts Commission. of History ami Dama Soghop Club. address on them and should be turned in with the manuscript.

Dr. Margaret M. Peek will read a in the creation of fire prevention com­ Board of Directors of NOA, and is a In English paper entitled ''Theme in the Peddler's mercials which featur� his original member of the curriculum committee Prophecy" at the annual meeting of the puppet character, "Inspector Detector." responsible for establishing guidelines Dr. Tom Brooks spent six weeks at Rocky Mountain Conference on British for college and university opera pro­ Reed College in Portland, where he par­ Studies to be held at Arizona State Uni­ Dr. William E. ShankweDer recently grams. ticipated in an NEH Summer Institute versity, Tempe, Arizona, Oct. 20-21. served on a committee to evaluate Madeleine Bsu, associate music pro­ on "The General Crisis in the Seven­ humanities and fine arts programs at fessor, was guest artist for the 1978 teenth Century." Dr. Jan Widmayer spent eight weeks Sheldon Jackson College, Sitka, Alaska. Idaho Music Festival in July. She per­ Other participants represented de­ this summer studying "British Culture in formed a full solo recital and a Beetho­ partments in the humanities and social the Eighteenth Century" at the Univer­ Frank Heise and Stephen Buss pro­ ven concerto with orchestra. During sciences fromall over the country. sity of California, Berkeley campus. vided the setting, lighting and costuming August, she studied at the Bibliotheque The institute focused on the political, Funded by the National Endowment for the Theatre Arts production of "The Nationale in Paris, France. literary and artistic changes in Europe for the Humanities, the interdisciplinary BoyFriend." ' Will Elliott was conductor of the 11th � providing a �model for interdiscip­ seminar was conducted by Berkeley his­ annual Flint Hills Choral Festival held linary studies in the humanities. torian Sheldon Rothblatt and included In addition to directing "The Boy Oct. 13 at Kansas State University. The eleven other participants from English, Friend" Dr. Charles E. Lauterbach festival featured quartets and other Dr. Niki MeCurry attended an eight history, and music. helped provide talent for the Idaho His­ singers fromKansas high schools. week NEH Seminar, "Rhetoric and Col­ torical Museum's recent program, ''The lege Writing," at the University of Museum Comes to Life." Nevada-Reno as an NEH fellow. Dr. In Theatre Arts In Art McCurry also delivered two papers at Dr. Robert E. Eriuoa has been A one-man shop of Dr. Loais Peck's the Pacific Northwest Library Associa­ elected chairman of the executive board In Music paintings will run through Oct. 31 at the tion Cqnference iJi Anchorage, Alaska, of the Idaho Alliance for Arts Education. Northview Gallery on the Portland Com­ in August. William Taylor, professor music and munity College campus in Portland, Oregon. Peck also has had a watercolor Ropr Bedard produced and directed director of the opera theater and sum­ Dr. Belea Lojek participated in an "The Physician in Spite of Himself' for mer music theater, attended the reproduced in the September issue of NEH history seminar at the University the Governor's Conference on the Arts, National Opera Association (NOA) con­ Ford 1\mes. His oil paintings are now on of North Carolinaon "The South as Myth Oct. 7. He is collaborating with the Idaho vention in Tucson, Arizona, Oct. 11-14. exhibit at the Caldwell Public Library andSymbol." Conference of Fire Prevention Officials Taylor is a member of the National through Oct. 27.

\ New Faculty

Thirty faculty members have been hired by Boise State University as replacements for previous members of the staff. Among the new faces are: Kenneth Bahn, marketing & Mid­ management, M.S. degree California State-Long Beach; Ronald Baldner, vo­ tech, College of Southern Idaho; Bruce Broswich, radiologic technology, B.S. degree MidwesternState University; Corwin Lee Brown, vo-tech food ser­ vice, Boise State University; Cynthia Brownsmith, psychology, Ph.D. degree, Indiana University; Stephen Buss, the­ atre arts, A.B.D. degree, Washington State University; SheBa Charlson, nurs­ ing, M.Ed. degree, Idaho State Univer­ sity; Furley Chandler, vo-tech, University of Southern California; Garvin Chastain, psychology, Ph.D. degree, University of Texas; Billie Don Cox, accounting, M.B.A. degree, Baylor; Dennis Flynn, economics, Ph.D. degree, University of Utah; Richard Fegan, management & Fi­ nance, M.B.A. degree, University of Virginia; James Felton, vo-tech, Linn­ Benton Community College; Kendra Falen, women's athletics, B.A. degree, Boise State; Roy Fox, English, Ph.D. degree, University of Missouri; Kath­ leenFrancis, nursing, M.S. degree, Uni­ versity of California-San Francibco; Felix Heap, art, Ph.D. degree, Uni­ versity of Minnesota; William Be.. , teacher education, Ph.D. degree, Uni­ versity of Iowa; Carol Ladwig, women's athletics, M.S. degree, Western Illinois University; Suzanne McCorkle, com­ OCTOBER DRAMA EVENTS spotlighted two eras with the Theatre Arts munication, Ph.D. degree, University of Department productions of "The Boy Friend," jazz age musical comedy, left, and "Endgame," by Samuel Beckett, pioneer in theatre of the absurd. Colorado; Bruce Munk, radiologic tech­ nology, B.S. degree, Idaho State Uni­ versity;

1 Gordoa Pirroac, accounting, D.P.A. deSTee, Arizona State University; Carol 'Rinnert, English, Ph.D. SUNY at Buf­ KAID Shares Public Microwave falo; James Sawaden, geology & geo­ physics, M.S. degree, University of KAID television moved Boise, and one way transmission from Georgia; Gerald Setiroeder, music, a step closer August, KAID began receiving satellite to her companion stations Moscow and Boise to Pocatello. D.M.A. degree, University of Colorado; in the state signals direct from Washington, D.C., through a new microwave system that Previously the three stations have Carol Seddon, allied health, M.S. rather than relying on "long lines" to started this month. shared programs, most notably the degree, Oregon State University; Eliza­ transmit programsacross the country. The new $500,000 legislative report produced by KAID. beth Sims, liaison, parent facilitator system will link public broadcasting stations But those were done through telephone project, B.A. degree, Whitman College; in Moscow, Boise and Pocatello, hook-ups. The new microwave system C. David Stout, social work, M.S.W. thus bringing the diverse populations means more live broadcasts Apply Early degree, West Virginia University; of the state closer can be together for cultural, shared at lower costs in the long run. Cheryl Thomason, art, M.A. degree, educational, politi­ Students interested ln applying for cal and other programming. The most recent example was the Boise State University; Erie Yeuen, BSU credit for studiesabroad in Londoa, Symms-Truby congressional debates biology, Ph.D. degree, University of The new system now allows for two­ Colope and Avipon during winter and that originated in Moscow and were Arizona. way transmission between Moscow and spring terms should submit applications beamed live to Boise. by November 1 and February 1, "the all The new system is now being used earlier the better," according to Dr. day to send educational programs from Penny Schoonover, coordinator. For fur­ Boise to the other two stations. ther information, contact her in LA 212, Indian Cuhure Pictured In another new development in 385-3508. What began as a master's thesis in education has blossomed into a full-fledged book for Boise State University graduate Helen Grainger Wilson. Wilson, a second grade teacher at McKinley Chatterton Writes Critical Study School in Boise, says the book is designed to help A book written by English professor elementary students create a "picture of ideas and Wayne Chatterton has just been re­ feelings" about Indian peoples and their cultures. leased as part of the Twayne's United The book was approved for use by the State States' Authors series. Board of Education last summer, and some orders The 191-page bookis a critical-analyti­ have already been placed, she says. cal study of the life and writing of Alex­ Picturing Indian Cultures is divided into four ander Woollcott. "steps" or chapters where students "picture" the W oollcott revolutionized the field of land, Indians using the land, Indian culture and dramatic criticism in the 1920's with his Indians in changing times. work on the New York Times. His two Several illustrations, mostly of southern Idaho books of essays, "While Rome Bums" petroglyphs, are laced into the text. They were (1934), and "Long, Long Ago" (1943), done by the author, who also has extensive art reached the best-seller lists and gave training. Other drawings were done by Cynthia him a placeamong the important writers Carr Hardyman. of his time. llO The book places heavy emphasis on map-making Woollcott became America's first and other "hands-on" activities. great radio personality through his "Town Crier" series that ran from 1930- Wilson, who received her master's in education 42. He also was a leader in the "Algon­ in 1976, thinks the book is the first of its kind ever quin Wits" group that helped establish published. In researching the topic she contacted a the "New Yorker." dozen states with large Indian populations, but In addition, Woollcott w.rote news­ found very little material written for elementary - paper columns, acted and lectured students. Wayne Chatterton throughout the world. But her interest in Indian culture also has a per­ sonal side. Her husband Monte, a BSU geology pro­ The book is the second that Chatter­ of the westward movement in America. fessor, was raised in an Indian village in Alaska, ton has written for the Twayne Series. Chatterton originated the Western ago and the couple has an adopted Shoshoni-Bannock Three years he co-authored a book Writers Series of pamphlets at Boise on Chicago writer Nelson Algren. Chat­ son named Tima. State. His work on the frontier and She was assisted in the book by her master's terton has alsowritten a bookon Irvin S. regional writing of Idaho author V ardis thesis committee of Clyde Martin, Pat Ourada, and Cobb that is now being edited by pub­ Fisher was the first booklet in that lishers in Boston. Clara Burtch. series. He wrote a critical commentary on The book wasprinted by Comet Printers in Boise Chatterton is listed in editions of Con­ and is being distributed by the author and Caxton's Nathanael West's "Day of the Locust" te mporary Author•, the Directory of • in in Caldwell. Cost is $10.50. for Monarch Notes and is currently at American Scholars and Who's Who work on a two volume study of the novel th.e West. On Faii .... News· & Nostalgia

21 4 12 Saturday. October Thursday, October 26 Saturday, November Sunday, November 4 Faculty Art Exhibit continues through lecture, "Indian-White Conflict in Southern Alpha Chi Omega Pancake Feed and Piano Recital, Elizabeth Zojac, p.m., October, University Gallery Idaho," Dr. David Crowder, 10:40 a.m., Faculty-Alumni Breakfast, 7:30-10 a.m., Music Auditorium Theatre Arts Production "Endgame," 8:30 Senate Chambers, SUB BSU Snack Bar p.m., Subal Theatre Tail Gate Party sponsored by BAA, 11 a.m., Wednesday. November 15 southeast corner of Bronco Stadium Pop Film, "Eight and a Half," 8 p.m., SUB Cross Country, BSU Invitational, 11:00 a.m. Friday. October 27 Football, BSU vs. Weber State, 7:30 p.m., Idaho Sociological Association, 1 p.m., Nez Parking lot Ballroom Bronco Stadium Perce Room, through Oct. 28 Homecoming Football Game, BSU vs. U of 16 School of Vo- Tech Education Annual I, 1 :30 p.m., Bronco Stadium Thursday. November "Counselor Day," 9 a.m., Vocational Bldg. lecture, "Geothermal Energy and the law," Sunday, November 5 Anthony Bohner, 8 p.m., Nez Perce Room Orchestra Concert, 8:15 p.m., SUB Ball­ Saturday, October 28 17 Slide show, Colorado roCk climber, Pat room Friday, November Ament, 8 p.m., Boisean lounge, SUB Faculty Artist Series, 8:15p.m., SPEC

Sunday, November 19 Sunday, October 29 Brass Ensemble and Keyboard Percussion � Homecoming Week Begins Ensemble, 8:15p.m., SPEC

Monday,October 30 21 Burning of the 'B' on Tablerock, 7:15 p.m. Tuesday. November Jazz Ensemble,8:15p.m., SPEC (or dusk) Pitcher-n-Peanuts Social Hour at Casey's Beer Depot, 610Vista Avenue, 9 p.m. Concert, Jack Otterman And The Not Yet Famous Band, 8-10 p.m., SPEC

• Tuesday, October 31 TKE's Toilet Bowl and Powder Puff Derby, 6:30p.m., Bronco Stadium Pop Film, "Silver Streak," 10 p.m., SUB Ballroom

Sunday,October22 Meistersingers and Percussion Ensemble, 8:15p.m., SPEC

Tuesday, October 24 Field Hockey, BSU vs. Oregon State Col­ lege, 4 p.m., at BSU

Wednesday. October 25 Halloween Film Festival, "King Kong" and "The Fearless Vampire Killers," SUB Bhll­ room,Sp.m. Lecture, "Stress Management and Inter­ national Diplomacy," Dr. Alfred Le Se�ne Jenkins, 8 p.m., Science 106 Eighth Annual Indian American Institute, through Oct. 26 "Jim Thorpe, All American," Performing ... Arts Repertory Theatre, 7:30 p.m., SPEC Volleyball, BSU vs. CSI, 7 p.m., at BSU

Thursday, November 9 Wednesday, November 22 Lecture, "Give Me Your Word," Eunice Pop Film, "Twelve O'Clock High," 8 p.m., Wallace, 8 p.m., Nez Perce Room SUB Ballroom

23 • Friday, November 10 Thursday, November Thursday. November 2 26 Or. Albert Ellis, Emotion111 Adjustment, 9 Thanksgiving Holiday through November Boise Readings Consortium, William Staf­ a.m.-6 p.m., SUB Ballroom ford, 8 p.m., SUB Boisean lounge Visiting Artists Recital, 8:15 p.m., Music The Great American Talent Show, 8 p.m., Auditorium SUB Ballroom

Friday, November 3 Homecoming Dance, 8 p.m., Rodeway Inn