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

1-15-1982 Montana Kaimin, January 15, 1982 Associated Students of the University of Montana

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

Recommended Citation Associated Students of the University of Montana, "Montana Kaimin, January 15, 1982" (1982). Montana Kaimin, 1898-present. 7340. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper/7340

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Associated Students of the University of Montana (ASUM) at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Montana Kaimin, 1898-present by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ■ M o n t a n a k a i m i i i Friday, January 15,1982 Missoula, Mont. Vol. 84, No. 48

Acting dean named for education school

By Bill Miller of winter quarter. K aim in Reporter A committee is being formed to find someone to be permanent John Hunt, a faculty member dean of the school. This person at the University of Montana will take office July 1. School of Education since 1966, UM Academic Vice President will be recommended by UM Donald Habbe, said that he and President Neil Bucklew to serve Bucklew selected Hunt out of a as acting Dean of the School of number of education school Education for spring quarter. faculty members recommended to Hunt, who will need the ap­ them by the School of Education proval of the Montana Board of advisory committee. He added MEMBERS OF THE UNIVERSITY-COMMUNITY chess club, (from left) Brian Hattell, Bill Regents at its March meeting, that Hunt had a lot of support in McBroom, Ted Ahern and Tim Hovet, square off against each other in a battle of strategy. will be replacing Albert Yee who the school of education. The club meets every Thursday. (Staff photo by Perry Backus.) resigned as dean effective the end Hunt said he was pleased and honored to, be asked to serve as acting dean. “I look forward to having a close relationship with Leisure Services director resigns Dean Yee and the School of Education faculty,” he said. “I By Sam Richards and he starts his new position stead he tried to make university Ray Chapman, director of the think it will be a positive ex­ K aim in Reporter Feb. 2. activities attractive to the whole University Center Administra­ perience for all concerned.” Ball accepted the new job, he community. tion, said that Ball’s duties will be Hunt, who is a former division In what he described as an said, because he wants his family Ball has enjoyed all aspects of handled by members of B|all’s coordinator for the School of “upward move,” Director of Un-. to be nearer to relatives in the working at UM, he said. staff and by himself until Leisure Education’s division of Ad­ iversity of Montana Leisure Ser­ Chicago area, and because the “It’s been a good relationship, Service’s new budget is worked ministration, curriculum and vices Jim Ball resigned his posi­ new position will let him “get both professionally and with the out and until Chapman can supervision, has a doctor of tion recently to accept the post of back into total planning .and students,” Ball said. discuss a replacement for Ball education degree from Colorado director of the St. Charles, 111. development” of his projects — He said he is excited about his with other directors working State College, Greeley. He has park district. mainly designing and overseeing new job. under Leisure Services’ authori­ written many articles for construction of athletic facilities. “I’m fortunate to have a job I ty. professional journals and is the As director of Leisure Services, love,” Ball said. “It’s not work — Chapman said this will take co-author of the book, “Rx for Ball designed most new plans for it’s a total commitment.” three months at the most. Team Teaching.” recreational sites, including ball fields and running tracks, but engineers at the Physical Plant Ransomed Wednesday develop and build the facilities. ... Ball came to UM from the Chicago area in 1976 as Director of Campus Recreation. In 1979, Bertha will attend ball Campus Recreation became Leisure Services, encompassing By Renata Birkenbuel potential moosenappers, thieves failed to show, irate campus art galleries, program­ K aim in Reporter they would take Bertha foresters picked up their ming and performing arts. In earlier than usual. ransom and headed back to addition it also dealt with outdoor Bertha is back. The “ We do respect the Foresters’ Ball head­ recreation and field house ac­ moosehead mascot of the (foresters’) tradition,” he quarters — the Men’s Gym. tivities. Ball says the change Forestry School has been said, but they feared being Several phone calls were resulted in a more coordinated beat to the moose by exchanged and finally two JIM BALL returned, but not without a program and was one of the most ransom. Bertha’s thieves, waiting. informants met with Mack important changes he worked for who refused to be identified, Then Wednesday night, and led her to the Universi­ Ball was offered the St. Charles during his stay at UM. traded the stuffed head for a the foresters received a ty of Montana Golf Course, post Jan. 5 and submitted his Ball said he tried not to case of Moosehead beer ransom note, demaning where Bertha was un­ resignation the next day. His last separate community programs from the Forestry Club. four tickets to the Ball and a derneath a pine tree, day of work at UM will be Jan. 29, from university programs. In­ Traditionally, Bertha is case of Moosehead beer. wrapped in a black plastic stolen during Foresters’ Directions for a dropoff bag. Week but this year she was location were given and a “They (the thieves) were Search continues removed seven months ear­ photo of the mascot was glad to get rid of her,” Mack ly. Last June, she dis­ enclosed. The note was said. appeared from Forestry signed, “Bertha’s Buddies.” Because of the theft of 50 for crash victims Room 206 where she is used Club members followed ball tickets, the for inspiration and during the moosenappers’ direc­ moosenappers dropped tions and dropped off the Compiled from AP reports A helicopter lifted them out. initiation rites for the club, ransom but when the Cont on p. 6 It may take three days to in graduation ceremonies. Divers in thermal suits complete the recovery efforts, “It wasn’t any part of chopped through thick ice on the police said. tradition, taking her -that Potomac River yesterday in the A paramedic and the pilot of a early,” said Sandy Mack, search for scores of bodies en­ rescue helicopter described how a Forestry Club president. tombed in the fuselage of the Air passenger of the downed aircraft “As far as the club is con­ Florida jetliner that crashed in gave up his life to help save five cerned, it’s a theft if she is Washington, D.C. Wednesday fellow passengers. taken so long before the afternoon. The man refused to be rescued. ball.” Seventy-four of the 79 people on Instead, he passed the rope which Because the thieves, who the plane were killed in the crash was dangling from the helicopter are known only to be from of the Florida-bound plane and to nearby fellow passengers. Married Student Housing, most sank with the plane while After towing the five to land, the broke tradition, the still strapped in their seats. Police helicopter returned, but the man Forestry Club was begin­ said that three others were killed had disappeared and is presumed ning to worry about her and when the plane hit cars on a dead. was seriously considering bridge laden with rush-hour traf­ “In a mass casualty, you’ll find pressing charges for the fic. The impact sheared the tops people like him, but I’ve never theft. off some of the cars. seen one with that commitment,” One of the accomplices, As heavy equipment was said Gene Windsor, a paramedic who refused to be identified, brought in to hoist the aluminum aboard the helicopter. said that Bertha “is taken fuselage from beneath the ice, the The cause of the accident has earlier and earlier every bodies of two victims — an infant not been officially determined. year,” and they decided that um Jenson and an adult — were spotted in to get a jump on other the river frozen between ice floes. Cont on p. 6 opinions Vague drug law letters is unconstitutional It seems to be a standard for legislatures, whether Repressiveness withdrawn from public domain, course of a four-year education they be state or federal bodies, to encroach on the lives in Black Hills this request was made under the (anybody need $24 to help cover of private citizens. Federal Land Policy and the cost of a lift-ticket?). It began last spring in Montana with the passage of Editor: In supporting the people Management Act of 1976. This Even more odious than the de the anti-drug paraphernalia act. The law rules illegal of Poland in their quest for was denied as well as a special facto theft of $2 from every the sale of anything that assists in drug use, including freedom, we offer them our use application. student who doesn’t want to such things as spoons, sifters, blenders, balloons and solidarity, strength and courage. The government does not want waste his or her time in getting it scales. Violation of the law is a misdemeanor charge, In doing this as we light our to relinquish the land because of back is the supreme arrogance candles of freedom, we speak out its contracts with v lumber cor­ and total lack of concern for the punishable with a maximum penalty of a $500 fine or against repressive governments. porations to clear cut the entire individual preferences of six months in jail. Penalties are stiffer for selling Whije that solidarity is kindled, area, building new roads, making students which enables the Mont- paraphernalia to a minor. we need now to look in our own the area into a gravel quarry, PIRG organizers to importune Missoula’s The Joint Effort resolved to fight this back yards and neighborhoods. expanding into strip mines. Also the regents for the wfs. In effect, absurd, unconstitutional law and filed suit Oct. 1,1981, We need to recognize this same a cattle grazing permit has been the MontPIRG organizers are the day the new law was supposed to go into effect. It brand of repressiveness in our issued to a Texas rancher. saying, “We’re so great that then won a temporary preliminary injunction blocking own country’s policies, foreign Uranium mining is planned for everyone will want to give us the enforcement of the law pending the outcome of its and domestic. the Hills is another factor. money, so to save everyone the lawsuit. jConsider the people of El Destruction of their culture and hassle of writing out a check and However, last month U.S. District Court Judge Salvador and Guatamala. With repression of their self determing mailing it to us, we’ll just take Russell Smith ruled that five of the six provisions of the Americas aid, the people are freedoms are also insidious money from everyone and being killed, tortured and repress­ motives to move them from their anyone who doesn’t like it is act were constitutional. His exception was to Section 6 ed as they fight also for freedom land. They were ordered to leave welcome to file for a refund.” As of the act, which bans advertising of drug parapher­ and justice. by Sept. 8, 1981. They appealed noted above, and I repeat to stress nalia, calling it “unconstitutionally vague.” Consider Yellow Thunder and it is now in litigation. They importance, the MontPIRG But The Joint Effort appealed the decision and Camp in the Black Hills of South have stated they will not leave— organizers are hoping that not continues to operate under the terms of a new restrain­ Dakota. Thanks to an often inept they want their right to self too many people will file for a ing order. The case is now before the 9th U.S. Circuit media and a right winged, racist determination, establishing an refund. Court of Appeals in San Francisco. government blitz in the area, not exemplary model community in If MontPIRG really has the The anti-drug paraphernalia act is too broad. Such a many know of Yellow Thunder. terms of self-sufficiency. Why are support it claims, why aren’t they law hints at economic regulation and supposedly the On April 4, 1981, the Native they being denied these rights? In content with the regent-approved basis of our capitalistic economy — entrepreneurs American people, Dakota Aim solidarity we must support all pcs, or are they afraid their and friends established this camp people who have the courage to risking their revenue to give consumers what they alleged supporters won’t put their on 800 acres in the Black Hills. act on their beliefs with peaceful aggregated dollars where their demand. That is a free market operating. They had cited the 1868 Ft. actions. We cannot afford to have collective mouths are? Rather But, proponents of the act argue, drugs are illegal and Laramie Treaty, which a Poland here. The United States than risk the possibility by providing the means with which to use drugs, society guarantees the entire Black Hills must live up to its laws. Support (probability?) of seeing their in essence is contributing to the crime. region as the heart and center of Yellow Thunder Camp. putative support vanish when the If that is the logical basis, then society has some other the Dakota Nation forever; the time comes to back words with inconsistencies to resolve: if handguns kill people, how 1978 Indian Freedom of Religion In peace, bucks, the MontPIRG organizers can their sale be allowed? Act, the 1897 federal statute Sunny Adams seek a system of involuntary Drug use and abuse is self-inflicted. In fact Society which authorizes the Forest Ser­ 1021 Wolf contributions (sure, you can file promotes such injury; consider alcoholism and smok­ vice to relinquish small amounts for a refund, but it’s so much ing. If an act is self-contained — be it drug use, smoking of land for the establishment of hassle for such a small amount of schools and churches to people or abortion — the responsibility of our government is to Picks pcs money; besides, who’s going to living in tfie vicinity of National miss a quarter of a hundred ensure that at least the tools for the act are safe. Forest land; Article VI of the U.S. over wfs dollars when they nick it from The Joint Effort deserves our support. From strictly a Constitution, stating that you at sixteen bits a shot?). self-interested viewpoint, The Joint Effort’s success will Treaties are the “ supreme law of Editor: I commend the Board of MontPIRG organizers, I call your allow it to stay in business, but the case will also set a the land” . Regents for refusing to inflict a bluff: do you really have “ un­ precedent for maintaining economic and personal On August 13, the camp made a “waivable fee system” (wfs) upon precedented support on campus freedoms. Help defend its, and your, rights when The formal request to Watt, the in­ the students of this university in and in the private part of town,” Joint Effort holds a fundraising benefit Jan. 23. ferior Secretary of Interior and order to generate a funding base or are you afraid of something Stephanie Hanson John Block that the 800 acres he for MontPIRG. The “positive that’s not there (namely, your check-off system” (pcs) approved supporters)? DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau by the board is far more than generous and, in fact, constitutes Bruce McCullough

m e w , m r . p r e s ­ A5YOUKNOU.anM.000 undue largesse: how many other junior, mathematics T GOSH, I 'M id e n t, b u t i ‘M vlUsroo&rreoASFtKAs BESIDES SIR, ITS TOUR AFRAID SO, organizations have the privilege AUFUUYS0RRY AFRAID THE 016 tTUSEDTO. PERSONALLY, CM GREATNE U TAX BREAKS HEE.HEE.. SIR. tOt/VE 1 TOURE LEAVING to assault students at registration CUT IN SALARY R U LIN G 10 MAKE 1HB S A C­ THAT MAKE rT SO IRRESIS­ HOtSTWBT MADE IT FUN Letters Policy i THE TEAM, FINALLY CAUGHT RIFICE, BUT ITS JUST NOT TIBLE TO GET BACK INTO M Y O U N F E - TO BE RICH with requests for charitable Letters should be typed (preferably triple • SIACKMEYER. UPLUTTHME.. A HIGH BRACKET! TARP. E H ? A G A IN ! FAIR TO MY FAMILY. donations? spaced), no longer than 300 words (although =. e / ^ Under the wfs, M y student longer letters will be printed occasionally), signed with the author's name, class and major (as well as desiring to regain rightful posses­ telephone number and address, for verification purposes only) and mailed or brought to the sion of the money arrogated by Montana Kaimin, J-206. Unless otherwise A FAREWELL 70 AIMS' MontPIRG doubtless would en­ requested in writing, the K aim in will correct spelling and capitalization errors but make no counter a time-consuming, other corrections. The K aim in is under no irritating process involving obligation to print all letters received: potentially libelous letters will be returned to the author for some, if not all of the following revision, and anonymous and pseudonymous steps: 1) find out where to get a letters will not be accepted. refund; 2) get there; 3) fill out GOOD EVENKS. TODAY TOP MRSLACKMEIER. NOT ATALL. AH ACTUALLY, M Y U IF E forms after possibly having had FCONOMC ADVISOR PHILUP ARE YOU RESIG N - RESIGNING BE - A N D I COULD PROBA­ I'M DONG TT m o n t u n a SIACKMEYER BECAMETHE ING BECAUSE O F CAUSE O F THE to 4) wait in a line; 5) wait for a BLY MAKE DO UTTH SO M Y SO N 1 LATEST ADMIMSTRATION THE DISPARITY B E - DISPARITY BETUEEN M Y GOVERNMENT CAN STAY check to arrive in the mail; 6) take 1 OFFICIAL-ID RETURN TO TUEEN YOUR ROSY M Y EARNINGS P 0 - SALARY, B UT IT 'S M COLLEGE.. the check to the bank and deposit kaim in 0 THE PRIVATE SEOOR.THIS FORECASBAND TBWALANDMY NOTFORUSTHAT s UASTHE S C B iE A T T H E THE CURRENT S ' CURRENTSALARY.. I ’M RESIGNING.. it; 7) wait for the check to clear, \______r 1 ______A W HITERECESSION'SHOUSE, jSv^BL,___ and finally, 8) withdraw the money from the bank. The Stephanie h an son editor brian rygg...... managing editor vagaries of certain david stevens...... business manager masochistically inclined persons karen mcgrath...... , , news editor pam ncwbern ...... news editor notwithstanding, I would venture heidi bender—.— ...... sen ior editor the notion that most of the theresa w alla— ...... — .senior editor Charles m a so n -...... associate editor student body would consider the cindy shepherd ...... associate editor lu kindblade— :______copy editor above process to be nothing less shawn swagcrty—...... fin e arts editor than a royal pain in the ass, but ray m urray...... —...... sports editor DAD ! IS IT COULDNT benson ...... graphic artist rrufis CHEAPER any person not wanting to c.1. gilb e r t.—.,., ... p hoto editor CAD? ARE TRUE? Y0URB YOU HAVE TO USE THE M B N A . Perry backus...... photographer JU S T PHONED monetarily support MontPIRG YOU HOME RESIGNING? YOU'RE NO T STAY­ ken kromer — ...... photographer MET I ING FOR DINNER. would have to undergo this tor­ ARE YOU? / tuous process not one, but three Published every Tuesday. Wednesday. Thursday times a year. Naturally, the and Friday o f the school year by the Associated proponents of the wfs are aware Students of the University of Montana. The School of Journalism uses the Montana Kaimin for of this and, quite literally, are practice courses but assumes no responsibility and banking on it: their hope for exercises no control over policy or content. The opinions expressed on the editorial page do not funding MontPIRG rests upon necessarily reflect the view o f ASUM, the state or the university administration. Subscription rates: the assumption that most people $8 a quarter. $21 per school year. Entered as won’t bother with all that hassle second class material at Missoula. Montana for a lousy two bucks, even 59812. (USPS 360-160) though it amounts to $24 over the 2—Montana Kaimin • Friday, January 15, 1982 classifieds WORD PROCESSOR and IBM typing. Lynn, 549- 1 Vi BLOCKS from campus. $80 per month + Make a Resolution lost or found______8074; thesis specialist/editor. 42-38 utilities — 4776.______^______48-3 IjOST: A gray handknit hat with a dark Aztec SHARE 2-BDRM. apartment $109/mo. + utilities. design on top in one row and a white Aztec Call Jeff after 5, 543-7801. ______48-4 Don’t Blow the Quarter! design on bottom. If you’ve found this, please transportation SHARE 2-BDRM. apt Located between U. and return to UC Lounge lost and found or call 728- RIDE NEEDED for 2 from Missoula to Spokane A tutor can help you to Mall. $105/mo. Vi util. Pets O.K. 549-0610. 48-2 4227 after 6 p.m. There’s a $25 reward. Thanks! Saturday, Jan. 23. Share expenses. Call 543- ______48-4 8585.______47-4 FEMALE TO share large, 1-bdrm. apt. Near U., avoid getting lost or downtown, bus route. Call 728-6634 after 5 p.m., FOUND: MALE, adult German Shepherd. Mostly RIDERS WANTED to Phoenix, Arizona. OR behind in your classes. KEEP TRYING. ______45-4 black w/brown markings. Very friendly but no anywhere along the way. Leaving Jan. 18, collar. Found at 6th and Russell Sts. 728-0075. Monday. Call Colleen, 542-2747. 48-2 But for tutoring to really ______48-4 RIDE NEEDED to San Francisco around Jan. 27. benefit you, you have to SWEATSHIRT FOUND, yellow. Please call and Call Sally at 549-7413.______48-4 cooperative education identify. 243-2017. 47-4 start now . . . before TWO GENTLEMEN need ride back to east coast, program______LOST: FEMALE Blue Heeler wearing a leather leaving Jan. 14-15th. Will help gas, driving, & things get desperate. collar. Call Mary, 549-7503. 47-4 GLACIER PRODUCTIONS, Mimoula — needs: a) entertainment. Call Larry at 543-8050. 45-4 Office Manager, upper division preferred, STOLEN: MY blue wool coat at the Sigma Phi Business Education major with office mgmt The Center for Student Epsilon House on Friday night. If you insist on clothing______skills, 20 hr/wk, $5/hr.; b) Person Friday, keeping my coat, please return my keys and production/promotion field, Journalism, PR, Development’s YOU FEELIN’ ugly and cold? Carlo Dressa you tutoring I.D.!? Return either or both to Knowles Hall or layout skills, 10-15 hr/wk, $3.50/hr. DL: 15 Jan. Pretty arid Warm. $2 off all wool clothes, $1 off call 243-4298. NO QUESTIONS ASKED. 82. For further info on all internship, Main Hall service is for all students all cotton, 25% off furs. Sixth Higgins. 45-4 . £7-4 125.______46-3 and, because ASUM and ONE BLUE wax less cross-country ski, was lost on for sale______GLACIER PRODUCTIONS, Missoula — needs 1) highway 200 between Seeley Lake and Bonner. Office Manager, upper' division preferred, the Urtiversity Center provide partial funding, the cost to If found please call 258-5210 or 492-8486. 47-4 MUST SELL computer video terminal, excellent Business Education major with office mgmt you is low. FOUND: BRIAN Plinkki’s calculator. Call Kathy, condition. Dave — days, 728-5454.______45-4 skills, 20 hr/wk, $5/hf.; b) Person Friday, 721-2407 and describe. 47-4 18* (ft.) TEEPEE with unitand poles, call 549-8833. production/promotion field, Journalism, PR, layout skills, 10-15 hr/wk, $3.50/hr. DL: 15 Jan. LOST: IN LA or Copper Commons, pair of brown ______455 Come to the Center for Student Development, Room 82. For further info on all internship, Main Hall leather mittens with whits fur trim. Please turn WANTED: STUDENTS to buy lecture notes for 125. 46-3 148, The Lodge. Let our tutoring program help you reach in to LA office Lost & Found. 47-4 History 152, Chemistry 111, Biology 101, LOST: CUTTING scissors in blue case with clear Economics 211, Anthropology 101. For more your academic goals this quarter. front. Scissors have my initials. Also lost: yellow information come to University Center 104 or legal pad with notes, a lot of needed info. Please call 243-6661.______4£5 miscellaneous call in evenings — 543-7072. 47-4 WANTED: STUDENTS to buy lecture notes for FOUND: 1 car key made by Taylor, has a plastic wanted to buy______History 152, Chem istry 111, Biology 101, orange rim around top. Is attached to key ring Economics 211, Anthropology 101. For more WANTED TO buy: used electric potters’ wheel, 3- 1 information come to University Center 104 or with clasp on top. It is in theU.C. Lounge Lost & legged, free standing. Call 728-2277.______47-2 Found. ______47-4 call 243-6661. 44-5 f BIG MOUNTAIN 1 L08T IN U.C.: Small tooled leather coin purse with zipper closing. Please keep half the cash for rent______and return to Luci at the EVST house, 758 Eddy 3-BDRM. UNFURNISHED duplex. Basketball storage______Street 47-4 and tennis court, full basement, self-cleaning LIL’ BEAR MINI STORAGE. Call 243-5161 days or 721-1935 day and evenings. 45-35 SKI WEEKEND FOUND: ONE key chain with 2 keys, American oven. V/t baths, *patio, fireplace. No pets. Motors. Call Craig Hall and identify. 45-4 $350/mo. 150 deposit. 549-5911. 48-8 FOUND: KEY chain with 5 keys, General Motors. SKlfeRS — 3-BEDROOM on G R A N T CREEK. gift w anted ______Call Craig Hall and identify. 45-4 Free wood heat, 2-car garage, garden spot, and swimming hole on 5 acres. $330.721-5678. 47-2 BIRTHDAY, ANNIVERSARY, WEDDING for only $99 FOUND: UNICORN necklace at Grizzly Poql. coming? Carlo’s Gift Certificates $5.00 to 2 BDRM. unfurnished. Children, no pets. 549-8515 Call Lisa at 243-5212. 45-4 $1,000,000.00.______45-4 to show it.______45-4 Jan. 22 — 24 1 BEDROOM furnished apt. and furnished studio. personals______, Located at431 W. Spruce. Must call for apt. to see letters______inside. Rent $175.00 or $155.00 respectively. GOT AN unruly puppy? Stacy’s Obedience School OTTAVIO DEFRAIA — wants someone to write Whitefish Big Mountain Open 24 hrs. 7 days a week.______48-1 Includes heat! 251-4873.______45-4 to him. He can write in Spanish, French, and THE ZOO needs you to help put away some beer UNFURNISHED BASEMENT apartment Close English. His address is — P.O. Box 4124, and pizzas at reduced prices. Then plan the to University. 243-4615.______44-5 Sebaboleng, 104 Maseru Usotho Africa. 48-3 Ski Tour Package includes: attack on the poooooor Bobcats Saturday at the Bearclaw, high noon. 48-1 room mates-needed______★ Round trip chartered bus leaves Fri. at 8:30 REMEMBER 27-17 on Halloween?______48-1 sexy clothes TIRED OF dorms? House needs 1 roommate, close CARLO DRESSA you sexy! Oh boy! Carlo’s, Sixth THE ZOO remembers. Come and look into a 14- to campus. Phone 721-4323, 728-2180, Gary. p.m. Returns Sunday after day o f skiing. and Higgins.______47-2 ounce glass and plan the future of the ZOO. 48-1 SATURDAY at the BEARCLAW. Starts at Noon . . . then moves to Adams Field House at ★ 2 days — all runs Ski Lift Tickets 2:30.______48-1 HIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIU PHOENIX JAN . 16 X-country skiing and tubing 2 OLY 12 Pac . . . Bottles ___ $4.49 5 ★ 4 daily transfers to and from Big Mountain. at Blue Mountain. Meet at 538 Univ. Ave., 12 p.m. for rides and organiz. Bring a sack lunch. SCHMIDT 6 Pac. .. Cans . $1.79 = Kids, spouses and friends welcome. 48-1 ★ 2 nights' lodging in downtown Whitefish PFPSI DIFT PFPSI = WOM EN’S RESOURCE Center volunteer at Cadillac Hotel, Remington Hotel or at meeting, Jan. 18,7:30 p.m. All interested women MOUNTAIN DEW 12 Pac Cans $3.49 = please attend. 48-1 COKE, TAB . 6 Pac Cans __ $1.89 = designated area hotels. Based on 4 persons GO GREEK!!! Sign up now in Lodge 222 for Informal Sorority Rush. 48-4 CELLA ROSATO , . 1.5 Litre $5.15 2 per room. Doubles are available. MEET WOMEN and become involved by volunteering at the Women’s Resource Center. WINE-OF-THE-MONTH: 2 ★ Free drink with meals at participating Organizational meeting Jan. 18,7:30 p.m. 48-1 SEBASTIANIZINFANDEL... $4.49 2 SORORITY OPEN Houses Tues. 19 and Thurs. 21 restaurants. at 6:15. Meet in Knowles Lobby. 48-4 PROPRIETOR’S RESERVE INFORMAL SORORITY Rush. Sign up now in ★ 24-HOUR FILM-PROCESSING SERVICE * Ixxlge 222.or meet in Knowles at 6:15 Tues. 19 ★ One free beginning ski lesson per person. and Thurs. 21.______48-2 (BY THE DARKROOM) A V A IL A B L E IM M E D IA T E L Y : two work study ★ A free Keno game at the Remington Hotel. positions. UM Foundation, $3.70, errands and GRIZZLY GROCERY mi sc. projects. See Traci, 600 University (brick ★ Ski rentals available. house, across from Lodge), 243-2593. 47-3 KAMPUS KEG KORNER = CARPET: DORM room size. Only $10. Call Beth at 549-4139.______47-2 Comer of S. Higgins and E. Beckwith 721-2679 WANTED: PARTNER to homestead in Alaska 2 Mon. thru Fri. 7:30-midnight — Sat. Sun. 8:00-midnight 2 this spring. If interested, contact Greg, 728-2355 rm illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllll||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||ii For more information & (evenings).______47-2 SATUR DAY ARTS Enrichment Program. Begins reservations # inquire at the January 16-February 27. Fine Arts Building — THE RESIDENCE HALLS OFFICE IS CURRENTLY 9:30-11:30.______46-3 STUDENTS! TEETH CLEANED $5.00. ACCEPTING RESIDENT ASSISTANT Student Health Service, Dental Clinic. APPLICATIONS FOR THE 1982-83 ACADEMIC Bear Claw. 721-1889 243-5445______46-11 YEAR. APPLICATIONS MAY BE OBTAINED AT JOIN STRESS MANAGEMENT group and learn how to relax and become more efficient THE RESIDENCE HALLS OFFICE, ROOM 101, or call toll free Starts Wed., Jan. 20 for 6 weeks. A t the CSD — TURNER HALL, OR AT ANY OF THE RESPECTIVE Lodgte. Phone 243-4711 to sign up.______45-4 1'800'332'8410 J O IN F A T L IB E R A T IO N , lose weight and keep HALL DESKS. APPLICANTS MUST HAVE A 'it off. Meets Tuesdays, 3-5 p.m. and Thursdays, MINIMUM 2.00 G.P.A. AND AN INTEREST IN 3-4 p.m. for the quarter. Starts Tuesday, Jan. 19, ★ Also available: at CSD — Lodge. Phone 243-4711 to sign up. WORKING WITH PEOPLE. INTERVIEWS WILL BE .______45-4 SCHEDULED DURING WINTER QUARTER, AND SUN VALLEY — The powder’s waiting. Ski Club NEW RESIDENT ASSISTANT WILL BE SELECTED A UDrive Ski trip, Feb. Uth-15th. Sign up now. W.C. 109. ______44-5 PRIOR TO THE END OF SPRING QUARTER. Package SUN VALLEY, best snow in years. Ski in the sun QUESTIONS RELATIVE TO THESE POSITIONS with Ski Club. Feb. 11-15: Sign up now. W.C. 109. ______44-5 SHOULD BE DIRECTED TO THE RESIDENCE for only WANTED: STUDENTS to buy lecture notes for HALLS OFFICE. APPLICATIONS SHOULD BE History 152, Chemistry 111, 'Biology 101, COMPLETED AND RETURNED TO THE Economics 211, Anthropology 101. For more $25 per day information come to University Center 104 or RESIDENCE HALLS OFFICE BY JANUARY 15 call 243-6661. 44-5 Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer per person. help wanted SITTER FOR 2-yr.-old, Weds, and some weekend evenings. Call Michelle, 721-3464. 48-1 WANTED: STUDENTS to buy lecture notes for PARENT EFFECTIVENESS TRAINING History 152, Chemistry 111, Biology 101, (Official Course) Economics 211, Anthropology 101. For more information come to University Center 104 or A humanistic approach that offers a “ no-lose” system of raising call 243-6661. 44-5 kids. Avoid the pitfalls of the strict method (the child always Includes all run work wanted loses) and the permissive method (the parent always loses). tickets & hotel. HOUSEWORK — 3 TO 8 hours. Dependable, Monday Evenings 7:30-10:30 p.m., for 8 weeks starting January reference. 549-6916. - 48-3 (Multiple occupancy.) 18, 1982, Room 148, Lodge. services______Taught by Helen Watkins: sponsored by the Center for Student WANTED: STUDENTS to buy lecture notes for History 152, Chemistry 111, Biology 101, Development, Phone 243-4711 to sign up. Economics 211, Anthropology 101. For more information come to University Center 104 or For students and/or spouses — cost of materials only ($20 for call 243-6661. 44-5 book and workbook). typing______SHAMROCK PROFESSIONAL SERVICES. Word processor for all error-free typing needs, also weekends and evenings by appointment. 231-3828. 251-3904.______42-38 THESIS TYPING SERVICE 549-7958. 41-78

Montana Kaimin • Friday, January 15, 1982—3 FEATURING THE FINEST FOODS IN tag THE MEXICAN in southern Algeria, the decision by a U.S. District TRADITION. Algerian Ministry of Court judge in Idaho. It Hours: Tuesday thru Friday Foreign Affairs said. He states that Congress lacked 11:30 a.m.-3:00 p.m. WORLD disappeared six days ago authority to extend the 4:30 p.m.-9:30 p.m. • Mark Thatcher, the son during an auto rally. original ratification of British Prime Minister Saturday: 4:30-10:00 p.m. deadline of March 22,1979, Margaret Thatcher, was NATION and that five states that 227 W. Main Downtown Missoula 721-3854 found unharmed yesterday • The Justice Depart­ rescinded ERA approval ment, backing away from acted constitutionally. its previously announced position, told the Supreme MONTANA Court yesterday that it does not oppose speedy review of * Anaconda Minerals a ruling that could doom the Co. is the latest large min­ proposed Equal Rights ing company to submit a Amendment. The Justice plan to the Forest Service to Department’s decision in­ look for minerals in the volves an appeal of a Dec. 23 Cabinet Wilderness Area.

Like Listening to Music but aren’t % weekend FRIDAY M eeting M eeting MSU Alumni gathering, 10:30 a.m., UC Mon­ always sure what to listen for? Recreation and Lands meeting, 7:30 a.m., tana Rooms. University Center Montana Rooms. P ractice Registration International Students volleyball practice, 7 Center Course Registration, 11 a.m., UC Ticket p.m., Women’s Center gym. Office. Clinic Lecture Chess clinic, free. 1:30 p.m., U M Social Sciences Consider “MUSIC IN PERFORMANCE” Outdoor Program lecture and slide show: Bill Building, room 382. March on International Climbing, 7 p.m., U C Lounge. E vents Winter Quarter, Music 195, Section 1, 2 Credits E vents “ I Wish I Were in Hawaii Beach Party,” music Music Days VII, 8 a.m., UC Ballroom and UC by Surfer Ruth, $2.50.7 p.m., S t Anthony’s Gym, Montana Rooms. 320 Edith Ave. Lectures on Tuesday evenings from 6:45 — 7:45. Music Days VII. noon, UC Montana Rooms. Foresters’ Ball, 8 p.m., Men’s Gym. Foresters Ball, 8 p.m., Men’s Gym. C on cert SUNDAY Recitals on Tuesday or Friday evenings from 8:00 — 9:30 Judy Fjell, mm M eeting Gold Oak Room. Uturay, 9 and 11 a.m. and 9 p jn., Christ the P arty King Cnurch, 1400 Gerald Ave. International Students Party, 7:30 p.m., 1010 — Arthur. Course No special musical knowledge or training required just a Montana Real Estate course, 9 a.m., U C Mon­ SATURDAY tana Rooms. desire to learn more about music through listening! Lecture “Technology and Excellence,’’ Albert Borgmann, University o f Montana Department of Philosophy, 8 p.m., Western Federal Savings & For more details, consult the Winter Quarter Loan, 2230 Brooks.’ C ou rse Montana Real Estate Course, 7:30 a.m.f UC MONDAY Montana Rooms. Interview s Schedule of Classes or call 243-4970 B rea k fa st . The U.S. Immigration Service will give informa­ Men’s Basketball pre-game meal, 8 a.m., U C tion about careers as boarder patrol agents and Montana Rooms. how to meet the requirements. 10 a.m., u C Mall.

FBI. HAPPY HOUR 4:30 — 6:00 UNI-VER-SITY * Free hot and cold hors d’oevres * Free chips and sauce :N-TER * Specially priced drinks in the garden bar

Montana Real Estate Course Jan. 16-18, 20-22 9 a.m. Mt. Rms. MSU Alumni Gathering Jan. 16 4 p.m. Mt. Rms. Pay film: "Catch 22" Jan. 17 8 p.m. Ballroom Vem Hoven's Real Estate 145 W. Front Downtown Missoula Pre-Licensure Course Jan. 18-22 8 a.m. Mt. Rms. SAC Lecture: "The World Seed Situation: What Local Farmers CHARLIE’S FAMOUS and Gardeners Can Do" Jan.18 8 p.m. Lounge Mortar Board Jan. 19 7 p.m. Mt. Rms. Outdoor Program Slide Show C L A M F E E D * and Lecture: "Richard Pierce on Rock Climbing" Jan. 20 7 p.m. Lounge FRIDAY Free film: "Passage to Marseilles" Jan. 21 8 p.m. Ballroom Alumni Board Meeting Jan. 23 9 a.m. Mt. Rms. 4 P.M. Gallery Reception: Jace Laakso & Amanda D'Agatino Jan.24 7 p.m. Lounge Marajen Concert Jan. 24 8 p.m. Ballroom Economic Outlook Seminar Jan. 28 8:15 a.m. Ballroom SJOO Mortar Board Lecture Jan. 28 7:30 p.m. Lounge Teaching in Alaska Jan. 29 2 p.m. & 7 p.m. Mt. Rms. Pay film: "Midnight Cowboy" Jan. 29 8 p.m. Ballroom CHARLIE’S 1st National Bank 24-Hour Teller BAR Copy Center Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:00 p.m. • 428 H iccins Copper Commons Mon.-Fri. 7 a.m.-ll p.m. Sat. & Sun. 11 a.m.-l p.m. Gold Oak Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-l p.m. Gold Oak Sandwich Shop Mon.-Fri. 11:45 a.m.-12:45 p.m. Bookstore Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Tonight thru Saturday Sat. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Recreation Center Mon.-Thurs. 9 a.m.-ll p.m. Sat. Noon-midnight Sun. Noon-11 p.m. Recreation Annex Mon.-Thurs. 8 a.m.-ll p.m. Fri. 8 a.m.-9 p.m. Sat. 11 a.m.-8 p.m. Sun. Noon-8 p.m. Men's Gym Mon.-Fri. 7 a.m.-6 p.m. Grizzly Pool Public Swim Performing together Mon.-Sat. 7:30-9 a.m. Sat. & Sun. 2 p.m.-4 p.m. for the last time! Fitness Swim Mon.-Fri. 8-9 a.m. Happy Hour 2 for 1 Mixed Drinks Noon-1 p.m. 5-6 p.m. Mon. thru Fri. Mon. — Thurs. 9-9:30 p.m. ) 5:00 — 6:30 9:30 - 10:30 Sat. 12:30 p.m.-2 p.m. U.C. Gallery Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m.-8 p.m.

Please call 243-4103 for additional information.

4—Montana Kaimin • Friday, January 15, 1982 sports ' ^LACK ANGUS V Wrap-up 700 W. Broadway 728-2603 Join us for our CBA game slated The Grizzlies host arch­ rival Montana State Saturday Night By Ray Murray “ motivate themselves mentally” tomorrow night at 7:30. The Live Special! K aim in Sporta Editor are the players who get to the Grizzlies, 8-6 overall and 1-1 NBA. in Big Sky Conference play, Happy Hour from 11:30-1:00 While You Watch SNL and Terry Stotts, former Oklahoma have not lost to MSU in Missoula basketball fans will University player now with the Missoula since the 1972-73 Join in the have an opportunity to see pro Golden Nuggets, said, “Everyone season. The Grizzlies have Ugly Tie Contest basketball, as well as the San in the league has been drafted, or also won nine of the last 11 Wear your ugliest tie and if it Diego Chicken, Sunday after­ some team is interested in them. Cat-Griz games. beats Bill, the bartender’s, noon as two teams from the They want to get back to the The wrestling team you get a FREE DRINK Continental Basketball Associa­ NBA.” evened its record to 4-4-1 Tomorrow! tion (CBA) meet in the Harry Karl said he keeps in constant yesterday with a 27-21 vic­ Adams Field House. contact with NBA scouts, and tory over Western Montana The Montana Golden Nuggets that 12 NBA teams have seen the College. Ruben Martinez, will face the Billings Volcanos Golden Nuggets play this year. 126 lbs.; Rocky Kaluza, 158 in a Western Division game at 2 “The players have to play hard p.m. Advanced tickets are $5 for lbs.; and Lamont Roth, 167 ROLFING® every night because they never adults and $3 for students. lbs., pinned their op­ know when a scout is watching,” ponents. Randy Reed, 118 balances and aligns the Tickets are $6 and $4 the day of Karl said. the game. lbs., and Jim Marks, 150 human body in the field “You can play great one night lbs., won by decision. The CBA is an eight-team and be a dog the next,” said Ken of gravity. league split into two divisions, Dennard, the Golden Nuggets’ Every Lady Griz player Eastern and Western, which league-leading rebounder. “But if scored last night as UM So what does this serves as a farm system for the the scout sees you when you’re a thrashed the Montana National Basketball Association. dog, he’s gonna tell everyone you State University Bobcats mean for you? The NBA gives the CBA $250,- stink.” 88-60. UM is now 11-2. 000 a year for player and referee “We have high hopes of getting UM reserve Anita Novak, A film, “Rolfing: Gravity Is the Therapist" development. Twenty-three back into the NBA,” Dennard a freshman center-forward, will be shown in cooperation with Clearwater former CBA players are in the said of himself and Stotts. led the Lady Griz with 14 NBA this year. Karl said Dennard and Stotts points, 12 of those coming in TUESDAY, JAN. 19 Golden Nuggets Coach George have good opportunities to get to the second half. Karl said many players in the the NBA, adding that there are 7:30 p.m. CBA are “starry-eyed and blind­ several teams interested in each ed” about their chances of mak­ player. Missoula Public library ing an NBA team. Karl added “It’s a parallel to struggling Big Deal! that the major weakness of CBA Questions will be answered by Dick Larson, artists trying to break in,” Den­ Rolfing practitioner, following the film. players is their “mental inability nard said. “We have to pay a few Admission is Free to understand pro basketball.” dues, but we’re still doing what Schmidt Karl said the players who we love doing.” For more Information call 549-7773 1.59 J THE STADIUM COLD We’ve got your sport covered! Stock Up for Winter • Pool, Football, Video Games, Ping Pong, Funniest: Fowl • Darts, Big Screen T.V. ^

• Happy Hours 5-6:30 & 11-12 ' 25C Beers — Daily — 11-3 FREDDY’S BEEP AND READ • Sundays — % Price Draft Beer 549-2127 1221 Helen IS COMING... • y 2 Price Pool All Day! Together with PRO BASKETBALL 0 Great Hamburgers, Sandwiches, UM WILDLIFE SOCIETY • Pizzas-and Fresh Popcorn too! PANCAKE EATING ^ BILLINGS • 125 So. 3rd West CONTEST AND J 1 BLOCK WEST OF SOUTH I r o n a y h .il" ■.’ttznina— END OF HIGGINS STREET BRIDGE BREAKFAST ALL YOU CAN EATt JANUARY 1 7, 1 982 — 2:00 P.M. JAN. 16— 10 AM Old Men’s Gym Harry Adams U of M Fieldhouse r PRE-GAME AND POST- 1 $1.50/student, $4.00/familyI Missoula, Montana 1st Prize—$20.00 Gift Certificate Adult tickets: $5.00 in advance to Warehouse Food Market, 1 $6.00 at the door GAME ACTIVITIES! case of beer, and a Trophy. 2nd Prize—2 cases of beer. 3rd Student tickets: $3.00 in advance $1.50 PITCHERS OF Prize—1 case of beer. Gift Cer­ $4.00 at the door RAINIER DURING tificate donated by Warehouse Tickets on sale at: Univeraity Bookstore, Eli’a, Food Market. All beer donated HAPPY HOUR by * Grizzly Grocery, Olson’s, Grizzly Grocery, Univeraal Athletics, BoLega, Worden’s Super Market, and Stockm an’s, Lenny’a Lounge, U of M Field House HAPPY HOURS: Western Warehouse Foods. BE NOON—1 4—6 THEREI Sponsored by Qrady Insurance Aganoy & KER R /K Q 9B, Ronan 11—Midnight

$]00 pool all day

3103 Russell (Behind the Messenger) hrs. 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Daily 549-9651 NORTHWEST DO YOUR SCALP A FAVOR PROFESSIONAL Does the cold air have your hair looking dry? Let one of our students give you a OPTICS protein treatment to promote healthy, Filling Prescriptions From the Eye Doctor of Your Choice manageable hair. • Prescription Eyewear • Designer Line Eyewear HOURS: Monday-Friday 9 to 6 “ We Care about Your Hair” • B&L Ray-Ban Sunglasses q t n 1 • Frame Repair & Fittings oaiUrday a IO 1 • Contact Polishing & Cleaning BIG SKY COLLEGE • Invisible Bifocals • Low Vision Aids, Magnifiers 800 KENSINGTON AVE. of BARBER-STYLING • Sport & Safety Eyewear „ . _ __ OPEN 9-6 TUE.-SAT. • Custom Tinting IxGllSinCjtOn & BOW No Appointment Necessary 800 Kensington Ave. 721-5588 Phone 728-0044

Montana Kaimin • Friday, January 15, 1982—5 Missoula’s skyline CLASSICAL PIANO LESSONS Pamela Larrett may get even hazier Training, New England Conservatory By Gordon Gregory assessed possible impacts of an fish and other aquatic life. Kaim in Reporter increase in the use of coal in the The study predicts violations of All Ages, and valley. some federal air pollution stan­ Experience Levels The study, conducted by Robert dards if as little as ten percent of Another airborne health risk Boldi, a researcher at the UM the households that now use 258-6388 may be looming on Missoula’s environmental studies wood heat, convert to coal. hazy skyline. laboratory, and environmental The health department funded The city-county air pollution studies student Richard Steffel, the study in an effort to prepare board was told yesterday that predicts that increases in sulfur itself for what could become a increased use of coal for home dioxide, nitrogen oxides and a major new assault on the area’s ASUM LEGISLATIVE heating could cause significant variety of organic compounds — air quality. deterioration in air quality and some suspected cancer-causing The study predicts that the COMMITTEE add some new potentially agents — would accompany any steadily rising prices of electrici­ dangerous chemicals to the area’s is now accepting applications significant increase in the uses ty, oil and natural gas and the air. of coal. increasing scarcity of firewood for TWO students to fill vacant These were the results of a The study states that increased will spur residents to begin buy­ study done by researchers at the positions on the committee. •coal use in the Missoula valley ing coal. Coal is roughly equal in University of Montana that would raise the levels of both cost to the delivered price of sulfur and nitrogen, which are firewood, the study says. For more information, please contact S e a r c h ... now present in only minute R. B. Lewis, who owns a coal amounts in the air. distributing business here, said Cont. from p. 1 These pollutants, the study he has seen only a moderate rise ASUM at 243-2451 The National Transportation says, will be additional in the demand for coal, and he Applications available in UC 105 Safety Board will conduct the respiratory irritants that might doesn’t expect the rate to change Your chance to become Involvedl investigation. cause a range of adverse health suddenly. He predicts a slow and Investigators focused yester­ effects and other negative ev- steady growth instead. day on how ready the plane was nironmental impacts. Lewis said, however, that if Wednesday to take off in sub­ Sulfur dioxide, a major by­ Montana Power doubles the price freezing weather—how long it product of coal burning, is believ­ of natural gas in the near future, stood on the runway, whether it ed to be particularly hazardous to as many people expect, there was properly de-iced and what people with respiratory problems, could be a much greater demand caused it to slam into the 14th such as asthma. for coal. Street Bridge within seconds of It is also a major cause of acid He called such a price increase liftoff Wednesday from National rains which have made lakes in “ an incentive for people to con­ Airport. spme parts of the country unfit for vert to coal.” Late in the day, the location of David Feffer, Missoula city- After the Game or what could be the first clue to the county health officer, said he was cause of the crash was reported T oday’s afraid that some people will work After the Ball . . . pinpointed—part of the wreckage hard to promote the use of coal, containing the flight recorders. w eather and therefore, that increased use Chief investigator Francis could be very rapid. Get over to Godfather’s! McAdams said it could take three We’ll have northerly Because of this, Feffer said that days to as long as two weeks to winds with decreasing some regulation of coaj use was Bring in this ad and receive either... raise the 100,000-pound fuselage, snow this morning. Partly essential. He said the health • One FREE pitcher of pop or beer with the purchase of any but officials said they hoped cloudy this afternoon. department last summer con­ medium or large eat-in pizza. swiftly to find the two on-board High today 25, low sidered banning the sale of coal in OR tonight 0. Missoula or limiting sales to coal recorders that might provide • Two FREE 32 oz. Cokes with the purchase of any medium or clues to the cause of the crash. with a low sulfur content. large carry-out pizza. Feffer expects some regulations Offer expires Jan. 31, 1982. Lim it 1 coupon per order. to be adopted within the year, well in advance of the next B e r t h a .... burning season, he said. He added that such regulations Godfather’s Pizza Cont. from p. 1 prepare better, he said. would be adopted only after more Mack added that the study was done and public their demand for four police didn’t take the prank hearings held. tickets to just a case of beer, seriously because it The air pollution board will the accomplice said. Hav­ happens every year. discuss the issue again at its next ing accepted numbered Mack doesn’t know who regular meeting Feb. 11. tickets would surely have the thieves were and neither given them away, he said. does Wayne Brainerd, chief Nothing splendid has ever been Holiday Village • Missoula • 721-2472 “We wanted to press of activities for the ball. achieved except by those who charges because we thought However, Bertha is now dared believe that something it was a theft instead of a safe, “recuperating from inside them was superior to cir­ ransom,” Mack said. But her ordeal,” according to cumstances. —Bruce Barton she said the police informed Brainerd, who would not the club that in order to disclose her immediate loca­ prove theft the intent of tion. He said she is in good theft has to be proven first. condition and will be at the The moosenappers had ball, tonight and tomorrow, heard of the threat to press beginning at 8 p.m. Exclusive distributor of charges, one of the ac­ The club is considering complices said, but “we chaining the moose to the weren’t about to be in­ wall next year until about Bobcat-Grizzly timidated just because we two weeks before the ball, were carrying out a tradi­ Mack said, as a precaution tion.” If anything, the furor against such untraditional made the moosenappers thievery.

SATURDAY ARTS ENRICHMENT PROGRAM T-Shirts Beginning Jan. 16 W H O — ‘ Missoula area-wide children, ages 3 through high school are invited to participate. W H EN — *7 consecutive Saturday mornings starting JANUARY 16th through FEBRUARY 27th. ‘ Registration com m ences at 9 a.m. the 16th of JANUARY; classes will be from 9:30-11:30 a.m. *99C per session for a total o f 6.93 or $6.00 paid in full. W HERE — ‘ Fine Arts Building on the University campus. W H A T — *W e attempt to provide children with an opportunity to com e into Don’t be confused, contact with the arts (visual, writing, music, drama, and m ovement). W e want the children to experience the totality of the arts from creatin^interpreting in and through evaluating and developing critical attitudes. Children will select their area of interest and concentrate on their chosen We’ve got the Booze. „MONTANA'S media if they so prefer. KEG KAPITOLA** Activities will include such things as painting, sculpture, photography, drawing, And writing, composing music, creative movement and dramatic productions. WINE WAREHOUSE WHY — ‘ The program is sponsored by the Department of Art under the Where you pay for advice, direction of students in the various art methods classes. but insults are free! *W e are now in our ISth year. 434 N. Hitfins 549-1293 ‘ Family rates are available.

6—Montana Kaimin • Friday, January 15, 1982 arts Transplanted Tennessean Taps tabbed makes Montana music *average9 film By Shawn Swagerty of cowboy country. Tennessee- get to know him and his music K a im in Fine Arts Editor born LeGrande Harvey has better,” says Stanley, who is also By John Kappes written and recorded a Montana marketing the record in seven K aim in Contributing Reviewer Montana music, music which song which, in spite of some of its other states. Already scheduled is familiar themes, is personal in its an opening spot for a Michael The grading system follows the University’s with the purports to embody in song the method and its mood. Murphy concert to be held next exception that (very rarely) a film will be given an A*. spirit of the state, and what it means tp live in Montana, has Harvey’s new single is entitled month. largely become, in the past few “Montana Melody” and is quite Harvey does not seem to be TAPS years, a two-bit product. possibly the best song yet written bent on winning fame or fortune, Starring George C. Scott and Timothy Hutton. Musicians who know the ins and specifically in praise of the state. however. “ I make music because I Directed by Harold Becker. 1981. Rated R. outs of the Montana product The lyrics are straightforward, enjoy doing it,” he says. Harvey GRADE: C+ scam usually pick banjos, grin conjuring images not foreign to lives in the Nine Mile area outside Serious, even solemn, the advertising probably caught your big grins, affect what they think other Montana songs, but of Frenchtown with his wife and eye. A drumroll, silence, then the title in white against a solid are Western accents (though no presented with neither the travel- his step-son Donnie. The family black background. Taps is an ambitious film, without one they know really talks like agent’s hard-sell patter nor the inhabits a cabin, which is question: ambitiousin that it wants to enlighten the rest of us that, except other musicians) and singing bronco-buster’s hoofheel without electricity and running as to the ugly little truths lurking behind, among other things, appear frequently everywhere trampings. Harvey enjoys his water. “ I guess you might call war, politics, tradition, morality, friendship and late singing fulsome songs about adolescence. Well. With an order like that, it should come as no loving cows, loving streams, surprise that it succeeds at best part of the time, here and loving fights in bars, loving the there, and usually with something less than complete bottle and loving the cowgirl coherence. (sure is some fahhn lookin’ ones George C. Scott, representing Authority incarnate as the up thar, I hear tell). spit-shine headmaster of Bunker Hill Academy, General The ones who really know the Harlan Bache, is competent here, though little more. He gruffs scam get records distributed and Pattons his way through, as usual, with a cultivated nationally, get sI>ots on syn­ boredom one would have thought only Marlon Brando was dicated country-bluegrass shows capable of. For a time he toys with the idea that the old general and, after giving the cameras big might be having second thoughts about just how many sins toothy Big Sky smiles, say that “honor” will excuse, but that hint is cut short too quickly to they’re from “Maawwwwnnn- mean much by Bache’s arrest and subsequent heart attack. In tana!” wiping their mouths with a scuffle he “accidentally” — the ambiguity is intended — flannel sleeves and starting to shoots a teen-age thug who has been insulting his cadets in pick their banjos. “ Hope they the foulest manner, calling them homosexuals and the like. play Orange Blossom Special; I That leaves Timothy Hutton, as Cadet Major Moreland, in just love that one!” says Ernst to command. Dierdre back in Buffalo, the cow Hutton is a fine actor, and his stunning performance in last picture from that Havre year’s Ordinary People won him an Oscar as Best Supporting restaurant hanging behind the Actor. The pressure is on, then, and he handles himself well. couch. Almost singlehandedly, he builds a fragile sense of tension out of the mawkish and stilte4 lines that rob the film of its Happily, some Montana art, claims to be high art. Bunker Hill is hardline to the end, proud literature and music isn’t just of its unwillingness to budge, and Hutton leads the cadets in snakepit sludge. The state has its an armed uprising to keep the school from closing. Honor worthy writers, artists and before condos. But whatever urgency Hutton strains to musicians, people who feel, think establish is lost in director Harold Becker’s dull, meandering and communicate, most of them approach to pace. There are far too many wide-angle shots of people who would be practicing the half-deserted dormitories just before sunrise for my taste. their crafts even without the And I defy anyone to explain why the final scene, still benefits of renumeration and resonant with Hutton’s anguished cries, is followed by the recognition. These people define same tedious parade sequence we were forced to endure for the state of Montana’s art, main­ nearly five minutes earlier in the film. taining, changing or forging Intent on holding up to the light all that is wasted by a place traditions, but always expressing like Bunker Hill, Taps goes on to waste the talent under its personal perspectives or ideas nose. It is, despite Hutton’s best efforts, a wholly mediocre concerning their surroundings, operation. rather than • conforming to the Hee Haw audience’s expectations

LEGRANDE HARVEY (Staff photo by Perry Backus) Peters praised for P ennies surroundings, and he states his that primitive,” says Harvey, fondness for the wilderness in “but that’s how we want to keep By Richard Mockler the focus in the story of Arthur, she who is in control of the simple terms. The melody is it.” K a im in Contributing Reviewer played by Steve Martin, and the relationship. It soon becomes restrained during the verses that schoolteacher, played by Ber­ apparent, though, that their lives, are backed with guitar and bass; Prep musicians PENNIES FROM HEAVEN nadette Peters. Arthur is a sheet Arthur’s in particular, are then, in a change of mood, it sails Starring Steve Martin and music salesman in his thirties, an dangerously out of control. with new urgency through the gather, compete Bernadette Peters all-around failure who has no Steve Martin provides both the chorus. Directed by Herbert Ross. at Music Day VII compassion for and no common high and low points of the film. “Montana Melody,” which 1981. Rated R. thread of understanding with his His name will draw many people GRADE: A H arvey w rote with his wife By Shawn Swagerty wife. who, under other circumstances, Carleen, and its flipside, “You K a im in Fine Arte Editor The American Dream, the force Arthur retreats into fantasy, would probably have avoided it, Are My Love Song,” another Over 400 musicians from 38 that drives our economy, govern­ and this is where Pennies makes and his appearance is perfect for Harvey original, come packaged Montana high schools will con­ ment and everyday lives, can be the leap that gives it its power. We his character. When it comes to in a brown and white picture- vene at the University of Mon­ pretty much summed up in five see his fantasies as he does: acting, though, he has trouble sleeve, 'the front of which is a tana today to participate in the words: Goods will make you hap­ lavish production numbers, in melding the mugging inherent in photo by the late wilderness UM music department’s seventh py- which he stars with, beautiful a film of this type with sufficient photographer Danny On, the annual Music Day. Events in the The utopian vision of wealth, people and beautiful dancing, the emotional depth to convey the picture having been solarized by festival will be centered in the presented by the media and the voices and songs of an era film’s harsh realities. photographer Jon Schulman. Music Building and will span the wealthy, has driven out of emananting from his mouth. The Bernadette Peters, on the other Complete with lyric-sheet and day from registration at 7 a.m. to Americans all goals, all dreams strange voices drive home even hand, is perfect for her role. She production credits, the record a joint concert with UM not directly connected with harder the fact that Arthur’s portrays both strength and in­ packaging is designed as much to musicians at 7 p.m. at the Univer­ material success. Thus, when in fantasies are unattainable. The nocence so well that, in the promote LeGrande Harvey as it is sity Center Ballroom. bad economic times the realization that Arthur believes middle of this fantastic film, she to sell his record. The students — juniors and materialistic utopia becomes un­ in his dreams reinforces the is quite believable. She also Producer Benford Stanley, seniors nominated for participa- attainable, we have nothing on bleakness of our picture of his life. appears much more at home than music director for the Missoula- ' tion in Music Day events by their which to fall back — no On a visit to another town, Martin in Herbert Ross’s based Westerns Unlimited, a individual high school music meaningful relationships, Arthur falls in love with a elaborate production numbers. media production and promotion departments — will meet in nothing. We retreat into fantasy, schoolteacher who lives with her Pennies From Heaven is an agency, plans a major push over general and sectional workshops and the typical fantasy to which father. He fills her full of lies, they important, daring film. Though the next few months to establish with the UM Symphonic Band, we retreat is one in which we have make love and Arthur returns to flawed in places, its overall vision Harvey as a name act in the the University Choir and the everything: riches, beauty and the safety of his home. The and originality make it, in these region. University Chamber Orchestra love. Think of Dallas or teacher, pregnant by Arthur, is days of Reaganomics and reces­ “We’re concentrating on Mon­ throughout the day and will be depression-era musicals. pushed on by her remarkable sion, a view of our collective tana right now. LeGrande will be given the opportunity to compete In Pennies From Heaven, this determination to live. American psyche that shouldn’t a lot more visible and hopefully for between 15 and 20 music gap between dream and reality is When she finally finds him, it is be missed. more Montanans will be able to scholarships. Neil Young shows his social conscience again By Michael Yeakey satiated with the massive line of cludes the stories of an unwilling ly extend the borders of their in Latin. Translated, the inscrip­ Kaim in Contributing Reviewer bullshit I had just fed him. pensioner (“Southern Pacific,” ) countries. “Shots” is, to borrow a tion reads, “ God, grant me the “T-bone” is obviously not the the idle rich at play (“ Surfer Joe phrase, the important sound of security to accept the things I I was listening to re*ac*tor, the centerpiece of re*ac*tor, but it is and Moe the Sleaze”) and the things falling apart. The falling cannot change, the courage to new Neil Young , with my representative of the style of the bitchings of the upper class apart takes place “in the night,” change the things I can, and the roommate Bob the other day. album. Its screaming guitars, person inconvenienced by the under cover of ignorance and wisdom to know the difference.” The intent is clear; there are a lot During “t-bone,” he turned on heavy back beat and rhythmic loss of two of his three cars deception. The guitar work in things we can change, and many his characteristic look of distaste, hand claps are the sound of (“ Motor City” ). The only slightly “shots” accelerates to such a complete with scrunched-up nose re •ac* tor. While last year’s playful song on the album is the degree that it becomes nearly of the things we must change are described in the album. . and disgusting sneer, and said, Hawks and Doves was classic aforementioned “t-bone,1' a nine- impossible to distinguish it from So why call the album “Who in hell would want to sing a bluegrass Neil Young, re*ac*tor minute jam with the sole lyrics, the machine-gun sound effect re»ac»for? Simple. We need to song like this that contains no is vintage, balls-to-the-wall, amp- “got mashed potatoes/ain’t got used throughout the song. The become reactors in the simplest socially redeeming qualities at busting, brain-hemorrhage- no t-bone.” Even those lyrics guitars become the anguished meaning of the word. We need to all?” Being a bit of a fan of the volume-level Neil Youpg rock and could be stretched to have a screams for justice, for peace, for react to what is going on in and aforementioned Mr. Young, I roll. Riffs are of the “Tonight’s socially redeeming message; just common sense in a world falling being done to our earth and pulled out my trusty Smith & the Night” and “ Hey hey, my use your imagination and apart even as it is built. ourselves. The correct path is Wesson .38 police special revolver my” variety — not exactly Bee remember haves and have-nots. Even the cover of re*acmtor clear. Which side of the album is and prepared to send half of my Gees material. If the only Neil “Shots” is the magnum opus of makes a statement. On the front, more pleasing to the eye, less beloved Bob’s cranium halfway Young album you ever liked was re *00* tor. It’s a biting novel-in-a- a very harsh black and red harsh? In the context of to Idaho when, luckily enough for Comes a Time sans “Motorcycle song complete with images of triangle design imparts an im­ re»ac»tor, the sun is the root of all Bob, I remembered I was a Mama,” don’t even consider buy­ men, women and children all pression of the loss-and-gain the answers we need to find to pacifist. ing this Hendrix-esque guitar being hit by “shots” of lust, attitude of American economics make the world what it could and “My dear Robert,” I said, “Neil masterpiece. ecological destruction, futile today. On the back of the album is should be. (as only his close friends call him) It would be totally unlike Neil warring and broken dreams. the alternative; the bright, warm No, Neil Young obviously is most certainly not your Clash, Young to make an album that Children copy the already-denied glow of the sun, always giving doesn’t have the same overtly but something relevant is being had nothing to say about life in machinations of their fathers, and never taking as the economic left-wing stance as The Clash. said here. It caught your ear, did modem America, and re*ac*tor women learn to fake orgasm and system does now. In a typically But by the same token, he’s been it not?” Bob went back to his is no exception. His vignette of find sexual fulfillment elsewhere cryptic style, Young includes a microeconomics, apparently life in this plastic paradise in­ and men try continually to greedi­ message on the back of the album Cont. on p. 10 WEEKEND CINEMA

TONIGHT AT 7:30 ONLY THE TREASURE SATURDAY AT 2:15 AND 7:30 OF THE SUNDAY AT 2:15 AND 7:30 SHARP-SIAS SIERRA MADRE EVENINGS THEREAFTER AT 7:30 Bargain Matinee Prices MISSOULA THEATRES Down-and-out in Mexico in 1920, a couple of Americans hook up with an DAVID OSEIZNICKS* r MARGARfT MUCH! I IS old-timer who promises that he can lead them to gold if they can provide the necessary supplies and equipment. He W ILMA I takes them deep into the harsn, isolated, --GONE WITH THE WIND and bandit-infested Sierra Madre, The New Year’s Only where they strike it rich — and soon FUNNY Comedyl begin to come unglued because of greed CLARKGABLE _ _ * ana their mutual suspicions. Bogart's Chevy Chase in performance as the paranoid and if-m VIVIEN LEIGH ® G«» 1 treacherous Dobbs is one of his best; and LESLIE HOWARD OUVLAdeHAVILLAND* “MODERN PROBLEMS” Walter Huston gives an equally outstan­ 7:30 P.M. & 9:30 P.M. ding (and Oscar-winning) characteriza­ tion as the philosophic old prospector. Sat.-Sun. Bargain Mats. 2:00 Director John Huston also won The Unique, Magnificent New Academy Awards for his scriptwriting and direction, and appears briefly as the W ILMA II mdn in the white suit 1947: WILMA III Cinema of the Dove Geo. C. Scott • Timothy Hutton Ground Floor (Basement) Level Wilma Bldg. “TAPS’* Take Stairs or Elevator from Street Level or Bank St. 7:00 P.M. & 9:20 P.M. SIS SOUTH HIGGINS Parking Lot Entrance • 131 S. Higgins • 543-7341 Sat.-Sun. Bargain Mats. 2:30 SHOWS AT 7:00 & 9:15 W ILMA III “GONE WITH THE WIND” SNEAK PREVIEW! Tonight at 7:30 —of a major new American Independent film, the hit of the San Sat. at 2:15 and 7:30 Francisco film featlval, still many months away from national distribu­ p n o n n Sun. at 2:15 and 7:30 tion. Take a chance, you won't be disappointed, come see a funny, Eves. Thereafter at 7:30 Irreverent story about growing up and growing old on our new I THEATRES IN MISSOULA I Bargain Matinee Prices projection and sound systemslll ROXY ' Walt Disney’s — “STREET M USIC” — “CINDERELLA” LATE SHOWS MATINEES 6:00 P.M.—7:25 P.M.—8:50 P.M. Saturday & Sunday at FRIDAY & SATURDAY SATURDAY & SUNDAY 1:45 — 3:10 — 4:35 AT 11:30 P.M,____ AT 1:00 & 3:00 P.M. 6:00 — 7:25 — 8:50

NOW SHOWING SHOW TIMES 7:00 & 9:15 “‘ABSENCE* COULD WELL BE THE BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR.*’ —FRED YAGER, Associated Press

ASUM PROGRAMMING presents M il SALLY NEWMAN H ill rjTCH-22 IS THE MOST MOVING, MOST r INTELLIGENT, THE MOST HU- MANE-0H.T0 HELL WITH IT! -IT’S THE GEST AMERICAN FILM I’VE SEEN THIS TEAR!” fMcaaf Cent/. M. V. Times SLEEPER CLUB LATE SHOW THE WHO FRI. & SAT. — 12:00 VeKiA MATINEE — SUN. — 4:45 Sunday, Jan. 17, 8 p.m., UCB ADMISSION: $3.00 OR $2.50 AteAfa WITH SLEEPER CARD Admission: Students .50, General 1.00

8—Montana Kaimin • Friday, January 15, 1982 Entertainment Calendar

FILM U.C. Ballroom, Jan. 17—Catch 22 with Alan Arkin and Martin Balsam. Jan. 21—Passage to Marseilles with Humphrey Bogart. W inter Q uarter COPPER CO M M O N S DINNER SPECIALS Crystal—Cutter’s Way with John Heard, Jeff Bridges and Lisa Eichhom. Street Music—special late night showings Monday Wednesday

tonight and tomorrow for a special Montana premiere for this Spaghetti with Meat Sauce...... $1.99 Mexican C om b o ...... $1.99 unreleased independent film. Served with green salad, choice of dressing A.large turkey enchilada, beef taco, Spanish and garlic bread. rice, and salsa. Mann Triplex—Reds with Warren Beatty, Diane Keaton and Meatless C h ow M ein ...... ,..$ 1 .7 9 Q uiche ...... $1.79 Jack Nicholson. Ragtime with James Cagney. Sharky’s Served over white rice with a cup of soup and A meatless quiche baked in a whole wheat Machine with Burt Reynolds. a fresh roll and butter. crust, served with a cup of soup and a fresh roll and butter. Village Twin—Rollover with Jane Fonda and Kris Tuesday Roast Turkey and Dressing ...... $1.99 T h u r s d a y Kristofferson. Pennies From Heaven with Steve Martin and Accompanied by whipped potato and gravy, French D ip ...... $1.99 Bernadette Peters. vegetable, cranberry sauce, and a fresh roll Served with green salad, choice of dressing, and butter. , and oven browned potatoes.

Wilma II—Taps with George C. Scott and Timothy Hutton. Vegetarian Casserole...... $1.79 Egg Plant Parmesan ...... $1.79 Vegetables, tofu and a rich sauce served on Served with a cup of soup and a fresh roll and World—Midnight showing of The Kids Are Alright starring casserole with a cup of soup and a fresh roll • butter, the Who. and butter. 1 , ' _ _ ' . Served From 5-7 P.M. BAR MUSIC The Forum—Paradise Valley Band from Bozeman. The Top Hat—Surfer Ruth’s last shows (hopefully the retirement will be temporary).

COFFEEHOUSES Gold Oak Room —Tonight at 8, Judy Fjell.

EXHIBITS UC Gallery—“Windows Through Space,” paintings by Rebecca Webb. Missoula Museum o f the Arts—“The Painted Word,” watercolors and calligraphy by Karen Noice.

BIG BOOK SALE 20-40% Off selected titles including: Indecent Obsession * Creation * Cosmos ★ Still Life with Woodpecker * Wealth & Poverty ★ Warlock ★ Vida ★ Teenage Romance ★ and Many More ’82 Calendar Fiction Cookbooks Poetry 30% OFF ' Jan. 15-21 Opinion FREDDY’S H istory 549-2127 FEED AND READ 1221 Helen

SOLID GOLD ROCK REVIVAL —members o f the form er Lost Highways Banc} 2 for 1 Drinks 7 — 9

tu e/tKOUSSI E E X X S E Z i S n E Z 2200 STEPHENS AVENUE

Large Selection TONIGHT COATS PARADISE VALLEY JACKETS BAND u p C 0/0 HIGHWAY 93 AT SOUTH AVENUE T0 O U OFF FREE SANDWICHES AT 11:00 Mon.-Fri. 9-9, Sat. 9-5:30, Sun. 11-4

Montana Kaimin • Friday, January 15, 1982—9

/ Audience response sought in special cinema screening JCRRY’S By Shawn Swagerty symbols, drawings, slogans and tion of the building. The fight K aim in Fine Arte Editor taglines.” develops into a raucous battle To aid in the development of the between the old foes of the es­ CWNSSe YiLXAGC Special late-night screenings of idea and to test the effectiveness tablishment and the common- the unreleased independent film of different concepts, audience folk. Street Music will be held at the members will be asked to com­ Richard Bowen, Jenny’s hus­ Join the Birthday Club at Jerry’s Crystal Theater tonight and plete short response cards. band, coproduced the picture and (no charge; just register) Saturday night at 11:30. The film itself is the work of photographed the film. Shot on Audiences will be asked to par­ Jenny Bowen, and concerns the location in San Francisco’s And enjoy a free Polynesian cocktail ticipate in a special graphics struggle of elderly people against tenderloin district, the film not project related to the film’s future those threatening to destroy their only tells the story of Sadie and on your birthday. promotion. home, a dilapidated hotel her elderly associates but also (bring proof of age) Street Music will be distributed building. Bowen got the idea reveals a great deal about the by Specialty Films of Seattle, the while working for Francis Ford lives of the street performers who Serving Fine Cantonese Cuisine 7 Days a Week same organization responsible Coppola as a recording engineer practice their crafts in this part of for the release of such films as at Coppola’s Americna Zootrope the city. The Return of the Secaucus Seven film production laboratory. The film is not slated for Hiway 10 West — On the Way to the Airport and King of Hearts. The film has Bowen observed some senior general distribution for several previously been shown only to citizens with a similar plight and months to come and is currently “Can you really refuse an Invitation to Jerry’s?" select festival audiences and will was inspired to construct this between showings at film be shown in Montana by special new film by her interactions with festivals around the country. The arrangement with Crystal owner these people. special screenings afford local Joe Staats. In the film Sadie, the heroine residents with the unique oppor­ Staats and local artist Monte fights side by side with the tunity to view a film before Dolack have been asked to put tenants of the rundown Inter­ several major critics have a together a visual design keeping national Hotel for the preserva­ chance to see it. in mind the immediate percep­ tions a potential filmgoer would have in viewing the work. “On these projects,” says Staats,” we try to conceptualize how to represent a film’s focus FOR i with a single graphic image, which may take the forms of YOUR — ^EST/IUK/INTd Above the Rishashay and Crystal Theater Y o u n g . . 515 S. Higgins Ph. 542-OC INFORMATION Cont. from p. 8 Lunch at the Lily Far too often the bookstore or the professors at this game of social criticism Friday longer than they have; about ten are blamed for not having textbooks for the Ortega Chili Quiche years longer. Besides, it’s not his start o f classes. The real reasons are style to sing songs like, Crab Crapes “Washington Bullets.” Neil may 11:30 a.m. — 2:00 p.m. numerous and complex but the following list be a radical, but he’s not a violent may explain why books are not available. revolutionary. What Neil says is just as important as what Joe Strummer says; listen to both The 1. Textbook not available at the publisher. Clash and Neil Young, by all LOWEST DRINKING Out of stock—shipment will arrive when book means. But Neil remains the becomes available. artist, the guitar artist that PRICES IN TOWN Out of print— book no longer available. meshes several musical styles as (with live music) New edition—publication dates do not always deftly as he meshes different featuring LION topics. And if he keeps it up, as it coincide with start of quarter. appears he will, "rock and roll can never, die.” 2. Professor had to reorder another book to replace one that was out of print or unavailable for some other reason. The Bookstore does request faster UM professor shipping for these texts to prevent further delay. to give recital 3. Continuation classes—no books ordered for Phillip Clarke, assistant pro­ those adding the course. fessor of music at the University 3 Hour Happy Hour 6:00 — 9:00 of Montana, will present a free piano recital on Tuesday at 8 p.m. Vs Priced Drinks 4. Over enrollment. in the Music Recital Hall. The concert will consist of 5. Transportation delays— Holiday mail crunch, Aufschwung Opus 12, No. 2 by TRADING POST freight strikes, storms and mud slides, all outside Schumann; Sonata in B-flat forces to hamper delivery from publisher Major Oppus Posthumous by SALOON Schubert; and Trio in E minor _ ********** warehouse to bookstore. Oppus 90 by Dvorak. Clarke will be joined by violin­ 6. Bought fewer copies of text during book buyback. ist Walter Olivares and cellist Supplemental orders are shipped the fastest way Fern Glass. Both are assistant from the publisher. professors of music at UM. YOU CAN AFFORD US Clarke holds degrees in per­ formance from the Peabody Con­ 7. Delays at publisher warehouses. All other schools servatory of Music. He served T G I F are also ordering textbooks for classes and it can on the faculties of the University Thank God It’s Friday take two weeks to process an order through the of Wisconsin, Susquehanna Uni­ — versity and St. Andrews College NOON 6 P.M. publisher’s shipping department. before joining UM faculty in *1.00 PITCHERS 1979. 8. Received the original textbook requisition late. He has been awarded fellow­ 259SCHOONERS ships to the Aspen Music Festival 509 HI-BALLS 9. Bookstore error. and the Yale Summer School of ★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Music and Art. 10— 11 P.M. You can’t hold a man down 10$ BEER *1°° PITCHERS Finding ways to serve you better! without staying down with him. 50$ HI—BALLS —Booker T. Washington 9 3 When I dislike what I see on the Bookstore stage, I can be vastly amusing, ethelhaua STRIP but when I write about something University Center U of M Campus I like, I am appallingly dull. Missoula, Montana 59806 (406)243 4921 —Max Beerbohm 10—Montana Kaimin • Friday, January 15, 1982