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Idaho • 208/336-5899 Vol LORNA KIMBALL, TELLER. Member FD I C A CHRISTMAS GREETING FROM CHARLES WYSOCiil ~ "'0> "' ~ Cl ~ ,.~ :r ~ ;: 0 i..1..... c~~ ~ ~ · ir i* CHRISTMAS GREETING by Chnrles Wysocki A signed, 11umbered limited editiorz fine nrt print Tis the season to celebrate the holidays and overflowing with gifts and snow, snow, Charles Wysocki's Christmas Greeting is ready snow! The Greenwich Workshop's eighth to make your home or office as festive as can annual commemoration of the holiday - be! Everything is here: sleds and sleighs, truly a Christmas Greeting. Please call or write wreaths and ribbons, mistletoe, a mailbox to place your order. Custom Framing ~ GREENWICH Corporate Art Consulting WORKSHOP ~ Phone Orders Welcome 601 Main Street - Boise, Idaho • 208/336-5899 Vol. XV, No. 1 Fall, 1989 22 TAKING CENTER 30 A DIFFERENT STAGE DEPARTMENTS DRUMMER Can Boise play a starring 5 Campus News Boise's alternative rock role as a performing arts 18 People bands follow their own center in the West? 20 Foundation News beats. 41 Alumni News 26 HEAVY METAL 45 Sports ON ICE? 46 President's Comments 32 MAKING A NAME An entertaining concept, Three Boise State graduates but Idaho concertgoers' find success in show biz. tastes are more main­ stream. COVER 29 PROFESSORS Like the performing arts, dancers 34 NAME THAT TUNE AT PLAY Alfred and Marla Hansen are From operas to acid rock, Educators by day, enter­ moving in new directions. BSU employees list their tainers by night. Photo by Glenn Oakley favorite albums. FOCUS is published quarterly by the Boise State University Office of News Services, 1910 University Drive, Boise, ID 83725. Offices are located in Room 724 of the Education Building, phone (208) 385-15n. PLEASE SEND ADDRESS CHANGES (WITH THE ADDRESS LABEL, IF POSSIBLE) TO THE BSU ALUMNI OFFICE, 1910 UNIVERSITY DRIVE, BOISE, ID 83725. If you receive duplicate copies of the magazine, please notify the Alumni Office at the above address. Friends of the university who wish to receive FOCUS may do so by sending their names and addresses to the Alumni Office. Correspondence regarding editorial matter should be sent to the editor. Unless otherwise noted, all articles can be reprinted as long as appropriate credit is given to Boise State University and FOCUS. The staff of FOCUS includes Larry Burke, editor; Amy Stahl, Bob Evancho and Glenn Oakley, writers; Chuck Scheer and Glenn Oakley, photos and graphics; lana Holden, alumni news; Brenda Haight, editorial assistant; Dana Robinson, typographer; and lisa Ker, laVelle Gardner and Phil De Angeli, student assistants. The FOCUS advertising representative is Point of View Advertising, 411 South 5th Street, Boise, ID 83702, phone (208) 385-0338. 4 Trosky among President meets president top 10 again English professor Tom Trusky ... poet, editor and most recently, film sleuth ... has been named one of the top 10 teachers in the nation in a program sponsored by the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education, based in Washington, D.C. Trusky, an English instructor at BSU since 1970, was chosen from more than 500 CASE Professor of the Year nominations. Of the top 10 professors honored, Trusky was the only one from the Nor­ thwest. Trusky also was named a top 10 professor in 1987. A published poet, Trusky has founded several publications at BSU to encourage creative writing, including the school's award-winning literary magazine cold­ drill, the Ahsahta Press poetry series and Poetry in Public Places. BSU President John Keiser, right, was among a group of Idaho officials to present Presi­ dent Bush with a 50-pound bronze bust of Ernest Hemingway during ceremonies at Ex-student lauds Trusky, page 17 the White House in July. Keiser joined Jack Hemingway of Ketchum, the famed author's son, and Sen. Jim McClure in presenting the bust to Bush. White House photo During the past three years, Trusky has collected several films by Nell Shipman, an Idaho filmmaker who established a Enrollment passes 12,500 mark studio in northern Idaho in the early Boise State's enrollment continued its time equivalent" students. (Fifteen credits 1920s. He has published her auto­ steady climb this fall, passing the 12,500 equal one FTE undergraduate student.) biography and shown her films in France, student mark for the first time. BSU has 8,281 FTE students in Italy and at several festivals in the United BSU's "head count" total has been the academic programs, a school and state States. highest in the state for several years. This record. FTE enrollment increased 600 Trusky is also leading a BSU effort to fall 11,896 students enrolled in academic students, 8 percent more than last year. collect films made in or about Idaho, a programs, 777 more than last fall, a 7 per­ While the FTE figure does not represent project that has resulted in the acquisition cent increase. actual students, the total is important of "Told in the Hills," the first full-length Another 690 are taking vocational because it is part of the calculation used feature filmed in Idaho. The film was technical courses, bringing BSU's overall to determine how the state budget will be thought to be lost until Trusky discovered enrollment to 12,586. divided among institutions. a copy in the Russian Film Archives. To accommodate the increased demand Graduate enrollment reached 1,256 This summer Trusky produced a two­ for courses, the university added several students, which includes 176 taking full­ part television program about the filming sections in several areas, including 19 in time course schedules and 1 ,080 enrolled of "Told in the Hills." BSU President English composition, three in communica­ part time. 0 John Keiser said the university is pleased tion and 10 in the sciences. to see Trusky receive national recognition BSU Dean of Admissions Steve Spaf­ for his work. ford says the increase is the result of About this issue "He pursues his passions with a creative several factors that made it easier for and energetic spirit not bound by the students to enroll for classes. From Bach to boogie, the per­ restraints of weekends or vacation periods. The distribution system for financial aid forming arts provide an outlet for The results he achieves have drawn na­ improved, the new registration system is personal expression, social commen­ tional attention to the literary and cultural working well and a deferred payment plan tary and sheer joy. The performing resources that are within Idaho's boun­ made it easier for students to pay their arts, an area of emphasis at Boise daries," Keiser said. fees, he says. State, enrich both the university and CASE, with more than 2,800 college But even more important, Spafford says the community at large. In this and university members, serves as the BSU's image is improving each year issue, we examine how the university principal public affairs representative for because of increased research, better affects performing arts in the region higher education. It is also the organiza­ teaching, improved facilities and addi­ and conversely, how the region tion for public relations, alumni and fund­ tional programs. affects its performing artists. 0 raising professionals in higher education. Boise State also leads Idaho in "full- 5 Award Winners Boise State honors Redford, Andrus Robert Redford and Gov. Cecil Andrus joined BSU President John Keiser following the awards ceremony. Chuck Scheer photo ecil Andrus and Robert Redford seem like the political Resource Management, which has since sponsored a series of odd couple ... one emerging from the central Idaho conferences bringing adversaries together to discuss controver­ C woods to become governor and the other fleeing subur­ sial environmental issues. ban Los Angeles to become one of the world's most recognized In its latest project, the institute will co-produce with the film stars, Soviet Union a film about global warming. Despite their diverse backgrounds, they are united in a per­ ndrus, Keiser said, "has earned the trust of those who sonal and political friendship born from mutual concern for A recognize the beauty, the inspiration and the sustaining and the environment. critical importance of unviolated streams, forests, mountains And each has evolved into an eloquent spokesman for the and desert. preservation of the West and its outdoor-oriented lifestyle. "Growing from his understanding and love of the land, he Redford was in Boise Sept. 22 to help his old friend raise has used his considerable, long-term position of public leader­ money for Andus' next gubernatorial campaign. ship and influence to assure appreciation and protection of the That event, "An Evening with Robert Redford," was the natural environment in Idaho and the American West," Keiser most successful political fund-raiser in Idaho history, adding added. at least $200,000 to the Andrus campaign's bank account. Andrus' strong stand on the protection of the White Cloud But Andrus and Redford left with one other momento of Mountains near Stanley was one of the major issues in his suc­ the evening ... the President's Award for Western Life and cessful 1970 campaign for governor. Letters, given by BSU President John Keiser to honor in­ As governor, Andrus has been a champion of land-use plan­ dividuals who have contributed to the preservation of the ning, wild and scenic river protection and assurance of water western lifestyle. quality. It was a concern for the environment that brought Redford As Secretary of the Interior, he played a critical role in set­ and Andrus together in the late 1970s when Andrus was ting aside 100 million acres of land in Alaska for parks and Secretary of the Interior. wilderness and expanded the Snake River Birds of Prey area Since then, they worked on several projects, including this near Boise.
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