16
(\SMSU Publication I [email protected] I 1cials lobby for .een' building funds; million sought Jo11,,o, I ntu r, 1 den t B1 11 C I 1 n lo n e 5 mtllrnn ·Green·· fundra1,1ng pro.1ec1 k and ome \1Sl are going LO C.1p1 tol a) to oppo'e the Jng tho'e making funding of the nC\\ ntall) safe building a'ha\\ ay. director of sen ices: Robert . chairmen of the n Building Council. ident :\like \!alone: 1iz1. \ice president _orporar1on. and Kath · pro1ec1 chief. 1fi \e spokespeople are l going straight to the Ip their cau<>e. I are taking on a Jot of id Williams. d e' the $5 million 111 r the building. the) ao ask the EPA for an 1 S5 million "\\e hope 10 come b.1d \Vilh the JO million." \\1llra111s 'aid . The butlding ha' a con - 'truc1ion cost of mtll1on. a pro.1ec1 co'>! of s;o million plu the addition of an endowment mainten.ince ot ) 1.2 to )2 million . The total cost ot the building i' appro\.imatel) $100 mrll1on So far. the committee ha' raised SJ 2 million and i' hop- ing to find more prt\ ale donor' to contribute 10 the cau-.e of the em ironmentall) fnendl) building The \ludents ha\ e contributed S:! . 8 m1ll1on lu the project. the research office ha\ con tribut ed 6 million. S2 million has come from the 'la11ona l Department of Comme r ce and th e rest has come from \ ari ous o ther MS U contributo r s. The building's supp orters will gel no support from the see 'Green' building page 6 ove without fear '\ ORA POLLOCK he Exponenr y 9 second a woman ac cording 10 FBI ta- of all yo un g .perience dating v 10- ne age of 20. accord- ell-known study pub- Levy in 1991. And ence occurs in many u imate relationships. q. of r ela t ionshi ps. •Occurs only afte r a 1s become serio usly invohed. is engaged, or liv- ing together <Brown. When Bat- tered Women Kill. 1987). 27o/c of young women aged 15 to 19 have been s urvivors of rape or attempted rape. 84 % of them knew their a ttacker (Warsaw, 1988). As we look forward to the romance of Valentine's Day this weekend, the se are s obering s rat1 s t1c s. It see ms that for many people, especially see Love page 4 SIDE THIS ISSUE eds ........... .. .......................................... .. pg. 14 . .. .......................................... ................... pg. 15 ·l!nts ..................................................... pg. 2 s ..... ..... .... . .. . .... . .. ..... .. ... .... . .. .... .. .. ... .......... . ..... .. . .. pg. 7 ....... ....... .. .. ... ... ......... ..... .. .......... .. .... ..... ............. pg.13 ..... ...... .. ... ... .............. .. . .. .. .. .. .............. ............ pg. 11 illng Events ........ .. ................................ .. .. pg. 5 m .. .. .... ... . ...... . ..... ...... ... ..... ..... . .. .. ...... ..... . ... pg. 3 February 1O, 1998, The Exponent ftna State University - An ASMSU Publication Tuesdav, Fehn1anT 10, 1998 With a little English Jodi Sveum and Mike Grubb shoot pool in the Recreation Center in the Strand Union Building . Exponent prepares for digital printing, Internet publishing EXPONENT STAFF In an effort ro follow indus- try s tandard s, the Exponent print ed its fir st digital is- sue Thursday . "Digital printing is quickly becoming an industry standard and the Exponent is very excited to work with this emerging technology" file Hibdon sa id .. Origi- nal I}. PDF technolog} wa intended to pub- foh documents on the internet and hopefully by next seme,ter we · 11 be able to gi' e '>tU- dents access to the Ex- -Marcus Hibdon, Expo11e11t Editor According to Exponent editor Marcus Hibdon, the digital production process will allow for a higher r eso lution and even tually a faster production ii me. '' Digital printing is quickly becom ing an industry s tandard and the Exponent is very exerted 10 work with this e mer gi ng t ec hnology ." Hibdon said. "As we continue Lo evolve and master the digi- tal proces s, it will open all new avenues for students, fac- ulty, s taff and eventual ly ev- eryone in the world to read th e Expon ent ." Currently. the E. 1/HJ11 e11t formats the new s paper into Adobe Page maker page la y- out so ftware. The software allows the computer 10 take text from a word proces so r and crea te a new s paper page by incorporating graphics. photo and headlin es into the text. The pages of the news - pap er arc then printed and pasted to large shecb of pa- per called flats The flats are bussed to the Livingston En terprise and transferred onto film and ultimatel y printing plates. Through utilizing Adobe' s Portable Document Format ( PDF), the Exponent can export the entire ne wspa - per onto a disk and se!)d the di k to the Enterprise for printin g. "PDF technology allows us to ex port the Expone111 to our printer in an extremely po11e111 via the internet. " Ultimate!). the £1po- nent plans to allow s tudents to download issues of the fa- ponent from a website cur- rently under construction a nd read the from J computer u ing free software from Adobe. The £.\fJ<111en1 plan s to publish on the internet with nex.t >eme. ter' s first issue . "It'll be a great way for anyone to gain access to the £r- pon e11t no matter where you are," Hibdon sai d. "All you need is a computer and modem and you'll be able 10 view the paper before it 's e\ en pnnting . It's a great way for and alumni to keep informed about the University."

With little English .een' building funds; million soughtarc.lib.montana.edu/msu-exponent/objects/exp-090-31-001-016.pdf · .een' building funds; million sought Jo11,,o, ... it does

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

(\SMSU Publication I [email protected] I

1cials lobby for .een' building funds; million sought

Jo11,,o, I ntu

r, 1 den t B 1 11 C I 1 n lo n e 5 mtllrnn ·Green·· fundra1,1ng pro.1ec1 k and ome \1Sl

are going LO C.1p1 tol a) to oppo'e the

Jng tho'e making funding of the nC\\

ntall) safe building a'ha\\ ay. director of sen ices: Robert

. chairmen of the n Building Council. ident :\like \!alone:

1 iz1. \ice president _orporar1on. and Kath · pro1ec1 chief. 1fi \e spokespeople are l going straight to the Ip their cau<>e.

I are taking on a Jot of id Williams.

de' the $5 million 111 r the building. the)

ao ask the EPA for an 1 S5 million

"\\e hope 10 come b.1d \Vilh the JO million." \\1llra111s 'aid.

The butlding ha' a con ­'truc1ion cost of S~O mtll1on. a pro.1ec1 co'>! of s;o million plu the addition of an endowment mainten.ince ot ) 1.2 to )2 million . The total cost ot the building i' appro\.imatel) $100 mrll1on

So far. the committee ha' raised SJ 2 million and i' hop­ing to find more prt\ ale donor' to contribute 10 the cau-.e of the em ironmentall) fnendl) building

The \ludents ha\ e contributed S:! . 8 m1ll1on lu the project. the research office ha\ con tributed 6 million. S2 million has come from the 'la11ona l Department of Comme rce and th e rest has come from \ arious o ther MS U contributors.

The building's supporters will gel no support from the

see 'Green' building page 6

ove w ithout fear '\ORA POLLOCK he Exponenr

y 9 second a woman according 10 FBI ta-33~ of all yo un g .perience dating v10-ne age of 20. accord­ell-known study pub­Levy in 1991. And ence occurs in many u imate relationships. q. of rela t ionshi ps.

•Occurs only afte r a 1s become serio usly

invohed. is engaged, or i ~ liv­ing together <Brown. When Bat­tered Women Kill. 1987). 27o/c of young women aged 15 to 19 have been survivors of rape or attempted rape. 84% of them knew their a ttacker (Warsaw, 1988).

As we look forward to the romance of Valentine's Day this weekend, the se are sobering s rat1 s t1cs. It see ms that for many people, especially

see Love page 4

SIDE THIS ISSUE eds ............. ...................... .................... .. pg.14 .................................... .... ..... ......... .......... pg.15

·l!nts ... .... ..... ... ..... ... ....... .. .... .. .. .. .. .... ... .. pg. 2 s .............................. ......... ......... .......................... pg. 7 ........................ .................................................. pg.13 ...................................... .. .. .. .......................... pg .11

illng Events ...... ....................... ..... ........ .. .. pg. 5 m ............................................................... pg. 3

February 1 O, 1998, The Exponent ftna State University - An ASMSU Publication

Tuesdav, Fehn1anT 10, 1998

With a little English

Jodi Sveum and Mike Grubb shoot pool in the Recreation Center in the Strand Union Building.

Exponent prepares for digital printing, Internet publishing EXPONENT STAFF

In an effort ro follow indus­try standards, the Exponent printed its first digital is­sue Thursday.

"Digital printing is quickly becoming an industry standard and the

Exponent is very excited to work with this emerging technology"

~mall file ~ize.

Hibdon sa id .. Origi­nal I}. PDF technolog} wa intended to pub-foh documents on the internet and hopefully by next seme,ter we · 11 be able to gi' e '>tU­dents access to the Ex-

-Marcus Hibdon, Expo11e11t Editor

According to Exponent editor Marcus Hibdon, the digital production process will allow for a higher resolution and eventually a faster production ii me.

'' Digital printing i s quickly becoming an industry s tandard and the Exponent is very exerted 10 work with thi s e mergi ng tec hnology ." Hibdon said. " As we continue Lo evolve and master the digi ­tal process, it will open all new avenues for students, fac ­ulty, s taff and eventual ly ev­eryone in the world to read the Exponent ."

Currently. the E.1/HJ11e11t formats the newspaper into Adobe Pagemaker page lay­out so ftware. The software allows the computer 10 take

text from a word processo r and create a newspaper page by incorporating graphics. photo and headlines into the text. The pages of the news­pape r a rc then printed and pas ted to large shecb of pa­per called flats The flats are bussed to the Livingston En terprise and trans ferred onto film and ultimatel y printing plates.

Through utilizing Adobe' s Portable Document Forma t (PDF), the Exponent can export the entire newspa­per onto a di sk and se!)d the di k to the Enterprise for printing.

"PDF technology allows us to ex port the Expone111 to our printer in an extremely

po11e111 via the internet." Ultimate!). the £1po­

nent plans to allow students to download issues of the fa­ponent from a website cur­rently under construction a nd read the new ~pape r from J

computer u ing free software from Adobe. The £.\fJ<111en1 plan s to publish on the inte rnet with nex.t >eme. ter' s first issue.

" It'll be a great way for anyone to gain access to the £r­pone11t no matter where you are," Hibdon said . " All you need is a computer and modem and you'll be able 10 view the paper before it 's e\ en pnnting. It' s a great way for parent~ and alumni to keep informed about the University."

Students should challenge mandatory attendance polic , \11e11t!a11ce policin The~c

I\ onh elicit a frnwn of re~enLment from e1-c1) self-respecting college student Or perhaps the) should. Some of u-, ha\e been so inured to them 01 er the years Lhat. like the ubiquitous magpie. wc hard!) notice Lheir pre ence. But they are here, creeping through classrooms like a lme111 evil, breeding rapidly. devour­ing our freedom and autonomy.

They are anachronistic: we are ofren urpri,ed mid not a little fright­ened b) their !>trange and inappro­pnate presence. They simply do not he long here.

We must end this nonsense. We mu. l e\po'e attendance policie' forwhm die) Lrul) are: irrmional :i.nd unju't practices that 1 in late tl1e prin­ciples of rea on. faime andju 1ice. 11 hi ch an) wgni lied and respectable university should hold dear.

We could. trut by delineating ho~ attendance policie~ deny our adulLhood. freedom and auwnomy. and how any in~Lruc1or worth his or her alary hould be able to inspire auendance ralher Lhan require it. We could go on to explain how we. Lhe rudents. are Lhe University. and as

we are paying thousands of dollars per year, we alone hould determine our le1·eJ of commitment. But there

i ~ a more important and fundamcn- score' '\·,on all her tesh and p<1pcrs. hance tl1e teaming em 1ronment and 1al con1,1deration. \Ve an: rallonal but mi,ses one too man) classe~. 111e help other studenh. But i\ 1101 par-be1ngs anti. panicularl; m an insli- instructor lowen. her grade 10 a B. ticipating reall) untair ro other ~tu-lute of higher learning. we must That means an A-student has been dents.a. man) teacher;cla1m'1 First mak.e deci,ion' deri1 cd from reason gi1·en a grade th:it does not accurately of all. a student is not obligated to and nnional thought Attendance reflect her le1cl ofperfom1ancc. The help other sllldents. She ma) help policies. ho1ve1 er, han: no rational teacher. then, has deliberately mis- others in Lhe interests of human de-foundation, and cannot withstand Lhc represented a !>lude111's grade and has cency. but Lhere is no requiremem scrutiny of a reasoned ~-------------------~ that hedoso. Altruism. analysis. They therefore by it very nacure. can have no place at Moninna never be compulsory. State. Mike England Moreimponantly.ifpar-

MSU is a perfor- ticipation i what a G UEST E DITORIAL mance-based institution. teacher want . then ii

Performance alone deter- must be requested of all mines a student"s grade. If students. Ju. t as one tu-

n studem pe1ionm sat1sfac- dent may 11ritc a better tori I) on exams. papers and essay in 30 minute than other assignment~. then his grade basicall) lied IO the registmr. anmhcr 11 ho spend. all night on it, should reflect this lei cl of pertor- \\'ilh this in mind. reducing a so one studem ma) co111rihute more mance. Just as a professor"s task is 'tudem·, grade for poor auendance to a class discus'>ion in the one day to teach. a student's task. 1' to learn. is nothing shon of punishment Pun- per week that he auends than the si-lo comprehend the material pre- ishment? When did this 1 ariable lent per on in Lhc comer comributes sented by the teacher. He is then enter tl1e grading equal.ion? Teach- in a week. Should the lauer student, given a letter grade that co1Tespond ers are supposed to rate students· who attends regularly. be rewarded to this level of comprehension. The level of ucce. -. based on tl1eir un- while the former is puni bed? effon put fonh by the tudent i not derstanding of the material. They are If. in defiance of all logic, par-a factor; a dedicated imbecile doesn"t not LUSked with rewarding and pun- ticipation must be a factor. then at get an "A" for effort. And if del'o- ishing. That is lefL up to Lhe admin- the very least ii needs to be judged lion does not raise Lhe grade of a poor i tration, and take the fom1 of dean · in a manner con i tent with Lhe rest perfonner. then a lack. Lhereof can- Ii ·1~ and academic probation. of Lhe gradrng system. lt must appl) not reduce the grade of a good one. What is the punishmem for. ro every studenL whether the) attend Reason demands con~i tency. m1yway? r it for a lad.. of participa- cla or not.

ow let's :i. ume a student rion? Granted, participation can en- It should now be patently clear .-

Lhat anendanc,· pohcic\ r unfmr. unrc<i...onable and a what should :rou do abcr Confront your teachers. TI be happy to jusllf) their I refusal mean~ onl) one of t they arc unable to e\plai1 Lhey don't think.. tl1at you' 10 an explanation. Eilhe1 rlJ in Lructor has no bu. ines al a university. In the fo Lhe teacher is a set fish. im and uncari11g indi\ idual 1 Ii hes policies Lhat affect h without an) thought as to ety of Lho~e policies. Ir case. he is guilt) of a mor transgre sion: he tech th beneath him and ha\e 111

questioning ht methods. Lhat he is here because o 11 ilhout you he has no JOI

Mo~t teacher.; 1\ ii with you. though, and you 1

the reasonable ones will t it is imp!) a neces. ary 1

will explain Lhat allcndar are only used to encou1 dance and participation : denrs get Lhe mo c out ofa 1 enough probmg, they " acknowledge thm mcenda:

see Policy page 2

Clinton's scandals do, in fact, harm american public

. ";. ..

As Americans. freedom of speech is indeed a precious gift inherited from our forefatl1ers. The olher. is a liulc known ~"-.ill

called reading. My col­league, Ms. Jordan, un-

Darin Rambo E XPONENT C OLUMNIST

believably misread the focus of what l had to say last week.. r11 re-peat Ill) self. Bill Clinton. getting a blm\job. er .. I mean an "alleged blo1\ job" in Lhe Oral office. i' OT an isolated incident. Ralher. it is as) mp­tom. no. a facet oflm ENTIRE presi­denc) that has been neglected on most major ne11 s channels. Remem­ber picking that Olli of the firsl pa.ra­graph'1 I then expounded on many other areas. which had nothing to do with oral sc>.., in~ hich I think he had 'hortco111ing1,; Whitewater, Tra1elgate. PBI files reco1ered. Vince Foster's death. "Don't ask don't tell ... poached accomplish­men is r rom the contract 1\ i th America. and \\ h) don't we add Charley Tree. John Wong, and shady campaign contributions from foreign government.,. I didn't just hate his guts for the latest in a Jim! or noo-7ic~.

I encourage anyone to read an article in thcWashi11g1011 Post en­titled ··r Believe" wri tten by Michael Ke ll y. ll 's at

1\ 1\ w. wash111g1Lmpo ... 1.com/ 11 p-sn I Wplate / I 9l}8-02/0-UO I 01-020494-idx.html. READ IT. It"s out,tand­ing. 111ert' an: man) thing' 111 11 <1bout the Clinton pres1tle1K) I bet you·11:· never heard. I •'ncourage) ou to read Weh,1e1 Hubbcl's book. on the Wh1tehou-,e. am! also PrimwT Col­on. l eneourngc an) one to read these 1A1it1ngs. Now, 1fyou_1u1,t want to talk. about the 'e' aspect I\ b . .lordun said ·The American public 11 a-, not threatened or ham1cd 111 an) wa) b) this 111ome11tary lad or imegrit) ... There 's se1 era I problems 111th this ussenion.

One. 1nter-bus111ess scandal­lJUs rela11on,hips can hun yourcom­pail). or in this ca\e thl' gm emment. \\ hieh is one big company entrusted with our freedom. So Bill and l lillary's relationship bn't affected by Jcnnifor Flowers? The fact that your spouse is f*ck.ing someone el~e has no beaiing on your decision mak­ing? Sexual misconduct can impair

tl1eir abilit) to do their job. Tl IAT banns Lhe American public Ms. Jordan.

Two. so" hat if FDR. Grrnw Cle1 eland and War­ren H<1rd111g had try t!>. aJ­fa1r~. mistresses or \\ere cok.e-snoning pedophiles for that matter. o what iJ JFK pumped Mal) lin 1on­roc till 'he squealed. Thm

make' 11 nght" Thi' ··ethical relatil­ism··) ou so dr:.mrntieall) detined rcl­egat.:-s 1tw. behm 1nr 10 he e\pected from tl1e presidenc)? Good deal Pardon me 11 hilc I run for nflice and stil•k. Ill) dick. 111 '>Ollll' intem. 111cn I can be "Wo 1aluable'" 1ha1 Ill) actions Cl)Uld Je111c.1n 111) office ,\ 'D 11 omen. get ,11\'a) 111Lh it ,111d no one cares. Where do ll'C dra1\ the line? C'ongrc's'>!11en·1 Gm ernors'1 'chool principals? \\ho 's too 1aluabk'? I IL)\\ can Tl!. \T not hann the Ame1i­can public I\ ls. Jord:.111 ·?

1liree. -,1ncc ) ou b1\1ught up JFK. let '' talk about him. JFK ··en­tertained .. -,c\ era! 11 omen from for­eign g\WCrnments. Watch A&E"s Biograph] on ho11 tl1e Russian KGB ha1e used women to influence CIA operati1 e' and it· 11 mak.e ) our head spin. Could Bill give up secrets 1\hile being suckl'd on? Dick. l\1oll"i~ di­vulged secrets to a prostitute and he was !ired. What? Bi ll Clinton has

sec Role model page 3

The E\p<•ncnt os puhlt,h«l m<»l Tue'tla)' & Frid.t) :-. ol the

acadl!nuc year .md 1s affilmreJ ''1th th!.' .A,,,oc1._\tC'd Students of

~lontJna St.:11e lTDl,t't:"lf)

Edltl,riaJ Pohq L'n,1g:nl"J l'thk,riJ.1, t'epl(:,f'Ot the \lptmon ot the: E\~"'ncnt Nlh."nal ht1a.nl ''gnrd eJ1t\"lnal ~lllum.n~ rcr~ ... cnl the opmton ot the

auth~1. OptnH'"" t'"P~~..;.cJ m kucrs JJtd :id' en1!<.menh Jfl not ntX"'t:',$3ril)

rctlc.·1.:l th1.· 'tC'''' of 't~tff mcm~rs

l dtc.•r.:. Poh~~ TI1c l;;\J'.Xlncnt \\ ckollll-'' kuef\., .10\l - 150 \Wrds m length. l<> die

tchh'r from. all re.\dc:n- The L \{'011~nt n:tJmi.. lhc nght to edit kttc1" for

C'\lntcnt tUld ... pace <.)t reJCi.:l mattri.11 i..ubmmed TI1c c"htor decide' \\ hethcr

m.ltl"nJl 1;h~luld he run a-. a gue't up1n1on Subm1,~1on, ... hould 111<.:JuJ··

lhl" author\ n.unc. )Car 10 ~chool and m.tJUr J\n\m) mou"

... uhm1~1on' \\.-111 not be accepted.

Contnbuung W nlcrs Roh Pun>h. Mcgh'"1 app.

Amul.n \\ .tllcnd.lht, Patncl.. Bcmcth). 1'.rNcn Burt. Jcxloc Deignan

Kn,tcn Bnmd ... Je~1ca h,ltmake.t,

Cla."11icd lthcrt1\lng • t-106)'14}-~bl I Bu,tnc'-' Ollicc • t-106)Q94-l.590

Dosploy Advemsmg • (-106)994-.1.206 fn\ • (406)9'>4-2253

E-Mail· [email protected]

..

J"''1ca o, rlJnJ·M

~-'"' \pL~'F..t

\.h.·0 .. lt'\ Jami!~ •

S\"n1nrPhotl)f

R<•ser De •'I'

ubnut k-tt•iJ The lhPo•

P.O. Bt>< I" 305 StrUnd L111<> ~

Bo1eman. ~O

'our Turn r you believe it's fair that some artments and classes enforce

ndatory attendance policies?

thev feel that there is 1netfung important going in class that they can't get rm outside reading then I h.k that's a legitimate way reward the people who lke the effort to come.

--A1111e Teppo

n't think it''> reallv foir. If re going to not attend

s then they' re going to ·er for it, and it's their n problem to figure out. y're paying the money to o class so if thev don't 1t to go, they're-just .ting their money.

-Liz Leu•15

I don't think it's fair at all. I just go under the assumption that we're all adults, we pay for our school and I think that we're the ones that should be put in a ro~1tion to decide whether we're going to be there or not. If it's important enough to a person they' re going to be there, 1f not I think it's their business.

- Kevm Bright

I believe it 's fair because going to class is more valuable sometimes than the te:xtbook. lf vou' re not in class then you're' not going to do well, so l think the professors are trying to help you out bv making you come to class.

-Heather Spencer

Enforcing mand atory attendance is silh If students wish to pay ali' thi., mont!Y and not attend clc1"s then the\' should be permitted to. .

-Tom Blake

t41mmentl I Tuesday February 10, 1998 I 3 I

Policy: Mandatory attendance provides unfair grading standards

co11 / inued from page 2

are intrin ically unjust, but in the long nm do more good than oth­erv. ise. While a few students are unfairly pumshed. a larger number actually benefits from mandatory at-tendance.

Thh is\\ hen you explain that there 1s a\ iable alternative. There is a way to encourage attendance while still upholding the precious idea.ls of rea~on and justice. What' more. it is fair and consistent. It retains all of the teachers' good intentions (we' ll give them the benefit of the doubt) but eliminates the inconsistencies and irrationality. A few instructors have already figured this out, and

have implemented it into their classes. It 's called a participation grade.

A participation grade. which is a portion of the ovcral I grade. makes attendance implicit: one can't conaibute if one is not there. But it is fair: JI holds all students account­able. The sleeper and the letter-writer will receive no more participation credit than the srudenrwho is absent. And the intelligent student who hap­pens to miss one too many classes can compensate for hi sparse atten­dance with above-average participa­tion on the days he does attend. This ystem evens the playing field , is fair,

and ~imply make more sense. ll's seems so ~imple, doesn't

it? So why do attendance policies exist. when a logical and just alter­native is available? Becau~e we are apathetic. We endure auendance policies and grade reductions with nothing more than a silent curse al

the teacher. Well silence and apathy will gel us nowhere. You must talk to your in tructors. Talk to the dean. Ask them for a reasoned justification. When they can't give you one, they' II be forced to reevaluate their policies. And when they do, they'll realize that you are in the right. You are MSU. and you deserve to be treated with fairne ~. respect and dignity.

Role model: Clinton's actions validate unethical behavior in other ______________ c_o1_1t_i11_11_ed_fr_o_111_p_ag_e_2_

too much moral stamina to do that") THAT can harm the American public Ms. Jordan.

Finall), he' a role model. should be America's lave not D!Ctator. and represent us ethically. Hi~ deeds lend validation lo the deeds of others. When the next president comes along, I gue you·11 just ab-olve any of his actions with Bill

Clinton's name added to your list of indiscretions? Good plan. Also, people moan and whine about how Dennis Rodman or Michael Irvin's affect behavior in this country and they'rejustathletes. Thi 1s the Presi­dent of the United States. [f he

doe. n"t want to act like one, then he didn't have to run did he? etting deplorable beha\ 1oral standards at the highest office SURE AS HELL HARMS the American public M . Jordan.

In closmg. I'm sick and tired of the "1t"s bu ines as usual" bullshit reekmg in exoneration of Bill Clinton, or in any other irreputable individual' defen e. Business as usual used to say women couldn't vote. Busine. s as usual used to say ')ust pour that shit in the ocean there Bob." Bu~iness as usual used to ay "he) mgger, ball that cotton." rm not in to saying it's alright for Bill

Ointon to be business as usual in the way he handles his hb1do. under­handed dealmgs, or his policies that affect a democracy rm a part of Bribery, lies. adultery, deceit-these are Bill Clinton's virtues and ethical standards of behavior. And I think THAT harm the America I want to live 111.

I'm sorry it hurts some people to just say something is i*cking wrong and step up and hold a higher account of ourselve .. I guess that takes courage and elf discipline. I'm Orr)' for that. be­cause THAT inability to do so ham1s the American people

Take part in the decision making for higher education in the tate of Montana. Apply for the student position in the Board of Regent , the deci ion making body of higher education. Applications are available in the ASMSU Senate office and due Friday Feb. 27 .

@

montana. edu

:TRAMGRALS AND ACGI DART TOURNAMENT

;gn up in SOB ~C Center ·bruary '-19th

1urnament 'l3rts Mon. -b 23rd · ~independents

Tues. Feb. 24th for Fraternities

In SOB 275 For more info

call 994-5000

I

A GREAT RIDE! Advanced Full Suspension systems from Schwinn.

A Sweet-Spot ride that stops all the Rhetoric.

on sale starting at $574.00

Owenhouse _. iCE Hardware • '"' 11<.1'>1(' -.r, 1'1 I

36 E MAIN• DOWNTOWN BOZEMAN • 587-5401

I 4 I Tuesday February 10, 1998 I tll''i mttlentl

Love: Students against sexual assault celebrate Valentine's Day con I i1111ed fro111 pnge 1

women. intimate encoun­ters are not whim. ical. carefree. or part icularl) romantic .

Valentine·~ Da) has a long histOr) a. a fe,ti' al of lo,e. pa . sion . and flirtat1011 . The ancient Roman fc\li\ al called Lupercalia Look. place e\ery February 15th . Generali) con idered the predeces,or to modern Valent1ne·s Da). it ~as a celebration honoring Juno the Goddess of ''omen and marriage and Pan. the God of nature and 1111seh1ef. Partner> for the festt\ al ''ere eho,en h) random b) dra~ 1ng names from a bo" From the"~ random pa1r1ng-. man} romancc' werc begun

Chr1,t1an 'Pill 011

thc festt\ al began 111 49<' AD "hen Pope Gelas1sus changcd the fe,tnal to Febntar) 14th

and renamed il St Valentine·, Da). Whi le the exacl identit) of the St. Valentine i:-. nol agreed upon. one St. Valentine \\as a priest living around the year 200 AD. He 1\a jailed and later beheaded by the Romans for aiding persecuted Christians.

Contemporar} Valentine·, Day is criticized b) man) a-. O\ erly-commerc1al and as just another Hallmark mone)-maker. But most people ,till get cxcited at thc pro~pect of It)\ e-letters. cand) and flov.­ers from admirers , both kno\\ n and 'ecrel.

The old -.ent1mental meaning of hnth the Roman fe,­ti1 al and 1h Chnst1an Cl)Unler pan remains toda). Lo1 e and relauonships are ,ull chen,hed a, ideal. 'I et 111 man) relauon­sh ip-. It)\ e turn-. tn fear and

abuse . This week, in honor of the St. Va lentine who fought against oppres~ion and physical violence. ha. been recognized as Love Without Fear Week aero s Montana. in order to commemorate tho e "ho ha-.e suffered the oppre sion of rela­tionship violence.

Student Against Sexual Assault will present a table m the SUB on both Thursday and Frida) of thi!> wed.. to celebrate Valentine's Day and Lo'e \\ith­out Fear Week Come make a \alentine for )Our s~eetie \\tth suppl1c' pro1 ided (including ta\!) treat,!) and pick up "omc 111lormation on 1\a)' to pre1ent ;ind reduce "c"ual and relation­"hip \ iolence . Ir) OU ha1 e fur­ther 4uc-,uon' about rc-,ources for sun11or' of \C'\ual and re­l,ll1onsh1p 11olence call the \ OICI· Center at 994-7069

STUDENT CHECKING

· ~o Pt~r t 11 ck Fct s

· l nlimitul Check \''11ti11tt

tr~ \Bl I I t.ht·1 4,..11 d

· ~r• UmlC1 ~ l11 l .. u1l .k '.!1blih:

I l Fitsf: fnlusfafe Bark I~ I

MSU offers summer program in Europe BY CAROL SCHMIDT

Com1111111ica1io11 Sen·ice:>

Applications are still be­ing accepted for a two-week ex­ploration of theater and architec­ture of London and Pari . offered through the Office of l ntema­tional Programs and the College of Ans and Architecture at Mon­tana State Univer ity.

The . tudy-abroad pro­gram, ~cheduled May 12-26. will be led by MSU professor Clark Lle,,cllyn, architecture. and

Stephame Campbell. the Participants in the intcrdi nary lll\.estigation of En, and French an. theatre and tu re. will allend . e1eral tht cal production~ Ill both En! and France, including a pe mance at Shake,peare's t place. Stratford on Arnn. cursions are planned to r legendary archttectural m ments includlllg the Tow London. the Eiffel Tower.

see Summer program pag

SAUNDERS PHOTOqRApHiC

Pile up for some fun at Saunders Photographic Studio.

Bring in a group of friends and get your Dog Pile Picture taken at no cost.*

When your looking for a good time let Saunders Photographic make it memorablE

Open Saturdays and week nights until 7P~ 11·

Call for an appointment

587-1 352 • must purchase 1 8x1 O per person. black and while

The $ 11 .95

HairCut Special

Includes Shampoo and Cut

Offer good with this couoon until 2128/98

Offer good w th part1c1pat1r.g Stylist

......................... $1 OFF All 8 & 16 oz.

Retail Products Otter good with this coupon

until 2128198 •••••••••••••••••••••••

$20FF All 32 oz.

Retail Products Offer good with this coupon

unt1 2128/98

Products Include • Paul Mitchell •Kera Vita •Sebastian • Biologe

-Main Mall 587-2343

Mon-Fri 10-9 • Sat :J.. Sun 12-6

I Tuesday February 10, 1998 I 5 I

'De English Club will meet dne day Feb. 11 at 7 p.m. .E. Story streeL For more in­fon contact Je se Johnson

874.

i'ree income tax ~istance 1s e to ta>. pa) ers who cannot af-

1pa) for professional advice. \}le Volunteer Income Tax As­

program. b tm TRS pon­gram in which volunteers

!Opie with ba~ic federal and a income tax rerums. VITA r:e will be a\·aifablefrom 6:30 ~. Tuesdays. Feb. 3 through

in the Su·and Union Build­SU. Taxpayers hould bring package~. W-2 forms. inter­

tment. 1996 tax returns. and x documents. No appoint-

e MSU Leadership Institute <;oring Create Your Own

orkplace leadership confer­dicated to the interests of

Upcoming Euents What's happening in the Bozeman area in the next few weeks

MSU students. Participants will be able to participate in a number of education and entertaining work­shops. The conference will be held in SUB Ballroom A at 8:30 a.m. on Saturday. Feb. 17. The cost i $I 0 and includes lunch and a packet of re ume writingand interviewing tips.

Victim Options In the Cilm­pus Environment (t)1e VOfCE Center) and the :Bozeman Area Battered Women's etwork will conduct a \'Olunteer training begin­ning Saturday. Feb. 14. 1l1e.32-hour training will fotus on providing peer advocacy to survivors of sexual and dome tic violence. Participants will receive training in the areas of cri is inter•ention, peer advocacy. medical and legal concerns. and commw1i!J resources. For more information. contact the VOICE Cemer. 994-7069. or the Battered Women· et­\\ ark. 586-7689.

A nordic ski tour in the Is-

land Park area of Idaho will be coordinated by ASMSU Outdoor Recreation on Feb. 14- 16. Cost of the trip is $30 wh.ich include~ trans­portation, group lodging and , pecial use fees. Tenta tive plan:. include Lucky Dog and Harriman St.ate Park trail system . Skiers of all abilitie are welcome. Contact AS 1.SU Out­door Recreation at 994-3621 for ad­dition infom1ation.

A new serie of natural child­birth education c~es will be of­fered, in Bozeman beginning Tues­day, Feb. l 7. The eight classes wil1 be taught by Kristi Campbell. doula; and Stncey Haug land, apprentice midwife; "1\!ld will cover basic anatomy of pregnancy and birth. emotional i ~Sues.,surrounding preg­nanC) and parenting. nutrition and exerci~e for pregnancy and birth, dif­ferent comfort measures for labor. ways of. upporting labo1ing women, newborn care and breru.t feeding ~up­port. For more infonnation about the

classes or to register. call Kristi at

586-2399 or Stacey 585-0752.

The Bozeman Headwaters chapter of the ewi:. and C lark Trai I Herita_ge Foundation will present 'The Sdenttfic Literature of the Lewis and Clark E.xpedition" at 7:00 p.m. Tuesday. Peb.17, nt the Bozeman Senior Center (807 N. Tracy). The program wjll be pre­sented by Dr. Stuart Knapp. MSU professor and pa~r President of the National Lewis and Clark Trail He1i­tage Foundation. Dt. Knapp will dis­cuss the scientifi0<informati'On used in the preparalion for the expedition. the books and maps they took along on the journey and the journals thm re ulted. The program is free and open to the public.

·•Paradise Found," a multi­media program focusing on adven­ture travel in New Zealand. will be presented by Greg Smith on Tues­da). Feb. l 7 al 7:30 p.m. m Ballroom

GET INVOLVED AND MAKE A DIFFERENCE IN THE NEW EPl·CENTER.

Help with the planning f the student building that we

are helping support.

Due Date: Friday, March 13th. he applications can be picked up

at the ASMSU office.

a Great Expe ience!'' Lt·.11n 11~ ti" t,11\~ti.1~· :\l1'<'ting pc••f'..: < •lminf 1."ht' 10 t.l•l' \\llh

h1-.t.in .11t auJ .~1 ... hlll tur~. <.u ltlll'L' fl•L'd .1nJ tun

Uni'>'Cl!>il\ ~ t urli1.·., l\hro"d <on •JrHtm1 l nl\ f"IC\ 1 rf \.1•-. ,,.i., I d1r.tn I ~l ~ 1~('110, l'\ :'ld.1 r.•J;:;.i;7 I 7ll~ I 7~ 1-hr;ti•t

l--111;)tl lP•.JL r.11..hntn 111\r"·du l1t lp:/ '' \' '1.-..l>< ~ LllU'-·ii ll L ..... h.

AUSTRAL.IA • CHILE • COSTA RICA • lNGLANLl • f R '\JCf • c. · RMA 'JY L.1\1 Y "' NF.W 7FALAND • SPA~N • THAJLAND • CHil':A

A of the SUB. Admission charge is $3. Greg has Lraveled extensively in "The Land of the Long White Cloud." He has visited all of New Zealand's national parks and ha~ cycled over 3.000 miles from Cape Reinga in the north to Steward Is­land in the south. Contact ASMSU Outdoor Recreation at 994-362 l for additional infom13tion.

Planning to spend Spring Break in Mexico or Be lize? A 1/2 hour presentation on how to pre­vent and/or treat travelers diar­r hea, plus immunization a nd medication recommendations will be given at Lhe Student Health Service on Thur day Feb. 19 at 4 p.m .. Wednesday Feb. 25 at I 0 a.m .. and Wednesday March 11 at 4 p.m. If you are traveling to an­olher coumry this semester or 111

the summer where immunizations are required, you need to be een by a nurse 6-8 \\eeks in advance of departure.

My Cat is a

handsome fellow

that

needs a

Valentine!

WEEKLY DRAWING FOR $5 OFF

YOUR PURCHASE!

$1 "BIRD BUCK" WITH PURCHASE OF ~10 OR MORE

TO SPEND ON YOUR NEXT

VISIT/

I 6 I Tuesday February 10, 1998 t9!\'omnentl .L

'Green' building: Focus on a healthy environment state, which will not contribute to the funding or maintenance of the building.

The "Green·· building is one of its kind in the nation.

''It is the first to have ·Green· technology. environ­mentally safe technology," said Nicole Chinadlc, campus repre­sentative to create student :rn arencss.

The construction and maintenance of the building will focus on prcsen·ing a healthy environment. and it is because of the popularity or these ideas th at some large cor­porations haYe wanted to get a hand in it.

"(They reali ze that] it is the way our society i · reform-

ing," Chinadle said. During the holiday break

several mcdings were held re­garding the use ot it.

'"[There was a] concern on how the students \\ill use the bui ld ing," Chinadle added.

A pa1hwa1 through the re­cycling center is also planned.

"[They hope to] have stu­dents and professors work to­gether which will create better relations." Chinadlc said.

The proposed building will be located north of Montana Hall where Cleveland Street used to run and will include many class­rooms and laboratories. It will also house offices from the Na­tional Research Center for Green Buildings. the Technology Cen-

em1timwd .frmn paf!.e 1

kr tor Computation Biology and possihly the Center of Bio-Active Compounds.

Although the center wi ll be used by scientists across the nation, a major portion of the 200,000-square-foot building will be given O'>er to the stu­dents' study needs It is in­tended to be used as a study space much like an extension of tht.. SUB and library. There arc also pl.rns to add a coffee bar. named Rio-bar.

Funding will determine the construction dates. At this point , the committee hopes lo begin construction in 1999 and estimates that the building will take two to three years to complete.

NOTICE - NOTICE

THE ANNUAL ELECTION OF DIRECTORS FOR THE MSU BOOKSTORE, INC.

IS SCHEDULED FOR

WEDNESDAY - MARCH I I, 1998

APPLICANTS MUST FILE AT THE ASMSU OFFICE

(STUDENT UNION BUILDING)

NO LATER THAN

5:00 p.m. Friday, February 20, 1998

ONE FACULTY THREE STUDENTS

Directorships to be filled:

One (I) Faculty member of the Corporation:* Must be at least eighteen years of age, and at least an Assistant Professor with three consecutive years of service at Montana State University." Said professor to "hold office for three years. .. "

Three (3) Student members of the Corporation:* (a) One student who is "at least eighteen years of age; has earned at least twenty

semester credits.." Said student "shall serve for two years. .. "

(b) Two students who are "at least eighteen years of age; have earned at least fifty semester credits. ·• Said students "shall serve for one year ... "

Students must be (and remain) eligible by maintaining the credit and grade point requirements of Montana State University for extra-curricular eligibility. Any individual who receives direct support from o full-time Bookstore employee is not eligible to serve as a Director.

•MEMBERSHIP: "All regularly registered students and regular members of the faculty of Montano State University ... •• ore member:> of the MSU Bookstore, Inc.

M5U EOOKSTORE 8TUO•NT FACULTY OWN80 &INCi! itil31

Summer program: Two wee in London and Paris

and London Op'"'ra houses and European m.irketplaccs that give the sense of European architec­tural st1le and use of space.

Cost of the program. .,.. hich can include up to three university credits, airfare. meals and accommodations, is pro­jected at $2,500.

In addition, there are still openmgs for a four-week MSU study abroad program in Morocco set in May 12-June 11 The expedition will be housed in MSU's sister-uni­versity, Al Akhawayn Univer­sity, located high in the Atlas Mountains in the resort town of Jfrane. Course work will include lectures as well as

continued from pat.!e

field trips in the ancient citio of Fes, Rabat, Casablanca a111 Marrakech. The Morocc~ program offers three cour ell each worth three credits, all 1 be taught 111 English. They ia elude history of the Arab airJ Is lamic world, introduction j the study of Islamic Civili:u tion and Moorish and Moroc can art and music. Cost of th Moroccan program, includio airfare.;. meals and accomm1 dations, is $2,900.

For more information c these programs and other stuc abroad opportunities conta. Beth Davenport at the MS Office of International Pn grams, (406) 994-4031.

MSU Campus Police Repc -1-31-98-

Res ident at Langford re­ported the theft of a coat from his room. Two suspects were loca ted . They were cited for theft, obst ructing justice and minor in possession of alcohol.

Officers responded to a domestic disturbance at resi­dence in family housi ng. A mal e suspect was arrested a nd charged with family mem­ber assault.

-2-1-98-A male • uspect was ar­

rested for DUI on S. 12th street. Employee at Langford

reported that a door had been vandalized .

A delivery person re­ported that a window was bro­ken out of his vehicle while parked by Roskie hall. A sus­pect was located and agreed to pay for damages.

Officer investigated ave­hicle accident in Gatton lot.

Resident in family hous­ing reported that her 7 year old son was missing. The boy was located a few hours later.

Complete

Office r investigated hicle accident in the Lew Clark lot.

Employee at the SUJ ported that a male suspect seen taking toilet paper fr custodia l closet. The su: was located and the toilet I was returned.

-2-3-98-Resident Ill hous1n

ported that he is rece i harassing messages or voice mail.

A back-pack was s from a vehicle parke1 Deer street.

-2-5-98-0fficer investigated

hicle accident in Gatton It Resident in family I "'

ing reported that she is re• ing threatening phone call

-2-6-98-0fficer investigated

hicle accident on S . 11th s Student reported

she was threatened b) ex-boyfriend.

Auto & Truck Repair

Foreign or Domestic 1401 E. Malo

served "ith garlic toa t and include Baked Ziti•, Ravioli, Spinach

1anicotti, or Spaghetti or Linguini

with four sauces to choose from. You

can also get Homemade Meatballs or Italian Sausage with any dinner.

1003 W . College • 587-5544 open 11 ~m - 7 days a week

's1m1har lo Lasagna

iingle-parent students balance roles '\()'\ 8.\\1'·\

I \\nftr

uc11t.l1ng college and d1ildrcn arc rough act'

2le to the ,,1me tune. ·ncrg) ,md monc) 'ccm JI ume !O\\' \\hen t\\O tr~ n. let alone 'inglc

ccntly celebrated il 20th ann1-,·crsar). ha' 'ecn man) changcs occur In Januar) 1988. 11 mo\ ed from !ls onginal site in a duple:-. in famil) hou,ing lo a building north of '\ionh Hedges. It \\a' ,11\0 accredued through the National Academ;. of Earl) Childhood Prngrams of the 'IAEYC.

a Pl i I~ ~ ha\ c l g ~ d h the

r.le<l\ i ng hildrcn k-par­sehold. ing to Eggert.

"Student loans are hard to pay back, but there is no way to get around them in order to pay for

Jeanne Eggert. direc­tor of the daycare. 'aid one of the m a J o r changes she has noticed is the famtl) d; namics of the children a c Len <ling daycare and their parents

of the Shunk.

e Cen­lontana

daycare"

Current!). there are 85 1 allcnd1ng thL da)care , at the Louise Shunk ' Center Thi.o <la)care. ed b) AS\1SL opened \\ ith I .f children attend­\\ it l' licensed for more children.

1e da:rcare. \\hich re-

-Lori Donahue

··\\hen the da;.care fip,t starred. 1 t \\as common for the mother to support the father \\hi le he attended school. Now both parents arc usual I) attend­ing school. .. Eggen 'aid.

But that 1s not al\\a) s the case. Of the 85 children currently in daycare. approximate!) one­third are from -.mgle parent fam1-

PtlOT 81 R £R D I

Children at the Louise Shunk Daycare Center listen to a story Monday while their parent(s) attend college

lies. Monica Finnicum and her <laughter are one such tamil). The 23-year -old mother of one is a JUmor majonng in Chemical Engmeenng.

Finnicum. \\hO last year

\\Us completing an 11uenhh1p at the Un1\erslt) or '.\lontana. f111d' '\ISL ·s pnccs \ ery: rea­sonable Lompared to what she wa> paying last year for Llaycare At the U of M. dayLare

\\as $16 a da) ,rnd that Llidn't include the c:ost of sending hcr daughter to preschool three times a \\.Cek:. \\h1ch wa ... n·t a

See Daycare page 8

;!creation department offers something for everyone

1 Jeason completes a set of reps in the Shoyer Gym Monday.

\AUSF

Writer

>those holiday pounds refuse oaj? Were grandma·s Christ­

' ie a little too gooLI this year' I

Well, the holidays are long gone and it\ time to get m 1,hape.

The intramural~ and recreation department at Montana State has a va­riety of programs to help anyone. from

the couch potato to the all-around ath­lete. tr) something new and li..>cl great.

Ryer; descnbmg the Lliffen:nt program ... anLI a friend!) staff oflenng to tailor make a program for each stu­dent, are available at the office in Sho) er Gym.

Some of the program!> offered are personal 1:ra.ming. incentive pro­graw . rock climbing. women's box­ing and women's weight trainmg

ew and expanded programs are alwa)s in the making, howe\er. there are still old favorites like aerobics.

Shelly Harder. an mtramurals aerobic instmctor. said. "'Our aerobics clas-;es conunue to attract large num­berof students and that i. very exciting to me."

Some upcoming events to look. for are women\ self de fen~ and an ad-

';meed rock climbing cla.'>s. The) also otter lecture pro­

grams. The ch<mgcs that o!lt..r came \\ith college has pmmpted the-.e lec­ture offerings on fitness ,111d nutriuon along wnh a dormitory prescmation about everyth111g from a changing schedule lo healthy eating hab1Ls in U1e dom1itones.

College studems are usu­ally on a limited budget and can't afford an expensive gym mem­bership in town So. most of the intramural and recreation are free. Accor<lrng Lo Carrol Kolarich, an MSU recreational speciali~t. stu­dent~ are "'mcJ...el and dime<l to death." The recrea tion depart­ment wants to give students an opportunity to change their lifesryle skill s without always

ents captivated by professional success stories and inside tips

ha\ ing to pa) for ll. Man) students h;n e partici­

pated in the programs and are sat­isfied \\ilh ''hat the) offer.

··1 think. it \\Ork., out rather \\ell.'' say' Tahn Coll ms. a fresh­man 1n General Studies. " It seem' that the) ha\e a lot of decent ma­chmcs that are easy to use and they have a friendly taff:·

ll 1s always hard to get into shape. especially the months after the holidays. but the free programs m the intramurab and recreation depart­ment can help change a student'> li festyle and get them 111to shape.

Stop by the intramurab and recreation office, for infom1a11on on the program , Monday-Frida). 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. or call their hotline at 994-5000

dership conference introduces students to business

!arly everything students kno\\ about the profes­

•'Orld-from hunting for the Internet Lo table man-busmes-. lunch \\as a<l­

la>t \\eel.end at the WorJ...­~adersh1p Conference in n. le conference \\as the

ASMSU Leadership lnstitute's lat­est effort to align the business com­munity with Montana State stu­dents.

According to Blue Mitchell. studcm employee of the Leadership In ... titutc. more than 60 stuucnb at­tended the Saturday \\ork-.hop in 1he SLl3, \\ h1ch \\as a larger turn­out than expet·ted

The l cadersh1p Institute 1s "fur students by students," accorc.J-

ing to Carina Niedermier. director of the program. The Institute 's pri­mary goal is to serve as a resource for MSU students interested in leadership-oriented programs. she said

Plans for the Institute 111clude offering a Leadership Ccrt1fi1:atc Program and organi11ng a confer­ence each semester dedicated to improving students· career and communll} leadership skills.

In the keynote speech, Mark Tavem111, president and co-owner of Spanish Peah Brewing Com­pany, spoke positively of the pro­fessional world . includmg oppor­Junitics for starting a business.

"Reali1e that ,my th mg you do 1s gmng to create an e11.penenee for }Ou.'' l'a\ ernilt said. ''The question is.'' ill it take )OU \\here you want to go'!"

Following the speech.

Tavemiti opened the lloor to the ' tudents, \\ho asked questions 'uch as. "What do you look. for in people you hire?" and .. Have you thought of lllming Spanish Pea[...., 111to a frnnchiseT

Sc\ era I students ton11nented upon TaYernll1 's introduction co the Conference

"It \\as mspmng Lo !ind 'omc

See Leadership page 10

I 8 I Tuesday February 10 , 1998 t&J;'ornnen tJ

6 ''Wuf" spoofs Montanan ethics RF\ ll\\ Ii) LEsu \ Sc11R01 Dl:R

£1pt111<·111 II rirer

tr )llu'1·e ever attended a pla:. pcrtormed h) 1he Vigilante Theatre Compan) at Fmer:.011 Cultural Center. ) lHI ''ill li<11 c ll<H1ced t\\ o things: the unbe­lte1 .1bl) h.ird. '' ood chair~. anJ the requirement of the actors to pla) n10rc than one par! 111) c>.perienee 1\ith 1hi~ play \.\a affected b) nc11her of these things.

"Wuf." directed by Tho­ma. Q. Morris and written by MSU English prof es. or Greg Keeler. was certainly entertain­ing. Thi atire is based on the notion of reintroducing wolves in to Yellowstone National Park. A the play looks at both sides of the issue. it mal-.es fun of them at the same time.

It start out with Lobo and Loco. two typical Montana CO\\'boy . Enter: Dr. Lupina. a therapi t from (ga . p!) Califor­nia "'ho's motto for Montana is : "A little bit of truth and a lot of hugs''. As Lobo. Loco. and Grann) (who happens to be Lillle Red Riding Hood' s grcat­great-granddaughter) tr) to rid

the '' or 1 d ( o r a t I ea~ 1

\cllll\\'-!One) of \.\Ol\CS. the;. arc up again't tree-hugging en­' 1ronmcntali't Little Red Fann) Pach (Grann;. "·granddaughter).

One or !he shO\\ ·, high­lights \\a~ Grnnn) and Red's dueling duet of "Woh cs in l lolding Pens" set to the Doors· Lune "Riders of 1hc Storm ·· PM!\ of J\ct I become ab~o­lulel) h1L.tr1<HI' a-. Red g.11 es mouth to-mouth lo a buffalo Grann) just shol (all uf lhi' i'

One of the show's highlights was

Granny and Red's dueling duet of

"Wolves in Holding Pens" set to the Doors' tune

"Riders of the Storm."

off- tage. of course). Last but not least. the

hero, Buch (who looked a Jillie like Kenny's dad on South Park), i a drunk cowboy who has hallucinations of a wolf.

The econd act i, a com­plete turn-around. as it i ,e t in lhe future in the house of a rich out-o f-stale de\eloper. Fenri . and his famil). The famil) con­'ists of a \\ ife. an ltalian ha<:­been compo,er. Bella : and the daughter Phan (that', "Fang") ''ho earnc' .iround a dead lamb and i' nothing ~hon of a female

l\larilyn Manson. The) order a "CO\~ boy in a Box" to contrib­ute to the Co1\ boy reintroduc­tion program. The cowboy hap­pens to be Buch. Iii id al the foct that there arc no real chores to do and i' put into an apron.

Things bcg.tn lo get a bit chaotic and P')Chotic. but Grann) and Red join Corce' to 'a\e the da). and all 1' re,1ored in Montana.

John Hoshing. G\\en Ganjeau. Rhonda Smith. and Brian Massman were wonderful in their multiple parts and de­livering corny. bu! funny lines. My only complaint wu the Piggy Rap performed by Bella. played by Smith, as this idea of rappi ng is old and worn-out. H owever, the number wa al­most saved a Phan began st rumming along with her dead lamb' inte tine (it actua ll y wasn't as ta teles as it sounds).

I am not a native Mon­tanan. and am very unfamiliar with it issue , uch as that of wolves in Yellow tone ational Park. So I did not fully experi­ence the play or understand all of its jokes. but the audience obvi­ou ly did. becau e they laughed throughout the entire thing. You can. and should. anend "Wur· Feb. 12. 13. or 1-f at Emerson Cultural Center The shm\ starts at 8 rm and t1chet' are <;;ti for studenh and S l 0 for adull~

CO-ED VOI.I.EYBAI.I. Intramurals & Recreation Sign up 202 Shroyer Gy1n

Feb. 13-18 Mandatory Meeting 12PM, Fri . Feb. 20th

Shroyer Gym Play starts Feb. 23

Daycare: Single-parent dilemm

sen ice the daycare pro­vided.

In contras!. the Loui'>e Shunk Duyrnre charges $2.25 per two-hour block, up to $10.15 for the whole da). Pre,chool 'en ice' are a1'o proviJed at no extra charge

F1nn1cum also noted thal \,1Sl' has been ver) ~up­porth c in supplying grants and ">cholarsh1p" ba"ed on both merit and need. In ad­dition, there are :.everal pro­grams available 1hat offer tu­toring.

Among these programs are Advance by Choice , which provides tutors to first-generation college s tu­dents. and the Empower Pro­gram. which also provides tu­tors, through the Chemical Engineering department, to minorities pursuing engineer­ing careers.

All in a ll. Finnicum considers the daycare ser­vkes offered on MSU to be very affordable and efficient.

"They ham a really good staff and program . .. Finnicum said. "My da ug h­ter love' to go."

Howe\ er. not e\ eryone agrees thar the daycare is af­fordable. Lori Donahue, a 35 yea.r-old-d1' orced mother of four, find~ da}care pnce-.. at

nmti1111ed ftw11 png

MSU outrageou ... Donal a freshman majonng in n lllg, i<> currently takmg , of her two) ounge't chi II \\hile her ex-husballd ha• O]dl"<>t l\H)

Donahue. 1\ ht) r 79 a \\ eeh for her 1 wo c

dren 10 al tend d,1) care du the da). -.aid it ''a~ toli pen~n c for her budget

"l can't afford top and there ,lJ'en't enough Lion~ for single pare~t campus ... Donahue ~aid.

"Studem loans are to pay back. but there i way LO gel around them i der to p:iy for daycare."

Donahue would Ii{ see more program'\ single-parent studer MSU. and better advert• for the one:. current!) a able.

Th e Louise S t D aycare Center i:> locat 1295 W. Garfield and c to children be£\\ een the of two-and-a-half thr kindergarlen. The on l sLricrion i. lhat either be one of the parent~ must student enrolled at l\ The da) 1.are i-; open e day clas~es are held. in

• • ••••••••• Buy 1 Sandwich &

J Get 1 of equal or Les· Value FREE!

Please present coupon when ordenng.

1 coupon per person per visit. Not good with any o

Someone • misses you.

®

,,

Film hits close to home in light of recent headlines ~ BY CHRISTOPHER ABEL

e11t ~i riter

The \ oting public is being . Remember the bombing of

1 ine barrad.s in Beirut about p.rs ago" Probably not a. well u remember the im a ion of da which occurred a matter ·s later A' ··Wag the Dog .. sts. the public b easil) d1>­

t d. When ,omething goe' in the political arena. the

ing to do 1~ redirect the at

n of those who will hold you ntable. While this film ue­just that son of political of-hand in a humorous wa).

lJSt real enough to make you r.

The President. as you might . is in hot water. Allegations e claiming that the leader of ee World propo itioned a

y Girl (i.e. Girl Scout) for I than an overpriced box of

s. To make matters worse. tters tend to become. the ent is eeking a econd term, e election is a mere two

; away. Naturally. the other candidate jumps all O\er

w scandal. Political ad crop _mingly minutes after the oreaks on the news. That is I the spin-doctor comes in. '.Conrad Brean (De Niro) is

gton · leading cleanup man. with Wh11e House aide.

$2

>4-33 12 Linfield 125

Winifred Ames (Heche). the two must concoct a tory so complete!) distracting that the Firefl) Girl anu her accusations become a dis tant memory. or at least are forgotten until after the election. And what can be more distracting than a war with a . mall country that ha no hope of defeating the mighty L'nited States Armed

peal to a higher power: I Iollywood. A the "'war" with Albania

start s to appear in headlines. Brean enlists the servi ce~ of Hol­lywood producer Stanle) Motss (Hoffman) . After being offered an ambassadorship to any country he \\ 1shcs in return fo1 h1; help in es­calat111g the war (or "'pageant" "'

Brean prefer~ to call 1t). "vlotss

Forces. T h e

>tory starts small. ubtle hinb uropped to the appro­priate news agency con­cerning the B-3 bomber (\\ hi ch does not ex.ist. yet it does exist, but ic doesn' t) on a secret

A review of "Wag the Dog"

.1oins the team. The big-ume producer. \\ho finus more ui ffi­cu l t) in fi lm­making than in running the country, calls in two co lleagues to brain torm . Shortly after. the) are feeding

Stars: Robert De Niro Dustin Hoffman

Anne Heche Director:

Barry Levinson Running Time:

97 minutes Rated R

till more mi in-formation to the media. even shooting phony new footage of

mission. Then a little bit more i revealed: Albanian ter­rorists are up to no good. The e first bits are designed to do noth­ing more than buy a few days for Brean and his team of master ma­nipulators to further their plans and get the Pre idem through elec­tion day. But to keep the bogus ho tilities between Albania and the Un ited State. alive in the minds of the public. the spin doctor must ap-

REPRODUCTIVE HEALTHCARE

For Women & Men of all ages Regardless of Income •Physical Exams •Birth Control

• STD Screeru ng •Anonymous HIV Testing • Free Pregnancy Teslnlg

• Mon-Sat by Appointment

587-0681

a young girl e caping the carnage that is Albania.

Why Albania, ) ou ask? It' s imple. o one knows where it is. no one knows any Albanian (though. a::. it turns out, Jim Belushi is an Albanian sympathi zer). and cena111ly no one knO\\ an) thing about Albania·s political structure. It" the perfect target.

te Eagle Has Landed • EXPRESS MA1L-::­Domes11c · max ~lght to'

GLOBAL PRIORITY~· Mu ,..Jtllt - under 11,

not rate only 4-S day d•livery 1( recei~ by l!OOp.m., no JUll'l.ntcc

CAl~PflJ now otters a convenient MAIL SERVICE !

wok ror the 061J

.ue Bax· south of Ula Strand lhion 300p.m.

M.on.-Sat. pickup !

dJ' Greeting Cards,. Report Covers Class Notes Drilling

Laser Printing Copies

1 day 1uaninteed If rtttlYed

by 2.oop.m. no ruarantee lntemotlonal - mu ....i!lht 8 oi. ?-J cby d<ol""'1)' I[ ~ved by z..oo pm. no enuante.e

PRIORITY MAil * Domestic - mu wetjhr 10'

>·} cby dellvery If re<•lved by ;i,oop.m .. no tuanntee

STAMPS

PARCEi. POST·::­Domesdc · mu .... 11h1 to'

Mo<1 hlw own box IW handllnt chat'I" 1r p.,,.packed

MAIL DROP u:oo P1I' pick upl

' ' ' Binding (great color selecuon Lower Level Strand Union 0~~9~5806 ' Mon · Thur 7:3oa m • 5:3op.m .. 7:oop m · to:oop.m. ' Laminating and we're fasr I)

FrL noa.m - s oop m Sun 7:oop m. - 10 oop m Closed Feb. 16. Mar 16-rn. 1998 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

Clear!). this film is a work of fiction, yet it contains just the righl amount of reali sm to send a ~hiver up your pine. In the age of .. seeing is believing ... buc only if you see it on TV, '. you have to wonder just how far a scheme like thi could get in the real world. Director Barry Levin ·on suggests that it does work. In the film he ci tes the example of the Beirut terrorist bombings. proposing that the invasion of the small Car­ibbean Is land of Grenada wa masterminded for the sole pur­po~e of di stracting the public. Whether or not that is what the purpose the invasion served is not that point. The point is the po -sibility that our own governmen t would dupe us. Le\ inson say all that. and through it all. marntains a sharp comic edge.

I loffman is the very be~t he ha been in years. Both he and De Niro have a wonderful onscreen rapport. They argue over miniscule details: De Niro shooting for subtle realism to his lies. while Hoffman aims for a Hollywood level of in­vention. Anne Heche, finally given some reasonable dialogue (i f you have seen ' 'Volcano .. you'll know what 1 mean). carries herself very well, even sandwiched between two of the biggest name in mov­ies today. Supporting players, such as Denis Leary and Willie Nelson. keep this sometimes frightening story laughable. 1 honestly never thought l would say that about Willie el on. But. ··wag the Dog .. i\ polnical satire at its fin­e t. Shod.mg and funny at the same time. thi~ is yet anocher pic­ture not to mi~s.

SPRING BREAK l 998 SALT LAKE CITY-WAIKIKI ~I '\RCll 16-21

OLITHIGGER REEF ON Tl IE BE.\CH In< uc11» 11u1eV.\ifpor1 Translers nn<I Taxes 11 Imel & ~irlme

S5b7.00 per person B.\.<;t D Oi\ QU:\D OCCl PA:\CY

BOZEMAN-LAS VEGAS M.\HCI I 16 20 EXC \LIBL'H Includes Transfers and Taxes

$358.00 per person BASED ON QUAil OCCL'PANCY s 100 oo Dt•po>ll Due ~1 Time ol Booking. F1n~l Pavme111 Dur JAN 1 ti

Space is Limited! Call NOW 1-800-843-G 180 • (406)-388-6919

I

1 O Tuesday February 10, 1998

~CDPicks B\ KRI, Tli' B L'RT

£1po11e111 \\ ritcr

Soundtrac k Ami.Had. Original !'-Int ion

Picture Soundtrad, compo~ed and co ndu c ied h) John Will ­iams. tDream v. or!,.s)

J ohn Williams· incredible musical gcniu ·appear' again -this time on the Amistad '>Oundtrack The famed Star \Vars and Ll\\ ~ theme' composer's onl) trademar!,. is

the e\cc llencc that becomes each film sco re he writes . Ami'1ad is no different - and Williams ha s once more charmed our cars \\ llh the di­\'Crsit) of hi s idea;. 1n thi s piece of\\ orL Some tracb arc Yery Arrican. free and exuberant in their rh) 1hmic pulse . Others are classically gruccful and bit­tersweet; the union of these forming a fragile bridge bt·­l\\een the l\\O cu ltu res \IC -.ce clashing in this picture Thb CD is a must to °'' n. \\ hclher or 1Hll ) ou sec the fl Im The music·, 1\ orth e\tend' far he-

yond ils pairing with the picture it ''as meant to accompan).

Alterna ti ve Much Afraid. Jar.., of Cla)

1E.,,enlial Rc..:ords) The ha nu J ar<; of Cla) is a

\ oice of reason 111 an insane world. Somchov. these Gen­X'cr' h:nc ni<1ncu\ creel their '' ay through their ) ou th and escaped. qJll "'h1p." but lacking the cynical eugt' 111<111) of us ha\e adopted as a '>Uf\1\al mcchan1..,111. In 1h1' 111sp1ra-11onal CD. the) bring a 'ound that 1<; mcllo\\ and acou..,llc. Team this ''1th I) r1c-s that

openly communica te their hu­mility and faith - \\hi le 1,.eep­ing their " thou ght. .. in a per­specti ve all of u ~ can relate to. .\tuch Afraid is music for the rnasse;. with a mes~age th at v. ill comfort each indiYiduars very unique ~oul

World/Celt ic The Book of Secrets.

Loreena McKennit (Warner Bro,.)

i\lc Kcnn11 C\plore.., her Celtic hentage and \\ andcrlust in this delightful musical JOUr­nal of her tra\ els The original -.elections on her CD range

from solemn l ri ~h ballad Venetian-~!)' le ··parade mu to authentic Eastern melod intenvo\ en \\1th modern compc1niment \lcKell' make.., an excellent stOr) te on this trul) h1-.1orical. ro nt1 r1 c album . strange!) surreal. hut. 111 n ity. authentically chronicles past in a\ ery beautiful and otic \\3)

\\'hile li'1en1ng to B of Secrets. one feel-., satis fy sequt"stcred from 1h1-. mndt complicated '' nrld E\ e1 on!) for a liulc \\hi le'

Leadership: students express gratitude for advice

onC \\hodidn't n~all) have much educational hacl,.!,.'fOund. but utilized the people he encountered 10 net\\ ork. .. "'1!d Sonia Rt"t'CC, a senior in Comrnunit) Health. "He Jll~t did 11. ..

Jt"lln Elliot.. 'ice prcs1uenl of AS~! L. \la' abo 1111pre-.scd b) Tmem11i. He had so much t"\penence to share-11 \\as real!) a bm1ing ex­perience."

"I appreciatcu Im \Clf-conli­dence ... said Dan 1'-fallo). ~cnior in ps) -chology. "He \\'asn·t going to let the unlmown stop him."

The n::mainderofthe worl-.shop

\\a dividcu into three ses~ions. in \\hi ch each p<U1icip<U1t chose to attend one of four <.eminars. Topics cm ered hy the -.em111a1'> mcludcd !11ten-11lt11rvl Issues in rft< 11 orf..placc . Joh H11mi11g Tt11s L 1i111? the Set. anti Per..(llw/ Fi­ll<lllCC Afier CC1lll'f.!.C.

In Job H1111ti11g 7i11.1· Usmg the Net. Ralph Brigham. director ofMSlJ Car1..>er Scf\ ices. said 80 percent of the positions filled in the job market are not advertised. Brigham described the pro­cess of finding position~ on the IntemeL but emphasi1.ed the 11nponance of net­working on a pe1'$onal le1el.

ln a 'eminur enutled Sel/111g )(>urself \\'ithout Braggrng, John Parkes . .I 1 . hum<m re~ourccs manager at Pt1\\ert1ou-.e Tcchnolog1e-.. oflered tip-. on the intef\ IC\\ ing pmcess. such a>- researching the compan). and -,end­mg a [I) pet!] than!,.-) ou note to the in­lef\lC\Wr immediate!) fol kl\\ ing the 111l.'eting.

"\vord' don·! ha'e meaning. the) cau..,e meaning." ~aid Kath) McClcm). public relation. director for the Northern BmoJcasung S) ~tem 111

Billings, 111 a -,ession cal led Co11111u111i­cario11 Skills for the \\i>rkplace.

McClem) illustrated the ca~e with '' hich people miscnrnmunicate and how tom 01d tension on the job.

The scmmil.1' ''ere met wllh an equal a.mount Of enthusi<NTI.

'"TI1e conforencc has hecn exct"l­lent 10 '>par!,. us \\ Hh ideas for fuurre can..-e['.:· ~aid Lyncl...e} Fosbe1). Agri­cultural Educauonjumor. '111e) ha\e really shm\ nus hm\ \\C can u....e cut­ting edge skills lo help tts sucet.-ed in whate1cr career we choose:·

··You learned thing you can use eve!) da):' '<lid Dare; Shilling. 1Sl: ~rudenL of the Business Eriqtlt'fte semi-

nar led b) Ka) Gutm<m and Lon land. Gutman <Uld Holl.mo instnJ the students on toptcs such a.' mar while dining in a busme. 'X'tung

Student pkumef' of the ca ence also deemed it a succc ~

''\\ 'hen)OUCOllSlderilt: -and it took ur a \\hole SatUnla} S<J) the turnout'' :l! reall) grea(' -.rudent Holl) Dungtm. a mcmb the Leadel'\lup Instirute.

· ·ttm ing d)11<un1c ,peaker. ke) :· aid ~ litchcll. ·'?-. lo. t pe marked ·excellent· on the e\'alua or the work! hops ...

Vhel1 "..:. .. r.<:lflirr.t 1' loo eo:t eme br .... urtL rl s 10 trie lh oo;ir!!e A.'1-~ !1 !11 e ~ I te\:j· ·:ll!g)' \'OU n ill 1:~nL':1Ce I R:t't-lt'>!!OO.

Al R:i1•lhci.-,, you 11 l~·<l le<:tmO!OlTf'Ul'rJ ';l)Ut <:aretf'l :.> ftle 111 !:!SI pa•· ·le ~ 'rct.i ti I.all." 11 IO II Cl Nl• Wt• ll be '1$11~~ y-.xn aill:1)Ull soon Corll.!rd '() airet..'1' i:t&=!!~ltlrll o te:e tlCtll " schecl.lle :::1 n {:!t '$ or 0:1!6 out Ollf v.-ebsite

t ww,., i::ivpal~ co111 ,oau 11re U'll:lb'.e to t:Olll ,,..,11 u:1 pl!!&.~ send ytur ri:;:su~ R:i~lne0!'1 Sl~Hw~ P.O 600< 655 71, MS-.01 Dall~ ~52tti 'h'e 1~-e

11an1· exi:11tng wor t iu .:1» 1b!Jlei.ar.:l we wwU Ii• to taJk tr.l \'OU

SU tennis team slaughters the Grizzlies IS TA I \~IE" I \I ntl.'r

'lt<1tc m<:n"; and s tenn ' te;.m' 'tt>od their and posed a tough hatlle \tontan.1 and '\onhem An­

past \\ 'ekend. he men's team came out asy 5-2 \\>tn mcrhllth C of AU !1/<)C 11omen took a r: on :V!oncana then played

• match against Nori.hem but suffered a Io's with a re of 3-6

;eshman Mark Daniel

t1\o b) keeping the ball to Montana's Scott ~mnett's forehand and Ol'cr­pm1enng him.

"I staned on real I)' skm.'' ~aid Hauck. ··Tue -;econd set I staned thinking through the poincs and put a lot of balls to hi\ forehand:·

fhe \!5l' women· Lennis team alsn m erpowered the Griz in a 5-.f 1 ictory. The team· s perfonnance LOok off 1\ 1th '\o. I seed Mari-.ka Steenkamp's terminat10n of U or M's Liuren Leger in a 6-1 and 6-0 ma1ch.

Theda) went down to lhc lme hut ended in success when MSU's No. I double' team 'cored a point m the final match tn take the lead. Stccnkamp and Sharon Cle land rolled 01 er their oppostllon "ith an 8-4 1\ in gil ing the Lady ·ems the needed point to win the match.

The men·, team ''en! into battle ,1gainst orthcm Arizona Sun da) mommg looking for their sec­ond 1 icLOl) this season

The double' learn~ pla)cd 1111-

ay for the men's team sounding \\>in 01er U

OaHd Froschauer in I seed match. Daniel

presl>l\ e game to gain the first double·s point of the se:u on. Owen and Daniels had a ~olid wm O\er AU' o. I seed. Kris Hauck and Chris Tokar came back from a score of2-

" It was a match where neither guy was playing his best. It came down

to who wanted it more." 5 to take their first double 8-6. schauer"s serve at a

ill in the third set to take ' I) 7-5.3-6.6-3. t 11 as a match where U) was playing their Jx,t. ·· i coach \lark Sigalove. ··It ,vn to 11ho wanted it more:· nior Dean O\\>en had a

in overcoming the scrapp)' ).llontana · No. 2 o;eed Man

Owen defeated Shame m ·e 7-5. 7-6, sell.. ~'in Reeder and Kris ulled out crucial victorie~ ing behind early in their

- Mark Sigalo1e Daniel overwhelmed

Lumberjack David Robles with his superb backcourt

play pullmg htm into the lead after !.he fast set In an incredible final set Daniel. otherwi 't" kno1•n as ··Ki\\;i.' talked hi way through a uebreaker to win 6-3. 7-6.

The next hig 11m of the da) came when No.'.! 'eed Ingrid Bille fim~hed off opponent Jen Canuso. TI1c uiumph came aftertwo hard sets and led to a pie~ ing pomt won b} the scrong second seed pla) er.

"I got allead in m) first ~et.''

srud Bakke. ··1 played more consis­tent and he made the mistake . In the ~ond set I made more m1~take5, but l played with my bean."

··1 played well in doubles and fell good going into smgb:· said Daniel. "In the tiebreaker r was more rela),.ed. I even laughed when I botched a few:·

Then in a repeat of hi:. out­tanding performance on Friday,

Owen took out Aaron Badbill of AU with a 7-5, 6-3 win.

PHOTO Bl jAY THA\E

~eder fell early 2-5 in his .but bounced back for the . 6-4. victory. Hauck fell t set 0-6, but had an im-

xomeback to take the next

Supporting the learn was Michelle Kia.ti's defeat over Kylie Wagner with core of 6- I. 4-6, and 6-0. Then in a breeze Cherie Ritsco smashed Rebecca Means with a fi­nal 6-0. 6-2 win. see Confidence page 12

Kevin Reeder spikes the ball for a point in his comeback victory on Fnday. Reeder came back from a 2-5 deficit in the first set to win .

. tts lose second straight game, lack of three pointers blamed MORY J AMES

1 li1or

ie Montana State men 's ·111 team fell another rung 1:Jnference ladder on Sat­. ight against Cal State ~ge 87-78. Ve just flat got beat ," said

t ~ch Mick Durham. "They o us in the first half and

just kept it going in the second."

The only conso­lations for the Bobcats (9-3, 17-6) after the

"We just flat got beat. They took it to us in the first half and just kept it going in the

second."

took over the confer­ence lead is not eligible co play after the regu-lar season. Ponland

Joss was. ironically enough, a University of Montana win and a team not being eligible for postseason play. The Grizzlies defeated Northern Arizona on Saturday

- Mick Durham State took over first with their 8-2 record in

night to help keep the 'Cat in the race for the conference lead. The other fact that is working in MSU's favor is that the team that

Big Sky play. PSU '. basketball program ju&t came back into existence la t year after being on a hiatus for awhile and accord­ing to CAA regulation a team i

not eligible for postseason play for a determined amount of years.

The 'Cat fought with the Matadors (4-6, 8-12) in an offen­sive battle throughout the fir t half. The 18 point that ate Holmstadt added to MSU' 47 points wasn"t enough to keep the ·cats up to

see Battle page 12

"ck team brings home ~ualifiers, 2 records

Lady 'Cats fall after hectic weekend

' \CH GEPT\C!i

m Wm. r

Montana Stat!! continued its indoor track and field season la'>t ~nd with a successful perfom1ance against eight regional teams tho State's Mc•untain States Gan1cs at Pocatello. Idallo. The came away with five new conf<orencc qualifiers and two new ~ record> in their second of onl) three regular sca~on meeLs bc­'lls month \ Big Sky Championships. "\Ve had a number of great pe1formances and improvcmcnL~."

1..fSL track coach Dale Kenned}. "We're now approaching the llren~~ meet with several legitimate. viable scorers 1\ ho can carry

su·~ men were paced by the school-record-breaking pe1for-of senior All-American Miguel Galeana Galeana, the

's defending 1500-meter champion. placed fourth in the

see Record page 13

B Y M CCORY ] AMES

Spons tditor

The Lady ·cats had their sec­ond disappointing loss of the week­end to Cal Slate orthridge 65-70 after having a road trip from hell.

The Lady 'Cats (3-9. 8-14) didn' t ha l'e the opportunity to pre­pare for the game like normal with all the abnormal events that took place. Here a re a lew things that made the trip inte resting:

• They mi~sed their night from Phoen ix to Los Angeles.

• Heavy winds caused the pilol to circle over the Pacifi c for an hour.

• The plane had to land 111

Ontario, Calif. (wherever that is). • The plane then new back

to LAX. • A man seated next to head

coach Tracey Sheehan had a heart attack.

After all the evems that had transpired the day before Montana State just couldn't pull things to­gether for the win.

"We didn't make things hap­pen down the stretch," said head coach Tracey Sheehan "We had too many turnovers and d1dn ' t re­bound well to win tl1c game. Jt"s gut-check time and we need to get after it in our ne"'t four home games."

Montana Stale 's 19 points from Te nnyson Balle k and the double-double effort of freshman Serena Merril wasn ' t e nou gh to 01erco111c the 2 1 points pu1 111 by

Cal State Tammie Mill

orthridg.e senior

"We stood around too much on defen c." said Sheehan. ··we just didn't make any plays and aren't linding a way to compete in th o! linal minutes or the game ..

Cal State onhridge (6-4. 10- 10) led at halftime at 37-36. and secured the lead for good 1\ith 7·'.!1 remaining Thl' ' Lad} Ca ts c ut the lead do11 n to one po111t at 63 64. but the Matadors held on down the stretch to take the 1 ictor) .

As if things couldn ' t get wor\e for the Lad) 'Cats. Montana Stare sc1Hor <Halie Smith injured her back with I ·30 remam111g in the game and ih listed as doubtful for the rest of the season.

12 I Tuesday February 10, 1998 I

Battle: 'Cats lose lead, unable to bounce back Co11ti1111cd from page 11

'peed \\ith CS onhridge w:.h hght-mg it up from 111 the pai nt and out\lde the arc and ended the hall wl!h 51 points and \hot 60.6 pc.::rec.::nt from the field.

I lolm'>tadt '>lood out agam 111 his bid for Big "-> MVP. He pulled down nme board'> to go along \\ 1th his outpu t of 12 poinh for the 'econd \lra1gh1 game.

On the other hand t-.lontana State qrugglcd \\Ith their perimeter 'hooting ,111d onl ) hit 2 of 10 from three pomt range 1n the fiN half and 3-19 for the game.

.. You \\Ould thmk that h} the lime you ge t to the 20th game ) our main,la)' \\Ou Id be there:· 'aid Durham

The ·cats did go on a 9-0 run to give them the 3-+-25 lead. but '\lonlrndge ca lled a time out and came ou t of the huddle and \\Cnl on an I 1-0 run of the ir O\\ n to ta!..e the t\\iO point lead \\1th 6 20 left in the half

The 'Cal'. ''ere able to \la) e\en '' ith the M.llador' throughout the '>CLond half. The '>OluJ pla) or -.entOr'> Damon Ollie and Dan Sul I I\ an." ho hoth ended the 111gh1 \\llh 16 pomts. \\J'>n't enough a' the ·Cat'> lo'>! the bHJ ''1th.+ lh left .rnd couldn·1 hounce hack.

r 1 1 /Mr , Senior Dan Sullivan comes to a stop and prepares to shoot as Jaime Hooper looks on 1n the background. The 'Cats lost to Cal State Northridge 78-87.

The Bobcat\'' ill tr) to re'>! up and re­gain their "1nn1ng "a)' on the roatl this \\eek. The 'Cal'- onl) h~l\e one g<1me '>ehetl­uletl for the wee!- The squad \\ill ha!!le Weber State and tr) to climh back to the top of the Big Sky conference on Fntlay 111 ght

INDOOR SOCCER •Registration Dates February 13th-18th

•Mandatory meeting FRI. Feb 20th

•Event starts Feb. 23rd

Come to 202 Shroyer to sign up! For more information call 994-5000

~

~

BRIDGER ORTHOPEDIC AND SPORTS MEDICINE, P.C.

Don't let injLJries keep yoLJ oft

the slopes this winter/

L/iS SKI TEAM ••••• l'tl\ '\If I \ ··• ·-

john D . Campbell, M.D. Sports medicine

uS Ski 1 earn t''l)"i1c1an Spec1ahz1ng 1r- sports 1n1unl'5

Steve n R. Speth, M.D . Complete back and neck care

:ico11os1s <1nd spinal proo1ems S ec1al1z ng n spinal care 1n sports

Daniel M. Gannon , M.D . Complete orthopedic car e

Knee arthroscopy ind total JO•l't rcpbcemcN

93 1 Highland Boulevard, Suite 3210 • Bozeman, MT 59715 (406)5870 122 • Fox (406)587 5548 • Call For an Appointment

Ice Garden hos All-stars Sunda BY Tm" \M) J1 '<:-;11-1 R G1·1s1·R

Erpc111t•11t WrHt•n

The premier player' of the AF! 1.L gathered Sum.la) C\ening at lhe Valle) Ice Gartlen for the annual All-Star game

The &1't. \\ h1ch wa ... made up of members from Billing .... Cemral Wyommg. anti B1 ... marc!.. laced the WesL which w a\ made up of pl a) er.., from Helena. Bune. Bo1eman. and Great Falb \\a!-. 'Phi bet\•ecn lhc two teams.

It wa ... e\ ery thing a -;ports fan could ha\ e \\anted ma hockey game.

"Coultln' t have wnl!en a bet­ter \Cnpl for our All-Star game:· said kc Dog and t\FHL West coach Da' id Cole. "It \Hts cxciung for the f;ms and lhe pla)er; hatl fun:·

The Ea'! got on the board first a' the \\e,t turncd the puck O\er for a breaka\•a) Jun '>;:in)!-: , a Bill­ing ... forn ard. got the pa" from h1' teammate. Den111' Gould and raced to the Bo1cman net. BoLeman·, Ca'e) o ... 1rng \\ oultl ha' e needed an .. ·· on h1' ehe't lo ha' c s:l\ ed the ..,hot that Ile\\ over his lcll 'boulder imo the upper 90.

The onl) other one that got past O ... ung \\ll\ put IO bj hi' 0\\ n defender. Thomas "The Hammer" H.:11el-... oops1

The \\'est retaliated \\ ith l\\ o goals of their O\\ n

The fiN came after Billing' goalie. Joel Kimball. couldn 't hold a "rap around auempl b) Bune for-

came out to the pomt \\here Jesse Werner wmted Ill a qu Later in the night \\emer p second goal.

"I eouldn 't ha\e :t'>l-ed thing better.'' '>aid \\crner. full) I turned some head<'

The 'eeond period b Pirate. Kaleb Kri,tensen to for the \\e..,t and B1 ... marck'1 • Gregoire for the East. The "ere almo-.1 Ila\\ le-., 111 the penod e'.cept for one shol fi pa~l Kn~tensen off the sl N) lII) k for his second on tl1

''It\\ a'i fun to get t\\O l an All- tar game like that N)Lnyk " It \\as a good g around"

left in lhe game\\ hen lhe · lhe keeper for lhe .,i\1h anac all the pres,urc. Ea'>t maru force m their fifth goal \\ ith 1

second' remammg. Thi' brought abou

e\ent in hocke). a '>hl"IO( OU

to go one-on-one\\ 1th the go, · like a penalt) 'hot.

Great Falb. Paul Cox Kimball le:1\ mg hun .,pra\\ la ice and nened an eas) forehar

Buue·.., goalie '\ ol.t11 .,on came up big. not allo 'rngle puck to ero" th Timmpson·~ a\es led lhe W1 to the dr..unauc \ ictof)

THIS WEEK IN SPOR' \\ ednesda) • The Ice Dogs take on the Great Falb Amcricath 111 the

ke Garden at 7 05 p m The Dog' \\ill IT) .md conunue tht>ir 1

\\a)' a' lhe) plunge into the 'econd half of the ea-..on . Frida) • The \lont.ma tale men·, ba,ketball team'' ill tn to rel!.

'pot atop the Big SI-..) conkrencc again'! \\ eber tJte. The g.m;e tele\.t,ed on FO\. ·port'>- orth\\C't. rou can ,1[ o tune \\IUrdtal A'.\! to h'tcn 10 KBO/', coverage l)f the game. .

• Reghtenng begin' for mtramural co-ed 'l1lle) b:ill ,ind '>Occcr 'I ou can '1gn up m 202 hro) er until Feb I~.

• The kc Dog-..'' ill ho,1 81,man:k at the\ allc) Ice G:ml1 puck \\ tll be dropped al 7:05 p 111

Saturcla) • The I ad) ·c.u, \\ill hthl Weber tatc '" the) go mlo l

strett h of conference pl.i) at home. Tip-off\\ ill be- ,u 7·35 111 th Bree-den 1 ·1cldhou'e

• The Bilhnf!' Bull' tra\cl ltl tht' \ allc\ kc G:itdcn to b ke D\lf!' li.ll the- \mcnl,111 I rt,nt1er lfocke) l eaguc kad. TI1c 1

face tilf" ill 1.1kt' pl.ice .u ., ll'\ p.m.

Confidence: Postive look at ful

"lkan (0\\c 1l ,JH'\\c'd 11u1-..,tand1m! c'fl1ll1 ·· ,,11d \i,• ,tl11\ c " I k hasn't had .m c.ts\ malt hall) c.11. but ''hen he geh 111 .1 light '11u.l!1tlll h~ h.1' big pl.1". llic· tithc'1 gu), .1rc '1a111ng tn lc.tm htl\\ w dt' tht' ,,unc:·

fills 'h\l\\ed 111 tilt' tllhcr l\\ll \\ 111' nl the ti.I\ put :l\\ .1) b) J....ns II.tuck and k) le H.uNin

" J....n, (! l.ltll'k l had 'llll1t' big pomh \\ ht'n ht' net'tkd tlwm.'' s,ud Sigal1n t' " k) le ( H:11N111) ,tarted pl,t) mg \\hat he 1s 1·apable \lf I k \\as 'trong and confident '' ith gt1nd \ ol le) s and sen e'> "

The \\Omen didn't pl.I) qune as eflic1entl) a' the lllt'll. but the) sttll came out \\Ith some p<.hlli\·c, .. ga1ns1

'"nhern i\111011.1

In '1n~k' 'truggktl (\l pl.I) l 1t \\ I\

:ig .. in l the• I :td) Cini. n

'\ \l 0\{\1ppl.1~c·r't.L'I "tu

'L·l11 e nl '·ll. 1-t> \ It\\ lilt lre J1 .. p!lOi

'''' \t.;;l l.llllL'\\ht'nlt!U kr.1u' . • md Kl,111 f\'l kn k b\ the L u nix• pc!-' Th~ '\ti 5 .ind '\\• 6 pulkd tltll the te.1111 Ri1,codelea1t·dh ncnt .mt! Clel.111d l1l<.'~ tkm Ruk b-3. 7-5. in .lit e'.t"llllll

rhe \\ l)lllL'n \ dOUI \\di \\uh J....la1l .md R1l\L'll, nadian Conne,·111111." e,·u1t'I linal p<.)int b) '' 111rnng S-1

Round# 6

Marcu~

"The Man··

Hibdon

McCol) 'The Inshman ..

James

Pete 'The Turncoat ..

Faggen

Darcee ··Kno''' HO\\ to P1d. 'E:m ..

Richmond

Judd · P1d.rn' Spuds ..

Sch'' art1

Records

14-16 46.6%

18-12 60.0%

18-12 60.0%

1 l-19 36.6%

15-15 50.0%

Hawaii at

TCU

t9'1f I11nenp

Indiana at

Purdue

Rhode Island at

G. Washington

I Tuesday February 10, 1998 I 13

Hornets at

Knie ks

Heat at

Cavaliers

France VS.

Germany (Olympic Hockey>

I:ord: Brunner only new qualifier although 'Cats accomplish improvements Co11t111ued from pt1gt 11

ne-milt• run and bmke hi\ O\\ n nl "1th an :\CA.\. prm i­

ark of 4 minute'. 9 .46 ~'COnJ.,. n impn~"i' e ere\\ of 'Cat . led h) 'enior high jumper oefeld,1 l6-9). al'o turned 111 t.andout performances for the 1en. Koefelc..la. in 'econd

• inedjumortnple1umper Jeff rg (47-0.5) and junior long Dan Grou'\ (21-10.75) as

teamed '' ith semor John Wun.z and 'ophomore Justm Flaten as a group ot three ~tSL pok 'aulter-. 10 turn 111 16-2 effort,.

·Tm really happ) \\ith the perfonnance of our JUmper,:· 'aid men·s head coach Roh Stark . .. In

fact.'' 1th three gu)' mer 16-2. it ''a' probabl) our best pole \ault day in school histol) ··

Other 1111pres'1' e perfor­mance~ for the MSL men were

See U&far l'Jalentli~'& Vay!

'Jn & Mam • 586-6989 • 9am-lam Mon-Sat • noon-lam Sun

5:Lt5 pm "1SU f'IELDHOUSE

turned 111 h) JUmor \ 1ark Rollins in the 55-meter da'h (fourth in 6.4 7).

and JUlllOr Ke\ Ill Jacobsen 111 the 3.000-meter run (si\th in 8 34.50).

On the women·, 'idc. \1SL \

perforn1ance ''a.' highlighted by the -,chool-record-hreak111g distance rnedle) team of sophomore' Emil) Thompson and Zclf) \1o''· and \e­mor-, Genna Hou,'lere <llld I loll) Stam\h The team·~ doc.king of 11 .56 41 'ma>hed l\ISU '> olde'l

'..:hool rc..:ord l 1980). and no\\ 'lands \econd 1n the conference behind onl) Weber State

·Tue hig ne\\s for U'- ''a' the -...:hool record in lhe d.i,wnce medle)." \illd Kenned). ·Tu1' group could po­lenuall) place high at conkrcnce:·

Though the Lad) ·cats added on!) one nC\\ qualifier. \\ hich came when 'ophomore Shem Brunner tos....:d a 48 11 \\eight thro\\, Ule) 'Lill managed se\ era! notable impro' e

Tell someone they're special m a

BIG way without puthng a big dent in your wallet. foy 1t with

balloons. Balloons Ek 586-5231 Menhon this ad and save 10%

February 14th

7:35 pm MSU f'IELDHOUSE

menh mer 1,1'1 \\eek\ marks Se n1or 'pnnter Christ) Oue imprmt.:d her i\.C \:\ pro\ 1>1onal mark 111 the 400-meter,. 'i4. IS. and anchored \ISL'"econd place 1600-meterrc­la) tean1

Strong marb from the Lad) ·cat> \\ere abo contributed b) Stanl\h 111 the XOO-mcter-. (third 111 2 u 79) .• md 0 \ 10s\ Ill the one-mile run (third 111 5:o.+. l 5 ).

BLUES BROTHERS 2000 WEEKDAY MAJ -4:00; SAT·SUN MAJ 1:00, -4:00;

NIGHTlY 7:00. NO · PG· 13 l'::!t

THE '\Ht\ti'MENT ~ WEEKDAY MAJ HS; SAJ-5~ MAJ l-00, US;

NIGHTlY 7:-45, 10:00 · I

JACKIE BROWN SIBEO AY MAJ 3:50; SAJ·SUN MAT 12:50, 3:SO;

NIG+ffiY 6:50, 9:SO - I

GREAT EXPECTATIONS WUKDAY MAJ 4:1~ SAT-SUN MAT 1:10, 4:1 0;

NIGHTlT 730, 9:S5 - I S1HfO

GOOD WILL HUNTING WEEKDAY MAT 4:15; SAJ-~ MAT !:IS, -4:1S;

NtGHll Y 7: IS, 9:-'S - I S1HfO

AMISTAD WEEKDAY MAJ HO; S»-SUN MAJ 1:30, -4:30;

NIGHllY 8:00 ONLY - I

DEEP RISING S1HfO WEEKDAY MAT 4:20; SAT-SUN MAJ 1:20, -4:20;

NIGHl\.Y 7: 10, 9:30 - I

WAG THE DOG muo WEEKDAY MAJ 4:20; SAJ-SUN MAJ I :2S, 4:2S;

NJGHnY 7:25 · I

AS GOOD AS IT GETS SAT-SUN MM 1:30, 4:30; FRI-SUN NIGHT 7:10, 9:45;

MON-THll NIGHT 9:20 · N-13

IFF PIESENTS: KAMA SUTllA

MON-THUR NIGHT 7:00 · NOT RATED

I 14 I Tuesday February 10 , 1998 I

Readers

J.llake Better

john Sawyer, Ph. D.

They are also better at comprehension, concentration, and speed.

Attend a Free Introductory Class! This will be a real class where you w ill learn of the science and method of advanced read ing. You may decide to enroll after this free class. Bring two books !

Schedule of free classes: l 0: l 0, 11: 10, 12: l 0, 3: 10, 7: 10 in Reid Hall 206 Thursday, February 12th

Classifieds HELP WANTED

Premiere Guest Ranch offering Summer positions in: Waitstaff, Bar, Dishes, Housekeeping, Grounds, Wrangling and Childrens Program. Interviews being conducted at the Bozeman office February 25th-27th. Call for an application and information packet. 406-587-1244. Mountain Sky Guest Ranch An Equal Opportunity Employer.

CRUISE SHIP AND LAND­TOUR JOBS- Excellent earnings and benefits potential in seasonal/year-round positions. World Travel (Hawaii, Alaska, Mexico, Caribbean, etc.) Don't pay outrageous agency fees. Ask us how! 517-324-3094 Ext. C56952.

Alaska Summer Employment Fishing industry. Excellent earnings and benefits potential. Male/Female. No experience necessary. Ask us how! 517-324-3116 ext. A56951.

NATIONAL PARK EMPLOYMENT- Discover how to work in America's Parks, Forests and Wildlife Preserves. Competitive wages plus bonuses! Seasonal/year­round. For more information, call: 517-324-3111 Ext.N56952.

I

HELP WANTED

Looking for someone to promote the sale of embroidered products. ~No experience necessary. 1-888-784-2488.

Can you talk on the phone, eat popcorn, drink Coke? Then don't miss this opportunity to have some fun and make GREAT MONEY before spring break! We need lots of enthusiastic students to help conduct our annual Parent/Family phonathon, March 1-5. No experience necessary. Salary is $5.50 per hour, plus ample bonuses. Calling hours are 6-9 p.m. each night, work as many shifts as you wish. Contact University Relations IMMEDIATELY, x 4571, 106 Montana Hall.

ANNOUNCEMENTS SEIZED CARS from $175. Porsches, Cadillacs, Chevys, BMW's, Corvettes. Also Jeeps, 4WD's. Your area. Toll Free 1-800-218-9000 Ext. A-3843 for current listings.

Worried about a STD? Contact Bridger Clinic for screening, 587-0681.

Don't get sent to the dog house. Call Balloons Etc. for your Valentine's Day needs. 586-5231.

t'>''i itlln en tl

LI YE M U S I C ·

Andy Larson &

THE STEEL COWBOY BAND

Open Daily at 11 am 515 W Aspen• 587-1652

f1'11lfl $39.95 Un\im\ted Calla

Trade Ins W~IC'ome $1100/Month Voice Mail

Let U$ adapt your pagcu ro our system!

Alpha Numb&tic

QUANTITY 01SCOUNT S1

r-----------'M!l!!!J I fiEa. lM

----· I ~ I BOZEMAN KAU5PEll./M15SOU

I 502 W Babcock. 569 N Moin Kalii;pr.:11 585-247 2 758-6!>!'>5

I U\fl STON BUTTE/ ANACONDA I ~2 I S 3rd 500 Maphil

L 22l-t5645 !i63-7115 __ ._.., ...... ~~-- ... ----·

(406) 994-4590 Busine , Manager Paris Hodg on (406) 99-t-2206 Ad/Sales Manager Melodie Burge

Sales Associates Brian Hauer, Jodie Deignan (406) 994-2614 Graphic Designer JefWilliam

Sara Irvin

ANNOUNCEMENTS Old Bozeman Gifts And

Beads Great selection and prices

Beads, Hemp, Gifts Come in and learn how!

321 E. Main at Rouse 10-5:30 Mon-Sat, 587-5588

EARN $750-$1500/WEEK

Raise all the money your student group needs by sponsoring a VISA Fundraiser on your campus. No invest­ment and very little time needed. There's rio obligation, so why not call for information today. Call 1-800-323-8454 x 95.

Build your life on a firm foundation. College Bible Study, Sundays 9:30-10:30 a.m. Room 272 SUB 586-3879 info.

Need a vacation? Ski the French Alps! X-mas and Spring Break. $1,355, everything included. Call 582-7963. BUSINESS AND MARKETING STUDENTS, ENTERPRISING ENTREPENEURS.Say YES to the most compelling business opportunity of the century! Kevin Trudeau has integrated Direct Response Marketing with Network Marketing. Ground floor opportunity! For more information call Florence Guest at 587-1804.

Classified La) out Todd Baker

ANNOUNCEMENTS Raise $500 or more in one

week. Fundraising opportunities available. No financial obligation.

Great for clubs. For more information call (888)

51-A PLUS ext. 51.

Lambda Alliance/Q-msu A safe place for the lesbigay and transgender campus community and our straight friends. Meetings every Tues. 7-8:30 PM .. in SUB 273

Free Pregnancy Test No Appointment Needed

586-9444 40 East Main #8

Pregnancy Caring Center

.FOR SALE Lab manual and Photo Atlas for MB301 and 302. Labs for MB301 completed and included along with lab final. $30, Call 582-7354, Mon­Thurs.

11·}i&U1•14·1'Jt -i

Found - Blue shoe/boot I • Christmas break at the A. ~

Desk.

Lost - a used cardboard • filled with dancing mice t • have passed away.

House for rent, fully furr • single or couple only elm MSU, three acres on ere -.., Hot tub, faculty or staff o 585-8920. $1 .200. mo. f'" Roommate needed: Ava Feb 1. $2251 mo plus 1 /4 utilities. OW/WO, hot tub cats. Call 586-7622.

Two rooms available. Ne House, five miles Bozerr ;os S. N/P. Feb 1 and Mar 1. ' mo each 388-4909. Hol H in Belgrade.

Meet me at the Waite G1 ~

t*>'j WJilentl

OMICS

Mo1Z6

W o 1oJ 1> E:. R S oi::

Su.-euRBIA

ACROSS 1 Horse's foot 5 Labyrinth 9 Biblical queen

14 Tuscany river 15 Actress Moran 16 Steel tower 17 Falsehoods 18 "The Avengers"

star 19 Ore analysis 20 " and Clark 21 Most indolent 23 Stan's panner 25 Columnist

Landers 26 Writer Ferber 30 Justly evaluated 33 Vex 34 Flightless birds 35 French textile

center 36 Orange llqueur 40 Addic~ve drugs 42 F1ct1onal Butler 43 March time 44 Female relative 45 Regarding with

respect 51 Shout of Joy 52 Industrious

insect 53 More rational 54 Leas1 damaging 58 Marine shade 59 Gooey dollops 62 Jamaican fruit 63 Turkish money 64 Streisand film 65 Quantity of

papa-66 Slaughter in

Cooperstown 67 Bullwinkle, e.g. 68 Units of work 69 Refuse to

believe

DOWN 1 Revere 2 American

songbird 3 Eugene, the

dramatist 4 Archaeologist's

find 5 Blackbird 6 "Elsa's Dream,"

e.g.

I Tue sday Febru a ry 10, 1998 I 15 I

C 1998 Tnbuno Media SeMou. Inc All nghts reserved 2/10/98

8 Locomotive 9 Heal th resorts

10 Frenzy 11 Golfer Ernie 12 Long scarf 13 At all 22 Consumma!lon 24 Deplane

1mmed1ately 27 Sap 28 Sudan nvor 29 Beer choices 31 Actress

Thurman 32 Twosome 35 Alther and

Eichhorn 36 B1rd's crop 37 Casual

affirmative 38 M. Descartes 39 Tries 40 Lofty poem 41 For each 43 Number 45 Actor Kilmer 46 Last

A N 3 a S91:13 1 3SOOV>I s 0 N 3 ~ V 3 1:1 l l N 3 A v 1:1 I l I l 9 n S d 0 l 9 3 n l 8 l s 3 a 1 I ~ ---1:1 3 "'II""· 0 N I l V H 3 N 3 A l N n V

S 3 0 I l l 3 H 1:1 S 3 l V I d 0 0 V 0 V 1:1 n 0 3 1 l I l S n ~ 3 i 1 o 1:1 a 3 e a n r i i 3 M V N 0 3 N N V •• 3 I l 1 0

- 1 s 3 I Z v 1 S I 0 l

AVSSV l 9911:1 s 3 I 1 N 0 l A d N I 1:1 3 0 N 1:1 v If 8 3 H S 3 Z V ~ .:I a 0 H

later 48 Like some roller

skates 49 Bram cell 50 Oily

57 Conway and Curry

59 Training room, in brief

60 Sign of the ZOdiac

wa.~"" """'k~ ovt a.+ ';J' l'la.c~~

"""°'--'--'....._........._...L...=.~ l-.AOlll!!l!EllllllL__..l....'-IJ---L-.J.J ~ ~ .._.........,~~--""""' 7 Slaloms 47 Set aside for

55 Man or Wight 56 Dross 61 Lennon's widow

~~ES AUTO SERVICE 2215LEA AVE BOZEMAN.MT

59715

ASE CEKrIFIED MECHANIC

iFESSIONAL AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR & SERVICE

~i;.-~~-1_0_%_o_O_FF~w~it_h_MS~_U_I_D~~~~~_J "--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--"

"Worried She May Be Pregnant, A Friend Of Min e Came To Me For Help. I Told Her To Go To The Pregnancy Caring Center."

Over half of all the clients thaL come to the Pregnancy Caring Center are referred by friends.

Women appreciate someone who cares and will listen when they arc worried about being preg­nant. Faced with the possiblility of an unplanned pregnancy, they want all the facts. The PCC has helped and made many friends over its 12 years of service.

ASMSU Spring Senate Applications

4 Off Campus Senators 3 On Campus Senators 1 Greek Senator 2 - At Large Senators 1 family Hous ing Senator 1 - President I Vice-President

Applications will be available at 8am February 10th and they are due February 20th at Spm. You can pick up an application in the ASMSU office room 281 in the SUB.

Whe

l J'!'E: CAN GET l"lESSV 5AO RELATIONSHIPS, TOUG:-1 C RCU,..,1ST,.C..NCES, ACK OF PURPOSE

fORTUNATEL y Goo DOESl\J'T ~=:OUIRE us TO DE~L WITH LIFE IN ISOLATION. 'Nr;. CAN

~IVE OUR l..IVE:S CONN EC-ED TO HIM, AC TUA LL.' RE'..CE:IV NG GlHDANCE FRO 1 HIM V'o/E

CAN START OV£R VY'ITH A CLE.C..N SLAT£ . START DO\\'N A NE \I ROAD ..

AND BEGIN 10 RE ALL v LIVE

HAVING A RELATIONSHIP WITH JESUS CHRIST uOESN'T Mt:AN _IF'E: SUDDENLY B£COMES

SMOOTH LIFE HAS IT$ CHAlL£NGES. BUT 'WE DON T 'WALK IT ALONE. FINO OUT WHAT

Goo CAN DO IN YOUR LIF'::"'. Fo~ OUR FREE BOOKLET ON REAL L FE CL\LL

I -800-236-9238

-don't settle for anything less.

*