ASLCSC senator lobbies for DREAM Act - Lewis-Clark State College
ASLCSC senator lobbies for DREAM Act - Lewis-Clark State College
ASLCSC senator lobbies for DREAM Act - Lewis-Clark State College
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Issue 23 Volume 114 A Student Owned and Operated Newspaper April 4, 2007<br />
Courtesy Matt Smith<br />
The Washington Monument in Washington D.C. at sunset on<br />
March 10.<br />
Page 2<br />
- Pathfinder Policies<br />
- Crossword<br />
Arts and Entertainment<br />
- Music Review: page 5<br />
-Movie Reviews:<br />
‘TMNT’ page 5<br />
‘Blades of Glory’ page 5<br />
Concert Review: page 4<br />
L-C goes D.C.<br />
<strong>ASLCSC</strong><br />
<strong>senator</strong><br />
<strong>lobbies</strong> <strong>for</strong><br />
<strong>DREAM</strong><br />
<strong>Act</strong><br />
By Bryce Kammers<br />
of The Pathfinder<br />
<strong>ASLCSC</strong> Senator Eugenia<br />
Ojeda flew to Washington, D.C.<br />
to lobby with other students<br />
in favor of the <strong>DREAM</strong> <strong>Act</strong>.<br />
The <strong>DREAM</strong> <strong>Act</strong>, or the<br />
Development, Relief and<br />
Education <strong>for</strong> Alien Minors <strong>Act</strong>,<br />
is a bill that, if passed, will make<br />
it possible to obtain legal status<br />
<strong>for</strong> those that were brought into<br />
the country as undocumented<br />
children.<br />
By passing the <strong>DREAM</strong> <strong>Act</strong>,<br />
these students would have the<br />
opportunity to receive in-state<br />
tuition instead of paying higher<br />
costs. Many students are unable<br />
to receive the financial assistance<br />
they need.<br />
“You can’t qualify <strong>for</strong><br />
scholarships because you aren’t a<br />
permanent resident,” said Ojeda.<br />
The requirements <strong>for</strong> someone<br />
to qualify <strong>for</strong> citizenship include<br />
arriving in the U.S. be<strong>for</strong>e age 16,<br />
being a resident <strong>for</strong> 5 consecutive<br />
years, having graduated high<br />
school or obtained a GED, and<br />
having good moral character,<br />
meaning a clear criminal record<br />
with nothing more than minor<br />
infractions, none of which can<br />
be drug related.<br />
The event, which was put on<br />
by the United <strong>State</strong>s Student<br />
Association, consisted of a<br />
workshop on the <strong>DREAM</strong> <strong>Act</strong>,<br />
discussion of other educational<br />
issues, and lobbying <strong>senator</strong>s <strong>for</strong><br />
these changes. Students were<br />
encouraged to talk with others<br />
about the important issues in<br />
hopes of attracting them to the<br />
cause.<br />
“I think there’s a great<br />
possibility it will pass this year,”<br />
Ojeda said.<br />
Ojeda believed the event to<br />
be very effective. There were<br />
about 150 students at the event<br />
with a total of 35 schools in<br />
attendance.<br />
INSIDE<br />
Campus News<br />
-Students weigh in on smoking (page 6)<br />
-Letter to the Editor (page 6)<br />
-Study Abroad Program adds countries<br />
(page 7)<br />
Four ASB officers attend D.C.<br />
Leadership Summit Conference<br />
By Matt Wilson<br />
of The Pathfinder<br />
Four <strong>ASLCSC</strong> officers attended<br />
the D.C. Leadership Summit<br />
Conference in our nation’s capitol<br />
March 8-12.<br />
The trip, which was made<br />
possible by a $4,200 Institutional<br />
Development Grant, was taken<br />
primarily to give <strong>ASLCSC</strong> officers<br />
the opportunity to learn how<br />
student government can work<br />
with state government to achieve<br />
goals as well as how it can become<br />
more efficient in its everyday<br />
duties, said <strong>ASLCSC</strong> President<br />
Cody Bloomsburg.<br />
As president, Bloomsburg was<br />
responsible <strong>for</strong> selecting which<br />
members would attend.<br />
He explained that he had<br />
selected 2 experienced members,<br />
one of the executive branch<br />
(<strong>ASLCSC</strong> Vice President Matt<br />
Smith) and one from the legislative<br />
(Senator Eugenia Ojeda) and then<br />
2 others he called, “our shining<br />
rookies,” Senators Brock Astle<br />
and Brenn Frei.<br />
Through various workshops<br />
and seminars, the four were able<br />
to split up and focus on improving<br />
upon their particular concerns.<br />
Vice President Smith said his<br />
main focus was on state student<br />
associations around the nation.<br />
Courtesy Matt Smith<br />
<strong>ASLCSC</strong> Sens. Brenn Fei and Brock Astle in front of the Capitol<br />
Building in Washington, D.C.<br />
Sports & Campus Events<br />
- Campus Sports (page 9)<br />
-York House: More than a B&B (page 10)<br />
-L-C studenst hit the Pacific (page 12)<br />
-Graduation list (page 13)<br />
“We made really good contacts<br />
to help with our new <strong>State</strong> Student<br />
Association of Idaho,” he said. “I<br />
also learned a lot about organizing<br />
voter registration rallies.”<br />
Smith went on to explain these<br />
contacts should help reach the<br />
ultimate goal, which is to use<br />
the <strong>State</strong> Student Association of<br />
Idaho to rally a whole of students<br />
into voting in order to <strong>for</strong>ce<br />
government representatives to no<br />
longer neglect higher education<br />
in this state.<br />
Other officers attended<br />
workshops that promoted inneroffice<br />
efficiency.<br />
“I learned about how to recruit<br />
people to take over the leadership<br />
roles we have created or that we<br />
currently hold,” said Ojeda.<br />
Astle, who is the only Vice<br />
Presidential candidate on the<br />
ballot in the upcoming <strong>ASLCSC</strong><br />
elections, had inner-office<br />
efficiency in mind as well.<br />
“I learned ways that would<br />
prevent ASB meetings from<br />
getting off task and keep them<br />
efficient,” he said. Astle said he<br />
also tried to become more familiar<br />
with the lobbying procedure<br />
and the debate between online<br />
voting and traditional votes,<br />
See Summit, page 7<br />
Back<br />
- Warrior Spotlight<br />
- Campus In<strong>for</strong>mation<br />
- Perconti & Chamber Players release record
2 The Pathfinder April 4, 2007<br />
Care to be in the box below? Th e<br />
Pathfi nder is always looking<br />
<strong>for</strong> talented writers. E-mail<br />
thepathfi nder@lcwarriormail.com<br />
or visit SUB 201.<br />
The Pathfinder Staff<br />
Matt Wilson..............................................................................Editor<br />
Bryce Kammers..........................................................Assistant Editor<br />
Terri Stamper..........................................................Business Manager<br />
Satya Narayan Thapa Chhetri..........................................Staff Writer<br />
Joe Curd...........................................................................Staff Writer<br />
Ryan Easttum....................................................................Staff Writer<br />
Suman Gurung.................................................................Staff Writer<br />
Pawan Kharel....................................................................Staff Writer<br />
Julie Kvern........................................................................Staff Writer<br />
Destiny Martin..................................................................Staff Writer<br />
Pasang Sherpa...................................................................Staff Writer<br />
Wendy Strack....................................................................Staff Writer<br />
Mike Bybee............................................................Staff Photographer<br />
Matt Baney..............................................................................Adviser<br />
Brian “Beez” Beesley...............................................................Adviser<br />
The Pathfinder policies<br />
The Pathfinder is the official student publication of <strong>Lewis</strong>-<strong>Clark</strong><br />
<strong>State</strong> <strong>College</strong>, and operates under authority granted by the LCSC<br />
Communications Board. Responsibilities <strong>for</strong> establishing news<br />
and advertising policies and deciding issues related to content rest<br />
solely on the student staff. The views expressed in commentaries<br />
and letters are those of the individual authors, and not necessarily<br />
the views of The Pathfinder staff.<br />
The Pathfinder’s offices are located on the LCSC campus in<br />
room 201 of the Student Union Building. All members of the<br />
campus community are is invited to visit and share comments and<br />
ideas. If you would like to make an appointment to meet with<br />
the editor or any staff member, please call 792-2569 or e-mail<br />
thepathfinder@lcwarriormail.com.<br />
Staff meetings are held every Monday at 6 p.m.<br />
Students interested in writing or layout, or anyone on cam-<br />
pus who is just plain curious about what goes on at The Pathfinder<br />
may attend. The Pathfinder’s staff may be contacted at<br />
thepathfinder@lcwarriormail.com with the staff member’s name<br />
in the subject line.<br />
Deadlines <strong>for</strong> The Pathfinder are as follows:<br />
Ads -— 5 p.m. Thursday, unless by prior arrangement<br />
Letters to the editor — 5 p.m. Friday<br />
Press releases and public service announcments — 5 p.m. Friday<br />
Articles, columns, opinion, profiles, stories—5 p.m. Friday<br />
Sports stories and reviews — 6 p.m. Sunday<br />
Submissions via email attachment are preferred.<br />
Letters to the editor, press releases and public service announcements<br />
are run on a first come, first served basis as space permits.<br />
Items relevant to the campus community are given preference.
April 4, 2007, The Pathfinder 3<br />
Health Corner:<br />
Feeling Anxious?<br />
By Destiny Martin<br />
of The Pathfinder<br />
Students who have to take a communications<br />
class <strong>for</strong> their major may be familiar with the feeling<br />
of anxiety, especially if they are leery of public<br />
speaking. Or perhaps they are like me, and have test<br />
anxiety. Of course, just because a student is anxious<br />
about a speech or test doesn’t mean they have an<br />
anxiety disorder. But those who suffer from these<br />
particular issues and struggle in everyday situations<br />
often need medical intervention to function<br />
normally in society.<br />
Social anxiety is a common disorder that plagues<br />
a lot of young adults. This particular issue is often<br />
misdiagnosed as part of a mixed mood disorder or<br />
part of a depression diagnosis. Although a person<br />
can have depression and anxiety, there are a lot of<br />
people who suffer from specific types of anxiety,<br />
without the depression diagnosis.<br />
According to the National Institute <strong>for</strong> Mental<br />
Health (NIMH), anxiety disorders are categorized<br />
by the type of anxiety the patient is having and to<br />
what degree it affects them. These disorders range<br />
from general anxiety to severe social phobias. Other<br />
disorders such as Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder,<br />
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, and general Panic<br />
Disorders have a varying degree of anxiety in which<br />
the patient may feel.<br />
These feelings of anxiety can create physiological<br />
symptoms much such as difficulty breathing,<br />
increased heart rate, racing thoughts, insomnia,<br />
decreased appetite and, even in some rare cases,<br />
Wendy’s Fitness Forum<br />
By Wendy Strack<br />
of The Pathfinder<br />
Well, it’s official! Spring is upon us and love is<br />
in the air … if you’re a runner, that is. Running,<br />
or better yet jogging, is something people either<br />
love or hate and I happen to love it! There is<br />
nothing better than heading outdoors to piddle<br />
paddle those little legs as far as they’ll go. Birds are<br />
tweeting, the flowers are a poppin’ all over – talk<br />
about eye candy! Oh, and to smell the grass after<br />
it’s been mowed or the streets after a spring shower.<br />
Freedom reigns and runners are free. No wonder<br />
Forest Gump ran and ran just ‘cuz he could. The<br />
sole purpose of spring is <strong>for</strong> people to run outside.<br />
There is no other reason <strong>for</strong> this season than that,<br />
and to partake in the wonders of the runner’s high<br />
we love so much. Not to worry, you’re mind won’t<br />
be damaged by this natural high. Rather, it will end<br />
up relaxed and much more clear than usual.<br />
Be<strong>for</strong>e you get geared up and ready to go, allow<br />
me to impart a few reminders that might benefit<br />
anybody who may be a bit rusty. www.runnersworld.<br />
ltd.uk has some common sense tips to keep you<br />
going the distance without injury or mis<strong>for</strong>tune.<br />
Take a look.<br />
Stretch daily. The more running you do the more<br />
prone you become to muscle imbalances. Stretching<br />
helps counteract tightness in the lower back, calf<br />
muscles and hamstrings. Tight shins, quads and<br />
weak abs also benefit from static stretching.<br />
Drink lots. Costco sells these fabulous hydration<br />
hallucinations and psychotic episodes.<br />
For the majority of people, these symptoms vary<br />
depending on which type of anxiety they have. The<br />
person who suffers from “panic attacks” may have<br />
the feeling that they are having a heart attack with<br />
chest pains and breathing difficulty. If they have<br />
any other medical issues, like asthma or diabetes,<br />
these problems may be exacerbated by the panic<br />
attack. The most important thing <strong>for</strong> the patient<br />
to remember is to remain as calm as possible and,<br />
if they have the capability, remove themselves<br />
from the situation because this can decrease their<br />
symptoms.<br />
A healthy amount of anxiety is needed to help<br />
the body process stress, but when anxiety prevents a<br />
person from going into public, as is seen with social<br />
phobia disorders, intervention is needed, because<br />
a combination of therapy and medication may be<br />
needed.<br />
In any case, anxiety is nothing to be ashamed<br />
of. A lot of people suffer from it and still maintain<br />
normal lives. It is treatable, but it must addressed<br />
if it is interfering with daily living, or if a person<br />
has other medical issues that may be complicated<br />
by the anxiety. There are ways that physicians and<br />
therapists can determine if a person suffers from<br />
anxiety or just has normal stress reactions. Find out.<br />
It may be the difference between feeling helpless or<br />
feeling happy.<br />
Destiny Martin is an LCSC nursing student with 10<br />
years of experience in the medical field, including six years<br />
as a Navy corpsman.<br />
packs <strong>for</strong> a mere $20 or so. You fill a fluid bag<br />
with water or a sports drink which is inside a pack<br />
strapped to your back and then you suck out of an<br />
attached straw. Throw your iPod and a small snack<br />
in there and you’re good to go without the hassle of<br />
carrying a water bottle.<br />
Wait <strong>for</strong> your second wind. This usually occurs<br />
after 10 minutes when your body’s temperature rises<br />
by about one degree and you start sweating lightly.<br />
Run slowly up to this point and then pick up the<br />
pace from there.<br />
Wear proper clothing. Layer yourself with several<br />
light, thermal clothing pieces instead of large thick<br />
layers during cooler weather. On hot days try light,<br />
breathable clothes. For example, Coolmax is a good<br />
alternative to cotton.<br />
Injuries. ‘No pain, no gain’ is no good! If you<br />
get hurt, do not ignore the pain and try running<br />
through it. Get treated or use an aid to help with<br />
recovery.<br />
Run in the p.m. Face traffic if possible and take<br />
care to wear reflective clothing or shoes. At the<br />
very least wear something bright. Gals, running in<br />
the evening is not off limits to us. Just make sure<br />
you have protection if you are alone. Big dogs are<br />
effective and so is a thick can of pepper spray. Don’t<br />
be afraid to use either one.<br />
Most of all, don’t be afraid to run!<br />
Wendy Strack is a kinesiology major at LCSC and<br />
a certified personal trainer. She may be contacted at<br />
w_strack@yahoo.com.<br />
Tell our advertisers you<br />
saw their ad in The<br />
Pathfinder. They like<br />
that.
4 The Pathfinder April 4, 2007<br />
P36 teaches Rock 204<br />
By Bryce Kammers<br />
of The Pathfinder<br />
There are few places around<br />
LCSC that strongly support an<br />
alternative culture. So when given<br />
the opportunity to adsorb some<br />
of this culture <strong>for</strong> myself, I jump<br />
at it. Thursday was such a night,<br />
offering an evening of alternative<br />
music. The bands to play were<br />
local favorites Debt to Society,<br />
Starting Over, and P36. While<br />
the show was slated <strong>for</strong> eight ‘o<br />
clock, things didn’t get rolling <strong>for</strong><br />
another half an hour when Debt<br />
to Society took the stage.<br />
The band opened with a few<br />
edgy progressive songs. Despite<br />
their ef<strong>for</strong>ts, the small crowd<br />
remained fairly inanimate. It<br />
wasn’t until guitarist and vocalist<br />
Guy Johnson spoke up that<br />
people started to stir. “We would<br />
be a lot more com<strong>for</strong>table if<br />
everyone came up to the front,<br />
please.” The band finished off<br />
there heavy handed set with a lot<br />
of energy. Certain songs seemed to<br />
emphasize different instruments.<br />
With this kind of diversity, you<br />
really got to see the individual<br />
talents of the musicians on stage.<br />
Much like the band be<strong>for</strong>e<br />
them, Starting Over was also<br />
a three piece made up of a<br />
guitarist, bassist, and drummer.<br />
What was very unique with<br />
Press Release<br />
this band was that all members<br />
participated with the vocal work.<br />
Their sound was very fast and<br />
steady, having little to no tempo<br />
changes. This kind of energy<br />
invoked a little more response<br />
from the crowd. The lead singer’s<br />
voice was everything you would<br />
expect out of a punk band, both<br />
sharp and slightly slurred. It was<br />
certainly refreshing to hear music<br />
that has kept many of its original<br />
Grape and Grain returns to<br />
Center <strong>for</strong> Arts and History<br />
The annual Grape & Grain beer and wine tasting fundraiser <strong>for</strong> the<br />
Center <strong>for</strong> Arts & History will be held April 20 at 6-9 p.m. at the Center,<br />
located at 415 Main St. in <strong>Lewis</strong>ton.<br />
The Grape & Grain includes a Silent Auction featuring artwork from<br />
Northwest artists such as Sarah Swett, Jill Hosmer, Eileen Klatt and more.<br />
Tickets are $20 in advance, $25 at the door and include a souvenir wine<br />
glass or beer mug and seven tastes from a selection of wines and microbrews<br />
featuring the finest Northwest selections. Tickets are available <strong>for</strong> purchase<br />
at the <strong>Lewis</strong>-<strong>Clark</strong> <strong>State</strong> <strong>College</strong> Center <strong>for</strong> Arts & History Center Pieces<br />
Gift Shop, the LCSC Community Programs Office, Owl Southway and<br />
Owl Tri-<strong>State</strong> Pharmacies, and at the Wine Company of Moscow.<br />
Proceeds from the Grape & Grain directly support the <strong>Lewis</strong>-<strong>Clark</strong> <strong>State</strong><br />
<strong>College</strong> Center <strong>for</strong> Arts & History in its mission to provide arts and history<br />
programming and special events to the area throughout the year.<br />
Bryce Kammers/The Pathfinder<br />
Jared Dawson of P36 per<strong>for</strong>ming at Muddy Waters.<br />
themes, really bringing back the<br />
sweet like salt sound of punk.<br />
Last to per<strong>for</strong>m was the<br />
band P36. The band had four<br />
members, two being guitarists,<br />
one bassist, and a drummer.<br />
It was at this part of the show<br />
where students of Jared Dawson’s<br />
COMM 204 class could see their<br />
See P36, page 6<br />
Press Release<br />
Three <strong>Lewis</strong>-<strong>Clark</strong> <strong>State</strong><br />
<strong>College</strong> students have been<br />
nominated to compete in the<br />
Irene Ryan <strong>Act</strong>ing Competition<br />
Scholarship program <strong>for</strong> their<br />
recent per<strong>for</strong>mances in the LCSC<br />
production of “Snapshots.”<br />
The competition will be held<br />
next spring as part of the Region<br />
VII’s American <strong>College</strong> Theatre<br />
Festival at the University of<br />
Wyoming in Laramie.<br />
The nominees are senior Chris<br />
Aronen, junior Valerie Bramell,<br />
and freshman Mike Wilson, all of<br />
By Matt Wilson<br />
of The Pathfinder<br />
from reports<br />
The <strong>Lewis</strong>-<strong>Clark</strong> <strong>State</strong> <strong>College</strong><br />
Visiting Artist and Scholar<br />
Program, sponsored by the<br />
Humanities Division and the<br />
Rosehill Estate welcomed artist<br />
Dawn Latane and scholar David<br />
Latane to the LCSC campus<br />
March 26-28.<br />
Dawn Latane, a Visiting<br />
Assistant Professor of Fine Arts at<br />
the University of Richmond and<br />
an Adjunct Assistant Professor<br />
of Fine Arts at Randolph-<br />
Macon <strong>College</strong> in Virginia, is<br />
widely known artist and teacher<br />
of art and David Latane, a<br />
Professor of English at Virginia<br />
Commonwealth University, has<br />
spent a great deal of his career<br />
working in the publishing arts,<br />
both as a 19 th Century scholar and<br />
a biographer.<br />
Given LCSC’s history of<br />
interest in the publishing arts,<br />
the Latanes were an appropriate<br />
‘Steel Magnolias’<br />
doesn’t steal my heart<br />
By Destiny Martin<br />
of The Pathfinder<br />
“Steel Magnolias,” the bittersweet comedy directed by Shirley Hennigan<br />
and written by Robert Harling will run <strong>for</strong> three more shows this week at<br />
the <strong>Lewis</strong>ton Civic Theatre. Maybe it was the inconsiderate audience or<br />
perhaps it was the dry per<strong>for</strong>mance, but something about this play didn’t<br />
grab me. I laughed at some of the lines, and there was a charm with these<br />
women that seemed apparent, but there were times when they looked really<br />
uncom<strong>for</strong>table on stage.<br />
Opening night seemed to bring in some who knew little-to-nothing about<br />
theatre etiquette. So this might have had something to do with why the play<br />
lacked that something extra. Of course, the play itself had several lagging<br />
moments, where I found myself bored. I know this sounds terrible, but it’s<br />
true. And I usually love theatre.<br />
But it wasn’t all bad. The cast themselves were appropriate <strong>for</strong> the roles<br />
they played. Elizabeth Greggain who played M’Lynn had by far the best<br />
per<strong>for</strong>mance. She was absolutely perfect and in one dramatic scene she was<br />
so moving that many in the audience including myself had tears in our eyes.<br />
Each woman had her own strengths, Kate Laws who played Annelle did<br />
a great job with her accent, and had great energy, but she seemed to need<br />
better stage direction.<br />
New to the stage, Sandra Bagget played the eccentric Clairee. She had<br />
some of the funnier dialogue, and although she tripped on a few lines, she<br />
had a unique charm that was fitting <strong>for</strong> her character.<br />
Stephanie Carlson, who plays Shelby was darling in this role. She did a<br />
really great job in both her serious scenes and more comedic acting. This<br />
was definitely her element.<br />
Adrienne Stromberg, as Truvy was marvelous. I liked how she gave this<br />
role a funny and somewhat mature flavor, and she had moments where it<br />
almost seemed like this would be her own reaction to a certain emotion.<br />
And then there was Mary Minton, in the role of Ouiser (pronounced<br />
Weezer), I thought she was fantastic, and was my other favorite pick. Her<br />
lines were always delivered with energy and strength, and gave the overall<br />
per<strong>for</strong>mance depth and flare.<br />
The most troublesome parts of the per<strong>for</strong>mance were the distractions<br />
from inconsiderate audience members. As <strong>for</strong> the show itself, although each<br />
actress had an overall good per<strong>for</strong>mance, some of the lines were lagging in<br />
the timing on their delivery. Overall, it was mediocre at best.<br />
Theater students nominated<br />
<strong>Lewis</strong>ton. Sophomore Dani Diaz,<br />
also of <strong>Lewis</strong>ton, has been selected<br />
as an alternate. All four students<br />
are majoring in Interdisciplinary<br />
Studies.<br />
The entire cast of “Snapshots”<br />
also earned a Certificate of Merit<br />
award <strong>for</strong> Excellence in Ensemble<br />
Work from the Kennedy Center<br />
American <strong>College</strong> Theatre Festival<br />
Organization (KCACTF). Joining<br />
the four above in the cast of<br />
“Snapshots” were Deb Emerich,<br />
Calandra Dell, and Rosa Bautista<br />
of LCSC, and University of Idaho<br />
student David Hathaway.<br />
LCSC’s theatre program<br />
choice <strong>for</strong> the program.<br />
The two spent the three days<br />
visiting L-C classrooms discussing<br />
small presses and the history<br />
of the gutter press as well as<br />
giving several public lectures on<br />
a variety of topics, ranging from<br />
participates in the KCACTF,<br />
which sponsors regional and<br />
national competitions <strong>for</strong> college<br />
and universities to recognize<br />
excellence in acting, directing,<br />
playwriting, set, light, and costume<br />
design.<br />
Two theatre instructors from<br />
KCACTF’s Region VII responded<br />
to a “Snapshots” per<strong>for</strong>mance last<br />
week and, along with director,<br />
Paul Kalina, nominated the<br />
students to compete next spring.<br />
Each nominee will also choose an<br />
acting partner <strong>for</strong> the competition<br />
so six LCSC students from this<br />
production will make the trip.<br />
Print-making couple visit LCSC<br />
Mike Bybee/The Pathfinder<br />
Visiting artist Dawn Latane lectures at the Center <strong>for</strong> Arts and<br />
History.<br />
the artistic, literary and historical<br />
significance of artist Ian Hamilton<br />
Finlay’s work to print-making and<br />
the Monoprint Guild of New<br />
England Exhibition currently<br />
running at the LCSC Center <strong>for</strong><br />
Arts and History.
Heroes in a crap shell<br />
New Teenage Mutant<br />
Ninja Turtles movie,<br />
‘TMNT’ disappoints<br />
By Ryan Easttum<br />
of The Pathfinder<br />
Warner Bros. stole $30-plus<br />
million from America in the last<br />
two weeks. They pick-pocketed<br />
my generation and the one<br />
directly below me by distributing<br />
the latest Teenage Mutant Ninja<br />
Turtles Movie, “TMNT.”<br />
How you ask? Simple. They<br />
re-packaged a highly successful<br />
franchise from my youth and<br />
put it in theaters knowing that<br />
8-year-olds would flock to the<br />
theater because it has animated<br />
mutant ninja turtles and that my<br />
generation would see it out of<br />
loyalty and nostalgia.<br />
“TMNT” was like a god-awful<br />
hour-long episode of the cartoon<br />
from the ‘90’s that everyone<br />
paid $7.50 to go see. The little<br />
kids were only disappointed<br />
by watching a bad movie; I was<br />
disappointed by the same and<br />
having the knowledge of how<br />
great the Ninja Turtles were.<br />
Now, in no particular order,<br />
reasons why “TMNT” sucked:<br />
1.) My beloved, angry Casey Jones<br />
wore a tie and was domesticated.<br />
Casey was always the bad ass that<br />
took nothing from no one. Now<br />
he’s dressing business casual<br />
instead of his stained white<br />
shirts and he’s even whipped<br />
by April O’Neil. The real Casey<br />
Jones would kick his own ass<br />
if he saw himself like that and<br />
By Joe Curd<br />
of The Pathfinder<br />
Chazz Michael Michaels and<br />
Jimmy MacElroy are nearly<br />
polar opposites in the world of<br />
figure skating. Michaels, played<br />
by Will Ferrell, is the loud,<br />
masculine, and rebellious icon<br />
figure skater who also happens<br />
to be a sex-addict. MacElroy,<br />
played by Heder, is a younger<br />
naïve individual with feminine<br />
characteristics and a heart of<br />
gold.<br />
At a prevous figure skating<br />
championship, the two skaters tie<br />
<strong>for</strong> gold and end up in a scuffle<br />
which bars them from ever again<br />
participating in figure skating.<br />
The two sworn enemies then go<br />
their separate ways and struggle to<br />
find happiness in a life where they<br />
cannot skate like they used to.<br />
Fortunately, a loophole found by<br />
MacElroy’s stalker allows them to<br />
participate only if they can team<br />
up together as a male-male pair.<br />
For two men who hate each other,<br />
skating as a couple is unbearable.<br />
Now they must overcome enemies<br />
from the outside, a nasty triangle<br />
Warner Brothers<br />
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Rapheal and Leonardo in the latest<br />
film of the franchise, “TMNT.”<br />
would shove a hockey stick up<br />
the back side of his Dockers Iron<br />
Free pleated khaki pant.<br />
2.) April O’Neil and Casey Jones<br />
are in a long-term relationship and<br />
live together. Casey Jones is not<br />
dating material and April O’Neil<br />
is simply too good <strong>for</strong> him. We<br />
all expected them to hook up<br />
after the first Turtles movie, but<br />
we all figured it would end after<br />
a week-long torrid affair with<br />
April jilted and crying and Casey<br />
drinking, swearing, and smoking<br />
more than usual.<br />
3.) Good looking April O’Neil<br />
was replaced with a teenaged fan<br />
of Sanjaya from American Idol.<br />
April O’Neil is supposed to<br />
be a temptress, with her hot<br />
yellow jumpsuit, curly auburn<br />
hair, and oh so barely exposed<br />
cleavage, but “TMNT” reduced<br />
her to looking like an anorexic<br />
14-year-old who is all too busty.<br />
Seriously, she would tip over<br />
of love, and cooperate in order<br />
to overcome all odds and win the<br />
gold medal. Fortunately <strong>for</strong> them,<br />
the killer move “The Iron Locust”<br />
will be of great benefit to them<br />
only as long as Michaels’ head<br />
does not get sliced off.<br />
This film was enjoyable, easy to<br />
follow, and very humorous. Most<br />
of the jokes used humor that was<br />
borderline cheesy while others<br />
were more subtle uses of humor,<br />
which I was not expecting to see<br />
The Pathfinder 5<br />
with her new measurements.<br />
This reason <strong>for</strong> sucking<br />
particularly upsets me because<br />
April, along with She-Ra from<br />
He-Man, was one of my first<br />
crushes. Now she’s a teenage<br />
girl shacking up with middlemanagement<br />
Casey Jones; it’s a<br />
shame.<br />
4.) It was just a bad movie.<br />
Some movies just suck and<br />
“TMNT” was no exception. It<br />
had hardly any humor, limited<br />
action, poorly animated human<br />
characters, and a disjointed<br />
plot. They played up the typical<br />
Ninja Turtle stuff: Leo as an<br />
authoritarian leader trying to<br />
learn, Raph as an angsty, bitter<br />
and brooding warrior, Don as<br />
a genius with a big stick, Mikey<br />
as a bumbling, brain-fried<br />
Cali<strong>for</strong>nia surfer, and Master<br />
See Heroes, page 6<br />
‘Blades of Glory’ is truly glorious<br />
Paramount Pictures<br />
Will Ferrell and John Heder join comedic <strong>for</strong>ces in “Blades of Glory.”<br />
in this film.<br />
In the actual figure skating,<br />
Farrell led. In the film itself,<br />
Farrell’s acting led the movie.<br />
Heder’s acting played very well<br />
off of Ferrell and Ferrell’s off<br />
of Heder’s. I myself am a big<br />
fan of the two actors and this<br />
film was about what I expected<br />
a Farrell-Heder movie to be. It<br />
did not let me down and I would<br />
recommend it to anyone who<br />
wants a good laugh.<br />
Northwest Public Radio<br />
offers a variety of genres<br />
By Julie Kvern<br />
of The Pathfinder<br />
I have this friend that is kind enough to send me links to NPR<br />
interviews and live concerts with some pretty great artists/bands. The<br />
other day an email came in directing me to yet another interview<br />
with live music and it occurred to me that it’d probably be worth<br />
mentioning that NPR is more than decent and assessable online <strong>for</strong><br />
everyone’s listening pleasure. So, this review is mostly going to be an<br />
overview of what a couple shows on NPR can offer you via good music<br />
and insightful interviews.<br />
NPR is, well, Northwest Public Radio and what I tune into most<br />
these days is the World Café and All Songs Considered. At the World Cafe<br />
you can listen to a variety of genres. Blues, rock, folk, and alt country<br />
are listed and I saw a link to an interview with the band Fountains of<br />
Wayne, which was a slight deterrent <strong>for</strong> me personally, but the people<br />
in charge made up <strong>for</strong> that possible error in judgment with classy acts<br />
like Emily Haines, Dr. Dog, Beck and so on.<br />
At All Songs Considered, all or a lot of songs are considered. Wow,<br />
imagine that. You can listen to so many shows from really great artists<br />
and I like that. Right off the bat I pooped my pants (not literally,<br />
sicko) over the list of artists and concerts available. Regina Spektor,<br />
Hilary Hahn, Built to Spill, etc. caught my eye and yes, I said Regina<br />
Spektor. I know she’s on VH1 a lot and is gaining popularity and<br />
that’s typically not my style, but I still dig her music. Plus if you have<br />
Windows Media Player or Real Player you can stream a whole concert<br />
to see if the bands you like sound decent and are potentially worth<br />
seeing in person. (P.S., Spektor sounds pretty good live, if you’re<br />
wondering).<br />
Anyways, I just wanted to let all of you readers know about NPR<br />
if you haven’t heard already. It’s not all just talk radio or news or<br />
whatever. There are really good artists to dig or not dig and there’s<br />
more shows than the two I’ve mentioned of course. So if you get some<br />
time (ha ha, yeah right, I know) or you just need some background<br />
music <strong>for</strong> your studying, give NPR a listen. Oh, and thanks to the<br />
friend who recommends shows from NPR on a regular basis. You<br />
know who you are.<br />
Check out http://www.npr.org/programs/asc/ <strong>for</strong> All Songs<br />
Considered, http://www.npr.org/templates/rundowns/rundown.<br />
php?prgId=39&agg=1 <strong>for</strong> World Café, and http://www.npr.org/<br />
templates/topics/topic.php?topicId=1039 <strong>for</strong> the music main page at<br />
NPR. Enjoy!<br />
Shooter R<br />
Daily (3:50) 6:50 9:40 Sat-Thurs (1:00)<br />
Bridge to Terabithia PG<br />
Sat-Tues (1:40) (4:20)<br />
Blades of Glory PG-13<br />
Daily (2:30) (4:45) 7:10 9:30 Sat-Thurs (12:15)<br />
The Last Mimzy PG-13<br />
Daily (3:40) 6:10 8:30 Sat-Thurs (11:10) (1:20)<br />
Premonition R<br />
Daily (4:15) 6:45 9:10 Sat-Tues (11:20 )(1:45)<br />
Wild Hogs PG-13<br />
Daily (4:50) 7:15 9:35 Sat-Thurs (11:50) (2:20)<br />
Firehouse Dog PG (Opens April 4)<br />
Wed-Thurs (11:05) (1:25) (3:45) 6:25 9:05<br />
Pride PG<br />
Evening: Sat-Tues 6:55 9:15<br />
The Reaping R (Opens April 5)<br />
Thurs (12:10) (2:40) (5:10) 7:30 9:50<br />
TMNT PG<br />
Daily (4:10) 6:20 8:40 Sat-Thurs (11:40) (1:50)<br />
300 R<br />
Daily (3:30) 6:40 9:25 Sat-Thurs (12:45)<br />
Meet the Robinsons G<br />
Daily (4:00) (4:30) 6:30 7:00 8:50 9:20 Sat-Thurs (11:00) (11:30) (1:30) (2:00)<br />
The Hills Have Eyes 2 R<br />
Daily (5:00) 7:20 9:45 Sat-Wed (12:00) (2:25)<br />
Amazing Grace PG<br />
Daily (3:45) 6:25 9:05 Sat-Tues (1:10)<br />
Showtimes in ( ) are at bargain price. Showtimes<br />
Effective 3/31/07 - 4/5/07
6 The Pathfinder April 4, 2007<br />
Students weigh in on<br />
campus smoking<br />
By Satya Narayan<br />
Thapa Chhetri<br />
of The Pathfinder<br />
Smoking is injurious to our<br />
health. That is what nearly<br />
anyone says when they are asked.<br />
Most people are well aware that it<br />
causes different kinds of diseases<br />
and can even lead to loss of life.<br />
Long-term health problems<br />
aren’t the only problem of<br />
smoking. Nicotine and the other<br />
toxins in cigarettes, cigars, and<br />
pipes can affect a person’s body<br />
quickly, which means that smokers<br />
experience many problems like<br />
bad skin, bad breath, bad-smelling<br />
clothes and hair, reduced athletic<br />
per<strong>for</strong>mance, greater risk of<br />
injury and slower healing and an<br />
increased risk of illness.<br />
Despite the various harmful<br />
effects of cigarettes, people are<br />
allowed to smoke even on college<br />
campuses. Here is what different<br />
people think about smoking<br />
near LCSC buildings, such as<br />
the Student Union Building,<br />
the Library, and the Science and<br />
Nursing Building.<br />
Some LCSC students say they<br />
should be allowed to smoke.<br />
Utsha Joshi, a freshman at LCSC<br />
said, “There are lots of people<br />
who have smoking habit. So, they<br />
should be given to smoke if they<br />
follow the rules.”<br />
Arif Nairam, also a freshman<br />
at LCSC, said, “Well, I think<br />
that everyone has their freedom<br />
here. It doesn’t bother me if they<br />
use the front of the building <strong>for</strong><br />
smoking. It’s a bad habit and they<br />
know the way to deal with it. I<br />
have no offense about it.”<br />
A staff member in the<br />
International Programs Office,<br />
Rebecca Formdahl, said, “As per<br />
state law of Idaho maybe people<br />
are allowed to smoke 20 ft. away<br />
from the buildings but it doesn’t<br />
bother me at all.”<br />
Many LCSC staff members<br />
and students do have a problem<br />
with smokers however.<br />
Eric Skipper, LCSC staff said,<br />
“No, people should not be allowed<br />
to smoke near the buildings or<br />
should be at least 50 ft away<br />
from the building. They should<br />
consider other people’s health.”<br />
James W. Gray III, a staff<br />
member in Learning Resources<br />
said, “Smokers in those areas do<br />
not consider health problems<br />
of other non-smokers in public<br />
areas. Buildings should have air<br />
breathable by all people. So, they<br />
should not be allowed to smoke<br />
near the LCSC buildings.”<br />
That opinion is shared by Kevin<br />
Lee, a tennis player at LCSC.<br />
“Although smoking is bad <strong>for</strong><br />
smokers, it is more dangerous <strong>for</strong><br />
non smokers,” said Lee. “There<br />
are always people going in and out<br />
of the building; there<strong>for</strong>e, smokers<br />
should consider the priorities of<br />
other people.”<br />
The main conclusion of the<br />
different views of different people<br />
is that smoking is bad <strong>for</strong> the<br />
health of not only smokers but<br />
also of non-smokers and smokers<br />
should be very considerate to nonsmokers<br />
while they are smoking<br />
near the buildings of LCSC.<br />
LETTER TO THE EDITOR<br />
Butts, butts and more butts<br />
As I was walking around campus yesterday during my lunch break, I noticed cigarette butts all over the<br />
place. There were cigarette butts on the grounds, sidewalks, stairs, and doorways. I just kept thinking how<br />
awful it is to see that people don’t care enough <strong>for</strong> our campus to keep it looking beautiful. They just toss<br />
their butts out anywhere.<br />
I know there are many receptacles on campus <strong>for</strong> all those cigarette butts. Maybe they need to be painted<br />
a really bright color <strong>for</strong> the smokers to see and then if there were posters, flyers, and/or notices showing the<br />
smokers how to use the receptacles, maybe, just maybe, they would start using them instead of the grounds,<br />
sidewalks, stairs and doorways.<br />
I know the people who keep the grounds do a wonderful job to keep our campus looking beautiful.<br />
Now, I have not heard if cigarette butts help with the soil, and maybe that is why they are all over the<br />
grounds on campus. However, I do know that they do not help the sidewalk, walkways, stairs, etc., so I<br />
don’t know why they leave those butts there.<br />
I do not want to see our college littered with cigarette butts, paper, or garbage. How about you? Do you<br />
want to see our beautiful campus littered with cigarette butts, paper, and garbage?<br />
P36, from page 4<br />
instructor light up the bass guitar and belt lyrics to the crowd. This set<br />
was the most fun to watch by far, as the band would constantly move<br />
around. The boys had so much energy in fact, they were able to get the<br />
crowd singing with a cover of “Were Not Gonna Take It.” Somewhere<br />
in the middle of P36’s set, members of the previous band, Starting<br />
Over, disappeared. It wasn’t until the middle of the next song that the<br />
boys returned, placing a pair of boxers over one of the microphones<br />
on stage. The guitarist of P36 showed tremendous dedication, singing<br />
right on through the gross but somehow humorous disturbance. We<br />
are left only to assume where the underwear was retrieved from and I<br />
have since been trying to get the image erased from my mind.<br />
Overall the concert represented many of the things that should be a<br />
part of the music scene. It offered diverse high energy music that made<br />
it possible <strong>for</strong> anyone under thirty to have a good time. However,<br />
I also believe the concert could have been improved had Starting<br />
Over opened the show. It was this band’s consistent progressive<br />
energy we needed to see from the beginning, something to keep the<br />
crowd’s interest. The bands made it a fun and memorable night, even<br />
worth the few bucks I’m certain I was shorted at the door. You can<br />
be assured that you will be hearing more from these bands. Debt to<br />
Society is almost done putting the wraps on their album which will<br />
be available sometime in the near future. Watch <strong>for</strong> these bands and<br />
others like them appearing every week at Muddy Waters in <strong>Clark</strong>ston.<br />
Doris Swin<strong>for</strong>d<br />
Heroes, from page 5<br />
Splinter as a wise Taoist type.<br />
The film’s imagination,<br />
or lack thereof, ended with<br />
character roles that were handed<br />
to them 20 years ago. Sure, they<br />
threw in a dozen or so monsters<br />
to visually stimulate the little<br />
kids, but this movie lacked what<br />
a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles<br />
movie really is: ninja fighting,<br />
juvenile and slapstick humor, and<br />
pizza.<br />
Alas, there was one reason<br />
“TMNT” was good – it was only<br />
87 minutes long.<br />
With that said, I highly<br />
recommend and urge everyone<br />
to see this movie, because I don’t<br />
want to be the only one who had<br />
to sit through it and who has<br />
nightmares of its horribleness.
April 4, 2007 The Pathfinder 7<br />
Courtesy Sophie Flynn<br />
LCSC student Sophie Flynn poses with a Japanese friend. Flynn<br />
was visiting Japan through the Study Abroad Prgram<br />
Study Abroad Program<br />
adds four new countries<br />
Career and Advising<br />
Services offers unique<br />
training experience<br />
By Suman Gurung<br />
of The Pathfinder<br />
LCSC’s Career and Advising<br />
Service is organizing an interview<br />
meal program on April 11. The<br />
event is taking place at Williams<br />
Conference Center at noon and<br />
is planned to conclude about an<br />
hour later. The event is especially<br />
focused towards students to help<br />
provide valuable tips on meal<br />
etiquette i.e. how to eat and<br />
behave socially when they attend<br />
an interview meal or any <strong>for</strong>mal<br />
functions.<br />
“I teach every thing from using<br />
a <strong>for</strong>k, cutting the food, eating the<br />
soup and at the most behaving<br />
socially in the interview meal,”<br />
says Debra L. Lybyer, director of<br />
Career & Advising Services. She<br />
also adds that the main objective<br />
of organizing the event is to teach<br />
the American style of dinning<br />
etiquette. Debra L. Lybyer has<br />
By Pasang Sherpa<br />
of The Pathfinder<br />
The Study Abroad Program at <strong>Lewis</strong>-<strong>Clark</strong> <strong>State</strong> <strong>College</strong> has expanded<br />
their program in four different countries. The recently added countries<br />
are China, Australia, New Zealand, and Fiji. The Program also offers<br />
different internships and volunteer opportunities abroad. Interested<br />
students can still apply <strong>for</strong> the summer program.<br />
There are two different study abroad opportunities <strong>for</strong> students. They<br />
can either go to a “sister school” or go through a “provider.” The sister<br />
school program allows the student to use their financial aid and still<br />
be an LCSC student. According to Rebecca Fromdahl, Study Abroad<br />
Program Coordinator, students have had good and a safe experience.<br />
Several students at LCSC have used the study abroad program to study<br />
in Italy, South Korea, Mexico and Japan.<br />
One of their special programs is at the University of Ulsan in Ulsan,<br />
South Korea. Interested business students can use their financial aid<br />
and also receive free room and board from the university while studying<br />
in Ulsan. For more in<strong>for</strong>mation, students are encouraged to contact<br />
Rebecca Fromdahl, Study Abroad Coordinator at 208-792-2184 or email<br />
her at rlfromdahl@lcsc.edu. You can also visit their website at www.lcsc.<br />
edu/admissions/intl/studyabroad.htm.<br />
been teaching meal etiquette <strong>for</strong><br />
about thirteen years and has also<br />
been training people in cooking,<br />
looking after children and many<br />
other household activities.<br />
The event is organized every year<br />
and is open to all LCSC students.<br />
It is predicted that nearly sixty to<br />
one hundred students will turn<br />
out. The admission fee <strong>for</strong> LCSC<br />
students is $6. They will serve a<br />
meal and instruct students at the<br />
same time. Interested community<br />
members can also be a part of the<br />
event but they will have to pay $10<br />
to do so. Organizers say that the<br />
seating is limited, so interested<br />
students are asked to reserve their<br />
seats no later than Friday, April<br />
6. For more in<strong>for</strong>mation about<br />
reservations and ticket purchases<br />
contact Career & Advising Service<br />
Reid Hall 110 - 792-2313.<br />
NAIA World<br />
Series<br />
reserved<br />
seating is<br />
going fast<br />
Press Release<br />
Fans hoping to get good seats<br />
to the 51st annual Avista NAIA<br />
World Series at <strong>Lewis</strong>-<strong>Clark</strong> <strong>State</strong><br />
<strong>College</strong>’s Harris Field on May<br />
25-June 1 should act soon if they<br />
haven’t purchased tickets because<br />
only 30 percent of reserved seating<br />
remains available, according to<br />
college officials.<br />
The seating section along the<br />
first-base line is sold out, and<br />
along the third-base line is 75<br />
percent sold out. A tournament<br />
pass along the third-base line is<br />
$70 per seat.<br />
In the grandstand section<br />
behind home plate, only 50 seats<br />
remain in the section directly<br />
behind the plate, and the first-base<br />
side of the grand stand is about<br />
half sold out, while the third-base<br />
grand stand is about 40 percent<br />
sold. All reserved tournament<br />
tickets in the grand stand are $50<br />
apiece.<br />
A tournament family pass,<br />
which is general admission<br />
seating <strong>for</strong> two adults and three<br />
children, goes <strong>for</strong> $80, while a<br />
three-day family pass, also good<br />
<strong>for</strong> two adults and three children<br />
in general admission seating, is<br />
$45. Also, a general admission<br />
tournament pass costs $30 per<br />
individual. All general admission<br />
seating is in the bleachers beyond<br />
the left-field wall.<br />
For more in<strong>for</strong>mation on<br />
tickets, call (208) 792-2471, visit<br />
http://www.naiaworldseries.<br />
com/2007/tickets.htm, or go to<br />
the LCSC ticket office, which is<br />
located on the top floor of the<br />
LCSC <strong>Act</strong>ivity Center.<br />
Summit, from page 1<br />
which he said may become more<br />
pertinent at L-C asthey consider<br />
the transition to an online voting<br />
system.<br />
Senator Frei also had issues<br />
that directly pertain to LCSC in<br />
mind.<br />
“Around the time we went to<br />
D.C. we were working on our<br />
tuition/fee increase,” said Frei.<br />
“Talking to people from different<br />
states, we were able to understand<br />
how to effectively argue <strong>for</strong> what<br />
the students want.”<br />
Though all learned a lot about<br />
leadership, both Frei and Ojeda<br />
7-7:30am<br />
��LC RADIO 88.9 FM KLCZ��<br />
03*31*07<br />
Programming Schedule<br />
MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY<br />
Glen and The<br />
Magnificent<br />
Glen and The<br />
Magnificent<br />
CLARITY<br />
Internat'l<br />
Pasang<br />
7:30-8:30am DEMOCRACY NOW! 7:30-8:30am<br />
8:30-9am<br />
9-10am<br />
10-11am<br />
11-11:30am<br />
Glen and The<br />
Magnificent<br />
MASS. SCHOOL<br />
OF LAW<br />
UNDERGROUND<br />
UPROAR<br />
Amer/Int'l Metal<br />
Duke<br />
Glen and The<br />
Magnificent<br />
Indie Pop<br />
DJ Dani<br />
CLARITY<br />
Classical/Blues/<br />
Jazz<br />
Matthew<br />
Seth<br />
Internat'l<br />
Pasang THE PUNK<br />
ALTERNATION<br />
Adam<br />
LC IMPROMPTU<br />
& VARIETY<br />
SHOW<br />
Skippy (LCIV)<br />
SHOW<br />
Seth<br />
Country<br />
Bullseye and Mojo<br />
11:30-Noon Free Speech Radio News (from day be<strong>for</strong>e) 11:30am-12pm<br />
Noon-1pm<br />
UNDERGROUND<br />
UPROAR<br />
Amer/Int'l Metal<br />
1-2pm Various<br />
Various<br />
Limit Push<br />
Brolly<br />
Various<br />
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as the convention is put on by<br />
the Minnesota <strong>State</strong> University<br />
Student Association.<br />
Though Smith and Astle said<br />
they would recommend the<br />
conference to future officers,<br />
both Frei and Ojeda said they<br />
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good through May 18, 2007.
8 The Pathfinder April 4, 2007<br />
This and other prime advertising spaces<br />
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call 701-2470, visit SUB 201 or e-mail<br />
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Press Release<br />
<strong>Lewis</strong>-<strong>Clark</strong> <strong>State</strong> <strong>College</strong> will<br />
recognize women’s track as an<br />
official sport and the team will<br />
start competing during the 2007-<br />
08 indoor and outdoor seasons,<br />
LCSC President Dene K. Thomas<br />
and Athletic Director Gary Picone<br />
have announced.<br />
The addition of women’s track<br />
will give LCSC six women’s and<br />
five men’s sports. LCSC currently<br />
offers men’s and women’s cross<br />
country, basketball, tennis and<br />
golf, along with women’s volleyball<br />
and men’s baseball.<br />
“We are excited to be able to<br />
add women’s track to the athletic<br />
program,” Picone says. “I have<br />
every confidence that the program<br />
will flourish under the leadership<br />
of coach Mike Collins.”<br />
“Considering the importance<br />
of women’s sports and Title IX,<br />
I am especially pleased with the<br />
addition of another women’s<br />
sport,” Thomas says.<br />
This is the first sport LCSC<br />
has added since starting both the<br />
men’s and women’s golf programs<br />
in 1996.<br />
“It is fitting <strong>for</strong> LCSC to make<br />
a women’s sport its first addition<br />
in 11 years,” Thomas says. “We<br />
looked at several possibilities, and<br />
women’s track is the best fit <strong>for</strong> us<br />
at this time.”<br />
Collins, who is the LCSC men’s<br />
Press release<br />
Former Washington <strong>State</strong><br />
University two-sport star Jennifer<br />
Greeny, who posted a remarkable<br />
84-12 record in the past three years<br />
as volleyball coach at Pullman<br />
High School in Washington,<br />
has been named volleyball coach<br />
at <strong>Lewis</strong>-<strong>Clark</strong> <strong>State</strong> <strong>College</strong>,<br />
Warrior athletic director Gary<br />
Picone announced Tuesday.<br />
Greeny replaces Jerry Pruitt,<br />
who resigned earlier this month<br />
because of health reasons. Pruitt<br />
was named the Warriors’ coach<br />
in February but immediately<br />
developed health issues that led to<br />
his resignation.<br />
Greeny, 30, starts her new<br />
position immediately, but will<br />
finish her contract as a physical<br />
education teacher at Lincoln<br />
Middle School in Pullman<br />
through the current school year.<br />
“We’re very excited to have<br />
someone of Jennifer’s caliber lead<br />
our volleyball program,” Picone<br />
says. “I think she brings a lot of<br />
excitement to the program.”<br />
Picone met Greeny when both<br />
were at WSU in the early 2000s<br />
– Picone was an assistant baseball<br />
coach and Greeny was an assistant<br />
volleyball coach. When Pruitt<br />
resigned, Picone’s first phone call<br />
was to Greeny.<br />
“After talking with Gary, I knew<br />
it was a great job,” says Greeny.<br />
“Getting back to the college<br />
coaching realm is very appealing<br />
to me.”<br />
Greeny, nee Stinson, was a<br />
LCSC to add<br />
women’s track<br />
and women’s cross country coach,<br />
also will coach the women’s track<br />
team. Despite not having a track<br />
team previously, LCSC has had a<br />
few cross country runners compete<br />
in some spring track meets. LCSC<br />
also has a national champion<br />
in track in Tausha Kuzmic, who<br />
won the women’s marathon title<br />
at the 2005 NAIA track and field<br />
championships in Louisville.<br />
“We are very excited about this<br />
new dimension coming to the<br />
running program here at LC,”<br />
Collins says. “We have roughed<br />
out a basic 10-year plan with the<br />
first stage of the plan being the<br />
indoor and outdoor part of the<br />
schedule and transitioning into<br />
that first. So, the first couple<br />
of years it will be a team made<br />
up of predominately distance<br />
runners, but we definitely won’t<br />
be turning away the field athletes<br />
or the sprinters if they want to go<br />
ahead and come here. Over time<br />
the plan enlists specialty coaches<br />
and specific recruiting <strong>for</strong> those<br />
areas.”<br />
The team will practice at<br />
<strong>Lewis</strong>ton High School’s Vollmer<br />
Bowl, a facility Collins has used<br />
be<strong>for</strong>e, thanks to his relationship<br />
with <strong>for</strong>mer <strong>Lewis</strong>ton High track<br />
coach Wade Hillman and current<br />
track coach Keith Stuffle. Collins<br />
says it will be a positive <strong>for</strong> the<br />
high school and college athletes<br />
to interact and help each other.<br />
Greeny is new<br />
volleyball coach<br />
standout volleyball player at WSU<br />
during 1995-99 and also played<br />
on the basketball team her senior<br />
season. She spent a year coaching<br />
in the Spokane area until taking a<br />
job as assistant volleyball coach at<br />
WSU in 2000 under then-Cougar<br />
coach Cindy Fredrick.<br />
Greeny spent 4½ years on<br />
Fredrick’s staff and then took over<br />
at Pullman High when Fredrick<br />
left <strong>for</strong> the University of Iowa.<br />
In 2004, her first year at PHS,<br />
Greeny led the team to a 25-8<br />
mark and a seventh place finish at<br />
state. The following year, Pullman<br />
went 28-3 and won its first state<br />
volleyball championship despite<br />
being picked to finish fifth in<br />
its league by a vote of the Great<br />
Northern League coaches. She<br />
was the chosen the Washington<br />
Interscholastic Athletic<br />
Association’s Coach of the Year<br />
and the GNL’s Coach of the Year.<br />
Last season, the team went 31-1,<br />
suffering its only loss in the state<br />
semifinals. The team finished<br />
third at state, and set program<br />
records <strong>for</strong> most wins and best<br />
winning percentage. Greeny was<br />
chosen as the GNL’s Coach of the<br />
Year.<br />
During her three years at<br />
Pullman, she finished with a .875<br />
winning percentage.<br />
“That’s a phenomenal record<br />
<strong>for</strong> any sport,” Picone says. “That<br />
shows not only is she a great coach,<br />
but she’s also a great fundamental<br />
teacher of the game.”<br />
Greeny takes over a program<br />
that went 8-19 last season and<br />
Collins says he’s excited to<br />
attract some of the top track and<br />
field athletes in Idaho and the<br />
Pacific Northwest to LCSC.<br />
“Our climate here in the valley<br />
is one that bodes well <strong>for</strong> these<br />
athletes where they can still spend<br />
a good part of the year outdoors<br />
with their training,” Collins says.<br />
“In the past 8 years we have had<br />
30 All-Americans in cross country<br />
and track and field, including a<br />
national champion in track. We<br />
have had multiple teams and<br />
individuals qualify <strong>for</strong> national<br />
championships in both and track<br />
and cross country, so the basic<br />
framework has already been set<br />
up. This was all done with young<br />
hard-working athletes that were<br />
not going to get an opportunity<br />
to compete at a bigger school, yet<br />
found here the chance to compete<br />
and have experiences that truly<br />
no other institution in the state<br />
can offer. There aren’t too many<br />
schools that can say year in and<br />
year they are sending people to<br />
the national championships.”<br />
Although no schools in the<br />
Frontier Conference currently<br />
offer track, 27 schools in the<br />
NAIA Cascade Conference,<br />
NCAA Division III Northwest<br />
Conference, and NCAA Division<br />
II Great Northwest Athletic<br />
Conference have track programs<br />
in Idaho, Washington, Oregon<br />
and parts of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia.<br />
finished sixth in the eightteam<br />
Frontier Conference. The<br />
Warriors had only two seniors on<br />
the team and both were libero/<br />
defensive specialists.<br />
“We have some principles that<br />
we want to build in the program<br />
and one of the most important<br />
is the character of the players we<br />
recruit,” Greeny says.<br />
Greeny graduated from<br />
Davenport High in Washington<br />
in 1995 where she was a stellar<br />
athlete. She was named one of<br />
Volleyball Magazine’s Fab Fifty<br />
Freshman recruits. She also stood<br />
out in track and basketball, where<br />
she finished her career as the<br />
state’s all-time leading scorer (both<br />
boys and girls) with 2,881 points.<br />
She led the Gorillas to two state<br />
basketball titles and she won three<br />
state high jump championships.<br />
Her accomplishments earned her<br />
numerous honors.<br />
She went to WSU on a<br />
volleyball scholarship and became<br />
the seventh player in school<br />
history with 1,000 career kills. On<br />
WSU’s career list, Greeny ranks<br />
third in block assists (360), fourth<br />
in total blocks (410), seventh in<br />
kills (1,006) and eighth in solo<br />
blocks (59). She also trained with<br />
the U.S. National volleyball team<br />
during the summer of 1997 and<br />
was a three-time all-Pacific 10<br />
Conference selection.<br />
Greeny also excelled in the<br />
classroom where she was WSU’s<br />
See Greeny, page 16
Press Release<br />
After the Warriors concluded<br />
yet another trouncing of an<br />
inferior opponent Friday<br />
night, Ryan Wholey released a<br />
mammoth sigh of relief.<br />
“It’s about time,” the <strong>Lewis</strong>-<br />
<strong>Clark</strong> <strong>State</strong> senior said of his<br />
team’s dominating per<strong>for</strong>mance.<br />
“A lot of us have been in a little<br />
bit of a slump.”<br />
He may need to brush up on<br />
the exact definition of a slump.<br />
The Warriors, after all, are<br />
basking in the radiant glow of<br />
a remarkable season -- even by<br />
their elevated standards.<br />
Paced by Wholey’s 4-<strong>for</strong>-4<br />
ef<strong>for</strong>t at the plate, top-ranked<br />
L-C pummeled Oregon Tech 18-<br />
4 in the opener of a three-game<br />
series at Harris Field.<br />
To demonstrate just how<br />
broad a gap exists between these<br />
clubs, consider:<br />
The Warriors (24-2, 10-1)<br />
racked up a season-high run<br />
total on their way to their fifth<br />
consecutive win.<br />
The Owls (4-16, 2-11)<br />
committed a season-worst<br />
six errors -- a mark they have<br />
amassed two other times this<br />
year. As a result, the Klamath<br />
Falls club suffered its 12th<br />
straight setback.<br />
“We just didn’t play good<br />
defense,” said Tech coach<br />
Pete Whislers, whose team<br />
surrendered five unearned runs.<br />
“When you give a team second<br />
and third chances, you’re going<br />
to get your ass beat. Bottom<br />
line.”<br />
The Owls’ outing was so<br />
bleak, they couldn’t even find<br />
solace in the 2-0 advantage<br />
they built after half an inning.<br />
The Warriors, unfazed by the<br />
The Pathfinder 9<br />
Warriors crush Oregon Tech 18-4;<br />
follow up with series sweep<br />
L-C basketball signs<br />
transfer guard-<strong>for</strong>ward Short<br />
Press Release<br />
<strong>Lewis</strong>-<strong>Clark</strong> <strong>State</strong> <strong>College</strong> women’s basketball coach Brian Orr<br />
announced that Sadie Short (Touchet, WA / Walla Walla Community<br />
<strong>College</strong>/ Touchet HS), has signed a letter of intent to attend LCSC<br />
and play basketball. She will enroll as a junior and have two years of<br />
eligibility.<br />
“We are extremely excited that Sadie has decided to join our<br />
program,” said Orr. “She is a very athletic and versatile player who can<br />
score the ball a lot of different ways. Offensively she has the complete<br />
package and she is a great rebounder. One of the best things we like is<br />
the fact that she is coming from a winning program and knows what it<br />
takes. We expect her to play a major role on next year’s team.”<br />
A 5-foot-11 guard-<strong>for</strong>ward, Short played two seasons <strong>for</strong> Bobbi<br />
Hazeltine at Walla Walla Community <strong>College</strong> where she was a two-time<br />
NWAACC All-Star selection and this past season was named MVP of<br />
the Eastern Region. Short averaged 15.9 points per game and led the<br />
entire NWAACC in defensive rebounding, pulling down 9.3 per game.<br />
She finished second overall in the conference in rebounding, averaging<br />
12.6 per game.<br />
She was a three-sport standout at Touchet High School, being named All-Blue<br />
Mountain League in volleyball, basketball and softball. She scored over 1,000<br />
points in her high school basketball career.<br />
“Sadie can get the rebound, lead the fast break and finish it, stated<br />
Orr. “She is a talented player who has the ability to make big plays on<br />
both ends of the floor.”<br />
Short, the Warriors first signee this year, is joining a <strong>Lewis</strong>-<strong>Clark</strong><br />
<strong>State</strong> team that returns two starters and finished 31-3, while reaching<br />
the NAIA National Tournament <strong>for</strong> the 11th time in the last 12<br />
seasons. LCSC went undefeated in Frontier Conference play. S h e<br />
is the third player LCSC has signed from WWCC in the past three<br />
years. Forward Aundrea Morrison finished her LCSC career this past<br />
season, while post Mandy Troutt will be a senior on next year’s squad.<br />
Mike Bybee/The Pathfi nder<br />
LCSC catcher Travis Georgius works a double play in Friday’s Oregon Tech game.<br />
unusual early deficit, wouldn’t<br />
allow it.<br />
L-C, which has outscored<br />
opponents 35-6 in the first<br />
inning this season, stormed back<br />
in the bottom of the inning.<br />
They eventually loaded the bases<br />
and took a 3-2 lead on Travis<br />
Georgius’ bases-loaded walk.<br />
The Warriors would go on to<br />
Press Release<br />
Warrior cross country Coach<br />
Mike Collins has announced the<br />
signing of two regional standouts,<br />
Sean Huey, from Borah High<br />
School in Boise, and Jessica Law<br />
from <strong>Clark</strong>ston High School. Law is<br />
the second harrier from <strong>Clark</strong>ston<br />
High that signed a letter-of-intent<br />
to play at <strong>Lewis</strong>-<strong>Clark</strong> <strong>State</strong> <strong>College</strong><br />
next year.<br />
Huey has an impressive running<br />
resume. He finished fifth in the<br />
Idaho <strong>State</strong> Class 5A Cross Country<br />
meet in <strong>Lewis</strong>ton last fall, which<br />
helped Borah place third as a team.<br />
Last year he finished third in the<br />
USATF Junior Olympic National<br />
Championships, ninth in the<br />
Rocky Mountain Cross Country<br />
Borderclash, and No. 23 in the<br />
Footlocker West Seeded Race.<br />
During nine-year cross country<br />
career, he hasf won nine USATF<br />
All-American awards, helped Borah<br />
place third or better at four state<br />
meets, and was a member of the<br />
sixth-place team at the NIKE Team<br />
National meet.<br />
“Sean comes into the program<br />
as one of the most heralded high<br />
school recruits we have ever signed,”<br />
Collins says. “His running resume<br />
is quite extensive and I believe he<br />
score in every inning but one,<br />
including a four-run barrage in<br />
the third, a three-score burst in<br />
the fourth and a five-run salvo in<br />
the seventh.<br />
Leadoff hitter Mark<br />
Thompson set the table <strong>for</strong> the<br />
L-C offense, driving in four runs<br />
on a pair of hits.<br />
The senior also added to his<br />
Warriors sign two harriers<br />
is probably one of the top four or<br />
five guys in the state this year, and<br />
this is going to be a good year <strong>for</strong><br />
high school boys distance runners<br />
in Idaho.”<br />
runs-scored total, crossing the<br />
plate twice. Thompson, who<br />
has scored 41 times this season,<br />
is tied with Beau Mills <strong>for</strong> the<br />
team lead.<br />
Georgius, filling in at catcher<br />
<strong>for</strong> the injured Jessie Mier,<br />
drove in a pair of runs on two<br />
hits, as did center fielder Brent<br />
Wyatt.<br />
As impressive as all those<br />
per<strong>for</strong>mances were, this night<br />
clearly belonged to Wholey.<br />
The senior, who has appeared<br />
in just 12 games this season,<br />
tallied two RBI and scored<br />
three times. His four hits, which<br />
included a double and a triple,<br />
were a season high. He had<br />
just two base knocks entering<br />
Friday’s contest.<br />
“I had been struggling of<br />
late, and I just wanted to keep<br />
it simple,” Wholey said of his<br />
approach at the plate. “It feels<br />
excellent. I’m pretty stoked right<br />
now.”<br />
At the other end of the<br />
emotional spectrum was<br />
Whislers, who came to a simple<br />
and undeniable conclusion.<br />
“No question the best team<br />
we have played this season,” he<br />
said. “No question.”<br />
With the help of junior third<br />
baseman Beau Mills, who hit two<br />
home runs and drove in seven<br />
runs, the Warriors went on to<br />
sweep Oregon Tech in Saturday’s<br />
doubleheader 12-1, 10-3.<br />
Huey served as team captain<br />
<strong>for</strong> the Lions’ cross country team<br />
the past two seasons. He also has<br />
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10 The Pathfinder April 4, 2007<br />
The York House: Not just a bed and breakfast<br />
By Destiny Martin<br />
of The Pathfinder<br />
Have you ever wondered where<br />
you could go to just get away from<br />
it all? Where there is a secluded<br />
spot to not be bothered, perhaps<br />
to spend a romantic evening with<br />
a significant other? The York<br />
House is a Victorian style Bed<br />
and Breakfast and is nestled in the<br />
community just a block away from<br />
campus. This business is there <strong>for</strong><br />
two reasons.<br />
One of those reasons <strong>for</strong> this<br />
business to exist is to serve guests <strong>for</strong><br />
just about any occasion. Whether<br />
it be <strong>for</strong> a little girl’s tea party, a<br />
young woman’s wedding shower,<br />
or even <strong>for</strong> the wedding itself, the<br />
main goal of this business is to<br />
make each guest feel welcome.<br />
In the words of Tom Mayberry,<br />
director of the Hospitality Program,<br />
“What we want is <strong>for</strong> people to leave<br />
the York House feeling that they<br />
have been treated with exceptional<br />
service.<br />
But there is something else that<br />
the York House offers, something<br />
that isn’t offered at any college or<br />
university in the Pacific Northwest.<br />
That’s right. LCSC is the only<br />
campus that offers a hospitality<br />
lab. What this means, is that any<br />
student planning on getting any<br />
kind of hospitality degree isn’t going<br />
to get the kind of hands on training<br />
the York House offers at any other<br />
college or university around here.<br />
It is completely run by students<br />
studying hospitality.<br />
All students wishing to pursue<br />
a career in culinary arts, hotel<br />
management or any other<br />
hospitality career is required to<br />
rotate through the York House in<br />
every aspect of service as part of<br />
their degree program.<br />
Harriers, page 9<br />
a grade-point average of better<br />
than 3.25, is a member of Junior<br />
National Honor Society and Who’s<br />
Who <strong>for</strong> Student-Athletes, and is<br />
an Eagle Scout.<br />
“It’s pretty obvious that Sean<br />
is an outstanding, outgoing<br />
young man,” Collins says. “We<br />
are <strong>for</strong>tunate that he has chosen<br />
to become a part of our running<br />
family her at LCSC. Once the<br />
running circle talk started that Sean<br />
was coming here I had a couple of<br />
“The purpose of the York<br />
House is to give the students the<br />
opportunity to deliver exceptional<br />
guest service and incorporate<br />
theoretical and practical business<br />
acumen,” Mayberry said.<br />
One thing most people might<br />
not know is that The York House<br />
was named after a man known<br />
only as York and, according to<br />
historical accounts, he was sent<br />
from the East coast to accompany<br />
William <strong>Clark</strong> on an expedition as<br />
his slave. <strong>Clark</strong> then approached<br />
longtime friend and military man,<br />
Meriwether <strong>Lewis</strong>, to accompany<br />
him. And so the became known<br />
as the <strong>Lewis</strong>-<strong>Clark</strong> expedition,<br />
which is of course how this area<br />
was named, and likewise, the two<br />
houses of this bed and breakfast,<br />
<strong>Lewis</strong> House and <strong>Clark</strong> House.<br />
Opened two years ago, the York<br />
House offers several amenities.<br />
There is a choice of several suites<br />
which are divided between the<br />
<strong>Lewis</strong> and <strong>Clark</strong> Houses.<br />
In the <strong>Lewis</strong> House, the Ashley Inn<br />
Suite is furnished to be a replica of a<br />
room at the Ashley Inn in Cascade,<br />
Idaho. This suite offers a high, fourpost<br />
bed and a private jacuzzi on the<br />
balcony. It is also the largest of the<br />
suites.<br />
<strong>Clark</strong> House offers the Hasan<br />
Davis Suite, named <strong>for</strong> a man<br />
who travels around the country<br />
portraying York in different events<br />
and who was most recently a part<br />
of the Bicentennial celebration.<br />
This suite offers a Roman tub<br />
complete with waterfall faucet.<br />
All suites come with a choice<br />
of four different menu options.<br />
Guests have a choice of two hot<br />
breakfasts and two continental<br />
style meals.<br />
Benny A. Advincula, trained by<br />
the Culinary Institute of America<br />
and the culinary foundations<br />
trainer, is an Executive Chef <strong>for</strong><br />
Sodexho, which provides the food<br />
and menu. He trains the students<br />
in the culinary arts, and oversees<br />
the culinary program to ensure<br />
all students are within OSHA<br />
and food handling guidelines.<br />
Lindsey Oliver, a sophomore<br />
hospitality student, hoping<br />
to pursue a career in cruise<br />
ships said, “It’s a great learning<br />
experience. Their just isn’t any<br />
other place to learn hands on<br />
and I think that’s what makes<br />
LCSC great.”<br />
Kaylee Marshall, hospitality<br />
student and manager of the York<br />
House oversees the students<br />
and every aspect of running the<br />
business.<br />
“I couldn’t imagine a better<br />
opportunity than to work with<br />
such fine people,” she said. “I<br />
think that one of the reasons<br />
that most students don’t choose<br />
the hospitality program is they<br />
feel it’s only housekeeping and<br />
dishwashing, and its just so much<br />
more than that.”<br />
Other amenities offered are<br />
catering services. A select menu<br />
is offered <strong>for</strong> guests having an<br />
extended stay, which offers lunch<br />
and dinner.<br />
Guests also have access to the<br />
jacuzzi located in <strong>Lewis</strong> House in<br />
the foyer as well as a masseuse on<br />
call.<br />
Guests have the option to write<br />
comments in guest books placed in<br />
the suites. Former LCSC student<br />
Matt Baney and his wife, Sarah,<br />
had this to say about their stay: “6-<br />
16-06, our wedding reception was<br />
absolutely wonderful! The perfect<br />
end to the perfect day! Everything<br />
was beautiful and Tamika was a<br />
fabulous hostess! We will cherish<br />
this memory always and hope to<br />
return.”<br />
Another couple who had<br />
traveled from Australia wrote,<br />
“22 nd March, 2007, this is a<br />
lovely home! We are so lucky to<br />
have found you. Kaylee was so<br />
charming and helpful. We are<br />
so impressed by this lovely city<br />
and area. We are researching the<br />
‘Chief Joseph’ history. -Jan and<br />
Peter Skelly”<br />
The York House is located at<br />
504 6th Avenue, in <strong>Lewis</strong>ton. For<br />
inquiries and reservations, call<br />
(208) 792-2900. Prices vary among<br />
the suites and most functions can<br />
be reasonably accommodated.<br />
LCSC students find value in service, and sombreros<br />
Courtesy Kristyn Koehler<br />
Patty Banuelos and Kristyn Koehler take a break on their service<br />
trip to Puerto Vallarta.<br />
Destiny Martin/The Pathfinder<br />
Sophomore Lindsey Oliver slices fruit in the York House.<br />
other coaches call that were also<br />
recruiting Sean in order to confirm<br />
his signing and their comments<br />
were always the same, outstanding<br />
runner and a ‘workhorse.’”<br />
Huey says he decided on LCSC<br />
because, like his parents, he<br />
wanted to attend a college that had<br />
smaller class sizes and more access<br />
to professors.<br />
“I have no doubt that a<br />
young man as diverse, energetic,<br />
hardworking and motivated as<br />
Sean will be successful here at<br />
<strong>Lewis</strong>-<strong>Clark</strong> <strong>State</strong> and represent<br />
the school and the program well,”<br />
Collins says. “We have a team<br />
returning that was ranked as high<br />
as No. 8 in the country last year.<br />
We only lose one of our top five<br />
runners to graduation, and I think<br />
Sean is going to have the ability<br />
to step in very nicely and be a key<br />
contributor to some of our goals<br />
<strong>for</strong> next year including winning a<br />
regional title and finishing in the<br />
top 10 in the country.”<br />
Collins is optimistic Law will<br />
also be a fine addition to the team.<br />
“We are excited about having<br />
By Pasang Sherpa<br />
of The Pathfinder<br />
Last Friday, Patty Banuelos and<br />
Kristyn Koehler presented their<br />
alternative Spring break experience<br />
at the “Celebration of Service”<br />
luncheon sponsored by <strong>Lewis</strong>-<strong>Clark</strong><br />
<strong>State</strong> <strong>College</strong>, the <strong>Lewis</strong>-<strong>Clark</strong><br />
Service Corps and the Community<br />
Warriors Volunteer Center. This<br />
luncheon was organized to honor<br />
Community Warriors at LCSC.<br />
Bannuelos and Koehler, who<br />
went to Puerto Vallarta in Mexico<br />
during spring break through a<br />
Practical Nursing class called<br />
“Servants to Mexico,” were two of<br />
these Community Warriors.<br />
Bannuelos, from Eden, Idaho<br />
and Koehler, from Spokane,<br />
handed out food at a dump,<br />
followed a nurse practitioner in<br />
Jessica on the team,” Collins<br />
says. “I have visited with her<br />
high school cross country coach<br />
(Brian Denton) and he and I both<br />
agree that she has the potential<br />
to improve a lot in the college<br />
running environment. Much of<br />
this has to do with that she has<br />
come to the point of deciding that<br />
she wants to run and understands<br />
the commitment and sacrifice<br />
needed to be good. She has<br />
per<strong>for</strong>med well in high school,<br />
but probably did not always reach<br />
her potential because of her<br />
an orphanage, did a presentation<br />
at a school on washing hands and<br />
germs, visited a free roadside clinic<br />
and took a tour of the local hospital<br />
that was built recently.<br />
They said this trip opened their<br />
eyes to look beyond mainstream<br />
nursing and realize that their skills<br />
are needed not just in nursing homes<br />
and hospitals, but worldwide.<br />
Their favorite part of the trip was<br />
the visit to the free roadside clinic<br />
where they assisted the doctor. There,<br />
they were involved in treatment and<br />
writing prescriptions which they<br />
thought was very interesting.<br />
Both Bannuelos and Koehler<br />
encouraged everyone to participate<br />
in a service trip as there is so much<br />
to learn and so many ways to help<br />
others.<br />
After the presentation, Charlotte<br />
Kremer from the Community<br />
involvement in other activities.<br />
“I know that she will be<br />
challenged as a runner here<br />
at LC, she knows that as well<br />
through our conversations and<br />
I have no doubt that she will<br />
progressively become a better<br />
runner and represent her high<br />
school program and the college<br />
here well into the future.”<br />
LCSC has already signed Jon<br />
Kane of <strong>Clark</strong>ston <strong>for</strong> the fall.<br />
Law is the fourth female<br />
runner and seventh freshman to<br />
sign with LCSC <strong>for</strong> next fall.<br />
Warriors Volunteer Center awarded<br />
four Community Warrior Awards.<br />
R.T. Whiteman is the outstanding<br />
student volunteer this year. He<br />
has spent more than 100 hours<br />
volunteering at a local clinic and<br />
wants to become a pharmacologist.<br />
The Outstanding Community<br />
Partner was awarded to the YWCA<br />
<strong>for</strong> their partnership in promoting<br />
service learning at LCSC.<br />
Ambassador’s Honor Society and<br />
its members were recognized <strong>for</strong><br />
their volunteer work in supporting<br />
the community.<br />
The Service-Learning champion<br />
is Geni Mertsching, Practical<br />
Nursing Director at LCSC.<br />
Established in 2003, the Practical<br />
Nursing Program is the first in the<br />
state of Idaho from which students<br />
graduate with an Associate Science<br />
Degree.
April 4, 2007 The Pathfinder 11<br />
International students<br />
develop leadership<br />
skills in Virginia<br />
By Pawan Kharel<br />
of The Pathfinder<br />
The International Students<br />
Club of LCSC sent two of its<br />
members to an international<br />
leadership conference organized<br />
by James Madison University of<br />
Virginia on March 23-24.<br />
Every year, two members<br />
of the international club are<br />
offered a chance to go to the<br />
program organized by the<br />
James Madison University of<br />
Virginia. This year Arif Nairam<br />
of Afghanistan and Yoko Tamai<br />
of Japan attended.<br />
The theme of this year’s<br />
program was “Trans<strong>for</strong>ming<br />
Cultural Experiences into<br />
Leadership Opportunities.”<br />
In the weekly gathering of<br />
the international student’s<br />
club, March 30, after attending<br />
the program Nairam and Tamai<br />
shared experiences and the<br />
knowledge gained from the<br />
conference.<br />
“It was really a great<br />
opportunity <strong>for</strong> us to meet<br />
many students from around<br />
the world,” Nairam said.<br />
“This program made us more<br />
contented with groups and<br />
presentations.”<br />
Tamai added to that, saying, “I<br />
particularly liked the leadership<br />
training part. Moreover<br />
different fun and entertaining<br />
programs made us com<strong>for</strong>table<br />
with many different people.”<br />
There were 200 students<br />
from 23 different colleges and<br />
universities around the United<br />
<strong>State</strong>s.<br />
The two-day event was<br />
principally divided into a<br />
welcome session, leadership<br />
training and workshop<br />
sessions.<br />
In the welcome session,<br />
students had a mix-andmatch<br />
pizza party and some<br />
entertainment. Then the<br />
students were divided into<br />
groups <strong>for</strong> group activity. There<br />
were two leadership training<br />
sessions and three workshop<br />
sessions.<br />
Different leadership skills<br />
and training were given to all<br />
attendees. At some stage in the<br />
workshop session students had<br />
to pick one of the topics given<br />
have a conversation on that<br />
topic with other group members<br />
and had to find solutions and<br />
options to solve the problem<br />
raised.<br />
There were topics like<br />
International Students<br />
Studying Abroad, Women in<br />
Islam: Questions of Identity<br />
& Leadership, Leadership and<br />
Emotional Health, HIV/AIDS<br />
Education, Understanding<br />
Conflict, Self-defense and<br />
safety, Women in Leadership:<br />
Facing Societal and cultural<br />
Obstacles and How to run an<br />
effective meeting.<br />
The program ended with a<br />
group and individual talent<br />
per<strong>for</strong>mance and a semi-<strong>for</strong>mal<br />
dinner.<br />
The current president<br />
and vice president of the<br />
International Students Club,<br />
Katja Loevslett and Un Sherpa,<br />
were the two who attended last<br />
year’s conference and the two<br />
students who attended this<br />
conference will be the next<br />
president and vice president of<br />
the club.<br />
How do you use your Pathfinder?<br />
Tell us and win cash<br />
Send us a 100-word-story<br />
(roughly) about how<br />
creative you are in putting<br />
The Pathfinder to good use<br />
and you could win cash.<br />
Mike Bybee/The Pathfinder<br />
Volume 114, Issue 20 of The Pathfinder doing its loyal duty to<br />
LCSC in Sam Glenn Complex room 23.<br />
LCSC golf<br />
team climbs<br />
to No. 12 in<br />
NAIA poll<br />
Press Release<br />
The <strong>Lewis</strong>-<strong>Clark</strong> <strong>State</strong> <strong>College</strong><br />
women’s golf team has climbed<br />
two spots in the National<br />
Association of Intercollegiate<br />
Athletics’ second poll of the<br />
season.<br />
The Warrior women moved to<br />
No. 12 in the poll and actually<br />
switched spots with fellow<br />
Frontier Conference member<br />
Rocky Mountain, which slipped<br />
to No. 14.<br />
Oklahoma City drew all 12<br />
first-place votes to hold down the<br />
top spot, while the University of<br />
British Columbia, and Concordia<br />
of Portland, Ore., are ranked No.<br />
5 and No. 9, respectively. UBC<br />
and Concordia, like LCSC and<br />
Rocky Mountain, are part of the<br />
NAIA’s Region I. The University<br />
of Victoria, also from Region I, is<br />
ranked No. 22.<br />
On the men’s side, the Warriors<br />
are tied at No. 28 with William<br />
Woods of Missouri. Oklahoma<br />
Christian is the unanimous No.<br />
1 team, while British Columbia<br />
is at No. 3. Victoria, at No. 15,<br />
is the only other Region I team<br />
ahead of the Warriors.<br />
Both LCSC golf teams will<br />
return to action on April 16-<br />
17 when it plays host to a 54hole<br />
regular-season conference<br />
match at the <strong>Lewis</strong>ton Golf and<br />
Country Club.<br />
Students, faculty or staff:<br />
E-mail submissions to thepathfinder@lcwarriormail.<br />
com or slide them under the door of The Pathfinder office,<br />
SUB 201, by April 13 at 5 p.m.<br />
Be sure to include:<br />
• Your name<br />
• Contact in<strong>for</strong>mation<br />
• Photo (Optional)<br />
2007 LCSC Library Services Survey<br />
The LCSC Library staff would like to hear from<br />
you regarding LCSC Library Services.<br />
Please fill out the 2007 LCSC Library Services<br />
Survey <strong>for</strong>m online and submit the <strong>for</strong>m by<br />
May 1, 2007.<br />
LCSC Library Services Survey 2007:<br />
http://www.lcsc.edu/library/survey_2007.htm<br />
Your input is appreciated!<br />
Submit a LCSC Library Services Survey<br />
<strong>for</strong>m, and you may be eligible to win a prize!<br />
Ten winners will be randomly selected on<br />
May 2, 2007. Winners will be notified by email.<br />
Winners may choose from the list of prizes:<br />
$10 LCSC Bookstore gift certificate<br />
$10 added to your WarriorBucks account<br />
$10 Starbucks Coffee gift certificate<br />
Help KLZC find a logo.<br />
- Participants can submit logos either<br />
in the red folder outside SUB room<br />
206 or by email at<br />
klcz@ lcwarriormail.com.<br />
- Winner will receive a gift card of an<br />
as yet undetermined value and free<br />
KLCZ t-shirt displaying the logo.<br />
- Submission deadline is April 13th.<br />
- Submissions must include the artist’s<br />
NAME, PHONE NUMBER, EMAIL ADDRESS.<br />
*We reserve the right to not choose any<br />
submission <strong>for</strong> any reason.<br />
The Pathfinder editorial staff will<br />
choose the winner based on:<br />
• Creativity<br />
• Efficiency<br />
• Comedy<br />
• How many myspace<br />
friends you have<br />
The winner will have his/her story run in the<br />
April 18 issue of The Pathfinder and will recieve $20.
12 The Pathfinder April 4, 2007<br />
L-C students hit the Pacific<br />
Outdoor<br />
Adventures<br />
Program takes<br />
5 students<br />
to Olympic<br />
National Park<br />
By Matt Wilson<br />
of The Pathfinder<br />
The <strong>Lewis</strong>-<strong>Clark</strong> <strong>State</strong> <strong>College</strong><br />
Outdoor Adventures Program led<br />
a 21-mile student hike in Olympic<br />
National Park over spring break.<br />
It was a wet one.<br />
The trip, which was planned<br />
and led by L-C Outdoor<br />
Recreation Specialist Jayson<br />
Ulrich, kicked off the morning of<br />
Monday, March 19, with one goal<br />
in mind — to “have a safe, fun<br />
overall experience,” said Ulrich.<br />
Five students, Ulrich, and<br />
faculty member Jim Hill made<br />
the five hundred-mile-trip across<br />
Washington <strong>State</strong> to the park.<br />
Having struggled with low<br />
participation <strong>for</strong> past trips, Ulrich<br />
was pleased to see a full van,<br />
despite 2 students dropping out<br />
last minute.<br />
Though being stuffed up in van<br />
<strong>for</strong> eight or nine hours might not<br />
seem like the most ideal way to<br />
kick off spring break, Ulrich said<br />
the proximity of this hike was part<br />
of its appeal.<br />
“It was closer than a lot of<br />
other things but still got us to a<br />
place where they could experience<br />
something totally different,”<br />
Ulrich said.<br />
The group arrived in the<br />
region to “a monsoon rain,” said<br />
Sophomore Brock Astle. “Then<br />
the first day of the hike was a<br />
sunny day,” he said. “Then the<br />
rest of the time, all hell broke<br />
loose.”<br />
“It became mind over matter<br />
really,” said Ulrich. “We did<br />
eleven miles in some really, really<br />
bad weather, and everybody that<br />
went pushed themselves, didn’t<br />
complain.”<br />
Instead, some of the students<br />
sought out redeeming experiences<br />
throughout the week. Sophomore<br />
Brayton Zipse cited one of these<br />
Jayson Ulrich hikes along the Pacific Coast in the Olympic National Park.<br />
to be the time spent seaside.<br />
“The high point <strong>for</strong> me was<br />
pillaging the beaches,” said Zipse.<br />
Just after explaining his best<br />
find, a metal hot dog roaster<br />
shaped like a stick man with an<br />
extremely long…protrusion, Zipse<br />
said, “For some, the trip was a<br />
true test of moral fiber.”<br />
In light of the weather, Ulrich<br />
and the group, who had planned<br />
to camp four nights, camped only<br />
two, spending the first and last<br />
nights of the trip indoors.<br />
Ulrich said he still regarded<br />
the trip as a success, citing the<br />
high point to be, “meeting new<br />
students that actually have quite<br />
a bit of passion <strong>for</strong> the outdoors.”<br />
“Bad weather can really turn<br />
people off to going back out in<br />
the outdoors again,” he said, “but,<br />
with this group, they’re probably<br />
more into it now.”<br />
The cost of the trip was $95<br />
<strong>for</strong> students who had their own<br />
equipment and $110 <strong>for</strong> students<br />
who needed equipment provided.<br />
Ulrich said these fees paid<br />
primarily <strong>for</strong> transportation.<br />
The rest of the fees—staff pay,<br />
permits, a ferry ride and a<br />
few meals—what Ulrich said<br />
accounted <strong>for</strong> about 30 percent<br />
of the total cost, were covered<br />
by the Outdoor Adventures<br />
budget.<br />
Because of the overall positive<br />
attitude among participants after<br />
the spring break hike, Ulrich<br />
said he is planning another trip<br />
<strong>for</strong> the end of the school year to<br />
either Stanley Hot Springs or<br />
somewhere up the Selway River.<br />
Courtesy Brayton Zipse<br />
Jesse Houseman, Jim Hill, Yamil Escobedo, Brenn Frei, Brock Astle and Jayson Ulrich.<br />
Courrtesy Brayton Zipse<br />
Courtesy Brenn Frei<br />
Brayton Zipse takes a minute to goof around on the ONP hike.
April 04, 2007 The Pathfinder 13<br />
Congratulations graduates<br />
2007SP Rebecca Nadine Acree BA English<br />
2007SP Justin W Adams BS Business Admin.<br />
2006FA Justine L Adams BS Psychology<br />
2007SP Loretta L Adams BS Elementary Education<br />
2007SP Rebekah Vallee Adolph BS Justice Studies<br />
2007SP Rhona Jo Alboucq BAS Medical Office SC<br />
2006FA Robert L Alboucq AAS Business Management<br />
2006FA Brooke M Allen BS Kinesiology<br />
2006FA Heather Louise Allen BA Business Administration<br />
2007SP William L Alspach AS Radiographic Scie nce PH<br />
2007SP Samantha N Anastasi AAS Business Management<br />
2007SU Kristy K Anderson BSN Nursing (BSN) MC<br />
2007SP Megan Denise Anderson BSW Social Work SC<br />
2007SP Misty Anderson AA Liberal Arts<br />
2007SP Brandi E Apple<strong>for</strong>d BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2007SP Thomas Jefferson Armitage BS Elementary Education<br />
2007SP Nicholas Armstrong BS Computer Science CL<br />
2007SP Brett Taylor Arnzen ATC ATC:Diesel Technology<br />
2006FA Dee Dee L Arnzen BAS Administrative Assistant<br />
2006FA Joshua J Arnzen AA Liberal Arts:Nat Sciences<br />
2007SP Victoria Lynn Bailey BS Elementary Education<br />
2007SP Janice Baldus BS Elementary Education SC<br />
2007SP Kathryn Maria Bales BA Communication Arts<br />
2007SP Dawn Marie Balmer BS Kinesiology<br />
2007SP Victor H Barajas BA Business Administration MC<br />
2007SP Kerry Joe Barnia BS Business Administration CL<br />
2007SP Kimberly A Barreiros AAS Business Management<br />
2007SP Joseph Anthony Bauer BSW Social Work<br />
2007SP Palani J Bear Ghost BS Management<br />
2007SP Francis Michael Bega BS Justice Studies SC<br />
2007SP Forest M Bell BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2007SP Jennifer Amber Belmont BSW Social Work CL<br />
2007SP John Bender III BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Meagan Bermel AAS Medical Assistant<br />
2007SP Meagan Michelle Bermel AAS Medical Office<br />
2006FA Christopher Bernal BAS Web Development<br />
2006FA Lindsay M Bess AAS Early Childhood Development<br />
2006FA Mark S Best BAS Applied Technology CL<br />
2006FA Alfred Michael Bevacqua BS Communication Arts<br />
2007SP Ashli N Bever BS Biology<br />
2007SP William D Big Man BS Management<br />
2007SU Bess Blakey BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2006FA Katie L Blevins BAS Medical Office<br />
2007SU K Michelle Blume BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2006FA Nathan Blyleven BS Elementary Education<br />
2006FA Carmalita Yevett Bohnee BS Business Administration<br />
2007SU Erin Bowen BSN Nursing (BSN) SC<br />
2007SP Jake Z Bradley AAS In<strong>for</strong>mation Sys Analysis<br />
2007SP Rebecca Rae Brainard BS Natural Sciences:Composite<br />
2007SP Sultana Janie Braman BSW Social Work MC<br />
2006FA JoAnn M Bricker BS Elementary Education<br />
2007SU Charlotte R Broesch BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2007SP Jessie Ann Broncheau AAS Medical Assistant PH<br />
2007SP Erik Neal Brown BS Biology<br />
2007SP Cynthia Brownell BS Interdisciplinary Studies SC<br />
2007SP Brent W Bruns BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Shane R Budde BS Interdisciplinary Studies<br />
2006FA Jonathan M Buettner BS Kinesiology<br />
2007SP Stephanie C Buettner BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2007SP Jessica S Bujak BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2006FA Doris A Burgett AAS Business Management PH<br />
2007SP Kelly D Burkgart ATC ATC:Diesel Technology<br />
2007SP Paula R Busch AAS Administrative Assistant<br />
2006FA Shel-lee Calene AAS Practical Nursing (AAS)<br />
2006FA Audra L Call AAS Medical Office<br />
2007SU Kelly William Carlstrom BS Kinesiology<br />
2006FA Todd Michael Carpenter BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2006FA Lucinda Cavileer CRT CRT:Medical Biller/Coder<br />
2006FA Lucinda Cavileer CRT CRT:Medical Transcription<br />
2006FA Lucinda Cavileer AAS Medical Office PH<br />
2006FA Peggy Cedros BS Management SC<br />
2007SP Jin Hui Choe BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Kellen David Christensen AAS In<strong>for</strong>mation Sys Analysis<br />
2007SU Matt Church BA Business Administration<br />
2006FA Ashley Erin <strong>Clark</strong> CRT CRT:Medical Receptionist<br />
2006FA Ashley Erin <strong>Clark</strong> CRT CRT:Medical Transcription<br />
2007SP Haley R <strong>Clark</strong> BS Biology<br />
2007SP Jordan <strong>Clark</strong> BS Communication Arts<br />
2007SP Ina “Lori” <strong>Clark</strong>e BSN Nursing RN Track SC<br />
2007SP Matthew Cleveley AAS Auto Mechanics Tech<br />
2007SU Scott Thomas Coleman BS Earth In<strong>for</strong>mation Systems<br />
2007SP Elizabeth Collins AAS Legal Assistant<br />
2007SP Elizabeth Collins AAS Paralegal<br />
2007SP Elizabeth Collins BAS Paralegal<br />
2006FA Jaime Cook AAS Medical Assistant PH<br />
2007SP Sarah Ann Cook BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2007SP Corey L Coon BS Justice Studies SC<br />
2007SP Amy Corbett BS Business Administration<br />
2006FA Craig P Cornelia BS Interdisciplinary Studies<br />
2007SP Gabrielle Corner AAS Business Management<br />
2007SP Douglas N Craig Jr BS Kinesiology<br />
2007SP Deborah R Craw<strong>for</strong>d BSW Social Work<br />
2007SP Kaydie Dawn Cresswell AAS Engineering Tech — Civil<br />
2007SP Aaron Curtis BS Social Sciences<br />
2007SP Shaun F Curtis AAS Engineering Tech - Mech<br />
* Honors legend: SC=Summa / MC =Magna / CL=CUM / PH=Presidential<br />
Term Name to Appear on Diploma Degree Major Honors Term Name to Appear on Diploma Degree Major Honors<br />
2007SU Andrew S Cypher BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Carolann M Daniel AAS Legal Assistant<br />
2007SP Carolann M Daniel AAS Paralegal<br />
2007SP Carolann M Daniel BAS Paralegal<br />
2007SU Amy Loreen Darrington BSN Nursing (BSN) SC<br />
2006FA Bradley A Davis BS Biology<br />
2007SU Cheryl LeAnn Davis BS Justice Studies<br />
2007SP Gina L Davis BSW Social Work<br />
2006FA Nancy K Davis BSN Nursing RN Track CL<br />
2007SP Audra Renee Delahunty BS Justice Studies<br />
2007SP Calandra K Dell BS Communication Arts<br />
2007SP Justin M DeRango BS Management<br />
2007SP Doris E Derry BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Rainer Matthias Doerr BA Business Administration<br />
2007SP Christopher Wayne Dohrman BA Business Administration<br />
2007SP Meghan Dolny BSW Social Work<br />
2007SP Crescentia Renita Domebo BSW Social Work<br />
2007SP Patrick M Donnellon AAS In<strong>for</strong>mation Sys Analysis<br />
2007SP Desiree L Doramus AAS Business Management<br />
2007SP Raeleen Dorr BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2007SP Jon Dowling BS Interdisciplinary Studies<br />
2007SP Jocelyn L Drake BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2007SP Patrick Drapeau BSW Social Work CL<br />
2006FA Derick A Driggs BAS Business Management<br />
2007SP AnneMarie Driver BS Kinesiology<br />
2007SP Jamie L Duman BS Business Administration<br />
2007SU Ryan David Easttum BS Communication Arts MC<br />
2007SP Marla Fern Easum BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2006FA Angela Eaton BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Susan M Edwards BS Social Sciences<br />
2007SP Robert Ernest Eggart BAS Engineering Tech — Civil<br />
2007SP Julie Ann Eggebraaten BSW Social Work<br />
2007SP Lisa D Elliott BS Justice Studies<br />
2007SP Debra M Emerich BS General Studies:Humanities<br />
2007SP Edward Endebrock BS Interdisciplinary Studies MC<br />
2007SU Normandie P Enderton BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2007SP Odette E Engan BS Kinesiology<br />
2006FA Khaliun Enkhjargal BS Kinesiology<br />
2007SP Donna J Erickson BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2007SP Hailey A Erickson BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2007SP Valerie Lynn Evans BS Psychology<br />
2007SP Julie A Everts BS Elementary Education<br />
2006FA Adam Christopher Faling AAS Diesel Technology<br />
2007SP Lisa Marie Farley BS Biology<br />
2007SP Megen Alexia Feleke BA Chemistry CL<br />
2007SP Mary Field BSW Social Work CL<br />
2007SP Morleen L Flerchinger BAS Medical Office CL<br />
2007SP Judith A Floch BAS Bookkeeping<br />
2007SP Michelle Iris Fluckiger BS Hotel/Restaurant Management<br />
2006FA Kimberly J Foht CRT CRT:Medical Transcription<br />
2006FA Brianna L Ford AAS Early Childhood Development<br />
2006FA Michael H Forker BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Dustin John Forsyth BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Justin Fraser BS Interdisciplinary Studies<br />
2007SP Brian J Frei BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2007SP Aaron M Frizzell BS Computer Science<br />
2007SP Aaron M Frizzell BAS Web Development<br />
2007SP Shane W Gardner BS Justice Studies<br />
2007SP Monte Tyler Garrison BS Psychology<br />
2007SP Nicholas Raymond George AAS Welding Technology<br />
2007SU Esther Darlene Gering BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2006FA Jessica Juanita Gibson BS Elementary Education<br />
2007SP Eric M Giddens AAS Engineering Tech — Mech PH<br />
2007SP Travis L Giese BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2007SP Alison Nicole Gilley BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2007SP Andrew J Gion BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Tammy Glass BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2006FA Robert Glatz BA Interdisciplinary Studies<br />
2007SP April Christina Gormsen BS Justice Studies<br />
2007SP Deborah Lynne Gosso BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2007SP Sherry Lynn Greenup BSW Social Work<br />
2007SP Kenton Greer AAS In<strong>for</strong>mation Sys Analysis<br />
2007SP Jennifer M Gregg AAS Legal Assistant<br />
2007SP Jennifer M Gregg AAS Paralegal<br />
2007SP Jennifer M Gregg BAS Paralegal<br />
2007SP Thomas Phillip Gregory BA Management<br />
2007SP Shannon Rae Grow AAS Web Development<br />
2007SP Shannon Rae Grow BAS Web Development CL<br />
2007SP Alecs Michael Guerrero BS Kinesiology<br />
2006FA Lindsay Marie Haines BS Justice Studies CL<br />
2006FA Ashley Christine Hall BS Psychology<br />
2006FA Cheryl Santina Ham BS Elementary Education SC<br />
2006FA Leilani C Hamilton BSW Social Work<br />
2007SP Tara Anne Hanekan BS Justice Studies<br />
2007SU Holli LeAnna Hansen BSN Nursing (BSN) SC<br />
2007SP Larissa Cara Hansen AA Liberal Arts:Nat Sciences<br />
2007SP Katie James Hanson BS Communication Arts<br />
2007SP Emily Schwimmer Hargrave BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2006FA Pepper Harman AAS Business Management<br />
2007SP Amra R Harmanson AS Radiographic Science<br />
2007SP Shanna Patricia Harmon BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Anna E Harrington BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Ambria Kay Harris BS Biology SC<br />
2007SP Ambria Kay Harris AA Liberal Arts:Humanities PH<br />
2007SP Martin M Harris BS Biology SC
14 The Pathfinder April 4, 2007<br />
Term Name to Appear on Diploma Degree Major Honors Term Name to Appear on Diploma Degree Major Honors<br />
2007SP David L Harrison BS Management<br />
2006FA Janelle Lynae Harrison BS Psychology<br />
2007SP Alexander K Hart BS Business Administration CL<br />
2007SP Christle Joann Hart BS Elementary Education<br />
2006FA Heather Rae Hart BS Justice Studies<br />
2006FA Steven Eugene Hartwig AAS Automated Manufacturing Tech<br />
2007SP Benjamin Taylor Hasenoehrl ATC ATC:Diesel Technology<br />
2007SP Michael David Haugen BS General Studies:Education<br />
2007SP Rachel Havens BS Biology CL<br />
2006FA Tara M Hearing BS Elementary Education MC<br />
2007SP Shelley Hensel BS Psychology<br />
2007SP Anna Hiebert AAS Business Management<br />
2006FA Brian D Hilt BS Elementary Education<br />
2007SP Gabriel <strong>Clark</strong> Hinkelman BS Kinesiology<br />
2007SU Michelle Hiseley BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2007SP Darrah Hocum BSW Social Work<br />
2006FA Christa Hogan BS Elementary Education SC<br />
2006FA Kristi L Hogan BS Mathematics MC<br />
2007SP Andrea Leigh Holt AAS Graphic Arts/Print Tech<br />
2007SP Justin C Holt BS Psychology<br />
2007SP Lindsey Ann Holt BSW Social Work<br />
2007SP Susan E Hopkins BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2006FA Kinsey Lynn House BS Elementary Education<br />
2007SP Danielle Ann Houser BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Yu Huang BS Chemistry<br />
2007SP Monique A Huddleston BS Elementary Education SC<br />
2007SP AnnaLee M Hughes BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2007SP Jesse D Hughes AAS Graphic Arts/Print Tech PH<br />
2007SP Jason Robert Humphrey BS Psychology<br />
2007SP Andrew Joseph Hunt BS Social Sciences<br />
2007SP Kimberly Hunter AS Radiographic Science PH<br />
2007SP Leah L Hyman AS Radiographic Science PH<br />
2007SP Dawn Tiffany Ingham BS Kinesiology<br />
2007SP Richard W Isley Jr BS Management<br />
2006FA Kathy Jackson BAS Graphic Arts/Print Tech MC<br />
2007SP Patrick W Jacobs BAS Applied Technology<br />
2006FA Andrew Brent Jaekel BS Business Administration<br />
2006FA Adam Jarvis ATC ATC:Heat/AC/Appliance Tech<br />
2007SU Nicholas J Jarzabek BS Communication Arts<br />
2006FA Tim Jarzabek BS Communication Arts<br />
2007SP Holly Anne Jasinski BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2007SP Holly Anne Jasinski BS Psychology<br />
2007SP Melinda Jean Jennings BS Psychology<br />
2007SP Linda Marie Jensen BSW Social Work MC<br />
2007SP Daniel Jentges BSN Nursing (BSN) CL<br />
2007SP Arlin “Trixie” Johnson BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2006FA Carrie L Johnson AAS Bookkeeping<br />
2007SP Drew Oliver Johnson BS Management<br />
2007SP Kent R Johnson BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Kent R Johnson BS Social Sciences<br />
2007SP Melanie R Johnson BAS Applied Technology<br />
2007SP Rebekah Mae Johnson BA English<br />
2007SP Dennis J Johnston BS Business Administration MC<br />
2007SP Kyle A Johnstun AAS Auto Mechanics Tech<br />
2007SP Carla Carmel Jones BS Psychology<br />
2007SP Charlotte B Jones BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Jared Mark Jones BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Kristina M Jones BSW Social Work CL<br />
2007SP Ryan M Jones AAS Heat/AC/Appliance Technology<br />
2006FA Ai Kadota AA Liberal Arts<br />
2006FA Djeneba Kanakomo BS Business Administration<br />
2006FA Matthew T Kane BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Megan Diane Kane BS Kinesiology<br />
2006FA Molly E Karp BS Justice Studies<br />
2007SP Karen Karres BSW Social Work SC<br />
2007SP Chelsey Nicole Kaschmitter BS Kinesiology MC<br />
2007SP Susan C KashKash BS Elementary Education<br />
2007SP Karen Thomas Kaufman BS Business Administration SC<br />
2007SP Jessica R Kaufmann BS Elementary Education<br />
2007SP James T Kearns BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Trina J Kennedy BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2006FA Joseph Patrick Kershisnik AAS Welding Technology<br />
2007SP Kyle Douglas King AAS Graphic Arts/Print Tech<br />
2007SP Rebecca Ann Kingsbury AAS Medical Office PH<br />
2007SP Ashley G Kleinjans BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2006FA Knute D Klingler AAS Heat/AC/Appliance Technology<br />
2007SP Beverly Alane Kloepfer BSN Nursing RN Track MC<br />
2007SP Jason Knowlton BS Business Administration<br />
2006FA Duke Rheul Kouta BAS Web Development<br />
2007SP Audrey Anna Krahn BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2007SP Marilyn Louise Kurdy BS Interdisciplinary Studies MC<br />
2006FA Laynie Lasswell BS Management<br />
2007SP Brandi Jo Lawen BS Elementary Education<br />
2007SP Kimberly S Lee BSW Social Work SC<br />
2007SP Lee Daniel LeGore BS Kinesiology<br />
2007SP Thomas T Lenigan BS Social Sciences<br />
2006FA Janssen T <strong>Lewis</strong> BS Business Administration<br />
2006FA Isaac A Linscheid BAS In<strong>for</strong>mation Sys Analysis CL<br />
2006FA Neil K Litchfield BS Kinesiology<br />
2007SP Binaya Lohani BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Diane Kay Longley BS Business Administration CL<br />
2007SP Lara Marie Lowry BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2007SP Seth J Lunce<strong>for</strong>d BS Social Sciences<br />
2007SP Adena Danielle Lunders BA Justice Studies<br />
2007SP Anna M Lusby BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2007SP Crystal Lybarger BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2007SP Janet Beryl MacKay BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2007SP Mike Madrid BS Kinesiology<br />
2006FA Jeannine Robin Mahoney BS Business Administration<br />
2006FA Lindsay Raelynn Maki AAS Legal Assistant<br />
2007SP Lindsay Raelynn Maki AAS Paralegal<br />
2007SP Lindsay Raelynn Maki BAS Paralegal<br />
2007SP Kristine M Maksen BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Molly L Mallet BS Business Administration SC<br />
2007SU Carel Mambounou BS Justice Studies<br />
2006FA Elodie C Mambounou BS Computer Science<br />
2006FA Roy M Manning BS Interdisciplinary Studies MC<br />
2007SU Kenneth Lee Marble BSN Nursing (BSN) SC<br />
2007SP Lea’ M Marineau BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2007SP Adam D Marshall AAS Business Management<br />
2007SP Joseph Allen Matt BS Justice Studies<br />
2007SP Jacqueline S Maurer BSW Social Work SC<br />
2006FA Chanda A May AAS Practical Nursing (AAS)<br />
2007SP Diana Lynn May BSW Social Work MC<br />
2006FA Kerri A Mays AAS Practical Nursing (AAS)<br />
2007SP Shelly Lynn McAlary BA English CL<br />
2006FA Paul A McCall BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Danelle Kathleen McCann BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2007SP Amy J McConville AAS Business Management<br />
2006FA Amy J McConville CRT CRT:Retailing<br />
2007SP Amy J McConville CRT CRT:Supervision<br />
2007SP Jason L McDowell BAS In<strong>for</strong>mation Sys Analysis CL<br />
2007SP Cindy Renee McGee BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2007SP Jennifer L McGowen BS Management<br />
2007SP Clayton M McKee AAS Auto Mechanics Tech<br />
2007SP Rosemarie McLaughlin BSW Social Work<br />
2007SP Lesa A McPeak AAS Web Development PH<br />
2007SP Lesa A McPeak BAS Web Development MC<br />
2006FA Jeanna N Meacham BS Elementary Education<br />
2006FA Carolyn L Meek AAS Early Childhood Development<br />
2007SP Carolyn L Meek BAS Early Childhood Development<br />
2007SP Adrian D’artagnan Menard BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Lucinda Leann Mendenhall BS Mathematics<br />
2007SP Chelsie Middlekoop CRT CRT:Medical Transcription<br />
2006FA Chelsie Middlekoop AAS Medical Office<br />
2007SP Bonnie Leah Miles BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2007SU Summer Rae Miles BSN Nursing (BSN) CL<br />
2007SP Martin Scott Miller AAS Automated Manufacturing Tech<br />
2007SP Aaron J Mills BS Kinesiology<br />
2007SP Kristie G Mills BS Justice Studies<br />
2007SP Sheila R Mills BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2006SU Cori Lynn Miranda BS Elementary Education SC<br />
2007SP Borja Molas Solsona BA Business Administration<br />
2007SU Jeanette L Montagu AAS In<strong>for</strong>mation Sys Analysis PH<br />
2006FA Tami Sue Montague BS Elementary Education<br />
2007SP Raymond Montelongo BS Justice Studies<br />
2007SP Cheri Elizabeth Montes BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2007SP Bonnie Faye Moore BS Elementary Education<br />
2007SP Daniel J Moore CRT Industrial Electronics<br />
2007SP Elizabeth Anne Moore BS Elementary Education<br />
2007SP Jesse Morales BS Business Administration<br />
2007SU Debra R Morris BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Aundrea Mae Morrison BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Sara M Morton AAS Early Childhood Development<br />
2006FA Brian L Mosher AAS In<strong>for</strong>mation Sys Analysis<br />
2006FA Kimberly Moss AAS Practical Nursing (AAS)<br />
2007SP Angela Dawn Movius BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Sasha Marie Moxam BA Hotel/Restaurant Management<br />
2007SU Billie Mae Mueller BS Justice Studies<br />
2006FA Dean O Mundell BS Justice Studies CL<br />
2006FA Jacqueline A Naccarato BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2007SP Crystal Lynn Nail BAS Administrative Assistant<br />
2006FA Yuka Nakamura BA English<br />
2007SP Lisa Marie Nash BS Psychology<br />
2006FA Julianne Nebeker BS Psychology<br />
2007SP Amy R Neglia BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2007SP Kendal L Neill AAS Business Management<br />
2007SP Kendal L Neill CRT CRT:Retailing<br />
2007SP Kendal L Neill CRT CRT:Supervision<br />
2006FA Chassidy Colburn Nelson BS Business Administration SC<br />
2007SP Janeen Nelson BS Psychology<br />
2007SP Benjamin Z Newton BS Kinesiology<br />
2007SP Alexander K Ng BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Lai Man Ng BS Business Administration<br />
2006FA Ashley Anne Nicholes BS Social Sciences<br />
2007SP Eli Nightingale AAS Automated Manufacturing Tech<br />
2007SP Ciprian Nitoi BS Kinesiology<br />
2007SP Kenneth Arthur Noah BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Angela Christine Northam BS Elementary Education SC<br />
2006FA Laura Marie Norton AAS Early Childhood Development<br />
2007SP Ramon Andres Nunez BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Martin M Nuxoll BS Natural Sciences:Composite SC<br />
2006FA Judy K Oatman BS Justice Studies<br />
2007SP Kimberly D Ockwell AS Radiographic Science PH<br />
2007SP Jimmie O’Harra AAS Web Development<br />
2007SP Bryan K Olinger AS Radiographic Science PH<br />
2007SP Trevor Toney Olson BS Kinesiology<br />
2007SP Omotayo O Omotowa BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2006FA Elizabeth Jennie Ordaz CRT CRT:Medical Biller/Coder<br />
2006FA Elizabeth Jennie Ordaz AAS Medical Office<br />
2007SP Sonya Day Pablo BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP David Michael Palmer BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Whitney Palmer BA Social Sciences<br />
2007SP Jun Pang BS Business Administration<br />
2006FA Allison A Parker BS Elementary Education MC<br />
2007SP Juanita Diane Parker BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2007SP Anthony David Parks BS Communication Arts<br />
2007SP Kristi K Parks CRT CRT:Office Technology
April 4, 2007 The Pathfinder 15<br />
Term Name to Appear on Diploma Degree Major Honors Term Name to Appear on Diploma Degree Major Honors<br />
2007SP Nathan R Penkert BS Justice Studies<br />
2007SP Nicholas Craig Pentzer AAS Engineering Tech — Civil PH<br />
2007SP Thomas R Pentzer AA Liberal Arts<br />
2007SP Cody Persinger BSW Social Work<br />
2006FA Josh Peters ATC ATC:Auto Mechanics Tech<br />
2007SP Lauren N Petticolas BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2007SP Marci L Phillips BS Elementary Education<br />
2007SP Nick Phillips BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Nick Phillips BS Management<br />
2007SP Taron Nicole Phillips BS Elementary Education<br />
2007SU Bill L Picard BS Social Sciences<br />
2007SP Beth Pietlicki BS Communication Arts<br />
2006FA Jacob E Pineda AAS Heat/AC/Appliance Technology<br />
2007SP Christopher Michael Pitts BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Christy Porter BSW Social Work CL<br />
2007SP Catherine Rebecca<br />
Josephine Pottenger BS Justice Studies<br />
2007SP Brian Scott Poxleitner AS Radiographic Science PH<br />
2007SP Mary Ruth Prasil BA Management MC<br />
2007SP Jesse Province AAS Heat/AC/Appliance Technology<br />
2006FA Deborah C Queen AAS Medical Assistant<br />
2007SU Carolyn Denise Quintero BS Interdisciplinary Studies<br />
2007SP Dain E Rad AAS Business Management<br />
2007SP Kelly Sue Ragland BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2006FA Linda Rammler BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2007SP Kynna Sophia Randall AAS Graphic Arts/Print Tech PH<br />
2007SP Clif<strong>for</strong>d Bruce Rawson BS Computer Science<br />
2007SP Jolene E Redfield BS Business Administration SC<br />
2006FA Kyle S Reichert BS Interdisciplinary Studies<br />
2007SP Mitchell Reid AAS Web Development<br />
2006FA Cenone M Reitan AAS Practical Nursing (AAS)<br />
2006FA Linda Remer AAS Administrative Assistant<br />
2007SP Linda Remer AAS Web Development<br />
2007SP Maria Amelia Ozcariz<br />
Franca Resende BA English<br />
2007SP Kristen Richards BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2007SP Christopher M Riebli BS Kinesiology<br />
2007SP Sheldon Ryan Rippee BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2006FA Margaret Anne Roberts BAS Early Childhood Development<br />
2007SP Nikalena A Roberts BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2007SP Jasmine L Robertson BS Kinesiology<br />
2007SP Janice L Robinson BSW Social Work MC<br />
2007SP Melissa Rode AA Liberal Arts<br />
2006FA Lorree Rodgers CRT CRT:Medical Biller/Coder<br />
2006FA Shelley Rowe BS Justice Studies CL<br />
2007SP William David Rowland BAS Engineering Tech — Civil CL<br />
2007SP Terassa M Ruiz BSW Social Work<br />
2007SP Jenny Ann Ruppel BSW Social Work SC<br />
2007SP Kelly Ann Russell BS Elementary Education SC<br />
2007SP Keith Bryan Rutler AAS Auto Mechanics Tech<br />
2007SP Karla Marie Ryan BS Hotel/Restaurant Management<br />
2006FA Leonard F Ryser AAS Heat/AC/Appliance Technology<br />
2007SP Annemarie Salisbury BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Ryan Thomas Sallaway BS Kinesiology<br />
2007SP Donald A Sampo AAS Bookkeeping<br />
2007SP Nicholas A Sanders AAS Collision Repair<br />
2007SP Sonja V Sanders BA English<br />
2007SP Gregory Sapp BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2006FA Misato Sawa BS Psychology<br />
2007SP David Schrecengost AAS Heat/AC/Appliance Technology<br />
2007SU Tamara R Schumacher AAS Graphic Arts/Print Tech<br />
2007SU Valerie L Scraf<strong>for</strong>d BSN Nursing RN Track MC<br />
2007SP Andrew James Severson BS Kinesiology<br />
2007SP Janene Shaw AAS Hotel/Restaurant Mgmt<br />
2006FA Kristine Shaw AA Liberal Arts<br />
2006FA Tabitha A Shears BS Justice Studies<br />
2007SP Katie Ann Shelton BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Kelcey Shelton ATC ATC:Auto Mechanics Tech<br />
2007SP Anne Kathryn Shepard BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2007SP Pasang Y Sherpa BA Social Sciences<br />
2007SP William R Shook ATC ATC:Collision Repair<br />
2007SP David Siers BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Janiece Marie Skranak BS Justice Studies SC<br />
2007SP J Nikolas Slyker BSN Nursing (BSN) CL<br />
2007SP Amanda Jean Smagacz BS Kinesiology<br />
2006FA H Eugene Smith BS Interdisciplinary Studies<br />
2007SP Jayson Paul Smith BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2006FA Jeffrey S Smith BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Lyla R Smith BS Business Administration CL<br />
2007SP Terese Lyn Smith BS Interdisciplinary Studies SC<br />
2007SP Amy L Smolinski CRT CRT:Medical Transcription<br />
2007SP Amy L Smolinski AAS Medical Office<br />
2006FA Sherry Snell BAS Early Childhood Development<br />
2007SP Jennifer Rae Snyder AAS Administrative Assistant<br />
2007SP Shannon M Snyder BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2006FA Krista Solem BAS Early Childhood Development<br />
2007SP Tony Sousa BS Kinesiology<br />
2007SP Kyle S Southern AAS Automated Manufacturing Tech<br />
2007SU Richard Byron Stang BSN Nursing (BSN) MC<br />
2006FA Heather Stearns BA English<br />
2007SP Jeremy B Stedman BS Business Administration<br />
2006FA David R Steen AA Behavioral Science<br />
2007SU Shannon Renee Stevens BS Justice Studies<br />
2006FA Alaina Mae Stevenson BS Elementary Education MC<br />
2006FA Andrew Stewart BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Robbie Stickley Wilson BSW Social Work<br />
2006FA Ramona R Stinson CRT CRT:Medical Transcription<br />
2007SP Ramona R Stinson AAS Medical Office<br />
2006FA Jeanna Rae Stone AAS Practical Nursing (AAS)<br />
2007SP Lorena A Stover BSN Nursing RN Track CL<br />
2006FA Amanda Lynn Stowers BS Elementary Education<br />
2007SP Terry L Sullivan BSW Social Work<br />
2007SP Matthew M Sutterfield AAS Auto Mechanics Tech<br />
2007SP N Trent Taggart BSW Social Work SC<br />
2006FA Yukiko Taira AA Liberal Arts<br />
2007SP Debbie J Taylor AAS Medical Assistant<br />
2007SP Jonathan Taylor BS Management<br />
2007SP Susan M Taylor BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Terry V Taylor BAS In<strong>for</strong>mation Sys Analysis CL<br />
2006FA Linda J Teats BAS Business Management<br />
2007SP Robyn Lyn Thomahlen BS Justice Studies MC<br />
2006FA Stefanie Jo Thomas BS Natural Sciences:Composite<br />
2007SP Joshua J Thompson BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Julia Elaine Thompson BS Elementary Education<br />
2007SP Steven Lerone Thompson BS Management<br />
2007SP Cheyenne Nichole Thornton BS Elementary Education<br />
2006FA Brian Ray Thurlow BS Justice Studies MC<br />
2007SP Jared Tikker BS Business Administration<br />
2006FA Lucas J Tilley BAS In<strong>for</strong>mation Sys Analysis<br />
2007SP Eric J Titus BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Gretta E Tompkins BS Psychology AP<br />
2007SP Karla M Tonn-Long AS Radiographic Science<br />
2007SP LuAnn Townsend BSN Nursing RN Track SC<br />
2006FA Margaret Mary Tubb AAS Practical Nursing (AAS)<br />
2007SP Amanda Lynn Tucker BS Interdisciplinary Studies<br />
2006FA Michael A Turner Jr BS Justice Studies<br />
2007SP Adam John Uhlenkott ATC ATC:Diesel Technology<br />
2007SP Frederick J Ulmer AAS Auto Mechanics Tech<br />
2007SP John E Unruh AAS Engineering Tech - Civil<br />
2007SP Brandi Lynn Vale AAS Medical Office<br />
2007SP Rachel Amber Van Noy BS Business Administration<br />
2006FA Jonathan A VanWoerkom AAS Heat/AC/Appliance Technology<br />
2006FA Peggy R VanWoerkom BAS Paralegal<br />
2006FA Marc C Vedder BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Dimitri Verabyou BA Business Administration CL<br />
2007SP John Francis Verhaag BS Social Sciences<br />
2007SP Shannon M Vietmeier AAS Administrative Assistant<br />
2007SP Shannon M Vietmeier AAS Bookkeeping<br />
2007SP Jennifer Marie Vigil AAS Early Childhood Development<br />
2007SU Heather Vinson BSN Nursing (BSN) MC<br />
2007SP Camille L Volking BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2007SP Kevin Walker BS Elementary Education<br />
2007SP Stephen Alexander Ward BS Business Administration SC<br />
2006FA Ashely R Warren BS Management<br />
2007SP Kristin Lea Wassmuth AAS Early Childhood Development<br />
2007SP Sean R Watkins BAS Graphic Arts/Print Tech<br />
2007SP Marina J Way BS Biology<br />
2007SP Jeffry L Weber AAS Industrial Electronics<br />
2007SP Marie Wedin CRT CRT:Office Technology<br />
2007SP Marie Wedin AAS Medical Assistant<br />
2007SP Marie Wedin AAS Medical Office<br />
2007SP Betty June Weeks BSW Social Work<br />
2007SP Duane E Wemhoff AAS Automated Manufac. Tech PH<br />
2006FA Krystal Ann Werre AAS Graphic Arts/Print Tech<br />
2007SP Timothy Richard Werre Jr BS Communication Arts<br />
2007SP August B Wessel BS Justice Studies<br />
2007SP Desiree L West BSN Nursing RN Track<br />
2007SP Loren D Whitcomb Jr ATC ATC:Collision Repair<br />
2007SP Bailey Jennette White BSW Social Work<br />
2007SP Debra A Whiteley BSW Social Work<br />
2007SP Shayne M Whitson BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2007SP Ryan Clarence Wholey BS Kinesiology MC<br />
2007SP Jason T Wickard AAS Auto Mechanics Tech<br />
2007SP Corey Vernon Wicks BA Communication Arts<br />
2006FA Aaron M Wilder BS Psychology<br />
2007SU Jackson Wilkey BS Communication Arts<br />
2007SP Cory James Wilkinson BS Interdisciplinary Studies<br />
2007SP David M Williams AS Radiographic Science PH<br />
2007SP Jesse L Williams AAS Engineering Tech — Civil<br />
2007SP Kate L Williamson BS Kinesiology<br />
2006FA Michele Gina Williamson BS Justice Studies MC<br />
2007SP Jeffery J Wilson BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Lisa E Wilson AAS Medical Assistant<br />
2006FA Chad J Witherwax BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP Rachel Annette Wittman BS Interdisciplinary Studies<br />
2007SP Rachel A Wolfe BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
2006FA Kandice Wolff AAS Medical Assistant<br />
2007SU Melissa Marilyn Wyble BS Management<br />
2007SP Katya Yankova Yancheva BS Business Administration<br />
2007SP MinSang Yoo ATC ATC:Industrial Electronics<br />
2007SP Bryan J Youtz BS Elementary Education<br />
2006FA DesiRae Zabel AA Liberal Arts<br />
2007SP Paula Zehner BSN Nursing (BSN)<br />
GRADuATES: Please check the in<strong>for</strong>mation listed including your name (as you want it to be printed on your<br />
diploma and the Commencement Program) as well as your honors status, the degree you will earn and the date<br />
your graduation will be effective. Errors MuST be reported to the Registrar’s Office by April 16.<br />
Reminder<br />
If you do not plan to attend the Commencement Exercises in May, you must submit written notice to the<br />
Registrar’s Office. You can email Carolyn Quintero from your LCWarriormail at cdquintero@lcsc.edu.<br />
Honors In<strong>for</strong>mation<br />
l Graduation honors will be recorded on the<br />
Commencement Program based on a minimum of<br />
32 graded LCSC credits following Fall Semester.<br />
l Graduation honors will be recorded<br />
on academic transcripts based on a<br />
minimum of 32 graded LCSC credits<br />
following the final term of enrollment.<br />
l For Associate Degree Graduates: Presidential<br />
honors (PH) are based on a minimum of 32<br />
graded LCSC credits with a minimum<br />
cumulative GPA of 3.75.<br />
l For Baccalaureate Degree Graduates:<br />
all honors are based on a minimum of<br />
32 graded LCSC credits with minimum<br />
cumulative GPA’s as follows:<br />
l Cum Laude (CL) – 3.7<br />
l Magna Cum Laude (MC) – 3.8<br />
l Summa Cum Laude (SC) – 3.9
Warrior Spotlight<br />
Joseph Curd<br />
Associate Justice<br />
Helena, Montana<br />
Committees: Finance,<br />
Library and Advisory Committee.<br />
Favorite ASB moment: The pre-meeting<br />
hangouts<br />
Brayton Zipse<br />
Associate Justice<br />
<strong>Clark</strong>ston, Washington<br />
Committees: Christmas<br />
Craft Fair and Graduation.<br />
Favorite ASB moment:Talking to<br />
“Chucky.”<br />
Greeny, from page 8<br />
Athlete of the Year in 1998-<br />
99. She was a GTE/CoSIDA<br />
District VIII Academic<br />
All-America first-team and<br />
second-team selection her<br />
final two years and was a Pac<br />
10 Conference All-Academic<br />
selection three times.<br />
Greeny was involved with six<br />
of the 10 seasons the Cougar<br />
volleyball qualified <strong>for</strong> the<br />
postseason, three as a player<br />
and three as an assistant coach.<br />
During her playing career,<br />
WSU was ranked as high as<br />
fifth in the country and made<br />
the Elite Eight of the NCAA<br />
Tournament.<br />
“I know from my experience<br />
at Washington <strong>State</strong> that Jen’s<br />
impact was an integral part of<br />
the Washington <strong>State</strong> volleyball<br />
success,” Picone says.<br />
Greeny and her husband,<br />
Burdette Greeny, a <strong>for</strong>mer<br />
standout pitcher at WSU and<br />
Student government <strong>for</strong>um - April 4 at the SUB Solarium<br />
at noon.<br />
<strong>ASLCSC</strong> Election will be April 11th and April 12th<br />
from 9a.m. until 5p.m. in the SUB and the Sam Glenn<br />
Complex. There will be a free barbeque after you vote in the<br />
SUB Amphitheater on April 11th from 11a.m. until 1p.m.<br />
Vote early and eat free.<br />
One Academic Senator position is open. Interested academic<br />
students should apply in the SUB, Rm, 219 ASAP.<br />
F o r c l a r i f i c a t i o n<br />
In the March 13 issue of The Pathfinder was a story about the<br />
proposed <strong>ASLCSC</strong> constitution change below. It was not stated<br />
that the proposed change will appear on the <strong>ASLCSC</strong> ballot in the<br />
upcoming elections to be approved by a majority of votes recieved.<br />
It will. Below is, verbatim, the proposal from the <strong>ASLCSC</strong> office.<br />
<strong>ASLCSC</strong> Release<br />
Current: Constitution Article III, Section 2 Eligibility<br />
All members of the <strong>ASLCSC</strong> Executive Cabinet shall be in good<br />
standing with the college and maintain a collegiate cumulative grade<br />
point average of at least 2.50 (on a 4.00 scale), one semester of which<br />
shall be from LCSC. Executive members shall throughout their term<br />
carry at least (8) LCSC credits per semester.<br />
Proposed: Constitution Article III, Section 2 Eligibility<br />
All members of the <strong>ASLCSC</strong> Executive Cabinet shall be in good<br />
standing with the college and maintain a collegiate cumulative grade<br />
point average of at least 2.50 (on a 4.00 scale), one semester of which<br />
shall be from LCSC. <strong>ASLCSC</strong> Coeur d’Alene Chairperson shall<br />
throughout their term carry at least eight (8) LCSC credits per semester.<br />
All other Executive members shall throughout their term carry at least<br />
six (6) LCSC credits per semester.<br />
We recieved<br />
this card from a<br />
very strange man<br />
and felt the need<br />
to pass it<br />
on to all our<br />
loyal readers. It’s<br />
nice to know someone is looking out <strong>for</strong> us.<br />
Useful In<strong>for</strong>mation<br />
Outreach Centers<br />
Clearwater Valley<br />
Vincent Martinez, coordinator<br />
vamartinez@lcsc.edu<br />
Monday -Thursday<br />
8 a.m. to 8 p.m.<br />
Friday<br />
10 a.m. to 4 p.m.<br />
Saturday<br />
9 a.m. to 6 p.m.<br />
Kooskia City Hall, 2nd Floor<br />
208-926-7085<br />
www.lcsc.edu/cp/cvalley<br />
Grangeville<br />
Louise Stolz, coordinator<br />
lstolz@lcsc.edu<br />
Monday, Wednesday, Friday<br />
10 a.m. to 3 p.m.<br />
Tuesday and Thursday<br />
10 a.m. to 6 p.m.<br />
201 E. Main<br />
208-983-2164<br />
www.lcsc.edu/cp/gville<br />
Lapwai<br />
Kay Kidder, coordinator<br />
kayk@nezperce.org<br />
Monday - Friday<br />
8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.<br />
adjacent to Lapwai High School<br />
208-843-7316<br />
www.lcsc.edu/cp/lapwai<br />
Orofino<br />
Danielle Hardy, coordinator<br />
dhardy@lcsc.edu<br />
Monday - Thursday<br />
8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.<br />
Fridays and evenings<br />
by appointment<br />
Orofino High School, Rm. 10<br />
www.lcsc.edu/cp/orofino<br />
Distance Learning Technology<br />
Monday - Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.<br />
Saturday 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.<br />
Sam Glenn Complex Rm. 52<br />
Library<br />
Monday - Thursday 8 a.m. to 11 p.m.<br />
Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.<br />
Saturday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.<br />
Sunday 1 p.m. to 11 p.m.<br />
Math Lab<br />
Monday - Thursday<br />
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.<br />
Friday 9 a.m. to noon<br />
Sunday 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.<br />
Meriwether <strong>Lewis</strong> Hall, Room 115<br />
2-3 tutors are on staff during the above<br />
hours to assist students with math.<br />
Module Math and Linear Program-<br />
ming software are now available <strong>for</strong><br />
student use.<br />
Student Health<br />
Monday - Friday<br />
8 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.<br />
after 5 p.m. call 208-305-7483<br />
Sam Glenn Complex, Room 42<br />
Pi’amkinwaas<br />
Monday - Friday<br />
8 a.m. to 5 p.m<br />
1112 7th Street<br />
208-792-2777<br />
Writing Center<br />
Monday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.<br />
Tuesday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.<br />
Wednesday 9 a.m. to noon and<br />
3 p.m. to 5 p.m.<br />
Thursday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.<br />
Friday 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.<br />
Spalding Hall Room 115<br />
208-792-2433