THE JOYS OF EARLY SPRING ARE UPON US Student Events holds Easter egg hunt for happy kids | Page 9
NEWS Graphic design students rock the ADDYs | Page 2 PERSPECTIVE Rape accusations make waves| Page 6
ttheSent Sentinel en inel ent LIFESTYLES NIC student touches lives in Nepal | Page 15
THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF NORTH IDAHO COLLEGE
MONDAY |APRIL 9, 2012
WWW.NIC SENTINEL .C OM
Volume 65 | Issue 9
CAMPUS
Interim VP assumes role at NIC Perez officially began position March 6 Christina Villagomez Staff Contributor
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See PEREZ | Page 4
Trickin’ it up Freestyle stunt riding group performs extreme wheelies in the Spokane Interstate Fairgrounds. Sports Page 18
Ryan YellowJohn performs a hoop dance in the SUB last Wednesday. Amy Brandt/Sentinel
History comes full circle NIC celebrates American Indian Heritage Week April 2-6
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Kaye Thornbrugh Asst. Features Editor
red and blue glow rose behind the stage, and an array of lights faded in like stars when the pipe music began— ethereal and dreamlike, floating through the auditorium like the music of another world. Members of the audience held their breaths, transfixed.
Bill Birdsong Miller was the man behind the pipes. Purple lights drifted over the three-time Grammy winner as he opened his show at NIC for the InterTribal show, part of American Indian Heritage Week, a celebration of culture and history April 2-6. Organized by the American Indian Student Alliance, Heritage Week was designed to cultivate a sense of community, and to be a “sensory experience,” said Evanlene Melting Tallow, AISA adviser. “We want to show all facets of the culture,” Melting Tallow said. “Historic, artistic, contemporary. It’s like you’re using all your senses this week.” The events of Heritage Week, including a silent auction and InterTribal Food Feast, helped fund the Che’nshish Scholarship for enrolled tribal members and descendents attending NIC. The club took in about $1,500, Melting Tallow said. Since its inception in 2010, the scholarship fund has risen to around $35,000—money that will fulfill the meaning of “Che’nshish,” a Coeur d’Alene tribal expression meaning “to assist, provide for, and give to others.”
QUOTABLE
IC has a new interim vice president of instruction. Jim Perez officially took over the position March 6. Perez will be filling the role for six months, until after a new college president is selected to replace current president Priscilla Bell, and the search for a Jim new vice president Perez can of ficially begin. “As much as I enjoy working, I was getting very comfortable with being retired,” Perez said, after confirming that he has no plans to seek a permanent position with NIC. A Spokane resident, with a long history of working as a college administrator, Perez served as college president of Spokane’s Institute for Extended Learning for five years. Before then he was the vice president for “I’m always student services at Shoreline Comvery much munity College impressed and was the associate dean of with the student developenergy ment services at Columbia Basin students Community Colexhibit lege. Perez also worked at Eastern in their Washington Unithirst for versity and Gonknowledge.” zaga University. Since retiring, however, Perez JIM PEREZ has also filled in Interim vice president as interim vice president for several Spokane colleges. Despite being given several opportunities to take interim positions across the country, Perez has turned them down, preferring to stay local where he can be close to family. It’s this impressive resume and close location that Perez believes led Bell, who he’s known since early in his career when the two were serving in the student services of separate colleges, to ask him to fill the job. While Perez said there has been some challenge in learning the finer points of an Idaho education system that differs greatly from its Washington counterpart, and the expected awkwardness of jumping into a new position, he says that his co-workers have been nothing but extremely helpful. A welcoming, helpful staff and an enthusiastic faculty that is “reflective of the quality education” at NIC are part of the reason Perez said the people on campus are his favorite part of the college. Perez said he also appreciates the students. “I’m always very much impressed with the energy
“ I am pretty sure Irish boxers eat roundhouse kicks every day with afternoon tea. ”
Perspectives Page 6
Marie Poirier kicked off the celebration Monday morning with storytelling, followed by a presentation on the history of the Coeur d’Alene Tribe from Quanah Matheson. The Shooting Star Dancers—a dance group comprised of children and teenagers—performed in the SUB. Artisans from around the region gave art demonstrations Tuesday including basket weaving with Jacque Rickard and contemporary handbags with Diane Bebonie. Merle Big Bow, a Montana-based artist, demonstrated how to build a traditional rawhide drum. “Treat it like a baby,” Big Bow advised his audience, as he carefully trimmed the rawhide along the drumhead, preparing to stitch it in place. “It represents the heartbeat of the people. Take care of it and put it in a place of honor.” Valentina LaPier, whose artwork is in private collections and exhibitions throughout the world, led a demonstration of acrylics on canvas. LaPier said that she draws inspiration from historical Native
“I really believe, as a Blackfeet, that I have an obligation to express Blackfeet images,” LaPier said, while working on an expressionist portrait of a Native man. Dancers from Tangled Roots Dance Studio in Spokane performed the hoop dance Wednesday In the hoop dance, a dancer uses up to 30 hoops to imitate animals—the spinning of an eagle in flight, the bounce of a rabbit, the graceful leaps of a deer. “The hoop represents life, family, friendship and community,” said dancer Shanner Escalanti. “We try to give back to our community by sharing this dance.” Later, Coeur d’Alene tribal member Norma Peone taught “stick game,” a traditional American Indian guessing game. For Peone, teaching stick game was an emotional experience. Her younger sister reintroduced the game to their family about ten years ago—but since then,
Peone’s sister has passed away.
“It’s a little difficult for me today because of recent loss,” she said, twisting a turtle-shell rattle, a gift from her sister, between her hands. “But she was my baby sister, and she would’ve wanted us to do this.” At a free craft workshop, families made dream catchers, choker necklaces, pony bead necklaces and Yakima Dolls. Later, they viewed a puppet show performed by AISA members Amanda
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WHERE TO START News..............................1
Games.........................13
Perspectives..................5
Lifestyles.....................14
A&E..............................8
Sports..........................17
Coast to Coast.......10 & 11
Back Page.....................20
See HERITAGE| Page 16
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