Document 11824535

advertisement
" The Amer ican system of ours , coli it
Ame ri can ism , call it Cap i tal ism, coli it
what you like41ives each and every
one of us o greot opportunity if we
only seize it w ith both hands and
make the most of it."
- AI Capone
SERIES VIII, VOL
16
UW-STEVENS POINT, FRIOAY, APRIL
NO. 21
13, 1973
The Trials Of The FAC
t:dltor• not• .
1111 ttll.t Inn llllr t•olatf'r prt'knU thf' rlnl
of 1•11 illttll llmnb 011 tht- bcad&cl hf'lrill&• o1
thf' t-' ln.anc-c a nd ,\Uoutlofttl 'ommlllfl', Th•
bnrlt~&J<o, l'CNIJbotlag of sb. ~para l r tf'nklo_,
omrr a t•o Wtt't'll ~riod . roacludr on \prll U .
Tbf' u•orOIMt last.a llmcat. C'OYrrtnx lh r W""t~Sion.,
uf o\prllll. 14 , and IS, • ·Ill •PIH'Ir In
nf'J.I
lnuf'.
'*'
b~·
( 'uoll.obr)' (' art"<Hi&lllt and Dan \l({;l)nn
TIMe Ftnan«-AIIocattonS Commttl~ . v.hich
l!i pt"esftltly hold1ng budgft hea.nngs, 11 a
vermont'nl ch~arttrrd standmg comnuttt"e of
the' Student Govemmmt provided for In Hs
t-onstttulion and formed t'ach year by the
f.:O\"rntment for the purJlOie ofKTftrung and
• t'C'Ommendma financial ac11on C"'OCt'mmg
studenc sq~attd fres All actions of the
1-'AC a rt' only 2 l"ffOmrnendoltiOtl to tM
Su.Kk-nt GoYftnmmt ..., htcll holds rinal po'tUT
nn all st~l monty m.aur-n 1lMe comnutt~
cOMisb of nuw• studftlu and tv•o ad·
utmii;lrDtiVt adv1sors
\prll lUI
The 1-'mance o~nd Allocat1on ComnHII«'s
t t'AC • f1rst budget hearing session \U!I held
un thfo t'\eninl( of Apnl 4th 1n 1M Van II i~
ftoom of tht" Unl\·ersuy Center Tl'lt" C'Om
New Editor
Vows No
Editorials
Follw111g a lit vote 1n a th rtoew.ay contest, the editor fot' the
1973-74 Polaln" wu ~ected m
a 5«''nd ballot on A~l 6
Robn"t Kerks1eck, ~
t'd!IOI' of \'It'• point. tht dor
mitory newsltttet", wu chos.m
by the publica hons board to
succt't'd Cary Rutkows.lu whoR
term u f'di tor exp:res at the
end of the currmt academle
)'t-a r
Durma hu; prnmt.atJon to thr
board on Apr 4 1n thle Muir
Room ol thle Uni\'n'SIIY Center
Kerkslt'Ck stated he would be
workina clouly w1th Dave
Gne•wr, one ol the other of the
eand1datet for the editonh1p
Gnelstt IS a formes' membe r ol
the Polnte:r staff: ht- was fi red
hy l'cMntf'r «!•tor AI Jenk.tn1 •n
1972, rehired by Rutkowski lut
Septem~ , and f1rf!CI again in
February ol this yt-ar
KerUI«k stated to the board
dunn& the heanna that hl.a
editorial pol•cy would 1nclude
the ellmination of echtorials and
the limitation of lrtten to the
rd•t.or to 250 •ordl He stated.
that. u ed1tor, he •ould ma ke
rverydfort to assure that rver)·
vie•point would be consukred
In rn~ to a board
mt"mbn' wtm questioned his
rriuul to be int.ervit"Wt<i when
the Pohlln" did a feature on the
VIewpoint , Ke rksiec k sta ted
that he did not think at that
llmt. it WIUI ltft"eSS&ry lot' him
t.o speak and that \le:..,ol•
adviSOr Cvrtn Ndsofl covered
rveryth1'* that he m1ght !\ave
said 1n an lnt.erview He a1ao
sul.td hls refusal was baHd on
a fnr that he would be quoted
out ol context
Ket"kalec:k \US W\avallable
fot' comment at the time ol thla
writinc.
nutte-e heard and ac:ted upon budget requests
from ,.,.e student acliv1ty groups
Student Activtty Admmistration , ...,h1ch
•ncludes tht· offices of attJdtnt controller and
assistant studmt controller. requested a total
budget of 112,200 That toc.al•nclude:l $7,500
lor a clas.s•fif'd position, SI ,SOO m clauifit'd
frmgt' benrl'its, S2,600 for regular student
.ISSistanlS, S400 for cont ractual ~rvlcn and
S200 fCW" supplies
fo'AC 's recommendation
•as lor the amount requested.
Actu••ty and Identification request«! a total
hudKct of 112,190. That figure Included s:r,:!IS
111 cl;u.sifit'd ularles, S440 In classified fringe
~~~'r!·r ':c!~t~~~t'~u!:vi~~da::~nr~r
.. uppl•es. AssiStant Heg11trar Dave t::ckholm·
ooltod that equipment rental fees amounting
to II~ ...,ef'e no longer n«ded. and 1-'AC cut
ActiVIty and !D's eshmattd 11000 Income
lbt' S1.1%S 1.'\11 resultt'd 1n a commtll~
r('('(lnlmendatlon for a I11 ,06S total budgrt
Ml'n 's lntramur01ls s ubm1tted .a total
r('(J~WS I of $22, 1,.9.+4
That total included
SI.St9 2,. •n dassintd ~ l a n es. S220 •n
cl11~1fif'd
fnngc ~t-flts. SH,801 50 for
1C'I(Uinr s tudt-nt a551Sia nls. 5450 for travel ,
11.84U for eontrnctual strvlccs, 13,218.70 for
.. upphes and 1100 1n capital 1-'AC tnmmed 01
11000 •Ct" rt"'nlal IH tStudent Senate •ill pay
.•\l •cf' rt'ntal fn.-s ~o~ nd take 1n all•ncomt' from
tht• 1« nnk propoat'd to open about October
ISO from contractual ~rvl«s and rt'ducf'd a
1200 rt"pa trs request by 1100 The commlllee's
total r('('(lmmmdatiOI"' • as rounded to 12.1,100
Unt\'H'Sit) Theatre. Wldft" the advbo rstup
"' Dr Seldon Faulkner, 5ubm 11tl'd a tota l
lndudl'd -.en·
budget reqUt"St of ~ m.aas
~.000 lor regular student :aulstants. S250 for
trlll\'tl , 111 .225 for contractual seTvi«"S and
Stl,,.I O ror supplies . The ss.ooo request for
r<"gulu stucknt an1s t:anb was targeted for
the Summ~r 1ltt:atre program . and ~mro
rather h1gh Ill M'\'eral commlltee membft-1
\ rrduct'd hgurtof SJ.JJO-.as am ,·ed at. - -•th
:an aecom panymg r«ommendattOn lhat lhl'
.:roup constder domg thr~ s ummer plays
rather than four Under l"'fftractual s.erv1crs,
l n~'ersily Th('lltrt 's rental budg('t request
"'as " .92S-<'ontpart<1toa current allotment ol
$3,000. The ttroup cited 11me consumpelon :and
a cerlan amount of materia l waste tnvol\·l'd in
~'Oi tum e btuld1ng, and expressed :a des1re to
rmt all t'1»tumH
1-'AC fA\'Ort'd a com ·
bmatKMt of costumt- rmt.al and t'Oitume
b!.uld•ng, and reduct'd the rrntal request b)
St .OOO The total reduction of $2.6i0 amounted
to a total budgtl rt"'C''mml:f\Cbtion of S2'7,21S
•Lnl\t"nlt)' Theatr~ upecu to put on fi\' ('
prodUCIIOO$ dunng the '73-'7,. school y~ar l
11M' W-SP Vru for l_.eact- submlltt'd a
reqUt!St for a total budget of 11.335 That
•ncluded $.400 fot travel , $760 for contractual
H'f'\'ICe:s and l t7S for supplies. HAC rai.Soed
qunllons both :~bout the .. eu· alleged
pohttcal actiVIIIH-orit'ntn tlons and about lM
numbft' of student Mrved by their aclivites.
1lK< comnHtlft' also c1tf'd th resulu of :a
.. un·ey 11conduc!ed. not1ng that all commf'C\15
hsted about the Vrts for Puc(' 'At"Tt' M"ga tl\'t'
The ,.eu did not dmy urtam political con·
VICiions, but sta ted that thetr budgt-1 request
•as for non·poliOcal act1V11its. 1lley oted
!Mir •ntent10n to C'Offiplete a hbrary ol Post·
V11Ptnam Syndrom t PVS t tand problem ·
related t mateTia ls ...,hieh ... outd be available
to tht- campus C'Ommumty ~'AC dtt1ded that
the Vets for Puce should be phued off the
II~ of student·funde<l organiutwn~, but that
the PVS hbnry would be :a ...-orth•·hilr ad·
dltion ((I tht' LHC To those t'nds. tht" com ·
nu ll~ ea rmarked SSSO of reserve account
mon1ts apec:tfleally for tht PVS librar y ttbtU50 tncl~ SJOO for duphca tmg , $200 for
other contractual s.tr\'ICn related to the PVS
hbrary. and ISO for postage t
.\p rllllh
t'we budgeu camt' undn tht' acrutm) of lM
~· mance Allocallons Com n11tte last Stlturoay
mornmg m the "Depot " ol Allen Ct'nter
lludlt'U dlkussed ...,f're Arll and Uoc:lurea .
Governmen t.
WWSP-t' M,
S tud t'nl
t :nv1ronrnrntal Council. and Unl\'enlty
Writtrs
The Arts ;~nd L«tures budget as preRnted
to the committte by Jack Cohan requested a
gross allocation of $17,700 • ·iU. espected in·
come of 117,100or more. Cohan said many of
the att ractions for nut year had already bftn
bookl'd for the Concert SeriH, Fine Arts
Smes, and the Young Artist Series. The
budget wild also providt' for l>ancc
Hesidto:nc•n. Trnel Adventure t'1lms, and a
Ledure Series.
Coh.an w.:&s asked If :1 reserve fund would
exist for other oraaniuUons to use in helpin.:
other ltcturers besides !how cont ract«! b)\
Arts and ~tur n to come to the campus.
Cohan said there should be 12,000 to 12.scio 5el
aside for this pllrpote. Cohan also s.:~ltJ the
Lecture Series ...,ould like to gf't some " ~ ·
sonalitiH" to th(' campus and mention«~ that
ue:xt yea r 's leoctw-t- program ...,ouJd incl ude
Dr Margare t Mead and Adele Davis.
fncom e for Arll and Lectures procr:am5
...,as discussed and Cohan uid income for next
~~~:ar ~vultJ tto from 120.000 to 12t,ooo. Al tcr
discussion of the' budget by the committt.-e, II
...,as dt"CidC'd to give a gross a llocation to Art5
and L«tures of m .soo within ... hich llt ,OOO
•ould be 1n II'IC'Oml"
WWSI#·f'M's budget requested 119000 and
nne of th(' main questions the commitlt"e had
-.as how the the station could lmpro"'e It's
bro;ukast po.,.·f'r so that more studenls could
br rt!achfod by the station 1be problt"m for
cont . top. 2
Summer Job Outlook
Bleak In Point
All ...·as the case Last s ummer .
tM Job piCture lS not bn&ht
IJoartlcula rly 1n 01 unl\'ft"lltr
C'Offimumty_ One suggtstim ·
s tudent.s should seek jobs In
thri r home t~'liS and not
remain m Stevens Poi nt on the
auumption they w11l find full
tlmt s ummer e mployme nt
here. In this community , thtre
art- simply too many students
for too few jot..
Student.s wM have submttled
lhnr finannal a id application
and Indicated they would hke
5ummf'r employment undn the
CoOege Work Study P rogram
rec:ewe e1theT a flnandal
aid proposal wtth the type ol a1d
a ...·arded or a denia l lettrr
.o.omctimf' bel...,'et:n Mu y I and
May IS. Those students whoH ,
financial aid awa rd 1ncludt"s
cont top. 2
-.,u
A. Paul Ort~a . Na Uve American voc.aUst,
perrormed In the Univers ity Center la s t week
as a part of the Na&lve American Days
ce lebration.
Friday, April
THE POINTER
13, 1973
Senate Salary Increase Ok'd By Committee
tM~t'JtiOn,
IS1t '' anh.'tllla "hoch llnol hogh
rnoughforgoodr«'<'ptlon
I'OS$obchtie.
cucntionl'd by th•• ~UIIon mduckd tccthng a
ne" antcnna ..·h•ch"o uldb,costl )' 3no.l
tmthng th<' old Dnt~nna on a htll,h<•r butld•ng
•uch :b the LltC " h1ch the adnuncsuation
told the ~ tat10n ..-as not possoblco
Alt<"!"dcsc:w;soonoftht·r~phon prob~no~
">'th<'<"Omnllllt't'. theydr<:>dt'd tonlloc:ate
onl) $1 6.~ ,.,thlh••Sitpulatumthat.,..WSP·
FM,·uuld•·ometotherontnllllf'l'"''hagdod
plan hi i~~>pron· thr antenn~ s ctuahon and
IIIC')' «~Uidr~n·encorenconey·
SIU<knt Go\'eolnlt'!lt't ~t.'i prnentl'd b}
l'rn idrnt J IM' t.a F irur rcqur~trd an
alhx·ahon of "'·SOO A nt•••: pro•·ision ol lh•·
huctgr t "nuld tnl'ludc p.lying ne~t }'<'ar's
~~dent Scnatorsl1 60a "l'l.'kor ~ t otal ot
Tht• rommttlt't' felt thhi budgrt " as facrl~
ta •·orablranda motiontocncrraN"salaries
for l'rr,;id('tll. V•cr· Prnidcnt. and Student
M nalors Wai agn-N to by the comnnllt-e.
T!w l 'r6idcnt's~lary,.as mcrcasedfron c
iS:.'Oto$600, \ 'crc·Prescdentlrom S260tosaoo
:111d Sr-naton to U .U . 'Tlns oncrcaM· rnultl"d
on cnr r t'aSing lht' Stud<'nt Governmrnt
.\Uon t toto In
10hoch the commoue.·
.. p~ronod
En••cro nmrntal Co un c ol rcquHtcd an
.> ll ~·a tconof $2,1.\oO to contrnuc puttcng oul ,
thecr nt"S~pl'r tht• ~:c•T•c and m•lnt3il1
thrtr ltlt.'S of rnate n ab; en thf'tr office, and
other u po_'f\5n
The C'Ofllnllll...,. dr<:tdtd.
thuulth . to ~~··~ an allocation of SIOOO to bf'
ust'dforpubhshrngthf' i-:co-tac.malntainlnjl
thecrrrftrtnl•rarra andfW"prodoclnjtanlm
Th,• comnul\"'' suggt."Str-d that En•·cron·
ournta i C'oun<:ll,.orktncon]UII<:toon "'lh ·
r cthtr .\rts and i.A.'<'ture5 CN' UAilto brt"'
'pt.'akrrstolhecampus
"'·Mil
a11oount ol n t"rnU '"'II mrntlonfd as a
por~cbi h ty This "ould breomc ponibJe on ly
" bcn till• lJ ni\'en;ot)' Center addition is
<'i:lrnpMed · IIOtb,fort~et.'Ond~ml"'l l"'"ulthc
F.\C'onemberBcll llanultona nd
""'·rraluthl"'"romnnllt..,not•mberscxprt'liM'd
d•spi<'3SUtt ,.-,th lJA II 's budgt't llt"nnuuon .
,. h•le lJ ARrrprt'Oofiltatl\'esondtcatedtllatlhr
hudgl'thadnot bft!lbrQkrndo"·nbylunctiOn
.\lt<'r son"' dl·libcratc on, ~'AC ~am.., up "i th
th,·follo,.cngreduc lions a "Cinema Arb "
11Im rental f~ rl'qU<'It ol S.S,OOO ,.·as cut
1UAR'I til nos are divided cn lo " l'op" and
'Conrma Arb'" catt"&Oril"', the pop lllm s
han· produ~t'd sotut' proht " hill' tht• ccncrna
.<rtsfilms 118\'t lnfil moo~y l, the telpltoo~and
ldt•gr3phrl'questwas trnount'db)' Sl .OOO.a ntl
' 73·0~\l"'"ntl
lcctun"' ontheperformtnjt3rt s~alc1for)'IOl'Tc
t:"UI by $1,000 lJAK'sf'StunalM cncon><' "a~
tt'du«dlrom$:!&,'ZSO to$::!2,000.andth1Swas
eomb<nedwolhane t allolmentof ~B.OOOfor:t
totalbudgetre.:onunendatlonofS<O,OOO
f)daat<"·t'orcnsoc•n•ctut.'litedatotalbuagl'l
OIS<.IOO lncludl'd,.·crr$alllfor rt'gular
,..cudftlt assostanU,S6,:UOtortn•·<"I.I-IOO for
t"'fftra~tllll l SE'f'\·icn. ~n ~~~pllf'l and
~~n;~~~r~:~c!~~;.:!~~;~~~~~=';;~~~i
the ji TOUjl'~ ac ti\'ctiH
t '.\C n'""'""~
qunlioned"h)· tfl<olj.rouphadnothrldvlscblt·
~ ctcvitit.'S on this cDinf!UI ;o.nd oncorporaltod
morr ltU<kflts on IM1r cfforlll. Deba tt'·
~·ormslN Advioor C Y Allen wod ttwt llis
I\I'OUj!had not thouf:hl of ill; :o.c11•·•tie5as
FAl' hdd it.i thtrdbUdl\.t hrarmgli<'SSOOII
<onSunda y noorncng . .\prciHih<nthel>epot
Kt10tn ol the Allrn Crnter Budgtt r~ursb
lroonlour ~:roup!i'"t'rtllta rdand:octl'dupon
...
by lht•C'Ofllnntl..., atthattimc
Thr U.,.. ·SI' Otl't'rlrad<'rs•ubuu lll'tfatotal
budget requnt of $1.000 That sun• cncludrd
5500fortra•·d. $10Qforrnntradualstonicrs.
S200forJupphnandJ200oncapotal 1Thc$rotl
, n,· ap<laf,.·ur~tedlorthf'purposoeof
purch.:ollng .,..,.. uncform~ l
~'.\t: ell! SIOIJ
trom !hi' tra•·el rrqunt ~nd appro"t'd a total
budg<'l rCt."Ommendat•on of S900
ThrUn,.·erslly.\ct n·•tlf'll:loardrrqueste4
atot3lbudS:rtof&aO.IL9. Thatpropos-;~1cn·
.-luded $2.36-1 for re1u1ar studmt us.stants,
1.>,617 lor lravd. su.r.a fiN' <'OIItractual
>t't'\'t<'d. S3,l t0 tor ~upplcQ and $&$0 •n
capcta l
t'AC memben questioned UA IJ
~jf~":"~~;\:! a:o:.o:;~nl:n~.-::.N~~~f'~,\~~~
ternunm""t to thcs l·ampus
lJAil cotl"d
ltn;onctallunoUotoonl. booltingproblroul,ancl
1 W·SI' 'I poor "t rack record"ofa\ltndant<'
at litM:h b•IL·name-concerts
Stucknt Con ·
trollerJim ll am cltontlled respoiiRIIIOFAC's
~u rvr)
,.·llich ca l!l"d for bis·namr ""
•~rta<ntol<·nt , and con t tn d<'d that othe r
cau>pw.ro;51:'rmablrlopn;>vidc ot TloelJAii·
rrprnentahvts ~ted that nt!lll year's
hotutcomongrhacrman ,.-uinfact 5t'Cking
>uth ""trrtacnmrnt, and IO'eTt optimistic
aboutthrpoasiblhtyolobtaintnsitfOI'eithrr
homl"COmlnllor "inter carmva! nen )'ear
Conmuu~ members also que~tcond the.•
rrpre~tntahves ~boot their lilm, 5pcakrr ~nd
dance progranot The UAil rrprtsentati•·es
ondic:atl"d their intrnuon to •ncrease their
re<'t'IIUC:S nr~t year by chargcng •n ad
>ucllnnce fe-e for toffee·h<tus.e ev.,ll. tThe
Stude nt Governm ent
Ele ction s April 30
Un rf'IILiiiUhon day Slu.dent.l
"'llbc.-ukl"dto•·otto for thc~r
new officers lor 1!173-U_ The
~~~~r ~.:~'!~', s':;:l:
TrciiW'er 11100 1, "'II 1,1p fCN"
o·loctoon
Stud<'nt£interntedcnle~dlll"
the.• ~ tudcnt body ~ hou ld obtain
mf01'mation from 1M Student
t..o\'c r nm~nt Ofhtcs a t tho:
Uncon
<h~lundswould becut
l naddiloontocut ·
tinjl thc$5GO,F.\t:a15<1<'linci naledtherrql,,t'St
torS200Inupctul t ,.·hcc h wutobeUK'!Ito
purc fl;o St.·a h<ILh·jumppill
t'inally, FAl'
tr incnol'da $1.000rt"quntlorposi·SC'al0rl
tournato >t"nt t')~IUU. notmg that athlrtk·
:~~'::s!':~~~ :~;:;,~ :r:;:, ~~:;t~.~::.~lll~
torpostseasoncompetilion. Th<'totalbudgr\
Tt'COII IIIICndJtlonwuforS9.100.
pllr! icul arl y ···~.t~ t or" u r irn t atl"d,bu tth~t
Summer Jobs Continued
Unin•rsot)· Wr utnir~llt'litl"danall...ea t iooc
~>fS2.9"..Sforlhcpl'!mar)· puTJI(ISO'ofput llng
out thecr loterary magu cnr and to bri ng
"rctrrs to the unc.,ersity to speak
The
counn>tlt't' mo•·cd lo fund lhr organt:ahon
~!.SOOo f "h~eh 5200 ,.·ould bt- •ncomto from
lhtcrmagaunc
,\pri!Hih
~ueh lhonJPi IS "olE-0.:1\t-olfl" could be.- hrld 011
thist·ampustotha tt·nd. lfc~ ISOIKMt'tf tl!at a
jlrUUIJ of lJW.S I' students had reeentl)'
orturnl'!l form a "MIIdcl United N~tllllll"
proJt"ctatllan·a rdlJnit•ersoty,,.·hrn·tht·
.:roup •·~ml-d if'\'fl'ai honors as the " C;ono·
bod•an l>rlcgation" .\llrn disc:usSt'd tht·
I.I()O;Stbiltlyofascnul arpro;.:ctontl!ilt'DIIIpwl
"ll ht ll th•'nl·At t-..·o )'t'ars t".\Cea rncurkt"<l
Slll001nr:osi mclo:tr !riflrl urinJ:Ih<' '73·74 tern> .
anduprt•:<U'tladc.-slrt·tohavrthr llor<"ard·
t)'P" project on this eampn IKM later than
lht· 'H·'7S IC'rm A total bud.;~tnf$&. 1 01.1 .. a~
•k'ommt•ndrd tOn a pro·rattod ba~lli, tha t
togur~ matdtrd til~ total ro_oquestt'dl
Wucn,•n '~ ath!cllt'S rt"<tut'"'-d a total of
Sti!,IIGIS.O lncl uded,.·crcSL-IOOforrl'IIUlac
.- tudt•nt:o» ostants.S7.5WS01ort ran•LSUS2
fCN"rontnctua i N'r'Viets, DXIforiUPI_)Iitslnd
~:..000 on \'lpllal
lnchaded on tile rcgula r
studt•nt ao;sistant requHt ... u SSG~~ for :o
. ..... relar)· who,.ould work J20 hours dunn11
tht·yt•ar t• tSt ?:.perhuurt. Tht·reJWe>'t.'nJat """""cr<l!unct·rtainabouttlwa•·ailabilil)'
ot IOOI'k •)f\ld) fund:! for "''~1 year . bui
l!orl't.'lorof ltudgtt l'lanninll and.\nal)'Sis
f>aull\clchu!dhcsa" no•ncl•catiom tllat
Work Sludy!lho uld ch«k ,.·ith
the Fin.ancial Akb Office thr
werllo1 May21 ·:1:S for pnMible
jnbpl:ocemrnt. By that timt ,
this office will know the
~acancies lh3t uist on the
ClltnpulandlnStL'VCIIS Point.
AllapplicanllshOUldbeaware
olKVcralfact.l:
11 Thrrt' a r~ not adrqu.att·
Collr11e Work Study lund5 to
rover all nnandal aid applicants ,..llo ,.·anted swnmer
J)ilrt ·tl me tmploymcnt while
a tt e nd ing summer sehool .
Ht-cau.wof limittdtompln)·mtont
opportunitie~~. thf'rdorr, 110111e
st udents ,.·howantl"d MUT~mtr
jol»willbc-glven i(NionJ .
Zl Full time College Work
Studyjobsin SteYrrt.IPnintand
at thr univrraity are a lm0$1
non-oe•isttnl
l l Opportunitiftltoworitin
your home town art- morr
rcnumrrati ~e l ha n ea mpu sjobs
brcallSfoflftlroomandbo:udis
fu rnlslll"dbyp~trcnu.
Slll~nts
..bould. t'OtllrQUoently . ae«"pt
home townemployll'lftll.,..·ei'
tmploymrnl In the SteYens
Pointa ru .
Otbu Univers ity f:mploymut
lt EGULAII
W OR K
PltOGRAM -Studentawho hne
ftOI f'Omp!rtl"d lhrlr fit11nc:ial
aida ppli<:•tionbyf'ebrua ry IS,
or
,.-hoar~ noc t liKiblc fnr thf'
College Work Study Program.
may ff!cure 111mmer rm
plo)·menlb)' CIIr<:king-..·•lhthrir
major dl'jl:lrtment for possi bJr
cmplny menl under the llegulJr
Work f' r oNram .
:'> l onlu
avai l ~bl t for this program , il
Alouldbc-poiutl"dout,a rt'<'ll·
thcir cmpiO)·menteounH iorfor
poUlbl<'opening.s.
Submltkd Hy:
Officf'oi St udr ntt"huonelaiAidl
lJ\I'.St~•· ~n• f>olnt
tr~ tl )· li mc t rd .
S.\GA FOOI)S - Studen t s
OOsiring ~um mu work en thr
um vc~ilyfoudscr~cesshould
make a ppllrmt con to Sawa
F ood~. !toone I. lJniversl ty
Cl'fltcr
Sle<· rn~ l'oln tond
Son·
li'n h·~r•lty En<plovm~nt
Studt"nl t::ncplnyment file .
Rese r ve Koom - l.urn <nl
K"""rrcs c..ntiM' • A summl'r
tmploymen t file containing
broch ures and bulletins on
s un•m cr jobs with camps.
rl'SOrtS, and othrr N'OIUI(IIIa f
:.clivitiesison t"·nhourrCHI'\'<'
tn thr KI'Hf'Vc Koom . Lcamlng
KQOUr<"CSt:rntn
WiKOIII tn S\.alt' Employment
Sl-rvkt. t'i rit ~'l"dera lBulldi nM .
2nd Fl oor. 130$ Main Street .
Sl,.,ens l'oirii,W I .~ t · lbe
Slate Employmtnt Snvicr Iiiii
IUIIlmt'rjot.pcrutinio!IIOboth
theStevensPointarraand.Ctu
May 1. the resort area of
NorthernW•Ioeonsin Chec:k,.·oth
staff
Edllw:
G.J::. Rullr.owat.l
AIHdal<! Eofllw:
JrMifrrlJrban
Aadatut Edllw:
JaneSadiBit y
~·~·~:-'--'
c.,
Dan Mo:-Giynn
1 Edllw:
Louise D.lund
Btotl.etsMnaau:
Sec:kyYustr
!Spwta:
Larry Gilman
Secretark• •
Sl'lcl.LylllaU
Lymft.oblc:k
Audrey Rotnn
c .. pllln :
Mar ty Lue
AdMnl &er:
RhodyJak,.t
R....... l<!":
CnoiC..rtwrl&ht
Stt11 e0konek
Kei th Otis
Pit Dtlmorr
S.m £yo
AdAatlltut:
Bitt Ptl'\ffer1
P~ot .. rapb"" :
Tm y Mtmf'l'
~rrBarr
l..a yHI t:.!Jiw :
Bob KeUerman
A.rh Edliw :
Nt-~IDtrring
Ted> Crew:
Ctll pBil)ow
AnnMr rc• rtLII
Pat Solie
Sl'llrlt'ySpillltmf'lltrr
... """' 'N'....,,"
TllcPolnt.r.-ll a~e~;onclcl.a.,
publication, publishfd
durins
S!t"OeruoPolnl,Wlacon.ln$44111
TllePoin..,. lla unl'l't'nll)'
publlntlon , publls hedun6er
authorll y llr&ntcdtolheBIIIIn!
oiK~tnt.oiStattUnivtraiUtt
"' """"
37.11,
Wltconsln
Stat ~•·
Publkat lon~aare
p~~ ldby~St lltolW~In
........ '""
undereon trut•a•arcledbythr
State Prlntllll
ll>t'pf.rtmcntofAdmlnbt rallon,
~~~~ : . . ~~~:: ~!~tl:f
Septftllber l, ltl'O.
THE POINTER
Native American Days
=============================
U.S. Education Doesn't Relate To
Indian Students
Vi ne De loria
Deloria Says Treaty
Rights Must Be Honored
by P•t Drimo~
Unless the Ame ncan go\·cmmenfll 11 111tude towards Native
Amc n can tre<~t)' nght.s changes, i~ 1dmt.s such lU Wounded
Knt'e may be rtpt:ated. contendro Vine Odona, author ol Cut"'
Ulf'd I" or 't'our !"ln._ wb1le ~dre.stng a ClaJSroom Cmtcr audi«-nce
on ThuOOay C\'m1ng last week.
Dclona. a S10ox from the South Dakoca Pine Ridge n~ation.
st.att'd unless Congressional Commiltt>ts optn hearings upon
I(O,·emment violation ol l ndlan treaties. Native American protest
wtll conh~ Ktjected tn lhar attempls to get act~ from lh«'
Sc'n.a te lntenor Com milt«. which cla 1ms }U r1sdlct~ over Indian
~~:·~~~t;~~~~~~~ll~!~:~~~ ~~:!~~~t:r~:~ ~~:::-::
Committee cha1rma n James Eastland to open hc.a nnp upon
ltO'emmcnt tre:uy V!GiattOnJ AcconhnK to Ddona, F'ullbright
and Ea11-Uand rn-ersed thl'l r e:~~ rher po!!lllon ol !1Uppor1. for
ht·armgs vthm preu:ured by~nate lnter1or Commllt«"e members
l)t'IOf'ta furtht'r t'on tcnded Con gressn)nlllllenrings would force the
govt'rn ment to openly admit Its unwllllnRneM to mt-et trt'.a ty
obhl(3hom
Addre3ung htmlt'lf s pr-cirlcally to !.he Wounded Knf'll! Situation,
ol l ndla nAHalnthmleawdtrlbilllandto.,.·h•teranchrn. Allhoud\
Jtovemmt'nt wh tch 1111pulated !hallhe govcmmmt would provi(Se a
comfortable home for each S1oux wOO part1cipatf'd •n the land
aUotmtnt sy11tem Subsequent agreements lcontracu t bttwC'tn
thf> gD\'tmrnent and the Oglala Sioux 11174, 1171, 1882, 111191
provtded assurances thai the govcmmntt .,.·ouJd " house, c:lothe,
and feed lhe Ind ian~ fw H'Vm generalions " Allhough formulated
a.~ lf'K3l tonltacl.<l, lhe treal ies were lat¥rly di11rrgarcled by the
go\·emment
Traang lh~ h111tory of the Ogltl<~ SKMU·Untted States governmen t rela ttOnS. l>elona o trd the di!l.astrous effe<:U of the gO\'ft"nmt'Tit lllaughtt'r ol O\'tt ninety per <'«'nt ot OgJala S10t1X ca ttle for
World War Ont' mthta ry ~ Drpnvt'd of a herrl of ca ttle. which
took )'e'31'!1 of ..acnrice to bu1ld. De'loda CQntendt'd. the Oglala
5fOI,UI ' II~I(' Status chan~ from lha! oJ rrJati Ye pro!lptnl)' to
~werty Furthn' compounding the lnduln situa tiOn. !.he Buruu
ol lncba nAHat n then le:~~sed tribillland to While ranchers. Althougtl
le-gally obligated to pay the lnc:hans for the use of the land. white
r30Ct!n ddaultrd on the lease po~ y mm u The resull ing IOIU of
tncome fornd lhe Natn·e Amertcans to Mil thetr pony herds lo
"t'rny IIOrY>OO('t' sa1d that :me gmer;t llon"'
a h t'r hiS d~a th lht'Te ¥~ ould be 3 kmd ot
tt'bir lh or rt'nai!l5a nce of India n culture tlur
younit people arr that siJith generatiOn "s.a1ll
Dorothy I..L>p<~gt' Ogrodo\~111k1 . OtrKIOI' of tht'
lndt.an Community Sc:hool m ~IIJ...,auk et•
()t:rodo.,.'5ki, a ~Mnomint'C Indian ¥~as hen·
Wt'llm.'Stloy, Apr.-4. duriny Nnlln• AIIII.'Tit'a u
llayupe:akingon Indian problems m t.:l.'nt•ral ,
.and gcvtng a ghmpst' of tht· Indian Coni
111untt)' School and 111 philosophy uf
t-dUC'atton .
She discussed India n edutation throughout
US hiiiiOr)' . s.aying it \\ U a IIIIXtUrt' Ol
.:ann ihil a tion , s uppressio n. •solation and
o.s.<Um 1lat100 : "Some of each s till remam"'
¥~11th us t()(by. My tr1M li\·t"d 1n a n 3rt'a of
\ 'IT Hill forest , and .,.·hen the go,·tmment sa"'
that uur land had value they trlt-d to mon : us
to Minnesota . OUr chieLJwd the ¥o isdont,
l10...,.cvu . to go look at the land m MiMl"SSto
"'hlt'h \\a£ barren and he refused to leave
tJ thN lnbes haven 't ~ t}WI fortunntt' "
" Tht• K hool system in the Un1lrd Statt-s ho:.
ut• n·r related to Indian s tudents 1\ n Indian
ch1ld that gets through Khool tod3y is ;~n
1tdd11)' " She opened an old hiStOry book
So1)'1ng II was OM fn:~m .,.hich many con·
tempora ry America n teat'hcrs vrobabl~ read
Sht• quoced s.everal c•crpts rdt'mng to
,\ mt•r~ca, "a country of happy people: ·
"•\nH"Ttta as a n«'W cnuntry," Bnd "OOw .,. t.
hw" ,\ mt'nU beuuse of ht'T ~;oodncu to us."
" fl o.,. ta n an lnduan c:hild believe this'! " s he
,l!lkt'll. " llow c:m they ref~ r to Americ.a os o
new place when Indians were here centuries
before !.he grl!at white saib appea red on the
shores" "
" 1'\-e seen hislory books thll
com pltttly ignore the Indian's ui5tence.''
OIJ,rodo.,. s ki s pmt limt• ll pet'IIICally CX·
l'lamint.t the school 1n Milwaukee and 1L~
htalury Tbe Khool was ltarted .,.hen thret·
\lllwou kre Indian mothen became 1n ·
c reaamgly frustrated b«ausc tMir chtldrm
1t• fus~'ll to go to a public school . There, 1n ont•
ol th1• mother's living room s tht· Khool wos
~ t a rted with an e nrollment of a.even . Before
long 11 had i~reaK'd to fiftem and lh<' hving
~~~. ~~:·~i~~~~~rn;':"~O:tec~~~
:.p.'ICt' 1n their basemmt for lhe cause and the
spacr problem wu some.,. hat relieved for tht'
!lsludents. thu'e, llllthough Ogrodoonk.i noted
that conditions we re IDn'it""'' hat leu than
verfect.
tlttrndo"'~k• lhl'n camt' to tht• Khool, as,.
jlr:tt'll('e tt'acht•r uut of tht· Un n't'Tllill)' of
Wi!IConstn· MIIwau kee. Th1s wall just O\'er two
~e:ar~> 3HO
In 1971 on•· ot tht• ~:roup·, hnt attt'mpt'< ttl
uooH' to a IM'IIt'r locatiOn pro\ I'd to!)(' a flop
tx,·au:.o• H ¥oll:. un;tblt• 111 a~:l f UITt' any mone)
lr11 111 lht• gO\'t'TIIIIIt'nl. 1\\ the tltlll', hO\\t'\'C r ,
M.'n•r;tl :\ltl¥~auke~.· lndton ttroups \\t'rt'
st't' rt'tl y planmng to takt' 0\'er an unuHd
RO\,·rnmt•n t biuldtng, JU511fymJ: the ta keover
b)• 311 old tr('a ty "''htch :.luted a ll ab.'l n·
dont'tl pubht· pro jll•rl)' \\ould outomatu:ully
rC\'Crl to the lndtans The plan . ho.,.t•ver ,
lcakf'd out 111 Cht• prHll and then ... as droppN.I
hy all the t:roops but AI M
t\IM d('('tdcd tu OCCUp) 311 old Coast (;wml
' lalmn on l..;tkt• ~ltch1gnn
Many of the
Couun umty Sc:hooi s tudents ¥oert• there :utd
t i.:JM"-'5 .,.t•n • urg.am u 'd u n the lawn
~rodo¥~Skl S!!ld nlthough they \\ Crt' ...,ornt'll
,1bout the po~1bt l1ty of manhBIIs movtng m,
th1• gon·rnmrnl dtdn't rt'SOrt to
SUC'h
nwthods
"•\ llt•r sevem/ \\t-eks "'C JUSt
1110\'t"il mtu lht• txu ldmg Thl~ 1... thl' currt•nt
IOC.:J II0/1 of the M'hooi. "
1lK' M"hool has 11 IIIa H of SIJi tt'achcn. a... o ot
tht'm.:Jrecurrmtly a t Wounded Knee, S.D. All
but ont• a n • Indian
Pt"Ople from the l¥~11
Milwaukee univt'rs ities a nd several colleges
prO\•Idt• ass ts tanct•, t'Spt'('io lly In IUIOrtn K
tlg rodo¥~ sk • tll lht' only certified teach t' r " I
don' t think that It's re.:ally thai important.
llur high school teacher for t•xo rnple ne,cr
graduatt'tl from h1gh .school . !Jut he sees to It
that hill s tudt'niA ta re working ha rd and he
¥oanlli to set• them nc hte\•t• thmgs We want
fOUr lltudf'nts to ~>n- a n lndl:an m.:a le 1n a
pm>tl1on of aulhont y " Tht• Khool current!)
1 10~ :1 wmting li~t of O\'er 90.
"Our philosophy of educa tion Is lo h~ lp lht•
lnd1an re·acqutre .,.hat th~y ha\·e kMi t '"
lmiHUI va lut"!! Wt• f«l that an lnd1an uu
IUII('IIOn Ill toda y'll satiety ....llh lht'H \'a Jun
For namplt' . lndmn.<~; find 11 hurd to compt' lt'
They look out runrf' fo r tht'ir people than for
them .<~;ciVl'S
Unct• \\l' regain tht.'SC vlllu~ .
problrm:'i hke !IUtt'lde and a lcohol w1ll bc-gm to
d1u ppur ," she claimed
" If you !ell person long enOllgh that he
.,. on 'l t'Ver accom phsh anythln).l he'll bcliew
11 Our goa i1Ato hel p lnd1an children and .,. e
nHd them m Khool to do lhts If they don 't
return IO tht't r people afll'r they' re done
oo... e\·er. \\t're los! "
<un'IYe.
Rather than alter !.he lease system.lhe BlA siJII continues to use
11 and thus ptrpt'luate Indian poverty. Mid ~Ioria lie •llustr.:atrd
tht' "3b!lurdit y" of the land lease ll)'lltem by d ting a 111tuat ion in
.,.h1eh the l ndtan land OVo'ner cannot put land 1n the ~ I bank whtl«'
the wNt~ ra ncher ca n legally do so
DdCUS.Sirci.MeurTft!C Stluatlon a t W0t1nded Knee,Oelotu stated
appnuamatdy etghl·fi Ye per ~nt ol !.he N a tn~ Amencan
population supported theoc:nlpatiOnof Wounded Knct' In npnt to
the (p.lestlon ol whkh group1 ~manded the auj)pl rt ol the
m.a)OMIY ol lnchan people, Deloria t~aid 11 vanes w1th dtfferftlt
I»UCS Deloru emphascud !.he f'XIIt«'nee ol wjde.spread Nat1ve
Amencan .r.upport for lhe concept ol tribill government alth&ugh
wbltant•al di!l('onlmt conlinues over Oglala SIOUI Tnbal Come•I
presklcnt Dick Wllllon 's 1«-adershlp
Whileanalyt.ing the leaderhs•pconlllct at Wounded Knee, Ddoria
cited the uatance ol four Pirw ftidee ReaervaUon i"l'J~ which
have attempted to alter the popu lauon's phJ,hc
Thoese
organ•z.aliorul 1ntludt-: lhe Black H1lb Treaty Ril.hU Counc:tl
fOrgaruz.alion ol Sol"'lorG randlons ol SkJu• Chld a concerned w1lh
iepl rtghta t . lhe l..;lnd OwMn A.Poc:U~Uon ( 0rgan~t.alion at·
temptlna to )lop land lea.stna to white ranchenl, the l nter·Distrkt
Council tCroup ol elected tnbill represftllalll"H ~lfll
,·anoua rqKHW ot !be reaerva1~ 1 ard the Ogl.ala Siou:JI C1vll
~~~~~!~n, ·~:~~~';!~':.~ec:~~~~t~~: ::
thd.c four orpniUtiOnS reprtKnted appro•tmaldy rtghly per
cml ot the P ine Radle Raervation population.
Kespondina to an audienct quntlon. l>doru criUd ud Northern
Na tJve Am4!riea n craft objects ln the .- int ArU Building las t W4!ek.
1-"bft'al Congreumen for ttw:1r unwt11111Rneu to tniiUite Commlllce
~==·, a':.~~~:'a ~~·ha~~~1ro~:,':1,~~~.al !Senator
Prt'Sidenl Ntxon's stralrsy at WOllndrd Knee. •rwued Dd«UI ,
w;u thai ol ktlln&lhe sn uat~ contJnue unt1lthe conc:Tpt oltnbel
government wuduaedllf'd. Delor~a further userted N1mn could
have ended the Wounded Knee KJZUre earlier by directing lntenor
l)epartment olftctals to meet with India n leaders
S..mmanr•rc the destrn ol !.he Oglala SkMD people whtle
p~rod y, ,. N•xon.. Ddona sa.led. W«' need anothrr " Puce Wtth
1\ooot" that w1ll get lhewhtte man out ofSIOWIIand. ' '
THl r OIHTlR
Film Contest
Ullll"l'nll)' t "olm Sot...:y ,.,II
·~
!l. 1m
~t l-nn~
:o l1lm
coni~
on Apnl
Ali i~ ontn-Htl'd "'
tlli~ non lnt tbol.lld
•q;• ~ •tr b)' Apri117 .,.itll Hoger
Bullis. Offitt" OWJ Old :>.loon
t"olm~ wolll>l" ~llo.,·n ~nd judgl'd
,\ j!tl l 2Jo lj OO p m. ulOid ~l ain
,\ ,.o;lolutll.lm Th11 conlr$1 ·~
o~nHitlll•publk
l'tllt&att'
b H~Oll
:!nct.IZSOO
:std·SIOOU
Tht'rt:orenocat~.es. Thr
("QII!~o50ptntol&alldlmm
lllno
""''rst
T~ektol• ror 1M
on.•
lro:oe to )'o lm ~)" mnnboeno.
1 2:1 lor lluci!L'nt non mnnbiL'ni
ancl t 50IOIIGIIS!I.Idmts.
Summer
Campus Jobs
Student
You all remember lfle Smorgasbord a1
lt1e Pim Hut, righl! Well n·s back A new deal and new limes. All
lfle crispy salad and pina you can
sluff yoursell wilh, for $1.SS
Truck on over any 'Tues. or Wed. from
12 p.m.-2 p.m. Greal for a case of lhe
munchies, 'cause lfle food's ready when
you are. Don'l forgel family
Night Tues., S pm-fO pm. Any
small one 1ngredienl pina
for $1.15.
a
flOc: for nch odded topplllf)
employment
job applications for
su mme r a r e now
available in the Housing
Orfice. Room 103, Stodenl
Services Center.
AT
PIZZA
J1'f-f
ENTERTAINMENT
Every Friday & Saturday
W.HITING MOTOR HOm
Uue to the limit ed
a mount ol space, ~•e wUI
not be runnin g th e
cl au lfl e d a d s lh h
w~ k . They will H run
in the nu t ln ue.
HAPPY SPRING
FROM ALL OF US
FREE
6 PACK OF COKE
WITH PURCHASE OF
$10.00 01l MORE
IF YOU DON1 FIND WHAT YOU WAJIT - YOU HAY FIND WHO YOU WAJIT
Fr iday, AQ.ril
13,
1973
THE POIHTU
Conservation
Tour Planned
Jea\·e rrom the parkin& lot
a cross from the Science
Building and retw-n a t a~
proxunately 12 :00 noon.
ror fu~ qUKtions see any
SCSA membft'
As part ol the Earth Week
Acll\'l ltes, the Student C'tulpter
ol the Soil Const'f'Vation Society
ol Amenca wtU sponsor a
~ation tour ol Portage
County. Saturday. Apr 14, 1973
at 9:00A M.
J ames Woller . Dis tr ic t
Consttva tionist for the U.S. Soil
Conse r vation Se r vice, will
explain the envi ronmental
problem at coach of 4 stops and
show or suggrst Improvements
to be mnde.
she tS ehgtble st.ould call Heltn
Godrr toy tmmediately l t'Xt
The ll onor Societ)' m·
\'Oh'H tlst'U m sen1ce proj«ts
tn the unn·ers~ty or commuruty
Thts year's group ts ..·orlu ng
with the restdt'nts of the new
ltl\'er Ptnes ~untng home
:D61 1
AWS To Select
New Members
Medical Sociology
OHered
The AWS llonor Society tS
se:lec:ting its membership for
the 197'3-74 academk )'ear.
Membersh i p Is based on
leade r s hip , se rv ice. and
sc:holarmip. Avplicatlon forms
have been sent women studrnts
holding a J.Oor better GPA, one
of the criteria for membershi p.
Any woman. junior or first
semester senior. who did not
r«ei\·e a form and feels tha t
nus transportat ioo will be
proVldtd free of charge fo r the
thr~ hour lrtp. The public is
mvtted to a uend. The bus will
Medical Sociology taught by
Elfmde Coppinger, will be
offered here in the faiJ
semester. The course 1s being
oUercd to provide content which
Is ~cne r nlly una\·nllable in the
university's curr iculum.
The course will be structured
to be of use to students who are
not sociology-an thropology
majors. bu t who are In a reas
where knowledge ol the socia l
.!itructure of the field of
medicine and a ll ied health
areaJ would be usdul
Content of the course will
tnclude the following :
Social Organlut.lon of Health
Professions:
Soc1al oraan1ullon ol ~ledial
Institutions .
Odinmg Health and Illness :
l>attent-PraNttioner Relations :
Dtstnbution of Illness.
Students tntl!fe:sted should see
CopptftRCT at the Sociology·
"'nthropology
re gis tntion
M'<'lton Apr 30, or- call ext. -1565,
or rome to room -131 CCC.
(Home of Portesi's Fine
Italian 'Food)
PRESENTS
THE TALENTED
TOM NICKEL
On A Wurlit:zer Organ
Every Friday, Saturday
and Sunday Evening.
..---::..
:-1-1-.------, "''"h
A.
"mRIIT/Rillll.
Charity Ride
Planned
The Yout h ,\ s50dotlun for
ltetn rded Children Is plaMing a
bike ride to raise funds for the
mentally rt'IOtrded o f the
t-ommumty The '" Btke lt1de for
the Hctardl'd," wt ll be held
Saturday , 1\ pr 28 a t 9·00 a .m
brttmnu"tg at Bukolt l~nrk ~t ore
mformalton can be gamed from
thr Studt'flt ~lnn.agen · Office at
Drbot and Allen Centers aod
from the.' Jnformatton Otosk oo
the Un1verslly Ct'nter
.-\ dis play or Sa tive Amer ican cr a rts in the
Fin e Arts Huild ing wa s a pa rt o( th e Na th •e
Am erican Uays ('e leb ra tion las t week .
PAUL'S BAR
An important announcem~t to every
IL,;;====;...::==-' Ne•• u
for GIMI
NEW SCHOLARSHIPS
ARE AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY.
THEY COVER TUITION AND
RELATED COSTS AND PROVIDE AN
ANNUAL INCOM.E OF $5,300 AS WELL.
estN
&
~
hour ~
Wetch •nd Ull•n fOf' DlfhtNnt WHkfy Sp.cMJ.
~
POINTER
~
Trousers . . . . 69c ea.
Present Coupon with incoming order. Good April
13, 14 and 16.
•
il
Opn Da ity 7 • ·"'· • 6 P·"'·
2.57 Dl•hion St.
student in the health professions:
Aflow••
Tbe
frid•Jt 7 • . m.-1 p.M.
344-5277
0
Empl~e Room
SUNDAY 5 P.M.-11 P.M.
STEAK BONANZA!
FREE BEER!
$3.25
If a 1t.udy ulary of $400 a
month and paid-up tuition
will Mlp you n~n tinue your
pro feuional training, tht
lt'holarsh i ~ JWl malH po.
1ible by the Uni f o r med
Servi<ft Health Profesaiona
Revitaliu.tion Act o f 1972
dnervt your dose a ttention.
B«ause if you are now in a
medical. oe:teopathic, de ntal,
vtUrlnary, podiat ry, or optometry Khool, or art working toward a PhD in Clin in.l
Psychology, you may qualify.
W tmakt-ittCtfJ1/0r J101ol l o
compldt uour •tudi,.. You 're
commluloMd aa an offtcer u
soon a1 you e nttr tht p rornm, bl.tt remain in student
status until graduation. And,
durinr uc:h yta r you will be
on active du ty ( with utra
pay ) for 45 da)'L Naturally,
if your academ ic: Khedult
~ii'H that you remain on
campus. you stay on c:ampua
-and &t ill f'K"eive you r active
duty pay.
Actitoc dMtr
reqv irtrt~ntll
arc- fa ir . Baaieally, you aerve
one yeu u a eommiMioned
offlcer (or each year you've
participaUd in the program,
with a two year minimum.
You may apply for a Kholarlhip with either the Army.
Navy or Air Force, and know
that upon ente r ing active
duty yo u 'll have rank and
dutin in keeping with your
profaaiunal tninina:.
The life '• work you've d.ow n foryourwl f nquirak»nf,
hard . uptnalve traini ng .
Now we art: in a poeition to
give you 80~M hflp. Mail in
the coupon at your urlitsl
con\·enience for mortdtt.ailed
in formation.
r ~.;-~=~:.:=..:------l
!8
I '-- - - ' - . r- .. .. , ,
. .....!
I
~;:~ ··;;:
, ......
o-.·---~1
,So.
... -.
.._-•.
:"-
:
, ... ._ .
I
I
I
I
I
I
l e<oo
1
I
~ ·----~-- 1
1..,.,_,
I
I
•
•
I
!::.::-..:.: : : ·~:: ·:::!
L ~-:--.::::::~::-.:-:-_":"::J
FREE BEER!
U.S. Choice, Juicy
Top Sirloin
PotatOes
Criset, Garden-Fresh
Touod Salad
Texas Toast
DIXIELAND MUSIC
7 P.M.• 11 P.M.
:·f. -\(to~~
.
: .
of Stevens Point
j2.
Dinner ruertotions • 341·1340
E~dj_tg=[,,icll~-----W-e -our-read-ers~wer-e
w-isht-hat
as-sta-lwar-t
invoicing the cause of humanity as they have been in
preserving the integrity of their golden memories.
pea ce H ave n :
Last Time Around
Anti-Culture
To take a critical look at this university is to
become aware of the lack of intelligence and denial
of a life of meaning which pervades it. One quickly
perceives that there is little interest in ideas, the
world, or the quality of human life. There is merely
devotion to hedonism and enshrinement of dogma
and superstition. One finds a pathetic and moribund
institution, devoid of vitality and wisdom.
Two recent events or situations are illustrative of
this point. Although seemingly minor and irrelevant
to many, particularly those whose insight into life
is restricted to jukeboxes and beer halls, one can
infer from them something about the character of
this university. First is the absence of a decent
concert hall. If you attended the performance of the
Berlin Concert Choir and orchestra last month you
were undoubtedly sturck by the appalling ugliness
and crudity of the facillities: merely a noisy, uncomfortable concrete box. Such conditions face all
orchestras that come here--recall the paddleball
game that accompanied the Milwaukee Symphony
two years ago-but they were particularly evident
that evening. Noting the situation, one could infer
that this university has no serious interest in
music. Music is merely another toy, accorded little
more respect than donkey basketball. Music is not a
vital part of life, but a trivial pleasure.
One also sees this denial of meaning in life in the
architecture on campus. The brick and concrete
monstrosities which envelope it run completely
counter to any sense of beauty and craftsmanship.
Rarely is it necessary to comment on the obvious;
but the circumstances following our coverage of the
Semester-in-Britain program call for a brief footnote.
The facts as presented in the article rest upon the
integrity of all those parties interviewed and, since
we must assume those parties to be only honorable,
those facts must stand. Those who reacted to the
editorial did so on the basis of their feelings about ·
the program, however, the question is not one of
feeling but concrete fact. All of the good vibrations
in the world will not expand the dimensions of an
overcrowded (though "charming") old house· or
remove doting paternalism from the American
education system.
It is regrettable that there was so much confusion
regarding editorial and article. Careful reading
reveals that the article contained two parts: a
general overview of the program, and a look at the
seventh semester as an instance or example of what
the program can do. As usual, the article was meant
toinform. Theeditorial (whichthecarefulreaderfound
on the editorial page) served as a means to elicit an
exchange of ideas. Regardless of its opinion quality,
as an editorial instrument properly placed, it accomplished its purpose. Hence, it may not be
honestly said that the newspaper failed in its task of
encouraging and providing the ground for public
discussion. In spite of the rash of emotionalism, a
public forum was given life.
Lcl~LH~s------------H-a_r_r-is--F-ig_h_t_s_B_a_c_k ~-~-!-!-oe-g1-r~-p-h-y-~-~-~-6-~- ;-!7-~-~-:7-~-~- c-~ ~-~-~e-e~- -n-i~-i-n1th-_e0__1~1-la-t~-~-in1-~-~-s-~-:___
Support Strikers!
To the Editor:
Dear Students,
I have been notified by the
International Alliance of
Theatrical Stage Employees
and Moving Picture Machine
Operators of the United States
and Canada, local 606 of
Wausau and Stevens Point,
Wisconsin, that they are
presently on strike at the
Campus Cinema here in Stevens
Point. The Campus Cinema is
now operating with non-union
employees. Your attendance at
the Campus Cinema will only
serve to aid those who oppose
all the progress Organized
Labor has made through these
many years. As both a student
and blue-collar worker, I appeal
to you to support the strike at
the Campus Cinema by not
patronizing it, and further, to
actively solicit the support of
your friends in defeating this
latest threat to the gains
organized labor has made
towards decent working conditions and a living wage.
Vern Kenas
Sec.-Local 584
AFSCME, AFL+CIO
Ed's. Note:
The Pointer
received this letter on Mar. 21
and was unable to publish it
until now.
To the Editor:
The claim that officially
furnishing contraceptives tends
to encourage premarital sexual
indulgence has not been
refuted. Apparently the experience of the University
Health Service confirms the
claim. Their results could have
been predicted from citations in
what is apparently their own
bibliography (see Furstenberg,
et al., Journal of Marriage and
the Family, vol. 31, 1969, for
example). Other sources would
have been of equal or greater
value. K. Davis, also cited in
their bibliography, reviewed
the probelm under the title
"The American Family in
Relation to Demographic
Change" in I nterna tiona I
Population and Urban
Research, 1972. The United
Nations Demographic Yearbook is another source of such
information.
Faith in contraceptive
knowledge as a means of
reducing the rate of unwanted
pregnancy ·has reached almost
religious intensity . Such faith
had its origins, at least in part,
in an unpublished report which
was widely circulated among
governmental agencies an?
crisis groups in 1967. When It
was subsequently published its
data were challenged and
Even though data show that
under current contraceptive
promotion attitudes, habits and
conditions, the rate of sexual
indulgence rises faster than the
rate of contraceptive use it
would seem that within
educational institutions, individuals might find a cure for
the illegitmacy epidemic.
There are many possibilities.
The Health Service has alluded
to some remedies which seem
capable of success (Pointer,
March 16, 1973). Unfortunately
the singular approach upon
which it seems most dependent
evidently creates more
pregnancies than it prevents.
Sincerely yours,
Joseph B. Harris
Vending Machine
Rip-Off
To the Editor:
We feel the present vending
machine service in the dorms
should come under closer
scrutinization . A recent survey
conducted by a group of concerned students showed that 90
per cent of the dorm residents
surveyed are dissatisfied with
the present dorm vending
machine service.
Complaints made by students
failure to receive the correct
change. Other complaints deal
with the vending machines'
selection or the fact that they
are often empty. In keeping
with the current inflationary
trend, our vending service has
also made its goods available at
costs well above what they can
be purchased for elsewhere.
Are we actually getting the
service we expect from the
vending machine operators or is
it actually a lack of servicing?
A plausible alternative to
vending machines is a switch to
behind the desk service. This
procedure would allow each
dorm to sell what is now vending machine merchandise at
or below the present cost.
Complaints due to lack of
service would be eliminated and
the new location for the
dispensation of "munchies"
would be met open-armed by
the students. The hassle over
having to have the correct
change
would
also
be
dissipated.
Finally, if t~is
switch was made, any profits
could go dii·ectly to the- dorm
and not lost in channels along
the way.
Students are being ripped off,
cheated and inconvenienced by
a vending machine system
11 hich could be vastly improved
by sellin~ . thes~ items at the
The university architects and planners have almost ·
succeeded in erecting one enormous, windowless
concrete block as their institution of "higher"
learning. That windows and trees and grass have
some relation to a meaningful life is apparently
~
-·
beyond them.
To develop a student who knows the world
requires, in addition to many other things, good
music, meaningfui leisure, and beautiful
surroundings. A student cannot come to be in a
vacuum. Yet a vacuum is what this university
seems to be striving for--a self-contained, isolated, '
and lifeless world: a dead world, devoid of genuine
meaning, culture, and intelligence.
This condition is not peculiar to this university
alone. This university is merely quicker in realizing
it. Also, it is not characteristic solely of universities.
American society as a whole is marked by a denial
of culture, as a life of meaning, and intelligence.
Recall that in the past twenty years America has
spent over $108 billion in the attempt to make
Southeast Asia safe for capitalism. Then envision
what that vast amount o-f resources could have
contributed in terms of a life of peace and decency.
It is not merely a question of providing music and
concert halls and beautiful buildings; it is also a
matter of rebuilding cities, a matter of decent work,
proper schools and homes, and good health care.
The achievement of a peaceful and meaningful life
is not denied because of lack of resources; the
potential of the United States alone is overwhelming. The question is, as we have previously
stated, one of intelligence. It has been said that we
lack intellectual courage, but the problem is even
more fundamental. It is questionable whether we
even have intelligence.
Business
T·akes Charge
The current budget hearings of the Finance and
Allocations Committee of the student senate mark
the point at which business takes charge of the life of
the student. In America. the controlling force is
finance capitalism; it lays hold of all aspects of life,
bending the most vital institutions, including the
university, to its will. The essential qualities of this
system remain constant, though reformers, dogooders, ne'er-do-wells and others of varied intentions will enter it, serve and pass.
Finance IS a means of control over the objective
relations of life. It is the principle, for example,
which allows the finance agent a rich life while other ·
parts of society lie in misery. For the banker, its
instrument is the foreclosure which places the
family in the street in order to ''balance the books.''
For the reactionary bureaucrat, it manifests itself in
support of narrow private interest by means of
budget tirms in the public sector. In the university,
as in all vital public institutions, the finance
machine exerts its subtle yet powerful influence.
In a university, objective relations of creation,
study and recreation must be principled upon a
practical intelligence that will end in a good student
and a good world. On this point there should be no
question. This is to say that there is no question that
a university is a place to gain insight into the larger
world and to find solutions to monumental problems
of providing a decent life for all. Those wbo believe
the university to be a center for entertainment and
"escape" are charlatans and fools; they reduce the
university to the level of a whorehouse or a Las
Vegas casino.
A true university is a radical adventure and as
carries with it a very real threat for a very real and important names from birth records,
to all the freedoms we are en- cause. Color you conversation "New Comers." and radio
joying.
"green." That is the stuff that advertising. They do follow-up
I am a member of that Faith makes the loudest noise calls, visit the ones who need
which has great cause to wherever men and women sit help, and pave the way quickly
to the eye doctor when
remember the Fascist down to plot and plan.
Conccmed Students.
Get the word to all the cam· ; necessary. A delightful simple
movement in Germany which
Bob Buettner
carried to death over six puses across the country. Let book, "Charlie's Lazy Eye,"
i\large Johnson
million of our brethern. Before this be a movement started in accompanies the kit, explaining
.I im Kohl
Fascists can take power they Wisconsin, by the young of the entire procedure.
\ 'a leric Vainisi
This method includes every
must first destroy the free press Wisconsin , so that history will
(;aJe Wescott
and then the educators and the one day say the rights child in the County. It is acguaranteed by the First curate because a single E is
educated.
If, indeed, you young people Amerndment to our Con- used and turned behind the back
who are "sifting and win- stitution were truly saved by the (manv adults memorized the
Send Money
eye chart as small children and
uowing" are sincere in your youth of 1972.
To Ford Foundation desire for a better world where Mt·s. David Levenstein
went behind the age of corrcetion) . The Health Departall men are free to speak out La Crosse, Wisconsin
To the editor :
men t gives sup por t ,
against the threats of tyranny , Mar. 26, 1973
A week a2:o I was in Madison,
reassurance, and help.
it is time you did something
Wisconsin , and had occasion to
Two bills in the state
concrete and positive.
Lazy Eye Ltd.
read a number of issues of the
legislature--Assembly Bill 201
Instead of gathering on malls
Cardinal.
and Senate Bill 324--would make
to make speeches which are lost
The number one concern of in the winds, instead of
this home screening eye kit for
the news and editorial staffs organizing marches which To the Editor:
pre-school children available to
"Every year three of every everv health deoartment in
seemed to be Carl Armstrong carry with them destruction,
one-hundred
children,
the
world
and his chance for a fair trial instead of gathering in smoke
every county in the state. Every
and the question of his not being filled rooms that are full of over , age six years start first child in every county deserves
grade with sight in only one eye. sight in both eyes by being
brought to trial fairly .
symantics, dedicate yourself
They have uncorrected am- found in time for correction. We
I have my personal thoughts and your energies to a specific
blyopia or lazy eye. If they had are told this bill has little
about Mr. Armstrong and young "something."
been found in tim&-ages 3, 4, or chance for passing unless public
people who destroy in order to
Get a job for two hours every ·iJ-- and correction given im- support is given . Address for
stop destructicm. However , this
is not the issue which drives me week and send that money to mediately, they would have Governor Patrick Lucey , your
to write th's letter. I have
the Ford Foundation and ask sight in both eyes.
state senators and assemFor seven years the Eau Claire blymen is State Capitol,
enough faith in our system ?f them to add it to the dollars they
1
City-County
Health
Department
government to believe he wtll , are spending and willing to
M~dison , Wis . 53702."
continue spending to continue has successfully used a home
have a fair trial.
Thank you very mucll.
What worries me is the Public Television and Public pre-school vision screening kit
' seeming un concern in the Broadcasting. This will say to and has now reached 91 per-cent Very truly yours,
( ·ardinal and on the campuses the world you are willing to add coverage of all pre-school Mrs . Robert Dernback
with the very real threat to the a little of your sweat in order to children in the county. The Lazy Eye, Ltd.
press and the news media which earn money and contribute it Health .Department gets the Eau Claire, Wis. 54701
desk.
We, along with the
majority of students surveyed,
leel it is time for a change.
Don 't you?
hist?ry demonstrates, finance capitalism stands
agamst all that is radical. When finance confronts
the university, it must seek to control it in the interest
of class power and privilege. The alternative is that
the universit?' will radicalize society, abolishing the
syste'? of p~Ivate control and, through intelligence,
set thmgs aright. Hence, finance does as it must and
enters the university through a thousand loop-holes
in the public system.
At this point it is necessary to restate that the
subject here is the system of business control, which
we call finance capitalism, and not those misguided
souls who are its instruments. We are not beating
the bushes for devils as the "cause" of the problem.
If men are "devils" it is only by virtue of the evil
~ith _which they connect. It is altogether likely, as
Implied above, that many finance agents possess
only the best of intentions. Yet intentions mean
nothing in terms of correct action.
When finance seeks to direct the "activities" of
the student it does so with no regard for the quality
of the proposed activity. Practical circumstance is
not its -concern. "How much -will it cost?'' is readily
translated into "How much of it will there be?"
Thus, thousands will be allocated to assure a
quantity of frivolity while the genuine student life is
left without resources . It is in this manner that
electronic madness is given precedence over the .
arts. Further, the business principle of self-interest,
the heart of finance, presents itself in working to
achieve the subjective pacification and emotional
titillation of the individual. The life of the student,
the life of a larger dynamic world, is ignored. ·
Finance sells the athletics program to the alumni
but does nothing for decent student recreation.
Finance give us prestigious bureaucrats and
campus night clubs. It does not give us an enriched
humanity in an ordered world.
Tristram Coffin's
Washington Watch
Behind The Cover-up
A twenty-five page memo in the hands of Senate investigators
throws a new light on the Watergate scandal. It opens up a subject
long whispered in Washington and outlined in a secret probe by the
Kennedy Administration.
Independent investigator Richard E . Sprague believes White
House efforts to hold the lid on Watergate are to hide President
Nixon' s relations over a twenty-year span with Cuban counterrevolutionaries, adventurers, and (criminal) Syndicate leaders.
Several of the Watergate plotters, he contends, are a direct link to
this past.
"Nixon does have two major areas worth hiding, " he notes.
"The two areas involved people and groups in Miami and the
Florida Keys who are imbedded in many nefarious activities with
organized crime and with anti-Castro illegal projects. Area one is
that hazy one involving the Syndicate and Cubans." The other is
counter-revolution against Castro, including the Bay of Pigs, gun
running and smuggling.
These groups merged in a common effort to throw out Castro.
The Syndicate wanted to get back the lucrative gambling casinos it
controlled under Batista. Syndicate boss Meyer Lansky is said to
ha ve offered $1 million to anyone who would get rid of the Communist dictator.
In his report, Sprague draws on detailed accounts of "a man
<Richard Nixon) whose financial and political careers have rested
on investments and contributions tainted by the involvement of
organized crime." (Published by the San Francisco magazine Sun
Dance in its November-December 1972 issue.)
The magazine claims that "information from two ex-FBI
agents" shows that Nixon, as Senator and Vice President, in many
trips to Florida was "in close contact with ... persons closely connected with organized crime. "
Both the Sprague memo and the Sun Dance article leave open the
possibility that Nixon may haye wandered, innoc~ntly, into this
den of thieves and become mvolved, through h1s real estate
speculations, with questionable people without being aware of it.
Fridoy, Apfil
THE POINTEI
13, 1973
Youth And Adult Soccer
Comes To Point
In ~oopeution wtth the
't'MCA alld a lew l«al
• buJiMS$ft and orpniUIIions a
Mr Wartu~ at the 't'MCA or
Mr. Klaus Kronu- T.-1. :WI·
Sof09. 1h<"lN'"IJmr.-rlllldplayu
or tM team. Anyone
)"Outhandad1.11tto«"erprocnm
~d'l
ISbelllCWrtedhef'eiiiSI~r>"ti'IS
aboveandUM:IucllllCIM;~t~eol
Potlll. Tlle tlt'$1 Sl:f"'ens Point
Soerer Ciub hal been orpniu!d
and • ·ill Wtt competition with
Dlher~:llytnmlinthe NortMm
~=~t~~:i~:~~!t'!!! ~!:.
anyonl· of hilhlchool •it,
•·oll~e ase or :.bo•·.- •• m-
Rt~:ionoltheWisc:OIIIIlnSott-er
As5oaaliocl. "The tt;~m will
The
klea lg;~mn
pi;Jty~
will be
rour;Jtifd to _loin
the team
pl;~y
1111:h dlln 11 Appleton.
Menalha. De Pen, Green Bly.
:O.Iarinette and Fond du 1.1.1: In
an ~~~~~ game Jpring JN!«<
-..·hichwi\lstart on Apr. tSth.
on 1M Univenit)' Alhltlic: Fidd
bfohind the l leld houH.
lneonjunc:tlonwitlltlleldult
program, membt-111 or the tum
wll l al5oo:onductdiniaal loc:a ~
vadeJchoolsandat!MJunior
lliihSchoolf;~tc-fftaintimn :
these w1U bf Drn!llfd by the
Phy Ed. dirtelor$ ol lhele
xhoob.Aeyon-elhmlntn-e~tftl
inc.~tinul !llloplaywi ll beable
The dub is eMGUnaina any
•ndiYiGI.Ib in 1M commllD.it)'
•nt«fttfdinlumlncabautthe
pme;~ndplaylngtttof:Qntaet
to diD it in ;1 summer )"OIIlll
l«'«r prOIJ"Im that will be
«11nizfdbylheY:o.tCAandtM
Sl:evens Point SocuT Cub.
/
Chris tian Science lecturer
Home fe Grad
Assistants Wanted
Th.-
Sehool
of
Hom.-
~lf:SEduo:;~tlonh•two
jt r aduate
auislanllhipl
;~ ~atbbl.-lor
the
19f3..74sdlool
)·earAey-•nterestedahou)d
tonllletA&nft.loMJ. au1 ckan
ol the Sc:hool o1 Home
EnlnDmln, for ;~n appliution
form.
JOR"ph G. lleud, Christian
SclftlmlecturerfrornMia.ml.
na .. will spe;~k here Wfdnc-sday.Apr. llattt;OD-in
1M Garland Room of the
Un,.·enitf c...,ter
1be Ire!.'
teeture , entitled ""Today"l
Prophet."" ts J~bytlle
Ch r iltlan Sdence Coll.-r;e
Ori~niution.
11.-ud.uanaLtorney.l efthis
lawcar~rintmtomtertlle
""publk he;~lilll millistry"' ol
Olriltian Sdei!C1! lie has beoen
:acllv.- lnyoulh;~elivltits lor t lle
t"•rst
ChU r ch
of
Ch r ist ..
Scient.ist.in8oaton , M as.~. ror;~
'" Tht!!J do not love:
that do not sho11.1 their love: .""
number of ye;~n. A fornwr
navy c~pl;lln. he hu tn~llfd
almah·dy In the Unitft!States.
Canada. Europe and Latin
Am t r k:;~ .
ChooK KccpSilkc
withcomplcleConAdr"nce.
beuuse t he famaus
Kceps.1 hGuarantec
n ' uresaprrfeet
tllgagcmtn t dt.amond
ofpreeiKrutand
supcrb r olar. Thc rcis
r~ollncrd ~;~ mondnng .
OOu..EUIATE
SOTES
...
u~
pla)"l &nd
..Uoub~
no ~d•
lut.-r.
PHOTOGRAPHY
Weddings &Portraib
Professional Wort
lowes! Prices
llo..,,I..,. 1 KIUI0.000
T-MIIn.o.H,_Co.
Rkhard Herman
~1-3403
CRO<XfR'S LANDIIIG
Mobile llome PARI
Married stvd•nts:
Lots or• oYo ilobl•.
How $29 o month.
For information
Call 34.4-6908
It loe1in• with 1 K.-epl-lkll Rln1. KHpl-lke-a
p.-r ftc"t Hnler oli amond o f p.-..c-i.e cut . Therllla
nolinudiamondrinl!fo r yo urlov.-lt ory.
GRUBBA JEWELERS
_ ,.. :e""- -,._ .._ r..u-""=w;[oO"isCj
,. ___ .. ""--.-~~~~ ......... -~r;; :
I
I
Diamonds our SpeclaUy
968 Main St.
I
I
I
I
0..
i----------------------------1
~~~:,... . .
IYll.o.CVJ~~ l
OIAMO/'fO IIP"GS. lOX "-
·TH E POINTER
Friday, April 13, 1973
Friday, i\pril 13
Jnish Sabbath Services: Jewish staff and
!heir lri~nds ar~ invited 10 Sabbath Services
~ach Friday ev~ning at the Mt. Sinai
Synagogue in Wausau. Transportation leaves
Stevens Point at 6:30 p.m. Please call 341 ·
4816 or ext. 4537.
~ l ond.ay.
,\ pril lfi
l,ane l Uiscunlon un Aborlion : 7:30p.m .,
Frank Uoyd Wrighl Lounge, University
Cen ter.
"Abortion- A Right to U\·e?"
modcraled by Dr. John Za"•adsky, Chairman
ol the Philosophy Deparlmenl , will involve a
panel discussion comprised ol Dr. Rlchard
~·eldman, a Philosophy ol Law speciahsl ; Dr.
Sunday. i\pril 15
Robert Cassidy who heads the lleligious
r\e"'man Vnlve.nlly l,•rlsh: Saturday 4 Studies Program within the Philosophy
and Gp.m., Newman Chape.l ; Sunday JOa.m ., Department : Dr. Nancy Moore, Advisor W
Newman Chapel, 11 : IS a.m .. Cloister Olapel, lhc Chancellor lor Women's Allairs and
t; p.m .. Cloister Chapel. Blessing ol branches member or the English Department
altO a.m ., II :IS a .m . and 6 p.m. on Sunday. will give the position on abortion held by
WEEKDAY MASSES : Mondav. Tuesday and new women's movement. The department
Wednesday, 11 :4S a .m., Newman Chape.l and will host a reception lor the speakers and the
p.m., St. Stan ·s Upper l:nureh.
audience alter the session.
Holy Thursday : Celebration ol Lord's
Wontl'n 's l at.ramura ls:
G-9 p.m .,
supper at 7:30p.m. at Newman Olapel.
Fieldhouse. Open facilities lor all women in
Good hlday : Service at l p.m. at Newman swimming, gymnastics, all courts in Berg,
Chapel.
badminton tournaments and racquetbaH
Holy Saturday: Easter Vigil tonly one linals. Bring yow: own swim suits and caps.
servicel at 6 p.m. at Newman Chapel.
Softball tournaments will begln during the
Easter Sunday: 10 a.m . mass at Newman week.
L11Bpel . No II : IS a.m . at the Cloister Chapel
Contm una l J•enanct.• Se-rvice :
1 p.m..
this Sunday. There will be a 6 p.m. at the Newman Chapel.
Cloisler.
·
9
Thursda v t\pril 19
UC ~1 Internationa l Cinema : i
Auditorium . Main Building. "1lte Touc.h ."
L.ulhcran Ch4fr J•ractict> : 7 p.m .. Peace
Campus Cenlcr.
Practice lor Sunday's
Celebralion .
U\1'-SI'/\ew•
Te>t llental : April 27 is the last dav lo
purchase lexlbooks and pay lor lost textbooks
;~ t lhe discount price.
Ca p and Go><n pl<k-up : Turner Room , U.C.
Graduation ca ps and-gowns may be picked
up May 7·11, 8 a .m. through 11 ;30 a.m. only.
NO exceptions will be allowed. ·You must
hnve your fee receipt and know your height
and ca p size. If someone else picks it up lor
you, please give them your receipt and
n•ca sure mcnts.
Biology 'AssiSlaniShlps : The UW·SP
lliology Departmcnl is now accepting applicalions lor graduate assistantships lot·
lm-74. The lull assistantship is lor $2,320 and
requires 18 hours or work per week . A half·
time assistantshi p is lor $1 ,160 ~nd requires 9
or work per week. For application
1trllotcm•allc>n <'On tact the UW-SP Biology
l ll>onartm•mt. The application deadline is ~ l ay
1' 1••••· Note: On April 2'j the II : IS mass Tu t~day. i\prll 17
"ill be at Newm.a n Chapel. NO II : IS a .m. at
University t'llm Society: 7 p.m. and 9: tS
the Cloister Chapel on that Sunday .
p.m .. Auditorium, Ma in Building .
l.utht'ran Sludrat Community: Service " Loneliness ol lhe Long Distance Runner ...
with ~~ucharisl, Saturday 6 p.m. and Sunday
t'acully.Studut lledtal : 8 p.m . Michelsen IS.:ho,far,;hi'P
10:50 a .m. at Peace Campus Cenler. Palm Concert llall , Fine Arts Building. Con Sunday processional and celebration.
temporary Music.
United t'hurch ol l1ullit : 1756 Dixon St.
Sunday worship 10 a .m.
Sl. l'aul's l lnlled Methodist l'burch : GOO 1\'ednHday, ,\ pril IH
12 Noon,
l'hrlsllan Science 1-ftture :
Wilshire Blvd. Sunday worship tone. service
unlyl IOa .m. Rides : willpickupatSieineral .Garland Room , University Center. Lecture
9:35 : Delzell at 9:38 ; Sehmeeckle at 9:4%: ~ntitled "Today 's Prophet," is 10 be given by
Joseph G. Heard, C.S.B.. ol Miami , Florida .
Watson at 9:46; and Roach at 9:50.
Franu- Memorial United Presbyterian 'llte public is cordially invited 10 attend.
Student lledtal: 3:4S p.m.. Michelsen
t hurch : 1300 Main St. Sunday worship •t: IS
·..,,.-.·rl liall, ~·i ne Arts Building.
and 10:4S a .m.
Church uf the lntrrc::H"ion t Episcoral) :
Seder Meai-Mid·Weelt Lenten Service:
1417 Church St. Sunday mass 9 a .m. aud 5: IS 6:30p.m ., Peace Campus Center. New!nan·
p.m.; ~'rl d a y mass S: IS p.m. t$.35 s upper Pence Center Mid-Week Lenten Servtce :
alter Friday mass) .
Seder Meal . This Seder Meal will be a
l'lantlarium Series :
l p.m., Science modified version or the Jewish Passover meal
Building. "The Evolution and Growth ol u und should be considered your evening meal.
Slar."
Cost will be $.50 at the door. Please sign up al
~·a<~ll y l'iano llecltal : 4 p.m., Miohelsen Peace Cenlcr or Newman, or Maria Chapel
Concert ·llall, ~'inc Arts Building.· Bellamy ser:vices this weekend tApril 14·1Sl. Note
~hange in time : G:30 p.m .
II aster.
University Jau Band Concert: 8 p.m .,
Student Urgon lledtal : H p.m ., Trinily
Michelsen Concert !loll, Fine Arts Building.
Lutheran Church.
Mtzlte joggisg
IIIII lllld IJIISf.
/oggmg with a friend is o fun
L-----------------~--------------L-------------------------------~~------------------------------~ waytoexe~ise, andkeepmg
in shape always seems easier
with good company
a long. So you don' t
want to give up even
LOSE 20 POUNDS
IN TWO WE EKS!
F~
U.S.
Wo~Mn
SA; THm IMt
Durin& the non ..now otr ~n
BURGER
CHEF
That's why you should
depend on the protection ol
Tam pax tampons. Because
they're worn internally, you'll
tM U.S. Women'• Alpine Ski T•m
mecnbu. 10 on the "Ski Team" diet
to loee 20 pouncb in two weeU.
'J'hat"• riaht - ~ pov.nd.t in 14 daya!
The buill or ""' eliot u. <Mmiul ·rood
anion and wu deviate~ by a famou.
Colonldo phyoician •pociaJ4o !0< lhe
U.8. Sid T...... Normal - o ill
malntaltMd (vftY impor&anU) while
rodlaclna. You keep "fllll" - no
ttarvalion - becaut the diet l. ct.
1 ~ Lhat. 1wQf h 'a a did \hat ll
...,. co toUow whetlwr you wort,
travltl or 8l.ay at hoaM.
Thill U., ~ .. • rantaodeaU,.
Double Cheeseburger
with 2 51 ices of · Melted
Cheese
~··<:.
:,~·.
<ilk . ·' 1
~·
~-to
.~ ~
>' ' > . ····t. .... .
..·~·
... ,,....,...
·-~a
-,_. "' . ......... .
, _till diet. If II .....,.'\, lhe U.S.
Womfft'l Skl T-.m woa&dn't be PI"'
miu.d
to -
iU Rllh11 So.
>
~VI
,..,..tr lhe ,._ ......., 1M u.s. S&J
T•m , .... '-_.hi lhe adonlillc.
pro"" way. Bvlft it you'n tried all
the other d'eU, you ow• h &o you.rooU to 1rY lhe U.S.
S&l
T•m Diet. , ., '-· it yoa. f'Mil.J do
wan\ t.o IOM 20 pou.ndli ln two wlltb.
Ord..- tod.,. ,._r UU.. eM&& u a
",_
•
-
w-·•
rm~indcr.
Smd only 12.00 (12.2r> r.. Ruh
Sorv\eo) - eaoh u. 0.1(. - to lnrocm•tion s.o.rc. Co., P.O. 8os ~!·
0op<. ST. ear,.iowria. c.ur. mtDon't onlar vn'-t 1M apect Lo !OM
:10 poanda Ia IWO -~~ lloealhal'o whal lhe Ski
Diet will do!
Tu
'F or
I
one days run, and
certainly not several days due
to your period.
the late Night Snack
Fourth & Division
Open 10:00 A.M.. • 12:00 Midnight
12:30 Thunday • Friday • 8a'turclay
lee/ completely comfortable.
When the lompon is properly
in place, you won't even know
it's there. A nd you'll be free
to keep up with your jogging.
Active lives demand reliable·
internal sanitary protecrion.
So is it any wonder that more
women in more countries
around the world turn to
Tompax tampons?
Friday, April 13, 1973
THf. POIHTU.
10
Newsletter Ct>nt
prP·r<'t•~lf'r
\ ' CM alfl<'r. ~41
t 'nuPr , pk'aM>
by f<llhn' lht•
:OOpoo«ll~•dllrari.,I[~Urni•I[. Tlllt~h
~nd llt:mng (.lonlt "'11 <'On'Juc-t ~pK'<'h ;lond
hunng ><"fMnlnp !Of' ~ ppli.:~niJ 10 1M
:khool Qf t:ducatoon on Thunday. t\pco l
~. from ; to \1 p.m 1n !loom 1111 l"OPS
l"'uldong
HUT(' , .,. • •
,\ppll n t lon .:
y,.,.,
l'tol(rano
Sophon oo r~
,t'nHJr and!: r ad~~:~teno .. n
wu•·rnol)" "ark
'"~)' q~Yllfy
\rrrp l ln~
nom and jumor,
.. ithi"U)'t'anol
rrmaontntton~pt
\ , 1971,
lor mrollml'fll 1t1!M IIOTC Two•
\ 'ur l"f'aJnm . ... h~<'hp.1)11
SIOOI'ft"n1011th
"htk•nM'houl:lndromnnssionsrnt'n~d
l,it•U tl'nant ~ uo
th•• U.S Arn• >· 1.1p0n
~radUOition Forfurlht'!'lnform.auon, I'OOIKI
spacer for hlmR>I f man advanC't'd
llr&o:;.tr.ll10nl01"lht'lstsenon.ler,l97l-H.
"' 'lllwhtldon~loruby. ApnllO.
S........nand
Jlm•llO 111::0)' ptck up Utdt rrtillralion
'"~ 1rr1al 1 In thl! llo·gillraliO!I Oilier em
.\londlly, ,\pr illi. Jojlhomort'llon Tursd;ay ,
~ nd Lrmmt'n bfocinnong. Wft!nftcby. Aprol
11 Crtdit5 ~"'~..,,.,.,1M t'\lrnnt
......,.,.trr tZnd ......,, dt'!rrmme !>t'nior.
JUmor . Nc . Ktlltus
ihrl>lohtary ~~rlmmt , ~>:!0'1,
·~ngon,.IIC'nlhrya rrtopock
up
SnviC'ft lluild•n&. t'~l
:7T.I
~adlinc'lorapplintoonosMay I l~ll
rrgoii-lr.I\IOnmll«llb
\la)o"' .
~· .,,
'"l~n l
Thrrt' ,..,u lw a
~lillol
Ad•· •sin ~
SKJ!onfor :dlColltgt'ofSaluralH~ces
Tlour-:da) , ,\ prll "
Normal Oprraling ll oun
t't ida,..,\prU:<o
,\ Urn 01nd O..Ht t' rnter
......d
l '•ll·enlty f"f'Gitr
Buildinc ;oe am , 10
10 ClOp til . Grld7 •00a. m. to IO.OOp.m. TUI
"'llbt•requtrW\o11Utndonaflht'$e-IOns
l 'leaM" ha•·t )'OUr ~tudy Jill urd .ava• loble for
approval b) thtCN II tt'prt"Sm~tivt'.
Plt>ase r~rp~rl to tht' followingr_...s .
~·ornll')' l'lorMr Hoom
... ,u brnoAL.a Cartel
Rt'sourtr
:O:at urday, t\pril u ,\f lt n a nd llrbot l 'f'nl rr
Mao::agt'mt'nl
M1tt'hrll H.oorn
\\tldlll~ tiarland !loom
Souls Muir Hoono
'AaterSci~SchunHoo171
s,,.,.,.,.:aoployMnl.
Applit'IIIONfor
>unllllt'f ....,plo)·mrnl ll rt' :~•·ail.1blr in tilt'
llous•nll Of !let. lfXl, Studtnl ~n·k~ CrnlrT
T.K. I'b n- l'hoiDIUploy•:• hlllh : 'T>o<t'n l )'·
••~ black and ,.hilt' photo&raph5 •~ on
•lispli•y •n the l...af'ollt'Ut't.oungr. Unlvrnoily
CrntrT,through AprilandMay. 01--. Cbangm
.>l"rofru«ofGt'ography
\llu llooo l'o11tlu1Stlun.\la)ors
Alllldv.an«d COU1WIIin Political Sc:irnce
arta\·ailablrforpr r-rralstratil'llltoPoUiiclll
Sctt'floft'lllliiJOI'SOII Apr . 25andlllin Room
~7:1
t'ollu,.a-CHterPre-rf'IISiriiiOnll
~rvfOI"thest~t
,.;howW'Iest•
1!notaii :OOa . m. tol2 : ~
p.m . S
lo !2:00p.m . Camet;
p .m t'ood Srrvifto N
I :OOo.m
.on . to~ : lO
ab lloun ott-o•
n,...,,
l ' nlnn.la.· t 'flllrr l:luUdinai :OOano 101000
p.m. Grid 1:00 a.m . lo 10:00 p.m. Trat
IIC'flt.IL ~ SIOI't' C1oRd L;am.,. Koom
, .oo • .rn . lo,:lOp.m.
II ours
~
Only Amcrk1n nlm to be so Honored
Unourrt'
on:IJOn on Monda)'. 1'\lnday. and Wtd ·
""'by, ,\proltl , 11'. ~nd tl:ll7p.m lol ;lO
pm In lhe Unl\·tnooty Ctnlt'r
AU Collt!Jit' of Sa111ral Hnout"Ca~ majon
WISC
WIMMER 197i CAMMES
FILM FESTIVAL
JURY PRIZE AWARD
StudffltJ"ho-..lsto~IOOilld
thr ~r od•·ISt'r
.• thcduleon appointnwnt -..uto
:n.
,\d•l>lal[ Sfo!l•loD
CAMPUS CINEMA
~;o~V:~~ ~~~NT
lltMI•trlllenfor•·ln t ~l'l•• l trll1:t..11
_,,elllllt' brt"H'n April II 1nd Aprol
SCucknt
...
n·~n·~
.-In~
Food~krNorm•l
l' undly ,,\ prif :r. ,\ll•n n d Urbotl'u tr r ,.,tl
~!,'iri:i:'c~:':!'nlt;:: :~: :::·
t 'n ln,..l!y C"rnlrr Alla~u Norma l lloun
\f-.11 )'. ,\ ,..11 n All Cmtt'I'S fftllmt' .-mal
hounofoprration
Allt'nCmlt'r"''illrt'fnainopenf'ridloy,April
tolorallbusdt'parlures.
Nol.f' : All con tract foodservl« from t'ird.:ty ,
,\pril201.hbrrakluc.thfOU&hSuncbyNt l.unclol Apri l z:J. • ·ill br 11 the UnivrTail)
Cta ttr.
THE T OP SPOT
Friday, April
13,
THE POINTER
1973
11
Maximus Triumphant In lntramurals
. On Apr. 3, Gluteus Maximus
overcame 2 West Burroughs
and the effects of a two week
lay-off to become the In·
tramurals Basketball Cham·
pions. The final score was 66 to
56.
A strong Gluteus defense in
the first ball forced 2 West to the
outside and try lor the long
shots. Maximus, on the other
band, was able to drive to the
basket almost at will. Gary
Sager and Pat O'DoMel did
most of the Maximus scoring in
the hall, each having 9 points.
The only reason that Burroughs
wasn't blown off the court was
the fact that they were able to
hit from 20 to 25 feet out. Ron
LaFond and Dennis Riddle were
the leading Burroughs scorers
in the first hall with 7 and S
points respectively. Both teams
were rusty in the first half due
to the two week break in action
as is eviden t In the 26-20 halltime score. In addition, 2 West
lost one of their main guns when
Steve Norlin was side-lined
ea rly in the first hall with an
ankl e injury. No rlin, who has
been one of the leading scorers
lor 2 West all season, was forced
to sit oul the entire game.
Ron LaFond exploded lor 17
points in the second ball as both
teams seemed lo shake the
effects of inactivity.
This
resu lted in a better all-round
~~.ame lor bot h teams. In fact, 2
West was able to tie Maximus
several times in the second hall.
LaFond's effort was not enough
to offset Gary Koy's and Pat
U 'Donnel's
hot -s hooting,
however. O'Donnel broke loose
tor II points, while Koy netted
14, most of which occured just
wtren it seemed that Burroughs
might seize the lead . The
~laximus lead held, and Gluteus
~laximus captured their second
uoajor Championship of the
year.
IMaximus took the
football tiUe in November.)
Leading scorers lor Maximus
included Pat O'DoMel with 20
points, Gary Koy with 18, and
Gary Sa~er with 11. Other
Maximus scorers were John
Pieper with 8 points, John
Wright with 4, Sherman Gress
with 2, and Ken Golomski also
with 2 points. Don Sater also
netted 2 points.
Leading scorers for second
place 2 West Burroughs in·
eluded Ron LaFond with 25
points, and Dennis Riddle with
11 points. Other scorers for
Burroughs were Tim Kress and
De Wayne Schmidt with 6
points, and Steve Norlin, Kim
llale, and Gerry Weber, all with
2 points.
and an effective fast break to
defeat Gerry Roebuck and the
Black Student Coalition, 56 to
30, in the lntramurals consolation game held March 20.
This game determ ined the third
and fourth place finishers in the
lntramurals basketball playoffs.
The first half saw both teams
play a rather uninspired brand
or basketball. Gerry Roebuck
was easily the bali's outstanding player, scoring IS of
BSC's 18 points. Roebuck's fine
perfomance was not, however,
enough to offset the PSE last
break when it finally started
rolling. This last break and the
ina bility or Roebuck's team-
mates to score more than 3
points gave PSE a 2S to 18 lead
at the hall.
Both teams started cold in the
second hall. The difference
between them was tbat BSC
stayed cold while PSE began to
run away with the game. While
their defense held Roebuck to
only 8 points In the second half,
PSE's very physical offense, led
by Steve Gresholt and Russ
Kurth widened their lead to 26
points to win going away, 56 to
30. The game's leading scorer
was Gerry Roebuck of BSC with
23 or the teams' 30 points.
Gresholt and Kurth scored 13
and 12 points respectively,
while Tom Sheel and Mark Wolf
scored 10 points each.
TURN THOSE USELESS SKIU5
INTO HAND50ME
BUDWEISER. PATCHES
For exomple, if you can hug cans pretty goad,
you can wear a -Budweiser World Champion
Pa tch. J ust hug, next to your person,
o record bunch of empty Budo cans.
Record to beat is 38.
CoosolaUon G1me
Phi Sigma Epsilon capitalized
on a balanced scoring attack
THE LANCER
MIKE, LORI, & RON MURRAY - Your Hosla .
MONDAY- OLD MILWAUKEE NIGHT
Can or draft 23c
Laneer Wine $8.00 5th - 7-9 P.M.
PITCHER NITE 75e
TUESDAY -
WEDNESDAY -
10c TAP BEER 8-10 P.M.
THURSDAY- LADlES N1TE 25o AU Drinks
FRIDAY- HAPPY HOUR 4-7 P.M.
50c AU Drinks
SATURDAY SUNDAY -
AFI'ERNOON CHESS and
TOURNAMENTS
COOL HAND LUKE NIGHT
Wallbulger~~ 65e
Harvey
THE lAfKER PRESENTS GREAT BANDS
APRIL 1S - WATERMELON
APRIL 14 - UWSP'S OWN RAVEN STRAIT
APRIL 18 - AMERICAN TEA
APRIL 19-21- MANCHESTER FROM
BACHELORS ill In MADISON
FUTURE AlTRACTIONS
DADDY WIDSKERS
E DEN' Sl'ONE
CIMABBON
POOR BOY
BLUE TAIL n.Y
BUDWEISER
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS?
WHAT'S GOING ON?
Oh, happy day. At laat aomeone is doing
aomething positive about the current
world shortage of champions.
Budweiser is sanctioning five absurd events
in which college youths can oet records and
earn wonderful, big Budweiser potches
(7~xs~. waahable, genuine colors) .
Besides the breathtaking BUD CAN HUG
above, there are four other ways to be a World
Champion. Get details at your favorite beer
store where you aee the " Budweioer World
Championship" display!
Do one, beat the record, t~U IU about it on
a p<ntcard and get your marker pen ready
lor inscribing your particular specialty
beneath where it says " World Champion."
(Maybe you've detKI~ thot
this iJ not an o fficial, rigid·Nies
"canted." But it iJ a Jot of fun,
e~en if you con ' t bre<~k the
records. You can, thovgh,
can't you?l
TO GET YOUR IUDWfiSfll
WOIIU> CHAMPION PATCH
(EVEN If YOU t'ON 'T SET A
RECORD), JUST WRITE YOUII
NAME, ADDRESS AND WHAT
YOU DID ON A POSTCARD.
NO PIIOOf Of r\IIICMAM llfQI.I IdO. Otfll VOID WMII:l f"'Iftll41(0 I ' ~AW, AUOW JrOUI WUU fOI O(U ... lU. OUU Ia""' ..a..eil ll . ltD.
AIUt(IIKt ·IUKM. lltC • U . UMJ
'
12
Friday, April 13, 1973
THE POINTER
Buffy Burke Takes A Ride On The Reading
b)
Ti m S..IIi u n
hlfltol)8on t..·ootlhtlnt
r>. pl'nsiv~ red properties
Joe
Tlw fii"Jt aMual off-camp.~~
MCIIIOpOiyTOIIrnamtt~t•--- ~
Apr 1 iruide 1 local downtown
sal-. •ndthtbuylr:wand
wllln&olrnlttta~~
alaf~~r"-p;o~
Thll!sblflnal
po~rtlclpa nts lnthtt""''" '
piiCIIfd matth Wft'l' AI Bloom
t thelaMn- I; ~"Buffy"
Jlurto.e, I Slaldl : KaUI')' 8ro'6'TI,
UW-SP ~tracklate: Joe Burke,
Siasdl , Dub Eduafman. Vet
ICI'"Jdualt , and WiUy White,
Siasfti.
111e &amc omc~lly lxpn
• ·hHnch pbye'l' roll«! the dim
c-ards the Community Chest
ca rddf'CII , thvsdetennlnln&the
PfOI)I'rDI'derlnwhlchlhe••mc
wu to pl"ocftd, A c..-d of
approJ ima tcly'3o Monopoly
cnthusluUI was on
d11~r
for
la~·orite
hand to
pl.lyen.
Art'SGUndiii.JI'OIII'WIShurd
fronolht'CI'OIO'd\OhenOMOIIM'
l)rC'·Iour rwy undllrdop, WiUy
White. landed on Pa r\ P"-ce
and immtdiat~y bol.w}ll it The
mood cha n sed qulclr.ly,
however, when the huvy
la.-orite, JoeBurb , arrlftdan
Nl UIIIK'nlplftl Boilrdwalk his
suond time a ro11 nd an d
&bmmtd down MOO to d«lan
aulJ'i&ht o• ·nrnhlp. nu mo~.
ill thoueh $OlWICI at llw tirM.
pro•·ed to be the doWTilll for
both Burt~ and Whit~.
Meanv.-hL~. U!~Dtha"toplou
'"'"~ be!IIC purdlued in a
hurry from the blink. Edual·
11\111 lll'lftted hiS moMy 011
M&rvLII Ctrdtfts and Atlantie
Avenu~. two of the hlchiY
~rdedyrllowlol.l.
Brown
controlled Padfic tnd Norttl
~rolina A•-e- !the pow~rful
IU~nlattt . ...·hHeBloo-mbuftl
Burho~IWOIII"liii'Cflou.
• ·hit.Wl'ntrgrabbtdSt Olarln
Placoea!ld Virginia Avrnue.
8oth vtility mmparH$ "'"""
to J or8urkr . andthe railroads
wur divided amon1 f011r
play<!n. All ollhe rem•inin&
bil lata Wotf(" lpi'Ud oul.
Tht' frant ic bllyinl pou
mmplelelyby-passedlhestvm
uu, leavina lht' undesirable
U.. Ltic-l.ledillotranu.n W1 and
IMConnrclicutAv~Jroup
unown ed .
Ot'nny Burtt
rra llnd that and bought the
trU.ire sldtot thf!board ut"ept
OrientalA•·tnue.
Tht lint IICIUDI bold mo••t of
the pm~ wu made by Dtnny
Burtt.
Although a tremely
shor tonca5h.Burktsplurjtdto
build holrlll on both Baltic and
Med itttranun. On hll nrat
tum ,.·ith the eke. he lm·
medllltly went to jail whtr1! he
t'OUid \.like lime out to plot
Jtnuc . Sevtnloflhevc~n
ployua Jc offed II Burtt"s
t ,.·orftllotsln:aprnsur~po.-er
play.thutgl¥inc thellumlord
)"f'l another Nmplett bloclr..
Ten minutes toter, Bloom wu
bankrupt for 1100d,llavlng
landftlon a latalllllnob Avrnlll!
..·ithl"lottl.
Brown w:" no t nlc tl y
bu Lldinca ruleslllte dynally
herself. She&llllcontroUtd the
n1 lghty two llfC!C'n Iota, but
wu 'l;;comln11 incr~ur:'gly
Murdo~.
The ollly Mher
' 'Ct-1
proper1y 1M owned
wtofjall" card,whkftlhe hld
Brov.ll.,.~repeated l yvic·
bttntrylnato~ell alnce tht'nnt
timiztdby"W~k<i!""conls.
Bloomkt'fllp<~yinl damJciiiC
rentsont'\'eryone's pi""Cipft"tla.
while Jot Burtlt llt'VH moved
far due to low dice nwnbft-1.
BIDOI'ft"lllllly rul mui'L:IL of
IIII"Yival durina: the MXI how
,..~,...the "'caslonal Urnes whm
hewouldllndonf"retPtrtinl.
whenhewouldpic:kup1llthe
~hintheklt[)',whidl~eklom
l mOIIIltedt.omuch.
'll'b!nDtnnyBurbfinaUygat
Wtol}lil.ht hit lboniiUI.. A
(hant"e card pv~ him Illinois
FREE
~
Both De nn y Burke and
t,;duaf man ar1ued 1tronsty
agains t th~ mo¥1!, btciUst
IJurltehl doverUOOOiolddltlon
t.o the shuns, ,.·hile Eduafman
wugctUna rk:hon hls Manin
C1rdem ~mpire whlte picking
lip loo~e (hlnat wi th the
railroads. llowe¥er. it didn"t
INLI\ft" Wha t the Val ~ WU,
bKau&e JOI! Burke ond V.'llite
mergedan)"IO"Iy.
l mmt'dlattly fol.lowinl the
mtt"JH the two ju mped Into
:~ction. ll."hlt~ IT>OI"IIIItd I o~w
Burk~'l lots and liWd \ht MW
cash to put one houH udl on
Boardwalk and Part Pb~.
beii'C fully awa re that the
~;;:~~:::~:n~
While Burk~ w11 lo jill. the
ather five playn-s ran Into
Nlthi"OILI luck.
Whitt lnd
1.1dlca.
~St. Dlnleabl«k, but the
lulu~ apprared dim without
atl)'lriOM)'IOtft'd. buildinp.
"Thttlm"cavahtuptoJor
Burke and Willy Whitt. Both
hid plnlly of OC!C'ds to imprftsl"'lproptr1;n,butneither
had 1ny money. T11cft'fcn,
theydeckledtou•-efat"eby
tryirc- o1 w most IIDdtrNLnded conrivlng moves 1:11
the game. 'Nhite and JOI!Burt~
dtc ted to go lllftal and
MERCE.
TM rm1alnin1 two pliY\'1"1.
t::duofman and Denny Burk~.
WHt'Wtraged. A merger would
mun thAt the o~tlon wwld
rm trol both lhr BoardwaU.
blockandthePaciflcst reebi,ll
..-~n u the entire ~ut 1ide
JtrfC'I of the St. Char les esl.l l~
1/ld tht drt'adtd New York
1\ v ~nuf' . thus bruklna up
Sloorn'l hoptsolfontro!Unllhe
"'lire lndLJLnarftlbl«k lnthr
nut ba lf·how . BLM"k~ coll«ted
lantu t lc sums frorn a lmo:st
eYtfYOIIt' • ·ho lll"hipped arOI&'Id
~c . .. 01nd l;Lndfd on hilL s.ttic:
AVrftiH', complrt~ '""L\h ho\~1.
Ev~ntually the rent and
fhai!C'e rarm cauahl lip t.o
Sloom
Trulylowoncash ,
Bloom luLd the misfortune to
land on ,,..., conJ«tiNie hol~ l
lots .,..ned by Denny Burb lnd
,..u dow to INLnltrvptcy. To
IUrVive, Bloom sol d Burke his
w• •
ttnmlnutesofth~IJm~without
~f'\IUL\tytheflnJIIrial
roofcil\·edinonhrrandlbewu
f~ftlto-.tll thetwop-een loll
t.o J oe
Burt~
•
for«loM
f~tr. Mi1111tesllter.shewu
dtadbroke.
With both Bloom and Brown
out of the xtion as dtdared
bankn.Lp\.1. the contest took on
ldded prnsLM"~. Joe Burt~
rm trolled the orsrce lou a.
wriluthep-eens.buthehadno
build i,.. and only 1&0. Whitt
mnnwhilt had Part Place and
~ywasduetoswingby.
Th~
move bldlfiml. u botll
Denny Burte and Eduf,fman
uiltd thrwghwlthouttroublt.
That pill U!t j)fUIUrt 00 the
newly meraed dUID, •• both
playn-shadtopD!<Inftlyby
the M arvlnC~rdeNsldtr.
JOI!I
&rlt~madethctripllfelyby
Iandi ni on a Commvni ty
Oint. UnfortUnately, V.'llite
nr•·erhadaehlnc:t. llt'lhoolt
doublts, roltedthedk-.lplll,
lnd onnbol. "Go" by hllli!!l
theenrmy'•Biltlc:Aw. hotel.
Whitecllimedhl•tum was flat
broke , IIOthemefltdtumwu
allowed to play after tran' fn-rinl ttl~ entire west slOe.
Including Boardwotk. to the
oppoMnbi.
The WhltNoe Burt~ G.lo lllU
had on~ lric: k up Ita sleeve.
White pulltd 0111 sevotral SIOO
billshe,."IIM¥1nlandputa
lew houses on St. Chlrla lnd
furthu down on New York.
Theywl ltedallltietooiOiltlfOr
the mov~. betau&e Ill~ opposiUOil bllilt hot~bi all 0\Jotf the
OOard.
Wlt llln fiv e Lll lnut u, t he
mused partnenhip wu
tmlshed fore¥er. J ot Bvrk~
neatly ovoldfdllllnol• Avenue
andllndeddlrfCtlyootopof
Marv inC i rdfN . 'nMII~
Both Burkt' play~rt had
(OII"LIMII\IIfltrllwllame. Joe
Rurte uld, " If I wou)d'w
mn-gfd with Willy ear lier, w~
.. oukl"¥ellaughtued Ulenl.
The advance tok~n to BcMrdwalkcardwuduetot'OIIIellp
shortly."'
Dtnny Burtlt noted. ''The
t.aulf'otd at m~ when 1 bepn
buyinc th~ slum arra . They
Ttally r011redwhen I put tome
hoUitlonmy8a ltlc. But what
lhe'-ll , mymow~paidoff . Thty
i.;Lulf'otdat Edl1011 ,too. AI fir
u thollt L{ll)"l ""concerned ,
ltt"sjusluy w~tooklhemfora
friend ly ride on the Rtadinl
Railrlllld."
BIKES! ~
STUDENTS, REGISTER AT SANDY'S
FOR THE WEEKLY DRAWING FOR
FREE, 10 SPEED, E~ROPEAN, RACING
BICYCLES ! !
~ NO PURCHASE
'
NECESSARY
REGISTER NOW AT SANDY'S ON-A-CONNA YO " owE-IT-TO-YOURSELF
1617 Di'f'ition
eM)
Download