"War, like any ather racket, pays high dividends to the very lew. But what does It profit the maues? The cost of operations Is always transferred to the people who do not profit." -Brig. Gen. Smedley D. Butler USMC (Ret.) SERIES VIII , VOL 16 UW·STEVENS POINT. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1973 NO. 16 Credit Transfer A Problem For Vocational Student Phose Ill I Still Owe On Phase II First Black UW-SP Graduate Speaks On Minority Education IJy Ca rol l.ohry Cart.,.·rilbt Gerald Van~. tM first black graduate of L:W-SP . ume back to the Unl\'l'n1ty last F'ruiay, F'eb. 9 to speak abou t the admm•st rator's role in the tduc:u lon of mmo ntics Vance. whogradua !ed from Pomt '" 195-4 15 the prinCipal ol 2Ut St r~ School and 11 a school ildmln!StratiOn spraah.sl V<~~n« eJ~plamed the vanous tasks an administrator must handle m runnmg a sc:hool. The fu·st. he said. '' commumty-school relationS Vance sa1d thu as probatMy the most 1mport.a nt t.ask an educator h.as today Vance sa•d '" the black community there""" problems Wll.h comm urut y-school r ela t1ons lie s<ud par~ts frel the schools have fa1lt'd them ~ause th~ r cb1ldren are no1 ~ •ne educ<~ ted. One solution to t h11 problem, suggested by Vance. •• to gt't the parents to beline m the school and to work w1 th tl!!ach~ and administrators A second task of adm inistra tors IS m the arl!!a of curnculum and lllSt ruchon Vance suggeted tn this nru thttt m LZSt ~ me=~nt ngful ehange. ro;'ew ide.• ha.-e lO be formed. M sa id. to make learning mo rt of a real ltft o:prrienCe. 1M tht rd task 11 pupal penonnd Vanre satd lhe myth 11 tha t the black communtty 11 one Jarse area of di.tconttnt. He uld this Is not true Vance s tated wh1tt tuchtrs ha\~ to be- made a~o~.·are ol the strmgth5 and "'-eakne55ots of thto black communtty a nd that the myths poople hnve mus t be Btt nc ked Vance sta ted the feunh area, staff personnel. 1sa d•tricul t task ol thto adm irust rator Ue scud Ol"'e ha's to get people lO ..,..ork together and a gr~ on the goals and objeoctives of a school Once the goa ls of the school ta~ set, sa1d Vance. thm the s taH knows m \lohat dJrKtton they ar e goang The firth task of the adrmn•lt rator deals "'-"lth phySJcnl fac• litJes VanCt' pratsed the sc:hools m ~111"'-·aukee 's iMer city as bemg clean and ~o~.· eiJ · kept He sa1d the tnnl!! r City has some new schools btu the older b.uld•ngs ha\·e all been r~va ted and ~ppl1ed w1th nt"'- mattnals. . Vance stud school val ues have to be ch <~nged so sc hools ca n mM k1ds where they are and IJi ke thrm tu far as they can go. He sa1d schools must INch k1ds to realne the~r goals and ob)K" tiVQ When asked how whne tc.ac:ht'f'l fit mto predomu\antly black schools. Vanc:t' s~ teod a See Page 4 8\' SC.rve Okoaek Vocati on al t ec hn ica l education, a rapidly grawi ng a1t~natlve lO the four year co llege . Is posing so me problems and , a pparently, offering &Orne opportunities to ad mi ss ion departments throuahout the Unh~rsity ol Wisconsi n system St udents who attend a voca t ional teochnicalschool and then decide to attend one of the ac:hools In the UW avstem often encounte r d if t!c ult les in tnnsfe rr l ng credits from the voeational school to the university they choose to attend . The reaso n for these difficulties Is that lhe credit trans.fer pol icy has neve r been made uniform throughout the UW-System. Until th e Board of Rege nts a pproves such a policy, whieh m1ght Lake plac:-e next month , each stAte unh·ersity ,..iU be free to ~~ up its own guidelines on accep tance of transfer credits from vocationa l schools. The Impli cations of the current si tuat.im are that 111 s tude nt could sa\·e money If he chose to a ttend a \'OCationa l technic a l schoo l , gaining transferable credits, and then tramfer to a uni\~f'llt y lO work on his degree. The cost of attending a \IOc:a t.ional school Is only S32 00 if the atudent ls a residm t of the vocllltlonal school d!stnct ! North Central Tech Institu te l ~o~.• hile the UW tuit•on IS $259.00 per semeste r This kind of plan. ho..·ever . assumes that the vocationa l school s tudent 1s certain about whic h crechts would trans fer to the university he wished to attend. It also a.sswnes the student ~ans lO majo r in 011n a.ru programmed by boU1 the vocal!ona l school a nd the unh·erslty J ohn l.arsen of the Ad· miSSions Orfice here. 1s a membe r of the com mittee "'-'hic h completed the or iginal UW transfer policy proposa l whic h was up (or approva l by the B0011 rd of Regenls , s uggested the school most ..·tlllnK to acctpt credits from vocational teehnical s tude nts IS UW-S tout l....:lrsen no ted several programs at Stout in the ar e011 of industrial «'duc:ation which m1ght be attracti\•e to students w•lh1ng to tra nsfe r from the teochnial sc h ools Stout t r a nsfers techmcal courses fro m all around the state mak1ng 11 the mostlrrucnt of all the schools 1n the s ys tt•m 1n this a rea . UW· Plattvtl le , a lso willing to tr:a nsft r a large amount of thee credt ts. does not aeeept as many as does Stout Where docs UW-SP s tand m the va rying policies" llere, the hm1ts seem to be mo re s trict as to the lurxb and arnOWits o( voc:a t1onal technic al school tTed• ts whtch are accepttd l...a rsen nott.-d three schools in the Mate ~o~.· htch olfer some college level courses M 1lwaukee Tec h n1c:al College . Ma d ison Technical College and Niaolet T ec hn i cal Co ll e ge I n Rhinelander. This uni versity ac«pts up to n credits of c:ollege le\·el cou~ from these scllools. It also accepts up to eight cr edits fr om the Oahkosh Tec:hnlu l Institute's Natural Resou rctl pro&nm. Several ol their COUrMS were evaluated by the faculty hen a nd deemed acceptable for credit here. lt is poss!ble lO get up to 28 credits from the No rth Central Technical Institute in WaUYu ,.; th the ex«ption of one c:ommunica llons count:, all of these are In the business area . They include courses s uch as accounting, typing, shorthand, data pr()(ftSing, and machine ca lculations. Thls policy hllll been in existence since 1968. Larsen noted lhe progranu In Wausau hue been In operation longer !Mn many ol the newer \"OCatlona l technical schools . This is the extent of credit granted to studmta here ,..ho ha\le gone to vocational technica l schools. It does not include the YTA Oilltrlct which Stevms Point ill ln. which Is headq u a rte r ed In Wisconsin Rapids. " We don' t wa nt to say that \'OCntional schools a rm 't good schools" , l...arsen said " Their purpc:lM' 11 different from the W\1\"t'T"Sities , or at should be or else we' re wasting a lot of money The•rc:ounesgen~a ll y a re gea r ed more towa r ds specific "'-"crk and are less theoret1ca l In na ture "' He added, " Dete rmination of whether o credit will be tran· sftrred lies m08llv on the cat.aloiue descri pt•on. If we have quest ions we us ually not1fy the department chalnnan to get their opinions as to "'-"hether the course meets the reqwremenlll that they have .. The Hoard of ttegents was unable to adop t a unifo r m transfe r poltcy a t i!JI t-' ebruary meet mg . .as had been expected Larsen s a1 d a some what mod1f1ed proposa l "'-' Ou ld probabl)' hue to be prepared bu t. as of now, not hmg rem am~ sen led A meet•ng of the vice chancellors wall be K htdull!d 50me 11me before the Board 's nu t m~tlng 1n ~l a r ch , to loot at the proposals. Bob Schunk , of Student Per· sonnel Se rVIce at Sorth Cenlr.ll Techn1ca l lnstatute an Wausau . expre5std a less than opllmLStk: \ "It'"'-' of ho""· the \'OC<I Ilonal schools will fare before the F"ebruary regents' meeting. Schunk sa1d, "' ~l uch of thiS transfer situat ion 11 a political game. and the s tudents art s u!fe nng beuuse of it The door shouldn' t be c:IO&ed lO the students from the 'I()Ut.ional Khools. Perha ps we should sit down and evaluate our cour-ses tndividually but in any caae, we feel that voc:ationaJ schools shouldn'tauffer becauae they're able to P"ocl.lce a product for le55 money." Ftldoy, FebNory 16, 1973 ..... I'OINTU Poge 2 Nancy Moore: "An Ombudsman Role ••• " Interview ......,..........,,,.. ,._ralaiMulo...-.lllertb)'llawlll&•••u• ~-t : '" I would .111ft' that f..-« and violmf'f!area problftl1 but I don"! tnowthot womm are In)· tess pront to 1M uae tJI for-ct andviolmcf!lhanmm. lfthn-tllldlar"lllt, l lhlnlt ''will co...., from 1M fan that force and •1olm<:'e no longtt bt ldmtlfi~ w•th malent'ss. Talting !he military, if it ia no lonifrC'OIIIidr.-..da•·ayolprovlnaone's ,,,mtyto,vpbttnthf!warorlobtagmr..al« ;o·tuatf!\"f!r. tMn tMre will probably be> les. tncmtlvtlobrila.-ethatw~y Th•twillbtlhe only,.·ay l can5«thatwill chan&e. ! don't thinltthat,.·oma.are, byn.ature.amtlf!lnd mm are nolmt. I don't 11«fP1. that aaumptlon '" ,..,II ,..1\ioots .. oiDr.er: '"Ia lbf! ~-. •N'II"t IUdl .. , .. . . ._,k:atlytok.t•,..itioo... tJoatmn-dy lf"f","f" IO ntkUN lhf! \l bfra\hra of !Jot - ~~HIIty aodha'trraUy_.. ,towa,..aiU' ... bt-uoatinrllU(tf .. ttbill tht ill otl\•0.0'" M-~ =··wffl, if womm art I'Hlrkt~ to t:dk...-o S~ : hllo•ill&aa April 1111 appolnt•rat by Cll...,ctllorLn S. D,...yfu. Salle)' M_.r aua<nfdttt.,_k ... f/IS~I Ad•·'-to tM Cllaa"llor- Womtll"l A!fain lnAui(Vo toflhatyn r. A •r mbo:r oltllt t:nall•ll Dr~rtraclll . M_... 11o1• l httt: Mgnn: B.A. from Uoh t"ornt Collflt>: ~I.A . '"'"' Sorllt ,.·utft"D Ua h·rnk r aall Ph.· D . lrem U.t" Uah·t"nity of Ill inois. ll r r clcK--to.-.1 dlsw·ntlon Ia Kraallnocr Drl mo Wll - ifK'"'• Ill Bu comfdla. ~fort )Milia& tllt S~•-•• PoiDr. IIAU)' Ia 1"-'. ) IOOrftiUJIItattHUah·tnkytl lllllloll andat .\u rora t:utll l&b Stbooi. SII.,buoo mlUI.Ir)' ~acl•&,....ll. Tilt" • ..,.- ,..ltiooa b lt.llf·tlmt", aUo wla& M_.r t .... ,.,,.alaill& hlf of Hr llmt> lw dull ... r ... unrd ,.-11.11 tJot En&JIJ~ lhpar1•ral. ,._,.,.. lilt II IOOt iiOaUy \0 U.adt t•a ~ n-l'llila hucl'll-... M_., D pl'ftftllly COn-)'iiii..,I)' OIIf kff'<ih a~ ...... Sltf! rKfhUOIIUIIUIIU IIT)'Of l ll.IIIIMoo addiU..a l u lar)' lor tiM' ool>itot)' ...... M_.t IJ uob&fd by a 1~lai lllllnlllllllli&l.ef! .. ..-omco"l allan •••DlliiJ tl : ~ ll afrr brc kf! r . aulna at cbaaullor lo r audt"ntk allaln: S. J"'1'b Wooo!U . lluo ef u... Collnr.f" ol Lf'ttrn u d S.:kac:f: Allee C ta..-oo a. bud of womco·o p ll)'llc•l rduu t lon; Ro le od Jullolt c. pcnoa of! l d.lru\Or : J o»o Taylor. uobUulol du.a of uudtotl ; Coll rn Can t y. na.dalf pr-olr.1o0r of art : Mary Crof1. U llll.lol pr ol~1o0rol Eo&llslt; all(! an appolttttt: lrom Womnla IU p erEIIucaU... In atMthloo to t.lot altf!ldJ mno.-4. M...-~ ootrtf!l - Prf!li4Nt J ... " "UWer'l Afnr...aOwt .\rU.. lor Womu Cont mltlft. tbt local Womeo Ia lllp...- t::ll•caU.. aa•tM Mal.t C...-dlot alill& CooocU fw " "••n Ia HICJier t::•calkL • ••~~t•lttleaw•llt_..,.,_ potoil._ tH Uolnnh)' Sr• • Sf!nl« , ..... lllfttfd : '" Dftn wra clteued ill 1laclla. Or. ~~--• a ppo:an \0 bt • dl ook" forth ,.k.'' "htfollo"loJIDr.en-W...wut'OIIIIIIIdH• J•-·• •Ut:• Frb.l.tmtt,-AIJralr.lao.lutur.,~ol U.tl'olater. Polater · · ~- ... t D lbc olplfkaoc:~t of t.h ,....,no·•mo•·r mtDl1 ~- IU It brlalabooto lund amuu l lmpro wt111UI lo Anttrlua lilt!'" ,\ l _.t: " Yu.llhinltitwill. f'lnt.beeiUH whf!n peopll. mtn and womm. a r., frMd from sex Rereotypell. it will 1lvt thtm mort penonal ffftdom. llhlllkthattn.t ltOelinble. ~lretoomanyRricturesthatbothiDel holdin&lhia kindofpolition,ye., th.l\wol.lld lxtn~e.But . thepur-poHollh.,positonllto htlp move womm intD aU &trelon\l of aflodtmic mdeavor and !hat would inclvde admiaiRratlon . 11-Uppc:R.inaway,youare ri&ht. Aalon&n"'·e t.avethenotion that thtre ila women'soffif'f!andlhat,.·e.arf! lttf:'Pln& lhatldmtltyof ,.,·omm as di fferent from men. ,.,.., will hDVf that. But. I lhlnk lha\'1 ~euary In 1 Jtf!p towanlaettlng rid ol ~ .11animportant idtnti fyingfeatu~ So. in thtlongtenn. ifthilolfin!andothttofTicet hilt! thil and the movement are aucceuflll, I lh illk w.,wiUgrtoulofthlsboxtJihavln& ,.,-omm's oi'fica and mftt' l." Palater: ••fstbt reclllcrimlutlooltaplal& ...... noolbhca .. u ......... i art the 1..-moltlok" aiiiiWIIIt ll .... lnJdo...,aliootlt It! " ,.,_ .. : "On..ol tht problmut wrth tlllcnmillauon il that ..-e tend to think of diacrlminatlon 11-bting co~ioua and ,..! =~ind ~~~.::.~ {~""!! Ylotioulkindthatllhinllilprenkoltherel• lheklndt.hat isjuSI ~on common ....,mptktnl ob«<t peoplt. and our almply thinlt in& that ae~: cl.ISIUtcallonl arelm· pon.ant daSiificationa. That 11. ten ~ears •ao.or l!"'mtlveyeanago,lt wouldl\lve bem consldtr~ quJtf! pn.;pe- to deddt tMt 1 Wife lhoWd mt bt employed bei:IUM htr lltdbandalreadyhadajob:thll t it llatJ&ht monf!)' market and lht money ought to bt lpreadaround. lbatklndol.aumpllonlla form ol dda'lmlnation. It D tdliq a woman t.h.at. breiUM lbe dtoM to mttiT)' a profeuional man, even thotJ&h &he II a profeuionll hfntU. 1M lhDukf not follow tht same rule:ll ol employment. If a woman ltmplymtlrriesal!lanalldhemakuo&ood llrinl. !hm it ilapprow~ t.Ntt ahec.ln ltttp lhlllivin&- Bu.t.iflhechoooeatomaiT)'I profeulorYLim.an.thatba~tobelnher :.~..,:~~lheW:IT:"~w "l thintalotollhmlar.,trldiUona. Why. ::n1s~:~ tr::;.=:a~$1~ On.et~that men.inthepaSiatleaR. h avenot llvm thoulht a bout it . They don't laiVf! that imq., ol wornm •• admlni$\ratoro: ao. \My areiiGC thou&htolia theKI«tlon proeeu. Another il lhat women h.av., 110t thou&h t of Utemsdvf!l 11 a dm lnlstr~t on, 10 they don"t lpply I« !he~ Thosear., formlof di~eriminalio11 lhat nil\ but they art .-t netetUril)' !hi! kind whl!f~ aomebody 1its down and &&)'1. " I don't lilte womm, or I won"\ havt 1 woman in my df!partmtnt." Th«l!m.a)'btth.llltlndtlthin&, lhavrhtard hawt on thtm lhll ~ lhtir lndiwidtal. fuUde•·tlopml!nt. So, l woul d viewlhltlla potitivrthin&. t'Mtapplis tothlnp hll.t ftflplo)'ment • whydomenwbool'f!IIGCindtMd, for .,.am~ \0 likf! to work in a pottlcllllr um., ilfQUmef! and bt lht 10le Thai. breadwin.IIH \ al . havt\Odothat womm who do 110t Clrf! for 1M tractmonat ""- al.a ~~~~ 1M appott1111ily to do oth« .............!" ~:~'in.~·w:uo.,':;! '::!e~ ::.:~~nd~ - thatpeoplellavf!allec~thatthatntruein ~ca-. But. l clrl"treaii)'IUbltantlat., l'.uater: " " -kat Hrvk n - . . JOOr otflu 11 falllilyliftbecalaftbl!nmftland"-omtft CIIWIOI impoM, throu&h 1\tnotypU. m-11Ut k.indltJibrillvKit"onlhfir l~lnd dtUdrm.'· Polat..r: -- ~' 11.11 pri•OI'J ,..wr•• Ia Allltrln • lllt btla& lorrt aad w......«. M JM thillk tblt tht womn "l mowemN\CQ cootrlblte\O tUmlaatill&lorrrlndvlaolnu 11 prilldplft Ia A•rrln• lilt 01" ...UI •• almpl)' ... wr IIIWf! womn ,.,,...rail aod -~ .. , "'Tllemllnfunctionthatlwould now. llthoi.Wh it 11&1 110t perlormtd thll .v~_. lu..-toonvery~fully.il -tJihdptne womm tl !hey fer! they ll.avt been diiCMmLnlled againll Ln ltl)' Mpt'll:t IVL ombudsman role u w?tat I would wi~ m)' )Db 01 So far. an!Mftrllwmestr r. lh.lv.,had DniJ lhrer Rudmts mme ln. N I think that't btcaUM: not very many Jl'"OPit know much ab\Jtlt the olfke Alao, mr btinllf<IIH'SI.er~ uploettprobablyhaaaom~hin&todowlthlt. Alto • ., lwfullot ol m)' mrrp h.u to bt dir...rtcdtowanl wrltlnaout!Mitovn-nment daaunmts and, to tell you the tnlth, a lot of " "Ot"lt has to btdonefor thll!&ovn-nment. I don't know If it will, ultimately, bt prod!K'twe. Whcone--er you ha~., a bureauc:raey drcldetMtyouhlvetodom-1a.lnthlncl,lt mltynot lxthtbest thlfll for an Individual (a mpus. Out , ,.,.., Mve to hllve t.hls Af· tlrmalivt- Action P lan prrplred f« the IOI"emmmt. auppoledly lh lt year. That tnc: ludes pi"(IVin&• lot of tluntl l lhlnk w., cont. top. 7 'That man over there soy that o wom a n needs to be helped Into carriages, ond lifted ove r ditches , and to hove the best place everywhere. Nobody ever helped me Into carriages. or over mud puddles , or give s me o best ploce .... And oln 't I o woman? look at me . l ook ot my orm I I hove plowed ond planted ond gathered Into barns , and no mon could head m e .... And ain 't I o woman? I could eot as much os a man when I could get ft. and bear the lash os well ... And a in't I o woman? I hove horned thirteen children and seen them most all sold off Into slavery. A !] d when I cried out with o mother's grief, none but Jesus heord ... And ain 't I o wom an?" Sol~urner Truth :Womon 's Rights Convention ot Akron , Ohi o in 1851 Staff l::dll.w: C. £ . Rutlt.owUI Auoc:lete EdltGt" : .ltMiferUrban Editor : c.,,. .............. .\11h11ot E41tor: JaneS.dtally Future Elllt«: AI Jen){M F utor., A11ht.1111: Dan MeGiynn So:urtarkl: She llyLuta Lyna Roba(k ~~:~<~:..~" Kf!ith alb Bill Kennt7 Teclt CUw: Chip Blalow Ann Merca rrlll PatSol)e Shirley SplttltmriRI!f The Pot•~er It a J«and dau publlc.atlon, publbbtd weekly ckirinl the IChool yea r In Stl!"'tnt Potnt, Wilc:onal n ~1. n... Potnler II 1 ualwnity publleatlon , publit hedu nde r aulhorily&ranltd to \hi o .. r.s ~ R?:tJ~:' ~~- u~l:'!!1! Nf!il Dn-ring l.a youtUII.- : Bob Kellerman Ad ,\ llnl &rr: Statuti. Publicat ion COIU ue plidbytheS!IIttJIWIM:onaln undercontnctaawarcStdbythe Stile Prlntlr"lll S«llon, State ~.~:..~ Bill Powtn ~=~ t~~J!:· opr r atlona l Bullttln t ·2• of Ru1fon1 M... ,.,: Srpttmbn- 1. Ifni. ~1?,· A~t LlrryCUman ~~~ Darlene Pttenon Dlvf!Cnriter StneOitonelt ;:: ' F,.doy, February 16, 1973 THE I'OIHTtlt Poge 3 Different Sons: The UW-SP Vets For Peace t:d ltor'• notto : ,\ftf' rhotoh'f' yurs and t"'uty· 'b da ys. Amf'rlca't combat rolt- In \'lt"laam rnd. Oiohtr contlBun In tbr ml"db, "'bUt- IU lrt- told Am torlu's ru c tion to tht- nf'&otlatt-d ,.:rHmrnt is mlud . ,\l uy Pf'Oplr n1l3 ht UPf'<l that for thto UW.S f' \ ' tis for Pun thto Ja nuary '!ith "Ct"asr· flr r" in \' lt-tnam marked lhr end ot a uuse. The Pointer In an atlt'mpt to anu.·rr thl quf'ttlon for th r nmpuJI and tbr rommun lty. ''bltC"d lhf' ''f'b r«f'ntly. h., olfklally romf' to u By Dan McGlynn ~ Vet.s for Pea« first emerged, th rOlJ&.h tbr efforts of five or su1 .nd.iv•du.als. as the Portage County Veterans for Peace 1n March of 1971 , iThe)' were latrr to bfocome a unwerstty organu.ahon, the UW.SP Vrlll for Puce, and e,·mtu.ally an area chapter of thto V•rtnam \'eiPrans Against the War , \'\ 'AW The)' are nov.·, •n t-H~I. a ll three organim t1ons George Guyant . now a Portage County Boa rd mrm bfor , ""45 the first cha.rman of the orgam:r.ation. •\ cth·e wtth him m those t'arly dfort.s werE' Dnr Rand, as """II a.s tht· curren t cha•rm an. Str,·e P•otrov.sk• . and curren t treasu rer , DIC'k St-mrov. A«<rdmg to Guy ant, the mrmt~nJup grt"Yo' to nboot ::!2 1n a couple of months. ;~nd reachf'd us peak under h1s chatrmansh1p at " about l3 mem · be:r5" The \('lS w;uted httle ttmC" mtakmg acttOn. and 1n April of '7t about St'\ ' l'fl members. flnancl'd through local donat1ons, JOUrneyed to Washington. 0 C m:. ''an from Apnl 1~ through Apnl %3, \'\'AW mounted demon· str:at•ons tnWash•ngton under "Opt'rat•on fX>we)' Canyon Ill " The c\'t'nts culmma tl'd on frtcb)' a ft ernoon. Apnl %3, .,.,-hen vet~rans jo!athered ou the "'t'Sl front of the Ca plloJ to tum m their ~rations One b)• one the' srrpped up to a six· foot ""'If~ fence ba rr•c:.dC and threv. Sih· ~r Stars. Purple Bra rts and \'•rtnamt'St' C~ of Gallantry on to thto Cap1tol steps Dev.r) Ca n) on 11 •~ documf'ntNI •n a f1lm caiiNI OUI~rrnl Sont, ,..h1ch was shown at I~ Vets f~ Ptace Poht1cal Act10r1 Confertnee a t UW-SP tn October of 72 In u rl y ~l ay of I I , the ''ets sponsored a " teach-in" at UW..sP. Lending thrir ~ervi ces :J.S volunteer s~Uf'rs . they loggt'(l about 30 houn 1n classrooms where lludenls and tn · struclors mdica ted a .,.,.,llingneu to hav~ them Looking bac:k, Guyant is happy .,.,.•th the ..· .:~y the teach ·tn went " The res~ on that ,.u just fantastic . JUSI the gmeral feehns ,.e got out of 1t·,. t' actually pulled the thmg off The kind of responses we got out of thestudenlll. the mst ructors. and a ft erwn rds. the ft"f'dback ""e got I think It v.·as probabl)' them~ .,.,·eU r«rh·t'd action ,.e ·,·e evn donf' locally 1lJffr waa continual fl't"dback for months a fterwa rds " l.ater tn Ma) o! II. tht" vets joined .,.,.,th some of the local clerg)' and lay ~le m sponson ng a candlelight march on Anned f-'orcn Da)' Tha t aummrr tht')' abo marchNI m the 1-'ourth of JulY Paradfo, complete ,,,-•th a speciall)' painted C'Oltin drtaiU,. " the- coR of "'a r " m c:uu.alt y flgurn They l.l5t'd the cofhn again in October of "71 1\ Mrl Stocretary ol DrfmR Mtlvin Ll ird vi11ttd tht' uw-sp campu1 ~id Guyanl. " We fol lov.·ed him ...~.H" he .,.,.~t on umpus . v.·r JUS( non· chalantly ,..alked ~•nd him .,.,.,th our cof· fl n ~ r no110 nonclul lantl)' " In a .,.,-"'k long build·up to Laird't a ppearance, the ''tts came up w1th one of their more imaamat•vr actwms In an attt'mpt to 1mprna upon the com· munttv the naturl! of a war . they conductt'd " leanet bombi na and artillery a tt.tcb." Selec:tma a target fM eac:h nt&ht. they would poll leaflets tnchc.ahn& the results of the " attack" 'The>1r firs t target was the local drafl board office, and Gu)'an l described the " miUKWI" " We IU«<'NlWJy destroyt'd the draft board and about two surroundina blocks . 11 was a very limited artillery hit. ut rem rl)' well·tugeted w~ ""'err sym· pathf'lic w1th !.he prop!~ . l th1nk our casu.a.lty fi aures lhat n1ght ,.H"r about llll k1lled and five wounded or 110meth1ng hke that " The luneu lndtc:att'd f ltller di rt't't h•ts, damage c:Ataed b)' prollim ity to the tArget, or "stray roun d " des truc tion Un their th1rd " miSJKWI " , the Air Forte R«:ru1ting Officr . thto ' '«'ts ran mto a loc:al ordmanc:e protubltmg sx-ting lh.inp on private or public proper!) ""'lhout tbr ownn's cons.ent Under the 'awdance of a local police off~eer , t.he vet.s •err foreftt to 5CTap that third m1st10n Som~of thf' members ,.ert guest.l on local r:.dio talk shov.·s. and dissemination of dittOt"d articles ""as another informational t.act 1c A«''rding to lht" ,·rts. they v.·t'ff "one of the pnme movers in a consolidated voter rt"gltlratlon drwt"," and a lso ..·r rr active in an uns uccess fu l campai a n fo r reap · poruonml'f'lt Gu)'ant K'ft threari)' effort.tof the group as largel y uplo ra tory . " That rlrst )'ear .,.,.e wtre rea lly JUSt sort of aetting our feet on the ground and not real!)' knoWing v.-htre v.·r ""trt' ao•ng to v.·ht'rr our heads were a t At that timr our major goal was educaHon as wr saw 11 , just trying to get acrou to people ,.ha t"''«' :uow as \' l'ls and why ""'t f~l the ""'a)' """ do and tnt'd to set 11 ac:ros.s to the man on the 5lrHt." ~I any ,.·hoopposed tM ,...,. in Indochina fell .,rry to a growmg frustra tion "'lth v.·hat thf')' consldt":red to be a nationa l a path)' to ..·ards 11 Gu)'ant sugested that the local aroup"'u not mtlrely ,.-,thout that frustration " I th1nk that the Nlucattonal .11 pproat:h 50ft of r roded a ftt'r awh1le , 11 bec11me obvious that peoplt' ""ere .,.,·atching tha t boob cube rver)' nigh t and k't'lng men being blown up and nner l'\' t"fl bhnk•na . JUS t walktn& Otlt and grabbmg another ber:r I thtnk that a ltt'f a""hilf' 11 bec:Jme somewhat obviOUS to us that nothm~ ;::~ ~ett1ng across . the) """r~ dfoad to ttk- Sr\H"thelns. last October tht- orpnu.a t100 sponsored 1ts mos r amb1t!Oiis pro)ft'l 10 datt', the Polltlc:a l Action Conlerenc:r. The lhrrc.o day event, held In the Unh·ersity C~ trr fraturNI films . speakers and "'·or lts.hops ~ the wa r tn Indochina . !The orgamu tion had r«eived a Stud~t Senate a llocation wh ic:h was to be used aolely for the con fer~ce It now app.a.rently has been dec:ided that the ,·r ts w• ll be able to we ""hate,·er fun di are left over fro m the confrrencel Though the conferf'ncr drew veterans from around the state and nation, campus and communJt) pa rticipation tn the evmts was mi ntmal '!l.'hile an estimated 130 people partid patNi ln the candle·lig.ht march ""'hic:h began the c:on f~rrncr , atttndance at later t'vent.s • ·as noticeably low For most of the nts. ho""·rver. the ronlf'uncr was a SUtteSS both organ iutionall)' and individuaUy. ' Though the Vets for Ptacr dec:lared their support for George McGo,·ern m the' prnidrn11al prima ry, they did not otfic1.1 ll) endorse h1m prior to lht> November eltc· Uons Both Guy.11nt and Ptotrowski notl'd that many of the mr:mbers ""'Orked on the M cGo,· ~m campaign individually , but that "some hasslf's tn people's mt nds " ovf'r lht whole iHU(' prec:ludNI an organlwtionaf mc:k:lrwmt'nl The organiZation today rema ins rather loosely structured In addi tloo to 1~/0iro..·skt as chai rman and Semrow as lrr.asurr r , Mike Aird St'f"Vt':l as St'<' r~tary Or G«oorgt- Otxon o( the Soclolot,y Department has bet-n the group's advisor from the begmn1n1 and along with his fam•ly and other co~e rnt>d persons, has bet-n an acth· r supporter Other faculty members havt' been ac: tiv~ from timf' to t~ m e Piocro.,., sk• noted that mrmbfonh1p : on ttn uet to nuc:tua te IOmt"'A·hat " ll 's reasonable to say that there's n core !(roup of probabl)' about t2 to '" ptoplt' now, and there a re ma)'be anothrr 10 to IS people .,.,ho are QUilt' act1ve in supportina us Then therf' a rr a num ber of people who JUSt kind of noat around and hr lp oul when they feel that ..·hat """'re dotnltS ,.hat they want 10 do " And. P1otrovos.lu added, s1ncr eoii«Uon of dues u no1 ll tncti.Y enforced , dun rt'C'Of"do do no1 n«cesaanly rdl« t lht' timr contributed b) some I Nhv i~.als MOlt of lht' ml"mbera a31H that ~1eatJon to the IJ"'UP has brei the durf fac:tor 1n ktq)•na lht'm goina. II may surpn K' 10mr ooservers to tt ll n that " qu!lr a fe.,.,· no n-vete r ans ," 1n P•otro..-sk• 's ,..ord.s , " a rr .trong supportf'rs and a re actl\'1' w1thtn the frame ,.·ork of our orga mz.aUon " Under a " contn butory" membership cl3use, non-veterans C'an and do ..·ork .. !thin the Orpn!Ui ion and rtcf'IVt' full membership ri&hts C'Oflt . to p. 7 ..... THE I"'tHT'ta Vance , Cont. t~l<'her aJid it dotsn't ma~eanydtfftrencewM.tcolorheit. tle..,ld thrn •~ bad black teadwn 11 well u bad tead'ltn. Vance did NY. )Mr.o·evtr. white .0. mlllbtraton c•MOt dell elffCt.vely wot/1 prgblems in blac:t IChoob, tither beauae tMy don't want toot thty h~~Ve racial hlncups. 8yCai'DI Cartotr'&ltl '' 8Ladr. P~er is a po1itlve e1'ld and a aood fOO' crutive fon:e to pl'V\'Ide mlldl blxk.sand~nationua•·ho~;'IIUif'd Hrc•nbn& '"'ffralian and the ~ of IIIJuonc.Vannoa.ld..-hitepeoplehavem•M otdearthloydotl 't"'An\ID)"thlnatodo•11h blacb lie ..,,d he doHn't - "'hY blatb ~dspendLLmewithinnarMion whenlhey can M ~~~~ ~~~ ''lfi1..LPC Uwmwh'fll IGCd.her '' Vanft did ""'&elt. hc>Wf'\'et. lhllt blu:U and wholes at an u.rly ase. llhoukl IUrt gemn&toknowaboUioneanothtr. llebln fa\'or of a PI'CIItlm ..,-hich would open ldlools Sau•lillr "-'~UIP and have NCtl ldlool Mal • ·tth a sprdfiC ldi~y and lticb from all cr.·tr the cot)' could 11011\t and plr+ t...-opate Ill 1M YIOCIUII adivitia. Van« funhtr..,QtstedtNitpeoplecometoltlhtr andliveuhwnant. F~ry 16, 1973 Nathan Wright Speaks On Black Power pod teadltr b a aood 'll'lutt Friday, Nath.anWnght.wtlospobillmnjii.Mlionwilh Bladt CUitUN! Wed!; 1.151 Wed. , f"~. 1 Wrigbt.,.howassponiOf"edbv Retide~ ... llaUCOUJK:d.isdlairmanolthe l)qN!rtrntnl oiAfm-Americ:anStudtctlndprof-rof Urtu.n Affau·• at 1M State Uninnity ol New l'ork at Albany He is abo edllor ol ~·ht l!.luk l::dueal«f; ...t Say•&. Wlul t Blatk l'olitidan•ueSaylas;andauthorolBiatk l'o•·n and I.Jr bu Unreal and Let"1 W..-11: T ..nMr. Wright. ill uplainln& t.'adt po•••er, said bladl hu alwa)'ll b«n a.aaodatf'd wllh wtl andpo"'·erisanimp:tlileword,.·hkhuiw.s lhtil.suelhatblac:kpt'Oplearell(l(a«eplirc theinequillblepo.·errelalloNhipbttw«oo bladt; and white Americ:ans. Anotht'rpar1olblatkpower.widWri!Jht,b that bladts•redefininstheirou·n5ell· oonaoptandarenotbti"&dtflnf'dbyothna. lie s.;oid blacks in the 1960"1 bepn doirc thifl&stodftythernolda.udluwearina:lhe Afrv hairc.._ Wrigl"ll $1aled bl•ct; power il a new 5tfl5tol self-concept and pride. 1 new awa reneu for blacks to detennlne and ahlpe their own dtltinles. Aco:nlln&t.oWrigl"lt. black people are the only people wiKI have ~bared 1 common oplnlonandcommonopprt!llllonandhiYenot banded tog«her. Wrl&ht a.ald bl~elt power ,.·IIJhelpblackpeoptetobeoorneoppti!U'fdno lon&eraad to add lheircarpontcJr0141 power forlhtirliba"ationandabeuerlife for•IL Wfi&bl a~ that tucu and au Amerians have bee! aipplt'd by a filM conc:eptol howblatbtreutpeople. He a.a1t1 the more biitb trird 1.0 be white. the :=:e;:..~~~~e':v~e= olwtlltmeaa,Mid Wfi&ht.andblllc:kchildren aretatJ.IItttoMteblatktleM. Wfi&hlsaidlhatneryaneiiiAmerieaha•a "honkylitd mind. " Tbey an~ "uaht thll bluklteYilanda rei.IU&hi~YIO h.ate bbc:ks. Wri&ht stattd.. "Biact; power rmnnlk blac:k peope and all Amnic:an1that ""C!NIVC!llpatholocic•lvicwol,..hatilmeans to be Amenean and ,..hat It mans to be ,.·hue" Wrillht also had 10n1e Ideas abollt rducalion llewtdlhtt.talecb:at>ONII a~illlikethertholollhenation, palbolopcall)'l)n)-ll"hite llesUCltstt'dlhat t\'Kyac:ademicinltitutioninAmetic.anft!dl IPJ"OirDmofbloekandmlnoril,)'lludiH.Ifit doftnothavethlt,itilnallldlooi""Or1h)'of then.ame~leaeorllni>"tr~~ityll'bichi5called upunt.odealresponsiblyll'ilhtnlth. Wn~Jt!t further Mid !hat educatioMI ill· ltitutlons ,..cri. to kerp blacks down •nd f01tn- a n~alive concept ol blacU. The ill· iJ!ituhons area\10 tryin& to prohibit bladts lrornhavinclllftidentpridetojolnto&elhtt" to fonn the rudimmts o1 pown-. Wnghlassertedthal blacbart!nolonaer ll"tlllrctobetreatedassuestsbut ascllluns ollhisnation. llewidbladllh.llvt!n~trbetn treatf'd u cillrens but as .,.·eka me Slltlll .,.·hl:n n«dftt and \"\welcome JIICSIS whm not ....... Toan:~werthcqueatlon; areblac:lumaklrl.& IW'I)....,...Wri&htMidll'hitettfeelblac:ltlare lfU'SIIln America and II blaW cet one more cn~mb,ltllanadvanceandblaclullwluldbe &r•telui. Wrl&htltatedblacksa renDIIIIHII bulclllunsandone&houldroeversaybladts are maltlna prv(lreu by comparina: wh.lt they h.ad from one year 1.0 !.he nuL Wri&ht Mid thtff II a p p bttwea~ blxlu and whites In American and If lhllppdotel. blacklhlvem•dePf"lllrSI. He aald bladtt ~t:'a::f,I~~.~vn- II they are , not To conclude. Wfi&ht lt.lttd \hill bl"* power Mys blaclu wiiii.IM their corporat'e llrtnlth to mlke one and a llall'aror that tucka do not ~rive tht'mle!lvett u auesu bulaacitiZftlliiiAmtriu. Hurst Calls For Self-Determination RyS&evtOit-ft C'llarlet H-. pnalda\1 of Xakom X Collett iiiCbka!llo.doeedtbtfirst dltyol Black CUiwre ~ bt:re last Moad.Jy M,.U. qu.at•tyfduo:atoon,lntearatfdorottwrwise,ll the only hope (or 1ny minority. Malcom X II one of the larttst blaek ~mdfq.radll.lle ldloobtntbttountf}'. llunt uplalned ill~atlon il on!)' a H!COndafl' lacto.rlntheaolutlontotherace eommuniatlon problem. ti e Mid. " I've been HpiiUted lll of my Ute. Now my emph.uil llltstobeonSetlinttheblackltocethtr. md then to II'On1' abollt cenlna the world ~t~~ether. Whmlhewhitettre.Uywantbladts they"llaoout andaet them. S\evm~ Point'l un\venity II an eumple. Before they went outlooklrclorblaclu.!Mrewfl'ftl'taft)'het'e, andtheblac:Uhadnochokorabolltil." In nt•rd.to tome ot the ledual pro&rallll aimed at he Ipin& blad.l 1nd minority voupa. ....,..h u the War On Poverty lnd the New t"rontlft . llunt aald blaclu mlllt fl"ft \MmMlveabytbeirown eff.u. HedeMrlbed lhecurnNnationalmfl!talityubrinlantb:r wtlich " one doesn't u.k ll'le tl.lvt wtlat he · neoed.lbt.lttdllhlmwh.llt be nML Aa lon&U lhillktndoflitualionprevaiJI.whlcb~Mwwno -.lp& Ill ...-.:· dw!&lrc. the probkml tan only Hurst fdtevero with lnere.llol!d lnti'IJ"•tion ill 1 tcndmcy for man:r 1.0 wan. lhe wroag w1y. and that! went to colleae hopitl&I.Oleamtodothetelhlnpri&N. BIII afterlookircforjalbaandhe.vlnllhatl wUD'ttal.l~,orwa10'1 lhort enoull!,l went backto&tl mymalltn and doc-torlte de&ren..Afterlhat.lwuenougl"lofarari ty to&ethited." " A deblllill& proceu, daip~td to keep lllcln&olfhillnull unlll hebecomt'llapleceof \ ba loneyac:aopt.abletohistonneroton."was lliii'R 'a depletion of the black llnc&le to be<omea«eptabletowhltee. He looked at the ritlllllolconksayin&."llyouanaetrourllltlr ltrliChtmedOI.I,yourlklnllral&hteoedout. maybethewtlilefolkl willlMimillteyou.·· !lel.llidblac.ltlh.llveb«ndivldedtoaloclc onlhebalbof lrTtlnllldn. M~ollt ,he claimed, iiG.Ie toinK!auity illth•t bladle don't really know ll'ha\ wlnnJnc It, and that bbdttdotl'tlookattbelrstl"8lllN.bt.ltdwtll aalhrirderldencln,t.a.kint:theillf•llibllil:yot lhel)'llem for lf&ll\td. prolts~~~rs wbll MY or Imply blacb are "'turallrlnferiorendlhatthebeat lhq!Mt an be done lor U....m II Ill dlmirlllle them, reuo~~lnat .. tli'ILDoiJtetorepalr tbe damaae the wluttt. ' llltve l lrudy dol\e. Be<'aUIC! of theM thN!at1. llurst termed a colle&e education for bladts. "a mauer of pure IUtVival for lhemHiftl 111d their commvn\Uet." lie JU&Itlled bladll fOf' mulate 10me ot their own rf!Mlrdt wort. ·· l•oiitlcal and economic powe r are thor lwo dlrectiorwlhattheblackpl'OIIIC!mllllta ke," bt Mid. " BIX.Itllre q.lkltiy btocomlnt I liability and bel,. evicted from the polltkal foolholds. The civ il rilhll demonatratlon• thatw~eiO\mportlntdurln&theto'eiMtve betome to common that the power of the pt'Ople hal beftun 1.0 disappear. and we Mven'tfoundanaltcrnJtlvt)'ei. Untllwtdo, bladllano plnci.Obephascdoutolthe l)'ltem." Hunt urted ~dll to 1Im 1.0 so ~do; 1.0 !heir own communiUett to llfftlltbell the liba-atlon. Fine. however, lhe:r mlllt pin 1 Mlptriorkno•Jedt! illtcanomlm end politles10theymaybeablet.opinpowerln lhem. he ... ld. a!.,~ ::t::!:t ~IT no': ~~.~..,i,: mytholthol!happylll&ltronlbeplanlllioa btlped de-vdop lhil inseclrily. Aa - . u slaveryes.illlillany-partollheii'Oricl. thtrean"tbtfreedomillanyaaeput." there I.CIItlonaUy~awtalteJUpnioritymytJL He added. for the moet put, blao:b hiVe came to aa:ept these mytht. Euminin& hil ownu~.henalled,"Aiter l e&r"Ded mytutde&ree. l ~'tthlnkthatlwumudl rnoreolamanlllanthefintdltythatlcam.e. l dldo't~m)'lldfUiblaclt;becaUMI.hls bralnwuhlnc wu 10 effective. I arne to believiilhfltWewaiJifd.talk('danddrelledln Hunt quoted WliMe)' Y-a M)'in& be pointe:l-theneedlolbrllnpowerltaUme wtwn the blact; 111.111 II bealminl ol¥\.ete In the minds ol mall)' people. Hunt ~Mi. " G«tocideilltl!naltolheblaclltamm...ity. Pbnned pa renthood and vueetomln an becomlll!ll ao mudl more common ill the black community." He !'lOUd te¥enl Hit oonch•lon. lor tne ISO people wbo had altendord,waalhatbladl.aa,..IIOiambtority, bul.~nDmWion people. Hlad'toc:ltldMll deurtnillalioa In the allllllmmt ol aoall, inC"rt&led failhinthol!~kcal.INiandlbe r1&fl'- of whet the ~dts- doUIC· Page 5 THE POIHTEil Friday, February 16, 1973 The Vicar Of Christ On The State Boolc Review By Timothy O'RIIey Writing in the late nineteenth At the head ol the Roman Catholic Ch~h is the Pope, who is the acknowledged leader ol world Christianity lor he claims to have his authority directly !rom God; in essence the Pope is the instrument through which God com· munieates to man. to Pap1l SLate are Thought on the pres ented some ol these communications from God which are in the form ol Papal Encyclicals and which have to do with the question ol the state. There are several clearly presented tenets that appear in the writings ol Pope Leo Xlll, Pope Pius XI, and Pope Pius XII which serve to point out the Church's position on what constitutes a State and on political questions, in general. Although many ol the pronouncements olthe Popes are cloaked in nowery Christian language, what we shall see emerging is a political doctrine which is reactionary and, generally , stands aga inst the betterment ol the human condition . century. Pope Leo Xlll ad· dresses a lew Encyclicals to the question ol the State and how it ought to be run. He points out that people should have respect lor authority; that is is the person's duty to obey the ruler ol a State because a ruler gets his authority !rom Gnd. Pope Leo says, " ... they who resist State authority resist the divine Will; they who refuse honor to rulers refuse it to God Him· sell." Now, he does qualify this somewhat harsh position by saying that a ruler should in· sure the common good ol the people. But, God's messenger does not bother to spell out what is the common good. We are, however, assw-ed ol one thing that is lor the common good and that is the maintenance ol the Ch~h. Pope Leo's position on the State essentially comes to this : the proper State is the State which insures the existence .ol the Church, lor it is only through the Church that man can attain eternal happiness in heaven. The Pope says , " .. .for one and all we are desti ned, by our birth and ·adoption, to enjoy, when this !rail and neeting lile is ended, a supreme and final good in heaven, and to the attainment ol this every endeavor should be directed." In other words, the State's job is not necessarily to insure a better life on earth but to above aU else, insw-e the -never be able to rid itself ol existence of the Church so man happiness, ... " A more reactionary statement could not have been made by Adoll Hitler himseU. There is the basic presuppostion in all Christian thought that we can never realize a good life here on earth. So, then, why even try? might go to heaven. This basic theme is reiterated in the writings ol Pope Pius XI. Again, the only goo<l and proper sta te is that State which insures the existence ol the Church. He says, " Man cannot be exempted !rom his divinely- imposed obligations toward civil society, and the representa.tives of authority . have the right to coerce him when he refuses without reason to do his duty." Pope Pius is writing just before the outbreak ol World War ll, a time when the world had just sta rted on the road back !rom a deep economic depression. He includes in one ol his En· cycllcals the familiar advice ol a man ol God to the poor and downtrodden. He asks the poor to have patience : "Let them remember that the world wiU dirge over a nation such as Our dear Poland, which, lor its fidelity to the Church, lor its misery , sorrow , and tribula tion, which are the portion even of those who seem most prospe rous . Patience . therefore, is need ol all, that Christian patience which comforts the heart with the divine assuranee or eternal Pope Pius Xll , who writes during World War II , em· phasizes the virtues ol Christian love and peace as being the real bondsolnationalunity. But th is love and peace have lillie to do with the wor ld. What good was that Chritian love and peace during World War II ? The Churc h does not work in the world but she operates on a mystical plane to bring about good. This point could not be more clearly sta ted than when Pope Pius XII says, "The blood ol countless human beings, even 110ncombatants, raiSes n piteous services in defense of Christian civiliz.ation, written in indelible characters in the anals or his tory, has a right to the gene rous and brotherly sym· pathy ol the whole world, while it awaits, relying on the powerful intercession of Mary, Help ol Christians, the hour ol a resurrection in harmony with the principle ol justice and true peace." A Jot ol good that help did lor the mangled and bloodied bodies or Polish soldiers. Any person who possesses basic common s ense with reg ard to life woul d view this position ol the Church as one which stands squa rely opposed to the betterment ol lile oo earth. The soul , hea'loen and God are mere figments ol the imagination. Anyone who has s tudied the history ol Christi anity knows this to be true. Therefore. let us clear !rom our eyes the log ol superstition and begin to cOn· s tuct a world in which all men may achieve a decent lile. "Henry V"; Undeniably Shakespeare Film Preview This semester the English Department is sponsoring a series of classjc rums for the enjoyment ol the university community. All showings will be Monday nights atS :OO p.m. in 125 Classroom Center. Ad· nlission is free. On Monday, reb. t9, the scheduled lilm is Shakes pea re ' s Henry V. sta rring Sir Laurence Olivier, who is also the director. Henry V opens with a bird's· eye view or the Globe Theater as it probably looked during an actual perlomance. The viewer gets a feeling ol the theater, the act.ina and a even a sense of the audience. The movie begins a3 a " lilmed pla y; " one is crucially awa re ol the stage and of the actors as acton. However . Olivier so soon shifts gears. and the "play bursts from the ci rcumscribed "0" of the Globe to gambol rreely over the English countryside , becoming a panoramic motion pict ure . exce pt that the lang uage is undeniably Shakespeare's own. Although great attention is given to authentic historical detail - the scene is the ea rly lilteenth century-the nim is completely contempory in its speed ol movement and in its dnematic t«hnique. Alter the first lew scenes. you will not have the sense ol watclting a play. The plot ol Henry V concerns a rna jor episode in the seem ingly inte rminable and often bloody rivalry between !"ranee and England. Henry V, newly crowned !ling ol England, is urged that he has a legitimate claim 10 the throne ol France. But, he hesitates until an un· timely insult !rom the F'rencb Dauphin-even tennis balls can oe a pretext to wa r-angers him to wage war against France. The whole movie sweeps toward 1\·atch. the famous hattie or Agincow-t Bergman's Wild Strawberries, Mar. 5: D.H. La"'Tence's Tbe Subsequent film s in this series sponsored by the English Department are: Ingmar where. in 14ts: the nower of Fr~?nch chivalry, as the his(orians say . was decimated by the English long-bow. and Oscar Wilde's The lm· Although the battle, itsell, is ol 9. major sig nH icance. clearly Shakespeare is interested in added later in the semester. Rocking HorseWinner , Mar . 19, porta nee or Being Ernesl, Apr . Additional films may be Once again , the time 8:00 p.m. Henry the man as well as Henry on those Monday nights an· the militarist. Henry's genuine concern for the common man is ex tr e mel y well·drawn, Center . There will be no ad· nounced, in 1·25 Classroom mission charge. especially during the loog night vigil belore Agincourt, when the king disguises himself in order to walk among his man as one of Art Faculty Exhibition th em. Later. Henry's ineptness in the field ol courtly l ove is shown in one of the most charming scenes in Shakespeare when Henry attem pts to woo the French Princess Ka therine . whose combination or coyness and pragmatism tshe has. in an· ticipatoi n . been learning English l st.e ats his thunder and almost. the show. Un· fortunately , the marr iage, which many hoped would soothe the wounds ol England and France with its healing balm. prayed to he only a brief, romant ic: i nterlude . historically . Although peace is declared and Henry made heir to the French throne, the sequel is tragic lor the English : Henry dies young, leaving a baby to inherit the c:rown and. in short time. not only is !"ranee lost, but war comes to England, also. ~~~psm~k~ ~': :C'r~ed~~ Henry's wooing his · "Kate" ultimately so poignant ror us to "Very Quiet" Review The annual Art Faculty Exibition opened tast Sunday in the Carlsten Art Gallery ol the F'ine Arts Building. With only a couple of exceptions, everyone on the art faculty had something showi ng . As in almost any art~exibitioo , you can pick out a range of work from exceiJent to mediocre. The interesting thing about this exibitioo though , is that it is quiet.. . very quiet. There is bardly anything that plugs in, lurns on. or h3ngs out . In fact , the exhibition doesn't assault or even insult the viewer . When wandering arowtd the halls ol the F'ine Ar!S Building, you can see studen t stu!! that demands reaction . Art students must tend to be more aclive and sea rchi.ng than the faculty . It Is very apparent by the type ol things at th is exhibition . One can see that cra ft · sma nship is one of the main dillerences between facul ty and student work. Many ol the -<pieces in th e faculty show seem to be carefully and accurately put together. It is the strong point ol the showing. !"rom Meyer's "Speaker Enclosw-e" to Keats's " Eastbound 5" you can sense the ca utiousn ess used in creating them . This isn't the exhi bition to go 10 il you want a Bang-Zap-Pow experience but it' does have a couple o/ mellow things if you want them . The show's on until Mar. J and, ir you want to pick up a li ttl e something to start your collection with .. . prices range rrom $5 to $750. Bertolino Will Read Here University Writers will present poet James Bertolino in the Nicolet·Mnrquette room. University Center. Thursday . Feb. 22 at 7:00p.m. Bertolino has published nine coUections of poetry. the most recent of which is Edging Through, LiiJabulero Press . Robin Magowan of "Poetry " Magazine has said or Bertolino , "Heading him you are constantly made joyful. The astonishing seems to lie there in his hand , and as he '<4'hirls it out you learn ""'hat seems impossible : that to go mwa rds is also to expand -i nto the source or all motion .. something musically faultless does arisc ... and in a precious , starlike space that seem s to me totally viable ." The reading is Cree and open to the public. ,,.., Fridoy, February 16. 1913 THl POtHTO Drop-out Rate Low In Soviet Union 8) tto-" l'l'f'» T ofum•n s .....tl htn".lllll/'1! M C.llll HSii)' fill Ill •\ anory Corr"pMiknl the I•P b tt'r. But his fellow u udtntfromlhemf'l:hilniaand \'ohont ary Uropouh brtv.·Mnh•ghldloolandc:olle&e de porlment WIJIO II~tthDtiOmt stude/111 ~trouble~daplln& lnhi&h k"tooolthtro at<"t~klc•·ery tnd•rr• o·hh l•l th USSR u~uny .... .. , · ·lly t.he ,..,., ntr • • So•·~t butltutu ud .uthH"IIdnlllo.,.. HollltbiiOll uorprili•l-l~rre b Urtllo leek Ia k. To ..~plala ell I• 1ep, lt1 .. ...-klt'r t•·o Undil .t c•nnot afford such a lwwrythe Vft'Y natu/'1! cllhe 5Ubjectt Is wch that tht proeH~ of leaming thtre Is ~~·~ day. wlule1n univtnil)' the 1tlldrnt Is on his own betv.·een eurnlnulonl, t houah. o f t ourse. there ut required c:atc:h up. Some lhlft )"Ur'S ago the f.c:H aad•·olu.. a>'ft'.IIJttdropoutrate•nall.l he Not all lotudenCI IY•·e a pod fentdto ln~·tninl~· ltnSCofKtf•di.Jc:ipline. t&r) . .loe'lft'IMturaiKience~- Th«dote the o:unkulLm for rlf"lltnd6«11110.yursutdenll was altertd. f'l ut-yur l tudtntl hive mort time for il~M-pmdmt worll \ but not " the expense ot the diU ac- rntnllndJt'l l job. But m051. IIUde/111 Mf~e this quettion in anothtr•·ty: They remainfuUtlme ltudtnts 1nd u.m utn money in lhrir l.pl~ time, II I rWt. atthtlrcrwn inltitute. At ~l olcow Unlvc,.lt)' thi!:IC studenutt-eoffert-djobsinthe depl rtmtn ll which need laboratoryasailtlnts, ti the univcrlltyOoct•areatdeal of r uet rch for va r loul e n· tcrprilt!fartdlnltitutlonl. As thclludftlt cannotworkfulltime. t he Jt la r y of one llboniOtyiMIIIIIIt lt ouually sh.arftl by two ltude~ts. All ~·.,eta• ..,..p--•: u u•hnu ••• mathemat l u amiMI~ti'}' ShldtntisatHto mmu amounttd to three ~r cent, whereu now it hos dterNit'dtoabouiUperC'trlt. Vo'llat aecountsfOI'thi!lm- Youn& people can aue nd So•i et instnutior'lll of hi&Jwr lum1111 trTtspect~•·e ol thl:lr aoaol ona•n. net". nationality, t'lc T\ution ~t So~it'l hfJI'N!r prove ment in t he 5tudents ' ICJdM!Ic pnllfftll! IJot Tm'IOV, ..-ho IUpeoilel 1M NIUtral ICimcu ~· mcnt l o f the unhenlty. lldlooltis f~atl tht uptnsu br11!1"etthatlt lt 1Jr'&elytht result ot the special atte-ntion ar e p1id by 1M sate. MO«<•~r. So.-Jeutudt!lunUoy patd to frslunf'!l. 1bty Md anumb!-rolpri•·U~es. 1bfy kft~Uattdfort-thirdsoftbe ~"~ IUpends.. tnde union dropouts. ne difrcrtnc:t IK~urnandpttchc&.I JI\Idlts.. tivltito~t, and«nlllltatioftlwith insti"\ICton lrtmoc-e freqllt:IIL Thelludent ii&.IIO&ivftll lylllbulfoc-1\alf ayearlnallhls t ub.ltCUIOthllhtun plt nhls timcandwork inad¥ance. f'til~UUhnedea"c.uedsU: tomes dut to these musuns.. . Don't some 5tudents drop out bt nUJe of materia l dlf· fi(U\\ots! Pl'!"hl pi a IIUdent ··antstoctm ~ tl•·ingtoluppott hi• family, as hissUpendttonc is ceMalnlynotftiOlllth. lnthiS <'~K. the ltudentcanbetn.ll5- W'OIIthtn t frwor~tadileounu tor~t'le ~undeTsuch C'Ondltioftl runy pt<Oplewisbto ;mmdun..~tr. tbe)" ll.neto take compehti~e entrance c x a m l nat1on1 where the numbn" of applicant~ fu U· C'Mdlthenumberol~auncies. ~UC'"P'-td..lfa llucltnt fatlt to pau lhrf't or more enmlnatiorudurin&lhtwlnttr of lwnmer-ion he II t.l• pdltd Tak.Jn& liii.Oa«<ttnt th.lt the Wlt••rn.ty llucltnts ·~ u•"hodtdplrticularly•·e:llonthe ftlll"llnct e.w.~ma. it i1 mall unhktly that any of them will fail thrf'tor~S!Jb,lecuot 1M thnlr to fi~t eumiMtlonJ !My u b dunn& a sealoa. HOWC">"I'!". C"'"ftl If they do., a fa1lw-t dots not mean lm· medlateupullion. Student Wlf·&OVemJDfllt II • ·idHpreadatSovietinstitutH a nd uni~eraiticl. and the authorities cannot decide a lllldrnt'l delllny without the C'Dnltntolhlsfdlowlludmta. The upul1ioo of an un · MN:tft.lfuflludentlsclilcui.Mcl bJ dc-panme~tal c:ommluioru! c:omjJoltdolltudelllandadmonlstration ....-ntatl..-n aod the •tudftltl have a IMJOI"IIY vote. llle amm,qion taka Into Kf:Oiolllt not . .ty marb. AI a ~ampus 1 M•dly. ~·nnarytt,tm w- n ·• lntn•ouall: H p.m .• f'icklloute. OptnfaclliUerorlllwommin I Wimml/111. l)"mnlllin.. rtcqutt ~II and aU biiUt'IDAII IOiolmlmentfacilitift; Brinlyow- :·;:~~~y~~~~ IIMif time, they wiD be po$1.«1. An archery <"link wiD be held from 7-4 p.m. in tht Annex. n.e Stlllly.t J H•: 7 p.m•• Puce C.mpillt Ctn~r. DIIC\IIIIonfoc-thlseYeninawiUbe· " JCIUiand Eud.ls" . l'olatf"t tUne snd Pittol O ub: 7::10 p.m .• 1M rnltal'l<'e to the Student Servl~a Cent\'!" off of f'rm1011t Street. "nle Pointer Rlflt and PistoiCiub il optntotllltudeDIIandraculty. trtord.mlrylddktionto~GCY! woc-k 10 lhe dt'l.rimc/11 of his lludiea. lniUchaJituation.. und er ''exttn uatina· · dr(Umw.&n.:a. the com~. il It It JUre th1t the ltudent wdl ret.-kt tht Ulml IU~eufuUy, wlllintercedefoc-theiiiKk/11 With 1M a.-horitia. and he Is nottapelltd. But chpauu clo taist. Our JptCitlisUbel~e•-ethatthemaln renonbdlindthelrleavinJis 1M ttpod rattol !be de~lop mtftloliCMnce.tbelno:n..Sq YOiumeoflllfOI"ftlatlanancLthu. caniUinUyCJ"OWinadetnand:l .. ttltlludtnta. Lottu.takelnu.ample: the dro~ratea! MOKOW$\.Ite U111venity. If a 1tudnt from the philoloiJic&.l depntmtnt miuea • eouple olle<'IUrs on andelll We4Hidly, ~-ebnary u. IU\ni(\lan 0111 In the p.m.. Ne-·m•n House. Arts • t."'t~1 !Wries: Concert IIIII FAB. Mlllit ~==•::~lmtl. But such There II every rft.lm to brheve th.lt 1M pHttnt low dntpoutratftwltlbec:omelower inthe yetn•hcld. In fact, If ~e~mooneh.um•deamiltalle ln doOOilnshlspnrltlll. .. nobody lhnuld f"t&"llhe fld thll he has~ft lplace•"hldiJOIIlii!Y Dlherl•·ould likt tofill Tran~pnrl.ltlonwillbrprovidtdfoc-tra..tl'!" 10 lhe V.'hitinc Ri!k and f>tstoi!Un&e. AU equipmto~t ltprovidedandexpertlniii"\ICUIIII rurUm~lllhip llavtl.lablt. on liNt)' V . lllrrircSirLaurenceOUvitr. I~Ciustnon1 Ceolter: I :OOp.m. f'rf't. S.d,ay. ~'ellniary II. !tTl se-w~n. . Ual.-etllty Psrtslo: 4:00 ' ' '00 p.m. !Saturd.ly l. Newman Oi.lpel, 10:00 L m., CSundlyl. Newm•nCNiptl. lt: t5t.m .• C1oish!f\Cllapel. t :OO p.m., Clolstl'!" Olaptl. Wttld.ly mlllt!f, T\Hidly throush Frid.ly. II:U I .m. 64:Up.m. Conffl.li<W11, 4:00p.m ., Wednesday, Newman CNipd. l.olhcr SWdeM C.mmully : t :OO p.m ., tS.lUrd.ly l. Mf"'tic:t with E~.~:Mrilt.. 10:30 a.m., tSundayl, both ltr"ri<"ts II Pu« Camp~&& Ceoltet. Ulllkd Ctlardo.. Cllrlll: 1156DbonStreet. to:OOt.m , Sundlyworlhlp. St. Pnl' o \l"'t..SMelheo!.III CIIvell: t : \56 IO:U t .m .• Sunday wonhlp. BID pic:lu~· Steine-. 10::10; Dtlz.dl, 10:'14; Schmeeklt, 10:21; W11.10n. 10:32: Rlllldo, 10:,.. Fnme Memorial Ualkd Pre• byterlan Cllwcll: UOO MalnStreet.t: I5610:U a .m .. Sun$y Wonhlp. Ctl..-cll.t~ l•tercn.ol• : I Epiauplll. 1417 Oourdi S~t. t ·OO a.m. 6 5: 15 p.m .• SutldayMau. 5: 15p.m . f'ri&oyMIII. II.r. IUpperaftl'!"f'ridlymauJ Plaaeiarh11111 S.rif-1: ""GIIadet and lheUnovtrae" prt:Stnt«< by !>lark TrNdeu,. 3 pm . Sl:itfta! Buoldiq h"cl•y. t' rbnllryZII. III1 U..•enlty I'Lim Society: 7 6 t : l5 p.m ., Auditorium. Old Main. " lkdloWed, Talr.e the Money and R11n " f'ICDit)' \ 'ot.c:. K« ttal: I p.m ., Mifhellen Conctrt Halt, I' A.B. Ellubeth Om•n. 1113 Cal.loolk ~·atlh: 7 I p.m .• Mldleben from MarlbOC"o. T~~~nclaJ', Ftbrouy tt. 111l l•ter'IU.IIOIIIOI)' ltm k rles: 7p.m .. Oid Main. " Pf,_." by Btr1m111. Walclfl Qullttt PttfWMI : I p.m. ~l idldsen Conc-ert Kill, FAB. Robert Gcalbtrl. null ; Daniel Ste-wart, oboe: Raymond Luedete. dtrintl: Jufula Er len~ch, born, Frant Rodunlm. b l . _. Spftd $:~W: 15 p.m . Afll'l" nllc. lludenta a~ awa~otthe r e a1o1oa for theor fellow lotudelll"sfa,IW"tsandth.lthtiP' tbtm to IOI•·e the problem objft-uvdy Whftlaptnonll an incorrigible ldltr with an obviouii.Ju:lloltptltude foc- the <" houn •pu l•lity . th a lludcnu-members of the c:omm-naturaliYilJ"WIO hile.w.pulsionfrorntheldlool. B<ltiiOmtlimsaiUidenlftillto pauhlse:xaminltionsfotiiOmC JCiod ruaoo IUch u prolonaed ollnna.. famoiJ' afltln., OC" ft• lnadditlor~.••ofSep.t . tm. Newslette, ........... Saturdly, t' rbrual"")' tl. IITS PTe·Marrtase Se111hoar: l ::tOt.m .• Ptace Camp~&& Cent\'!". The KCond hall of the first pre·marri•ae ~emlntr will be held this ~~~~nni~:n~r~::t0 a.m.· 11: noon 11 E-cJ.b.lo IHfll'rtJIIU I IUaa: thetequestionl ~~ handled by lprclallludti'IUI' employment <"Ommisaio111. JtudenCs "ltlptndsln LliC USSR v.·ereinc~asedby an avl'!"•ge of~petcftlt. Thll! st.an$rdol lirin,ollludeniJhat imprnvtd t"CSiderably. So, the mtin rea.., thll lludtrU drop out is acactemic difficultltt.. Some a reupelled foc-brutnrc the rules in the dormitor y \ which ~ rt ntablishcd, lncldenlllly. by lludents lh<"m$dvts) or for ~acllleatlaiOIIIcSaenln&• The Speoe('h • nd Hearina Clini<" has rt~CrVed the fotlowlnl Uma to t:OndUC"t sprechllldhclringsctftnlnpfarappllc:lntll to !he School of Ed~.~:lllon ; Tund.ay. Mttch t; Wednsdly, Mardi 14; Thunday, Aprll2111. All tntlq will be from 7-11 p.m. In Room 038. COPS Bulldirc App!N:.Intsnetdnotmakttllappolntmrnt foe- •Pf"f'Ch and hurirc lerftlllnp. They ne-ed . .lyto l ppeardurlncthetl mft,._...td to c:omplete thl1 1t~ of 1M ldmlui. . ..-. litMII llto:ltnSttks A.,..,<', play. " Around and Around," written bJ Pault'lte Laufer. West Bto~d. wiD brpresenttdf'tb. nthtoUJ.h:U•tlp.m. in theStudtoTheatre, f'AB. A.A.U.W. \It..SHookSale "nteStevens Polnt brtnchoftht:Amerkan AIIOdation of Unlvft'SJI)' Women wlU hold 1 UHd boot wJe Thunday. F'rid.ly tnd S.turday. feb 1:).'!4, 1nd2$1tlhtSo.ithllde IGA f'oc-riplanau•seboollandrcw:ordwta are am.., t.hll! manyltenu foe- lilt. All proceed~ IO lo !he A.A.U W. f'dlowthfp "'"" Ctllllllltlee lklledute l :$0 p.m .• I!:Yery Acaclt.Mic Allain: Monday. M1ldltll ~. U.C. Ap:ndt: Completionof di~C'l~Uonondotna:twlywlth fintl eum1 tnd million reYicw in rtetrd to P E. propoul. HD1in'"'o Aff1lr1: 1: 6 p.m., tJtCflllte Wtdnndays tf'eb. 141, Van libe. U.C. C_m..lty Relatloao: 4:00p.m., every Wtdncsdly, Room 10. COPS. C.rrtc.lu• : l :$0 p.m•• eYery Wednetday, Mttchell Room. U.C A&endl: History tnd P.E propo~~ll. f'nDIIJ' Alflin: J :$0 p.m .• t:vtr)' Wednesday. Room JOt. S.S.c. A&end.l: Merter lt:Cillttlon F'tcally~. .le: 7:l0 p.m., tnd tnd4th "lllundly. Room 116 COPS. EGltor'1nolc: Allol lhe•boYemeetJal• •n o,en. 8toululllrtiH'~u••ledl.lat t.tD4. TME. POIHTO Friday, February 16, 1973 Ceasefire Not A Reality Says Piotrowski cont. tram p. 3 As could be expected, some membersolthe ~roup have been somehow, in maybe 20 years, maybe one ycat. the war was someday going lo be over, views on the "cease-fire'' in under what cirucmstances we Vietnam . P iotrowski spoke to dido 't know , but the decision made at that time was that this lhe issue 3l some length, and organization ca nnot s top s tarted by referring to a recent incident. "lt you watched the there .. .it's necessary to try to TV news tonight you saw where stop the situatioo in Vietnam as it now exists, but how ? It's sort one or the VietconR controlled villages in the (Mekong) Delta or out or our reach : in a sense this whole thing may have that they had shown pictures or been ; beyond that Ito try ) lo yesterdoy or the day before got make sure that we don 't get hit by an air strike today. The involved in another Vietnam , South Victnam~se Army threw an air strike on them , nnd they and lha t we start re-ordering came in and took it over ...the the priorities in this country war is over as rar as the where we spend most our Nationa l Liberation Front money on defense and s tart t NLF I is concerned, but the culling back on the programs So uth Vietnamese are still for the people ,or the country." trv ine to 2ather more territory Guyanl feels there is a need before it' s sellled ... That's a . for " some kind or brotherhood" political situa tion involving the or soldiers, veterans and con· Vietnamese. If America can cerned persons throughout the reall y pull out . which I don't world. " .. .1 think this whole know if Nixon intends to , the coalition has to get its head CIA is goi ng to remain. but if together collectively and figure the United Stales can really pull out just how in the hell we can out of it. it's a Vietnamese Jive together in one world that is question ; it's between Viet· threatening to tear itseU namese and we shouldn 't try to apart. " impose a nything there ... We In a disc ussion or the local shouldn ' t even have personnel group's future directions . over there dealinR with Piotrowski cited three areas reparations unless they 're which will probably serve as mvited by tht people of Viet· focal points for the grou p:S nam . not some dictator. and energies in the nt;ar future. "or king on ly with lhe people, Operallon County Fair is not in th e ca tegory that currently a nation·wide project ;\mencans usually do serve in ol VVAW. While in Miam i this type of th ing. where there is Beach lor lhe Republican a know·it·all to tell them how to national Convention COperation Last Patroli . some VVAIY rebuild their culture.'' AU or most of the members members were Invi ted by Black tend to feel that everfa complete leaders to visit their community near Selma, Alabama . Located end to the war will not erase the in Boca Chita, Alahama , the l'onditions in this country which they feel s pawned the war and People's Farm .i6 the home ol many or the same Black people permitted it to flourish . As one who occupied Resurrection City member, Lyle Updike. pul il : in Washington , D.C. in 1968. .. Even if the Vietnam War was While there, some or the VVAW over , the institut ion of war in members who had been medics this country is alive and or corpsmen noticed that many kicking ... " of the children at the Farm we re s ufrering rrom staph in· Guyonl indicated that the leclions. Medical supplies and organization had envisioned a medical facilities were almost post-war existence for itself entirely unavailable or inacfrom the very beginning. " I cessible . After some lhi nk " 'e lhoughl or that before discussion , the people or the we even thought of what we we re going to do to try to end the F'ann asked if experienced war __ we knew that someday , VVAW members could help asked more than once their them . One VVAIY chapter had access to some a ntibiotics. and others agreed to send people back lo build and staff a small clinic for a three month period. meanwhile searching ror a permanent s tall. On thursday , February 8, the local Vets lor Peace had lables in the Collins Class room Center and the COPS building taking donations for Operation County Fair. Some local members plan lo go to Boca Chi ta during the spring break, and the operation will continue to be stressed . A second thrust or the local group, according to Piotrowski, will be the collection and dissemination or information concerning Post Vietnam Syndrome IPVS I. PVS is complex , but is so metimes discussed in term s of nine rough aspects. Among them are guilt feelings, psyche numbing , a lienalion,lhe feeling of being a scapegoat , and doubts about one's ability to love and trust other human beings again. A well·known case in Wisconsin involved the trial and eventual con \·iction or a 25 year old Vietnam ve t lor the first degree murder or his wife. Don Kemp , hi s defense contended, ¥'as awakened !rom a " Oash·back" nightmare by his wile, and shot her dead with a gun he kept under his pillow " to protect him self from the enemy he sees in his dreams." The VVAW has charged that "neit her lhe prosec utor . jury nor judge ... recognized the rea lily of lhe Post Vietnam Syndrome." The local Vets for' Peace have obtained a " PVS library" from lhe VVAW, and will allempt lo have copies or it m~~ available to the public in lhe LRC a nd elsewhere. The library is a collection of articles from newspapers . magazines , journals and elsewhere concerning PVS. A th ird endeavor ol the local vets will be an attempt to establish a newspaper , which :ru:~:" ~b~~rr"~~co{fe';!.nf_ tupolnl. As far as "healing the wounds" in this country is Moore "Plays Down" Vocational Training Page 7 concerned, the loc al group s upports VVAW's sta nd on am nes ty. As Guyarit put it, "The war ts not going to be over ror them until the choice is theirs .. .! personally believe a lot ol them are going to choose not to come back, and I don!t really blame them, but I think the choice should be theirs." Piotrowski stressed the totality or a true amnesty as he sees it. " It's not just a mnesty lor drall resistors. it 's amnesty Cor everybody. There a re charges ~ainst oHicers in variou s places for war crimes ... Nixon is, in many people's eyes, the biggest ~· a r criminal a round. bul he should be given amnesty along with the draft resistors . It can' t be one-sided; it can't be the other way, with the military being obsolved and the draft resistors not. " . Other concerns Cor the \lels include m edical aid to Indochino. " Winter Soldier " investigations or war crimes, and the investigation or in· telligence operations. They also hope lo publicize the dangers of nuclear weaponry a nd the stoc kpilin g or chemical · biological weaponry. While the members are in basic agreement on may issues, mos t agree that there is a range of opinion on other matters. As Piotrowski pul il, "We're aU at VariOUS Stages rrom liberal tO radical...' ' Though nn over-abundance ol money has certainly nol been a problem , the vets claim they have always managed to come up with neeessary funds. Specific lund-raisi ng projects, such as rummage sales, have often been held to raise money lor s pecific needs . Said Piotrowski. .. We always managed to scrape up what we needed. a lot of times it came oul or our own pockets.'' The R;roup will continue to see~ university funding ror its projects . Asked about campus and community reaction to them , lhe vets were generally optimistic. "The community ," said Piotrowski, "a lmost always when we gel 'r esponse from lh~m, il's positive. It's been am'azing at Urnes : we do have a lot of validity in some peoples eyes because we' re ~e ter:ans . " The university yew ad· ministration, according to most or the members, has taken lillie notice or them one 'way or the other. Said Piotrowski, " About Ihe only lime they really noticed us was when we put on the conference, and when I in· troduced a resolution in the Student Senate condemning the Thicu regime Cor the " massive arrest or thousands or students," and the Dreyfus administration ror "its sUence and thus apparent approval or Thieu's policies ." Guyanl echoed Piotrowski's view : " We 've gotten more recognition !rom ROTC than we have !rom the administration .'' Asked what the organizallon c6uld mean to s tudents in general , Piotrowski said he expected more concentration on st udent problem s and re.l ationships in the next couple of months. particularly if their new s paper materialized. "When we ge t a reaction from s tudents, it 's many times positive : we arrect students in the sam e way we allecl the gene ral public ... We do have an ab ility . Io deal wi th bureaucracies. in the military we learned how to deal with bureaucracies, and so in that way we can many times get through where other people can 't. We know how much hassle bureaucracies can be, ond how to hassle with them ." The members point with some pride to the lacl that they consider Sue Semrow, who recently became a member of student government, to be their orficial representative. The organization has had no lies with any of the local veterans organiza tions. but cont. lo p. 12 BIRTH.D AY SALE WASH1NGTON ONE DAY ONLY - MON., FEB. 19 STORE HOURS: 7:30 A.M.-6:00 P.M. cont. !rom p. 2 already know, which is kind or a waste ol time : for instance, demonstration that women , i£ they are employed in most departments. usually hold low ranks and that the women who have been selccted lo work In the departments are people who are probably not qualified lor promotion beyond instructor or assistant rank . They have not been hiring Ph.D.'s. Now. many people say that's not discrimination They have been nice: they have hired women when maybe they could have hired men. I suspect that's not true. But the kind or jobs lhal women have been employed for , have been lbe lower rank , lower pay jobs." Pointer : " What do you IH 11 tbe nature an d function of \he unlven:lty!" Moore : ~ ·ll is not an easy quesllon lo an· swer : it has many functions. One of them would be to prepare people lor lbe future in society. I think th is is one of the things we have to be concerned about here ( in this office I because I expect the luturewilllnclude a change of roles for women. Another would be the hum anizing !unction, and I would think that that is related to my office. One of our goals should be to help people: one; examine past asswnplions and prejudices, many of which are based on sex ste reotypes and that kmd ol thing , t andl get rid ol myo.hs and stereotypes. ll Is lo seek knowledge. and knowledge involves the examination of these things. And. I s uppose lo a certain exten~ another or oun 15 lo prepare people. more specifcally lor ltinds of work, although I lend lo play that one down.' ' Pointer: "Do you mean the vO«:at'oul of t.he u.nivenity'! " o/o OFF u~tct Moore : ··we have some of that in our thinking. I don' t really accept the notion that a wliversily s hould spend all ita lime creating water specialists or people whose training is very narrow and only lor one job. I think il is lo broaden tbe person, basically, II you had to divide il into three things, I would say: examine knowledge ; learn what we have and to think critically about the th ings lhal we have believed In the past and the assumptions we are making in the present. The life ol sell· examination is im portant. How people relate to one another is 3!1_other as~ of university education. Finally, I suppose, when they get out ol a university , people have to be prepared to survive in the world and that usually means that they had lo have some kind or preparation lor work.'' Polnter: " Do yoa ha\le any additional ~ommentl f " Moore : "There is a committee called the ~~;er~r,;,;o~:_isr[ba~:o~~~~:n{:~n~~~ Kay Bres ina and Mary Jacqmin Their inout is supposed to be those things thai are of a concern to s tudents. " Another or my goals is not only to work as an ombudsman but to recommend changes in the curricuh.un." AU IEGUW PRKE MfROIAIIHSI AT ERZINGER'S TOM KAT SHOP ERZINGER'S ALLEY KAT SHOP ERZIN6ER'S KIDDIE KORNfR WINGER'S -FOR WOMEN ERZINGfR'S FOR MEN FALL FAIR TRADE ITEMS EXCLUDED Down The Tube The reaf:'IIOftllry natW'e of the Nixon A~minlstra!lon comf:S lhrouahdtouly in lUi rebt lons with the Amftlcllll prew. llnwillin& to allow even the mlldtst critklsm, illuoJ I.IUI>l'bed I recent 1\t..ld< on the television netvoorkl,bot hpublleandpri •·ate.. Such action willundcubtedlyhavere ptrcusslonsonthe p~asa"'holea nd thus mn-ita uami.nation and c:ommenl. ti~~:;~ ~,::~;::'~~~!.!ifv:C,;i;i~ ~~~!s:!t/~ v':~ tts go~~rning body t Corpontion for Public Broadeutln&J e~ me underright-wlngcon ttol, and its major public affairs programs " ·rre cancelled a nd iLl ~nmmln& p;~w~r revolu:ld.. In ftfect, the nature of public televiJKift u a publtc: a&ency was J.arady destroyed and it wu pl.la:d undrr bo.IJill('SS control. CP B Is now dominatedbybusinessintrrestsand it lftmS hla;h lyunlikely that mm ,..ho are prindpled by printe prol'it will wddmly de\·dop :o concemfurpllbliclnterests. The expla nation for these changes lies in the Administration' s behdinlheleftistorieni.ILionofpubllelflevision. ltwouJdaHm that !llixon 11 stiU preoxcupied with chasing communia R,holtL PubU~televislonlllnotltftlst. lt is,ho:l\•'tvu.sometimescrlticalof Americ:~nsotk:ty and it ls conc:emed with "''tl&t lll happelling In the '"'OC'Id. Pllblictelevilionprovide~ll'liousprogramsonpoliUoand MK:iety-ilattempllltohelptheJI'Ibll<:knowlh e,.·orldthey ll vein llndtoasl<questionsabout it. To dosoitmustbecritiu.lllldabove n.aiTO,.. pr·h·ate interests. The Ni.lon Administration will not a llow thi s, butlll.ln¢5ovt"tand agalnll the public's rigid to know and questionthe iO'Orldtheyli \'e irl. Thepri•·ate televisionnet,.wUhlvep~.id lillie attention to the :~ 1\:u:kon l'BS. On th eone hllnd, the Idea of public television is rq~U~nantto th~r belid in the w.nctlty ol private profit and jrt~perty They would rathtt PBS di.Nppea r .thlll w.ve it. Bcs1des, the net..:orks .,e more COI>I:ft'ned w1th their . o,.·n jrt~blerru; w1th the Administration. Tile move qa~ pn vate television illustrate~ how totally '-lwilllnl the Administration is to &lloweventheslight estcri tl~lsmofptibUca ffalratosli ptlvouahto the public:. American news networU hl\'t! never bern known for thcircnticalorqutWonlngpolntofview. f'or\hem0$t p~-11, they c:onflne themJelves to superlldal covrrage of day to day nC\II't e-otntii,U$U.D ily ~ntningonthemon"trlvill l upectsof hu!"'anUfe and publil: alliin. E~<:eptions to !hill are rue. The Nuton Administration,M,.·ever.insl sts uponbeatingadyin&dog. Hmc:e.it has dedami that local television 11.1llo111 will M h~ re~pon~lble ~:::;:::. ~;~~:!~~~~!:~~:Jy~.~~~~~ nonrenewal ol the station's lie-. This Is. In d fect. 1 fonn of bladun.ail,aimed .atsilen~:ifl&critica.l rep>rtln &onthpan ofthe televulon networkl. Loc:al sU!Uoouareunderpressuretorefuae jrt~&ri!M that a re un.accepta.ble to the Nixon Adm indtntlon and the lntl'ff!ltl it repreaentl. such 11 ptOBrarru;~litical al the Ad- Vrry 111ce•~•T· \ 'ta.tlmtr Brooletoky l•l• •atlon Oflker •:mb anyof llte UalonofS..~tet SodalbtHtpulllluWuhtaJI.Ob . o.c. What Is Freedom? This wintrr - - has brought 111 through many 11eruming headlines: "Peac:e Talb Underor;ay;" " Pea<:e Ag reem ent Sl&ned ; " "Troop! Return Home;" "POW's Releall!d" and "NilUin Nominated IIW Nobel Peac:eP riu." Now, a RI'f thallonn, comes an eerie stillnf!IS In the air. Just wh.at exadly was ac:cornpliJhed by the Vletn.am war? Are the Vletnaml'll' people now free! And.,.·ha teuctly d::leathewordfreedommean! Th e orislnal aim ol Un ited Stales' lnvol vemfnl' In Vietna m suppoll'dly w11 to aid 115 people In their struggle for freedom . Yearaand)·eara ofbl~and-aiTOwdom lna tedl)«<ppe'tlivf!l obsculingthisoriginlllimtothepointwhft't!allthlltwufinally lOUgh\ was a qukkfnd tothewar. Nowwlththepea<:etre.atle! and prUoner ~teaMS, this countty is .over-joyed. Apin, the queWon ~~~Y~~~I:'w~lfn::.n::: J::!eth~~t;":'t :~:~~ !he act of wa rtodetft'mlne its morality; and, to aak, "Did thf Vietnam war free the VIetnamese people!" m~l~;bl10.:r:;~r~~q::~lt i;.~mf:'s!tte,~·:..~~o:; freedom. Molt books which ex.amlne this question seem to view freedom In l l!l'llallveJI'IlJI'. Thl tls. that freedom Is rlddU!J a cou.ntryorpeopleofc:ol\lrolorauthorltariallbmbyanactofwar lor example. llowewer. there ill also • pollltive way ol a~hle-oifll •:dltor'• Not•: no Kay 8rnbla,astu notnnnu rUy rff! Wl'>mtn a llovert dingeqlllllrllhlllf prvgrHSsincethe bra. Th ecoin plah: and , likflll thenew lhefactsllillrrma' notonty lnoure-ol'r) rretelvf<llt!l•eclltorl•ltommeat lrom thb uodvtnJty. Tloe vlews Upt'f!IH<d do wle,.·aolth•P•terwtu•atl. 'onhavebeen sptalt lngout l nddeman· •r.alyearaMW. lbey've made alotof r Women's Suffuse and the first bumt vomenh•vecoveredanextmslve a rea nmllloftodly,f>l'rUolltareflctlon,but diso:rlmiruollonlllllevldent problem e,butlnoureulture. ~ Tr istram Coll in 's ru the ability to act a nd to ilStnlctWX'I. not destruction nu UK" proper Ol"''kring of elderly person becomes !ded to cure him'! Without ien!d to provide the best And. without 1M tr-an· 1pply the hMpital it tS al5o to be f~. all institutions tng, a home and medical u cannot h.a\·e a good ham ordering of the dllry, the IS. Frtotdom, then, has its 1 ordt'f"ed institutions s uch Ibese Institutions mus t be iuc:!Ce. we can ask " did people'!" Do they hne eless because or the war. what few schools existed !d to bombtngs. Children line booii.L Do they have •Y many people stan·e to ' Vietnamese have proper tallareover.(1ov.tmgwith ·e facts 11 IS impouible to :0 'L4honues · say But, wha t 1 .,.·ar-torn country'! And tght to s top the s pread of wewav· "Gi\oe t~ ·at ion, transporuUon and democl'lltlc go,·emment. at the Vietnam war was 1eration: iction li edhorlal tommtat fro m , Tllt' vlt'WI t'.X prt"'IC'd do College campuses a rea logical ~ace to hearlheoutcryof women demandingaC"Ceptance for v.·ho they are and now much the,· know, rather th.1n to which sex they belong. Here is wh~ women ha '•e the chance to pnwe themselves throuAA their mtellectual nc· compliShincnts along with thei r leadenhip abilities and physica l capabilitcs. College campuses breed an air of gro141h and so v.·omen f~~eult)' and students from co,llege camouses throughout the nation have banded togdher to form women's organizations. W1sconsm has an Ol"ganization c:aliC!d the Coordinating Cound l for Women in iligher Education. Women 1n lligher Educ:atLon groups from the separate coi.Jeges and univen1ltes mM eadl mooth to discuss, plan, and act on 10me ol the many problems wh1ch fa~ uruversity women. both faculty and studenl.S. Suc:h a meetmg was held rettntl y at the Madison c:ampus on Janua ry 19, 20, and 21 l"ac ult)' and studenl3 partkipated In a three day workshop which dealt with women's s tudies. ro4.mRilng for women, es~bhshing v.·omen's centn"', and such. UW.SP haa a faculty branc:h ol WHE . Although 1t is an active group, the number of faculty women who belong to U IS minimal, not to mention 'the lac:k of male partki pa lion. Those faculty ~O:Stl;~~~~!t~ta;,;,=~·~;~:::=.~~~~:=:~ :'0::S:,~t~~!:7oupma~x!';:~~~e ,•:~~:s,··~~r ~c!!i~= So mudl for the v.·omen faculty and classiried em p!D)'te:S. but noth1ng hu ~n sa1d about the students 1bat's because there Is nolh1ng to SOl)' There are organ1tations or st OOent v.·omen at nea rl y all the um\'eTSitles of Wisc:onsm Some. 11uc:h as Oshkosh and Platti.'YIIIe, ha ,•e set up Women's Centers where women may tto for help concemmg anything from c:arterC:OWisthng to person:. I grJe\'ance So v.·hy 1s there noC.hlng for the v.·omen studmlS at. Ste\'en.5 Pomf• The aflS\Io·er 1s that th~ has never been a demand !Of" such a SC'I"Yit"t It •s difficult , howeve r, to bd le\•e th;ll there Is no 5ell disc r1mma tion on this campus. Is 11 reaJiy possible that n ·ery other umvt"r"Sity 1n the state t maybe the nauor11 . except Stn·ms Po1nt, has such a problem' If ttus ~ true, then th1s an kle can be sho\'ed bad into the a rclm-es w1th the rest of the over· reactionary art1des that are not applkable to this campus. If you believe tha t sex disc rtminatlon is a problem on this campus, then it is lime to do something about 11. Are you ha\i ng problems at the ~a cr m mt olr1ce Of" the COWistling c:enter' How about you men who can't get a Phy. Ed. ma)or' at Uus school because ol )"OUr aex'! You senior" women, as you' re lOOking for a job, what kmOot OJIIJC:UII1es are )'OU t'nroun tering with employen'! ~oriUIU ff. spu t .lng out and drm.an· They''-e malk a lot of (rage and the first burnt 1\'ered an e•u:nsh·e area paru ol1t a re Oct 1on. but on 11 an e''ldent problem """' Where Is A merica Dr ifting? Wbne I• t\m ffiU Urllting' · " The greattragt>dy of present·day Amerka is that most of our dtiz.ms do not understand tha t our countr)· 1s traveling the same ro:~d along which Germany went before lhtler and h11 rddl corporate backers assumed dictor1al rontrol o,·er the people Th11 summa ritCS the roncl~ions of William 1- Shirt'., who vlt..,.·ed the ri~e or German F'ascism first 1\a.nd as a reporter in the 1930's and told abou t It in his monumental book , 'The Rise and !-' all ol the Third Rekh · " cRenz. L Jennings, rfl1red Just1~ of the Anz.ona Supreme Court, 1n a"Book ltadt " J " The lesson for Amer•c:ans hes in the price the Germans paid for following their leader as long and as blindly as they did. The rea l probl~tm , as the romlng weeks .,..ill make deare r, is not Just to disengage Amer•ca from Southeast Asia but from the in~as l ngly on~man rule or Richard Nixon " t i.F Stone, Nrw \'ark Rf'\'lt'lll, Janua ry 25 1 "NC\'tr sinc:e the founding of the Republic hu power bt."Cfl gathered so cornpletl'l y Into the White House itself a s it Is toda y. And ne\·er before has the President so dominated the s tructure of government If and 14·hen ~tr Kissinger goes tht:re .,..Ill be literally no one around ~1r !'i1xon to share the spotlight or question any of Ius dec•s•ons." J oseph C llarsch . senior rorrespondent. C hrl~tlan Sdtace Monitor , J anua ry 9. " The US is fa cing II C:OI1StitUtiOn3l C:riliS. That brand! Of the government that most d06«!ly represents the peo~e I CongresS I IS not yet broken. but tt is bmt and 1n danger or snappinR. In \11et Nam, he t N•xonl has m1ned ha rbors and tumC!d the maSSJ\'e bombing on a nd orr like 11 spigot with no advance c:onsulta tlon with Com~ ressa nd with explanation, If nt a ll, only aftl'f' the fad .. Jie has Ignored Congre.ss when it overn:Mte his veto, refusing to s pend the money appropriated·whkh is not his dear right .. E\'ftl as he cenlTalit.es more J)O'A·ersof the Executive Branc:h within his Whue !louse staff, he has drawn ac:loak or Enc:uti\'e privilege around his men , refusing to allcw key dec-ision makers to be questioned by c:ongresslona l c:ommiltees." 411 m" J anua ry 15 1 " A sense of unea~e 11 IUOV.' INI. •n Washinaton In tne past tv.·o months. he t Nixon l has become more remote and Indrawn than n •er.. The President has fa1led, and we have to assume the fail ure 11 dehbcra te, to make even the mor(' minimal gestures or politka l acrommodation to the Congreu rclat1ons with the press, alrt'ady bad, ha\'e grown WOI'SC! these thu~gs form a pattem It is an Image. to borrov.· from Patr1c:k Henry. that squints of monarc:hy and .,..e a re uneasy,· · c:onserv~ tl \'e columnist James J Kilpatrick, Ja~~C, ~vincC!d "' lf how well people get d how they view their ings comes because ol 10t lona l a n d en · 1tal sUuat.ion ~ by r 1M: instructors along group, and the fP'oup 1 Itself Our group and ctors were quite good, ;eems IN group In· j did not fa ir 10 v.·eU ehar&es a ga1nst 1n· ty w1thin the editorial ) QUite atupid. Society ~eparate ontoiCJiical . you a«m to s uppo.e it , not a bl& brtlther sit· here whkh individual md &ood muat be :1 Lo In order- to havt'. happiness · sodety is 1 sum of 1ls partl ~you an only promote es pod by promoting ~~~vfd~ ~ ar~t a couple of v.·omen students v.·ho art' 111te-e:sted m st.artmg an orgaruu t10n ol student 'A'Offief\ but help and support IS nt'tded. If any of the abcwe gnp6 or romments h1t home pleast' (."()1\tact thc:k students .and perhaps someth ing can be doiH' to alh~· ,·•ate the pressure of 1e.1 discrimination on thlsc:ampus !-' or more mformalion ca ll Kay at 34 1 · ~-\3 or Waro at ~~7 . Room 333 Washington Watch ;,Ji.· to dist&ln 10 much U to st.rrender some ol lhll, n ne · but don't te aurrende r of mine to lhic:al good of sodety . uoo for that trip, wu years ol age, and ol rxf : therefore I had lhe 91 for extracu rrkula r c e xp e r ie nc:u over many ol my daues if I washeo to while 1n England · and I did so I believe no one bad the nght to try and pri'Vent thlS · In fact. the more restrktive such rlghls o! ind~dence and lra\'t'l a re, the leu e Uec:tive the program is. If the classes are good, you'll balance the ac· tivJUes · if not, well, one c:an learn a lot hitchlkinJt and meeting different peoples "That c::e-la.mly v.·as a stupid analogy drawn b)" Mr Schnieder English pubs are cer tainly more of a cultural learning e:x penence than Papa Joe& Integration m thec:ul ture should be a pnme concern II was also ra ther Ir rational or you to c:r itiz.e Peace Haven for perhaps being run lilte a t.alneu · hov.· docs 11 operated yo u don't p ~ thalthey'r-eat least busmeu e11ough hke to take In as muc:h as they s pend , are you &oi~ to support 11 Along w•th tllla . a• long as thrir starr does a proper job it Is none ol your busiiH'U as to thrir bac:kgrounJ. To rec:apiWi aU!, Pea~ Haven for me was a very enjoyable time. but this does depend much on the maturity of the people and irwtruc:ton going~ Some of the lot Interviewed seemed to tack m this respect Peace Ha\·en itself v.·as a home. not perfect but rom · fortable. Next lime make a n elfort to g1ve both sides of a n issut' even if this Is a llen to the Fbinter I believe you' U ha\·e qu1te a rev.· letters from my group · enjoy them · you err· ta inly deserve them . Ralph Kna1 Comments On Peace Haven To tbf' !-:dltor : Hegarding AI J enkms' ar· tide, "Semester m Britain " and tht'. editonal " llaJI Britannia '" I have four bf'•ef comments I The lntemahon Fnendship League . w1 th v.h1c:h th 11 uni\·ers1ty has auoci<~llons in London , was founded m London m the early and desperate 1930's for the sole purpose of promoti ng world peace and Internationa l understa nding The I F L .sooght to aehie\"1' thest' jtoal s th rough en courag1ng and devclop1n!' ciMt· persona l t'Ontact s amonl( people" of d 1ff ert'.nl t'OI'II top to tha t the US is t'loser to one-ma n rule than at any time m our history," Senator McGovern J an uary'2 1. " Secret• ~ and enJgmatJt'. ind!re<"t, revoh'lng more and more dosely around the per500 of the ruler : palac:e mtrigucs ""'!thin Int rigues. periO<b of St'll('mJng s tasis 1nterruptC!d by fur ious OUI· bursts of energy ; the gr~tat lords with independent titles va nished from C:OW11n ra\'Or or the ruler's bound Jeigemen, dec:uions taken an S«lusion and put into effe<1 v.·•thout explanauon, prem11e1 or a1ms." J ames Burnha m Sstioaa l R" \'l"w. " I thmlt we're heading for a oonstltutlona l cri111. The s pirit or the cons titution has certainly been viola ted by the President With President Nixon m the White House the Lord only knows what will happen to these programs '' Speaker Carl Albert I he was speakmg olsudl progra ms as housm&. education. h1ghways, de.an v.·ater and health ! The Speaker s.atd of Wh1te lfouS<' pres~ure oo 'n' stat•ons "of rour-se, that 11 dic tatorship." " There In his s plendid ISOlation s•ts the President. consulting w1th fev.·, explaining to none. d1r«tm,g against a small As1an country a ram of death and terror that to the v.hole v.·orld ma kes theUn1tedStates ol Americ:a app!C.1r a barbanan gone mad.'" i i.M Angell'"l 11mn, Dttem~ 28 ) TU SU HSt'R IHE : WASIII SGTOS WATC II . South PeNni !•tau . l.aruin&. ~1khigln IIIIa. ltatl' t l2 I I )"l'l r l: t7 II mot. !. Hl- monthl)". iJP :~ i. NBC CBS ABC The President ,lfld I .Jt~ happy to o~nnoc,mu tNt the /UJ f iCf! IA-p.Jrtfl')('fll h.Js brolctn the VIOOJS ne~Jc monopoly 0\'ef'" I V ~owammmg . Stay tuned lor an hour ol martial music followed by the Billy Oaham Hour and the Ronald Reilpn Show."" Poga 10 Friday, Februory 16, 1973 THE POIHTft Letters, Cont. brethro:-n na uonalllln . ra~n and ptulolophin 1lw I F L f~ tl~ '" thtl tuk. Ill COW"M:. and V.orld War 11•-as thf' wtlible ~nd 1\aunUn& proof ol thil laolw~ Aflfl" 1M "ar. the Like Paulino:- -·-- Classified Ads ....... ls.a~hefto.heiSor>eoftl!e For all Yom" HJ-F1 do:-dicated. ilonftt lind tdr;Jiltt~ penon~ ot ha$ n"ft" lwom my plea5UN' 1o know llrmberlolthf't.-donU'L. Juo·o:- the hlcJ!nl resptocl for c:ampaa ""P. (01' • • molt I~'L bl-ganaaainand~pd., maJOr rtn.ar~~;~l and idlrolo&iul your hlm.Lif'lt'lybeca~hetoolt PeOK'e lln·enat a hm• ..-h., 1t IOlltonthcbrinlr.of od...alistit' ;Jnd fin1r~~;ial banbuJ)I~y . and by proprr manag"""''· by lteltutJ )·ear 1round uw of thr fat'ihtiH from ~·renm, Dutt"h , Ger man a nd Am h lcan s tudfntt .byup& r adi n&the ho:-atlnl•rstem,yH,I t U5fd lo be ..-onf, by improvin1 the ...,tbackJ.ithaiM\"ft'loi.thoPf' '" ·~ Ko;al. prrhaps nalwf. pt"rhapl utopoan, p..rhap1 foollloh.that"anandhatl"f'dl .-anbta•·oidc'dofi)I'Oplf..-ould ......,.,ho,.•gtttolr.oo ..· ea~hothn­ by h•·in&. O!at lrw and wor kin& IOJirlh.-r . b)' .,.-., &rumblina. o·om platntn&. ~nd )bouhlllt :r.t ~ac hothcr , too To thiS Hid thr It' L hat rst.abliJ.hed ~·oull'l host~!• urou Europe and ~:n gland "her.- thOIO! ~toho be lon~ to the If' L from "hat.-o·.-rl"OIIIIIr)' Un find a plaet" to $ l~p • .-at,lo•·., and ~rumble ..·othol hrtptnOI'II"ho HIJO~ 1iftoptng. ultng lovtng ;ond IVUmbhng not KO!y to I~- L os that u os onternation.al , roominlandboardinlfacilit~. ~rid bytraulinl about Enlland andt:uropc-promoli11Jtheldeas of the u· L .. Omll.a r Na\1'1 made Pea~ llaven phyliclllly and tdit-ahstlrally10urwl . llfhatthe ~~:n:e?. ~~~ ~'!~~~a,:; 1 i'"'~~~"';= ~lldthe l.ondonmemben l havO! fOmf to know tac:h otMr, li•·e tocrther. stud)' to1rlher , yH. mtt , dotspott'a major bontbong ' "~'~"" t•·tn l'~ac~ llavt'll ltHif '"h d;oma~ted l and lilt' otl!f<' uvagerin of war . hav~ r~main~d fatth ful to th" do:-hghtful utoptan bo:-lio:-f ttlat futurt!hoslllitiHalld ..·ancoold be avCNded tf po:-ople limply kHI,.r.tchoth«bo!ller ~~"';a!~~~~n~=;.:!;!~ ~::s ~~r~:~.~J:·~~~t,\on~ d•minoNttd. tf not abo lished. m&l'l. I'm a larp maU order ftna out eut. 1 .,a vtrtuaUy &ll,)'t.b llll[- all,)' bn.ad.. Wh1 ..ot For Dk!: U.ed lid boot&. Laa~~:e Competition. · she II. U oeh~ abe&. Both In uoelleut condition. RNaonabt.v prk'ecl. can S44-3!N4 or S41~ r;tve me • ca.U! Jerry zsoz IM KlwbeD For&&e: 1971 Hariey· Davkl6oa 9por11Jtor ''900." N- pe.lnt uad tu..e-ap. .,.,, ........ After 5 p-111. !~ :;r: ~n•twt! :. ~=•rebiUt'!; . HEN · WOKEN Wuhln~ D.C., No experience required.. for a lido to over •P ri DJ: brftk. ~!.!~~ hospit&llty. U YOU w.:,: ~P ~~ =-~ !_.e!!..,eet ,_ ............,•_Job,.... ,._,..,... 00 Antlqtte &Ad UMd .:aRepaired uad ...toted. Your KUD may be ~.:':'7:~ 1~':. .~ ~:~mhae~r:s'::t~ ~~~--·. lnfo':!Uoz'MWAX 5t~nts "ho stay at the ::;,~;!~';~:OU~rsthe ~mae~ M4-0941 ukla' for '11m;. Port A!l#lt:e.. WL 98S6Z 12 y!,~ London '-tel of 1M I ~'L., J Ddpilo:' what ltalte to be L--;:====================~ u lled ·· po:-li('O! llavHI". --'e hyl)ftboif here and then 1 Ttw a~ ther•lar&rlybec:a~~5eth.- IFL tnJenltins' article.andclespill:' 1M IKI INti I'm SW"e a number lw-hi:"<"H and hopes that our ~ludenll .. ,u Mlp to promott! of pe-ople an made to suffer peac-o:- and undrntalldin& and thatlile)' "'llhnuplolh.-holh IM~Is ol tho:- I FL. I belin·e tlutthts h.-l,..fandhopehno:llftft reahLtd wmHI« after wmnt« at Peac:e Havm, II tile)"hadn't . l'm suro:-thattM I ~- L ,.-ould lon& a&o have >Ullllntedthatwo:-lorlse..-ho:-re 2 . \'oo real1y011ghttoauuh nothlnj1Jtnl!lertotllewa r6tnof P..ace linen . It's true il a li\IJiiiHI man, a trained a<: · tllu ntanttobeuact , anditiJ also true that no one un ro:-mfmbo:'r his first name Act uall y that name, " P O' Nath. " ~ hb own alltmpt to fos tu mto:-rnational un· dencandtnl by ta kln1 a 10on· ompoS.tible-to-~ derholly liM., but beauhftol Kuhmtn namo:-. Pandtt Omhr Naill, and t......,an&liclll!IJ•Iforthealto:of hos lttat&hl·spulr.tfll Brttlsb publicly lor no good put'pMOI! ..-hatiOn'ef', alld dtspilo:' U.. fa~l !lull tome sin.lslfl" and, I believe, lnl upporlabl e in · nuendoel ttr-tp In ~ten. al>d the-re, dHpi!elhtsf mi:qiwinp. aboutt ho:- articlo:-,lthinlr.\l'latl ,.-ould r~mmtnd It lor , .,.din& lo alllho5f t ludntll ..-ho are conltderiiiJIOin&abtoldundef' lheaUJplce11ol thf lntrmational I'Toyam!. The article, of courH, II not dfoscrtptiwe of ,.-hatlt ..·u ru lly lik etoliveat l'uce llavo:-n: butltlscertllnly do:'l( r lptiveof what til studenta lhouihl It wn Hlr.e: and their oburvallons and their rMOilt-elloN and conclusions " "OII Id mako:- thil Im portant rudina for jii'05pt«ive candld.ltes In U.. procram. t f'inally,uyoumay«may notbeabletodeto:"CI, l arnan mat. to p. 12 he ~ Wslcoms To 1111iwrat:ty Actiuitiaa Board ' s \W~~ifltl2 ®~~~~W~LL i}~ THURSDAY , FEBRUARY 22, 11173 4:00 prrr Chariot Rae. , IH Fiflkl Cid.r Sip , 7:30 P"' W~n'• Hairdo , ~~right Lowtgt~, Lounge. SliNDAY, FEMIIARY 18, 11173 7:00 pm 8:00 pm "StJ'tDtgt'rB", lo'isco~in 7 :00pm ROOttr, U.C. YOW' Path.r'a Houatachs, 8:00 pm C't"idi'f'0"1, Marti's Sweetheart of a Deal. POINTI& ~ Your party dress and one Men's and Ladies' twopiece suit . . reg. $6.00 Just $3.99 with coupon . Oft.-r . - . ...... 16 & 17. u.c. HOliDAY, PEBRUARI 111, J/17J 4:00pm Tug of War, IH Field 7:00 P"' Men's and W~n 'a Pips S1110k6 , O.Bot 8:00 pm Ednrunda I Cu rly ~th Daddy Whiskflra. A. C. o.- o.n, 1 . ..... - 6 , ..... 157 om. . St. F.W.)'I 7 . ...... ., .... . l44-Sm u.c. u.c. "Putrwy S'~Jopt!". IH.ttoOI'Wiin ROOttr, u.c. K.-LUJr I W'Bbb , O.Bot FR1DA1, FEBRUARY 23, 11173 1:00pm ero.a Country Ski Workshop, aTid InatNotion, Nhirld J:OO pm Bt~rg Gym, f'N• SI'IOU Sca..lptUl"B Judgi.ng, Bull..ya CCHid Tug of WaJ", IH Field 4: 00pm PyJ'alflid Build, IH Fi.Zd J:JO pm TCIESDAI, 4:00 prrr 7:00 pm 7: JO pm 8:00 pm FEBRUARY 20, 1973 ShotHil Raoa , IH F'iskl Hog CaZZ, O.Bot Dflcol"'tsd Xneaa , DB Bot "Scm of Movie Orgy", lli•oonsin Roo111, U. C. 7:00 P"' 8:00pm "PutM!f Sl.Jcp•"• llisconsi" Room, U. C, Lutksr AlliaOI'I with DyPIQ$t• Duak, Q.G. IIE:D!IESDAY, PEBRUARY 21, 1973 4: 00 P"' CJ'OB a Countl"!! Ski Raotl , IN Pi•ld Professional Cleaning and Service come first! ~~right 7:00pm SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 117J 1~~~~: ~~;:· .,;:.~·ld IN Piflld 1:00pm Log SatJ, IN Pi•ld 2:00pm SaDk Raos , IN Piald J:OO pm Sadi• HC~~Jki.~ RafHI, IN Pisl.d 8:00 P"'. Patti HH-tar, Grid. Fnday, February 16, t-:dllor'!l> 1973 THE POINTER Page 11 "Africa orAnd Black Americans" .~otr : Hl'crntly, on ~ our corre-~pondents at Peacl" ll aven in London encoun te-red a ~lgt'rian national living In (ir"ea t Britain. The reporter otskM if the.- man. C'hinyci .'t'l.. l'hinyrl . \o\OUid li~rlte a pi~cr (or thiJ. Ot\o\Spa~ . Fortunately, thr rollo" ing piece.· arrivtod in llmr to be incl u d ~ "ith our co,•rragr or lllitck C'u ll ur-co \\ eek. By Chlnyei :S. Chin yei Looking up and down, l am obliged, through my own ex· perience. to comment on blacks in general and on the everyday phenomena in our universe. These comments will be chieny directed to the blacks in the United States. 1t has come to my attention, through personal experience. that many black Americans do no t know anything at all concerning Afr ica and arc not. through either lack or understanding or an imp roper cduc3tion. prepared to know . The name, Africa. has been mentioned to some blacks and the reply ha s been that they do not wish to know her : "Africa should be left to her undeveloped desliny, " is the implication. This answer, to me. in the present day , in unconventional One sees that the other Americans ha,•e more knoWledge or Africa than the blacks. These other Americans hav(• visit(.-d Afnca . having "orked and saved for years to achie ve their goal. There as one uon· ACrican woman . for m· sta nce. who traveled from Ne~o~. \' ork to Ghana where she Jived thr~ years. studying African IIIUSIC and dance. Presently , she lives in Britain and is lee luring on this ver y subject. To bring everythmg to light, black Americans should travel to West Africa to Benin, Nige.n a. for mstance. to see what has been done there in the past. They might visit Timbuktu in Mali to sec whal has been done there during the Sawgay Empire or go to Morocco in No rth Africa to observe the works of the Moors. Also in North Africa lies Tumsia and llannibal's Carthage. Then. ther e is Alexandria In Egypt where. before the Arab co nquest of 642 A.D.. the Egyptians had accomplished much. By visiting these places. one can see that Africa has cont ributed much to mankind in the past. One should rccogmze that Africa is very old in the record of history. yet very young in relation to modern 10 dustrializ.ation. Americ~ is a new nation tn the record of history . though 11 tS advanced in modern tndustry an d technology Some of us kno" that not just ont' counlry has contnbut ed to the presen t--da y technology It will be fair. then . to take a cle-a r look at a nv country that has. according 1~ l.ht.• records , taken pione-ermg mitaative We must be :1ware that technology i~ tht• dislln(·· tion or the " elite" today . any countr\' which ha~ no tec hn oiogic a l know -how ts rega rded a s underdeveloped Iter people. then . are al"•ays subject to indignittes. h may be that many nations in Afric~ are not full y exploited by mdustnes that have made our sons ;md daughters outs ide Africa vie" a ll places w1t.hin the continent as remote. Americans, young and old, are today visiling Europe in search of their ancestry . In Britain alone there are hun dreds of Americans, seeking their birthright. l n Scotland some are asking to become clan c hiehains while others arc participating in tribal dancing. But , blacks have no interest in doing such lhings in ,.\!rica ; to them it seems archaic and fruitless . Blacks should rega rd themselves a s the best . if they are to e njoy the beauty of their pains. The momen t lhcv know that Africa IS their second home. as other Americans have looked to Europe as 1he1r second home. pride ~nd dignity will be their e \•e ry day happiness .th ANNIVERSARY SALE 1968 PRICES ARE BACK FOR 4 BIG DAYS THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAY FEB. 15th 16th 17th 18th ENTIRE MENU PRICE REDUCED! HAMB. FRIES 11 oz. COLD DRINKS ETC. ETC. ETC. ----~. 15' 15' BURGER 10' CHEF • FAMilY • & • NONE OF THEM I'S "Jolt' JOE IS THE FIRST IN A SERIES OF This MIDNITE SHOWS ~~::~a;.t, STARTING theCAMPUS CINEMA Think Spring ! Think of..driving around with the windows down again while you listen to your favorite music. 'Pioneer has a complete lin·e of car players to provid'e the music starting with a budget priced Mini 8 track player at $54.95 to a deluxe S-track with AM/FM/M'PX radio for $144.95. Perhaps you're interested in a good unit for your ca.r-or an automatic reversing cassette. Pioneer has them! Add a pair of speakers and you're ready to go. We have a complete line of Pioneer car players at the STERE01 SHOP and we'll demonstrate their power, performance and features for you Show you why we say - ® PIQ~"~~.' THE STEREO SHOP Corner 2nd & Clark 344-6020 Friday, Februory THl I'OtNTU. Pog. 12 16, 1973 Vets, Cont. lrvm l>aJt7 l'ootro•uki nott'd !hit lht \1VA 'A' has tlkm OVtt' ~ lt'OO' ,\mtrifan IAgion l•osts thr-"out the cvuntry 1llto ('Oft! But toiJMo\'tUfc..-Ptac:..,ll~ •IOS«I'flthat !MOon Kl'mp5of U.t•·orklh.l~l'~l to,.·in tMir pcac:e l'«hflp5otts~t Jumnotd up byJu Barry , " &rouphasnotie~~wilhtheS.SO's. thou&}la•·rt«ant"OUklbeklnl! to both or1antUtfon1 Pootro ... nouldth.lttht\'ttsfor l't'Kt' ha•·e btm somr••hat \~tnam l~ngl'$t actovr on •·ttenn's ngtua. but tha t ol " hun'l bcm at all 11 prtntary goal or a pl'imary STUDDITJ! Do,.. .... ,_....,. vm littJl'leftof,.·h.lt•·aJonc: .. pou~bly the lareHt prottst ntDVC'II'ItntinlhianMUtU')',IJMo . ,.,,.,.-atii'IO\'l'mmt" ........ loryoar~ or mobile t.-!' u .. .,., 344-35991 , ..,,, inhiSpot'lll"Thr War ". Thelonlfl-1 war is ov« -. purpost " tlr.otill')'Sil)' lllftVBimY r•·mts transport' tht "'otld, mOll! of the "'""'bo.rsfH"Ithatt:oop"'llh· -'liiiiO JIISURAII(f "ha\htr ~round dn.,.~l•"''""'")'btrnlizedhy " gtncral fUtbacks In lht' nothtar) •ondustrul t'Siabh!oh· mt'AI " llo ~tothat re-onlrnnl( " ' PfiOtllltS that many of the mcmbtu •nil ap pncnll y dr•·~tthtorrM'r&IH llulltanlhllhf!arlhl'&unfirt' t:~l't)' night ., ··~.... C8IIIR Thrlongntni&htmatl' Ne•·l'r liftmJ to t;,,, 701 Club ~lll'('Of!IC Wh:OIP\'PttiH'tslhetlllt.the grouplt'eii\IC'Onfidenttl'ultl.hey "'l lltwuu•·rlonJ 3ftcrmanyof lht'<>th« Mt<alled "mO\'t'mc'A\ uoupt " hl vt man:Md orr to ~uburboa Pootro,.·Uo summl'd otup t' r om 1\lnnh•l llnr11 a od \llntb : Warpoor•oby \' Ot tnant \ptrnnoLitrry Hottman, BaJil " Thrrc 'sancord lorour ~roup lo stoll t"JoSI Anmd. T P~qlll't. Jan Barry. Eels .. ~lcCnw- lloll . tm Thtrt!'l letters, Cont. oonl from J<ag .. to oMalth•t if proplf! somrhow lfl loknowooeanothtt'bl'tt«IJMoy •o1t'tp •round lwrttn~one rnth..taJIICStlppol'ltt'cMour Yfllg Pllfies ......... l.ondonprocram. PN~Ita•·cn. Omkar Nath and the LFL. fNiures Un lnlet!llnmenl fine foods I.Jrge Ballroom I •ould.!hatAJJtnktns our on'I'Has proctlml, ar>d """" ""'"""" hts art~eiH on \rlharllrrmu :t:Soo)lorlf- ptt'ha~t'\'f'II Jptndafl'w•· H"U lilr•·c•• •· • · u-o f>l'Kt' Ha•·en, that tun.,. '' Th ey do not fo ue th<Jt do not shou1 their love . Welcome 701 No~ Seco.d St. snnf'd. CI'OIII~. aornl'timf!l fturnblo!llar>dpH"Iiftlbutsll ll 'Ollnd monwnmt to the cvr- PHOTOGRAPHY Weddings & Portraits Professional Wolfl lowest Prices ChooM:Kup501kc '"'' ithcomplc!cconlidt'nct. bccau.wthrbmous Kups.ahGuarilntu auurcsapcrlut rngagrmcntdiamond ofprttl.wcutiind $UfM' rbcolor. T htrr os noftntrdo;,mondrong. JS~.~P..~~~ Richard Hennan 341-3(03 LOSE 20 POUNDS IN TWO WEEKS! o......u..--- · " .,.U-!1 w -·o AJ..-StiT- - .... u.."SoT_"_ _... .... . . -\Ill - _..to"' .... ..... ~. ......_..,. ... Ttoot'o "'~'- liO _,..io"' to ~.opt n..booolo.tthoodi .... . -..., ..... Coloo-.... ph,......" ........u,r-..w """"•t llloooot. - t H» ttOD» U.ll , Too,. ,__.Jl' lo -l"iaUWollf"ft)'l.,_..nl!t •holo T-MIIroAIIP-Co ::=::" ~...bo<:..:. :!''~-...-.. :: ......... -, .. -. .,.,..dlh.otwoJ'h'oo4oollllotlo ... , ...ool,... .. hoUHoT _ _ \ , '"""'"· """"'1J, o lo11100lk.PJ ~&.ll i••.....,"o.thooUA ..... .._w .... w- ·. ~~~o,T ~oe..,. _....,.,. -..--. oil lll!rht7 ,_,...,v.. ... .,.u.I. Stoi So. ~·· T - • - t - .-.ho U.. _...,.._ h l~~:f;lnt "'lth • 1\ecpulte Rln1• Kec p.. l t prrf,....t ~n lc.r oillomo nd o f p...,..;.., not. There I• nolinl'r ol io mond r in1 fo r yo11 r l o~·e 1tory. .......u -. ....... ,.._. ;,,.,_,. ... ..,.tlwu.s•-·• AI ...,... ,.0rE•.,..,f,._",..lriooil oU o GRUBBA JEWELERS T-a....Ttoooio,lf--117· .... ,o .. _liO _ _ ...... ....... =-~•r T_,_ .., .. ~-l:rl2.00 !tl.. . . . ltiooh ~)-c..,io Oil-,.1"""" ..._....._ea_ ,.o 11n1t2. l)op<.ttr. ea,........._Celoc.mt3. 0.._ ...... ..-,_ .. - 'Boa_ ...... 'JO _ .ioo_ ....... lhot'o,.MtWSk!T-Dio<..;D.sot Diamonds our SpeclaHy 968 Main St. .~=====:::==:::::== ' "'• ·o I I I I I I I · I I 1[~~-~~~)j~~-·~~·~~~~~~".:..!!~!!_ Il . Friday, February 16, 1973 Grade Review Procedure Hecen tl y. firs t semester grades were ma iled out to the st udents at Stevens Point. 1( a rea l grievance has ari sen over the grade received by a student at this university , lhe Screening Committee for Grade Review wou ld like the £o1Jowing prodecur• to be followed . First. THE P<»NTER should be used to supply the needed information. This in · eludes the name of the student , the grade should be discussed the name or number of the wi th the ins tructo r of th e course involved, th e name of the course . H the results from that mstructor of that course and the meeting ar(" considered un · reasons why the grade recei ved salisfactory, the st uden t should ts co nsidered to be unfair. submit . in writing . o. s tatement These statements for Rradc of his grade g rie\•ancc . Request review should be sent to the rorGrade Reviewform s ma y be office or Dean Frilshel, college picked up in COPS tl 2 a nd of Studies Profess ional Page building : 13 Grades must be reviewed during semes te r semes te r the next follo wi ng wh ich th~ in the questioned grade was received , excluding the summer sessions. Short Forms Available The new 1040 Income tax rorms-fa?e now available upon request at the Financial Aids Office. With theAnny ROfC Two~ear Program. Army ROTC usually takes four years of college. But you can do it in two. · If, for example, you couldn't take Army ROTC during your first two years of college. Or if you just didn't want to take Army ROTC before. But now you recognize the benefits. Yqu start the Two-Year Program by going to our six-week Basic Camp the surnrnerfollowing your sophomore year. Camp-a little classroom work; some challenging physical training-replaces the Basic Course you would have taken during your first two years of college. You're well-paid for this six-week catch--up. Then, after camp, you complete your Advanced Course during your junior and senior years. Maybe you'll decide that the chance to get real management experience earlier than most people will be worth a lot later on. Maybe you can use the $100 per month subsistence allowance you will get for up to 10 months of each school year. / Maybe qualifying for two careers simultaneouslymilitary or civilian-is insurance against job uncertainties. // Or, maybe the opportunity for an Army ROTC scholar-// ship is exciting. / ' The Army ROTC Two-Year Program is another // chance f~r a better career, through Army ROTC. /~ Talk over the Two-Year Program with /' .li!il. . h I / ,...'""' """ th e P rofessor o f M I·1·I t ary SCience a t your Th , bl. . sc oo . / / ,.,,.,,, •.,"'".....' ~''" ,. \ ,.,," h. 0 ruse t IS coupon. ere s no o tgatwn. / ,, Army ROTC. The more you look // ''":' """ ,... ,.., ' ' '""""'· ~.'_ at it, the better it looks. / - ------11 , , . .......... ... ,, .. . ,/ ~~ ,// ~,~/ /<. . . . . _____ _ ........____ t ... - _______ ,.,,,_____ I "' - - - ""' u.. -.:• ..... ,, .u • •ott ... _ - --- ''"'•~-----COtHJ1· 12 ; . THE P'QH(rll Jobs n·b Admhtl•trll\oa, ltap1d~ AU W!KOIIIIII So<'ooloJ) . l'•)thololb ;;~nd ollwr mllpn t'rll It \1lu.....,la .\lwlnl l.lfriii•Wtlllf<'. A_ll majo,-,;for S:lleoonly l posol10n5 FC'b Ill · ("a ihollr t 'hurch I ~C"nour l)fo( r••· All ma,ion tnlfrH!t'd 111 thr pr'"thood Ft-b %11 • lpjoh l'hu· noanutlni. AiliJiologySd~f noajoon or mtnon for phar ma«ullnlsaln ~'rll:O · SC oi•UIIU-• 1•. Runa11 of Pf'rooaa r l. All ~:raduolllnl~lolln. ~Jradu.anna ~lldmbandahomn o \ lfll'\)1 fora,.!dr of •lair urHt" o po p«tumllt"f t' rb \ l utual ~~ I. Ur \IU•~ubr ' '"h t,.r•tr r n l n.• unncr ol mu\l~tntloo. All buSil'lft.l Ad· EconomicS and Ubti'a~Arts majors Interested on da1m1 adjust ons . un · <k,....,ilmll and hom• off!ce mana~mftltp&.uuons Feb:!::! 1\l•r-•ln l lomr Friday, Februory 16, 1973 ,\lfnunillrltoon,Etonomonand CMht-rnoljOI'Sonttra t.-dinrttatl ma nllltm<'nt ta. - s Mar 1 · 2 t •.s • ..:.,·} · ,\ 11 majon . Mar ~ • 7 l 'un ('orpo. All noaJt~ l t•tpecla ll y Natu,.l %2 . 5Kial Sl'nrll)' •n w~tt'd ln ff'dtlo"alnrl'f'rsm "•M'Oflllll, llhnotll, lnrbanaand tllrllllihool lhl'mid,.n t t"fb. 22 · Tutber C..-po . l:lo'lro!l , ~1irh•gan( ~II ti~nl ~ rtt ,; tudrnt l 1ntrrested '" lf;IChiiii!Oppo!"lllnitoet f rb. :D • •\mtr lcu Bapt.ht ~sum bly. All stulknt.lfresh· "'an to Knior t for illlllm.-r ·-~ Mar ' · t; tmh•l• . IIO)Irle Economon, Bu1.1nru, Libef"l Mts liM' llf'taol Management po$1110111. Mar . 1 · lnt• r114l ll f'HIIIIOI Butlnen a11 d t:.;ononucs lludmtl with 6 or S.r~ln• campopportunma t loft~uard. o;ounltlor , cooh and han - Mar I ~•lioo.-.ri•JI t'd ~~ . u.s. 11•11 Sllr•ltf' t :u ... ll0to 12 oo. Room~t2t o1 tht Srimce 8uildin1. Si1n uptn Room IOii~lainandSft:l •·oun lt'lo r M ti ps for ~-lontCNilyl . ~l ar I • II . J . II•} 'IIOicb :~,':;~"!!: proetdu'"" and Fe b 20 • ll ulu t•u lllk N-hool~. Uadar. WI. \'aua· df'" Klndergartfn~ Grneral Scieoce, L.Ibra r y&lrn«, Math, Ph )'Siul Sdenc e . SjWc•al t::d~~~;ation. Art and ll111inev AU ~ Z Sa~::y_";!~r/t7':~: ~ ~ a.m. on the l'\ima' Room of tht Tutor Meeting Unl\'tnity ~ter for a ll Iuton wortlna '"'ll h tilt MnlunAmer i<:a n P~ram JEANS - JEANS Tom Kat Shop ~ JEAN . TRADE -IN SALE Education •uth7n«bf1!orrnommulatl\'f rndcopoont - LAST 2 DAYS Pll~ tna jon for ~ll UCAT I OS t .rHnmlc• t: •lr hlon IIUkr. \11 ll<mlf' Ec'onom"' maJOn JEANS AND l "o.,lla• t loll t'a. To hun . All toba«<u la. - ~ AlleyERI{;tsShop § mort M'O:Oimlinl rrMu dio;raft t t'tb 21 l'O t atr t"uno III >UUn( r , Allm.ajorsfors:alf'$ poslhons t'tbX7 · .S.Oa" I\Of'hiM'kand ( "o, ~II Bu sinus JEANS I Bring in Any Pair of Your OLD JEANS (ANY' CONDITlON I - ~ ~ AND RECEIVE - I ~$2° off ON A~ 0 ~ ~ NEW ~ PAIR OF JEANS ~ ~ SALE .: .~~~s,c:::; JEANS - JEANS - !:! 17 JEANS - ~ JEANS ENTERTAINMENT Every Friday & Saturday WHITIHG MOTOR ' &nqtf..c;omposfuz.z. i•note.>stj . l~ has•IW ~lot . Get coiled names. lbue fuinqs throo>n at me .flnd that!. before lever l,.ve home ;nthe morn;n<J.l\nd thats whq r at ~1~~ hamOOrgers eat'""' When {JOt/ can! fJ' home (jOioSandif5. HOm Problel'l Pre~nanoj Counse\in~ ~~ ~e.r~tC.l'. - Pre3nani? Ne ed Help? \lj 0 orfor cou.n~ol;nt Ji.oR fhe ~ l!. all<rna i u<s · CALL - ,..~P,llil\f!E 3 ff ·OI.39 AOOPTicM A BORTtOr4 3 11 "' · 1%-41 PAPA JOE'S 233 Division St. 1617 Division • .._\_, _ _... ,.,L Beer Special: 6-pak Rhinelander Beer 98c Case Beer, 24 12-oL BoHies Point . . . $3.00 plus deposH Huber • . . $2.7S plus deposH Page IS THE PO..n-n Fridoy, February 16, 1973 ,,. •v• Stubborn Stout Stifles Point: 78-73 by Larry GUmo n and Tim SulUv~n Last Saturday, the Pointer basketball team was twenty seconds away from pulling orr the conferen<e's ul""'t or the year. The intended victim was none other than the Stout Blue Stansell was next in line ) 'ilh 18. while Cal Kuphall seored 15. Les Gruner added 9 before fouling out . Stansell was credi ted with 12 rebounds, while Wei nk auf added seven. lU 11.7 261 Ill 11.0 ISO 7.S no ·~ The defeat brought Point's record tq,.,5-15 overa ll, while Stout stan<ls a t 11·2 in the conference. Nevertheless. as a n yone from Jo..bnson Fieldhouse will tell you , this game could've gone either ~· ay . tr u 110 ,. ll 4.5 )_] ., " l7 11 • 1.0 ,, 10 Devils. the nwnber one team in the State University Con · terence. This is how it looked as the game ran down to the final twenty seconds : Stout was holding on to a 75-73 lead, but the Pointers were about to shoot a !ree.lhrow. Point missed the attempt, so the game was just about over, right1 Wrong. The clock im· mediately started, and Point grabbed the rebound orr the missed free throw. Point sHU had time to tie the game with a qui c ~ basket. Sure enough, a Pointer shot went up, and everyone 's eyes in Stout's Johnson Fieldhouse were focused upon a small , seemingly insignificant round bas ketball. Most of those Menomonie eyes liked what they saw. The Pointer shot was off target , and tout gra bbed the rebound . Ten athletes ran like mad a U over th,.. court . and one of them ob'iously s ped to the right spot. Stout made the crucial basket , and on lop o! that, the Blue Devils added a quick free throw . The last Ourry o! action in the final twenty seeonds had earned victory number l1 for the Blue Devils. 12 P.M.-12 A.M. 12 P.M.-12 A.M. ~EB. FEB. 1S Pointer Coach Bob Krueger has stated all season that his team almost always plays one good hall of basketball. This time he was wrong. The Pointers played two good halves or college basketball. Apparently. someone forgot to tell Stout that the Pointers are capable or playing a tough , rej)l'esentive basketball game. Actually , late denied lhe Pointers a key victory . Point had everything to gain and nothing to lose in the battle, while Stout needed every win they could get. The Pointers were geared for an upset . It was obvious the Pointers meant business. as they went onto the loeker room at balllime with a six point lead. After they came ou t in the second half. the roof began to ran on Po tnt Slowly but surely . Point's top rebounders began to lade !rom the scene. Ankle injuries claimed the services or DeMy Peters and Matt Smilh. II that v.•asn 't enough. rugged Pointer rebounding forward Les Gruner got into serious foul trouble. With those three gone, the Pointers' tallest player stood at 6'3' ' The Pointers definitely ga,·e it all they had , but the final tw enty seconds settled the issue m favor of Stout. P'RODI/Cr IS1t 510 tl.econler Change MADNESS JVC Model MM 4600 - 60 Watt FM/AM 4-Chonnel Receinr $2 29 .95 179.95 WS 70 Fisher 2-Woy Speoken . . 79 .95 eo. 39.95 Shure M91E Mot netic C.omidge 49.95 16.95 Koa HV 1 Stereo Heodphones 39.95 29.95 Fisher Model 3901' - 140 Watt AM/FM Stereo Receinr .. 349.95 279.95 39.95 C-60 Couette Recording To,.-, 3-pok . . . . . . . . . . . . . ISR 310X Record Changer Bose/Duot Conr . 80.00 Scotch Motnetic Recording To,.- 150 1800' " \4,. 1 mil Polyester 5. 55 203 - 1800'" \4" Dyno 'Range 6.65 Kenwood KS 50SP' Compact Stereo System ... . ........ 319.95 5.99 1.49 1.50 JU<: VR 5511 - 16 Watt !RMSl Stereo Receinr Feotvrint SEA Control System . .... . .... 229.95 199.95 2.20 Amp.. 710 - 2 Way FIC>Ot Lo.od Speaker . . . . ...... . .. . . . 129.95 pr. 69.95 Muntz 860 $-Trcrck Auto Stereo Playback Syst.m . . . . . 49.95 39.9S 219.95 EXTRA Plsher XP80C Two Way (IO":d") s~ ..... u..t: -.9:1-- Mod"-se $69.95 SPECIAL PRf-RKORDED TAPfl Precor Alii/~ Radio Model 730. Lbt: $29.9:1 MADHOUSE $12.95 Precor Al\1/~W/ AIR/Pollee Model 800, Lbt: $49.95 MADHOUSE $19.95 Stevens Point outnumbered Stout in baskets from the field, 33 to 30 The Pointers also grabbed more rebounds , ~37 . llowever , Point 's downfall cam e at the free throw line, as Stout sa nk 18 gift tosses to . Pomt" s 7 ,\ Podtter guard Bruce Weinkauf broke loose for 24 points. which easily gave him game scor ing honors. Mike 16 UST l!l2Z!ll~ijjl~~~ Page 16 Friday, Februory 16, THE P'OtNTR lntramurals And The Top Ten llyJuT)'t..GI U•t•·<'f'k.tMI'einlc-r•poru .'llaffprom1M'danmformalpoll of the offici als on the lntramuuts offiff in an at trmpt to dettTrruninc- a "Top Ttn " In lhf lntnmur ll liukc-tball compe-tition ThclOtvf) hubftncompiiCtdand a ppcoars ~low But finl, I~ folio"' IIIII arc- Uw hlfl.hl!Jhu of la~t "''ff k'a rnulta. TM Ta~1 Squad tapllaliud on Lynoll's 31 po111ts and t•rror~ oJ the- opp;~~~otion as they rolle-d owr-r the F i•·e t :.01y l'o...,K, U to-10 ~lok1 Thr t ' ratt'rnol)' league po•t>r hoo~e . Pho Slama t:jaolon, put logtthc-r a "til balantt'd att ack to manh.andle ~•1ma l'ho t::plilon. &l to J5. ~lark \\oil and Tom StitH! lrd ~':,hi 'Sf: drl\·e '"llh H pomts Ta11 tot:oppa l':psolonruv~ft'ed from the-or loser of tht- "'ftk , humohattonlodo"-n Si lm:;o Pi . l'Jio:t! Di<:kU'Konnt:tsparlted liM' Trku ... uh21 po1n11 sp•l~ of l'aul Sanot' N poont~. ~South Sims couldn't In lost a heartbreaker 10 l North Sims. )!:ark Lubetk ,.... 'orth 'l h1ghrolle r • ·olh tl pom" mu~tc-rtllc.good!;asthey "In~ Cluitw.\lnlmusdidtl.again. The)' ltum-roiiHed )'et ano1Mr opponmt. l)li:I,.Hk's :;:·~o~~~~!~~·~~~~! "!thY•WIJhy " ' ltfs , !hOSt" ,.-(lftderluJ. witless wizards al the aootrt~ play. the u~rr l'.arts MulmiiS SIIW them ronoingSodidGarySagerand John l'.'riaht . Theyt~irt!Zland 20points rnpKti~ely. Result : a rrl4hll!&lltoSihwnoliatiOI!for thrLI•·ff\\'arts. A tram · ·ilh another t>nigmallcnam.-endeduponthe "•nnin&•idtolthepro•·erblal KOrtboard The lan~ Wnb fouglltatlglltbante,.·iththe City Gardeners ~ 1 o:onteat th.at tht! Unken u to~- AI HUNtotoltd'!l !)OinU lor the l.lnllJ ,..011. 10~13~=~:::~~ U vldory DVtt 2 North Del· U'll. J l':ost 1-'ny. beh1nd Tim U'O..ll 's II points. handed ~ t:ut Pray a 3t to30ddeat ThelllltkStudrntCo.alitlon o:o.asted to an imprnsi•·eS:Z-32 thum plnlof l\'lr IOUJh HOTC . Gt>rry RD.-buck and Ted Cla rk ~hart'd sc:or1n1111onors for 8SC ...-lthllpoinllfach. ,WHI II)'Ir•·entul.ambtto Gary Wendt's z !:list li)'t'f s l.au11hter -ho use . t;ut ad· ministerlda66-3 t thr uhingto l'.'est We-ndt addrd21tpoi11Utto his pc-nonlltotal ttandyThlel's ll1rd Dotlstook itllrltheiro:ollt"tth._, th1n when they met Corvu- l..utllllll lut .,.-ftk Thatl"OnttStturM-doutto ~ a '-$-2111 mismatdi. • ·i lh L.ulrum on top Cat llavinga nenrdtlpointsiMI..uie-um. 2 South Batdvo·in tnmplc-d 1 WH\ Baldwin U to 35. Jody fto&t>nipump«<ln :tJpointlifor Soul h. I West llanlt'fl came out on topoi1Me·a.awbiltt le•llh1 Ea:Uii l nlt'fl. The finai$COI'c,.-.. ~7 to ~1 . D1v1 Strassman lrd!o\'ea t..-ith 22po~nu Thel.Witsrtmocllledthei2-IO H.-....... hnl Compan y. 60-21. I>IMy Strong le-d the l.ultn •·othtlpoints. JohnSttin.Georae llav,. r . and Denny Ziehnako each 1 1 ~~~~r:;,"! t :-!i'rl)~t!~ 11le P oi nlfr basketball tum Ol'lrt!IIDonol/U5tr:atedlhalit hatn playongaway from hom1. u the I~ Croue Lndions ,;oundly trouncedthevasiUna l'vontl'f'S nida)', 9-4-H The key to La Cro111's Impressive ~ •ttory • ·•• tbe lnd lan 'a quoc:t l'ltllon laslbreahand rtdhal:shootin&. llappearedtbePoonthadtlw $otwotionllfldoort'IIIIINII. atthe mochaypertodofthe linthalf. butthePoo.nt....,5oonfaundOUI t-Muld have remained they home . During the final faur mlnutnollhebeginningl'Lill, t..a Cr one outs~ored th e vtaltors.l._..,lot.akr.asmaii:Ja. J.4halflimelead. LICrouequkklycomt'Out Jtrllrl l In tt1e J«<nd half to domonate the one-sided bottle. Tlwlndlan'• Erk th~ ludinc -KOI'tr lnthlf'llllltTeoce.5hotat ,.-,uondfinllhedwith211ipoints. Other 11nlrimdly holtl who IICOf'eo:l well ,..t'rt Dave Stlbo " "llh22. Mart1Thibodeaul2.and Gerald llibtkr tO. Ca l Kuphallled lhe Pointera wlth:Dpoinll. lltlp1ngKuphall out,.·er-1! BroeeWt'inluouland Bob HamlH with !1, and Mike Sta~~~tllwllhlO. W~nk.auf and D.-nny Pliers led Point In reboundlnl with~­ • ·h.ile reserve forward Tom Enlund added 4. The Indians outrebounded Point lt •27 . bvt weren't rt'ql.lirtdtodomuchworkonthe board• ollensivt"ly, 11 La Cr-made:Jtourof1ishotl. Th1 defut brouaht th1 Pointft' eonfere~e t - " to z.. .. CIIO<XfR'S LANDING Mobile Home PARK Monied students: Lots ore o.-oilo ble. Now $29 o month. t . t Eut llyn 1. Kn·•·rryllot• t. t'ollrgr 1\ n . t 'noYrn Stump The Sports Stars II} li nk Kimball, \nut ('arboa. aadTlm Sa nlun Jo.W11rth t •oph•morri : " Wu Hartlil.arrukl!'dll lnvrthr l'atkrr fNtlll•ll•ta ll~" l'oinltr: Ma)·bea ndntay~ not On the one hand. Starr daim1 he left to pursue his blllinflllntertSII. It Memahe didn't ,.·ant to remain in pro footballforlhertSiofhlslife. llo,.·evtr , he IIIU wa1 ton · ~::!:!;a·~~·e t~~rr.~O::=l~ Eq:les wanted hiaservil:u. "On the olhu h.and, Starr .....,• .ctymlgllt'vebfeniUktdto lt'IVI by the Pac:k. He H-rtainly didn'tdoVt'r)'W.-lillloChinSthe Padttt q~rtf'l'ba~kl ho• to throw pua o:ompletlona. lll'lltM they th0118ht opp011111 linebo~kf'l"' v.·ere 11roupc-d in •ith th.- ot hu ellllble recliven. T'nie. the Pldt •entalonl"'ly lutyear,butlt •aJn'tttlel'ockerq~~artf'l'bac:kl Jt::astlbniOMbrffledtoan euy»to30rompov.-r2Wnt llansm Stt\'e Tnu&rr ltd !tie Ea11 ••th !lpointa Pointers Back In Lq_sing Groove --LaCrosse Wi rrs, 94-74 :!m!!~ry Gllmu and T l111 1. : 1\'ntH wrr..lh : . T niS~awa4 .\ladmw• I. K.S. C. s. l's •: l. (;hl l~w• 1973 andSturtlla t movtdtllf:o tum . S un.-u • ·u d111 to 1rnt runningbac:luiand anes~t llaol ddrnH. Gr'"'n 8oy'a only glarinll ,.·uknns was its pa$S1M&. the area of Starr'J rnponsobdity " l' at 1\lb.• ojunlorl : •••Y •••en d••• ll aok \ ar-'\ Hrothrr T-m) lla•·t In tllr ~l ajoou!" l'olntrr: "Youngrr ilrothrr Tomm y hl$a~a rlt'flotalolt l homt' r11111 II hnlthy, Tommy Kaainger.tliic:aao'a lhorlltop, • ·oatht!lollowlnabottl'l',l ndht! ,,.·,arstleltnKkout before !tie ba lll andld." l. ro Wahon IIO ph OMirtl : " \~ h at~: •·tr hpprnt:4 to ~Hb KllllffaiMit'nniiS..hdr"'U... En (.1 atrr Kwl~:oldJ!" l'olnkt : "llltllff Is 1 JUb. stit ule~mtr-rfortM NllA Klnp now.and~llklhaahado fiWlO point11amrs. Sc-h•cle•·n•llo wi lhtheKlllCJ. llewascf.ropped .l h 111 ~•me ba~k . and wbslqumt ly droppld a&aln. It 11 poulbte that he- m laht 1\"t'ntO.IIymlkeit ba~kon tllttuma&ain,buttwooftbl&uys he miiSI ~at out lntlude Tom Ya n Anda le and Nate Ar~hibald. DclnKoji:l,a/ormrr star at )la rquette. 15 also playing,.·lth the Kln&a." Uo1 Hllfknu llU d U tt> l: " t :v rryon r kn o• that tht l t ll•·a ukttHn•·tJon~tkltfowr ton•.,..utlvrllomrnlna aamt, '• tunlly, th r p11)'tn "'" ;\ll«<lf•o,i\l rOI,ol dtKk ,a nd t 'nnk Thoma•. Mr quullon b . ~,~:.~~- komt~ Jar tile- oppooln1 l'olllttJ : " The Cindnatt1 Ht'Cb 1lso jDineod in on ttle slu&fest. llt"ranii.Hobl_,and G1ne f'reu.e took Warren Spahnovl'l' the•-allintbat 11.1mt." A-)'IIIOUt: " h It lnt Ula t Jutn l'aul o/ thr 11/tlar)' l"p't . ontrba ti rdlllln-st llob 5houlddos.lnon8o~lluth 'a tolboon~" rl'Cord about 3t10 )·urs from now" 1' . \\'..-nib <junior! : " llo" old I• Johnny (:rr~n ol thl' J'oln t.r : " A~ordlngloOIIC' o:o<Jrte, res . In I!IS7 .Cr~igh t on U pla)·rd a &•m•· •&•ln~t IJoane CollPge l 'aul batted agains tCreiJhton'sCibsonand ~eroundedoutto shortstop. No•·ad.ayl. it'• <:ONidtred a tcrt!ltfeat tomerelyhl t alalr bill! offGiblon TNt to form . 1-'aui,..Cdldot"'llllthincin t he city'• summer so ftball lt'a&IN!IIt>tontinu.allyp-da IIUt to J.hort liM' PH1'1 Sil~tt ('oac h . last year's teague thlmpion "'~'::;~;~~~- ·. ;:~:- ~::.> is ~':.:~~~~~f~~:.~·.~.!i~· " \\ko hit lkf' llolt~t lrlomrr i11 ltballl sca•l••~" r'ohltrr : " l'.'illit>Smlth. •hilt pla)·ongfortMCIIbtaf"')'fll"!! IHort, tonnKied • a Urnt lutiHolland M'flt ot headin11 townd tht Atlantic 0<-~an Don BIG DADDY'S SALOON For the boys with rta financial might, Holf price drinks on Mondoy night. ~:t. ·::ictehedr7:::·: w::!e:r:;· night. For informa tion Call 3«-6908 STUDElm! ::;::: r:'::: Auto l n!IW'VIee! If •.-•-* Avllllue. ~SliM (Half bkd: from Campa). ........ o...o WEEKDAYS & SUN. 7:1S & 9:4S FRIDAY & SATURDAY 7:00 & 9:30 IIIIYBimY IIISURAJKl CBIIII -ON THE SQUARE- Why Pay More? Eleven yeon of H"ing UniYenity ltu· denh, 100% Pure ChopP.d Beef Hom· burgers, Gold•n Brown French friH, and Ice Cold Drinks mob Ul your favorite •pot if you're inte r•at.d in so•ing nt9MY· --·--- --- •