"Every reform granted by capitalism Is a concealed measure of · reaction : • -Daniel Deleon Registration Fee Lowere by Carol l..ohry Cart•-rlab t True Love __/ controvenlal SSO Th«' regis tration fee hu been low~ to S20 and will be due at a later date in the summer. Thls announcement wu given to the Student Government at their meeting Jut Sunday even In& by Joe LaFleur . Student Government President. The S.SO rC'gistraUon fee was proposed by the Registrar's and ConlroUer'a offices to help them know wtult the uact enrollment 1.5 in the fall temesttt1i . 'The fee ~~o·ould tulve been due by June 26 or lhC' s tudents ~tntion would be cancelled. L.aFIC'Ur reporttd that the Student Government C'Ommittee set up to look Into thls registration fee problrm with university administration had be.ld t,.·o meetings and alter bargaini.n&, a final recom menda tkxt was made. This recommendation lowered the S50 fee to $20 to be payable by Jul y 1. H a student did not pay by this time. a reminde-r v.·ould be sent to the student. If the student still did not pay an effort would be made to see If the student wu having trouble raising the money or what problems he may be hning. If the s tudent did not pay within a few v.·eeb, his ~istratkxt v.·ou.Jd be canceUed. The SlO would be ta ken oU the student's nnt fee paym ent and would be refundable 11 wu lhe SSO by the first dey of dasses if the student c~Kided not to return to school. The first fee payment of oW per cent of the fees would be due by the e:nd or the first week of· classes afte:r fi nancial aids che:ckl were handed out. Other Action Student Government became' deadloded on a proposal to a llocate S21 .200 to the StevC'ns Point tlock«'y AMoclation to rent iet> tim«' nex t yHr after the A.uod.ation builds an indoor facility . Both bodies tuld a tie vote on the proposal to buy the I~ time on ::a one-yea r contract bub. Joe Lafleur broke the Senate's tiC' in favor of the alloeaUon m order tha t the Seute a nd Assembly would be In opposition to eac.h othe:r and a committee of arbUn Uon was County May Purchase Steiner Hall tty Sttvt llkoaotk Portage Count)' 1.5 cu.rT'ftltly naminlng the: pou.•blhly of purchu1ng St~m~r llall from the univenuty for use by the city to alleviate overc rov.•ded conc:ht1ons at the: present C1ty Coo.nt)" Budding ThC' buymg of Ihe rnukrK'«' hall•s only one of several alternatives th~ cit)" \jo •II ~ consldermg in the! future the: anaual payment on the stude:nll because of hia.her non Th«' s uggest ion tha t the budding illdf are paid through resident tuiUon ." building m1ght ~ up fo r sale, the student's room and board In looking towards the- future , cam«' lat«' Jut mon th from Leon payments. Co~ently, tht Bell stated. ""The: Indica tors n~n. vice chancello r for situat K>o often a rises In which don "t look tcood. Our prtdicted business a rfairs he re. \joho Is payment mus t still be made for e-nrollments through IllS don't al50 a mt'mber of the Cowlty a dormitory which is no longer show us reaching 1M 9.1 54 peak Board of Supervisors AI that that we reache-d not too long mtet•ng , the board had turned · '"~Bell added, however, thus far , ago. Now Is the time to act down a proposal that the Jacobs rather than ID find ourse-lves the Stevens Point ca mpus has Ford property be bought and ~ fortunate in not having lhe with 100 empty beds. Before: r«'moc:kled to be UM'd for the: ne:st September, we'll have lO problem of esceu s pace . extra room It fff'Dmmended state: a position as to how an '" We've been fortunate to have tM: Steifla" Uall pun::hase be oversupply of do rm space will bee-n operating in the- black looked into amo n (il ot h e r be handled. every yea r For thl.' most part alte:rnatlvu. It's very pouible- if an we've b«n runnina a t tOO per Ste-iner Uall is one of the older oversupply of rooms did exist. cent oecupancy or better &au reside-nce- tullb on the: campus \jo"e could simply c.l061' down theCla ir e 11 the only other It \jo'U bl.ult Ln '"' and wu hall entirely , paying only on the unlvers•ty in the state: lhat destgnt'd to house 200 lludenll, btlilding I!Mif, but saving on seems to be currently In good \johic.h makes it one of the: expenses, sta ff , etc." fi~ncial shape with rqard ID smaller residence halb be:re. It lnlook lngat the- pOs.sibility ol this mattn Several of the: othe-r 11 on the c.orner cl Fremont ielling a hall to the county, BeU schools , notably those bor · and Oark Streeu dering on other s ta tes are: . said Steiner ll.all would be the In discuulng the- future ol logical first choice for the having ditnculties, much of Steiner llall, Bell noted the: \johich may be d~ to theuniversity to sell. With the oversupply of stucknt residence campus t'Xpand.ing to the north Inability to attr;act out of SUit~ Mills that exists throu&hout the country '1'he &O's we:re ln.l1y the: tim«' of the college educatHxl boom. There were only four Mila when I came hert' 1n by .-\1 Jn~k las Ia c-.pt"rad• February 28, t973 Under thet9S3. Now the:re are tl. Con· wkJI Kt kJI Otl:l. new syllt'm at Baldwin , 119 siJ'\ICtion of additional Mlis \jo'U vmtaHon hours an~ allo..-ed per Following a month and a half tted Ln w•th the: prechchons of week or 17 hoUrs per day ending 1ncrease:d e nrollment . that of adm iniStrative: conside:ratlon no later than 2 a .m and a confrontatMx-1 between unfortunately didn't come:, or The move toward vWLaUan didn 't stay at many cam - students and mrmbers or the reform was prt'cip.tated by a Housing Offlee-, Baldwin Hall puses ·· Many univers1t1U, UW Board of Regents resoJuUon 1n<:lud1ng Potnt. Mve: dorms h.u adopted a t7-hour a day paued at their J anua ry 12 that must be ammo r tited visitation policy. ltesulting meeting. That resolution sLated through the 1990's and 2000's from the: chanceUor 's approval that ltudenll 1n uw system Com pllcat inl this matte:r 11 the: on f"e:bru.ary tl of a proposal dorms may participate '" the draft.ed by Baldwin students, fa<tthatreslde:nceMllaarenot formulation of •ndividu.al hall the- ne-w policy tool d fec:t on tax supported. All upmses and vlsUatHxl and tounae polldes , ~;~~ and the pbns to tea r down Old Main, that residence: hall would became ve-ry isolated Bell noted, howeve r . othC'r a tt ~ r ­ natives. the County Board will be considering, including thebuUding ol a complete:ly ne-w s tructure on tbe- southside or an Industrial park. As of now, no plan see-ms to have n decisive edge. Bell said, 10 sell the building, the university l,jo'ould have to present its data to President Weaver of the Centra l Syste:m at Madison. The Boa rd of Regents and the Bu1lding Comm ission would thm \'Ote on the matter Bell sta ted , " The:re's no sense to s tart with this until we know that th~ county wants to buy th~ building If and ~,jo· hen the)" decide that they do, the U"ansaction will probably be an easier process... New Visitation Hours Approved such pohciii!S. subJKt to the approval of the chlnt'ellor , \jo"ould not ucee:d t7 hours of wisitat10n per day or md later than 2 a m Tilt' resolution also charged each chancellor w1th prov1ding adequate sec:un1y for each residence: hall and \jo'lth providir!i non<oed and non· visitationa l hall facilities for those who with s uch arrangt"menll It was further sti pulate-d that all s tudents cont . lop 10 set up to work out a possible 50lution . For the $21 ,200, university students v.·ould rec:e:ive- l l hours of ice time to use for the university hockey te-am and for .ntram urala and free- s kating. 114.200 would come out of !.he budget with the: rut of the: money betng upecttd income from the 1\ockey team . J im llamllton , s tudent con· troller prHC"nttd the f"inance and Allocation committe:e: 's proposal and stated that the As.sociatioo had wanted S2S,OOO a nd the FAC offered Sl_5,000. The baraained figure or S21 ,200 was reached alter the Uoc:ke-y As-sociation promised to provide a bus for uni versity s tudents transportation to the facility which is on the south side of Stevens Point. A floor covering was also provided 10 that the facility may be used for other events the s tudents may wa nt. 1'hose who opposed the allocation said the- facility was too far f rom campus a nd student s therefor e wo uld probably not UH It and when budgets are tl&ht extra mone:y should not be alloc:ated for a ne-w prog.ram . 1'ho6fl who supported the allocation said that hockey ~,jo•as a popular sport and would be a good recruiting tool for the university because hocke-y is very popular In this area ol Wtsconsin . Stude nt Government also came out In fa vo r of se-veral proposals ~~ by the: Faculty Businen Affairs Com m ittee de:aling vo'ith texts and pur· The first chased books . proposal is textbook ren tal fees l,jo'ould be lov.·ered from SIJ."A 10 Sit The I«<nd proposal raises the dollar limit on paPft"baCb s tucknts are requi red to buy for classes: from S6 to SIOwlth the sti pulation lhat a ll boob above S5 be used t\jo·o IC'mii!Sters and the: bookstore would iel up a reule facility for these books. A third proposal supported by Student Government Is that tex tbooks in seqUt"nee coW'$H, s uch as fore1gn languages. l,jo'ould be e:xem pt from retum after the fa ll semt'Ster if the student was registered for tht' sec::ood St"mester of that cc>Unt' A fou rth proposal dealt with the: rec:ommmda t•on that s tudents l,jo'ho v.·ould rather purchase the-Ir textboolu l,jo'OU!d be give-n tht' rmtal f«'t' back The last proposal l1lted the dollar limu on te:xtbooks purchased by text r~ntal fo r s tudent use L.aF\t'Ur also rrported that nex t year 's fina l C'Xams schedule \joould be modified (lasses would m«'t't until Friday of the v.·e:e:k before exams and on Sa turda y, exams would begin Sunday v.·ould be off and ~londay and Tuesday would be exam da ys Wednesday ,.·ould a read1ng day and Thursday and f'r iday would be exam days SUnday a fte-rnoon v.·ould be &radu.at!Ofl ThC' Student AsM:mbl.y also apprO\'td three ne:w o;tudent groups as rec:ognlled llude:nt orga niutlanJ They a re Student f'oundatlon, S tudent Art Leaaue, and the TelevlAW:ln Production Organlution . 2 TH l POtN'TU. Friday, Morch 9, 1973 Day Care Center Provides Service For Students "" .\lkbtl , ...( ~ In iln rifortiO aid matr'Wd "uden11 with o:hrldren , the Childl.farnincandC.reCautr opn!fd iu doon on Maro:h 5, tm Thcp&lliO;$eottheDa7 Care Cenlfr is to providf QWihtynrfandlurninf.opportunrtin,ataminimumn>tt, for children of enro lled IIUdentS, Kithatthesludfnlli mayfurthtrthfir~ucation. The dt-.·elopment of \he Day ...·ufa rfromashot In tilt: da r k. Quallfi~pt'I"'IMel lor pos it ions u dirt ctor , auUtantdirectorandvolunteer ~icb .,.~ IOlJI,ht . and t'OIII · mlllff' m"mben tra.-PJ.d to campuses rn l>hlwaukH , Oshkosh and the Uni•·rnlty ol MiPOW"r to I~'" htlprul in· lormllion from .;mrlar sue· OtrectOI' of «UUu.l C'ftlten St lldentAJ'farl"'ando:ommittft mPmbrT M~~ ~I0$1ff U.rd, " "tabiWunca MW prognm ~hIS !he Day Cal"f Centtr rro~olves !Pdrous work and unrnterrup!ed plannin1 Serrous o:onsideration con · cerningstalf, colill,elilrbllity, location andJeMral actwrtra mus t be made before tht prolramcanJrabhok:l." ~In of Studenl Aflarl"' and rom · millet membrT Belen Godfrey. l\lldacommrntonlheCtnters oricln " lt' l takm.olonl bKaUHwe !uvP!udtotouct\KI C ~TfCt'llter manybaiHrnall a~oflhe procram llle CrnttrrlfinaUy off the ¥round and I anr lhnlled " Undt'r !Ire IUI!Uin« ol 1M newly elected director. Loll)' llfttler. ~nd auislant director. t: larMTrubrato.,·ikr , ttreDay Care Cenll'l' finally open~ l lellll'rrectrvedMrblrchrlorof sclencl' decret In homr l'tQnOmrn "hlle majonng tn child df\·elopment at the Univel"'ily of Crnc:rnn~tr . She "'~ IUPl'f'VIsorofthe Playroom WafdatOr~'sKolpltalrn Cil'lcin natll . Ohio lor nioe .-w and spent u •wnmer dirl'clor of t he Jewith l.:ommunrtyCentl'r 'l~khool daycanrpin\'ou.ngltown,ot\io lletllerwrd," l 'dlike!Oiftltrlt proeram uttndedtomftlall theunwrnity snrdrnii' M<edl Yl'eha•·e1aldthrJr011nd"-ork ...-rththil pil«program. and 1 kno ...· the Crncu ..-m be 1 complete sue<:ell Our 1talf Is trainedtotnterta~n t hechrlc!N:n ,.·rth all thl' actlvitltt •~•liable. and rmouragc group letrning technlqun .'' The l.lay Cal"f Crnttr Is located tn the bakment of the l.uthtnrnStuclnltPe.a\'eCtnter. 200 \ 'i no:ent St reet. behind Tf'mpo For a child to be ritllblf.-ofhU pal'ftll.tmU$1 llf'l'rlrolledattl!.lsunivenity. Anlllf'limrtoftwotofi\'t)'fll"' has bPen Kl becalllf o1 tbi: limned 1pace. The costa in· cludeaUrntt•ncefl'l!piUS)O cm\.lperhourforamaximum offouriloul"'aday. Alltr· natn·rsforfutllret'Orlsideration tnc hr de : a tiliding aca le p~ymeol plan and an op· portunit)· for a parent to r·olunteer to.,·or k at tlre Ct'nttr lnlieuolpaymt'rlt . I pr01flnL lnlhed lort te aid llillkntl"'ithchlldrt'rl on um pUI. We hne no in· tt•ntionofearninftlprofilofr thispro&rtm . llle comnrillee had to~ettbudcftforthbi l.:t'rlter, and tiM U tuition per Rmtlttr.,·lltmlnlmalfee. U lhlspilot proiJUm ilttU«fU thl1 1rmuter . con1idtrttlon .... nbeclventoaslldin&"a&e scalo:herea llrr " Lettuce Movement Faces Problems Ry C1rol Lollry Ctrt.•·rlpt The l e t tuce boycoll movement in S~ens Point , constslinl of atudenu and members vi the Ste•"tnnl Poilll community, hlsbftnac:tive in rf«nt .,·ettstryUrltotonrince lrfl people to buy only Uni ted Farm Worten Unirxr ~wee 01' boy.:ott M!twee ai!GCflher There have ~n probknu, however trying to get di1trib.rtor1. merchanta, and consumen to coopert\e with the movemenL CoppsDistributL~Company, 10hkh distributes fooo:btuffs to ltcorporationstoresandst lndeptndently owned l OA scorn in Wisconsin.. il nat c oopuatri'IJ with the movement F'rederic: Cop.-, Director ol ProdtK"e at the C'OIIlp<Lny , lbrtedtllt:company·• pOiitronotLthrboycott ina letttrtoabo)'('ott~in Madrsoa. Tbe poloition ill 11 folio"' ' ' 'TIMCoppsCorponlionOoes not han~ <mly United f'arm Wortrenlettuce. Webuyallof our lettures tl!.r-au&h M!nuee broke,... located m Chicaao. Arium.aorothl'rlbrtea Allol thelettucetlandl~bylheCopps Corporation is union lettuce Wehavehadlettuceh.andledb)' U111ted F'arm Worten Union or by lhe Tumstt'n Unilll'l " lt lltheinte nt ofttreCol)l)s Corporation to continue to offer lettuct>toaurcustomt'r&llitls not our riS!rt 10 ma ke up our ~tomt' r's mind on whether Wwantaltttuceornot. The lettuce controversy ildearlyt juri$dictiorurldilpilt' be\...'ftn IWOUN-. Ororraprmsibrlity lltoolferthrbt'5tqusrlity~ · \\K'etlthebeal~toour o;UStomel"'andthilillhebuil an wbidl we make aur pir• dlasillldeciliOI!I." eopp. does not ....... the dltlinct iOII between letlvc:t hf,ndled by f'ann Worten tnd thatllllndledby tMTetnutf'I'S. but thebclycott movmrmt Is ~thrf'antrWorkl'rs Ullioa and not the T•msc.tn btQ.u.e the f'trm Workel"' Union oCfel"' bett.er benetltl spteifkally for farm worttn. Cop.- uld he CGUk:l He dlanlllll his pMition it both un- Nrd Wotwce of the s.ame qo.rall ty andlhellrntprice. He uld he can 't ukthe ~omtn tut&ke t ub-sc:urdard lettu.cejusl bectllltltwashlndl~bylhe ~·arm Wort.en Union. ASked if cratomtr pre:t.Mn coulddlangehispMition,Copps '"'ld lfthen:sponMwllp-ut -ghloronvlncethemanagen olthfllorcrswhldtthecompany s.ervlen. thentl!.erem lghtbea dran~te. Copj» s.Jld a few people havt atked for Farm WortersUnlonlettucebutnott major1ty olhl.sc~o~~tomers. Copps w11 11ke d if cooll('ratlnc with ttrl' bo)"Cott ..-ouldaffecthisbulhr~andhe repliedlt.,oulddepcndonthe quall tyollhelettuce. lfCop.Corponlron cot Farm WorUn lett~ tNt wu poor quality it ...·ou.Jd alfectbusillfii. Coppl ...... f'll'\'ffktiO"'Iifrtlsunlonlet\uct or not. Thr ifty Super Mtrktt's upplierl art Wiscon si n Oiltrlbuting Compa ny of WauuuandGandB Produno, allooiWausau. R.alphPtoliof WiKonsin DislribuWLgllidtlre company leta its lettuce from themainolrrceinAppletontnd they buy tlvough broken like Copp~ Co rporation don . Ue said moat of the lettuct WiiCOIIIinOUttibutlna llllndles it: from Merril t'arnu in C.litornit " 'here the wort.el"' Artunionllled. ll e d ldnot k110w , however , w h at un ion th e " 'orkrn In orpni~ed undtr. saidtheytbobuylrorntbroker andgf'twhat theycanwlththe empha1ls on quality . lie said \ht company tries only to ltft WbesiQII;IIityandmaknm distu'ICtionifltil unlonlett\ICI! or from .,·Mt union the le!WCP ~H - UsuWik i of the Thrift y ¥a r ket "id if CUJ tomera preuured him he would ~i~n11umonlettunobuthe lorFtrmWorkei"'Unlonltttuce but , 10 far . noc~o~~tomen htve astrodforlhelfttuce . mldtlnodi5tlnC'IJonwhetherthe leuuce wu f'arm Workert UnionorTunuten Union. Hil dittnbutor 11 Red owl Sl.llrea andtreuldtheboxathelt'tluce comninsayltilunlonletluce. Whtn aaked whether cuttomer pre~~~~rec:ould mat' him tNt hlltuppllerfor <mly Farm Wortren Ul'lion lt>twce . 01\tr replied nfllli¥fly, lit saldtheorcter formf romwhich lwordel"'produce"ysonly " lettuce " and m1ke1 no diMinctlon whethtr it Is F'arm Worken Union lettucf' or Teamstel"'unlon W.ltuce . One uore which hts lllld t'arm Worten UNOD letlUI:e ol\enlnthej»MillhrTlrifty Suptr Marltet , ap-oceryea.Mof St.....,.. Paillt <m HIJ,hway611. Mlllllfr Ron Lii"'Wikr .. ,CI thatltlsn 'lhilpolleytoalkfor :!lf.:.r:~ 11 V::'!~: ~n;,:~ n!Ct'ivedfromhil~plit'n. He _.ted he just 1et~u... leUuce lhl t lhesuppllt'nhavetndhe /lc'r rcason~areperww~aland anotherwomtnllldshehadn't liven II thtt mudr ron· sidHttKrn. One man ....ho supporll the bo)'('Oit uid !hoe "'orkrn 1111•~ lhf'rillrtlllunioni"'lndthe pO"'triltlmplyaatinsttMm. A woman who uld lhe IUpporlt they~o~~pported i tandwhy n-aun~~. twopei"DlS had no luro..,•ledge of the bo)'('Oit,.,·hilelherftt " 'l're aware of rt. Ont woman who s.ardahfdoesa'tJUPporllhe boy.:Di t pna1a reuon the fact thtt the buys wllllt 11 on u.leanddonn't lookatthf brtnd. Anothtr " 'om an .,.ho doesn' t s~tthfboyc:ottu id po~~rblyaskhiltupplit'nonly Onelarlt~meroflettuce r~theunlvfrlily . AiltheCftllt'l"' ot'fer lettucP n • droke for 1 wl~d . John llutchiiiiOILofSaga Food Servl«uidS.gaobULIIU 111 lettuce from vario ul distrlbuton incl uding Copp1 Corpantlon and WIKonJin DiMributiii(C ll eU!dmDIItof the lettuce the omtel"' get l1 Team1ters Union lettuce uuc chr- said Ire could preiM.nhillllpplit'n!OIIIpPit Sorp w1th only f'trm Workel"' Union lettuce it Jtudentopln>on ..-arranted it, but 1M Mid con · sumptlon ollettuce 11 the cen~hasnatdecrelltdattll and ¥try f<ew Mudentl hive alkediOI'FarmWorkei"'Uni ... lettuct'. To tind out 1 little of how -c:wwumenleellnStenrur Poio t about the boycott , thePel•ier IUI"f'l')'t'd cuatGmen Htheywt re lenlnaoneofthr aru 1upermtrt eu. Ttre ltrtbo)'C'Ottp~f'lllrNMW~tlw ltd thll t tile .,·orken don't ltft t'IIOUI!.h money Academ ic Calendar Ques tionnaire F'redOtiOofGandB~ Ont 1tore whic h htndlfl Mudent ~tomen il Ray 't Red Owl Ray Olter. m&lllpr, uld the letwce he mtn)l ...·ereasltedll thl')' "~ IWII"folthebo)'('OII, If s~ropptrs When tiLe currt'llt acadfmic caltndtr tonCtpt- tlrlil'r ltart , compii'!IOII of first SM:ts.ltr prior to Chrillmll. Jonc bt1wefn · Ktnt'ltl'r break. and ~ar ly completion of Rt'O!Id M"mntft'-wll approved by the Board of Kqrnta, II was on a a..."0-)"1!11' n · perimenul baJ.is The Acadt'mk Affaln Commltlft of the Facu.lty Senorte ...·illreviewthenltndar - forr-mmencS.tiontlllthe Senate lnordtrthttwema ymor taa:-uratPiyrdlectupontheoplnlorur of both faculty and Mudenll, .,.., aft' ••klnl for Mudent rtsponH 11 indrcated be-low. PluM dip-or make a c:opy-ollhe form below anddeposlleltherinthebollprovideclttlhe lnform.atlortDelkof ltrt> Unlv"'"' ty Cenltr or Hnd 10 R. Btrudr, B· IIO, f'ine Artl &!kline I Wh lchctiPndtrcrxrceptdoyou prrier~ l'o'ouldyouprderto: reta~n 1M curnnl calenda r _ _ return Ill the former almdar _ _ 2. llow does the curr ent calrn\Uir lllffl'l' fl'(lm tl!.t fO<"ml'l' calendar In terms ol Actd~mlc Impact upon )'0\11" cltssn,&rtdet. maalma ld iftetftr"!P, Iorthebflter lcurTentcalendar l_ _ muimal difluence, for tbi: .,.orte (CWTtnl etlftldtt)_ _ mirumaldlflerence _ _ noopi nlon - 3. How doeltbe CWTenl calmd.ll' differ from 1M former calt'ndarintt'nrurofleCal lmpaduponyaurUme: mnim.aldifftrence.lorthebetle r ( c~ntulendar l­ ......, __ mui mtl diffl'renr:t, for the...._ (CWTent e.lendarl - mlni mal difluence _ _ ~ 4 Cl... vear : Fr: Soclh: J r: Sr: Spec. $, College: U.S; f'A ; COPS: NR ' PltaMatttch- rea10111for ~rchokel abov~ mr:ontlanthenJerrda r. S. bralttH '-Y Kobrrl K1r11e'- 01'- j Fnday, March 9 , In terview THI I'OIN1U 1973 JUW-SP Vietnamese Students Speak Out b)' l'a t Otlmore 11 nd Dan Mc(;lynn 1t :dJtor'\ Note : Thou&b \' lnnam ma y k&ift to bdt from lhc hudllan, It "'Ill rem1ln tht llonlcliiWiof Mmc : 1 uudent• 11 1 lhb unlvC't',lty. Tht Pointu, n~eoxnhlnJ t.hu the 'tvdenu cout ltvte oac of thf' luacst voups ol Vln.nmf'k st•d~ts lalhlt C'Oiillllr)' , 11tk cd lour of thf'm lO rdltct a bit. llle four. •ho rrprcsmt more Ulan onr •rca of Soulh \' ~~am. bavc attcndC'd hf'rto for perkxb raaJID& from tllnc yean to lnl th.lo oae. Tbrlr obtnntklns •reo rC"Cordr4 briow.l l'olnttr : " At • \ 'lf't nlllmnf' suuStonl on cll nlpu!!>. "'hat :arto the mo~>t common !M"OIMrm, you huf' fuf'd ~ Wh•t role. have tht unhr,.,lty t fllelllly. ~ot aff, admlnbtraton :a nd ~ tlldrnt.li l and thr Ste \'rtu poin t <'Om· m11nlty piii)C'd In )OUr adjlltlntrnt htre'!" l'h:am Olnh Dac: " We ll, mysdf, l don' t fa<'e any proljems at all But somet1mes )'ou get !toOtne husle "'' hfll people JUSt ask you <JUt'SIIOOS about war, a nd, my~U. I get tir~ ol that I thmk th1s <'ommunity tl> preuy fnf'ndly com p.art'd to the othft'S I hoi ''f' Mom m I thmk the staff and the faculty In th1s unt \'etslty help the foretgn students a lot.'' ~go Quoc 1\hanh tJohn l : "Since tht' day 1 came Mrl' I han• had no troubi<'S with anybody on thf' noor t m the dorm1to ryt or ,tny•body• m Stf!Vens l'omt. bc!ocause 1~ people m Slt'\'f'f\S l,oml ar(' reall y mce pcoplt• I h.a\'l'TI 't fact'd any troubles or any probiMTU" Kul Tb l Thuy ll uonA : " Th~ most common probltms a re tho5t' of languagt', adJ~tmmt to Anwncan food . and adJ UStment to thf' .,.,eathrr BtU my ad)UStmml has b«n 1u d~ by students, facull ) and the admtniStra lion .. "As a Vtt'lnamC'SC' ' Auyrn Tu O•nA : -.tudent , the m05t com mon problem fllct.'G IS tht• l:tnguaJ(c problem U thts can be im· proved. "''e ca n tmprovt' our com muniCIUion wnh othrr 5tudenu If the md.i\•1dual s!udmt l'll n conqiH'r lhto languagc problem , he wtll m('rg<' wtt h lire here as hl' did in h1s homt'l:and .. l'ointrr ·• \s a nath·t' ol \'lrtnam. you art' •11100 familiar with lntf'n!ation•f probft'mt; :a" a "1udfont in 1tt1" rountry. you are abo .. ~~~~:~;.. ;:;:~;:;~I'O:~o.:;:~~P,:•,~~~ lh :at an ln,.titutkln likt' l 'W.S I' can br an t'f· lrcth·r lorcr In !>Oivlng lhou probft'm a~" l 'h:~m IJ fnh l>ar : " I don 't th ink that only 1h1S campus . 1or 1 the un•,·ers•ty or thC' t-duca t•onal system 1w•lll d\lllnge your 1deas, but maybe the soc tal ll!fl\'lmnmt'nl WI/I cha nge your 1ck-a ' a hlllt' bit If yo u stay here for a lonK llmt', "'hen you go homt' you mighlth1nll ,·ou·,e rhangt'd o,·er here because you nnd a 1 nf thml(l d1ffe rf'nl at homt L1ke I found nut , .,.,hen! some new V i etnam~ students JUSI Cllmt' here. thattheu 1deast wtrel a httle hit d!ffnrnt than mtne. so I thm k I'm a hllle hit chartKrd I' ve beoen here fnr thrt"t' years .1lrt'ady " ' A• Quor 1\hanh: " No. I don 't thmk so ,\lthough I'm a .student 1n thll country, there Jrt' somt ocher problems of my own and of my nw n counlry Stevens Po1nt. or the UniVer'Stty ot W!IC'OnStn·Stevms Pomt, unnot be an dftctlve force 1n IOivin& my prob&enu or probltms 1n my country ·: ltui Thl Th11y llllonJ : " I ttunk thoU t-dtX'at•on pl<~ys an tm por12nt role '" SOC'tety. bu! I th1n k that pohtical proljem~ should not ht brought tro lhe unl\'tntiY " Npym T u DanA : " The UOI\'rrtlty Cll n heJp a !ltuck>nt m thrt"l' ways l"ducattona lly, politically <~nd financt<~lly Educat~ona lly . the unl\'tntl) ca.n 1mpm,·e the l«hruques of teach tng l,oltt tcally, the Student Sm111e IS re.spon~tble for tht' polit ical situation 111 a unlt'!'niiY I would like to he<~ r the Studerll "enate' , npnKWI on pol!ttaltssues lhat a.lf«t thfo unnen1ty f"tnanclally, tf the W\1\'f!'r'IIIY kno-.·.s ho.,., lo spe11d mont"y properly. II can help the st!.dents " l'olnc ..r " In .. h:u "'ll)l ha\ thr \ mrrkan roll" in hulochina m~ l affmf'CI your \lay hf'rl"~ ll :a ~ It ttondf'd to vt ) OO •part lrom uthf'r lntrrnallona l ~tudm~~ What qUf'UkMn lla \1' ) OU m"l oflrn W..n atk~ b) \m f'rkan•~ .. l'ham Ulnh IJ:ac . "OnC'e I m~l an \ mencan. th~ f1n;t th mg ht' asks about 1.s the .. ar 1n \' trtnam Then t he 01~1ts1 " Is you r f•mtl ) \ltll thert'" '' " Are you r p.arenl3 aft, e'"" ,\nd tho~ quenKJm maybe a thous:,nd or a m1lhon ttmes l'\e an.sw rrt'd. bo."<"OIUSC' I don't want 10 hurt lht'lr ft't'hniJ at .Jl (l t\111\e 1oans"'rr I got lirt'd ol that liCk of thai Tlw:'lhmg I ,.ould hke to he.ar no'<' tathe .... ord " peace, .. that's ,.holt ; ..·ant E\'t'TI the fort'lgtl students 'Wimt'llmes :ask me about those q~aSIIOn.5 . 1and 1 lhts ~~a ha.ule I ~ l'flnStdc-rlhem hkrtheother ptOple askma me thfN' Q~KWIS that I gN ttrtd ol" :\KIIllUuc Khanh : " t'or the fint part of lhe que.t ton, I don' t know anything about 11 About the K<'O nd part . lhl'f'r's nolhmg tha t Sf1.!i me apart from othl'f' mtemat•ona l studenu The q~st100S Amrr1crms fmosll ollm ask me a re :~bout the Y1etn:1m War. and poht•cal quest1ons about Prfi1dent Ntxon, lx-t\lot"t'n h1m and McGo\'em or Gf'Of'Se Wallace or somethmg hke that " Vlrlm1111 , lmprlt.onment. torture or deaUI for thrm.u lvf"' or thrlr famlllt'L Would you commrnl on lhls~" l'ham Dlnh Dac : "As far as Ofoth and tortur('. they e xisted a long time ago during the Diem rt'g tme Tben I -.·en! ovl'f'·seas tm«e than l t"''O )'Uts ago, so I don' t know enclly -.hat t.s true in Vietn:lm now But I ltnow 11 wa.s true a ff!W years :ago undt'f' the Diem rcg1 me." :OOs,o QIIK 1\banh : " This questKWI 1.1 not tabouU somethiOf risk~ by spuld ... out 01' somet h1ng. but l ll'sJ because all the VIet· nam~ students who a re her(' just want to pursuC' their study, noc to engage in politlt'D I busme.s.s or som~th i ng hke that. That's why they do n't want to talk aboot the Vietnamese. or the Vietnam Wa r. or Imprisonment, tor· ture o rde:~lhfor themse:lves or their fami lies I hll~·e no com ment on th is.'' Rui Thl 'Thuy ltuonJ : " I do not know for sure. but I don't believe it : I do not be:lie,·e 11 ss true It has never hllppened to me, my fnmds. or to membt"rs ol our fam ilies." Ngo Chloe Khanh llul Thi Thuy tluoa&; " At first. Amrrtcan s tudt• nt s we r e s urprised whe n they d• sco \•cred tha t we we re Viet namese s!udenl5 i\ftrr they found out I hilt we were from V1etnam. they asked a lot of QUC$Iions ain u the wnr m Vietnam. Sometimes s1udenu m dorms and m embe rs of organ1utions like women'a dubs uJt CJUI.'SIIOn.S about the wa r. but most questklns v.crl' about food, customs and culture. Whm I'm askt'd questions a bout the war, my an· ,..,.,.l'f'~ usu:ally do no1 satisfy students .sin~ I do no1 know much about politiCS." ~ XII) f'n Tu Hang : " f"or m~ll . I am not s.t•po1 r01tt.-d from other mtemallon:~l studmts bcc:mse of !he war I seldom have m · roun tl'f'!'d sp«•nc questions aboot the war, but some Amencan frtcnds do ask me some J.:t'~W r a f crul'5tlons These questions are usu.J IIy a.skt'd to seek a beuer understanding 1of the V1t'tn01m stiU3t iOnl. and are seldom antagontSIIC questiOnS" l'uintrr : t'ontlnUf' to hrar rt'porU IIIII \'f,. tnamr'l' ' tadent~ In tills country r~k . by 'P"aklnJ 001 aJalnst coadltklnt In SouUt Bul Thl Thuy Haong "WI' .. ~ * •. i i~ .. : • ! : :-i')[llyf'n Tu UanA: " The South Vietnam Govemmmt does offer Vietnamese students some polit1cal propaganda that asks lhe s tud rnts 10 ex prt's s ant l·co rnmuntlt v1e wpmnts. If 11 studmt expresses any op1010ns aga inst the South Vietnam Government he will nsk his future:, a lthough somcttrncs the 1nd!vidual student spealts out :agamst the government for persona l fnon· pohttca H motive~ .. .............................. !!: Staff Arb t:dltor :. Neil l>t'rrlng t-:ditor : G E Rutko"'·skt (,rsphkt : ~lllrty L..av~ : ~ ,\ uocb tc tAihor : Jmn1fer Urban Sporb : La.rry Gtlman : : J\;~~~;:~.:::cor : ~=::7"~:::wr11(hl f;d(tor : f.o uist Eklund Kc11h Otis Pa t ()elmore ( ' etp) • : : Stev~ Okon~k It : Exam Week Under Review : ~~~t:;1 ~:dllon: ~~; ~~'";~... Uan McGlynn ;!~~ ~;:gart'lll : : : f1nal exam "'t"t'k . presrntfy con.ttltUied . 11 currentl y unde1' rt'\lf"Vo b~ a r ommltlt'e of .s tudent s and faculty members -.ho are ln · \t'S t1gat1ng pos.stble alt rr natl\·n ~l fflmgs on thf' qunhon arc helntt: held f'\'ery ~londa y a f ternoon at 2 m the Muar Schur: Room of I~ l:nl\cntt) t 'mter Th(' rom rmllt"t' .,.,t'Jcomes all "tudtnl or facull ) 1nput , and •n,·tte.s mtert'StNI ptT'50nS to •ttt"nd lht' ~Iondo~~ meellnp to pl'esent .~as and suggestiOns !'>ug gcsllons l'Oin a lso be dtrectl"d lo ttko lom mtiiC't' b~ r onla<'ltnl( t'tl~r f'rf'd l'opn or lkmnlt" SC'u:pko : ~rt'l.a r irs : ~ltlf') Spttlll'mt"I.Ster : • : Jf. Jt Audrey ltobrnn "!I It ~l~y ,:;.:~~ t ..a~CMII t:dllor Hob Kellerman • * : • : : lt It It Th~ l'olnlrr Ill a sn-ond cial'l5 pubhllhed -.l'f'kly du rmg the sc hool )ea r tn St('\'m s Po1nt , \\ lll('onsm ~I The l'olnlf'r IS 11 un.venuty publlca11on , publl s hPd under .. uthonly grantt'd to the Hoard of Regmts of State l 'nl\'cntltes pubhc<~ tton . \d \l llniiJ:rr ' Hhody Jakust 1 ~~~~ ~:::: l'bot~Jlraphrr~ Tony :\lnu:rr llrtan Lenon 1 1 ~~at~ ~ub~a\ .~ :::n:;~ ~r!,b~~;a~~ ~fr~~~ .... Mate l'nn11ng Section , Stat~ l.>t•pa rt ml!nt of AdmlnistrnUon, ,1s prcwuied m S«ate Print1n1 • : lt *• lf. * ~ Jt : : : • • ...................................... .•. : ::~~""~e~~;a&rr . ~;:;:;ra: . ~~~f'lln 9·U of : ~ ~ Friday, March 9, 1973 T HE POtKTD. Comment Africa Today s.. ~:,·0 Tosomt'OI>ewbohasnotbem ..-ell informt<d about Africa today,tht&en«allmprHSiont lwldofAfric."a areltlo6oool JUn&IH , ele phu~ . tnakt'l, li01\$,crocodi les,d~-.nd pnmiti•·t lift. A ninth grade 5tulknt 1n Port EclwMU lli&h Scbool,,.·ritingln appreciation o1 my l'ffent tal); in their School, renaru, ·~ you 101" n~ming to tell ut about Africa lal,.·a>"Sihoughi.Afric.l .. u ITIOiti)' itnolo'll fOI" the ~tsands.Mttt. '' ThUil a common bi!:Jitf even with adults. Sommmes friends ask mt if I ..·atc:Md the telenJion $how on Africa tlw previous night. It tum~ out that I find these movies eq~Uy u $!range u theyaretoyou . lrecogniutlw ·ptOpltinti'M!m.sAfricansbut dud in time and fealurel. The mms depiC't futurH of lift ,.·hic h arenow history in thOH arusroiiC'eflled. Pft'haptour tdeVItion ntf'too·oriLI that know btner could film in parallel with thtH tnli!'!Uinl'* andtnt filnu,theiKUofAfricatoday . SIKh televi$lon show~. I gueu. candisxmi~~;~tetoour preaent 11tnuation a co rr...,t per· sptetivtof thtworldandpf(lplt aroundthmt.~byenhan­ cingbetttr undtnt.andifCand tordialre\a\101\$1\lpt, Take a look at any nation of 1M ..-orld, 1 ctntury aao, and YOI.I wiU rmliu th:it immcrR changeshavtUikenplac:eto gj>"eSIX'hNIIiOIIllthtl fprt'Hnt factS. Afrka .nodoobt.fthoUJh slowinhcrdevtlopmrntdueto ... mft'OU!i natunl factonl is no a~ion. 'fbto pa5t r..·o d"'adu havr Wltntned a tro:mendoo.asrattofch.angeln Afric."a in modes of lilt and In HIVIrOI\menl ButJrqrt'IIOU)' that most of the "blilld" dlao&tsafff'C'liacoorC'Ultlll"t' v l ttrippme\lJotourldentlty. Some rulwnl •-alues. unltH •nttnttvelyencourast<dand rt"Yi>'td. are irredeemable A lerribltpr lce forblindly modtrnilirw: Some questions f't'\'UI too.. hltlt IOIIlt of"' know beyond .,.-hl'rewe li\'ellldourdist~ from !.he realities of life. "Do )'OIIh.:l•·trn~~dlmyourcoun · try!" "Do you h.ave a government!'' ''Co urt $)'$tem!" "Cal'S!" lcan'tthintotanyvllbgein Africa tocby without ;o road 1o IJti'Vtitsn«ds,noreanthtrebi!: foondapeoptean,....·htrtln Africa that go naked. Tribc5mM AMUnd the Sahara Desert do h.ave leu n('td for formal dn!ss b«aWit of lhrir m•iromntnt a nd O«Upation. Some prefer wh.attvtr form ol panlll,.·ithloostjumperonmoat hot cbyt. Their san<lard of agriculturt c:G.Ipled with the benefit of open erauland qec:t!~Sitate:s a partia l nom;odic lifeinordtrlortarthrireatUt. 1\ isJmeth.uonefindiiVI.Ind· t.ophutJ. tbevill;ogf!Sinwoodt<d areas still have beauti ful roomy , a iry , high th llch buildings Some of t~ ~ plutered with cement and rnolt<dwiLh~tt<diron sh«u.. With the new " 'ate r r-l'fft.it ls hopedth:it si uOlbltnencJtnbedn·oct<dto ~~ure, " 'hid!, "'lth the in· trochtc!ionof•tralnsofca!Ue ad.apud to the climate ol tM aru. may impnwe Uveatoc:t production inSpani$11 Sah.:ln. or course."'" do not m.a.nulacturtc:.II'S but we ha•~ cJi rU5mlblie:s In most oftbt c:GJntria. One couldn't btlie\'e that !be modern Africlln cities areonAfrlcan$011. To mention but a few, cities lite lkoyi and Apapa near Ueoa-eapltal ol Nieeria. com pne favoubly ,.; t/1 E\'&nston, in nortbtm Chicago. Enugu, Port Uarcourt !Port HiehJift l n'* ~ samt. Alklis-Ababa and Asmara In Ethiopia; Dares Salaam and Za~bar in Tanzania: Santa lube! in Equitorial GuiiM'a, Freetown In Sierra Leone, Tripoli In Wbya, WbreviUe in Gabon. AlBien in Alse ri a, A.«ra in Gh.&na, Monrovia In Wberla, Nairobi and Mombllu in Kenya , CUIIb\aneil. Rabat and Marnteib In Moroa:o. Kampala in Ueancla are all beautiful modem ciUt11. 'Thecoonii'J1'idebt&l'111011lt difftf'tnctt fromcitlttinltyles o f hou tu and eenara l amenities. The thatch buildiop in tilt vilbgt~~ art fast alvinB ,.,-ay to ptt" ma n~"n l buildings. t'ortho5t"'·boc:anaffordlt. permanent buiktin&S IC'tllltnt blocksandzlnc,ortlattllare thl' maJor dlsenu lite malaria . Many othl'rdilt'astll like jaulldict, yellow fe••tr, tmallpox,.,.·hoopillitoi.IBhand ya ..... art now tno•••n by name onlyinmostartu. mUch more ec:onomic:al IN" lhatctlbulldings,ol ..·hic:hthe rooflneedC"'ff51antclwlgea. One sl'ulll not h.a~ been to Africalfont.Uopprdinthe cititll. ~·or it is the c:GJntryalde th.ltontS«'SlhrtrueAfrlcaN : ho$ptlablt pcople, llvi,.: tlOHr locachot~r. et~joyingpureand mturalrn•·lronment. Weha•·ee~ntanodoubt. Jl,...·evtf'.l saw the: first lh~ rlephanthtrtint ht·Mil"·aulteoe Zoo. TheRbiggamearealmoat dylni out In 110me armt in Afrka. so the Go•'tnvneou are doi,.:alot t.oprtst'I'Ye the few tptc:in rem ainio" io tbt Go••t'llUTitnt Rtlltr'Ve ~·Oni'IIJ. lt't illep l to till 1udl CiiiC'IoritsolanirNb. lbeyart no m""'et to people and yau rarrlycomeac rOSJonedUTin& your normal Ufe ac:tlvl\lea. Te;ochtrs in most of the high schools around arc dolne apprtelablcjoblinlhtlrSoclal Studiesclas.sestoedueatttht stulknu with up-tCMiatt fac\f onllfeandpeopleofAfriea. make a better To gene ralil.lltinnofAfr icatocby depcndsonone'sabllltynotto look lor t no»mobil u,.,·hert' J.>t<>plt don't kno.- snow. It depcndsonhowmuchofAfrl(a one knows. how oprn andfr~ ont II with tilt people. One miAI judge people by the pc-ople't own 5tandllrds and 3 1 ill the Unlvl'nit)' Ctnttf'. A S('ric=> of acminart will be 1111' .,.lues. :!6. Th e World Health Org anllation, to me fr iend ly fo reign go•·ernmentll Llh the UnitedSt.:IIC'S,ande;ochAfrican National Government. have donelmpressivll!jobstocombat theyN!ouldbtM'nl t.otither!M ex tendtd se r vict'lofficeo r alumnlaJSOC:IDtlonhtf'll!. Staffs lrombothofthos.eofficnoftht' unh·t'rslty art helping sponsor lhept"osram Women's Program Planned Thtth1rdannuai"Continuing ~;ducationDayrorWoml.'n "will behtldhtrtonSaturcby.Ma r . ' ubstanceo(theday·loneac· ti•·ity. "Come to Wfe"lstht gencralthemeactectt<d for the: day'tdilc:ut~ionltt&IOIII\\'hlc:h, !e~~':/ ;r:;a ~t~n:: such toplct as: "thedi'uc dilemma ; " "tht llb ented ,.·oman : " "B r owing old eractfu.lly" and "mating the btttwlth .,.,·hatonehu." llegisuation it open to any Thr Interested .,.,·omt'n . deadlineforrtjillleringisMa r. lfrtjlsttations ;~ remailed. Wekh ucl U.teft fw Difhrul Wnlcty S,.clele POINTER Trousers . . • 66c ea. PreHrtt Coupon with Good1. Ofhr good March 9, 10, 12 0,.. D.IIJ 7 e .m . • 6 p.m. 157 D"'llio.. St. Classified Ads Hey you! Yee., you. Y~aa~.:~:! ~Jay OD yoa! )'OW'{!,o~f:=-:. ··~!$-;;~ there's DO reuoa wby ya c:u't buy a .,..um to IL And man. :lJrW m!!~do1 ,;~e E~~ zo..60'J'o tile dlllcoa.Dt.! Ya KOt Z paraat-! No .ca&e tu l Far out. uo~·=::ru·· -For SaleStoek 1911 Harley XLCH ............ Male Students ReN"ationl now being taken for surn.,...r ...don and 73-7o& school year. EJ:cell•nt housing, cloH to campus, fine fociliti... Contact Ken la1k 1117 Fremont St., cw Colt )U..9131 w-=..r=rl~P. WlJWh}eld,. erMh bar, ~·:140-8582 --===· For SUe: 1988 Nort.o., BJl.K.....,..... Tarntabkl duM ccwer. Sbore ~. $60. ~Gallar, pod llhape. ..., warpe. s:w. Boeelpol Stnto.. pole&. booQ, S yean old, 170. Jllle. dock n&, . . mber, odlh a eada. '7SS Jolua'a DrtYe No. S Ride n..ded to Florida over Spring bruk for 2 guya. Will help with. gal and driving. Call Rolph .J46..2l98, Rrn. 112 F.W.ra 7 e .m.-1 P·•· J44..S271 MEN · WOMEN Work on a ship nezta~l No experien ce required. .::~~' l!~d. Perfect awnmer job or eat"t'tr. fknd 12.00 for T wo ""d ride to Hew York c;ey onr Spt'ing breok. Will 1hare driving and ••penNS. eon Lynn .. 4646. For Sale : N-eameraklaet4- s~~· Coli 344-3057 Information SEAFAX BoJ: zo.t9-IP, Port Ana:el8, Wa. 98S8Z Wanted : JlaJe ud f emale nude IDOCk8 for U!e DnwiD« Clulee. Tuee.·Tbun.. l%:4.5 to S:~. 12M I hr. AD typN. lihel'.ut~Jo~t;.t DO o.JJ Mr. Volk Ml·S2Sl or Cuapq, pbODe 6TZO Friday, March , 9, 1973 0~ ·Book Review TMI POIHTD War A Perversion Of Culture , which they renlr ...•nt.,d. was associated ill ' - - - -- - -==o..:Iw....o••our a ~treater i!IJ!iiht aud a manlier wl.odom. But the first death we saw shattered Reviewed by Mark FIAiey this belief. We had to recot~nize that our generatioo was more to ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT. Erich be trusted than theirs. They surpassed us only In phrases Marla Remarque. Tr. by A.W. Wheen. Boot ... : LltUe, Brown and in cleverness. The first bombardment showed us our and Co.: tl58. Erich Maria Remarque's mistake, and under it the world as they taught It to us broke in book was first publi.obed in Germany in t928 under the title ple<:e~~ . " (p.ll) The youths internalized the lm Westen Nl<bll Neues and brutality or the war and fighting later translated into Engli.ob. oo· the front lines destroyed The author discusses the effect their human quality as they of war upoo a generation of men, their families, and their became hard, suspicious, pitiless, vicious, and callous country as seen by a private in the German Army in World War human animals living by in· I. Centering oo the personal stinct alooe. Ev'entually, they were little better than the rats experienC<j" of Paul Baumer, who fought them for their dally ooe or seven teenage boys persuaded by their sch<><>l bread. Coming to the war teacher to enli.ot in the army, straight from high school, the Remarque illustrates ihe teenagers had never bad a chance to take root in the world. manner in which war perverts, -distorts, and destr<>ys the Thus, as Paul-noted, " The w~r quality or human lire while swept us away . For the others, perverting and destroying the the older men, it is but an in· terruplloo. They are able to culture or the countries engaged think beyond it. We, however, in war. have been gripped by it and do In ooe of the more significant not know what the end may be. passages of the book, Paul, now We know only that in some ninettcn and battle hardened, strange and melancholy way we renects upon hl.o teacher and have become a waste land." those who sent him orr to war: lp.19) "For us lads of elghtee.n they The ooly sure things the ought to have been mediators soldiers could count on were and guides to the world of maturity, the world of work, of ra t-infested trenches, bullets unceasingly threatening them, duty. or culture, or pfot!ress-to starvation, gas attacks, conthe future . We often made fun sta nt surrering, unsanitary or them and played jokes oo hospitals, and the continual loss them, but in our hearts we or fellow soldiers in the sen· trusted them. The Idea or seless slaughter of human beings. Essentially, they were lillie more than gun fodder for those who profited from the war. Mter bUrying another one or his close friends, Paul renects upoo the situatioo in which he finds himself. " ... we are emaciated and starved. Our food is so bad and mixed up with so much substitute stuff that it makes us ill. The factory owners in Germany have grown wealthy ;-dysentery dissolves our bowels."<p.277l · The seven teenagers were all members of Secood Company which started with 150 members and saw three quarters or them annihilated within the first few mootha of the war. The seven youths were all killed during the war,. but they were not Its ooly victims . Even the military doctors became callous and unnecessary amputatiooa were frequent occurences. The men who fought but escaped death were also destroyed by the war as they were "weary, broken, burnt out, rootless, and without hope."<p.290l The famllies of the soldiers suffered from the loss of their sons and from starvation and the lack of adequate medical services. Everyone Involved in the war was a victim or its brutality. Even those few who profited from it and sent others out to fight and die for them were victims of the brutalizing ef· feels of war. These few who grew wealthy during the war were quite similar to the rats in the trenches who thrived on the misery or the suffering soldiers. "J llall~ dicJ this .freshman chick 13ut iD be candid ...she has net b!end~i119 me."fhenJ~ked her to qo with me over io Sand9~ ham~rgers .for dirtner. NoW we're both in love. I lolls her... and she IOI!e6 Sand9~. '' r 5 earn credits between second semester and summer school UW·OSHKOSH 1972-73 . POST -SESSION INTERIM MAY 21 -JUNE 8 '(campus housing available) for further infonnation, mail call: coupon to, or OOLLEGE OF CXNI'INUING EllJCATICN UNIVERSITY OF WISCCNSIN-OSHKDSH OSHKOSH, WISCCNSIN 54901 phone: (414) 424-1136 or 424-1137 NAME'------------- (I) ADDRESS._ _ _ _ _(,SOlXJL) CITY ZIP l PH( ) Mister G's RECREA.TI'ON CENTER 800 Clark Has: F.oosball Pinball Pool Air Hockey And Various .,. Refreshments COUPON This Coupon is ·Good For 2- Free Games at Mister G's. · OPEN: 12:00 p.m.·U:SO p.m. - Mn.-Frl. 10:00 a.m.-U:SO p.m. - s..t.-&m. ADd AB 8ebool B~ Organist TOM NICKEL CliW-SP Senior) ·is Appearing Every Friday, Saturday, Sunday Evening at 1617 DIY"*' PAUL'S BAR 100 Second St. ••• · •• • • •·• • • . •• ·• • •· •• • •. • •.••• • • '>. .. • Moving To The Right Over the past few months there has been growing awareness, even celebration, or the decline of radicalism among American university students. Many have found the fact that students are no longer as Ri ng questions quite " refreshing" and praiseworthy . Instead of concentrating on the serious problems facing lhe world, students are attending to problems of interpttSOnal relatioos and social life. After all, the latter are far more difficult to dea l with and of greater significance to human life. It is a much greater challenge to order a student's entire being around hedonistic pursuits tha n around scholarhsi p, thought and the attempt to solve problems of poverty , war. racism , etc. It is hard to conceive of this sudden alteration in the character of American students. Within two years the active radicalism and the questioning and criticism of the 1960s has been replaced with a situation closely akin to the critical and intellectual void of the 1950s. Moreover, it seems incomprehensible that students would tum so sud· denly from a lire ~f vital, critical thought . The conventional explanation of this move to the right asserts that students are merely tired or asking questions and trying to change the world, are turning instead to serious study. The fallacy in this is the separation and isolation of the world and social criticism from the work of a student. Memorizing longer lists of mindless and meaningless "facts" cannot be considered the scholarly end of a student. despite the prevailing view. A student is grounded in the world and his or her task is to know a nd understand the world and to clarify the good world it could and must be. A student, properly defined, is a social critic; a student questions and criticizes the world and at· tempts to give direction and meaning to human life. Health Center Partly At Fault To llor Edllol' : U the nwnber ol lol'lwanttd pre&niDCits hll incru.Md amonc•tudenllone~mpus,tbe UnlvenltyllellthServlelmlllt ac«ptpa.rtofthebl&na. D1t1 from the University of •v•ll•bllity would redue e ltliSillmiCy. Noneofthemlulw IC:ierotintdal.ltoaupportthelr dllm. Such d•lms IN! 1 dilloervice to tducltlonllln· t tltuU ons and wiU rtdu~e the reJpect for these lnsUtutlon.a throu&bout the life of the cu~trollegelludent. Slaa:rel}'youn. J OHJI"..B. HArrio courase prrmuital lt!J:UII ~:1!!tnc~~ilu~ wt!! gener;al public more thin six monlhla,o. Thert!porllboW'I that lurnilhlnaccntraotpllV'f:l eondonea fornication cmen~y. and lllatther•teol IOI'lllcatioo u'ICreuesfntrrtba ntheroteof contrlotphve IIIII!. 1loe Hf:lllh Srrvlceltn.owoiollhis rt!port but reluaes tolc;ceptlt. Th.oathelr penonolconeemforthelluclent 1ppe1ntobesubordiNteto !Mr profesaiOIIII 11'1"C11p11Ct. Other compu:~ organlt~tlou hlvrjolnedlnthlsshort·allhttd bl:trl)'llofthelludentlntbeir claim th1t contrlte ptive Pu rge The Pointer To U.e Edllor : Critical jmunaUsm ;.In IIK!I oneol the m111t ._licond lm· portant rlghr. th1t the fint amendment prO¥kltt ua with . The con1tltutlon dotl not however, detl with fl ulty jou rn.ali•m. TIIIJ;. Itftentlrtly uptotherU~der tod«lde. wM:ther .wch reportinals f1ct or nctlon, truth or tr~ah . ;~~!o:"::~:t ..~.~ ~:~~r.br:: eon t r~up\lvutrndsto ... en· There are intelligible explanations for the failure of contemporary student radica lism, but it remains a diflicult problem to provide a clear, definitive answer. We must note, however, some of these explanations. One clear possibility is that the radicalism ol the 1960's had no serious philosophical base. It rested mainly upon mere subjective feeling and emotion-a " feeling" that war, poverty , and racism were wrong. It lacked a solid, critical base for action and faded and drifted as mere mental sta tes do. This lack, in turn, reflects the failure of the universities. The students ol the sixties had no radical schola rs with which to connect. The purges and witch hunts of the 1950s had driven away the critical professors. Students were left without positive direction as they began to question the condition of the world and the quality of human life. The universities, no longer concerned with critical scholarship, provided no base; they merely stood for what students saw as nega tive and corrupting in· fluences in life: business, the military and main· tenance or the status quo. Another possible explanation is that while students had a solid base for their radicalism, the failu re to make fundamental changes destroyed them. Radical students were faced with totally unresponsive institutions , beginning wi th the universities. Control of American society by business and the military was so complete and Intelligence and thought so totally lacking that al· tempts at significant change were utterly fu tile. Such failure merely drove students into bitter isolation, or into drugs, counter-culture movements and intense subjectivism. Whatever the precise reason, student radicalism has failed, and this !allure holds serious im· plica lions for American society. America may have become too liberal to allow a rerun of Mccarthyism in the immediate future, but such would be wasted effort even if und~ken . Virtually no critical thooght remains in American universities, and the few isolated pockets which do remain apparently pose no serious threat. The absence of critical, radical thought means that American institutions will remain essentially unquestioned and un· BSC Thanks Supporters To the Editor: noe Bilek Student CGIIlltion ezpc-.._itllpprK~tlontothe hodivldu•l• a nd 1 r oup1 t R uidrnce 11111 Counell. Unlvrnlty Activity Board, Unlvrnlt}' Crntrr stu dent mlniiJer . PRIDE Office. Polnter Jtaff, SACAF'ood:llwho c:ontrlbuted In m•klnl our PARADE Of' BLACK AWARENESS WEEK a IUC · Bllc:kSt.MeootCnlltlnD l ammerrlnatothefuture article in the P•ter luueol t'eb. 11. entitled "All il na: PtlcefullnPeleelll~cn." Mr. J .A. Jenkins II II it ll*iD in .aual lorm with- eye opm to interpreutionandtheothereye closed to common KnH and ra tionale Specltlc1lly, my OO)I!Ctlonhesonthefldthathe r.lktdtoonlyllludenlllndaU ol those spent the,..,,., Kmf:llft' tosel.hft' II Pua: lflveo~ . 'nllJ in l!aelf IM!Ienll to 111ggtsl th1t only the 7th progr1m II btlnaev•luated. Why not interview J Wdenll from 111 or• m~}orltyofthe7 seme..ten. to &d 1 lnQI'4: well· I'OIUIOedoplnlonoftbetripln s-ll~en. Myview~'"' lharedwlthiOiltot.hu.Audents, who like myldl. spent 1 "Semf:lter In Brll.lln." TWo even rem1lned fill' 1 %nd semtsltr-' Pea ot lltven. Tht five of ui represent two dil· ferent semesten. Now. we are in Ku1ll Lumpur. M1llylll lpendina• "SemeJttr in the For E11t." None of us would h1vc1 ppll ed fnr 1nother O¥ft'Selll progr1m ilwedldn' t think the bendlr. outwef&htd {Mproblem1. The 11udrnl1 c:ompl1lned 1bout the Wile of repoln 11 Ptac:ellaven,yetobjeetrdto rrpalnbl: lJ'41mlde.clllmlnsl n the wordl ofOM penon, "All the tlmewewere lhcre.l.hft'ewu hlrdJyevtrlpeleefulllme." llowe•npeoplellkethilbe ..t i.lfitd? ltretllybraksmy hu.rt thai 1nyoroe would hive thr 111d1clty to m1ke repoln when they wereJtudyins. • II w... Implied In the 1rtide thll ptrtonll problem• e n· countrred In the sroup weTe cletnctklnl from the wme..ter 1bn11d priJ&f8m. 11 1 whole. Our Miu K., ollrred HVI:I'II lame duck l!li(Uift for the eontroveny 11.n0Yidi!C her COflduct. II lbe Wll knowll!dcubll! of her ai&nlns changed. the sixties roblems that the radical students of ptedtodealwith : war ; militarism; ; business domination; inadequate in, and face nothing more probing criticism. Failure of radical ' ·versities implies that there will be improvement · in the quality of tutioos and life. tes has not been noted for the use of elligence in the ordering of human tead to rely on whim and caprice or · Thus, we end up with a merely fraught with such insanities as slums and · the threat of n\Jclear The Unit thought an life. It ten force and tolerable snowmobil oblivion. True, we so chn a pi be satisfied living in ignorance, but directed to a worm. Human life is supposedly higher ends sue~ as good homes, work, sch ealth, and cities; a life of decency, osperty. The achievement of this of the world and radical action. ain failed to realize this and refuses nificant attempt to achieve a truly I life . . This is not due to lack of aterials; the wealth ol this country incomprehensible. It is due to a t and intelligence, and the ultimate s as to whether we will ever overe. Note 0 Editorials It is an readers ar editorial a light of th perpetratin derstandab we offer th nsid'ered ~tement, A prer~ · philosophic ba'se and we wish to assert, immediately, that this base must be directly connected to the world of objective fact. In joUrnalism, particularly, this concept of " objectivity" has presented considerable difficulty. Muddle-minded and reactionary journalists hold "objectivity" to mean getting as many individual opinions as possible regarding any given set of factual relationships. They work to "balance" the "good" and the "bad" ooinions in such a manner that the actual facts la.Jlse into obscurity. This sort of " method," for example, was highly evident in the years of reporting and news analysis on the Vietnam War ; in the end, the balancing tricks of the journalistic profession created a fog over the entire factual situation. Let us clarify the point: Opinion, simply as a statement of private or personal feeling, is absolutely irrelevant to the facts of existence; things are as they are regardless of how anyone feels about them or would like to interpret them. For instance, it may be the opinion of the activities programmer that the university is a place for entertainment and the satisfaction of hedonistic desires but the fact, substantiated by history and the scholarly tradition, is that the university is meant to be an institution of work and study. Consequently, the opinion of the programmer, in spite of its mass support, is false and immoral. The notion that each and every opinion is right is rooted in self-interest and lies at the ~ of anarchy; hence, opinion, as such, can have no relation to objectivity. The philosophic base of the correct editorial then must _be the world, the world of object (obj~tive ) relationships, unperverted by interpretations . through private interest. It is precisely this base PY ctrcumstance that some of our which provides the direction for the fulfillment of ~ i!1 regar~ ~ th~ natur~ of the the overall editorial task and which lies at the base stituhon of ~ntt~l JOurnalism. ~n £ tha.t. the umyerstty now ex,cels m ) of the critical tradition in journalism. We will add, by way ?f ~nclusion, that the editorial position of onfus10n, this problem IS unthe maJOnty of contemporary students of jouro define the nature of the editorial nalism negates this vital principle of objectivity. · wing, hoping that the ideas will be True to their liberal nature, these SCH:alled jourrealizing that a mon; ela~rate nalists dance in the clouds of opinion and selfh space does not allow, IS reqwred. for any meaningful editorial is a .~~et:es_h_!ls_tl)e world_passes_them by. queslioo of mere "survival" as "Hall Britanna," alated. Maybe it's about time that our standards were lowered a peg so we would realize what it means to scrimp and save-not en.loying life at the fiidt of a switcll: What is the advantage ol living in American type accommodations, while vlliling a foreign cultw-e? When In Rome do aa the Romans do, is sUII applicable In tm. But now let's talk a bit about the charges of nonindividualism registered against the pi"'OIram. Maybe it was true in lhe case of the 7th semester in Britain, but 5 ol us also speak from • experience when we say freedom to pursue individual interats and OJ>' portunilies to enhance one 1 own knowledge, were never denied us. <This also lloe& for the current For Eastern Program.ll\llsaK'a accusations ol restricUveneu on the part of the procrom, smadtl atrongly ol bloody bullJhit. . If lhe students felt tRat the 7th semeater in Britain was restrictive In any way, maybe the fault Uea with their ad· visors ; and in no way abould detract from lhe beneilts of a Jli'OIII"8m as such. The complaints should have been registered wlth lhe advilon dou:lag the time the alleged problems occum!CI. But. why should one bad oemeater apolla good PI"'OIr&m? It's too bad that our openminded editon didn't look put the eoda of lhelr noaea before allo~ themselves to be led astray , by one aided emotionalism; flinging aside all rules of falr pisy and proper journalism In lhe proc:eu, and resorting to literary badtltabblng. II II about time that we rid ourselvea and this campus 01 the . blaaed bullJhit that the editors olthis paper are trying to pull over lhe eyea ol the student populace. I think it would be appropriate to have the editors and staff experience the Ufe of a "Semester Abroad Procram," before fly in& on lhe handle with unjustified criticism being ~rsuaded by second-hand reports from a "&elect few _" These "&elect six" cooslituted neither a ma.lority nor a ran- Washington Watch The Hands On The Tiller The Second Term is guided by Nixon's own visc:eral hunches, his im~alely cooservative beliefs, a nd his cribbing from George Wallace. llntervieftd at the Inaugural by CBS, Wallac:e confessed be was most pleased that Nixon bad taken over his beliefs.) The management is lefl to batc:bet men whole lOYalty to Nixon is unquestioned. Joseph C. Haroch writes in the Cbriolaia Sdeaee Mcmltar, "Not a single White House courtier of today bas a personal c:oastituency or a public political position. No member of the Cabinet is any better off. In medieval terms, they are c:ourt chamberlains." Ric:ahrd Rovere of theN"' Yorker notes. ' ' Nixon wanls men lei put aside their private positions and carry out his will, no matter how much it may be at odds wlth their convictions." Tom Wicker adds, "No wonder Eliot L. Richardson took refuge in ciisaftt silence when members of Congress. at his Cabinet confirmation hearing, aslted subtanUve questions about his policy views. By now, he knows thai policy Ia IIIia AdmiailtraU.. Is tile abMIIIle pt"eserveofRicbanl M1Nix em aDd Ilia jaallurlea aroadblm Ia tile Wblte Haoue." The chief batc:bet man is Roy Ash, who jwnped from Hughes Airttaft to Litton Industries and expanded it into a giant armament concern. His job is to pour money into the Pentagon and grab it away from social programs. The case against Ash II reviewed by the Times in diuing up charges of law suits in Los Angeles in the 1960's. The chief allegations were : " That as the chief financial olfic:er of the Hughes Aircraft Company in 11149-53, be foreed accountants to make ~ entries that they testified were false Tlleae false e~. bad .l!'_e"-. effect o1 caaalac tile Air Force to be O'ferilllled by 143 ...UU.... .Mr. Ash coneeded that the Air Force waa billed for 143 million more than HUIIhes Aireraft was entiUed to receive, but he ~ lbat doing so did not violate the c:ontrac:t terms. .. That as founder of Uuon Industries, Inc., he participated in a scheme wlth two other founders to deceive a fourth man and deprive him of milJlons of dollars worth of stoc:lt in the c:ompany ... Despite 1\!r. Ash's insistence on the propriety ol his actions ... both juries retumed verdicts against 1\!r. Ash's positions." ro SUBSCRIBE: WASHLIIIG'roN WATCH, s.iiiiia Palat ~ ­ La-C· Mkblcaa 4811t. Rate •tz 11 year); f7 (I ,..._). B'" mcmtllly. dom sample of the nearly 280 students who have returned from Peace Haven over the last 3_ ~~-yean. The laat linea of a famous old poem sum the situation up apUy. "So olt In l joumalisticl wars, the disputanta I wean, rail on in utter ignorance while prating around an elephant. not one of them bas seen." JoU Donafeld Jr. Mike Slarlt Faye M. Gorst Kerry SUe Bartelt Jack Ber1 "Ask not your country can do for you, but what you can do . for yourself!" A Friday THE POIKTU JOBS ten·lewing all female. maJ~. mall' or Allwn•orsshouldinililllea .\l arch20 - plac~mentlilebycotH.attingthe Planment I 106 for non· tu.~htrsand 103 fortu~l\er$ 1. A hosli~ ~omy and kHn competition mllka an early sl.;lrl•mpcrati'·" for suc:el'S!I in underwriter. property un · derwriter.group underwriters. s.alucorrespondentsand at · tuarialtraine-tt yo ur job search. ~l atch U.S. ,\ Jr t"ortt. in interviewing a U \J - Interest~ U.S. Ma rin. Cwp•. Same as abovl'. l.uthen n Br ot htrhood l n_,uranrt t 'ompany. Interested in intervie111·ing all majon for Sillnposillons. majon. male and IemaR. F lrutoor . lntcr~ted 111 •n · ten·iewing Business Ad· mlnist ratlonmajon . ~l arch H - U.S. Air Forre. Mareh2:1 - B• l on Slort. lntl'fested in Interviewing bU!ineu a dmin is tration. Same as above. .\l~>tua l S rrvlct Caa ull y Company . lnttrestrd in in· t~:rvie,.·ingallmajors for sales position. Man:hl5 - Samf'nabove. ln- • uranct'. lnterestl'd in interviewing all majors for sales positiOIUI )larch\6- Com pany. lnt erestfd in in· Interested in Civil ~ TI'iCf! f.;;~~amlnation . Room t2; AScience Building. 8:30 to 1~ : 00 noon. II lntere:st tod please Sign up in the Pla~mrnl Cen ter . ~·ederal Eckankor Meeting There w!\1 be a diKtuSion meeting on ECKANKAR, th(o \ncientScienceofSoulTra•'el. on Wt'dnesday. Mar . t4. at 7 p.m.. in the Uartand Hoom . ~ondflooroftheUnlon. ~·or further in formation. call Mike at34HMO,or Bonnieat346- ""· YOUR DIAMOND & 61Fr (EJrnR terviewin&all majonfCII" sales pa ny. - 2~ And Each Apartment has: • 2 Bedrooms - 2 Bal1u • 3 color Schemes lo choose hom • Dishwasher, Disposal, Air Condftionlng • Ulililies are paid by Ownen • Healed Swimming Pool • Fully Fumilhed Including 4 Desks • Securily lock SJllem wllh Voice lnlercom • laundry Rooms and Ping-Pong Tables • Very Close lo Campus Reduced Summer Rates Kf8ISAKE, COWMBIA & ORANGE Bl01!0M Com· in · THE VILLAGE 301 N. Michigan - 341 •2120 DIAMOND RINGS tervle-~·Jngthoselntrrestedin pharmaceutical sales. P refer scien..-emajon:bl.ltwillconslder an~· ma)or CHECK OUR PRICES Model Open - Let U• Show You Around MAIN I. THIID ST. March 19 U.S. Mtrille Corps. Interested in in· STEVENS POINT AREA INDOOR A Hart!et '"'"'-Y-C.. IS HE RE =.elM'~~~-= WQfii ...... ll.hhO~hce< a.d d ct'to~ of tl,e C.O'-' f'k \:.o. BIB a.vd1o a.ccesso•r lh.. e. A 5ev..J .:f tke d .elM.> yo v1Je b~c:.. .;:\,y- C 1 \<>t~cl f?..L££..2~ " Dl.IST B v c1 - "l:-~t~..o.<>. 1 t. \ WIH.. L~-- T - hd:l -.. s,~ , _.__.... ·tt<--, 3.5<> d ,•.,. r L EVf::L.. - 5o• -:.lv . l--•'11 t ~ ,~ t ~ ~· le: ~,~t'- . RE ~:~ I!-OE~ (.Ae:t: !'-IT · ~ .. 9 A.M. TO S P.M. u.o .um. v..se.- 11 ~ Call 344-6908 Stevens Point ·t I.G;. , "h.- .:..1·~ 1,qo z..:; ..· * a..w ~ ·St.. 8tev- l'oUd, W1L (71a) UI· U1L !.l'i l,L'J t),O O I~A ~ [~ j, ~, ~;/'Vbl . -:, rt- ~u<. Sellers Wartted • •UHl~lM~ PLUS fYl AN 'r' OTHE.R NE. tU ITl MS 12 :. 'j-..C .:. p.J. 1 ~') 1!. . iT Married ltud•nh: loh are oYailable, Now $29 a month. For TU&e 2 qtj f . .. ; CROCKER'S LANDIK6 Mobile Home PARK • Sun. Mar.ll lu_,_ tt....,, 51 N. cit~ ~r :- . .,, 1~~!.1 ; 1:2 E'- :: R-.i) Dv!>TEf.'- -t .I. .. ,.J ,.I" vc/ .. ·[ ~f-tR.1T ~ Holiday Inn h r. low. Si'T'LlJ~ 8ALA.tJ::.E - Xi ~" " "' ~~Lb.. -t •• -.. (.., l { IAPE .S PLIC.tt-: . - do ~.t 1-t ·jk t. 4..4 CHf 5 .~.; CP.!:.~Ei H:. ~-AII.T ~ FREE DOOR PRIZE! l-1• f c Fo,·U·'' f-r oud\y =::-o\o' POOR HENRY'S FLEA ~~oc~ Taps St. Patrick's Day MARKET 8~8 C\..s.k: u•• l March 9, 1973 HAVE YOU HEAJID - YOU CAN STILL LIVE AT THE VILLAGE FOR "72" PRICES! "Diamonds Our Specialty" Jobn ll an c"" k positions. llur roughl Wtllcorn t March GRUBBA JEWELERS U.S. Air For«. f' ho.nl• ) 1utua l Llfe and liberal liftS majon in trr ested in ret a il position t:mploytrl ln- ,..,.antt. Wausau. Wisconsin. Will be in terviewing for thto follo11·ing poeiUoru; Casually Of fiu of Ca rrer Counse lingand ~onomlcs STUDENTS! Do,..._, rnter'• 1-.-..ce for your~ or molllle bomef UN <all 344-3599! III1MRSrlY I1ISUIAIKf !Biftl F.or information PHOTOGRAPHY Weddinos & Pollrails Prolessloul WO!k lowes! Prices Richard Herman 341-3403 701 Club Fulures llle &lletlll111111111 Fine Foods lalge llllroom Wilt Plrlles WeJct. 701Nore..._..~ Friday, Morch 9_,_ 1_9 7_:J_ _ _ _ _-::-:-::--- -7 --;:-Tlt - l_POIM....:.__nu_.=_ _ ____--,/-____________.a~ j ..!: ampus Newsletter· Frida)', March 9 UCM Social Get-together: "7:30p.m., Peace Campus Center. 1 Jose Greco and Nana Lorca Dance Co. : 8 p.m., Quandt Gym, Fieldhouse. Saturday. March 10 Jose Greco aod Nana Lor('.a Dance Co.: 7p.m., Quandt Gym, Fieldhouse. UCM Pre-Marriage Course: 8 p.m., Peace Campus Center. Student Clarinet-Trumpet Recital : 8 p.m., Michelsen Concert Hall, F ine Arts Building. Lynn Emond and Kenneth Camlek. Arts And Lectures: 8 p.m., Quandt Gym, Fieldhouse. Mazowsze, PoliSh dance company. Wednesday, March 14 Student Recital : 3:4S p.m., Michelsen Sunday, March 11 Concert Hall, F ine Arts Building. Newman University Parish: Sat. 4 & 6 Speech and Hearing Screenings: 7-9 p.m., p.m., Newman Chapel; Sun. 10:00 a.m., 038 COPS Building. The Speech and Hearing Newman Chapel, II : 15 a.m. Cloister Chapel, 6 Clinic is conducting speech and hearing p.m., Cloister Chapel. Weekday Masses: screenings for applicants to the School of TUesday, Wednesday and Friday, 11 :45 a .m., Education. . Applicants need not make an Newman Chapel. Monday, TUesday, Wedappointment ahead. nesday, Thursday and Friday, mass at5 p.m. at St. Stan's Upperchurch. (This will be"the Thursday • March 15 schedule during Lent.l No 4:4S p.m. mass in Choir Practice : ! Lutheran ) 7 p.m., Peace Newman Chapel during Lent. Confession, Campus Center. Rehearsal for next week's Wed., 4 p,m., Newman Chapel. celebration. Lutheran Student CommuDity: Service International FUm Series: 7 p.m., with Eucharist, Sat. 6 p.m. Stm. 10:30 a .m., Auditorium, Old Main. Film for this evening Peace Campus Center. This Sat. and Sun. we is: "Ritual" by Bergman. Donation of $.50 will have a Special Service of Music and per student, $1 .00 for others. Dram·a on Temptations. Unlled Church ol Christ: 1756 Dixon St. Friday, March 16 Sunday Worship, 10 a .m . Opera: 8 p.m., Jenkins Theatre, Fine Arts St. Paul's United Methodist Church: 600 Building. " The Gond Soldier Schweik." Wilshire Blvd. Sunday WorShip, 10 a .m. No bus pick-up. Fo r rides call 344-3557 or 344U\1'-SPNEWS 6936. Appllc.atlons for Grod Aulstaallbipo In Frame Memorial United Presbyterian lllstory Department: The Department of Church: 1300 Main St. Sunday Worship, 9:1S History, UW-Stevens Point, is acceptlng and 10:45 a .m. Graduate AssistantShips at applications for Church of the Intercession: !Episcopal) the Department of History Office 1424 COPS) 1417 Church St. Sunday Mass, 9 a .m. andS:I5 or can be obtained by writing to Justus F. p.m. Friday Mass, S: IS p.m. t$.35 supper Paul, Chairman, Department of History, UWafler Friday mass) . Stevens Point, 54481. Full time assistantShips Plaaetarlum Series: 3 p.m., Science Bldg pay $2324; half time assistantships pay $1162. " Galaxies and the Universe." Applications and supporting materials must Studeut Art ExHibition .Open: Edna - be received by April IS. Decisions will be Carlsten Gallery. Fine Arts Building. made by May 1. SympboDic Wlod Ensemble Pops Coacen·: a Grad Studenll Comprebenilve Exoms: p.m.. Michelsen Concert Hall, " Fine Arb Comprehensive examinations for graduate Building. Donald Greene, Conductor, students in History will be held on April 20, featuring Raymond Luedeke. clarine\ soloist. 1973, from 1-4 p.m. All graduate students Tul-sday, March 13 wishing to take an examination must register lJCM Student CommiUee Meeting: 3:30 with Prof. Robert H. Ze.iger, 409 COPS, on or p.m .. Peace Campus Center. before Friday, April 6. Unh·er>ll)' Film Society : 7 & 9:15 p.m., From the Midway : On Wednesday, at 8 Audilorium , Main Building. "The Trial," p.m., WWSP-FM 90 wiU broadcast From lbe directed by Orsen Welles. Midway. The pro~ram is entilled " The Class in lla•lc ChriJUan Tucbln&s: Challenge or Phase 111". Arnold R. Weber ! Lutheran) 7 p.m .• Peace · eampus Center, oescribes the economoc and political tactors downstairs. which Sha the latest economic <ontrols. POOR HENRY'S No (over Charge Mon. -Tues. - Wed. ·WHITING MOTOR HOm TIMELY ~ - ~--. ·REMINDERS at St. Patrick's Doy is March 17th..e our great Yariety of Irish gift icl.osr our unuauol incense and candle departments are well stocked and 10 popular! · atop at our old fashioned aocla fountain - ·it's been a great meeting spot .far 70 yean. you will enjoy stopping at our unusual store to ' " our unusual and timely gift ideas. WUTBIBER&ER'S GifT SHOP' ....-.Mala .. sa-p PAPA -JOE'S TEQUILA SALT & 'LEMON MARCH 9 & 10 ONLY SOc- CWBRATI lHE JOSE' WAY This Week-end Mandrake ENTERTAINMENT Every Friday & Saturday CAMPUS CINEMA 1601 6TH AVE. STEVENS POINT, WlSC. ~ Saddle up for a fashion ride in Saddle Jacks by~.,.,.~ MIDNITE SHOW NOW AT REDUCED 'RATES '\I)~ Get back in the saddle again In lhom MeAn's new Saddle Jacks. They're the tatest idea i n fashlon nostalgia as the popular ~tone &addle pa1tem ol the SO's has ~n updated tor the 70's with the new high heels and thick platform soles. wlllo tilt lOSt- COIII'UY ., SPANISH DANCERS MUSICIANS AND SIHGERS In OoDcert rr-ted b)' UAB Mardi 9, 8:00 p.m. Quandt Mardi 10, 1:00 p.m. ~~deata 16o $1.150 _Noa-Studeata rLVS ~ FLASH GORDON FR'E EwtTH THE PURCHASE Of' A MIDNITE SHow ncKm A PIZZA BUCK Oomplimeotla ol -..It ~ a tile PWa Ba& Available In soft leathers in a variety of old and new color combinations. Saddle Jacks are Just right tor everything jeans and nares to the new boggle or pleated paniS. Saddle Jacks by Thom MeAn. SHIPPY SHOES MAIN AT WATER 10 THI KMNTW. Visitation Cont. ~theaaroltlatthe ~a•nn•n~tofthtlcormin,.hich lht)'t'llrollw•llh•·etnnon~. non·•uitallonal a!"f'u un~ p:ormto~lpumiMionis&ranlf'd fcwoclwTarranlf'nW"'IIS On Ftbruuy t, tht' l'rnidnus· llall COWKtl Li'IIC t Pf~led the llou5in&Uffk"' ,..·ith a pr11p01.1l for INtour •lltt:u- IJucotouapp;~rrnt admtniltrahvt' muup th•s tm · ntrdiat{' ronsldfontlon . On thr morruntt nr t't bruuy l2, 11udmt.11 from 8;11d,.·tn llall, pro~l...-.unotltL~ onl'ludmc )lokt' MtMfllamin. th<" J>rnodomt of IM K.:II!Nin tl :tll I'GIIIlt"tl, met 10ith Md K:~rg, Ass151ant Dirt-nor of IIIMAini ,IOdiKVUtheouuorof th<· !kola) on ompltmrntatiOII !'>k!'>lcnamLn I'Xp/alned to the l'olntr r tlwmcettni(IO a sfruLtful .ond that ht' rxi"'C'l«< rrsulll . <Xhl'r!l.:itd.. ml!lldents...-c.orr ~pp.:ar.·ntly 1101 J..:lll uofit:d " 'lth till' rnult~ ol thor mornon~e !'t'liiLOn l.lurLnl(th~~>fltrnoonut th•• ~mt· da) !llref' doun • tllllmts !rom Uald"'''" lla U ronfrontedK.Ii r!ILnao:onf~ rwmontlWHou:ton&MLUr Ina u .. oon mar~fll by anar)' flari'Ups on t!w part of 1M ~udtnts. Kar11 t'~plainrd tllr t:lltofthrn-..•nasessoon llr statfll that imp lrmrntahon •n~olvfll crflaon lr1:at and admono51rllll\'t' requlrrme.ts andlorthatrrasonrouldnotbe rapidly ao:rompllsh«<. Thr >tlldrtits allo>o~ ~mllndtd t!wy hr to d«idr upon im plrmmtatllln sifter they ••:rrr d~tn"tlyalfto:ttdbythrpotittr. Jan Williams. a .-ophomore from Bald,.,·rn. spoke lor t!w doi&Kknts · " We arr lkk ol W:llllnllfotUtobepa5M(I Wr kto:pllrlllnllpulollbyproplr U)'lllll"''"''lllhavt'ltlnanothrr "~k . '" 1wo more ,.·eelts" Mdlenamon . lhr offlrial Friday, Ma rth 9, 1973 ~'oflo,.ong Ureylm ' appro•·at <lflheK:IId,..,npro.-alonthe !byaftn~o:vnfronl.lllion.IM I' II C s ubmollrd il similar Tft{UfltOII rebrua ry 26\ha\thc\HICM.II'OO(ionbeUtftldrdtoalt dorms lti5throptionofnch hallhcowt'\'ft',todrlft'monr ots ..,..,. vwtat... policy Tht- PAPA JOE'S WE BUY USW GUNS r~rnts' ~lsprc-itlrdlhat l!wro:oWUhraiii.W1·visitalion o~ rra Ri U>de on r:lmpu!l but Sont'ethrno:Uroni)' IWO:Inda half m~nhs remaiNng "' tbiJ M'Ttlftlrr,Lhi5polkywillncMhr put Into dfrc:t thos )·ear WE AlSO Sill NfW AND usm 6UNS. Bald,.ln rt't'Ommrntkilth:ltthi~ r>ptionhroflrrrdlcorl>t'lll)'t'ar'l "''"'"' Student Manager Jobs Still Open Appllc•Uons •rr no,.. brift& a«rpled at a ll Rrsidtnre Crnlrra and lhr Univeralty Crnter f« studc! nt manager po!J Uonsbeginn lflll wilhthe fa ll '7).'74Hmeatrr. Thrjobmtailtavarietyof rf!lponsibititles and prnon.at nJnb~ll, ... toich it if, Ul)«<fd will rnabte the p.1 rtlci pant to p ..... •nddrvetopilllhrfiddfll 1nlftllt'I'$0MI o;ommunicatim. 1llr Crnttr~ are lookiniJ; for proplewho"mjP)',..ortlinsvrith and for people wtollr. at tht same lime, l.l kinc on 1 responsibleposition ,.-hichil. FREE BEER! U.S. Choice, Juicy Top Sirloin Pototoes' Crisp, Gorden-Fresh Tolled Solod Texos Toost DtXIt:UNO MUSIC 7 r.M. - 11 r.M . dlal~nclndlnkres(ina. " Tl-e who ~onsidrr lhrm· 5elves"nsp:onsiblt-,penon.able• in;tivicaalb" should pick up a n applica tim. Application.~ due Mardi '""- MOYlng straightoheod, following the tomes. keopmg up.to-date.seekmgthohle Budget Hearings thai's hoppemnq now That"a you o:nd your luends. oJwoys on the go Tokeepyou qomg conhdently overy_doy, you need Tompox lampe"' They "rethointernaliiOI'Iola ry prctechon that's port of today . ~poknmanlort!wtlaldwmlla ll Counc:1l. called thr aflrrnoon confronta tion'do,.·nri gh! ldiotk andllupid'addinll,"'lllry•rt! runntnllhos,.holriuuriiiiOlhe l•ound " llr Mated he wu ronfidrntlhlt t a ll steJ:awl'l'e bring taken co upeditr lm · pJemcntiltion. thotlrocsyoutoleod I onocttvelt!o. No reason to"' ' ldlo and lotrholunposeyou by With Tompcu: tampons. you 're not oncumberod by ~~~~r:~~~~;':ld bock showong" And they come on th1eo obsorbency -si zes -~lor. Superond /!LQi2!-soyou get tho one thots best lor you Woth Tampoli!Ompons toroly on. you're olwoys heod1119 in the nghl doroe11on for fun ········;;;,.·;:k; ·s;;·&;;.;·A;~;;~······· ~ POOR HENRY'S ~ This coupon entitles the holder .... to any drink at half the usual Aprice between the hours 4-7:30 p.m. Expires March 18, 1973• !=f =ndov, Morch 9. 1973 2 ·-*·-·""9• .. Tlfl I'OIIOU II *' 3-" •-o•·rt..cl o•"• 11UDWl i U • CAN '011 . ........ *., ....... WDWI ISU CAH HUO ••• _,e..,l>f'l&..ci• COfto - .... 1'1 ••tol'l.. ,. . ..... Co<~ o <o" ' '-"9'0...,..,.. ""yotl'l••'..,dol o,._l lecood ll BUDWEISER. ANNOUNCES 5 KINDS OF HORSEPLAY IN WHICH YOU CAN BEA \Ate'RLD CHAMPION YOU CAN EARN THIS SWELL 7''x 6" PATCHL,,dhull·~· ·~,..... ~o•.,~o., ... n f rharnp1on~ '" t~lt' ~<.oriel T o pto'-t> 11 , t,l \Jnl hn" m:tn\ \ ' OU pef'loOnAI I\' know See? . Tn ea~ l tu ....hortn.:c. Audwcll-4_'1 '" ...am·t•om nR ll\'t' loohllh eve nt ~ in "tw· h hnnallfh• \\'nrld ('hnmpiOn..,haJ.k- l'ltn l~t• l':trn<'d Thev are deK"nhec:l ~tloo'e The "well Bud"t'IJoer \ \ 'mid Champao n l"'atc h L.. \'OUI pr!H! 11le-e mav nnl ht• the ulflmAie o; poflllllf At' l l\il leol on mpu .. Bu t the\' llll' thr onh unt"' 10.,.. ~uch ....·e' llrt~·t·ugmt t> 1\"l''lld· lut•Bklnl! Jk'rfurtn.'llkt"' • '"'uldn't l~t· Sort·. ,, ·., e&.ot \' t o l!t·l ·~·nnl Bu1 t ht•n \'OU 11hle ,,. mSC"n hc \nu• .. pt.'<'arill\' heneAih lhl' 11 p.'\lc h h\ clii!RllnR 11 fl<"lalulu .. "''" ' ~ " \\' rultl C'hnmp•on " 101 " 'tt~ lfl \ OU .. I Whtott' •lo (EVEN IF YOU DON'T SET A RECORD), JUST WRITE YOUR NAME, ADDRESS AND WHAT YOU DID ON A POSTCARD. -.o- Of .....c ..•u u ouo" o ou u oooo .... u, .,0 •.,., .,0 t • 0 " ll IU..U MCI _,f J! t t1J ' " '"' oooo- •ov• wo Oo l o • •.,l v :.. o ~~ 04 1!• 11 ' •• C • if 10\11, IT TO 12 Friday, Marth 9, 1973 Stump The Sports Stars by T i m Su lll ~an, Whu t C. rbcwo,and lbnll Klmt.I U Jlnot;lodou kltj,.lorl: "' I think lbr t"ll IDIIJihHI If· ron•plisllmrnl~ In •parb arr hllll•laholrilo""'•!tolflnJtaiNI ba"II&Jtlptrlrflltamr. 1\"hkh ::; ..do,outhlnllbhar,:rrlo Point,...: ··we ..·rre unableto findstatl!itlcsforthlsans"·er. 010weaskrdtloeopinionof0oug Bisber.thrsolfproatSitvtnS Potnt Coutl\1")' Club. Oddly mough. Doug felt that tbe 300 pmeinbowllnglsalottouper toaccornptish. llesaidthat rallingnstrikesinarowinbo" ·tins same takes an ulr.lordinarilysupereffor t,whik! ON!inllr)' Rollers everywben arrca p:~bleof sinki ngabole in one . We would tend to IRret wtlhhim'' GrorttrEurrallfr Hh mao l: ·· w ha ~o m p r lud lilt ABC =~:~ ·'·"' \11~ ..ad .\IU,.·aoLJie« Pollllrr: "Any batboy fllf" a Wisconsin l.tttle t.easue t~m couldans"·erlhls-. Ham · merin&Hanllwqinri&bt.BiUy Bruton in «ntrr, and Wei Covtngtonplayrdleft . Bruton, ~~,!~.•y.ILi tthrllraves'first KrucrKahri!I : " Lao i )"Ut, I nMk...t ~ull~ a ,.,.. collrJr •tudr11h playln1 MttNU foorrcrnllllll tram o In fit,· lu~~~n . ·''"'""' ~u o1 1he II•• lnmonnr•po~~....,....tby bars . tn,ou r i>JIInlon. ,.)lo,.·as tb ~:',.. ;.~•or lhrouahout lbt Point..-: "'Ournodwould. have Jo go to Rom le Dragula, proprietor ol Romit"s Ren- dnovo.e Yurinandyurout, Romie has helped thr Rimmer softball ltagues nourish by reputedly orpniril'll tap-notch teams. Ma nyofllistearrut ha\"t won championship•, and srvent l UW-st' people playfd farhim . Rornieannuallyliso sponsor edworntn'stu ms.ancl for llt'Ynal yean. Barb Tepp lfd the leagues in homen. In addition tohissponsorshipl, Rornit15withoutadoubttbe mostavidlndentrli[tlicfanln thiscoty'IIIOftbi.Ub~ory. "' ChiiiC it Otono: "'Whe holds the rrcoo-d /oo- me., lrc iLnin l laa l• In ~oUe1r llllkttbl l11"' Pol11trr : "Weca n'tglvt you an o ff icia l an••er. but Marquette's AI MeGul re mlllt bedOM. Inther«:enUyplloyed game al Lon& Beach State. McGuire wu called for three, vollile one o1 hht pfayen was ru~iledforanOiher. Nl'('dltuto $11)', theWarrionlosllhtlame, and the technlcab didn't help !Mm any , R"n Cohomolll tua lorl: M n•e playero who u~e pby.-dla a t J.uU I,..oduteru t ··Sa~nt lllljW IHIJIIt oporta." Poloter : "Right now, we an onlythlnkoftwoforsure. Gene Coolrypl.lycdforlbtBoston ~ l tlesandMilwaulteeB ra•-es. !llld Dave DeBIUidlft'i! pll)'ed f« theWhlreSoJiard now is a s~ York Knick. We believe uPinllt lbortslop Oldt Cr<Nit mlsht have played pro blsk~ll.butwto'n!DOta~~re. Abo, Charger n~nning bull !\like Garret t is cooslciftinJ playlrc for the I)odcers. and MkhlpnSllltt'sB radvanPel t t"OU idevt'ntiiiiUyellduppla)'in& - profOOib.IUandbooseball. " Jnk KO)'ba flll tal uma ull : "WIIol rt' lhtbl gHt Oaknlll pro lporU~" Polnar : ''Tim R-Ykh. In rx-~lt and now wilh the C"-rgen, m111t lead pro foot· ball. R.ouoric:hwilleataJau ..-Mne:vtrpoulble.andhtLikH cleli&htln awallowlnsapatTOW1 durlna halftimes. Basketba ll ltndsiOiowlthJimBamtttof !he Goldm Slate Wai'T'icn. ·cruy Hone' Barnet! ~•n alwaysbe foundnannift8uo~ in laf11t dn::ift durifll the courseolapme. llerec:enlly putonquiteasbowdurina• ttlev\ud a•me asalnst Milwaukte. llowever, B.imett woll never repla~e Artllur lleyman,wlloplaytdinbotllpro leag~~es. Art.hiii'UKdtotell tbe refrreeW.C. neldsjokeswlllle llewushootlnghilfreeUrow. JimmyP!ersalllsourba~U rrprl'$elltallvebecauseheona llitahomttandranlhebaset batkward s . Butball lou quieted down tome tlnet Piersall, allhoughOttroit'l Bill ~lartin occasionally lakes a swlrc a t 50ifleone. lndudlng starpitchrrsandsudo. Anoaymaa•: "' Do we ba~r 1111 •porU lanalla arou4 tiM ri iiiJMII!"' Pohtltt: '"'111trt 11re l.hrft pro lpor\1 fanatics tNt we Pat O'Donnell. a Vet,cante ll youanytlll"'and rverylhlnaabout Dttroit teama. DtMy "'Bu lly"' Burke, 1 Siaufi, lives and dies by the Clllnso Cubs The r e is anotherstudt-nt,who$11a11 CQ namdeu, who Jut )"tar tllt"ew hlsb;uebi.Jihelmetlhrou&htbe teltviJion Kl'ftll wh:ile Wit• china the NBC Game ol the Vo'ttk '" know about. Hawks Whip Pointers: 96-67 The Paontrr biosket.baU team rndedillsea5onlast"'Hkby fa llirctothellrona\lt"bltewater llawks.91Hi7 A ntlt capadty crO\fl·d of more tNn 3000 fans ""ttf on hand to watch Whitew a ter com pletely domtnate the wa5011'1 finale. Both tUIM hit with deadly acruracyintbebeainnin&l2 minutes. and Whitewater aiJ.. conference unter Bob Stonr p~e Hawk fans 1 scare by plckingupllbthlnlfoulwith u : t$remalntna. Wllitr.o·attt waitfd until! minutes " "tte leftln tbe b~ll to demonstrate wtl)' lhe llawks finished u con lere nee codlampionl. 1lte Hawkl took Stoneoutoflheli[lmeandwent " ·ith a 3 li[Wrd attack . Thf chansr re.uhrd on an rndlru biorngeof\\lllitewatttbaslr.tb lnthefinallminvltaoflhtha\f . lhr llawQ t<wed 19 stral£ht ""''111werfd polnb Ill a row, " "hiletbePolnttrswtttableto contri bute o nly one lonely Bruce Wei nbuf jumper. The game was actltl ll yover a t the end o r the first half. u Whltr-·~ter took a 4!H91ead tnto intermll-lion Wllllewaler 's Tom Van 0eBo&~r\lfdaiiKW.....,.wth20 poinll Ga r ryGrimesaddrd It, while Elmrr Polk toued in 17 ~nd Larl")' Grimes to. lllePolnterlltlrMplckrdup mosl o f the ~isi Uir'• poinll lllf"inbul and Cal KuphaU led t4 e~b. ,.·hilt tfHrvt "'til aua rdPhliJtr~addrdi. Cente-r Natt Smith contributed tO. Wrestlers Toke Fifth In Conference by l'hll t:uhr "ointwrestle,.,, lrdbycocaptain RO£tt Suhr's second pill« finish and third pia« llniS..._... by Phil '"Pte Wte" Murlltt.Stt-veLIICoul\landco""ptainBobBauurne r ,tndrd up filth. in thr WSU conlttma. tournament at Superior. River ~·aus. lht tournament <.brkhorse, won the meet. Tltl t'alcolll, who did noc have a ··~I")' good dual mret UIStd 1 well balanced team effort plus two lndlvldul l championshlp1 In wiMing. Wlollewater took aecond u ellprded and Oshkoth a surpri!llnsthlrd. f>r't..tournament favoriteSuprrior,wllohadwon the mttt for the past two l talons fi nitbed a distant wventh. -1011. "'Oven ll, I was vtl")' pleued with the team effott ," said lleadGr~ppler.RttWickl. "'It wasaiOOper«ntrffart andin IIOI!Iecase:sltwuttOpereent. We improved very mucllo•-er Last.yearlboUKII . LIIJtyearwe finishedtastandhadonlyman place. This time we ha d one~«ondplaer.thrtttlllrdll andafourlll. "' Takinga lookatthemeet by ,.·etghtclasla,thillsthtway thePointtt'sdid. I Lipaa11ds · Ptte Doro, ""011 IU fint matcb over Marou of LaCrosae2-l.toreaellthrsemifinals, but then loR to thr e-ve ntua l champion, Gal")' Ziuo of l't"bitewattr. In a wrl'$tlebatk, Doro lost to Rkh Lobntt of Eau Claire and finished fourth. I N pauulo - Steve Lll Count beat Dav e Con no r of Whltewattt J..% to read! the seml·fill.11s but thm loat to tbe S«ond pia« finisher Sttvt: llmnlngsofStout2-o. In l..a Count"awres tle-b.lckbebea t Lll CrOSH"sBlackand t llenConnor onceapinf«thirdplace. Jt ri")'UruslettmofSupH"iOT ""OIIIIis~«ondatn isbtcro..,n. 13-lpou.nda - LubySidoff did ..,·ell f« bl1 flnt tourney 11 lor fa~ tht tournament cham· pion. Dick Beattie ol OshkoM, lilt first round and 10$t. In lob ,.·resUebltck, Sieloff bloat Bill ll armeyer ol Eau Claire on 1 pin before losl"' toG~ Monahan of Whltew1 te r. tU pound• · Bob Bauuener brat Rick Dworak o1 Oshkosh in the fint round but lost to Naurtt of Rlvtr t'alls in t~ seml-finab. In t h e wrest l eback, B.iuuener beat Garsr.au ol Supr!'ior and then but Dworak, ~~~~~e't;"v~~"'Js:;, won his fourth ttnlgbt WSU crown ISOpolllld • WIITenPoppwas beaten ln botb the openin£ roundandinblswrntle-b.lck. Ron OwonJt of Oshkosh wen his~«ondsttalghtcrown. Ulpourod• · PttWteMueller, thePolnter"stop pinnrr,pinrw:d t ..·o of Ills oppor~mts and fi nishrdlhlrd. Mueller opened wilh a pln inl : t2andlhemoved tothesemJ.rlnabwhrrebemet J e rry Zawacki, wbo won the title for the third time, from Superior, MurllrrinwllatCoxbWicka described 11 1 "bel l of a matt h,"tiedZawacki'M.after resulatlon time upl r rd . Zawackltbmwon3·2inovt: r· time In the wrl'$tleback. Muelle r pinllrianOsteniiOofE.auCialre. whom he had lost to earlier ln theyearonapin,andlhenbrat J ohnBrigpofl.a"Cr-. who hehadal!o losttolhi:lstaJOn. lfl psuada· Roaer Sullr. turned out to be the Pointer '• llisbest finisher •• he but Larry lla1uyuof EauClairrto reacb the semi"• and then knod•td of f P1ul Rttd of Superior withallrst perlodpln to reach the rln.11b. In thefinals,S uhru ltd. B. B. La l'rad ol La (.'rfi6M, who h.adn'te\-enbeenHguredonto pla«inlhemttt,Mtowlrd lltl ttldoftlleHCOIIdperiodbefcn la.ina w. when LaPrad lllm inthreecradlesinthefinal ....... aot mpouad.J · RitkNtlptrtlot pinnedlnthefi"'troundandla.t In hl1 wrntleback. Mike S"nek won tbe UUe for Whl lewa ter . ttopMnob-Jim Youngttwll bumprdlntheopenin&~d ""ltlnbewasplnnedbyl>llve Gllnl«ki of Rlvtt f'alb, who ,.·on the t itle. Younger then beat Bill Hartmann of Superior In bls nrst wrestleback but lost tltl se«ondonetoStevePtddl nl[ton of P latteville. lluvywei&hi ·AIJankowski loJt toSuptrlor'sSd!ltrowlk!ln 0\ltrtlmelntheopener ancllhtft lost his wrestlebxk to t.tn IA!fdlkeof Eau Claiu. U. CrOAt's Don P arson• won lhe lltavywelgbterown. Projecting t o nex t year, ~cbWickluld, "Na.tyea r '• ttamlooksllkeasoodone. We arelotingonlyonesenlorancl thltl'sSuhr . At faruthtM:IItol theteamohapesupwewillhavt: plenty of nperlencr from our freshmen. If It wasn't for themthiswason ..·ewo.>ldnot h.avebren thr team ,..e wtte. Bob8ruslly,l..aCount,Mudler. Sldof f.Nelprrt•ndPoppall dld DIP'eat joband lcan't llly enoughf«Doro.Biluuenver andJanlr.owsk i." · WiL'llht:H ..5011overforall butonePointerwrest lrr,SUIIr, thert~tofthrteamwilllet to e~t normally p in. Suhr. though.will£etatr iptotbe NAJA natlonabnelltweekend. llequalifledforthrnationlbby finishl nss~d. Norma ll y tbe conference allowsthctoptllt"refinlshento go the Mlionab, bu t Stevens Pointonlyallowslhetoptwo.