ON THE INSIDE 3

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SERIES VIII
VOL
17
ON THE INSIDE
Page 3
Search And Screen Proposa l Approved
Page 5
Review - Opera Is A Surprise
Page 6
Paraplegic studen t dies
Page 9
Student Union Opening Set
Page 10 & 11
Com pus calenda r
Page 13
supe rp ickers shoot for perfect score
Page 12, 13, 14 & 15
Sports
·
Page 16, 17 & 18
The Maynard Ferguson Concert Nov. 6
d isplayed some of the best jazz horn playing in the notion.
letters to the Editor
•
•
_.)
40 give opinion· at grad meeting
byTonyCharlnandShlrlty
Splttlt mtister
About .4Q people ex.~essed
their opinions on UWSP
gradu.11eandundergraduale
~Wograms at a
Board of
Regents hearing held here
Thesday. r.iov tJ.
nus wasthefirstofse•·eral
heanngs by the Regents
Education Comm1U~ on
graduate program cuts in the
W ' system . The purposf' of
the htarings 11 to df'cide what
tht m1ssion of the UW higher
educlllionlnllit utibnsare .
according to Regent John
Lavine.
Lavine and Regents Mary
Williams and Mn . Howard Y.
Sandin prnidf'd OVf'T the
lhrHhouthearingheld inthe
Michel.stn Con~rt Hall of the
Pine Aru Building . Th r
mood of thf' hf'aring seemf'd
bll51cally resrrvf'd and fo rmal .
Spf'aktn mcludf'd faculty ,
alumni , s tudents , a d ministrators a nd cltinns,
representing themsel•·n as
llll.'ll as variousdf'Pirlments
at UWSP. Programs that
rece1ved rf'present.1tionwere
natural r esourcf'J. communicativt
disorders ,
~~~~~~~a~~~- ~d" ,~r;i
studies.
Olancellor Dreyfus was the
first~keratthehea.ring.
Bts.Judtha.therep~nted
not only himself but also
UWS P faculty . Dreyfus
highlighted
UWSP's
Page 2
THE POINTE R
Novembe r IS, 1973
Faculty Senate Passes
Search & Screen Proposa
by
~la ry
Uudde
The Faculty Senate met
last Thursday and passed a
proposa l concerning facu lty
nnd student represent ation on
the Sea r ch a nd Screen
Com mlltcc . The Senate also
hea rd reports fr om Vice
Cha nce llor
Hafer bccker .
Student Senate P r esident
Hamilton and
TAU W F'
representative Allen Blocher .
The
Unl\•crsity
Counci l
rt"Commended to the senate
that the Sean:h and Screen
Committee to fill the Vice
Cha ncellor position be
com posed of six facu lt y
members and 't hree student
members . The senate passed
the proposal.
The proposal incl uded two
members from the College of
Letters and Sctence. one each
from the Colleges of
Pr oh:ssional Studies . Fine
Arts and Natural Resources
and one · membe r fr om
Leu r ntng Resou r ces or
unassig ned. A list of facully
member nominees has been
sent to the Olancellor for his
selection .
Two
undergraduate
students and one graduat e
student are to be chosen for
s tudent r epresentation It
wns included in the proposal
that an additional student
could be c hosen. if the
Chancellor saw the need for
it.
The proposa l m ust also go
befo re the St udent Sena te .
This
" P assage appears likel y ... lla ft· r bl•tkcr
nt"\.'C~t tnt cs the d(•velopment
l!l111d Pn.•stdent Hami lton
Uafertx-cker rt'ported that of rt'!;tonal MST prog r ams
the nusswn hearings nrt• llt.' I \H'Cfl lUII\'CrSt(I('S SO that
S(:heduJtod for No\·cmbcr 13 s tud(•nt s m these areas can
Studt•nts nnd taxp.:~y e r s !'l tll gt·t tht.•lr mas t er's
dt·grt.'l'l!l. tw saul
would IJ\.• allowed to speak
St udt·nt
Go\'l.•rnmen t
Chan ct• llo r Dreyfu s met
.,.·at h the Uoard of Reg(•nts !' n .•stdt•nt Jun Hami lt on
last we<·k to po10t out the rt·purh.'d that he met wilh
ncccsslt\' of mamta1n111g Hl'gl•nt Wtlhams and asked
some baste program s . that .m :wd 1t be rWl on un·
rt•ported Hafcrbecker Th<' dtorgr :tduate programs The
Chance ll o r f eels som<' audit would tx- rwt sun tlar to
duplicatiOn IS necessarJ for thc OfiC run on graduate
balanced untvers itiCS , he programl!l , !la td ll am1lton It
satd The Omncellor also 1s nL'Cl'l!l!t.'lr y lx'Cause some of
pomtL'<l out that the MST the undergraduate programs
progr ams in socia l science nt."\.-d to be c ut, he sa1d .
Hcgl•nts wtll r("Commend to
and gene r a l science arc
sc hL'<iulcd to be phased out thc legi s lator s t h at th ey
he r e and at Oshkosh. said restore most of the million
dollars m tht· user fee con·
troversy , sa td Hamilton .
Thl•y w1ll sta rt funding
supllOrl through segregated
fet• s upporl Cent ral Ad ·
mtOIJ>tratiOn wtll be
reqlK'stt-d to nt<tke a study on
segrcgatl•d fee s upport.
c red1b1ht y wtth the student llanult on sa1d
TAUWF representative
body It needs to revieu.· tiS
poltctes.or maybe 11 would bl' Aill'll Ulocher reported that it
best tf 11 folded and start('(! IS :tl'lmn month for TAUWF.
Thl'y "111 11ruposc a three
a gam
Trc
adml n t s tratton puutt p rogram to the
Th e
rcspond!l fa vor ably to strong guwrnor , hc swd
demons tratton from studen lS . followmg po1nts wtll be
propo:o.t.-d
Pomt one tha t
1
tran:-.111onnl funds be
from th1 s bu1lding . T h e o.~llocatt-d to help Unt\'erSitiCS
chancello r ts ven· much O\cr thetr dec rease in
concerned with st LKfenlS and cnrolhnent . Pomt t.,.·o that a
thc ptcture of whole ont• nullton dollar fund
(-ducat ton ," he sa1d
program be s upported by
' ' If students stt down and rt.'gt·ni J> and the go\'ernor to
lhtnk about why there IS fo rm a Teacher lncenti\•e
nothmg to do, the)' will see
Plan . Potnt three that a n
that the r e tS really a ny tnct:'nt1ve plan for early
num~r of lhmgs to do ...
rctlrcmt•nt on a vOIWlta r y
Badzms kt s~ud .. We ha ve to IJ<1S1S l:w: t.'SI:thltshcd .
nwke s tudents aware of the
Blocher al so In formed the
campus
sena tt:' of a legi s la tor sociaJ
Controller urges students
to promote campus
by Lydia Abell
~ limma t ed :
the Student
Se n ate
R eserve
A challenge has been of · C$4850) and lhe Student Gr oup
This was
h.• red to the UWSP sti.Kient Momcs CS2000L
body by Student Controller done to cancel last year's
deficit. which is a policy of
Hober t Bad ti ns ki.
Central Adm inistra tion . he
said
B.:adzmski said . .. We need
Some campus actt v tttes
total s tudent im•olvemcnt and don 't ma ke as much money
par ticipation in campus life. ·· as they could, Badzinski said
Lower enrollment results in " Let st udents make the
ftnanc1al cutbacks for deciSIOns if you want thetr
campus activities. he sa id.
s upport. " he said . Arts and
.. Because of the projected Lectures and Unh•ersity
en r oll ment or 6435 next year . Theatre are two activi t ies
our budget will drop by that could profit fr om m ore
S3t ,380. We ca n 't raise t he s tudent control. said Bad ·
s tudent act ivity fees. so we zmski .
can't fund a t the sa m e
Also. the Un ive r sity Ac ·
levels . ··
t1vi tics .. Board CUAB ) ha s
Ba dzi nski said tha t two been Wtde r a ttac k r ecently,
fu nds have r ecently been he sai d .
"UAB has lost
pr~~!t~:;eo~o ~~~~~
~~~~~~s!:u~ :;;0\'~;!~~~g>~
Prrfor m ln a • ml xtW"e of tradi tional •nd modfl' n folk
da nces. the Krasnayarsk Dance Company of Sibena .,.,]]
appear at UWSP Nov 19 The troupe has won accla 1m
hour to be he ld o n Novembt•r
:.»9 at ol :30 tn the llo hday Inn
li e ur ged the sena tors to go
and meet wit h the legislator s
fro m ccnt rn l Wisconsi n.
11tc Conu nwlil )' He l a t i on~
Co m mit t ee r ecommendl•d
thnt lh c senate rea ffi r m tlw
proposed establish ment of :1
Human H.clations Commtlte(.'
to be sent to the Olancellor
for wntten approval or
dt sa pproval . T h e scnatl'
reaffi r nu.o.d lis pr oposa l of
April 23. 1973.
The scnn le also p.'lssed a
chang • 111 the park1n g
regulations . ;\ ccor di ng to Uu..
change, complaints m us t b..!
broug ht to t he O la ncell or·s
o Hi cc w it hin 10 days of thl'
decision m a de by the Parking
Appeals Boa r d .
•
Cartoon Time
For Fi lm Socie ty
On Tuesday , Nove mb(•r
20th. the Uni\'er5Liy Ft lm
Society will pr esent a Spt"Ct.tl
progr am o r Wa r ner Brothers
ca rtoons .
A perfect opportu nity to laugh a long wtth
Bugs. Da ff y. the Hondrum1cr
nnd Coyote . Elm c r ,Por kyand
'JV.•eety will be a fforded to all
T wo h o ur s· worth of
am m a t ion will be h1ghhghtt>d
by " My Lttllc Duckaroo ... a
~.~~~~lt0~ir:.~.s!er~l1~~ · ~('11r~
...
language IS s u bver ted m tht·
bes t traditiOn of the ~ l an
Broth e r s
If you like your
viole nce s piced w1 th laughter
.. Sheep Ahoy ... "''tth the tn
d u bita ble Wile E Coyotl',
provides e no ug h masoch tsm
fo r e ve r ybody .
The lilms will he shov.n 111
Mai n a uditor ium a t 7:00 amJ
9 : 15 p.m .
e
~roughout the USSR in addiUon to receiving praise from
'rugoslavla . Poland . Algena and the Middl e East.
Siberian Dancers To Perform Here Monday
Co~~an~:fs~~~!~ at~:~~ ~=~dh~~~a~~~~a;tc~h~c!:!: ~~~~e~~~~~~:~ies . :: H•.~~~~~~~~
of 80young folk dancers and a
14 · p iece o r chest r a , will
perform at UWSP ~1onday ,
Nov . 19, as part of iLs first
United States tour .
Tile 8 p.m . perfor mance
will be held in the Quandt
Gym na si um o f th e
and Lectu r es Box Office
Jocatedontheupper level of
the F'ine Arts Building
Program selections include
a medley of folk songs and
dances such as " I LDve You.
My Yenn issey .. with soloists
LodmiJs Kor kina and Ivan
Dance from Nenetz .. danced
bytheG 1rls , and .. Oncemthe
V11Jage of Olkhovka " ' th
solotsts Valery HortSO\' :~d
Anatoly Vlassov
Th e to ur 15 under thdJrectton of Columbia Art ste
of New York in co-opera:io~
": 1 I h I h C A me r ic an
Fedcratton of Musicians.
The. company , founded in
1
~· 15 d1 rccted by Mikhai l
Godenko lie has fashioned
the com pany 's d iverse
repe~toire to include danc es
rangmg from the lyrica l to
lhe symbolic and jocul a r .
The lro upe is one Of the
younges t (the aver age age of
the m e mbersls 2J )a nd most
popul ar folkda ncecom panies
in lh e Sov iet Union. It has
won accl aJm all over lhe
USSR in addition to win ning
pr aise for perfo r mances
Yugoslavia, Poland , Alger ia
and the MidcDe Eas t.
!"
~
November
Search And Screen
Proposal Approved
by Krls:oloum
A rtcommendation for the
choosingofmrmberstoser•·e
on the Srarch and S.:reen
Commit tee for ViceOtance\lor was appro••ed at
th e Nov 11 meeting of
Student Go••ernmfll l.
lbe recommendation was
sent to Student Government
by the Uni•·enity CoWX'il for
appro•·al and to the Facult y
Senate where It was approved.
The University Counci l
consists of tO Faculty Senate
members and 10 members of
The
the Student Senate.
Council is called ~'heneo.·er
there is a deadlock between
thefo'acultySenateandlhe
Student Senate.
The University Council was
called to advise on this issue
because the two Senates '''ere
oot able to develop a com
promise on a student and
faculty member ratio.
Cha ncellor Dreyfus ~- ill
make the final decision on
membe r s from the
nomina tionssenttoh.imbythe
Student Senate and Faculty
Senate
The Oiance\lorshall select
"~of the twelve nominees
from tiM: Collf!Res of Letters
and Science. Preressional
•
Department of Lea r ning
Resources.
The Student Senate will
nominate four undergradua te
students and two graduate
students . The O!ancellor will
select from this 1\o;o und e r g r aduates and one
graduate student.
Senator Bob Kung ,
chairman of the Business
Affairs Committee. moved
that facu l t y and administrativepersonnelshould
pay an $8 Universi ty Center
fee each semester .
The motionwastableduntil
further facts and rigures
co uldbeche<:ked. Senator
Cary Winegarden was asked
to check intootheruniversitiestoseelftheyhaveselfsus taining or tax -suppo rted
university centers. This is
necessary before a d«ision
on the motion can be made.
sa1d Winegarden.
In other action, Sen . Pete
Atlderson, chairman of the
Student Affairs Comminee.
reported that Philip George.
F'inancia\Aids.s pokeat the
Faculty Affairs Com mittee
meeting.
George s aid thlllt the
Financial Aids Office
welcomes any input from
students on matters con·
cerningfi nanclalaids.
~~,~~;~s-~'::ce: r!~d a~: CoTr!~ .t~:eu~: ~~~ai~!
Rehabilitation Via
Halfway House
by ~l:lr y!Ambuger
The halfway house located
1n Delzell llall is now in its
fourt h month of operation.
sa1d Project Superv iso r
Dan Houlihan
per10nal proble1.
of the
individuals.
The halfwa)' house is in
operation 24 houn a day.
seven days a ~·eek . This
atm05phereprovldesthekind
'' The purpose o f t he
~a~trr:,~urk~::~ns~~::,
::!:"ra~~~n~00 f[eenhd~i!i~~
,
would ordinanly be referred
to the Dhision of Probation
and Parole,'' said 'Houlihan.
" The r esidents ~-ould
other-..isebehousedlnlhe
county jail : mu-.or traffic
offenders . petty theives ,
persons convicted of alcohol
related offenses and th e
like,' '
~idents staying at the
halfway houst ha\'e an opportunityto pursue schooling
or job traming . TheN! are
four residentsatthe .present
time. Three are work•~& fulltime m the commun•l>". and
one ts attending vocatiOnal
~eh o o l . according to
llouhhan.
lntensh·e group therapy
programs. u well as tn ·
dividualcounseling,areheld
three nights a week. V{tl\lam
McKee . directo r o f the
half~·ay house . and Douglas
Broyles. alt~ate dire-c~or .
arem charge of the traimng
sessions.
According to McKee. the
therapysessionsa reforse\fenlightening.andrelatetothe
from further contact with the
to
1\ouhhan.
McKee said residents are
able to use most of the
university se rv1c es and
fac11it1es . They eat three
meals a day at one of the
campus food centers . Each
resident is also slveu an
activity ticket lor campus
e\'ents .
McKee said residents ha•·e
freedomtodoastMyplease
" 'hen they are not at ~·ork ,
sc:hool orattendintalherapy
session. A contract Is sig ned
between the parole officer
and the individual . It sta tes
cou ~t s. according
t ~rulesandrtgulatiOOSihe
resident must follow in
rt"R&rd tohoursandthelike .
According to Houlihan , it is
1mpoMible to determine the
suc:cessof theha\fway house
at this time. He feels it is a
~·o r th ~·hile program and
<'!her campuses are beginningtorealiteltsadvantages.
~~~~~= h~a!ske:f~~~
for more information about
the program .
15, 1973
THE POINTER
Page
3
College Spirit Lives
by Tony Charles
Thompson nail recent ly
hostedtwu tialloweenparties
for handicapp-ed children and
proved that ··collegespirit"ls
not dead on this campus.
!tobin -Mitcht>\1, assistant
looking into thepos.sibil\ty of director of Thompson, talked
ha••ing a bank branch on aboutthepartyherwing put
campus, or some type o( a on for the Chileda children .
check cashing program in· Chiledaisaninstitutionfor
"underdeveloped" children
stituted .
Anderson also said that with physical and emotional
Sen. llonBruchisloo kintinto problems, and is located in
thepossibilityof havingan Steiner llall, once a UWSP
dormitory . There are 24
ice-skating rink on campus.
Thi s~illbediscussedfurther children living at Olileda .
~ine were present at the
atalatumeeting.
SenatCK Tim Scanlon met party.
Ms. Mitchell said that her
with Mayor Paul Borh am
F'riday , Nov. 9.todlscusslhe ~ing\o.-orkedforaweekanda
campus ma ll .
" Mayo r half planning the party. They
Barham is in favor of the organized games and made
hatsandbags forlhechildren
mall ," said Scanlon.
There Is no organited to use t r ick -o r -treating
resistance from residen ts of throughout the dor m.
Dr. Ditson, supervisor of
the city concerning the
closingoff'rankl\nSt .. sa.ld Olileda. said that it was a
great experience for the
Scanlon.
A public meeting on the chi ldren . Dr . Dit so n Is
closingo(Franklin St . will be scheduled to speak to Ms .
Mitc!M:Il 's wingtonigh t onthe
held Sunday , Dec . 17.
Studentsareurgedtoattend .O.iteda program .
" I saw this party bring
the meeting.
people
out and it showed me
Sen. Tom Mannis. chair,mnn of the f'aculty Affai rs the importance of giving of
)'ou
rself." said Ms. Mitchell .
Comm iuee , said that the
"Wegotasmuchout
of the
faculty evalua ti on surveys
must be out by the first wffk exper ience as the children."
On November l rd. the
in De<:embef".
Youth
Associ
ation
fo r
"The e valuations are
designed to help the transfer
st udent and present students
in choosing courses," said
Mannis .
The eva\Uiltions
shouldllivethestudentssome
s ubstan t ia l sta tements
about the faculty member
teachinllacourset!M:student
byKathy O'Connell
is in ter ested in taking .
UWSP students are ursed
' 'The evaluations are not to abide b y h u nting
designedtohurtanymember regu lations in ord er to
of the faculty,'' said Mannis. pre,.ent serious accidenlll .
These evaluations will also
Shots have been fired Into
assi s t the chairmen of an apartment house bardepartments when It is dering the north end of
necessary to decrease the campus, according to city
number of faculty in his police.
department . said Mannis .
The a r ea of _the ~ity
The st udents will be chosen bounded by Mana Drt•·e.
at random for the first Division Street . North Point
se mester , but secon d
5tmester the sun·ey will be
campus--..ide. This first )'ear
~-m be e xper imental until a
fair and comprehensive
~urv~y can be developed.
Mannis said.
.
The Depa r tment of History
fo;~ ~ °b;~~~~fadbleRa~ 1 :h~ announces the openifli of
StudentGoverrunentOfficein
De<:ember. ~rding to the Better Business
act, ;myoneearmnglessthan
Retarded Children I Youth
ARC ) and the Thomson 11:111
CoWK:il sponsored another
Hall'o"'·een party in 'ltlomson's basement. Lola F'onlt'fek . member of Youth ARC
and resident of Thomson.
headedthls party .
Mentall y
handicapped
children from the special
educatione\assesofJackson
and Washington elementary
schools were invited. Girls
from Thomson made party
invit3tions whichweregh·en
totheschoolstopassontothe
children.
Not all of the girls who
helped were members of 1131\
CoWK:il, accortiing to Ms .
Fonferek . About 20 girls
helped out at variot.IS times.
The basement was decorated
and games such as "pin the
wart on the witch" were
played. A sing-along
of
llalloween songs rounded out
the activities. Refreshments
were served .
" I was surprised by the
involvement." Ms. F'onferek
said. "Committees ~·ere set
up a.nd took off for themselves. The girls really got
excited."
Both Ms. Mitch~ll and M:s .
F'onfereknoticed that girls
who were thought to be introverted truly opened up
when with the children . They
becamethelifeoftheparty.
Police Stress No Hunting
In North Campus Area
Drh·e and Minnesota A•·enue
will be more extensively
patrolled due to several
reports of hunters in the area,
said police.
No-hunting5ignsarebeing
postedinthearea . ll untingis
prohibitedthere~ausethls
por tion of woods l1es within
thecity limi ts . Huntingisa\so
prohibitedlnthearea lyingin
the Town of ltull .
majors offered history
scholarship award
10 1
~v: JPea1~
i!
~i~;~~~~
discount on his rent.
Applicants must have filed
incometuformsforthetwo
yeanpriorto beingdeclared
a dependent.
Anyone me e ting these
requ:irements is urged to fill
out a form .
A constit utional change
was proposed by Sen. MaMis.
f:m~tro';,o~~hl;~r:f:ti:
committee. The committe-e's
purposewouldbe " tokeepthe
student body informed of
what government is domg.
and to make sure that th~
medJaat o..- disposal handles
that task properly."
Aftt'f much discunlon 11
was d~clded to tab le ;he
motion until the proposal
could be too kedmtofurth er .
and revisions made
Promoted By
Committee
com petit1on for the 1973
Steiner Scholarshi p Award
The award. made annually to
anoutstandinghistorymajor .
carriesastipendofS&l.OO. All
history majors a re eligible
apply.
Applicants should submit a
one-page. typed, narrative
statem en t which includes
applicant 's class standing .
overall GPR and history
GPR. a hsl of courses taken
andcreditseamedinhistory,
a summar y of college ac:·
ti vi ties and future plans. and
a brief statement tel!ina v.-hy
The Comm unity Relat ions theapplicantehosehistoryas
a
major and the value of the
Com1u• ttee will mee1
The applicant
Thursday : :-lo•·embe,r IS at discipline.
7·00 p.m. tn the Dodge Room. should also request a letter of
recommendation
from one
Umversity Center
Bnng
member
of
the
llistory
)'ou r compla1nts to the
meet1ng or drop a line to Tim 1Rpar1ment '!be letter and
the
apPicallon
should
be
Scanlon . . Commun1ty
to
the
O!airman
of
submitted
H.elallons, Student Govt'fn ·
the Department of History ,
men! Office
An yone in- !loom ~2-1 COPS by no later
teres ted li'l running com then
December
t
,
1973.
parat1v esurvey s of area
bu.~ont-$5eS IS 11-elcome
"Ati)"Ofle having 11 com plaint regarding a loca l
business e5tab li ~ hm en t
shouldbringittotheattention
of the Student Government
Community Re l ations
Committee." _s aid Tim
Scanlon. comm11tee chai r ·
Page 4
THE POINTER
November 15, 1973
77
enrolled in new
Empty Dorms Cost Students environmental minor
UW system . Tay lor sou d that
lhe major reasons for not
Stevens Poml students pay s urrender ing Delzell a nd
almost $100.000 a year for Steaner 1-lalls to the state were
empty dorms on other UW
Ac-cording to Taylor . af th('
campuses, sa1d Bob Taylor of
state had taken o,·er the
the Housing Office m a recent
bwldmgs. UWSP would ha,•e
mterview
by Ma r k Vollrath
lost completl.' control O\'er
them lie pointl-d out that
there's no wny of telling what
the stat(' maght do " Tht•y
nughl e\'en lock them up ;and
JUSt let them s1t ." Taylor
noted
Ste\'ens Pomt ts the only
school m the UW system that
ha s been able to utili ze
bwldmgs that would otherWISe gp unused Thts bcncht s
not the only dorms m the UW
the ent •re W system \\lult•
system that are em pt y,
Several UWSP students Ste,•ens Point ts sa \'11\g other
though . According to Taylor .
UW campuses money .
plan
to
s
pend
Chris
tmas
m
the cost of each t!mply bed on
ho~,~oe,·er. the other campust-s
any campus 1s absorbed Fran c e The g r oup IS ar(' s tall costmg Ste,•ens
scheduled
to
Oy
to
Pans
Dec
.
equally by the enti r e UW
Pouit They probabl y -.111 for
system nus 1s to msure that 16 and return Jan. 7 There a lon2 tame . too
are sllll openings for in no campus "''Ill " fold ."
Lert>stcd lra\'ellers . T he tour
Ta i lor s tated that dor m
UW -::>tevens Point, which is being offe red through t he
closed two dorms this year. Fore1gn Language depart· mortgages on some other UW
cam
puses .,.-on 't bc pa1d orr
spared the UW system C\'Cn ment .
Wltil " around the yea r 20t5 ."
mo r e financ utl headac hes
During their s tay in Paras. tO maantain control O\'er the
when it found " tennants '' for
both. Steiner HaJI is being the g r o up plans to tour fac ilities, and that they
leased thts year by the historical and other points of pro ,•ide a futur e profit
Chil eda In s titut e. and a interest. The itinerary in - potential . Any profit that
portion Of Delzell IS being cludes four days in which migh t be realized would be
rented for use as a hal f way individuals will be able to used to defray s tud en t
take side trips .
holl'iing cost.s .
house.
Whitewater has fi\'e dorms
•die this year Ln Oshkosh. a
high -rise residence center
aJso stands vacant. These a re
Semester Brea k
Trip· Offered
Ell'\'CII s tudent s h ;1ve
l'n r o ll cd 111 Ill\, new l y·
appOintl'd ~_:n ,• •ronmenta l
Studat'S Mtnor 111 UWSP. The
mter<hscaphn.'lry
program.
emph:t:.lzang humamhes and
:,.Oelal :.l'lelk.'l' approaches .
1nciudt•:. cours('~ an the
naiUral ~ • t•ncc~ and natural
resuurl't'!> ar{';ls
A l tho~h a
maJOr com polll'ill of UWSP is its College
of :"\attaral Uesources . the
desa~ners of thc mmor agree
then• wa~ a n('('d to sen ·e
stud('nts ~,~. ho are mtcrestcd in
Uus field but not oriented
toward a SC I('IItlfic.
rmanagl•rwl or technica l
program
The offt•rmgs ancludc two
~:ore l'ourses. one 111 ecology
;and ont• m n;atural resources .
Many of the remain i ng
elccti,·e hours toward the 2~·
credit manor ca n be con·
ccnt rat ed 111 the socia l
sciences and human it ies .
Most of tht• courses in the
minor can also be applied
toward the General Degree
Hequirements .
Dr . Hie hard Christofferson
the ad\'iser, and Dr . llaini
C1 11icolt, su id that the mmor
w1 1l not necessarily qua lih• :1
s tudent for a s p ec,-f 1t·
\'OCa t1on, such as a job With
tht• Environmental Protl"t'
t10n Agency . However. thb
mmor possibly wi ll impro\c
employment chances of a
s tudent who has also corn
pleted a major in a traditional
art>:1 such as political sc acrK't'
or phil osophy .
The Em•ironmenl<ll Studlt':.
progra m was designed b'
Ca llicott of the Phi l osoph~
Department , Oaristofferson
of the Pol it ica l Scicnct·
Department and Or. Jame:.
Ne.,.·man of the Collegt' of
Na tura l Resources facult v
Thus far . ChristoffersOn
sai d , Inf o rm a ti on and
enrollm ent forms for thl•
minor have been provided to
s tudents enrolled in tht>Sl'
co urses incl uded in th£'
mmor . But he emphasncd
that both he a nd Callicott ar{'
available to advise any •nterestcd students .
•
According to Taylor . the
Olileda Institut e pays $43 ,100
a year for the Steiner facility.
That figure represents the
normaJ yearl y cost of the
building to the umversaty . At
Delzell. haHway house pays
$8,000 yea rly for i~ por tion of
the building .
Ta ylor said th at $21,000 is
~lz~t~~v~l~~·· af:
•
geLs "aroWld S2.000 from
other sources" for Delzell.
Taylor claimed He sai d that
the r emaimng $ 11 ,000 deficit
-.;u, hopeful ly, be made up
through revenut-s obtained
from conference renta ls .
Taylor admi tted, "We may
lose a few thousand dollars
th is year ." He quickly added .
however. that hopefully both
ex-dorms ....,u provade a profit
10 the future .
Taylor pomted out that
UWSP coul d have turned its
vacan t dorms over to the
state , as severa l of her sister
schools have done . He added.
" That would have been a big
mistake ." The combined debt
or those two buildings would
have meant an additionaJ
$65.01)) yea rly bi.D'den on the
The international Institute
will s p onso r a n annual
Holiday Folk Fa ir a t the
Milwaukee Arena Nov~~
16--18. Over 4S nationality
groups will exhibit products
that their countries are noted
for . Tbe:re will be exhi bits of
manufactured goods as well
as hand -made exhibits that
portray traditions of each
culture.
Oemonstra lions of Polish
glass blowing and Korean and
Olinese handwriting will be
displa)'ed. There will also
De a one to two hour shOVo'
presenting native dances .
1be Interna tional Sid~alk
Cafes will provide sam pl es of
the differ en t co untr ies'
specialities .
This year the Foreign
Language Cub ls making
plans to sponsor a trip to the
fair on Saturday, Novem ber
17th , for the entire day
Anyone Interested in going
can sign up in the Language
Lab fCCCI for discounted
ad\'ance tickets .
theft reported
by Kalhy O'Conne-ll
An Air Force parka was
stolen m the area of the Fine
Arts bwlc:brt~ Thursday , Nov
8. acco r ding to Cam p us
Secunt y
The parka was navy With
a n orange Ianing and fur hood.
The name of the o.,.ner was
labeled 1nside the jacket.
Th is was the only reported
Item stolen for the week of
No\'ember 4-10.
veterans grants
still available
Among WISConsin's pubhc
UIIIVUS IIIeS , UWSP rank s
th1rd 1n the number of
mahtary veterans who have
signed up for a new grant
pr og r am Tht s pro,;uam
allows servicemen of the
V1etnam era ed uca ll onal
}~~::,n~ t:~ds r ang•ng
To date , about 250 persons
na,·esagned up for the morues
pr ov•ded 1n the 1973-74
b1ennaal state budget for
Wa sco nsimtes who se r ved
more than six months of
ac llve duty . UW-Mil wa ukt-e
rank.§ first with S83 eligible
ve ts, foll owed by UWMadtson with 283
Members of the financia l
ouds start at UWSP a re still
~•s.satisfied w1tht the pa rtac •pahon They estimate that
perhaps an other 250 or
more persons have not ta ken
advantage of the program
Ma rr ied veterans a r ~
cnllUed to S400 whi le single
' 'Cierans are ehg•ble for $200
'" outright fu nds with no
stnngs attached 'J'he grants
are avai l able - to un ·
derg~aduates as well as
entenng students .
. John llohl of the financial
aads s tarr has encouraged
ehgible persons not yet in the
Pl''?"'am to call or write his
ofhce.
Greeks Work
For UNICEF
by Sue AlMterson
On a cold and rainy day 111
October, the women of Della
Zeta and AJpha Phi Sororil it-s
and the men of Sigma Tau
Gamma were dj vided up
throughout the city to tric k or
treat for UNICEF.
The three organ i zation s
r~m:!!:;o~T~~ ~~
pox vaccines, achoolsupplies .
seeds for vegetables and
fruit a and vitamins th at
chlldren In underprivileged
coWttrles of the world need
The U n ited Nation s
O.lldrent Fund -u In ovt"r
100 eowltrles ln the world.
'
November 15, 1973
THE POINTER
Poge 5
Concentrated studies program to be initiated
•
bySbl rleyS pltllemelskr
The courses tMt v.ill be im provedinamattl'r of afew
offet"ed and the teachers for weeks.
Next semwer about 120 eac:h of them are : ComArti giani uld the advantago of the Concent ra ted
StudiH Pfo&ram over lhe
students from class to class. and 102, Willi am Clark . prl'Knt ml'thod of study are,
They will be vol unt eers for Viralnla Kirsch: History 101 lirst .students wlll!'ll'verhave
todl'alwithsevualdiffeffnt
th~ uperlmental Co n - and 102, Robert .Vtigiani :
centrated Stlodies Program to Philosophy 100 and lo:ii , John subjects at the same lime.
be held at UWSP.
Bailiff: and Political Science SKmd, thn-e will never be
twoormorediUerent exams
Robert Arti&iani, a LM'SP 102. James Canrield.
on tM ame day. 'nlird, a
~~~!.~
~~ All courses except Dlglish final exam week ,..ill be
C~ncentrated
Studies will be taught in fouz--weeiF: eliminated beoc:ause the nnal
Program will ..maiF:e a sim ple blocks. Attlgiani said that will be gi\'m 11 the l'nd of
change that v•e think will this c:lau ,.;u be extended I!'Kh COWM! period.
ha\'e "'~ry significant ron - throughout the semester and
l lealsosaldt hat relention
sequenco."
: : : .!:ca::it ~u_:~~ levl'IS are expected to im·
st ud ents In t be that "'Tiling style can't be prove because the matt:rlal
prosramwilltakea IS-credit
load, but Instead of taking
five c:oursn simultaneously
forthefl!tiresemester.they
willtaiF:etheir cou.rsesoneat
atime forperiodsclaboutfour
""ftiF:s. During tM semester
they v.ill sYtitch to a new
thislsaveeyoldwork - dating
course at tM ead of I!'Kb
by Cbrlts Ntls•
~elF: to 1121 • and Its almoat
perioduntilallcoursesbave
.
.
be-en compieted individ!Wiy.
When 11 was ftrst an- naively simple story of 11
Vt'hen the semster ends. they nounced that the Uniftnity huntsman In the throes of the
have accum ul ated the Theatre, in conjmction with devil teems m~lodramatic
sam~ number of a-edits as the Music Depar tment, would an d , fran kl y , downriJht
usual, bul each three-credit present Webe r 's " Oer silly . lnstt:adofelfUding folkcourse will have been rom · F'reisc hutl'' as its opera like charm , the opera tends 1.0
pleted sepa rately .
presentation this sea son , be Iittles more than a very
. th er e we r e many raised tired stage piece · a nd a
Students who volunteer Will e)·ebrowa - mi!'ll' inc:luded.
melodramatic one at that.
not besloweddownorharmed Not that one holds anything
So it was with more t.'an a
m their academic: plans as a 113ainst the pie«. Far from touc:hoftrepldationthatone
result of thei r participation it. Not only is it filled with entered the J enkins Theat~
because all rourses offered some ot Weber 's lcweliest last night for the opening
are a pa.rt ?f the genn-al melodio, but to many it is night performance. What on
deg r ee r equi r ements . Ar · considered the begiMing of earth would transpire with
tigiani said.
romanticism in music, and dear old " Freischut:t"!
::.~de:e~:i~lh~ta~een~i~:r ~~t"ai~~o~~es':o~~ ~~:i
,i:;;',t::
will be Sl ud ied in c:o n - P'rol(ram
centratedd~andstudents
wi ll not be distracted by
ha\·ing to meet req ul~men ts
for mOn! than one eoune.
Finally, by c:onc:c:ntrating a ll
thl'ir academic ener&IH on
single subjei:ts, students aod
teachers should both get
more involved with the
material.
uperiment Is a
good one. He said th a t
students and Instructors In
the program will get to know
each other better and it will
hold more of a "smal l
wtivenity na\'Or ."
If the experiment Is considered a succeu, llaferbecker said, there is a
possibility that it could be
used fo r other courses of
~:';ni~:" m~;'t· ~~~- st~::tr~~C:ni;:~~-
at
ficulty 1n adjustine to the new
program .
Gonion Hafer becker , vice
chfincell!M' of IK'ademic: af-
Con·
cent rated Studies Progra m
will be New . 77·30 at 44 1
COPS. If there a~ 111y
questions about the program ,
~':,':~!'r:~r':t!gdeess~':~i~: oo;.s~·~=- Artl!lani, 441
Opera Is A Surprise
..,,n
•
t~t ~i!'c:::o t!!:~sc::_u~mo: ~~gn:ai~l:t )~l= ~:~~::t~~~ ntlr.· b~~~~.o~
.,;u
path that Weber Ronald Combl and sta ff gave
pioneeredwitht hiswor k. But us a glimpse of what might
be spen t in class each the
day
Interview Schedules
Allgraduatt:sareurgedto
take a d vantage of the
follo wing interviews by
contactln1 the Placement
Center , 106 Main Buildina: . a t
their earliest convenience.
Literature conce r ning the
companies lis ted below is
available in our placement
library and should be ~ad In
prepara tion for you r in ·
tervi~w Atti~ for placement
interview5 should c:onsist of a
coatandtieorana ppropriate
"'-·
SCI'\·em be r H, U..vtnlty of
WiKooJio-Exlens*;\l ad lsnn , Whe0111111 . Ail
home economics majors with
a grade pomt average oll.OO
or better forhomeeconom1cs
u1ensionp01i tions.
•
Sov rmlter :1, l oteraal
ltrvrnue Sen ·k e, Wausa u,
Wl s~o a li n . All mJOjors .
es pecia ll y
acco unt ing,
busineu and liberal a.r~ for
government audit poeitions.
So\'r mber tl. Ra llr u d
Rrtlrement Roud. ChlUJO.
tllinob . All majors, freshman
through senior, concernin&
poten tial federal goverrunent
opportunitits in the Railroad
Reti r ement Board . Un ·
derclaumen a~ especiall y
encouraged to i nt~rview
about future openings.
Sovtmbtr %1. Sentr y IaCom puy. Slevens
!"oi nt, ~1Kualin . All business
,... ra ~~ou
administra ~ion,
mathematics.
computer
scie nce , economics a nd
Nove mber %4. Federal Civil liberal a.rts for a wide variet y
Servin t:ntranu Eum will M positions at en'!y level in
be given on campus at i :JO underwritlng, cla1ms. office
a.m to 12 :00 noon in the services and data processing.
Science Building, Room A·
121 . All inttrested st udents Nove mber zt, Osmon Wood
please sign up for the tt:51 in Prnervl nJ Com paoy . All
the Plac:emeat Office. 106 fore s try and natural
Main Buildin1. and pick up resources majors for
the necessa r y application fo r eman poaltioos on
bookJet. (Notestwdlbe given tell"phonepole mainte'l'laoc:e.
1n Dtcember , the next test
willbeonJanuaryl5. 19741 DKembef' 5, Soda! Securlty
.wtmlnhtntl•.
~1K-In
so .. ember 27 thro• &h Ra pid s, Wlscou l o . All
Sovembn ll. U.S. Sny. All maJOrs in terested in career
op p ortunities wi th the
majoninterested.
f~deral
gover nmen t.
Information 1vailable on the
Junior Federal Assista nt
poeitions. All students who
havereceivedaacoreof95on
the Federa l Civil Service
Entrance Exam or have a
2.90gradepoi nt averagea~
also encouraged to interview
at th iatime.
Otce .. ber 1 an d 7, U.S.
:\1arh•e Corps. All majors
interested.
A "Career Guidelines"
book.iet is now available to
s tud e nt s at the Cueu
Counselinc 111d P1acemmt
Ofnce, room 106 Main. This
booklet has be-en produced by
UW.stevens Point 's Dennis
T ie rn ey, di r ec t or o f
placement, and J 111e C1a.rk.
The~letaulstastudents
in becoming acquainted with
the placemfllt ornce func ·
lions and In writing letters,
~:~~.e~ a1:ta!f::!~~::if~~
job-teekers, concemln& interview procedtrel and how
to evaluate the employment
oftn-. Federal govemmea1
employment poaibilitiHes,
state 1ove r nment e m plo yme nt and graduate
school pou!b1litits are also
included.
The bookleth ubeensuc:hil
SL~eeesa that a second printing
is being plaMed.
hliv«-OttUrTed~ciF:in\12\by
rentingperlodcoetuma,and
renting a whole balCh of oldfas hioned wing and drop
scenery, all draped in wi ld
wood.landc:olorswhichlilthe
opera and the period perfectly. Andtotopallthat , the
Act II closing scene was filled
with we.U executed technical
wonders tbat boggled the
imagination . Rarely have the
talents of our tec hnical staff
beenputtosucha tes t. It will
be a l q time before we see a
scene qui.teli k eithe~again .
~raU ,theainah~&ofthe
principa.lswuofavet')'hilh
Of'der. Daniel P. Kane fared
poorly opening night both
m~icaUy and dramatically .
Happily, there was an about
face the second night with
somesolidm u.slcianship,and
despite a few glottal attacks,
mo~ secure vocalism tha n
has been heard from Mr.
Kane in some time.
Hia
actinc carTied more convictio n the second ntcht ,
tl'loughheslillhualon.gway
to go as an ac tor.
Bob
Hrillingert endstoleanmore
to th emelod ramaticschoolof
ac:li ng as ""'ell, but In this
opera tM style lit nicely. The
youn& man has quite a bit of
s tage prese nce and this.
co mbin ed wi th so me
beautiful vocalis m , made
him the m01t excltinc pe rformer on the stage . both
musically and dramatically.
Kevin Dart rontnlxlted 1
::~ris~oi_c;.::I:u::;:;,eini~
second act " Leise, Leite"
scene, though her acting
suggated little more than the
alreJOdyone-(!lmenlionalpart
presents. Hers is an undeniably pretty voic:e, . and
one hopes tohearm oreofher.
Jeri DoddJ played to the
audience s hame lessly but
~~- ~~r~~ulltl~~~-
a
Kenneth Sina and David J
Kaase r ra handled their
smaller roles capably The
c horu a was quil e
rema rkable · 10r1eous to
listen to and every one of
them was JOn actor
Their
enthusiasm was Infectious.
Ja ck Abell led the orchestra
through Weber 's very di fficult orchestr ations 111d
cameoff extremelywell ,for
this musk is anythinc but
euy to play.
There .,.ere some naws,
however . Operation ol the
lig htboard opening night,
particularly the follow spot,
was sloppy, and the large
choral scenes, thOUih acted
and sung we\1 , were awkwardly staged . A firmer
directorial hand wu needed
throughout much of the
opera,espec\allytheariasln
which the principals merely
swauered from stage left to
stage r ig ht , a nd no on~
seemed to know what to do
with their hands. Dr. Combs
too often allowed what little
drama and tension there w11
to arise sim pl y from the
musk.
The dances too,
though neatly staged by
Terry Tl'maner, were a bit
shakily pertormed.
The r e a r e numero u s
~s~~=a:~~ ~·~~.~
point was that tM show
worked. By treating the opera
withmpect, a lotofloveand
by playing it slraight. "Der
F'reischutz" had many fine
moments. It's the best work
.,.e've seen from Dr. Combs
sofa r , andcer tainlythebes t
operaweMvedol'll'inyears .
.a nd a nother
p lo y is cost
After a ~-ell-out v.·~k at
UWSP and another "on-theroad " w1th the musical
" Damn at Sea," St ud io
TheJOire is coming across
wilhanotherone-twopunch.
The cast has been finali ~ed
for Paul Zinciel's '"The Effect
of Gamma Rays on Man-in·
the-Moon Mar lgo Jds , "
Directed by UWSP se nior
L.ynda Andert . tM cast Indudes Nancy Ho1man ,
senior . Dena Green . fresh·
man ; Ali~ Jones , fresh man ; Julie Barras, junior ;
ilnd OndySc:rogains , junior.
" ~l arigolds " is a tendl'r
drama and has won tM
Pulit~et Pri1e , the Obie
Award and tM New York
Drama Qitics Awa rd as Best
Amerkan Play of 11'70. The
Studio Theatre Produc:Uon
datHa re December 3, 4, 5, 6.
Page 6
THE PQINTE R
Novembe r 15, 1973
RHC, an attempt to serve
facts of programm1ng mto the particular "'t>ckend ..-.· :~s not
camous commun ity but the too good Many 3tudents lefl
s t ude n ts o f this university for the wt"Ckend but the
won't exe r t t h emselves to remammg Wli\'Crslt)' body
part icipa te in th e d ifferent d 1dn ' t get un •o h •t•d w1th
fields of activities that we are things th:lt were plannt>d for
all dorms to attempt to serve providing ." Miss Bov.m an them . smd M•ss Bov.·m:m
eve r yo n e i n a socia l , used an exam ple to bac k up
Ma r k ll ubacker . ;mother
t.-ducational, a nd academic her statement by looking at
wa_y thro ugh program m ing . Poi nt s ki F est wee ke nd .
co -pres1dent of HJI C. s.1id ·
HII C or igi nated in 1964 a nd Par ticipation in th ese ac · " M any s tudent s don't
has been acti\'C for .:~lmost ten tivi t ies pla riti'ed for that rea lly kn~w what HIIC 1s
by LoiTalnr tl oul lh • n
The UWSP Residence Hall
CoWlcal t RIICI as a student
organrzation which is made
up or voiW'Itl"Cr students from
years now . t\t one time the
umvcrs•ty ccn tcr<.od around
south campus which was
compnsed of Delzell . Steiner
and Nelson halls Attention
was brought to the north side
of campus as new donns wer e
constructed Students . .seemg
a need or un1hcat•on between
the north and south campus.
started RH
The functiOn s of th1s
programmmg group as to plan
actl\' ltles and. by doull this.
umfy students an all dorms
RUC put s on actl\'llles.
...,hcth cr they be socaal.
athlei.Jc or academic. as long
:IS they conta1 n some
l-ducat•onal va lue to substant iate them
By crcatmg
actl\'ltl es, s tudent.s have a
chance to come together and
partiCipate with people that
thcv arc far removed from by
be1ng 111 dHfe r ent living
ce nt e r s located ac r oss
cnmpus from each oth er .
Hil t ha s al so put on
coopernti\'C type programs
with AlltO. the American
Nnhve Group. UAB, Black
Coa litiOn a nd DcBot a nd
AJ ien Center .Programmmg
Board.-.
Hil t presc nll y ha s 22
members G..-.·en Nelson and
Mark Jurgl'lla arc the two
ad\•1sors on the board. and the
20 others arl' students from
dorms on cam pus Cer tain
:.tudents are asked by their
parllcular hall counc•lto pin
H IIC and some follow along
on a \'Oiun tary bas1s 141uch
HHC would hk<' to ~ more
of One dorm ca n have up to
thre-e members 111 llHC
HJI C rece1ves $68.000 an ·
nuaJiy when st udents pay an
adWIIonal S8 on the1r room
rl-nt fl"C at the bl-gmning of
the school term This $8 is
dtv1ded and d1stnbuted out to
four dJUerent places . Hall
Counc1l rece1ves 12. S2.50 goes
to DcBot an d Al l e n
Programm1ng . and $2 5() is
gaven to R HC act1v1Ues . The
remainmg dolla r is given to
GLACU R A, Great La kes
Association of Coll ege and
Universil)l- Hesidence flail s.
N A CU RH .
Na t io n a l
Assoc.:nion of Coll e2e nnd
Umversity Residence lialls.
and AC UII O. Association and
~lo usi n g Orgamzalion m the
Midwest Reg1on .
nu c pr esents m any
educatiOna l ac tivit ies but
lack o f Int er est and m·
volvement by m a ny in ·
dJviduaJs 111 the student body
causes a great amount of
ha rd planned acllvit•es to
Oop
RI-I C needs studen t
part1c1pation and Wilflts m·
d1viduals to vo1ce their
op~mons so new 1~as for
cbffert!nl actiVIties on campu.s
can begm
Sue Bowman , one of tM
R HC co -presi d ents stated.
" We 're tr yina to get different
IJt.,·;IUSt' Pmntsk1 weekend 1s
n .•.•\1) the only llcll\'11)' we
han• put on thiS school term
!oO far
1lwt 1s probably ~he
n•a so n for luck of 111 ·
\'oln•rncnt with nctn•it ies . ~
llw)l'll r gm•son.students wlll
part1c1pah.• more I think." .
A unUJU(' fea ture of HHC 1s
II !> lhn·rs10nar y type of ac ·
11\'ltlcs
Progr;uns such as
ba 3k t•tball
m aratho n s.
concer~. college bowls and
collectmg clothes for needy
en~ .are only a few of thc
ac ll v at1 es prese ~ted to thc
st udents . RH C IS trying to
get away fr om progra ms that
De Bo t a nd All e n lf a ll
Councils put on . It i ~ m aking
an ef.fort to find new mt<'r es« s
to br mg s tudents in a ll dorms
together for a w1ified cam .
pus .
•
Paraplegic student dies
Mike Bielewicz, 30. a UWSP
s tudent . d.it<l two weeks ago,
endmg a long. uphill batt le
to. 111 his own words , "con·
tr ib ute something to
someone ."
Mjke was a paraplegiC
Ue succumbed u n ex ·
pectedJy Oct . 31 in a Wausau
nurs1ng home 14-here he had
resided fo r eig ht years.
Technology and good
fnends provided him 14'i th a
sense of purpose and the goal
of a college ~ i p l ~ma .
To
~~=:::~:~ %s ~~:~~i ~~~
obvious that wi th s uch limited
physical abilit ies it would be
diffi cul t to achieve in a
materialistic societ)' . He held
to a thread of hope a nd
concerned himself firs t wit h
comp le ting his bachelor 's
degree requirem ents .
Wilh the use or a specia l
te lephone hookup fro m his
bed to UWSP. he was able to
take part in one class each
semester smce the fa ll of
t9i0. At the time of his death ,
he was mvolved in an in·
dependen t study project
When he began tak1ng
communications classes via a
phone link. the university
released a story about the
project It sta ted . in pa rt :
" Mike is having a hard time
fmdmg something to dQ.
according to Dr P auline
Isaacson. a fr iend and fo r mer
teacher of Mike. He has tned
to find a job so he can contribute somethi ng but his
physica l co ndil 1on h as
prevented him from sue·
ceedjng. she added . That 's
why Dr Isaacson's pro.)Ct't
for a commumcation cours<'
led a group of students to find
a way of helpmg soh·(• ~hke '3
problf'ms "
The 1dea of
uullzmg the phone was
suggested
~hke madene "" fn<'nds on
campus through tus ..-.1red
con\' e r sa 11 on s to the
classroom prom ptmg some
people to pay h1m personal
\'ISIIS
~ h ke was no s tranger to
Stevens Point lie arrl\'ed on
cam.pus in 196 1 as a six·foot .
two mt:h. 2:!1 pound foo tball
pla yer and ..-.on a va rsity
lct tt•r as a tackle h1s firs t
~ear
In thr(.'l' succeeding
From that point on , his !if('
was one s teady per iod of
confinement. Alter a period
of rehabili tation , he could
~Nrs.ht"alsoacted1naplay feed himself and type \lolth
and ""'as a promtsmg s tudent finge r spl ints .
maJOnng m Sp<"«h
He admit ted being in a deep
On Stopt 5. 1964. while dcpressionoverthe situa tion
s..-.•mmmg at s.,cklts Lakes Getti ng back in touch with ttx•
on a last outmg txofore a Ulll \'er sity hel ped matters
return to the Ste\·ens Potnt
Until his dea th . he was
campus . he h1t h1s head on a chngi ng to the hope that
rock
The 1mpact sna pped perhaps th e r e 'olo'Ou ld be
tht• s •xth vertebra in his neck something he could do on a
and left h1m with a cr us hed prolessiona ~ ba sis if he could
some.
just completehis collegework
•
~:;-.
•'
M ike Bielewicz d ied two weeks ago, after o lo ng boHie
to try to " contribute som e th ing to' someone ."
U-Cities To Receive $2.5 Million
MAD ISON - Under
provisions of a new law.
Wisconsi n cities will receive
about $2.5 m illion in state
funds in J anuar y for ser vices
to University of Wisconsin
campuses, ci ty offi cials wer e
told here Wednesday.
President J ohn C. Weaver
of the UW System reported
the fo r thcoming payments a t
a meeting of the League of
Wisconsi n Municipalities at
the Pa rk Motor Inn . He said
th at a ppr oxi m a te ly t hr ee·
four ths of the S3.25 million
ea r marked to pay
munici palities for ser vices to
state Institutions would go to
commun11 1e5 p r ovtding
serv1ces to the UW System ·s
Tl campuses
"Tius •s the first program
or such breadth m the nation ,
and 11 should make for tm·
proved relationships brt""·een
the cam puses and com ·
mWl1t 1es m the years ahead ."
Weaver s.a1d
The ne..-.• law authonu-s
a nnuul payments for pollcl.'
and f1re protectiOn :md for
trash coll ectton from st ate
•ns tilulwns J>aym€.'nlS w1ll be
com puted and p:ud by the
State Depa r tment of Ad
m nu s trat1on
The m<ljor f1nan(· •al
benefits to campus Clii€.'S and
surroundmg areas. ho\loe\·er
comes f r om un 1ve rsn Y
pur chases und from spend.mg
by faculty . staff . students and
VISi tOrs . Wt-aver sa•d li t•
cttl-d a study by Prof Wilham
Strang of UW-Madi.S on
show1ng that a total of 11!18
mlliton flowed 1nto the
Maruson area economy from
unl\•ers1ty sources 1n t970 As
~~ money wa s respent , a
m ulttpher effect " genrrated
:!0:':'~.~!;11y amounting
Wt·a vcr ..aHI thut he was
"ctK·uur:tfWd" by prog ress
lht• Ulll\'crs 1ty
..-.•as passed in
Ot:tobt·r ll.nl . combmmg the
1 " 11 formt:r Ull l \'e r s1ty
'-)'slt· m ~ 111 tht' s tale
" We hot \'(' a very robust
IWIJ yt·ar..,hi on our hands,"
ht· s;ud The sys tem now
M!r\'l''- mure than
135,000
Mudt·nts based on the cam ·
J)US4."SOf llWli\'CI1U tle5and 14
fre~ohman-sophorno r e cen ·
tcrs
A b11l to com plete the
merger by rev1s1ng state laws
IS no-.· Sidetracked in the
L eg•s latu r e.
Weave r
report e d. because of an
Assembly EducatiOn Com ·
m•ttee amendment which
-.ould &JVe the l--egislature
rather than the Board 0 (
flegen ts, final authori ty to
d•scont1nue
g r a du ate
programs on any campus .
m;ldt.' sntt't•
rnt·r~t·r latA
'' It is hard to cope wi th tht.•
co nfu si o n th is ac t ion
crea tes," Weaver told thl'
city o fficial s . " Th e
Legis lature cl ea rl y in
s tructcd us in the Budget B•ll
to move s wiftl y to eli minate
unnecessa ry duplica tion of
progr a ms . lllere was e ven an
'or else ' tone to the order
Th e r ec ent merger bill
a m endment would prohibi t us
fr o m d isc ontinuin g any
gr a duate program . In
s wnmary : We were being
told both that we must act and
that we are somehow not to be
trusted with the a uthority to
act ."
Wea ver urged th e city
offi ci als to work with chan·
cellon a nd deans at the
ca mpu ses to de ve l op
educational and public ser·
vice programs: to aid their
l«al government. and area
relidenta.
•
•
Poge 7
THE POINTER
November I S. 1973
Reserving rooms made easy
byS hirleySpiiUe mels tu
If it wasuptoyouto linda
room on campus for your
gr oup 's metlting or con·
fft'ence.wouldyouknowhow
to resei'Ye one' If not, then
you should learn about tbe
office of Conference and
Rtstt\'alions
At the olfice of Conferentt
:Jnd !tHen• allons. locaLrd on
the n•con d floor of the
Unh·erslty Center. coor dm:uors tknnis ~uckol.s and
:\lat)' l\l<MSC!r,along\loiththei r'
hosted by a studen t or
departmcnml
organi:tation
arenex. t ontheiistandfinaily
private groups are coor dinated . M r . Nu cko l s
pointedoutthatnomorethan
rive per cent of the available
space in a buildin& will be
resei'Ytdto:.privategroupat
onehme
Sot all pnvate grQUps, un
m:.ke reservations for the use
of campus fac1lities Ac cordl"ff to state statutes.
state-owned buildings soch as
the ones on UWSP can be
unrelated to the unin•rs1ty.
o\150,conventlons thatdonot
imply an educational nat ure
a r enotwor ked~~o•lth .
Stote, affi liotcd, educa·
tiona\ , youth and non profitc1v1cgrwpsa~among
those who eon reserve
unh·erStty fa c1li11es thrOUf,h
Confe ren ce and Ruer \'ahons.
The next tlme you need a
meetingplaceforyourgrQUp,
remember the peq>le .,..ho
.,..ork lor Conferen« and
Reservations : th ey can
arrange the occommodalions
profi t-makil\ll org::aniz.ations lor you .
~~~~~ee~:no~ prog~;:;; =ht~ei!c'ins~~uctf!~~i:~
s pace for s tudent a nd
!k-p::artment,11 organizations
thatrnt'CtOul$idcofregul::arly
scht>duledclasses . They ...·ork
.,.ith conference groups. such
uworkshopsandu'IStitutes.
oot only resen.·mg met-tmg
Sp:ICC but ::abo hning up the
hou5mg acco mmodations .
meal sen·1ces and parlung
perm1U that the conference
groupm:.y lftd .
Aft er your group puts Lntl5
noque5t foradateandf::acillty
10 Conference and ~r­
•·atwns. Mr Suckols and
,\ In! MOISCr wtll chec k the1r
UW Offers Tollfree
Telephone Information
A tollfree statewide
telephone informa tion set"·
\ice is now available for
'onyont in Wisconsi n .,.-ho
needs information on any
as11ect of Univers it y of
W1scon si n System
ed ucat io nal opportunities .
UW President J ohn C.
Wea•·er announced that the
High er Edueation Location
PT-og r am CI IELPI, tes ted
asapilotpc-ojectlastsprlng ,
...;n now be offered on a
continuing b;a.sis u a service
to the Slate.
~~~~l~y tO...·a~t~u~: .!!::~ ~~
re 5ervatutn They must
work around a hst of the
butlding's b;is1c unl\'er.sity
prmnttf'Sandcanconsider
the faclilt)' for OUtside use
ool)~~oheflthese lti\'t"~n
•
~~~~~~os,;~rm~';!t~fi:l~
rlt"arance for use
or
that
fac•ht)' and~~o·•llthennoti fy
you r group. confi r mmg the
rest"r\'Ation
" If the room or building
)our groupwan tedtouseisn1
:•v;ulable ," ~1dMrs Losier.
.. .,.e~~o•lllgotogreatiengths
toftndotheraccommodations
th::at ...-ould be suitable for
Dennis Nucho ls, conference ond
reservolions coordinolor
Mory Moiser. conference ond reservations
Anyone wishing to use the
sen·iceshoulddialtollfreel 800·362·11025 an d ask for a
HELP COW\Selor . Although
HELPcounselorsareonduty
t : 00-8 :00 p . m . Mon day
through f'r iday , thetelephone
isanswered24hoursaday ,
e\·ery day The answering
h
oporator.,.illleaveamessage
for the counselors If 1 caller
telephones at any other lime.
Last spring the HELP
counselo r s were mo l t
frequently as ke d about
programsandma)orsofftred
bythe•·ariousu niversiti"l n
the UW System . The sec:ond
frequentcategoryof inquiry
concerned student fina ncia l
aids. High school seniors
planning to enToll in college
consti tuted the largnt single
ca tegoryofcalltrs , foll~
by high school guidance
counselors. and parents of
prospecth·e students.
Counselors Bobbi Hah n and
Kris Anding h.ave visited all
of the deg r ee · gra nt lng
cam puse~in the UWSystem
to become better acquainted
with the admiuions per ·
wnne land wi ththecampuses
themse lves.
:.:.~~-;;~1.::.::::f~:;: DeBot Board Trying To C ange Image
d11 n~,!~~eerv~~esth!r ~·
b)
ltob#.rta Punoa
~uckots and Mn. Mosier.
.,.h o are pa1d by the
Ulll\'t'MiiiY A fet' 15 charged.
though, for the liSe ~f !he
facllliy and an)· m!untenante
that 11 needt-d for the
" DcBot Program Sc.rd is
out to change its tmage this
yea r ." said board coch:urmen Joe Weigand and
Dean WroblewSki
~c:'~tinr~·n:;eats
~~~~::f~t!~ki;;.:gea~~
commented. Wrob lewski said
that the board lrits to ket-p
the e•·ents free . but for the
more exptnsh·e forms of
entertainment they h.ave to
make a minimal charge,
~~t~i .?~rmpo:~ ai: t:
~~st'"!lsoco~:ryen~~c~~ OO:~~,:~~i~:i~o ~~=~k :!~ :t~~-'":e"Y,!~~~~~tsgaei
and equtp·
The facll 1ty usage fet- 1s
denved from now much 11
o:osts to mamtam the bu1lding
bemg used The fee for the
useoloneoft hecentengoes
n:
about $5,000 per yea r to work
othl'r activi ties besidn the w1th , which comes from
usual mov in and dances student housing money If .,..e
Thts seme~ter DeBot Center ~-:r~~~~c!~d !,ha;,g~~~~!'
ha s s ponsored O r
group. then .,..e·re not bemg
Buscagha's"Love Tape" and fatr 10 the student ..
~~:'.e~fe :ld~;~~r fee :nll:~:~:n ~:'\~m~C:,~: ~~~!"' ~::! u:n~~:t f=~~;
~~~~the ~c!,':)' :,;e;!~c ~~~~.· gu~~ s::;~~~ t~~~nk r!a~: ~o~~teir~=~~~e:;.~l ~:
1
:~~:;!~ft~~::.~.:::: ~~Y-~~~lell~;'p.~s~~ !~';i~hye~~tr
budget for the
Board member J•m Grabau
s tudent Any addi tional L\'B<lt 's !urge mt"t"llng room .
mooey is put 1n the special Wl'lpnd 1a1d he e)tpetl$ a ~atd . ' "The turnout for the
~~c~eaC::U.~:s =~ lar~ turnout
coJ;t ume contest wu un ·
buy captlal items
•
t~t a~ sp~::~;:f ·a 0:!0~ ~~:~~ ::'1~e~~b~an~· ~~ e~f~;
~~~:;e~r:e b~~!dmgs
on a
may be w011llenng
.. hatthechancnareforyou r
JUOUP bc 1ng able to reserve
the fncllit)' the)' desire If you
hclnng to a ~tuden t or facult y
urRantt.atJon , then you otre top
pnnni)'OftheConferenceand
lks••nahon:. ~taff Groups
\ 'ou
t:)tpected turnout was 500
students hut only 3SOsho•••ed
up Mc m'henofthfo pre>gram
hoard '<;ltd that perhaps the
tu rnout wu ~ma ll b«ause
the) •·haf!tl'<l a :l.'i cent fee to
d.-fra;y cns t ~ --some students
..... nt go to .mythmg unlns
,, Jo frt"l' :1 ho.1rd mernher
.,..01.dd get more parli<'t pahon
.,.-e <'OUid lla\'e mort' e\'l'nts
BUill st udenlSdun 't tell . ~
wh.at they want , t~ 11 ~
washng their money
" What "e need 11 rn•ll"c
ft-edbac k from the ~lufkon t " ··
sa td Weigand " We ... ant to
krl<M· "hilt sort of .u·II"I'Cll
the studen~J; i n thi1eenter
...-ould hke to hear "
" It's very dl"1)resal nc .,.·hen
...·e plan so mething and
nobody ~ho.,.•s up. " sa id
Grabot u
elude more sk1 tnps , winter
games. !he voup " Black
Soc1ety." a s pring bike r:.lly ,
buses to away basketball
games. and Dr Buscaglia
from
USC.
speaker
of the " Love Tape "
" Oepend•ng how thew things
go cl\'e r . .... e·n plan more of
these e•·enu." satd Grabau
V.'hen asked "hY UWS I•
doesn'thookbtgrockbands.
Wroblewski said, " Roc k
band.sdon' t considl'r thiSarea
The cenwr 1s currently
to be a btg crowd-drawer conSidering 1deas for
Groups toda y demand a (.'h n st mas('\'Cnts. " We want
percentageofthetakeatthe to plan some Chr1stmas
door Many concerts here ac th·1t1es that people will
cannot even break even," wanttocometo Weareopen
OeBot Center 11 now con· forsuggnllonsandhelp"
Stdermgpolling studentsto
deterrmne what ll.ffllll» they
LII'Uot l'rogram Bo;ard 11
wouldpayto see Wroble.,.'lkl made up Ill ont or t...·opeople
satll. " Actually. we almost from each dorm There arc
ha•·etoleavethebiggtr rock
groups to an org.1mtation currently t2memberson the
hn.ud f>oslhon5otre shllopen
...·nh" b 1gger budget . for pt<Jple frnm Burroughs.
otlthoughtt'5poss1blet hat.,.·e
.,..111 tt'am .,.·llh Allen Ct'nter llald.,.·1n and Han se n
liC(•Ilngs are hdd tn the
:md t;,\1! to bnng tn !Kime [)lollot
large meettng room a t
~roups
W1 th a budget of 7 pm on Thesdotys Students
1'>.000. tf .,..e " ere to sponsor
tntcrn ted in hllillj one of
.. n e-.pcns"·•· group .,..e would t~posttionsormaktng
1\;< n· to cha rJ:t' full pnce
.,.h,.·htk·h•at:5ourpurpose " , ugg t-s llons are asked to
;~ttendoneof themeehngsor
t :r.oh.ul<otlthrwd !llltTl(! of
Uo:IW ~ upcommiJ prfllrams
f<>r th1· r•·~t uf the ~('ar The
,,:ht>dulo· ... ,n probably tn·
t•ootact Joe
Wttpnd , 346-
T.-t.l, Dea n WroblewSki , 34 1·
:-620.
IllS_
or J•m Grabau . 346-
Page 8
T HE PO INT ER
Novembe r 15, 1973
Community industries specialize
1n vocational rehabilitation
by Lydia A~ll
goa l is competitive em ·
A r emar kable phenomenon ployment for these people ,"
exists in Stevens P oint : said Martin " Bud" Werner .
Community Industr ies. Inc .. director of Community In forme r ly knov.· n as the dustries . " We evaluate a
Portage County Sheltered person's capacity to be
gainfully employed and then
train him to develop thnt
potential."
J ob tr ai n'ing incl u des
"oodJes of difreren t things ,"
fenor of a religious mission . Werner said. Activities are
'"lltis is a dead serious ass1gned according to ability ,
busi ness ." said training and range fr om s1mp le
super"isor Walter Kalliainen . box.ing of card sets to the
" We are preparmg these operation of power sa \lo'S and
people for their li\'es . Tiley a multilith offset p ress .
ha ve just as muc h right to a
Most jobs a re ha ndled on a
happy. prod ucti ,•e life as the contract basis from loca l
next fellow ."
industries . Werner said . For
Com m unity
I nd ustries. example , pa ll e ts for in ·
localed a t 3116 Algoma St. , is duslrial use by the Steel King
presently serv1ng "6 Corp are made in the lumber
physzcally and me nt ally shop Also. bakery label5 fo r
handicapped people rangi ng most of the IGA stores m
m age from 16 to 6S. "Our W1sconsm a re printed in the
Wor kshop.
This non1)C'Ofit, vocational
r ehabilitation facility is
staffed by dedica ted men who
discuss their work with thE:
UWSP To Provide
Intern For Oxford
Correctional Institution
by Terry Witt
'Ole Job market may be a
htlle brighter next semester
fo r the UWSP stude n t
selected as an adm1mstrati\·e
mtern to Oxford Federal
Correctiona l lnst Jtullon .
Oxford has agreed to an
experi mental one-semes ter
administrative Inte r nshi p
with th e Stevens Poin t
cam pus next semester 'w\'hile
the concept of an internship is
not unique to the academic
com munity , the use of a
correctional facility IS sure to
hold a certain myslique fo r
~~~I e~e~:;;:;5 student that
Profl'SSOI" Dale Holt of the
Poht•cal Sc1ence Department
been coordinating the
Internship with Associate
Wa rden Victor Urban Holt
smd that even though the
mter nship is still in the
co ncept stages. some
prehmmary plans have been
made ·
has
'Ole mtern w11l probably be
expected to spend at least one
full day a week at Oxford
tor the full 16 weelu of the
semester
During his in·
terns h ip th e st ude nt will
complete a research paper
dellling w1th both the
theoretical and pract1cal
Education
Credentials
Needed
The fo r ms needed to
establish c r edenhals have
been coming in very slowly
P1ease complete these forms
promptly and ~turn them to
103 Main. Our entire staff is
anxious to help in your job
search , but an incom plete set
of credentials Ia a handica p to
each of us.
workshop.
Arts and crafts acth·ities
are done by those who a re
Wlable to do much else. said
Kalliainen
Ca ndles .
blankets. cente rp ieces.
Ouistmas decorations. ya r n
dogs. planters and book cases
a re sold in the Craft Center,
w h ich is open Mo nd ay
through Friday from 9 a .m . to
3 p.m .•
Community Industries was
founded in 1965 b\• the PorlaR:e County AssoCiation for
Retarded Ch.ildren . The old
facilities were outgrown and
the new buil di ng on Algoma
St r ee t was com pl e te d in
March . 1972.
S u bstantial s up port is
provided by the United Way
and the Portage Cou nty
Boa rd of Supen·lSOrs, Werner
said . In add1tion to the job
cont r ac ts ~,~,• ith local i ndus tr ies, Commu ni ty In·
d ust r ies ea r ns mo ney by
selling it.s sen •ices as a
vocationa l r ehabilitation
agency . 1lle St:lte Oi\•ision of
Vocationa l Rt habi litat ion
and lht• Dn•ision of Men ta l
ll npene regula r ly refer
prople to Comm unity In·
dustru.•s fo r cva lu n t •on .
counselling . training o r
placement. Wer ner said .
Fmdmg jobs for skilled
gr 1duates is often di ffi cult.
Werner sa • ~, " It 's a ma ller
of publk l-duc3tion . Industry
seems to be fea ring the
wtkno-...·n "
Wer ner cited
Steel Kmg Corp.. ll err·
schners and Joerns FUrniture
as local mdusLries tha t ha\'e
been helpful in hiring
gr ad uates .
"M<:~ny of our people go out
and get jobs on their own,"
said procurement agent Pete
Hescr " We use work as a
mediwn to help regain self ·
conf1dence "
~ l any han ·
diC·apped people ha\'e bet!n
overprotected at home nnd
need a "boost," Rl'SCr said .
Supcn•isor Kalliainen also
st rl•ssed the importance of
dc\·clo ping in terpersona l
relalJonsh1ps . " No ma tter
how -...·ell we train a man on a
mo:Jchmc . 1f he can't get a long
wiUt his fellow workers, it's
all to no ava il ," he said .
Many UWSP s tudents ha\'e
pa rticipa ted In the acti vities
of Comm unity Ind us tr ies
Dr . Robert Ross miller of the
Educa tion Dept. reports that
he ta kes his "Exceptional
Ol.ild " c lnss for a tour each
se m es t e r .
S ev e r al
psyc hol ogy s tude nt s have
been working on a project at
the center; Kalli ainen said
he is ver y pleased with thl'ir
work . Also , some work-study
students a re employed at
CommWlily Industries .
I n a dditi o n to th e
educa tional opportunit ies of .
!e r ed b y Commun ity In·
dustries. UWSP s tudents ma)
be interes ted in som e of the
cente r 's prod ucts .
l nex ·
pensi ve b uttons with a special
desi gn o r me ssage art.•
ava ila ble, ei ther si ngly or m
a ny a m ourt . Printing jobs on
the offset press m a y also tx·
com missioned . A va rie ty of
att r ac tive, we ll ·m ade gif t
items are available in the
Cra ft Center Store .
llspects of pu blic ad ·
m •mstratJOn
'1'he student mter n ~,~,. ill be
confronted ~,~,,th the problem s
of a young 1nst1tUIJOn hke
Oxford \lo1lh all of Its growmg
pa1ns. " sa~d Urban . " He w1ll
study the problems of sta rr
and personne l on 3 \'cry
practical level and hopefully
11 ~,~,•on 't ~ just an academ•c
exerc1se
··we 're trrmg to bnng
Oxford 1n contact ~,~,,th the
outside commWlity. and at
the sa me 11me g1ve ' the
student a broader ex ·
pcn cncc," said Urban . "The
public has generally held
publi c adm1mst r ators m
disrepute O\'er the years
Th1s 1s why the contemporary
public admm istrator must be
"''ell \'ersed along a broader
spect rum of d.Jsciphnes m
or der to be flexib le and
respons1ve to a skeptical
pubhc, .. he added . "1llat
aspec t must be considered
when the mlern IS selected .
along w1th such qualificat iOns
as gradepomt and the year m
school "
Professor Holt noted that
pubhc administra tion is only
one of many fields that ha vt>
potential for 1nternsh1p
programs at Oxford
- ~~
Soc1ology . Psychok>gy and
Commumcations Depart
ments for example could
conce1vably utilize the m ternshiP concept at Oxford ,'
said Holt. '1'hat is why the
success of th1s mit1al •n ·
ternsh•p program is so Im portant It cou ld lead to a
much more comprehensl\'e
program m the future "
Holt •nd•cated th at he
\lo'Ould be happy to discuss th.:intemsl'u p with a nyone who is
interested . Applications a rc
available .
"We use work os o medium to help regoin self-confidence."
November 15, 1973
THE PO INTER
Pog~:
9
~oqlPiications Have Stalled
Science Addition Opening
also be ~n oblening .u~a oa
"Complkllions with the
ventil.ation system h.as held
up the pi'Op(IMd No\·ember I
open in& or the Stlence
Building. Addition," sai d
campus planner Ra y Specht.
What appears to be holdin&
upthtopeninglsthearrival
and installationofthesta rter·
switch for the ventilation
system. ''The building will be
ai r -co nditio ne d and will
m.aintain a constant tern·
pe rature through out th e
seasons," said Specht. The
rooms for '"'Ork in spec;iallzed
~:e~l!:c a~~~ '"l~~ :r~:pl:~ :!ch~
di tion.l ""~ather lnstrumenU;
,.;u also be provided on the
ro o f for t he Geo l ogy ·
. Geog raphy Depart ment.
The addition was originally
1ntendfd to house only Ex·
penmentaJPsychoiOI)'onthe
second noor .
Ho....ever .
dtcisioos have been mmde to
mo\·e the entire Ps)'cholog)'
Department to the new additionoftheScience Bullding.
The addition will provide the
dep artmen t with research
.::;
outst.anding featuru of the
nooc is the Animal Sur&ery
room which will be used to
shKly brain functions.
The Pape:r Science and
O!emistry Departments ...,;u
occupy the lint floor . Up
until one )'e.ar ago the t,..o
fectively C1)mpltment one of
~n':s0 ~~ t~0 ':'~~:;.t
s!rd
Dr Kocurek, chairm an of the
Paper Science Department .
The addition ,.;u aen ·e as .an
expansion to the Chemis try
Department, and ''will also
provide u.s with the resean:h
facilities ,..e\·e never had
before," said Dr . Weaver ,
departmcnts~~o~recombined .
Chemi s . 1y De p a r tme nt
" Althoug h the Paper Science ch.ainnan.
Department is one of the
The baaement will have
s mallest on cam pus, th e lapidary rooms for three
addition will provide us with departments . The Geology·
the IBbor a tories that ef· Geography Department will
have a stone-cutting room,
the Astronomy Department
an electrical shop
..,.;u have
an d the 0\emistry Depart·
men! will have a plastics
shop. Titere will also be
dup li ca t ing r ooms,
mechanical a nd electri cal
rooms and rooms wit h future
hook·upsfordataprocessing.
There is no design atfd uae
for the unfinished space :
however , it will be developed
for future use.
For the
presentlime,lt 'llprobablybe
use<l tor stor agespace,"said
Specht.
ft,;!;$'t~:r;: NR Building Offers Better Facilities
at cost of $2,969,SOO h.as been
under construction for the
by Mary Budde
last l\\'0 years.
The Department of Biology
Spec:ht said the addition and the College of NBtural
will house the following Rnourcn has movfd to the
de partme nt s :
Paper new Natur a l Resour ces
Science and Olemistry on the
first floor . Psychology on the
second , the Ceology Grography Department on
the th1rd , and the Astronomy
Dt-partment of the fourth
Some of these
floor
depa r tmen ts hope to be
pa rt ially moved in b y
:'\ovember I Others feel a
m1d-semester mo\·e would
only prO\ide conf~.~Sion for
faculty and students ahke,
and 1ntend toutilizethene~~o·
faetlity Jtarttng s econd
semes ter
" The gene r al
rt•ac hons to the new Bddhon
ha,·ebeenmostfavotnble . m
fact . the depa rtm ents ha,·e
been mO!'t than satisfifd ."
SOlid Spe-cht
Each department 11 fur ·
n11hed wtth a su{ficlcnt
number of laboratortes
designed espectall)' for its
particula r depar tmental use
£ach floor is equipped with
classrooms . facu l t )' and
departmental otncn in Its
des1gnatfdarea All campus
departments ...-111 ha,·e the
Buildin&. The building offers
a great increase in new and
beller fa cili ti es to t he
studcnt'sadvantage,sald
James Newman , assistant
professorof forestryare in
charge of improving the
aest het ic qu~lit y of t he
building's in terior .
but most of the clusrooms
"Piansarebeingmade for
are al ready being used, said painlin&s and murals," said
~wman .
Newman.
The building also houses
" In Old Main , na tural
resources were facili tated the Wise«~Sin Cooperative
1111th one lab. Now ...~ ha\·e f"is.hery Unit and the UWSP
t....·olabsfor each ofthefive Environmental Task f'oru
disci pl ines, comple te wit h ...,·hich has rtc:en Uy receh·ed
controlled environment areas state appro,·a l to test water.
''Thefac ilities for ushere
that a llow rq ulation of water
and ai r temperature and are 200 percent better than
lhe)' ""'ereatOid Main," said
li&h ting," said Newman .
Th ere are additiona l Micllael Meyer , technician
factlities ""'hkh may not be for thetaskforee.
" Be'CaUSI:ofitsname. few
available anywhere else on
eampus. he uid . These in· pe<~ple are aware that the
elude a dark r oom for building a lso houses the
developi ngpicturesBndfilm. biologydepBr tmen t ." sa id
a dr aft ing room for d ra~~oing Ne11·mBn . Natu ral resources
maps. a wood11·orking shop. IS one of the thrct< main
aqua riums and facilities to miu ionsoftheun i\·crsityand
assimilate streamC1lnditions. for thispolitical reason , the
and six indoor green houses building had to be designatfd
lor natural resources. he
""1th arllficial lightmg.
One or the most exceptional said.
newfacilitiesisinthcblology
Gepa rtmenton the thi rd and
fourth noocs. The dep3 rl ·
ment owns ~ $3-1,000 electron
microscope which pves an
Resources.
Completion is noc expectfd
~W~Iilthecndolthissemester,
Kennedy To
I
l
opportumtytoUJ~:thegeneral
fac1hiLH1nthebuilding ~
dep.artments ,.,JI also share
thet r spectfifdroomswlth ·all
othe r departmen ts during
free periods f'or example.
the t""'O lecture halls ,..hlch
form the entranee of f'OUTih
deanof theColleKeofNBtural
5
~~~e~ ~~: ·~j~·~~O: Speak In
~=i~f
~~::~ of the M i lwaukee
butld.Lng are highlighted by a
~ ::r~:U,~ ~~d pf~ts ~:
1'
An eleclrion works to complete
the Noturol Resources Bu ild ing .
benches. Mary Ann Baird of
thehometc: department and
Cabr•el Olerem . assistant
E~~~?!~f~~~fZ St U dent Union Opening Set
may be used by other
departmtnlll as well
by l.ydb ,\btll
.
Just beyond the lecture
" Jan. I, 1974 is the opcrung
halls Is the court. Specht da te for UWSP's completfd
hopes to see vegetation student uruon . the lar11est in
1
l!c"::C::e::J ~:s!ud=k""~:
combination Uni veni ty Store polyester resin 2\nchesthick.
and text renta l: a mU$lc Sleiner said . Wood bases .
lls t enlnll room wi th t O ca pt.aln 'schairs andoldbrick
cfn'!=':
t:~~ o;nth~hede=~~;,;ts ~~~:ii~b~inr~c\~,Y~~e si!i~~ ::::~::::·~~a:~ a~~t!:~~ ~~~s :;ii ~o~p~:i~!~f:~i
~~oill be supplifd with audio·
visualrooms.
The addition prov1ded the
..utronomy Department Vo1th
the o ppo rtun ity to i n corporate an obsen•atory in
~vember t6, 1973, according
to James Lawson, public
rrlationsco<ehairmanforthe
ca pacityfor T\' originatlon : a
A special feature of the conference
progr a m -banquet ro om CGffeehou.se will be SO !.able
The lhrce-<IB)' convention
accommodating iOO people : a tops designed by studen t art ..,..,llbeheldat lhe Ma rcPiaza
sma ll. waitress-service c la sses . Th e a rt wo rk llotel . November t-1. 15 and
~;rt~!".t':~": ~a~~ ~jd 'i{~e~te~~~~. ~~~~~·; ~dn~~fona~!aih:
facul ty lounge on the &ec:ond director of operat1ons for the
noor . Student lounges and Unl\'crsity Center
study areas will a lso be
'"Theadd.Ltloncomcsclose
Senator Edwa rd M Ken·
ncdy t D-~l ass . l ...-m be the
keynotespeakerattheSth
Annual National Indian
Education
Assoc i alion
t N I EA I Conference in
Milwaukee on Fr~ d~y .
sa1d The operung of the 12.-4 the student lounge ; a typing
m1l l ion addit i on was room...,·ith lix typing s tations
scheduled lor Nov IS, but has and lout bul.•ness machme
been del a y~d because of s~t1ons . a material center
problems \\'Llh delivery of 1111th reference and check-out
e!tc:trlc.al tq\upment. he said. matenals . solicitahon booths
-.~;ork to cre.ate a back-alley
cffect,"saidSieiner
Although he was _1'101 opum isllc about meet u11 the
Jan 1 open1ng date. Siemer
s;ud they ...,·ould operate out of
~a~:!~h ~ ;;:,;~~ st;!;:n:~o!!~ ""~ 1 th~t~~~~ :!~ ':,!~~~r:-:x!~r~ ~~rix~ll:':e ~~~~er~t ~-!::
11
classes more. access to deep- tioni~g fireplace . hve an adm inistnth·e offi.cu
py research, as wdl as in· meet• nil rooms , a com · con:'Piu , and a new StT'VICH
ctividual pleasure. There will municat1on room w1t h facil1ty
move ~~- wh_e n the rush ~1es
down '!}t re yery exoted
abouttl, he wnd
"
Kennedy•scha1rmanof the
subcom m ittee on Ad ·
mmLSt r ative P r ac t ice and
Procfd urt of thr powerful
Senate Judicia ry Committee ,
the subcommittee on Health
of the Senate Labor alld
Public Welfar e Committee .
and the Technology
Assessment Board. lie Is also
a member of the Senate
Select Committee on
Nutntion and Human Needs.
Special Committee on Aging,
;~nd the Board of Tru.stet'J of
the John t' . Kennfdy Center
for the Performing Arta .
THE POINTER
Page 10
November 15, 1973
campus calendar
Thursday, November 15
SKI CLUB MEETING: 6 p .m .. Nicolet -Marquette Room .
U.C. Agenda : Payment of durs and discussion of upcommg
trips .
·
CHEMISTRY COLLOQUIUM : 7:30p .m .. Room A-121
Science Building . Dr . David E . Green , co-director of the
Enzyme Ins titute . University of Wisconsin -Madison , will
deliver a lecture on " Energy Transduction in Biological
Systems ."
FILM FORUM : 6 p .m .. Channel 6. Watch Film Forwn
for reviews and notices of films in the area , on cam pus and
TV .
CIIRISTIAN SCIENCE COLLEGE ORGANIZATION :
6: 15p.m .. U.C.M. Center al corner of College and Fremont.
"Do it with LOVE ." All visitors are invited to altend our
weekly testimony meeting .
c ,ntP l!S PLAJ"NIJ"G AND DEVELOPMENT SUBCOMMITTEE MEETING : 7 p.m ., Burroughs Hall Study .
basement. Anvone with ideas about how the campus should
look is welcome .
OPERA : 8 p .m ., Jenkins Theatre. Fine Arts Building .
"Der Freischulz."
ll"TER\'ARSITY CHRISTIAJ" FELLOWSHIP: 8 p.m ..
Muir -Schurz Room . U.C . Inter-Varsit y Christ ian
Fellowship will h ave an informal singing and sharing lime
Thursday. Nov . t5. beginning around 8p.m . ll will happen
in the Muir-Schurz Room in the U.C. Everyone is invited lo
join in .
Friday, November 16
UAB CINEMA : 8 p.m .. A.C. upper . " Marooned."
Saturday, November 17
UAB CINEMA : 8 p .m ., Wisconsin Room, U .C. "Marooned."
PAPER DRIVE: Sponsored by the Environmental <Aluncil.
I! you have newspaper or any other recyclable paper
material. or would like to help with pick-up, call the Environmental Qluncil office al346-2055or stop in al 022 Main .
Pape r s must be bound. Volunteer help is greatly needed.
The drive will slar1 at 8:00 a .m .
Sunday, November 18
STUDENT RECITAL: 8 p .m ., Michelsen Hall, Fine Arts
Building. Lynne Emond , clarinet.
PLANETARIUM SERIES: 3 p.m ., Science Building . ''That
Lucky 01' Sun ," narrated by Mark Treuden .
SUZUKI SOLO RECITAL : 3 p .m .. Michelsen Hall. Fine
Arts Building .
UCJ\1 TIIANKSGIVING CELEBRATION: 7:30p.m ., Peace
Campus Center . Music with Skip Myers C!rom " Easy
Street" l and musicians and singers from Newman and
Lutheran Worship groups, folk dancing, a short film ,
refreshments , in an informal setting . A food item lor offering will also be gathered al this lime. CFood item canned- will be used to replenish The Pantry for needy
students l. Bring a friend!
Monday, November 19
('A~IPI,;S C.:Rl'SADE FOR CHRIST ll"T ERNATIONAL:
Encounter meeting . 7:30 p .m . II inler ested call J e= J a m es
~\~~f,'~IODEI\:-.1 JAZZ liA:-.ID : 9-11 p.m .. Gridiron . U.C.
t;~iEN 'S INTRMI UR.-\LS : 6-IOp .m .. Fieldhouse . Open
faci lities for all women in gymnasttcs and S\\1mmmg. Open
courts for voll eyball tourn a ments and basketba ll free play
and r ac ket ball courts may be r ese rve-d from 5:4S ttl 6: 15
p.m . on Monday . Bring yo ur 0 \\11 s wcmsut1s a nd cap>.
ARTS AND LECTURES SER IES : 8 p.m .. Qua ndt Gym.
Fieldhouse . Krasnayar sk Dancers from Siber ia .
Tuesday, November 20
UN IVERSITY CHOIR CONCE RT : 8 p.m .. ~lichel sen Hall.
Fine Arts Building .
DISCUSSION GHOUl' : 7 p.m .. Sle!!en residenc e . 2009
Main .
NIVEHSIT\' FIDI SOCIETY: 7 and 9 : t5 p.m ..
Auditorium , Main Building . Warn er Brothers Cartoon s .
Sunday, November 25
PLANETARIUM SER IES: 3 p.m .. Science Building . " The
Christmas Star ." narrated by Bob Valiga .
Monday, November 26
\\'OMEN'S GYMNASTICS : Open fac ilities lor all women in
gymnas tics . swimming . volleyball pl ay-<t !!s and
racquetball courts . Bring your own swimsuits and caps .
Racquetball courts may be reserved !rom 5:45-6 : 15 m
person - alter that time they "'ill be posted .
UAB COFFEEHOUSE : 8:30-11 :30 p.m .. Wright Lounge .
U .C. "Home Qlokin '."
Tuesday, November 27
U:-.iiVERSITY F ILM SOCIETY : 7 and 9: 15 p.m ..
Auditoriwn , Main Building. " Bye. Bye, Branerman ."
JUNIOR PIANO RECITAL : 8 p.m .. i'vlichelsen Hall. Fine
Arts Building . David Wagner .
UAB COFFEEHOUSE: 8 :30- 11: 30 p.m .. Wright Lounge .
University Center . " Home Qlokin ' ."
DISCUSSION GROUP : 7 p.m .. Steffen res idence, 2009
Main .
UA B CINEMA: 8p .m .. Allen Center . " Harold and Maude ."
PSY CLUB SPONSORS A<:ADEMlC _BOWL : 8 p . m ., Wright
Lounge , u.C. Two teams will be playsng agamst each other .
The two teams consist of six psychology faculty . and a team
of six students .
RIFLE AND PISTOL CLU B MEET ING : 6:30 p.m ..
Downstairs lobby or the George Stein Building !Campus
Security ). Training will take place at the Stevens Point
Rifle and Pistol Oub in Whiting .
STUDENT RECITAL : 3:45p .m .. Michelsen Hall , Fine Arts
Building .
CLAR INET CHOIR - BHASS CHO IR CONCERT : 8 p.m .,
Michelsen Hall , Fine Arts Building .
CAMPUS PLANN ING A:-.ID DEVELOPMENT SUBCOMM ITTEE MEETING : 7 p.m .. Burroughs Hall Study ,
basement . Anyone with ideas about how the campus should
look is welcome .
UN IVEitSITY CONCERT BANDS CONCERT: 8 p .m ..
Michelsen Hall , Fine Arts Building .
UA B CINEMA : 8 p.m ., Wisconsi n Room . U.C. " Harold and
Maude ."
ON
STAGE
ChuFCh Notic
Wednesday, November 28 ........
Thursday, November 29
LIVE! I
ATTENTION: STUDENTS HEG1S
EDUCATION PLACEMENT
needed to establish credentials ha ve
slowly . Please complete these form s
them to 103 Main . Our entire staff is
your job search , but an incomplete &\Of
handicap to each of us.
W
TOSTCHUOCH(AMUIC··· ' " " " " " " ...... .
~':u~~~P0; TH I
INTI•cau 10 ,.. IEPUCOPAL I
~.uc ...... ("
~~t':e-::~ ~~Jo~NT COMMUN ITY · P~• t" ,,..,""'' Cl"'.lP
S.l\lfd•y • • p m : Sunday. IO . lO. m
LUTHERAN STUDENT COMMl'i'iiT\' :
SATURDAY OR SUNDAY, Nov . 24 and
NEWMAN UNIYEIUITV .. AIIISH CCATHOliC I N,...-....a~~
ST.,., , Cloillt1' CP~~pel , 1)00 MM I• C)r ov r W..,_• f'l"((
N.--manCh.e>tl Sunda y lOam , Ntwm•l'l en•~ ' 11 XI • '"
Tvnd•'f IN'U F' ld' l'• II ' \A"' ¥WII '
Conln••on• Wl'd,......;l41'f, 4 p m , " - " ' '" C""P"'
W"'"'d41)'
mut-H.
Weekday masses: Tuesday thru 1l•ursday. ut.......... .. ..
4:45 p,m ., Newman Chapel. Confess ions:
p.m .. Newman Chapel.
.. EACI UNITEOC HU .CH 0, CHRIST : 11.tl 0 ••0f'l
FRAME MIMOIIIAL. " IIISaYT.RIAN CHUit CH
•m
411'1d
IO.U •m
U . "AUL.' S UNITED METHO D IST (HUitCH
'~~c;:,!!".,'.~:,·~rnem Point, I"'IO'fPI o1 HoQ" """' 14' 0 ·~·
phone,., Ult
M ien~•" ..... ,
Svnd•y ·
' ' " ' · l lbfe ctau.
CP~Urcto phOnf' 1<1 ' ' '
~~~~: ~~~~
8 I01e
"~ t
OIV~N..:~::~ :~~T~:!~~~U:~Iro"" re-t\1.,_~•
Pbo<ef' SOt In; Ot tve.,., Wetll lt'19ton A v«~AJ~ . PIOvf'f II(!Qrf
Will$.
"A THEATRICAL MIRACLE!"
·-u. _.....- Q:>
ALL SEATS IU!SEBVED NoM · 14.61 · M.6l
UWBJ'ZVENS POINT 8'ft1DENTS tile OPP
a..u.ble at UW S~t ~. lat......UO.
~
- · w-........-..
S&er<o Sbop, - - Polal.
Baplda, - · Muok:al 11k,
..,. mall: 8eDd your cheek ODd oolf.
ODd mall to Goopdl, uw
0emer Propam, UW.Sie,..,.. PoiDI, Stev..,. Polat.
W1L HUL
Cl>urcb Doup. w
- or order
-
"*""'""" ......_
' u • m.
COFFEE HOUSES
-Life Magazine
SAT,, DEC. 1st - 8:30 P.M.
QUANDT 'FIELDHOUSE
UW-STEVENS POINT
"""'"
10 U •.m.. divine Mrwke.
GRID
:. ':u~::S,a;
.Vlt !Jon . , .!t-1":;~~~':!:
rcome.
! DOWN-HO)IF. OOUNTRY BAND)
WRIGHT LOUNGE
'~::,:,~" o•t ~MDI
"RHON
"HOME COOKIN"
Free Popcorn
=
entertainment
TONITE thru S
FREE ADM.
MON., NOV. 26
TUES., NOV. 27
9-11 PM
Khool
I P "'
SvUdlt'l9 comm lnM m"'- on Mond•"t nJoPII • 1
Mond•y of ff'l4 montPl•t' p.m •• •nd tM WorM"'~
MON., NOV. 19
UWSP Modern Ja.z.z Band
9-11 PM
s~•Y
~!,:.•.,c_';~~i:~.~::f:,.:::;~iruc tlon
2Sc
Beer will be Solc!f
The Echo Nite
'I
111 1let
H.W. of SHY•ru ' oirtt, fo/1
November 15, 1973
THE POINTER
Page 11
The 23rd Psa/m--1973
/
by Keith Otis
"The Lord is my Genetics
Counselor , I shall not want for
risks .
"He make th me to lie down
iu genealogies; he nondirects
me beside ka ryotypes.
" He res tore th my inborn
errors; he leads me in the
paths or reproduct ion for my
name's sake .
" Yea. though I walk
through the va lley of amniocentesis or under th e
shadow of fetoscopy , I will
fea r no evil : for thou , the
Greatest Good of the Greatest
Number. art with me; thy
chromosome counts and thy
enzyme assays they comfort
me.
or computerized biomedical fa vo red the concept of test
tube babies.
Concerning
information forever ."
This updated rendition of abortions, she felt that the
a n old psalm was read by Dr. moth e r s hould have the
Paul Ramsey at the Genetic ultimate decision over the
Ma nipulation of Man Sym - future of the fetus .
posium held November 8 in
Another speaker , Dr .
Quandt gymnasium .
Sheldon Reed , defined
Dr . Ramsey felt tha t this ge netic counseling as " the
issue of genetic manipulation ethics of deciding ." He sa id
should be pursued with that geneticists more and
caution in hopes that it would more are going out and
not create a monster . He screening populations for
made light of a "1984 " world genetic defeciS. He did feel.
of the future where everyone however , lha t this screening
had his or her genetic should be voluntary and not
background on a dogtag legislative.
A voluntary
wHich was consulted before program is better accepted
dating or mating .
but is less efficient in dealing
with large populations, sa id
Ramsey also spoke out for Reed .
the procedural risks and
Dr. Edwin Larkin proposed
immoraltiy involved with in
vitro experiments such as an early and periodic
test tube babies. He also screening , detection and
pointed out that no one really treatment ( EPSDT) program
knows if there is any for genetic manipulation .
chromosome degredation in Larkin said, "You can 't deal
frozen semen used in ar- with genetic manipulation as
a short term crisis ."
tificial imsemination .
]
"Thou
pr e pare s !
multiphas ic scree ning before
me in the presence of my
illnesses : U1ou annointest my
head with check-ups; my
prorile runneth over.
iii
he·t~~~~~~osi~ ut:~ft"s fo~~~ H:Je~ i ~~~~id~~: m:f s~~~
~
...
Dr . James F . Crow from
Madison pointed out that
E me all the days of my life ; (National Organization for genetics never actually began
Women ), said she in no way until the early twentieth
century . He noted that we
must discuss what we can do
with genetics now instead of
ATTENTION : DECEMBER GRADUATES: Seniors who
hypothesizing about the
expect to graduate in December will find commencement
future. With this
idea in
data available at : Informa tion Desk, U.C.; Records Office,
mind Crow said, '"The chief
S.S.C.; Student Teaching Office, COPS, (The cost of the prebeneficiary of genetics is
commencement brunch will be $2.50 this year) .
presenUy agriculture."
PreATTENTION POLITICAL SCIENCE MAJORS:
Crow later said ,
"The
registration of majors will be held on Wednesday , Nov . 28
practice of genetic counseling
and Thursday, Nov. 29 in Collins Classroom Center 473 from
will increase and Increase
8 a .m. until 4: 15p.m .
rapidly." In Wisconsin, the
majority of genetics counLRC MATER IALS RETURN: All LRC material charged to
selors are in Madison, and
students and faculty must be returned by Friday , Dec. 7.
anyone wishing information
We would like to close our books by Wednesday, Dec . 12.
should contact his office .
After Wednesday , Dec . 12, all unsetUed accounts will be
In closing, Dr . Crow called
turned over to the Cashier's Office for collection.
attention to the moral uprise
in
this country. He
atMAT-MST EXAMS IN IIISTORY AND SOCIAL SCIENCE :
tributed it to the fact that in
MAT- MST Comprehensive Exams in History and Social
America the intelligent and
Sciences will be given on Friday , Nov . 30, at 1 p.m . in Room
unscrupulous people get rich
472 COPS. Candidates in History should report to Professor
and
practice birth control,
Donald Dietrich in Room 427 COPS and candidates in Social
while the poor moral people
Science should report to Professor Guy Gibson in Room
propagate
and have children.
410 COPS no later than N~v . 19.
and I shall dwell in the house
****************************************************************************
SP News
LRC IIOURS FOR EXAM WEEK :
Friday , December 7
7:30a.m. - 12:00 l\lidnite
12 :00 l\lidnite-2:00 a.m.
After Hours
Saturday , December 8
9:00 a .m .-5: p.m.
5:00 p.m.-9:00p .m .
After Hours
Sunday , December 9
2:00 p.m.-12:00 Midnite
Early After Hours
t2 :00 Noon-2 :00p .m .
After Hours
12:00 Midnite-2:00 a .m.
Monday , December tO -Thursday, December 13
7:30 a .m.-12:00 l\lidnite
After Hours
12:00 Midnite-2 :00 a .m .
Friday , December 14
7:30 a .ln .-9:00 p.m .
After Hours
9:00 p.m .-1:00 a .m .
Saturday, December 15
9:00 a .m.-5:00p .m.
GAY PEOPLES'UN ION : A group of concerned Stevens
Point gays invite other gays , concerned straights, and intersted undecideds to join them at their weekly rap sessions
held at Pacisci , 2215 Prais St., 9:30 p.ni. Tuesday nights .
For more information or to rap with another gay , call 341 3237 .
REGISTRATION FOR THE SECOND SEJ\1ESTER, 1973H : Seniors and jwliors may pick up their registration
materials in the Registration Office on Monday , Nov . 19;
sophomores on Tuesday ; and freshmen begiMing Wednesday , Nov . 21 . Credits earned before the current semester
Ost sem ) determine senior . junior . etc . status . Students
who wish should schedule an appointment with their advisor sometime between Nov . 19 and 30, depending on when
they are to pick up registration materials . Students will be
permitted to pick only their own packets. It w1ll be
necessary to show student ID's when picking up packets.
Registration is Monday , Dec. 3.
"/.,";.;;,~~1·························i·1
--· •I«AWA''~
i
DEC. 29 JAN. 5 !
:
ft
•
t
I
t
:
•
e
TOUBS
LODGING OUTRIGGt;R Wlh'T
(Situated on Walldkl _.h)
:
•••
.. 'mANB-lNTERNATIONAL AIRLINtlS
e
e
e
DEYAB'n.JRE FRO!II CII.ICAGO
3 DAYS AND 7 N I GIITS
S%711.00 (llASED ON 4 IN A 800!11)
(SG0.00 lkposlt Due In AdVWioe)
••
:·
•F~; ~~T ~~~R~~;~~~ :
Call Student Activities Office
346-4343
i
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Warner Brothers
Cartoons
Bugs Bunny
Road 'Runner
DaHy Duck
Elmer ·F udd
Porky 'Pig
Sylvester
Tues., Nov. 20
ADMISSION
7Sc STUDEH'T'&
$1.00-NON-STUDENTS
OLD MAIN AUD. - 7:00 & 9:15 P.M.
THE POINTER
Page 12
November IS, 1973
Deer Hunting Prospects Look Good
Rhinelander , Wls.-Providing
the 'Aeathuman cooperates ,
d«r hunttts 10 north «n""ll
Wisconsin .,.,·ill have better
hunting thls yea r than lui.
agrHS ~partment of Natural
Resources
area
game
managers 11 Woodruff. Antigo
and WiKOnsln Rapids .
L..ast )'t>u's mild winter.~
o~,·ed lhissummt'r a nd an II
~«"ent 1ncnase 1n the autumn
archery lker harvest az;t Lhret:
1ndu:ators
that
support
predictiOns for improved huntrr
succeu
Chel
Hotw•nslu,
game
manaaer for \'Lias, Ont1cb and
Forest C'OUiltlts, noces that the
early So,·embtr 17 ope-tung date
for lhe gun hunt may atch
IOffit'
of the lite rut Bucks 1n
punu11 o f does dunng Lhe
mat1ng season tend to blunder
Lhe1r way m front of huntu gun
!ughts
Tracking s.no.... has already
st Hed down upon northern
for-Mts Wet areas a re firming
up fast under a cold spell a \lo'H;k
before thfo hunt bqins and 1f
favorablt' v.uther conditions
hold, there appea rs to be no
reason .., h) the ptndulum of
dedmmg hunta m the north of
re«nt )'ears ""'Ill not s~to·l ng the
othtt IUY
Actually. cold and somt"'-hat
uncomfor"!able ..,-tathrr durin&
the aun su30n boosts the
harvest of dee-r \~!'hen hunters
must move to ktt'p warm they
also move the deer about.
more targets 1n front of
the1r com panums IIUV)' ra1n,
bhwb1rd ~toeather or seveTt
bhuards on upt"mnK V.rt"ktod
are rond111ons v.h1ch depress
the dHr k•ll
Dffr and bear rt'jiLstration
s tatums, anoounct"d by Game
lntramurals Action
by J im llabft k
If revenge Is Jwtel. 2 North
Burroughs was v.·orth a pound of
sugar ' Altt'r lcelng their infti al
t'CWl front ation w1th .f West 17-15.
thfo SortMmt'n C'OWitered ,.-,th
crushmc I~ and 1$-1 wms. J
Sorth also surter«< an initial
ddut, then ove rcame the
setback wllh 2 consecuti ve
v1ctories. ~N o rth romplet~ the
Scrth sweep with a 1$-12. f')oi
de mohtion of 2 West.
Sims' J South found them·
sel\'es outscortd JS-3.4. yet won
by scores of .f-15 , IS-9. 15·11. 3
North S1ms compettd in nea r''Sim "-•lar fuhion, outscoring 1
South by a mt're 2 po1nls in their
15-8. 2· 15, 15·7 victories. In the
hardest fought contest. 2 Sorth
capturt'd a 1$-11. IS-17 . JS-12
~It'S \loin
LAY-IT-AWAY
NOW FOR
CHRISTMAS
A SMALL DOWN 'AYMIHT WILL HOLD
TILL WANTED
•
•
•
-
MOHAWK DOC TO 5950
'tfiENTUA4 $300
ALSO 5150 TO Slt7S
Pt:AF IECTO S700
ALSO TO 171 00
~l:acmg
Winn1njl both gameS came
easy and tht'n tough for llyer's I
East The~r squad dbpost'd of 2
Wesl 1$-7. then was fo r~:t'd tnto
O\t'rltme to ga1 n a 11-U v.·•n I
Sorth c-ontinued the dommatton
o ' er~ noor teams "'' lth a
IS-9, 12-1!1. iS.7 conqunt of 2
East
Bald,.·tn's 2 South appu rt'd to
~ rushed for time v.·hen they
rapLdly dlspo~ of I Wnt IH.
IS-7 Han.sen's 2 North te01m
found thr g01ng tough 1n 1$- 13,
13·15. con lests ~Mfore S«unng a
IHvictory
Knutzen 's J We-st exploded,
destroymg -1 South IS-O. then
Wt'rt" bt'a ten 13-IS bt'fore
Sf'Cunng the St't!l'S With a 15-6
\'ICIOry
Vu:tory came nslly for
Sm1th's J South They crushed
m ·al ~ Sorth IS--I and lS-i
Setsflbonng 3 West pro,·t'd the)·
~toert'above 1 Sorth , ~to1nn1ng IS9. 16-t-1 ! South ~to as also fcrct'd
tnlo ovt>rt1me. dlnc hmg a 2·1
St'r tt'S wllh II 16-H thflllt'r
Watson 's .f f:ast showt'd hO"''
e lementa r y ~~ really ....-as .
me rely by ripping through .f
North defens.tS for IS-O. l!t-7
'ictones I West had hllle
trouble dlspostnR of 3 North tn
t:'J-6. t$·11 contes ts
Pray '$ I East prO\' Ided
symmetncal IS-9 v.·tns O\'t'r J
E:ast . ~tohert'tlpon 2 f.:O.st took
o'er v.1th tdenllcal IS-ll K"OrH
O\tr 1 Wnt 2 \\rst found an
unv.tlhng opponenl. ho,.e,·t'r.
v.1nmng tht' first game IS-I and
the s«end IS-10
ltOTC s tood for lht' 1t1ght-On·
Targei ·Co rp
v.ht'n
their
strateg 1cnlly -pla ct' d
shou
f."dgt'd Smseh twtce by a 17-15
margm Sigma l'h• EpsilOn
prO\'ed dommant wtth 15·7. IS-13
VICtones 0\'t'r TKf:
J- ~lan Basketball had st\era l
Jeadmg teams emergt' Wh1lt'
tht' ~1 araudt'n found them sehe5 unablt' to ro~ ~toilh a
Trash Baskets group. the Klap
squad stru~k do"' n 2 1-;ast llyer
101 Umon got more than they
bargau'ltd for ~to hen S1gma P i's
bas ketball
managem ent
responded w1th a crucial vic·
tory
.
Managt'mt'nt StaU Specialist
Arlyn Loomans, art' at loc::aUons
fam1har to m011 huntt'N from
prn•ous )t'lllrs A M-rr or btar
must bl' rt"gistt'«!d bt'fort' 11 Is
remov~ from the suson l.OC'Ie
In ~tohL~h ~I ~toaS killt'd The
dudh ne 1s 5 00 p.m, Monday .
NO\'embtr 26 A d~r killed
undt'r a quota pt"rmlt must be
rtglStUt'd btfcre 11 lS remo,•t'd
from the quota ~ rea m -..hich it
was s hot. Tht're is no quota deer
hunting th1s yur m nor th
c~n tral countiH north of lligh·
way 64
Bag ll mils are ont' deer v.·1th
antl rr not les.sthan thrM Inches
1n lrngth on a rrgula r hunting
hcrnst lloldtrs of variable
quota permits are allovot'd one
de!'tr of rither ~x on tMi r party
permit lict'Nl'
The bla~k bur bag llm1t IS
one adull bt'ar pt'r license
holdt'r per yt'ar. during all
seasons
Cub burs . are
prntKtt'd and 11 1s unla ....-ful to
shoot any bea r In a den .
ThrH Po1nter cross countf')'
runntrs .... on btrltlS 1n the s ,\IA
nal10nnl cross country mft!l b)'
placing " m the mont')'" a t lht'
SAIA Ol~trJct 14 m«t ht'ld a t
t-:au Chure last v. etk
" I couldn't tw mort' pleased
lj,Lthnurteam Contrnrytov.ha t
has prt\'lously lx'en stated, our
a ltitude forth~ last tv.o raC'es·
:!n~~t'~~~atl :'~~~~~rh~~!
54) that our t'nlltt' squad
Tht
lour upperda.s.!imtn 1Uehnke. l>u~tot'll ,
Elger and TnrbHIIOYo~k fl ha\'t'
rt'3ll) se1 an uamplt' for our
frHhmt'n The) hau· pomtl"d
ma1nl) to t~too b1g ra~es . the
Confcrenct' and Ul!llriCI , ;md
ha\'l•comt•av.ay with their best
ul d pleased cross
t•fforts."
~ountry cooch non Anuot
Don Trubmtc....- ~ kl r11o hLs
bnt ract• of hi" crou count r)
~a r~r at thco mt't't on a \t'T)'
d1H1cult ~ourst" Tru·b1ato~tosk1
hn1shl'd
d J)('rsonal bt'st of
:ZS 09 for thr hn• milt' cou r~ .
somr 26 seconds bfollt'r than he
has t'\t'r run Tht' ~to· mner ~to as
\11 - Am~tlcan Luc1an llosa from
l,;W-Parkstdt' 1n a rttord llmt'
of 24 29 Trub1atow~k1 J ftne
performanct' quallf1ed tum for
the .~A lA Sat1onal Cross
Country ~~ ~ ~
to
~sprc1ai1)
o. •••••
"mR/ITIR/110&:
CAAOt.IN[
TROUSERS
SWEATERS or
SKIRTS
"Diamonds Our Specialty"
CHECK OUR PRICES
MAIN. TH IRD STREET
" FRESH AS A
FLOWER &
GERM FREE
IN JUST
ONE HOUR"
~~m---~c=ou~r~o~N--,~·
YOUR DIAMOND & GIFT CENTER
KUPSAKE, COLUMBIA & ORANGE
BLOSSOM DIAMOND RINGS
DIAMOND IMPORTERS
""''h
Hne r an e .-tro charge for otte hour Mf'Yice.
DOWNTOWN STE'VI"'S POINT
Ten lette r men will be
returning this winte.r to the
UWSP
"'' rtstling
squad .
coached by Rf'll Wick~ .
Wi~ks 1n his third year as the
Pomter head mt'ntor , has
rom plied an 11-17 rrcord 1n t-..·o
years Last year he brouaht the
Poin tt'rs 11 6-2 conft'renc::e dual
mtf'l record and g..7 ovuall
reccrd,
u~ also had fiv e of his
wrestlers place in a ronft'rtnCt'
mt>et and one mn n go on Co ben
fcurth team " All-Amer ican."
That " AII - Amer i~ an" Ia Phil
" Pet"\\'~ " 1\tutller , who a t 158
pound'! ut two UWSP Khool
records last yu r
Along with Mutlttr
be
Stt'\'e LaCount. v.ho nnlsht'd
th~rd 1n the conft'rt'.TIC::e a t 126
pounds, and Pete Doro. who
placed fourlh a t Ill.
Other uperienct'd returning
lettermen are Bob Brusky, 126;
Luby Sidoff. I:W ; Wa rren Popp.
150: Rick Nelpert . 177 ; Don
Lutl, tn . John Nt"vlns, 190; and
A I J ankowakl, IIWT .
•
,..,11
Three Pointers Run
"In The Money"
1200TO~
Grubba Jewelers
Ten Return
To Wrestling
3/$1 99 c!::!',.
•
Ope n Dolfy 7 o.M. to 6 p.M.
257 Division St.
344-5277
Tn.eb1ato"'-skl fe lt he ,..t'.flt out
too fast at tht' conference and
ttled to run w1th Ali -Amt'rican
J m1 Orev.s Th1s llmt' he rnn a
slowt•r pact' the ftrst mile and
one half and worked his ~to• ay up
to the top l»trfnrm:mct' of his
caret:r
R 1~k
Zaborskt• was the
Pomtt'rs ' ~ond runnt't and
quah hrr , plac-1ntt 18th Ln the
mt't'l v.1 th a tlmt' of ZS 52
7.aborskr has had problt'ms ol
s tarting out too slo"' and h:u
had 10 push hard to l{et hack 1n
thf' ract' ThiS lime. \'l'lt'ran
non Behnke 1n11sted that
Zaborskr s ta y V.llh hm1 the first
two m1les to ke!'tp 7.:aborskt' 1n
the top one quMter of all run
neu •\31tturnt'tlnut, i'.:atXIn~ k e
had a great r LICt'
Along With 11 lot uf cn·
couragt'mt•nt from h1s lllother.
v.•1ft a nd formt'T high s~hool
coach . Uob Wells. v.ho a ll m•ck>
tht' trip to Enu Cla ire. a
dcter mLnt'd Joe Young found
tha t ex tn httl t' drh·e that
quallftt'd him for tht' national
m«t Young. a freshman from
WISConstn Uap1ds. plact'd 19th
1n the ra~e and ltd for the
' Pmnten IlLs tlmt' "''as 2S SJ
03ve 1-:tger , • junior from
~lus keg o. was onl y 2 pl11cn
rrcm belnM m tht' top 2S which
qualify for the N.11llonal Meet
1-:lgcr was 27th with a time of
26 . 14 and 4th for the Pointers
J ohn l>uwell . a junior from
lludson v.·•s the l)olnter sth
runne.r and 30th place for the
mHt ""''h a timt' of 28 : 11
Don
llrhnke
and
AI
Gam roth .
both
fro m
Milwaukee, ..,.t'rt' the Polntt'r
6th and 7th runnt!rs
" I can't imagine another
NA IA Diatrict as strona as oura
•n cross country In the U.S. All
the coa~hes and runners fee l
that if they have good races- not
great, but good races like
S::l turday't·-our dia trlct 1hould
h.11ve the Ind ividua l cham p.
Three AII·Amerluna and a ll
thr~ qu~llfylng turns ahould
be in the lop tO. Bdlnke was 31Jt
thisyea rwilh a time of 211 : 11.
Last yea r tha t would have beft1
18thandtwoyeusaao3rd. That
gives you a n Idea how strona the
district haJ aouen," rem1r ked
Amiot.
With Trubl.atowtlr.l bdn& the
only senior •nd the mUr e squad
retumlna plus • few top new·
t'omtr~ the Polntb'l u n't help
but look forward to nex t year.
•
•
November IS, 1973
Poge 13
THE POINTER
superpickers shoot for perfed score
by TUa s.tllun. Mille II aM••• f'IIOUCh pl&)"llll r.me ,.,ltl 1M
•MJw ··lkGrftii- H..-b
C.,dinala.
the
anltr~
Lut " '"-k a
flred·IIP
ptwoaunlp!ayedoutltloptioll
Su puplc:ker tum made a
...-•lhSI Louis•ndaicnfdwiltl
..Mmbln out of the National
Grtc"n Hay lmmt'CI•tely prior to
Foutlwl ll Leque Khedule. An
rametlme The Pack elf'f:tfd to
ela!ed Joe Burll.e dtc:la~. " I
mert\y use the plwouant u a
••s~allylktedolf,.-hen l "w
dec:oyby Kne~mait inmolionon
"lutl'eteRo,fl,lelried!adDto
I"UUIIIlfll pia)'$. but it b<rume appa ren~ that l~e
1111101SuicideSundaybyltloctiaC
auu-epmflllaln$\111. We
pheuanthad~1de11. '""'
· ·ufti' tabou!laloethimpw.hlll
pheuant delibentety jumped
aroundhketl\ill, ao """dedded
off11dn o n one play . thus
1o pullout all the 1topal11t wtell
dra,.·utaa fwe yard penalty On
and &hoot for a perfecto:·
another ooxuion it rdiiHd to
T1'lf result • ·u 111 abloluttly
retum to !1M! huddle and was
incredible Supe rpic:ker JM:f·
a-..ed • delay ol pme
forma~. as Ow loc:al c:lalf· • penalty "ben ot ,.... c:au&lll 111\twleflfbt~ni•""•Y"
1·oya 11 tJcorr.,;tl ypredi rted
elet·rn o1 Ow t•.-elve pmts
theh.llolunark
pil)"ed on SuDday. The laAvp
The
pheasan t 's
•11 ·
l ubordmatoon ~id ofr u the
" ''""l loSullivan ,a ndanumlna
In- ni.SIY Burs but Ka.nJu
I'Kkft' c:oach11111 I-liff ckc:lded
City 1101 Monday Ni&ht . the
toletitc•U lllo'A'IIpla)'l The
t,.·etve•ndone:!'ftOI'dforone
phi'IUIII
rnpo11ded
by
,..ftt ....ctoubtedly wu an all·
dllplaylll&a bnlliantrq:otr10tnhmel\i&llforolfKialpoc:ktnl
nfMiddrnd.a~upthemlddle
ac:I'OIJI ~ 11.1tion.
and perfrc:t ny ~nerns .._..11
Moat ollhe ao:tlon oa SI.IDd.ay
lht sidthnn
Although onl}'
pll)'lniiiM "lilt aruountl.'d t<>
" '&lllrictlyfnr theblrcb. Ali
pr edl~td . the hllh llyina
half a 11ame. 1M plwas.ant
t'akon$ da..,·f!d their ,.-,y to 1
rProte •llllw r«ord boob by
,.-ntt-ope~~ 44-Z7 winO\'frlM
' prm\1ft1toatotalollt10yard$,
crounded Eaales. The R.aic\er>
lh~a bnakUI8 the ~- Steelft' aame I.OOt on the ap''""' rv$hif11 rec:ord o1 nm
puranc:e of 1 Phill i pine
yards held by ahw.kie dun~~~t
gamecoc:k fight 111 ..,·hidt t>o"O
allurly~Oatllnd ·.\l ll mo
roo.ten Kratc:h and knife at
aame 11 Berkeley F!fld
A
utholheruntil oneoflllc!m
l..ambraut"ieldtu$hinar-..d
derllrtsiUrifloKr bymeansol
was also smuhed. a• t he
a brokrn 11blet
phe1Sante;u•lyerllpHdtht.90t
W>thoutadoubt , thehl&hJiJht
yards lhll a n:ookt. tqU>rrel
olltlf • ·eekOtt\lrn!d•·tlftla
Jll ned dur>ng Ia" )"Ur 'l
~rk pheuant toolllht field
<nkland> l'ac:ker game
d ur>nl the Pacter ·Cardin~l
The
pheasant
,.·as
1ame Irate over 1101 cettlna
una va1l1blt lor romn>ml 1ftrr
the. 11amt'. but unt.,lllble
~ourc r• dt 1c:t os ed that It
mi&ht '•·e bern a lut ·mm11!e
rrp\l (ftflt'll\lddedtothefOitl!t
Tilt; I'AC ... 0\' t: K St:W
t :I"G I.AN U • TM Patriots lllw
Sam "the Bam" C\atninghlm.
~:..~u.yTtturston "• Left-Guard
~ble 10 bo11111e
l'lunkeu· s
p~~uinc • nd " lwlmm" Sam at
A hwtiVY Joe Burke noted,
'Tm l Uff the Card ina ls
:~es.ame tino"
lhrl'l!c:onttsiiiiOihomt'lrrttiOO")"
b.,g1IIIIIIIC November :11;, thr
IIV!t a ppearann- bd0n1 1 luJJ
•t udent
body
t01111dered
la-on ble t11 January 11. more
rhan 1 month latrr Thb un·
den• ably
form•
an
ad ·
•· ~ntaa..ous pOSI\10<1 f11r f>omltr
,_..,.
(lpponen!l tltll )"l'lr OMiutktW ·Ctel!ll Ba y. Ndw11b
Omaha and Winona
All
~tedtheorddtrot\Jifl
rheNA IAplayoffslallyUr As.
lor conference o pponent l.
to~rh
K ru~au
noted .
·whitewater hill thetr tntire
l'ta rt lllllfambac:k . pluslhrir
" •Ill m~n ,..ho <:OWd lllrl 1101
almo.tanyroal~tt•m "
t:..ua..~ . acron~tnatoeo.dt
Kruqer . " hH loat 1 lot ol
peoplt, butl.heyhaveacood
ProtltlmUult'l hfOUIIht lntome
'"""' klcb" St.out, lllt yur's
rhampion. should remain
•tmnl. "'hile RJvft'FIIllhaSa
bla (fflter " SIIperier.'' uid
Kruqu,"ttu aoewroac:hand
~ 6- IOC'fnter. lltey'veallolol 1
l'OIIple pla)'t'I'S from Chic:a10
"ho look qukk and proml•lng."
llowdotltePolnlfnplan on
1tovg1na tl>t:wtuma•
''Thb ye. r weplanonrunnin&
~ tontrollofd rast break
In
lmtral,· we're loin& 10 preu
moreoft tnantlaet lnrnc.-e
run n1111 ," Coach Krueaer
lilted
"Ofcour~e."headcled, " that
muntwei>Mdtoeorwol the
deftMI\"e boar<b V.~ un 't
allo"l" <>arrnoreshotlandlllll
rakead•anta&t'olour~ "
l ... l't)earthrl'oontentoolo.
t'fiOU!l.h~torank~
tTadt
A few years 1111 the
Canb,.·rre,.·illinatotndetllo!
phtannt fo r Roadr1111ner "
Tl'"uis Wtlllllmsevfllup."'
O..rWeck\Opred.ktiotliare:
K.\lllt:HS 0\'t: H 8K OWS5 ·
Roletn1coff . Rlanda , Branch,
Bro,.·n. Bubba.llanac:u.kand
11M' rnt ol thoK bdllfl'flll
black and 111.-r.- brasu will
bnitahze lht bwnblin& B r Ill 1M Nllpt.rk by the Bay
oakland by 17.
1.111,\"S Cl\'t: H IIEAit.'i· '1l'le
~an arran theft!geolu ·
ttnrt>on,"M)"S IIeadZookf'fper
s ..·eoc~e ·-s,.·ISh" Probalopa of
the ll11rba11k Zoo " Wbtt!eYr.thio 1..- and Bean stan
bt~"hnc •n the 11111. it's usually
thr Llom """ rnd up on top "
IJI:tn:ootbytO
...a:ur;,'t
-•tiWi td'"' lllhrr~urrlll\lt
ll'ttrrmf'n flrll<'e V. t"1nk~ 11 f ,
TomEnlurwlandl"lni J rrt. "ho
c:anplay 11uard« for..ard
M a llnlnttthr<'ffllft'~ '" 'llbt
relurnlnl\leUumanMai!Smllh
andHt;.rdiJCarr.atransfer
from H.rlh•ll)" J11100r Cnll<'tl<'
sevrral
lettermen
1nd
,_-("'men ,.,u toau l~ I« thr
IU:.\"GA I.S 0\'Ett J E'ni •
New York bombed !be PatrioU
lut•·eoell.. New York..,-anllla
aive Coac h W~ 1 few more
..·ins ~forr hi' rel.lrn. New
Yorklhould hlvelhtfabuiJoe Namath lwlrll.ln action for
tbtpme. We11taieCiDcil!.llli
by Honl 'l l polllll.
MOnell.
KAi\IS U\'t: R ~' HISCO • Thr
&rshaw.,juataboutllldit.
Can't
undenllnd
th eir
probkms. but U\c Ranu will
COIIItitt~~~to•ddtothfm .
CAHDINALS 0 \' ER GIA.\TS
· Ttrecomblllf'd pol11llollll Ill
lhiSOMWiUI)f'ObabJybein the
sistln. Bfthltasll m.ay,the
ttame filii New York , Ml Sl.
Tloms
byl 4.
~~dwin.Cardlnalsby
HEDS ... ISSO\' EH CO LTS · !!
,.·n adlffkult dtc:ision. but,.·e
dfc:ldedloiOOtltonalimband
tateWuhinaton. Skinaby5t .
~~~V~~~ ~~~NT
,.,,n·Sia t~~h l\fWIIer
".W ~ 'toould bo: IU &ood
CII AKC. EHS 0\'I':R SA INTS ·
ll treaonouraw:rqt. A 1on1
tlme•lo"'tuld..-e...-IIU!dpick
lllllllt theS.inU.thtrtstoftht
year . Thelutmonthwe'~had
1e<:011d. thltd anct'"fourth
thouah t l about our traak
decil.ion,butwecan'tiOblc:kon
our ,.·ord . Wepic:ktheCh•raen
by one point ...·tth fllt~me
\ ' I ... I NGS
AGA I SST
t' AI.CO:"'S
The Monda y
Noahter and al10 to11up.
llaberma11 thinks that the
VikonpwillkRonecamethis
ii'IIIOII.andthlsls lt . Sulll un
andBurk., th•nk lllbermanis,
...,.
CAMPUS CINEMA
ti
a-"•OIIttnltwC'Orlffffftn! .. ll all
t;of..,.dtliM'&US.m<l)')'~nod
=rl'f'nt'foolht.SIP">·ml l'otnl
~!;;,...~~~:u~::;n;;~~~
1
('I T\'
0\' t: tt
KANSA S
tto USTO.\ ' · The Oilers al'fll't
Rtf'fdy They have thei r win
thiiYUf, M1 they should be
contt'llt CIUfflbyiO.
IKtl.I' III NS 0 \ ' EM BII,I.S •
AU,.·eranllyW.whatcanwe
11y• ~hami by 21
!o'Tn: U:I\5 0 \ 'Ett 8MOS·
looll on the 11ool1
do""" at O'Toole'11n1 sUi rting
to drool bKaUH the Steelen
haveallthetooii. Pittbyl7.
'l'hl:df'f~Jt'.ho"~'·"" · nnk O'da
~~~ .. ~~~ pl·~ i :rs·
<'on fertncr la)t )"<'U . our
leadonM"'""'rr.-andtofrour,...
he '~ aJ.fii>OtiiO" " llelpo"'lf'al
)·ra r RJ&htlboutiiiiWTomaiiO
is lhlnltin&aboutln earller
Ea&lt ,.-In ovr.- Dallas
Sol
murhl•lelttolt\clm•&lnatlon
Co...-bo)'l by%1
Green Bay by
cos . The
olfe'ml•·ri)UIIhrf'OIIII""rtlt'l'
tlw mc»l 1mp<>rtant a,JI"'I ol
ltle Ita""' l~t ye~r .. e llacl
c'-'11'"~ .. .,~ot~ab)· atotal
oft5poonU.If'"·r<"OUidha•·e
tumrd t~ pn..,. around""
.. ould hl\e had ~ " '"n'lll
S..aiiOn'
Coa rh 1\ru<'grr btlot•·n
w•·..ral lartor.poonttto thr
l'lm..,.ttoonaour,.aythll )'tar
" Cai Ku phallihouldW-ol
aboutplayo(f~rthllhWtlmeol
~edfh-lplay .beaUH
lhf)'shllartn 'l sure about the
Mar l.al!e for [)on.qy Andrntlrl
Basketball Shdping Up
As Season Start Nears
by Jimll•bft lt
"OUr objert os to ltt101ek 1111
"hott,.·aler and t:au C\au-e."
•;ndCoadiBob Krut~er " Vo'e11
j.ll~ y tachg&m<' IJ ot namn"
Thrbutttbjllpmn..,·tllnot
r ome ea.;ly thil yea r tor the
l'o•nt ~rs Aftu sUi glngtllelint
UAI.IAS 0 \' t: it 1'11\LL¥ •
Tom l..andry l.llrtl lhintU.,
butthePackdflen~elhould~
WISC
~
Audiences are standq:"' and OjllllauciOig•••
WALKING
TALL
!lltlahoma ll. lhiM~IItl l
lst':!7, Sianlotd'S
l'tnriStatr». XorlhCarohlll
State-~
Kan» \ t7 . Clllotodo I~
Slllr~ l)ame- 3\ , P ottsbur!lh Ill
T...,M'liM't' Statt· U. Cm!ral
Stal"- 7
Arwona St;a\1.' t1. 'A ~om1111 0
lt~ J6. J\e" Mr.u c:o»
HK't'I7 . Arb~s7
Or""'"
I CLA :!7.
7
Oltl ahuma State- :a. Ka llll~
S l~l r II
Srilrat.bll . lo•nSiate7
nonda ti ,G rora.a to
Teuo n . Baylor I
,\ ruona n . 8rlllham YOU/II II
A~tt'«tell. Rut&rrl U
Kt'fttUO:k)Z7. \ '•nderbdtl7
Grambhlll! 22. Sorfollt Slate I
·-··rd~·t-
Anoth<'r fador dHm~ by
eo.<hKNf:Ctr U~t .. ttoa
•ucrHII ul _ _. .. 1M hom'
eourt adnntal' ·'Thtfln•
con\onUC'd l upport tJ • ~ry 1m·
~~~~:,~;;:::'~ ·~~·~
tan . and ,.-torn \.hi') do a
tremendolll,ob•t ~P'to~
the fan. •~ b..tund IMm
What •• DO'"' bebond the
Poonttn may l"fU hlwe beftl
the worou . " Our fr~mm tum
tootJtobfooeoft.llebesl ln
11 .
Stout
14
I.•Croue
H•~er f alb H . Ste•·ms Potnl o
l'lattewdlriS, t:auClllffl
(1$hkWI :4. Whl\!t'"'l l_er '
St'nlomii:I&.Superoort2
IIIG 10
Greg Hoosl
w 1~11» . •0""·a•
Oh.,StatrlS. Mk htpnSI.Ite u
ll kh'l•n21 . llliiiOIIl l
M1nnnou :H. Purdue 7
Sorth.. f!llen'l2t. lndlln120
Joe Ryder, once ovid " Packer Boeker"
seems to hove seen the light and is
now d isplaying the colors o f the
" purple gang."
Page 14
THE POINTER
November 15, 1973
Nuclear Plant Moratorium Gains Support
Two stat e groups hav e
recen tly gone on record in
support of a moratorium on
atomic plants. The news was
announced at the Thursday .
Nov. 9 meeting of The ~ague
Against Nuclear Danger s
t LANO )
The Wisconsin State AF'LCIO subcommittee on water
pollution passed a resolution
fav oring a mor a tor ium until
the m3jor health and sarety
Jssues hav e been fully
resolved .
The g roup ex ·
pressed concern over the use
of Plutonium 239 wh1ch it
warned " represents a major
carcinogenic hazard for more
tha n t he next thousand
generation... The Wi sconsin
Socio logica l
Associa ti on .
meeti ng in Stevens Point on
Oct 'n. also went on record in
support of a national and
Slate moratorium on atomic
plants in view of all the
hata r ds inhe r ent to thei r
oper ation
Delegates from LAND to
the meeting of \\'isconsin
O tiz.ens for Energy Alter natives 1n Madison , Nov . 3,
r epo rt ed that eight stat e
sena tors and assem bl ymen
have expressed support of a 3yea r mor atorium on atomic
plan ts m Wisconsin .
In response to invitations to
member or ga ni za tio ns o f
Lake Mkh igan Federation
for comments o n fed e ral
energy policy, LAND ha s
submi tted a statement to
Herbert Brown . Dir ector of
Federal Energy Regulation
Study, emphasizing 11s
concern that governmen t of
all IC\>•els remain responsive
to Citizen concern s and
respec:Uul of citizen rights in
ft ·e energy policy deter·
minations . The statement justified misgi \•ings ubout the
pointed up a n E nvironmental va:..t increase in th e usc of
P r otection Agency r eport nuclea r power ."
wh ich warns that radioacti \·e
l.t\ ND urged efforts by th e
e fflu ents will cause increases
in cancer, infant mortality federal governmen t to full y
and leukemia and th at inform citiz.ens of risks they
emissions will cause per- may Wldergo. to concent rate
manent
dam'!- Je . funds on resea rch programs
for al ternatives to fission. to
LAND also dr ew attention thoroughly study the health
to th e staement issued by the effects of present nuclear
23rd Pugwash Conference on faciliti es and to consider a
Science and World Affair s. an lo ng- r a n ge prog r am o f
Inte r nationa l body o f energy conservation rather
scientists. issued this fa ll :
th an un limited ener gy gro...,1 h
" The as yet unsolved problem in future plans .
of waste ma nagement and the
possi bly unsolvabl e <in an
Loca l fa rm ers at the LAND
absolute sense) problem s of m eeting reported problem s
ca ta s trop hi c r eleases o f relating to transmission lin es.
radioactivity a nd diversion of Shoc ks a nd inju r ies we re
bomb-g rad e mat e r ials. r e lated . Recen tl y utility
combine to create grave and representa ti ves have been
Sports Shorts
Jim Palmer . star right handed pitcher of the Baltimore
On olcs. was named the American league's Cy Young
,\ ward 'Ninner of 19i3.
LeRoy Andersen . head foo tball coach at Stevens Pomt
Area High School. announced his resigna tion last week .
Andersen compiled a 21·32·2 record in six yean at SPASH.
F'rench skiing star J ea n-Claude Killy married film actress Da ni ele Gaubert last week in Arc hnmp , France .
Temperame nta l llie Nastse of Ruma nia , a Davis Cup
winner . won the fir st pla ce prize at the Tennis Gran Prix .
Nastse thus becomes the Cirst man in the competition's
his tory to repea t as the Prix· winner .
Ha rlan Sva re has resigned as head coach of the San Diego
Chargers . Svare will be replaced by form er Los Angeles
Rams r unning back . Ron Waller . The Olar gers have a 1·7- t
record thus far this year .
The Soviet Union has been ousted from the World Cup
soccer competition because or its refusal to play Olile in a
retur n match a t Santiago. The Soviet Union. in an a pparen t
protest against the recent overthrow ol the Marxist Allende
government, had asked that the game be played a t a neutral
site. but the International Soccer Federation ruled that the
~tame should go on as scheduled .
calling on farmers evidently
in r esponse to complaints
rl"gistered a.s much as seven
years ago.
The need for
residents to know the extent.
loca tion and possible hauu-ds
of lines from the proposed
Rud ol ph complex was
discussed .
From the
prelim inary r eport by the
uti liti es. it appears that
Port age County will have
more miles of the proposed
mil e-wide corri dors than any
other coW1ty .
L \ ND ..-.;11 meet next Nov .
29m Stc\·ens Point.
Sand Land Seminar
on Nov. 15
The third in a series of fi ve
sess ion s in a "Ce ntr a l
Wisconsin Sand Coun ty Lnnd
Use Seminar" will be held a t
UWSP Thursday, Nov . 15.
· The 7:30 p .m . session.
en titl ed " Availab le .io..ac ts
About Controversial Issues, "
...,;n be held in the auditorium
or
th e new Coll ege of
tcr(.'St groups by bring ing
land use spec ialists to the
community .
Among the four persons
p.ulicipating in Thursday's
program is Hubert Halliday
of th e Wiscons in S t a t e
Depa rtment of AgricuJture in
Madison. discussi ng the use
uf pesticides . A representa tl\'e of the U.S. Geological
~u~:l o~~oce:"heBu~~~~t,;.!~rv:~·t~~ ~~~.~~~~ i~~a~~~
..-.;tt10ut charge .
The se m inar , wh1ch IS
funded by the U.S. Office of
Environmental Education. is
headed by Dr . Ra y mond
,\ ndc r so n an d Or . By ron
Shaw of the UWSP n:ttura l
resources depa rtment.
It is designe d to he lp
minimize co ntr ove r s ies
betwe e n ag r icu l tu ral .
recreationa l and public in-
and dramage .
Also Included i n the
prog r am will be Ro bert
Ba r rows , an ag't-ic ultu r al
t.>eonOJt'Ust from UW-Madison,
s1>ea kmg on rura l economics .
Dr Byron Shaw, of the UWSP
nntu r a l resour ces depart rncnt , wi ll di scuss research
needs .
The next session will be
he ld at UWSP Nov . 29.
--->Wrestling Season
Starts Dec. 1
b) J ohnt"rlbth
The UWSP -..rntl1ng tum
opens •l5 season on De<-~mber I
by t r;n·~hng to K~nosha for th~
Puluui~ TouMUimf'nt
Coach
Hegmald Wicks f«ls that thts
y~a rs ' teamhasthemCl'lllalent
.md dt-pth lh.al he has S«n m his
thrt'f' )ears u UWSP ,.-resiling
coac-h
W1cb satd, " This yea r we
hope to hmsh m th~ top J or 4 in
the c-onf~rmce We'rt' going
,.tlh upent"ncc. ta lt'nl .and
dt'pth ..
Vt' r c-.stl~r.s returning to the
l'mntcr sqund a re : Pete Ooro at
ltfl wci~t h t clau. Bob Bruski a t
by ~t. ry J o l)opp
Women's lntramurals Is now
m the procns of electing ne-w
officers for the spring and fall
semesters.· Nomln~tlons ,.-t'fe
held Nov . 12 and are as follows
Ch;u r man
of
Women 's
lntramurals
Ma r y
Yan de rt le , Barb De1c-hl , Mary
T1mm
Cbairman of Sports Ac-ti\'Uy
~lary Elliott, B«hy Sc:hatzka .
Cindy ~hx dorf, Mary Timm
Cba1t1nan of Pubhc-•ty lHb
I-' rater , Dee S1mon
Cha1 r man
of
Dor m
Communications D1ane ~1 uzt,
Carol IIlii
Chairman of Offi cials
Sue
R iec k , Jan G un delfinger
Chanman of 1-:c1uipmrnt
B~c-ky
Sc-hat1k~ .
Cindy
Mixdorf
Election date 111 Nov 28, 197:1
from 6-tO p.m
111
th e
lntrumural Offi ce
P lay -off s fo r volh•yhu tl
tournament!' a rc also tu k1ng
p l a c e N o v
2 6·
Wmntrs arc League I, ShotStnngs . lA-ague II , J W~l
llwlmson . League Il l, Sarah 's
St-1-t1ps . Le.Jgut' IY . Ttf' ~t
,.ren 2 t-: Neale and J W &h
m~kle . League \', T1e bel
.,., e~n 2 ~
Roac-h1es a nd
llarrl5011 Httot'S , l..eaRI.H' VI.
Tie ~t..,· een J Vt' Schmt"«k.lfl
and 2 S Neal~
The pmg-pong ball sta rts
bounc1ng ~f onday the t!Hh as
Women's Intra murals starl\the
Table Tenm5 tournaments
There are 2~ doubles teams so tl
~ hould he a close and e1clllng
tou rnnm~t .
The Swim Ca rnival wil l he
held Dec Jrd. It 15 open for all
WE WANT YOU
If you'd like 111
be a
leporter for lhe POINTER
.Piicl Positions Are Available.
Come Oa In and Talk To Us.
POIIfilll OfFICE. 2ND FLOOR U.C.
126 11>5, Steve LaCount a nd Lubi
S1duff hoth at Jl4 lb.s., Warren
l'upp at ISO. Phil 1Pee Weel
Mueller nt 158, Hick Neipert at
tn . John Nevtns and Don Lutz
both a t 190 and Alan J ankowski
as the Pointer heavyweight.
Thnt- men a re the Pointers'
t•xpenrncrd and return ing
lt'llermf'n Ooro. l..aCoont and
~hJt'ller plac-t'd th1rd 1n the
("'rrh•rt'JK'e me~t last year. Phil
Ll,er Wee t Mueller pbc:-N 4th
tn tlw naHon at NAIA meet.
Coach W1d.a feels tha t the
freshmen are going to be a big
help m the tll!'ams' win and lo5l
rK"nrd Coming in a re Ktnt
{'asper at l iB lbs., Ma rk Casper
att42lh.s .. GuySoucieat 150and
J o hn J o hn so n as
hcavy ....·eiKh l. Wicks also
mentlonll!'d a few transre r
Mt udent.!l such
heavyweight
L eo n Nevil l e, Geo rge
Strozewskl a t ISO lbs.. Dan
Kohler another t501b. and Jerry
Crudu11 ~at the I'M lb. cl.au.
a"
The team feel s that its goal
lhis year Is to place high in the
eoofermce meeu. " E.Kh year I
have at lust one man place in
the Nationals," said CoaC'h
WkU " I would like to have at
leaat ont, If noc. more piKe this
yea r ."
On l>«embtr sth UM! team
will have an lntenquad meet al
7:30p.m.
November IS, 1973
THE POINTE R
Page IS
Pointers End Season On Sour Note
~alledatunt•-GII\OU~hl:i
lo)'J""''--"
YMUWSP I"mntenfintsh.eda
lona . drury ud ratl'ler
d1$1ppolntin&IOIMbiii1KIIOnOII
a1011r nottlllt .,.-ee~ b)· l~inll
to the UW -Rivtr Falls F alconJ,
t~-o. Tht loP gi\'H tiM' Point en
a;t..S('I)rlfHfnctrK"'nniO!'thll
In almOII
~·-
1!'\'ff) dc-pflrtmtnt
tht Pointtrs ouuhont tht
n~c:Gas ThfPolottotal-td»-1
offmt•~~j'ardl to the f'ak-olu'
tUyardl TbePolntenran off
n f1nt do.,.·n• wl'l•lt thtlr
defust stymied their oppo!>t!llts.limitmltlhtmLoJIIIIt
hut down~ St.-v.-u Poult
puntftlonlytl'll'fttimestoRI~t'f'
~·ans· nine punu Both teams
lost an equal amount of fum·
!HH-two But tnt" SUI !lilies tNt
telltJMostoryarethenumbtrof
pauifttft'Ct'pli-andyardl
pe!!lltled Tht- FaiCOM pit~ed
off tnt'll St.-~ens Point ~I-HI
to tl'lt' Po•nt 's two The Pomt
.,.·llptnlhlftl91)'1 rds ,.,.·htle
n,.·er Fallt l01ot :12 ya rds on
pt"'I-;;IIIH
To the Pomters and 1M
1'91ntrr laM , m•ny of tM
p.-nalllnand other ruhnas
nllftltlllftltlhePotnler-."·t!n'
ofahl&hly~tionllbltn.IIUI't!
ttud coach !tlontt' Ch.,la.
Ulolllllycoolandeoll«tftlon!M
Poultert''-*lu>ell.atonepotnt
trr- at .omt of the offldab'
nlhnp
" I don 't mtnd aetUnN lwat, "
1-atd Chllrt~ Iliff the pmll' ,
" but l don'thkehlll'lnath-e
offtciabblo" tho•&amea ... ay h
,.-ukindofafrustratm&ltlmt'
Weplayt'dthe"holl"lirsthall
almost m the!r t'lld 1011r. and
thorn to b~e lht- pme blown
,..,..• ,. " O!arlet ' \'Otcetniled
a•·a,·
onai>CIIeof~pld.t
frwHrallon
Ch1rln .,._. referrona to
Son·ffaf tnSta""es •·hm the
P01nten • ·ft'eon the •·ft"'e of
scottn&onlytolla•·.-lhebaU
hth-er tum o•·er to 1M ~·alconl
<7 to~ prnaliled out ola
scottn&OppOrtunll)'
ln-~;os., thePOIIIttn•·en
attht- t'lkon Z4 yard line and
,.-""'fxed•olhfow-thdown
l'at Hobbln.J •as called tn to
auempt~rit:ldJioal 'flloo4h\he
allempt appe~red wc:ceu.ful ,
theoffictalso;alledt....,pla)' bllck
~amt
after that. "
O!arlt!l
In the urly 1olna. the
Potnll'n dominated lht- field
TheycontroiiNbothth-earound
allack ~nd \he air wayt 'fbto
l'olntt!n!hlld,atthehall,%00
yartUtotaloffmH. The~"lkofts
hadonlylll)·atdsonthelround
•ndnoaerialyatdsatlll.lntlle
"" lht- Pointt'nl totaled 147
)'ltds,\O"hileonthe groundlhey
l'\l$hedforunetyardl.
One of 1M man)' Lima tNt
the Pomttn wue knockilll on
1M ~·akoas' door, ~·a1con line
hxkn JahnZahllk.apiekftioff
an Olejnin.ak put to IIUb \hoe
Poiftl-'dri-Yt'. Shortlyarter.an
lnlt"rCC'plion by Ptt Robblnl
bfOuChl thoebiiU bllek mto the
Poultt!n!hancb.lpustoWry
s -·kl by Joe Plleoeky, •·hidl
many thouaht • ·•• an in·
complete pau, ..-.. n~IN 1
tompll'tion and a fumble • ·ith
the t"aiCOIIIIrtc:O~ft'inaattht!lr
o..-nfOIII')'ardline. Thef'aiCOIIII
.. o:nn'tlbl!"toseorl"onthe
ontht!~;rou.ndstllatoneoftlle
Potntfn'~dluck , but\htydid
PO<nlt!nl "''It I1CII •unn11 h•~lltn strap properly
Surh 1
peNII) ~Urlt!l a I ~ yard los.r.,
andtht't-nslltniUM'Wimmtpul
the PoontPn ..., of f•f'ld aoal
ranjtr
"That field p i •ould .......
real!)' JMolped Wt lftmfi! \0
Jtall-fldLAll)' loHeonii'Oiofthe
~==~~11 mlo
upa"t
thel r
On lht- Poon ttn' IB yl rd line
thor t'akons f11mbled an In·
tereepl>OII nrly in the lhlrd
penod Altholl&h 1M ~u · -u
•t•llbolarlnnaafOWid.lht-ol·
hct•b rulftl it dud, th11s
n11llifylna
thl"
Polntna '
rt\'0\'erylbet·ll~fumbled
onlhetr•·erynell\playandtJMo
Pointft"' rtc:O>-ft'ed 11aln But
the offidab •ll•ln rvled the
bouno:lng ball cle,d, gi~ma the
Wll bllck to River 1-'alla. Two
pla)'slatft',Jnper F"rftmtn
rlnthtba ll tntotherndwntfor
the first of Hi~rr
LD~K h­
do,.l\1 .
The f'alton• ".M"C''nd ~n
nme at the tnd of tile lhlrd
q~rtH on a I yard 1'1111 b)'
Hoben fto&ert Jeff\',.. kkked
both of Hh·er ~·a ua· extra
points
'l"boua:hotheroff~eialll had
made qlleJtloftlbla nUt In
other 11mt!1, Char '" fell that
the jlldJemut thown b)'
Saturdlly'•ofliC'II li "'U much
•orw " lthlnkthat lhllltullt!it
tbad judamrnll. really hlll'l
u:s,"llidC.'lLirle..
Joe l 1oleoekyandBm8 rledlhePointen'l'lllllllna•ttack
....,,h 41 and 41 yards respeoetiyely . Don Saaft' added 11
ylrlka nd l..3 tTYSo"klla ined
nvrnytrd• In tht' e_arlr
moment• of the 111mt: Potntn
quarttrback Mark 01.-jnicuk
111rprl1ed the RJ~er t'alll'
dtfrnH • ·ith 1 few JOOd runs ol
h11 own. Until thlt, tilt Jut
aam~ In Oltjnicult"t colteac
carft'l", Charta had rt'IIIHd to
aUo..-hlmtol'llftthebiiU. Wilh
r.-aularbacku-pqua.rterbllck
lolonteMatbt!OIIIIorthetu11011
.-.u.·
,.·,\han~nJuf1 ,Charles feltM
C'OOolt.dn'ta ffordtoriaklnlnjul')'
to Olejninak
" I •'OUidn't \tl ~ark 1'\11\
befor.--he • ·•• 011r only qLAr·
trrbaek ''
ChariHIOOk 1101.1 of marked
im pro~ement In the Pointtr
cleftn~ " l'at SI!x tonpllyt'da
helluva aamt. Mike Dlt:rcks
playedajwi! Jpectacularaan•t
!)tuck• played that quar terbackoptlonju:sthkeh-ehad
•
~pll)'tnl(ltallhlshftlftlw
dl"fei\I.CIIadpbyt'dhallngood
apinS-It:auCiatrt,theytt:au
C.1airt i .,.'Ouldn'ttutve'-tltn
lhepmt' " St'lton•·ull.llmfil
ddtntl\'t player of the •cek
*Pllec:kyledallrfft!t•·en
•tth M"o·rnntritftfor60ytrdl
Jeff Cou and Ben Breach
caUJht lOIII' puHII for U yardt,
"'htlt'DonSalft' .... redlhret
~lorUytrds. Bruce
W.-onklllf m1dt two ratdte~~ u
l)Oug Kfllfit!r llrou&l'lt in '"'0
p.:&Aft for 215 yards
l..ar ry
A Dt'partm!"nl of Sahan l RftDW"ees tmphlbl- drtcl s:e
woc-ks a r otating e utt.-r hud benulh the water a! Denault
Spnngs, a state owned publ ic fish i ~~~t a r ea seven mtles south
of Antigo . as it completes ils job of deepening the n.at~al
s prmg pond fr om 11x Inches t o an a•·erage depth of etght
feet .
Max Johnson , fish mJ.nager kneelin~ o n the bank m
front of the dredge , says that Sludiesof simtlar ll'OIA. ponds
deared of muck and debe-is by the 0!'\:R tndlute thiS
ope-ration cos \I about tvoo tents per (;sherman hour Uk' O\'et
a
50 y e a r
per io d
The silt Is pumped throu&h the near horizontal "ta tl " PIP"
loa lef'ies of aetUing ponds as far as '• m•le from the
dredee .
t Departm~l of Natunl R.-sourca photo l
ITALIAN RA VJOLI
·SPAGHETII
•
All DINNERS INCLUDE SALA D
AND HOT ITALIAN BREAD!
.
BILL'S
PIZZA
Dew-.,._,
St.... e nt Point
, ..... )44...9'5$7
o.tt... ,.,
s-nc. "'
City
Servo ka eau&httwo puses, while
Ot'Ml5 t:l.ltrlll, Steve Denbon
andJ.,..ryRaedft'each uuaht
OIM'PIILPiit'c:kytookofftllli~
hononfor Satllrd•y'•&•me.
Mark OlejniCI.Ik threw -til
limt!l,complttlnl:!l\li~Mt fOI'
2'1\1 yar-ds.
Mark't day wat
dOIIdN by sh: lnterreplionJ of
hi1 pUIQ Olejnicuk't 26
tompletiont Mave him the
WSU<: rec-ord for moat Urefl
complthons with JU, it!Vfn
moretNntheoldrec:or-dM'IIn
t97a by <:hr11 O!a rn lth of
Plattevlllt Mark'l U at•
tempts aives him the career
rf'COI'dinthatdepartfl\eftl with
6l t , compared,.·•thiDlal1011el
by Chrit Cbamilh. ,......, U
anempts Civt!l Oldnlcuk the
reconlfwthemoall llempllln
1 linKit w-uon 11 l5a allempiJ.
That ec:lipses the old mark or
:Q&etbyAIO!am ldt,brother
ofChriltofPllnevlllein 1161.
AI Chamlsh'• held co.dl wa1
nont other than one Monte
O!a ri~ . Withl7$1\n&l tMIJOI1
compleltont, Olt'jnicuk
ther~of
tos-
t 41.etbyA I
CharniJh,apl n ln t!l6i. Galnina
27\1 yan h tltrough the air lui
Saturday, Olejnio:Ukllll the
slnll)eseason rec:ord for most
yardspinedatt20f)'lrcb,
destroyin&lheoldr~oft!Q
yardlll!lln IMby (.'hrls
C barn 11h . Additional l y,
Ole)nttl•k hold• 111 t•el •e
Poi nter
all -time
pauln1
rf'COI'd:t.
" RKGrdsdon'tmeanllllhlt
muth." said a char•c·
tt'rutkt lly modtJI Olejnk111k
" Whtn )'Oil 1-pend the t"ntire
l(ame bf:otwl'tfl \he llvt yard
hnes,thrnth01ert!ot'01'111aren't
so•mportant Tbe idelll to ...-•n
Andy0111ritht!rwlnorlosena
team ." •
0""p~icuk l l101t.ldprlull! for
llleofftntive line " TheyplayN
JU JI &r u t I ll Yllf
My
rec.,ivt!nl•·ertllrt!lttoday~
DrHWI'IIdalft!lldly,"
ll italllllquely lfonieendto
anlron.icw-uon tonotethaltlle
nllll'lbtrofmtll«tp!IOIIIlhro•-n
m the Poonten' lnt 111M of
1973uiiiO•rec:ord. lnlft'·
«p~ma w-•·en Poontft' paiHS,
till" lli~ef' ~·aliJ t '1koM lod a
newlinaJe 111M record for pUt
lnt.-rc.pli-
Page 16
Letters lo The Edit2(
Halloween Drugs Not A Treat
THE PO INTER
~
~
TOM & GEORGES
GRIN &
BEER IT
OH TilE SQUARE
THE NEW
SLIDES
ARE IN!
STOP IN & Slll I
by BUI
Nove mber 15, 1973
II~Uier,
M .D.
Unlvenlty llu ltb Senke
U11loween night waa almost
the lut night for a 14 year old
student from our community.
The purpoee ol thb article b to
point out some very real rlsb
involved In puN:huing and
using unknown drugs in our
society today .• The lollowing
account ha.$ ~ wrill~ by a 16
year old student who was a
companion to lhe YOW18 man
whoalmoetdied. The accountis
In hia awn words, writtm im·
mediately after the incident
took place, while he was still
somewhat under lhe eltect o1
the drug he lDOk. Hia ICCOWII ol
the episode is as follows, the
name used in the article is
fic:tltioul:
"On Hallow~ night 1 was
hiking wi th my fr iend , Ted, to
Point. Our first ride took us to
Amhent J tmclion. Then we
were oUered a ride to Stevms
Poi.Dt by a YOW1& man in !tis
t'larentlu. After we wn'f: on our
way he asked how much money
we had, how old we w~ and If
.,.,.e wanted any to<alJed ac.ld
that would make w happy and
HUNTERS
w........
- o..o-e COIIIpW.
lncl•d:Mt
SOREL
UD WING
IALL lAND
LA CROSSE
FELT PACS
HIP lOOTS
HIKUS
INSOLES
5 IUCKLES
USUIIIIy don't. It got more In·
I~ and mo~ inlrnM. After a
while things we ren't just
movjng. l"hey were becoming
piiUt'ms. Obviously the samt'
thJngs "'tre
~ppming
" When the driver saw what
was ha ppening he got paranoid
and told me to take him to some
O.D. center or somrihing. When
,..e wrre into town he order-ed
me to get him out of the car. 1
didn't know what wa.s what and
he beca me angered and parked
the car. He came around and
opened my doo r and said the
holpital is right over there
somt-place. get him out of my
SHIPPY SHOES
~--
'·
-
~·rrrt
~""~'"·~
~-
to my
friend. For awhile I thought
what was hlppenina wu
pleuant. Then It got worse. I
didn't know what I was doing a t
times. Thankfully a ft er a while
I could sense the lntmsily was
guduaUy dec=rusing. I then
knew I would come out of it. I
thought Ted was the a.ame pia«
I was. I lhought he saw that tw
would come down . He started
getting jumpy and beeomlnfl:
p~nnoid . l tried to let him know
It was O.K. and that he would
come down.
Eventually, he sta rted gettin&
wone. He was pushing me sor t
of, as If he were trying to say
something to me. He star ted
getting more and more: afraid.
Then he started saying phr~ .
Don ' t lose It, Don't lose it. For
awhile I thought he was playing
some sort of game. It see.mtd
like he was doi ng It just to freak
me out, ! though t NO. I WON'T
f ' REAK OUT. I repeated to
eyes.
&
ru.r- .
that he sold 11'!1, ns we got closer
and closer to PcMnt I noticed
that I ke-pt forgetting wh~ I
was. Tfw:n It gotwone. I started
&Ming lhlngs move in ways they
Ttd started going into con·
vulslons and I knew he wun't
trying to trick me. He couldn't
breath very well so I put my
finger into his mouth to get hll
tongue out of his throat. He bit
my finger and a t the same time
he had 3 look of ti!TT'Or In his
lOOT
~
lhoc.utht it over and decided "'e
would. We thought it .,.,·ould
I mp r ove our lblloween 1n
lrrms of fun. It didn 't
" We each took one of hLs acid
~~::: ~~ ~n:,:,ve:.~
DRESSINGS
(A-A~]
f~ling good. lie also said it lets
YC' l see things as they rt"all y
11 re. Just have lou of fun nnd Btl
into It he told us . We sort of
~
....,..._
ca r. lie became desperate and
of wha tever the substance.
!laid get out. I was completely • was suppoM<I to be In the
gone. 1 got out on Impulse 1
sample and frequentl y there
think and then he pulled Ted out
were ha r m fu l S\olbstances
:and layed him on the ground. He
present such as stryehnlne,
look oft without shutting his
photographic chemlcal.s, bit·
passenger side door . he wu
tery add, powdtt and 10 on.
so
scared
The authenllclty of any drug
•·1 stood there trying to get it
sample purchased in an Illegal
together and I thought about
manner must be questioned.
The epiiOde descr ibed above
what he Nid about an 0 .0 .
c linic . I s tar~d running
was a rault of a 14 yea r ~d boy
towards 10me llgh13 that had a
taking one sma ll pink pill which
looks. I
was supposcod to have been LSD.
certain difference in
told the man Inside that my
A thinking student would never
lay his life on the line by tailing
friend wa.s dying . We went over
a nd got him and ca rried him
a substance sold to h.tm for
inside. Then they were askJng
pn~Ot from an unknown dealtr.
me quHtions which at this state
In my estimation an individual
of mind conlused me more. I
m u s 1 be e x t r e m e I y
desperate for fun or n:tremely
couldn't tell what was what so
I s tarted praying . In my
desperate for some greater
prayers I repeated over and
pleasure to ever ta ke a chance
over OH MY COD! Oll MY
on inges tl ~, smoking, snorting
~~~~ ~n~;t:~~ ~:~! 1~ ~hic~e:a ~ ~e~d ~o s~~s~~~
0
my pr-ayers. I hope I never e'·er
ta ke any more: of that . voluntary or involuntary. I never
want to see anymore and I'm
sure il Ted pulls through he' ll
say the same.
"P l eas~
~•cuse
wrong
spellings etc. because while
I' m v.Titing this it seenu
as if my I.Q. went dov.-n from
this ba.d experience."
The above account Is not u
acct~ r ate as It could be bec:ause
of 1M efl«b of the drug on the
person wrillnllt. I tan fill In the
fact.s from the point ol the 14
year olds' admission to the
hospital. On admission to the
hospita l, the 14 year old boy was
unconscious , was unrespontlve
to painful stim uli , was
breathing irrtg ul.arly and had
a n irregular heart rate with
premature beats. A tube wu
placed down in to the patient 's
stomach and the contents of the
stomach wrre removfd. An ora l
airway was plattd in his mouth
to help maintain a breathing
passage. The eyes were widely
dila ted and were n111ing back
3nd forth without focus ing. lie
was admitted to the Intensive
Care Unit and shortly after
a rriving there, the p~tient had a
respiratory a rrest . This means
he stopped brc-athing on his
own. 'The personnel of the
lntc-nsive Ca re Unit had to
artificially breathe the pallent
for a while and then he began
brc-athing on hl1 own aga in
During the c-venlng the boy also
convulsed many times. Ovrr the
course of the Tlight the boy
finally started com1ng out of the
acute toxic reacllon to the drug.
When I talked to him the next
morning he was still somewhat
shakey and sligh tly confused
and was not sure about wha t
had happened lie was very
te3rf ul and extrem ely con·
t'erned about the well bC'ing of
his friend
It 1s not the purpose of this
art icle todiscuu the reasons for
student use of drugs, ho..-·ever
thu topk will bC' covered In a
~~~~~;.r~!e pu~ !f ~~~
WHICH STATEMENT APPLIES TO YOU?
!.. n.Y HOKE &A'niD TILuf JIAS81Z Tll.AFPlC.
:t. Gr:r A LICENSE TO ACJ[JEVE :N'O. L
S. GAIN IJrf1'EKIBT WITB ADUAL l'lELD 'nUJ'8.
oL VA TI&AJNINO KYOND PIUVATZ CEJn"'FJCATION.
&. ALL OF THE AMVI'-
F()B
IIORE INFOII.II.U'ION SEI!: CAL, II.A Y
OB CUFF 011. CALL OOLLECI' I
WAUSAU 842-4000 Olt MOSINEE 693-6111
CENTRAL WISCONSIN AVIAT10N
cr:N'nlAL Wl800NSIN AIIIPOIIT • liiOIIINr:l!:. •Wl800NSIN
ltfticle is to point out distinct
risks that are auociated with
buying druiJ from unknown
lnd 1viduals or sometimes
known In d ivi dua ls for the
purpose$ of making your life
morc- interesllng or more enjoyable or more com foJUble
Studies-have befll done in which
students were encouraged to
brln1 in drua samples tha t they
purchased from various IOUI'Ces
around a community. 'The druc
sample was labled as to what It
wu suPJIOioed to be by the
dealer and then wu sent to a
lab tobeanai)'Ud to see eucUy
what wu In tbe ~. One
third of the tJme tbtre wu none
1
1
death.
Ira student is in need of 10me
substance or druj: to make hll
life mo re t o l er:~bl e, I would
encourage him to only use
substances that he is tOO percent
&ure are non·har mful agents.
This Is extremely dirficult to do.
Unless you make the drug
yourse'1 r or have a very close
friend who makes it, you will
ne\·er be sure. Is it worth the
risk?
Gay
meeting
a success
To the t 'om mu nlty:
The firs t or ga n iutional
me-eling of Cay Lib a t UWSP
was an unques tionable succus
m demonstrating an intense
Interest and a pronounc:fd need
for organized sexua l liberation.
The o r g:~niutlona l meeUng set
Tuesday nights at 9 :30 as the
time . for future week ly
mtetings. Al10 discussed were
aspec13 of the Stevens Point
scene :and potential fun d
raising.
If you find yourself gay,
s traig ht and concer ned, or
unsure and Interest ed , our
me-etings a re for you! We e.tend our wannest invftatlon to
you to attmd our mtetinas. The
premise of the meeting.s is In·
formality and spontaneity.
If )'OU are interested In the
gay community but feel
1nhibitfd in "com ing out," call
the telephone numbrr below
and expreu your ftelinasao we
may Integrate them Into lhe
course of l(ay lib here a t UWSP.
Watch for our flyera · ·
Discover
yourself
first !
Additional In for mation : 341· '
32J7.
U WSP Gay
The Polatrr Ia a second claaa
university publicatio n ,
published wAk.ly durina lhe:
school year In Stevens Point ,
Wisconsin 54481. It 11 published
under the authority arant.ed 10
the Board o( Rqenta or State
Unlvmllln by Section S7,1J ,
Wlxonsln Statutes. PubUcaUon
c01ta a re p1ld by tht State o1
Wisconsin unde r eont.racts
awa rded by the State Printl na
SecUon, State l>q)lrtmeot of
AdmlnlsttaUon, u provided 1n
State Prinllna Operallona l
8uUetin t-J4 ol AU&Uit If, 197S.
0
-
Letters Continued
N o ve mber 15, I 973
THE POINTER
"Sensible" look
at energy crisis
T• tM f'dltor :
11 it lime fur
som~
to
~~akOOJt-iblyinlhe~
,-allf.'d''enc'r&>' c:ri5il.''
onde~
a&r«ing
Wh1le
that
th.is
· ·,·risis"•sa•·erydana:ero~~~
trmd, my reuon!l ant vasUy
lhflrl"int.
Font of aU, it 'lhould bo!
claril•t.'d"·ho the~a l c:ulpritl• ·
gon~rnmftll,
namely 1M
with
o\S$1Upldpricteonll'Olland
rtstriction sc:Mmes.
In fact .
Just r~ntly conaru.s madf: Lhe
111uauon even won" by
ti~tuen111g
naturlll ps price
<:Ontrols. All this mn-ely sen-n
todiKOUTageexplorationand
pri~a t e
lndusuial research.
,.·llile encouraaing waste and
fri •·olous usa1e of sc;orce
r~as weUuuport&
a 111·ay from t he
domesl>C'm.arkf'l.
low -pr ice
Also. ifi~Lhereisalack
of competition in 1M oil ifl·
dustry . tlllsls due In larg~ pa rt
to ttle drury •l phabt t of
fedenl
regulatory
com -
mtw-, u for eumple 1M
t'CC restricb radio and TV
competition .
V.'hat is ruUy
n~is amo•·e oothepartof
lhe 1o•·nnm~tto get out of tM
"ayar~dletthemnket,.,lveill
··crUes'' on ttsOWT\ , Thft1!
Jhould ~ ma uive proleststo
l'!' llhoe&oven~mentoutolwhere
11 does not belona n d elurly
::O:<;e M.rm than &ood: 1M
Instead. our politkians an
)Limpinlilonthe"~rr.Y band·
v.a gon" HI in motion by the
II
l>ru1dent'1 1peeeh
pret1dtntial leadenhi p 11 so
n«euary !hilt people can't do
lln)·th.nllonlhri r o\1/fl lnitla twl',
the nv.hynotcro,..n Sixonlung
1n~tead of impuchinl{ him'
And of counl' the Con&raa.
,.h1\e mouthing empty phr a.ws
abo ll lnensivco pri'SI<II'n tia l
pOV.'I'I', cltll'!la ltt 10mco mor'
•"'"l'ncy po,..con to t hf
l'rl'$tdl'nt.uith.ubftnvcory
101\dol doing ever ai nce fOR ,
nl<ll'ert~etnteumplet:Drillltthe
t:ronotnk "SI:abiliJ.&Iion '' Act
;;! ti~~ G11lf of Tonkin
1111
~~~
tn ,..,rflapptng and
pri~
cur~ trols. this ia anothl'l' cDe'
~oherethepeople a retndi n& ln
rea l freedom
for IOml'
•m•l•n&ryMoNr ity. Mand.atory
classified
ads
l~laUoo:atlon.aaidel ro.mnol
....,'"llherealsoluhon. woWdbe
anothrr &rral~ptoward\1184
1\llrr creating a problem. the
gov~mtn\ , lni' 10 form . in·
Nf'Honeglrll otubl etVIUage
apt. IOI'Znd trmestuwtlbl
other gir ls . Cont..cl Gerrl
•·n~La50mernot'edielltonlllp to
try to eolv' 11. MUniO'hJieof
COW'H the Dm!octats, with
~ta lf'mtnts l llth u " too litUe too late" tWit. Stniii.Or Caykwd
SeiiiOII, wholnc:ldentally lsllp
ror rH I.ectlon m trw.
:SU .fS \0.
Room F'or !Unt - MALE II
01' 21 U U .DOforZIIdacmesttr
ll ndudiiiJUiil!tles l Oowto
sc hool ClolrleiOWn f 'r «
parklnJ LMS Malll Si. 34 1-
lt'l!
doing their best to make the
Suon a d m l nh t ration'a
totalit nian pollc lea Look
rdatlvelymlkl.
M ~y people applauded the
uto.
WANTt:D·One malr to J ublt l
dou.blerooma\1117-F'rernOIII
St. ftlg htauOII from Unloa.
Contael Tom In room No . z.
WIIJp) y llrsl m•lh'l tC'II I.
i' restdenf l speecll u a 11~
away from Wattrpte toward
··mo r r Importan t ' ' 111\ion a l
problems. Tbb is the barest
WA NTED ro. 111 male im · UWSP J r a du ate ll udenl
medlaiel y . 10 s hare relit . l «kJ rides le Ma dboa any
IIIO.oo.Contac i Sut allln-F , wttkd ay for purpose of
Main St. anyllm t ..IOI"e 4:30.
~:!:..~';.; h ~~f.U:g'. 51~=
FOR SALE : lt70 mobile
~~:!e~!~~:..~~:~:o.:·:j.
home: %Mdr-. fi'GIII UYi•l 2'1'U anytime.
room . ntw c:arpetillg. s lllrl·
~.~ . CaU
:WI-3311 aftts' J : M !lOUSI NG WANTED F'OR
SECOND SEMESTER .
S I NGLE /VI AL£ . CA LL
GARY :Wi-3'11 01' r m tJ1 ti l .
J OUS OS SIUPS ! No u ·
perlea<t l't'quired. E~:ed l ea:
pay . Wo rld wide travel.
Perfetl I IIIIIIDtr Job 01
career . SeDCI 13.D0 lor ill•
f«malloa . SEAFAX . Dttll.
P .O. 801: U41. Port
Angeles. Washlng\.01:1 til%.
u.,
•
STEREO EQUIPM ENT FOR
SA Lt:
DISCOUNTS f' RO:ol
modern
·~IIOr5
...---··
11\tCWtktl.
...
_,_~
,._
~ pt: RCENT TO iO PER·
Ct:!'liT ALL BRA NDS AND
~~t\~. Gl~ ·c;;;~~·H~asl
RETAIL .. II OCI.
WIIOLF.SALE .. ISt. RON AT
~1-5ZOO.
1-' 0R SALE : Partl for Opel
Kadtl Some par \:I near 11ew !
Ca ll 8111 • U l Sl m• Hall 341-
,.,
%5-49
,\dvulli.IDIIIIIHm iA•aa\eCI
1o r
E L E C T R I C
MESSENGER TM . Com ·
m\ ul oa bub . II hlltresl.ed
~~!e):~ Pr~r~':.
·N«ded: Children 'l clollllall , : : n .
a nd furnllvr t f.- a oew Corp . ~ E . Moarw. O.ka&o.
e hold trutmeal c:e aler near III . MtOl.-eaiiJI%-7az.tl lt.:
1o3:•
~~=~iy ~:~r=:n:.:·~= ~~~~~~ee!:'tt':.'::f~~
uu -d. Ca ll J ohn al 34J-S3111 or
TllmorT-·aO.I1drta JII·:ZS.S..
IDS I.
UIIIIUII bt obtained ITODI Mr
B. 8uKII'a oftke •
Page 18
THE POINTER
Novembe r 15, 1973
Letters Continued Again
Letters to the tdltor must be signed , typewri tten
and doubles paced. The POINTER will wllhhold
names from publica tion upon request. Letters s hou ld
be limited to no more tha n 300 words In length . The
editor reserves the ri ght to edit all letters. The
dead line Is 1\flonday noon .
Mandatory Student Activity Fees Justified
To o.~ Pel a~ N .ltor :
I woWd hke to prottst two
articles tn tbt Oct. 4 Pabtu :
"vital uprc~ o1 a stude.nt's
educaUon."
I, for example, find music
one, purporting to just.ify
feH , lhe other a letter rtndi.ng
the proposed usn- f« unfair.
Of course, these two closely
rela tt'd subjec ts cannot bt'
d 1 s cussed in v a 1 u e
gt'ne r a l itles wi thout ~e r -
both entertaining and
educ::allonal ; but 1 have nt\-er
demanded th.lt other students
br forced to p1y for my records.
Why not alve each indiviGual
sludt'nt the choict' of spending
his $42 per yt'a r as he sees fit'!
lt ls truethat someoflhe money
Accord.in~ to Mr. Sippel, "U
act.ivlly fe!e were not
mandatory , many students
y,·ouldootpay•t" , perhapstrue,
mdee-d
b..lt
what
a
Justlficatton ~"
This Is
eqwvalent to saying we- must
t"St.abllsh Olnstianity as the
sla te religion, because otherWISt' some people- would not join
a chu rch
Thought eon t r o I and
economic control both spell
ty ran ny and oppression. Sure
enough , so me "se rv ices"
provided through our com·
pul sory fees may be
"educattonally beneficial : " but
"education" - perhaps rather
towardiUeneeess!Utt:, perhaps
drinking. llcr.·e~ r " bad" may
brlheusetowhichthatmooey
as put, ia it anyone's ri&ht to
dt'cidt' for 1.11 how we &pt'Dd our
acUvity money'! ChoiCt' being
the usence of !reot'dom .
defenders of tht' present
compulsory fee systt'm are
really refl ecting a fundamental
lack of fa ith In freedom itself,
though they ore hard put to
admit it. They all hide behind
th e f t~l a e
viMgl!'li
of
"education" and "5C1'Vices,"
SomemaYrt'plynow thalthe
s tudents DO have co ntrol
manda tory s tudent activity
Indirect control a tyranny of the
majnrity as ol)pOI$('d to truly
tree direct choice H~'i! \'er
abused lhat phrase, v.·hat 1
really want Is " pM1rer to the
novot\'tT , ts that 50nlt money
goes toward at least p;~rtially
ptOple!" 1 rtsft\1 the fact that
a majority can tell me that
since l' mtooatupidtospendmy
ownmoncytheyh3vetQspendit
for me to glvt' me the best
political organiz.at10ns such as
the Veta for Peace. United
Coundl,· lht' WiJConsin Pubtic
l nl t'rt's l Huearch Group,
t\.I.R.O., and the 131ack Student
r.~,~~~~i~~~n~et~~-tent ~~K!\~fsf~.~7!~ w~:~~
the
~~~ ':!:~:t'sr:~\:
~~~~~ ~~~ r~n~~~
WORK OVERSEAS
All !lkllh and pn>f<oolotuo
Studt:nl8 and Gradnatee
Male
IJI~h.-r
So. and
wnte
Female
poay, no tau., trawel to Au.tralla. Daope.
~n tn.l Amerk:a.. Alrir.a and So. f'.Mt Aa1a.
t nr
our broc:bu.re:
~~r':o~ld~tudeut
lt'l'.S Or.mlno F'1crN
Opportullttlett
I
the c urrent
fee syste m ,
Co.1 hton
ll o.,.,· rv~r noblt! the
;urns ol some of
these
organt1allons mmy be, they
.... ootdstrveusallmuchbetler
1f they were volun taril y
financed
ror example, the
$1000 per yea r to Uni ted Council
1s used to lobby for Wliversal
\'oter r~ls tra llon and a&ainst
user ffot'S ; pa rtisan political
purposes representing yiews
on a volumlary buls, would br
3 strp In the right direcUon.
Act'rptlng this concept would
quilt' naturally rai5t' ticlr.t't
costs - b..lt I K"t no reason v.·hy
pect.ators at athletic l'\'t'nts
should not be.a r their full cost.
And by claiming that the user
fl"l' may bl' a deterrent to
recreation . the Athletic Adviso ry Comm ittee is really
implying that we ca re so lltUt'
for rec rea tion that we will not
pay for Its cost a nd hence have
to for ce Wisconsin taxpayers to
A ldtu to CllanC'e llor Oreyfu
La nn of u.~ J•OJNTER :
Our Chancellor Dreyfus,
we ·~ six students v.-ho art'
1nterestt'd about tht' pt"t'Sefft
policy of not allowing any
bt'vt'rage more than s perce-nt
alcohol by we ight in ou r
unive-rsity Jiving quarters. As
the policy has been explaint'd to
us by the llousin& Office, the
board of regen ts presently
allows each chancellor of the
UW Syste-m to decide to v.·hat
extent alcoholic liquids up to 5
h1ndranct' 1n the- stud)·ing
conditions ! &a perceontl, or
living atmosphneo !92.-4 perceno in the dorms bt'cause of
tht' presfllt bt'er policy
We v."Ould bt' \'l'ry Interested
In any comments you ~.-ould
havt' about our survey, and if
possible could you tell us if we
nrc correct In the fac t that the
UW rcgt'nts are responsible for
sell ing any further alcohol
limits. AiJO, we would like to
uskyoutouplain)·ourfeelings
on the prneont policy
of
pe:rcent limit the UW Systt'm
, reogents will consider giving
their approu l to allo ....· hard
liquor in the- state dorms only
if it is rl'QUe:tted by a numbl'r of
UW chance.llol"'. and then it
wou ld on ly be allowed on
ca mpust.-s where it had been
requested.
We have rt!'Cently surveyt'd
students In UWSP dorms and
allow1ng hard liquor m lhe
dorms
We- hope that )' OU v.·111 excuse
us for using such an tnd1rec:t
m<~nne r lo coniAcl you on !his
mauer , but ""'l' f~l tha t by
using the l'olntl'r as a forum
more pt-ople ca n be Infor med
about this :~i t unllon through
)'OUr ans-.ers Thank you for
your time-
C'OUrlt', from a purely selfl.sh
slandpo.nt , most studftlls don't
m1nd subsidies from the- gmeral
taxpa)·er But the real ls.sut' is
falmt'S.,, and ht'rt' Govt'mor
Lucey Ms tllktn the correct
stand, and I applaud him for it.
If the views expresst'd above
are dismissed as those of a
sm::.ll r ndlcu l· llber t a rian
fr inge of tht' student body, so
Sin~) .
': ~ ...~~~~~n~~~or;~ol~;:;~a!:
sprech ·
" Extemlsm in t.he
~~";:~, ~f :~rt y ts no vice"
~~~t ~:.!~r~"~;;~ i~~
~~;:eoydl~~;·e;:c~~t ....~re thf~
favor of seeing hard liquor
al:
~~~~·i;~ut>ee:o'~~~ht'r:rm;~~
i'ob Gil l
t•onko . Hor ) l•r ol tr .
\l ark Stolbrr,
~~!~::an ,
)
oo~~h:;:;tf::, \~~~~le~~~:t
Dorm Students Ask
For- Hard Liquor
Cal_.lf _•_•----------1 ~~~·t~a:n ~r~r:~ ~
L-T1>oua&Dd
_ _ _o.u.
__
" f'ducat 1on "
Th~ m06t shocku'li fact about
K~
Ch r l~>
Steo,·~
do so.
Furthermore. I would
qut'Stlon both the validity and
~! r~:,a~~~·~eo~:\'~~ittd:;
1 1
: RESERVE- AN APARTMENt~
TODAY~
)')
* 2 BEDROOM 2 BATHS
* FULLY FURNISHED AND CARPETED
* DISHWASHER, DISPOSAL
* ALL UTILITIES PAID BY OWNER!
* HEATED POOL - FOR THOSE SPRING MONTHS!
* LAUNDRY
FACILITIES AND PING PONG TABLES ON
PREMISES
* CLOSE TO CAMPUS
* OBSERVAB'LE WILDLIFE!! !
FOR NEXT
'SEMESTER AT THE VILLAGE I,
)
)
)
,)
!)
i)
.)
)
(
IF YOU MOVE IN AFTER VACATION YOU PAY ONLY FROM THE TIME YOU ARE THEREf
COME OVER TO
THE VILLAGE
-
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(
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(
(
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•>
THE POINTER
November 15, 1973
pointer podium
•
Q.
Pcge 19
L y n J a kuu, Jun lor
" I ftel !'\ixon has over ·
steppt'dhlsbounds. lflhe
people don't get on to him and
start cracking down on what
heisdoi ng,heisgoingto rtll
usintoalotof hass.IH."
Wh a t art' y.ur •·it'>n
roe~c:ern i n g Sbon ~
Sandy Nt"h.on, Stnior
'' l don 'tthlnkthatheshou!d
be 1mpeacht.-d
If more
e•·idc~~eecomesupandthing s
come more out in the open,
thenlheymightha•·ereason
to impeach him ."'
Joe Edm islon
t.:dml~ton. Junior
" l ha¥en'tgotmuchuse Cor
him , l neverhad. Heisareal
sha rppoli ticianbut a rott en
leadll!'r ."
JOt"
Ken Gray·
Mn Gra y. Snkw
" l don'tthinkth;~the should
bf', PrHident
lie has.n 't
shown me anyth1ng that
deser•·es res pect . l think he
should be lmput'hed or
forced to resia n :·
Sunny Nar:ag . Frn hman
"As an onlooker to the>
whule Amencan polit1cal
perspecth·e.andafter ha¥mg
expertence ..,lh pohhcs of
other countne-s. I ,.uu!d JUSt
la)' thatat'OW\tT)' hUitood
scasonsandbad inpoht1e1,
andthtJ I Sabad~ason
I
opllmiSIIUII)' hope that he
well ha•·e the good one pretty
Phil Stedman
lyn Jokusz
Sandy Nelson
( lfrt lf~11 • o.ITrtllt 0 1f'l•<tT. (M•OO~J I:IOC.~ lt"'
~-K,.,..r#, ,ItO"' Q~~ "~IOIC.IO 4 $C"Nit:" M A T;
'~OM ... 0\Aa oo< ~K"'flt;
l'£ji!PLfltl0 O llt OlAD)
T"l' l'l' l oiC.
II
-··
l'll il&~ ma.n . S..nlor
" Deahng with the idea of
of energy . at
c:on~ation
~~:'~f l=~i~e :!~o!!~
1
•
~hmit t o l i rt y
1\~~o'OI.IId
if he put a hea•'ler
taxon manufat'turersoflarge
be!
1111ser
mgmn."
Sunny Norog
K.rt'" Milbt'ISft'. Senior
" 1 can't rtally say that I
would hke to ha•·e tum 1m·
pearhedbeea~lthinkthat
the count ry needs umt)'
I
can'tsaythatlagree,.,th
some of his mo•·es either." '
Jeff Heinz
J eff llelu,S..olor
" He's m big lrouble. I'm
gtving him two week s
to r uia n . He't got to
show some prett y hard core
evtde~ to me that he can
still uphold the funda men tal
forms or democr acy ~~oith
,..Inch he wa• installed into
the office ."
.··-·::--.. ,. ,, ....,· ../:Koren Milheiser
l)f'ftlw lhoro;c" a k. f''ru hntan
" l ttun k lhatMshouldtll'
tmpeached J don'tlhmkthat
he 11 effech>'t as a pres~dent
anymore
H t 11 undtr too
much pressurei n officeandl
think th at ht should be
removed."
•
Dick Semrow
llk k Sernrow. Senior
" I don't th in k thet he hat
the decencyto r esigniO I
guess one would hi ve to
tm peaeh hlm ."
•
..
-
'
'
..i
Gf"tg llau l. Sophomor~r.
" I don't know that he
should be 1mpeat'hed right
~tway
He lhould ei~er
resignortheyshouldRet nght
down to the bottom <~ f the
who.leninycritty ttunc They
~uldgetthe tapesoUltnthe
open and, if he ll&uilt y. then
ta.kecareofhi m"
Greg Hoo~l
Denise Ovorscok
Kdth Otll . c ubrf'P(Irter
" Nixon .who ?"
•
U!!!J'P'- p_Q
_ IN
_T
_ E_R
..............................
editorial page
energy conservation is
everyone's problem
by Dave Gnelsu
The maJOr naw in Nixon's
ener gy savang proposnJ is
that . while it places emphasis
on the indivi dual, it ignores
Officials Are Incompetent,
Inconsistent Lei st Week
by Jtrry l.onK
Until lo s t Sa turday , the
UWSP P ointers ha d had t heir
share of the bruU Un ti l last
~ t u r day, the l~om t ers had
r«rn·ed the1r fa u share of the
quest!on.able calb from the
orf•c•als- tht)' had won a few.
:md they had lost a few. The
Pomter opponents won thei r
l>h3tt' of the t'low t"alls and hAd
lost thei r sha re
Unt tl last
Satutda)', no one had reason lO
carp about the offieLalhng a t the
\\SL:C footb311 games.
But the mcom ~tencc, m·
•·unsttency :• nd genera.\ bush·
leagut> performance of t he
orf•c•als at the
Pointers· last
Jtotme of the 1973 season canno1
l{o unnoted It was. frankly, a
scme remlnls.«nt ol the 197'2
Olymp1c Gu mt.os. It wasn't so
much that the l)ointers lost a.'l
tha t the off tcta ls took the game
a-...ay
Fumbles that 5hould have
~~~ ruled u'K'om plete puses
-...ere called even though the
n.-cetven 5i mply didn't h&ve
IIOSSE'SSion of the ball. At leaSI
t-...tce the ball was ruled dead
t-ven though 11 was bounding
through the au aft er an actual .
real. li\'e. honest to goocfnn.s
~~~ b':an?; t~e ~~~~ c~~ ~f!
receiver, seeing tha t he had no
c ha nce to ca tc: h the ball .
Poi nt ~
smacked into the
de fende r , deli be ra tel y. not
acc1dnitally - the defender
-... asn't t\' tn looking at the
receiver- but the officia l, who
was NOT on the spot. ruled II a
c:aK" of def~ive pass in·
terference Isn't tha t supposed
to
be
oHens• ve
pan ·
.nterference" Once. the Falcon
defensh·e lme came cha rging
off sides. but the otncials just
coincidentally, weren't watch·
•1'18- Pla)"S WH"t" callt'd bac.lr.inK
b)· officials who ,.-errn't v.·he:re
they ,.·ere s uppo~ to be. They
made calls on plays they \litre a
ha lf a footba ll field a-...·ay from
Well. just what the hell is their
func tion if they a ren 't going to
p:ay auenllon to the game'! ·
No-..· of courst. some clown
somewhere is going to' think
th!lt the only reuon I'm •rked
about thu sltuattOn •s because
my team lost. Cra p.
The reason I'm trked about
this is bec::aUk the problem
e:xlStsand none of thefalhead.sat
the WS UC headquarters will do
anything about It The fa ct of
Point Blank
by Robllam Jr.
Nice weathe r we 've been
hav ing .
Balm y breezes
w1s ping along at 175 miles
per hour . all the way from
Anta rc tica . Scraping leaves
along frostbi tte n s idewalks,
freezing hands halfway into
poc kets , pe trif y ing trees
before they're fully grown a hh. isn' t na ture wonderful !
Onc e aga i n . people hav e
di sc overed jus t how e n tertaining it is to s tare at the
ground and watch their feet
as they walk to c lass .
Everything is turni ng gray .
w ith e r i ng a way, decom ·
pos ing , rott ing , deteriorating ,
decaying a nd eve ntually
being passed off as meat at
De Bot.
The whole thing i.a, of
course , acomm leplot . WeaJI
know that som~here in the
sky , outside that cold s tee.ly
winter shell , the SW'I , the
warm air and the s luff that
makes tbe leaves green is s till
there . We aU know that we
are presenUy existing in the
deep freeze bottom or God 's
Amana. right'?
Around this time or year we
begin to exper ience que-er
the matter is that some. if not
amnmany, nf the ""offlda ls" In
th(' WSUC an· no more qua lified
••f actual ~ rformance IS the
cnterion 1 to bt< officials than I
am . I can make bad calls as
v.ell ;u the)' can No doubt that
the coaches 111 the WSUC a re
uware of the problem : no doubt
that some of them have made
their ftehngs known to the
WSUC. btlt why 1n the namto of
the se\·en m.ad gods who rule the
)ea does n' t a nyone do
somethmg about 11
Pa rt of the rt>ason for having
penalt ies Is to help pre ..·ent
mjuries. In a ~a rn e that saw
many personal fouls go un·
ootice4. one ....-onders why -... t
t \'en bother \loith rules and
officia ls We could rf50rl to the
murderous kind of play one .sees
at a .504.'cer or hockey gam e.
The ga me m1g.ht be more mter·
esting, but then 11 wouldn't be
football .
As fOI' Saturday's referees at
the S tev~ Point· River r alls
11ame. perha ps they'd better
dea n up their act or seek 11 .lob
-...· ith the IOC The Interna tiona l
Olymp ic Comm itt ee has a
knack for findmg JObs for in·
competH~ t referers.
the major e nergy was ters .
stantial a mount of gasoline .
How much more gas could be
s aved H i ndus t ry was
required to produce cars tha t
did a minimum or 20 miles to
the g a llon ? The national
aver age is now about 12 miles
to th e ga llon .
The inefrici ent use o f
energy by industr'1
continues to was te an in ·
ca lcula ble a mount or our
limited fuel resources. Also in
question are the inefficient
me thods used by industry to
manufa c ture these product s.
Indust r y was tes energy in the
manufacture of the product s
that waste energy.
While ma kmg our' com ·
pl a ints known on ind ustry·
caused e ne rgy wastes, we
must begi n to correct the
abuses a round us. The best
place to sta rt is right he re at
the university
Re port ove r -heated a reas
o f the un i ver s ity to the
maint e nance departmen t .
Thermosta ts should be set n l
68 degrees .
Hall councils s hould discuss
ways of conserving ene rgy in
the dorms a t their next
meetmg . They s hould the n
ta ke act ion on their ideas .
Unnecessa r y li ghts s hould
be re moved from brightly lit
hallways .
long . hot showers could
become shor t warm shoY..-er9 .
U ghts should be turned orr
when they will not be used for
long per iods or time. The
s ame goes for the TV, stereo
and radio .
The use of
lights on
Old Main s hould be discon ·
Unued .
• Chris tm as
decoration s
s hould be unlit. We can enjoy
them in the daylight.
The use of elevator s, except
by the handicapped , should
be discontinued by facult y
and students .
Use of Wliversity vehicles
Should be curtailed.
Gas mileage s hould be the
dete rmining factor in the
future purchase of university
vehicles a nd nny othe r s ta te ·
owned vehicles .
We s hould make known , by
ex a mple and s uggestion,
wa ys in wh ich the city of
Stevens Point ca n , a lso con s erve energy .
Th e s e nr c but n few
suggesti ons . Let us have
more s uggestions, but most of
all . let us carry the m out . It is
no longer n question of
whethe r Americans can give
up the Sundny·a fle moon car
ride , or th e boat and the
snowmobi le . 1lley m ust give
them up !
nood
_J
The Student Norm
Suretar'" :
~>e-W e Denson. Ruth Grange r.
Judi Guth , Unda Molitor and
Jane Thiel
by Tourus
Trth:
PeMy Gi llma n. Chns Kroll.
r•a tt y Morunt i and Shirl ey
Spitt l(•mebllt r
Photogra phu• :
Tom llalfmaM, Bill Paulson
and Don Palmquist
(ir•phln :
Denrus Je.r120
Sport1 Wrllt'n :
Sue Anderson , J oe Burke .
Dennis Cox. John frlt&c:h , Jim
Habeck, Diane PleuM and Mike
Yauck
Ad vlsc.- :
Dan lloullhan
Writtn :
l ydia Abell, Mary Budde, Tony
Charles. Bob lla m. jr., Debra
llill. Jdf Cloninger. Lorraine
lloulihan. Pt rry J t'llt·ell, Mart
Kurszewslr.l , Mary Lemberger,
Mary AMe Moore, Krll a.1oum ,
Kathy O'Connell , Keith Otll,
Robe rt a Pearson, Kathie
llossmllltr. Mark Vollrath and
LawreMe Wilson
~~~~y )of fo~ymJ:~Y pi~~~
and turkey dinners in the
frozen foods s rction of our
favor ite s uperma rk et.
As
soon a s some hot dog can
scrape up enough fl akes for a
snowba ll . things will really
get rolling.
Of course . now is the time
for all good men to turn their
thermostats down to an in·
vigorating s ixty-five degrees ,
to conform wi th the te m perature in Mr . Ni xon's
bedroom . Fear not- there are
alte rnative sources of heat
which we are all a wa re of. As
long as we ha ve visitation
rights , things will s tay wa rm
to partly cloudy . tr thing! get
too bad , a nd your li ps fuse
together, you can always try
rubbing nos-es.
Fresh air riends could learn
~e~~~ ~~~i~~:! ~ m~~~- ~~fsla~S ~~~thw\~doh::ts~~~ed
Buslnns MaaaJe.r :
Diane Eve:naon
t\ds :
l.
Cindy Kaufman
Sports Editor:
Jerry Long
Photo Editor:
Hog.. """
staff
Aullllal Edl\orl :
.,
Pa t DIUIIo, Dive Gnelser 1nd
UW Centro! Admin istration:
blow in in the wind. .
Terry WIU
Edll.-:
Robert Knbfeck
•
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