' INTER U!!!.IPPO •

advertisement
'
•
U!!!.IPPO INTER
SERIES" VU/, VOL.
17 UW-ST£VENS POINT, THURSDAY, JANUARY 24,
1974 NO. 16
Senate Cuffing Dreyfus
by Krb :\town
Reso lulions to e-liminate
Govemment mtttin&.
It wn ~i dtd by lhe FAC
student funding of the ae·
countant position and fw the
that the Olanc:ellor's Rt1er11e
should be reduced fTom U.e
reduction of the ~ncdlor's
Rtterve ..,we pr~ted by
St udent Controller . Bob
Badzinsk.i. at lhe Student
Govtmment meetif!i. Jan.
Accounting se r vices for
student activities h ave
remaiMd the same since the
position was first created.
uo ..·ever , lhecosaha,·eriHTl
prewnt amount or SIO.OOO
annually to SS.OOO. The
Ctumcellor may use the
mooey from this fund in any
way he chooses. Last year the
reserve money ~~o·as used to
produce a recruiting film .
FAC's r esolution st ated
that Student Ac t i,•i ty accounts are iltllicipating a l5
per cent reduction in
from $4 ,7$:!to S8.028 for 1973-
avail able funds for the fiscal
7~ . wilh an antidpated nse to
$9,000, plldfringe~ditsfor
years
20.
nextyear .
Th is cOil re presents fl\·e
per cent of the to~ l budget
fDf" 197~75 and exceeds the
budietsof 1Softhe2J studmt
actiVIt)' ae<:olUits . mci!Kting
Student Gove r nmen t . the
tntlreunlvenltycom muni ty.
the Busineu Affairs Comm ittee decided It was
equitablelocharaea feetoall
faculty members and administrative personnel. Final
action will be taken next
.,.,,eek.
The recommend ation
presented by Kung was ad·
dre ssed to all ruldent
assistantsand dormdii-Kton
conce rning
unnecessa r y
lightina in restrooms.
Kung ' s
committee
recommended that the
flu or esce nt lighting In
rntrooms be reduced to a
mini mum, and be switc hed
off during periods of In·
\97~ to 1975.
Due to the AnticlpMefl
reduction. al l student ac·
Uvities will be reducl'<l , wi th
the probable elimination of
funding fo r some
orgamuUons, and reduction
in qu;;ntity and quality of the
l't'maining programs.
~=hs~~~t
activities co~~ F;e~~~~ ~~a:.~:~
rKe1ve less than half.cime student apathy And a larger
reduct11.m 1n enrollment.
the student activity fund must
The- resoluti on was ac·
pay for a full·time position. cep t ed by the Stu dent
The various student ac· Government and will also be
11vities cannot rely up(Wl the \"O<Ied on at the next mee-ting.
serviC'H provided because of
The ruolution was Oil':
the many dela)~ . mistakn cepted by the Student
and O<lher problems from Go\·ernment and will also be
account1ng Sft'\'lttS . ac · \"Otedonatthenext meetinl.
cordm& to the Finance and
A 5.5 per cent frHU on net
Allocations Committee a ll otments was recom ·
tFA CI report.
mended by I'"AC to balance
Due to t~ reasons. the the Student ActiVJtin Ac·
f.'AC rnolved that Student.s count.s. A freeu was in·
Activ1tin will nO( fund the st1t uted unlil defimte action
accou nt ing
serv1ces . can be !.Ben. A total of
begiMing ..,;th the fiscal year S\6. 123 I.S n~ to balan«
t975 Tbe resolution will be the acrounts.
\"O<Ied on at !he neltl Student
An amendment was added
servictsfn)mthe~untant.
UAB secret
project now
in the works
•
~oro~;:s!is
~=~~ ffe:r~
:;r
Winegarden . Winega rden
as ked that a six per cent
across the board freeze be
Investigated and presented at
the next meetinfl before a
definite decision is made.
Sen . Bob Kung , chai rm an
of t he bu11neu a ffairs
com mitt ee. prese n ted a
resolution and a recom ·
mendationwhich stated that
a ll faculty members and
administrative personnel
51\ould be requi red to pay •
feeforuseofthe lhli~rsity
byAJ M:rtSla11ek
UAB Chair.man Da ve
Yo'heeler is ~Jking about a
"Specia l project " costing
IOTTlewhere in the area of
S9000. Wheeler would not
discl05ewhathehad lnmlnd.
Ue would only say that the
UAB would like to have0f1e big
conc:c:Tt after \\~uhbone Ash ~let Afeeof$4SIM ~IIy.
Wheeler requested per· "'"hich 11 the prK:e paid by
studl!fll$, ..,.as recomm~ed.
ml.'~IIOI1 from the F AC last
L'WSP's Uni\'etllty Center
weekloustsr.'OOthatll~ng
heldmes.c:roeaspreliminary 1s a selfofupporbng operat1on
booking money The m0f1ey funded solely by ltudent
had beotn placf'd 1n exroe funds and the r""·enue from
after a canceled performance llsoperatton. except for a
Y"arlysubsidyo f121U7 tfrom
two yea n ago
The FAC authoraed
V.'heelertousethtmoneyto ~"'ct ~t~~~:.!m'~,';!
nc-aotiate a contuc:t but report soud
A.s the un,verll ly Center
would not release the money
prov•des setVICI!S for the
unlll a cont ract 1s signed
Leo Buscalia, the renownf'd "Jove~
doc: tor ." will speak in the Quandt Gym,
F'rtday at 8 p.m . The title of his Jectun
is " Aftt:r Love-Wha t"!"
lie plans t.o visit "'ith small studen t
groups at various points on campus on
the after noon before his formal address
and on the following day. There will be
no admission charge.
Lost Call For Candidates
StudtntStnalt l:leetlon~ forSerlll lun.J,.nllllr)' 31.11 71 111
the ('of'\d . Pl ust volt~
Pf'litiCift•for thoseinltret.tf'dinrvnnlngd~w,Jan . ::11 , 1~1.
(lpf'ninJI In all dl~trict s .
POINTER deadlines pasted
Thf' dudiiM for :advtrU~In J mattrbl Is noon . Frida y.
and lht dudthw for all copy is ;\londay n -. We are
pr.wnUy llmlltil by oor biHIIr-1 u to ttw nnmber of PIJH
.. e may prlnt. Some dttay In publbltlna ar liclt-S may be
npt'rltnctcl btcacastllflht Iacko!' 1pau. Wtuk ) "OUT
undr-ntandln1 and you r C'GOpf'r:IUon by ~ ubmlltln J
matr:rlalbylht dn dlinn .
fr equent usetohtlpc:onser ve
energy.
ln other action. Prnident
Hamilton spoke to the Senate
and Assembly a~ t a 2S year
loan ~ayment program as
an alternative to the present
program. The pr01ram is
known as the Wisconsin
Guaranteed Higher Education
Proposal, CWG IIEP I. The
program wuultl apply tu 1111
coll<'gH\inWisconsin .
In furthtraction, Uamilton
info rmed the Senate and
As5emblyabouttheddeatof
the cam pus mall.
At the Dec . 17 Ot)' Council
mceting,thecouncii\'OtedlG3inflwor of clo!lng F'ronklin
St.
Th ei r nc li on was
defea ted, hovtever. because
of a.petitionci rculattdamong
property owners within the
area of the proposed mall .
According to state law.
property owners can k~p a
Slfftl from being c:lostd by
obtaining the signatures of
one third of the property
o"'nerswithln theconcemed
area
IIAmiltnndoes not consider
theissuedeadasilispouibile
tohaveasufficlentnwnberof
people voluntar ily remo\·e
their namn from the petition.
llam•llon also spoke to the
Senate and Assembly about
UWSP's funding level as
comparedtoothertchools in
the UWSystem .
llamilton said that if our
fundm1le•·e1was the same as
UW-Gre...n Bay . we "'"OU.Id not
have lost any profeuors We
..,;II ha•·e lost 70 by the end of
the year.
UWSPis fundl'<lhiJher per
capita for our administ r ative
personncithanother schools
1ntheUWSystem Uecauseof
this , ..,.e have lost only
professors. an d no ad ·
m1mstrators , s.aid Hamilton
Enrollment 1n the Day Ca re
Centerforst"Cond semester Is
:W. ascompared to <4/Jchildren
th e ftrst ~mester , saidGar y
Winte r s. vlce ·pr nide nt of
student government
The en rollment drop has
not affe cted the inc ome .
Winttrs added , s ince the
children enrolled stay for
longer penods of hmn
Pn ont y for enrollment
does I!X ISl t 'J t SI pnonty JOH
to the chtldTen of full ·time
st udents. !«<ndtopart ·time
students and third to the
chtldn:noffaculty
llomtstead Rel1tf form s
an 1ncluded m the Yo1xonsln
Income Tax booklet Extra
forms :tte avAilable 1n tht
Siudent Govtrnmtnt offl(:e,
sa1d Hamilton
Page 2
THE POINTER
January 24 , 1974
Luce condemns US involvement 1n Vietnam
by
~lar y Ann~
:.toore
·· Amenca is still involved
m the Viet Nam War- .·· said
Don Luce . Viet Nam expert
v.'ho spoke on the topic " Viet
Nam ·· One Yea r Later ,"
Monday, Jan . 21. in Old Main
Aud1tor• wn .
" We nre killing 5,000 people
eac h month wit h o ur
economiC and militar y
asststance to the Saigon
go\•ernment. ·· he sat d .
''Wllhout our assistance the
war couldn't go on ."
Luce sa1d that in January
1971. the bmlding of 38~
" •solation cells" !tiger
cages 1 was financed by the
Food for Peace money. The
cells were built by American
co mpan•es
located
throughout the United States.
M any of the handcuffs
p r esently be mg used to
res!t a1n prisoners were
manufac tured by a company
tn
Spr•ngfield.
~t assachuse lt es. he said .
' ... prisoners in these
tiger cages hove
nothing to read but
the imprint on
the ir shockles-Sm ilh
& Wesson , Mode
in. the U .S.A.;
Acco rd ing to t he Paris
Agreem e nts . a ll political
pnsoners were to be released .
The Cities of the north can
be rebuilt. he srud, but if the
South Vietnamese are kept
out of the1r farmlands by the
S.:ugon government , they \nil
be forced to remain 111 thl'
s lum s . Without the food
produced by these fann ers.
the south rna\' face a food
shortage .
•
P eople living in the country
controlled by the Pro\' IS!onal
Revolutionary Government
of North Viet !'\am t PRG l a rc
tremendous ecologists . Luce
satd . They are raismg crops
as well as ma king use of the
remnants of the war . such as
boxes . crates and many
mili tary supplies .
Luce said he feel:. that the
PRG ma\· fare bt'tler than thr
Satgon gOvernment Tht')' are
bwldmg hosp1ta\:. and schools
and generally talung ca re of
their people
The people of the north and
PRG seem to be much happter with thctr go\'ernment
than those under the sa.gon
r egime . . Lu ce sa 1d The
go,·emmcnt of tht.• south was
selected bv the Umted Stall'S
"One Or the frust ratmg
thmgs about Amcn cans IS
that they get more roncemed
0\·er the 20·25.000 barrels of
oil lost per d:t)' to military
acti\'ttv in V1ct Nam than
they 'do O\"Cr the great
number of J>eo pl(' being
kJIIt.>d. " Lucc sa1d .
" \lts ha rd for us to think of
(h(' \'tetnam('se as people."
sa 1d Lure "OtheN'ise. we
"ould be sendmg medicine
:md t'<lucalOrS therl' ms tead
of nuhtar y s uppl ies ." he
added
Lucc was nsked if he felt
Aml•ncans would s tand for
total n.•tn,·olvement in Viet
:\am
" I don 't thmk we "ill
become m\'olved with groWld
troops agam ." he said . " It is
passible that " 'e may reswne
the bom b1ng of the south ."
'' The mcd1a a rc m or e
madrquate thon .naccurate in
Grade review option offered
UWSP students may appeal
grades they have receh•ed to
the Screening Committee for
Grade Review . Th e Com mittee is composed of three
students. two facu lt y in structors and one college
dean
To appeal, a student shouJd
first discuss the matter 'ol.1th
the mstructor . He shouJd then
send an explanation
tpreferably written 1 of why
the g rade is WJ!air , to Dean
Trainer. room 136, Coll ege of
Nat ura l Resow-ces Building
A letter is then sent to thl'
•n s tr u ctor invol ,•ed .
requesting his view on the
a~:::e;:~y ~~~:: rhgafe"' ~~~::n~~r :~~::dJng
been changed to crimina]
charges m order to keep them
m prison ," said Luce .
The bombing ol tarms m
So uth Viet Nam has pushed
the peopl e mto the slwns of
the cities . At the same time.
the bombmg of cities in the
north has moved more people
mto the country. Luce said .
the department m .,.,.hJch the
course was taken
The Grade He\'1ew Committee considers the student ·s
r eq ue s t
If th ey find
g rounds wh1ch md1catc a
~rad e change , the mstructor
IS requested to t'hange the
grade
Onl) the mstructor can
change the ~ r ade If the m·
structor refuses to change
the grade. the Grade Re\'lew
Commlltee may attach a
s ummary of Jts findmg to the
student 's transcripts
The Grade Jte,·tew Com·
m1ttee may remo,·e the grade
from tht.' !otudent's grade
po111t a\'eragc In the case of a
gradua t1ng sen ior with a
gr ade of " f "' Wtder review.
t h e comm1ttee may
r('('ommend to the chai rman
of tht.• st udent ' s major
department . that the siUdent
be a llo.,.,ed to graduate.
Grades must berevtewed in
1he nex t full semesJer im ·
m cd •atei~ follow~ng the
semester 111 wh1ch the grade
"a ll rt.'Ct!l\'l'd
New Pro-gram Aims
To Assist Middle
Class Students
n fe-&rc-ening Committee
co n side r s t he student 's
request . u groWlds seem to
ex..ist which indicate that a
gr ade change is needed. t he
by Shirll'y Splttlt' rnl' iStN
request and the instructor 's
The 1975-76 school year
reply are ro n~o· ardecl to the may bnn2 w1th tt a nc.,., form
Grade Review Committee . of financ ial a1d
wh1ch is composed of three
The s ta te of W1 sconstn
facul t y instructors . one from Higher Edu cat ional A1ds
Board ha s proposed the
W•scon s tn
Guaranteed
lltgh e r Edu cation P ian
t WG HEP l A repor t released
by the board stated that one
thing that WG !l EP w 111 at t~m p t to resol\'e 1s m n•gard
to the state 's new Ill-yea r -old
age-of-majonty legJslat10n
The repor sta ted that ttl<>
plan will try to reli e,·e
bnng the same things to the gro...., ng concern of mtddle by Perry Jewell
n.e name SDS (Students people of Stevens Pomt The •ncome parents over the n s 1ng
for a Dem ocratic Society l peo ple involved a r e con · costs of h1gher t.-duca t10n
probably conjures up visions
ce rn e d i ndiv i du a ls who According to the report, 11
of wild-eyed , long haired . believe that ever yone should Will msure broad and equal
bomb throwing fanatics for
be aware of the things that access for all students to
most . Maybe these visions are ha ppening around them
are well foWlded . ln the late and should try and do
sixties the SOS was not noted something about them
also lt)' to rehe\'e the com At the present moment pe:lillon that the need for
fo r its peaceful endeavors but
that organization hopefully there are about 25 to 30 s tudent financ•al a•ds has for
died with the last decade . SOS members in the SOS itself but the tax dollar , soud the report
died as a national the group is aligned wtth the
The report s t ated that
Vets for Peace and the Bla ck WGHEP wtll allo ..... st udents
orgamzation but the name
a nd the or iginal ideals have
Liberation
Front
to take out loans for the•r
been ado pted by several organizations with sl mila ~ college educatwn A parents'
sm all g r oup s across the goals On the campus level financ1al statement would not
these people
are tryang to be reqUired and st udents
nation .
18
Here on the Stevens Point make the students aware or years or older could rtcel\'e
cam pus a group of students problems like present dorm
pol ic1es ,
ra c1al ~~~~~~ Without pa rent al
have adopted the original
precepll of SDS. Back in the discrimination and general
Accordmg to the report
early sixties the ideas of student nghts .
after graduat ion, the s tudeni
equality and freedom were
SDS is operatmg on a .,.,.ould ha\'e up to
25 )'tars to
the baJls for the formation of tem p o r a r y 30 day
pay the loan. plus Interest
the SOS . It was decided tha t r ecogn iti o n , awaiting ap ·
back
lO the state The rate
SDS wouJd try and bring prova l of their consti tution. mterest would depend on the
these Ideals to the people . Membe r s h i p i s o p e n to amount of income earned
Now the new SDS is trying to anyone In the area .
annually after graduation .
once dead
S.O.S. TRIES FOR
RESURRECTION
~:~~~~~: po~~J~~~o;d~~r;
oi
Thcreforl' . 1f •ncOJm• IS high.
thr mtert:.t rate would be
high('r than1f a small 1ncome
1s ra'rned The report sta ted
that 1f the mcome 1s s mall
enough . part or all of the Joa n
.,.,ouid not ha \'c to be reim bursed
If WG II EP IS lll ltlated. all
cx 1s tmg sta te gr a nt and
~hola rsh 1p programs. with
the exception of the Tuition
Grant Program . wouJd be
phased out. sa 1d the report.
P hd1p Geo rge from
financ1a l aut~ stud . though,
that he dt scovered som e
d1sad\'ant~at may arise
"' 1h th1s n ' form o f
fmanc1al a 1d
• \
Geo rge sa 1d tha t most
young people nght out or high
school proba bly have never
taken out a loan and may not
know exaclly .,.,.hat they are
gettJng themselves into if
they do 50 He said that a
debt of up to $8000 is a very
large one to ha\'C right alter
gettmg out of college and
~at 25 years 1s a long ti~e to
\'e a debt to be paid .
llkGeorge also said that he
es the paren t <hlld partnership that often ex.ista while
a s tudent IS 1n college with the
present form or financial aid
The legis l a tur e would.
pr~bly eventually aay that
tuJtJon s hould be ra ised, said
Geor~e since it would be
relatively ~asy to aet a loan to
pay for It with WGHEP
. WGHEP b IIIII under con:
llderauon by the legl.alature ..
reporting lhe events of tht>
war." Luce said . "They
seem to be report ing '-'thin
"of the war that is go1og 0 ~
nght now .
"W
Luc~ said he would urge
Amencans as Individuals and
as g roups to do a ll they can to
help the prisoners st ill Jx>mg
held in Vi et Nam . Ms . Nancy
Sc hn ei d e r . d ep a rt ment of
poli tical
science. has 111 •
fo r mation for anyonl.' 10 .
terestcd .
Placement
Dates
All graduates are w-ged to
take advantage of tht
fo ll owing in t enie.,., s b)
con t ac t !~ the Pl acement
Ce~te r . 106 Ma in Building . at
the •r earliest con"emence
Lit e r a ture concerning tht
compa nies listed below IS
available in our placemrnt
library and should be read m
preparat ion for your In ·
ter\'iew . Ahirc for placement
inter views s hould consist of a
coat and tie or an appropnale
dress .
Jan . 26, Ftderal fhi1
Se n ·ice Entnncf' Exam 111'111
be given on camous m lilt'
Science Building , Room A·IZI
fr om 8:30a .m . to 12 :00 noon
AJI interested s tudents pleast"
sign up for the test m thtPiacement Office and p1ck up
the necessa r y applic ation
~~~~t
s.
St . ltegis
l'ap~.e
Co mpan y . All pulp and paper
sc1ence gr aduates .
Fl'b . 5, S . S . 1\r~ sg~
Cu mpa ny. All majors for
retail m a nagement positions
Feb. 6. J . C . Penny Catalog
All major s
espet'ia ll}
b usi ness
adm•n•strat1 on .
econom ics and li beral arts
graduates wit h a marketing
mterest. J ob de.scnpt 1ons and
lite rature ava il able m tht
Placement Offi ce .
Feb . 6, Wisconsin Depart·
men& or Tr ansporta tion
IWisc o1tsln Stale l'atrull All
maJors · especia ll y ethmr
minority and females
Feb . 13. North.,.,,. s t~r n
Mu t ual Lire ln s ur a nrr
Com pany. All maj ors for
management
tr a1Mt'
positions <must ha\'e 2.75
overall grade point a,·eragr t
Feb. ,,., Aid Association for
tulheran s.
App l t" t on.
Wisconsin . All majors for
home office management and
sa les positi ons . Lu tht-'rans
only are eligible for off1ctr
and to p mana gemtnt
positions . M a fra ternal hft
Insurance company. A1d
Association for Lutherans IS
exempted from certatn
~et a of the equal op·
portunlty employm ent code.
Royalty
Crowned
•
Schmeekle Hall 's Patt i
Juc:f&e and nm J(jrkpatrict
were c rowned Winter
nlval queen and king ~n
Friday , Jan . 18. Lasl year J
queen, Sue Ander son .
crowned the couple.
car·
use of funds q uesti oned
January
24, 1974
THE POINTER
Page 3
WWSP Budget Expanded
byAlbutStanek
WWSP began oper-ations
Contractual Services and
S!Jpply is a portion of the
summcrsess1onand $2062.40
for the first semester She
pa)Toll budget. The Funding
Co~ mittee
serv1cn telephone se:r\'lce
and other operat ing ex·
$1930 this semester
Station ad\•isor Jerry 1-'nt~
full ·t im e s taf f
::::a~~~~he p!~~~-o ~~~
during tne summer months.
• :~is :!,est~~ w:a~ m= ~~~nt"~rial~ ~~ ~!~~ ~!~mt!~e~taf~h!.~ul':~ec~~~:
A~,~Propria_tions
:!s~~~~!~e::~ ~~~rT~ <penses. . , .
::!l~i!ed~~~~~~~~~::r~~t~.
:r~i:>~~~~n·!'::e,s:;:~~ noTh:Jfo~-~~~ br':rge:U~~~ ~~ 11 :f ~:.~hn~!~';::~~~
~!m=.
This situation is not ntw . It
happenrd Jau semeste r .
merSf'S.Sionsat the requestor "Last semester at the station
student and adm fhi stration there were 80 some Pf'Dple
V.llat is new is that Student
Controller Bob Badzinskl and
Student Body President Jim
Hamilton questioned how the
budget officials.
Summer there , only eight of whom
operation depends on the "''ere p.aid. We nc•·er know
:a•·ailability of fund s and ~ow many ~pi~ we'!l ha••e
personnel .
m 5ummer , ~'ntz satd.
t::~ol~r:~c~':;~ 1 ;'= ~~
The tran sfer of funds is ll;~~~~~t a':;~:en~:es~?~n.:
usually just a rout ine thing. buy this explanation .
He
Badzinski ex plained. This asserted that many studen t
)·ear he wanted some answers organization em ployees work
before 35king the ~'AC to during the summer on their
approve the transfer . WWSP o..-.·n time . Ham ilton used the
manager Betty Eckardt was
asked to provide the com-
what effect the transfer of
funds will tuwe on stat ion
services .
'1'he problem was.'' satd
Badzinskl, "that they had
operated during the summer
butthcydidn'thavefundsset
~•dolo"=m""P''"''" ·
The payroll account ran out
and they reQuested that they
be able to transfer S1. 100 from
Contractual Sen·ices and
Suppl\·"
miH~
•l>h p;>)TOII
fig~~
and an explanation of any cut
m services, said Bachinski .
•
Eckardt told the committee
thatstuden t staffersrecei>·ed
sal:mesofS4.360duringthe
"Overwhelmed" was the
word Betty Eckardt . S«Ond·
ye ar chair woma n of the
WWSP Annual Ch ri stmas
Telethon. used in describing
thegeneralfeelingofthestaff
as they approached their
S7.000goal. The 1973Telethon
minis trat ion from giving "'"as broade35ted under the
rides to off-eampus students. theme. "All Kinds of People"
said Kursevski . " Ho ...·e\·er . in De-cember I and 2 in the
'' \\'hen I asked PSS lor a
ride. they told me to call a
tax • because studen~ living
off-campus are out of their
JUrtsdirtlon ."satd :\! Iss
Kraft.
"We were not awa re that
~hss Kraft is a disabled
student ." e xplained Kur ·
se•-sk• of PSS.
PSS is
proh1bited by UWSP ad-
frust rating incon•·enience,"
said Miss Kraft
"There is a grea t lack of
communication between the
clerica l people who answer
the telephone, and the people
who hand down !he edicts of
policy.'' said Miss Kraft .
A feasible solu tion to the
problem might be to provide
PSS "'ith a list naming all
di sa bled UWSP off-eampus
students .
" It ~:ould_ be~ great ~l p if
the uruvers1ty '"ou.ld _prmt up
a b~k l et deur.'bt_ng . the
•
~: uy;a~s
t~i~t
s ago h
telethon. originated by Nick
Ryan . tnow of WAOW -TV I
r aised a total o f Sl80.00
contributable to community
charitable organizations . In
just six years, the goal was
set at $7,000 and surpassed .
Olairwoman Eckardt said.
'1'hesuccessof the Telethon
is apparent In the final
release figure of S7$2$. "
Tho s e
communltv
orgamtatiOnsassisted b)' the
Telethon we re the Portage
County AssociatiOn for
Mentally Retarded O!ildr~
!~~~:~:~e ~:d o~·~~~~~~~f~ ~:~~~onPo!o'ra'~sf:~::!~
~:::,~s a~~~n ~~iJn M~;;
Kraft .
Who's Who Picks
Thirty Students
The Who's Who Sele-ction
Committee of Student
Go•·emment has made the
f1nal decision on those
Juniors and Seniors to be
1ncluded In this year 's
publication : "Who's Who
Among Students in American
C?lleges and Unh·ersi ties. "
Students we re chosen for
theirhighacademie standing.
service to the univenity and
chosen. They are : Richard A
Anderson , Mary E. Bubolz,
Kenneth W. Camlek. Leunn
Y. Carlson, Kathleen A.Olop.
F~den F'ulleylove. Lynn E.
Gterach.James R. Hamilton.
Unda A. Hanoemann . Terry
L Harper , Rober! A. Heil·
and Rehabililatton. better
kno..-.TO as ' Bootstrap · 1973
wasthefirst)•ear "Operation
Wheelchair ." 11 campus
organization. was funded by
1 he
T e I e tho n
The or ganiutions that
r~eived funds from the
Telethon "~'ere chosen on the
basis nit heir ''need of funds ."
'"The pu rp ose of the
Telethon." .said f-::Citardt . "is
to assist handicapped pe rsons
not funded by the state.
federal or local government ,
or the United Way "
To date. eac h of the
organizations have received a
check for 11. 000." said
Jenkins. Marjorie Johnson. Eckardt.
Eekardt a lso
Dale B. Jorg~sen. Judith A. stated. ·:.More money will be
0
Kon~. Nancy A. Krel . Holly L. pre se nt e d t o the
Nim~ . Mariko Oku, Robert F . organizations as soon as all
5tudent was nominated by a Oleson, Diane G Pleuss. the pledges are honored.''
faculty member , ad· Dona ld A. Pochowski .
mtnistrato r or student f-'rancesca Puntil. Kathleen
"1'he ent1 re Telethon was
organizallon
coordmated.staffedandheld
A Sehe1d. Sand ra :0.1
s...•an50rl, Jantce D Sykes. together by the students on a
Of approximately ISO Paul E Usuuck. Cary A. vol unt ee r ba su ." s aid
st udents nominated . Jill Winega rden. Gary F . Win- &-kardt. " Ounng the per·
Juniors and 14 Seniors were ters
formance of the UmverSIIY
f~~~!'"~~~ fau~!sr:~i~c ~
Accordtng to Studen t
nate rules , no student on
th e student parroll can
recetveo•·erSI.OOOmoneyea r .
Oomwan earned $800 last
s ummer and would hav e
exceededtheSlOOOiigurei fhe
wouldha•·econtinuedtosen·e
as station manager . said
Hamilton
sen·rcesthat>~111bel essened
" lt seems unfor tu nate." by thetransferofmoneys nor
sardllamilton''tha tthcpeopl e that WWSP's broadcasting
thatreall)• benefitedfromtne will be hampered in any
very.••eryhighsalariesinthe way." replied Eckardt.
summer aren' t going to be
The stat ion has reduced
around next semester when daily programming by three
themoneyisjustnotthere.
hours but Eckardt ern·
These guys that collected all phasizedthatthis wascaused
thedougharegone."
bythelackofpersonnel.not
tlamllton also questioned funding difficulties.
S10.•ing Singers. the s taff
literal l y held th e set
together "t According to
Eckardt. the Singers were a
litlletooenthusiasticintheir
accompanying dan«.)
Othe r com munit y and
campus ente rtainnent included the Stevens Point
Ba.rbershopoers, the Pacelli
Singers. the New llope
Sinl!ers. the S"';nl~ S.nlttTS
and Zakon 's '73 of Wisconsin
Rapids .
Nick Ryan,
originator of tht- Telethon in
'67. hosted one part of the
TelethonasaguestMasterof
Ceremonies.
Eckardt said. '1'his was
thefir styearthat alarge
amountofthe support ,talent
~~~~=~;~s~a~=:~;et~f
s~ ~~:~~~~~~t~~~~ :!"!~~ g:~~:r~n ~f r~e fo~n~er:~: ''Meet M e At The the
community effort would
Movies, louie"
1
1
be the seve ral hund r ed
~:~ty~~~:~e~f;e~o ~~ m~-~~e;~~~~~h~, ~t ..,!!sn:
health
center .
Because of a health
problem. Miss Kraft was told
tocometothehealthcenter
by her ph ysician. Dr .
Numsen. Dr . Numsen told
her to rail PSS and they
wouldgiveheraridetothe
health center.
the transfer of funds from
Contractual Services to meet
thissemester'spa}'roll. " We
ass u med that t hey were
operatingonbareessentials
and now all of a sudden we
lindtheydiscoverS2:100," he
said.
The F'AC asked Ms .
Eckardt if the tr ansfer of
funds from Contractua l
Se n ·ices wou l d e ff ect
WWSP'sservices.
" 1. do not . foresee any
Te Ie th on G rea t Success
by Marl 1\ursuwsk.l
Protection -Security Refuses
Ride for Disabled Student
by KatllyO'Connr ll
A misunderstanding bet·
ween Kathy Kraft, a disabled
UWSP student, and campus
Protection-Security
and
"~'O rds " fiscal irrespon·
!llbthty " 111 regard to Tim
Dono•·an, last )'tar 's 5talion
rnanaacr
#;!~~ii~':: . ~~r~~ae:e!"!:
On January 29th. the
University f'ilm Society ..-.;u
presen t one of the most
popularmo••ie musicals ever
made. Mte t :O.te in St. I.AJuls
v.illbeshownat 7:00p.m . and
9: 1$ P.-m . in Old Main
•\uditonwn .
An hones tl y se nt ime ntal
and nosta lgiC' musical. Meet
Meln St. l.ouis is set ilfthe
t900 St. Louis site of the
World's f-' ai r It is a colorful
and thorough ly delightful
portrayalofabygoneeraand
afamilywhosefatheristobe
tr ansft'rTed to New Yor k.
s h a tt ering a wor ld of
peaceful happiness for Judy
Gar land a nd Margarel
O'Brien
dollars raised and pledged by
Pacelli and SPASH.''
"Oneof theeampusefforts.
'stan•e-night' , coordin ated
..-.ith SAGA foods , brought in
saoo:· said Ecka rdt.
Ooanctllor Lee Sherm an
Drey fus learned that hi s
reno>OTOedred vest auctioned
offt o th e TKE's forStSS . ..-.·hen
hephonedfromPolandwitha
pledge and hi s en.
CtlUI'agement.
" During a time of hard·
ship:smtheworld, itisl!oodto
know>~·ecanstillhelpour
oeighbors,'' ....as how Eckardt
expre5sed her gratifica tion
to>~·ards the united com ·
mWli ty and campw1 effort
Senate announces
free skating hours
The Student Sena1e an nounces free ice-time . for
studentsonly . atthePor tage
Count y Ice Arena . Times of
open skating are :
Mon .. Jan. Z8 - B p.rn
12
a .m
Wed., Jan 30 ...10 p.m . 12
~ . Jan
Jt ..
a pm · l 2 a .m
S.'lt,Jan 26 ·· 9prn.- llp _m
Sat . f'eb 2. 9. Zl - 9prn · II
pm
Sun .. feb l. IO. I7. 24 - 9p.m .
· llp.rn
· F'rr .. Mar .. 2p.m · •
p.rn
~~:--Mar 4, II - 8 p.m • 12
Wed , i\la r . 6,13 -- 10pm.- 12
Thu , Mar 7,
I~ -
Mon . Feb 4, 11 . 18.25 _a F"n .. Mar t . 8. t5 - 8p.m.- t2
pm - t2 am
Sat . :O.Iar l, I0 -- 9p.m · II
Wed , Feb 6, \l. V -- IOpm
pm
l2am
~·n . Feb t . a .. a p m . 12
:-;"ote : f-'reeskatingrnaybe
elosed lormtramuralaction,
Thu . ~·eb 7. 1~ . 28 - a p .m
bulit>0111 beposted.
12am
Page 4
THE POINTER
January 24 , 1974
Advising may be strengthened
by John larson
st udent to the place where he
may get the assistance he
re quir es. according to
strengthen faculty sturlcnt Wi lliam A
Johnson ,
advising is underway a t the Assistant dean of the College
Collins Classroom Center , of Leiters and Science and
room 105 .
dJrector of FACS.
The Faculty AdVI Sing
'1lte center hoges to offer
Center for Students CFACS ) Is more than just adv1ce. I think
des1gned to ensure a .,.,,lhng from discussions \ldth
and understanding faculty students and faculty over the
ad\·isor for every student past years , the st udent ex ·
with up-to.<fate information peels more . A student who
or the means to refer a says an advisor is good
An allempt by a RrOup of
faculty adminis trators to
doe:,n 't s.1.y so because he
gave mi.' the right course."
" If the ad\' ISOr on
duty ('an't help. he'll get the
~udent to somebody 'olo'ho
can " s.<ud Johnson
" \\'c feel the centl'f can be a
re.ll help to the present
system by o(fering another
a\·enue of adv1ce fo r the
student who IS undec1dcd
about a mujor ; the one who
l'nn 't SC.'t.'m to get together at
the sa me ti'!le and place 'oloi th
Elim inating letter-grades costly
by Kathy RMAmlllrr
A new grading sys tem ,
eliminating letter grades and
using an overall faculty
evaluation at the end of each
semester. 1s not serioU!i ly
bemg considered ~at.Ge of
cost and complexity . ac ·
cording to El\olo1n Sigmund,
a.5Sl5t3nt to vice chancellor
for academic arfcurs.
CosUiness enters m through
faculty time and effort in
separate student evaluation.
Where grades ca n usually be
com pleted by the instructor
and submitted within a one·
to·two day period. separate
student evaluation would take
close to a week to complete,
said Sigm und .
Besides cost in compiling
the separale stu d e nt
e..,aluations. there would be
more cost in storing and
handling the many
evaluations 111 the records
office .
Complexaty 111 sepa rat e
student evaluations takes tVt'o
forms . First. an evaluation
form would ha ... e to be
s tandardized for all In ·
structors so that they ,.'Ould
all contain the same pertinent
information, and would ha\'e
to be appro\'ed by the entire
faculty . The form would also
have to co nform to the
standardsofotheruniversitles
usi ng the sa me type of
eva luation so that the
evaluations could be trans·
ferred equally .
Secondly7lh'"i problems of
transferring grades and
credits between universities
are too com plex , according to
Sigmund . Without an actual
number of completed credits,
any type of transler to a
uni..,erSJty not using the same
type of evaluation system
would be hanler for tho
uni\'ersities invol..,ed , and
possibly unfair to the s tudent
in..,olved .
With the less-standardized
system . students would ha ...e
a harder time entering
graduate sc hool s and
professionaJ schools . These
schools require g rades . class
standards and the number of
credits com plet ed. said
Sigmund. Employen would
also have a hard time
checking college per formance without reading
stacks of 1ndl\'1dual
evaluations.
This type of evaluation has
not been used by any or the
schools within this university
system , and has not been
used succeutully within any
large university system ,
accor d ing to Sigmund .
" Every system of grading
has been used within the last
2S to 40 years, but they have
always come back to the
system we use now," said
S.gmWld . "The system of
mdi'Jidual C\'31uations would
be di sa d ... antageo u s to
students. and I hope they
would look into the disad·
\'antages themsel\·es"
~
-=
-=::=- ~
" On ca mpus here as wctt.as
h1sad,·1sor ; theoncwho has a
personality con Oict or has other places I've gone," said •
dlr!kul!y undersland•ng what Johnson, " there is a feeling
h1s ass1~ned ad\•lsor has told that the faculty advi sm g
n ee d s
h1m or the one who has an program
em011onal or oth er type strengthening."
The decision to try FACS
problem ," ex plam<"d John·
son. "or c ... en the mdlvidual resulted from a trip Joh nson
who IS co ncerned about made to observe the samf.'
3110thcr school. grad 'olo'Ork or type program in the Collcg<"
of Lcllers and Science. uw.
pb prospects "
··We 'reher(' for all student s Madi son .
J o hn son said th a t
w1th an)' questions o r
recommenda tion form s on
problems
which st udents couJd indicate
further choices or objections
Thf l'olntrr IS :. steond clus
adv isor s ·
un1vers 11 y publication. concerning
pubhshtd v.t<ekly dunng the counselors and their perschool )~a r 10 Slt"\'t"ns Point. fo r mance in the center will be
W1Konsm s-1~11 II IS published
av.aHable a t th~center . Cards
unMr lht" luthonty grantt'd to shov.ing the nwnber of \'1511 5
thf Board of Ut"gt"nts or Stile
by students to each ad\'ISOr ·
linn·erslllt"S b)' S«t1on 37 II ,
coWlselor will also be kept
w.sconsm Statutts Pubht"at1on
J ohnson and the F ACS'
costs arf pa1d by tht" State of
Wisconsin under contract• student assistant, Don Snuth .
a"'ardtd b) the State Prm11ng nrc now obtaining catalogut>s
S«tion. Stair Df'putmmt of on o ther univer sitie s .
Admm•st rahon. as prO\Ided in gradu.t~te requirements and
Slat r Pn nting Opera tional
job prospects in various fi eld.)
8ultflin 9-2 1 of August 16, 197J
and areas . They are also
~it\~e~~~: ~d(O:~~i~~n~17
t; d.hcw .
Kob<ort Kt'fkSit"Ck
\l:an:.a linK t.:dllor :
l>aH·(;ne•~
St"' ~ t:dhor :
Tl'rr) W1tt
{ 'op~
t-:dl tor :
Chm Krull
C'op) h~ht:.ant... :
Shell) ll oHn and
\\ ahlnlhnf'r
~ l ll'ilfi,P\oll"l :~-7
t
,.....,.._9,.. ~-!:
GIYI ft THE COLLEGE.
Of YOUR CHO"E •••
Facul ty may get
two-year leaves
S u~
l'hoco t:d1tot
H~t'l'
U.a rr
~urht:d1tor
Jmlll.illt'ck
\ d\lana jttr
O nd) K.1ufm:.n
Hu\in..,, ;\l:roniiKf't '
IJ•ant•
t-: ~e n son
\\r lttr~ :
MADISON · UW faculty or prior service as one year m
members could take sab· determining eligibilit y. but
batical leaves for up to two after the law is enacted. each
semesters at one-half pay year of service " 'Ould coun t
unde:r legUs lation introduced as a year of elig1b11ity
last week in the State
The facult y member would
Mse:mbly
rece.... e fuJI pa y for a Single
State
Representat ive
R1chard Flintrop I D · ~~esc~: l~av~e~~ ~7 ~!!
Oshkosh) is co-spon.soring the sem esters
Accordmg to f"l 1nt r op .
b1ll . Vt'hich hedesttibeij as " a
means of improving the "Th e manner 1n wh1ch the
quality and experti~ of our lea\'e IS taken would ha\'e to
university teaching pe r · be appro ...ed by a com m1ttee
composed of faculty from the
sonnet"
teachmg dJv•sion m wh1ch the
"The subject matter of member ser... es "
uni ... ersity c urr icul um is
Pro ... huons for a sim1lar
cons tantly c hanging and ,
program was mcludt'd by
unless facuJty members ha..,e
a n opportunity to engage in Go..,c r nor l.. ucey i n th e
additional resear ch or origmal 19'13-?S stat e budget.
training , the quality of but was dclett-d by the sixteaching is going to suffer ," man lcgJslat1ve con ference
com m1tt~
f1mtr op scud he
F1introp said .
wa s d1sappomted by that
Undu provis1ons of the b1ll acoon . but feels conf1den t the
l AB 1347 1, any faculty sabballcallt'a\'e program can
member 1n the UW system be pa urd as sepa rate
who has taught at least sax leg1slat1on or as part or lhr
yean or the equivalent m budget revirw process in
part-time service , v.'Ould be January
elag~bie for a le.a...e of eithu
Part-t1me faculty seeking a
one or two semesters.
sabbatical lra ... r would be
Present faculty members subj«:t to the same con couJd count every two years ditions as fuJI-time faculty.
~lark Urandt . ~l a r ) UuddC', Uob
j r . Lh:b r ;~ IIIII , ' Marl
1-:ur s u.·'tl.~ ki ,
John L.auon,
llam
JrrT) Long,
~t ar) AMe
Kr1s .\ l oom
Kt'1 t.h
Moorr ,
Ot11 . AI
SUnt-k and !.art) W•bon
Sporh
\\ritrn~
Jor Hurkf _ O.rwti Co1, J~
IJuJf} Tom 1-:nlund
01anr
Plta-.s
\
-"'rr.-carlr\ & T.,..h .
~ art-n HuC'hholt , l'enny
Gillman ltonmt' McQueen
LmdJ Mol1tor , Sus01 n StArk :
J ant' Th•el. and Honnito WHU
1\ rh t:dltor :
l)tonms J ensen
rtoquirements. courses and
ot her services and wdl
continue to do so to keep the
advising<OWlseling starr up·
to-date on changes . Smith "ill
be available through the
1-'1\CS' phone (2321) for ap·
pointments an d inform ation
" This is one of the ways we
can help the pre se nt
Situation . " said J ohnson
;;~:c~:rsobt~u: a:::"~!:~~
throug h all or th1 s 1n
formation to find 'olo"hat a
st udent needs . Sometimes 11 's
\'cry easy just to deal w1th lht>
ma•n matte r . which IS
teaching lor most . and fall
behmd on the rest. A student
may then end up with les.)
than current inform atiOn
wh ich could cause a problt•m
for him ."
f"ACS is sta ffed by 36
fac ult y memb ers wh o
represent e\'er y departm ent
In the university . They v.·en•
chosen by a "'three-member
faculty committee " 'hich . 111
addi tion to other cntena .
con tacted s tud ent s to
di sco..,er who they felt would
make a good ad\'isor . Each
has volunteered to take ooe
hour of duty per week at
FACS, enabling the center to
ha ..,e an advisor on hand
llours : 8a.m . . 4 p .m ., Moo ·
Thu .. and8a .m . · 12 p.m Fn
f"urther information for
st udents will come from 3
new machine called a sound
page system. This allow
st udent s to listen to an ad·
..,Jsor <ounselor who is not
physically a t the cent er . 11w
machine takes special paper
that can be used on the one
slde for written m essages and
on the other for recorded
ones. Advisors may 'oi.Titf.'
somrthing and comm tnt
orally about it on the nip s-de •
to makr something mort
clear loa student who cannot
meet with him or vice versa .
etc,
"AI In any newoutfit , lhere
may be a few bugs at the
llart," aald -Johnson. "but
what we are looking for Is 1
c.Nnce lo lhow student5 "-e
can utlafy • need."
e
T HE PO INTER
Page 6
January 24 , 1974
Instructors Relate Personal Experiences In
Chaperoning Semester Abroad Programs
by Todd Hanson
Or . H elen Godfrey.
associate dean of student
arrairs. and Dr . Seldon
Fa ul kner. chairma n of
theatre arts. ha,·e returned
from th eir lea\' C as
chapero nes 1n the fall
Semester in Britai n program .
Like many past group
leaders. Ms. Godfrey and
Fau lkner se r ved as go ·
bctwt.'(!ns for the Uni versi ty
and the group's O\'Crseas
contacts ln addition. both
taught classes at " Peace
Ha ven ." Steve ns Point 's
LAndon headquarters .
As the orficial liason . ~Is .
Godfrey admt ni s tered all
facets or the London budget .
This mcluded everyt hin g
fr om paying guides to buying
books for the house library .
from f"ixing typewriters to
changtng dollar s to pounds
fo r wcekJy a llowances . She
also was
the
University's
liason between the English
professors and the Peace
Haven management.
··My business is wor king
for students ... Ms . Godfrey
the dmly interaction there ha s renewed
by interest and wtdcr standing
of today's student. l leamed a
lot from the students "
" I a lso enjoyed the con·
versa tions I had with people
from London a nd England on
a one -to-o ne basis ." s he
added .
H a\• ing a natu r al
gravitation toward drama,
Seldon !Scotty ) Fau lk ne r
fo u nd Lon don 's manv
theatres \'ery rewarding . ·
says . "a nd
" l ' \' e seen around 45
produc tions, both here in
l.JJndon and at Stratford ."
Faulkner said . " What I've
p1cked up from them are
some new theatre techniques
-- mo s tl y ped o rm ance
techniques .··
Dr. Helen Godfrey UWSP's chief liosan for lost fall's
Semester in Brita in group, relaxe s in front of ,the
Un iversity's london headquarters, " Peace Hoven ."
" But I don't thmk I could doner s Some worked at
tell you exac tly what the hospital s an d day care
techmques a r(' that I ha \·c l'en t ers Som e played
learned, " he added . " I thmk basketball fo r a loca l rollege ,
these ideas will seep into my or any number of other ac teaching and directing But tJVIhl'!> I would like to think
the main th1ng IS that I've the English lea rned from us
~t~r~~:~=~~t~~~-~~ here ~~ l!_kc we learned from
" There was mdl>sc nbab]('
progress in the pt'Ople durmg
the semester. ~Is Godfre\
sa1d " lntan21ble benefits:.
like 1ncreased selr-eonfidence
and understanding of one 's
self m relatiOn to others It
wa s somethmg you had to
expenence as an ad\'ISOr '"
Jill Stein UWSP sludent, sits
on a fen ce outside of her
lemparory
home
lost
semester, Peace Hoven .
··Thc grea t th1ng about our
group." r aulk.ner stressed .
"is that it was active . They
were inte.rested in doing a lot
or things, a nd we r e not
satisfied to stay at home:·
"'Another great lhmg IS that
the Britain Program is tailor
made ror Stevens Pomt ,' "
saii:t Fa ulkner.
'1'hnt is
wha t ma kes it wor k so '-''ell .
Plus the ract that it Is set up
and organized well ."
She added . " I was par
ll cularly pleas(.-'d that our
students not only re-cel\·ed .
but gave back of lhem.scl\"es
We had lots of students who
got involved w1th the Lon ·
Cathy Clarke of Chapel Hill, N. C.,
standing in the golewoy to Peace Haven.
Standing appropriately In front
of Shakespe are 's b irthplace ifl
Stratford are Drama Deportment
Cha irman , Dr. Seldon Faulkner,
his wife Donna , and children
Julie and John.
Jonucry 24, 1974
THE PO INTER
Page 7
Some like it hot, Others go to England
•
•
5U~~~ ~Of!~~:.~~:~bu~
of
a few others, bound for a
warmer c li ma te, se lec ted
attracth·e swimming weu as
theypreparedtolene for
O\' eneas January 3. The
semester abroad pr011;ram is
sponsored by UWSP.
F"orty~ne studfllts headed
fiH" England. fully a ...·are of
the energy crisis the re
"" They know abou t t he
problem5 ."" said Dr . Pauline
Isaacson. director of in ·
ternat1ona l procrams at
UWS P '"They're satisfi ed It
..."Ill be cool,'" she added.
A group of \9 ..,.Ill study m
Kuala Lumpur. Malays1a .
Befo r t :lrrtving In
Malaysia.t hey .,.,i ll spenda
mghtln Jceland. lll' \"era l days
111 London , and a brief s top in
~l oscow
The groups ...-e!1' scheduled
totra•·el together to Iceland
Ylllilt' the st~ts headed for
~l alay11a get giLmpst'S of
Se\'t'ral countnes before
reaching thetr destination,
the London-bound contingt'nt
...-m spend a fe..,. days '"
Luxemburg and the
:\'ethertandsl'i5itlngcultural
«nterssuch:asartgolll'ne5
In April , those in London
..,"lllembarkona,tud)' tOUrof
the Europc!an continent to
complete thetr se mes ter
abroad Those In Malaysia
""Ill \'LSI! Orit'ntal capitals
The~ ..,,II returntotht' l:n1ted
Stali1·s l'arl~ 111 ~~~~~
LA.>admgthegrouplothe
Far t:ast ..,-,u be Dr Da••1d
Coker . ll:b151ant chancc>llor
for ,;tudent affatn Itt' also
acrompamcd tile first group
that went to London nearlv
fh·e ~·tan a~:o
·
In charge ~f the group 111
England a!1' Dr \\'i lliam
Nrby.ass tsta ntprofessor of
cduution. and Dr James
~hssey. as.soc1ate professor
of Enghsh
Mon ico Young of the U. o f Mossochuselts
end Ellen Zw ieg o f UWSP on o shopping
spree .
Semester Abroad Now
Accepting Applications
Or Isaacson. Director of
International Ptosrams . has
announced that her oHice IS
t.:lldng apphcllltions for
the follow1n1 semester
abroad programs England ·
Semester I or 11. !974·75.
Ge rmany . Semester I. !9'74·
n. and the Far East •
Semester II · t 97~ ·7S . The
pr ogums are o pen to
studentsfromallmajorsand
minors . Cost is a modes t
surcharge o-.·er regular costs
at UWSP"s !'lome camp!A
The
I nternational
110\0"
Pro&rams Office IS also
totkmgasur•·eyofposs1ble
studenttnttrest•nasemester
program 111 Poland Any
student..,·hofeelshe..,·ouJdbe
atenLatl\'eapplicant fotsuch
aprO&ramshou ldultl757or
,.Tile Dr Wacson. office II J.
Main Bwlding .
Studen ts at UWSP a r e
IJ"en first oppor turnty to
apply for th ese pn~~rams
l-1ter . apphcatiora are open
to students from other in·
SILtutions
Over 4,000 sign LAND
petition opposing plant
Q\•er UOOcitit.ensi n r.heit h Gr and Ra pi dS . W1s .
Cong.reuional Dist rict ha11e Wisco nsin Rapids , 'A is,
now signed 1 petitifHiagainst Sllgi n aw. M ich . an d
nuclear povoer The jump of r-;e...·romerstown. Ohio. The
tJOOOI'erlastmOflth'sfigure recent launch •nd the
...-as reportfd at the LAN D Oeoc:ember 1 l11unch ol SOO
mnllng 111 Wisconsm RapidJ . balloons dramat1z.ed the
possible paths of radtoac·
ti'"'Y from the proposed SIX
the Tuk Force Aga1n1t mdh o n kdlowat nuclear
complex
111 the Town of
;'o;uclellr PcMiutJon
RHults of a second batlon R:.tdolph
A utiiLty spokesman
launch fr om the Rudolph slte
reportedtMt
therock fault
on December 2 1 were
rl'l)OI'tfd Out of 25 balloons uncO\·eredattheRudolphsite
relea1ed . fou r were ...·ouldpr<lbablynotruleout
thf'
51te
11!ft0\'erfd . one eac h from
• ~=r ,',~~,!~':.,'ffi: !~
Was he o naughty boy?
Bob
Puissa nt of UWSP in the stocks.
Student Volunteers Aid
In Therapy At Norwood
by Da •·eGneiu r
'"Af terawlule, thepatients
tend to look forwa rd to our
' "ISits and df-pend on the
••olun t eers ."' uid Ca r y
Zierke.
ThiS fall , Zierke organit.ed
a g:-oup of •·otunteers who
'"sit j'l;otwood llospital fOf"
abrou l two ho u rs e\ery
Mondlly ni&ht. Norwood 1s a
hospita l loca ted southeast of
Mar shfield .
"The (l"ima ry purpose of
ourvisilt~there-soc:ialila t ion
ot !he patients. The hospi tal
cons1ders th1s 10 be 111 1m·
po r tan t part o r t h ei r
tl'lerapy."' saidZierke. " After
tong p e r1 ods of in ·
st1t u tiona l hation . the
patient.slose touc h with the
wor ld,'" said Zierke, "'They
tend to become lny and lack
motiva tion"
The p.alients at Norwood
hav e bee n diaa nosed as
pr ima ril y sc hizo phrenic or
psych oti c , 1cc ordingt o
Zierke . '" Wetrytotrealeach
pa tien t as 1 individ ua l,"
Zierk e said. The hospita l
se r ves abou t 70 patie nts
ranging in age from t4 to 70
'"At ri rst. nobody knew
..,'hat they ..,-ere doing. We
played it by ea r , found our
functions a nd aradua ll y
became more comfort.lble
with the patients .' " said
Zierke. The group recei\·ed no
lraimng to work WLi h the
patie nts . Mrs Anderson .
No rwood's direc tor . gave
briefings on 1111 indl\'Lduat
ba5is to t he "olun tee r s
..,·hene.-er d!Hicult ll'l were
enco u ntere d . The &r oup
membe rs did most of their
lea rning by talking among
themseh•es "'Through grou p
talks . d1He~nt approaches
aredi.sco•·ered and tried.""
~•d Zie rke
The Portage County Ment•J
llealthAs.sociationsponsors
the •·olunteers Volunteers
use their ow n ••ehlcles and
are re im bursed for mi leage
e.-er ymon th .
,
'"gelllng thPmm otlvaled '"
,~er;~~~~~tr:;~~~ero~
...
thepatientssuchasdancing,
bov.•ting. volleylnll. and card
games No one is requir ed to
ta ke part in an activi ty , but
pa rtic1pa1Jon 11 encouraged
by the Slil ff and by J)ftr
press ur e. Not all the It"·
h111ties ta ke place at Norwood . The p111ents are ta ken
on shopping trips in small
groups. La rJeg r~psa ur~c t
too muc h attention. Dun ng
th e activities, the 11olun teers
work wt lhthe patien tson a
one-to~basis The purpose
oftheseoutings.acconllng to
Zil'!'ke. is to motil'ate the
patlenttolea•·e thelhellered
hfe of the msh tut ion.
Tohn Kon om y
" Only one other fac 1lity.
that I know of . bas a token
economy program T he
pallenl can actually buy h1s
way out of tl'le hospi tal wit h
the work credltsheea rn s.··
Zierke uid
The> token economy
program has seven levels of
pr ogressment
Pa t ients
•·oJ unteer to do ce rtai n tasks
for wor k credi ts . Exa mples of
these jobs are making beds,
tying the1r o...·n shoes, and
s,.·eeptng noon. Credits va ry
as the pahent progresses
through the seven levels
Credits are spent on life's
luxuril'55UChaJ nylons ot
ciga rettes. and on the basics
hke room and boa rd.
A
pn 1•ate room cos ts mo re
...-ork credit.sthan onetha t is
sha red.
·· M a ~~~ 1';:o~r;h "see
1
psychohcasaraving lunJUe,
but thiS stereotype doesn't
hold tr ue, " sa id Zie r ke
··Many patients are indeed
w1t hd ra v.-n , bu t l'"e ne11er
5oeena pa llentaet •·iolen tly.
sometimes verbally, but
1\el'er .-iolently They hne
feelingsaf thei r own. but don 't
know how to ex preu the m.
One patient . l am tltin kingof
111 pa rhcular . simply needs
someone to 1dentify wit h "
Z.erkesaid
'
" lfeelt hatc reditis du e the
"olun teers They made the
program ..,.q t it ts:· said
Zierke. -·lcan't really say
l'fiOU.Ih ·•
" Wearea J...·ays lookinJfot
new volunteers They must be
senous because the patlenta
depend on thei r coming,"
,.,_,d Zierke '"In efforts li ke
this. there is no immedia te
gratifica tion . Someti mes It's
hke pulli ng teeth . but in the
long run the re 's a sense of
sa tisfaction." Zierke said.
Page 8
THE POINTER
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•
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0
m~>dern
:
•
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:
::.=.:-:. :
nt¢rtors
I.:,
e
Monday, Jan
January 24, 1974
•
,..~...
·~················~~··-
Campus Calendar
u_/f>
POINTER
POI~T~;R~~;'XrsJ.~,
Thursday, January 24
~"TE \' ESS PO INT S\':\IPIION\' OHCIIESTil.A :
MJchelsen Hall. 1-~ me Arts Building
8p.m .,
Friday, January 25
··Ja cob~i.ecture!ierl~s l n Math '': 7:30p .m . room 116 COPS
Building . '1'he Jacobs Lecture Series in Mathematics "
continues with Professor Ernst Snapper from D.lrtmouth
College. The liUe of his talk -...ill be Algebraic FouudatJoas
of G~mrtry . All are in\'lled to altend .
LEO f' . Bl'SCA'CliA TO SPEAK II ERE : 8:30 p.m . Quandt
Gym , Fieldhouse Mr . Buscaglia will speak on " After Love
. What ~"
•
1111
IIIII
Sunday, January 27
FIHST BAPTIST C11URCII
1~8 Olurch St ., Sunday
ser\'ices at t0:-4 S am & 7: 15 p.m .
(1 1tiRC11 OF Till:: 1:\'TEHCESSIOS IEpiscopaD : 1-417
Olurch St .. Sunday masses at 9 :00a .m . & 5: 15p.m .
Ll'TIIERAS STUDEST CO~IM USIT \' : Peace Campus
Center , Man a Drive and Vincent St. Service ..,;th
Eucharist. Saturday, 6 p .m . & Sunday, 10:30 a .m .
NI::WMt\[lo; UN IVEitSIT \' PA RI SI! !Catholic ): Newman
Olapel. basement of 5I Stan's:Cioister Chapel. 1300 Maria
Dri\•e . Weekend Masses : Saturda)'S 4:00 & 6 :00 p.m ..
t'oOewman Olapel. Sundays 10:00 a .m . Newman Chapel ,
II :30 a .m .. Cloister Olapel. 6: 00 p .m .. Cloister Olapel.
Weekday Masse5 Week of January 18th · Mass only on
1\lesday. January 29 at 11 :00 a.m & -4 :-45 p.m .. Ne\\-man
~;rdr· :f.::~::~t~Jl:~~:!~n~s.~ ~! ~~e!s~::~
1
SHI"Y SHOlS -
BOOT SAlE!_
Wo...e"'' 15 hw:h
• lwH4ut L..ether
Soln
• c,..,..
•
HHTJ Pile Uniftt
$14.99
!OFF!
......
'Ip
' py
RE6. ·
Slu
• N avy
$29"
·-
Sl to 10
SHOES
WILDLIFE SOC IETY Ml-:ETISG·
Lounge. U.C. Student Otaptc; of.
mee.ting. Old .and nev.· members a
ProJect commllttu will be formed
summer amp will be discussed
Wednesday January 30.
PEACE UN ITED {'II UHCH OF CHRIST ; 1748 Dixon Street ,
Sunday ser\'ice at 10:00 a .m
FHA~IE PR ESDYTE HI AS C1 1liROI :
1300 Main St. ,
Sunday seni ces at 9· 15 & 10 : -IS~
ST. PAUL 'S l:Sfff:D MI:.IIIODIST CII URCII :
600
Wilshire Blvd ., Sunday servJce at 10:00 a .m .
FlltST CHliRCII OF CIIRIST SC IESTIST: 9 :30 a .m .
Sunday school, 11 00 a .m chun:h service
UN ITED PESTECOSTAL CII UROI : 3:»9 Center St.
Sunday services at 10 :00 a .m . & 7:30p.m.
S'\'Z UKI SOLO ltECITAL : 3:00p.m . Michelsen Ha ll , Fine
Arts Building .
PW\SETARIU~I SEiti i::S : 3:00 p.m Science Building .
" Comets . Meteors . and Astero•ds." narrated by Bob
Vahga
Cl iRISTIAS SCIENCE COLLEGE OR(.
IZATIOS : 6: 15
p m . U.C.M. Bwld ing !comer College and F'rtmont> . AJI
are :-"'armly invited to attend our weekJy testimony
mect1ng .
downstairs lobby at the Gt'Orge St~
...;u take place at the Stevens Point Rt
Whiling .
UN IVERSITY F ILM SOCII:.'T\' ·
Auditoriwn, Main Buil<ting " ~t~ 1 l
TilE JESUS SJ'UDENTS 1-'EI.l.Oy
Garland room , University Center W
1
Tr:uth . Plans will also be discussed ro
lh1s new group .
ARTS AND LECTUHES : s·oo p m
Arts Building . La DoMa Barns mtn
Indian Opportwtity v.ill speak '
Wednesday, Jo 1
STUDENTRECITAL : .. :OOp.m .. ~tJch
Bui lding .
VO ICE R ECITAL: 8:00pm . ~Iicht,
BUilding . Bruce Hobright , John Stn
Spring Expe
To Bring
by Shirley Splttl~ melstf'r
Freshmen have not yet
experienced the joy that other
students, especially those 10
residence halls , have in past
springs . That is the time of
year when hip boots become
necessary bec a use th e
ath letic fields near the dor ·
mltories become lakes and
the sidewalks become tern ·
porary rivers. What causes
lh1s annual phenomenon"
The land that the dor·
mitor ies arrd some of the
academic buildings are bwlt
on used to be a swamp. Most's
Creek ran through the area
immedJately adjacent to the
Phy . Ed. building, went on a
diagonal across the athlehc
field soulh o( the De Bot dorm
co mplex . jt_ cont1nu cd
through what Is now Varsll)
VIllage to the pump1n g
stallon Jus t north of the
ChtJmber of Commcrct
building .
Before building con ·
st rucUon began , the creek
was built WldergrOWld In to a
12-inch tube that now runs
between Pray -Sims and
Smith Halls, north of the Phy
Ed . building . then straight to
Isadore, co n tinuing south
a long Isa dore to F ourth
UC ~I
PRE · MAHRIAGE
SEMISAR: If you plan to
at lend Uli~ rive week Tuesday
evenmg course. February 19
through March 19. please call
the UCM oUice soon 13464448 1 and prereg ister as we
need to know the nwnbcr
tv
can on!)'
v. attrtJ
Wld"JJ<
tha t lb•
handles !
the
Utll
from l.lD
So. VlhtD
11mevohe
or h1gh
tubt nn
-.. altr tb.
I
com
1t-..-oWd
s;ud th
roresru
planning to attend that
Avenue. then diagonall yu..""'·
I
Peaco Camp
.nte' m~a~t;;;-;;;;-;;;;-;;~~=: Spechtsaidthat M
OS<S Crt'<k fma1ntt~
irmrd
~:~:~::::::::::::~.;';'o~m~o~
· oo:t;ous~9C.~:30;p~
SH
10
adequate preparation can be
made Seminar Meellngs are
r····rtie· TOURCHiiGHT
11
'\
Wlder Varsity Village to thr problr
pumping station.
Lt orur
Campus
Pla nner
Jwtt Hortt. of M.,.h,.IU• .,.. Hwy 1)
Fri.,
J•"·
25
Set., J.ft. 16
a.
Sun., Jaft , 27
Tun.,
J.,..
29
..~!STU.Y ROCK" -
A aock ud loU Re•iew Group th•t i• d•"cy •ft4 .,.•• ,.
tolftlltf. Gu•r•nhed to turn JOU on ! ,,.. odmiulon,
"LINDA LEA" •rwl h•r tort•~· Country &
w •••• ," Yolce.
"THE. ,ANTASTIC SHAKfllS" •r• ~Nick . Adm iu l.,. Mty $1.00.
COME 011 Ill -
LIT US SHOW YOU HOW TO HAVE A 6000 TIME! 1
257-St.
Ha )
Monda y, January 28
January 24, 1974
\\" I LD LII,.E SOCI ETY ,\ lt:ET\:0..(; : 1 00 p.m Wright
Loul\le . U.C. Student Olapter of The Wildlife Society
meeting. Old _and n~ membtr1 ~ lrmttd to attend.
~~ ~n;·~;~~flltd~t thls m~ting and
THE POINTER
Page 9
"MEET ME IN
ST. LOUIS"
..,,Y.,~.~~~.>.::.~~.~t-t,!?,. ..
m .•
:u·r:;~~;~r
~~ ~\~~n·~:~stolTr~:~
'A'hlting .
; Oil & 9:1S p.m .•
Auditorium , Poll in Buildlna. " ~I ~ ~It Jn St. Louis."
?:SO p.m.,
p tn Spirit and in
Garla nd room . University Ctflltr II,'
Truth. P!ans wiU abo bt' disaautcl for. turt ga therinp ol
this new group.
ARTS A.'l/0 L£CT\JRES: I·OO p.m l h~sm Hall. Fine
ArU Buildina . La Donna Ha rm.
of t ~ Council on
Indian OpportWiity will spuk
UN I VERSIT\' F ll2!1 SOl' ll:.i \':
Ti l E J ESUS S n mE.NTS H:U OW UP :
...
JUDY GARLAND
MARGARET O'BRIEN
FILM SOCIETY
TUES., JAN. 29
Wednesday, Jon ary 30
~IUDES TRECI TAL : ~ :OOp m
. l littw en llall. Pine Arll
Building.
\'OICE RECITAL: 1:00 p.m •
7:00 & 9:15 f'.M.
Buildinc . B.r-u« Hobright, John Srr
Spring Expe ted
To Bring ud
i
1::1•):4
~ ~~
~ WEEK
"ONE OF THE BEST ADVENTURE
MOVIES OF THE YEARI"-•Kw
** 1Beautifully
bedrooms - 1 ballu
fumilhed and carpeled
* Dishwasller, diJposal and air conditioner
* AU utilnles paid by DWiffR
** Heated
pool for lllose 111rina monlhs
Ping pong tables and laundry tacinlies on premises
* Close to campus and an iCe rink
* Obsenab!e wHdlffeMODEL OPEN
THE VtLLAGE
Page 10
THE POINTER
January 24, 1974
UWSP Extended Services
Offers Non -Cred it Cou rses
t)ujll &
~Woad"' ork
~a lin ~orth Am~rlc:a
of
7-9 p m •
Thurs . Feb 7 · Mar H. $14.00.
Thr ) I ~Sif'rJ Slor) . 7-8 ' 30 p .m . Tues , Jan 22 . Feb 26.
$1000
The \l:lrrla.::r Game l ~I s ion ) lakJng in thr i\l:lrrlagr
Ur l:ulon,hipl . 7-9 p m .. Wed .. Jan . 23- Feb. 'r7, $15.00 per
person , $25 00 per couple
•
Tht· l':1thulic Crisis in )hxtern Fit'tlon , 7-8 :30 p rn .. Wed . .
Jan 23 Feb 'El . $10 00
n a ... iC" S..aman,hip & S:a ft:l)' Couru . !Co -sponsored by U.
S Coa~t Guard Aux t 7·9 p m , Thurs , Feb 14 · May 2.
Sl o 00 mdudt·.., matenals. 52 00 each additiOnal famtly
m t•mlkr
tum.- tu 1..1 F t: . ~ ~eking \Jtun:llhrs for Women ,
(ar ..f'r & l·'"r'onal toun ..f'ling l 1·3 p m . Tlll'S . Jan Z2 ·
)J ar 1:.! CIH; 9p rn . Wed Jan 2J. ~ t ar 13 , $10 00 mcludcs
l(""lm~
& m.ll('nals
For Ht>gtstralwn Call
346-Jil'i
UAB Short of Money
b) Keith Otis
The UAB Specul l E'•ents
Co,nmlttce IS In trouble a gam
through no fault of Paul
Ustruck . comm1ttce chour·
man Ustruck . dubbed Fuzzy
by h1s frtends . has a total
budget of $6500 for the entire
year Consec:1ucntly. when he
IS not on the phone promotmg
concerJS he 1s slowly getting a
black lung or pul ling out hi s
hair
As Fuuy potnll.'<i out . S6500
IS ha rdly enough cash to put
out n large concert bcc:tusc
an 1n1ttal cap1lnl mvt'stment
IS needed at contract 11me to
se<:u re a band and facllitu.•s
S.ud Fuuv , " I '4ould hke at
It liSt StfOOO l' W·Os hkosh
gl!ls $17 .000 for th1s type of
entert:unment ..
The Art s and Lectures
senes prt'sently stndes a
$49 .500 budget nllocatton
"h1ch 1s roughly ("lght ttmes
tha t of Spec1al E\·ents As
Dean Hanford. ~: ha1rman of
arts and le<'turt.>S . sta ted.
" We ha\·e a cultural m1ss1on
to the Unl\·ers1ty and the
surroundmg
community ..
Hanford went on to discuss
the not10n that man)' students
would pay large sums to see a
rock concert "'hcrcas they
may not pay so h1gh a prict' to
nt tend :a fi ne arts progr;un
Conce rmn g th1s !Ianfo rd
repli("(l, "S t~ent s w11l pay to
Sl'C whatthC\' want .. He went
p n to say . " \\'e ' rt'nottr~lllg to
replace that happ1nt.-ss tof a
rock concert 1 but g1\ mg more
options by pusht ng r\r ts :lnd
l..ectures ..
l'struck had !U mlll:lr
regards for Art s and Lt"Cturt•:t
"hen he remarked . " We don 't
w1sh to Interfere "''h the
excellent Arts and Lci.'turt's
A Red Lantern
i:P:I:z:z::A:i
,,
YOU.R ticKET TO
5c BEER*
* 1 WEEK ONLY
UNnL 12 P.M.
NOW ... PIZZA and PIWA·
an~ to
introduce you to it
we're offering 1 week of nickel
beer with our PIZZA.
So ..• come on in . .. this offer
won't last forever!
0
BHR -
YOUR OIOI(E (TAP) PABST U6HT OR DARK OR HAMMS
Pr og r am but feel that
st udents " 'ant more con ·
tl'mporary pop music .''
As1de from budget hassles.
Fuzzy confronts a realm or
obs tacles. One headache is
the s 1ze . aco ustics and
IO(.'<ltiOn or Quandt Gym ·
nas1um which ha s n capacity
of four thous:md students .
nus white elephant cn n be
ttSL>d by the s tudents, who own
11 . onl y under str ict "no
s rnok1og or drinking"
1tnutat1ons.
11ns IS lh<' larg<'SI facility in
the cam pus area and the only
other alll'rnatJ\·e for a large
concert 1S to go outdoors Out
111 the fresh at r IS the problem
nf mother nature . city or ·
dtn.mt·cs . campus res1dcnts
" ho sunply do not hke rock
mus1c . power se t · up
prnblcms and gate crashing ,
tn n:tntc a few
•
Another fnctor to con ·
-.tdt•r 1:> l' \\'SP's ponr track
n~·ord t.·onccrrung roncl'r ts
:-. •me groups . due to the lack
of 'Ul'l' ('~S of past COIIC('riS tn
thlioo to~n. Sl mpl~ do not want
tu pia~ ht.•re Last year "Taj
~l.l h.tl and " lt':t a lk>aut 1ful
lla~ .. cancl'll'd because of low
.Hh .utn• t1ckN ~ ales Smce
~ru ups usually get 10 to 90
pt.•n:ent of g;~ t e fl'Cs they often
h.-cl that 1t 1s ha rdly worth
tht.·lr l!ffor ttf there is a lack of
tntt•r<"St 111 a concert
In hght of the previous
ha~ l cs , here IS an example
of costs a t a re<'ent concert by
Lester Flatt and Ma c
W1seman The imtta l costs
"ere Lester F1att.
SISOO.
and ~ l ac W1seman . S600 .
Pr1nted tickets were $-10 50.
Tedmtc1an and usher fees
"ere $1 52. Publicity costs
totaled S204.35 Ibroken down :
gloss1es $1 1.25. posters $23 .50,
newspaper ads 542. 10. radio
announcements SI27.SO) . Al l
tlus was balanced ngninst
$1444 2:5 income fr om ticket
sa les . leaving a conce rt
dehc 1t of ·SHfi2 .60.
•
J
•
'2
Fuzzy IS presently looking
forward to a large turnout lor
the Wi shbone Ash and T .S.
llen ry Webb' concert set for
ton1ght Wi shbone Ash costs
Si2.SO T .5 . Henry Webb is
Si50 Fuzzy has almost every
penny t1ed up in this concert
and , he stated . " II students
do 1 p romze this concert I
g Ul"SS
'II have to close up
5
h~~·of
the'reason.s UAB can
afford a big band such as
W1shbone Ash is because Ash
'41 11 be touring the midwest at
th1s time . They will be appeOII nng in Milwaukee and
Madison so that costa or such
things as travel are cheaper
lUlder this " block booldng"
type of arrangement.
While Fuzzy is on the edge
of his chai r anticipating an
ulcer . hard-driving concer t
freaks are looldng forward
with ant lci patlon to a
breakthrough . in Stevens
Point concert tradition . It 's
up to the people or this area
and the students or this
campus to place their vote on
the type or !uture en·
~~~=1~~~ ~ ';:~:
last big concert of the year !
Jonuory 24, 1974
THE POINTER
Poge 11
New Law May Clear the Air For Non-Smokers
TheStevensPoint·Pw~ge
C~ unt y Division of the
taken by state and ftderal
W1sconsin Heart .WOC:iation
prrdkted that non-smokers
can opecl more relief from
tobacco smoke in t9'N than at
the rights or non-10moktN
Dona l d J ohn so n ,
control smoki ng In public
Dr Johnson credited much
of. th1s activity to "~""''
sc•cnhhc t'\'ldence ,..hich
sho ...-s that cigaret~ smoke
can be h.armful to
nOI'I·
smokers "Stud1es '" smoke
filled rooms:· he said. "in·
dicatl'<i that the le\'cl or
the 1•oeek which
smokers ~~o·m be subject to
alleqpu,
an\' timt' in reunt history
br
plusclttzensgroupstoprot~t
·• Jntlwput )'earalone."soud
Dr Johnson, ·•se\·cra l states
introduced legislation to
l:lkenincreaSJngly toprottocl
non'Sillok~ . expecially in
~losed public places. public
~;·o•weyai'ICft and in many
"'ork sttuallons ··
•\ panel dtscusslng non -
Educ:alion, and ltetrc:alion:
Billllrttler. physician a t the
UWSP Sludrnt ll~a l th Servicr: But Scbwittgoebel .
R1 ve r Pinr1 Community
Il ea I th Crnte r Ad ·
min1stra tor. and rorme r
Sta t e Senator Wi l liam
ll.:lnsen.
~:!d''d:::,~ ~ ~~~:; f~;ef' ~~ 1 T!:S":'e~~~O:~~~ ~:~=~~:~~:a~~~~~~~ !~ok1e~ ri~~~\'t'~~ p~f~
~~e;:~~c~~~inma: ~C:~,:' s::d :~ ~h;!: ~:Ch~c!!,~~':-:rati:;,~~t! ~~!i~ J!~bl~~. ~t;"~~m~: W~~~~.~~n~r ~n~o~~~~~~
~~:t,:~'eeokfonN~~:i~l :;;~~ea~c :~~k~r:a~~~dno'n~ ;~~~:~7/:r~nhg;u;~~::; ~~ T:::~~~~~a~i ~·P~~.~ :~~~~~e:s· :~:~~~r~ti~~
Theme
fCK
heart
and ~cac:e~"~e~~b~~S ~~d~
~;~":,kk'e-:::ns!~~at'!nao:n~~
~:a:rO:a/~~~ 0 ~~5~~~~ ~~~ ~~~~~t:;:~~~ ~. =~~~~~)~0::~ ~f ~~~ ;,:e:soro~ ,:~;~~·Ph~:.:: ~!:;".~orted
lla•~
ttJghU, Too...
Dr Johnson buts h1s
optumsm on recent actions
:\o;u=ta:CK~~~o c=~ ~;:~~~o.;:;;·e~ :;~b~·:!!
Indoor a1r pollut1on by
tob~~~:cu smoke ..
UAB Equipment Available.
tou•rflll)' Atlivoun llnrd
rquepmrnt a vailable lor
ch«koul from thr Program
nurcofrlcronltoeaentndRoor
1>1111<' Unio~nil)' Crntt.-
1 HU(Ct'fl Amplifier
: Wollnuall CaUC'Ite
tt'l'doonoi\'Oicelllll
t t:krtro \'ooce ~linophonrs
Armory Info
~rtment
The
of
J>roteellve Str\"ICCS . 001
G..'OI'geSIIen
Bwldmg.llas
bf!'e n :appointed Armory
CUstodian .
All students having guns on
ta mpWi must register and
n-tam them in tht> Armory.
C.O..Orgl•Sil~ Bu1lding l.«ks
mUSJ be furniShed by the
1nd1'o1dual
The Armory ~~o·ill be open
from 6am to 6 pm each
Saturd:ayand Suncbyforthe
rema1nde r of thr set·on.d
semester
Armon• operations a re
)ll"l'St'ntl): under rt'VI!Uon for
thrf:all5emest<rr
0
~
I'AH
~pi)Ch&hb
5moke So 11 is encouragmg
to ~ that steps are being
LAY-IT-AWAY
l aw Schoo l
Admi ssion Test
NOW FOR
IOStopW~t~
Date Set
1 SUrhn~ Pelolot
Z\\alkOPT;olk~•
3 Smnh \ 'K' l« .\t<l\tt' l'holo
hghb
: Hot..x .\lo••t Photo l.e~thb
1 Sup.or 1 Holt'~
160 .\lont'
C'anltTOI
I Suprr lfl.oln :li0.\ID>1t'
Camt'n J SUI'ft" I Y.uhoca
.\ii)O·oeCamt'fa•
~ Camrr;o Tropoth
t8mmt:dotor\'1t""rr
l ll opSupcor iBuuSpli«''"
I Alrt'QUtpl t2XlSmm Shde
\'Ot''"tt"
Student Senator
Vacan cies
Student Senate ha s
1·annt1H for srnators m
ewr) d1stnct If you are
mh'rt'Sied m bft'omong m ·
\'OII•rd In student politiCS.
pJ1•a..e "op mtothr Studrnt
GO\t>rmnent Offll"e. st'tond
OooroltheUn..·rrslt)'Crnter.
for more mformatton Signed
p;'l1:1ons to plaC't' }OUr namr
on tht': ballot 11.111 be dur on
Jan :!:8,1974
Homestead Act Eligibil ity
by tobacco
FSZ$z:l;;z:l;zs;.,;.=:,..,=;;o;""'""'"'"'""''
The Uw School Admi u10n
Test,.·lllbcll.ll"enat UWSPon
Sat . Apn\20, if there arr a
1~astt5tandldateslnternted
mtakll!&ll h~rt"atthat t1me
lndl\' lduals
onl rrrstrd
5houldcontatttheCOunsr:ling
Centrrassoon as possible for
application
materials .
applit11tiona.
Complrted
ac:tompamed b)' fet>s. must
be hunt!'d m to the Counseling
~ntt>r . Ot4!':elsonllall . onor
befort' Thur . March 7
SU I 'Kt:~u;
COURT OF Til&.
STAn: Ot' :-.;.,;w YOIIK ,
COU~'TY ot• Nt; \\ YOit K
STAn: Ot'
l"'aonu/1,
~EW
\' OH K.
agauut
Til£ AIIOIITIOS IS ·
FOit.\1,\TIO:" AG£N<."\'. ISC .
J\111:0. ,\ St:TTU:. Jlt ~nd
:UtAIIU' C' PETEitS .
l.lri.. ntbnu
l"'lrwo;ont Ia Arhtlr II of lilt
Uus1nes~ Corporatoon La,.· and
a. Subd 11 ot tilt
s.-t
t:~l'<'\ltl\" ('
......
ll."fltpatdb}· youmi97Jmust
ondnno~71
be U5t'd 1n tomputallon of
'0TIC' t:
rrrd1t Thts prrcrntage
agrorolderasof~mber
ll. 1973, arr a Wisconsm compared 11.1 \h )"OW'" yrarly
' OIK't'Uhn"eb)'&l't'nbrthr
meden l and havr 11 yr11rl)· 1ncome 11 tomputed and you r und..rUJtnt'd , 8ERNAII0
lncomeoflessthltn$7000. )'OU cash refund lsdl'ternu nt'd
ttu:~sTtK'K. that II<' has tc.l'll
If your d111m 1s based on dul) a tlpomlt'd l't-rmanrnt
may be rligoble for a ush
refund undrr the Home.tcad n-nt. u;h1ch most dorm and lt'""'""t-rollhrpropcrt)"ol lhto
off-campusstudrna' are. )·ou <'OI'por;ttrdorlrndant.andllal
The Homestrad Att. m115 t an:ath a t"ffllf1tat1on ::;.....r:;!~ht'u~~~
fl"rt'ntly puled by thr slolte 51 gnoed b) the landlord n to
olh,•dut•n.andlllal, pun;uant
ICJIS]3IUI"t', is des1gnoed to p<~ymrnlll made The amount 10
S...· t:YI of thr Busonru
prov1de rr:hdto low uw:ome pa 1dforoccupanl'yonlycan fOI"piiUIIon t..ll,. . .aodH«t'""t'r
be IJSed."''ht'l"t35,an\OUnl5 r<'Q\IIfl'S
r~nter s or home-owners The
law now provides tnat any pa 1d for h.-mstung.s. htat.
person aged eight«n or o1·er utilities or meals C'annot be
All rrl'llllon and daoman"
ont"'-ltftlland,.,Uhunloqutdall'd
~~oho o~· ns or rr:nta the
)"OU reqUirt' further m· or ronlofl\lt'fll d.aems •nd an>
proprrty m wh1ch he resides
LSehg1bl.e lor a direct ush forma\101'100 the Homestead ,.,lto,.homlht'C'Grporaltonllal
refund This would mclude Act, contact Student unlullolltdcontrxll:taprt'H'III
Go•·ernment Prn1dent J1m lht'~rt"la,mstosaodRKt'l•·a-on
students r uiding in dor
""''"" ~nd 1n dtotaol :01 lht•
llarmlton lleencouragt':lall uth,...
nmonesor ol"rtampus
uf hoi aUDI'nry . ~IO it·
To be r:ligibl.e !Of' suc h a rhgible st udents to take Tt~t~:H )I ltOTIISTEIS .
rriund, in addition to thr ad\·antage of th1S and he lll<'~ lt'd at US 1•1rt A•"MIII'
stated
t~t
forms
should
be
!toulh,:'\.t'\0 \"ork , ;\"r.o· \"ork
aboo.·r. you must not ha"r
a
·allablrathlsofhtrbynrllt
1001' b)· thr t~th cby o1 ~la y .
1
be-en claimed u a depmdent
IYil
lor federal tax purposes soemt':Strr
ThiS progrn~ aSiOC:iat~ t>~tfd :>.o•rmber~. tm
Wlthinthelasttwo )'r&rs. You
1 IU:HSA itll Rtt;SSTOCK
m~a t be a ae lf•upportin& rligtb 1llty w1th need n lt«'<'"troflht'Proptrtyol
student with an Income undl'f" provldmgrrhefforrentenas Tilt: AHOII TI ON IN ·
rrooo Income would Include ~~.~11 as homecw.-nen AJ Statr t'OHliAT10~ AGt:SC'I". I ~C
wagt'l urnrd, inltrt'lt on ~nator W11i1am Bablilch
sni ngs,acholanhlps !not satd " M11ny needy peoplr. MORTIMER M HOTIIS'flm;
loans), social tecurity and uw:l~dlng studrnu ..,·ho tan
lor BIENSTOCK ,
take •dvantage of thr
G.l . bUI .
U you pay rent fiK your program . d~ · 1 ~~aJ1u tnat ~~~~:;-;~NSoylto 10011
homest.ead, 25 percent of the they are ~l.ig1 ble .
by Kr it hOti~
lf)"OU artt'ighteen
yr<~rsor
"''
us;1
=:r
A
DOWN
CHOICE.
'AYMfHT
w'tLL
HOLD
YDUil
<i'VE IT AS A V A.U p.fTIH f. THAT
SHl'U. ALW AYS CH QU'SH.
GRUBBA JEWELERS
YOUR DIAMOIID & GIFT WilER
11
Diamonds Our Specialty"
Kf!PSAKE. COWMBIA & OUJI6f BlOSSOM
DIAMOIID RUI6S
CHECK OUR PRICES
MAIH & TltllD ST.
U~---=--=--5----:p_or_ts_ _
POINTER
The UWSPhockey team will
be engaged in four games
here. this week.
The Madison Voca tion al
and Technical School ~ill try
to revenge their previous loss
to the Pointers on Friday . a t 8
p .m ., and again on Saturday ,
Puckmen Drop Two
To River Falls
scoreless lie and roasted to
by Pbil Esclw
U bo:. sccres we:re all you had
to go on . looking at results ol
last weektnd's hockey games
would be misleading, at least In
lhe opinion of Coach Did:
Kottke. His puc:kme:n droppftt
No·o contests to ruver F'alts, 4-0
and 8-0, bringing their SU$0n
record to H .
" The scores we:n no rea l
Indication of Ole: way we
played ," stated Kottke. " I feel
we: played them as well as we
,.,·ere: capable of."
In the: first meeting, it wun't
until late: in the: S«ond period
lhat the:: Falcons broke a
JEAN S
JEANS
victory In lhe lhird period.
te!t~~~~:~~~::'nd~c:-
.
Shepa rd kept the Polnte:rs from
being blown out. The: ddense
was especia ll y tough when
Rlwr Falls had chances on
power playa.
"Only one power play goal
waa scored on 1.15 in bolh
0
~~:·~~;~~ ~;:',:_.:'What
Statistics for the two games
sho...,"«i that in game one
Stev~ Point took Z2 shots ~
goal to 3l for lhe Falcons. The
S«<nd game River Falls held a
~Z2 advantage.
JEANS
JEANS
Winter Activities For
Outdoor Sportsmen
Upcoming
Hockey
Action
{!:~~~t~s:ta~~: M;~:
The Pointers pl ay St . Nbr·
berts on Wednesday. at 8 p .m .
A bus will leave for the
gam e at regular interva ls
starting one hour before each
game time . It wiH,make-pic k·
ups a t the ci rcle by Sch·
meec kle , between Watson
and Thomson , and in front of
Allen Center . The bus will
continue to make its s tops
until everyone is picked up.
All hom e games are at the
Port age County Ice Arena . on
Rke St. just orr of Olurch St .
JEANS
JEA NS
JEANS
£rainqer~
ALLEY KAT
THERE'S A SHORTAGE OF
DENIM .•.. BUT NOT AT THE
ALLEY KAT
V)
~
~
V)
~
WE HAVE MAND .s:qLES TO
~
CHOOSE FROM. 500 PAIRS fN STOCK.
JEAN ·
TRADE IN
SALE
by Ornn ls Cox
Winter months h a v e
traditionally been sort or a
limbo for the outdoorsma n.
When guns are cleaned and
put away a nd fishing tackle is
taken out of storage, mended
a nd sorted in antici pa tion of
the upcoming season. a quick
look at the outdoor scene
should really be all that is
necessary to dispel such a n
a tti tude .
But the rabbit a nd squirrel
seasons remain open until
January 31. providi ng some
exce ll en t la te seaso n opportun ities . Although the
Stevens Point area is not
genera lly known as good
r;:~bbi t territory, there are
some brushy pockets where
sizable concentrations of
cottont a il s ca n be found ,
pa rti cular ly near Custer .
rught now , a wa rm day
should be a ll tha t is needed to
provide some first rate action .
During semester break.lhis
reporter had a chance to do
some hunti ng in the south ~·este rn part of the state
which must have some of the
most overlooked and best
rabbit hunting in the s tate .
Collecting a limit of three
cottontails within a couple of
hours was easy .
In addition to rabbits. a n
extra m onth of s port is a fforded to grouse hunters in
so ~thw es t e rn
Wi scon s in ,
wh1ch has a ~ason extending
to January 31 for the first
time in the sou thwestern zone.
The bluffs. a l o ng th e
Mississippi remain one of the
FOR THE ONE
YOU CHERISH
$2°0
z
4:
w
....,
Off on a
Students study
winter kill
V)
~
~
!
New
"'z
Pair of Gl RLS' Jeans ~
FINAL WEEKI
• ALL ~
~ FAIR TRADE ITEMS EXCLUDED. • GIRLS ONLYl ~
SORRY GUYS.
~ FINAL WEEKI
JEANS
JEANS
JEANS
JEANS
JEANS
JEANS
D1stance runnt'.n at UWSP
had one of the belt yura In the
school's history 11nd, includt'd
with the! many distinctions the
t97J Pointers han rtceivtd, is
lhr naming of senior Don
Trubialowaki to the NA IA All ·
D111nct H team
A pair of Poin ter freshmen
Hick Zaborslte and Joe Young:
,.,-ere :also cited as bonorable
ment ion runners
Trutiatnwskl'a honor came:
after he placed seventh in the
dist rict championship mt'.l!:t at
~a u Clai re. The top IS were
acclai med All -Distric t 14
runners. The ne:.t tO place
w1nnera , which Included
~-~~~~~-~e'1s91 ~ a~ 1 ~11 :~e w~~:
GIRLS! BRING IN ANY PAIR OF
V)
Runners on
All-District
Team
g1ven the honorable mention.
2 WEEKS ONLY
YOUR OLD JEANS
AND RECEIVE
more productive areas for
a nyone interested in hunUng
these birds .
In the northern a reas of the
sta t e. s nowshoe rabbit
hunting is reported to be
good, acco r ding to the
De p a rtm e nt o f Na tu r a l
Jtesources, wi th the ceda r
swam ps providing the bes t
hunting . Unli k e cott ontail
rabbi t a nd s qu i r r e l , t he
sen50n on snowshoes r emains
open yea r round .
Ice fishing, which is now
just coming into Its 0'-'-'ll, has
va ried from poor to good.
Lake Winnebago, whic h has a
reputation as one of the better
wa lleye lakes in the state, has
so fa r been some thing of a
dlsappo intm e nt .The li m it
ca tches of la s t year left many
anglers looking forward to
this yea r 's first ice . Despite
such ini tial optim ism the
good fishing has failed to
materia lize .
Elsewhere fish ing has been
fai r , though the re has been
some exce llent pa nfis hing
locally . E\•en though hun ting
hours have be-en altered a's a
res ult of daylight savings
ti me . the DNR reminds
fishe rmen tha t the hours of 6
a .m . to9p.m . a re sti ll in e ffec t
for ice fishi ng .
JEANS
1116 M•i• St.
on. rox ~
Nut
....,..
MoL. "'"'nln.. N
...::::::
::.
SO,.
lol
The Fisheries Comm ittee of
Student O.a pter of the
Socie t y Is an
designed to gi ve
interested in fish
bi~logy. and opportunity to
gam experience in the field
according to Mark Ebbers. '
At the present time tbe
F is h e r ies Comm itte e Is
working on severa l projects
fo r the De p a rtmen t o r
Natural Resource'.s dis trict
~ s h manager . One project
mvo lves taking disso lved
oxygen readings on a number
of la kes in Portage County In
order to determine which
la k es could develo p e 8
winter-kill problem .
They
are also doing a winter creel
census study on McDill pond
If students a re Interested
joining the FIJI>orles O>m mittee they can do ao by
CAlling Mark El>bon (phone
Mftnbonhip "' tile
Wildlife Society 1a ~reel -
u;
_I)_
>
January 24, 1974
Wrestlers Tromp Stout-Squeak · Past Marquette
")'Te111 E•Iud
·
In tallr.in& to UWSP v.-n~lhna
<WCh Rtj Witb it W(ll.lld be
Nrd to tril that his tum l'Yd
11ut overwbtlmed UW ·Stout
liiSO>"trllll rt'«Jrd to Sol >'\II ll
pnin4 •t7ofiMI«<OIdpenod
All thretof Mutlltf""s~l ~~
•ic~ ha~e ~Net 11 on pim
~·~m;~n ~U)'"'"ttlhl Joe
JohruonpinnPdhosopponentln
teamb.adjustwonei&btoutollO
m~otdles. five on plnl.
" We did OK," nid • calm
WicU. "W e hlve ahtUebet~r
··t··u happy aboM 1M fxt
thootlheiU>"~ · "''"t out looking
for tbe pin," uld Colo(h Widu.
' "Tbat'l W m.~in 10111 in
a.lentlhanStoutand i iJIK'!Pwt
..-rtatllna."
~-. 1 ~i~~;'~ .~'! ~~c~!
ddic1\ mto a t.W \NI'SP lead.
Alsofi£11flfllllllhrrllllywtre
t'oBowolll! Mueller's pin ,
f'o:linten Wayne 11\nu. 11111.
H.ICk Neoprrt 11711 and AI
Janlt--.ki t190twe.re buten
··-a
consecuti>~lylsMir1111tlletltd
the acore 1~1~ with only the
hra•·y·-..flJhtmatchremainiiiiStt'\·~
~onthtion"
A pon by Plvl 11-'ft W~ l
) l llll'llft'provodedthe ..·innilll
maflia In the UWSP wreltlifll
ltam 'l li · U w1n over
Mllr111H'Ile.Jan . l2.
lim ! M:arqutlle and UVi SP
Actually Stout nevu knew
..-hal bit t1wm lA \bl! J•o. II
mlsmllldl.. ~ Doro apmed
\hemloldlb)'pinni~hil~
ponentln): \i ol the Lhird
p;:oriod. Followin& Ridr.lluJhes'
C'GIIIItiftc
hlm 1o win many
m.~lches becaU5tlof hil weight
and s peed.'' commenttd.Widui.
The efforU ol Rkk llughel, ll
l·% w1nnn- in the 12' pound
lbuoion . Soucleand0obb5"·ere
•lsocotedbyWickl.
" lluchts had bHn beaten
toubtrb)' lh\:soppontnt:lndhr
nmchetbutMilll'lln-.compttinc
lnthtl51poundclau , wononthe
only ptn 01 the meet ~ ~~ tr.am
pointsa~a,.·ardedfor 11 pm.
LubySidot!tlltt..-ononapiniD
teCOnd pmooi Tom
• 41 of the
~11<12\wulhenckfe•ted
IHiint!ronlyPointerdefeataf
threeforadfciloon
tlwcby Cuy~ t \501 .
Wurea Popp l Ull and \lo' l)'""'
,.hiJeRickNftpert(\!IOipinned
hlaOIJIIO'Wftlin 7:UollheUnrd
intheflmptnOd "
~lueller'l t'ffort ho8hhl!-hted 1
s trongperformilfl<'tby POlllttr
mlddle-.;flKJotsthouturneda " l
bolh ..-on on p in$. Ph1l MuelleT
ranhos~lmertFdtoJ.-0.
b.u:kiobeathimthllt.lrne,"
Wic:los "Soucie.OO...ed •
great .. ,umgnest to win Ills
matchllndu•fnshnanllal
1rUl potentillf . Dobbs has
nct1)t>ONII 1bihty for take
oo..·nsaOOhe!ti•·t"SIOOperrtnt
ai\Uittome"
s.:~od
olthe)nr•ndbothlla~ebeftl
pt~iwohl&h-acorin&Pointen
«1
$hrro<ed1faldeli~lnamilll
"Mueller ~ , .tr). •cress~•~
lndllal ..-ays,.·orklnjtfwl
po.n." ...,ld l'olntn- Co.ach R<'l
Wicks " 1lus ..·ash~IK'OI'Iodpon
Jlinh 11771. an..-on d«ilions.
JoeJohroson
asahea\')'·tici&ht•nd,.·tart
wrutltn both won liv e
w«•w in 1M IX~~~~ ells..
f'oint'•
d indled the mert with 1n
.mprts$i\'el-%-..·in•nthehuvy·
,.·eiallldivosim.
"Johriwo lias mucl'l t&lenl
• ·vn becallK..-e
bit mon'
aarft&ive and al1! in bttte1'
The Agony and
The Ecstasy
~turcb y''"''''on"·"'e ~liS
llyJi mllaiiKk
~~~~ns:C~~:".:=
lt ..-:as tht utrane eum!U.
n~ng .. hatthtqonyand
tl\e«$UUI)'reaUy munt. Tlle
haU. tMl'll leonsofRIVft'f'-11\ll
hllmollltt'd thr P01nten. 75-65
ecstasyclmtln Fridly'tSWI
" 'Ill OVer Superior Tloea&OII)'
:appuJ"ed Sat\U'day Ill I 7'!t-i5
lou to Ri ver Falls.
t' roda y'l conltll With
Suptro« bfeln woll'll 80K"e
Wflnklu!honklora241ead. lt
ended wlll'l 1 bastet by Tom
t:nlundfori.W i victar)' . and
bd,.-~n the extnmes thr two
~eniors domi n:al ed tht Nil
Weonkauf lonithed with •
ttame-hi&hlllpoints:andat e.m
hl&h o1 1 t't'bounct. Enlund
finiShed woth 16 poonls. •
nboundt . a nd 4 UliiU
-
Wflnbuf ahot7t ptr cent lo
t:ntund'• Tl per ctt~l from lhr
nw 11me
tt.a nt'd OUI -
-
~,:~~~!1~~~~ ~~ ::ir
, _ last four mlnuta proved
t nou&htobeat Superoor .
ho..-evtT . when 1M Poinlen
reeledolla14-lpoinl$pf~IO
'The P01n1en dl$-played an
amount ol111f1111tudt
BeforetheS.aturd.aycontl!51.
lll\-.,rt' llllhadao-4C"'ftferaK't:
rt'<'Ofdand,.·tftl-100\'erall
Yrtthe)touts<OI'edthePOinltrl
~\OllndOIItt~themby
amaLUII
Thea•me~an ..·otbbottl
trams~orarchongforthtbll$lltl
With 1M K"'f't tied II %1,
ho•-e~o·n- . lJw P01nten broke
open "lth 10
l'OIIM'CIItl\~ \Ill •
rnatchcod poon\1 and It'd at Uw
111111 ~71
Stllrllf181hrii«andh.JII. I
nur -cornplete revenal oc·
n~rnd
'A'h.JI
h1d
~
a
closely<•lledc«~ltstbeoe•mel
phySical pme . ..-hole Hh~ r
•'alb. ohoollfllllpercenlontbl'
fint half . hit 0111 21 of l$ :1\ •
le~~lllll ..-as thr i-'01nttn ..-ho
conttoUed the onollllf IK'OI'Iod·
h:llf s urae B"'"'WflnUul'sl
poont pfly concluded IIIII"
SuptriorcameclcM...,ththr
U·U, but el&bt C'OII·
I«U\ive poinu. inch.oding four
by Weillkauf. prompted
Super\G'"Urne-ouls. 'J'heyWere
....-o
Ia vtln "the Pointers"'*'
~t~ana&ed 1o apen up 1 lWI
lnd.ilnclw- dlallengedonly
.111 1.21 ld t with 1 D-74 \ud.
ThePointenW1)11de$pl1.e%1
tu rnoverstoSupcrlor 'llS,
lar&ely d~ to1 a per rtnt
~flllvenrcefromlhrnoor
llldan&lpereeatperformlll(e
atthrfrftthrowline
Superior's aU-foot
Llfe~tl.e
ColliN.and .. ~J i m Happ, both
lrelhmen, led lbe opp:~Mnts.
CollinaledtheVellowJ-cloetaon
poinUwlth21.andisl~
WlthiO,whlle Hipppaured 1n2l
polnUfor the'-n.
_)
conM'nlh'·" UWSP poinb. and
p•·ePoont a 41--ll 1dv1ntaae
wo\h I ~ ZD to pllly
Then came the downfl\1 .
Wt"lnluouf ..-u ftl~tn 1'1.'51, thr
Polnt~!"l .,.·ent cold. a nd IUw r
•·allllnltiaLtdL.hecorMbloc:k
Taklna :ath~ntaJe ol Pointer
~.t~w~·a\corunlllTO"'ed
tht-&apto»-UbtiDAWen••ut
rrturnedandmadoeltU~. II
.. uthelutPoinln-basllet for
;appro~timatdy four mitr.l\a.
Rn1:' rf'allsdidnotfoUowllliit .
TM t'alt'OM K"'f'ed II con·
S«UII\'epoh11Jilndhadll51-5-l
k;od "Mil Lhl! Pointtn ~\led
lhelrfintUme"'-altbl'
:KVTinllbin~
W1th 5 12 r~mainonft. the
Poult toN at ~1-51 , but ll 14-2
nJconlplll'tputthe&lmeoul
alconteniiOIII
tlnl('t' Weonk•ul illllln kd
Pointn-KorinKwith II, " 'hi\e
llob0mehnalddedl4, llndTom
En&und 12 J ack Ktnkt:nl ol
RiV'n' Falls bdd pme-h\lh
scorLnahonurlwi th26poll'lla
llfl(illddedilr~.while
Tom )laten>.~cMr added IJ.
$hoOlin& lois -fOI'·Ioi• from the
nw
lnd •2·35 II h.alf.
I(Qfe
Point Women Squeak
Post Oshkosh
Page 13
Intramural Basketball
Title Up For Grabs
Tom Dobb'l ~l win 111 !he LU
p;ounddliUandCuySaucie't7·
~decision inthetSii pound dliM.
~:Jbo~~ea= ~~~~~~~
T HE POINTER
lnttamural balketbllilactlon
opened up \lilt ..-eell with the
tiUt up for &Ubi. Cluteu~
Mu trn u • . ~ tum which
domiNtedplayl)~llfi.JOind
even\Ullli)' "'OIIlhrtitle,ilnol
mteredthisyear
lnthelndrpendentl.uJue,
the maiOI' con\HI
BSC I
defeat Vets 1. 110 to 30. Chuc:k
""w
Johnsonwulhele~ingK'Oftr
dl'ftlltiqlniNorthW•l:IOn.61
toli . JohnSc:hotnenberiertoolr;
pmehononwilhttpoinls tnd
North tSmit)l'sl hammert'd !at
SouthiOOiolt. KmPOI'ttr led
the way for thevlttorlwlth 22
points. A llllented :lrd North
Simi l.e;lm -.lippt'd put 4th
SoulhSim5,$$10$3. 8obSdlulll
tookhl&hhonorslorlhewlnners
-..·itht5poinl.l.
lor Ul~ ..;nners " 'ith 54 poinlll.
Another roW ~aw the Rt}td.M
dtfnt Mr Lucky's. t:llo 21 .
l.eadilll Jn~rer for thr Rejec·
Lon wu Mike l.ynett with 2S
An e.1tly H:llon 111-c:•mpus
Intramural bflslldball poll for
the lop fi ve tmms r.~llkl 11
lollo,..,_:
pointa. lnlmatdl~bel>o·een
121Athlete'1 t'eet
131 Rejecton
t41tnd &>atWI1$011
t51 J,;xlinct Sp«itl
twoalthe lea&ue's toplallll,
theA!hltte'at'eetdefutt'd thr
E~tinct Species, fill to :U:. Roger
Sus& 11 former U.'lo'. Stt'\'ens
PoUlt ball pllyes-1 '«!the w•y
for the winners with II pointa.
The loKn ..-ere It'd by Paul
Welta . 1 former U.W. Eau
Oaire to.ckcuurt Ice, with II
wsscf
......
lndormi1af1rompetillon,2nd
1::151 Wallon•PPI'lll'1 tobethr
lellmiobeat. lnthef.ntol2
pmes they doll'ned 4th Eut
Wltaon , l0to20. Stevelfeinlnd
Ca rl Creterhar« led the w•y
for the winnenwith 16 polnll
tliCh. In the seeond game 2nd
East apin domlnlltt'd plly by
L~~:§~if;j~J
(
THE POINTER
Page 14
January 24, 1974
Since You Didn't Ask -
'7 4 Elections -Prologue To 1976
b)' Jur y Long
In So,·embt-r. tlu.s nallon .,.·JII
once ag:un trudge oH to the:
polls and pull lrvers o r SC"r:&w l
'lt's on b•allocs Political obM"n ·ers say tt\01 1 t~ resulls of
lh1s off-yrar election will be a
me.u ureof the public's ~action
to the pohtu::al gangrene of thle
~uon
adml:l15 1ral• on
[)('mocrats :ue saying " We told
you so,' ' r:Hht.•r undt'r t~• r
breaths, as they mountain a low
profile and a proper!)' mdisnant
nns
nnstoffei)On
lbursday, Jan. 31
1:30 P.M.
UW-lC .A..re Mo
-.
Tickcta: UW-10 Holders • $3.50 ach-once et
......
U. TKket Office; $.5.50
Ad't'OfiC e
Otflu,
c....,. ••
ss.so .,
PTaentN bJ' the UW-Y..au
Cta.lre Sodal Conunl..ton
and "'Whoop&e'" Cornmltteoe
facade
Chagrintd and em·
barassed Republicans are
holding the:1 r greatest liabtli ty .
President Fmk, a t arm 's length
and nre saying lhin.gs like :
"Nilcon7' Ne,·er hl'ard of him."
You really can't blame them .
though
Seems
~'· ~ryon~ · s
try1ng to 3\'0id pullut1on these
days. and th~ Wlut~ llou.se 1.5
em1ttu,g more than 11s shar~ or
politica l hydro-carbons. With
this 1n mind. the reporter with
nolhifl8 else to do il ltd to
specula t~ 011nd philosop)u~ oo
""ho should and shouldn't run
fOf'offkt'
Hcllection on the 1972 ca m·
pa1gn leads one to .,.,·onder that
the Democrats didn't stt'm to
leam anyttung from the 196-f
~mbarassm~n t that the
Rt'puhllcans suff~r~d wh~n
Barry Goldwat e r was
repudm tt'd by the \'Diers. In that
\'t':n. the Republican party ....·as
domu\al~ by a far right .,.,; ng
factton that booed mcxkrat~
Republicans lik~ N~lson
Rockefeller off th~ podium at
the pa rty's national convention.
The r~ult was a far right .,.,;ng
campa1gn and platform .,.,;th
wh1ch the larg~ centrist
ma)orlly of \' ot~rs could no1.
ac~t when they went mto the
booths. The 1~ disaster was
not wasted on the GOP and
Democratic r~z:ulus in the
1968 eltclion. In that year. the
two parties came up ....;th
Hubert llumph r ey. a pe r ·
sa nification of llumpty ·
Dumpty. who probably would
have b«n a pr~tty good
Ptes1dent. and Richard Nixon,
.,.,.ho tsn 't
Tht point is, tlult both
~~r~~ede>;{ti~phl~ ".;a~
1
:,:,d:f!a~r:~k~t~
country hold. Both candidates
lit~rally tried to crowd each
other out of the center of the
road. The lesson to be learned is
that m order to be eleC"ttd to the
prnlckncy. the candhbte must
actJvely court • broad spectrum
of political thought To do
otht'r""ISC. il to court disaster.
as Georg~ McGovern found out
m 1972. McGovun Incidentally.
woultl ha,·~ made a better
presidtnt than Nixon . But that
s.1y1ng mlK""h
What. then . should .,.,.e look for
l$11 I
m the 19'7-4 congraHional and
stall.' ell!(:tiOns•
To theextenttha t both parties
.... m be experiencing in-fighting
1n the coming months. the
results ol the eltttions .,.,.,11 be
an Indicator or both the pubhc·s
reaction to the e,·... nts of the past
)·e·nr or so. and an Indication of
J);)rty direction leadfng to the ·
t976 presidential campaign
Democrats ...... 11 ha\'l' to soh·e
the sticky problem of
repre:sftlt.ation for minoritlH.
youth. women andold·line party
regulars. Their a ttentions will
also be dist ractl'd by facUonal
feuds betw('IE'n the ultra·li~al
faction led by ~l cGovern and
Edward Kennedy and the more
ttntnst faction led by Hum·
phrt.' )'. Henry Jackson. Edmw•d
M ~kie.and Lawrt"nce O'Brien.
Party
leadtnhio of the
Democrats is currenUy held by
the moderates who have sue·
cel.'dcd in ~lecting Robert
Str auss as nntional chai r·
person. The Democrats will also
h.lve to contend again with the
ugly litany ol lies and racism
epoused by G«!ri~ Wallatt
The Rl"publicans w1ll also
h:we their factional fighting and
bicker ing . The memben of the
uitra ·cooser-vati\'e wing. led by
Goldwater and Ronald Reagan.
w1ll be m direct cont~ntlon with
the mode-rates champ1oned by
l{ockefeller. Edward B rook~
and Cha rles Percy UC!'Cause or
the1r exposure as m~mbers of
the Senate Wa tergate committee . Sena tors Uaker and
Welker may :~lso fi gure
promtnently in th~ fight for
llepublican leadership. Th05e
who have in th e past identified
themselves w1th the Nixon
foUow1ng . may be reluctant to
do so in 19'7-4 , espeoc1ally 1f they
face strong oppo&i tion from
either other llepu blkam or a
strong Democratic nominee
What about Gerald Ford. who
h.1d the unmil!gated gall to us.e
Ius name m the same sententt
With Abraha m LulC"oln 's"' 11~ ' 11
still be telling us what a good
guy Nixon is. and how great
things, lik e the Nixon economy .
are And then he'll want to bto
Ptetldtnt in 1976
DON'T MISS THE
STEREO SHOPS'
9 HOUR SALE!
FANTASTIC SAVINGS ON NAME .BRANDS
LIKE:
THORENS
ACOUSTIC RESEARCH
PIONEER
CERWIN VEGA
SUPER SCOPE
DESIGN ACOUSTIC
AVID
TECHNICS
AND MANY MORE!
THIS FRI., JAN. 25- NOON TO 9:00
AT THE STEREO SHOP
Stearns declares candidacy
!>ea r Ed1tor .
Aftl"r atttnding a couple of
,\ ssembly m~etings. u the
rcpresc"nta th•t from my student
organization. 11 was soo n
C\' ldent to me that thc r ~ is a
nt'ed for J)('Ople ""ho want to
.,.,·ork 1n student gO\'f'tnmt'n t
Thl'refore. 1 am df'Cianng m)'
canclidacy for student 5f'Ni tor
1n D1strict One. and am wnUng
this letter m nn effort to present
rn)-self to as many stud('nts in
my dist rict as possiblt'
Prt\'IOUSiy . I ha\"t attended
the Um\"t'rfilt)' of Srbraska and
UW· Mtl.,., auk~ where 1 was
ac tive m 't'oung Democrats
before t'ntcrln.g the Air Force.
Honorably d1.schargcd frorn the
Iauer this summer , I moved
.,.,,lhm)' famtlytoPomt.andam
currently purswng a degr« m
biology.
from Ill)' past school. Air
Force and political acth·ltics. I
am ustd to ~~o·orking with pl'Opl~
and ""ould \'Cry much enjoy
representing the students of my
dlstrkt. as v.·ell as dealing .,.,.,th
unh·crslly problems as a whole.
The Campus Mall proposal was
one of the f1rst issues that
ca pturt-d my 1nterest .
hopefull)'. no on~ .,.,.,II haw to be
m31mcd before va riou s
residmts see the wisdom of the
Mall I am fo r a more equitable
fin a ncia l aid sys tem a nd
mllinlly suppor t the recently
proposed ~ year r~ymen t
plnn Thl' IOM of \'Brious faculty
perturbs me as do SUC"h things
a.s the lack ol aceredidalion fo r
the School o f Na tur a l
Resoun.-cs There a rc. in od·
dillon, br ooder Issues with
""'hich I am conce rned. such as
tht" "cnt'rgy" cr isis. nuclea r
po ....·n pl:ants. and go\•emment
on all le,·els. More Important
though. I am concerned with my
fe ll ow s tuden ts and pledge
myself to be on effective .
comm unica tor between the
indh·iduals of my district and
nudtnt govt!mment. If electtd .
I urge all studl'nts to \'ote
Jam..1..1ry Jist while aski ng for
the support from students in
Distrkt One. so that I might
bei!N serve them as a student
se-nator I w1ll be glad to darify
:~ny of my stands. answer
assor ted ques llons, e tc ., if
students will call me at 34 1-409$,
any C\·enlng.
Sin<-enly.
Ste \"f' Slt-a rns
Sludut •\snmblyman
Point Blank
__/
by ltob 11 3m Jr.
I have no -quarrel ""ith
washmg machi nes. eve n
though they look like bread
boxes w1th thyroid problems .
I judge by performan..:e . But
when I saw. hanJtinR over the
Wonderrul Wa tson Washer s. a
s1gn saymg " Push coin msert
m fi r mly . or the machme may
accept the coin •d th o ut
starting ". I was immediately
s us picious I hadn 't hnd a ny
problems before . but
I
d.t\•idcd my laundry into two
pi les . dark and ~Atlite las nea r
as I could tell I . I put m the
soa p . and then the white
c loth es. whic h were
somewhat used . Perhaps
even molested . ~t o r e like
raped I put a qua rter into the
coin msert and pushed 1t m
fi rml y. It was probably the
~~:u~!:t P~:re r ·~~ '7hl
~.r;~;~c " clunk ." then .
qunrt e r . " We don 't t ake
pennies," Rolf noted he lpfull y .
I honestly regret that I didn't
in my forma t ive yea r s.
acqui r e a taste for arbitrary
asininity . I s t a rted from the
room . a lmost tripping ove r
my lower jaw. a nd Rolf look
pity on me . If I would
wait a f ew minutes . h e
would g •ve rfte a quarter fro m
his private ch a nge collection .
I told him I'd be in the
laundroma t a nd sasha yed o n
down there . content that
whe n Rolf promises. he
deli vers I never saw him
agai n .
A hair hour slipped away
wh il e I coaxe d a nother
washing machine and a dryer
mto accept i ng m y da r k
clot hes . The m oon waxed and
wane d . Kin g d o m s fell.
Olildren wer e conceived .
I mugged the m311 who was
locking the ca ndy m achine,
~d ~no~~~t~~:rc~~j.~,;,:y~i~
.. Goo dn ess g r acto us ... 1
said. because you never kno w wound up, leaned Into it, and
""'-hen you're going to find kids slammed it in . The machine
hangang aro und a laun · shuddered with the fury of my
dromat I didn't scream and onslaught. Or perhaps it was
carry on I never do that. laughing . It regurgitated ho t Instead . I trudged up to the wate r over my clothes .
des k a nd ex pl a ine d t he
I figu r e d that at any
si tuation to Rolf . who wa s on minute, a cop would arrest
duty . " I don't know what to do me for abusing the machine.
about th at ." he said: hi s Maybe even con fi&eate m y
razor -sharp mind twitching rinse cycle . At that part icular
""'it h raw inte ll ect. He put my moment however, my dark
name on a rehmd list. Wh ich clothes stopped twnbllng in
didn 't a lte r the fact that I had the dryer . With grim
eigh t pounds of clothes and deter mination I prepared to
soap so l idi fy ing In the pu t · the m through again,
machine dov.rnstai r s .
certai n that th ey would never
Never one to dawdle, 1 get d ry on just one dime .
bounded up to my room and They were dry . With just one
r~turned with a dime , two dime. Whoopee. Ra . Hip hip. I
ruckles and five pennies, in may still be out celebrating
hopes of getting anothe r as you read thJa.
I
Jonuo ry 24, 1974
Letters To The Ed1tor
uw~------
_..... POINTER
Pointer Papers .
Tax Exemption?
To Ill.. t:.thor :
llo.nebr-..nad•·IIOrto' !hlo1-'ointn- 1111(1" t9&-t , but th1s
srmster I -..·,u be t.akrng :..
w-mn ter leave from that
responsibolil)'
I h.:r.•·e 501'lle
adva«tO&I\'f'IOIIM! Unl\'f'I'SII)'
~m umty related to a for·
tuitou s pr eced ent se t by
Pn:sodtnt Nixon
I ha•·r
deddt'd toredu('f'm)' tnesby
thrumemethoduhf'dld. \ 'ou
ca n too !
l ha•·rcarriu.llysa•·~allthf
dealing IO'ith my ad•uorshop.andlplantoSftld
them to the UruvtnLty Archl\'ts
andtakeataxdtduction toa
val ue or 110. 000 . thfreby
rNoc1ng my taus to a le~el
almost u low •s thr
P"ptr-ll
PTrs~dtnt ' s
SOYo' sotnf' mll)' s.ay there "'
1nterat m thtw paptrs.
bu tlrenllndyoutheyc:o•·rr
511C h glor KIU$ rvents u
a
freshmancdl torln l9&-I C'0111mg
out for Coldwater m a pagf OM
t'dLtotlal. thecrca t•onofthe
~lllf
::r~t!~:u::ra:" ~~- ~::
tfortunatelythelltterlhoughtu
..-asfunny1 , thefamoush~e
~t"fofna P••t...-reportft' and
chil~rman or tht Engl llih
~rtment ,t Tiwlrtportft' "'<lS
thf'
Lltft'l'f'fcrndtob)' theEngiiSh
l>q);irtment chairman as " A
)'01111& man of
ttal"n n.tractJon.'' Jl f " "U, in fact ,
Jl'•'is.h butthatJSll man-.. lous
" ' I)' Of d111U111ng Inti ·
StmliJSm l. the n•gh t a i' Din'-"r
reporter \O'U thrown out o f ~
faculty methng ' )'tars later
l'oln terreporters~&fTtper ­
mmed to come and co•·er till>
ITift llngsbutnone'"'as"-..r
kno•••n tomah n through a
,.-holtmf!'f'tlngawake i, J.t\·rral
31tl'mpts to make thf """'~~"•
md~pt'fldent .. ~ce donf b)'
edllorL.1lpronoun«ment ..·hldl
lasted pan ..-ay through thoo
•·r rynuto5~UI'"hto!thredilor ,
<"J<h;ou~ted from typ•nlall nieht.
c;,.pot ulatedtothepubliWrllhoo
laltl'T, thrBoardof ltu.cn ts.
!ypocallyhadn'lnotJced l, thf'iO
called "radical " era of ~lc­
t>onald.Jf'nkons. ltutltOIO"Ski!l
na•·rto~•·rr)· cul'ful ..·h:o tl
Ja)' about tileR edi torl. They
arelllltkno,.·ntohauoutstand•ng Hlllft of humor 1
furala,. su•t • lcouldgoon
boJt I set' )'Oll. dur rt.adfr.
rf'COgnLZe thatthrst paptn art'
;);t lust u Important and
•·atu:~ble as 1M plolptrs of
Hocll ard No~on 's nc epresldtnt•al ) tars
0\hf'rs ma) WI) tha i thoo
t•olntrr Papt'rs"•as iM)' ..-,u
hertlll<lf ! ~ be knOYo·n l lrf ol
grfa113lllt'butthoo)'atr... d )
borlan•toLh•l'nh ...,..lt)· ll'f'll, l
..-auld h.:r.I'C thought MU«pl
forth<" Pres•denl's pri!Ctdent
I r«OIIImmd that alllac-W ty
and$tudf11tsllstthlslepltax
redoct1011method Whttneryou
ne on Acadf'mlc Counc1l.
Curriculu m Commlllft, In·
terptanrtaryRr. •dtntcHa ll
Counc1l. Phyilcal Education
C'ornmo Ut't' for H«rultmtnt ol
Lorg<" f as t Run~us 01nd
llmrr~. orflfnlhfkl "lyllalf­
Room -)la•ni i'IUI""t Cornm•ttff
Col lf<'l ~our paptrs' Send
them to !l>ehs K~rnprn&a . Ar·
<'h"'lSt Gotu frll(' like our
l-'rl'$1dton1
•lcnrd :
From the President
byJi m ll amilton
Students encount~r many
problems . som~ of "''luch
I ha~-e ~x poundtd upon from
lime to time tn th• s artict~ .
Some of the probl~ms ..-e
e~o unter , \lo' l" as students
ha•·ellttleabtlil y loremtdy.
but som e cnn and shouldix'
dealt "'ith. Th is year is an
el ~llon yearandundoubted.ly
ma.ny 5tudents "'i ll bf ex·
poundingthe\·i rtutsof and
working for their fa•·orite
cand.ida teson boththe s tate
and federal lt"\·el "''hile I ...;n
nenrdiscourqe.butm fact
encourage,s uch parlici~tion
m the political process by
SludenlGo\·~nment\lolllbe
l'ndursmg cand1 d:1t ts for
offtceon:~llle,·tJ s, but....-t,.lll
pa\ par tic ular attention to
lht'cll)' and~ountyrace5 We
11111 support only candidatt5
..-h ose mlfrests are d irecUy
m lme " '1\h !host' of the
studcn1 and th e Uni••ersi ly.
We"1tlspendagrl'aldealof
time and energy m the s upportoflhosecandid3tfS a:td
\lo11lcondoc1mttnSIVl'tfforts
tn r rga rd s to .vo ter
rt>g tstrattonandget hngout
the li-o-teinourmterrst
books
delayed
students. l wishtomakesom~
observa tion on the le\•el and
•nte n sity of s u ch p a r tiCipation.
Due tofuclshor tagrs.lruc k
11eups and C'hristmas ma il .
Th eleve lofgovemment.:~s books may not be on the
I see it, which mOSI effects shcl~l'S on the hnt day of
All pape rback
lhestudentan d hislifest yle c lasses
IS,in on:lerofrelalivity,city, requests re cei vtd by us
countr y.state , andtederal. bel"'et"nj'.;ovlldLK'dale l and
In Apri l there will bf Cit)' NO'o' lSo.l973"'' l'l'f' pt"OCessed and county ~eats up for andpurc:hase-orOtrsma lltG eJection . I "''OU.Id urge all bei"'·E"en 1"0ov IS. and De.: I.
stuclenta ....bo are concerned
Shoul d you be t n ·
to seek thow seat s . Th is
"'-ould be, of course . a 1"'-o c:on•·eruenc:ed, we aslt you
yea r commlttmentand I do paoenceandundrntanding
realize that s uch a com· We..-•ll maltee•·CTyef{ort to
mlt ment is oftendifficult to pr-ucessandlhe lveiiiCOming
m~ke . I feel , however. that ordersllS rapid lyuposs!blr
th•s is o f ext r eme i m · Da•·id Prplln ~ ki .
Unh ·•nlty Start
portance.
'"'
Page 15
THE POINTER
' Don 't equate seniority with tenure '
::~u~~~{:~~~f ~~:mdly ::~~; ~;:rv::u~:'r1 :::~
:ke~lh·:~~~. :;:::n1!
~-,·~~:n:;d 1!•:ve~~ ;';,~ ~~,"~~e:;cS:~-~~~':~- ~1 0t;,a: ~:~~e!.~:.u~:/~ad'no~d~
*~~"~m•, btl~ ~~>:" 't~ ~~::~~n~~;~~:,;s~~:.:~~'= ~~~.: t,~'l:,,)?uo;~: :::
1
1
~c ul~~~:e m~~brr: 1 1~)- ~~em~\·~::~~~e :t~~~:. ~~ :O~:~=~d '!:e:::l :~m~:
:"~'~•l,t 1J ~~: 1~ ~~~ ~:~:; :~~~ ll~:/~v!'u!~~ ;.~;!~~~~~~~professors I. a
0
Y
Leav e_ llt ll
.
sa1· '" tM moner
Ac tw.lly
~~Y·= 11 }~ ';:"0 ='~: :~~~~ ~= C:lrlh~·~-~i!:~
in":'~~~' ..~~~rrv~~~~ ~~~ :'!~~.!...e~r ~!,-e'!u:::;
~~r 1~ •::~~-: S::::h1 ~~~;:~ ~n informfd about WIIO t..s
10mr of us frcm high sdlool
0
dendPd t.o plctet a Woot ..-onn
store in German t own,
Pholadrlphi a, IO'hic h had
rl'f11Sf'dtoh.rcblack~leas
saltsprnons l ~t~~tU I ha•·en' t
learned ~noch o•·tr the >"tars
Now. lri'J grt one thing
~Lr<llght
I do bclle.·e in
" to>nurr"_ua neCU$.11ry good,
boJt unloke many of my
mllca,ues, lrriusttocquatr
~iOtli)' WlthttnurrSuchan
unqua hlitd al~iancctothe
sr.uorit>· "S)"Jtem," gh·m our
dl'<:l!nong en rollm ent. could
rtt.1 rd thlS un lvrnity For
eumple.ifrrtrntlonandnonrrtentimoflatull)' mrmbcrs•s
understood Mldy In Ltnnl of
Longt\1 ty,otis possiblethat
soonno•nstc:"C tonlllldtr forty
br left •n many academic
do>partmcnts. l donotmean to
511g.gl"5tthatthr relsno•·irturln
gro ..,ngold, butonthcothrr
~
Jerr )· F'arbu"'·rote hisboolt
!:;~'~:~it11a ~n~:~~~~- in te:
~!:';':;,eland
A~•btut
SPECIAL STUDENT ,RATE
for INCOME TAX RETURNS
$5.00 & U'P
INTEGRITY TAX SERVICE
:"io
900A Moin St.
s _ , - - Call
A~ntmea l
On The
Square~
,.-,u
,._
lland.surcl y "· isdomand •'in~~t
a r e n ot the cx clu J l vc
pro\'lden« of the "mat\ll'e"
Wh;otl-..-osb tocallaucmion
taostheSJ t u.at~on-..·h idlaistsln
a number of academic
do>partmrnu-..·htrrall.ormost.
f:~cult)' h;ol·tttnurr Whrrrthls
os thrc;ase , tMn tenuneeasrs
~a~H~~~;~.~t";~,:~&V
.. hoch ~cornu the SO LE
c.T< trna for rrtent lon. J,.·ondrr
1fwec<ln 3 CC('p! th is rationale
anymott than,.·cc•nabklr the
fu tunsucsoc:ltt)· of WUd ln tb t
St r... ~o •·htreonlypeopleunder
JOareuswncdtoha•·rthe
..-isdclm to go-.·tm S«itt)' lndrt'd , J,.·ouldgoufarasto
lllilllilth.otanyinstnlctor"·ho
haSgJI'f'IIITIOI'ethani~)'Unof
H'l'\"1« to this uni~rrslty be
autom:~t~ally excluded from
Oi!!YdiK"US.SOonof 1101 being
rrtaont"d E•·eryone else.
oo..-~-~r . !'hould ~conJidtrl!d.
and equa l! ~ expnrd to
f'\·aluauon
Anythm,glt"UthanthiswouJd
ha•·ethepotentlllfor rflduci!li
thos univrnity to a prO\'i nc;, t
•ns!itullonof)'Utft'c!a ~. Just n
aun~•'ei'Si tys.houldprovidt i\.J
"~th a va r~rt y ot
It must
onsurethiltthft'eisasp«trum
ot .,,., and uprrl~ from
..-tuchtolurn. F'IU'Ihft', u 1
number" of academiciaiU han
obsen·ed. the current ca r·
n~mstanres ha•·e pro•"ed an
arose 1n many mstancrs to
purge )'Olin& mftl and ,.-omftl
from the 11ni1'f'rslty ranks who
htld radical or unc~llawftiUonal
points of"~"'· Todtn~lludtntt
st udents
OJI'"'"" to chooH from.
theopportun~\ yto~veaCC~"$~
to lhf'seiiUtruclort,. Wrcduce
1M quality of the student '•
education
Wetl.l f sen•orit~lhoWdnotllf'
usedaslhf'Mieniteria lor
ret~ntlon, • ·hat l hould be
t'OIIIl6et"ed~ AI 1M ru.k of lppeanngangcnuow, m1"'t l
sunett crut ivc tuchi•·l·
academ1c •cholarthlp and
studtnt opimon Certain!~ thil
m<"Uutt is not wlthollt 50mt
prob lem• and short comln &l .
but 11 is, 1 brl i~r. 1 better
alterna til'tthanthtneatand
un 1maginat1ve formula of
sti!LOI' I\)'
Cu n ously. th•s nollon 111101
l"roiQ.or of lliii WJ
[b@\YlO·~·
DENIM BELLS
ARE HERE
We got 'em-LEVI'S
Denim Bells. Tough
pre-shrunk denimlean LEVI'S tit-bell
boHoms Just the way
you like 'em. .Stock
up on a pai r or two
today.
341· 1~
.1.
ui.fP
Editorial Page
POl NTER
No parking, no mall,
Sentry complex
PRELIMINARY DESIGNATION OF
ARTERIAL STREET SYSTEM
no representation
by Dave Gnelur
Several years ago when the
eighteen-yea r o(lld vote was
imminent , the ca mpus was
divided (Gerrymander-style )
into fou r wards .
Wards two. three. seven and
eleven are designed sO that
they each include some
dormitories .
Students make up roughly
onr·ha lf of th e total
population of each of these
wa rds. In the second ward.
which contains Pray.Sims,
Smith . Roach . Hyer and
the Village , lhe s tudents have
an overwhelming majority .
This spring the county
board positions are up for
election in all wards. City
alderman positions a re a lso
up for election
in the even·
numbered wards . COdd ·
numbered wards ""ill have
elections next year .) In the
second ward. there is a n
excellent opportunity to elect
our own alderman.
The actions taken by local
government directly affect
the student even though he is
not adequately oepresented in
that government. Seveoal
recent examples come to
m1nd . In November. parldng
was eli minated foom campus·
area streets during those
hour-s when students use them
most. In December . afteo the
students had left roo semesteo
break . the proposed Franklin
Street mall was bungled .
Little. if any . errort was made
to clarify the misinformation
c•oculating at that lime.
the student Norm
The student makes up a
sizab le se gment of the
Stevens Point population . The
average student spends "'-"ell
over $1000 a year in Stevens
buy
Point . We pay rent,
-grocenes , purchase
gasoli n e and support
a good man y tavern
O'lo'o'ners. Yet we have no
pa rking, no mall and no
representation .
ll Is not impossi ble ror a
studen t to gel elec ted . George
Guyant was elected to the
COWlty board two years ago
while he was st ill a student.
He has decided not to seek re·
e lection Csee la s t week's
Pointer . page Il l. His
district incl ude s Knutzen.
Bur r oug hs , Watso n and
Thomson halls.
The requirements lor either
the COWlty boar d or alderma n
positions ar e that you be a t
leas t IS years old and that you
reside somewhere within
your ward for the duration of
your two-year term .
Nomination papers for city
a lderma n are ava ilable from
the city clerk . Nomination
requ i r es at least 20 .
sig natures, b~ more than
60 .. De~dlihe 1~'- - filing
nommat1on papers IS ~Qo.w~a
29 a t 5 p .m .
Nomin ation papers for the
COWl ty board are available
fro m the cou nt y cle rk .
I'<O'om ination requires .:at leas t
20, but no more than 100
sig natures . Deadline for
fil ing is Jan . 29 at 5 p.m .
Threatened
woodlands
I
North campus forest
threatened by plans
by Da ve Gntlsrr
Here's a nothe r prime
exam pl e of what happens
when the student
Is not
represented in our local
government. The City Plan
Co mmission inte nd s to
construct a str eet tha t will
slice through the Wliversity
Woodlands north of ca mpus
when the street is com pleted .
It will provide a direct lin~
between the new Sentr
surance hea dquarters an
Sentry offices on Dixon Street.
Reserve Street would be cut
off below Nor th Point Drive
and it s route wouJd curve to
meet Michigan Aven ue.
We believe there is no need
for th is new street since
access to Michigan Ave .
presenUy can be gained by
simply driv ing down Reserve
St . lo Maria Drive . Not only
is the proposed street un·
necessa ry, it poses a direct
threat to th e ab und a nt
wi ldlife inhabiti n g th e
'<4'00ded area . Many of the
animals were displaced when
the university destroyed their
habitat by building parking
lot Q. Now that the wildlife
moved northward , the plan is
to s urround them wit h
pavement and run over the
survivors with Sentr y's cars.
Must the c ity build this
p ' va le thoroughfare so that a
select few can avojd a few
stop s igns in the name o(
convenience? Not unless we
let them get away with it. U a
petitio n could sto p the
pedestrian mall we wanted,
then a petition can stop a
street we do not Wa nt .
--=:..
carnival knowledge
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