' NTER U!!!~POI •

advertisement
'
U!!!~POI NTER
•
SERIES Vllh VOL.
17 UW-STEV£NS POINT
THURSDAY
JANUARY 31
197-4
NQ. 17
Administration Charged With Overspending
lat~lntn-utolfal r pla y, tk
POINTER 1111 la•·~otl &a! N ••
fully u .• ·r ••~ U pllblt, \be
drcun:~naacu
a l1 ~pllo111
nrraundln &
1• ~t ram~ at
o tad~n l
of admlall tnlln
II obould bt
o•~nptncll•&·
pM.ttol ..L ......ntr, lUI IM
l:WSP adllllla ktnlloaa
~u aOl
bfeaabltleflctiUOIIy t tlll~ \lw:
alk'plloM. norha•·ciM)' btftl
•illiii&IOC~~·IUotM
POlSTER Ia tltarln& ap tome
oiU.t que.. lloa bfo•P,IOVI~y
Sllldtn1Gonn111ut .1'1llsdot'1
1101 mua lilt lllrpUoM l rC'
tlllltrlrutorlat~.bulnl hu
:::~~:~tdPO;~r?.!-=~~~==
.. hl c h h nt ••• ouh y bu
bulully u MubluatU.IN. Tlw:
SI S,SOO . Th is was accomplished by c han nelli ng
Sli .!>OO from non-personnel
a reas. The addit ional St5,500
insalariesisbeingusedto
pay the two fWld raiK'rs .
Th e U W -Ce nt r al
Ad -
ministration provided a
fo r mula ullin& for propor tiona te cuts in all areas of the
budget.
·· w e feel he tD r eyfusl
rath er that Chancello r
Dreyfus ts s imply not awa re
of the discrepancies . " I think
he'stakin,a'Nixon'onthis,"
said Hamtlton .
If admi n htratlve and
student officials cannot iron
outtheirdifferencesat the
upcoming meeting an 'audit
o f budgeting practices is
poss i ble . Hamilto n and
Badtinski have a lr eady
c<~ntacted
UW Central Ad·
ministration. " We didn't get
in to spec ifics but we did let
themknowthatwe feel there
is a problem on this cam·
pus.", said llamilton .
Dreyfus s tated that he
didn't th in k Ce nt ral Ad·
ministrationwouldevengh·e
Hamilton and Badzinski an
answer to their inquiries. " I
dono\ accept tha t cen trn l
makes the speclflc Int ernal
dec isions of how I run this
unh·ersi ty. Th a t would be
highly destructive to the
autonomy of thi s instit ution.
lf theytell mehowtospendil
and I would s pt>nd it ttla tv.·ay.
..well , that wouldn't be me
because I V.'Ouldn 't stay in
that kind of a job." sa id
Dreyfus.
should have gone by Central's
formula, " said Hamilton .
''Because of enrollment
shortfall we were cut by
nearlyahalf amllliondollars
thisyearandnoneofitcame
out of administration . He
~ 1<11')' b U U"ltll~ll bUIIIII II()'
takescareofhisotrkesfirst:'
~=~::.b~~- udH th clrA rdiabll: administrath·e
50un;eh.asconlirmtdthat we
b)' Tt " Y \\111 and AJ Stand; do spend relath·ely more in
The annual b.aUle of the the administntive branch
budget at this university has than ot he r former state
•
~~~r~~ !;,r~e:~~r:!~::~~~ un~~~~~tion is reinfon:ed
student go\·ernment of ad·
mmistrative O\'ttSpending.
Student Senate President
J im Hamilton and Student
Controller Bob Badzins~i
maintain that an increase m
the administrative budget is
unjustified in light of the! fact
that cuts have bttn made in
academic a~as . --Priori ties
1\:1\·e to be rea rr anged so ti'L:It
educational needs a re met
first . After all lhal"s wh<l t
we 're hen for ,.. said Bad·
l:inski.
The administr ative branch
of the budgethasreceived a2
pe r cent increase ~~o•hile
Stude nt A f fairs a nd
Academic Affai rs have been
by an Apri12, t9731entt from
Donald Percy, Sl"nior UW
\'ice-p residen t. The le tter
was add r essed to t h e
Wi sconsi n Leg i&la ture's Joint
Committee on Finance and
was produced at a No\·ember
1973 pub lic hea r ina conceming the! non-ntention or
tenured facu lty . P ercy
asserted that UWSP ha.s the
highest pen:mtage of ad·
ministrative and se r vice
costs of the 13 f«mtt sta te
universi ties.
The problem wit h interpret ins theu statements
liesi n thedeflniUono fthe
term 'Administr ation'. In a
PO I NTER
interview
11
1
s~~~ ~f~~~~~a:t ;!~-~t ~otDr~:ifn~im!~ ~
17 per cent.
Chance ll o r
Dreyfus
delended the 2 per cent in·
crease in administ r ative
spendiq as an effort to
solici t runds. R.ecft! Uy t~~o-o
ten ur e d faculty members
were moved into an ad·
ministratlve opening in a
development a~a f« the
purpose of generating new
revenue for the uninrsity .
TheOlancellorneverdirectly
stated what the money would
be used fCH" but im plied that il
would be used Cor rmntion of
faculty . The ch a nce ll or's
office actually r eceived a n
additional S-4000 but the
•
ministr a lion in regard to
other universities. F'or this
reason the question of adminis trati\'e ovtt-spendi ng
rffl!ains unclear.
Hamilton and Badzinaki
h.ne a rr anged to prHe'llt
their case befo~ members of
the administration v.ithin the
next two weeks. -- we fed we
have an airtigh t case," said
Hamilton. The nex t step is to
convince the Chancellor .''
Dreyfus and Hamil ton
agre-e that nothing has IJH,n
setUed yet, but U!e bearing
~~oill be informative to both
parties.
Hamilton said tha t he
~~iv!asoff1i:;:~la~; ~~~ .....~ ~~':!nt~~~
Pointer Deadline Changes
,\11 ma teria l s ubm itted for pu blica t ion In t he
PO I NTER m ust b e su bmi tUd b y noon on the Friday
p r ior to p u b llc:atlon. This po li cy will ~gi n wit h the
nu t 1Feb.711stue .
Winter Carnival games bro14ht out a crowd of spectators to
cheer the teams on . ~ future . pa Jn 4 and 5.
Mall temporarily killed
by Mark Brand t
17. the Steve ns
Point Common Council held a
public hear ing to determine
the future of U!e proposed
Franklin St . Mall . The final
vote or the Common Council
v.·asl0-3infavorofthemall .
The Common Co uncil 's
favorable o;ote was nullified
by U!e presentat ion of a
petition signe<t by ci tizens
that reside on both side$ of
th e proposed mall on
Franklin St
The citizens opposing the
mall cited that there wa s no
Immediate need for it and
that hav1ng a mall on
nec ess ity . The p r oteSiing
citizens propose d that
st udent s s h ou ld walk on
existing si dewalks and cross
th e s treet at desig nat ed
a reas. rather than bui ld a
mall for pedestrian trafflc
Wil liam B Vickerstaff ,
s pecial assista nt to the
chancellor.expla inedtha tt be
mam rea~n ror the for mation of the petition was a
lack and misunderstanding of
mforma!Jon C«~Cermng the
mall Some citizens thought
that the mall wa.s to be ex·
tendt'l.l from rtese rve St to
()h'!SionSt . thus eliminating
astreettn frontofablockof
F'ranklinStisno tanab~lute
"'"~
On~ .
Thisistotallywrons.said
Vic ke rstaff . The ma ll plans
ca tl(or
vacati ngF'rank ll n
St . from Rese r ve St . to
Isadore St.. and not from
JsadoreSt . toDivisionS t.
Vicl!;e r sta ff co mm e nted
U!at the State of Wi sconsi n
has given UWSP St4-1,000fCH"
the mall. All that 11 needed is
citizen approval . he said .
Vickerstaff cited that the
mallwouldbeagreatsafety
factorbyforcingcarstolake
F'ourthSt . tothestopllghta.
Also. the malt ~~o·oul d be
aesthetica ll y beautiful and
addto theoveralleffectofthe
a rea . he added .
Page 2
THE POINTER
January 31 , 1974
To Tell The Truth
Portage County Sheriff Gets Lie Detector
by Marl Kursuwsk.J
Ca ptain Ernest Medina was
acqui tled or the Viet Nam
war crimes his unit a llegedly
commltled . Consenting to and
taking a lie detector test
proved Medina 's innocence
and 1gnora nce of the wa r
cnmes To aid in elimination
or cnme suspects. the Portage County Sheriff ' s
Department has begun using
the polygraph instrument on
''anous mvestigat10ns .
"Can't beat it," are the
words detective Mark
Wysocki of the SheriH's
Department u sed i n
descnbmg the accuracy of
the polygraph ins trument
Wysoclu 1s the examiner fo~
the polyg raph which was
recenUy tnstalled m a back
qucst1on mater1nl 1S
measured and rC'C'ordtod 111
tht.>st.• two tests , " sa 1d
Wysocki
Wysocld explained three
" Usual!)' Only two I&H tests
different types of detection
tests The " I&R " test consists art> admimstered, " saad
of questions of an 1rrelevant Wysock.J . "cons!shng of 10 to
and relevant quality . Wysoclu 13 quest1ons and each test
sa1d , " for nonnal tracmg . las tJng three to four m1nutes
reaction is tested to a Yes or no \'ocal ansll·ers are
qucst1on having nothing to do reqUired because any lengthy
v.ith the suspected subject ·s talk tmg 1 has an eHect on all
crime " Wysocki explamed tracmgs of all thrt"e set'·
that the polygraph operates lions "
In imtlatmg th<> polygraph
on the emotion of fear . The
" Pt.>ak of Tension" tests type program. Sheriff N1ck Oleck
"'A" an d type "8" dealv.ith applied for two CriminJI
a " choice or variables " Justice PlaM•~ grants ; one
rele,•ant and irrele,·ant to the for purchasmg the polygraph
case " Reaction to vo1ce mstrwnent and the other to
st1muhs and the reactton to tram an exammer Follov.'lng
suppressed breathing . Th1s
would be evident on the
graph ," said Wysocki .
,1 St'rlt'S of tests, Wysocki was
sclcl' tcd as the potentia l
t•xanunt'r He then studied
from Sept . 9 to Oct . 19 at the
K<'t.'lt'r Ploygraph Institute in
Ch1ngo. Ill Th t' entire
program cost approximately
$10.000 The grants lowered
the local share to $2 .~.
llh~t: h was then spilt tqually
among three co unt ies :
Portage . W a upa ca.
\\'aushara
Wysoclu pointe-d out that
W1sconsin laws do not accept
t.lw results of polygraph tests
as <'\' tdence m the courtroom
)0 ttM.• exam mer 's results are
regarded as a "rendered
o p1n1 o n .. " Wh e r e the
pol)•graph mstrument is
off 1ce of the Co urthouse
Annex
Wysock.J stated that the
polygraph clears a lot more
pL-op le thnn It mdicates. ''The
polygraph mst rument doesn't
deal m terms of guilt or innocence. but rather m terms
d{"('eptlon or truth," sa•d
\\ ysoclu "This is due to the
soc •ahzat•on process one
endun-s durmg duldhood and
o ~ through adulthood ," said
\\ ysoclu " As a child, one
goes through a conditioni ng
processs He is taught by his
parents , teachers and peer
gro ups. the 'r ig hts and
v.Tongs ' of society . He is
taught that punishment goes
hand·•n ·hand with rul e·
b r eak1ng . and Is sub·
conscious l y af r aid to ge t
caught in a lie ...
In describing the equipment Wysocki said . ' 'There
are bas1cally three chaMtls
to the polygrJph instrument :
th e Ca rd iog raph , the
Galvonograph and the
Pneumograph section . The
first tv.·o sections are each
eqUipped with one pen and the
pnewnograph with two pens .
These components record the
act1v1ty on a graph that the
vanous attached sensory
dev1cn measure ."
The Cardiograph section
records relative blood
pressure . Thas is recorded
o~
~/::re~~~~~~ ~~~~ t':
the mean blood pressure can
be indicative of dectption ,··
sa 1d W ysoc ki .
The
Gal va n ogra ph
measures the physiological
change m the subject's sweat·
gland activity," said
Wysocki Two electrodes on
the 1ndex and ring-linger of
the right hand record reaction of the s weat glands. " An
individual tends to sweat
more when he is lying ," said
Wysocki . " People are under
the misconception that the
electrical current used is of
danger to the subject. 1n
actuality, very li ttle cu:rrent
Is present ." he added .
The Pneumograph section
meuures the subject's
breathinl rate . A strap
around the person 's abdomen
and another around the chest
record the breathing and
resp i ratory
changes .
" 0\l..nles In ratio of the
Inhalation and exhalation
~~relsa~~
:en0:
~h«ocr• phn 1 :
)'ndf.e ErkUon, Tom Halt.'
m,•nn , Darcie Laub Don
1 •lmqWst and Crea Sl~nalr.l .
~;~~~~"~!~~ ~set,"
5ald
r~ms o~t east~nAI~em cl~~~ )
Clit es, corpora tions em 1:,.
poly~raph . operations to ~tit
the m~egraty and hont'S ty of
potential employees ..
n At _ J?"esent , WySOcki ha s
dmmtstered approxunatel)
10 t~ts . but tXpt'(IS tht
exa mmatlons to mcrriur
once the other agencll'S
Centra~ . ~iscons111 lt'arn ~~
lhe fnc ii1U es . When lc~tlng 15
~hed uled , the other agrncits
~:•II be charged for each tesl
sy~~!m u~s~ f!~.url!)'
force~ent agency . IS t>!Jg7~~
to utilize the polygraph 1ft·
~~:~~ · if neeck-d ,'' Aid
January 31, 1974
THE POINTER
Page 3
Union Addition Criticized by Student President
by Krlth Otis
The new addition to the
Un1versit y Center t U.C.J,
1 originallyKheduled to open
ea rly this wmester, has been
de layed pending completion
ofminorconstructionandthe
deli\•eryofessential fur nishings . The addition is
being constructed at a cost to
the students of S2,rn,400.
Completion is Khtduied in
twotothreeweeks.
\\'hen finished, the new
addition will contain roughly
thesamcfacilitiesastheold
center .,.,iththeexceplionof
extendedserviceandlarger
space. In the words of Jim
ll ami lton.student govern·
mentpmident,theaddition
is''verytostlyformoreofthe
same."
Some sen•ic:es which are
rellltively new will be an
audio-,·isual room .,.,.;th a
library or student-s.rlected
tapesandmagazines. Aroom
.,.,,,h listening stations and a
typ1ng room .,.,ithten stations
will be adjoining this
fiiCihty .
There will be an enlarged
recrt"ation.sectioncontaining
a room for table tennis and
~~~en g::F·ta~~nd "~~
::arcade room featuring
foosball . ai r hockey . and
pinba ll ·rrtated machines
The sports e-quipment rental
,.;uatsobemovedhere and
s.houldoffergreaterstorage
space and convenience
Other mnovationsinc\udea
new Information Desk with a
largersLa ffandlaterhours .
Therr will also be a hall,.•ay
ofbuiiNin boa rds . Adjoining
thiS front hallway are six
solicitallonboothllwluchmay
be used by campus
organiuations to distribute
their wares.
Additional fac1 lities include
three small m~ting rooms,
one large meeting room . 1
\"15ual meeting room , and a
large banquet program room
whicll is multipurpose and
equipped with a projection
booth to show movies. 1be
old s tudent lounge has been
con,•erted to a mini~rvice
lunch room . The Grid lias
been greatly enlarged by a
new addition which can be
Vonnegut play, Star Trek, featured
at Science Fiction Film Fest
Trek"' se ries, in,·oh·es an of science fiction on camintell)lanetary tOO .
pus,'" Doxtator said . 1be idea
Feb. 7 · No l1me Uke th e for the organization was
A television play by Kurt
Vonnegut, jr .• Between l1me l'ast . The Monstns ,\re Due generated by Ha rl an Ellison,
and Tim bu kt u is one of the on M a pi e St r ee t . S a science fic tion writer ,..ho
film s scheduled to be shown 1: h a r a c 1 r r 1 I n
'·isiled the UWS P 1:ampus in
during the Science Fiction Char ac tfn In Seuch Clf an April 1973.
Film 1-'esti'•al, according to t:xlt. three of the best oneRicllard Doxtator, sc:ienct" the ''1\l'i\lght Zone" series
fic~o; ~:~b f~~~~- which is br~~~ ~:n..i ~~~i~
~~f:soc';~ b:ndth~~~~·~r;c: ~~u~11 ·aTh:i~~r\i~\sa~r:
Society. ,..as designed to
stimulate interest on campus
in bot II science fiction and
film. said RogeT Bullis. film
society adv1!10r
Thefilmfesti\·aJhasatwo·
fold purpose, Doxtator sa1d.
"'We hope to furtheT tilt" cause
of science fiction on campus
and in the community." he
explained. ··we also v•ould
like to make enough money to
bring speakeTS to campus.''
All films ,.;u be shown at 7
and 9: t5 p .m. in Old Main
Auditorium . The fes• ival is
open to both the unh·eTSity
and the comm unit y. No
regular f'il m Society season
passes ,.;u be acrepted for
ad mi ni on to this se r ies,
Bullis said.
The followmg film s are on
the three -week series
schedule :
f'eb . 6 · Thr .\ l rnagrr1r, the
pilot episode for the "Star
"'"hichgets out of control and
eliminates all peoplt" over 25
years old.
f'eb. i<6 · The0aythrEart h
Stood Still. directed by
Robert Wise. is a film in ·
\"OI\·ing a sympathetic space
traveler who stops on eartll
and isgroeted with hostility.
Abo. Dag~:,er of tbe Mind.
another film from the "Star
Trek " series.
F'eb. ZO - t•or blddrn Planet.
a
Metro·Goldwyn· Maye r
spectacul a r starring Wal ter
Pidgeon and Robby the
Robot.
Feb. 21 and 22 - Hetwren
Tim e and Tlmbuktu . a
humorous and s~tirical pl.ay
by Vonnt"gut whtch contams/
segments from four of h1s
most popular novels.
The Science Fiction Cub
wasorganl:tedoncampusln
the fall of 1973 for "the
enhancement and promotion
Zero Population
Discontinued
Zero Population Gr owth
tZPG J is no longer an active
organization on the UWSP
campus. ' 'This reflects a
cooling o ff of the e n ·
vironmental movement ,"
said Kent Hall, form e r
faculty adviso r .
Attording to Hall it wasn't
apathy, but a ~:ombinalion of
members gr aduating and his
choice to become inactive.
Hall said he believes the
organbalion reachedmanyof
thei r goals . According to
llall , the organiuallon ''was
able to lower the threshold
towards th ings such as
abortion
co u n se l ing,
steriliUitiOn and the need for
contraception. Society 1.s now
conKious of tht" need to
con tr ol population growth
and has the po~ntlal for
handling the crisis of over·
population .··
Housing, voting and fees
dominate Senate meeting
byl\risMo um
Voter registr ation in ar ea
elections will be high priority
th1s year . said President Jim
Hamilton at the Jan T1
Student Senate m~ting .
St udents should support
local candidates because the
declsionsmadt,.illaffectthe
student attending UWSP. satd
Hamilton .
Support 5ho"11 also hu an
effect on how the rq)resen·
tatives wili ex press the
fe-elingsoftheircoostiluency.
said Hamilton.
A tota l of -&,000 students voted
for Sen. \\11liam Bablitch in
rn
l.eafgren.directorofhousing.
concerning the establishment
of a screening board to hear
appeals from dorm residents
whollavehad charges made
against them by the dor·
mitor ydirector andassistant .
The reque5t arose out of a
student's .removal from a
dllrmitory.
Housing brings the charge
against the student made by
tile do r m directo r and
usisLant. Housing alsollears
the charges, and decides
what actionshouldbelllken
The appeals also go to
hoU!iintJ.
Hamliton said that students
should have somewhere else
to tur nfor anappea l,andthat
a ~ereening board might be
the ans""eT
A total of ~ .000 studenta
voted for Sen . William
!Jabl1tch in 1972 . Th1s
represents 1-$ of Bablitch "s
,.otes. said Hamilton. and
TheSenatevotedonthreeof
Bablitch was agaill$1 user's
f('H from its conception. he the r~"SO!utions presented at
U.eJan 20meetmg of Student
In other senate discussions. Government
llamilton asked Sen. Pete
The resolution for the
Anderson. chairman of the reduction of the Chancellor"s
studentaff;uncommittee,to Rnerve fund from StO.OOO to
meet with h1m and fredrick $5,000 was paned Also. the
"'""'·
resolution to eliminate fun ·
ding of the accountant
postllonfromstudent activity
fees was acrepted.
A resolution presented by
Sen . Bob Kung at the J an . 20
joint meeting recommending
that all facu lt y and ad·
mmistratlvepersonnelpaya
s.t:'>UniversilyCenter activity
fee was passed after an
amendment was added.
The r etolution was
amended to read that faculty.
adminstralive personnel an d
students should pay an equal
Univt"r sity Center fee .
Kung "s recommenda tion to
keep all fluorexent lighting
indorm itoriesand restrooms
at a minimum was also accepted.
The resolution• will be sent
t.;~thech;lncellorafteraction
•s taken by the assembly at
the F'eb. lmeeting.
The recommendation will
be 5ent to all dormitory
directors.
llamilton said that a
CON1dcrableamountoffunds
has been diverterl from In·
struclions and put into nd·
ministrath·e funds .
"We strongl y beli~·e these
fundshavebeendivcrted.and
,.·earesurewecanproveit."
said llamilton.
In othe r action. Susan
St ark . a UWS P student.
expressed concern over how
facu l t y members a r e
dismissed. She said tllat
studentsshouldhaveasayin
what faculty members sllould
be cut.
Hamilton uid tbe smatr
was awar e of the problems
and hu been ""orklng on a
racu ltyevalu;ation tu r vey .
These eva l uat igns we r e
distributed last semester and
will be con t inued this
semester .
Students have the absolu te
ngllt to conduct these sur·
\"eys. nid UW Regent John
L:n·ine. and Stnior Vil:e·
Pres1dent-UW
System.
Donald Srmth
Students,.·ereremmdl.'dby
llamtltonthat Student Senate
elect.lons ,.,11 be Jan . 31. liE
urgt'<l all students to vote
se<"lionedoUwhenitis l ~
crow ded . The Home
Economlu Department has
design ed unique table tops to
match the decor for this
coffee llousearea.
The Tex t Rental ,.;u be
moved into the basement of
the new p.1 rt , as will the
enlarged Bookstore. Of this
Hamilton s tated , " The
Bookstore is bigge r , not
better." and went on to say
that it is "'still as hig ll priced
as e~er ."
This is only one of the
controvenies arisingo,·erthe
new addition . Another even
greater disagreement is that
there ,..ill be no offi« space
provid e d f o r stude nt
~~~~~~~~tlon:lo~", ~~~udneen~
~~i~n~~~onn.Sf!~~~~r~~,:
hope of an immediate
sol ution. wh il e Uni versity
Center Director non llachet.
An istant Director Bud
Steiner. and Bu sin e ss
Manager Joe St. Marie are
mo,•ing from their presently
ade-quate offices into new
ones.
\
Hamilton, one of many
upset with cu rrent oHice
arrangements.
cllallenged
that "they gel new ones " "hen
students don't ."
!Iache!. in attempting to
st raighten this conflict out.
pointed out the fact that th is
was In the planning four to
five years ago and students
were asked for inpu t con·
cerni ng desiRn and function.
At tllat time a Program
Statement Com mit!~ . made
up of two faculty and th ree
student.s,wasformedwiththe
U.C. staff.
It wasthentha t,a long,.ith
plansforanewaddition,they
formed plans for renovating
theoldpartoftheU.C. In this
plantheoldText Rentalanda
numberofotherroomswere
to be converted into office
sp::ace which would be com ·
patibleinqualityto tha l inthe
new addition. Unfortunately.
the State Bui lding Com·
m1s s ion canned t h e
renovation project two years
ago.
Uachet is optimistic tllat
work will be done on the old
part . ho,.·ever . itmayhaveto
be done ' 'piece mea l" instead
of as a major project due to
unf oreseen
budg et
limitations.
Concerning reJuvenation of
the old ~~« lion. Hamilton
' said. " I don 't think that it
wi ll be fixed for at least four
or five years.""
In reply to this Hachet
stated. " I don't believe it. I
think that it will llappen
before that ."'
"!"hoe I'Mtu .. a MCond dqa
un1ver1ity pubtlealion.
published "·eeklydurtns the
tchcotll ~ear In Slrvens P01nt.
I'>"IKWLJin 5-4U t It il publtllled
undt-rtheauthoritylflnled\0
the Board ot Rrgenta of SUtte
Unl'·rnitiet; by S«tlon n .tt.
WiKOMin SUotute.. Publkatktn
cosuarrpaldbylheStateCif
WIJCOntln under rontnclt
a-..·.,Mdby the State Printllll!
SectiCin. State Departmn>t or
Adminlltrat iCin. u providfd In
S"tr Prlnt io1 Ope rationa l
Bullelint-l4Cil"Augusttl, lm.
P
:...:.og:!:e::.._4_ _ _ _T_H__E
::.._PO
_c:..I_N_T_E
_R_ _ _ _J_o_nuory 3 I , 197 J
It was a rea l hai ry situation at the
pyra m1d build during Winter Carnival
games
Par11Cip3hng In the log-throw takes ev~y bit or energy this
co nt ~1 ant
had
After aU that hard -.wk this team lost to
their stronger opponent.s.
Sure there 's a gas shortage but will the
sho\'t:'l replace the automobile?
" T .S. Henry Wri>b" and " Wishbone Ash " provi ~ t,.'O v~ y
differmt performances Thursd.ty night
'
TH E POINTER
·· Att~r wegt't this cut . we ca n use it to h~a t the dorms when
theyrunO\Itoffuel.''
" Wishbone Ash" played at a sol d~ut
co n ce rt Thu r s d•y n l'lh I.
Some mornings it jiiSt doesn 't p•y to get out of bed.
Love doctor dares
students to love
by Daw•G MiJf'r
Leo BuKaglia challeng~
the audience> that pack~
Qu;lndt Gym t'nday night to
"da~ to love"
Buscaglia. knov.-n as t~
" Love Doctor ," says he 11
totally comm1t1ed to love>.
"''hich m~aM endeavonng to
lo•·e all men ~v~n If he isn't
lo\·ed by them
" Life is nO! the goal. 11 is
the> tnp ...·hich is fu ll of little
happemnp." uid Buscaglia
" Ufe can only bl" hved in
now . ,_ 1n lomOI'Tow." he
said Headvisedtheaudienct
to ~ c~ath· e 1n thrir lives
and to sol•·r life's problems
onea t abmt '1behtalthiest
person is~ one w1th the
most alttTllah•·ts to solvina
of th~ >/~f)' wise, the>
flex•bi.lity of the child, the
stnSIIIVJ ty of the artist , the
undcorst ;udlnJ of the
phllosophl"r . the acceptance
of the sam!, the tol~ance of
the dflfiuttd , the knowledge
of !he scholar and the for ·
Illude of the cer ta1n."
Bu5caglia cr iticiud the
e du cat iona l sys t em and
socie ty's ln:atment of old
people.
" What we do to old people
m 01.1r 50Cic>ty 11 a crime, .. he
sa1d. ''Wt put them In in·
slltutions where all they ca n
do IS $11 and wa..t to d•t " ln
cont rast. he pointed to the
Ita han fam•IY s tru c ture
whr r .- the elden are
chenshl"d and lo•·td.
Bu s cagli a critiche d
hl~~~~· ~~:~aa ~::~'CX:m~~~ ~~~a~;:a
quote from hiS recent book .
entitled l,.M·e , 5a ~1 ng , " to be a
IO\'tr will require that you
conti nua!Jy havetht subtlt'l)'
pi:
fection . ll r said tl\at ra ther
than llnve for perftoet1on it is
bl"ller to be human and love
11
" All
pets
must
bt
kqll
on
a
leuh. "
Page 5
Page 6
THE POINTER
January 31 , 1974
UW funding restoration urged
budget funds
for
the
University of WisconsJn to
co mpensate for money
withheld last )·ear pending a
study of increased user fees .
State
Rep. Rkhard A.
t-1introp <D-<>sh kosh ) asked
Lucey to include $934 ,000 for
the UW System in his budget
~·l ew bill. v.'h.ich will be
s ubmitted to the State
Legislature when it convenes
Jo1tntrop noted that the
completed study by the Board
showed that a maximwn of
$66,000 could be generated by
additional user fees .
' 'Tile only fair response to
Philosopher to Talk on
Infinity, Religion and-Math
an Madison. Jan . 29.
Yt'hen the 1973-75 biennial
budget was being prepa.re-1
mathematical set theory ,
according to Wenz. U true ,
the prt!mise ,.·ould set;~ .to
stand against the posstbiltty
of an in fi nite se r ies or
cha nges as held by some
physicists. including those
who propose the "big bang"
theory of "creation ."
Wenz · ll'Cture is the first in
a se r ies of talks on
ptulosophlca l questions to be
sponsored by the Philosophy
Department On Feb 20, at
the same hour . Richard
f'eldman wall talk on
" Natural R1ght s. D1rty
Hooks. and the F~tst
Amendment "
Pet et Wenz or the
Philosophy Department will
lecture on '1'be Concept of
lnlinity a nd the Beginning or
Time" in the MW r ..SChurz
Room of the University
Center on Wednesday, Feb . 6,
a t 3 p .m . This public lecturt!
and discussion is open to all
students and facult y "'ithout
charge
Wenz will explore one
p r emtse of an ancient
argument for the existence or
God . That premise - that an
mhnite regress or changes as
1mposstble - seems to be
supported by the current
definition of infinity in
Resolution
passed to
reduce
student fees
by Mary Budde
The financial burden on
students should be reduced to
no more than 2S per ~t the
cost of mstruction. urged the
Student and Faculty Affairs
Committee at last weeks
Faculty Senate meeting . The
r esolutio n was made
pnr.tarily for resident un ·
dergraduates .
Reason s given for the
resolution "''ere that tuition
has doubled in the last four
years . new fees covering the
'etoed that exclus•on, but the
,\ ssem bly has O\' erndden
that \'eto The Senate "'"ill
constder the \'eto in the up·
conung scsston .
early last year. St m1llion
was left out of the U W budget
unbl the Board or Regent.s
could study ways to increase
the use of user fees for certain
non -instructional activ1ties.
The final budget approved
In August of last year man ·
dated the user fee study, but
spt."C ifically for bid any fees
from being appli-ed to
s tudents . The governor
Gov . Lucey was urg~ to
restore nearly St million in
J"No one could attend the
by Mari Kursze.,.,•sk.i
After analyzing the local
operational budget at UWSP .
the Student Senate believes
they have round an un warranted diversion of about
$900 ,000 in funds . reported
Carol Marion for Student
Senate President J im
Hamilton .
The Student Senate
believes the funds have been
dtverted from the academic
and instructional budget to
admtnistrative and other
areas of campus . The Student
Senate plans on sending a
copy of these findings to the
Carol Hopp er. assi Stant
student director of the arts
a nd I ec t u res se r1 es .
in c om pa r ing the
st ud e n t · s
Op ·
p o rtunity to attend
conce rt s for 50 cents
31 UWSP . "The Series ," said
M.s. Hopper , " presents 20
concerts per school yea r ··
The Arts and Lectures
Series is undet'lt'ritten by
student fees . ' Ibis is one of
the reasons the series can
afford to charge the In ·
dtvidual student a minimal
fee for the concerts." said
Ms . Hopper.
Student Director Dean W.
Hanford. and Ms. Hopper
both advise and work closely
with a student committee .
chancellor
. said Senate
M.s . Marion
~~
.. ?'~fc{committee
~~~~·~i~
The Student
a lso. the
student
. The
by D;ne Gntlstr
There was a smell of ex·
ci temen t in the ai r , among
other things At last a " big
name " group was coming to
the s l~py burg of Sle\'enS
Pomt. and the audience
wa1ted im pattentl)' . Some
members of the audience
tossed a frtsbee around
Quandt Gym . "''hlle others
"'·ere blo"'1ng bubbles Those
bubbles d1dn't mean
l..l"'Tence Welk was coming
e ll her
"T S Henry Webb " ex·
Wa r sa "'' NatiOnal Philhar · the hlgh<"SI Cll 3t iOn for
mo n•c on 1<- e b I. \' iolimst
achiC\'l'lllcnt g1ven by the
Jean ·J acques Kantorow on · Po ltl>h go\'~rnment, wtll
feb 10. and lsraeh piamst perform m Quandt Gym at 8
Dana Vered on Feb 20 The p m on F'nday n1ght, Feb. 1.
Ballet Repeto r y Co mpany at UWSP
w1ll be presented on Feb. 21 ,
The n•pertotre to be used in
the Netherlands Wind En · the Ste\'ens Potnt per semble on March 3 . rock formance "'''" mclude works
adapt ton o f Sha kespeare 's by Szy manows kt and Havel
comedy ," Two GenUemen of plu:. " Sym phony No 4 in F
Verona " on March 10; and M111or " by Tschaikowsky .
celltst Jonathan Abramo"'1tt
Th e philh a rm on iC was
on March 17. John Slewart cn•atL'<I m 1901 by Emil
"'111 play the v1olin and viola Ml ynarski, a composer a nd
on Apnl 17 and clarinetist conductor "''ell ·known tn the
Mtchael Webster concludes IIIUSical worlds of Europe and
the sen es Apnl 21 All events Amenc3 of those times .
begm at a p.m ."
Toda) the phtlharmontc is
'"The Arts and Lectures Poland 's prtrnary musica l
nes is ·av;ulable to all ms tttut wn . d1ssemmating
st udents , and tS "'pen to Polt s tl and tnternational
program suggestion ," sa1d mus1cal culture
Ms Hopper .
The approx 11n atel y 120·
member orctQ.s a 1s being
The War saw Nattonal brought to cum s by the
Ptulharmonic . whtch holds Arts and LectureS ries .
c.1ran . Modun apartmen t
near ('llmpus for girls .
Summtr a.nd fall openings .
The adoption of a minor tn ~~ve:'~ {~ all facet& of the
museum technique was
M.s Hopperpolntedoutthat
passed by the senate It IS to the student& manage the box
be part of the Department of office. the h<tJSe during
~ogy
performances and make
l'a ll lH·ZIVI .
For Sale
~~~t~~ons~;~~~~c~
..
odded .
The Board of Regents study
~~s~~e~~~f ~~~~~o~~~:~
athletics and individual and
group recreation is already
financed by user and
segregated fees .
T h e governor' s annual
budget review bill will be
considered by th e
Legislature's Joint Finance
Committee, which "''ill
recommend changes before
submitting the bill to the
entirt! Legislative body
plodcd on the stage in a wild,
crazy style. If you luld to swn
up the "Webb .. crew in one
word, it would be dynamic .
Constan tl y on the move ,
''Webb ''covercd every Inch or
the stage in their romp . The
leader was capable of pla)1ng
many different instruments
although he was unable to do
3 job with the nute .
There was som e
di sagree ment after th e
concert between those un ·
pressed with "Webb" and the
Joyal " Wishbone Ash " fans
One reason suggested for
" Webb 's" popul arity ~· as
that all the dope was smoked
before "Ash" got to the stage
Maybe so, but more tm ·
portant is the facl tha t " Ash "
and " Webb " are two very
different groups They ha \·e
two \lery distinct styles It 's
not a case or one betng bettN
than the ot.hcr " Webb" and
"Ash " were both good but for
differ e nt reasons The
dynamic " Webb " was a hard
act to follow and the mon•
refined "Ash " got off to a
sJow stnrt. "Webb" was fun to
watch , but the mustc of
" Ash " had so much more
quality .
Whichever band you ltkf.-d
best really isn 't 1mportant
when you consider the most
important event of the mg.ht
F'inally. a "big name" coo ·
cert sold out in Stevens Potnt
Th is means a possib1ht)' of
having more such concert s 1£
we are willing to support
them . II we do get more
concerts we could lose our
image of a " nothing happens
here" school.
t+_______________.,..___________
asked for faculty par · committee is not just limited
tictpation in their evaluation to music students but rather
of courses.
made up of representative
ll was also pa!Sed that
math placement tests , 1n
addition to high school per ·
formance , may be used to
place st udents in math
courses .
The Search and Screen
Committee announced that
a pplications for the v1ce·
chancellor pos1tion are sllll
being accepted. Any tn ·
ter ested faculty members
were urged to apply before
M.A[~ .I: ~ ~ • . . . .•• • . • •••
:a
~~~~~~:ts s~:re: a~
Bands Provide High Time
Warsaw Philharmonic on
Friday
_ )
1
Lime when Wisconsi n is trying
to open up its university and
when the cost or lh·ing is
sk)TOCketing, II would be
unth i nkable f o r the
Review
A look a t arts and lect ures
=e~~~ru~~onco::~ un::~-~~i~:~~os!~~
\tvtng has increased .
The senate pa ssed the
resolution . It will be sent to
Central Administration .
thts st udy 1s a restoration of
the S9:W .OOO "''ilhheld fr om the
unt\' Crs tt y system budget
whtch cannot be generated by
new user fees,' ' said F1intrt-p.
According to 1-,introp, the
llegcnts determmed that UW
students are a lready paying
Sl~ mtlhon m tuition and
vanous fees . They also pay
$418 ,000in seg rega ted fees fo r
1nstructional se rvices and
act •vttt es thnt s hould be
supported by general tax
dollars or other methods .
"University s t uden t s
already depend on financial
aid for bet"'·een 30 percent
and -15 percent of their total
costs. and increased user fees
could only crea te further
monc)' problems for many of
them ,'' F1tntrop stated . " At a
Ms Hopper sai d that all of
the productions are presented
on cam pus , either in Jenklns
Theatre, Michelsen Concert
Hall or in the Quandt Gym .
" Soloists perform i n
~hchelsen ,'' said M.s . Hopper
' 'Tile larger productions are
pres ented tn the Quandt
Gym "
Ms Hopper told of commg
cultural events Arts and
• ~t.U;:~ . ~~J • •P!'~n.t . ~ .
1965 Comet Slatton wagon
Body-excellent. •ntertor ·
good , ttre s ·good , engtne ·
needs work
Best orrer takes it away : II
.ntcrested . call Jeff at 341 ·
2991
l#roblem Prt:Jtnancy Coun·
Hling litrvlce .
Int e res ted volunteers are
nc<ded '
Pltase phone :WI.oil22 and
leave nam e and phone
number . or stop mat the l..o\'e
Shop. 900A Oark St . Stevens
Po1nt
U )OU want to help others,
help thcnuelves-Help us.
classified ads
Books gathermg dust in your
closet" Put them to work for
you Trade for books and
magaunes:
TilE llOOK EXCHANGE
2124thStreet
Wausau
WANTED : Blue Jun s, any
co nditio n fo r r uyctlng .
Please c.a ll Cindy. J.ll·l6-19.
1011
Saturday night , Jan . 26
Black bil lfold and gree n
address book . Important
FOH SAI.F: : 1968 Dodge nn papers . Please return to :
nc~lltn t ('OndltJon.sd up for John Meagher
umplng . Phone : -115 -4-15 · 1025 S. 64th no. 4
:120M.
West Allis , WI 5321<
·or
JUKS
ex· Allan LoeJOer
Rm . 11 4 Baldwin Hall
perlcnce requ1red . ExceiJent
Postage wUI be returned .
pay . Worldwide travel.
Per fect s ummer job or AS OF J AN , 31 .CLASSi f' JEO
career . Send $3 for In · ADS will cOi l II p6 cohual
formation . SEA I-..AX, Dept. Inch a nd payment In ad niKe
12-N P .O. Box 2049, Port 1 r equlrM .C I I Is minimum
Angeles. Washington Sll8352. chlfJ!:e.,
1
M~~1.~~~ t·NrJo
Native American
Presentation Set
for Three Days
by lk"acr R. Bumu
Th e UWSP Histor h:a l
Discourse Society will
present spect.l programs on
Native Americans and
American colonial history on
Feb. ~- land 7.
prewnt. ''The VoyqNrS", a
s lide presentation and
!:e:·
~~~~ ~:~~·~
UWSP history department
pr~ntalectureandslidn
c:omm~tary
on the colonial
fur trade in Notth America.
Thepro&ramwillbeheld atl
p.m. in the Wright Lounge,
Unlversily Center. A qutstlon
and discussion period will
Thb'e ~~oill be a double follow .
·Leland Pomainvllle will
presentation on Tuesd ay,
will discuss thei r recenUy
published book , Who's tilt
Sava1e. The book relata the
mistreatment of the North
Ame ri can Indians at the
handJ of the white man.
David Tousey. a UWS P
senior. v.i ll sput on the
~e:~!g ~n~d!iC::r~
of Nath·e
Americans . The
program will btjin at 7 :30
p.m. In the Frank Uoyd
Wright Lounge. University
Center . A question and
discussion period wiU follow.
The Pl"Oiram on Feb. 6
Maur ice Rice. jr . . will
'Whisp~r'
co nc:erntna medidne and
medical practices of the
American Indian . Th e
programwillbeheldonf'eb.
1. at I p.m., in the Wri&ht
Lounge, Uni\'trsity Center.
Th ese program s will
provid~ an extellent op·
portunlty for Interested
pertons to learn about some
unique upects of Ameritan
Coloni~ history and _Nath·e
Ame n tans, attor d1ng to
Brute R . Beaman ,
programm1ngdirKtorofthe
Historical Sodety
The programs are open to
students. faculty and the
public No admiSSion charae
January 31 , 1974
fo' eb . I, Combwstloa
Engi neeri ng , Inc . Co n·
neetleut. All paper :Klence
vaduatn.
Feb. l, Wu tvaco, Covlncton.
Va . All pulp and paper
science ifaduates.
t-'eb . 11 . Pachcl n& Corpo r a t lon o f Americ a,
Eva111ton, 111 . All majon •
es pecially paper scienu
aradua tet fOl posltio~ In
sales. m:uketin&. accountlnll
and production management .
companies listed below is
~b:~:yb~~~:!fd ~~~:de?~
prepantion for your in·
terview. Attire forpla«ment
lnterviewsshouldconslstof a
~~and lie or an appropriate
.......
t>eb. $,
C~mpany .
St. Reps Paper
AJI pulp and paper
sc1ence graduates.
Feb. S. ll ncules Chemlc:al
Corpontlon, Delaware. All
P<~per science graduates.
F'eb. S, S.S. Kresce Company.
All majors for retail
management positions.
f.'e b. I, J.C. Penney C.Lalog
Divhlon. All m ajo r s .
es peda ll y busi ne ss a d·
beh~dlll&aminl leaderstnp
for an yone tm·oh•ed
""1th nmpus oraaniutions
The sessions wLII include
"'Commulllt)" Resources"' on
F"eb 11 . "' How to R11 1ly
Support and Action·· on Feb
2$. " Group Goals"' on
~'-"Or klihop
f.'eb. ' '· Upjoh n Co., ~Un ·
n-eapolis. Minn. All blolosy,
Chemistry and-or science
araauate s for phar ·
maceulical sales ooslticins.
F"eb. Zit, State of \'tlsc:OM!a
! Bureau ol Personnell .
~'l adlson. Wis. All majors
mteres~ed in positions in
general adminstration ,
laboratory
and therapy, engineer ing ,
SOCII! services,
1
~~~:I ~!Jo ~ ~· a ~:
form ;lllion se r vices' and
teaching.
Feb. zo. Rydtr Truck Uon,
Inc ., JackSOil\"ille, ., •. All
busi ness related majors and·
or ~her major with two years
ac t1 ve milit a ry service,
t-' eb. 14, Ald Assoclatloa lor betv.·een ages of 24-29. U.S.
citltenship required and free
Luther•ns. Applei.On, W\s
All majors for home ornce to relocate.
manaaeme nt and sa lu .
~~tfe'io~:fca:rs ~J ~; :::~;;~:~.e;! ~~'\:fi~!~
1
mmis tration.~nomicsand
management positions. As a
fraternal life i nsurance
company, Ald Association lor
t.utheran~,ls exempted from
certain u pects of the equal
opportunity em ployment
code.
hberalar tsaraduateswitha
ma rketi ng Interest . Job
descri ptions and literature
;wailable in the Placement
Office
:~~~t)ie;.·e:!d'7tit~~oml~e~'-;~ =~~reedof w~·~~chhi;·oy~~e~
leadership workshops planned
Student Ac tivttLe5 along
.,."lth the Houuna Offi~ v.·11l
on . c~mpus In the Sc:tence
Buildmg , Room A·l%1 from
~ : 30 a .m. to 12 :00 noon. All
t~ter es ted s tudents please
Sign up for the eum in the
Placement Office, 106 Main
Building. and pick up the
~~~~ '!irs~~ ~~~fy :!!~f:.~a r y
applica t ion
~intsa admlnlstra~?" and t' fb. !6. Sears , Roeb 11 ck and
hberal arts for pos1t1o~ In Company, Skokie, Ul. AU
manageme nt
tr a 1n ee majors tseniorsl inter ested
programs.
In rei ail managfment
feb . It, Nalco Chemin! training programs or catalog
All Fl~ sciftw;:~ ~!!:men t train i ng
_;;ra!.
uates .
.
through tl"le course of the
play
~l ake · up became a
problem . Using a fl esh·tone
flat finish latex to perform
necessary wr ink les an d
bl.emtshM on the faces and
handstransformedtheyotD"lg
men to old . The " mask" was
a "'-et solution ""tuch began to
dry. causing a "peeled'' effect to the nKk and mouth
a reas of the characters .
F"urth er experimentation~'-·as
nKessarybefo re the problem
t2 . 3nd ··Getting was eliminated.
Ready for ·;~ and Spec1fics on
Setting was basic . with tv.-o
Goa l s for Campus ~rkbencl"lescent~ona
Orgamz.ations"' on Aprtl a.
~ee~en~or~dec:~~ra~~~lir~~
~l arch
Allsns.ons ~'-111 behtold at;
pm at DeBot ~nte r 1n the
Matn Lounge The format for
the~tons will 1nclude a
shortlKtureand discussion
FREE SKATING HOURS,
Properties were simple . 1lw'
ac:tor:scarrieda newspaper, a
bottle. a pomegranate and a
gunandeither " littered"or
thought bettn-ofusin&them
/special reference to Max 's
guM .
ncnruca t expression _,
NOTE . ~he f~ee ska ting Sa turday. Feb :!.%3. 9p.m · II
houf"l publ1~hed tn the Jan .2~ p m
I$5Uf: were LllCorrKI.
Sunday. Feb 3. 10, 17, 2-t : 9
p.m.-11 p.m.
'"MiTCii lsH51h :
January·
Monday thru F'riday 2-t p.m.
~l onday, Jan 21: a p.m · Monday . Ma rch~ . n : a p.m . ·
midrught.
midnight.
Thurlday, Jan 31 : a p.m.· Wednesday . March 6,1 3: 10
m1dnight.
p.m ..midnighl.
Saturday, J an Zl: 9 pm · II Thursday . ~larcl'l 7. 14 a
p.m
p.m ·mtdnight
by the use of non-uniform
~ttems and va rious light
tem peratures or intensities.
Blue a nd wh ite compositions
depicted a cold, &loomy,
December da y . Li&hts
dimmed and thadov."ed to
emphas ize charac:ter mood
and Josa of day.Jight hours.
Although it took pati~
and detenninaHon to sUck
a
p.m.-fllldru&ht
Wednesday. F"eb. 1.13.27 · 10
p.m Anidnight .
Thurtday, feb . 7,14.21: a
p.m.-midniJht
f"r ida y. F"eb J · a pm ·
midnight.
friday , F"eb. l : l sun..J1 p.m.
ception of renon . perception
a nd at mos phere of the
product i on
ce rtainly
··whispered into my &ood
ear." lea vin& me mindful to
si milar si tuations . a nd
satisfled with the characters"
ps~hoJOikal rehabilitation.
t ~~~yr:'"~eb. ~ . 11 . 18,2$:
Feb. I , Wlscomln De putme11 1 o r Tran s portation
t \'tls~Oftlln State PatroU. AU
majon • especially ethnic
minor ity a nd fema le In·
dividuals.
contacti ng the Placement
Center , tOSMa ln BuildiiiJ , al
their earliest t'OO\'tnle~
Literature concerning th~
beha,·ior Such was the case ou_tdated . but contemporary,
v.1 th th1s 90 minute drama ~'-" Lnte r gar ment s . Max
R:::~I.Le ~~~!!~Jlbtr~·~~~ rssessed sever a l coats.
~Uchacl Shendan . respec· ~~~~;shS~hi:~;;:~cb~~
and thus contemplated
SUICide to end thet r lonehnHs
and dejection Suttlde. to
them . seemed ~ pro~bl e
answe r to thetr cy n•cal
d!sposlllon tovoard old aae
andMax"sgulltre-aardinghiS
psychological problem of
homosexuali t)•
Jan L. James ~nteih&ent l y
fashtooed the costumes as
Poge 7
Job Interviews Dates Set
All graduattsareurgtdto
take adYinlage of the
fo llowinJ Interviews by
centers around suicide
by l}.fbitUII
Neurot ic depres.sion and
p~ssimist1c at iL tudes v.·er e
infuential to the Derfonnance
of \\' III S PER INTO ll\'
C'.OO D t:AR. presentHI Jan
I t& · 19 by the UnL\"trSi ty
Stud1o Theat r e Student
Diana Du Pr~ was the
dl rK tOf'
Broadly speaking . a play 1s
the reprHentation of man in
xtton Hov.·ever. theac;tion of
a pia)' is not cr~ated merely
of physical movement for tt
dep1cts menial and
psychological functions
"'inch mohvate the external
THE POINTER
~day . March I . a p.m ·II
f'riday. March a,tS: a p.m.·
midnJght.
Slturday . March 2· 9 p.m.·
midnight
Slturd.ay. MaTch • · • p.m · II
pm
Sunday. March3,10. 9p.m ·II
p m.
~=~~1ti~e:,t!,ve);e~~
;,~~~n~edrs:~n;:nf~~ ~1::.
SPECIAL
MD 20-20 GOLD
Buy One at $1.19
Get 2nd Battle ll2 Price
SOUTH POINT
BEER & LIQUOR
s...- . ....
2100
Ga.~·
o,-
O.Uy n11 f:OO P.M.
Page 8
:rHE PO IN TER
Monday, Februo
January 31 , 1974
• Campus Calendar
LADIES NIGHT U!!.IP p 0 I NT ER
every Monday 8-1 p.m.
Happy Hour Prices
also . . .
HAPPY HOUR
1 DAYS A WEfl 4-6 P.M.
OLD MILWAUKEE
IS STILL ONLY 25c
At The
KLUCK STOP
lr an llem IS to be repeated . please submit a copy each
week
Thursday, January 31
PH,\\' E I\ UR t:A KFAST : 7: 1S am. ~lue ~m. De~t
Center . The Department of ~111Lt.1ry Sc1ence 1s sponsonng
the b(eaklas t. 11 1s thei r second local observance of the
Annual Nataondl Prayer Brcakfasl.
,
CIIHI STIAN SCIENCE CO L.Lt::Gt: OHG,\NIZATION :
6: IS p .m ., u .C.M. Building (Cor ner Coll eg~ a nd Frem ~nt ).
\JI arc welcome to attend our week ly testimony meeung .
~NTEHVAHS I T 'II' CIIIIISTIAN F'El!..OW~ IIIP MEETING :
s p.m .. N1colet Ma rquette Hoom. Um\'ersi~Y Cen ter . Darrel
Smith , an intcr vnrsity staff worker w1ll be the guest
speaker
S\' ~IPIIOSI C WISU ESSEMUl E CONCE RT: 8 a .m
Michelsen llnll. Fine Arts Center.
.
.
u ,\U FIL\1 :8 p m . Wisconsm Room . U~lverSlty Center .
The f-l rst Annual 1'\e"'' York Erotic Fesh\'al.
Friday, February 1
USI\' E it SITY TII E t\ THE : 8 o .m . Jenkins Theatre . Fine
Arts C~nter " Woyteek ' ' and "The Lesson ."
\\'AilSA \\' SATIOSAl Pllllii Ait:'tiOSI C : 8 p.m ., Quandt
Gym . Fleldhouse Sponsored by Arts and Lectures Series .
INFLATION - THEN INFLATE
.
lokery oftd New Heolth Store
('
AII-U-Can-Eat stil only $1.7 5
IMI H--. Coolti"t -
SMor1otbord
O.er nirty Deltciout Soloclt,
v.,...l.a..,
M"tle"' Dishn
.. ~:~ :~~/\~~ .~p .m . ,
to
M.Mt oM
Choose FrOM.
WMiteiWit $2.75 -
CSot.H MoMoy
H ..t to lltly't -
North 2IHI St.
SE\\'MAS lJN I\'EHS ITY PAHI SII : i Ne'Aman Olnpel ·
OOscment of St Stan 's) iCioister Chapel · 1300 Ma ria Drive)
Weekend mass(.>S Saturdays , 4 and 6 p.m .. Newman
.
g:.~~r ~~~t6 ~ m .'0~~::er ~f.~kd~~:~a~~:
0 3
1\lesday Web 5 . Fnd.ay , Feb 81 II :SS a .m . Newma n
Olapci 1Piease note change of tame m morning mass I. 4 :45
p .m . Newman Chapel iaflernoon mass time remains same
as before 1 Confcss1ons. 4 p m on Wednesday .
01\'ISE WOHO E\" . l \.,TII EHAS OIURCII : Wisconsin
Synod . Serv1ces 8 "15a m and 10 45a m Bus transportation
prO\' Ided Call 34-1-8185
FIRST BAPTI ST tl l l,;ROI
19-18 Olurch St .. Sunday
serv1ces at 10 45 a m & 7 15 p m
O l l,;HCII Of' TUE ISTERCI-; SS IOS CEpiscopa)) : 1417
Olurch t . SWldaymassHat9 OOa m & 5 715p.m .
l UTII E HAS STl:DEST CO:'t1M liS IT\' : Peace Campus
Center . Mana Orl\'e and Vmcent St Service wit h
Eucha rist. Sa turday . 6 p.m & SWJd.ay, 10:30 a .m .
P EACE UN ITED CII UHOI Of-' CIIRI ST : 1748 Dixon Street.
Sunday serv1ce at 10·00 a m
FHAME PltES H\'Tt.:ltl t\ N CII URCII :
IXlO Main St. ,
Sunday services at 9 "15 & 10 45 am
PL.t\Sf:."TAIU UM S EHIES : 3 p m , Science Buildin(l.
"Comets, Met(>()r s and Aste ro1ds.~· d1rctted by Bob Valiga .
UA H f'llM : 8 p m. Wisconsin Hoom . University Center .
" Malcom X."
~~-
PAUL'S UN ITEIJ Mf:.I IIOOI ST CJI URCII :
600
Wilshire Blvd . SWlday service at 10:00 a .m .
f'IHST CII UUt ll OF CHRI ST SC IENTIST : 9 :30 a .m .
Sunday school. II 00 a m church service .
UN IVE itS ITY TII Et\THE : 8 p m . J enkins thea tre , Fine
Arts Center " Woyu."Ck .. and "The Lesson ...
f'Al"UlT 'I' VIUUS Hl-:l'ITAl : 3 p m ,
STARRING:
GENE HACKMAN
ESTELlE PARSONS
Michelsen Hall,
~~":t:~I
~~~~~~E~-~~~~~~y t~~ :~~~~i~~n Hall , Fine
Arts Building
ITALlAN RAVIOLI
SPAGHETTI
Room
~~~!~ · Main Building " I :\t
INSTitUCTIONS IN Til E l'ATIIOI.U
Newman House, 1125 1-Temont Stm!
course . Anyone wishing to attend pit~
Offic e and leave your nam e. addrcssan
UN IVEH S ITY TII EATIU:: 8 p m . Jt
Arts Cente r . " Woyzeck " and ''The lJ:
FACULTY AUTI~"T SCIIO l.t\HS!Ill'
Mic,helscn Ha ll , Fine Art s C('ntt>r
Wednesday, Feb,
J F.:SUS STUDENTS F~l.lO\\ S IIIP 3
Ma rquette Room , Univcr!UI)' Centtr
CI::NTitAL WI SroNSIN t\IU'II EOU
M EETING: 7 :30 p.m .. 106 a nd 11:1
Center . A group of amatt'ur . s tudent ,
chcologls ls have formed a ~IN)' ,
sociology-a nthropology !acult) .,.,,11 diS
Anthropology. "
UN I\'I::R S IT\' T HEA Tit !-; : 8 p n1 . Je
Arts Center . ··woyzeck .. and ''The Lt
UA H Coffeehouse "Crystal " !parts of
and Daddy Whiskers) Ne.,.. Celffl'l'ho!JSf
$.25. Time : '!'! \
Saturday, February 2
Sunday, February 3
Wlscons:n
~~!=~~~~l:.~?.:~w
WVv
USI\'ER SIT Y TII EATH E : 8 p m . Jenkins Theatre, Fine
Arts Center " Woyzeck" a nd "The Lesson" .
TORREY'S ORGANIC
RESTAURANT
Hot
U~i~e?1~tS:p&~~e:~E~~IN!~
6
::
Discussion or future trips plannf'd
STATION MANt\GER : IJelt)' Eckard!
PUoG it A M OIK t:l,.OU : l'hil EK hr
MOSUA 'I'
9:S8 Sian On
10·00 The Art Verone Shoy,•
I :00 Mid Day Nt'olt'l
t·u Ntwa Feature•
1 )0 U N. PerspKiive
1.45 U.N. Report
:z :oo All Thlnp ronsidrrt'd
2:.10 Conversations at Ch1cago
l :OO Meet Me in Dixie
l :lO Middle ol the Rock U lu.sJC" f
4 00 The Phil J acUon Shovo
1·00 Evenina Ne ..·s
1·.10 Public Affa1rs: Book flOIM"
1:00 Jau. Unllmlttd
10:00 Nlahtwatch
2:00 Sian Off
TllES DAY
9:51 Sign On
,.,
""'
"'
"'
lO
1 10
1
,..
'100'"
10
to :OO 'The Jdr VanDlen Shov.·
I :00 Mid Day News
1"15 News Featuc-e•
1:.10 Point of Order
~~~ ~~:"a~e ~T:Pe<'UI~
2: IS Natural Resour~s
2:30 Usten to Their Volcrs
l :OO Dusty t...bell and Old Wu
3: 15 1l\e International Club
3:30 Mlddle ol the Rock IMUSfC"f
4:00 The Betty Eckardt Shov.
7:00 Evening Newt
7:.10 Public Alfa lrs : l011igh1
1:00 Jau Un!imittd
10:00 Nlahtwatch
2:00 Sign Off
POOF
OPENS ITS
. FINEST ENTEF
All DINNERS INCLUDE SALAD
AND HOT ITALIAN BREAD!
FILM SOCIETY
TUES., FEB. 5
7 ,00 & 9 ,15 P.M.
..
BILL'S PIZZA
Downtown Ste,.."' 'olnt
Pho"e J44..9SS7
Deli•ery S.nice M City
Feb. 1 & 2 - "ORLf'
F... 6 (Wed.) - "Bl.AO
Feb. U (Thurs.) - "CUI
fell. 16 (Wed.) - "CIRI
January 31, 19 74
FOOD .\S O DR UG
MIS ISTRATI OS
T HE POINT ER
Page 9
AD·
n t: l•tu :st-:NTAT IVE: TO Ut-:
II I::: II E:: Blanche E rk el h·om
the food and Drug Ad·
minstratio n will be on
CampusMonday,Feb. II . She
wi ll
speak
and answe r
THE BOTTLE
questions from 6:30 to 9:00
p.m. on Labe ling. f ood f ads
and Fallacies in Room 116
COPS. Anyone interested is
welcome to a ttend . She Is
5p0nsored by Alpha ))(> Ita
STOP
Alpha .
LIQUOR STORE
m9~9em
·~lors
WW P program schedule
STATIOS ~A.... AGEK : B~uy Edun!t
P KOCKA M DIKECTQK : PhLI [ S<tw
I•I' ~:~:H . ltoc:k Wntmberit"l"
\1-~I'UHTS: Nancy lllk;a
"HI.II 1\t:!.AT\O.-.:s : Tom Bedort"
M O...IJA \ "
t:~
Sian On
10:00 The Art \'~ SOO..·
1:00 fthd 0&)' !\ir.o-s
1 · 1~ News F"ntures
1.:10 US. P~~U~t
~:: ~ii'"Th~onside!"rd
Z:lO Convers~uons at Ctu~&KU
l :OO MeetMtLII~
l .:IO MlddleolthtRod< 1:-lu>IC
• 00 The Phil Jat"Uon .51\o\o·
1:00 E\-ellinj; St,.-s
7 ":10 Pub\lcAtfairs Book,.M"
&:OOJau U11limited
10:00 Ni&}Ltw&tcl"l
Z· OO SipOrf
t :SI Sign Oil
10:00 Tbe J df VanDien Sho-..
t ·OO !ohd Day St"'"l
n
New1 F"UILU"el
1·30 Point ofOrdt"l"
~ -~ ~:n.~tJ:r~lt"S
Z\5
:~ ~
tll f
!
~
l!
l~ ~
H~ ~:
SaturaiResour~s
2.30 Ulttn to Their V 01~t">o
1·00 Dusty L&bds and Old '.l'u
315 Tbe lnt~nationlll Oub
l :lO Moddlt o/!he Rod t Mu~..4:00 The &ttty Ec:Urdt Six!-..
1 00 Evmillf Nt~
7· :10 Publ.c: Affairs· lns>ght
8:00 JauUnlimited
te:oo Ni&Jtl:watcl"l
2:00 S~&nOff
lnk\\)nnShow
:-~;;;.:
.,,,... Aa A
GerM,,..
0...
SAn "IU M \ "
7 Sl SL&n On
8 :00 Tom Collins. On thr Rodn
I 00 ~hd Day News
LIS Nfi"'o"l f"taturH
I :10 The Nancy Hlka Show
~ - oo The ll a"k Y,'ynn Sho-..·
&:30 Public Affaira : Sporu Highlights
7 00 t:•·ellin1 Nt..-s
7· 30 Journeys fntoJuz
8:00 J au Unllmoted
10·00 Nightw&IC:h
1·00 ltoci; !'Ut !tf jdNghl
lOO Sign Oil
2:00 .\lmand;l.loi~Je.~
2:13 N&tUTal Resau"'"
L.>nr
ZJO
k l<-<1u rt St"Oes
ol Llll-Hodt t MUJic: l
2-!t.S
Li~tntoThrtr\'OICft
Tht~WMktnBroadc&stinl
Oustyl.a~ls&ndOid Wa.
l :OO
l : IS Tht" lntematioNtl Club
3 ::10 .\lrddltolthrltod t !tlw;i<">
.\ 1•nonty \'oicts 011 Campus 4·00 ThtJtff\'anDimS.OO..·
7:00 E•-rning News
'llhmull"d
7•:10PI.tbhcAffatrs: Booltnotst"
'l)lla-d>O
1:00 JauU11hmcttd
t
10:00 Ntghl ..·atc:h
1·00 ltoc:k Put ,\hdNg/11
Otti\S IM Y
l 00 ScgnOff
9.;a S•anOn
!GOO TbeJrif V&IIDlt"n Show
SUSilA\"
I 00 ,\hd D;ay Ne-q
!1 \orono Show
•:s
;
~ ~ -~~~:,;;
.. oo
!00
-nJESDA l "
I
"J'c ~ •
10~~
~lt:SI C": Skip 8cltz.
('11.-.:TISl: ITl": Stephm C Gehrman
FIU IM \ "
9 · 511Srgn0rt
1000 Tht P!ul J~ksonShow
! 00 Mtd Day Nfi"'o-,
I I~ Ne-.."1 f"utw-n
tJO f'ornlofOrdt"r
1.45 t' rom thrTop
IU Sewsf"uturts
130 U N Prrspectwe
I ~~ U N. lttpon
~ w All Th>ngl Consider-ed
~311 Con··~tionsatChic:qo
JOO Mf'tl Me cn Dixit
J "J"l ~hddltoltht"RodttMusoc:l
I 00 The Tom CoUin1 Show
1
sa
ScgnOn
a ·oo TbeMonunJAfln-Show
I 00 M>d Day Ne-.."1
tI S ctusiulMusic
~ · oo The Phtl Ja(k$011 Show
100 f'llbhcAff&Jr"l StudrnrtSmateMHting
10 ·00 Soght-..·atch
2:00 S>gnOff
;oo t:•·truna Ntwa
;30 f'ublic:Affain: Sporu ll iahli&hP
100 Jau Unlimitf'd
1000 Ncghtwat(h
:ooS1gn.Off
POOR HENRY'S
OPENS ITS PORS WITH THE
FINEST ENTER INMENT IN POINT
feb. 1 & 2- "'ORif' ~ e.test bolh nights)
Feb. 6 (Well.) - "'Bl.ACl JETY··
Feb. U (Thull.) - "'!U(I
Feb. 26 (Well.) - "'(11(11
Only~~ mmute and h:alfhou r ne-..-so:as11 aretisttd. Tht"re Is also
ne•.-sllnd-..·.-• ttM.'r$mLnutt"lbrfortlhthoure-o·t"l"yhour Please
dtre-<:1 all <'Oitlm(llll&ndqUt"A1011$1of'rogram DtN"CtO;V.'WSP
• If you compare,
you'll select ltna ...
If you don't compare,
don't say we didn't warn you!
TIM CHESLOCK
L!!=====:.J
n-w &.
In Jltll
Hot~ ,.'
AU. • .......,.,.
1'1101'1'!8610NAJ.LY
a.r.A...•orr.o a PIU!88ED
.
~··········;~,: ':.~~.~ .::,;:: · ·· ·· · ··~
~SWEATERS
_.., 88c " · ~
u'!::" ~,:~,_
~
~
No
• OH•r tOCICI fr i., Jo n. 11 tfln1 Thurt., Jon, 14 :
~
.... :-::::.~::..St•••••
~:~.:~.~.... :
257 Dl-t·I•Oon St,
~oiM
J44.Sl77
Page 10
THE POINTER
January 31 . 1974
Stored nuclear waste
"Enough to kill us all," says Huver
by Lloyd Nelson
" There is more th an
enough nuclear wute stored
now to kill every individual in
the world ," said Olarles W.
Hu\·er , associate professor of
the University of MiMesota .
He lectured on the ecological
envi ronm e ntal effec ts of
power pl ants on Wednesday ,
J a n 23. at the Collin s
Oassroom Center.
llu\•er has done special
research on radia tion physics
and presented testimony at
cong r essio nal a nd state
hearinis on environmental
effects of power pla nt. .
Nuclear wastes are from
one million to one billion
times more toxic than poisons
such as cyanide on a per
weight basis, he said. At
present there are 90 million
gallons of waste on hand .
Huver countered Atomic
Energy Commission IAEC )
claims that these wastes are
being converted to salts by
saying that only 1 per cent of
these nuclear wastes have
been successfull y treated.
LAY-IT-AWAY
NOW FOR
Wastes h.:we even been
rel~astd into open waters, he
said.
Accordtng to Huver , the
most important question is
term ed inoperati\·e or have Energy conswnption In the
been closed for s afet y building and operating of
reasons. said Huver .
these plants should be con·
Huver v.-ent on to say that sidered. Huver said. As of
t!tere are still many unan· 1970, 10 times the energy was
what should be done with swered safety problems and conswned in the buJJdlng and
radioactive waste materials. v.'h at we are lert ..,,,ith Is a operation or nuclear power
The costsaloneareveryhigh. number of '' dead whi te plants than all that had been
At . present it is costing be· elephants .''
produced, he added .
tween two to three''miUJon
Nuclear power production
dollars fo r waste storage .
If a major accident occured is dependent on fossil fuels.
After World Wa r II we felt a at a plant such as the one We are there fore burroV~i n g
moral need to develop a proposed a t Rudolph , Wis.. deeper into our a lready
'good'~ for a tomic power . imme d ia te damage would declining fuel reserves ,
accor ding to Huver . Thi.t amount to $1 million property Huver stated.
need was feU as a result of domoge and a human life lou
According to Huver. It is
guilt feelings a ner dropping of about 3,400. These are old not only health hazar ds that
nuclear bombs on Japan . It figur es a nd have been up· present a problem . National
was a means or atonement, dated to even higher nwn · security pr oblems a lso arise.
Huver said .
hers , he said.
He said that extrem ist groups
Huver said that even a t may sa botage nuclear
Because or these feelings pr ese nt. nuclear con· reactor plants and~r use
taminants have been linked them as scare tactics to their
...,'t rushed into nuclear power
production without proper V~1 th genetic mutations and advantage.
Huver cited a case that
regard to the safety aspects . occurances of sti llborn
arose in Argentina in wh.ich a
Nuclear power was at first babies .
Althoug h nuclear powe r g ue r illa g ro up mach ine ·
viewed as a savior . he said.
or the first generation or appears to be the answer to gunned a nuclear react or
nuclear power plants . seven our present energy crisis. it Is plant. Lucki ly the plant was
or eight have been declared not the savior that it seems to inoperative and the storage
tanks empty, he said .
failures and ha\·e either been be . co mmen ted Huver
•
Cross-country ski club formed
by Slue L.ybed
Th irty·fiv e cross-country
skiers from ca mpus and town
met recentl y to discuss plans
to fo r m a cross-coun try ski
club . The group IS a di\·ision
of UAB Trippers but V~ith its
0'4'fl oHicers
They plan to
promote cross-country skiing
Cor anyone 1n the Stevens
Poi nt area. establish trails
where s nowmobiling would
be prohibiled . improve skii ng
skills. and instruct beginners.
The club will meet every
Wednesday evening at 7 p.m .
m the Nico let ·Marque tt e
Room of the Union . Mem ·
bcrship is open to anyone who
is a cross-count ry skier or
mterested m leamlmz the
sport There ar:e.,sa\) dues
Car Pools Still Forming
by L.loJ·d 1\'elson
A Ulli\'Crlllty ca r pool IS In
operat1on at th e UWS P
campus . According to Lyle
Upd 1ke . c hairman of the
em••ronment al counc•l. the
Environmental Council
Gets New Office
by Lloyd Nelson
represcnt ntlves to the Con·
1
The Environmental Council
ortice is now located in .room
109. Colli ns Classroom
Center
Th is a nno un ceme nt was
made by L.y le Updike ,
chairman of the council. at its
fir st meeti ng !or the second
semester held Tuesday . Jan .
22, in the MHchell Room at
the University Center.
DOWN· ~AYMD<T WILL lfOU) YOUR
GIVI IT A.S A VAI.DmNl THAT
~U'U Al.WAYS CHDISH.
A
CHOic::L
GRUBBA JEWELERS
YOUI
DIAMOII)
&
61Fr CBI1ll
"Diamonds Our Specialty"
lliPsw, COUHIA & OUII6E BlOSSOM
DIAMOIID
•s
CHECK OUR PRICES
-< •
MAIM & TMII.D ST.
Ro san n e Pro i te . a
so ph omo re a nd polit ical
science major at UWSP , has
been selected as "Resident or
the Week" here on campus.
Rosanne is an Associate
Di rector or the Great Lakes
Association or College and
University Resi dence Halls .
9le is active in the Roach
Hall Council at UWSP and
serves as a de.legate to the
monthly United Residence
Hall Asaociation .
Ms . Proi te wUI receive a
memento from the Residence
Hall Co~.r~cil which sponsors
t he award prog r am in
recognition or scholastic
uceHence . service, and
C8!!.1P.,. involvement .
Among toplca discussed
wu the need for student
The cl ub plans to sponsor
severa l clinics to demon ·
stratc wax.ing of s ki s and
\'arious techniques of skii ng .
They V~i ll be open to the
public
~~o~~1 n°~Cg~~~~:'t~
was first formed in April or
t973 Purposes or lhe coalit1on
~~nn~~~~ro~n~ng::~~!r~~ ra~~
pr omot1ng so und sta te
legiSlation in environmental
matters .
Repre se ntat ives are
reqwred lO a ttend a meeting
ever y two months . said Jeff
UtUejohn, presently a CCW
representative . 1be meetings
are held in Madison .
" Being a representative Is
an excellent reference to
car pool '-"'35 set up to allow
people li\• mg in the sa me
general a rea a chance to
sha r e transportation an d
conserve gas .
The 1dea or the ca r pool was
origina t ed by J o hn
Sungst rum. a business affai rs
office staff member
•
Ca r pool members nu out
form s. information is taken
from these form s, riled and
~~~!J~~ t!~~he:: ~~~~~~e. ~;
3
presen t there ar e 90 members
m the pool.
Anyo ne Interested in
JOmmg should pick up the
form s at the Environm ental
Council Office located at
room 109, Collins Class room
Cen ter .
Film Society
Presents ... ,
The University Film
Society will present I Never
fut ure Sa ng For My Father a t 7 p.m .
Any interested s tud ent and 9: 15 p .m . on Feb . Sin Old
should contact Littlejohn at Main Auditorium .
A grown son who Is tor n
the council's new office .
An alternate energy work· between responsibility to hiJ
shop was scheduled for Feb' paren .. . yet struaall"'l to be
23. 1974, 1<> be held In the true to hlf11se:U, discovers the
Nicolet ·Marauette and Muir· emotional chum that hat
Schu r z Rooma . A slide emted between he and hit
program hu been ploMed. !ather. Until now he hat
The worluhop will serve to never had the cow-ace to
lnlorm people of melhoda of respond. Thil 11 the theme or
aJtemate
production pilywri~ . Robert Ander- · ·
!IJ1
related toptea . Mort
information wW be put out at
lnd Melvin ilouiJM,
I liter do~ . Updike uld .
~bs~ ..w~!?d rrn~e~~.
enero
<:
~~~~~~!:..""J..
•
January 3 1, 1974
THE POINTER
Page II
----------------Sports qu iz of the week---------------toy n .. s.utv ... J-Ikrllt-. W
Jla84yWie<o'd
ob1 , ~ fi.a, aet ,._
pmr;-•lad\.lrptnfdandrudyto
10 Super SportsQ\II111Umbfr
one 1J comln.& at ya . Don't
worryifyoutul pptnlomiua
fe10· ol our qunllona, bteluse
,.,·ubavelhoeeorT«'ta..,..trt
l.mdintheM:Itiuue.
Que$1.1011 no. I - ~'H I CH OF' THE
t'O U.~- I SG TEA.'IS HAS HrT
CONSECU TI VE
t' OUR
11 0!-U: flS IS ONE ISNING!
a BoAion Rl!d So11
b Sin Ditao Padru
c: Pinsbur&h Plnte.
4. N"" Veri; Mta
Qu~IOII
nn;
Q\lftll(ln no. ~ · "·no WAS
TilE IIOLDE il FOR TOM
DEM PS £\" S F AMO!,;S IJ·
\ 'AilD t' U: LDGOAL!
no. 2 • lniAT WAS
LAST SCIIOOt. TO ~IS
TH E PA Cit' I C E I G IIT
BASKETBALL
TITLt:
UCLA '
B t; t' O R t:
aJoeS<:a ~ne
• usc
b. JoeDonLooMy
c: Archie Manning
b. WnhmgtOOI
d.Joe R~
c:Or't'gonState
d. Stanford
Question no, l · WHO WAS
TUE OS L\' PU. \ 'ER TO lilT
TWO l1UPLES " 'tnt TilE
BAS ES LOADED · IN THE
s.u n: GUtE!
Quftlionno 5 - WHI::..~ WILT
('llAMIIt:HLAIS SCO RED '"
PO INTS AGA I!Io'ST THE SEW
YORK KS ICKS, THREE
KS ICK PLAYERS EAC II
SCORED O\'t;R :M PO I!Io'T!I.
W lll t ll OSt: O t' Tilt:
t'OU.OW ISG 1-'l.Al'ERS DID
SOTSCORt: 0\'E R :MIS TIIAT
GA!t!E!
a !Ia rmon Klllebre•
b El mtrValo
c:CiydrKJutt1
d. AllleT'Iylor
b. Rldlie Guerm
c: Cn·d.alld SIK:kner
d.WoodyS.ulct.baT)'
Qut!lliiiOII no. I • WII O WAS
Ti lt: OS L\' ('.OA LI E TO AC·
TUAU.\' SCOK•: A GOA L IS
1-'KO II OC KEV'
• · Tony Elpoalto
b. liCicMI PlaaM
c:. Y•-anCountOJH
d. Ken Orydln
Quft;tionno. 7 · WIUCII OSE
Ot" Til lS£ I' !.A Vt: RS HAS
. . EVE H I' LAYEO S E COND
IJ,\S£ FOR net: OA KLA ND
AT II t.ETICS!
A. Bft!CamPfMfis
b. Gene Tmac:e
c:. MiktAndre""'
a, Willie S1uib
Stump the sports stars
loy T1M!Wina. J oc B• rke, aad
lti.-IJWine t
Back by popull.r ~. lllls
colwnr~ "'ill
ODCe ap1a be
M>-otedto1115W't'riq&nJ iportl
que-stions that our re1ders
mi&ht feel like ukln.a. Our
Il l 1'1111
Zimmnman. junior
saphomorr from
Stan'•finttut,.·asadoubleoff
sports.ma)oraallqe1ports1nd
lffl«ll trivia , but actually.
Bolton'1 J1m Tobin 1n
c._.
Merrill .
SISl"£ lilt. WIIAT WAS ntt:
IUGIU:ST SCO!tL"G GAllt: 1."
.'1-IAJOR U :AGliE IIISTOH\'!
~ •tldnt slll&fnc "'""
from WIIIN U · ,\ 1\" KOOll ·
MATt:
C LA I~I S
STAN
MIJSIAL'S t' IRST lilT ~'AS A
IIOMt: RUN. I SA \ ' IT WAS A
Tltii'Lt:. "" HO IS RIG II~
Stan Seotl'ler one of you
sp« ialtie~areprofenional
d. ;red Kubiak
... Dic:k
f. Noneol the above
Qut!iiilion no. I · WIH CH PRO
GOU' Eft li AS MORE HOL£~ifE~ES TIIA S ANYONE
a.
St•"
Art Wall , Jr.
b Arnold Palmer
c: Bunky ll enry
d. [)aug S.ndera
know about eame in All(\l&l,
~i;;::,,: Ch~!~~~~
t"Act:Ot't' J,.. N'IIl.lllSnlR\'!
.. Dertk Sandenon
b. Pbill::spolilo
t PitMa..W.
d, \l(llry Boucha
Qul'!ltlon no. 10 - NMit: T il t:
1'110 8AS K"-'111ALL OOAC\1
WIIO WAS t'A MOUS t' OR
UGIInSG UP A VICTORY
C1GA.R DUR ING n t F. GA.\ 1£.
aOidi. MOill
b. Arnold Awrbl~;k
• \', Toby Kimball
d. KIUSbarm.lln
Qul'!llion Da II WIIO WAS Til £
J'I TTSBU RG II S TF.El.ER
l11ATSP IK£b n 1E IIAU.OS
THE TWO·YARD L I SE
" "IItLE nt iSKISG HE WAS
ALREADY IN Til E END
ZONE!
a. Mean Joe Greene
b. Frendly f'uqua
c:. D•nSm lth
d. Ron Shanklin
Question DO. 12 - WIUC11 Ot'
l11E F'OLLO'o~OL"G 15 Til£
.'1-IACIIINE TIIAT Cl.EASS
T11 E ICE D URL~G ' BREAKS
l!lo' I
GA.' I ES1
:5-:13. Nrllher starllng pitc:ht'r
,..u at01111d • c the md of 1M
\~ \
·~
•oe'~tonfideftl,.·tc:anans-..·u
t:ACII 1nd EVERY quntion
thrownatus.nomatter-..·hic:ti
UltJDtYIIml,&ht~. ,.
FLORI
follolo·•nc•~lhoeque~onsthat
"f''t bHnaJkediiOf r
111
Bob
Clodo ws k i,
PRING BREAK
oophomoN! from Wnt A.ll1.1 . 1
ln: .lO
T II AT
t' RANK
IIOWAHO
ltE C EN'TL\'
A
J AI'ASESE
St G:•a:u
H.\SEBALL ('OSTRA('T, AR t:
TIU: Ht:
AN'\'
OTII t: K
U t t:Kt t"A." S I' LA VISG 0\'t: R
TIIEK.;'!
Stan Yn. qwtf a ff!'OM aN!.
•ndudina n-<>riole Don 8\lford.
DAYTONA B
*
*
*
*
*
*
rx·l>odier Jim LeftbvN!,U·
Brue Clete Boyer, u ·C ub
Ct'Orle Altm111n. u. -P ad rf
John Sipin. U · Red Don
Bl151n11me 1nd of C:OIItlt'
llondo Ho ..-ard. lnddetltly, 110
mort than two A.lneric:a111 an
::,a;ed on 1111 Japanne
J im .,.,bite, junlar from
Sheboyaan· HOW t'A R WOULD
i ZI
*
*
\II('IILGAS IIA\'•; Gos •: IN
TH•: HOSE B0" "L!
SUn · Pf'obloblyalllhoe,..ayto
1-'at-adma.
, , , John"-"il. ~ ,,.,m
Stt'Vens Point - I' Vt! NOTICED
Tttt: tt t:
AM•:
:'\I AN\'
l Nt\'t: RSIT V
STUDENTS
l'l.A\'ISG BASKETBAU. IS
Tille CITY RECREA T ION
L•:AGll t:S. sPECli'ICAU.\',
t 'AN\"OV TEU.M£ ~- IIOTK£
ASSIST U:ADER I I_.. ntE
UOlliiL£ A U:AGIJE1
Stan· Tbe la1t llme •e
looked.ll'lel'1! ""erethrte UWSP
lludmts blotllin& for tht top
' - r They &1'1! M1ke Deter ol
J.-·s Bar. Pat lledqllist of
Bo&IOIII"'a-tdturealld
John
K~olSportShop
HI S.ndy Se~ . frahm an
from Omro • Wil l' DID TilE
t'I II CAGO CU BS TRAUt: ROS
SA... TO!
Stan Tbe .. me rea- they
traded Fft'&ie J enlllrw. Cltnn
B«ken. Ralldy HW!dley and
POMibly - - riM: II the
lnne ol thilwriUnc. Tbe cut.
•u t rylnc to ku p J uk
Bnc:~'• hopa:upac• ln ,IIO
Scene
fr~
our 1973
Mar<~ 23-31
1ncludes all Transportation
Includes all Accommodations
Choice of efficiencies or Regular Rooms
FREE PART! ES WHI LE TRAV ELI NG
Disney World Options
Other Spec ial Optifions
Free Ba r B Ques & Par ties
in Daytona .
LI MI TED A CCOMMODATI ONS
Sign up Early
344-5041 or 34 1-10 19
E venings & Weekends
TOTAL PRI CE
$ 137.50
the " ACTION TRIP"
8th Grea t Year
thil hmt!lhey're goin& ""ilh a
Yaulh movemtn l
<$ 1
C"rae
llu chu.
so phomore hom Madison -
"IIAT WAS Til £ BIGGEST
IU:Asos t'Oit THE GK t: •: s
KAY I'ACIU: IlS" OOWSt'AI.L
l-AST \ ' t: AR1
Stara Tbey ,.-ere oullc:Or'td
~mo&tof tht!~Ln&teamt
US E YOUr
MASTERCHAR:GE
I
Pointers outshoot Oshkosh
Sports
uyyp
" Movmg underneath," said
Mall Sm1lh. "ma de the dlf·
lneoce " It madr such a dif·
terence that the Pomtrr C"tnte.r
K'f'("td a season h1g.h or 25
double flgurl.'fl .
Oshkosh . with two of lhe ten
conft'tenct' leading rrbounders,
htld a mer~ 34·30 rebound edge.
Lea gtlt' leadtr Greg Holmon
..."a$ ht'ld to four reboamds.
~v en brlow his average.
nt s, grabbed se v en
, and led the Po1 nters
Urun• Wt'1nk a uf. Pol ntt'r
by J im llaMck
POINTER
gunnt, has ~n named Con·
ft'rt'nce Plnyer of the Week.
Weinkauf ~h·td the honor
aflt't" the Supcr.or and Rl~r
falls contests. In whkh he
scored ·36 and II points ,
respt.'("li \'tly. lie Is lhe le.1ding
scorer for the Poinlt'f'S this
Yt'!lt
home victory O\'t•r
:r.oiillt-<C::.<!'";O~s•h~kno::'~~~:Ord,
Chmrlie
Whltl', made 10 points to gh·e
Ttta ru; a n early t8-14 1ead After
ty mg
nt :»20, the Tltan.s'
'Shooting led a ts-6 spurt With
anly ,.,..o
m i r~.~teslrft
1n the h alf
A characteristically strong
l'olnttr finish still left O!hkosh
leading :JS-.30.
_
The Titans tried to keep II that
•ouy Starting the second ha.U.
lUI
Teammates , Bob Omelina. Dave Welch
and ~tau Smith operate in dose quarters
to get a rebound at the Pointer-oshkosh
game . last Saturday. The Pointers
defeated Oshkosh.
Ur\11\JW~ed
polntJ IJI\'('
them a 41 ·30 lead before the
Pointers sent their reply
Ele,·en straight polnll in a I~ I
spurt gave the Poi.nttn a lead
at~ they never relinquished.
" The S«ond half we got more
aggressive and did a better job
of blocking out , " Coac h
K~ger stated. "08\'e Welsh.
started getting up there, and "'' t'
held onto the ball."
Dave Welsh held on to the ball
enough to earn him garM high
rtbound honors "ith 11. Welsh.
Smith, and Bruce Weinkauf
baskets upped the lead to 62·50.
All lha t remained wu a
dtsparate fouling sp-ee by the
Titans In an effort to counter lbtPointer stall. Bruce Weinkauf.
Tom Enlund. and Dave Welsh
scorM II, 12, and tO points
rtspedi~ly to join Smith in
Vets lose battle to BSC I
Black Student Coalition I. the
r.Jmbcr one team on campus
facCU'ding to last week 's polll ,
ma1nta1ned their status by
h.Jmiliating Vets II &:u . The
f1nal score is somewhat
misleading in that the Vets II
"·ere within reach at the half,
w1lh the se«e at 5-31 .
BSCI applied a sticky defe!'M
an the S«<nd twf to hold l.bt
Vets II scoreleu .
J erald
Roebuck captained 8SCJ with
:n potnts
In other Independent action
lhe Golden Bears trashed the
No Sames, -.a. Don Reinke
had 21 digits for the victors.
Another rout In lndepmdent
1etion saw ROTC stine the Vets
I team, S7·20. Eddie Rogers and
Dtwayne Byrnes each had IS
poinll for the WiMtn.
In fraternity competition , a
determined Slg Tau squa d
del10\lne'td TKE, M-39. They
managed without the service o1
thei r talent~ ce nte r , Or le
Sjoberg. Harry Babcod: ignited
the Sig Tau's with 215 digiti.
In dormitor y rom~iUon, lst
W Hyerhammered tstE Hyer ,
behind lhe aweso me
scoring of Mike Campbell.
Cam~ll had XI polnta In the
game . With the score
deadloc k~
at the end of
regulation play, 4th S Sims
caught fi re in overtime to ddeat
2nd N Sims, 62·».
Larry
Hebr:l spuked the overtime
surge. All tota l. Hebel talleycd
28 points for the victors
4th N Sims defeated lrd S
Smia, 39 ·31 . However , a
clst raught lrd S team filed a
formal pr otes t immedla tt'ly
following the g.&mt'.
IO-J9
According to Steve Snow of
ltd S: " the officiatirw was
at~ I' ~ seen leu body
contact In a hockey game "
lbe protest went to Jim
Ca rll. the di r ector of m·
tramuro ls. Clark ruled that the
nnal minute will be replayed
since the officials neglected to
follow IIOfTit of the necessary
rules governing Int ramural
play Conseq.Jently. Jrd S Will
have an Opi)Ortunity to red~m
themselves.
3rd N Si ms scored an ~~ ·
presa1ve wm over 111 N Sims.
wu up 23-20
but they managed to pull away
m the ~ond half by ad·
m1n1 s ter ing a continuit y of
balanced aconng. B1ll Beck~r
led lhe balanced attack w1th 10
polnta
&215 AI the half N
ONLY
AT
~~
2nd W Smith ddmalvely
h.araued <4lh N Smith to hold
them to a mere eight points
lbe final ICort was 25-1 Rosa
~mer Md 12 points for the
WI Mtn 2nd !'J
Smith had
little trouble livif18 up to their
pr~asonal r ep.~talion as they
defeated l rd S Smith. 46-'ZS
Bob R06ftlkranz had 14 points
for the victors.
In Burroughs dormito r y
competition, 2nd S managed to
put I stubborn 1st W
squad , S3·SI. Ron Lafond
scored 211 points for the winners.
~k
Pointer Women
Trounce Green Bay
byiJIInf' l'leun
Th e
UWSP
womt'n 's
boskNbn ll tcnrn O\'trwhelmcd
UW· Grt't'n Bay and Northern
Mich1gan Unlvt'rSIIY t NMU I
this wt'tkend
~ Pointt'n dtft'a tfd UW·
Grtt'n Bay F riday night at Berg
Gym. S3·2.f On Saturday, they
traveled to NMU to outscore
lhem S2·36.
In tht' Grt'tn Bay game,
Poinl"s bt'nch depth and height
pro,•ed superior as they out·
classed Grtt'n Bay 10 take a
commanding 21-1 halftime lead.
In the third quar1er Green
Bay ralhed. but ....·e~ overcome
by Point 's consistent shooting
The Pointers shot a siuling .fS
per cent from the field.
Point 's ba lanced scoring was
appa rent , as they hsd four girls
in double figures . Kris LabuUke
and Maraaret Schmelur led lhe
way w1th 14 and 13 points
respectively , llihlle [)cot Simon
chipped In I:Z and Ja n Gun ·
delflnger tO.
Coach Marilyn Schwa rtz wu
pleased with the team's per·
formance. " It was one of lhe best
games the girls have ever
played." said Schwa rtt ol the
NM U game . Stevens Poi nt
combined a strong ofrtnse wi th
a sticky defense as they over·
came a s tubbo r n Northern
Michigan team.
The two teanu bAttled on
e\'en terms in lhe first half, with
NMU on top as they took a two
point lead In at lnter mluion. 2152<.
lbe second Mlf, depth proved
to be Point's biggest atset, as
tht'y out.scored NMU lt-4, in the
third quar ter .
In lhe final s~nu Point
continued to roll aa they
recorded lhdr fourth victory
against no loucs of the seuon.
Mary Schulu led the scorl na
1
~,t;~~~ :~~ ~:nC ~~rtv~~~~
netttd nine. Marcy l'oUrma n
dropped in eight.
Saturday, in thdr nnt con·
ference game, the Polntus
traveJ to La Crot.H to t.all:e on
the Indians at 6 p.m. On the
sa me day, Stevcns Point playa a
non -con fe re nce game wit h
Superior at 11 a .m .
On 1-~e b. 5 the Pointers do
battle against Eau Claire at 6:30
p.m. In the Sera: Gym .
Sv<timmers Left In
Michigan's Wake
by Tom t<:nlu nd
lbe UWSP swim ming team
....·~kendand
may or may not ha,·t- lost
anotht'r The Pointers we~
beaten by Northern Michia:an
friday . &S-211 That's official .
They also supposedly lost
Saturday to ).hchigan Tech. 5tS-4, bot If Po1nter Coach LyM
Blair has his way that defea t
will by reveraed
Blai r claims his team ac·
tually beat Michigan Tech and
he Is protest1na the meet to the
).1ichlgan Tech athlellc director
on numerous counts . Most
notable 1s the fact that theff
were no ct'rtllied off ic ials
p resent
Bla ir
is
a lso
cha llenging nn " Impossible"
call the sta nd-In " officials"
made that
led to the
duquahfkatK)II o4 a UWSP
sWim mt-r ll e abo notrd 1llegal
visual coamtt' n , hane d1vidcn
a nd dtvmg board
" We .,. ork too hard to go all
that ....·ay JWI to get a meet
taken away from ~ ... said the
diagustt'd l'oint coach
"It
doesn 't hurt me, 11 hurts my
sw 1mmt- rs I' m f1 ght1ng this
thmg fcw them "
lbe C"Ontrovers111 deciSion by
the offiCials occurred m the 200
yard 1nd1Vtdual medley Pointer
freshman Jeff 11111 appea red to
have won the event In 2:16. Ut!
was diS(tual\fled bec:ause hla
head ~d gone under water,
which 11 not allowed in this
t'vent But did h11 head go under
the water or did the water go
over hls head" According to
Blatr It ls a crucial point.
" Pools a re supPMfd to be
equipped with non -tu r bulen t
lane lines which actio kerp , the
water ca lm," Nld Blair . " All
the Mkhipn Tech pool had wu
lostonem~tlast
no way an official can make a
call ll ll:e that unde r those con·
ditlons .
I questione d
the stroll:e judge on his ruling
but all he uid was that I
couldn't argue the ded•lon."
''The visual counters a nd
diving board 1n the Mlchla:an
Tech pool do not meet the
standa rds of the tr14 Official
NCAA Swimming Guide," uld
IUal r . !Vis ua l count e rs a re
placed at the end of each lane to
Indicate to distance swimmers
how many lena:ths they ha ve
completed. ) ' 'The counttn had
no last lap Indicator u required
a lid the divlnJ board went on a n
upward incline a nd wu not the
corr« t height above the water
surface," said Blair.
S«tion 3, Arllcle 4, states In
pari , " VIsual counters must be
provided by the holt Institution.
F:ach indi cator must be
rquipped with one Indicator o1
~ id Oour es«nt orange color to
indicat~ the nnal length of each
di s tance event . Fail ure to
provide counters sMII result In
the disqualification of the holt
competltiora In the eventa
where counters are required."
Amid the confuskln lhft-e
were br ight spot a for the
l'olnters. f r eshm en Mi ke
Slag.le and Dick J esae nnlshed
1·2 in the 1000 ya rd freeatyle
with ti mes of 10 : ~8 . 4 a nd
11 :2:1.3, rtlpecUvely. Freshmen
Scott Sc.hraae ( I :S7.4) and Alan
JtnRn 12:00.11 fln.ished 1·2 ln
the :zoo yard freestyle. SlaJle
tS: tl. l) andJca.se (~ : 31.1) wue
the first two flllisMra In the 500
ya rd' freestyle
The Nor~ Mlchlpn meet
wu siJnlfkant for one UWSP
swimmer 11111 won lbe 200 ya rd
breut a~e lD 2:21.1 which
bruka the Khool r«<rd by ~2
~ofh~. ;i~: !:t:~ e~!~ a!; ~A:~ rr.::~: hb':a!:
aotna
rough that It'?'
up OYft'
the JWI.mmera tw..da. There il
ploN.hia- ln Downen
JU., Mardi 7...
a ron,
•
January 31 , 1974
Pointers fall to Indians
'-l J imlt a bed.
TUI'Idly'• encounlu at
:'~nts and ~b1k Thitlodr•u's
uc~d.sptaytcla~
~]E~~iby!iE
'"<'1't'UIIIbii'IOki'C1)UpW1th
L:oCIVSI>I'. IOSii1879.QI
,~,_·, Indian:~ bto&an thoe
,..,th a P"'"- Pf"O(b:ing
lhr"" eonsecuth·e U\IISf>tum·
Cl't'N-'Idatotalof nu,.fOI'Ihe
lull lai'JriYduttotbt'prHS.
!!""'"
tlx- lndlanscrabbedal!o-l~ad
~p1tl'
,.,.nt~
Tom Enlund 'a
They did so
hunon b l t' mt'ntion
Amt'nfln t:r1c ltautfs
11a
"'"l lh
All
nont
T11edomo*'LI\'I'Th~au.at
GniJIS.,,_,,nl'rt'a$tclthe
lndllln lr•d IO 2HO
f~
f"t'Rn't' Bob 0mt'hl\.l lilrucl
b.:lck Drovmgtuthtobltslr.ttand
tak1ng sho rt jump J IHI\ 1
0mt'h113 producf'd 15 flr1t-ll;ali
1101111 \
l'l1th Omri•n~ pro•ldUIC\tw
~park, lJWSJ> MWtod iht' f.nal
~mfi~ hlllf PQint&. ilnd ,.-ml
lllathlllldalocn~
On~t-hna 1 JUmplohol ~''" ttw
l'oont ena~ t411t'ad ~lo!.'lnato
•tonrdl'i'rnt>t', lhr i'Oilltt'rs
o.uddm!~ lwnd tho·nu.~h-H '"
trou~
LaC~5C'Orl'dllx
qudpoants,illndf•onhnutdtht
holwrak ..-htn i'Oiotrt'IUmed
am:on-to-mandiil'r~
THE POINTER
Hockey team skates
by Madison Tech
Tom(.br<-k;;u , SLI M111111u.1rd
f...-tht'lndlan),hotonlh rfl'
)Umt>ers ..-holr ht s l ca mnl ~ ti' S
by l'hllt:lfhr
Skatingtot•·ovtct...-let.and
usmga forfe!twin , the Pointer
hocke) tum evened their
seasonri'C'ordatH
l'otN , :J0.-17, the seocond half,
tho.lndtans"'ft't'llh'ft'lpon
lhnoatmN
l.Ndorc \Jw Poo.nters " 'II
Omrhru•-nhZlpoon~ lollolltd
IJl. Brun• .,f'o'*auf•olh !&, and
Enlund '" llh I! Ct'nl<.'l', Man
Smoth, lrd on reboundlllfl "'llh
Belundthefine playoff>lt
l:lt')'lu and !'at
Grud -
~~~~':~~~J:'n~~~
"
zll'lt'oro·slutht'I'Oini~K'III'ed
t .. ogooolsoneac:h~odto
dri't':;~t~l adiiOII\'OXIliOIUITI'C'h
6-l.lnl
~'rida)
S..yler KOrell a pa1r of lOlls
andhadan-..Lii ttohllfredot
Lightweights aid in winning dual meets
~)' T•"' ~:n111ocl
ltunnina thetr dual meet
'"'""'"" llreillk to four, tnt
t 'WSI' ,.·rntlfnt dt'leatt'd thf
ll.lduon JV 'a, %4-1~. and UW
l-'bnevolle , t7-tlast"'·eett
~keytoboth"'''"'"'·utht'
actu.all)· "'·onthrmf't'tjforus
Wh<'l'l )'OU dom1oatr tht' hK,ht '""'llhb.lli!~llot!M-tnmofftoa
aoocl ~tnt and tht' molllt'ntwn
nrne>)outhrouthth•:ml't't "
In lllt'Jan %2Madti011 lflftl ,
themoml'ntum'"I>II"''"odedtr.
Kock IIUihn • Ill• and LW)·
Sodoff <1)4
~'ollollllllt ~ ..
llwo• loAm 1M 111 pound
....
d.a~. JIU«]]n,. on5tandSidoff
· 1 "'IS ru t plult'd.
r-• p«oall )' with tbe lllhl
li.llld .,.kb . "~>-
ponnedh*'oppoi>C'fltoo ) 31o/
thrUurdpM"o<idTho• l'olnlft'•
had :on rarl~ t -3 lr~d
.. orkofthtli&ht,.·aghtl.ac
to I'VIntl'l" Co:itcb Kra
.....-cbnc
.. ~.~b ...
Stenmi l'olntjumpeduffto a
9-0 lead ~aa m~t l'lat1e•·•lle Jan
7til>oro,llughtllandSidoff,.·oo
J-Q,I,..•nd~tr~ p..cll\'tly
Thr Madoton J\' '1. alter
lalhngbrilmdt'a rly,nmeN(Il
andmadf>thtrnatdld-Tltey
l~ttii'M'OI"''t-,.t_poonl
,,_ ,$
and ttilltll'd
"'llh41!11y tM
hr.l•·>'"""lht matdl remaonmg
l'otnler ht'l\')' '"e•lht JOI'
Johnson,.-oo the mfl'\ b) pon
nonglu~Oppont'!ll 1n~llloftht'
thordprrood
··Wonnongorlosingtllt'm~
camedo..-ntotheht'oiiV)"l't'ight
dl\·oston and JohnJon c•me
through for us." uld Wk ks
to ...·onGntht'puo. <ht'nll,ltii'U
a rt'al d~t'fllllned effort The
SCD"t'lotcloOieatoupleume
and • ·etould lul~e fall"' bdund
bul,.·ecameback .,-ell"
Othn l'ollllentcontribut"''!lo
lht'win,.l'l'el"hilM~ II erti!>IJ,
.. llo...-onby•p•nin5:22of the
third period . and Ktck Ntlptrt
•17il.•7·5'"'illl'lt'r
~~~.~::r.:~~%~~ ~~~i.¥b~~~ s·l~~~Zf~~::~ ~*f.;~~~:£~~~~
~.,:~:'!:y~=:
~':.u!::nmtowr::"~\~n:'r.::
"'•s Sl ,.-,th IZS.JG •rod
l>tllman
a frnhman from
:!'~d$:.."::oi~a::::r~
)'t'lr
nnp fllmpt'lll- for
pbct' finl$h .,-•s reco.-ded by
011
COIItlrll')'
the
; ·onntnc,..;,;• ;.. ,•::,:;:t"'·eicbt
::W"'":::•:;:;pt~~~!t'!!:,
,....
w
•
l"~nSPU:tthm'!:t)St.he
•
•mPf'O'·edbyl$po,ntsontht'tr
qu.ahfinuoo for
1
~::yl'f~
r~"':a~ft~,.,~~~~~~~~r~'::
=~.::::rm~ /:~~ ha~
~n~t't~~h~n~~~~~
=
POinti!Tll
14
lo put OUt I
)'I'~~~ ~~:.n
tilt' .erond
KOred
tfam
:.:...~=~ :~
Conf ert'nce
competltlon~usurpritcd"'·e,.-oniO
or bnak the
Size limit put on northerns
A 22·•och 1111' limo! on nor·
thft'npkelddednoUWW•ntht
'"'Yol trophyfilbu\llhlby
fosbennm 1nd '-'Uitcl •bout D
Pft'<'fnlolthtnctrthfrMthal
~lent Olbl'rwiH would llave
taken home • ·iiJ'Ioul ~h 1
rutrtction.arco rd•ngtol'
'r~nt ol Department ol Natural
H"""urrelt!$1'a rchRudieson
r:.'<'aro;o!nll.llkelnViluCounty
Ill
l'Mre ..-u a meHUrablt'
!IKhllt' tn trophy fuh quaht~
Altft' the 22-oncb hm•t ,..• ,
"--rud, 101 J)lkl' cautlht an·
... au,- uft'~led !7 pcllllldJ pel'
lilt! Tbfptfftdtlll l l\ )t'II'S.
... hl'nfoslll'rmom<Wklkft'P&n)'
northrrn poke . tht annuli
D\'ft'~g" ~at ch uf 104 pke l:Z
ooch<-~ and l~rg~r a•·fraj~rd 31
~&• ..aiHIL.akt'l$-ofll\"e
LU.~mtheNorthft'nllighland
lhl'rt'l5ac~~m pll'k'crftlf'ftl·
'""Son«tM, thl'tehave~
PoJStdonnortherllll lr~~mt~
throutdltm
J rm kempinltr . hshenu
• ~rdl~,ffp0rtlthat
brfor., tht Z2·•ndlll&e wu
ornpmed, t::M:aNL~ Lake h;od
m ann~l avt'l'ale IXN'IM-rn
po ke catc:h ot 600 fuh th.ot
"_r.ghedat.otatottupolftds
.,""' the U.indl tesi!IC110'1
'"U ~bhshl'd tn lt64 , 1M
.;o'""rte numbft' o1 IIOtth«ns
l.c.-pte•ch)'l'illrd~t.otot
h""lloe toc.. \ wt'lthtd«rHM'II
u. :r.4 poundl
Leu !.han 2!J
. ..
\>!'t~ntotthl'etrliiPI'•nnual
~=
now rNcht~ till'
numbt'rotfi.Wt~Uinl'llnNid
ukr homt', ,.·tthoul onc:ffasinl
lhr numbt'r of l.lor«e northft'n
pokrtauJl,ht
When they didn 't
~appeuin threeminutatht
rt'frreerult'd l'ointthe"'IMIPI'
by forfeu
Sundl)' 'l contnt ,.... a ll
Potnt from the •·cry 1Utrt
ScorinK fh·e goals !n ellrh
:':,~~;~~ Polnt~r'"''fnt on to a
m~re~~~:~:n:.'"·r~l!::~
against Sup..n...-. and Saturda~
a 1 ainstK.v1!1'nll• Bolhbq111
at7 .:J0p.m
01\'t' \'t'ltcll
~ the "'
W rhau•bf>t'lonmnon.:t•o~
da}praruc·nandthfbo~ 5 Mn•
~ ''"'"'"'""'bo'i"l'fti ~.OOol
.. nd ~.000 ~arCS. pel' dll~. ~od
S~aomm•na roarh l.ynn HJ.io11
"Tlus,.-a)IM}atl'llrl'dioOth<-)·
hl>r to II'Url IO l '"lftl 111'1'd.
"'hoch 11 •mtlllrt~nt Tht1l '"" '11
starttapo•ronjtoiiJU>ilbrforrrhe
<'onfrrrocl'mt't'l ThilL '"")'t h~)
"·on 'r bo.• urt'dfor tho• con
ft'trrM"I' m<'l'l ;ond..tlould 1.-all)
... ,m,.·e\1 "
· tmplt'OUdi,.,ththto lf"~m.iG
ttlcl.llhrftplstand~"'
pl'toodwntn!W~t'iiiChiiCOI'edl
goat,.·ilhinUsecondlol rillfh
othertomalttlheKOrei.O.
Tht'voUey of s.hou came 11
ll ' 'li.II ::Jaandtt ·2tlnlhe
II«<<ldper lod.
Coae h KoHke wu fai rl y
plea.Md with hil tum's performance " Friday," be uid,
""..-un'la•wyucltln&a•me.
Wt had btatm thtm twice
bti'OI'i'andldon'l lftlihl'bo)'l
"''ft't'looupfor lh•1•me .
Suncby. thou&h.lhrbo)'ldid
somt'good pu•lfll, Hpecillly
thtfrontlineof BI'yltr, Ve-Itch
and Fi ala ."
Uack to~. Kol tke'IIJtl t fnt
face some tou&fr compeUtlon
this "''l't'k. Saturday the team
,.-,llbeinMinneapollsf...-a t"'·o
1amt'll'ries with KamM)I J r .
Collr,e.
adiclas
......
tu
~1' - tl' tmpr•~•nrt
~:•tck-nC'I'
•f
lhiO
h"
1n1
r.::;~. ~~~::":: ,;:"~~'::
KIUf lh••ol lft\'IIIII On:O\ at
~~~:~~~~~~';"',~":,~a~
1/lnrlont tmo<"' ollhr) l'ollr
~·rnnmlln I>K-k JI'->.M" , ,.;om
lus"'"'ttrrno.•tnthriOIXI )'I rll
trt--est)l" . \12!12
~·rnchm~n Mtkc- 'ila~l" , ,..;om
thr !IIOO ) Ird fr ef"•tJ ir· '"
1o J8 1 . '"'l""""lt no ~ " """
KhoOi rt'COI"'III) IL5ft'<ll'ld) He
.. tso ... am the ~00 yard
ftt't'$1}'11'1n ' IO ',brra kuljlllw
"'hool reo....,..d b~ alm01r 12
~SlaJIC'on>rrfntl)hollh
tilt' bfSl Uml' on thfo Wlll'OI'IItn
Stair llll\<.'f~ty CGnffrt'I'ICt Ill
bolhtht'l-r.,.·tn!IDndttrillnhd
n.:monall) tn both b~- lhr :-IAIA
Fr~ •hman
ltull)' Jf"nlen
swam hos J.oo,stttrneon tht> 200
urd fl't"MMI}It• 1n 1~2. "holt
ir~manScuttSc:hragr'J t5oS5
10 the' 200 yud free Sl)'lf
prt'frm•tutlft"''IJ/usbnt
no:thmlnJdllloUs"'a""h"'
l>fttllmt'mthr:OO}Irdtn
d>udualmf"dle) 2 Ill. and..,
t h~ :roo ) ltd breut~uok t,
tn~ lh• Um•·•nthl'lOO)'nd
HEADQUARTERS FO R
PRO-KIOl
PUMA
CONVIRll
TRIIORN
JACK PURCIL
llrr~troltttJtht'beslontht'
<'tll'lfft'ri'IC'rWdatr
A~ a
team rh<- l'otn\en
lon~ ~•~th on tout turr
poonu ~t the Khw lH"Vtl mm
Thr) frn11hl'tl IH'honcl tht'
I n~<fnlly of ~lonne•ota ,
llarnhnf',
IJ V. t:.u (111rr
t" t.aCro~ •ndUWStoul
JhoU
ongoalattac:kbyg~tinglhelult
... low- olhtn. Bl'tll'r aliO
made his pteenct' fellu M
IICOred IW~ 1nd uaiJted on
lourgoa.ts.
Tht'frontline...·hlchtnc:ludcs
81')'\t'r . \'fot~h and StfYI' t'ill.lo,
oc:ed tht' game m the I«::nd
14
~Unuedftfean·eJanJ ,
110!-lll'orballimotJandno
<"ilbt'd auson1 except lor
northern plkf t'o r t'll •
1-"'tommtat purpm.t!i a 22-inch
morurnum llle Umtt wa1 tm •
poundleach.oraboutahalf
pow>dhr.lvirr
Astudyolanll-tnc:hlimllon
1101"\.herM on Buc:b Lake In
Roalr. c-ty also found tht
retfK'Ixmll'l'\'edtorf'ducethe
~lad•soncoac:htookblsteamotf
tht' oce
Young swimmers
a id Pointers
Tltt':t!·•nchhmotonnorthft'ns
~:10t.1111.11ba lake has been
fuh .. ry Kuurch P r oJect
un der ap .. dal fuh•n&
<<"llllatoons ThroutKh a mm·
;ul!IOf')'arwler prrm111~em.
~'>t'lpi'M I 177l pad(IN!he
~k:;' ~~.,-~;,~
::::. rt~=r~.;~ra'ri'~~
~:.~;:;i~·.,:,:~~~~:tl'l"·;:~~~
1
=:.~a~,: ,:, ~- ~·:;J.:~t=~ :~ ~'";"t!:r;:::~d l thought
~~ ;: V~~:;
"''hile Gr uuizieii'Wikil-m«'da
Moa l lndhadi'"'OaNIIII
Sa turda y'• IIC: hl'd ulrd ga me
lurnrdln to aforft'll,.·hentht'
Mldr10n t."o.:oCb di ffered on a
Nlin&tlultdisallowed-ofhlt
pla)-tnttopartl(ipete
Tbt playl't had bMft IHimed
t 'rlda>· ntght for a came
m•M'Onduc:tprnalty A«<tcbnll
to SCAA rulrs, ht II unable to
play tn hl)\t'lm "l nt'xtgamt'
Upon bo>ong told thl5, thr
"lle,.asiOitlllbulc•me~ck
Gyrr nasts lose to Northern Iowa ~~:~~:·:,:;;;;:;~.::.~::i7E
'<Oft
Poge 13
-
SHIPPY SHOES
Ma ito at W 1 t1 r
e
Letters ·To The Editor
POINTER
u_.fP
Grateful for student
work at Norwood
DurSlr:
The
A Spf!'Cia l trea t was provided
Portage
Co unty
AS50C1BIIon for Men tal Health
would like to pay public tribute,
through your newspapt'l'", to lhe
dedicattd studma .,..ho par·
IIC!paled In the AUOC:lllion's
RKTUIIon Ntg.ht program II
Sor,HIOd IIOSpllaJ during last
semester
Approx•m•tely 20 students,
Gary Zierke as Coor·
.,..,th
dina tor, VISited Norvo·ood nearly
every ""''et:k to Interact .,.,th the
p.1 tlents there. They played
cards, basketball, pool, and
\'anous other r«reatlona l
actlvltits They took patients
out of the hosp ta l setting on
shopping trips, v lsl~ to the zoo.
v.a\lls through the parks
the patients wi th a diM tr held
1n Stevens P~nt at the Peace
Center , wilh the students doing
the rooking A tour of the
campus and a VISit to Jordan
Park followed
Anolher sprcial event - ·as an
outJn& at Pcnr;U1 BJuff, wtud'l
uxluded a wiener roast.
Their many hours of volun·
teer ~ice should nol go u.n·
noticed by their fellow students.
Thetr only reward Is the joy
lhey brought to the mnny
P~o1tien t s residing In that mental
IMt itutlon .
.. Ours ha ts art'! off to the
student volunttrers!''
Sin«r ely.
M n , J am"' Allrn
VolllntHr Srr vl«t Cbalrman
Counseling Center Starts Group Sessions
To thf' 11udrn ts :
The CounM"IIng Crnter wtll be
1nttiat ing a .&eri~ of groups for
mte r~ted students during tM
Mxt f~ ~Hks The groups a re
•ntrnded to meet tM de:velopmt-nt;al nft'ds of ;a .. tde range ol
stOOent
fK'ems Groups ...111
• ~ dtfer
:~ lhevd:!lt~:~:~
t n , 121 Personal
Gro ..·th .
tJ I
Assertive
Train ing; (4) Coupln , and
t 51 l..earnlnK Skills .
grr~ v:~~~~~n:'! ~~~;r:~~
1:1 tota l of three d ass penod5 1
Students wtll be :uked to take
an mterest ln,·entor y a week m
advance of the first group
meetmg The group meetings
.. 111 center on an O\'er\'tew of
major factors tn
making '
vocallona l deortsions, rn'iew of
the Interest in,·entory results
and the de,·eklopment of, a nd
fo r mulatton of. tndtvtdual
·•game plaM .. .. tth r~pect to
ca reers
The persona l growth groups
w1ll run the entire semnter.
mHting for one and one-hair
hours per week . The group!! will
focus on the development of t 11
interpersonal competence , 121
the ability to send and r«th·e
Visitor finds UWSP friendly
l ' WSP
~tuckats :
I had the OIC'C&s1011 to be a
vtSt tor at the c ampus of Sln·ms
Pomt on fnday , Jan. 18, during
lhe day as a repreKntati\'e ol
lhe Women m the Arts. Our
mt!'tllf'l& took place on your
ca mpus a the Untverslty
Center Because of the fact that
we got together on a riding pool,
I found that I tuld to spend more
Ltme on the campus that I ..-tw.dd
ordtnanly have done
This
meant that I spent some time
walking .,ound and sitting in
the Center. etc
I want to take this opporturuty
..
Cl..nint f
~
.....
341-0770
,
Sincerely.
Gretchen Grtmm , Profe:uor
and Cha 1rman
Department of Art
O IIUI
Upholstery
~
for Wome-n 1n the ArU, I h:n-e
\U1ted a good many campuHS
and had many experie-nces ,..,lh
all type$ of young students 1 do
not write thls letter to request
an ansuoer or to taltt up your
llme, txe'tpt to say that I was
\'C ry plea!lllntly impresR'd wt th
the frlendllncsJ of the students
t ha t I encoun t e r e-d whi le
vislling Stevens l)o 1nt last
F'rida y
AJIIe tten to the t d.llor must be signed by the " Tiltrs .
ll ovrever , t he name may be withh eld from publluUon for
"h a t the editor d«ms good and s ufficient reason .
PSE
C.r-pet
lO expr-ess to you that I was very
-.·ell rec:eh·ed and that 1 was
\'try tughly impr-essed wtth the
fr itndll~s of the students and
lhe ptOplt w1th whom I came in
contact. I am an older teacher.
and I was utterly amazed at the
way you r studeni.S respected me
and also made a rather definite
point of spea ki ng to me first . I
did not approach them , rtlher
they approacMd me with a very
fnendly g~ ture of .. Hcllo."
'' How are you," " Hi. " t tc.
1'\aturally. In my travels u
cha.trman clthe Department ol
Art and abo a representati\'1!:
..
The POINTER r eur ns the riRhl to edit , dele te. or r ejec t
contributlonJI , Al l letters s hould be limited to 300
words un less permi ssion Is gjven by the editor to go onr the
limit.
All letters m ust bt ty ped, doubles paced , a nd have one
Inch margins . All letters m ust bt s ub miU~ by the Monday
noon berore publ ica tion .
SHOE SALE
CHAliCE TO CHOOSE & 1AVE
1 PAIR 2 PAIR 3 PAIR
CASUAL - DRESS - SPORT
ALL BOOTS
High & Low Styln
Volue•
11.00 to 29.00
PURSES
1/2
Price
1101 Moin
communicauon Jbout his own
and other mf'mbers' behavior .
Il l a tolrrance for ambiguity
and tnlerpersonal anx1ety , t41
the capacll)' for open , honest.
trustmg rdalionships, and IS)
mstghts about onese-lf durtfli
the s em~ster Prospe-cltvr
R.roup members wtll be asked to
talk wi th a counseJor to
ascertain 1ndiv1dual goals for
)Otnlnll: lhe groop
1\ third type of group im·olvn
assertive lralnlng. It im·olves
teaching people to express
. :frr:c~ro~~i!d ~~~fi'on~. to;·::
proval , agreement. anl(er.
dlSllgreement . dtssa ttsfaction.
a nnoyance, etc The stude-nts
.. ho ha.,·r dafficult) w1th o'·rr·
apolog1z1n g, ucust\'e ln lerpersonal anx~ety , dtfficulty
m restsllng the persuasion ol
others , and submassion to
authoritY may be interesttd an
this group
1
The fou rth type, couples
groups, will focus on the
dt\'elopment of mterpersonal
re-lationships of marrltd a nd
unmarried couples . These
g rou ps will focu s on the
de\•elopment of 1 l i the abiht)' to
"fight .. constructive-ly , 12 1 the
<~baht) to set rttiproc-al goals ,
t l l mutual lk<-1slonmaktng . 141
ab1ltty to dea l " 'tth ffffdom vs
control 1n the- re-latiOnship . and
t51 the ability to M'ttle lht
po-.t-r ls.5Ue an rc-lat1onsh1ps
The groups ~til run the enure
semester. an hour and a half per
....
The last type of groop ln''olvrs the development of
lea rning skills. The major alms
of lh~ groups ar e: 0 I to
de'·elopan iTK'rease in the speed
of reading . 121 to 1ncreue
comprehension for material
re-ad . I l l to dtveSop flexibility
In speeds and modes of attacking material , 141 tode~lop
abihty to retain material for
exam -taktng . a nd 151 the
deve lopment or a lternative
study methods for differing
types of material. These groups
will run for six wtelts, with one
clau period per week for group
mtt'tings, and one hour a ..-celt
for indl\·idual practice on the
co ntrolled r eade r pacing
machine. Anyone inttrtsltd
.should come to the CounH:IIng
Center or room l06 Collins
Clr~~~du:t;nt~~t~~~ssti:~ ur~
participating an any or the
abo,·r-mmtioned groups &hould
come to the Counseling Center,
OH Nelson Ha ll , or call extension lSSJ.
In addition, DeBot Center Is
offering study skills groups,
under lh e direction of AI
Stens trup. These groups wil l
meet in the evtnlng for one hour
per ..-eek , focusing on basic
study methods, e-xam-li king.
study schedules, C'OnCent rllion,
motin tion
and
r tadi ng
developm en t
Anyone in- \
terested should contact tM
student manager in the OeBot
Center
!'Oi nurtly.
Urnni~ t:. Elunnth
Hirt"C"tor, ('ounullnJ Crnler
Since You Didn't Ask -
A rrother look at
capital punishment
by Jetr) l..onJ
As long as I have been able
to rationalize . I ha\·e conttnua Uy concluded th.1t the
mstitut ion of ca pita l pums hmcnt was an anachronism
tha t had no place m a
Civilized SOCiety To me . the
idea t hat the s tate could
legally and ceremon iously
snuff out a hwnan !He " 'as
an athema My prem ise was
based on the a wnpllon tha t
we wer e a relatively advanced
society . somewher e beyond
the concept of lex ta lon1s , the
eye · for -an -cye b r and or
JUS! ICe
to h1s natura l parents, who
promptly beat him to deat h
We a r e not a c ivilized
society .
If we hold that capital
punishment has no place in a
civil ized society , the n we are
not fa r from accepting the
pre mise tha t s uch meas ures
do have a place in an un CI\'Ihzed barbar ian stale suc h
as o ur own .
Th e. murderer o r mur derers or that Oshkosh coed
a r e , by ' ' irtue of thei r c rim e .
no more deserving of li fe than
a r abid dog . That we tn
W1th the recent un - Wtsconsin pre (e r not to s toop ,
s p eakab le b r utal rape- as tt were. to the level of
m urde r of an Oshkosh coc-d . 1 deg radation on which a modam forced to rev1cw once dog k.i lle r exists by having
agam the Ideals which have ca pita l punis hme nt,
is a n
mdiea tion of how fa r we think
we ' ve progr esse d from
I'm not s ure that those beliefs Neanderthal. But are we only
are ' 'alid for th1s society
fooling ourselves'?
In the r ecen t pas t , we have
If this s tate decides to inWitnessed the mlD'ders or a troduce the death penalty , we
should not delude ourselves
tnto thinking that capital
tem pted murder o r a punis hment is a deterrent to
pres1dent1 a l c andidatt . We c r i me . The ove r whelmi ng
have r ead about the Tate-La evidence indicates tha t It is
B1anca mu r ders in Los not. If the death penally
;\ng e les a nd th e mass com es to Wiscons in , it will be
murders by J ua n Corona
This last yea r we have read
about_the senseless s laughter rather· li ke the idea of
of Milwaukee 's police. And , exec::ution and r evenge , not
there was the Fond Du Lac be<:ause we think we can
girl who was kidnapped, co ntrol murder In th oL
molested and murde red . manner .
There w;u also the Chicago
1
boy who was taken by court
order from hls WiJConsin my r eserve of m ~y Is
r05ter-pa r enta and given back get.J.i ng pretty low.
~nis~~e~~ g~~isc~F~!~
~g~~e~!~;e:e':n': .t~ ci;:~
~~~~e b~:OOar:f ':nev~el~'::;
pu ru~!n,~&e,o~ ~:~~~
January 31 , 1974
Poge 15
THE POINTER
Black Culture Week starts Feb. 2
TelilrU\'iS., umplll :
Wbat tbe av~a• UWSP
1tvc~tntitukedtorallktoday'•
problrml tbe !itt indud"
rne r& Y er ial•. Wattr&tl t
Ka ndll. inflationary prica and
faC'\Ili)' C'\Itt..cU,Inclllma.tno
one men tion• 1 con tlnuin&
problem!ht t llolcnac:llllmportlnee.,.ur
Biaek·Wbite
rrlationtb lps. To call at ·
tetltio n to thi• problem
lllrvU&hiNt tlM:Mtlon , Bltck
CuLtu re Week• Iff bein&
crktwa tedcturiqtbemonthol
frbl'\llry. l>w'inc that Ume ,
n~~~tributlCIIU made by Bllcb
Jrt bnloua.htbtforetbennol
the " unupo,.d . " Viewin&
lultoricaldallandlulvin&apeat
four)'ta!'1ontheSttvt'NPoillt
campus I durly IH the
relevtiiCeolauchacultural
···~k hert'.
&kiJL tnd kinky tla1r U;
H mtthina "'e should be
uha.mtd ol. Th ill mm deals
.,.·othaurhistoryanclllow.,.·e
manJ&tdto~-~.~n·i~elltrll'ttol
people."
and btautifu!CIIltun!thatui&ll
1n Black America ud other
P'orllolthe ...'flrld. CidlyT)·~ ·
staroi"A\Ltobio&raphyof MLM
J arw P,tuntn", p.ill it ru«:ly
"ht'nllhe w.id, " F'ortoolOIIIWt'
ha•·e bt-en uh.amed ol our
heTIII&f Yo' e have mtdt'
tht
m~tbatPfllP!eol
AfriclliOioKftltlrt'll\'a&ea.
<llncin& manlad i'nd stucb. and
Uuot their land is a "dark
contintnt" of tenon- The
term "<llrk" must not be ll$td
inrtftrtnl'tttOi n~~nclv iU ltd
ral'ttbut to\Mpeoplrof"cbrk
Wu" .,.·hoifthabutdsucha
btautifL.LI. ridllnd"toctthtT"
cL.Liture
Third, to l'ftflfon:e In tilt
mllld ot iludalll. C'Ommuru ty
and uniVffSL\)' luden Uuot
tfflnfndom COIIIributionJ. DOC
mly tothucountrybuttotbe
We
hlvt
been
or Amrrkan still wffrr thr
pti&ht of oppraslon And Wt.
u 81Kt Pudrnts .,..e must
COIItLnllt'IOfighlto&flhert'\·rn
thou.\fl.,.·rma•· btdLSCOUr&IJtd
!rom soc11l mcrncuon b)'
othen
-Ca petow n. South Africa
Rnnrmbtr , u you read, IN\
SouthAJ'ricaiJinhabittdbyiU
mLlllon BladLiand 3) mLlllon
l'o'h1trs and s~h ma..lve U ·
ploctationllkaplace
" Anlt yearokiSouthAiri<:Jn
Second. to "'lPf out
Black iludt'ntswhtthn-fcnil:n
Myl't'UON for llSIUpportare
m.ny F'int.toui)C* to the
stu6t'nll aprou:l.rk:b, flowtn&
.,.orld
m.adetof~lthlttolul velot'I'VI!d
the111hltera~. tohl~blf.dt
That ala~uow.sm•lr
111dapacontbtbackdoetnol
IOI•·r tht'pn>b~m
TotiMIHoflll"'hololiO" lhr
idraofiiOIUntft'a\Lon"·•lhathrr
BlldLs. l tc~anartx~lromtbr
._doa Ol••~ntr Sen·lno \ltltd
" lSouthMncanl 8urn811~k "·
Point Blank
Blackchlld, whowurouttd by
tltrw•hilrraUway•orkel'l, ll
torrctl.,.. piydliatrit tre-at·
mentlocun~himolhllfearol
.,.·hitn
The bo)·. Godfrey
Umbtrt , .,.-.. call&ht plcklnc
up~l•narail"'·ayyardl'hrre
,..h,trs.tNedll.20and 24,btat
him . Llfllir-eMed him . smurec1
his body .,.,th JfNII<t, and \ben
Mid him In front o1 1 bladna
\O(omotive li re . The boy
susttined thlrd de~ bums.
Thethn!tt"''ntlft'ltenc:edtotlx.
Llshetlndonll!year lnprllon
uch Tht prison tt'f!M were
wspt'tlded. Hb mother wanu
theboyto~tPJ)'dliatrit
m01111tiq. thr wordl ol Leo
8L&Kt&lia teorp rin.&in& in my
ean : " 1\'1 tht' .,.·uk .,..bcr are
CI"LLd. &ft'lllft'lell can only be
attributed to the 1\r<~n& . "
Brothen an-d Iitten , whethft'
)'OU "''ertralsed ln thb con·
Unent or abroad. Wie must
C'OIItinue to fi&Jit tocethrr to
wlpeouttl'le..-ilsofoppresaioa.
tl't'almt'rlts becaLIIC " I do not
FO\rth,lhltlhetft'fti"BI.adt
want him to arow up with thb
cL.Li t'-ll't" Jllould not only Hilt
bllnglulnds, aqft'lll~., ftotlill&t
day . voumUitbeuutlontd that
It'• not tbe"tlmetobeniceto
Bl.ackWetk" butiWt'l!kol
ttXPOiition
and
.,tbn lc
awa.--. ll 'lallo a Umr
to r., w rlte tbe old
dk:be ol "United We Stand,
Olvldrd
We
Fall " In to
mun in &ful term • of "In
Dlvillon thtrt b Strtt~~lh ."
Only by recocnWn& the con-
re:~: :~: ,=:':;n. trr m· !F::f~:"'~r fE~
Committee Throwing
Hat In The Ring
If unable to atte nd the
Tu esda)' muting but interested in helping, plell&e
Potnt As many people mi&ht rontac:t Joseph Sirnki..,i<:l a t
already kno...·, Sl:ate Rf'P. :W6--U50.
Anthony S E.arlofWausauls
seckmg the ornc:e of State
All ornt'y Crnr ral. UWSP
s tudent s and c:ommunlty
~--lf-... '
resnlentsart'cn\'itedtojoin
"CLhlt'ns fo r An thony S
Earl "
An orgamzattonal meeting
..,u be he ldTuescby, l'eb. $,
at ; p.m tn the lo111gr of
Wat$00 Hall
A new co mmitt ee II
pri'St'n tl yi ntheproc:eu of
formation hen! in Ste,·~s
l'ttptsoi " CII.Itllf'aipluralistn"
wiU!herebellbet~r iOHdilled
nation. Every C'\llture m111t be
lncludtdinthemeltlnf:pot.
Black Cllltl.ll't .,.·totk will be
~~!::;.., t
2
o..-..
hluknru
M~rlr
h tu k .Surolrritc..mlero
by Bob lfam ,jr.
IW-... can ! sit in front of a
l)pt Wflt('rlt\'I'T)' .,._'I'ek and
~:C~-!~~ ·~:lfJ, jo:resc~~~~
;l(l,·trSil)'.
SJckneu, "''llr and
dog&lt'dodo'" l. i ntro~pecth·t'
fello-... that I am. often ask
mylt'lfthatquestton I never
anJ"''t'r ct though , because I
th cnk Lt 's s ill y 10 ta lk to
}ourulf. r tJh t '! Oh «rtainly
Robt'rt . I Q\lllt q r t'l' Clad
my \Lo'liY Bob I Bad
}OU M-t> rt
"'~k
FOR THE ONE
YOU CHERISH
1 An)'tlow, l've dec:tdt'd
co co n c: ent r atr my v a st
mergies on something im ·
portant . val ullble. and most
of all . lime cons urmng . So I
"'t•nt on tn interviewi ng
bnge I dubbed myHII the
HDnng ftt>porter and m11dt
upavitll l issue tocontrovt'1'se
about T1le question for the
~~ot~kLS" "iha t isyour opinion
of lust'" " Let'saskt hatyoung
ladyovf'l'tht're.
" Pardon mr misa, I'm the
Ro\'Ulg -"
··&c:k orr you sex per'fft'"
"Stx pt'r\'f'l't ? "
" Ah a ! You adm it i t !
Am ma l ! I know your type-all
you'rec nterestt'din is1ex! sE-X , sex !"
" I kn- how to spell it."
"Stay
a~~o·ay
from me you
creep !"
" No really Mlu , I work for
the Poln~r . I'm a loveabl e
sorta guy."
" So wu the Bos ton
Sl:rsngltr ! You stay away
from me !"
Hm m . I ' ve h a d mor e
succ:eu wltharoc:ll. Ltt's tr y
that degenerate lilting in a
lnOwhll'lk.
" Pardon nee li r , I'm tatinJ
as'-'veyforthe Pobllft', ancll
::'.t~~.if I mtaht all you a
" Shoot."
~~~~~~ It your opinion of
•
~
MEN'S
FORMALWEAR SHOWING
AT
.-
ERZINGER'S FOR MEN
Friday and Saturday, Feb. 1 & 2
A:ll the NEWEST Spring Styles
& Colors will be on display
Rlc;jS TI~IO fOR
OUAIITT- !IIWRID
fOR WITT
Oue..fee;
11 16 M. ht St.
POx.,....,..
..
....,
......,
:!llut""
,._ . TKn. N
SU.,._,.ta I
St., h d
Editorial Page
Ending Survival Of The Tenured
list of available candidoteJ long under the burde n of an
by Terry Witt
In a Uof my four ardous and for tenure and who in e ffect almost com pletely per·
sonalited seniority system
frustrating years shaH surviVe.
t propose a method wh1ch called tenure.
at this univers1ty no problem
I've given the plan a great
has seemed more perplexing has all those engaging
or nsolvable than the qualities of tenure without deal of thought and I really
elt'rni tion of poor In · sacrificing objectivity. My foresee no hangups with
~.,.,
; especia lly tenur~ . plan im•oh•cs contaminating contamination of students or
annual instructor the champagne dispenser . greenhorn fac ulty since both
evaluations have seeme d and the Caviar -butter dish In groups are Isolated from the
rather meaningless but still I the tenured faculty lounge tenured elite. This system is
consider myself a fair judge "Aith cholera bacteria. I can as impartial as tenure claims
ol good teachers. The poor sec it now ; tenured facult y to be but without any legal
ones I assault ; the mectiocre I dropping lik e flies I n hangups . In effec t acinsult and the good ones never restrooms, classrooms and complishing what tenure was
seem to stick around long bedrooms without the supposed to accomplish, but
cwnbersome s ubjectivity of a never has ! Can you imagine
enough to evaluate .
ll owever. all those vote by fellow faculty what w o uld happen If
evahwtions have taught me members or the chancellor. A s tudent s were awarded
that there is really no fair and regular shot in the ann you tenure after four years and
impa rtial method for might say to the university couldn't be given les.s than an
chall('es for inaccuracy art retention and dismissal of system which has suffered so A .
increased.
facully. and so I wouJd like to
The Administration intends mtroduce a rather novel
that the Pointer s hould only theory in this area . It's called
.. Spt!ak well of the intentions of "Darwin's theory of natural
administrators as If they selection," survival of the
n<'\'er make mistakes.
fittest.
What they fa il to realize is
00
that erKting barr.ers to the
press only makes matters of tenure··to protect the
worse.
strongest and weed out the
The t ruth will prevail.
weakest, according to Mother
Nature's plan. Only the most
desirable s pecimens can
enter the tenured ranks you
say. Such qualities 115 age,
sex , race and s evere arthritis
a r e considered necessary
characteristics The truth is
tha t if you're not white . 6S and
a morphidite with one foot in
the gra,·e, tenure will not be
awarded. Nor can it ef·
recti\•e ly protect you unJess
all of those &S years were
spent on the campus This. as
you m1ght well expect . con·
sidernbly narrows down Lhe
POINTER
~metimes
Freedom of the
press obstructed
on this campus
by Dav~ Gne-iur
··Congress shall make no
law ... , abndgmg the free<klm
of speech or of the
pr~s ... "
Our most important freedom
lies in this section of the First
Amendment
Yet v.·hen mterpretrd by
those who feel they ha\·e
somethtng to hide, it means
simply. "You cthe press l can
print anything you want. If
you can gam access to the
mfonnallon "
Thts obstacle not only
confronts the national press
m dealing with the Nixon
::~dministration. but also right
here on campus.
Our reporters have asked to
see pu~tc documents and are
simply told by the individuaJ
being questioned that these
documents are not in their
possession It appears that no
one m the entire tauversity
has the public documents
neccsS.Jry to run II . We know
the docwncnts exist and in
most cllSes we know who has
them aJthough they deny it
The documents are a matter
of public record that IS
con,•emently withheld.
When specific questions
have been asked, they have
e1ther ~ ignored or given
run around answers.
When these ev'e nts occur. a
newspaper is forced to rely on
secondary mfonnaUon, often
little better than hearsay .
Unfonunately . In previous
years , the Pointer used this
5«ondary information which
all too often proved inaccurate.
Because: we beHeve the
Pointer must have the con·
fidence of the studenlS who
read it, we feel an
1
ion
to provide accurate n·
formation This in no
y
means that we do not rna
mistakes. but we do try t~
check our information as
much as pos.sible. U '4"e are
denied access to this In·
formation , the taak becomes
far more dlfncult and tM
The Student Normon
all~~~{~~ the reS:JY~
From the President
Editors No t e : Stu d en t
Government President Jim
llamllton askM that this be
prlntM this w«k In plac:e of
his "From the Prnlck'nt."
1,.."\\'SP students :
As students we face any
number or serious problems
'411ich demand our attention.
Use r Fees, faculty
unionization , campus
autonomy and curricular
change are among them .
However. the most serious
challenge we currently face is
the skyrocketing cost of
education and the reluctance
of the state and federal
government to provide
adequate financial ald.
There is currently an effort
underway to atudy the
quest ion of refinancing
H ig her Education in
Wisconlin . llle Joint F\nanee
Co m m i t t e e of t h e
legislature, the UW System.
various state agencies. the
VTAE and students are all
deeply interested in the
refinancing question. Several
weeks ago the Department of
Adm inistrati on and the
Uigher Educational Aids
Board put forth a new
proposal for the state
financial aid program . The
proposal is called the
Wi sconsi n
Guaranteed
Hiaher Education Plan
tWGHEP). It is an Important
contribution to the. refinan·
cing debate. As such it Is
imperative that the plan .
WGHEP, recei,•e full public
diSCUISIOn
and
cowsd~~fry to rel ieve
gi-"owing cO'ilCcrn ;;r middle·
•ncome parents over the r ising
costs of higher education
Accordmg to the report . 11
"'ill insure broad and equal
access for a ll students to
Wiscons •n post ·secondary
institutiom
WGHEP "Ail!
also try to relieve the com·
petition that the need for
student financ•al aids ha.s for
the t..u dollar . said the report
WGHEP meets these thmgs
headon and provideS definite
responses to them . For this
reason 11 1s mcwnbent upon
all mterest~ parties to give
WGIIEP the most serious
consider ation and scrutiny.
Until this is done the crisis In
costs whic h Wi sco ns in
students now face will con·
tmue.
Because of the serfous
problems facing the UW
st udent in hi s or her
attemp t to pay for an
educa tion, United Council
endorsed In principle the
conce pt s c ontained I n
WGH.£P. The endorsement
takes into account the general
nature of the WGHEP and
anticipates further discussion ,
as the specifics of the plan are
de veloped . However, It
should be clea rly understood
by all that the endorsement
underlines United Cot...cit 's
belief that there are serious
Inadequacies In the present
financiaJ aids situation .
Signed,
ltandy NIIHsluen
l'Tcsldent. United Coun~ll or
UW Student Govuamenl•
•
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