' · NTER U!!VPPOI

advertisement
'·
U!!VPPOI NTER
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SERIES V III, VOL 17
UW-STEVENS POit'<IT, THURSDAY, MARCH 7 , 1974
NO. 2 1
Music department 1n trouble
by M ary Bud de
''l 'm ....illingtosetUe for lhe
ministration.·· said Han ford.
" I don't expect Central cur~nt SCH le,•el at this
Administration to lower the 'time.andwouldbesati.sfied if
Je,·et of SCH to ISO until aner I got lunding based on the
We are
the t975school year .. " said presen t1 targets .
grossly underfunded wi th the
Ad - Dreyfus.
credit
Julius
of the
The Music Department
faces a special problem with
the current budget cuts
becauseithasbeoenunableto
meet Cent raJ
ministration's student
hour guidelines. said
E::rlenbach . chairman
present SCH level," Dreyfus
said . The lowerinl of SCH is
impor tant but not of the first
priori tyatt ltistime.
Addi"i mus ic cow-ses tl\at
\lo"Ould lulfillbasic hwnanllies
department.
Student credit houri, CSCH I
which are determined by the
number of student cootacu
made by facul ty per week,
lul\'ebeensetflt LIIOfor the
Music Department.
It has
been working at Is.! SCH.
''St ud~nthourshavcfal l enorr
•
because more majors :Ire
1.1kingupthttimeoffaculty
111
p rivate one -to -o ne
lessons." Ertenbach said.
··Our faculty is teaching
more credits per week than
~::~:~~·!!~~
'' Acco r ding
we feel we're
to
Central
~:a~1!:n~ 'st~~:S ~! u1 ~
5
Admini stration.
we' r e
O\'t'rStaffed unless 111e can
meet the HID SCI\ figure :·
said Erlenbach .
The 1110 SCI! is unrealistic
and should be' 150, said Dean
of Fine Arts, Wi ll iam Han·
ford . ··uwecould get Central
Administration to accepC the
tSOJevel.wewouldbeun·
derstaffed . Forty to fifty
pe:rcentofourmusic faculty
areteachmgovertOads,''he
said.
··weWIIInotgiveupprivate
applied music lessons to meet
IJle sl<! ndard. Eau Cai~.
Madison and Oshkosh, our
maincompe:titors. haveclau
applied mUSIC IUI-Ona .
We're tbe .only school of our
competitors that still offen
p!"lvatelessons:· Erlenbach
said.
The solutions are to con·
vinceCe-nt ral Administration
to lower the SCH level from
teo to ISO, or generate mOR
Sctl. he said.
A rommittee or faculty
....;uun the department are
stud)'lng the cWTiculum to
find ways of raisin1student
hours. ·-one solution, which
is in the talkinlsl<lge, is to
add a c01.rse on pop music in
America which.could be open
to everyone, and utJ&ht in
lar1e sections,·· said Erlen·
•
"',:\..,,.,. wooJd bo"
r ealistic as Chancello r
Dreyfus , the SCH level c:oold
be]o...,·eredtol50.hesaid .
'1llen it no question as to
the s uppor t of ou r ad·
ministration in carrying the
filht for Jower in1 the SCH
1uideline to Central Ad ·
requiremenls and raise the
de p a r tment's SC II l eve l
.,.,-ouldbeadvanta1eoustothe
university . " lt isessentlal
tha t atudents who a~:,e
notmusicmajorsgetasense .
of thedi fferent m usic fornis,"
Dreyfus said.
If uppe r class music
majors grew too fast , music
enroll ment migh t have to be
limited . Mus ic is el!pensive
an d m ustbesuppor tedby iHS
ellpensh•e majors. Umitlng
enroll ment migh t not be all
bad if it raisedthequali tyof
music education.We do not
ex pec t to have to limit
enr oll ment a nd I can't even
prOjec t at wha t point this
....-oul dbenecessary .
" lliglw!r tuition for music
majors is not being' con·
sldered. I would .oersona ll y
oppose any differential in
tui tion," said Dreyfus .
O u t to the c u rrent
po!I I!OnS, SAid ii.Dnford . A
classified position in t he
m usic libraryhasbeen los t,
bu t theteae:hlngposl tlon can
be maintained for another
yea r .
"By cutting back on part
time hel p, using some of the
increase In base funding, and
us in1 the r emainder of
Olairman Greene's salar y,
.,.-hlle heison leaveof ab·
sence, I will be able to
main t ain the teaching
posilion ," said Han fortl .
Musicstudelltsl\avesigned
2
1.'
Nighttime activities hove always been a favorite pastime of
UWSP students. Recently, these noCjVma/ activitie s hove been
expended. See 'Faster than a strea k ...: page 16.
On the inside .. .
$600'000 in fis cal relief reallocated' page 2
FAC appointments d isputed, page 2
More UWSP graduates geffing jobs, page 3
The first student oldermon ?-N evins challenges incumbent, page 4
Ploy reviews, poge 6
Athletic funding in q uestion, page 10
Super sports quiz, page 13
l e tters to the editor, poge 14
From the President, poge 15
~1a~;:~n It ~~a= tt!in~o::
~~~ ~~~:ec~i~~t:::et~t~
and has 180 signatures.
local voter 1
registration
beginning
by Kri1 M011m
Avoter 'a rellsl ratlondTive
isscheduled lrom9a.m . tol
p.m ., F'riday. March 1~.
Definite sites for th e
~gistration drive have been
:S~~bli~o~i~t 1TeCi.i~~
Center .
Al i students who are not
registered in Stevena Point
are urged to regis ter a t thia
time, said Gary Sorenaon,
chainnan of the com m uni ty
relations commi ttee.
March 7, 1974
THE POINTER
Page 2
$600,000 1n fiscal
FAC appointments disputed
by Kris Moum
any close dectsion of budget
Alter a lengthy debate on
•· rubber -s tamping "
of
.,~ ,nance and
Allocations
Committee t Ft\C) ap ·
pointmenlS. Paul Peterson
and Kathy Smi th were ap·
pro,·ed as FAC members at
the Marth 2 meeting of
Student Government.
A number of senators ex ·
pressed concern because the
new FAC appomtces voted on
budget
recommendations
recommendation s
Ms
Kuether added lh3l she would
go through the minutes of the
budget tu. anngs Peterson a nd
Ms . Smilh acted in and
rcmo,•e the1r \'Oles from the
final tally
Se na tor Gary Sorenson.
cha1rman of the community
r e la tiOn s committee. scu d
that the voter regis tration
dnve w1ll be held from 8 a .m .
to 9 p.m .. Ma rch 15. Tempo.
Shopko and the Co llin s
Oassroom Center have been
chosen as definite sites .
Sue Kuethe r . exec utive
ln other action . Bill Tlct ,
SKrel.lrv. sa•d t hat the1r co-cha1rman of the course
votes were not 10\'0ived in and faculty eval uat ion su~
before th eir appomtments
were approved by Student
Government
Senate approves new
registration fee
by Krls Mourn
A new registration fee
concept has been approved by
the Student Senate .
Leonard Glbb , associa te
dean of administrative
se r vices . pre se nted the
p<oposal
Last year . a S2 0
r e g1 st ration fee "'' lth
payment due July 1. was
charged .
This fee ~·as
c harged to l e t t h e
Registration Office know how
many stude nt s would be
returning, said Gibb.
Th is year . the registraUon
fee has been replaced A mid·
July bill ....;u be sent out , with
payment due on August 6.
There will be four payment
options offered :
I.
Payment of the total
amount for first semester ,
and no deferred payment
card .
2
Pa)-ment of S:SO on
August 6 and .Wper cent of the
balance on arrival with a
deferred payment card enclosed .
3. Payment of 40 per cent of
the baJance on August 6, and
a deferred payment card
enc.losed .
.- .
Payment of S:SO on
August 6 and payment of the
semeste r 's balance o n
a r rival.
No deferrea
paymen t card enclosed .
Enclosed in the billing v.iU
be a card asking if the s tudent
~ill be ret urrting .
U the
student does not return by the
first day of classes, the SSO
....;u be refu nded, said Gibb .
U the bill has not been pa id
m full by the first day of
classes , a 12 per cent interest
wiiJ be c harged . Students
receiving fina ncial aid will
not be charged the 12 per cent
interest. said Gibb.
com n11ttee . urged a ll m ·
tere-sted studen ts to attend
one or bot.h of the two
mct!tings .
The meetmgs are held on
1'\.lesdays at 7 p.m. and
Wednesdays at 7 t5 p.rn
The goals and purposes of
the sub-committee are to
pr o v1d e fl"cshman and
tran s fer s tudent s w1t h
reltable anformnta on on
cou r ses and facult)', to
provide facul ty wilh reli able
informataon on courses from
a student 's pomt of \·tew. and
to provide anyone who
requests in format 1on on
facult y in s tructor s for
whate\·er academ ic purposes
considered appropriate by
the Student Goventment.
Dick O'Konek. treasurer of
s tudent
go\'ernment ,
p r esented an 1ncome
statement on the hockey
arena rental.
A net loss of S2.Sil ~
recorded. A loss was ex·
peeled for the first year. said
O' Konek.
The bus service to the rink
was discontinued because of a
Jack of students utilizing it
The cost of the ser\'ICe was
S25 an hour. O'Konek said .
The Student t\ffair s
Committee ~Aill be looking
into the question of renting
the ice rink next year
KJronde , an Afncan
poflfkian and mstructor at
Maketere College in Uganda.
will be the featured spea ker
at the Co llin s Class r oom
, / Center . March 7 at 7·30.
K.Jronde as a graduate of
Ca mbndge Un iversity v.'lth a
B A. 111 a nthropology and
English He is also a member
of vanous civic organaz.a11ons
._-....................
-·-
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K~Uh
of lay-oil deciSions that we
consider unjust ." accorcfing
to one comml lt l'C member.
Members of the committee
feel th at if st udents don't
become involved now. forcing
the administration to consider
the students needs and tM
quaJity of education before
every other admimstration
consider ation. the Wl iversity
as a whole will suff er
Randolph Klein. a nonreta i ned , tenured fa culty
member from the h1story
department. began the open
<fiscussion wi th criticism of
some of the guidelines on
retent ion of tenured fa cult y
a..s written in the fac ulty
handbook . " Prio r ity o f
dismissal is based rarst on
one's program , second on
....n ether or not the fa culty
member has tenure . third on
their degree status , and lastl y
Otis
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Uganda
K1ronde will s peak o n ,.,. ,..,,, , , ,. . _ _ (! ou - -c o•" Presiden t Am in and The ~ ·=:-..=-~~,:'1.:~. :':":',;.;:;..
Co llap se of a Polit ical
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System " The ta lk is open to #i,..,.,,u,_
>e_... _. ,.,.,.,tt••··-Dothe public
~:~;:-:;-:,~;:-Th e U WSP Pol1t1cal
~~ ':!
Sctence nub IS sponsonng ~· ~=
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fGr onde 111 cooperation ~A11h
The Afncan Studies Progr am _ . ... . . - . ....... _ .. _ .. . ... . 0.
m Mad!son .
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staff
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students ' input be used to
b~ :tlary Buddf'
Central Administration has determine t.hc ment
" Department s v oting
returnt"d money to mamtain
fou r of the fh·e user fl-c la y· against mer1t increase a rt>
offs and has rea lloca ted \'Oting agamst student mput,
$600,000 111 fi scal rehef for because ther e is no way to
t!fN-7!!, rcportl'<l Otanccll or ha\'C s tudent input without
Drl•yfu s nt last week 's having mer it e\'ollu.ations, "
said Dreyfus .
F;u·ulty &•nate mf."Ctmg
200.0CXI dollars .,.,,11 be used
fo r onl' more year to mamtam
fat"ull)' that was gomg to be
latd off $350,((10 will be used
to m:untam some positions
fur two years and could
lx>come p«.•rmanent funding if
11 1s used to alle\'late un ·
dt'rsta ffing m some depart ·
ments wh1le ehmtna llng
overstaffing m others The
remammg S50.000 is a per ·
manent base mcrease which
w1ll be used primarily for
g r a duate stu dent fundin g ,
s:ud Dreyfus .
There IS a S350.000 fund for
sa lary 1ncrease which as to be
d.Jstnbuted on the basts of
depa rt men ta l meri t . sa 1d
Dreyfus The regents request
that all sa lary increases be
handled by merit and :hat
In votmg action . the senate
passed a minor in relig1ous
s tudies for teachers cer
tification and a m inor m
geology:
The l.:Ommuni t)' ll.elations
Commltlee proposed that the
senate pass the formati on of a
uni\'ersity policy guideline to
co\·er s tudents involved in
universit y acti\'ilies outs1de
the cam pus .
The senate
pa ssed the proposal.
A study will be rw1 o'h thl'
abo liti on o f final week
because of r enewed student
1nte r est. rep o rted th e
Student Senate. They also
repo r ted th ey w o uld
meet with anyone Interested
in reviewing the Student
Sena te's analy sis o f th e
UWSP budget.
Tenure discussion beeomes heated
by
At 7:30 p.m ., Feb . 26 , in the
Wright Lounge. a caucus
began with a pproximately 35
students, Student Govern ·
men t Pr eside n t J im
Hamilton, Vice President
Gary Win ter s. some fa culty
members , and at 9:30, a visit
fr om Chance ll or Drey fu s .
The Tuesday meeting wa s
called by M ad-hoc com ·
mittee of students and faculty
concerned about facuJt y cuts
and studen t government
cha rg es o f administrative
overspending .
" Th e p ur p ose o f the
meeting was to form a
broader based group that can
take act ion to cause reversaJ
. Kironde to speak
_.,r\ . __sa
relief reallocated
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on semonty ." sa1d Kletn
Klem sa.d that reten tiOn
dt.>clsions are "arbitra ry and
Wlfa1r" and c1ted that Cen tr al
Admuustration doesn 't use
compet ency as a standard m
r etentiOn c r1ten a " Ex ·
ce llen c~ and quality 1n
teachmg or activeness out:
S~de of the classroom should
be used 111 faculty dismissul
cr1t ena ," said Klein.
"Sl udt..'ftl Government IS
ha \•mg an effect on the ad ·
mm1 strat1on. but it IS now
bme for gut reactions ." slud
ll am11ton " We presently
ha ve 1"'""0 approaches to the
1ss ue . to wait and see and tr y
to reverse decisions, or to
investigute and see what ca n
be done We must .,.,.ork within
the system or outside of 11 "
Jlam11Lon suggested cut backs on fundmg m the
chancellor 's off1ce whach ha s
"s1x more personnel than any
other m th e state ." lie also
noted that Protective Ser ·
v1ces prloscntl y has more
personnel than when we had
9600
. ludents .
When Dreyfl1S arrived he
was 1mmec.hately questioned
a.s to why the stud~nt s haven 't
the raght to know which
faculty nrc bcmg laid off or
non ret :uned
' 'The hst 1s not publ1c tn ·
formation . and the laid-off
faculty member s h o uld
dec1de 1f he wants h1s name
pubh c mformation, " sai d
Dreyfus .
One st ud e nt a pproac he d
Drey fus by saying , '"The
students themselves are
already j udg ing quality
Within the system,' ' to .....-hlch
th~ chancellor replied, " And I
thtnk vn-y ~lair~y . "
Wh en th e c nan ce l lor
co mm e nt e d that present
faculty cut s will have a
positi\'e e ffect in f,rom thr,C<'
to five years. Ham alton s a1d.
" But ....nat about the student:,
her e now !"
Regarding fac ult y fundmg .
Dreyfus said, " We a rc clea_rly
headed towar d s co l\ cCtl\'e
ba rgai ning . w e tUWSP l had
the largest growth . we mu.st
hne the grea t est reduc ·
•
ti~~~;~~l reduct ion of sta ff hurt
the quaJity of our teaching" "
questioned an onlooker
·.. No " sai d Dreyfus . " We
have ·f r o m 395 to 375 .5
::~~~~st>!~!~;~u~e:\~ec:i:~
understaffed
departments
Dreyfus later said . " Our
hiring practices in the past
have increased quaJit y, ~m ~
of which we are now losmg.
•
cM~o~~~h~7~
·~19~7~
4 ------~T~
H~
E~PO
~
I N~T~E~
R ______ Poge3
More UWSP graduates getting jobs
AlOpe:rcmtincreaseinjobptacementhasbM:nrecorded
•
•
for perSO!lJi who graduated in \973 from UWSP.
pt~e~~~~~~~ ~:m~rin o,r~~= th~!::~~ y:~
in the placement of graduatn in jot. for 'o~-1\ich they
specifically prepared lhetnRh·es.
"In other words, we've bfto able to cut down the un·
deremployment."s;aidTiemev .
Ninety percent of the 1973gradualing st~tnl$ ha\·t
found jobs, ''and barring un foreseen problems we have
rea!iOn to believe v;e11 be able to im prove upon this ree:o:rd
that \1.1! already are quite pleased with," nerney &aid.
O.arles LaFollette, who hanctles teacher placement in
nerney 'soHice,s.a.id that among education students, approximately 70 per ctnt of the class in that ridd fOWld
teachi ng jobs-an increase of 20 per cent over 197'2. Mother
20 per cent ..·as placed In non-t eaching posi tions.
Among those who prepared for non-teaching caref:rl,
im provement of placement su<:<:esses were bolsttf'td by
partic::ularly good opportunities in the fields of MOIIOmks,
accounting, home economics, mathema tics, computer
science,sales, retail management, underwriting and paper
sdence.
Natural resources has &hown marked improvement in the
number of opportunities, especiall y in th e areas or soil
scienC"e and resourceme nt man31ement. Improvements in
availablejobsalsohavebeenrevealedinforestry.fish.
"'ildlifeand water SCif'nC'es.
Tif'rney said for persons "'illing to take ,lobs outside of
\\liSC"onsin, placf'ment suctess for teachers and natural
resources graduates "has been strong and wi ll C"ontinUf' 50
in the im mediat e future from all Information "''e have at
this time."
PiaC"ementofnewttaC'herslnactualclassroomposilions
isbestforthose preparedfor ele mentaryeducat ion-flearly
85 per cent. For secondary education ma,tors it is running
aboutOOperC"en t.
" lliketokeep em phasi:r.i ngthat totally. nine out of 10
education g raduates have reported jobs ei ther in teaching
or in some other field." Tierney said.
Jobs were most prevalent during the yea r in specialty
areas dealing with learning disabilities. commun iC"ative
disorders and psychological problems.
There also were demanas tor teachers s pecia liting in
genera l scif'nce. chemistry. mathematics art and home
'::::~;~)·p~us...:=~th a minor 1n coac hing and men in
In the non-ltaC'hing ranks , nerney reported th.at the
majorC'urrentlyofferinathetopopportunity for graduales
is p.ape:r science. UWSP is one of th e few nationwide
cam puSes and the only public institution in Wisconsin wi th
such an enginteing..,.elated program. For several years.
therehas~atleast ttlreejob offerstoevmgraduate.
,..,
ThestartingsalarywillbeSt2.000or abcwe inf'aC"hcase this
nerney said placement of graduates at Stenns Poin t is
leading the UW S)'S tem in many a rea s because of innovat il·e
programs that ha\·e bH,n implemented during thf' last
several ytan. Th eseprogramsi ncludebustrips sponsored
by the university to school districts where graduating
seniorscanmakethf'i rinterviewsmorf'convenif'ntforth ei r
f'mployer: a new dial-a·,tobsystf'm whereby students ca n
take advantage of the low-c::ast long distance s.erviC1'
avai lablf' to the univ ersi ty in dirKt con tacts "'ilh em ployersindistantplac:esuableto m akerecruitment"isitsto
Stevens Point; f'Xtensive publishing of thf' latest In·
formation-in placf'ment and additions to thf' plac:f'ment
library ; and a rapidly expanding cooperath'f' f'ducation
programin.,.,·hichstudentsareplacedinpositionsrf'lated
dirMUytothefif'ldofstudyforpracticalf'xperif'nc:ebefore
graduation .
NSL P· Part I
NSL discusses
student loans
Th e Nationa l S t udent
Lobby tN SLJ, a nation-wide
collectio n of 700·1 , 000
s tudents , coming from as far
away as Alaska and Hawaii,
mf't at the Ramada lnn in
Thomas Circle last v.·eek.
Seven s tuden t s fr o m
Wisconsi n attended as
delegates . One te ac hi ng
assis tan t from UW·Madison
tes tifiedbe foreahousesub·
committee. One s tudent from
the UWSP Student Govf'r n·
ment attended the con·
vention. The Wi1 c onsin
s tud e nts
collectlvf'ly
represented public univer sities, pri vate universities
and voca tional and ttc:hnlcal
schoolsinth ilstate.
Key speakers at the third
annual convention of NSL
i nC'luded Sen . Hu but
Humph r ey 1 ~-Minn. t ,
George Mc:Govero tD.S.D. I,
Cong r ess woman
Yvonne
Burke tO-cal. l, Gov . Tom
Mccau tOre.l, Dan Rather
! CBS news) and Bob
by the,Scifi Club
New course approved
by Jeanie SwayM
o1 Car lo. Cu ta necla: and two
Aminorin~ilgious studln Physical E d ucatio n tO I
and a minor In gNIOIY were C'OUJ'ses • Fundamf'n la l• of
approved at the Academic Sc uba Dl"lnJ and Adn ncN
Affairs Committee meeti ng Scuba T~K h nlq tan .
Feb . ~.
Both rf'qUire a
~i~~~run;o~r tt:a~rh~ ~e~ Ph~~~~~' ~~r~~:ti;:c~~~o~
:~:' ~ :!f:' studlf'S ~:,::c~ll :'oire~::. ~~lj
11
•
Co urses
'f::t:'in
to
be
offe r ed be held In Florida .
~!e ~f~.J~:~
1
Two new
c~u.rses
1
were
~~wt ~~ ~~: r~~~~~;! :~~~!:1
Philoaophy 250 · Appu raJICe Mi n In t.b t O&d Tn tameal.
and ReaUty : The Phll0f0Pb7 Religious Studin 104 Is en·
Utled 'The New Tn ta mea t
aDd Early Cbrtl tla Dity. Both
are threecrf'dits.
Approval wa s 'given t.o a
new philoso phy course,
Philosophy l37 • llldlan Yoga .
lt isa ttlrtoecredi t course.
Woodwa r d ( Wu hi DJ t on
Post ). Addi tional Washington
iead u s , a nd a h ost of
f'ducationa l and govern ·
mental officials took an ac·
tiverolein panel sessions.
workshops and rKeptions .
Arthur Rodbell. executive
director of NS L, urged the
s pecial s ub-commit tee on
Education of the! Hol&5e to
removf' the "mf'ans test"
barrier, in order to allow
students from families with
incomesup to SIS,OOOayear ,
to borrow up to Sl ,:iOO annually . "Legislation is nt«<ed
now 50 that students can
borrow forthiscomingfall,"
Rodbell addf'd.
Layton Olson, tegWJatl\·e
director of NSL. stated that
"'T he federal 'mf'anS test'
barrier has c ut off loans to
students from families with
incom n in the S\2·1$.000
range. and as a consequence.
bankloanstostudentsare
down 30 per cent in 1973 from
lhe i9721eveL"
N inety-five
apply for
position
byShlrleySplttlf'mf'ister
The Search and Screen
Committee lor the successor
to Cordon Haferbecker, vice
c ha ncello r and df'an of
faculties for academic affairs, has begun preli minary
sc reeni ng of candidatesfor
thf'position .
The deadline for app lying
for the job was March 1.
FrankCrow,C'hairmanofthe
committee, said that lhere
are 95 applican ts from all
ro~ ;!p~1ro~i0~s~~~
applied, he said . Very ff'W
women or r f' pr esf' ntatives
from minoritin havf' tried for
the position. Crow said .
Members of th e committee
are Rob e rt Engel h ard,
natu ral resource s: Agne s
Jones, hom eKonomlu: Alan
Bloc kf'r, phy5ics; Donald
IUldcbrandt, music ; Douglas
Radtke , ex tended ser viC"cs ;
Crow, history ; and s tudents
Macsha Undsay , KarlRusch ,
and Georgf' F"riC"key.
They "'i ll evaluate and
interview a pplica nt s until
they narrow the possibilities
downtoaboutfivenominees.
Those names will then be
forward f'd to Chanc ello r
Dreyfus and hf' will select
l laferbecker'ssuccessor.
HoJ)f'full y, the new vice·
chanC"f'llorwi\lbechosenby
theendofthissemester, said
Crow.
F"rickeysaidthatheandthe
othf'r s tuden tsonthecom·
mittee work as equals with
th f' f aculty co mm ittee
mf'mbers .
to be continued
FAC and UAB consider
rock impersonator
Scott will probably be
Th e F i na n ce and
Allocations
Committee's performing a t UWSP ea rly
{Ft\C ) first major business nut year.
wa s conducted on Feb. 18.
when the Univf'rsity Ac · ,K(\II ATt.:, ,\IK IDO, ,\ NO
t iviti e s Board ( UABI JUDO CI.U B: free lessons
requestedS2.000tocontract every Tuesday a nd Th ursday
rock and roll impersonator, nigh ts. advanc e d and
be ginn e r s . Kar a t e clan
Dun Scott .
The UAB meets from 6:30 to 1:30 p.m .
presented al l of the df'tails and the Judo C'lass meets
concerningScottandhis&how from 7to9 p.m . Both meet in
to FAC afl.f'r deliberation by the wrestling room ( R. 146,
the FAC, UAB was granted ,Ph y Ed Bldg . l. For In ·
thf' S2,000.
rormatlon,c:all341·3330.
Page 4
THE POINTER
The first student alderman?
Nevins challenges incumbent
by Terry Wi tt
UWSP senior . John Nevins .
will challenge incumbent .
Jerome Bachinsk.i for the
c1ty 's 2nd ward alderma n
sea t m the April 2nd election .
Nc ,•ins will run as a ~Tite ·
m candidate because he filed
uftcr th e r egistration
dead li ne .
The 2nd ward is by far the
mos t heavi ly populated by
s tudcnlS of voti ng age . II
t'onta1ns four dormitories .
Pray ·Sims . Roach . Smith ,
and Hyer . the Village and a
sm all residential section of
the c1ty .
The 2nd ward
alderma n's sea t has never
been held by a student.
The Poi nter asked Nevins
why he had decided to run
ngainst Bachinski .
Nevins : I galher from the
mmutes of Student Govern·
m e nt m ee t i ng s th a t
B.ac h1 nslu has come out in
oppos 1110n of eve r y th i ng
St uden t Government s up ·
porl" Wha t really bothered
me was the mall . Las t yea r m
St udent Government , we
~·o rked very hard to SCI that
up I don't like dodging cars
between classes . There is no
re aso n for unneces sary
s treelS through the ca mpus
area
P lHnter : So in elfect you
a rc say mg that Bachinski
hasn ' t rep r esented the
s tudent constituency in the
2nd Ward ?
,'1\t' \' lns : Yes. that's right.
For example lhe Stanley
Street petition opposing the
~TankHn Street mall was
falsely represented by some
Tha t JS how they g ot some of
the people to s1gn lhe petition
P ointrr . Where did you get
petition around. The petition lh1s mformatLon'!
was worded correctly. but
~t:\· ins · I recel\'ed most of
iOme of the people who the mformation from Wayne
j).1SScd it gave the impression· Jablonski. 2nd, ward alder·
tha t oart of Stanley Street man previous to Bachinski.
might be c losed as we ll . Jablonski li\'CS on Sta nley
:.1oslng po rt of Stanley Street Street .
A'aS never part of the projec t .
J"lMntc r : Would you say
af the people who passed the
Sr \ in~ I don'tlhink he ha s
~'(·n rt·prcscntmg the people
of tus ward . much less the
l' ll\' as :1 whole In fact, I did
noi Sl'1..' hun at the publi c
forum 111 Debot Cen ter
n·gardtng t he Mic hi gan
,\\' l'IHil' l'X Icns ion.
I had to
lc;1n· t.'ar ly bu t I did not see
htm lilt're I think it was part
of Ius duh· to attend and find
ou t .... hat ' the people of his
....ard t pr•manly s tudents I
a re t hmkmg After all . it was
th1s forum that milia ted these
(•xt ra s tudJes on that area .
The Sentry people didn ' t
s how up l' lt hcr and I felt a
h ttll' put out about that. They
!Sentry I rnuke all t hese
prmnist'S about possibili ties
of wlt:1t they are goi ng to do
If il were built Slraight . ttl(•
traHic would be r outed
through Reserve and would
go right through the privat('
land . That is what the Town
of Hu ll wants , but that is 1101
e
what I want.
Some people arc say in ~
there is a good cha nce of
clmnging Reserve into a mall
I hn\'C a feeling the cih·
would frow n on that . but ir~
an awfully good idea as far as
I'm concer ned . I would hk<'
to see more malls on campu.l!
P lM nter : Would you say th€:·
c a m pus has be en
gerrymandered and if so.
"'ith what C!Hcc t?
Nevln.s : Yes it has, a nd 11
takes away a ny chance for
rea l representa tion .
Till•
efft'C t mig ht be illustra ted b~
the street parking situation
1
~ ~~~u~~~~t~~~~~~~~J~ ~~~f~~ s~~~i~:ur!~ I 1~~eo~
Thall.l! hke telhng someone
)otl "'II do someth ing with
nothmg to bmd you to that
promiM' So they Jose a httle
publtt· sen tuncn t from a few
:.tuden tl>, "·hat •s the dif·
fl'rent·e to them. or so they
Jt•d
cit)' p eo ple don't want
studen ts parking on th()S(>
s treelS . But why would Ule'
close off public streelo; tO
parking during school "-ht•n
the s treets are perfectly safe
for that purpose.
Unit':. ..
there is some se t-up whl.'rt'
st ::~i~•tt·~n t~,{~r;r~~o~·:~ ~~~ ~~(~!~n~~~~u~.
('.ILdu.:an A\·enuc extension crack ?
and tht· nt•w Sent ry complex"
P ointer : How much inpuc
:-,:,., ln.. H1ght now I can' t will you have if you arc• tht•
~up~~~'y"-Ji;~~~~Kisb~~~s~~~ ~:: ~~~~~~ flderman on
John Ne vi ns
A lderman candida te fo r second ward
'So I had to represent them ' -Bachinsk i
by Bob Kcr ksiedr.
on any reasonable request I
" I definitely oppose moving would hear and represent the
the second ward voting booth students."
" I de fin itely think the
to AJien Center ... said Stevens
Point City Co u nci l man univC!rsity s hould have a
mall. but they gave me the
Jerome P . Bachinsld of the
second ward . He said he had petition !opposing lhe mall)
received two or three calls so I had to represent them ."
from Cbnstituents who op- He said that if students had
posed moving the voti ng presented him with a petition
booth to Allen Center. "You s upporting the mall , he would
have to consider the other have had to represent the
,
ns i.n the ward ."
students too.
chinski is 46 years old , .. Bachinski said that he felt
ed and lhe father or five the university should have
childrev . He is a member of gone out nnd presented its
the F inance Committee and case to those living on
on the Housing Board of Franklin St. ' 'There was a
communications
problem
~
Appeals .
! Will i am
The! second ward includes Vickerstaff
the dorms in the Allen CentC!r VickerstaH. assistant to the
complex and the Village chancellor for developm ent
Apartments . Each ward has and university affairs 1 in ·
approximately 1,850 people dicated to me we.U before the
according to Phylli s meeting tMt he knew there
were two petitions , and that
Wisnieuski. city clerk.
The voting booth for the he p lanned on meeting with
second wa rd is presentlv them !those who were ci r ·
several blocks away at the cula ting the petitions against
Recreation Center t Old the mall ) to explain the
Armory ) in the eighth ward . university's position . Now
Bachinski also apposed the appare.nUy h! didn't carry
Franklin St. Mall in a Oty lhrough on this ."
Bachimki said he thought
Council meeting in Decem ·
that i. the petition had been
ber .
" I definitely feel that handlJa:. properly it would
.st udents are a major oa.rt of neve r have reached the
my constit ue ncy in the COWICil floor .
second wa rd. and I feel that I
Ue did not per mit a tape
represent their interests ," recording of the telephone
aaid Bachinsld . " I think that interview. He saJd it seemed
lht·
~~::r~{~ht~~I'J:.~]~~a~J~na~ al:e~~~~~ : ha:ee\~~) ~~:~~
voted against moll
~
that ll;u:hlllSkl represents the
nt~ adt"<tuately"
unusual to h1m to tape record
an intervi ew
Bachinski is being opposed
in the April 2 election by John
Nevins . a UWSP s tudent , who
•s a write ·•n candidate You
must reg1s ter before ~l arc h
20 to vote in the Apnl 2
election
Scholarsh ip
offered
The Marion Brazeau Fey
Scholarship .... be available
annually to an un ·
dergraduat e s tud e n t a t ·
tending UWSP
Th e sc holar sh 1p ~ ~
ava1 lnb le to a dese r ving
s tudent of good character and
prom ise , who is a resident of
the state of Wisconsin .
There is no stipulation as to
course of study ; the s tudent
may be enrolled in any un·
dergraduate discipline
If possible . Marion Brazeau
Fe y will present the
scholarship each fall to the
rec1p1ent
!Dollar amount fall 1974
,u
Sl2S l'
St~den.t s may pi c k
a pph ca lion blanks in
AllJ!lln i Offic e, room 256,
Mam .
Deadline for
pllu Uon: April IS.
up
the
Old
ap.
e
w1 th my biology minor . I favorable s tands tov.·ard Hw
kno ....• Wt'tla nd s are not t'am pus . If there is enough
somt'llung you play .,.,,th . If s tudent interest . they m1ght
yuu fool w1th 11 you lose quite have to worry about the
a b1t And unless there 1s an student vote in the llt'XI
absolu k' demons tration that election . I'm sure they .... 111
11 4t h{· r0<1d l won't destroy begin to realize their con ·
mort· than 1t 's ....·orth . and so s tiluency includes students
far there hasn 't been . I can't
P oi nte r : Have you been 111
sup]lort 11
contac t wit h the studenlS of
II ha s the pot ential of being the 2nd Ward, and with wh.:1t
an nnportant asse t tQ. this resul t?
communcty
There is a
Nev ins : 1 have visited t" o
poss1b1hty of gelling that do r m s, P r ay·Sim s and
"-hole a rea out of the Tov.-n of Jtoach, and everyone J\·r
!lull and rezoned from In· talked to seems pretty en
dustnal to Hecreational ; and lhuslastic . It remains to be
then d(•\'eloped along lhe lin('§ seen if we ca n get them all to
or prop{·r r eso urc e thcpollsonApril2, twodap ·
m;ma gcmcnt by the faculty a rter s pring brea k .
and Sl udents here on campus.
I'm a rrangmg a ntei:!ll n~
Hut unless there is some rig ht now wi th the staff ,11
adc~tuatc guarantee o.f th.at, J P ray..Si ms . I'm also try111g tu
don I tlnnk th e ~1 1 ch tga n -a rr a nge m eeti ngs wh ert·
th·.~nuc cx t ~ns1on 1s ~ good peop le can come and talk 111
ldta I don t hke th_e 1dea of me , ask m e qu estion s
all that traff1c commg down sc r ea m o r ins u lt m e
lteservl' Strl'et e1ther
I've whatever they want to do
tal ked to people m the dorms
P oin te r :
you had to
0\'l'r m the ~ard and they 're s ummar ize your campmgn
oot t!nthused about having platform what would it tx· "
t....·o thousand cars a day
Nev in s :
St u dent 111
roo nng down ltes erve . There volvement In city gover n·
has to he a nother alternative . mcnl conslder lition of ltw
~·fll~•h'r · But the . or i~inal s lu d~n t p opul a ti on as :t
plan li for th e Mcc ht gan lcgitimate part ofth ecityand
1
\ veuuc l'XIcnsion call for a those who have an inlerest•n
~~;v~ to a void llcserve, don 't lhe city .
l'oi nter : Do you think the
~ .. \•lnJ. · Yes they want to term student power has ix•d
~un·~ II JUSt ~fore it reaches connOU.tJOflJ?
_M."t:llon ofpn va te land . This
Nevins : It 's not really what •
~~ld ,also bl~k devel_opment 1 would like have comr
e and for mdustnal use . acra.r.because the studenlS
l:,:ey cjoi!>Uidn 't put up ham· can ' t
en tirely against tilt
rger . nts a nd bars, which city or the people lhal li\·e
5
} what It Is currenlly z.oned her e
It has to be give and
~r; That would really tear up take : tl both aJdes a rc au·
c ecology · We want it to tagontJUc no one gains. I ·
s:ar as much in the natural would Ilk~ to see the best of
s a e as possible .
both come out. .
u
r
be
TH E PO INTER
Page 5
Slim competition
in spring elections
•
and l'h)•llisSkorsetharethe
byMarkHr :andt
Sp ring elections for Por· eandidatesforthisposition .
tage County and the Stevens
Point area are less than two
monthsaway, andaccording
to the nomination papers
riled , the co mpetition will be
i1le school boa rd term is
three years
Judge James H. Levi ~ill
beunopposedforre-elec\lon
in the 7th Judicial Distrid
which co,·ers the counties or
The only crowded contests Portage.WoodandWaupaca .
are for the Stevens Point That term of office is six
Board of Education and rural
Portage Coun ty Board seats.
Three positions on the
Onlytwoofthesillt Sle\·ens
schoorboard~>-ill be ''oted
Point Commo n Council
u!)On and all are being con· positions will be contested ,
tested . 'J\oooofthepositionson the Bth and the 12th wards.
•Slim.
theboardrepresentthecity
of Stevens Point a nd the race
Term of office for alderman
is two years.
forthose positionsisbetween
~ ~~~!~. 5 ~\~~~rd" REorb~~~ We aim to please
~~~~:Sacr~e~~~g tlh: ~:~ m~~~o~s ~~o~is ~~~at~~n~
_I' ll hove a burger and fries , Lula .
Mrs . Burns
She's served three chancellors
\'Oies will be elected.
Thethirdseatontheschool
board r ep r esen t s th e
sou thern and eastern par ts of
the school district. Rosemary
Janicki. Donald Rippling_er
~
please consider that they are
there for a purpose. We
publish some t hing for
everyone and some people
are a lways looking for
mistakes.
United Artists
1:1•£4
. ,.....
THEATRES
STARTS
TONIGIIT
7p. m.lrt p.m .
A STORY FOR EVERY
ONE WHO THINKS
THEY CAN NEVER
AGAIN.
CHiLDREN'S MATiNEES
SAT.
Page 6
Shakespeare's play
on stage Sunday
March 7, 1974
THE POINTER
Review
Emperor's new clothes are
"bare necessities"
by Dcbi lUll
There was no majesty for
Tht Emp~ror J onH!
No
crown . no je-A"els. no ermine
lr1mmed robes . only a scant
suggestion of costume . the
bare necessities
for
properties a nd terriric acting .
Presented to m1nimal
audiences, Feb 'Z7. 28 and
March I, 2 was Eugene
O'Nei ll 's
expressionistic
drama of a selr-conlident
Negro dictator 's g rowing
fears and mental br-eakdown
m short , rapidly shifting ,
subjective scenes intensified
by
the
mcessant
beat
of
native tom-toms and
•llusiomsllc lighting .
Alice Faust directed a \'ery
modern expenmentaJ por·
lrayal of this show . The lack
of t raditiona l setting . that is
use of flats and scenery. and
some acton with scripts in
hand did not destroy the
power and development of the
characters in action .
JeH Young gave an ex·
cellent performance as the
emperor Brutus Jones . -.·ho
was drawn back to the
supcrsltions oC his Mrican
inheritance and horriCied by
the vis1ons or " haunlS " Crom
How to succeed ...
b)
Luann~
Rk ha ntt
" How to 3pply for a job
How to advance from the
ma1l room
H o"'' to d1ctate
memorandums
How to commute-in a three
button su1t
W1th that weary executive
smtle
nus book 1s all that I need
How to· How to· Succeed!"
Success 1s one of the most
1mportant goals for most
busmcss studenlS or ot hers
mvolved in the business
world 1lJe problem IS finding
a way to reach th1s goal .
Shepherd Mead wrote ~book
m 1952 called ll ow To
Succee d
In Hu s iness
\\1t.bout Really Trying . O"he
book was made into a musical
comedy by Frank Loesser
and Abe Burrows and they
won a Pulitzer Pr iz.e .
The play . to be perfor med
~larch 1$-2 1, is cons idered a
salire on American business
and politics. with love and
foolishness in the office .
The main cha racter . Mr.
Fmch . 1s anxious to rise
qu1ckJy and easily to the top
or the busmess world .
The plot of the play ~
ca rtoon·llke , run and wild in a
" two..<fimensional
world.".
commented Tony Schmitt .
d1rector of the play
Dick Gustm plays Finch
"''ith Muriel Bonertz as the
Cemale lead .
Other cast
members a re Karen Staples .
Debra Ca rtwright , Mark
Norby and Gary Meyer
Drama and music s lUd ents
make up the supporting
C'horus . under the d.irect1on of
Ronald Combs Dan Stewart
IS the conductor
The choreography. which
w1 ll tend to be very lively . Is
under the direction of Ms
Susan Hwll , dance Instructor
Commenting on the
produci.Jon or the musical
comedy , Tony Schmitt said ,
.. The Music and Drama
Department s peak well
together
We have good
coo perat1 on rr om both
departments .
Some
universities have problems
between departments when
working on a play together
However, In llow to Suc cerd ... we are all ha vin~ a
good time working on it ·
The box office will be open
Monday. March ol.lrom 1 p.m
to 4 p.m .. for ticket sa les .
h1s slave and criminal past.
Ills desire was to raise h1s
personal standards to that of
a wh1te man . to pro\'e himself
as a freed, civilized " nigger ."
Yet a ll the while he "''as
rcmmded by Henry Sithers
t ~hke Dempsey I of "''hat he
wa!' and what he could never
be
n .'Chnlca l expression was
particularly eHective . The
constant beating of S.Lwage
drwns and the employment of
phantom color magnified the
rorb 1ddmg ness of a West
Indies jungle and stressed the
men tal anguish of the em ·
peror. Jones .
Although The Emp eror
Jonu underlined a well-worn
subject. the Negro's emancipatJon from sla\·ery and
pagan African inherita nce . 11
~ac;~~~~~~~~/~af~~~~
perception of this dram a in
performance does not contnbute to a " let ..down" to the
purpose of Black CUlture
Week .
Film
society
presents . .
The Unl\•erslly Film
Socie ty will present The
Grapes or Wr • th on March 12
at 7 and 9: 15 p m mOld ~1 am
Aud1tonum .
Adapted from John
Steinbeck's Puhtzer prize·
-.1nning nO\'el . this IS the
story of a US farm fam1ly
forced off the land
They
leave
drought -r1dden
Oklahoma heading for the
promised land of Califom1a
Here they discover they are
unwanted because of the
oth er thousands like them
who a r e over -ru nning
Ca lifornia and willing to work
for starvation wages They
wander. the y suffer . the
fam1l y falls apart, but the
people endure.
"Two Gentlemen or
Verona . " th e ro lli cking
muSICal \• ersion or
91akespeare 's rirst comedy
"'iu~ captured both the Tony
Award and the New York
Oramu Critics' Award will be
staged Swtda)'
The production coming to
Stevens Point includes an
experienced co mpany or
t"'•elve principals . eighteen
singers and dancers. and an
onstage band of six rock
musicians. who h(We been
touring tOO citi es coast-to·
coast this season . Some
students gef more say
•
tn stu d ent A tOtrS
•
IS
COMING
:~'::~~/~:~~~! ~~~~
Eckankar interest growing
by Susan St.u rk
Interest 1n re l igion.
myst1c1srn and the occult
SCi e n c es has grown
tr e mendously 1n recent
years 1\ renewal among the
follow(•r s of traditiona l
TO
Morgan and Barnes
grab audience
by Terry Ryan
Terence P Ryan , don 't you
dare say one thing . Boy . we
got you now, ha ha. We saw
you at that Morga n and
Barnes show the other night ,
clapping and stomping Uke
some kind of madman . and
now you're going to try and
tell us there was something
-.Tong with them . that there
was something we1rd about
them, like they had warts or
something. Well it ain 't going
to work this time . No sir ! We
got witnesses that 11 prove
Morgan and Simes wu one
ol the best acta old UW ha a
ever seen .
F'or mstance . look at the
mus1c they were domg Sure
they d1d
mostly original
stuff . but they didn't just play
11 and expect us to like it
They "''ent out of their way for
us , they grabbed hold or us
and wanted us to share th eir
music with them They gave
us di ff erent levels of musk ,
d ifferent moods . d ifferent
attitudes. and they showed u.s
what two guys With a lot of
brains and talent could do
when they really wanted to
entertain .
And funny ! Man alive, they
were funny . It wasn't j.,.t
jokes or s.idelines or cute
f~
by Shi rl ey Splttlemelster
wanted more representation
bot they cUd not say much
Be-g.mmng next semester more about it."
The Student Affairs
there -.ill be 50 per cent
st udent representation on the Corf'Pmittee deals with s tudent
Student ;Vfairs Committee . we lfar e, fin ancial aid .
At the present tune the IS. student activities, athletics
member comm1ttee lex · and is involved with student
clusl\'e of the cha1 rman I ha s publicaUons .
'
three studenlS and 15 faculty
Th e comm ittee recom ·
members .
Next fall the mends policies having to do
faculty membership will be wit h student aHairs to the
reduced to nine and the FacuJty Senate. Tile senate
number or student members ma kes the final decisions
~,~,,JI be 11'\Creased to nine.
co nce r ning th ese recom ·
Tom Mc Kittenck , student mendations .
a1fa1rs committet• chairma n.
McKitte ri ck said he did not
sa1d the amoWlt of s tudent see much of a possibility for
representahon was changed combining the F'aculty and
Student Sena tes 1n t o a
university senate .
m tht.• workings or the com ·
" You combine when Utere
m1ttee s1nce 11 IS a commi llee a re common mterests But
for the students
there are many thu1gs of
There was not a great deal mt e r est to s tudent s that
of student pressure to change faculty is not interested in .
rcpresentalion on the com · and it's the same the other
m1ttee . McK.Jttenck sa1d " If way around . So. I don 't think
there "''as student pressure. it 1t's likely that the two senates
wa s last year but not th1s will merge ," said Mc KH·
year We knew that students !er ick .
Review
.I.P.
members of th e cast performed in th e original
production put on by the ew
York Shakespeare FcslivaJ
three swnmers ago in Centr aJ
Park . An instan t success,
produc e r J oseph Pnpp
quickly moved th e high ·
spirited comedy to Broadway
-.-here it became an over ·
whelming hit in 1972.
The musical will be per·
formed a t 8 p .m . in the
Unive r sity's Field ·
house . Tic ke ts a r e avail ·
a ble at the · Arts and l...cc ·
tures Box Ollice in the Fine
Arts Buildin g
re l igions to m e ditat ion
classes. yoga classes and
mind-expanding drugs opens
flC"'' paths for those see kers
who wish to ta ke them
An'other innovative pnlh is
Eckankar .
Bill Ruch , UWSP Juruor.
answe r ed question s at a
meeting last week put to him
by peopl e i nt er ested 1n
Eckankar .
According to Ruch . ' 11\e
word Eck m ea ns s pltlt
Eckankar . an ancient name
God . is the pa th of the Spiral
Eck students claim to learn
songs that held the humor, 11 "spiritual exer cises" which
was every expression and enable th ei r soul to leave
movement they made . That their body a nd travel to other
final medley or old rock'n rolJ plane5 of existence. ltuch
tunes they did proves that never revealed how this soul
they were top -s helf en - travel was done .
These
tertamers, and their encore exercises can be learned.
held one of the fi nest blends or however. In classes held in
prof ession alism and Ruch 's hom e and through
creativity we've C\ler seen . lessons which can be pur·
So we juot hope you don 'I chased from the Eckankar
try to say anything about Las Vegas office .
these two guys that we won't
li~e. Mr . Ryan. Old a,weu
Gibbons mtg.nt laney chewing pamphlets , ''is simply to
on ptne trees , but I think he'd show how In this lifetime,
agree that it would take a lot before death In the physical
of tenderizer to choke down a body, on can reach the ralm
typewriter .
of Spirit ..."
lu~~F..t~ ~~~·n~f;
Morch7, 1974
Job Interview Dates Set '\.
•
All seniors and graduates
a re urged to take advantage
and sign up for the follov.~ n g
~ yton, Ohio. Al l pul p and
paper science gr aduates and
forestr1 majors for positions
Building, at thei r earliest
co nvenienc e .
Literature
c:once r ning the com panies
listed below is available in
our plac::ement library and
should be read in prt>paratlon
for your inter view . Atti re for
ploc::emcnt in te rviews s hould
consistof acoatandtleor an
approprlatedress.
Marc h 11 , Mu d Corpora tion ,
.\ l arc: h 11 . 12. ll. and 1.&. u .
S. :\lar ine COfJI$. Al l majors .
:\luc:: hll . lnter n• I Ru·enue
S..nio:e.
All majo r s .
HpcciaJJy 111 business and
ac::counting . Position of in·
tema l ~venue agent requires
an accounting majo r . a ll
otherpositionsrequireonlya
c::ollegedeg:ree.
1\la ro:h 1~ . Gl mbels. Ap-
~·:cr:::::t ~nct:;~a~~,~~~ ·~,e:~:~~~~~~~ie~~pe r
pl.-tun, \\h . All majors ·
H pc«:iallyhomeeconomic::sin
fashion merchandising for
pu si lions In reta il
manacement t r aining
prOJtams.
Ma rc h IJ,Socia l Sec11rlty
Admln ls tr a tlall, Wlsc a u ln
Rap ids. Wi s. All m ajors
in terested In ca reer op·
porl u nit ies with the feder al
gll\'ernment .
,\ l:uch ll. Spcfll Q11een,
ltlpon. WJi:' All business
admmist r atlon and speech
majon for positions in Hr·
THE POINTER
~!~:S ~~n:!:;:emPablk
Sc- h ool~. Beloi t . \\ls .. v.ill be
on.:ampusintervlewingfrom
9a.m -$p.m . Vacancies : At
thls time wedonotknowwhat
the vacancies will be
March l l. Dun a nd Urad·
Sll"fl' t . GrH n Bay. WI, , All
business related majon .
March 1-1 a nd IS. V. S.
·"'ny. Al l majors .
Ma rch II, ,\ clna U fe • nd
Cas ualty lns uran u, Gle n
Ell yn . Ill .
All bus in ess
majors or libera l or ts v.it h
professionalbl.l'lllle$5C3re-er
in teo:ests for positions as
ma r keting s pecia lises and
Feelings vary on WGHEP
One thing Hamilton said he
bySI"Ii rl ey Spiulem els t.-r
There are varying opinions likedabout ot is the2!1·)"ea r
on the worth of the propoitd loan repayment plan WG UEP
Tlltr e is an
Wisc::onsin Hi~her- Educati0t1 v.-ouldolfe-r
Plan IWC HE P I.
ad\·antage tha i a 2S·)"t'ar
Philip Gtorie of financial ~payment plan ll.-ould hli••e
atds sa•d he felt that the o•·t'rthetG-)·earplanwhich
conce pt of WG HEP Is "based p r esent financial aid
on a shaky foundation ,"
programsha.-e. hesaid
\l.'ith a maximum of 10
A report released by the
lligiM.! r Educauon Aids Board yea r s to r epay a loan.
HI EAB I sta ted that WG HE P p;~.ymentsmustbes i nshortl y
If the
wou l d ho p efully ac · after graduatio n.
co mmodate the 1&-year -old studen!hasalov.•lneomeoris
age of majonly law .so that
students would not need ~e!.~nfi!'~-~~h~~~~ ~~~
p.ut'ntalbolcklngforfinan-eial money during that time . said
Hamilton
Georcea111.Ut'dlhat tht sline
But w1th a U -year
of reuoning IS not va lid
repayment PtoKram . cf a
Ex1 st 1ng f i nancul aid s t udent doesn'l have the
pr og r am s a r e based on money nght away. he can
dependency
W1th the v.·ait a few ye;u-s be-fore
programs 00\1.', cf a ~tudent 1s begonmngtore~ytheloan
considered 1ndependent, ht' 11 11o1thout feeling pressured. he
god
On tbe other hand , George
shouldbt'noc::on«mtov.·ard s;ud he did not belie•·e t""l
tht' aae of maJOrity law in the-re ...-ould be an advantage
re lation to financial aid mha\'tng25)·eantorepaya
programs, s;ud George
loanmsteadof\0. 2Syearsis
Anot he r p r ob le m that alongtimetohavea debt
George said he found with Ounng that time. the amowot
WG II EPis thatattheprt'St'nt or mtercst ~~o-ould also be
t1me 11 1s too lOOSt'ly struc - mc::reasingandbytheendof
tured . He said that thert'are 2Syears . theac::tualswnpaid
very few lads about the loan v.·ould be muth more than
repayment sc hedule and ""'hat had ~n orisinally
1nte r est rates
Little
borrowed. he said.
resea rchha s been doneto5t't'
George a lso mentioned the
how the progra m would bt' possi ble dlsadvant:~ge that
run , he said 1bese details studentsmayt hlnk theyhave
....,u probably not bt' worked a.-erylongtimeto rtpay the
outunt•laftertheproposal laan and overborrow. They
has been passed. and then may noc realiu how much
notlun& could be done if the dt'bl they have accumulated
5!ipulations for it v.·e-re not untilitistoolate.andthen
they may have diffic ult y
sallsfactory. George said
Student Body President repayinc it.
Hamilton said . lhough. that
Jim Hamilt0t1 agrt-ed 11o1th
Geo r ge c::onurnin1 the 1M.! didn't believe that the
present lac k of data about possibilityofoverbon"o~~oing
how WGII EP would work. but would ex11t because the
sa•d he be-lieved thai; " the f"inanc•aiAidsOffic::e~~o-ould
concept II \'t'rY sound and IS 5!illac::tasabufft'1"10prt'\·ent
something I agree with st udentsfromd01ngso.
One other difluence in
wholeheartedly "
Ht"'l·po•nt that Hamilton and
Gt-orge had c::onc::emed the
u1c::ome contingency plan A
report p~pa red by HEA B
oullined tbeplan. lbe rateof
1\iton a re needed for the repayment v.·ould clt'pend on
Stoc::kbridgt'·l 1unsHTutoring thestudents"actual eamings
Project . Interes ted ~e alterlea\·ingsc::hool. ',l,"hile
1neomewaslov.·,thepayment
amounts~~o-ould be small and
at:!I :SO pm .. lnfrontofthe sov.·ould themten:Strate .
Butasincome oncreased. the
1nterest an d payment rate
1be
provide transportation to and ~~o-ould also increase
from Bowler. ¥.1s. Ieavins mcome contingen t sched ul e
around 6 p.m . and ~t wnlng wouldbeevaluatedaMually
andadju$tedtoshowchanges
by,i~ ';.:.;day niJht hd.orin.& m earrungs and 1nfiaUon. ·IC,
.seuion Is filled v.~lh wton- altt"'" 25years, a balance was
buttherearesUUopeninpln sUU dl.lt' on the loan, the state
v.-ould pay it .
the~y.seuion .
...
•
n~~~c::~~~·~,·d~~~~~t'~~!~;
Tutors
needed
~:rn ~=:f!/!~~~
•
~~~~:r~~~~:I,I~~~~i ~
George said he did not but addld , " I think the
believe that the propost'd O\'era ll objec t ive o f the
income contingent PfOIJ"llm proposal is to keep cost. low
v.-ould be as ideal as the so t hat more an d more
rt'portoutlinedi t. '11lere saudent.s can participate In
v.-as no research done to show the eduellltion proeeu."
If WG HE P is passed, all
v."tlethc:r the plan v.·ould ac·
tuall yv.·ork. llisonlya existi ng s tate grant and
scholarship pr..ograms , with
gueu ,"" hesaid.
The possibility exists tM t the exception of the Tui tion
the sla temayfind they were Gr ant Prog r a m , will be
payingmoreoft he debt s for phased out .
Ha milton and Gt-orge :&aid
pe<~pte than they had a nltc::ipated 11nd thal li was not they thoug ht tha t this woul d
v.·orth...-hilefor themtodoso. be unfortuna te.
Another major objection
Sllid George. If that v."OO!d
occur. the: payment and in· George .said he saw wi th
tert'SI rates could be raised WG HEP was tha t t he r e
and people may end up v.-ould not be the pa rent-<:hi ld
~lationshi p t ha toftenex ists
p;~ying mo"' than they had
now , withparentshe lpin& put
origm.-. Ji y planned.
t h eir c hild re n th r ough
Hamilton said he believed (1)l]tge .
tht'tneomecontingentplan Is
Hamilton .511id he likes the
a good one Students would eonc::eptof WGHEPbec:auw It
nol be under as much v.-ouJdappl ytoall.sc::~of
press·.-e In payin&the debt lugher educ::ationin \\1sconsin
v.hen their iiiCOme is low.
IU W. prh·ateandVocational And when they ha\·e higher technicall . Students could
ea rmnp. otlsonlyrighttha t thengotoanysch oolhec::h~
the1r amount of repayment be and not have to pick among
oncrease-d. he said.
only those he could a fford to
Both Uamilton a nd George go to.
said they 511w the possibility
lfamilton said he had a
for increased tuition with philosophical objection about
WGI IEP
the program . though
Geo r se said th a t t he "Stud, · maynot critically
legislatu re m ay say that loo k a t t he qua li ty o f
tuition s hould be hi gher edutation theyge t iftheyc::an
beca115eloanmoneywould bt' s.ignoff the money they may
easy to get.
ha ve hadto payou toftheir
Jl amil ton said he sa w the own poc kets a nd use WGHEP
same problem wi th WGHEP, instead."'
Sr n·ic-~ ~: ntranc: ~ ~:u m
will
be gtven on c-ampus in the
Sdence Buildlns . Room A-121
froml ·30a m to 12noon. All
mtert'sted students please
scgn up for the uam in the
Place ment Office. 106 Main
BUJiding, a nd pitk up the
necessary a p p l ication
booklet.
Pleasesignu p fortbeabove
in tcn.-iev.-s in room 103, Old
Main
SPECIAL NO T E :
Q ues l ions conce r ning
Federa l Civi l Se rv ice
Posnlons or Testing should be
di rected to the to ll free'
Milwaukee ln fonna tionc:enter
11 ·8\)().2U -91911 and not the
loc::a l posl olflce.
-SOPHOMORES-·
EXAMS WILL BE HERE & GONE BEFORE YOU KNOW
ITI
THE LAST .THING YOU.WANT TO WORRY .ABOUT
THIS SUMMER IS SCHOOL!
~~~~sA!EN~~~~:~<;;GEST PROBLEM BEFORE IT B~­
SIGN UP NOW FOR YOUR FALL HOUSING NEEDS!
INVEST 'h HOUR OF YOUR TIME AND DISCOVER FOR
YOURSELF THAT WE UNDERSTAND YOUR NEEDS.
IF YOUR FONDEST DREAM IS TO BE OUT OF THE
DORM AND AWAY FROM ITS HASSELS - THEN YOU
CAN'T AFFORD NOT TO TALK TO US.
-MODEL OPEN-
THE VILLAGE
301 MICHIGAN
Page 7
s ales
manacemenl
development procrams.
!\lnch IS. John ll:;oncoc lr.
tnsllt:o.nce Cam puy .
Al l
majors for sa les !onl y)
positions.
Ma r c h II,Un lvtr l il y of
Wi ltO nl ln · MIIWIIIIIkee7
Mil wa uk ee, Wis.
All majors · - es Pecia ll y
business adminis tration a nd
f<:onomles lnttrt'Sitd in .lh e
MBA program a t Milwaukee.
March It , Unh erslty of
Wh c o n t ln · Whllewa t e r .
Wh lle v.·a ter.WIJ. A.ll m ajof"S
·especia ll y busi ness a d ministration and economics
in t erested i n th e M BA
program at White-water.
Marth 11. KenDSha Pu blic
Sthool,. Kr nDSha, \\1s.. will
be on campus interviewing
from t p.m .· 5 p.m . Vacancies :
Elementnr y - mustbea ble to
teach ar t . music: and Phy.
Ed ., Phy Ed. miJS t have a
bona fide health miiiOf and
WSI. English and Soc:ial
Studin-mustha\'eamajor in
English, broadfleld. histofY
or political scir:nee and a
minor in one of the other
mentioned a reas. A major or
minor in Englis h mus t be
inc l ude d In th ese
qualific::atlons.soeial studiesbroadficld , blology-certlfied
mgcnera i K"ience. English-a
m:tJOrinl-:nglishand aminor
or area of co nce ntra tion
!mmlmumofl:!lcreditslin an
additional lans uage a rt s
areas \journalism. speech ,
drama•
•' larch :!:1, ~·w era l Civil
341 -2120
March 7, 1974
THE POINTER
Page 8
• Campus Calendar
uyvP POINTER
Sugar, salt & Greasy Processed Foods!
WANT A CHANGE?
TRY
TORREY'S
NUTRITIONAL
SMORGASBORD
REAL HOME COOKIN'
SMORGASBORD STYLE
MEAT & MEATLESS DISHES
All you can eat only $1.75/ -...
We •lso hne • complete line ol flours , grains ,
beans , seeds & lowest price natural Yltamlna!
TORREY'S ORGANIC RESTAURANT
LOC ATED ON NORTH 2ND ST.
) U-o4M
--
.............. - &
........... J_
IL!!======:.J
~Jf&U.Y
a&AJ<D>. ~
,.... ""-'• .,
.
: ............. COUPON •••••••••••••:
: TROUSERS
1
:
~~
- lie ·• . :
w~o~oc--
Offw ;ood~~~~;;:.:.,<hU
:-::::.~.~-~:=
;....
--
p .m ., U.C.M. Center. com er College and Premont. Search·
mg for the Truth " J esus said , " I am the way. the trut ~ :
and the life , no man romelh unto the ~ather. but .b)' me .
Al l ar e invtted to au end our weekly tcsttmony meeting.
·~ ~~~~;~~:~ ~~n~~· au;;~~~~\ c~te~~~i~ Jr:n~--~ii
discuss "Genera l Am in and the Coll apse of a Pollttcal
System ." The ProJ,tram will be open to the ~l!blic IAi.thout
charge under s ponsorship or the UWSP Poht~ca l Sc1~nce
Department m cooperat ion wi th the UW-Madison Mnca n
Studies Program .
Ut\H f i LM: 8 p .m .. Wisconsin Room . University Center .
"Skin Game ."
INTEHVAHS ITY CIIHI STI A:~ FELLOWSIIIP MEETING :
8 p .m ., room 129a , University Center . An in formal ti me of
singing and fellowship .
Friday, March 8
'1
:
....:
t-' IHST CII UHCII OF CIIRI ~I St.: ~
· ~n
at ll a .m . a nd Sundayschoolat9 .
m
P EACE UNITE D O IURClt OF
U.S
Sunday service 10 a .m .
FHAME PHESHYTERIAN CII UU(.'I
Sunday Ser vices 9: IS and IO:.j5 a m
ST . PA UL 'S UN ITED METIIODI ST t'l l
Blvd ., Sunday ser vice 10 a.m.
PLANETAIU UM S EIU ES:
3 p.m .
' 'Th e Best Way to Travel" narra ted by [
ST UDENT HEC ITAL : 3 p.m ., ~hc ht
F'inc Arts Cente r . She rrie Van Wyk . 11
ST UD E NT PEHCUSSION ENSE/11U t 1:
Ha ll . Fi ne Ar ts Center . Terry K.1wl~s
DI SCUSSION GROUP : 6:30 p.m .
Ministry P arsonage, 2009 Mam
"
"Relig ious America ·• and discuss 11
TON\' t\WAHO WINNING ML'S t('..\1.
Gym. Fieldhouse . ' 1'wo GenUemrn of 1
b)' Arts and Lectures Series .
UAB FILM : 8 p .m .. Wisconsin Room . University Center .
" Skin Game "
Monday, March 11
Saturday, March 9
NAT IVE AMER ICAN WE EK : i ·:ll
Room , UC. Discussion on Da\'ld Wr001;
Savage'? Speakers will t)e Wronr and B
the UWSP His tor y Depa rtment
UAB CO FF EE IIOUSI=: : 7-9 p .m .. New coffeehouse.
Un iversity Center. Gary Larrick Quartet with F'ri~ds
tMjxed Media perform ance of moder n da nce. progressive
jau and audio visua l ). No adm ission charge .
Sunday, March 10
·AU....-
.
Thursday, March 7
CIIHI ST I A~ SOENCE CO LL EGE ORG ANI Z.:\.TI ON : 6: 15
FIHST UJ\IryJST l'II UHl'll . tl).l8 Ol urch
ser vices IO:.j 5 a .m. and 7 :15 p .m .
St. , Sunday
~~~~~~t .~~:m~~ ~~~~~~;;:~~~~ ~:~ r~~PALI ,
Hl 7
LUTIIEH ,\ N STUI>ENT COMM UN ITY <Peace Campus
Cente r , Mar ia Dnve and Vincent St . ) Service with
Eucharist, Saturday , 6 p .m . and Sunday 10:30 a .m .
NEWMAN UN IVEJtS IT\' P ARISII ICATIIOLIC) : Ne~Aman
Olapel-basement of St . Stan 's Cloister Olapel-1~ Maria
Drive . Weekend masses on Sil turdav . -' and 6 p .m ,
Newman Olapel. Sunday tO a .m . Newman Chapel and
11 :30 a .m . and 6 p.m .. Cloister Ola pel. Weekday masses
during Lent : Monday through Friday , ll :SS a .m .. Ne-...man
~Z~~ -5 :;~ .~N~~,~~, ·!nu~~~~~~~;r;s:no;s7
p .m ., St. Stan 's Upper Olurch
Budweiser
Tuesday, March 12
UNIVEHSITY FILM SOCIETY :
i
a udi torium , Old Ma in . "Grapes of Wr:
SYrtWIION IC WIND ENEMULE l'O:
Michelsen Uall , Fine Arts Center .
UAH F ILM : 8 p .m ., Wisconsin Hoom . l
Center . " But ch Cassidy and th~~~nda
UWS I' l)"'T UOENT CII APT E U-.r,F .
SOCII:.IY : 7 :30 p .m ., room 129 . L'n
Genera l meeting for a ll members. new a
reports and projects will be presented
Wednesday, March 13
NATI VE A~1 ER I C AN WE E K· WoWlded
Speaker , Ver non Bellecourt.I2S Col hnsC
p.m .
011\ECTIONS IN IIOME ECO~ U~II C:
progr a m , " Learning Thru Pl ay :· w1JI bt>
ca ble TV , channel 6. The show corK'erns t
educa te young c hildren . The guest 1s llut
host is Tom Collins .
uAn F ILM : 8 p .m . , Wi sconsi n Hoorn_. ~!
" Dutch Cassidy a nd the Sundance Kid .
MIDWEEK LENTEN SERVICE : 8 p.m
Center . " Right Here , Right Now ." a s t~y
man who drills mysteriously into the h\"e
him . Alter his death they r~ogmtt' h1:
nuence .
UAB IS
HEADQUAitTEitS FOR
PIO-lEDS
PUMA
COIIYWE
llfTORJI
JACI PURCEL
SHIPPY SHOES
'Sk in Game'
Turk lnterna
Union
Gary Larrick
of modern d
MAR. 6·8
MAR. 7-8
Check your local
radio listings
for time
and station.
Tune in,
drink Bud.,
have fun !
PRESEt
MAR. 9
p.m.
filW Cc
·MAR. 12·14
"But-as!
Union
MAR. 16
UAB ExpeM
MAR. 19
· " Circu s" 9·,i
MAR. 20·21 " Candidate
LOOK FOR DEl
s Calendar
-
Thursda y, March 14
tiNTER
STE \' E N ~ P O INT Sl ' MP I_IO:O.:\' ORCI I ES11\A COSCE itT :
I p.m . Michel.wn Hall. Fine Arts Centu.
.,. 11\ST CU U RCII O F' CIIRIST&:~
· TIST Ol ur~Ser,· •ce
at !' 1 -'!' · •~Sunday school at9 .
m
UAH FILM : I p.m ., Wisc:ons in Room. Unh·ersi ty Center
PI::,\ CE UN ITED Cll lJRCI I OF
liST 1;.;s D1 on St . · '' Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid ··
.
Sunday service lOa .m.
·
nt1U I E PRESH \ 'TER IAN l'IIUII(Il. LW Main SC ..
Sunday Stf,·kts 9: 15 and tO:<&$ am
ST. PAUL'S UNITED METIIOOISTl"lll ftfll 600 Wilshi re
Bh·d ., Sunday service 10 11 .m
·
PtA... t,.'TA RI UM SERI.ES: l p.m Sclt'lln' Bwldina .
' "lbeBest Wly!OTravel " narra~t.;. Dt-nrus Kohnslti .
STUDEST REC ITAL : l p .m , :\bcht~ C'on«"rt llllll.
F'ine Arts Center . Sherrie Van Wyk mruo soprano
DISCUSS IOS
G RO P :
6' 30 p rn
t:)lllt::
Mirustry Parsonage. 2009 Moun Watril
" RehiJioUI America" and d!tciW n
Campus
-
Ma rch 7, 1974
Polish
summer
school
offered
THE POINTER
Page 9
:·w~·;~d·d~~····~············-:
!
•
•
•
bikes . . .
!•
' •rt•
H-
..... wMCI i:IAH .
•~ <I u e . . u rl n . Com plolo
r~tp~lrHnlc:o.
:
:
OPENING
MID· MARCH
:
1314 WATER STREET
•0
:
: Hostel Shoppe
BIKES BY:
,~~~~
HAN~~~~~FF
KLUCK STOP
n: Pf"(lll'am
Monday, March 11
S ATI \' E AMERI CAS WEEK
7 JO pm
~~>iscons m
Room , UC. Discussion on Da\'ld Wroro~'' OO..k. 1\llo't tM
Su •Rr' Speakers v.ilfbe Wroor and K~!! :-.'dsoro from
History Departmrrol
Tuesday, March 12
-JUNIORS~
- HAVE YOU BEEN SHARING A HOUSE OR AN APARTMENT WITH FRIEND?
- I 'll BET YOU CAN LIST QUITE A FEW UNDESIRABLE
SIT.UATIONS THAT HAVE OCCURED DUE TO YOUR
YOUR PRESENT HOUSING SITUATION·
MAR . 6·8
MAR. 7· 8
MAR. 9
-~~~~~t ~~J:rz~~~J~LE~~~f3.Y
ABOUT WITHOUT
-ELIMINATE NEXT YEAR 'S HOUSING PROBLEM BEFORE IT BECOMES A HASSEL!
WE HAVE 12 YEARS EXPERIENCE WITH All OF THE
STUDENT HOUSING PROBLEMS IN STEVENS POINT.
INVEST 'h HOUR OF YOUR TIME AND LET US SHOW
YOU A WAY TO AVOID MANY OF YOUR PROBLEMS!
MAR. 12·14
MAR . 16
:
·······························
TON Y AWARD WINSISG Ml:S IC\1, 8 p m . Qu3ndt
Gym, F'ieldh~ . ' '1\t.-o Gentleml'll of V"'ona." sponsored
by Arts and Lectures Stties
th~ UWSP
:
:
THE VILLAGE
301 MICHIGAN
-MODELOPEN341·2120
THE POINTER
Page 10
March 7, 1974
Athletic funding in question
by J ohn Larson
All current varsity spor~
~A111 be back next year as a
result of $650,000 returned to
money, our programs in all
areas will essentially be the
same for ~xt year ," said
Robert Bowen, chairman of
" St:arf for the varsity
programs as well as the intramurals IS the main
problem here when )'OU talk
a <JUOiity program \41th good the media. etc. We've got to
coaches and facilities. They sell the programs and do the
arc not looking for training typcsofthingsthatma kefans
for a future professional attach themselves to the
~~ ~~~\·~i~w~! ~~~~~~ ~:ca~l~~.l tr~~r:a~i~~ I~~~
;;=,t .~a~~~r~i~. having a
yet and what finally emerges athletic
departments
rna)' be a bit different In <HPERA).
operation.
" At this time it looks like
All cur r e nt program s that v.ill be the case.
appeared certain for next
" However if we should
year. They are based on the receive only part of what we
ant1c1pated return of user fee expect from the user fee and
reduction and the recent published priority list on the
publication of a pnonty list state money . we ,.-ould have
for the dispersement ol the to lay orr staff.
state money by last \lo>ff.k 's
··tt would be difficult to do
Point~r
that and not cut some sports.
But the list 1s now bemg
"Wh en we receive t h e
rev1 s ed and , a l tho u gh approximately · SS9.000 user
unhkely , the revision could fee refund and if the physical
effccttheretentionofstafffor education faculty positions
some sports.
I six ) on the list remain there,
" If priorities for faculty in all eleven of our original lay·
lhe hst remain the same as oH positions woul d be
published or move up and we restored and with them our
rec~l\'e the expected user fee program .
Bowe n andicated that even
" The only out of state
If staff are maintained, the commitments we are
athlclicdcpartmenthosbeen honoring ," r emarked
told to expect a $10.000 cut in Athletic Oirec tor Bob
operating revenue for next Krueger, "are contracts
year from student activity previously made or where an
allocalions.
agreement can be reached
" We'll ha,·e to make do which guarantees us enough
....ith what we ha'·e in this money from the meet or
area .·· said Bowen.
. game to cO\>·er ow- expenses
.. We are institut i ng m meals. travel and lodging.
measures to reduce operation
" Some programs will have
costs In varsity s port s sack lunches to cut rising
competition .
costs of mea ls," said
" The State University Krueger.
Conference is on record as
" I feel this may effect
eliminating all round-robin recruiting . Prospective
scheduling in all sports ex- athletes are concerned about
cept bnsketbllll and football the way they travel, eat.
next y e ar . The on I y where they stay on the road
responsibility a school will and the trips they'll make.
have to the conference in all
" It all comes back to the
other sports will be to rield a central question . Do the
team for the confer ence students here want n suemeet.
ccs.sful program and are they
''This v.ill enable us to SOlVe willing to pay for it"' '
travel ex penses and to Krueger said.
feature more local com" We'll have programs 1n
0
lbe ErnofRe Room
FRIDAY NIGHT FISH -FRY!
$1. ~~ per person
Golden· Deep Fried Fish
Crispy French Fries
CreOIIY Col e Slaw
Homemade loof of
Bread & Butter
~~~.
in a sport,"
said
te~r'don·t tnmk tnas Wlll place
any added pressu re on our
teams or conches to win or
else. Wedidn't wlnthcmallin
football but we had better
crowds there than we've had
for along time. II was just the
kisld of team fans could a t·
t3~h to."
Bowen agreed with
Krueger that present
monetary tightening within
the university has again
posed the ques tion of the
value of s p orts t o the
university and students and
that 11 ....,u oe an.sv.·ered m
terms of participation and
s pectator and financial
support.
A committee has been set
up by Vice -Chance ll or
Gordon Haferbecker to come
up with a model a thletic
program which could be
employed in the near future if
reductions are necessitated
by future budget constraints.
Members or the committee
pe_t_i~~~il have more i n - ~~~fuJ~~~~-hi~ h~~e ~e:r:: ;~~;ra~usta~~por~l at:nit~
;~~r~~;';; ~r~~~t:~0~0';,0;~ :~~~~c:~~~- stu~:r~~: ~~w::~P~~~~t~;~~ar~~~
conference and invitational
meets , maybe some com pet i tion between long
distance sc hool s at in-
"Sports give the university are : Bowen: Jim Clark, in greater ' 'isibility than any tramural director ; Krueger ;
other area by virtue or it.s Marilyn Schwar tz, IIPERA
position in society. There will faculty membe r and women's
poss1ble on overrUght trips,
Teams from more than one
sport will be traveling
together if they have meets in
the same a rea and of course
e fforts will be made to
schedule things that way ,"
Bov.·en s.ald.
Some coaches around the
country see trips as a
rec ruiting tool. (t migh t
follow that a rt'lative lack of
same might hurt recruiting,
but Bov.·en doesn't reel that
way.
" In the case of most of our
sports, we'll emphasize local
competition ," said Bowen.
' 'II we see long trips and
competition against b ig
schools as a better program .
we seem to be saying bigger
is better and I don' t accept
!hal.
"Some univer~i ties have
grown beyond their means of
support and that could be a
resuJt of extravagance.
-=-'The biggest selling point
here Is the university experience. I feel the' majority
o1 our athletes are looking for
"We' ll ha,·e to increase our Senat~ chairman . and Bob
efforts 1n other art'as such as Badzmsk1. appointed by the
fund rais1ng event s. s tudent
go,•e rnm ent
promollonal activitie-s with president.
~~~~i~ :!:~~-~:;~\'~ ~~o~ec~li!~~g. but It ~~~~~~\~~~~~~~~by~;~~~
Plus Sparkling lllslcal
Canedy Entertalnonent
Nightly In the
liAI.lEOH LOUNGE-
Of SteV"'IS Point
P I·ZZA
AS YOU I,.IKE ITl
••
LOOKING FOR A RESPONSIBLE POSITION
WHERE YOU CAN ENJOY WORKING WITH PEOPLH
APPLY TO JOIN THE STUDENT MANAGER PROGRAM!
The University centers are now accepting applications
for Student Manager positions in DeBot, Alien , and the
University Center.
If you are interested, come In and pick up an application from the student manager in any of the centers.
Hurry! Applications are due April 5.
Mathroom-where
students help students
by ~1ary Anne ~~oor~
"You don 't have to raise
your hand to go to the
Ma throom " is the central
idea behind the assistance
and study room sponsored by
the Math Department , ac·
cor ding to George Kung ,
math mstructor It is part of
the Fac u lty Tut oring
Program .
The Mathroom p rovides
s tudents who are having
problems with math a place
to go !or help. The room is
staffed by Kung, math instructor Bruce Staal and
student assistants.
The room seems to be
achievmg Significant success
Approximately SO
people seek help each week
and another 70 use the room
for studying, Kung said .
The room provides a place
for math majors to s tudy and
wor k with others on their
assignments .
Often thes-e
students are of great help to
those students who are
having difficulties, said
Kung.
Students who go to the
Mathroom do so voluntarily.
~ey a re not referred by
Instructors. " We feel it Ia
d emea ning and em ·
barrasslng for a teacher to
tel_l a student he needs help,"
sa1d Kung.
Kuna a UTibulft much o1
the success of the program to
the fact that students go to the
room \'Oiuntarily.
"Some
students feel that just being
where you can get help if you
ne-ed it is an asset," he said.
One thing the Instructors
and assistants try to do Is
identify thOse s tudents who
are exceptionally we:a.k and
provide them v.ith individual
tutors. Lilst SC!mest.er four
s tudents were given ~in­
dividual tutors .
Three 'Of
them went from grades of r
to C, Kung said.
Individual tulors nrc math
majors who are interested In
lhe program . Applicant. are
screened for their a radea In
math and their ability to get
along well v.ith others . Funds
lor these tutors are provided
by the Pride office .
Anolher part of the Faculty
Tutoring Progr am Ia the
Learning
R eso ur ces
Assistance Program handled
by Unette Schuler of the
Learning R~es Centft'
ILRC I.
The purpose of this
program is to provide he.lp for
s tudents using the LRC
A.sliatance is given on a
to-one basis for as long 11 It Ia
necessary. Ms. SchuJer uld.
"We operate on the system
or referrals from the Pride
office," she said. " I aerve u
• contact penon ror thole
students who have lclonlll1ed
t.bemaelves as needlq help.''
one:
•
•
-
AEC may deposit records
Atomic
•
Energy
Com·
mission IAEC I ret'OI'dsoflM
operation of nuc lear povot>r
plantsmay500nbedeposit~
in the Document& Ubral')' of
UWSP .
Telephone communications
from the Atomic Energy
Commission
t AEC I .
Washington. D.C .. cmfirming
progress in the ne&oti•lions
laciht1es .. : ·
We may be
subje-cted to !he t-ffects of
4.000to6.000 me!Ja ..·attsof
nudear po,.·er at the
corded opposition to a
town of
~t~~i::;:l ~~~·~!RIJo~~i
fJ~ .~·te '"the
Ms Dixon note-d that . " i f
the re<:ord!; are obtained it
.,.·ouldbethelintttme.tom}'
knowledge , that citizens
IIIOUldha\'e~.1d)' K'CesstoA·
ulitiakd last Oec:tmber by
the Luguc Against Nuclear
Dan&t>n ILANOI ,..e~ an·
noum::ed at an executive
commi tle e meeting in
VtlSConsin Rapids, Tuesd;Jy
evening .
Documents
Ubra rian ArUnu- F'ish and
Gertrude Dillon, executi\'t,
plants and records. inciiKilng
all abnormal occuren.ces .
before a plant is functiomng
in their immed1ate area ..
Present!)' com plete docu ments a~ a\·allable only
in Washington , 0 C
~ivedtherepor t .
as one raised l:ut yu.r vohtn
Sol Burste1n. Wi sco nsin"
eh.• clr1c . den1ed s afety
problem s at the Point
Beach reactor despite a
:\Tih•:roukn Jovraal article
desc r ib1ng the fuel den ·
sihcatiOn s1 tua11on there in
ter ms of a safety ha1ard."
The r~ which may
co nsist of U fe et of
document$, were requested
beca u se LAND f elt 1
"Ttiponsibility to the public
to provide as much In ·
form;llion u possible con ·
ccrninR elusting nuclear
cWhu111 ln Rapldl Dally
Tribllne, Ma y tl,l9731
LAND ha s also r e ·
ci;~~~: cr~~bi'i~~~;:~~ ~~a:~rnJt'~· ~he C~e~
n.'potted explosion of an A·
plant in llussia .
The Executh·e Committee
1s preparing a questio,maire
onnuclearpo...~rforthestate
legislature aDd other state
officuals . MichaeiHitt ner,cochairman, expr~ doubts
that state governmen t
Students decorate dorm rooms
byUftdaK . Itancbchke
l>uc! to thr decrease •n
enrollmtnt here at UWSP and
due to the re5triction or the
budget. housif1K has given
students the opportwuty to
paint their rooms. hal lways
and other areas of their
res1dence halls The
~Y f~lo~S::ned~':'ter..OO:
r!i~~!l r~:Sa.~'::;
coven, eartoon characten.
purely a r t btic dulan•
similar to fant&l.la and pop
art usina Coke or Point beer
advtTtlsementa..
Proveu
ln ~the
Res.l den ce • Hall• :
ments to ABi t4, the state
powersitingbill .....·hichcould
make it more relevant to
nuclea r power. in particular,
and to lhe Central Vi1sconsin
~te . llittner nid that ''in its
present form . the bill 10i\l
ha\·elittleimpactonthelocal
ii tuallon ."
Alternate energy
generates interest
w~~~t~::t/,dd ~;er£
UWSP Environmental
Counci l Feb . 23.
The
program was held In the
~co\et · M:arquett e Room of
the Student Union from 10
am . to 4p.m. F'reellterature
was available for the public
and studtnls.
The workshop was sta rted
in motion by the interat
arousedlnthewindgenerator
built and displayed by Jac k
Susarrey .
Tbe wind
generator was built from
plans rece ived from a
Calirornia designer and coold
provide enough power for
lighll and 1mall shop and
=~eu!~li~nc:~\·~i~~:
a cost of approJ:1mateiy
St:Z.OOO a year. during .,...h1ch
t1me only one bwlding would
bt- painted . Already the
t"quivalmt or one and a half
buildings tabout ~00 gallons
of paint I have bf!.enpaintedin
only one month
Uy stopping do10-n at the
I lousing Office on Tuesday or
Thursday morning and
ta ll1.1ng to Steve Van
Goethem. a work study
~udent in char ge of paint
oniers.astudent mayord~a
ga llon of paint for his room
tor another areal in four
quart CQII\ainers and a three
color combination Holl5ing
•
POINTER
talked of the many com·
ponents used that have made
wind energy feasible and
answered questions on the
wind aeneralors operation.
Geor&e Becker or UWSP
spokeonsolare nergyand the
use of solar energy in homes.
lie dtkribed solar homes
that have been desilned to
use both solar heating and
~;;:;~~~~t}w~~~eu;!~:!r ~~
;:; ':~tah~u:nc~n~
m colon. 10 ptrcent of the
cho!ces madelnchJde40orthe
colors f. and must submit a
dekription of how the room is
to be painted. Stev~ Van
Goethem a work -s tudy
~ udent. 11 in charge of the
orders.
The paint may be picked up
on the same day the onier
was made. later in lhe afte rnoon . Al l neceuary
pamtit~~ suppli ea may be
acquired from the director of
lhehall .
The subject limitation of
deaigna only inc h.Ses those
ttungs which probably would
not a ppeaJ to anyone who
UW.fP
Outdoor
leaders IO't're really prepared
tom:akedcc isions verysoon.
Comnutt~o n Atomic Energy
in Washington. D. C. Ms . They may result in fh·e times
Joseph Groshek, LAND the present nucl ea r
.
generatinapov.·erinthestate
se<:ret.1rv. exolained the bill
voould1mpost5everelimitson a nuclear complex larger
public !~put at AEC hearings thananyineJ:istenceandup
to
1.sooacres
at
one
site
.
...·hich,even now,ls minimal.
She reported that Slatesenntonarealsobt'ing
Co ngressman Obey ha s advised of possible amtnd·
prcn•ided LAND wil he11J!iesor
theb1ll More information is
also being sought from
Good bye old paint
•
•
solar coolin& Becker noted
that it is both .economically
and technolo&ically feasible
to use solar energy in
residential homes today.
Jack Sanden of Stevens
Point told of the 111t or
organic10·astes for producing
methane gas. Compared to
natunl gas, methane has 60
percent the British 'Thermal
Units tBTU I content. W'ben
produced,ltls&Opercenl
pure but can be refined of
i mpuriti es in a sim ple
manner . Sanden stated that
lhe organic waste from five
cows could supply the needs
or about seven average
homes . Optimum production
t.1kespl acen t 90-95 degree:~
~·ah renheit and a pH of &.Ito
I .O.... hich is controlled by the
input of organic material to
the system
A ful l-hour tape and slide·
show. made available from
Alternative Sour ces of
Energ y of M inong ,
Wisconsin, dealt with the
sola r . w1nd and methane
topicsthathadbeencovered
throughout tnt entire day.
a.m.
H.nideDCt' lbl\
Bald10in
Burroughs
,.,,..,
llyer
..,,,
....,
"""'
Knulli!D
-
S.:hmeekle
s~
Smith
w.....
Se. olr-•
•""
'"
'""
.
I
3
'"
.
No. olorinp
3
0
0
whole dorm
3
0
DOUBLE CHEESEBURGER
TWIN SUPER DELICIOUS PATTIES
EACH TOPPED WITH A ·
TANGY SLICE OF CHEESE
I
Sports
uyvp-P-O_I_N_T_E_R
Women cagers
capture third
Lut v.ttk~nd , lhe UWSP
v. omcn cagen took third p!acc
'" the WW IA tou rnam rnt at
Madison They lost a clc.e
dK iSIOO to Oshkosh. -tS....O. but
,-a mtba ck
to
defea t
Wh tlt',.' 8 ler. 44-22
Tht Pomten ,.·en· upset by
Oshkosh durmg the1r Saturd.y
n1ght o~nu Pomt had a slow
first half, ffld tng the first
quarter tinS 3 1 H . and tra thng
at half time 21-16.
Outsc:ortng the Titans tl-12,
Ste\'t'M Poi nt held a J4. JJ ad''antlllge by the thi rd quaru~ r ·s
conclwion
In the fourth quarter tl v.·as a
~saw
bilttle "''lth ne1ther
team be1ng ablc to break \()tiM
Os.hltOih ""'ent ahead ...-,th t.,,,.o
mmu tts left, and lhe: Pointers
v.·ere unable to catch up.
Wendy Kohrt's II points led
thco Poi nters with Vic Heltem
and Marcia Engebretson ad·
di nM
10 a nd
nine
poi nt s,
respt"Ctively Marcy Mirman, a
l)omt s ta rter , was lnjurt'tl ea rly
'" the third qua rter and w:u
unable to pa rt icipate in the rest
of the tournnment .
Stevens Poin t took con ·
solo11tion honora Sunday a f·
tunoon
by
defea t ing
Whitev.·ater . .....22.
~ r~
pro..·t'd a great asset for ~
Potnters :u they grabbed J&
rebounds and 11 steals
At halt, Point held a t•·7 lead.
t: \'ery player saw action as the
tea m continued to dominate
play during the sN:Ond half.
Ms. Hellem took game honors
neuing II point., ¥dth Barb
DtichJ and ) ts. Kohrt chipping
1n eight and seven points.
res pectivtJy.
LaCros.se took top honors in
the tournament with Oshkosh
flnishine sec ond .
Stevens
Point's r«ord for the yea r now
stands at 13-3.
Wrestlers wrap up season
b) Tom t-:nlu nd
Pee Wee Mueller wu named
outstnndtng ,.,Testier and the
UWSP team fin ished th ird mthc
Wisconsm State Unh·ersily
Cor.ference t WSUC I c hamp·
ionships at Whitewa ter March I
and 2
Competing in the !58-pound
class. ~lueller ,.,.oo all three of
his ma tches to become the only
1ndi\·tdual champion for the
Pointers Conference coachn
awarded him the John Pete rson
Award for his performa nce as
0
~~r~ttci"·~~i~elltt ~~~~:~di~~
tou rna m<>nt undefeat<'d In eight
conference ma tches and 14·3
O\'erall 'The Port Washington
10phomoreeasllywonhisquarter
final and semi-fina l matches II ·
3 and t t.O, respecti,·ely. In the
finals . Mueller \loon 6-4 o..·er a
River Falla opponent who was
s«ond in both the conferen«
and NAIA nationals last yur .
Muf:ller wu third In the WSUC
a nd fourth In the nationals one
year ago.
" It wu a good match. " said
Pointf:r Coach Rrg Wicks in
reference to the IS&-pound final.
"Mudler 's win wu probably
the ruson he got lhe Petuson
Award .
Two to p not ch
wrestlers were match<'d against
~aocn~~e~n:~h w~d wi~O:~:
1
Trackmen breaking records
by JirnJiabKil
·· 1 thu\k we can make a bid for
the mdoor ti tle. " pr edicted
track Coach Don Am iot. " It will
depend a lot on the injuries we
encoun ter and how well we
come out of them."
tlowever. a large num~ of
lut year's UWSP track and
field team mm1btrs fa1l<'d to
return for lht tll74 season
Am iot aplamed that one
at hlet e
wu
decla red
scholast ically Ine ligible , one
transferred out of the alate
because of his economic
11tuation and one quit to gain
eaperlence .as an aula ta nt
junior high track coach in order
to .Jttain job rderencea .
Another graduated earl ier than
1nltially indicated, one dropped
oat of school becau&oe ol per·
sonal problm1a, and three quit
the team due to personal
problems.
In the opening lnvllatlonals,
several records have al ready
been broken. Pa t Tlmm . a
soph omo r e transfe r , has
a lready twice broken the UWSP
two m ile record with a tJme of
t · l7 6.
fre&hman Jotln Williams also
smashed two recorda, brea.lllng
the old 440 and 300 yd. dash
marks. The sprinter turned In a
best time of 50.2 In the 440 and
32.3 In the 300 event.
" I think the eventa that are
going to produce moat or lhe
pol nta for us this year will be lhe
-.high jump. in whkh we a re
fa1 rl y tough. and the 440, 880,
long and triple jumps, In which
,.,.e ue better than average. "
atatt'd AmioL " And maybe even
the dista nce running."
Senio r Don Tneblatowskl ,
holder or four UWSP records,
has th rea tened his own records
in the 880 and one mile runs thla
season. Trubla towskl has run
the mile In 4:11.9 this yea r. and
has com pleted the 880 event in
1: 59.
Senior Don Trubiatows kl.
holder of four UWSP records.
has threatened hla own records
in lhe 110 and one mile runs thls
season. 'l)"ubiatowski has run
the mile ln 4: 11.1 this year , and
has complett'd the 880 event In
I :59. Both were within two
seconds of hla previous records .
~ l or Ron Lafond hu a lso
ea«lled,leaplng &-I twice In the
high jump. Lalond ea.t'Md all·
American honors Jut year
through a 5-6 lea p at the na tionaJ
tou r namen t , good (or third
place.
TRY
J·~ ~!!~ee5.
DELICIOUS SHAKES!
a .... a rd ..
F ln3\ team s cores we re
Whitewa ter t1 0''2. PlnltC\'IIIe
'P. Ste,·ens Point 86. llh•er t-~u lls
n. l..aCrosse 51, Supt·rror <t7 1'),
Oshkosh 311, . Stout zs•,, and
t-:au Cla1re t71 , .
W1cks sa 1d that r,.,·o racton
that ronlnbut<'d r 101t to the
Poi nter1 ' failur t to ,.,m the
team champ1onshi1- were lack
uf tournammt exper rence and
rnconsistent officiating
" Inexperience definite\)' hurt
us, " said Wicks. " W~ have no
seniors on this team and of the
four who made the finals, two
wert frdhmen and two ""·ere
10phornores.
" All through the tournao.tent
the off1c1als SH:mrd to bto
fa,·ormg one tea m
Whoe,•er
"{as ,.,.resiling that team got the
short end.
Poor officiating
might have cost us sK'Ond
place.
" Pete Doro, in the 11 8 class,
got pin~ in the lint round but
he got some bad calls." uld
Wicks Rick Hughes 112111 . in
his match for third place,
due r ved points he wasn ' t
gf'tti ng. That's what I mean by
Inconsistency."
In the 13-4 cla.u, Luby Sldoff
was defeated 6-5 In his third
match and 5... \n his first match.
Wick s questioned bolh
dedslons . lh• claims lhat in the
former match Sidoff did not get
p61 nts ,.,•hen his opponent sta llt'd
.1 nd In the latter did not get
credit fo r a taktdown that oc·
currtd at the fmal buuer.
Stevens Point's Tom Dobbs
I lUI a nd Warren Popp t i.SO I
tac h won only one of th r<>e
matches. and neither placrd .
Dobbs won his opener 5·2 but
lost 2.0 in his second match. He
wu pinned and eliminated In
the th1rd round
" Dobbs got caught ,.,;th a
simple move and was pinned ,"
~>aid Wicks . " Popp lo::.l his firs t
match but came back to win on
;1 ptn tn a -.·r~ ti cback be{.ore
losing
m the third round."
•-o
" Popp d1d well." said Wicks.
" lie came back In the
,.,-re:stlebacks and got us two
team points lie did his job."
The Pointer heavyweigh ts
were mo re successful as Wayne
ll intz. t lli71 placed second , Rick
Nel pNt ( 1671 third , Russ
Krueger t 1901 second, and J oe
J ohnso n Ol wt. 1 ~ond .
Hmtt lost in th<> finals 2-1
after ,.,·rnnmg his"' first two
matches 1-6 and 11·3 Neipert
.... on on default but lost in thf:
s«ond round 7·S. He came back
strong m wresll<>backs, winning
two mo re mntches 6- 1 and s-o.
After winning on a pin a nd by a
-1·2 decis ion, Krueg<>r was
pinned in the finals . J ohnson
won on a pin and by default in
the first two rou nds but lost ~
rn the finals .
Wicks upressed pleuure at
his team's perlorman« not
only in the conference tour·
nament but all yur.
" These guys have done an
outstand ing job the entire
year," he said. They have given
100 per cent at a ll tlmn and
have done their beat. Win or
lose. that's all you can ask.
They accept IOUoel u men and
come back a nd try just u hard
the next time. I'm very proud of
this team . they a re YOWll and
have a bright future ."
By placing 1n the top th ree,
Neipert ,
Mue ll e r ,
lllntz ,
Kruege r and J ohnson qualirled
for the NA IA nationa ls this
weekend at Ri ve r F'alla.
Swi miners fin ish
with fifth place
byTomt-: nlund
J eff IIIII and Mike Slagle ltd
the UWSP swimmers to a firth
place finis h 1n the Wisconsin
Sta te Uninrs 1t)' Con feren ce
meet at Stout F'eb. 2:1-Ma rch 2.
Wmnmg the meet wu Eau
Oal re with 623 pointa followed
by Stout 343, LaCrosse 242.
Superior t92, Ste\•ens Point t69,
Oshkosh ISO, Pla lleville 117,
1\i ver fo'a lls 65 a nd Whitewater
J5
Freshmen IIIII and Slagle each
placrd m three events and
scored i l points between them
IIIII wa1 strond m both the 200
breaststroke and -100 lnd1v1dual
Mt'dley . and finished 6th m th<>
200 IM Sla gle set conference
reco rd s in wi nn ing th<> 500
fr eeatyle 15 :00.41 a nd 1650
freesty le l t7·23.11.
lie also
placed 4th m the 200 freestyle
11:!123 )
Coach Lynn Blair, ,.,.ho had set
the t<>am goal as third place.
wu pleased w1th the Pointers
performance "I thought we did
real weu:· he said . " I pur·
poadu ll y s et our goal high .
Everything would have had to
be perfect for us to reach third
place. We kept improvi ng our
times a ll year and when that
happens , how can I complain" "
Blair went on to point out the
vut Improvement his team
made over last year.
·· w e
scored 23 pointa lw' the con·
terence meet last yea r a nd 161
this yea r ," uid the UWSP
coach. " We finished fifth this
yea r compart'd wi th lut. a yea r
ago. We have the youngest team
In the conference and thlnp
klolt bright for the future . r {()(lk
eight freshmen and two
IOphomOffti to the con!erence
meet and nine scOred."
Besides llill and Slagle, the
others scoring for Ste vena Point
were freshemn Scott Schrage.
Rusty Jensen, Km Kulliclr..
John Walsh, 0\clr. J esse, Tom
~l c Ma hon and sophomore Da ve
Winder\.
According to Blair, Jeue
oand Sc hrage we r e s till
rttove rlng from recent lllneu
that hurt the Polnt<>rs. Schrage
still finished 9th In the 200
freestyle I I :S4.7) and 12th In the
500 freesty le 15:22.1).
J esse
"''"s 7th m the 1650 rreeatyle
111' 53.1 1
" lla\'mg J~ and Schra ge in
top health definitely would have
helped us." sa1d Blair Jesse
would have placed higher in the
1650 a nd :;oo freettyles, and
Schrage woold have done better
m the :;oo fr eestyle. With both
hea lthy we probably would have
finished 4th."
Je~ was 9th In the 100
backstroke f1 :02.7l and finished
ttth in the 200 backstroke
12 20.2) Winder! came In 6th in
the 100 breaststroke 11:07.6) .
and was 9th in the 200 breut·
stroke 12:311.
Stevens Point divers turned In
the following result.a ; KWdclr.,
9lh In one meter di ving (340.4) ,
li th in three meter , 1221.1 );
Walsh , 11th in one meter 1320.3 )
and MeMahon, loth In three
m~ter C248.U .
Pointer relay teams dld fairly
well as the 400 IM team finlahed
:~:::·:':b!=r=r~:
In 4th 17:43.61, and the 400
freestyle team wu 7th t l : J4.3).
Hill and Slagle will compete In
the NAIA nationa l meet lhla
weekend at Downen Grove, W.
Hill will swim the 200 breut·
stroke a nd 400 IM . SlaJ]e wW
compete ln the 2011, 500 and 1150
yard freestyltt.
--- -
Morch 7, 1974
Intramural playoffs decided
Roeert.J~~:~::::~ntt.led
1M Athltte'1 F~ pat.! ~
lndependfntt ewo. In othr:r
Independent
utlnn,
llle
ltejeclorl do•-ned tM Gamma
lla)'I,73-57. MikeLynott led~
ltejK\.orl ,.·J th 30 polnu,_ The
Cnua l1 oulplaye-d R ~· J
Bum111en, 51-40.
John
K1uiMim neued n pomtt for
the Casualf..
·
The s.o w.s. 101 ~·· Eul
l'o.ntiAowmime,$1-41.. Bl.ane
w,.·itn !olikefitc:her"Utpoinla.
OIIIS<COred 2 W Pray 11·4$
Talenttd~W Prayoutpla)·fdl
Vo' l'ray$4-u Tim Orathhad
H poinu for !he '6"1nnen. In
BI.I!TII<Chsac:lioro,4N defeated
~ N 56-», II Glen t Zn'ol
lkilrllllhad 19 for 4 s. Hyer
II QJI 'II W hammffed t Vo'. l2·
44. btfund 211 pointa by Mtke
thePT'$, 47~ .
Brvc:eCurie"•lllpotnUiedl
S Si.msoveriS, Sima. ~
Tlm Kuhn and Matk Stotbet"
lll'OI"edlpoinlaaplec:eto lead J
S Si ms tO il2·27 ,.·in 'l~er 2 S
Smu
2 E . Wabon defeated 2 W
\lo.abOn »l2. C.r l Gretenlulrdt
Jed2 E . Wataon with 20polnla
Snuth'12N. ~atne~
c:halltnlfOIJW Smilhina44·
J3 ,.ln,,.1thDaleTtmm5c:Ofolll
17poinu lorthevic:ton. Pray'IJ
Glme....uJ ~playft
thelinalunt\Msday,Ma~hl2
The C'OiliOialioro 1•me ,..ill
bqonat i :JII p.m. Thec:ham ·
pionduppmefolloqatlp.m
Ttwonly pmepla)·fd In the
Women outd istance
Eau Claire, River Falls
by nlu• l 'lru u
o.n the milt
lndindual track ilar , Jane
Atbml,took t,.·ofinlli asdle
led hK team to a M<:tlt\'ll!
~kiM)' on a tnanaular m~t .
Sato~nS.ll )' at Eau Claire 1lle
tl .l i. Ktm netc:llerintlle•
yd . Nn,thefour·lllprtilyteam
ofMs. Shoulden,Sue "ZIR!tckorf.
:\lar~ Va ndtr t le and Lyn n
lll'I'~Mind KalhyGntbec:k
l05sedthesbotputfor33' t •,".
Ciao~ on and R,.·er ~·alb 1
1be Poonten captured nine
for.tl mtbtlth·enttAlloltiM!
team mem~n plac:.d '" thrlr
...·enu. ac:c:oniint to Coach
Jud)· T•tc
M1 Adam• took lirsUIIII the
:IO )"d hurdles tlt l. ar.dhiJh
Jump " "lth 1 leap of~ II Other
Poullfln.tl '''f~Karft!Sn)·dtr
-
...
1&:27 1, Shit'la
Sftou.idef'JlntheM)·d. !IQII
hiiiiiK'DI'~,.·creliWS P n. Eau
-
1'\111
Anewf\"mlin,.·omtn'•trac•
Ui ihemile rellly. N s. "Z~Risdorf.
:.11 Fletc her, Det.bie Vtr·
ca uteren and Bn BriettnftJ.dt
took flht wllh 1 timeol4 :1l
0nA)Ifil IO,tiM!Poin.t "omtn
,..,u tr ud to Olbkosh for a
quadran&lllatmeet.
•1-..i.Y~
---
-
------·
-~
~ --,~~-=-. .- -. • --~~·SEt~·
•
lut
loniJhtandSundaynl&ht,.ilh
Camp~ll
lletdlddtled~S .O. W.S. with
U polntt, The CnaMn beat
Allen'• l:tol 's H·31
Rod
NeuvoHei<'OredZ2.nthat • in.
With c:apuln Cruh •Call
Kuphll sco rinl 12 potn\1,
Kuphall's Crutch Kk:ir.en llll'ft
1\Msday
_..... .
F - _-fl.,~~>
by11mS.III•·••. JHBOr\t'a.d
Jo.,. "0o•" l.oomh
Question no. 1 • WIIO WAS THE
ONLY CUV TO CATCII A
TOUCHDOWN PASS PROM Y.
A.. TIMU: AND HIT A IIOME
RUN O~T SANDY KOUt' AX !
~-
J ack ie Jen~tn
b, Kyle Rote
c:. ~lontt ,,.,.·in
d. Al vtn Dark
e
M ic:lr. Tinal~lf
QutiUon no 2 • TENNI S
SE NS ATION BILLIE JEAN
KING liAS A BROTIIER
I' ITCIUNG IN Til E MAJOR
LEAGUES. liE IS .
a . llal Klnt
b. Randy!oloffil
c. Ro)'n-BftTy
d. WayneCnn&er
" · S~rlt.yLyle
QueUion no. 3
PETER
loiARSHAU, IIOST OF ' 'Til E
IIOLLYWOOD SQUA R ES" ,
HAS A SON PU YlNC MAJOR
I..EACUE BASEBAll. liE IS :
a Milr.eMan.hall
b. Pet e Manb
c:. Pctel.aCoc:k
d. Pal&! P090ric:h
e Dave Manhall
Ques tion no. ~
WIIAT
t' .UI OUS PRO BASn"TBAU
COACH PUl'ED f'OR Till::
HRO O KLYN
DODGJ::RS
WHEN BOBBY TIIOMSOS lilT
IllS PA..\IOUS IIO~IE HUN
AGAil\'ST TilE NE:W YORK
(;I ANTS!
a Bill Sharman
b. Dave OeBullchue
c: Alex Ha nnum
d R~lloltzman
e A.!Bianc:llo
Q.of$1>01\10111 ' · WIIATOHJi::CT
IS THROWN OS Tilt: ICI::
II OC KE\'
RINK
EVER\'
~;~~~OPOLtT~S S~TS
CJ:: STt:ll SINCE T il E MIN·
NE SOTA
NORTH STARS
HAVE aEES PL·\YING•
r :
a.
;:
&n~aUoc:topus
~~·bt":lmel
:::k:dc~r
%
~~~~:s~~~t.f~J~~
S
HUNS
LAST
a
Don Zorn scores 16 po ints in inTromuro ls compeTition .
Student enjoys competition
l01>1ball tum at
two
tnnni'P"ff!Konlhftrac:lr.
tum
Other eoll~e aclltf'·emmtt
oncludoo ~~~~~the )lft~~dent ol
PhiSIJma Epsilon, a fratemlty
of•·hothhehut.cenamember
fCN" thrft)·nn lleha.ti aiJO
bcrnonihedean·ltiatforthe
thne Mmflten and spent
the
frfthme~~
Mllbadt, plus Jettmna
''I'm not ll)'lfllt to prvwe
• nylhillltoanybody.l'm j\151
trytq toprvye to m)'Hil tNt
I 'm a ble to compete with
cwcry- else ," 11ld Dan Zom,
,.howubot'nwilhacon&eniW
def~l Hia leftarmtftdlal lhr
~bow f'ormw1~. oblrth
def~lhir.cthii "'OIIIdhmltlhftr
i<llttftlinlile HOW"ever , llllu
not stopped Dan.
Htlmailllnt-la~nht&h
I Chool
ce nlered
.,ound
~lhletkt. Helcuered 111 fOIC!tMU
lllljuiiiOrandleft.ioryursat
llalfbac:k.
lliaHIUOf'yUrhe
w . . ela:tedCXH:aptalnollhe
tum and wu named KCond
team all 'conftn'IICe
He let ·
tered in baah!ball his
50pl\omore, junioralldHnlor
ynnuwell
Ke•u- ·
lttndllllllnt...c:kwithhUi ma,lor
llll:~illll'leiOO,Z20&nd
440 yard daaha;,
Dan placed
fltstilltheC'OI!Jennc:etneethls
)wuor and senior )'U1'11 In thew
:;::Jwt: ::..·~ :::~:;
mcrnbet" olatudentc:ooronl
1111
major
ru1 on
for
enrolllntai Slf'l/er~~Pointwu
tbeenc:ourac-ntbel'fC'flved
fro"" Coacb Do n Amiot.
Anot.hermajor ~ wu the
frindliDeM ol the atudmt body.
DIZI 'IItbletk:~at
Polnl: lac:h.ldea
1t1rtln& rokon
v-••
lhffinlwmeste~""ollllsjwolor
year on Germlll)' throu&J! lhe
Semato>r Allno.llod PrOiflm
Inn 11 •·"'>· onlcr~tcd tn
allolttic ofliciatina
Lut
111mmer. hf olfinated both
ooflb;oll and hardball 1111M
Stevens P oinla ru . l..ut fall.
hfolfinalcd&rl6tKhoolt4&
fOI>IbaUandaduU c:ttylealllf'
bublblll
th r ough
tile
ftec:rntoon DeJW~rlmrru
Aflt'r bavont ctted many
ac:c o mpluhmrnu and
achoevemen~. 01\f bqons II)
,.·ondtr
ho 11'
much
thf
c:on&enollldef«tllubampe:ted
D1n '1 lofe or e-·en olot h.Uif·
fcc:ledolat all " lthaln 'lreally
affrc:ted mc bcc:aiiH my arm
hal al'""'YI been ll'ul ,.-ay,
thtre!Dt f or 'J been ~Iller to
adjt&SibKIIIHoflha! " Vo'hen
as.PCJ,....· othenrnc:ttohim,
~~~t~~·:w=n~
towardthe,.·holelllual-"
DIA Is a leDior najo:oriqltt
pOiJtkaiK>n~ttlndlus!ory
lie •• oriao.nally from Phtllips,
Vo'ilc:OIIda. Dan plan. to attend
la•· "'*'nntfaU,poulblya
school In \he (.,lo:a&o 1ru.
pe rh a p) J oh n Manhall or
Cbic:•&o Kmt.
Poge 13
Super Sports Quiz
fralernoty ln111e u w PS E
aubc:oreSTCso-.n Maril Vo'oll
and DanZom llad 11 pOinU a
pil'(e lor PSE .
The play~l1ame.~n
T HE POINTER
VEAR ~
Ralpb Carr
b, Han• Aaron
c
d
DarTdl Evans
Da~e JohnMon
f' rankBolling
e
Quution 110 7 •
A~'TEk
CAkl..
HAD
CO S ·
HUBBELL
SECUTIVEL V STRUCK OUT
aABE RUTH, LOU GE HRIG ,
J IM.\! IE I'OXX, ALSIMMOSS,
AND J Ot: CRONIN IN n11::
• 193-4 AU STAR GAME, WIIO
BRO KJ:: T ilE STitiNG UP
Wlnf A BASI:: HIT!
a. Bill Dic:lr.cy
t.. l"rlnlr.Croseni
c. Maynard G. J(nt.
d . f'h ll tuzuuo
e
b. Jlm lliclr.man
r;. CI- J - .
d. Tommie A&~
e. Coolr.lc Rojh
Queltlon no . • • EVJ::R'o'ONE
KNOWS IT WAS EARL
AVERILL WII O
BROKE
DIZZV DEAN 'S TOE WtTII A
U NE DR IVE IN ntE UD7 AU
St'AR GAME. WIIO IUT A
HOME RUN JUST BEPORE
AVER IU.. CAME TO BAT!
L
BobbyDoeiT
b. Lou Gehrt&
c:. Babe Ruth
d. TedWilllaml
e. Eno~Siauchltr
Question no. 10 · IN T HE 1960
WORLD SERIES, WIIO WAS
T il E
YAN KEE'S
LEPT·
t' IEI..OEH
WilEN
BILL
MAZI::ROSKI lilT n t E GA.m:
WISS ING IIOM!.:R!
a
b
YosJ
&>ru
llrdor Lopn
c Tom1'res/'l
d. BobSio;iMcr
e. Jollnalanchani
~ion no. II · NAME n i E
OP P IClA L WHO SE:T AN AUTl.\IE IU G II RECORD FOR
C ALL I NG T il E M OST
TECHNI CAL POOLS IN THE
C IT Y
RE C REAT I ONAL
BASKETBALL LEAGUES.
a ;\l""<'y Rudolph
b. Muon Rudolph
c: An Gerhardt
c: MarkLubec:k
" Emmett Aahford
Q.IKtoon 110. 12 • NAMJ:: TilE
I'LAVEit \IIIlO II AD Tilt:
MOST TECIIN ICA L t'OU LS
CALLED
ON
HUI
IN
IIASKETBAU. TillS YEAR.
J:: ITHt:R l:.O'TkAMURAI.S OR
CtTY U::AGUES
a AI Md>uire
b. J11101Giob8J
c
Ru.IIMK~cru
d. Tom llnntohn
lla..-kllomhaiiHr
e
AOI"f't"llo lhlf d oporhC~IIil
t ll · b - RKI'Iardl , tl l · C: ·
Grove: 131 .. . sp.nn; 141 ·• ·
VonnieSmlth, ($1 · b · Jolln1011,
111 d . Weoolherly . !71 · b ·
llauser ,! ll · b · O'Sril. ltl · c ·
Si mmons and Cunnin1ham .
t tll l · b · lleontl, II H · d ·
Ouroc:hrt
DIAM'OND RINGS BY
ORANGE BLOSSOM
KEEPSAKE
COLUMBIA
BELOVED
COSMIC
KAYNAR
IDIAMONDS OUR SPECIALTY'
COME IN AND SEE OUR
DIAMONDS IN COLOR
GREEN - CANARY - BURNT ORANGE
DIAMOND IMPORTERS
CHECK OUR PRICES
-
GR U BB A J EWE L E RS
HI MAI N STI U T
STlYfHS POtNT, WIS. $4481
rHOH I t71 5J )44.71 ~
....
..
•
R.ai~ Kincr
Question no. 1 · THE it70 AU
St'AR GAME 1S MOST NOTED
~'O R T il E COL LISION AT
II OM.E PUTE BETWEEN
PE T !:: ROSE AND RAY
FOSSE . WH O HI T TilE
SINGLE WH ICII ALLOWt:.D
ROSE TO SCORE!
a. WU/Ie Dawb
1
.. . . .
.Letters to the edito~
U!!!.fP
POl NTE R
t-- - - - -
~-:- - - ~ -:- -
I Ask yourself ·.a~ y~u llvmg
l or merely swvtvtng .
MiddleEast policy inequal
~. l r,
l>t'u
f :dllor :
ThcfoUowing is a rebuttal ton
editoria l by J erry Long
C!fltltled "Russia today "
At a ltcture abou t two we-t-Its
ag<'' &1\~n by Congressman
rec~nt
~ -:- :-J ~~v~u~J:>'~ ~~~:on~~::
dt~tphne I and our Middle East policy. My
liM of qlle'Stions characteriud
f by some as mo~e or a lengthy
Educauon IS the
for the adventure of hfe, but
experiences a rc Wldi sciplined
and make lire a hell of a lot
f WO rdS
f A college education is
f ~~~~!~r~~1:C ::~u~~
dlsaertntlon has none the Jess
f actl!tl as a stumull on what
f usually Is an apatheUc student
=ent~ ~v~an~r ~.:;
...on po~·er and goodness f they thought :*•! a well·planned
more fun !
that will prove
I periences
valuable in la ter life . U life Great power tends
.
.
,
be d~rtbed as .a senes to_con~use tt
Ican
o f unending frustrations. the "''lth VIrtue .
Icollege has s ucceeded . II not ,
W uJ br ight>
I line
or quest•onmg on my part
pulalnlng to the so-ca lled
I question
m~:rgycrlsi.s. Unfortunatelymy
and comment per·
I tainlng to our Middle East
1~fa~~~~!J:~~tal failure . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . f:li~m~s..u~~:U~~:'~~~.4
II we Hap
piness IS somethinJ
Ryon 's s Iaug hf er
create in our minds b)1
I ~~~~tc~ o~'f:,~~~~~ness inf
I Trust me and 111 do good f D~~a~t':~peak in favor of a ~~ ~jo";~~t~~t=~~=
was a target fOf' unjust criticism
in an editorial which appeared
m the Feb. 21, 1974 Issue of the
Polntf'r . The artide ""Titten by
-.·ha t appears to be a ratMr
stupid person by the name of
J~rry Long has accused me ol
1m plying that, ' 'TI,e problems
m US fore ign poUc t, especia lly
In the Middle Eust, can be
blnmed on the J e"" ~-" lie j~
on to say in his art lck ~ •• d tled
"llussia today " that logic of
that sort is asinine . If he wishes
to talk about asinine IOfllc he
should reread his editOf'lal.
Aside fr om being inaccurate his
t'ditorial lacks coherency.
I will conctde th.at my
Rmant ics were not. up to par
when I commented on our
Middle East policy. So In light of
that ra r e occasion whrn my
phraseology was Inadequate
and thus misunderstood I would
like at this lime to restate my
position so th~e will be no
question as to where I stand I
believe that our foreign policy
In the Middle East is one of
Inequity. I believe thntthereis a
cer tnin con s tltu~ncy in this
co untr y whic h Is ove r
represented. An exam ple of this
would be the state ot New York.
In Sew York the J ewish constituency 11 rather large. While
the Arab constituency is almost
nonexistent Thus the inequity
emanates. In the article by
Jerry Long he says, " We have
disregarded suffering hwnanlty
at home and abrond long
enough." 1 agr« with him
tOially. That Is why I opposed
the Vietnam War and pruer~ Uy
oppose the Nixon ad·
ministration. I have publicly
sta ted on television that Nil::on
should be impeached a nd that
our men In Canda should be
allowed to come horne. But
somehow peop le like Jerry
Long forget that Arabs are
humans too. Just bee:& use I a m
pro-Arab, which I admit does
not make me Inhumane.
\'ours
J oseph
truly.
Slu ltl~ wk1
you. even if to f ~~~~~:rmo![c: b;h;erryw:;::~
~ou'fd :~er!~~-stu~~t ~:::
l ~ake )OU happy means to One writer lambasted Ryan for
cannot be expected to have any
fo'eave you to )'OW'stl( .
mepUt ude, Inacc ura cy and
musical education. \lo'h y should
- - - - - - - - gene ral incompetence. Or did
only music majors care what a
he ?
The lette r , e ntitled "? symphony orchestra is like? I
"Review Hits Sour Note," says
care, too. I'm , a math major .
nex_t to nolhift8 about Ryan 's
Com pare Ter-ry Ryan the
rev1ew
The nrst paragraph
musician with Music U:&. a
1nsults
Ryan 's
music:al
dass in fundarnen~ls, using the
knowledge and ability , while lhe
common Amerie~ s~nda rd :
second paragraph makes a
money
foggy statement about the
1\yan gels paid to play music
quality of lhe Polutu . What
for us, But we have to pay
ha ppened to the Warsaw
tuit ion to get into 109 to Jearn
Ph ilharmo nic?
Where is
how . Maybe Ftyan was tr ying to
comment on the review Itself?
tell us about the beaut y he sees
I think Ryan wrote an In·
m musk, and maybe he'll try to
.u:re:sting and t.ruthlul attount
t~ll us agam
For free yet
Wha t a deal !
Slnnnly.
J ~ l..an.on
Sulor , ,\ lath Major
f things
~or
f
GRAPES OF
WRATH
DIRECTED BY JOHN FORD
MARCH -11 - (TUES.)
7: 00 & 9:15 P.M.
OLD MAIN AUDITORIUM
FILM SOCIETY
Finding massive 1rony
To Whom It Doet
Con~~m :
I """Ot.dd like to inform the
campw community about the
existence of a course W10f
ficially offerrd
by thl
unlvenlty.
It is known
Where To 1-~ l n d Maulv
Amovnll ot lroay a t UWSP
The course is funded by th
SUPER SUMMER
_,. ·
BEAT THE HEAT AND INFLATION!
I~
ATED POOL
AIR CONDITIONING
RECREATION AREAS
ART' S AND CRAFT' S SHOWS
ALL UTILITIES PAID
HASSEL FREE LIVING
PARTIES
CLOSE TO THE ESSENTIALS OF LIFE
This and more can be yours lor $50 a month on 23
month contract. Sign up now and get the summer off
to a great start . You owe It to yourself lor at least one
summer.
THE VILLAGE
301 MICHIGAN
341 -2120
MODEL OPEN
students and is ~ugh t by the
administration. At the ons-et of
the course. each class member
believes the administration is
the vanguard of progressive
change and the prott-ctor and
e nh a nc er of the student 's
educatio n a l
welfare .
Th r ou ghout
the
tourse,
examples are hammered Into
the class members · mi nd
~lliling the true definition of
1rony Ironic examples used to
date have been .
I A universtty known for ttl
conservat ion program ad vocates the industria lization of
wild woodlands by encou raging
the construction of a road thnt
would br ing development and
urban expansion to an untouched a r ea north of its
campus.
II
S.ld university, bdng
umque in the fact that It
possesses wildlife habitat 10
ciMf! to the classrooms, atrlve:t
to be unique by destroying tald
wildlile habitat to ~reate a lake.
Ill.
Thla lake could not
support aqua tic life.
IV The lake would facillt.te
phy-ed canoeing claues. ~
eanoeisll would not have to
travel a U the way to Mcl)UI
Pond to canoe. "Jbeo lake, bdfl8
clo.er to school would mun the
people enrolled In such phy-ed
claasea for tbe benefit of
phyakal acllrity would not have
to enpge in too much phyakal
activity.
V. An insu.rance company
moves Into Ste-vent Point and
desi re~ a ra.d to be: built for Ita
employees. A public meet1a1 II
hekt reaardlac th1a topic and no
com pany npruentallve Ia
Vl . In an age ol gasoline
5hortages, university officials.
the harbingers of ~hange ;
discourage alterna te tr a nsportation methods such as
buses, use ol one-way slreeta
and not building a Michigan
1\ve . extension, This does not
help the energy problem of the
wildl ife . Specifica ll y, the of.
ficials supporting building of
the road a re the ca mpu s
planner , a Mr. Ray Specht and a
Mr.
Bill
Vlc kerstaff of
University Re la tions.
Mr.
Vickentaff is a put employee
of the ins urance com pany.
Sentry .
VII. At a public meeting
mentioned urlier , those a t·
tending are told by univenity
officia ls that unless the land
north of umpus Is developed,
this university land wU.I be sold
by the polltiN,. In Madison.
Thus, lhe whole question ol
what to do with thls land Is seen
by the adminlalration not in the
Ierma or right or W'f'OOC, but In
the language of poUtlcal expediency .
1be person partJdpaUng In
this course of Irony usuaUy
withdraws from the course
because It runs lndeflldtely.
Said penon then either leaves
Stevens Point, buys Sentry
Insurance
or
hopefully,
cballenat:a
adm inistration
officials and rdu.es to sanction
polld• delriment.al to the true
re.aJOrll for a unlvef'llty- lhe
atudenla, their education and
hope fM po~IUve cha n&es that
are not reoccurrences of ~at
mlat.akes.
.........l
llne. P. .
MA;e a. . . .
-
M.ardaaa .....
Since you didn't ask
__
March 7, 1974
Long replies to Sienk iewicz
"'Jf'"''-'
\n anotboet" p;utoftheP..alrr.
)'OU"illrlndall-ltnotrtbuttal
.ubmi Ued•n~ljiOana rticlt!
In the ~·m. 21. t•m
ot mu•t
t·.-...-.
The thnm ot that
ed•torialwnthatthelln'l&n
pol•t)' dnlinp ol thl' IJnited
Statu
,.·ith
tot~lituian
~~:o •·unmenta
'"'hith opprtu
thl'l t peopla lhoWd be tl'·
•·••alw.ted. lnthateditCN'ial!
attiiHd Mr . JosephSienkltwic:t
altm plyn•clhlt "'Ttleprobltms
•niJSioreippolKy.espeocYUy
on tJMo Middl e t:as1. can be
blamed on tht J e•u ." Thto
omp!Katoon lhlt I lltt\IW Mr
Sltnkii'IO~nol.•s. lbelll"\"l',an
acc urate rendl'rin« of thl'
(Ot!Hq\I~Ofhaill·locic , n
Msta ttdit. lha\'I'IIOinttnlion
~e~~:~~!z·n;;,.·":~ ~r ~'>rem• •k•
In h.alttta- . ~tr . Sotn.kie..·ta.
.. mes ''l'hear!l(:ltiO"rotttnby
,.h.lll ppeantobeanthtr
1111ptd penon by \hi' namt" of
JetTJ"~ Msa~me
st up~dpmplekno,.. ,..ILal
~tU;~ot~~~.
t=·e ~'!:~~·":~
liOnleothtr uancbrd The on!)
Soed-·~e:tmtamonlr lhriJU&h
other rudd ra•·a ib~me;asure
oiJudl;anambogiiiM&J quaht)'.,.
11'111 of p-adt pewnt a•trllt
so..· I ,.·Ill admit tNt the
~,..,.·ecometoanabMiutf'ly
lltUqLR bot of JUIOII\1!1--
aim<nt ..·rthout
p~ralll'l
Areordonato )lr S.tnklf'\lo'ic:l.
lhr Je ..·llh rommunily tnjo)'l
o•·errt"pruentat ion on thl1
n~~~n\1)' .
111t'non " proof'of
th11. heol lt"rs theuam ple of
pract ~e:t-of auign•na snc~Hto
tell>&t'r!CI', L.I' .•tdoesnot•n ·
d~e:ati',.·Mthtrapei"IOIIktor~t
" wn:ort " HOIO·e..·tr. ll lo an
lndocahonola lar•el•twpldh•
Wemayuy, ,.·uh littk ftar Or
""'ll"':ldH:tiOn, lhll a "Uupld"
prnon .... ,n ""' do .... n rn
eolltgl' Whoif'm~ GI'A 1111011
perftct
~ 0.
it is hiJh
mough 10 d1spel the- rliafll'ol
'"~tup1d .. l'l'rholps. ho•••<:"Ver. I
an•"u ptdlore•·tnaniiOI'ti njl
Mr
Sltn koi''"'IU '
!tiler
An)·..·ay. IIM'I'IIl)lhllt r mwbf'
JUdced '"W uptd" ~I)" bKa'*
I !Iappen todiSI&rfl"'"llh Mr
not
~111111'\0"lCI '
hl'l"'
)lr S.t'tlk oro<~etUwftitCC\IM'i
to SUUHI \hat I re-read my
H UCl., Well , I have. And I
rts pect luli )" submtt to Mr
"IUtturatl' and
.. I 1ubmn. on !M
bl!Jos of ~I> k'tttr of rflluttol.
that Mr S.en.lur.o·oc• os oo jud&e
of cohl'rtne~· He .tlould lt!J•e
lhonjli hkr that Ill t:R~~h lh
profes.w>rJ In fad, ht should
rflak e t:nah sh 101 A~ to
Stt"nk iii'WLC1 lhi!Mdo~me re­
~adm& Anr•.-ay. l•·ouJd lokt
IO~IIOIO''""he~hegetstheriitht
m'J<t!ol'l\ttne<".\lr Sol'llklf">'''lfl
admi\5\hlt l wurorr«t inlhr
o(l mply ing ... " f"ro":"lhtre
thor quota tion ltad!t 1nto thor
quocat-intheftnt p>~riCTiph
ufthoJ an~e:lt ll•Uwft a-on
,.·Mthtr or not I'm
•tupod Alido!- from II be111,1 1
hbf'iouiiUtemtnt. ,.·hllartht.S
qlllthfiC"I tiOftltOdtttrmtne !he
IIUpuiLt)' of ;an)·one~ I '"'IU be
!M fintto admtllhat l amnota
'" M' man. nor am I evtn
'.mart "" llut of Mr SiL'nk lewon.
kno ..·l lhltl'molupld. llekno.,.·s
mon aboutmt"lhln ldo Thi:lll
nownallit«''mpltshrntnt•inct
llf' hi$ nevn- mel me
If
>tUpldlly C"ln be ml'llun<i, how
do iOt ;u&lgn \CI]III'S lO ot~ [)o10·e
111
A)
IQ k'IX'I'$• Asodt from
prn.entdaytcepCirilm . .. •lh
USf
ri!jardtotMvalidityaf\hl'$or
~~- 1. tom)" v--lfd&e. 111•'1'
1>1!\'fflllktnsudlatt"SI And1fl
me of
o~l
~llf'ledonat'tutac y , on hiS HI"}'
h!$tpiKf-lhlt\O h;ltlhrard
hlmU) , d•d.onll(l,ha•·f'an
ann·SPmotH:nnJ:IOU
=
.UtOII\al " rSrf,Ott&IIOII "
:.~·.~. fh:~·::n:
ofhLIIC'qLULinlll"""\hatli.M:h
"" onad•qu ac ofos"'
on
~h
SLtn kte .. ln""" pi'LraJ.t'Oloti.) " U f'
quo!•
romrnon
If
)1r
Slf'nk-~erdotf;not-..antto~
=~~~~~~~~~~o~:,~~
!bat lOIII UuptdpfOpii', IOWICI
a ntt·Semltoc and boa:otted
'I"Mrfo osanalbgl'tl'llt says It
oJ bf'ller to rema•n 11ltnt and
thou,ght ~ fool. tllan 10 •P"ak
aloudandr..mO\·t" aUdoubt Wt"
Protective services report
by Kotby O'CoaDell
A man 's
..
lhret~uarter
~,·t =:~: ~~=k~~~~: 1 ~i
The following incidents
been reporlf<! to U¥.SP
rack
near
th t
Mu sic
~~~~~nS:~~~ ·ac-ddent ~1S:m:,ft : 'e Fe~~·
OC"CI#"red in UWSP patkinllot
A on F't b . 20. A li66 blue
O.""olet Impala . right ~•r
fender , .... u dented and
~.;'.ages "''ere estimated at
A benc-h. estimated at
no . was broken near
t he ic-e-ska ting rink
11 parking lot L on Ftb.
"
Tv.-o 2.Pec:e swim 1uits,
tsltmatedot $2S , Wen! taken
from a loc:ked locker in the
IO"Omen ·sloc:ker room oltlwo
Phy Ed Buildillj on Feb. 11.
One 1uit was lime green and
the other was a plnk and
ora nae muiU<Oiored prinl.
Sixdol.la ~wasslolen from
• walld, liken from an
::~~:~~~ :~ w~
floo r
of the
Le a rning
Rnources Cent.er on
Feb. 20.
An anlt'nna. estimated at
no. was broken off • 1973
Toyota Cor olla t h at was
parked In par king Jot P on
F'tb. 23.
Apscapandanairfilter,
estimated at $1. were taken
from a bl u. 1818 Rambler
.,.·M e parked m
"·
~
P on Feb.
tshmated a ! $100.
Where were
you in '62?
The
)t r
lhf.'lll \emtn!Jiw:UIIfnl
"'~''"" \'ork , ,.hichhasala rae
Jtwllh com munity u d' on
"'almost ngn ·e.ustent AriD
rommunoty AreordLn&ly. lh11
constot ultl "" o ~er · rtpr uent ·
at-.'" Somdoow. ot Jftlll$, 101'
aft'to tluniL!hataifn,I!Oror
l"l"pp""''fttllh•·t 11 suppoHd 10
not h~ten Ill Ills ronstotutn<'Y if
\hl'y Itt I llf'ld)' Jewish
pop .. ta !Lon If I '""ere 1
tl!'prftl'fl tath·e and my con·
st otufncy ..·cre largtly J n ·ish
)OUCinhrt>·ourlastiMael lhat
f ..·ou!dbt-Vtr)IIIL'IItiYt"IO
t honas that ..·ou ld c oncern
lira~
Kl'gar dl tu af thei r
rdtl~ bKkcround or ethnic:
orocins.bov.·l!\"n-.l,.ouldDOtt.
. , . . m)
jab
lLI.
f't"JlftRft"
tau•·eif l,.·erenotrHponsweto
m)'C'OOISllt llf'I'OC')' uforu wu
morall>
~iblt
Out of the clea r blue i ky, ~lr
Slen kte ..·oct 111'1,.., the con·
duslon! ha t l fortitltha t"Arabt
ar• humans too'" Sot~~~~« in
nl)" tditonaldidluy lhlt
Anbs ""l'r'l"n 'l hum ans. Not
ontf'dod l uy\hat,.·e .t~ouldn 't
foua .. a)hd·Eas.tpollcrlhlt
'"it fa ir to both Arab and
brad• SOCOIIC1!dldla~
JOKpi'L SiL'IIkin"ic:-t af beinc
mhumane. attllauCh. h)· irn·
ploc-at-. hr xcusn me of lhlt
lalll1 1didn'tf"\'l'llrnl'!ltiontht
Arabs '
AtthrbtJonnlnKaflhllreply
Sienkie10·1n. l uid \hall
to~tr
:::1~.: =.', ":...~ h
i: ~;
1
editoroal SO\\" I Ift thltl,.·u
I mUll apolo&la for
Ja)'onjt thal h11 loa:iC" waa
IJUIOM'. TO IIIII" I qLMllly ,
f"\"Pnlfol"llhl'qualotyafbeinl
ULnLni'. LSIOadmot\hllllehll
lo&ot llwfff01'1! . I apolocia.
Joe. l ..·u ,.·rona. \'oudonot
any ul .. at !oclc : you
~imp!)" hoi•·• ft•IOCiC" II Ill
,.·rona
ha•·•
by Jim llomiltiNI
Nextv.·eek.F"ridaytheiSth.
Stude-nt Govtrnmenl , In
CGOpC"ration ~~oilh the c-ity
derk v.·lll be c-onduc::ting a
Voter Regis tration dri ve on
cami!._U:S· The senalon from
*~d]·~~~~~~f~rll~ ~~~ ti:l
1
as
to lime,
proc:l'dure.
~
;::>
p la c e
I write this letter not
1
and
nee·
cessanlyto informyouofthe
dril·e, but to stress its impot"tai'IC"e . lndtyww-dno. 2,
whkh incl udes the Allen
Center dorm ~mpltx<'S and
the- '• Village," a stude-nt by
the Qmt of John Nev ins is
waging a lloTite·in c-ampaign
again s t the Inc-umbent
Bac-hin1ki. Bachlnskl. yo u
may recall, wn one of the
three dty aldermen who
voted against the Franklin
Slrftt " MOll!."' whic-h WIS a
projec-1. I believe , very
muc::hd~iredbythemajority
or
lhe student body . In the
lllh C"OUnty districl. wh!C"h
ii'IC"Iudes Watson. Thompson ,
Burroughs and Knutzen
llalls. the seat was formerly
held by George Guyant , •
former student. Ron Konkol
IS also waging a write·in
c-amp.algnv.·hichi sto filllhe
vac-anc-yc-reatedbyGuyant 's
withdrawal from the race .
Ronbellc ves,as l do , thatitis
absolutelyessentialtohavt
student rtpresentati \'ts on
both the COWJIY and city
governmental uniu for 00.
\'ious reasons.
l amsurethatmanyofyou
ftt-lthat voting is a waste of
time and that it probabl y
v.l)fl"t make any differ ei'IC"t
anyway . But the nut tim e
you' r e driving around
c-ampu:s , wasting lime and
ps, looking for a parking
place. or the next time the "
JOvtmment tries to put a
road through the north
campus without your input.
reme-mber to kkk yourself
extuhardfornotmistering
and voting. It will m<~ke a
di fference .
Interns face reality
Th e poll tlul Sdenc-t
Oep;irtment is emphasizi ng
formation of intemship5 for
its s tudents , said Dale Uolt.
politiul sd enu faculty
member
There are si x
UWSP political sc-i enc-e
majors presen l ly enrolled.
.. The programs are an
txcellentbridgebet,.·~he
pract ic-<~1 and the academic
v.·orlds .""hesaid .
Convmc-ed that this v.-ork
experience will make the
5Udt"nt s mor t em ployable
a fter they c-om plete their
courte ..w k . lloll said he has
" alwaysbeensoldontheidea
of getting people out of the
dau room to see what it's
ot closs
0)
Page IS
From the president
d!d, l donotl.no>oo· tho:rtMiltJSo
1M IO'OI'k of Jtudtnts II 1
qUHIIonable pr.ICio« And II
Cl'rt:uni )' is no meuu rl'of ln·
THE POINTER
rt:.lly liktlnJovern menta nd
publicservic:t."
Onepolltic-alscienc-tmajor
enr-olled in this prog:ram is
doinJaStudyol the in-$trvice
trainin& program fi!C' both
•·etera n and ne w employees
at the re ~.:en tl y opened
Federal Owrec:lions Institute
near Oxford.
Other s ludcn tsa rewor king
~~o·ith the Centra l Wisconsin
CrimiQI P\anni"' Council.
the Portage County Distrit' l
Attornl!y ond the Adami
Cou nty Social Se rvi c-e5
Department
"" l reallybthC"\'elnthiskind
olthing- alibera l education
should hav e pr ac tical use."
ll oll c-oncluded
(dghtdowntoyou•M,sAmenca Shoes)
~~!~rttt~v~Zt~=:~~~~· ~~~ =~y ~:~~
Ame~ica S;andals Wit_
h straps in an the most strate9ic
locations and dynam•te heels.
·::::~
~
WHITE
NAVY
BROWN
CAMEl
t
Editorial Page
u_.tp
POINTER
UW merger-
Can the marriage be saved?
by l>a,•e Gnelser
The Wisconsin Assembly
gave preliminary approval to
the UW system merger bill
last week . The preliminary
app r ova l came a fter the
assembly rejected a ll but fi ve
of 32 proposed a mendments .
-;J;;ws analysis
l egisla tur e doesn't bu y
luvlng things u Is." lie
lnsh ted th at the north
umpus woodlands must be:
develope-d or lhe legisla ture
,.·ou ld for(e the ••n.lvenlty lo
st ll the land .
An amendm .!nl thnt was
native service in Wisconsin to
a tt end school at resident
tuition ra tes .
Presently the universities
are allo-.·ed to grant resident
st a t ~ to members or the
military service stationed in
Wisconsin . The conscientious
rejected would ha w~ given objector sec tion passed 61·38
rege nts the a uthorit y to after a lengthy debate.
r eba t e tui ti on cost for
· ·we're ta lk i ng abo ut
students c hosen at thei r
An amendment was passed
requiring legis lativ e ap ·
proval before the Board of
~~~t=e~~ea~h :~fs n:~
~~~:~e:~aJ~~ i~tr:C~l~~
8
Faster than
a streak of...
by Dave Gneiler
A large nwnber of st udents, estimated around 100, participated in streaki ng incidents Tuesday nigh t.
We would like to warn all -.·ould be struken !.hat lade-cent exposure carries a muJmum penaJty of lSOO an d a
one·ye11r prl.son sentence.
Par too many students are immature sheep led around by
fads This only confirms the image the public has of the
student as an immature. sex-crazed prankster . Are
st udents un"'·orthy of s uch things as voting and drinking and
only worthy of such privileges as paying taxes and fighting
older people 's wars'?
We do not condone the prudish . Victorian attitudes toward
the body . but doe5 streaking express a healthy atU tude?
Streak if you want as long as you are aware o( the con·
sequences. It may save on goldfish , btf: that appears to be
the only good that will come out of st reaking .
We're coming in
by Dan Cnelser
Att e mpts to deny the
PcMnlu access to information
reached a new h1gh last week
when we were refused admlllance to the Planning
Programming Budgeting
Advisory Committee CPP·
BACI meeting.
Accord ing to Wisconsin
State Sta tute 66.77 . meetings
may not be closed except l or
,..· \ five specific reasons . Th ese
concern personnel matters
a nd land pureh ases . No
closed at the last minute just
because a member of the
press or the general public
happens to show up. This Is
what ha ppened .
How is the Polnier supposed to have any respec t for
those who consistanlly break
the law to hide information
which is a matter of public
record?
A letter of protest has been
sent to the chancellor and we
await the repl y. The Pointer
refuses to be thrown out of
~~~t~~!~all:w~~~~ ~~t~.~~~th~~~~~ ~:::
meeting. The closing of a
meeting requires that one of
these statuary exem ptions be
established pr io r to the
meeting.
A meeting should not be
min is tration ' s , Student
Gover nm en t 's, or any
m ee ting conc e rning the
student interest.
Let th is
serve as a warning to those
who would try .
at the graduate IC'\-·el or
abo\•e.
The amendment also or ·
ders UW Milw au kee to
preserve the campus-owned
Downer Woods, a woodland
area of 19 acr es .
Th is acUon came on.ly oor
da y artu \\1HIIIm VIcker·
staff. repr esenUng the UWSP
admini s tration at thl"
"';\1khl gan A\•e. publl c heari ng,
told s tudent s th a t . " Th e
peop le who for wha teve r
reason refused to put on the
uniform or our country, "said
Rep . Kenneth Merkel <R·
Brookfield ). " It may be
meril orlous work , but should
we give the m tne same
pr ivileges as a young man
have put four lawmakers on who is g<H ng to risk his life?"
the Board of Regents. Also
" Are we going to continue
rejected were amendments punishing our young people
that the legislature review for telling us we were wrong
proposed mission statements <about the Vietnam War )? "
and UW administrative rules.
Rep . Herbert
Approved was a provision countered
Gro\•er 10-Shawano ).
givi ng s tudent s input on
The
assembly
rejec ted an
policy decisions aHecling
student life a nd a section amendment r equiring out-ofa ll owi ng consc ie nti ous ob · state students to pay nonjector s perform ing a lt er · residen t tuition even when
they have lived in the s tale \
for more Umn a yea r .
An attempt to remove from
the bill a possible three·
month jail term for students
who brenk university rules
was ddea ted . The bill sets
pe:lnfied cook..ie from Dcbot max imwn penalties at a S500
Thos e soc ks you ' ve been fine and 90 days in jail for
wearing since the BeaUes students who violate rules on
split up.
Use
your suc h things as property
damage.
imaginauon
1.
Ligh L~ven black
Th is last amendment is
candles dipped in lemonade totally r idiculous . There is no
and sodi wn phosphate a t reason thot such a crime as
around midnight. Va mpires property damage could not be
tend to avoid idiots .
8 Hide a mirror in has tried under existing laws .
underwear . This won't kill There is no need for UUs new
law , yet it is inc luded In the
him .
He won'L die from
s eeing h is r ef lecti o n ·· proposed merger bill .
Thus far , we have seen
va mpires never check their
underwear for mirrors . But noth ing that wo uld e nd
Cen
tr a l Administ r a tion 's
after a rough day spent
cha s ing folk s a round the favor itis m towa rd the
under brush . a ll that cracked Madi son and Milwa ukee
glass Will irritate the hell out campuses . The funding per
of him . IThis is especia lly &tudent Is far from being
effective when used wi th equal. Many poinl5 in the
merger bill are good and
method No. 21
9 . Pour a pitcher of icy beer wor thwhile, but ir s ome
down the front of his pants . things a ren't Cha nged , the
For some reason , vam pires marriage of the WSU and UW
Ond t.hU very uncom fortable . systems will be a bad one.
10. Qulin him to a camel Write those s tate legislators
who 's walking around In now .
ci rcl es .
II. Get yourself a denti st
EDITORS NOTE: The next
ou tfit , look deep into hi s Issue of t.h e POINTER will be
bloodshot eyes and s ay , March 14.
All makrlal
'i'hose incisor s have got to submlt&ed for pl&bUeaUoa lD
go !"
that Issue must be n bmJUed
n~ ese a re all methods I to t.he POINTER ofRce by
have u.sed effectively . U you Friday nooa. March I .
know or anv others that are
Remaining luaes of the
s uccess ful. let me know . PO INTER wU be prin.&ed 011
Together . we will make this the followta a c1at.es : Marcb
world a sore spot in the 14, Aprtl 4. April t5 ud May .,..
memory of the living dead . %.
discretion .
Several a mendment!; were
rejected that would have
given the legisl a ture more
direct author ity In the policy ·
making powers or the regents
board .
One amendment would
Point blank
by Bob Ham , Jr.
Gone are the good old days
of wooden stakes and silver
bullets . The crudity of those
andent methods has made
the m obsolete. Nowadays. if
you wan t to get rid of vam·
pires. you have to Ond a more
sophistica ted way of doi ng it.
To aid you in this endeavor , I
have provided be low , a
comprehensive list of ne-4'
techniques .
1.
Staple him to your
mother 's only child . If your
mother doesn 't have an onl y
child , she's in trouble . U you
are your mother 's only child ,
you're In trouble . '
2. Hide his calamine lotion .
Although s unlight doesn ' t
really kill vampires. it does
give them an awful rash .
3. Steal his balcony . He1l
ei ther fall to his doom or
learn how to turn In to a bat so
fa st it11 make your hea d
spin .
4. Tie garlic nowers around
your neck . This old standby
will make vam pires keep
their distance . · U will also
erfectively repel Insects, bus
~~e;~y~~es:~~~~e~~
of you .
5. Tie his cape to an im·
movable object.
6. Get yourself a charm . A
crucifix will wo rk but
honostly . that 's so square .
Try something new-en old
bicuspid. A bronzed dwarf. A
The Student Norm
j
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