' POIN TER .

advertisement
'-
uw~p~------------~
POIN.TER
SERIES VII, VOL 18 UW·Sttvens Point, Thursday, September 5, 1974
NO. 2
Lafollette attacks Burnstein-
Senator Doug LIFolleHe (otondlng leH)
telks with students Cindy Sweln, Tom
Wojcleeh-skl and lyle Updike.
01 the inside:
Olildeo
F€at...re-Poge 2;
• Lhiwrsily Services undef
David Coker-Poge 3;
So..mmer OienfolionPoges 11, 12, 13;
Next week's feature:
Plonning ord Analysis
undef Elwin Sign<rd
1blaheceDrn.r.U.Uolar&tiU.
heart ol• d*:ken embryo, !. m.aplf\ed,
12.500 l1m4l .,. thl ekctroo mlcraKvpe
ii!IIU.CNRbuJJ4q. Set ftatureOIII)IJ!t
"·
=-----Tc~l;da's ;;~g;a~· fills gap others miss
2
:..:::Poo:::...;•
~y Belly Oentk•nl•l
Ac:hild lyingon lhenoorof
the Grid can aute e:~­
ci tement Some t imes a
distort.ed piCture multi when
the Kent is
b)'
unlr.nOII>,n&students
Te rr y Ha r pe r , lludent
manacer. obloto·ed the in·
c•dentand helped to clarify it.
" I wu aware of what was
happenina but others • ·n-e
conf\IMd Some of them may
···lne55otd
havefeltthechild~~o·u belng
nqlec:ted or abused, but this
~·aan't tn~e The child was
from the OIHeda Institute
and the behavior waa being
watched althou&h maybe not
ap pro ved o f by h is
therapt.sts,"saidtlarpu.
Besides the emphasis on
In tM m•dsl or all '':;
:~n~~:r:;.~': :•: ~= ;~::.::~~~~ :Z~~: ~!:"i:
~~~~\~:.!nii!a~mv~~~ ::~~~~:::.•',!l~ndth:~~~~~~ ~:~~~~:~~~so~~~ :~~r.c,~ tob;e~ut:;~~r:i
!r::~.t~~~=-: :E~~~~:~~s ~. ~?~~~·~?~~~ ~:~;?J':~~1:•
:':,;.~1;":~\~l~~~~~~: ~o.:;f;~ 1 ~ ~1l~~~~ :.n;r fun.·· ;:,hu;ol~r:•:ht ·~=bl:e ~=~ y~~~~b =~
~he~:::,;~al~~t ~~~:!s u;::,~~~~~aur locll!~~ ~~!,~~~tion ovtrOMin ~~~ ~lbh~~;~o'!~~
1
the•r spertftc medtcal
oncampusdiOr'm~~~~
d
Uowl"\~ tblltd:l ma y be tMpremitaWIIhin attrl.1 1n
~~:!~:S:tf~::-:r~~--~~~.::ee,:rr. -~w~ .:,,k for~ to~locate. Qlfnntly, ~~reni:?:"aC:is ~~~~~t'ua~~Y
h;l\·~· t bee:n seHI«i )t1 ,"
said Paul Kt'lch , dirtctor 1.11
Budget Plann ing and
Anai)'IIS, !lousi ng
ThUIJ , Chileda may havt 10
tl! loc:ate a nd poasibly build 1n
c hildhood di .!ieases or
•llnesses. flu , colds. sore
thro:~tl. etc ··
Whe n ~h e bas1c testmg
pr?Cess tS. c:ompleled. the
child Is ass1gned to CWle of the
~~i!,~'}:~~t:r c~~:;::/!~~
~;~'t!e~.l~ f~~n~;·~!
1
01~1~or e~!al:~lor.::ro~ ;:~~h:n:=g,.:S :,e•!
cominc to Chileda. many of
these chlldrenmayhavebeen
babied because of their
1\andlc::apJ. Inordertobrealr.
through to some of theselr.ids,
some degrH of dlac\pline Is
nec:tssaryat times "
Ray Heidel , a UWSP un·
de.rgradua te in psychoiOIY
and emplo)'ft a t Olileda.
provided some insights, " A
lot of t«hnlqut1 I learned In
psycholot.Y dau got thrown
out the window. There are no
sett«hlliques. Amajorityof
the children have medica.!
problems in addition to thdr
handieapt To And an d ·
fective treatment , 1 try
loolr.\ng a t the si tuation
through the lr.idl' eya"
"Our whole aim is the
one-to-one basis.
"In the beginning we tried
an orientation procram for
ou r em ployees , but an
orienl.ltion program didn't
worlr.. There are no available
recipes on how to worlr. with
lhesec:h.lldren. We found the
best training for our
therapists is to get down and
worlr. with the children ,"
ellDiained Don Heidel.
director of Social Servi«t
at O\iled3 .
" When lgetanewpatient, l
try first to build a relation·
ship : then the teaching
process can begin.' ' uid
~!frren
dergradu;~t.e
ne!: ~~In~;!
comefirstwilhus. Weloolr.at
t hem as c hildren with
damage s rather than
damaged children ,'' said
Rayma Oitson, e:~ec:utive
directorotCbileda.
Olileda worD with a wide
var iety of c hildren . The
license granted by the
Wiscons in Department of
Health and Social Servlttl
1umm a rile s t he casell
Olileda may handle
O.ileda accepts childTen
who are by definition
"developmentaUy disabled,"
more speclnc.ally, children
who manifest cerebral pals)'.
:f.!!~l':!
0:,
v~:,.co::
tr ibuted t o neurological
imp~~lrmenta from the age of
aix ID fi&blem.
111ete are no geographk or
reliJI- barriers to being
~Ca"pted . The child's care Is
p~~id for by the child 's home
or Sl.at.e Division of Family
Servkes and the fee is set by
the Wisc~ln Family Services.
Jo:mpha111 on the ctuld 's
care is revealed by Olileda's
schedult. Ollleda operates%4
houn a day . seven days a
week . It opera tes on a threes hUt basis . Suc h dose
AJper Yisionofthe:rlchlldren
req ui res ciOR to 70 employees.
ca~~wi;t'hi,;;'~~!.loc:
batteryolteslltodetermine
as weU u h.an·
dicapl. Cbileda UHI various
fadlitla forltatesll, thtRice
Oink. The Marshfield C1ink.
St . Micbael's Hmpital. the
Communkatlve
Dborden
fadlilift on campus, all in
adcliUon ID ill own staff
hU ablhties
..........
~:'~~~ ~~~~
th:~s~ U:reenv~;s;en~
co,·er future c..ts.
i
•
Our whole aim is the children
and helping th em-Heidel
scope.
~~~~il~:~ h~~!~ fi~!~
limited program s may
n.eglecl. Here we take in th011e
childrenthatotherprosrams
may _ ~eject..'' explained an
adm1mstrat1veJt.aflmember.
Hanson abo worD at trying
Olileda•trivlfll onward alld
upward and nevrr &ivmc vp
Commercial use invades privacy
::t~~:~~:!: !!io; 'leaders
~~ u J'e~'t"Yc:~~rnment
at UWSP
a
Ha~WGnhasbeenatCbileda
::;iitn~sr;:,~~~m;ia:r•f"!~s
~ ~':'!i1~nt ~h~t~':a~:·~f
8
SU'JCe ill begi.nni.nc . She WJS
also involved in the one-year
program ot Oitaoo. wbkb wu
created from a oae-yur
arant to St. Mic hael 's
Hc.pital that expired ln 1m.
O.ileda was an outgrowth of
t he year program , but
became much blager in
~;r~tu~ef{h th~i!!'s~!~d~
E oo:J~e:s~~~t~~~ ~c:uf~~
or graduatts.
Dennis Coolr. , a gndu.ate from
UWSP, with a de&ree in
aeography and sociology,
wotD with two of the blind
~wlr. . 't try to get them to feel
at ease with their en Yironment. 'Miatisoneruson
for the wa llr. s and Interminclina on campus," ,.id
Coolt.
Alq with work.lna on the
bask mot.or t.ltllls some of
the children re~e iv e the
f\ldiments ol reading and
math. One ol the full -time
teacben is Karen Hanson.
" We have di!Cided to silly 1n
Stevens Point . We like the
locationandalltheresourC'f'l
ovallabletousllere,"said
oneoltheadminlstrati\·eslaff
CUrrently, 0\iled.:a hasn't
any voluntee r programs
" Volunteer ser vices ha\'e
been limited due to tht
rd~~Sfd
\hce · Prt Si d e nt
Barb
Stltf va lfr outlined the
"mlmmde<:ISion " reaclledby
studmlleaders
Tlletnt'mOu•dthatwhena
lludent g1vts address in·
kx:al banlr. acceu to student
ma1ling h1ts Jut monlh
because they said the ust of
student ftam~ and addl'eues format•onto~uNvtrslty , it
for commernal 111t1 before •• pres umed to be for
~ubliut!on of the fall
un••·er1o1tyuseandUiereisno
directory ll "an UIVISHin of 11m1lar presumption of
pnvacy ''
mtttuli usw.~ee " Yo'e do
OlanceUor Lee Sherman not see ourselves Studeat
Drerf'-- approved Ule reftaal Government as h.aving the
althouJh he said he thoudlt nght to g1ve the student
St udent Government 's malhllJ! I~ to any person,
po6itioa Wll WnM'Ig He saKI orcan•ullon or business
that he thought that Student ouwde the wuversit7."
Government should be able to
As an alterqt.IYe to fl'ft
make ~ ~ions and dlstr1butM;Jn of mall10g lists;
then hve w1th the con- tht mtmo suuested !hat
KqUCII«S.
firsc . a cornm11tee of student
lfiYtmment be esl.ablished to
Otizeru National Bank o1 rev1ew all mai ling !I t t
Stevens Point requested the ttquests , second,prior tollly
mailin& lists to publicu.e 1 non -un1ver~ty mailing , the
!!!!:ui!, ~:::n:~~~~i'J.:;IJ
!be semester The even! was
W be co-sponsortd by the
University Aclivill~ea Board
tU AB l andthemailings were
to be ll."f(i for advance 111 •
vita tion:s W the event and to
::.~~',:'~,ie~ ~~~~~~:: ::r~fc~f:r !(~~nt!ank•ng
=~~:;:.~'!, ;c~~ t': le:J:!en1~id ~heYYer:a:en~
=;_c~~~m'."e~tlon,
then to =~::~:~da~~~~bu~ ~:~
l u.setheDisllrapprO:Kh itudentmaihnglisllbecaust
~isbo:' :a:or:~trr::t~!, ~cowr:mi"~~=;':1
apprcach than the former thenama
pr ogram we used The
studenll are allovoe:l ID teach
In a memo to the c~ 1 ,.
each other at lima.. We abo cdlor. Sl!Kient Government
~~~~-of,'.;~11~~ President Lyle Updike and
•
the Pol•ter : third . op ·
jiOI'tUNiy be provtded (Of
eac:h student to remo••• 1111
name from !he hll aad
::'~~·~~::~~t~·~~~
by ur~~versilyempJO)·eesand
sent by the university
The memo also aald tlllt
UAB, as an oftida.l un••·en~tr
oraanltalion, would 1M thr
mailin.:llsllfOt"promobOntl
the fr i sbee t oss
Milr:l: Harper, a form«
student at UWSP. and thtll
pubUc relations director !Of
Cl tinnt National Bank .
called Student Government's
Relaldec:lsion "~rbltrar)' and
caplicioua." Harper s.:nd thr
dtdslon would be an •n·
convenience to UWSI'
atudents left un infor med
about free banlr.lng lt!f\' JCtt
~of thell st btpubl ishedln avallable thls fa ll .
~~~p~
to~
m~
~~'-5~·-'~9~
74____~T~
H~E~P~
O~
I N~T~E~R_____ Poge
Coker head of University Services
by.Wuyaeadeanlng
Thue are changes t\·ery
semester.
Some cl\anges
appear smaU, others seem
big.
One of the more
widespread changu that
occ:urrcdthis fall on campus
was lhe str eamlining of the
UWSP administration.
Before tbe change UWSP
hadthreedlvisions ; currently
it has two. Heading the po$1
Of Vice Chancellor for
Academic Afrain; is John B.
l:llery. O;wid Coker became
the assistant chan«llor for
the Unh·ersity Services ,
.,.,'hkhisacombinallonoftht
· old division of Student Affairs
and the old division of
Bus1nns Affairs wl!.lch was
form~ly headed by Leon E.
Bell, Jr .
Uni\·ersi ty Servic::es in cludes a ~~~oide variety of
divi sions from custodial to
food ~rvice . placement to
payroll and orientation to
ins t:~llmftltbilling . B«ause
of the diversity. Coker U
towards iiO '' integrtltM appro3C:h ."
$ lr1v1ng
··one advantage Is that
C\'eryonehasbeenlnvolvedin
their respecth·e areas before
and it's just a matter of
re.alignina thing.s. In this
respectitislitethellr"'O"t
study program which is a
juggling opeution . In "''Ork
studyprogramsthey striveto
coordinate the student 's
inteTestswiththeavailable
jobs, " u.id Cote!'.
As Don Hosie. head of the
con trollerare.a u.i d,"l leel
more comlo r Uble with
c~nge because the people I
wock with on a d.ay~o..day
basisarenowuncler onehead.
Having the Unive r sity
Services under one vice
chancellor makes a closer,
mort! coordinated unit ."
Aiding CokeT in ac hieving a
mort coordinated effort is .
Adolph J _ T o n ewsld ,
assistant to the Assistant Vice
Olancellor. "In a position
''-·
spring.,·hen lwas.,'Orktngon This decision was due in part
the freshman orienta tion to a dec reased enrollment
program I realized that about thus making more rooms
\OOOstudents over the age of availab le so that Fred
25 attend the university .
Lealgren,hcadofstudentlile
There is also a number of services, could make the
handicappedstudentshere
change in the housi n g
These facts set me thinking program.
about the non-traditional
students attending the
unh·ersity and how we should
Altogether Coker has five
prepare for them .
For areasundtrhlssupel'\'ision .
uample.onestudentwhoisa Thcyarestudenttifeservices
establishthealumni &r~ .'' pnraplcgic had a class
under f-'ted Leafgren which
scheduled in Old Main. but i~\udes Housing, University
Old Main hasn't any ram ps
whichallow forawheelchair Center, food service ,
togetintothebuilding .. Sowe discipline prllblems, heal th,
mo\·ed his class to another counseling, and Student
buildingsohecouldattend Government; co-cun-icolar
the cla n .
Under th e
reorga nization I am able to
talkto Hiriam Kfebs,headol services headed by Helen
general SCI'\'ic:es, about the God fre y whic h includes
need for ramps and better admissions , re gistration ,
access on campus lor these
students, more easily than ori entation. financial aids,
before. Nowwehaveabetter Programs ltecogni'l.ing Inopporhmity to combine our dividua l Dete rmination
knowledge of the student's
needs and then to solve through Education I PRIDE I,
them."
and foreign students olnces
or prog rams : public and
Other programs which alumni Sel'\'icts under the
demonstrate a more coor David Coker
dinated effort between the di r ection of Leonard Gl bb
The coo r dinated effort
Accessibility is another various divisions under Coker which includes recruitment,
applies not only to the ad- thrust of the program. Not, are beiq implemented on a lumni , placement . conministration but also to the only through better com- campus. Clot of them is the fere n ces and p a rent s
adm inistratioa's program. A municalions between the checkpoint.
concentrated effort is being publicandadmiNstr.Jtionbut
programs or offices; conmade to bring off campus alsobetweenthestudentsand
"Cll..<:kpolnt was a coor· troller headed by Donald J .
people back to the university . administration .
He len dinated program . It made U Hosie whose duUes cover
Godfrey. head o f co- easier to lind out those acco unting. installment
"We need to be-ing off
campus people such as those ~~~~~arnse~~de'~tn~~1ri! ~~fn!t w:c~~W~~~ billing. c.dhler and payroll
in the judicial, governmental si nce the reorganization.
this fall from those who officu: and Hiria m Krebs
and other proleuions .bere
didn 't. Before the checkpoint ...no heads the general ser "Now that the Stduent we had no way of knowing vices which include m_a!n·
and let them see what is
happening on campus. This Services is in room 104 of the this inlonnation because we tenance, custodial, facihhes
includes the parents who are Student Se rvices Cente r didn'thavethlscent ral point . manAAement, central stores.
involved for two reasons. Clot instead of the second floor of Although there were some
reasonls~auselheyare Old Main, the student traJ}ic timing problems, lilr.e the purchilsing, communication
taxpayers and the olher is if has lne~e~ . Our locahon backlog of people on Sunday, services, heatina plant and
•theyhavechildrengoingto makes 1t eas1er lor students 1 still fed the program was a protection and the aec:urity
school here." said Cok.ef .
:=~ i~n:.....~~~- ~~~~ success ."
and safety operations.
Echoiqtheneedfor closer Godfrey .
"OUr goal now Is to an ·
ties with the public is Ltn
An example of the opAnother exa mple of ticipate where ovtrlaps wi U
Gibb, hu d of public and portunity for better com- utl li:r.ing the information oc'cur.thentointegrate
the
program even more so
alumni soervices , " I feel we munication between various avai labletothevariousareas
need public and a lumni administ r ative
divisions is the idea of providing that we can provide the best
sel'\'i«S. We must follow the "''hich will aid the students privale rooms on a larger serviceforthe student,"said
e:umpleofprivatesehoolsby was cited by Godfrey. "Last scale than in previous yean. Coker.
like Coker 's there is such a
.,;de variety of art!as to be
covered that one penon
couldn't handle all the inves tigation him se U.
An
assistantcanhelpsupply the
needed body of knowledge to
solve the problems of the
\'ariousoperationalsel'\'i<:es.
reaching out to parents ,
alumni. foundations and
faculty . One of my pUTpo6eS
istocrt!ate friends, funds and
freshmen . We must interpret
an academic blueprint for the
alumni and parents.
To
accomplish this we need
CQIISI;~nt input , meeting5,
mailing .lind .lin on-going
program of contact plus.
perhaps,.llsociaJ thrust such .
.liS homecom ing to r e-
Commuters can save
$100,000
A syste ms analyst
estimates that 5oOO commuters
to UW'SP during the 1974·7S
academic year can save a
tota l ol S\00,000 by participating in ear poola.
Jolin Sundsu-om made the
prediction after completing a
study ol a computerized ear
pool.lna s}"'tem he is coordinatina lor summer sessioa .
Approximatdy 411 penon~
were matcbed for the curn-nt
eight-week se:!llion.
"What'a remarkable about
these people Is that through
car pooling we a re collectivdy saving tbem dl'lvlnc
about UOO miles evuy day
(an average commuting
distanoeeol28miles)."
U the aver~~e gu consumptioa run~ 15 rnl1es prr
pUonforthec:arsbelna;~
3
bythe40persons,poollnghas
then saved them a tota.l ol
S,IMO gallons ol the fuel this
summet" whlcb, at the going
rate. is worth more than
$3.200.
lntermsolmoneysavedby
eac h ol the students, SundsU'om puts that figure as
182.36.
lbe systems analyst, in
~~~"\e~?t"'':.
n:;,. y:::
prices will spur gr owing
interest in pooling. Last year,
approximately aoo atudenta
commuted from more than LS
miles to the un.ivenlty to
attend claues.
"Because this number
rtpruenta a aize•b l e
.egment ol our i ..titution,
and in view ol the fact the
metl)' crisil has unhpdy
arrec:ted them, unlike \ho5e '
who stay In dormitories or
live closer in , we now pl.an to
make the compu teriud
carpooling program a prr·
manent service .llvail.llble to
all studenb, faculty and slaff
without charge," Sundstrom
reported.
"U we c:ould help 500 people
get into these poola 5\artlng
thisfaU ,welm! talking.Jbout
a S40,000to$50,000savingsto
~!!:~.~.r~c:;/ct!d.ts
per
Penon~~w!U slgn up for the
service at the information
desk at the Univtnlty ~nter
after the fall term bell.. and
the computer wW be fed the
dala to spefl!lly match
pe:I'SOOS ewnilll from the
same area at approximately
theaametime.
Pelet' Alldenon Ann Winkel and Barb
Ellil regitttt t.o vote. Student CooteTnment Vice President Barb Stiefvater
said that oveT 600 new people register-ed
to vole.
THE POINTER
September 5, 197-4
Democratic candidates appear on campus
by Kris MMm
The four men vying for the
Democratic
party 's
nominatloa for the office of
state a ttorney general a ppured IO&elher Sepl. l in a
public forum at UWSP.
The ca ndidates runnlna in
the Sepl. tO primll")' are Stale
Rep . Anthony Earl of
Wausau ; Milwa ukee At ·
torney Thomas Jaco bson,
who was the DemOttatic
candidate for the ume office
four yean ago; Ma dl aon
Attorney Bronson LaFollette,
who heldthepost inthe 1960's
a nd Sta te Rep. Edward
Nacer, o( Madison.
LaFollette , who becan
publiC: aervlce In 1962 11
asai1tant U . S. attorney for
Western W"IIC:OI'IIin, elected
Wlse:onSin attorney cenn-al
in 1!164 and re~Jected in 1966
a nd c h airman of ~)'l,e
President '• Contumer Ad·
visor)' Councillrom 1967-1968.
said that the voten should
"r-et urn the people's lawyer
ONLY 4 OA YS LfFT TO
YAK£ ADVANTAGE OF OUR
BACK TO SCHOOL
JEAN SPECIAl
AT
Er-zinqer's
PANT TREE
OVER
3000 PAIRS TO
CHOOSE FROM IN
Sb:•• toFU
Men 27 to 311n Length• to 31"
Gall Slzu 31• · 15111
Properly Tu Relid Act
to t h e State Alto rn ey ,.,-hich
ra ised Income
General's Office"
~ l lglbility from Sl,750 to
LaFollette listed as ae: ·
complishments du u ng h1s S?,OOO and got lht State
yeanasAttornery~ral
~
JEANS IN STOCK
rq~ardlessofwea lth , raee
ot
must rema in indeptndent
lie said that It cannot be ~n
ad.junc: t of the govtr nor"a
office, but must be frf'e
willi ng, ready and able ..;
lnvestiple.
Nager laauppor ted by tht
Wisconain AFL·CIO, the
Wiseo n a ln
Education
As5ocialion, the NFO Alld
Wisconaln Farmtr's UnK:W~
Wi sconsin Reso urce con:
servation Council and tht
Wisconsin Women's politic&!
political in nuerw::e.
J acobson aa1d that th e
ht~~o-ouldn'tneedonthejob office of Attorney General
trainiqand that il is tht should be held by a person
"best evidence of a man 's 111·ho is eoneerned with the
office and "not a politician
qualifications."
~~o·ho wants to use the om~ as
Slate Rep. Earl is presently a stePJHfll stone 10 a h1gher
majorily leade r of the office."
Nagerhasaervedas a St.ak
Asiembly . Earl is a strong
During his years 111 lrial llep~talive for 12 yurs
critic of the Dept. of Natural lawyer. Jacobson won a was a n Aalstant Districi
~~c ~ ~~~ ~ ~ ~n: ~~ ckcision In the U.S. Supreme Attorney for Dane Counly
past experiem:e meant that
Caucus.
1
vironmental
Protection
f::':~J!j~~':n'~O:i~~!:,~ ~~:;;'uJ!. thec:m~:
~a~·i:h ~~~~~~ ~~~~:sr:.~oc:o·~:~~ ~~:;:IillO:. ~~-=~
Earl was the author of money u~ed by in\·esting llou.sing,and a mentber of the
m a jor 1973 · 1 97~ e n - t.ax and _tnsurance escrow Veleran 't Education Counc11
~~:nn:n~!.!~~~u~~:~~~ ~~~!e~~~ brh:o~~;r:~ an~~~n~~ ~:~~;:~~
Lake Rehabil itation, Ihe
Oean Water Act and Po-wer
Plant Placement.
Eari'a philosophy is that
lhecoruensustSnotbadand
that compromise Is 110( a
di rty -..·Of"d. He uid that at
ti mesitisne«sU;ry
te;i':r~, 1 !:!o
:::0th!~'::~:~
He won a new
pm1shment taw 1n the U.S.
Supreme C<U"t , wiMing a
landmark cons umer ease to
pr otect p ayc~ec k s from
;arb1tury IC11 ur e : a nd
punued clllU action suits to
r«o-.·er illqally ucus!ve
1nterest chargesonrevolvmg
charge accounts.
~~o·tte aaked about the role o1
the stud~t eon«ml"l lhl'
amount or law the t hKient 1s
subject to beyond civil Ja~~o·
~FolleUeNi dthatln l967
or 1961 he was asked to study
that question. He said that an
off campUi t ludent islubject
to the civtl a uthorities only
c a mpus
~n~ lforCon5Umtr Arfairs
But , ifaerimeiseoncemed
1nStVri1seonsm from 1~· 1 968. with only the university. thl'
ta~~o· allowing ~~.J'~~~~r~~t':'n!; ::J!on~i~ ,:.':,_e
klc~ g~·~nmenll to hel p
=~~~ ~~enai£'~~~!!;
ckange In the llomestod
THIS COUPON WORTH
$1.00 OfF ANY REG.
PRICE GUYS OR GALS
;!:~~~~.;: ::~t= ~ ~huJ;!uc::~=m~
h::;,:.
Nager Nid that the ollie~
as leadingthefighttoeon·
se r ve Wisconsin's na tural allow those fon:ed into early
resources forthebenefit ofall retirement to receive full
state residents : concentrated ~fits.
J.lcobion. attia.l lawyerfcw
efforts in protectin& con·
5Umersandacrackdollo·non the past 12 years. Is eon·
sec recy in go\·emment to ce rn ed abou t th e la w
protrctmgeveryone
equally ,
protectthtpeople"sriilhtto
.......
t.oaFoUeue stated that his
office of Attorney Gtneral·
theover-allcrimina l uprc"t
agencies under the depart:
ment and the public ln.·
I
ther:t!r~~r~a!se~~C:,t~ ~:Jt~ati:~~~~ Ia':!~~
~.!~":..,;:.;.;,':':.~~r.t,
UWSP to host debates
UWSP will host debates
Accephna invitations for authorities.
~;:,~:r tf,!~~~~e!m~~ ~7 ~~atSt'u~e~ 5ro';~~ po~e~ ~~ u~:~:;
~~s~~~~C:t:::~io~e
~~nc~~~at~~j::. Ui~: ea~::!:
~oold
ballot in
In addition , fiCIOI.lattons
are undn- way for
third
?ebate which ~~o·ould 1feature
mcumbent Gov Pat ric k J
curnbent Democrat and his
Republican ch ail e nger
Thomas Petn , currenlly ~
IJI I:mber of the State Senate ·
GOP opponent. Wilham
formtr mayor of
seatcontmdn-s. DavJd Obey. legis lature giv es lht
Nager Nld
lhal
thl'
~:~~ty
by law
it isuntil
diffiCult
1. .
~~~~GOO~O~T~HR~U~S~AT~.,~S~EP~T.~7~~~~ ~~~"~Y·~·~O.=m=«~'~"·:•:od~h~aj~~d~'h~d~;·
~"~"~<oo§greS!ioo~
~hned "1~r:ti~~~~~~~
Republican opponent
ELECT
ROBERT
FULTON
RESISTER OF DEEDS
DEMOCRAT
PORTAGE COUNTY
- ·!!!- -
·
that he
have to have a fuU hearing to
present the evidence and thai
11 ~~o·t~~.dd by " the bell I could
do before-the-fact ."
Nuclear power has a plact.
u id Earl . But, he addtd. hl'
bo "not~atlafled we ought to
be building plant a unlit
quesliOfW a~ answerrd "
' 'The publk: has to be st11·
lilized that energy at an)"
price I• a problem ."
LaFollette sald that no
agency haa the experliiC to
make a value jud&Jnml and
propot.ed that a new dtpart·
ment or Contumer Affairs bl!
esta blished.
When the candidates ~~o·ere
asked if they would endorse
lhewinnn-ofthe primary all
uld tha t they would ex·
~ud~~ ~~ttbe~e..~ ·:.~ •
clonemmt.
The campua awearanct"
Wll tponaored by the UWSP
DemOttatle Youth
<AI")' ·Wintrn , YouUI CatJC'U5
president was the moderator
for the forwn . Qancellor
Lee Sher man Orey ful ,
UWSP, introduced the cu·
dldatea prio r to the ir
tpeaklna. A rece:ptlon for the
"eandldatnwathekl afterthe
forum.
CaucUJ.
September 5, 1974
THE POINTER
Page 5
Wolves to be
seranaded
Yt'hllt will the researd,..n
do if 11 ,.'OJf respond5 to their
lft'Orded c11lls! Theyll spend
pa rt of December and
Januaryc:ombingtheareafM
any phytkal evidence or the
mammal.
:O.Ieanwhilt, Anderson is
tippina his hat to the U.S.
fo'o r es t Service for its
UlisUUl~e In the project
be1ide1 some e:w;pente
money, "we ' re receiving
-..vndt:rful cooperation from
the lla ff In northern
Wisconsi n ," said Anderson .
'1beyarereallyinttrested ln
thi1 be~a u se they have
multiple use emphasis in
th ei r work by sbowlng con·
cern for the wildlife and the
recrution within tile forest
they manage.
A UWSP Wildlife profHSOr
s:aid he 1\as a ..stronghunch"
•
•
t
that. cont r a r y to oHic•al
dec-larations, some limber
~-oi,·H do indeed exist in
northftll po~rtsofthesate .
Raymond Anderson hopes
to ' -,ettlethequestionsofthe
lllllh'es once a nd for all"
~~oithinthennt year and hell
do it by using an amplifying
system to broadcast a
seren11 de i nto the vas t
v.'OOdb.nd•nthe Iron-Price·
~~~-..ontida - Forest County
The tape he will use is the
• recorded call of a voolr, acopy
of which was secured from
the U.S. Museum of Natural
History . Essentially , . the
~ofblaringthec:aUs
1nto the forest is to get
responses from the "''Oives
511Sp«led to be there and
then have the responses
reot"Orded.
Anderson wtll be assisted in
the project by Richard Thiel.
a ~or in the UWSP Coll~e
of Natural Relources tCNR).
v;ho has btoen intrigued by
timber woh·es si nce he was 1
Earn an officer's
commission while
youeamyourdegree
boy .v~d did an unusual
amount of rneuch on thoee
kindiofanimalst\-efl before
entmngthtiUtivenity.
Anderson uid IJ!is pro;«t.
YouundllltwtU.tiM!T-Ye~rVetertn'P~r.,.,
to be funded by UWSPand the
rortvettttendt""coll-,A"'")'IIfTTChtve')'
<IOOddul.
U.S . Forni Service. is
especially important in view
Yourortorurvtten~Wr1eroct,.!ll,111mstcaus,
~~~ C::~!:~:it:':Cet~
ttktthepllteOft/leflntM}'tlnD'thf'COUI'UIIIII
will lturcount fflrlctht cklt;yor '"''""' ""'Y'""
r·ut.-ntpurflOses.
l\ll"t"" )'OUr twoyurs of lf'ITt.:,wtw11 ,.nu •,.tn ttoe
AdUIICf'd ~nt , you'll be Ul"ft!IICI SIM , I'lll I """th up
t.ote n"'llt/ll nftl'leytlr . AN:! t!wt' J lntM!tiMtO
Wisconsi n . TlleTefore it ia
rare that an undergradU.Ite
Sludent i1 involved in work
that Ol'dinarily would be done
u part of 1 master's deJree
resear~h assignment .
About two years ago tile
Sl:ate Department of Natural
Rnour~es !DNR l declared
the timber wolf exUn~t in the
S111te. Since then. however,
people in the northwoods
ha.\'t bftn Insisting th.at they
1\11\·t spotted the animals.
you r G.·t.llll1•11-nces.
Alld'ftter"lns , bo th~~~en•nd-n,ctiiCDI"('oel• fc>r
=~~~~1cll011rshlp1
tllatro•y full
tuitl cft~fttlflt htr
Anderson II)'S II IS tiS)' Ia"
m1S1akea~oyotefora timber
wol f, but he Is also aware of
the ra~t that many of those
..-no ha•·e made the report~
hllve the know-how to make
the dislis nclion , s uch as
t ~11ppers , biol ogis t• ud
longtime permanent
~d<nU
Anderson and Thiel will be
doln& the1r field work from
m1d-July through September.
He w11l be using ei ther a
vehicletot ra venefirt lanes
or travel by foot orin 11 canoe
and will aet power from 11
b a II e r y
pa c k .
Someurefullis~inawill
btrequiredinthelrenc:l of tlle
projfoct becll~ae dop ottea
respond to wol f ~ails .
It there are IOITlt timber
=~~:·i~ ~nbi~~~~~ t~
some blolcg it tl like An derson. Thit il becauseoneof
the mOll vl11ble popul11tions of
that kind of wildlife ellilta lo
the northern reache1 o f
MlnnetOU pl~a Canada and
Alaska . While Andenon is
~te coandentlhere s.tiU are
!Dmt left here, be doubta
,."flethel"tbereueanypac.b.
L.---------------------------.1
Page 6
THE POINTER
September 5, 1974
Defensive driver
course scheduled
Hamilt~n
appointed
to task force
A Drtrnsn•r Dru·rr
Ttatnlll£ f'OIWK' lot ;all In·
wn~td students , slllff. and
(;J<'ull\ hu bern schedultd
(ti(IOiit·~ptembtrandearly
lk'tobft" All mrmben of the
Ullllt"rSII)' ('Oftlmunity voho
ll;ne IIIII \tt Nd the C1)Ur5ot
arturgtdtop:.rlK'ipatt.
Linder tilt' Go,•erno r 's
d•n•ctl\e , this courst' Is
rt"Quartd of those st-..k~ts
and tmplo)ffl wl'lo drl\'t'
lho:tr C;irl or IUI!t' Clint and
dt,.n• rrtmburstmt'nt.
Thl•l'our:se is t>slnblishe-d
Uruted Council Pftslclmt
~m ~~~:.~:~~wa~ro::::
stud)'lnl faculty
collectl\'t
~ra<~inin&
llamllton.•ll~tonthe
lM' Madilon campua wu oae
ofthrtoelludenuappoinic'dto
the National Advisory Board
of the Pr01famon the Student
Role in Co il ect he
Baraainina
Hamilton
.,.·asappointedbyAllanSbark,
Task F'orn Proje-ct Director
~ !~ 11a ~~~::0~ t!::'~o!:d
~
:f~:e:~~~~~~
J/
i
Smale president The appointment camr at the
SaOonal Student Al:5odaUon
convention held lhe week of
Ale· II m St. Louts..
Ham illon 11 currently
uud_y i n&the colltctlu
bar&a•nin& in ue as a
membr:rolthelM' Bo:ardof
RtJt'nts task force on
eollecll\"e~rallnu'C
Asked about his ap·
pointmentto the national task
torce . lfamillon uid."l'm
\W)' hopeful ttyt my in·
\'olvt'ment .,..,th the Natioaal
Ml•tsory Board will auist
myseU and my ~aues ~
the ~enll " task force tn
rormulalin& Juidelines fo r
coUecth·e b:ara~nlnc in the
UV.'S)'I~ . ..
lbecampusr:adlosbtlon
Y.'VlSP· F" M to in Ste,•rns
Point .,.,u bqin iu 7th yrar of
bfo..dculln& Monda y Sept
1.
The atlltion ....,u be
.,.,tifll frwn newly ex·
panded f acilit ies. tm ·
prOI.<f!mentJ CICW'fin& laraely
in the news department
in::.:::
educators. labor relation•
~ali~!a'd;-:~,~~~
t5tablish a national network
for the aatherin& of in·
sorat'lime early this year
1be ~ increase ""'OUid
IJUIIY upand the stations
~~cd~~v~~~~t=~ th~~=~
i.,~~
is year ue : St•tion
w i ll •n•ly:u the data
colk-ctecl and present their
f•ndin&J at I national
colloquim on collect in
baraainin& to be beld in
November . 197$
Ac'C'onlanC to Shan., lhe
Wit force , funded~ •
&rant from the F\lnd for the
Jmprovrment of Post ·
I«''ffd:arEducatkln willlludy
tht tmpact of collective
bJr&a•oin& on tbe pott·
seeond.arytducation atudent.
T hrouah the uu of
ques tioaaires, loterviewa
and aurveya of put at.udeDt
partic• panta in faculty
collective bar&aintt~J , the
t.uk force hopes to answer
10me crucial questiOI'II about
the ro&e of studtnta In the
co llective ba r calnin&
.
~
Thereau!Uol tbeyttr-klnl
lludy Will be pubtished as I
res-earcb tool for student
IIIIOcialions,f.acullyurUc.tl.
admin11trative •&eacies.
~~r:r~:e~=
t.raainU.iJJue.
lbe 6rtl meetinl of the
S.tiollal Advll«y boMd wi.IJ
be hdd .a WalhinJlon. D.C 1t1
"'......
Ses&!On$ 1
and II, whichever \1 m~t
dtsi rable for you from the
Hhedule as foli o•·•
Seslion I, Sept . 2$,
room Dun, Science Butldu11
Sesaion I, Sept. 2t, 6-tprn .
room D t02, Scien« Buddtng
Stssion ll ,Ckt. 2,5-tprn ,
room DI02. Science Butldmc
Seslion II, Oct. l , 5-9 p m .
room D t02, Sclell('t' Buil<bnR
Pre·reala t r a li on must bt
done In the! Elltt'ndtd S...rvices Office, room 117. Old
MAtn,u:t . 3117. Enrollment
is limited and the lt'Woni
ne«1 to be N lanced.
,_,p.m .
Warren warns of
security deposits
WWSP-FM
to begin 7th
, n~~~~o~e'f~~~'. fa~i~i~thw~;~P~o~Jd
~ ~ l~nm__:
;!"::':rlr::':n: I~~~~~~~~~
nmn•nt t•nct of tht par ·
ticipaton. II iiiWftJ.lll")' to
=ic:~~~ bu~y!'h!,:~ i
choice ol RlectU.
U:ua&n Tbomaa Bedore.
Pro&ram Di rector Ht'~ry
Wllwlyk, Newl Director Gary
Wt'ICotl, Muaic Director ~p
Bilh . Pu b lic R~htion a
Dire ctor Don Wudu ,
Continuity Director ~e:a
Gehrman and Ctief Eniineer-
Allonlt')' Ctntnl Robtt-t carpet, de. Ast the landlord '
w W:arren s.:ald th:at com· to silO it .
pl:unt s art frequently flltd
" llh hu• Office ol CoMumt:r
Upon te r minatin1 the
Protrc tlon
co nctrn1ng tenancy, aend 1 .,.·r•tttn
M"tunt ) dtpoitts ol :ap;arl· requesttothelandlord uklnc
ntent :and homt ~ters
him to mum the ~·'
..,thin ten days or furnish you
ltld, V+'t"Stenbergu
TIM:
rllldtostahonstlllffiO!Italotol
t'romllwcalbmadetothe ~~oit h a llatement of thf
~asonforwi~dl n1thf
proopltlnt wmt'$1tf throuch olfK"r ' ' appr;~rs th:at the
depos.it . Bt: sure to •ncludr
IV:adu.liUons
C'1lr'lttpt ol :a K('llnly depo5it
your new addreu.
..
..
lntheeventthe\andlord
from pre\'IOUJ )'e;~u ..._,lth Warren s:11d
faila to respond and you ft'f'l
tmphu11onne,. andbtltf'r
youartenti t.l ed to the ~turn
sthtdultng ol ITIU!IK" . news.
Thttf' ll noilatrs~tutror of your dt'1XI'II. call your
rduntwn.al :and public tn·
admuuilrilh\"t' codt whiCh attorney or lnvati&•te tht
terestprograma
dthn~wreg ulat ~sec: urity pouiblli ty of • Small Olll•ms
dtpo s tll . Warr en Utd . Cour t •ction and f1lt a
complaint wi th the Office of
Consumer Pr-otection.
Telethon and the :al,.lllyl 1n order to MIC'rrnine the
popular Trtvt:a Contest le-gal pnnc:tples :applicable to
~~·~e!'!~~r d~l~~~~~ :n:!:thr~u~~~~~
pr~sst,~~~~·.; ~~~~!·,:;~'~ ~~~~e~:r~~~ ~o:;::~ro!:
AI In added ft':.ture tht
stlltion ..,II prtRntthe ftrst
unual FM ·to Scaven&tr
IIWII IOmt'tun~ ill11 f~l ;~t :a
datesoontobeai\IIOullcftl
Hamilton leads
united council
Jim Ha milt.c:m, a
UWSP UW institultons an~ now
aenlor and president of the! Unlt~d Council members
UWSP Stucleat Go\·emrnent
"' I ""'lnt to Illes& the {:act
Lu.t yur , was dected Umted that , tn the t'Om1111 yur. tht
Council presidmt &by 4
United Council w111 offtr
Uni t ed Council 11 :a
atatewlde or&anlut,on
r epreaentin& over 110,000
•udenll Itt thr UW System
Hamilton ••• elected by
unanimoua ballot 11 the
Unit~d Council Gener•l
Auembty •t UW River F.U.
"" I •m comm•tted to
~Jtht'Of'IMIWI!on't
r eprel-t'!!Utton:al bas~ •nd
upaod•n& :act!VItltl an~
MTvices ." H:am 1lton 111d
TeaoltiM:thirt~fow- ·)-en
pollt t ve allernaclvu to
policies affeettng lludents
""'hen"'edJ!IoiiUeoe. • ·e•ntend
toprHent thtlhldft\t..,ewm
:a tonstr uct we, rather ttyn
neaattv t' manner " u,d
tt.mdlon
·
llamtlton •lso n•d ht
desiredtoconllnurto ..wk
dosely ,.,,II the flo.a rd of
He1~nu . Cen t ral Ad
mlnlillalJOn tht lf11$olaturt
Md th~ H•ghtf Educahonal
A.tcb Btlwd u ... d las other
11ateqmc1es
thl$1~lll
Fund drive
for needy
student$
1
•
Music Deportment
member of NASA/I
1be · mtak cltpartment at
UWSP has been glveo accreditation by and full
membership in the National
Auociation of Schools of
~":~~"!h~ ··~~:~b~
1
available if we are tnaly
providing a diverse and aood
M~~~~~:SM)Oepartment c~ul~tment
OWrman Julius E. Erlenbachsaidtheaction crovldes
a special kind ot status for
recoanitlon of the mualc
pro&ram ' a maturity at
UWSP.
Prior to this year , UW
Madison was the only otheT
publk institution In lht atate
thatwuafullmftnberolthe
assocb.tion. St'veral othU
s chools are auoelau
member'~ and UW Milwaukee
also is in the pro«ss ol
"'becomingafull-membef"thls
year.
Priv1te lnsliWtions
holdlnafu.ll membership are
Lawrenc e
Unlven l ty ,
Alvemo and Vite:rbo Collta:es
and the Wilc::onsin Col.ltge
Couwrvatory ol Musk:.
Natioowide, approximately
385 schools ol mldk: have
been si mibrly honcnd .
Erlenbach s aid en dorseme nt by NASM is tne
h i &h es t u : creditation
ava il a ble to a music
program.
Guidelines for
membtrshipare "sltingent,"
thf' acting chalnnan added.
A n ev 1.luuor for
the
assoc ia tion sprnt three da~
on campus ld f ebruary to
confer with studen ts ud
faa.dty and to d'lf'C:k the
currirula and facilities .
The u niv e rs i ty mu s ic:
e ::r:e~~ ~~~he~~~
t
...........~...........
tiri c:;~ tion ilnd also in applied
music: or perfonnanc:e plus
theor y snd -or composition
and m!Jiic: literature.
n.e department is one of
few m the country s till orferin& a bac:IM!Ior"s dtgree in
m usi c: literature .
The
September 5, 1974
THE POINTER
Poge 7
Arts and Lectures tells___
concert schedule
vi~inist
A divene c:alendu or 14 and
ltz.hak Perlman
CGnCerts, rancinl from 1 and Flamenco auit1rist
performance by the world- tar los Montoy1 u well as the
11
1 1
bu ap- 0~~~7!:d t! t~ : ~~~~~~ ~=~~ t~mJ:=: ~~
1
~!j!~~~~~n r::u.f:rs:~ ?.:!~':le0ro~ :~pan:nd 0\:!"U. indlvid~~&l
1\lesday, Oct. 15 • IUhak
Perlman, violinist.
T h ursday , Oc t. 31
Richardl Woodwind QuiDtet.
Sunday. Nov. 3 . Om«nt~
M!Jiicus.
'1'\Jtsday, Nov. 12 • Rajko.
SUnday, Feb. 2 • Mlsha
and season
another- 60 mlnodl'll In the ceremony by a rqiment of tickets are available from the
subject. 1ber'e ve 23 full- Welsh Guards, has befll UWSP Arts and LKtl.ftt bo11 Ditcber, planlst.
time faculty membtn plus schedWed for the '74 -75 orr~eelntheF\neArtsCent« .
Tuesday, Feb. 4 - Isr-ael
several~t-timeinstructon. su.sooat UWF.
:- TheCGnCerts schtd!Jtd for 1 Otamber Orchestr-a , Gary
The popular Arta and the comJn& academic: ytu
Bertini, direc tor.
Wedne:lday , Feb. 11 • f&or
,e<lnuday , Sept. 11 • Kipnis . harplehonbt.
Friday, Feb. a· " P .D. Q.
Bach." Peter Schic:kele and
Thirty-one persons are new student;s and resldmts In the conductor.
•
'
31 'oin faculty ~~~~".!J~~~
I
~~c;:~!c~oy:.~~ pr~:!':
:;!::tbkee S::ez:'~:~::~n
~:;~~e~,:rc~:e.u~~ ~~~t!?al~~:'~ic~ ar1J~~~~- i~cz:d
Monday. Aug. 2S for the faU
.semester .
r-:'
M06l of thrm ue bein&
assiJned to po~Hioos vacated
by per$01U who resi&IWd for a
variety ol reasons. A few
othen are In newly crutecl
jobsinue.uoftheuniveni.ty
which are e~tperiencing
growth in student enrollment.
There is a new policy in
the UW System providing
preferenc:einhlrina:onthe
various campuses to persons
who held tenure at a UW
institution but ~~o-a-e released
for budgetary reasons largely
created by enrollment
dKiines.
1bree of the new oersons
hereare inthatcalel«y,
c:ominahererilherfrom uw
PlatteviUeorUWWhltewater.
At UWSP. a r rangements
hilve been maile to l1y off
some leflured proteuon in
departmentl
whe r e
enrollments have fallen , but
that actual termination has
not tUm place on most, if
an y c;ue becaUR special
budgeting arrangements
Ave thosepo~itionaat least
a not~er academic yea r .
aeli ellS
21
MODELS
normally would by-pass Uvif18 in Paris," FrvM:h
Central ~sconsln citl~ .
sillltr<Ompo&tt".
~kindsofn:ents tnthe
Sunday. Oct. IS . Wdah
senes ~ be ~usidans such Guards and the AraYl1 1 nd
as harosJehoc"dist I&or Kipnis SUlberi&Dd Hiplanden.
·
:~~j= !d:!C"Ie
Thursday, Man:h I· Vienna
Boys Choir .
Thursday, Ap-U S • Carlos
Montoya, Damf'DCO &Litariat .
n-day, AprU 15 • V1r&il
Foil, qanilt.
FIRST DAY OF CLASS!
Wonder where everyone Ia? Hope I didn 't get the wrong room .
You 1lmost have to be 1 gredu1te j ust to read the schedules.
Accor,Stlng to the cetalogue some of these guys h1ve so m1ny
degrees they must be 1bout 98 degrees In the shade. But for
whi t It 's worth , I've never seen · 1 professor th1t could tree a
squirrel so I guess we ell have a little to l earn . Speaki ng of class,
Parkinson' s have some vested suits that are class plus. There's
both sollcts and pla ids that are great mix and match combos . You
can pick up 1 suit with two pair of pants and a vest for aa low as
$1 25.00. Now there 's a value; especially when it 's completely
tailored tor you at no extra charge.
Register now at Parkinson ' s
Win Henry or one of His Friends
HUOQUAlnlS FOR
SHIPPY SHOES
Parkinson's
OF COURSE'
Pcs:~e
8
THE POINTER
September 5. 1974
Jordan Park
pre-historic campground
At today's price ol eoppef'.
a ptnon mliht understand
why studentl from UWSP
were enthuslutic about
uncon:rin& a piece ol the:
metal.
Rea10t1 for aU the excitement.~evu.il forthe
sake ol science.
What they found may
provide proof politive ol a
civillutlon In Porta~ C«.~nty
dltlna from s.ooo yean B.C.,
or in terms used by ar·
cheoloalsts, the Archaic
Period.
J ohn Moore, 1 UWSP
proleuor. conducted ~ral
archeological diKI in the
countyinrec:flltyean,butall
of his previous findings ha\·e
been att ri b uted to the
Woodland Era which esisted
from about 3,000 years a go.
At a dig site in Jordan
Park, several miles east of
campus, student Naomi
Russf:ll of Wisconsin Rapids
spotted the topper object as
Mt:~Grewas5hovelinadirtinlo
a screenln& proccu. 1.
After clC.C investigation,
the object was identified as
the point of aome ltlnd o(
weapon. It had been crudely
socketed to fit into a spear .
In addition, the s wdent
archeolocists founda scraper
believed lo be of tbt same
period wl'len the inhabitants of
thismion,."re huntersand
gatlleren. The inhabitants
lnversed a wide area and
probably brqht the copper
,.·eapon frun a mined area in
the Upper Peninsula in
Mkhigan.
Moore said he ill quite
confident tllat matft'ials are
indeed from the Archak
Period not. only because their
descriptions fit finds from
that year In other digs in
o ther regions, but a lso
because ol a skeleton that
accidently was unearthed In
Ste1o·ensPointa~leof
years ato.
The skeleton, alter being
checked in Madison, ....-as
described as several
!thousand years old. It still
has tnces of red ochre
painted on it which was
cu:stom in the Arch.aic Period.
In those limes, bodies o(
persons wbo died were exposed lo the elements until
lbe nesh WIS gone, then the
skull was painted with the
ochreprlortothe burial rite.
Mt:10re'1 s tudent team a lso
found numerous pieces of
pottery, some of ,.'hich h.:t.\'C
•
been ptect'd toget her Those
pieces are from the morr
recent Woodland Pfflod wtlen
local inhabitants ..._,andered
tess and actually pursued
some agiculture
F'tom
lhese people's civilu.ations.
lhe student.s found a dnll,
many projrctilc point.s and
knives in addition to the
' iNMtery
Also unearthed were
st\"eral roundcla)' objrcts
,.,.htch Moore bdie1o·es ....-ere
probabl)' usedasmarbles. " I
always thought marbles li·as
a game that origtnated in
Europe-- pe rhaps It ..._,as
sta rted by early Nath•e
Americans," hemused.
1be students took one day
away from thctr own project
lastsummertovisitagroup
from UW OshltOih tn\·oh ·ed in
a dig at Silver Mound near
Hixton.
The Pointers. in ...-.!lung
throughanopenfieldnearthe
site, UI'IC:O\' ered about IH
artifacts m aboutol5mmutes
from tile Paleo-Indian Prriod
ofneari)' IO.OOO)·earsago In
theshort triptheyacquired
many easily identifiable
weapons and toolswhlch...,,11
be added to the UWS P
collectiOI'I.
Moorel\as~nassistedin
Shortage of dieticians'
creates new grad
program
the four-week project a t
Jordan by Judy Ptpher wilt>
hasstudiedprevtouslyat
UWSP and UW Milwaukee
Thr Board of Regents has
appro•·ed a new gr oduate
program at UWSP In the face
Among those •n the gfOIIp of
studentswere l\lark llueuner
andDavid J ohnson Johnson
became interested in ar·
cheology as a highschool
studentwhen Mooreusedh•s
father'J barnto storctools
during some digs in the
Nelson\·•lle area
Moore said Jordan Park
now may be venfied as
Portage County's oldest park
inview ofit.spopularity wtth
ofhc•als
prehistor~ccampers
~et~ua:u;::~:r~~~~:alf~
UWSP has~nauthorited
to confer Master of Science
t M S 1 Degrees in nutrition
andfood~eience
Agnes Jones. !'lead of the
School of !lome Economics,
sa1d people who pursue the
d eg r ee will have ex ce ptt o nally high job
pl~m:~::r:l~~~
by
partictpants in a 1970 White
»ouse Conft'rence of F'ood,
We think so-
l!li-
Especial~
O't!iifttee's
l~:.twu.ua:
~~~:i~~::t! w~~c :::al~~ •
00
lrast doubled wltlllna thr next
five years."
The confer ence r~com­
mt'nded highest priority for
gra dua te t r ai n i n 11 in
nutrition.
In t h e profusion of
nutrition, people mlt'lt bt
certified by the A.mt'rittn
Dietetic Alloclation IADAI
before they can be hired for
mo.tjob81n thefield. Tot'.u-n
ce rtification, tht'y mull
usually
In the profenion of
nutrition, people must bt
certified by the A.rnt'rkln
Dietetic Association IADAI
before they can be hired for
most)i»ln thefield. To earn
ce r tification , they mull
usually qualify by serYin&
intemsh/pl or eamh:c M.S.
Ot'grea coupled with SOti'Jt'
on-the-job eapet"lence.
Althouah t her e art'n ' t
mou&h lntenuhlp1 for all ~
the candidates, JOOt'l .uid
that the opportunity for 1d·
vanced study at UWSP will be
another opportunity for thoSe
seeklnc cerUficat!on.
Jonesuld Lbe procram .-ill
m eet the n eed or the
pro fualonal p ractlclnl
dietltiana w h o mu t t
Many people afe saying
that a DIAMOND
is a fine Investment.
if you're investing In LOVE.
Nutrition and lfulth vohtch
eslima ted that "the numbl'r
THURSDA Y & FRID;;:ySEPT. 5 & 6-7:30
NEW PROGRAM BANQUET ROOM
SPONSORED BY
UAB FILMS
:~t~~~:.te:u~~t'f:nti':.~~
fi ve year Interval . In ad·
dillon, lhe uld that It will
meet the needl ot oldtr or
inactive dlet!Uua; who mUll
update thei r profnJlonal
education to rcturn to em·
ploymeot:
Jonel eetlmated that attet
the fou.rthyurotop«allon.
the ~tadt.~~te JWOitllft wUI
produce about 15 M.S. Dearte
candkl.atelaMually.
•
September 5, 1974
THE POINTER
Koshkonong to be
Page 9
,.
first A-Plant ~ite
582 atomic reactor misfunctions
reported in 1974
A summary ol abnormal morutorinl syslenu, 1tataae
at U.S. atomk «wastes bdore the required
oct'UI'T.I~
po~tt"ff plants for 1974. dated
Aucldt 14, ~Is a total o1
M'Yen days of decay ti~.
failure to satisfy AEC
51l•neidents reported to tht ~inc requi~ments , tic .
Atomk Energy Commission Dixon noted that no penalties
I AEC I from 52 pllnts have evidently beflllmpoHd
Sin~ the latest entry i..<l for Yiobllor- althoulh the
~~~ i;'e,:,."~r: ~~c~!f::. otpt~!:':!a':
yea r total for 1974 compared occasioned iUbltantial finn
to a total for the year tm of for Cons umen Power in
861 occurrmcn.
Michigan. IAEC NR No. T·
The 97 page
~
was
404, Au&. 14, 19741.
reuivtd · by the LeaJut
An AEC inapecUon report
Against Nuclear Dangen of Pointlfeach environment.!
t LAND I on Aug u st 23 . monitoring procedure~ noces
Cor respondence from the
AEC Indicates copies have
alsobeensuppliedtoWilliam
Eich chairman Wlscon1in
PubliC Service Commission
t PSCI and three area
libfaries.
.. Component failure, "
breakdown of parts of
shortcomincs lnclt~tna P<l9f'
method~ of mamtaining
~ords,lnc:orrecten trlnand
failure to follow up M'Ytral
abno rmal
radiolo&lral
monilorin& resulla.
Par·
tiC'\I Iary noted ls the IKII. ol
investigation by YtlK'Onlin
Electric of abnormal
~~:S·~is~a~~~::e ~~e~isouar~~~~t~o1!ne~~~~
Errors by plant ptTSOIU'Iel sam ples ana lyud by the
attOUnt for about one out ol7 Wisconsin Department of
occurrences. procedure HealU. and SorW Suvkn
defectsforoneoutol~.and fTom lt71 throu&h tt7:J.
~.tctor desi&n tfTOrs for Detectabh limits for mill!.
about one out oilS. Unknown contamin.ttlon are ten limes
caldtl, indicated by suc:h hi&her ~n required by AEC
desa&nations •• " un · ft'JUiatlon• fot' analy1ls .
determined ." " prohbly ,'
Tile hiibest number of
·possible ,·· "suspected ,"
" not stated ," ' 'under in ·
\'ftli&ation.'; etc .. clesl:ribe
I'!Uiny o1 the ircidenta. Oc·
rurrenresare not eatesoriud
1n te r m• of degree of
Sl&nificance in the printout.
'1'\No adclilional abnorma l
Chancellor Lee s . Dreyfus
oc:ci.IJ'Tf:nces. not lrcluded 1n of UWSP Us been appointed
theprintouts.arereYealedby as one of l:l clirec:ton of the
Public Document Room American Association of
records at UWSP for Pojnt State Collq:n and Univft'·
Stach planta . These bring allies cAASCUI.
the mid·ye.ar total for OC ·
The annou ncement was
currencaat Wlsc~ln planta madelnM~F'rldayby
toatleastTI.c:omparedto21 UW System President John
for the whole oltf74. CI..AND Wta\'ft' before a meelin& ol
does not ha\'11 ready ICCUI to
Kewaunee or LaCtcue plant ~:!~rua:''t~r~ ~fj~~n
recordl. l Tbelatestinddmla th rOUJh !t1S. He IIIIa a
iiT'f'olve problemtwithconll'Of vacancy left by Mllllla 8 .
rock in lday aod I reported Byrd wbo resiped recend1
Sllnif~eant fiSh 11.1.11 in June. aaprt:aidmtoiO!icaJOSI.ate:
These public
Uroivenfty
also reveal violations of
Technkal Specifkali- ot
The assadaUon ia ol
ClleiOTY II and Ill R'lnity two major orpniutions in
at Point Bc:acb lac:l ulnl the C<IUlltr'J loft"'inc coOeces
falluretoealibrateradiatlon and unlveultl.es . Its
occurrences lor sinJie
react.ors were :JI at both
::;wc;;st~~rrtfee~'.•b~:'.!
......
,.
LAND recommended
establishment of an In·
formation rent« in Madison
for government documents
~~~=~ :n~a~=li~
recordsoloperalingplantsln
W'dconlinat the leu t. ''The
Commission and other stale
agenriesneedreadyae<-tuto
Information and the beat
unbi ase d upertlae for
ana ly&lsofreportslnorderto
;oa::e~':j~~;~ch~'f.::~:.!
nuc:learfuture."
•
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colored fishnet
calendars by Hollie Hobbie
dried flowers and va ses
posters
India spreads
mobiles
hanging plants
and ask about our nail-less
hangers
at
llr.sttubtrgrr·:s
GIFT SHOP
Dow ntown · Main at Strongs
LAND expi'eued the hope
that PSCwouJdpersilt in the
riaht to eumine sa fety
flctora : "T he U.S . Con ·
slltution granla st.ata the
ri&ht to protect the healtb and
safety o1 its eitluns. u the
Commlssloo Ia oot em ·
powered to puraua In·
vestiJatioN of rdlability aDd
~f:Y~;;;icro::tsr:=:
Wisconsin clti1ens ' con·
stitutionalfi&bllo!"
Dreyfus appointed
AASCU director
doalments
head qu arters Is I n
Wuhlftllon, D.C. and tlu
:s:~::.~~·~,~~r.t!~s
in·
Dreyfus will attend his !tnt
~=~"Yn "a!n:~r~ :ai:!~
1
Hia a ffiliation wiUI AASCU
U a lonptandinJ one. For
M'Yenl years he Us suved
u chairman ol
aovern·
mt'ntrela.lior.committee. In
la.te: November and early
£~Kember. DfeyfUI waa one
o( nve American ~.ton to
rqnsent the auoda.tion In a
million to Poland for the
pufl)OH o( advaneinJ a new
Its
enol~alklnbetween
public supported i,.titutions
ol learaiDi In that COW\tty
and this one.
SANDLER's Groundhog brings beck sp ring In the
Fall. All the spring and bounce and ~omlort you
want in an easy &hoe Is here On custnoned c repe
and fully leather lined. The new soli s hoe. as ooty
SANDLER ol Boston can do it
$23 .99
:_:
Po,o:._
e ..:.IO:__ _;T..:.H:.:E...:P...::_;_
O IN
..:.T:..:E::..R_;_~Se~tembe r 5, 1974
UWSP grad becomes
Learning Resources
reduces hours
'The l.eAmint Reseurcn
~nlcr U.RC I wW have to
l"t'duc:e library bows . . ,
dunn& the 1974-7511:hool yur
twaun or studtnt IJIIJtant
Budget red~IIOI'i$.
Th li reduction for the area
W I maintains lumltilct 1od
ctn:ulatton poinls is 17.950,
o r approxi m ately 4,000
student hoon.
second lieutenant
Part of lhls reduction will T huuday and fort) fur
betheboursol9am to I mnw.1tc' rt'durhon 1111 t'ncb>
p.m on Satunby . n-e four Th11 'IIIII bt> rouplfif b\
houl"5 ..,'ere chosnl because dos•ng th r ~~o· rst turnJIII'!'
our
Y~a~e
st.atistics Indicate
~~they are lhe lovoHt o( the
...11o1e .-eelr..
t t"l11C'Ai btntranlll't' l arlt•r5
p m !btl)', I p m 011 t'mb)
and all 41)' Satunb) and
1'he re~indn" of the timco Sunday . and clostnJ AftC'r
<Ai ll bearirtt-tn minuteoenod llour Stud)' Ofk'hourearllrr
each dl y, Monda y through
··Jn!T$)01imgJp«laltrust
J nd r unlidrnt'e 111 thr
p;urMJt•)n• ,....... nOei1ty and
o~bllillt'> of
.. began
llng:ldll'r (;t•nera l n o~rt
\rtt>r Thud ltOTC Rtc1on
t lavin&enll~ setthe gual
~=~~~~~~~
.
position 11 an anny olfietor,
~~~~~~~e~ ac:n~.:.~sioni~~
uercunat t'o r t R iley,
Kan
o n July II
Ht'cu n•1ng a sec ond
li<•ult'<l,mt 1111 that orcasion
A 53\'lngs of apprv•Jnullrly 11as Stt'VtM."<• A ltusswn , a
SIOOpcorwt"t"k~~o· •Ubcru hu•d
Engagement
RINGS
I SHE Will
ALWAYS
CHERISH
•
from thHC' cul5 whiCh un ~
translakd Into $3 .400 lot the
acadcm•f year
Th t
~ma mder
of the S7.!f!O cut
~~oiU be absDrbed
In the
s~ffin&ol t hevanOUSiorf'\"itt
an d ci r c:ulatLon areas
thr oughout the build•ng
h•toth hunors gra d_ualt' of
l'WSP '" l\la) of this year .
Thr re..'ll)lt'lll of . sen·eral
u tht•r a ra dcm•c and
h• ado•r sh1 p
achlt''e me nt
a11 arlb . ll ussumrecel\'edhis
uat h of ufhc r from Ca ptain
Thl'Odorei:U:~~scht , amembcr
th~
Sr • ~nr~
or
Pointe r
Milita ry
O~partment .
Stephen Russum
Hamilton placed on
LAY-IT-AWAY NOW
A S MA U DOW N PAY MENT Will HOLD
TILL WAHTED
PERHAPS A CHRISTMAS
ENGAGEMENT
•
financial aids committee
by Kob Kuk.\ink
Umted Coull(•! Prts•dent
J1m Hamilton and Janet
Mac!eje'vo'5 k.r . a member of
Un1ted Co unr I ~~oere JP·
po~ntrd!o aBoardof~Rf'nts
committ ee on financ•a l anls
las t s ummer
Kuu um was very dn;1p
potnted to k11m durinc thf ,
followlnc his jurloor
sum m~
~:;.~~"..~1;";;;·~. ·:;;
wmmiS&ioned. IUstory of a
T~ ong•nal committee mali,n•ncy which ~~o:u
lll(ludrdnostudma. butSen. s urgrcally remo ved fro
Wi lham A Bablitch ID· ltussum'l back wtule kC' ~~o.u
Sle,-ens Poinll, Re-p Norman 111 grade achool thre.1 lmt'd lo
C AnderiOII IO·Mad!son land ~manmll y dilq\Wi fy h1m
ltrp Alvin Bald us 10· from ret'elvl ng his cum
Menomun•e l appealed to the mis s ion as 1 se~.·und
.
!':J:n~ .,~~: ~~~~
heuteflanl.
ltt-~tents com p•lrd and said
thattheot•gma l excJUJionof
Alt hou1 h severely d•sap·
~ludenl~ was an 0\'erslght . po • n t ed, R uaa u m 1m
mediately soug ht out mtaus
ll am dton . Studtnt by whic h his medkal histOQ"
Government president II could be waived or exc!IM'd
UWSP last yea r . was
m:. mmous ly elected United
C:..nc•lpnosldtn t in May
"Steve wu an e~llonal
l'ludent Wi th thole UI'IIQLW
qua li ties o r inl elligc:nct .
Integ r ity a nd hLi h moul
llandards t"Utntlal ror thr
leaders o1 today'• arm y'"
stated U . Col, Port«, hlS
p r o rr euor of Milit ary
Science. " Ue wu ius! too
•
loodt.o i ~ ...
modern
nteriors
•
'"'"""" f
~":.~::.:::. I
Porter mlls led the aid of
Chancello r Dreyfus and
HuJium's ph)'lklan and lhey
c:ontacled the depa rt ment ol
the a rm y on his behalf
Th rough thei r eHorrl.l an
exem ption wu &ra nted rot
Qlde t Ruuwn:-
.I
... ~;.. .....,........,.....,o= :J
Poster and Blacklite Headquarters
GRUBBA JEWELERS
YOUR DIAMOND & GIFT CENTER
" Diamonds Our Special• ·"
K11PSAXE. COCUtoe!A & ORAHGI: BtOilU!o!
DIAI«JHD RINGS
CHECK OUR PRICES
MA IN I THIRD ST.
largest Selection in Central Wisconsin
Incense
Fish Net
Gifts and Novelties
MOON FUN SHOP~=~
Pc9e 12
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September 5, 197A
THE POINTER
Summer Orientation: getting
S&ory and layout desl&• by SOb
~rbled1
wu the staff
who did it
It work. I really
aboutlookin&
sati.slitdwith
doclt'~f~~~~· 3 ~=~ne:! ~:ri~\~!t~:1 · "
10
together an _o nentllllion
~~ th:~"'~v~~ ~::et ("Offlll!i
bell~ =tn~·=~':'r~:~
through
..-ith the progra~ for • pr~~~k 11'1 1 muc-h mort o( quality.
Of the ap1 blf' rogram "sa idproxlmately
numbttoryur.sas'thC'best
I ,SOO
e~·er " ).~lth Kar~tutro::; ~::~~~ ~frt)". orientation evaluations,_ only about :10
::~n=.;: w~~t w':. ~in&
director. "UIIr basic &oal Is
~~;n~!:'~he e~~J:!
'"''·'"' ' .".'.'" "
1
r11nktd the pro&:ram as tx ·
cellent .
Tlmcak nplalned that
more time had been spent this
)"tar tui.nlng the staff, and
that this year- the orientation
assistants were trained with
the leaders.
" Wealsottitd to pu.ll then
into the decision maklnll·
process,"Timcaksaid. "So
111
many of the decisions being
made affected them, not
myself or Helen tGod(rey l. ;;;~:·;;; l~';;:;~{~;·;;;,;o;;
:;,:~~rt111 ~t~ O:rt~•n,~
1
dtcision,a«1!pl howltume ····:.'' ... ....... , .... .
about and understand it , this
can really pull the group
MaryScoU,aa•leataUoa lucter,uld
that the ttalnin8 the starr ..-ent tnrough
50metimes bolhered them , but made the
whole thing come out betl.er in the end
and helped pull the slaff tocether .
"'l"he train ina we went thrOU&h be(orehand was exce114!nt. We tried to go
through every pouible altuaUon that
wou.ld come up. In addition the whole
thins was left ruUy open to chanae."
She l&ld that Helen Godlrey !OrlenLation Director ) and Johtl nmcak
COrienlalion Assislant Director) w~
==:~~~ -the.~;bl,~~r :~ot e:;
lhlrcs opea for the tlaff to decide and if
10melhing needed to be chanied. they
lfllft"en't alnld to do it."
Joan Shafer . u orlentalloa Ieder,
uld that she felt that most of the
dtpartmenlll could 1\;1\"t put a lot more
time intoorienlllltion.
:·some departments. like paper-/
SCience. home uonomks and physical
tduutiondlducellentjobJ Theygave
studentsan ideaof....-hattheysould
expectandwhat ittxi)Kttdinreturn
They also helped w11rk ou t th.e
schedule."
"Other dtp.artmeniJ.IIke psycholocy
and eduution were real pains
Professcn e1ther didn"t sho\1.· up at all
or ~~ they did. they didn 'I bolher to ex:
plamalotofthtng5,"shesaid.
A Wlique part of the UWSP
SUmmer Orientation is that
there are separate programs
for the incoming freshmen
and their parents. "We fee l
'' In the end, the sUJ.U made
Orientation. " said Timcak .
'"The frrshmen came in wi th
theiranxietiesandquestions,
andthestafrlried tomeetas
di_rr~~ ~=~ ~~J.-~f it':~a;~d ~ha~e~~
each ha\'t dlf- .,.,-asoneofthosethingswhen!
.co ncern s and ~;~t;:n~ ':-~'ou~ ~or:
s~m to come to more than the sum or the
get acquainted with the parts
uni ve r sity, and othe r
students, and to ~ister ."
said Godfrey. "We try to give
parents an overall idea of
....i!atisher1'andv.·hattheir
childrenareandwillbegoing
through. The v."hole thing is
rea ll ycrea tlnganawareneu.
" Th e r e we r e some
problem s r egarding the
length of the session. ''1lle
problem is tha t 1r;e don't know
how muc.h we can gi\·e a
studtnl . Ther1' il so much
thattheyhavetoknow.andso
littletimetogiveittothl!-m
anyway . Vet we simply can't
bombard them with too
much, " sa id Godf r ey .
" Nothing says that they
have to come. We recom mend it and they come on our
Helen Godfrey,
word that it's a beneficial
It is a good
program .
Director of
program and it "'nects the
and
student leader s ," said
GodJrey.
1
.,,.,, ""~·: ..:;,-":~
to
of
and
he"'
to that
anusyta.s k.''
Photos by
Rick
C~gel
Bob Kerksieck
a.•y s.d&De, a a-a- .w.IaktraU. •aJor.
trllhU, uldhe likeclorientationbeerru.teyouget to know
the people and the Jthool real weU .
His parents , Mr. and Mrs. J im Sondalle, wt"nt through the
par1'nt5oe5aion.
·
~:i§!.~~s·:~n won /::c~Fa~~\
The autumn huntinc
Sol'asons art Jl.llt around the
rorner and the Departmfl! t
of Saturai ltHOU~I"S CDNR l
suggeststh:!.tnowisthe llmt
&raduate !rom a. hunter
!l.llftt)' course alter Aug . 1.
t974canusetheir&rad uate
«rtificatein plactofasmall
came huntlnc lice nse .
The hunter nlety proaram
forhunlerstopr~reforthe
t974stasons
is condueted by 3,000
Sto\·eral of the ways thAt a \'Uiunteer instriiCtors. 11'1('
hunte-r can Miler prepare e•ftht·hourcourseteach(';S tM
u~e ludetaklnJahunttrsalety sale handlin& of firtarms,
t'O urse . obt:1in1n1 proper ufe huntin,practicesandan
t•qutpment. t'htck1 ng with
lando""•nenlor per mluion to ~r~!:v::.~ntfon ~~ws ~~
hunt and prtpariq lumseif hunter's responsibilities .
r•ersons who s uccessfull y
ph~s1nily lor the hunt
f o r the l~rsl lime . CQmplete the course r~h·e a
W1scon.sm rts1dents \lo·ho certificate, an embroidered
l'mblm~ and can hunt .,.,,thout
the age of t.f,
supc-n'1s1on at
r~~=-0 ~:~~~~~-~rs who plan
to hunt out of state this )'t'ar
may find they're out of lock
~~~a ~':;;e:a~~e~r~~~:;:O
The states or Colorado,
K ansa~. New Mu:~co .
g!:~:-~,"r':.' Mic~~~~~~~~~~~ :
ne so ta . Monta na. New
~!!~~~~~~~~s;;r~~~f:~
Rhode Island. South Dakota.
Utah and Wash.ngton, and
Canadian pro\' lnces of
~~~:~!~aha~neta~~ec~~~
r e qu.rements
for
nonrestdents conctrning
hu~t~rR~fc~)~:e~~~~~·e:f
hunl,ng safety, uomer )loe.
alsoaddslhatthiSilthetime
~~.~.::;nt to bee::r!nl'fn~
spect the gun 1o be s~re ,,
funchons properly and
::~::: c~~~!rget~~~:r~
proof boots. be sure your bt at
has the proper personal
~=~~·::rdn~~~~!nd ~:~~~~
)'ou hunt small or b1g game.
make '' a pomt that you r
~~;~~~~ 0~~:~~h i n g ~·
Remembe r to physically
~~~~'ld!i·~~~~ ff~~~~~~~
ahead that your "telt\'lllon·
toncd"mllS(.'\esha\-enotbc>t'n
~ 1 !· out, visit wit h tht
tudo\lo·ne r and ask per ·
mission well In advance
Those who wau un!il .open~n&
11
JEANS, JEANS,
JEANS
::~~~ ~:! ~
11
acccs.~~tholtday
;;::,
~!:~ Nd~~=~~~~~"s!:!~ ·:~~!?~ ot :er!
heawier and highll' IMitth.... h.twathe usual Park·
00 1
inson's 100% g~a~rantH . II yCK.t want the olhll's,
we "-•• lhlm too. l..,l - Wrangl4-r . .. . 111m1s
you'n known lew y11 r1. H'a really a Job to stull
!hit Ill 111111 belly Into 1 pair but I gu1a1 that't
th1 onlr way to be " In". Cord• look good again
this year and straighl legs a11 Melt. I gue11 we' ve
got almotl ..,.,..,thing you might want, Including
me, It we draw rCK.tr ntme 0111 of !he bo• .
Register now at Parkinson's
Win Henry or one of His Friends
-
11 ~:
=~m:,to t!fe:~~o ~':
We llnallr 9Qt them . To .. ., tn.., 're slicking out ol
our llfS would be 1 sltght eu~atlon; t:onlkt!Jf ·
ing tile sll:e ol mr 11r1 . Anyway , th.,' re here.
...... .
011
Thlstsalsoa
crops,v;hlleatthcsamellme
studying the w•ldlife and
scoullnl the arta .
1
_:..~t!,e.. t:eu!
~
Jl5l a shoo!er ". ~Jald Moe
::'!::r
Nature study
offered
A nature inttrpretatlon
course, &eared lar&ely for
teachers and nature en ·
thl.lliasll, wlil be offered on
sb S..turdays in September
and October at UWSP
by Joel Guenther
This summer 1had the privilege of angling
wi t h a gentleman who was somewha! new to
the game.. Need less to say, he wasn tone of
the lew ble)Sed with a neophy tes luck , and
soon became discour aged.
One may think thi s Is normal but then. this
man Is. not of the Ilk to close up shop so
quickly. Hi s tenaci t y, I ca n assure y~u,
would m ake an angry g r izzly blus h w tfh
incompetence. What .'h~n . turned the key to
unlock the box of ev tls .
Ah ha , you say . It was Pandora . Wrong!
but close . In ac t uality it was his wife and
friends who took it upon themselves to
verbally !log the unsuccessful angler and
with !heir spli t tongues, slithered their
slimy, little Ideas Into the angle r ' s mind.
When he began to fish . he was happy and
con te nt . He didn' t br ing back fish but that
didn 't really matter for he was ouf·Of·doors
and was only a no v ice. The time for taking
fi sh wou ld come.
Then the serpents flexed their fangs . They
cr it ic ized his s uccess for what they con·
si dered fai lure . And It wo rked . They made
h i m question his values just long e nough to
subsll tute thei r s, that o f meat In the pot . He
became confused . d istdrbed .
Look at th is situation . Feet it, and ask
you r self w ha t happe ned and w ho gave
som~one e lse the r ight to take away ano t her
man s happiness.
Ask yourself these
questions and answe r them .
It you do work out a s olution , s hare it w ith
your com r ads. They need to k now, too.
M y own solution is si mple.
Take the
ve rm in to the r iver bank . Let them listen to
the whlpoorw\ 11 and the short popping and
gurgling of the river . Let them feel t he cool
breeze on the l'llape of their neck an~ let them
feel the darkness slowly creep tnto their
fier y eyes . Then , slowly w ade with them into
the r iver and know its li fe
After all this is done, t~rm i nate a long
fr iendship wi th a qu ick push In to t he fr igid
depth s.
UWSP to host
hunting confer~nce
UWSP wil l coa ducl a
conltrtfl.(.'eonhun tinllScpt.
1~ . l!n4 The public Ia invlltd
to attend
Pt~may aicnupfOf'
Sponsored by the UWSP
eithcTnoncredltorfortwo to Colle-ce ol Naturt l Retotrcu
-thne underar.aduate credllll I CNH I, Wi!ICOflsln Acldfflly
Rqist ra lion Is being handled of Sciencn, Arts and Letters
by the extended w:n~icn andtheSia~rdObon Institute
"'htre persons may enrol.! 1n for Envlronmenlll 9:udies.
adva.nce by t1ther phone or the confe~ Is entitled
mad
" llunti"l · sport or tin!"
"f'tM!< Jn!!JonJ wtll run from
The one day conference is
I JOa.m to~ lOpm on~t
H. 21 , 2land0ct 12. tJand2t
based 1n room lt2 ol the
Collett ol Naturai 'Resour«s VIeWS on hunllnc.
Buildtng
The program stutt a t t :lO
lbcre will be 1 lim1t o1 n
a.m . S.turday, Srpt. 14 and
penoas m the dan
tsex pectl'd to adjourn about 4
pm
Conferencn par·
.
llcipan ta include George
Knud se n, c hi e f pa r ks
natu ralist fOt the Dtparlmfl!l
Natural Resourc:es CDNRJ,
Ma r y Ann Krue ce r ,
rtpresentativeofthehumanc
mo\·emfl!t : Mel Ellis out·
door WTitcr and C'iMumnts t
a nd Wildlife EcoiOJ)'
Professor Ray Anderson of
of
UWSP .
Information can be ob·
~~ ~~";-~-: ~m::. ~:: ;::.::.h~':l:'~
=~~ns Point , Wisconsin
The CCII\l'tf'ftl« 11 free and
will be hdd in room 112o1 the
CNR ~ on !he UWSP
campw.
•
•
St-pTember 5, 1974
THE POINTER
Swamp student spots 59ndhill crone
Tom !toward is neither
surp~ nor offended by
funny r eac t io n s fr om
s trangen as he outrits
Nm5df to tTsvei through
11nmps His e quipm ent
I ncludes an eleclr\1:
11encrallng uniT on hls back,
ipO{Jight atop his orange
helmet and .1 net ill hand
lto....·ard retards his work
a1 noble and so do the
5tra ngen once they get pas t
hcsga rb .
lie's tryinc to help U l'e the
grt'al~ sancllill crAne. just
JTttntl)' off the mdani~ed
sproc•esbst.
A graduate in natural
l't'SOUI'Ces .11 UWSP. HowArd
has sprnl the surn m~ In a
pro,~«t 1upported by a $2 ,500
grant from the National
Audubon Society and Sl ,500
from the ~pa.rtment of
:O.:atural Rtsourc:es CDNR ).
The s an dhi ll c rane
population in the state 1\as
reb ounded f rom a
d:angerouJiy low level of
IIPP"IJUmatl!'ly 50 in ID to a
l' urrt"ntcount oraso.
The crann aren't readily
;ac r~en i ble for dose obit'l',·ationand~Spt iA"t'SO they
C'MI bt" marked for fUrther
~tudy ·
Consequently , he rinds it
al most n«'HSary to make
some ni&ht trips to rmd the
ad ultblrdsonwhoseWin&she
" :anach1n&bfi&htmarts ofa
plu11c-l1ke maten a l. Such
tnps requ~re eons1denble
h&ht41rnce tht" gas-burning
are sttachrd through ;~ thin
l;~y~ of lltin "'h1ch uuses no
'
a.d~·cr5ereactiol!onthtbirds'
hu\Th " The ma r ks are
really )\lSI lib another
futMr ...u.plauled lknl.·~rd
Onn! completed v.1 th the
markinK phut' of Th e
project auempts v.·iJI be mAde
to determu~~t v.·nrtbrf the
bulk of Wi~sms sand!dls
v.1nter m •1orcda or ,.., other
seoct1onsofsoutht'rnstatrs 1n
addition, stud!esv.·,ntx-madt
on the d:ul y m01.·ement of the
blrciundthekmdof tftTitory
thtyuse1n \\iscoos•n 'l mild
~easons
lloward is accustomed to
tr amp•ng throu11h swamp hltea"'a s u a •·f'l~anofthe
Vietnam V.'U 1111 tr1ps take
him •nto v.· e tl and 1
th r ou&hout central
Wiscons•n . partic ularl y in
parts of Jacbon. Juneau,
Monroe :&nd Wood count1es
PaM of tiM: grant money
v.-entforh•nn&lc-optertoOy
for as lon1 as fh·~e hour• pu
day 0\·~ lht' vut Wt'l lancil 1n
tlnSrt'&Jon
F1 y111111 he•ghts of about
31 to 30 ftt>t ;~bo•·e &round
ln·e{ ht' IOI:ated 16 nest•
•ilich •'ft'l! plotted on a map
and then revt51 ted on foot
Spet-tfically . the plan by
some SCI~IISU IS lO . _ the
Yndtulls as foster parents m
future proar a ms to rt' ·
1ntrodut' e the whoop•n&
tTann to areu of theu
former range Tbr sandtulls
m1y hat t' h th t' v.·hoop1ng
~tmt"t"a.torunitonhbbackto
crane~
pov.·er 1M IPOUi &ht atop his
IM:ad
" I &t'l some rut V.'l!trd
looks from tomt' of lhew
farmers around here;· said
ilov.·ard smilina
In the markins projec:t he
1.&1\t'S r01:k nets to l5lW'e a
The nalionv.i de COUll of
sa nd tulls•sup""·ardsof25.000
or thlft bmn &~•ter tl\an m
the m1d 1960's
lloward , work1n1 Wl\h
fat'ulty :ad1' 11or . Ly le
Nauman. ..,,11 con tm uc h11
project nut • ummer bt"fote
~~!~~:;::,~~;:~ :::~~ v.vrrr.
Tom Howard
for the
THl
miT
STUDI:NT
CHI:CKIN6
When your account averages
$100 per month
=~~~~~a nickel.
Bike on down
to Citizens today.
6RrAT AMI:IXJCAN
~~IS~!
...,
.·,
Poge IS
Pos;~e
16
THE POINT ER
September 5, 1974
LaFollette blasts nuclear plants and DNR
byJoei Gut nUier
Douglas La Follette, state
senator from the Keno&ha
area and Demoeratie candidate for Wisconsin
SecretaryofState,onttapin
atl:lekt'd proposed nuclear
power pla.Dts io Wisconsin.
"Nuclear power planta are
lhe WTong way to go," said
Lafollette.
Besides expressing the
nuclear plants as being environmentally dangerous,
Lafollette cited need as an
important factor against the
plants. He noted that there
would be a maximum need of
20 percent in increased
eleetriealpowerinlhenextl4
years . "This allows for
both I n dustr i a l and
population growlh. ''That can
also be made up for by eon·
servation techn iques," he
Bear baiting restricted
Bear hunters are reminded
added. Better lnsulauon was st.ated,''These front groups
given as an exam ple.
should have both thei r <:05ts that all baiting stations must
In conjunction with need, an•\ backe r s pub lieally be registered at tht nearest
LaFollette slatt'd, " U we just aeknow ledged . .. and also Department of Natural
replace present power plants should not be charged to the Resou rces t DNR I office .
Don Beghin. director of
with new ones when they rate~yers . "
,."earout,lberewi\1 probably
lnregardstotheproposed DNR's. Bureau of \..1w En·
be enough electricity for the nuclear plant at Rudolph foreement . said that hunters
sLate."
LaFollette noted that the must ha\'e a \'atid bl'ar
"leannot-.eeanyreasoll pla/15 have been momentarily hunting ti een~e before a
for doubling the number of "mo\'edtotheb.ackbumer,'' bait1ng station can be
l'Stablished.
plants inlhestatein thenex t
l noppo~~ltionto the Rudolph
Bear b.:lit is restric ted to
15 years. Tl\at's wl\at they plant, LaFollette said. " I
want to do ," L.aFollette don't believe t~(e can be a honey and liquid SttiiiS and
cannol
be pl3ct'd within so
emphasU:t'd .
good argument for th e
Laf'ollettealsoeommented economic n«d for this plant. ya rds of an)· trail . road or
that technologically, sola r
e;~mpsiteusedby thepublie .
eneri)' is now ready to go and ~an~~~i~ ~~~kj:: In addition. paper, plasttc,
this Would lower the need for one who lack& for elee· gla!:s , metal or wood eon·
tainers and other non ·
home healin& and cooli ng.
tricity .''
\..1Folletteal.socl\antedthe
LaFollette also attaekt'd Oegrad.•{bfe materials or salt
g r oup Sec ur e Adeq uate the Wisconsin Department of are no! permitted 10 be used
Future Energy (SAFEJ as Natura l ResouTees CDNR I. forba1t .
~ng an obvious front !or the
While the new bear balling
· ~DNRispoor lyrun"
power companies. t..aFollette and its ''pOwer is unchecked. rule limits a hunter to l\\'0
It 's become a big b.:lit stations. there is no
bureaucracy wilhout cheeks. limitation on the number of
1be DNR should be split up in
authority," said LaFollette .
Asitit,benotedtheDNRis
unconstitutional because you
by Joe l Guen th er
h ave th e ex e c u tive,
legislative and judicial in the
TI:e Wisconsin Department
same body. " J udges and of Natural Resources t DNR I
executives are hired by the has nnnoWl<:td the opening
persons wh~ may ~it or h_unt
o"er an.Y gl\'en ball sta llo~ .
Beghm suggested that m
order t~ simp!ify vt nlleauon
of regtstratiDn, that the
ntt·~ber of the -par~y who
rtgts tered the s tatt~n ~e
prtsent when the stalion 1S
~x'ing used. \l owevcr, a l~ne
huntt-r eoul.dhnve that stat1o_n
re-g istt'redl!th \j nameevenlf
the s tat1on ha s been
regi s te r ed by .a not h e r
memberoft~hunhngparty .
Th.e DNR field oUlees ha~e
rl"CeT\'ed a supply of batt
station r egist ration forms
that ~to•il\ be va lidatt'd by .•
DSR tmployee when fillt'd tn
by the hunter. The hunter
1o1ill be required to carry his
copy of the regist ration form
~to·henb.:litingorhuntingover
the b.:lltstalion.
Bear b.1iting may not begin
beforeSept.7andmust eea.se
by Oct. t5.
Hunting seasons set
~J:iv:_~:~.~ ~!rsc~~~~g~!!onf:.r
powers should be completely
separate," he added.
TheseN~ torsaidhewished
the DNR to be spli t up ;
fort:Stry~ ra tefromgame,
game se para te fr om law
en!~m~nt.
La f'ollette suggested a
pouible three divisions :
Conu r vation,
P u b l ic
Relations and Environmental
Control. Each division would
have Its separate chief and
would consist of several
bureaua.
this
~~~!:'~~~:~xe:~n~
The big game archery
hunt inK jackrabbit .
season opens Sept . 21 for both
Sharp·tailed and ru Hed
deer and bear . They run grouseseasonsopenSep\.28.
through Nov . 17 bill deer Sharptails can be do"Wned
areherl,. get another chance only in the nor thern pa rt of
from Dt<:. 7 th rough 31 .
the sta te . RuHed gr ouse
The big game gWJ season seasonends0ec . 3llnmostof
for bea r opens Sept. t ~ in only the stale and Jan. 31 in 13
the norlh~m part of the state sout hwestern and weste r n
and closes Sept. 29. The deer eoWJties.
gun season runs from Nov. 2:L,) Bobwhite quail season
through Dee . I for most of the opens at noon on Oct. 26ln six
s t ate . There a r e other south~to·estern counties and
specifications for certain
do5eSon Nov . B.
southern and eastern porThe waterfowl season
~d~om~ ~~m~~~ tio~~· ngarian
modern Interiors Inc.
! .. ~IOII.IOIOOIC!IC UID- !lti-IUI'l - Ul1
s--. ...
Tmtlooodoll
_ _ ..
--~~ 1 1n~1UDt
S.tlo\ .
1~""*,.,
partridge
rndiea ted tlul.t eonfhet wou.ld season opens Oct. 26 in only
be good for .tt makes people cert11in southeastern eoun·
lies. Except in those counties
fight for their programs.
Laf'oll ett~ did praise many which have open seasons.
DN R personoeJ but 'added, raccoons can be baggtd from
' 'They dorl' l \\ave the In- Oct . 12 thrOUII,h Jan . 31.
spiration from the top."
September 28 opens the
IF YOU DON'T
KNOW WHERE YOU'RE
GOING, 'f'OU'lL PROIIABI.Y
END UP SOMEWHERE ELSE
CAMPUS WORSHIP SCHEDULE
Newman University Parish
Satur6ay: 4:00 P.M. 6 0:00 P.M.
Suf'day: 10:00 A.M.
PWwma n Chapei-(Bas ement of St. S'*n'a Church , 830 Fremont Street)
Suf'day: 11:30 A. M.
O:OOP.M.
Cloister Chapei- (St . Joseptt's Conv•nt, 1300 Marfa Ortv•l
Lutheran Campus Community
Saturctay: 1:00 P.M.
Suf'day: 10:30 A. M.
Puce Campus Centar- Luthe •. '!- Marla Drtv• and Vlneent Street
(B• hlnd Temool
COME CELEBRATE WITH US
·-
northern eollontall season
Oct. 26 for the sou th.
Both end Jan. 31. Jackrabbits
1o1i\l be game from Sept. 28
;~nd
=~~ ~~:~Y~~~~·f::
fifty days, throUII,h Nov. 20.
Immediately a fte r t h e
dosing, a special scaup
(bluebill I season will open
and last for 16 days Geese
may be htrited from' Oct. 2
through Dt<: . 10.
September S, 1974
THE POINTER
Page 17
CNR houses
electron microscope
Thiscellfrornthelinlngoflheheartol
•chickenembryoisactuallyt-2.500inch
m diameter. An average cell is ten
microns in diameter. A micron is I·
2S.OOOinch.
Thts portion of the 111me cell is I ·
100.000 inch in diamettt. To enlarge it
the microscope was on 90.000 power
byKIItberlneKowabltl
On the UWSP umpus in a $45,000 to
laboutor y.
an electron
mlcrO&Cope 1.s sllnda rd. equipment. The
S35,000 electron microscope I E~O.
pun:hued for the College ol Natural
fte&oUrca tCNRI, is housed on tht thi rd
noor of the buildinc. ltisinlhlsnorthwesterncorner ofthe
CN R where both students and In·
atructon have shared many hours
toge!NT in rnnreh.
l'hetransmi.Jaion EMdlffertd from the
lllhl mlcrotcope with which moat
ltudentsarefamili.rfrom biologyclus.
l'he difference is that the transmission
ll!lectron microscope can magnify up to
100,000 times while the iilht microscope
only magnifies about 1.000 limes.
The traumlnion EM hu been
S$0,000
espedally~.Rfulforobservi~cellsas
un.aU as 100 anptrorM. One tbo.aandth
angab"om equals about • quarter
millionth olat1 inc:b.
Jo.&epb Harris, pro{egorol bioiOCY. in
doinlretean:hwithalin&ceils. findstJ:'e
EMtobe•valuableinstnlment . H11!1111d
that aow we can ''basic.Uy bella'
vtsuaUte lbe undent.nd the operatint
part olthe cell."
t~uoarc!!ft:~w:~ ,:r:e~
resUrch with cbkkrn embryc.. "The
electron mk:roscope has been responlible for over 50 pll!r cent of all the
acquisition of blologiul and mtdic.al
knOYt·ledgll!inthelast20years,"a.ald
!lay. He added , "We felt since il has
bll!ensosignificantincontributinc to our
scientific knowltdge that we should
UpoiC' intemted biology and n.~tural
resoureesstudll!ntstoatoolwhichisso
imporllnl."
Jnterestedstudenlsnaytakeaspecial
course in electr"on microiOIY . In lhis
courw all the skills which are necesury
ror lbe 1M of the EM are li1J8ht. They
notonlyle.arnhowtooperat.ethe&eope,
but thll!y Je•m techniques 5UCh as
Pf"eparing tiuue for oblll!rvation and
photographyforphotog.raphlcevldence
ol their work.
The EM Jab inc.ludH other accessory
equipment whk:h is bulc. A S4,000
cuttingmachinewlthadiamond ll.nifels
Oflll! of the mc.t II!SSential pieces ol
equJpment in lbe la.boral.or)'.
A normal cen cut is about 700
angstroms. Slici,. the cell is the hardest and loncnt part ol the whole
Jlf"oceA in telecb"on mict'OIOIY· The
operatoru.nnotmerelywtthenachine
at the desirt<l thlcll.neu tobll! cut since
temperature, humiWty and vibration
wlllctlangll!thll!thlckness.
Barbara Dmhont, first aemesl.er
junior, hu been work ina: in the
laboratory with Hay for over one year .
Shellasnotlakentheelecb"oomicrology
COUI"'Ie, but has learned all the skills
neces111ry to assist Hay with his
research.
Ht:rjot.inc:ludll!sllcl"'thelissueand
Jlf"eparin& it ror observation, usinl the
r:~aorcc!srtde~E~·:, ::~=i
a labassisll.nl.
Elmbont lika her job and considers
herself fortunate to be working in this
laboratory. She s.aid, '"Until I sll rted
working ~re. I had never considered
goincintornun:h."
liS
' 'Theworltoltengetafrustrating. The
!d~~fu l momentsaregratifyi"l,''she
Ha rTlsNid that the demand that the
demand for electron micrology trainlnc
Is conlinuln1. In newsletters from the
Mid we.te rn Society of Elll!ctron
MkToiOI)', lhere are UJually two or
three openings every month for people
who have bulc EM tn.niq, be •Oded.
· 'Studeoll in lbe tclence area who are
terlow about leami,.: more about
bioiOik:al functionandstructureare
wekunll! to take the count, said Hay.
;!=tatt!~~uia~~
f!''!:::m:'~ t~Jde
o1 the ceJJ, is
he:r-8
\
P~e
18
September 5, 1974
THE POINTER
.1.
SPORTS
u~ POINTER
It's all in the name
by Joe 811tlte • ndJoeOu ffy
Most Collrge All -American football teams are ridiculous.
Ha•·e one good year at one of the "football fa ctories" and
you 're a shoo-in for All-American honon. For lnsta~.
~;~~~!~~~~th!';d~:},~o;;.~~~ !s'!~~=o~
Players optimistic
byJoe i Gurnl.her
" lthinlt,.·ecanwin ital l,"
said Monty Mat tei, luding
contender
for
the
quar-
ttrback position on the
Pointn-'s footballsq_u:ad .
This year's team 11 yGW~g,
fast and strong . In the of-
fen s ive bacldie.ld, if J oe
Pilecky doesn 't return from
an injury , the Pointers may
field three freshme11 . Tile
offensive Une sees tOUT twoyur men returning and the
defense , both Unf. and backfield, dlaplays much the
same.
summed il up .~d remarked.
··u anybody gt'lS hurt, wf' \·e
got the Pf<Oplt: to replace
them ."
The large difference from
season 's problemswasinthe
Much
of
the
previ ous
tastyear's teamcomesfrom de fense but that may be
l.he depth at all positions. changed now. ln the first few
Denny tJo' lypa per l Esltritl
practices, the defense has
held
the
otren se
to
a
minimum . As Eskritt put it,
·wn,e defense looks good but
utr, ~
POINTER
FOOTBALL &
f··
~
BASKETBALL
theorte~needstotone
down ."
Ga r y
Stanin s ki - ,
defe nsive haUbaek added ,
~ey~~~=li!j:ys~~"f~
backfield."
But the schedule may be
tough . Mattei admitted, ' 'The
s ched ul e is again s t
us ...LaQ-osse,
Mlittwater
andPiattvilleareall good."
LaQ-osse Is the first con·
ference game.
E ven with the rough
sehedult, the optimism is
expreutd by the players
themselves. Eskriu noted ,
" We 11 be in the top th ree. "
Mattei added, ' 'II .,,,.t don 't
losekeyballplayers ,llllthave
a good ch~e of winning II."
Orie Sjoberg, offensive
center. u: pre sse d hi s
thoughts when ht said . " I'd
bedisa~intedi f wedidn 't
103 3 FM
103. 3 FM
finish nght at the top."
103.3 FM
>
Lastfall asajunlorhe tlsomadeAli·Americandespitean
orr yea r and it will take nothing short of bubonic plague to
kl'tP him from All -American st.a tus In 1974.
Since it has now been esl.abllshed that All-America n
teams are a little ludiei"'OWI, may we present just tha t : The
1974 Collrge Football All -American Name Tum!
To becOme a member of this austere •uresallon, one
doesn 't need t.alentas much as one needs • name colorful
enough to be a possible candidate for Nllloa.l l.almp-.
Don 't smirk. This team is not that easy to make. Con·
sider some of these blue-<:ltippen who barely drew
honorable mention thl.s fal l: Mike Sweat, O.K. CoiTales,
Rick Dingle and Wilbur Boggs.
Add to these immortals F1orlda State's tremendous
linebaclting triumvirate of Greg Pounds, Detroit ReynOlds
and Rocky Gratiano tyou canseewhy f'SU wasO.IIIn '73>.
Sadly, none of the '74 sian come clo.e to the ptnna<:le
atta ined bv thrice All·American Kin~ ley Fink Ill from !be
Army . Despite t.his minor annoyance, here •re the 1974 All·
Americans :
m'FENSE
e
~
•~'
qb
'b
'b
'b
k
Name
Dudley Slice
Dale Lee Bread
Ol rdell Nunery
llaiTyClamm
Steve La rd
W.ultingtonGay
Olh•er Sudden
Gay Tucker
Alky Tsitsos
Majorf'inklin
llarddenWe«:h
Bronco Belicheslty
S< hoot
East Texas State
Southern MWissippi
Louisville
Arkansas A·M&:N
cal-Davis
Kentucky
Colorado Mines
Texas Lutheran
Harvard
C. W. Pos t
Kansas Slate
tlrEP
Dt; n:NSE
I'O!illlon
E
E
T
T
LB
LB
LB
CB
CB
HB
118
~~~~Schmid&/
Chatsworth Utley
Aaron Soobitslty
Toxie Beavers
Atlas Bucl\anan
Joe Duffy
Julius caesar
Tommyl\imi~
Jarvis Clinks
Wonderful Monds
Rackum Oacltum
"'""
Webe r State
Texas O.ristian
)
So. Connccticult
Southern Methodist
"""'W'
Gettysburg
~0or
NWLouisiana
Nebraska
Vennont
Attention Students
Intramural activities
initiated this week
YOU
olthe
POINTIR QUARTERBACK
CLUB
UW-lP OOARTIRBAO: UUB API'UCATJON FOil M£MBERlliiP
~m• ---------------------------------City
~~-------
State - - - - - - - ltp _____
(C HECK APPROPRIATE BOXES)
AHNUAl actl•e membership di.IN
S1 0.00
I )
5.00 I )
AHNUAl FOOTBAll PAREHTS membert hlp duet
5.00
t )
ANNUAl STUDENT memberlhlp dues
Make c.Mek JM!Yible to: ~:"'o~8i'~EJIBACK CLUB
}
STEVENS POIHT, WIS. s-&481
THE 08 CLUB MEETS EVEJI Y TUESDAY, 7 P.M. , HOLIDAY IN N
byJlm tt ab«k
Three intramu ral sports formation can be obtained
1\ave begun, one will begin, from _fmhoff at a Berg Gym
and th r ee activities areJ)tachce.
sch e duled to h old The UWSP Judo and
organiutlonal m,eeting.s thl.s Karate dub will hold an
.,,,.eek.
org:aniutlonal meetl~ for
Touch foo tb•ll began those inte r e&ted at 7:30,
Tutsdav for the dorms , with Tuesda~ . Sept . IOinroom 119
l ndependenttnd Student of the f1eldh01.11e .
Organization teams slat.ed to Foll owing the defen te
entercompelitionnextweek. club't meellna wil l be a
Non-dorm teams have until gathering of the UWSP ar·
tomorrow , Sept . fl. to com· d~ery club.
An:htra a re
plete their roste.-,.
.scheduled to convene at 1:30,
Roster assignment. for the also in room Itt,
all<ampus baseball league _Soccer practice hu begun,
~ve been p:.ied , but ptriOna Wlt h practice held dally from
1nterest.ed may llill join a 4 lo 5:30 p.m. Anyone Ia
~a m by contacllns a captain welcome lo join the team,
hsted. Action will bqin at 6 pracUcing just eut of DeBot
p.m., Tuesday,Sept . ro,inthe Center.
•
friendly confines of Bultolt
Al l people taklt!J Pby. Ed.
Par k.
tO I, &ec:Uont 76 and Tl s hould
Mark Imhoff is headi ng this attend • meeUng at 8 p.m.
yea r 's men 's volleyball c.Jub ltiurlday, Sept. 12. Anyone
with practices set from e to I enrolled In thiti Intramuub
p.m . for Tuesday and Wed· clasa that c•nnotattend must
nesda y nighta. !-'utther In· contact Jim Cull: m room
· 107, Sera: gymnuh.n_.
J
•
September 5, 1974
Super Sports Quiz
11
\\i~:e1 a'!s ~~~~~~be~m~! ~~~Y~~~~~sto~:~~S:· ~~~
:he\\~~t!:':t~e':f!:ckP::: ~~~k
com pl etio n
~ ~~n~"".=:owicz
::=~as . e. ~.} =."f:i~nesota's
::
9.
~~oM~~mtan
!:uwt:
.
s;;~~~ ~::,.!'~:!!
;::~:!,'M""' • '""
a. Alu: Karras
~~.,:o
or !:e~~-~5 ~~
:.=:
b;ill " ~
c
d
~
e
~~da
Who kicked the longest
Oeldgoal lnapc-opme'!
a Tom Tom Dempsey
b J ac k Dempsey
c Jan Slenerud
d Don Codcron
e Olesl:l!!" Marcol
S
1be most touchdown
pasws in a pro lifetime were
throv.•ntly"!
II
a
lhk
Sept.7
Sept. 14
Sep\ . 21
~~ 5-:a
Oct 12
Oct 19
NO\' 2
Nov 9
slltne
~: ~~~'!tlonaa=ins
e
AU~nt: f'a~~
named Tu esd ay as head
hockey coach a t UWSP.
Twcnly -KVen year ~d Rich
Blanche from llamlllon .
Ontario. wu ai)I)Olnted by
H
Opp-•t
Momu~gside
L>Ct....
St Norberts
tShri net
Y.'lutev.·ater
OshkOI>h
~·"
Supe·nor
utomeo:ominc l
Platlevllh.•
tDad 'I Oay l
Eau Claire
itl\"erfo'aUs
I.MatlOII
Away
Home
Home
Away
Away
""""
Home
!lome
Dick Kottke
Away
Awa y
Pointl!f" Athletic: blreo:tor Bob
Krueger to succeed Dick
Kotlke. Kollke accepted a
po5ition wit h Augustana
O!Uege in SiOWI: falls, S.D.•
All game• oth e r than
Wlutev;att-r ~~n al l ·3(1 p.m
The Whitewater con test
startsat7lOI).m
Mtlt Plum
Tobin Rot e
Y A. Tittle
J ohn Unitas
Bobby Layne
6 Who holds "the record ror
most pus ~ptions In a
Mngleproseuon!
a Don Maynard
b llomes- Jones
c Pa ~ Warfield
d Olarlie Hennigan
e FTank Gifford
1 The fint 1000 yard rusher
tn one wuon ror- the C..~
Ray Packers was!
;r, .
~~ P~~ ~ /::
and 1969 nationa l c hampionship hoc key ~a ms .....,
Football schedule
b
c
d
e
b
c
d.
e
Chuck foreman
Wal ter Cam p
Pop tvy
Kn ute Rockne
~- Oscar .~
~~~~~~~~n ::~,~=~i·; d ~~~d :phi~11
"•
b Ed O'Bradovich
c . Howard Cosell
d . Howa rd Tvo-llley
. e. Herman Munst er
The tight wi nger on the
Unh•er si t y of Denv~·s 1968
a.
Bnldie
Jim Taylor
Pa ul Homq
Tony Canadeo
Elijah Pitts
Tom Moore
Answers to
Aug. 29 super
sports quiz
1" d -f'Ted DrytT, RaiN , VI.
~Pac k ,OC't . 21 , 1m. z : c­
Jac kle Smith , St. Louis
Cards . 3: d ·Tim Foley,
Dol phins vs. Colts , Nov .
1U9?:J. 4: b.Jim Bakken, St.
Lo uis Cnd a . !i : c -John
Page 19
Hockey coach named
j~~ ~~~~~ton
Ed lla.r gen _ / 10e ~ ""'f 10::C
b. Cannonball Bu~er
~etven Ia~ y~ar ::::ee':
p e r c entage.
basedupot~ISOOormorepass
at~~mS~
to the Los Angeles
b
THE POINTER
after &uidilli the. Pointer
hockey leom in Its tint two
yean as 11 varsi ty sport.
Blanche .,..ill a lso teac h
physical education cl111R1.
Kr llleln' said .
Blanche ~n his coaching
c:a ree r Immed ia tely after
graduating from Denver wit h
a physica l educa tion degf'ft
In 1970bycoachingthe Dutch
Nationa l t e am to the
Netherlands Olp title.
In tlt7t·n Blanche 'll'i!nt
back to the University of
Denver and wu ass.ist.ant
hoc key coac h wh ile also
earning hi s masters in
phy.ed .
Th e next two winters he
wa s coach.general man ager
for t ....·o expansions cl ut., the
Sioux City Musket~rs and
the St. O oOO, MiM., junior
"A" league tam, relpec·
tively .
Blandle, who said he has
1-tad aspi rat ions to coac h
.:lltge hockey for a lone
Ume, also informed he's
conducted ort~uon hockey
clinlcs forthe lut II years,
the last1ix in Denver.
Welcome back UWSP students!
CABLET\l
SPECIAL
FREE INSTALLATIONSAVE MONEY
FULL YEAR OF CABLE TELEVISION FOR LESS THAN
THE 2 SEMESTER MONTHLY COST
Total bill $66 33
tax inc.
Free installation <usuALLY si2.50l
lpiUS SerViCe Up tO one year (USUALLY $6.03 per month)
IUg&lra, N .Y. jets. Itt didn 't
l'lelp his runnina . tbou&h l. ' :
b-John Brocltinatoa. GrHn
Bay Packers, 0971 . am
tml . 7: d· Marv Flemlnc - SB
I ~d II , Packers; SB VJ ,VII,
if: mY~Izi Do1f~b-r r~ t
Philadelphia Ea&Jet. t : c·
Bobby Joe Green . OUc:aao
Bean · 910 ~ta- tO: c ..
pheasant. The nnc-nectecl
pheasant ri.IPed for 1,110
yardlina lamtbet~ lhe
Pack and St . Louis , brealdna
the r eocord lt'l by a reel
aqli rrel of lOt y.r'Ciadurin& a
tm Pac~ • Raider Drawl..
Earlier last lleUIItl. a h1111de
rambled for t ,l• yardl at
Berteiey f'1eld when o.Jdand .
hoat.ed Miami.
FIGURE IT OUT:
IF YOU ' RE HERE 9 MONTHS THATS $66 .77 with the installation.
YOU CAN SAVES .44 DIRECTLY. THE POSTAGE . AND THE
HASSELS COLLECTING YOUR ROOMATES' SHARES MONTH
AFTER MONTH . SPLIT $66.33 UP ONCE AND FOR THE REST
OF THE .•YEAR YOU'VE GOT NO PROBLEMS . IT'S CHEAPER
AND EASIER FOR THE BOTH OF US .
~
102SCiar1o.St
~ l4 1·01l6
~ 1025CI&r11St.
I C J•I·Oil6
~1025Ciar11St.
a::;;
341· 0136
Poqe 20
THE PO INTE R
September 5 , 197 4
Runners have hopes
Pointers vidorious, but lose
b~Jim l bb« ll
F'riday niJ.ht the Pointtrs
gotofftoapromish'&start.
They won their intr,rsquad
ll>m<
-
Tlo.· oytarsago.UWSPfans
couldn"lbesure ofthatmuc:h .
and this se;lSCNI's rirst half
fa.LIC'd to offer muc:h more
Re«< Gionbna prodU«d
s.ome orrenw .early in the
game,whilehisdcfense held
theregularstoa&-Ohal rtlme
lead.
The S«<nd half turned into
a rout , ,.,th the starttrs
pounding out five tooc:hdo,.-ns
for a ~O..Q ,.;n
A pre-ttame thunderstorm
delayed the con test . an d
affected play throughout the
rught
Monte Mattei had the
starters within the ten yard
line ,..hen he rolled out and
dropped the ball . l'Wo punts
,.~re muffed. one when the
~turner ilipped, landing on
hisNck.
Still, the Pointen looked
good tn many "''3)'$ . Jeff
Gosa. last year's WiS<'onsin
Slate Univenitv Confft"ence
tWSUCiscorin_gand reeeivins
champion, caug ht several
tooc:hdO'tlo-n pa-sses. ~Y
Esk:rilt proved he can still
catchtheblgones,l.allln&one
in for the TO. "f!ght end Doug
Krueaer began the way he
finished last wason, with the
football ofte n in hi s
pouesslon.
The Pointers" running
game a~ared im prove-d,
des pite the wet playing
surface . Pointer backs ran
inside and out, but th e
<1uart erbaek:s presented the
most promising n e w
dimension . Both Mattei and
Giordanacanrun. Giordana,
v.i th third and ten, scrambled
for a first down , while Mattei
ran for&ainsseveral times.
Kitki.L1Jloomsasast.rong
point·thls year. One pWlt wu
blocke-d early in the con!Ut ,
bill rm~ainin& punts by both
sides wne beller than
average for good wea. ther
conJitions.
to improve re<;ord
bySI .. ,·.. n\\'. Sthulh
Bob Uolfman, who held
kickoff dulies last yea r .
appe.ars ~a.dy to fill P.at
ltobbin's kicking shoes .
lloUman booted 1,.'0 extr.a
points. and sailed a kickoff
through the end wne.
This year "s crOS5 country
Rive r Falls as favorites,
along with Stevens Point.
:~tm~=~ t::~~=~e ~ ad~~~::;nit~g ~;te!f:::m!~
~d. shoul~ bl' a •'ft"Y Jood
one, acto~dmg to Coach
Donald Am1ot.
In discussing this year 's
prospecL• . Amiot sta ted tha t
Points' s tarting defense "We haVe a good team
shut '>Ut, shot down, and shot returning. and we only lost
throughthe reserves'oUenw. one se nior, Don
Tnebiatowski.."
Two in ter ceptions wer e
lie further related that the
returned for touc:hdowns, one
by defensive Uneman John present tenm.led by a trio of
Nevins . Thrt!e more reserve St!nlors; Dave Elger. John
Duwcll and Donn Behnke,
passeswereplckcdoff.
who are also the tri<aptains,
Hob "Claw'" Rivard hll shouldbe rq:a rdedasserious
hard and often, ~ losing contendtn for the comins
his he lmet .
Riu rd 's season. Theonlyother seniiX"
teammates
performed lenerman i1 Oennis Zielinsld .
si milarly , a ll owlna the
LDoking around the state,
,rucrvts a serious scoring Amiot saw LaCrosse and
th ~atonlyonte .
I)
honed seniors. Include : AJ
Gamroth. Dennis Kosobucld,
Ron Luathe, Ritll Zabonke,
Don Buntman and Patric k
Tirnm . Arnie Bt"nson, Paul
Nithaus. Stuart Pask, Dave
Coulter , Mike Simons and
John t"'\lsinatto make up the
remainder or the team .
!"rom trus total of 16, only
the top seven will be allowed
toruninanygiven mat t h. The
first meet will be t hi s
Saturrla y, Se pt. 7 at Oshkosh,
host for the Titan Open . ~
only home meet for the
Pointers will be the con·
terence meet, to be held on
N011ember %, a t the Stevens
Point Country Cub.
Chilsen warns
of silencing
A Northern Wisconsin
legislator wa rn s that
Oemotrats a nd the Governor
have embarked on a cam·
paig.n to attempt to lllente
independent voices In the
State Senate.
Slate Sen.
Clifford W. Krueaer CR·
Merr ill ) c ited rece nt
Oemocrat acti vities In the
29th Sena t e Di l trlt t.
_/
" In the put week," he
stated,'"ast.reamofMadison
and Milwaukee type
politicians have fiowed Into
the Wausa u ar ea for the
purpose or ddeatlna Sen.
Waller J ohn Chll se n .
O.ilsen"s ~nate ~eat has
been ' l a r aeted ' by th e
Oemoc:rata because he has
thosen to follow an in ·
depe nd e nt c::ourse when
lacing issuet aa they come
before the SeMte ."
Kruegft" said Sen. O!llsen
fates the job of not only
competinc with his formal
opponent but with a ll the
outsta t e r esou rte s the
, Oemocrat party ta n mustft"
in thei r effort to wueat him .
" Residents of the Hth
Distritt will have a ra re
opportunity lhll fall ," he
said . ''Thty willprobably~te
an ~leu var iety of bi&<ily
po l i t itians to m ln& t o
Central Wisconsin to advise
themhowtovote."
"Governor Lucey and his
pa rty ha ve publltly declared
their dtsi re to tontrol an of
Wistonsin'a politi ca l In ·
~~~u:s.·;ha~~~Y
':!:i
repl.ac::e Independent voice~,
suc:h as Sm.Chllte:n's, with
their won people. That ll wtly
vot ersin th/sa reacan~t
tohea r ag~atdeaJ of
ous
political platitudes rom
Madison·MJlwa uk ee
politicians thls ran •• they
attempt to slill the effectJve
vok:e or Sen. O.llten."
617 DIVISION ST.
·-··-·- .....
.,.
in "!.u~ll~~ha~UW'*'!:
mft"ly rt'J)rSented Mantbon
=z·~d~~~
!:':'>r:e~~n:ad':t,
Kl"uqer coodlllied.
I)
THE POINTER
Page 21
· r~Uy maklr-c l«rlf'OIM happy
aud wat~hlnsthtm glow with joy
llllnklfll ollollmeOnef'be's
~~bt-fortyour own
LIKE SPAGHETII?
YOU WILL AT
BILL'S PIZZA
Bicycles of Excellence
FUJI
JEUIET
81TUE
FOURTH ANNUAL
CORN &BEER FEST
SAT., SEPT. 7, 1974 - 1:00 · 5:00
2 Blocks North of Road! Hill on R...,.,• SlfNt
All The Beer You Can Drink!!!
All The Corn You Can Eat!!!
·- ·-
S.. Qu, Com pl... Llao otT...,;.,
llqujpmen~~ ···
•T_..,
•.,._
.,__
...........
- LIVE MUSIC -DRAWINGS FOR DOOR PRIZES- HELD OUTDOORS -
-TICKETS$1 .2S In ad.,.nca from the> members ol
SIGMA PI
orSt . SOitll'••g•t•.
DON ' T IIUSS THtSI
..
......
Hostel Shoaae, 1111.
... "TIIono..-..JiUOii.;p._........... ...
/
Po~e
THE POINTER
22
Former students
join UWSP staff
The UWSP has nearl y 85
persons eithe r on its facult y
or classified s taf f who have
been s tudents at the insti tution .
Consequt'll tl y a project is
1111derway to
m••olve these
JreneGrayoftheAiumni
Assoc: iationstaffisassisUng
the group which emerged
from a small. on ly some times
ac th·e dub that existed in
earlier years onl)' among
JocalteachinR faculty . Ea rly
in July , that group convened
and \'O ied unanimously to reorganizeandtakeunderits
peop le in a new Univer sity
Employees Alumni Club in
Yo'hichthey ,., U ha,·esocial
and sen·ice activities.
"ing all persons working on
A group met Thursday
mghiintll e Universi ty Center
tU.C. I to plan future even ts.
thefirst beingparlic:i pationin
homecoming on campus Oct.
l'J. They also •·ie.,.,·ed a ne w
slid e pr esentati o n about
l 'WSP and tourt'd the new
At the homecoming. the
newgroups willbe0flh3nd3t
an 8 : 30 to 11 : 30 a . m .•
Saturday during the coUee
hour to ass is t emeritus
faculty,parentsofstudents
~·ho attend and help provide
activi ti es for children plus
other local guests.
addit i on
to
the
U.C .
ca mpus wh o have also
studied here.
CANOE RACE
SEPTEMBER 8, 1974
36 " TROPHY FOR BEST OVERALL TIME
$4.00 WITH YOUR OWN CANOE
$9.00 IF WE SUPPLY CANOE
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 341-1525
SPONSORED BY
S!G~t' _p~ji_EPSI~Q_N~
This photo of Winston Churchill plus
other widely accl,imed photographs are
on display at the Edna Carlsten Gallery
until Sept. 15.
UWSP husband and wife
team serve> as
education specialists
A husband and wife who
se r ve as ele m en tary
educationspe<:ialislsonthe
UWSP faculty have been
appointed regular columnists
for lnstrudor, one of the
Mtion's leading magazines
for teachers.
Robert and Ruth Schmal:
willbegi,.ennearlyapagein
each month 's e d ition to
provide short 3nswers to
questions s ubmitt ed by
readers.
f))
UWSP faculty in the fall of
1970.
Ruth Schmal: was on the
slatf of the UWSP Gesell
!rJSiilute for the Study of
Earl y Childhood until II
closed last spring. This fall
shewillbeassoeiatedwith
theWiscoosin lndian Teacher
Corps which is headquartered
on campus.
·
an:r.e~~~~t::':~s~
!orate In educatio n .
The column is identified as1
Schmal: is the author of
several prolesslonal books
Class room Problem s . " and is co-author of another
Schmalz, who has had coming out in J anuary from
a rticles publis hed in the the McMillan Publishing Co.
maga: ine over the years , was entiUed Modern El.. meatary
asked by the editor to provide · Sehool CIU'riculum. II will be
th e new quutlon·answer used ac rou the country as a
.service . Schmatz joined the t ex tbook in collegea .
"Q &: A-Bob and Ruth Sch·
mat: Help You with Your
1))
AT
~
SHIPPY SHOES
M...
AT
WATER
Fornlt :
HOO\' l'r apartment siu
washing machine Ex~llent
condittoo. Set' Rick Martens
rm 231 CNR Building
Mle11tlon Stereo bllytriNow that you have worked
all summer , maybe you"re
thinking about investing in a
httle aoun d equipment
There's noust' in getting your
hard earned cash ripped orr
by paying retail pri«S. Now
)"OU can buy aU major brands
frommeata draslic20-65pu
cent savings off store prices.
Otoose from AR, Aka.i , BSR.
Bual. Ga rrard . Kon .
:>.tarantz, Sansui, Sony, etc .
Buy speaker~ , tunen. amps .•
turntables , car stereos .
..evenTV'sandcalculat.on.
Every item DOUBLY
~:~~~f~~~~~~~~~ -
Campu s and local
Do yourse:l f a favot" . Before l"l'Prtaentah\ ts needed for
youinvn.t cl'leckmylow low nallon.,•de
tmploymtnt
r~cts. J~y. zm or 4S59, ~~f~l F~~~it~ou;~
Knutzen Hall .
full In fo rmation write
Summ er Ad\·trtl!ing Co.,
P.O. Box 643, Ptoria , ..Jl.,
61601 .
THE POINTER
Poqe 24
Students
receive honors
s traight " A" avenge: or
More than 2100 student.s at
UWSP receved bonotl lot
thei r scholutic ~~ehie:vtmftll
during the: spring semester,
Gordon Hafe: rbe:cke:r , vice:
cha ncellor for aca dem ic
pe:rfect~d .
To qualify for Inclusion 011
the honon list, students were:
re:quir'edto carryl2eredit.s
He n cre dits if s tudent
teaching >. Persons won
" honor s" st atu s for
grade:points ran&inglrom 3.2
to 3.4'9: for "high booOB"
averagu rqe: from S.s to
3 . 74; a nd for " highest
booots"avenge:sabove:3.7S.
a ff airsanno~.
Of th e: 7, 3U stude nt s
en ro lled during th e four month term. m~arly 29 pe:rce:ntol tlult group earned s.2
orbettergradtpointsona t.O
seale:. The:4.0represe:nt.s a
Hey Larry! (the zoologist)
Larry !
Guess who's here: outside:
your window.
Wake: up ! Open the: door. I
fl."tllike:daneing!
Huh'!
l)(r.o.·n 1.0 Main St. and I
can' t hnd my way home:.
Larry, youlooltsofuMy in
pajamas- li ke a litUe boy .
....llat!
Oh. l justeametote:llyou l
havegolde:nfeet!
Wannadaneeonelastone:!
...,'here's the: radio!
Sill y . Mills Brothers you
sa•d. (and I was impressed
t hat yo u knew Mi ll s
Brothe:ts!l
Hills Brothers!
Oh no thanks , Lar .
I'm a Mogen-D avi d
drinker- drunken OVfftime:
thinlr:\"r- e:nte:rla ining thought
of you.
I know you' re gonna leave
me. but please: don 't forset
me ;
That night on the wirxly
pie:r wasa llof summer tome.
sl&ned •
Smuh .
Editors aole : O•e poe.a per
Wffk may appear Is the
PO I/Io'TER. Tttole latenste4
In wrhl.a& poetry are
welcome to. All POINTER
material ll to be typed .
OracSilltelslheF'rillaybefOH
publleatiOD.
SEPTEI'fffiER 1974
_ _,S00
UN=D::.:A-'.Y_l__:~::ci0:::;ND=A~Y:.._L_TIJ=ES=D:!:A:.'Y'--..L.:JWE
=DNESDAY
DlAI. UOO - Jn to.-t \011 011 -w.. t h ~lf19 on UJC~~R" u.n M
obUinedby dhl\ngExt.JOOO . A1lll.liclcntDrpi'IIUt10111 1nl .. 1~
t.ol'l.lftthal reo-curTicultr e.-.nhi'K.Ordtdon Uihttcle•tiiiiCOU
\fthaiMo,._.tiOIIhiDIUMtotlleSt.IMM!tktlvltiHOfflcalt
lult14tJ'prlortstlle •-n .
FRIDAY
TIIURSDAY
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ILLK Ill LOYE,
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7 ;30p. ..
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U:cture,
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(Oihlosh)
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SATURDAY
7
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