POINTER j • made

advertisement
j
uw~p~
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•
- POINTER
SERIES VII,
VOL
18
Effort made
· to increase
voter turnout
1 b1KIIy K ~n
A YOlet' ~tratiGD drive ,
Andftsorl., wboitindwp
oftbeooeampu:s phase, plans
aponaored by Studul tnuendtwlCOU!Idlmeetinp
GoYtnUMnt, has beeD la in the resicleoee balls to ask
thlltlhewilla~t.tivu
pracrealinceStpt.U..
lbe drfve is bel111 held In PIA out cards to the lludents
conj~Uon with a atale'tQde on lhdr winp. 'I1Ie c&rdt ult
canvas belna conducted for the ame lnlormaUOa
Wider lhe awpics ol United uked for In lhe ttiepbone
Council WCI of Student eanvas. ibe haD preaideoll
•
~ta..'Jbepwp:~Mol
Mvebeenukedto~tlhe
the cam a ol to imprGV"e U.
tum out ol stuciutl at· tbe
po&a: tbil year.
•
''One objective ol the drive
Is to mate It u euy u
pouibM for uch atudent to
cut his voCe," u.kt Stew
Riled out card~; fnn tbe
~tativs
wina
and to return
them to lhe Student G<rrtnt-
ment olfke.
Tbe drive hu been runn1n1:
'Smoothly so far but !w:lp Is
!u[;sp~·u~:~: =~::;~~
havina problems with other arua, commented
::':rn::~onb :rf~~tl~ ~
lbe
mdl Oct.
:,earns. drive
0
whatever , we !S tudent
The UWSP students br.ve
Gow'tnl~Mftt l WaDI to lulow tM ri&bt and U. respooabout them 10 that aometliq aibiUty to cut a vote. be It fD
c.an be done.
Sleven~ NDl or tbdt home
SturN and Pete Andenoa, town, uidSte&ma. 'lbladrlve
:!:
Jc~=~~~~==
ipto
pbuet. The off
~rate
cam~
phase will
be
~~n':.OS::'vu~: a:'~:!"~
fumlah UWSP and other 1tate
with aome kind
a · univenitia
~~c:.nv=~e:: ~hi~c:'d u!taa'~!;
and it allY pnlblem.l are whether the student llltended
upecred . 1be c.a1.1t wiD bl to YOC.e and some ol the
tMde becweeo tbe hllun cl Sol problems studmt. have lA
p.m .
cutin& tbeir votes.
UWSP ltudect. Kue1 Lam5*1JU1, wa c:auPt lD a
a warm AAIIIDII day. l'boto by
moment ol rtGicUorl •
On the inside
UCM"-"e, p.7
~ 8-1 1
lnloMows al SkJdont Sonot<n, pp. 12 & 13
•
c...tcdicn
-.e.
Spcns. pp. 11>-19
ClpO>kln, pp. 21 -23
p. 15
ftoter W. Barr.
Page 2
THE POINTER
October 3, 1973
US. leaders featured .at conference
Three persoos who have
held hlghpo~~ln thefedef'al
&0\·emment, a Washington
correspondent !or a tarse
newspaper chain and the
presidents of a Roman
Catholic college and a cw·
poratlon which manufac·
turersfeedforlivestockwill
bedi.scusslonleaders0ct. 7at
t h e flftb Laird Youth
Leadership Confe rence at
vro~~ina ""i60Ut 1$0 hi&h
school at udents from the
~nln l and
otthestille
tlvities wW
law fi r m of Rucke lshaus
( William), Beveridge li nd
Fairbank~ and aniatant to
thechainnan for the National
Energy Project, American
Enterprise Insti tu te. For
th.rft years be!ore this past
April, M was a membes' of
President Nixon's Domestic
Council as an ene ra y-
of StevensPoint,he nowholds
the title ol pc"ts.ident or the
Product& Co. , Inc ., ~f
Burlington to the post of
Marshntld native. It draws
qelhe-tbetopstud~t.rrom
~~6Y tt,~~:;,eaded the ~:edr~nt,rend ::;ef:!ec~~~ ~o8nhgr':s~~a:n dt:f':t~~ ~~\1
u.s. Office fOC' Civil Rlghts s.;: ~ds8 !~r!.~~~~~n::.: di~~sue ;:.~~srre:n~~~~~~e
~~'; : 1s toc~~rr~orun~: y
nd
the national theme is "New Opportunltla
Washing ton Research sc~~. }armor:.larketlng Man In the '70's··Ethlcs and
Project, a public Interest law olthe Yr:a r .
Abili t y . " Each of th e
firmencaledinlitigationand . Timothy J . Wynaaard is a dise\.Uion leaders will live
monitoring of selectr:d Wuhington CGN'Hpondent brld !WeseGtaUons and then
administrative for daily newspapers In spend the remainder of an
The Rev. 1bomas Finucan federal
"'as ~n praident ol Vilerbo agencyprogramsonbehalfof Tenneuee ow ned by the hour· long period In the
Collq:e In LaCroue since the poor and p1embers o1 Scr ipps Howard chai n . A momlrc and ' apin in the
1910 and is a former leacher· minority aroups . S ht Wisconsin natlu, he aflernoononspeclrksubjects
previously wn associated . relating to the theme.
pr~t in WauSa u, W'I&CGnlln currenlly is assislina lhe
Rapids and holder ol a Ph.D. Home Committee . In the with his father, John, a
In educational admlnbtraUon. District oC Columbia to for· longtime syn dicated
Falrbllnka will speak on
mulate pol.icla In the field of colwnnist and state capitol "America's
Envi ronment,
public education ,
reporter for the Green Ba)' Development and Enern
Robert R. Spitzer holds 'a ~Gazette and Appleton Need a: Can They Find
doctor's degree In animal PMt Cresca~t .
Happiness Toge ther?";
nutrition and In the past 27
1be unlvt'rsity previously Froehlke on "America 's
years has advanced in the announced that Cupar W, Military Role In World Atmanagement of Murphy Well\ber&er, ltCretary of lhe fa irs: Responsibility and
U.S. ~rtmeot ol Health, UmitaUons": Fr. Finucan on
Ed~~talion and Wel!are !Ol' " Abo.u t Life Styles,
the past tl months, will Education and Jobl : 11 19$4
deliver the keynote addreu Aln!ady Here?"
followinc a noon luncheon in
Also, Martin on "Governthe University Center IUC). men!, Business and You - The
Weinberger ,before auwni na Consum u : can They F':lnd
his current post, wu director ttappineu Tot ether In tile
of the federal budget office. Ma r ket Place ?"; Splher
The leadershi p confertr)Ce on "Amer iea 'a Economic
is sponsored by a foundation Role In World Affaira : Where
which honors the family ol Have All The Dollars
forme- aeventh District ol Gone?": and Wyrcurd on
Wisconsin Q)ngressman and "The Bicentennia l and
1
~vironmtfllalspec:lalist.
::~:e uA~elv~r~~. ~ ~:S:~~or~~!~ a1~~::n~~
t
Foul play suspected
in death of LfwSP coed
The University J azz Band packed the OltfeehOUie during
their Monday ni&Jit performance. Photo by Rick O,el.
The body of a 11-year ~d UWSP coed was found In a
ditch Tuesday mornlna ln RiVer Hilla, • suburb north of
Milwaukee.
M.llwaultee County aut horities said a passlna motorist
found the body of JoAnn Marie Blanchard, UKII Ellis St., In
th;:etC:u~~~~~ ~flh-:;u:,:~~af:-:d~· lndlcated
4
she wu air angled and may havt' been thrown Into the ditch
paul;n& vt'hlcle. An a~tos-y wu bein& p«formed to
determme the ~•uae or cle.alh .
A univenlty spokesman said Blanchard lnfgrmed a
counselor lut week that ahe wu eonatderini dr-epplna OUt
o( Khool .
~
Milwaukee althoriUa said she was reported u · a
runaway on Friday bit picked up by Stevena Point pollee
from •
r.r:~·~.:r::~noo~'"a~~::':=t i~:.-. 'M:t:y ~en w
left the County.city Buildina.
I
.
u_.~p POINTER
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74
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O IN
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R.;__ _ Page 3 .
Two -counseling center:s available
by AI Pavlik
stud y skills program , and ·
academic tutoring are ofrered and an occupationa l
info rm ato n libra r y h
available.
The 51.41 Board, unlike lhe
UWSP Courueling Center , is
responsible for more than
jus t s tud ents . Nineteen
pertent of Portage County's
floor in Ne lson, room 336.
resid~ts or 9,000 people need
.Irs oraaniud for Pwblge the servkes oC 51.42, ac·
County residents .,..bo need co rd i ng to J a mes Me ·
attention for ( I) emotional Cormick, board director.
and ps)-chiatric problems ;
The se rvices migh t be
1%1 developmental disa blities
such as mental retardation needed by people anxious or
epilepsyofcerebralpalsy: 11) depressed ove r eve ryda y
al<:ohol abuse ; or l4)drug living as well as people with
abuse.
more severe problems, he
Thru Uoors below in said. Services also include
Nelson's basement is the follow-up cue to people just
released fr om a hospital
~=~Pp~(~i::!~~; c;:~~eed followingtreatmentoCment:aJ
counselors are available to a lcoh ol o r drug a buse
·
assist underaradu.1te and problems.
"We won't turn away
lfaduatestudentawithtbeir
pe:rsonal..-voc:ational and anyone. We'll refer people to
educational development.
theright ~erviceortakecare
Indiv idua l and group of them oursel ves," Me·
counseUq, a rudin& and Cormick said.
'
Nelson Hall now housa
two co un se ling ce nter a
available to UWSP studen ts.
' Th e Port age Count y
Comprehensive Me ntal
llulth Ser vices Board,
commonly called the 51.42
Board , is set up on the third
''The UWSP Counseling
Center is very competent of
s erving the s t udents,
though," he added .
' " l'mextremclypleasedwith
the treation of the 51.42
Board," sai d Denni s
Elsenrath, oC !he Courueling
Center.
'Tve been aware of the
need for such a board since I
came here ten yea~ ago. The
situation before the 51.42
Board was developed met the
studen ts needs but wasn't
near ly as e ffec ti ve . Its
creation has Increased the
limeavallable fiX'thenpyof
studen ts," Elsenrath said.
The two c~ten work together in four ways. Bolb
referp.a t l~ts toeachother
wh~ appropriate, use the
same psychiatrist {at dlf·
ferent times), s hare any
seryices and personnel In
eme:r-geocies and are working
logether to develop a mental
re ta r dation preve ntion
program.
The bolrd is providing
most of the services the now
dis s olved
Pa cisci
or ganization offered In·
eluding c r isis In ter ve ntion
se rvices, McCormick said .
The 51.-12 Board does not
1ponso r the r a p g roups
Pacisci did, he s;aid.
" There 's an Inte res ting
phenom ena taking place with
kids today. They're going
!!:;~~~~~~~,: ~~!; fo~~·solution iJ not to build
drinking patte rn &," M e·
Corm ick u id .
A total of 2,600 people or!>..,
per-cent of Portage County
needs help for alcohol abuse,
he said.
Ten percent of the cOWtty 's
residents need menta] and
of mental r eta rd a llon ,"
McCormick Info rm e d .
"Prenatal care, particularly
the poor diets of pregnant
women Is one of the causes.
By 1975 we hope Implement
correcUve programs In this
area."
"Next year we hope to have
developed a day holpital
which will help former
hos pital patl e nh g et
r eo r ientated to the com·
munity .
Day hospitals are designed
to redtRe thequickch.angein
environm ent which might
s tart the individual's
problems all over aga in,"
McCormiclr.uid .
......
North Vietnam held to lhe
same buJc bdlefa fo~r~d ln
our conllltution and the
people who misted the War
v.we serving the country by
doing so, he added.
" When we're ta lking about
==Y:.:th'"!a'::.kf:tt!~
.,.,Tone' and no one can
dejermln~ whose si de Is
wfilch . We have to join
or
to come
back.aspersons,uagtnof
love," !le. uld~.
"You
'Its
an
individual
had
::ft:~ra~t~~~e'a~ an obligation to lhll eotmtr)'
other," Cusidy Jald.
and if you Hidn't fulfill It in
the military, you ouaht to
fulflll it in civilian service,
Cauidy, along with u . Col. Porter araued.
John Porter of the UWSP
This cot.Wttry. reached the
Military Science Depart·
ment : Milr.e Aird , a mdoiOS:Y : , : o~ f~~:f C:O ;~
student at UWSE' and a against Ho Chi Mhin and
Vietnam veter"ao and o.n Vietnam, Aird Jald.
Gol d en, Portaae Count_y
" H lher.e ia jU51lce to be
district aUnrney made up a done , when we contemplate
panel to diiCUSI the question and stOOy e-vents that led up
of amnesty at a program to our Involvement in th is
sponsored by the 01ristiao
Mini st ry on the UWSP
campu~ .
and draft rnisten but there
needs and uk. then
1
:~t:n~;. ::::tL::~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Apenon'1value:lhouldnot
on future con·
of Ill... cauid)' uid .
tributionl, Cauidy argued.
''There is no a~ute right " " We should thlnlr. about the
terms Of the limitation.a o! all
a nd s tale government to
· gamble, to spend money on
outpaU~t treatment wblch
will not immediately reduce
the mon e y going Into
hospitals, but will eve nt ·
uaUy," he uid
McCormlclr. sald there Is
cUJTenUy a baclr.l011n county
outpatients because of an
Increasing Portage County
population and because ollhe
clinic staff's desire to see
people regularly.
st:~~o;:~an~ ::!:u~
by DI:taJWojc\11.
Amnesty is a "Pol.itlcal
decisioninterms ofwhatwill
be of beflefilto the co~.W~try,"
said Robert Cauidy, UWSP
philosophy professor, at the
program on amnesty Monday
" Unconditional
amnesty
could seta precedenc'eth.at
couldleadtode&tructionof
our country when we need to
raise an anny," he J.a!d.
a large mental hospital here
b!j t to Increase ou tpa tient
trea tm ent where· patients
need to see a psychiatrist or
psychoiOIISt on a regular
basis, and wouldn ' t have to be
In a hospital," Me Cormick
u ld.
=~~~ct'r~!~!em::!~::; lh;:l~eort!~ t:· g=~~!
a nd three percent developmental diublility care, he
uid.
The Sl.42's main concern
pnsen Uylsbreaklna:Portage
County's dependency on the
fadUties and staff ol other
counties, said McQlrmlck.
Panel discusses amne$1y issue
Amnesty Involve& no moral
clecision.normding ofright or
-.-.TOng . lbn'e is no advantage
gained tn pi"'HCutins them.
Golden said .
When we tallr. a bout am·
nr:sty it would be belief" to
"talk about the nation as
reaching a point ....11ere .,.,1!
cansee eac hother ua family
and find some way to live
together" and stop acting in
te rm l of judgement,
~gning guilt and lm~ng
~~~=~d.and aut hofll y,
" lbelie-vewe'vegot toshow
leniencf to draft desert.en
and re11sters and do to now,"
Porter said . He cautioned to
be Jure that the p»JUon that
we talr.e will not affect our
defense.
''For any I npatient
psychiatric treatment Por·
tage County residents are
se nt to No rwood Hospital
near Marshfield or Win ·
nebago St a te Hos pital,' '
McCormick said.
"People with alcohol and
drus problems have togo the
the Mara thon Health Center
or to Winnebago," he in·
be based
:!"':'.!",~:.:::•:\'"J.:
urs. - Fri., Oct. 3 - 4
~!':'~a~~ota:~:~.~~ 7:30 New Program Banquet Rm.
"''·
SPONSORED BY
<
THE POINTER
Poge 4
October 3, 197.t
Prev~ntive program· launched
.
.
·
Shop/ i-fters take everybo<;Jy's .money
.
· ahopllltll'll plus
A~~~!:;jc~r ffiay • is~~::\ 1 clty
cost
fOU
SilO.
SIO court eostl and goes
uld
Perlak
Point Police Oepattmenl
pay for It, u.ld a local mer--
~::'m:rrce: h~~~~e~:nt~:
prlca, he Mlded.
In view of Ulil the SUvens
or- on the penon'• record.
Lt . Len
of the Stevens
dlnance,ca rrlna r!lle ol SIOO
launched a drive aplnlt
ohShopfoplf•ff~~·T' •.~~~~
1
'"'""ak£> ' ~
M~ ~~:~-
iJ designed
~ "to try to educate students
r:-;!·c~:,:'~la1 =:
t
w~:e :r-n.:e':'~~~~d~~
ah
lUted each yeu
I
St:'ensPolnt, Wooduld. n
It's not onl)' university
atudtnts who thopllfi because
and the public in general that hi&h school ltudents and
sho plifting h costing townspeoplearejultublld,a
eve.-ybody moaey,"uld ~ men:hant u.ld.
Wood o1 the Stevenl Point
1be funny part la that 119
u:
~ Aret.!c~::::n~:~~ I:~~ a:a:~~
displaying STEM decals and pay roc- whit they've atoltn,
slans sayiJll, "No lfs, ands or an assistant s tore manaser
buts. shopliRin& lJ steallnc." said.
Handouts warning against
A c:«avicted ahopllftB PIYS
:e~~:f.~~!fa~v:i:Ut
to
Also available to the
1chools, c hur chu an d
orsanhalion ~re 11i d e1
explalnln& what· happens
whet~ caught shoplUtl,., he
11id. ·
'llle cost of sbopliflin& hn-e
accounr. f« two to lhl'ft
~~t ol the lfOU rdail
sales. It's a three perca~ l
shoplifting tax to the con·
IUJ'Oen, Wood u.ld.
IIOM$2,000toS:Z,500aye:ar
due toshoplirtlna: and I'm not
&oingtobelheonewhohalto
~~ero~ ~~~~~~!:~
fa«:a a ROO fine and a
poulble jail ~lence lor
reptatedoff~. WootNid.
U a penoa is convicted of
shopl.lftln& he wiD have a
criminal record which couki
make it hard for him to &eta
.lob Of' toad into~ollege . This
.... Orgy anyone?
A13toS:30 p.m . a freeEivll
Presley movie "Kina Creole"
will be lhown .
from S:30·7 :30 p. m . ,
Happy Hour with Wayne
Faust pHformln& In Cof·
feehouse . ·
A Dance M1rathon l1
byF.AnUySoroko
The stroke of 12 noon, Oct.
u star:ll an Of'IY in the
~~~e!..it'ruf~;~~-ucJ
o r aanhations will be
giventheopportunitytomake
them ~el vH known to the
ltudenl body u well u the
wm
fa culty and staff by havin&
10 p.m.
them monopolize the facWties be open from 1
of the uc.
At 7 p.m. I double fu.lw'e
I>.lrin& the &ftltnl time movie wilL show " tiM" and
~lodloftWp .m . ,7· l OJI.m .• '"J'Ime Machine."
P I = !i~ t
P.a~.owd .
.sc~u~ci~~~~ Ct:i.
lo
f:'!''::;rJ!T:'::v:
s t ationed at convenient
locationltothatltiXSftltacan
~~~
r:;:ni:!: :
their•nterest .
•
lol~in.:~~~!.~ ~~~
event an «JY. consMkr the
evet~llthatwillbeoccWTing :
from 12· 3 p .m . the
IOik:ltatMM} booths will be
.....
,Jem
Frtlm t l ;t.m. to61.m ., a
Cllino will be held .
At midn i&ht Jack Nasty
record wW follow him (Of' the
rHiolhll Ule, · hrlallsaid.
" We 'r e not for putlin&
people behind bl"· We want
to reach the people before
they s hoplift . Thil Is a
jW'twntive pracram ratMr
than a punitive one," Wood
said .
Ou r overall policy is
pt'tvetltive nthes' than apjW'ehenslve,uid the a•istanl
manqer o1 a local diJcwnl
store which employl the use
ot two-way mirrors, Ooor
=~~ ~ ~.:~:e:ms to
Tbe bHt methOd Is to
establish 1 direct ,eye-lo-eyt
contact with the aatomtr so
that they luloW that an nn·
ployee 1s neaTb)', be said.
m~one~!c;:.n:.:;
the O.mbe:r ol Commef'Ce
hal done fOf' the retail In·
wi~t~::'\!~~~.mboou., ~ ~e1v~p":d'f~
!optional) will be open.
To conclude, at I 1.m. a
brtakflll with
~d~man Dreyfus will be
cham~a.ne
This schedule Is stiU optft
for any new I deal .
from 12·2 • p.m.. Mike Org1ni11tlons wlshl na to
Sullivan will be perlormlna in participate , please till
the Coffeehouse.
The Dunld"' tank will take !s~f:
=h~
placeat2to4p.m .
Emily Soroko.
.
J,x:'tb
Phllacklphl.a In tr.t and in
the finl year reportedly cut
1hopliftlng lone• by 20
percent.
'!::'=
in ~~~o.;.
fr om th e Me tropollt•n
Milwaukee Aasodatlo n of
Commerce whkh reported I
~~~::~~~-:=If~~
Nove_rnbe:r.
•
October 3, 1974
InterculturaL communication
to be topic of workshop
lly Bas~ey Umem
The depl,rtment of communication is sponsori ng a
~~o'Orkshop and publk lec:tun:
by an expert In lnternatlonal
com m uni cation and persuasion on Oct. to and 11 .
beconsidft'edona"firstcome.
first served' basis. American
and foreign students in·
tel"ftttd in participatinc In
the W111'Uhop should coatact
Busey Umem, 225 Gesd1 or
call 346-3409 or 341-<821.
Professor Thorrel Feat,
cluiirma n of the University or
Co lorad o depa r tm e nt of
com munication, will direct
the two-hour "lnten:ultural
Communication " worbhop
from 3-5 p.m ., Thursday, Oct.
10 In room 211 Gesell . The
workshop wiU help studeats
test their capacity to 1wltch
cultureuDdexistinaforei&n
culture.
Fest will also preset~! a
lec:tut'e ~titled ''Man In a
'f'echnocratic Society", 1
discuulon of tM soda! and
com munication mphc.ations
of inlonnatlon tec:hnology
The lec: ti.D"t , which is ooen to
the entire uni ve rsi!Y and
com m unity, will be held at
7:30 p.m., Thursday, Ckt. 10
in room 321 Gesell.
An eq u al number of
American and fo r eign
students Will be daen to
particfpa~fror- »r.ona those
w•ho appty. Applications will
Festls~uthorollhrH:
books : Effec tiv e Co m ..
m1111ic a t lon In the
OrJIIIin l loll ,
Gnap
Dbcunl011 and SpHcb ami
Tbulre. and tlas preHt~ttd
over 100 scholarly articles·
and papers.
His profes~onal mem berships I n c lud e the
Am e r ica n Socie t y f o r
'l'raining and Development,'
Industrial
Communica tion
Council and lhe lnterl'll tlonal
Comm~nlcatlon Association
of :-wtuch he Is 1 pu t
pres.dent .
Profe:ssor FestisUsltdin ........................""'t!
"'-'ho's l\'ho In til e Workl,
lnte rll a llonal Di r ecto ry of
Scbobnandisalifefellowol
the lntemaUonal Institute-of
Arts i!Dd Lectures.
~
Refunding plans
discussed by PPBAC
by Carol Martlo
Refundi n& plans foe- the
In W"lK'Otllin foethe 1975-n biennia l we re
discussed a t the Planning,
P roaram, Budae t a nd
Analys is Commi tt ee (PPBACI meetlna.
• The fundina is pre:senlly
being done by determlnlna
the number of student credi t
hours In the fa ll session and
figuring lhe summer seulon
seP.arllitely, said Adolf Toe-·
teWskh assis t ant to the
Assistant Chancellor of
Upiversity Services.
• Under the new system the
fundln& wvuld be determined
by total student credi t hours
of the fa ll , s prin& . and
~r~inni t ies
summer sessioos, Tonev.-ski
Aid.
Faculty will then be
detennined by the student
credi t hours in each depart
m~t . said Elwin Sigmund
usls tanttothectlancellorfor
Plannin& and Analysis.
Also discussed at the
meeti ng were pilot programs
at UW Superior and UW
OshkOIIih.
The pilota are used to check
" fle xibili ty In relatio n to
IChtdulin& calendars to see
impac t on thOR institutioos'
~rollment." said Tonewski .
The next meetiltl of PPYAC will be at 2 p.m . on
Wednesday, Oct. 1 in the
Ouancellor's oftice.
UW enrollment
increases at all but two
The Unive r sity or
\'ttSConsin System ~rollment
has reached a totil l of 139,1190
this fall , an increase of 4,32:5
over last year.
The tota l Is based on
preliminary eiVoUmmt in·
formation, but final figures,
\lihlch should be <~vail able
r - ' from the system's 21 cam ·
\....... puses In ea rl y November,
Ca mpus
Eau Claire ,
Bay
... .,.....
Gr~
M.adison
Milwaukee
Ooh'""h
Pa.rkside
P\atteYIIIe
RiverF"alls
StevtntPoint
"""
Superior
Whitewater
Center System
Total
are not expec:kd to change
the total si&nificanUy . The
139.690 f!Jure reprnents an
increase of :u ~t and is
a new high for · the UW
System .
Enrollm~l$ were up on all
but two campuses, Stevens
Point a!KI Superior. Campus
enrollment figures com pared
with last yea r :
........
........
Chanl(e
3.661
9,43'1
3,941
35,931
311.915
24,943
10,415
2S,421
10,641
5,2111
3,138
4,211
,,.,
1. 1+1
"'""
139,690
( lte S htrrn~nDreytus)
Champagne
Breakfast
a.m.,
6:00
Del. 12
Organizational
ORGY
Tickets $3.50
from
~·'"
le'''i
811/
··a.e...
+54 9.
...
\.es
Ly,.,,
+478
+ Z33
+405
+ 117
+129
346-4666
·129
+ 106
TH IS AD
COURTESY OF
:!!!g POINTER
.'·"''·".", .... ...,.
.,'·"'. ..,.
......,,'·"' ...
...,,
'·""
3,821
LSD
phone
THE POINTER
Page 5
[ID®[~J'1j TABB
917
0CT.ll-12
October 3, 1974
THE POINTER
Pcge 6
Theatre ·begins with drama
University slore crd 1eXt renlol
New location benefits students
llySlacey Dua.c.ll
11le ·University Store and
Text Renta l, In tM!r new
~n!~~b:othr~d:~~a.!:
the management.
Tbe store bu .been i&
creased In tbe.lo accomodate
more studentl and supplies.
It has been located adjacent
tot.hetextrentaltosave the
student time.
aru was located :so feet !rom
lext r ental . There wa1 much
limelost lnmovingmaterial
from the r.lr.mp to the store.
Now tMre IJ a new lo.sding
doclr. and freiaht elevator.
The material Ia brought
direcUy up to the Jlonge
room adjacent to the store
and ~at rental . Thilmakea it
e.asier to Jtoclr. and to keep
shelvesJloc.lr.ediOfll;ter.
need ror .liquor maU. htr a
contradictory and complex
The U WSP Univeully, charac ttr.
·
Theatre wiU begin ltJ 1974-75
As Blanche'• mental alate
seaaon with Tennessee deteriorates, trisgered In her
\lo11Uam•'powerruldrama,A youth by the .auldde or her
:;~:::. .:::rett:a ~~rvia~r. :w~;::r ~=~:in~e-~ r;:r:~~~~kh~:yn: b;
~~:.1f: i:.e•.t:ki: ~!~:;; ~~~oen~;'\'/~~~;:~~
around dtllan."
or the Fine Arts Center.
· working and livinc In the
same tough aurro~dinp, yet
he has • certain Rnlillvity
and &tntlenesa not ro..,d In
man whose Insensitivity Slanley. Kowalskl..
destroys people . Marlon
The mteraclion or thew
Brando made this role peraooal il lea c real ea a
David
Tut rental Is also concerned with aatlafylns
students and keepirc COils
down Tbe ree for boob per
aemater 1J used to ~hase
Kauer a stari
11
" Sta nley Kowalski ", a
P~yskally ltf"Dt!l and ro~Ch
~:.Ujn~Sa{n ~)!•r!:t ::r:u~t'!,m~klnsJ~~ ~~~~~;:ydiJ~~:~:
several yeaB this ree baa not Named Dulre. with the
'"111t university store Is
covered all their upenses. As famous "ripped T-ahirt "
BC'sldes an increase in
strlvlnc to serve rint," said
wire, "Slcllo",
Stanley Kowalayk, a.alstant tpa« and supplies, the store
stor-e manager. With tills and text renta l have a new
policy In mind they haft stcnse aru . The old atonge ~:~~~I$expect to COYer all ~a~ :w~nat~!'~of.~
expanded the art lkpartment, area wu located :SO feet from
·
.,.,"hen her lislff, Blanche
DuBois, 110mea to atay with
introduced po.tal service, lext rental. Tbere wu m~.~Ch
extended bouts and pi.IMed WneiOillnmovinsmat.erial
The manaaement sai d them . ''Blanche", played by
to hire more ltudentl u from the ramp to the store. student reaction to the new Julie Barras, Ia a senllle
Now
there
IJ
a
new
loadinl
upa~on increass.
store and t.ex.t rental area has Southern lady from the
dock and IJ"d&ht ele-vator. beeft\'tf)'favcnble. Uianot "Gone with the Wind" eu,
The material Ia brought only more attractive, but "'"hose stronJ sexual urge and
'lbestoreandtextreotal
up to the atorage more apaciCIUI and dfectl~ .
are not on a profit basis. direcUy
room adjacent to the store
Prices are set to cover
text rental. Thisll\llkes It
overhead and pey ul.ariel. and
easier to stock and to keep
They are expectirc to break shelves stocked longer.
even lhiJ year, but any pf"!)fit
Is turned over to the
University Center IUC).
:Ubs~~~ ~Ytheha~~. ~: sc;:~lcy's
in a poor a«Uon of New
Ofleana.
r~::e~a:lath;:f c!!~'::.~
~Jsf:l~ne~~~eoace.::moat
ft,rformancea will be g.lven
at I p.m. In the knldna
Theatreoo0d.4,$.&,1,tand
10. Tickets may~ purchased
at the theatre box orntt, With
a diiC'OW!tt!d price to UWSP
students.
David~pl.inakl,textrentai
U.aldes an increase In manager, u.id the new text
space and supplies, the aton rental ia "more functional .
and text rental have a new 'lbere IJ an lmprovtmeflt In
. atoruearea. Tbeoklatorqe traffiC now, cunmu:nk.allon
ITZHAK PERIMAN
WORLO·FAMOUS VIOLINIST
r- Michelsen
Concert Hall
Tues., Oct. 15 ....
M
-TICKETS-
50' PLUS 1.0.
346·4666
ARTS
~
LECTURES
Pi~tured are a few of the more popular mq:uines whi~h
you ~an find at the new Univenity Bookstore.
PhotobyGrq:Spr~er
CHECK
HANDBAG
FASHIONS
~~
Gift &
Luggage
On The Square
UAB features mystery
Featurins aix bil· name
sta r s, the intrlauln&
mystery, Tbe t..•t of fihdla
will be shown at 7:30p.m .•
colwnniat wife, Sheila ·was
killed by a hlt· and-rundrlver
outalde their Belair home and
reasonably an be auapec:ted
of the crime.
Center WCJ Banquet Room.
The puns are 10 thick , that
It appea" u If the film wai
ca.st before It was written.
JamesCobumpia)'llhellllde
widower·same orlalnator.
Richard Benjamin I'U.Mf:rta
hla ~lalm 11 be!na: movie's
moat ~harmlealudln& man.
Raquel Welch beautifully
portray• a bllldactre.a. Dyan
C.MOn doea her allndard
funny -bitch act and only
Jame1 Muon •nd Joan
Hackett au8Jeat lives In ·
dependent o1 the mystery
pme,
~~~yi~:.,: ·~nr;~~ry
wi~~1~:001,hae~~~~~n!~
producer, the aix people he
haa Invited for a weeka'a
cru.iseontheM~iterrariean
have other thin&a in common ·
~reo:a::~!re~n~
_~lm buaineu: all have sordid
htlle secr eta. alcoholism,
homotexuality an d old
shopllflinl ~barge ; and all
::i!h~c~:nr~,:~
TR E POINTER
October 3, 1974
Poge 7
UCM gids religious cooperatio-n
b1 Betty Oenden11h11
Rt:lt&ion Ia usually considered a private matte!'.
"Beine a merribu on lhe
Newman Bolrd hu made me
mo.-e aware o1 some of lhe
can rdtr to. I'd abo lilte to
send out an internt ba.llot to
find out where 1ome of the
It's an experience In com- w«lt thr'Ou&h the problem,
munal Uving which operates and hdp them reflect on the
in a reli&ious atmosphere. It question of why. We let them
thinlt it through and malte
their own dtcis iona. We
t ptc:tlves. It It ttul:nt provide th e d a t a a nd
opera!~ and run, they backaroun d which th e
contact and tllre the per· student can cranlt into the
sonnel for II. "Pan y Vlno" Ia equation to help tol.ve II," he
open to members or all said.
fa iths," said Brockman .
The UCM mlnlsters also do
Anothuimporlantfunctlon the tradition a l thlna•
otUCMisadvlsing. 1bismay auociated with their Job such
be done on a group levd u wonhip sen-Jc:ea, weddlnpandhospltalvilllatlona . •
~~kk~fa~ts ~~!~ ~~f.: ~-~1:S~ ro,: ~d~n~:lpi~:r~!!t' ~~·~~~ :;~C:t ~~: 1 !sc~ce ~~
it may not be IS openly parish rnay have. 'The Board lhlngs u who would be Indiscus$ed.
consists of four ttudeftts and tel'ftted in attending worship
"Rt:liaioa Isn't an OYtr"t five adults . It's a cr oss let'Vitft and a t what limes, I(
lhlnc. You usually don't aet representation of people who they would lilte to pntlc\pate
too Involved with It until are usually members of In a disCussion 1f0UP or If
somethin& happens and you various commiuees-liturl)', theywouldliltetoplanorkad
may need some help or ad· finaDce, dw:ir wbkh &ive a wonhip service. What 1 ~eel
vict. Thecampusmulistryis ft'P0111ollheirftndings tothe 1 need new Is more student
trying to malte religion a Boa rd ,"
tal d Janic e input,"saldEdingtoa.
mo.-e apparent part ol a Bemows.ld, a UWSP ttudmt.
=~~ti~e r-r:I =~
and theexchangeolldtas and
viewt," remarked Matthew
Smith, a UWSP student and
membe r o f the Uni t e d
Mini s try i n H ig h e r
Education t UMHE l Board.
de~o m\nhat~o~sg ~ay
1
Putor James Schnekler,
th:v:
Lutheran Minister at .separate interests, they often
UCM, uses the Puce campus cooperate in t p onso r ing
Cf:nter ror his wonhlp ser- va ri OUSP1'111r&mtonc:ampus.
vitft.
One of their past events wat
"Ontoflhealmtil toJtl the Eugene Mccarthy and
the people involved, because Marti n Marty dl tc usslon .
the
~~;e ~:~~ ~r~o~~
brokers" by helplnc a student
group or organb.ation get a
projtctolfthegroundorona
private basis.
" We l'llve peraonal coun·
" People aren't alway1
aware of everylhlna: that a
minister may do, becallSe
theycan'tseealllhtlhlngshe
does," said Smllh.
on-r:eo~~ -~~i:ut!~; :::w~~~~hto~~! ! ~':d~c!= ::inW.':treta1~=of~
1
organluUons c:onnec:led with Ultt to get four or nve people ''Am nesty , '' SomethinJ
the University CbrlsUan toushtt,htlpwith liturgy and whkh was Imported from
Ministry CUCM l, located btlpwith other up«ll of the Osllk01h Jut yea r Is the ''Pan
at(OU from
Neison Hall. Sft"ntt.
y Vino" ret.rot.
There are thue religious " "Another lhlng which Is
"PanyVIno\saretreatfor
ministers about something
that may be botherinc him,"
ffinarked Edin&ton.
Brocltmao helped explain
the approach to the coun-
10
~~~~-~C:h~~~~~=~!': - :=:.;:~-:·:it~=""l""'""m1111"•'.,~
.....' ,".,"!!!''."",!!!'11!·.,".,'!'".,
!l•·,.··.w.,
• •"'•''.,"""
..,'•''1
and the UMHE which in- times throuJh out the yea r . fl
eludes the American Baptist.
lhe Dlsc:iples of Chriat, the
Moravian, the United Olurch
of Christ and the Methodist
and the Unit.ed Presbyterian
churches.
"BefOrt the UCM was
formed in 1957, there uist.ed
~ate Identities for each
reliJion oa eampus. Kavlnc a
total «C!ptt''lloa has proven
adva nt ageous in two
res~ll. One Ia financiaUy,
being tO&tther In one building
-..ith one sec retary and one
setofofficemachineshtlpsto
cut the c;Oill. Secondly, b
communicaUona, thue Is no
needfor-competi t\onamonpt
the different g.roups. we find
-..-e can do more tottthu than
ftc:ouldalON!,"c:ommented
FathttVaughnBrOI::kman,one
o1 the CalhoUc priests - at
UE:M .
Although the idu ol total
coope ration 11 ve ry Important, each group st ill
r etains ill individual
religious identity.
"Becaute we repr esent
differentminlltries. we have
se par ate views and
ideologies. The thrust of the
ministry is serving the needs
ofthepe<~pleuweeac:hmay
see them" said Br01::kman.
'Specials' may be anything
from a se r mon on th e
'Exorcist' to a play lilte the
·ure and Times of Noa h' and
h.aving the congregation
partk:ipate by responclinc ln
it. 1btse are an allempts to
get the people In the
congregaliCNI
Involved, "
commented Tom and Marlea
Gilbe rt, members of the
Lutheran Student Community.
Besides the wonhlp services , Peace Center baa othe r
uses.
Oenter is open ror study from
6-12 p.m., Sunday thrqh
Thursday . Student a~roups
may also use the Center as
longulheychtc:k the time
wit h the office," added the
Gilberta.
Student involvement and
participation is the prime
goal of all the ministers.
"We have lhe Luthera n
Student Community, a
student orpnhatlon which
includes committees on
wonh.ip. education, nnances
and st:n-ic:t:. M01t of what Is
done is geared to the stud~ts
inlernll In tueh are.a.s as
music:, a r t, d r ama an d
study, "
commen t ed
Schnetdn.
•
~.: :;!".f:::, ~~·h:;
in our se rvl c:u," s a i d
hit denomlnlllon."
Btmowsltl.
atEau:;: ~n:rn:= E:r:~t~~~d:~
c:onaregationa or groupa for minister at UCM, Is new his
:~ ~~;a~ln :t"S~:
Stanisla~a' Olurch, il one of
5:30P .M.
HOCKEY AT
ITS BEST
TO KICK OFF THE GRANO OPENING WEEKEND FOR THE STEVENS
POINT ICEODROME THE
"A iotofacllvitlesgoonat
the Peace Center. Besides the
:r:ti~l:'~~y~~
Reverend Steve Edington.
the UMHE mlnltter at
UCM. added , "Each minister
has 1pedBc responsibilities
to the studenta of his
denominations--s uch at
Father Kr)',.ltl c:onduc:tlna a
' 'One of the C«~Ctms of
mu•~ Although the members Newman Is to get an a t·
of his denomination are his I'IKiq)heN! and lltw'JY !Nit the
:!::?
~~~~~j~~~
histc:Opetoonlymembersof
OCT. 11
=:c::=c:::: ==
dmomin1d-.
~d~u~~
a:=ati~~~ a~~I ' m ':,'~tu:;
~
Representing the Catholic
USi ng the UMHE
Aug~at.
denomloationatUCMarelwo Boa rd to hel p aenerate
University of
.Wisconsin-Madison's
Hockey Team
Will Stage Their
Annual IntraSquad Game
At·The .lceodrome
Registration
Begins
Sept. 30
in UW-SP
346-2696
PRIZES
2800 Cleveland Ave .
lst-$15.00
ffl.,• Oct• 4th 730 pM
Tick $
I . lnd-$15.00
• ets 3•00
t 3rd-$10.00
I
:
1
•
E~~nvgaeilr'asbleforatMtehne,
lcTeraovderol mShe'op, · ~I
, ...
HunJers' Comer, Sport Shop
I
:~~~~~~~::: ~~aamres'::~ ~n~r:t ~ IJ.--&iii!MIIIii;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,_;;_~..
ADM. -.50'
·uAB
Page 8
THE POINTER
Oct ober
3, 1974
t., OUTDOORS
PPBAC conduds
forestry audit
by K..y K1r1
thlsmaybethatatthej~ior
The PlaMI"I , Program· lenllhe ltudentla for«d to
mini. Bud&et and Analysis spech11iu . " 11id Adolf
Committee ( PPBAC I Is Tonewsld, assistant to the
conducUna an internal audit Assistant · Chancellor for
of the Forestry Prosram In Unlversllr Services , a
an errort to compute In· member of PPBAC. It was
structional COil per st ~t. also noted that at the senior
"Forestry was chcun as le\·el studtnts find they have
a sample program because II .thd r requiremtn~ but n~
was the stmplnt proeram to to -take 10me electives to
com pule COil per 5tudi!Dt accwnulate enou&h credits to
CJ"f'dit bour," explained El win graduate.
Sigmmd, auistant to the
This was one of the tapirs
Olan«<lor on PlanninB and discussed at the Sept. 11
Analysi.l who it cbainnan of meet!n& of PPBAC. The
the~mmlttee . Headdedlhat
general goal of this comforestryltud~llhavealq
mittee , acco rding to
listof requirem~tstoinclude Siamund, Is 10 &ather inIn their t24 crt-dill needed for form atio n on p laanlng,
g radu atio n. Those credits program mln& , budaetinJ.
that are elcc:tivcs oft~ have and ana l)'llt; to review the
suggested ~urses for the material : and then to ma lt~
studtflts to tab. Therefore IU&IHllonttothe 'OianceUor
~~~ ~r~ ;?l !':'i~e~; ~:;rnln& the separate
predictable. This dala sup- · PPBAC is made up of :
plies some consfants by three voting members ;
v.'hich the instructional costs Siam und, Toruwski a nd
C.rol Marion. assistant to the
can be computed.
Final results of the audit Vice Chanci!llor of Academic
indicate th a t th e highest Arfaln: a n on-voting
instruttklnalcostsexlstatlhe scc:retary, P aul Holm and ,
J!!!!iorlevti.'"'J'be r eason for dir ector of Of fi ce
u_
ManagemC'nl Information
andlnttltutional~arth
POINTER. ·
•
•
and a facult y observer ,
Douglas Radke, chemistry
profuJOr ; and a 1tudent
observer, Robert U.dliMki ,
student controller.
Some or the projcds the
committee will be dealing
v.iththisyeararesnalysisof
a prvposed plan to ~ruct
conne-ctors betv.'t-tn Collins
Classr oom Certter t CCC I,
Co llege oJ Profeuional
Studies tCOPSI Buildina.and
the Science BulldinK. The
connectors v.·ould be built at
thethlrdorfourthlt\'t l ; m
proposal to the Stevens Point
a ty Council concerning an
easement for the Michigan
A\'e. extension ; a review of
thedifflcultlcslntransferring
UWSPdq.reecreditstoother
,..1\-ersitics.
The PPBAC mHthlgs are
open to the public. Unless
previously announce d
otherwise, the weekly
mectingsareheldat2 p,m ,
~~~~esda y , In rooT 219
BOOK SALE
10% OFF ON ALL BOOKS IN STOCK
Thursday, October 10
UNIVERSITY STORE
UNIVERSITY CENTER
. "EVERY FRIDAY"
FISH FRY
A~L
ALL YOU CAN EAT
DAY !
INCLUDES:
BATTER FRIED FISH
CREAMY COLE SLAW
GOLDEN FRENCH FRIES
ROLLS & BUTTER
"FAST SERVICE IS
OUR BUSINESS
AND WE'RE ONLY
MINUTES AWAY "
EVERY SUNDAY
CHICKEN AND TURKEY
DINNERS "ALL YOU CAN EAT"
$ 99
1
Bow Hunters need little In the way of
aear. Instead of equipment, they carT)'
great Sl«ts ol faith and knowledge.
Photo by Roser BarT
Bowmen silently
stalk the whitetail
by Jaei C. GIIofD iher
ibefe's a IOUnd in the
~~o-oodstheseda)'lbut lshas
nothing to do wit h dee r
hunters. Those now In the
~~~r:tet~~~~
quiet ones. They are the bow
huntm.
They come from both nota r
and far , from city and farm
and from rich and poor . They
C?"~e from everywhere to
• lently stalk lhe .tlltetall
and hope, only hope, lor that
· one brid moment whet! lhe
foliage opens slightly, just
enough to send an arrow on
Its short but swill Journey.
'!'he how hunter knows of
t h•n ga oth ers ct.n--o~
imagine. They knoW the lmK
of lhe primeval, the days
when there were no hanh
reportaol'rtOesloshlttertbe
mom ina ai r . They ln t~tivdy
reallzeanauraol ancient
blood rWlninl lhrou&h thei r
vrina. And they Wldersland.
possibly more tl\an anyone
elle,whytbeyaretherelntbe
woods with only thft!M!h'elll
company and the wind as an
advenary.
There's not much more you
can aay abou t bQwt~Wlttrs
They are •imply theft· You
may not let: them and you
P.'obably ccxidn'l hear them
1f you tried, but the)' a"'
there.
October 3, 1974
Urban
forestry students
'
~
THE POI NTER
Page 9
ConservationistS question land ad
'
restore Iverson Park
by Ka~ Kowalsld
Dead and dying trees In
Iverson Park hav e been
removed but plans are being
· made to restore them .
Last semester two groups
of students from a UWSP
ID'ban forestry class studied
the rea s ons for the
deterioration of trees and
studiedt'heaoUs in thea~a . A
third gr oup went further
upstream to study a n area
whk:h wu a natural site.
Robert Miller, profeJSOf of
ID'ban forestry said that the
class found that trees in the
area were dying due loa high
wa~t.able .
Micky Simmons, th e
Sl:evens Point City Forester
said in an Interview tha t the
deteriorationolthetreesisa
result al a combination of
events . •
The two most significant
events which led to the death
al trees in the park was an
unusually high level of
p r ecipitation and the
discontinued use of three
wells which were being
pumpedbythecityof~
Point, Simmons said .
The unusually high level of
precipitation continued for
fiveyeanfrom 1967tol9'73.
The water table rose
causing a cone of depressloa
to fill in with water. Thls
prevented the oxygen from
reaciling the tree roots. As a
result , the trees died, said
Duane GMJel, qoe of the
students who worked on the
Iverson Park study.
The class made rec<~m­
mendations for restoration of
the area.
Alistoftreespe-cieswhich
willsurvivebestinthesiles
studied and filling In the
depressions with land flll1re
rec:ommendations submitted
by the urban forestry class.
Aproposal!orfillinginthe
deprusions 1\as been submitted for approval and "as
far as I know it was approved," said Simmons.
Simmonssaidthisis1step
towardaetting the park back
into usa ble condition fo r
recreatiooal purpcset.
" I hope in a few years it will
stat! 'looking like 1 park
again.:' Simmons said .
byJodGuenther
In its September 10
the Sierra O ub
ne'oi.'Siet~ .
~"%~ I~:"P~i-:~n~
Mana.Jeme nt Ac~ . H. R .
1&61'6. ''Tbe bill must either
be amended to safeguard the
national Interest, or failing
·
tha t ,be ddeated ."
The club announced their
"objections'' in seven areas :
mining, givea .....ay to state
ag encie s, endange r ed
species, nationa l fore sts
grabbing, grazing, possible
landrushandtheestablish·
ment of advisory councils
instead of public hearings.
The conservatioaists · said
that H.R. 16676 would a llow
mlningcompaniesto"locate
claims and obtain title to
them without reitrlctloo."
They also Indicated that the
1871 Mining Law should be
~pealed .
lnregardstolhegiveaway,
the club said the bill would
allow unlimited Bureau · of
Land Management (BLM)
lands,whicharepubliclands,
tobegivenawaytostateancl
local ROVemment agencies.
"The townspeople are 10 contract, all net profita that
friendly " Is one of the m01 t develo p fr .o m t h is
common remarks made by arrangement will be used to
uaen of W'lJCQnlln's state imp-11'/e the trail to enhaDCe
parlr.t.railsas they hike or itsuseandenjoymentfor the
bike through the communities public. •
along the trails.
The Department of Natural
nte' Ahnapee trail opened
Rhources CDNR l obtains in August and reports In·
comments from tnil users dicate subs tanti al usaae
through registration cards during the fil'1t rew weeks,
placed at various spoil aloag accordl natoWeizenicker.
the trails.
Dave We i ten lc k e r ,
assis tant director of DNR's
Bu r eau of Pa r ks a n d
Recreatloa, said that. "OJe
fine relationship between
local citilens in adjoining
communiUes and the trail
ratrons is one or the many
r easo ns ror enjoying the
tTails."
Three state ll'ails are now
in operation : th e Elroy·
Sparta trail !MonroeCQt,~~~ty l,
Sugar River tTail !Creen
county land the Ahnapee trail
! Kewaunee coun ty). All ZJ
miles of the Sugar River tT1il
vm-e opened last May and
was an Insta nt s uccess .
Usage on the SUgar River
trai l isalmostequaltothataf
the ElroyoSparta trail. wh.ich
has been open to the public
for a number of yean~ .
The SuKar River trail is
unique in that a nonprofit
5t'rvice corporation, madeup
of two representatives !rom
eachofthefourcommunities
• ~~~~ ~Rtr~J- ;~~~~
bicycle rental and shuttle
5t'rviceolvisilor1. Under the
I
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With the tools of moct.rn scl-.ca, •• ca n now
syslemlllcally ..-aiUitl t~ objeetiYe ca u... and
ax prn1lons · of tha Inn..- per5011al development
produc.cl by Tra nscend-.tal M.cllatlon (TM ). Tha
ltllmlnatlon of manta! 1nd phy1lc:ll •tress through
dHP rest. as lndlcal.cl by tha c:ombln.cl phy•lologlcal c:hanges during TM, prod ucas a n O'feratl
••n•• of fulfillment and lntarnal harmony.
For lur1her Information there will bl a lrH
public lec:t ura:
Thursday , Oct. 8
at 8:00p.m. In the Nicolet
Marquette Room of the University
'- _c~~~!~ ~ '=!1.!2~1:~~- _j
They Said, "choice wtldcr·
ness and wild lands could
likewise be given to s tate
agencies totally unprepared
to mana11e them."
Stockmen, the club s_aya,
.,...ould be issued ten year
grazing periods Vt'hich are
longer than those now Issued.
The permits could also be
extended "indefinitely" as
The biU , theclubsald,would I~ as tJ:te grazer has not
"indir«:tly repe11l provisions VJolal-ed h.ia terms.
of the Endangered Species
Sierra maintains that the
Act or t973." H.R. 16676
reverses the top priority biUwould allow another land
given to endangered species rush by failing to repea l the
and puts them in "equal" "obsolete " Homestead ,
considerationwithotheruses. Desert Entry an d Sma ll
Tncts Acts.
H.R. 1667& also allows the
foreststobesoldlnto private
The club did say, though,
ownersh.ip "at the Vt'him of lhateertaln provisions of the
the Secretary of blllwere favoredbuttha t a .
Agriculture . " Loggen , bill already passed by the
miners and grazers on ad· Senate , S 414, possessed
jacent lands Vo"OUid be given these good potnts ''without
first priority in the pur- the chaotic and reactionary
chases.
provisionsorH.R. I667fi."
October 3, 1974
Paj:Je 10
GOvernment legislates
en~ironrnenial action
U.R. tG6'l'i-Publk l...ands
Potky and Management ~t ;
es tabl is hes mu ltiple -use,
sustained-yield mandate -for
Bureau or Land Management
tBLM ); aiiOIIoli the sale of
Forest Servlc:e a nd BLM
primitive areas, roadlen
anas and wilderness study
areas. The blll Is presently
in the committee.
Jf]C..t&!Zl-PTevldes statn:
..,_·Jth the right to adopt or
enforee ~ul rements with
res pec t to certain en\'i rorunental matters ; allows
states to set stricter standards In areas ol radiation,
noise and pollution. Tht bi.U Is
oresently in the commit tee.
II .R. tl31 1-- t:stablisbes
ener&y coordination
projeoct ; tofurthcrlheconduct ol research, develop·
~ola r ,
ment and demonstrations
in solarenerc technologies ;
to establish a Solar Energy
Coordlila tion
and
Management P roject; to
establish a SOlar Energy
Re5earc h Institute . 'I'be bill
was receotly inlfoduced.
t:d'hor 's aote: Le&ls lalive .
EM·ironmental Action Is •
C9Qtlnuln& fea ture to htlp
kup the
~•derldormf'd
In
governmental legislation oa
lheenvlroament.
I
,OUTDOORS CONT.
u_.IP
P.OINTER ·
/
owderbu~
rns
.
and
backlashes
by Joel Guenther
During the day when I'm on campus and
see all the students on thei r way to class , and
talk with many of them, I try to re.main
fairly optlml$tlc. I SeJ! In their youth and
vitality a hope for th is sphere.
But then the night falls and Wnh the
blackness a cloud shadows my mlndl
pushing out the clarity of lies and sullstltuting the di ngy · filth of t r uthful
pessimism . I see the great hordes of people··
not iust .s;tudents--pushlng, shoving and
complaining of their father' s lack of
foresight. And In this massive psychosis, I
see my children cr amped and angry.
My children are angry. They're angry at
me and, yes, they're ang r y at you too
because they no lonQer have a wilderness:
They no longer have mountains. They no
longer have hope.
·
What they do have Is on ly a memory,
rekindled in pre-dated books and m agazines.
In these they r ead of how northern M innesota suffered through disease, the pock
marks being open-pit m ines . T hey read of
the demise of the timber wolf, the bald eagle,
the gri zzly and many,· many more. ~
Fina l ly, they find thel r way to a 'small ,
circular room where they ca n be a lone. One
of them, a young woma n, searches her
bedding and f inds a book ... m y diary. She
pages through It and stops . She reads,
Ge• ~nwolwed
a shady deal
a• Hardee's.
~n
Hurry on down to any participating Hardee's and while
the supply lasts we'll give you this Sun Shade to wear at
the game or wherever. It's free with the purchase of a Deluxe or Junior.
DlliJ~.
641 DIVISION ST.
"been a good day. sma ll game bag .
missed easy shots . sunrise fantastic . watched sun melt early frost on wild rice. twc
drips and it w as dry. guess It's all It dared.
but those two were wonderful and lovel y.
hope they find a dawn like this ."
She closes the book,~o- tears
close to her cheeks.
snugglln~
October 3, 1974
THE PO INTER
Poge 11
Vets fail to use benefit programs
byJDh~ R . Pn"d ue
UWSP, is a Veterans Acl·
ministration IVA ( employee
assignedhereaspartofanew
VA policy. All colleges and
un iven;ities In the United
States with at lust 500
veterans on campus were to
ha\"e a full time VA .service
offi«r begiMin& In August of
this year, Pn.lnka said .
Tom E . Pesanka, new
veterans service officer on
c1mpus, rec-enUy lndic:.a ted
that many etlJib\e veterans
have failed to use certain
benefit P"Oil'lmt.·
Only24bofthe52Scampus
Veil have applied for lhe
Vietnam Era' Educational
Grant, Pftlnka uid. The
1rant is a vailab le to
Wisconsin veterans only and
paysuptoROOpt:tsemester
tomarriedvetel"'nsorStOOto
single veterans. Altbnu&b the
vant is based on financial
need, most Wisconsi n vets
are eligible, be said.
\"eterans knoWledge and as
the subjective judgment of a
commanding officer. They
sometimes translated into
such thlnas as ''inaptitude,
homosexuality, apathy," etc: .
Unl nowlng veterans were
sometimes tumed away by
prospective employers who
understood the codes , as
many of them did;
i)le main pl.l'pose of ·the
program , and Pes anka 's
primary duty, Is to ex pedite
Any veteran w~ would like
to check the meanlna of his
SPN code can do so from the
program In response to list In Pesanka 's office.
previous com plaints about However, all veterans are .
long delays in the handlinao£ urgedtoask forll revised
ve teran's benent claims, be DD21,.evenif thelrSPNcode
Is not a bad one, Pesanka
said.
said. This can be done by
ltlbmltting a request to the
Pesanka can also help appropriate branch of servetera ns eliminate the Vlce.
con troversial Separatio n
Program Numbers ISPN
Pesankll'clln help wit h this
codes) from copies or the:ir problem or any other related
DD2.14'slaeparationpapen). to veteran's a Uai r s,
SPN codes were numbtn espetially with respect to
previously applied to the irregularities in the pa yment
separation papers of veterans of benefit c~ec:ks .
eve n if they r e ceived
honorable disc:hartes. The
He ca n be contacted in
codes "Nf:re on en assigned Admissions In the Student
without hear in,IIJ, without the Services Center tSSCI.
Rf'Vic:e to the vetera n. The
Abounder-ullliz~ are the
Tutorial Asslstaoce Procram
and lbt Wisconsin Economic:
Assis ta nce Loan, Pesa nka
said. The tutorial proa:ram is
available to a ll vets In need of
academic anistance and
f:i~ :n':r':~::'iJ~
att hreepercentintt:restto
eligibleWisc:onsinveterans.
Pesanka, a Navy vetuan
and a May 1974 tradua te of
Tom E. Pn.anke nnng some nterans
af fairs informstion. Photo by Rogft" W.
""'·
.
University Theatre .
opens tomorrow
J oehnk as the yo u na
collector ; Unds Hannemann
asthenurse.
·
F'rieda Bridgeman of the
Theatre Arts Department Is
the costume designer and
Clsrke Crandall, slso of
tMstre- artl, Is the sound
designerfor the productlon.
The ll&htin& designer iJ Dave
Carlson , a se nior drams
ms)or.
Seasontic:ketsmaystlllbe
pur'(hased for five shows.
Sintle tic kets for the
1
=~r~e:Jsb:v~maan ::~ production are available at
illusion . The contl"'sl of 1m" the theatre box office in the
encounter wi t h St anley upper levdofthe Fine Arts
Kowalski, the earthy oppollle Center.
of illusion. has been rated 11
one of the fiDest moments in
American theatre.
Anthony Schmitt , p r o ·
reuor o1 the Theatre Arts
~t . at UWSP Is direc::tor of
the campus production.
Three theatre arta majors
have been cut in the leadln&
tty Kslbft"'ae ~ah r.J
One of BrNdway's greatest
a ucce ~> aes,
Tennesee
Williams' A Su•eetc:sl[' Named
Dnlre, Will be the first
Univer aity
T h eatre
production of the 1974·75
season at UWSP.
Sc:beduled pedorii'IIIICI!I
i re all p.m. on Oc!OMr 4-11
at the Warren Gard Jenkins
Thtatre of the Fine Arts
C>nt«.
¥.111iams 'dramadealswith
the cha racter of Blanche Du
Financial assistance offered
to. minority grad student?Financial ass istance fo r
minority graduate students Is
offered through the Advanced
Opportunity f>«<ll"'m IAOP I.
Some funds are available for
minority students who enter
gradualt:pf'QCI"'Inlal UWSP.
Asdefintdby this progTam,
' 'minority" is cla11ified as
Black , American Indian ,
Oriental and Sp anish ·
s urnamed I Lat l nl . Ap ·
plic:antl must be U.S. c:\tl.uns
or pouna a pennaraent visa .
To qualify for AOP
assistance, 1tudents must be
enrol.led in lin approved poll·
baccalaureate
pr oaram .
Grants •r.e reviewed
periodically and recipients
remain eligible as lona as
they remain In ,c:hool and
shoo.r.· satisfactor)' academic
progre u . The a m ounts
awarded are based oa studenl
financial need.
O.m enl minori ty graduate
s tude nts are e tl&lble for
fundin& tbiJ semestu if they
apply by Oct. 9. December
&raduates m ay r eceive
assista nce for the spring
semester if they enter 1
tVaduatt: program here.
Further details . a nd apo
plic:.ations can be obtained a t
the PR IDE Office, lOS
Main St .. Stt'Vt'nl Point.
CNR holds
job seminar
=s
=~~~
:::::~ in~~~=~=~::
plays the role of Stanley ; and will be held for students and
his wUe Stella, Blanche'S' filaalty at 1 p.m .. Oct. I, in
lister, Is played by O.yna room 111 In the College of
Moe.
Natural Resources (CN R)
Mi~i. ~ ~"!nun..r will include a
also a theatre arts major.
Sc:boe:nbohm doubles aa the
scene desi& ner for the
production.
Other cut membtn In·
dude David lAmoureux u
Steve and the autstant sta&e
muaa« : Pa ... :Z.wadaky..
Pa.bkt: Karla AM Wklnft" aa
Ewllce: Botlbit'Boedft"Uthe
Meslcsn n owe r wom1 n ;
Nancy Nub.aum as the
nel& hbor la dy ; Robe r t
t'f'Viewol joblat the fedn'al ,
~tate,c:ounty,dtyandprlvatt:
levels.
De t ails about rallna
systeml, fed eral se r Yice
e:ums and civil ser vice
eums wiU be disusMd.
lob buntint tools and
tecluliqwa includitC resume
p!'eplration , lettft' wrilli\i,
Intervie w akitls 1nd the
importance ol 'martelint'
oneself will be di.lewMd.
SANDWICHES - TEXAS HOTS- CONEYS CHill AND COFFEE
-
COLD STUFF -
MALTS- CONES (OVER 30 FLAVORS)
SUNDAES ANO FLOATS
-OLD STUFFANTIQUE RECORDS - RECORD PLAYERS & PLAYER PIANOS
ARE BOUGHT AND SOLD AT OUR ESTABLISHMENT
RECORDS-1 5' AND UP
=~gg:g ;t~ ~~=~=m~~~De~,c:_~o2:s~go u_:ND uP
PLAYER PIANOS-ASK PROP. ABOUT DET~ILS
PoAe 12
THE POINTER
October 3, 1974
Newly elected
Kurt Anderson, a
philoso ph y ud polltlc::'ai
science major stressed that
beina a st udent is not a
privilece. but ratber that
students sl;lould realize that
they can become a worlr.
force, he sa.id. He Is in·
terested in •wiling wi th the
Academic: Affairs Cbmmltlft
and voices a pro·New Student
Alliance CNSAl viewpoint.
Andenon rep-esents district
Jeff Thiel Is 1 freshman
:~~~ -:~= ~h~~
~=~en_'!~~~
elections were not public:iled
tf10U&h and students 'NUt! not
lnfonned on '<~'here or wh~ to
\·ote. Thiel is from district
four and is willl n& · to listen
bot h ways about the Juuea, he
s.aid.
......
Kurt
,lefi ThO.I
Andeoon
jim Lud'AiJ is a special
studentfinishlqhismajorin
busineu admlnlstrat.ion and
has all ready nnllhed a
communications major .
"It's what Student Govern·
mentlsn'ttJlatbothersme,"
. he said. There is too much
apat hy and ' not enouah
student involvement be said.
Ludwig is from clistric:t two
anduidheisinteresledin
getting somethin' done about
bousin&formarnedstudents.
Marlr. Herte Is a political
sci~c:e major from district
one who ul d tMt students
nud to be laformt! of
mi\'ersity and city events u
Vt'Cll. A senior thla )'Ur,
Marlr. said he feela that the
sen a ton 5bould lr.eep In touch
"Ailh l1'lt people in their
dist r ict to aain possibly
different viewpoi n ts on
certain Issues .
J;m Ludwig
~m-J
modern
Inc
• Interiors
':::!:':'.!
:.-:.::~,
,..,_ .,. ,
_,....,....,.~
Nobody Stands Around
in Viner Crepes
Evetythlng Is going casual, so wea r casUIIs that go with everything.
!
Student GoVernment does
notrepresentstudentau a
Also from dist rict five Is
Bill Michaels, a sophomore
publicity, said Bob Hei l,
distr ict two.
To Imp r ove r e lations
btt'<~'ftnfac:ulty and to in·
creue stude nt In put on
majoring In histo r y and
poUtleal science. lie is In ·
terested in tlle work that NSA
has been doing with vot~
re&istntion and wi th the
United Co uncil ' he ,aald .
'<~'holebeca~aeofa l ac::lr.of
~~~~'lor~~~~!~~~
"~'~
s![de
-H~I Is a aenJor social
studies major . Ue has been
Involved with f:iculty
evaluations.
Nancy McPhlil, district
two,waspromptedbya letter
from StOOent Government to
runrorthesenateanddidso.
She nid that ,lhe thought
that more people '<~'OUidha\·e
~if they had knOWIIabout
tbeelectioos.
McPhail is a freshman
bUJiness
administration
major. Sheisalsolnvolvedin
Residence Hall Council and
ha~ COW!Cil :
Jim Sarkis is 1 senior
majoring in soc:ioiOBY and
won on a wr ile·i n from
distrlctlhree. Hea lsora nl ast
)'tar as a write.{n c:andldale,
but lost . Sar kis said he is
concerned about why there is
so much apathy In and arOWld
the campus.
"Not enouah people voted,··
said Dave Gormley, district
five . The goa l of Student
Gove r nment i1 to malr.e
lhlqs bttter for the studen t;
he said. Business Alfalrs 1a
the Committee that he said
tJlathe'dllte tobeon .
Di11tic:t one also elected
Paul Roberts, a freshman,
whothinksthatstudi!nta need
togetmorelnvolved,hesaid.
lie 1110 Slid he fell that the
elections wet"e not publicized
BarrysaidhisaG;~Isfor thls enough and as a result the
year are to increase com · students didn't get a chance
munlcations
between to get in ~otes. "St!Hient
stu d ents and the ad· Gove r nment Is so met hln a
minlltratioo.
thatglvess tudenbavoleeln
Ba rr y is a fr eshman 'A'hat they do lnsteld of
chemistry majo r . lie also havinR the adminis tr a ti on
worlr.ed on his high school controlling thei r a ffairs." he
govern ing body.
&ald.
"I realite that Student
Gon•mment is important for
anyeducationalexper~nce,"
said Michael Barry, third
District.
Combine creamy, sort crepe soles and
supple le1ther uppers tor the best In
comfort and tu hlon .
s~
11 01 Main St.
•
October 3 , 1974
Hll!nhel Webb, tluden t
~enator!rorndistrictthfte,
District !OW" &110 dlOie
a.:'7,uJ Hoffman, 1 freshman
~ajoring In chemistry and
biology to l"q)res.Mt them .
Hoffm1n rao because it
said he wished that mot'e
sludent.s wou.Jd I'Uive voted.
His &oab
for
Student
Governmtnt this year are to
increase communic:ttions
behr.ftn Student Governmen t
and the lludenll, to keep
policy with • dorm life and
mates 1 Pft'*Xl more aware
of vofltl't going on, he uid .
Something should be done to
htlp the studmls "''ho do not
commute rmd rides to lhdr
hometown, because tbe ride
boards don't really belp, he
!::fmc&~:!~\.:t:,~e
on
THE POI NTER
by S..Uy O.Ur aiM Sbelly
"''"
Newly elected student
w naton el!pressed var:loua .
anticipations prior to the
St_te;:;=~ivesas
possible were Inte r viewed
bef~ the flnt session of
Student Govemment met.
ed~e::::.~s:~~~~:=
said.
on his IU&h school JOVW!inJ
body.
Photos by Rick Oge/
Henhei Wei:J:J
Rick Ci&el r ep r esents
rive and iJ aiJo a
frnhman . lk is majoring in
poliUcalsdenceandhashad
forensic and debste ex ·
peritnce. "SI:udtnt Go!o'wn·
mtnt is an electtd group of
students promoting student
Interests And \'iews."
dlstrh:~t
Mate Neville
The pw-pos.e or Student
Go\·emment is to aet the
•
entavoiceln matters.
n when things upset
students
they
can
say
· somethinJ al5out ll'tm, said
Kathy Johnson , fou rth
district.
Co ncerning t he New
Sludent Alliance I NSAI, she
said, " I hope that it doesn't
I
UJke over with a one party
system ."
Johnson is a sophomorre
11i ldli fe management major.
9!e worked on John Nevins
u.mpa:ign last yea r and has
been active in hall councll.
.....
Tom IWojol Wojciechovo'SID
is the only return ing senstor
from las t yea r . Gt'tling
merge r Information to
studenu. pining more power
overstudentlife, tryinetoget
1 better line of c om·
mW~iutions bet~~o·etn campus
organiulions and creating
more ol
1
~tstlve
Studeilt Government are the
goals of this year, he said .
Wojo is 1 senior wit h
:~eoi:'afri~~~~
tducatlon.
Tcm Wojdechowski
·+·
N
the Four Winds
for lhe gift unusual
JustAm,edA"'lhenllc Indian moc:cas ·
lnt, hikin g shoes , dOfm
Apr•• tkl boots \
snow boots In colors, made
ol deeuk/n , moo11h lde,
1nd tMeplkln.
1sot cn..,rc:h SlfMt
Across !rom Courthol.lsa
boots ,
s
Opren Dallrto5
S.t. lo Noon
GRUBBA JEWELERS
YOUR IIIAMONQ & GFT CENTER
"Diamonds Our Specialty"
KllPSAKf. COOM!IA & QRANGE fllOSSl)l
DW«lff)
RINGS
CHECK OUR PRICES
MAIN I 1'HIRD IT.
-
October 3, 19741
. THE POINTER
PQAe 141
Church ar:mouncements·
§ttree Equi pment few 1alt .,..,.,.,.,.,.,...,...,...,._..,....,.,.,...,._....,
CLASSIFIEQS
Almost aU brands available.
All equipment Is brand new
and fully warrantetd.
DiKGmts up to ISO ~1.
Why pay mort than you have
to! cau Ron at _341-5200.
summ~ job or car~ . ·Send
SJ.OO lor lnfonnation'. SEAFAX, Dept. V-IP .O. Box~9,
Port A.naeles . Washlnaton
98361.
•
....-e oner lull hal.! linea,
tuners , ampa., speaktn
.we ha-vt an exc:luslvt
DOUBLE guarantee
:~~~';: : ~~:t~r~1-m:P~~- !~. a~:i~T~e's S~E~ ~iiv~'!r ~~~Itft!n:afe
~~on~~!.,~~~~- ~u:;!j~~~!~eopr~=!~:\: ~
...'hat we
off~ -
are we1 We are Kid.
So und
Services of
.we do have low prices, :zo.65 ~siec=~U~~~~~Iw a~
percent off store prices
-needlsYOUsolcanprovt
.
my clalm1. Give mt a eall at
requi red . Eacellent pay . •we off~ major brands bke 346-2&74orltavta mess.q:eat
--. Worldwide travel . Perfect AR. ~y. EPI, Dual . ICou :J.4&-455t. Jm-y, 150 Knullen.
M.EN~ -'A'O M.EN l
Jebl on S.l ps~ No experience
FOR THE BIGGEST & BEST
HOT SANDWICH IN TOWN
TRY A
ITAliA.N ROAST BEEF SANDWICH
FROM
BILL'S PIZZA
iiii;i"i';';"i;
i "iiiiiiiii;i'i;'"i;i";ii-~"'i;;;;iiii/.1
l~;;;i-
r------------""11
It's a natural
Newman Unlvtnlty Parish Weekday Muses :
<Roman Catholic) Newman "''utsdatthrou&h Friday, 12
Chapel. basement of St. noon, Newman Olapd
Stan 's, C1oiJltr Chapel, 1300
Marla Drive
Weekend Masses:
Newman 0\apd
Sp.m.
Saturdsy
9.lnday
Newmllll 0!1pel
IOa.m.
Ooilter 0\apel
ll :30a .m.
Ooister Olapd ,
&p.m.
'
4'
Lullltnll ~U• d t nt Com·
1111truc: tlon1 In CatlloUc:
mu 111ty, Peac:e Ca mp us fait h will bt ofrered at
f:iv':~·ndc~~~o~:!~rla ~;~~t';. 11~~~~ - !
Service with Eucharist :
Saturday
&p.m.
10:30 p.m .
Sunday
·
Special se r v let :
"Getting your feet wet",
contemporary
dr amatic
Tutsda_y ..Ckt. I
Flnt Baptist C llurc:la
(American> IMI Olurch St.;
SJndayServk:tsat 10:45a:m.
p.m . •
Peace Uni ted Church of
Onist, 1748 Dixon St.: Sun-
and Main> Sunday strvlct at
II a .m. Sunday school at 9:30
a .m.
Churc:ll. · Wilshire Blvd;
SundaySer vlcta ttO a .m.
S~day ~trvlce
atral Wisconsin
sec: tlo CJor~fte American
0\tm\c is-{ _!tty and the
Tbe
~~m~alre ~i"•j~in~i~
lpOnl« 1
colloqulm
at 1074.
7:30
O<t. to,
~m .. 11nnday,
in The
room
colloquim
119 of 1....£.
Mil Phillips
be held
Scit"Me Hall. The' speak~ foethe evening will be Robert C.
Sl~:ntSl=~=:n!'tft :,!
called tooc-dtf- at 4 p.m .
Sunday In the Wl1c:onsln
Room u .c .
.
Tht Auemb l y, whic h
consi sts of one voti ng
reprtunla llvt of eac h
r tCO inhed cam pu s
organlullon, will mee t
shoc-tly to review the actions
olthe StOOenl Senate meeting
of Septtmbtr . 29. AI 7 !30,
there will be a joint meellng
of the Assembly and Senate.
:f:!~e~~·r p~~ft~:~e~~~
0\emlstry at tbt University
ol MlMeaota, Mlnotapolil,
MJM.
from top to bottom
The Corner of Delights
•Teas
.,,_ .... . good
Clelaalooll at'lhe~
• Oil lamps
of~ThomW<:Aneoo..rtrt
~
)OU"II-
..,.,.Kt'MehM
and~TMro!Mnatwallooll
of ... leMhar.
-pftonyortrMiaodwllhpiMilc.lkltf'HI.
--..~ ....... lr*loobllbllltalned-~to,. · ~-
­
Nowlooll•lhl...._ Tlle(nolldK.II.-: JMdeofonow• •
--
n.oQ8«<~~Ihallltam o lol>f,lonOIIIM.
Counlty SQu,.. to,.Thom lo6c:An. They ct-erou IN loOk and
IMiof-..ai!MihowwllfloutiUJriOolotof-..yOIA of
• Beads
•India spreads
eDI1p Clndtes
etncense
• Maple candy
• Rs.._hnet
• Coffee mugs
• Dried flowers
• Vases
•Glow ball candles
• Hole Hobb&e calendars
•Bini cages
AND
Natural leather, Natural sole
Courtry Squires by
~"'-~
SHIPPY SHOES
'7
Chemistry
:l!~~:~~e ~i::tu~:; ·~; ~~ct at~~ ~m~ rIa 1
of 1':'01"- .11nd othtr saints. Pl't.s by ltrlaa Cllur cb. 1300
co/loquim
Main St.;
at
f' l nl Chur cb of Christ 9: 15 ' II a .m ..
to
held Sdt11U1l.
(CCIII"Mr MiMHOtl St. Paul 's Ualle4 Mtt..llodlst
Visit otrcllil!ltbtod iocli-
,..,...,., .......-
.molts
-
Downtown; Main at Sttol'lgl
M•Jon
..,.,
Si< knesa, poverty and other
n which huma n lives
artbl lghted are tflecta of
err on Of lhOUJbt, saya a
o.muan Sdtn~:e lectur~.
In• lecture titled "What Ia
Ufe1" Martin N. Healer,
CS.B .• of Houat.on, Ttxu,
will d lac un how an unclenlandinlofGoduUfeun
~. In correction of such
..........""'·
llr.atruhrrgrr·
.a
GIAli«JP
OlD FASHIONED SOOA FOUNTAIN
ava ila
library
prepa
tervl
OCTO
Broth
Waus.a
OCTO
Unitt
...
The
J~l~nOS~tc~
"""."'
zatlon ol UWSP.
.
ltta place al 1 p.m.,
M....y,Ocl.71ntbeGarland
-
Room located I n tb•
nlty CenttT (U.C.) .
"
October 3, 1974
THE POINTER
Poge ' l 5
,_ Cvstodians handle big job ·"'"(
~~u~~~~~~~~~lean ~~~~~~:!!:!'~i~~ ~':~ ~i:1~"5 a"~~~e:er~~\·i~; ~~:':ur~us~~~~- ~ot:g1\~: fa~~.;~:s:!e%~::!~~ ~~
may 01p~ar to be a herculean m e1thcr the audemic or ' 'pager". People can get in most thorough job possible", people living in them. In the
taskathJ?~ - Nosoonerdoes residence buildings." said
a custodian cl~an a _room . Krebs.
•
thcnpeopleuse•ta~ttmay
Each ?fthethreebranches
rM.'td a second clean1ng.
has a director . Len Walkush ~
Know ledge of campus Is th e supervisor of the
touch with us by calling commented Ray Konkol,
campusse<:urityand~ urity director for the UW Centers,
c an contact us on the ~~o·hich includes the UW
" beeper ." Th is procedure Cente r , 01!bot and Allen
allows us to be more ac· Centers.
academic buildings alone,
this area might be equal to
somet hing like one million
square feet ," &aidTort.t'olo'lki .
Adding to the financial
become so "'ell versed in
knowing ~~o'hat actl\•itles a~
happening on campus, that
they know during what part of
the Academic Buildings
segment.
Belmore has been a
custodian for the ~mh·ersity
oncn caused by carelessness
or misuse.
.._Twoofthcthingswehavc
to replace most frequently in
the dorms are the window
screens,whichcostabout$7a
piece, and the defusen on the
ceiling, which cost about
$18," said TckoWIIkL
"One of our main problems
hastodowith!llDokinginthe
classrooms 'and corridors .
Not only do cigarette butts
leavea mess,burn markscan
also ruin thenoor finishes or
cause damage to the ca r·
pcling . This clun"'iiJI after
smokers, is a waste of our
man po\lllef ,''added Walkush.
''Our problem is that
people like to take our fire
eltlnguishcrs.
Someday
someone might need to use
oneanditwon'tbethere. This
resulu only only In a loss of
mone y, but maybe In
someone's life," added
~~~v~~l~. hel~tolessen ~=d~mic =~t~i~ ~~~d~ ~!!:!:~:)' ~:;ajr':.~.k~:i~ ~de~~!r~a]~~a~~h~~~~ ro:bi~::Ui!:shc:~aio:.~o~
"Our custodtans have the C!flege ~f Natural
Don Belmore. a custodian for lleading this area is Edward damages to the buildings are
Resources Butlding. Old
Main, the Science Building,
CollinsQassroomCenter, the
Fine Ar ts Center , the
Tckov.oski . Inludedinhiswork
load are Baldlll'in, ikA'roug.hs,
Ha nsen. Hyc r , Knutz en,
Neale, Pray-sims, Roach,
Schmeeckle, Smith. Ulom1011
and Wat&On Halls .
"1\ly crew works mainly a
dayshiflfrom8to~:30p.m.,
the hours 111'hen the students
are usually in class. We clean
the areas outside the rooms
such as the stairways, en·
trances. windows, etc:. 1be
onlytime~~o-ecleantherooms
is during OUT major cleaning
projecu when school i111't in
. session, like the break bet·
ween summer and fall
semesters.''
Oncofthedorm custodians
Is Pat Marquard . She has
been with the custodial
services for 23 years.
" I began in 19S2 as a
custodian for Delzell. At that
Umemyjobwastoclcanup
after the carpenters who
were working on it. I worked
at Delzell ten years, at
Sleinef' for two, and have
been at Roach Hall since it
=~·~satd r.~a~u~r!l.
years
Althoughcustodialservices
is divided into different
branches. some of the same
kindsofproblemsaffectthem
all. One of these Is the budget
reduc:tiona.
"Because of the budget
cutbacks, I am using students
in place of my full time
employees to cover the
..,"t'ekend ac~ule. This way
wedidn'thavetocutanyone's
job. It's our attempt at a
ma1imum effo rt with a
minimum ol cost,'' said
Konkol.
The residence halls ha ve
experien«d the cut by a
tesscningof student help for
its ilaU.
" lntheputt~~o'O yearsour
s tudent he lp ha s been
their shift to clean what Leaming Resources Center.
areas . If there's a meeting in the Physical Education
one of the banquet rooms, the Buildings. Gesell. Stien
custodian will clean the other Building. Student Services.
areas and then come back to Nelson Hall , the College of
that room when the meeting Professional Studies and the
is ov«." rema rked lliriam Maintenance and
Krebs, head of general .ser· St~keepingBuflding .
"'The majority "Of ou r
vices. which includes the
cleaninglsdonebetween4 :30
custodial services.
Custodial services contains p.m. and 6:30 a .m. Sunday
th r ee sectlons .. Academic: through Friday . These arc
Buildings, Residence Halls or the times that the buillding
Housing and the University isn 't as heavily used. During
t.heday'lll"eha\"l!onlyonelead
" Although all three s uperv i1or and .thr ee
branchesareapartoft he custodians here to pollee the
aatodial aerviceaon campus, building.sandforemergency
l'monlythedirectsupervisor services."'saldWalkush .
One of the functions ~~oilich
for the Academic &ildings
branch . The other two the custodians provide in
segments have a different add ition to clean~ng is
one. nus lsdl.ll!ln part to the opening up the buildings in
different kinds or ;a each themomiJ13.
··J begin at 6 a.m . every
branch perf orms . F"or
uample, custodlana in the otherweek. Myflrstjobisto
UWc:entenba11etoset up for open up the the CX:C. CNR,
COPS.
andScienctbuildings.
cmain activities and they
are able to tnow In advance Because we cover sl.£h vast
about it .. Thus their areas.acustodianineach
""'""·
Konkol .
However , these eases of
vandalism ha\·en't created a
III!Jali\·e feeling toward the
:,::~f ::rc~~~~ !:;:e
ora re apartofthatpopulace.
One of these custodians, Ca rl
Seils. just completed his B.S.
in English In August . Seils
has worlted on the UWSP
custodial staff since 1970, and
is currectly working on the
UW Centers branch of the
custodial services.
"Our primary goal is the
students. It's fine for outside
groups to use our facilities,
but~~o·efeelourmain
purpose
is to provide a clean en·
vironment for our students to
get an education In ," said
Krebs.
" I feel a n essential quality
thatourjanitorsmust haveis
a good attitude towards tht!
students . I wouldn ' t hire
anyonewhodidn'thaveone:·
~~ec'r~ hij!~·~~~w~,n ~ =~:~~~~'.!,~~ h~:! sa!~ ~::~s~ of respect for
various academic buildings
such as LRC, Physica l
Education and Sc:ience.
Anolher service which the
custodians provide is done on
project crews. 1bcse crews
do such various thiqs as
moving furniture, to spring
cleaning of the buildings on
campus.
' 'Besidesourclean-upafter
meals. a major part of our
able to help us with such talks
as sweeping and mopping the
stairs. taking out the garbage
and cleaning windoWII," said
Marquard.
Accwdlng to Krebs, "Our
custodians are getting spread
pretty thin. We now have to
make s uch decisions on
whether to empty our waste
baskets in the classr-ooms
every night or every other
the custodians. They have to
wor k unde1ir ab le hours,
usl'iliiY the late night hours
when everyone is gone. They
also have to conti nuousl y
clean the same areas. One
just has to note the difference
in the buildings between I
a .m . and6p.m. toknowwhat
a bang·up job th ey are
doing ,' ' commented Tor ·
zewskl .
=~ 0t~ei~herpr~~~~':: ~~gehti.~!!:,~~~Ji~~~~
~~oil\ do is the set-up for
\"arious cam pus acti\!ilie&.
This includes the arranging
;lndrearrangingof furniture
for s.xh things as a da~.
m!lvie or lecture. One ol the
things I do on a weekly basis
is an 1U1announ«d building
inspection. This is merely a
cheek to help our ct~~todiaNI,
not a punitive device .
section wh ich is about a 12
percent cut ."
Although Zeke Tonewsk.i is
now the assistant 10 the
Assistant to · the Oiancellor
Dovid Coker, he used to be
involved with the custodial
services whe11 he headed
Penonnel .
"We added :ZS percent more
academic bt.i.Jdlnp; without
~:!:~~m;!!o~!Jf~S:: : : =a~n!sfs~r Inc I:~~~
can aee it more objecUvely these crews dean a daUy
Professional
Hair Styling
Men & Women
R.K. Products
2100 McCulloch
344·5493
Poge 16
T HE PO INTER
.October 3, 1974
It's all in the Genome
byJhnHabeell
"When I first kkked it, I
When Bob Hoffman's field thoUght it was going
goa l attem pt ulled into the through," ' alated Hoffman.
wind, stopped and reversed ''Then the wind took it and
di r ection, Stevens Point blew it back at me."
earned seven t h ranki n g
Steven.sPolntthus"lostits
among the nation's teams. third consecu ti ve game,
while dropping to a 1)-2 ron·
Stventh best? The pol1a fereneemark .
officially failed tl) include the
" Weplayedwellforwhat
Pointen, but only an all-()l.lt, we have ,'' " comme nted
batUing Warhawlc c:omeblck Olarles.
gave the nation's "ltlh
" It 's hard to b eat
ranked team a na i'Tow 2:0-IIS Whlt~ter with freshman."
win .
· For rive seconds sby of 5IS
Freshman quarte rback
minutes, Wbitewater'a home
forc:ea nevff led. With 2:05 Reed Giordalna finished with
remaining,
All-Conference 20complelions in 40 attempb,
end Roger Gena me cut accounting foe- 717 yards. He
outside and easily gathered in threw no inter«ptjons.
the winning touchdown pass.
Reed Giordana ran for 40
A Bob Rivard Interception
yards on five carries and
set up the Pointers' lone rii"St
qu arter score. Giordana
the Pointers to the enemy 23 moved the Pointen 58 yards
yard line. With 0: 10 left , in only seven plays, pauing
Coach Monte Cartes called 28yardstoJeffCio&a!orthe
onHoffmantoattempttheill· game'• initial touchdown.
·
fated 40 yard attempt
The Pointers sandwiched
ini:e~~ ~:J~';~
:r::
Hoffman field goala of 32 and
20yards around a WhiteWater
touchdown to lead 12·7 at the
half.,
Third quarter pJay proved
frustrating, with the Pointers
unable to score unW 0 :03
~~7f/J~naend .haf~e.~l~~~l{y
mil5ed a S5 yard att.empt
while a b.ad snap from center
negated another field goal
"'·
With third and goal a t
Whitewater's 14, Giordana
found Denny Esla-ltt open and
completed his fi nal touch·
down pass.
SPORTS
.POINTER
t4. Withthirddownand Uat
his own liS, Warhawk quar·
terbackRlch Murph y fired to
Ron Mallory for liS yards.
Another pass ,lo Mallory
covered 24 ya rds , be fore
Murphy connected with tigh t
end Dan Brunner.
Brunnft' gained 12 on a
third a nd ten situation,
then scored from the 28on a
Ughlendscreen thefollowlng
play.
Football
scores
wsuc
Platteville 24 Oshkosh ~
Whitewater 20 Stevens Point
18
LaO'osse 35 SUperior 0
Eau Caire II Stout 14
River Falls & Nor thland 0
ru:;~e :~tl: 'aa~~e!~·~ BIG I t
forced them Into the pass and
got beal doing what we Olk>rado 24 Wisconsin 21
Ohio State 21 SMU II
wanted to."
Michigan $2 Navy 0
. Facing both wind and rain
the fourth quarter, Stevena
Gary Stanbuki made a Pwdue 31 Not re Dame 20
Point's "three yards and a diving defiection to atmt the MiMesota 9TCU7
cloud of mud" offense was Warhawk 's next drive, befooe Dlinols 21 Washington Slate
unable to effectively move · Whitewate r
r e gain e d
the ball .
possession and moved 39 Penn Slate 'Z1 Iowa 0
Th e Warbawka moved ya r ds I n e i g h t play a UCLA 56 Mlchlgan Slate 14
swiftly, using onJy 3:15to cut for the winning louc:hdown. Nebraska 49 Nort hwestern 7
Kentucky 28lndiana 22
the Stevens Point lead to 11-
EHliNGER'S ALLEY KAT
ANNIVERSARY SALE
COATS AND CAR: PANTY HOSE
ALL
COATS
REDUCED
REDUCED
20°/o
25°/o
ASSf. STYLES. SIZES SffJ • 1Stui
.1.
u~~-=-=-=-
ASST. COLORS & SQ:ES.
SKI JACKETS -COSMETICS
II EDUCED
"
With fourth and two , at the O'nt ER .
31, ha lfbaclr. Rob Steber
rammed off right tackle foc- Oklahoma 72 Ulah State 3
sixcruc:lalyards. Thl'ee pllys ·Alabama 23 Vanderbtlt 10
later , Murphy s potted Tlexu Tech 21! Texas 3
Gename open, and aealed the Mluowi t Arizona State 0 _
USC II Pitt 7
Warhawkvictory.
Texas A&M 2ll Washington IS
~~;:v~~~!tf~"t:.~ ~~n 3~ o~:!e~te 14
" But we're no t a b a d LSU 10 Rice 10
footba ll team , We 'll be Arkansas SO Tulu o .
~ for the rest of~ games." ~owa ~te"34 Brl&ham YoUng
1
Reed Giordani, along with
Wa rh a wk
q ua r t erb ack
Mlrpby, wer-e named Coa·
ference Offeulve Pla)'ft'l of
the Week. Pointer Unebaclr.er
Bob Rivard was appointed
Pointe r Defensive Player
.honoR.
KSU 31 Pacific 1
Nor th Dallota 41 Morningside
0
Maryland 24 Nor th carolina
12
Mlaml (0.) 42 Mar.tWI o
Stanford 21 San .lole st.te 21
GeorMI.a $2 Soutb carolina 14
Mlami fP\a.) 211 Tampa :111
MARY QUANDT
20°/o
ASST. STYLE$. stZES 5-M-L·Xl
SPECIAL
GROUP OF
DRESSES
REDUCED
15-50°/o
ASST. STYLES. SHORT A LONO.
SIZES5f8 · 13/1.
REDUCED
20°/o ·
Hetzer's Bicycle Shop
" Senlng the Area for Over 50 Years"
WE SELL THE
BEST!
• Motobecane
• Schwinn
• Raleigh
Slack Skirts
Tops, Bodysuits
Sweaters
REDUCED
25o/o
ANDPROFESSIONAl
SERVICE
THE REST!
ONE DAY SERVK:E
AT A REASONABLE PRICE.
344·5145
2154 Church Slr. .
-DON'T MISS THIS OCT. 18- UNCLE VINTY
OCT
• Bottecchla
SPECIAL GROUP OF
FLEETWOOD MA
i
October 3, 1974
nir(Po!NTER ..
Page 17
\,-
Sup__er ·Sport Quiz
'
Sweetan
by Randy l\1evd. Mlke
c . Karl
to Pat
!Ia ber man a nd Tim SaUl van
Studstill
t ; 1be opening kickoff in
Miami's first regular season Ml~h~el%o1o~y
game was returned for •
touchdown by which Dolphin?
- a. Bo Roberson
b. F1ip~
9: What NF L wide reseiver
c. Joe Auer
is nicknamed ''The Ghost ?"
d . Howard Twilley
a. Paul Warfield
e. F1etcher Ou-istian
b. Sherman Plunkett
c . Harold Jackson
d. Gary Garrison
2: 'ft.'hich TWO h.alders
K'OI"ed the ''missing" touchdowns vs. the Jets in 1968's
Hei di game?
a. Q!.arles Smith
b. Preston Rlddlebauer
c. Warren Wells
d. George Atkinson
e. Billy Cannon
e. Isaac Clrtis
" to: Bengal passer Ken
Anderson attended tlle same
hig h school as \lo"hat pro
bas kelballstar?
·
a , Oa\'e Cowens
b. Walt Frazier
c. Jerry Sloan
d. Dan lssel
3. \\'hat "NFL team was the
.rirsttoweartheiremblemon
their helmets?
a. Green Bay Packers
b . Bears"
c . Eagles
d . Rams
e. Olicago Fire
-1: Vikin& linebacker Jerr
Siemon's defensive unit at
StMford was nicknamed the?
8
::c. Thunder
~!n ~!:~s
or Granite
Olickens
d. Lennon Sist~
e . Olineese Bandits
s: Vt'hicll Pac~ caught the
shortest TD pass in club
history?
a . Boyd Dowler
b. Tom Moore
c . Cec.illsbell
d . Don Hutson
e. Cary Knafelc
6: Oakland Raiderette Jane
Lubeckwasrecentlyfeatured
in which maguine ?
a . Field and Stream
b. Raider Report
<. Sport
d. National Lampoon
e. Playboy
e. llall1horne Ytlngo
ANSWERS
Dormitories dominate
intramural football scene
by Rob Schallock
With intramural football
h&Jfway completed, severoll
ind ividua ls e merged as
gamebreakers.
Burroughs hall ' s Reid
Nelson scored four touch00\lo·ns tTD"a J as powerful 4W
shutout lS +I to o. Brtvit
scoredal120pointsfor3Saait
Upped4S20-12;VossandDavis
scort<l for the losers.
Srmth Hall , Behmd TO s by
Da le Trmm and Steve
last week . 4S, led by Ouis
Veldon's twoTD's, shutout 2N
t4 to 0. 4N also JCOred a
.shutout as Jerr Taylor's TO
enabled them to beat 25,8 to
o.
Watson : Dan Schmidt had
the only ICOI"eoftlle day as
2W pushed over a TO to take
INbya6-0scwe. PatO'Briet1
hadl.,-oseo«s tolead-IEpast
IW14to 0.
~lyer-Deh.e\1 ; IE Hyer
blanked 2N Delzell 16 to 0 as
Da\·e Knaap and Bob Schultt
scored for Hyer. IW Hye r
Upped 3W Hyer 14 to 8. Joe
Kinsella had I west's TO's.
Baldwin : Eric Garren , Jim
Hamala and Steve Lem all
S<:ored TO's for 4S as It easily
handled 3S 24 too. 2E was led
by Tom Pakerasitbeat 2W 12
too.
Intramural teams a r e
reminded that tlle r 051en for
tllc foll owing sporll are due
on Oct . 8 ; Swimming,
Volleyball, Racquetball and
Foul Throw.
~~·:~a~3~
1!~~:~ ~-. .--~----------.
Barda scored for
~w.
Knutt.en : 35, behind TO's
byJacobsand Howe.shutout
-'S, H-G. 2S whipped 3W 22\o 6
as Crams scored two TO 's to
lead2S.
Ba~ : Milr.e Anderson 's
three TO's led tWpastiEZ2
to o. Ste\·e J..aux and Bob
Philigeas scored fot 3N as It
beat !W 16to0.
"JM"SI· P :ot "UOiJ.uea
· P :5 "Janes 01 llltWeN·e
: I ' J.:tWIOI ma-e :L·,{oq,c;eld
•a :g "(" Solq~U\ t iu]U,\Da
U6t u] sweu pueta ..UJ:>
" I~ \~\ I!»;) 1,110..1J) U<mniJ
Pra y : JWwas the winner
0\'er 2E H to 0 as Dennis
Werblow and Rich Greene
scored for tW. tEwhipped3E
22to I . Mike Fisher , Crl!f{R
-p :s "SU OI'JI~!\I J JOipUn\I,L WarrenandJimKurthscored
-J : I- "IWillJ·p : £ ' Joll1tqiliP!M for IE.
UOJ~Jd pue lll!WS a! \Jtl()
Sims : Both fourth Ooor
-<1 pue e : ~ ·Jany ;!Of' · ~ :t
teams ca me out \ictorlous
-------------'11
SHARE
...
WITH US THIS
WEEKEND
AND GET ON
TO AGOOD THING.
U5 means Greyhound. and a lot of your ltllow 51udtnt5
who are alrea-dy on to a good thmg . You !eave.when you
hke Travel comfollably Anrve relt eshed and on t1me .
You"!! save monev. 100. over 1he 1ncreased a11
fares . Share the ude w1th us on weekeods . Holidays
7: Who fumbled the football
tha t Jim Marshall piclr.ed up
and rambled 66 yards !.he
wrong way with ?
a . Bil!Kllmer
b. John Oalvd Q-ow
c. Jalr.e Gibbs
D. Ken Willard
e . Roy Riegels
RewrnR.:rultintCtnlll
2442SimtA".
St.<nntPolnt.Wl 54481
715-344-71331CattColl~l
1974
tawt
I taw
au
SPORTS CONT.
utr, POINTER
Schnellenberger sinks,
superpickers swim
by T1111 SoJUv.. ud Mike Mar~ to kick some men
lbober•..
neld aoats. Look for Buffalo
to win by ten.
Oakland onr Cleveland:
How un the Raiders lose
with two ex-Colgate a tars In
the backneld'! Hubbard. Van
F.qhen and crew will make
Durin&lhetbirdwee:kofthe
NFL season the ~icken
lost three aames. Howard
Schndltnbb"&er, on the olhtr
hand, only lost one. So, ll.leU
who got r1red'!
as~ac:~~~H~ rz~c~
Cenenl Ma na&er Joe
Thomu. Sadly, nobody hat
pme, but h1l tea m v.ill allo
catch a loss. St. Looby two.
~OamlonrNewYwtr.Jeu:
Joe Willie and the Bil Apple ,
Boys are on the ro11d for the
fourthconsec:uUve week. How
can you tlQ)«I Namath to
win If he h.lsn't 11~ in his
~h~~~er:!d~B~~kec:y,.~~: r.:l:hi~ty f~. a
LM Aaltln ovl'r De tn1lt:
It anyone else connected with
month 1
Mlnnuota over Dall n:
That great ICI'ibe, Tex Mlule,
;:~:~i!~::er~~~;:~~ ~e ~::Sdi~M~~.~~~ru:::~ ~:!fs! =~:Sed~~-:.r:C:':t
J!OJ:N TIIB
CB.OWD "
marc\ dow
. to
the
D
bands. As 1 unlt, Detroit Water\ooandtherltlnJSuna t
lhouldexplnlntheCollseum, lw_o Jlma . That's enou1h
by at leut 13.
ev1dence for us. The mighty
Vikes b)' forfeit.
Deaver IWtr KallUS aty :
AUuta ever New Y•k
The Bronc01 have never had Glan~: UNorm Van Brocklln
muth 1ue«11 in KC. tmtil i~n't fired by the time this Is
this year! Denver by three. printed, he will be If the
Pblladdphla our Sa n Falcons doa't win Smday.
DltJO : Dwina the o f f -. Atlanta by a Nick Mike·
Pete Roul.le ~everdy fined Meyer flt!d 10-1] .
ChkiJoonrNewOrles~t~:
the 0\ai'Jtn for mlsusina
ck"~. &alclay they11 suffer Slop Archie Mannina and you
New EaJ I Iad over an overdote of Roman beat the Sa.ln~ . Even if you
donl stop him you ..uauy
Bai Umon: Joe 1bomu is Gabriel. The " JaalH" (u
beat the Saints. Even if
destined to foiiO'III' in the they A)' in PhWy) by II.
Plu.b ...Jh over ll0111ton: you're the Bears! Cb!cago by
hallowed footstq,~ of two
other a.-eat coachinl Jon, The bi& question In the Steel the width ol' Abe Gibron's
namely Kuh&rieh and Sch· Oty is'A'ho's 11 quarterl:laclt! stomach.
Clnclnaat l over
mldt . Since it \1 thetr lint Rellistlcally, L. C. Greencontest WilleT the new cur, wood could take: the job for Wuhln&'oa : )Veekly touup.
Baltimore should be suf- this game. Sleelen by seven Sullivan rislts his 2·1 touup
ficiently fired up to lou by ll&ht yean.
mark by ildlng with the
Sl. Louis over S.n Fna· Benaals mainly becaute he'1
Olllyt7.
Buffalo 0\lfr Green Bly: cl~eo : Big Red should con· a D,an lsse:l fan and lssel went
The P.ick CWTfnlly hu mMe llnue to roll If Uley don't to the urne hl&h school as
people In traction than the spend too much tiroe looltlna Beng1l Ken Anderson .
VIet Cong. Look for Brock to at the Niner Nu&&ets. Danny Profound logic! Haberman
"bust out" with at least 50 Abramowiawlllcatchapass likes Ice cream, 10 he's
yards .rushing . Look fo r fOr the ninety-fifth straight _ partial to George Allen.
will continue to sufftr.
Our nine wins from last
week give us a compolite 2312-1 mark through the nnt
three weeks. ibis is four
games behind our record
pace of 1971 and six garol'l
behind the
Slenns Pelnt
O.lly Jouf'llal's forecasters
(who make their selections
altergetttngthethin!quarter
scoresl .
·
SOUNDS INC. PRESENTS
BILLY JOEL
With Special G.uest Stars Brewer & Shipley
Wed., ~ct. 9 - 8:00 P~ M :
U of W ·STOUT
JOHNSON FIELDHOUSE
1sf in a Series of 3 Concerts
Oct. 9-Billy Joel & Brewer and Shipley
Nov. ~2-Ciimax Blues Band & Elvin Bishop Band
Dec. 4-Marshall Tucker Band & Charlie Daniel Band
SERIES TICKETS-$10.00
INDIVIDUAL TICKETS-$4.50 ADVANCE
$5.00 AT DOOR
-TICKETS AVAILABLE, UW·STOUT STUDENT UNION
UNIVERSITY MUSICIANS SUPPLY
202 WATER ST., EAU CLAIRE, WIS.
October 3, 1974
THE POINTER
Page 19
y
Point women bounce bock
UWSP ' a
women ' •
vt~lleybaU team won a matc::h
aaal n at RIYer Falla by
beatlnathem In three out or
fivegamnlaatSaturday .
Sttatned by the powerful
attac:k, point for point , Into a
lie 14-14. With 1teady effort
the Pointer• took the aame
wlthaii!Cl«ol l&-14. f1redup
with two auc:h hard earned
vic:loriel behind them the
~etvin.JoffU¥trhlb , tbe Pointers eui.ly put away the
PDinten loll the finl two fifthgameofthemaldlwitha
pmesbothbyaac:W'tofl5-2.. lc:W'toflW,thUiwinn.incthe
In the third aame the matchwithaacoreofJ-2..
Pointers, ..ala behind, beJao
Tbe team play ahowed
to make a c:Gme-bac:k in the consi~able lmprcwemes~t
!attn half of the aame with OYer the previoul week'a
axnbined ltt'vin& dforll of loan to O&hllo&h and Olr·
thqe. E:Etra prac:tic:edforta
:!c:~,.and~~~:,. ~: on aenlnJ paid defiaite
mdur to lie the same at t4 dividends !or a ll the pla)'ffl
all and Jialn 11 15 all. The udidtheir staylncpci"Net', a
fin a l o ut c: om e found th e result of c:o nala tent c:on·
peraisfent Pointers with a ditionina; thePolnttt"playera
hardearnedt7-15wln.
exc:e lled In blo c: klna '
In the fOW'th c:ontnt both numerousharddrivenapikes
teama c:ontlnued a bllan«d by River Falla.
UWSPwomen's fieldbocby tum <k-Iva 1111 oae ol elevea
pals, apinst UWM. Score II~. Photo by Roter Barr
Titan performance is slated
ut.,
for Saturday's encounter
POINTER
lly.Jimllaltec:k
Satun:lay 'a 1'\tan-Point~
bome contat looms aa a
battle ofcon.Rrvative versus
wide-open footbiU .
Whereu the Char les
chartes lhrive on passing.
lona aalneu and quic:k
llrikes, the Olhkolh T\t1ns
run off tac:kle. Inside llc:kle
andthtoc.ch tac:kle.
Thisyuronly rnild~Utte.S
hu bHn attained. Vtctories
over UW Mi lwaukee and
St~offaeta20point!Uver
rau•• aoct a 2+3 trowri:ll
by Platte¥illelat weft.
In tm llle Titans were
IWSefeated c:hampionl of the
WSUC. Lut year lhey fell to a
4-4 conr~enc:e record 1nd
fourth place.
Titan lt ren&t h, with ends
Terry Thorma n, Grea Boese
and tac:kle Roser Hanson
supplying m011 praaure.
A frntlman , aopbomore.
junior and aeNor e.c:ll man
the deftnsive bac:ltlleld apota,
posinc poaaible coordination
problema .
Olhlwlh hu a auc:«Pful
plac:e·kic:ker In Dan Wadie ,
...,1Jo booted au yard field
IGJ~I \'triUI Stout , and rarely
lfli liblastotf tac: kle.
PREDICTIOS : Olhkoah IJ
a Nll c:ontrol team , and la
~ble to mlltakea ln a
c:ome ·from -behlnd effort .
T it an
qu a rterbac:ll
Koronkiewk1 will roll out
frequently, tr)'inJ to 110111e
'ntan lineNc:kera arelikely
to hang bxk , belplfll to
protec:t the flats . The
~llclusivel y- oq
Platteville.
l«occromec:eremoaie:s.
f
SAT.
OCT. 5
1:30
::e:sJifn~c:t~ ~~~~h
receivers Gou and Elkritt,
...,;th Bill Amac:Ur , the llruiK
aa fet y, posinathec:hiefln·
t~uption thre~t .
Look for the Pointer• to JO
alloulearly. tryiQitoJtlthe
lnd and ron-e Oshkosh N or
!Mir bread and h!.tter run·
ninl r:amea .
SCORE : Ste-.:~1 Point 14
Olhlwlh 15
lcecxirome celebrates
byJI•IIakd:
An inte rsquad c:olleae
ho c: key r:ame , dea~on ·
stralion~ , by • proteuional
hockey team. free allalin&
and a dinner hi&hli&ht thl.s
...,·eellend 'a Jnnd openlna
grand opening
and the lceodrome.
Free Aatinc for lbe public:
w\U be feattred f.-ora M
p.m ., Sw!day.
FridayaJcbt'ac:ontestwill
be an aU-out effort by the
Bad&~•-
" Everyone II fi&hti"l for
The interaquad aame apots down here ," c:o m F1anker Cary Wild, at 5'1"
and teo pounds, is the rut.eat reaturu' UW Mldiaon 'a mented Badaer Coac:h Bob
and moll potentially Badlerl, pn-ennlel n.ational Johnson. " ltlhould be a very
daaaeroua Tilaa . Quar - c:h1mpioo c:ootenders who competitive came. lll laat
terblc:ll John Koronltiewia last5talo0Daentthreepllyera
..
a1mJ for Wikl « tJ&bt end to theprOI.
The Central Wiaconsln we should have 1 Yery even
Dave Oeveland on most
.
F1yera. aJona with UWSP's c:onteataaain ."
" We have a lot of r;ood
The Titan ddenae has Poln te ra , will pr ovide
unde raone major c: hanae. demonsttationl throughout younr: ta lent thi1 year:~
continutd Johnion. " We've
with on.ly three HIIMJn in the Voffkend .
From 4 until I p . m . lot five of our li x dden~•
ata rllnJ poaiti<HII . Senior
llnebac:ller Sc:ott Kronea · S1turday night . a lkalinJ blc:llandbothJoalies witha
wetter is qukk, atun~ well to pllrly, dlnnerlndbeverJie Ia again . We're •malltt' than in
tbelnaldeandwUJbeUitfulin featured . Tlc:k etl are putyeara, toweplantopl•y
a v ailabl e a t Enlnae r ' l , h a ter . mor e exc:lt l na
pa•c:over..e.
PMJ f'UiblftJ haJ DOt beeD I llunt~ ·· Cornft'. Sport 9lop hockey."
..- ...,..
FOOTBALL &
STEVENS POINT
vs.
OSHKOSH
missesutrapoin~.
All c:on fe ren c:e running
tt.c:k T\m V1n~valden haa
vlduated, akq: with All·
Con fe renc:e defenders Jeff
Waukau and Brian Zuhse,
leavl,. Wlfilled holes.
t.c:ll Dan Feldt
hu llbn up aome slac.k.
Jain lnJ ove r IGO yards
. .ainll SCout. Yellow f'Ulllinl
mate Dennia Moon also
tol&led over 100 yards, but
both have h«ft lndfec:tive
aaainst River Falla and
Rum.!.
~ildoneonone , orhithistlaht
end short , while r unn loa
ol\en. Both Feldt and Moon
~:0~~ Je~~ites~ l~
lor ah ol Centtal WtkOnson
1033 FM
10 33 FM
103 3 FM
START YOUR
WEEKEND EARLY!
HAPPY HOUR
AT
EVERY FRIDAY
AT
Bu~}m. ~~o~~on
All THE BEER
YOU CAN DRINK
FOR ONlY $1.25
STOP IN! !
SPONSORED BY SIGMA PHI.EPSILON
·-20
. T.HE POINTER
October 3, 1974
we Challenue vou
to taste·and
compareI
Our standing ·challenge: taste and compare the good
old-time flavor" of Pabst with any other beE!r. Once you
taste Blue Ribbon quality, you'll never go back to the
beer you were drinking.Take our challenge. We know
Blue Ribbon will come out the winner, every titne.
Pabst. Since 1844. The qualitY has alwa)S come through. .
·~
lt/0, , ... _,_WING cowP....,., _ _ , Wio , , _ o _o,III., ...., .... N...O., LAoo- oo, CoiOI , , - . , G....-.
.1.
THE POINTER
October 3, 1974
.
OPINION
Page 21
· ~
History honor society
+P'--=p=-=o:---:-:1N
:-:-:T=-=
. E- R
To,. idit.w,
membership available
The UWSP lola -De lt a
Olapter of Pbi Alpha Thtta,
Affairs of the Area =~r~~~j!
talr.ln& applic:attont for
membenhip for the fall
lllyJo.. Stlalec-aa4SIIar• identity. Pen' rdtlionlhips soemefter, ll7t.
auume a ma)lr role 11 a
The requirements for
student msy otten IU.rc:b for membtnhlp In Pbt AlpM
• Once~atimethertwu an identity within a&J"'O4) or 1beta are 11 follows : the
nke: lad who ventlnd into he msy find It dUfieult to pro~p«tive member must
the landol hi&btr education.
maintain a unJqume:u out· bave earned at least 12
Upon hit arrival, he
1
discovered there were many
new adventuru awaitina ac:«ptance. Vt'h\le me may counes, and a 3.01 1rade
him.
feel that he C:ltl be a«epted pointin at least two-Uilnh of
Bl.a alJJ, he came ~ck by lakin& on lbe interest. of his or hec- other dane~ .
lhe lf0\4) , another may be
U you are interested In·
~o:;ov:e a~uaali .:th
afraidtospealr.141forfearof bec:ominaa member of the
per claJJmen tald "Fool."
1
Ol.r YOWl& ''fool" now began
to feel alienated. Not only throuch 1earnin& to neaotiate room 401 COPS. Ac:cepled
becaU5eolthis bullhtft were
many other adjuttments
wbicb had to be made. wulr.neael.
ceremonies In the near
liown'er, utlme pa.ued by
Finally. an aspect o( ad· future.
be resolved hla pnlblmu and
j\&Stment Is findina one'•
is now a happily adjusted i~lity 11 a man or a
Phi Alpha Theta Ia 1
hwnan bel.n1.
,.vman. This can be hard schola rl y and 1 service
Not to m1ke llaht of the beca~ne of other's per· organuatlon At UWSP the
Creshman year there are a
at.,~~t the d!Uerm t ~~~~~~o~:'~ ~=
teries or adjustments whieh
need to be made. The main
adjultment we would like t.o m= t~:i ~~~~ ~~.'rydif~~u~lbEaa:~
di~euss Is t he quest for
prove mesetr they mllll be umester, tbe cbtpter
identity. •1hk:h can be aU
with tbeare
oppotlte
publl•hK•boolr.letorbistory
su. Men npec:iaUy
fK'ed count
IW"Ve)'l to lalorm
t.o a new en·
viruunent in many different
per·
ways. v•here one person may
feel very com for ttbl e, learn one '• Identity in lota·Ddla abo maintain~ a
another ma y fed Inhibited.
But a common result can
pr<JCnm for
often be lo nelineJJ. Not oppositesex.ln lbatonecan
realitlngthatthereareother1 easily for&et tha t they are
One ol Pbt Alpha Theta's
lharlna the 11me types of anothn- hwnan penon.
mo&t Important contribution
fedinp tend to make one
New experiences can oRen to the UWSP campus has
fed separate and perhaps be very threatenln& and been the formation fo the
insecure . Oftentimes th e cause I lot of londlneu in a UWSP Historkal Discourse
mere lr.nowl e dae that """"'' U b o11oo lm......l Sodoly IHDSI. • hU"'Y cl"b
10meone else 11 letmina to
torememberthatothenvery which p r uent1 films ,
('Ope also can help one t.o fed
oRen bave limWar !eelincJ, spea.lr.en, diK\Baiou, etc.,
more confident.
. . . ., .... ,........ . , _ .. """ .. hlolorial ,..
Alienation can also arise
lalkin&:tbemowrtheyare ta'ftt. Mall)'olPbiAJphl
'I'Mtt'a members are alto
out of one 'a .earC:h for ofll!ll eui« t.o deal wi th.
llo6e
a
members of liDS.
on enter ln& a 1r1duate
Belt~~ a member of an
school ~
honon 1ocie t y Ia ad· bntc:e R. Be1m111
when the 11udent Prui4ellt
1ee1ta employment or plllll 0 111 Alpka T'Hia
vantaaeou~
Suggestions welcome to
Human Relations Committee
To
u.e M ll.or :
Tbe Human
·aroups on the un ivenlty
Relation's c:ampu1 and within tbe
=:d ~1r~10~~n: ~j~~:~*·~lb~h!;!! ~t:i)r!v~~~~: ::c:n:~~~~~c!!U:
u:
wit h ttch of you and rt lur·
nln1 st udent s a very
meaa.ingful '74-'75 yea r at the
University.
,
The Human Relation '•
c:tltl«rns to any one of the
members ot tbe Committee.
Human Relations Committee
Me mbeu are Ca rm en
Benavides.Unlveralty llealth
~nJ::r~n~' :'sc:ti!: ~~~~Ps~rNe~U: ;~:.~~'.~!! ~o!~,t~e:: ~~:d~ n~~·~a:-~:n8 ~~~~:!:
1
1
composed or ttudents , Chai rputon
( Extended
:Su!e:~na:!=:'.!d ~~~~=~~o~ =f:~~~ ~!d~~~~I:A~:~ry~:Jf:~;
~!i
lmproriD& tbe total human F'aculty ; William Stiebtn,
envirorunentofouruniftf'Sity Faculty ; Marjorie Warner,
campu1 . fSee Facu l ty Alwnni ~resentatlve and
Uandboolr. Pill! E.S.S.I
~te Whitebird, Mainlenance
If any ttudent, c:lauUied Stall.
llllrl or facultymemberhasa
Human Relttlon 11 when 1
:f.:
~::! ~ryec::::'i:t:t: ~wC:oin~frr:::'n~
~:r:t~~'dfn~eann~ 0r~s~i mine.
~UCCU~rw
i"~u~,,~...,~·~··~··;"'~·~~~~~·~·~"'
~·....,
~~-~;;;;ru
~~i.!,be~Jre:::UY~
:=~~r! :~~~~
amoac all
the radal, ethnic.
Barb.ra Far l- .
***********~
"''' ~"K" "" """ "' ""'" ...~. '"""''"· :~ Under New Management
:'r~~!; ~:d:~~~ ~~o! l:'.e::~~::
:
The
0 ff Ice
•
~
0
Bar. & Gr•'II
:
~
~
The Finest
Featuring Char-Broiled :
:~:::~::ndings li
: Enjoy
j With Your Escort
i
:
~
Cocktail Hour
4:30 to 6:30
:
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j
WATER STREET
_:
~ Offi~~E B~~rOF~HE~rill ~
~
GO AERrAL CIRCUS ·~
P~e
22
THE POINTER
October 3, 1974
~ OPINION CONT.
u
Abstinence from
meat requested_
To IJie ediLW,
Most ttOOents are by now
pr obably aware or t he
tremendous world food
shorta&e&. MiiHml ot people
are llreatened with sta r·
vation and dea th, n pedally
In Africa. Alia, and Latin
America.
Meanvoillle, even lhqh
Americans face inflation and
rising food prices, we are
eatinc more and betlft' than
eve r before. There is a
defini te linlt between the
eaUnc habits ot ow nation
and thole ot other natiON :
the more that'ft eat, the leu
that Is )eft ovn- for the poor
C'OUIItriel• •>es-caplta&rain
coosumptloa m the' U.S. Is
about I,CIO powldl ~ 'fiiU,
I'D05totitintbeformotmet~t
and dairy products.
T be aven s e In poor
~=.a=-~~
consum.d ttireclly. n takes
len pounda ol sraJ.a to ma ke
one pound ol bed in feedlotl.
Meal consumption In the
U.S. is rllins. Pf: r capita beef
COiliUI1\I)lioa was 55 pounds In
tt40, 117pounds- ln 1171, and
projected tbr Earl Butzl 10
bet401n l985.
A nallonal cltlzens lobby,
"Bread for the World " has
propoud a. syste~ o f
voluntary abstinence from
meat. 1bey Invite au concerned people 10 abstai n from
meat on Mondays , Wed neldaya a nd Fridays. In this
=~ ~:: ttai~'W::rw~
proce~~ ol meat produi::Uon.
We all can a leo do ow part lo
C«<lftVe food br avoidins all
foo d was t e and over·
conaumpllon or rood and
--
Even If succeurll] , an
lld)astmeat In tbe nation's
eath:C habib alooe will not do
much s ood. F.alin& Jeaa meat
won't pu~h baclt hunser
unlesaraou:rceathatoalylhe
perwnent can eommand
are more fully CGnUDitted 1o
~w.~ncry people.
•
·
POINTER
u.s. food aulstance must
be increased . The U.S. must
participate polilively m the
creation and buildlnc ot a
wo rl d food reserve .
Therefore, in add ition to
personal uc r\fice, all con·
~pe4)pleareursed tobe
'Nell informed on aU matlft"'
and legislation relatln& to the
wor ld food shorla&e. to express t~r riewa on au
related lfllalalion to their
senators and ~men,
and tospreadtbeirtone'l'fn to
umall)'peoplllupollibleao
that a true ltall · roots
movement towards IDcruMd
food for hunary people an
.......
1
r~
!rJI= ~=· a:S'il!~:!
procram, "Bread for the
Work!", or rdated ma t ten,
fed free to
or wri te me. )
can
SI~J.
Jadle Bru
IW(lar\: 8l.... l 4
)U -5!1'5
FOR BIG APPETITES
OUR DOUBLE DECKER BURGER,
CRISP , GOLDEN FRIES AND
A THICK SHAKE.
by Bob Kerksleck
At the first Student Senate meeting Sunday
night, Senator Tom (Wojo) Wojciechowski
Introduced a resolution to send the Student
Government Constitution back Into committee for three weeks.
Considering the apparent new powers of
Student Governments In light of the completed merger bill, that rHOiutlon and Its
pa ssage are to be commended.
According to the new law, "students shell
have primary· responsibility for the for.
mulatlon and rev iew of policies concerning
student life, services and lnternts." ·
The UWSP Student Governm&nt will be the
pr imary voice of that responsi bility on this
ca mpus. In return, It will have to demon. strafe that It can truly represent the student
bod y, and that It has the leadership potential
to cope with that responsibility.
Members of the Student Government
Executive Board had originally planned to
try to ram major constitutional changes
through the young senate In the first two
sessions.
While some of the- changes may be
necessary, trying to ra m anything through
could only hurt. We need to learn to look
closely and cr itically at all major policy
decisions.
Student Government President Lyle
Updike has a reputation for' acting rationally
In his own good time. Indeed at times, he has
been cr iticized for acting too slowly.
However,ln light of his responsibilities to us,
th " may be a real advantage. In this day and
age, In every public position, too little Input
from the wrong. people Cllln be disastrous.
'-
October
3, 1974
THE P.OINTER
Poge 23
Stevens Pond
The Student Norm
by Taurus S.
join the Scouts
To lbe fl! IC.,
Coll~t 1ttadents ~In bt 1
Vlh.llbltuaetlotht StevtriS
P01nt ~ommunlty 'I'htrt Ire
hundredlolopportWlitlts for
coU~t ltudent.s to hdp lbt
youtll of Stever. Point. One o1
tllewayslstogetinvolved In
Sc;':~~j
within Wlllling
::'d':re
Y!r c~hl';e~
stills, Men and women a re
experltn~e for those in·
ttre5ltd in proftulon1l
.~touting or other IOCII I
JotrYk:.e work .
No scouting experience Is.
ntc:ft.Nf')', jUit 1 lincere
Wllnt to help the youth of tllill
ll'tl. II interested please
~opKr.~~~T,sTe~!n~
=~·
!d
:'m!;''!d!:se
phone number.
needed to advise coed h:·
plorft' pc:cts. Mloy di.ltricl J im Chtlstraaa
positlon1 are opu, 'nlese IU Knutun IIIII
positlOI\I oHn- a worthwhile 346-4~t
20% OFF ALL
Western Jean Jackets
DURING
Erzinger's Tom Kat Shop
Anniversary Sale
.~.OME TO
TORREY'S RESTAURANT
TO GET A MEAL LIKE YOUR
GRANDMOTHER USED TO MAKE!
IT'S POSSIBLE TO GET A
CHEAPER MEAL IN WISCONSIN
BUT . . ..
IT' S IMPOSSIBLE TO GET A
BEITER MEAL!
P~e
2"
O:ie to
' crazy Nlary
. ,.
Jwbhlwen~aconcerto~
the tape deck of your hear
I'd 1tay up nlghll qufl
lately to memorize my par
OUr music would ma•
Beethoven, B.uh, and M~
lookllke:fools
cut you'd play
m e:
a~
rewind m e: , and I'd spin yOt.
little spools. - Bob Ham, J
~1/N I M \'
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