INTER U!!JPPO •

advertisement
•
.l..
•
•
Governor Potrkk Lucey (standing) has on oHentive audience in William Dyke
(seated left) and William Upham (right) a t the gubernatorial debote. held here
lost week . Photo by Roge• Barr.
.
U!!JPPO INTER
On the inside .. .
Gubernoforiol hopefuls
lash it out
Poland extension may
become reality
p. 2
p_6
Homecoming festivities
•
successful
p. 7
Land may be granted
to Indians
p. 9
Superpickers
still winning
p. 16
Pointers don ' t disappo int
See Homecom ing photo feature pp. 12 & 13
Photo b
Bill Poulson.
returning alumni
p. 17
Fleetwood Moe review
p . 15
Page 2
October 24, 1974
THE POINTER
Gubernatorial hopefuls lash it out
byJotiC.GM•U.~r
saidtheaovemor••appnrat.o the Rep14,.bllcan 's In this
"As the ch.AI'IC'f:llor pointed be Wlab~ to e:ontrol thole yur's dectioN.
out, I am the lnnambent people he haJ already apo
aovttaor and •• sucb 1 pointed
suppo1e it 100 wilbout
All thrM candidates l.l.shtd • t!f:n~i~:t•.;'u.!e;;~~!~
-..)'inc that the luue o1 this out at the Department o1 Lucey and Upham agreed
to olfie:e."
~~~-~:td~~~ ~o;k~{l~~~~
gowmor of Wllcor.ln and the! DNR "buru~ralk:" and
candidlte for a I«''nd ttnn Upham called It just 1
at that poll.
''mea."
Luttoy's above e:om.ment
Lucey said he wu
opened a debate bdd in 8ef1 ' 'Wsappointed" because be
Gym at UWSP on Wed· wanttdt.ohnrOylle'souUintd
nesday, October 11.
pt'OCTam but lnstead ·''lot a
n:=:Tb; ~'t.wJ!
Republican candidate for
tr~~
the audear
powuplant~wu''notan
t:~~~!!!;~l~~~ :!fl:h.:'~n':r:!'~*':!
candidate.
ln hll openlna remarkl,
Ll.lce)' pointed out hit ac·
plishmenta u &OY«nor
tudina: kaisJation on the
sr
ir'onment, ethie:s, probate
ufe" u the Atomk ~
Commision IA EC) would
have 111 believe. He did say
tbat he dld not favor a
moratorium on the con-
structlon ol
~ pclftr
reform and property tax
relief.
Dyke expounded on his
e:ampalan theme of "&o
where the people are" In his
openlnc remarts. He pointed
outthathel\ldrilittdtst.ou
counties "mHtina people
and, moat lm port aat ,
Usteninc to peop&e." He uid
that people we:re diualilfled
wilh tile way aovemment has
"cootrolled" their Uves.
Upham, in his openina
statement , exprC:IIotd some
themes or the American
Party. He uld that tbe
pUnta in Wisconsin.
Dyke said that Lucey's
power plant sl ahtina bill
would have aiven one state
aaency the power to "drop 1
plant" on someooe's bad:
door.
Uplwn auaaated tbat the
powtte:ompanles "be bdd to
stTkt accounll.bWty" for any
malfunctions or diluten.
All three candidates were
aaalnst the federal five
ptTCiat aun::harae ubd by
P rea l de at
Ford.
Uyke attae:ked I.JJe:oey'a tax
reform prop-am by sayiq It
=:"!~e ~~~ was only "tn abiftlaa."
~=""!~;*~=
and that the Amerkan Party
wu the only real alternative. llllft while Upham llJ8Ietted
l h ; :::ru~~ re:r~ ~~::::..C:t~
candidates rebutted each the real prob~ Is."
In relation between the
olher'a statementa; pha an-
::~~~ o'ue::~ d:n:~ ~n: :::~~::::~:. ~~t.!n!~U
0
0
questions from the audieo«.
Upham polnttd out that
Lucey had 1 tona lilt o1 accom p6shmenta; but that he
" had twice 11 loft& u any
other aovernor to c:an-y out
hbprccrams ... "
Dyke crilklttd Lucey for
''In two minutes, I an't aolve
II." Dyke uid "I don't think
·any one candidate .. .._..
today what tt.. answer au
be." Lue:eyauaested that the
anawer waa I n "con servatlon ."
All lhree candidates uld
bad " lost coatrol" or
W'ISCW!Iin'a Kbook. He aJao
aequenc. amM:&ty bave: Jut
~rol-=~~l!"!:~!; ~~:~.!o r1~ P~~
and Prft.ident Ford'a sub-
withtheZ5pen:ent-75per-
cent split between lluclents
and the state. Dyke uld the
me:rae-1\ad not ruulttd In
COlt reduction.
Dyke and Upham said that
reduced gcwernment spendina would redu« inllatlon
and Lucey said that enettY ,
C:OASe:rlation«~~o~ldbt!pn~rb
Wlatioa.
In anawer to an audience
question, Lucey saki that the
UWSP willgtt "some" reli~f but wi th a "responsible
in its budgttina.
~U:en~·:,:.;=t~
o,·te claimed that merzer govemmenl
.
olthe uw and WSU 5y5tems
didn 't saw· anylhi~Windthat
Lucey said that Wisconsin
it "did nolhina ror hl&her did have management Ia
tdUCiltion."
aovernment and Uph1m
suaaestecl that outside rirms
Upha m blasted ala t e audit lhe atate books to IC·
&o\·ernment lor 1 " coa - count for spmdina.
ce ntration of power In
Madison " sunestlna that
e\·en Chancellor Oreyha ol
The debate WIS lponlortd
UWSP waa from Madi10t1.
by the UWSP Student
Political Science
Dykesaidlhathel'-.nttdto with Gary Winten, a studeat
leave this wtlr'ld wllh not
more ''bric:ks and mortar" ~ol~!~~al science , 11
Asloda'*
I
Oc
::.:.:.'obe=•c..2::.4"-'-'1.:.;97_4;_ _ _T
.:.;H
.:.:E_;_;
PQ:o:l;_;N_;_
TER::..:.;_ _ _• Page 3
.JBadzinski discusses possible budget increa,...
byBasuyUmu
Bad:dnskl continued to
A new proposal by Ce:ntTal
Bob Badzinski, student explai n that facility reserve Admlnlstraion to charge one
controller, said this is a is the f ee wl\ich eve:ry student dollar per student may be
•
premature time to talk about
budget lnc.~ase .
Neverthe l ess a r ough
estimate of $10,000 extra
income may be anticipated
late second semester.
Badtinski
enu merated
thcise activities which Student
Government helps in
developing budgeLs and In
accurate accounting. Activity
and 10, AIRO. Arts and
Lectures CA L ). Black
Students Coalition (BSCI,
Day Care CDC). En vironmental Council CEC),
Men's AthletiCs ( MA l ,
Women's Athletics IWA I,
Men's Intramurals CMU ,
Womm's lntramurals CW)),
Music, P~nter , Univusity
Activity Bolrd (UAB ),
University Writ~. ·WWSPFM . TV 6, University
TMatre, Student and Activity
Administration are all includedindtvelopingbudgels.
is cl\arted to maintain empty
dorms at Os h kosh,
Whlte ...·ater and Superior.
"UWSP alone is to pay
about $40,000 for that pur·
pose," he said.
Madison, Milwaukee, Eau
Qaire and Stevens Point are
opposing facility r eserve,
pend.lnaUnitedCouncii WC I
fo rmal vote. Other cam·
puses, some of them bene·
ficia r iu , are apathetic
on the issue.
''1llere is a propo5al to
requestfor additionalfundinl
for instrucllonal programs
which are more activity
oriented," said Badzinslti.
If the request is not met, it
might be ne«:ssary to raise
aclivlty feestomaintainsudl
important areas n
the
Pointer , which is already hit
by high pr inting costs,
rnulli118 from curren t in·
nation .
effective ne•t academic yea r .
This is meant to provide
additional funds for campuses
having financial problems.
-"" Superior, with a head-count
or 2,600 is one a! these cam·
puses. It has tbe fourth
JargeSI university center
...itttinthesystem.
" lfthisproposalsurvives,
about $8,000may be utracted
from the' UWSP campus,"
said Bachinsld.
Student Government 5ees
this as the easiest approach
adop ted by Centnl Ad ·
ministration and the Regents
tocorrt-etthelrerrors made
on the Suoerior campus.
"We shall oppose this
proposal because it is unfair
asking stu den ts on one
campus t.o malte financial
contributions to a nother
campus they are not at·
tending," said Badlinski .
~~~~~~~~=':!
Faculty Scoate chairman in
t'he Oct . 17 Polnttr . He Is
chairman of a Faculty Senate
committee deallna with
faculty evalua tions . The
chairman of •Faculty Senate
is J .P. Zawatblty.
Come see what's new
at your all-new
BUrger Chef~
Math expert to
speak tonight
•
f1x,.... GWn lupr the WilY )'IOU
. . It at CMr new \11\:ns 8.-.
H.-Jp younelf t.o 1.-ttuc.-, tomatoes,
oniON, ~li.nand pickle.. If m~.~~otanl
and caiR.Ip are all you want, it'athtre
foryoutoo. Havep muchor uli ttleaa
you want at the Burrer Chef Wnrkt Bar
r=,:.~ir~:~~~:.
·:y
Bur,..rChel,thechoiceia)'OUrs.
='C·fi!~!!~:~fa~TSLi,7
youratl f. You'll find a choiotnfdr~inl
and at Buraer Ghef, you cnn come b.:lck
for nll theMiad youwnnl!
Oneof\Mcounlries Jeadina
mathematicians, Stanley J.
Bewsl.lta, wiD be spe.alr.ina
toniJhtat 7 :30 p.m. in rdbm
116 of the College of
Professional Studies <COPS)
bulld.lns.
The
Ma<h ematic s
Department Is spoosoring the
•
~~e~!:! ~~c~~~ ?e~ i :S
1
through a grant by Sentry
ll'lluran<:e.
A Roman Calholic priest as
lfl"ell as being director of the
Mathematict lostit ute at
Bo&ton College, Bemslka 's
l.allt Is titled "Eltcursiona into
primes." He has also served
as a top lnvestiptor fCK two
Air FCK~ res.earth contractl.
Bezuszka feels that the
~ullona to the world's mOll
vexing problems will not
come from the computersbut from human Mings with
ins i&h t a nd imaalnation.
"Computers will make our
...-ork usi~ and fa ster but
imaaination is an e•clusive
human property," Bni.BUa
said . " And imaginative
solutions toproblemsisatthe
heart o f mathematical
thinklrc," he added.
The publie is invited t.o the
lectun; it is notjustfCKmalh
mlo,jon . A Pththemat\cs
Dt-partment spokesman said
anyone with an elementary
school . math background
s hould be ab le .to com·
prchend what is bein&sald .
There w\11 also be a
re«ptioofor Be-zuszkaafter
1\istalk. 'Mtepublicisinvited.
.
-
............... CIIot
-·-··-~?..P.~~~~~~~·-·-·-·-·- ~.
Page 4
October 24, 1974
THE POINTER
~aft Apes win
by KJotberiae K-akiLJ
team did not neceasarlly have
lo win the entire Hunl.
'Ibe flirt Apn won lint
prize in WWSP FM-IO's firtt
annual Scavercer Hunt last
weekmd.
" We pooled our superior
brains to&ether and won,"
said Jim ''Swl&" Swluum,
won the case ol beer.
Sue KaHtner, a roordinator for · the Scavenger
Hunt Kid tNt there w~
some complaints abo ut
communit y groups plr·
Udpalirc In the Hunt. n.c,
Kart Ape Number Three.
n.c
anolf-campu~group,heldthe
The Ktlre wu 1030 for tbe lead with the mOlt points
Raft Apes with Trinity ~houtmOitoftheHunt .
Lutheran Church <TLCI in They had about five houses
I
coordinatorfor thellunt.
" It 11rned out betttr" tUn
we thouaht because people
partidpatedeventhcJu&h lt
wu Homecomln& weekend.
Nextyeo~r~~>'i!Wanttodoiton
Official action on the
when nothlnR II s tudent ruponslbllltlu
sa.id Victor.
~«tion of mercer 36.08 In·
Wbole hoUJIH or whole terim Guidelines by the
lrinp ol people should set United Residence Ho1ll
together as teams ror next · Association <UR HA ) has
yur't Scavengu Hunt , said been held off until the
Kaestner.
Noo.'i!mbeT mteting.
1 ...mend
happen!~.
Thi~J ! ; e ; : ~~rn:O~~ :~ aw~th at:~!" i:~
Dlngoa with 190 polntl. AlJ people on call nid Kaestner.
three teams won re cord
' 'TLC wu • good team;
al~W:SScavenaer
~
Hunt was a
contest in whlch each hour
fourltemsweremtnUonedon
WWSP FM41. Participant.
had lo brin& In eo~ch Item
which wu announced to earn
point or va.r low; values.
Certain items brought Into
Hu nt
Sc a ve n1e r
Headquarters were awarded
with a clue which brqht
teamscl01er toalrealul'e of
Paul Shof&ren, a member
or Minao·• Dlnao• from
second·west Pray u.id, "We
pooled tosetherall of our
mourcestheix'stwecould."
"Suc«sa wasteameffort,a
much fun aa 11>'1!! bad," said
81.11 Sink, Ra ft Ape Number unified wlna. and en·
durance,"aaidJim"MinKO"
One.
" lt wucoUqeorltnted,we Ebardt.
Tom "Rookie" Seibert of
didn 't want non -colleae
students to win; we wa nted to theDinaosuldtheyttaytd
prove there was stUI coUege upallnl&htandllstentdtothe
spirit ," said Swiggum .
Mo. 'Ibe Dinao crew ~­
" We wo uld lik e th e slsted of a "headquarters
Scavenaer- Hunt to become an manager,''a lotoflisteners,
annu.a.l event in the fall, but chasers, drivers, sleepers
and people to tit and
d=e
think.
~ ::C~ '!!~h!.tv~~:tu:!
~e'!;~~~~~~.~ =~
URHA action on
student ~esponsibilities
delayed
1
~~:.o:~
URifA . lncreued com.
will be askfd 111
munlco~Uon
!!:~0: both OC'Janiu.Uons
Sec urity review 11tll
!;,:~~~v~ of V:1:.nf
need was cited for IOI'IIt
The URHA President Wes li&hte r secur ity on most
R a mseier
s t resse d campusea.
preparednus for th e upReportedly, five r.~pes or
comins mtetlng in the latest
UIUIA session, held on the attempted ral)tS ,OttWTedon
UW Milwaukee ca m pus the UW Eau Claire Cl mpus
and bicycle and petty thtfb
October 12.
have t hown an lncrfll~t on
most universities.
The URHA will dec:lde In
No•;embeT what they will do
Ra maeler asked mtmbtr
lor the Febi'Uoll')' Board of ·schooll to dr aw up pocenUaJ
~~~::~t ":C:,'~~gn. {bii'i~~~ :r:~v;:.,f:~~~~~he ~
1
gui~li"" "Aill be dec:lded on meetlna . to be held
a f1no1l basis.
N~ember I& at LaCtoat.
OperaUna u a lel)olfa
qaniuti«J from the United',
Council <UCI o( the uw
Student Governments was
unanimously supported by
'fbrough URHA's and the
member achool's efforts, all
campuses have alcohol in tilt
d ormitories except U\11'
LaQ-oue. Aicoholisexpeocttd
iOOn on tha t umpus.
National tourn,ament5
open to
UWSP students
by JohnR. Ptrdae
~~:~~fn ~::_o~~
table tennis will be open to
student participal\oa here on
. November 2 and t .
• Also tent.JUvely Jebedultd
•• competition in bowlina
uid Ph.il Silbmtan.. of the'
Student Activities Office.
The games a re
/:1 of
Unt!'!
~!'):."~~~';!erc~l e~ate
Alaociated CoJf~~zed
All full time students st
UWSP, . in ac1dtmic &ood
standinl, 1re dlglble for _tbt
tournaments . Pros p«llve
d;'~~~o~~~:e~~
to 30 in the Gimes Room of
the Univenity Celter IUC).
Anentryfee (tocover theCOit
of trophiel ) will be collecttd
at the time of re&istrallon.
SUbentdn said.
The table tennis tour·
nammt 1riU feo~tw-e com ·
peUtion in both sinales IHd
doubles.
'lbe ACUI lnltiltes and
~!~:,!,ia~n~~~~!!· C: ::~~!~:~1t:~cf~Je~l:~~
collegeuniOflll
·
Winners at theklcal level
wi ll earn trophies and an
opportun itytocompetelnlhe
regional aamea at UW
• LaCrosse on Jo~ nuary 30,31
lind Ft:bruary 1.
campus radio station
manager at WWSP. di scusses the Scavenger
Hunt with Maggie Victor . Bedore was one of
the Items In the hunt and stands In Raft
Ape's box, along with the other items t urned
in. Photo by Rich Cigel.
r et: r ea lion areu . The
nation•! finals In these
tournimenll a r e held t l
various loca tions KJ"OII the
United Stalet.
October 24, 1974
Nc;rman
THE "POINTER
. Page 5
kicks off? ·
•
h~ John R. Perdue
Students a t UWSP, and
other connoisseurs of Point
Special Beer, may soon be
without ooe of their . most
publicized colleagues.
Student Norman, the
popular brainchild of Pointe r
ca r toonist Dennis Jensen
! T aurus S .), may be
relegated loa prolonged stay
on the drawing board before
the end of this year.
"Although the decision is
still tentative, Norman may
not last the semuter,"
frowned 1 disappointed
sounding Jensen dw-lng a
recent Interview.
Ironicall y, it is partly
because"TheStudentNorm"
cartoon strip 15 so popular
that the creative Jensen may
elect to disconlinue its
publle:alion.Norm anhas been
widely accepted, but for all
the WfO!lli: rea100s. he taid.
It takes about '30 hours a
week to create each new
"S tudent Norm" strip .
Writlns and formulation of
Ideas take the major portion
or that time. Jensen ex·
plained that wrlt.ing the strip
has r ece ntly become a
"he!Ush proceu, especially
in view of the unintended
r upOnse s tudenta have
generated for Norman.
In a ttempting to a"nalyze
~~=td:~ ~helh:~f~
of the "Student Norm" Idea .
=:~~e~'!Jil~! =~va.~
incidentlnlhedormgavethe
final Impetus to th e
publication of the strip.
On that day, several people
tn the dorm were watching a
television broadcatt of a
' World Series game. \1/hen a
bulletin about the.tJUtbreak of
theMideastwarn ashedonto
Originlilly, Norman was thescreen,thedltappotnted
intendedtoser~e as a kind of
vleweu voiced thei r
mirrcw on the UWSP student di scon t ent with the In·
body. He was meant to be a ternJ~ion.
rellectionolwhatJensensaw
as the typically apa thetic,
dis interes ted student . Ac·
That Incident cryat.alllled
con11ng to plan, students the"StudentNorm"idea foemlsht ha11e been moved to Jensen, and now he argues
take a long self-crilicalloolt that student a pathy has
at tha t rdlection, J ensen become even more per~asive.
explained .
•
Now, afte r a year of
publication. Jensen confides
that his efforts may have
backfired. " Many students
have adopted and kkntlfied
with Norman in an heroic
sense,ratherthanutheanti·
hero he wu intended to be,"
he said. In other wordt, the
beer- s willing,
anti·
intellectual Norman hat been
idolized by the very tame
studenU that Jensen had
hoped to change. "Norman
~:~e~.~~:::!!n
The Norm com ic book , part of the work of
Dennis J ensen, was done this summer as a
rec ruitment effort and includes some of the
~~r~r~r'f:r~nog~r~he 19]3·74 Pointer. Photo
:.,rd·llke
ObYiously, Jensen Is
disheartened by this tum of
evel}ta. "Norman has become
statlcwtthme. ltspopularlty
with the students It apparenUyincreasing,butwith
me itt going kind of
downhill," he said .
Busch elected ch<::Jirperson
academic « ~ roc-mal
training for students, stan
and raculty who have
r etponslbi l ily f or
paracu.rricular programsand
events on thei r campuus.
Busch h at a broad
back&round in student ac:·
tiYities. ln addition to his
present position al UWSP he
also~oUvesthatinstltutiona.s
aultta nt dir ecto r of the
UniYft"Sity Centers ..
Retponslbllillet of the
foundation lie In four areas :
to auume financial aupport
appeared on nwnttout NEC
regional and national paneb.
and written articles for NEC
publlcaUons. Butehpresently
ill chai r.m an nr NF.C'll
nomination committee and
chairman of the Associate
Member Ad viso r y Com·
mitiH.
Buteh has served on the
National
Education
Association Ad11isory
Committee on Jow-naliam,
been a regional coordinator
fortheAssocialionofCotlege
Unions-International ( ACU·U
Committee on Relation. with
ArtitU Representatives and
penned "Book Reviewing"
for .y;u-l's Spring 1e7o
Bullehn.
UNcwmandoesgJyeupthe
g.host, doesJensenplan to
quit cartooning?
The answer Is an tm·
~atlcno .
Foropeners,hedescrlbeda
long he ld prediaposlllon
towards political cartoontns.
He Is unabashed in hi s
criticism of the Polnterforlta
supposed shortcom ings In
thatarea,andheindlcatesa
tirm resolvetocorrectthoee
deficiencies.
Jensen Ia alto currently
inYolved in an Art Depart·
ment clau in cartooning.
With the guidance of In·
atruc:tor Tim Volk, Jensen
and threeotherstudentsare
proceeding larsely along
experimental and informal
line~ . Each of the studenta
(and inatnJctor Volll) ha11e
a lready published their
ca rtoonaln thePolnter under
various pseudonym•. Many
more contrlbuUona are an·
ticipated.
The course Is nwnbered :i99
anditlisteduindependent
study. ltwtll be offered again
next semester, and J ensen,
who will be repealing the
coune,lndlcatesthattheonly
prerequialtelsanlnterestin
cartooning . Howeve r, per·
spectlve tt ud entt are
directedtosetthepermiaion
of the instructor.
Jensen of(ered what may
cl ue about
be one final
i:em=f::!tbl:.!d':eia~~
" Someday I'd lib to do the
real adventures of Norman In
the- underground prna." He
didn't elaborate on what he
meant.
Poge6
TH E POINTER
October 24, 1974
by Betty an.k...U.&
'I>Uftl dobey ' il • PoU&h
exprssioa for 'lood Uy'. It
may become a more widdy
known IJ'Mtlng on the UWSP
campus if the tentative
semester abro~~d pro&ram to
Poland becomes a ru.lijy .
" I've beea interested ln
esti bllahlnJ a semester
a broad bued In Poland
b«a\llot ol lbe Palbb ethnk
buewebavelaStevem.PI:ilit
and WlatOOila" said Olan·
· cellor Lee S . Dreyf ul .
" The trip I took Jut
November u a member ol
the AuoclaUon of State
Colleaes and Unlven!Uet
<ASCU>delqation to Poland
helped move my lnt«ett
towards reality ," s aid
ll<eyf...
Ttle ASCU ia a national
c:qaniution of 315 IU Alp-
ported co ll eaea and
~versltia .
The purpose or
=t ~em=~~!on~ ~
W11)'1 toestablishedlEiotional
uba.n&es between tbe Ulll.led
Slates and Poland.
·
" 1 fed the ddegltloo wu
requested by tbe Pollah
government wit h the ap·
proval ollhe Soviet rqime.
Not only was it a atep towardl
betl.tr Ues wltb P<Und, but It
was also probably related to
imerorinJ cooditiOM for tbe
detente b!-tweea the, U.S. and
the Soviet Urdoll ," added
OreyfUI.
Cracow II the pr-ob&ble site
'o.:. ~,!"~~:r,t::cr:·n,
coUeges ucl univtn:iUes in
Poland lut November, I tdt
Cracow would make a good
location. It . 11 the andent
~tak:pl.:oyorol~
and architecl&ral trullftl
ollhe country, '' said Dreyfu&.
An Intellectual and
hislorlc:al Cflller, Cracow wa1
founded prior t4 the ninth
ceDlury and by the tenth
century bad bec:ome an
lmporta.ot trac1in& center.
Cracow waa the aovern·
mental capital from the
,---------------.
PABCO orders
two ·new buses
I TRANSCENDENTAL I
l
MEDITATION
It
lily Mike Loeb
approximately S300 • ciao)' "'
Rola ndThu.nnaier, PABCO runthetwobulel, lt CUrTCfltl)'
<Point Area Bua Coop) co.ta t:=o a dJiy~ s.aid 11d'·
maier.
are on order and ahould
1be C&rftlll route ll 31
arrive toon.
mllesl~and recel ves abOUI
:r'ht city of Stevena Point 1,000 rtden a month, uid
pa1d for the buaea and will Thurmaier . A 112 perceat
leue the busel to PABCO. lncreue in riderlhip was
When the new .bulea ai'T!Ye, lhown betwMn July
lr72
~old onea will be retired, and July oltm.
Uid Thunnaier.
PABOOandthe citywan l lil
P~ BCO Ia receiv lnJ a offer f ree riderlhlp It
&ublkty from a number 'of unlventty atudentl who ibOW
areu. They are C\II'TftiUy a valid ldlool ID upon ell'
rectivl na SIS per month from tert111 the bua. PASCO aiktd
ParltfUdge, S375 per month for ' tOO a mon th w baidy lt
~etreta ry , u kitwonewbuia
t
t
I
I
Fotl\lrttwlnfonnatlonlhwa wlnbaatraa
..--...,
Tuesday, Oct. 29
AT 8 P.M . IN THE GARLAND
ROOM OF THE UNIVERSITY
j.
«
The. tentative ae mu ter
to Poland will have
I abro.d
tbe same procnma and be
t buedonthe ume plln as tbe
I -~~~:":n~f:~~
wllhtra ~llng in
1 difficulUes
the Iron Qlrtaln cotlntrles
0
1
than we have in the other
I PI'OC11mS.
One of cu biggest =th~r~ St~rJ':. ~~de~~Si:~~o~ e~
Each city &elllwo-thlrda of ment money hal btrD Jtl
I protMerna now ll witb In· wha
l they aubaldiu ~to 11kle for the propoul.
-~~-:!!·~!.5!..~ .£~l_14..!:~~-'
D.ation and tbe rialn&priceol
tvtr)'lhina. lt'a dllflcultto
PASCO blclt from tbe atate
111e. I:Malel ~U)' Nil
Nb tyu.r \twUicoatP~~ SltiJ"diJ·
October 2:4, 1974 .
THE POINTER
Poge7
Homecoming festivities succes~l
•
s~7'~~~~r.~!
to clauea
..eet
returned
this
fraternity
Secaod..Signta pt Epll.loa
fraternity
Tblrd..sg:ma Pbl EpaUon
fraternity
.
tales to teU about the
f~tviU"!~U Homecoming
WiniH"'"" ol the JOn& and
. " 1 · m su r e J Ia d queen coatnt u fUiows:
with
Fint·Nea.le Hall
Hom~ecuning weeltl OYU.
&et aome sleep,"
Second-Watson Hall
11llrd·Delta Zeta sorority
said Joan Shafer. Other
students remarked that they
SoRbaU Tournaments u
had roraotten detaU. of the follows :
infamous square · after par·
tatina: ol the a.bo infamous
'"blue buUets" common to
moat alumni and un·
c~er&raduates. Point beer wu
nowlng as well as the
nOstalgicreminlscentsofpast
homecomings.
According to Homecoming
Chairperson Wanda Un·
derwood, Homecoming was
quite successful. The total
cost will be calculated next
.,.,-eek . Underwood estimated
thatSSODto$700wouldbeleft
over from her J2,000
homecoming budget.
Overall winners of the
Homecoming festiYIIIes in the
women's division went to
Delta Zeta sorority. In the
men'sdivision.overall wentto
Phi Sigma Eosilon fraternity .
Coach Bob Krueger said the
bonrire sponso red by the
Greeks was the belt he has
seen in years. A couple of
now 1 ean
•
w-"
..
F1nt-Luc:kynfne
Second..1nl Nortb Neale
Thlrd-193.2 College Girls
Me•'•
F1rst-Vets
Second ..Stud
Third-sigma Phi Epsilon
Coli.ng the' Homecoming
festivities Wl3 the "Fleet·
wood MK" c:onc:ert SUnday
night . Wojo said tickets for
the concert were sold out
The back~p band, Q-ou.
Wojo added tMt mooey wu
fire pla ye d "boogie-rock" made on the concert. (He did
not have the final figures.)
Underwood u.ld that next .
yeaT'a Homecoming Is golna:
" Fleetwood Mac wu tostart\tsplanningstageu
mellow," added Wojo. The ofnextweek..Attblstlmethe
concert was rather tone: and Homecoming posltloos will be
lasted to approximately discussed .
music, according lo Wojo.
Burna to the Quandt J)'m
Door were at a 1ninlmum.
hu~~f: ~::;n~utat:nd~~
Wlbelievable show according
to Tom Wojciechowski
tWojo) , Special Events
chai rman of the University
Activities Board <UAB I. One
scene from the concert in·
eluded three performers
coming on s tage with
graduate gowns to the tune of
" Pomp and Circumstance" .
To end the scene ..each
received their diploma. Wojo
estimated the crowd to have
beenatt,200.
Underwood added there
were no major problems and
everything ran rather
smoothly. One problem was
the assembling of the p4{ade
which as a result started
latter than previous l y
planned.
Bill Kuse and Bernard
Wbs were tbe honorary
f:~:eed"h,~::!; ~ ~
The Pointers really did sting the Yellowjockets. Photo by Bill Poulson.
Chileda seeks funds
to complete building
t~!:!'Y~~~~~
~t~~~:n::!:
:=::
Hall of Fame, at lhe Holiday
Inn Saturday.
Winnen of the lloat CG!ltest
went to Delta Zeta sorority
and Phi Si~tma Epsilon
real
problem today . It hu struck
many areas, ~robably ~e of
the harder hit areas I.S the
prospective builders ma rket.
'1'here doesn't aeem' to be
UAB s&id that the parade ran
smoothly 1be parade incJuded n~ts antiques cars,
c.lowntand ~unusual kazoo
seeking funds so we can · other bulkfings the Skidmore,
complete OUT new building," Owings aDd Merrill firm has
satd one ol Olileda'a ad· constructed are the Air Force
ministrati\"e staff .
Academy in Colorado, and
may be nnns or businesses
who m~y wa!lt to invest in
Ollledal project.
Skidmore. Owings and
l'olerrill ol Chicago are the
~~er;;!ae c:~~~~e~ :;:;nri!~c;:"oble~:a~~ :~!int;~!;:t ~~"c:~~
:;:{=:~oua~Ou~t m~C:.,~~ u:~lzii':
•
Satur'day evenlnJ . A.n 11 :30. 1bey ended witb an ·
number ,
estimated S,IDO people at- appropriate
tended.
"Hypootiu," satd Wojo,
,:;:
i:i~st
Youth Home in
~~~e
~~~at!~ =~en:;:it\~
~Chl~ed: ar~~'::c~r'!j~cii: i! ~:.
band
taken by Otannel 1 News. · derlake at least one
u
~: .of
the games are :!':f!t!s
~::~ta Zeta JOnlrity
::.::
!:'~~~=~~~~ ~";.a~~~fct'f:.t{n ~~~c!
1
~~~s~U:. ~e~be~n:r ~~~~~dad~
com munity center . The
community center will have
nursing se r vices, a food
service, a gymnallum and an
administrative office. 11lese
•·env ironmental teaching
s tations" will serve as
catalysts for leamlrc for
c hildren with lea rn ing
disabi lities.
Connecting the buildings
will be a roofed walkway.
This canopied walkway also
connects the Iandi In tbt
e:ommWiity ca~ter. The new
~.llitreC:u'b~~-~ viewed as a
" W~ decided on th is
buildingapproa.chaothatwe
could provide a home atmosphere for our children.
This kind of hous lna: design is
part ol the trend for aerv\ng
lessening the transition when
they return home," added an
admlnlstrallvestaffmembe.r.
Ollleda 's new institute wi ll
be On a site north of Fourth
Avenue, east of Michigan
Avenue and west of Cayton
Avenue.
Construction will ~n in
Novembe r ,wilhtbepropOsed
completion by July I . The
PlanCommissiotlhasalready
givenitsapprO"Y'alforthesite.
Olileda now awaits the approval of the Steven.~ Point
~:!d~he~~r~~~~ ~~
tober 2t meeting.
Lack of funds is one of the
major problems Chlleda has
yet to solve.
'1be only fUII<h we have In
OUT buildln& account Ia an
~~cC:C~t~n·t Pl~:;;::~tinVfllves ~~"t!!at~:;_s~··s new
~a~~r!;aCdf!io1p~~n~ :~~.?:'!'.~d~ ~~;~o!'r;,!
c.llll~
~ :e~
~"[,; ~i~J:I ~::~~. t~~ tHe~ommunlty. Bdn&
In this administ r ative sta ff of
~::t~Phi
t.-:=-::
Sigm.a
Epiloo look throughout the United onewillhold12c:hiklrenanda
kind ol environment aida in Olileda.
•. ,
Poge.JI
p
,
October 24, 1974
UAB
Schmeeckle junior
named resident
U.llholds m embershipinthe
DieteUcs Club and tlornt
Economlu Club. Aim is
junior a t UWSP.
Ne111ma11 Unlvenlly Pa rb b
Utoman Cl tholic ) Nev.man
Chapel , buement or St .
9an 's, Cloister Olapel, 1300
Mll rioDrlve
01
Weekday Masses :
1\IHday thr<MCh Frid..1y, 11
noon , Newman O.a~
Conreuions : Saturda ys, s : t ~
p.m . at Newman Chapel
Wet>ktndMasses:
Saturday
Sunday
"and &p.m .
Newman Olaprl
\Oa.m .
11 :30a.m.
&p.m .
Cloister 0\apel
Newm an O.apel
Cloister Olapel
Lut heran St • d t>a l Com - Sl. Palll 'l Unllc'd Mrthdist
multy , Peace Camp us Ctl llrt.'l, Wllthlre Blvd :
Cente r , Corner of Maria Sunday Servl~ at 10 a.m.
Drh·e and Vincent StrH:t.
~~~~ywlth Euc':;~:
Sunday
10:30 ~
Fl r u Baptis t C hur c h
!American) I!HI O!un::h Sl .;
SundaySI!rvlctsat l0:45a .m.
and7p.m.
f1 rame
Me m e rl a l
Prubyle r lan Chllr tb, 1300
1\talnSl.; Stl'lcbyser viteat
ll: l$and I I a .m .
• NAVY
• CAMEL
• SAND SUEDE
SHIPPY SHOES :E~:
Evalt~tlln~
Fre! _C.mll.
~~A =~n&- ~;!~= ~-;
10:30 a.tn ., :lndays. Biblt
ltudy for univenity 1tudents
ll htlda t 9:30a .m.,Sundays.
•·1n 1 C hur c:h or Clnhl
Sc:iead11, !corner Minne50U.
and Main 1 Sunday wrvite at
!~~ :m . Sunday
at ue
school
i,.,·OUTDOORS
POINTER
u_
•
/
owderbu~rns
and
backlashes
by Joel C. Guenther
There is a measure before the United
States Congress to expand the Grand Canyon
National Park.
·
This, in itself, is good as there Is always a
need for more room in our national parks.
But what isn' t so sweet is a provision In the
bill to give the Havasupai Indians 185.000
acres of the _park.
If a rancher wanted to give someone his
land , that wou ld be f ine . But I' m terrified at
the thought of the government giving away
public land, especially land in the national
parks, to ind ividual S to do wi th what they
please . Thi s is just not 90und conservation!
gr!~~~abvu~ ~h:~ :1~e:~: ~!~1 :~: ~r~~~~:
5
•
5
1
rights . What if they do with the land as they
please?
The tribe has already endorsed the construction of a dam in the can yon with the
possibility of aerial tramways. What's to
stop them from opening up the area to
un limited tourism and development?
Nothing!
This proposal in itself would not be so bad
if left alone but a precedent will be set, one
which could allow the " giveaway" of lands
in other national parks and forests. The
national parks and forest s· are "every"
American's.
There i~ one proposal of allowi ng the
Havasupai the concessions contract for the
park . This would provide a steady income
for the tribe of 435. If this is not enough, other
types of subsi dies could be provided and
worked out.
Presently , over 57 million acres of land
(including lands in the national parks) are
claimed by Indians. Are we to give them all
of this?
Is this even necessary? The government
already gave the t r ibe $1.24 million for the
land. This was done as recentl y as 1969.
If looks as though the government is going
to have to decide if they should continually
sUPDOrt one group of people or preserve the
future of " all " Americans. If they don't
choose the latter, this whole nation will be In
a hell of a sorry state.
Backwaters of the Plover River offer a
quiet peacefulnes s on chilled Autumn davs.
Photo by Roger Barr.
Land may be granted to Indians
by Joe i C. Gu.enthu
A tribe ol 435 Indians m•y
be granted IIIS,OOOac:resof
land in the Gnnd canyon
National Pa rk .
Ac:c:ordina to s. 1296, a bill
before the House-Se nate
c:o nfer enC'e c:omm itlee ex'p.;lnding Grand canyon to
1 , 406 ,5 00 ac r es , the
Havasupal Indians would be
giventhe t8S,OOOac:res for
economic development wi th
only certain controls.
Representatives Morris K.
Udall IAritona J, Sam Steiger
IArilOfla ) and John Rhodes
IAritona )spoke fort hegran t.
Representa tives Thomas S.
Foley.tWashlng ton )andJohn
Oellenback IC)rq;on.J led the
opposition, poin tina ou t tl\at
otherfedmlareaswould be
open to land claims if the
grant was made to th e
Havasupal.
The proposed "givea wa y"
is opposed by a coalition of six
na bonal conservatnlil Jl:OUPJ.
The groups ar e the Na'tional
Wild i He
F e d e rat io n ,
American For estry
As.soe.iallon, Friends ol the
Earth, Sien-a Cub, llaak
Walton League and the
Wilder ness Society.
The coalition expressed
co nce rn that the Grand
~:~a~ .':t ~:!i!: ~~~~:: ~~a!tndba::
tourist facility developm ent.
COalition spokes men have
The eoallUon also believes sta ted that tl)ere are other
that this trans fer may open ways tohelpthe tribe rather
up other a r eas in ot he r than by giving them part of a
national parks and forests for national par k " held in lr111l
massive trans fers .
foraiJA.mer\cans."
c:o~~~f:~ennt!t~desth!~ !~· 1"--iiiiiiiiio-....
, byKatherineK-:IIlskl
A team of four UWSP
studentswon.seventhplaceat
the Regio n Three Soi l
Judging Contest in Michi gan,
Oc tober 12.
Don " Joe " Wysocki, a
UWSPsenlorlnSoils, ranked
third highest for individual
scores at the con test which
took place a t Mle hlga.nState
University In East Lansing,
Michigan. Las t year Wysocki
ranked fifth for highes t In·
di\·idual SCOI'ft .
At a soi l jqing contest
eac h team m uitdescribethe
number of soil horbona In
fourdifferentfive-footdeep
pits. Eachhorlzondtscrlptlon
Includes depth , text ur u,
structure and eonsistency.
and economica l development
of the tribe. They s.a.Jd the
tribe needs some kind of
income si nce they are v~y
poor and are Isolated during
the winter .
The conservationists, on
the other haod , said that the
government a lready paid
Sl .~ miUion adjust ment to
i
Page 10
October 24, 1974
THE POINTER
Open .,..'lltef' hunUnc: on the
Mississi ppi river In Vernon
countybu been prohibited
since OCtober 15 and wW
be throughout the remainder
ollhe duck hWltlfiiUIIOI'I.
The Dt-partment of Natural
Resources IDNR I aMOI.Inefd
that a d01ure ol the open
water hunting in that aru
...aaapproved by the Natural
Rnourcea Board In Se ptember and recently sl&ned
by Governor Lucey .
Thia a r ea co ntalna the
,
-
tr, OUTDOOR~
.u
Open water hunting
prohibited
No camping fees;
DNR winterizes parks
a t .te'a heaviest co n centrations of canvubad:
and redhead ducks, which are
illesal to ahoot on th e
Cam ping feet will be
~-~'=f~.rirv.ii'r:\:!c~ wa ived In Wisconsin's state
and will hel p ' eli mina te par_ks from Oc:t~ 31 W}li l
mistakes by hun ten hWltlng Apri l t ol nut yea r acc«d111J
:!a!~ump
The
ONR
~~~~~',~ af~~~
and open water
co ns'e r va t lon pa r k stickers a r e still
;:r:=,~ ::=~ ~~:i~e:;
:
.ed at many ~rks ye~r
DNR park mana&t'r1 .,..,11
open water huntina was very
e H ectl v e in reduCing be~.,..interi&ingtheparlt
mis takes by hWltert.
racth liesduring the fnll. but
- - -- - - - - - - -
=
Many campe:rl utilize lhe
state parkl during the fall
because of the spectac ul ar
show ol nature 's S«Mry.
Ho weve r . after the fi rst
SI)O'Ioiall m.i.ny roads and
campgrounds are snO\lo-ed.tn
rorthr.,..intrr.
Some campa roundt will
rtmain open for win te r
camping .,..;th water, toilet
facilities and plowed campsi tt'l avai lable. and the ONR
will providr furth er in ·
for mationonwi ntt'rcamplna
.::Jeremiah
A SVONt:Y POI.l.M:K fiLM
The man who
became a legend
The film destined
to be a classic!
A08(111'11[Df(R)
..... s,or-.-,-..,...
"J(MIIU.HJOHHSQN"
~
~~~lit,__
AU.'I'N-YclVIIE •.,UAN Qil(_iii4SQo · OWILLSl'VNllt · -
_ _ _ ""-'c..,.., ..roow.,..
-.ongO£U.E ICII. TOfl· -l:ly -~ -f..,-
a.-..,,...,.,_...,.__, _
~..,_'""""'
_
(
-·----··
J pd!'ifli· &t
lOX OffiCf.IIUI ATI:sl
S11DW TillE AT 7:01 Alii t:IOPJl.
IATUIIOAY .u11 aMIAY lOX OFfa IIUI AT 1:00 PJl
• _,.TM1;SI.I:JI, 5::38,7:30.t::JO
opportunities in selected
parks by ea rl y Novl.'mber.
Enviro nmenlal
legislolion ·
rev iew
Snowmobile rules change
The Grand Can)'OII
expansionbi ll allovosforlhe
expansions of the Grafld
Canyon National Park tolatal
1, 406,500 ac r es . H also
provk1esthetransfl.'fol. tas.ooo
auu of land to tht
prohibitl.'d by posted notices.
,This old provision still a p:
pra~ in thr 1974 Hunting and
Trapping Regul ation pamanditis n owp«~hibitl.'dtouse
a. snowmobile on any state phlrt.
Snowmob ilina in the
land s excep t wherr
H l& h la nd,
authorized.bypostednotieft. Northe rn
The Department of Natural American Ugion, flambeau
Resour«s fDN RI aald that Rivr:r. Bnlle Rlvrr and mack
previously snowmobilirc .,..'lis Rh·er Slate forHts wil l now
allowed unless apedfically be CO\'e«d by these new
rules.
the Bic
Cyprt'll Nationa l P'resl.'ft.•t ill
florida . Thr bill is prrwnU,.
ready for President Fonl's
signature.
llouH aM St11a tr tonftrfel
rnol veddi ffrrencesinS.lZI4,
the Sola r £nerty Bill. l1lt
8.3234 provides for I'I.'SI.'ardl
and dt'velopmrnt or solar
eneray . II prov ides rn
million for fiscal year lt7l
~~:r~~~~~::t:,t~rp:~
usen in desi&nated arras.
NOW! 1 WEEK ON..VI
JOlinson"
CONT.
POINTER
Rqulations governing thl.'
useofsn011o-mobilesonpublic
lands have been changed
S. 12M,
~~~:=~~~rs hrs
1
October 24, 1974
THE POINTER
Poge II
The rope pwU competition wos strong during Homecom ing festi~lties.
Photo by Bill Poulson .
DNR awarded hunter safety award
disiTittinthesla te by cer tified volunteer instruc::tors
and ('Oflltf'Vation wardens,
and last yea r wnspresented
on eight television stations
and the state educational
netwwk. The course consists
of promoting safe hunting,
use of nuornc:enl orange
clothing,
demonstrating
fir earms
hand l ing
techn iq ues, good s portl·
manship and c:onc:ludell with
an exam.
The course Is offered as
part of the c:u!Ticulum In
hundre d s of Wiscon si n
sc hool1. !1'1 sponsors include
mt11's c:tubs, ~ - H clubs,
( 1
Boy Scouts, community
serv ice departments, la w
agenc:les a nd
others. An yone over 11years
of age is encOW'aged to sttend, lnchJ:iing lhOSot that
don 't h~.r~t but wsnt to learn
~ pforcement
properr~tforfirear~5 -
The_hunter safety course is
coordinated by conservation
wardens in _eac:h county and
the follow1ng r ec:reallonal
sa fe t y spec: ia ll_s ts : J ohn
Plenke at MadiSOn, Gary
Scovel at Green Bay, Mel
Lange at Rhinelander, Doug
Radke at Spooner and LaiT y
~ith at Eau Oair·e.
IF YOU TALK OVER
AHORNY lULL'S HEAD,
THAT'S EXACTLY WHERE
HE'U TOSS YOU.
Energy sources
discussed
Henry Cole ol UW Parltlide &e r ve d on va ri ous ai r
pollu tion bo.ards and com:'~t~~ues~scht!~:: mitten and has resea l'(.hed
Seties, at a p.m. October 29. the environmental imp;iclof
Ions
tenn energy developThe &ubjectol"thelecturewill
mt'flt.
beiOiareneriD'.
The lecture will be held in
Cole recelv~d his B.S.
degree from Rutg ers the Nicolet-Marquette room
Univeni ty and his Ph.D. of the Un ivers ity Center
from the Un ive n lty or CUCI. All &tudenl:l snd the
WISCOnSin . Since then, he hu public sre invited to a t.tend.
Professional
Hair Styling
Men & Women
R.K. Products
2100 McCulloch
344-5493
l':~"Si-~ montezuma·
lfs~~~~~~~~bult TEQ_UfLA
.,..,.... _,__
- -·--1»1_·-·~
THE POINTER
October 24, 197.4
October 24, 1.974
THE POINTER
Poge 13
Homecoming is
one of the only
times yol.J can
act your. age ...
nd get away with it
...
PO{:le
14
.1.
THE POINTER
·October
24, 1974
ARTS/ENTERTAINMENT
u~ POINTER
Five films
to be shown
throughout week
.
Tonight, TtleReiver•.7and decided to write the
9:30p.m .. Prosram-Banquet screenplay himself.
Room, University Center
Several plots develop at the
WCl.
same time· Fields tryina to
Starring Ste\·e M~een. sell Franklin Pangborn on
Based on the William makina the movie: Fields
faulkner novel . The Relver• acting In seve ral versions or
is a .rollicklfll tale of ama ll theacreenplay,and trying to
town turn -o r · the -century cast Pangborn's wife as the
scam!» havlna a hannleu bea~lady .
In theriMI chaotic scene,
mna inthe~
' ty ,
Oct. 25, J•
e Rock and Fields is racing to the
Rock Ar011nd he Cl ock holjtital, his cu gets hooked
fd"ouble featur e !, 7 p.m ., by a hook.. nd-laddu truck,
Program-Banquet
Room <A-oven through trarnc and a
tUC).
"men at wort." trench with
J alth-eRockstarsEivis Fieldl<:lutdlinlthe steerin1
Presley, wbo rocks hit way ...'heel while he tella those ill
out of jail into Hollywood and hia path to "let outta the
stardom. Rock AtfMUid llle way."
A truly cl.assk:: W.C. Fidds
Oockfe:aturesthel~ry
Bill HaiSey ~ond the Comets.
Oct. 29, Never ~ve A
Oct. 30, Halloween Spook
S..eker An Even Bruk, 7 and Special , I p.m ., Allen CenteT.
9:15 p.m ., Wiscons in Room for dorm residents.
tUC) .
Oct. 31, HaiJO'II'een Spook
W.C. f'leldt stars In this Special, I p . m . , DeBot
film-«~ly b«~ouse he has Center. For ,donn residents.
.....
, ,.
. 55POO
•
Uncle Vlnty entertains hundreds of UWSP
students In Ber g Gym Friday night, Photo by
Rick Clgel.
\\ORDS FREE.
Uncle Vinty puts _on unique show
lly I'Uke V~on~ty
The new Uncle Vinty Show
tw again proven that you
don't necnurily have to
have supe r ior aonga ud
lyrics
make a bil fm·
pression on rock audiences;.
They did It ~opln last
Friday night In Berg Gym
before 1.100 people. Their
ltlow, which one can only
de5<:ribe u "uniq~ ". Ia a
mixture of mualc an d
vaudeville .
" Coamlc
Vaudeville'" 11 they desc ribe
lt.
to
The audience seemed
1
Vinty snow. Tney were
geuinc hassled by the time
they sla rted pl~oying their
second JOtl8 by a crO'II'd that
was Impa tient for the ~P·
pearan« of Vinty.
·
It was rather aad beca1.11e
MOfg.&n and Barnes WUtn'l
th~ot bad. It surely must !lave
been dlaheartenin& to them .
Uncle Vinty dubbed the
crowd " the mag)c choi r."
U thue wu nne thing to
recommend Uncle Vin ty's
show fOI' It would have
be
audience participation. He
to
~~~~~
f!"Y pl~~edt~;a~
r":;~! a:r~~Y ~of:' ~=: m~,~~/~:1
throuah 1 dozen
Morgan and Barnes, started cha ngesi n c01tumein thetwo
out the night "for the Uncle hour show
COME TO
TORREY'S· RESTAURANT
Buy the hardcover
American Heritage Dictionary and gel a copy
at the DeD Paperl>od< E<lition free.
UNIVERSITY STORE
JJNIVERSITY CENTER
TO GET A MEAL LIKE YOUR
GRANDMOTHER USED TO MAKEI
IT'S POSSIBLE TO GET A
CHEAPER MEAL II WISCONSII
BUT • •.
IT' S IMPOSSIBLE TO GET A
BETTER MEAL!
Their rendition of the
Beatles'"lamtheWalrus" hld
to be tops just about
anywhere. •
"AIIiaator Wine" wu a ·
frealtout aona. what with
smoke pourinJ out
the
s w~omp whe re Vinty waa
into
:f:f:=·~~r; ::~~~~~~~;
into the microphone.
You knew Eddie the Wlu rd
had something up hit aleeve
~he~~e
;!":' r;~ h~';::S
playing " Pomp and Cl r·
eumslance."
A minute latu Morgan,
Barnes a nd Teddy t he
Thumper came strolling onto
the sbg"e wi th caps and
gowns. They took the whole
place by surprise when they
=n~ 0~~~~irJow~:""'~
ahould 1 say everythlnc. A
better term millbt be •
sbtlonary atruk. Thai sUll
blowa my mind .
. ~~=-~·-:::,or
J:lrnie:t
one
If any
Uncle
too.
of
Vinty'a aonp will make the
ndio circuit, thla will be the
....
The li&hl ahow wu a«ond
rateuwuthemusk:,butthe
ahow, puea«lla~!
•
THE POINTER
October 24, 1974
Page 15
Fleetwood Mac: Hot time in Pointer cfty
by M.lkeVarwey
You mow a cel~Mfrlis aood
when the QC!Iy bad thh• )'1)U
can uy about It Is, "What a
lhltty vmtilation l}'ltfm."
A ldl-<M crowd was on
hand Sl.mdly nilbt to bear
f'\eetwood Mac in the hwnan
coote r , a llu Quand t
fle\dboule.
Since Stevena Point ia
gea red to boOgie, Croulire,
Fleetwood Mac'a bact-up
' Bob Welch did a comJohn McVie pla~ a &ood
voc:ab and the light u-.
mendable job on vocals and concert on but &uitar. Out ol
OUistint' McVie let us know guitar. lleisthe&uy whohad the limelight m01t ol the
what her voice reallv IOWided to put this thow toselher and ni&ftt, he thown thrq h on
like when she &.an& "Spare 1 'm ali:eitao.
!tis jam number near the end.
Micli: F l eetwood w u
H.is votctwas han:l-blttlftl
~We:!l~~e-~h~~7.o becaiDthecouldtrulycreate
l'lu a noticeable Brltiah the at mosphere wit h the
accent, when ahe Ia not $OU1Ids that were emanati ng olthe realm of an ordinary
profes-sional musician.
from him .
sir~~ ina.
" OhWell ,"a hlt aonaarew
~nt:-~ue~h~:,tasp: The " Bermuda Triangle" )"C& rs~ck,wu nicetohear .
her away from thereat of the was a ~at son&- Welch f'leetwood Mac really got
slowed thangs down • bit and 00.....-n on that number .
group at the perfect time.
1
appearN ; their mus.lc, thei r
:';!ydl~~C:n~~ •:
~~;:a:e Th'i!'~~~~ so!~iu!.a~ma'u:h! ~me!i;
~~~~~~ ~~n~ t~ ~::n~t ~;.t wood
Herb. orwhatlh a\·e heard
5ome policemen refer to as
"greet~ vegetatl!le material"
wu prevalent lrom the sLD.rt
ott~ concert.
.
. TNa amoke, along WJth
ctgarette amok_e , added to
:!~u~C::. feeh~
or
Mac showed
t ex pccl.edto hea rmoreof
lheir softv" music As It was
they pla~ a ll el~tric and no'
acoustical music. It wa t
louder th a n anticipated
because of this .
" Hynotlte .. was tn e 1r
be]ng ~~~n!~~ =~s .:'~:.!
" An&el" 'was an enjoyable crowdbec:ause\t waatheonl)
ml;'."~~ Games" wu cool ,
too. Welch got Into the
background of lbla aona .
explaining that its origi n wu
encore.
Perhaps because aU &ood
Pointer. had bten wboopin&
it Iince Thursday or Friday
down outaide
,.-eeli:end.
~~~~~'f.:=c!:~: ~~ 1\:~a a~~~n~
,
RrtE ~J. CraftE
Ctnt~r ~
MACRAME and WEAVING CLASS
Ink Ttc'"*!utl - Enryane Welcome!
OCT. 30 - 4:00 - 7:00
In the Future :
. woodwork
• Cifamlcs
• Photography
• Jewelry
. ACROSS FROM GAMES ROOM
Servlc:"Offlfad:
• BNctwork
•Limlnallng
•leathlfWOI'k • DryWounl
• Bklc:k Prill • Drewfng
Fleetwood Mac concluded the activit ies
for Homecoming 1974. Photo by Bill Paulson .
Woodwind Quintet
appears here
The Quinte t conaiall of
The Richards Woodwind
Quintetwl.ll a ppearat UWSP luael BorouchoH, formerly
Halloween nl&ht , 1 p:m .. A.uOCiate Proleuor ol nute
at UW Madlton : Daniel
Thursday , Oct.
in
Stolper , oboe . who liu
Michrbon Concert Hall.
The Quintet la ~niud playedasfintdesk...,,thUJe
by criticaand publk ali li:ea.s San Antonio and New Orleans
one of the finest wind Symphony Dn:heslru ; El5a
chamber entem bles in the Ludewig Ve r dehr. wellknown clari~t recitalist and
United Slates.
Marlboro F'n tinl a r till ;
Douglass campbell, french
Mk hi&anStateUnlvera ity . hom ronner member o1 the
The name Richardt waa National Symphony and
Edpr Kirli:, bluoon. lor
adopted i.ft merDflt'Y ol Lewis manyyearsviaitingproftsiOf
Richards , theftrat headofthe o1 busOOn at the Eastman
Mu alc Depart me nt a t
School SUmmer seu\ON.
Mkhipn State.
'I
It":': ':Ul ~-::::n~:
DIAMOI>ID RINGS BY
KEEPSAKE
OllAI>IGE BLOSSOM
BELOVED
COLUMBIA
KAYNAR
COSMIC
!DIAMONDS OUR SPECIALTY
COME IN ANO SEE OUR
DIAMONDS IN COlOR
GREEN - CANARY - IURNT ORANGE
DIAMOND IMPORTERS
CHECK OUR PRICES
GRUBBA JEWEL E RS
HI IUJN IT&IITiTIYINS POINT, W1L $4411
I'HONI 17111 144-7121
I
THE POINTER
PoAe 16
October 2-4, 197-4
e
u_~ POINTER
10. Th e au r tlnc quar·
terblc:kfort he Ben&IIJ In
their first r~111lat S~UOft
c•mewn!
'
a. Gl't'l Coot
b, J ohn Sola
~ . De we y " Swamp Hat"
SPORTS
Sports quiz
Tl• Sa lll vu, lbd y
Wle .... t
Mike tt ahr•••
1. Who kitked the longeat
punt In an NI"L ga me!
a. Sammy Bauch
b. S teve O' Neal
c:. Ha,1Guy
d. Guy Lomba rdo
e. IIerman Weaver
2. Detroit's Bob Smith onc:t
nn 102 yud a wit h an inureepted pa a t . Name
a nother pla yer who also ran
102 ya rd s with an In·
~,
u•
t . The N ~' L' a nnt pbyer
draftwaaheld lnli:Jt, andthe
firu playerplc:hdw11!
a. Jay Berwancer
b. Nh; k Boekwlnk le
c:. Butldo& Turner
d. Jay J obnatooe
e. Red Granae
7. Pll riot receive r Rind)'
Va ta ha spe nt one s umm e r
wo rklnaaa•
a. Abbc:kjl.ddealtrattht
Sahara In Ve&ll.
b. A vendor for Geora•
lt:~e~;;~-K~~es
c:. Ken Ellit j
Al!~~~·~~e :,re;~o!rve;hlte's
•e:~\dw:;!~~~~~~~~i,''~~
d. Charley Mc:Neil
t . Fred Fonebone
) . Wllat pla yer bold• tM
NFL reco rd for sc:ori n&ln tbe
mosttoi'IS«Utln 11mea!
a. Cu rt Kn ig ht
b. h11Stenerud
c:. Brvc:e Go11e1t
d. F'red CoK
e. El& ln Baylo r
4, The player with the most
p~~u renptiona In one aame
is!
Milwaukee County Stad ium
t . A public: . addresa an·
nounn r 11 Ole LA Forum
1. In 113$, the Pac:ker't
Curly l..lmbeau offertd lin
•ll·stlt c:o llece c:enter S200 •
came to alan up wltb the
Pac:k. Tbls offer waa later
nutc:hed by Detroit Name
the center.
1. Ac:tor Buater Crabbe
b. Ow ner Charlie F'lndley
e. Jan mualc:la n AI Hlrt
d. Presidut Gerald Ford
e. Gupter AI Capone
1. Two pltyen abare tilt
NF L nc:ord for the lon& n t
klc:koff return ever. Th e
Chief' s Nolan d Sm ith onc:t
ranon•bac:ktotya rd.s. Wbo
dsed id!
1. Ollie Mallon
b. Oliver llardy
e. AI Carm k:bae l
d. T i111 Brown
e. J on Arnell
b. Johnay Morr is
e. Torn F'ean
d. Walter Findley
e. Charley T aylor
$. Whoboldstller«ordfor
moll punt returnl ht one
KISOII!
1 . Rodge r Bird
b. Speedy Dunun
, c:. Stndy Dun u n
d, Alvin Htymond
e. F'un)' Thu nton
W :~r~~:rmoft KiiJ~brt:W '
e. Yir& il Ctrter
1: b-Steve O'Neal, New
York Jell : versus Denver.
l!llit . • yards. 2: t · Eri~h
Korntt. New Yort Glmn tl,
ve nu s ball11 iniM t. 3 : d·
Fred Coli , Vik i na •. Ut
tca mH. Irom IN) to \ln . ~ : c:·
Tom ~· ear s. Rami , v~nus
Parten. II c:atc:b" in
s: d·Aivln
a !ISO aame.
llaymond, Ktml. Sl rf turn a
in 1970. 1 : a·J a)' Berwanaer.
fromU. of Chieago. Pk:tedby
Philadelphia.
7 : c:· Vttaht
wu a Dlaneyland dwarf
durin,& one of Ills yun 11
Stanfor d.
1: d-Yep, the
President hlmu if, who
pla)'ed 11 Mlcblaan. t : b-AI
Carmk:bael, Puhn weuu1
Burl In ttst. 10: ~- Dewey
w.,rtn.
Superpickers still winning
but Hoberman takes a hike
by'M m S.lllvn aiMI Mike
Asswnlng that the Pad:era
~~~dnl~t. :s·~t!;·~
billft' auumptioo Ulan the
one in WliCOMin R.pld., the
Superpicllers went 8-4 for the
NFL '1 1lsth wed:. .
Sullivan upPed hll touup
m~ll to ~~ thanb to Kenny
Stables-, and lhe total yearly
m a r l!. Ia no w 53·11 ·1.
Haberma n , complete ly
disgusted with · hill fourth
consecutive toaup lou, hal
lakenaoneweellleaveO!
ARTS & LECTURES PRESENTS
MICHELSEN CONCERT HALL
UW~ SP
De•ver over Cle.,eland :
Pity poor Denver. Who'd
want to s pend a weekend fn
llabtf'lnlll
THE RICHARDS WOODWIND QUINTET
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31 -8:00P.M.
STUDENTS SOC PLUS
Coed footba ll acton during Homecoming
week . Photo by Rick Qgel.
1.0 .
Oeveland? Tbe BrowN are
Bofft lo ove:r ChkaJ•: If
this game wu in t n t lley,
we'd take the Beara. ll't In
BuHalo, so O.J. and tus
Elec tric Com pa ny a hould
shock Chicago by nine.
on .thdt way to only their
second loslrtl tenon In
history and the Bronc~ will
help them 111 theTe by four
poinll .
PIUJittat&)l h'H
AU. . ta :
~em~fn:~ :!: rr!:c1~a':!
1
sure they won 't IO&e this
Sclnday. Why'! Beca~.e the
aame'1 Monday! Stee:lers by
ll, 42 U Franll Girford loc;b,
hi!TIHI! In a Westlrchouse
rt frtgeratorand ls rl'placed
by Honk Greenwald,
Ondnnall over Il-Ion :
The Ollers lil~e to play on the
road,because, tt)atway, IIIey
at least aet to 1~nd Sunday
after noon outdoon. Benpls
by 17 .
. "llan'll onr Kaltlmore: If
!hines go rig ht for the Colts,
their plane to the Orange
Bowl will be hijacked to
llavana where lhey 'd be
heavy ftvo r iles ove r th e
Cubana. If nol , Mia mi by 20.
Oakla nd over San •·ran.
dseo: The best fr011t line in
Frisco belongs to Carol Dodt.
Raideti iO ~ I by 17.
Philadelphia over New
Orlea ~ : The Sa iniJ r«or-d
ag ainsttea ma from Georgia
Is 1 ·0 . Els ew he r e, 0 · 4.
Because . Philadelphia's in
Miuia ippi , we 'll take them
· - by seven.
St. Lou lt onr W11hln11on :
Coryell 'a Cards can open up a
two game leadwiU!avlctory.
!I'll be • dar\ day for Sonny
as lhe 811 Red Jar rott
Gew1e Al len by three.
Da ll al bver New Y• r l!.
~:;~:;',~':";~!::rJn~~ rl!;
only drive the Gl.t niJ are
inlerested ln issexuai, Oallu
by 14.
Loll Aaseln ovH New York
J el1: Anerwalchlngthe Jeta
offense the paat two weeb,
it's obv ious J oe Ntmatb
m ight bavt s pent too mueh
time in those panty bose he
wean on T .V. The Rams will
~v~ ~oadway U!e run.u ound
1
Kanus City ove r Stn
DieJo: KC alm ost stopped the
Dolphllll3-2on Ed Podolak's
bases-lotded double olf .Jake'
Scott. That should make them
mad en ou1h to h a ndl e
~ubborn San Diego by three
ru nsl n extn -lnnlnp .
Minneso t a over New
f.AIJiand : A bl& one for both
aa tbey're 'com lng off U!elr.
nrs t selbacks or the season.
11'11 look like Sttnford '1
homec:omina wiU! Plunkett,
Vatal\a, Siemon and Poltl on
1
~d dha~! a,r;:orrrn:r~;~
•'ra n Tarkenton by si x.
Gree11 Bty at DetnU :
Sullivt n vs. Crouwhile In the
weekly tauup. SUllivan likes
the Pacll becaUH If be didn't
t~':e~~=::t~t ~:::::
Uona wtll..tn for one co&o.aJ
for them !
~aon : he play.
~
·
THE POINTER
...
~,
Pogel 7
Pointers don't disappoint returning alurifni
College
Scores
wsuc
V.'hltewater28 River Falls 14
Plattev\Ue S4 Stout Ul
Stevens Point 52 Superior 'Z7
LaCrosse 40 Eau Caire 12
St. Norberls Z2 OshJtO&b 7
The football is knocked loose from a
Yellowjocket as he is tackled by two
Pointers. Photo by Rick Ogel.
Michigan 2A Wisconsin
3)
Ohio Slate 491ndiana 9
Michigan State 21 Dlinois 21
Purdue 31 Northwestern 26
Minneso"ta 23 Iowa 17
oinER
TODAY'S HEADS
-'~EAUTY SA~~~;: .
'
,_ ; ( -/_,'
Nebraska 56 Kansas 0
Notno Dame 41 Army 0
Oklahoma State 31
Great Bands
AT
BIG TEN
Miuouri 7
North Carolinl S3 North
Carolina State 14
Maryland 47 J..ake Fornt o
Auburn ll Georgia Tech 22
Alabama 28 Tenneuee 6
PtnnState30Syraeuse 14
USC 16 Oregon 7
Oklahoma 49 Colorado 14
~ford:MWuhingtonl7 .
Air Force 19 Navy 16
Texas 31 Arkansas 1
_,.,.., ,' 4
-~"" ~ J
~
·.
'.:
"- .·
, // t '/
~
!
{:;
;,
.. ---.... ,,
, y·~
~
Men's & Women's
___
f,
' '
(' ~)
Cuts & Styles.
'
341-1717
<1,
\
··1·,"
1
"
"
Clicker "
"J
Tooite:
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
Texas A&M 17 TCU 0
Yale UColwnbia 2
Harvard :5 Cornell 27
Utah State 'Z7 Kent State 14
Poor Henry's
I
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
•••
!.l')'jlJ·•n
II Admission Only $2.00 II .
,_,a
THE POINTER
October 24, 1974
SPORTS CONT.
POINT.ER
Former UWSP gymnast
becomes team coach
=in
)
PaW DeOiant. a rec«d ICbool record ror aa allJn~n& IJ)'mnut at UWSP
In 1917·71, has beta named
the IChool'l hud l)'ftUWtiC performance aaalnlt UW
coachfor thet!r74·75H.uon. Parkside hlt senior year.
Dealant hu taiCbt ldenee
D«:hant succeeds Bob
Bowen, who was head eo~ch
from 196UI and 19'11·74 but
atepped down this year
bt'Ca uae of adml nlstutlve
rnponaibllltln. Bowen il an
uaistantdea nlnlheschoolof
heallh , physical eduatlon,
recreation and athletics.
DeChant was named the
Poi nters' Most Va luable
Gymnast and capt.in while a
senior at UWSP. He boldl the
::~~~c:r~.~~~~
~=.,~uni~":U:"~=
since hit IP'Iduatfon from
UWSP. He Ia only a part-time
mtmber of the Wlivenity
staff, retalnln& his responsibillUn at Ben Franklin.
1
1
w!:-~~:t se ~or
tt: ~!!~~~
~eason began Tuesday with 15
athletes trying out, DeOiant
said.
Grin & Beer it
guns down Vets
John Harrington, homecoming King
watches as Queen Karen Kettlewell (rigl)t)
receives a bouquet of roses before
Sa turday's Homecom ing game. Photo by
Rick Clgel.
by Joe Barke
Grin & Beer IUGBUedged
• the Vets' Club 1~· 10 SUnclay
afternoon a t fri&id Varsity
F1eld to capture the UAB's
tt omecomina So ftb all
Tournament championship.
Rod Neuville's homer
provided the winnlna run as
GBI overame an early &-2
defkh with nine unanswered
tallies duri ng th e middle
:=n~. ,r:rn: J~~;,':.~t
~ho
The 5SO's
physically
resembled atrag lers from
the Tel Offensive durin& 11\f'
la ter staaes of the contest,
ra llied forfourrunswithtwo
down In the bottom ol the
.eventh on homers by Dave
Nau "and Woodduck
Lubenow.
" Aiotoflheseluyaareaonna
be on the tTad ing bloCk,
especially If they seek If·
bitrallon over u l ary
disputt':s. I can't walt for the
winter meetinga," Morrell
~~~'1r~hl~~!~ci~~n~
Nixon .
GBI linla hed the 1&-team
affair with a 4-0marltwblle
the Ve~ went :S. I. The Back·
door Sheep, who did n' t ahow,t ·
won th e s po rt s mans hip
trophy .
Acco rd ing to me et
dire<:torJimWood,the moet
exciting game wu played
early Sunday morning bel·
,.-een the " Vet.s" and "'Ma'a
Children."
Tralling 16-5 in the lut of
the seventh. Ma'a exploded
for ten nans, spiced by Jrand
slams orr the bits of Dennis
But, wlnnlng pitcher Mart
Ropella recovered to aet the Burtte and Georae Frkte.
nut hitler on a h1rd The'WI Id atnJgJeendecfwhen
IJ'ourxk!T, cllndliq the flrst Vet's reliever Hal Hefti
~~O:re J~1.h~"t;~~ ~~e~f~~~·runner
the on-detlr. cin:le.
Jt.b~~~ton:::~m!t:lna
GBJ'a owner and genet"al
manager George Mor rell ,
although pleaaed with the
wi n, wu looking ahead to
1975.
The 16-15 fia.:o with Ma"a
r:::'er ~u!cetori:ha;:;
Fred Schneck contracted a
severeuseoffroatblteinthe
billeT morning ai r and wu
loet rortheremalnderofthe
tourney.
;e!~lh:nd10{eJ~
"Even though we're the na-:::
cham~. I'm not gonna stand that II would certainly be a
~~n~o~;·l!~;khl:~ ~~nsnre:,\vtJ!~~~
the frantic GBI Ioclter roorr. only sour note accordlll(l to
Wood wa1 the aorr y at·
tendance; 17 coeda, three
groundakeepen, two parole
officers and a pena:uin .
)
THE POINTER
Poge 19
Living cost
.differences big farce
Jb~rb'~~:~~
He said his wtion believes
In providina frft tulti• to·
l tudenll for the rlrlt two
years at univets llites ·,
t h ereby m a lt l n& the
pureq uis\te . for higher
ediJCationtheablliliytomake
the grade instud of to pay the
price.
Schmitt put In a plua: rw
John SchmiU or Milwaukee establishment or a national
told K'OI'IOinles students at health proanm , c hided
UWSP at two d!Herent physiciarlsloroppoUIIJ It and
HUlON lXI Monday Oc!Dber prtdlcl«<lt wil l COOle raster
14 that ~· ror rmta and if 'lo"'rtinc people tum out
property lues, no r thern In November to vote for
Wisconsin residents pay more U.S. Conareu and Senate
~5::'. than do Milwaukee candidates who will take the
lide or the aeneral public
He said he believes that one instead of the "special In·
of tbe reasons 'II'OJten ill leresis."
small town f1ctor les 1et
11
smaller wage ina-eases ls
because of an age old insurancecoveraaeupartol
arpmentthalitC'Oitslesito labor setUeme~~ts 25 or so
live on farms and In smaU yean q:o. Yet the reiUit wu
towns. "And th1t 's just that physlcl1ns prospered by
noraense,"hesald.
that kind or union
Schmitt told the students br eak throuah in con tra ct
that the AFL-CIO bas been a negotiations.
supportef'olcallllnrectnt
Of the new U.S. president,
ye.anto llnftrtuitiononthe Schmittuid, " I have nobl&h
1tate's university campu~e~. bopes when I kMik at Ford's
111e uw Board or Regenta hu rec:ord·hehadoneollhemoea.
gone on I"«U'd to reduce the conservative votJna rec:ord!
tuition, but Schmitt said he when he wu • eoncressmandoubts the legislature will and you know , a IUY doesn't
enact such a awopoul .
chan&e ovtrnl&ht ."
belief must tad which totes
lhelduofbigditrCf'UIC:'el ln
Uvlng cOlla between smaU
~munities and larte cities.
The rtSUit , he eontendJ, Is
com pounded KOOOmic pllaht
~~~~ kers in less populated
Wirkus (leff) won the singles title by beating Ken
Lepkowski during last week's Foosball Tourney . Photo by
Rick Clgel.
Games freaks given time to shine
by PIIIUUp SU"""'Icb
Associated College UDionalnl.emallonal will hokt 15
rqional pmes tournaments
this comiDI winte!".
Pily.Uf tournaments will
bt hekl In tbt University
Rettutioa
Center
(Games
Room ) 01'1 NoYtmbn- 1, to
sde<:t reprnentatms to colo
LICrosse . Semi ·riDII 1nd both me n and women's
final miltches will be divisions In each event.
November 1.
Any re&ls tered full-time
Rqion I, which UWSP is student ln&oodslandlng with
p...rtol,willbotdtournaments the wti\·enUy is di&ib~ to
at UW LaCroue January enter. Sign up lor aU events
will be from October ~ In
~;!u~!d .Jue~u~
the Games Room. 1'hete is an
billards. tablel.mnl.l,bowtiD8 entry fee to coYff tr-ophy
and fOO&ball . Tbue will be
t.;
"""·
Ph~~~c~:~ !;pc!s":J h':!~t
Group receives preservation grant
Forthesecoadconsecutive
year the WlSCOnlln State
Lf&bla~ has approved a
A50,000 (rant out of the state
gentTal fund to Menominee
Entuprlses , Inc ., to retain
River s hor eline and to
maintain the public el mp·
J!'OI.Inds and facilities.
·The federal gove rnm ent
desiJ11ated the Wolf River 11
a ''scenic: river," and has
the WoiiRivu~ alion
asked the state or Wlacon~ln
area In Menominee county In to provide the preservation
Its natural state.
fundirc until federal funds
The fundi are paid to bec-ome avafbblt. 111e stale
MtnOminee Enterprists, a has provided the 1250,000
tofl)OraUon which manqes 1nnually since 1970, with
the auets of Menominee
C'IIUI\ty to preserve the Wolf ~=~uu;; l~:'!r' :.~In;~~
M ike Knuth,(back -right} and Randy Wirkus(front-rlght}won
last week's Foosball Doubles Tournament as a ~esu lt of this play- off
game agains~t Gary Tomcyzk (back-left) and David Hoerchler. Photo
by Rick Clgel.
t.,~
Cole to speak on solar energy
At I p.m. on Tuesday ,
October 111, the nm in the
sene. ot Earth Year lectures
will reaue Henry Cole o1 UW
Parltdde.
He will be spnting lXI the
national aDd political sc:ene of
the nuclear PQW'ft' issue. Cole
Cole, auociale professor ol Alpin. The re1eareh con ·
Earth Sci~ received his ee tned the environmental
Bachelor ol Science cSecree impact of Joac tmn enercy
from Rutaen University in development,
;.:J.: '!::
Colelsalsoan ~ppoinlee to
1' : ;, • from UW
Durin& this past summtT, the Wlseonaln Air Poilu~
Cole was Jepslath·e research Control Advl1ory Counc1l,
assista nt to Congreuman Les 1174-78.
::!u:J: J::!':~~
0
~~~-= t;a.w.aaw~Ft:~niR~A~R!lE~A'*Lwwwlat!t
In the Ni<OIOI·M"q"olle
~:! :t,c~·
I V'
HALLOWEEN 'TREAT'
TRY
Unlmolly
Is~~~~~~:
=
STEVENS POINT
vs.
PLATIEVILLE
~
•
SAT.
OCT. 26
1,30 PM
t:Exclu si ve l }"'" orz.
WWIJlW
dlltel2108
for all ol Central W1sconsm
~ DELICIOUS ~
~~willat~ptto
munlty on di!ft:reat top1a1
FOOT/lALL
BILL'S PIZZAS
Lecture Forum
wtKh will·
consist
or a number
or
opeokm well-lol"m"'ln"
Ylrious areas concemlnl: the.
~ ~ ~=k:e
POINTER
ITALIAN RAVIOLI
tl1!'f
WATER~~ MUSHROOM SAUCE
~-tsn
*'*************~...*********
103 3 FM
103 3 FM
103 3 FM
THE POINTER
POQe 20
October 24, 1974
Pointer not for 'mental midgets'
To tllf editor.
In the OclobH 10 Issue of
the Po'nlf:r Larey Gilman
exprt:s.K'd his dislike ol the
Po'.llteroaa.roundlthatit was
•• mundane , provinci a l ,
mediocre. trlte,a ndauiltyol
::::.~if:ue~ i~'l~i~~
create an atmosphere or
irnlevance at UWSP.
Had Gilman taken time
read the Polftter carefully,
10
Instead ol focu.sina tu. at·
tentlon on the comics and
sports.ICO«S,he miaht hive
been ab le to make a
believable appraisal ol the
Poialer.
One of Gilm a n 's main
complaints was that the
t•olnter wu not relevant in
that it did nol deal with
politics enough~say it is not
theresponsibill olaweeltly
campus newspa
to kl!l!l)
~eni~':nl~ a':h~as .. ~,Zi'fe
world.''
The Pol•kr has a '"ltmited
staff, a limited a~TM~Unt of
print space, and a limited
amount of lime: it ,.:ouJd be
utreme l y difficult to
mainta i n accuracy and
plausibility pr inlin1 world
news under these cir·
cumstances. In addition,
=r:=~!r~d~::t!:
doina this and these are
availableatthepriceofa
,.:·alk 10 any center on cam·
....
The other main point that
~!:;~o..J:I!icJ!!
cal' expresa his views and
readofolbet"'s. lwould jwt•
app«ciate it if he len the
Polntu to Its busineu of
printing UWSP news.
JarkUtuuf
Phi Beta Lomtx:Jo
~~'t:::s,~aO:e'!~ ~\ U:: open to business,
t.,>---o_P_IN_IO
!...' N=-=-=-
POINJ-ER
(
Are Superpickers
really so super?
printed in tbe Pol• ter Is
:~~:~'.~ u ~~en: ·t:::~: eConomics mo;ors
1
thls, it would mean that the
followlna topics are not
worthy of mention: two
polltlcaldebatestobeheld on
campus, Governor Lucey's
proposalfortuitlonincreases,
the death o f a coed,
organiratlons available to
students, faculty and the
tenure situaUon, the 197$
UWSP budget, tbe special
skill.sreadingandwrlllnglab,
arts and lectures programs,
natural raoun:es and envi ronmental problems and so
o n . All these plu s
mdr'e appeared In tbe same
Poiakr In which Gilman's
opinion appeared.
~rhapsitisunfortuDillte
Opea ltlttr,
What is Phi Beta Lambda t
come to our next meeting at
6::10 p.m ., Monday, Oct . 2:1
University Cente r <UC) , Red
~~ a~::e:e, ~o; y~~!f~ I
majorina in Bllline:N Ad·
ministration,
Buslneu
Education and Economks.
Up and cominl activities
include Bullne:N, Industry
and Education ' Day , fund
~~"f...~~a~o!n;"ttnlp~
be
State Convention to held In
Stevens Point this sprlna. ·
For fur the r Infor mation
call Kaye Holschbach ,
president , 341·5517.
Ka ye llollcillbach
CAMPUS TOURNAMENTS
Nov. 2 and Nov. 9- Men ' s and Women 's
BILLIARDS - BOWLING - TABLE TENNIS
WINNERS SENT (EXPENSES PAIDtTO
A.C.U.L REGIONALS AT UW·LA CROSSE
SIGN UP-OATES: OCT. 21 -30
RECREATIONAL SERVICE CENTE;" IN
THE UNIVERSITY CENTER
Opn letter :
casually stolling down the
balloOhePhy. Ed. Buildinaa
mark of the SUperplckers :
Week one H; Week two, 1+
t ; Yt'tek lbl'ft, 1-4: Week
Polnttri,Yin& on the noor.
Snatc:hul& up a copy, 1
turned to page 21 only to be
sent reeling to the men's
room where my 1tu1Ch and I
parted company.
There It was In bold print
"Superpickers sport perfect
,.:-eek." The hon"or of It
all !! !!! How dare they claim
a pe;rfect week when only Tim
Sullivan accomplished the
real. Mike Haberman missed
the tossup aame I suppose
wanted some of
the Jlory too and I can't
blame him . Evil does lurk in
the hearll ol men. &I tbe
headlinesaid''Superpic:ken"
and thlt 's plural.
•
N I read on nothing was
mentioned about the FM-90
F a nta s tic Footbal l
Forecasters finlshlfll 12-t for
,.:-eek four . Al l that followed
was a snide rt:mar k th.at
indicated that Phil Esche
wouldnotpredlctaperfect
,.:'ef!k for week five .
aettlng fou r tossups an d
missing one, be Is 41-17·1 for
the year. Uaber man has
gotten only one of five touups
or 44-»1.
FM-90 was a.~. 7:5-1, 1-5,
12-1 and lo-3 In weeki one
throu&h five respec:tlvely for
a record of4S.I9-I . _
Before I go I'd like to uk
Sully Ibis one quesllon. How
can you pick the Dolphiris
over the Rtdsldns and tbetl
say the Vikes by 20, (October
10>?
Slnrtrtly yours
Phil EKbe J acks•
WWSP·FM tl
~~~~~ru~~~= ~~ •:..~.~~~v:Unl~:~
Haberman
c-a t' ... t u ll t
•·-asters
Footba ll
Edlt.onooie :
Simple: We Lboqlat Frao
T arke nton •n d Ch u rk
t'onmaa playtd on tbe
Dolphins.
. ...::;::,~,:,:,'!,·.:,.~;:'~ LRC hours
at FM-90. Jackson \1 my air
1
1
~~~ ~t hewhr.cr.~~n!:~. ? '~
inconvenient?
~mpus! 21 Films for $4.00
You can see 21 films for $4.00. How?
and Randy "Bo" Wlevel's.
Since when did he &et In on
the pick:s? I thought it was
only Sullivan and Haberman.
Do the SUperpiclcers nHd
Ta tbe edUor,
Ooalnc of tbe Learnlna
Resources Center CLRC ) on
Saturday mornin1 places a
Buy a season ticket to Film Society lor S4 and you will be" able to
SH the .8 remali-tlng wHkly films on Tuesday nights at 7:00 and
9:15 p.m. In the Wi sconsin Room , University Center. These In·
elude:
pickina
It Dave Preston and I
wanted to, r'ould ask
Chancellor Drfoyfus . for his
collqe or not, the library la
the bale of all acUviUes in a n
lntellectua.l community.
~~i:~e;r:~~:?. ~e:,~
Best Deal on
Oc:t. 29 Never Give A Sucker-An Even Break (W.C. Fields)
Nof.
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
Dec .
5 Roaring 20's (Humphrey Bogart • Jamn Cagney)
12 Bicycle Th ief
19 Citizen Kane
28 400 Blows
3 Lonely Al8 The Brave
PLUS
As a member of the Film Society, you are Invited to aHend free of
charge the UWSP Second Annual Film Festival , October 25· 28 ,
·
where 16 great feature film s will be shown . They are:
Walkabout
How Green Was My Valley
Charly
Desperate Characters
Boyfriend
Citizen Kane
Take the Money and Run
StagKoach
Friends
North By Northwest
Grapes of Wrath
Savage Messiah
Medium Cool
A Separate Peace
Gl8at Directors: Bergman and Felllnl
No lldmlss•• to the FutiYat wilt be Mid. Only FUm Society NaiMM\ tleket
memben; wilt be allowed to aHend. You may buy your Fllm Society . . .ton
tlclat at tiM Information Desk, Un!Yitl'slly Cent•: The o.p.,tment of Com·
Film Sodety ·~· Tuesd8y nights,
: ~~~J.:.:~
~a;,u~~~f
~!~O,.U' .:~d!:~~nt;~i~a:
~~~ "'~~::' ~ to~y~~onof==!
were doin& this on cable TV.
Dan Houlihan an d Joe
Durfycouldbeanother~e
but all - ·d hur would be
isW!just ttutudentlwbowork
during the week, live off
campus, and need a place to
study,are doina research and
:·::r;t:~e~~al~~.~fa~~;;: :e:'::C:~ted
~~!~ ~C:e~!,Y ~~~:~~
was the bueball1U5on.
So you lee Dave and I rely
only on eac h otber., not "Bo"
and or "C.mac ."
In lut week's copy of the
l'ointtr !October 11), the
words clods, clowns and tbe .
phraae "atlck T HAT up" your
hours o1
::n~:?
_t
g:,Yof':,
our studenta over educated?
nas the time come to limit
and control aa:esa to boob?
Let Ill not lure students' to
UWSP and then cut off the
studentl who do a ttempt to
acllleve tbe best education
t hey possibly 'can . The
~riteOO::;r.t':~:i!J: :':Ur~c!Z~d::a'c:i,f:::~
~~~~~:.de!~~~~i~:dO:~~ =n~t~ily~t
wbat
t:!!::~ ~=.w~~!-: m::U~:aht!/ ~voe u ;hl~'!c;
mind thouah II that after an
adml11ion of IUIII in the
opening paraaraph, th e
Superpickers reverted t.ck
to their ok! trlcka and lied
onceaaaln. 145- 14-Jphooey! )
Just lOll!! tbe reconl, here
Is tbe OYFJCAIAL seuon
tbeir values and not let us
know. 11le alloc:adon and-or
' lackofrf!dlatrlbuUonof funds
i.s a 1ood Indication of
(:rlortty.
s-..enly,
Mark Dav ..
J11.~~~t ll.. City
(
Oc=tobe=•...:2:_4c:._
• ..:.19;_;7_;4_ ____;
T;_;
Hc:E..:.PO
= JN;_;TrE'-'R-- Page 21
Usher crew reprimanded
fttt1 Tl\[
VOTE
by Bob
I
I
Kerksieck
An aide to the governor said last week that
politicians are going to continue to be
against legislation to help students as long as
students do not exercise their resP;Qnslblllty
to vote.
For that r eason, students must r egister
and vOte In the November S election.
Politicians are not. likely to lend serious
consideration to something said by someone
not In their constituency.
Young adults have the lowest election
turnout of any segment of society.
The last Student Government election can
be used as an example. The homecoming
king and queen elections last week drew
nearly twice as many voter s as did the
Student Government elections three weeks
before.
Responsibility for the low Student
Government election t urnout must also be
shared by the candidates, who did not
campaign as actively as they should have,
and by the Student Government leaders who
did a poor job of planning and publicizing the
eledion.
The United Council Representative for
UWSP, Steve Stearns, has been conducting a
voter canvass of students to r emind them to
reg ister and vote.
Stearns said he is confident he can contact
everyone by tomoriow, the last day to
register for t he November S election.
Voters may register after tomorrow only if
a register ed voter fr om t heir ward goes with
them to certif y that they meet the
qual iflcaUons.
Stearns is t o be commended for his attitude and hard work, especiai !Y since he has
had so little cooperation from Student
Government and from organizations.
He blamed a lack of Student Government
leadership and organizations like en. vironmental council, which promised help
that ne.ver materialized, for hampering the
•
canvass.
In the final analysis, It is the responsibility
of each of you, Individually, to register and
vote. The consequences of whether or not
you do, like the responsibility, will fall upon
you.
To lh~ editor.
they would do that (as an
I attended the Arts and ,afl;er thought).
Lectures presentation ol the
Welsh Guards on SUnday,
Webothsaidnonoticeshad
Oilober 13. Since I don't been pasted, but we found out
judge my~elr to be a qualilied thatlbey were, aner moct oc
mUIIccrltic, l can only say the people .,.,,~re in. He left
that the performance wu wilht~he.adushet"todiscuss
very good.
the matter,
ttowever, I do wish to
Munwhlle , ano.ther
critique the performance by
theushec-COfJJS,pa.rlkularily photographer nearby wu
that which occurred dr.ui.DJ approached by an usher who
the intennluion.
told the photographer that hlJ
I arrived before 7:30p.m. eamera had ,to be loc~ed up
as did the gentleman who sat and he wot.ild be g1ven a
next to me. Before the show rKeipt. He reCused. The
we discussed the issue of usher said, " I'Uonlysaythis:
photographing the show. Both 'secudty'." HedidnotspeciJy
of us had looked foe- signs what they would do.
tortgisterandl«kup hls
camera. Later he found out
theobjec:tioniswilb the flash.
l q:reewith the flash objection,but ldon'tagree with
the ush ercorpstactlcs .
Sugaestions for future
events : Publldze your
specific requests conctrnln&
photo(lraphy,suchuflalhor
not; a Mounce such before t~
event, and lnstn.lct the ushtn
~ toappropriatemethod:sof
bandllna a "deviant." Words
~~k:~::~~~.!~d!~~::ed~;
acceptable.
Slnc:erely ,
indicating a rtquest for no
After another ushe~ also O.vlcl F . Df:ttmaM
pictures; we saw none. 8oth talked to lhe man, be agr~ ,.1111%
or us had &een ~»mention
made of cameras on the
posl.ers, newspaper articles,
orticke&.s . Wewaitedforthe
lntrodtM:tion ol the 1bow lo
~r !.=:t~~e~n~
Wat.
Therelore, we concluded
thatinvlewofnorestrlc:tions
c~~~J:~·;~~
pictures,espec:iallyin
light
ofthehistoricnat~ofthe
"'-·
My friend took four or !ive
nuh pictun!S during lhe fil"'t
ha lf. Dur lnl intermiuion,
three ushtn and one head
ushercameuptotalktohim.
They asked, "Do you bave
permisaiontotakepiclw'el'!"
He had gotten permission
befon! the ahow. That no
longer made any difference.
" We have to take your
camera."
No menUon made of a
r«eipt. My friend uked
abOut that and then Iiley saki
UAB FILMS
THURS., OCT. 24-7:00 & 9:00
STEVE McOUEEN IN '1HE RBVERS"
FRI., OCT. 25-7:00
DOUBLE FEATURE
B.VIS IN "JAILHOUSE ROCK"
AND
' BILL HAILEY'S "ROCK AROUND lHE UOO:"
PROGRAM BANQUET ROOM
PlEASE NOTE: BECAUSE "THE lAST
·PICTURE SHOW" WAS RECENTlY ON
.TELEVISION, UAB HAS CANCEllED IT.
P~22
TH E POINTER
October 2... 197..
..tr,
Homecoming posters
ore waste of paper
Opea aeuer ,
To tbe Homecoming Kina
and Queen C.ndklllte:J : I
would \lite to mtntlon
somethin& .~ pr~ ~m 1
hue noticed on cam plll
lately, namely tbe amount of
paper wasted advertisi nJ
pr01pectlve homecomlnJ
court ca!ldidate:J.
.
AI a unive rsity which
s tresses preservation and
careful ullliutlon or our
natural resources, I was
s hocked to see the vast
number of poat~ llped up
all over campus.
One cue In point : while
worltin& deslt one night at
Burrouafts Hall, I counted II
pollerljl\lppOI"tin& a number
of diff*H~~in&
a!ld QUten
candidates
t In tbe lobby
alone. Sis of
ters
were
pushlna for just one ol the
candidate pain while two
othu sell of candidates had
three pollen up each.
Multiply this wasted p.apestlmnlhenumberofdonnsoa
campus a!ld it amounts to
quite a sum.
This aum dHan't even
Include the vast quantity of
poaters put up in the olhft"
bulklln~tt .
I ' m not aaalnst announc-entfllts for ltinJ and
quefll candidates but a waste
of paper II sUII a waste no
matter how you look at it.
I thlnlt now is as good a
time u any to 1tar t
reevaluat1111 OW" over use of
papr:randcardboardposters.
Bt:luer
c.,a,,...,._
!H
lt.ll
Sigma Pi sponsors
" Operation wheelchair"
To the editor.
Somethinl i.l beinJ done on
campus for the ....-bee\chalr
iludtflll at UWSP.
Again lhis year Sigma Pi
1-'r ate rnlty is spo nsorlnJ
"Operation Wheelchair ."
October 2l-31 . The fund
ra isi n& campalcn was very
sU«eafullast year , ~inc
in Jt ,200 which wu
to
p ur chase an e l e ric
wl"lftolchai r for one of our
students.
"
The WWSP Ch ri s tmas
Telethon donated a n · additional $1.000 to the project
which, In adclition to thi.l
yea r 'a dona.tionl lflill buy a
specially equipped van foe
transporUnc
wheelchair
students.
"()ptTatlon
Wheelchair"
wllllticlt off on Monday, Oct.
!!21 with an ~ng ceremony
featuring chancellor· Dreyfus
and a whtelchair race with
the Greelt organlutions. All
wheelc hair activities will
talte place In the Sundial
between the Learning
Resources Center f l.RC) and
the nne Arll Omter.
The Sigma Pi members
will man a tower 24 hours a
~U:n~a':!1~ourtbedai::~
needed to pw-c hase the van.
Students may see the van on
OPINION CONT.
POINTE·R .
'Viewpo int' odds to
.
education system decoy
To tbt Nit..,
D.JrinJ tbe last two weeks,
m~h hu been W!"ltttft In
ILSCA I
rtU~mmended
a 325
SCH ficuno for the Instructors
in the Geoaraphy · G~Ion
Department IColleae of
faculty cuts. These artie~ Letters a nd Science):
have been stated emotionally evidently, the Olanc-ellor hat
and without any objective igno r e d th i s reco m r easo n l nc liaVInJ been mendation.
" Viewpoint'' on the
JII""OPCR'd
.........
On October 10, you stated
tl\at "money can no loncer be
affor-ded to retai n aU the
members of an oventaffed
department ." You didn ' t
ddine how to dttermine if a
department is "overstaffed" ,
bu t I au ume you were
:'~~~~~~:r:=~~
n.e
teacher.
requind SCH
peTinstnJc:torrarcefrom 1110
IMWiic: and Communicative
DilordersDtpartments)to3riO
!Geoara phy and History
~~·~~~~:·:: oc:~~
was . acrHd upon by the
Olancellor and tbe faculty .is
a taraet maslmwn for · a
departmtflt to meet. U appears however , that the
Oumcellor bas ~tt:n fit to use
this figure as a mlnimwn for
certain departmtfl t.
Last March, the Letter and
Science Advisory ~mitlee
This 325 SCH fiKUre Is
especially Important with
respecttopc-opoltdcutaln
~r~~ta~hl.:t~!~~
the SCH nxure for a lab
course, a 3:2 ratio {two SCH
for each three lab baun ) II
used in computaUon. UtinJ
this ratio for the current
~emester. the avirace SCH
load ol an Instructor in the
Geogra phy-Geolo&Y Department i.l 332 SCH or ~even
SC H mor e than needed
by the recommendation of the
LSAC.
. Therefore, by the LSAC
system this department i.l not
0\"erslaffed. The 332 SCH
Ogure II h!Jher than SCH
rixuresrequiredln49percent
ol tbe dtpartments at this
unlvenlty.
Why thtn does the Chancellor propose to cut 23
l
per«nt of " the GeosraphyGeolotY Department faculty!
On Oc tober 17. yo ur
" Viewpoint" staled that
" en r ollment haa already
dropped trom 11,000." You
:::~~~=~=~'t::at~
number of lnatructors thou ld
also.
Presumably, the stan r uta
vtere bllsed on enrollment
projectlont . For th e
Gucraphy Department
alone, the projection Will tet
at2,~ 14forlhllsemester (a n
upeocted drop of30 pr:rcent
from Jut faU 'I actual
enro llm ent of 3,415 .)
'111eactualfi1ureforthlt
~emnter has turned ou t to be
~;: l!:t::::~.~~~tt::
percent increase over the
2.mpro.lcctlonflcure.)
I ~-ould hope by this letter
that at least a few ttudenta on
this campus would become
aware of what II and will be
happenin1 "to the educatloa
tyste m here . It 11
dete r lora tln1 , and yo ur
'"Viewpoint" has so far only
aided the decay .
•
:s:·~~omonn~e ~~~~
booths a«eptln& donations
wi tt be loe~ted both at tbe
Sundial and at various places
on campus.
All donatlons, both lq and
small , will be Jratefull y
IC«J)ted ..
Na11cy Ji erma n
Slcma PI
17M ColltJt Avtnve
HowFR££
'Y:REE?
.,_.anc:e
At Citizens 1n ..-• •
of
$1 00 in • student chedclng eccount
..-ns the equiv..,t of 1"' inanest
in benking senict.•
How's that for FREE?
~·li,.DI1J\t,uuiONAL BANK
~~.'~'.!"''
.
._.,·--·-"'""""""--·........
' 01NJ • WISCONIIH
•
Octbper 24, 1974
II
Locum
Poge 23
by 'P.U.S.'
Stevens Pond
The Student Norm
T H E POINTER
"'by Taurus S.
I
OCTODER 197-i
SUNOAY
11JESDAY
MONDAY
.
WEDNESOA Y TIIUUSUA Y
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