'-PO INTER UW.Ip . · NO. 10 On the inside page • Student responsibility increases 2 Faculty approves new calendar 3 New residence hall directors 4 Self defense course offered 5 Semester abroad 6 · Coffeehouse doubleheader • Photo by ·9 Solar energy 10 Weather con kill 11 Pointers plop 17 Carnac responds 22 Paqe 2 THE POINTER October 31 , 1974 Students gain responsibilities with merger lly Krill ~l oum 1be passage or the 1tudent raponsibllltles section ol the UW merger. :16.09 U), ~resenll a sianiflcant step forward for all UW stu<knta. rnponllblestudenll would be Government J hould not in control ol the Jludent alway• be lhe spokesman for ~~~r:c,:~~bi~~~!:o; g~·ernment . all student concn-n1 thJt poUr:in C'OJIC'tfning studmt h f~. ~icH and inttrftlS. Oneof the provilionsolthe arise. stuckntHt'tion ollhe mer~e.In p u I • h o u I d b ~ Ort)·fus sa1d that it Is 1tates that all s tud e nt ~pl'ftentath·e oftheJtudenu ncasury to d«ide "''hal " primary rtspOMibillty" Is faculty ~mitk'es shall be all input should; not come bc<'a~Seuptonolfl· itapplied appointed by the Studtnt from Studlont Gcn•rrnment." only to facu lty. Accordina tothestatem~n t . Go\•emmcnt or ' as50daUon. 1lle student section olthe Drt')'fuadisagrH:Siflilhthis merae.r al1o state• that students shall have the statement. He said he did st ud ents shall have the primary pol icy respomibili ty not beli~e ..111 appoiratments lbould be made by the Student Government alone. ''The chancellor ought to make an appoi ntment In order to Insure a balance on the cunmlttee." He added, "the c hancellor '•m!fe· ~:;:e\\~.~t~: ~~r::r'si ~;·~';; s si~d :!~ Jre now guaranteed a statutory role In lhe J!Wff· nance of the • tate's publlc uni versi t ies. sai d Dav id Jenkins, Ullited c..mcu. In a memo to 1U stud.ent body presfdeots and cirecton. JenklnsalsouidtMtalona with lhe paranteed, and Increased authorit)' over seve.-al areas ol campus life and bud&eting, «Nnes new rapooaibilities. ~~~tsa!d:~~!: f:~\?lenl r Rt~ents. !:::'hi:·..';!~:~~~~ in !.hole areas, but ' Dreyfus sald,"Jwlllrejc!ct~lsions and r«<mmendatiGnl that ~~es~r:'emm';~::::~ ~~a: . rejecting them ." Dreyfus 11id thlt that policy would app ly to all decisio ns comlna fr om Student Government . "The final authori ty rnll here," uld DreyfUI. abould be al!:::.a~ a: ~tl~ot":'ut~~t " It Is fundamental th a t w carry out our fHPOIIIlbillllesin tbupirltol the "Dew coll~ality ' with which the Meraer Act Is lm~ ... s.aid JenkiAJ. Qlaneellor Lee Shtrman Dreyfus bel)eves that UWSP Is a model campus for the merger . The UW school aystcms have an April t , tm deadline In which to Incorpora I.e the m~e.-, but l)reyfUI, said "I think we IUWSPI can do it in the nut 8J days." It might be euie.for other c;ampw.es If they ..ba'l'lt a medrlto loot at, said Dreyfus . It will ease s us picions in the ad · minislrations and amona the stucknlS en the othe-r cam· puses, he added. In the late fall ol 1971, ~lion Klotscbe, Wylie a nd Dreyfus asked· to amend between th e Student Government and the Chal\· cellor'J olflce,said Drt')'fua. Dre)'f111 uld tbat be flll.md the tpechanism ol UWSP's Student Covemment u good. Student Gover nment has matund llnce he arrived aa dw~ellor , he said . The Student Government has become representative of the student body . Whenever there Is a thoughtful and reasonable viewpoint, it is listened to, and there has not been m~Jeh " hljHhooting " la~y. said Ore)'fus . For the firsl lime, lhe Otaneellorl•receivingdired cunmunicatlon from Sludlont Government, he Jald . And also for the first lime, be hu been invi ted to a ttend IOIII!f"nment meetinp. "I am convinced we are far along In aovernment, but I • i;:7m!~~ bles~~~!\bfti t~h.~ ::~~~It ~ t~~~:. emphalls a nd ·changing the role ol. the chancellor In a iiKat•nasecregated fees from a C1XIIU!utive role to a role In wbk.b the cba.ocellor would have a veto. DreyfUisaid that he pushed ::~ ~}1 f:!t t': puses," uld DreyfUJ. lntermsolthemergerlaw, Dre)'fUI uld that Student Government Input 1hould only be beard where 100 percent ol the atudmb are invol ved. auc:b as s tudomt j_ ~':o~~~l olmylnput f:iihed lhe veto control In the • from Student Government," A rather inapprOpriate sign is displayed In front of the Un iver sity Center. So watch it kids! Photo by Roger W. Barr. ch\~!:u~ac:f!~~ ~~U:,~~~pp=~ia:. shOWd be the presence ol a reeled are the ones who veto In order to insure that abould be heard. The Student ' Hearing on bus co~op U u many people rode the bus u to make ucb ride cheaper than zz ceats per ride, then It would be In viPlatlon with ruUnp of the Public Service Commission . Ly~ Updike, student bod)' president wUI ea.ny formal bea~~~:u:e= Ot)' Bulldinc 011 a contract araum.ent. A ~ ol reslpa tion was accepted from Randy Puckett, Student Govemmenl contract prov ided that treasr.rer. The resignatien Studmt Government would wupendinJhilappointment to the Finance a1•d Alloutlona Committee ride the bill by sbowln1 their fFACI . Hlsappointment to the FAC was app roved. ID'a, between the Student Senate and the Steven~ Point Aru Bus Coop t PABOOI. The :-J~~~::1~ ~ to be held ~ A report was heard 011 facWty evalu.atiou that are JChedWed to bqln on Mon· day, Nov. 4. The findlnp from lhe evaluations are .:heduled to be rudy by reaWraUoa da)'. Ott. s. The evaluations were accepted by the Senate. TheConstill.IUonal~ Committee presented their propoaed cha111es. meet!. The ftftt wiU be at 7 p.m., SUnda)', NO'I. S, in lhe WI Je on•ln Room University Center CUCI. • • <X ~~t~obe~•~ 3.1~._:1:_ 97:,::4~--TH~E;_:cPO~I:_:N:_T~ER~--:--P.age 3 Profs may be reinstated • te:u~~.w::r=u::~~ scheduled to lose th eir teach.in& jobs next spring at UWSP are likely to be rein· stated. Enrollment lhiJ fall was much higher than ex· peeled. John B . E l !l, r y, vice chancellor for Acade mic Affairs, rfPOrled to the Faculty Senate at Its bi· weekly meeting Tlunday, Oct. 24, that a summary would be Issued publicly alter Chancellor Lee S. Dreyfus informs Individual faculty m~benofthedeelsionstnd <~ctions taken in their respective cases. About 21 persona with teniD'"treceived layof(notices • tithtrlut springor the year earlierbt<:auseo!enrollment shorUaUs. Ellery uid the " final deeisiont will be pretty satisfactoc-y to tht faculty as a whole." He added however. that "the data and projectio ns treaa rdin& future enrolhntnO whic h 1ppe:ar useable to me do not support lherequestfor the recision of all laid off faculty ." 11lere a r e projections showin& enrollment decllnea of HYef'al hundr«i atudeflts in the next couple of years. Several of those rec-eiving h'cia:r;;o:~~~~ l~a:e f':; other cases, profesaon have eilbu aone back to ~ebool to preparefordifferentteac:hin« assignments or will be lakin& other kinds of jobs on cam- ..,. • Calendar awaits CetitraNAdministration approval ln addilion, Ellery sald It will be possible to defer for by C.roll\1artln and Mike another year layoffs of some prolesaon wbose jobs are not Loc:h upected to be aaved perThe calendar for the tm-76 manenliy: and 1!176-71 school yean was accepted by , th e facu lty '!be university had m11u~ Senate at its meeting la yo ff decis i on s o n a Thursday, October~ proj«lion of 7,200 students Under this calendar classes this fall , but the actual will not begin until after eJV'Oilmentwasslig.htlyover Labor Day which will give 1.000 and only about 14 less s tudents workln& summer than recorded one yen ago. jobs in tourist induslrles the In ot he r actio n , the opportunity to fi nish out the senators approved a revision season withoot misatng the to a calel'ld.al- that lhey had lirst ,.-eek ol dasses, said approved only a mooth ago. Vi~ OulnceUor Joha [llery. Ellery said UWSP and UW The Student Assembly has LaCrosse are attempting, passed the new academic " hopefully with the addition11l calendar. cooperation of UW Eau Claire," topavethewayfora The c.alendar ~~~ now be uniform calenda r for in · se nt to Centra l Ad · stilutions throughout the ministnltioo which will make syslem. a lluations in the calendar if For197S, U•changesdonot necessa ry,saidEllery. llwill a.Uect the sta rt of classe alsogobeforeCtlanee llorLee wh.k:h will be the Monda y S. Dreyfi.IS for his approval. following Labo r Da y Ellery said they a r e bowever, there aft changes working for a uniform on Sl?r ing recesses, fi nal calendar lhrougbout the UW exanunation periods and so System which would aUow forth. Approva l alsowasgivento f~:ant!~e~~~~gfo~r~t~de:~! two new courses: Woven universitytoanother. Asltis Yextiles"and the History of now some universities are Vietnam. s tart in& a se mester The senators also heard before others have finished. Student Senate President There is a chance that !,be J..yl e Updike r epor t that whole IUii versi ty system will initial results ora faculty use our calendar. " U the eval ualio n pr ogram con- systeni uses our calendar we dueled by students have been will have more say about publisbed and that another futurecal~, "said Kurt evaluation will be cooducled Anderwn, chairperson of the i n Novem ber fo r more Student Senate Academic widespread distribution . Affairs Committee. "A block c alendar" would be more useful to the university student," ui d Steve Stearns, United Council di r ecto r. The " block ca lend e r " wo uld enaD te s tudents to schedule their own classes, breaks between semesters and so forth. "The begiMing of semesters and breaks between semesters would be the only controls Imposed upon the student," said Steams. Student Government president Lyle Updike repo rted to the Faculty Senate that the Board of Rqents in Madison have accepted a proposal which wUI stabilize tuit ion for thi: 197S-76schootyearandlower tuitionforthet~77 :School year. '!"he proposal must now be accepted by the Leaisla lure. said Updike. The next meeting of the Faculty Senate will be a t7 :30 p.m .. Thursday , November 7. The next meeting o! Student Assembly will be at 4:30p.m ., November 2 at the DeBot Center In the North Private dining room . Voting bus schedule given The following is the bus IChedule for lakin& students to the polls on Nov. 5. Tber-e will be two runs made, each run going every other hour. a.!~.n 1A~~~':::.at 9and 11 9 a .m .-Leave front of T hompson HaU 9:05 a .m .-Arrive at Pea~ Center , Wardii (WiUdropoH only) • 9:10 a .m . Arrive a t North Poi nt Terrace Apts. 9 : 1$ a.m.-Ar r ive at S1 . Peter's School, Ward 4 Note : Bus will wail Wllil persons are through voting at Ward 4 and then take same route back to campus so people have ride back to ptace of origin. Ru.n 8 : ISlarUngat 1011.m ., t2 noon, 2 and 4 p.m. I !O a. m.-Leave from front of Pray .Sims tO:OSa .m.-Arriveat VIIbge Apb. 10: 10 a.m.-Arrive at Old Armory, Warda twill drop off only) 10 : 20 a . m . -Arrive at Washington School, Ward 12 tvia Clark St., Main St., and Wilshire Blvd.) Note : Bus will wait lor persons to finish voting at Ward 12and wi ll then lake Prals St. back to campus. THE POINTER October 31, 1974 UWSP selective in choosing residence hall directors ~e aald she would like 1o aet more experience In plyclloiOI)' and • ao on, maybe in coun&elilll. Glrntt at Smith uld he :.·:~lk.t:~·- .. ''One Ulat 1've heard, lt t~ the bulldh• b ~lltlon of C':i~~~: ~.~d~·.~':'i: make Smith a place wht~ everybody un live conforlably and have &rowlna exoeriences. AnotMr more pei"'IO\\ol aoal Garrett said he would like to become famlllar with the sute. Garrett .. . Jd he really enjoysthenatuulntssoltht '"The houlinl!)r(~Uam bftoe people here. He abo ukt be's ts exrtllnll." said McMahon. amaud with the lnvolveJMnt •"11wphiklsphy b rl&ht In time and lntl"rftl peop'e have In 1o wNt 1 wu · lhau&ht It nature. should be. It's carried out Garrett uld he isn't IUI'fi ucd~y." he added. whtthH he will 10 on In an In the future, McMahon ~aid he plar. to to in to the acadr:mlc f.eld or a lludtnt affairs counaellrw job whk h =~c~ly":'::'it=~ ~- saki he bu more lnlftftt Another alltrnatlve, he ~.wouldberttW"n· !:: :c:..~. and reftivi111 Mdkoat Tbomsonuld bt'l' plf~Ktbeyurls tobril\l =::::.~;~ SOC:1~~~ ~~~"ror~1~.=~ ~~m llvlnc II really the to aet to know each of the &iris. She uid •he wants to center ol student'• lifo," takt Mtlko. Tbtrdore, Jhe IIIMi Council and "create a J::ltlve Impact 10 they'll wort dOJtl)' with the Hall Jhe fetil they lhould hive a They are lnltfVIewed by our actual Jtudtoll. Melvin Kars J&id they bave a dlf· lerenl outlook to what the qualll'kltioala penoa ol this 1«llhould have. '"Tbe tndillonal primary "The admln.iJtnUoa,"uld Kars, ''Wi.ll never hi.rt alt)'ont It there lJ a neaatlve raponae IJ educ.adOD. Eveeythinl WI II OD priority, hou&inJ, ~ect'~i!~~~~ w~ In· do education etc. don't ~n:.~~~~u~ FREE !fREE. ow At CitizMs M .,_.. blbncl of $100 in a student checking account NmS dM aquivaNnt of 18% intarest in l»nkkng ~anic:e. • How's. that for FREE? ~"lh•ons NATIONAL BANK ~~~~~UU POINt • WIICONIIN 1.. :\IIIJ!>'-:~a~OJ~ ~- ~~lk:ar=ld' :~ know th e mu l vu and o!Mn." Dona.lcUon u1d the fetll very comfortable at UWSP. " H'• very lnlormal and 1 l!!')ol' It," she added. Donaldson II «rlified to teach hlJh IChool PI)'ChoiOI)'. wanll"tomaltelhereadenct! pla~ to eat hiU more than a and Jlftp." Mdko uld the plans to work In a re~ldtnce hall for another two or three )'tart. .!!he ukl she would like to stay in Student Service~. New drop a class proposal being considered • • • • Personal defense offered. by St:acl'y Duncan method is to Itkit. l1le kick U yoo were sudd~y at· keeps the han ds from getting ~e:/~r=~~::~d' ~ ::~i~~:~h of the attacker," n ryconfide:nt in your ability. But, what can the average college s tudent do? Every student now has a chance to turn basic kic ks. blows and nips and how to defend themselves in almost any situation . Twke a week students are iTISlTucted by Nancy Page in ~rsonal defense. Phy. Ed. ARermasteri ngthecorrect way to fa ll , students practice flips on each other . 1"he shoulder and hip throws are e.uy tnOtlgh for evtn a s mall person to use. ''The element of s ~rDrlse and coofidence in your own ability are the most im· portant as pects of personal defense." said one student. 101 . Tile course uses many of StWents are taugh t how io lhe falls, kicks and blows get out of any type of hold or found In the basics or karate att~ck by appl ying kic kJ an d and judo. '"The course is not a blows in stratej ic places. ka r ate or judo c lass . Proficiency in th~ areas "''Ould take many years of prxtice."said Page. Page stre55e5confi ilen«in the studenls ov."n ability and developing several types of de fense that work the best for each individual student. " The most e rrective The s tudents practice their defenses on each other and on punching bags . Persona l ddense s ho ws ever y person what they ha ve at thei r· disposal to defend themselves aod then teaches thestud ent how to adequately ~·elop these techniques," said Page. Better evaluation methods sought by l\11ke Loch Stud ent and facult y are workins together to produce better evaluation methods. acco rdin& to the Faculty Evaluation Co mmittee open-ended queslionaire. so that departments may insert thei r oym qUHiions. The F'EC is currently v.'O rking with those studenls who developed la s t se m es t er's cou rse ~-elop to ev~t~.:er.ses;~~ai~~llfli a Jenuestionaire that also talked about the errors fd~~-ls t F~JFEC said they want sl t and faculty ~!!..t~P:~d ~:tu!~!!' Dur ing the last comrriittee queslionaire. 'They said that m eeti n g con si derable the mean tota l Is the only ~i~io~li~~o~ l ~! ~:g ;~isth~~t~\~~ , l y;"~eofq uestionaire thatwill be used at this universit y conce rn ing s tud en t evaluation of instruction. A policy statement is due Ma rch I , tm to the Board of Rt-genls from aU UW System s-choolsatatingtht'irpolicyon studen t eval uation of in· struction . F'urlhemux·e, the FEC at UWSP Is trying to develop an s h o uld not be wid e l y dislr ibuted . The s tudent memben of the FEC ap· peared'before the October 20 Student Senate to propose Ju t semester 's course evaluation oot be widely distributed. 'The Student Senateatthat lime agreed lhat only 14 copiesoflheresultswouldbe made available. A young lody demonstrates her self defense abilities Photo by Bill Poulson Evaluations not to be published Edwardsea The senate also voted The Student Senate voted wtanlmously to .dopt a new by OovJ :!?:: ~~J~~4m=~~: term course · a nd fac ult y courses officially dropped will be lbooNn u a W (with· drawn ) on lhe ·offie:ial tran· scr ipt and gnde repo r t• eva l~&ations . The eval uations were ori&lnaUy plaMed for student use to lhow wea knesses and strenaths of facul ty and counes, but they have lim itatio ns in acc uracy, ap plic ability a nd In terpretatlon, said Senator !'a~ua~:: S:~!~i~~ent These evaluations will be distributed to the three in· form ation centers. DeBot and Allen Centers and the LRC !Learning Resource Cenlt'rl . • The senate also voted 13-2 that evaluations will be made th la semester and wW be madeavailabletostuclenUat ~lion for the tf74-7S tprin& tenn . to a report by Anderson. Joh n E ll ery , vice- d~~t';!:'~~~~~ J::'~- ::~~~:l~o~h~'utet!i~~"ar': Eau Caire and LaCr-c:ue for UWSP to eliminate summer job competition. Olherwtse these school5 will be out one ratherthantheWF' ( withd.r~wn ·week earlier ' than UWSP in failing l a:iven to some May ol lf76, said Andtnon. s tud e nt s in t h e put A formal calendar policy semesters. will be vOted on soon, said The new resolutions would Anderson. allow studenta to olficlaUy St udent Gove rnm ent :o': ~he~e~t;"~~~an; timeinthesemester, prlorto final exam week, without penalty or perm ~¥1on, said Student SeiUitor Kurt An· derson . This resol ution will now ao to the Faculty Senate for further discussion and approval. Calende r r evisio ns au bein~e:onsideredfor the lf75-­ 76 ae:ademk: yea r ae:cordina constitution revlaions were presented In part by Senator Tom IWojo l Wo)::l«howski. The remalnl na revisions will ~e~~~'::t~~. c=,; :,; In entirety. The new constitution will make su bltanUal revisions of present workin&s ol student government, said Lyle Updike Student Government president. A re commendation was made to Student Government, by Vice-President Barb Stiefvater , to have Student · Aff a i n Committee in - :n~:;~~~~~D'sand the Students who wit hdraw tum In their !D's. Those who withdraw a fter the fourth "'' ftk of classes receive no refund , ye t without thei r !D's they can't a ttend activities they havealready paid for, said Steifvater . mt~St ~:..~:-~ ~Fitr~ ·-2 0IWOIIAn w n . NUSOI COAt 1 Valid ~ av , 5, 6, 7 . 1 Poge 6 THE POINTER October 31 , 1974 There's more to a- semester abroad than ,stu?y.ing st~e!t l1le chlmina of 81& Ben, a Jlimpse ol the Queen, or a students~nda semestn" abro.d 1ft ~Based in London, the RmtSitr abroad procram to En&land has been In optt"ation since t9EII. The UWSP tteaaes rooms at Pe1ce llaven, a building owned by the FJie,adshlp Lugue, for. six months durin& the yur. .- ~for an eum In his • Isaacson summarized one or the alms of the semester abroad procram, "In con· nection with the courses, there Is a great deal In the way or study usignmenta and class experiences which art ~~:~r;cu;:~i~~~ #r~~;; ~i~:~~!o~he0 rco:t:~~lo::~ "Beca u se we use 1 majority olthe space during these six monU!s, we have 1tmoat uclusive use of do~ , lounges, etc., at Pea aven ," remarked Pauline cson,dlrec:tor of the ln~aUonal Programs at UWSP. The procram In Enatand operates both semesters dutlnc the tchool year. The only difference between the two se:mesten. ls the &rOUP which leaves in August bu Ill tnvd4tudy oa the Continent first, while tbe January aroup does Its Coati.Mntal tTavd· study last. Isaacson said in rdtrenC"t to why Enallnd wu m.tn astbefustsitefortheUWSP semnter abroad procr1m, ' "''here are a number ol rusons. One ls tbe laclr. of a ~aneuaae harriet". Secoodly, London Is one of the educationally ric best cities In the W«ld. Also after we had tallted to students, we found they had a 'atrq U.terett in Enaland and the Anglo-Saxon herltqe. 1~0 c~=· a~ ':: Pt'acelt.,•ea, Kan!nKrajnialt summarized the scope or U~e program,"! just returned rrom art class at the Tate Gallf'ry. 1 spent the morning at the ._. PicUIO Exhibit. ~'or my SOcial Psychology project I'm • ·orltlng In the =~:cnbu~ areof~ Kathy Clark from North • ·e spend at Maria Grey CcolleseJ with Englis h Utvature. Yo'e all v.·ent to see '""'·elrth Night" In Stratford. I'm loolting forward to the tour of Winds or Castle tomorrow." perlence. 'lbe researc:h In· volves the use of many r~ other than boot.:· Because Peace !Iaven Is loeatedln Acton, a suburb of London, studenl.l often use Ole double dec:lter bus or Ole Stud~ts may also taU an indepeadent study course in their major or minor, if they~tlheconsent of the teacher and department at UWSP. lsaacsonstm.ses the need for a well prepared indtptndcnt stully proj«t so lhatslUdentswillgain the me&t from ll. One student who will be aHending the Spring 1974·7$ proaram to En&land Is Donna Gitter .. a junior majoring In Home Economics. Giller described Carolina por1icipoted · the Independent study course 11hf! will purs ue while in mobile clauroom Is 1 minibus . The pro&ram wu rortunaletbisfalltoreceive' a new mlnlbul, donated by 1 Stevens Point rcaident. Many students also go on trips oullide lbe city in the fall 1973 semester obrood program ,.,.... . ~:t~~·~tor~t!: ~f;~:' ~ or lAndon. " While I was In England I visited Nottint.ham, Oxford, Cambrkllte. Slnllord on the Avon . Salla bury , St~e and Edlnbur&h. Scotland," commented Miry Beth Okray, a senior, who s pe nt the Fall 117S·14 semester in £ncland. m!~~~~~=~d; " I hope to visit some of !he designers there such 11 tourasp~~rtoltbelraemester Belinda Bellville and Mary abro.d. l1le Fall tr14 aroup Quant, and the Vogue House. will visit Puis, Geneva, This will be Uiotful towards Rome, f'1orence, In!W}ruclt, my goal of fashion mer· Munich, Rothenburs and Luxembourgasp~~rtofthelr chandlslng." travel-study on the Continent. Currently one student, To aid the stiKk'nts In ~ Atwood, is doing her preparifll for their semester student teachin& while In abroad, the semester before EnJiand. In her letter to they leave they attend bi· Isaacson she described Ole monthly meetings. Besides experience. discussing s uch practicsl =~,:. s~~=:~:.~ "You should do some beforehand readin& on the area and \beG make a lilt ol lhinp you want to aee," aald Helen Godfrey, bead or Public AlunuU atn1ces at UWSP. "Uwillhelpavokltbe Iedin& that you have aone and returned from your trip and have mlued 10 many 1hi.nca that you wanted to Counts "off~ for the ttudenta wbo 10 abrol.d are mainly liberal arta orien· ta.ted. Students may eboole !ie.::c~~~~! ~~~J:·=t~ tbe U.t.emaUonal p-ocn.m. · toaeeanumbero(hllplays,l All the c:<USel offer-ed a re cholm so that they will be Godfrey wu one ol the two "enhanced by tbe site." Amq tbe CCIW"MI oftea faculty members who K· C'OIDpaaied the faU, lm-14 choee:a by the students is the Art Hiltory dall ta!Cht by JtOUpto~d. Bncl:uy. Braclu-y II a Bela& selected for the Pinel ~turer at the Tate proanm required tbree Nusewn. He is aa artist and saep.. Tbenntsteplltonn wortaattbec.uel Holpital, out an appllcaUoo wblcb I ncludes tbe student's "llecauJe Bradbury II our ::.e~du:~~o:; teaCher, are allowed .to ~ from Ida .&adleR, have our daa in the . Tile see." visit Stnllord-.-tbe-Avon, which is a part of ''Shakn:peare Country" and a study ol Shaltespure's London,"commented Isaacson. ·A Britilh prole.or, who Is alsoamaaistuteandhudof a larae ~«oadary Khool te1din the Juunlh spealten wbo have been on the semester abroad pros...m or to En&la nd. Some ol Ole speakers 1re faculty mem· ben who aid the studenll in academic 5ftpar~Uon. Other spealten &lve a slide prnenlalion. Mlmeoaraphed lettendescrlblna the vsrlous cities students will be visiting while on the continents ! travel..tudy leMa' are olten distributed. These letters glveahistorlealdescription of the city aocllta &J&hU. More flnthlnd Information such as studen t 's corresponde-nce to Isucson, pictures and maps an available for aludenta to browse tbrou&h In the In· temalional Prosrams office, 133 Ma!n Bui.ldlfC. Cooperstioa betWftll the UWSP students and the British school system in· cludesanexcha.ngeprogram between Mma Grey College at 'J'wicltenham and UWSP semester abr-oad &fOUP· Student& may laltea eou.rse "It became like "bocne". I 11 Marla Grey and have the made a lot o1 EnaJ.isb rrktlds. ;=t::Jt~ ~~~~8:. !~ ~~;d r:n:,: l~v:~elt'~h~': the cCJUeae, In return one of moatba U.to wordl," 11ld the accomPanying UWSP Okny fal'l.llty memben occupies "I wisb 1 eoWd eoavtnce the position of ''roving everyone to partake In tlil ~~:i:'S!>":C,~~ ~=~c~~ :":~;~~or=~:,·. ::':ulet~.: a::u~~ domestic co u rt where juvealle cases are bei111 heard. :=.~~~cS:..m:~'e':~ ===~~ consullant or tutoral. A Krajnla.k ~pwtcard to tutoralhelpsastudent~ \. 4 October 31, 1974 THE POINTER Change made on student .senate reps\4.St~~L:~antH<teb.ted c:n~!it~~i!n Govr~rv~~::! • pres.ented at the Oct. 27 meetina. re!::. ~~:=~u:t~ r;'~!"::F~:eu~ Assembly lhall be comJIC*d orpniutlon funded thrqh ol ooe YOdn& member ftam !egr'elated fees ol at lust recoanhed studen t $500 per year." orp.lliutioa wbkh diOOI5 In)' =:bil:"~::it::.-Ututlon =:.blyperson Shelley ThOR&roups whk:h recd.ve The proposed revlalon $500ormoresuchasUAB,the would force oraanilalloaa Plli.okr,,Artl and L«tuta, that don't ~ve the $500 campaa radio~ tdnillon, segrtpted fees LO reqta5t il, to~~ber~titution ,_ ;_·:~.c··;c-o .. ~·'-':=:.. :ll :~a:~nctorrre"~!~:;.h: =~:t~~~n:~ reads, " Membership ol the assembly shill consilt ol twenty members elected prtJpOttiooatdy from tbe raw- largeat nwnber of s tudents, said Wojo. The present method for aliOIIrin& ' members Into tbe assembly is aood now because it aives all organlutions the cRanee for ~epresentallon, sai d said Bob Shave r , usem· blyman. 111e p~ plan would create an "elite few" .makina Student Gove rnment less ~esentallve of the student body, uld . Gary W\nten, assemblyma n. Enoaoement RINGS SHE WILL AlWAYS CHERISH LAY-IT-AWAY NOW A SMAll DOWN PAYMENT WIU HOLD Till WANTED PERHAPS A CHRISTMAS ENOAOEMEHT II • A member of the American Chemical Society demonstrates her wa res of chemical magic. Photo by Roger Barr. • Regents vote to cut tuition llyCar-'Martllt A propoul which woukt stabili:e, then lower tullloo for the nut biennium was unanimously adopted by the Board or R.egen15. The 1tudent1 are now payina ~ percent o1 thdr academic co1t throuah • ControUer Bnb a.dzl:n&k.l. However, if tbe propoaal ll not pasKd tuition will rue at anestil'lllteofSl25peryur, said Badzlnskl. Tbe UW System Preaktent John C. We&Vft' was to ~peak in approval ol the propoulat the Pr~lideDll Club Ia MadiJon Oct, 11, accordiDI to ~u;~C:id!':: !"ilest~~nei his pn-p.amt statement for c;o..nun.... that event. Under t.he pr opoul '"tbe coR eeealalioa ll tuition for the 1~11s-c:hool yur will remain stable and tuition for the tt'l'&-n year our cltiunt.'' be said . "Eic:alatiDI Wiliorw bave will be cut to 12.5 percent of IUIJUd to strike hardest at • academic co.&l, he uld. "Students can aped to pay our middle income ~ta noo Ius per yeu If 0 our students and their parenli. Grantsloaldarenot l~al•latur~ .': 11ld Student ~~~~~ ~:.!:d t; ~.! ~!:~n;l: ==~:.r=tn-:: available to most of tbese st ud ents , and II'"Ow l na tuiliMI become a ~ve tax on their pam~.ll," uld Weaver. Jt lllmportant to oote that the tuition reduction will not result In hi&h« taus, said Baddnsld . 1bere are sul· ....... ~~'t:::~m:..w~~~ .:=::mau:r~= must prove lheU' support by votin& ror candidates who have atat.ed thdr •upport ror the propDNI. uld Badzlnald. This wiD Include immediate letter wrltiq to parenll and c.andidlitesforthismustbea 1tatewide drive to be IUC· oesstul. he u.ld. GRUBBA JEWELERS YOUR !lAMOND & GIFT CENTER " Diamonds Our Specialty" K11PSAKE. COCIMIIA &ORAJri BLOSSOM DtAMJND RINGS CHECK OUR PRICES MAIN I llMD ST. Poge g ~RTAINMENT POINTER =: ~.:i:tJ!t is~[!!:~ PlKina B.uh on a program is IOmttimea questioned 10 f.u a authenticity, but ~!man pulled this ont otr lm· preuivtly. Tht but all-aroun d selec::llon ol the evtnln& In tvtry \lo'IY wu the Ravel sonata. Perlman's able accornpanilt, Samuel Sanders, who als o accompanies 11 ~~ofino&rs!:ta·l~ D~ ~;ve!~Y h~! !r~i~~rt:~r:e =~ U,.ilt~ ~ter~y r!:!:.!?':'~ ~-- lot ol not.es wi~ only J howstopper . The un· :~:, m::i',~ ~h t!: ~~bl!b:a!t:':th'ta~na~~ thrown In tor excl~ent. the point ot, well,suff«.~tion, tNo, hemlob. is not a blood laues.s. Naturally, not a note diHUe!) or nuance ol the tiniest detail A J .S. Bach Sonata was wu missed. offe red next. The Fuaue _ Olr..ay. Now we were wonmovemen t wa• particularly dertna what Perlman could me m orable beca u se or do to top the lut sdecUon, If Perlman'lstartlin&accuracy at all humanly possible, so as and keen awareness ol the not to make the Je cond multi·voiced motion withi n portion o1 the concert anti lhefl•alllrvcturt. E\teeyone climatic. ,...'ho hu tve:r been t.o cllurch So...out come three ol the h as h ear d t h e th ird 14 P aaanin i Cap r ice•, .i!o ':!' ito::e~ :::ee:::.! D!fertory type pi~ in one ol hlp~:a~~~~O:~Y was amatinl also !or the fad Bach wrote for an instrum~t =~~~i~a~C::P'~~ If ~'tr" one person deserved ~~l~c=~~:V~hu!: dilp lay• of i1norance) Perlman tarn!d one. What in Coffeehouse Acoustic folk IUitarlsl guit.1rs, he slnp anti reads ~~~ ~~~~~~ d:rr:eh'OU::." ~~·a n Perlman- one of world's greatest Ni~:t;t";:~u: allvt and wtll and,vlna lri llzhak Pertma~:~. (How'• that !or an ~!)Anyway, you ruUy mi.Jftd y011 cba~ to hear one ol the world'• areatat liviDg artists perform If you didn't attend the «~~:~Cert In M.ichelson Hall Tuuday evenlna, October IS. Our IJ raell friend (ver y coocenialfellow, by the way ) Mitchell performing · c:an one uy when there nottlinawron&withanythilll? It wu just the pllz! lnhonoroltbec:entennial yearolF'tiUKriesler'sbirth, hrlmanpl•yeds.everal sbort !''e:':fcC'ec:!~~evie'~~ of value, Mi~hell ::::a~t~f~:~~~= ~~~~~i~n't::at~henm~u~ 41 th rough tomorrow, Nov. t. Mitchell's one-man per· fonna nce wi ll be from ~11 p.m . Admi ulon will be fl~edda:.the above men· "A mixed bag of material," is how Mltchell cleJcribed his show. Besides playlna the slx and 12 s trina acouslical a recordlna company. It IS r epo r ted that Mitchell Is Jl vlfli In the dorms and 1~­ volved In dasses d\ring his U~ r!~:'h.. the ability to both leave you spellbound and wallt away linairc to sell. )'OUr· melodieswrittenintheurly Kriealer Yf'ats. These, again were eminently superb. The !111111 prngram pi ece :! ~7"; o~~:ti~::f~ :~ arrangedthis ontheplaneon the way here !rom New York. S.mud S.nders WIIS sight reading the piec-e at the performance. Alter the concert, Sanden olfered to live hrhnan a rulet'asa&iftsothathecould tryandllneupthenoleson the~eorealilllem<nevenly . Truly , truly I say un to you (agal nJ, that more people should have been at l;land to witness In li ve performance one ol pouibly the top five violinilllln the work!. He is one artist who&e musk you m1.11t take home with you and Nvoc-q_uietly forasl~one • miJhl, lnllead ol runnin1 oU toLucty '• d.lncenoor to have ~-ery thouaht ol musicality destroyedin~t.anlly . SUch a shame. A areater artist may not around these parllforquitesome time. Richards Quintet performs tonight A proaram ~ c:hamber beginning a t I p .m. "Quintttte," mu •lc: by th e Richard• The T h ursday niaht lbeRfOUPConsistloflsrael Woodwind Quintet will be pr o1ram will iodude Borouc:hoff on nute, Daniel :'~~~~ina~~ ~~u::· ~~~~: ~~e~r~·~:t1;:~ ~~~·Ki~~ . Mi~~~~~~:: ;;;~r~~~~~ ·d:~ Fine Arts Center <FACJ by Haydn and Tomui's buJoon . Chuck Mitchell, ex·husbond of Joni Mitchell, is playing in the Coffeehouse tonight ond Friday night. If you are going to the moving p ict ur es th is lla lloween eve on the UWSJ> c:ampus, two cbcHces await STORE HOURS: 11:30-9:00 DAILY SAT. 9-5 ,.... OeBot Center Is handline the 11111-een Spool SpNial atlp.m : and Woodltockc<~n be viewed in the Univenity Center tUC), at 7 :30p.m. on Thurlday,Oc t .3 t andFrida y. Nov . t. . W o od 1 toc k Is a document ary th at transforms itss ubject lnto clnematicart. The Jubjed 11 a three-d:ly roc.k toncftt with soo,OOOin attendance. FREE WAXING CLINICS Wecj:~~ 30 lile1Jo ~... 5 Wedr:JO,..II. .. ~'- 13 Calle in and talk 1o Rolf Garh. our ski expert, aboat !hose lhioos that make Ski lOlling ill eiCifino winter pasttine. 'Woodstock' highlights films Keith Berger performs mime and Is captured In an abstract moment due to so darkroom magic. Photo by Roger W. ea":r~ On ei~tlon night <Nov. Sl Tilt R•rlaa WI wiJI be showina at both 1 and II p.m. In the Wl•consln R oom located In lheUC. It •tan Humphrey &o~art and James Cqftey, In the dramaUc1toryoiWorldWar I u buddkll who clalh In a vic:loul~a:et. • I Ot"tebef 31, 1974 THE Fl:>tNTEit Renaissance dance, music here Sunday byMikeVuDty Family at Mal: and Ron • =he;~!r ~n s~:i~o;. feehouse from 9 p .m . tit midnight, nut Thursday Nov. 7. ' This is the most e.xpensh"e Coffeehouse act or the semester, costing $1,000 in total entertainment charges. A nominal Itt will be taken at Concentus Mu slc us, a Renaiss1nce music and lbnc:e ensemble from Mlnnea!)Oiis, wlllappen rh erent 8 p.m, NoY . las the sixth of· fering of the season In l.be U'A'SP Arts and LeciUN:S Series. The concert wi ll be In the Michelsen Concert Hall in the UWSP Fine Arts Center IFAC). ......... The UAB Coffeehouse Committee Chairman Rick Bayer said, ·-nus is going to be a dance night with a comedian in the middle." F'amily at Mu: will play from 9-tO and 11-12. Oouglas will enltttain from IG-1 1 p.m. Bayer suggested, " U you don't c:une to an}'thirc else this semester, come to this." lie terms F1mily at Mu • 'dynamile' group , Page 9 ~~~desg::u'j:~ :~e:a':~~ ~:nesU: ~ ~~~:Js:J ~ ... 1 ra~~m~l1~'n; a;h=~n~ Family at M ax will be 2/ 3 of the show in the Coffeehouse ~':'r~· The band calls it The other third will be comedian Ron Douglas. They do a variety ol artists rangi"8 from Carole Ki"8 to K~ and His Gang but moRly do their own compositiona or tho5e ol Towet' ol Powu. About Dol.~Jlas, Bli)'tf' said, "If he does n't kee p the C!inic: in JobanneaburJ, South bi J ay•e Jlub ac ber audience lauahing from the Sterling Calder, a UWSP time he comes out to the time 1 he leaves, I'd be disap- drama major , w ill be pointed. Dou&Jas 1ea what direcling his first produc:tion non - p r o f it me d ical Of'Ranizallon that travels to ~~-seeandmakesuslauahat en:!~-A~~w~r~~hour the people Joc:ated in the A 12 minute promotional s h ow combini n g con.· surT'OIJ!tdina: a rea, who haYe Olm Oil Ron Douglas can be temporary poetry, jan and no way ol traYeling to the viewed Nov. 4 and S. Contact dance that will u:plaln dty . UAB for further information. feel inc of hatred need for 0 Baye-r is both tllcited and undentanding, stnnJth, loYt pleased with the Nov. 7 gig and the feel for joy : and&!Ye an awaren"' of South Alric& Itself, and of the problem1 Wcause,"We're brlnalna UWSP students an idu Of somethinJ here th.at wasn't wtl.lt It is to be a black South thatexiltundf:rlheaparthtid lysltm, anofftclalpolicyof here brfor-e and it will aU be African. in one niJ.hL Alle-r all, you11 No admission will be racial scgrqation, in South aiwayshaveyour folll--slncen charged; but donatlona a re Africa. Calder apent the summer In Un the Coffeehouse)." welco m ed . T h e m o n ey collected from donations wW South Al'riea worltina with a be given to the Muklen DrUt professional theatre group Student directing initial drama :!r~a~,~~"~~~iru~'! and experienced the constant separation of a ll races from one another. pr~~~~~ wfl~a~ ~ ~n!~ they could be In the city. Whites had signs where they could put thei r mail and where they sould stand. "No one of the oppoalte race talked to anyone else on the street because of fea r ," said C.ldtr. Co/leges convene here for entertainment confab by J oh nR.Prrdue of the J>UIYOL!e is to provide About 40 Midweste rn a "buyers market ," Busch ~leges will be reprnented said. a t a ~onal meetina ol lhe During the conference National Ente r tainment Confc-renee CNEC I here Nov . there will be aevc-ral private talent showings in order to 210 4. The.NEC is an orpnlzation provide a forum for tbe of colleae and unlnrsity naluationolartistaseeldna proa ram staffs that was future booCnp on campus. founded to enable students " Attendance at the lhowinp and faculty on various is necessarily restricted to um puus to sha r e in - conference <. deleaates formation abotlt proaramming student aclivites and establishing training Busc:h •.ndMaryDienL)'ftdl, programs and arranaing a lsn of the Sttldent AttiYites cooperative proeramminc, .. ofOc:e. Lynch Is the NECunit cnordinator for WlloCOnlln. The ..-endon In attendance Busch ia a forme-r chairman at the conference will indtlde ofthebtdofDirec:ton:ol talent agcn'-. film and Yi~ tape distributon:, travel l.beNEC. agents and outdoor The conference will r««alion nprnentsUves. provide a setting in wtlich Among the talent showca~e~ 1tudent activities, prrsnnnel will be a motorcycle t he Un lvenlly Ac t iYi t es Board CUABI, Residence Hall Council CRHC ), and the F11m Sodety," said Bulch . UAB, shows black realism ~;~I ~e~:~o~ :id' s.!!:er,gwi~r:.:~~~~~:~ ;~!:e!obAc~~lf~!~ ~ffi~e~ p.m . Thunday, Nov. 7 and FrldayNov. llntheProgram Ban qu et Room o f t h e Unhrtrslly Center (UC). S..ad~r is a stnry 1bout growina up within a black lha rccropper society in the IIIlO's. Theplotunfo!clsasaltindly father 11 caught stealing to feed his hungry family He Ia sentenced to a year 41 t hard ~ ~~~u'='ol'fir~! ::~~:!t !:~i:;~a~:, ~~~~e:~~j,~~d ~:a= 1 ror whose arrvi«:s. talent or Sunday. not to accept his desti ny . products are re lated to ''Tbe UWSP Oflanilations M~k for the mm Ia by Taj college programmirc. "Par t involved will chidly lnc:lude Mahal. th::~~d ~t a:f~owwr!; were ~n . Usina: the ins truments of th1t time, Concentus Muslc:us performs religious works ot the thi r teenth century France, lusty songs, dances and ddicate ballads fr om Renalssanc:e Italy, dr•matic pieces from Spain,Fiemlsbmuslcand the sounds of the aJ ilteri~ 1\ldotreign In En&Jand. Oripnally formed as a smill vocal group In 19M by its director Arthw Maud, Concent ua Muslcus l• ter added an Instrum ental eft. sem ble, a com plimentary Yocal lrotJ P and • dance e nsemble . The members p e rf o r m se p arate a nd combined programs, Critics have termed them, " ... not merely a group of musicianl, but a rec1ptured spi rit," and haYe praised them for their sophlatk:allon and expertise in Renalsaa nce music. Tk:kell are available in advance II l.be UWSP Arts and Lectures Box ofOc:e In l.be u~r level of the FAC open between II a .m . a nd 5 p.m .. MOD<Uy through Friday or by ealliq 34f-4661. P~10 THE POINTER October 3 1, 1974 Solar energy ~laimed feasible byKslherlaeK-alslti " Manyofuswi llbelivin&in solar heated and-« tolar cooled homes." said George Lol. Kopecky,projeetfllCineerol polilicAlgroun<ls,"said-John bynuclearpowerexpertsthal elite. At one day, we may 1 • :~ Mj~~~. ::;;~~ ~~~;; ~b~~ ~~:~r ~:.,:~c:~:~~:CS~n!1~ ~;; r!ai:"h:'twU:c!:tr;~~ t three days of solar energy is DuHi e a lso mention ctd ·to ionizing radia tion from lhe world at his fingertips ." equa.llolhe~ef'l)'provlded social problem• such as nuclear power leaka. Theaudieoc:eaatinanuneasy by the entire world's known sunr lghts , building codes . llerOIK'mOUS said that there silence as they reflected on Lof , presid en t of In- foull fuel resources. ternational Solar Energy " I think tbe only way lolar Society, was one c;l. four authoritla on solar~ power will be economlcaUy who spoke at the Oct. 25, •.,meoftheSun&larPil"ftr ~~::!'~en::J ~~~~~~~ Confe r ence, ' ' at UW said Parkside. About 500 people participated · in the conference and workshops. Solar and wind enef'1Y has been condemned by ma.ny Lof has use<IIOlar enet'JY because ol high costs. ''The for the last t5yea.rstobeat 25 secret allow coets f« wind pen:ent or his Deaver home. generator maclUDeS is mass H•~hisgas furnaceasa production of ver y small com ement to hi t tolar m achln es,,. •ai d be.iltinga ttem. Heronemous . "It Is estn!mely economical." 'Complementary' appeared "Electricity is more extobeakeywordattbecon- penlivethansolareoenr.v." ference . Complementary said Lof. "The prices or means a power system ol electricity has made solar wlnd-fumace«IOlar en~- energy competitive with furnace combinations. electricity. However, the prices of gas are a bargain if you can aet it." Pr ofe ss or William Speakers . allo expreued Heronemout, wind that uslnc aalar and wind engineering system expert ol enerJy are social and the Unlvertity of pol.itiealluues. Masuchusetts, Amherat, Mass., laid, ''Wind power could be UKd in conjuncUon " It seema to me as if with other land UMS . By lec:IMO&Y ol solar hatina is plaeina Wind aeoenton hJ&h here and available. The above a pul~ f<n~t or In pastures on hedJerows, wind C11Uld be harmued with DO wan( to continue to pour inlerferencewhataoeveror masaive amountl of money existing Industry." Into f«eian countries for 1be economka ol wind and economk resoun:es? These solar ener&Y were disctMMd decislont will not rest on by each s~eaker . Joh n enJineering around~ . but 'on ~~~onsonhlp,'' =~~~ica!uC.:tr'; aest he ti c p r oblems a nd public acceplanc:e. · State Senil tor Doug las are other health risks in the that haunt1111 fea r , future. Wind power and solu IUs other objection is pure power can give man entraY and simple economics. " I'm for years. HeronemOUI said Lafollette, who p~ted a ~~rv~:~~~~~eh!~nwc~~ ~:~;,e rr:::-~u~~~~~':.'o;:; 1 ~~~=~t~no~~o::~~~ ?,jt \~ ~b::~~~e~ 1 ;~~~!.«nke~ ~~~~n"';!I~:~L ~we'd-:.; amportant to bridge the 1 8 P 1 ~ for the nuclea r power :~ee~t.~~~~:of•y~ plant.s. We a re_ creating an are responsible f« this. We must be willing to do the nitt y·& ritty , hard back· breaking work to bring gove r nm e nt and science together." "I feel tolar ener&Y proceues could have an impacJ. within the next slx years and completely power theU.S. bylheyear2000. T11e only reasons It doesn't happen is that it it socially and politically not happening," said Heronemous . JiuOPI!mOUS explained that beishelpinctowrjtethe eighth &rade acience text· Nearly complete bear books. "Maybe the eiJht h gnden can u.ve the world," registration reports (« t~ September bear g~m hUDI m The conference not an attempt to condemn nuclear :;~ t~~nht;,~~:Vt!:~~~ power . However. about as man)! anlmall this Heronemous wu asked to rf,aras they did a year aa:o. llale hit specific objections to nuclear power plants. Ninety ~ four black bean The rll"'l objection be had wtte tlgged in the 16-day rested In tbe fundamentll season from a fiv e county mot'll question In taking lhe area. These same cOWitla risks without individuals yielded 1112 bruins in a 23-day flavingasay. tn tbelast three hWitlast year. · yean, it has been admitted b u_ In do It, we will be trouble with our grandchildren. OUTDOORS . POINTER Bear hunters fair well ....... .,.as "Bear h~r~ten: experienced unutually aood aucceu, conald,erin& tbe man y =ltJ!aon;.~'f:l~~ Loomans,pme l'llaDI.&ement s taff specl•llst for tht Departm e nt or Natural ............ ' Apparently, the most limltllll measure impoled on bear hunttn was lo prohibit lhe use ol do&• to track burl in a wide band of northern Wisconsin. Desianattd "Zone 8", tM belt of beu rana:e where no dOll wert per· mitt~d extended fr om Minneaola lo Lake Michigan between HiJhways I and 29 exc~t that HiJhway 64 was sut.tltuted for ·Hlghway lal the norlhet'n boundary - in lho$e counties sharin& the Nicolet and the ~uamegon National Foretls . The de!& hunlins restriction aooears· lo have. cauKd the hunten to s ub tllt ut e one hunting area for a nothu withou treduclnglnterestlnthe aport. Uncoln, Lafll)ade arid Oneida counties, which "'' ffl' arrected by the hunting tom: designation, dropped Z7 bears from tm. HOONever, Vilas and f'oretl counties Increased thei r btaryieldbyanlc:le:nlical 'nanimals. No hunUng or black bear will be permitted this year during the November gun season. Wiaconaln bear• art n«mally In their dens by earlyNOvemberandthOK'shot by hunters chrln& the det'l' llealon UIUIIDy are accidental encountera with b ears distl.ll'bed from their ~ . Denned bears are prG(ecled by state pme laws. Poge 11·· Octo6er 31, 1974 ., ' Caution--weather can ki II Madison to get 6) a!!!!t~tn:~:rh:~ltdc!~ by~~!!~~~~ol~: un~!~~':~:::~ew 1s7:t~~~:~ ·' ditions may work io dafliH'OUS and deadly ways, accordinB to the Department ofNaturnl~es IDNRl. 1\apid chillinB of the in· lef'nal body tempenture, or hypothermia, ·can be easily avoided by &eleeting wann, dry clothing in planning hunter trips this faU . Sev~al thinlayenolclothingare r.;:~ble to a few heavy "Hypothermia is a kill~ ol the un prepa r ed, " said Homer Moe, Sllp6Visor of DNR's hun t er sa f ety program. " It is one of the leading causes of death and serious Injury to O)ltdoor recreationilta ." Most hypother mia cases occur in air temperatl.II'U bet ...'f!t'n 30 and 50 degrees. "Wind dri ves eold air under and through your clothes," said the University of Wisconsin Depa r tme nt of Contin u ing Medical Education tC ME J. "Ex · posure to cold wind and water causes your body to lose heat more rapidly than it can be prodtnd." - your neekor leg.s,orbybdnB l'leld apinst your body by sopping wet clolhlnB. Wet clothincloses90p6centofits insulatinB value. l::xerclsing is then attempted to maintain normal body heat, but energy r eserves are lost In the p-ocus and exhaustion may soonforceyoutostop. lfyou ~::~~~ .r:'::-~:=; • II.R. tut t, the Agric:ultureEnvironmental and Consumer Protection Bill , pass-ed the House of Representatives by an overwl'lelmina voice \'ole. This bill called for the ""ithholding of fWKII from cer tain Environmental Protection A&ency pollution control pfOirams. tt.R. t t»l,abillthatwould allowfoc-gamemanagement practites o n milita r y rt'!lef'Yations,has paued both houses and is ready fOC' the President); Si8J1ature. 'The program would expand game techniques on these res.ervations. uha~J~Iion . Keep the victim wann by removing his ""'et clothes, placing him into a sleepi.113 bag and giving hi m wann drinks. Body hea t may even be necessa r y in extreme cases. lt is difficulttoknowlf you're deve l opinB hypothe r mia yo u rself because you r senses a r e becoming dulled. so prepare ahead or time. Dreyfus lake forum to be held UWSP Stu d en t Mo r e house of t he DNR : and Ro d ney _Hassett o f John Strand and. ~-~·' ~~~~· ~~~:C:. ~ictrf = =~~~ ror alaU in the north campm area . The l ake ~ conce p t 1 was ~!~~~~by rC::e:oo!':~ federal lab fumb linB hands , frequent 51wnbling, a \un:hing wal k, v a 1 11 e, s l ow speec h drows iness or app1reni heat production instantly dropsby50pen:entOC'more, the CME said. "U the inte r nal !empe:ratlll'e continues to drop," said CME, ' )'ou will begin to lose control of your hands ; cold o,~,ill reach your brain "Pul on ralnaea r beforethe deprivina you of judgement downpo~r ," 1ald Moe. "Put and r easoning power . " onyourwoolj.acketbefore Un less treated immediately, ?:...'i;,ss~td ~~~~·t ~C: hypo thermia can lead to coll apse and eve ntually when it's wet. dea th. The En vironmental legislation review 1 Moderator for the Pf'Oiram wi ll be Lyl'e Updilie, St u de n t Gover nm ent President. 'Ibis is not a public hea r ing and does not satisfy the r equirement fo r a p ublic heafina under the \Vls.consl n A unique wildlife health laboratoryisbeingopenedby the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Ser vfce in Wisconsin to prevent and reduce disease losses among the Nation's wildlife. 'ntlabwillbe set up by the nrst of the year at the Unh·ersity of WiscOI\Sin. The unive rsily'stight Isola ti on faci lities whith consist of a !lt'f'ies ol air locks, showen, andclothingchanje roomswm allowFishandWildllfeServiei! sc.lentiststoworksafely with highly communicable wildlife diseases," Direttor Lynn A. Greenwalt said, In add itio n , Fish a nd Wildlife sc.ientista will tulve access IO a unique BIOTRON which is a Na tional Science Foundation funded fac ility that contains a numbtt ol r ooms In which envtronmental factors soch as te mpe r at ure, hu m idit y, pressure and lig ht can be controlled by computer programming. Top on the list of priorities for applied r~arch Is Duck Virvs Enteritis (DVE l OC' du<:k pique, a major threat to ducks and geese about whic h li!Ue is knooA-'R . In t 973 this disuse wiped out ~o .ooo ducks at one location. Scientists hope to Jearn what this disease lookJ Staffed by Fish and Wildlife Service scientists. the Jab will also be able to draw on the talents of leading sc.ientific auU!o r ities on wildlife diseases from the staff of the Unive rsity of Wlsto ns in. Grad uate studen t resea r ch talent will be available also. In addition to DVE, oth~ diseases s uch as avia n cholera and botulism will be s tudied . The cente r will tondoctresearch ondiwases a!feelina oth~ species of wildlife, provide dias nosuc .servlcefOC" the more lha n 350 National Wildlife Ref uges ac ross the tountry, and a ive the Fish and Wildlife Senti« a fo r-e n sic me d icine capability to ass ist In law enforcement e ff o r ts nationwide. It will also perfOC"m field and lab postmo rtem• on wildlife ti\at die to u.sist states and other Federal agencies In their field work. Paul Yambert . 11 has g:rOWD into a 30 to 40 acre water cont r ol , r ec r eation a r ea under the present propo&al. ~':!7:~~~\ ~1i!~ :ht~ ~~:r d~~~~e~~f:ci!; ~:tfi~;'::ue~~~~e: An env i ro n me n tal p ro p osed extension o f more susceptible to It and coopera t io n with t he assess ment contracted by Michigan Avenue w\U be un d er what con d itions Wisconsin Deputment of Wanin Englneerin&: has been availa ble and questions will 11 n d re f ine tech n iq u es qriculture. prepared. Faculty members fr om ~:'.lee~ answered on this ThePf'OiramwiUbebdd at PAM UWSP have assisted in the prepa r ation of t h e 4 p.m., Nov . 5, 1974 In room assessment. lt2of theCollegeofNatura l Invited participants In the forum a re Stevens Point 1967 uw. STfVENS POINT GRADUATE Mayor Paul Borham, Area Wide Planner Bill Bur ke, Spelks City E n ginee r Ti m at~. forum wiU be broadG r emme r , L aVer n e cast live over WWSP-FM 90. 0 r--------------, En:~~~l::= ~ ANDERSON Old • • • __.... _, __ ... __ _ _·-..... _,_..,._,. .. ......... .. .......... .... _ _. __ ----·-------....... ...... _.-_ . _ .......... .----._ -......·-··-·---·-· --. -....... ............ _......... .-. .. .--·-~···-·-.............. ..._ .... UW prof receives forestry award -·. ....._.. ..... -·- -~ .- A UW Madison professor Theodore T. Kollows.ll:i , has been honored by the Society of American Foresters for his rese~c h contributing to the advancement of forestry . • Biological Research Award. f"oUowin&thedeathin t966of Barrington Moon, a pioneer in forestry research . the name of the wa rd was changed. It is financed. by i!IC1)!Tie derived from a 1154 A member of several forutry an d bioloalcal societies, Kotlowski has aut h or ed o r co ~ ~thor~ d nea rl y 300 publications , tn· eluding some IS cooks, dea li• with tree phyliology, M!"'r!o r~!fri~g~~nrdM:'~: ~;':;}:_";,~·~totheSAF :~~Ji!~~~!~al-ecology presented to KoVowski by SAF"Presi<knt John A. Beale. deputy secr eta r y of the Wi sconsin Department of •Natural Resources mNRl: at the society's rt'C1!flt meet.ing In New York . and A Buffalo. New York lie joined the Department native Kmlowski earned his of Forestry faculty at UW Bacheior·s clelree from the Madison in 1 9~ and Is New York stale Colleae of presently the A.J . Riker t'orestry, and his Masters DistihBuilhed Proft'SSOI" at and Doctoral degrees from the Madlsoo school . Duke Un iversity. lle was a The awa rd . which has Senatoc- t-Ulbright Research presen ted annually s ince Schol~ to Ox.ford ~iversity lt54, was nrst ealled the in 1964-65. ~--·· ... ~---- ·--···~ .... .......... ......__ __ -·--- ... -............____ ~ _ ...,,.. ., ....,_ . . .. -~ ANDERSON FOR ASSEMBLY Portage Cou'nty's 71 st District Because af the State We're In October 31 , 1974 THE POINTER Page 12 / "MUST HAVES" .... Home Made Caramel Apples .. Vermont Maple Candies ::: :=l ~easore .... India Spreads .. . . Decorative boxes ..•• 1975 Hollie Hobbie Calendan ... . Suling Wax llnl%fnnhnrnnr' .,: ,i.l .,: a! ~~ .,: d .:U Gift hop Old Fashioned Soda FoUntain downtown, Main at Strongs ** ** ~;:=~;;;;;~;;;;;;; "---.. fnR A REAl ~ ~ "H · ·'A.ll'O ~~WEEN ~. BILL'S PIZZAS l IT AwL,lAMUN SHROO RM ASV AUCIEQLI i i! 'TREAT' TRY • : ~ DELICIOUS * '" and es ~y~~~~-~~::~s w~e~l~i~~s~h(~rh~~!·ms.), 1do agree but beg to differ in that I, personally, have never seen the like In woods or waters. And I am not a whatchmaycalllt! But who knows, maybe some day I will be enlightened . If that magic moment does occur, rest assured, I'll be ready for II. Picture the situation ..• The sun ha$ turned to a bright sca rlet, hanging just above the horizon. From deep In the woods a grouse drums In a soft decending staccato. The current of the river, fairly percept!ible, presses against my legs as I wait in hushed anticipation for the morning flights. I stand alone, a cigarette dangling from the corner 0 ARTS and LECTURES *Presents* . \ outdoor editor In the words of "male chauvanistlc pig" It was brought to my attention that I have • ignored the fact that there are some women ~.~~~;~~=~:;;:;;:.A,i;;~~T~;;;.:;.;;:,,; ;.; ;.; ;....... :;;;:;;;;;;.,.:;;;:_.;,..~·!.,.;;'";,.;!i ~:: ~~~!h~i~~. Is quiet but for .the low Then, a twig snaps behind the blind. What Is it? Almost meekly, a young woman steps out of concealment. Her hair glows with the shimmer of summer wheat. Large, dark eyes fix themselves. on me and my heart throbs. Delicately she enters the wa ter, moving into the blind next t~ me. She sits In Innoce nt anticipation, shotgun resting across her waders . Needing little encouragement, I move closer ... so close as to touch. My arm gracefully raises and wraps around her shoulders . I pull her close.. In passionate excitement our faces draw near for that final, natural question. Softly, but with firm resonance I whisper Into her ear, " Got any extra three Inch number four' s, sweetheart?' ' music from the field of the cloth of gold from the courts of francis I and henrY:mr Michelsen Concert Hall Sunday, November 3 1 :00 p.m. .Price- Students - 50' ..__./·t:::::~....::P;;;Iu:.;s_UW;.. . ;.;_;"S.:.P...;I:.;.D.,.•...;ca.:.rd;..::..._---1 \, 0\yderbu~ •Sine• 1916• !Why Pay- More For Less? END OF THE YEAR SALE SAVE $1 0·$20 QR MORE ~oU~chb Speda l ret. 118US NOW I IIf IS ~perta 10 1 ~ reg I1 4U5 NOW IIU .ts. ll~ane Gran Touring reg • 1111.15 NOW Raleigh Super Course rq ll7S.OO NOW IISG.OO 2U5 Church St. Phon• 344.-SUS Octobir 31. 1974 • ~UTDOORS CONT. POINTER u_ Highland forest camping rises Family cam~ing on the i:~ ~:~·":~~s~ci~~ creased slightly during the past summe- from a year q:o, although campground de-mands remain down from the 1971 peak use.• ~portJ Floyd Relnemann. for est s uperi nt e nd ent for the Departmen t of Natu r al Reso~rces !DNRl. Extremely favorable July and August camping conditions made- up for the earlier cold, wet weather that discouragedforestvisitorsin May and June, he noted . Reinemann ~poruthat the family . campground reservation system in use for the first time this ~euon proved to be quite successful. While mme mixups Otturred the fir st &everal weeks , in generalthissen.·ice tothe camper w~t smoothly, he says . Th e r eserva tion program will be revieo.~:ed this wi nter with .an eye toward improving its administration next swnmer. ~y repo rt e d Certlfled'lst Class FCC Technician -6ft duty every day. Automobile windshield The 200,000 acre s tate forest i1 open to the public for hunting. Ruffed arouse, waterfowl, snowshoe na~. squi rrel and deet" are common game species found in lhe forest. Fishing in the many hundreds of lakes within the forest generally improves during cool autumn weather and ""'hen combi ned ""ith hwlting they offer lhe outdoorsman diver sified experiences. Snowmobilers will nnd new rolesineffectontheNorthero Highland- American Lqion State Fo rest that permit snowmobilin& only where authori2ed by posted notice and the11 only on designated tr ails . In previous years snoo.mobile use wa~ permittedthroughoutthe fom t. --· 1UAB f"•Jm Woodst·-r..,.-. ,. . ----------· ,ECIAL : Thurs. Oct. 31 •n is offering a special tents rented omber 1·10. I I I I I ~ THIS WHILE II S PLEASANT. I ) IN Fri. Nov. 1 ~~~ the NH·AL State Forest will not be collected unt.U April t or next year, according to Reinemann. stngle~:i:r~~~":.t;~ ~~ ~= i~~s ~~:~:; to arrive a t statewi de estimates. Poge 13 stickers and camping fees on :!'\~e ~t~e~~r!~~:v~ ~u:;t'i.!;:i "~:~~~~ \; It's service That Makes The l)ifference! State fo r est personnel maintain approximately ISO miles of snowmobile trails The NH·AL Slate Forest througbout the wint~. The operatts 11 family and two trails are well mar.lr.ed an d group campgrounds. The are groomed weekly. Two group campgrounds aDd four croucountry ski t r ai ls of the family campgrounds located around McNaua:hton rtSe1'Ve space in advance, Lake in Oneida County and Palletteand F.acanabal..akes in VilasCoooty are available to the skier. basis. 1-~o r more information eat Lakes There was no Ugnificant regarding the Nor th ern Highland-Amercian Legion !Sf ~te Forest write to tbe >fthetotaJ harvH t, or species com- necessary to increase the Forest Superintendent , Route number ol uniiJ available for I , Box 4$, Boulde-r Junction, and about position of the haM"est . trout Fif· The sl.lf\·ey was made by resen·atioos on the forest," Wisconsin 54512 or call 71~ ~~~~=~k~n':lybu';;~~n~ncf~;:~: said ReinemaM. ut 60 per.oonresident.s of Wisconsin as ,------:---:-----.., : arp andweUuresidenta. aiKI~ng them q u estlonna~te l . eason. theA\·erages from. the sample mquil moments at vens Point on the y Roger W. Barr. TH.E POINTER _ 7:30 WIDE SCREEN EXTRA SPEAKERS ADMISSION $1. shown in the New I I Program Banquet Room Call 3.u.6.50 or DROP IN 1404 Strong• Ave. In Tho H~TEL WHITING Pam says "Come Celebrate" Tuesday, November 5 Bemanfs • 701 2nd St. N.from 9:00 p.m lfs Our Vlcto,Y Porty Pam Anderson Autotileda. ~ld for by~ for Allembly Committee 1M AIIIOr'p, 1'nlu. 310110 Colltae Avenue. Steven.s Poinl Wlacon.sin C? ·~ ·~ ., ~~ - ,....., . . --~~~ Many people are saying that a DIAMOND ts a ftne inw:stmenl. Wethlnkso- ~ ESpoc~olly J(you 're Investing ifl LOVE.. {)ttlf!€e's ~iWli.US THE POINTER .!. October 31 , 197.4 SPORTS Intramural" football u~-P-0::--:1--:-: H=-=T=-=E--=-R · playoffs begin Oilers,--Saints, Browns, Pats win! Superpickers faint! byTim Sulllvao,M.Ite llakrmln 1nd Carnac: Ole Maplfk:tJII All rl&ht! What did we ever say againll Da n Pastorini , Bnin Sipe, Bob Windsor , Jess Pbilllpa and Err ol MaM? The effo rt s of the se turk tya,a monas~tothers, undermined a perf: I weelt for the SUptrplc . , instead o1 a nice 12-o • , we'resittinaherea-4with egg allcwerourfaces. Eventhemcatdevout ran in the country probably couldn't name the last ti me Houston, Ne~ Ena land and New Orleana won on the same SUnday. In all likelihood, never. n better not bappen apl n! OuT record Is now a semi· cool 110-23-1 for the year and if this type ol ~lay continutS we beatthe Uoraonaomei«tol weird play . Fer o:ample, Dtmpsey's f3 yd. neld aoal. 1berefore, we'll stick our necks way out and predict a Dttrolt upset by ten. Jus~t io':&,~~th:,~ ea~IJ',:~'= nS:n~!~by0~U Sr.mday·• frolickinc wu Leon Crosswhite"• dispos ing of SUllivan in the weekly t~ . Crouwhite wanted to stick around for thiJ wed.'a picks, but bad to blow IOW!I In a hurry SUnday In order to avoid a subpoena from Motown concemi.IIJ a J)lllef"nl ty suit. Det roit over New Orlu"' : The S..lnts UIUally Booby Clark buill out. Los ''-lelet our Su Fr. .c:bu: 1be meat udtln& thine about this Mondaynighter should be the batnime hi&bll&htlolSUnday'spmes. LA by II. · Milulnota onr Cblu&o; Abe Gibron is the only c:oacll in pro football who can'taee Ills feet whUe lt&ndint: up. Purple Gang bJ el&ht. 1'tlaml over Alla•la : Althouch• Dnlphlnwlnisa cutalnty, let'shope Atlanta's Humphrey and Zoot malte a "Stuckee" out of Hen ry . Miami by nine. O.klaJMI ..-u DH'I'er: 1be Bronco~ hold bands In defensive huddle. Maybe Joe Namath ll.n't the only player the!T ~eat~y-=j~~~ R':'::e~ J; f~.UovtrPIIUiy: ~lhe 0 DENIM OVER SUEDE OR IN NATURAL LATIGO Quaker Bowl. The n-s should make oatmeal out of the EaaJes unltu Roma n Gabriel brines alone Dave Schultz and the other &-old StreetBI.IIIIesto prOC«tblm. Steelers by le'left . NY Jell our u-w.: All Oiler coadt onc-e told his squad, " Wbea they play the national anthtm, I want you standin&at att.tntion on your tw:lmets with the sideUne tuc:lted under your a rm ." We real our c:.ue. NY by 10. Wubl n11" over Cr ee• Bay : John Hadl's &olna to b eco m e p a r t of the Was h inaton eo v e r -up , courtesy o( Brv.ndqe, Blqa, Talbertetai.Sitlna by.U.. Kn1a1 Clly aver NY Giants : Thia0n1ahould bave by RobScllalloc:k Just as the snow sta rted t.o fall, the rqular Intramural football .euon ended lui wedt. Because or the colder weather, many teams chose not to com pl ete t heir sc:Mdulea. In the aames tbat Robert Minami Delzt'll and John a touchdown for Sims : Randy • ~Cored tor aot Gl,uere Hyer. Smith's two erus bed lsi North's hopei for a cham· pionshlp 11 IS beat IN 14a. 3S now won the Sima division. 25, behind touchtouchdo~n a 'foti:.!l~yedtheresultsareas · ~:;:~ombea~~·~laand l';n u tun : Fin I Sout h Pray : Scott Lackas K«ed ~=~ ~u': =tf'~or:: ~ :Cei:f:e : , : :; :£ ~~f: ~r1 ':1J!i!~r~ ~!!;!,d S:ec~';~~:~t~ Wft'lt South wa rmed up for down. the playoffs by sll.lttina: out 3W 12-t with Ed Ftnaer llusen : Forfelta qaln bll and lntol.lansm'ucbedule. lnthe Tom ZlmiJ Korinc touch~ downs. In an oYertlme pmt, lE nipped 4W 1 to e. Tom Jansen ~Cored for IE and Jim C.ndea tallied West's touchdown. wa uon: Behind .a touch· downby.JtffPa11,2Ebeat tW &-o. 2N decJPed tha t It wu too cold for football and didn't show up for Its scheduled pme acalnlt 4£. Urer-Duell : Delull showed Hyer that it ,UII tnows Mw to play football u both RCOnd noor teams were ¥ictoriOUI. North aot a touch· down by Jlm f"rotck and went on to Up IW Hyer a-o. only aame played, IW tipped IE 7-41. 3N had an eaaler ti me as 3E torfelted the came . .SniiU. : Rl.lll BolaN: and Jim Dorn sc:ored tor IN as It whipped 4N zo-o. IS cot touchdowns from John Bilagney and Craig Rulbiila as it crushed 25 by the aame se<n, 20-0. Barro.~ lilt:Pat Crams, Fritz Dunt and Kurt Swarm all acor«< for tS u · tbey manhll'ldled lS 20-0. 4N cot two touc~ by Randy Carpenter a nd from Reid Nelson to hel p them t.a1te IW lt·2. Intram ural leaaue IW Hye r . In th a t game week. ~lthm~.:ed~~~"t~ecwbu~ ~~f!~r!~iilm= :!:', • Football scores WSUC Washinaton 66 Ore&on o Brigham Vouna 37 Arbona 13 Whi tewater I Eau Caire 6 Arizona Stale 41 New Mexico LaC ro ue 47 Os hkosh o 7 Platteville:ZIStevtn~Poin tl 7 River Fslls 31 SUperior 12 Texas 'D Rice e BIG TEN Texas Tech toSM\J 17 Arllan~as43Colorado5lllte l WISC'OI1Iin 35 Indiana Z5 Ohio St.te ~ NorlhWfttefn 1 Texas Aut 2:0 Baylor o = ~=~~~=~~ ~h~nm~~o ~~!~:~'iorce 3 by four. Mkhi&an Stale Jt Purdue 7 ~th Dakota 71 Momlnpide ~~t:t:.~e0¥:'0:~ U asleep, OTII E:R tune this one ln. Alabama 41 TCU 3 :ni:.~b:~ width of • Burtalo onr New Ea&l..d ; Battle for lint In the AFC East. Camac: lhinb It's too doce to call, but then he'a =.:-: : ~~G~Uia SHIPPY SHOES 1 c:!~~~:h•ll~e ''.n~~~~·e•d Kent State 51 Akron 14 ~~~ Nebraska 7 Oklahoma State 3 Ottahoma 83 Kansu State o Missouri 30 Colorado 24 TeAI"Il'Ut-e 29 North carouna Bolton 55 Villanova 1 Don 44 Catawba 1 0 ~~ ~'i! ~~~~ Navy II on • JoM =yJ!~J ~:::.~: ~~o!'m~:~~~ t = Tech 71 sw Min· r;;:: ~K~~a: 7 !':,~=~aonea:!una ~1bsasalppi5tate5f~vtu. Weat Vir&inill' ~':.,.ca,;ollna 31 Nort h • 1\llsa 31 Tampa 21 14 10 to casta vote for theCowbo_ys Stanford 2:0 Washlnatoo State ~:~e ~l~v::~•e•~k~".'rd'!~ II Wyomlnl 31 Utah 13 Crouwhlte lhlnltl they 'r e both for the birds ! Sullivan'awtnnin&ltreat lut ~~te 21 12 ~ee~.~=~~U.:!We ~· 28er~~~~~ ~=bl~ ~~::!~~~ • THE POINTER October 3-1. i974 Poge 15 Point harriers ready for conference meet ltySILc:YHSdl•lt& 11le Stevem PUnt Crall Qawltry team finished UVd in an II team 114!ld Saturday at C.rthaae Collette. They finished behind Luther Collfle, flrat, and the KfiOOU Tnck Club. Lut!IH' CoUtee. a scbool who bu beaten LaCroue, bad 55 pointa, the Ke&onsa Track Oub had ?e, and Poin t bad 11. Hoe t ~ehoolCart.hage finished fourth with 95 pointa. Top n.umen for Point 'A'ft""t! Pat 'l'lmm aDd Rklt Zabcw"lke,finishi.naninthandttnth, respectively . The remalnda" ol the ~quad finis he d 11 follows : Don Buntman,tl; O.ve Elger",lf; Mike Simon , 14; Donn Bdlnte, %7 ; Ron UJethe, n: John Duwell , St ; John Fusinatto, 46 and Stua r t Puk, 71. nus Saturday is the wsuc mftt. II will be Mld at the Stevens Point Ccu1try Oub andstartlftctimeisalatedfor It a .m. In rqard to that meet, C:O.ch Amiot said, "Laetoae lookallke lbe team to beat." "Towintbismeet,weare Roin&tobaveonef"UI\Illtl'in tbetopftve, twoinlhetopttn, and our other three people in the lOp 16 or 11 placa, otherwise Laetoae will beat us. U our fifth runner rtnishel In the 20's we don 't 1\ave a "Belmte, Elser a.nd Duwell are the three se:nionoo our team who I feel wW have to havetheirbestcareerraces for 1.11 to win," eommented Amiot. "Pat nmm is ready aod upable ol really rnakinl an asuult on the top three or fCU"placeslno..irConremtee . I reel he's comi111 around, and Rick Zaborskelartaht ln tha"e , too. Last yea.r as a Creshman, Rkt had a terrible Conference Meet and then came back the nut weft and qualified for Natlonala," be thia'A'ftk, tolelasfreshu we can , mentally and said Amiot. Amiot thlnka that the ~~c:~r.-~i~=l~~it rndi:i~~~~:!a:' =~~ all to~elher in the rlaht ' 'The kids will be up for II. But, every kid lsaoing to do race." his own thin& u far as aeWna mentally ready . 1bm! isn't We're Jolng to have to fisht such a thing u conditlonin& the pain off when it eomes. this time ol yea.r-we'N In You either ficht it back or condition now. All we are else you let it take.you. So, we doin& now Is wofkirc on a rejult&olna to have to naht tempo and our apeed." "I'd like to think""" have threeracalef\lhisyur ; the Conference, the Districl and hope that we finish well. that 'A-e.11 have a Jood race Nationala. Ute I told the kJds, we will have to run well nus is the meet we've added. · As for prepar ing for the looking forward to at l ~ea10n, lnlhrsenuttworacesbdore meet , Amiot aald, "We're and If we don't run well Ita wecanreally~dtrlotna ao&na to tate it Cairly eaay jUit a matter of 'chok.lna'," to Notionall, because we want to 10 u a team. We don't just want to send one kid," commfllted Amiot on lootinaahead. " Monday we wUI talk about what the kidl have to do, and I won'taay anythina to them the real ol the w«k. They're &oin& to be thintl.ng about it themaelves. They' re fine )'OUDI men and I couldn't •k for a better a roup ol a thletet as far u dedlution la ton · «meet," aald Amiot. " We will have to have a good race from evff)'body. I; :!:::'a":~r;t:~~~~ Jeff Gosa breaks record The 1974 Cross Country tea m includes: Fr ont r ow: Donn Behnke, John Fuslnatto, Dave Elger, John Duwell and Dennis Zielinski. Second r ow: Dave Coulter , Ron Luethe, Arnie Benson, Pat Tl mm , Don Buntman and St uart Pask. Back row : Paul Niehaus, AI Gamrot h, Rick Za borske, Denn is Kosobuckl and Mike Si m on. Women break LaCrosse win streak • 11le UWSP Women's F1eld tlotkey team defeated UW u e r - 1--1 on Saturday in LaCroue. II wu the firSt victory over a LaO'oUe fJeld hockey team bs four years. Marcy Mlnnan, a Rnior !rom Steverw Point , scored the fLrSI &oal with only 30 aec:ondl remalninc In the rtnt half, Dee Simon, a sophmore from AftU&o. added the aec:'OPdplearly in the aec:GrldhaUonashot (rom the ol the strikb~ drde. ectc.e VOTE Michigan, 'Minnesota, North ten minu tes remaininciftthe Dakota and SOuth Dakota will partki pate in the tourney. pr~e.a second contest on Two alktar teams will be Salurday, UWSP defeated ld«ted from all the players the Minnesota Oub team )-1. a nd these t-<eam• wil l Scoring for UWSP were repreaent the collqes In the Ma rda EnJebrt:lson (11 and No r th Central Sectiona l Tournament to be held In Jean Lochinski . · Tbe Pointen will travel to MiMeapolil Nov. II and 17. " It would be wonderful if Bem idj i Minneso ta , on t'rida y ~ play In the North all eleven Point playen were Centnl Cotlege Tcunament, selected to the aU star.tea.ms. NoY . 1 and 3. Eleven teams We have a seuon record of rrom Wi1cona ln . Upper 14-1--1, and It would~ • Laero&se scored with about ANDERSON J e(f Go1a broke a UWSP football record Saturday fM pasa receptions in one .euon. The former Wa ukeaha Catholic Memorial Hl&h Schoolatandoutovercame the rteord , S4 eatcbes In one seuonaetbyBIIIHamlltonln 1172, alao from Me morial lligh. GoA bu 56 catches in eight aameathis1eaaon. l1lel foot· t , I~ .pound rlanlter caught eiRht passoes for t40yardland two touchdowns Saturday In Stevem Point's U·t7 lou to UWptattev\lle. Cola also holds the Pointer =~:r, fus:: ~uc~ ~;e c':m'brn!ti:n.~ c~~: . r.~ ::ugyh!ri~s on;am~: men ted NaDC)' Page, aec:ond )'eat coach of the team. receiving in one pme I Ill I. Hamilton araduated from SleverwPoint in t972.,1ea.vinJ Team memben makin& the rive records , four of whkh trip to Bemidji are : Barb Gosa has sht« broken, and if Delc hl , Kri s Labullke , Goea maintain• his rurrent En&ebretaon, Simon, Sheila a verage of 71 yards rec:eivin( Shoulders , Becky SchaUb. g a m e h e w i ll break Mirman, Carol Hill , Bev... flamilton 's other mart. of 7S4 ~~r~~t~~m~ ~~a8:!r:'~;~~Snyder, Mary Elliott and Sande Cournoyer. 119 yarcD ~hart with pmea remainina;. For Assembly- Portoge County"s 71st District Because of the State We're In two THE POINTER October 31, 197-4 SPORTS CONT. POINTER Nine seniors finish at hom e tJ bySteveSC: hulb Nine seniors played lhel r last football game at Goerke Park Saturday. They are Harry Finley, back , from Harrlabur1. Pennsylvania : John Nevins, tackle from Blanchardville ; DaveBr~.deftn~lveend from Port Wa&hington ; Pat Sexton, defensive end from New London : Jerry Raeder, fullback from Sheboygan ; Dennis Eskrltt, end from Wisconsin Rapida : Gary Stan:insld, derensh•e halfback from Marathon : J ohn Miec:h,centft' from Muskea:o and Bill Wright, ddens!ve end from Tbomton, W. During thdr nnt two years they saw Point's football tea m fall on pretty hard Urnes. Theirlm.hmanye.ar (1971) .. .,. the Pointers 'win' only The UWSP (light tops) soccer team threatens UW Mad ison (dark tops) . The score was t ied. Photo by Roger W. Barr one aame . Actuall y Whit.ewala' but them, 54-G, butlaterforftltedb«ai.Uof an eli&ibility vlob.Uon. In 197%, they saw the Pointers1tartout thesu1011 with an d ght pme k:.!na streak. nus abo was Monte Frosh gridders best varsity record Olarles' tint yur aa COICh. He took ovet> at mld..eason, and the Pointers won lhdr 1 Th~ ':i:'l:· ~=: ~m e n ;:~itle~~~= r:; ~h~ :,~: 111 t~ y~~~~"~lth football tum ended the tr74 e~~liber of Lalent some of our ~~k~~ :~~3~~;n:; pltin:re~~bl~~~on or of- remain undefeated in four fenslve coordi nato r Ben Breese, the Poi nter attack The 2-G-2 slate posted by was lead by quarterback Dick this year's team marka the Parsons. P11raons wu 11 blah best finish or any Pointer tchool recruit from Elgin , freshmen tu m since ltM nllnois and rot &oocl relief ac cordin& to head Coach hel p from seconclctrinaers Peter Kasson . JeU Pechura or Kenosha games this year. si!';/b;'~!!,'"in~~~ ~-= ~~:~e~tr~ rough Whltew11ter team belen they rallied lhe next weft. lo tv)' L.akd.and 46-0 of Talentwasalsoexhibitedin the backfield where Wayne Olo)lackl lead the team In f:dtc::m= Sl:n,~~ 1~ £gf;;~kre:::~R al:d::~ Chllrles' nrst full yu.r as co.ch, the ~=~ i~::rek~ their Thlsyea r ,thePolnten are 3-:5wllhtwogames remalnlnl oa the achedule. I! they win the last two games It would give Stevens Point football team a .500 ma rk for the lint time Iince 1987, when the Pointers were &-2-1. 11 Women oust UW-M wason. Steve Pefkins and Gr eg The Stevens Point Women's finished Roden both from Green Bay Volleyball team brou&ht thdr with tne;r second tie of the 1ncl D1le F1eury of Sun OVet' all record to :5 wina, 1 year Coach KaiSOII uid, "Of Prairie. ' losses by defeaUna UWM In 11 coune you'd like to be Hlat T he fr e s hm en defense best two of three game the end or a JoeUOn . But let'J proved phenomen11l this match, This was the fint m1tch be realistic, the team issUII season giviq up only II WJde feated . We had our poinll In the four contesll. ""-on at home 11nd won In the chance 10 be11 t "l'hitewater The defense wn under first two games with 11 acore but had to settle for a tie. I direction of line Coach Jim 15·8, 15-1. It took pl1ce can't ever remember the Clark and Pat Robbins who Friday, Oct. 2$. freshmen be11tin1 handled the defensive back· The wo m en were l m preuive on both offen~e and Whilewater. Uowever , it'1 fidd . ltlll satlsfylng to know that Coach Kasson commended defense. EmP'o)'ln& • new the Oshkosh coaehet believed linebackers Ji m Rclich and offense for the first lime the Alief' the team ~ ':~t~~':!t.•t.eam ever !::~'; o~~~ r~ 1~d~~-~~~~ ':;,j 11 ,:ov~ :~O!~~:J: ~e~~a~~~!J':e~:': • ~~;~• ~fek::i:e o~n':n~e ~}':{~~.~~~-kills ot games worth of uperience over them," Kasson ex· nerlache and offensive Lackie Mike Hai ru we r e aho St. Norbert lost lo us II wu tbeirfintpmeoftheyear," '' Th l1 ye11 r ' s team dis pla yed al'eal unity in ~~~::a!, r~e;:.e ,t,~= ~~a!/in:¢~';:-. he.~- team for Servin& honors in the first pme wt11l to Lawie " Ace" ~~t:~v~O:n~:~: Serving poinllln the second pmewere balanced amona hi';;~'lfie!:a::f"~....:! al~~~enPlay con1l1ted strk:Uy of freshmm and II is Vffy fine ldds; It wu a 01.r primary JlD&I to JerVe the • pkoasw-e for us coaches to v11rsity ," Kasson saki. " We. work with them ," Kauon pattern ou.rsdvn lifter the. added , h as bee n Jbowint steady Improvement due to the . .lllllnce o1 Pete • Quillin& and Mark Imhoff of the Men'• Yolk)'~ J ~fot~er' j 1';' i~'i4' THE POINTER . p~ ··f7 \-- Pioneer spirit prevails, 21-17 lty Skve ScbuiU Aided by a 'roughing the For the Point.ers a l Goc:Tke kicker' penalty on fourth and Park Satw'day , it was a c:au seven, tbe Piooeen ICOred ol not taking a pme lhat fln t, on a 14 yard run by Paul Platteville was trying to give Hint.gen with I :S7 1elt In the flnt quarw-. The point after them. was aood and &1Ye the 1bt end result wu Point Pionetn a 7.0 lead. ~na21-17 , tothePiatteville Pione-ers, who upped their AfW" this TD, both tum 's cooference rec:ord to S-1, whi le the Pointers sJippeod to a defen s iv e units applied lherme\ves and punt after 2-4ma.rk. punt ensued. This pme was the Jut Pointer home aame o( the The Pointers broke from season, and wu a lao Parents ' tlll5 trend and went on a 15 pla y, shcminuteiC«iqdri.,e ~Y lnthtsecondquarter . Last year when the: two teams met, the Poi n~ uoset Reed Glordana 's pauina them , l7-14and!oiledtbelrbld was the key and he hlt Doug for a WSUC ~pi~p. Krueser for three pa11e1 it was, the Pointen nnr ly pulled off a major up5et , and ~u could have if the f bad been a ble to ca pttalh:e on the maoy Platteville errors. This yea r P\att.eville was not to be denied. and in winning stayed only ooe-halr pme behind con f erence l eadin& Whilewattr. T'Mre wtre 17 turnovers ln a ll , sevenby the Pointers and nine by Platteville. M play the rest of the game, g011 l at ' the four . AfW" two suHerin& an app.~rent c:on· incomplete pauu . Joe cuasion. Pilecky rolled to hU right and appeared to be trying to pus The first ha ir then ex pired when the ball fell on the without any furlher JoCOI'ina. ground in front of him. II was but with b..-ely a minute &one scooped up by Len Kunynske in the third quar1er, Ken and returned 85 yards for a ~!':!o:t.~~ilfl~~ep:~tt! U>,et,~?"'~fnl;'::'be'i~:. Point 40 yard line and ra~ ell:tra point . •Coach Charles' down the sideline for the protests \to"ffe fn.Utless and On the Pioneer's DH.t of. feflsive se r ies they were stopped on fourth and three by the tenacious defense ol the Pointers. Rick Peot , r eplacing Mattel , movedthePolnterl 7t =~:e ~e~':'' ~nd~ w" \aiJO'to"ed to Point, bov.~er. e~right back with a scorina rive aided by a penalty Plat· tevilfe. 1be TO c:a e on a Peot pass to eo.a c:overina eight yards. Hoffman's extra point \to'U good and gave the t!' !=pre~,:& 't! ~~t~1: .:"~~ ~ ~~!: =: utra Poi n ters threw a n in terception on the next play, but Ray Jackson, who had picked off the pus, fumbled when he was tackled and Poin t recovered. ibree plays later Point fumbled and two plays after that the Pioneers fum bled, and so it went. Tvo·o tu.r noven later, the pme ended. The defensive unit of Point played touah all afternoon, alvin& up only seven points, the other 14 co.mlng by Pl a ttevi lle's ddense. 7 this series were to J e!f Go&a, the K ore s tayed. the last one covering 29 yards and good for a TO. Hoffman's This wasn't the end of the beca\lllt ola penalty a nd two extra point was aood and c:ut quart e rback sack s, the thePioneet' leadtofour ,at 14- e xc:itement , however , and 10. Point had several more Poin~.tn•·erefon:edtotrya Next ,camethe:'bia' playas c:hanca to win but they fit:ld aoal. Bob Hoffman"s kick from 46 yards out was far as Platteville was con- simply could not cash in on perfect and .,.,; th t :osltft in cerned . After a Pioneer the many Platteville errors. thehalf, theP\attevillelead fumble , Point had the ball , firstandtenat the Platteville was cut to 7-3. With just elsht seconds After recelvina the kickoff , gone In the fourth quarter, the Plallevllle was fo rced to A 33 yard pau to Elkritt punt, but on the Pointer's nut offt:n~ lve series, Gior- and pass interference penalty da n.a wU injured and did not gave the Painters a first and their 0\\11 pasaa intercepted by Bob Riva rd. Not to be outdone, the =i~ ~;~e-:.!~=~ ... The weather sim pl y couldn ' t have been a ny better. It was sunny a nd warm , .,.,;th a sJJght brH'te. In the statistics depart· ment, Platteville came out s econd best In most catqories. 'lbey had 13 first downs to II for Point and could muster only 213 yards in total offense, while the Pointersaained33Syards, all through the air . Next week tnt Pointers travel to Eau Caire and thls is am!Jitwin,if the Pointers ~~:.'i:~~ :nrw:; ~e !~~ktwro: ~ha~~~ They are 3-S, wit h two games remain ina. ~~-~ I mo d ern ......... 1 IUICIItldlll ,-;::.::::~. _ _ ,ec,..,.. ,....,_"' ' • Interiors Inc UI/P ~, POINTER ~ FOOTBALL ,. STEVENS POINT vs. EAU CLAIRE SAT. NOV. 2 1,30 PM C"f:xclusively" Oft lOt all of Cenlral WISCO nSin Not even head coach Monte Charles could predld the outcome of plays executed In the thrilling fourth quarter of the last Platteville game. Photo by Bi ll Paulson . 103 3 FM 103 3 FM 103 3 FM P® e 18 THE POINTER October 31 , 197-4 TO GET A MEAl LIKE YOUR GRANDMOTHER USED TO MAKE! IT'S POSSIBLE TO GET A CHEAPER MEAL IN WISCONSII BUT •• ; . IT' S IMPOSSIBLE TO GET A BETTER MEAL! I"!!!IJIIII-----------.. 1~ t,-.. -.~. ............................. 7..... ' : "''::.::..:"n:- UWSP receives extra reve nue by Hassey Umem Elwin Slpund, assistant tothec hancellor forP1annlng and Analysis said that as a mul l of enrollment lnaease, additional revenue hu beftl ~~~ :,oeu~~nning . ~~:f;:~~c!~~~~~!u~J~. BACI, which met Tuesday, Oct. Z3, Sigmundsatd that his commlltee had received req ues ts fr om dHfe rent departmenlJ and IH'YI« t for theallocationofthe$250,000 extradollan. · Also. In order to determine thole fKUity wtlo will continue lheir servkel ~. Blankenship : PPBAC was J ludyln& representations from. dlf· ferentdepartmentlin respec:l to workload reduction. The work load at.andard 11 360 student eredlt houn ISCff), but most depa.rtmentl pressforauchredudtonslhat would help keep thei r faculty who mi&ht be affected . The matter .... 1tudled by the committee, Sismund uld . From O• h koa h wa s presenled a new proposal , a, belns ~r,'!d~oa~b~~~~.. ;~ complete ret:ular ~emester'a work withi n a sbortn- period with equal advan taBe. Sop homor e J ay AboYe all, the propoaal Blankensh i p has been ai msathaJUna:decllneofand f'arm H lp waated • House ~ dellgnaled " Resident of the boosUfll enrollment. Earliest fumllhed for part of work Week" at UWSP lmplementaUO., of the plan : . . _ _ .u.. .... : named reside nt caLm~~ o~ ~:ibe 4':~ ye~"Lthe~1d;:eSc~ ~ube!:'~ "!: f~·~~ IBntnll . ! ~~:.!.R~;1h r=~n~: o~· !':mt!:!r:a:p~~ Rewa rd! 1.o.t female Irilh ;:hves on camput and hu a include : Adolph Toruwak.l , ~::u. ~==-~=·. =~ •tervke i~!IJ~rn~e.ofa t Je!d~~!hl~c a~d Ch!~:l11o:0ro~Un~~ 214. C.l\ a nyUme. the uniYffllty.· Service& ; Ca rol Mario n, . •Eac h winne r Ia liYen a auillant to the VIce Olin· Elm up to Sl.200 a ~ehool : memento of the huUtuUon. ~llor for Academic Affairs; ~!:P~a~~~!~::~•s:,: : m:.!~::~.~ ~e:.!:~i~ · ~·a~ai!~~~~· ~~~~O:uo~ liii OW I. . . .. to ._'fU IIrT IJO II _....un n1111na name. adclteu, pbone ancPtthe Unlveraity AciiYilles and lnstltutlonal Rne.areb; IChool to: Coordinator of : Board IUA8), president of DouaJu ~dlke Oltmlstry Campus Represe nt ative~ : Sk l Club a nd an ac ti ve Department and fa culty J~------------·:::::;:~:~~=r or the Wlldll!e ~e.!~~~U:::t !;!!:,~ I) t • October 31 , 1974 THE POINTER Poge 19 .1. OPINION u~ POINTER Affairs of the area llyJooo•SIIafn-utiSka,_ll. f'OMUJ. anu terMit"' ol petitions, p~:a• and Menands. hard liquiorhlltb«nallowedintolhesanctityolthedorna. Whi l e - No•·e artued that it would ~ue the ac:adrmic at~otMnnrtatiudtlteff'rliJIItluot~IOWidbeno do.Hn-~ In orcin' to &tt • 1f'1"111 fHi for thl' lmpres.aion that !be: a d-mlt~nce ol hlord liquor 11M lad, ,..., lnteni"'rd people from Thornton. WIIIOII, BurTVUJht and Smhh 111111. WliM a.ucl if r.ht'l'e hu betn 1 difftnn« In ~lnklnl habiU. a ~~ Ulistant from~ Hall rtpiied \N.t\Mreare more ttidsrunnln&around«inkl,., but ir s mGatlyrtStricttdtolhe s=~=r~~~~~·,:."ill~:•it•;:=,:: ~~::::: bul...necirilaetunbflievablydnmll. WhmubdiiWfeltthls,.·ouldalsoh.appmln•bu. she rrplitd tNtton~eottheJirilwoukln'tnonnallypout. F...aUyW sa.ttd thoro! while tbt admittance ol illord liquor hal leueMd the bfid&e: betiO"Hnllerwlf and hft" wlnJ. il has ma!R il slilhtly hardtr to mforreothunlln. T"«osopbomon!l interv-edfrom BurTw.aN lril. \htft had~ lo!tlelrnod'fiCt. One~ll'IMltwouldloO\"t"rbiQ:ertllan11 hu lie felt ltlat ~pt, moM)' bas restricted Pf'OPie to drW!ing beorr. IIOOI'""'.Mnotfdthatf~-tobedrtnkiftcmore ~l.qugrthan~ Wa~ felt Wt ~ bu~aniKr&~elntka~tl.luordliquor~but One rn.idrnt uaUtanr. I RA ) from ~tbernulli"lal.lltolmi.nd islhes.ame. She felt that thrrehH bftn an innu.. ID(OII!.munkatiarl bttw~ her and the:,.·~. A treshnut! fn~~n Smith Hall said lbat he bdie>·f'CI , _ peope dnnll ~beuthmhardliquorbut that he tftb good about 1M option. ~majol'n~Mm~U~ol!Mprople""'li!Uo!kedtofrltthatlhead­ ditianolliqlawlladnotaffectedtMat~ollhedonz\JIDa majorwa)' . Small trtndl aeem 10 arise In lhe More frshm&n "'ft"t Ji m Symmons, enjoying a warm blanket of leaves. Photo by Greg Sprenger. lnt~nle,.... drinkina and more f~\1)1 than before. Pfl)pl.e wt1o -.ldn't 110nnall)' 10 aut ,..ere I!Komin& in~ol~ed in drinkU. : andalthau&llitdidle~~tnlhe&apbetweoenlheRAandthf! WU!f,itdldmakeltllarckrloenfor'('l!oWrrulinp. TbHolaUtHmlordatelnwa)'Stolht!IOl'il.las.peoctof alcohol !-=~~·=· :_.r:::_w:~~~t":t:;:"lly s!l and drinll alone, but l'blscantTeatealotolprequreandmayl'ftllltinl)f(ll)lf!drinking who~'tnormall)'i!ldul&e-Thilcan.,tddofshappenon winp. II is not mtlllll 10 sugnc lhlll ,.-e do not q~ ""'llh lhr '!"' llk:o/lolpolieylnlhehallsonlythllt••tfetllherellrtpou!ble problema and lmpl;il:atlona that ma)' artie. Vl't feel that it illmportanllo remembn' Ute illfl~~t~~Ce that you may Mve on tht othen 11round )IOU, and the iN111enrt' tNt !My '*"'Staff POINTER have on you. ' 'llle~eolfrWndilftiii&IObea!lint~alp.tr1oliM drinkq rruleavfocmoM pl'OPie. lndeoed, it ha:lbeoftlt~INt lhet~ ·~t drinlttr' impl; it5 thatlhednnklll(l pn<tif'esolthe monnal drinllen an: Oetermlnfd b)' the lituationl in whidl they fll>d lhmuelvtL Ill athn' wonb. llkobo' nlft5UIIIp(Jotl il repnkd at& propert)'oltorialt'OftlUtiDibft'tbtflthepniJiftt)'ol indivi41-&JI." From 11n artidt. Akohol and Hea lth, New K,_·l<'d&e from thelie:r-ttatylll Health, Educ:atioft,lllld Welfarettt741 Norm follower reveals inner self To Ute editor, I wu lbocked and broken· hearted b)' Pmtue 's article last wedt lhat Dtnnis Jensen may dUc::ontlnue the cartoon, " Student Norm ." It had 1 nadleuteeraviqsfor Funn y f ace fe1 p . Goofy Crape ). One whole aftemoon 1 talked lO a &irl about drai npipes. J t venchan&eda redneck 'lviewsoniOcialism. Finallym)llifehadmeanins. Butlastweek'IPotater lore bdcwe 1ftU!c tbe-t:arl.oOn , I me a part. I 've a lreadysear· was a dispicablecharacter. l c h ed throuih other newsp.1per1 and map:tines lO dranlt heavily, looked at &Iris fortbdrbodielonlyanddidn 't find a cartoon lO model my liv•alhitaboutourtoeiety. life by but without success. There is little hope for me But tben "Student Norm " e&mealollcandputorder lnlO andotllerbonSef!iMdft'e)icts myUf•. lcu toutaUotlhe like me . So for my s.alte, Jensen,carT)'on. Unot, •bo stripe ooe by ooe and puled tbem o. my little bu.llet.in board. M I studied them, DtkriorsthtJ iy yoan, P'olound chances came OYer Nell Onlf.erll my Ufe. special .qnirieance !or me . A few yean aso. even ""'' OPEN THIS WINTER COLD TONGUE ON THE SQUAJIE *HOT STUFF* Texos Hota. con.., Cha *COlD STUFF* Co,..., Molts, SundJes Drop In And Visit Today! Ca ll Ul -3363 Pog~ 20 THE POINTER October 31, 1974 Saga out cold C1lded message enryday, but To the td ltar, We would like to thank J .D. Cl.luing for his wonderful !~~~l~~~a~or~= offerin& of (kt. 21, evminJ , ·hat the beD " humbo jumbo" meal . IC be enr tries that lsandwbttherornot lt'saafe poorexcuseforameala&aln. toeat. l Penonally ou r " FF" were he'd better watch out for the cold . We don 't know If tires on his Cadillac. Let us remind the readtts anybody else expe r ienced whatthatmealconsistedol ; cold "FF" but It wu odd ..Calif Bur&er. Foot Lonas. bectnate they were fresh-lht cook brought them out while Fish on Bun, FF," CNotonlydowerecelve this we were standl na the!'e. tr, u. OPINION CONT. POINTER Werealize thatit lsdiffiCtJII toservefoodtoRK:halan:e crowd. but Sap Is In the busiMSS! They could at least work on perfectin1 hot food. whetherittastesgoodornotis obvi0115ly trivial. QWte•lnce.rely, TWoofyourreJula r pa lrons; S.lly DutUr Debenb Sturdev an t . StaJve night to be held meal and ~· donates the C'OSl o1 prepartna that meal to the Chrillmas Telethon . by Bob Kerksleck Previous Starve Nights have met with some sue«s~ and it Considering the responsibility of Student is hopedthatthisyear'seffort F o o d C e n t e r 1 . Cable TV, dlil~l 6. light of the new merger bill, Governm ent In Sign"Up for Stan·e Night lJ 'The money raised by will be the most sue«SSful any constitutional change regarding the still 12kinJ place at the dinin& Starve niJhl Joel lO various one yet. By Jiving~ one mea l from legi slat ive bodies must be carefully worked room entrances of both cha r itable or ganizations centers .. The actual Starve chose n to receive the Sap . you are not only doing out. · Night 10.ill a«ur on Thursday, proceed~ from the telethon. yourself a favor . but someone ~ . 7-the evenina meal. The klta behind Starve else as well . The purpo1e of Starve _nl&ht is that you give~ one Don Weede-n ~" leuer. N'!Jht is to ralst money for In conjunction with SAGA the annual WWSP Oaristmu Foods, WWSP FM 90 lJ once Telethon. The telethon lJ ~f:~~ 3~p~s:!tin!ndSt~1:~ ~ b~ ~O:C~~ Leg islat ive bodies have dual respon si bilities . They must enact leg is lation while r epresenti ng their constituencies. Cha,nglng the present system In the asse mbly s~ as to represent colleges Instead of organizations could prove dlsasterous. Other uni vers ities which have tr ied tholf system have found that 11 does not work. On the other hand, our present system has ca tapulted our Student Government Into a position of state-wi de leadership. To enact legislation people are needed to do the work . Operating under the same gu idelines as the senate, relative to committee work and attendance, the assembly this yea r has been at least as responsible a body as the senate. The senate and the assembly must, out of necessity, represent as much of the ~tudent body as is possi ble ind at the same time have a large enough working body to do the committee work. The assembly easily exercles Its responsibility to the st udent body as It Is now. A change to elect an additional 20 members at large from the senatorial · districts would incorporat e the best of both proposals. Efforts to increase the representation of Stu dent Governm'ent are noteworthy . However. any plan to either completely change the assembly from what lt.ls now or to incorporate It Into the senate can only be termed a blatent power by those senators who wou ld support Such a move. 31 , 1974 October TH E POINTER 'Viewpoint's' viewpoint. erroneous To ute editor. Y.'hen the editor of a college newspaper devotes h is editorial power t-..'0 weeks in a row to the proposition that eight faculty members ought to · be fi~ . at lust a minimum ruponse Is due his arguments. Your editof'ials echo the administration c:Jalm that to retain eiaht tenured faculty members from 1111'0 depart· ments. othe r departments -..i thgreaterstudent demand must ne«ssarily be denied the texhina faculty they need . This si mply isn't so. The real r e lation s hip be)llo'ftfl fllildsforthiscollege and the studtnt credit hour t SCIII •targets ' has to be understood before one can The se targets we r e established in the past on a rather cuual basil and for quite olht>r purposes. The UW Central Administration Rrongly ur&ed lui spring alloted by the Point ad· jobs they fill. Thco a d · ministration foe- oth.er pur· ministration also includes poses lncludln,g their own positions for which the salaries. No taraet levels of un iversi t y has no use, achi~ement exist for ad· whether the occupant is mlnistraton. They are In compettnt or not. practice rated almost ex- :~~~~~=t~ udministra tion of UWSP have a mon\~ademlc obll&ation to you sti.XIents to use our funtbtopayteachlnaraculty , not ror rrills like the nod carpetinttw;Fine ArtaCenter or more administrative posts. ~~~:;~'f a'dni~~t=~ '?:. lastin_procur;at Point. eludes penons wbo do not and ~~~abt: o ~ ...~~ e ~or at"~ :!':"'•·~"~!'~~~ ";••.~l jud&elhelaun. n achina is the central function of UWSP and collectively. the teaching f:acuttybringin nearly all the funds which -..·e have to spend. whether from students or state appropriations . llollo·~·er , faculty are judged inadifferentwayfromolher cwts of operating UWSP. The money prote55 here is, in errect , to pay out of total funds only enough faculty to teach the total enrolled (or predicted I SCII . The nwnber of faculty needed in eiiich department Is deckled on the basis of II$ pndicted SCH tolal divided by the taraet number of SCH !Of' udt member. A wa rm 'fall' day makes our Stevens Point campus, temporarily, a university without walls . Photo by Roger W. Barr. ON NOVEMBER 5TH VOTE FOR AND SUPPORT YOUR PRESENT COUNTY CLERK , r...,- Dqouryc-""'a..l 2Tcn. - CounryOalr. •• 1M •lfflirl of Porwgr \Vi~.-,,., eo.,.,,,. orr • ltonal onrd elfiQnl IHuil. REGINA B. HILGER INDEPENDENT CANDIDATE Citi:r.en's Endorsina. Real na B. Hllae r, independent candidate. for Re-tiection for Portage County C'Sa1i: Mr. • Mn. Henry Schullst-Town of Sharon : : :,:;e~~"'.le~~ef:~~~~ Gilkay ~. Vit~CU~t Diel5cbe·ll32 Gilby St ..Qinductor, Soo Une ~~~ .. Mrs. Ernest Brulke-~ Division SL retired . SL Pt. ~1 p,f!~=~~mby-t"elired KrembiFurnitureCo. 472 ~b-.~~ wachowla k·:bUII C1ark St. -housewife Poi t n Leonard Yulp·701 Franklin Sl ..Qnol.ldated. St. ~· • Mrs. John Wayer.USO Jankk C'rrde· ~~ia~O:~;!:C:ve.·Montgomery Ward Mr.-11 Mrs . .Urold Krubucli·R. I, AmherSt. Retired. Soo- ~~ &Ois~~~mes ~ Mrs. Marlin E . Oa rk·:JOII.Center Sl.·UW Athletic wson·Route S. Plover . Mr . 1: Mrs. Jo&eph Tylka·1l2: Sheri!Wl Ave ..Consobdtted, ~;~ ~:S. Merrill West-Pieaunt Ddve, Plover Mr. & Mrs. Lcran Vol.land·Princlple, Roosevelt SchoeN, Plover,W11. Mr. & Mn. Raymond Kindn&e--Principle, St.Pt. Area SeniorH.S. Mr . 1: Mrs. Hatold Mdlne-Almond a•ne:u.man & former County Board Chairma n Mr. 6:Mn. lvan Nledlina·EmploymentManqer, Dd Monte Plover, W'11. Mr. & Mn. John Bernd·ProfC'SIOI', U.W. ~erw Point. Mr. & Mrs. James Schli«·2217 Eul Ave. Consolidated, St . Point Div. Mr. Allan Ouistlanson-37 Bluebird Dr., Plover , American Potalo, Plover M5. Betty Chrl5tianson·37 Bluebird Dr .. PloverRegistered Nurie, St. Michael 's Ho&pital Mr. & Mn . Gordon 9llpman·2S3&PeckSt. Prof. uw Stevens Poin t Mr. 6 Mrs. CHild &-eitenbadt-2917 Algoma St.fttired Soo-L.ine R.R. Mr Peer Buck·Rdired Colonel U.S. Army & Mrs. Donald Wysocki-649 Washin&lon Ave .• Don's O..tom Service Mr. & Mn. Raymond su-paniak· l80 t Gil kaY. St. W«:r.alla's Publishina Mrs. F1orence Penderaut-retlred , 24%5 Praia St . Mr . 6 Mrs. Frank Okray-Town of Cl.rson, Taver n Operator Mr: ·-22 THE POINTER Alpha Phi Omega celebrates anniversary Lamda Siam• chapter of Alpha Phi Omega IAPO), National Sentke Fraternity, celebrated Its twentieth Anniversary, Homecomin& weekend. -..... Durin& the WHk 'l IC· tiviliH, APO members wtf'e referees for the coed football ~tames . An Alumni Bull Session, Beer and Brat supper was held 11 Bukolt park Frid,y night October 31, 1974 Women S svyimming does exist 1 Faculty chosen for semester abroad At the Oct. 22 me-eUng or the !C~1ao'~i~~~~er:~~~ Dtlores,wtllbe~gas•n accompanyina Oct. D, theA W8J a meet at For many people, the OsllkDBh. They l!fld the aeuon lJWSP womm'l swim team tills wedtend with two home may be non-a:lstent.But they meets. hlive been around and are At 1:30 p.m ., Nov. I, they here now. areholtin1Stout,hereatthe Opu Jetwr, wil' also be goh~& on the iemestn- abroad. His wife, fac: ully aul!'tant counselor , their Ever al~ AU(I. 21, they seventtomyeuold501l,Ricld, will be going u a college have beal praclldn1, and frtshman and · knnifer, their 'Miey are Roger L Wood five-year -old daughter, will C{)fflplete the family group. their season with a il-24 r~ the Education ~art ment and Wtlliam P. Kelley, The group is tet~lativdy defeat of River Falla. In theirCirsthomemeetof Communications Depart- !;(:heduled to leave In early January for its semester the season , they were ment . A . part ol Wood's family abroad iri Londocl, England. narrowly defeated. by one ol the better tearils in the conlermce, u Eau C.lre won, &1-59. Sin« lhen, they ~=-~~~-N=t!~~ members for the group were '"""""""· =:v~~hec:"J:"~:d Come see~ new ~~rall~new aurg8r Chef~ • there Is another meet here with UW Parltslde. The follow ing weekend, Nov . 1 and 9, is the state meet at Stout . · · This weektnd will be your Jut c hance to see the womtfl 's swim team of 1974. 11\ere are two meets thia have~ beaten by Madison wed!. end, so come to either or and taken RC'Dnd pace In a both. but not neither. triangular. This week Is their last week of dual competlon. 'l'uelday, Karen Slat~ry R011dl u~ Carnac responds Elfendl, To the Infidel EKhe: May a Neve!' ih my many travels holy wale!' buffalo leave a to the Wn t have my mystical sacred relic on y01.r Sealyand omniscient powt't"' been · Posture·Pedlc ! . • 10 dishon<rel;l . I , of coune, To the heretic Preston : am •~king ol the lelipt~ May )'OW' only sislet' be pea~ by the skeptics ~he bef r iended by the enti r e !!~J~= 2~ Prnton ;.,:kt:~~Y!!t~~ Today, from CU..bZanc:a to In cooclusion, a solemn Kabul and cairo to Kara chi, wa rn ing . S hould t hi s thla venomous a tt ack Is aacrilege C11nllnue, walt and known as "Esche's Anti· see what my friendl In the Arabian Epistle." East do to the gas prices in My response to th en Portage County ! ! "As.nlaam 'alaikum ! pagans. who surely must be frorn Tel Aviv is U\la : Ca r11ac:, Tille Maplficeat QJ, oops ... CwrecUoa: 1be name ol (i lea Pelo, the WTiter ol the letter " Viewpoint adds to educationa l ' decay", was de~ed In last week's Issue. erroneously reported in the s tory of Homecoming festivities that Sigma Pi Eptilon fratern i t y took second place In the games. Rather, it was Sigma Pi that Cwreclkln : ln the October 2.4 look second place In the issue of the Poi nter, it was llomKOmin&la~es . !}) r Tloon'loioonoto•III ....... CW. 6 17 DIVISION _._, ... -.. -·-·-...... -·----·-...- October 3 1, 1974 The Student Norm Stevens Pond THE POINTER > Page 23 by Tourus S. Pc~ 2.( October 31, 197.( THE POINTER tovt Is the maglcl3n, the enthanter ••• With it. earth II he1ven :and we are loeb· tt. G. Inaenol l NOVEMBER 1974 OCfOBER S~DA Y ~ l\IONDAY nJESDAY - n · • ,,,._...., '"" ....,,, , _. ••1- ,_,..,,,. •nu- . w ,...u.... -ru,. ,...,.. -tt ,...,.,_..H......... •r a. ... ~-. o uou oop oMUI-1 WEDNF..SDAY "'II ldo , _ ::~.:-~:!!:.: ~!'~: II - ntiDAY S:\ 1'UimAY ...... .., !!::.~·:.....,. I• 1M !.:,...::,~: oa. - TIIURSDAY ~..~, "".. oo •ru .... u_,_.,_iat, . ..... (DC) ""'C.fl-. -~ llhU.II, .. u,... c~l······· · ·· :..'-"w.-... ,,,,._.,, ":::t:=:"· ~-Aiploo -~~- 3..- ~ :";::-:=-Qooofl ot , .. U JO.(ca-tiQ - - .._ I Ut• ,.._ !lOCI ~~."':'; I' "'-"'"'- IVCI _ . , , , , . , .. -·--'. . . ·- -l(l lo =-:-;.~ .. ·-:=..-.- -.. --···-'-"""" ...«:) (~ UCI .,. c-11..-.., .......... , _ , ..... .. , ..u.....u. .._ ~ kll n . .... ,, ... ..... . " ·· ...... ......- Aftt.<o', IOJ·•· 011) GoUC.If-. Jl.o..r·-· .. • • .. u ,. o .(CIIo«) (Ill:)·· -.t... • r.. u, ... "''· .. . .... ,_ .. - · -.......... kiO I )tl>- t o:IOJ. o .(!ll) •"o,:.;:.:- - C.UI'\IIOOU\II.IO' IUY. n": . ~~- .::..::.:: ,,., s.-u-. - ... _, .., .............. , •.•. 1111:1 uoac:.tJI ••·•· .... ,,,_,• ........ u .. IJou.,loollu . ) • • • • • • • • • • • . ..... ..... .,.lloto,..O"f _,...,, .... C . f f - . 4, •• • 1111:1 , ..u, ..... . ••.•. I_, l'lol lootol.oooW o c...t . ' ' •·• · ·' • ·• ·ICCI ,._,, E:·:?:~~··· (CorU·• a• l .\a-1 ' - · ' - · · ·