advertisement
\-
Democrats
come out on top
•
Douglas LaFollette COl
was elecled Secretary Or
Stale with a nearly two toone
mUJin ol votes.
Qarles Smith ( 0) wu
reelectftiStateTTeasi.D'et. He
won over EO per«nt of the
WI<.
The po&ilion ol Attorney
JUop.lbUcan
Gener~l, lheonly
holdover in lhe state house
during lhe nnl Lutey term,
fell to 8roniOn LIIFoUette
IDI, who won with about 60
per«nto(thevote.
Oemocrata also aalned
control oftheStateSenate for
therirstUme ln82yeanand
increased their margin ol
control. In the auembly.
In Porta1 e County ,
Baldis CD) upset Republican , Assemblyman Leonard
Incumbent Vernon 'Ibomp- Groshek , the incumbent
Democrat, won with a lowft'
two to one rnugin.
margin th.an was upedtd as
Harold Froehlich the challenger Pam Anderson
Rtpublkanincumbent in the 1R ir~vedabout45~t
dghthdlstrlct, la.t to~ther' ofthevote.
Robert Robert CDmdl CD).
In the only Portage County
Comdl won a Imoat Ill per«nl sui raa, Raymond Dllher
ol the vote ln lhat district.
CDI beat lncumbent County
The trend continued Oerll Retina Hllgn- by a
In lhe lhirddiltr'kt, Alv1n
ton , with approximately a
~c'!:c;W:,~ r:Wthes!:~':!~ Wi::~~ :O.~=~~~t
ont" 40 tuta in the
House.
•
Governor Pltriek Lucey.
the incumbent Democrat. and
his runnfn.& U . Governor
Martin Scllrieber won wllh
about 60 per«nt of the vote.
and
•
afle'Dishn'btatbe!'by41
votes in the Dtmouatie
primary in StpttmbH.
Democnll retained control
ola\loltheothtrpositionsln
Porta1e Count y without
oppoaition.
~-
U!f'PPOI NTE-R
SI'RIES VII, VOL 18
pogo
UW-Stevens Point, Thursday, November 7, 1974
On the inside ·
2- Proposals approved for new auditorium.
3- uWSP moy hke lawyer.
•
NO. II
page
9- Loser installed for for UWSP
13- Oil spills decline.
4- $8,000 goal for UWSP Telethon
14- Proposed man mode lake to be built.
6- Food- the big difference between two cultures.
16- Dorms eliminated early.
8-.Truc coming soon.
19- UWSP hosts Stole High School Debate
Page 2
THE POINTER
NO'Iember 7, 1974
Regents PPD committee .approves proposals ·
'lbe \IWSP has passed the
first of ~eVeral tqh hurdles
to win approval for the
construction ol a new $2.4
million adml n l1t r atlon
buildifll, complete wilh a liOO•at auditofium, to replace
the ~pidly deteriontina O&d
Main.
The UW Boan1 ol fte&mll'
Phy1ical Planal na and
Development ·commlllee
IPPDI voted a pproval ol the
JWopoul 'l\lelday, Oct. 29, in
r.IJidisoa and also aave an
okay fora request to add
anothu four ttorin atop lhe
Ve-5 t y Albef'lsonJ..eaminl
(;eater ILRCI at a
c:.t ol a ruimatdy D.l
million.
'lbe lteml Wfft put of a
197:5-n bienn ium pacltaae
eaJiina for ''major projecll"
on the UW campuses In
Madison, Milwaukee, Stout,
Pa r ktlde, Eau Claire ,
Olhltodl and Stevens Point.
Tea otbrr propo&als for
&event Point, aU rtmodelini
~
~:e ina;:~•:!!ft ;~~~~t:na
f!~oeyu; ·~~::,~ojedl"
Tbe next hurdle 1U o( the
propoull mUll f1ce wW be a
mtttinc o1 the full board o1
rtget:!ll. After that the: ilftnl
10 to the: State 8uUdiq
CommW.ion and tbta the
J,taislatureand~.
Ouuullor Lff S. Dreyfill
saidhebrlit\'Hthesltddiq
will berou&h In getting final
okayafoc-anynew buildlnaln
the system sim ply because
there'• lntemt amoa& some
reaent1 to 1upport only
Dreyfus also ~trd that
lftheaddlllon\snot:approl•rd
for the LRC. it 'llill be in a
IeVere space plnrh within
th ree years . The current
llr\ICture has. for example.
10.000square fttt compared
dilemma. : to remodtl Old
~IJIIn for continued use u a n
ad mini stra ti on building
would coat about S:S miUIOII ,
he r e ported . which II
unreuonable to Impose upon
amalln- campuses at Ri\·nFalls and PI:IUevillt ~\·e
llbrarltt alm05t as lartee Ill
the one here.
The current LKC dttlg.n
capacity ol the stacks area il
u much IJIIH u is Dttded
for admlllistrative ofrtce~ .
Lut year, the State
Bulldina Comm lulon
aDocattd fundJI to raze Old
Jo1ain and to convn-1 Dr:luU
ResldtMe Hall Into an ad·
ministralion buildina , but
volumtt 011 the *I\"H.
Amon& the "mino r "
projectnppnn·edforStevens
Pointlnl%l2.000propculto
rennovateand redecorate the
older ltt'lions of the
Unh·enity Center (UCJ. This
•-ouki not be fiu~ by tax
anarboretumOIIthenorthun prftautlon, COllin& m JOO
part of campus, cosllng a nd lnatalling l utomatrd
$7J ,OOO: in•talll n& more bleacheB in the Fieldhousr
outside ll&hll as a safety c01t1na U2,400.
'
~~a~ude prevalll, ~~~~~~ c~,:~~'i'J; :~
~~:~~:=-~It =!::"~~n~·~r:::-
e'=
~=:~t~;~!;ld~~o,J,~: ti!': :·~v;"~:ty ~re~12~
=J'~:::.!.c~ ~~~:!:.
now m a kes the hall
u nuailable . La s~ _year,
Or:lull had been utiliud In
acco moda lln& persona at·
tendln& convutlon1 on
cam pUi andalaouabalfway
boule for offenders.
The cOlt ol remodelinc
would have a~cbed the
throuah ~elfThe minor projecll funded
by the state would be :
remodeling parll of the F'ine
Ar ll Center at a c011olsbciut
tt30,000: developlq a fluid
mechanlu and hydraulics
laboratory in the Science
Buildine to lft'Ve the ""'~
tcitnce program . costln&
=~u~~mt
;.;:~'h!:.:!r,;e"~.~~
~u:.~=~ '::! ~:.~~1g:C":
won
laking 60 percent of the vote. Photo by
Roger W Borr.
Proxmire to speak here•
ol aa
Tbe new 1dminiltratlon
The U.S. Senator WilliarR Artl Center off ParucebuUdina currenUy is tqh In
A newbuikli,.wouldtlthtr compre hensi ve landuape
priority amq aU of tbe be on the prnent site of Old project , lnc ludin1 con - Proxmire tD·Wll.l will an- Slreet . LotZ.nextlotheUCI•
swer que1IIOnl from the open a ll of the time for
major projectl, atandi.IIJ 11
number 1b: amona ZJ Items.
public ln a one-hour program ri~~m'::!kl~ft· be spcndina
~~':t :f..e 1 J~.Ftiday, approxim1tdy lhrMIMM•In
Arc!a mldtnll will join Sleven• Point F'Tiday, btl·
students in qu iuln& the :e"u:':f;~~~tond·
~C:
a: ~as:~:. ==:rnd·:~J!!:t:z
Financial aid hearings
to be held in Madison
~e;:~~ru~n ~~~mPr:r~~;
Unh·ersity Center I UC I.
He wW have a noon l~b
with local Dtmocrall In tht
af~~lv!it! 11 flit f~c~ ~~~r~ 0!~:uc~!~:
tilll\llueverallotatoprovlde fad lltltl lnclvdlnJ the
011 Noomnber IS and II
the
SI:\ICknt Mvilor)' Oxnmlttee
ol tbe
Scbolanlblp
Service <a panel or 1tudent1
from ac r011 t he country
concerned with i tudent
Onanclalald) will conduct a
~n-ln ol publk bearifta• an
Onandal ald.
eoueae
These hearinas will be hdd
in the 1tate ca pitol In
Maddon . 1'be t._ days or
hearinp wiD.IImlr'liq to.
tpo ltesman for the Committ~ . "HpDM to the publlc
problem~ wbk:b ltudenta In
the llate ol Witcon~ln ha"e
experieaud Ia lea rn i DI
- ~~~~~n~~~~
The St u dent Ad v l• ory
f:i'::!~
r::::
:fud=
at tendiaa both ~ic and
pr ivate coll ealate and
vocational !Mtlllllioftl.
1be Committee intend~ to
make 1 com plete public
~of fir• baad lludeDt
~~~~W"==
::~~~~~f~0:m:!.';: ~1~~4t~al~
kill are W, D-1, 0 . R and z one or the world's lar&tst
•ilkh are ~outed acrou the
stre.t from the Science
Buildirc on Reserve Street,
adjacent Steiner Ua\1 on
Arts Center off Porfage
Jasen wtUdl hu bttn In·
llalll!!i ln the buement of the
Science Hall. lle11 alto have
a brief new1 conference
before the public procram.
_
November 7, 1974
THE POI NTER
Page 3
Parts of
Student ·Government
constitution approval
•
by O..J E4•-ulbe•
StudentSeftatorsappnwed
pc:.-tiOftS ol the nt'W propc»ed
Student Covr rnmmt Con ·
s tltution at the Nov . 3
m«-tin&.
The rint ankle ol the
rev lnd constitution which
chanaes the name from
St..11dent Lealslature of
WIJc:easin Slate Univtnlty•
Ste\·ens Poiat to Stud eot
Covemi'MM ol UWSP was
un.anlmaualy approved.
A a«lion whkb detennlna
the powers , duties and
reprnentath"f'l ol the Senate
wu al10 approved 12-4Much oppolition wulbown
by Senate and Asserilbly
==~
..,...,:mt!nt;~:
.......
The ori&lnal propouJ ""s
to allow only those
cq:anlzatlons which receive
SSOO yurty fundin& into the
AIHmbly , alon& with 20
members elected proportionately from the four
.........
A
•
rwwer
pnlpOia] would
allow au orpniutions that
wisbtos.endamernbertobe
elicible for an Auemblywat.
The bylaws woWd rnaQ It
necesaa ry for tbeae
orpniutiOftS to be .eated by
the third·~ ol the )'fl r ,
sa i d Tom " Wo jo "
Wojclec:~ki. chlinnan ol
the Constitution Revision
Commitlft.
" We should en~m&ln the
idea of di s bandlna the
..........
~mbly ,"saids.matorKurt
~t.ationlhouktbe
bumontbestudentdec:tive
prO«SS , 110t sptdal Interet
IJ"oup ~tation , said
..........
We need thi. assembly
brcause it rtptHentaalarge
numbr:rol~andit
provldn a check and bala~
system for Student Goftm.
men! , said Bob KerllsJeck,
Yisltortolhe mee~ .
The motion for approval on
the Allembly !'n'blon was
tablc:d until thenex t meetin&.
Sunday, Nov. 40.
The duties of the Rules
Committee of Studeat
Government were a lso
pusorolfdby Wojo .
' "The Rukl CornnUtt« is
sort ol 1M SUpmne: Court of
this Co nstitu t ion ," uld
Ptftldtnt Lyle Updike ..
The propoMd CONIIIutlon
also has revised the t11 me of
the Finance Alloc:atiaas
Com mlttu to Studen t
Di~t« _PrGJram • Budget
""!:
andlbe
~~~c!b..
11 the Student Government
~::':JSPBA~
the adminittralions Plan·
nlfll, Prtsram, Bucilet aod
Analysis Committee CPB·
BACI, IIIidSt\Kient Controller
Bob Badr.ln~tJ •
The next mettlnc of the
Senate will be 7 p.m ., Sunday,
New. to, in the Wlsc:onsio
Room .
Possibility being investigateq UWSP may hire lawyer
by ,\IP..•IIk
Student Government is
uamiNn& !be pcuibi.lity ol
hirUIC a lawyer ·wbo woukt bl
available to studenll and
perhap1fac:uHy and staff at
UWSP.
" Hlllvin& lepl CC~UnHiin&
available Is a &ood way to
avoid a kit ol baales," uld
Barb St i efvater , v i ce ·
pres i dent of Student
UW Olhko6b t UWOI is the
""""""""'·
only state unlvu-sity which
offenthetervice,Siiefv ater
said.
The UWO fint ~ an
attorney on campus four
yean aao. accon:tin& to Slew
Bal..lanl ol the uwo SWdent
Covemmeat, and the ckmand
for the c:ounselin1 hu lncrealc:dsinc:e.
Undlord-tenant problems
have resulted m the m01t UM
o1 the wrvlc:e, he said.
•
~~ ~~: ·:w;e~n~t f~~
pouii>M to bite someone for
lepl c:out"Hiin& and lhll the
s.emc:e ls DHded by studenta
more 1nd more," Stiefvater
said.
Mane)' d the rnwt lm·
porta at iuue. she said, wt\Kb
resulta lo aoother ma}or
problem.fiDdlnJ a lawyer
who wiD attepe low ~yment.
1n addltloo to blwyer fen.
money wW be needed for a
»«retary and offtc:e space,
BdOH Ftbnw-y or Mard'l
It should be determined how
she said."
the next," Ballard lalcl,
~w! ;:rof~t.~
m~~y '!';~e ~!bl~ !':1~S:,~a=' ~e 1 se~
uid, briftlin& a a«ond at·
taltln& about nHdln&
11
16.000," said Stiefvater.
' "The Attorney General's
Offkctwokayc:dtheuseota
lawyer paid by Klf'el.lted.
feesu iollC a tbela..,.er
-
•
•
UWSt' bad a law)'ff on
campus In IIGt-71 when Mary
Lou
Robln~M
wu paid for
lrpl counselin& by student
foundation funds .
UWO lal t l ated the i r
prop-arainlhesprinaoftm
with one attarne)l from
Olhlwlh c:omlnt on campus
one nil,hl a week for two
houn , Ballard 1.1\d.
" We were able to pay \Um
SJ,OOOthefintyearancl$2,000
lelttnonstudentsbehalfancl
limitedcourtappe:aranc:a,he
..\d.
tornry from Milwaukee on
Barlow has not been paid
campua one nl&ht a Wftt for foe- bis IUYicft since he took
twohc:JI.n.
over the pro1nm alo ne,
In the lllmmer oll972 the Ballard said.
Stiefvater and fellow
nm attorney left end the
SetOCid , Bun Barlow, in· student aovenvnent mem·
a"eued his time on eampus ben Bob Shavet", Bob Bad·
1o four houn GM oigbt a :rinsti and Kathy Johnson
risitedtheUWOc:ampuslast
·~.uic:IS.llard.
Bulow c:un-eoUy spends 20 week tod~ 'lrith Ballard
perc:ent o1 hil time at UWO, and other UWO Student
Ballud uld, whkh is one full Govemment members, the
day. Ills time iJ dlvkkd hurd l e In brln&inl a
betWHn counselina:, Wf"ilinl lawyer on campus.
lso"tpaidlowortonac:asein
whic:b the s tate ll being
tued," she said. SrJreiated
fees are the non-academic
portion of student tuitlon.
A comb'lnatlon of
searqated. fees and a user
fee perhapa c:omparabk to
UWO's per cue rille ~a · ­
pouible way to r~ the
wr-ric:e, SUdvater uid.
SCudeot Coverrunent has a
reserve budaet w'hh:b
byTen-eUBner
who ot herwise would not
Stiefvater uld could also
"A one shot deal ," uld know uc h other, " said
pouibly be uted to pay for Nancy Halla, a st ud e nt Shively.
aec.relartalandofflcecosllat mana1er a t the Unlvenlty
"The rldeboards," con·
nrstlfstudenllcould pay for Ce nt e r IUC I Information tinue d Shive ly , "Is a
the attorney's Lime spent Desk. " Ridrboardl are for nationwide project of all
weetenda aNd don't chapttn ot APO. He said It
I"HUtddn&.
nic:aurtly hive to be on a wa.sadopted In Steve.-. Point
Student
Coveromtt~t 's rrsWrbuil."
in ttcJ by Ken Flood, who Is
l:luli.neu Affalr11 Comntitlft
now a teac:her iD Appleton
will be responsible for
" Ridtboards enable the and John Alterburl who is
rHeardlin&lhe needs ol this student, J)llrtkularty frfth· assoc:latedi rec:torforUncoln
cam pus and the poaslble men, to find people pinl to Insurance.
The board Is supplied with
methods ot mml,. these the same ara." said Mart
needs, said SOtivater.
Shively, president ol Alpha sped&~ urds for mnnaes.
Alsoonutbisinlormatioo Pbi ()rMp, IAPO I. Tbe APO Tbe urd has room to Indicate
II lathered , recom · is tbe nat ion\ service whethft"ornotarideora
mendations will be for· fraternity and orpniutioo rider Is ouded , the
mulaledandpre:wntecltothe
dtsllnatlon, thetlme,daleol
whole student IOVft"DDDent, =:~~~intains
..... ld.
" It .Uows people to meet,
Rideboards not only offer rides
=~ ~ua!e.e;h::
urdl are paid for by the
fraternity . " We pu rchan
J.OOOc:anll peryrar ,"sald
9tivcly.
Shively uid thlt the cards
are sent to the Newman
Ce nter where they are
printed up. He said that
:!;ra~a~~:~U:~
hWes in all the cardl before
they ere dialributc:d.
The three ridebolrds are
located In pos itions on
campus accena bl e by
students. One Is located In lbe
University Center IUC) ,
dowo the hall from the
Gridiron. '1111 other two are
k:lcatfd Ia the Allen and
DtBol Centers •
November 7, 1974
THE POINTER
Page •
A UWSP Love Story?
by .lolut R. Prnlue
~~~~~inc-
discovery that two people
I'm really
• With that prGnOI.Ineflnent,
hue, similar
Does it happen lhat way in not altiJ&ether
!!w!~.,u!~ ~~~ ~!ir~!
::,.tw:~~~.:=
do ott en
:f!,:J'!,'d.ebou~=~ Pf~Lmepr1!blmt~art'
studmt marrb&e
:,tw!:"::; oenocJW!~
dJfftm~t
I rom
=~~~::~ac;~~
=~or ism•=l~~~e~~ ~~'f.':~~~~~- ~~~~
~~ave
c hildren ." sbe
~~b~~nt~ic:,:·~
Mrs. Rcelt is a mother and student1111rent sa.ld..
Hollywood
portrayal, m:wdl, tMre are over I,XlO an 1ttractive apartment, but
e m anat1 n1
lrom
the problem
student and is also employed University Day C.re Center.
~~~~nsurance
~or m ~ rrl ed
JmaginaUon ol Erich Sqal, campus. Obvi-.ly,notevery students II randing a Uv1ble
andwltbRyanO'Ne-,JandAIJ ~le in lhis ' group lhare apartmentatarenttheyun
MuG raw . maUna . the rommon lite:.tyles, bul 'they arrord," uJd Hope ReeU of
1
in data =~':!~~~a:~~~~~
Mrs. Reetz, soon expecting somew here . else . "Tht
second child is not now un\venlty facility isn't justa
~~~~~~i··: ti~~ ::.'7ru~~ti~~.~:a!:d~
when both ahe and her
husband 'll't're enrolled. "II
made it easier lo study and
besides I wouldn't fee l
~!~~- . ~=~·Ui~.Uit
I
That attitude Is apparently
not unusual. Another e«~ple .
RlchardandMaryMartlnson
ha1·e found a way that they
· b61 h can be full ·time studenll
andparenllllattheumelime.
Thrir life II not without
sattifict however.
Ri cha rd, In addit ion to
pursuinaan undervaduate
drarte, must wort. 25 hours a
v.'t'dtasacustodianinthe
JunciionCitykhoolsystem .
··~wi thDkk'sveterans
benefit. we al't' able to mate
ends meet." ul d Mrs .
Martinson.
Mn . Mar tinson also in·
dkatcod that the existence ol
the University Day Care
Cenkrli another factor that
ena bles both her and her
~nd to atlend daSRS.
They have a thrte · year old
IOI_I.Ilanny.
Mar ried s tudenta have also
been hlt especially t!.rd by
inrlallon . "We orten find
ourselves with a pile or un-
:di!~:!~~~l~~~
pay.'' uidonestudent. Other
ma rr ied s tud enta l ace
simlliar·dllemmu. '" We had
to disconrftt our tdtphont
and cut down on other n ·
pensn untU I cradua ~e ,'"
an~atudent nid .
Despite all the probtrms
associated wllh murlf.d
student lite, can It be donr
and ts it worth the dfort?
to~~·
::h ::e.~
thoN questions, but lor what
it. worth, no one who wu
interviewed sa i d the y
planned to leave school
:::b':, it wun't worth tht
Married student life may
not be exactly llk'e the
movies, but apparently It
l$n'tallbld elthtr.
Richard and Mary Martinson
that one
'of the more trying tasks of being married
students Is convincing Danny to smile for a
photographer. Photo by Rick Clgel.
GOP campus
coordinator named
~--,
IJII~Il. I
errc -...
d
m~nt.er
ors• ::::-::'·
J1
,....._ .. ,
• 1'\CJ
.... _._ .....,.._
i
.
:'J::!~ ~u~~~ ~m:.: :..:;,~~~~~~e!~~e~~il-ti~; tha~he~r~i:~
romantic , enviable and but In reality at ~ example.
Point, WISCOnSin'!
" Four aln&le students can
Idyllic.
·
Unfortwlllttiy, lhlt wu a
Accordin& to university p:101 thrir rnources 1nd find
the married students on this
h e St ud ent W1ve s
TheMUUf\IOnl, t~lteetza
" The hous m& and several othtt- COUpkos
~oclahon
"Reach out and Touch"
t}
•
20 profs
to be retained
Primarily because of a of24 have resigned frOm the
higher than expected fall faculty .
en r o llm e nt , UWSP is
ThSf..:~ayoffs -.yere an·
resdndlng or deferring nouncCd either last sprina or
·year before and were lo
~Y~~~ ~~~or;~~~!:':~ the
take efftc t at the end or the
v.·hosepositions~retobe 197~-75 term next May. A
· eliminattd.
special approprlalion from
Olanceltor Lte S. Dreyfus UW Central Administratioa
said Monday, Nov. o1 he is in Madison made it possible
"personally relieo.·ed " that to reLDinanextra yea r mOI!It
most of the positions are of the professors who were
bting saved. He said he Informed of a layoff In 19'73.
mailed letters. last week to Now many of the people in
individ11als eoncM'!1h'f& thei r this categoey are part of the
new employm~t sta tus.
group bendi!Una lrom the
The univenity, he said, is action to rescind.
lftcinding 13 or UM! layoff
Meanwhil e,
elah t
notices and deferring four professors who had received
others f o r one ye;u . the layoff notices bave been
in the process of appealing
7;:~1mu~ts c:~,r~ind~n~- the decision of the UWSP
mlnist:rationinM.ad~will
administration.
determine wbttber the
ddernb can be rescinded,
'nleir causes were boosted
•
he added.
l ast
~partments losing one
position each are fortign
language, history, geography
!and the school of edu<:a t1on.
said Ortyhl5. The person who
filled the ed~.~Catlon usignment now is e mplo~ off
campus but has not offlcialy
resigned from the uni,.enity
faculty .
Me mbers of the four
deputmental and school
Academic Fact Finding
Committee. comprised or
UWSP faculty members in
a«ordance with gul~lines
tslablished for s~ h bodies by
the Board of Reg~nts , con
eluded that none of th~
tenu r~d professo rs her~
should fose their jobs.
Dreyfus said he is not ac·
ceptingthatdecisionandasa
result the case automatically
month
when
Ne lson Hall . UWS P's secon d oldest
building, has seen many things happen.
Nelson Hall has Wc;Jtched
Point grow
an
byShe lley H~u
The front porch slab has
cracked and settled on the
cam p us' second oldest
buildina. Nelson Hall.
Nelson Hall, built in 1915 11
a women's dormitory, was
the fi~t building of its kind
funded by the Bosrd of
Regents for what was the
Wisconsin No r mal School
System. II was named after
fd~~t~;~in~~heinvp~~o~~ ~~~ol a~ ~~atdej;c ::~~~ ~~~d N:~~~e~~~n~
""hose }obs would be la\'ed
permanently or temporarily
and whose would be ter·
minated.
In addition, three persons
in the original layoff catqory
established by the president
of the Board of Regents to be
compr ised of three resents
and two mem~n of the
academic a ffairs staff of UW
Central Administration.
From Student
Stat~ SUpreme Court.
The n~w women's dor·
mi tory opened its amu to Its
first occupants in September
of 1916. The dormitory was
complete with a fireplaee
lounge and a food service.
Dorm lire consisted of a
10;30 p.m. curfew, a formal
danceoneea year, mother·
Government
~.'!'~~~=~='~~
Presently a student pays2S
The major obStacles of this body as the guest
honor.
of
percent instructional COlt In
tuition fees . 75 pereent in·
stn.w:Uonal cost Is J)llid by lbt
state.
The proposa.l that tuition be
changed from bl-level Uresti·
junior
men-50phomor e,
senlorl to the same for all
underlrloduates and pouibly
lO nothing is what we consider
feasi ble for !be coming years.
Thersnt year tuition would
be froze!~ at wbat It is DO'tl' ,
not Including any otbe' fees .
For 197•77 the coct would be
divided In half and aU un·
dergraduatea would pay
awoximall:ly 1238.
'Ibe faculty is asking for
StOOmWkln for the next two
yeara in pay increas~ .
Students would be J>llyin&I2S
mWioa of this.·Of the 111,000
fulllime students in the
univeralty system, each
•
;r~~:!at~fy Ps~~n:on~~;
morelfthlspropoaalcloesn't
become implemented.
'Jbe fmhml'fl ol UU year
would be paying R8l u a
aop ho more and san as
j.lnion. 1bls doesn't Include
dasslried s.alarkl. intteued
innauon and nell' prG&rama.
1becoctwouldbel.boutt400
!llhellitiooreductJoo-wd
proposal a~ GovtrnOr Lucey
'A'tlo feel s that the studetlta
can afford an Increase in
their tuition. Many of the
alate leaislators a r e un·
dedded and do not think the
tuition will be aigniflcantly
increased .
Parenta of students are the
major tu payers. U this
propoe.al dosn't ao thfoulh
they will be contributing
mor-e to the atudenta for
tullioa alone. There will be 1
greater possiblllly that
students would not be able to
attend school because of the
significant increase.
Students wi ll be aaked to
PIIY approximalriy ssoo per
yearmoreforeachyearthey
atttfld. F'inancialaidswillnot
be able to handle such an
increase In demand for all
students. This will be a
burden especially for the
students who can't receive
financial aids.
Letter writing to your
senaton or aasemblymen to
show that you wanl them to
JUpporl thil propoul will
belp. Inform yow- pareats of
wtlll will happen to enlist
!Mirhdp alao .
For twoyearsthewomenof
Stevens Point Normal School.
lived In Nelson Hall. But
shortlyaflerthebeginningol
1he 1911 school term the
~idents were infonned that
they were to be moved out, A
training program f o r
membenoftbeannedforces
was to be held on campus.
Tbia training program
luted until Januaey of 1919
when the women got their
dorm back. Dorm life for the
women lt'U uninter rupt ed
until the depression.
1960. Durin& this time !be
women decorated their
dormitory and observed
holidays in the proper
fashion .
In 1959 the food service
· from Nelson Hall wu moved
to the University Center
<trCI .
In Sept . 1960, men moved
into Nelson HaU and the
~~~o-omen moved Into Steiner
Hall because Steiner Hall
was lai'JI;er.
In the fall of t961, women
mo\·ed back in,lo.Nelson Hall .
f~ris~gr!~edeJi:So~~~~~~ ~t~itsri~~:~~~ ~~w~~~~
br iefly and the cooking
facilities we~ turned over to
the women students.
Then. In 1943, Nelson Hall
was, again taken over by
men. The Air Corps were
training on campus.
After June of 1944 the
women had the hall back until
occupancy.
In 1966 It was again, used
for militaey pul'pOil'S.
It waa last used as a
residence hall in 1968.
Presently Nelson Hall is
used to house the UWSP
Health Center, ofnces and
some class areas.
Planetarium series told
Page 6
THE POINTER
November 7, 1974
Students exposed to new culture in . Far East
Monrot. Yt'iscunlin. Ht told
o1 the stipulations to me' lots ollhin&l about tht
U.S. ingtntf'alandYt11C.'GNin
In particular . npedally
UWSP. IIc uktd me to "'TI~
to
the WIICOnlln Sta t ~
for their ~eboolina.
" We bad emplo~ about University and study thtff,
six professors from the •TOte JoRph Teo Ken& lltnl.
from
the Alor Star, Kfdah,
Malaya UniVft'Sit)' to teach
ourstudtnts . Atfirst•-emet Malaysia .
lmprt'UiCMIICMillli!!()ne
tbe aareement wu that t.he
UWSP st udent• weren't
aUowed to~ tbf ctas.oom•
Uk•
placesotherlhanlbecampu~.
FortW'Iatel)' there wu a who
craduai mOYfllltnt from off
to prv(tsiOC' 'S of.
finall:0 ~~:u!~
Another courll! which
pro\·es helplul to the students
is the hiltorY course. oneo
history co ursu may~
taucht by the Malaya
lklh"trlit)' profHIOfS,
.
" Professor Kboo Kay Kim•
.,111 one or lhe prole:aors at
~lalaya Un!Vft"li ty. lletauaht
the history coww." said
Many students abo liktd to
revisit Snaapore.
'"ThelfOUpallyed Yoilhtht
•·ana family In Singaport
belort Uwy went to P.lalaylia
for lhtir semester. While tht
ltudentsata~wlththeFq
family, they alept on tht
\4)ptl' Roor of Pastor •·••'•
church," u ld iiUCIOII
~~ana .
Qassn .,.tr"t held from TlleYaltarese~ertdllytllt
Monday lh1'11u&h Thursday lravel4111dy'lberirlt lloponthe tra\"d•
and many or the lt~Xienta
ust'd the loo& • ·tekmdl to study tour Wll Ban&kok. To
travel lhrou.shout the &d to Ban&lwll, the Audeftt1
went via the Klonc Rlvtl',
known 11 th e " floatlq
market ." StudefltsaiJO UWI
Thai vlllase , whlth
demonllrated the " nsth·r
crafts and customs ."
Slelnkellnerdeseribcdtht
Illes teen while In hiwan.
" We were &uesls ol tht
Olinese Youth Corp. OM If
the lntt'I'HtiJ\1 thinp we did
was talk to aome dtf«ton
from thl Q lu mainland. We
alsouw a demonslratlonbJ
the armed fort'tl olgun-illll
warfU"e. l&ottheimpressJ.
lhat the country has 1i""
rule almoll like a pollft
ll.ate.'"
Sludenll visited hoo ritin
cb-ina lhdr Wy ia JapM.
They were Kyoto, the t~t ..ll
h~J::::! ~
Students living in the For East for a semester
leom how people there li~e .
•~ 'pcrlucu d•rlat tile
~mntt:r
In K11sls Lump11rBtc:ause the dormitories
Yo'tren 't rudy when the
UWSP 1tudenta firll arrived
in Kuala Lwnpur , they stayed
at Uw Ytuma Bella , an in·
ternationalhouse. YI'hilelhey
st:.yfd at the Wisma Bel.ia,
the lt udents didn't receive
an y meals. The lhldtnts were
fret to try the u r lous
lftlaurantsor buy food from
the vendors.
" Many of the students
~\'td the fnlits, whkb were
mlll'\'tlous. They have fruits
like ours : pineapples,
banan;~s , etc . There are also
tomefruits•·hicharehardto
c-ompare toanythin&wemay
know ol: lanpat, ma,.;c.tm
andrambut.t111 ffun-yon the
outside, heavenly on tbe
:'::
the &HaiHl indUitrial Md
tommerdal cent~ in the ~·u
.....
Hone Kon& wu the l.ut
stop on lbe lravd-ctudy lour
lor lhe 1m~ " I couldn'l bellevrthr
livin& conditions in lklnl
KonJ. 'lbft'e _,-e 10 many
people In 10 llltle 1pace. Wt
moslly went shopping,'' 11ld
Slelnkellner.
'lb~earesuch avariety ol
rvutesthecr014)1can uketo
a'ld from Malaylia.
'1be IJ'~ can 10 \11 l1w
Pacific or the Atlan tic
ILondoal to set to Malayw
~;tcw!'! fe~ ::!~
while lhe 1174 &roup took I
different r~le via Delpbi
and MotCOw to reach their
desiiMUon," uid lssarMAPI•• fer tile tt71 &r...
atf'
-:~~::n~~~ ~':~ ••,;:;'~paoyi~ fKIIItr
with the co unlry , they
r«t~vfd a bill totr of the
CGW~ try durin&lhefirttwetk
of their Ray In Malaylia.
One of the cities the UWSP
lt udents vl1il.ed wu Ptfllll8.
" lnPenant, we&awthelle
~=ist~e;~~~~
menberforthelmpro&r•
to lhe Far Ellt II Milo
Harpatead,
Natural
Re so urcu Department.
Harpsteld'a wife, Rd.h. I
nurse, and his two chlldr!'l
Karlllineandlda ,lt'Vtn. will
&j~a with him to the f'lr
tft"lmk tiles illlide. We allo
saw lhe Snake Palace, The
Harpstelld delaibed one ctl
the courMS he will conduC1
Kluang , ap lly na med ,
because many harmlus
N•!"ll
ftetow-OM m, Internattonll
Envl r onmei-IUI St ud!tl
~~ t!.~S:~~~: &n~: ~~ =sla~
;::::~=~t it," r:emarked Seminar. My plan Is to ISiilll
~Yorite
OlhftI9QII lhl,t
•udentstiketovllilwenthe
beaches. The beaches are
na.mtd by how mltl)' miles
~';v:=u~Orti!
lmmdebe1dl.
h!a:W~!~=
olltuderlU Hopef•Y· Jw1
can do 1 lot of pte
prepu-aUon aa tbe subjtd
·=a: U..';W;·;:.;
tbeyltllblthe ~
November 7, 1974
TH E POINTER
, Page 7
Heated d iscussion e nsues; Updike says-
·\-
.
- Democracy not always the best
byllaiTietPrt'nc: h
"Dernoc r liiC)' is not
•
~ril~~m,:~~fu:!:~
disbanding of the Student Student Go\·emment would
Assembly .
become an "t'lite5l" group
Anderson aid that be felt
P r esident Ly le Updike,
s peaking about student
senators who attem pted to
dominate the noor Slmday
even.ing a t th e Se nate
meeting.
Revision ol the constitution
domina t e d most of t he
~date's
discuulon.
student body. Alter a heated
and Jercthy discussion this
section COI'Ieffning assembly
rep r esentation was la bled
1 1::!fltll thenextsenatemeeting.
Articles that wtr"e passed
included lhe renaming of
student legisla ture to
=~
A prop~sa l to a ll ow
studt'nts who academically
co ll ective bargaining
proposal setting the mllln-
student 1.0 . was discussed. A
student com plained that he
should be able to ~ the
privileges granted him a fter
paying for those privileges
regardless ol dropping out.
Bob Badlinski, Student
Cont r oll er opposed the
62.
:O~r~pr:s:nfa:i:n . ~fe th: ;:t~~~!~ tht!~~ve:e~~ ~~.!a~~~.. ~~~m~~:;~
used
KW't
forlll
Th e. Academic AUairs
Comm1ttee reported that a
freshman c:an now_drop any
cou~se at .a ny ll me an d
rece~ve a W mstead of WF as
In the Jl:851.
TheFinanceandAllocations
~n:ti~~:nti~= ~1:\~~~!=ta~~~o:
students would have to foot
fee for this year . Additional
monies were allocated to
!~~~r!11~rl~~d~ra~ncers
--~~?W:::!~=~
The next Student Senate
meetingwillbeheldat7p.m.
Sunday, Nov . 10 in th e
In other Senate discUS!ion, Wiscorui n Room , IJniversity
F"aculty Senate accepted the Center tUCI.
Chemistry colloquium
to be held
The Central Wisocnsln
Section of the American
O.emical Society and the UW
Ma r athon County clllmpus
will joi n tly s pon sor a
coll oquium at 7:30p.m .,
Th~.r.tay, NoY . 14, 1974.
Theeol\oq!Aum will be held
in room 212 South Hall. The
speaker for the eYenlng will
be James Adams, supervisor',
.~mer l cllln
Co n sume r
Products , American Cllln
Compan y,
Rothsch ild ,
\\1sconsin.
The presentation is entitled
"Copol yme rization s on
Ce:Uulose."
•
ba'!rce ~e!~sez;n ~:'ne~danJ
Ever yone's a critic. Photo by Rick Clgel.
gr a ft copol ymer iutlon on
cellulose. He will dlsc:uss
g rlllfllng of va r ious compounds , the methods of
grafting, th e properties and
structure of such gralts and
bonding theory. Adams will
present slides showing the
effectsofgraningupon fiber
s tructure . Sam ples will
demonst ratethepropertlesof
differentgraltrnateria lssuch
as wa ter absorptiVity.
Anyone interested in a ride
to Wausa u lhould contact
Profeuor C.M. J..ang or D.O.
Radtke at 346-3609or call the
~!"::~~~rtment
Of.
~~~~~~~~
AAC amends
drop policies
By a 111· 1 vote, th e
Academic Affairs Committee
CAACI YotedMooday, Oct. za,
to amend course-drop policies
at UWSP, said Kurt An·
derson, student r ep resen ·
tative.
The committee resolnd
th.at "lll grade ol WF (withdraw faillrc l, is not included
incakulatlng the grade point
ratio," in the case ol fresh-
men.
lbls followed the Student
GoYer n men t 's reco m ·
mendations preaented to
AAC, said ADderson .
In the me mo , Student
•
permission. Those courses
droppedwouldbe shownasa
w on the student's ~ts.
Should a studt'nt desire to
drop a course, he would seek
the Incomplete notation from
his instructor and would not
then officially w\thduw ,
Anderson continued .
" It wou ld damage the
academic reput.atlon ol tbe
univeraity, ' ' said Richard
Face, chair man ol AAC.
Such demands, il accepted,
would result in elimination ol
the F grade and lack ol
academic responsibility on
the part ol s tuclenta.
.The current policy ol 'no
~:;;;~::',e"!r '!;~a;rdoe! :~a!nterde~'s n~~!=
students' academk reports. will be retained. Allacllldemic
A s tudent would receiYe a dt'ans h.aYe been requested to
Jette r grade of A· F. S establish a common criteria
:::~~)~a~t~~) wor(7i~~: ~Vterst~t!c:t-F~
~....::;"""""""'""' '"~~.:':;"'"' ...
waslhataaludentmaydropa yet been taken, liberalization
e«neorwllhdraw from the of '' withdrawal from
unlvenity any time In lbe uniYenity" policy was In
semester witbout penalty or
pr-oares~. be utd.
Arts & Lectures Presents
Friday, November 15, 1974
MARGARET MEAD
4:00
p.m. Rm. 129 University Center
Open Seminar on Human Identity,
Social Interaction, and Changing Sex
Roles
(Free)
8:00
p.m. Michelsen Concert Hall
Fonnal Lecture
Topic: Population and Food Crisis
Students soc & UWSP 1.0.
for formal lecture
346-4666
l.liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~l
Poge. 8
THE POINTER
November 7, 1974
ut.,ARTS/ENTERTAINMENT
POINTER
True stops at Allen--Center
Not only has the style
ltyMllleVaney
<No!~=~:
~eft
Upper Center
nu.rldayniJht .
ne~~:t
"Tr~"willbeplajinaroclt
'rl' roU and mid 'IIO'a muslc
from t-t2 :30thatevenlna .
The dahl· man Milwaukee
::!~u~c:::,~~~:.
~~
::l
aer ~-•ys strictly
. «:::uzTently
of their three
5041 minute Ida containl
toniJ by The Four SeaiOri.S,
Btacb Boys, Guesl Who,
Tv.rt.les, Tommy James and
lbe McCoys.
lnldditklntolhistbeyare
starUnato play mid 'IO'a soul.
too .
changed, but some of the
personnel is about to chanae
allo. 11le shiR itt musicians Is
due in December. Tbll may
~and
the tombl«one
~~o'Ould read somechln& llke,
.. Uve MUiic, Died tr14 A.D."
At one time in Stevens
Point there wi-re four options
~~':.~~~::~to see the ~~~ta~n:"m~?sn!1 ~v~ 1!g
Tom
· · w o j o ' ' ago,asWojoremembenthe
Wojclechowsld,
University day well.
Activity Board IUABI
Since that time establish·
menU such as Mr . l..uc'ky's,
concerned about the al»enee spedalista In plutic boolle,
oflivemllllclnStevens Polnt . have taken ovtr.
" I would lilte to try and
Wojo naurn live musk will
support a dance style show make a rebound u 10011 as
every other v.ftlt. U ~ people get fr\'a- thrir cover
Special Events chairman , II
Cinema shows
Sounder, Bicycfe Thief
SotuMta-. a realistic radal bKk to ltw and lhe
mm . will be shown tonight realism film atnre thtrt. Jn
and tomorrow nl&ht It! the the path ellc social U ·
Procram Banquet Room of vtronment or the Ume yoq
the llnivtrsily Cenltr IUCI. mmmalten were pl1th11
9lowtimeis7 :30p.m . both their umeru In the llfHU
and alleys of Rome. •
"1~~ a touchina story of INcycle 'nltfls the 1111·
crowinl up within a black foldln& drama of an Italian
shareavpptrsocletyinlbe ramllywbosefalhft' lsouto(
work. When he gtts wotk
IUl's.
Paul Winfield and Ccdy
T)·ton ltar In the rum . The
m1111cal ~r~dtrk'Ol'e II han· major part of the film por.
trays the man and his amall
died by Taj Mahal.
On Tuuday , Nov . 12, son's aearch for the lost
Hkycle Thiel will be shown in blcycle . ll ltahotqalnattht
the WI!ICOilsin Room we>. background oC Rome In lh01r
The Italian made film dates ~naday1 .
~~:~.~~::-b :r~~.:::
~~~!f!ilir:t.:'!n~~ =::,:~~"':e:~:
shows nUl aemesttr," Wojo
OnTruc'sappearance Wojo
said.
commmts,"lt'l a chan« for
By lhe same token if the all boo&ie-beattts to get out
respon~etalowtotbesedanc:e and bouoce."
bands, no more baDdl will be
UAB art sale has registration
participate.
ReJIJtratlon for display
space is Nov . IHS. There II
nocharae for registration.
Forms may be picked ~and
returned In the Student Ac·
tivilinOffl«. UC.
Woodwind
Qu intet
reviewed
by KtntA. Ptl.r..U
The Riclwards Woodwind
Qu i ntet performed In
Mkhelson Hall on Thursday,
October31.
Their typkally Mid.,.,-ett·
oriented pc-ogram c:onsi5ted
olGebauer, Eda-, ILI)·dn and
Tomasi. Each individual In
:!': 1 ~rouJ.f:h)'~a";tr~~:~
perhaps, made the ir en ·
"~bl· '"'" """ ..,.
CIIIONIIIy.
v~~:~~~~~::ic:\uex~
Douglas will be in the
Coffeehouse tonight along with the beat f)f
Family at MOx from 9-12 p.m.
1,1~71!1_
·-011101UI"S SIIT; MBS 01 COAT
perience,butoneeouldn'tsay
they really raised the roof
Jt'sjlllt that 1 hadthisr~uni
all the way throu&h that they
didn' tlikeusorthemusic.
Whatever the case may be,
tht'ywereon\yslightlyabove
UWSP ort professor, Norman Keats, hos Jhis
relief on display in the White Memoriol
libro.ry. Story on next poge.
Gypsy d ancers pe rf orm
Rajko . a company-. of
lluna a r l~ n Gyps.y dancers
and mustcians, Wl \1 perform
at the Quandt Gymnasium at
I p .~ .. n.-tay, Nov . l2 In
the hnal Arts and Lectures
program of the semester at
UWSP,
~:e::!t e~~~re.sldlled tr~~~=P.~r~fo;:N?:
li ve ly dances o f the
llunsarlan mountains . In
additlontoviollnsandothtr
st rina instrurnenu used In
ac c ompaniment,
three
authentic cimbalons, a
co mplex zither · ll.fr.e In·
ltrument qf Hmpry, addl
navor to the m~lc thaicreates an 1111 of 101\IIDd
merrymaltlns In a IYPIY
cam p.
Rajto literally muna
" Gypt;y YNh" and alJ 35
members of the troupe art
descended fr om Gypsy
musidans. Tht avenKt J&t'
of the performers is 17.
After a number of sue·
cess(ul European tours. thP
~= ~~~W7~o w~eu~~
received the acclaim of the
c:rillcs. 'nH:WIIhin&tonStar
Newa said of thtir per·
rormance at the Krnrttd:Y
Center. ''The CDn«rt llali
wu tranllormed Into ac·psy
camp ... thtorc:hestrs'sa bilil}'
farexc:eedl:thatof altllsll
Gyi:'lt~Pi~r the pe~·
formance are available 10
=~a~;~'::.':C:jt::,;
Fine Arts Center . optll
between 11 a.m . and 5 p.m ..
Moncllly tbrotCh FridaY« b)'
<alllnl-· ~
November 7, 197-4
\--
Art enhances
public I ibrary
The worts of two UWSP art
W ~of~=n!:~~=Y~:~
public libra r y here in
memory of Helen Weber
Faust who died in 1969:-
UWSP laser: worth $750,000
a wide range of interpretive
rel~wttichprovidesadesig:n
~=;~:~"=~ =~dl~
fourth ind1 thick clay and
The tile~ were then cut into
a variety of liz.es and sl\apes
and fired at 2530 degrees
pown-.
.
The univenity announced
that it hal a n agreement will\
a Wa usa u-based researc h
organiu.Uon and the UWSP
Foundation, Inc . , for lhe
operation ollhe laser-.
Local physics professors
will be joined by their
students in assisting the work
I-ring directed by. M)T'Ofl C.
Muckerheide, director of
research for lhe relatively
new Wausau finn.
Othe r research will be
conducted in lhe basement
laboratory 1uch as la1e r
appUcation~to medlciDt and
even gravity . But for now,
emphuis is on enero at a
ti me when the nation il
putting a top premium on
alternati ves ft»" the prit't
spiraling oil being shipped
from the Midd le East.
Tbe project won the praise
on Monday Oct. 7, of Caspa r
Weinberger, U. S. secretary
of Heal th, Education and
Wclrare and Melvin R. Laird,
former cong r essman and
formu U. S. secretary of
Defe nse . They we re on
campus for a youlh leadershi p coafuence.
Mucierhelde sai d he
believes the kind ol research
on energy bdn& Conducted at
the universtly il unmalched
at least in the United State~.
Lasers are pumped oplically, and In the basement
tsb the l.'ntr'l)' to do the
pumping cunt~ rrom elec-
tricity. Next year , there are
pla111 to capture .sunlight as
the !IOUfn' ol power, whlcb in
tum will be uaed to creele the
eno rmou sly ene r gized
plasmaa.
For an example of bow
mucb power ean be sparked
~by a laser, Muckerheide
said tl\at lhe energy In a
plasma the instAnt It exists Is
equiv•lent to all ol the energy
being consumed at that same
i111tant aerou the United
Slates.
Television course
offers weather study
•
Richard Schneider ~gduced this mosaic
on display ot the Wh ite Memorial library.
missiooed by Fa.Uit's family .
A residen t ol Steve.-. Point
almostallofherlife, she had
serveduatnJsiHolthe
public Ubrary. She wu a
graduate of UWSP, taught in
her earUer yean aDd abo
served ror a Ume as vicepresident of the Weber Tac~e
Co.• a firm ber father Oscar
Weber hudcd here for many
yurs.
Faust's husband, Gilbert
W. Faust, hal been on the
f81:Ulty of UWSP lhe put 40
years.
" My fi.rst concern wa1 for
•
•
A lasrr valued a t $150,000
h.u been installed in the
b:.sement of the Science
Building at UWSP. In tfflloin
focuses, the glass unit can
The problem il bow t.o
1\ameu aU ol that potential
waU outside the cltildren'a
The worD were com·
of energy.
f:!nt~t~':' f::~ 'fn~~~ifu!j ~fC:..~ ol~~~
api11!it the poured concrete colon.
......
With one of the world's
possibilities for young largest lasena.stheirtool,a
viewers . The painted research team be lieves
aluminum gear satisfied c hancesare "relat ive ly
good" to make a historic
br eak through here in
as scul ptural form ," he ad· developinganew,e\eanfonn
Richard Schneider, a~ ded.
'
ceramics and pottery
specialist, cnateda mosaic
SrhneideT madeover ZO,OOO
which tw been placei:l. on the pieces or ceramic tile for the
landing of a stalrwdl in the mosaic. He laid alab5of one-.
Charles M. White Memorial
Ubrary. Norman Keata did a
THE POINTER
!!:.a=~~oteci.~i~han'i:
somelhirw that wauld appeal
to chUdmt in a direct and
uncomplicated way . This
meant selling ukte adul t
thinking and a pproaching~
work wilh the eye ola child,
• n eye K'l\lith•e to bright
colon and bold, simple
design." said KeJ\11.
Fahrenheit . The ~an Will
drawn on plywood panels and
individual tiles selected to
creak the design wilhout
fi8thercutUng. " In this way
eac h tile retains an lndividulllisrn ol Its own wtW:h
would be disfigu red If it were
broken to fit into place,"
Schnrlder said. ' "!bus, the
task of placemen t included
the selection of Individual
pieces frun the thousands
which were cut fcx- eac h
colcx-."' he added.
lllepanelswerethenbolted
to lilt wall and the sums and
boltheacbwerecoveredwlth
Iiles.
The design is bued on the
letlers of the alphabet, and
Schnektersaid , "All 2&1etters
are incorporated inlo the
co mposition, which wu
conceived as a vilu4l puule
:rr!fi! ~~
"I~n~~tedtheworktoolfer
The programs will consist
of films done UW 5)'31em
Exlt'nslon's Electronic Media
Programming in Engineering
Division . The films, which
have~~o-on rave review. as
outstanding works for instruction pufl)OSeS, wi ll focus
on the form ation ol clouds,
higftsandlows,frontsandai r
masses, jet s tream, !hun·
derstorms, tornadoes, and
hun-icanes, precipitation and
climatic summation.
to 4 p .m . on Mond ays,
beginning Oct . 14 wit h
repeats of the same showings
from 1 :30 to 7 p.m. , on
~ys.
Anyone may watch the
programs, however, those
desiring t.o be officlal · " non
credit"studenls will receive
ma terials and contact from
Professor Anderson. There is
a fee for persons In tNt
category.
Two credits !Geography
IISlmaybeeamedfora ree.
T h e UWSP E•tended
ServicesOmceisaponsoring
the "Telecourse" a qd 11
coordinating reailtration•
from penons desiring t.o sign
up either by telepholle or
mail.
In Ste'Vens Point, person~
will see the programs frun 3
to 3:JO p.m . beginning Oc·
Iober 7 and cootinuing t'ach
:!
news
con-
Four year olds
set example
Four-year-oldsln aclassat
the Gt14!ll Institute for the
Study of Early Olildhood at
UWSP observed "En ·
vironmenlal Week" by
cleaning litter on campus.
Wllh their teacher Ruth
Sylvester, IIIey created a
"Litter Monslt'r" from their
group policin• exhibition
which waa displayed In the
College of P r ofessio na l ·
Studiet Building <COPSl
where the Gelell Institute
now Ia housed.
One youna:ste r told his
teachl!f"matter offactly : " I
wish people would putlltkr In
the p rbage ca n."
10%
off
Week Of Nov
channe l 6. The same
p r esen t ations will be
:peJ:'~ys~ 10 a:JO p.m.
W"tSConsin Rapids studetlts
• rt ist on public
:~1e ~echa~:;l ~ 3 :~
inStevens
Point.
the
01i)[llJ
~!~~a~r th:nou~ahbl: ·~~
=n
nn;~·tw~~=~~~first
by each
display
A topic with universal In·
terest, weatber phenomena.
willbelhesub}ectthis fallof
the fi ntcour5ttobeoffered
N television by UWSP.
The univer,sl ty is
cooperating with cable TV
firms in W"ISConsin Rapids
and S t eve n s Point in
presenting ten half-hou r
sessionstobeaired'A'tekly
begi nning in October.
Robert Anderson, a veteran
of 11 years on the UWSP
geosra phy facully,wlllbethe
resource cootacl for course
information, grading, testing
andsoforth. However,hewill
notbe5tenontheklevision
presentations.
During
ference, itwas s~~~&ested tl\at
if the resean:h is successful it
might be possible, a la cost of
severa l lhousaild dollars pe!"
family, to install laser tubel
that would be powered by the
sun to generate enough
energy needed to run homes
u they are equipped today.
Muckerkeide said seVeral
foreign government& were
interested in purcl\astng the
laser now owned by Wausau
~arch, Inc., however , he
noted smiling tha t his small
!Voupofmen (four penonl II
mvestorsJ could move !aliefIn the transaction Ulan the
"bureauaacitt of 1avem-:
meats."
rnents."
The bulc laser unit, which
the resean:hen: c«~Unua lly
exp;uld, was purchased from
American OpUcs In Soulh
Bridge, Mass.
FrancisSchmltz,cl\alrman
olthe Physics Jllld Astronomy
Department at UWSP, said
1\avlng the 1aseT on campus
availa ble for u se by
professon and studenll Is a n
~Wet beyond va lue. Steven~
Poi nt physiCI·astr onomy
majon w\11 1\ave the unusual
opportunity of gettln& expn-ience with such a rare
piece of hardware.
University Store
. ._
...
UIIInoilv,O,eriiisiiltyioiiCiiieniiitiiierll348
iiiiiii1-343
iiii01;.._. .
Page 10
T HE POINTER
Novembe r 7 , 1974
Center receives
controller's office
p3.rlic ul ar or aaniuiion
knowing w h at th t
oraani1ation needs the money
for and &eeina that thftr
budget ref l ects th e
or ga nh .ation'a needs and
,.....,.
''SiBn:'und feels thatmyjob
as student controller is son~e
sort ot' eat ra curricular activity and that I look upon my
job as being extr a
curricular," &aid Baclzinski
Anothe!' Informed soultt
said Bad1inski was m0\'ed
bee:auseofhiaattnstoin·
form ation t hat did not
di recUy relate to his job as
student e:ontrolles-.
Bad:dnski's oUice IUs
mo~ In Sep~ber from the
Budget Office, see:ond floor ot
Old Mai n, to an ofl'ie:f: adjace nt to th e Stud en t
Government Ol!ka IOI." att'l!
on the firs t noor of the
Universi ty Center <UCI.
Church Annoucements
Ne•·man Un i ~·tf'dty P.rtsb
tRoman Catholic) Newman
Chapel , bas ement of St .
. Stan's, Ooister Chapel . 1300
Maria Drive
Weekend Masses :
Saturda y, 4 and 5 p.m..
Ne<.r.•man Olapel
Sunday, 10 a .m., Newma n
Olapel
11 :30 a .m .• Cloister Olapel
••Jrs t Baptis t IAm trinn l
O. urcb , 1M Onu~h Strttt,
Sunday~erviusatl0 : 45a .m .
and 7 p.m .
Puce Ut~ lle d Church ' '
Olr ll t. 1741 Dixon Slmt,
Sunday ~ervie:e at 10 a .m.
~·~kcby a;as:S~~Y ~~m~~b~:!~~ ~~;
0...'"'
through ~·riday. u noon , ~<.-rvle:es at 1 : 15 and 11 a.m.
Newman Chapel
Confessions : Staurday . 5: 15
p.m., Ne...,•man Chapel .
Tbe UMIIE t'elt o....-l bip·
Dbnul011 wJU meet at 1
p.m ., Sunday November 10. at
the Peace campus Cenltf,
Marla Drive - and \'inctllt
Street,
f'o.lftg dluldl •
.ctlftly ....... . . . . . . _.
lnlftl.,•• '"""
=··::'!."::!..,-=
-.douo ~
...., ..
~ : Ibn
.·············
-IMIII.~tlon.l ,
wi"' IIOiradlliolnii~ CW
·= =- e-.tttatot.w.-
e•••\·oRHH. I BUFJ'SOSL.\':::
1.0~- Cir&..bllm lndl'oeltJt
2.RidwcoodF1'-"---t
.
....... ...... .........n..
..........1 _...,cull..=..&1
...n.o-. llolfl::.~~~ ~;.~; .~
~
~
J . ............
...... f _ . l f t d . . . . .
-alld..,..,
.....w---.
. . .._
• .Stl<t,_
-.. clowcll
... ..........,
..-opw~y...a
•
eO ::.:.~=~~~~
. C..\ :
''\
..... ..._
-..loll
llf lhl~'•cr....,....
....*"' ........................
Located In the university Center
·
am p lifi e r s
to
~l~islons. KLH sprate~ •
t ' UR SAI. E : 4·cha n nel
adapter for car . 14.00. Brown
l~•ll~tr frir~~e coat. Fully
hlll'd. Size 40, $18. Excellenl
Wpe.snap front , S50value
Crilica ll y acclaimed
Garrard Zero-100 turn table .
Less than a year old. Walnut
~~.dus t cover . ~mpi re 1000
-lt;X ca rt , and Shure MttED
cart. "!~ top quality, all top
per(ormers. Bargain at s i&.s
C.ll Jer ry at 346-2874.
·
and Dokorder. !bese art bUt
a fewof thehundreds of ittrns
Ildl. And the best thing of it,
ll'tbat Jean offer tbeseilerns
a t 21).«1 pe rcen t oH or store
prices, legally. We offer the
only F r ee·Replacement.of
Defective Merchand ise
Guarantee there Is. for .10
days. Tbere are man y extras
I offer that no other com·
Plnlesdo. • Give me a rirc
befo r e y ou buy . And
remember my&los:an , l don'f
try to butt my competition.!
1!'1ake it . Peace. Jerry. ' *
31174,150 Knutzen.
c--.
Recreational Services is offering this
SPECIAL ONLY NOV. 8· 17
Come On Down And See What Else We Ollerl
f rom
r ) r\.Y
0V
~C.
n::;;;;.:~s. Miryb-.
TWO BICYCLES FOR THE
PRICE OF ONE!
From AR to Wo1lensak and
Pio n ee r a nd Marantl
ree:eiven,GienburnandDull
tumlables , BASF and TDK
,-;;~
[ftdoM • .. . _. .
IJO •~Iftd-
• • • •
Nowthltlaotyour a ttention,
lend me yow- ean. I sell
,-C.:\
lftd pocUIIc:MM. T - • ·
cooon"'"' c:t>o.cll of
•• •• •
~:~~·:'~'::.~Yw:~:
······················· ······
November 7, 1974
THE POINTER
People, on the Environment
•
by Joe l C. Guenther
It looks as though it ' s over . The halls and
auditoriums are empty . The people have all
gone home. Only a few remain , those from
Interested organizat ions . Yes, the Earth
Crusade appears to be over.
Earth Day, born In 1970 and later
becom ing Earth Week, ma y .have run the
· gauntlet unsuccessfully. At least the
politicians believe so. At the debates held
here recently, only one candidate cla imed
his staunch support for the en vironment. The
others. . .well , they just dodged the
questions.
And where were the people at the debates?
Perhaps they were shopping. or doing the
wash or maybe they were in t;:lass learning
all about Socrates, Milton or Newton . 1
wonder what the philosopher, writer and
·'
scientist thought of thei r natural habitat? At
least they were concei-ned about something .
Where were the organ izations like Env ironmental Council , LAND { League
Aga inst Nuclear: Danger) and the professors
of the Col lege of Natural Resources ; the ones
who really know what's happen ing to our
lives.?
Where were they and w hy weren' t they
fl y ing their flag s and pi cketing or doing
· anYthing to call attent ion to themsel ves as
concerned citizens? Don' t they ca r e?
The Environmenta l Protection A~encv
recently r eleased a report which, in effect,
said that American s are equally or even
more concerned for their environment .
Bull .
E DITORS NOTE : " People, on the Environment'·' is a new, weekly column expressing people' s vi ews on their natural
habitat, the earth . The column w ill be held
open to all for the expression of their
opinions. Also, opinions will be solicited from
certain ind ividuals. All entries are subject to
Poi nter editor ial policy . Guest opinions will
be run bJ.wee~ly .
Higher gas prices this fall have grounded
some ducks. Photo by Roger W. Barr.
Point's
wildlife
to be
discussed
by Katherine KO•allkl
e mployment
seminar will be held 1 p.m .,
Nov. ll, in room 112 of the
CoU~e or Natural Resources
tCN Rl BuildinJ.
Marlene LoRnesa, (rom the
Filh and Wildlife Sn-vlceDtpartment of lnterior, will
speak abo!A swnmtf" and
per manen t employment in
some types of hunting and the areas or National Pa rks,
Wisconsi n may ha ve suc h a National Fish Ha tcheries an d
Jaw in the future.
Rd uges in d Resea r ch
Last year Georgia passed a Divi.sio""'
mllndatory Hunter Orange
Robert Connors from the
L.aw and reoorted its rirst De p a r t m e nt of Nat ura l
s eason without a hun te r Resources IDNR) Bureau of
fatality . Kansas ,PasSed a Personnel. will speak 11bout
similar law in 1965and as of job potential in the DNR, how
~thasnothadapersonshot
to get on jlb lists and .,.,ilich
who was mistaken for game. formstofillout for jobl.
Hunting fash ions
unveiled
Big game hunter s who are
thi nk ing about how to dress
for the coming deer season
shou ld str ongl y conside r
wearins t"Uorescen t orange
clothing this season, accordins to the Department of
Natural Resour"cn t DNRI.
ll unter orang~ or
nuo~nt orange is the
most highly visible color as
na tllf1! 1\as nothina to offer
~~~~tuac:c~e~fc~~: ~!r~~Ye·
min dedo utdoo r s man's a p-
P~·coior ga thers light and
disperses highly \·isiblerays .
1n lhorl, it attracu atten tion.
Even people with ddective
color vision a r e ab le to
r ecognhe it an d It
makes li ttle di fference to
animals since big ga me are
color blind.
Sr ve nteen s ta tel haJ'e
11 1r ea d y P ane d l aws
requir ing hunler orange for
Hunting error corrected
Two minor errors in the
new hunting reg ulatio n
pamphlet have raised some
question s with no r t her n
huntenCi>f"l«1"ninghuntlngof
bear dawing the deer gun
w1son .
The (kpartment or Nat ural
ftesou'"Cft tDNR I rm~inds
tha t thet'e is oot an~
aea.son on bear during the
deer" gun season, as there has
Albums $1.98
A wildlife
beenduri ng previousyenrl.
Pages 19and 2:2of the 19'1'4
huntins r~ul ation pam phlet
miStakenlylndicatrthat bear
can also be regi~tffed during
the d~ gun seuon , but this
isanrrror.
The llatewide bow and
ar row season for bea r closes
/l:ovember l7and the 1974 gun
season ha• arread)o closed.
NEW HOURS:
MONDAY · FRIDAY 11-2 & 4:30-10:30
SUNDAY 12 NOON · 10 P.M.
Page 11
Poge 12
THE POINTER
November 7, 1974
Return of the prairie chicken
roltforthr:)~blrdi. Jie
.,;u be livlna in GranUburJ
for at !Nil a year lo make
constantcbecUon lheNfety
and jWogreil olthr chk:kent
u they reestabl~ them wh·es in nrw ternt<W)'.
Tirly radio tq.1 will be
affixtd to 10meolthe blrdl10
lMir ....-hereabouts can be
monitored by 1Wpfer from
lis \'oiUwaaon ""hkh has •
teltvision antmNI mounttd
on toptorecth·e the siJMII.
·s·ocpferusedsurhadevice
when he worked with the
prairiechickensncarSle-Yens
:~
!''our men are key to the
somewhat
experimental
C::~::onnO:~ s:::. ~~=:
manqes-fortheONRoiQex
Meadows Wildlire Area is
involved in perpetuatinc the
prairie chicken populatioa.
Raymond Anderton ,
wildlife specialist at UWSP
haswortedfora decade in
1=. ~:h~ ~cw'!r~b
1
car through town or down
Hiahwa)' 511!1V'OUietothr:
duma V'ast.1 Mar&h.
Oneollhethlrcshe 11ill be
oa cuard for at Cru
Meadows a~ hawks which
!1\:a~u~':rl~p=
dlicltens reprdlra at thr
location.
AI prese nt , the .prai r ie
chickfttl are bri.-. rdeawd
from lar&e pens about 1110 by
chiclr.ensln •rhatpr-eyiol.aly 110 fm in the meadow. They
be ablt to m01.·e out
~rethrirlaat atate habi!IIIJ
slowly to es ta blish ttielr
lntheStevensPointarea.
habitats. About 30cod'.s will
Arnold Knae a piontt:r in be let out this fall and about
lftearchinJ and btlpin& lo
build lhr: numbu ol pnlrie
.,;u
~~t:.~k~!~~=: !:n;c~;odsu:=sme~~:
z::r~~m'!:t'::!~~~~~~!: ~eC:rkir~~: fan~ lor a
th e first to successf ull y
devdop techniques ol hatching and rurinJ prairie
-----'1st~::,a~o~~~-~~':::!d
chickm~lncaptlYity.
Tues., Nov. 15
8 p .m . Quandt Fieldhou se
Tickets-50" & UWSP 1.0.
wllhAndersonlorthre-eyears
in special prairie chkken
projects ncar lhecampu~.
Tocpfl!t' wiU be the m01t
vlsiblealthOielnvolvedinthe
Cr ex Meadow exper iment
becalM hr: wiD ltrVe Ira
somewhat ol a babyslttinJ
Toepll!t' w111 AlpPiy food
lhrouJOOutthewlnter,butthe
planistoaetlheblrdsforalns
for tnemselves and becomln&
independent.
In somewhat al a cupid
role.lhemmlnvolvedl nthe
projt-cttl:u'tdf'Cidedthat \t't
amll5tfortbe~lusepen~to
bel«atedin&ruayareu
tNt are &ood for bo6mlq,
prairie chic-ken lana:uq:e for
mali...
SPONSORED BY
ARTS & LECTURES
........
.w"-o(
ACCI)fl!ul&loiMI:...-.011...,..
C';~~t....-•
llll"'ot«1iiHIAarll(')'lilpulluliQIIcniAI*ul 1-6. 1bll..vn
VfiKUII"n'•nwjotaup.lllu-
ayc~ r
lnsp1 \O'huo.t m:IJUf "lUI«
b lhe ~UhH!Iulnk f111!on
nMIIIII.\odCif'l!lh.-ni Jif ,ll,.-ul.l.
I IUfl uf 0\JJfll in llw b~Mod•
IIIQm ltt'hrft~nluwltvf'tl
uf aobu.o IIIINIUAHk ~•r ln-
in lhcfutm oflkkrw~
Md l!ltlliat biN1, SIOOmllbun i111hnu&c l oaup..S5 .~
btllio. lnthnuv lu rni.knrUipr•lly.INidS47bl..,.,
in d•m.&c hi rNifll)k. Thr
IUUI rot-1 ufair pulluhon 1n
"""'1U•.Ihcn. i1 516.1 btl~un
prryn•.
l~nh
lukd,
II IS I
~
toot.Hitw.
uduf•
.- ,._ d•uaw•.
owderbu.r
and,
backlashe
/
by Joel C. Guenther
Outdoor editor
Some ti me aQo I happenfd 1
article by a prominent PSVd'll
claimed that hunters, whtn
together, are satisfying a latem
urge for companionship of theW
Well, one can hardl y argue
telllgence and so I suppose we mu
with it.
On the other hand there are
do not wish to be considered as
case, a few adjustments and
order .
Foremost, all men will need to
hunting together. Instead, we
ask a tender damsel to share fht
cold, wind, r.11n and sleet. AI
would prove Interesting in in
warm the body. Hot coffee c
well become obscure!
Naturally, since the ladies
hunters. they would thrill at
receivi ng shotguns. shells and
Christmas Instead of rings,
·
II Hie dinners for two. Of cou •
be speechless upon ' opening 1
package containing not one«
pounds of 3031 reloading powder.
Then, In order to refra in frcm
discrimination, other men
give up poker parties and
Morning teas would necn sarily
way as would ladles aid. Slag
meet their doom.
These sacrifices may seem a bit
just think of the great advance
would make. I' m sure thoSe
gentlemen would finally get tosl
that this world Is a liHie wl
mankind.
had'Khn, f"ll~ 1nd llowtr
ft~IIOitl.hlt~'QIIydJ,._
Environmental
l(h.IIIUU Ihow wfftlllll f1o.11n
hr~rtlflloQior
PL~ntablilbn
thf
14.550 len 811 Thlcll,tl
Natlontl Pratr'l'e In Tn N
'llUI: area has bHn calll'CI 1M
'"blolo&luii!I'OIIroadJ'"of
. -FREE-
~
-
. . .--.---..
-=~ : =.,.~,.-~~~
~8.£:1EA.· - -
~--
~-
ACNO-"'-"""-'--
~
UAB THURS.-FRI . NOV. 7-8
7:30 Program Banquet Room
F!Ight Bags Will Be Given To The
F1rst 40 .People To Sign Up For
The
JAMAICA or CARIBBEAN CRUISE
s1o~oo
Deposit Is Due Before Nov. 13
'" the Student Activities Office2nd floor Un iversity Center
- Sponsored B U.A.B. Travel-
read an
1st who
y hunt
asexual
n kind.
Nov~mber
7, 197-4
THE POINTER
I
Page 13
lty Joel c . G••U.nSbtAtics ror the first hall
19'71 lndkale that ac:ddenta l spilla ol oil and other
h.aurdous materials are
dtdlnirc lo W~JCUWin-from
1%7,000 &allons in 19'12 to
n ,ooo pUons spilled from
January to July ol this yea r .
AltbouChlheftllineenwho
,.ork in the tkpartmmt ol
Naturall\elour'cHIDNRi oil
spiU conU-01 procram aren 't
bn&&ina about them yet , ow
li&urK show lhat the nte ol
ol
\
10
:rl~:! :f~~~= :,"!~:
nt
at
tt7~ thm in any other year
Jioce 1969, ....hen data on
KC:kiental apllla was first
collected.
'l'here.arm 'tany oilwdlsin
WIKonlin and the chemical
d.
:::~,~~·:.u~~r1:J
1lO
•iS
in
other potentially harmful
chemica ls , from alue to
pealiddel, are «~n~tantly on
!he mO\~ . TraiN, trutb,
tankers, barJea and pipelines
transport t hese materials
ue
to
"";t
~UTDOORS CONT.
lo
"'oe
A SPECIAL THANKS
POINTER
of
or
zy
Deer quota discontinued
ld
>y
The Department or Na tural
Resources tDNRI announc:ed
'" that there are no deer quota
to p«mita remaining, for any ot
ee
Je. t~a~~~m~~J· f7,311
p\iutions were r eceivea
Ir these applications had
by the DN R dur i n& been received ea rlier, the
the last t hree oays . Ap- DNR ...'OUid have returned
pi•calions m111t have been them so they coukl reapply
=~kn1ec~bJ',~:~t:: ~~~~t~iubtJ:e i!:~~l :ue~
1
he valid applic:aliona for the rour licenle &tubs.
~ was na opportunity to
ld J7,2SO .available permits ,
Grant indicated Uwt about pve them a second chance.
giving hmlen a better than 1,000 applications we.re
t so percent c han ce of receh·ed after the deadllfle The 30, 13 1 unaucce11ful
~y =-~. ~u:; ccr= =~!'7or ~m1:!:! ~ ~iit' ~ ve ~ p~c ~ "J!
1
us
:i~':"in some m&na&emmt
To those who helped us
with the organizing of
events & doing little tasks
for Homecoming 1974.
Also thanks to those students who participated in
the competition.
Sincerely,
lbnecomioo Committee 1974
::! ~=plei:. ';;eo:! ~1b~~-:'~~~
1g Grant. dlief ol the DSR's
!Ill UcenseSec:tion, u.idthatover 365. 361 had ..ot indic.attd a
hair or about 35,000 ap· unit , ll7 dkt not inc:ludt rour
li«Ne Slut. .and n did nat
contain t he proper ree .
-~ sii'IC't all the Wlill wn-e
..-~ibed. Succeuful
~p p hcanl s should receive
lheir quota permit durln1 the
rarst ...m in N.,l.- embcr.
SA. . ..Ql§R
review
ME TO
RESTAURANT
lEAL LIKE YOUR
R USED TO MAKEI
TO GET A
II WISCONSif
BLE
Hottecchia Spedal rea. Il l-US NOW I "US
SUP""ia It speed rea SH·US !'liOW SI Z·US
Mol.obecaM Gran Touri.Jt& rea Sl7t.t5 NOW
T ..•
~~~b
~l
iiBLE TO GET A
:A MEAL!
...,
eStnce 1916e
jwhy Pay More For Less?
END OF THE YEAR SALE
SAVE $10-$20 OR MORE
Super Course rea 1115.00 NOW 1150.00
21A5 Church St. Phone 3-44-514.5
QUARTET
SANDLER would loke you lo QO out with the Boston
Bouncer, A ha~some, handsewn lun· typeln glove
aolt leather on a th ick c repe wedge. Contrast stitch·
lng and big bold lacH, all lor ll'le lun of 11. From
SANDLER ol Bol!on.
$23.99
SEIFERT'S
tiOI MAIN
Page 14
THE POINTER
November 7, 1974
Europe competes with Clam Lake
de
student at UWSP. intert:Sted all~na tiyt, program ma kes
d
in
summ~s tnp.
the ' prognm In 197S, Schmidt said.
Sometimes Bruce Schmidt developed an Interest in . Besides the profeiSional
The major emphasis is on would go to the top or the German fitness trails which beneritsoftheprogram,there
~~;r~. r::=u;~ d!:~~=~::::;::~~ he hopes to incorporate Into a~~ rrsonal
e~e;i~nc~s
1
"'~ldlire and rq.iona.l plan· Black Forest. " I would just his graduate program.
;ud~nt ~~e:r~ cu~urai
mng, said Hans Schabel, go up there and sit for hours
aspects of Europe, Schmidt
professor of forestry, UWSP, and think,'' said Schmidt. He
Fitness trails are trails on said.
whose native land Is Get'· a ttended the first summtr In which one can participate
There Is also time for In·
~ny.
Gftmany seminar.
both'mentally a nd physically, dependent travel to SwltThe ·program Includes
said Greuel.. Trails are I~ a urland, Austria, Northern
.;::.;...;..,.;.:_;.:__~...:,.,..visits to the Ruhr Va lley
Throujh exposure orahigh natural setting along whtch Italy or f'nnce.
The program 11 self·
Water Quality Management dens ity popula t ion like onecanjoganddoexerclses
An Interna tional En·
vironmental Studies Seminar
In t)Jrope is a n alternative
Prosram to SUmmer Camp in
Oam Late, Wis.
~f~:~ ;~~~re::rc~~~ ~~ ~~~~-~~\~a i~tu Ia::
stitulions.
ci~~f~!~.:~r~~~~~r~ ~irbl!~onc~:::~~!fo~~~.~
.
•
~=~::l~mc~!;neo!nJ't.!: ~=e~i'or'ron~-=~-~~ ~:~~=~~Jp~e~tro;ohklihan d ~~=~':!,~n~~:~:~~~
1
.600 ye.ar-old f'nnkfurt City compounded problems and
the benefits which result!<!
For-at.
'mt~n
..~,.',''t'H~~op,otu,'.
""''
........... e Ca
reveal th e natural
' urroundingstothetrall user,
from an early awareness of he added.
~~~~~~~k~:ir!.,~d. by Ger:
h
11
"By looking •I wh•t.
forestry. I was a ....·are of an
travel with the groop to the
-Ruhr and thrqh the BIKk
Forest while at Hornberg
Castle, according to a mer
like was wal kin g six
kilometers to town, down a
mountainside, over a
mountain and down the othtr
side. It was kind of isolated,
but I Uk!d tht isota~on."
future In areas of forestry,
ae s thetics,
wi l dlife
manageme nt , w,ater
management, planning and
lifestyle trends," said Duane
"Dewey" Greuel, a graduate
Stevens Point, Wis.,
SH81. or by contra cting
Pauline lssacson at the In·
ternational Affairs Ofrice In
Old Main. Applications dose
January 31, 1975.
th~omBel':c':r~"re~'G~!:~
h~;~:~nginto cl~~~~~e =! explain\~
the ~Oflram.
lnfonnalion can be
ob-
:·~ll~~~~;~l~t1;ic:n~ =~::~~"ft::!!~ :~t:rc:~v~ntfh~heU~~Y\\~~~~! g:::e~ ~~~~!!f~:ou~:
·Report
available
on Cylon
Wildlife
presented with a different
\'iew," Schmidt said.
" AtSummerCimp inCiam,
Lake, you are drilled into one
way of doing things. The
Germany experience as an
UWSP,
Lake considered feasible
1
"W~ ~!;ec::•l';~ a
feasible project," said a
representative of the UWSP
Environmental Council 011 the
proposed lake to be built
north and eaat or the UWSP
Bcrila.m, mayor of Stevens
Point, Tim Gremmer, city
enginee r , Ray Specht,
campus planner and FTed
Copes, member of the UWSP
Biology Depar tment and
coordinator of the lake's
biological researth.
Alter the for,u m, Tom
Wojclechowakl,
" Wojo"
senior UWSP student senator,
said of the forum, "It didn't
really do a whole lot since
after t1'1 all heard, they're
&oing to do whrlt they want to
anyway,"
Wojo indicated that the
~~ ~~~
•
r: ::,~
happening. He did hope,
thqh, that someone would
uk the panel\! Sentry would
still dig the lake If tht
university would not build
their road.
A-10&1. questions asked about
the lake were those concerning the water q.~allty,
grou nd-water flow a nd
na turalness of the area. It
was pointed out that a study
ol ground-water flow was not
done and no projections were
madeas tolong term water
C'tprcue smoktrs
quality.
~rc pnllu·
leu arid nornmukrn In ~
n.e main ilaue discussed unokr nuc.J '"'""' nn wiTr r
ortthe roadextentlon,besldts rhr rtl df«hofciprcuc putits neceu ity, wu the lui ion. Ciprtltc SroiUke ronplacement or the route. The \)insc:~rllonmo>nux.i.Jcln c.-.n·
Fllvlronmental Council and «nll:~llom 4,000rln~e~vnt ­
JeVeral individuals expreued cr rh:an b al!.l\llo·td In tllcamtheir e:oncem that the road bltnl llr.nkotlnr. apuW.ufut
\llo'OUid destroy 1 stand of l)fpnic flfr~druJ. andcad·
~~itte tne~~·be~e:!~
either to the east or follow
Maria Drive and Rfterve
Street where the n:tenUon
would not need to be built at
oll.
nuum,I!Oxlfmrtal.
•
THE POINTER
,
P... 15
.1.
SPORTS
u~VP~-----------­
POINTER
Eng:ft:ent
Liz Smith was awarded a first place In the
SO yard breaststroke along with eight other
firsts won by the UWSP women's swim team .
They beat Stou t 80·42 Friday. Photo by Rick
Clgel .
i.
•
SHE WILL
- ALWAYS
CHERISH
LAY-IT-AWAY
Sw!mmers drown out Stout
t :561.4respective:Jy.
1be womea'• awiln team at
UWSP ended thftr ~ular
uuo n tbla weekend by
fint pl•ca to the: Pointen'
f'riday
UWParbide: 102:·
12 Oft
turdly. 1bil brinp
tM tanbn' record to 4-.3
&oin&intotheat&le meet lObe
held to Stout on NoY. I and 9.
In the: Stout m eet the:
Pointen chalked up nine fint
places oul ol • pouible: 14.
"Many of lM awlrnme:rs
chalked ~ Uwir beat times,"
wki CU.ch C.ptain Linda
Bun:b. 8otb the 200 mecn.y
reby aDd the 21110 free relay
placed lint wllb a 2: tO.S and
,.,nnin& relays and placed
firstinthttOOyardl,\twitha
t :CB.2and the50yardny ..ith
a 3: 19. She was follo'A·ed by
Ka~nSiattt'ty . ..•hoauilted
..;th thr~ finis, one: as a
membn" of tht frre relay and
b)'placincfirst lntlw200yard
freein2 :2Uandtlw100yant
fre:e:,.itha t :OU. UtSrnith
added "• fintln tht 50 yard
bre:a.statroke. Miuy Jones
followed by winnanc tht 100
yardny ..
_,2·
Sarah PiftTe 11dded four
Slout80-42on x-ore:. She s ..·am in both
In the meet with Parltskle
on Saturday t:.: Paillttn
dominakd by wiMin& an 14
e\·entJand placina second In
nineolthe t4.
The Pointers' coach is
optimiuic about their
chancesinthe-atal.em«'t.
" Last yea r we beaan
buildinaand weren't able: to
makem~holashowinaat
state:. nus year wiU be: dif·
fe:rent . 1 expect an three
~lays to qualify for fina l1,
11lona ,.1tll a 1'11,11Dber ol
qualifieu in In d ividual
~enli. NextyeaT,.'t!.willdo
~tn bettet'," said Burch.
-Super Sports Quiz
terback Ken Stable r 's
lty 11m S...Wna , RaiMI)'
Wk-velaMMikeH•knnaa
nickNime!
a. Peanuts
I : Onlyone pl11yerhlls~er
played on.Lthree completely
di fferent tea~m involved in
~,.·~t.mpiODihlpp.mes.
b. Butch
c . Snake
d. Pinhead
e . Wonn
He:
11!
:
:
~~:.. ~
L
•
c:. Lew Carpeo&er
d. Don a.mner
e . Lew Burddte
2: Tt.lndMctullrft'«CHor
mGitfairutcllalaooe aame
11 bdd tt,!
a . Jake kott
b. Tommy Cuancwa
c . F'ranlr. Cunon
d. Joa Staaen
e. JobMy Roland
3: One ol these JU)'I once
had a !I& ya rd Loudldown nan."'
Ue wu!
a. Otle Snellt.cher
b. Ftlnt McCollouab
c. 8111 o.ddJo
d. Bob HoerDICbtmeyer
e. Bailey Howtil
4: The MiMeloU Vikinl
t.ncl is directed tt,'!
• · Skitcb Hendenon
b. Otto Prcmi.ale:r
~ =~
e:. Doc SeveriNOn
~ : What 11 Rakie:r ~r-
~'!t~·:;::,.:;
the MinneiOUI Vtkql'!
a. Paul Krause
b. EaneU :Wackbe:e:
c. Barney t' ile
d. Ed
Sharodm~~t~
e . Bobby Bryant
7 : Only two pla)'ff1 have
ever rwohed for 1..'0 toocb·
downs in 11 Super Bowli:arne.
Larry CMnJta is one. who'•
the: other!
a . Jim Taylur
b. Eutll Gtbbon!l
c:. Elijah Pitts
d. Oulne: Thomas
e. Tom Nowa!Ue
1: V.'h:at do Dick Dolac:k,
FriU Graf, Tony SkO\-er and
Frank Kirklllnd all have in
common!
a. 1bey were Abe: Gibrofl'•
colle&e teamatet:
b. They are Nt"L fidd
~~a~CountyStad1um
dot wndorl.
d. The)' were the: firll fow-
hol
NOW FOR
CHRISTMAS
A SMALL DOWN PAYMIHT WILL HOLD
nLL WANTIO
THE POINTER
November 7, 197-4
Dorms eliminated early
4t: Pn)' met • tou&h SPE
team and was soundly beaten
JOJoii.Sc:orlngTD'I f«SPE
Kobbhu had 2 TD'a IrK the we re Daley, Peotter and
• dormldldn'tstand a chance. RtHrva.
Rouc:k)' . Kc:e no 111Jied
Otr camp u s teams
The :L'l Burrou.ahl tum Pt-a)''• only ac:orc:.
In the second round : BSC
ellmll\lledll1 ol thedc:w-sna. provedthltllhldoneofthe
touchdowns from Ted
'f'tMore are two trams )e(t : the better dorm ~anu: u they p
Vdl al'ld SPE.
ahut out 2N Smllh ,. too. 3N (hrlle , Ted lllrrlson and
AMon
Schac:kUord as the)'
b.. had rnan)' dlfrerent
beat2S
Blktwln 211 to 1%. Eric
ha'-lhls year sad in the
ro~f:-Y~~e~~~:::! playolft It wu HurmptMr- Gwilln KWed for Blldwin.
The ,...~tUrds apin showed
eliminated Smith's cham- wbo h.Jid 4 TD's apinlt
a &ood oUense as they
pions by nipplnc 45 In Smith.
overtime 24 to 11. Tbe
In a!IO(htr dorm biiUie 4E c:Nihed 4E Wa'-1 Jl to l.
Mvk £:a:erl, John Thorn,
Wlurds aot touchdcrw.. by
SteYe Krin, Joba TonuMr ~.~are .~rip~-~,= Steve llrin 1nd Lee Bouche
I IIICtll"td f« the Wlurds.
Md Jdf Manlnski wtile attol.
The Vets scored their
Cary Zimm er and 8111
The Vttl proved too touch
Ster1erwald scored lor to.- 35 Sims u Sims wu thut KCond lt riiJhl lhiJIOUI I I
they blaDked IS Knutun lito
Sinlth.
out22too.
Scorfn&
the Vets
Chrilllanson , NUJ ud
•1 RM SMUodl
AI the Intramural football
pla)'1lffs Mgan lut week one
thin& was perfectly clear. The
The RHervft ran all over
Burrouaha
runnerupa ;
crushlnc UM!m 30 to 11. Pat
o.
c. c.
\
race
to second place
ru ~ers
~SlefnW. Schlll
The
Stevens~~
c:..'rou
COuntry team flnbbtdK'C'Oild
in the WSUC Mld. heft
S.turdly at the Slevtn1 Poiat
Q)untry Cub.
1n •
dolna, the Polnten
~~... :rHt "&!~ =k~~
-,_.,..
for
were
SPE Cf'Uihed 3N BwTouJbl
a to • .. Daley a..t ROMdty
hldtwoTD'sapiec:oe.
'The Intramural football playoffs continued
last week . In Tuesday's championship game,
Sigma Phi Epsilon downed the Vets, 22-14.
Photo by Rick Cigel. •
U , and Plattlt\'UJe took third
with "'po(I\LL
'TheotberlihoolJftnilhed
as folio" : River Falls,
fourth wltb 100 points ;
~bi~::.~: ~~~~ &:!~ t;J
and~wulutwitbao
polnu.
Pladn& bdllnd Tlmm for
Polnt 'ftfe Rk:ll Zabonke,
llalb; Drte Datr II ; Mike
Simon , 14; Don Bunlman, II ;
Joftn Fualnatto, 21; Ron
._
Luethe' 40; Stuart Puk, 53
Flnishin& r.nt and JeCGnd and John Duwdl, 70. .
Wtre Identical twins Joe aDd
Knowlnl thlt LaCrosse
Jim Hanten of LIC:roue, wUh woWd be lhe tum to beat,
idmlkal Uma of :24:43.
Amtoc wu not diAppointed
Third place was taken by withlft'Ond placeiDduid, " I
Pll nmm of Pl:liftt, with a
time of 25:01 , nmm miMed a
D11 It the fow-mlle IILII'k. and the LaQ-oue COkh told
''15e 1oM I pod len second~ , meU\aiU\atwastbeflrattime
plus all lhe paycM and the tblt they had been cMIJeo&td
rflythm ol the race.'' uld lntbelut nve ~arsln the
Coach Atntoc .
OlnltrenN Meet."
AI any rate , LaCrosse
" I uid I'd be happj with
finished r.nt overaD with Sl
~~~~.~an • ~ood race,
poUlts. Point was second with
C.r1hqe. 1bil Is beca~
only the lop 10\r Kbools and
fil"ll25NMtf"SattbeC:C.
ftrence Meet are eligible 10
partic ipate In the dlstTict
....
~.~orcif:=)!:
"We've "'"PP n
Ski Touring
is for
everybody
A...
......-...
FOil THE lEST If
Ski£~
---
lblel~.
Ud.
U14W...,sar..t
~11:30-1
.....
lll.ta.a.a.s,...
I
,_ . . . . Cilia
Tllln..,llillf. t1, 1:3i,...
T.... lllllf. ZI,J:JI,_
·--/ ~
=· .:e:. ':t
havtt
reallylolt.hapottnllalaa
~~~
,!1
have pod r~ . bd now
we'ye pt ala k* that ru
pod rkft."
MfOf'lbedlltridmfttiiiUI
wen. AtDiM Akl • .. u we run
MJ:t S.hrdl)' Uh we ran liSt
Satu rday , we abou.ld be
lmOnl the top three team1.
The two touahnt tu,ms
cominC In 1re Parkllde Wid
C.rthap, anct _ ....e beatm
C.rthlae two of the three
times we've faetd them and
Parkslde once In two tT\n."
Atlhedlltrlctmeet, lhetop
lhne tnml and first IS in·
:~....":..Sihtr~f:. a.:.:,
" We want to to • a team."
"Our CrOll Country
":
~:aep :f~ 'il!~.:
,.... haw • del tum, witb
FOCI lllds rehrnina. We were
• lOt' tbe bit; Me!! ICon·
ference l, andnow . . haveto
1ft up for U11 nut bit meet.
u- really put It lolether,
we feel - c:an
to the
flllllonal meet • a team."
ao
Pat Ti mm crossed the
I line In thi rd
pl ace during Sat urday ' s WSUC Crou
Country meet at the Stevens Point Country
Club. Photo by Rick Clgel .
November
7, 1 197-4
THE POINTER
Blu Golds intercept Pointers, 16-14
by J im ltabel:la
9.eve Haas kklted three
field a:oala, quarterback
Mart Sa:bin ran 70 yatdl ror
an early touchdown , a!J:I Elu
Oalrt'a deleaden picked o11
ai.Jtpuae:IIOpreltJ'Yeall-14
wiooverSteveuPoiot.
Reed ctordana, •artina
• quar\ft"t.cll: for the hinters,
Falcons will test Pointer offense
by JIMIIaltec.k
The FalcOni ol Rh'8' Falls,
a
re:~,. ::~~1. a~: ~;
.....
Pointers'
final
1974 op·
~.
but ranlt last In pauina.
~~~~~r:!~bl~
f::
passes tha nthose atStevens
Point.
River F allt bulu ll y
rushes inside and olf tackle
plays, but also run the option..
Pula are U5td IOiely u a
c~nge of pace.
Lut year the River Falls
defe-nse shut out the Point.en,
a 14.0 Falcon win.
Thl.i RUCin the Fakold
starttdquickly,winnin&their
nrst four aames . Losses to
LaCroase, Platte¥111e and
W)utewater ha ve knockt'd
thml out ol c:onlecltioa.
Falconconlft"tneevk:tories
~\"e been achi~ aplnst
Superio r , Os hk osh, Eau
Caire and Stout .
Last week the Falcons
defeated Stout 28-3. while
Stt\-eN Point !oat to Eau
Caire 11-14.
Defe nse has bun the
Fakms'slrM&th this season.
RiverFallsha,·eallooa..clon.l)'
33 points in their four Confemw:e victories.
Tht>ddensh-ebacklplaya
ZOM, to protect qalnst the
deep pa n . A&ains t the
Pointers the Falconi will
probably use thei r l-4
defteR, with the linel»cken
pn~~«tin& apintt the short
fUver Falls' offense rdies
almoa t entirely on the runninapme. TbeFak:Gnl''ead
the Conferenc:t In rushing,
Stout was able to amass
onlyae rushinayardslnll
attem ptsagainsttheF'alcons,
a paltry UaYf'!'IJt.
sptrrin&
pa • • -
Pri« to lase Saturday's
pme, the Falcons ranked
fourth In pus defense and
Ofth overall.
Falcon 1peclalt y tea ma
hive been a Slren&th this
yea r. Ban-yRitscherilfourth
inpuntrt'turntwithalO-'
averaae. whil e Butch
Phillis- iJ third in kickoff
returnswlthatt.$a,·era&e.
l'rtdlttion: Unleu the
Pointers are able to praoent
aome type of runnin& threat.
the Falconi sbould drop blck
and shut off Sin-en~ hint's
offense.
Rivn- F'alls' runnina of.
fense will try to lire the
Potnterdefense,controllhe
clock aOO allow few turn-
" 'Aith the Ofllide we hoped
for one more chuce to
xore," 1ald Coach Monte
O!ariH . " We wanttd our
orrenae to have two mlnutn
to W«k v.ith."
A s eries of turnoven
provided the Polnten th ei r
nntJCOre.
Followin& Giordana'l
¥ih.ile ualnc thdr tim e IXILI, aecond Inter ception, Eau
thePointerdefenteforcedthe: Caire fwnbltd on IMir firlt
Blu Colds to pll'lt with 1:27 play. Ddenlive back Mlke
r emalnlna . A al deways 'T'rubiatowsld recovered the
bounce carried the punL to the biU Oft the Blu Cold 311.
• Gi«dana hit Esluitt f« t4
f'Ointerlt.
With third and eiaht , yanb, pused to Gola for ts
Gior dana connected with more, and handed off to Joe
ti&ht end 0o1.11 Kruraer- for u PUecky who ran for the last
yards. Three pla)'l later,
Glordana qaln ltw'ew for
Kr!Jtler. Krueaer dropped
Elu Ca.Ire'1 Mark An the ball at E:.u Caire'• )0.
derson bwiC up lbt middle
If the Poinlft'l can get a
for tl yilrdstosetupa 44 yard
quk:k lead, the River Falls
thirdquarterHuJiield&oal .
offense may be hlrd pnswd
F~ with fol.l1h down and
1be BJu GoldJ IDCreued
to catch up . OtheTWi.se, It ....; n ten, Giordana rifltd a pall to thei r lead to 1•7. when Haa1
pro\'t another long afternoon Jeff Goaa. who dragtd a hit on the clinching 40 yard
for the Pointers.
defender out of boundJ while attempt. Eau Caire UICd up
plnlna the flnt down yar- 1:51 of the fot.l"lh quarter on
the drive, while rmnina 14
daae.
On their own 46, with 17 plays .
The lou dropped the
seconds remainina. Glor danaa' pau wu overthrown. Pointen to3-foveralland2·5
Btu Gold ddensive back
Mark ltlusermadehil thlrd ~~~.:.e::C:.!~af~St;~ene!
bya total oftlpoint s.
inter«pelon or the day.
......
,..,.,
'"They dropped back, while
rushitlloniY three or four
men," ICattd Oarles. ' '111ey
played a two deep 10ne moat
of the time."
-
Senior Oennil Eskritt and
freshman Alike Tne blatowskibavebeenpicktd
u the \1\VSP football Players
of the Week.
U~/J)~
.:.,.,
POINTER
'
FOOTBALL
•r
STEVENS POINT
vs.
RIVER FALLS
~zclusive /y-
SAT.
NOV.9
1,30 PM
OJt
lor all ol Celltral Wosconsrn
Margaret Schmelzer (32), spiked the ball ,
as the women's volleyball team beat Stout
last Friday In three straight games; 15-1, 15·
12 and 15-11 . Photo by Rick Cigel.
103 3 FM
103 3 FM
103 3 FM
Poge 18
THE POINTER
ut.,
November 7, 197-4
SPORTS CONT.
This
column
·
CAUTION:
POINTER
may be hazardous to your mental health
by.)lillelbborrmaa,Ca.-..c:
Ole )laCniJktnl ud 11M
Sum....
-...
That's not the headline that
weori&in&llylwdinmind,bul
irs thef'e anyway. SomdJow
NFL CUt Pf:le Rozdlt: lot
his mitts on last Wftt's
Pointer and demanded that
we issue this warning or '!_art
pic:kirc for the Canadlan
Football t.eaaue.
Speaking ol John Leypoklt,
!how 's that for continuity),
IQ C7 yard kkk edged the
Patriots 29-ZI last SUnday as
Buffalo won the battle for t.he
AFC East. It seems to usttwt
-....epredicteditjustthatway.
Thanks, John.
Ruling out Camac's ~eel
week, we were w-o with
Haberman finally winning
anothe r tossup. 0Yerall.
-....e're 69-25-1 for el&ht Wftks.
Now, here's weft nine :
Kaasn City OYtr Sa n
llWJo: To answer a question
from Phil Esche, no, KC's
Arrowhead Sl.ldium Is not
Come see whatS new
at your all-~
.llilrger Chef.
0.1111 OYtr Sill Fra~tdsc:o :
named after Ernie Holmes.
Cowboys push to the playoffs
Oliefsbylhree.
i\11aml qyer New Orle1111: con tinu es . Ooomsd•y
Paul Warlield i.s back and Defense by 11.
Oaklaa4 our Delroll :
that's t.d news for Miami·
haters. Dolphins by 17 In a Head-on colllllon between
two o1 the NFL's hottest
teams. Nobody's tyt,r acNY GlanlJ qyn NY Jc-11 : cused Oakl•nd. of being
·These two squads are 10 so(theadedsowehkethemby
poorthatthisgameshouldbe e-Ight.
putonwelfare. NewYorkby
New E111 l1fld OYer
a point. For TV fruks who Oevtland : The Browns are In
~ally want to watch New a pD5ition unique to any te.am
.......
f~e~s~':J!:~~~· ~uo':~~ ;,e:~e :~i~ewUPse:,sor:e
Ct.:~~:io on~
llou tall :lt Oilers ! Pats by II .
Pilltburch oYer anc:l11natl :
PiYotal dash In tbe AFC
Cent ral. We"ll lake the
Steelers by three because
knock off the siu.llng Texans their defense steals more
by t7,
• passes than Candice Btra:en.
lM An&eles ewer Atl111ta :
Grun flay over Ollnj:o:
In order to preYent the lone You're dynamite U your
trip to the coast from being a "ftkly pool numben are CHI
total loss, let's hope forthUbrawl.Forthesakeof
somebody takes Norm Van ta~ ng a wlnMr, put yowBrocklin to Disneyland . money on the Pack by a
That 's wlrere hi s te a m safety, or lr you prefer, a·
belongs. Rana by nine.
condom .
Denver oYer Balllmore:
Min11esota at St. Louis :
The Colts offense is no more Both the tossup and the
potent than Secretariat and Monday-niter. SulliYan wu
RiYa Ridle ~bi ned . Bye· shot down with the cards last
bye Bert Jones, 21-t3.
\II'Hit.sonaturally he's takin1
Wa~ hiiiJion qyer Phllly :
them again. Habe rm a n
George Allen's 0\·tr-U!e-Hill thinks Paul Krallit and the
Gang is about to put the Purple will ransack Jim
Eagles on the endanltered Uart. Carnac wu out on a
speck's list. Phllly phalls by harem call when last heard
phiH .
from .•
used to be the vogue to laugh
at Houston. Not anymore. So,
in our Up&et Special ol the
Week, welllalte the Bills to
Football
scores
Sport
notices
wsuc
lt ochy: The UWSP hockey
team'sintersq~M~dgame
will
be held at I p .m., Friday,
NoY. t5. Attordinc to Coach
Rich Blanche,team mmbers
will be battling for ~yin&
LaO'OMt tt Vfbltewater 3
Superior 45 Olhltosh 12
River Falls 211Stout3
Eau Oalre Ill SleYens Point
.
St . Norberts 6 Platteville 0
BIG TEN
~~~~~i,!~ 1 ~~:oV:~~ ~chlgan
The contest. will also
fea lure a rul es In ·
te rpretation suslon, In
which hockey rules and In·
fractkq will be ellplalned
and dltcussed.
Galdea Gl oYe Baxla1 :
State 28 Wilconsln
Ohio Sl.lte.49 IIIinois7
Michigan 21 lnd!ana 7
Northweslern21Minnnota 13
11
·
Purdue 31 Iowa 14
ontER
~;;~~::~~ti~:.=~ ~<:'~~EJ2S :~1 14 AriUHII
contactthelntramura!OfOce
near Berg Gym . Interested
&Ill! 27
OlrJahoma 21 Iowa Stille 10
ment by Monday, Nov. II .
Slave Sate : Prior to the
swimming inttrsquad meet
Sunday, NDY. 10, the team
will,hold I SIIYe auc:llon. Any
ptrSOn or JT00P
lsuch at
Harvard 3t Penn o
USC t5 Calllomia tS
anc:IMall Z2 Temple 210
Miuowl 52 KSU IS
Washin11on 31 UCLA 9
Nebraska 31 Colondo IS
=~ 1'!~~urC::'~~ ~abama 35 Mlsaluippl Stille
.
'lllln'l_.to . . III ...... Ciool.
61 7 DIVISION
:!~ftl~, ~~t;:,:~s~ ~::.!a5~~te1 ~K.nusll
"'~·~":!rc!~:~.~rtAer:'::d
Notre Dame 14 NaYy e·
17
trip tk:kel may be purchlled . =:a~~ ~f~nd
to Californ ia for $.197, Tbt Pitt Zl Syrac:UH 13
plane will lean for 'Lot Texas· AUI m Arbnsu 10
:=~':.on~- :: a:!~t:-r! ~u 24 Miuissippl o
available . · For more in- :::; IF1a .) 14 VlrJinia
:;e th~Ph~~c~i ~'(:f,~
;u,;.7aate ~
IS
Vanderbilt • Nmy 14
::au:;
Education Buldirc.
November
7, 197_.
THE POINTER
\;:;;:: Poge 19
Tournaments formerly at Madison
Debate and Forensics tourney to be at UWSP
by UarrWI Pfuwb
For the fU"St time. the
UWSP campus will holt the
State Hlgh School Dtblte and
FOftN~ Tournament to be
Mid Frid.ly, Ftb. 21, and
Saturday, Ftb. 21. tm.
Formerly, the SUte Hl&h
• =..=te.:: F=-:
the UW Madison campus.
Various reasons prompted
the rdocaticla ol the l.ou:r·
tu~menl, ukl C. V. Allm,
Debate and Forftllk:l advis«
at UWSP. "Pr-evfouljy, t.btre
will be QrkinJ throuah
Lar~ in )lad~ but will
host tbe tournament at
UWSP;' Allen added.
The UWSP was chuRn on
the critMon o1 Its responsibility ol advtftisin&, public:
relations, journalism and
radio and television
~~~~nds ;~n~s
Debate and forensics
Society, spoa1on various
worlubopl and inYilalionals
thr~t the year. ()(:tobff
~·~::en~o~:?' ~It~~~~~~~
Workshop.
'111':~.: ~~:!~
Debate Workshop . Ap·
:
comodations.
Allen said that he felt tNt
not only wwkllhe hlch sdlool
students and ttwlr fKUity
benefit from the t~UlWMnt,
~:i=rn!t't~~Jh IChools
v~y
be
mad~ to Debate and \'olvt'd. BudJet
cuta have
course ot
f'cnnsics actiYities. In the
~~::;::~~ ~:,-d~
made lnltrucllona l Yldeo
tapes fortralnlnahl&htchool
debate COIIcha. Students as
weU u faculty have also
benefited rrom tbese taoes .
Allen uid at one time 51
students were actively In·
u
despilethebudletcuts.
1bo&e interated, are en·
couraaed to attend the
wwUbops « invitatlonals.
Thll're will be no cover
charge.
the year.
Pi Kappa ()r,lta has also
~~~~ ~Jf:r ~ C:i~
"Next ltn\elter, t'tb. I,
f'Cftftlicl Worbhop,
tm. a
=::'
..~.~.T..':'I.: State determines UW
f'ollowinc the Forensics
Workshop, a Foren&lcl In·
~=JCUI.,:.i~ ~:= ~~:r~ ::: ~ai~blt: vilalional
Worluhop will
lhadent&," Allen
facilities. " I see it u a
money distribution
held Feb. u. tm . Alorc with
pa~pa~~~~~~~ :c~:bl~,=~wU~y ::e hi~ these workshops and In·
and
In attendance. campus and see our student& \itatioaals. UWSP actlas a
s.akt.
.
c-oat'hel
"Local media coveraae
WJ-111'1 very pod," Allen
added.
Students from the oartbem
part ol ~ state also had a
toa&er distatM:t to tra\-d.
" Dtblte bu bk-ome alm05l
defunct, alona witb ex·
&:~~~ c=.,~
Involved " Allen uid ''TheM
hi&h sc'hool stude~ts a r e
exper~inrestarchand
anroi)'Un&, With a l"fCCrd of
academic excellen«." he
said. ··s ot only are lhese
lludcnts intenstif'd in COOl•
munic:ati- but other ftddl
u ~ell." •
=
Uuon for the Debate ate·
tionals each ye1r.
lilly Clad Ttadll'r
"Wewillhoattheltateand
With
e nrol l ment
divisiona!J, ph.ll lndividual deer~ bow does the
~=-ts·-Tht.(!t~~· u;•l1 ~P!distribute maney for
hundreds and hundred& ol
.
!
:=: ::f.~e~~vi~::
~S:t~~:::~=
a
done by coUII'IIate and faculty System every two years. The
Allen said II students h.J,·e
enrolled this fall b«aUie of
November 1$. each year,
thisproeram. "Someoltbne tabulate ballots, keq~ t1me.
students have come to UWSP do promotion ol thne K · UWSP l'f:Ct:ives money from
two or three consecutive livities and act u tuta at the Rf:&et~ls fot' that year
events.
attOrdin&
to the enroUment,
years Jor dirt~rent ~te
Allen estimates 41students Each year UWSP lrirs to
:r.~~=r~:.~!! ~len = ics pr~J~rams," to be active with debate and e&timate the enrollment ror
approval ol a U maa pand,
Along with the nevdy formsics activities on tbl:s the nat year. With tbe
dtdi.ni.rc enrollment, UWSP
UWS;P reHived a fant place K'quired State Hich Sc:bool campus.
Alq with lbele DUmef'OUI was funded loftr becaUie of
ranluna.
Debate and t' orea1ics
activities sponiOI'ed b)' . PI-that decrease. 'Tih! money
Kappa Delta, 12-15 tnps alloc.at.fd from the ~tate is In
l.ou:rnaments locatioa. " We Pi Kappa Delta Honorary throuahout the state are accwd with the atirnate that
ukt.
Alita IUbmilted a proposal
tot.arryt.armtr,HCI'ellll')'·
treasurft' ol lhe W"~JC~X~Sin
lligh School Fortnlks and
Debate Asaociation, to bold
~a~:'~.. ~~~~~e:'~~; =:!.ofr!!f!:e~~~
Whi~_'!WiftLI~~~ =~a!"n:n~Or~icsu~~
Budget Request
Report rev iewed
lly KayK.n
The Biennial Ope:ratinc
8ud&et Request IUporl was
revin't'd by the Planniq,
Protrammlnc. Bud&et. and
Analysis Committee IPP·
BAC).
Thlsrf'pOrtconslstsolthe
rtqusts for fundi Jubmitted
by the state universities to
Central Aclminlstradon ol the
UW System and tbe funds
~hkh it reeommaK!s for
each university.
Thetotalamowlt~ted
by UWSPwas l l.lmilhonand
the total recommeaded by
Central AdmlnlstnUoa wu
$2$7,000. Robert BadtiDild,
UWSP studeat controUer,
notedanen-orlnU.reporton
the total fundi recunmended
for UWSP. FWKi1 had been
recommended by Centr a l
Administration for Gesell
tele-vision studio tupport. but
this ilem wu not Uactuded In
l'ft\'aluate priorities wbeD
p!"tsentina: h.ad requests.
ScxM ol 1M lovoll'r ranked
items. whkh art! jus\ u
imporlant as aome ol the
hilhtr ranked ones, may
have been c oasidl!'red by
Central Administration if
they had been ranked higher
on thl!' request, Sigmund said.
One of the Items which
Si&mtmd was referrinc to was
that ol computer support.
Whll'n ~ompared to other
...,IVII'rSitieswt\k:hrequcsted
computll'r support UWSP was
Clftll'olthefew~holerequest
:nof~~rna.L::
..-.snotCGnJi6tred. llwll
assumed that Central Ad·
m.Wstration would support
thiaitem IOitWU pulinUa
lowl!'rpriorily, evenUMJu&!lit
was considered m«e 1m·
portant than some of the
other items hi&htr up on the
lisl, Sigmund uid.
On the other hand, Adolf
Tor·-·sld, aubtant to the
Assistant Chanullor of
UniYII'nily Services, said
he felt that UWS P on
the wbo&e had reaived u
muclt u the other univ«·
silles. However. be did
suuest that a task fot"Ce be
set up by Central Ad·
ministration to study the
forms for requeatirw funds
and other forms in evaluatln&
the need~ ot each univft'lily.
PPBAC meetinp are hdd
at 2 p.m .. Wednesdays in 2lt
factors. Tbe PPBAC DMds to
Main.
the total fUDds recammended.
Thla error wGUSd be brou&ht
to the aU.entkln ol Central
Admloatratkm, aakl Elwin
Si&mund, aailtaat to the
Cbancellar for PlanrU,. and
Analysla . Slamuad Is
chairman ol PPBAC.
1t1 ltilcuulna vm, uWSP
did not Jet m,ore funds
recommeoded by Central
Admlnlstratloo, SlJNund
aaeated tbet ulaadequlte
...;J
l
the university aave lhe
~~':.t!:ce~~~
ftlrOUmentforthiayeu. Thill
money that UWSP ttftiva
will bave to be alven to the
areainlbe univll'nltythatla
molt In need.
At this Ume aU 1M areas
that need money .,.. Joi"l
~thebierarch)'ofthe
Uftlvenlly. 0\a.nctUor Lee
Sbl!'nnan Dreyf111 has the
ultimate responsibility on
When! the money wUI JO.
The money will probably
save a teadler'a job for
anotbtr yeu or· buy tome
new equipment !or some •
buildiftl. No matter what the
decision la, the money will be
distTibutedtotheareawttere
money Ia moat needed.
Poge 20
THE POINTER
November 7, 197_.
Camp·us police protect and serv~
byCa lhy ~1 urray
. There is a small. light·
colored brick buildirc on the
ex treme north end of-ltle
UWSP um pus that few
stUikntl could idtnliry right
away.
.
Aft~ some thought they
might say, "Oh. do you mean
the one with the big
okestatk'!" Well, that's
the riaht one. but it house5
morethilnaii'I\Okestack.Itls
the Georae Stien Buildi• and
is me home of the campus
Security Poice.
Just usome students don 't
know mid! about the building,
somedldn 'tknowexac:Uywhat
thecamputpolicedo.
Ala nR. Kursevski, director
ol Protective Services, said
that many ICudents think
secur ltyoiTteers try to catch
students committing crimes.
but rea lly they are the ones
who make sure the campus is
a safe plan to live. He
alsouilithatSec:urityofficers
donothl\~alloftheallofthe
riahts of city or county of.
ricers.
. For example, campus
pollee cannot carry guns or
ma ke arrHts. Instead, they
can dela.ln a suspect unUI city
or county pollee anive. The
only ptece of equipment a
campus orti cer carries is a
pollct radio.
Kursevskl said that the
primary responJibllity of the
camp u s poli ce is the
prolection of state property.
Tile mechanical rooms in
each dorm and classroom
cent.er are checked No-ice
every ela ht hours f or
malfunctions of motors or
pumpsor for valveleaks. lf a
sdety hnard Is found ,
maintensnce is Immediately
not ified . Security will re·
checlt the pi"'b!em a rea the
nex t day to see I( the tTouble
was corrected uUafactorily .
Laundry roomt are also
Anothe-r s tudent aervke
fW1Ctlon of the campus pollee
is to provide lick students
withtranspottatlontoacllnic
The secood concern of the or hospital. This Is only,
campus police ii to provide hov•e\·er, for student. who
servketothestudents. Often , become ill on campus,
insp«:tedtomnltesurenoone
!:r~~:/'!-~~~~n~'dr::~:
Ku~klsaid ,
theseser·
vices are mllunderstoad or
not fully taken advanta1e of.
Be stated that not enou1h
students ltnow that they can
get advice , aene r a l In formatkln, directions or legal
counseling tv.·enty·four hours
a day at th e Securtt y
Buildlfll.
ae~~r:!,:r:!'r~~=~~=~
Secur ity may ac t as a
"buffer-tone" between the
student aOO the pollee. While
they do not malte excuses for
the Jt udent, cr mptr officers
will try to ~nt him as•
much u PCISSible.
Security ll nol. allowtd to
transpor t s tudenta from an
off campus home unlHJ the
penon Ia handicapped and
unable to get other Iransportatlon . It Is otherwile out
·of lheir jurisdiction to leave
the campus for auch a pur·
.....
The seCu r ity p r ovide
sen.-icesto theenllreatudent
body, not just vicUma of
thievery or a lcdlol. KurRVSki said that he woWd be
happy to answer questlCW)S
about Security or any olMr
problem tha t one might have.
Florence goes to
boot camp
Darlt eyed and petite
catherlne t Kit l Florencev.ill
"shipout" toarmybootcamp
nextsummerasapartof her
Reserve Officers Training
Q)rp& CROTC I pfOBr.tm at
UWSP.
Florence iaa juntor English
to milltary service for either
two to four yearsactlveduty
or alx yean In the reserves.
All cadets 1raduate as
commiulone d Seco nd
Lieutenants . After
1radua tion , women m ay
command any military unit
~~a~~:ntmc':';t~~!~ !:Wf!ryt~ea/::{!~tr:~d n;:~
14 women currently enrolled
in lhe cotducallon;al ROTC
Protra m a t Stevens Point .
It will be the fi rst yea r any
woman ROTC cadets attend
summer cam p on American
bnes , and even thoiJih there
may hjlv e to be s ome
modifications in the tough ·
1
de fense artlllary ,
The coeducational ROTC
program at UWSP has been
genera ll y accepted, ac·
contln« to Florence, a ll.hough
she said she does expect a
little resent ment from male
cadets a t summer camp who
will perform more ICrenuoua
~c!!~~ sal~e~i r:a~t~ 1 ~ ph::~t=~·out ,
Board of' Regents
Members of the
of the
University of Wlsconslr'l System : front row,
from left- W. Roy Kopp, Platteville; Barbara
Thompson, Madison ; UW System President
John C. Weaver ; Mary Wil lia ms, Stevens
Poi nt; Board President F. J . Pellsek,
Milwaukee; and Board . Vice President,
Bertram N. McNa mara , Milwa ukee. Second
rrrw, Nancy Barkla, River Falls ; Arthrur
Oe Ba rdel e ben , Par k Falls ; Mll toq E.
Neshek, Elk horn; John M. La vi ne, .Chi ppewa Falls ; Mrs. Hrrwa rd V. Sandli n,
Menomonie. Sta nding : Ody J . Fish, Hart·
la nd ; John Zancanaro, Milwaukee ; Walter
F. Re nk, Sun Pra ir ie, and Edward E. Ha les,
Racine.
Did You Feel Homecoming 1974
Was What You Wanted?
If you have any suggestions , criticisms ,
remarks or the like please send them
through inter-campus m_
ail to U.A.B. Office
(U .C.) or drop it in an envelope outside of
the .door.
-THANK YOU-
be treated "the lame as the:
guys."
Th e four year ROTC
program at UW Stevens Point
is nearly identical for men
and women . 111e basic cours.e
hO'ftV«,
that women are expected to
become proRclent ln the use
of the M·l6 r lne u are men
and moat of the "conRdente
physical testa" mUll be
performed by men a nd
!Z!.":n;~~::Sdrns~fl:j! =-te':va~~lt:.v!~,f!,~P.·~;~
th e fund a menta l s of t-1oren~. " that would only
leacltnhip and manaaement , build up more retentmenl."
v.ith em phasis on leadership
t-1orencesaldlhe'aexclted
development. 111ere is no about summer r:am p b«:ause
military ltf'vk:e obliptiona of the dWJena• It offeu. "I
incurred d..-lna thll course intend to do evttythlna the
and women are not ~ui red guys do," she aald smlllna: at
to drill wit h wea pons , her boyfriend Ed Schrader ol
;!~hout.h many chooae
=~:~m:':a*~~e::~
to do
Th e advanced co urae
Schrader smiled and a&reed,
hav e demonst r ated a
potential for becomina: ar my
officers. They are taught
lutlerahip, mana1e ment
theory and dynamics of tile'
military team .
All cadet. receive 'lllO a
mont h for up to ten
month s during their
junior and a eniof
years. Theyalsolamabout
$400 for summer cam p bet·
.,..et'n the junior and aenlor
years, Before regiiCering for
the advance course, cadet1
she weighs ... "
The other twelve women
cadets are Lori Shudarlt of
Plover ; Stn:ette Za rub a of
Amherat ; Ann Stone of
BurUnalon, carol Ullmer of
Green Bay ; Diane Corirad of
Milwa ukee ; Ba r ba r a JarnaginolPortEdwardi;Gall
Guzman of Waukesha ; Ondy
Muuf,JI of Merrill ; Mary
Gru llnl of Mer rill ; Judy
McDowell of Apple t on ;
Ceor~t t.e HtriC of Applelon ;
i~unl: 1 !:~edse::~~ars!t!! but added, "they1J have to
~~:.~~~~ fo~~a~c.'jj
1
:fsenea·~~c~bienx~t~~ :::~~~~~~~
November 7, 197..
\ ,Joge
THE POINTER
2~
What makes a good college student?
'll(dlia.m Qemftlls, diredar conch.:ttd 11 UW MsdiJon
inltltudonal rewan:h at
Oftnmls desip, Syh·ia
UWSP bdieves he hal piR- Rimm, 1 doctoral candidate,
poinled some of lht f.Ktors concluded Jhat hi&h school
that make for improved li1t' was not a delft'minlna
scholarship among coUqe fattor ln coUeae IUCCt'M . In
:an article publilhed In the
stud~ta.
HisJI"ffViOUSslUdiesabout August Iss u e o f th e
clas.sroom pedonnance on " W'IIC1lnlin Journal of P\lblk
Inst ruction ," Rimm noted
campul haw ckall mainly
with studenls ,.-bo ·~ on thattheresullsfromJUI'Yt'f')'
' probation 01 found (oiJege t'Onthac ted at UWSP by
studies diUicull . "For a Ot'lnentJcouklnotbeuJoedu
chanae . we wanted to gcnt'f"alizallons forallstate
determine what produced inslltutlor. of hlaher leamthole studeals at the top of
the .ale, the crum of lht int.iemenls said he does not
considerhilstudiesoltollt&t
crop," saktOemeats.
1be: " cream,"araampltna sue«~& complete and calls
group. chlllefl by Clemeats for more detailed ln \'tsliRalion, The Impetus for
,.'l!f't honors graduates from
May 1972, May 1973, and the
combined group or A\111151
and [)eocunber, tm. With the
\lSi•
o(
=r~~r.li~
m-..:h ol his l'ftt'a«h came sa id there Is also more
from a study of the drop out motivation to learn amq
rate of fi 1·e ollht slate that RJ«t croup. The study
universit ies and was not shows they aenerally come
limited toStt'YCn!l Point, he from low income families and
are stTonaly encouraged by
" Both of our s tudiu their parcnls to achieve a
destrO)'f'd 1M myth ol the collqe degree.
bigt"rthebetlft'becaUJtwe
Another cha racteristic
both found lh\1 the bl& hlgb ,..hich identifies the honors
graduate, said Cemmts. is
.......
:=.~ ~ot~~Andltj
concluded that ~m~ll schooll
had the advantace · in
producing good students
bt'caiiM! ol smallft' drop out
rates, more National Honor
re-ci plentl and other lm porUntvariablts ."
Refenin& to his honors
graduate s tudy, Clements
tbt'occupationofthe parents.
Accordinc to lht ITpOrt , a
tignifican t number ol the
student't recordsinditate
their fathen \lrto:re Iannen
and 60 percent of their
mothcn ,..en:! housewives.
ThereportalsolhO'Io'edthal
more of the honon aradua tes
werewomen, moretookpart
~~:,n~.:=di~~
biktna.
1"be information from the
ITpOrtwill be helpful mainly
to the J tudent, said Clements.
Vlhile It will have DOt.hin& lo
dn with the Jeleclion process
attheUIIiverslty, hesaldlt
wlilauiat faculty In aciYIJing
Jtud~tsin acourseof study
and may help determine
th~~~e J ludenta motl dtservtng of financial aid in the
future .
Updike opposes student activities complex
Lot"
by the cractuates. he c:ame up
" Y /\UU
,.;tb whit he COI15idn-s a
blueprint for s uccess in
Ly le Upd ike , Student
coUqe studies.
Go\·emnwnt pre5ident saki
Usina a se r ies of U heoppc:!&ft '~ tudefttKI.l vities
comlliete it Wcud be time to
look foe- MW space far the
lkalth Ccntn- bea~»t the
Health Center has to be out o(
Sebon Hall In seven years,
activities com-
said Updikl'.
1be basic remodelinl plan
fortheoldputollhtUCcalls
for the remo deling of
lavatories , meeting areas,
hall ways andtl.alrways. The
~:.r:;=: A~l~ ~~~~t
and hi'b .cbool rank at plex would " cause a
p-aduatkln Clem~ts came disfunctWn" andwouldtcn·e
with hll formula for only to ueate a "feelin~ o1
IUC«SS .
resl.l'"ic tion" upon the olf1ces
The most impo rtant of found in that area , said
!hose characteristics. It'· Updikt. ThtniJ ' 'nOMedfoccordin& to Oem~ts . iJ the a studcn~lt'tivilits complex"
111e or hi&h school . 1be: study bf:otause tnouah office ~
hw:lkates that ttudcnts from is available for Jtudtnt UJt,
small« tchools have a better said Updikl'.
c~ru o1 cnct~Unterin& an
1be arn that II cun-tntly
individual teacher or being thoulht ol u an otrK:e
cuidance counsc:tor who will area for a Jtudent actlvltift
ptayaliJnlfk:antrolein tht'ir complex could better be
fducation , he said.
utihud by the llealth Center,
-~ honors graduates Sllid Updi ke.
1\ad dist i.uished themselves
A fh·e-year-dd plan ta ils
.cadnnkally before coming for the remodtli"' ol the old
to the univenity " Clementi lt'xt book renl.al lift for
said. ' 'Such lhlnis usthool studt'ntof~i«s.
up
•=J!~! u!t~~e~~; ~~~"l1 ~
:=ma=
However, In anolbt'r study
STA He Ips
The ST A pro&ram tabs
s tudents who have made
successful adjustment• to
C'ollcceandSteVensPointand
ll"ainsthentolbare whatlhey
have lea rned with other
Mudenta.
The STA's a re prepared to
he lp wllh problems in
readlna. wrillrc . .tudyln&.
tcsl takir. and many other
general rwspecifk: academk
difficultit'J.
TheSTAprovamworkaon
a one-ttMJne basil. Worklna
individually with ea ch
studenl has proven an effeclive way or dealin& with
student problems .
To make use o1 the STA
program J tudenll should
come to lht STA Offke In
tOIA Maln Bulldlna . The
office is open oo 14 p.m. on
Hou 1 t ng and Urban
Development IIIUDJ," said
Marie.
tha t the
Alloc.ati~ are made to
activity fee is managed by
different
a dm inis trat ive payin& bondl a~ mortpges.
utilities , full -time salar_iel.
unlls.
The unlta of book rea tal, UC Jtudent wages, supphes.
activity. health Rr¥iC'e and telephones. travels . mainfacility rese r ve each tenance of arts and crafta,
and the Dt'W publicity t«llon
charae teparatdy.
.. Total revenue from
studmtactlvity ft.oe for this or.~~h~C~urrent overa_ll
fallamountatoll6',m.trhlle budget iJ U .ut,OOO." Mane
the budcet 1a 1154.200." said
~~~ 1M question ol ad·
In answer to how the dlliOCial Income from 100
alloeations are mack, be said extra studenta. Marie t'X ·
that W'.I5G hu been all«ated pla i ncd that head -count
for work study and 111.a
far recuJar ,.-on procnm~.
Thll mcan.J tbatt1studenU
The dtfference Is matte up
fr aom aeneral reveniM' of takingOMCrtdlt(Qrlt'Sart
Weekdays
Beginning
Nov. 7
through
Nov. 15, 1974
by Ban ey!J•e•
e~i~::_rs~~na;::'J:!u~~
Marie explained
.......
~=-~~:~'t...¥'£1.
:a~ra~;"
':.2on:ea7-cEou~
••
" Other I(U"ceJ o1 cmeral
income inch~ . UC fee . food atuckflllforthll fall ll con·
• ervice, book sto r e . " " ted to 7 , 346 _ F' T~ .
"
f'inancial
account1ng lS
recreational services, vend·
in& locome , conference ~sed ol f"T&and ~on
int':ome a nd sub&idy from head-count ," said Mane.
Monday , 1·11 a . m . on
'I'Uelday. •to a.m. and I ·
3 p.m . on Wednesday and a t
10.12 and 3·5 p.m . on Thurs·
day.
.
Ther-e 11 also someone
availa bl e in the Ia ra e
meetlng room, DeBot Ctntft'
from 7-tO p .m . Tuesday,
Th u rsday and Sunday
even in&•- · Pri d e office
pbcne 346-311:21.
Gridiron
Special
Student fee
allocations explained
t2.C,OOO.
In numerous extracurric\llar
ac tivities and the majority
paid a taraer peroentaae of
thtlrcol lqto:expensesoulof
!heir -n pockets. Thei r
GYROS SANDWICH-
French Fried Potatoes &
Beer Of Your Choice
ONLY
$1 •40
TAX INCLUDED
THE POINTER
Page 22
November 7, 1974
Student
describes
concert with
disgust
Affairs of the area
The~
lly JouSII•fn-aa<I Sh,..lllloW
olaeadnnlcl hltalll ol ~ 11 one lime or lnolher,
and•e•Ureacltoilin¥ft)'citf~t••Yf.
To - . mollvll lon If finlllynh~ed the nlltll before the tnt
"1'1en"·e pull the tradillonal " l ll nlJhltr'' ,..hlle otMn f«<
prnklrethe mlnuleafter~y tum ln thelnt.
Wh.atner•indolsl\Jdent youmaycw rnaynolbe, lllepr-reil
on and It •Ill proNbly be pttin1 wone lnUe.d of betltr.
To the tdilor, •
Beln& a member ol the
"younaer- generatloa," my
P.-reana)mefrom alol oldifi""'IOUI'«<I-that one diM
thatllti'W-I'rlllomakeHnR.aelliniiGPAthltwillrnahyou
feel pod. aellinl olf probatloft •nd 11\a)U'Jri.Jfllnllhe tubj«:t few
pu;!
~~'::=en wbo ....W
~6~~Pc!:"~!=~rv!f~
assert my disgust and con·
be punuinl mft111 1nd
tempt for a s~at many ol my
suppolltd emotiona.l and to
=~:-..: ~~:-.:n,:o;:= ' : . :1d!=::,ttz
some degrH. intellectual
equals . .
As 1 became increaslnaly
perceptive o r . ex t e r n~!
re}ec1ian. 1beM are )lfl• r - example. ollhe typH of prtMUre
that peap1e ltd. but Ndl of liS tmlia to hive OW' own type.
drpmdiq • OW" blc~ and pi$.
~~~~t!!!~=~ ~~~;
Some~IIJOOdaadcan- toleiiiSIOin&.butwhlt
~~~~ wMa it'so~ nu
t1 p r - . can Jt
tn-
timesteadtonlkut.
freshman )'ear , l undn'wftlta
continuum of experiences
ra~lnC from nndente to
lbtfirll ~~~~ ~•IJ.ncwiththillllooklnt•rtbeiOUfftand
- · -~a1istlcpartLP'cwaampM, ifJOU'"JDll
paperdllelntwaw
•ruybe,..:tQllobr-.kltdoww.ln
sectklnlsucb•doblt
rdt.writlrf:lherouCfldn iLIIkiq:
lt totMc:ltlrWlllb.lhta
lrlcatldb'PIIIIuptherillllchi'L
:=Pili"':~ ':~~~d!~
;::i~ts~yinterac~wlth
U)'GIIrnltycloB'tundtnLI.IIdwbaraaolniODiate._,doll.t
=
waituniUtMct.rbtfcrea\HttoiOWito-IMprol-. Molltot
=~~=~~O::.d:'r'cre~~~~~~~hdS'.e!:
tmlftS loc:alfd ill tbeColllnlou.r- Center ceca Wl'ltre free
tutorill~areavlilable.Atloloeaed In the CCC Is the
~adirc tad Sludy S.UIJ Lib C.-n :MI71 whkh fr-eejy liYl'!ll out
lnfonMiiotllll thee areu..
Alter four yeara ot campus
ure 1 have b««ne -mort
secularlted and " un lver· ,
~~,;.:!~~~;!~
~i!!.~hance
m morals and
It 1s not my position to
brand these value cMncn as
good or bad, but to ucerta in
POJiiblylhe"'*'lmportantpolntweareU)'inlloll'lllkelsthltlt
II impol'tml IlOilo put lhinp oil. You eu tantrol lhe 11n1011111 and
thtlnlft'ISitytl the preuure roulftt by the way you appoach
...........
:~:t:!Z:htv~h=e!t~
~~-=~~~:!:~~~~:-!
=~~"d!.t;j~ 0:!;J.r~:;
..
~=-:-~~~,: ~!';:"at!k'::::ln~
.ex. drugs and abandonment
ol Inhibitions has been a
::r!r:ru:e~~e~~~~~-r~
F'iMLly there lithe CU. tl tbe ttudmt who hll done well but Is
:m~~~~=:~~~if=t~m!' :'ft=Y~m,::=::
which should' be accorded to
authoritative figu r H, or·
dl nances and rul es and the
=:~:.~r:v~:t. ~ ~~ :-~~.:
~igningo'ysll'm .
m~~:~ l~rva=
remove me from my own
apathtlicentnpment wu the
behavior of a great many
people at the fkoetwood Mac
C<lriC'e'l't. l didnotattend ; l
was wwking in a supervisory
upadty for the lntramwal
Department, but as it turned
out, I spent more time ex·
pellinl gate crasher's and
apprehendlnJvandalsthanln
performinJ my norm1l
duties.
A a,reat many individu.als
attempted to pick lc:ds to
storage rooms, others weJ"e
not so subtle ; a classroom
door was actuaUy kkted in u
'
~~~'?o!ot~m"e~O:'e;/ree
This Is the genen.Uon that
will be coatroiUng the country
In ten to twl!nty yean.
:.'J!~ii~h tb:"::OOfe".:p~~
saying this group olpeople ls
lnamlnority,lcaMothelp
butnoUce that they are a very
lnfluenUal minori ty and lhelr
MEH' S
undHirab le atl.it ud es a r e
OR
The inability of a few sena tors anet their
apparent' leader, Kurt Andersen, to comprom ise concerns us greatly. It would seem
that the stubborn attitude Inherent in that
Inability or unwillingness to comprom ise can
only hurt Student Government If continued .
The atanda rd reply ol apathy
forthearowln&ltnotlnyour iiOIIIJdl.
:'dta~:'e ~:~ui:~~
WOMEN ' S
by Bob Kerksleck
M.any have ·become concerned recently
about. the attitude of those few In Studet:tt
Government who are adamant that the
Student Assembly be dissolved .
Moreover, this kind of a blatent power play
is shocking to those of us w ho are not used to
such an Irrational proposal from members of
the Senate .
It would be preposterous to even consider
destroying the only legi slative check within
Student Government.
The Assembly can certainly be enlarged to
ha ve a grea ter representation, but any
proposal that would enda nger the Input of
the fine leaders already there can only be
termed Irresponsible.
What Andersen and the others do not seem
to realize is that unti l they come down from
thei r pr iv~te ivory tower a compromise m ay
be impossible. In the meantime the
Assembly will continue as It Is and Student
Government will be tied up while other
important matters do not receive the attention they deserve.
Studen t Government President Lyle
Updike said Monday that after listening to
Dean Leonard Gibb and others at the Sunday
night m eeting he had decided to urge a
comprom ise that woul d keep the Assembly
as it is with the Addition of 16 eleded
r:eprese ntatl ves and some minor rule
changes.
individUals.
~~~~~c s!t'U~~e .:"t:-2;
substantiated and I s trongly
feel that unleu 10elal and
inl.eli«:tual change Is im·
SHIPPY SHOES
MAIN AT WATER
r.e:en~~~ ·re:uta~
and destrucUon.
In hopet for amdi.,..Uoa,
De WayaeSc.aaWt
ne S.rroqhl
Senator Tom ''Wolo'' Wojciechowski ,· who
cha ired the consti tutiona l revision comm ittee said ;Tuesday he would also urge a
compromise.
Their r ationale Is to be commended and it
Is hoped that the Senate will follow their
leadership.
0
November
7, 197_.
~ 23
THE POINTER
The Student Norm
by Taurus S.
Stevens Pond
Dietetics grant rece ived
The UWSP hu recdvf'd a Internsh i p per iod lfter
Jones uld •ppro1dmately
~2U ,OOO federal 1rant !O . aradualionilrequired , unieu 20junionand 201fttlon will
unpltmeat a new procram 1n a master 's dtJrtot is umed be c~ as PNI&1"11m p..r·
•"hkh dietetic~ ma;:.rt will 11nd sb months of v.wk ez· 1JC1pan11. The number ol
~~~~e.1~~~~~~:~ r~~ periTheentec!cfi=t~i
the ume time they worlt
toward a baclldor's c~e&ree·
The funds wtrt: annotn«d
1t1 Wa&hin&ton. D.C., by Rep.
O.Yld Obey ID·Wa~u) and
officially accepted in
~ Friday bJ the UW
S,.stem Board of Retmta.
The Stevtn~ Pv4at campus
•111 be tbe ftnt public In·
llltution in the state to otf~W
•tlat ofr~iaUy Is daienlttd
I I • Coordinat e d Uo ·
lit:randuate Proaram In
l)l"ogram
lncwporata the iniern ex·
perience Into the total un·
*r&raduate curricula .
rar~t classes will be
offered ~~~~netime in 197~.
F'\rlds from the grant will
be e•pended here cMinltht
next ltree rean mlinly 1o
CO\'ft" salaries fCK about 11x
additional faculty members
who wUJ provide theoretical
aspects of dietetk:s In tbt
campus clauroom. then
accompany Jludent• to
The
::::~~~~~ ~';7r!W:!th:~ hos p ~~'Or Jnc!-:1~ :=,~
Mount Mary
Milwaukee.
Colle&e
In
~raJ Vt~n •tlere
oe w found sltllls and
!mowltd1e a re put into
p r =. thesenior yur.
studtnU will be involved one
~enester with instrvdklnal
food service'~ IC holptlls
afralilted with the I)I"Oif&m.
The univenlty will send
proftuOtltotMholpltalsbul
alsonqlire lbe studotntJIO
return to caJ!lpul for oc·
cu~llftflinar•
f:"~n:~'on~~fr:';;,,:'~ot':
number ol dietetics m1jon at
UWSP. •"tlich hal one ol the
lar&at tnrollmeats in this
fidel in the country.
Jona said stu&nts 11111ble
to &et {nto the new procram
10111 It Ill have opportunitia to
be in tr.ditionll dietetics
procnms which include
intemshi p opportunitia.
lnaddition, UWSPoffersl
new dletetlc:s muter of
IC'itatt dtJI't'e.
Prepantion or the new
coonl!n.lted I.WidetJI'adUite
PI"OCI'Im hll been ~.W~derway
INFLATION?
1t.t at tk
,~
Stbu
UNIVUSIT Y C INTU
Spiral Nateook
15~
25%(){/
S•lected Trade
loa In
tbtpasttwoyean~D!idlrthe
<if~ of Bonnie McDonald
or the home «onomics
faculty. • ·hois credited •.ith
~te:l.ll"inathefed«ll&rant to
fund lt.
JonesAidthtnewlddition
tothtcurricullilldittttirl
' 'really poinls up the arut
lilreagthwehl\'einthlsuu
llldlltothefactlhlltvoehlve
mo\·edmto full motion in this
MONDAY No v. llth
THIU
fRIDAY
Nov. 1Sth
WH
'-----"'I"'LI"'T"'H"'I"'Y"'L"'A"'ST----~
NOVE~IDER
S~ OAY
MO:\'DAY
TIIESDAY
1974
WEDNESDAY
TIIURSDAY
SATURIMY
7
II"'- PU'f •
tool~ -u --
....... , lo ,.._,.._ .,.
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, , . , . , .... u ... too ... luO<Ioot,..lt-t i•UhU/oo O/IIcoooL - o
14arp•l.,.- oloeo-o .
CAl~ l.l'~TC- lo / o l ' - of tW o o l - r ..,... .. ri<lo MoOIU-,
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•- ••.-...••,.,u,__,.~oo
t~w
·-•1.1••'- nu ",..u_ -h. ,,......_.,
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...,uu-•,
...Oftko 2 - "'"'to
.....
I<"""•• "C.<
to
cu.....
......
·-·-·-""- ··-· .........
hill•
t W - I f , _ ......
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.....
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~.
C..f., II o . o ,•
Jp . o .(G:)
,,_
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.... -
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JQ
"'l u l)alu-
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:;~',: . ;· trA·
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