ER • NO. 15 1974.

advertisement
•
1974.
ER
NO. 15
by Bob Kerktlec k, POINTER Editor
The articles and photos In this issue have been
taken from past issues of our s tudent newspaper, the
Polatrr.
This issue Is an effort to acquaint you 'with the
University oi Wisconsin · Stevens Poinl We hope that
you will be able to go thf'CIU&h this and get an idea ol
what it ls like togototchool herein the "PoinL"
We're proud of our sc:hool.
•
Despite the lowest fundina: of any ol the University
ol Wiscoosin JChoob last year, we continued to do a
much better job ol placing our graduates than mcst
other schools.
·
Many ol our d~rtmtnta and professors have
achieved national recognition.
We have progranu where we can Rnd students
abroad tp sb.ldy for semesters In
Malaysl.a and Polarxl.
•
En&land. Germany,
Take a good look 1t us. We think we have a Jot to
offer.
The cupula on Old Main has bHn rhe
symbol of the University of Wisconsin
-Stevens Point (UWSP) for 80 yeol$.
Pfloto by Rick Cigel .
•
This aerial phoro shows po..f! of the UWSP compvs.
THE POINTER
December 2, 1974
Job opportunities good for UWSP grad's
Placement s ucceu for
UWSP graduates seeldn&
teaching positions durin& the
• past year is about the lame,
and possible a trine hi&her,
than In llr73, ..1
With near com pl ete
r«wds, 76 percent of the
persons who re&iltered
credentials with the. Career
O>un&ellna and Placement
Office for e lemen tary
education jobs received ol ,education anyway. The
ci!WI'oom 'positions. Anoth~ remaining (our perc:ent
20 percent fotmd jobl btj not reportedbeingstlllavailable
uteachen,a l though.:~meof
the graduates had not In· rorA~ rig those plan ning
lendedtoc:onlinueintherield careers Ofl the secondary
le\·cl, 1ll percent or 209 per·
sons who r egiste red
credentials were placed .
Another 20 •udents went to
graduate school, S6 others
found non-teaching positions
and 13 .,.·ere continuing their
1
-------------------
job~earches.
011
c oC:~d't: a:-:; [!~·c:~~placemrnt at UWSP, Slid
some of thOle! ...'ho mnaln
developed In WiSCOnSin 11.u
ruulled In school ad.
mlnlstrators throughout tht
::'~v!~~~ 1~0 thl:'~:
for their new teacht'l'l.
In 1 ddlt lon, wlthi 11
Wit consl n LaFollette uid
school administrators are
Impressed with the quality or
teacherpreparationatUYiSP
and are anxious to hire !oral
graduates.
Althouah data is leu
:;fU::!s
~In:~~:
than teachlna, It appears tht
Cl.ll"ftnt economic slump has
::!fm:!~ye:1or 1 :~:~:~ ha~~!:.rf:~~rdlnat~
contract offers but refused the non-teaching phtcemmL
~.J!cu:fe .of unwillir!fntSS to service does not have,.
Moreover, Lafoll ette
believes the future for job
opport!.ll!liet Is mucb better
in teadlinc than hu beftl
prtdicttdinrecentyell'l.
ln Yt!SCOnSin alooe there
v.;n be • bl& demand for
severalyeanto cllcll upwlth
all of the new hlrtna r uWting
l:il!'!':fet::"~a~~:::
s u cceue1 of pe rso ns
utllhlna his office is ·
• 10mewbat do,_,n from lase
~a r .
NeverthdHJ, there arer.tlll
~~trona demands for Slh"tM
Point pad~tuln the fidds
of borne economics, businru
~n~'r.!' :~~~:v~ :a:J!emaU~, ~n.! ~~:
requires..cbooldlstrlctJto clo
more for y01.11pter1 · with
apedal leamlna needs.
He iaid UWSP Wlf not able
this year to produce fflOUih
graduat.ea In aome areu that
1ehool districts lnterufed to
hire. Thole areas are In
mathematics , physicl ,
dlemlstry, &eneral science,
learnin1 disabilities and
busineu tducation.
•
''There's alway• a llron&
dema nd for our home
economics an d com·
munlcative disorders and
music majors," Lafollette
explalntd.
pre-enalneertnaand soi11.
The lnaurancelndustryisDIIf
or the m01t stable In today'•
econotn)', K~ said. and is
always lookin& for ptrsons
who can ~erve in uln.
clalm1, und erw r itins .
computer ldence and oth«
positions.
There's a lot of opportunity
for salumiD In man)' dJf.
(erent kinds of buslnesstS, he
added.
Even though new jobs ha1·e
.become more scarce Ia
recent years, Kun said
person• s hould not bt
diKoLrqed about att('tldilll
uAJ~o~h:S:'~ coUeaeasameanstoprtpart
areas, Pft"IOnl with broad· fo~ .~n~er~o;:, colltle
field aodal Kimce major• graduates think it's tqb
~~=h=~~~~ ~~ft·s~ ~~=
=t~orh~e~'!oc:SC:O:. ~~S. t~ea! ~
::,::e~lcs and politieal
Kun. said.
m~~s ir:'v:~:l ~:ati:: pe~J:!'e,t~!u~:d!~t t~:!
~~~~~fuc~or~e:rea~:.· ~W::~:r:c:~~:•;
::~t~lt~~m~i.r! 51ta~f~~~n1 1 ~u:;:~~i
:Ci':~~,toam•Prlnaodal =~Y •::_rn~r 1~~
Lafollette said the flct
andslatepernmentr~rt
:::~.~n inh"::a~ee': =fs:~J:,:S.;~ity
Skeleton of pre·historic dinosaur appears to stride across rhe floor of The Museum of Natural Hl#oty.
THE POINTER
•
.
•
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•
POINTER
I
THE POINTER
PoS»e 4
December 2, 1974
Freshmen physicals changed
New freshmen who enter peeled to be m~ efJI!Ctive in
UWSP next ran wiU uve the main tenance of 1ood
money by not beln& required heal th ,
to-havea traditlonal ph)'llcal
Being inltituted i• a new
examination .
autom ated medical history
lnsll!ad they11 be hwolved system that involves a Jell·
in a ~I .yourself procedun! adml.o.lJI.ered questionu.lre.
that in the klnl run It ex· The technkaJ name for this
Jyitem Is called Database
~~~s~l~i~{)~or Student
~~::!! :Yt~~~a; ~:.'~!a~!!, :;Jar!en~Pr~t;
1
the needed Information ,
accwdi ng to Donald Johnson,
dirlll:tor of the UWSP Heal!~
evaluate an lndlvlduai 'J Cent.er.
health J tatus . Laboratory
1be . DASH Is spedflcally
tests and the ph ysica l d esig ned 11 1 health
screening system for college
use and la)'J emphasis on
problems that are oi most
CO!leffn to and most common
with college Jtudenta. It 11
tailored to lbe individual
JtiXIent and the Information Ia
confidential.
~u~~~:~::.!r:
colga a nd coughs " uid
Johnson.
'
The new atti tur:lt 11 ftl·
couraclna and it frta tht
physkiiD for lhoat in.!tries
and aliments that Itt! mQ.....
more ..,ilnlfJCant," PfttlaPI
r eq u lrl n1 au r 1e r 1 or
hoapltallutloa , be added.
One of th e most lignificant
cha.n&es this year has beet
the emphasis on "non-MO't"
La tini over many of tht
m i nor , time conaum ln&
"i=::iy~:!t~3~'tiliz! :rc::!:' ~~e!ruYfo;:~
1
hysicla ns much
r.ectiftly.
more ef.
'' We r ecel • e a typed
medical history of eacb
studeat com plete with habits,
ttndtocles, risk fac ton aDd
diaJnOied di leJIH," said
Nune<liniclans and one
tralnedcoreman aretxrrtin&
independtntjudgemtntinthe
dlqnoala aDd treatment ol
moat illneuea. At the end ol
eadl day their work iJ
rt!VIewed by ODe of tht
~=· ·;fett~·s=!~ ~:~~~.:k ~~ ~~:
ph yaical condition t hat errors altbou1h th at hu
enablesustodetectayrntomi never happened , J ohnson
vo·Mch coWd lead to future uld.
probltmJ.
What are the doctors doinJ
The DASH Ia used coly for with all thla ''lpare time!"
\nc:ominl freshmen but the WUUam Hettler UJel th e time
t.cklog ol ~over the for two health relattd (O!Itge
MX t four years~ Jive tbe ·c:ounes ; Critical Health
~mlvtnitythec:omplttebealth t.uesand Sexuality.
m:ords o1 every atudmt on JoMaon ltreNed the role ol
c.am pi.B, Jotwon said . The studeats In the ne. cha~es
new computeriud retrieYal occ:winl at the health serI)'Slem Ia also e~ to vice. Hel&idafew yearsaao
~;:r~:.~~~;re~~:u~:a!~~ ;t:o-.~thO:::U~e ~=
proach to penonal hygiene .
and under'fUDded. That trend
n:::~u:~dl~ ==-wt~::
is
UWSP'a health service but Is an lnformatiorlal seminar in
hu aiven birth to a oew at· Boatoa.
tltude of atudmta toward
Since that Ume students
~~~odles, a ccordhsa =r=-ac:~~
e
.-
The Jarcest single catec«Y lhe health fadlltiea.
~ ~.:lsic~a~l~: ~~·= ~ ,:tca'!·~t.n~n:
i
""" ~,;,,..,;,Jt•IIIW•
Some ttvdents feel they have something to hide.
Othets retreat into their shell. Then there's those who do both .
.o:;
Q,
Personal experience
~~ ;~~~~~~ :~~~=~~:rvr::r~
mears, lnstructioa ll'l sell· Board. And 1 think It's just
~':;~ ~~: (:~t ~:!,.'~: t~
ldin& aboW aen.aiJ.ty. 1beee ldtJCted and approved the
are primarily lntormationaJ nN DASH Jytttm," 11id
riaita II oppoaed to lut year Johnson. "I bope the Jtudents
where the lar1e1t alnale e«~tlnue to be Involved."
Suic!de not the answer
EDITORS NOTE : Mu1
lludeutalla•e c.. 1ldeud
Mid. . II die a•wer tu
leelhlp el 1 &rt111 , IMdluotta,
failure . depre uleu, etc .
BlkYe ..._eYer, re...W a
... , _• •, _ .. Ia ....
~e:.,u.,,.
wtu. .uncu~t
dtutleu.
ShoUiyouMe•pn-5euclal
diffkuJUes y . . . .,. ..... to
seek aulataace. FIIHI a
fr iead . c leJe prefe uer,
dtriY•••· etc, to c..nde Ia,
" uutaet a ,...,euMMUy
tralAedceullltior.
Tlte t tafrat tiM CIIIUis.ellaJ
Cuter ia tt:al..t tu &I••
st-..c. auistaucc lu c.,ta&
Wbat causes It! Preuur'e Blood ptt:IIUre and pulle.
from school, personal You are thirsty , and II you are
dlsappoinlmeslla, emotional hdy there'd a friend thefoe
lmtabillly, tamily problema, wbowillkeepthe wal.er llau
fulluthenf&htpuaes.
Wlat 1a It Uke? Dtzzineaa,
muscle
a p aama ,
t.JiucinatiCial, ahi¥et'}'-tben·
acaldin& Uln, the inability to that Ufe was worth an dfort
r emain anythlnl but the
~:;;:'it;C: ~:.ot:
obaerverolyow-actiODI.
~peritnce will place you late,youopenyou.reyeiln the
acme.hereiatbe~ :r'Jna. You have break-
wttlll ~-• wbkll al&flll
lor:M 1e a tuk:We alklllpt. Ttlr
<:eater ia .,ea CclaU Jl . .eull.
,...
•.a
-
#
uiU.udleu•a~towtudeaJ
home just about everybody in you've been meanlna to rtad
the dorm knows, The nrst day for a long time. Or you may
orsotheywon'tevent&lkto decide to paint your room and
you, but prefer Instead to ask eet a roommate: And if you
YO!.Irfriend bow you are.
are very fortunate there
mlpt emer&e I friend you"ve
wanted to eet to know wllcJ
!MJrri~yandatadlstance. n wUiha.ecoffeewilhyou and
ts evident that )'flU are a bM a phone nwnber fot you
thrut to tboae ar!Uid you. tocallatuytime.
reilbe that lhtte will
u·. uu havtoa: a CGII- beYou
a lomorro'l"andalttr!Nt
II&ious dileue and people yean: a nd years, and It iiiDo
The man from the Coun- have had thri r lbare of youna to cut tblnp olf.
and mellles. 1bey
I was fortunate. I decided.
aeUna Ceftter f!OmeJ to see mumps
yoa ~nd tncour.qea you to certainly don't want tocatcll ll'lthemldatolamcntal "
hutricaoe, thai I wanted to
atehlm reautarly lodi.Jc;uu ''5ulcldiUs" from you.
hoveriiiJ over them.
1be nl&bt 1a kq. 1bey your altuation and turn more
81
!~'i~J.I ::r~!~~edupthin:
-·tJetyou fallolfto aloetp
YOU~If and cSeddt to do
for l q, for feat that you
wm 'teverw.U.eupforbreak·
Howdopeoptereacttoward some ne. thlnp. You mipt
_
aet
a
ha
i
rcut,
or
buy
yoa? By the time you Itt somethln1, or pick up boot ~~0:: ~ot~~.me from
1
._._,
~s=::tio~eJ: be~::~~~t.!ll!"
~.:·~~
~ :~e"'f:i!td':.l~~
:e~=·~y~pi~~
Y~m':'tou.ftt~ :~
~:.~~.,!'!::
Dec@mber 2 , 197.4
THE POINTER
•
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Attoday'a price of copper,
a person might understand
why s tudents from UWSP
we r e e nthuslntic: aboll,l
tmc:onerina a piece of the
mNI.
Reason for all the ex·
citement, however, is for the
sake"fsc:ienc:e.
Wh at the y found ma y
provide proofpo&iliveofa
civilbation In Por tage County
dating from !i,OOO yea rs
before Christ , or in terms
U'led by a r<:heologislll, the
Archaic: Period.
Professor John Moore has
c onducted se veral a r ·
c:heologic:al digs in the county
in rec:entyears,butall ofh ls
previous flndlqs have bee n
attributed to the Woodland
Era which existed from about
3.000yearsaiolo thepresent.
At a dig site In Jordan
Park: several miles east of
c ampus, s tudent Naomi
Russd l of WIK'OftSin Rapids,
s:potted the CQPper ob~t as
Moore was shove IIIIi dirt Into
==,
0 ·:~~Ugatlon,
i
:r.=nt~~ !:
11
111-eapon. II had been crudely
soc:ketedto-fitlntoaspear.
~ ~~=:!:'roo:.
~~=:
believed to be of the same
•
Communication is varied major
and pubUc communication
via radio, television, print
and film .
Someof lhe majors prepare
for teaching careen mainly
on the secondary level. The
curri cul a has a lso been
developed so peraon~ ln this
ca tegory can puraue masters
........
A cco rd Ing
I o
Ch ri s t o phefo.con , ' 'Our
cw-riculamalt~e~ sense toboth
•
. period ..,-hen the inhabitant.a
of this ~ion were hunters
and ga~ who travei"Rd
a wide area and probably
brqht the copper wupon
from mintS in the Upper
Peninsula of Michigan.
Moore said he Is quite
program.sof\oca l intemtfor confident the materiab are
broadcast ove r ca ble TV indeed fr om th e Arc haic
outlets In Stevens Point and Periodnotonly~ause their
descri ptions fit finds from
thaterainotherdipin other
o r a weekly campu s ~ions,but a lso~auseofa
newspapu, the Pc-'nler .
skeleton that accidently was
unearthedinSt evensPoi nt•
The location o f the couple of yC..-s ago.
unlversltylnthecenter olthe
The skeleton. after being
ata te near sevual cities of checked in Madison, was
appreciable t he affo rds d esc rib e d as seve r al
s tud enta with special op· thousands years old. II still
por-tunltlea to actually be had traces of r ed oc hre
employed, in moatcascsona pain ted on It which wu a
part-time basis, In radio. c\l'ltom in the Archaic: Period.
television , newapaper and In those times. bodies of
public "'lations offices, said persons who died •·ere exChr btopherson.
posed to the elements uni U
the nesh •·as gone, tben the
Olristopherson Is a native
of MllltfNo-n in Polk Cou nty. skull was painted with the
ochrepriortotheburialrlte.
lie ea rned dea r ees from
Moore 's student team also
Dana CoUege and Purdue
Uni\'ersi ty and taugh t at UW
Madison before C1lffling to
been
plec:ed together. Those
UWSP in thefall ol l!Nil.
items are from that more
In his Mpartment m011 of recent Woodland period 111·hen
the memben hold the Ph .D. local inhabita nts wandered
degree and represent ' about \es5 and actua ll y pursued
ten or the country't " finest " lOme agricultw-e. !-' rom these
i n sti t u tion s th a t have people 's civilizat ions, the
prlllfamsi n some phases or stude nts found a dri ll ,
C1lffl mun\ca tlon. "These are num erous pro,lectile points,
~:iri:k!, r::ot~e ru'fu~ ::~tekr~i-\'eJ in addition to the
The depar tment has been a
leader in its field , said
w~ri~: l~!':~:U!'::d Chr lsto phersoo. About sill:
tranafonned into a two lludio yearsago\twasthefirst of its
kind in the state to lake the
~lc:Yisionlaboratory .
Some other alterations will name of communication.
be made, but in genet"al the Se-veral other schools have
buildina will be retained Iince foll owed s uit in
much ln lta present statelll·ith Y.1sconsinandolherpartsof
many ol the old fumishlnp the ~ountry .
Upt in~ct. The tol.al COli of
In the curricula the old was
the pr ojec t will be a p·
set aside and "we started
prox.imalfoly$1.2:million .
fresh ," the ~hainnan ex·
plained, "to provide op The campus radio sta tion, portunities for ou r students to
Y.'WSP ·FM, which always has gain expe r ience in th ree
been in qua rt~rs on the firat majo r contexts in whic h
com municat ion occurs."
:d?;iO::In!'!se~~
Thtt'e wi ll also be new dark
rooms for procesaln& of film
for still and motion pictures,
a newsroom to be uwd by tbe
student newspaper staff and
journalism atudenll, plus a
ty poa r a ph y laboratorycommunication museum..
Th01e contexts are Interpersonal or face-to-face
sma ll group comm unication :
organizational involvina the
study of the internal and
the students and thei r employers ." As a r esult
placementofc:ommWiic:a llon
graduates last year wu tOO
percent with the &raduates
gettingjobsi n highsc:hoolaor
\'OC:ational-technk::a l scboob,
radio and television bt'oadc:a.stins. joumilism, public
r elations , mana1ement
trainirc. sales and penonnel
III'OI"It,hesald.
The'' handson"experience
the majora get in various
areas of commu ni~ation has
provided the extra margin of
preparation tha t malte them
"so em ployable, " said
Oaristophenon .
About 70 students are in·
volved in the operation of
UWWSP·FM 110 which sends•
sig nal through much ol
Portage County. Another- 70
~xtemal ~om mun ication of st udents in~·otve themselves
bu:oineas , Industry a nd in the cam pus te levision
~~:ove r nmen t a l h ie ra rchi~s organilation which produces
:;:~uaa~4n ~:',:~~1c:
!:;:tr/:n~O: w~kt.esha!
of comm unication. "
Olristophc:Tson said.
Among those professors are
the unl\'enity"s two highest
officials, Chancellor Lee S.
Dreyfus •nd Vice Olanc:ellor
J ohn Ellery , both of whom
teac h one ~ourse eac h
semester.
Also un u 1rthed we r e
several r ound clay objec ts
which Professo r Moo re
believes ..,·ere probllbly used
u ma r bles . '' I alw•ya
!bought marbles was a game
that originated in EUTope.
Perhaps it was started by
ea rly native Americans," he
m....S.
Page 6
THE POINTER
December 2, 1974
p,
What makes
William Cements. director
of institutional research at
UWSP believes he has pin·
pointed some of the faC'tors
that make for imp r oved
tcholarship among college
students.
Hlsprevlousstudies..about
classroom performance on
campus have dealt mainly
with s~ts who wen on
probation or found ~e
studiu diJficult . ·•For a
C'hange, we wanted to
:!:'!'~:h:: &~~:=~
lhetcale,tbe eram of the
crop ,"~o~~ idCleme~~IJ .
Tbt ··~am." or samplin&
group. choeen by Clementi
were hooors araduatn from
May 19?2, May 19'73, and the
combined group or Auaust
and Decembef', It'll. With the
helpolhighsc!i=and questionnair filled out
bythearadua.t.ts,
eup
with wb.at he consi rs a
blueprint for success In
college studies.
Usin& a series or u
~:.r:::.e~~~: A'ci'::!!.~
and hi&b ~ rank
a· good
conducted at UW Msdison
usinc Cementa design, Sylvia
coliege student?
mucti o( his rHearth came said there is also more
from a 5tudy of the drop IIlii moth·ation to learn among
~!~n!:~~~~fc:foo~ ~~r !:~c:~ 0 ~a7:!J:
inJ;emtnll said he does not
co .aiderhissludfeso(collqe redpie.nts and other im - rnotht't'l were bousewives.
succea com plete and calls pottant variables."
Tbel'q)Or'labolhowedlhlt
Reff!Ting to his honors mort'ofthehonorsgraduates
ror more detailed In ·
vesti~tation . The impetus for gnduate study. Clements 1n-re v.·omen. more took part
Europe competes with Clam lake
by KalberiDe lt-al•tl
at
IUCCeU.
::':-hi~ ~~:r'~ ~~~:;
•
casUetO'II·erandlookovtrlhe
darkgrffilcountrysideollhe
Black Forest. " I would just
go up lhn-eandslt for bours
mined land in Cologne and the and think," said Schmidt. He
attended the firstswnmer in
=~~~r-old Frankfurt City Gennany Seminar.
Through exposure of a hi&h
1 0
density population like
Gennany. one can see tht
probit'ms o.r long abuse and
compounded problem~ aDd
the bt-nefits which resulted
llkt was walking sir from an early awareness of
kilometers to tO'II"II, dolro"O a natural resources by Get"·
mountainside, over a mans, Schabel said.
The proaram incl ud es
visits to ~ Ruhr Valley
m Europe is an alternative
~a~.~~er C.mp in
For
t~t«e
JUmmers ebout
th ~ ~~eS:t~nre~G~:)~
=~~IC=Ie~t!= a:;-~ ~1~ ~=!fni~~~H:n~'ta!':;e~
f!'d'i:id~a~:~e~ !':· ~fat.-':eem:u~ ~!~u~~~;""th';::l~iJn~
guida~ CilWIRior wbo will VISiting natural re-'Uiurces
play a signifiCant role in lheir ~ltd programs and in·
stitutlons.
education, he said.
ha~~= C v ' : fi~et~:fln~Ct;!~e~ ': ::~~ki:r·~t~~~:.
::a.:o;.~~:_~~~~=~~ ::.'diir! ~~«.~~~'!: ::~e 'c!:: ~':. ~~.~~:~·;
:::·~~~lh~':.:esc~ ~:f~l~ ~~~~~~~~: =m~:-~~~~:.ated
.P~Pforatl't:..
·
ad~~~:o':ndex,~~
" Wisco!Wn Journal of P\.iblic biggn the better btcause .,.·e
Another cha ra eter lltic
Instruction ," Rimm noted both found th.mt tht big high ~~o·hich itkn tiries the honors
that the results from IUT\'C!f'Y sc:hools did not produce the graduate, uid Cementa, Ia
conducted at UWSP by scholars." ht said. ··And I tilt' o..'t'Upalion of the parenll.
CCJnentscouldnotbe~as concludedthat smaiiSC'hools ~cc~i111to the rt'p011, a
8enft;ltiutions for .U stlk had the a dvan ta&e in ugrur~eant nwnbe!' o( the
in1tl1 utions of higher learn· producing good students 1tudent's records indicate
~ad:::~on h~esr~':at.c'fo~ yi~m!:i:r:t~~:!'S!m~:; ~::, ~~ZaS~n'e:~r~
th!:: c~:~~c:~Y:t~~~~ a~~
tn
=~d~~O:,;nd~~ ~~\~e~itf~e a':d ~~~~~~~!~ !~:~t~y~~!;.~ ::!! paid 1 larg~ Ptrun~:~
size wu not a determining ' limi~ to Ste\'t'lll Point, he fromlowincomeramlllesand ~~~ c~!e:ep~~~~ot
~~ct:rrt/~leco~~~~sh~·,~ ~~~~ith of our s tudi es ~h!'ir1 ~~~~ e~~~~~e b! hobbies rangtd fNI!n lfti r
August issue of t h e dettro)'ed the myth of the col lcgt'degtt't.
W"a~~"':'mmingtortading~
In Jut
them IUPt:'"•or
who5e native land is Ger·
Sometimes Bruce Schmidt
Uoweft1', in another stl.ldy many.
would go to the top of the
student at UWSP, inttmltd
In trail planolna and dtsi1a.
Fitness trails are trails on
which one can partid!lllt
bothmentallyandph)'tk.ally,
Nid Greuel. Trails are in 1
natural aettiq al011: •ilidl
one can Jo1 and do exf"!"ciws
on equipment "A' hicb i•
deslaned to pro ... okt' and
reveal th e natural
surroundings to the trail UJfl",
ne added.
"Going to Europt" has I
helped IIi ela nu lih
forntry . l wasa ...-artol.llll
altenatlvetothe ...·aythlngs
are done in the U.S. Wt Itt
presented with a d1ffmnt
'" By looking at what
l::uropeansaredoing, we can
pouiblybe looldngatourown
future\nareasofforestry. vlew,"Sehmidt~o~~id.
authetics,
wildlife
"AtSwnmuCamp lnCiam
management,
water
marggemmt, plaMing and Lake, you are drillf'd into cu
lifestyle trends," said Duane way of dotna things. 11lf
Germany experltnce ~~ 111
alternative prosram main
one able to contrast anddnr•
their own conclu sions ,"
Sehmi11t uld.
Buldtsthe profession!
bt'Mfitaoltheprogram , thm
are peuonal experit'nCt'l
which are rewarding to llle
sl.udt'nl auch u thecuUurll
upec:IJ or EurOpe. Sehm~
a.ald.
111ere Is alsO time fori:n·
dtptndent travtl to S.-il·
zn-land, AUitrla. Nor\Mrl
' Italy or Franc• .
The program is self·
x:::nn~:r:!a~:
~~~~~ ~th~::1~0::. . t:;.::
fo'ornt while at llor~
Cutle, according to a l1itr
explalnlnlt the program.
Information can be' obtained by writi~ lo: J)tU.
The UWSP (light tops) soccer team
threatens UW Madison (dark tops) Th
score was . tied. Photo by Roger w. B~rr e
.~:r.=·p:~::
54411 'or by eontr.actia&
Paull~ lai8CIOft It lJie Ill·
ternaUonal Alfain Office il
t>ld Main. Applica tions dOle
January 31, tm.
December 2, 197 4
Proxmire specks at UWSP
THE POINTER
Page 7
Education should be top priority
by Silly Dullr
During the question and
" You thin cats are always answtr seulon held in the
4W
~~~:Yf!~
Olaocellor
~~~e~~~~C~
T h a t sta t ement waa students lad the opportuni ty
di rected III'Nlllrd U.S. Senator toqui&theaetu~toronvarious
William Proxmlre alter his subjects.
•
visit lo UWSP on Friday,
One student optntd the
New. l.
sessloa wilh a quation about
PtoJ:mlre wu in SleftnS pottiblt cuts In federal
Point for luneh, a campus sptndin&.
IOw", anewsconf~aoda
Wedoo'tbl!vealotoloption
~ion and answer seakln to cut In many areu, because
foe- studlents on a stop over most everything is con·
betwftn Fond du Lac and t r acted, said ProJ:mlre.
Tomahawk.
Programs ~h aa Soe:laJ
" My Inter e sts a r e Security can't be cut easily,
primarily in the ecooomk he aald.
areas, however I am also on
Mllit.ry and Cortlan aid
the Bank, Housh\& and Urban spending ca n be cut by
A.Ualn Commit tee and boldln& down lbe number ol
Sena t e
Appro priations tr~ we have stationed
Committee." said Proxmire. around theworid, be said . He
"Feel free to aak me termed thue forces a
an )'thin& you have Interest ''e:oloasal burden.'' We e:ould
In," he added..
stren&then our t roops by
Du r in& the news con- redue:in& our wides pread
ference, questions dealin& vulnerable commitment," he
persuade people to make a
free ~hole:e wi thou t as much
timespen tinse:hooland wilh
as much overall satisfaction
In their occupation, he said.
Arly type of environmental
controbthatcrouatatellDes
are the federal&overnment 'a
responsibility, said Proxmlre. tn res ponse to a
question about land use
controls Proxmlre alated that
weare a mobllecounl.lywith
a national Inte res t in
preservina our environment.
How e ver , th e f e deral
government should try to work v.-ell-espee:laUy In view
=bl~s w~~~na a t':!::!t ~ ~e~.~ ~~ed~ffee:t on the
leavelandusecontrolstothe
......
disc:rtllon of the its te , he
Special Interest was ex·
pressed in the sena tor 's
" How ca n we justify JOUinJ, Ue said he bepn
playina God?" questioned joggingwtlen herealited that
Proxmire in response to a he could run to work faster
tha t the bua could aet there.
~~~~ln~=tl!.!eA&~~~ He
now runs ten mila a day
!CIA) Intervention In Chile. and dttd the added benefits
Hesaldthathe feltan overall of running. You save aas ;
view ol the CIA's record wear on the ea r ; you are able
showa that it haa been to eat ma« and people say
c ounte rpr od uctive . T he you might live longer , said
programs don't appear to Proxmlre in conclusion.
:~\:!~lea -~~vee a~= sa~~ilitary spendiPC e:ould be
surtax and general reftflue cut in three areas, he said.
sharing plans were ans~~owed The number of trnops could
:¥dat:;e~!~~~~~~Jnaoftor~ ~~ee:;a::~:!, t~~
programs were unrealistic,
Wlaceeptable and that be is
qainst them as they are
presently beiiiJ cons.idertd.
Questions on housin& were
asked in both the new5 cooft'T'eflce and the question and
answer session . Proxmi r e
-
andbomberscouldbedenled,
he said.
Proxmire also said that the
bud&et coulcf.aee cuts In the
areas ol hi&hway building
and the space prqp-am.
Financial aids cull were
the subject of intet"est to
:it~~eheo:eltn!he;!v~~~e~ =t=~bil~~~~
auisted housin& P"':)ee:ts this increases, Proxmire said he
)~ar . This ia primanly due to felt edueation should be the
:f!~~hatt~~~r~!~::~ ~ ~tt~ority in addition to
He said he felt tha t our
borrowiOI at high ntes are
fev.·er in number and the system rTUJY be produdiiJ too
housinR business Is bein& many Ph ~ D.'s in one area. II
murdered, he said.
mi&ht be advisable to try and
1V sparks involvement
OpportWlities
to
prod~.M:e
their ow n procrama and
havina them broadcast over
commen:loitelevisiOflouUets
is s pa r king wide student
partlclpationinarathernev.·
organization at UWSP.
From 6· 1 p . m . each
Tuesday , Wednesday and
Thursday. the students" WU"k
ia fed Into lbe cable TV
systems thl t aoerve Stevens
Point and Wauuu .
women and members of
minorityaroua- wiU have a
good shot for many ol the
positions.
Meanwhile, the campus
televllloncrew Ja\nvolvtd in
a variety of pto~rams that
will appeal to many dlfftf'eflt
intemta .
Senator William Proxmire chats w ith students
wh ile v~i ting the UWSP compus in November
Photo by Rick Cigel
Approximately 70 penons
an involved wit h t he
" Campus Televi sio n ''
oraaniu tion . Ma ny a r e
communication majors;
others are merely Interested
In &aininJ practical U ·
CruiainJ the Ca rr lbea n , organilatlons on camp~.a to
perience in what they ~~ si&hl5edn&ln Rome, skiing In co!ncldewithvacationlonthe
UWSP tct-1 calendar.
!!.~~:. lnt r i1ue of broad · ==·bJ:-dldl~' tg.~ Sludenta are not the only
packinJ In the Smokies, are ones eligible for the 5ptcial
Some ol the youtb are all available for the UWSP travel rates . Univeulty
partkularly motivated by a student wbo wisbel to spend faculty and staff may 1110
claim the counll)' will ha \-e an II'IC:Ommon repreive from take advantage of the offen
aad, att«dinc to federal
50000 new joblln tdevisi«< e:laue~lhis ~ar .
~· about 19110 because of
The above liated ten travel r eaula t ions, Immediate
families may participate in
rapld developmeot ol eable ::::::~~~:~~ non· U.S. trips a t stude nt
Sun' n snow draws students
•
Al so coi n cldi n& with
rates .
A camp-e:rou country aki Christmas r ecus II a
trip to the Porcupine Jamaican trip lp(lniOred by
~linea isbelncsponiOf"ed UAB for Dec. 21·21101' Dec. 211·
by Outdoor Recreation of the Jan. 4.
On Jan. 4-tl a 1roup will be
University Activities Board
heading for Keystone l'IU.,
IUAB ), Dec. tl-20.
The Car r ibean c ru ise
aboard TSS Mardi Cras Is ~ ':; ~~~~\ t~
Six tr ia-arebeingpl aMed
sponsored by UAB and Is
scheduled for Dec. 21-Jan. 4 for t h e UWSP spring
vacation.
or Jan 4-11.
3::
Poge 8
THE POINTER ·
December 2, 197 4
Students manage radio station
•.
~
: ·: :
v.'Orked a t this stali~ is
, by Ri ck Ogtl
nG\1'
ph~;' ~m~s w~s~~··th! ~l:v~!~~ si11\1o~ :O::nd~~a!r
unh•crsil)' radio station,
and that 's a lot betttt'r tlla~
providesa vf:ryappropriate
anyotherunlversityaroutJd."
Oneofth lshighpointsfrom
an U:~f~nlion basis is the
r(!ference to this student ... un
t":ffoct .
1
1
th:Sst ~1o~~hh;hui!:.U::ae:a ~ :~~:S: ~npp~C.:!!.o:' ~ ,:.:
1
~~~~~i:&n~. ~!,~'": ~~~:u!i'!~Y e,:a~=~~~
~~
r:: rye ~ ~~n;:;l~
~:~~:~r~t~v~~~~~~~~- :~
eurrenthitsongs,ca rry news,
weather and sport1. bul the
·superheroes' of FM·90 play
miles.
On campus, this ra nge 11
cut down quit e sig.nirtently
progressh·e, c lasskal and
jaumusicaswell. lnfact , as
T om Bedo r e, sta tion
mnnager of WWSP points out,
" Weare lhe only ,plac:ethat
plays classical mtUlc, and a
because of the obstadei
present . lnorderforaslgnal
tobe transmittedto tllen0f1b
side of the Wll\•ersity, it mLtSt
go through the Learnina
Resou rc es Cen t er. the
lot~f !:~!it!~~atti~t-~road· ~a~~:l ~~~~i!."'!l~~~
cast source; as Bedore terms llfld yartls of coocrett:· aM
it , WWSP ofren the college f1na ll y to Its desti nation ..
st udent an opportunity to be ·However, wi th the t'Xp!!ettd
closer in touch with the increase to 300 watts which
compuss.c:ene ..Sinceallof the the station now awaits final
s toff. includi ng th e an - approval,thereshouldbeno
notmeers, are students, the pro~em reaching points as
programming can be geared distant as other citin in
toward the campus lis tener Ce nt.r a l Wisconsin . This
.,.,ith a first-hand point or increase will then all o••
vi ew . " We want to be WWSP to serve the campus
'And now. as a presentation of vJwsp radio ' ... Hank
Wihn Yk. program di rector. Pboto by Rfck Cigel
~:C~=~~ :~~si~~!bJ:m:;. ::h~i~·r':~~~~~~~~ i~~t'•
munlty audience, bu t we
always like to remind them
that th is is a campus radio
Slation .. .if people w1nt to
know .,."hat's happening on
campus. this is one or the
placn they can tW1l ."
Indeed, the station Is a
place to which students ca n
turn . Manystudentswhoa re
intereSted in pursuing a
career in broadcasting look
towardthestation asasource
or prac t ical ex perience .
llo11·e-.·t'f". about half of the
Eac h yea r the station
provides •evera l 'sptelal
events .' The n ationally·
known Trivia coolest ltads
the list, along.,.,it h the annu.al
Olristmas Telethon, and this
year 's add!Uon - a Scan•ngrr
Hunt .
The Scavenger Hunt Is
ten tative ly sc hedu led for
Ho mecoming Wt'ekend .
Although It has lle\"er befn
tried before. Bedoreisllopin£
it w\11 be a sue«SS.
The Telethon, which is
~~~~j~~ e~Ft~~a~ llli~~~ ~:;:~~h b~~~~,r:d~~c~o~ =
11
and have a tittle run. When
as ked how someone can join
the staff. Bedore replied ,
"Just stop do.,.,n , and if you
want to be on the sta!f, you
are.''
Bedore did poi nt out ,
though, that the sta tion has a
'g reat tr ac k r ecor d ' for
pla cing peo pl «: In jobs .
Currently on the ata!f, ther-e
are 1ix member1 that 1\ave
work ed or are presenlly
.,.,"Orking in commercialradio.
" Last yea r . everybody that
gr oduated he r e a nd had
Jeffrey Jamn Van Oien, the current 'announcer or the ·
~ea r ' , p~eparesa~pedprogram . PhotobyRlckCigel
r"
' Telethon chairman. is U ·
peeled to draw $8,000 this
year for near-by charities.
Through the joint effort oftht
r ad io an d th e tel evilloa
peopleoncampus, ovt'1' S7,"100
was raised last year.
"T'rivia It a huge e\·ent 011
campus that ~"I' ha•·e e-.·rry
spring."
December 2. 1974 ·
Page 9
A UWSP Love Story?
byJobaR. Pt:nl• ·
discoftry that two people do oft~n have similar
I"m_ s~i.JW. I'm re.aUy ctiUid do just about anythina problems.
IWdfUI&.
and study at the same time.
Som~ of thew pr-oblems are
•
it':; =!,.~:n:t:C:enc!;
mcMe&oen that the abared
life of two struglinJ married
collep studotntr wu rM.Uy
r omanHc, ~ n vlab l e and
idyllic.
Unfortunatd)', that was a
Holly wood portraya l,
~ m anatlng from tbe
ima&lnatlon or Erkh Segal,
and wi lh Ryan O'Nt:al and AU
' MacGraw' .maklnc t h e
rea~r!~ happen that way In =-~'~!rthsi~~f~';~~':::
C»n a studult marriage
nod happiness, not at a
celluloid vttt:ion oT Harvard
but in re:ro lity at St~
Point , Wuconsln'!
Accordinl to univt:rsity
rec«"', there are OVef" 1,.200
ma rr ied s tud~nts on this
campus. Obvlously, notevery
couple In this group &hare
.common U!ntyln, bu t they
they often ta.ke on added
t:mphasis for the marTied
-student. Housing 11 an
f:Xllmple.
•
•·Four siniJ~ st:udf:nts can
poollheir ~ces :rond find
an attracth-e apartment , but
th~ pro bl~m for ma rr l~d
students is finding a Uvable
apartmen t at a rent they can
afford," said Hope Ree~ of
th~ Stu d ~~ t Wiv~s
TheMwtinsons,theReetu
and ~era! othrr couples
v.~ quick to praise the Day
Care faci lily. " Withou t the·
Day care Center, I wouldn't
be able to J9 to ~ehool.'' one
scudent-parmt said.
Anotlln" parent Indicated
that s.he had confidence In the
Univu-sity Day Care Centef",
butthatshemightnotfeelthe
sa m~ about l~aving her child
Assoc::illion. ''The housing
probl~m is especially dif·
Oculi for married stud~nts
who have children," s he
addrd.
Mrs. Reel% is a mother and
a pa r t·llm~ t luden t . He r
husband J ames is 1 full -tim~
student and is also ~mployed
at Sentry Insurance in data
proces:sia&.
Mrs. Reel&. soon expecting
a second child, II not now
attending dasaes, but she
dtst'ribedas"ideal"l.hetime
wh~n bot h t he and her
husband _,.~ ~nrolled . " It
mad~ It easier to study and
besides I wo uldn ' t feel
~j~ ...~::!gw:/_ust
so m~wh~r~ ~~~~ " Th~
unlv~rslty facili ty Isn't just a
baby-5ittingservi«,itulsoa
l~arnlng ce:nter," she said.
M.arriedstudentshavealso
been hit espedally hard by
in fl ation. " W ~ orten find
ourselves with a pil~ of un·
paid bills and trying to mak~
a decision about which ones to
pay," said one stud~nt. Other
marrl~d s tudent• fac e
simili:ro.r dilemmas. " We bad
to dl.scont~tct our t~lephone
and cut down on other expenses until I IJI:aduate,"
anotherstudentwd.
Despit~ all the probl~ms
auociated wit h mar ried
studt:nt life, can It be done
and is It worth the eHor t'!
1
That a ttitude Is apparen tly
not unusual. Another coopl~.
Richard and Mary Martinson
bave found a way that they
both can be full-ti me studentJ
and parents at the u.me Ume.
'Mieir lire is not wi thout
sacrifkt bowever.
Richard , In addition to
pursutn& an undergraduate
dqree, mus t w0ftt25 boursa
week u a custodian in the
Junctioo Cty .chool tystem.
"AJorc wi th Dklr.'s vete:ratll
bendlts w~ are able to mate
~n d s meet," sai d Mrs .
MarUnson.
Mrs. Martinson also in·
dk:ated that the ealatenre of
the Univer-sit y Day Ca re
Center Is another factor lhat
enabln both ber and her
husband to attend dassa.
They have a three·year· old
1011, Da nny.
•
Obvioully, uch couple has
to find thei r own lnlwert to
those quest ions, but for what
Its worth, no one who wa1
interviewed said t h ey
planned to leav~ sc hool
because it wasn't worth the
troubl~.
.
Married student life may
not be ~nc ll y li ke th~
movies, but apparenUy it
Isn't a U bad either.
one
of the more trying tasks o1 being married
students is convinci ng Danny to smile for a
photographer. Photo ~y Rick Cigel.
Leafgren leader in student housing
Tb~
word dormitory Is
personn~l
whose prima ry spiritualism IDd witcbcraft ,
Dr. Leafgren says.
" Vt'e'renotJOina to devdop
witches and tTain them,'' he
said In expllinln& that a
residence hall could invite a
professed wttcll limply ror
studeni.J in inte ract and
becom~ more informed.
"Students are oot eu.Uy
uampl~ would be brinlinl brainwashed" on mcb coadoctors to dorms to tdJ p-e- troversial issues, Leafp-en
med students rtnthand wha t cont.ended and are ~aually
" pretty objective." Most
to expect .
Residence halls are at.o parentswouldbesurpi.aedto
promotinJ: students actina as seethtmselvesre!Jectedin
bigbr-othentodWdreninthe their cllil&--en'a statemenll,
com m~mity, Wfgren uid. he acid«\.
r=\M':t~~~ ~i:p~v=~::s ~
Leafgren hal bad on the
insUtutlon for nearly a
decade.
This campus bou:lea its
students in 14 resideoce halls,
dormltorln, Leafgren uid.
Exampln of residmce ball
procrammi.og. he said, are
wmioars on human sexuality
and program• dulinl witb
:3a~~~~~ ~=u~o::es~
mUll be places to '1»eep
people Wld~ntand tbem ·
telves:"'
Leal1ren has 1ai n ~d
national prominence In his
w o r lr. an d com·
pleted a term u pmideat of
the Upper M ldweat Th st~xperlence"coolributes
Regional Auoc iation or ju.st as much to the coUege
a nd University kkll," In 1etdnt: "a se:nse or
Housi n g Office r • whlcb wtlat It means tocoatrlbute to
=
Co ll ~ge
•
inatltutions in dlht
Besides b ei n J a d ·
ministntor, be stayJ In·
wived In Dl'le put time
t~ac b lng as an associate
profeuor of ~cboiOIJ' .
Today'a bcMiDJ offtcen
are
lacreaalnJIY
" ororu,lonally trained
a ~~~I~~~~~ ~.iues
on informational proJrams
about ~ abuse, be ~d
other pruent concU'ftl tn·
cl ud ~ a l coholitm and
respon.sibl~ drlDkin& habits.
Quftnt slUCient coocems
aretdl.mitedaoditJOt'Sall
the way to the subject of
Sludentsare''very,very
curiGW~," and want valuabi~
informatiDn even If they're
unlllr.~ly to becom~ sup·
porter-s of • movement or
phftlomenon IUCh u wi t·
dlcraft.
Ltafgrm wUI be continuing
hia i n volv~m~nt wi th th~
asaoclation h~ hu headed the
=~=of
it::~.:
Wormation Committee.
AlarJ~shat~orlhe•udy\ng
bio&ogical orient.lion. Her-e
a-ammlna for his
Roser Barr
that occurs In the LRChaaa
•-e have a diligent Jlucltn t
compa raUv~
anatomy ellam. Photo by
December 2, 1974
THE POINTER
Poge 10
Point draws more students
Half of the 1tate'1 7:l
. :!~ ~~:S~ttsm~
than they did one yea!.:'go.
This information 11 in·
eluded In a study published
this week by Paul C&meroo
llolman , director o f
man aae ment information
nnd institutional resean:h at
UWSP, Some of the most
sla nlflcant gains wert
~ded for two nei&hborina Mllwaultee county stuc~ent~
eou nti u: Mar a thon 's compared with &33~ )'Uir
wrollmmt jumped from 438 aco.
to S15 and Wood'l went from
Althqh It hal not cut. into
536 to m .
UWSP 's ability to draw
a tudentl f r om eutern
An increase of part-time WIK«<Sin a1 much as IOIQe
sh.idtflts, some whom a~ observen originally thou&ht
ukln& co uu n In t heir the rdaUv~y new campUJ ai
bometO'IIIDIIUC:hasWI~in Gr~ Bay ls having some
Rapids. ~hrshfield and
communilllel
surroundlnj:
Wausau, contribute In part of
For example, Browq
O!unty, where Gfftfl Blrls
lheaalns .
located, aent 136 new fresbmmt.oStevmtPolntlntht
All told, the UWSP total fa ll of tt7t and thil
htadcount this fall is t,Ool2or yea r the number Is 55.
aboutt:Jbelowlhet973 1evel.
Approximately 5311 student•
are from communiUes in
The UW-Parklldt csmpus
more thnn 40 Jtalel. 1be bulk In Ktfllllha County, anolhtr
howt\·er, comes from Dlinoil. rdatiYely new Institution also
Twent y- three are from depends on moat of itJ
foreign countries.
students from an aru 'tllilcrt
Stevens Point draws btavilr
ln Portaae County. the total In tout heaatern WI ICOnsia.
enroUmmt fel l from 1,271 to
1,164. llowever. penon~ who
have been involved in Jludent Kenolha O>wlty th!J fall , an
recruitment pnjec:ll wer-e all Ume hlgh and twi« tbe
encouraaed by the fact the numbn- recorded last ytar.
number of new fresh men
from the same area increased
from lSI to' 235. This it the
T b ere was a rather
hi&hestdrawln lhlacatqory s11 nineant drop amon& new
since 1970 and down only &lx treshmea from DaM County.
fromliiBwhefttheunlver&lty from 1015 to eo. However, the
had ill laraest fresbman total earollmm t from Sln·ens
clut.
Polntlnlhatc:ounly.inwhitb
uw Mad*" iJ lou ted. is
remaininJ quite constant
Although the draw of new with tranlfer s tudent s
freshman from Milwaukee mUJna up for the lou in new
has been alidin& In recent freshmen.
yun, from 336 in t961to 2163
'"'"'·
=t1~1~w'~ro~~enu:!:
~~~t!~oo~'!~!~~~~~:::
cOUlty is only alighUy down .
The reason Is many students
take one or two years of
university educ:atlon on a
cam pus close to horne and
then transfer to Stevens
Point. Thiafallthe-reare&ZI
Some people ca.n't "let lnlo"ltudie$, while others can.
Photo by Roger Barr
ROTC coed ships out
Catherine (Kl t l ~orenc:e
lbe«itnomililafyservlce
will "&hip out" to army boot obUaaUon lfiC\II'Ted during
tJUa cowae and women art
Reserve OUicers Tralnlna not required to drill with
next turnmer .Sa put of her
Cor-pi tROTC l
pn~~T~m
at
UWSP.
She b a j~ior En&Jis.h
majorudthemo.tadvancecl
ROTC student cadet amona
14 women CW'T'tnUy enrolltd
in the coeduCliUonal ROTC
programatStevensPoi.Dt.
· It wW be the nnt year any
women ROTC cadets attend
summer camp or American
bilsa, and even though tbt:re
may have to be some
modllkatiodl in the tough
phyJiul r equirements,
Flor~ Rid she wants to
lie treated " the same u the
IU-n·~'
four year
ROTC
weapon• allhou1h man y
cbooR to do 10.
The advanced course
duriq the junior and toelllor
yean 11 for ~elected studtfltJ
who have demorstrated a
potential for becominc army
officen.
They are taucht kadenblp
and manq:tment, and theory
and dynamicJ of the military
team . Before rqiaterln& f«
the advance course, cadetJ
are ~ted to IIJ.II a tdn·
tTactbindin&them tomllitary
ltn'ice fbr either two to four
yean acUve duty Of' lilt yean
In~ ~inctuate
as
a:ene r ally acce pted, ac ·
cordlna: to Flo r ecence,
althouglilhesaidshtdoea
expect a litUe reaentment
from male cadellat summu
cam p who wlll perform more
at l'ttiUOUJphysicaltnks.
Women are txtJteted t.o
become profldent 1n the USot
of the M·l6rine as are the
men and mo.t ol the "'conridence physical tests"' m1111t
be performed by men and
women alike at summe r
camp she added . " I don't
want f a voriti sm,'~ uld
f1orence . "that would only
build up more r_esoentment."
f1C~rtr~Coesaldlhe'sucited
about 1ummer ca mp because
of the challena:e It offen.
" l lntendtocloever)'l.hing.
the auys do," she 11\d ,
fd:'t!:ir:~!:!,~~ ~~~:,'::~o:f:. s:~~=~ ;~:L:'~~~t
Pr:~:n ~~=~ ~= .'!,y~!ilifa"ry ~U:ft
~aen r:;~mi~1on !'f :=ry ,~r;::~~n~r{d f1;~
kadenhip and JN~nagemMt. dele'* artlllary_.
0
with emphasis on Jeadft'lhip
developm~t.
The coeducational ROTC
pros.ram at UWSP has been
w:
also will attend summe r
camp this yeilr. Schrader
unlled and qreed, but ad·
ded, "they11 have to lighttfl
that 1:1 pound back pack a
little for Kit . Thal'J all Jhe
weta:hts ., :·
Draw from the westcm side
or the state remains rather
minimal, althou&h there is a
slow 1aln In Jome of tbe
counties north of Eau Oai~
and JWToundlng LaCI'olse'
andPlattevllle,allof,.ilk:h
are unlverlity mnmunitieli.
Governor Patrick-tucey (stonding) hos on attentive audience in William Dyke
(seated left) ond William Upham (right) ot the gubernatorial debate held here,
Photo by Roger Barr.
UWSP students taught )hree R's
Skills labs prove worthwhile_:;;br Bellv Oeeode•u•lu
Reading,'r iting and 'rith·
metk- are just some of the
skills ess.tntial to Sluc!enlJ.
Nowtherelshelpfor SiudenU
· ,.,-ho may find thmtselve:t
lackin& in these areas.
Located in the Collins
Oassroom Center tCCC I lrt'
" I got the Idea yean ago
,.,11m 1was in gra~le Khool
in Kentucky, which had a
Mathroom for Its Sludents.
Fin a lly last yu r when
PRIDE pnwlded the funds ,
""'t ...-ere able to open 1
Mathr"oom," said Km1.
Another buic skill for the
~:::n!!~.!~~~li~ ~;~~= ~·~:e"~...J! .::;~bet~i!
.
Laboratory , the Reading and
Study Skills Laboratory and
the Malhroom .
Ac«salbllty is one trait all
the laboratories share.
"StUiclenta can drop inany
time. Mostoftheworkisdooe
independently, but if they get
stuck on a math problmt are here to ~p them,"
remarked Wai 011 Uu, a
student aulslant. sho workJ
in the Malhroom about six
hours a week.
" We provide s tudent
assistant, who are jW~.ion or
Rnion, either majorina or
minoring in math and I C1)fl'le
in here 10 help the studenu.
Remmtber the letter to the
editor last yea r !run the
stOOent who improved hiJ
math grade from aCto a B.
with more studying and help
this area the Readina and
Study Skills . Laboratory on
the third noor of the CCC,
otfen assislan«.
"When a student comes in,
we explain the va r io us
a.ltema tlvesthath econtake.
A student can take a cl151i for
credit. such as Psychology
101, an eight 'lll'ftk coww,
sign up for a non-credit
reading and study s kills
group or come in for in·
divldual help." explained
Barb Smit h. a Uudent
assistant in the Lab.
There are five instructors
and rive student asslstanlll.
...110 rotate the hours they
...'OI'k in the Lab. The Lab Is
open from 9 a.m. • 4 p.m
Monday through Thunday
aad rrom 9 a.m . • noon on
f'riday1 .
confidenu Jevt"l improvu
""ilt"n they know there is
someone here 10 help them if
they get a 111ag in their work.
Our student assistants doa't
"""flo come In for tlelp. I '
sometimes teach v.~ or
students, too." said Ullian
Spangt"nberf. one of the
graduate ass1st.ants.
~:~~~i se!~~h.}.':;ud:~; i~:~f!i~~~na~i:!f~~
~au~! 1 a:~,!:~""~·q:!s~!~
Three of tht' &raduatt"
s ufficit"ntly they find a~lsunu sre also dorm
~::,':1": c~o Kc~:~·. 1,1~~ di~~~:-;·or the students rind
Mathroom's advisor.
out about the ~b rn thfo
The )lathroom became dormJ from ~1the r . thf'
:;!~.~~~~~·~thy~!~~! ~= ,M~~ ~~~
listedonthedooroftheroom . ~is Stormecn . • student
23-4.
ass~Jtant .
th~~~:.un:m,~:·~l!
:!o:·~~~i:~·;~i~~h1::
rOoms, ha ll w1 ys and othnareas in the hal11. Eadl
lludent was given a choice of
m colors and then tu~
looae with vlr t uall)' no
, .... ••·-···c:.:·:" '
rHtrk:tions.
The onlyRJb)t<:llimitatJons ••~•·•> low;'""'
were on those things which
appeal to thf
peraonauigllt'd to that room
mlaht not
thenextMmeslt'l'.
A touch of UWSP graffiti on a dorm wall
cape and paint dorms
Hendcnon and his coed
a"t'W bfpn re-landscapin&
an area on the nor lh end of
c:amp115
thil twnmer. ltno1r;n
dlaracters
C1bl&I1S in as lhe ' "pil."
The pi t also recopiud as
the backdoor of Watson,
Bur ro ughs 1nd Thompson
and KnulUn Ha\11 was re, lh!paint, designed In an effort to
upplred by eli m ina t e th e per en n ial
1ly~ern defolia tionofthe areaca used
11ilh in- bythehef'dofstucltnttn/fic
Already mo1·ing from and to claues.
one and a
la,·e be-en
Hendenon uid OM of the
thin&sthat -.-·ulacldfll at this
campuswuanare.11just to
lit and chat -.-ith 1 buddy or
girl (dend. '1be areas are too
optn.'"llid llaldenon. '1be
wholelh rustoft he landsea pe
project is to make a more
f)ntlrl)'«l0
thathas h\Mtanscalt.h\Mtan
qu;ll ilies and th at 's -.-·ha.t
-.--e're trylfll to do -.-;th the
landscape project .'' he said.
~ ·""'
pproac:h
<fdalbOOJ
1
-.hodon"t
dii; land·
edtojoina
,..,..of di tch
by Don
"" Knutzen
Wooden stai rways con·
stnx:ted of old r ailro.d ttes,
...'ffe placed to r~nel studtnt
traffic aw•y fr om t h e
l'qtlation and over existing
sidewalks. Mammoth oc:tocon
sha~ n ower beds, a lso
constr ucted of old railroad
ties. added a ' 'tlatural loolt"
to the p revio us ly naked
landscape.
Hanaon , Sc h meeckle ,
Bald...,in a..! Neale Halls
•~e also r e<IK«ated this
f.al.l with si miliar buildinl
mtterilll t prim ar lly old
railroa d tiesJ but In a new
moti f . ln5tead of stairw1ys,
boulde r gu dens nestled
among sreen lhrubbery w~
placed to creal a pleasant
rural settlns .
inlimateeam p~a . "
' "The no-.-w oe<ls break
lheselargeareasintosmaller
:!re:t .~; n:f~:'m!,"~
Hen!kr50fl -.-·as the man
:Z!
:rr=~~~::.«i~td~::
and isexpec:tcdtocontinueas
the ramrod (Of'" the project
through the summer ol tm.
He would prefer aloncer
term procrambe lnitiattdto
co ntin ue rorecastin& t he
needs of the entire wi\-ersity
in theareaor landle.llping, he
:!~i ~=~~f~e ::!1,! :
nat uralresoureeprogram,he
"'""'·
II a in' t the Point Playboy Club but we coli it home
A tower of timber erected during the student landscape pro ject
THE POINTER
December 2, 197 4
•
" 'dr-c t. Ha".,..! ow.cetlor Lee Sherman Dreyfus
said he didn1 even know tbe liJn wu thft'e durirc the Last
........
DreyfLB opened mast of the aeulot~~ with a r- words on
what to expect, and on what he expected during tbe next
four yean. ~ II)' R.wt1 K"""5KII
ltyBoltKf:rUkd;
' "J'bey were tbe univtnlty
for tome 1,500 incomln&
1!\dfonts,"said John nmc::ak,
orientationasaistantdlrector,
of the orlmtation leaden and
~~~ill~~~~
was a bia
" I think It's a mud! more
nulble pr oaram," uld
Helen Godfrey, orientation
director.- ''Ow" basic &oalls
to serve student needa.''
The Incoming freshmen
and parent evaluations of the
procram bon out the fedtna
of quality.
Of the appro•inutely 1,500
evaluations, only about 30
were neaative. 1be vast
majority o! the evaluaUona
ranlr.ed the procram a u·
ftllenl .
o\.-:~iquepartoftbe UWSP
SUmmer Orientation II that
there are ..eparate prosrams
for tbe lncoml113 (rahmen
and their pare~ta . "We feel
there are different I!Hdl,''
said Godfrey. ''The lludents
andparentaeachhavedlr·
ferent conce rn s and
anlddles."
''St~ta seem to come to
aet acquainted lrith the
university, and othe r
students, and to ~lster,"
said Godfrey. "Wetryto&ive
p.rentl an OY'ft'all Idea of
what is here and what lhetr
children a~ and wt11 be JoinJ
through. The whole thlnJ II
~allyCfl'atinaanawareneu.
' ' T h e r e were so.me
pr oblems regardlna the
l~lhofthe session. · ·'The
problem is that wedon'tltnow
how muth we dn atve a
student. There is 10 mur:h
~at !bey have ID know,and so
hltle time to live It to them
anyway. Yet we si mply can't
bombard them with too
much,' ' said Godfrey .
"NothinJ says thll they
have to come. We reeommend it and they come Oft our
word that it·s a beneficial
program .
It II a good
program and il rdlectl the
st udent leaders," uld
God frey.
Math bulletins
used statewide
Two editors of bulletins
published at UWSP are at·
tm\ptlng to lhow students
and the public a n 'elraarw:e'
involved in so l vlnJ
mathematical problems and
tMn sharinJthe Information
with others.
Go r don Miller and
George Kun1 of the UWSP
mathematics faculty have
founded two publications
promotinJ appreciatlM for
and lntaest in the fit'ld of
mathematlca.
st~:J ·~~nt 1 ~blet~
become an
lr~~tant IUCCUI.
All older publicaUon, ''The
Point Set .. which was sta rted
near ly thrtoe yean aao, is
«stributecl to studrntl at
UWSP wliO ei ther major or
mlnorinmalht'matlca ph.IIIO
about 50 individua ls and
campuses in WIJCODain and
several other states.
Mike (Mac ) McMenamin OdU , and JiU Huftlink tr!J.hl),
r...o orient.tlon leaden, hel p two frelhmen with their
"The Point Sublet " also
totrVesasa- ne...,letterforlhe
Cen t ral
Wisco n si n
Mathematics Leaaue which
local profesaors founded ..vlth
f\U\ds fr om Sentry Insurance
of Stevens Point and Em·
P'o>'en Insurance or Wauuu
for pa r ticipa t ion by high
scbool ltudt'flts in a wide
The publications Ulually
have a geometry, algebra and
advanced problem·all dlf·
ficult enouJ,hJO "we don't get
besi..ged wit h responses.··
It
~surfn~~~~~~!'~~e~~':!~
detiJned for hi&h school
students. 1be circulation II
approximatel y 2,500 with
copies going to individuals
plus secondary scboob: in
WlKonlin and In some oul..of·
llate communities.
~ehecfu}n . I '~II7HMn1Kublftlt
In add!Uon to the time they
~=~~~~~v~o:;
MlUer also respond to lettns
from thei r readers.
Such publlcatlona In
mathematics are n 't com·
m011place on the Amtrican
educatiM scene, but there
a r e a few . Kuna , who
prGpOied ''The Point Set",
saw it as a publlcaUon to
serve the university; but
toon, Ill popularity tpread
far from the boundaries or the
campus. It led the way for
"The Pulnt Sublet" and a
dltrert'flt audience.
Both publications are
prinled Oft the university's
Kuaa lnltiaUy teamed up
own d~ lcatina eqtipmmt at wllhanuaerpartnft"IMiller)
limited COlt and fow paces wtlo has experienced parltthesiz.eof an averace book. ticular t'fljoyment from an
Howevei-, there ls a certalo
:'~:f:'~==~~ii~
dlqrams.
•
=~!f ~,:;:.;~~
mathemallct
cro11word
puzz.les!orlbe"PolntSet."
•
December 2, 197 4
T HE POINTER
~e 15
$34,000 giant used in studies
A nev.· electron m~
at uwsP erompltd a Marshfield ph ysicia n ud· lils
techi\ICI.an to be temporary
eotl~ans this pa&t summer
50 they can learn to use the
povoerful instrument as a tool
for medkal research and
diagnosis.
01arunsana SUbapodot. a
pediatricncurologlstattbe
Marshfield Clinic, and
medlcaltechnolosist Barbara
Sim01'150fl spent about four
mornings a wf'dt at the
UWSP campus t;aking a
couneindectron m~
techniques tausht by Don A.
llay ol tbe BioiOI)' Dtpartment . !lay also serves as
director of the electron
microsco pe
laboratory
facilities.
The $34 ,000 giant
microscope whose
maanificatio n ca pacity
ran1es from I , OOOx to
l2I,OOOJ;, was installed last
s pring in the Bio l ogy
Oepa r tmen t 'a
new
headquarters In the College ol
Natural Reaources (CNR )
Buildi~ . Since that time a
gre.atde.alolinterestinlhe
device has ~n expressed by
ltudcnu, faculty and people
in the community, according
to !lay.
Subapodok, whose sub·
5p(!clality is neuromuscular
dlaeasea. said t hat the
powerful instrument Is
allowing him to study the
uilraslructureollhem1.15Cies
and nerves. " It 's a very
lelllitive way ol detecting
tarlystagesofdlSHses," he
explained . " The electron
mkroscope allows us to see
en1ymes present in the
musc l es in difrerent
...._...
Techniciaro able to handle
the instrument are in demand
in medicine, resean::h and
Nucalion, and the new
course t eaching its
tedldtquesisverypopularat
UWSP. Wort for lhe courw
invo lved learninc how to
proceu t he tlnue for
eumination, leamlns how to
operate !he microscope itself
which tats ~!'Vaphs
Or. Donald Hoy adjusts massive microscope w ith mogn ificolion capabilities
ranging from 1,OOOx to 128,000x
1-'acthtlesforthelaben·
compau four rooms. In
addition to the room ~~o·hlch
houses the huge micJ"'OCttf",
lhereisali.ssuep~atton
Techll)(:t.lns able to handle
the inslr"ument an in demand
in medicine, resean::h and
education, and the new
course t eaching it s
lechNques is Yt'.f"/ popular at
UWSP. Wort for the course
in.-oJ.-ed learniog how to
process the tiuue for
examination, learning how to
operate the mlcroKope Itself
:ic':n~t~ri.f~:r·~~~
learnins basic darkroom
procedures to de-Yeklp and
erb.fJethephot.l».
room whn'e the makrlal is
fb:ed, stained and embedded
in a solid block ol plastic, a
room with an ultrami.crotome
thattsusedtoslicetiuue
=lionallylhin.andadark
and fac:llitid'are e.celient. I
Both doctors plan to work
feel luc:ky to be 10 close."
closely IC1iel1m' on com mon
p r ojecu with t he ne w
microscope to help them.
t!!Yi:n~~~nu~M:'~~
useit.electronm~ .
also appreciates the con\"mience of having one In
SIC\'t'ttsPoint. Jicis nowable
to contin!JC his research on
atrioventricular heart valves
bn't". Withtheaidofseve!'ll
thouund dollars worth ol
Subapodot Yid he was grants from the W~in
· ·v~y surprisedandpleased
Heart Association, he has
tofindsuchfinefacilitieslna befllltudyinsthestepbyslep
communily this sbe. I had procus ol normal cell fiK'·
thought it would be necasary mation to bettt'r urJdn'stand
to travel to Madison to take hov.· ddec.:ts in tbe opes-ation
the courw. but U~"SP's lab olthebrartoccur .
Thatlano and came to thiS
country 13 years ago. lie
rect"ived his degrees from
UW MadiJOII and now lives in
MarVtr~eld with his family .
" Ma.sterina the techniqUt"
His techrtc•an , SimonsOI•,
oltheelecti'QnmicrtiiCOpeis hils worked at the Muscle
not easy," Sub<ipodok ex- !Ustochemist ry l..:.b a t the
plained, "but Hay is an ex· Marshfield Ctlnic forthepast
cellentte;acher. Anyooe who t"ight years.
complt"ted this coune will be
:1
Yery co mp ett"lt
technic1an."
1be Marshlit"id physlc•an.
who a1ao has a full
background ol tra.i,rung in
adultneuroiOfY.isa native' of
Page 16
Fine arts offers variety
The term ''fil'le arts" at· ~ice Organiution ' <UsOI University J.u Ensemble\
UWSP reo. !n eitba' lo a toun'ibroad. In 1973 a troupe the University Concert Oloir
building~ a college or a ol. students !rom Stevens and lhe University Symphotly
:!e~ety
of lhinp 1o do UM!
Amore the usual host ol
activities lo a tteod « take
part in are the university
theatre productiOill, Musk
Department presentatiODS,
:,~
~
::-'
e::iti:d
Lect~We Series in whiCh a
vanety of taleDt from arouoo
the aria is displayed.
The university thea tre
provkles lWama students, u
well u otben lnteresled in
theatre, an opportunity lo
practlee tbdt cralt four or
rive limes a yeu In shows
ran&in& £rom tragedy UM!
opera lo muslc.al come:ty and
dance theatre.
J
This seasoo'slsardeetiou
of t_hat variety with the
mus1cal extnvagaou of
~~J.'::f.· ~rk T~~;s~;
overseas.
The Arts and Lectures
Series has provided Central
Wisconsin with entertainment
opportunities oOt otherwise
:..es:=::.a':t
~Mar~~ ~~s~e~vtt~ r:e~~;::
f.uhet . an d the popula.~ and Argyll Sutherland
Arse n1c a nd Old Lace
H igh l a nders and th e
among the offerinp.
Hungaria n dance troupe ,
amq lbe oueri..-.
RaJ!.o
In a ddition , productions
A ~ array ol mualc
S:',.;
•
~~ t!::~~bl=': gr~~~=r asrteud~hnet ~r~~~~r~
the Warsaw National
Philharmonic, the Loridon
Bach Society and New
Orlean's own Preservation
Han Jazz ABBand.
1be 74-75 seuon is another
mixture of International
Ia~. Scheduled eventa are
namenco guitarist Carlos
Montoya, the VieMa Boys
Choir. tbe Israel OwnbetOrchestra a nd Professor
Peter Schickele's P .D.Q.
Bach.
Other perform a n ces
~ar~·~·~':!~ ~~~:e~e~":f:.o~
=m:tyu.:r
and s~ area With
art work ; cra rt s and Hall, the scme of many
photogra phy produced by recitals and concerts.
The University Film
local ar"thts.'Recentdisplays
-re of folk art and cnrta Society, a group of faculty
from Poland collected by and students In teres led In the
holiday tim e for studtr~ta, two uea residents and a craft of fllm ·malr.l ng ,
faeulty and area residtr~ts series of prints, palntlnp and presentsoveradoz.en feature
offering Kenaissanee pmoo' rose:malling items.
lilma each season. They also
enterutinment, c01tumes and
sponsor film festivals and
dtcor.
The FA.C, opened In 1970, speclaJ eveOta. t..st sprtna
provides the xtu.na for mucb director Fr-Ulk Capra, whoee
olthil acUvlty. Besides tbe films lDclude "Mr. Smith
Cho ru s, the Percussion Carlsten Gallery, it includes Goes ToWalhlngtoo" aod " II
Enxmble and the Olrlnet the Warren Card Jenkins Happened One Night," spm t
Owir.
Theatre, th e home or two days on camp111 leading
lbe UWSP also boasts one university theatre, and the discuuiONI and an.swerina
of the rmest Suzuld violin Peter J . Michelsen Concert questionl.
sChOOlS m tne country. 1be
AmuicanSuzukilnstitute,an
annual event on eam p111 slnee
the summer ol 1971 , draws
parents and sludeats from
acrosa lM c:ounlry to study
the Japanese method ol
teachin! children the violin.
ProfessorMargeryAber,one
ol. the American pioneers ol
:~~t'!?~~;~~~r~ g{;!:s~r~d Ae.:a~lrg::
==the
lmtitute and the
In the area of art, Ut new
Fine Arts Center <FACI has
provided the c:amp~a with an "
important addition, the Edni.
C.t!sten Art Gallery. The
~ aa~ {.o~~;~ ~ ~:~?;!_ ~e !~~a'~
UWSP Music: Department, Internationally famous ar ·
;.'!r;! i:'!!-:' ~ ~~~/d~P'::~~~~ ~a'c'!tt~ a~~~-tudent and
Is generally
tb"Onl-
m111 1c and opera
Exhibits have .Inc luded
music: xuon are
prov\dedbytbe StevensPoint
Symphony Orche1tra , the
Univenity Jazz Enaanble,
tbe Univtrilty Concert Choir
andtheUnlvenltySymphony
Orchestra . A Madrigal
Dian« Is held each year at
holiday time.
Some of the bigger ennts
of the musk: season are
providedbylheStevensPoint
Symphony Orchestra , the
Mexico and Latin and South
America and original works
by such artiall as Plc:uso.
Olagall, Dalland Ren01.r.
Shows for the 74-75 season
"ha velncludedphotographaby
world· renowned
photo ·
journalist Alfred Eisenstaedt
and a coUec tion . of ~ster·
colors by WisconSin arusts:
The Uouning Reaourees
Center I L~ I at UWSP abo
sponsors displays ; primarily
spon10n '
l';.~d~ s:n::'!ti! ~-the bigger events ~g;;~:m;!,r~~~d p~:t;e{;.~.::
uWs'P
Theatre Seris, ~plays
presented and directed by
University drama students,
and the mucb acclaimed
Summer Tbeatre aerlea,
which this past sum mer
presented tbree m~. " I
Do, 1 Do," " UtUe Mary
Swlahiae" and ' 'The Roar of
the Grealepaint."
1be Theatre Arta Depart·
mentatUWSPbasalsotakeD
~rt In a DWUber o1 United
.
of tbe
~
.
•
UWSP is o notional center for
teaching children violin by Suzuki.
li
Nelson Hall , UWSP's second oldest
bull d ~ ng , has seen many th ings happen.
Nelson Hall has watched
Point grow
byS h~lleyl l oun
Study Habits : Sometimes even the
most dedkated succumb to nature-'s
dema nds. Photo by Roger Barr
The front porch &1Gb has
c rac ked andsctUedon the
campus ' Jecon d o ldest
building, Nelson Hall .
Nelson Hall, builtin t91SaJ
a ..-omen's dormi tory, was
the first bulldin& of ita kind
funded by the Bo1rd of
Rfo&ents for ,.·hat was the
Wi sconsin Normal School
Sys tem. II was named after
George B. Nelson, membe!- oC
the board of Regents and
State Supreme Court.
The new women 'a dor mitory opened ill arms to Ita
llrstoccupantsln&>ptember
of 1916. The dormitory was
complete with a firtplace
lounge and a food servke.
Dorm life coniisted of a
10:30 p.m. curfew, a formal
dance once a year, motherda~J~hter teu and afternoon
teas with the whole student
· body u the &uelt of honor.
For two yean the women of tKJO. Durin& thll time the
Ste\·ens Point Normal School women de corat ed th ei r
lived In Nelson Hall. But do r mitor y and obaerve d
shortlyafterthebqlnninaof holidays In t he proper
the 1918 achool ter m the fashion .
residents were Informed that
ln . I~ the food scrvice
theyweretobe movedout. A from Nelson Ha ll wu moved
tr aining proar am fo r to U,e University Ce nt e r ·
membtn of the armed fOI'Cel IUCI .
In Sept. 1160, men moved
was to be held on campus.
This training proJram into Nd.son HaU and !he
lasted unUI J anuary of 191t women moved Into Steiner
when the women got their Hall because Steiner llall
dorm baclr.. Dorm life for the wuLa raer.
women was uninterrupted
In the fall of 1962. women
moved baclr. into Nelson Hall .
until the depression.
Atth.isU me ltheld 145women
1
with triple, double and single
briefly and the cooki ng occupancy.
In 1966 it waa again, used
facilities we re turned over to
the women studentJ.
for military pur1)05el .
Then, in 1943, Nelson H.all
It was las t u.sed as a
.....s, again taken over by residence hall In 1961.
men. The Air Corps were
Presenlly Nelson Hall Is
training on campu1.
used to house the UWSP
After June of 1i+l the Health Cenler, offices and
women had the hall badt until some class areas.
fOOO::risne r!~e~~:~tl~~!d
Hamilton urges support for lower tuition
by Bob Knksleorll
The universi ty 's tuition
propoul b IOUlld, but it is
go..ng to be acuttled by the
10\'enor unleu we take imm e d iate actio n , Un ited
Council IUC ) President Jim
Ha milton said Sat"'"day.
Hamilton , presklent of the
U'lt'SP student &OVffllment
last year , was speaking of a
proposaJ written by the UW
Central Administra tion which
ca.tls for a reduction of In ~t ate. underaradu.ate tuition
from 25 percenl of inlt ructional cost to 12.!1 percenc .
While speaking at UC's
encutive board meeting at
Rl \'tr Falls last ,.-eelr.end,
Ham ilton called for the ten
mem~r s tudent go\'er nmenl'l to mount an im mediate campaign to pin
acceptanC" t of the tuit ion
proposal.
" I don 't th ink there a rt
many students •·ho can bear
the anticipal.ed higher C'OIIS
o1;er the next three or four
yeau ,'' said Hami lt o n .
" Something has to be dont.''
He sakS that I( wr~ t
trendJ continue, tuition and
fees for unckrgrads may be
0\·er $1.000 annu.ally In less
than row- yean
UW Pres ident John Wea,-er
and the UW Board of Relents
hon ·e come out in s upport of
the Jovoer tuition proposal .
But . Go\•ernor Pa trick Lucey
has repeatedly spoken out
against the propo1al , calling
it inflationary and a ' 'pie In
tbellr.y."
'"lllegovernorhasnoteven
~acopyoftheproposal , "
sa1d Hamilton. " I think his
decision to unconditionally
rtjectitisa bitpremature."
fund thll. II will not be
n«essarytoraisetaxe:s .''
lleestirn.~ted thai thest.ale
of Yt~~~eonsin presentlyhu a
surplusoCaboutfZtSmilllon.
"It will be a shame if this
propos al goes unheeded ,
v.·hen it could 10 easily be
im pl emented, "
said
llamilton added that lncrtasedsalarycompensation
for the faculty and st.aff Is
also necessary. But. If they
get a 1100 mlllion inc reue
theywi ll becuttinatheirown
throats as studentJ will not be
able to pay 101' that without
tuition rtliel , he said. Con -
=il~':·th~~e ~~pit! ~:~~:.n~~~.:,he;,.jd ~~~~y~~
Hamilton said that man y
feet Lucey jumped
the gun.
accomodate thi s propou l, if said llam L_Iton. Unless we Jtt
the governor wantJ to."
~~Jty r:.::i~ ~tr~~:!t ~~:
I think the real Issue Is the increulngly tight ,lob
" Once all the fa ctJ on this
there ,.-on't
be a ny rea.sontobeap lnst
it .'" ui d Ha m il ton . " The
present s"'"plus canbeusedto
" W1 scon si n ha s been a he said.
naLLonal leader in higher
" You cannot sell your
education. l.uttyisaerklusly luture short In a time of
hinder ing thi s program ."
crisis,'' said llamilton .
ltg~slators
are br~htout
~~:~ti!~~~:m:ito~ 1 !:id~ ~~:~~~:~pl~ yn!:::tufi~~
0
Pcge
18
THE POINTER
December
2, 1974
Students master the marshal arts
bySC.atayDun.c:an
u you were suddenly attacked and were proficient In
judo or karate, you could be
very confident In yo~.rabillly .
But , ...'hat can the avl!f'ale
college student do?
Every student now hu a
chaftl!i! to tcun bask kicks,
blows and nips and how to
defend themselves In alm05t
any situa tion.
'T'wice a week students are
lnatructed·by Nancy Page In
personal dcfenac, Phy. Ed.
101-.
The course usn many of
the. ftllls, kicks and blows
method It to kick. Tbe kick
keeps the handt from s;eulnt:
...ithinreachoftheauad:er ,"
said Page.
Aftermasterlngthecorrect
way to fall , students practice
nips on each _other. The
shoulder and hip throws In!
cuyenouahforeven asmall
pcrsontouae.
"The clement of surorise
and contldt!nct in your own
ability ue the most Important aspect$ or personal
dcf~nsc." aald one studen t.
found in the buies of karate
Students are tauaht how to
get out of any type of hold or
attack by applying kkka and
andjudo. ·"J'hecourseisnot a
karate or judo class .
Proricltney In these arcu
would take many yean of
practice,"sa\d Pa1e.
Pagestressesconlldcncein
the ltudenls own abllily and
dc\·eloping several types of
dcfenaethatworkthebestfor
each Individual student .
"The mos t e ffe c tiv e
The atudcnts practice their
defenses on each other and on
punching bags.
Penonal defense 1how1
every pH'IM -.chat they have
at their disposa l to defend
themselves and then teadlCI
the,studenthowtoadequntcly
develop these techniques,"
said Pllge.
·
blowsinstrat~icplaces.
UWSP enrollment
increases
A young lody demonstrates her self defense obilities
Photo by Bill Poulson
Faculty offer scholarships
t~ incoming freshmen
Sixty-three frHhmen all
UWSP have received SIOO
sc holarship• under a
procram f:llablllbed a ytar
aao ID which professors
reCOIDite
academic
achievements on the hilh
acboollevd.
The
partlc lpa tiDI
protesson contributed $100
cuh and thereby became a
"Faculty Sponsor" for the
new frethmen .
In additio n to winning
financial auiJI:ance intended
to encot.rqe sh.!y on the
tolltgiate level by pft'lonS
with 0\Utandinl acadtmlc
cndentlals,lludenlsareallo
pv~ an extra bit of personal
attention by their tpeq0rin1
p-ofeuors, wboinsomecasea
invite lbe students home for
meals or pnwide a speda.l
meu~re of counsellna.
The ~ebolarlhlp winners
must be ranked at or v~y
nca r the top of their high
school a:radu.atina claues to
be etrgible for the awardt.
by Jta rr te t Pfutth
Various facton inn~ced
the recent Inc r eased
enrollment• at UWSP.
Ongoi01 lmtdt, increased
graduate enrollment, b'ansferrina ltudents, and fewer
dropouts attrib!Acd to the
Increased figures .
Latest projected figures
stand at I,OJS students, including tho s e stud ents
enrolled in off campus ex·
tension courses a«ording to
Aulstant Registrar David
Eckholm .
L..astyear's figW"csshowan
almost50pcrcentdecreasein
the dropout rate, tald Helen
Godfrey, associate dean of
Student Services.
ThO!IC students continuing
on the graduate levt'l surprislng.ly pushed the total of
graclllilte enrollment to 722,
approximate ly 230 more
compared to las t year ' s
Oguresatthislime.
Last s pr ing, budget
plannen estimated 7,200
lludents to be ret~~ning this
ran: Later figtrcs rose to a
7,700 ntimtlion as school
approached.
Final figures were turned
into Central Adm inistration
In Madison this week, to
evaluate the numbe r o f
course credita lnstruct.on ue
teaching.
crcdllt Centra l Ad miniatration appro priates
monies for one FTE student.
The nwnber of orr campus
te udcnt• are numbered a t
a pproximately 350. These
student• are usually part
time studen t• .
Prospects for rcf111ding the
~W~iverlity equitably for the
increased enrollment are In
question . The UOO , OOO
received lut yt!a r as fiscal
relief for ten~.red faculty Is
being conside r ed in th e
current budget. The
reca l cu l ation• wi ll be
determined by Central Ad·
minist ration on November n.
added Sigmund.
Slcvcra Point wu rliLWed
~o!!atd'yd~~u:c!,,af~
compariaon to othl!f' state
ll'liverslllcs In the system .
Although the fiscal rdlef
monies alleviated 110me of the
pre11u r e, future fltca l
problema are In question,
Cent ral Administration Sigmund aaid. SigmWid alao
constitutes budgeti n g stated that Chancellor
allotment per full lime Dr eyfut' decltion maklna
s tud e nt or fu ll time polic:le •
conce r nl n l
equiva lency IFTEI sai d retention of tenured faculty
!!:~~ . ~f~~~~~ fobrue~~~ :tmaa~":~ :~ rpr;~"'XO I~
ISCTedi ts taken wtlcthft' it be cv~yt.hina he pouibly can to
one student or two part lime re~Cind a lay..,ff of facul ty ,
st udentaaddlna up to tS Sigmll'lda~ .
December 2, 197 4
THE POINTER
Page 19
Regents PPD committee approves proposals
The UWSP l1u passed the
first ol severa l tough hurdles
to win ap prov a l for the
three yun. The current 300.000 volumes. As of this
structure has, for example, · fall , there a lready are 312,000
7'0,000 square feet eompar~ volumes on the shelves.
~tiona:'mrni:;-a t~! P!':b\:;~ ~~;P~brw-:J :! pr!;~na~:!~;:Wm~t::~
building, complete with a 600seat auditorium, to replace
the rapidly deterloratin& Old
Maln .
The UW Board of Rejentl'
Physinl Plann1ng and
Developme nt
Committee
tPPDJ voted approval of the
proposal Tuesday, Oct. 2S, In
Madison and also gave a n
okay for a request to add
anothtf- lOUT stories atop the
t'ive4101')' AlbefUon Learnlrc
Resour'CH CenteT <LRCJ at a
t"Oit ol appro:llimately A.l
millioo.
The items were part ol a
11175·77 b ien n ium parl!:age
caUing f« '"major projects'"
on the UW campuses' In
Madison, Milwaukee, Stout,
Parkside, Eau Clai r e.
Oshkosh and Stevens Point.
Ten otber propo5&11 f«
Ste..-ens Point, a ll remodeling
~::e in~~:~~~;§ f~~~~t;~.
categOI')'ol'"rnlnor projec ts"
for the UW System..
The nextlv.lrdle all ol the
enrollment ol 3,000 less than Point is a $232:,000 propoNI to
Stevens Point. The even rtnnovateandredecontethe
smaller earrtp~.~Se~ at River o lder sections of th e
Falls and Platteville have University Center \UC). This
libraries almost as large u
•-ould not be finaDCf'd by tax
the one here.
dollars but through se lf·
Tbe cw-rent LRC design amortlzalloo.
capacity of the sUcks area is
The minor pro)ectl fund~
~!~::
~r~\~co':t)n~
$311,100; insUIIing new room
dlviden, new lightina and
ventilation equipment in the
Flcldhouse,costir~~ m,700; a
Hamilton said there wes-e
three balk thlngs'lt'T"Oill with
th e former policy of
prohlbiUni; liquor.
Jim Hamilton, president of
theuni t~COW"Icil , uid that
the repeal of the a~de
prohibiting alcohol in donns
sho"'-s that the Regents are
finallyrealiz.ingthe rights of
students
" Fi rst, Regent policy
simply was not in harmony
with stale Jaw," Hamilton
said , referring to the s tate
age of majority bill . •·After
al i, the regents certainly
couldn 'tget. a way with trylna
t.o restrict studena in donna
from votfD&."
United Council represents
ten st udent s governments
within the UW System .
Hamilton,.·upreaidentoflhe
..~~~~~~~nki~e ~~~;~
~,.
solidied with milkshokes and Coke? .
Eddie! Analher Scotch ond Sodo huh?"
su pport only
jobs.
If that attitude prevails,
I.Xt'yfus said SLevens Potnt
would be cau&ht in an W1U5Uoll
dilemma : to remodel Old
Main for continued use as an
ad ministration buildin &
,.·ou]d coat about IS million ,
he r e p o rted , which is
unrusonable to impose upon
ta xpayers . Moreover, the
facility would have five times
as much spaee u is needed
for administrative offices.
Last year, the State
Buildi ng
Commission
alloca t~ funds to raze Old
Main and to conves-t OrJull
Residence Hall into an ad·
ministration building , but
there is renewed Interest In
dorm livin& on campus which
now makea th e hall
unavailable . Las t year ,
Delz.ell ~ been utiliud In
accomodatlng persons at·
tt'n din& conventions on
campus and also as a baUway
hou5e ror offenders.
Tbe cost ol remoddina
"'"ould have approacbed lbe
lhreoe-quartes- million ~Wiar
figw-e , but would not have
lntll.lded development of an
audi torium apace.
Anewb&ildinawouldeither
The fteients In s upport of
Lavine, BtTtram l'otcNamara ,
Frank hlitek, M.s. Howard
Sandin, James Solber-1 a nd
Mary Williams .
Opposing the change were
Roland Day, John Dixon, W.
Roy Kopp , Walter Renk and
Barbara Tho mpson , 1tate
auperintendent of schools.
.....
Three Regents were ab·
" lth inkthe regentsmadea
mi sta ke when beer was
allow~ in the dorms, " said
Day,oneoflhefive•"hovoted
agalnstlegslizin& liquor.
u·;'P~~~!~~ ~rrn:fn~
regardl ess, 1M I see no
reason "'11Y the Board of
R.tsents ihould give it owstamp of approval,'" sai d
Day. " lfeel lt'sanabdicatloo
of our responsibili ty.''
" l"ve at,.·ays felt that ,.·e
e:annot legislate morals,"
uid Regent McNamara.
the prnent lite ol Okl
Main or off the comer ol
R.eses-ve and Stanley Streets .
space pinch within
nothing mo r e than
prohlbilion,and that , likeprohlbilioo,lt bred contempt for
rule making authority In
general.
~kl~~aFJ!ard'~es~~
1111
Dreyf~a.lso~tha t
stcond, Hamilton said that
hefel ttheruleamount~t.o
Third, llamlltonsald that lt
doesn ' t r eally fos te r th e
~ucation of the student to
d e ny h im- semet h l n1 ,
especially when that st udent
can simply walk acrosa the
street and lei a drink. lie
said it wu like trying to
prete'ldltlfilhl'teldst.
~modeling
~~'i~~~~as:::~
precaution, eDiting $37,500 ;
an d installl na automatM
bleacben in the Fieldhouse,
coslin&$22:..00.
UWSP Student Government
last year .
there 'sin~ta mon.g 10me
R\'ert
anarboretumonthenorthern
pa rt of cam pus, costln&
$73,000 ; Ins t a lling more
outside lights as a safety
The 8oan:l of Regents
'-otedWJuly 12tortpt"al a
tellriction against liquor in
dorms .
rt'genlS to
be
com p re hen sive landsca pe
project, lncludlns con ·
strucUon ol sl1111 to identify
buildinp and fw-ther work on
Ban lifted on alcohol in dorms
byBobKerlulec: k
p!"'ppYismust fa«willbe a
meellngof the full board ol
regents. Afte rthattheitem a
go t.o the State Building
Commission and then the
legisla~ and g01o~ .
The new administration
bui lding cw-rently is high In
pnority among all ol the
major projects, sunding at
nwnber six among %J items.
O!.anceUor Lft S. Dreyfus
said he believes the sleddi"&
...;u be rouah in getting final
ollaysforanynewbl.iildin& in
the l)'ltem simply because
by the state would be :
remodeling partao( the Fine
Arts Center at a c01t o( a bout
$130,000; developina a fluid
mechanics and hy drauli cs
laboratory in the Science
UWSP studen t, Karen Lampadi~. was caught In a
moment ol renection on a warm Aulwnn day . Photo by
Role!" w. Ba rT .
PcQe 20
THE POINTE R
December 2, 197 4
Student newspaper rated first class
The Pohuer wu awaf'Md a high First Clus rating ln the
Critical Strvlce of Associated Collegiate Preu (ACPI for
lutsc:mc:stt1". '
Competing aaalnst hll'ldreds or publications from schools
throughout the: .United States, the Pointer was cited for
Marks or Distinction In Editor ial Leadership, Physical
Api>f'arance, Writing and Edlllng.
Rober1 Kffksieck, this year's .PQ!ntc:r edltor, Wll alto the
editor last year. William Witt, a Communication Department
profeuor and the Pointer advisor, was also the advisor last
semtstft" .
Comments in the ACP Guidebook inc:hM:itd U.e following :
The l'olnter is well ora:aniU!d (coverage and content 1.
Balance l amont~ sow-CHI is well malnt1lnc:d . Facti are
dtrh·ed from rtpOrtln&. not ~~>Titn- opinion. 1be tmure
feature ltee the Ftb.'21. 19'7<4 Polnterl ll ~~o-ell researched
and ~~o·ell handled. Well dt\o-doped, objective ~Y - Sports
copy hu real plzun:. A variety of good c:d!torlol page
fea tures. A briJ,ht , ne~~>"ly front page. Page makeup l1 In·
novative nnd imaainntive. Photos have excellent contmt
a.ndquality.
The first class rating is awarded to public:ailonl which
ACP deems 10 be ex«llrnt in quality .
m::::~~~.,-:~~::!:te~J= ~~~!tfoo~~~~~~
A few use the Poinler for somelhing other thon
wropping up the gorboge
Photo by Roger Barr.
UWSP laser worth $750,000
With one of the world's
la ~gest lueTS as their tool, a
rese~rc:h
team believes
chances are " relatively
good" to make a historic:
br eak through here in
developina a new, clean form
of energy.
A laser valued at $750,000
h.-.s ~n ins talled irhthe
b:.sement or the Science
BuildiOiatUWSP. lncertain
focus.es ,the glassuoitcan
create plasmas containiq
billions of wattsofeoerc.
The problem is how to
harnea all o1 that potential
power .
The uniYft'lity aooounced
that it hu an agrffment with
a Wausau -based research
organization and the UWSP
Founda tion, •lnc ., for the
operation of the laser.
Local physics professors
will be joined by their
studentsinassistingthework
,.,.lng directed by Myron C.
Muckerheide, director of
research for the relatil'ely
new Wl~a.i~Ufinn .
Other research will be
conducted in the buemmt
laborato ry such as laser
applications to medicine and
even gravity. But for now,
emphasis i1 on energy at a
time when the nal.ion II
pullin& 1 top premium on
1ltemativet for the price
spinlin& oU beillJ shipped
from the Middle Elst.
The project won the praise
on Monday Oct. ol Caspar
Weinberser, U. S. HC:Tetary
of Health, EducaUon and
Welfare 1nd Melvtn R. Laird,
former c:ongrnsraan and
former U. S. secretary of
Defense. They we r e on
campu1 for 1 youth leadt1"·
shi p conft1"tnee.
Muckerhelde said he
believe. the kind of research
on c:nerv bc:lng conducted at
the univc:l'ltiy i1 unmatched
atleastln the United Slate..
1:
Durinf
the new1
c:on·
ferenc:e,ltwus~~~&Htedthat
If the research Is 1uc«s.s1ul it
miJ,ht be poulble , ata C1lllt o1
seve ral tl'lousand dollars per
family, to hwtall laser tubes
that would be powered by the
s un to generate enoug h
energy needed to run homes
u they are equipped today.
Muckfl-helde uid sev"eral
foreign governments were
interested In purchasing the
Ia~ now owned by Wausau
Research, Inc .. howc:vt1". he
noted amlling that hil small
g.roupofmen !four pc:nonsu
lnvHtOI'I) could move fastn1n the tranaaclion U.1 n tbt
Uc~andu;~ ~:S:m~ ~~~~~acitt
of
gov~:
lab the enerl)' to do the , The basic laser unit, which
pumplns come. from elec·
tTicity . Next year, there are
plans to capture sunliJ,ht as
theiOUrceolpowc:r,whichln
turn will beuaed to create the
eno rm ous ly energh.ed
plasmas.
the researchers continually
eKpand, wu purchued from
America n Optln in South
Bridge, Ma.u.
f'ranc:it Schmitz., chairman
olthePbysicsandAstronomy
Department at UWSP, said
up by a laser, Muckerheide
said that the energy in a
plasma the lnlta ntlt c:Jdstl is
equivalent to all of the enc:ru
bc:ina consumed 11 that u me
insta nt act"OU the United
States.
rc,rr
prolc:uors 1 nd students is an
asat beyond value. ~vc:ns
Point physics-astr onomy
majors will have the unu101l
opportunity of gc:ttlnc expe1"itnc:e with such a rare
pieceoChardware.
m~h ;!::!P:!
:.!: ~~ifa~'ie11
onu~!m':;
../
A member of a fraternity does some
modern " flagpole sitting " to raise money
for handicapped students .
Photo by Roger Barr
21
The Peoce Campus Center - A multipurpose facil ity used by UWSP students and
located just a block from the university. Photo by Bill Poulson
UCM aids religious cooperation
ae.-.a.,
Ahhough the kkl ol loUt
• 1 aeu1
Religion is ~&~U~.Uy con- e:oope ral io n ia very Imsidered a private matter. por tant. each &roup alill
Unlike other a~bjecllsucb as nlai n a ita indi vi dual
your job, cLa..sses or hobbies, reli&iouskkntity.
it TNIJ not be as openly
discussed.
" Rdi&ioa Isn't an overt
thU.. You .-u.al!y don't get
loo involved with il amtil
somethi ng hl ppet11 and you
may need tome bdp or adrice. The campus ministry is
llyin& to make reli&ion a
more appare:nt part of a
=~e r!! J::.~
and theexchllrce of ideas and
views," remarbd Maltbew
Smith, a UWSP student and
me mber of the United
Mhistry I a H l1ber
Education. UJMHE I Board.
The UMHE Board is just
one a( tbe contrlb•tory
orpnizationstor~DeCted
the
with
''Beca1.11e we re p~en t
diHerenlministries,wellave
ae p arale vlewa aDd
ldeolocla. The lhnllt o1 tbe
miniltryisservin& the needs
ollhe people as we each may
see them" said Brockman.
Steve Edington,
UMHE miniater It
~ Reverend
th e
UCM , Idded , " Each mln istet-
has apeciflc rapon~ibill lla
to the s.l udents of h is
denom ina ti on s--s uch a s
Father Kl}'lliticow:haclillc a
mass. Allhou&h tbe rnmtbert
ol hit denomination are: hit
primary rapon~ibilitles, tllat
doesn't mean thai he li mits
his~toon!ymembersol
his
denomin~~tion . "
~here
Is no
-e:udomorel.c:Jidberthan
we could akae," c:ommeoted
FatherVa~Broc::laDan,one
of the Cllbotic: priests at
OCM.
thnJu.ab out the year.
'Specials' may be anything
from 1 u rmon on th e
'Exorc.ilt' to. play like the
•ure and Times ol N01.ll ' and
hiVin& the coo.area•Uon
pll"tlcipate by respondln& In
it. These are all •tumpts to
&el th e people In the
e:onarea•Uon
Involved ,''
commented Tom 1nd Mule•
Gilbert, members of the
Luthe r1n Studenl Com munitY:
times
l:lroUn" byhelplrw a•ludent
IIJ'OUP or orJ&nlution aet a
project off the &round or on a
private bula.
" We have pei'Milal cauntel.lnJ wher-e someone m1y
c:-ocneinandtalktoOMofthe
miniJicrt about aomeU.na
thatmaybebotherinJhim "
rema rked Edint,ton.
'
Brockman helped uplaln
the approt.ch to the counseling. " We help people to
"~yVIDOilla~tfor ~be=~:::e
extens1ve croup expmene:e. ~'U~~-hw:,::
It's an experienc;e In com- thei r own deci1ions . We
=!n
::!~~~~1:! ~==-~ C~~k~dr~u~hde ::~~ah ~h~
:!:~
C:"hel7!:~"~ ~
O:t CS:1!sc==-.,:.
..
apec:Uvet . It Is s tud ent Aid.
operated a nd run , they
contact and bire the pa-The UCM ministers allo do
aonnel forlt. "P•nyV'lliO" il th e traditional thin& •
open to members of 111 usodl ted with lbrir job such
faithJ," uld Brockman.
a wonhi p lft'Yias, wed·
dings and tap! tal ris ltationJ.
a~t
a1 " r uo ur ce
" People aren ' t always
awar-e of everything that a
mlnistet- may do, beca.e
lheye~n 't seeall lhethlnphe
does," Aid Smith.
New art history
minor offered
A DeW minor in art hlat«y
was added to the cw-rle:Wa of
UWSPon Thur-sday lli.&Jll by a
unanlmo ua vote of the
Faculty Senate IFSI.
The minor....,.., be unique
amona the uw Systems 1:1
" Bef..-e the UCM was
formed in ltC7, there aisted
need forCC~mpeti tlonamoP&~ I
tousher, helpwithliturvand
help with ol.her aspecls ol tbe
.,,..,tee,
More~ t.lylhey~
afilmanddbcussionpudon
'' Am nuty .'' Someth ln&
....-hk:h was imported from
Oshkoah lui year is the ''P1n
y Vino" retrut.
may
'"""""·
lhe differ-ent &MJUPI. We 6nd
Uketo&etfourorrive~
A It h o u g b
the
denomi nations may have
5Cpal'lte Interests, !hey often
cooperate i n sp ons oring
va riOUJprogramson.campus.
One ol their pa ll evenll wu
the Eusene McCarthy and
Ma r tln Ma r ty diKUJtlon .
Anothel' lmportant function
ol UCM ia actviling. 'nliJ may
be done on a group level
where memben of ttie UCM
ac:nu rrom Ndson HaD.
1'here are ttree religious
atfilia liona represented at the
UCM-Ca tholic, Lutheran ,
and the UKHE which lndudstbeAmeric&JIBapti.at.
lht Discipks of Qrist, tbe
Monvia.a, lhe UDited Qnrdl
ol Owist and the MethodiJt
. and the United Prelbyteriu
C'C_!Jmt.uatlcn,
''Ooe ol the aims ill to ae1
thepec~pleinvotved , bec::ause
mall people like lo just come
and watch. Each servi« we
" Anolher thin& wllkh ill
Uaiversity Cbr istiu
Rpante idmtities for each
rdi&ion oo campus.,Havlrlg a
vie:a.
;;:~~~·::~
Mi nis try <UCIIU, loc.ated
total coopention bu proven
a d Ya ntaceou s in two
respe.etL ODe is finloclally,
bring toeetbtr in GOe buiJdin&
..;u. oae .cretary uc:l tel ol a((ice mKhinel ~ps lO
cui. the COlts. Secondly, is
Pat!« James Schneider,
the Lutheran. MinUter at
UCM, uses the Puce Campus
Cef!tt,r for his wonhip ser-
"Bdn& a member on the
Newman Board hal made me
more aware: ol some ol the
problenu th.tthe pries II flee
and that the people ln the
Pl rilh ~n~y have. The Boar-d
co..isls ol four Jlu«nls and
fi ve 1dul ta. 11'1 • cr ou
reprftefllationol people who
1re uJu.ally members of
variOUJ commilteet-liturgy,
finanCe choir which J,ive
fq)OIU~ lhftT nndinp to the
Board ."
uld Janice
Semo~Wki . a UWSP 1Wdent.
:f~wtJat'!:i~ei:~~:
Student in vol vement an.d The UW Whitewater had bHrl
participation is the prime theorlyothermemberoflhe
go. l olaU the minitten.
old Jtlteunlversity ays.tem
" '1\'e have the Lutheran "'til f'K'ftlt.ly to h1ve I well·
Sludent Co mmun i ty, a devel oped are• of con st~ orpniutlon w~kh
e:entraUon In th!J subject and
inclu des commiueu on haJ for aome time bretl of·
wonbl p, edi.ICation, finances feringam a)or-in lheiUbject.
and ~ot~Vice . Moat of what ill Others had been Hlabllshed
cloneia&eared tolheatudentJ at UW Milwlukee and UW
intere~ll in IUC:h a.-eu aJ
Madilon.
mu1ie: , art, d r ama and
The Att Departmmt ln·
a tudy ,"
commented clicated In a prepared texl,
Schnddet'.
that "student mrol lmentJ ln
arthiltoryC'Olnelindieated
~ninteratinvitua1artsto
fulf i ll bumanltie l
requiremtl'lta 1nd a flrthtl'
inter-at Ia dem-uated by
thole students v.--ho would
have avaUed themidva to
anarthiJtory mlnorlfitwere
offered ."
The faculty •deled that
" th is i1 an u.nUJual op·
portunit)'forthe"'ivenltyto
t ake aa Yintaae of th e
poaaibilityofofferingamlnor
without having to add new
C<KrRS , start, facUitla or
library and Jlldes over and
above the typical l!llhala·
m e nt prov i d e d r o r In
continuinl annual budgets ror
i n J tructional
im ·
provemmtJ."
December 2. 1974
.
THE POINTER
\,;age 23
r·····r;;;··;;;;;;~iF;i·~·9 dii1~·~~;,·t.........~
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Re ligious Studi•s •• • •• :. . . ...... ........ ........
Resource Nl.nag•ent,, •• • •• •• · •• . •••• · • · •• ••• •• ••
Russian • . ••• ••••• • •• •·• ·•••• · • • • • • · • · • • • • · • • • • • •
Russian and East Central Europun S.tudies .•• ••••
Social Sc iet~ce ., ., ••• • • ,.,., ••• , ,...... .... .....
Socioloay and Anthropolory ••• • •• • ,. •• •.••• ••• •• •
Soil Scienc:e ..... .. .... .... . ....... ... .. .... . . . .
r=.nd~o::=e~~~~~l~r~~~-:.:~u:~
~~~':'ues~~~~ost~nd.':~~ co.~ching:
Water Ruou.rces , . . . . . .. .... ...... . . . . .. . , • , , ••• ~
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Allerican CiYilit.ation , . .. . . . . .. .......... .. . . .. .
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Art ........ . .... .. .. .. .. ... .. .... ........ ... ....
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81ol•&r· ... .. . . . ........... ... · ••• •• ••· •• • ••• · • ·
Business ~lnistrat i on t inc1udill8 accountifl8 emphasis)
. Business Education ........... .. ............ ' " "
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Ch•htry .... , .... ,,., .. . .. , •. , . .. ... ... . .. . .. ..
:~anEd~::!:::: :::::: : ::: : :: ::: : ::::: : :: ::::::: :
M_lnor
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c_,_n lcat ion and Orua Education .... .. . ........
C-...nicativa Disorders •••• , . • , • . ••••• ••.• ,.....
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Dance tmodern and ballet I •••••••. •• .• . • ••••• • • •••• •
Dietet i cs • ••• ; •. . •••••••• . •••...• • •• , •• , • •• • ••••
:••
•
Oraaa • •• ••• ••• ,. • •• : • • • • ,, •• . .. . . • ., • • • ',. • .... .
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Earl y Chi ldhood Educat i on . • . . •••• ,, • • . • • • •• ••• ••
Ecooc.ics • •• ••. .•.. . ••••••• . • · • · · • • · • ··• ··• ··· • •
Education of the Deaf .......... .. .... . . , ..... . . •
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Food and Nu trit ion ... ... . .. .. ... .... ........... •
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CeoloJy .. . ... · .... • · .. · .. · .. ·" · .. ·"" ·" " ' " '
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Ceraan .......... .. .. · " " " " " " " · " " " " " "
Please send m e information about the
following academic oHering(s) and/ or
progrom(s) ot the
Kea.l th Educ&tion .. ..... ...... • · · .. .. • " " " • · "·
History... ... ...... . .. ... ... . . ...... ... . .... ....
1
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University of Wisco"nsin·Stevens Point
•
Hoee Ecoaoaic.s •••• • • • •• • • • •• · •• • • • • · · • ·· ' • • · ·' ••
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Interested per10ns may obtain adm ission form s :
by writing to: The Director of Admissions
;
University of Wisconsin;
EnvironHntal Studies . ················· • • • • • • • • •
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:
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1-.. Ec~ics
~sic Uucation ::' i~;~~tal.
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~sic llduc:ation •• Voc:al .. ....... .... " "" .... •
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Outdoor EducatiOCII • . • • • • • • · • • • • • • · · • • • • • • • • • • · • • •
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Education • . •• ..• . .• • •• , : •• •. • • • • ,
Latin AHrican Stud i es ••• •• .. ••• • • •••• • • • • • ••• ••
Learnin, R..ou.rces ·" ·" "·" · " " " • • " ' " " • "
Library Science. ' ' ' ' ' · · '·' ''·· '·· •••• '.' .''. ....
Nath-at.ics • •••• ••• • ••••• ••• ••. . •.•••••••• • •• . ••
Medical TechnoloJY · ······ ·· ··· · ·· · ······ · · ···· · •
X
1 Please enclose on opplicotion
1blank for admission
yes
1
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,! Home oddreu
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JHigh school
;
aus i c Literature. ·· · · · ····· ··· ···· · · ······ · ·· ' ··
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Ec:~ics ia Business •. ••••• ···· ·•·•• • • · ••·
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UWSf also offers mosters degrees
in many of these majors .
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museum
jfere Is 1 complete r\sting of the majors and minors of·
fered at UWSP.
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Public .W.inhtration •• , • . • • •••• ,.............. .
The5e are suc:h lhin&s as n;~tural resources : paper
K"ienc:e tv.·hkh 1\astht highest average startirli: ulary for
and ballet : speciallted fields of home economics such as
dietetlc:s , businus, communications, rashion mu-
•
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::~!~:! 1~~~~~:::::::::::::::::: ~: :::::: ::::: ~
But~ are offerillis at this umpus in the center of
Wiscoosill that stand oul. too-programs that an not
£
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=~~'t:~~~d~or~~ history, the languages,
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Paper Selene• ••••••• • .•••• • •• • •••• . • · •• · •. •• • • • • "l
Philosophy •• • • • •• • •• • •• •• " ' ' " ' ' •• • •• • • •• · • • •·•
X
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Po~e
Stevens Pond
24
&y C~pt. TE£ V££
ConHnueJ on page 22
The Norm com ic book, part of the work of
Denn is Jensen, was done this su mmer as a
recruitment effort and Includes some of the
Norm strips from t he 1973-74 Pointer . Photo
~ reg--.Sprenger .
(
'"
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