Document 11824606

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Looking ahead-
In thu iaue..
-St\Dmt Cwft'IIIIWI!t
can.
for abolltloa or P£
~
~N)'IreqllimMntnotMIIIlltcillleltioft.
·Nallan'slartlSi trlvla~tstabll~­
·A look at the ronr nuyor.
·f"rat\ll"e on lnlemlltlonal f'olk Oancen.
·Allllttic:priorltlaoulllned.
·f'ew at\Dmll allow 11 polls, April I.
·NatiYW Amftic:arw meet and
w,. with t"Ommlllllty.
-SloodmobUeCIIIumpwthllweell.
•
· Pitlllter- bumall ll'llm ..U..
TER·
NO. 38
Few votes
cast by students
those people who listed
dormitorinasthelrplaceof
mldmce.
Burrouahs and Knuuen
halls had the hlahest turnout
with 17 voten uch. PrayC'OI'tli~ to naurn ffieutd by
the City Clerk's DUlce Sima hall had 12: Wten;
Smith tWl had 10; Neale hall
re«ntly.
Voters In Stevt111 Point tur ned out nine votert;
elected a mayor ltld aeven Baldwin, Schmeekle,
councilmen. Of a bout 6500 Thomson and Hansen halll
hundred vota cut only a uch turned out aeven voters;
little over a hundred could be
po~ltive!y idenUfied 11 those
of Hyer and R.ch halll
ust by studmta.
turned out at the polls.
Stevena Point \1 di_vt~~~
Acctlrdinatothefigures32
atudenta voted In the 2nd into 13 wa rda. The dorWard, 161nthe3n1Ward, l4 mltoriu were acattered
In the 7th Wutland 47 In amona four or thole wards
Stevflll Point'a 11th Ward. after the eighteen year old
The fi&urn f'q)rnent only vote went Into effect.
byAJStaatk
l~tinable student turnout
In l.ut Tueldly'a April 1,
tl«tion wu minimal ac:-
•
~~v~~::~
State budget
hearings held
•
Native Americans of all ages took port in the .octivilies
for Native American W eek lost week. See story on poge
10. Photo by Rick Cigel.
byBoliKnkl~lll
result will have to be a tax
lncruae.
Ten atate ltlialaton: and
Bablitch 11 a member of the
three state administrttorl JFC.
J!Jtened to the tnUmony of
Anthony Earl,~ecretary of
about M people on the state the Department of Ad·
budaet durln1 a., public min!Jtratlon, ukl he , _
Marina at UWSP Sltw-day, some form of tuiUon belna
April$.
establilhtd for vocational,
Senator William A. technkaland adult education
Bablilch ID-St~ Pointl IVTAEI centen.
uld that these budget
Earl abo said that if
htarinparebelievedtobe r eve nues continue to
or if the budget 11
~ufde1 ~e'hiCa~~oJ he!~ dtcreue
increased by the legislature,
Madison.
therewouldhavetobeata.
Bablltch said that the increase.
forum wu to pther public
Bablltch s.aid there are
input for the touah ctedltons sevtf'e preuures on Jf'C to
thelegislatw-ehaabeforeit. increase apendina.
' 'These dtcltlona will affect
more people dlrectly than
The UW Sy1&e111
probably any other budget
UW Rqent Mary WllliamJ
lin« the 1931:1'1."
I.Oid the ltlislaton: that "no
Almosteveryaa~ythat one is happy with the
hasappearedbeforetheJoint propoled budjet." She uid
Finance Committee CJFC) so that 1000 new studtftlt are
farhasultedformoremoney comlna into the ays~ next
than 11 bud~:eted, uld
Bablilch, addlna that If auch
conl on pa1e 3
increases are &ranted, the
Poae 2
THE POINTER
Apri l
8, 1975
PE requirement drop called for
btAISla.d;
Student ~:emment endorstdaresolulioncallln&felf"
the abolition of mandatelf"y
physical education t PE I
credits, Sunda,-, AprilS.
..,
Fourc redlus of PE 101 are
currently requi r ed In all
curricula at UWSP. The
combined senate a.nd
a.ssembly is calling !Of" the
abolition of those four credits
...,ith the number ol credits
reguired for graduation to
n!fuain at 12-1. 11111! acllon
cameatthe rec1>mmcndation
or the Academic Affairs
Committee chaim:i by Kurt
Andersen.
" We 're the only campu~ in
the UW System who has four
credits or mandatory PE.",
u\d Andersen. " It 's my
feeling that the required PE
CGurseSarejust notdoin&
what they were Intended to
do:·
All
The r\"SOiu tion calling for charge . •The UCPB had
the remova l of mandatory PE recommended an UO per
now goes to the credit charsc but the bod)'
Academic Affairs Committee reduced the figure at the
ol the Faculty Senate. An· ~rgin& of Student Bud&et
dersen is a member ol that Director Bob Badll.nskl.
' 'Tbt IX'r crtodlt charae
committee also. U it is f'!l doned by the Faculty Se-Mte doH make sense but not at
It wou ld then need Olanccllor the $.90 le,•el." S<Jid BadDreyfus's final approval to Dnski . Bacb.lnski said that
$.10will provide eno ugh
become a rolity.
Anderson was optimistic money for acqu isition of
about what will ul tima tely
happen with the resol ution.
"It's &oini to take a lot of
discussion," he said, " but I
think ....·e'llgct u mere5ul ts."
Sunday's ~ u tion comes
on the t-L.Dr a ~ntly
completed survey that
A total of $2SHCI.S7 was
lho....'ed two out ol th~ raised on the UWSPcampus
res pondents favoring th e during the ,...,.o lb)' Fast Day
~!:=~on ol manc:Utory PE Worl d llunge Awarenen
program held
Feb. I HZ.
Student Governmen t. also
or this am . $1650. 10
for
apprcwed. a resolution from came from Saga
the Unh'ff&ity Center Policy what . .,.as saved due to the
Board <UCPBJ calling for a n numbe r of do r mitory
$.110 per credi t text r enta l studentswhofastedonthat
t'OI.Ir$CS
Di r ector Winthrop C.
Oifford uid despite some
earl ier concerns that budact
problems migh t cause large
cutbacks in progra ms, ther-e
ha\-c only been a n-averaae ol
about one class cut from uch
depa r tment .
And In m01t cases, Dlrford
uid, theclasaa that were
canccll~ ses.sionhad
small enrollments last year.
The cuts ....-ere made amon1
lower level courses and did
not reach Into upper level and
craduate offerings which
traditionally draw the laraest
percentaaeofsludcnts
da)' . OOIC to I:ZOOon C"am pus
SIOOentsparticip:ltcdinthe
fa stont'eb. t:!.
The rcn~aining $-100 came
from a bmtfit concert held In
the Coffeehouse on th e
t\"ening of t'eb. I:!. from the
d:mceinAilf nCenterwi tht he
Sojourn &l:prt'U on Feb. II
and from contributions from
campus and com munity
pcopll' th.1t were collected
durmglhetwodayprogram .
sponsor ili annual Sl.lmmer A contribution also came
Theatre Festival and stage from thr:P. J . Jacobs Junior
lliih SchooL
se\·eral musicals .
.
Pe rsons may wnte for
lnadditionothl'rmonicsfor
SU!f~mer session lim~tables
USI"' this addreu : Dir«tor relief ...-ere railled locally
o f Summer Session , through urious ch urch es
Unive rsi ty. of Wisconsin - during thctr .bh WcdnHday
Sttvens Point, ~ 1.
SUVlCeS . 0 \'C r $100 W::I S
Throughout the UW System r::.iscd for enol• from the St.
there will be an increase ol Paul's United Methodist
tuition fees : hov.-cver, an Chu r ch and the Fram e
a rrana e m ent at Stevens M emorial
Unite d
Point will make it pouible for Presbyterian tllurch.
junionandscniors toattend
The entl re..-..m.o.S7 was
at the same rate u was c:hanneicdthrouahCROP, the
dlar&ed last year. This is commWlityhunger appeal of
po ssib l e bec a u se the Ouu-ch World Servitt, an
ecwnenical ....·llfld-wide relief
age ncy . The fast Da y
Ta ylor,ischanaing Ita policy Pl anning Commit t ee
olchar&ingdifferingratKfOf designated three CROP
fresh.mmandsophomores.as special projects fo r the
opp osed to juniors and money to be distribu ted
sc_niors.
among.
One project was for
offer swnmer courses
BecauR or an a1.15terit)'
bud&et bein& proposed by the
Lucey ad minist r ation In
Madison, it was thouaht
ea r lier this yea r there ""·ould
be massive cu~ throughout
the: uw System campuses
dur ing u- e summe r and
~bly no sessions at all on
some campuses . Those extreme conditions did not
materialize.
In addition to the rqular
courses and workshops for
perso ns seeking collegiate
credit , DUford said the
university wo uld also be
boiUna a va riety o1 SJ!«<al
pr o &ram s f o r youth,
proless.ional groups a nd so
forth .
Entertainment wiU focus
largely on the Theatre A.rtJ
Depar tm en t whi c h will
5 UW Campuses
Fl\·e universities of the UW
System disclO&ed thei r plans
today for rneeUn& a regent
mandilte to limit mrollment
g r owth in the i97S · 76
academ ic year .
UW £au Cl aire, UW
LaCrosse , UW Ma d iso n ,
Stout and the grad uate school
a t UW Milwa uke e we re
directed by the system board
tohoktmrollmentsthis fallto
thelevclsorlastyu r.
President John C. Weaver
cited the lack of state !Judtct
fund i n& fo r a dditional
students as the reason for
pladng enrollment ceilinp at
campuses already sertinc
the maximum number of
students pouible at cureent
funding levels.
Each campus wu asked to
develop ill own criteria for
co ntrollinladmluionsaccordinc to &uldelines luued
by Senior Vice President
Donald K. Smith , c hid
academic affairs ofr!C« for
the syiLem. The fuidellnes
stated that co ns 1dera!lon
should be civcn to commuting
ment action: the Scienrto
Fiction Oub was given $100 in
student group monies to pay
part ol the cost ol bringing
William Ten to campw : t~
Student Protrammlng and
Budget Alloca t ions Commlttee recommendation for
fu nd ing Univenlty Writers nt
$2000wasrecflvedandAJbert
Stanek ....-asappointedtothr
UWSP Athletic Commitlt't'.
CROP uses Fast Day money
depa~ents
Al l academic depa rtmen~
...,;11 offer classes from June 9
thl1)Uih Au&. ldurinc the 67th
annual summer session at
UWSP.
books llt'XI )-car. He told
student govern ment that if
the $.':10 charge wtre ap·
proved excess money would
go into a rnen•e fund which
....-ould ultimately e nd up
costing s tudenll money
bec'ause the cur~nt rate of
inflation Is hlg~ tha n the
rate ol Interest that the
mont\' \l"OUidgcnerate.
In -other student gO\·ern-
~t
st ud ents,
disadvanta ged
st ud e nt s, m e mbers o f
minority groups aDd students
seekU.apn~~rsmoffered at
only one ol these ca mpuses.
AI Eau Claire, Madison and
Stout prospective Jtudents
who apply by May 1 • iU have
~~~i:;s~!nt:o~f::d~~tc~~
enrollment ''"'i~'
the best chance ol being
accepted. At LaCn11M, the
date is June 1.
AJterthosedates,or inthe
eventthatexcessivenumbcrs
ol appli ca tions a re r«cived
by thole Utes, additional
criteria wi ll be applied.
Registration dat,. announced
Rqlstration for the fin! to p iclr. up r egistration
semester, tm-78, will be held materials.
on Monday, April 21.
Students will be permitted
Senion and juniors may to pic:k up their own packets
pick up thriT n&istration only. It will be neceutry tn
matcriallinthel\ejistration s how st ud ent ID's when
Office na Monday , April 14;
sophomores on Thcsday ; and
fres hm en beglnnin& Wed- re&istraUonwlli beaccordinc
to claulfication, and within
cbumcationbyfll"ltlttterol
temnter" (Meond tcmnter l the last nam e . Th e
detenninesenior,junior,etc., c l assification order is
stat Ill.
g.raduates, seniors,juniors
sophomores, and freshmen'
Student. who with should The "first letter ol the lasi
acl\edule an appointment with name" order will be z to A fin
thei r ad vi se r Jo m etime t h e t hr ee pr evio u s
between April 14 -25, rqistratlonsit 'sbeenA -Z: A·
dependinc on when they are K and Z.L : K-A and L-Z l .
pi~"'or~!-k~~ission to
=:J·t!:~ ~ ~~~
"'
development In Ba"'iadt'Sh :
this includes refugee relief a1
M!ll as means ·of cna bhng
commWlllies to develop the1r
own agricultura l resources A
total or $701.1S went for 11111
project.
Another projeci was for
Indi a fa min e r elief. The
failure or the monsoon has
brqht on 1 drought in that
COW\Iry and various C"hurrh
groupt arc makiiiJ relief
available . A tot.l of 566016
was marked for th is project
The tJUi.d CROP project
was for the provision of dry
edible beans for a doten or
mor e countr ies, many of
themlnAlrica . ~beans
are usually used u com·
pensation for members of
villa ges whoworkonprojt'cts
ti nigatlon da ms. ctc.t th;at
will allow their village to
bet'ome more agricultw-ally
self·s u!fi cient . A Iota! of
$670.86 was dtsianated for
this project.
The Fast Day Plannin&
Co mmitte e h as n o ....·
reoraani:ted Into a lonl
cha pler or Bread for thf
World, • Orbllan dtiztN
~foe~ c~~r:~~~~~~~o
look lor ways and meallli of
deali"'wlththeworldhungtr
crisn.
«>mm""ily
u-.fP---=p:-::ru-wc---:--::-=
lJ-=E-=-R
..:::..~:~ ~u _ ..._ ..
s;;:,!~~~.J:.::.~-?;~§?-E:.;
.. .. . . . _
.. ,0. _ _
~~~~~.~~~~
'
Psych
professor.
pops top
•
L. Wayne Lerand's hobby
Jlu, tters the lone-established
image ol wha t psycholosy
professors do when tney are
awayfromtheclawoom .
llecul.lect.Jbe-ercans.
Lerand enjoys the oc·
casionaltradingJotJSionsthat
bee:rcollectorsholdand ~~o·n
W illiam Boblitch, on unidentified per10n and Anthony Earl
hearings
participated in the state budget hearings
conl from pare 1
~ar
~~:~~~
China l said that VTAE s tudent.J pay t2.5
any further reduclion In per«otolinatruc:tionalc<~~ta .
Both Bablllch and Rep.
Marlin Schneider t D·
WrsconsinRapids>saidlhat a
sliding tuition seale bued on
need """~!~.lid have to be considered for the VTAE Cen·
said Ellery. " Stevens Point Is
Schneid« is chairperson of
br:Jow average."
Last year UWSP rtttived JFC.
Two speakers rtprt:Sot~~.ting
the lowest unde rgraduate
VTAE
Boards ursed the
I LI\ e 1upport per ltudenl
amona Jbe Khools in the UW legislature to g ive them
permi.sllon
to ralse property
System.
,taxestokHJ) from charglng
tu!._li_on_.__ _
VTAE Ceaten
Sev~al speakers ura:td the
tea t• lators not to Initiate
tuition at the VTAE schools
citins turveys they had d~
whic h lhowedlhatamajority
of the VTAE students would
not conti nue if tuition were
without any new fl.lftdin& !undine will probably roree
this uniVffSi ty to declan!
GoYe fn men t rlSC:al emfT&ency and lly off
Prtsk»nt Lyle Updike uid ttnW'"t'dfaculty.
" the people of W'ISCOI'IIln race
We need to look at puity In
many difficull decisions fundina between lnslitutiona
r~~~:~t
•
•
wl!.ic.h willdinc:tlyaffec tlhe
quality ol our tdueationaJ
system.''
" If «rtain poUey propouls
t'Or'ltai nl'd wi thin the propoled
budget are implemented,
ICC:UI to pOII ·ItC:Onda r y
educ:atioo will be severely
cu rt ailed' In the coming
ytarl," said Updike.
Updike said that we mus t
first be able to tttrac: t and
hold ql'&lified professors and
we must m ainta in a n
adeq uate lib r ary an d instructional materials .
~~~~e~~~!;m: d~li;t~h
said that the luue
first to go in the sov~nor ·s should be ~ In penpective
propaHd budj:et.
of UW tuitioa wbkh is 2S
Actina UWSP OlanceUor percent of instructional casts.
John Ellery COiancellor Lee The sovmu proposed that
Relocation may cause
inconvenience
The area between Old M.a in
Hofl'b«ll: a.bo said that the
and the Student Servi«s project will cause pedestrian
Buiidina is expected to be inconveni~ between Old
closed off soon in ord~ !o Main and the Student Set-ndocate steam !Ina.
vices Bulldin1 . Nellon
~~t!f=~i~~ ~~~=c:r.;::
be
m id -Ap r il , uld Harl an a nd Student Ser vices
Hoffb«lr. UWSP facilities
manac~ .
Constructi on is ex pected !o
take about three montN.
Parklng lot 8 belween the
bulldinp will be ciOHd and
J)ltklnc will be reauiiJ1ed
ebewhere .
SHAKLEE EISTRIBUTOR
IIOWI ~.:'~ .~·UIAitf
.u.,.. . ...... ._.....
....., .
.. CINollol,.....
FOR STUDENT
GOVERNMENT
VICE-PRESIDENT
*VOTE*
MARIA ALVAREZ
""·
interesled I n m aking
fa c ilities on this ca mpus
avai lableforsuc h ii.IJII. theri ng
Saturday . April 19.
The C()Jieclon wl\l display
thei r wam in the Allen
Center and mem~ ol the
public are Invited to browse
withoutchafle from 9 J .m . to
5p.m.
LA!nndisnottheonlybeer
collector In this area. An
official orgtnlulloa ollhe
hobbyitl s, Bee r Can
Colleclors of Americt, lists
Jeveral hund red affilia te•
from W!Jcon sl n and •p·
proximately4,000nationwide.
Lerlndhasbee:nacol.lector
about rive years and has a
cou pl e of wai!J In h is
batementcovered withm01t
or the app roxi ma tely 100
di U~enl cans that he has
found or acqui red thrcq:h
What promoted him to get
in\·oh·ed in such an unusual
hobby!
lie enjoys drinking beer
and ' thoug ht It might be
amusing lo s.ee how many
different ca ns he could find .
AI the ti me, he said he had no
idea thathundredJof other
people did the same kind of
lh-ing a nd t h a t an
organiz.o.Uonhadbetnformed
tounlteallofthem .
Some breweries now cater
to the hobbyisll by putting out
variety ol designs on the
cans. Some are acenk, others
Informative ab out tpo r ls
dubs in cllles where the
brewet"iesare located, a few
humorous. The new !wist
from Denrnart , Ltrand said,
are ' 'pornoa:r a ph ic" bHr
cant. He hasn' t seen any yet.
1be ra cl that Lerand lives
in one ol few communi ties
that still has a brewery is a
bnak for him glviftl him
easyaccesstocansthattre
trlded with others. On the
other htnd , the l ona ·
esllblished company which
brews Point Special Btu
hasn't been a bit chalitftler
tocollect.orsbecauselthas
a few come from different chaftled the designs on lt.J
j)lrta of the sJobe.
cans so Infrequently.
1
;;:~~rf~ ~~w~ C:~t,:~~
BEER DRINKER'S QUICK QUIZ
J ~at lo
kill • minute Of" ~. why don't you maleh your own
bHr-drinkint hlbitll •nd ptf'fermc:n a p inst lhoJe of the
Bud-i•r Brewnuo1tf'r. Wh ile you're takint lhe tal, it mi1ht
be • cood KIN to c:ovf'r up tJw. J IUIWf'r. with • mld c. n or two
oftheKint ofBeen.
1.When
you do
tllu. do you lhe Mer down
the side:' 0 Or do you pour it down the middle 1et
111oe •
1o
• niceheadoffo.m7 0
2.H-
beer'
m\ld'l f01 m do you likf' on • tlaa of dn1u1hl
NOI'Ie J t•ll 0 OM inch OOnf'•nda hllf to
twolnct~et: O
3.Do you like lo drink your btolor in l ittlf' 1i~:O O Bi1
-.1\owr;:O 0 Some thin1 in bf'IWftn:" 0
4. Which do you lib bHt:O
c....rwdl:woPrO Boctifil~r O Drioulhlbee!'Q
5. Which beer it brewed by "exdusive Beedlwood A1einc
with utufll l ca rbonl tlon 1(1 prod...ce a bett.er t.ute Jnd
o tmOOther , rnorttd rinkJblebeer?" Bud-ieer O Some
otherbrandO
6. When you ..y"Bud-iler. "doyou AY it ... oftm ? 0
.... u,erty? O .. loudly? O ... , Iad ty?O
......"lq"''""'""'
...... uv
'9
·u-o~ P"tl -'1"0
<;
~
·• pna
hoi .. ·~1
•.ao••
,. .(u y
t
......n.,....• •·o ·t
WC(Joll!tO'I'I'o l l:
,.
1"'""1 AI!II'<OOI •""
•o1'
..,PP'"' <00(1 "..op lljlty
I
SY3JASI'< Y
P~e
4
THE PO INTER
Closed meeting
Apr il 8, 1975
participation
Busch receives commendation
Rob«t Busch, assistant to board Ju ne! 1.
the di rect« ol the Univenity
Busc h was r e cognized
~terincharteolstudent during the L eaders hip
xt.i,·itisat UV.'SP recently
0
r eceived a commendation
fr om th e Nationa l En tertai'nment Con fer e nce
CNECI Board of Directors for
his live yean ol servke. =~~t:}~=
Busch will retire from the Canada. Spec:ial convention
guesu included President
Ge raltl Ford and comedians
Bob Hope and Rtdd Fou.
questioned
State Sc'nators Clifford
~!;~~::on~ ~~C.~ 'd~ri~~ org~~~~~il:rn:~~~":~ ~:f!~r w:1~p~ua ~;
1
~;n~:n~~~n ~~~~:~,":.! ~~~~~~:~ andaa~\!::J =~!r~:1~:!
~~;::~;:esn 4~h C~~~~!~ ~~~~~~:.a tin&
S.C.
In c losed
Kru ege r a nd Chilsen ,
Senate minority leaders,
said, " Attorney Gmeral La
f-'oUette's opinion concernln&
the leaality of the secret
seu ions being he ld by
democrat members of the
Join t 1-'ina~ Committee iJ
sufflcie-ntlyvagiJl' to warrant
specific prohibitions agains t
a ttendinssuchmeeti"'S. The
Atlomt')' General's decision
~tosa)· theymighl.be
-~~~i~: )~~=~!~·ed
for by
" When the Senate recon·
•·enH... Krueger and OUlsen
sa id ... ,.,.e ..-111 bring a
n-solutiontolhefloormaking
it perfectly c lea r secret
mcetmgs are contrary to
Senatepolic~andth.1t~nate
membl.'fj'A'Iilnotparticlpate
1nthem "
ThC'rHOiutionKrue-ger and
Oui.!K'n Will introduce will
creatt a.-- Senatt rule to
Robert Busch receives a plaque
honoring his ser v ice to the NEC Board of
Directors from William E. Bra ttai n,
NEC Board Charlman.
\\'heniUCh meetinp te'llto
predetennine the outcome of
any vote subsequentl y to be
ta ken by the whole committee.
Metnben ol the Sen.te ..~II
be required to point out that
suchmietingsviolateSenate
rules and, If the meeting
continues, to lea•·e.
" ll'slmportanttomaintain
thtin tegrityotthereaislath·e
process," Kru eger and
Olilsen said, "and ihat can
only be done by Insuring all
declsioas a r e subject to
public s-cruti ny and revie ..·."
''The Senate rule we're
pc-oposinc will clarify the
Seute's rornmitment to open
government," they said.
Applications
surpass
expectations
prt\~tft'Nitorsrr-omtalung
Fin! reporls of frnhmen
Jl"ltl m closed meeti111s at
v:hich a m;~jorlty to the ;~pplicallons for nex tfallat
commiltee members are the 21 UW System campuses
present. but other members are runnln1 "some,.· ha t
andthepublicareeltcluded, allead of expectations." saKI
President John C. Wea•·er
Although it Is too ea rly to
fo r ecast fall enrollments
accurately, he said. present
t r e nd s indicate th at a
projected locrease of J.:t»
studenta.toasystemtotal of
143,246, will be reached.
As ol March I, the campusoes had received 21&.07~
appl ica ti ons from prospec·
live first-term freshmen, an
increase ol 2,309 over the
Yme date la1t year. 111e)·
had accepted 21,498 for adCHAPMAN IS
miss ion, an \ncreaseol 2,280
WE PROUDLY ANNOUNCE THE APPEARANCE OF
ABRAHAM CHAPMAN
. ~W-SP English
Depart~ent Faculty Member)
AT THE 300KSTORE THURSDAY , APRIL 10. DR .
A NATIONALLY RECOGNIZED AUTHORITY ON AFRO-AMERICAN LITERATURE AND AUTHOR OF THE BEST-SELLING
BOOKS
BLACK VOICES
NEW BLACK VOICES
JEWISH-AMERICAN LITERATURE
STEAL AWAY
DR. CHAPMAN WILL ANSWER QUESTIONS ABOUT ·HIS
BOOKS AND WILL AUTOGRAPH PERSONAL COPIES.
THURSDAy' APRIL 10 10 A.M.-1 2 P.M .
UNIVERSITY STORE
l..argestlncrea~e~in "n~·
freshmen" a pplica tions up to
March 1 were reported b)'
Ea u Caire, which had 3.2~2
applicallo ns, u p 717 .
Mlldison,7,150, up 507Stei'I'IIS
Poin t , 1,792 , u p 269 ;
Whitewater, 1,711, up :!Eil.
LaQ--oae, 1,151, up 233 and
I
..Pi'a"t~ville, I ,OII , up 197.
ol .~
--L>C''-c'
r .::.er said !Mt all fresh·
fV
~~~:a~~ ~r:c~':~!.
should be sent to UW Eau
Claire, UW Madison and
' Stout a t Menomonie before
May I a nd to UW LaCrosse
before June 1.
l'ho5e wU venitieJ are to
hold total en rollments at
apprOitimately the prese~t
Levelforlhenext\llroyearsm
ordff to protect quality whik
the system accepts acklition.JI
unfunded ttudents under the
p r oposed tt75-77 state
:;~~~ ~~~~~:. ~ ­
an~~~e:~ ~~ :r.~mm~~
students applying by J une' I
would be ab le Lo attend the
campw ol their choice, bul
the Inc reased a ppl\cai10n5
~~e I ~~ue&~~. ~!~~~
and Stout.
April 8, 1975
CNR calendar
Pt.Mn&
A symp<:&ium on "Lq:al
Ones : Use and Abuse" has
been scheduled April 14 at
UWSPwith U.S. Sen. Ga)'lord
Ne ls.on as t he key note
speaker.
Arrangements are belna
made to brina some o1 the
.nu a. .-u.u.c oa
''OY~ ot
~P\aaal;nalaWIIcDNizl"uthtlut
.U.tr In the CNR ColloqUwn Mriet Ia
,_IU.CNR.
Aprilt5atfp.• •• XISiplaPiwtU~a ,
Round l'llble Dill:uulon: Ecaaomlc Policy
and lbe Environment. with a p1nel Ill CNR
faCility in room n; CNI\.
April 11 DNdluw fw C'md,.we
OUIIIOe room m, CNR.
II&••·
~ti::~~~·f~·~'i.::
on the podium as lectur-ers.
The senator's speech will
open the program in the
APO
ApriiU•t7p. m., theSocietyofAm«<c:U
w!U DreHnt Hubtrt
~.llrectot o( f'O«St f'roiMU Lab~~~
Madilllrl. Ptoctam Banquet Rocwn, UC.
Public: ill lavltfti. A bull- meoetirl& wiD
)'ore.ttn tSAf' l
sponsors
,.,...
bloodmobile
Ap.-11 21 II 7 p,m, Xl SipM Pi ( Hora'UJ
f'oratr)' f"n~lt) wUJ bold I -title In
lht Nic:halet -Marquette Rocwn. UC.
April :a Deadline for fuU P' YIMIII ollea
for thoK aumdin&llnt lelllion ol the CNR
Claml.akeSeulm. 'MIOMreceiwlr'lln!\.lnclal
aid m1111 sl&n a poww ol at~Gmey c:ard.
April U BeJIIIDinc at , _ tht SAF Coa-
Alpha Phi Omega will
~1r ~:,be :~-:b~ ~
1
campus April 1, t and 10.
E .-er)' semester the
students at UWSP are asked
to gh·e a pint ot blood to help
davt!aneut.ofCNRbuiklinlwiUbehtkt
W~.tllaU-ttare~pleted..OpmloCNI\.
bklloiJ 11111kntt and facully
•
ru~~nset'::~er~so~~~tl"j~
nights; , with 1 d!Herent
resource penon , f rom
throqhout the I:'Ommunity,
conduc:tin& a difftf"ent session
eac:h night .
On Monday, April 14
Fathe r Leo Krynslti will
speak on " Religion and
Human Expe r ience . "
Krynslti'-oneofthtPuton
at the Newman Parish.
Krynsfli will be coverlnJ
topics cl relitious development, lnduding why people
religious, religion and
personality and mature
reliaion.
On Tuesday , April a.
Brother Rkhard Rolltf" will
present a talk enUUed. "God
is spuflinJ, is IDJ'bOd)'
Ustenins'!" Rolltf" '-head 9f
the Pacelli ReiiJ i on
DtpMtment. Rollft' u.id he
would like to orrer some fresh
Insights on God reveali~ 'His
Word' toda)'. He fccuses In on
ourabllitlestotunelntowhat
i.rt
•
o~IJ' .
Newman
schedules
lecture series
OnApril14, u ,and If the
Uninrsity Newman PII'Uh
will Initiate a contlnulnJ
procum of lecture serla
aimed at exploring modern
OtrisUanbe:lid.
~v~~~tsof~,:~J~~:
semester'sgoal b570pintsin
three days or 190 pln~aday .
The Bloodmobile will be
located in the old testboolt
rental area, wtuch is in tht
basement of the University
Ctnler. The Bloodmobile will
1be basic format f« each be open on l\lftday, April a.
night wiJI be: a lecture from and Wednesday, April t, rrc:m
7: »a:l5 p.m.,a break until
I a.m. mtil 5 p.m. Thws·
1 :30 p.m. and disalsslon from day's houn a re from 10 a.m.
1:31).9 p.m . They will be held to 41!_.m.
in tht Green Room, at the
University Ctnler.
This prosram has been put
together by the Newnt<~n
Parish Board, bt.Md on the
needs that h.ave ~ a:presstd by It's parishonm:.
Pa r tici pation by a ll is
'>''tlcorne.
ANNOUNCEMENT
•
WUTBN STATE UNfVRSI"'Y
•
COLLEGE OF LAW
OF OIANGf COUNTY
.
CAUFO.NIA' S u•GEST LAW S~ HOOI.
=-~nlfiTP.= :.:u::-~
•
•
OffEIS A CHOKE Of fOUl
PIOGIAMS Of LAW STUDY:
~s-~!"'!.!!.,•t.o!.,':."~"";._ ._
_,
· ·JYo .. . ,....,., ., , .......
. ""'· - - . . .
_.._._.__,g_
.. ......._,..._
.. d.....
=-...-.. . . . . .
• ,.,._ -
.
_,... - - . u.o......... -
~ ~--
Cod DaayinJ .
On Wtdr.sday, April If.
Rogtf" aDd Rosemary Mat·
urath will be: dlscu.ulnl
"BuildiiiJ a Moral Life
Today." Mr. Matzen th b the
areadir«taro#theSI.el!ens
Point Rililious Education
Pro&ra:m. and Ms . Malzitrath
bthere.IJciGuSdirtctoratSt.
Bronaslnia Parish. They
will focus in on rdi,WUS
habita and what II mt.aNI to
De
a UVistlan today.
FAU SfMf5Ta IEGINS AUGUST 21, 1975
-=
Poge 5
Nelson keynote speaker
at drug symposium
Apt>U I 4 p.m. O.cDine for rra;latntlon fet
rd'vnd If a atudent dtdds nDt to attMI:I tbe
OuSu.mmn'Settlon.
AprU "BemM JmkiN ot ~ omce
aDd T- Len-. Ill 1M Unci Use PlaMitlc
Clrfx:e wiU apnk II II l .fll., room 112, O.'R
buildlzw, ~ 1:• , ... to :1 p.m.,'-'wiD b.awai'-bk f• t'OillltllatiGn In r-. m ,
CNR • .knkU. wiD meet with Fotetltf'l aoct
Wlml in~rtllted In ~·'S Employment 11 11
a.m. and 1:30 p.m. In I"'OIm tWA , CNR.
AprU If J p.• .Steva Bom, Dltfftorol Stile
•
THE POINTER
AU,-.uu..uo nAn -• --•,,.
- n-.--.......
_....,_
---
•
Quandt Gym or the illnesses, achieve relu:alion,
Fteldhouse.
cont rol deviance, avoi d
UWSP is being joined in the d isco m fo rt o r ac h ieve
sponsorship of the sy m· pleasW't.
pGiium by the Marshfield
Nelson's talk w!U be on
Clinic Foundation which " Lq:aland Poi!Ucal b.suts In
1
Drug Usage."
f=;~tte~~tJ:!y- 1~n:
Persons may rtg.isler In
aenetic
advanceclthesympoaium by
'4Tiling the Extended Ser·
Symposium plannen said vi«~ Ofr!Ct, University ot'
Point
this year's subject wu Wisconsin -Stevens
chosen to give membeR of :»44111. A fee will be charged.
As an option, arnngementa
the public opportunities to
eumine ethlcal lmplicaUons also have been made for
a nd general infor mation inter-ested persons to rec:eive
about legal drugs which are one g r a du ate or un used to alter the mood , der&raduate credit for thei r
thinldnl and behavior of participation in the day 's
people regardleu cl whether activities pha aome followup
the purpose Is to treat
proa r am on
manipulation.
.....
April 8 , 1975
THE POINTER
Page 6
Obey to speak
at military ball
UWSP newsbriefs
t:l~mentary
ed llflliOII
moj.n : Thn-e an stiU some
oprnircs in the ~.Student
Teaching<:c!nterprogramfoc
element.ar y eduution ma~
fo..-nv~t fall and sprina. lf you
are intere!ite!d In takinasome
of your education cou.I"ICI In
anelementaryschool5ttting,
please contact Betty Al lar ,
.WI CoUtee Of Profeuional
Studies buildlna.
•
l' rofHSOI'" t:Tqu11 l 'ener 11'111
present a lect ur e a nd
discUSSion at 11 a.m .. Wed·
nesday, April t, in room lt .t
Collins Cassroom Cen ter oo
the subje('t of ""Problems of
~· orelgn
In vestment in
Dl>\·eloping Countries : The
ThrkiSh Case."
All interested lludenls and
fa cul tya l1.'in,•itedtoattend.
Thll year's H ome
Economico Alumni and
&-cognition Banquet will be
hcldatt2 :30 p.m ., April20. in
the Program Banquet ltooin
of the Uni,•ersity Center.
All Hom e Eco nomi cs
students. parents,friendsand
alumni are encouraged to
come.
The s peaker for · the
proaram wil l be De tt y
Simp500. dean of the School
of ~·a mil y RHources and
:-:,\ : . A'~ ;j~~ionat c r edit of
program 3 re a luncheon. a independent study, Bloloey
presentation ol awa rds and 399-399, 11 also 1 \'lilable .
sc h olars h i p s and a
t'o r further informa tion
recottnition of jlfaduates.
contact either ~"red Copes or
Tickets v.•ill be sold from I Doug P05t of the Biology
a .m . to -4 p.m .. April I and 9. Dl>pl .
111 t he !lome Economics
Office, toPS.
~:.n~nAr.!!,~;,:~:e~~~~!~~ irr=uoo~~~ ~:~~==
Cente r .
Bu ildins . .
-----Topics and Jpeaken wiU
~~p~;~1!:. }'::he~urr;:
The
_Sb~pp e .
located
Krynsld · "God 1s Speakina downsta1n 1n DeBot Center
15 Any~y Ustenina '!", s/ wiU be open na.m . tot p.m .
~~u~ld~:~~e~. ~~~"a~- ~ir~ ~~:::.nn:;:::;:
Mn. Rtlger
~=y~ 4~ to tO p.m. on
~a:.~,th~!'lriL~:s'~ ~r~~ryby =!~i~e~~~~
Military Ball.
part of the otate, lntet-ested '
The ball, sponsored by the · members of the public.
Army n ese n •c Officers univeraHy personnel. cade ts
Traming Corp unit and the · and their families.
Mili tary Sc~nce Dl>pa.rtment
Part ol the pto«'eds from
on ca mpus. IS ;;cheduled from the event wi!J be used for a
6 p_n• to m1dnlght at the ieholanhipfund .
llohday Inn.
Persons may obtain lk:kets
by calling or writing the
Military Scie~K"t Department
1
Students receive ~~f:r ~ 11 ~~~ent St>n·icn
9
%'~~':!~ . Scl~C:S o~t
.......- ..- .........- .......... _
Pre -rer.btrolloo for
psychology m-.jon v.ill begin
at I p.m .. Monday, April 21
A lecture-<liscussion .ser ies and end at-4 :30 p.m .. f"riday ,
.,.;u be presented a t 1 to 1:30 April 25.
r~~~·~~- and
wi~- 5be~he~:/~er~l~~ pu~ =~ ;;,:fo':u.~ ~~
A me~llnl for fo r mal
r.atstration in Biolocy JiJ.
$79,asummercoursc, willbe
held at 7 p.m .. Thursday,
April \0, In room 0 101 of the
Scienc~ lluilding.
"I'M three credit (=Obrse is
entitled ··Great Plains to the
Thndra : l''teld Zoology" and
11ill consist of three ll'ctks in
the l"ebraska·W)·oming area .
tncluding
\'ellows ton<•
,..;ational P:.rk. The count
v.ill run from July 20 through
EngliBh prof
leadership awar<!s
autographs book
Three students at UWSP
:.re re-cipients oltht 1975
'-!elvin lt. Lai rd L.e~dt-rshi p
A11·ard 1 for out s tand ing
ser\·ice 111 Student Govern·
Tbt lnltrutionsl
l11b 's
politics table exte nds an
1nvitatiootopet10111wiKiare
Interested In United States
&nd world political ilsl.ltS to
parlicipa teind isc ussionl
from 3 to 5 p.m ., Sunday,
April 13, in the Hed Room ,
Unh·er sity Center.
Studenll v.· ill present an
ana lysis of the poli t ical
st ructul1.'of thei rmpecth·e
countries.
OiSCUISlonslli ll focus on
internationalpolitiuin
relat ion to U.S. foreign
policy.
STUDENTS-W~y
Settle _For Less?
ttY£ AT THE VILLAGE ... THE ULTIMATE IN APARTMENT LIVING
301 N. MICHIGAN - STEVENS POINT, WIS .
EACH APARTMENT HAS
« 2 BEDRDDMS AND TWD FULL
BATHS WITH VANITIES
* CDLDR ·CDDRDINATED RANGE
AND REFRIGERATOR, DISH·
WASHER AND DISPOSAL
* CDMPLETEL Y FURNISHES IN
MEDITERRANEAN DECDR
;, INDIVIDUAL HEAT
,CDiHRDL
,., PANELING IN LIVING RDDM
·~
TELEPHONE OUTLET IN
EACHRDDM .' ~
<c LAUNDRY
FA~
\.'-..
* CARPETliiG AND DRAPES
''' SEMI·PRIVATE ENT,RANCES
« All CDN0111011NG
'I< EACH STUDENT IS RE·
·, CABLE T.V. HDOK·UP
SPDNSIBLE FDR DNL Y HIS
SHARE DF THE RENT.
9 MONTH AeADEMIC YEAR INCLUDING VACATIONS
- SUMMER LEASES AVAILABLE
FOR INFORMATION
. AND APPLICATION
CONTACT:
MIKE SCHNEIDER
301 MICHIGAN AVE.
CALL 341-2120
BETWEEN 8 A.M. & 8 P.M.
<
Students present
'Ah Men, Ah Women'
•
lh~e Warrtt~ Card Jenkins
lbe11tre, Fine Arts Center.
It is an original musical
revue produced , dlrf<:ted,
choreoaraphed ,
liJhled,
' Hernando's Hideway ', as
"'~I as 2S others filled v.ith
singina and dancing.
Choreoar aphy wu dOne
co ll ectively by Jack ie
episodcsinthetragiclifeofa
poor prostitute in Rome.
exclusively by studmll .
" The purpose ," said
Director Otris Olarewla, a
junior majoring in lhtatre
uts, "is to en.:ounae
threatn arts lludent.s and all
UWSP studenta to produce
thei r
own wo rk and to,
hopefully, set a pre<:tdence
~~~~.~.re pr ojects by
Sutan Ryder, a UWSP
music: major , is musical
di rector. Musical numbers
includeold favoritnsuchas :
'JustlnTime',·~ntht
ZllutMI', Rnior: Dan Radtke,
cali~IOO.
Carlos- Montoya
'flawless'
...)' Rklt Meyn-
pre-dative DOdl to applause
taken warmly by the
~e
Thlll'3day nit;ht. AfrU 3,
marked • spKial
for
those interested in n amenco
guitar. Carlos Montoya, In·
ternationaUy known for his
excell~ In this rlekt of
music, played • fLiwleu and
5limulatinl series of piece~ .
even•nc
The movie portrays her
ii}!bi1:!: ~~Ji~":te'!~
senior: Karla 'A~tdner, senior she encounters tryina to
change it . It does not
and Judi lris. senior.
Anlstant d i r ecto r is romanUclze her life or In·
K:uh y Kinney. ju n io r , dicatethatitwilleverchange
lig.htin1 Msi&ntt' Is David for the better, but merely
carbon, senior and costume tries to make us undentand
misl.rtU is Lynn Carvey, that she too,l.s a hwnan being
"<~'llh feelings. hopc1 and
senior.
Cast memben include : dreanu of the unattainable
David Blair . Dick Gustin,
Dave Lamoreaux, Dan
Radtke. Judi Iris, Karen Ann
Staples, Karla Widr!H and
Brenda Wolin' .
Ticketsareavailableatthe
UV.'SP Theatre Box Office.
opm cbily from 'Z to-S p.m., or
Review-
•
of
~c::-~~ ~e;~i~fk~bi'Jjli\~
:'"p~.~~=;~~m1e;~;
a~.
.;. ~~m:C:aa~~!':;
With the music, he described
a Ho ly Wetk futiul
pr occs1ion complete with
comet fant.are:s and sna,...P
dr um imita tions. The in·
lensityofthemusic seemed
to envelop the enti re crowd.
Alter a ita nding ovallon,
Montoya performed tw o
CTICONS, one,thevery famou.s
''Malaguenas.··
namenco guitar is music
of Spanish Gypsies and until
just rt«nUy.noneof It was In
wriue-n form . To learn to play
this music by ear is a tult
that m01t would consider 1
nea r imposaibllily.
Fo r ent hu siasts of
Montoya spoke not a work namenco guitar, it was an
until he announ«d his tn- eve-niJt& that will be long
cores. His gestures and ap. remembcr«<.
-
UAB COFFEEHOUSE
* PRESENTS *
SAFETY LAST
STRING BAND
AND
* SPECIAL GUEST *
CURLY COOKE
OF THE
STEVE MILLER BAND
. TUES. APR. 8
9-12 pm
FREE
UC COFFEEHOUSE
THE POINTER
Poge 7
Weekend films
C. Wr la l.s a
classicfilnt.madebydireoctor
Sights
Squint', 'Sltppin Out With
My Baby', 'Too Darn Hot' and
costumed and Pff(Ormed
•
8, 1975
Players will
The
Univ~ity
April
illl.llllon of 1\appiness and a
better life.
Fellini is masterful In
expoaln1 the loneliness and
re jecti on felt by the
pr05titute, C:ablrla . Ca biria'J
e-ternal sean:h for warm th,
sy mpathy, and love , Is
s hattered by the con ·
dcmnation and rejection tl\at
she receh·cs from the .society
from which she can nevnC!Seape.
The prostitute, Cabi rl a,
may appear grotesque to the
eye and her life may repulse
the viewe r aest hetically,
howe\·er , Fellin! sees her as
th e ·eve r yman' whose
ARTS/
. UNTERTAINMENT
u_
POINTER
Hunter and Ronson coming
The
I an
Hunter · Miclt
Ronson group will make their
American debut at
i
p.m.,
April 17, at Quandt l)'m .
!an Hl.ll\ter ,sonc writer and
main movlna force of Mott
!i:h ~c:teao!:!n.c::~
of David Bowielame .
* TYPIST WANTED *
Must be eligible for work-study program .
Must be ab le to type 50 words per m inute
accurately. Duties : typing , llllng, pasting
news clippings , routine office dulles.
CONTACT NEWS SERVICE, 235 MAIN
~ . illusions and fan·
tasies are forevn- shatttnd
by the ugliness and lohelineu
of reality.
Nights of C.Wrla presented
by the Film !MM:iety, wlll be
shown tonight at 7 and t :IS
p.m . in the Program Banquet
Room of the Univeraity
Center.
The Legend of llc-11 lloute
wi ll be shown at 7:30 p.m ..
Thursday and Friday, April
10 and 11 In the Wisconsin
Room of the Unlvenl ty
Center.
Slar rin1 are Roddy Me·
Dowall and Pmmela Franklln
a:; a pai r whoa re rathe r odd
themselves; they are exor ·
~s~ .l l zlnl ln
Hell House II pos.seued by
a demon with grea t powen
similarlothos.eoftheDevllln
The- tdon:b t. The dtmon
reacts in violent rebcUJon to
the vlolatlna attempt to
exorcise Hc-U House.
The t?hYiical and
psycholog~ca l batUe for Hell
House dl t plays horrou
CGmJW~rable to thole in TJw
E.n tcllt. and holda the
~~'i:;t::f!~ !~~n~~r~
ll'"Citer in magnitude than
Slnw Dop.
f'oo,,......_-._.....,,.....,
Salnman wantlod to 1111...,
mata tarm ~lntlng )ob1.
Summer work or lull
time. Excellent Income.
S.l" experlenn helpful.
Send return• to Gtrltnd
8rot., Box 202, Rio , WIJ ,
53960 .
-rr::::s::::~C:>:::x;:~~:::;x;:s::;~~:X::Z:::~(
UAB-AV
PRESENTS
"KOV ACKS"
CLASSIC TV COMEDY
MON.-FRI., APRIL 7-11
10 A.M.-4:30P.M.
-1> CONTINUOUS SHOWING -1>
45 mm 8/W
UC COFFEEHOUSE &
COMMUNICATIONS ROOM
FREE - FREE - FREE - FREE
PoQe 8
TH E POINTER
Ap ril 8, 1975
Photos by Rick Cigel.
by RkkOcel
A long with players, workers devoted many Rours to Trivia.
At Umldnighl, April6, it
::: :.;~~~~ ::-~::
telep hone had been answered.Trivia'15,the largest
conteat ol ita type in the
naUon had become history.
The radio aMouncu spoke
ofsuce:esa, of thanks and of
nut yur. Twenty fi ve
workers, drawn from the ~
hour effort, stood siltnUy by
u they heard the mulls
being read ov,er the air. As
the first place team was
-announced, a round of applause filled the con trol room
of WWSP f"M-90, the campus
radio abltion; ln~nded as
much for eachotherasitwas
.for_thewinner.
f'M-90conchM::ledTrivia7S,
theaixthannualtrivia~ntest
· For the past three yean,
''the campus radio station
has put on the biUest trivia
contest in the country, "
Bedore said .
Beginnln1 at 4 p.m. last
F'riday April 4, the station
played 'solid lold' millie
inte rlaced with 10 tr ivia
questiOns every hour.
1'eana were liven points
for questions they answered
correctly by telephone. 1be
valueoflhequeslionsrallled
from five to:;oo points.
Ques-tions were baHd ·on
te levision, radio, movlea,
comic boob, sports , music,
fad s, hi s tory and
measurement .
lnadditiontotheestimated
5,000 participants from 560
~ams, "anybody in cen tral
Wisconsin that had an FM
radio was listening," aald
........
Before the conlat bep n
Bedore said , " we 're golna tO
blow the phonn off the wall."
As the contest Jlr'oceeded, his
prophesy came true.
"We overlo.ded ci rcuita
and Ued up phone s.ervice on
lor!& distance line~," Bedon
aaid. Anythingthathad'.!_p
April 8, 1975
THE POINTER
Poge 9
the Trivia crew still
3.
Andre w J· M iller really haC his work cut
out for him for awhile .
Trivia handles
·3 00,000 calls
ui:ECIAL FEATURE
POINTER
Bill Sink led the R:oft Apes to a vidory. Here they search
through their reference books for on answer.
waitiiiJ fiK thil gokltn opo
portunity.''
How does one atudy IlK
tTl via! "You read old booU
and get a getlft'&l idu ol who
' played whal. U you watdl
televllioo,sitthet'ewithape11
and notebook and put down
anything that looks like
tTivia ;· he expiained.
Most ol the 560 questions
were written by Bedore,
SteYe Hamilton and Gary
Winters. They bepn com·
pUinalhtmamonlhago. " lt
lakesusaJood7S-tOOhourllO
write up the questions," said
H.amiltoa , whoc:aliJ himKir
'lhebrainsbehindthec:oo-
test'.
''Tile more obscure a rac:t
Ia, lht better it Ia," said
llamilton .
The tTio's task has grown
harder eac:h yea r , they say.
" ltisgettin~muc:hharderfor
us to think olquntiona that
will stump the people bec:ause
every year the teams get
mo r e sophislic:ated," said
Jtam!lton .
OtMr membt-n ol the Rail
Apes are Eric Berndt. Mike
Mc: Menamin , Den Berndt,
Tom Poku. Gary Meyers,
Qen Pelo. Bob Hardy and
Arnie Berndt .
As lhe rtR~Its were being •
~ad over- the air, aMounctr
Tom Collins wa r ned the
audience to be wary of next
yeu. "Next year , you're
piaylngagainst me," he said.
Bedore uid he plans on
tea mine up wilh Winters and
Hamilton to play Trivia next
year.
Quic:k now. for 10 poinll,
what did PatTic:ia Nul say to
lheroboliothe 191Sot sdenufic:tion lhriller The Day the
ElrthStood Still to ke-ep him
from dest royina the earlh!
r-·or 10 Trivia points. the
answe r Is ' Gort , klutu
borada nikto' tdon 'l destroy
the earth ).
PoQe 10
THE POINTER
April 8 , 1975
Native
Americans
share
tradition
..
::~~~~~:- ~~~m
=~~~~~~Rosalie Jones, a Native
by Sally Dustlr
The UWSP conc.IIJdtcl ill
fifth annual celebration of
Native American Weelr. on
S..tunby, April s with a
traditional Indian style pow
wow.
Native Americana comine
tocethtt with local people in
central Wik1>nsln.
1be Edna C.rllten Gallery
of the Fine ArtJ Center hoattd
a weelr. lone a~in& of
painllnas. drawlneund"other
art worlr. done by Native
~~:::~:,~u!;~~!~ :r=~~~c!!i~.su
Native Americans to eat.
sine. dan« and tell old
legends at Washington School
on Sati.U"day.
Diane Dt<:orah, publicity
chairperson fo r Native
Am e r ican Weelr. and
f r om
The main corridor of lbe
University Center abounded
in labiH of jewelry, btiidworlr., 'bastr.etry and other
crarts all hand ma de by
Native Amer icans. 1\lrqoise
rings. neclr.laces, bracelets
American dance performer
and chortograpMr appeared
Wtdnnday , AprU 2.. to bol.d a
dance wor-kshop and a dance
performance. At the dance
wOC"Iuhop she demonstr-ated
tr-aditional Arntric:a n lDclian
dance step& and mOYemenu
wi th ~tveral UWSP lludenll
joining in . The eve ning
pe rf o r mance Incl ud ed
danc:lne ill the tr-aditional
m a n ne r to h e r o wn
choreogra phy.
" Art of the Spolr.en WOC"d "
was an event sc:hf'duled to
familla r l:r.e atudenta and
=~:'Znd~wi:a ~
America n Indians. 1be AIRO
combiDed poetr-y, prOR and
lhort atories Into a ruder's
theater presented Thursday
=~ ~rt!tlu~
The
~ WO'III
the Col·
IWilmed up
~~!~a~=~~ i:.!:erT~::!;~=~
the event as a ptherine ol
people to experience and
share In the traditlona of
Americanlndlans.
The whole ,..."ttlr. ol events
1111-hi<:h be&an April t , tumtd
out to be the culmination ol
jewelry a nd crarts. The
c r aftsmen were Native
Americans from around the
state .
Special events hllhli&hted
lheweelr.inlheformofvoup
pruentalion, aun t per -
•
A Native American works on his
costum e. Photo by Rick Cigel
Native crofts of many kinds Were on dispJoy In the
University Center.
Photo by Rick Cigel.
April 8, 1975
Page II
~--------------------~ )
#lin the
beer capital
of the world
For years we've been telling you that in Milwaukee,
fbeer capital of the world, Pabst Blue Ribbon
is the overwhelming favorite.
Poqe 12
THE POINTER
•
April 8, 1975
Renken accepts coaching post
Jaclt Renken , UWSP championship in 1973 and
assistant football and tra,ck 197-1.
Before that he assisted in
co.ch since 1971 , !las been
appointed head football and football and track at North·
track coach at MayVille State east Missouri Slate Colltge,
wherein 1971 hert«ivedhis
COIItgeln Mayville, N.D .
masters degree in physical
education.
Renken ea rned his un·
dtrgraduate dq:ree In 1964
from Westmar
hi
aft.er
lie also was previously a
headfootballandtrackcoach
in the Siow: City, lA and
~lherv ille, lA public high
school sys tems . He was head
olthe freslvnen footbaJlteatn
his first year at UWSP.
Netzler pitches
2 shutouts
strike outs," Cla r k said .
.....,..Jimlfabeck
Neltler gave up singles in
Joe NtiZ.Ier, senior ou t· the fourth, firth and ~eventh
nelder and pitctw!r, recently
performed what Pointer in~~"3!, ~i;:~~';:r Allowed .
Coach Ji m Clark considers a first inning si ngle and a
oneotUWSP'1grcatestapon.s double In the seventh inning.
fcatsevn-.
Nel11cr won bot h ends ol a
doubleheader Friday, March rested our other' pitchers,"
28, against Louisiane College. said Clar k.
The Pointers won both
In addition to his pitching
games by 6-0 scores. with feats, Netzlcr also had a
NeWer itllow\ng three hits in banner hitting dly, Clark
the opener and only two in the noted.
nightcap.
NeWer had three hits In six
Neltler struc::i out four men at bats, walked twice and had
in the opener, two In the three l'W\S batted in.
•
night cap and forced
NeWer led the Pointers'
Louis iana to hit at the springtriphitUng with a .390
Pointers' Infie ld.
average, one double, five
" We played good defense wa lksandnine r unsbattedi n.
the whole trip," said Clark.
T h e Polnten back ed
"Of the opponents' 224 total Neider's pitching eUorts with
outs,wegottOOollhemlnlhe a six hit, six run attack both
infield and another ~ by games.
tl
st~~~. :S'1 l~jf~~~~~
12 UWSP athletes
selected for honor
Twelve UWSP athletes
ha ve been singled out for
re<:ognitlon in the 1975 edition
o f Ou t • tandlnc Co ll ete
Athletn of Amer\c:a.
· Dave Elger and Mike
Slagle,whowereplckedlut
i::r, ·:.·,t~~ v~ h ~~:
1
Jack Renken (right) , who has been
appointed head .football and track coach
at Mayville Sta te College, was presented
a plaque by Don Amiot and the uw.
Stevens Point track ~ea m Thursday,
honoring his promotional and leadership
service to the school the last four years.
...SPORTS
"'~OINTER
AFilM SOCIETY PRESENTATION
Is she just one of Rome's common prostitutes or is
she a portr~it of an indestructable womJin?
. Come To See Federico Fellini's Film Masterpiece
NIGHTS OF CABIRIA
Starring Gh.ilietla Masina
" Of all of the films I' ve seen, none has been more sen·
sitiVely or beautifully executed . Glulletta Maslna's performance Is without parallel except by Chaplin . NIGHTS
OF CABIRIA is my favorite film. " Toby Goldberg In FED-
EUCO FELLINI: A POET OF REALITY .
member ol a midwest all-sta r team.
El~er, a senior, and Ames,
asenior•remembtTsofthe
Pointeu' track and field
team, defending outdoor
champions In the WSUC.
Kuphall , like Smith, also
just concluded his collegiate
buketblll career . The
Wa uwatosa native ac·
cumulatedl l7polntsin three
years or varsity play, a a II
pointaver&J(e.
O.ve Brewer, Jim Gotsch,
Tom Ames, Pat Seyler , Dave
Ftetcher.MarcyMirmana nd
Wcndx,..Kohrt have been
selec ted for this yea r 's
edition.
Slagle Is a sophomore
'T'he group, selected by
athleticdirectorsandaports swimmer who was a double
information directors from event champion in the WSUC
colleges across the nation, meet and Stevens Point's top
are being honored for their repres e nta ti ve in the
abi litiesnotonlyinathl etlcs National Association of In·
At h letics
butineoolmunltyservk,and te r coll egla t e
national meet .
cam pta ac,livitiesaswell .
Seyler, 1 junior was a
Elge r , Kuphall , Smith , member of the first line on
Ames, M!rman and Kohrt the Pointer hockey team
were all on UWSP's fall which pr«<uced the Khool's
firstwinnina:seasonover this
scmest.er honors !lsi.
Smith just l!oncluded a wlnt.er. Ue also is the Poin·
four -yea r col l egl1te :~.'e:.ll ·tl mecareerleadlng
baskelballU4'eerlnwhichhe
Goesch is a junior and a
collected 447 poi nt1 and
nearly 300 reboundl.
vete ran pitche r for the
rp.
Fletcher, a junior, com· base
bined with Pham in tenn is to • B
no
nior, was a
win the Pointers' first sf ou II e
n for the
Wisconsin State University football lea, earning the
Conference IWSUC) and Most Valuab le Offensive
District 14 doubles UUes lui Linema,n Award liS! season
spring. Pham Is fNim Saigon, and t he Most Valuab le
Vietnam.
Defensive Lineman Award
theyearbeforelhat.
Mlnnan, a l10 a senior,
Kohrt, a junior, was the
stood out athletically In field third leadlng acorn- for the
hockey, where lut fall ahe women'a baaketball team ,
waa picked to participate in a whlchgalned athl rdplacei n
national tournament 11 a thestatemeetthiswtnt.er.
.,
• i
TUESDAY NIGHT
7:00 & 9:00P .M.
. APRIL 18, 1975
PROGRAM BANQUET ROOM-UC
April
'Aces' in
the crowd
by R.udy
Sullfvu
~'le.-~1 •1111
n ..
On the night of M.an::h 21,
tm Fred Schneck becam~
the first penon In history to
roll a J)ft"fect &ame 011 the
prcwiously
uneilnqu~red
bowlilll machiM 11 Morey '5
""·
8, 1975
THE POINTER
Page
13
We invite
our researchers to
ask more questions
than they can answer.
" I once rolled nine strike5
m a row at Rom ie's but 50me
drunk knocked the NJI out o1
my hand in the tenth frame
ill1d it rolled down the alley
andlcftmewiththe 1·2..,...·S.
6-7-t split ," Schneck added.
'T'heperftitowaswitnes.5ed
by a wild throne v.ilo cheered
Schne<"lt 'aevcrymov~during
thl!tcnsefinalframK.
'"lbt place waa jammed.
but wMn newt ol a pouiblc
J00 Jpr'Ud, evHyOM forgot
lhdr drinlta and headed for
the machine," ~Ia ted John
Kcdrowllti, who waa bar·
tendlna throuahout the
historic occ.uioa.
Rememberin& the CJ'O\IOd,
Schneckaaid, " Hwasacuin&
WH")' C'OnCI!Itcd CWa' thn"c. I
had hard.ly any room for my
approach and some chick in •
halt.u top was playtna havoc
wilh my bacltawina."
I
ca~e~~~·~n300~~::J
frame whet! hla dcventh ball
left his hand away Off line.
Som~ how . as If throuah
diwine inte r vcotion . the
sphere craued over onto the
Brooltlyn aide and all tO pins
fell.
After thla nanow escape
the final ball was anti ·
dlmatic.
AI 100n u the twelllh strike
was racked u~ joyoul
~~ c~rriedk t! '!!
the bat where he was treated
'\
-
~
Makmg your mark 1n busmess used to mean
caMng a comfortable niche lor yourself and stay·
1ng there. Promotion was simply a matter ol time,
prov•ded you could spend 20 years in the process.
But today. bus1ness depends on technology. Tech·
nol(.gy that can't wa1t a moment il•t'sgo•ng to keep
pacew1thwh.at'shappening.
That's why, at Kodak. our basic reliance on sci·
enlilic 1esea1ch makes the need for creative young
minds ITIOre demanding than ever. We must have
:o;~~e~~~~ ~~~~~n~t~;~~~~e.~~:~:~~~ ~:
the cvmlna.
~'*!a!U:>'~
an !he freedom and responsibility they can har.dle,
and tackle our problems wilh their ideas.
'M'Iich, we're happy to say. has helped .many of
our scfenlists y1eld important d1scovenes . F.Jr
ckle.lna time when a reporter
exa~e~n on the left has devised ~and ·~·
''i;:~~~~~~s~.~
:ac;~:.h~is~~~p~~~~~r~~r~~~
to Budweiser ror the rest ol
=..~ 1hi;~ impact ol the
~~~~a=~~;;~:~ r:~:r~~~~~~~~~~O:a:·
helps to identify unknown substances. The woman
on the right has a dual b4ckground in gas chroma·
tography and trace metal analySis, which she's ap·
plied to analyzing pcllution in rivers and streams.
They came up with new problems while SOlving
some ol our old ones. But they've uncovered some
promising answers, too. As they continue their re·
search, you may read about them again. The oldest
isjustover30.
Why do we give young men and women so
much room to test their ideas? Because good ideas
often lead to baUer products. Which are good for
business. And we're in business to make a profit.
But in furthering our own business interests, we
also further society's interests. Which makes good
sense.
After all, our business depends on society. So
we care what happens toil.
~ lr8Uk.
~ More ..... a business.
~~~~!.or ; : : 1:er'::!' it'ah . . . . . . . .• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •. .
'-'
Po:::oc:_
e ;_;l_4 _ _ __c
T;_;
H=.
E .cP=.
O;:_
IN;_;T.;c
ER
" - - --O..:
A::::
pril 8, 1975
r--,
I
I
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I
.
n I
VI.J
I
Th<na~:!:~~: :""·o )~arl
~~_is. a t least by my!
on~
advances
c«~·l
ectionoftlis
d~anu,l
s tollvelife
!;_~!~:;~~~~~-~;.!~~. ~
!Tow~t'::"" t~; }!rd,
11
gemlike!
I
innme,
j
i
!To ma intain this ecstasy.
! iss!X'Cessinlife.
L:.~~~!!!..~~---·---'
~~~ei:;:;:! :~:S!y. I
I
jThe same earth holds us
but not in t1w same place.
jl'tle same IUh f«dd us
!
j and we share ea<:h oUw:r'al
!lh· ~~elin&
j shad~-s .
~;!!nknolll"n
ueh ot herJ'
'
ivou
tO\·e God
!~muchastheperson
I
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I
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r-,
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----~
lAnd
I
•
~~=.a re the aongs ehlldre
jYes, you, youar eeverythlng
.And everything is you .
lvou are the wi nd,
~~~~ ~~~~~~:;"~.;~
~....
!You are
I
Ole
=er
wind.
iAnd youue lhesoft &ti
!above.
iYouarethe lire l 'mdre
'·
r;;~~-~::~:· · -·-·-·J
you are a morning I
!sprin&.
THE POINTER
IS
Prof lectures on
'China today'
•
Av11itinaschola r 10.ill &h·t
lectures. April 17. on tile .art
and lire in Otina today at
UWSJ>.
I'Tof65orC. J . Uu, of the
J::ast Asian Lan.ua&u
Department .at the Um\•ersity
of Minnesota, IO.'ill be on
campus to lead Jll'otrams at
3: 30 and 7: 30 p.m. In the
CDmmunkaUon Room ol the
Unive:rsity Center .
The first lecturto will focus
on current conditions in the
and will be open to the public
10.ithout eharte.
The 52-yea r.oQid Liu is a
nath·e of Pekin& and has
taught at Minnesota since
t963. 1ie has previous exper ienceat the University of
Uritish Columbia, Stanford
University, Lase ll Jun io r
College, the Univusily o(
!'lor ida, Vassa r College,
Brooklyn Coll~e and UW
Madison where he earned a
Ph.D.
\' 15\mainla ndthathas~n
openc!d to IO.'ettern \is ilors
only in the last couple of
years. The ~·ening program
will be about the prnent and
put ...·orkoiCI\inesearlists.
Bothprograms10.ill include
thes~·ing ofc<llored film
lie hal done ex tensh•e
writing nbout China and Eut
Asia and accordin& to the
UWSP p r ofessors who
arran&ed for his visit here,
"has an inte rnational
reputation" in his rteld.
Students chosen for
1975 'Who's Who'
Thirty41:\'en out.standlng
uppe rclassmen 11 UWSP
ha\·e been singled out for
Diana DuPree, Marth1
£1ler-y, M1rdl EPiebretson.
Kim Erway .
~nitloninthe1975editlon
•
finds out that over Easter
some parking meters have managed to
sneak into the Universi ty Center parking
lot. Photo by Roger Barr.
Student one of 20 winners
Ka rroll R. Bohnai, a tenior
communication maj or at
UWSP from · M.ilwal.lkee. is
one of ap pro:a :imatel y %0
"'i nnets In natiofW com ·
petition for commwlication
Sl udenls.
Bo hnak 's paper o n
"Significant Application ol
Rhetorical Critici.Jm" was
eho6enforprnentationatthe
DePauw Universi ty Undergraduate Honors Conft1'enet. Greencastle. IN.
Thelhemeol the!W'ogram
of Who 'l Who Anun1
S tud e nu In Am e ri ca n
Colle~es 11M! U•lvenltles.
The designees, ch01m by a
iptdal committee of S\udeftt
Gove rnment ,
were
nominated for the honors on
lhe basis of their academic
achievement, se r vice and
invol vement In cam pus a ffairs .
Th e ir bi og raphi es will
1ppear in a special directory
to be printed this yea r .
Chose n were : Lauree n
Adams, John Blader, Tom
Bl.ankenheim, Marty Boman,
Kevin Dartt, LyM Dotter ,
Also: Bennyl-'l"l.~a
Ga rsow, Susan Gura ls ki.
Dale J orgensen, Kathl~n
Kasdorf , J er ome Koleske,
Ronald Lange, Terri Lon&.
Robert Mackin, Jane
Prohuka, Joan Sha fer .
Robert Shave:r, Jr., Barbara
SliefVItet, Jill Stlen, Kathy
Sun atedt , J ohn Sw1nson ,
Pa trick Timm , Baney
Ume m , Rober t Va llga,
Robert Volp, Ma ry Van db-tie, G<ary Wege, Gary
Winters, Tom Wojciechowski,
Alan W on1. Alice
Wyw lalowsll and J acalyn
Zautnt1',
is '"The Comm unication Aria
1nd Scienc1.'S : An Integrative
Approach " and it \I' U
arranged to encourage un dergraduate scbolltship and
to facilit at e inte n c tlon
~\l'eefl)'OUn&Khotarsinthe
communk:ation arts .
•
CHOOSECIIA'f'ONS, I'OUSHES. I-'STO:S I CHEEKY$
ALLEY KAT
£rzinqer's
ALLEY
J KAT
Poqe 16
THE POINTER
Apr il 8 , 1975
Faust expresses gratitude
~dln
and
Gt'nllt'mra of
l JWSP,
MCK"t than a mon tli has
paued sine. tht' opt"nina of
Wintt't' Carnival and this
letterisloniO\'erdur. lthas
been difficult to find ....-ords to
u p""" my feetlnp without
gettina maudlln about lt.
I want to express my apprfd;;~tion to the Universi ty
Activities Board for
dtdicatin& Winter Car nival to
me illld for providing tlw:
university with the opportunity to make tht' ;;~ n­
nouncement ol an enti rely
unexpected reward.
ThWie of yo u who were
there uwaaociabletu. pa.rty
~·
tum into a momentOUI oc- alike. My work over the put
culon and you saw that I was forty years has beet! plt'uant
r:,~el~rhao'ru~\'~!~~~:u~!~ :;.~.!:n'i~~ne S:i: :w~
speechless by the turn of frustrations .
ev.;!· man·elous miniature
statue of the chem il tr y
tJh .!.,~J:r ~.;~~~on~~~
0
0
tnou&.h reward.
Putti na my name on a
university facility seems a
so mewhat
:aw~~".!!o~~~dt~ m~~~
.....
UWSP a better place for
atudenta, atalf and taculty
T• tat tclltw :
J:!tenc:eri:ic~'i! 111ve~
We recently visited UWSP lw:lpful
G•m Nil.: of
•e-re
ar~ ~opt'e~~~=~o;tr!,-7~i;l!
1
1 1
for bot~the university and for ~nr!~ r~t ;n t ! ~nkolsf!~c~ ~q:~~ckl~n:.ire~:!'
=nW.~~~ ~~~~~!it~
Gilbert W. Faatl
Reglslnr
exaggerated
recoanition for my of ten
feeble, ine ffec tive and
UWSP halls impreu
task force
Ja"O,NION
...,
POINTER
s tudyina residence hall
systems.
We couldn't hi ve u ktd for
a better sta rt for our tri~. The
frlendlineu and holpitality
we received left us lrith
nolhiDJ but the best impression of Stevens Point.
A special thanks aoes to
Paul Peterson, head Student
Man aa e r of DeBot Food
Cmtn, for his tlme and
women ol 3W Schmeeckle,
the men or 3S &nlth and
evt"r)'9ne else we mel.
We only hope we can show
visitors to Normal, U.. , the
sa me consideration
have
shown ... Thanks again for a
wonderful Ume.
you
llllnob State Unive ral ty
Task Force .
J••a Walkr, a.Jr-.u
I
'"
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