Document 11824614

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Proxmire to speak at commencement
U.S . Senato r William
Proxmlre will .speak Sunday
after noon, May II, at com-
.
mencement ceremonies
markingthecloseofthellsl
academic y~ar at UWSP.
The 2 p.m. ceremony in
Qu.:Jndt Gymnasium wiU be
fiX" approximately a50 persons who will receive rithft'
bac helor's or m1ste r 's
.........
play a prelude as well as a
processional usi ng works by
Schubert and llandel . The
re«SSional to be ll5.ed was
written by a music ma}ol'.
Dan Hansen, membef' oC the
seniore:lau .
The invocatio n a n d
ber!Miction will be given by
the~ - James Falconer,
pu tor of St . J oseph 's
C8thol.ic: Church ln. SCevens
Point .
At lhe co mm encement ,
members ol UWSP Symphony Orchestra , undff the
direction of Jack Abel , will
Students graduating with
aca demic honors will be
in troduced by Vice CMn·
cr-llor John B. Ellery and
winner s o f J a m es H .
Albert.son Awards, hig hest
recosnil ion given by t he
university in honor of a
former president of the insti tution , will be announced
by Assis tan t Ch ance llor
David Coker.
Dtans or the u~verslty's
~?~'!f:!
;:::' !:;:~~
~~"d
Olancellor Lee S. Dreyfus
wi ll conferthemandpresent
a ehat'ftt to the graduates.
Students in the Army ROTC
Unit here will form lhe color
guard and pr~t the U.S.
an d un iv ersity flags .
*
u~POINTER
6, 1975
Student leaders
•
forese-e'
good year
by
~u.,
eu ....,aa• ..,
Maria Alvarez and Bob
Baddnltl wtTe elected vicepresident and president,
respectively, of Student
Government for the 1~711
Khool yea r.
are not representatives oC the
students," Badzlnsld said.
It was suaested that the 30
or 3$ people In S tudent
~:rn=~~~~:
:z
tlnskl added.
" We were accused of
b ei ns n e bulou s and
capridous\nouracll. lthlnk
''One lhl~ that llhlnt is
that It 's a ve r y fa lu
Soinl to be very Important
state-ment ," Badtinsld said.
nvr.,l yur II to eltlblilb in
Badtlnstisaidlha t vlli ting
certain people's minds that
various orga nlz.ationa I"M!xt
Stud ent Government does
year
will be beneficial In
represent the studenllandis
rtadUns the student body.
not an arbitrary body . They
"I will be s oi na out talklns
pula lot of effort Into their
to various group s,
work and are very dtdkak<l
establishins so me rea l
to what they do," Bacb:insli::i
, communication with olher
said.
key organluUon suc h aa
Bachinsltlwasrduring to
President• Hall Counc il
a comment made at a
tPHCI, BadtlnU.l said.
meetins on Monday, April 2:8.
" I want PHC to give a
' '11le reference wu that
standing report to Student
studenta do not put In that
Goolemment so that we'll
type oC effort and lhat they
Student leaders continued on page 3
•
In thu iuue_
N""tA111I1tb
to,-MtrtK..-ut"WII kl
·Drtyfuafor-noLI1011'ftfor 'n--'77.
-student Co\l~menl '75--'71 bud,et inc r- .
-UWSP t tudtnt parachutinc! .,.feallln! i.-Ide,
·Vtl:l for Pu.cediMolv,..
·UC s-rUaJ~atk:lll"ftOiiutionpltaa~.
Cindy Graef
closed-off third floor of Old Main. See the
photo-feature on page 9. Photo by Bob
kerksleck.
·M· "-«-1-10. bDidl aM:llllana..
Pos;~e
May 6, 1975
THE POINTER
2
UC renovation
•
resolution passes
by Sblrley SpltUemellter
A resolution lorenovate the
former te•tbook rental aru
in the Unlvtnl ty Cenl.er <UCI
into a lludent activiles
comple•waspusedMay tby
lhe University Centers Policy
Boud CUCPBl.
The UCPB uld pi arm are 10
divide lhe arta orr with wa lls
10 studtnt orJanlzations will
be able to Ott\IPY the rooms
for their operations.
Ron Hacbet, UC director,
said, Bob Bl*h from Studeat
locatedbecauseitlslargtf'b)'
alm01t30pen:en t, thebo&Td
said.
The l;raer a rea will
provide m<n flexibility for
shittina ol olfice space and
meeting areu than that on
the second noor of the uC,thP
board uid.
The resolution was ap-.
proved after discussion on
whelhtf' lhe University Day
Ca r e Cen t er's need to
rel ocate In that area was
more Important than the need
fo r the com plex to be
devdoped .
~~~~le~O:u:a;!!~el,!t~ :Ures!d'!:n~rofAl~~::
v.ill probably Include offices,
meeting s pace an d 1
rect"ptionarea .
It i1 probabl e that
renovation wW beglD thls
c omin& Dece m ber or
Janu.My and be completed
the rollowln& sprln& or
summer, Hacbet u.id.
taken by Student Government
on the complex.
Schuette uHr it wu the
feelin& or 4 ome Student
Government member~ that
lhe Day Care Center ahould
be moved to the old Wttboolr.
renta l are.~ because lhey need
the spare 10 badly,
Sc hu ette uid they
qu estioned whe th er t he
complu would
able 10 UN
aU the apace available in that
TheUCPBuidlherelathe
posaibility that lhe maintenance and food
offices now in lhe lowe!' level
of the UC, will move to the are.~ .
secood floor and that the . But board memben said
act!vitla complex will use that enouah student interest
thoM art.U, abo.
had beef! showt1 10 fill lhe
The Unlvenity Activita aru to be r enovated.
Boa r d , Student Ac tivities,
Student Gover nm ent and
Board Chai r ma n Joe l
other s-ervice oraantzatloas Guenther uid that accordina
are thought 10 be likely oc- to J oe Sl. Marie from the uc·
cupants of the complex.
:::: rc'~O:=u:!~u!~
The former textbook rtntal $150,000 for renovation iJ
area wu' ct-en ovn- the from the atudent '1 user fee , 10
secondnooroftheUCwber-e anypartoftbebuiJdinlud
aervicea
be
n:!
~~~~t~f!~~ ~==•=·beuadfor
~POINTER
:d:.?::=!"='SE-~.:.!.~;5:.~:E:
--
:.::':"..:.','&'"O:::'.;:t.!:'~.::~"::.~:..-.::- OOOI<ft
........
"'"
These 'wrPaths, held by Ra y Specht
(left) andOindy Graef were sent to
UWSP fr om the for mer Republi c of
VIetnam. They wer e sent to the funeral
of former UWSP Chancellor Ja mes H.
Albertson, who died March of 1967 In a
pla ne crash In South VIetnam . Albertson
had been in charge of a team of US
educators who wer e working w ith
universities in South VIetnam . The
wreaths are cur'r ently stored on the third
floor of Old Main. Photo by Bob
Kerksleck.
•
Student Government
budget increases
byCaNIIM . Marthl
dayl to 110 dayl.
· 11 lncreue Major Medical
maxlmum from sz.ooo lo
~)~t patie~tplychiatrit
are paid at
150,000.
The buda:et has lnaeased
from l ll,MO to 115,220, an
lncreueofi3,S80. 111emoney
wl.ll beUiedasfol.lowt : suoo
for presldent'sulary, l l ,iOO
for the vice presldenl 'a
ulary, tiOOfortheExecutivt:
Director's ul&ry,tzsoforlhe
United Council Dlrtctor 's
ulary, SS , 400 fo r the
aecretaries, Sl,410 for travd
expen~e~,S2,i011for~ervtce
~d auppl.les and 14,400 for
non personnel , said newly
elected Prnldent Bob
Badzinskl..
1:1 perctnt lo
::M::_oy'-..:6!...
' .:.;
19:,:7;:_
5 _ _ _ _:T:.:H:.:Ec.:P0=1Nc:.T.:.:E::;R:.__ __ Page 3
Student leaders -continued
t..ck," Ahtaru aaid.
" I 'd lib to be W'Ofkin& on
the orli!ntation proc:ram this
talldn& to the new
frelhmen u they come 10
that they know who I am,
what I'm doinl, bow they can
help and bow they can 111
involved in Studmt Govn-nment," Badlinskl aald.
IWilmf!l'
Alvaraaaid that her hopei
for nat yur are to lnereue
c:omm unlcaUoa
between
Student Gournment ud
.w:lenll, abo.
' '11wft is • poulbUity ol •
bulklil'lbol.rdM:tupfor nut
year In Allen, Debot and the
Unlvtnity Ceoter for the
current luuea of Student
Govtnunent,''Aivern aald.
" I hope to hive I really
"'We're ruUy hopU:c to Jet
a lot accompllthed thlt
tummer . A Leadenhlp
Wor'uhop It ooe ~lbUity.
We wan t to Hnd out a handbook ora SIUdmt Government.
We want to make sure
Student Go'lllfnment Ia
ready wht'n everyone come&
Police stress bike safety
Aid offered
Maybe yo u qualify f.or
flnanda l aldlanddldn'tltnow
it. Briefly , thlt Is how
eUglbUJty fcwflnanclal aids 11
.........
F11'1t, what fundi can your
J)affnll CGntribute from their
rfl\llar income and from
uaell! ThJs dqlends upon
!:!i!!'mta'~"l!tU:ti~ ;:;
chUdren, medlca l expei'IIH,
itldebtedneu, etc. Thla II
~te~~~~~~fo:NI:e;
su bmit on the P.renll'
Confidential"St.temen t .
Second , what can you
pnwkle: from your uvtnp
and eaml.ngs!
Tblrd , what oulllde
~ ean you find like
giltl, special ~anhil)l,
1rants, vetenns bendltl,
vocational rehabilitation,
etc.!
These resouf«t are all
added toctthu and bal&nHd
aplnst what the univeni9'
filtll'ft It co.tl to a tttnd
UWSP for a yea r -for 1975--76
tha t il set a t D,oo for a
rqulu , In-alate, drpmdent
student tcom mutera, out-of·
state and other lludentl have
a diffe-ent naw-e).
Uyoueoo~eupshort of the
S2«10, then you probably are
ellllble ' for rinanclal ald.
Whether It will be In the form
ol a grant, a job, a loan or a
Pandemon i um breaks loose on
Reserve Street with regularity, Monday
through Fr iday for approximately 10
minutes, when people, bikes and motor
vehicles clash for the rlght..of.way.
Photo by Roger W. Barr.
. . . ... .. .... ..
~
..... ..
~-
combinatio n of . a ll thr ee
depends upon the level of
yovt need , your present in·
debtedness and aevenl ot her
!actors.
U you are ha ving financial
dilfkultles and want .ome
help, CUM IDto the Student
Financial Aldl Offk:e In the
St..Sent 5er"vi"«< Ceflter- and
dwell; it out with one ol the
~ora . Tbe office ltaff ll
there to bdp you and ..W do
::tb~ ~.:d.r:;:.=
,...
.......
Poqe 4
TH E POINTER
Summer
by BHLeaiC'IriU
Two kinds ol fw:~dl eniUre
the continuance ol student
employment at the Wliveni t y
for an academk yec, uld
Hll!leo liCm~md of fllwK'Ial
Aids ( (FAJ.
The re&ular proaram
subsistincoastatefuadsls
extended to thOM DOt elJ.alble.
The JWKII are distributed to
the vuious coUeaes in the
u nive r sity. Th e adlninistuti<ms then allocate
Fortho&e who aredi&ible
for ruaandal aid, the familiar
wort-ctudy program is made
- availablewithfederalfllftdl.
May 6, 1975
employmen·t rates down
vsrious depa r tments and
centn-s on campus.
the amount for student
WI&HUWSP is feelln& th e
repncussiON of the nation's
economic receulon, Sigmund
uid. lnOation <:0141led with
the tax paye~ · Inability to
paymoreta xes have~toa
Summer employment
pros pects for s tudent s
.eemedbleakthisyurasthe
last two years, due to these
drcumslances, Slamund
said. "While the empiO)"ITlt!flt
program functions by the
academic year, the universityrunsonafiscalyearba.sis
from June I to June tlhe
~f.~c :O~o~~J:-~:. ~~;~ ~~~~:,'oa!~_m;::
pn)priated to the work~udy, mnainin& amount 11 used for
~.Jr~e _ only $200,000 wa&.,.~~::ddect~ployment wages,
lnOation hu abo lUI lhe
Since summer usually
student •IUch called for a n extend into Auaust of the new
Inc r ease In waaes . Tile fiscal )"Ur, the top of the new
lhrintin& of the budiet plus I:Jud&el II alwa)'J li phoncd off
the r aiselnwagesmeantthat to maintai n the summer 's
eitba- leu students may be payroU f~md. This actioa Is
~~~~=r.~ ~rre: ~.;~~ ~~ruta_r~rudy~~~r!iu~~
-~DICOlA
UIIIIATIDIIA
~~~~~:.kif.!~ ~w!
facl.oriessuch as
the paper
mUla and canni111 factor)',
who aba'b a lot ol SluOcds
~~~::rr!:fm~~bJ
many bein& laid off or on 1
rtdl.ll'ed work v;eet, llf ad·
""'·
.
Consequently studtnli •iD
be a Hected since thew
wor~a will be more liUI7
calle d back for opmi~JI
be!ore the atudenll. DD·
ployment in 5lons, MXDt
offlce work , waitressin& and
bartendll18 Is abo typical. be
added. Some ate IOII!d il
f a rm ln& or' l!uvr
ll&ricultural artusudiH
field and irrigational-.-ork, ht
said. ·
The ····~···M
bod
..........
Sl&mund said that tbrrrln'
many students v.•llov.iU !lOibi'
:~:e·~:; ::n~~.
job lor that tim e. Thcrri
UWS P 's enrollmtnt mar
suller should suchiJrlt
numbenbeaffecttd.
Janstowld nld there"l'rtt
many atudenll In the ~
!:~"~=d~l!~
wilat theydesirtden«dlf
wlth wbatevertheycouid&~
However , some
'~..:.
. :e"~~!-~~~:e-~
•
May 6, 1975
Peace Vets
to dissolve
•
next fall
Tht Veta for ~~. an
orpnlulion on this campus,
willnotexistasofnextfall ,
ac:cordina: to Gilbert
Halvenon. president of the
Veil for .Puce.
Th e ruson, Info r med
Hah·enon, is bec:ause their
project was reantly finished .
He said that Student
Government allocated them
money to .nte a book called
Post Vie tnam Syallram e.
'"T"be book was a project for
two years." said Halvenon
" It deals with a lot of the
economic. social and
something for lhtm (Viti·
nam~se) to decide fo r
thenuelves, ''wl\ich they did
as olyesten:lay, <April 29),"
Halverson added.
"When I got over there,"
said llah•enon, " I decidtd
there ....-ere North Vietnamese
fighting South Vietnamese
and Sout h Vietnamese
lighting North Vietnamese.
People right for a reason. II
\lo"al over \1<-htther the !lioc'th
Vietnam Gove r nmen t was
legitimate or the South
Vietnam sovtrnment was
l~tlmat~. It all boils do~to-n to
who is more popular. Even
tht South Vietnamese I met
wantedar"t\lnificationofthe
e!f:~~~~~ p1=~~ ~Or[count ry."
popularwar."Halvei'IOI'Isa.ld
that there are three C"'pies in
the Learnin& Resource
Center.
Basically, th e Norlh
~etnamese and the neutral
Vtttnamese In the sout h
wanted to get away from
interference and aggression
"AI one time, the purpose and the recent evenls have
of the orpniulion, was to &ivtn the Vietnamese a
llop Am tries's ln,•olvemenl victory fPn those," Beck
in Vietnam and to settle II said .
peacefully," said Bob Bec:k ,
" I think t hey <Viti ·
vice pr esident ol the Vets for namtse l should have a
Pta~ .
,
Beck said thai now It would
like to be an organiution, in
UWSP, that could educate
some of the undefsraduates
tosom eofthtasptc:Uofwhat
thisc:ountry hasdoneandcan
do for peace.
Hah-erson said that now
they are interested in un·
c:oodilional amnesty for U.S.
"""""·
A«ording to Halvenon,
therearepresentlyt0tol5
members. At it's peak :
hov.-evtf', thef'ewere35to50
members
continued
llah·erson . llaiv tf'son said that he's
neutral to the t\"enll in In·
doc::hina and that it was
\'ictory~lebration . Vittnam
may have peace:· continued
THE POINTER
Bee .keeping comes
back to Portage County
by JoftnKrJir:r
To most people. the thought
olbeesisapamful one,but to
Zeke Tor:r:ewski and hi• son,
Mike , it's thtir hobby .
Mlke, a UWSP student, was
thtoneinilially inttTHlt'd in
bee-k~na: .
" lt all • tartedttu-ee ytars
ago," Mike said. There was
an ad In a state fann
newspaper about the <:lass
and ever Iince thtn 1\-e been
hooked on bee-keeping, ht
said. " I've btc'ome muc:h
more Interested in it and I'm
stlll ltarnlng," Miktsald.
" Wehaveabout:SOhivtsat
home," Mike said . Somt
hives die In the spring and
fall . he said. If you do ha \·e
0\"er :SO hives, il is then
ded.aredafa r maccordingto
a stattstatute, Mike said.
Each hive cootains about
60.000 bt-ts, Mike said . We
started out by ordering two
poundsol lta lianbt-tsandone
Queen bee from l'tlillourl, he
said.
'1"heltalianbeesartmore
agrnsin and produce more
honey than the C.ilucasian
bees," Mike said. The ~
produced 2.900 pounds last
year and \lo"tarese111ng It, he
said.
" We have three diffel"tnt
classes of bees: the working
bee, the queen bee and the
drome bee," Mike said. The
workins bee .,.,-orks on the
structure of the hive, while
the queen and drome bee are
for reprodudng purposes, he
said.
The work Involved wllh the
hives, Mike said, has to do
with makingsurethereisone
~rse:a~e be:it:.,r t~~vehiv~~
beins c:onlt'olled, more porpte
areset tinsin terestedinbea.
I know of three people who
1\a\·esottenlnvolvedln bee·
keo.pina. he added.
Ac:c:ordlng to Tonewski, his
hives produc:ed S7 pounds of
:=:s!~~!~!'tr!:~ ~
produc:ed in the state last
yea r was 65 pounds.
There is no nec:esury
preparatioo for the honey
enough food .and also that afteri t is<:1)! l~ted ,hesaid,i t
thereishoneylnthehlve. The 11 almosl pure susar.
"It was ,-ery time con·
hivesarevery<:lean, it's like
a mini-city in there, he said. suming in the ~inning . Not
" l wasalittleappreheoslve only did ~to'e have to work on
at ri rst workin& aN)I.Ind bees, lhehi\•n, butwehadto le.a rn
but I've <:hanged now. The about the ben also," Tor·
bees seem to sense fea r ," ~~to'$ki said.
You do need the necesury
Mike said. "Onetime, I was
stuns 12 times on the same
spol, Jc:ouldn'twalk the next ~t~f~~.T~ee-:~!!rl.
Thue are two to ttu-ee deaths
day," he said.
a year resultins from bees
Zeke Tor:r:ewski , assistanl attacking bee-keepers in
to VIce -Ch ancellor in force. he added.
University Services, beume
The initial investment is
in terested in bee ·keepin& rostlybutthe~yp;~ys for
soonafler hissondld.
ilself In !he c:nd, said Tor"Both Mike and I attended u~to·ski .
a dass at the Pardeeville
There is .a Bee-Keepers
vocational school on the Assoc:iatlon formed in PorSIJbj«tofbtes,whichranfor tage County, accordi ng to
10 weeks," Tor:r:ewski said. Tonewskl. The first offidal
"Bee-keeplnl 11 comins meelin&ls.sc:heduled foe- May
back to Porta1e County," IJ.
•
Toruwsltl said. It ~to-ent down
Tor:r:ewski added lh.at his
hi ll bec:aueofthediseases, family never seta sick of
but now wi th the disetsel'
"""''·
B«k.
Bec:ks.aidthathethinksthe
orphans fathered by
Americans should be brought
to this C"OWllry, but it's unf1l r
for the fut!A'e Vietnam tha t
~to"etakeVietnameworphans
and br ing them to this
eowttry."
Bec:k said that he feels the
Vietnamese mili lary per·
sonal .and othe r refusees
should not rome to the U.S.
"They should turn the plants
arouod." .said Beck.
"We can •ccept South
Vietnamese deserters. but
yttthisrounlry hasnotacttp~edonthtsamet~JU
OOA-n sons." ('011('!\lded Beck.
Dreyfus does not see
layoffs for '76-'77
Chancellor Lee Sherman
DreyfUI aNJOUnC'ed to the
faculty April30 thatheis
terminathw the consullltive
proc:ess with the Faculty
Advisory Committee on
Fhcal Emergency .
enrollmtntpict~continues
at Stevtnl Point.
Ameetinswuhek1April29
with the mtire C'<1111.mitlft.
and the chancellor indicalt'd
his acctplan<:e of thdr
judgment . The t'ff~l o1 this
a<:«ptance is to as~ure the
l"t:;,m~~!!te~e u!~de!\~ ~~~!ttr:!e~r~
fact ftndin& miaion to the
People's Republic of China,
he met with Professor
Douglas Rad tke, chai rma n of
the cunmlttee who provided
tw:m with the informal report
o1 the committee and Ita
resolutionthatadeclantkln
of fisul emersency would not
bel)f!CftUry roc- tt715-771f
current
l mprov lnt
recommended by the
chancellor in the C'<1111.lng
biennium.
" I don't know If this is .a
greater rtllt'ftome oc- tolhe
fai"Uity . llllfta I ~JUt bwdtn
frommeslncethlsbusineuof
layint off tenured faculty has
been pers on1 ll y ve ry
~~~~'!t ~~~= :.~
Page 5
UWS P st udent, Jea n Per ki ns, finds an
unusual way to pa ss the time, crewellng,
while she waits for her ride home for the
weekend . Photo by Roger W. Barr .
' Po~e
6
THE POINTER
Moy 6, 1975
Amateur wine-makers enjoy hobby
by 8Q!) Knoff
·Rood white table wine for
daily use with my meals'·
''I 1\.ave enjoyed drinking Ellie said.
'
.,.,;ne ever since I was In
The _process is begun by
Europe during the war,·· said collecting a basic ingredient
F rank Eble, bu si n ess forthe~~oine . "Youcanmake
manq;er for the Athletic wine from almos t anything "
Deparbnent. " I have wine said Ellie. " I have recipes f~
""i th _evet;t meal and I love birch sa p wfne. walnut leaf
~:ki: w~':nas~=r a;,~ ;;:de~f: ~=~ :~e,; :~
Al::('ording.toBus('hanother inthehaJisbeC'ause the issue
good way to get st.a rted Is to has ne,·er been brought up
Is then str"a1ned and allowtd
to continue to ferment from
two weeks to four months.-.
~ahue:~:rk~~P=~~~:~
~
Afte r the fe rm entation
~ocess la. comple~ the ..int
IS placed 1n dean conlainets
&ryd parllc::les noat\ 111 In 1 ~
'" You('heckthesugarcontent
and add suga r a«<rdlng to
thea!('oho]C(!IItentdesired."
Yeast lsnowadded tobegin
the fermentation process.
According to Eble the
Ingredient! are very acti ve
during this proees1 and the
rackinJ.the wine," Eble.uid
Acco rdm1 to Eble llid.
According to Ebie this musi
be done two or thrre lim~
::~~~e wine is ready to bt
~~~Galla~-=
··At this point w11er
f!~\~t!~d· ~~~~~~: ~~= !~u~~.. E~~W"!id.
federal government with a
manymore."
minimal ('harge.
'" I really don't kfiO'A· if
to
Eble, wi~C:.'!~~~~~Oa;:~~
maku!' W1.ne lS fun and in· thes.,.,.eet fruity wines. After student! in the residell("e
~rest!~ · ,t t also '-kes along the fruit is collected it must rbal]a muke~~oine ,"said f'red
Leafgren exec:uth·e director
~'TI~allf II IS done ri.ihl. " Mv be ('rushed and ('hemiC'I Uy
of St\XI~t Ufe. " We don't
:u:v!d:
for s terilization ha,·eapol.icyonwinemakina
joyment ."
A~cord.ing_
~n:~:::~'; :~~~:~
~!kt:ek~ ;:s;~~YonW:h: ~~?;"~~~ ::n:OOUJ
mar ket .
if anyone tries to tum the
According to Ebte a nd basementofa hallintoaw ine
Busch, anyone quali f)ing as ('tJiar ."
=·
~~~
a;:;:wr: 11':,~tu1e~
"Wine should be allowed to
age fortwoorthreeyearsbut
amateW" ""'inemakers nevu
seemtoha vethepalienret.o
waft that long ," Eble said. •·J
wa•tas long as l c::anbutonce
:,::~t-~,l tandil"s goodilrle\·u
Another wine maker on
campus, Bob Busch. director
of Student Ac::livities bktsa
differ ent approach. ·
" I don 't bother with adding
chemicals w yeast," said
Busch."l collectthefruil and
rely on the natural yeast and
s ugar It contains . I use
wooden ban-els during 1~
process a.nd I usuall y make
~=~ ~:fd~gallons a yea r."' .
"For a person who knovos
nothins about malting wint
a.ndwouldlike to getstarted l
recommendabook('aii Fin t
Ste,.lnWine"bklng byCJ.
Berry," Eble said.
Joust a m inute! These trees appear to
be positioned ready for a duel. Photo by
John Hartman.
Andrews receives
UAB- AV
PRESENTS
ERIC-CLAPTON
CREAM
AND
A VIDEO TAPED CONCERT
UC COFFEEHOUSE &
COMMUNICATIONS ROOM
MAY 5-9, 1Oa.m.-5p.m .
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-
second award
Oli\·er A. Andrews was
lt<lml!d rec:i pient Thursday
niKht, April z.t.of the anoua l
ISOO""Ex('eliell("einTeachinl
Award'" at UWSP.
!twas therirsttimealnce
the award pro1ram was
C$1abllshedadecade agothat
a faC"ulty member topped the
competition more than once.
lle....-onh\s firstSSOOin\968.
Andrews. aprofes501'1n the
Chcomist~y Department, has
been achve repreRnling the
u~n· rrsity in pr ese n ti ng
1C1cnce programs in state
hlghiChOOis.
First r unne r up in t he
('Ofllt!lt this year and winner
of S300 is ltobert Artigiani
""·ho has been a member or
~~l.listory Department since
~a('ing
third was Hobert
fac ult y sin('C 196$ and
Dak ln a murth y Chit ·
h a
of c h emistry
lllrec:torOIIIlt
medical
logy program
si nce lastye•r.rinishedin
fourth and fif th places,
respectivc lyand£'1Ch"'·ert
designated to re«i\'(' IHlO.
The winners are cho6ftl in
voti ng condu('tcd bysti.Mnts
and faculty members.
By years, the previous
winners are P r ofessors
Mi c ha e l F ort un e. t'6S :
George Becker, t967. An·
drews, 1968 : Thomas McC.il.
19m; Ma rk Cate5,197'0: Kent
~t~~~~97:;~a1nnk, ";'~~
1:
Rkhar d Christofferson. t91t
The priz.e money for tht
winners, accord ing to
· ~:n~~~O: u!:!n~:et:
~~k~i~:~·ye,~r('~f:;r•:n~ :!n~~eem:!~;ki~ P:~~
I e(' J PI ~ I of SI OO. Robe r t Lectw-e Hall , IS comidtrtd ~
...--~ tossmlller ol the education "0\ancellor'a Merit Award.
May 6, 1975
THE POINTER
Page 7
Non-resident tuition explained
by non-f'esidents, tbtfffOf'e for UWSP but for the whole
the \t'gislature decided to UWSystem . lf thlswtff an
incrtasethrir tuition."
ac:tualtost, the roslwould be
different ."
byDa\ellmdars
· st~~~~ o~~~~~si~ef:::~;:; \e:i~far:';: :,S:~id~ 'tt~~
Inflation as much u the non- the! ¥ttSCOnsin taxpaytn Wtff
res~~~ s~~~~.
assisllln t
to the 0\anceUor for Planning and Analysis, said, "the
reason out-of-state students
are pay;n& more for their
educalion than r esidenl
students is because the state
legislallrededdedlnthelate
60's and ea rl y 70's that
enough Ins tances of the
studentdisturMncnover the
Vietnam crisis .,.-er-e caused
" The avera1e cost is
:~~:~~t!~aJ:.~:!~ =~~~!"~~YptC:~~~~f,!:=
anyone from anothtf' state
miB}It be a little more 'well to
do' so to speak and cou.ld
afford to pay more for their
education."
Are non-f'esident students
pay;n&IOS per~nt of the cost
olattendin&school a t UWSP'?
Si&mundsald. "lOS percent is
an estimated cost , not only
along with who is teaching the
course," he said . " for
example, the cost for attendln1 a communicative
<borders course, tau&ht by a
full profeuor , .,.'Ould be more
then atte nd ln& a home
economics course, taught by
an associate profesaor," he
added .
'1becostfor nextyearsUII
~:n·:tg~a~~-ter~~ ...~fi
probablysetatentalivecost
and change H late r on,"
Si&mundsald.
"Wisconsin and MinnciOia
have ad apt e d an
a rr anaemen t
where
Wisconsin r uldents pay
resident tuitloa ln Minnesoat
schools and vice \'l'rsa," hi'
said. ''Thn-ehasalsobtenan
arrangement made with
some of the two yea r colleges
in Michiaan with MaTinelle
and Menominee," Si&mund
.......
''Thereisno planofexpanding any arrangemen~
.,.;th any Olher alate," accordingtoSigrnund , " Dilnoil
and lowadonot haveasmuch
opportunity per state capita
residenceasWisconslndoes,
thereforenoplansarebe\ng
made," Siamund added.
" Right now our enrollment
at UWSP is matk up of u
percent non-f'esid~nl students
compared with :!1 pen::ent
wf'len our enrollment was
around 9000. So there is no
need for ~xpansion of any
arranaements ,'' Sigmund
said.
CLANCY lR\CKcT:
5\UDCNT
11.3
~~
t.Q) 9/017
/II
18
il5lo2
3H
1.9.3031
•
Tht. ViiiCQt. 2Jpadmtnts
'WKERt THINGS GH roNE "
•
En~oy
th~ Ouid and Conv ~nitnct.
or
livin~ a+ lht.
Vil lagE. .
2 b~droom , 2 bath) tull~ fi.'urnd1£d , caq::dir'o<j, C:lirc.onditionitllj and
a 1\ltcht:n
yourt dont
lht.
CD mplt::t~
wit-h
di~wa~htr df'ld.
w 'o-1}, &XdfllS 1 rt.la~ dt
Vi lias'- dOClrtrn~-nt:,
-ti"t~ ~ol
disposal.fht.n
:5o/ IHic.,hiJl'""
wh~ n
r.:wt a <jrtat Surnmt.r !
Dive. .
34 1- 2 12 0
ClM
Poqe 8
THE POINTER
May 6, 1975
Needs cited for state amendment improvements
by llarrlt1J'1ersc:h
byA
..;
lla nkersontaid .
· ' 'This will a llow each
=~c~r.f\ ~c~ ~r,~~-~ c~~rr to0-.,:~ ~~
looking into revamping the
Slate !lf'inlln& amendment .
T . J . H anke r aon ,
Lesilla tive and Reaearch
Arfairs Committee chair·
pt"I'IOO for UC. is beading the
research.
" Many campuses. Student
Gover nmen ts u d student
newspapen could have
cl~apt"r printing services if
they did not so thf'OUih state
printing
co ntra cts . "
Hankerson added.
Once sqregattd fees are
"col.lected . this money then
~es state money according to Hanker5011 .
ln turn all state money used
fOt' supplies has to be pur·
·chased tbrOICh state printing
contraciS. Hankerson added.
" UC planson introd uclng a
bill in the future which ""-e
hope ,.;u so to the legislath·e
council and l egislation
researchbureau and help UI
lindoutifli.·ee:anfindan
uemption . · Hankerson said.
" Right now th is is a
reiearc h project by UC," he
added.
'11\ec"rent state prinling
amendmtn t dotsn'! allow us
to shop aroUPd f« better
service ." said Richard
Nrlson. ad\'i50t to the Royal
P11rplt, UW Whitewater's
student newspaper.
"Slate prinlina con trKts
j:OU!d develop Into a biB
problem. btcausetheprintn~'S heis going toget tht
Railroader's club at UWSP
'Walkouts' face
conseque.J)Ces
by Kimt:rwa y
Appa r en tly the other walked out without pa)·inl,
and when Smithback ran
handling the walkout problem outsi de after them . the y
out of court. No one hu been ~u~hesaid .
arrested In Point on · a
dtfraudinc charge fOf" three ~.ua~Hu~n·twantto
yea_n . Perlak said . The requJre people to pay before
Uol_lday lnn lstheonly place 'they eat, but if the sltuation
""'hlchhaJeventumtd ina aets any worse they might
complaint, he added.
have to, he said. They abo
don't want to ha ve to tum in
But, ~cconling to Smith· offenders and makt' eJCarn·
~k, t~~eHu!a)=~en~ ples o!UW:m.
resta urants fn town are abo
month. 'The avenge amount
oflheunpaldcheckia S!Oand
th at comes orr the top or the
profit , he said .
Check walkout s is a
C'o~elm .:~c~e'!'::yur1 :C::
manaam are facinc. What
are they doing about it! Rod
Sm it hb ack. anlstant
ma.nqerfOf"\ht Piw Hut
uidltulthechastsofftndtri
into the parking lot and
request• them to pay .
hrlak uid till! if hr
recelvedanotflda l complalnt
from a restaurant mana&«
htwouldl\avet-optiocls. lk
The bigest offender Is lhe could charge the offtndt'r
male college .itudent, Smith· with breaklna eitherthtstate
!»c_k uld. They Ulu.ally come statute on fraud or the city
tn 1.n grou~ . with the ll'l· ordinanre on shOpliltlni,
:!:~c:'ts~w"a~!:r~~~
g~rally triesit thesame
rught,- he added. " I think
th ey re taklna unfa ir ad·
vantaa:eol lll."' heuld.
One t'Venlng, row- suys
Mov 6, 1975
THE POINTER
P.oge 9
•
Above: The cupola that stands on top of Okf Main has been
a symbol of UWSP for 80 years. These photo9rophs were token
during a recent tour_of rhe closed-off third flc?or.
Below:· The
skylights on the third floor leak, which c:ouses the walls to crumble .
••
•
things on the third floor of Old Main.
Photos by Rick Cigel.
Above : This steel arch
extends over the originol Normal School building.
·,
Page 10
THE POINTER
May 6, 1975
Fraternity image iml!'roves with age.
qetbe:r .andgotolblt
haveaf"rtJUit isl!l
p&.ca.' So, he uld
people here don't rtt~ 1 '
~~frltetnltyfor
.,- AJrleyS.,IUJnta.&er
At lima you mai have
beMd people uy, "Guys join
lratem.itia jUit to be ture
U'lere1l alwaya be somebody
arowwf lo JO ckiDkl.rw with."
u:: ==
Mlech said that the reuon
for the poor attitude of
fratemiUesatSte'lftiiPoin t
may be becatUe or the
usodation people have- ol
them with groul)l Uke the
Siasefit. This 11 not ri&ht, he
said.
And lf you were looklnc for
ll:d,t~
To!fu!ct
be at a frat boule.
That may be
beca~~~e
the
~~f:~~~:. ha~=ehi:~
you to believe they a ra
delilned for the man who
mainly likes to party and
<rink.
But fraternities have a1lo
bHft known to run teJetbonl
for muscular dlatropby ,
collect money fOf' Enter
Stllb. cqaniu a community
youth project Ia Stevena
Point, ,.IOfltfortheMan:hof
Dimes. cqaniz.e and run
Open lion Wheeldwlr. cut
Otriltmas trees, vtslt ol.d
folk.s homes, bold parties for
pilrtntr. wit.hout partners and
worlr. on the Ch r latmu
telethon.
And thAt'ljUit in a se:bool
year.
So, members of lhe five
fraternities in Stevena Point
rmd that bring a !ral.ernity
brother Is noll}'noaymOUJ W
being a drinkin& partner.
TDm Smyaek from the
TK£'1 uld that the
orgAiliuUoo heiPI a man
throu.gh his academic and
aocia\ life.
He u.Jd his
fratemity wants to &elAn·
volvedwllhpeopleoocampus
and to get to know the
W~iVft'Sity better.
·
rri!:~~~ 1Jaia~ethlbtui~U:~
belqinatotheTK£'sandhe
hal learned to a«tp( mOC"e
rnporuibillty by beinl in·
Allthefralf'rnitiesdosome
eoo~munlly worlt but they
cqanir.e activities that put
them in the classlfkatlon of
In the put, 10me lrlter·
aodal fratemltin .
nIt Ie1 ha ve us e d
dehumanllina method• or
Miecll said tha t for Ju t initiating · a pleda:e. which
fali 'J homecoming 400·SOO m1y have given people that
people attf'nded the pig r?!:\ ::,soctation, Jaid Mledl. But,
.Jncll
Mike
from the SiJ
Tl u'a Jlld he thlnkl hil
fraternity contlsta o f
brotherhood and working
toaether . And •becauae
fr1ternltln worlt with
bud&ets and rmances, l'le uld
It Is a aood experieflj'!e in
manqemftlt.
fr1tem!Ues, but lifted wt
Miecb on the ch~nse that
llltlngplace lnthls a
And Wind! uld that Gret
organlutlonJ are lot~
=torylmagethtyha
Smyuelt taid lh1t tht
decline in popularity of Greek
organhaU0111for the
few
yurs mayhavebefl!diM!r.o
~:~h~~~~·: Si~f,t~i~e:~~~~ :~~~:':.!:!'th.~ now thelarpamOIUitofpolllk.al
Involvement. But he uid,
an annual corn ~t for the
publ.lc. And Mlech noted that
Miech said that Point Alld now people are more or as
activities Judi u car waihn the state are a UtUe behind content on what's happeniaa.
.o fraternities are becomint:
ol hi•
more populu.
planaUonhepvewasthatln
Smyoek Rid he believes it 'I\1JCOI\sin there iJ a diffeftnt
And, he precli('ts, Greek
=edm:'~ ~~e:·m~l~~ ~ :'~t~a~~~~=have never regretted joining
It," he uldr
Smynek laid thlt 10m
=~o::u~~~: of..
.,.11
~:,J:=.g A~~~ e~
~at~.;,.rte!anr;'~e~ ::te!.':t~kl~~tJ:'t:re:; ~=~ee~i~.::~~
for • lf"'UP of guJI to get
tiv!Ues or homecoming and
Winter Clrnival .
All members talked to said
they noticed a d«:line In
membership in fnttmities in
recent yean. But, they said,
there hu bMn a rile in
penont pled&in& to join thia
pill year.
Each of the organiutlons
has from :Z0.2S memberl and
Ill said that 10.1~ yean ago
there were ~70 memberlln
eACh aroup.
Joleph Hennllch from the
sta £p'1 uid he 1nd hi•
Memben of Tau Klpp.a ' fraternity brothen learn to
Epsi.lon (TKEI, Sigma Phi live tocether as a unit. He
Epsilon, Slama PI , Slam• said he foreaees l11ting
Tlu Gamma Alld f'ta SIJma; fr lendJhipl and crowing
£psilon Jaid they beli~ relationahiPI by belonatna to
thei r frate r nitiea Include the Sia ~ ···
McKay uid that this
much more than that.
John Mlech from the Phi campus hal a bad attitude
20% DISCOUNT
ON ALL TENTS AT
RECR~ATIONAL..SERVJCES.
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS
SPECIAL BETWEEN EXAMS!
SEE OUR NEW EQUIPMENT
* BACKPACKING EUREKA TENTS
* SUNFLOWER SAILBOATS
*WADERS
* 5 NEW CANOES
OfFER G(X)DMAY 8-15
LOCATED IN THE UNIVERSITY CENTER
the rem•lnfng70's.
May 6, 1975
THE PO INTER
Page 11
Sororities membership increases
•
by Ca rol M. Martin
derwood said. Most soror!Ues
The Alpha Phi sorority also
Mem~p.insororiti~
~~~o;;~~~!n~~ts.and
::-rt:a::
:C:'~=~~
party for h a ndi~apped
at
UWSP IS sta rtina to \nause
said Wanda Underwood,
president or Delta Zeta .
Ten years ago the sororities
""'fnquitelarge.almc.tupto
quota whl~h is 60 girls. But
since then it has been on a
1
~:~~;.' ;!id~ li~n~~ .
The national project o1
Delta Zeta is workinJ with
deaf ~ hildren , Underwood
said . Eal:h yea r money Is sent
to a deaf man a t Ctn·elle
College for the Deal, she
added.
The members of Alpha Phi
The sororities are smaller stms scholarshi p u "'-ell as
on this campus than on many service and SO(ial projects,
ol the Olhers. The a ttitude ol said Sandy Shireli:, president
the s tud ents is ditrerent ,
Underwood said.
There are three sororities
at UWSP : Delta Zeta, Alpha
Phi and Alpha Sigma Alpha.
The sororities are for service
as well . as socia l , Un ·
~~': s=:etJ!.~dent of
Some of the C1Xru11unlty
projecr.s over the las t yea r
included helpina the mem·
o1 Alpha Phi .
bets ol Sigma PI sell candy
Ra ising money for th e for the Kidney Foundation
heart fund Is one of their and helping the members or
se r vic:e proje~t s. T he Tau Kappa Ep~ilon answer
members of Alpha Phi raised phones for the Jerry Lewis
11 .700,000 in the United States Telethon, Kempen said.
and canada. said Shiret .
ODeofthemaln&oalsclthe
•
shlp~andpromotes\s terhood ,
" Mygoa l lnthe sororlty Is
to meet new fr iends, lear n
leadership, poise and get
more involved, " Almquist
said.
" I felt I spent too mu~h
time slttina around," said
Terese F elton. an Alpha
Sigma Alpha pledge. " I didn 't
want to meet people In bars
a nd I wanted to fi nd
somethlngtobelongto," she
said.
Felton said she would like
to Jee more people become
Involved and have a good
time. This is pouible Wouah
the sororities, she added.
Mary Swingle, lef1
and Ki t Harrison
got
all w rapped up in kite
4t
~hildren In the area, Shlrek
said.
''The Alpha Sigma Alpha
sorority has a number ol
goals. but it's mainly to
provide a sisterhood," said
fraternity at least once a
yea r , Underwood sald.
Underwood sa id . They
The Alpha Slama Alpha
provide a sense of In· sorority have a Christmas pot
vo l ve ment whic h is luck supper and a party with
somet im es dlffl~ ult to the Chileda Children, Kvnpen
acquire In a dormitor y lllid.
situa tion.
" We tf)' to balailee our
socialandservlceacUvil\es," inTIIu!reU::I':or':jtl:~
UOOerwood Mid. Sometimes semester . Delta Zeta has two,
the social and servtce ac· Alpha Phi has four a nd Alpha
tiv\ties a re combined. For Sigma Alpha has three.
" I joined buically to get
exam~e , we chaperoned a
Gir l Scout dance and bf'OUiht Involved with the uni versity,"
date:s ourselves, Underwood saldSueGreU, a recent Alpha
added.
~~~~~c:~~ ;;:tk:, t!
Many of the aoc.ia l ac· university."
So ro r ities provide a
tiviUesconsistofparties with
t he frate r nities . Ea~h siste r hoo d . Someone Is
sororityhalapartywltheac:h always there, Grell said.
" Dor m life jus t was n't
enough. I enjoyed meeting
the people and we do alot of
things," she added.
" I'd like to see lheaWtude
towa rd sororities change,"
Grell said. ''It's a good part or
campus life that ahould be
ta ken adva ntage of," she
said .
Kri sten Almq u ist als o
pledgedAlphaPhi . ' 'Thegirls
are nice. l found good friends
and have become more ac·
tive,"Almquis t said. " I am
less apathetic than 1 was
before," she added.
sororities Is to build friend·
flyin9 . Photo by Rick
Cigel.
by Rick Cigel
Falling 3,000 feet through the air i
somewhat against a man's concept
self-preservation .
As I left the airplane, the fact
had a parachute strapped on
didn' t comfort my m ind
The scene was Omro,
of a parachuting school
Naut, Inc.
Bi ll Hasenfus, the certif ied
there, was telling me earlier
eight years at Omro, not a
parachute has malfunctioned .
At the time, that made me feel
He then told me that three
ha ve broken bones so far th is
I felt worse.
I had arrived at noon , expecting
jump a few times and then return
Stevens Point. As we checked the
speed, we found it was blowing at
miles per hour (mph) and gusting to
mph .
Hasenfus said he doesn' t take
In the ai rplane unless the wind i
slstantly below ·12 mph .
The last time someone
winds near 20 mph, the jumper
number of bones and lost the use of
arm .
I decldeit to let the w inds die down
After seven hours of Omro's trnest
recreation (pinball , lunch, pool, pinball
and so on) the winds finally died . As the
sun starft:d~ I donned my SO
pounds of ~r-:- \..'-..
Hasenfus had already reviewed a.ll
proper procedures for parachuting. HIS
1.000 jumps make him qui fe an expert.
The reserve parachute was clipped on,
Mov 6,· 1975
~feet
the tlelmet tightened and the Cessna
fired up.
We circled around the drop sight. On
the ground was a pea gravel circle about
10 fee t in diameter. That was the target.
When he slapped me on my shoulder. I
knew it was my turn.
I swu ng both feet out ptf a liHie bar
, iutting out from the bottom of th.e air plane. With one hand on the wing strut
and the other on the plane, I stood out on
that liHie bar.
There is quite a different feeling
movi ng along at 80 miles an hour on the
"") Outside of an airplane as there is sitting
inside.
t,~'!~da at;~~~:;,d t~:~~~u~ I";;a:~~~~
1
bor ne.
The static line connecting my
parachute to the airplane automatically
deployed the chute. After two minutes of ·
noiseless drifting I hit the ground .
With a quick change to a new
parachute, I was up again . Only four
more jumps and I would be able to pull
my own ripcord .
My second tinle out was much easier
to take. I adually looked forward to
jum ping .
As I floated to the ground, I looked at
the world 2,000 feet below me and tried to
discern my car, my fr iend on the ground.
and the target spot .
The ground rushed up" to meet me the
final 15 seconds, and the day's event
ended with a soH landing near a muddy
field.
Unfortunately. that muddy field had to
be crossed In order to get back to the
shop.
Photos by Bob Kerksieck
THE POINTER
Page 13
Paqe 1-'.
THE POINTER
May 6. 1975
Preparation ,
excltme nt.
congratulat ions, awards with kisses,
disa ppointment, defeat and fatigue are
portrayed in last weekends WSUC track
meet. Photos by Roger W. Barr .
•
•
e
I
Moy 6, 1975
THE POINTER
-
Poge 15
May 6, 1975
THE POINTER
News Service increases coverage
~~~~~:~~~~~~~~ 8:!! :!~~w!!~~ell~~~e:u\~ a'~~ ;~ld:nlnn!.:~'c:.tl~~ ~:!; ~~ ~e! ~':•':t":~~~~
tty TerTeiiS.IIer
The UWSP News Service position for cultl.D'al events;
Dqlartment does prlntin1. Susan ArU1iani, a p~.~bllclty
promotion fomn and the editor : Mary Thompson,
Alumni Milgulne, according PrinlinJ Lluion Orric e r
toJohnAndenon . di~torof between the university and
the News Service.
the State Department of
Ander~ said that the Adminlstral«"s and the news
Newl Set-vice covers Faculty director, Andenon.
,
~att~em~bfi'can~h~ e;~~is
significant. This U usually
new curriculum, new policies
and prus conferences with
UWSP Olancellor Dreyfus.
Featl.res are sent out on
interestin& faculty members
or new developments on
campus, Andt.rson added.
The staff consists of five or
six students ,..ho \\'Otk part
time. Tbey usua lly do typing,
filln& and courier work
which Is assistin& the rlerical
work. continued Anderson.
AI Pavlik a student "''orkll
on SpOrti and Beverly
Cayton, another student. Is
~~~;..;~
Se r vice
Andn$011 uJd that _the
f-est
s::d c!~p~see~:~
prepare a re c ru itment
proceu for UWSP. A IOC of it
is \\Tiling advances,"
Mllw-.. ktt Stntlne l," An·
dc rson said.
"We used to average 2S to
30 neWI releases a week."
peopteyou'retrylq toht.lp."
He addtd that~ acuity Is
not the easiest to get along
with.
~said . lleaddedthat
Some projects don 't get
they send out 50 one· CO\"ertdbecauseof thelackof
paragraph noces to tov.-ns staff members, Anderso n
"'"here 1tudents came from said .
co mpasst nl eve ~y t hinl
becau1e th ey .~on l have
en.o ugh s pace, Anderton
Slid.
He added that UWSP
faculty and lludent events
have increaMd. " We can
~;!:;N!~~ ·~a~t::!; pr~i':!~h~n:!~~i~ ~r:~~sk.~Au:d:~o~hec!~:
area!O(ofproblems." Wlleo to rUJI two or three stories. eluded.
An·
derson added .
Anderson said th a t the
amall Wftkly presses aN!
Interested In the activity at
UWSP. lle also said that they
send out general Information
to home towns of UWSP
students and U!at sendina
these releua U a JOOd Corm
of recruitment for the tchool .
" We send rdeasa to the
surroundin& radio slations
SUCh U WIUIIU, WiJCGnlin
Rapidl and MerriiJ," An·
~~~.. capl\lll'nm tll {
IICttpls
features from us. We
Sen. Bablitch claims
salary increase unjust
St ate Seo . William A.
Bablitc:haaid "the propoaalto
lncreue 1elislative salaries
' is out of the ques t io n
especially at a time when
state gOYernment should be
tightenln&lts belt ."
Bablitc:h was spealdnJ out
q:alnstabltilntroduc-edby
Sen. Monroe Swao that \\'Ould
~~ lqillaton oa a full-time
status and raise their pay
from the ctrm~l Sl-5,678 to
S24,120ayear.
All autmbly me-mber's and
halflhe~t~~ateme-mbtrlnow
rece;ve the 115,171. Babl.itch
is one of II senators who
receives only
and wiD
notbetlilibleforthe Sts,m
~.~~ tit tm lf be ruoa for
r-Hlectlonandw\ns.
" I don 't think.'' Bablitch
sald,"lhatlheleJblatu.reha.s
•.bl
jusllfledtht'irprniousaalary
lncreue. The averq:e tamily
Inc-ome in my di.lti1ct 11•.100
a year. We should be more
worriedaboutrellevinclhe
lax burden oa that locome
btacketratherthan tryingto
feather our own nest."
'111e idea of a full-time
lqb:tahre U appealin& and I
belle've It has merit. But a
salary ol S:U.tlO II not needed
toallract&oodpeopletolhe
job. It would &ive WilcoDslD
the dublau~ diatlnction of
havina the hl&hest pa id
lf'lislature In the country.
That U one thine the lall·
~yers dm't need."
beyOnd~
"It is
Bablitc:h.'"Whyanylegillator
would even propoH auch
lealslatioo du r in& such a
per iod of unemployment ,
hiJh tuM and reu~~lon ."
Some UWSP music students perform on a sUnny
spring day, for an appreciative couple. Photo by Roger
W. Bar r.
· Science Fiction Club extends interest
UWSP has been invaded by
"mythical creat\ll"t::." The
Sc~ f'k:Uoo Club is OM of
tbese M called mythical
creatures , uid Richard
Ooxlator, the dub's advisor.
Seve r a l dlltl n&u ls h e d
authors were brou&ht to
UWSP by the club and Ill
advtaor. Amoac U.. wen
Harlen EIJIIon, •uthor of
several "Twlll&ht Zone "
script• ; !larry Harrison ,
author of ''SoyWit Green"
and WiUlam Teno. autbcw of
many Sc~ 1'\c:Uon boob.
The club is, and always will
be, like the lkle. It pee out
and It coma In, bu t II Uepe
&oi nl on, aald Doxtator ,
u
Mov 6, 1975
Phy Ed requirement
decision awaits info
by 8obKJ!ofr
theresolutlon ..i thoutlt"said
Kurt Anderson , senator from
Ea' r lier this semes ter Dlstrl~t 2. A~cordins to
~~o~~S'!~~~:n~~~.~ =~rsr:· ~=:,a~~
educat ion requiremeats br
dropped. The ruolution was
sent bae:lr. to S tuden t
Govern ment by the Faculty
Acad~lc Affairs Committee
at thrir m~tlna Monday.
Apri121.
A Student Government
survey In March &howed that
two out of three students
fa\ued a chaose In the
manda tory
phy sical
ed uc::at.lon requirement . A
total of 15311 s tud e nt s
ruponded to the survey. One
thousand seventy-111M said
!My favored a revision. The
surveywudrculatfdlnthe
~~~d~~~; ~!:.. a nd the
" I am extremely sym ·
p;~thetic to your u~ . but
the evlde n ~e provided in
support of the reiOiution is
simply Invalid." said Ric;h'ird
Face , chai rm a n or the
committee . "One of the
questions on lbe quesUonaire
is ridiculously pc-ejudice and
that louses up yow whole
case."
" I'm ,.illinJ to forset the
questionaire and arsue for
s tudent cont>cnsus and
thcnfore the resolution Is
va lid.
F ace susses t ed that
Student Govern ment develop
a new quntionai"' ,.ith the
help of the facul ty . The luue
was disclaad and a motion
was made to vote on the
resolution as It was. The
resolutiora was voted down.
THE POINTER
Page 17
Playoffs begin
Informed that the resoluUon
bad been p;~ssed by Student
Go\·cmment .
" facetoldmethatitv."Ould
be placed on the agenda for
April 14 on the condition that
the resolution and all in·
formatloragot to him before
April 10," Andet"SOn said .
Accontina to Anderson this
c:onditiora,.·umet. " Y+'henthe
resolutionwastabled l asked
F'ace for an explanation ,"
Anderson said . "Fa~e told me
that he receh-ed a letter from
Robert Bowen of the Phy. Ed.
Dtpartmeot askln& for time
to loolr. at the long rlllge
impllcalionsoftheresolulion
sotheytabledlt."
A S\lbsUtute motion was
enacted to send the resolution
back to Sludent Go\·ernment
for dariflc::atlon and the
development of a new
Acc::ordins to Fa~e the
quest i ona i re . The resolutionwastablfddueto
~~!!j_~~ne~i r :Y i s ~od e~~ :~.valid evidence In support of
Government with the help of
Acco rd ins to Ma r la
facultymem~s. Themotiora Alvarn, vice pruldent of
also prov ided fo r t h e Sludent Government , there
preparation of an impact .,.;n be no final action on the
SIIHcment ora the proposed resolution this semester .
chance in requirements
" We are worlr.lng on a new
Prior to Monday's mteting questionaire with Bow~n and
Andenon explained 1o1-h)' the Kr ~Je~et" of the Phy. Ed.
resolu tion ,..as or isi nall y Department," Al vara said.
tabled by the ra~ulty "Hopefully we ,.;u set the
Ac:a demit> Afhirs Co m · quest.iOIWre to the students
m i tt~ . Ac~o rd ing to An · at tex t rental at the beJjmung
der~ , on April 7. !-"ace was of next semester : ·
51
Six teams have gained the Zillies.
Women's lntramurals softThe defending champions,
ball nnals this season.
the Bre,.·cry, hail from 3
The nve c::ha ll eng~rs are :
Bucket's Brigade. PenthouR
Sv.·eets. Sandy's s..;ngers,
Schmeec:lr.le Shoestrings and
Zita Zit and her softball
~th:a\=~~~~'~
baseman and catcher lie
down the infield , with shcwt·
stop Dee Simon as the leading
hitter .
Music Association
to hold auditions
The Wisconsi n Music:
Teachers
Auoc::iation ,
Distr ict VB, wlll cond~ t Its
a nnual spring a udition s
Sunday. May 11. in Michelsen
Concert Hall of the fine Ar ts
Center a t UWSP.
The auditions a.re open to
all elementary, junior and
senior high school students of
plano, voice and string in·
s trum e n ts . I ll Is not
necessary for their teachers
t o b e m e mbe rs of th e
assoc:iation.>
Each applicant will be
~ra:ed an audition fee . Top
contestantswillbecholento
perform in an a fternoon
recital .
District VB includes the
C1lU!Ities of Ashland, Iron,
Viln , Price, Oneida, Unc:oln,
l\1a ra thon, Wood, Portage,
Waupac::1 , Adams, Waushanl
and parts or Taylor, Clark ,
Jackson, Juneau, Marquette
a. nd l..anglade counties.
Also on the day's a&enda
will be theory clu.scs for
C~c':'m:·~~fie~~~ t::!
Wisconsin Music:: Teachers
Association.
,ln addition, a guest piano
teacher will gi\'e demon·
stration lessons, attendance
at v.·hlch also counts towards
certification. Piano teachers
will be admittfd to both of
thesesessions forafee .
f'urther Information on all
events may be obt.aioed from
Kenneth Hoppe r , Music
Department, UWSP , Stevens
Point,WI., 544111.
Deadline for applicaUons to
all events Is ~1ay t2.
Custodian temporarily solves pigeon problem
th e b u ild i ng he was
responsible for ," he said.
And this Is the probl~.
An unidentified UWSP
c:ustodianWadlnittedtothe Krebs said. For years Old
shooting and killlnsof R\'et"al M.!nllashadtroublewlththe
and !las been unable to
r.!~on:.tha'pelletgun' bir"ds
set rid of them.
The pigeons roost in the ai r
The Incident, ac:c:ortlina to
Hyra m Krebs , General vents and window sills ol Old
Servkes , took place 011 tne Main, causing problems in
evenina of F'tklay, April 11. maintenance and looks ,
nurtheOid M.linc:om ple.x. Krel» said.
Past attempts to rid the
In all. seveo pige<~n~ ...en
ltillfd and dispoled of and it building of the birds u ... e
remains - unknown .."hether been repeate dl y unany more v.we Injured othet" suc::c:es:sful , Kr~bl said.
than thOle found .
" PISt attempts " include
Ac:cordlnc to poli~e. the
disc harains of firearms , thelef'Vic::esofse\"et"alpelt
includina B·B and peUet giN, C«<lrol firms and. about rh·e
is illepl within the city )'ears aao. a group from the
CoUq:e oC Natw-al Resources.
limits.
The group or c:lasa, as it
The ~Ui todlan has been
"n rblll y reprimanded," but
not charged, as a result of the
proCessor at UWSP.
incident, Krebl said.
Baumaartner said the
The man wanted only lO
"solve the pigeon problem in group's efforts also proved
b)'BriaaMaclr.
:!~m"'~":rt~ee~ ~ld~~
Artists exhibit works
A three·women art show
opmsat 7:30p.m .. May 5, 1n
the Edna Carlllen Gallery at
UWSP. The work of Carol
F.mmons, J~e Leary and
Chris Rucki , all UWSPsenion
majorlna In a rt will be
featured .
The &how's openins will
inchlOe music to be per·
fonned by Geary Laf1'k:lr. of
the UWSP music:: faculty and
JimT\Ic:lr.er.
1be exhlbiUon includes a
wide v&riaty o1 work. both
111suc::c:essful beca~.~Soe of le&al
fa'::!:
But he ackled that the
problem is still a real on•.
Pigeon droppinp carry a
1
~·~~~~o :l!:mo:i;. ! , e: ·
respiratory conditi011 ,.'hlc:h
afr«ts lhe bronctuaJ tubes
and lungs, he said.
~
Though th e di sease
"doe5n't have a high In·
cidence", it Is a very real
~~:e:ndorm~::Jui~i!:!, :
our s uccess has bee n
minimal ."
There is a health probl~ .
though, lrldthlsisttlereuon.
forourconcet"n ,Schmituaid.
For the most part. area
~~m~r':.!!r .. ,/roblem .
Steven• Poi nt 's hea lth
sanitari1r1 Robert Schmitt,
said that the city will soon
~r~dertake a piaeon control
pigeons in ~e111 Poi nt.
But what will bec:omeofttle
111wantfd pigeona is, a t least
for the moment , unc:ert.aln.
and in residential areas, Sch·
mltzsald.
" In the put, we have
~~v~'io~'!l:es:m~,~h:
tntcrnmeeUn&willbeheld a\
&-7 :30p.m., Tuesday , Ma y e.
in room 22-t. Sc::ienc:e Building.
Details will be ellplained
concerning
timec::a r d1 ,
paym e nt
sc h ed ule s ,
r egistra li on a ndques lions
,.;u be answered.
Gradual.lnc Hnlor• may
piclr. up th ei r Ca p •nd Go1o.-n
from I a.m . to 4:15p.m.
starlins May 5 thl'ough May 9
In the University Store .
Church announcements
Th e Evaa&e llcal •· re e
Church : YMCABuilding,1000
Di vision St .• Rev . Fred
Moor e . Pastor : 34t .(IOI:J,
Suncby Servlc:es-9:30 a .m.
College Clua, t0:30 a .m.
Worship, 7 p.m. Bible Hou r.
Sew maa
U•lve r li l )'
Parl1h: Newman Chapel
!basement of St. Stan 's
Churc h ) , Cloilter Cl"ape l.
1300 Maria Drive. Weekend
Masses : Saturday, 4 and 6
p. m ., New m • n Cha;.e l ,
~r~d noor scul pture~ .
The artllls e:~plain that Sunday tO a.m .• Newman
their indivldu.al workl hold Qlapel. 11 :30 a .m .. Ooistet"
toselher as a 111lfied body Chapel , 1 p.m .. Cloister
because they •re all ri1u.ally. Qlapel Weekday MuM-1 :
open ·end ed ,
vlsuapy n-da). thnNB)I Friday , 12
suggestive of more speclfk. noon , Newman Chapel.
ConCessions: Saturda)"5, 5: 15
c:oncret.e forms .
1be llhow will run thrOUCh p.m .. Newman Chapel or
anytime by appointment.
May lt.
twodimension.alwatcn:olors,
s ketches, pho toaraphs .
embossments, etc::. and three
dimensional fr ee·h•ngins
tculptures and wall«lentfd
program of its own .
~~~.tape"and simplelaclr.of .,.;:epl':'~a~~
•· rame
Pre• b yterlan
Chur ch : 1300 Ma i n St .,
Sunday RrYic::es at 11: 1$ and
II a .m
t1n l 8aotlil IA merlc:anl
Ch ur ch : 1948 Chur ch St ..
Sunday services at t0:4$a.m.
and 7 p.m .
Lulheran St udu l Cemmunlt)' : Pea u Ca mpus
Center, Com6of Ma ria Drive
and Vincent St. Service wit h
Eucharist , Thw-lday, & p.m.,
Peace C.mpus Celrtet" and
Sundays, 10:30 a .m .. Peace
Campus Center.
SI. . PauJ '•llniled !'llethodi1t
Church : 600 Wilshire Blvd .,
Sunday service at 10 a .m.
Bah.a'l Faith :. Informative
pthenns mreatde l held on
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at %510.-\
~·r~ e r St. Slid~a o f
pllgnmase to Chn stlan ,
~lh. ~Iamie and ~a 'l
9mnes 1n Israel will be
shown.
for more lnformaUon ~all
:MJ.IOI7.
TTinlt)' Lutheran Churcll :
comer of Oark and Rogers
Sl.., Pastors : Oliver Utzer
and Daniel Litzer. Sunday
Servicu arei:JOand tla.m.
Puce United Cburch of
O.rhl : 1741 Dixon St ., Sunda y Service a t to a .m.
Tllere wu an error Llll.lte
Chwcll M11011nccments for
Tr lnlt )' L•tberan Cilurcll :
PutonsreJamHOIIver ...d
Da11lel Lltu r . T r leU y
Recw•ed Meua&e • :M4·:z.J.
THE POINTER
PoQe 18
Moy 6, 1975
-SPORTS
u_.fP POINTER
Pointers ambush
Pioneers
by Jim llabeck
It took a thief ~turday ,
May l, and the Pointers had
pltnty of them .
The Pointers stole 10 buel
an a It-% shelling ol ftatteo(ille. thmaetlled for 16-:S
win in the nightup.
UthePoin tersearna split
(
The Pointers scored five
ext rarunsinthetllth inning
to put the game out of reach.
Nf:tller walked, then stole
IM!COnd base. With two outs,
Nick Sandow reached first
baseontheshortstop"snTOr.
then stole second .
orsw~po,·erOshkoshtoday,
Don Solin's Un&le drove in
UWSP will own the Southe-rn two nms and cleared the
Division title and the right to basepalhsfOI"Solin's stealol
play the Northern Division second and third base.
leader.
~
John Sandow wu hit b)' a
pitch, then ato le second
Oshk01h must ~at the balM! aod scored on Dan
Pointers and Wh itewater Hauser's lingle.
llauser stole l«ond and
twice to gain the title.
Saturday the Pointen third, then IC«'ed on AI Ash·
moved another slep toward beck'• doub~. Ashbeck ,....,
the playoffs' boolting their cauaht in a rundown betWffn
conferencerecordtot-t,wilh secondandthirdbaaetomd
an O\'trall 11-10 mark.
the iMifW.
nt. 1ixth IMing proved
Don Vruwin k and J oe
Settler wer-e the 'Ainl!ing ~~ei~~~- Poin?
pitchers, eac h pitc hi ng
Vr uwink ud CambTay
th en sco red on
coNJ!e~f:~~Uence play. walked,
Nelson 'a triple.
Vruwink walked lOUT while
Walks, stolen bases and
strlkinaoutaix.
ftaUeville en-ors accounted
Vruwink sot eDOugh of- forthreemoreruns .
fensive support in the first
Vruwink ended the PoinIMlna:toeamthewin.
ten' se:orins with a three-run
~lark Cambray began the smash ovet" the fence .
g.ame with a walk and Joe
In the nlchtcap, NeWer
Netlltr folk7v.-ed with another picked up his fourth conbase on ball•. before Reid terence win and moved bis
Nelson amuhed a three-run overall record to 7.0.
homer.
NeWer allowed eight hits,
"'Reid driUed one to r ight walked none and atrue:k ou t
rield that"• 1till going. a real rive in the 6-:S victory.
shot," said PointCT Coach
The Poi nten backed
Jim Clark.
P\anevllle came bad: wi th Net11er- with two r •1ns in the
N.·o rWII in the n~. before Keond inni n1 on 1010 home
the Pointers added 16 In· runs by Tom Hojnacki and
surance runs to clinch the Bob Wittsell .
win.
In the third inninJ, Ndson
sini.Jed and scored on Ban" We hit the ball wdl, ran dow'a dol.ille.
"''t'U a.ndacoredafewextra
runa ," aaidCiark.
Solin added a run in the
ai1 th when he aln« led, took
Medical, Dental and
A""""''
taw you
!dlool..,., applied
Ha'l'e
lort he t 975claues but
without aUCCUI SO far?
Perhaps we can help
you gel an acc eptan ce.
Bo.ot 11140. S t. Lou is.
MO. &3105.
" '.....,...._....._~
mtn
UWSP tries to maintain
'present athletic program
by Jh• llabed:
creased aUocatlon. the apor t
" fUght now we are leaning is not feaalble , aald Ma ril yn
towa rd trying to keep our ~ Schwarb, aulstant athletic
as women'a Sp or ta In ·
formation Director.
Any funds beyond this are
veryuncertaln, Kruegeruld .
" Ha vi ns coaches on LTE
does n't make for a atrong
program. We've 101 \o have
someone who i1 going to be
here full time and be able to
rffnlil," Krueger said .
f,j=~ ':r~~!thla!~c- director.
r emar k s
Stude nt
Government
Kr uege r '•
followed a Thursday, May 1, allocated $53,330 for the 1975meetlncoftheUWSPAihletie: 76 athletic program , which
Commllltt~ .
includes men'a and women's
Comp»ed of s ttldent and athletie:a.
Of thla amount, MUOO will
faculty members, the committee deals with luues af· be directed to men 's
Kru eser said Dave
feeling the athletic prosram. ath l etica, with 111 ,11 0 Stewa rt , !all aeaso n '•
11 hal the power to r~om · reurved fo r wo m·e n 'a wr estling coac h, has in ·
dicated he will not return nert
a ' :: :f:;Kruegersaidhe felt
policy dedslons .
a n equitable pr-ogram for
At the meeting, the com- women's and men'a aporta
mittee accepted a recommendalion to the chancellor elliata at UWSP. Mol now,
s u pporti ng an at hl etic the mtn will try to keep thei r .
prosram consl•tlng of t1 present ath letic program
I
osrtm doea
maint.ainitap
tIt team
men's and aeven women'• intact.
sporla team.
''We have two men 'a formal, each 1port will be
The committee'• actloa •porta now, wreaUinJ and funded a t the same level aa
gymnastle:a,wherelher-eare lastyur. Howevft", whlle.the
::.,~~~ :~~: no full-time mem.btn on the dolla r allocatlo n a would
with the reallution a stafftocoae:h," ukl Krueger. remain the same, the buylrc
Both the wreslllns and
women'• symnastlca team
will nol be fielded next year. ll.ym nastlca coachH we r e :;;~ord~~~o·~.~ be
' 'Thechancellor'apc~ltlon paid with Limited Term
is to mainlaln existin& IIJOI'Ia Employment fLT£ ) funds
::':t~~~~~~~ thispastyear.
18,000 a lloc:a tl on for nex t
'nle LTE fWids vary an· year, wUI be limited to a $4400
of Profnalonal Studie•
nually a nd are m ade allocation plus wha tever
dean .
ava ila ble when 10meone
ca n g.nerate,
Th• women'• l)'mnastlc:s resl1ns from a po~ltlon ~=~
aeaaon wJU run from the money has Pf'eViou.sly beef~
bqiMi,_goftchooiiUitJIApril allocated for .
eo.ch IUch Blanche said
At present It Is III"ICft'l.aln the klwft- anocatlon wW limit
next year and lrith DO in·
how much money will be
and
:::I•;~~';JIE= Howe ve r , at a UWSP
Krueaer uld It appeara coaches' meeting In March,
now that there will be auf. other coachel aal d It would be
ficlent LTE funds to hire unfair to lower allocation
Nancy Pase aa women'a field levels of exiatlnc aporta _to
hoe:keyandaoc-cCTcoachand furtheraubaldluhoe:key.
::b.':=~~~~ ~h~n~~~':~=-~~~.j
Sandow's ualfie:e ny.
Net11CT added the final
Insurance tally ln the seventh
innlng with a solo home run.
Should the Pointers make
the playoffs and defeat their
opponmta In the best two of
three games ae riea, the
:!ict~t~e:~~~d
be
MEDICAL SCHOOL ASPIRANTS
Owr 40,000
Tom Zam ls took the lead Saturday.
May 3, and went on towln the440yd.
hurdles In the WSUC meet.
Photo by Roger W. Barr.
llld womtn will 19pfy
11:1
Americ .. medici!
1Choobtht1Yhl, bllton1yabou t 14,0110wil1Mke:rptlld.
Oulified undidltft " - • \'tlid tlttrnlliw: INK.~
ttii!Qtloe i• hrll!". For inlorm.tionMJd appfktlionlorms
(o pp01111n ittu 1t10 av•llllll lor 'ttl:lrinlry lnd dtntinry
tMdidlttsl,tontKtthe inlolllwotionoHicr.
INSTITUTE OF INTERNATIONAL
MEDICAL EDUCATION ·
,._..,._,
,.,_.,.,
__ ...., ... -A._., ., ... u.._..,..,, ... s..,.
40 E. 54 St., New York 10022, 1212) 832·2089
St=~~~~\:::·~eda:
':frt.
:he~~~~::or:::~
.(
Mev 6, 1975
THE POINTER
Page 19
Softball league
plans swin_ging
summer play
bytludy ~ltnlndMare
Vollrath
U the words of ita president
are any indication, th e
Steve n s Point Softball
Association tSPSA) U in for a
Ted Harrison strains during his
takeoff In the triple jump. Harrison set a
WSUC record, leaping 48' 9" to clear the
old mark by almost two ~feet.
Photo by Roger W. Barr.
"':~~~1f':~~hl). outdr•w
anyotherswnmtrrecreation
activity in the Stevens Point
area." claims Mike "The
Cur" Disher, leader of the
SPSA .
Disht!', in a jsb at the local
psper' s
ove r uturattd
awe:raae of Cfftain ~t~mmt!'
activities, added " We ml&.ht
draw more people and have
thrHt~s.JDs,Merryland
'The SPSA., Vl'hich provlds
competition for ov« 1.000
athletes, indudin& man y
UWSP audents and alums,
swin&s into ita second season
o( operation on May 11.
Asinl974,therewillbenine
leagues taevtn mtn'l, two
VI'Vmtn'l).,..;th clo&e to &O
teams re:preseoted.
One of the main reason•
""'hY SPSA olncia.ls look for
'7S to be a big year Is the
retl.lr'n to city competition of
Point's two winningest teams
of the last decade, Moore
Barn and The F1ame. Neither
unit has appea red in city
league action fora number of
years for various reuons.
Moore Barn and F1ame will
join with Morey's Bar and
won ~ · ~ same should be
true this Ume •round.
Hawk
Bornhau s er ,
manaJer of B u ffy's
Reaeauon Leque, ctilar·
swellers of ~4. tpleaae don 't
confuse With the famous
~Uar·Dwe:Ue:n
basketball
l.eamlwbtnuktdlfhilteam
would tate it .an. replied, "U
Bacch'-- smiles on '--,we
ml&ht. mind you, ml&.ht, be
eompetiUve."
.
Ov« the distaff 11de of
lhin&s, powerful Paul's Bar
should waits through the
women 's SllvtT Leque. But
the PowdtT Putt Leque
tPPL I could be a different
tale.
Last s umm er the PPL
ended "" in a. thi'H-ttam
deadlock featunna n~e ,
UtUe &:own Jug and ZOd~ .
The ladies are, to say the
least, an intqf'll part of the
SPSA.They alwsys draw
laraecrowdri,whlch,intum,
means larae concession
profits. Despite many bad
weather dates ea rl y lnt
season the gals continued to
packthem in .
Another bendit a• me,
limllsr to the one: last June
which raised money for the
Portage County Cance r
Society and filled Iverson
Park, i• being formul ated.
Th U year the benefactor
will be the Ollleda lflllitue ,
according to Oisht!'.
Other special events being
considered by SPSA offici• Is
Include all ·lla r games,
players·O f·the·week, ad·
mtional toume15 , etc.
Everythlna considered, it
should provide fa ns wUh
some of «ntral W'liCOftlin'a
bestsoftbaU.
~ of the moat ea&«ly
awa1ted of the early season
contests wiU be the May 22
pl1yolf and the title.
The B division of the PPL
should a11o be elltrtmely
hard·fouaht , wit h Buffy's
broadl: ral.ed sll&ht favorites ,
especially If Ge<qe Fricke
the American Legion . Both
one o( the
fint:ll IOflbaU facilities in
favol'ltes : and have been
itching to &et at each other's
throats since August.
Olristmn
the mt bein& played at andEaster ,"roaredtheCzar .
Goerke Park. Goerke's rock·
hard infield was ra tht!' un·
:norebe~i~:~....':!-/,~ :nc~n:! 1 ~~~1;! ~:W~e~l~.eWomen's
ink!"
byRa11dyA .Ptltala
In t h e 60th annua l
W'll«<nnin State Univt!'sity
Conference tr1 ck ·•nd rield
champioMhiw hdd bere this
pasl weeKnd, May :l and s,
the Pointen fmisbed .econd.
Pointloltlhtirbidfora
thi rd consecutive outdoor
title when LaCrosse out ·
pointedtbtm 17lto t41and Yr.
for Coach Don Amiot's
youna team. It wu a
disappointing second con ·
lidmDa the row first and
four second pl.ct finlsbts
they woD. Howevt!', Coach
Amiot staled tNt ht bdltved
it W11Uld have been Point's
title if standout Ttd Harrison
hadnot~injuredearlyln
the meet. " I bdievel.hatlfcould have qualified Harrison
iD the 100,%28 and kin& jump,
we could have taken the
meet," he uid.
lnspiteofthtinjl.arytohil
hamstrin&, Harrilon triple·
jumped G't and Ya" to Itt a
DtW confft.eoce r«::O"d on
Saturday. The leap was one of
three new conference meet
recordlld, the others were
the 1110 yd . run clocldn& of
1: 54.1 by WhHewater's Kjel.l
KaaabaJea and 1.ummate
Bill Hamilton's 14 :41.9 twomile walk time.
" He did it on sheer guts. Ht
ranahtllwaraceafttrbring
out for two Vl't'tks, he's a
Jrtattumple for this team
and a nne person."
Othn' strona ri11ishes for
thethlncladscame1nthe 1·2·3
triple·jump placi111 whe r e
Dtnnls Rue and Drake were
nextinlineaH«Harrilonfor
Point . Also, Roy Robertson
~~n~i~~~~:
finishtdsecondinlheSmile
run and Don Buntman was
numbt!' two in the mile.
Drake also finlslled third In
the high jump while Bill
Writht and Rut finished
fourthinthe shotpl41 ndlong
jumprHptdively. Joe YOWlS
Wllsll.soi«''OIdinthesix
mUe and third in the l mile
while P1ul Niehaus was
fow1Jiin lhetwomilt:WIIIk.
With the SUSOII jUII ending
coach Amiot is alre1dy
lookin& tii'Wllrdsne:xt year.
" Wt need &ood sprinters and
somede:pthinthtpolevault
and hi&h jump. It's Jus t •
matter of how well we
recruit. we t..ve exce:Uent
~turnersbl4 1 'dliketoldd
about IS aood fresluntn to lhe
squad," he said.
The team
foUows :
LaCrout 111
In the field eventa Point
earned firats as Due Holm
k:utd the diKUI Uf' I " and
s. Potnt
earned by Point came attn'
Tom Zamis croutd the fulish
lint in the 440 \nt«mediate
hurdls in a time of $4.1
aecondi. A.rnkltwidolZamis.
Platteville%?
Sl:outll
!tO:·~~g::~
~eores
1.. •;
Whitewll.t!' 104
Eau Claire 56 ~
R.ivtr FaUs44
Oshkolh 4Z
~perkw'IO
wert as
.,..;=~.m~;:':~~~ :~~f:sp~ecls:m~~r~
comme nted Mickey st.;..
&wm the sll&ht ed&e oc·
to most ~xpe rta
because of the addition of
M.arc Vollrath, a 20-game
wmoer for a desultory Mlnl
Bar sq~M~d lasl year.
Another leag ue which
should ':'t wide open Is the
Recrt.ationLea.a:,ue. Lastyear
~o rdlng
mons, the City f'Offtter .
Three tournaments a r e
alated 1lready . A men'a In·
vitatlonal will be the first
begiMifll May 23.
'
The premiere event will be
the Open Tournament spread
OVt!'t~o ....'t'tksarnundJulv4.
On the weekend followin&
anywhere near the most
LaCfosse wins,
Pointers place
in WSUC derby
peliUve," sated PeKh .
stallation of a restroom.
Rhody Mallek, manager of
"With Got!'kt lackina a
the Top Kit , ltlll another restroom for the: entire '74
contender , replied, "With ~eason , lt's no surprise that
luck, we11 be eompetitive." the bushes borderinlt lhe
So much for the wit and swim min& pool near the
=~~~~~~~it': ~~i:J:l!!'..:~'U: :O:f~~e.:n:r;r i~uslte~':~
~·s~ue:~~~~= 00:~:;.,
Point. At lealt 'Czar' Dish«
hopes so!
"If everything goes .,..·e:JI,
we just might be able to open
~ .,..... K.IU of Fame to the
public for more than the
~=~m~Uo!i.s a
yea r ,"
And just what are the thf'ft!
ic:ua~e:~o~uiearigv:!'· ::'. :,~sc:;,c~ ~amO:.~ ~~~~vine.
1 ~. ~r~!·amJ~r~ ==~ ii"r'!r!!:l:'w!;!
~ ~anb!,:-.n·i-l:rur~ ::e~lidin& •re •n dfective
:;;:~~~~
:h!t::d
oa~~ :U~'d.'
.=:,
=t:ee:n~~~':a:~ ~:'inti!l~~ui ~!~":
Earlythisspring,whentold softer . This will team with
that St1n'a had moved othtT improvements a t the
Sull!va n to second ltne, field , especia ll y th e in
Leaton's vettnn mentor
Dave Kluttz. is rwnored to
h.ave gOI'Ie out and bou@.ht a
$120.00 lor aummer metal file, then ordtf't'd his
ptl•ata room - kltctt.n l
runnentogo in ''spikes hi&h' '
bathroom l•cltltlea.
•tsecoad.
1547 Slronv• 34-t·MIS
When uked whelhtr or not
his team will take it all,
JOue:u responded, " I'm not
~~~·ve~·~t we'll be com ·
SHAKLEE DISTRIBUTOR
Bob Pesch, Stan's head
IIOGEII ~_!~ ,~AMAHM
3:~ . Vl'aS asked the same:
"' . , . _ , . _ . _
I'm optimistic that , given
the breaks. Vl'ell be: com ·
...,.,.w.•au-.,..,.,.
Get your ~
career off to a
flying start.
Howl
Qo.oehlylorAIIfo~eeOtr. cer
Tr~"'.ni . U' IIOQtn ttoe ,JOOt
to o•tot or n•v•1110r tfl •n·
let:hedeteolscon-•nt•
you. call S Sgt. Sta
Kent at 608·272·616
COLLECT.
Look up.
Be loo!cecl up to.
AIR FORCE
Poqe 20
THE POINTER
May 6, 1S'75
Pointer Phofo Contest Winners
c
Photo by Gerard Due ll man.
Mev 6, 1975
THE POINTER
Page 2 1
Photo by Gerard Ouellman.
'..
SUtKR SUSIIll •
Cltneslt')ln
lnHpendtncc O.y
F'INI U..t
COI:nlnc-nt
June9
July4
Julyll·hl•)lat 1
Ali!)l.lst l(Frt .)
a:,.
,,/''(_,
Mev 6, 1975
Poge 23
THE POINTER
-OPINION
u_,., POINTER
Doremus expresses thanks
To UWSP 1tudenu:
farmer action
Student .criticises
~
lelta- to Mr . Newell,
recently became
acquainted with the action
taUn by younel£ and various
othl!!' AHa fanners on April
2-t.Thisletterilinresponseto
your pr«est as it appears in
the Polater article ol~ril
29, tm.
I
I find no need to mince
words, as it seems you
obvlowly fo~.a~d no need to
consider the conuquences of
your actiona.
To put It simply,! nod your
.c:Uons to be. an abomillatioa
to humanity . You have
eslabUshtd yO\neU as sole
authority ill determination of
the plight of the farmers .
YOW" acc~tions that the
Americ.an Bar Association
has somehow ass umed
omni pot ence in ( a r m
legislation iJ u absurd and as
reminiscent, as McC.rthyism
and the rationale ea-poundtd
by the John. Birchen.
Your &rislycamage,,·ery
able'ycapturedlnthephoto
layout.~mindsoneoffutile
sacrirlclal orter ings from
centuries ~st . I am ~litvtd
howe;.·er, by the fact that you
saw fit to tate out your
aggrenions on merely a
cardboard replica of an
elephant, but at the same
time di shea rt e ned in the
knOwing that had an elephant
beenavallable,ittov."OU!d
have suffered extinction at
the hands of you and your
trusty1:tt:aUKe.
Beginning with the
Burroughs Hall B.s .·er ,
Viewpoint and the last two
years in the Polate.r, Bob
Kerksieck and his starr has
letthe " Words" columnexist.
To them, evm though it was
at times diHicult to keep it in,
thank you.
To Shirley and her wonderful layout and keypunch
sta ff, who did a beauliruljob
on. the column and who accomplished the impossibledecipheriq my handv.Titlng,
thank you.
To those of you who sub-
~=J7'ouoh:v~::ft~~:
thereby mati"- the column a
little better and more tinued Ills essential that you
meanin&ful, thank you.
callhim,seehlm ,orplease
.,.,Tile him, in ca re o( the
To all those who expressed Polnter. Andlfthereare any
their appreciatioo for the other "thought collectors"
column and because of this, whowouldliketocontinueon
made it a pleasure for me to after Doremus, a lso see
do, thank you .
Stanek.
As I mentioned In the first
Withinthlsluue,isthelut "Words " column In the
time you will be seeing Poloter, I hope In this column
DoremlllastheauthiH"ofthe youeouldfind "some insight,
"Words" column . I am a joy, a new idea or just'"a!l
graduating . Whether the expression of your own
column continues to exist Is thoughts."
very much up to you .
I sincerely hope you en·
1
With a new editor for the f>'~!e thom'fy'!;x~e::~i
upcomin& school year, Al them to you.
Stanek, possibly many things
will be changed In the
Youn In puee,
Doremw !Gary f' . W\JI.
Poi.Dm. U you would like to
see a column like this con- tersl
Physics prof challenged
The right to protest carries
it an implied rJ&hl of
accountability wh ich yo u
seemtohaveshunttdulde. To Profeqor MODica Balat«,
~~~oitn
ScleaU1t and when yo u
refUied to read It becaute I
&inter is a pt"O(eaor of did not know the autbon
others, l canoaly fearforthe physics and sn outspoken c r e den tia ls, I beaan to
safety of our elected of· advocate. of nuclear powft'. wonder.
ficials.Because, Mr . Ne'lr"'dJ,
Bainter, When you JpOke to
after innoctflt calves and
my political science clus
donkeys, who 's next~
andprornisedtheclllllO again accused the nuclea r
minutes to ask questioasand opponents of usina incon-ect
Donald Weedea
33S B.rolclwla Hall
onlygavetheclauabouttwo and dated information. Vt'ben
minutes. I thought your I a dd ressed a question
speech luted longn- than you lpecifically to you about the
AEC's "Raumusstt~" study,
originally intended It to .
'Nhlch you quoted In your
The very u me day you p-ese:ntation, you rtfured
5pOke to my political science my quest.Jon to a man from
class, I went to your office the Utilities, because you
and showed you an article ltaltd the answer to my
from the hi&hJy p-~ous questionwasnotlnyourOeld
Bulletla of t•e Atomle of txptttiH.
:e:~e~:ra;~:·i~~e=
Mf::e~o~:~~n·r~~~:
Mandatory food
program unreasonable
()pea letter :
Upoa reserving rooms for
the next academic ye.ar we
'll"tt"e IUI"Jiriud, angry and
puu1ed at flDdinc a food
prt~p"am wu mandatary for
allstudentsllvin&ancampus
next year. No satisfactory
ru.on for this action has
been given us.
N students not required to
live ill raldence halls, we see
the halls u a convenience.
We see them u rooms we
~tcloee taourd&ily work
and activities. We abo see
food centers u a conva~lence
:tl not returning to this
campus in order to C1)0tinue
our education within our
Umited budgets.
1n requiring a mand.alor)'
food plan for us, it seems ~t
Housin& is defeatln& 111
pull)OStO( tryin& to keep
upptrdusmen on campus.
We enco uraae all uppn-cJusmen and graduate.
students who share our views
to rqister their complaints
wtth the HOU5il18 ornce.
Coaetr11ecl s tucleats of
llalltlrD llsll : James HarnJ.
Karla Repta . Mary R.Jm·
stack. MaryAnoe S t rln~lr,
residence hall requlrma~t.s Sleven Walloa. Ed Ka~berl .
Tom Alve-y. JHk Gannaa,
are optional for Ul.
Raacly Zupaa. Mike
Mandatory meal plans 81ocnqulst.GaryKJeven. Jule
WOUld caute many ltuda~ts Koh ls. Lac y Wiubrock .
not required to live In Raphael Tbom1011 , Klmm
residtoce halls to spend more Jolllltloa.MartLeGut.Sc.eve
money than anticipated, O!rtsllansoa. Dillie! Mulry.
forcinc many of us to con- Joha FIL&Jera1cl 1Dcl Kstbie
sider umovtna on eampUI or Ze~nkr .
:!~~ r~,~~'!t'::
When
y ou
make
a
st.atema~t,Jfeel,if youareas
well Informed at you profess
to be, you shou.ld be able to
m~pondtoa criticism of the
Jnlonnatioa you orlj:lna.lly
presented ,
dl~'on~~:=;,J~s w\!::!f~
Electric Power Co., said that
nuclear proponenll and
nuclear opponent• should
debate the is.sues and the
:ir ep;~~a~.e ~ufJ r~~
1
consent ta such debate wtth
thenuclearopponet~ts!
Paul Scott
mKautnaHall
Rates increase
To tbe edtc.or ,
M~ny
hxal and area rat.epayenreceivednoticewith
~t bWs of an "Interim
Rate Increase in the Form D(
a Surchaf"ie Granted by the
Public Service Commission
CPSCJ", Wlscontin Pawer
an d Ught Co., March 11,19'15,
Docket 2·U· IOIS ; eitctric
17.26percent. naturaiaasS.31
percent, water ·Beloit ·11.90
pereent,Rlpon·UiiptrC":nt.
Continuing on the subject of
electricrat.era.isei,Pteslclent
Ford sent Con&ress an enet~Y
bill that incl udet a section
makinJ it easier for uUiltles
to r111e the tremendous
amounts of money to build
nuclear power plants .
! Proposed
Rudolph,
Koshkonong , Sheboygan ,
Durand, etc.) .
EntrJY Independence Act
1m. has section , 'NUe VII,
allowina: utilities to raise
This docket Is subject to theirdectricityraletUSDOn
additiona l PSC hearings asautilityst.artsCO!l5tructlon
where a permanent rtte on a new power plant.
increase aod chanaes in rate Utilltiet now have to wait
schtduleswlllbeC0115ldered. ~.W~til plant completion !6-6-10
Be t ure to carefully read the yearsl.~foreapplylngfora
br«hure enciOKd with yOW" rate increase.
If this section of the om ·
bill.
nibUI energy bUI becomes
law, It wUI provide utilities
with capital necessary to
co n1truct cottl y nuclear
plants; alvin& ~lear
development another
In
relaUonloanyothe-r ter·
nativesourceso(energy.
You,theconswnn-.willpay
asain , hit ea r lier with
another e lectric rate in ·
creaM, (for nuclear power.
that you don 't want, but sre
being fon:td to acrept and
dearlypayforit .l .
Urse your representatlvet,
senators, congressmen, state
andfedera1,tostrlkeoutTIUe
VII from the 1975 i{lergy
I ndependence
A t.
l )trl .l Coraella Gr odiek
..,
g
Aldl,5'. OE:AI? U:W<S·S{)FFEK/A/6
OIJES, W~ HA Ve REA<HcP rilE EJIO
~
c;=R ;~;;~:~~:;;;!~
IJIO AOieV, "J1)Sr C¥1E. FIAlA< w'ao10!
.• . OAIE LASr /'IESSA&c FROM
"THE cJJriRE CA577, , , ..
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