Document 11824615

advertisement
getting to
or1s & crofts
center open
Reav.lu \IU\Iou to til~
Unlv~ty Cmter b)o now bavto
probtbly notlc f'd ..eomethioa
new out tide the Crld lnm.
NoUIIItd Oil lbl P ollllf
Yftldln&JU.ndlllthe fintof•
numberot'GettotM Polllla'
t.cau.lbltwWitUttppet.rlq
o ro11 11d
comp111 .
Wllhthecooperatlmol the
unlvenlty cnptnten ond
pllnten wureaolna outolou:r
waytomake lttuyforyouto
~nii CI
JOW'
IIIWipllpcr .
1'11rouaboultbe~~nt,..,.we
hope Ia be pramtill& yau wltll
1 pro voeotlve ond blp.ly
r et dtble
•••lily
IM'WSIIIIJaliDe. Hopefully )'Ctl
woa't alwt)'ll IP"ft wiUI the
lhlrlpw.bl\ltloU)'•tbe
WI)'
we ..)' lbem.
We doa't
piau to be morbidly blud.
U aDd wbell J'OU line 1
ret~dlorlloe)'UIID&o~
In Pollllft' feel free to let ..
kaow your fullnJI . Co mnutnlcatlou nnnot nl11
wltllout
lt tdb t c ll .
lab available
,.._
•the pointer
•
tvff')ltblrllyourud•nclhur
role of
ItolD pnlftNOn. A PII .D. \1 not
I ll«aie to pruth lnlt.b but
university
n.tbtr ltiDdka~lhlll-llaa
-pUsbedleam«.
Allofu.'lriihllllhernaterial
unlvert\ty are N\ldtnts of the
rMI unlvtnlty anmltl.ed lo
thequeatfoetnlth.
J .... J . Wa-nkl
questioned
Tallw P.a.tn-,
JllltwhatlstMUni~!l
uUod mr-11' that queWoa lhe
otberdaywbeDiaawaVOUPel
prolpectlvelreahmenallcltheir
bei.tl&
~Korted
throi.IP~-tnbol
puenu
.........
ll~to~:~~ethlltlhe
trees
cut??
IDI~t1 hu no apedflc:
localloll. ltOWMnopr"'lpitrt)'
rul
iltldpi)'IIIOaalarin. ~ruJ
WIIYenit)'illstateofll!lnd.. It
Is that Mrltq:eof lratioaaJ
tllou&bllhatbatbfellbraulht
downtou.lhnNitltbetllria ancl 'wtlidl dDM IIDl alat
at anyapecifk location. The
real Wllftl"'lty Is DOthlnc
'"*
lhaalheeontinuia&bod)'ol
~itKII' .
la..:ldltlontollllsllifeot
•
miltd thert'l al<tpl mtit)'
whlctl Is unfOII"'UMtely .:called
by the ume nama. The
l~tlllilyunivenltyiaa~
prlllt corpantion-11 brand! ol
1M state .-illl a apecif!C: ad-
m-e.. l t -
~)' .II
Clpflbioeolpl)'iniMiariaand
rnpoads
to
pnNUI'ft In
the proeeu.
le&itlnlve
'nllatypeolunivff'tllycan't
teadl and doesn't pnente
k..,.Jedp or ewatu.te ide-.. II
lljaltbuiktinpanda.UU.,
that
makn
condltlona
favouibla lor the rul
unlftnii)'IOH!$1;.
Manyol~Yfallto-the
difluence between unlve r·
aldes. WelhintU\aiiCOBli"DDol
lhematfti&llnivtn!IJ'imptift
~oltberftllllftiVft'Sity.
Profeuona reM!ftiUI'I'II·
plo)'t:tl of the corpo rate
u.nl•tf"'il)''6"hosbDuldabADdan
reuon when told lad tUe
ordtn with no bld.UIII.
1bl! pMwy p i ol the
TatM J>alattr
Seve ral moolh1 aao \.he
CMneenoe made the dedlioo
toleclbedty ofSI:ev-Potlill
ntendMlc:hJ&anA-IIIIrtb
of Maria Drive. Mill\)'..,._
W\Nippy-.\Uitbe6edlloabut
'Wft'tl left poore.-lfts lo do
IIIJihinCaboutit.
To placate the rabid e&
vlronment.albt:l tht OU.nct:llor
Indicated that the outure
'A"hlle Pint IWid lylncln the
path oflhtroad would bt
sp~~rll'd. One Biolo&Y proleuor
dtseri.Md the stand .. " !be
moat natun.l and untramp&ed
atandof..,.oodl~~nlhemU...
northump.~~land". HeeaUtd
thearea " aplenof..,._..lobe
t flllred.C aUcoats."
Ttle: 'Weft before fl,..l aamt,
atud~ftofll theCGllqeof
Nllural Rnourcn , u.oder
onttn (tolD~ ill the
Admlnbtrallon. went In and
t lalhed lht 'tii'OOdl down with
cNoln ......... Tblrty of the
bl&itlllttc!ll'""ftlltd,tom•
uploZllntbelindiamdtf'. The
tl'ftltwutbttweeo60alld711
,..Dold.
I'd lite 1o knD..,. Why !bat
treft; '"'"'' eut and who pve
theonler . Maybeaomebodyon
1M PeiMn- ala U an tell me..
~J'a:!~"!t"~r;
tnsuranea1 !:i!Mr way 1!'1 a
cbmnedWme!!
ulli•tnit)' il alwa)'ltrutb ln its
t'Ytr·ch.anti n& forma .Ever y
thl"' et.. ahoWd be l®or·
dlnate. Coclftirtl like t.tao.e
apparat!Odlly &riM whee the
~tGnand
11M 10"~
U.tepointsofv'-inoppoailion
lolheproft:NOI'I'i«t~or
publle
alatemenla.
The
pollliclaM oftet~ lean on the
• dm lniltr•tioa lfprofeuon
don "! ...)' what ~he-y Wllllt lo
hear. AIDOdpral-wUIKt
•
u ifM:b..a'tbarde)'thinc
ft'OIDthelqlllatororthtM·
m1nlltntlon.H11prlmarypl
ll lo thrqtl rNfM !be
ploltnllh..
•
Mt. eomnwnu eome out of
empit.by for iooromlnl frat!·
~n:; ~'t~-:
.=
knowinJ'Whkhprofeuur'WIU
Inn rteJ:t "under
t hreat.
~lhe-y'W!Ub.nelo
COBLnd db tboM prat~
..t10 vudllate bet.-een cood
andbM.
Ny~loall
atu.Mnts
Ia
to
ehalltnlle
Etl .
S.Ce ; )h. Win'a
alle&atlonl are btln1 Ill·
vatlpttd. An indepth ~ 11
btin&teadledforourJilly\0
-·
'Pol11 ter ' 11 a 111t1eat • • pp..-ted
p•blleall•ll for the V•l.,tra ll y of
WIK OIIII n Skn n• Point Cornmun\ly ,
Series 8, Vol. 18, No . 47
summer hobbies can be grove
It's a perfectly
!~~~~:di:.~eactlvity,andheevet~uysitcanbe .
andmemb<m ol fratemal ordtndilplayed their ldtnutyln&
marks .• Abo durin1 the 111601, epitaphs appeand, ap·
pa~ntly l nt~ by Gmnan Protestants.
A number of chanaes Wft'e introduced ln the 11701 and
11101 . 1lle entire monument in many cases became ayrn•
Dr. Maurice l>en-et nys tha-e 's much more inV111ved
lf&niry in& eternal life, an anchor for hope, a tree for
by Jolla~
JowoneyU. tbrou&b oktcemeteries of the state as a new
i
~=r:,:,.m:,~=~~lieves
than con!ronllnc death when a person Kilen an old burial
=~~:;;' ;:ai!:J"·~~~~:Y~e~~ lnal&htlnto the life
TbestylesolthetornbltonatbemJe!Vft rdlect the tastes
of the <:<Immunities and the waves of immlaration occurin&
through the late IMIO& and early 19001, he says.
For thole who take on this new activity as a hobby, here's
a little primer that will answW m.ny qustions for new
''necf'oceocrapbers." It is taken from an article pnpared
for publication in the Witc1>nsin Academy of Science, Arll
and Letters by Dr. PftTet, who has IIUCht at U'A"'SP for the
putt2 yean.
The earliest s tyle of tombstone in WitcOns in, used ex·
tenalvely between 1130 aod 1860, was a aquac;.t..,or rte ·
tatwular llab of white sandstone or Umestoae with In·
ICI""ipt.ions Iindy incised, often in italics to Imitate 1\and~~oTiliol,
Dwin& tbe 181!101, tombltone styles b«ame more
elaborate. 'lbe top ollhe alab was 10meUmes rounded or
potntedandsymbobwerenttenadded :a weepi.na willow for
aorrow , a ctOWI'l for victory aver dealh , a rOle for virtue,
clasped hands for friendship or fuewtll, a ford"in&er
:'~~J=~rc!·~~=~~b~or'/r,!>'~~
bollt : a broken column for a life that ended early ,an obe:lisk
~~:::- m"";'lmats also ehanatd. Red aranlte !rom
Montello or WIUIIU became popular but other materials
also were uscd,such as gray granite, m&rble, concrete, and
iron. Individual lfiVH began to be replaced with tamlly
lots one monwntnl being used for all membera. This led to
the 'scarcity of symbols and ej)itaphs, and eventually they
•"ffl! no longer used .
"
A numbuoftrmds led to mon l"e('enl practkes. Obelllb
and columns grew In slu, reachiflC ten or fiftHn feet a t
their maximum ~round 1900. Then the style chqed and
massive blocks repla«!d the high monuments. Ofl.en the
blocks were m:uked with family nam~ only and amall
stones, used for each membn' oltbe family, vm"t allgned on
tbefrontorbackolthtplot.
Eventually family lots ~ repla~ by guves for
couples, a sing.le stone bNrln&lhe namtt: of huaband and
~~~:rth~~:s~~~:,:a:r:~~~~~
:::::3:.:
mate a lready mJ(aved : only the date of death wu ldt
blank. Occasionally , a photograph of lhe deceaRd was
inlaid or , sometimes, a picttnof a married ccqlle.
The &fl!eral outlook ol cemeteries, apeciaUy old ones ,
a dove lot" &ftltleneu or an qd to cany the younpta- to
~~~e~~~ ~~iliC:p~y~ID!rce;t~~ :e:..~
eternal life WHe popular. SymboiJ also documented secular
lireevenu . The a:raveola solider rer~un showed
Prolejlanll avoided that sy mbol , often uainalnatead a n urn
atthetopofanobelisk. ,
an.,
Housing committee
named
·~------------~
Viets strive for self-sufficiency
Eleven Steve ns Point
families lll'e hollina Viet·
namese refuaea.
So far 31 VIetnamese are
ltlyingwllh~Point
hosts. More are expected as
the list ol host families in-
creases.
Most ol the refugees here
1\ave tin with the 21 Vietnamne at!Jdmll on ump.a
or wilh university administrators who went to
Vietnam 11 ed uution al
consultanta.
David Co ker ,
UWSP
assistant chancellor , ia
~ee:;,~r;oo~::,~~!r£!~~
Coter told newsmen that the
number one conem ol the
'¥1dnamne is their desire to
becomeloelf rellantu..onu
pouible.
' 'The vletnamese do not
want to be deptadent. " be
said . He duc:rlbed the
refu1eu 11 belna hiahly
motivated to work.They an
lookinl at everythinJ In
ttnn1
•
of employment
ac::-
cording to Colr:er.
Of the employable Vtet·
namese rdugees, lhree have
found Job1 to date. One has
been hired by Sentry ln·
suraoce and the other two
have obtained work In
Wausau.
Most of the local rdugees
are members o( Htabllsbed
proCessions. Employers in·
t,e,-ested in hirtna a m"uaee
are ulted to C«<lact Bud
Eagon
at~.
Professional backgrounds
include architecture , den ·
l h try , pharmacy , accounting, booltlteepina:.
typtna, KWin& and businea.
Most rdugees have some
facility in EriiJWI.
A tutorln& program In
Dlglish has beea established
locally for VIetnamese
ehildren and their oarents.
A"Yietnam Rd1,Wee Fwxl "
had been establ:ishtd at the
Portage County Red Crou
omce downtown. There has
been widespread ~ for
the Vietnamese In this locale,
I«<C'dln& to Coter, He said
that 100 per dent o( tuncb
don.ated Joc:ally will be used
~~eesirfthelmmediate
Disciplinary cades
bv SuiUI'I' NaraA
~
A committee has been
appointed to deal with student
houslna: problems. Assistant
housina:ltirec:torMelvlnKarg
was recently elected chair·
man of the new Housing
Advisory Committee.
One or the chief responsibilitiesofthenewly formed
commlttee-...ill betoactasa
llason between the dlfre~nt
parties involved in student
housin~t. said Kara .
The eunmlttee, establ:illhed
under the merger plan ,
consists ol fifteen members
representing landlllt'1b, the
city, uni vers ity ad minis tration. faculty and
students.
.
Onestudtntrepresentatlve,
Patty Ma!Mr, said she hopei
to air the problema students
have in off-campus housing
and a lso protec:tthelrrtghts.
The committe-e will com·
munlcate pouible sol uUons to
both the mayor and !be
chai'IC'ellor. 'IbqrwiUa.lsotry
to ldentiry the problems and
eoncmw of land·klnla and
The first step toward the demolition ol
Old Main : Steam liDel are bd 1 rerout«< around the campus's oldest
bulldlrc In anud.,.uon ol Its demlae.
~nters.
~;~~~
.=:
aDd II
biking fine
Bicycle rtden without valid licenses
risk a nne of S2'1ineludln1 court coats.
Non-residents who ride in Stevens Point
should have a valid lkena trom their
own town or lhould purchase one here.
~~~~~:~=
1o locate at.oien or 1011 bieyt.Jee:. The
lines, he said, are deta"mined b)' stale
ordinance now enfO«ed In !be dty.
Approximately .Uty bicycles were
stolen lui month In Stevens Polnl
Sankey said he wou ld encouraJe
everybody to lock lbeit bicycles and
have them properi)' lkeoled.
The lkenses, valid ~til Dec. ll lt71,
ean be pwchued at the fire station. The
e<cl \a $1.2$,
questioned
Astudentwhobrukseither
astate lawora city ordinance
should be
prosecuted thr ough
the exlatlna atate aDd city
judicial processes-and
not by
!he Wlivusity be allendl ,
ac::cordinJ to the United
Council CUC ) ol University ol
W~SCGMin Student Govern·
mentl.
The uc Is • state wkle
student Jobb)'lna ~-
The &f'OU'? UTI the Board of
Rtgents Jbould delay actin&
upon the propoled "Student
OiJclplinaryGui~"for
•
six monlha,toallow lt udent
govunmenl leaders 10 study
thea:uldelineslhorouahl yand
make appropriate rn'islons
in!Mm .
·-nwa auldellna were
drawn up with minimal input
from the ltudenta who will
ultimately live and work
under them," uld UC
Praident Mkhad De.J.Aoay.
"United Council stronaly
objects that otft again uw
Central Administratioa hal
rdused to allow students
thei r proper rol e In the
decision makina: proc:eu of
theUnlveraily .
" On the whole , the
Guiddinn are overbroad and
unclear . Many of the
provilionlarepatenllyUDfair
to students and shOI.ad be
rejKted for that reuon."'
Or~y concluded.
To be or not to be
The fhnklin StrHt mall will be
constructed as soon as admlniltrative
invol~ent II cleared aceordinc to
William Vlckerstaff , executive
5tCt'et.ar)' 1o the chancellor.
ch~tu=:sr!l' to~ ~~~~e~ :nd
that , Vickentarr says, Ia holding up
pr~:'~taareratberexpenlive,he
said . Tht'refore ,l.be universily ll~
to get an arehllect from the Departmmt
or AdministraUon(OOA I aulined lo the
mall. No dlargn to the university would
result from a OOA arehit« l.
Once an architec t is officially
::ir:::·.:: ~':: r:~:=t
Vklterstaff said the Cams- Laod·
1
: : : ror ~':i!~a~ Am;:Ja~:::
mall will be conatructed between
Isadore and Reae r ve Str eetl. The
wliversity has a 210-year conttact with
StevensPointandV.i~nfortheuse
of the street for a mall.
The mall will be e«npieted no lata'
!han ea rry · next aumme.-, VicUratat'C
said. " I'm highly frustrated (with the
. progresal 1o say the least," heuld.
.....
/
Rock around the clock
by Sunny Narag
WWSP . the "real rock
radio" is now on the air
around the clock . The campus
sta tion is believed to be one of
the only university stations in
the country to program 24
hours a day .
The s umme r program of
WWSP caters to a variety of
tastes. " We try to give the
people what they want'', says
Chris Shebel, the station's
program director . The
program currenUy includes
music ranging from Oassical
to Jazz to Progressive Rock .
One of the summer
highlights is the " History of
Rock ·· This new program is
produced by Jeff Vandien . He
describes it as a patch·work
of " tid -bits of rock-n -roll
history" . " It also enlightens
the listener about the era of
this music and how it
evolved ," says Vandien .
History is being repeated
with
a nother
s ummer
highlight, "The Shadow " .
the UPI news wire service
which Chuck BarnhoH. the
news director . claims
provides better service than
the wire used last year . The
news broadcasts run five
minutes before everv hour
"'ith a specia l hour oi public
affairs and news starting
SIX .
daily at eleven .
/Sports and out-door lovers
The station is staffed with
are not forgotten at the ···real students a nd they according
rock radio"' . Scotty Krueger to Shebel are the cause of its
and Mike McCullough are the s uccess. Mos t or the st ud en t
--sports reporters (or the staff is earning credi ts for
station and three times daily working full -time in the
they mform their listeners of station. This experience. says
the latest in the world or Shebel. is neccessary for the
sports and their predict ions or tr aining 1n comme r cial
the summer game results . broadcasting. He contends
The times for these reports that UWSP is perhaps the
are 7:30 am. 11 :50 am, a nd only plac e where s uch
5:30 pm Keeping in view the training is available.
summer rush for outdoor
AJong with the station the
faci lities the station a lso audience too has grown. " The
reports on parks and cam - general consistency of our
pingsites.
sound makes us a better
One of the lat est station and attracts a larger
acquisitions or the sta tion is audience ", says Shebel.
This vintage radio program is
a reminder of the days when
radio ruled supreme in the
fam ily living-room . Ac ·
cording to Shebelthis thriller
radio series is a predecessor
or the current te levi sion
series. ""The Shadow " returns
every Thursday at half past
news notes
The 1975 sum mer school enrollment is
expected to involve a total of about 2.400
students by the time the final taJly is
taken .
The count will be up, perhaps as much
as iO. over the number of registrations
logged m the summer of 19'N , according
to Hegistrar Gilbert W. Faust.
The final figure wil1 not be available
t11l near the end of the session because
some classes and workshops a rc not held
for eight weeks. the full span of the
sess1on.
Only one residence hall is open this
summer . Roach hall is currently accomodati ng nearly 100 students .
t::arly indicators are pointing to the
largest fr eshman class in a nwnber or
years . Applications and housing contracts are reportedly higher than usual
at this time .
A new hotJine has been established to
provide assistance in family planning
and referral. The to11 free number is 8002-f2·9922 .
The universi ty 's car pooling program
1s in progress for the summer session.
Parties interested in Lak ing part in the
gas-saving measure are urged to contact
the University Center Information desk.
About one fourth of the students on
campus th.is summer are new , transfer
or re-entering students according to the
Registrar's oUice. Almost one fifth of the
over 2do0 students a r e graduates.
Graduale studen t percentage usually
run s around nine per cent during the
academic year accor<ting to Associate
registrar Dave Eckholm .
Planning
A Picnic?
See Us.
The registration deadline for MAT
MST com ~rehensive exams in Hjstory
a.nd 111 SocmJ Studies is next Tuesday.
Grad student s wanting to take the tests
arc scheduled for July 11.
Gr~d s tudents sho uld con ta ct the
chamnan of the Hjstory deDartment.
.COLD BHR
eiCE
G I Bill students a re now eligible for
VA loans up to $600 per academic year .
Students must demonstrate need . For ms
~reavailablefromVA Rep Tom Pesanka
m the Admissions Office .
.COlD WINE
•WARM BOOZE
.CHARCOAL
•SNACKS & AU
YOUR REFRESHMENT
NEEDS.
South Point
Beer&
Liquor
SHIPPY SHOES
MAIN AT WATER , STEVENS POINT
The days listed for rinal exams in the
Swnmer session Time Table are in·
correct. swnmer Session final exams
are scheduled for Thursday and Friday
July 3t and Augus t 1.
...
~o?( re_Pairs on twelve cam pus
~~~~.ngs 1s scheduled to begin next
S and J's PALACE
Piua • Steaks • Spaghetti • Sandwiches
Opon Daly Unti 9 P.M.
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
2800 Cllurth St.
Hwy. 51 South
SttveosPIIItlt
Hours: Monday-Saturday 11:00 A.M.-2:30 P.M.
Sunday 4:00 P.M.-1:00 A.M.
DELIVERIES 5:00 P.M.-1 :00 A .M.
Personnel director
goes to bot for students
•
by SullllyNanc
[)J.e to the efforts ol Rona ld Junte, the
~VttlityPersonneiOi«c:tor,Jtuderltl
are now eligible to apply for positions
Cf'eated by the Federal Comprdlenslve
Employment 1nd Training Act!CETAJ.
EarUu, students were not qualified
for these positions unless they had been
outofiChoolforatleastamonth. Junke
said it wu un fair to ~~MUme lllat
students do not need jobs l!llpeclally
whentheyareon financial aid. He then
pursued the authorities in Madaon to
~t~n~~eir discrimination againtl
lnltlallytheauthoritiesrefusedbut
withsupport fromthecentralperson nel
ortice in Madison Junke contlnued to
push the malter until he persuaded them
to relent.
"lo'or once it all worked out. We nad'a\'llid argument and they accepted It,"
said Junke.
hi;j~w!:J'~'s::!yw~ ~y ":~~~
pla«d under the plan.
"RougJ.."R.-.
For the Outdoor Man
" 'lkPINE CORDS
•
BUYOIIE
HUSICEE JUNIOR
GEt' OIIE FREEt
alcyu-cf
riiiY·skw·-·i.
Ca>l efW\ la&m
•
:e
:..
•
{Wffflc::oc.FON)
OniFREE.._...~wlthpun:;to_.of~llt~price.
Oftlf uJilrn 7115/n - &1111 ...., If HAIIDEFS OF smaa
"*'
.
•••••
DiliJ'~
~"~""~
0
0
--
IT'S HOII1o'E c:oc:lt\ 'EM TWQ' c::oufTS,.
:
•
:
..:
• ••••• .
rnen these mvlrr·pocket pants ar e tile
great esi.Suroomypockets.lourrnlrc,nt
lnd lwolnback RoughR<clcroUeiSthcm
toyoulnachoieeolltnecOI'duroy or
shong ..SourdOugh ' toU011 blend (ul t
tvtlorcOMiort ChOrceotcoiOfs
'
See the Alponc Sl'lcHts /W;'IIIIiibiO rn ~.:~mo
labfrcsand.nvar100J$Col0<5
the sport shop
.,....., ·• .JMf'atwts·· ·...._.
/
opinion
It Is by design ra!Mr than coind~ that the story of
People's Falr lnhabltl lhesepagesolour fiffi.islue .
WhatocC'UI'Tedatlola is justa amall portion of the history
1 11
~~!e~t!'i::~in~ ng or11tf:'~~~0: 0a ~::r·h~ ~
young peopl~ in Central Wise«~~in .
Thedec:adeofthe60'swas both exhllaratlq anddisap·
poinlin&. The years ..-·ere laced with hot aod cold rushes Ill
purpose and disillusionment .
FOf' those or 111 fortunate to be part or the academ ~e
eommunity, both then and now, there is little In the w11y or
c:ampariaon to be found .
In the Woodstock yeus we were rightly uking;1'h)'
can't everyone jlllt be warm and loving?" Unfortunate
~~~~~~:;:ll~:.o:::.:~~~"e~~r70~,~~~d$
ol &enuine concern for our future . Today 11'1 lucky 1f you
can get part "Boy did laet loaded last nifbt !"
Obviously 11 '1 a problem of motivation. Back then v.oe
W1!re organ!U!d •&ainll a com mon enemy·lllt W:.r
Campus actlvllm was a~a
k . ,After 1970, activism
ltarted lakin& a downhi ll • .
A lesson in motivation c
ear
the Ctunese
They put into practite the "Dnil
" , The people al?
kept united bythefearofac<~mmondeviJ .
Vietnam was our devil back then .
,
Ironi ca lly , we now have a devil more seriOU!I th.1n the
war , but noc too many people seem to care.
Maybe what we need il a W'liverul draft into economic
a nd rt'SOUI'"Ce poverty~
T~y '1 deY II II more Immediate, more t"OOSpicuous and
more important to orpnize a&ainll.
Thtec~nent ec:onomic and entrV crises ahould be uruhng
usallaltainat theheavyweiltht powera thatso slovingl)' take
more of everythln&than they need .
Maybe lome kind of unity and action can rHult from tilt
«on_omkandr~meuwe'relntodly .
Wehopt iO
lt ls thebestofUmn. ltllthewor&toltimH.
photos courtesy of Tom Kujawski
...... kt'
J ~lll.li'JJ
Central Wisconsin 's
Woodstock has a birthday
•
ltyAlSta~k
It was to be anot~ festival of peace
and music.
Peepl~'s 1-· alr got underway that
Friday afternoon about four o'clock.
The chain or cars stretched to four
milesattimesasaerO\l·deslimatedat
45,000gatheffdforathreedayswnm~
celebration .The site straddled the
Portage-Waupaca county line: lronicaJiy
most ol the 2110-acre site was in the
tO'A'I'ISh.ip of New Hope.
New Hope abounded Friday and
Saturday. The area was filled with good
music (despite the absence of most of
the bi& names) , good people and the
~s ta tic
tingling that accompanitt
history in themakina: .
Ulhenatural tingling sensation wasn"t
enough, festival goers could Induce
various synthetic substances into their
systems in aean:h ol a" new pl:ateau.
Many tried.
'
•
M~cal
tents on the site Wtl"e kept
busy treating assorted drug reactions.
Betlll'fffl 10 and 00 «'ltbnton spent one
ormoreofthenutdayscelebratingina
hospital room .
-"Watchourforthepurplemicrodot.
man. We're getting reports ol ~
trlps." - 'Tbe PA system wasn't used
exdusi\'dy for music .
Police officials had vowed to control
drug usage but just gave up after things
got rolling. Signs advertising assorted
goodies 'll~re openly \isible.
New Hope for peace and music started
d'llindling slowly.
Blkersv•erethere in force and a few,
rtpOrtedly members of the 'OuUaws'
clan . star ted getting overly rowdy .
by~~~~·~h:;:!~:•aFM:~ t;!~~:'
detective. Brunner. it'1 ~aid, Will to be
paid from parking concession proceeds.
lie rep«te<Uy had a larse part or hi!
security for-ce out collecting doUar bills
for parking.
An filinoi! bike club, '"'lle DriRen",
had worked with Brunner at a previous
festival They appointed themsdves
secwity gua rds according to report! .
Their definition or security appare:ntly
left something to be desired ...
It was a hot Saturdy.
The music lapsed into Sunday morning
"'"he:ndriWestarted.
The first sign it was going to be a bad
day OCCUlTed at four o'clock lhat mor·
ning. A St. Paul woman went Into labor
prematw-dy.The child was not to be a
productoftheWoodstoekNation. It died
on arTival at St. Michael 's hospital.
Not l q afterward the trouble started.
One attOunt of the incident that
destroyed the cha nce ol lola be<:omlns: a
Woodstockeomesfromamemberofthe
"Drifters' bike club.
'"Moose", a 'Drifter', told a reporter
from the Steve-ns Poin t Journal that a
tripped-out blackman had pulled a gun
on a n 'Outl aw' , Gang members
re-taliated by beating the man badly.
"Moose" told the reporter that soon
afterward someone on stage- used the
mlcrophoneloW'IefesUvalgoers toget
the bikers.
" Mostoftheothercyeleelubshadleft
when the hippies come down on on us
from over the hill ," he explained.
What resulted was front page material
Three people were bospl taliled with ' gunshot WOWids . One man was b"eated
for head injwies caused by a chain .
'1\venty-tliX people were arrested and a
number ol bikes were burned or
otherwise destroyed.
The People's Fslr ended p~aturely .
It was i qulel exodus spiced with In·
lft'mlttent raindrops. By mid-afternoon
halforthe45,000celebra torshad lertthe
site. Only three or four lhouuod
remained that night.
f'i veyearslalft'the lolaRock Festlval
still raises eyebrows. The man who owns
thelandnow,a babydoctorfrom the Fox
Valley, spends an occasional ~ktnd
there with his family. "Please don't
print the location of this place. When I
bought this land I had to awea r up and
dov.-n that I wouldn't be hosting any kind
ol a gathering.••
Students receive
[
NSF grant
A team of natural rnourcet
students at UWSP hu
=v~·r:~~orS::~
Foundation to delennlne the
distribution and abundance of
wildbi.rdsandanimallln the
centralpartofthestate.
1be appropriation is the
largest or three made to
Wisconsin Institutions and
1
amona 79 appropriated
throughout the country for
sllxtles on a broad rarce of
environmental problemJ .
Ra ymond Anderson , a
wlldlire profts~« at UWSP
who will be faculty adviser,
said the grant provides
outstandinll st udents with
opportunitlu to get ex·
perlence in research project•
and to express in creative
ways th ei r concern f or
soclely and the environment .
In addition, the study will
be useful to concerned
citizens andaroupsuv.'ellas
governmental agencies.
William 1Jdinstl. will be the
UWSP project director and
'\ill be assisted by Robert
Bl-own who will be l n· clulrge
of the ll.rVey of mammals.
Michael Wisdom will probe
bird populations and Nancy
ftl,tner wiD lnvestlaate wood
turtles about whkh litUe II
curnnlly known In lhls part
ofthellate .
Each or the studenll will
~~~at:ly~ .f:'~o:rve f,;
1
Community garden proiect produces
loy RCMI'fll•••
It was a lana time comin',
but it loob u thou&h tbe
Steven• Point Community
Garden is ttartlq to bear
fruit .
The project II a brainddld
cl the Pwtaae C:CUty Ezlti1Y
Conse r vation Commit tee:
~prbed of UV.'SP pro(1,
rtprestfltltives cl Steven.
~:~!1~~'!:~: ~
f"lannlol , the LeiJUe of
Women Voten, the UWSP
Environmental Coundl and
........
Euly this year they
decided to take I lbot II 1n
idea that hat become In·
creltiOJiy pop ull r
throuahout the nation ;
matina land available in
specified loll to aputmea t
dwellers an d others who
desire a &arden but do Dot
have aceeu to alliable space.
The plan wU imp&emented
here, and to date hat been
weU received.
•
.........
...
Thiop did aot alway•
~
ipiti&lllck cl
or able to prcrv
ml tt!Mftt lo
wort
wf1llnC
brou&ht the pro~t to an
early e:IOH:. However, a1
these thlnes tend toao. with
tlma e:...-.mtlllonal lndiCatiOIIIclintenst.'Tbe:plan
was Jive:n the 10 ahead, and
nefOCiationlwereeooduc:ted
with an are.a farmer for
rentalclla.lldtoUthclMcDI.ll
......
The le.ued property wu
dlvldedlllto21lx100foot plotl,
for •hk:h lnterated partie.
paid $3). n.ilfeetookcarecl
the plot rental and a p ·
p!kat10111 cl Ume and manure
to supplement the ln:s than
fertile 1011 (In some cues
:-~ C:,t~~~~t7l:n~'
AldoLeopolddidn'tca U It the
lt~~m• C••ty Ahaaa-e, did
he? I
Due to the proclivity of
r1lnwater to percol1te
Uroucb the IIndy loam, In
lrrlpdoa arstem had to be
Itt ap, with pipesle.ued from
Roberti lrr l&ltlo n . The
:heeHI~~ar:'~
a ccmab:Dolt
. ... ....... . ....... ttn
'.,..,11
c::.~ 00 I nllatiOilll
C«nmeata by parUd,_UDI
prdnen seem almo.t wholly
lmpoulble? Maybe. But
favorable , with problem• wlththelnexorableriselntbe
~t!.~ ..wrr{!t.:r=~ =::~~f~~!~~:!~
the area as the tarae.t Kif· m1y not be too far behind.
toer'Vke salad bar in Portaae
County. lt'stooearly toteUI!
=~~~l::e ....~r~
':!e:ohr!::'a:
problem , but lndivldulla
talked to duriftl a photo vltit
to the plotl regarded UU.
pa.albllity 11 unlikdy to ....
existent. Poaltlve vlbr1tlocw
f:~e; :fJt:~1!'i:S:
mlnlmaaa
of
1000 par -
I
r-------=.....,-------.
.....
Of'. Roland Thurmaler, a
member of the E ne rJ)'
Conserv1tlon Commi ttee,
inilie:ated that lbou&h the
response by ~ indlvldull
families wu enauagl.na, he
looked forwud to perhlpt
101).150 plott nut year, and
poulbly more u lnterest In
self... utnc:leney
increased.
However, 3S or ev.en 150 ploll
JnadtythesluofPoint It
nothina extraordinary, and
he em phllited that lhe
pnlject coWd not be e:oa-
8
the project durin& a three·
month period.
They have hired as their
asslstanUI 1ix other UWSP
natuul re101.1re:es studenll :
John Swa n son, Mic ha e l
Doxtater, Adrian Wydeven,
Robert Ra mh u ter. Paula
Wydeven ,andRie:kAnderson.
Besides taking a count of
th e various tpee:lu an d
e:hartlna their habitatl , the
studenta will seek to develop
a aystematlc method for a
statewi d e e:e n tut a nd
del.ermiM the need for future
19dies of r a r e and en·
danc;ered ~pedes .
m~~i:.~:.::e'~=:e~::!~=
:::;J:
onthearo«rybUJ.
lna'euedconcem about blouominJiood bills hat helped
draw auentlon to plantl that have lonJ been overlooked for
their nutritlonll value, 1nd the Biology departme:nl 11
UWSP II responcUna.
,
The department will offer a new cowse in edible and
polaonou~ plants fTom July 7 to q . I for two un·
der&radl&ltee:redits. Thereareno prerequlltes. The e:otrse
Ia •vallable for a letter &radeor on a puH'all bull.
01aHUiont will be from 8:30a.m . t4noon on 1\Jeld~
=
·~wr:-~~d! n::'=.te Monday•.some o1
The lntttue:tor , Or. Robert Fredunann, aald the c:oune
wiU emphulte 1oe:a1 wUd plantl wtlkh can be eaten. Thole
species which Ire polaonout will be con~idered and there
wiJ I &lao be 1 1«Uon on meclklnaland edible planta ~Ref in
othere:ulturel.
.
1----------------J
Ud,..Ul-r~
I
Oh, those golden arches
ltyR•n.._.
McDonalds to locate in town?
station) and property ~~o·est ol
Division, located between
Academy Annue and Maria
Slevt'l'tl Point, like moat
unlverally towns, has its
share of eatin& places.
Due to the transient nature
ol out culture, moct ol these
tum out to be ol the fast-food,
drive-in, carry-out varWty. A
cursory bib trip ~
town would take one put
Dairy Queens, A&W's, and
c:oontleu nwn~ ol other
Drive.
How S\ft are U!ty this time
in locating in the home of the
Poinlen~ Acc:ordint to Oty
Building Inspector Ridt
Morton, quite ce rt ain:
showi ng recentl y obtained
copies ol bi~Jeprints and site
~:~~:=~ as no lUI"·
prise
t h at
the
r~~ni~iarbo~~Do~:r~~: lo~:.
locateinPointinye.ars~H~st,
1\lc -
~'::~~~~~~·:.;="' h!!
~ant:;,irre~~;~~ =~
~~~~~~~:sh!d':
:::~~-:.~~:!:d·':~
:':t'::· ~~oni.J::·~~~ri=
~~U: n'!:Y;~ r:a:;;~.~~
001 lhoM: plans had to be
ton&.
" Wait a minute" , you
ml&ht say. " Ha\'fll 'l 1 ~
here before"! You know, deja
vu"!"
~e;{,!i!:~~-·s
K.mart.
recent m~na .
The t75x3l0 foot plot they
hope to build on Is located
east or Division, immediately
north of the K-mar1 part.J"i
lot. Dir«t access to Highway
Stla not allowed at tMt point,
10 tnlrance to the m person
~·':f;~·~~:'!.1.:'!.~~
.handle
..~:: hlsthe::n;.~y
c::~
actual con0
t~j.~ r.~ by the
~~~~:, 0~on~ 1t1 ~u~~~!~
:idit~:n ~de S::~!l~'!
~- ~~i~~~~~~~~~!~
:~T~h.ooo,'',..Cph~~.··,'•,'.or;,e,:;...,,,'
h"',,,,:
..
b
whose buslne11 Is land
development an d construc:Uon, a re no atranatn to
r eal estate deallna• In
and Divi&ioo elite ola terVice
Divition, and Prentice Arn\1
•
A telephone conven.~Uon
wilh .Joseph Cbudnow yielded
no firm date for construction
to commtnce, or for that
malter the finaliutlon of
sale. 1bat , he said, would be
determined at some time In
the futl.ft .
niqalonathenorthedgeof
abandoned whin sha llow
bf'd.rock und~ the existin&
foundation prevented the
in5talla tion of the dftired
::U:'U:!::O:~!:~
has m ade
more than a few attempts to
Apartments. Th~ preYioully
owned the site of the present
The City Plan Commission is
equally «rtaln, having appnn·ed the site plan at 1
~~~~Ys =tn7'~1~~~
them in the Division Street
area, saylna " It II our lntenlion to eventuaUy develop
tha t entire area."
The area In question bor·
~::==·on~!~ ~!d
~e:=/~ned~
of cam put.
r Future of lake petition in doubt
ctaet
A studtnt petition askinc
'clan one' status for a
proposed m an-made lake
North ol ca.mpus; Nils not~
aent to the DNR as or-&i.aaUy
~,.
~
.....
Kkk
The petition was signed by
about 1000 UWSP studenll at
registration last April . It
called for a full en vironmen t al
Impact
statement and a publtc
hearing on the project. Both
a re required ol a 'class one'
proj«t und~ 1late s tatutes.
The lak e, origina ll y
refen-ed to u Drdus Lake,
would be a 30-40 aere wat~
control and recreation area.
It would be aealed by thl'
excavation of 10me 1:10,000
cubic yards of fil l for the
nearby Sent r y Insurance
Complex.
Questions about the quality
of water in the lake 1nd Its
poli&ible d fectt on the water
table have been raised by
envitof\mflltaliltt
Updike !at cba rae
The petition has not been
sent be-cause the necessary
information may be pthered
without a class one mandate.
to Lyle Updik~
accordin&
Badzin1ki. The lake wou.Jd be
}~!f!:;! d!:~~tut!~ ~~
~l:~~m'!t~~~~~~
amount ot" money, Bacb:inltl
said.
Updike sai d that the
cla.s.sificationofthe projec:til
irrelevant . The Important
;vrl!~ t~t rnf~at~
utd.
year and is t"Ontinuing his
errortsinlhelakeprojectua
representative of tNit body .
The DNR and the UWSP
University F'oundation are
Updike uid .
''AI long as they are
makingahanempttogather
Information tnd make an
asseument, we won't call for
a clan one ," he said.
Uisad~· a nUogn
Some disadvantages would
resWt if clas.s one action was
called ror , acco rd ing to
Updike . The im pact
statement and the hearin&
would 5-tt. back the con·
SIN:tiondateollhelakef;uenough to kill the project ,
Updike said.
In addition, a class one
would COli the F"oundation
1.4.000. acc:ordin~~t to student
Goverrunent president Bob
~~at1ontha~ t~J::S:, ~~
Oee:lsi•A decision will be made In a
few weeks whether or not the
inlonnation is 1uUlcient. If
addltionalinforn\ationseems
necessary, the petition will be
sent to the DNR, Updike said.
F'inal declaion about the
rutureollhepetltlon rests
with Bad~nski, since the
petition w11 eftdoned by
Studeot Government.
Updike said the quality ol
thewaterilbdnastudied."lt
won't be a trout pond or a
quagmlre--the quality will be
somewhere lnbetween," be
said .
The lake would be used
pa r tia lly for Oood control ol
nearby Moses C r eek .
Howev~. Ute quaUty of the
creekwater\sverypoor,aod
every time tbe creek would
overnow Into lhe lake there
would be a 1\ gniflca n t
lowering of the lake water
quality , he said.
Hshkill
The lake would be ac«ptable for fi•h life, bW
thc!recouldbearJihldll every
time the Clftk ovm'lowt.
That occun: a n average of
once every seven to nine
years, Updike saki.
For al l slate projects, one
agency la declared thenead '
agency, Updike said, The
lead agency prepara the
clau one statement.
The DNR is re luctant to be
declared the lead agency In
this JX"Oject, Updikeuld.
lh~~ h~ovec=y ~~gr~ f~
put two months," he said.
Updike uid the peti tion
should have sufficient weight
to get the DNR to classify the
lake construc tion a class one
project .
Torrey's Restaurant
NOW OPEN 1 A.M. TO 4 A.M.
for complete breakfast and
regular menu
Friday thru 'Sunday
QUICK EX PERT SERVICE
YOU R LOCAL
PEUGEOT
DEALER IS:
THE
HOSTEL
SHOPPE
A COMPLETE SEA FOOD MEAL FRIDAYS
-
WEEK DAY SPECIAL s1.75
BETWEEN 8:00 AND 9:00
If You Had One of the Best Meals
In Your Life- The· You ' ve Eaten At
TORREY'S
NORTH ON SECON D ST. JUST OYER HIWAY 51 .
A Meal Like. Grandma Used To Make!
.....
.,.
~
................ .
Music
camp
About 900 junior and senior
high school s tudent m lllidana
from the upper
Mid~·es t Ate
participa ting thla month in
the Pvint Music Camp, an
a nnual t\·ent thlt has been
ll
heldon c ampusforthepast2D
years.
C llrto n William s, a
dislin&u ished Amer ican
composer of band and wind
Productions scheduled
Th~
UWSP s ummer
~fi!~~ ~=~Old'=~~
~J!i:!:~eon"~~~U:~!tio':.:
leading choral directors and
music educators, a re &er"vll'll
as guest clinicians worldna
closel y with the yo~na
musk:\ans. Both gunt arbJ IJ
are on the music facul ty of
Theatre Ar U C h ai rm a n the Universi ty of Miami In
Se ldon Faulkner and Corai Gabla...Theywill beat
will direct the UWSP
production.
Openinl the followin g
ni& ht , Jul y u is "Ott
Coward!", loc:allydirected by
m~a~ic:als from mid Jul y
throuJh early Auaust .
A 41 -member company,
including ioc:alstudentl and
se:ve:ral others from cam·
puse:s around the: c:auntry, fe~~~.c~~: ~·will U~~:m,:.::u~;;,~un;a~lty
will produce: "The Boy mark the fin I perfonna~e o1 includes 15 membel"' of the
f'l"ie:nd", "Oh Cowa rd !" and • 'Godspe:ll" for the season. UY!'SP music deoa rtmtnt and
Robert Baruch, UWSP
fift aunt faculty from In·
"Gods~\1 " .
Sta dlna July tSth, the lheatrt arts proftsiOr. will stitutionsaroundthecountry .
At the camp s tudents at·
JrOUP .,..;u pe:rlorm a different direct the show.
Stason coupon books a n! tend c:laues In such subjec::tl
s how e:ac:h nlsht (except
Sundays and Mondays whe:ft avaib1ble again lhis summer as conduttin&, compolin&.
theory , music: literature and
the lht'atre: is dark I lltltil Aua. for $S per penon.
The: procedu re for the: history , jau lmpnMuUon,
The s wnmer season wiU se:uon coupon sys te.m is to and rftd makin&. 'lbe:y may
purchase: the: book , th'rl a l so take p rivate: l n ope:tl with ' "'lbe Boy Friend",
a spo(f on tbe roarina ~t20's
Vtilen the: Cha rleston, Rippers, spe:c:keaaltt and F . for a rtstn-"ed seat ticke:t on or more: of the performil"'l
ScottFitzaerald.novellwue: the nlaht perfe:r re:d . Ex · groups.
all the rqe. Tony Schmitt of chaoaes ean be made by
the:The:alr'e Artl Department mall, in penon, or by phOne.
""'·
:fn~~ ~c:~~m~~ !r~~ !"!e:"m~':':
paper waste's used artistically
\
by s.a. AtUJiaJd
•
A UWSP Art student hu c:ome up with bet own schane
for reeyc:lina: old paper. She UMd It to make eustomlud art
paper.... ndlheproc:euis swprisi nclyeasy.
" I )aktd about havin& to mab my O'WD paptt" when I
COI.Ildll1 fiztd e:uctly what I wanted for aa art project ,"
f.f::~~e:to~~~ Stab., ''IM I neve:rchamed
Mer a UtUe rneareb oa the topic: , bowevft', she decided
it wouldn 't be very difficult after all. So lbe 1ft about
desl:plq and conslnEtina a mold fashioned after a simple
one UHd more than 100 JeaB a1o. !ale fll"lt saw It
lnustratedlnabook.
Her mold produces paper with dec:kled edges about 10
inc:hesbyUinc:betandc:ontistsof twowoode!lframes with
a price of screen stre:tcbed ac:r-ou tbetop of one of them. It
~t;! ~ it.~:~eor~~~~~~~ : k : :~
least a day.
•
"
aoe:s
Ms. Stab:'a proc:Mure tor making paper
someU:rtna
like this : " After 101kln1 some ripped up pieces a( old
JTOCft')' b.gs and newspapers In a bucket or water for a few
houra , I but the: mlsture with a paint mixer !or a whlle and
then pour It all into the mold. 'lbe water J'Uihea throu&h the
•
~e!:Jin~~:!t~km~~1.,u:e~~~t'.;~
etchin&~ on," she explained.
She varies the texture and c:olor of the paper she mates
print my
~~F.!atdi!::n'~O:nol: ":&:,~:tor;':~~
"Sometimes I like to add totherni:tture some lint and bits of
thread I find in the filter or a c:lothesdryer toalve thepapeisome color and a more lnterestina: tutlft," ihe said.
In addition to uslna her custom-made paptt" for ber e:t·
c:hinp , the artist hu maduome: handllomestatlonary from
it, Uslnc old e:ngravi"l plates of fish that she acqui red
rrom a ny and tackle company, Ma. Stab hu designed
.,me: unique wrililll paper that coUd be a 10C«Saful
c:ommercialve:ntu.re.
OfftoHo/1~
Tony Charlet, a recent
&raduate of UWSP who
specialiud tn nlmmakinJ u
a c:ommurucaUon major ..
one of five wl.nntnln Ill tiona!
c:ompeUUoa of a ac:holanhlp
exce:edln& Sl ,OOO to par·
tlc: i pate In a s ummer
totallndustl')'.
Warners Bn». lnc:. apm.
son the sc holu ahl p
program in c:onjunc:Uon Wltn
the Naliona l Ente:rtalrune:nt
Council , u
oraaniutlon
servln s colle Jtl and
unive:nities.
=:lf:i':t ~~~all~r01. w!'':t:~"~ ':!!::r~hl:
ei~-=~.:.::::~;~ ::::h~.=~.~~
In Clllrornia to learn more one of two pe:r-10n1 named
about filmm a klns by ob· " MOlt OUtatandli'JI Student
servlnl aldlled c:rartame:n 1n PrOIJ'amme:n" for tm at
the performance of their
specialties. Eac:h of the five
schota rahlp recipie:ntswillbe
rotated throueh various
phua of filmmakina to get a
b-oad Wlde:rstandlng " of the
UW-Ste:ven. Poi nt. The:
rec:os:nllion was JpOiliOf'td by
the Univenlty Ac:l\vltle.
Board, a· nearly 20-member
body of which he ••• a
member.
I
I
'' and it don 't rain in Indianapolis
in the summertime . ., '
~ypge Ut~
llcnewit!Andlsbouldha~
:t:=IO~=~e~;!t
buuing, when that rUJI-
~~·~~t;"s:::~i oi~Volklwagfll filled up with
smoke and- Weft )dt on I·
M with a car fWI of tuuaae
and a blown o6 K'al clftp in
the bowel~ ot the cu that
hates me.
I can't hate the en com·
plttely tbou&h, at leut It's
taket~
me down to ln·
di1napolia twice for
memorial O.y and the lrw:ty
500. An)'thlna lhat hl!lpt me
alona in that cause can't be
all bad, even Uocle S.m. lUI
tax rebate . . . well spent on
tkkets, gas and none other
t:~~~~~'":
me because I bdieved that
Amerka's number one tnw
CJUiht
to be
introd~
to
America's number one party,
~!c~~fcM~:h.Je:rh.fu,:!;
people, a lew ol whor'li ml&bt
be strai&bt and or lOber but
mO&lareeitherbentor drunk,
qulteoftenboth .
for a llltle enterlalrunent
to liven up the party, lndy
qaniun also nm a $00 mile
race lnvolvina 33 cars whieh
have often proven themselves
to be harder 1.o kMJ) running
lh;ln mine.
I'~ been to the party etc;ht
stnight yein now In 1pite ol
b&lky cars, stubborn bosses,
and a frequentl y un dtmowished wallet. Eftf}'
June for the past yean I 've
had doubts about whetha' the
whole thin& wu worth it, but
tarly next year 111 for1et
those doubts and start
making plans for buying
tickets and finding money to
pay for lhem.
Ule lnlkt pit
Lut year OUT tkketl cost
... only five bw::ksa head rex-
~!Raker
Yt'eman.agtdtoseealllht
attractions mtnliontd above,
but could get only an oc·
~.usional glimpse of the f"'Ct
c.ars. we could barely see
tllrouchalllhttan&ltd torsos
a nd limbs or the ~rowd
around ..-. 1be only lime any
ldndofappoomed~intht
aowd wu for a stl"eaker on
the. run me run. The pp,
which brouM,hl lo mind the
parting of the · Red Sea.
lasted only long enouah to
provide a btadstart for tht
weaker in his pme of
hidt-and-tHetk wilh lhe
aulhoriUn.
..
-~
This year
'll"t decided to see
some of lhe race . .&tildes.
there .art j1111 as many
odd chara~ten to .-iew in tM
Rands u thtr-e are in the
infietd. There we« quite 1
few pt.aC11Ckl In the standi
lhis year, includinglhoM: In
lheirpurple-paufon. t•hifts
with lime-sreen lhortl and
mat~hinJ btltll ol ora,.e
paltnt leather topped off with
ru-e tngine red baseball c.api.
~~rndu;::,=~ ~:~
talkirw about a family ol four.
£wr-y hWidrtd people or so
~~ o:l;::sw:fe:.. r.!
~urO:ot!et~!~ ~~e!
whdhtr ht's out ol the race
or not.Occauionally one of
these guys wUI forget where
ht is and start leadina a ~beer
for his fuor lte baseball
ltam, ur&in& some unsem
slugaer to "knock ooe out of
there" .
arti.Udatnln
So, I sat in lht Rands this
yn r baltlna. burnl na .
tied overbtad did,
Tht rain stopptd and 10 dld
the race but, unlike tht rain,
the race was over for this
Wben the race wu
)'Ul".
halted the atandinp became
official and a new conteat
began to 5H which or the
drilltncouldcuwineethe
t:::-=rr~~~~d~
the distance.
There wun1 mudlldt. We
made OUT way back through
thtmudandthtbrolttnilua
to the ur. SuprWnaJy, lhe
tratnc moved qukkly aod
pretty soon we all had dry
ckAAtl on and were slttllla
down In front ol a TV Itt
~ti:C"t.what we mlased st
Utt~ did we know that our
tra nsportation to Io disnapql.ill would be •ta.&ID& a
ttmper 1tantnun in .eu than
24 hOW'S. Maybt the thing felt
nqlect.ed. Either way I kmw
it hates me . I should have
eXpeCted It!
~ti:;r:1i1n~n~.;::~~~n~
see bow fast they could tra.-d
soo m.llts. Theo the rain
stopped them and IOiked ua.
We might have ataytd dry
~lust we brOUBht along
what we thou&ht wu alarfle
sheet of pluti~ but it tumtd
out to bt a medium si:Eed
pluti~ bag, harcDy mouah to
:!~~I u!d::;':!i;npa7c~1~~ . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
ground we could daim in the
inrldd.. We found Ol.llWives
in the "snaltepit ",
tht
&tntral publlc"s not- toartectionale term rex- the rU"St
UWSP spends least
Arthur F'rillcllel, dean of
the CotJeae of Prole.Jonal
Studies, says UWSP i1 a t the
bottom In athletic f1.11ding
amon1 UW 1c h o"ols .
In a May memo to' Chllncellor Drefus , Fritsche!
pointed out that UWSP 'is at
tbe bottom In total doll.vs and
percentofreeallocat.ed to
athleUa.·
This leads to le\leral obviousconc:lustonl, F'ritxhtl
said. Some of the conclusions
are that '"persons m.aldn1
decisions 1bout aegrqated
fees wishathletklat Stevena
tum portion of the infield.
This wide grassy llrip ol tud
lttmll ro ·attract all ol the
freaks, bike 1anp, street
fi&hten , fraternities, and
strtaktn. Not to menUorl
~r~ ~~eica~~· p~:.b~
:r.-
tflOUih drup to lteep this
=e
bmt for at
1
To iui« up lht action this
yea r some joker in full
111perman replia leaptd a
1ow mr~ld r~ acrou the
~t~t~••~~;
::~,!d:~i,~t::=:tJ: ':nd
inslitlltions place a higher
valueonathletiathan does
StevtGI Point."
Kruqer said that UWSP
h11 leu money for athletict
than othercampusesbeeaiiM
" we fund mcx-e a~U.-IUes than
tried to aet ln. ~btn the
Spudwa y Safety Crew
tscort.edlhe~away,
10me dru:lk Uf'led him to ny
away before he aot in big
trouble. It Jetmed the drvllr.
was pretty deep In lt'oubles of
IUown.
ketponeofuadryletalone all
!our. Without any other
rduae we went undet- the
stands where the raindrop~
couldn't hit ua, but the wattr
from the <:GOlen being emp-
In POINT-the case
othcrKhooll ."
Badzinski tiplalned tha t
the lower allocation at
Stevens Point is btuuu
lludtnll have more to say
""'·
Other ~ampusu have
higher athleti~ allocations
beca use the ~han~ellor
directs funds, Bad.dnlklsaid.
Thills thecueatSuperlcx-,
where tach student will pay
S17infees forathleticl,a•
compared to SUS at Stevens
Point , ht laid . Students 11
Super ior have tried to reduce
this amount, but the chancellor won' t allow them,
BadziMitl said.
Students at Stout, Ea u
Oalre and Whitewater abo
want to red~J:e the a thletic
allocation, Baclzinaki saki.
Students al UW·Mllwaulr.ee
wanttotlimlnatethtathlttlc
p ro1ram
completely .
Good news for Thuy
One of th e mou prestig iou s
fellowshipa to a science graduate of
UWSP luis been given to a ~ VIet-
namese woman who haa spent the put .
th~ and one-half yean on campus.
M1ss Thuy
Hoa
Nguyen, a native of
Sa!a:on , has received a fellowship and
research grant valued at more than
Sfi,OOOatlowa State Univusity In Ames
Miss Nguyen has had a string ol good
fortune in the past six ~~o·eets in the wake
of some tense days of concem over her
~Y and her fli mily'a safety as
Communists moved quickly to take over
South Vietnam.
f'int came news that oeartv all the
members of her large family fled to
sa fety btfor~ the Commuruat takeover.
Then thtt"e was a reunion in Stevtns
Point with some of those relatives who
came here as rtfugees, then an award
from the UWSP chemistry staff and
finally the annou~ent of ber 'targe
fellowship.
Her one big concern is ct!l\lering on a
brothtf' and sister who wen Wlllble to
leave South Vietnam with their parttlts
and other members of the famiJy in late
April. The whereabouts of the l:w"Olher
and sistt!' is unknown to olbtrs who got
~~e:Sndcr~ ~~Uf~he~ ~~,"f.eh:
some refugee u.mp.
Uer paren ts, Mr . and Mrs. l'u Dam
Nguyen and two of the nine children in
thefa mily c:a me to Stevens Point where.
(
~~nieth~e~e~~b~~e~r·~~en'is~
Besides Miss Nguyen , two of her
brothers ha ve attended UWSP, one as a
paper se:ien« maior and theothtras a
bus in ess 11 dm i ni s trat io n m a j9 r .
The family of Dr . lind Mn. c. Marvin
Lana are sponsoring the Nguyen parenb
and the two children and are providing
housing accomodations for them in the
Lang hom e. The senior Nguyen was an
interpreter In Saigon for the U.S. Agency
for lntemaUonal DtvelopmenL
. A. sister of the sen.ior Nguyen did
Similar work for AID and !Ll(as while
she ~~o·as a«OmJW!yiog VIetnamese
educators to the United Stales on two
differentocca.sionsln thelate 19M! that
she became acquainted with the Slevens
Point campus and recommended her
neices and nephews to attend it.
Besides the tlu'ee Nguyen cllildrtn
~~o'ho were in Stevens Point ~ore the
collapse of their bomdan(hnd the two
others who attompan.ied ·their parenb
htre,a brothtr is attendina:school.lnlhe
Philippines and a sister is married and
living In Fmace:
Critics wanted
~r
·The
is Interested in seeing your
oppro isol of o piece of music, play,
movie, concert, book , a rt exhibit
or whatever
346-2249
130 Gesell
(
no experience needed
You'll be glad
you've got a
Hiking Boot
this good ••.
AnnyROTC
~s·you2~to
makeup your mind.
Slrni~~.JtupfottheBaoicC....rwoi Ann1
RO'l'CioliU..-otht-•foiltre.....,,_:
Yoom•ltenorMjor<$11millmt'flt: t ...... lo
noopoeialobllr•tion. YOOic.,....,itorRu"k
•t. Or.youu" drvpit.Thatdrpowlo
..,.,..,
.....
Try th<r u ..
;~
eo..- d~rin11 ,.our
lf"8111NIIud~,...n..Sft•Mt
~ ·:~~ ~boot. l tonl,.uk .. • ff"W ._,.
.. !!lrlt!~::·A~~..J.:~~ll
"""" wll you •bout Ann1 ROTC. You
Mwt.o filldou tf..,.you.....; l.
P·rofessionatly 9esigned
and carefully constructed
for mountai neering. climb. ing and hiking with heavy
packs of over 25 pounds.
Sizes : S(AA) 10-15. N(B)
5-16. M(O) 6-16, W(EE) 6-15.
the sport shop
G
Yoo11t""'be"'111iblo f..,. t MAdv• nctd
Cou r• , Thi•P"1" 1"" 1100amonthfor
t ... !. ot 2JHrl ~-h.ooi. Y ouliKUII
_,..,;...... ·~ t he ....
ok!l-. T ... IKderohip•lldlft&Mift'l"'t
lllili•1<MJ.Cquj,..; l]pul 1"" "1wod ln
d_,.... ""' ,......
oit~·~~~";'.,:~~~;{=\...,..
•hat Arm1 ROTC u n do for you untJI you
,Pveit• f•lrtn.l.l t"o ot i<oaotworth
clwckinllroto. F•I• """'Ih7
ArmrkOTC. n.. -,.....look • tit,
l,..bttttrillooka.
books
live music
Revk:•·ed by Robert Bonk!
records
'noeRoillal Sto.les, MilwaU.ee C.U.nty
Sladl..a . Jue l. tl"'5
Reviewed by Cfa!J &u-Mm
More than 50,000people dared lo show
Blood•U.C'I'r-.c:b
By Bob Dyt.. IMyhiM Recwds)
up at Milwaukee County Stadiwn June I
1btre are tea tnckl of music and
poetry ill Dylu'llalelt album ........
u.e TrKU. It II a well intftp'at.ed album
- completeandunilled. Tbewords, tone •
ol voice and wlillna hannordca are aU
put &osetha- to aute a truely ran and
nctlleot combinatiocl of IOWMh and
lma&ts-
/"
nlillsnottbeDylanofald. Norlsit
.....
tbe Dylan ol Planet Wava, two )'W'S
m::nnow~.=.~-~!=
ecstalk joy to utt« despl.l.r. The Inner
voice speaD from a bnUed man who
h.la w1ndered aimlesaly , tuHered
geatly, experienced alm01t obsessively,
1nd yet bu turvl.ved. Whethe' hit U: ·
~~~!i~:c.~t~
. DyW! ,l peakl of ~
.idl allow. a penoa to diKovt1' his
own wea.kneua , hit insecurities, his
humanneu.
u. F.O. or God ! , by Georae f)-iedrle:h
ICarllon Press , 96 paan, JS.i:S I.
·
..,...........,,,_ulaa_t&o.,
1Mrie4t.tllebell,
to witneu a coneet't by what can
probably be labeled the areatnt
rock'n'roU show on Earth.
'lbt: Rollin& Stooes 1m summa- tcucouldpossiblybetlldrlulUStourevn-.
Rumors al~e~ ~atlna thlt the
arulesl rock'n'roll abow on Earth may
not exisl after na.t year.
Despite tr&lllltions iD the band, an
occaalonally malfunctlonln& aound
l)'tte:m and chilly C:ODditiona, the Stones
manaed to cut their infamCIUI apeU •
tile aatbered mu.IUb.ade. Some of the
crowd were 10 hllb about ~ at tlU
' Ultimate' In rock eYeDts thai early
~of tile Monkeya e:oukl have
beeft piped over the PA wl tboul noti~ .
1be web of exdtem.eat wu 10 aue:e:euluUy spwa that probably DO one out
the oYer 50,000 walked away
diauppointed recanBeN of JDusieai
tastes. l1le web wu luoc:e:.fuiJy l)'n•
e:hed by the wlu.rd
roe:k 'n'rdl . Mkk
Jagges- una:. dane:ed, . . .ulted the rat
ofthebandandjeeredat lhee:rowdin h1l
uaual maale:aJ fuhioo. Roo Wood, on
~ve from tbe ' Fae:e~' replaced Mkk
Taylor . U the baDd suffered from UU
subatltution It wu bardly DOdced. Billy
Preaton did an excellent job of aiazina
=~ ,:.~ O...WI with pndlion
of
of
u
"":!::~~~of~=~~
lla~.
1be perfnrma.nce was
~
,-_.bltMMbH,
llld llla.- .. t . . u.et... lt."
pered with e:laaalc:s like Brown Sua:ar,
1be 10q1 ate at once romutk,
~~~~~ with !':~:;.!~
on hlmself.
poulbly
tskf:ft the lmlclleduled t.tll to cool off
from • lleamina performance or
rock 'n'roll fortitude but m«e Ukely be
wu altemptin& a ludi.nc from the ef.
TUmblin~ Oic:e, Rip
wud Horse~ . Street
Thia Joint ,
npuna
Cet 00 My Qoud.
~'~~'t!;J;.1 ~i~ r~:r~it:~·
profound unae of lo ll a nd
~-· .en~eollhe lftevitabk
- Inevitable s uUerlnJ , Inevitable
fuewdl, in"n-ltable
"'"'"
ctwwe
" WMl'sJMdlsNd
wu.t.. Modtaa•
Y•11RIMI-wltono
v.. n .. Ck..,
Y•'re•U.Ml'- ·"
for
tbe
n.e
Arcie.
Man , and
who&e ex-
~~have
~:e&~W:!:.~u:~~
dlrlna tile performance.
111e Stann followed a..-ua and the
Ea&Jes. Ruf111, Ute the Ea&let rd~ to
ley and upllaCe the muten. No complained.
Ea~etrda~vdlt..~!~of;d
eualomen, lne:Judinl me. n. Eac'lt:ml.ed to IKk entbLai.utml . Maybe
they feared antaaOftizlni.S.Un-'a tudl
and ultimately aettma blown off the
JtJ&e. 1be Eaclel performed ma.t of
thelrdullc::lwltbllwobviouldlaad·
:-udi~~:~ ~t~S::
in lhe penna of former Jamea GMi
member. Joe Wala.b.
Despite arreata, crowded ~tka
and cold tempentw. the Eqlea and
Sll:ftf:le:ombinedtoprovldeMenjoyable
couple ol hours. "You c:.~'t alwaye: let
wb1t you want. but if you try ICmetime
you)lltmlltltrlndyouptwbatyou
need.''
................ _...•:a..
,_.._
Cnlll ......... . ...... .. .,....
~
u!e15da';. =~~~~:~ls15!':i ~:~
look at ywr neighbor'hood paperback
book raclt and you will be 1\U'e 10 find
any number of ti tles on UFOI, the
Ber mu da Tr la nale, veaetab le In·
telliaene:e, or aods from outer lpll~ . The
name Van Danlken mlaht lmmedlatdy
come to miDd; it was he who popularl:ted
the Idea of utraten-estrlal c«~tact In
wr put, and he who c«~tlnues lo hold
lhe major attentions of lhe Great
American Lut11tle: Frlnae. But by na
:.C~t!t~!=~oh':
throne; Frledrle:h'a book, U.F .0. w Ged
~~e::'th'!J:eu;.n:eu~~t1~
=
arades, the ume clrcumventlo.-. ol
locic, 1nd the aame aa.h-wow bolopa .
::n~!biy ~~ 'iike m::o::k~
~ke~ Pf'~ft:~:' u~~ =n~n:r.
u
fkiently advanced tee:hldoCY Ia in·
=lh•!l~f"r'ortl:"t': ·' : ":2
po~tulalel that UFOa were resporwible
for the mlrades in the O&d and New
Teatament .
Wh11 the b iblical
e:hronklen pe:rdeved aa divine In·
ten'et~tlon and attributed to God , he
daims , were ae:tuaUy the 1chievemeDIJ
of utraterreatrials and a tuperlor
tee:hnnlop-we were juat too ignorant
and feu-rlcSdtn 11 the time to realb.e
this. The proof of all thll, of e:oune,la
\neontrovt:r'tlble and rf&ht in the Bible
ltaell. To UH ooe ol tbe author's more
biurTe examples : ' 'Cert&l.n ~aaqea
quote woman u bavlna In tercourse with
aoatl and other animal.l ... So would
you e:onalder these people ca!)lble ol
recoJn llln a a n aircraft? "
Not un.Jea lt looted like aaoat, would
bemyl\lf:ll. .
_
But lhilla only the bq!Mina. As the
boookproe:eeda, Friedrichllva-ye:areful
to point out to ua, !hat Iince the writen
of lhe Bible Weft a JUperatitiOUI and
bacltwarda lot , we mutt reeumlne
Scripture In a new U&h t and never allow
ounelvea to think It haa 1ny literal
Vl lue. And yel with ttrtaln chol;~
quotes Uheonealhlte:anbe coerced to
JUpport hlltbeor)',Jbedoeaexae:Uytbla.
:yeti::=.·!'!t~'!"tuo::' :::=
11.1ppoa\tlonon the natureollhele wordl,
~Hmln&ly unaw1re that in lhrir origina l
Grftk or Hebrew they ml&ht have
meant " to methinJ elae entirely .
.;::=f=~~~~
9
~ ~y !1n~i~~::ron':~~
ldeu. Toobadhealaotetnu to think thll
Jlvea him the ri&hl to niDie.,..el
ldene:e, beca-..e lhe boot il w:ry
mll&hteninaln th1l developmeDI. I wu
=!~~:=tb.~:~'!:
badtiDbibllcaltlmea fdue , he theorizea,
to laa e:camie: ray1 aetuna
throu&h to
upua l, andalaotbatr~~dlalloa ale:kDeaa
Is cwab~ by simple ablutloa . But then
- aJao have a word for UU too.lt'a
e:alled bwlk. And from Ita vrry beCianlnl
toitllutbelaled amm, U.F .O. .- c.IT
eaa only ba e:alelorhed u bunk
the
hllhest
order .
of
... .
.......t uw.. .. ................. ...
... .__,... .,...,.....
. . -...J .. . ~.mw
In Turn
r~J
by Hon Thums
It Is the tas k o( tl\e media to Inform , amuse. and educa te
ex
Chautauqua
Hy n•rt Borski
llaruspicy is a sanguine ar t and dates back to the
soothsayersofaocient Rome . Yiha t it involves is sim~e : a n
anima l is sacrificed, aod from il.s ent rails omens are drawn,
asif death,"thatetemalproces.smostobses.sively wf.ong
llilh the world,"toquotepoetJamesDickey,had someway
of re\·ealif18 the future . Perhaps It even does; I may know
better than to look for auspices In the viscera of dumb
beasts. but vohen it comes to death in another form , the rape
ofourvcr ycou ntl')'side. theomen'sare th ereforeveryone
to see. Taken in context witll the l'ftetll defeat ol an Impor tant strip -mining bill , they all but signal the surTender of
this nation's ~ologiu l Ideals and the elevation to ~
minence of our fas test; rising deity , the Great God Enffgy.
Even now, as You read this, strip-mining Is destroying
Wltold acres of land in a multiple process . First, the landsca pe is denuded ; the trees and vegetation are stripped
away, v.'ith the topsoil so\lowing sui t. lben the ore body is
e:cposed. A trenc h-like cut is made and giant scoop1 are
used to gouge the coal loose. A level is cleared ; then a new
cu t is sl.arted. Overburden from each 1uccessive cut
cmeaning the ~ateria l extraneous to the coal-yielding
pockets)is deposlted onthemost recentlyexcava ted le~~el-,
and like the bounding highwa ll on the opposi te side of the pi t
encourages erosion. As a result, acid mine drainage often
pollutes area water resources, to the detriment of any
111i ldlife invoh·ed. But nonetheless the mining continues,
layered. likt a con tour map in three dimensions, until
finally the CH"e body's capacity has l:leen depleted . Then the
site is abandoned, lookinjl very much as if It were hit by
some sort of luna r blight.
Tht: unfor tunate fact or a ll th is, Of course, is thltlt doesn' t
Ra\·e to be so. R«lamatioo could be enforced , and
~aft"guardserected . We.couldrequirebylegls lationthatthe
coal industry rell.lt'n any stripped lands to ita original
contours or an ~ :ogically.aund altemat ive. We could
prevent the pol.sonlng of our water resou.rcu and the
practiceoftol.al despoliation. f'undamenta lly. this is what
the stri p-mini ng bill sponsored by ~ - MOrTis Udall or
Aritona would ha vedone. ltwould have levied a lax on each
too or coal mined to pey for reClamation and ~e
limited the e11panslon ol stri p-miniq oufwest, as well as
baMed the leaving ol highwalls in areas li ke the al readyravaged Appalachlas .
But perhaps I should streu the use of the conditional in
the above. As we all should know by now the bill didn't make
it. President Ford vetoed it for the second lime, cltiq It was
inflationary and would have cut back on coal ~Woduction .
Congress' subsequent attempt to override him fell sbol-t by
three crucial votes; and the whole issue became clouded
over by the fact that a Congress with a Democratic
ma)orlty had once again failed to override the Prt:sldent's
veto.
So draw fnxn this the portents If you will. What it looks
like Is that whe:reeoergy and the environment are concerned,thelatteris goingto suffer even more in the future
than in the: past . Extrapolate from here to such volatile
issuesJJoff-shoreoil driUJng, theconstruetion of nuclea r
powerplants. and the relaxation ol pollution s tandards, and
you can see the aac rifices we will ha\·e to make . Our altars
may be bloodless, yes. But only because the beast is
apocalyptic; it is born dyi ng. And even though we no longer
practice haruspicy, itdoesn't taea soothsaye r to see our
own e~~entual demise in the visceral scars of the Good
Mother Earth.
its audience. Included In this r esponsibility ll the airing of
Information that falls under the broad heading of Public
Service announcements.
-one th ing these ads have in common is that each , If their
advice Is followed. will e~ up benefiting us aU .
so they
claim . This includes everything from brushing our teeth to
pte\•enting forestfires.Mostoflhem areinnocUOUII enough,
some are even Informa tive , but others. despite their
ostensibly good int entions. a re downright Infur ia tin g.
SuC'h is the ca.se of one PS spot cur rently gellifll con·
siderable pit~)' on C'am pus radio , WWSP. This one concer ns
the perils of hilch-hlking. In it wea re told of some law enfo~ement ngentswho routinel y s topped and investiga ted
every thumber on a certain highway 0\'er a several month
period. Wea re told that they mtuwged to apprehend five
known cr imina ls, along with s~h dangerous types as
you thful run aways and n larae nwnber of AWOL ser·
vicemen.
Mentioned almost as an aside was the fact that also apprehended were hundreds of innocent h.itcbers . Hundreds !
flow ca n they lwnp runaways and AWOL'S with their
"kno~TI criminals"! What autom atically brands them as
suspec t :as aserioust h rto$
thesafetyo f others?
Anyone (un!)fortunat
ugh to see some of the US
Army antl -<:omm ie !X"OPii
films narr ated by J ack
Webb in the 50'l could recogmu and appreciate the tone of
thi s anti -hitching spot.
·
Hitc hing is a time -honored means of transportaUon an d a
trip in itself. Hitchers, along wi th blcydlsts a re the only
people doing someth.ing about the incredible waste of In·
lerna! combustion powered private trans portation. By
utilitinl! vehicles whose pa th is al ready charted, they are
abletoconserve tbeirmoney,andournniteresources.
But to approac h the adva ntages of hitchhiking solely from
aneconom\cstandpolntwouldbemissingthepolnt. Fori! is
the experience alone or thwnb-tripping which should juslfly
its con tinulllion. 1be incredi ble feeling of freedom of near
total independence, yet paradoxically , the just i.s tota l
dependence on others of the road,ls an n:perience that can
neverberealitedbythose who ''playlt l afe''.
The experiences and tales that a reexch1Uf8ed In the brief
·'
driver·h l~herrelalionsh.ip a re thereal rewardofh.it.C'hlng ,
or of picking a thwnber up. To glean the attitudes of others
and t.ake In a representative cr oss-section of fellow
Americans should be required by the University, as the beat
and most practical Humanities course av ailable.
For the radio station of a university (purportedly a place
to learn and experience I to work against these ends Is insane. This type of attitude only encourages us to remain in
our own little cloister , to build the walls h.iJhet, to electrify
the fences th atseparateusfromt herestoftheworld . It
=rte: s~d
/:~~~:# ~:~rust
in others. while the op·
This PSspot warns us "You ...,'OUidn 't let a stranger Into
your house ; why let one into your car ?" The sa me might be
said of destructi ve nonsense spouted by cam pus r adio F'M
90'
wws p .
The Student Norm
(l
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