._·:-;:::. ~1 •.•:. · . :._, Worth looking into A ~ '!:':;)!:; ':,e ~~s:{"~ ,.riday. Odoki' U THE BRA VE, J pm, Studio 'lbeatre. Adm.ialon cbatp. UAB FUm : CABARET, 7:30 pm , f'ro&nm Banqwt Rm .-UC, AdmllliClO eharp. - ClausaloufllaiiChrtstmupn;~~ramfor ...... theunderpri~llfvtddliknnolSte.·en. l ' mwrlllnlthislel t~rrlnthehope lhat Lectwe : " Womea'l Role lD a ~~C:\::. •!.b~n~:~...~~-· r~~~.~ ~~~~~-e~~Y~!~~~- It-tUnc ol hopeleuneu. of dnpal r, beeauteitlft"mlsomtwhal futile tolll lk co chiJ eamput about the drlnklna problemlhatlloiwiouslydoaNI•'t. I Arta • t.eetare. Sir'* prMerJb NATIONAL THEATRE OF THE DEAF, I pm, ~ HaD-Pble c.a..t =-~~~c:harp~- I . U AB Coffu hou u: BARRY DR.AKE, t-11 pm , Colf.......UC. ..... .....,. arn..... { ~ a.quet am.• a-. us .c~ J.LI-UC'. UWSPPI:IiDtllnw . Oitlblll'ft~ l:JO pm, (T) ~ ebup. · audio TbeMre pr...a lilliE OF '110'! BRAVE, Ipm, Sbdo 'JbeMre. ~ cbari·- .... belleldlna«"''H..nl f«lllldtalh l~lly. beta~ no one ~lly phytially UAB Cotfu bou. . : BARRY DRADJ t-Il pm , Coff......_UC. ...... ,.. ~. __ f«rtd himtodrlnll.but l dobe lievetha;l ltiJ!he~nrsity'ltftpolllibilltytoatt 1111111-1 lheSI•sefl•. Mybnil for 1hi1 bel!ff lsm~rrdy tlll t theSiaaflsdraw their membenhip /rom the 1tudent bocly,alld•llllouahnoonellforeedto join. the coab ot IIQ Otpnillt)on ar~ eontrary Ia the objecti ves o1 the mivft"Si ty. There 8111 many ...,,.. 10 INm. buttotallnebrittiiN'Irefutesthem Com.IDJ;LilJlJ FoUr. Duc•a Jlld ...._ .... HarwR lloaD Nk Dloce r.tiYIII, lam-tpm, Prorp-.m lluqallltiD., Rooml us ud l.lJ..UC. • THE DAY THE EARTH CAUGHT ........., .... ......,.,._ ~8111 .-UC. • 11IE INVASION OF 11:1E BODY =-~~~~ • DUE ON llAPIZ S1'1U!ZT at 1 pm aod M.ETROPOLIS at t pm , Prcctam s.quet Rm.-uc. .,.......,._on.Mr. . Studee t Go.t. P u.blle Huri.al : DISCIPLINARY COD£ FOR STUDElft'S, a am~ pm, wa.oc..ra Rm.-uc. ~=~ a..,quet Rm .-UC. • ud 1:15 pm, ~am . . . . . . ., . Ocwllw Zl ~~~ms~ . aod EARTH VS. THE n.YING SAUCERS at _t pm , Pftltram ,....,, OtwMr. Rm .-uc. ~tMcpt • UAB . P'Utrl : JEREMIAH JOHN- SON, 7:l0 pm , P'rop'am Rm.-UC. a_,.. c.. • .-.,. Nt.n'*'-acar,.,..._, , C...... ltJC........ P.tMirr,.lt t Oc&Wer u . ltU ~':!u,::."r;-, 11 ~w.u -rnkn ., ' ~ islen ' produces T• Ult- 1'-'• t.er, C01npletdy«Werthe Colfeotbo14e - ·ithtaiiVf$1 and let everyone \Oriteonil, painton it. n-Hieldifftren~wau than ha rd , ualy brlc:k. StoreWanketaorml l ~aboo.-ellut llne grid-work of l"'rillng. Anytlll na ! ,.._._. lntrumurols T•tbf'..a lt-r. ThelntramuralO.:partmentbuput outanentkll"f: bf«hure lhiJ)"tar dtxribiflll the aportt:adivitia IIIey otfer. ll'lalhllme,~.lll.:lttlle actua l lll ppen lnp put on by the in· triiiiW"Ii people fi ll fir lhori ot the ob,koetivetallo tfdl n the halfdboolt . I ha ve played in one &•me each Ill intramura l foot ball a llllbaJeba.ll Cytl. IJ;alieb.J II I , IIIId lh- t ""Oel~ aJo~lrel'I"IOIIcfttoronvlnc:em-ethat theprogram ttl'*-• lh lsyea.r. l don"t ~t-ltwaain lhepa lttunclerthe tir«tiool ol the IIOW dtpoar1fdJim Cbrt t. buta l ~ l fe-tltbe or~~:anlullon could tlll nd lmpnwrmtnt. )ly lntramurlb are ttudent-run mai n &rtpellaboutthewaythelludents umpi re the 11me~. The " r d"s" In football and the home pla te "ump"' M the b;awba U aam e .,.·ere M tiu~~:reotable-and i-m pelm t 10 bool lll.:l t I derided the fall intnm u r~l --~-waa no iCJq~;tr .,.·orlh " maltlna ." Furthenn~~rt, there w~rr~ lllnft""herl lhe atudentdir«:tonfallfd 10 lhow up I t B~olt Part f~ lilt propolol'dbu~ball pm~. ... ThlsiJ-'tl)'alludent.ctivit)', bui the•tudtntolfida'- beha vemorelike ibtUJquotdultt. Yo"ha t iJthe bu&up thrir rnn' Wll)'il the Intram ural :::~"'.': • ik:::ll:· ·~=nit:: ot }crlt! ~~,.~~l~ht ~!'.;"!~·~~:. TeLhP.. al-er, Atlasteount J-..u 2t yea ,.. old. Adult agein WiltOI'III nia ll,inciudinconour aompua. Then, pray tell. why ean l notcllhl I 11_. that I haven'! ex prtufd my thoughttandviewtnurlyllwtllu l 1 ='=~~';:; PASr ad SHADOW PLAY at lpa, .._.,., occ.~~ern ~ =r::~i!t:!'!r:e ~pa~~ tkul~r,'thebrotherllood t ha l seemt to tahsuchpridein bt-lngU. be lltdthe Sluefi•. I have oflm hurd ol the insane lnl t'-ilon rilftll that the Slawl"11 undtfiO kl bfcome 1 mftnber of !heir ''elite"rlub-adublhalattomplishn little olhtr lhlll JOir:w out tvtr)' 'WtdlmdQnd atttinc loadtd.. 1 know 111.:11 Lumpy't piii"!IIU ean Cloke lqa l actionapl~ BuUy"•t.brou&hacivil IUit, l knrrwlllatDDonellldiviclualean ComnuuUt7 Folk Da.Devl' 211d llarftlllllaoa l"ooknr.ac.r.tt.al, I am-12 pm , b.uonthetquare. Shou ld,.·eu ralponJibleJII.Idtntsol chis Unlnnhy allow I he eonlirn~lion DI IIIII ba r Nrk organlullon7 ornrth K•oburkl 111•• ~• t.o!IUn MifhiP I La,.·lon , ll l Durr0111.111 ~.-er lhou&hl.lll.:ltl"·ouldfindmysdf writincillilaorlolaleller,l"tn&OCa littlec·h•dleoutoftbelelll'ni"Tiltmon lhiJ Mlbjecc in - r o l Uw tarlier iuun olthe Polal~rr. Myt«b l ldiviliesand h.:lbiu: I t t 101,. to etw~&e qW\e radieaily, b«tutol! Lumpy"• ciNch doeJ mean 5Dmd.hlnc to me. It ~ me jus! how ridin.lous *unkemn. really sm..NDt~~a ~- tbe a.d A-..1 A:= : ·~lut'dourfritndl-h\P•ndrtsprett'dhlm f«lhoi!fineprnonhe•·u . l mteLu:mpy in the mann« eM! many ol the Jl~ntl 111 1\nuirtn IIIII mdlllm, t.hrou:clltllt 1111nmural football aames. ln tneampua adMties and 11 tht Sfnca Studio'lbeatre ~HO MEOF ...... :~;:,f:r•J~~~!;: ~~ About 'Lum py' lmm .,.·rltln1ln rt~a rd In the dealh ot - olthe tt~nu of' chis eampllS. a frlrllll of mine. Due llolfmann. more commonly ~Qw...·n N Lumpy lie dird Sf turday mornlnjt. 0.:\obtt" lB. ,.·hilt lackincAia~. ldDntry 10. write lny biiJ, laney ,wordi. I jus t tried delliftl with my ernptlcm. 1 hope ho"tv~rr, tha i the •dministration l dl my muaase. but )1111 u lmportan lly, thatthesludotnllldit, illl t they realire ~~eapplitationoiiUChpreqw-eis "'111'1- "-"lt IA"M"IIf"t ~. aUowed!G rtmtlnadoleddiqur did F~d Stop Why matlna Edleb ! Al'nu.trate<~ J .-t Just che<:k ing C"hedlf«-tl lO.OO wtlhouttllvinciO More on 'Lumpy' walk t bib,trike, whatew r l to our tocal Tempo! 1tismyunderllan4nalhat aeampus is lllflw«k in itJdl, ptrl« min&atr· ..Xes forthelludenttfaores, f~ lltrvic:et,ll l.ld y areu, Uvi"' tondi tiortll, alllleven dri '* lna fac:illlifll l . Bu lno moneyexr hanae .... why' Are we millnlllttd , pt llty before provtn lmoem t? The rtqUNI fOf" a more effective LDIIIt'-lludent-chf'C k-cllh t)'ltem ill not ~rt•-onable. The ten dollar Iindt i5 unrmlon.lbloe l Par whkh rea.- wu il evtn Itt? !low kina 1111 It been Ill nlateace! Yor a t leu!. tlvt yea.,.. . -...n 'i llllt ..tkwhen you c:ould walk intotheUniona nd &d a mul /« 11011' b theiiO.oa Umit an:hl le? llowtou ldl ntaled!Omention l haw llt..Wiy wilnelaed fanolty ealllin& cherb formore than l lO.OO. l prt)pOioeaneleva Oonol the llmittoat• ltallrorrelateto todly'a prkt'JI , WI&tl, ::c·i!:~J.~~~~: :=:~·~: faeultylhereteormano pilct lor ttTOt! J••• c..~u.A Poorpickers Te lh Pei•Wr, Tbe rrilullal artlde writtal by the Sup«ppdten In~ Ul C011dl Ted S.tor'aartldewuapoor-.T'ht-n!are IIWiy,._wbyb.lsll.l~tiltNt. C'o&d'l Satar wrate • li~ artkk wriaus.lyq~tklalnclbevalidltyot livinl - . ink to 1M Superpkbn =:~~~~!.~~~ with e&mP'JI lpCIIU Ia ~Ptral. I feel the SUperpldten miNed the maoiCOIIdiS.tor'a arUtle.lna~d u.ywrotelpoorrftlutlaltblt il fullol dlildiltll'ftlll.rb aDdaon be)'Ofld wbrot " 'll bnxchtupabwtdtallnewith tboiMo ....ho penial iD disnlpllnc the Cot· feehouseauno.pbere. lmwupointCMa throtatmt lmeck.uint:thedilcuulondld l ata tetbatwewouklnk:lanyptnm fram the CtlfetilouM for beln& On the cover. boilt~. lnno'Waydo l -it uapart ofmy)obtonentey JndC'OI'IIfOIIIOIR ala Col'fft'l'iouloe. A.llstudmuareattheColfft'boi.IMUI enjoy themaelvs : the problem don lrile when the ft'joyment rac:hn a I"'IIIme level tblt dilttacu from the tnL."rtainmm t. IIO'ouldlllc all thoM who allend a Cotreoeboua event to p&eue be f'Oftlidente llltheptl'fonQerandthe otherfolkiiO'howanttoliltentothe m~lc:. If you ue attending a Cof. fft'houie and - - il beill& ol> nodous, tea him ao, and it znipt belp. CGUkl be~ lood Jownalbm. Ati:Ordlnt:totbePfllalft"I JIIIdoellnes tbe papn' "il wriUta aDd ecill.ed by ltucliHiu ot the Ulll\"tnity," n. rewap.per b a "IC uOmt auppotted ColfH~I~ for)'OW'enjoyment,ao pubtiation fat the UV.'SP CQmmiiDity." doyowselfa faYorand the na t time )'0\l'rea t &ColfedlousenenLI~m­ A~mlatbeaakedben : are aU lbe Supttpk:Un awdmll! u thty a~. )'OU " 'ill tnjoy. loboulda't tbty be writqlor the UllivfnilycommiiDil)' and DOl the P."n. TeMIDUt . . a and ~non.al llor:r. Shouldn'l thele C-'ftoelooato Cblr ... n .loumallatl be writiDc for 1M Ulllvenit)' c.uowity! TV off Co.dl S.tor. just hind thia Yelr, notked lmletNJII WI'OII& with the Tallw PahoiH'. U.W...stcv- Point s tudmt memben Pei.DI.ft"'1 format and hadtbeccunceto l peMup. la&JftwlthMr. Satottbatthe vi the lludtnt qanizatlon W\\'SP·TV majority ol Point studmlt would rather havesufferedthe louolthe hl&hfst l'eldabcalt .Ucampuatportalnt!Ndol I)NIIble quality Nueatlon .... tftU!t ol Nf'Lprtd~. We&tt"*'&hfoatbaU conOid Wlth a IC\Idtnt _...kft cowraae with Coidl. But to convince oraanlz.atl011: UniYersity Broadc:lltlng tbeSuperpictenmaybelheyahauklput tU.B J. ~nonnel and tqllipment restric:nans thftr .?awimlnc~OIItbeline and pidt the pme ol tile t'tn!IJ.I'}' : set up by U.B. haft c:\lrt.llled total tampua sporta - • a c e . , Nf'L V.'WSP·TV mntfOI OVft' trNtivity of ill predktiana. tdevision procrama. As a result of lhll. Vt'Wst>·TV hal dec:idl!d to IAft't ill Jlo' &-wllWootW~ re,wn qaniz.ation.&l c:ontrol by remorin& otself from U.B. H'JYic:s. Vt'Vt'SP-TV The Sago sago • woU now opente out of othft' ...,.illble 1tud loa. utllbl n& othe r availab le Dawn \'erea..·a letttr at.ut the equiJ)nlftlt. ! both Ill wNdlare Werior " Debo!tDet:lade" wuoneolthe- t.athestudioand.pmeatcontrolled tnlert'!ninc ll'llveread lnyea,.., One by UB.I. pouiblesohalon tothe prllblemsofluk WWSP-TV mtmbft'l have ~ a· ofl&nllationlnfoociRI"Ykftmi&htbeto ttemely t olerant of 1urmounllna n~na-.prot; t , ltlle-'Otd lood restrictioniiiYft'the pllt n wft'ks JtrYke,..heretmploytft receive fair bllt now W"'SP·TV mUll demand and w..~. Sludmt employta bave alwaya delerve to prxuc:e their ri&JU, been ncMIII'iously lllldfrpaid in f'\'tf')' reponlibili tiftl,control .andcensorlhlp atea , botb here and at O(htf uni~r· as1nyotherllllllen t orpnizatlon does. Thlllinivenity , by rfllllalion ol the ait~e~. T1'le !Iieber Pawen tor taapa)·en J muat belle~ tNt poor stuOenta UNversity of Wilc:onlln I)'IUm BOIIrd ,.ho musl WOI"k their way ll'lllii.IIIJh ol ll~mUI "hal&neqllllobliptionto ro ll ege . a pprec:iatethei redllntion proLec:tiUedutalionalpurpo14'1ndthe moreaRn-havblcloal a.lftp. f\ldce<l on Ill lu 11\lderlt body." ! From ICWies. and hYftl on m;oaroni and ~ul&ti- outlined in the U.W.S.P. Ca takJcue l Allo. thlsUnlvft'lityhllu '""'- dinne,.. for four yell'S! I ha~ had nperienfes simili&r to oneoflllpul"p(RS!heobjec:tivethat ru ... n·a. only m1ne took place In the " eath s tl.ldent. .. allalnahllhoft'levelor Crldif'Orl. Oue ~by .,.·hlle eatiq ol trNhvily." WromJ)Uil!ORIIIndJOIIlli outlitwd In the UV.'SP Cat.aklpot l. I thenew " tow~· ·~. ld~ ,..111'1 fw the Unl~rtity to rec:fllliU alone.na kedp-eoenolivep~ta t the bollo molthebowl.ltookthepitback to the~ercsponlobiliti~ totheltudtnUiol the Crid • it to tile ,.._,. behind "''Vt'SP·TV W"'' SP -TV se r vl c:u bo th t he the c:wntn-. and was to&d.''Don ' t ell UNversi ty and lbe eommWiity. I wbl'l 1! !'' Shr didn 't suqnt that I take thatPfOpieoutsldtand ln&idtofour IIIOlher Nllld. I dl$1 '1 wantanyway . The adler ~by I emptiecla&LI.u l )'llem W'lll beoc:ome awa~ Ill the tr emendoul fr11atrations WWS P·T V olmolk onlytofindthebottomotthe membenl han bad IQ meetU. their ataa a.vem:l wl tb a lllyB" o1 blaek orpnuaticwl&l and eduational needa. l'iprflleathu. Tl'le wom.aa I complainedto told me it wa~n't her fault , WWSP·n' haln~nlntobloc:kldeithat and.th.at l s/loukl.,etafrnhiLI.u. ldid. ha•·e k~t the orp nizallon from l'v~ found blac:k ubn 1!10 blalll In rNdli.. Lti&OIIIa, tl'luarequiriqthe caffH n.- severa l timel belen. dlangeth&thasbft'n madt. ObYiouslytherearemall')'problenu ol lt lsm)·beliefth.atrn«elllaconc:ft"'l more nnb-thalleri!ll li&nlfkance forl!~nt&OIIllillhouldpr~ptthe thaa theM>, IMa theM an aymptomatic: concemfor unh-ertityprofit. ola major !slue: jllllbUt JUpport for JeR .M.,.Ioarlll f'lb::~~tioii.. Shoo.lldlbeaWaalsoprovide WV.'SP·TV food _...ice , .. IWdnlt.! Vt'ould the ~ervke i mprove~ Should e mployea be More on bikes paid highe~wags! I'd like t o - a _.e illte-.iveatlldytl !hew ~ions in the Pflla&er. T- H. J . . _ Under the cover ""ft'ftt• Series 9, VoL 18, No, 10 .._,ed •••loer 'listen' produces ln your0Ctobtrt7iaue.youtlldan artkle eonc;ft"'l, noiM in the Cor· f~ t tide : ~a..ahut-up ). The artldeilll:luded anirllerYiewWitbme wl'llc:hlwu b&pp)'toablleeto. Durtna tht(111111'Molthein~ew. thequatlofl ... more letters {:::::a_1::'~~:.:::=::-:.7~~~~~Er=:! . :;::-::.":"""· o... - - - - -· · - · -..... - ,...... _ . :.:=. :::'E1!:::s:~i!:'~=:n~~:..-=: . ..... _.._ :,':"':.:.==:.~ -l-'<0~ ~- ..• more letters bdtu 11 •torl111 eMTp d'Odc:ntlr thai! =~:J:=.~i/:~tym~=,;'!: cident leU r radiation to Ultful but. I Sun Saver - no saver Ta'DePIIIalott, t.astwedlattbep-oc!'am " f"roduciA& Your own J>o,.·er", apor!JONd by the ~taUOn produ.."l>>OI t ptrunltarunpawdtolhe _, II !-..fbk Alto, most • ·elldeslan<"d llat -platc.olarroiiKt on ...oidtut rinallll~l')'surfaces which could act N c:oolinl f ilii and by !Mr«creca~~.~e iOUftolat.orbedscUr apriva to!manufuture iSwiSner, l nc. ) on aoll r power for home heath•· At that Ume. I addreued myldf to the ll'lllppropri.lto!ana ol aula pitril -a,y by bact-radiation ot convection CNR. then wu a ulft gu redtoMilin&-·a~tby t . ridkulln& "paper" uientlat. and ftllinetrs who do lalthou&h uu. ~tlal lppro.Kh atudiH lmdoubtlbly hal&stronl;~ppealtoantl-lntftlec:w.l ~ 1. petltln ancl 1:1. llnodb11 (Oft! · product~ while aoar heatlnt b.l~ up - · • own b)' sw-tlnc KientUic miuutcmtnll and-or (011«0)' ~n: ~::C:!;:t =tit~ quation!Nota»fokll~ inhe;tU ¥ialatin& the lawsM rwlurt. 'l"'~tiltetoelabonteonthelllttu : lpKiflc&Uy: I SWIS.~r. lnc. d.almathll t ~r t'IIU«<oronlyi'IHCb!OOsquare ftoetol collectoral'ft,romparedto300011q~ lfttfOfiO.tpa..te coll«tor,beeloUieol IMir ayslftn ol rftlecthre .wfKft, or "-Ntt>'ff. Since a well-drtl&JM!d fbtpl.llecollfl:tortypleallyll&rNtttlbaa 25 percmt tffieienl in connrtinl In- rodlltC'OOipln!dtOIO'IIer. 11QmelliS ttwltum«J1ItMc:decltohNtroxb: But•·ea rc:notheii i!Wrocb-•-c:are •lOri!t&MffiY Roekttorrcml>diiHI ~llliiiiiWIItl"forllllequ&imiiM IIIII temptr~turc: riM. To equ•l the ""f'rlY Jtoraaeolwlter , then, onented:t rilhtr more rock tby ml$11. or must heat the rockl more \J'I111 the w1ter. hutircoftheauff'OI.IIIdinla lr . lnilh«t , I qllt'Stion theirdllm of the arnter d'ferti~nea of !Mir tola r coi lt'<'tOf' TeTIIe t'-'111-c:r llla)tc:r temperaturc: Jtoraaemc:~• delian. more inriflc:ic:lll tolll!dor optrlt aon I more: back·. . _ and lew ,...hal heat fori aavte lnc:idfnt tolar txpotiNI allll lnCif"e Mat lcaua from L 111eliaurtol130,000ormorefor a Wiler eMf'O 11or1ge J)"5ttnl l com· pared to a rewthousandforthein l D 1-..·ouidliketopubllclytlqnli;jjw ~al~~':"'rr!!..,f: ~,: 01.11 put baseclontbeweolJ,OOOpl'-ofex· peiiSivc:fthyitDellycolantdrft!Zc:. Ilk not lle«!$PI'J' that Uw entire watn reM'f'YOir eanllio anlil'r«Ze--only the • portion Ill Uw JYttftn outalde ollhe olChl~l,.lltutebii lhc:llora~tmecliumtolheen•i~c:_nl · u- hell ::!f:iy ':'! !::,. ~~~ capacaty It ~~~~::~:,.~~~~ 4 'ollltHWISNid\Obelpoo.- ~iumforheatiiOf'li!C:bec:IUJeof Dolatc:Wouuidrwa ter loopfromthe IIOI"agetank. Tlldwouldnotbe:quiteu efficient, but wwld J,lvtd- to 530,000 bued on today'• 1nt.itrea:c: prica. Coneluslon: rock ay.temaue not appredlbly c:hnper than Wiler c:wapon\JOrlandtonvc:clrvc:drc:ulltJ.on. A ell*d Jyatem llld lntemal blfnes llkc:ureofthilproblftll vtrJtll.ily. $, Outdoor 110r1ge WIINid tO be alont, Thanks Telh t'-'attr, l wou kl lillc:totallethdoppol"lunit yta brtter bec:IIIJe " - - Mt•·ec:n the I'OIIc:c:tor and Jtor•ae -.·ere rninimiud ltofll eolhe•t. !Nnll 1U \.he l htdmta. fanllty, ad · mil'lil~~~\on and e1pecia Uy the lllldflll qan~~tiona who m•dt this )·ear's •hentheywtreloc:atfd tottt.her. Sure, l . The prewl'ltatlon implied that I"O(k , wllhlspecilic:hc:a t ea..-c:ltyoto.2 • ..:11 but ol:couneyOI.IIoMMc:rl)' lattr-.·hen briqlrw the: liNt illto the house. Ac· haally lherew011ld be:IOme'WIIII more .!!:ecThl! ~='a:::"tsta~ d'fort on t-vtrjone'a p;aM pvc: tile heatkrnea tltrola&hthelon& ll rduc:tsif they"'ereloutfdbe llo'eel!thei'OIIc:c:tor fc:llintletlntxdtil'llfllvorfar s H• ht lOOk pAM. On be:tlaltof the Uni•-c:l'lily Ac:tiYitiea Bollrd, I apin thaN all '-"-involvc:'liln the 1975 U.W St~·ntro !'oint lt omi'COminc. andthe u orqc:ratherlluollbet•·ec:nthe storageandthe~.bfc:aiiM'the You·we been there. tolledorl'\llllllhattn-tc:mpc:nturea. 1/(fllltvtt.the~c:IOUH-.·ould~"'·hile the .un wa1 up. ,.,.hen loun r«~ld ~ ..... leHerr policy 'lbHf: were: numc:roui qUC'IIi - left unaMvoerfdb)' theprewntltion : llo"'· manylayenofJiuscovrra~ Y0113ttype Sc:ll!di•-c: Ill gi.Uio~ Ttlrnnop;one~ IW'fKo!COI\(IIat• Elc:. Bullhenthe prtwt~tllion•·•• not aimfd at an ill· 1. Three hundred words or less -- loriger let!ers ollow. at Ed. descrelion telllaenta~ . 2. All let!e~ to be signed --- nome withheld upon request l donaathavc:lhemont)'lo illveatina .MIIr-hearl,.sy~em. witholll.doirwthr Thty'.. got•longwayiO go. lniWOIIdlfllliM'll...,. '"P.Jpc:r" tnliMc:rir«c:alculatlonsand economic: analyw bri'orftland FM· lunately, thereianow• n lnllt.lllbt ionin Bulwllt!IOIN-'1 1\tlp, lfloty"'maktlt.WIIII ,!'ttJtiHd St. Poi nt ,JO hopc:(ully••••wiUk_.by ' ill lflti'III. SotnlcltMoiOKIII conlidantandgulda. Patll.lpa. t'OI'Ipany"s proda.a-ct rdrofl ltfd on a PfllltCII'Btothir. nonventionally-hc:atc:d home ThiSIIell.nsoiSt.John aoaco-atou,.,..,Jnta5tlo ..,..."tOUiriUnliiii -Cii'dltl_._ aposiOIIII,_c,..,.... c~ INS.IHiiM atw.,-.,...,. ~ - and wlll'lurytng Mdl'oowdowtoQOaoout it?8ylolowlngiNII'-"ol Ollrloundolt,DonBolco. Toc,__l'filwltflr--,NIIglon -tincSnelt wilfiiiNIIIodolpley, lel tnMdp<ly. WI' fl lfYIIIQIOOUIIdDitlelc:ontmunillnbJ'IIelplrlgloCI'IIIIIIben.tltllfl~~s.Jetlan, ~lfiQ .... raniMdiiMicttlnuolollllp lfle~lnl widet1110fof.....,._ ,,, U9Uidi-COUftMI­ ... 111CIIniciiMCIKICMmlci..CIIt<I, IICOICfW!I, poyclloioghll ••. In~ duba. - · c.mpo ••• u mlulonariii.Md)'OUifiQhwnltll klndoltralfllngyoutiHdro ld'llt..your....._ Thls,alonlanlamllyilaler(ll-(wtolfi1Niflirdllf9fll Ofdot(lbula w.-m-. A~WIIflanenlflutlaaticla"'lly '-ling-•1'101onlt011fll ientl8flolll.rtodbul011f-· -..-.nyour.~aa -do. llll\awotc.'n)'OUII'ICMtll an ilnpon~n~mittloo!Jn,our i"-, --~I'O"'tm.r .. t. 3. Deadline : Monday noon before Friday issue nut l prif18 euc:lly how much fouil fuel , ia andit naatf,lveclbyh.lvi118th is llcouldDI~PIS.IIIIan t»rf;tofltllwofldlhal-lltalhle'--. HolaniMY IQ-IIul_wl'llcll_.,._, tA ~tta l., bl lt. R;llllani·UA ft Indoor hc:illt stor.~te It ma.a-ch to he prefHrc:d-anyh9tlouc:sfrornstorag~ thenc:ndupinsldetheho~ . notaut · now YJJU wm 111, )'OU!fl Ofilllllld. ToNy _.,.,.,ping to,._,, ro<o1'9" J im r;~::,edhc:~~.:;~:~~t:. the: can help them. W~r C"'mlr.r:.Octobttl, 11'1eenliiiUIIIIand tpiril ol th.denlll was • l'ftJ tribute to the mtlre ~udmt body 111 UV."SP. , _ people arc: to be rommended for thei r fine ...,-..uatian andlrewe\cometocornebackanytilne. 'LarryWtger e-ncu-ruc Rock don hlove many O'l ft" water for lldvllllliiiN 3 • FREE BEER § A ~ PIWO NIC "" KOSZTWE•:;: : -Shrimp ! B~!!~!!ZG « 3 =:::; ~ - : i ..... . i ~!~~~G~~NF~;~II Shrimp ~ A Boon tv choice of our hon.mlde dreuings CHOICE OF POTATO baked. hash browns or Pden fNtnch fri" HOMEMADE BREADS WISCONSIN GRAOE A BUTTER :» ,., " '"' & nt 'T t :H o( 'arl Slol(n- "' EifpiOI'a i!OO flfSPK'fl '" o Stan lr y Krlppnr r - " Uo C"Mnj!esinConsc:tOtJSMSS l..c:ad to CN ngts ill Sori- rty• " • HoiN'rt n..ot.ald- '"Nt'l' lltaloftfora N- f-'ulurr ·· • J . t\llrn ll .~·nf' k- "TlltU f-'11 f-:~pttterrt" '' • ICirhard t"anoa - " The t 'u!Larc: of the Amrncan t"a mily'" St~phan lf' MIIIJ . Modt•ral or tc:on-c:erntd with ovc:rpopu la l ionJ TwtHtay paMI di1C11S51011, • ·athrapM'UiORs.lwofnturt• • fllms andl!f ~acllY itic:sdt.-­ s lllntd lotJploretheqursl ion I'll whM-c: we have: bren and when! we a re Koina. t' uturc: Mwlek i~ loday . NrN l,:l, all ... day. Conrad lhlton. Oaic:aji.O STIIIl t:/\'T lha~ ('()Upot1 t't;t; · S35 -..-,th Claai~ ( 'enl('f , I ~ t-; Cirand, Chk 11ao liOfill , al J2J 2f.oiHliiXI · Sentry complex update byT'""'J Tnlolho The problem facing Sentry ln- su runct'l new inte rnational headqua rttn north olcampusts as yet undetermined or at lent unexplained. A major complex cnstruc:tioo outfit laid orr OVff 100 worke-s two weeksagoafterfaull$v.·ere found in COI'I('rtte butlrftl colwnns. A Smtry spoiiHmlln at tNit lime said that !her-e was a "tendency oC steel pnta not brine able LO 1tand the SlrtSI.''Ailfurthererectionofsted members was baited at that time accordina: to Sentry VPTom Le«b. l..eedl tokt the SkYea Point O.lly Journal that tht workers laid on .,,,ereln\·olvNwlthsteel e~tion and concrete pouring. '"ThO&earen"ttinkerlo)'Slhatthe" cranes a re hauling to the top," he added. Another worke r warned that "hotlldl are going to roll If it's the steel not meeting spedficaticxa that'sllohat's causlngtheproblem .'' A third worker discuued the possibility ol lq:al action taken aga inst contractors or suppliers. "What if It is the materials and Sentry deddH to sue for dafnll&es - and it turns out that they are insuring the eontractor ! Can you sue yourwlf?". he asked. Workcontinuu Construction on the project is still underway acc-ordi ng to an October Journ• l article. The article quotes Leech as pointing to lhe halt in loadina ancl erection of steel but T.sk •·orce 111e situation .,...1 described by ~h as "tuahly technical." A special task forTe of engioftn, builders . ~:onsu.Jtants and architects a rea . "Aareatdealofwork lsstiU golna: asseu the problem. The tast forTe Vt'll "'recomputing some factors ' ancl -..-oulcl have an an5'1t"""' to the problem " in a week to 10 clays," acconllngto an October 14 Jou rnal article. adcled-disclalmina any l'llmors of the building settiir~& . One ol the -..·orters we talked to agrM'cl with Leech on that point . ' "No - the building is not sinking ," he saicl, " but thot roof is moving ~~r~~~~uJ:; ~~~~! The Sentry proj«t is reportedly ;!"r!;:ts~e~~~~~t:: .., c:ontinuationolwortinnon~rfrcted ~;~.:~ =teint!:oc:~"\:; ,..~':'""':'~'o~lh<:f:ou:""'~tion~.~"_· _ _ _ __:=====::;;.:~;;;;;:;;:~~;;;:~ midwest. Before the problem 1 rO&e O\"er400workt:rs wereemployedon the i,.. Silt'. c o· E Ueexpla\ncdthatheha neverseen his assailants before. Vaklsll said that at 3:10am !FO t54 ll H f'lst4i~c:racks Tlle Pointer tallted with \l>orken in.,·oh·ed with the project before lr N . \ !it,, .- ~ releasl,.ourinltialst«ylastweek ~ lOctobu 17 ), Some or the worktn reported rlst-sited cracks running the il'n&th ol concrete columns and told of shirting s teel griders. An tM damage but-atteSS was dtnied by Sentry officials.. We told Senlry VP Leech about lht rtpOI'ts and ~ told that damace s~iries could not be releasf'd. lie advised u:s that .. there is no danger ol colbpie. •• Our October 17 article carried that <pJOteaslthc!adline. :O.Ir . ~h wu conlacted Wed· nesday (October 22) for an update on the situation. At that time he refuwd to ansv.·er the majority of our q~~e~tionl . He told us that our W.Untalll :;~~irs~~:~~;rat~w'::t~ ~:~ e{s wing, according to 1 ~~''!{ ~r ~~~~~~~~ i:rrt.kf.h~ The three were t'ICorted down to the front door. Vakishsaid. " l closedandlockedthefront doorandthen-..·enttothe sldedoors toseeifthey-..·ereshut,"hesald. " l wasoutslcle the dOOt" t northwtst l to see if the east door was open when the driver r e\·vecl his enaine, jumped the curb • nd headed ~pott lorabe raiionlolthe~pottl Our efforts 111 galnlr13 additional information were apin dirrcted at IO'orken. La.born'S wiUin& to talk asked that lllef'e names be withbekl for petSONII economic reuoos. "We're way ahead of schedule now " one worker saki, "but if they hav~ to tear the whole thing apart and put it back to~etMr aga in, who kno""s how much more money and time it's goinatotake to finish ." ;!'!~ ~~fncl~ ~~~': ~~~::!t '1'hat "s asfar asyou "regoing." he reportedly tole! them. The reply -..·u " What are you, an RA '!". Vakish told us that he e\•entuall y persuaded the! young men to leave the building. The blond assailant , later iclentifiecl as the driver, became quite cock)' ..,.·hlle the otMrs -..·ere reportedly ready to attr:mpt -..·as made to photograph hadstirredupspecul.ationabout the status ol the building as far dOiol·nsta.teu Madison . Hebbelecl the story "ridiculous, full of Innuendo and s pec· 1.1cularidna." We asked him who insur es complex coctrw:ton againlt faulty mater!• Is and If US Steel ins pee: ton hadbftncalledtothesite. Hisreply was" no comrnent" . The questions wn-e deemed Inappropriate and not ~levant by Leech. ~~i~~fr: ~~e~~ir: them what they v.·ere doinc. When they were asked to lea\·e, one v.-ent st~~~tha:C,.de~ that he tried to jump on the hood olthe \·etucle but managedtoonlygethlsrightlq:up before Impact. Hts left lq: was ~=~~t between the wall and the . WANTED Area police and campus KC\Irity olficenarelooking forthedrivrrol a vehicle that rammed into a Baldwin Hall KA last weekend. The ~~!r~:c'~~~pa!!~ v.'t'fe evicted from the building early Saturday morninc. The suspect Is saki to be about six ft-et ta ll , 165pounds. wlthblondha ir :11d fr«kJes . He cloady resembles the attached compo~He drawina. Information about the identity of the suspect should be forwarded to UWSP Protrctive Servit'ft 1346- ""J. The indl\i dual reportedly drO\"e hisvehlcleupthe siclewalkparallel to Baldwin ll.illl"s northv."Ht tn· trall("e pinrung RA Olarlet Vakish bttween the \"ehicle and the door. Vaki' h Is listed in satisfac tory condition 111 St. Michael 's H06p!tal-..·i tha swollenleftl~ . " lni.rntlonal" Vakish told a reporter that the dr1ver " Intentionally did it because JklckedtMmoutofthebuildinR" . Therewunodamage to the bone . Vakish is currently recovtring from a musc le contusion with a n 1 rt ery being comprened by the sw~lifll muscle. Ste\·ens Point Police report that thelncklntcoulclresul t ln charaes ola~a~ultwithamotorvehicle. Au toclescrlptlon The vehicle involved wu descnbedasa 1968turquoisetoblue Oldsmobile or Pontiac . Wilnesses told a1.1thorities that It hid ali&ht blue vi nyl top. Anyonefamiliarwiththis vehicle or with the above composite drawina are asked to contact DetKtive Aufdermauer of UWSP Protective Servit'd . Ckl"'""r:l. ll15 p••'SI'Dinln 'Death March' prophecy? by .\Uth•llln• ~ A hl"t'nty~ year old UWSP studblt is de~d after alleg~ly takingpart inan inilationritefor a campUS club. David tLurnpy l lloffman, 2514 5th Ave., wu found dead in a d0\1.1\town 81 :g:,~e~ t _Sat urday mor ning . Ste,·ens Point Police are in· ''esUgating Hoffman's death and would tell us only that the incident is still under investigation. The multsofanautopsyweresentto the State O'lme Laboratory In ' Madison. Because of a baclt log at the crime lab the cause of death may not be known ff)f several ' voeek.s.Ste,•ensPointPolicetoldthe Steno1 Poh11 Dally Joumal that they have ruled out foul play. . Sia~fl pleclge norrmanwas!JM!onlymemberof thissemester 's Siasefi pledge class. Slaseri is a non-greek fraternity on campus. lnilialion rites !Of' the fraternity incl ude activities rritrred to as 'The Ring ' and 'The Df:ath March'. Those activities @ ~ were scheduled for Hofrman last "''eelt. 1be Dtath March' was scheduled forFriday,theniahtpriortothethe disccwel')' of Horrman's body, ac· conlina to a noll« In the Siuefi bulletin box. • The 'Ct"een Door', referred to in the o raanilation's b ulletin Ia reportedlyanicknameaiven to the apartment where llofrman's body was found. An October 20 S(eveM Point DaUy J1111mal article quotes police as sayin& that Hoffman wu taken to the a partment about 9 :30 Friday • ni&ht. According to the a r ticle, Hoffma n was still alive at 3: 00 a m Satu.rday whensomeone checked on him. Lllt SemH ter In March of this year another Siascfi pledge reportedly escaped death after the ' Death Ma«h' ritual. The student was liken to the emugenc:y room of St. Michael's ll05pital with what was termed as "nosi&n of breathin& present" . The s tudent reaalned consciousness after life-uvlng mechanisms we~ applied. At thetimeDr.Oon Jolmsonof the University Health ~rvi« wrote a letter to Chancellor Lee Dreyfus expreuin& relllf'Vationa about the Siasefi pledge ritual. The incident produced a lette r to the Siasefi group statina disapproval or the qaniution'a activities and ad· vising them a bout legal respon· sibiJity. State s tatute !Mt .33, dealin& with ro~~J:,~~~ a:r ~rfe:t~ 1 1 initiation rites. Studeot&overomenl The UWSP s tudent aoverrunent di scussed the poasibili ty o f r e movl n a o ff icial s tud e nt oraanlution recognition from the Siasefis at that time. but no specific action 'fU taken. Removal of of. tidal recognition eliminates the OI'Jtaniutlon's possibility of fundin& ~:;"~dta~a:c:;;it!:e:r :ru~~. sity facilities. · Sunday ni&ht the st uden t assembly and senate voted to temporarilysw:pendrtcQ&nitionof the ~iasefis,pending lurtherdetails of the incident. The body also took initial steps to in\·e:stigate the initiation procedW'eSof allstudtnt ortaniutions because of Hoffman's death. Hearsay A ~liable SOW'ce repor ts that lloffman ~n the 'Death March' a t a bout S::ll pm Friday. lie ~portedly went to five a~a tavems before ~turnina to the down· :-:;~:r~~y ~~~p~ilth Fromthereheissaid to have gone to a seventh ta\·ern whe~ it Is allesed that hepas.sedout. tle rect:i\·ed his Siasefl sweauhirt , :! l ~ :& ..i mark of recosnltion, at another tavern,acc:ordin& to the source. Afte rthat , hereportedlywa.a taken ~~o~~~~~!b~ree:,~:;::fy c hecked at a bout 3:00am Saurday. It was said to be a little slow a t that time. The Steven• Point Dally Joumal article !October 201 s tates that Hoffman's body was discovered Satu rday morning (October 181 a t 9: 20am . He was pronounced dead onarrival atSt. Mict\ae l's Hospltal shortly a fterward. Hoffman was born August 9, t95ol in Milwaukee. He was a 1972 graduate of Wa uwautosa ll l&h School a nd a senior a t UWSP majoring in forestry and wildlife manaaemen t . He was buried Thesday in Milwaukee. ThNe ll no official word at this time If any lq:al action will be taken on the e ve nt of his d eath · ATTENTION STUDENTS: ,......._ . ' PUBLIC HEARING ON THE PROPOSED DISCIPLINARY CODE 8:00 P.M., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28 WISCONSIN ROOM - UNIVERSITY CENTER Opportunity will be afforded for any member of the university to offer testimony. Time limit of 3 minutes. Student Government wi~ j)resent a resolution stating their position on ffie code. · ' More of fear and loathing in Campus TV fl)'J.U K•dr Alter a ion& period o1 hassles, cutbacb, and contradictions, WWSP-TV has decided to go In- dependent ol University Br-oadcastinJ. 1be decision was made at the Oct. 15th meeting of the WWSPTV encutlve committee and the I..Miveraity Br01dcasting st.rf. lnaterw, explicit,memosent tn l iB llirKI'W' Bob 8uTull on Od. 16th , WWSP-TV outlined their reasons for the breakaw•y. Burul.l hu been at the center of the controversy from lhe ~start . In an ea rlier October Issue or the Polnttr, a 1!01')' rec<~~ni~nc lhe differencn between Bunall and WWSP-TV appurfd. In short, the atory ~d how the people in lhe Communkations ~rtment fell !hat Burull had too much power oYtr" campus T.V., and why they lhn-efore wanttd him dismissed h-om his po~itlon ol sole authority. 1'btdeocili\·ememocitedrta50n.ll like : schedulina: dirriculliH , equipment problems. too much control and coercion by Burull , and Intimidations and restrict ions placed on the lt udf:nts by the UB staff. f'or a wtule, the people at WWSP-TV vo·tte conslaotly adjuSiinl and rearran&ing their prop-ammin& to 5Uit the whinu ol UB. F'urthtr"more. Butull ~iged onhispromisett.bejustatechni.:al superviSOf w~n he pre~mpted t WWSP shows with hi5 own UB product io n for other than ''t« hnka l'·~asons. The campus TV organiution has an uncomfortable environment in whkh UBis the domineoering fon"\" . One sentfoce in the previous ly mentioned memo is best indiutive oftheexisliqsltuation : " Wefind Ltdttrimmbiltothev.-elfareoftht WWSP-TV organiution to conti nue ~atiq 1 n s ucharestricti\'t: a tmosphere wltlch we find e«~n· te rpr oductive to a learning si tuation." 1be campus T .V. program wu set up with the Idea in mind that it 11 be aort of a clauroom worbhop. 1be v.·ay it haa toeen thi5 year. the e m phasl5 has been on produdnc a technically perfec:l s h ow ; thus vi rtually e lim inating a ll ne~omers fr om actua l production . This procedw-e seems to defea t the purpose ol the educational ex· pe r lence . h e n ce the -'phrsse : "coun~oduc:tive to a leami.ng s ituation. " S tuden t P roduc tion Manaaer ThaD Brodtmaa related, 'itle oew people are beina puWd out bec.ause ol time limitations. There il no time for trial and error on their part. Wehavetolet the experienced people t.tke over In order to do the sbow. ThiJ tltu.aUon is making 11 hard for the new students to develop any creative interes t in the field ." 33.500-000 Uuelaimed Seholarships Burull wants to project a good 1mqe ol the univen.ity. !herdore he Insists on tec:hnleal perfection. Burull is seen tiy many as being veryagresslve,and"notafrald to ttep on somebody'• toes when he has to." Brockman aald tNt "Buru.ll deal• with the T .V. prognmming like It is ltls own C'Ommerdal venture. instead of an edu.:ational si tuation ; which Is the wayweseeit . 1betwote~~ethtrjust don't jive. I think the teparation will be good for both parties. Maybe now we can get clown to ~~~~o~~"fo!:~=r :m with UB as a compmnise." It shouldbenotedthatBrockm•nlsln an awkward position bec::auae he ia involved In both UB and WWSP-TV. As it stands now , WWSP·TVplans todomosloftheir producUons Ina significantly s mall er 1h.:Uo In the Student Servl.:n Building . 1bey still plan on workina: with UB u far as technical support goes (use of equipmentl . The transition from the v.·ell~ipped televltion studio ~n~~f:~m~lf~~; ~~f~ addition, WWSP·TVwlll be missing the valuable guidance of the UB pe-ople. The Stimula"Condom. DeUc:ately ribbed to belp a woman let go. ·The housing 'problem' b) ,\1 Sc an~~ -The housing si tuat ion for UWSP students is now being to as a 'problem ' by adm inis trators. Assi s tant Housing Director Mel Karg used the tenn of· fieiall y for the first tim e at a public hearing Mond:ly night tO: tober 20 ). The Housing Advisory Commilwe was gathered atthattimetoheargrlevances from involvedparties. The Housi ng Ad\•isory Com mitt('(' consists of fift een people representing s tudent.s. laodlords. the City of Stevens Poin t. faculty, and the admini s tration. The committee is to make recommendations to Stevens Point Mayor Jim f'iegelson and Chancellor Lee Dreyfus. It prepared a report 011 the heusing si tuation this s wnmer and then did not meet until ••new pr~lemsarnse . · refem~d Te n witnHSetl The committee was reconvened upon the recomm endati on of Chancellor Dreyfus . Ten people testified Monday night. The hearing lasted about one half how" longer than scheduled. Only one of the witnesses was a landlord. Richard Summer. whosewrittentestimony claimedth.lthehas beenin\·olved -..ith housing as~ tenant and l,a.ndlord for fourteen years , stated that houstng today Is more available and better maintained than in the past but is also more exoensi\·e . Student1 hea rd The remainder of the wttnesses were students. One female student told the committee that they had a mistaken attitude about the housing situation. She stated that the housing problem is a serious one. The witness Ulld ol an .arrangement she entered into this summer were she was to lh·e with seven other gi rls and ended up unknowingly facing .a :dlo~ ~ne,::!:~~ t!:t~~~t :J?.rer:m~!~~=-~~-· isf' Another female witn~ told of a situation that resulted when two of her five room mates moved from her apartment at mid-year. The landlord moved .a married couple Into the :::,:~~~~ pite the objtoctions of the remaining four gir ls. La nd.lordtoa froa lfll One witDt'Ss produced income figures she had computed on abuildif13sheinhabitedlastsemester.Sheconcludedthatthe landlord was maktna a 40 to 60 per cent profit on his in· \"I.'Stmentln-theproperty. The landlord referred to was a member ol the Housing Advisory Committee and responded t~t ""housiftg is going to ~a:~~.r if I get people telling me how much money I'm "What you're doing right here is one of the reasons why tandlor!b':u"t ge tting out olthtstudent housing business," he Sol~e l:mdlord tol~ the committee !;hat ~gures many of the ustod in ("Otnpu)i n~ his pr~flt were 1n erTor . He dechned to produce his own ull.'ome frgures . "No ll isn't" 1\ mal e witnt"5S told ol an apar tment he rents that did n01 h:l\·erc pairsdone as earlicrspecifiedbythelandlord. Hetold of a two w('('k delay in getting a refr iger ator f11ted and or mat tJ"esses.w rth exposed s prings . The student said that hl' lurc w of housing code \'iolalions in the bui lding which had exrst t'dfor at leas t a year. (~ h· Housing Ins pector Sam Molslr.i. a member of the romrfuu ee,said tha ts ltuationsli kcthismayenusethcplace tobe \·aca ted. Ala:rdlordreprescntath· e on theeommi tt.eestated that a situ:uioo like th:l t -..-as rare. After a pa115e he asked the comm itt ee."" ... it ls.lstftit ?" "" i\oit isn"t," replicdMolskl. "Some people tak e pride in their property and some people don "t," said Molski. n .ooolne ruse Anothermales tudenttoldofa~a t he rentedlast year. lleeomputedtheprofitfromthat · "ngataboutS3000 las t year. lletoldtheeommltteethatthisy ar thebuitdill,fis grw )n& about $12.000. a nit he hasn't witnessed any rm · 111:ovcments. Afemalestudentwhodecidedatthe last m inute that she -..·as retumingto sc hool toldtheeommittee thatshehadto settleforanapartmentthatwasabovehermeansbecause of the lov.· a\•ailability ol housing at the time. Her problem was complicated by an unsuspected high utili ty cos t . ' 'They told me that electricity would run about $25 a month ' :rot the highest ... in the coldest montb.Janua ry . In the fi\-e weeks from late August to ea rly Oetober the but"was about SJij a ndwedidn"le\·enha\·etheheattumedon,"shesaid. Karx asked the young lady if she confronted the landlord \lith the situation. "Too m ~ h l'V" "I approached him about it," she said. "He didn't look at me much and just said we mull watch too much TV. 1 just didn"l know what todoafter s uch a r idicu lous response. I ~te TV." she added. Student gO\·ernment Bob Badtinski was the las t person to tes tify. lie told the commit tee that atone ti m e he was looking forhousingforfiftt"Cnstudcnts. ··1 knov.· personall y that lour of those students just did not return," he said. The committee will be s tudying the testimony this week. No specific course of action ha s been mentioned for combating housing difficulties. ANNOUNCEMENT CALIFO~HIA " $ • LARGEST LAW SCHOOl • WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY CDLLECE OF LAW ' OF ORANGE COUNTY AH AC CUO I HD lAW SCHOOL OFFERS A PROGRAM OF FULL- TIME LAW STUDY TO BEGIN IN JANUARY ~5 ~~~t!w:! ::...,~ :;~~1 ;uu.m>~E 1o~ ,,~ 1 • OCT. 2.8 PROGRAM RM.- U.~ IHllfHll 4 YlAU o1 fAAT-rtUE .Jo,. •••••ot. :... ·,-::,-;: ' ;::,,;;-,.~;-·';:: "tU:/,s,o~~o:.J1 fiA:t~"1,~ ,,.,,J ,,,., ,.. ...... J •• .._, W-!fl 0~;;,1 ;~l]tAIAI.OGlJI • 1111 North Sr••• College Fullerton, CA 92631 f7141 993-7600 APPlY NOW fOI DAY, EVENING, Ol WEEKEND CLASS ES IEGl NNtN G JANUAIY 19, 1976 SIHILAt "061 AMS AVAILAIU At COOROINATf C AA!I'(IJ IH SAN DIEGO . SfVOIH ll 7&9:15 P.M.-$1.00 J'l .., 8 U.IGI ~~':,.;.':I~YVI"~-= lTUOtHI lo.ut$. t\.'iTI -\ 'ANDAUSM CAMPAIGN A statewide eUort to combat hi&hway sip vandalism is beinJ launched on college campuses througbout tbe ltateu a joint effort ol the Go\~nor's Office ol Hlgbway S.fety, the State ~rtment ol TransparUIUon and the Un.ivenity ol Wisconsin. Hlahway officials have distributed anti-vandalism posters to be displayed In dormitories and other- amput buildi.nJ. Tbe mr.· phasisollhe pc»ters is on a rKtnt bhrbway accident in which a WIICOPSin woman wu ldUf'd and nve other penons seriously injured because ol 1 milling stop lign. The ~~= :•!n\rus::~~~ matipoueuion ol a bighway lign ac:rime. · ' 'Some people seem to think it's just a joke to tamper with highway uid Robert T. Huber, ad· minist:rator ollhe state lll&bway divisiOII, ''but It Isn 't . Sip vandalism not only threatens the lives and property o1 molof'ists but It C08ls WI!CQfllin taxp.ytn well over a miUion dollars a year- for lign rqllacementand rf1)aiTon tbestate t:rll'lk hiahway system alone. It's a YffY Sftious prnblem." sign~," M.S. Exam Master of Scienc-e in Teaching and Master ol Art In Teaching, c:omprebeAsive exams in history and social scienc-e will be given Friday, November 7, at I pm, room 471 COPS Graduate st udents wishing to tab history or social ac\ence comprehensives a re requiredtor~lterwithProfessors Justus Paul or Robert Knowlton. hiltory, or Guy Gibson , aocial science, 110 later than Friday, October 24. Off11MAir • WWSP-T V, atudent television here on camput, bas tempo.-arily gone ol! the air due to external organiuttional problems. WWSPTV bas been bra.dtuUng OYfl' the Tellron Cable Tueaday , Wed nesday, and Ttlw-sday evfllincs from 6 :30 until 7 :30 pm. 11le organiution's student leaders ~ed that they hope to again beiin broadculirc Oct. 21 with the same format u wu previously sc:bedulf'd. au tothefestival 's coc:n!i.nator~is Kolinski of Stev-ens Point. llnltkC-teOffered A prospective Medicine~ will star t on Monday, Oct. 'rl at S:OO pm in Room !lOA ol Old Main on the tfWSP campw,. The series ol three daSHS will be as follows : Mon. ,Oct. 27atS:OOpm Mnn .. Nov. 3aiS:OOpm Mon .. Nov . !Oat5:00pm Form~ information contact the health «nter. fr'!::,.'=~~! s=·~dtt!; 1 The following 1s a listin& of On· Campus Interview• for Oc· tober and November. Individuals interested in obtainlnl an Interview a ppointment are asked to contact the Placement Office, 101 Main Buildina. Phone : 346·31:16. Sign-up sheets will be polled In the Placement office two weeks prior to the interview date . EmployerslnsuranceofWausau v.ill be hereon Monday, October 'rl for 2 Schedules. Positions in cuuatty underv.Titinc trequiri"' rnobillty l and audit review thorne office position I . All majors. U.S. Navy interviews will take place on Monday, October 'Z1 and 28 local residenll who participated in a th~yconferenc:e at Racine to get the new movement started. Ttlose educators are : Otanc:ellor LeeS. Drey!UI , Dun ol Fine Arts William Hanford, a.nd Mrs. Pat:rkia Lewis, music cunic:ulum supervisor in the Stevens Point Public Sc hools and president or the Wi s consin Music Teachers Asaoc:iation. AlotaloliOieadenintheartlin will meet ~~oitb you Thutlday, OcAll the state. hu:ludina Governor tober 30 for 2 Schedules. Lucey, were invited to the C«<- ma!on-ror federal positions. Collqe ure lnsuran« will bold !erencc which wu sponsored by the Johnson Foundation, Inc:., and bdd interviews on Thursday, October 30 at its convention center, for positions in sales and sales manqernent . All majors. Wingspread. Metropolitan Life Ins urance Company will be here on -rue.day, November II to in terview s tudents for safes positiON. All majors. U.S . Marines will be arOWld on 'l'Uelday-F'riday, Ncwember 11-11 . Allmajors-allstudenll. Pflur, Inc. will bold Interviews Tuesday, November II for positions lnengineering,produe:llon,sales, marketing, financial ar-eu. They are lnteresttcl In Ufe Sc:lence, Bulines.s, and Medical Technology majors . "'~lid Kh11clom Revlsttcl -ru&:::r·~~[y Zmi~:':!'~~ News Notes r ~·otk~'n Uval The Community Folk Dineen and the Poliall Culture Assodatinn of Stevms Point will hold 1 second a nnual Harvest MOOCI Folk Oa~e Festival S.tunb.y. Oct. 25, at UWS P . The n'ftll. which is ope11 to lhepubtic, will be held from llnoon to 12 midnllhl in the Banquet Room of the University Center. Folk dancers rrom throughout the state, J ncludina aroups from MilwaUee and Madison, and the Colina Polish Dancers ol Min· ntapolis an plannirc to attend. All interested members Df the c-ommunity are encourqf'd to par· tic:ipa te in the activities, according 'tbree persons from Stevens Point are involved in a campaJan to further develop the arts i n Wlsconsinto "touchthelivesnfall midents ." ' 0eer H11D11niCliak: A clinic for deer hunten will be presented in three s ucc essive Monday night pfOIMiml -on campus, beginning Nov. 3. The clinic will have speakers from the College of Natural ~=~stlV:. br~!: :eon;t ment ol Natural Resources. a professional taxidermist and a re-pmentative or an ums and am munition firm . 11 is crucial that deer hunten .ec:ome informed, learn about • quality hunting s kills , ethics and rflulations as a mear. ol e«n· battirc lhe growing s-entiment to ban deer bunting , said Dr . Raymond Anderson. The HS5innli will run from 7 ::xl to tOpm on Nov . 3, tO and 11 in Room 111 of the CNR Buildina. The eo~t will be $1 per seuion or $1.50 for the .~~~tries . 1be UWSP Office or Extended Senlica Uelephone 715-346-3'7111 is handling lftlti"Vationl. WUdllfe Society Meeting 'l'tlurs· day, October 30, 7:00 pm in the wriaht LowJae or the Union. Dr. R . K. Anderson will present a " behind-the--scenes" " look at the recentpinernarten~ developments in the research will bed.isc:U55-ed. NewAI•mniDirecters The board ol direc ton1 ol the UWSP Alumn i Auoc:iatlon bas elected six new members. 1be new directon , who were an nounced at the recent bomecomina on camput and who will se rve three -year te r m1 beJIMing this are : Karen Engelhard, Barbara Menul, Diant Sc:boors, and Le-onard lSippel, all ol Stevens Point: W.ScoltSc:bultzof P1over : and D. A. "Pat" Vauahn ol Wisconsin Rapids. rau. Influenza vaccine is available from the Student Health Center. Generally healthy c hildren, young and middle aae actulll do 1101. need the vaccine and it Is DOl recommended that these peop le receive the vaccine: however, the tn n uenu vaccine is recommended (or people with certain kinds or chronic illnesses. It il especially augestf'd for peoplewitbheartdiseateolany uuseorwi tbchron lc iWlgdisease (Inc luding ulhma ), c hronic bronchitis and other illnesses , c hronic: kidney disease, or diabetes m e llitus and othe r c h r onic metabolic dis eases . Inte r ested students s bouldtontact the Student flu l ib Center for more In formation. ART & LECTURES PRESENTS THE NATIONAL THEATRE OF THE DEAF TONIGHT-FRI., OCT. 24 8:00P .M. MICHELSEN CONCERT HALL L- TICKETS: UWSP STUDENTS $1 .00 WITH I. D . GENERAL PUBLIC $ 4 . 00 PHO NE 346-4666 r-0-. -a:£ Steak Bonanza g CHOICE SIRLOIN STEAK TEXAS TOAST HOMEMADE ONION RINGS FOOTIALL HOUSING MEDITATION 11:00 P.M. I'AHORAMA t : OH:M. MEDIA WATCH FRUDON OF PRESS - t :JIIP.M . FANFARE DAVE PUII.U (LIYO ~" BAKED POTATO & SOUR CREAM THIS WEEKS SUBJECT: - CHOICE OF SALAD choiuo f ou rfaaoouMMnft B~ Cable 3 WEONESD~Y I::WP.M. SPORTS fiLE t :OO P.M. THIS WEONtSC"l' EYety Sunday N ight! ~ WWSP ·TV iSDAY - a $395 . g~r====:==~~=~=~=~~~~=J aa tnmm · ..,,_~:~~}!!~~·-·· g i';;·;';;'~ nmm g· . , a SUNDA~e~~.~ DANCE ~ ff THIS MONTH'S SPECIAL ff BILL'S PIZZ'-:M - -t LIVE ENTERTAJNMEIH t: o.... o_....., •...,. .. ill -\\~ Of ..,.,.;gh, Strn:rzs . 5;),."'- Ph 3411340 "fV1 !~( • BILL'S OVEN TENDER BEEF ·sERVED ON OUR OWN ITALIAN BAKED BREAD! WE DELIVER_- CALL 344·9557 ( l Campus characters Early morning riser ., ....,.... ''My fathu ~to think me an odd child because I would never huddleaboutOUTF'rankllnstovethe v.·a)' lheOihr:r boys did. I like cold v.-eather-always ha\'e ," And 10 we had met accorditelY, on a brisk autumn morn in tho5e post davm hours when the sun and 1M moon Sftm to atw-e the sky. I "''U tired. sluggish,grou,y, and not altogether sure that every curler had bHn Utkm from my hallilybrushed hair. He was restless, vivacious, and poueued by some aurorlc spirit that I hl\'t nevtt' known . '' Mr f'erauson ." I ulr.ed cunously, ··How old are you'!" "Sevent y- three." he divulged llli thanunm istalr.ablenoteof pride that made my t""-enty )'tars in- signlriunt by comparison. ()b. ,•iously , this v.·unoontinaryman and llladtok~· hisstory . Mr. Ferguson grew up in the ~~oilds of Canada. He began readina atanearlyageandw.ashampered only by tht family's limited literary collection . Bible paaqn 100n became favorites u did the worD ol Horatio Al&er. that famOUI o&d master v."ho took our fathers from 1'11ploriches. Through his own fervent studlts. hf soon mastered many clauks as .,.-en as three Lanc!Yps. He also PfO\~toha,'t'anexrt:llent if!'OI • photographic memOf)' and a m1nd .-":. ..... '~ ' .- •:,.J.. ..· .r- / . ~- ' __... ' .· --- - ·'. ~ '\,. for minute detail. Follo.,.·ing his formal college studits t.,.·orking in Michigan and living in North Dakota). hf ac:ceptedapositionasthelibrarianof the University of Wisconsin Ste~o·ens Point. He lists this as ont ol the m01t enjoyable and rewardin1 periodsothislife. Theworkeqabled him tokeoep abreast ot new books, modern 'ATiters, and world affairs. 'A11ile at the same lime provided hlm with valwroble insigh t and ~ference material for his own personal pursuits . Gathecincnatistks Is one of hll many hobbies. In the past, a " number of his flndinp nne been · p_~blished and he Is currently conslderiDI selling the rights to more. He feoels they W9Wd be of spe-c_ial value to socloloclsts 1nd rese~d:n:,:'t!':~~~!Ktsoil file . Mr. Ferauson can list off names. cbtts, places. times, and other such particulars upon mere reQuest. He can even tell you such things as tht avtn.Je numbH ol rooms in a family farmhouse, lht ten most common NimH In every state ol the Union , tht history ol canadian sumamts, and the author olany ,-ene you should choose to rtcite. In effect, he Is your true walking encyclopedia. Needless to say, this man has uved many a st!,fdent and profe:uor long houri ol frustratinalabor. Botany is another interest which he has pursued intensively, The roouofthesestudltsextendway back to his early years in canada w~n he took a fancy to plant taxonomy l the collection and identification of vegetation) . Throughout his lifetime, he has occumuJated a vast mental herbarium of midwestern nora . Nowthat he'sretired,hehas the time to spend with his studies. Moch.,.·orkisneededtoorJanitehls comprehensive data ntes . He aLso ktepS quite busy c:Or-reipondlna withpeopleinvariousreachesol the wOfld who wish to request or exchange material . Forthoseofyouwhohavenever made Mr. Fertuson's acquaintance, you can find him breakfasting in the Grid eKh day. That is, if you manaae to catch him before be begins his five mile walk. He believes that a fit body and a sound mind are the ke)'11 to longevity, and if he's right the odds certainly don't appea r In my fsvoc-. • TONIGHT! FRIDAY, OCT. ~4 WINNER OF 8 . . LIFE IS A - ~ACADEMY AWARDS! W ~ tl P:=r:: =~:; Rm. $1.00 A UAB FILM 1. Fill a glass with nice, clean snow. (White only, please.) 1. Add Cuervo Gold EspeciaL J. See it tum yellow? -4 . Put a straw in and drink. 5. If snow is unavailable, use crushed ice. Or, forget the snow, and just put a straw in the bottle. Or forget the straw and just pour some Gold in a glass. Or just have some water. Must we make all these decisions for you? Investigating the The Warren Commission examined · by ltobl'fl lklnki ~akingbefcnalarge ci"O'ol·d in the llerg gym Monday f'\'tning, aSSil ssina tion c ritic James I..esar predicted an O\'Crturnlng of the Warren Commission's findiiii! S 31 v;eU as a new investigatioh by the Senate of JFK's dt.Ut. ' laar,chiefattorney for both James Earl lby, the alltged killer of Marlin Luther King. and Harold Wtilburg, theacknO\I·Jedged dean ofassassinatloncritics.spokefor O\"er anhouronthtshortcomlfliSOf th e Warre n Co mmi ssi on's methodology, lhen\ll·entontodetail his work with the ~'rtoedom of In· fcwmation Act in oblaining im · :'f~:..,trf!ax:C::i~·~ m~~ltS Com- Lnar thl!n went on to talk about the l\llo'O approaches taken by the prt"55 and the other media ouUets over the past several )'ears. "One tendency," he said, " the tendenc'ywhic hia themostnotable intheprus, lstosensaticxiaJ:uthe case anddirec:tattenUonto«rt.ain thf'Ories ." Decrying thit approach, laar citC'dthefollyandexpenseof in· \·~ tigalillfl a large nwnber of theoriesinsteadofconcentratingoo the facts . "That's what the other tende!'K'y invol\'l!ll,"hesaid . " Wor k.ing\toi lh the facts , as a very few responsible critics, li ke llaro ld Weisbura Syl via M~r, and lloward . A lot of -!'ttention hat been built up by JH!ople who want to know WHO killed JFK . . . but 12 { ~an ahe:r , K'• going to be: very difficult ... A graduate oi the Unh·nsity of Wisconsi n Law Sc hool, ~sa r acknowledged a re-cent statement by Stnatcw Slt.'eicher ol Penn· sylvania about the imm inent coll apse of th e Warren Com mission't rindinS: . .. l thinktha t speech \'Uyc:lear ly foreshadcr."S a call by Stnat« S~tt·eicher 's subcommittt-e for a r ein _veJt I gat I on o f 1 he usa111nalion," be userte<l Ad ding,''Tberea re . ho~tt·ever ,ctr taln guidelines, « rtai n crit eria , llt'C ought to develop with res~t to any new lnvesti81tion." Roffman, have done . " Contrary to specut.ting about who might ha ve shot Kennfdy, thei r effor ts ha ve concern ed whether cw not the Warren Com· mission waa accurate in Its fact.s, andwhetherornotthefaclsVtilk'h ar e known to be true indicate in any way there was a conspiracy in· volved or if Lee Hiln'ey Oswald.,.,, thtllS&Iuin." Otoosin& the correct a pproach, Lesa r argued, would determine tht respectability of the Stnate's in· vestigatlon. ' lie then elaborated on the reuons a past-ledure audience quizzes the critics r:~·;,.~~ . . >''1~::0 /\· ~ - \i ' l In Lhe Len )UI> """John li> mrwd)'••k•Lh--trnpol'· •~ntclLKorf;oct ll.lo•hftn.oddo:<JLo tlt..otiiW)IIn\.or-•>tu.c .... p;un.t.&~ tn&l) aro4. on the .. hoW. c.ordully rll<j ultrd rnh> b) the .,., ,.,.., ('omm ..won \ "' [,.,r ••• l he<>f~ lt..ou b«npr~ f'<>Undcd ,. tlh<>U inurnb..r ('larm ~llu cLo>m luo M-fn ;od•;oncN corrn""''"""odcnu, LcUL.o~cluo ... crloolrd or tnl>lntc>prctcd. .&nd m.Jnwi'IDraJid ""'lie"""'"" ,,.>fl bythc W~ rrcnCornm .. Ill 1111 c•tOkncc tlu:o p;l '" lftlft'Cf t1111 lhc --nc,.l.oah;n httnturn.cdup lhrr i>on f. . !o•IMKir ) lnu <>diKI ... n. r''"'"""'""J"rr b)U••Id lkhn.I9H ' ' lly KarTOII Bolulak To get campus reaction to the recen trevtvaloflntem t lnthe JFK usasl nation, studen ts wen aaked_,j the question "Do you think the investi8Jiion into theauauinallon ol John F . Kennedy should be reopened?" T1te interviews Wft'C done on Saturda y, Oct. II, 1 day before the arrival of Attorney James Lesa r. Surprisingly, almost al l the students in terviewed feltt~t the information revealed by the Warren Co mml u ion wasn ' t complete or wasn't accurate. A couple of students exprt'lled some reservation about another invesli&ation though. Richard Newgord , 1 UWSP graduate said ~~ he would approveofare-investigallon "ifthe ex peue wasn't too much .'' New&ord said 'lhat he feels there's more important things to worry about. Jane Adams, a senior, stated, "Yt'eU in a way I think it Uhe lnves t i&alion l sho uld be reopened l ... btrt then .YOU look .. .and ltwasinthe put . lt'soveranddone v.ithandldon'tseewhatdiUerence it would make." On the otherhand , most sttrdents interviewed Vt'ere convinced that a r e·l nvestlaation was ~ecena ry One student , Tim llilson , a sophorn«e. •ppe.ared to ta ke an ex t nmepositionwhenhe st.al.ed,"J the Warren Report . Gr imm uld he felt a re.fnvestlptlon should take place but ke added "I'd have to ag r ee with Duid' Wrone that =:tenc:vFd~:e ~~ ~O:Wdu~ uncovered, youknow, it'&not golng to help too muc h." l_nterestina.ty enqh, Jt'a been 'ltTLiten lh•t this Warren Com · mission wuaet up, among other l n jeopardy, n w~ll as possibly II'OUSe the lr~ ol J . Edgar Hoovar if IJI~y protffded to in\"tstigate it. They tll~rtfore decided lO suppr~s the r~fromthepublicrecord . There IS aLso some atscuu1on aboutho-A· tllei'IU , contr~rytolbti r usualpolicyofnon~valuation,had enrouril&ed the Commission to ace~pt its r eport concluding O.wald was the lone assassin lrld lbtrev.·asnoconspi rKyin\·olved v.i th Kennedy 's death. • t..Kar 's «nclusions: ""Here you ha\·ealllhe"'asonsyou'dt'\-erneed to re-open an invrstiption." But inthet'\·ent that a new in· · \·tstigation by the Senate Is un· dertake n . Lesa r ex pressed his conctrn about what could be ac· complished . " A lot of attention and a lot of excitemMihasbetnbuiltupacross the country by ptOple ~~o·ho want to ~:i':r~~~~~-~':~~~:.~t { question. But tv."i!lve yean after the murder it's going to be very dl f· ~~::·~~o":~!";i:'.!,~d :nt~:; 1 · much time has gone by . "In addition," he v.·en t on to say. '" It may not be the mO&t important ~~1:;~c~ti!!~·!'ett! :!:~~~ " If governmen t agenclts ca n impede and thwart a ort'lllfi,.n. ~b!!!'t ~ec:?:a-:: ~e.!~ poh lical fi gure In the United States, 11 an be done in a ny cue where thesesameag~nciesa"' r~lled upon H eowmme-nt o.eenciH can im~de and thwart o pruidentiaUy dire-cted inquiry •.. it can be done in any ccue IJIIOC we can accomplish . The claims of the critks and the im· pUcations ol the transcript from whic h I just read show that the War"'n Commission was deceived by government ag~nc les, that govemm~nt agencies didn' t fulfill thei r obligation to ~rt all the facts . to find the facts ." Lesar then went on to chronicle his lf'gal st rugle to obtai n spec· tog raphicdataon theauaulnaUon, and concluded his speech on an optimistic note, IM)plnc the Senate reinvestigation o f t he J F K assassina tion would not only cov~r the Wa rTM Commission's fail ures, bu t alsothoseofthecourt.s.the •'BI. lheCIA. andeVft'yothergovernment ag~ncy involved with the still· ~vedmW"derolPresidentJohn Fitzgerald Ktnnedy. the UWSP assassi nation library is located in documen ts, 5th floo r LRC WHITEWASH, a seriet by Harold W eUberr PRESUMED GUn.TY by Howard Roffman I<>"'" "-'d limn lu\f ,......, f<)UIIH). ~ nd Ullr " 111<)\f'J "'""l! ~"'""' t u thAI ~~ -11<>>1, » IIJ\f ACCESSARIES AFTER THE FACT by Sylvia Mearber 1(1 k>l•l h~cl•••d ~nd••l " '"''' " ' lh • r• c~ n be no •rnt thrrr ~ ~~ I<M> mAn) d<ffrtrnt nuronh "' 1ho flt>• <A hu rn.Jn " '" tho ~'"' '""~Utili of l'tlhllknt KrnMd) rn.J r\ • •"-' poont ~I a lllcll • • lo.>\ It-~• • of h i>I Qf) THE BASTARD BULLET by Raymond Marcw t ho l t!ltlll nlc-u • rftnda ndri.~o SIX SECONDS IN DALLAS by J<>Uah Tbomraon thnllltnJ. • r • IR,...,..,P"' __, '"""'''""'" ' thot-.ov for more info contact Georve Leopold Ph. 346-2778 V. cmu>1 rro~n _,,./W•. , ; ...,. , ~o,oo~ot n..- -4 , .....,_.. '--"" ·· , .. •e'rr smokhiJ opium If 'A'f lhlllkthefundJmenlalpeoplemo"er ls&olngtobeanythlngbuttbehlgb- [ "-.ys:· - Rep. E . G . Sbuslt.r Ut. 1':1 .1 Aroad with -no e·nd? by Mlthu l Rru 'ibe total project cos t of this st reet , int'ludl~ engineering and construction, will be approximately S550.000" s tat e d the t-: n.,Jronmt.nlal Impact Business HiRhway ~Ito just eas t of ltsl ntersectionwithMichipnA\·e. This seldom mentioned project will addS203,320tothetotalprojectcos t. Another addition to the original planisthe:laylngofasanitary sewer the entire leng th of the :O.tichigan A\'t', exte:nsion to handle: futu r e deve:l'lpme:nt n orth of cam pus. Thissc-.oocr , v•hich will be connected to the dty system , adds ,\snu mrnt prepared by John Stra nd and Associates, Inc ., for the O ty of Ste•·ens Point in Dr«mbu. 197.f,t p • ..O l " $1.197,700' ' ls thecurrentcost escimate for the l\liC'hi1an A\'tonue fo::Xt~sion from figures suppli~ by theOty Engineer 's office . Wh)' 11ou there a ~7.703 Oil anestimated St 22 , t~tothe:project . A storm se-..'t'r for the extension -..·asinci!Jded in tbeoriginaleost estimate , but it will no longer empty into Lake Dreyfus as first proposed. F'earof upsetting the lake's delicate tcologka\ balance (if it eve r reaches one ) made plan ners decide to extend ·the stor m H"ttft' furtbe:r ~th where it -..·ill e:mpty in to Moses Creek . If you don't remember eve r se:eing Mose:s Q-eek, that 's because it tTavell underground, via city pipes, from the Village Apartments to the Wiscorisi n Ri vu. l1le sewer extension leadingtothe.::reekwll\cost a tmost$50.000. Concerni ng future expansion, the Strand report stat rs, "The proposed fa.::ility will r eadily handle the projected 1994 traffi.:: volumn" or 1500 vehicles per pe:ak hou r now Cp. :::,:\'~~c!!!~~~~~~ ~~~~~ the facts'? An voe all like the provmial ostrich with lt.s htad buried In the wrxl. afraid to ~aUy know what 's goin1 on'? Does anybody care'! This suspicious looking cost incruse in the Mk:hipn Ave. Ex· tension may in,·oh·e C'eftain im - proprittles.IMitcannonelhelesa be explained on economic &rounds trathrr soft &.rounds I mi&ht add I . Prom what the Oty EnatnHr 's ofrice told me , it basicall y boils dovm to expansion and lnnatlon . t: XPANSION The ori&inal plan did not include lhewideningofl"orthpointOriveto rourtanes, wilh s torm sewer ,from TITLE I DEED MICHl6AN RENT WITf.l WITH AYE. $ ~ Oc,O K-nART ~~;a.\Y' $ nf1C (X)NALD) d.pOO{XJO $ L.j 000 00 0. ) 391 . Later In the report though, it mentions that " The traUi.:: generated over the proposed stree:t will probably r l'(tuire furth er impro\·ement and widening on portions of Mkhlgan 1\ve:nue," l p .S71. INt"LATION The remai ning increase or S322,221 from the original $550,000 es timate can be attributed to in· nation and other minor costs , ae:C«dlrw to the Ci ty Engfnee:r's offi.::e. These fa.::tors are difficult to predlctwbena proje-ctlsonlylnthe pla nning pttte an d will un - • doubtedly In ase as li me goes on. One par i.::ul ar ar.ea worth monitoring it the effect , if any. of the high spring water u.ble on the Mlchlsan A\'e . ro.d bed . lbe Strand reportmadereferencetothiJinthe ~tiononsoi lanalysis whenita.aid , ' "'lbe toils tupon which the road ....;u be built l a re not .::onsidered to behlghlydrsirable for<:dnstruction of anykindbtc'ause:ol thehlgh seasonal around water . " (p .20l. Cur r ently , Sentry Insuranc e Is p:aylngforfill a ndexcavationln exchangefor useof theroad tohaul fi ll from Lake Dreyfus to the Sentry bull din& site. It will be lnterrstingto ~lftheycontlnuetopayif problems occur I'H!xt s pring . Ht:TitOSI'ECT One' point is woc-th mentioning beforeanyoneconsidersthecosts mentioned above: to be final. The figurrs -..·hich I ha-.·e quoted are direcllyfrom aroug hcostanalysls of the Mkhlga n A.ve~Extenslon pro\'ided by the oUie the a ty Engineet". Thts· is the sa source that John Strand a nd A.uoda tes, Inc. used to arri ve at thei r S 550,000 es t i mate t e n months ago. In othu words, If tliecostscanchangesodrutically inthls short of a time , the:y 're bound to .::hange apin Mrore completion of the project, now sched uled for late t9'il. Unfortunately for ci ty Ulxpajre:r!i , lhe finalprice tag wi ll no doubl: be hi&her than it is now. Just how much It wi!II!K'rease Is entir e ly s pe.::ulallve , bu t th e amount will problilbly be small .::ompared to inc:re.ues up to the A: :~ ~tc;!7,cf!:n:re~~~he":.~: 0 project entails and so ar e able to ma kemoreaccuratec01tesUmates than last year . Whether or not so m eone dellbe:rate ly unde:r es timated the I:OSt or the Michigan Ave. Extension tomak e.. itmorea~:eeptableto the public is something I've been unableto substant la te. SUs plclons will linger in U!e minds of many !Of' quite sometime. One mi&ht be te:mpted to point a n accu ti ng finger at th e City Enginee:r 's office since they've been supplyi ng.::01t da ta all along. But thesepeoplecanonly &obywhat the City Counc.ll tells them and would gain nothing by hiding cOils. So what abou t the City Council '! From vr:perieoce,they undoubtedly knew that the 1:01t or the project would increase as time went on. What doesn 't? That the public 11 the last group or people to find out how much of an increase is involved 11 not unusuai . 'Tbls ls not a n att.empt to justify the pracll.::e , just acknoNled&e that It n:lsta •• a poulble n:planatiOfl for the In· .::reased price or the Mkhlp n Avenue Extention. ) OUTLOOK w1TH WITH WITH 1 BIG 130Y $ 6,6oo,ooo HOLIDAY INN $8,000,000 GRAND WA200 IN:,UF\PNCE COMPANY $ __ ------------P-.uo-,.s~U()r~14 , 111S lntalldngwttbmalllJ. leoflhe StevensPointcommU}\lt abou tthe/ project, there see111 lobe a prevalentattltu exp . They weren 't partl.::ular 'upaet by a S650,0001:011 lnc}'Uie · be.::aus t -tbe:y expect the I ne v ffa bl e nor t h i I d e ~v;l~~~:o ~~j.~n0:~~~-t That th is development 11 inevitable .:an be disputed by none. The Mkhipn Avenue Extension II but a smallaymptom of the p-owtna pains that this dty will be experiendnaln the next ten yean. Eco Briefs Environm enlal Council UWSi> Envi r onmental Council Meeting.films-WUdfiowft'S ol the Uppe r Midwes t : wood lt ndt, wetlands, prairie. Communications Rm . U.C. Tues • . , Oct. 21. Anyone ....'ekome. Griuly Sur The US Flth tnd Wildlife Service recently announced that u of Augutt \ , 197$,thegriulybea.rls consideredathreatenedspec:lesln the US, with the exception of Aluka. It is estimalt'd ~t only 500 t.oiOOO&rluliesu-eldtsoutbollhe Canadian border. N•dear Pl1111t1 ScientisttlnJapanhavenotk:eda ltatlttically si&nifkant lncru.toe In the num be r of mutation• In vegetation RUToundin& • nuclea r reactor. Sadao lchik.awa,professor ol &enetics at Kyoto Uniftl"'ity, stated t hat the Increase In mutations wu aurpritlnc . and may lndkate that more than the per· miuible amounts ol radiation are bein& released. CNR Shnkntl Pruen t : A public meetinc to prtsent the result• of t ummer r esea rch, 1\iesday, October 28, 7 pm In Room 111 CNR. A team of federaUy funded CNR ti~Jdentt will show slides on the ttatus of the Wood 1\irtle fendangt:red spfC:iesl, a number of smaU mammal spf('ies, and a areater numbef" or biNI species. Everyone is invited. Projtc:t Saacv.lee The Navy is now e:OI'Biderlng Michigan's Upper Peninsula for Its Projec:t Sanguine, a low·f~ey radio syttem for communie:atlng with submari nes. Efforts to build the system in Northern Wisconsin and in Texas have been repelled , larcely t hrough the effor ts of citiltn"sgroups. At leasttwoU pper Peninsula counties have se:heduled November ~th referendums to ask the vcMers llihetheror not they approve of the installation . A landslide ""no" vote it antlcipat.ed. Loweria g DDT Levels DDT levels in food and in the fatty tissue of humans and tome birds and animalt have df-opped tteadily 5ince the aovemment ba n of that pesticide three years aao. ac· c:ordin& to an Environmental Protection Agency report. PoiiOCifod Fltll le Lake Mklllcae Thousands of carp taken from La ke Michigan and told to the city of St . Louis for gse In public pa rks had t!)bedestroyed inea.rly AUKgst. accordin& to the St. Louis Post· Dispatch. The .reason for the destruction'! Thefl&hcontaintdten times the permissible level ol polychlorinated byphenyl (PCB). Cheaper Bttr Falstaff Brewing Corporation has announced tha t , In order to encourage the use ol returnable cootalnen .lt is aolna to reduce the price of its beer sold In returnable bottles . Company officials noted that nonreturntble containers account for awoximately one· thiN! of the cost ol a standard six pack. Ice Age Trail qanized into group5 and issued ll.andard ra tions (peanut butter and jr:Uy) tnd our weapons. To fi&ht the local underbrusb we had, for each aroup of five , one weed v.-hipper, one hatc:het, one hand-uw, one prWler andavery lethaltwobladed monstrosity tometimes known as a polaskl. . lnto the ...,-oods ...,-e tramped, foUowlna our fearieu Ioder and chairman of the Portaae County Ice Age Trail , nm Victor. The tile of bailie was two miles ol hiUy farm· land and woodlots. For the m01t part we were to stick close to the fence line. We di ~ "t have m uch trouble ....i th the 1rail throu&h the fields until our weed-whipper pve out,butbyth.lttimewewft'einto the trees. We tpared tlftltoo big for our P!U'Ift'S· but sawina through by Ba.rb Pud•tl I wu wondering if burnt-out could mean freezin& cold. After a weekend ol cold October ctmping I decided on this IH'W definition. True tO the nature of our plans t.o work on the Ice Age Trail in Por· tage County, there wu frost on the ground Saturday mornin& till 9am . By ttw:n, while the rest ol campus was aetting up for another day of HomKOming celebration, we wen on our way, down ba3 and baggage. We had permission to camp on a hi ll , somewhere 50Ulh of Arnott. nea r the site of our trail work . It was refreshing to see blllt aner the sand fiats of Point ; but have you ever tried drag lna a sb:-man tent up one of those gladal mortines '! After aettin& Tent Cit)" ~ (populati~ 101 set up:, we Wft'e ou tn lpoUswuodbtftnt lwn .,poat!bl<! with ,.,y Kwn throuP~ dorsi&n , .,.d onc:rennth<!,mountoldt-d,.rtpK<! ;lrOIIndyou IO'C'Of\S~nt). lnn~ (l.5")ollolt Addorion,uy, the! dtMot yoft h<!lo&htlywgv~m4olOUit1' •lwllh<!IJ!$kHpn\Oftofyourbody'• h<!'IIMid<! Th<!St1'owfuturn,l02nn(4") hopdownflll<!dcoll,•nd,nonlul.llt'd s :;~-;:-~::::~=:",:~ l = 5i&hted a areat bird cin:lin& over the llb: t field. When socntbody m e n tio ned &o•haw k we im · medlaltiy dropped all discussion or the blrd's identity. Sunday's wor k waa much the same, although we ran Into new problems. Nobody aot more tha n &eratches all wt«"kend, but things could have been aerious for one group if one of the landownus ::ft~i!:r!·~:!t fe..~t!: lhe brought Ul some tpples and v.'e got to listen to all lhe problems of landownera who want lo proteoct their wil dl ife. OUr group's main problem was run nln& out o( marked trtil . I wondered as we thrashed ~n~ r=:~~~. U:Wert;,~ ever &ot out bert without ending up east a few tlmes . But lhen, except for our sore arms, it see.med we had to pack up too soon. We'd only aotten hal f of our par t of the trail done and besides, the wet ther had been so great (except for the fr01t on the pumpkins ! and the hillt Wfft so betutifui . ltwaseasiercar ryinathe siz-mantentdOWTI hill but we began t.o wonder how l q it would be befon we could aet out ol town agai n . h<!ulprotKUII"S&&"· ""'I<!I'CA'mt, SER OW 1 TMSt1'-owos,wonkrp.orU .IOO ~::::::n~.!:nJ. wrut ThO' weD insul.ltN lwndw,wwr pod,t1~ II<! COVt'l'<!d W1lh bdlows pofhb meuunn& 2.5 4 em (10') ~ 267nro(IO.s"), ...,tcro-clowd . Avrrriully,lpp<!t<!dpol' ktt ovtryou r some of the ovn-.tlanging branches and chopping through the dud \llood kept us btay. Our group finished a good bit of up-hill trail and 1till had time t.o' enjoy the beautiful , a lmost com· plete silence of the country. Thft'e v.·asn't, as a novelist ml&h t uy, a cloud In the sky, so we soaked up the sunshine. Uttle did we know, in our state of bliu, what wu coming . The cold starlt'deretpinaln when v.-e got back for dinner a nd the sun v.-asturninsorange. By the lime the chili was half cooked, nngft'S wft"f: get ti ng stlff. By the ti me the chili was ready to serve, we were standing around like little orphan1 v.-aitin& for a bowlful to warm our fingers and Insides. Kftpin& warm aner dinner wa1 another matter . n,e O"A-ner of our campsite area didn't want any fares onhishU110welnventedothtTways to keep warm . Some cli m bed into thtir sleeping bags and weren 't ~ tiU the water wu bolli na Sunday morning. Some of the rowdy cold people threw a party with blackberry brandy snd another group went walkin& down the road looking for 1 pumpkin p.atch In hopes of an early lightina or the Great Pwn pkin . Sundar morning , while wtltins for a nde to our trail site, we 11 ,ndothtrfl'gol<!ol<!msfrgmh•nn. •nd tht'I'O'"s ytt,nmlwrpock<!ronth<! 1Mo6f A w' rsl dr,.._tnn& thutt off co'ddr.lfts, .ond,ltup-onhoodis UAB SEMESTER BREAK TRAVEL ORGANIZATIONAL MEETINGS FOR 'Y"':<!~l!';~~US-,.. NEW MEXICO TRU TH OR CONSEQUENCES BACKPACK TUESDAY OCTOBER 78 , 1975 in lflTipt'l'.alure pu down MOUnd uro cond otOOMWolh choll fKIOnto - WF, 'nd bdow. The! W<!o&htof prim<!~ woth r.o.ct'llrnt resutts. lt '"'''"morf downfoRi~eomp.o,.blr lo th.ltofth lclft p<!l unll of wtoghr tlwn •ny ~:~:r~~;:<!n;d~,:::~:;:~:.,m.;, CC~t~>p<!fitov<! dHr&n. wind-tl pn60-40~htlwUunprcrvts Co'on N''"1 blu.t' , t.uo th<!h<!"rt~ntionconlldt,.bl y The! XS. S. M. l , Xl =~.sq::'~~~::,::~:.':t~ Av -•&hi 116l!g (4toz) S7600 7:00 P·M· ROOM 129 A UN IV ERSITY CENTER • :. PORCU PINE MOUNTAINS : MONDAY : CK ! CROSSBACKPA COUN TR Y SKI ~ NOVEM BER 3, 1975 : 6:30 P·M· :NICOLET-MARQU ETTE • ROOM ~ UNIVERSITY ~ CENTER fk~U . IIn,. ... n 'Let's Make an Education Deal' by O.StlrlroNtr "You can't win without the bor· sn." An overused tlkhe In lpOrU to say the least. But the bat teams usuallydot..vethebtsthorws,and 1n collefe, the only way to aet the I hones It to be the best recruiter. Over I ook ed and u n • deremph nlted In evaluatlnJ athletic prosnma it the malin- of recruitinc . lllhouldn't be, bcca~~~e the name of the aame ""' m devdopina winMn is the I"Knnitilll procftS. Brlngin&thellhietes you want to your school It Mlf the bltUe. It 's also the m01t arue11n&, hustratina. a nd time c:onsumina job of co.chirc . The c:o.ctuna ltHif Is the e;gy half, the fun and enjoyable ""· The styk of recruilina varies from 5port to spore, eoo~ch to coach, 1ebool LO sc.hool. Certain anu of the ~tate ocel In 10me sports and an ~•k In others. Spetific II"UU arec«~lfOli«Sb)'t'fftainKhooll. \lead fOOlbaU COKh Monte Olarles recruits most of his talent from conf~ncts within tOO mUts of Stevens Poinl. The Wiscontin VaUey and Fox VaUey «<nftrtnee~, a well u the entire CHen Bay area, are rtspGn~lble for many of the people found on the r01ter. brf~~~·~n 1~ !e h=t i~or:~~ 1 Madi.Jon lrtl, 1'-0 known fM Ita ....£ ~t:c:~=~l. ~n:-e:::r,.'" fact tNt that Co.ch Qarln don not dwell on the Milwaukee aru , feelin1 that thl football t.lent tMre b not IS abundant 11 it II ht .. l'f:ll up htn. Ontheotherhlnd , headtrackand Don Amiot rec:ruill heavily In the Milwaukee area . His team s , wh ich hue CI'OII «<UU''Iry CNCh l!.~~yy=t~~~~:~ have beef~ built around Milwaukee area talent. While both Charles and Amiot recruit almO&l exclusively in v..~IKOftSin , new head coech Ted S.tor has dirrtTent optiord. To make hia prOIJ'am work , Sator wtll have to attract hockey players from Canada and Mmnaota. Wi~oCC~Ni n Will also s uppl y taieft led pla)'ffl. but not or the cahber that Canada can offer. Hockey players from l.'l! s tates sim pl y don 't hue the badcaround, ortxptt lence tha t the Canadians do But h n<hnc the talent is just one small fraction ol thl recruitin& proceu. Rein& able to K'Of'e the talent can be a coofusinl and compl icated ordeal Letters must be wrlnen, phone calls m1de, as wellaaarrancementsforvlsl ts to lheathlete 's~oehool, talkswithhJI coac h, principal. vltil$ with the parents ... thesea rejU5 tafewpointa oft.heproc:nsthatacoachmust&o throughtoget hiJ target llcanbea 101'11 and tryina affair , U can be a painful and wasted tffort if , after all your work . you rind you've 10111 your man Your effort wasn 't quite tc;ood enouah. J Maybe it was aomethlna you llid, or s ometh1n1 you d i dn ' t :"~th'tf!t a ~~~~nc:!~s"~ preuionon a parent But Jt can abo be reward1ng111hen the YOUI'II man you ' ve spent hours upor1 hours ...-...... ,.• • 11 flr.......,.ll.ttn trying to impreu finally ll3rHS to tnroll at your school. All coaches mUll be able...to ~ell the: school. as a hi&hiY respectat»e academic institution. Few athletea diOOMaKhoolaimplyforthe sport, apecially a state collqe. The future enrollee must be sure he will be, four years later, a more educated, and mat~e adult, not )1st a beller hockey or football pla)'ft'. Education in the lona: run will dictate his future , not his athletic ability. m~~.:J t~ ~~~": procram. Put ~ can be a oomber one Kllinc point. Everyone want.J to be uaociated with a winner. V..'by pby basketball at Stout if you 're &ood enqh to pa.y at Eau Clail"e'! National a ttention publ~c:lty , and statistlaunallobean tmportant rec:naitlna element. Monte Olatln feels that h.avina his own T.Y. ahow, ~~:~C~~~ '\~.~':';·e v':r ~ 1 1 ~~':e =~~ ~o ~t;'';e:~IU~~ prOIJ'am. Ever)'1)ne likes to see his team or name mentklned In the ~:r~i:'a~·i~~!i:'l ~~~~ drawa attention. Bein& unique , or crutlna ~tth.ina new and exc:itinc can be tmportant. This il how Coach Sator delc:ribn hil hocke, team. kina rJ!W !:!er;'i~a=~~=':,.~ ; Po&ltlve attitudes mUll prevail rqardlns ol the • port. This !edina mUll be transmitted hun the roach to the future rec:ruit.J. Recruiting is a risky busintsl . Mediocre talent b pkntlluf. It can !=Je::~r::rs:•!:r ~~ncS;~~ not I<Haaily attained. The cream risH to the lop. The mt tetlin elsewhere. 'nltorein lies the dJf. terence between a wtnner and a '-· The I'Knlit ina procesa here at Stevens Point lllmprovin1. Monte Diaries has brought c redibility and respectability bad; to footb.all. Amklt hu had tremendous Jurcat with his trac:k and crou country prOIJ'ama. Hockey ((IU)d be the sportolthefutureonthiscampus. Bnketball remains the b l& question. The tituatlon has im· proved OVft' the yars : hopefully, thia tmxt will continue. Pointers win again .,Y w.,-... w...u. With homecoming ftstivi tlts com plt te , theoniything needed for a perfect weck wu a Poi nte r win over Stout. The ~nttrs did jU5t that by trouncin1the Blue Devil• "~ The Poi nttn consistentl y moved the ball on th e Blue Dtvil defense . They picked up 303 ya rds passing and 313 yards In total offense Quarterba c k Reed Giordana completed 2$ of 42 posts for 4lliO ya rdt . llepasatd foronetouchdown and ran for two others. -Butthebigstoryforthe~nlf'rs 1110111 Jeff Goal lie broke a con· ference record for pua reuptions previously held by tea mmate Doua Krueter lie caught Ill for 112 ya rds and one touchdown . On the last play of the aame Gou took a lateral ( frorn ltlckPeotandpassed2SyardJi to Doug Krueger for the fin1l ~oeore . The Pointe~~ q:ain turned in a fine aame. e forced Stout to fu mble seven ea, recovered lhr ee , an~n r-ce pted St quarterback . nElkinnve.t' es. Corntrbac Tom R~ah , startina ·onty.-his-iec:1>nd game, rtcovft'ed two l!Jue Devil fumbln, lnlf't'cepted an 1-::Jkin pau, and made many key tacllln . !lit play inspi red the Pointers to s hut out their opponent for the tec:ond atraiJht week. The Pointers hadn't ahutout two conJec:Utive opponent.J since the lira! two aamn ol the 11163 seuon apinst Stout and Pilneville. The Poinlf't't tr1vel to Othlloth for a conference a•me at Titan Stadi\111 on Saturday . t Ladies' night 1n by Glenn 8ehring Mond ay nights at UV.'SP, at least in the Unh·ersity Fieldhouse. the men must take a back seat to tl'lt women . Monday nights ar e ~~o'Omen 'sintram urals . U you h&\'t f'\' U walked through the fieldhouse on a Monday e vening , you IU'e prob<lbly ac· customed to hearing the sweet \'Oices of the women in charge, kindlytellingthemalepopulationof the campus to bounce their basketballs and lift their ""-eights e\sewher"e because you see, this night is women's intramural nighl. On Monday ni'hts all fieldhouse facilitiesa reavallable. A,•ar ietyof equipment may be checked out from the intramural office usi ng )"Our student 10 card. lfyouhaveanyquestionsconup a copy of the sports handbook at the intramural office, or come to the fieldhouse on a Monday night andseewhattakesplace. _f-"lt' ldhockey UWSP came back after a 2· 1 loss to l-'olt Valleyc:lubonOc:tober 12,to beatUW-MilwaukeeJ-I,Oc:tober tS. On Oc: tober 18-19. the team attended an Umpiring Conference In Mil11·a uk~ . Kri s Labutzke and Sue ~~i~ J::i~ st._ral apiece to UWSP travels to Rh·er F'alls Oc:tober 25. Sports Shorts S11·irn mlng To the male jocks of this campus, I know that Monday nights ....;n alwaysrtt~ainc:loseto)"Oilrhearts . UWS P won a toug h contest against Carthage College J-2 on Oc:tober 17. ~larcy :\lirman.No.Jsingles "''as theonlysinglesplayertodtfeat her opponent . She did it.,.,ith dec.ish·e 60.6-<lsets. at least one night aldie fleldhouse ~edforthtiruse? v.'OfTitnlotakeanactivepartlnits many recreational opportunities available on the campus. Each Monday night offers these K · th·ities . The sports that are offered provide a wide varie ty of team and individual activities. Fint semester activ\lles include tennis, flag football. volleybal l. and table tenni s . Basketball , raquetball . badminton, and softball are of. fered in lhe second semester. The new assistant coach will be H.ichard Hack. of Valhalla. N.Y., who was appointed to the university faculty this fall as a phys ical tducation instructor. director of intramura t sportsandcoacholthe golf team which eompleted Its :seasoninfourthplace. cernifii~"Omen"sintramurals . pick But shouldn't these women han• 1 stopped by the lntramunls sports handbook . It says that ~~t'Omen 's intramurals invites all on cam pu:>. He also has served as headteMiscoac:hforateamthati n the paSl season finished third in the conference. Jerry C. Gotham, was elevated ThUTSday from auistant to head baskeUJall coach at UWSP. He "'ill succeed Robert Krueger, who has been given a one year leave of absence from his post because of recent health problems. Kr~er .,.,;n remain as UW SP athletic director . l Cotham has been coaching and teachingphylicaleduc:ationat lhe Unh·ersity since 1969. He has been Krueger's assistant since he arrival UWSP swamped UW-Whitewater Double winners for UWSP .,.,·ere Jenni fer Cummins. 200 fret.'5tyle and 100 butterny : Kathy DeGroot , 100 backstroke and 50 backstroke ; and Sarah Pierre, 50 breaststroke and 100 br~aststroke . • 7H$. Pam Mueller placed first in the i nd ividual med ley. Jane Ellefson in the 50 freesty le, and CndySatorin the tOO freestyle . Cindy Reetz ea r n~ the Pointers first top diving fi nish of the year. ~nbin Van Oien placed second. Both doubles teams were successful in their matches. Kathy ..._ Janz-Ba r b Kobi s h op de feated · Ca rthage's Stopn-Vardenburg 6-0.&o. Mary Spliu -Ca rol Weston topped Scandrett-Meslck6·2,6- l :zoo The team competes State, Conference tournament at Oshkosh. Oc:tober24 and1S. The team lsnow2-2in dual meets. The gals have a home meet Qc:. Iober 25. against River F'alls at 1 pm . ~e Natalie Andrews has been elected captainofthewomen'stennisteam. Andrews _w as elected by her tt'ammates and competes at the No. I singles" spot for the Pointers. On Oc:tober 16, LaCrosse out· 5Wam Point. 105-26. Karen Slattery and Jennifer Cummins were t~ onlyfirstplace!inishers for UWSP. THANK YOU! WITH YOUR DEDICATION, COOPERATION, AND ENERGY, THE '75 HOMECOMING WAS A GREAT SUCCESS. SIGMA TAU GAMMA DELTA ZETA WWSP R.H.C. ROTC ALPHA PHI SMITH HALL THE POINTER HANSEN HALL HYER HALL ROACH HALL SCHMEECKLE HALL HARRY BABCOCK NEALE HALL ANDY DEDERICH SUE SCHLEIF MARY REDMAN KURT WELKE CINDY KAUFMAN NANCY WAGNER BRIAN DUCHSHER CHUCK BORNHDEFT JOHN ANDERSON BOB WEBER GWEN NELSON SUE KASTNER SUE KUETHER AND MANY OTHERS UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES BOARD Pickers go on safari by Handy ...,1rvtl, ,m Sulllvan,and Mlluo Haberman Remembet' the BaiUmore disc jockey who journeyed to Alrica to his tosses and is now a--1. 0\·erall . assumi na ·Buffalo "'UI on Monday • . thePic:kersare-16-Hontheyear .. .a respectable .767. SohowdoesWeekSixlook? Wdl, v.'e 'll tellyarightnow. ~~>itch doctor •·howould cast a ovu the Red Sox, thus enablinll the Orioles to O\'eTtake Boston! Well. the Superpickers lind a ~II lllt'retwoye<~rsahead o fh i m . In t973,beJ~wemetCamacat a chi.U"Ch b<iuar . 111e decided to seek o u tside h e I p In our prognostications. Source5 told us of a man who lived on the Zambesi Riverwhospecialltedinspor ts, so "''t' headed for the Dark Con tinent. After ""-eeks of Dat llln,~: dense iuns le,oppressiveheat, tsetse flies and lions (not of the Detroit variety I . we came to a clea ring hard by~ mighty Zambes.i . At the l.'dge of the rh·er was a thatched hut. Outside the hut sa t a rtgal 6ENGALS OVER ATLANTA- It i1 apparent that the Falcons' pr\u rookie , Steve Bartk owski. is no Polish joke. Sadly for Steve, it'll be the Bengals ' defente su pplying the punch line SUnday u the Falcons fa llby 7. man , mumbling some triba l incanu.tion . t\tlastwe had foundhim - the ltgendary Dr . Kinkadoo ! It was decided that Habennan. who spoke Swahili , would go forth andaskfor thegood witch doc tor 's aid in selecting the weekly NFL IIOUSTON 0 \ 'E it DETHOIT.{)nce upon a time whtn opposing coac hes chec ked thei r sc hed ules and found that the Oiiei"'S were the next op· ponents.they'd tell 'theirplayersto take Sunday off be-cause they had a bye. Not any m<H'e. Bum's Boys by J behind Billy White Shoes. ~~oinnen . For three hours. Dr-. Kink.adoosat in silence. listening to the spiel. Suddenly the South African stillness was shattered by the ringing of a phone iMide the hut! Or. Kinkadoo excused himself with av.·a\·eofhishandand wentiru;ide. The only distinguishable words emanating from the hut were "Notre Dame over Alabama by t" . Shortly therea fter Dr. Kink.adoo stood at the entrance to the hut and be-ckoned to us. For th e first tim e since our arrivalhe sP£!ke . ··Sorry. boys . b,ut I thought they told you in Johan· nesburg. Ionlydocollegegames!" And thus it is tha t the only outside help v.·e now get comes from Ca m ac v.·ho. by the way, is merely 66-(t after Wt-tk F'i ve . The shiek really stuns 'em . For that matte r , the mere mortal Superpickers haven't bee n doing ve r y bad either , although"'"" did mess up on four umes last wt-tk . Wievel an d Sullivan 'AUI the Eagle tossup. so they're 4-t inthesaladcategory. Haberman dropped outta sight wi th University of Witeonain cu· OAKLAND ' OVER SA." Dtt:GO· San Diego Is posing a problem around the leag ue among enemy scouts. How do you scout a team 's offense when they don 't have one! Phi!Villapiaooexplairu; :"Wecame in on Monday to watch the Charger offense on films and found a blan k tape. So 'A'!: all went to see 'J aws· ins tead." Raiders by 17. ·-.' 4JEKS OVER NEW ENGLANDThis is like choosing Kate Smith 0\:et Tolie F'ields in a beauty con· test. SanFTanciscoby l . I'IT TSIIURG II OVEU GUE E N n,\\'·11 the injur y ridden Pack wins th is one. then Sixto lncano will be chosen the Mil waukee Brev.-ers' Most Va tuablePiayer. Stee.lersby "'· J t:TS OVER HALT!~ :!:~nd ~~~~as~o a;,t:" a'sto~f,! ~~!; pre\'ai i,SO.S2. T ST. LOUIS OVER GIANTS-Don 't fa uJttheGiantsifthey'reatl schizoid by th e end of the season. They play some of their "home" games at SheaStadium ,homeofthe Jets.an d ~:r:if!~!t~~:e ':.!~ ~~ like the Buffalo Bills. Too bad they play like the New Yor k Knicks! Cards by 9 Saturday . MIAM I AGA I NST BU n ' ALO· SUptemacy in the AFC rides on the toss up game . S ull i v a n a nd Haberman support Shula 's .scut· tling Simps on while Wievel fearless ly for ecas ts Ferguson 's mteting of the Flippers. O II EFS OVER DE.'!rr,1\'£R·Look for a repeat of the wild opener a t Mile High. Otis may be Arms trong , but his legs and ribs sure ain't . It's Ka nsas Oty by J . RA MS OVE n SAINTS.L.A. Is the wor st best tea m in the NFL so far this fall ! What that means is that they should just be far enough ahead ~f the Saints.to preclude any last·m•nute hero•cs by Archie Manning and Andy Hamil ton. Rams by l: J . - OVE R W AS III N GTON CI. EVEI.ANIHf the Browns were a batlleshi p,youcould sin kthem by pu ttingth eml nthewatcr . Redski ns by 17. UO if it rains.) MINN t:soTA 0 \' ER CIIICAGO· This is the Monday Night " live" game and we ex!)«t that tile Vikings will put the Bear1 to sleep long before ~"rank Gifford doH the same to hlsaudie nce. Purple by IJ. Ot\LI.AS OVt:R EAGU:S.There is no truth to the rwnor that Tom Landry came up with the Cowboy shotgun attack while helping his daught er prepa re for he r wedding . jTexasby3. • Steve n a Point U~/P ' POINTER,. FOOTBALL • ., UW-SP vs. OSHKOSH (T) Saturday , O.ctober 25 , 1:30 pm ~rc/ u sive l y- Ofl. W185 in sterea COMING NEXT WEEK OCT. 30 & 31st 7:30 Prbgram Banquet Room .. for afl of Central Wtsconsin 103.3 FM E·Oon't worryabout .anydefe~player fromeithert eamgoingtojailonan assa ult charge! Broadway Joe 103.3 FM 103.3 FM $1.00 (t ...Intra please lo)ti<'I'Lnlll' lt.a You ha\·~ probably s.een Mr drinking cotree at the Crki or cruising by onhert~-s~bet­ "'eenclassesduringtheten-mmute· rush . She wears a buck.s.k•n C'Oat lhat matcheslhec:olorofher long straight hair. You have probabl)' seen200other gir lsinbuclr.skinco;i!S on tkpeed$ .. ..10, vohatts so Spt(:ial about Bonnie McQueen" \lihen Bonme hears musk, a swirling and movina montage appears in her mind. She envisages lhe chords as soft billovo'ing douds in the melody, "lMn a st~ak or brilliant n uhes.··She sees mi&Sic: in COIOI'$andfeels illtextures. ·· r or- example, an Oboe JOUnds red and feels hard. a nute is sih·ft" blue and tlllrtmely soft , a Cello :a:;_~!S sha'l)ness and is a dHp The touring company of "'1776'', ~ere in the Quandt f'teldhouseat tpm, October 31. will berecreatmg hillorylnmore ways than one. During the swellering swnmt'f" of t776. a ~~onngl inJ. bickering body of men in Philadelphia forged a nev.· nation out of ll RJ)Irate C1)lonies. The fami liar tale of the men who made the American Revolution Is joyously retold in the Broadway p~aying mus~eal"1776" . an~i~~~~~~~~~~~h~~~!O: long way from the time she studitd the p1ano at the age ot fh·e At 8 ycoars. She\lo·as composing hff ov.·n melodies on the piano . She dlscoo.·ered the viola 1n her fresh · manyt'afofhtghschool . andinher JUnior yea r , shtp\·t half a rec•tal the Statt' Y01.1th Symphony . Colleagues and fritnds reca ll "Dawn" and ''Tomorrow," two tone poems that she originally composed for plano but lat~r re~~o· r ote for orchestration and preformance b)' the IJWSP S )'IJI · phony last y~ar and solotd ~~~· i th Iter talent has not un· not~ . Sbe ~~o·u unoffictally ac· claimedthebestviolaplayermthe stateandholdsa state record Class A, tn Wind. Shespenttheprevious2 summers as a suestvtola play~ fO<r the Ten~ musk: pa~~ant The play by Peter Stone, ~~oit h and lyrics by Shennan Ed•••ards,captw-es the wit as ~~o-ell as the seriousness of the f'oundina m~£Sic Bonnie '"''hey enacted'their own llttlt- ~~o·orJd of music. They used to analyteanddisHc:tthemusiclbe)· !w-ant cuttina dov.-n the other mll5tcians to t'xalt themseh·es Tht'y hung t011.ether and would noi talkabouta nylh ifllbul mll5ic-. 'J"he ptlceless m111idans 1 knev.·, ~~o·er-e the ones voho are open-minded and t'ducatedina ll a~asoflifebesides This s ummer . however , two weeks before the semester opened. Bonnle made a starllin& deciSlOfl she dropped out of her muste major and switched to medtcal technology . She was close to graduation at the time. but decided the emotional and competitive strain was too hi&ha price to pay The world of music was al50 becommg somewhat disillusioning. ··nus .s goma to JOUnd ridkulous but honest, I found that miiStdans ~~o·~e a strange breed and I ~~o-as becoming a n a tvt>ical one." said declarati~of indepe:nde:nce,andby comprom1se and cajolery. the three convince the mOC"t' conservative deleaates to accept the ideas in the document. f'inally . on Jul y 4, the Declaration is siJned. Statringinthetourlnaprodi-ICtion us John Adams, th~ flinty Massachusetts aristocrat , will be Don Perkins who. 11111 like the "Ohno, l have not submlltedtoa total abandonment of music. I just neve r liked the universe that musician.screatedforlhemw lves." she said. !low did Bonnie feel when heT own music was performed by the UV.'SP symphony~ " E\'t'l'}'one ~~o·anted to be on top, mc:luding mywlf at one lime. My ""hole hfe ~~o•as absorbed by mUSic and I spent all day in the musit' department practicing (Of' per· f«tton .''laidH-onnie ·"Then I broke under the pressure. 1 ~,:;:e~~ter h::;l~ n:Ct'f"c:'~:! fight 1n me. The consUtnt battle c:ooldru•nandsmotherthatpas.sion thatoneleelsfor music:." she addod " It was a shock at nnt. but a tremendous feeling then enveloped me when I heard them They were julit2t olminutes duration , butl rememberallthe~~o-orkitin\'OI\·ed. " " Wntinc music is very time co nsuming . d i ff ic u lt but satisfying.'' "'The buic strueture "of the &eore il seldom written in a day. Usually, it may ta:.C.e lix months. But I remember once. the day beforethefinalexams, l heard the melody-by the next 14 hours, I'd alrrady constructed th e basic llructureofthescore. That isarare but uhllarahng~c:c«n~ishmcnt . " s:ud~ ni,. " \\'hen I hsten to Brahms lSI S) mphony, I don 't miss a note . I ~~o·a1t aru1ously for certa1n parts to come and ~~o·hen they do. there is an o v~rwhelming and inten s e leehng I don't ...-ant to kill that feehnl " Pennsylvania, Mr . Ben Franklin ~irectfromPhiladt'lphia,ofcowse m the J)('nOrl of Sam Kressen . I Philadelphia wher-e he has alway li\·ed. and where he got his deJ at the University of Pennsylvania which Franklin found ed, Mr. Kressenhas been the city 's official areeter •. costwned . and bewiged, ever s1nce he tmpersonated Fl-anklin at hl1 25(lh birthday celebration there ini9S6. And so,onc:eagain,as tlleydid 3:10 ycarsago,a man from Bostoo and a man from Philadelphia will meet again to decl11re independence. . ~ie chose to reswnc her own idenllty and J)rftt'rve her love for T:"UIIC . m\dtC . " goo~ ~ntJy an extens•on ol a mUSlC dtopartment in a Texas Unw~sity ?asofferedhef-a posttion asstnng •nstrue:tO<r. on =:~t'f"~~a~~t~: Fathers. The action centers John Adams and his "dforts to persuad~ th e co ngressional deleaates to declare America free from British rule. With the help of Benjamin Franklin , he gets Thomas J efferso n to wrft e a Perhaps~~o·eallcanlearna lesson from Bonnie's honesty and still retam our intt"''t''t in something ~~o·e'vegrowntoloveo-.·ertheyean . Poetry reading• John ,\t l<' t>ollllcl We dn esday night , th e per · forman« poets brought the world to Stevens Point. Perhaps I shouldn't say " the ~~o·orld ," but s urel y a diH e r e nt world . Philadelphia , New York, Supe!' highways and back roads a ll became present and alive in The Co Hee h ouu during the pe r · formance of William Talon and Otis Brown. ~y Jlltcl_tingrhythms, city rhythms, breathing rhythms, life rhythms, slammed us soothed us moved us to little sections of life. In the best tradition of the story teller ~~o·e sometimes wondered where one story ended and the next began. CoiO<r leaped at us in prism thin slices that overlapped and blended lntolhespecialreaiJty ofTalon nnd Btown. Oti~ Brov.-n was my special favortte of the e,·~ning . llis work f!::l~t~e ~:!~·~C:f:" 1 ~':!; a:: came touchtnJ dose for me. Somehow the love and warmth o( all th ~ slipped iiHO the room ror t.a SIIII$! and savorinjC. lwishlcoulduythateveryone feltuldidabouttheperlormance·they didn 't. The reaction was either : "I really loved them", Of' ....,.hat cra p" I found no luke-warm ~-- guilty .:ouJO be admiasable evidence. The student had no choice In !Jle type of hearing, this being the power of the Otancellor. The student does noc have the right to even ehallengeor ques lion the henr ingexnmlneron suc h issues of bias or competence. trthe student is brought to "trial" an attor neycanbe presentatthest udent's upense. lfthe studentisfound lnnoeent.thendmini strationcanappealt hat declsion. lfastudent failsto!lnswerthequestions, hecanbe foundguiltya schnrged . l nsomec~.astudentcouldbe facing. bot h crimi nal proceedings and unh·ersity procet.-dings. This is not double jeopardy in the legal sense, but it places the student In an extremely unfair si tuation . These are only a few examplesoft hemanyproble~s withthc_ pr~eode . Vet's Comer News for campus ; els b)' ,\ l ark DuHon Two collese organi:talions whose members enroll about one-half of all college sllldents in the United States ha \'t exprts.Sed •·grave con«m" that !he House Committee' on Veterans Affairs has vOied to repeal the G. I. Bill for persons entering the armed senices alter ~mber 3 1. 1975. Stnlltor Vance Hartke 10 -lodiana), Olairman of the Senate ~miuee on Veterans Alfai rs, has strongly opposed repeal ol the G.l . Bill : there appears to be more opposition in the Senate . The Amer ican Association of State Colleges and Universities, IAASCUI and the American Association of Com munit y and Junior Collt'Jes, tAACJC) testified before Congress ~:!;:~~ : repealing the G.l. Blll. They gave the follo....ing I. The G.l . Bill programs sinc:e World War II have t)Cltnded educational opportunity to millioll5 who otherwist> would noc h:we had this chance, including many from lower -income, o,•;orking-dass or disad\•antaged backgrounds. 2. Themilitaryserviceswouldprefert o keeptheG .J. Billas an incentl\'e for recruitme nt of- quali fi ed people. It has been a major incen th·e in recen t )'ea rs. 3. Se\•eralhundrtdthousand vete ranswlll leavethe.ser vice each year, and a great many could not continue their · educa tion without the G.l . Bill. ~ The G.l. Bill program has paid for itself seve ral times over in inc reased earnings and resulting larger tax paymenls to fl-de ral , stateandh>e!algO\•ernments. Man)" educators hcwe written to Congress urging that the G I. Bill not be ended. It is important that the vete rans at UWSP also IOoTite Congress concerning tttis matter . United States Senate Committee on Veterans" Affairs Room u,, Ruuell Office Building Washington. D.C. 20St0 Vance Hartke. Indiana, Olairman !louse of Represenatives Committee on Veterans' Affairs Room 335. CaMon Ho~.Ge Offk:e Building Washlngton. D.C. 2051S Ra)" Robert£ , Tuas , Olairman A second IS5UC is the rHponstbility of the Unh•ersity . Should the Unl\·enity h;we the auth orit)' to punish studoenl! for non academic rnatten'! Studt'nt Government maintains that the only matters of concern for the Unh•ersity are the academic areas. When a studt-nt violates academic ruiM.then the student can be di sci pline-d b)• the University . But in those casesthestudent m ustbeaffordl'dallttisrights. Our main contention is that the student is an adult with all the rights and responsibi lities of adults . The student is not a member of a pri\·ileged class nor a protected class. At the same t1me, they are not ~dary clliu-ns. They must be mponsible for their actions and guarantted their rights. To the student I ask . would you expec t to be treated di fferently if you ~~o-ere not a s tudent '! lfwearetobeadults. we must act in that maMer. We can nolongcrexpeettheUnivenltytoprotec:t usfrom the outs\Je } wor ld . We must eKpect to be a li ving part of that "'-or I~ . Chautauqua A Pointer regulor feature by Robert Bonk.l llis \·ery difficultto1sayanytttingmeaningfulaboutdeath without bei ng overly emoHon.1l or trite. But I do like whai Ja.~es Dickey ~nee ~~>Tole about it In a poem renecting on the su1c1de of a childhood companion. ""Th~! . eternal process most obsessively ~~oTong wi!Jl the wo_rld, tsho_whe_chose to desc:ribetheuereisingofourone unt\"ersal brrthr1ght. Clearly. he was onto something especially with his ~of the ~~o·ord ~~>Tona : death, If anything: hasalways beenabrttooblasphemousandinc.,omprehensible for mos.t people. Perhaps this Is why e\·eryone is so lrw:ensed about ~~>hat happened to Dave Hoffman last weekend To die at the age or 2 1 from having consumed too much al~ohol is without question , a tragedy. ' But when it comes to redressing the ~~o'rong as m05t of us ~~:~::k:k!~~do, let's make sure we ha\·e' a few things . Eve~ since the news began to spread on Monday that a Siasef1 pledge had O.D.ed on boou. a good number of people ha\·~ been coming down on thesoc:ial fellowship in question. 1 can t say I blame them, frankly ; the Sens, with their nai r for tastelessness and excess. have not endeared themseh·es to ~u~ts . Buttoholdthementirelyresponsibleforwhat happenedtstooeasy. The Se~is rna~ have been fi'!Oreclosely a55oc:iated ~~oith Da\·e ~~:~:no~d::~~ ~! d:a~h.g them our scapegoats ~~>ill not Open Channel A weekly from Las t we-ekend, lf you' ll recall, was Homecomi ng. A Jot of yo~ went out and got .sc::orched, but that 's typical ; in Stevens Pomt, the Great Amencan Bum-out Boogie rWI! second to noneasfa ras socialactivltiesgo. Fridaysand Sa turdaysa re [~ student go'lernment · ~ ~Iober 28 at 8:00pm in the Wisconsin Room of the ~br!~~:!:a~;te~~t~~\nar.;w~m~t ;~holttln~ Disc1~1nar ~ Code. We are asking a ll interested members of the Unwerlltycommunlty to be there to present their views to Student Govemment on tttis impor tant issLJe. Student Government: In Apri l of 1975, took the position to oppo!ietheJ?roposedgw_deli_nes. Wedid thisfor basically two ~=:-tha~~~~~ ~v~el~ :~ ':-~~~n :~at'.!~ gu11lehnts had a complete disrqard for the accused student . · lslua such as common law rules of evidence were not necesury so, the ~~o·ord of anyone who heard this person was :S!d~~~~~;:,;, w~;~:.;~~:l~~~~a:r=n~are drawing a What on! must realbe, however , is !hat this type of atmosphere 11 ver y ~onducive to grOUJllll like the Sefis, They could not derive the1 r membership or sustena nce on a ca mpus :"'here drinking wa~~; done In mode~aUon . Their very existence , ;:::'U::~ r~e~:au~ ~!~:k,:C~i:s ~~-:"t,~b!; .li~t but ~~ ~ ~~ / such a bad idea In of what happened, could somehowcriticlzeourownbehaviormored' . ~~Which brings me to my other major concem: In my opinion :::!b1;:: :h~!~~ l::os~.~~"mU: !i~!u~et~~"f~~ ~~f~l~:,n, ~nd!e'i1':~!:;~~~mte'f~:ft:!~t:'na~:~ 10m~ _ falll'!g down at the Square or a party, and don't :.e;~ 11 until he or she is dead, !think thAt's the ultim ate w~!tJ~~~t~At!~aid ~s ~.::~~~~agd ~his~~ i:~~~ : otherwise , Dave Hoffman migh t still be with us In tum Con- Pro Consumer protection news from the college press service by Mark Volluth I was just getti ng to know 1M man behind the brown eyes. We had engagtd in bull•hooting, small-talk, and other mindgames that peel away lnhibitiom and pave the way to friendship. Saturday I ~ivedtheudn~thatl had lost a potential friend . Lumpy was dead. ol~_wr:wsth~~~-~~~~u::,-~ ~r:r-:;: ~:~r= =:~·1 :et!t~=m: ~~~me away fom someone who wU .In the bleak days following the dark news of Lum py's deaUi, I listened u rumors about the circumstances ol hi5 death spread. I decided to find out what happeoed for myself. Lumpy enjoyed the friendship ol the Siasdi's and looked forward to becoming one of !Mrn. Becai&Se ol that and possibly m~sons only he knew , Lumpy became the Sia'wn·s only pledge last week. UnUIIastf'ridaynight.everythingwaspretty"WJevenlful" compared to other Siasefi pledge daHeS. Being the only pled&e. Lumpy d id not have to perlonn any skits. He only •spent onee11ening in the ' 'ring" too. Friday a fternoon he said hefeltfiM. At 6:30 t"riday night Lumpy began thr traditional march' frombar-to-barthatprecteds initiationinto Siasefi . Thepath tM;PnatlheOffice Bar,continued on to the Tllll Hat,..and then sh1fted to Jay Drees bowling alley . There were more bar s tops along the way , but their names are no more important than theonesalreadymentioned. At about 9:00 that evenlng he Deeded help to ~~o·atk, as his s taggers became stumbles . At 9:15, Lumpy was unaware of the fact that he !\ad becoole a Siaseli. His new brotbers helped him put on the familiar gray s weats hirt with the mU£ proclaimi ng " fellowshi p" across it . It was a moment or celebration for the club. A new brother had been ini tia ted . Lumpy was too "out ol it'' to join in the festivities , though. He was taken to a nearby apartment to ..... At3 :00am , a fewol Lumpy's friendswe ntto seehowhe was. They heard Lumpy talking in his sleep. Convinced lhat sleep ~~o•a s the only thilll he needed . his friends left. Another frie nd , ol Lumpy 's was sound asleep in the bed beside his . ~ At a bout 9: IS Saturday morning, another friend ol ll.lmov's went to wake him up and totakehimoutf«breakfast. Lumpy nevergotup.and~v_u~illagain . He was pronounced Ot'ad on a r rival at St. Michaels hospital shortly a rtt'f'Wa rds . 1be exact cause of death hasn 't been determined yet , and probably won 't for some time. On Tuesday . Lumpy's f•mily •nd friends .buried him in Holy Cross cemetery. It's just • short distance from his hometO\IoTI of Wa uwatosa . Noboy can ever bury the memories lhat Lumpy lert behind. orcantheyevertrulydrythetearslhatstill1mart~indour eyes. As lifeless leaves fall from the trees that ! walk past, I can't help but think of Lumpy. I can't help but as k: Where did the warmth of sum mer ao'! Wintu c•me to Lumpy far too early, and in the chill of il$ pasairc. it has left1.11 all cold . Lumpy , m ay God keep you warm in the palm of his hand. Bruce Nelson was worried. The Montaila s tudent lobbyis t had just s pearheaded a succe55ful legislative drive to guaranteesiudents in his state a voice in facul ty collective bargaining. It ~~o·as th e first Ume students anywher e h.ad won that right. Previously the consumers of ed~~:ation had been left peekingthroughcracksinthenegotiation roomdooras labor Hhe faculty ) and management Cthe administration! decided issues that would directly affect tuition , class size and s tudent .servires. Students watched their role In campus dec ision· maklng,llard -~~o-on during the late 60's, slowly Mcked away , limb by limb, on the Procrustian bargaining table. The Montana s tudent bill Md started to reverse all that by guaranteeing students not only obst'f'ver status , but the right to participal.e in caucuses before, during and after negotiations. So why Wa5 Ndson.._wOIT)'ing1 · He had just fOIUld out Iili i a bi li li kely to pa5s Congress this session would overrule his legislation and put facul ty collective bargaining at public univ ersities under the cont rol ~·~=}~~~o~~~~~~~~~~~~~ent of active in bargaining. The NLRB has consis tenUy ruled tlla t students • even taborers li ke graduate teaching aSI!stants and cafeteria worke rs · have no place at the table. They s hould read thei r books and shut up , the Board has said in effect on severaloccasions. · Only those states ~~oith laws wea ker than the federal bill would go Under the NLRB, but that will probably be most or them , since the federal law is ex~ted to Jet public workers s trike, a right most s tates haven't granted . Unless the NLRB has a s udden c ha nge of heart, students at public institutions in those sta tes ~~o·ou ldloseanychancefiM'guaranleed l nputin bargaining . In all fairness, the Congressional bill <HR Ti l introd~~:ed by Rep . F'rank Thompson CD-JNJ ) wasn 't meant to shut the bargaining door on st udents . II intends to gran t the 14 million public employt't.'S in the US the same right to organize and bargain that WOC'kera in the private sec tor !\ave ha d for 40 years . Thompsot~hassaidhewants to "jog" states into action on their own public worku laws , but apparently no one ha s told him that his bill s tands to jog students out of academic decislon-mald ng for years to come. According to obst'f'vers, when hearings on the bill begi n latu this fall , other special interests: will unroll a laundry lis t of items they wan t exempted from the federal bill, like state te nure laws. retirement systems and so forth . Student rights areapttobe los tinthe s hufneasvisionsofstrildngpolice, right·to·work suits. aa rbage collection slowdowns and picketing Congressional pages compete for !be bad dreama of Rep resentatives and Senators. Whenever laundry list Um e rolls around . s tudents a.re typicall y the first togo dirty. Montana's Bruce Nelson has vowed to go to Washin&ton himselfifneceas.ary.sothatltisstudentacademic victory doesn't turnout to be purely academic. "Bei ng involved in the first student bill . ! don't want to lose it," he told me. If not Nelson, someone should go. Collective baJ'Ial ning maybethenewlanguageofhighered~~:ation,butitcannotbe blithely translated word-for-word from the f• ctory. If it is, s tudentsinthe "industrial''universitywillsoonbelittlemore thanrive tsspatouttoholdtogether a falteringeconomy . (__~-~=.c~~~~-l b00ks· mocksmenandthelrheroics.yethe ~~~~;s:b,'f.e ~~~::.~~~~~ ~~ Grudel by John Gardner ~ ... ae.._-~ by ADdy 8obsge Thisbook isath·ertisedasbtlnga retelling or the Beowulf legend from themonstu 'spointofview.• It is thAt and moe-e. Beowulf Is an epic poem written Sometime in the eighth century by • · nor thern European Olristlan poet. II is supposedly a retelliq of an older pagan tale. Thutory is about Hrothgar , kina of the Scyldings, whose kingdom has betn terrorized for twelve years by the monster Grendel who comes crashing into his beer hall at night and devoun his people . 'tbt monster is finally s.liiiin by the hero, S.Owulf a sense of purpose, reminding men of their morlality. In the end however, Grendel must face his own at the hands of Beowulf. He ~!~iti~\{;~~c~:~:~. ~~g;:tt. ~~ maifitains ' 'it was an accident " . This is a fuMy book. Grendel is not only at odds wi th men but \loith l'lisenti~envl ronment. " Why can 't these creatures disc:oYer a JitUe dignity'! I ask the sky. The sky saysoothing ,predicta~y. lm_akea face , uplift a defiant mn:ldle finger , and give an obscene little kic:k. Tbe sky ignores me. forever unim- pr;s:tb". grim book . ..,.-e need our monsters OW' he~ - It say. that 115 m uch as Our newspapers are lull of Crendtls, shocking us into looking at our everpr~n nt vulnerability iiind the absurdity of ourbelligerentherolcs: . Gardnt'l'"isanexceedinglyskillful iiilld compassiona te writer . I recommend a ll of his books. live music by J\ut A. Prbold U just ""Y five auys came running In after a wearisome and disgrWIUing plane ride and sa t down and expected to play a decent program. tlate, at thatl, I would expect a performance that was lousy , atbtst .. Luckily, the American &-us Quintet , whichpiayed in Michelson Concert Hall last Monday night, is not made up of just any five IIII)'S. This aroup of fellows came into their perfcwmance situation ~ithout ltle benefit of a relaxed supper , nap, or warm-up-all of which help to detennlne the outcome of a particu lar performance . Evidently, ltlese prerequisites, foregooe by extenuaHng circumstanets, were transcended by pure musicianship . The quintet presented_ a well· LUCKY'S THE PLACE TO GO IN CENTRAL WISCON~IN NOW FEATURING. OVER 500 LIGHT COLOR COMBINATIONS ON STEVENS POINT'S LARGEST LIGHTED DANCE FLOOR! REMEMBER COCKTAIL HOUR DAILY 3-7 NEVER ANY COVER CHARGE ~: ~· _' : • • rounded program coosist~ng of compositions by Coperarlo, J.S. Bach, and Carter In ltle lint lulU, and Poulenc,lAvelock, and Scheidt in the portion after the lnt:!rm\sslon. Every piece was bouyant and clear. AmUIIICal Wlderlta ndinawas eviden t and exprnsed well by each player as well as Ule group itself. The fi rst selection didn't seem to hiave as much confidence and authority as the rest of the pros:ram, but even professionals have to get used to playlns with each other again aner a break .. My per10nal favorite of the eveni~~& was the lAveloclt SUite. This piece was weU-wrltten and expertly In terlaced with just the right amou nl!l of special eUects unique to each ins trum en t , remaininllwtllwlthintherealm•of 11ood taste. The performance was til!hl and exdUn~~:. maki nR this numberrepresentativeofthequlntet and thei r overall presentation. Special mention should be made of Herb Rankin, the tenor trom- ~:~~: !~v~":'a~~:n~HtJ! ~~~~~·~::~~ ~':hc:t::. ~ his own material. His very Iunny mono\QII.Ie, based on obviously true-to-life home town uperiences gave the oltler brass playfl'l, ·as well as the audience, a chance to rest and relax. I'm sure many were surprised to lind out that the figures who walked out on stage were actually people. and not motoriud stufled sh.l rts tlult played well . l am also fairl y certain !hilt if Herb teaches a mu.slc history class somewhere , none of his stude.nts will ever find employment. Well, enqh. Let me conclude by uying, the American Brass providedanenjoyableeven i~~&.and I'll always remember their performance bert. LUTHERAN STUDENT COMMUNITY ,_,_. Sunday Services · 9:30 a.m. Open House 6:00 · 10:00 p.m. Sunday Thru Thursday Peace ·c~·mpus Center-lutheran c.;omer of marla Or. & Vincent Street West of Tempo Parking lot UNIVERSITY !!~DISC!f1l.T ARTS & LECTURES PRESENTS FRIDAY , OCTOBER 31 , 8:00P.M. UNIVERSITY FIELDHOUSE TICKETS: 346·4686 UW·SP STUDENTS: $1 .00 20% off on allc_ot ing -Pleasing You . . . Pleases Us! INCLUDING: SLEEPING BAGS, BLANKETS, DRAPES, ETC. 257 Division St., Stevens Point 344·9255 1- records M anyone familiar with Uncia Ronstadt 's previous ""ork can tdl you, bet" vocal range is most_ impressive. Equally at nome w1lh a ,-ariety of material, rrom country ba.lladstohighenergyrock.shellas always included an eclectic sam· piing of tunes on her albums. c:rouing and combinina genres . But no.,..t1ere is this moc-e apparent than on her latest waxing. Prisoner In Disgulw. With its melange of country, Motown, blues , rock a~d ba.lladeering, this albwn defies utegoriz.ation: and ultimatdy the only way one mayspealtof it is to co mpare the a lbum with her = " Heat Wa\·e. " ltpresel'\·es muchof theintegrityoftMoriginalvenion done by Martha :.nd the Vandallas. but literally smolders in its up· dating , .,.,;th Ronstadt Hpecially strong on a series of belted-out yeah·)·eah·yeahs near the end. Of the new material. Anna McGarTigle and C.S. Holland's " You Tell Me That I'm F'xlling Down" is clearly the best. a buoyant song about Identity and \onelineu • .,.,;th l'olaria M111.lldaur contributinaon 1M vocal mix . But also good is John David Souther's "Sliver Blue", a bit· tenweetballad aboutthedurability oflo\'e,andNeilYOUilg's"Loveisa ~ ... a Cajun hoedown complete v.ith banjo, fiddle, and hande:laps. Production. again. as on the last lllbwn. is capably handled by Peter Asher. And th e back -up musicianship is sterling. But the ~alhighpoint.uwithall her.,..'Orlr. , is Unda Ronstadt 's own impeccable si nging. Oth e r cuts incl ude James Ta ylor's melancholic, "Hey Mister, That 's Me Up On The Jukebox," Uttle F'eat's "Roll Um Easy," Jimmy Qiff's"Many Rivers To Cross," and tM albums most co1.8'11rYo50Uildlng tune J .B. Coates' "The Sweetest. Gifi," a song which minntheprisonmotlfandfeat~.rn Em my Lou HarTis on · back-up vocals. ~::~r~or:A~=~~~~ then can you appN)aCh its beauty, cran. and compelling nature. Ofthee\eveniOI'Ipthat compriw ~~o~~- e~~~~ c~ ~:;,!;:, Ronstadt's inte rpr etation does them justice, and in somco cases, duet.ohelpv.iththeirarrangements ~de~he=~~~"!i~~ versions . Thetitletrack, for eumple,..,;th J .D. Souther s ing in& perfect cOUIIterpart harmony and backed by strings and woochrri~s. is in· finitely mote appealing and ha1.8'1ling than the turgid \'enion found on the second SH F' albwn . The ume can be said for "TUcks of My Tears :' ! never cared for the Johnny River 's version , butsc«"~ with some in teresting acoustiC guita rworlr. .Ronstadt's covering of 11 g r ows more and . more ~~~:~~n~~~te~!\·~=·-13.d out for the AM playlist5. the IJolland·DozierHolland penned Tht' Other Sldt' Of Tht' Mountain Unh·t'rsa t Pict ure• l>ltt'Ciedby L.a rryP~rce b)· l:. W. I't'trick Sur!" it's a tear jerker ...and good for a couple or handkcrcheifs. But it'sagoodone. '1'heOther SideoftheMountain" isnol a big film, It's not important totheartofcinemaoranythinglike that,it'SjWltamellowsortta movie that rolls over the eyes and gets riRht inside to the soul . "TheotherSideoftheMountain" is the true life stOI')' of top-notch skier Jill K.inmont who was only ooe race away from a spot on the ~~-~~!c!Jd~tw:a':t!re'daf!cr dreams and spinal colwnn. Movie newcomer Marilyn Hassett vibrates with unsticky , ungooey emotion in the role of Kinmon t. She is disa r ming In her ability to portray the tragic heroine without the fakery or artificia lly induced pathol. The st.omach wrenchiniJ t'motlonsthattheviev.•erfeels are ~al, not contrived by the pen ol a fu~t!r;~.Cka$ed by the p"'{ue:er '"l'heOtherSideoftheMountain " is understated. It d0t5n't blare out abou t the mistreatment of quadrapalegic people , a lthough that is im plied. Instead it involve~ thevii'\l.·e r with ca reful,inteU!gent scripting and engrOHin& actina. Themovieisoot gt05sy,lt's\ikea friend you want to talk to about problems, orshareabottleofwlne. It's mellow. Not for kung fu freaks. ~h~·J~:'S~~tf~~k~~t~~ ~~= movie. Ma~ ter Gunflgha.er lli!LyJac:k ·t;r~lt'rpd su Tkt' Ulrec:tt'd by f'r ank La uzhlin by l:. W. I't'lric:k The leu said about this movie tM better . ltisanotherawfuleltcurslon into the Billy Ja ck mentality that Tom L:lugttlin espouses through all his movies. '"The Master Gunfighter'' should ha\·ebeencalled " Bllly J ack in the Old We5t" for all the diUerences be tween the two characters. Tom Laughlln .whowas l is) Billy Jackinthreeearliermovln,can't act. He affects a slow burn. The thrlllJofthemoviearewatchlngto see how long it takes Tom to uplOOeintoarageofshitkickin,kung '"· Some pacifist Bllly Jack ,is. lie grooves on violence. even though he claimstodetntlt. Billy J ack tala The Master Gunfighter) gets his revenge by mu tilating and killing people. but only after he warns \.hem he doesn 't want to hurt anybody. ''The Mute r Gunfighter " Is an exce ll e n t exam pl e of ro tten moviemaking a t its best. Petrick's rafting; the black plague had mort going for it. movies Earthq uake Uni>·nul Pkturn by C. W. Pt'trlck " Earthquake" is of Interest only because of SensesWTOUnd. But it's :!'{~t~c!c:~vr~~~~~:~~!~ in their ears . Alas. themoviecornesina plain regular sound version too, which is the version people in Point will see, tunless things at the FOX have chilnged by prus time.t The movie ia a slick . sick melodrama by Ma rio Puzo who SC«"ed with ' "TM God(alher". II features unforgettable lines like " Earthquakes bring out the worst in some people." You can afford to miss it. WARM WELCOME TO COLO WEATHER Comtinffomth•cold insnug, soft-m-ups! Piu.tl 1inings,g~nuintltathtrupper1, ·~1turn cu.tliony crepe soles - 111io o' you ' re gonniiOYt lorwelcom ingWinte~l Tieinl.lnorbiKk;sidezipintln. DON'T READ Another in a series of fine-prim presentations that actually ·encourage you to read the fine print I THIS!!! .\ UN ITED COUNCIL ANALY SIS PAPER : T il £ S T UDENT D I SCI PLINARY CO DE W~ Sysum" IUWSI, 1M ~entsano~aaetoi ''StudftltOiKiplinatyP~·· lllat " 'OIIId IOW:rn all UW campuse~. lr1 addition 10 prol\ibiUq In fonnm1 1M "Univrn.lty Ill ~n:::~~~~~~ ..:~·~'"==··~r::u: f'roc.oftlul'ftWOUJdiN:IudetbefollooriqclauftofacUI; ''tal.. lntf'nlloMl concllxt that $Oriousl)' dama1s or dft.tro)'l' Univtf$ity profit!'!)' or atttmpu 10'' do to: ''tbl ... intentloMI ronduc:t whldlcO...titutesa wriolll d.lnatr 10 the pel'l(lllaluft'tyofolhtrmcmbr-;sottneUnivenlty('Ommllnlty'' : "lfllntmtiOMI tondutt th&t obltruet5 or~)' lmp~l, or 'ltempta to ot.truct or Hrioualy Impair Uni~nJty-nm or Unlver· s..ty-authoriudactivilii!Sonanycamf!U*..," : "ldl(Otl¥iftionol lcrimetbat"(ilin¥olvedlhe-oi.. Jorff. disNptjan, fi'Wirllr.olproper1y''btbJ.&iac&otheUnivenJty,"tiil wu committfd with intenuo pl'fttnt tmployea or Sllldfnll at the Univtnity from mpa~ In tbtb- duties or plll'lllllna Uwir lltUISin. I IIII wu. .. ~ andtnrJ confribultdloasubluntiald.i:INptlon oi\M admlnlttra~ o1 tht Ulli•·enlty: · • •'fd P'or 111\alolthcirtrt'd paueuion ol Univft'll()l properi)' proprM)I of another m~mber of the Univeni!)' commWiil)l": Of " Cfl f« violatiniJ !he WiKOnJLn Administrative Code; and. ''(II rukil!ll I kMwillll)' false IUL!ftMI!I ... to In)' Unlvrnl!)' or •1ent on a WLi~rJil)'·rtiated rutttr." m~ployte TbeCM~IIorortadiUni~rsit)'w0uldappointan"lnveHiptlna Offiur" who would ba ftllfJOW~ to Mljudieatt IJud&el the ae- C\LSILtionwht~su.spttllioll.npulllaa,orlouofOnlndlll aldilnoc appn~ptaate In haf.Mr osiniol'l. Tllbconditional Judcemmt powtr Is Lnadditlontothtlnvatlptlftloltker'tllllrOIM!ItiiNJ•thorlutlon toinvn.tipteandprrftrdllraetinallata. In~·- wlten the ln..atlpUn& olfleer doe& think ~·loll. uplusion,Of loudfillllnrialaidillappr"'ffri..k',lhecawlsr.terfdto enMr 1 hu.riiiJ offker or a ''Swdetll Cclnduct Hetrilll CommlUte" t wl*h need n« """'nudtnta• il l , orlheChiLncdlor .U)' allow the c.- be!weea tM two. • If the lludomtls itldlfd to llave violated the p!Wtldurts, the Univrnit)'rn.y rftpOI!dwitft"pt'llblltiol'l,ruiplionorleava.... C\Lt Audlenl to =~:...~;a!':. o:eu~'!ef~= ~kb~==~· r~ ~ """"'""'· With the ILOIL~ptlllion-npulllon-Jou.of·lid ~11M11 f~alltd " ln- formai Adjudlcationl, a~alls to the Chanc:dlor; with lftOI"ttMriotll aws t"fonnal" adjudlat.loc.t."""'""" IIUL)' appeal to the Rttenta' " Committee on Stlldtnt Dilclpii~W", and if tile Chancellor 1111 made proYUionlorit, toanitlln-mediateappallattbDd)'. 1M Prtl('fCiurn allo enabllth emer&ency -Pf•lon hn CCIMS Without I hari,.l, lad~ and pro~Kript..,.,. 101' Kadoml~ miKondun Sopllicantl)'b«allltloftherfiCLfUol UnittdCoundland a number ol ~udtnt IOYft"'Lmtnta, thif Rflmtl hive dela)'ed art1on on the PfOPOMd~HWLlllhearinpa"'l'ldci.QPelldlampu~ tltldln allfal~tetheR'Stnlllohou~'tthb havebeftldaneolthelrown wohtion, l.t . wlthCIO.Itl!udent prftlllrt'! l. AI thoa poont, It Ia C'I'IIC'Ial tllat 11\llk<nlt loWidtri!and what thew proctduf'ell will mnn for thnn and for fulurt' ulldm~ of the PW SySitm. 0~ adopted, ttleH prO«durn will hl\l'tl At this point, II il trudal tllat lludftltl Lllldentandwhat thew pracedurnwtllmeanlorthnnand!orfuturtllvdentadtheUW Systtm. Clno;'tlltdoplf'CI,theM~wiUhavethelorwollaw. Whiik it is IIWI)'Ittleontlall)' P*ible to dLarc~ them, IIIII Will be I clifr~CW!. if not vlnu.au,. lmpoui~• .,.d to tnvd. And the ecurU IU)' voidportlontafthc P'roc:etkue, but JlllltfiU)'~ mLIIC flftd spear~~: ltplddectaiiLI. LIILConatibltii:IMiit)'l, lndtiiii)'IIGIIIet "ll'lft'tlt)l'' bc<:ILIMthePr«edllrnartW!wiM:orpoorpubl~pollc)'. ' . ln Uabt ol tJU. ~ 111111 ti....w-_ and 11\et' card'lll. t21tnOedlppnlaalafthtProc«<urft,UIIitedCoo..dl haatalr.1111, 1nd dtltn<ledbel-tMRtamta fall'lllalott.r.t tllkpoeltloll: ThisofnursedLallmp:~thtver)'i<kloiUnivenlt)'dildpllnelor non-aadmllc m~t. Glwn thlt:' howrvn- bearudaincf)' for ~e ~~lniMraters and Rtamts, students art' abo tand flrlll)'l a t1-. with the u m. o:ourll and laws ovn- thtm u an,. otMr citiUn.wtl)'t.hou.ldthe)' ... vtaatp~~rlltld)Lidieatlvel)'llematall! f'irll. tither U.. ~rea will proi'Libit mort' con®ct lllill In non-academic lrNil thin ult.tlna law or It will not lind clear I)' l.he Procedures will prohibit morel. If it il more ·rntrlcllve. whit jusUfltsthlsloud lreedom! TlleUniversity,lfanythlna.ou&tltto be leu lr tltrtd, more open and toltrlnllhan IOddy at lart•albdt atltastnotltuJO. Suclentla~notll«mtroopen, ihe)'lrtlllppwed tot.laT'MfS, lreetofollowthrud:tafthCIO.Iahttotbtlrrlnalcondulion. ' - " " ' tecl'-lllbL will be for lachen and ldminlatnlon. Butundft'lhe,~ra."Derialve La..,.ttr" eculdba ~niiNbk. if it inttm~ptfd 1 spe.aktr. And If the net dltct ollhe ~realsanlytodllplkattniltlnalawtaDdt.lw)'andonono less-the Rtamtllllft'ly ml)' not eumpt 1!\ldfo!ta from alatln& law, e-ven if they 10 daittdl, wb)' not slmpl)' k-1\l'tl vlolat.loc. ol nistln.a law to theexlt.ttrcecurtt! 'fhfteprinciplel, imporuntobjcof:tlonsintllnnHivn_lrt'noiiO abslrxt u the)' IIIII)' 1011nd. The Rt~enta and Cmtnt A6minislration ha~ justifltd milCh ol the Prtl('ftiurt!l b)' lllttmmts hke"A clilc'iplinary pr11Cftdlrc i11n admlniltrati~e~n&ancl noiacrirnllllllpr«'Hdlnc",ut tl\at •prriflc-polnt,mtflniftllcon- ~~~~~~~.~!:t:.':!~!!~w~:'.:~·~ with the ISiist.a~e ol thoulanclll of ltpl workers tJudlm. Jawyen, law prdeuon, IIC.J dtvOCII!III.he enllret)' ol thrir vwatlanalllvea to the law, the Rtamta llave appointed two draft cammi!~ to ctran the Procedure. and lntmd to LIM umpw ldmlnlsuaton to run thb ldjudicaliYtr l)'lltm with a portion o1 tllelr vwatlonal lime. One o1 ::e:.~..=,=~~.~~~nd~~..::.ul~ rridrnc:e" 10 lndlc•tm. ai!Udeotla lhul suttty: ~ att\Md m111t ~WAatrlll; lf noc.the)' ma)'bapUt)lb)'driaadt: thtrPrlll!tldurn., bc<:l~at lhr)' Itt adminlsuative. not judlcal, nont.aln Mlm~ probiemsofthisiOrL __...Addition.lll)', ~lteOtlltritpland'elllicaldifficultlfswithtthe Procedures. lronlc:all)'. both the mannu In which the)' wn-e writttn and lhemanntr in which they .....,ld be applied ma)' violate l.he mff1"' statute which aavr riM to the P~rm. Stucknta .U)' be ati"UMCIIIKinonvkttdfortheumeart b)'boththeUniva'lit)'and lhtCour11. TMrelrt'qu.tst lOIIIIbout the nlllltltlllllon&llt)'olboth ·-· drtailsancllhe"bfOILd""ftP"ol tbeProctdurmlntheare~~ of lrte Thladoetnoltxhaullthe llat ofprobiftnarell. TbeR'StntsiiiOadrnittllatabuleoltheProc:edur"lapoMibk. 1be fl'ltntahave notnonlendrd tllatlhe)'wouldl!andaa • lela! J}'$1ttn I they would protljlbl)' 111ffl« for runlallawl, ltld the)' Motd not, u I!Udent-eltluM lt.a\l'tl a )Lidkal l)'lttm to ad)ldicate mi--.lndrimM. tbelllatnllhaved.abnedllutthel)r'KfO..orn would baa "betttrckal" for •tudtnu btaLaM the protedurts would avoid nimirlll reconb for Audtnta. But tM decision 1o proMalt.l Mloldftllt,..auld 11•11 be made b)' theUnlvrrsit)' · ifweareto belitva ~!=£:::.~fr~~=;=~~j(~~!i! pown- rtstln& with Unl\l'tlrJ ,._ ldjlld~ltl\l'tl the 1be Rtaents !lava. abo justiliecl tM P tNncatecl M proo:na with the rrmlnckr lhlt they art' "ad raiiYt~" and noc jiK!klalintllaractcrlrulftolrvi<knct, lnd n dedalont not IIWI)'J.Ippl)'ina,IIC.) Butthlaiacircv.lar,andilq.thequeaUon, 'tbeabillt)'oltheft'lmlltocchlrMttrit.e--tanci~IOI It.. Prondurn Ia no arpuntnt for tMtr lqal or fthlell ..lldll)'. 'Tbe ~J>e~tionofwhJihlsMP'rlte "adm.inlatraU""-judlcla,l ad­ _.....,red judiutl\l'tl I)'Sitfn ranaU. for student&. n. Rtaenta r.veU.i.raiiP'tt: 11Uialtmplerforta. Alttudma , . . . . .UflDd our -n an.-r or IICll ha" - · ' ...for more details on the student d isciplinary code contact student government at 346-3721