15' No mber 1975

advertisement
Off~pus
15'
November 7, 1975
Worth lgoking into
Nor 10
be
condoned
T• UIP I'ol n\n",
Rfn'!ltly, l d ull«d to reid !he 01::tobn' ! llll isluroflhe Pol•l.fr. lwu
ul tn-ly Hocktd and app~~llcd at tht
.U.uJti!IJ. rfi,ulsh-e adwr1istmtnt on
l»lt7tJI )·curpubl.k ation. lsyour
'
'
rw•oJp;tpPr ln141d!di re rl~~o~~ t con­
f.'riday,Novtm~ r J.
dl tion th.lt you musl solici t ada from
Wl"ll vllll(ar SOLrCN1 One " 'ould ellptd
an ad oltllat sort lnadltappulp,liJ'lle
porao~ dne, but not In a
publlal lioeMJPJIO'f'dly rfl)fell!lllllive
UABFilm : THEWAYWEWERE
Vl:
pm , IPfotram Banquet Rm ,:
or
~~~~l~~: ::.=d~~~~o~~
olaCOU.Oprillll&htrltamina;. lfilllfor
fiii.IIIC.'ialre-)'1111Niouidritherrabe
)'Oirsubtcription rate. or ull lor
dclll.ltl- from,.·eiJ - munina p.~l'fntllto
l mpro\'e thtqu.alityolyour~ion.
UAB Coffeehouse : CHUCK MITCHELL. t-Il pm , ICofJeehouse-UCI
:e~:~~ ~oil~~~~~~~~~fe~.
S.l.urday , SO\'U1ber I
Col)r-ce.taould be a plll."'! toraile the
tu ndarcktll owyoulll, nota piKe to
Wtttr moral Wlndardl. One c:&n at ·
tainiUdlk_.lfdttinbldtalltyswitb
Campus Preview Day
~~rT~ntff• "'· Platteville, 1:30
mLW:II ItuCG~tlh.lnthtpr- ttoiltp
The arUclt about tbt Death Maret.
and tht drath o1 1 malt llludtnt
rtm lndtd me of tlw Dart A&es wflen
propjtp.~idto-tdiOrildan.beina;
~·n lnloatinllobtmancltdlo
dl!'atltbywild allimall. Do ~best so.
calltdfratunity"brothtn"e~llop lo
lhl,.howlhtp.~rmtaallh.lt)'OW!I man
Sullllay, November t
ftlt wbtn they btard ' - ' IU "frimdt"
~~ ~:; :.~bl:"b!
University FUm Society: a.ASSIC
CARTOON FESTIVAL. 1 6: 1 :15
:=:.
~ ! M •ylutureinitiationlbl!more
pm, Uf'to&ra.m S.nquet Rm.-l1CI
Wiacomln
UAB AV Pro&nm :
Video Theatre, 1-10 pm , <Communications Rm.-UCI ·
t:f":! ~v~~ui, .-be banned
Come on studmtll.
Put out 1
publication that you will be pn:IUd to
lwoveeny-rud. UseyourtaJentt lo
t..l.'ld c+w-acttr and ni'T~t the
M..aay, Novembu II
miJI.IWol~lflltl'ltions lf you
:;;·~! "ha will! !! You tan~ it if you
International Folk Dineen Den~-1:»t : 30pm, CWfia:biLounge-
Mrs. lt1U.!Io-1uth
UAB Crou Country Sid Oinlc, 1: 30k~ pm , ! Nicolet-Marquette Rrn .-
No ducky rubbers
7
~- 7 : 30pm , ceonee~-
UniYersity fllm Society pre~~e~tl
PUBLIC ENEMY, 7 4 t : lS pm ,
<Ptocram Banqud Rm.-UCI
Duo Jwdor Reocil•l, hul Luce·
;!~c::~~~~~~o!~· 1
University F\Jm Society: CLASSIC
1
Ar ts &. Leclurea : C HINESE
ACROBATS OF TAIWAN, I pm,
IQ\&andt Gym-F1eldhoulel
11ua·loday. Nfttmba' J:S
UAB F'i lm : PARALLAX VIEW
v~ pm, I P'rosram &nquet Rrn.:
UAB Coffeehouse : PAUL MAlTY
9-11 pm , ICoff~-UCI
'
c -pii<N lly Cam p11 ••• c-••IIJty
Alf.U. ~IC«Mai)'PIOI&er.
(\
Iii-
ttc . , ourChlnctUor\.lke.blal'int~
t.rd-llnestandon a n~bbtrad,
lt 's lnilyhfar1warml~lll~lblll
,_...-roleorK'I!nl rxbttwitlalr
~~tntcllt d sdn~ l •i•tu tltt
...:~:;.~.;•.. tt~Y:.· ~
Who~-uN vtn~lyadisltrft:f'
K.,l Gar...
Quack.
Tallie Pol•ltt'.
ln~Tp rdto~Uar Drt,fll'
lttterc:onc-ernina;lbtrelalon"11dll
dipity and tu~" for pnllb!C • •
ver tiae1-ncntinlll-t0rtobtrtt i1R
dl!' all nl wilhtor~tr.etpl*l '
l 'm pltawdto noltlbit ~
ulin tlr
l-Ilt .-ill
Bicen lenn iol blosl
Tile-May, NO¥emba: 11
IPtOIJ'am &nquet Rm.-UCJ
lmpreuh t !'!
.,...._,.._Ran
olthe unkMWin&.
Ku Knoll
Ste~~ n • Point Barbersboppera
AudlU011.1 for Admluloa. Open to all
ma lts, no tln1ing e•perle nce
CARTOON FESTIVAL, 7 6 t pm ,
Amid alcohol
Slrt'l!l.u.saultll. filldir1np.lb lw
cotp.-ltemanolllht:, budcftmtnill,
on I Uird
~e:eun~i~~~c~!.fm ,
Weodn.ncby, Novemba' 12
Tallie Ptllnter,
..,:-:~~~~ !!!
bur ~uucrats s r t
to prftoi'O"P
Unlveraity
Film Soc ie ty ·
CLASSIC CARTOON FESTIVAL.
~~ ;~s pm , CJl'rocram Baoqutt Rm.-
C.mpus TV Cofreoebouse, 1-11 pm,
• ICoffeebouse-UC I
.
Quack ...
billion
University FUm Society Movie~:
lliE HUNGRY CLASS and 1liE
SIGN OF SA1"N. 7 & 1 r;m ,
! Program Banquet rm .-UC I .
UAB Colfeebouie: CHUCK MIT-'
CH.ELL, t-11 prn , ICoCfeH!ouae-UCI
On the cover
Hearts & m inds
~ ; witbcutpayincanwcodly
T•UoePQier,
Tbougblam' ID&fDeralaveerneot
with what 1 Wldentazld tot. the lhrwl
ol Don Romwldloa'l Wttl"'' ol ~
=~~~~~~:::=.~':::=
attmtioD.. Ia ((ICDII'Iftlt!Da on Hun.
aMMU.,IIenotaiapaa~Jtatbatill
the mcwM! "llt!Je atte<~Uoa was pald the
American ~moY'emmL. "
Far my
part.lhe~M!'iloli&fltJ.ncthe:utiwar
movtmet~t and Ita concomitantly
JUU5tint that nearly •U Amtrb..
wrtfaithlulwrv;~ntsofthtltltelll'ft't
-"---~-
Hea111aa4MI... sll&h~lheaatlwar
lf'MI'I'emftltinAJthawayutasuge.t
lhllt lhi:IM who had rub~ the dnn ,
thoH who had immolated tbemxlvu,
tho&twtlohadbloc:ttdtrooplninl, and
LboH studmll who had rilked their
xacltmlc: c:aren'SbyplfCoutonalrikt
to prote.t tht Vldnam war aevtr
aWed. Not allnak pn.on who'd gone
to jloil fOI' nsbllllce to the: War was
t nt~ Tbeonednerta-whowu
lnttrvitwfd wu, at last the first Ume
htappearecl,abouttotunotimwlfiD.It
~ inttre.tlnlthllttbtmowie tndedwitb
&IIIOUIIL But It diaturt. me U.t tbi1 i1
all I've htllrd. l'n htllrd tiOIHac about
whatllhouldbedclne~na:lhe
sltu.ltlonOI'whateouraeofa<:tlon tbty
would like 10 - . EwryoM -ma to
hlvt tbeproblemd•rillmiDd, but
with nokle- ol how 1o cope wltb It or
what to do about IL
bn't it UIDI! we start crutin& optiona
lhatltudentaeanc~ frorn , !'fltber
Uwlalwap~orn!)ectln&what
iiJ!vm lotbtrnl blt lhatlbMitnll
don't knvw what ahoukl be 6oM. or Ia it
merely alac:kolactloa on thftr putl
Sl:udent • Government il PrHtnUy
=~or:=~lha~~~ty
cumu lated from tboae ulalln&
pr1)1J'ama and dlrttnnt rautea of lm·
plernmtatloa c:onaldeted.
The poMibillty of farmulltirc 1 CD-Gp
In Stevena Point1nd whether II wiU be
IUCCftlfulornot. il notllllelyuplo
Studtnt Government, but up to AU
lbldtnlll. Wewtuptber tbe lnlonnation
rreaaaryto lmpl.tmmt.uc:llapro&ram
and orpnht it for lludenll, but anly
wilhlheiiii'POI'toflll.ldentsw\Uit be
~ful.Wenetdtolulow)'Oirltand
ltnltienl~theWaryml'$,~ttbty
onco-ophouairc. Wouklyoubewllll.n&
masai veoutpciiU'inpofpeopltwhotook
lothe~lopn:lle.tthtWar.
Not onlywu the Amtrk:an moverntDl
lostoptheWtualiahtedin HnrWaM
~1111111•. but moat AIIH'ric-ans l f t f t
togivt lllpporltot\ldlaprocrtm1Anl ,
~~~tb tbe CGIK'epl:l beJmd
If studl:nta are willin& to ltand
toaethtr for the: bel!lefit o1 srubENTS,
portr.yedufalthful~en~antaoftbe:
=:.c:aa:b~~,~~~:Uu!
state and u Pfople who hrid racist
8~
attituds towardl ""'--.
~tWdentalhat'4riDbeatteDdilll;lhis
Americ:lnaaentrallywerenotlikemOit
Gft'manadurin&thtrileof H.iUerand
the S«ond Wc.-lcl War. who bllndtd
lhtmselve~~tolheHolocaust. lndeed.u
tht Vlttnam Wn draged on.
Americ a na bteame more deeply
disi11Uiioned'4ritbit : tho&twhohad
llJI'P(ii«< lbe Wn bft:ame «<nfll:led ;
tho&twhohad~c:-oal\IKdlllrted
proteStirc ; andtbOMwtlohadhltMrto
onlyprotated btpn resistln&. llwu
thia &..-ln&andderptnlncmonment
that l thlrlkfinallyatayedtlle&. mmt'a hand from the more ntnmt
kinds of 't'iolmc:wlopen toit-(beUMol
r.~c:M!ar_..,._andthebombin&oftbe:
dike. in tht North. Tbe Vletnamn.e
• ·tn indttd rourace- U.llclo4h not
alway• monlly rl&ht. u
Doa
Romuncbon augt~tal . but tbty COllld
not ha...:doot'whlthldtobedoae.alont.
Thtyneededourhdphtattlirclllout.
nwas the&i...tncofthia htlplhlll llurt•
aMMt..tllrtei:Yi&nored..
JI• Mt.HJ'
The non-existent
problem ?
Toi.HP.otct'.
-=~~~~::
Jronlc:ally tc.-abouklllly iUituraUy ),
llndlor'cil.in~withtbeHOIIIill&
om~:e , rin& to thtWne lhltlhen! II no
ahortagt, but only limitatlOIW : while
studtnU~IDhlnW'ut'4ritbthebeUet'
that tbtn dftillitdy la1 Ra\lltr tlwn
loollinaattbe~tmofhollllna
dirtdly. people lftm to be lkk.wppi,.:theiuue'4rilhthilpartic:ular
cp.MStion.
.
But ~ lhill partlaalar queatioa va.Ud
~ wwth the time and effort upended
on tt! ilthllevllltbeeorrcoc:tcp.MStlon
thatal'tauldbellked, ori:atheq&MSI.Ion
prKftlt studtrl ts ol UWSP to c:onaldl!r
Univenlty In
an
AU. OF THIS AND MORE
rectiveequltablehoulln&a.nddeltnl1
thepoulblllty!No t the sl tiiiiUonlhen,
MarlaAlilfn
S..G . \'~PraWnt
More on Death march
MDirec:lor'ofthe~
Auoc:laUon on Alcaboilsm and Otbtr
DncAblllt. lne., l feel I mllltcommeat
OlltherecenttraaedrlnStevenaPIIilll
involvllli the SlaMfl. Thla Ia; a UW·
Stevma Poiot fntemlty '4rith ao
lnitlatlonritethltmirnn-tilttane¥U
imagt'-Colltgt tctDtSoldare-de¥11
owa--c:oc.umptloa.
Mwe tlf!C)eouttheSialdlrorthftr
Sldlatic: llupidity, we are ~m­
comfartlbly awa~ lhllt lhll la. Q Alit.
Chano:tllcr Coker hla alrady pDinted
out In the prtu, " just part of a ll'tlem
ol akobol ablllt OttUI'TiD& OD college
ca mpuses acnu Amnic:a."
Yet, how and when a re we to fiUib
)'(Mil men In Stev-ei. Point and
el aewhere understand that lbtit
manhood il more thin merely a
ott- muc:ll beer and boDu
lheyeandrir*! 'MIIala;aprobltmthat
measure
noun i~nitydarelport.
Btcluseit ia aprobltmthat ..eeannot
icncrt, ourC'IIIIftrtnc:e wu)lllthtlcland
ltwaa dedic:ated to " PnvenUon" .
n..atlld-.r
E•«l!Uve Dlrtctw
W.A.A.O.O.A.
Out of sight .•.
Totae-PQier,
Inyourartlcleentltled ''Talkl!liwlth
probkmel\lltrway!WorGwillonJyao
lllrry " youfa iledtarnefttlon-lm-portlnt mm~be:r ol hill VOUP- Mlcllad
Maatenpla)'lc:elloanduHarryuid.
nteded • ac:Uon on tho part of both
" lt'aMichadandbll ceUolb.almall.sthe
ln talkl.llllo a~ lldenlll over thilluue, I
oftmi!Nrthtaametbinc-' "Tbtrt ll
jllltiiOhousiac'". 'Tbrolehfinlhltod
about millie c:ooAd
m~~.,.!~ t:,_
even a li ttle bit
tell._
wdl he
played.
!ofk:hlel il ao er;cellent
mu • lc: i an and dner v n
........
n~lamabet~r thatthilil
.._,",....
~.wlle\lltrsUIIkni......S!fWOI'ttr.
1•
mclllfil.el}'tbeCIM . Tbat Ia. if)'OI.IWalll
toii'o't'4riththenarmaicomfarUa
~~::~:e:· t:::C:t!n:k~~l:e':t:"ebtst
goddamn fi~ picker. Ma.IT abo reviews tbe LP output to
dale of Vasaar Oemtnts in the review~ section.
There'•
abundanc2 of lttters thlt week concerning a
~~ advertiaemtnt we carried and the response It eUcited
from ow chancellor. ln the regula rs section columnist Bob
Borski gfveaow-vi~t . Abo on that pale you11 f1Dd Pete
Uttenk! 'a views on the rece~t bappenlnp fzl campus TV.
to c:ocnt. We u n
ao farillaol...t,.a~ ; whatianow
~·ndHouaint-
~lr;~:rnzc::~ere:.:~~~~~~,:
enough to name a dormitory aftt!f' him . Tbe Ng& of the
tt.ernal George Fricke ~ . presented to 111 by humor editor
Marc Vollu tb .
rould beslmllarorworaellwloura Is
enerv ""'
atmantka of
~~~~~~t~~=::=~~~
1~11'11
With a thleUca in mind we present part two of JW Un ·~
Vft'Uit 'aaerla oo lhettucitntactivlty fee this week.
bt&ionowlnhtlpiflilhi:!Mitudenta
;~.~e~:~ rbttoric:al! ~
bftn expa'l(led on the
hl:llllin&. lt ianowtimelo&etWtbe
probk-m at band. SO what If ltudtftla
Under the cover
which il workii:Cinotherdtisandlaa
great btrleflt W tboM who parlk:lpate.
Worrnation iiii"Se<!Uy beift& ac:·
a pro-war OemoNtration. Acn.tttedly,
tbere Wft'e 10111e pro-war demonwe-t tnslgnirlc:ant compar«< w.th tht
We'vt~gettingalitUebltofflac:klatelyabDulOW" ''non·
covuage" of Pointer football . Well, at we've u:plalned, we
have a bard time jusW)'inl the inclusion of weelr. old news on
the sports page. We have however had reporters and
photographers a t tach game to ca tch any oewawortby
h.ighliaht along wilb bringif!C back the bulc story. ThiJI week
pbotographes- Dave Zutge presentS IB with a collection of
photos taken at Poi nter borne pmes. The cover photo Ia
typlcal-l't preRnls you wi th an alternate look at this year'•
football stason . Tbe emphuls Is on the Man orr the field .
Da.ve'scoUec:Uon IJi featured In thec:enleuec:Uon.
RMC~
Series 9, Vo l. 18, No. ·12
-- more letters
Best irregords
T•IIH' P.U.In.
I re.U)' firtd It hanl to comprdlmd
lhrot a -.piPft' written b)' lnWUig!eal
ln:tirickaaltwoukillHthe-ltt.nt
ErctDb......t .. lnqanne.t" . I Pa. . IJ
that many oltbe Slneflt felt and ate
llddreuthls-ln'wumJW..iDSt.
andmypllonenumber . .s~IKit
tNt it ruktsany ditrenncenow, I 'll be
aoneanctmond to Mar$hlltkl by t.lle
ti metlwdirect.of)l matts it intoyaur
.....
I"*'Jdlhlnklblotprideifi)'CIW'Wcft
would lr.etpiUch a foolilh foible from
ap pu r iDI and downaradln& an
oeherw. . Joodnewsp.per,
llnc:aylr.
w,ntA IU.
1::4. StU:
Webtler'IS«<OIdDII:tioMry rllhe
Ena:tllh t.anau-ge • -
~g la l.lle
wn•~tnp r.l leu' C P. TUI .
O. r ..e ot
lilt waN h llluel..,.., .. ui.I -H
~leu fll lk 1-cl tluot WMNotr
~wen
I&
••saa.t-•nt'.
no direction
Tatlloe Pflal.er,
Asollhlamornent, lhettudent
dirtoetoris are 1tW DOt out and
lvall•ble. l wllh.ameonecouldtdlme
wby. ltwouldllftmlhatlntwo-thl
-wvuidbe:~tolwl~-_.-tol
8tt!U'Iltr-.!olwhtren~ilby
now. and at just
whllt .,._ number
atWI!DUe~nbe:reae:bed.
:;:;::·.::~use~~ J:e~-'=
Here we ore
fcr nrld('l;wdtf~illl-aaly lhllt)'OII
ToU.Polow.r,
The rnidr:IQ ot Dt'llotllllall would
lilleto.-..l.!ldtbtvariouan""llfi"Vkn
aa eampu1 tNt )'ft. Indeed, we do uilt.
omeu. .. en experilnent.al hall. 1w
ftl'lqfd from 1 ~ cneted
tevtralyeor.tJDD. IIIpHWDt licewu
~)
II wu the arne lllu.ltiaQ 1ut year.
allll
m~»t
ol all a• human
Sago sago
No wi nners
Co~c;~t!~:' -C:~ ~
ate lloplrwfarlreoler e«<mpllltmeau
llldim~tobemade-to
nrartytlcf11)'tlllt)swtr"ttWie.-ed, •
bentlltu.c.eupper-ciiviDaGalan.dr:rU
-
rtrn~inii!IOIICIIII'I ....
ptnttretfd Nonn's
ffucullt. 5aa1t
!.~-~~~-~~~~.~~
Tocl.lte.lhiluperlmmt In .._lllirinl:
has pniiCiu('ed"' nttemdy spirited
family, whk:ll Llllfort11111tdy bas bem
udly M&lt'dtd by the m«llll aa lhiJ
Clmpus. Delr:eU's homtcumlnl efforts
rwlllted in • cerci NCdoa 11 Lbe
f"romme: " ... the rtc~llctmtnt f« Old
Mlin ,"Bd. o/Rtetnll; " ... theptcQ~ct
~--~ ~;:~~~~••~-M~-~~
~ltt~~JS;::::. ::er~':!:
=~=;.,::J'~~=-,,..,,ollheWiioa; lndthewinneninlbll!
llldKenMd.eland-<Gififdy,andKen
Mc:LelandvocallndovenUIWIInll. "'e
be1Je¥t tbtH I«<mp!Wimeats Itt for
toolmportonttobeO¥trlootfdandwe
.•.
lbeli~·rinthllfrllo""l-hlpnprople,
lndi ~lO.... II.
bei~WS.
Jill M4rnoa
ct_. inlhe~!Nttbtdelirsllld
To lent Sbow eom~tloa. Tom Leymon
Wbai.,.U-DMn~tome
h.Jnaontotbat andbelitnin it.
::.=,t~~~~ ·~~~:r~-~~~~~~:~
mallllff, the dlreclol"'a
had been promiaed to be doat and
aniilble to the ahldmta rwa wefts
wuthefactlhataftn-twoandahalf
months or " dillpnt" complllat. I wu •
atiUnotll'lentlonecllnthe.tupldlbina.
One would lhlnll U..t the ttaff e<IUld
have lotatfd me ill !hal an~OWII: ol.limeIRII, Ollwn lftmeilo kMw or mana&~
to find out, and even Rqlttntioll and
kMw ...... l iNtel lhtm llumtllllld )'011
theM foc:ilities. Softr theuptrlmtnl
hu provtd to be Vtr)' Ml«'eut\ii end we
1 Aecordloa
to- lludenl
:::Cf::ha~':~~~":-IIJ:!n~Ytl&.:-:i
lovu m.nwho iu Slaldi and feel very
d~~~ottomany ollhtmlnthefellooo'lhlp.
I' m not wriW.ln my thou&hil todtffl'ld
NI M}' " 'lpprr-..11
6d))
~~~~Y tetl'-l~~tt it alldfMI
abGut1boul theSiudlswhohueiiNII
••...allttntlwi-IIII,"'S. Crroamdttese: " ...1 Dtmocrat," R. Rt1~11 :
" Ncrm II Mdq Mesctlito," D. J11111
Centro: end "Norm is .._'IIIII all&bl
JIN(turolpnlbltrnt," J . Joanlt tlit l.
Tll('boyslnd&lrllolthe0$hboyaan._H
Club we,-. al)'mled, but ttme d 05t 1o
the lrviJI when lhe7 daaibtd tllr
cattumt 11 "&.tl-awful" u " W Q
- when Nonn ,-.vull:
...... .
hopelnlbii!MIII't)'OIIw!Urtmtn~ber
ltlotDebeaHallishtreondWinlltobe
lUioMa CoiU..
C• Pratlll.ftlt Dd«ll IIIII
On 'Lumpy'
R«orcklr.newquiteatt~.~nlelywhrrel
li~andwhetmy pbanellllnlbH"wu.
lnc-lhedirft1orydotan'tmakeit
DU! untll Del:ernber, drartrlotnds, my
OVER
TWO
THOUSAND
OUNCES
OF
PRIZES
in:
The· First&er
Point
Seecial
Beer
. Photo-Graphic Contest
tfe're's how it works:
~fo,e
WIN :
y, barrel of Po int (first prize)
Decembe, Bth you compHe o visual dep iction identifying
P;;mt SpectOI Beer {photos, graphics, or w hatever)
., -J
•
3 quorter barrels {se cond prizes)
4 six pocks (third prizes)
Deliver your contest entry or entries to lhe POINTER
Rm . 130 Gesell
• A~f'seDecle cte~ber
8th the people at Point Special ond the POINTER
lne twelve top entries.
•
W•
(Coa,..t eada Dec. 8-all ealriea
•
become the property of Point Special to be Uled f
or Pr-omotional purpotea )
(l
,
Coroner's report finished
'Sefis' found guilty of hazing
lly Pl1c Ulunld
It has been almo.t fow- weeki
sin« the ttagle: death of David
" lmnpy" Hoffman foUowU!c his
initiation into a e:ampua fraternal
qanization, the Sluefil. Last
week the C'Of'Oeler'a repot't con·
firming the cause of death as
alcohol overdose wu made publlc.
this week the Siaseft oraaniution
wu found &uilty of criminal hui.nJ.
Daa Gokka . tbe Pottage County
DistriCt Altomty, uld that the
alcohol level In David's blood·
llream wu found to be 0.421 per
tin!J{!4 s: ::~ ~~~
become
coma~.o.t
verae or death !.
aod are oa the
Asamultoftbecormer's report
the DA charged the Siatefls wllh
violation Ot the \\'isconli.n Crim inal
CDde Public Health and Safety Act
tu.33on Hazina.
This TuHdly Ken
T~ebudy ,
president of the Sia.sefas, appeared
in Portage County Court on belul lr
of the entire aroup to answer the
charges brought by the DA 's omce.
Throuatl Ken and tbrir attorney the
group pleaded 'nO Conteat' to the
rha rge . Followlnc this pl u
assistant DA Fred fleiabauer
spoketotbecour-t.recommepdin&
that the group be leY i~ the
maximum nne of $200. He abo
~uested lhat the Siasefts be put on
informal probation~ the DA's
omce.
Tschudy read a statement into
the rec:ord on betuolr of the group.
The m'ain thrust of this at. temttlt is
that the Si.sdis ~y rqretwbat
happened and want
lo remind
people that David was their friend
too and thllt they were also deeply
hurt by hla death. 'I'Khudy said,
" You:r honor. there 11 nothlna this
courtoraa'!law, caodol.opunlsbUI
more than we have alread'!
punished ourselves. There Ia
nothinl thlacourt,orany law, ean
of the taverns Involved In the
Friday nl&ht ln\Uttion Golden uld,
' 'The drinb for- Hoffman were
botlpt by others who then pve
them 1.o hlm . So the ta.verna and
bartenderl'ftre only respontlble
for w rvin&the otherland not
lioffman : thlsablolvttthemofany
reliability 'under the present ordinances."
:
~~:; r:J~~ than
He aiiO aaid , ' 'The tTqedy of his
death is, we~alize , compow~ded b'!
the tenKitu/'lleSI of it. And we •~
~~~~ of~~!tJ~u~c~
,.oe can aDUTt Ilia famU1. his
friends , and this community that
this wiU never happen qalo."
tnexplainingthe9uerltplea of
'No Contest' Tschudy alated, ''To
nght a charge like thl1 would inYOive countless hows, and do little
more than cause deeper pain and
IOCTOW to us. his friends . and mCISt
impor~ntly to Due'l family ."
After F1eishauer and Tlchudy't
statements the judge restated the
case aa he sa w it. He al10 criti<:iz.~
the Siawfl pledging and ini.tiation
pra«durft . c:lting 'infO':mal in·
format ion' about past . 1nttances
that he had heard of. Then he ac«pted the plea of 'no Contes' and
pronounced the organlutlon guilty
as charged . He fined them $200 and
put them on intormal probation to
the DA's off~etwiththe llipulation
that the DA be informed in ad vance
of all pledae and lnlli-.tion
procedures so _he ca n have the
option of having someone present
toobservetheproceedinp.
No further legal action on ttlis
matl.er lftfM imminent. V.l\en
questioned about tM liability of any
Another- doth
Crash kills Pointer
He lived a t 408 Simi llall and
pledged Phi Sigma Epsilon social
fratern ity thla semester.
Bein- wu a reserve t!Jht md for
the Pointers . He started the Sep-
~1u":!:.~ '!dg:::wa~~~ :h!t
Offmtlve
Pltyer of the
Week
d~tion .
Porll&e County Sheriff's
Deputittsald Beier w11 eulbowld
on Hilbwsy 10 when an«her f'ond
du Lac man , Osc::ar Reyes, 3t , apparently fell ;,sleep and hil aul.o
Cf1I&Soed tM center line and coUided
with the
Beier auto. Depl.de:s
~port that Beier suffered a broken
neck In the collision . The other
driver Ia lilted in &ood eondillon
with brulltl and lacer•Uons.
~~=~~~anbJerlsi~J!
A nineteen yea r -old UWSP
football player waa killed Sunday
ni&ht in a head-on a-uh east of
here.
•
JamtS R.. Bekr of North f'ond du
Lac was pronounced dead on
arrival at St. Micbael'a tx.pita.l
about tO:lOSundayniJht . Beier wu
a rrestunan Commurncatlon ma)or;
nameofthefootballteam , coachin&
staff, and the Pointer Quar terback
Cub. Contributions ahould be wnt
to the UWSP Foundation .
Beier is turVIVed by hit parer~ll ,
cne brother and cne lister. One
brother and cne tiller pr«eded him
in death. lie was en&a&ed to be
married to a North Fond du Lac
&irl.
Steven~
Point police and campus security orncers • re
~~~~-f~jnd{~~uarn:~~~~eof ~~~!s~ J";f:~~
On ltVtral e~ttasiOI'II within the Jut month the l UI peel wu
seen In the WQmtn't locker roonu of the Phytical Education
Build ina. Hi• method of operation It to enter the locker room1
ufemaleathlettt• ~ •hownin&. Attofdinctolncldent~ports
>
heusuallytwnltheli&htsoffinthedrts~ingareaofthelocker
roc:::.;one
having informa tion about the ident ity of thll In·
divldual 11 asked to cootac:t Protective Services at ,.._2368,
He wei&hl t pprollimately 110 pounds, is somew~e in t'!'t
area of five feet ei&ht inches taU. has allocky build and 11
between 22:and ~yearsokl . He wu Jut seen weartna: a&old
cotton windbreaker, plain dark tr"ousen tnot blue juns I ,
white lOCks and brown .sandala.
The composite dra wln& ahown he:re wu clone with the
Prol:ective.Servictt ldesltl-kit. The kkntl-kit putt to&tther a
liUneu of a suspect piece by piece. The ca mpul~~tclll"'ty
foree lt theonlyholderofan ldenzl-kit in Central Wisconsin 10
police department• frtim aU over the area often borrow the
service.
£
Where your dollars go
The student activity ee
byJIII Unv~lll
Lut week, I outlined the PoUlter
activity fee and how It wu spent.
This week I would like to outline the
:~:ie~~~~~Dd·~'Th~
-·
largest sln&le c:h.u.nk of your $U In
studeot activity mmies Joel to
athletics. Each of us pays l7.95 per
I .talked with Bob Kruet:er, lntercoUe&~ate Athletic dirMtor,
' and
he said that the at.380 total 1
i:s~'= !C:. ~ =~-~=
talked wUb Bob Sbaver, Student
Budget QlntToller of the Student
Gover'l'lment. t would like to clear
upthedi.screp~~nclea~na:
the.Athletk Bud&tt aod investlpte
lritm:oUegiate sporta.
MT. Kruegn- said that the student
fee money ror Athletics is divided
into two areas, lntramurall and
lnt erco ll ea l ate apo ri a . In·
tercolle&iate sports hal bHn
alloCJitediS7,300f«lbe"'n-'76
yur ."1bls amount hubeen froun
by lbe Chancellor, beeaUie Stuclent
Government wanta to eut ' the
Alhletic pN~~ram .., Xrufler saki.
Mr. Krurger says that tJer,eause ol
Tille IX u~w passed by the
Federal a ove rnment t.lut
lef'eOUeciateaportala for men and .
tlvites. One coach held a training
amptbllaummertortisemonty
and another eoach bas his athletes
telllqQiriltm.utrees.
Krutt;er mentiOfted that tbe 1tate
government f~roishel a Geoeral
womea'a sporU. Oripnally, lA·
tercollealate sports had bHn
alloted 154,3311 for the 'n-'76 yur,
but W'Oftlerl'a sporta received an
IUit&inlnc- "l!tha!Wft"e tohappen,
~a::s~. =:~e:~
c:M be JPKIOed u a men'• or a
1
1
=~·~ ~\:"' ~~u~ 1~ fo~~~~
==:. =~:. ~tJ:'&!v~r=feellthat Alhletlc:ssbould
~sdf­
we could "only fWM! two or th ree
tporta" . Krutgu Mid.
Unfortunately, Krueger uld,
"Gymnaltic.t had to be eliminated
from the protram beca.UM tbtfe
the-e are line major areu of
wu not enough money. Soccer,
anticipated ioc:ome, Foolball . . ,iOO
Uhi1 total 1w already been ex- - whlchoboastlalol. of Interest and
ceeded >, Bulr.etbaii-P,200, and - wbk h hu utii Oed tbe guidelines to
Hockey-$6.500, for a t.ot.l o1 sta,eoo.
10 from a club 1port to an ln·
lerCOI.Iqia t.e sport, caMot do 110
J<rutaer uid lhlt 11Dce the budlet
hu been frmm , Alhletics bu been
beca.UM lbere are oo coacba and
funds available."
bavio& diffkuldes, mainly beeau.e
ol inOtdon. He alto mendOfled !hilt
KTuraer said that Hoc key has
the amount .UOC..ted for .thletks
per studeat at UWSP II the~ In
addiUoaal $,000. 'tfle S57,SOO II
lhOUJht of u one total for men and
~~~io.t&tethllt
.t:"tkihn!
beenmadeto htlpstarttht Hoc key
Program ," Bob Shaver uld .
Hockt)' It In ill thi rd year as an
lntercollttiatt~ .
In spite of all the problems.
Krueaeruidtbathecan 'tfaultthe
Student Government. ' 'Tht Student
Gov~m~ment hmds more activities
than any other school In the
Uaivenitysystem ," andhe t aid " I
fetl the Student Gov~m~ment Is
doin1 IP ucellent job of
distributl ns th ebudgetevenly . l
can'texpec:t StWent Government to
givtlntercoll tgiateAthltt lcs
dollars it doesn't have tocivt."
The following Is a list of Mms'
and
Womens' sportl and the
budgets for each ;
Me11
Generai·SIO,OOO
Bueball·$2,1100
Basket.b<IU -S4.a>O
~~~~~~=rt: i=~~-~
lhec:Gftf~ .
=
Kruecer uld that the A1hletic
dtpartment bu tried to pnente
money outaide of the I J*'"tll ac-
~':diti:!'fr~:'t.=:'~
becalM of additional CCIIII ol
f'ootbaii -S7,700
~~.:t·5a.500)
!:f!?~suoo1
Swlmmi.DC-IS,OOO
Tennll·f700
Ttack-f4 .2:50
Wresilln&-SU50
tplus \ncome·MSOI
Womtll
f'ltld Hockey-$1 ,704
Sw\mmi.DC-41,442
Tmnlt·IHI
Vol leybai.I·Sl ,$71
Basketball-t:z,310
Traclr. and f'leld·Sl ,t5S
Genenl-t:z,IU
=·
f'IMlly, \ft respeet to the err«
ma de conctrnl nl t he Athl etic
::~~tn"ter~~:
'sport• was allocaled 1:54.330 and
lntra m~rall waa allocated S23,Qi0
ror- a total of m.110. 1be estimated
income ror- AthleUcs Wll HI ~I
$2,200, bri~nc the total athletic:
a<:l~~·C:n a:;
=\otow!':.
added lD thil totaJ ) .
~~
Pretty Soon, Sooner. Tnen You Think!
We Hove Chrismos Cards , Wrap,
Stocking Stullers, Gilts, and more .
s-t4-rt
1/tuu, II
"Zlsun,,,_.;,,~ ~
- -·-univ~ Center
News Notes ·
DANGEROUS DRUG
byJolr.aR_,y
~~~.~~=~~
to a
Unk between DES, a
dnc
po~~ible
given to moUien durina
lft&!WlCY, and one type of
eancet'
developing later In their daugbtul.
DES.«Die- Ethyl.stil ·Bes-Trol
iother names:dienestrol,berestrol,
and hormone) , Is still
.IJSotd today and is moat commonly
The colpoKOpe ll an lnetrument
that m..nlflea v..lnalllAue 16 to
2ll timet. Only under this areat
magnlflcaUon can doctors tee the
sman charces in the tiuue that
~~:ru~:!V:W~edi.entln
From 1945, DES, wat Jiven to
mother • . hav i ng " pr oblem
pregnancies," I.e., bleeding ,
spottlng, cram ping,or a h istory of
mlscarrlageor atillbirth.
Tbe Pr-ol:lkm.
Snce the late 1960's, doctan have
seen a n increaae ln a prev\ous ly
1
~o~~~':t~~~d C::::::?~
shown a Unlr. betwe-H~ tbls ca!M:ff
and DES. ~tors have found
vaginal tissue changes In almost aU
ol the daughters wboee molbtn
toot DES. The chaDIBes are oot
necessarily caneerous, but doc tors
must watch theM pe<~ple In the
event that l.bese ch.i.naes may Indicate a precancerous condition.
An acc unt e m et h od f o r
examining vaginal tissue is oeccessa r y . The usual p e l vic
examination and Pap test do not
revu.l these early changes. A m~
sensitive method, which Is simple,
painless, and relalively inexpensive, is now available. 11le
method usn a C1llpoKope lcotpovagina , scope-to view).
The disci pli na r y code public
hearin& hdd TUesday Oct . 28,
centered around the sections of the
may slana! a prec ance r ous
code re latlnJ to
"derisive
la u1hter ", a disciplin a ry
pr~.l!nd suspension.
Four visl ton &ave testimony
durin& a discuuion period by lhe
student senate and assembly .
Kurt Ander10n arxl Lyly Updike
&ave ve rba l pretentations ex·
presalnc their concern over the
condition.
IIOmoret.mokUIIID da•
estrot~:en,
A firmly worded memo from
Chancellor Dreyfta to an faculty
and staff, dated Monday, Nov. 3,
19'15, 5ptcifically dlrecta all staff
an d faculty members " to act
rnponsibly and adhere to published
~iversity rqulatiODJ relative to
theirownsmOkinJ bablts, as wel.l as
thole of their students".
Chancellor Dreyfus cited air
pollution , tfta lth dangers, and the
ri&ht of 1tudents to study iD an
atmosphere free from tobac:coo
smoke as factors Involved In his
deci 1ion to e n fo rc e exlstin&
smokina codes.
The •mokin& r egulations ref feud
to in Dreyfus's memo are fotr~d In
section 600 of the " Administrative
Manual " ;
··smokllll II aot allowed ha
u.ivertilyclauroollllhylladtats• .
raculty,or.U if.
=::
~ ~~·~M:ym~
deallfll with noa ...cademk areas".
Student Govtmment Presldeat,
Bob 8acb:i.n.skj stat«~ that student
1overnment will act on the
discipljnary c«1e at the Nov. :u
session claritylfla tbwe: point. to
be praented to the Olancellor on
Dec. 5th.
One campus in the UW System
has been hit by a l)eW Ito us )
scheme of fntxtuler~ t dollar billa.
Since It could spread to other
cam puses, you may want to be oa
the lookout for it and pas• the word
oa to hl&h traffic arus handling
......,.
The scheme disCovered Is this:
the corners of various ten doUar
bills have been clipped off and when
four a r e collected, they are
carefully attached to the cUpped
com en of one dollar bills. They are
then passed during times of heavy
tralflc, auch asln a meal line. A
quick look by the cashier show1it to
be a ten dollar bill when In fac t It is
one dollar. The a ttachmer~ ta are
wdl dorM!, 10 detection has to CGme
b y_ l ookl nl a t the p rinted
denomination on the front or brick,
or know the denomination by the
portrait on the front .
Is beln& olfered to
Atwolt:ISionreluationprOjp"am
Kirla who are
A Title I Tutorial Proa r a m
submitted by Melvin Bloom ol the
sessions a re being taught by Becky
Erlenbach arxl Polly JQm ball , the
Lamau Childbirth instructon at
the state of WlSC<Inlln and funded
for approximately two thouund
dollars. It Involves thirty unlver·
~~C:h~~~:J:!!:!~~
~!k.J~:O~~n ';,.-::..~~:~
:!:~~nr=ri~=v~~c!'ti~~~ ~tp_ ~t':!antwn~~~~
ltiltller~iwtltyoltbe
d u ..-- teatlla" to la1are 110
l lllOkl al 11 per111ltttd In hil
clusr-orla baratory~e~ll• .
S111okilll II aet allowed lo
ac:adc: mlc: buildl•l• c:uept Ia
c:ertaiDdeslpatetllmolliq:ana•
1ad Ia rac: u.l ty aad ad111l.ab lnUve
offk:n."
NOTlCE
Sludenl Dbdplillary Code
•
dysmennorhea .
Girls who are interested In the
leSiionaareaalted to call the Health
Ce nt er (34 6·46411) for furth er
details . n.tre 1a a 12.00 fee for the
miJrant work« famlllea In Ste:vent
Point, Bancroft , P1alnfield and
Hancocli~.
Studmll lntenst«< In
tutorinl ple11e co ntact Laura
Hayden, ext . 3740 or Melvin Bloom,
ext . 45J7or341-41111.
BILL'S PIZZA
ALL KINDS OF PIZZA
YOU NAME IT,
WE MAKE IT!
CALL US FOR FAST
DELIVERY SERY!_CE
. 344-9557
Have You Seen The Boots? ?
You MUST
See The
Boots! ! !
at
MOH..JUEl.-W!D. & SAl. 9 o.o.-1 o.o.
IHURI.-1!11. 9 •.• .·9 ....
lUHDAY ll·lom.
Saow I Cold Coming •.. Bmrr
8
Who are they?
33.500.000
Unclaimed
Scholarships
o.... S3J,500.000 unc:l.;meo;~ Khollr~il".
,.,..ft.
UNCLANEO SCHOLARSHI'S
IIDTbom piOII
"'"""
Dislrid ll
' ' PLEASE RUSH YOUR CURRENT LIST OF
1
i ~
I
I UNCLANEO SCHOLARSHI'S SOURCES TO: I
~ City
I
S t i " _ lip _
IC.it- .,._,. . , . . _ - " ' ..._ ,.,...,
l
I
~------------------...1
The SaiBSians•••
Helping
others
to help
themSBIUBS.
l)iftrkl \ '
AllnllarwN~
CA 90025
O lam et"CIOiolng$9.95plus$1 .00fotiiOit••fldhandt ing.
----------~ --- ----------
3tii''Tiy
"'"'"'
District !
feltoWlh lps rtn~ng loom $50 to $10,000. C•m.nt lin of
thlw to\11«1 rtw•a.td ..cl compiled li o f S.C,t. IS, 1975.
11275 MMWCho.twlll Ave.. l os
~ld Kiump
n'"•BukoiiLanc:
"' """"
,...,.,
gr1nu.. ti~. and
J«iCutalhtt'
3:!1 lollchi11nA\~ •
~
......
""""' "
!l)•rl Eddy Jr.
wSdlme«kle
Sur Katstlll!l"
8 1~ St l' aul St.
Di5trkt \'1
.1.¥-l\SI
Bnlc."e Blobowlf,.k
1101 RHtrve Sl.
:W\ •$Q:Z
Dlllrid VIII
Jim E.aoo
........
1741 Mai n St.
Dbtrlct IX
Krit Arndt
m•Alaom•
Dlatrid IX
OiW'in Ill
_
....
"'""""
Rick Tank
District !\'
l.i1Smlth
•2t:JanKIICn
:HI·27511
lmtrid VII
AlSc:hueu~r
KidtCigt"l
....,,
S2:011)f'l'
101 Soo
l>istrid IV
l lutrkt VII
f
M IIW.h"~
~·-
Bob SNivtt
Stlllknt Govemmmt
~X
Jack 0 . Vfelt
Rl. 2, Boa Ul, Jd . Cliy
Obtrict X
~lib ~~hn
:!~y
OIUrid V
a liatinr of your atudeat aeaaton
Speedo.
A winning line-up h- '76.
( t
~
Campus characters
by Marc: VollnUI
The eterna I student? ..
Georae Fricl:e 1tarted lcl»>O at
Stevens Point bdcn the Invention
ollhe ballpoint pen. Rumor has it
that be even ltarted aani ve writing
with turkey quills.
Fricke is a native of Ollc:ago.
Allhouahlt'snottruethatheleft hls
homttOONn wbtn it was atill~maUu
than Milwak~. it is known that he
arrived In Stevens PUnt by bone
dnwn cart. Anyone wbo doubta hit
lon&evity lw!rejust has to check out
his wanlrobe. How many other
people do you kDow wbo h.ave t>.oo
ori&ina) " Point .Normal " IWUII·
shirU?
.
"!came toSlt'Yens Point to Ittend eol.lege," said Fricke. One of
his frimds doesn 't qree, though.
saying that "George left Chicago
because the Rill. bar II In Steva~a
Point . He jult got tired ol com mutlnc ."
Upon tis ani val in Stevens Point,
G~rge ad m itted thst he waa
"nthet' ally and retirina." He also
noted that ''alllhe gir ls wanted to
takeadvantageofmtjlllt because 1
was from lbt big city."
With the puling of time, Frlde
WIITf'W mOll of his lhynea and
became invoh·ed In outside: activitia. becomin& I boy KOUI
lead«. "It was throuch the Boy
Scouts lhllt I managed to make
some of my dOSftl frie~ ." aid
Frkke. "In fact ," he 1dded, " I
P'edaed Slasel'l beuuse ol the Boy
Scouts.
When I pledged, the
SiaJdis were still atrillated with
ICOUtiiiJ, cboral rtldiiiJ, glee club,
&Dd thinp like that."
Obviously, 1 lot ol Wile!' bas
paSHd ewe~" the dam si nce Fricke
arrived in Point . ln fact , when be
finta rTived, theyhadn 'tevenbuilt
• the dam yet . MOll ol Frick's
3•FRH BEER
5
i
A.
'\1!1
or iginal instructors now have
dormltoriesnamedafterthem .
Althou&halotoftimehalpassed
sin« Fric.ke started talr.ina: claases
here, be uys that some ol the
matt'ri.al hasa'tchanced too much.
" They ' ve j u st changed the
designat ions of the courses,"
Friclr.e said. "F« example, what a
student today wnuld study as
Science, I studied as Scienct f1c .
lion," he added.
Fricke recdvtd a BS dt&n!t'
from Sttvens Point (« was It 11111
Celltral State!) many years ago.
Notreadyto leaveschool though, be
dec:idedtoaoc.~ to graduate IChool.
Last year. Stevens Point awarded
Fricke a Masters degree In Na tural
.......,_
"''bile Frlcltf' ias still livi ng in
Olicaao he wo.:ked at the Museum
Every Tuetday Ni\tlt
3
~
-
is"::e:~,.:.=n~~!:.
r
Give Gecqe a JUita.r, a dance to
sin1. and JOOn hb audience is
stampiqJ: their feet a.od clappin&
thdr hands I some say thil is to
drown him null .
But Fricke's
talent.a are not limited to guitar
strinp and vocal chorda:.
"I can rully dance, to-1, '' said
Fricke. He noted that be alm01t
woo a bottle ol champagne one
"amateur ni&ht" at lbe-Platwood
Oub with his rt'ftdition of ..the
dance o( the maUna prair ie
chiCken". Fric.ltesaid,"l reallyput
Diamond Dlclr. to s hame that
:m~e/::."1~~':!'v~~
worry about some chkk tryin& to
take adva ntage ol me just because
l'mfromthebi&city," Frickesaid.
He noted, however , that he "can be
had if the girl plays her carda
riaht."
Loollin&'at his walch, Fricke said
lhathewouldhavetolet'mlnatethls
Interview because he had to 10 nut
and buy some clothes. Gulpiq
down his brandy and water, Fricke
apolqpud for his hasty departure
and beaded towardl the door:
'"The Thrill Shop clORS in Cive
minutes," he said .
~7r:t- s~
PIWO Nit NIE KOSZTWE •i;
Shrimp
~ Bonanza
=
~
ol Natural Hiltory. For five years
be wu In charg-= ol f01alls Now,
the c.~ly foulla be comes into
contact with are elde-ly inebriates.
Fricke works at Buffy's Lampom.
h....
Anyone who doesn 't recognite the
name "George Fricke", un doubtably has heanl his athletic
nickname - '"The BiJ d". A standout sollball player. "G" batted a
sinliq -~in the Stevens Point
tournament this past summet". His
b as e -runninl a bi liti es kept
everyoneiUetSil\l, includifll his
own team.
·
Fricke admiiS that he's foc-«d to
throw out his "ni« auy " image on
Flidaynlghtswhilehe'scompeting '
in a highly competitive bowlinJ
leq:ue. Vnu won 't find !')-iclte
boilsli~ a bout his enviable taleats
either, despite the fact that be
carriesalustyt26averaae. ""''by
brai!"besaid. "lmlghtcooloffolf
beforethcseasonis over a nyway."
Fricke's varied t;~ lents keep
numerousothertrophiesrollin&in.
He iets one nu rly every week In
fact . Whet! asked to comment on
them, howevet", his baJic humbleness resurfaced . A blushina
George Frjcke said, " Ynu aren't
acXna to write anything about that,
are ynu!"
Fricke admitted that the Stevens
~int campus has "grown up"1ince
~~first IITiVed here. '"'bere are
A Bounty of GokMn &ttllf Fried Gulf Shrimp
GARDEN GREEN SALAD
cttoiclcc:!;:'~~~~,.
blkld. haiti browns or gotden trench frift
HOMEMADE BREADS
WISCONSIN GRADE A BUTTER
:
fl'rUellf4 . . .
I PUBLIC
~
ENEMY
5
~
NOV, :U ,
Pl\OGRA¥
:aM.-u.c.
7&91:1. 5 p ~
ONE
DOLLAR
Talking with America's
best goddam fiddle player
"'v~r.::Tn thecorntrof~
~~e.'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:h
!:;"n'~' · ~r~~t!dd,.;~e:~
urkd
t!:C pl•yina tonlt~;
~~~:~=~·~- ~~::an;
ci=~!r~~n~-w.'!:~ly~ac;
feature~ he lookS more lUte • truck
driver or the methanic be once was
lhananddleplayezo. His eyn _
clole
uhebeginstoplay,llowly, lightly
at flnt unt il he becomu
reacquainted wilh the \nttrumftlt
hf(s played thousands of time1
bd~ .
He starts out pla)'inl bits and
pieces or .onp, ~toppina . t~ tift
~as~=ly~r~~~.t~~l
~~t:: .~~ ~-lar:'ttf::
~e:s=:n:,a;=::'~!~~~
Vassar for an impromtu jam.
~:-~.~ =:~=\
~ ':m~~~~r!~i,k.:: ~~·~
Vassar Jrlns shtoepilhly at be
b«ats toto it. 11le crowded room
grows quiet as they waleh Vuu r,.
eyes lhlt ti&bt aPd 1051 Ia hit own
world .omewbere, fiddle like no one
else an ....
His wife Millie uis they loRd to
ull him ''The Musica lly Minded
One St«e Cowboy" becalM he
used to han& atOlDi the dnc atore
with IU suitar wben he wu In hi&b
school. More receclJY he hu beer~
called the Kiulmee Kld, 1 ume
tl:anhi~~ki:.;,tt•~::
Vasur il from Kislimee, nor\da.
Then then: are otbers who lim ply
call him the bell damn fiddle pb)'ft'
ever. Ofthe three it teem& that tbe
Jut II t he mo1t accuratel y
dncrlpUvt:.
In the amall IOWD ol Kltw'd,
~oridl, where VIU&I' was born In
1921, ooe woWd tbiDir; life would
have been more condudYt'
to
..
~~:n:.~e; ~ ~u:c: j~
()pry on the radio and his family
thatinatilledinVaaa r thedeslreto
become 1 mualcian. He hu n'~ae
memorit'l of his father. who died
when Vuaar waa q.dte youna.
pbyingJUilaT and pi.atlo. Hil atep
fathet' introduud Vauar to Owbb1
Wise who later in~ him to
Bill M:OIVoe. MonroeoUered Vassar
in contact with ~e~me of the mc.t
Important aod respected musicians
in Nuhville.
t=
nat aecond sq.mt>nt
t.~!"r.;~rr
1
of Vassar'a
~:ic·~~e; ~~
persona l problems and some
bw.ine:u ventw-es. He wu drinking
heavily durin& thla time, hia tint
marriage was brealdna up, and he
was inYolYed witll a real estate
•
\
r':\
firnt: l~the real estate (inn
~~!t~Utnta~~~e[~''-~ bi ~II !'!~17push ~~
high school.
•
.
1n 1949, lbortly after bigh school
was over, Vaaaar went to NuhYIIIe
MlllietSV
r 's wife, businesa
rnanaaer.arranger.booking agent,
and all around pe~ In charge.
"Vassar just sort of remai ns 1
=~~~~giJ~o:[.~,:~r: =~j~·~m:: ;n~~ ~w!
fiddle player·
Tbt e.aretr of Vassar Qernent.
could eully be divided lnloO two
segmmt.; the rll"lt, pla)in& with
Bill Monroe and the Bluegrau Bo)'l
until l95i and with Jim and Jesle
Mdteyooldl until 19Q. Dldna: this
~tr':l=:~'*~~==
P~
,.lelt
N..eaWrl. lfU
s ideman. Him more than me. I have
to puah him. To him it's just a God
givtfttalentandhejustwantatodo •
the best he can with il. In fact, he
has made thia remark to me
tbouaandlloftimes,'AJI ("wanttodo
lsget mymualcoutthcre. What I've
got up here In my head . If I c:an do
that I feel like I'Ye accomplished
someOing.' " Millie provided the
driveandtookoverthebusinesstnd
ol thinp giving Vasaar a chalk't' to
justplay hism usic.
,.'rom 1967 to 1969 Vassar mainly
didstudiov1ork untll he bagan
~~o·ork.ing asaregul a rwithF'aron
Vouna:. Vassar hu since been a
regular with John Hartford and
m05I. notably the Earl Scrugg.a
Revue. On ltning Earl's group
Va as a r comments , " It was
btglnnl!lltojustgetrepetitious.
Nobody wanted to proweu very
much. They were 1atisfieddoing the
same lh•ngs. We"d ro off in a room
JOm-heres and pracUce but we
nevera:ot.to~r Ole stuff. You have
to~aelhestuffto keeplhetft­
thiDiasmupandwewasont.hegoso
much that ~~o·e never really a:ot a
c:hancetoworkonit."
Vasur also ldt Scncgs band
"Aller he left the road the calls juSt
kept on comin' in for him . I ng~
~~:n~~~:r=,.~~~
to pay more than a aldem1n s
ula ry . I kept goin ' up, up , up, up.
up in price and I wasn't tt'fused. II
wu like lhlt for two ye~rs. It just
~~~"~ rt~:ep~C:;:r~~
doina: it . This pYe ua the lnct>nllVt'
and bigger idus too,"
During that ti me Vuur play~
with some or the bia&eSI names m
the music industry, including Paul
McCa r tney, Ould Bromberg,
Jerry Garcia, Doc: WilsOn. 'llle
Al lm1n Bl'others. Gra t.e ruJl)ead,
Ste~~e Goodman, Norman Bl1ke,
Unda Rhonsta dt 1nd the NittY
~~y~~~or~trra:U::~
~~~~rc:th~Un~ .
beU~Aeoftheria:orsof the road
and varioul coun try m utlc JTt'li~ ·
po&sible~. llewentln tothe
a lbum .
Nashville was his home and ~
prdtrred to spend as much time u
vendin~ busineu and hoped to just
do IC!Uions work around Nubville.
as Mi!lie explained it , thinu
did not quite Work out th1t WI
U:ut·
~r~~~:lfy ~·tc~~
The album was orf&laallY C'Ofl·
~~bJ U:'~m~~~·::·
,
ofmeetmabetwet>ntbeold starsot
Nashville and the new~ c:ountry-
rocltstars. Atfirsttheprojfoctmet
...,.lth oppoaillon by the older
traditioo11l people until Earl
Scruap sttpptd in to help get tbe
ball rotuna. Bnldel Vassar and
Earl lhe pro~t included such
legendary ngurn u Roy Acuff,
Merle Tuvls , Dot Watson,
M.1ybelleCarttr and Junior Husky.
The album broke down the doors
between the old and the new. Not
evmthoseb:JvolvedintbePrOi«t
. expected the ncltement" it
generated. " I don't know •'by that
a~le a lbum is 10 good," cfrawltd
Va.uar. " Earl mmUoned would I
want to do that album and I uid
ture becaldehe had explained what
the album was to be and I said 1\ft
because I Mew a lot of the j)@Ople
that wne to be oa it. '!bat was that.
Nobody upected the kind of
response that thing aot."
Altn' the IUCCftlol lhe ''Orcl'"
album iind seein& lhe kind ol
money people Wn'e willing to pay to
see h im play, Vassar brpn to !hint
ilbout a band or his own. He wu
gh~n the opportunity to record an
album on a major labd, Mn'etry,
doina the kind ol musk he wished t•
do.
Surrounded by the people he had
aj\•en his help to !Jnu&h out. the
years. Vassar produC'ed a rock and
jan: oriented album th at was
r«dvtd ao ...,.ell it ga,·e Vassar the
impetus to form a Nnd and hit the
road on« again. " I've had the
chance before with r«ord com·
panies and they wouJd .sk wllat I'm
gonna do and I C'OUidn't tell then
...,. ~t I'm gonna do. I'm not &ood 11
'"!'o me he ltts bettft" and bet·
ler," ldclsMillJe.""He1ldol.hinp
at a show Uurot've nt'\'tr been done
before and that'U tle\'et be played
qain. He't doln' thinp on that
riddle lleVft' ~ done before in
history."
Vusar and MiUie organized a •
band earlier this yeu aad bfgan
playinstoamallclubs,audltoriuma
and mlverlities. Tbe muUc wu a
dt-parture from what people had
come to expect !rom Vassar
Cements. 'Jbe band concentrated
oa a varietvof mW~ieal stvln.lncludirc ~nand roclt.That bl.nd has
now split up but VUArs' m~cal
plans Nwe remained the ume. II
could be Aid that Vauar ls enterilll a third staae of his tll'ftt'
a nd he'• DOt reaUy lUte where be's
Join&.
· " We want to do 1 lot ol thlncs."
M said. "Vt~ could switch right
:f;us~~t t~'\,~~ is1~ ;O:
get in some cat~ory. Then anu we
settle in some catecory ...~ can do
what we want. You
see,
they keep
~~~~~~~~ :!:',~~
chartJ. Olarts. cbartJ, ChartJ! I
ne\' U was in the charts before! I
don'tlhink I Rot to be but they say I
do. Anyway , the only way I can
do that is att In one direction here
...,·here I won't keep &oin& back and
forth. Whue !bey can put their
fingu oa wtult It is. Then I can do
what I want arter that. Then we'll
go ...,.here ever It takes us, where
ever that is. But you know nothln'
e\'ff' worts out like you want it to
anyway."
E
!~!::~n~~!~=~t i! ~~~nt~~~
then you play accordingly: If it
takes a banjo, you 11se a banJO. If It
takeslsax , youuseasax. Justgoln
.~
~
;
fl'i
~
a
Steak Bonanza ~~
E-v Sundey Night!
CHOICE SIRLOIN STEAK
~
TEXAS TOAST
f3
Ootnor_.., ,_lhoiHmadtdtaoinp
BAKED POTATO&: SOUR CREAM
3:
HO~~~~EO~N~~~A~NGS
jjl
tl
~\)\\\
~~~~\j..~~
~~\
THURSDAY
EVENING
8:00 . 10:30
Students Only
e $1 25 ADMISSION
t
!:)
!!!
FREE BEER!
Nlyoooc..,.m.kwithyooorlllc.-1
C1l
auuntn tn tnl-nl-n 1-n 3:
- - - it t
ill
:;i
SUNDAY NIGHT DANCE
Featuring
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
Great Oanot a.nd
Sundrr Night
~
RESERVATIONS
FOR WING
PARTIES
CALL 344-9348
OR
341-7017
WITH US THIS
THANKSGIVING
AND GET ON
TO AGOOD THING.
us me•ns G•evhound. and 1 tot of 'fOOl' leUow students
wtlo a1e alleady on co 1 good th1no ¥ ou reave wh1n you
toke T•av1l c:omiOftably Amve ••l•eshed 11\d on 111n1
You' tt Silve moMy. roo. over the 1nc•eased 111
'"" Shale tl'le rid• w 1th us on weekel\ds Holidays
Anv!llne Go Greyl'lound
GREYHOUND SERVICE
--TO
Chcago
£a.CIIon
ONf· IIOUNO- YOU CAN
WAY
Tllll"
S l380
MOO
1 11.0
YOU
UAVIE
AlllltVt:
.,~ P.W
TIOP .W
S21 •~
.\s.vouol~l-lfCIO,I.C)fi~Gtfllflu,.,ll'ldoll"""'''g'
BOB WURL
341·4740
T_-GO
GREYHOUND
~lldlea¥8111edriYIIIIIIOUS ·
~·
Ph.otOfirGphic view• of the G~rlre field uperience often center on the action at the line of I'Crimmage
to the uduion of an equally intereating facet of the gome.
Thia weelr we point th~ camera• the other way Gnd pruent G loolr-
Behind
the
With vacation time rast approaching,
manyo£you will no doubt be traveling
to Mexico. Some or you might even be
coming back . Here are some hetprut
hints.
1. A man on a burro always has the
right of way, unless he appears to be
a weakling.
2. In local cantinas, pouring a shot or
Cuervo down a man·s collar is not
·thought to be humorous.
3. Falling onto a cactus, even an
actual Cuervo cactus, can be
a sticky proposition.
4. It is tough to find hamburger
rolls in the smaller towns; it's
best to bring your own.
· ·oo~•w
,. 1.,u s ..-.... ~~er1.
1tn
" Myrc"a-tc:at:bH melllat lalld
nanot be l old .... Nothlnj UD be
l old but lucl'lll'llaJS IS ua be
urrie4away."
Black ll awk • Sa uk Cb le f
[___[}~-~-~-~-~-·-·_·_--___..]
Don't call me Dreyfus anymore!
by Mkhael ftn5
" I'd like LO Ullk ta Mr. Bell
!e xecutive sec r etar y to !he
Olancellorl about the future of
Oreyfl.a l..l.ke ... Admonishingly his
secrelary rc"plied, "We don 't c:all it
ll'lat anymore! The name hasn'l
been decided yeL" In an instant I
had learned a very important leuon
about a lake that is, and isn' t, a Joe
of thinp to a lot of people.
You c:an't rc"a ll y blame a guy for
calling tb.at lake Oreyfi&S Lake. I
mean eve ryone has been c:allina It
by U~t name e-.·er since the red
''"led wonder des«nded upon our
qu ie t campus eight ye01rs ago. But
as ~~~~·re all bqinnin& to learn quite
1111!11. !hires can chanae rather
quickly on this campus. sometimes
for the be tier, sometimes not. Such
changes might Include the name of
a controversia l lake north of
umpusUIII'C!ll.
Actually , the lake never rea lly
Na d anarne tobeginwithbutpeople
~''C! a.ociated it with the Chan·
c:elloreversi~hefirstcall~for
ita creitlon at the Chamber of
Commer-« address in the winter of
1967-68. The idea of a campus lake
goes back even fur ther , but Mr.
Dreyfus 1\asbeen the 'driving fort'e "
.behindthela.keasitls presenlly
conceived.
UWSPt' OII.tatJ•
A. name for the lake, as ~~~~II as Its
uses, isn't rc"ally up to L.S.D. or
a nyone else at UWSP. These
decisions rut with a private cor·
poration called the 'Universi ty of
W"liCOnJin · Stevens Poin t foun·
dation ' whic:b owns the land upon
whk hthelakeisbein&CGnStructed.
SiM'e the Foundation operates in
the lntet'C!I t of this university, one
mi&ht ea:pect a name which In·
corporates thli interes t ! hint
nqmber Ofle). Mr. Bell. lfl'ho is a
member of the Foundation 's board
of dlrecton. looks a t the lake a s
good publicity and image contact
for the univH"Jity as lfl'ell as a n
e ducational and r ec r eation a l
fa cility thin! number two t
l.aktU..e
\\"hat does makea dirrermce Is
holfl•the lakellt\'entually used , if at
all. This is somelhllll"''hich can
only be determined 0\"er the nu t
Sl'\'eral)·eanu the ..,·aterquallty
brcomesbe tterunderstood. V."hatis
knov.-n up to this point is t~tthe
lake area ....,1\ not be left totall y
unden•loped ~or 11 it likel y to
btc:ome another h·enon ~rk , an
area wh e r e heavy st udent
pouibleusqesof the north campus
rela te tothatc:ollqe's aoals. Their
final recommendations are still
forthcoming.
Many other ideas for the lake's
utilization are bound toappeilr u it
nean completion. To OfJaniz.e thtse
ldeas inhopesof arrivincatafinaJ
pLan acceptable LO the greatest
r~~mber ol people, with the lake's
lfl•a t.er quality as the prime concern,
Cha ncellor Dreyfus ts ~etting up a
co mmittee which will include
repr es entation from v.arious
campusCU~Cer ns .
{
uti h utionwdl belcssened.~ the
nev.· h•ke 11 com pleted . Som"'-here
bl•l..,·eenthc.>lle twoe • trem es lies the
futureofl..a.ke - -.
Wa ter qual ity IS of course the
mai n factor in decidi ng what a<:·
tl\'lliet ..i ll e-.·entua.lly be aliOV>"ed in
and around the lake . Educated
guesses up until now indicatelha t
thelakt"l lll'attr•illha \"e rtlil tively
good characteristics. This would
allowfor lirnllttlrecrea tional act•nt y. possi bl y including ice
skati"' .llfl'i mm ing, and canoeing.
No motorizt'dboiltslfli llbe f liOIII-ed .
Abeach 3.ndpicnicareaatthenorth
end of the La ke arc" tent.atl vel y
pli1Med. buta renotyetacerta inty.
.
The task at Nand is trying to make
it u good a lake as possible ... for
education , r ec r eati on and
aes thetics, no matter what the
damn thing is called. A. lake that
youcanswim infor one mont h and
Y.'3lk on the scum of the rest of the
tim e won 't do anyone any good
!except maybe an alaotoelstl.
This coold 1\appen repnlleu of
what the foundationdecidel , due 14
the intense dev elopement soon to
occur north and east of the lake.
t\lrrent nutrient levels In the
ground lfl'llter by the la ke are not
ea:cessively high and are not likely
14 cause an algal bloom. But
development in the area e«~ld raise
lhtaenutrientlevelsCGnSiderabl y,
res ulting in very high a laae
populations. This would In turn
cau&e an oa:ygen depletion In the
lake as these a lgae die and are
decomposed. Such condit ions ,
would., in general, be detrimental
LO the lake and the orpnisms
~:~iated wi th It , inc luding
land !including the lake I u ite«~ld
• Thrir final recommendations wiU
be closely scrutinized by the UWSP
Foundation board of direc tors who,
in the end. will make the final
decis ions . In addition to ea:ecutlve
se<:relilry Leon Bell, the university
\1 represented on this board by
student aovemment prnldent Bob
Badzinski and Chancellor Dreyfus .
A.ll of these people
ha\·e made assurances that con -
::~~·t~~
~~~~~ct!:=
beofa
making proeftS.
To usu me that th is c:ourse ol
events is inevitable is rather easy
COMider ing J)f"evious events north
t:d11nU•
~~a~~~~ m~~t!eoo :~~!!!
Now~'b•t !
Bes •des r ec r ea tion. the lake
should provide th e College of
Natural Resou~ ICNR>, Bioloty
Depa rtment , and other university
So after readln& all of this , you
probably don 't know any more
- than you knew
about Lake before. SOrry about that. Of course
b boratory dose14campus. ALand • many people would be just as 1\appy
withoutanyla.kenorlhofcampus.
Use Com mittee ol the CNR. Jhis
But the lake u beina built anc:1 u .w
year chaired by forestry prof'C!SIOf
be permanent.
RobertMiller , iscurrcntly stu:Jyin&
plans will have a significa nt effect
onthelake'swaterquallty and are
concerned about its future, let that
Oflanization know wtuat you think
should be done. Alter all , Lake
Wlultchamac.allitis&oingt.obewith
us fora longtime.
concffftl lfl'i th a n eu~llentaquatk
A committee was a ppointed by
Foundation presidhlt Ken Willett
with the apeelfic purpose of c:oming
up wit h a name for the lake LO
recommend, LO the full board of
directon. Tbrir recommendlt.ion.
"Uni~ty Lake" thin! number
thfft" t. Nas yet to be voted on .
Thb; II only a t«<mmendation and
lhouJd be viewed 11 such. It
probably won't make any dif·
ftrence what name they do come up
with because as lqas Olancellor
DreyfUI is alill arlll.nd. and maybe
~tr , lludentl will keep on callin1
it Dreyfus Lake lou t of C1)mj)ISJion
or contempt:" ).
-
'f
-· .
.>·. . .
·'-,.":'tk-
.
~
' -
.
.
~..- .. ,.M1.
117S
i. ~-
--~- ~ -
~· ..~ ·aJ>oO: .
,_llf U
Pel~
Viet refugee begins investigati~n
nature", Don& said , "but Vt't' can
avoid the noJtlous e rre cts and
use ... nhem l in a good manner ."
.·
by KarToU Bobak
Or. To Don&- a displaced Viet·
!\;Iinne biochemic:al analyst has
begun a one year study or lhe
herbicide 1.4-D in the Golden Sands
a rea ol cehtra l WiKonsin. The
study has be-en made poaible by a
grantinel_lcessofSIO.OOO(rom the
Ford Foundation.
AccordiJJ& to the initial propoul .
the objecth·e of the study I! to
"dttumine cWTent le•;els of 2,4-D
and ... 4ilsl r'esidutS in non-target
· vegelation. animal life and soils.''
The s tud y hu been initiated
because of c:OIJ(:ern over the effects
the wide ly used herbicide mlg.ht
haveonwildlifeintheGoldenSands
region.
Attord ina to Dr . Dorltl:. 1,4-D is a
chemical of the phenoxyherbicide
fa mily . lt lsusedas awM<ildUer,
mostly in corn riekls in this arta,
Dong s.~id . He said it is a Vfl')'
poisoflous chemical, just as all
pesticideundevensome medicines
arepoisonous. ButheWE"n tontosay
that inthismodr.r nda y ci vi lir.ation.
lhe use of c:he mk:als ca n't be
avoided. " We can't return to. old
. 'fie said there are a lot of
dl s c r e pan ries round i n th e
liler at ureconcf'f ning the her -·
biddes. In resea~hin& this s tory
these discrepancies v.-ere plainly
seen. For example. in a pamphlet
released by the Council ror
Ag r icultural Science and
Tec hnology in February, 1975, it
was reported that this "'impor tant
class ell herblcides .. .a re widely
..- us-ee:~ bt-cause they are mor e efficient a:ldusually less hazardous
and leas injurious to the en·
vironment t h an alter nati ve
methods." ltwasalso reportedthat
they ~-ere "to:dc to green plants"
but"'muchlesstoxictomammals,
birds , fish," and so on.
On lhe other hand, in an article
printed in the Sleven5 Point Dally
Journal on May l. 19"1-4, an area
envi r onmentalist ,
Marg uer ite
Baumgartner, wrote that a UCLA
biochemist "'Warns that minute
quantities Col the phenoox yherbicides l can kill. that dtitens
everywhere ~ e1tposed, and that
the com b i ned e rr ec t Is
cawtrophic."
Dong said that while he may not
clea r up the discrepancies, he
miRht a t leas t come to a better
understanding of what happens
when the chemical breaD down In •
the wi ld . He said that breakdown
occursinsixmonths to a year,but
that animals still eat the treated
~~-tation before ~akdown ocHe went on to uy that while some
literatUre contends that there is no
bulld up of the chemical or Its '
residue in animals, he wanta to
make sure that 's the case. Dong
u id that there hasn't been much
spra)'iuaoru-o in the s tudy area
recen tl y, but that there was very
wide use or it ten to fifte-en yu rs
ago. He sajdhehopesto learnifthere
could possibly be bi rth defects
found lnthe wlldllfeof today si milar
to those found in wild life whose
ancestors were expoeed to DDT
twhich is now banned in Wiscon·
sin ).
111e Initial proposal sta tes that the research project will oblerve
breakdown rates of the herbicides
andfollowthei rmO\'emen tthrou&h
soil and water . Dong said he's
concerned that fish in the Golden
Sands area might contain the
che micalsm- their noltiousresidues.
He noted that studies ha\·e show n a
poisonous residue of the herbicide
2,-4 ,5-T (a c hemica l of the
phenoxy herblclde famil y) was
found In Vietnamese nsh. The U.S.
Anny dumped $50 million wm-th of
2.4.5-Tindefollallonprojects durlq
the Vietnam war, Dong explalnt<l.
Ue said one of the main concerns
should be man . We are tee " Ga rbagec:ans,• that will eventually
cons um e all different types of
cq;anlsms tha t may be affected by
getaffectt'd--unfortunately."
In this study, Don& said , he hopes
to increase our know lege of how we
can use the pesticide most el·
fectively and least hannfully. He
·said tha the hasone yeA rlnwhlchto
ca rry out the !tudy whic h will
consist or stuctyn11 soil and water
sam ples. crops and freshly road·
killed spt\:imens o1 wildlife alona
with small trapped a nimals and
deer collected during the dee r
season. lleaddedlhat all specl mens
will be collected from three a reas
withlnlhevastGolden Sands area .
The first two zones are the Buena
Vista and Carson· Sherry areas.
These regions are heavily fannt<l
and htlve been exposed to heavy or
moderateapplicationsof2.4·D. 11le
thirdzone, lheMead Wildlifearea ,
will beusedasacontrolareaslnce
very little a ppllcallon of th e
chem\u l has taken place there .
§
Hesaidtl\atre s e adependson
information that Is interpreted
accu rately a nd looke a t objectively . He added that e Is ex·
trcmely gratefu.ltoa ll the resou rce
fa ..-u lty and othe r UWSP ad -
thepoisons . "~eateve rythlng . ln
them I could do nothing," he said .
the future
"( frt:
~~-:e~t~ {~s u;i;J~~- i~.:~~t
added , '" Man will
Eco Briefs
El!vlton.mental Coll.n.c: ll
The UWSP Envi ronmental Cooncil
will show two rdms on TUesday,
November II a t 7:00. ibe two mms
~:;ak:n~pe~O:k-r:e r:~o:.-r;':
Techniques ~ The mms will be
shown in th e Communication s
,.&om of the UC for free! Anyone is
v.-dcome.
EcologicaiBadtluh
Jn anefforttoeradicate malaria
in the jungle vtllage of Mala ~ia in
Bo r neo , th e World Health
Organization sprayed the a rea with
DDT. The s pray killed lhe ma lariaca rr ying mosquitoes, but the
village eoc:ltroaches built up a n
immunity to the pestkide and
~~~~a~~~~~~=~
cockroaches killed the geckos, a
~!:~~errj ~; !: 1~-n~t;::
Enero Dnciency
A report entitled " A Nation or
avoid the village cata. As both the
Enmy Efliclent Buildings by 1990"
cats and geckos died from DDT
poisoning, di sease-bearing rail
contains plans that could reduce oil
cons umption In the U.S. by more
0\"erran the village, and cater ·
pillan, once kept down by the
than 12.5 million barrels per day by
1990, according to the American
geckos, began devour ing the
Institute of Architects (AlA). This
village's thatched roofs.
The
p.-oblem was pa r tly solvt<l by
reduction could be accomplished by
cons truchn& more energyeffictent
pa rachuting a planeload of healthy
butldings and by Increasing the
cats into the village.
v~caao Powu
erti clency of exlstlnastructures.
~ says buildinp can be I
11lestate ofllawall intends to cut
made I~ percent more efficient ' down on its dependence on im ported
by add1ng sola r p~nels for the e n ergy b y h a r n ess ing th e
capture and generation ?' energy, geothermal energy of some of Its
and by ackliq more tnsulatlon, many volcanos. The fint power
co n s~ ruc~ing ~ewe r windows ,
plan t utilizing volcano power is
red uc mg hghteru ng, etc.
M"heduledtobeinoperalionby 19'19.
T\\t B£ST IN
Cross CountrgSkies
at.
flostel ~l]oppe, ]fitb.
1314 W•t•r Str..t
Steve'!.sH~~~n~1 ~~~~~s~~ 05448 1
V(JtcOf\Sinf' apidl
Ste'oltlf'll p oint
I
...lntro please
by MlcUd Varaey
" Eac.bdnwincbald!-anai)'Sil ;
by puttin& these thinp down on
paper it's lilr.e aoinl to •
psydU•trist," is bow UWSP junior
Dtnnb Hill aSHS&eS the affects o1
his JU.n"ealistic art work.
HIU, who doesnaturedrawinpas
....-eu. employs a graphite peodl and
occuionaUy a pen to produce
tobjets d'art. )
Some ol his images come from
dreams he bas hid. Each point of
departUJl!-the idea-is built on and
planned in a very aenenl teMe .
!:..die:;',':
l:':~:'!bt~~nge
Ever ti nce childhood, llill has
enjoyed workin& with pencil and
paper to fonn Images. "U I don't
work on a drawi na I bqin to feel
fr ustrated a nd use leu," he
remarks. A drawing can «<l''Swne
a nywhere fr om two weeks to
several months of his time.
''Somber , motion less. barren ,
starlr.,"areHif.ctncripti-olhis
surrealistic works. " It lakes a
certain amount of stability to put
down lhinp that bothft' us,'' he
says about surTealist themes. Hill
believes that stlble people like
surrulism and un~table people
cloo'tb«ause tbrt'e is no ''SecUrity
ol reality."
AJthoughhillurrealistoffft'i!WI
are somber, his wllcllife duwinp
are quite contnry.
Hill is the first to admit tl\at the
idN he wants to conve,t: is not
always obvious, but ....hen people
uk him wl\at hb dl'llwings mean he
rdlllh to leU them. He thinks,
"tbeyshouJd see thtmseh~ in it."
' 'Someoone brirc able to identify
'llith what I have put down ," is the
staled purpose of Hill's 'II'Ofk, Yt'hen
otMrs an find nothing in his
"twistedrealism"he r~b sorry ror
tl><m.
Asked about changing from
graphitepenciltoadifferentmedia
hesaidpain t wasdifficultforhimto
control. Hill likes drnin& because
" I like to be deliberate.·• He also
revealedlhatheisastrivingperfectlonist .
ltlllderivesa"areatsenseol'
satisfactlon to finish a work," but
readily admits that he has more
=~ished works than completed
"I see an evolution in my
drawing. An e-.·olution in skill, in
St)·le , inlheabilitytocoordin.atethe
forces that wo r k within the
dra'll'illi,'' he reflecls. Hill also
corn~hcndsanar Usticevolulion .
He has borro...·ed from previous
timesandhopes to " addinasmall
way" tolhefuture. lkrealilesthat
1n$0yearsprobably no one will bedoincthekindof..,·cri:inwhichheis
presentlyengaged.
·
A sel!-9roclaimed traditionalist
the likesoldtllingsi.Hill..,-ouJd
kitalistically like to make a living
with his a r t and mentioned
illustrating boob as a possibility.
He cooduded, "The important
lhin&isthatl'llalwayshavetimeto
~~o-orkondrawingsnomatterwl\atl
do.''
Coming up •••
Oneol tbegna tettganpter ntms
ol'alltlmewiUbe P.-esenteclby the
Universi ty Film Society. William
Wellman'a Pvlllk EM•y wUI be
shown in the Pfa&ram BIDqutl
Room IUCI oa '1'\Jesd..ly, Novernbft'
tlat,7and 1:15pm.
hblk ~e•y derivea ill power"
~~~~~c:=:r~
Clpey'a raw. fef'«<OUI portrait ol
vicloua lh\C. Cagney's Tom
Powers h at no socially
redeeminc tnits--he Is a bully
behind bis guo with men, a bully
behind bia fiats with women. His
ratbn- dfeminate face bdtes an
alm01t udittk personality. He
taka Jledlil pie.uure 1.11 eva~ the
m01t petty pbyalcal insults---he
spits a mouthful a beef' at • apeakeasy propriet6 and nashes ~
grapefruit l.llto Mae Clarke's f~­
WeUman'a ti&btcuUhlland pointed
shooti ng provide • highly expressive vehicle for Cqney.
The fllm allirs James Clgney.
Jean Harlow, Joan Blondell . and
Donald Coot .
The Wa y We Were •tan Robert
Redford a• a WASP joc:k-fr1 t man
who il, on the side, an incredi bly
sens iti ve wr ite r , and Ba rb ara
Streiaand u a Jewilh Stalillist
camJX,W radical. The duo go from
col.lqe to narriqe to Hotlywood
..,here Redford's sc reenwritina
career il vktimiud beca~~~e ol his
....,re·s gaudy lenWn.
1
Tile Panllas \'lew starrina
War-ren Beatty, will be shown Ttlun
f'ri .. Nov 13and 14 in place or
and
the
scheduled
1.-dy Siap The
Cl~b sports
b_yt-:lalneStache
In c::ompt!nution for seven!
sports bdng dropped this year , due
to the situation the athletic budget
11 in , c::ampu5 club spof'ls are
developin& and growina.
Cub sports are funded through
thelntramuraldepartmentandare
run by studenls .
Each dub
determines its own rules , tela its
~N-1lpractic::es,anddecideshowitis
goingtooperate.
concerned
~clubllare not
.,.;th eligibiiUy and are
co~ . lbere is no club insurance so
50tne per$011.111 rislt is involved. 1he
dubs play a limited lnlef'<OIIe&iale
and-or club K hedule .
M of now. UWSP sponson ten
club sports : arc::Dt!'y, dir«ted by
Ca re y Sa niter which meets
Tuesdays from 7· 10 pm in Annex 2:
gymnastics, di rected by
Courtney which
meels
Dan
Monday
through F'riday at 3 pm In the
auxilia ry gym; volleyball , directed
by Mark Imhof meets Thursday
a.nd
Sunday nighu: f~ing , directed by
Lou Bieringer which m~ Wed·
· =::.ni&htsi nthe~lcooy ; apd
Club s which aren't fu ll y
established yet include boxina:.
judo, karate , and wale!' polo.
If )'OU are interested i!l par·
ticipatinginanyofthese sports,or
would like to see another sport
de\·eloped, contact the direct« of
the sport or Dick Hack. room 107
P .E . There are pamphlets on club
sports available a t the rieldbouse
and schedules of practice~ are
displa)·ed in the glass cax~ In the
fieldhouse and In room t07 .
••.fencing
Th06epeopl.eyoumighthave5ftfl
111ith the weird looking c01tumes
and masks and 1worda are l.he
UWSP fencing club. Thd 81"1)U P is
ge nerally made uP ol fencing
studenll, but anyone is we.leCinle to
)oin.
growing
What is fencing ! Fencing Is the
historicar toloffenseanddefense
with l.he sword, In which the object
is for one fencer to hit another
without being hit first. The object is
notto\nfiictanlnjury,u10111e
~~~:::::::::~:
wrest I"1ng ..bE(,Qins
•
although many use a sabre or an .,.
epee. nte foil Ia capab le only of
by DOll
blade hill any part ol the tono.
fromthecoUartotheg:roin,in front
Stevens Point wrntling is alive
and going s trong! Practice started
Saturday, Nov. I , u new head
!~~~is:C~nclf~;~ U:
:CS~~~ku!~:.euS:SJn~1a!;
anywhe:,f'e else, it Is off-target and II
Inn:!~
~O:r!~~ ~~en~~J:"i!o1~:r:
Scbrotde!;,.
:~~~:h~~::bs:nhi:!:m~:
. program.
·
~1c~I~
S::~~~
potentially fatal are counted. Any
pointhll, whelhervalidornot,slops
action a.nd no subiequeflt hits may
count until the fenttn have stopP,ed
and once more resumed fencing .
Thls is done to prevent serious
inj~tlsenckd whera a fencer hai
been touched five li~es in a men:•
bout or four limes m a women s
bout. Sometimes llmin& is also used
and the fencer with the most
Loueheswins.
The eqWpment used Includes. a
foil , a strong mask , a. padded wh1te
jacket and a fencing glove. ~
latter three are used as a protectiOn
and should be worn at all times
w~~::"bastc
movements that
must be learned if one Is to fence
well Moat people have heard of the
on.g;_..rd position .
The team Is extremely young.
the 26 wrestlers, 18 are freshmen, 6 are sophmores, and 2 are
juniors. No seniors will be on the
team. FiVe lettermen do reiW'n
from last year , includin& Jeff
Ketter ,John Mo&e, and cal Taclua. ·
or
is no penalty for a n off.
1
may be hard pressed to duplicate
that finish.
Midway through last semester
the UWSP wrestling program
looked to be In serious trouble . The
student fund allocation committee
· was thinking~ of cutting out
wrestling. Dave Stewart, last year's
coach, resigned. Joe Johnson, the
conference heavy -weight champ
a ndafourthplacefinisher lnthe
NAIA nationals, and Wayne
Olojnacki , a IS& lb. standout. both
transferred to Mankato State
fearingthatthewmUingprogram
here was kaput.
Thiswasnottobethecase, thOU(Ih.
In June of last year UWSP
:_~~~: ~~~ ~~n; ~:n~~ri~U~
budget arter all . Enter John
Munson from Ohio State, formerly
of florida International U in Miami
and Plymouth Slate College in Oh.lo.
The sport or fencln& sounds-dangerous, but a(les- having wal·
ched it, I can't believe It is any more
Coach Munson believes wrntling
dangerous than sporiJ like football .
Is now here to stay. A healthy atThis is beeause lhe fencus are
litudeanda new fresh approach is
underway.
trainednottolnfllctibjury,uthey
might be in other sportl.
Uyouarelnt.erestedlnjoining the
The 1874 ·75 Stevens Point
fencing club or would like more
..,-esUingteamfinishedfifthinthe
information about It, contac:t Lou
Bieringerat3U--4725.
Coach Mun~on and his squad are
not throwln& in the towel, however.
MunSO!l believes he hal 10me
outstanding frnhmen on campus.
Norm Kedrowski , from Steve!U
' Point High, wu a stale champ lui
yea r . Rick Peacock had a 27·1
record last yea r at Merrill and
com piled a 7$--4 record over the
courseoffouryearathere. Munson
believes he could be a c:onlerence
champion In the 118 pound clan.
SC:ott Woodruff, of Muskego, a rillh·
place finishuln the state tou r ·
nament lui year, will also be on
hand.
.
•
The season opens November 20
with a home match ag ai nst
Olhk011h. The Pointers will then
know more of how they are to s tack
up In the conference. MunJOn ~e-e~
Oshkoeh , along with Whltewatu
and LaCroue, aa the teams to beat.
The P oi nters hope to II.IJllriH a
few teams this year . Enthuslum Ia
~f~t~~r.~n~:~ll~~he~~~ei::~
/
h)~·~:n:n,.~ial1
arcus toot--A.,
Ybt~t·=~kpiclm:iup
~:~a:c=rt'! ~~~/~ fi':t
'"'~~-~'·~..'<1
, ,'~r-:r:e:::~ordU:y {!~
lrite ~1ed
5
score was River Falls 56, Stevens
Pointt4.
10 times. The Falcons'
MikeWillsetaconferencerecortS
Falcons' . Nine different Falcons
carried the ball for a total of ~
yards. Of these . only the starling
quarterback, Tom Bichanich, failed
to rush for double figures.
Jasper Freeman rushed for 186
yards on 12 carries and scored two
touchdo....-ns . The Falcon's Bobby
Rogers also scored two touchdovms
and gained 115 yards in to ca rries.
Rick Peat four times,
The Pointers ac tually picked up
more first downs than River Falls,
20 to 14, but with ruJW of 80, &4, 41, ·
32, etc ., by RiYtt Falla , thia is a
misleading statistic.
The Pointers will try to rebound
againstPiattevilleontheroad . llis
the final game of the year. The
bu~r!~.;=:eor;tm'!r:.-'.:~11:!
(~c:a~~~~~.:~e~ :Z. ':'; ;
~~=:r~n aG:,a:aasa~
~~:: ':!n~~in:r'eac~~r~~
conferen« win ove r St. NorberL'
Super quiz
answers
Anawan: I. A. McGeorge: 2. 0 . Brooker, 46
In 1964; 3. C. 10..7, Giants: 4 , B. Mickey "Captain Crunch" Zofko; 5, C • Blrtho Arnold: 6. B ·
Bum, whk:.h Is what a lot o l lana will be calling
him ilthe Oilers play down to their potantlal: 7. 0
• Patulskl. Wall hasn't even made the Bills Hall
oi Fame yet: 8 . B • Scott, remember h im Packer
lans?: 9 . B . John Gilliam; 10. C. Ernie MThraa
Shea ts to the Wind'' Stautner.
Perfect week for Pickers
by 11m &ll ll n", Randy Wievtl, aDd
Mike Habenaan
WeU , what can we say'! The
Poialu's A1 StanH: a nd Audrey
Houlihan ha ve been giving the
Superp iclters some greatly appreciated support over lhe season,
so we naured we'd simply return
thefavor. Sincelhey'vehadfalthin
us all year, what else COI.IId we do
but gh·e them a perfect .,.·etk in
return'
You'd alm011l lhinlt a ll of the
games for week seven were find.
~·or star ters, we picked Pittsburgh,
JIOU5ton, Oakland, Ne w OriHns,
Bufra lo, Baltimore , St. Louis, and
theGiants towi n. Natura lly they all
won. You look it up.
l'benwetooltlhe Vikings by 10.
They won by eleven. We didn't
mran .10 mis4ead you there. We
fig ured the Uons , with a:l of their
quarter backs missing, would win
by9. Sothey took it by eleven . Close
enough in our book . As for lhe
Dolphins, our system had them
WeekEiiht :
l\I IA.\1 1OVER Jt."'TS ·The J ets may
be in the sa me division as the
Dolptti nsbuttheysurearen' t inthe
same league. Mia mi by 3:1.
O IARGERS 0\' ER PATRIOTS ·
We11 repea tthati n caseyoudon't
believe it : San Diego over New
Eng.land. Truthfu lly, -...- e:weregoing
to take the P atri ots until -...-e: found
that ii!Stead of nying to San Diego,
the Patriots are taking a bus. We
expect the Pats to be somewhere
around Wichita at kick-off time.
Olargers by forfeit or 1.
OA KL,\ND OVER NEW ORLEANS
· After opening with fh-e: road
games, the Raid ers a re now pla ying
more hom e co nt ests than the
Folstom Prisoa " Eie-.·en " . They11
drubthe Saintsbyz.t.
beating Olicqo by 38. They let us
do1•m I' bit by only outscuing the
BraTS, •t3, but we11 take it
anywil)'.
Even our touup game made us
look good . The Red sk in t a nd
Co11oboys Nid to go into sudden·
death overtime to find a winner. No
wonder we d idn 't feoellilte Lilting a
s tand on that one.
After all of the Pete Rozell e
autosraphed footballs had d isap~am:l into s ports ttistory, the
SUper picken were awar-e that we
h;ad finally liven our supporti ng
readers something to c he-er about ...
a perfect wedt of our own to go
along with Ca rnac's.
BUFt·',\LO OVER BALTIMORE •
Bert Jones and his Colts ca n play
anybody tough ... es pecia lly if they
forgettheiranti-perspirant.Welike
Buffalo by &because of their Right
· Guard f Rcggie McKenzie).
OETROIT OV t.'R CLEVE LAJ'iD •
Uons by 1 as Herb Orvis, Cha rl ie
Weaver,andtherestolthe Detroit
defenders go on a Snipe hunt.
sr. LOUIS
AT PIIILADELPIIIA •
Our weekl y tos.sup. Sul li va n likes
the Eag les btu use of T om
Sulliva n. CHe's also taking the
EagiH because neilhtf' one of lhe
other guys wants tol . Habenna n
goes with the ca rdii'II IS be<:ause
they traded WiUie Divis. WieveJ•
sides with Ha~rman but feels tha t
llllyway you loot at it , this game Is
forlhebir-tk !
•
HENGALSOVER DESV E R · Ci ncy
hasn't been beating anybody badly,
INhile the Broneo~ haven't been
beating anybody late ly. 8e'Dials by
~ as the trend conti nues .
RAMS OVER UERS • Unl ess
smog aets ln. the Los Angeles
~ondary shouldha vea field day
wi th Norm Snead's p;asses. Rams
by II .
YIKIN CS OVt-:R ATLANTA • The
two best quartet"backs the Falcons
ever had , Bob Berry lllld Bob Lee,
are now on the Vikings. And they
don 't sta rt ! Norsemen by 10.
DALLAS OVE R KANSAS CITY •
The Monday Night battle between
the Cowboys and lhe old Dallas
Texans. The grapevine uys tha t
the wiMer ge ts to go baclr. to
KansasOty . lnthatcasewe'llstill
take lhe Cowboys to win bf 4.
Rt-: DSK INS OVER G IANTS • For
thefirsttime ln four ...,-eeks, the
Ciantll are playing on • Sunday.
Th is is un fortul\lte, aince Cr&lg
Morton, thinkilli the team ha d no
more Sund&y games 'left, joined •
Su nday a fte rnoon mixed-couples
bowling lea gue and won't be
present against George Allen 's
a rm y. t...oot for Morton to rol l a
national honor coun t 700 and the
Skins to roll New York by as many
poi n ts .
Pl'n'SBURGII OVER IIOUSTON ·
C&rnac's Upset of th e Week !
Despite the Oiler's awesome per·
formance 10 far, our Arab oracle
de mands tna t we gamble and take
the Super Bowl Clamps by 6. So we
will ! Steelenby 11.
GREEN BAY OVER CIUCAGO ·
We applaud Bart's decision in going
with the double reverses, flanke r
end-arounds, and h&lfback option
paS5es. That raule-dnlle stuff can
beeffective.Nevertheleu ,theway
tne Bears hav e been going, sim ple
fullback plunge plays up the middle
s hould be e nough to confuse
Olicago'5defense. We'retaki ngthe
Pack by 13.
We're assumillj the Rams took
care of Philadelphia on Monda y
Hhe Eagles c<JUidn't burn us twice
in one season, could they? I, so our
12-o weoelt brO!Jih l the ovuall
record up to 61 wins a nd s till 17
losses; or a percentage of .798.
Tossupwise, Sulliva n is5-t ; Wi evel
sli pped to 4·3; ancf Haberma n
moved up to s-4.
Perfect weeks come along once in
a lifetime , and if nothin& else, the
Poi nter people can claim th_at
·they've al~ady turned .one 10.
That 's on e mo r e than the
Associated Pres.•
'JP I can lay
d a imto.
The UWSP Cross Country team
-...illmakeitsstrongestbidinfive
yea r s todeth r on e dtfendlng
champion UW·La Croue in the 14th
a n n u al C ro s~·Co untry Cham ·
pioruhipstobe heldSatw-daylt
***
UW-5uperior.
The top four te&ms In the con·
terence will qualify for the NA JA
District 14 Meet at UW-Eau Oaire
November a h with the top 15 in·
dividualsaf)(tthreeteamsgoingon
to the NAIA NationaJ ip Saline,
Kansas on the 15th of November.
Sports Shorts
The girls s wim tea m placed tint
withawi nnlngscoreof i4'Jpointain
1 quadrangul1r meet bosted b y
Ca rthage Co llege laat Friday .
Schools .p;articip;ating in the meet
Included UW.Stevens Polnt, with
149 points; Carthage College, 100;
UW· Milwaulr.ee, to f; and UWPa rkside with a final score ol 39
pois:.ens
ul.tp
'>i'
p~!~?'!!~
UW-SP vs , PLATTEVILLE (T)
Saturday, November 8, 1:30 pm
<excJuiijlqGJ
in stereQ .
~- ' """···-
... t or 1111 of CentrBI Wisconsin
103.3 FM
103.3 FM
103.3 FM
Point los t to a ltrong
UICroae team •t a meet held ~
Saturday, lnvingtnem wiui&l·J
season record for dual meets.
U!Croae Loot firsts in every event
ex cept the zoo yd. lndlvldU&I
medley, and the 50 yd . back s tTote.
Sarah PierTe and Kathy DeGroot,
respectively, takina firsts .
.
...
UWSP Crou Country and Tnlclr.
teamslt1! hos tlng•n arm wmtlina
cha mpionship the ~lll few weeks.
Both women a nd men are allowed to
com pete in respective divlslons,
withtrophiestotnmandindividual
champions &nd to the person with
lhe fastest pin . Six people constitute
a team, witn men divided In to
weightdassa.
Slightentryfeestocoverc01tol
trophies are charged, with e~try
bl&nlr.s du... by Frida y; Nov. 21.
Pr eli minar y and qua rte r fin a l
matches will beheld the following
week. witn semi • finals a nd final
matchesbeldduringtbehatftimeol
UWSP basketball games against
MacAlestu and SYperior.
-d,e UW Stevens Point tr&clt team
is looldng for men to compete In the
walk race div i1ion. Th is Ia 1 new
tcoring event to begin at lndoot'
meets thJ s ye&r. nquirina no prior
experience for those who wish to try
it. Anyone inleft!Sted may contact
Paul Nleh&us, 17.0 Oak Street 11
:MI·SIII%, or Co;r.ch Don Amiot in
room 109 of the fieldhouse at 34&:lrn.
Fieldhoc:key : The Poi nters com·
pleted their regu lar season with a 31 victory over the Unlvenity of
Minnesota tea m .
Sue 9t'oiurd, Judi Adamsld , and
Sheila Shoulders each scored a goa l
for the Pointers.
The se.son record stand at t+l.
The Pointers tT&vel to Ohio State
Uni versity to play In the Mid...,·est
Regional Tourna ment, November 7·
I.
Volleyball : UWSP played somt
exciti ng match es at UWM,
Novembu t , with the following
resultll: UWSP over UW·Pa rkslde
2-0, UWlol over UWSP 2-<1, and
UWSP OV ER UW.Qshkosh 2-<1.
Co;r.chMullenwas pleasedwitnthe
team 's performance, com menti ng ,
"Bloc:lr.ing and back court de fense
were both 1uper . The team was
moving well, ma ny balls were
pl ayed tha t m•y have otherwlae
been put aW&y."
The P ointers com pete in the State
Reaional Tournament Novembn- 8,
at UW·Madison.
[~]
-Open
Channel
A weekly from student government
!frdi~~~~:&:!:"J:~~-~=t~~"t_sl~~
cused~" ask the students. " Well ao, they're not convicted,
~~~~ - ~.!.ur.~~~~~..:~.,~~;ort~~~:.
"they're not convicted." "Oh then , you mean not to be
chargedwlthrelatedcrlmesforlhesamel?~dmt,!- " Well of
an
re
~not" reply
impatient faculty, 'if you azTesad
for~lyC1)ndtEt In a demonstration the UnlverJitycan
charae you with obstruction.'' " Rember w~ said for the same
crime, not a related crime." "You ION.
So what the facully have created is a sit uation where If the
Urliversi ty acts fast they un still get you with the double
whammy. l&n'tll nketoknowyouweretholchtof.
The point to all this is ti mple-only students are going to
protect student• . It's (!me we&ot together and demanded 01r
~f:i~~::J!nbe~~~ts~~~~~~~~~r::
paying for a qua.llty edutation and should receive one, and If
you really bellrve students are adults with the full · riShts and
responsi bilities of any other dtiun, then It 's time you band
together as a aro~ and na ht for your riaJ!Is. Together aa one
shouldbeourgoal . Togetherasone wecanachleve our&oals.
by Bob S.dd.lllld
!think it's time to update you on a few of the ev~ll lhrot
concffnyouat this Un.IYft'Sity. la lhe~t 'll'ftk I've attended
a number of faculty meetlnp aod found things to be n~~~nin1
as usual. ln each instance the filculty's needs and the
University's needsweredlteusaedinlqth . lneaclleaselhe
final agreement Insured that the interest o( the faculty and
the Unh·ersity would be prom~. This should brine &ood
tidina;stoyouall but pleasedon't~iooloud. Wby ! Uyou
interpreted the University to mean. students I'm aft~~ld you
made a serious error. The Unlvtnity Is an Institution to be
perpetuated much the same u ~neral Motors. The students
are only ill customers . AI General Motors rqard.s Its
customers 10 the Univtn\ty and Its !acuity ~ard the
students. Your needs an served by aUowin& you tbe option ol
either a~ing « rejectinl what is offered , not in dekr·
mlnln&~~o11atistobeoff~ . Lttmeciteafewuamples .
I at~dtd 1 ~rtment meetirc Ill wiUch they were
discussing a proposal for a new major to be Implemented on
this camp1.11. I have long supported the Deed for this program
and ~~o·as glad to be able.lo parlicipale In the f«mulation of
this new major". In rniewina the proposal I felt it did not
provide for courte~ thai I found necessary for a belief' un·
clersta.nding the topic. Now I don't prof eta to be expert in
the proposed neld but the only objections made to my
suuestiOfiS wen tlult the procram would become too rigid
and clemanc:lina,and as a raul! few students would enter into
this new pM)(lram . 1be objective of the department was to
providean"easy"procramiOthatlhe majority of studenta
could slide through . It wu the genenll cori.Jensus that the
" &ood"studentwould take thehJ&hly~mendedcounet,
but the department had to be concerl'lt'd with the poor Jludent
who wanled the major but not the dfort. lncredib&e! What
they wanted wu a mediocre procram to nt the needs of the
mediocre student at the u:pense of thole who want a &ood
edu!:ation. All I have to'->' is look at your tuition bill spin.
An. you pa)'in& for a mediotre education or Is It time we start •
of
an
den!n!"!ctthce.:~ &i~!ta~l:J:: :::pie of how to
best protect the Univen\ty tagaln the lnslltulion, Dol the
:::":~! ~:::~~~~=~~d':t~~iws~e:;l'::
for sludent conduct. There was muth talk about~ ~l&hts of
the accused , doubleu.nction, and vaaue languaae. contained
In the proposed document. The highly lnteUectual discussion
centered arOI.Wid how It wu belt toiOive these problems to the
satisfaction of the University and if poaible the student. 1be
rights of the a«:Uied had to be protecled but one mu!t rembtr
this involved on)y a few students and the rf&hts of aJI the rest
must be prot:ecled above all . It
Interpretation of
constitutional r ights for the lndiY!d
apply only with the
ihe
~~t~t:,atf!l:~oi~c ' tit~:;~~ia~t;::
probletrtwuaneuyMefor_the-f
IQive- jusltakeovt
a word you can't define . Don't w
about the content and
Intent of the pana raph that contalried that word. So what If
the p<~raaraph denies you fr~ of speech~ At least ~
won 't have to define what Is derisive laushter .
r.ov"':n':,~:~·~~~?~~~ ~~a~t! s:r:=u!u:n~
court of Jaw then the Univenity should not be able to punlah
you. Why should the student be p~lsbed twice? What benefit
is provided for the student or Is the benefit provided to the
University by prtlft'VatiOfl of Its imqe~ Tbe only reasop to
punish twice is so the University ean aet rid of thoR wbo are
undesirable (read controvenlal 1. I wonder YiMre tenun
came from~
But to the rescue came the faculty . "No !", They stated to
double sanction " If you are convicted of a crime the
Chau.tauqua
(Pointe~ regular feature
~yll.rtllonkl
''w~~~~~~~~ydi::::?P~~ :r:~~!: :m=~
bdlavior and atti tudes, to the aMoyance of o!Mn." It Is a
contemptous term ,ofcourw ; but Ofle I.,.,'OU.Id like to Invoke in
addressing O!aneell(l{' Dreyfus' letter to the Poln~r last
-··
lna short,brieflywordedslat.ement, ourmanlnthertdvest
let it be known he was Vft'Y distUTbed by the inclusion of a
contraceptlveadlnthesepages. Hisreasons, asstated, were
'1ackofdian tty and tas te." But other than !hat he wasn't too
specific . So Jet me venture my own opinion U to why he
reoched the conclusions he did . To penonallu my attack and
the subject of thl~ Chautauqua a bit : no offense, Mr . Dreyfus,
but from the puntanica/ tone of your letter, it's quite obviou
yor~~~~ cf.~·you
try to impose your moral standarcll
on us. Don't you realiu we're no longer livin& in the IMO's~
Sex is no lon&er dirty or bad , u your letter would lftm to
imply. And contraceptive ads can be found in any number of
non-~Q or;lented mapzines. So ....t.y try t.o cenJor their appearance 1n a student news~ per~ I can't beUeve you're and·
~t~=.~h~~~:UC:~~:':':!e~:~!~t!r~w:~ f:::';
up front about your sex life, especially If you're a woman .
I also find it hard to believe you're anti-sex, despite your
stance."!' 24-hour . visitation in the dorms ; that's plain
un~al.ishc and lndicater; you're way out of touch with the
mapnty or UWSP students .
So ~at is it exactly you found so distute ful ! The
araphlcneu of the ad ~ Was your sense of decor um offended
by the overt phallic rq~resentationof a condom, Granled you
may have found this IOIIIewhat arou; but thi.t's a rel illve
;..ctc:ement on )'OW' part. Moreover, I think it's overrlden by
thefacttheadslresaedthemaleroleinintercourseaswellas
our att~nt responslbilldes. Traditionally, the burden of
f.:!!!~::::Sre~~s,::~nn~~~~ ~~~ ~;
~Y che~lslries by lakin& the pill , or have cervical plup
1nserted m their netheT reclons. I ca n't say 1 blame them
frankly . That's why it's nice to have rubbers to fal l back on'
Or perhapa Mr . Dreyfus thlnka, women should take .thel;
c~nces: again , I don't know. I've already auaatsted
priggish ness u one ex planation. But I can't believe a man of
th~ Olam:ell~'s Jn telliaencewouldbesoolfended by an ad of
~j!:J!:,'!'!~~~Th~re~:~~~=l~eti:~.=~ ~!~.!:
=e:~~~:~!n"Z::;~d~~~=~&!'e::!:;re
=e~~~:~~~~~~~=~~~~'~ac:'; ~~~~
~:~~.:!':"~~he let everyone know he disapproved of
In other worcll , lend your kldl to the UWSP folk& They
:~Yt~-~i:'e:~~l :!!!~ :~~~"': !itb~tr~~~~~:
Jii'ii;
In tum
Pointer st:rifers bke turns
A saner person might wonder .,-hy WWSP-TV, the campus
TV orpnluUOfl, decided to leave tbe spacious, v.~ll equipped
and wdl maintained color studio in the ~tnt of lhe
Learning Resources Center. Even! wonder sometimes u I'm
direding 'Sports F'tle' from the cramped, ill~pped Studio
Bon the second nooroftheStudentServicesBulldi~.
I nave no qualms wtth Mr. Burull 'a havin& a c:hanc:e to do
some production won, totr~~D:Smit on ampus linkl with c:able
TV, but in tl\it institution and in this uSe the students m ust bl!
&ranted a lli&her priority than faculty a nd ll.lfC members. lt'a
kind of fUMy but iveryone Sl!l!ms to agree that students who
are using this TV experil!l'lc:ft u a self-teaching tool deserve
to have very IIlah priority raUn&s in time .Uotments, but we
are stillrecordi~ourlbowsin Slud.io '8'.
There have beeii iMumerable memonnda
involved In
this conflict. There have been. many Ions and heated
discussions at various meetlnas beld in honor of this conlllct,
and now there Is even a special committee investigating the
~alter. But the fact is thatatudent.lare being forced (either
directly 01'" indirectly l to use substandard equlpnient to turn
outshowswhichare nolndlcaUonoftheir potential abilities.
You must understand that WWSP-TV wasn't evicted from
the best studio on campus: no, it was more like btina
squeezed out by the time allotmenlS that would cut the
organlz.ation'sprogramming alma&tinl\a.lf. But there is mot"e
to the drama than lhis. ·The limitations put on studio time
brought lbe conflict bel."'-een WWSP-TV and the staff and
Directtw of University PrOIUammi ng to tlle brink and over it.
ree
One might tend to
sorry for Bob Burull. the Dirtelor ol
University Broadcasting. He's UJlder attack from two dif·
ferent 1idts; the studenu at WWSP-TV and thf> O>mmunications Department tach nave their own po~rtlcular
criticl&ms of the man and the y,·ay he handlts his job but they
also have ~mon grounds of complaint against him. At one
point, the Communications Faculty even asked for BuriJI"s
dismissal.
But 1 don't feeiSOITy fOI'" 1\im. In the time that WWSP-TV
spent in the studio that he c:ontrols some things .,,,.~nt
smoothly: Burull and Ron Weseloh. a UB employee. quite
on~n were very c:ooperath·e and Vl!f'Y ill!lpful. But I always ·
~d the feeling that they .....anted to do more t.llan advise a nd
teaclluslhing.s a bout TVproduction. lfeltlikl! lhl!y ....-anled
morec::oolrol,mOI'"eautllorityinthl!func:Uoningoftlle s tudt"nt
~anization .
•
Quiteoftc:nl'olr . Burullllnsdc:niedtha.tlle ....·antedany m_ore
hand in actual production of the TV shows than to momtor
tc:cllnic:al qu.ality.butnowlhatthl!stud~nt organization~
pulled out of ·tus' studio he has taken it upon llimst:lr and ll15
starttoproduc:ethc:irownsbows. This isnot to im~y lllathe
purposely dtoveCampusTV a ....·a ysohl!c::oulddothis ; ld01;1bt
that , but it ll!l!mS to indicate his desir~ to lla1·e production
c::ootrol.
.Vet's Comer
News for campus ve ts
by Mark Dutloa
The Veterans Alfaln Otnce would like to &Mounce that
VA work s tudy
programstarUngthesprinlsemester. Ally veteranwitha30
per cent VA disability Or more 111'0Uid have priority in obtaining one of these positions.
FOI'" more infonnation see Tom Pesanka, VA Vet Rep,
Admissions Ortice, RDom 102-8 in the Student Servi«S Bldg.
Phone 346-2+11.
•
A WISConsin Department of Veterans Alfain outreach
wor ker,CeorseGuyant, will be in the Veter ans Affairs Ofnce
from a :oo-tt :30amand I :G0-4:30 pm , Wednesdayt Nov. Sand
, 12. 1975. George will be available for any veteran who has
questions 01'" problems in,·olving state veterans benefits or
nnyotllervetera n relatedprobll!m. AllybodynotablctoSI!I!
George on those dates c:an contact him at home anytime.
Phone :WI·2tS3.
there are six remainina openlna• on a
the Pink Panlhu," which was a ...
sequtl to two other sequell.
movies
a::~ ~OC.W.fie~/~
t::
Me " the newestintheBond aeries.
~l,fw~~lss!.:t:t!:'!J
by
cw
Pelriell
Why don't !hey make movies like
they !lied to you ask . Well, tbt
answer is , they do.
More pl"fcisdy the an11wer Is the
SEQUEL! If you thou&ht last year
;:a:::::,tu:eih~ls~M-:~
•
Moguls have up tbtir rented ale-eves
this year.
Defyina all Iogie ! Hollywood Is
great at thlt),therewf!l be a "Jaws
II " soon, following quietly on the
voracious money~ating power of
the fint . The original Is .UIIBoing
SlronJ.
byasequeltoaspec:ial@ffect :
Sensurround,the " Earthquake"
roU the
Fox Sensurroundwillruppearlna
"Billy Jack Ill" Is in pre·
produc:tlon. IT ls being made with
the help ol Ralph Nader, a man
Tom ! Billy Jack I Laughlin greaUy
admires. Thf! story : BJ goes to
Washington as a Senatcr. What ?
_,. In ' 'The Exorcist II" Unda Blai r
is all IJl'O'ND up and soes off to
college where Jhe Is repossessed,
and not by the finance company.
For the more bloodthirsty, Oint
Eaatwood will return in maguwn
formin "Dirty Harry ITI ." Morefun
and mayhem with Harry Callahan.
elfed that didn't rock and
new · movie caned· " Midway",
about the WWII batl.le.
~~~~ ~~;F!:~;;':
working on a new movie abou t
Vietnam which will star Marlon
s:,a~;-~J!~ ~~:u::e:~
for a mucll looter TV Godfalhtr.
Brando will alio be on display in
the latest film by Arthur (Bonnie
and Clyde ) Penn. He will co-ttar in
a western called ' 'The Missouri
Breaks" wit h J a<:k Nicholson.
A bumbUng Peter Sellers will
return In a sequel to ''The Return of
Nicholson will be Academy
Award materl:~ol againthilyear,as
will Brando, with hla role In the
Mi!OI Fcnman ad.lptlltion of Ken
Kesey's class ic sixUa novel, ''One
F1ew Qvi!r the CUckoo's Nest."
Nlchobon will play the man wbo
acts cra&y to get out of prison and
Into a nut house where ure II easier.
Barbara Streisand will Oy In to
next yea rwltha l pltishy remakeol
the box-<lffic:e disaster "A Stat ll
Bom," and we preswne, not made,
exc:ept by theleadi nR m an.
Robert Altman, whO acored wi th
"Nashville" is working on " Buffalo
Bill and the Indians" with Gene
Hackman and il aupp:J&ed to do
movies of Kurt Vonnegut's "Breakfast of Qla.mplons" a nd EL Dottrow'• " Ragtime."
Stanely Kubrick '• latest movie
willbeoutjustintimetostorm to
numer ous
Acade my Awa r d
nominations . It il '~
'BarT)' Lyndon"
and h11 been yean n the making.
justlnlirnefor theti tftlteMial
SHORTSTUFF IS COMING
TUESDAY NOVEMBER 18
9:00- 12:9f:J P.M .
Three 45 m 'inute sets
UPPER ALLEN CENTER
FREE POPCORN
Beer w ill be available·
celebrali<inl we w\llbeti'tatedwith
Robert Redlord and Dus tin Hoffman In " All the Preeident'1 Men."
Red ford and Hoffman will pla y
Bernstein and Woodward.
Gene Wilde r , late of "Young
FTankeJWif'in," ia working on
"She rlock Hol m es' S m arter
Brother ," anothe r good looking
comedy .
Woody Allen is trying another
fling a t movie making and sooa will
be ready to Wlleash himself on an
unwitty public.
Good things are on the way. Just
like they used to make movies .
ADMISSION IS ONLY 75 •.
UWSP STUDENT GOVERNMENT PRESENTS
THE FALL 1975
LEADERSHIP CONFERENCE
NOV. 14- 16
fRiDAY,
SATURDAY,~ SUNDAY U.C.
Fee $10.00
SCHEDULE,
Registration and introduction
6 :00 pm Friday - Entertainment
Workshops oll doy saturday
(3 meals included)
Lee Sherman Dreyfus, keynote speaker
at 6 :00 pm dinner banquet.
Sunday - 9:00 om coffee and donuts
conclusion 12 noon. '
WED., NOV. 12, 8 P.M.
QUANDT FIELDHOUSE
-TICKETS346· 4666
UWSP STIDENT $1 .00
*ALL PERSONS ARE WELCOME
AND CAN PRE-REGISTER AT THE
STUDENT GOVERNMENT OFFICE, U.C.
) *LIMIT 40 PEOPLE tCI
- -
)
l
records
the yean. Ctur.rlie Daniel, John
Hartford, Jeff Huna, John
McEuen, Grant Boatwright and
The a«ond album that featw-ea
Vassar as an individual is called
lllllbUiyJau. M Rick Ulman ex·
plains in an attoml)lni ng booklet
hillbiUy jaa is a term for
v.-cstcrn awi nc m111lc made popular
by Bob Wllls a nd Ita P\ayboys.
Ulman'a booklet is a rambling
account of the history of this jau:
~=lc~· cwntry bluegrauty~ of
la~i:~s ~~~~~t!r:, o~~~YM!lc~
tt.e
people Vassar has fiddled v.-'ith over
Jimmy Colvard appea r among
othen. With this 1ibum, Vassar
Joel more to rock ml.dicthan he 1\as
In the past, It is I \'CJ'Y IOiid
r««ding with some ol the most
talented people around.
Vas5ar does his now famous
" Lonesome Fiddle Biuct" as one of
the few rf'COgnizable and iden·
The album futures, besides
Vassar, David BromberJ and ~me
Mcl(ord t Melford co-produced and
played on the first album). The
intent of the album is to present
hillbilly jau to • wider audience
and demonstr~te the variety ol
styles pouible with this millie.
MOll. 1011p •re traditiona.J swinK
songs, such as Willis ' "'Tate Me
Bact To T\llsa " 1nd his " S.n An·
tonio R~~~e" . They also apply sWinJ
arr~ngemenll to their own com·
positiontatwcllas"C..JamBiues"
by Duke Elllnaton and "Breatrut
~I" by Benny Goodman.
~!~!!~:_~;?:;:=~~.it
and the unbdievab&e " Mocking
Bird " CNI wllich VaUi r has hit
fiddle sin&ing like • bi rd. Of the
thl'ftalbumsitisthcmostcrcative
andexdtina.
Vauar is careful not to mate the
fiddle ctVenhadow the rest of the
instrwncnts but it is noticed . It Is a
delicate balance that Is handled
quite well by Vasu.r and his
Vaua r doea a lot ollhe vocals
:!,~n:~.~~~~a~~ b:
Croul. . 01~ C.td.llb
Rouadu Rrc«ds I ll
s:'r
' example ol a type of mL.Sic that was
once ntremely popular, but todly
is known tooaly a few. II is also a
good eumplc ol another aide of
Vauar ctemenl.l.
\ 'a1ur Oe meni.J
.\lt>n:ury SR,\t 1 1m
Hillbllly Ju1
flyLnaFI•Il• .u
by Gf"rJGr)' Marr
As Vassar ~membns it his
recording was done in I!M9 or' 1950
with BiU Monroe and his Bluegr~
Boys. Since that time, be has ~P.
peared on hundreds of reconlinp
playi_n l a variety of styles,
promt~ntlybluegrass. His earlier
recordingsarecliflicul tto findand
Lack ~ quality of IUs more reant
......
Thil review will con«ntnte on
Vasu r 's work where he is
spotlightt'd. ratha' than elrorts on
which he •PPHI'I as a JidM'Ian •
altbou&h I feel il is necepary to al
lust mention a few otbt'r platft
where Vasur can be found.
The most signlric.ant ol these
other recordinu Is the "'111lhe
Ci r cle Be Uabrollea album .
Vassar's riddle appearsonOVeT two
thirds of the sonp and his lead
gui~ r onone. 'nle immenses\X'C'eSS
olthe ''Cin:le"a!bum~tisa
result of m.any r.cton with VUNr
Clement i belna a major one.
~u:;:~·d r:m~~!t~ ~E.~
~~ band and John Hartfords
There are a number of popular
aroups and in diYidua ls ~round
today who have had Vassar as a
sidftnandw'incthtrecordingof
their albums . One oflhele on wltkh
Vassa r standi out is Rkh.ard Betta
so10
!sometimes AIIINn Brotbtr,l
albwn. &tllgave Vassar • chance
to show orr on a couple or SOitl•·
Of Vassar's individual efforta
vte 'll start with the albwn rKOnted
on the Rounder label that has David
Brombefa: sitting in on auitar. On
th is albwn Vunr don traditional
America n music with blucgrau
prtdominating.
MOlt !"f'C'Oiniuble is Vaaar's
\·enion ol the &atles old sona.
" NOI"Wttian Wood" . II~ the S0r1J
is done with traditional blucgrau
im trwncnts and a Cajun type or
touncl. "Corina Corina " is also done
,..ithav.-'ellernswinaarranat'menl.
The rest of tht songs are basic
bluf'll'ass, a few made up in the
stud1oanda couple of Vassar's own.
The mo&l imP"esaive Uftel of
ttiisalbum is the tighllltu of the
croup in puuinc these tracU down.
The rKOI'd was squened In bel·
Vtftrl rNd wort and various olMr
sessionsbutittoundslitetheyhave
playtdtot~ethcrforali fetlme.
I
arr~-.n--producerwi!e , M.illie .
People lookirc for • bluegrass
alburp thould look to one or
Vaua r 's other worts, but If you are
looltina frx aood m~alc o1 •nothcr
:!:. youcan'tgo wrongwltbtbls
r~J
''THE
WAY WE
WERE''
TONIGHT!
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7
7:30P.M.
$100
NOVEMBER 13-14, 7:30
PROGRAM BANQUET ROOM, U.C.
A UAB FILM
is the
~
Vasaarl\as blucttlll'ln like "In
the Pi,_", jau with "Ni&ht Train"
A UAB FILM
~
Chans_ing the world
isafineidea,but
where do you start.1
We asked the sam!question wheri we first
lt io 16 make the world
found ourselves In a p~
a more livable place.
· AI KOdak~..sta_ U~d ~ lose to home. In
Rochester. New York. e cut river pollution with
one of the most efficient industrial waste water
treatment plants in the country. We cut air poilu·
tion with scrubbers. adsorber s and eteclrostatic
- precipitators. We helped set up a black enterprise program in downtown Rochester.
Why? He[Ping to combat water pollution not
onty ·benelits society but us as well as we need
clean water to make film. Our combustible waste
disposal facility not only reduces air pollution
but also helps pay for itself in heat and steam
r
production and silver recovery. The black enterprise program not only helps people who aren't
well off but also helps stabilize communities in
which Kodak can work and grow.
In short it's si mply good business. And
we' re in business to make a profit. But in further·
ing our business Interests, we also further so-ciety's interests.
Alter all, our business depends on society.
So we care what happens to it.
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