Document 11824626

advertisement
Worth ·looking into
A .
~
.....,.
Q:lmmuait)' Folk
-·
Duoln Duda&.
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UAB I"Um: PA.RAU..AX YIBW,
7:a pm (PrOp'aiD a..q.t .._..
IJC)
_
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<.Jec*inl 'ftlel:tn )
•u
..
reanlly
apJitO•"td
N·hour
rlll tatlonpalky ,it~ -rrror
metoindiatemypo»itlononlhemattu
~~~~::~~:":n!e·~'t.:::i!;
:~~~~~~~
~~~~~~::::.'~::~;
falr iNtthleatudcntaandfaNltykroow
w~r:~:r:';_,~IOmeandlsone
• ·hldllhave aivm agooddral al'
tboulhtandCOIWidtratlonovt,rlh_t~l
nveyun.. MyposillonatlhilliiM~
Nt our cur~! vltltatian p:~lley . •
=~:t~~'.rr:~::J
11\KIIenll. ViJI I.IIior! In the room. it
:~~~v-:J:be~2 t=-2 ~\:
f•ct•llew&blen~rnntl)linthelobbJind
(Oillmonl a r~ . I do 1101 l n)l
l'eiU(IMble llftd al Ill)' lltloldeat !Mt
caiW!Otbemetunder tW.polic)'.
~"tntlookattNIOdl t ~. l aaree
IMI.~In!Coln&tobeti-wlwal
andlmportantdiiCUSIIfeand2a m.
~~ ~~~~~;' ·vaey~ tl!
pomm- ar~l
..__,
~~·'=
UAB QlftelboiM: DAft BRAGA
t~~·~~~
11!Mt
•
("the
1:_-;"=e~~~~ ~:~tool~!
110mtone a1tep O¥a- In the I'OOIII . 'Tbat
:::::=:r:~on.;;h~~
and wwld abo obviously creale I
problemln-situatiOilwblchlnvolves
two~pe r ~ll!dallo&rauP
lantorJ I•iUtleswhkhll'eli!!&letex
UAB,..._ ·rua.fllltd.,•npaa
(......,.._......., . . .-UCJ
UAB AV Prop'_;. : Wlloeoula
VkSeo n-tre.
J1111 <Cam·
•11
-~--)
~,.:.~11~
•t:. u.!IIIOI.:.j
not
problems Involved are , in my opinion.
nDI readily handled by many of the
fushnun·Sophomon ace lf'OUP. It
~ttm.~~to
metherelt~nO. I
cvldtnecofthilcvenundcr•rclll'renl
polic)'at r~tomcaenrrallyby
UAB' VW1o 1Mm PIIID : THE
GREAT GA'I'SBY, I pm .CCflt·
_..,,
-
=-~,.ma--.~
CJfl*lal'ftlelitN)
RA'ssnd hall Director.. Thete 11\llllntl
who alnady have pcnonal dlfrll'lllties
btforc
in utililiqlhrir own ..-nl midtll&ht, one. or two AM. would find
lhemltlveslnaveryu.nplallntlllod
~filkdaitlloltlon. Oaarisll.­
~"::.=~
.
. . . Room..UCI
•
btntfllbnls, Lhatriskfuout""ei&hlfor
1M IUIY of the $CK'alied bc!Mfita l 'ft
hurdartiaalltedtlw.ll far .
On t he ume risk·Mnd'itbllsls,look 11
Lhccobabilllionit.t.ult. Do•·ci&nurctM
laonofllliuommllllityanduateu-u
lltheunivcnitypolieyonlhilmalter~ I
IIAUI\Cyouwould.,y "ne", ltoweva-. 1
have not yet heard a metMof palidn&
• mf•cin& that part of lhe policy
,___ whlchwouldbeltttpUoble!A.'anyol•.
I ce.Uinly don't Wlnl RA'I dl«kiq
into 1"00011. 1 wOIIIdn't want tftt)'One
who had 1 Y\sitor O¥tf nllht to Ill!
q.lfttiCIMdlheno.tdloy. l u n't tce
UABO.C., SHORTsrun'.•lW
il'&lltuliolw,p.a rticularlylli.IMiwhours
Pm.
UAB F'rell f'Uiu flllld., .. 11
W'rCIIral 8eDqult . . . .UCJ
r--
l:"~~~.';
(Jeoldal~)
lAD-I
QeaW )
~....!!..~-!-·
_,
•n Pill
~~.':
,,...n.tnl
-
KIIW Jaetloo,
~UC)
ofthe niibt. l un' l ~ttlheSCKJIIcd
.., _ rruotehonorcode"•Y"tem
of
rtpOrtln& Yiolationl. So how do we
propc-e hlndli"' Lhil• shouldadmitopcnlyandhanfstlylhltwedo
lntmdtoicnorelhltpol lfyandli mpiy
dKIIre lt 11 unenl•ctable! You know
tnt•·d l l'NIIIib. l donotopa-ate that
way•lookonmyrapan~ibi!Uythat
bkome a
1
MCUflty iltue! Thlt will
problem .,. dHcribl!d
~trlaus
totntbJ«<Ica~WSwhobeadla-
e.r:;
7pml~ . . . . . . . .
UAB Coif..._. PAUL IIA'M'Y •
ELLIS JUNCTION , 1· 11 pill
ICOfteebowe-UCI
UAB Pllm : aJPEil n.Y, 7:a pat
IP'roCrlm Banquet Rocm·UC>
~~.n:
c-,iW "" ea.,.....
Al&lln I'..IIM.r ...,. ""'"-·
(~ 'l'belitre )
ptrctotheopcndoor•!IPf'MchoiiOme
'1{·there 1
UAB~ :
/
in the
rouplem.llywilhto«t~tiiiUIIIHrious
UAB ODifelbotM : JEFF. Ja'T,
pm <Co«.......UCI
•
Dreyfus on visitation
Ta~~:,kt'th.: umpuiwlcielnt«ftl
c-....,.
:=l~~'::t~:o'~
Wwlrd
:::rn:c::
b«omi• an Gpftl , public'
W ildi .. ralherthlnacloledonenilll
nowwhenYIIil.ationcrw:b. 'l"htnmUM
comeatime, evenifit ;.ullteal2am.
when a raktcnt who nu11acrou a non·
relldtntinlhehiiiUclearlyhlsarif!tto
II)' , " Who are y• and whit are,..,
doi,.htre! " UnOtral+'tlow'vllltatlon
polic)' th.at petiOli mil)' wdl be
IIIIMMI'IIIMMflrpoMNone . The
ltudenU'MCU rity wouldmdatthe6oor
alhllvC"tyamaUroom. VouwouldrLnd
,_wlva in the kird of Pfr':hokilkll
en Yi ronment more akin to priVIU!
a partment bulldl n&• in dente l y
Bagach on Dreyfus
T• tk PIII•IH.
I umothcl pbut lrl theftell,.lhlt
Lhcperfectenvironmtnt for you lllnlhe •
• ·•ld o1 c-&c Orwd lt, ttft . Juat
lhi,.·wecouldloeatey., ... cu~~tllr
allheantiMKieaJue.
1 mywlf w11 r~red in 1 vt:rJ liberal
atma.phert. Wouldy.,btllevelhiiOIII
ofa&!'l6lullteclauoiMO indl~ls.
I knowolonly one Jirl undcrjofn1 an
abor11on.alldontC'OIJPie thltlclt!My
1\adtopt matTied..
In Wilc.Wn. I kMw of a lfldualinl
claqal58iodiY\dualt. OIItolthtlt~.l
slso knowofl2f11rced!Di r rllgs, whlch
ltalma.t50 perctnt, andyou.,..MI!ol·
fended
by •
ca~trleept.i.,.
ad·
\'trtiltl'llentlnthe PIIIIII.H. " Ain't that
lliffbealll" .
I think it'a Jl'tlll!
People are
awa kenlrc from ' 'OeeGeor1e. I tbou&ht
they catM: from abba~. tblt'a whit
momtaldtr~t",toW rinltheCGIIand
I'CIPGIIIlblll tyolcontrJoeptivea .
Enli&httDY'OIII'Wif-r•eaa't etopmy
arneratlonfrombnln&to-anatural,
:!r:::!Jl,.~ li~ouu:.u·..::
tum tMidft;renanclprornotetheadve r liHme nt of con trtce pllvn on
campus. I could ria&Wb& a eampuawidecampaiJn forllle praetloeandUH
ol rontracl'ptivet. Wlybe If )IDII rould
only~thlt, tbat lt ..,coukl
onlybetakenoutofthec'-l. llonl
with 1 fr- ott~rr lllrlet.om, then ,..,
would not hnc lhe npe problem on
cl mpus, weiOcvldenlly havs..tv... BapU
Shudy on Dreyfus
&i•en It
Te lhePaboLtr,
lchuckkci,serii!CiDiutwed't
Plol81~ the delua:e Ill 11tac:U on
Owlcell« DreyfUs' &tattmelll ~
(ft'ft!na the rubber td. Somebow I
expected them. The Owlcellor laid Ia
-"fed, b'- ID(nb • - tffronled by the
ad. The ttuckua, in e!f«t , uy Llw.lr
rnonb arttffroilted. by the Chancellor,
wt.:ldtnd Ill let hbpol.atlliYiflll t albrit
"" IMO"' vintage ) be known. Vtbo. In
ac:luall l y, !1 lm pu ln& prl&&l•h
morality!
GeerSII•oly
marb.
Tbty
M¥e
lfyauarelnlft'81edlnatt~the
workthop,pa~ec:omet.otbtStvdrnt
Govemmmtolrlceandlea¥eyo~rnamr
and phone number before SUndJy
Novrmbn"t.
Wew\llbelirnlledto40peoplt,fln;t
c:ome. lint serve.
.
Trrry Tni.U•
~=
c.-.-c-•..k •t~eu
Pachyderms not 'cots'
QUality educ~tion?
,
hlgh
:,.5en~~l:EEri=
andc:reatlvity.
T•Uoe Ptlaler,
After rudin& OPEN CHANNEL In
Now . 1'1 P.ULtr, I fell c:ompdled to
write Bob Badz:inUI• letter of aupport.
One of my daue~ hu bftn DOthiq
buttggrlvltlanaacl f~tratlon4\nce
the day I walked ill. 1be det.alb ue
lrTdnalll twre. but for 11.000 1
srmnter I felt I wu tntltloed Ill a
tr:adla- ol more patlmce and m<n
lbility. So l spoltetothi!Deanalqwith
ltl0lberst\dtntan6thesupportofmo~t
olmydau.
The Dean rtfernd mr to the Aaai~Ynt
~ Dean who he ft:lt wu in clotft" toueh
with the pnblem. Some mli&tlteniri&
fac:tsaboutthiacollegewerebroo&htto
myatteiii\OtldurirwthllmHtln&.
F"irstlllall.ate"<:herilnotrmlly in
thec:lhltou...dl.butrltberlll&uidelll
inourluminf;. lllillM~n' tflJUrtd
aut this .Utement.
ti~l".~~=~th:;
workup to an A becaUM the only izn·
p«tant atudenu art lhe D atld F'
studrllll. This commmt resulted wbm
the Aut. Dean !Pmtd of mY tuchtT
pviqmalr.euptatttoDatldf'sbldmtl
ln~IN.t theymayrliMIIMV&rldll!
tt.o21etttnandJivlrwBandCituditfau
nDiuchpriv!Jtae.
Nothifta;ddinitehubftndonttboul
mytudler ; l'vebHnt.oldtobep11tlent.
noadlon illl.ktn I talan&wllb rwo
ather lludltnta l amprrparedt.oJO t.o
~ aulhoritift but tbllt wun't the
pointofmylf:tter. lreaUyWT'IIIelllilto
supportyou:rvlewlhatthecoa:tnlal
• thiauniveraltyilfOfthepoorltUOent.
My oweraU lmpraaiOtl wu that
tee.dMn and adrnlniltnton lbould be
u
T•llle Ptlaler.
lntbt artkleol0ct.Sl,1au--.to
im ply \Mt the Rrp.~bliaon Part)' II a
bunc:hol"fatc:.aii". Tbililnolt.bec:ase.
lt il tnotthlttheRtpublic:.ans,libt.be
Oemoc:nts,haveafflllpeoplehrn!IDd
~whohllve~Mnflttornalttalarct
financ:illc:ontributiontothrirparty.
Thesr{I«'Plearea minority In both
partles,csp«laUyllncethe-ffdtral
andst.atec:lmplllgnflnanc:elaW'Iwrnt
intorffect. Today lhereiaalmply ton
muc:h red t.ape involved. 10 onl1 the
"ac:li•ill "' membrn of a polltic:al party
makeblacontributiollltnyrnore.
I wauld invltt aeylnt-ted penon to
visit a cauc:uJofaulftlllla r Portap
County Republican orpnb.alion.. Tbry
will rind out that the ttnandal badin&
11'\111 comes OUT way is not in the
l.housancb or even hundnds of dolalra.
Thravft'l&ec:onlribt!Uonlthat&olnt.o
aur('Oil«tlonplateanl! - u y
anywhet"e from one to fln dollan
apiece. Tbe aven aecontribtitor is not
'" rollin& lnthedougb", but iltnort
likely the avenge 1«1 of penon one
.,.·ouJdmeett¥rrydayaalbes"trfttsof
StevensPoint. l thlnklbilboldltrutfOf
Republican Party or&aniu1iona
d-hrn! In the United States, despite
volvedintheeduaUoiJal~lrminJhb
!nrirwollllil in~1ionllla
requirtdto~yfOfaLtacbrrwhoiln't
A
Leadornhip Worbhop will
November 14-ll, from 6pm ~y to 12
-Sunday. ColtiiiSIO.OO.
The l,.radenhlp Wortabop il brln&
&iYftlb7Sbldr!II.Ltadrrslli pSerrioes
whit-h il 1 llate-wide reco&l'liud
oraanlzatlo n with well qualif i ed
educ:atort. Pertonal lradeuhlp
~aliU.w\Ut.thefoc:a l palntoft.be
·~ ~:~-rtlbtration -wn
bf&innlrwatlp<ll Frida7will be
folkrwed by wine, cbene, and en·
Ltrtail1lllftlt. Small VOUP -'on~ from
t-12 am and l-5 prn Saturday wiU be
ltllowed wllb 111 adrf:u by Chanmlor
Drryf111at thrl pm dintlel' ..nqurt .
COffeeand~willkldl:olfa
to~~C:Iudi!W •12 a m f'llklllive W#ic-.
~~Hail
11lrAIMfican•ay~tohlw:tq.~al
~tatioll. T'bolerduc:atonwhodo
malr.elnrfl'orttottac h wlllla n open
typlc:allyvrryJOOdtaa~yeraandlht7
be
•po.uorrd by StudH1 GOYtrnmrnt
All
havenoplal:'f ina freuyttern~a U
ThtLbnthataupporttheeduealional
l)'llem come from _people ol many
diffrrenl " lhauJhla" . Rtpublkanl art
Workshop
T•IM P.t•Crr,
area f'fll)tlllt.r lhlt p11rtiton polltkt
...,.. ol conctnl art repraented.. Tbll
illn.ltdthejllnlorhlp.hl&hacJ-IIlld
t'Glkp le~i. tspedaUy.
mlnd~thit.
lbrn!t.ot•dlyau.
Jaaln L Ray•...
In! iac'luded In the SIO.OO
_,~
Student Govff1111VIIt , . . . of the
Mft1i1Yrtllldevriopln&ialdrrthipha~
lD the ceoter sectklo tiU week Jim Tau.U ta1b with BID
=::.:..=~~=~-==
,_r wbicb feabnd a naaW ol
6tUoD 111m ..rtMr tbil
UWSP lhdlaU u attu.
~~::a:,::::;.~:~=
..-...s. !Dery'l ,_,. Is lowld 00 PICe '· ..
r,:g~~~~=--=:a.:::~
..... f'llue--
olftn itl fourtb
m.tanaMat.
bllM......._tal-.etioollllchMla..pr--.ubtdam-Lal'arl• project. Ill tbe
dllptb report 00 tile Kktapoo
~-=·'!::.~~,:..:.~~
o.ail ~ preeetl tbe-. edUX. ol "lt.. 8ladlal
Nina'.
ALL
~
'
Of 'IIIII AND IIORB . .••
~J. W...U.
Lady pachyderms
lr!ttofrndfortbtmsrlvn.
~·=v:'=t.:-~~~
..........
Te!M Ptl•ler,
The Polutr Co. Rrpubllc:an Women'a
C-lub rapteliYdy uQ lblt 1 ' - in-
c:olltat educ:ttlan. I feel we ahould
eithrrcispeMewiiiiOUtprtHnl JrldiDJ
I )'SI.emlnfavorlllapa.u.-fail l)'ltern,Otr
aVt'l"llltlf'ldai)oyea'lfflltatudmU:
should merely br &Inn boob to st udy
and an e:um t.o take without belli&
feabnleccilleeUoaolatudeDt~tott.._.IIDd•
~oc:a.si0tlll disd~ureslntbt­
matlna c:oUep a.ra&Jata aut Ill below
••era&eandabOYeave-~aeabillty ~n .
,.,.....,._. ..... """"""""r.:...........
mtdia.ofpt0plewhocontributemoney
in the "'mUI!ona" tnc:tet-u-e c:Ufl
ut 1M rart tueptklnt nther than the
Nit. In fact aorne 111 OUt amall c:an·
tributonmiJhtewnbrlheca:lltnlctian
workenwhoyauhavtdec:idedtobe the
spokam&n for , dletpite the fad tNt
mc.t Ill them a n spNk and lh1llk lor
pr~rtdlllpllllnatklutdfortlnlll
aVft"llt 1bidll!nt1 While itUOents ol
Under the cover
,;:-ol-:.·~~~c:mpAJedttv!,:;r::
contrlbutesut.t&ntiaDyin many otllrr
way•t.olllecomm~Jty.
EGieaUoniathrkeytotheannm'llto
Lhe pn:ltH1111 lac:lrc DW world. Good
citiulllhip and lnmlnc to can! for au
people should be a put of nur
educational syatem.
Mrs. Marvl• Knrcrr. PrfiWeiiC
<"·-··
~'::'" c..., .......
Resignotions · ~
Tetk Ptl•err.
.Ua rallltoftadtof timrweflndil
i mpOUI~ to perform 01r -lGrlal
41\intotbtbetlolowabUJUa. F'or
this n11011 we aorrowfully place aur
narnniortslptiondf«tlV'fSai. Now .
latl2 pm.
(".,.,Ill IU••P
MIU Kapatbo
Dhtrlr\$8C.. 81!1611 Wn
... more next page
Series 9, Vol. 18, No. 13
\
}
'" more letters
S~Ebtbln&luapoatnrin&.-kenat
recuJtr
dwlpter
mettii'CII
and
by
dtveloplrc lddl.Uo.raldwlpterpro)«tt
Psuedo kudo coo
Tai.M P .. aln",
Sl&frledwrolepoetrythrulhenite.
He:tartur«<hisl~andjoyfvlly
prottituled hiiiiOUI for I sllmpae at
IG!l~.:fr~:· wu
merely reaching
arilinc from the ln~rsta of the
membenhlp.
The UWSP AWRA la\dint~ forwud
IOpltyln&atontinulnaand sLJDiflcanc
roleinUnivtnltyuwel l uCOilt~;eof
Natural RNOUrCH aetlvltl,..
Sogo defended
equlnoxwb«<I(D'palm&avehltalbuma
....
To the Pohu.er .
bldrevi-.
Cypaiel:w""always 6oiftlttulllike
II ~ they wtre upHt about
cnfbmen bcill8 allowed In unlvenitlet.
''Tobe a ~ la muchnobler" ,they
Mid in urUon with the polllldana.
·1~1 America llftdl today
anothrrVIetMm loweotpO¥~."
Is
UeilryD.huHa
WalwenH.W I
Rlvtrt'aU.,Wiae.
A new chapter
Tallie P.Uin".
The lint SIU(kmt Owpt« ol tbe
Amtriean Walft Retourca Aaoc:latlon
CAWRA I w\U r«:dve Ill dian« on
November 11.
The AWRA wu
..cablilbedln1954wlthtbeobj«tl¥eol
tncoura&ins lnterdlscipllnary commun lcallona between profeuion.al
people invlllved in water nsoun:e
manacemt~~l.
Tbere arasWdtntmembtrtln AWRA,
but 1M UWSP chapter will be the flnt
official\ )1
recoanhed student
c.vni:r.atlonaffilial«<wilhthena tioou.l
auoc:ialion.. The UWSP AWRA will ·
provlde•"I•IMrlnapll.ce''forwater
Mucienta In the Unlvenlty,
and wUI help 10 broaden tbl! K'llpe of
e~tnt'llrrlcular adivltin anll.lble to
rl!ICIII.U'Cft
atudenu lnteruted In Nltural
R~. AffiU..tionwilhtheruotian~l
c.pnlution will brtng the ~tl011.1l
bend'ilol(l)lltactwilhlhinkllleand
phllolophles outside tho! UWSP rom·
munlty.
Activities o( the chllpter will aim
towud l ncreninc lheproleulooat
prl"parJtionoflheatudentalnvotvedby
I am bfl,lnning rn y fifth yur as
rnanaaerot'DtBGICenterFood~rvlce .
I am a &radlllote of Midllpn Sl.8te
Univ e rsit y , majored in llotel,
R es taurant and lnllitution a l
Mllllliemmt and hll~e apent (litem
)"ears in the food RrVice Qlneu.
In my opinion, the employees at
oeBot Center are 10me of the bat and
most concerned lndlviO.lab I ~~~~~
wOI"tedwlthovertheyars. Tbe)'art
.-eryproudofthtworll tht)'Ooandare
-lpwa Dt ofaoods.anle..tlonp~·
tit6.
DeBot Cmlft" food service hl.s very
Nahs.anie..lloaae..ndardl andkee~the
employees ,.·ell Informed. Last aprlna,
tl'le food JttVkot manqen 1M! umput
completed a coune in applied food
llft"Vict wni1.8UC.I concNcted by the
National RtJI.8ura nt Asloc"iaUon. and
wtte amorc the firs~ toO in1the United
Stat"'torec:riveetrtlne~tn. Allo.lut
sprina we luld the Sl.81e Health Officials
conduct a ttminar on applied food
lft"Vice '"'nitalkln for food M'fV~
employees at tl'le DtBot, Allen and
Univenlty Centtn. Contiii\IIUon of
tducationlaimportllntiOus.
f'lfty , llbor houri are spent on
~ie..Uon 11 DtBot Center dally . .
· Re&ular llnlt.ation lnsptttlons are
.=..~ ~~ ,U!~3:'s~
llealth~rtmtntlnapectSDeBol
pl'riodicttly. Bob Schmidt. the ll.lll!
\nii)Ktar In t.hJa UN wit\ Verify that
Dt8otCtntttilup10al.llerf1ulat1ona.
DtBol Food Serville hils Itt"
proximately 200 employees. To watch
1!\"tf)'moveofeachemployeewould~
an lmpoulblttaN:.
ll 'tv«')'impractk:II IOWM.r plastlc:
J)ovn In performln& the many ta.U In
.,lume food hlod.llna litut.tlolw. Tbe
:::s&Jov~&7:1:'!~
potato 11iad In 140 p\lon
Qum&ln& &lo~s after 1M
pot.
Tbebeltftyto&et•Jobdonelltodo
ltyOIII"It'll' . ll'•qulteobrioullhlltyou'rw
not rtllpCN!bie enou,tl or you would
have&ivenyourNIIMIIOthtarticleltuit
appal'edlntbe PtUier. II'• !lppUtnl.
aen~r
lhlltyouthlnii)'OII'rtabovethteallber
olinttamurall. lfyou'rethat&oodthtn
practlclll, u we aerve 6000 mu.ls daily
It l)e Bot. ltwouldbeUptM\Yeand
slowdownRrvlce. ~rvt'rsdotl"thllndle
lhl:'platewlthlheaamehandlheyu.ttlo
--~ean)""'"ay . lt wouldlakearnqlcian
toholdaplate andllllltwlththtsame
hand.
You actually hllve to become Involved
In the Intramural Department to appreciatewhllt 1 meu II ta nbt...
Kaadylillllt.h
~aplat~wouldalsotttmlrn·
At Dt8ot we lnslstthllt tht emp\oyMI
wa.shtht-lrhllndsbtforemakin&conl.8ct
withlood, andslgnsareposttdin·
dicatl,.tht- imporun~~t ol this. We also
lulve sign!iposledintt\-eralarea•in·
di<'lt l,.tho!cbngerttmpl'fli!Urtloneof
,_,
WeC'tl'"lainlyOonotcondonepicking
food off tMrtoor a !ktlft"Yin& it!
Weareven-proudofourconctmed
De.BotfoodttrYictempiO)'MSandwill
continLM!toupholdourhigb aanitatiOil
al.8ndardl.
Jay ~Ctoula1
Refs defended
~ou~.~~~~~~.tr::-,ter!;h ~~=!ve
On the Sefis
To t he Palnler,
Ala former atudent of UWSP, I wn,
Jlllemany othtn, dll&wted lithe ac:tlonl ol Siuefi. I rememb« when a
pled&n almott died from drinlt\ng Last
yearandac-Uonabouldhllvebetn1.8ken
by s ludfftll and admllliltn.Uon 10
curtai\SiasefllpreROCC lore 110. Ttley
areatt~~~tleu,munlrcletJ&roupot
people who blve a diltarte:l view af
wh.atlifelt. "Theyttrvenopurpo~eand
their rituals are app&lllng, not fUIItl)l .
di~~u~;:~!!·~:!f~,~
;~~:i~ pe;!f~rc ~U:" ~~
Siattfll. l hope the Studtnt Government
andChantdlorDTtyflllwiUtaJteTaUiePalaler,'l"m wtilln& In d.dmst of the in·
ttamural releren In "'Prdl to an
artklewrltten by a frustrated Jodi in
~
OctobtrU,I975IAUOI'ol tbtP.t"'er.
hid lheplellllreofworlllngf.-Jim
B a nd .., intnmun l dtpntmn~t
and I anll!llyouitwasn'l l ll)lht-ller
lastynr.
The lntrtmunl Departmtfll ad ·
vertiltsfwinttrftted ptoplewhowould
like to refenw. They l ive you an
" ouUlne" ofthrlrnilsand a onehour
crashcourM'inretfing. I'll be tho! first
to admit that I" m not lhe greatest
rtfneebutthtn l dldn'tapply u a
W.I.A .A. olficl,l either.
lnltilllvetoputtheSiateflttoa ntnd . l
lhowed my rr ltndl down he« 11 ldlool
yourOet . M illue on Davelloffman 'a
deathandlheytouldn't~Ueveauch
lrresponsibilitywithlife&ottonat
UWSP.
Myregmilthllt l, lillemanyothtr
peopli!at Poi ntl..tyear,nevet r Nily
fwmtlly voittd dllapprootal of the
Sialt'"fi1. Now 11'1 kind of late. I know
SttvtniPolnthaamanyaoodpeopleand
c:ortceml. but to Itt an orpnlutlon that
destroy~ lb own youth uilt is the
Jn!ll"'lcrlme of all.
Gary W\UIIma
Murfre.....-..TfUftMf
SHORT
STUFF
Tuesday Nov. 18 9:00-12:00 P.M.·
THREE 45 MINUTE SETS
-FEATURINGJAMES LIBAN: HARMONICA & LEAD VOCALS
JUNIOR BRANTLEY: PIANO ORGAN, VOCALS
KEN BERDOLL: BASS GUITAR
ERIK EPSTEIN·- LEAD GUITAR
KEN ARNoifi-, DRUMS
The'groupptpa combination of To( Mahal, Little Richard, John Ma~all,
and Original Rock Blueol
FREE POPCORN-BEER WILL BE AVAilABLE '
Admission is ONLY 75'
Allen ·Center Upper
· Twenty-four hour visitation
Dreyfus favors status quo
byTitfT)'TI!f;~
O.t lasue!
'The tefl year •tnc&le for ruU.
studeot visitation riahta in the
dormitories at UWSP has rectlvtd
official sanction by a Bolln:t of
fWitt~la policy rnolutkln adopted
on Oclober 24, tm.
Tbe ~mts have ettabli.Jbed a
He also conciWeslMt "there is a
COlt lAue" but avoided specific
identification because of It ' s
relative inslplficance. lnltead we
are told , !be COlt «M.JJd be supported . ''If the bentfita 'ftfe clear
and anaUy outweiahed Ute riska.
That's just a matter of priorities".
TlleMon l lu.e
Although s ome people might
" joke" about the mora l Issue
throuah " allusions" the chan«llor
WTites''formeltisaseriouslslue".
LSD's stronges t concern Is not
that " unm arried men and
women .. .may be sleeping or In ·a
wxualliason, but rather thata14-
uv1u=:
~; 1 :.tb 1 :r ~isi~~Uon
residalce !\alb ), that allow 24-bour
visitation within a fnmeworlt -
requirina options of " dosed "
visltatlontost udentswhodeslreit
or t7yearoldJ, "who do not receive
special parental or Jlllrdlan per'·
mission".
Under the new v!Jitatio n
guidelinesastudentehoosnam«ll
the visitation options offered by the
campUI when applylns for a room .
1\rra'lly..fow hour visita tion op-
;
~
tions are to be determ!Dtd by
studenlJ livlnc in ' 'the residence
haUs worldn& lhf'OU&b local campua
1 ~~~~·:,~i~E~t ~~1!
housin1 JoYemmmt ".
U any
changes are made, lhey are to &O
into eHect by the latest, ntlll
.._
Sl!'mestrr.
Thee~ tchiathatall ch.an&esmust
be apptOVed by lhe Olanmlor of
the particular UW Campus.
LSDU)'INI
1n a news conference hdd in Old
Main on Nov. I, Olancello.- Lte
Shennan Dn!yfus indkated he was
happy with the present visitation
polic-y of ' AM·2 AM or 17 houri
daily , with visitation allowable
beyond 2 AM In tht lobby and
commoni area.
·
Dreyfus uid before television
cameras and reporters. ''I do DOt
see any reasonable need of any
student that c.iMot be met under
this policy" .
· The chancellor stated lMt if
enroUment dropc-ln tht eventuaJity
that UWSP be<omes the qnly UW
system campus not to adopt a 2+llouT policy, he would reslan.
LSD indic.tted his «<nHnn over a
pouible enrollment c!Nip. but said
"the bulc prindple bn'e over-..fides
my concern".
~:! :cet!!or1 ~\i~~ ~!~
mo~t '',
if student& Wlnt the 14-bout
~~~~~mr~:
be set up on an e•(!erimental bull.
s..delltAed•
The UWSP Presidents Hall
CounciiiPHCl 1w taken a pro-2+llouT potiUoa. and ilin the proceu
of tabulaUng tbe rsulta of a
:!f~~~u:.li=:.
Rldlard Iverson, Prukient of
PHC. diK«Jnted the Ullllty of the
questionnai re , becau.e ht thoqht
~;:=:~ol=~~:o:
llouTvisftationshouldbetheem ·
plwisofPHC. Todothls, anad-boc
committee has been formed,
cmsistinl ol PHC mem~ aclmlnistral«'' , a 1tudeat aovernment
representative. and ttudents-at·
larJe. 'I'M)' wW meet weekly and
workout a rationale to be presented
tothe~bdoretheendof
the s.emest.er.
~a~~:da;:wJ SO:::ewe~~
upon other&".
LSD begins his concludin&
paragaph by writlnc !bat ht
doesn 't believe Utote people who
"• . . the tyranny of the majority
lnstanceslnaclemocraeywbn'ethe
tyraMy ol the majority would in
errect be exercised over the
mlnorilyUill"lecessarlly " .
SC.Ude•tGovennae•ta..t U.~
Bob Badlloski , President of
Student. Government, said that tht
problemofworkinaoutasolutlonto
UteChancellor's difficuiUeswith14hour visitaUon ''Was within tbe
scope or activity of PH C" and that
student government wUI probably
support the ad·hoc visitation
committee's rationale.
Bad:dnski was a llical of LSD's
positiOfl, stating that the " Board of
Regenta have alre.dy made It clear
Uteproblems canbehandled".
Badzin ski described LSD 's
em phasis on cohabita t ion ~
"stupid, becaiiSe the eldsting bl ·
laws are nothin& more than attempts to s tan dardbe lex .
Cobabitation is an unenforable
:• Jaw. Studenti should mount a
massive campaign against these
laws".
Badzinski stated further that
"because students an forced to live
in donna is no reason theY. should
have to &ive up the ri&hts and
mponslbiliUaofotbn'adulta".
would in effect be exercited onr
the minority un.neceNarily"
ln a lhrftpaaelettet' ld.ted Nov.
s and addnssed to Iverson ) the
chancellor outlined the social ,
sec urity. cost, and moral iuues
which the ad-hoc PHC visitaUOfl
committee will be conslderin& in
formulaUngthei r rationale.
The worth of PHC committee's
effort hinges a r o u nd the
believability of Ute CU~clusion of
Dreyfus's letter. HeconclWed, "AI
always. I am subject to chan&e if a•
cue II made which convinces me
that my position is 14T on&"·
ne Sotlallnw<ohabU.auoa
The eocouragement of
co habitation , g r oup lavatory
problems. -and tbe na.ivity of the
"fre:shman"'Iphomo.:e qe group"
are aene:ral problems the chan·
«llorbeginswithinhislett.er.
They make 24-bow- visitation, in his
at imatlon . unacceptable on a
"rilk-bmefit basis."
LSD d.i!counta the "open door
policy" and ''room~ate bcM:Ior code
system" solutioas adopted by other
institution~ , becaUJe !bey Ignore
taking on tbe unlve~slties enforcement respGQSibWty.
Dlforcement of the cobabitaUon
laws <which tbe chanc:tllor aams
Is a must) will be very difficult
becaiiSe as he put it , " I certainly
don 't want RA's checking into
rooms . I wouldn't want everyone
who had a visitor over- nl&ht to be
questioned the ne•t day".
TlleSec.-ltyla..e
Dreyfus maintains that " the
student's S«Wity would md at the
cklorofhilverylm&llroom". Ala
result of this be writes, "you would
find yOI.rSd f in the kind of
!»fCholotkal environment men
akin to priva~ apartmmt buildinp
In denst-ly populated •~as" .
The evolution of
student visitation rights
at UWSP
1965-No visitation. (Open House on
Homecom ing Weekend )
1967-Sundays 1-5 PM.
1968- Womens houl'$ end.*
1969-FrL, Sot., S..n.- 1-12 PM .
1970-Fri., Sot.-8 AM.· I AM ·
1971
Svn.-3'AM.· 12 Midnight.
(with one optional weekn ight)
1972- Present 17 hour visitation policy.
- 9 AM .·2 AM· Mon.-Sun.
1975-24 Hour Visitation?
*1~68-Un;vers;ty
of MK:h;gon at Ann Atbo•
institutes total 24-hour visitation.
Thoughts on 24 hour visitation
by Ka rToll Bolllllk
" I would love it."' wat the
raponseolone female relidmt to
the qUI!Ition ol 244'1our villtllion.
M01t1tudent1 inler"Yiewed were not
quite u poaitlve about the Idea, but
no - · indiJdina le\"enl dorm
directors.•wetotallyqalnttit.
The &realest potential problem in
the mindl of lludentl ~~~~
around the clock visitation was
poulble roommate conrlk:t.
·
F'oruample,Vlcki Heibft'lrr.a
sophmbre, said ahe felt that tome
may not rapect the rightt or their
roommates. Tom Diaries. abo a
sophmore. wa1 for U -hou r
vil ilatlon , but qualified h il
sta tement with , "I voted yes (on
PUC "• qutstlonalrel. but I 'm
concer ned about my penon11
privacy."
Deb Donaldson, dorm dir«tor ol
Burroughs ltall, tald the felt that
2-1-bow- visitation, "might put more
responaibiU ty on the ltuden t to
stand up for what he wanla." She
""'ttl! on to explain that now a
roommate hat a nxed time every
niJhl when he or the canaet back
their room. U 24-hour visitation is
put Into dfect. the Nld she thlnks
this m1y force the student to be
more asw:rtlve and say, " Hey It's II
o'clock, and I'd like my rt10m . "
Wataon's directo r , Fred
Gutift'T'ft is for 24-hour visitation
and tee med to aaree with
Donaldson. "Aslftti~ trainina Is a
more poaitive approach," CutlftTe:t
said. ''thana re&ulation thlt kl'ep&
someone"• boyfriend from shovina
a §!r~~~a:U·~:S. Kaiser ,
direct« of Hyrr Hall said she
wasn 't lure if 2+bour visitatiOn
,.-ou.Jd make the roommate more
assertive. She said tha t In many
cases roomm1tes let the "little
thingt" build up betWHn them
thtoUJh lack or cunm unlcatioa.
Kaiser said abe wondered If
assertivenns and communication
would inc~asejlllt beca~~~.eof 24hour vlaltation.
Security did not seem to be a
major ronc:ern of the avenae
student interviewed, but the dorm
directors tilted it as a majorll'lllg
that mlaht block utended
risitation. Oa the other band,
director Gutirrrn said he felt - It
would not be much ora problem.
"At Michipn State (where they
have 24-bour visitation) the aime
rate wu actually rtduced," be
said. Cutien-n has eO«U"qed
WsUOn HaU to ll.rVey campu~n
with 24-bou.r vitltation tlrqhout
the Ill lion to determine the rdatioa
between crime rates and J4-bour
visitation . Kaileralsosaldthatthe
typeofdormhadtobe«msideredin
=vs:.~:~r. ~tl:d::~ Ia~:
lar&e comp&exes with llnale aila
The type of dorms we ha~•
h
- uld probably make 1ec ij
more difficult and c01UY.:,.
ll·
v.-llat abOu~Oie ~e<fuca
mosphft'e of the donn'! WOuld It be
affected adverse ly by 24-ho ur
vis itation'! Some tald they felt
there'd be too much noite .
Oonaldton said, ''The guys complain of more noise during
visitation." Gutierrn said he felt
studyingwouldbed.ownintheoUJC!I , but that thinp would settle
down later .
lntra~ncallthedifflaalties
or implementlna the 24-hour
visitation plan . msny student•
brina up the question of their rights.
One male stOOent said. "We're
adultsrightnowand~~o-elhQuldhave
what normal adulla have." Another
stated, " U you can hancDe the
responsibilityof&oillltosc:hooland
shdlilll out all the money , you
should be abl.e to handle your own
Where
social life."
CUiierrn seem• to hold similar
se ntiments but he added, "The
University has the right to proVide
foc-diffef'efltllfestylesandvalues ."
Ue went on to explain that some
stOOents may not w111t 2.1-hour
vi1ltatlon and they should be
it works
U. ln r slly or Mlc: hl&aa, Ana Arbor. Mlc:lll&s a
Mr. John Fddltamp, Director or Houtin& 11 the Unlverllty
of Michipn, described hit universities 24-hour visitslion
pol~e=y~o:-~~'!c r~!:J.·rd
1
vlaltlllon was
established In I~ at UM and has received faculty , student
and adminiltraUon support because ac:cord.ina to Mr.
Feldkam p It " has enhanced the academic atm01phere
because r esidence hall administrators a~n 't was tina time in
petty bickering. What they a~ Involved In Is acsdemlc and
social cowuell ng".
A aeneral concept ol tr111t alor~~ with an understood lancDord-tenant rdationshl p between donn rnldentl and ad·
ministnton has anowed for smooth opet"atlon of 2-1-hour
vititation at UM accord! "I to MT . Feldkam p.
_-.
The cohabitation problem II dealt with dlr«tly, by in-
provided with an option. '"'be
University of Minne:tOta bas a vote
:: :!fdt~Uon houn on eac::h wlna,"
It appears that the option would
be nC!Cell.ary here because 10me
just don't wa nt al l day, all
mght hours. The presidents of
Watson snd Baldwin balls said the
prelimi.naryvoteslneach oltbeir
dormswerestronalyinfavorot:u.
hour visi tatio n . The r e 1 lways
seemedtobet'N'Oor threeqalnttlt
~each wine though. ln Roach Hall,
11 was ~ported that the residents
~..:Ients
~!~ r;'~~~m~1~~ a=:s:f i'a~
option was made available to
others.
LegaUy,24-hour vitltation dOC!SII't
ex.isth~oratanystatescbool,but
doesn'titaoonanywly'! Am ajorlty
ofst~l!ntslnt~wedtaJd It does.
~~~~:~~~: :ddla~~~~ l : : . : p ~0:
~~~:'s,t=~~h':~J::"~-~==·~emas
The .s«:urity "problem: was handfed by the not too com. plif:ated method of securlnc locks on doors, tpractlced ln the
many metro-population cuters of America ). ln female
dorms at UM, all&UI!Its m111t be acorted.
Witness tothesUC'C'C!Siol theaU-4ay liberal visitation poliey
at UM is the method. used to apply for a dorm room. "It's a
:·~~~~ ln", said Housing Director F'ddltamp, ·~10 we use
U.lv~ty
of Mfaae!50U., Ml.a~~tspolls-SI . P11J, ~llllaC!IOla
The Univenity or MinDeaola has a donn population of 4,300
students, over nny percent of which are freshman 1nd
sopliomorn, ton both countt, very close to UWSP hotiSina
staUsliCI). These studentl are livlnc In residence halls which
have beftl openting with a limited 24-hour visi tation
procedure since tWO.
Our own Board of Reaentt could very well have modeled
thei r own visi t1lion proposa l .round the "twin~llles "
academy of h[&her lumina 24-hour plan.
?avid Anderton, Dir«tor of Houalna a t the Univenity of
MiMesota, said stOOmts "pre«<ect contractually betWftn :
uno-visitation, 21 limited-hours visitation and :n 24-hour
visitation". Rooms on the approprilte noon are then
aaslgoed to ttudenla in the dorm• A«<C"d.ina to their
preference.
Mr. Anclenon Ita ted that cobatHtation wu not a problem
beca~~~.e ' 'you can 't fllld out ~.i.1..:6-f01"1 on without invadina
someone't pri vate fi&ht.a--there"• noway we could rnfoc-c:e It
Cohabitation wUJ tate place ~cDeu of l4-bour visitation ."
Students a~ adulla and have lea:al ricbt.
Stre there 's
always tN.ewhoean't handle re!ip(WM.ibility, but""' leave the
lifestyle decisions up to the indivldul't own conJCience ln
that way each indlvidul hancDes the problem, not th~ institution wblch aUows for vrry nexible polk:y" .
v.-beaaskedabout thuecurity problem, Mr. Andenonsaid
' '-e haY'C! mere than an adequate secwity force to check
!:o~~·~~ ~~Uy up to sludenla to aet Peopae out
Mr. Andenoa thotJsht the 'Younc Klddies" araummt didn't
bold water eithet-, "At tome time in their llvet people have
to confront reality ; eia.hleen year otd men and women Ire
capable ol mating their own clecitiONI."
of the
Appalac:hla- yoursdf.
And out about the
opportlmltles open to
you as a Clenmary
Priest, Brother or Sister.
fcr""ir'ilolrr'dotlct)Oulcqxll ·
t.n!iesloM"oGiermolyHomeMil·
"""""~~
Gl£NMARV, Room
b46404
67
Cincnd. Ohio .45246
0Aboplaoseserdffee
1r • 7'/" God Mode Me
"""'""""-
DS8rw:llleeOOSJarO/Nf
c., _ _ _ _ __
to
BORED???
What
Are You Doing At 3:00?
Well - we've got a good idea! Try
* Mr. Lucky's Happy Hour *
Cocktail Hour - With Special Prices _
Daily 3-7. HOPE TO SEE YOU THERE•
Whe~e your dollars go
,
The student activity fee
llll!lll!r - - - -
by Jill UIIVt:naJl
Fine Ar tl Is oae of the major
a reas where Student A.cli~it y
money II t pent. It II uconc1 In
spending after Athletics. F1ne Artl
il d.lvidedlntothneareu : Arts and
Lectu res -n .:za per s tudent
Uni:'~ly thutre•lUI, M111ic'
Activltiet-.$.$8, !ora total ol $10.47
per student , Tbe Fine Arts program
was allotted $717,5(&, with an anticipated Wome ot 132.175. so the
• Bud&H comes to $104,510.
Dr. William Hanford, Director of
Artl and L«tures, explained bow
the Arts and,Lectures proaram wu
~ ~ up and bow tbe Activity Money
11 speDt. A new sysrem ror contracting performers in the rorm ot a
e:Nirter has been set up at the
request al student lll"'t'''nmeat this
year. Dr. Hanford and bllauislant,
C1rol Hopper, suve u dlrec:tors for
the chartn-. An Advisory Com·
mittee compole(i of six atude'nta
appointed by s~t IOVU1!mtnl,
and two faaa!ty memben appointed
b)' f~eult y IOVffnmmt KI'Vt the
director with suggestions, Dr.
Hanford said. He also said lhat the
director can overrule the major
vo te of the committee , but
aenm~Uy be will DOt do 10.
Dr . Hanfo rd explained the
pu~ of Arts and L«turn is to
brin& clusic•l cult\U'"al types of
entfftainment to campus for the
benefit ol students and the com munity that would not otlw:rwise be
offered. Dr. Hanford abo said that
" Rock " il a «~ntemporary part ot
our Nltunl, but !Nit part il well
Isleen care ol by UAB.
The statistics for the Arts and
Lectures budaet ~e given to me
-by StudenJ Gove.rnment. Arts and
Lectures was allotted ~9.130 , and
has a n an ticipated Income of
St5,000, forat0LIIbuda;etof 164,130.
Dr. Hanford aald that the Student
feemoneypays for 75per«ntolthe
rest comes[~~f-3~~~~~~:
boll olftce. Each e\'ent
one dollar for student&. 'lbere
are tradiUooally 14 events ; siJt ol
them are CGnee!'t aerit:l usually
held In Quandt l)'m because they
are the type that will attract a large
crowd, and lhe otber el&ht are f'tne
Arll series bdd In Michdlon or
Jenklra. Dr . Hanford aaya that (or
only IH, aludents &et$47,000worth
ot outatandin& enr.ntalnment .
COils
~.:ar:n'~~ ':!u~~-::;ts.,~
cles from New York. He N)'l, " We
try to decide which ptrforman«s
are aood and which onea we can
a
year
, becai.IM lbe New
York aaenclea schedule their
cerlorm~ on tours. Allo, no
CGntncta are signed until lprin&,
when at ~~:lent aovernment approyes
lhe schedule that Arll and Lee·
lura har set up. By lprin&. lhe
student JoYtrnmenl aJ.o wiU have
an anticipated enrollment for l.be
comb-c year and an deal wi th a
~-~K.ntont
sa ys that Cflltl hllve
gone up because now Arll and
L«tures nu to pay for main·
:::·:~~~.~ -1:~·:~: ~~:~·.'!: ·~,·o~
,j!
to learn the
bualne11 of contactln& per·
formancea , dolna lhe aclvtrtil.inJ,
tk lw!tlales, etc.
The foUowln& lithe schedule fM
lhe re.mainln& Arll and Ltctw-es
pe.rformances lhil ye.ar:
""
Coactrt&riet
Mummenscharu: I two mi me ar·
Uats l
1'\lnday, March 7, 1978
Royal Tahitia n Dance Co.
. Thursday. March 4, UJ76
Robert Wqi'IC.'r OH!rale
Thursday, March 75, tr71
Utah Symphony
SUnday, April 25, 1976
:~MJ~St;;:lot't
.
Anthony
::::nilts J Monday, November 24,
Pinchu and Euae nia Zukerman
mute and violin I Ftlclly, January
30. 1976
Juilliud Strlna Quartet
Sunday, f"ebnJ.Iry a. 1971
Shiaeml Matswnoto lsopranoJ
FriUy. Fdlruary 77. 1176
Western Wind lab aina~ J
Friday, April i , 1976
It's COMING
Applications are out for the
WINTER CARNIVAL
BuHon Design & Theme Contest
ANYONE CAN ENTER
Applications available through you
organization or at the UAB office
DEADLINE-NOON NOVEMBER 21
WINTER CARNIVAL: A UAB EVENT
Repott oa Rape
News Notes
Contrary to rumon lhat have
been spreading around campus
lately, both the Stevens Point Poli~
:>epartment and the Campus
SecurityOfficestatelhatlh~has
been no recent outbreak In the
number of assaults committed
q:ainst women in thiJ area.
The poll~ reporU show only two
reported assaults on women in
Octobe r a nd two so fa r in
November, as com pa red to a
prt'\iOUS monthly avet'age of about
sill reported aUacks. The Campus
SecurityOf(lcenysthat the most
common complaint they receve
a.;e 'Wll.ual ' \'ft'bal assaUlts while
th~ are much fewft' physical
assaults with neither one being on
theincreuelately.
None of these reported Incidents
have been put in any ldnd of rape
category although some or the
attacks did have sexual overtones.
The poli~ records show that the
last rape reported to them was in
July of this year.
··nuttyl/D)OII
Camp14 TV Play
On Monday,Novemlier 17,at& :30
pm, Cam pus T .V. (Channel 3)
presents "The Bunny with the
Lopsided Ear." The pi'O(Iram is a
taped production of the play per·
rormedbytheSh oestring playersof
Stevens Point. The play was written
and produced by Pat Zawadsky for
the Childrens Arts voup. The allwt~men cast designed and con·
strucledaU ofthe~ellandeo~tumes
intheplay . Thelrpuforman~will
reachover4000adultsandchildren
this yea r in Steven s Point,
Wisconsin Rapids and Marshfield.
SOVIET SEM INAR
UWSP is eligible to select 20
st udents for plrticlpal\on nut
March in an annual&viet Seminar.
The local group will join students
fromtOot.herinstitutionsintbeUW
System in the trip between Man:h
13 and 26. The cost for each par·
ticipant will be about $7'00.
Or . Robert Price, who teaches
Russian in the depar tment of
Maggie Cage. who worltl with
Women Helping Women Inc .. was
also contacted about any re«t~t
trendsiathenwnberofassaultson
...,-omenloea.Dy.9leaa.ld : "Sin~ we
opened ( in October) I've had two
rapes and one aUiult reported to
me. but then, accon:l.lna to the FBI.
approximately 4out of torajlesare
~Fsfi'g~=~J:P~e ::!ui:m~!
f~~!i~:,'~~etl~ndst~~:~~!
lowasoneoutof ten.So,lftt~e local ·
avft'age of assaults aglinat women
issillpermontb reporc.tdthen the
real r11urtcould actuaUy be as high
as fi!teftl per montbor more."
Maggie bas no past figures to
compare her data aplnst because
women in this area have never Kad
such a place to turn to before this
and what women would be willing
to report to Mqgie's office they
· might n~er repOrt to the pollee.
part of the Russian and East
Central European Study Program
offerings at UWSP. There will be
visits to Moscow, Univld and
other parta of the Soviet Union plus
to VIlnius, Uthuanla which is
Genn~nic in Its innuence and
different from Russian communities.
Reservationure being received
by Price and the secretary in the
department of foreign language and
comparative literltllfeornce.
UWSP has given the strongest
supportamQn~sta tecamp~~Jest o a
ptancallingforafriliationbyaUW
Systemfacultyorganlzatlonwitha
nationa l teachers" union.
The advisory referendum was
heldlastweekandaskedmembers
of The Association of University of
\\~ISCOJISin Faculties tT AUWFI if
thatgroupwhouldaffiliatewiththe
AmericanFederalionofTeachers.
~ro~~~~~t!'rsf;f;:o~~~n
::
referendumwithfrrpercentcasting
ye5\"0lf!S.
The advlaory referendum was
heldl as tweekandasked members
of The Association of University of
Wisconsin Faculties tTAUWFJ ir
thatgn:iupwhouldaffiliatewiththe
American Federation of Teachers.
Approll.imately 80 per«nt of the
totalstatemembenhipvOleG"ththe
referendum...,il)l67percent
casting yes votes. Allnai decision
on the matter will be made Nov. 1~
at a TAUWF delegate usembly
"!t"ting In LIQ-osse.
U the
Ci:ur!,P~s:'·t-:o =:~ti~
11
would take effect on Jan. I.
UAB·Mini Course
I . tfyou are interested in a
F'renchcorrespondentpleasecall
student activities. ~343
2. A minl~rse in the construction ol "'down -kits"' is now
being offered by Art's and Crafts
Center. Stopinandregisterat the
Center .
Stu!Sent Cocle
or ~Un~. ~~~;t::r~~~~~
.
"violates legislativel nten t, uceeds
lhe principles of adm inistrative
law . and raises aeri ou1 civil
liberties issues,"' State Rep . David
Clart>nbath 10-Madison l said
today.
ln a letter to the U.W. Rq:enls
Board, Oart'nbach raised his ob~cti~ns which Include. "legal
queshonstothevalidityof therules
~=: m~s.:':wJ~r:~ ~
:~niindun!~~;:S ~sc~~~~
slllndards."
pickles all on a toasted-sesame seed bun.
T......aw·-~~
l wmu::o.~l
: o-~ ~ . . ............ ~ ..
:
Offer Expires _1 1/23/75.
L..
.
PliJiter
Good Only al
:
---,......,cc..:
HARDEE'S ol STEVENS POINT :
1111
r:--~"='~ •••••~
Ul.....IGJ~
rrs HOW w
,.rea
(X)()M "EM
N..,e•ber 14.1115
TKirT c:x::.Mrs.
•
Sch~lflbl p
The Portage County Association
for Mental Health will award a
car~r assistance grant in tilt
amountor$300toa rull-timeJunlor
or Senior majoring In Psychology,
Sociol ogy, P r e·Medlclne, or
Education ; and with a GPA of 2.5
overall and 3.0 In the major.
Application forma may be obtained rrom Thomas McCa ig,
Wayne Lerand, or John Moffatt at
the University, or from the Mental
Health Asaocl1tion om~ at !HSA
Main St. The 1 pplic1Uon deadlint
is Drecember 1. tm. According to
Don Crick, Auoclation president ,
majorconslderationwillbegivento
those appllcanta who are contemplating careers In the field or
mental health.
Sympothim
A symposi um enUUed Slno.Sovitt
Split: An Amerkan Dlplonulk
C..l1i1 wil l be held on November 19.
1975 in the Program B.ttnquet Room
at7 pm .
Pa.r ticipsnt1 will i nclude Dr .
Hugh Walker. Dr. Soroka, Dr.
Adrian Van Ueshout, Dr. Clang.
Dr. Staf!ord, Or. Zawadsky. Dr. ·
Oster, Or. Marlon and Olan«llor
Drerfu..
THE INTERNATIONAL CLUB, RHC AND
The % . _. HEfT1E features a ~ lb . char-broiled beef
steak.. 2 sliCeS of tangy mefted cheese, catsup, mvslord
:
UWSP'1 utronomy observatory
equipped with one (>f the state·i
largest optical telescopes, has been
opened to publk use. The observatoryillocatedln theaddition
to the Science Hall, which opened
twoyearsagowitha telescope that
at that lime was valued at more
than $16,000.
The astronomy
facilities also Include an out-<~f·
doors roof-top courtyard with about
eight small telescopes. Since that
eq uipm e nt was Installed the
university a lso ha s developed
phot01raphy capabilities in the
observatocy .
·
CUrrently, miJCh Interest In the
observa tory centers on the fact that
it...,illbepossibleverysoonto see
three planets in the sky at the same
lime- Mars, Saturn and Jupitt'r
which first appear at difrereni
times during the early evening but
whicharevlsibletogether byahout
_tl pm . _Also, the Andromeda Galaxy
·~_or mtem t because it, too. Is
VtStble wi~nappearance similar
to the Mi y Way of which the
planet Ea
a part.
:~E~~~(p~f:~;T~;;~~:S
THRu K
NIGERIAN·MAOE FILM
/
THEu1~
'\us1c
\ NIGERIAN STUOiS
79
" pm
R
&
•
FR!~~!~e~2~:B!R 14th
~FRee- .
EFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED
· More than a folksinger·
_..
_
by Mard Ellery
I went to interview Druck Mll·
chdl fl!din& lite a mu betweea
Lois Lane and Rona BaJTeU . I fully
Mlldlell's back&toWid in drama
and literature art evidenced In his
performance, uherec:ltespoetry,
adlibshumor ,andaffectsavariety
or accents convinci1181Y. He con·
Iiden himsell a sln&tt who plays
&uitar, as oppOied lo beln& a
musician, and has been developin&
his voice si nce childhood . Ue
lurned guitar in later yean u a
means of self-accompaniment and
toenhancehl1voice.
Intended to define his music ,
dM\and justification for his appeua!X'H in the dasaroom and , ol
course, pry into hia persoaal
n:Litionahip with his wdl known t.x·
wife, Joni.
I failed miserably on
a~l
counts.
l,.tud I sat for two boun in a
dimly Ut niom ; sipplna: coffee, and
U.teniq to this amue aDd talented
to1it che ll was understandably
relur.Lant to diJCUII ex-wire Jonl
whenlhetopicwasraised.He fee.ls
thlt his nlationship wl.lh her Is
irTeleva nt now a nd of no con·
seque nce In understandln& hi s
music . He did 10 so far as to
commentthathewasnota fanof
::ic~ti=- =':r~~
and development.
Oluclt MltdleU has just completed his second "~ in
~U.7.us~~u~:!rU~e ~~tasO:;
Oauroom " residency at Slevens
Point. ' 'Concfftln O&ssroom" iJ a
program whereby perlonnn"S give
noon and eveniq concerts and
make selected clusroom a p·
peannces . Mitchell atlended
cotneSinmvironmmlalethk:s and
creative wrlllna dur ing his
residency ,
students in sona.
dis.russion,and poetry ftadings . He
fttll the coocept ol ln&.e&rating
had infl~n«d e•ch other's wwk he
responded t.hat he lmq;lned they
had and suspected that they would
both adamantly deny it .
kadinc
The topic of Joni served as a
launching point for a discuslion or
s tardom and the sacrifices and
benefits or fame a nd fortun e .
Mitchell feels that when one performs tor massive&roupaoffans,
lnt\ftlacy with the audience is lost.
He considt-n it to be the respoll·
learning, entertainment and
student participation Into a single
experience is an innovative one and
credits Mary Dim Lynch with the
progresaiYftteU lhat brought the
pr<JCTam to SlevtN Point.
~:~ ;zr~ '::rct~~ town;t~n~~:
:~ed.~b~~~~~~~::st~
1
Mitchell is hii,hiy concerned with
progressive educ1tlon. His own lire
has been one of continual growth
B:ruce Sprlnasteln a nd Pete Seeger
as eumples of Jt.ars he admired for
retainlrc small audience contact .
and .elf~ery . Ht has worked
u an .ctor, a sin&ft'", and a writer
fOf'a boardol education . From each
ollhtseactivitiesbehudTawn new
insiJ.hts and hal ii'ICOI"]]Irated lhml
into his present pbiJOIOpby of Ufe.
. Mitc hell considers him1ell_ a
teacher attn- the SottaUc fuhion:
thatls,notuadeala-offactsand
inlonnation, but rathet- u a midwife of icku. He views education
similarily to Fritz PW-1, whom he
quoted as u)'in& '"Teachilll il
showln& someone that somethiJI& is
pouible . '" Mitchell believes
today'• collqe ltudeot Is cynical
and disinterested
in the world
a round him beca u 1e or
Chuc• MikhoUgetting bock to "this delightful business of living."
di s illu sion ment , socia l and
economic preu ures , and non·
humaniatic education. Thrqh his
work he hopes to serve some s maU
5JU1PC* in altui.Dc this situation.
MilchdJ recdvtd bil BA in
English Ut. and feels this hal made
ERZINGER'S ALLEY KAT'S
WEEK-END SPECIALS
NOV. 13th-14th-15th
THURSDAY -FRIDAY ·SATURDAY
........
SPECIAL GROUP OF SPORTS WEAR
SLACKS-BLOUSES-JEANS
........
REDUCED 33 1fJ ·75%
ENTIRE STOCK OF DENIM
SLACKS-JUMPERS-DRESSES
REDUCED 25%
::ue:3y.-~iJ!:;~~~:;~
;:n:
he rare ly performs hi s own
material . He conslden so mur.h of
tbe other available material
IUperior to bii ,OWD that be 1JOUid
rather pe r form other people's
Next week 011~k Mlldlell will
celebrate his fortieth birthday In
Green Bay, sln&Jnc. talldD&. and
exchangin& ideas and laughter with
the s tude:nts oC St. Norber t's. He
Intends to spend thls yea r as he has
the lutforty , actlvelyplltticlpalln&
In what he terms ''lhil deiiJ.htful
buslnesa or llvlna".
Based on the vitality and iele: de
vlvre that he demonstrated durlnJ
his sLay in Stevena Point, I'm IW't
he'll doeuctly that .
BIG SHEF:
-two beef burgers
melted cheese
fresh lettuce
& our secret sauce
available at
BURGER
CHEF
Corner of
Fourth
and
Division
\
·j
.
,~~----~~~------------------------------~----~----~~~~~-------FREE STUDENT CLASSIFIED$
I
WANTED
•
FORSALE
STEREO COMPONENTS - 20-60
.
1~Z~~ ~~NLJr ::1ft:· ~t
I ~~~NAT~~~ ~~-JERRY AT
• Usrd " Konach" ski boots. Buckle.
lblackleathe r ,size 10 Med. JIG-Call
lOon at 241 Smith 346-3040
·
\"est sale~believable low
J~ .;weater Tops
j.ll"ices!
•
& Pants, Downtown
.1•962 For~ . • FalcOfl-Cood runner,
$1.50 per line for commercial venture•...
NOT1Ct:S
Happy Birthday Emma n ! You
madeitthis fa r,good luckthruthe
If you play your cards r ight, you
couldbe oneofthewinnersinthe
CA~IP US C RIB·BAGE TOUR·
mt.
~r~~:na~ S::vi~~~~ve ~8. ~/,
The first session
0
20. First prize is a deluxe cribbage
bo<lrd.singles and doubles com·
petition. Sign up thru Nov 17 in the
games r m·University Cente r .
J!t~re~~~~l:a!i~-~~-'fj:Jl ~~:;:
"'
o/le
haU price book sate . hi5tory,
llter.ature,assortedsocialsclence
odds & ends-Ca ll 341·2655 ~9 P M:
Weathered barnwood and posts.
Will cut to reasonabl e
spedricali0115. Call Tim at 341-4837.
~!~=esSI~0~:
Found: Coupon bk betWffn ~·::w~ &
6:15pmatthePinery, Wed Nov5. lt
can be Identified by the coupon oo.
Call Marge 346-2359
or the "Lamaze &
~:~;~~~,:~~1]'1.:~ ~::~d ~~
University Center. The Znd session
v.ill be held Moo Nq\· 2-lsame rm a t
4 pm. Girls who have severe
menstrual cramps requirihg
medication m ay s till re~ister for
thetwosessionprogrambycalling
athe He.althCenter:w&-1&16. $2fee.
1: peopl~ to s ublet·Znd semest~r
UmyfrSity approved housillR: Ask
~~j-1~~ or Sally. Leave meSsaJ~·
f'partm.~nl or s ingle .room wu,1ted
•mmed•ately. P r eferably near
~::pus. Call Lori at 346-tsSO.Rm.
I or 2girls to share a pt. :?nd sem
Oose 10 campus! 203S Ellis Cali
34Hi1:15 a fler5pm.
The new dance dub, Dance Action
Hey Joan Bone, OOpe you enjoy your
membership in the "21" club. I
can' t believe I've put up with you
oearlythat long!
tDAI, is oUfring Sat classes.
Modern at 10·11 :30 am. Improvis ation is to be a rr. and tap _is
offeredatii :JIH2:JO.Adonationof
25centswi.!Jgototheclubtreasury.
Beginners are lll"elcome and en·
courq:edtoau~d. Jfanyoneis ·
Willtheoersonwhomlstakenlvtook
a lona: brown coat with hood, on
Halloween ni.ltht, olease return it. II
was last seen at Bob Simeone's
party on OarkSt. Ca.ll34H240.
needed as
Hall Counell
mlttees are lnvolvl!d
university: Policies,
Budget and Pei""SOnal
ming. Interested s tud!nts get 1~
c ontact with Gwen Ne iSOI"\·3511
Housing.
'
interested. in joining DA, please
attendthtmeetlngswhichare held
onthefirstWed.ofevervmo. at-1
The last day stdts. will be able to
·;~:::t!4 ~~~ris ~~':;!o2~~ ~~~ {
pm in Rrn 150 of the Phy Ed 81dJ.
~:~her questions. call Jana at
RELIG ION
Ouisti~n&!ence
Org. meeling~:IS ~
pm Un1vtr 11ty Center Dodge Rm.
f'int~4f"Ch
of OtrUt Sci · 1
· ( Min.nesolfi & Main COf"ner J; c:~~1
serv1ce·ll am. Sun . school 9 :30am.
Berea Ba_Piist Chu~h·2216 £His·
~~~:~hip II am Ft-ee bus uni«
The E vangelical F'ree Church o1
Stevenli Point meeta in the YMCA
1000 Division St. Fred Moore:
Putor;worship service 10:30 am
Sun. College Clus..f: t5am.
Trinity Lutheran O!urch, comer ol
Oark and Rosen Sts. ftastors-Jirn
Olive r , a~ Dan Utter. Sun. wor.
s hip ser .-8:30 and 11:30 a m. F'or
~~~~ecorded message dial
;
. 1:nd
U
ot<ee falls in the fo<est
thereS no one there,
who are you going to drink
your Cuervo with?
flostel ~qoppe, J!Jtb.
13r.. W•t•• Str...t
.
St....•ns Point, Wisconsin 54481
~>iDHI:?IS • :I•>· •:I• c
P"'*n- ,..,., If Nwtmto..r 14. ttn
J
Campus characters
What~s
by John Rondy
corralandstable lortheirhoneand
two ponies, and they tapPed an
underground water source which
serves to lrfilate the on:hard and
\"tgetable gardent.
When asked to define himself,
llettltr unhtallatlngly stated that
he is blunt , aggreuive, un·
com prising
In some areas
les pedally when It C()mes to health
issuesl, honest. a hwnanist, and
C()mmunlty-minded.
Gettin& back to health, Dr .
Hettltrbtlievestha t p~ventlOfl is
mort:efftcth·e than tr'eatment.ln
Who is Dt. William Hettler? Well
forOMM(sahealtho(ficialit tht
Unh·ersity Health CenttT,
but
you'd n~"ff JUH.1 it by his ameraJ
demunor. He c:ompletely shattfn
the sttnotype or the <'On5ft'Vati~
MD. This is not to say tluit be is
egocentric and irTesponsible. On
~~~trary , he hastobeoneofthe
most responsible Individuals 1\·e
t\'tr
meL Among his m111ny
"causes" he advocates responsible
rHp005ible parenthood,
~txuality,
and repect and care for one's own
bod)'.
otherwords,taktca~ofyourbody
Dr. Hettler and tht two other
dpctonattheheal thcenterfeeltlult
they should set an e:um ple for the
rest of the Wli11t rslty community,
both phsicallyandemotlonally . He
feels that his famil y t.akH priority
Ollft'all else,includinchimself. His
..;re. Lolly. and d11.ug,hter Jotli 16
years old ) and 100 Toby U •,)
C'Ompr-iw his aJJ.jmportant flllmily .
'o\'hen intervie,.in& him at his
house , I noticed that he was totally
ope-n to his children. He ""'ilsn't
IColdio&ortryingtopushthcmout
of the way while he talked to the
newspaperman . Instead, he made
e-veryefforttor«<>&nizehlskids
,.,ilile talkina to me at the same
time.
Briefly looking at Hettler's
history : he grew up in Younptown.
Ohio and went to • public high
=
..
v~;~!:!.l:"~~~~t:~ka
small methodist college I Mount
UniOfl Colltge l v.·herehtmajored in
chemistTyandminored In ~ligion
• and philosophy. Aller graduating,
ht v.-enttomtdic:altchool in Cincuulttiforfouryears.
The summer afttr his internship,
he went to a camp in Canada where
he wu the only doctor In a 90-mile
radius.
Alter (.;a!lllda, he spent two years
in the Air Force where he was in·
vol\·t'd In pediatrics and a dnl&
abuse treatment cen~r . From
thtff. he and his wife stl«led
Slt'l'ens Point from a lilt of 60
prospec:tivecol.lq:es.
Dr. Hettler has an unbelievably
wide range of hobbies, projects, and
activities. and almost all olthtm
seem to invoh·e the lids 10mebow.
iJylbe"ldds " lrtftrnotonly tohls
ov.-n, but to kids from all over the
neighborilood. A good ume for hls
house would be "The He ttler
eo.;sm:Jesi::~·pbotCC.pby,
cross-country stlina, ga@tnlng.
woodwo r king, and plcklln&
vrgetables. He also likes music the
plays guitar, and is laklr!l violin
lessons with his five-yur-old
daughter I, and he and his wife like
1.o collect antiques. Hls back yard
resembles a minia ture farmyard,
He and the k.lds built a not~•mall
bam,achickenhouseltheyhlve70
chifkensl, s tone-lined paths, a
now. "'Nolmountofmoneyls going
to correct people's ph ysica l
ailments. People have to leam to
t.akeca~ of themaelves. Theonly
way to \tam Is by example," he
observed .
Hettler feels that the two mOl
danaerous drucs in this country a~
alcohol and tobllcc:o. " We should
spend the most time and money Ofl
alcohol since it It the mc.t abused
drug and the number one killer."
Regarding te:t uality 11nd
'' r es ponsiblesea uallty'', Hettler
13)"SWeshouldhaveagoodhealthy
undii!rstandingofourseaualselves.
lleseesviolenc:elnAmtriuandon
. television, as • by-product of
repressed seaual desires . He ftels
responsibluexuallty (birthcontrol,
contraception or whatever ) 15 a
terribly neccessary practlcc on a
college campua . He w1nts it
brought more out into the open lnot
, necessarily In the form of ribbed
C()odom adsl so that ttudtnts will
think twice befoc-e havin1
protected intercourse.
Next Week
SUPER
FLY
NOV. 20 & 21
Program Banq. Room $1.00
- U.A.B. FILMS-
TONIGHT!
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4
7:30-Program Banquet Room
$100
A UAB F
,.. ~II
PtoiMn-
'Spiders' is coming soon
Reba.ne
his R_,hilos
by J im TtPU ta
.
•
•
;
•
Last 1ummer Central WiK'Otllin
was iJ1vaded by giant spiders from
outtr •pa~ and Bill Reb;ne wu the
man responsible for this h'ent.
ll owever . Rebane il not par ·
ticularly fond of spiders , giant or
othnwi.se,andhellunoconnection
with beinasfrom outer spa~:e.
Rebaneisa featwe rllm director
andthlinvasionolgian t spidertis
allpartofhis latestfllm'111eGiant
Spider Invasion". This film a nd
anothe r titled " Invasion From
IMtr Ear th" were made hft'e in
Central Wi~CCM~Iin under Rebane'1
direction.
I went to Kebane's home and
found his life s tyle combined' the
rus tics of Wisconsin with th e
glamour of Hol lywood. He lives
about sb.ty miles north of Point.
just east of lrma, in ahousebuilton
thefOUfMb lionsofanold barn. J ust
afevo· hundrtdyardsfromthehouse
is the sound stage where all the
indOOI'~nesof''Spiders " ~re
shot. The giant spidrr,w hich s pent
most ol the summer at tacking
:.lerril, now lays dismembered , on
th~o:,t
:U~~~;:
:ex;aw:;e
greetsmeandtakesmetohiloft'ke
wheretheintn"riewwilltake pfx.e.
~ The di rector sits a t his desk placed
attheheadofa~«~nfer~e
table.Thetableis nanked by seven
eanvas direetor'scl\ainandl sit in
the one with " l'xecutlve' Produeer"
printedonthebackr/it. The walls
olhisolflcearecoveredwilhdotens
of biO glouies lhovilng ReNne
churnmingitupwithpeoplesuchaa
Sammy Davis. Dwighl Eisenhower
and h'en Riehud Nixon. Ret.M
exp lains thathewan ttdtolea1·etlt
mm lndUitry because lie h.1d jult
finished a rum In Europt In •bidl
" allldndl or things ll'tn t ...,.flllll.~
" Bul when I ~arne up htre at..t
nine)'t!ai'Jago lmelHmtptOJiltill
Wauu u and lor
IOI1'If
111J111Cr
reason Jl&rted mak ing iWINI
films a ll over apin. Thtn 1M nwr
I got lrwolved , the det-per l &ot ill
ond It just went on and oo."
The first feature film he m1dtill
this area w.. " Invasion tram'Earth". This film wu madtlllltn,
~~.t;,~t S::t~on~~gr~lt~
UWSP. Rebane uid this film hu
been sold a nd re'4!ditt'd thret tilllft
but 1111111 playing in c•ties scrou
the country as well u in a lttr
forelcn countries.
Rebane haS liltJe rnervaUan!Mt
'"'be Giant Spider lnvulcn ~ ril
draw people at the boll olfX'f
" From a financia l standpoillt !tit
spide r lhlna: ought to do P'fUJ
damn well. "
Th is picture was macle In !tit
summet" of 197$ and had its debul•
October 17, In the Dallu. TfDI
area. Rebane said it ctrrenlly bas
OVet' 2:,000 bookin&s ~~ tbr
C1Ultry and will C1)me to this ar11
d iller November ll or ua.d
Otristmaslime.
'J'he worth ol a pkture rna)' br
meaa~red only In p:~ r t by 111
financlaltut"Ceu . ll stiii Nsttbr
looked at for iiJI a r tis tic mtr~t . l
u ked Rebane if these plcturtl•fl'f
sutteuful from an a rtistic .uJI6.
JIO!~resretwotrainsofiJIOIC.bl l
dl::~t!:t~e~~~~·~~~!
have about it. One - lli kr to lfri tblt
I know when it 11 perf«! and Dill
perfect. Thill picture t •111tlll'
vaaion From lnMr t-.:arlh"lll-'
perfect . Aaamatter offacLilisDI:II
even palst&bte !rom m)' pollll Ill
" That's a loa ded quuUon
bec~use l wasgoing togetoutotthc!
bu11ness when 1 u me up hete to
WGrk on the farm or go Into some
~~~::~er: ~~ ~:t:!:i.':
lightsaeigaretteandchainllf!okes
lhrougMut the lnterv;ew
maktthestfilrns?
0 !t.fr kind of busi ness."
th e
dtrector,aveteranofover iOOI'ilma,
vi!,W~; =-:.~~!':!ke tldln tit
rtahtcontext, " headdrd " lf~IIUP
beJIMir• • you ,have It ~~~ •
Plptl". youhavey~r
nravels
phy of film
md and you know how you want it
OC'Oit\e out.But you 're fl«d wHJla
I~
prabJem---(})e prot:Mem
low budcet."
Onl' ol the problems stemmiDJ
om a low budget th.at Reblnt
ml in the mating o1 "Spklen"
s special etrtcts . The j)J'Oblem
·as to nake the big spiden looli: aa
alas pouible. Rebane saya the
or fail ure ol oven:oming
as problemisoowuptolht
. ll('t , "if they buy the bil
ldtn, the buildillfl ol the pkture
fint If they aetlur"Dtd on, if they
t s.cared enough 1nd It mali:n
Me tothem- Well,o.k . Buill they
[ · 'Uh-uh , Lhat'sa phoDey spider,'
H' gOilhat tolivewlth ."
In film maltinc. the director is
htto be the m•n with total
trol Olltr' the makin& ol the
oduc t. But, accordilw: to RdJane ,
• IS not always the case bec.aust
dimtor hal the people ''up
·· to ckal with. 'They are the
trlll!JIOfS or people who put up
moneyandarranceforlbefilm
bt shown in the<~tres.
~nt said that in the makin& ol
Jders", thedis tributor<:u t ou t 1
!f!berotscenesonlhepre!enseol
ng ''too alow". Tbese were
~ that ftebant thouiht Wff'e
IQ't:ut in building sus~ .
ne speaks with contempt as he
'$, ''The diJtributor thlnks the
· trs are DOlhi.IIJ but morons,
b run! uu people, un·
hlsl.icalfd, and the more blood
gut£ and aex you thr'ow down
r tlw"oatsthebetterlheylikelt. l
&rtoe 'tti th that w~ theory."
t one point Rebane handl me a
In' u a s.ample of tht ad·
t111n& bein1 ci rculated for
~" : it depicts 11Wlt spickr
a&J n&downtbesttfttwithblood
rc from ita mouth, crushing
oOUes and chasing a shapely
dl'ftled in a slr.impy outfi t.
hy dldR~nemp;elhis rilm?
did It s tr'ktly for money, tM:re
absolutely no lou in the
I)' or the script. lhat.etouy
:" he~dds . "it may sound like
ta job butitb , ltrea.Uyls."
" What I ¥~'0Uid stTive forb to
make a film tl\atl 'd total control
0\'er from a Onancial u d artistic
standpoint ," says 1\d)a.De. l 1.slled
if he has any plaN to make a film
like this. ~bane replies in 1
mantll"l' that reflects hb deter·
mination , lndwithastiffjawsays.
"Yel, l ha,·eapicturea\led"l..ast
Wintu" which is a love story · a
contemporary lovestOI')' ."
Unlike hislutplcture, "this one..
/\as to be a labor of love to make
sure It 's bei"l done rilhl from
e\'fff ana.Je." But 1\ebane says
" there 'snogu.arant.ee l canmakeit
because it's I G~lt.ed pi~lure and
it's \·uyhardtofindldlslribulor
•ilowillhlndlea G-ratedpictu;e."
Rebane announced that the
shooting for this film will s la rt in
Det'emberor Januat')' aod that it
\1-ill star lOme "'·ell known ~e
fNXD Hollywood. He declined to
mention any names because he
doesn'tha,-eanyeontnlct.5yet .
Thbfilm,like thelastt\ro,\1-illbe
madeinCentr1f WIICOOSin. lnfacl,
Rebane /\as plans for the area that
ao beyond his own film makina.
They involve other producers
comirc in and makina films here.
" If 1 W'H'I! to build three more
sound staaes. 1 proje<:Uon room ,
coffee area andpcuibly e\'eniOII\e
housing · I would think I could get
some other producers to make .orne
features here. God almi&hly · get
tvo·oorthreepkturnayearhere,
tll is county would be buzzing ·
carpenters work i ng , "'· elders
building. That I would like. Tha!'s
~~~-hy "Sptders" has tobeafinanctal
IUCCftS- toprO\'etllattheidea of
maldn& pic ~urn here b right."
What is it Bill Rebane likes about
thearea ~" IIO\'etheview · lundo
whatevertbehell l please. l likethe
terra in. llikethepeopleandlhe
~athu : thechanceofseasonsl\as
alottoofferforpktures,you u ndo
almost anyUuna here. I coukin 't
thinkofabetterpl.lce."
S Wt'mlln" II , II'JI
""''"IS PMIIlt'f'
CGI1't find
a way, we'll ma•• one.
'' Hwe
[
HANNIBAL
l..a~i~-m l kUI
Lately the project has been In
serious danae r of l osln1
ronareuional fundinc because of
dwindlina: support from Wise~
lawm:~kers. federal oraaniulions.
~dattiticalreporlp~arf'dby
the Institute for Environmental
StudttttiESJ at UW·MadiiOn.
Senator Gaylord Nel10n, who
appro\'ed the original Army Corps
of En&Jn~ dam p-opoul while
govHT~Grinl962,hasbtotnltsmOIII
persistent opponent in recent yean.
Besides Ndson, the Environmental
Protection
Aaenc:y <EPAJ,
the
Pretident ' s Council on Err·
vironmental Quality, WlJCOMin's
Go\'HTIOr Patrick Lueey. and now
Senator Yl' illiam ProxmiN!, have all
issuedeallsfor amoratoriumonthe
project and a thorough s tudy of
alternatives with partlcul1r emphasis on flood control methods.
1be new opinion of Senator
Pr oxmlre , who supported t he
Kic:kapoo-La F".rae endeavor until
• SotVft111 monlM ~o. Is especially
meanu11ful In lf&ht of his membership on
the Senate
Ap-
propr iations Committee. Thia
committee will decide how much
fWidirc. If any, ....-m be recommended to the lull Smite for
continuation of the project. Sena taf"
Pnlxmire's position, as of last
F'rid1y, h that he f•vors
fi.e .,
no maf"e m
yl bec•use of •n
incrNSeinc:os
tirt)Jitil~ $12
Otaulhoriz.a~onoflhepro)ect
~~- faf"~h,;~~!~
d a decline in bmefila such 11
""-ater quality 1nd restrictions on
motoriud bolts. His st.lnd pla«S
thec«nplttionoftheprojfet,which
will cost another $36.4 million. in
'
Gover nor Lucey , who con-
~Wriout)eopardy,
di~;i:~YtW:I~f!!'~~e.!.?~d:~
~support, feelin& " ltw1stheonly
responsible thin& I e«.~ld do" in
vie'w of the I.ES antlysls which
predicted a lake or poor watet"
quality.
,,
dam thing cont'd
'
Senator P r oxmire a pp ears
~tlve to this idea Iince much of
the proposed park ia al re1dy
How often do they ferti Iize it?
by Peter UtLersll.l
Astro-turf on Goerke neld or the
Bukolt Park bl!seball diamond~
Never . But severa l businesses
alonJ Main Street have found a rtlficlalgreenery tobethesolutionto
crab grass, dandellons. and the
gardener's fees.
Atone time the f'tat f'tnandal
pu.blicly~andwou.Jdprobably
na,,•e ecooomle: benefitl a t least
comparable to the Corp~' dam
projecl. Relocation of rtsldent.s
from Oood prone areaa i11t present
the most feasible anJWer to this
per~ialproblemt.Jtiseasierto
solve on paper lhln In 1 real
situation.
In vi"' of the environmental
n.urdsassocllt.edwlthbuildir•a
dam on theK.ickapoo Rh·er , and it.s
questionable economic benefits, one
might expect reasonsble people to
atleaste:onsiderlhenatlonalpark
idea insttad. Unfortunatdy . the
Army C«ps of Enainetn has never
won any medals fo r being
reasonable. H<N<-ever,theyare-11
known roC- btlildin1 dams wherever
1
and whel"lltVtr they can, even if it
meanJdestroyingari\'erinorderto
sa\·e it . "nle Kickapoo controveny
offers concerned ~le an opportunity to rewr~t. or more
realistically, to restrain the Corps'
fetish for building dams .
lf you care about the fu ture of the
Kickapoo 11 a rive r , you Mve a
responsibllity, both to yourself and
others , to let your elected
representatives know your views on
this issue. The time hal come to
stop the Corps' environment.lly
dt'StructivepolicyofO.edaiQ lhUI&
afwraaocller.
~~nr~ a~r;:n ::~di'!\~~~:~;.
around their offices but when the
pa rkllljJ lot . was expanded and
resurraced all the 11rassy areas
~~o-erealsopavedover . Alterthis . a
local caroet finn , Ouralum. in-
~a~~~:ew~ctii:'~~~=~
A manager at F1rst f'tnandal ,
Mr. Sermaur, explained the reason
for installaUon ol the fake nora.
''The purpo5e~ Salt from the n:~~d
keptltillln~thegrass-madeitlook
llke hell. " The carpeting has been
in use now for about two yean at
the savings and loan.
Across the st reet rr om the
savinpandloanandnext door .to
tnt Post Off"~ee is anothn- otrtce
building that uses the fake &rOWld
cover. Amon& othtT thilljjs, this
buildln1 houses a local travel shop
in addition to the owners, Robert
Berard & Associates.
I talked to a woman in the
Berard orflce whouid tl\atlhey
had had the '&rall'lnst. lled about a
year and a half aco by Somers
Landscapin1. She also said, "We
putiltberebtcat~Sethelawnwasi n
Write to:
pretty bad shape and we didn 't have
a maintenance man tokeep ltup,
and this way it would be easier to
make it look nice."
ltltalltingtooneolthemenoutat
Somers Landscaping I di.sco\·ered
that the rake arau Isn't used too
much in this area due to the hi&h
cost, but at the same time he also
stressed the advant.ges olthe ease
of maintenance and the mattrial's
good durability.
~natgr William PH:~mlre
Se nator Gaylord NtiJon
both at: SenaLe Omce BulldlnJ
Washlngton.D .C. ~II
Your conp-n5maa
IIOUN otnce Bulldlag
Wuh.i(l(lOII,C.C. ~II
Gov~or Patrick Lucey
Statt C.pltal
.o---.
Madisoa , WIKoasln s.:utz
a Steak Bonanza g
~
:;;
a
:!!
:;;
CHOICE SIRLOIN STEAK
TEXAS TO AST
HOMEMADE ONION RINGS
CHOICE OF SALAD
dtoic~or...,,r.,......h o"'cmldfdrftl.inl•
BAKED POTATO & SOU R CREAM
~
:!1
FREE BEER!
AltyOOI.-"'Idrinkwilh)'OOirmt.al
*t
·; uunm ~· ;;;;~nmm g
:!!
a
tnQ§IIfl§l!llitt>Ji!ll:l
i
Clllliii:I.WMI\311111 :it
DOWNTOWN
STEVENS POINT
~~~
SUNDAY NIGHT DANCE
Featuring
LIVE ENTERTAINMEIH
~
~
\-,
~·
Reeyclllt& ProcrH•
DnLrO)'IIIIMYth•
Y.'hen y ou th ink of Colora do, you
usoci1te it with cl~an
~obably
::tu~~~ ~~,r;t :~:."'~=~~~
Rocky Mounlain State may be like
that. but when you talk about
Ol!nver ... no -.·ay! According to the
State Air Pollution Control Division,
lhe mi le high city's air is just as
po\Jutednln any_other major city.
Reasons for ttus include: Den·
\'tr 's high altitude perml15 a high
penetration of ultraviolet radiation
which Is necessary to produce ~one
fromautomobUeexhaust . The city's
climate produces ion& laslina air
in\·trsions. esll«ially in win ter.
p«\'enunglheescapeofcarbon
monoxide from motor
ve hicle
eshaust into the air . Denver
residents lcr.'t Motown mlxmasters
asm~~thasanyoneel se .
Berkeley, California • The
Bert.eley City Counc:U bas passed
anordinanc:e, eUectlvenextJuJy I,
requlrln& deposits on ~ans and
bol: tles ol soft drinks and beer.
Eco-briefs
StOOent influence Ia said to Mve
Solar Enul)''l BIIBrtak!
Solar energy could make its fiDI
major U.S. breakthrough in New
En&land in I~ near future. The 1300
independent oil retailers and
wholesalers in the ~ England
FUel Institute, faced with tbe
IOa rin&prlcesollmportedoil , have
"" decided· to back the development
and sale ol sola r-heat-cenerating
e quipment. Accord i ng to
Newsweek. the oilmen calculate
that hom e sola r pla nts could
provide 35 percent ol the area 's
home heating .
Maybe John Denver aets his
R«k y Moun~in hi&lls by bonglna
Den\·er ai r .
DamaDIImJ
At the recent ded ication
ce r emonies or the U.S. Army
C«poration ol Engineer 's Lower
Granite Dam on the Snake River,
Idaho's governor, Cec:ll Andrus.broketraditionbysaylna. "Before!
accept lhls ... lwanttopoi ntoutthat
the costs of this system have been
horrendous both in dollars and in
coststoournaturalresOI.IN:es."
Dams on the Snake River have
disruptedthespawnlngmiarations
of salmon so much that Idaho has
banned all sport fiShing for chi nook
salmon in the Snake and Its
tributaries.
'played an influentia l role In the
passage or this ordinance.
Pl;,.u ruver BlkiaA Trail
The City of Slevens Point has
asktd the Upper Great Lakes
Regional Commission for 180,000 for
the construction or a bicycle trail
along the Plover River .
The concept or the tt11 il wa1
Fu~~~ t~s~u~~~~:=~~
funs:ould bo
to · Engineer
.
Bill Ohm .
Bill Burke of the
a Wide
Planning Commission said his
office, at the request of city officials , drew up ten~tive plans for a
se riesofbicycletrailsastarlyas
lo.st February.
Burke said that he hu not yet
been contacted a bout a proposed
Plover River Trail, however.
AlthOUBh thestatusofthefWld.ing
request Is not lulown at this time,
both s~te and city officials have
warned aaainst over.q~timlsm, as
procedures under thi s federal
public works program are very
uncertain .
developmental
s~ t .accordina:
SudnrAbnormalitles
A study of silt months' operation
of nuclear plants in the U.S. by
National lnten-enon , a coalition of
IH envi ronment;il groups from 30
sl;!ltes. showtd that or 110 "abnormal Otturnn«S" which took
placedu.ringthesixmonthperiod,
only38weremadepublic . The study
also stated that 1.~21 abnor mal
occurrences took place in 19'7~ .
Super Bug'
A "super microbe" capable of
dl&esting most types ol cnxle oil
and cooverting it into harmless
carbon dioxide and water, has been
deve loptd by General Electric,
attordinato Envlroameatal Aell•
maaazine. Anade Cha krab a rty,
developer of' the micrObe, hopes
that a si milar microbe may
someday ' be used to convert
petroleum into protein-rich food ,
but at the present time it is hoped
that the aerm may be useful lD
cleanina: up oil spills.
.ollill<!
ELECTIONS TO
STUDENT SENATE (12 SEATS OPEN)
Eadaagereclf>ta na..
Over 2800s~iesofplantslnthe
U.S . arecu.r~li't.ty being comidered
forinclusioft on the Department or
lnterior'sendllnaeredplantspecies
list. The Fish and Wildlife Service
sayalhat:JS5speciesofplantsare
believed to be already extinct , and
that the 2800 lhreatened species
may Jutrerlhe ume fatebecause of
development and insensitive use of
the land.
..'>i
UAB AV PRESENTS
'1HE GREAT GATSBY"
p.m. Nov. 16 U.C. Coffeehouse
8:00
AND
* UNIVERSITY
AND
All-FRAZIER FIGHT
CENTER POLICY BOARD
(10 SEATS OPEN)
SENATE NOMINATION PERIOD
U.C. COFFEIHOUIE AlliN & DEBOT SNACK BARS
·· Wednesday, November 19 to
·
Friday, December 5, noon
UCPB NOMINATION PERIOD
Wednesday, November 19 to
.
_.L . Wednesday, December 3
"NOMito¥KiN'
PAPERS ARE AVAILABLE IN THE STUDENT GOVERN·
MENT OFFICE.
' UCPB REPRESENTATIVE - RESPONSIBLE
FOR FORMULATION AND REVIEW OF THE
POLICIES AND PROGRAMS OF THE DEBOT,
ALLEN , AND UNIVERSITY CENTERS.
NOV. 18·21 11·3 p.m.
Nov. 21 !22 8 p.m.
,..__
FREE ON THE 4'X5' VIDEO BEAM
RED *
_t_LANTERN
"<:
ANNOUNCES;
-'
MONDAY
)
Pizza Smorgasbord
)
All you can eat
.
.
$2.50
Ll..t Every Monday 3·8
p.m. · :.,1
.'..Intro please
~B«a-ac••
Tadasbi Suuuml has b~n
st udying Art for nve semesters In
Japan and three summers al
UWSP. Originally from Japan, he
.,.,;u graduate this De«mbtr.
" Beauty ia Eternity ," said
Tadashi.Hefeelsthatbtautyinart
will always prevai l. However,
Tadashl abo feels that beauty is
rrlath·e. " Man y Americans do not
Hke Sashhni, a dish of raw fiSh
~lis hfd by .the · J apanese. Owi ng
toone'sindividUalleveloltasteancl
understanding, a person may admirePic:assowhile anolherrindsno
...
distinctively contempo rary in
nature . The painting revealed
circles that utended throughou t
the large canvas.the effect is
modern. Surely such a theme is
divorced from th e traditional
techniquewhlchbehadmaster~in
pleasure in his worb,'' said
Japan. But to Tadashl , modern art
is not so reR'Iote froro conventional
art as one supposes.
Upon closer loolt, I discove~
that indeed , one Can relate many of
thedttailst"oconvenlional styles.
fiX' example, Tadashl explained
that the concept of the circle isol~ :
the idea thatinfinilyis upressed•n
the circle sincelllperipheryisa
Tadashl.
" Yet some people will say, 1
~~~~n~ont~n~~ a~~eu~ht . .~~
cannol. ~tandartsoldon'tlike
It!" To this, Tadashi answered that
in the same way, a person can
appreciate art if he studies it.
Tadashi feels that knowing the
history of art can illumin.te and
clarify one's doubts, and lurning
the dUferent art forms and
l«hniques to prodi.Jt'e them can
he1ghten and improve the artist's
skill .
Al~h
Tlidashi 's course
is
well-rounded , from painting to
l:ffamics, his prime Interests art
printing, etchina:. andje'tr.·elry.
Tadashi showed me some of his
etc hings and a painting lhat is
organiu.tionofthecircles~a
discipline in the fine symmetriCal
lines and it is appropriately
nam~ ... "
Hesaid, "lnpai nting. theusingof
thebrush isanc:ient. Wegetideas
fromtraditionalart.Print-maldng,
for example, is an ancient cran in
Japan~i t bography ,
silk-screefl,
and collagn.phy."
Whe;e ~ Tadashl get his Inspiration'! The atypical question :
" from eve r ywhe re .. ·the envi ronment, the colors on your
sweater, dru ms, and alter reading
a history book that has no relation
to art at all," said Tadashl. "Ideas
from an e,.;perienc:eorbeyond the
realm ol one's e,.;perience,'" he
added.
Tadashifeelsthathecannotpalnl
by insplratioa slone. " It is only a
small part of art," he said. He
continued to say that the materials,
prOCft,S,snd construction takes up
the rest. ' 'Sometimes lnspirstlon is
=v~~~~~";!~~.i.m: .:~·
r
Tadashi e,.;piained that he came
w the Unit~ States not only to
study ar t but to undmtand another
country. "I read many books on
America after I arrived; I saw
many new thlnp I did not find In the
books," he added. "Before I came, I
knew only about New York ,
Olicaao. Niagara falls anl the
Gr and Canyon-this is a very big
· country- Wisconsin is almost the
sa me si ze IS the Japan ese
manldnd."
·
The ways of the American people
areaqewexperiencelo Tadashl . ln
Japan, iltakesaconslderabletime
lo grow accustom~ to a stranger
bdore expressing friendliness , but
livin1ln the dormitory has giVen
Tadashi the impression that
Arnericans arevel')'frlendlythe
first' time.
While the language or art is
universal, the spoken language ol
~;.!;~ell~.=~~., ':tit~~
wtderst.and American slang," be
says .\
'Hs the season
of musiCals
" The Most Happy Fella" .
Universi ty Theatre 's sec o":d
production ol the wintet' season •n
Sl.evens Point, opens tonight for a
run of seven shows.
The show waa written by Prank
Loesser and contains an abundance
olsonp,iociiXl.Lfi&IUCh tavorhes as
"Standing oa the Come!'", "Happy
to Make YOW" Acquaintance", and
" How Beautiful the Oaya" .
Loeuer' a varied score, which
mana,esa rare blendincol«~m~Y
with l!ippina dnma, tella the
bittersweet love story ol a mailonkr bride and the man who comes
to love her.
The UWSP production is being
direcl.ed by Alice Peel Fauat ol the
theatre arts department. A.ulating
her are three new membef'S of the
faculty : Joa Borow:ia:, who Is
servin1 u conductor ol tbe zz.pece
orcl'lestra . Wllllam Madlen as
voca ldirect«, aDd'JamesMoc:.-eaa
dloreocrapber. Cloee to 50 students
areintbeeast.
Based on a prUe winning play by
Sidney Howard , " Most HapP,Y
FeUa" was an instant hit when 11
open~ In 1954 on Broadway where
it had a l q run and receivN the
New York Critic's Circle Award and
the Best Musical or the Season. The
show was acclaimed for its unique
tombinalloa or tbe belt features ol
musical comedy aod opera-an
impishly lilbt touch and
tul'll"fulneM of a musical. together
'Niththeemotlonalturbulenceand
melodicfuryofopera.
Robert Hei tti nger 'Nill Sta r as
' 'Tony'',theemotioaal ltalianwine
vower around whom the plot spins
in Californis's Napa Valley. He will
be seen as a middle-aged rancher
who has enti~ a weal')' San
Francisco wai tress to come and
marryhimbysendingherapicture
of his handsome foreman . This
action leads to heartbreaking
complicalionJ for him when the
hopeful msU-orderbride.find.s that
her hll!l~nd-to-be Is not the young
and handsome man she thought he
....'OUid be.
Vil'linia Ntppe"r 'Nill play the
waitre51i " Rou.bella", and David
N. Lamoutfilx will play " J oe", the
virile foreman rounding out the
rt~~~f~.a~~eh': ::e'~!':'Y·
" Cleo". theheroine'shash.Unglng
friend . Roger Hunt will play
" Herman'', an amiable vineyard
workef' a nd Bobbie BoedeT has the
role of " Marie", the winegrower'•
jealouslilteT.
Puckers ready
by Don Sl:broedr:r
"We'rereadytoroii ." That is the
feeli ng of new htad hockey coach
Ted Sator who claims his Poi nter
teamis"as re<~d yasthey'regoi ng
to be."
They had better be. For tonight,
and Saturday night, at 7: 30 in the
I«<drome, the UWSP hockey team
will face off against powerful Ohio
State. Sator believes that the
Burkeyes are going to be one of the
best hoc key tea nls in the country
this year.
ThePolntei'Sarenotawtdbythe
situation , however . Sator believes
his team is well drilled for this
game, and feels his squad is con·
ditioned as well as any.n,e hockey
team has been working hard since
October IS in preparation for this
.,.~kend .
To say Stevens Point will h.ave to
play well to win Is an obvious under statement. They will have to
playwelltorema:inclose. Sle\'en5
Point has s impl y never played
anyone close to the calibre of Ohio
State. Butwin or lose,Satorsays his
squad "v.ill be very ~~tattve
forourWli versity."
Tonight Is a chance to bring
i mmediate recognition and
cred ibility toourhockey program, " A cha~ to put us on the map,"
Sa torsa.id.
But no matter what happens.
Stevens Poin t fans will be given
their first real opportunlty to see
Sport. Short.
Q-oss Country : UWSP r~ second lo
La Crosse: ~sSN.eam 11dd lo
qua lify for the nat ional c ross
co untry me et in Eau Claire
Saturday .
.
The Indians won ~~oith .. low fh·eman tota l of20points, well ahead of
the 59 pos ted by the Pointers. Also
qualifying for the NA IA tourney
was River Falls wit h 89 points.
;,cc ;c~::.....:..· - __ and Oshkosh
to roll
big timecollegiatehockey. U's not
often a team like Ohio State pulls
Into town. This Is no ordinary
hockey weekend . Ohio State
represen ts some of the bes t
collegiate hockey this nation. has to
offer.
St~·ens Poi nt will Held a young
tea m , dominated by freshmen and
sophomores. u is somewhat inexperienced. Paul Kapala, lu t year 's
gualie, and Jerome Erdina , a
defensiveman , abo on last year's
tea m, have both been declared
ineligible this semester.
Arnone the returning s tars are
Pa t Seyler of Madison, who will be
thecapta inthisyear,and incidentl y
is the only senior on the team. Last
year 's leading sc:orer , Paul Scott,
returns as does leading de fenllveman , Olrf Gregory. Both hall
from Moosejaw, Saskatchewan .
The Poiilters appear ready to
tackle the bi&&est game in Its brief
hockey hislory. Head coach Ted
Sa tor hu worked ha rd both
prep..ring his team for the season
ahead a nd also trylna lo make the
students and community aware of
hisl!rl$-76hockey team .
Sator has a rranged for transportation out to the lcedrome. A 54
passenger, sh utUe bus will make
five runs from various spots on
campus . Alldorms bavellslingsof
the areas and times the bus will be
Freshman Mark Johnson led tbe
~en'::on~ c:e~~ ~ lh~niJ:.' '
UWSP bad only ooe other runner
In the top 15 (who quali fy for
nationals ). Don Bwatman. placed
l4thin2S:57.
Ro\mdina out the top five for the
Pointen were Ml t e Simon, Dan
Buntman, and Rick Zaborske . Joe
o.: .: :=
;~-.,:.;;:_,:.c;;.-_c·..
lea,V~.
also will be on hand.
Beer will be sold a t the lcedrome
this yea r . Another new addition will
bethe~Utveilingof:h-Stcvl-ns Point
hockey cheerleaders. An organist
Satorhasstressedthelmportance
and nH<Iforstronastudent suppor t.
It is euential as well u a great
League Patriots t3-l, scoring 4
goals in the first 5 mi nutes.
Fieldhoctey : UWSP
lost tllt'O ga mes in
~t::~~"~teth~:::s ~~
~:~:::=~~n~:~~;!nbus, Ohlo.
Ea~~ ~0:~\g~'! £~anl-:'t! I~
goal . Coals by Pal Seyler, Ray
Berendsen and Ma rk CUmmins
added to the Pointen 4-<1 Jum p.
A goal by Russ KeMedy brought
the score to $-0. Becker 's second
goa.lgavethePolntersaHieadin
th eJecOI'Id period .
Mlke Wiles scored on a n assis t
from Shawn Harper to make the
score6- t and sa.ve thePatriotsrrom
a shut-out.
emotionallifltothepl.aye~
over lndiana
second game 3-0
University. They then !oat the
co nsola tion title ga me 3· 0 to
Eastern Dlioois.
SUe Brogaard scored Point 's only
goal In the first game . Krls
Labutzke, Jud i Adamski and Dee
Simon al l scored a goal to tally the
3-0 win over Indiana U.
A IJood down pub iJ l,lli·
lizedlnmoreoutdQUr -etivilie• tt..n 1ny oth11
1l nal ~
piece ofgeer. ~· mm •nowr
tnQUntll n p.. U t o •h ~ w•t~r'~
adg1. our Slene IU ' ~' hu
proven IIMlfu thl oulptr•
lormerlns.-.downrlpt-!Op
p11rU.. Our Uf'l In seltctlon
of rewm~tartaleend•tt•n llon
to quelity In Q~nst ruellon
brln1J iha fln•ttoyou
rCM"edditlonel lnformlllon
onthlJpuUuwellu11lou r
p.~rUs.lwigl , tenls lndpecU.
~endfotiCIIIIOJindtho,
n~me.ofyourneerntdpler.
hat's why
e have
cards, candl s. -~
iddie toys,animals, etc.
UNIVERSITY STORE UNIVERSITY CENTER
f71SI,.._l'31
The 'Circus' in review
byWayneWaala
Prospects had looked good for tbe
Pointen before the season began.
~r~defeatedintheconferenceand
their quarterback, Nod carlson.
en terf!d the pme as the~·
ferenc1! 's tot al offense leader . Eau
Caire took an early lead but
Ste\·ens Point came ~ell to win
their fi rstgameo(theyear JS.%2.
Four Pointer interttptions helped
stall the Blugold's offense. The
Pointer ground game pic ked up 113
yards rushing.
The Pointers traveled to SUperior
for game six to play the winless
Yellowjackets. The game was no
contest as Jeff Cola caught t-A'O
touchdO"A'II passes and Giordana
r an (or two more . Middle
linebacker J oe Berghuis led the
defenseastheysh utout Superior 2:80. This evened the Pointers ~d
at2·2anda firstdivisiOfl finish did
not seem unattai nable.
)·ear before. Improvement on that
seemed a certainty. The 1974
Point~ squad was dominated by
fresh men and sophomOC"es and a
year's experience had to help them
for lhe coming )'Ur. Add a few
transfer slUdenlS and some highly
regarded
.
Eau Clai re came lo Point for
game five. The Blu&olds were
Twenty-seven lettermen we re
returning from the 3-7 team of the
freshmen
and
a
bi&
se~oc-~ ~.:a~:rec~v.:-&.~ti
MonteOiarlesvowed to run' the ball
mor-e. Instead of pasRng the ball80
per cent of the Lime and running 20
="~c:t60~~nt::!
..Ope:rcent o( thetlmehi5tea m had
the ball . What happened thi s )-ear
wa.sa10-30Pft"«<ll p:tSSpe1'nln
ratio. 11)t:Pointenranthebal l229
times while passing on 502 playa.
~uently,this)'ea r ,they've
Pointen also set a record. They
passe<l for 4~ yards breaking the
oldrecordof4ll5. Thefl nal score,S&HRh•erFliiiS,toldthestoryofthe
game. River Falls was just too
powerful .
The Pointers finished the season
on a bright note by beating bost
Platteville 14 ... 'The win put the
Pointersallaloneinfourthplacein
the WISCOnsin State University
Conference . It was the highest
fin ish for the Pointen si nce their
second place finish in 1967.
Quarterback Reed Glordana set
three NAJA records for the season.
He finished the season wi th 3,101
yards total orren.se, breaking the
record ol2,963 yards set by Oi nt
Longley In 1973. Longley is now tbe
bac kup quarterback for the Dallas
Cowboys. Giordana also completed
U9 passes brealr.ing the records or
us set by George Bork of Northern
receiving record with 159 rec:ep·
Uons, and the conferenc1! career
yardage record wi th over 2:,000
yards.
Rick Peot, a 1974 graduate of
Crl'een Bay Premontre High School ,
co~tinues to lead the University of
Wisconsin.stevensPoi ntto naUonal
football punllnil; prominen«.
Peot is the fifth ranked punter In
thenation,witha4t .5yardllverage
on 62 punts for the season •
lntheWI.sc:onsinStateUnlversity
Conference, Peot leads the league
inpunUngwi th a4Uyard average
on 51 kicks.
Peot has completed 17 of 35
passes for the Pointers this season
as the backup quarterback .
pic kedup:J065 yards passing to5.25
yardsrusl\ing.
The season went like this ;
The Morningside Oliefs came
into Goef'ke Park for the Poin ters
opener . One year ear lier the
Polnten had bealen them 30-0 in
Iowa . Moc-ninpide had an a-9
lftOI'd that year and despite the
fact that the Point.en starting
middle line- bac ke r . D9n Solin,
dropped out o( sdml only a few
daysbeforetheopeninggame, the
Pointers we re favored. Reed
Giordanapassed ror asc:bool record
or ::.01 yards but the Pointers lost '2121 .
Yo'hitewater,came to Point for
game two. The Warbawk.s tied for
the Wisconsin State University
Conference title with LaCrosse and
Plall.evllle the yur before : they
-A"ere e"Xperienced and big. The
Warhawks were expected to -A'alk
past the Pointers. lnstead the
Pointers turned in a close game. I(
nolfora l q Rick Murphy to Ron
Mallory IOIJChdown pass with no
Ume left on the clOck in the first
half, Stevens Point could have won,
but Point lost IS.I3.
Game three for the Pointers
was In DePere against St. Nor·
ber ll . The Knights bad beaten the
Pointer six straig ht years and made
it seven wi th a 27·24 wi n. Doug
Krueger set a school record by
grabbing 14 passes and Giordano
completed 34 of ~ passes (or 387
yards and two touchdowns. His
counterpa rt , Freshman Mlu'k Tonn
· was 2:1 ol 35 for 293 ymls. He led a
romeback that lifted · St. NOfberU
pastStevensPoint aRertheKni&hts
trailed 21·7 at the end of three
.........
La Crosse was the next Pointer
OPPONENT. The Indians were
undefeated and looked like a sure
bet lo get a piece of the WSUC
dlamplonlhip again. They reatured
a top runner, Tim German, and
according to statistics the best
derense in the conference. Point,
capitali:dng nn some early lndian
err~. took a 17-41 lead a fter one
quarter'. Two Ciordana touchdown
passes and a ctJJI[erence record 53ya rd field goal by Bob HoHman
provided the scoring. But with
German Cinally getting big hunks of
yardage and the lndlan dderu;e
stiffening , Point went down to
defeat aaain 21·20.
The tMimecomi l'l g game against
Stout saw another fi ne defensive
lhowi ng by the Pointen. With Mike
Thompson harrying Blue Devil
qua r terb ack John Elkin , the
Pointer secoodary intercepted five
passes. Tom Rush picked orr one of
th~andrecoveredtW"Ofumbtesas
Point thumped Stout 314>. It was the
fint ~k.(f>back shu tout for the
Pointers sin« 1963. Jeff Gosa broke
the r ecord Doug Kru ege r set
agai nst St . Sorberll by Catc hifll 16
passes. He also passed for the final
toochdown .
Oshkosh h05ted Stevens Point Cor
ga me.eig.ht . The ntans -A"tte t~ Ofl
the year and despite the fact that
they had beaten the Pol nten the
previous seven years, the Poi nten
lll'et'efavored. Butthe'Otans picked
off fi ve Pointer passes as they
de(eated the Pointen 17·13. Gior·
dana set a conferen« record by
passing 70times. He completed only
26, lhough, and was igtercepled
with juat48secondsl~in the
gam:Uver Falb ume Iii
t last
Saturday wi th a ~~
ferenc:e
record and the best rushi game in
the WSUC. Vt'hen they ldt, a
number of rec«ds had fa llen. 'The
Falcons ran fot a rec:ord.540yards.
breaking the old recotd of 3114. They
also intercepted 10 passes breaking
theoldrecord of seven . M:ike Will of
RiverFallsseta~ferencerecord
~ki::S~ffro!.~o ~~i~ ~:=a1 b~
Uunois in 1963,and broke the record
for total pla)'l with 571, the old
rec-ord .533 by Sim Byrd or Troy
State in t968.
Gio rd a na agains t Platteville
completed 17 of 32 pa15e1 for 159
yards and a touchdown. He also ran
for 88yardsonl7carries.
Giordana opened the acorin& with
a two yard quarterback sneak in the
first period. He passed for the other
IOIJChdown In the third period to
Jeff Gosa for t5yards. Plattev\Ue's
onlv touchdown came on a 111 yard
run by Tom Jakubowski after the
Pointers had taken a 14 to 0 lead.
Pionee r Qua rt e rback Kurt
Gunlach completed seven passes in
tS attempU; ror 110 ya rds as the
Pointer defense turned in its fineat
pmeoltheseason . Itwasthefirst
time thi s 1ea1on the Polnten
limited their opponent to under 200
yards total o(fense.
Jef~ Gosa remains the Uni versity
of Wisconsin-stevens Polnt'l top
(oot~llre«iver .
!:
yea~re~n~ h~J1~0:df~ t
receptlOfls.
Cosa leads the Wisconsin State
Un iversity Conference in receivi ng,
-Aith 56 utche:s for 638 yards and
seven touchdowns, and 11 .4 yard
average per reception.
Last Saturday apinst UWPlatteville Gosa broke Bob Peck of
Superior'srec:ordof
1
~~hW~li.C-~':'C:;~:·~ ·;~'·::·:·
13, theoldrecordwas l0. .;.
'""'
;;,..,._,.,..;;;;;;;,;.;~~
1
BobHoffman,remair111 amona the
top conference scorers for the
University of Wi1co nsin·Steve ns
Poin t football team .
Hafrman booted t-A'O extra poin ts
lastSaturdaytogive hlma SJpoint
lota.lin conferenceplay, 7thbest in
the league.
In WiSC1)nlin State University
Confer~ action, Hoffman has
kicked2textra points and folD' field
goals,lncludinl51 and 53 yarders.
Hoffman has kicked 'Z1 extra
poinllfortheseaiOn,(arexceeding
his UWSP record-setting 21 of last
year .
Hoffm an also holds the career
extra point record Cor the Poin ters.
with 51 in three yean.
What looked like a bright seas~
tumed out to be a mt'di«re 4-6
season . A break here or th ere in
theirgamesandthe Poi nters could
easily have been 9-I.The Pointers
we r e exciti ng . They 1cor ed a
tremendous a mount or poinll . But
thisyear,aslastyear ,wasayea r nf
learning.
The Poi nters have only three
graduating seniorl . The IMs of
th~athleteswillbefel tbuttl'le
Pointerfootballp rogramlson the
upswing. Vwith another year behind
these players. next year could br
their best.
[ ·~]
Stlldenta will have to rorce the iuue.
A bllr dozen students with acCftl to a ditto-machine C«LLd
«J~~o!all:::Sen~i':a'~:~~~~~:e~~~:-, for
their rights u adults
110w.
You can bet the Chancellor• thrqbout the WiSCOI'IIIn
System have their eyes and tan open to what happensatlhil
campus .
In tum
l))n't let the students of th is&tate down .
- Demand :z.t-hour visitation.
Dtmaod a public debate with LSD
~:=~~~'f:;!::chaMel&7and9ofWausau.
For further assistance and a helplna hand ca11 341·2955, or
:M6-n49.
Pointer staffers kJke tums
~
Open Channel
Us iRK the same dictionary , ~other noun should be t.cked
to the Chan«Uor's red vest, merited by his actions to-date on
the 24.bow' visitation decision of the Regents.
Hypocrltt- is defined as "a penon who pret~ to be what
he Is not : one who pretends to be better thiln he really Is, or to
be pious, virtuous ,etc., wlthoutrtallybeinato."
LSD's press conference last Thursd.y (Nov. 6l ll.ld bare the
ldeolosy of a '1iberal " university Cllanc:ellor. ApptarinJ
before the TV cameras of clwmell7 and !I of Wauuu, channel
!1!~~~~~~~~=-~r~~v~:on~~
philOSophy of 'in locus partt~tul " ltandi.D& firm apinst the
Rqtnt5progressivedec:islon,toallow24-hOW" vlaitatlon at
UWsys~emse:hoolJ.
The extent to which LSD'1 thinkln& hu become clouded and
lookinc at his "argument"
{
A
w~ekly from
student government
by Marla Alnn••
Have you ever had an ins tructor Iha t lotS too fast and found
it Jmpouible to get do-.-n the important points before he
moved on to other points! Or have you ever taken • course
where the instructor could never seem to 1et his main Ideas
a«ou'! u you haft, you are very much aware of the
frustraUonandanKietythataccompanieasuchexperlencn .
The result it you fall behind in the cliSI and yow notes are
incomplete. In HKn« they are of little value when stud,.;na
for the clus and usually need clarification and~ a complete
OVCf-haul.
foulli:r.t<l bec«nes apparent by
a&al nst 24-hour visitation.
We are to believe that cohlbitallon Ia a major IOCia.l ill , and
that it is lhe responsibUity ol the Wlivenity to enforce a law
::'!:~~r!==~~~:::;:e~t~~ ,;,1~!
0
childrtn, l.llable to«~pe with sex,or loe:lt thel.rdoon.
Further we are to believe u-hour visilltlon ImplieS one
person's morality on another.
RecenUy a faculty committee discussed the topic of
Jtudent.s in the cluuOom and parUcularly a student's
frftdorn to tape recorda clau lecture. The poUcy established
was belleved to be In the interest of the university ua whole,
students and faculty. For th!J rcuon , the instructor, and only
the inltnlct.or wiU make tbe dcdsion ol permlltin& or not
permitting aatudenttotaperecord his lecture. In a short
time, the pottnUal a!llllety and frustraUons wUI not be your
concern-it will be out of your hands and in the handl of the
instructor. But rt:membtr, th1a it In the best Interest of the
students. We arc t part of this university. Let me explain
why I Ond this u~Uina .
The chancellor should reread the Ret.ents' propolll bdore
ltlddn& his foot any~ inl.o hls mouth .
The Rqmta' propoul . a lonJ time. in. the comin&, dearly
allows for individual choice by ntablistuna: Jp«<al areas for
students
the entire ·~trwn of poalble visitation
preferences. That thla type of u-bcKr v\1\laUon procedure
works is attested to be the experieDee of the .Uaivenides of
Michigan and Minnesota , fprlDted lD Uts ~ ~and • bolt
of other univerlllies thr"qboul the C1)Wllty ·
covmna:
Studenll are forced to Uve In dormitories tbelr flnt two
~·rs at ttua campua, at price~ll&nifkandy hi&her lhln off·
c.ampu&.ll .. in&. And now to ldd inlult to lnjW'}', you are to be
dtni~ bask rl&hts and responllbWUes of adults beeaute
·
PHC'J in-system dforu to formulate a ratiooale r.o r ~
visitation Itt to be lauded u locka! step~ in deahng With a
rea1011able laue.
Just u the OlanctUor has e,;pre:ued an interest for the
minority and thdr tiJhts, concemlna 24 bour vlsitaUoa, the
question m111t alto be addreued here. For the mlnorlty of
studcnll that do have a problem of kH'pltla up with tbe tza..
ltructor or are unable to take ~ble nota from a
particular Ins tructor, their rights could be denied. For thole
students thatcaMotconvlnce their lnltnlctor's thlt they nMd
to tape record lectures, Its too bad, they 're out in the cold.
They hl¥e lo.t out because the lnltructor hal .. ld no. For
whatever the ins tructor's rcuon , the atudtnt tuffen . He hi•
thechoiceto cond nue Jtrua&llnJ through the clau ol if there
AI a one-lime raldtnt of Dtlull KID , and e«~tributinl
aulhor to the then radical197'2 17-hOII villtation policy and
suchcate~,haJ topaylnthe!ndal.lo .
'a ladlofimaJinldonandnewf<U~dPurltanEthlc .
l51y to hell with the Qlancellor, Enough Rhetoric !
It's time to '"man the t.rric:ldn"!
::~l~~;h:~!~~d'fn :'sh~!~{=.'buf::
1
.
Chautauqua
A Pointer regukJr feature
by Robert Bonki
Despite the fact that we haven't 1lwa)'S ~ eye.to-eye,
I've amrrauy found it VH'y bard to disUir.e Gerald Ford.
As a politician, he always struck me u a typical : an
~auwnirc. not ovnly intelligmt, straightforward u ·jock·
tumed<CJDCressman who hrld suddenly fO!.nd hirnJel.f at the
he!molthiscountey.
~ the time of his inaY(I~ration , I bonrestly wished him luclr.,
l:lopU.r; his tenure u President would hdp to restore the
public's confidence In a government badly shaken try scandal
and mismanagemtnt . And while I diugreed with his pardon
ol Rkh.ard Ni:uJn and his handling of the Maya JUn. incident I
thou&ht hlJ lntmtions Wtf'e noble; th.Jt be honestly bdievfd
be was doin& wh•t wu best for mom, •pple p{e, and the good
:!d ~;-~~-~~~r:sr'ed him in Ol:l'ler'words, as well as what
But then came the first 111ftlr.end of this month, 11.so known
u the S.turday ~iJht Shutne, and now it appe•rs I've been
misled.
In his 1pare time , ~ Ford m.y be ani~ penon, with a
rrfr>eShin&ly human family and penchant IOf" football
meta phors. But first and forem01t he's a politician, an
auessml!n t I can only view as unfortunate.
Apparently concerned with both the mulls of a Gallup poll
indicalina: his popularity was ebbing and Ron~ ld Reagon 'a.
riling star on the horizon, the President fired Odense
See-Nry "James SchletiQier- and CIA Direclor WIUi1m
Col by, l\l mina: as thdr mpecllve r~•cements Donlld
Rumsfdd aftd George Bush, two hlrdcore ~ublicans with
p(lliticalaspiutions .
Twenty .four hours later Nelson Rockefeller 1MOUneed he
wu withdrawing from considention as Ford 's V.P . in 1'111.
The immed.ilte lmpllcallons! Well, accordi ng to the prus ,
wi th Rocky out of the WI)' (a move designed to pliCate Pitt)'
cansuvatives). much of the appt11l of a Reagan candidacy
.lnu.J!)ii;IIDII' ~".......
JE~WJ'I If,lit
,ermcr1~1J Ca.I1U
The Student Norm
would be neutralized ; but 11 the nme ti me , his withdnwal
also VKited 1 poaltlon on the Party's i t n1tion11 tic ket
r.isjngdoubts as to the wisdom of Ford's selection of two m~
111ilocould verye•si ly ~ae their new lppotntmentsust.pplng
stones to the vice ortsidenc:y.
If Schlealnger 1nd Colby were removed because they
disagreed with the President on cm.ain \uues, Ills ridkulous
to think 1 politicaUy ... mbltious duo like RumsCeld and Bush is
goingto~zep!drCIIrtoerlbylimilarlydolngso .
As Scoop J •ckiOI'I ctw-sed. the Prftldent, "In ridding his
own team," m•y be sl.rf'OUndiaa himself with "Yet men and
lac: keys." Hardly what I would eaJJ • constructive working
situation, and one in whleh the C~M~try itself m1y feel the
reverbatlons, depending oa tbd r ac:tions ; although I won't
haza rd any Jutlses at this moment.
But lhould the public coocl.ude the Praldent , in shufnlna
his admlnllll'lltion 1round , wu tryina: to Itt h\msdf re·
dected 1ftd playlna polities, the future may not bode wtll for
the former &ridiron llllndout .
To put It into mon! funili1t and'Jift'IOI\al terms, on :.od
down and long y1rdage, J erry, wi th the score tied 111d time
running out , may just be forcect to pun t and hope for the
.....
r
Vet's Comer
News for campus ve ts
by Mark O.uon
All veteran 's who will be gr.dua ting Dec 20, 1975 wi ll not
re«ive 1 full months GI Bill ed~atlon check on Dec t, 1975.
The lut d11te ol exams this fallaemester is Dec: 19, 1975 and
for thlt rea1011 the VA wiU pro·nte lhe mon thly • llowance.
For example :
AsinJievetwlllrecelve l t7l .OO insteadofS770.00.
A manied vet will re«ive 120l.OO!nstead of 1311 .00.
Then•re slillappro~imltely20 Vietnam Era Grant checlu
at the cashier's ortice. Just a reminder to thOle veterans who
have app l i~ and have not yet pic k~ them up.
U you hive a ny questions conlllct Tom Pe11nk.l, )46.2441 .
records
Andrew Gotd
Alyhr.111 Rec:enb
7E-t047
Revlt'wN by Rltkrt &rd.l
8
Andrew Gold firat came to my
auenUon on Unda Ronlladl's Heart
UIF.e a WhHI album. He playt'd a
variety of instruments, sane backup vocals, and helped with the
ll'"rangements of mOlt ol the SOO&S.
exc:ellin& a t a ll thret". He was a.lso a
membtt ol
Ronstadl's IDurina
band, adding stronc support on
guitar and p4ano, and prllftd bls
m~alcianlhlp was as credible In
pt"rsonuitwuintbestudlo.
Then shortly bdore U nda's
followup LP Prisoner It~ Dbplse
was releued ton which he again
stood out), I heard Dlvi~ Geffen
hid signed him to bls label and
btgan to look forward to his debut
albWn. Now It bas appeared. EnUtlt'd simply Alldrew GoW. it
features ten ortatnal c:omposltioos
laraely In the countryftclt vein,
with an emph.as\1 on up-tempo cuts
and vocal hlrmonln. And If they
33.500.000
Unclaimed
Scholarships
su.1, _ _ _ r o p _
me as unac:«ptlonal, npedally
lyrk:-wite. But two sonp u plorinl
Gold't expt"rienceaat~OI
m111k:lan, " Rnlln& in Y
"
and "I'm ~In& Home,' a~
nicely clone. The u.me ml&ht be
said fiX' "Endleu Flllht" , an ex·
ploralionol long-<listanc:e travel by
jet and the sudden cr~ fHUn1
you're loir!l to c:ruh.
Only one sOna struck me as
~~~::~!~~~~~a~~~~
Me", In which Gold's vocal
Umltations are really apparent.
But ovuall\t'sa falrlytuc:cesalul
dtbul album. Gokl plays piano,
IUII&n, bus, drumt snd per·
cussion, u well at overdut. on his
own YOC:als. And I 'm already
looking forward to his t«<nd d ·
Side One fut\res thr« of tbe
album's stroncnt takes. '"'bat'1
Why I Love You," exam ina tbe
more simple, reinfordna aspects of
any relaUonJh.lp, c:onc.l!Jding, " It's
RUSH YOUR CURRENT UST OF
I1 PLEASE
UNCLAM EO SCHOLARSHI'S SOURCES TO:
orv
~!·r:':'-~~:. ~AG:~~~~~trlke
Ronstadt, they dJ provide II} in·
terntiJIC and listenable outln&.
.
11275Mm«huJtiiJ Avt.. L01 """""' CA 90025
0 ,.,.. _ . _..,$8.95plw $1.001or POiu,tlftd"*"d!W.,.
!I ~..
"LO\Ie Hurta" explorn the pr\~
sometimes exacted by unrequited
love. Bothareexc:eptlonallyllJ'oo3
on vocals, with Unda Ronstadt
provldlnl tasteful back-up support.
I'm tomewhat dlvidtd, however,
amon1the albuma remalnlq cuts.
::,..une;n~l! ~J~~~~ ~U:~
O.er $33,500,000 "~J1Jmed W:holll$hipot;, fi"I AII, lids, lftd
lll'llow!.tuPi ,.,...,,. from $50 10 $10.000. Curr..,l hn ol
lhtw IOUKftftvlftl'ltd lftdtompoltd iJOJ Sl'pt.15, 1975,
UNCLAMEO SCHOLARSHI'S
which scrutldne love from a
s omewhat lesa bl\nful an11e.
" Heartach es In Heartaches"
' chronlc:les a destitute lover'• one
remalnln1 aolac:e, his musk; and
I
the smile on your face· It's '/wr
ltyle and your IItKe· That '• wby I
love you." It Is tbe album's moet
china.
Who knows! Maybe he'U even
live up to his name then and 10
Gold.
buoyant and whlltlul cut, and bdps
to balanc:e tbe two followiniiODII
I
~~~-:::::~________j
3•FAEE lEER . PtWO
~
Nl: Nl! KOSZTWE•;
'!"
~
Shrimp
---; .Bonanza
E....rv Tuetdev Night
3
S
g
~ ABounty:!~=n:~~NF=:IfShrimp
.:,
-
d'lolca of our homemade d,..ing~
CHOICE OF POTATO
biKed, hah browns Of gokttn french frW
HOMEMADE BREADS
WISCONSIN GRACE A BUTTER
SJ95
1!-. ! K
P~ ~- - u. e.
7:0() & 9 : ! 5 'P?K
;
i
~
§
5
21
books
1'tle Outennoat House
llury Belton.
The \'lkln& PI"HJ.
Sew \'ork, ttzS.
"'Ole w_orid to4ay it skill: to It's tbitl
bloodlorlull:olele mentaltbU.&•·
forlltebeforethelaaod•. forwatn
welllasfromtbeurtb, lortbedear
eartbltaelfaoderloot.''
ln our world of action, dominated
by the iorry philosoehy o r
' 'economic leasibility", dvllintion
l\ls strayed from Its fundamental
~mdupinning-nature.
Objects or
the material world are of, from and
because ol the natural world; to
c redit men with great " mind
states" for ihe many pleasures in
life is to loee sight of the many
rhythms of nature that allow for his
uisteflce and livelihood. Henry
Beston, a relmowned nature writer
ol the 2Cth century is one man who
had an abiding reverence lor oature
and a grup lor the basic
relationshi~ within ~~o'hich man and
nature co-exist.
Htttry Belton in 1be Outn-moat
IICKise,writesofb.ilobservations
and experiences with the ocean in
all it's countless beauty, while
living In a simple hut !Of' a ye.ar ,
built on the barren dunes ol the
cape Cod peninsula, juttina: like an
"elbow" into the North Atlantic
(km.
By 'tO· means I St<lrT')' eyed
dreames-, Belton admits the dil·
ficulty in the ' 'blclr. to nature"
cliche, and details h.is own partial
dependence on conventional
matnialism. His ob&ervations are
Instead a slatement of the ma nnature relationship, u well as an
individual diary of appreciation for
th.at\1/hich lifeis.
Beirc isolated fn>m industrial
society.foralime,givesSestonthe
opportunilytobe " lteenlyintune
with and extremely ob5er'vant of
nature". He is able to study first
hand the wonden and myst.tries of
nature-"the migration of shore and
seabirds,theceuelessrhythmsol
wind and sand and ocean, the
pageantofslarsinthechanging
seasons". Bestondescribeshowhe
thinltt men have become synthetic,
notwillingtoattempttousealltheir
senses, resultingly Jiving almost
completely by. the eye, placidly
" endlliQI the stench of foul blue
alr".
Experiencing " nature as
obliviau5 to wl\lt man does",
Belton implies that men shouldn't
expect nature to sympathize with
their lives. It is the life force of
nature "which sustalns life" that
mustbevlewedirlalargercontext
as the creation.
Henry Beston's a....n life can be
ci\IUet~~ed today on grounds of
practicality. Yethiswritioas and
observltionsontheintricatebeauty
and delic1te balance or.nature can
be ·of growing importance to the
practical life. To be able to see
somethina where one has not
be!ore, touseoursense,tolive
deli~tely,appredatinga,tree,
bird, or a s t - for Its own
signilicance apart from our own
utilitarianhanc-ups,isto lh·e. !tis
nature thatglvesus Ibis life worth
living.
television
.
" lleyl'mAllve"
biting cold loratoflhe
Struthen; !Gloria on
Family" ) is Helen
is an adventurous,
YOU"i woman who has
come along for the ride as part of
her trip around the world. Alter the
;
story.
F'inallv. after Helen has succwnbed to Ralph's religious Insistenee,sheflnishestheBibleafler
47 days. F'ittlngly enough, as she
reads the final word a nd closes
Ralph's Bible, the search plane
spots the S.O.S. In the snow-
~===~=~~:~:~ something
l!~n£=c:h~l:!:ct
~ ~!"fc!
like that).
old coot. He demandJ that she pray
withhlmbeforeeachmealand re~~d
All religion aside, "Hey I'm
the whole Bible or else they wiU not Alive" is a refreshing change from
be rescued.
the usual bal!l-barc shoot-em'-up
Asner is as convincirlg as be is crap P.rime-time television puts ouL
U.as perati ng In his c h l riC· Dir«tor Lawrence Schiller does an
terlzatioo ol Ralph Flo.-es He excellent job ol re<:re~~ting the
blames the plane crash on Helen's dramatic conlllct between a young
rejection of J esus Chrill. ~freespiritand anolddos:matlc
~~~~;e:.!Y ~~= ~·lsR~~ TV·, ~~~J~~ha~OS:ndW:.~ ~!~:~~e~~O:::'herev~p~nc~
movlebasedonthetruestoey ol two
plane-crash victims who survived
49 days ot' winter in the . Yukon
(Alaska) befOl'e they wes-e found.
Lawrence Schiller. who
ph~raohed the rescue for LIFE
Magazine In 1163, Dirtc:ted thl.s
drama. 'I'M: show is filmed on
location irl the chiUing pine lorestl
ol the Yukon.
•
• Edward Asner I Lou on "The
does. a n almost believable weeping
scene when she and Ralph are
reunited after being rescued.
Thlslsoneoftholemovteswhere
theactlng\ssogenulne that you
tend to get carried away with the
progression of the story, Instead ol
ana lydng the finer deta ils .
Althou&h the scenes are basically
limited to the crash sight, the m.in
Impetus ot' the film Ji~ not 10 ~uch
ol Ralph's doued faith gives you
the feeling that the powet' ot' heart
and wiU can overeome even the
sevemtcireumstances. Definitely
ashow tobe seenincolor.
UAB AV PRESENTS
WISCONSIN VIEOO THEATRE
THE BEST IN ALTERNATIVE VIDEO
November 16 8:00 p.m.
COMMUNICATIONS ROOM, U.C.
2nd in a 5 part series
Series continues Nov. 23, Dec. 7 & 14
~FREE-
TOGO'S
Wants To Care For Fellow
Students At Our Home Of
The SUBMARINE SANDWICH.
*
We Have Over 30 Subs For You To
Choose From Including: 'fr American
and Italian Style
Tuna & Egg Salad
Turkey
Vegetarians
G"'llled Ham &
ChHH <t ~nd Steak Sandwiches
*
*
*
--__
~·
YOUR !lAMOND
_.......
& GFT CENTER
!lAMOND
....._. RIIGS
BY
lES'IAU.~aOUOM.
We s..-ve these on our apecl•l recipe bre•d ~nd UH freshly sUcecl
muta, ch..... •nd produce. There are 3 slzn of sub s (am1ll,
to fit 1ny •ppetlte. VISIT US SOON
-TUMMY T. TOGO-
GRUBBA .JEWEURS
Only 3 weeks left IIIII
.You tfan win:
y, barrel of Point (first prize)
3 quarter barrels (second p;izes)
4 six pocks (third prizes)
Here's how it works'
• Before December 8th you compile a visual depiction Identifying
Point Special Beer (photos, graphics, or whatever}
Deliver your contest entry or entries to the POINTER
•
•
Rm . 130 Gesell
After December 8th the people at Point Special and the POINTER
will select the top entries.
,...._.
.
I
The Point beer
photo~ graphic
contest
(Contest encb Dec. 8-all entria become lhe Properly of Poud Spcciol to be uoed for promotional
p....,.... )
Almost 3000 ounces of prizes
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