February 6, 1976 Off-compus 15' -

advertisement
Off-compus -15'
February 6, 1976
~
Worth .looking into....
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f$ntini'lh!:&reatoac-inaPE 101
OtWte. II b very n.utrina
tt.t
.o
manypf<lplelhouklrmaidtrthcltateol
ourdnleritya " hotii.-.M Ptn~~n. lly
apukfni I fetl that any 11.\IO!nt •
poueta~na an 1p1r1ment two mile.
from cam~. an abnarmally amOI'CIUS
IIOC'IUI'IUiilile,ora d auon lht fourth
t1aor of tbe CNR bo.llkllna, lbould be
aemptt'd from malllblary physical
l.'ducltlon~~IU.
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Coors we felt like it
BIG
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1:11 Pll
Castle checkmated
T•tlte
Pel•~n,
M a~~yofyoum1y lla~ notlotd an
artldeon~,eSin lhtJai'WryJOUI
edlU.:.t/ltM"Painter ". ln lhelrUde
)'OU will n-d that Wtlldi!ll Ntllan !.
dlllirlnt;aeommiUetloalltmptlowt"t
Graffiti put to rest
TelMPi.la ~.
Welcome aboard
Thifld:~lstall!fw~nalllllttrsted·
~ the opportunity to beame
laYolndiDSludalt~'lbere
lluckiU
:.;~:rA==:~
can be pldled up WouJh MOldy,
Febrwlry t , in lbe Studmt GovermMat
OUlcoe aDd !be lnl«~UUorl dsk In U.C.
and 11 the Studeftl: Manaaen' omce~ in
Allen and Debctec!llen. The followia&
Hit and nm fink
=::er:-=.:.=~~~~~
Dblric\111 t Knuuen , H1uen, Scb·
meKkle ), Distrid V IB&khrirl, Neale,
Pray Simtl, Oittrict VII t&ut tl.
Mi~A¥e.l, DiltrfctX tSout1Ratt
gf U.S. 81a. Sl aDd lOUtb af U.S.
IO).N<U: A.. llab141 until Wedattdly,
FRo 11. U you an; at all eonee:rmd wtth
whlottwppmaln thll Ull!venlty, you are
uraed to f\111 for the nc:anda.
lnaddit!GI, tberttretwo-tsopen
t Diltri« I and 101 101' the University
CmtenPoliey SO. rd. Applk:at.Lans may
bepiekedupattheabowplac:esandln
ofrtee. They are d~,a February
~ UAB
l.utnf&hl, Thu.rldly, Janu.at)'ath, l
left tbeCCCbuUdiato l nine pm to filld
my ru.tybuttnaty whllll Dade! Dwt
~r'ud~
ltw..,'twlltRihad
ldl.itlwoondolllllflxMneutift". You
.J irftll~bttit-"!I.M.Tbundlly
nl&hL Uponc:IOHeuminad on lfoundo
squashedl.lll-tl&htandtorneo!Mrear'o
redp~~lntlnvario.-:pllcesonlhtleft
rear d my ear. Evldftltly. _ , _
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w.u j.,.:aoruotpi)eollddee~notlo ·
bolberleavlnf•noce.lcanjWGbably
pkt up a tail-IJ&ht or • few blEb, but
my riJIQ;havebetll vlolated.IIICI•Liw
IIIII been bn*BI. WborYtr bit my c:a r,
wua.........
SS.G . ~C-•Itlft
p-owup.
I'U&LidiY~IIICIM1iDI
brownpllp«baldtlivet«<lnthedead
ornighL
G«doa
Cu•IJIPa•
U41MorySirfft
Even more on hunting
In ~ply to BUI 'OS.ve the WM~es "
Codnn 1 ~ lib to pollll aut thl.t
prStioninthenaturalworld tbycat.
('O)'ate, andwolflllnot Umltedb)'any
!acton IVdl • •ae or dlsftoae. All
lettera policy
rnm~bn'stJI.thepreylprclesare
poleftlial vkt.Lmt. notneasu.rUy ma.a
but 'tictima. In eamP'r:ln& ftllblnil
..-fdloiOntom~oDIIUII.-)'OIItaketwo
lan& ... lkllialhewooda, tbtflrsllmmedlatdy afttr dftr--- aDd !Be
a
bodyc....tol aUU~~~ea.lmeddel!'r
ao. - -. Talr.e your MC'OJid ...lk Lbe
lint weekend !11 Ftbnaary nur a dar
yardand-'-m.~nydeere...-eaM:t
youfindthatblovebetnkllledbycoyllle,
.........
dogorwolf, andhne nevereve~~bem
In your am~rt- of two bucb ol
equal ace you fail to ,...lize ~~
IIKIIIH Mtltr cltwlopmtnt II not
dtter<r~ilwd~qebulrothrrbfiUdt
I . Three hundred words or
less - longer letters allowed
at Ed. disaetion
\
Series 9, Vol . 19, No. 19
2. Ali leHers_to be signed
-
nome withheld upon
req~est
3. Deadline: Monday noon
before Friday issue
fadon u naib.biUty d food, types til
rood. and wMIMr or
no1 1M Mtien
i11jure:l wbile they W!f'1!
..el'o'ttat-c~tblltwobudllfr«n
weft
lii!M
•linn
om wo.dd procb:e 11ml.lar .ued ontltn
lwbitdalll~,..,.~more
l l w l - mllefrom wbtrttheyweR
bom l. Alto, Miltf Nle dcJet not
dttennlnethernaUnc•blllllesoflhe
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buck . nordoetitlndicote "~"
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ae-Jnlhe c~. O!Itother
point
iD lhia or• II tblt Miler
dntlopmftltkaoto~teto
m~!lnlwilhodoe.
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do you '-v~ ony kiM or the IUDber d
I'D)'ai:D it~t&IF.etoa-opl51,0D0
dtft"oMU~lly!lldll!.iA'!fll'ltlitucleiD
canlinufrc to fl&llt ffllr 1 IMI'1i •twa!
ret.UonMip with the natural utth but
yvurnuat,...ltrethltm.l nbualwaya
bHno ....... tarone~rtll.udaltboulb
Fdnaryl. 1m
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DA YTO,NA!
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8
MARCH 12-21
BUS-$144.00
MEN'S
&
WOMEN 'S
LEAVE FROM
STEVENS POINT
TWO MULES FOR
SISTER SARA
PROGRAM BANOUET RO()l
l«lHHAY, f!BRUARY 9
lHOW STARTS 9:00 P.M.
THIS IS THE TliiRD FILM OF A
REGULAR MONDAY · NIGHT
CLINT EASTWOOD SERIES.
UAB COFFHHOUSE AND SPECIAL EVENTS
PROUDLY PRESENTS:
BLIND
JOHN
DAVIS
SUN. AND MON.; FEB. 8-9, 9-11 P.M.
FREE - FREE- FREE
IN THE U.C. COFFEEHOUSE
BLUES AND BOOGIE WOOGIE
"45 YEARS AS A PRO MUSICIAN!
EIGHT TOURS OF EUROPE I
HUNDREDS OF RECORDING SESSIONS!
RECENT PERFORMANCES
PERFORMED WITH
hUr Folk F1stlval
Unl.,.,slty of Buffalo ·
Grfnnell CoU-ee
Western 111. University
Beloit con~e
Summer Fest (Mil . )
. Big Bill Broonzy
Sqnny Boy Williamson
T1mpa Red
George Bllrnes
Sidney Bechet
Memphis Minnie
FINAL PAYMENT DUE
FEBRUARY 10, 1976
CONTACT STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE ·
FOR FURTHER INFORMATioN: 348·4343
.
news and opinion - - - - - -- ---..
Bus p-lan bail-ed out
The subsidbin& "01 the Stevns
Point Area Bus Co-op <PABCX)) by
Student Government f« use by
stLKienta at this university is run-
nl.na lnlo financl.al problems. How It
=~ t~i::!nto ~p~~~~l ~
studenta usitl& the bus
ler'Vk:e.
Sincetbe&..Co-opwuarelalively ·
III!'W vrature, DO one knew exactly
how mud! moaey would hrove to be
allocated. Now it semu~ that 10
many stucleots are makiqJ uae of
the free bus rides that the mooey
=·=~!:l!~o(~~~;
has rundry.
Last year Student Government
approveciQ,OOOtosut.idizetbeBUI
~from the Student Bud,pt. The
!'atudeat's
!d ~=:~eo:::ecee~c::
ride. Tbe coatnct made
appropriation: to belp subsid.IJ;e
various bus services throu&bobt tbe
state." 1be way thiDp stand oow, . because this may lead to a lad!: ol
ridershi p. The Public Service
Upclilte commented, ''There may be
Commluton says that twenty-two
arealiJUc~lbiUtyolaothavina
and oiie-hau cents Is the lowe~t they
the same ~ervlces ," oext year If the
can
10 for a lf'OUP dl«ouot. The
;~:~nor's pr oposals stay the
Student Government hu to decide
how much they want to subl!dlze
Meanwhile, the r e .are an
Aru 8UI Co-op, or, If they
the
Point
estimatedl:IOstudeatlthltUMthe
want tosubsid.IJ;e it at all .
tueseachday. 'lbePolntAru Bus
~==:~ol=-:l:!~ct!
caUed f« frft studeat l'idts from
·
~
tfnu&h llay for the
1fl'S...It71 .:hool year.
E\lery~
wu wort.b:JI well
until the mWid&e of January when
the Stuclmt Budpt ran out ol the
all0c.1ted $2,0011. Tbrot's wben a
requat wu made of up to 18110 from
Student Govenunent Rsene." Tbe
Budpt Or:mmlttet tbeo reeommtadtd appro¥aL l.&lt Sl.lnday
eveail\1 Student Govemmeat voted
... alcoholism, and dumb sex
botb In the Auembily and the Sealte
to approve the 1800 addltloul
sub&idy to the Bus Co-op MrVke.
This wW sublidize the bus service
\C) to 1pproxlmatdy Ma~h 1.
Alcohol abuse aad Unwanted
pr eaancles a r e major health
problema amoac UWSP students,
acconiingtothe. unlversltyhealth
service.
Campus violence
Two UWSP studellta are free on
bood after belllJ arrested lor
aiJqed lmtolvemeat i.D a e~mpus
knile llrieldln« IDddnlt.
Allred S.udwrlp, Sims Kall,
polled boad ol S500 011 charts of
rec.klt~~UMiofakDU'e,eareylnca
conculed wapon,pc1111811oaola
....,itehbiade kalfe, aDd obRnlctiq
an olfker. Guy IDcram, m
HanlenH.alJ, paildfdbXIIXII
charae
of~
an officer.
in~~!,"::':,'!le~y~
Robert Jeakinl Tulsday. JeU:W;
entered Jmocmt plea for tbrm.
The alleled lnddmt OCCUlTed In
the UWSP Pby Ed bulldin& lut
S.turday. The complaint uys
Beauchamp and tnaram wer e
playina basketball with Daniel
Hoefs, Ill Scllmeeckle Hall, and
another unidentified atudent.
Beauchamp waa aup p o..~ly
knocked dowD bJ Hoe& Uiq the
pme and InJured his kDee accordlJIItoU.policereportl. PoHce
rr! ~~rr~J~~- r,:.
.say tbat Hods refused to apoiCJiiu
for the Incident becaUM be said it
wuaccidmtal.
Beauchamp and Inaram are
. blacks. Hods la white.
The police report says that
Beaudlamp wnt to the locker room
after tbe \nddent, aot hls jacket,
pulled out a Jmlle aad threatened
....,,,
arrived
• Wbe:n pollee
Bea~M:bamp
allecedly "told them be bad throwtl
the lmllt.oulllde lD the snow. Ofrtcen at the tcene maintain thlt
tbfy uw him attempt to drop the
knife when he was Jeadlna them
outside to show where the weapon
...... ~ted .
~m ·became involved In the
=~t~l:r:!:u.!~ J::'fa:
to'* a ltnlle handed llim by
8Mucbamp up to I:U room. Tbt
ltnlle that police lniU&lly recovered
=~:t:n~~t!
lbfs' atatemftltl to police.
the health lftVice uid one studet'lt
died of alcohol overdo.e and
another required ho&pitallnteaslve
=:u!.Not..u:~~.=~
from an ak:ohol OYt!'doMUU faD . )
"Akobol clearly continues to be
~oun~d:tc!'.m':. C.~!
our atudent body," said Dr. Dona~
D. Johnson, bealtllaervkedlreetor.
" AIIoq u UU. situation nilta we
must utilize ewry educatioaal or
other method that .orb to chanae
thlt."
The health tervke performed zs,s
prea.nancytesta, olwhkbawere
positive. <Tbe yur bdcn Q out of
217werepoel.tlve.l
" Mo.t of u.e preplndes were
unplanned with tennlnation by
abor tion," .. ld J.ohuoa. "Ob·
Ylously, lack of birth coatrol
methodl for these women did not
prevmt Hxul activity."
Twke .. nllill)' prepanela ..
JOIIOIThea "Cale:l 'tll"ef'e d\apoMd,
uld Jobalon, " Yet
mid teal II
aald and almo.t nothl111 la done
about it. I th\1111: It ruiOUbkl to
warn people ol the dalliers they
face If we are aware cl theM
danaers ounelvea. Oearly tben we
must warn coUece students ol aU
the effects of l r reaponslble
eexua.Uty and auaest ru~ODioble
altern~~tivea."
1be report said tbe bealth terVke
laboratory dlaa-ed U cues of
\DI'ectioua moaOIIUCiec*l aDd M
cues ol Joncn-hero . No ayphWJ
cues were found.
A coniZ'ibutltaJ factor to upPer
~~t~r! ~::c!Jo~;~~
dormitories,
''which could be
C«Teetedtotbedlrectbenefitol
students' education." said Johnloa.
w~t ~~~:c·~~d~ J!K!'.~
members ol the bealth lerVIce
rtpOrted when they bad bad their
::J la~~a~a:tt.ew;!: =~
one physician hadn't h.ct one for
four years and another doctor had'
hla lut physical ftve yurs ICO'"Tbe model of health care we
C'..~~~~:Cr:!~':.y:!
said Johnson . " Hopefully •e
learned a leuon ."
dudeltf tcwemment
Getting
things
together
~IIJU\ddlnes .
A resolution submitted to
the
Stnate and aaembly by Al Achutte
In ~ to four members wbo
ftl'e recently elected to UG!wnlty
Center Policy Board IUCPBI wu
defeated in both houua. Tbe
resolution maintained tha t the
Student Government Rulel Com·
mlttee reclnded Ita te n vote
req ulremeat for election and
~;:r1a~:~Ct~al;~l:b ::
moluUon contended waa Wepl.
A ~ond resolution, which would
make mandatory tbat facility
return atulient euminetions 1ft a
speclfled per iod of time, was
rdnTed to the Academic: Alfaln
Committee forfurtberstudy .
Student Bud&et Director, Bob
Shaver, stated that the University
FUm Sodety bad submitted a
request of up to MlO !rom Student
Government Reeerve to be used In
the pun:bue ol alx films.
The Stud-ent Senate and Auembly
voted to approve the~t .
Ft~~n~arya.tm ha•• •,....
1
Um•u~
Co.ru
Off~
The Umue ~ for Jirb
h.avina seven! menstrual crampa
willa.. lnbeofrn-edthissemcstu.
~:h:'by U:1.a=e 01~dc:f~h
00
1
instructors from Rice Oinlc . Ef·
rective results hive been reported
from thoR 1Uendi• last aemnter.
Girls intuesled in the -.ions
are asked to c11t the Hulth Center
t :S41-46411 for further detallt .
Seuions will begin February 9th If
there iJ an 1ckquate rqittratloa. A
n r~ It charaed.
C.mpaJ TV Sdtedule
UWSP C.mpus Televisioo ICTVI
will be.11n tecond se m uter ··
brol!dcalilin& oo 'l'ue:sday, Feb. 10.
Theprocramtcbeduleitu follows :
T l•e OatiSportl 11. nd
Recreation )- 1n lnvestl.pdon and
demonstnolion ollrisure time ac·
tivities. Tueldayt, from a.ao p.m.
After ne FacUNews and Public
Alflifll- lnvolvt:t seri-, IUbjective aoalysis ol two lo four
current i11uu in tbe newt .
Ttieldayr,"from 1:30-9 p.m.
To 'rile PUI!Soc:W Critique and
Commenttryl.ci~e subject
dlatocue investiJ•ti ng relevut
socii! l.uues. pmlominrotely ol
local ori&ln . Broadatllive fromH
p.m. on Wednesdlya;.
F r ee Admiltlioa I E n ·
terttirvnenll- dn.win& from the
arts lthuotre. music.dlnce, poetry.
etc.l with fOC\II on a single lheme.
Uve from tbe Coffeehoute, 'Jbur·
sdlys rrom. H p.m.
crv·soewotr.cels roomaaMaiD
tnutdoortolhePointer),a:t3051.
a .. c..op Meed•l
PETS SEEGER APPEARS IN
MILWAUKEE FOR HARRIS
The Directors" ol the Point Aru
Bus ~ will meet 11 4:00 p.m.
Tuesday Febrw~ry 10, 1971 II ita
otnce 11 llnA M•in Street. 1bove
the City Newst1nd.
·
• The Directors will discus~ the
maintentnce 1nd repair upecta ol
the PABOO opeution. 1be meflin&
Is open to slw-dlolden and the
public.
~park enthuslum for the nation's
200th 1nniversary.
Prole.« Kell)'ard E. Smith,
direct« ol the 63--Voke student
or&anizllioo, 1nnounced J•nuuy
21thlhltlhegroupwWbepartola
ser iet of concerts i n
Wuhin&ton , D.C . ~oredbytbe
National Blcentennil l Ad ·
ministratloo.
· In 1ddlUon to 1ppearaoces on the
White House Elliple, wbere there
will be seati~~-4 for about 2,000
persons. tbe eboir alto will preform
m several chlrda, tcbools 1nd
public buildioas or blstorlcal
tignifteanee In tbe Wublqtoa.D.C.
area and Ia Philadelphil ckuin&
thrir four-day visit to the East.
:uar: ::S!iS~
'"'·
u:
=c:mJ:
t.enord L.G!bb, on the ad·
ministrative staff of UWSP the past
nine years. hll been named
director or devt,lopment and
executive direct« of the UWSP
F~~U'·~e
chlncellor 't
~a:;!~ c:~:
DeBot or Allen Center,
A writlen uplanaUon ol the In·
te r view proceu 1nd a job
descri ption will be banded out with
the 1pplicaUon form . All1pplkantt
are required to have a mln!mum o1
two semesters rem1hlina on
ctmpus bellnnina Fall Seme.ter
·News Notes
OoirTrtp
1be UWSP Cboir will preform II
the White .Houle and other hittoric
lila in and 1round Wuhl-.ton,D.·
C. betweea April 1 and u to help
~
Mllllier poaltions av1U1ble for
76-TI. We w!U be
See1er , internationa ll y Fall Semester
• ppllcatloot from
folk singer and pollllc1l accepting
will perform 1 benefit February 4, 1971 thru February 23,
for Presidential candidate
Appllcttioo formt Uti be picked
Fred Harris In MIIWIUkH, Tlu·
sday, Feb ruary
In the ~ 1t the C.mpua Wormalion
~ter or Ole Studeat Manqen
Pllntinton HaU ollhe Mllw•llkee Office at DeBot 1od Allen Q!aten;.
Auditorium. Tbe conrert will beain
1bese forms lhould be retumtd to
ltlp-!ft.
Pete
known
1ctivist
concert
tollhe
lmmeSi.'te stiff,
~:u~;:·:~ -:.~,~~e
secretary to the chln«lior and
sec:retaryofthefoundalion .
The founda tion II 1 priv1te
organl:r.atlon, mott of wliose
directorslreloc•l buisneupeople,
=:c:ists~o;::=~:z:rst:~
taxpayers. It seeks to dnow the
contributions ol both money •
servlcesand&iflt In kind toenhlnce
=~Ill olferinp or establish new
16-71.
•
m::t.~~~:.!c~~~=
Stud~t Mau1en at the Univer-
sity, DeBot or Allen Cenlml.
C.re Cea~ Ytc,.dft
Yacanda tllll exist for younpters
in the UWSP Child Leunlna and
Care Center.
The center , which hu 1 director
and two c«tlfied te•chen, aerves
::h':.e" p:~-!~lr 1 :etd II~~
faculty members. The center it
louted in tbe Pe1ce Campus
Center- Luthera n on Marl• Dri\'f .
Openinp 1re 111 day on Mondlys
and n-days, from 7:45 1 .m. to to
a.m. 1nd 2 p.m. to 5p.m. «1 111ur·
~vs~nd lp.m. to • .m. on
UAB
TRAVB.'l
':
7ff
.~
) •
.
-
1
..
TO
1./1
ACAPULCOI
DEPART FROM CIICAGO
...
MARCH 15-22, 1976
$291 . 00 ROUND TRIP
\
FIRST CLASS HOTEL-
EL· MIRADOR
WE HAVE THE COLORS
•
IN STOCK
FI4AL PAYMENTS DUE FEB. 13, 1976
CONTACT STUDENTS ACTIVITIES OFFICE
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION - 34e· 4343
~IDIIIIII~!!IIil ~
•
Ofti!EY
TUI
•
Closed primary best
Eddy Miller
.,.PniSeeu
aJpport to dOled pimaria .
Actually, opeo primaries are DOl
more democ:ratk:. Generally then
Wbcmsia 111e1 an open primary
for ltiectin& e&ndtdatel for the
~~~~~r:~D~
election. "F1cbtin&" Bob
LaFolldte and the Prelp'tliiJVfl
~rty were ~b&e for ill In·
stltution i n WIKonsin, Party
caua.s, wblcb preeerded the open
primary. had fallen victim lo
pow'ftful iotenst Jf<q~a , e..a.• the
rallroadl. and tbe opeo primary
p:ner~~l
that nationally ln 1972. only two
qui ol 33 wue defeated ln
~enaton
t:.m::ra.~;~~~~rna:;
Since there ls low
elections.
voter
rticip~~tloa and little competition,
oc:al p~~rty orpniu.Uors exert
considerable Influence In the
selection of candida tes in the
aeneral electioa.
r.:
was enacted to allow aruter public
...........
~ia-ti011
in the sdectl«a ol
1be ream La Folldle
pr~!;n:ra~:!t t,~e it!rjo:f!j
conclusion, one Is advoeaUnt 1
nonf:rtison system," states Dr.
opted for the open primary wu that
the Procreulve party, of which he
was a member, wu a faction of the
larp:r~blicanpt~rty. By not
f!ll,:!~ ~:en:.,t~: ths:'::.~:~~
requiriDC vottn to declare a puty,
the open primary enabled many
parties and their platforms will
provide the voter a more dear cut
choice between candldalel and
~~~=~.J.":: J:vz;te::~
the present controveny over
a:
:':·Jec4i.!;.su~: :en::-
Wlaeonlin 'a open primary. Shauld
Rrpublk:ans be allowed to in·
nuence tbe Oemoen.tic Party's
at.l«tioa of candldate:t for the
geoenl election and vke VU'N!
Dr. Edward Miller, of the UWSP
PolitieaJ ~ Depl.rtmeot, N)'l
be 1Upportl I deled primary. A
spedalist itl the kcbbtlve proeeu
and stale and UJba.o 1overomen1,
Dr. Miller bas closdy observed tbe
workinp of tbe open primary In
~l!!t~:e=~~
A ciOied primary II pre!erab&e,
araues
Dr. Miller, "Btca\lle a
primary is su~ to be an Intra·
pt~rty ld«tioa of lhlt party's
caodidale:' Hec:Gnleodllhltlt is
Improper for one party to lnnuenee
anolha' party's .election ol a
lmportantln~titutlonslnoursystem
uodidale Jiven the
purJKIIe ol a
primary In a party system.
Dr. Miller cites researeh by
A.PA;tin Ranney, former member ol
the UW·Madisoo Political Science
Department, wbo found that about
25 per-cent ol the voles in the ltll
Omux:raUc presidential primary in
Wisc onsin we re cast by
Rrpublkans.
Voten c:r0550'Vu for basically
two rusons. coatends 0!'. Mlller.
Fhst, because they feel there'• a
lack of iuuel in their own party '1
primary. Or leCOIXI, some vocers
actually raid the other party to
UAB FILMS PRESENTS
CLOCKWORK
_)ORANGE
attempt to aet the other ,.rty to
ldectac.al'ldidatewbowiiiDOt be as
apt to beat the nominee ol their own
~:.-Millnfedstbatthere-
is solid
=~e::=.~~~:
national poll ot' the ume bas been
taken to date oa tJU quest!oa.
Privately, Or. M.iJJeor " suspecll
thatmany1tate~laturesarein
favor ot' doeed prirrwiel. But
becaLM ot' claims by their C«<·
slltueatl that dOled prtmari• are
undemocratic, 1o me st•te
le&lllators will not lend their
ol aovemmenl, we mUll work to
strenathen them.
•
Under the present Jtate prii!Wy
slnlcture the Rrpublkan perty
tfldonelaeandldate fora p..-·
=:=s~~.r~~
endorsements!" I'm DOl In favor
ot' them, for it is thepw]KIIeol
tbe primary to allow the party In
the el«torate to make the choke."
Dr. MiUer advocate. a aood
~~=r.=:.!!!:C~~
elec:tion,one In whkh members ola
~rty can select their party'a
candidate. The opp«tunlty to select
:,::'=~~~"fnetiU: :~
e~tJon .
UNIVERSITY CE
POLICY BOARD
Applications for vacant seats In UCPB
are available through Wed., Feb. 11 in
Student Gov. Office, UAB Office, Info
Desk UC, Allen and DeBot Student
Managers Offices.
DISTRUCT X - 1 Seat
1 Seat
DISTRICT VI
TONIGHT!
FRIDAY, FEB. 6
HIKER 111230
7 P.M. and 9 P.M.
PROGRAM BANQUET ROOM
ADMISSION $1.00
lcolm McDowell as Alex, gives a
inguiarly brilliant performance tha
ot only heralds the arrival of a super
tar, but also of the most accomplished British actor of his
generation.
5
53.00
thesport shop
SKI RIB MOUNTAINI
?
UAB SKI CLUB IS SPONSORING TRIPS
EVERY THURSDAY NIGHT!
- S3.50 Includes Ills, bus 5 y, llano!
-l'lc:k up fnlm u.c. 5 OeBol ill 5:30
- Sign up ill student Activities
llftlce by 4:30 every
Wednesday!
.Everyone Is Welcomell.
·student Government
Applications for seats In Student Government available through Mon., Feb.
9 in the Student Gov. Office (U.C.),
Info Desk (U.C.), and Student Man·
agers Offices in Allen and DeBot
Centers .
. 1 Seat-Letters & Science Assemb~ Person
1 Seat-CNR Assembly Person
.
*1 Seat-(;OPS Assembly Person
1 Seat-District Ill Senator (KnutsOn, Hansen,
Schmeedde)
~ 1 Seat -District VSenator (Baldwin, Neale,
Pray-Sims)
2 Seats-District VII Senator (Area East of
Minnesota Ave.)
1 Seat-District XSenator (tirea Southwest
of Bus. U.S. 51 & South of U.S. 10)
•Available Until Feb . 11
Leasi~g
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ULTIMATE CASSIDE.
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Heat and water included
One block from campus
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FEBRUARY CLEARANCE
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1311 STRONGS AVE.
1.311 STRONQS
luycenfennlal myffts
Fainous lost words
by Mas-k VeUnU.
Rkhant Nixon stared Into the
lfta ol a TV camen . Bdlind it,
million~ ol Americans watc:bed and
listened. Few realhtd l.br!t thdr
prftident would make a statement
History would latH" r««d as his
JN!IIest uttet-aoce.
" lamnotu~rooll ."
NiJr.onst.ated.
TV a udientft heard and uw it live.
Unfortunately , America '•
earliest historians didn' t have
~ilion aDd had to rdy1 on
hearuy and IJ«''ttd-hpd SCU"Cft
for their Information. II It any
'li'Ondtr that 10me ol lht famous
quotes attributed to our most
prominent fordllhtn was actuaUy
"doctor ed up " for public
consumptkln and not true quotes at
all'! Sometimes lbe quotes were
ac1UaUyuld by1001eoneetseor the
evtnll lbemaelvn changed.
A ptrfect eumple ol llds is
Poatrick Henry, an orator ol the
Amerko'" Revolution. AccordinK to
:~ ="~o:r.Z~t!'!.~
rtally a chikt mcM:sterl , Palrick
llenr y waa s upposed to have
said:
" Give me lib«ty or give
meckalh."
Not true. Actually. Henry was
tomil'lfl: home from the bars one
e"\'t:Rio& when he stopped by a flag
factory run by Betsy Rou. It was
just a " front", ho\Jornoer, fOf'what
the pta« rtally was~ house ol ill
~te .
Betsy Rou, meetina Henry at lht
door , asked : " And · what is your
fancy tanl&ht. Mr. Heney!"
Beirc the true orator he wu,
Patrkk Heney boldly a~ :
"Give me Uberty, or &ive me
Beth !"
Even Abraham Uneoln wu the
victim ol mltquotel . 'ftllt wu
UI"Kkntandable, tboulh. beau.e
~:~~~~t!'cCY to:::
bellevebewuwhoheu.ld hewu .
=":en~e~=~::
hi m 10 he could show slr.epUcs his
picture.
At any rate, Uncdn was sltti n&ln
a rallrol d ca r one day when a
newspape r r eporter appr oac hed
him
"Mr Prnideat " he saki
·· u·~ been i-umored ti'Wt you and
yourwifeafftl'tsettingalon&. J 111t
how Is your m&tiocsbip!"
Uncoln, s tarln& blank ly Into
=·=~~· " FOUTICWei,RVefl
:~~~&e~;;le~
Talr.e, for example, the cue of
Genera l Dou&lu MKArthur and
~~':r:~!~~~icer,
hid
It pretty euy
World Wa r n
cxa the PttW ppiMS. WbiJe foot
&Irina
soldiers fou&ht bloody battiH ,
MacArthur wu spending his time
in tbe company of a Phllippino tau
atlheManillaAiamoPiau Motel.
When force d t o retreat,
Mac.Arthur was enraged. On the
day ol h1s dtparturi, MacArthur '•
Birl friend aceompanied him I!' the
dock and asked: "Wall you return,
Joh n!"
(MacArthur was no
ctu.mmy. Hehadn'tloldberhisreal
name for tear she migbt " look bl.m
""" later. )
What made Mlc.vu.at utter his
famOUI quote, "I shall retwn"!
Quiteslmply,itwua quotethe&lrl
uttered for which Manuel Labor, a
Texas pea1ant far m er , was
credited: "Remember the Alamo
Ptua!"
'ftlere arec:ounUea other quotes
tMt are credited to the
wrona
people. Frucis Seott Key, who
wrote the Star SparcJed B.lnnet',
was acecl out ol a well-known quote
for which Theodore ROOieVell was
credited. Francis, when uked if
f:::!e!:b~w~:.me~U~
"Not ruUy. I 1pea k IOflly .and
carry a blgstic:ll."
Some quotls mada by famOUI
America ..
ha~
become everyday
upreulona.. Even 10, the !amOUI
fi&ID'es are not juRly aedlted..
Take, tor example, the former
c:omm.anderoltheUntoa!orc:etud
put presiden t, Wy - S. Grant.
ane day, he wu sipplna a brew
with anOther welJ-known Amerka n,
WiU fto&en. "(never met a wonu.n
I didn't Ute," said Kotas.
"I'D drink to thlt," replied Grant.
.:v:.,;;,;;····~-.
diftere!.iu ·~
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:
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:
DAT ~-:: LSAT -~-
l: G~:~
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SAT ::...-:":"_ .. ,.._
: FLE X ::.::-- :
lECFMG -:..
l
: NAT'LMEDBDS :
: NA T' LDENTBDS•
~~~~~~~~
:...........:
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DAYTONA-BEACH
BUS TOUR*-$129.95
LEAVES MARCH 12
AIR TOUR*-$197.00
LEAVES MARCH 13
"Both tours mclude kitchenettes, midweek pool party, ocean front accommo- '--.....;:::...._____,
datlons, plus special options.
CHECK US OUT BEFORE SIGNING ANYTHING ELSE!
Sign In the Solicitation Booth In the Union or Clasoroom Center lobby or Cllll
344-92531or further Information. (D-Its due F-uary 9 & 10. )
SPONSORED BY DELTA ZETA SORORITY
J
,.._,.,., tmhP'.......,
Nare that dorm
_
Baldwin had _,big_~~!5__
Robert Dodce Balchldn, a lartt
eared Khola r wilh baby-blue eya
and wire rimmed pusn, tnlly
staodl amona the ~ehool'a mOlt
prOifftlive founder~. His forni&.ht
extel'ldfd. far beyond the limits of
hisprtd«essor'', too fa r , ln fKI , for
thefaeulty'soldera:eMntion.
Baldwin nrst came to Point In
19211whenthe Board of Relents was
a r opinl for a s uitable new
Prnldent to rtpla« the late Joh n
Sims . .Chlrcina: times delNinded
an infl uential, well ~a ted ad·
minlsttator to ii'II Utute a com·
!:!~~~~ !t!~~~~
wit h
h l& h
Robert Baldwin:
Under the persuasion of Mrs.
Eliube th Maloney,the Board voted
n~m••ake af
unani mous ly for Robert Baldw in , a
fou r year lfadl.lllte of Prince ton,
with a Masters fr om Columbia and
Boldwln Hall
a Ph.D. from Stanford . The
DeW
=.~e:f':U::~r:.c:e~~ j~
days alter his 35th birthday.
The Baldwin famUy btcame the
flamirc ll&ht o1 JOdal drc:lel. One
of M rs . &·al d wln's p et
qanlialiont, the BJuebird C ub,
met pe:rlodlaUy In her home for an
dter noon of mother-<IIUJ hler
pmes The lalin adopted the
names o( tome !avonte bird and
would adreu each other as
" Oriole ,' ' "Chlcludee , '' " Snowy
Owl,"arw:tto forth.
Mr. Baldwin at.o achieved a
~ruin a mount of not«<ety for his
tlltnllasabauiOlollt.
8\l t thlncs \lf.er"e not 10 bri&ht In
the wo rld o f an d e m la . The
problem~ cl tra111ltion from Normal
School to Te1chen Col ltte created
• &oocl deal of controveny for !he
new President. Faced with a mea n
budiet and a fa UJ na enrollment,
Baldwin decided !he situa tion could
De solved If thole teachers
belt
lacki•collq:edegreeswould t.ke
aluve ofabseDC"e to finish out thei r
fonnal tninin&.
· To some this seemed an elitist
attt'mpt to undermine their MCwity
and personal wonb. Old Ouffen on
the threshold of retlnment feared
lbe strain of trottirc to d aues oa
:e.~ inru~res:)~daf!, ::
anywhere without pay.
Oitics arose from evuy Cri M f .
Oissatis!actionbtoc.a.methe modeof
the day . E"en the President
&neritus, William Hansen, who
s ene ra ll y sy mpat hi zed with
Baklwin'sacadtmlcrefOfl'l'll, found
Jtrious fault ln hlsotherpol lcles :
'Baldwin's atti tude towards such
renred a c ti"V iti es as oratory s nd
athletics is heretical."
As a result, BaklwtJ:l's populuity
bqanfalllncfnterth.lnthehairs
ol hb thinninl tresses. Indeed, he
~j =eh~~~;:! ~=
Education and c:::urriallum design
provedsrtdtt'min1 feature.
Ttlebattlecame to a head in 1930
when Mrs. Maloney's tenn expir ed.
Maloney, still a loyal 8aJcl111in fa n,
ur&edhtrcdlesguestoconsidtrlht
procressbehadmadt. Sbepointed
tothe liJOcataloswhich listedonly
rive faculty membe rs wit ho ut
~rHSascompared to II when
S.ldwin took ofrice.
Th e Board had other priorities.
~'ailing
enrollment in a time when
other sta te coll!les were p ining
justlntd 1 chan1e. Governor Walter
Kohler appointed W.E. Atwell to
replace Eliube th .Maloney as
ReJenl. Shor tl y t he r eaft e r
~
a Steak Bonanza g
:i!
Every Sunday Nigflt l
tl
:i
CHOICE SIRLOIN STEAK
ti
:i
Q
,
THREE SHOWINGS
3:00P.M_ 6:00P-M- & 9:00P-M Based on 1'rederlck· Forsyth ' s best·
selling novel of political suspense _
Tells of a mercenary hired by French
OAS officers to assassinate Gen _
Charles deGaulle_
ill
HO~~~~C~EO~~~~A~NGS
;
choin of our funou• hommudc dratlnp
BAKED POTATO& SOUR CREAM
;
tot
a
$395
;
il!
FREE B~ERI
t!
t;l
ADMISSION $1.00
tJ
TEXAS TOAST
All yooo CL!I drirr.k wilt. y011r mul
ill
atnuun ;n;-;;;~nuun g
111
SUNDAY NIGHT DANCE
!!!
t1
<Featuring
LIVE ENTERTAINMEin
!!!
~
Grtat DMCI &.\If Enry Sund., NW~t
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or Stn• ·, 1 ~
,,, 341 1340
"11 •11!1
ill
I
SPECIAL
SECTION
Ftorn Jan. 2lllb tbfoutb Feb lit
this umpuawu mobbed by
fr om Illlnob
and
Wisconsin . T he occasion--the
Ameriun Colleae Ttlutre Festival
Rql01111l f'lm~ ... '111tteWU"efive
o~rtiall
chm.a
=~~~!:J~:Sont!~!.C'nc~~~
The fHtiv•l also included an
orialnal playbyaanduate•tucltnt
at S.I.U . <So uthern Jllinola
Unlvenity ). f'telcbl Bridaemaaand
Robm &ruch, •lq witb many o1
their students, busted their taill to
brirc the fesllv•l anclttaa~ats to
you, Fer those ol you wbo didn 't
make It, ten members ollhe PUnta'
s tarr have put toaether thl1
~n ta tlon olpusONIIntervlew~
aDd ~views ol aU lbe pliys. We
hope you enjoy it.
-Leon Ames featured
Mister Ed s_p oke
Durin& the recent America n
CoUtee 111eatre Festiv11 the cut
and crews olthe campetina: coUtcts
were Jlven the bendll ol critique
leSSionsdirectedby thestarolfilm
and staae. Leon A.mts. The participants ol each o1 the pft"formancn atUndtd two o1 these
sessions. The fint session was
private, just the dirfttor and cut
I'Ml•ilb Mr. Ames. 'l1lis priVIC)'
afforded the opportunity for an open
and honest 1pp--aisal ol the &iven
l)tf"forma.nce. The second sesaion
('Onlbined the east ol two perform.ances 1nd was open to the
public. I altf'nded one such meetina.
where lhe participants ol "Small
Craft W•min&l" and ''SUmmer and
Smoke" . were to discuss thei r
opinion. and problems.
I mUJt conf~ thlt I did not know
whattoexpect atsuch an event. I
WIS lmprused by the openness of
al l Involved. What the one hour
session amounted to wu badinage
between the light crews. stage
designers, and c01tum ing people.
Problems of adapting to stqe siu,
audience size. and time spent in
rehearsal seemed to be tbe m01t
pressina. Everyone cOQfeswd that
II was no easy ma tlef' adjUitin& to a
strange theatre without the beodit
ola ctlmplete dTea reherut
The problems ol the acton ad-
~~~ ~nf~.~ ':': ~;-=
theatre can be easily understood.
=~~edth~e s;ob::.rr:~ ar:
budgelina. '"Small Craft Waminp"
was done by Loop College. They
..,"'re not accustomed to working on
a large stage like the one in Jenkins
Tbe. tre. Northwesteo~ UniVffaity
011 the other hand , is 1*<1 to liberal
nnucing, which aHords them
.-cess to a la rger theatre. In fact,
Northweste-rn's problem was tNt ol
adjustina down to a sma ller scale.
1
nc~:'!i~le'd kb;~~~~~~~ '!
stacles gave way to talk a bout the
individual scri pts. The discussion
quickly became rather phlloaophic
and son~ewh.at out o( hand. ~
this sort of bantering started to
Include doubts about the mood
createdbytbesetand other cheap
shots . Mr. Ames Interjected and
removed any doubts about hia
quallnr:au~ as a critic. He aim ply
stated that where the playwrl&ht
fails . the actor Ills to make itao.
The discussion suddenly became
meftsensible.
·Arts .funding shrinking
" A 1eM rOll)' tut.n", is how
Mary Williams . e :u cu t in
secretary to Oancdlor Dreyf111.
predicted the fut~re in the am o(
corp:nle llon.ti0n1 to tbe Arts.
Mrs. Williams bl.ai'MS q,e overall
poor economk situation in the
country. and lllted that "human
beinp cannot become eathusiastic
aboutthl~llkepoli tk:s , rdiJ:Ion.
or the: Arts when peopk: are
IIJrcn ''. Mrs. Williams suuested
that the Arts will have to abow their
practlcalaspects i n~to aet
Robert \IL Worth, aDd the American
Oil Qjnpany ( AmOCO ) by Dale
Sapper, Director ol Public Allain.
Robert J . Hankins, Executive
Director of the Wauau area PH·
formLna Arts FOUDdation wu abo
present and staled thll a United
Fwwl raisin& drive for the Arta in
the WaL&Iu aru is u;pected to
8J'OII $49,000, but Hankins pr-edicted
a J!oomy future for Art fundina.
Ms. Jev."'l F'iUgn-ald, on behalf of
the Wi sc onsi n Theat r e Arts
As5ocia tion, CQfllmenl.ed that " the
Mr. Robert Worth headl a smaU
company that hu Umlted financial
resources : In reference to cootributina to tbe Arts , Worth said ,
" We do fed a r eapcnibllity to do
what we can". Feedb.ck from Mr.
Worth's employees showed that
they would rather have the money
l:~~ci:~~~Jft~:t!e~t :;d~
su~~P~{= =~t:U:
n::
: tr =j!~n~~
r~~
curporatuponsorshi p". Mr. Joanla
::;c:'n!.~~Y~l:u:'::;;
:!~[ ~~:a·;~n~~~e"~~~
. ~::iv::e wi:~~n~·~
int.erats were
=~~:-~e::: =~
=~to SI.WO'i !bole wbo
,,_.
.
'1'11ret buliaesa
reprneoted it~ the panel discullion ;
Se:atty lnRa"aoce. ~ b~
Joha.Jo.nis, Qalnna.tlol the Boud
and Executin DirectOr; !.he Worth
Com pa.ny of Stevens Point ,
repruented by Ita presld~t.
better world In which to Jive. He
also slated' that ''we \Sen try ) get
pressure from ditrerent if'OUPI to
bunlened with sponsorship and
mUll say 'Do' to tome projects. He
projects. Sentry does contribute to
the Arts; they are in tbe PI'CftU ol
buildin& a community tbeatre
whkhwUJbeavallabktothe publk
if tbe facility is oot abuMd.
~~Gelto f~mc~trl~tlf:m
'=
support from government and
COC'pOI"Ite concerns.
In conjunction with the American
COUta:e 'Mieater Festival Rqlon
VIII , an ope:n forum was held on
Sa turda y, January 3t, at the
Holiday Inn. Discuulon oa tho!
pouibillty o( "Corporate Spon·
sorship of the Arts" was the topic
headed by William Hanford, Dean
o1 the CoUep: o( F\ne Arts. Panel
participants wa-e members o( the:
Art community aDd businea in-
waats or beoefltl . .
primary spoasor o( the Arta. He
.waested that artl.Jta are poor
talesmen aDd that artiata have DOt
· :=1-~~~~~t~
respoaslbUity to SICJII(Irl tbe Arts"
but "'the Arts abo b.ave a r~
p
'lbla year the Federal &ovemment appropriated r74 ,700,000 to the
Natiou.l EDdowment for the Arts.
More aovernmeftl aupport. la a -
peeled ln the future, Mr. S.pper
seea mo ve me nt or com ·
munlt y an d national
sov e rnmenl l towar d . Art•
~hi&. :~ ~a.;:!~~~
gainin& COIIlrOI OYft' the Arts. Mr.
Sapperwtntontodaimthathewas
certainly not an advocate o( bit
f:e~:::·~n~~~~n~l~e:,..~
way.
Dr. Frieda Brid&ema n, from the
·University Arts Department, was
mpoaslble lor tbecoordi natlono(
the diaculaion. She told the P••~r
that Saturday's mettlna: wu meant
to ope:n disclllaion 011 commercial
spOIII(nhip o( the Arts.
Or.
Br idaeman suaaested some
CJ~t:&tlona to be answered with
lurthe!- discussion. They are:
- can the Arts sur¥1ve without
com!Mt'Cial sponsorship?
- What are the bendit.l and
burdens of commercial spon·
"""""'
- ls &OYernment sponsorship
dHir:abk?
F'•W.•r)'l, lt!lhl•IIP'.tM.r
When you
Small
bySUnLybedr;
1 aat in the Jenldu Tbeatre
thinlti,. about one ICCDe pia~ ~
craft warnings
1111
Roca 011¥U
nnneuee WiWams once rather
face.tl.oualy called his play, "Small
O'alt Wunlnga", "a play about
voptng". Lui Friday night, the
f:!:r~~· .~ ~·:;;,~:
\\-1Uiam 's remark may have been.
11Milch "Small Craft WarnilWI' '
is one ol· William'• men recent
pllys,lt deall,asmOilolhile.arlier
playsdid,withcbaracten wbo have
somehoW lc.t their drums, and in
desperation are sropina for
somethlna to trust and believe ln.
:::~~~~.~~!c:: rn-,,r~r~~
otanyonewbo happens to sit next to
btr , all the c:b.aracten In ''Small
Craft Wunlnp" ace reaochlna,
aroplng ror someooe to belp them
make It ttrqb the oJibt.
A decftpit seaside bl.r called
" Monk .." il thestlp for the play'l
dwacten to lament, bitch, aftd
=~.:;,~:t:da:e~~~:~ :~
corkle husUes himself while he
fondJes a nd believes only In hll
larae ' "personal auet"; Leona
O.wson, hit pre.ent benefactor,
lnststalhe II happy withbez-llfe In
htr "little home on whHll", but
Metnl headed down the ro.d to .elf·
destruction. Violet Doats from one
ma11 to tO the next, searcl\lni for
htrDell:tfree mealwbic.hiloften
p-OYkled by Steve in exc.Mrce for
tome mond ol affection, while
i!:m.~tt~::aa~~.·!:r~
to reveal hil bope for the ""
"Keaeration,_. aeaeration, which
fiasshOWI'Isigasof freerexl)rftalon
olhuman compass.lon . Whenplclted
up by a hom osex111l Bobby 11)'1 he
returned his touch beotause ''It was
just a human touch, and It atoeme4
naturaltoretumit".
As l..eolla, Yvonne Allen ,wu
=:~~J!~~=~~
the dominant pet10n1UI)' ol the
play, yet she has to lose ber
momentum at the ap propriate
Urnes to demonstrate her own In·
aecurity. Astheapotltaht ai n&]esout
Leona, ahe 11y1, "Llre! Ufe! I
never just aald 'Oh, well' , I've
always said 'Ufe!' to life, \Ike a
lOll& to God' too, becaiiiC I've lived
lnmyli(etimea nd not been afraid
ol...changes ... " .
With all the painful c ry ln&,
cringiq, aDd-wtimperina we have
been taugbt to nan fr«n , Sarah
Taylor crulftl Violet very ef.
feclively . r.ced with the role in
wtuch Tennessee Williams had his
.acting debut , Ramlro Carrillo waa
equally auccessful, &ivtna a aood
Imp ression or utter aplrltuai
exhluatlon.
lnvariably ,in ai'OIIdproCI~tion
wlthasetaset.bon.teutheone
called for Ia "SrnaU O'aft Wlr·
ninp", tecllnical problems will
appear. lwuJlad tolftthatamall
~~~ti~~:rrh~
were cOITeC!ftl beforo the I«<nd
!:ue:."ou~cn~t::t
"'·
' Under the d.iftctiOD ol Sidney ft.
· s-aiOI:I.
~=tJ;":'~rr:=,
Daniell, all elements of the
productioo seemed to promow a
naturalatJno.pbere,enc:ouratna the
audience to experience the
characters• dismal fedl ~a ol bdna
Ultelmallcraftslostlnaheartlesa
from hll hands. Moot acta ••
refertre between these vktums ol
U=
1
~n ~~:m:.~ c~owC::
howevft', ahinlne: forth fraD Bobby,
a youaa bicyclist from Iowa .
Thrqh Bobby,'iiilllama seems
dodecidctost.ay,youhave towatcb
the samuel for two boul'l. Once tbe
play had started, _howevn", the
actina and wondenna what was
aoina to happen next, held ~e
~or;: ~~~~:r~';arC:
our
c:ampu~.
•
bySI.evelltsKirl
"wtl.t am I doln& here", I
thouaht while waltlna for the
opcnina curtain ol Nurlhwestern
University 's interpretation of
Tennenee William's play ,
"Summer and Smoke" . John
MacDonald , the Polater'a Arts
Editor, had ulted for someone to
review that play aa a part ol the
coverage ol The American Collqe
~:If ~e:n'!:~~ c~~~. ~=~~
onlyafl.l'rbelngaasured that a
sim ple statement ol my re.ctlon .
wasallthatwasnCI'ded . Besides, I
don 'tlike to Itt: art edHon cry. So
OK. Ithou&ht, 111 try it . But while
waltina for the play to start there
wasthltqucstiCII'I-whatam ldoina
here!
But soon l'tiOUgh the rm ol
audience and I were
the lives oltwo
Southern town
p..._. Pa&e II YeWU...,.I, lt11
ria
d of
'ftlep&.Jopeoedwith.s::tepbaiand
ADCel. two employee. of the diner
dilcussln& Stepben's future .
Stepbeo. llk:lulamed "Red", .....
loi.o& to tell bla eraployw oft and
)eave town. CU.Iomtn woWd come
and JO while ~el curled sballowcoavenati«<lof amaU to-n
till& wnn uwm. A JGUnl diuP'fl
arrived In a VW bus in Deed of a new
&enerator. Tbe mau, Teddy,
==;!~~~=~~~~
hair In a friuy afro style: wu
typical of what people In a small
~alive, aouthwtstem
town Itt
tbe«<'scalled hippy. Tbe&lrl-.rith
~='="~::ffnbi~~~
cut nedt, and a CTOCbeted shawl
appu.ttd more like Teddy 's
-than a real person.
shad-
rJ:~'!:':==~
He took the keys from anothrH'
cuslomft"'s car while the customer
wu In the dioer. The customer
Ricti&NI,&ell the keys and uyste
:U'11a h~s 1: e a~=~~
~ope , thehouteli&hllaobtack,lt's
tntermiuion. For rtfteen minutes
~h~ what's happenina to
The second act opens with
ltichard havina: his arm Nndqed
byanothercustomerinthecliner. A
new &enerator had been order'td for
the VW and while Teddy and Olftyl
~~r.~itinJ, Teddy, the "disaf·
aN
==~~~hi~
othercust~"-
Young bucks
The two rebels leave and the
JIW\I.Itll' of the diner walks in, sees
people tayirc on the noor and
checks the cub register bdore
otrerin& aaistance. The pa.y eDds
with Rt<l temnc otr the manaaer.
~r~:C:~~~'!,:C
Revlewd Jr1 Cart Ll&ll4rn
YoutC Bucks, by John KIWir., il
the sl«y of the stapamtoa Buc:U •.
a ratber mediocre butelbl.n tum
whlt'bhas somehow &otten a chance
ataplayolfvlctory. Thep&.ytalr.es
pl.e:e In the Bucks lotker room. 1t
open~juatu the Bucks bavebuten
the St . EJmoCometsaDCI urned the
dlaDC'e to take on the Meridian
Vandals, wbo they have not buten
all aeuon.
Despite the vktory, there Ia no
rea l feeli nBofjoylnlhelocker
room . 'nle e:oaches are out to aet
each other. Hud co.ch U oyd Gant
Ia a lhort thin man who dreues In
an out-ol•tyle, poorly fltllna suit.
Ga.nt 1s played by Gordan KuppersUen. C:O.Ch Cant, •bo ooee
\ e:oae:hed In DetTott but left beeat&Jot
~lhehis~cJY~Ii:nC::
thills to beat Meridl.an . From •hat
we have been told about tbe two
teama, Yktory for Blqhamloll
seems unlikely. Aalistant Col.dl
Rusad Franb, pl.yed by John
Kunl.k, lheauthotofthiapl.)',il
taUer and 1tToncer In appearance
than Ganl He tTies to dres oeatly
aDCistaywllflfashlon. He would like
to have Col.ch Gant's job.
C:O.ch Gant has taken pla~
fr om Coach Franke's Junior
Varsity lftm and destro)'ed the
JV's wlnnln& 1tTea.k. C:O.ch Funke
ca11s a ''lively" niahtclub, the
casino Gonules. Sbe too
has
ruched a com..-ombe Willi life .
Her hopes have been shown false
and her drui'DI a trick tbat life
playt. Still, we feel she hu come to
be, If not happier, at least, more
aware and more alhte.
~:a~nG~~~ -~sc~~;
superintendant. Bothco.chestry to
emN rTuaeach otherln front of the
team members.
The playen are alau havl nB
..-obl em~ . Kevtn Myen, pllyed by
£ucene G. Robb , and John Kroetz.
played b)' Eric Poure:hot, Jack
"""""""'·
Myen, pl.yed by Joh n
Carney, fM!sthetenllonof trylnJ to
Tom
P~jtba H~, ';i.~fd
by Ruuel
Fear, il havin& treuble with his
Calber, wbo demandlthathepl.yln
..., ......
'nle level of tensloa in the pa.y
chanaes at different poi.nta dwin&
tbepme. Attbebe&inniacof Ae:t ll
Coach Gant tells C:O.e:h Fntnte lhat
be wanll the pl.tyen to have a &ood
time.J~atbeforethepinebellns
be Jives the team a pep talk u:plainln& hia •trateo ror kHpUtc the
p me cloae. When Cole:h Fntnke
inter r upts the pe p ta lk Ga nt
becomes arwry and, after Rndln&
the players out of the locker room,
betins yellina at Franke and p.tJhea
him over a bench.
1be tension continues to IJ'OW In
the second 1cene or Act II. 11le
Bucltl return to the locker room
after a rtlht. Coach Gant telll the
:h!n;~~~:n,e::=
u co.e:h. He alao telll them that
they are only a few points behind
and sends them back out.
Only alter Holbien's e:onlltwd
rdusal to ao bKirout, and the In·
tervt'ntlon of Coech Franke don
~= :~~."!l:oou!a.Heh~~
Nck out of the aame, despite his
..-otesll.
.:~'bf.r:'~c1e~a:J:::
Uoyd Gant and a bad 11.1)' In Ruuel
="~U!cbJo!e;: i!s.~!.
8oth
to~~ebes
are doi:JII whatever
they fed is nectuary to aet them
what they want. Ndlber of thMe
men are completely heartless or
unurin« but both have their own
interests to tend to.
· The members of the tea m are
:z~:s~~c::::.r.::~~
::.Snath~~~~ac:f:~~~h:
and playen, combined with oulalde
..-essures.
~~::;n:~~ll~~~
characters also seem reallstlc, and
the tension they created on ataae
~~r.~s contaaious. It was a fine
production.
photos by Ron Thums
Philemon
A streetcar
named desir.e
by
)tag~:l~r
tf~rnnesseWilliamsl is probablyone
oflhemO!Itoftenperformed ....·ortts
by an America n playwright. I can
tt'stify toseeingitninetlmes,either
on stageocrllm. So ... whenasked
toreviewlllinoisState University's
p!'oduction. I promised to be objective, inwardly suspec ti ng I'd be
subjectedtojustanothernightwith
Stella and Stanley Kowa lski.
No one could have been more
pleasa ntly surprised!
Under the direction of Jean
Sc harfenberg , the traditional
t tandby-of·the-stall:e came to lire
with a fresh new found vitality los t
by so many others . Cleverly
;~rranaed garbqe cans, old fur ·
nature ~:,., pipe, and chicken wi re
transformed the stage into a New
Orleans tenement building. The
~l')'alterationsoftheset
were quickly, quietly, and tastefully
handledbymembersofthecut . At
no time was the audiance plaa:ued
with complex and distracting scene
changes.
Neverfa lteringorslippi"IOUiof .
d1aracter, both Janet Nawrocki
1Stella J and Nic holas Ruggeri
1Stan ley1 totally s ubme r ged
themselves Into the personalities
~:tf,;'su":~b. ~a:O:!:~n~":!
wa1 whipped by the Romans , but
Ogdu
., A Streetcu Named Desire··
by Doaq NdJOCI
Dark, n~ng cloths naUed to
wood platforma provided theset for
a se mi·cfarkened stage. Eac h
chorus member ~~ draped In a
cape of .si mila r mate ria l a nd
usually sat or stood on a platform.
· This pervading physical da rkness
served to heighten the 1piritual
darkness withi n the play.
Phllemon itbased on an lncident
in Antioch in 287 A.D. A Roman
Com mander oUered the clown
"Coc:klan" ffft passage back to
Athens for pretendin1 to be the
Olristian leader Philemon . Cocltlan
was then to learn who the Christians
were and a:ive the information to the
Roman army. In the play '•
beginning, Cockian wU an empty,
shallowfigure ; duringthecourseof
Uie play be de>·eloped Into a
Olristian. He "became" Philemon,
and was cructrled. A sufficient
number of events took place to.
makethisch.Jngebellevable. ·
Jon Kalwarf as Cockla n, the
clown. was entertaining. He and his
partner Kiki performed a ba~·dy
clown routine a nd the chorus oc·
casionally commented on the act
with sinJingorchanting. The pace
of !he hrst half of the play wu
somewha t slow, however .
After intermission the pace
lh·ened; Cockian became 'more
believable for me. When a Roman
sold ier lifted a kni fe to Cockian's
throat, heshooltasifheweretruly
scam~ of the knife. From that point
AI the actor was excellent in his
role, a shinlna star amidst the
physkal darkness.
Another bright tpol was the
performance of John Johnson as
Andos, an eig hteen ye a r · old
Olristain who was parUt responsible for Cocklan's cMY'erslon. His
theysoa rti stica llyportrayed. Some
cr itics have used suc h terms at
alchollc p;~ranoia. schizophrenia,
etc .,' todesc ri~ Stella's older
siste r , Blanche Dubois . Wh ich
s ingle qua lit y pe r valls Is
disputable. llo....·ever . Moi ra Harris
gave us a unique blend of personalitytraltslnherlnt erpretatlon
of character. Only on O«a5!0n 01u
she stray from Der sweet Southern
3('tenL
During the first act Stella reached
to turn on lhe light which hung
above the table .~On Thursday, the
light crashed to the noor. Without
noticab le hesitalion , th.e cas t
handled near catastrophe !broken
glasaandmisplacedpropsJwiththe
t!~e a~tn?nc~J~f:ir:~1~i
as a humerous element within the
oriaina l script. Bravo for such
quick a nd clever think ing !
I can 01\ly say more glowina
thing~ about lhe supporting cast ,
1echnkal crr.:ws, musicians. etc. I
hope .those who shared the ex·
perience wit h me we re equally
en thused by the br-illiant displa y of
talent. To those '4'ho missed the
performance , I send my regre ts.
~e~~r=~: a~ ~~:;,~l~u:
than scenery . Andoastooda lone on
thecenterplat!or m wri thing ln paln
from the whip and terrifyi ng the
audie nce with his facial ell·
ro::~: ~th~ ~c:'r. w~:e
1
chorus' chaniJ grew louder and
Joui:ler as they maintained a steady
rhythm on woodblocks arxl othu
percU55ion instrument~. Finally a ·
climax was reac hed and Andoa fell
In a heap onto the plaUorm .
·An interestina theatrical device
wastheuseofcapesasa facade.
EDch time a cha radu revealed his
true feelings, he hung up his cape 10
the audience could see IIJ inside.
Although the capes were dark on
the outside, they were colorful on
the Inside, often decorated with a
~kla~ :s~:'i!'!,·';idbolarnt C::fl
tery on the outside, and when he
w11s conve rted, he removed his cape
all together.
Although the time period of this
pla y was remote , there wer e
·
~~t~~~~~~~::~l-esko ~':e =:~
soldiers greeted one another with
an up r aised a rm and "Hall
Caesa r," my mind jumped to Nazi
Ge rmany. The Roman's talk or
eliminating " less than perfect
specimens" drew my parallel
further .
·
The univ ersality of Philemon was
overwhel ming . Not only were
historical events paralleled , but the
play's beginni ng and end were the
sa me, the chorus donning !hei r
capes and sinKi ng about it. Modern
~n~a~;~~~ac~~:;~e':':;
pinno and percussion Instrum ents
rem iniscentofearliertimes. lt was
impossible to date the play by ob-
~n~~~~s~~ :~~s~~e~~~a~~h:
greatest pouession one can have i1
love.
/
·'
I'
Thea Itt Ul mock wit.ll IDdUI
llllrth WI t-k, tMIII.)c: plall; Tile
slara are laq:lllnJ at tbe eart.ll;
God'l Jl'tiW$1 joke ll DUD .
RobutStr vlce
'•
The rise and .f all of 'Dreyfus' Lake
by Steve HuKill
The depth of "Dreyfus Lake" will
be ao avenae olabout s feet lowes-
thazl 1fU oriJinally pl.JMed. The
chan1e came about after the
qineers decided lhat not as much
fill would be needed for the CUI·
atruclion of the new Sentry In·
sunnce complex 11 was flnl anticipated.
Seotry 1nsunnce 11 uRn& the
from the propo&ed lab site in lhe
t'Onllruc:tion of Its multi-million
dollar intematloul headquarters.
The Lak.e is be-Ina constru::ted
northealt of the University campu~
in conjunctioa w:ilh the Miebipn
Avenue extension . M lchiaa n
Avenueisbrincn.leDdedtortnll.lte
an expected buvy tramc lo.d aa a
rt!lul l ol the Sentry complex .
In addition to the red~ fil l
requirement , ~na of the lake
r.u
Lake". Th!ir ~mendl tlon tW
yet tobe votedon,
Sometlmeaf'tertheldeaolalake
:::~aa,.e~i~
~~·'!':r:ar.u;
ars. TbepnlblemollakedeplllwUI
be of bet aomewb.lt by the coolltUclion olan island usloc fill from
the lab site. The lliu of the lake
will not be chanaed.
A p-opoul for a lake was lint
· m86e by De.n PaW Yambt'rt blck
in t.be early IO'a. At that time he
envbiooeda ooe or two acre lake as
a hokt!r!l pond for a creek in the
north cam~ ana.
~llor Lee Sherman Dreyfus
has been aleadlna proponent of the
project. HecalledforthecreatiOQO(
a cam~ lake when he (tTSt came
to this c.ampusln the late 60's. Tbe
nounctd ill pla111 to build ill bup
::J:~ by the state
OreyfUI' dole aaocillltion with
~!:ti!tnt 0o~l~i!tei~~~
e:=
=
::,f~~!mt:,• ..
~.!t;.
new btadquarten. It olJered to dii
a take in rttum for the fin wblcb
was to be used as embnkment for
multi-level p1rtdna ramp1. The nu
will also be used in the construcUon
the Michlpn Avenue exte111ion
and for the development o( athletic
rtdds on the north md of campus.
Originally, plans called for the
removal o( 100,000 cubic yank ot
(Lll. When It was learned that the
Sentry lite would not. require the
amount ol fill first estimated, the
parties involved agreed to the
miuced water dtpth. The cono(
bytskin&thefillfortheillandfrom
a~~~ ~ ~~~teShaw, ad
by which it is con:unonly known.
usoci..te pro(euor ol lOll and
that ow111 tht property on whk:h the
lab will be constructed , has
recommended the title "Universltv
The ori&inal plan1 had caUf'd for 1
=o:~;:!:~u:
=~~lci~:; ~rbe ~~eec~
maximwndtptholovu30feet . Tbe
greatest percentage of the lake will
be about 17 feet nothet- than the
~£!!:, ;thoO::l'!:~';.,ater
qualltylnvestia;llionafortbelate,
npreued disappoil'ltment .-ith the
lowered 111'11« depl;h, he Aid the
dla..ala:wouklootaffecttbewata-
quolltyotthololto. lllo"""""
Showed that the water would be of
aood qu.all.~ with no d.anproully
flli&h nutrient levels.
High nutrient levels can result In
~~~r=.ti:n-depJ":ti!'~
dissolved uyaen u the alpe die
and dec:om pse. The resultin&
condition would be detrimental to
the orpnlsms usoda ted witb II._
Shaw bpJ'ISMd CGOCe:m that
WK:becked use ol tbe lake would
inevitably resul t In hl&b nutrknt
lewis and the ev-entual destruction
ola worthwhile late.
What the lake will be UMd for
remail'd to be seen. Many members
ol the univers.ity community, lncluclin& some faculty members of
the BloiOfY and Natw'll Raource
Departments, share Shaw's conc-em. UnllmitedURottbefacility
would undoubtably eliminate Its
u sef uln ess 11 an outdoor
labontacy. A primary Pli'Pf* for
the lake. acc:ordlna to the En·
vi ronm ental lm PKt Asaessment
Report , Is to ' 'provide an ~e~demlc
resureb and ouldoor ~tal'}'
facility to carr)' on aqu1 tlc:
studle:t." The propoled lake MU!d
be a n excellent place for ecotoclcal
sueceaionstuclles.
Thelakeisabotobeusedasa
" r ec:realional facility offerln&
swl mmi111. fishln&. etc." Mary
Williams ol the University Foun-
. :::e~'!~~d~=~~
watersltiiftl , etc. She uid she
fiYored nonmotorlud recreation
s uc:h as hiking , canoeing and
awimmi~ .
Williams said the University
Foundation plans to &Ive the lake to
the state. This would make It
ell&iblefor federal LAWCON (Land
an d W1ter Co n1ervat1on Ac:ll
money. The money woold be uHd
for development of outdoor areas on
the nor th c:1mpU1. WiiH1ms Aid
lhlt such development should be in
keepina with this un iversity ' s
function 11 an environmentally
aware institution.
I
,,
!!..~-mort! stinky. Thursdays?
Moeioee Paper Company tMPCI
b cWnc somethln& about tbdr
llinldftl smote. Tbey are In the
process of an air pollution
abatement cam~ip tbat will cost
aneatima ted$D mllllon.Theentire
project sbouki start late in 1971; 75
peftftlt o1 tbe major eqWpment b
eretted at tbla time.
down pollullnll from this source.
The new system will lnciOOe
more utensive black liq uor
evaporators and a low..odor boikr
with a 98.5
per-cent d6clftley
prKipilltor.
·
•Tbe "dry bottom, el«:lf<lltalic:
prKipit.atcr" is dtsiped to collect
SB.Sper'Cflll of particulate matter.
Melhodl of reduclrc sWlur pa
will be Incorporated In to th e
system.
A ' 'multiple condtnMr blow heal
recovery system'' will be U.talled
to control DOD~bk reduced
aulfw- p.ua. The pa will be piped
to a time kiln for Incineration.
A venturi scrubber hu been
hlrtdanenvironmenial ftllillet'rin&
(IJ'mlottucfythtirair problems. In
fr«nlheputotnUOOO~day
exltp~~e~olthellmek:lln .
~!;~~:A:t:~
~~e:n~:=ls:~~!d;t:
wu «mtrived . .
MPC c:lalms U.t the primary
ca u se or parti cu late and
~GD~ r~
~~~!:~~~
Is burned to provide 1team ror
tment*lottiectridly. Acompla:
fadllty Ia beiM comtructed to cut
!:;:~ted~~r~=
tonc~mCftthaniOOpciUD(IIIpercUy .
l2~~~J:i:"=~
will. c:ampliment the system .
11w power boiler will be capable
~~~:~f,:_ low sWfur
coal,
:er:-=~~:"sce~
.-iUberedumtoieftlsrequired
for process UM: by pualnc ttr~
the 12,500 kilowatt 1enerator,
proib::itC by-product dec:tridty.
=~d.!:c:rr:~:n 'at!
'nH" new f&c:ilily sbould mal*
MPC to meet air quality standards
~et by SUite and Federal JOVUn·
ments II will 1lao mate ute ol
eneru derived from by-oroducts.
MPC c:lalms that tbe air poUIIIIon
project comtituta the ''larJest
facility Investment In our fMPC I
tUtory",
In tm MPC st&r1ed operatirc a
water pollution abatement flcill ty .
Its
construction c:o1 1 ap prox i mately SI , UO , OOO and
operatingc:OIIImOUnted I0-1150,000
per yea r .
Tworeactorc:larlflers, l20 feet in
diameter, remove sus pended
wastes and biolocical demand
poUullnts from MPC '1 waste
water.
Prelim ina ry enai neerin& Is
completed for 1 future bloloclcal
0Jdd1tlon facili ty . The faclllty ll
expectedtoremoveanaddilional50
to eo percent in suspended solids
and another fJ ptT'Cfllt BOD.
We recf:ived DO inlonnalion on
polycbloriNted Blphenall (PCB'sl
from MPC.
Mosinee Paper Corpora tion ' s
Pulp and Piper Division plant 11
located on the banks ol the
Wisconsin River In Mosinee ,
Wilconlin . TM corponti• ha1
been operatl~ for m yean and
em ploys about 100 people.
I!
•·
Jesse Owens speaks
lddtd that tod.Jy'1 track surfa~
~re much be tier, snd lhlt back In
the30'ssprinter'shadtostartqutof
holesinsleado!blocks.
. Asked If he felt snubbed by
Adol phHiUerinthel!1360lympics,
byJobaRoacly
It was a return to a bygone en
when Jes.se ~ns spoke here
Friday night. The fOf"mer Olympic
champiOflgave the keynote speech
for the rLrSt UWSP sports clinic.
Still looking in uce:Uent physic.al
shape, Ov.-ens· appearance belied
his 61 ~an . II was hard to believe
that this was the same man who had
~!i/~:bedl~CX:t= oa~:
thetimewaslherace. He referred
b.lck to this question In his speech,
hlntingthathewasn'tthefondtstol
the deceased German dictator.
" Whalever you read about Hitler,
believe i€.'' said Owens.
In his highly inspirational a ddress, Owens stressed the
toge t herneu of the Olympic
athletes "breaking br-ead totether,
and singing and dancing totether."
He pointed out_that no other event
fourgoldmedals40yearsago. l
vr:pectedtoseeawhlle-haired old
gHUr-hobble up to the podium and
choke out his words . AI a press
v.'OII
confer ence before his speech ,
Owens answered guestions with an
eager vitality that would make
most Youn& people feel slow and old
by comparison.
QoA·ens, who now m.altn his home
in Phoenix , Ariz ., opeMd up the
.pres.scoofere ncebyexplainingthat
he stillworbout, butdoesn'tliketo
jog. "I can't go out and nm natfooted, I have to get upon my toes."
When asked if ·be thought the
~ eS.~h!~If ;:e~~:~ii:~~
Olympiadsdo.
•
He ll"ied to present a picture ol
what the Olympic gsmes a re rea lly
like to the audience. His voice was
packed with emotion as he kept
repeating, "You've got to be there
to see the nap Oying . .. "
Owens told of bow he aspired to
become an Olympic champion from
age 13. He told stories of two
Olympic greats, rflile r Glenn
~~rdm!~~-h.;!!~~~r!r!\:~
traceoflrTitationinhlsvoice. Ue •
feels that too muchol"the negative
is stressed r~rding the Olympics.
"You can't get away from politics.
Politic s enter into a l most
everything you do." Evidently,
Owens had heard this question too
many times before .
Owens was asked If be could have
beat such cur-rent great sprinters u
Ivory O"ockett and. Houston Mc·
Tearbackinhisprlme. He dodged
the question by sayina that back in
his time most runners competed In
three or four evenls, whereas now,
ll"ackismorespec:islizedsothats
ruMer runs in one or two events. He
~dol~~:.,:ndov:~an:: :~:r!
bums and polio respectively to
become &real runners.
Jesse Owens is a man ol strong
cl\aracler and film rell&ious beliefs.
Speaking with the fervor of an
evangelist, he asked his listeners,
"What is your dream?" He may be
from a bygone era, but his pa"ulon
for lheOiymplcgamesstillburns as
hot as it did forty years ago.
Tournament -held
by Paul Cha mp
The ht.DUen were chalking their
cues and the popping ol the pingpong balls was fast and furi01.a . The
li mp-wrist boys III'I!Te loosing it aut
with their last drop ol energy. The
action wu hot and heavy u the
Association · of CoUeae Unions International Tournament got un=~Y this week in the UC pme
The number. ol local entranta
t:te!:~~~=~~maft
standi,Stev~PointwWbesen­
dingsevenrepresentativeswiththe
~~~~:zr~ng :::,n~~ !:t!
sch~willw= l:c~ta~o!: ~
:.I'll
st UWM dCinnl. DrinJdnii:
money comes out ol thdt OW!l
At stake were trophies !or fint pockell.
Talking with Ernie Woonler, the
and second place, and !or the
winners,anexpensepaldtriptothe assistant manager ol the g.ames
regional finals at OW-Milwaukee room and loc&l coordinator of th1J
be&innina February 19-21 . The semestn's tournament, he teemed
regional foosba.l l winnen will 10 on sli&htly optimistic of Pointers'
to the national finals at Southern chances in the f"tlionab compared
Illinois University; table tennis to last semestn's tourney. He felt
winners 10 to Denver with IS that table teMis might not be 11
regions in the United Slates btin& Jtrong this lime 10 that Pnl.nter
represented plus enti r es from ping-pcq:ers coold do fairly well .
In fOOibaU , even thau&h ''we were
blown aut" when we got to the city
and between 20 and JD foosba.ll last semesler, the level of local
learns competed in a two aut ol competition~•• tten much
three elimination type tournament Jtronger.
Wocntn
t th.at ~hue were
until it was dowa to !be last eight
finalbls who then played of! 1ft a
anumberol&ood pool shooters here
round-r-obin with the man cw- team on campu1 but none to match the
wi,th the best record taking the caliber ol play to be found In
ll"Ophles. Only a handful ol ta!M Milwsukee.
A.lthou&h he bas bet!l woriting in
!ennis players turned aut bidding
the pmes room for tbt: put four
for top hooors in liqtles snd doubles
competition , with the women
yean, Ulia ll Ernie's first lhot II
competing alon& with the men, even _ ruMilll the tournament. Nut year
though the ladies were noticsbly
he would like to tee Point enttrln&
outmatched. Tbt pls also played In some ol the evmll that wer-e
along with tbt: guys In f005bal.l,
t!!.T.:.~~. ~t.!ctuc~~
ususlly as mlxed partners and
fairing a litUe bettn, but the and skeet
billiards to urnaments we r e
When I uktd him how he thought
separate, a lthoua:h a mere pair of thelevelolcompeUtlon in !be U.S.
femsle -"Falt Eddies" c:a.me out !or compared to that of otbet- cauntritl,
he pi(:lled the Amerkans ''bec.ause
oflhenumberolblln."
University of Wiacon1in
u~~
J,i?
POINTER
BASKETBALL
TuMday, February 10 River Fallo (H)
Friday, February 13 Eau Claire (TJ
Saturday, February 1.( Stout (T)
\
t:Exclusively- orz.
P11&.-ll " Fdnuyl, IJ71
.
W185
in s~eree
W!KOIIIIfltiiAI'IOS .I ITIVIJIII'OIIIT
shooting.
............
.
UW-SP VS·
Ca;!~iy~:::~ ~iJ1a=~Yen
r......-
- Stevena Point
- .. for all of Central Wisconsin
103.3 FM
103.3 FM
~M
·'
I'
'i
•'
I
OPEN FOR
.LUNCH 1J:OO !.M.
· &.6E~ S
'
• WA.M t.5WiiS
·ltEIJ BE~
- p.uri..AMI
· TURJ(J;'(
BEER:PITCHH.
1.2.5
flt,!$1"/Pr ..
AHPE"K.f f::... /.1 ~c..
I:£1"W'f:"' Z-7 ell Hat·W.
'
...
Juilliard String Quartet coming
~t'let hal rec:onkd tOifllbtr.
Stcond vlolh1l1t Ia Eul
C.rl•tlloaJuiiUardSdlool
alunuN.. wllo auended dlt
iulllull on11aa ..... ; •• ,
:""u..rW!i.t!f!~~
fll ~- Ha IMide bb
~tal debut It! N..,. Yortl In
IM2.Be'-jolaltctbtqt;Wt.
Cartyu wu I:ODC'II't•INIWI' ol
theN-Y.nctb'hllet.- ·
UAB AUDIO VISUAL PRESENTS
tOE OF
THE WINTER OLYMPICS
ON THE VIDEO BEAM
( 4x~
FOOl: SCREEN)
FREE-
~EE
PLACE: PAUL BUNYON ROOM, U.C.
. FfBRUARY
.FEBRUARY
FfBRUARY
FfBRUARY
FEBRUARY
SAT\iDAY, FEBRUARY
SUNDAY,
toDAY,
TUESDAY,
-~~·
8-1:30 & 8:00 P.M•
9-7:30 P.M.
10-8:00 P.M.
11-7:00 P.M.
12-8:00 P.M.
14-1:30 P.M.
I
I
•·.
'·'
Evanadkal J1'l'ft Olurcb services
~- :,:J:;: =e~i~=:
~
L~J
Division.
I
Trinity Lutheran Olureh • r:orner ol
Qark aocl Ropn . SUn. services
1: 30and11 am . Fordally~
mt~A~e :M+B'l.
FOR SALE
Coupon boob,
NewmaoUru•onlty l'uUh · Sot4•
I
6 pm. Newman Olapel ; Sull 10 am
%749413.
"9 ea1h. Clare :w..
6
CDupon books, QOeae:b. CI U Jull or
Marie in401346-4778.
Newman Lutber'an Stuctent Oxn·
munity sftvke with Qac:harist &an
9:30am. Peace campus Center.
Ford Ltd '6$, Gatu:ie 500 good
condition, Sl20. Ed 333 Schmetkle
34&-3158 or om Sdence Bldg.
II Anthony
~!n4::~~v~~-~~~
QWnn. Jlctie Gkuan,
I r:'~~:t~c!f:." Newman
Scuba Equip!. tank, regulator, bac·
pac, XL wet suit and bood, comp.,
....~i&bt belt, compau, knife, aod
Newrun ; 11 DOOO O ols ler also
pm . WI!Hda)'l mua at IZ noon.
m<n. Ailfoc-$225 ! Alsos-trae:lttape
player- $20. cati 341-14CII, John.
UELP WANTED
Needed to sdl Brand Name Stereo
Qlmponenls to Studeals at lowest
prkes.
High
cunmluioo, no in-
ve s tment r eq u ired . Ser i ouS
inquiries ONLY! FADComponenls,
lnc. 20Pas.saicAve. Fllirfield, Nf:W
Jersey. a7006 Jerry Diamond 201·
I
~~~~~~e==~·~n:.
dka
pPe<l. cau 341-7S45 evenlnp
l
Ola:rlea Wein5teln.
RHidence An lstant Positions
Available • Appliations may be
picked up fnxn Housing Office or
anj . Residence HaU Direct« on or
before Feb 11.
''------------~.a----k-~--~~~---E--~---~~~------.a------~0.~~~
APRIL 15 DEADLINE
271talian Medical and 9 Veterinary
Schools Accept American Students
Medic:1Land ,.l .. onl ty KIIOOI .. plr1nl1 who ' " tlllnUng ol IP.
pl)'lngtollallaolonedicaiiCIIOOis, andt,.if lllrlit;n, llltBia.;t
-.oialety. ,..wlla lian gOftn'l_,. ,.~ ·~""'• liLa! 111•
~ripl;,;,napeolieahoM~ l~.;,.,lhehU...E-Hyift WUII .,
~;::~·::;..c::~~~C!!'ir:'t~r:tr7~~ lor
27dil l"'!!unn.o:l lllllton
Did You Remember
Your Valentine??
~ICaiKI\OOIIKCipiAn!lflunl •
.S.W..alNifldfi(IAn~~rlc.,..nowa<aSI..,.,II\QIIIltalian~lcal
....,_•lnaryac'-!a.
Allappllu~mwt<IKIIIIIIItaltan Elllbusy-Coftlula!H
lllfofiA11' ~ 15 t.lldlc.al . .... tallitld-rlllarytc'-'al(llrantl
wi'IO need a.-blanca In I~ and CII"U<II onanlallon, _ .,. ,ion bllofl. Ourillg and ana• madleal tc-' 10 - blithe
II'IC!Iceol mtellciMinti'IIU.S .. III'IOUidcontacl tllllnst"ull ' ol
lrotiNIIIionalt.lldk.aiEduoc:allon . Thllnat~ullr.allllped -•
"-rieeff ...... and-anl~t Eu<-madlc.-.-nd-rlnary
acr.ooe.t.....,Mr'/lltJ'Itfll'g.,.lration.
~.:.-=~~..::t.~~=:o...~r~.~~~~:
dbiKC1911d. Cont.act$1udlnllnfo< ..... lonOftk:l.
ummrTE OF urrt:IINATMHW. MEDICAL EDUCATION
.........,~'lt.~~~~.:cr.=~.::*·
SHIPPY SHOES."!!'..
...
,lft
\
Occupational thera pist needs
227-61114.
WE DIDII
I
~
~
regular
Detours around
columns
Armageddon
laser
Crime of the century
.,AI,.....
.
technology
·
After incident5 like ihe one tM t occurred In the Phy Ed
buildln&last Saturday (see story pase five> I s tart wondutns
If "Peace oa Earth, Good will toward man"ls really nothing
mlk'etllanpoetry.
.
The ' Insane things that man Is cloin& to his brothers are
geHins more and more commoaplace. Tampers set heated
and anything can happen. II'S danserous.
The qe of the assassina could come to a close howeve:r
be<:ause o!_ a recent technological advancement. Violent
death , by gun at leut, could be eUmlnt.led beeau&e of the
newly maBeted Tuer.
·
A Taser Is somethlns like a ntlniature laser gun. In my
mind it'• the sreatest thin& to be marketed In America alnce
lhe Barbie doll witb aenltalJ.
If ~ery ltritated flakO that now takes a gun or knife Into hll
'Failure of the press
.:e:'d::
~~ :::~::e~ ~~"t::UJ~~~:r
jectofyouranae:rtheTaserstunsthetargetwlltian'!fectrtcal
cha rge. Alter the trige:r Is pulled ;ou view your opponent
&olnl throuah atrocious muscle spasrr11. It's palatul built's
ove:rafte:ra few minutes.
~r~r=-~~=b~:::;a:i?.:co!
Ori&inally, lt was not my intention to review every prop-am
=~~~::::: r:..nn::~au:;~nat!:';!o:;:"~i:=~
them. Political auallinl could zap their prey and maybe
after one too .many zaps from tbe Tuer the candidate would
get the message that maybe he Isn't wanted. II wou.ldll' t lene
any widows left behind to bada:e:r. Police could beauthoriud
to carry the hiahe:r power units (maximum cbarse perfected
to date la one ol 3 watts at $0,0011 volts). When abo6touta wltb
the badguya OCCUlTed the coppers could simply ~ their
charge and out startle the crooks and Jock em up. A major
change In television detective abowa plots would no doubt
mull.
1be Taser offers mankind Its fln t chance to commit the
ultim1te act of vlaleoce wllboul actuaUy ldUlDI anyone. It's
the tbouaht- that counts, rtaht'!
· Last wtoek , ~vld Wrone of the UWSP history depar-tment
appuredon Channel 7 program "Last 11Junday." Wha, t this
program amounted to wa1 a token effort ola compllant pnss
to make it appear as thouah they wanted both aides of this
issue beard. Their performance oo this pr'Oirl.m prove. they
really do not want this at all.
Joe GazJn, the program 's moderator, wu so uni.Dlormed
that be did not eYenkflO'IV whether Dr. Wrooewu proor antlWar-renCommlsslonbe!oretheprogram bepn. lf thll did not
prove hll igoor~ . thequnUont be uteddld. Jt wu radlly
apparent that he knew nothina ol the buie laues involv«t in
the assassination aDd ukedoaly Juperilical quest! en 1uc.h u
Wrone 'a ~;~uaUfiations for apea~ out aplolt the Wal'ftn
~?.l~O:t!~w=~~ ~';:.ol~~!!~~r'=!:!\
whieh were phoned ln.
•
''ri~J~~-~~~~~~;.':~roaJ~=
'Equality, Uberty and Fraternity'
wt:fuoc:lredl of othen,
called Ownw:l 7 thedly after they werealredprotesu.nc whit
assassination Ia just not true. I, alODB
:~:=w:-~~~:~ls
rr ~~e~~r:s~~~:;
a public forum for
mouthpiece for the many people who do not believe the lies
the media has been feedins us about this subject since the
local minority .
eo,:.::n!.:n~~~j;eadiT~~:enc/e.!,";f!;
w~n:n.
group struggles
=~!~:~~~!,~e::=:e:~~c!:=:.
filled 30 minutes '! 1biJ bush~eque production typifies tbe
manner in which the mediA handles this subject, and I oaly
hope !he public is ln!ormedeoouP to see Ull"'U&h II.
... the f ight continues
by UWSP Blick Shlduts
M~:a~. : ~~:;e:e~~m:~:;=~~f,: ::"~~~~
and sonnet form , of passionate driian« set Into dlaclpllned
~~n:a:~~~~~=~~~:at' ~~r~J..a;;,~a:::!~Y!~
expeditions are raised by the ease and tranquiUty
verse and shattered by the significance of thewordl.
Allh•&b site IH'dl me bread oliHttenn:..
·~nd links In to my thr~t bet UJe:r't tooUI,
Slellilll my brutll of Ute, I wW cOAfnt
l tovethituJtw-tclhcii U!atW.c.mry ..U.l
l ~r v11or II IIWI like tldet late mr blood,
(,lvlnJrMIInt~Jtbapl"'the:r.Pte .
l ~r biJMt• sweeps my bct•lllh a
'u·llta rcbel lronC.IIti•liatYle,
n....t.
l t llltdwllhta berwllltwiiiii.CINrt'll
til terror. rnsllcc, aot 1 wlln:l ol}etr.
Dartly l pu lalollle daysalludl,
"'""*"
t\ nd 1ft bcr mlcltt 111d &na.l&a
tllere,
llene1lh the t01te h of u-.·uacma1 t.a 11d,
Ultt pt'iutnt lrfl"lrH llalti"C II lirle 111M1.
P ....... Pll~ ll Fdnary I, lf11
ot
the
~
Recipes for good health
.
c.nie Wllvla
By
About t11e1prout, oh, tout the sprout , Ulough nmnc will not
mate you stout. 11le vita min clout jives colds the rout, and
btlpsus1tand the winter out.~ kllows sprouts. They
tum up In moet American attempts to cook Oriental and on
btalth food lists, and lfttee the cans in amongst the 10)' uuce
and fried noodles. But the fresh sprout, tNt unique child ol
A weekly from student .oovemment
The student
.,_ ......... University
culinary and ~ultivatina lncUn~tions, may be a new ex·
perlmti!"formany . And whit Inexperience! Asmue:h better
~~:!c~f:; :!~'1-~e~Y~r:W =~laughter.
..
-suitable seeds or beans. n.emoet typical are from munc
buns with the lhrudy, delicate alfalfa a &ood 'cllr.rce ot
bal'faC bet..a a concept G(
=~==~lyalwbodleyvi. fteeG~~eept
11oM 1tudeat1 by tbis time u-e ll or okler. By dellaiUon,
, _ ... a pi"Dbbem I'Ve bell!ll
.Ute ... _..,... thaN ltudeall kpl Mlul1l with
.u
~.
- • big jar or bowl , gl.ul or plastic but NOT pottery, with a
lid or pl1te to nt on top. nUt Is your terrarium .
Rinse the beans or seed and soak one part bean. to four
tbe
n,JU.:I~tielcladulb. Aiadulbtbey.tlouldbe
~rts~~~C::~e:n~~~u=~~=v~bu~
.cthoe ,.nk:lpeotl lo tt11a Llalltutkla aDd Ita as-atka.
IDmJaffortltldi J.U,I'vedvely~ledlhil
li;Jd for toupl, etc. Too m.tny water tolua.ble vitamins to
pour down the drain. RiMe well, draining well, and cover. Put
thecmtalner in a cool , and if It Is trantptren t, dart place .
Rinse and drain well at lust twice a day unlil the litUeroot Is
about an inch l q. U you wbh to s.ep.nte the bulls, fill the
container witll water' all$1 11ir vi&oroully, and m01t will float
to the
Rdr!Jerate your harvest in a plastic bee for a few
da)'l and, oddly enouah. tile vitamin Ccontent wlll multiply.
=.=.:::..~~~~~~~:
.,.menu,.~ it. TN1 ba been oae o1 tbe eotC1Ura1inc
Mpettl cl til LlalltuUaD.. The tad put II tht;t tbe prtawoy
~.:.::rtt!bo~~r::~~~~=
~
Co-opcook
top.
tbe c:oocept aad rality. Let me ouWDe jwt a few
'
aamp6M.
0
~'7~~:~e::,tt:~~ a!'t'::;,!aooe!::b:Sk
WltlltbeOIOeleciNiilunol Retaureel1t thil UDiventl)' we
.re~•-oltbem.tjorareuclal'firu1meata.l
in Oif""winter routine .
Lastly, the plug : coincidentally, yau call fmd mq beans
and alfalfa leeds at the ELLIS STREET C~P. 1115 Ellis
Street. How 'bout tNt!
.cdao. Slultentl t.ve bell!ll actively lmolved 1o maiiJ ea.
~tal-- -wtlalu tbe ~CUd,
bibs .U.,..., tbe lllkldpa Anrue extenlioa, etc. 'Iberlyou
klotatourampu~wlthil'lbeateDdOim ,mud~lhldedped
toiiYeiOCDIIludei:U thole predout fewllepl . Or tbe P1f*
tb.t Ut-. tbe ampu~. Or the dpreUe buttl
lllelarded•lltbewboieworld_..e
.tltny. I'm a ftrm believer m the old . , . _.'pnctlee
wt.t JOU pradl."
, The G.l. and I.R.S.
~
Aaotber aru ol coocen~ il tbe uruvenil)' Ceater. I'm not
.._ wbethlr you bloolr tbia but ltUdeob are paJial for tbia
trltirw buiJdiDt. Yau ~Y for lt'1 •operallca, ~. ud
martcqe. Yet, m01t neryoae _ , toaaume thil il
=··I~~ :.:nlr~~=-=-.ri~
Vet's comer
taaeta.W::?:w\tb pl.pel' toweil, ~. tupl, CUI, ud
w
tbe ute.,. ~~tteWa &rU:M~
~tt.. rter pm;ea~ dpmte
bulb are nea p'OUDd out m the earpet! 1be list ot eam.t
acttjlatJJ"WW,butewamoredistlrbinlare tbernaJa,dc,..;
attl ol deMntcticc. M part-owner oll.bil buildi.Dc, I raeat
ID)"'OIepwpciRiycklllro)'UICUUbulJdintbritl coat.enta. You
bave no riPti to do 10 !
News for campus vets
Tbae are jult a few poiata to ccmider. A. adultl tbere Is
reall)' no reuoa forew:ra tbe care&e. ..::tl wblchMe CGmJDll
Aladultlalldltudeatlllltulrlnltoomue:btojultt.biJI.koace
in a while about tomeone die! I bope we tall ~ our
~eopetolndwleotherpeoplemd tbeir needl. Alii ukil that
)"'Ujult lhlnk a UJtleabout wbatyoudo. U tbere'u eoaflict ill
~~~:::~ott!rl:;:e:a:t:'=Y:ett!
"""PL
-
Minority groups interested
in utlizing E·L·&F·
con contact Pointer
at 346-2249
or visit roOm
026 Main.
Tax time 11 here, and hopefully the Information will assist
some veterans who 1re eurTently attending school in
preparin&theirtaxes.
Questloa : lamavetattendin&schooiontheG.I. Bill . Am I
required to report the money I receive from the Veterans
Admlnillnltion on my income tax fonru !
Answer : No, the money from VA 11 tax exempt, or non·
tauble. However if you are claiming WlKonsln Homestead
TU Ciidit, you mUll report the amount from VA on tha t
application form .
Question : lwurde.ased from the service In 1975, and &ood
old"UncieSam''forpttoKI\d me myW·2 fonru. Where ca n
I obtain them?
Answer : To obtain W·2 rorms from the military you could
write to oae olthe addreues below, dependina on lbe branch
of the service you were In, they are :
ARMY :
Record~ Division
F1nancial Histories OperaUona
u.s. Army F1Ninte SUpport Agency
Indiariapolis, Inciana 40ft
AIR FORCE:
Air Force AttounUna • Finance Center
ATrN : C.A.D.
.
31100 York Street
Deaver, Col.orldol0205
OOAST GUARD:
Last ckl.ty ttalion OR :
Commandant, U.S. Cout Gutrd
ATrN: F .P .
Wasttington, D.C. 205!11
NAVY:
,
Navy f'iranceCmter
Ct-n tral AccounU: ~rtment
Oeveland, Ohio 4114
MARINE CORPS:
Command1 nt ol the Mtr lne Corps
COO. CDB
Wasbinaton. D.C. 203m
l
, Engel perilized
r
reviews .
111E PERILS
OF COUNTRY
LIVI NG by Davkl DIJtl tPorlloJt
~s.llpaan.SZ.Stl.
.
Rtvie•-N b7 Rob«t S....kJ
~~d ~lis1h'is ~:n~~~ ~
:r:ti~c:n;:~~~~: ~r::
1
~l!:"':bt~ ,:~.:t~·=:~u~
Dracu.l a sucks
Revlc•·f'd by CW Petrick
If you bappc:n to be one ol the
~=~::. :d'f.s~':~~~b=
this year's " Yciuna Fra.nlttMtel.n,"
you a l"'ady know you we"' taken.
lfyoudidn't, lwuattheJ«neol
the crime and file lh!J report on a
thorou&hly diqusUna mtsJ ol a
film called "Old Dracula ."
"Old Dracula 's" nrst mistake ill
to compare illell with " Youna
f'rankenste\n ." There ls no com·
parison . " Youna FrankenJtein "
r:~~r:r· ~~~r~~ ~~:!!:~n~~~:
and lilly.
•
The Heond mista ke was to ac·
tually sprina Juth a hideout and
awful ftlm on the upriJht and hone.t
citiunsolthiscountrywhowantto
enjoy movies.
'"'ld Dracula " is an insult to
virtually eVfl')' Dracula film ever
made. II is too MW to be cam py i.n
the way the old Bela LuJoa:l
Univcn.al borrol;: rucu a"', and it
can't hold a pint ol blood to the
Hammer horror film1 ol tate whieb
5tar Olris ~as the mt-ey«t blood
lUCker.
Draculah.ua •olid~lloni.n
fil.ns as a very nuty penon.
Beginnlnainthe•ilenterawith
" Nolferatu", continuin& throu&h
Tod Browning'• l..u.Jilll version, and
"'inc&rNoted by O!.rislophcr ~ .
Drac:ula hat been the darkest evil to
ever walk the Earth. "Old Dracula"
lu!CN-n as an author'seditioa: I.e.,
the author footl the C1llt of
blows tbe image. In the movie
David Nh-en. a usually very rine
actor, pla)'l Dracula as a gen·
tleman and scholar who Ia only
slightly more evil than the next
door neighbor, depending on which
neigl\borhood YOI.J live ln.
Caslle Dracula nu been robbed
of its evil di&nlty and Jtands a• a
tourist attraction complete with
fake bat.s and wolf bowls. Why , the
plac e doean ' t even hav e
~ta~om.:S~~o !Z,~!:f
:J:yf}:;
bunnies, a handsome pboto&rapher,
a hard-to-set female executive type
and a male model tben mixes them
all to&elher in Castle nr.tula,
:bfo::thlhe~~~~cdle~"rble~
MOll insultin& Ia Teresa Gl'avea
who plays Dracula's wife. In the
procc:u ol brlna.Jna back Teresa
from deadly anemia, brqht on by
drinkirc blood from a skk peasant,
publlt hlng . One of the ma~or
drawbacksofthistypeof~alion
however ,ls thattheaulhorhimsell
ends up dtddinJ what goes In and
wha t stays out . He becomes his own
editor In othtr words. In En&el's
timesandstama tthepbcwlefortoo
l q." Other tban these f~ lines,
however, he falla to traNCend the
bizar"' t"Niity of the pbototrapbl
~ cbooles to compliment his poems
with.
Engel does have bette!' luck,
though, with his pocma about
prOfP'eg. "Swamp Valley" touches
on the demise of Arcadia In our
modern soc I ely, and
"Redevelopment", a lament about
the destructiveness of urban
renewal , comes acrou as the
strongnt poem in the book:
more tbaa&reeti
mcwet them
Wkar4-albeokl
Lo replacelavcr•
· with par kin1 kKa
casethemWtsarenotthebest.
What might have been a modestly
slim, fairlyreadllblerintcollection
it mar~ by questionable lne:luslon
ol certain poems and exceaive selllndulgence, leadlf'll this reviewer to
believe one of the perils of country
l nosptrtulnd~alll
Wreplacedust
wilh t lft l and ctau
lnOJplrll lomallll
JlvlnJ l Engel llves ' ln nurby
Wpnelhecarl.h cntlrely
Rudolph) jult might be lack of
critic:allnsiahl.
aoltbecomnlmpoul b~
ru~ce::t!'t'en~t:,lr P:~: ~e~~
to pan thnqb IOWJt
1
fir:C::~.~~~ :~=rt;:
:sct!:~De~~~:fr~
Enael 't tllula r theme: several
poems even attempt to ~large
upon them.
But whereas lAS)' chose ,to
Jhelslnjec::tedwithlhebloodo(the
Playboy bunnies, one ol whom Ia
blaclr.. Teresa, of course, awakes as
a black vamolre who hu a cravin&
for soul food and jive talk. From
~a~te C:i~.m,:::eh ~~h b!!
::;i!~nd~~~c~~~:
:iu.~ rallng a llows , and minor
compdllnJ account, Ett&el, with bls
potml, faUs 1hort of capturing the
same sense of &rolelqUerle and
"Old Dracula" is a
terribly
unfUMy movie. Tbe only good thin&
It has golnc lor It il nice color
photo&ra~y : otherwise foraet it.
Ia In '1'\e Perils ol Country Uviq
M-U" : "AwaiUngyou lhept.ctstbt
odd corntrs and mtuurtt the
walls, Facts the windCM;,,!. dozen
111\dfracorehlspbotocn~phs
with
cltiUing newspaper ace:ounts of
dlsplacement . Thecl~~~e~thecomts
wllboulatlloqbt
As far q succaaful pocma ao,
however, that'• about II. 'n)t rnt of
Perlll Ia laf'lely liven over to a
~eelion called "The Travltt" l1icl,
and never mounll much momen·
tum. Ercd allo c:boolel to end a
r::..~::..a:;~.:"·~daw~~
for dlddy ; "dafydd " for David, etc.
What this Is dolrc in a book o1
poems, I have no Idea: I put It down
to esoteric sell-induJ&enu.
So, to recapitulate : Tbe Perlll ol
Country Uvlng Is not a very lood
fin! collecUon. But It Is bandlomely
produced, wtth Jome lnterHUnJ
photOJfaphJ. Tocetber, with what
poem• that do work, I'd &ive It a C
~~.
COMING NEXT WEEK
UAB PERFORMING ARTS
PRESENTS IN CONCERT
The Monty Alexander Trio
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 14
9:00P.M. -COFFEEHOUSE, U.C.
with tick~from· Union. lnfo. desk
FREE
BUY ONE BigShef
GET ONE FREE!
:··········································
BUY ONE/GET ONE
ONE AlEE •
:
FREE! ""'"-*'
SHEF WITH f'\MCHASE Of ONE AT RE&UlAR f'RU
. orm~u,....
:. • • • • • • e • • •
0000 Otoi.T AT
8aarge:r Clef •• •• •• ••
limited number of lickets.
Zuckermans
excell
byKnlA. Pfti.W
Doyouk.oowwbatlt'allke to be 1.n
love aa a balmy -.unmer aftenloc:G '!
An you familiar with U. li&.b o1
~ r v ~ d'- fJ /~ ~'~
). Waste saving coupon ~
J>
rdidlhlt~eswbe:nyouaotou
=~md~~l.a~r!
truly briUlant pert:'manc:e by
Dcmia
and Pinc:hu Merman
t'YGked IUdl feellnp in the Artl and
L«tures Seriel ewnt lhlt loot
placeinliliebdan Redt.ll KaJJ la&t
~Y~ioltanUyawareol
the duo's comm.ndiDf • taae
their artistic In-
pre~eDCe and
~=-~~~'=
and liZS. The pkcel pllyed were
wr ilen by VIval d i , Ku hla u ,
Te lemaoa , Hotf mehter , and
C.P.E. S.Cb.
n::;p::~=:!'':er:
in
1oidftl Rute , and Pioebu on violin
and riol.l . The intoaation and Interpretation were Rawlesa. I m111t,
however , c omment on t he
pr111n.!Dmil'll, ln lbat tbefint four
CUIIeCUI.ive •orb <tbe eft~ first
baUa.ndputollheMC'Oftdl wereau
in minor t e,s. Only tbe lut two
selecUou a nd the additiona l
::3fti:. =-~
-
1 =~ majo r
Theft C'ftt&inJy ll eaouah pCIII·
IIZ5litenture nistiz!c for t.biJ type
o1 duo CGmbin~~tion , but there Is
DOtbiQI wronc wi th u tractlr~~ an
entire concert from one ~rtlcular
period, and I ftljoyed _.,. minute
ct the ZWiermarl ~tlltion .
Samuel Saodera, who hu a rated
~~.!.J:~or~
ZA*.enn&lll .
cl ip out and deposit in Pointer boxes
•
Sago foods,
7J1irh~
I h;ghly object
tothouseofm Uk
!
§
~
oooons ;n placo
~
;ntho
b
Un;vors;ty oofeto<k>
~
•
1
1
•
Namo
ptfr
.
~
Vests in
Stock By
North Face
'- and Jansport
•
.
of large milk dispensers "'iO
~\
~
-~ ~ '==~ • ~ •
~
A4dross
~
.
•
~I
~
...
"'- ~--~ .
1. Write an epic poem no shorter than
DOWN VEST
247 pages long using the following
5 words only: cactus, Gold, lime,
Sun rise, Agamemnon.
2. Read Milton's Paradise Lost. E xplain
why you·liked him better when he
was on TV.
3. Translate a n\ap of Mexico into English,
leaving out aJI the consonants.
4. Disregard all of the above, make a
pitcher of Cuervo Margaritas, and
invite all yocu friends over.
"""'•,. .. t.,.h~Zl rt161Mr
...
DEAR GRADUATING SENIOR:
..
We wovld ·like to talk to you about something important to both
of us... the future. NO MATIER WHAT YOUR MAJOR, If you have
decided that a career in management might be what you want
ofter graduation, register to talk to our. ShopKo Representative on
campus Tuesday, February 17. He will be happy to discuss our
Mahagement Trainee Program with you.
)
There is opportunity in retailing as in almost no other field at
present. It is an exciting, challenging career. We know, because
ShopKo has been part of the retailing picture for 15 years;
opening as a discount operation and evolving Into a multi.faceted,
one-stop shopping concept. We now operate 19 Retail Stores,
plus Fabric & Craft Shops, Home Improvement !=enters,
Pharmacies, Gift and Specialty Shops and Self-Service Gas Stations.
\
Because of our constant growth ·shopKo has excellent career
'potential and benelts for aggressive, responsible individuals who
have the capaCity for decl~ion-making· and who entoy dealing
with people.
In ShopKo's Management Program, qualified individuals are rated
strictly on their performance. Advancement to management,
added responsibility and Increase in salary come fast for those
with leadership capabilities.
._/
Do you feel that you might be one of the bright outgoing women .
or men we a·re looking for? Then why not talk to us about the
future ••• ~ours AND ours. We hope to see you the 17th.
Sincerely,
David A. Liebergen
Personnel Supervisor
· ~
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