Sub•aurlace SoJourn Off..c:.ampus 15 cents PP. •z·•~ Febtvory 20, 1976 Worth looking into Buycentennial bodmouthed, Colorfu l comments, T•'llle PQttr, Wbtnl(ll"llnedthePointurrp~rt• the IF.nife-wtllcllq lnddtnt Ill tilt Qu1ndt l)'rn ,_ w~ qo, I kntw )'OU'd&d •lot of flack frorn 1111111 ~~:~?.!::!. ·~:~Ill== ....... ........,. •·blt~wboca n' l-beyand lbtirdftln IOippt.l.fliberallndulltUM'd,Jw the dlrrere~~l rxa a11,11e tt®rntt lnvolvtcl, Well,whenlhl.tlltbiltbe ftnllltllt lu i luue, I wu Ill Rt to Wrile tfltr _ ~~~doer nwnticlninl PblbaD ,...,.... Bet1DI tam CO.. Raa .-uc) ~;:.:-:--~·t:JDam- re~~dlnathtnnttolumnolltltmiNI drcidedltwOIIIdn'INIIllybf:necai.u,.. Soltm•Jnotbe~. illt riCJ!t. and 1 a&rtot .;a. ~~-·,.. _, .... "'' SWB'a dlmn •m. MIUSdlwaiM J?tThem . . Iadoer Bllllar• ToarDaaleDt ....... ,. to... a...uca Tl l.beP~ .... A rettlllttor)'la thePointtr tbNa :J;-· ... - - - =--· .. =::';A::IDcllllap,f:» =~~~ ~~7:Jtpp fortheiM:Iullonoflhei"'C'etllnvalved. Nany felt th1t UIUifCftlllt andaome nen br anded ttracl.t. All I Pointer lt.IR writer I t)'lll· p~lhl&ed with Sllnelr.'a Plllitiol ll wbtthtr ot 1101. to ' Nlt mcaU.:.ofr.ceandpn.IMIHIII!ialolf :=.::--."':Q• ,...a ...UM,,.« um ....... deddirlc -a..·-·-·.... ~PAULJIAft'Y, UAB--~ I do !Wit amdcme idmtilic.U. G1 net In very man1 -'CW.u- but t o - atorin,wherethe ~llat huclmded th ltl rU'orrnaUonlt~evantand lnlfll'tl ....,_.. tolheW;Jr1.Mll du11-bculdloiDdudl. Tocmltaud!llllorrnation wouldiiOl...,. brpoorr...-tlnebutfoDUtllu .-d. For aampk, ' - ('OIIlpkte: a ..,. would It br to -'mp!Jo 111 Ifill tbt AltU.n Brotllen no.'ltlat.e wu .,. ==~~ --~ "" . =::=.?""-·""' ... ~otb~:'r!~edK~uxof=: murd««< and ttnwlled pl'Ople! ~·~ardt.f~ TheaMnteoftt.ellaiet lalalllt --- · ...-----· --·-· ----- r~~:laldifferent•amona:thtJI'IIIPI lmGind•lltbe~aflllt .,.., . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . <B) IMal•iJic tbeUWSPIWderl._, llattl• campus hl•e told me that had II X:.."'::a':'*~ would not Ill•& been d.ra WII. I c:u IWI.Ime thlt, hid aU p1rtlc:lpa111J beeD whitt, an apolop would bave prvbUif bren liven tbereb)t •Ymlnl tile 11ddenL 'Dill wu a f'ldal lnddrlll 1111 ~ .. tudl. llaeac:ramh:c(Qju5llceibUdtdl Pl rtltlplntlbeenbLadla blfept"OWIIJ Umetornfttht fac:._and c:-tii!W ........~; r-u:a •• CCef· -·--· ----a.lo--·--· _ _, realiWionthltpnjudke anclbilalrJ• bolhaldeaaremotethan)wtwordt ll'lll they won ' t dluppear beullt. lltWiplptndon't rtpll1 thtm . GrrtM:ai'T PL\Y~- ................ .......,11 .~ f·ll:tl,. c=.,,..:... (Cef. ~ --·........... . ............. -·· ==·--·"" -=...-::7--=-.u.r::-: ='='==~ ..,._ UA&_,_ ~ ~, :C.:.."'l ... DIUC) Fdn&rr • • ltfl ...., I ....... Convet1ible aushed Good job ICings, Q.-ns ,.. ... P.._, = · and condoms l"ftt.eD.....:Iakw,._n.,~ l"eei11Jel~Jo1edthe~. lutu~ ::~: ~ru!.-:!?;:; nlllatk ld,Jedi-. s.ldel, lt't trw. --· ......... Reviewer of review reviewed ,.. ... p ....... Aa a r«eat calldics.te for U. Wlnlft C.tnlval KllC aDd q._.. Coalelt, I'd libco~,_ctdcelllltopriat =~=-~.:=:=-abe-:!: M.P'n11DIQ1~J'IIII6tll't piftt tbe ~w. Kllll • QIMorD candldlt. JOU felt tbe PaUll• ew.. . ==-::~~~ ltUdientlii'WSP'pen.l"-1-tobea ~ ~Uletic a Wtudt. lf UU. II yau :!te~ t.!;'~lhecal/!?~ 'f:! !MdJ,ttr.ll.. tlorl. It =~~is:-::J:f~: .pinlllil-tu. lt-..aadwhm -ha~per MihePoin~feebllmiiK prCia'IOie milk ~nU&Iacth-IUet, but IMit the "ID<Id cS.n fua" of WiDI.erC&mlnl Kllvitlelthlt arellowl)' d)t\tlcOBihll am~. I'd lbo like to know why your to·workert, u pec lally yo11r ad 11W18JefS.hiVIIIOI&)'UIO•hldlads --- ptprinledalldwl»ebck:D't.lt-m. lhlti!Mywouldtaltem.tollheRU. 1'd apprtdate 10 Da know,._ .....una Ja-cM . ....... legal society explalnea Series 9, Vol. 19, No. 21 ... . _----l------·---:..:="..::=-:..:::-.:=-=.-::.-· ~ =·= -- ------ ____. ._. . . """ =.=. c::::;:;:.=. ~...::-· l -:..:.-=.:-- Sensitive touch =*~~¥.;;:~~~~ -~-·- -·----- - -- ~~~~:::.~.:=-:::c-. ~.;!:':'.:::':" - . ·------ . -· .. -· ==~-=-...r.:.-::-...::.:..:r.'.:-::".:.::. =~:===-...:..~~=--:.~. =-=- - more letters ... listen, shut-up $1 Concert kudo I TenePolateo-, lwantedtottlltheColklat U.A.B. ho"'' muc:l'l we enjoyed lhe Valentine's Day trN t at the eG~JeehouM. Monty Ale:undt.r and 1111 blind were simply crut! Mtrd 8uiK'OIJP ror brlnlina - IIY~c )lon ofthiJhl&hq~.~&lltytothe St~Polfttcam~. llopetohtarkll.s m«eofthi5~ of millie lOOft, Mon poaitivetDfi'Cialhlsdln!Ctlon! Mary Cartla People's choice boot Veb Concert kudo II Ta~ Polal«, l ~ve~nc«<anryplen1nt t'Vmlf18 w1U! .orne &ood people and .orne good jllu. l Uwtll alllhe people who put forth any effort In atC..Lnln& suth eood ente!UIMient. To tum It up lnllml ll phriMIII)'yn . Jadl KAslk&er CLEAN UP aw11•10001 _ . - - - -- - -- news and opinion--- --------... =-"the answer lluvinllbe Last fall , In the wake ol a massive appu] by the UWSP Alumni Association to pw.h toward Old Main 's preservation, lhe tmlvenity requested UW System specialists to lake another looltat the buildina. Strprbina Lo rno.;t administrators, Qlke- uys, fin· E:buiJW:~.th~~·c:u~~blt! Coller then aasianed H1rlan Hoffbed: , UWSP director or ~~!!,es11 U::n!tec~e~ t~ with some ~~01 pro~pec;ts . With more aound data expected tobegatheredthathesu.peetswill ~~~he' u;;P'O:d:=!W:'~ lhowinaa DeW·round of enthuslum for sav.inc the bullclinc, wllb Bert AndersOn, . wdllteet and U&ialaDt vice president of the UW S)'llem cooperalina in the new attempt to 51oft It, Cokezo believes Old Main hu men ping for It than it hu bid for many yean. Housing situation may get worse mte enloreement aaeney came lD andaald that- were la&liDI badly In the enfon:ement of the Sbte Code Olapter 57, but they found , after lnvestlption, that ow enfGrftmellt lirewallt turroundlnJ furnaces, alternate exits for second door &Dd basement unitl, and fire ex· tinaubben . F~ U)'l many ol lbe room1111 boDes lt1Ye tbe al t ernate nita and t h e e•· ::~~~ex:~'·=·~ brove the roomh:c boule$ m the city at this time. An informalional meetma iJ belns Panned for 10m.e time In March whet! tbe clty'a lnapecU011 staff will u plain the atatet re&ulationa to a ny lnteruted tenants and l andlords . olthebotalnccodelwu..,topu with the rest o( the Jtate." Altertellinl the Common CouDcil ~ to code complianc-e by the next tchool year . The rea:ulall0111at the heart of this luue lnchKSe requirementa; for :!t:::'the~~~= Siasefi organization loses recognition by IAIMrt Vn-N Last week Qww:ftlor Dreyfua took a firm admlnlatrative ltand suspendinc the Siuefis u an of. f.cialstudent Jfoup. AI a result ol Ibis action, lhe IJ'OUP cannot uae W'livenity fadliUea or apply for student monies for the next three yean. Controuny il not a new pheoomeon for the Saad'11. 'nlere were times in l.he put when the FOUl> bad been denied the UN of any unjwnity facilities becauae of inc ldenta dur lna their pledse weeki . Tile Unlveralty Center Board expreued displeu~:We ovn- Siuefi homecomllll no.ta In Oc· lOber or tta5 and tW7. The University abo wu con· cemed about the hannful publicity ~=J::st!.e:~"L:;·~ l.he lprllll It( Jif7, Action ... la.kea ::i:;~~tl:~"~:n~~ lhe Science Buildinl. The PorUp ~~~:".==·= olfthebeackofUvechickml " inlht Sprilll ottf70. en . Sluefis denied the attW&Ill'llll . 1111 molt reoent ccnlrOYt'J'IY~thel.t"aak death of UWSP senior David ~~!tie!'~'=-~:~ The A&nii!JaiH.tion started investl&atln& the statUI of the Siaaef1 or&aniu.Uon last March when theft wu a near fatal incident with another Siudl p'"&e. At this time Dr. Johnson of the Univenity indlvklual , Siudl member, wu disappointed wltb l.he OYIDCdlor's acuoe~. ne Siudls 'ftf'e loki by Student Government that they would be rudmltted II they would make chanaea In thrl.r ctmltuUca reco&niudorpniutioaoncampus. Dr . David Coker. Auiatant Owlcellor ol University Services, said that Dreyf111'a recent action wu the result of a staff recommendation. It wu not just an emotional ruction to the Fall death. Cote' beUeved that the suspension wu C'I!Mdtent with Student Government'a action. Student Government temporarily tu:a:pended tbe lf'OUP In November after the OctobeT Incident. Presldeat Bob Bacb:lnaki aa:id the beinJ made. The ::~~ !::~ ~~:-:,srr~~~~ and'T'Ic~~:=· :rr'~O:V~ul=~:'! ~! direction ." nus could mun two days or two years, dorpendin& 011 Sluefl acti011. The student Or&antut•on ftecolniUon Committee started to lnvell!pte the Sluefi lf'OUP last May but no acUon wa1 ta.k.tn W~W the t«al Student Government acted. They wanted to make sure they were taki.OC the ri&bt action . Ken Txh...:ly, speaki.ac u an eswet"e new p~es . for eu.mpe, have worked wltb Qdldea lnatilute and there wu no akobol invol~l nlbeleactivllles. Drf')'f111's IUipenslon does not ~~aa:rz~!':: c~~J; questioned .mo haa the power 011 this campus, the studenbl or the anm•matratlon. Can u.ancellor Dreyfus overrule the Student Government's temporary SUipenl.ion! The onJy appeal the Siuefls have is to 10 to the Board of ReJenta. Tschudy did not foresee any realistic appeal of Dreyt'111 '1 action l nthe(ut~We. Stupid snowballers Injure campus cop IJ'ound and his attackers took tuma =1~~0 r~~;.:~ulea BurlifC wu later treated at St. Michael's Hospital u an oulpitUent and rei~ . He abo misled work ror lhe rest of the week and waa &oin&totbeRiceCllnlc today fora more thorqh examination. Kursevesltl A)'l be hal several leada 011 the people involved In the incider~l and added. " I think we have &ot a positive identlfic.atloa on one or the uaailanbl." P'Hrul")' •• IWJI .... 5 P ...... News CIA: b II lloeMed! A critical debate sponsored by the Political Science Allodatioo. Mond.ly , Feb. 2:t, 7pmlntheRedRoomolthe Univenity Center. Notes An ardllt~tural firm bu beet:~ <'Oftlncted to desip a sm.ooo rt:I'IOVIItioD projed ill the Ualnnity C'e:lteral UW.stevensfoint . The plan& are bdft& drawn by Airion and Refnke-ol Olbkolh whlcb hal had previous contract. campua fOI' aparate bul.ldlnp addltioDI. Wert may 1tart sprincwearlyllmmel'. The project, which will on and this be ~':~byin~:~~.:.--: xhedul«< to IDclude a model'· nlution of the ldtchen facilities, ~-~d~:t;"beu:! ~ publiC. Panel members will be Dr. Gerald Port« from Ole hdiatrk staff of the M.anbfield Oinlc: Dr. Coralie Dietrich, UWSP Plydlol.ogy ~t. faculty member (or tbe pat ei&ht years : Ms. Karen Bouti.D, a representalive of the Osbllosb Qapter ol Parenti AnonymOUI: and Mr. Tom Bultnet", a aocial. at~~t.!"eM,;.ill discus.s lheto~~tl which led 14» to the bitta- fl&htifli foodaervi.q:arul fortbe Grldlroa and Pints'y Rooms, 1001e M"<~r air ==~~h:c!~~: ~~ e:t:Ci;,c::u~e: ~ ~!a~~n£eo!!:;~ I~ whkb wu wed rcw a&ona time u a totboolr. library. Center Dlrectcw Roc Hacket u.id 10me ol the older arus probably will be redeconted durin& the nut year but will not be part ol the ~tlyiJI.aMedprojtct. worli:e' supervisor from the POrtaae Cculty Dr:pt. o1 Social Serric:e, who · will serve u panel modn'atcw. The program will be concerned with physical and emotional abuse, the dynamics involved In the parent-child relatlonshlpa , rolea and attitudes ol both parent&, JOme ol the waya In wbk:h abuled chlldnn manlrest themselvea,lona- ::e:e:p~~tlic!ndt!: dUidnn and p.areoll. . FoUowl"f. the di.JaJsalon, Ume willbeav&JlablefcwquesUonsfrom the audience. .'DEL ORADO: *Add ice to a mixing glass or jelly jar, depending on your financial situation. *Pour in 2 oz. of jose Cuervonquila. *The juice from half a lime. 1 tbsp. of honey. *Shake. Strain into a cocktail glasS or peanut butter jar, depending on your financial situation. * * m::l':~.o~:nt~·re':o'rf':i Cotnmunlcatlon at Belrull University Colltae. will pretenl a lecture tntiUed ''The Rape ol · Lebanon : camels. CUlture and Qlmmunication" in the Procram Banquet Room ol the Univenl.ty Center on Wednesday, February Z5 such request. may be obtained in 104 Student Services or throu,b M. Feldman's ofr!Ci!!. Detalll of the proct:~~a~notedon pp. :M-37of the Unlvtnlty calaJog. ClaUd Abae, Dilcauloa 0o 1\laday, r~ .u, lbe Plycbolo&Y Qub is sponl(ll"ina: a pudddcuaioaooclllldabule. Tbe diK1Ukln will take place at 7:30 lrc:lurebyleoaaniiM Studmta should be reminded that requesllforreviewofanycradefor the FaU Semester. tm. must be made I• WTititlf by the md of the sb:th week of this semester, i.e. by f"ebr~ary 21, 1976. Fonns for filin& andthelouolthousandsollivel~n Lebanon OVe!' the past year. His . view Is that the battle encompaSM:S far men than a reliatousrlft between Ouistiant and MOiietns. It has arown up over many years, s temmin& from the Frenc h *Pafture from the area after World War 11. They left a unique A committee ol local people to head the Stevens Point Area Hunger Hike hu been announ«d by Klp Cornel.!, Cllordinator few the April to evftlt. Amore thole on the committee are : Arlene Meyerboler, &uidance COI.IIIdcw : Rev . Steve Edinaton, UWSP ~:s::s s~'~!~i~: ,::~ s~.:t SPASH hiltory ~acber ; Cii,.er Wilson, Christian Ed. Director of St. P au l 's Methodist : Betty Davidson, and Rev. 1bom Satrold. The Hun&er Hike will Involve community volw.teoen who will hike « Sponl« hili:efs. TWo &oals have been set by the committee; first, to educate the community to the problem o1 world hunaer, ud aovernment&l llnlcture l..n the Uny • nation, one that wu difncult ttl maintain at the beginDin1 nd may be ~workable In the lt70'3. Todr!y the problems are aoclal, economk: and political, u well as rell&lous. However , Dr. Lee believes that Lebanon will JW"Vive and he hopes to return there one day. A native ol Wales, DT. Lee received bls Bachelcw's *artoe from Hope Col.le&e In HoUaqd, Mlc:hllan and bls Doctor of Philosophy dearee from UWMadbon . He, hls ,wlfe, and three children eae.ped from Beirut In September when the fllhtina becamesolnteneethattheyfeared forthe!rllvea . Dr .Lee ls apend!na thi.s semester u V11ltin"1 Profea« of Com · munlcaUon at the UWSP. second,torabemoney few various hunJer-filhllnc OI'JaDiutions. The SPA Hunaer Hike will rettlve orpnluUonal help from CROP, the Community Huncer =~~=~~~: aulstJ people In mCJn! than 30 countries each year. However , the proeftdl from the H~m1er Hike may ao to such qenciea u CARE, Lutheran World Relief , and • catholic Reller Servk:ts. deotndlna on spouor preference. __ .... ,OCE. The committee leaden will be CU~tactln& schools, cblftbes, and ~~!rij'fob!n:~ra:n~~: the Hunaer Hike . Penont In:. tereated In belplnc may CU~tact Kip Corneli at 341-71111. ~~ ~ r 'WiA~tec. Garni.vaL ,~pecia£ SAT. FEB. 21 J ALL DA'f PITtHER.S ~ SJ.25 PABST,PT . t:.. P'etnat)' • • lf1't ...... p-- S J.5 0 .AN DEJ(I::Jl ~~= ~:e.!4· Legal aid program proposed by Mkbatl Varaey ... When have you cone· Ms. Robinson, our ca mpus tum1 Its legal eyes to you ••• II was four yurs aao that Mary Ulu Robinson served this univft'lity astbest udftlts 'lawyu. Since then there has been no lepl counsel aVIilable to students wbo matriculate at UWSP. OJ.rrenUy. there is a Pf'OPlU.I bd«C! lbt Univtnity ol Wisconlin or aqents coneerniD& the use ot student fees for the acquisition or • lawyer- wbo will Board advise and, In certain cues, :fi:::.n',~r!ta~:: An olympiad aao the Student Foundation hired Ms. Robinson and inith11ly orpniud a po6ition for student legal .dvice on this cam· pus. The Student Foundation existed before lhe inception or student government's uu of segrqattd fees . This IJUI...ootl Foundation operated dir« Uy out of students' pockets tb r ougb tbe ~)'ina ol dues. In the end lhe Foundltion folded bteause or lack or fundi . John Montr, an advbor to the SCUdent Legal Society. termed It "llD itl- terestlrc failure ." Ther'e an still aneral places students •ltb lepl ptOblems can JO • lor advice or rdmall. The UWSP Student Lflal Society tS LS ) toetVe1 IOiely in 111 adYt.ury capacity at tbll time. Howev«, their future JOIIII are to become more mommeotally Involved in studeot lepJ proceedin&a. Formed last April, Maner uys the SLS lJ DOt simply voatloa.al. " It's people with a bwnanlatk or IOdalldeace intftfttinlaw,alqllrithprHaw,'' ht said. The SLS offke II klcated ~intheolderMCtiooolthe University cmer. Marty S.bUtch II the Impetus bdliDd the Portqe Couoty Lepl Society which students are to use because tbey are Portaae County residents. The service Is limited as lbia lepl body meet. only once eney t.o weeki. Also pro vldi na li mited leaal suvic:e are the Public Defender's off~ and the Consumer Pr«ec:tion buruu. Tbe District Attorney's ':'·the buildings they find lhlt you can be just as effective by taldnc people to court." He feels the Regents will vote affmnatlvely in Man:b on the student le&al ser vice question . "Informally we've aot from a 111 mber of people in c:entnl ad· ministration that there wiD be no problem, with the allpul.ltlon that you an't 111e the lawyer in Communic:etloo Department, buds the local cbaplA:r of the American avll Uberties Ullioo <ACLU ). The only otber alternative to these aforementioned choices · :insti stated. . IAndlonl problems aDd divorce ere typical or stUdtftt diffkulUes which mj&Jlt be baDdled by a of~~t•=. ~~ ~0:, ~~~:, in the UW system tha t bu a lawyer available directly to students. This il an experimental pilot prop-am and the Board of Repats decision oowbdherstudent fees an be used fa.- 1ep.J ~~!~"Vices wW come after clOie ac:rutl..DUetioa ol the uw-o Pf1lll'&m . Bob Badd.JUi, student aoveroment president, corrimented, ':,U:boai ~~=n~v~=~= bumiDI the lbftll and torney's oltk-e wW be respon~lble to an e~Uve board which will ~~~~~::::n~2~ :~.!! 1~ty\ :!· l,.d. 1 la~Sl.s banded lD their~~ for budaetina last Mooday. It ,... cootlnce:Dt upon the approval of the Oe.bkDih prc:rcnm. , Theoffkeofthelttldeats lawyer tbrouCh SLSlt, aDd a bi& aDd lmpartaftt ''U" It il, theftelmts voteto..e studentfeel fa.- ltudeot lepl service~ . f'n'* Ruswlc:k, SIS preakleat, said, · ~ attoroey and the at- will bewt 14» V'ft')' The primary roles of the students• lawyer wW be to sdvlse and with 15 minute i p· polntments in tbe pl aa nlna . Ruswlck uaures, "He (lawyer) would not ao to court on every ca1e. We're leanlna to1rard limited , restricted court appearanctdl." About the lmpendi.na: Relents vote Rw;wkk saki, " From the Umlted ladicaUCXII I have, It's tind of up in the air." ' Moner eonteoda, "Evell if the lawyer propou.l doeln't WOI'It, that wouldn 'I preclude the SLS from struc:turbl& a lepl clink aJoaa different lines. How UU would be we're not certain." co u !is~l. a.dziQiklleavea 111 OD an oo-- tlmlaticDO&eubepreclcti,"Utbe Relents approve It lD March, wbkb theylhould,wewW push forltua program to be Implemented 011 OW' campus for tbe oext sem..ter." down · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES BOARD Of TH£Sf COIII\ITTf£S' PERFORJo\IH& Nm (DfFf(HOUSE (Oil(ERTS CRHTNt~IT) HOI'of WI'\ IN 6 Eli.TitHt.li~llULM. TftAV£'A<.TIYITII'S WIIIJfl <A~IVAL OUT OOOk RfC.R:fATION FILl'\ SPECIM. fV£>lTS ., lllf7nfSf.I'.O, PI(«. IJI>NJ 111/'U<It'rifiW -1T Tll6. tM-4. Of'Fit«- 2.¥ F~ U~. Q<JE:::~~";'r::s,o:~:'":/ ;~~.,~4'1.1. ..~ ......ry •• l, . , ... 1~' Thu,s.-fri., Feb. 26~ 21, 1 & 9 P.M. $1.00 Program -Banquet Room (U.C.) A depreoalng & ahocklng film. The story of a young soldier In World War I who survives ·• ,::::. with Uttle _more than _hla mind and 'ftnarJ•. tm ...... Starring Clint Eastwood; Jessica and Donna Mills. A disc the night shift at a radio persistant female caller who night requests Errill Garner's rac:or,dingJ of " Misty. " He begins dating women , which leads t~htmare bloody' psychotic acts. - Pills aren't always heC?Ithy By Dr. wuna. Het!kl'. M.D., lftoallla Strvk:e Many people In our country are expressing concern about the u rety of oral contra«ptives. A reeent article in a medical journal. entitled "Another lookattherisk ol tbe pill" whk:h is printed In the January :~ ~ ~:c,c.~:·~ onl contrac:qltivtS. Accordinc to !.he author, Dr. Carl F. Dennison, the decision to take birth control pills must be made by both the doctor and the patie nt, with a ll the racts on the tab le. Many women are un«rtain as to whatthereal riskoftheoral con· tra«ptive is. One way to loolr. at thf risk would be the nwnber of death! ptr hundred thousand women per yea r that one ca.n expect because of the oral contraceptive . Having assessed the dtatb rate asaocia ted with onl contuceptivn, we then could look at serious complications of the oral contraceptive and at· lmlpt to pndkt atatistkally the number of cuet of that Jlllrtk\ll.ar t"Omplication per hundred thouland WOIIM:Il per yur. nus quantifying prO«ldure then gives tht woma n some perspotellve as to how daqt;I!IUDOI'ho.risty itlstoqree to USoe wal conb'Keptjon. A nftftt study done by tbe Community Oo Safety ol Drup in GreatBritalnbaal ndlcatedthattbe -=:a~~=is~m~ siJI tirMsforwomenaa;ed 20to+lif tbe woma.n is on birth control pllk. l'hOUCh !.he number ol deaths II veryamalltbe lncre:ueatatilticaUy is Yft'J si&nif~eant. Oral contra«Ptiva have abo been recen Uy linked with a n In- creased r isk of bu rt atta cks particularly in women over the age ol 40. 11le stalialiclare that women in tbeageranteol JOto:Whavean incidence ol heart att.cb ol5.1 per llundred thouNnd when they an on the pill. Women in the age ranp 40 to3t wbodonottakeoral contracqltives have a risk o( 2.1 per hundred thousaAd women. Simllaratatisticslntbe ..e40to +1 , the Incidence ol Mart attaclta in fl TIMCONCERT WEisBERG 'l ) f ALSO FEATURING CORKY SEIGEL lf '( SUNDAY, MARCH 7, 1976I! 8:00 P.M. QUANDT GYM fl '- ADVANCE STUDENT TICKETS ~ r $2 00 (BEfORE DAY DF COIICERT) NON-STUDENT TICKETS s3oo DOOR TlCKETS s3oo TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: U.C. INFORMATION DESK ALLEN & DEBOT STUDENT MANAGERS KELLERMAN 'S PHARMACY COMMONHOUSE RECORDS WESTENBERGER' S women on the pill is !111.1 per b.m· dred thousand versus l .t per llundred thouaand in women not usina the pill. n - flcllrft are for fatal a nd non-latal heart attac~. The fact that the woman hu a burt attack does not mean necsa.arlly ahewWdie from that episode. For comparison, ltbimrlt lallleful to point oot that tbe United Slats death rate for a uto acddenta is 52.6 per IM!dred thouaand. Thia .In· formaUon about a n IID"eued riak ol burt att.Kks IJl okkr women aa the pill certainly must be takeillnto consideration before.. a woman ~t::~ala:!~vl:: Norton Grfnberaer, M.D. that cautioa lhould be eun:iaed In the use ol contraceptive agentl ~ other eatro1enlc compounds In women wllh Type 1, Type_IV, Type · llyperUpoprote:i-.ia. Thesearec:oodiUONtbatarekDown to be auodated with early in· ddence of burt attacb. It mUes senaelhatlhepoUandotherriak factora worklnl In coajuncllon coWd lad to eartier delth aad attodo'. ~ The buycentennial qui_?:--part one I I Which of the following presidents had woodeP teeth? AI Woodrow Wilson 81 Wood duck LubenOW CJ George Washin&ton Dl ali.Uard Fillmore 21 Wby did Gear~ Washington chop down lhe cherry tree? AI Because II had Dutch Elm by Mark V.U..atb Sincethlsilthebicentennial yea. r I thougbt It appropriate to make up a litUe hlltory qui!. U you'M an "avenge" American, you probably don ' t even know that Georae W&lbillcton diedofl)'philil. It's important that we Mve a knowledge of our country's history. After all, were It not for the American revolution , the NBA would be witbout tbe Pbiladdphla 76tn,and the NFL wouldn't have a franchise In New En&land! With thia in' mind, I have prepared a bicentennial qui&, designed to test your knowled&e of historicaltrivli. Remember, tbqh, thia tat il belnd admlniltft'ed under lhe boner system, be s ure to do your OWD work. Juat becauae Richard Nixon cheated doesn 't mean you can. Good luek. ........ 81 So he wouldn't tell a Ue. Cl Because he nefded some new teeth. • 01 Because his frisbee was caught in the branches. 31 Why did Ge<qe Washi ngtOn cross the Delaware River? AJTo~ttotheotberside. 8 ) To undergo • hemorrlloid operation. C> Because bia girlfriend was expectin&. DIAlloftheabove. FEB. 24 II What play w.. Uncoln watcrung at Fonl's Theatre when he was assassinated? AI The Youna: Al&auins 81 He wasn't watching the play. He was peering oo.:er the balcony at the women wearin.K low cut dresies. tl John WUkes Booth assauinated Uncoln b«aute: ..... A1 Abe was peeklnc down the low cut front or Ester Booth's drts~ . 8 ) Uncoln a.lled him a "fairy" because Booth coul4n't: IJ'OW a beard. 101 Cooctrnlng AmeriCa's tourist attractions, the Grand Tttons : ... AI Were two small hills thlt BtueFoxLoungelnJuarez,Mexico. reached puber ty. CJThelhirteenthPresidentofthe 81 Would have been called the United Slates. · "Jane Rullel's" had they been OJ Whoures? discovered In the 50's. 71 Why did Abraham Uncoln grow a Cl Both of the above. beard? 111 America's Gt'and Canyon was AJTohidethefactthathe..hadno formed when.. . . chin. · AI The '411en were digging for 81 So he'd look like the man ::~C:f,•.ureappearedonthe flve CJ So that peo!!le could teU him apar tfromh1swife . gold. BING 0 In the Wright Lounge P.M. $150.00 in Prizes PROG. 1 ':> 101 'a 16 ·a ra ·a 11. '<R:> ~e ·~ 'a 1• 'a Ui ';) IZ' ':'1 It :Sli3MSNV · 81 Abraham 8 loomenstlen tried to. recoYera nlcklehehad dropped down a gopher hole. 7& 9:15 BANO. REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE ROOM (!i 4JWhydidWasblngtontossas!lver dolla r acrou the Potomic Rivet'' AI Because he wasn't all there. • 8 1 Someone bet him a quarter thathecouldn't doit. Cl He wu tryin1 out for the Washington Senators. . 51 Who wu Millard Fillmpre's v~ President? . AI AlgonquirJJ. Calhoun 81 TedSator Cl Tracy Sta.llard 0 1 Who knows! 61 Who the hell is Millard Fillmore' AI 'The hockev coach a t UWSP. 81 A washroom attendant at the 7 P.M. 25c Per Playing Card Per Game Happy Hour Prices on Beer This will be 1 ·of 6 Bingo games to be played this semester. SPoNSORED BY INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL ~ov,:,J~-JC? h bEDR~, 7.. bflthf> 1 fALL HOU!>INC:.- 5llrlMEI\ fol!r fuMI~HED CFIR1>£TiN&, Ai RCOI'IDiTiONiN"' Nome that dorm Smith: a common name lor an uncommon man Ph~M:•t~~~~ Dr . abrupt departure followq oae aemater the Tucben CoUece oyiq for a ~L Faulll hid ori&inr.Uy a~ed the Stewns Point ~tloa beca~~~e of tbe macy oppor'tUiUes be felt it alrorded. He nude aa exit faur moalbl later to b«ame auperint.tndut of MadiiGa pubUc ICboob - a job be felt oll'ered " " more opportunities. Enlelt T. Smith, a &raduate of ao .. dola , tbe University of 01icqo, and a faculty mem.l:lft' Iince lD .emed a litdy .. president left -· Studeats had petitioned that Smith be liven tbe prelideney the year belen, but Uw Board o1 Rq:tntahad:DOC.listened.Smitb,an. lntpiriat tucher and agre~~lve ~=!t c::h~~~~ tbe au. ol edueltioo. Before beeomln& prealdent, Smith tau&bt Hiltory. Sodolop. and Eeoaomics. ID IDO. be was cha&en dlairman ol the advanced Jl&Ddin& committee ud cbai.t'man ol the admluionl board. He allo wrote a oumber ol widely dt- :=::.:m~A~ :s::::.~-h i:u ~tWt~c::= ttudent faaey ud iutructon cour.e~eatla&wtll. Enat Smith'a tenure proved quite sipirkaal. however- brid. He made countle11 frleada ud ~~d~~":: 0: r:; =:c.'':' ~~U::.cli! chlrine tere1t by Ameriea and paraudl between the Roman empire • warninJ citiuna of a 1imilar dowDfall If there wu DOl 111 Immediate ablft of valun ud priorities. Durin& his leisure bcu's, Smith Memorial service~ took place ·~ tbetcboollateriatbeweek.a.and IOdal neatl were aoedkd to allow student. to attend the memorial tribute bebW bdd itl the Physical exercise held an important part In Smith'• routitle. Track and fencina raled amq bll !avoriles. He ran the mOe duriac IU hiaJ! tcbool )'Un and tauaht fencinJ after Jraduatlon. The athletic department of Central Slate beMfited from bll penoa.al involvemealaadadmiailtratln improvement.. One of tbe moat daalinc IOdal nentliatbeldlool'lbialoryoeC\II'ftd &nina: Smith's term. In lD, the SeNon atCilf'ed the J)'lllnui\ID and «p!Ued an WUMially speelaaallr prom. Blue and wblte crepe streamers dipped from beam to beamwhllearevolvlnc cn'lt&l ball 1uspended from tbe cellloJ reOtcted sparll.lioJ facet. of shattered ll&bt 00 the whirliD& . ...... =~==~ Other joke with friend~ . ~toriiDU . Srptember21, lt40,ma11ttdaday of sudden trqedy. PrelidentSmith, wbo had been IUiflfrillc from a bronchial allmeat, paued away unexpectedly. 'l1le body was ta.tea to the f\IMnl home lor famUy and friend~ to rift. No rw.nl aerricel wueht&dia~totbtlate president's wishes. 'l1le body wu taileD to Mllwaulleewbere It wu cmnated. n. ubeiWn buried itl Forest Home eemeter,. and~~er::~~ "No one will tate tU place. No oae wiUc.anyonhlaworku htal"riid it." The Glee Club ~losed the ceremonies with • readiUoo of '"hpa",aodwlth that &ne-t Smith became uotbn- memory aad an ideallntbeacbool"•blslory. Paul MaHy times he ..oukl ptber with the fntm'dty. boys to plan a Pf01nm or outiac. On more bectic day1, Smith p-derred beinJ alone, ud ...auld p ::=vr:i~.~= SUMMER JOBS Dear College Student: NMd aome extra cash? Looking tor a part time job that won't cremp your style? We' ve got what you' re looking ~0:~":: ·-=~:,.~ "':'~;;.~ ~-e:~len:!~g ;:: Wlsconlln Army National Qual'd and we've got enough different jobe and posHkw'ls to t uH almo.t ...,., lnterNI. We trlln on eorerythlng from civil disturbance to legal rights to 21 ton, HH propelled howttz.,., And you CIA lool S.y you can't afford 4 month• for training becauM you' ll have to mlu a aem•ter? We know; .a the training period haa now bMn trimmed to as ktw aa 3 months. How's that tor a secure summer Job wfth ttartlng pay that wUI cooter the coet of a full yNr's tuHion? Want more JnformaUon? Call 348·3511 and 4:00 P.M. Mon. thru Frf. or 8:00 Moit., Wed. a Thun. Or atop In at Jeff.aon Stt... , during th"e hours you can go plecft In the Guard. betwHn 8:00A.M. A.M. to 1:00 P.M. the armory, 3111 and flnd out how IN THE U.C. COFFEEHOUSE . FRIDAY FEB. 10 9-11 P.M. FREE .-~..._,. -. tm ,.,~ u P...._. Divers chase pu by Ste\·e Lybeck Who ever beard olplayiiiJ bockry In the bottom of a swimming pool! The UWSP Skin and Scuba Society plays ~dtrwater hockey u a means of developing akln dlvln1 technique~ and skills. Water polo, tcuba and skin diving lnttruc:tion, and divlna tri~ to the f1orida Ktyt are other activities or the sodety. Winter'a crlp has the water aki boatl dry docked and buebiU fans readina lut season's alatistics. However, Scuba Society member~ are buty plunalna thrqh 4 foot holes In the ice ol &msd Like and plannlnc to uplcn ship w«c:U In b.lmy aubb'opical waters off the f!orida Keys . 1 decided to take an underwater look at the Society's activities. One of the Instructors handed me a mask, finJ, underwater cameu, and what appe.artd to be half a aocrttl. '1111! last sncll"ul 1 111«1 W.l " 5" abaptd and bad I pUle pona tt.U iD a Uttle 1'\Jbber aae at - end, U nevu eoukl n,~re out how to&et the pine poocball la my moulb). 'Ibismorkelbadonlyone =:~=~tre:d ::~~ end to atlck where. I was 100n finnln(l my way a found the pool Ulte an aquatic \uect-a lOllY abut· ......... salvage operatiON foe noa.t planes in Northes'n WIKOnlla. Pt:ople were sitting on the bottOm otthepool , taltinathrirtanUotr, paYilll rt~U~aton bKt and forth and blowing bubbles. It wu like being in a 11r1e aquarium exC!PI instead of &lass walls ~hue was tile. Instead of oblerftfl looking In, they looked down at me like loons watchlna a ~ehool of miMows. EnthsiJsm for slda and scuba diving In the Stevens Point aru 11 gaining momentwn . 11'! Skin and Scuba Society Is opea to anyone Interested ln dlvlna,studentornot, and prtRfltly has over fifty active memben, ten of whom are women. The purpo~e of the IOC:iety Is to provide I ~enter for oraanJzing diving activities, promote divina stills, and above all to promote diving and water u.fety . AboYe- water Bruce Destrude, ulis~nt instr~Jt lor , wu demon strating first aid procedures. A portion of each Jesson Is devoted to first aid tnining . Mouth to mouth _ resu sc itation and cardla l putmin a r y ' mauaae were demonstnted and pncticed on a ' 'dummy" desi&ned to meuure the eHec:tivtnfSiof treatment. TtteiOC:ietyhue:ounes!orpeople 0 :~e'd ind~~~~~ .:$~-:;:~~~ expuieoced. diver who llrilbes to become more proficie n t and acquirehigherratinp. George Jirak, vke?esident and headd.ivinglnstrvc:toroflhesoe:iety e:Jaims, " We have the m01l ex· tenslvediver tralnl ngand the mOIII tnolferpeople Interested In diving of any OC1&nilltl0ft in Central WdCOillin." Georie is certified by tbe Professional Auocialion of Oivi~ ir.tn.~tton CPADU to In· stn..e:t and give all diver ratinp avallable. Patty Quinllsk ) coaches un derwl ltf' hoe:kev In the Uni versity pool from one to three p.m. on Slturda)'l. BeaiMin& Kin dlvtn learn to use fins , mast and snorkel while playlna: tmderwaler hockey. Playen 1de a hockey atklr. and a ~~J:,lr.lhe'U::.erol~U: thedirecUonoftheaoaJ . W!leathat P'ayer e:an no loncer stay down another takes over and the puck Is moved from goa.! in relay fashion. George II an experienced professionaldiverandinstr~Jttor, and lw participated in underwater activities var)'ina hom inslrue:ting under-thH«-<IIvin& to underwateT The bulc COW'H in scuba divina involves over thirty..el&ht hours of iril true:Uon. 'nit coM Ia MO and aftl"l' beirw chee:ked out in open wsteT, the student .eomP'etes the C:OW'Se IS I C:ft'tified diVl"l'. Pterequisitesare : •phyaiulexam fo r scuba divin g , s wim three hundred yardl any stroke, tread water for twelve min utes, and be able to swim twenty-live y...ds with 1 twelv .t pound wel ah t belt . Students in the tt.Jie: course art accompanied by an Instructor all the time they are underwateT. Geotte said that pule 11 the main problem for innperien«d diwn and thou&h It donD't happen ollen, It Is good, when It does, to Mve someone a va ilable who knowJ whllt to do. Georae hu an extra rqulator mounted on hl1 t&nlr. for emei'Jt:ncles. ntennaJ dive of the coune !Jin a lake and st!Jdents an rated for profidency, On this dive two diven must ascend from a :,~~~t!:~!;! and ascend with the ~ae ol an in· n.tablevest . • } r l £ -" i ks and lobsters The ~ boat'seaptalai.Jan~ fish aDd k:Uters. diver ud guide. The trip will cc.t :=-~~~0:~ l..euona ue given Friday &mday morninp l.a ~ aad the Univenity pool. The next buic will be&in Marcb 25 with CCM.nt certlfic.tlon dives at the end of the tcbool yell'. There bi room for 2e peop~ in lhb Ci)W'R , An)'Oae interested In diving may atteftd one o( these meetlnp or coatact Gtorse Jir ak at 341...5151 . tGecqe will also diiC!.U problem.~ In plll"dwiq: equipment with anyooe wbo calls. I COMPLETE LINE OF U.S. DIVERS AQUA·LUNG SCUBA GEAR AT LOWEST DISCOUNT PRICES OUR AIR IS CERTIFIED BY STATE Of WIS. George Jir.ok MEN 'S - LADIES WHITE SlKrSPEEOO~ SWIM SUITS HUNTERS' CORNfR OPEN EVEIINGS TI.L 8 Bottle bill bantered by Ka.y Zllorall C\lrmtUy before the WIIC'Gnlin State Lflillature ls a bill wtlkbmay affect eYef')'Uit from tbe clientde of 1M lnfamOUI ''square" lo )'OUt Colte<lrinklna nephew. The legislation, Asambly Bill No. 276 and Smate Bill No. &17, ~e ~":~~~~: nonreturnable bevenae eont.intn. m The Senate bill apedfkally requires that In the labdlll8 of c:-ontainers, the amount of return money must be lilted separately from the coat of the drink. 111 VIolators of these provlslons will be fined no more than ssoo or impriloned up 1o IIOdlys or bolh. ~3~ 0 of 15 ~~rUJf7C: ~! ~~!!:~~~':"~!eneii ~~~··proposal nor is it uniquely a pJ"'OI)eCI ror thfl s tate. Reaulatory lealtlatlon desianed to limit nonr"fturnable bevn-age containers has beea In· troduced In 10me 40sllltes,and laws of this n~~ture have alrady been Macted in Oregon, South Dakota , and Vermont. The legislation itself makes tbne pnwi.Jions : (I I 'lbe term "btverqe con· taintT" IH~erallyrderstocan and bottles containing beer or other malt liquors and soft drinb. 121 All sealed c:mtainerl of beer or carbonated bev«IIH must be ~~able for a minimum of rive bas cauted a diuartdnent to &rile betweea the economlata and the en· vironmentt.lllts. 11Jeatate's LqlalaUve Reference Buruu'a ll'lformational 8uUdin oa these re&ulatiOOJ indkated t.blt for many )"Uri lbe Idea to Ule nonreturnable containers had been embraced entbUJiatllully by bevnap lndUitriet, who m~»l producem-andmorebottlnand carato~theonee-uaedltenu:, and by consumers who wtll PlY extra to maintain lbelr convenlence«ient.ed ''throwaway" ~u!'bevenge ~~~~~and r:~e~:'v=:rtlyand~O: It haabeen estimated that about eo,soojoblwou.ldbelost natiO!}AIIY If a ret..-nable sptem were in effect . But eo,aoo joba 'li'OU!d be crated. ltlsclearthat mi!Uonsofdolla" and lhouaandl of joblare Involved In t.his luue, but the envir«<mental aide is equally prnralent. The environmental consldentlons were aummarlled in a report prepared by the Wllconsln =~ !1:er~;crro!~~~~ Reindl, Ruldue Waate Management Specialist or the UW· Extenlloa. ~areconsumersavinpln pwcbaslng retwnabl• rathft' than nonreturnable containers 11 fcMiows ; Retll(nable Bottle 19.1 «nta 15.SceniJ Nonreturnable Botti~ 23.0 centa 20.Scenta "'" ""' 23.Scenta .... zucenta = 11 ia estimated that Wlaconsin :&'c!CS: ~ ::~t~ convenion costs, increase metal pieces, are ~~~~! ,::u=ti~,UJ~~ household. Environmental and con · servatlonal advantages Include litter reduction , more efficient ~:iton~d improved eneJ1y In WbcOnlin IItle!' clean-up Is 151 On any c:mtai.oer U!a addre:a a nd · nama of the brewer , manufacturer , or bottler , and redemption value mutt be marked the priH of beverages, limit COD· JUmerchoice, decreuasales, cauae a lou of jobl, and reduce tax rnrenue. For WIJCOillin, the situation Is rate oltO.t percent ~ year while in Oreaon , where tb1Jle8illationl is In practice, litter clean-ul? COlli bave virtually remained constant from 197110 1974. Bnldes reducing places that cany a bevft'ale ln stodt must refund the money to people pouessing botUes of that particular brand. capltol"withgoodreasoa.Tbestat.e hal ei&ht breweries, fow of which are In the ''top ten". min& ..tldllfe with detached metal rings and rusted metal cans , the aesthetic poUuUon will decreue. The Oep.rtment of Agriculture , which would administer the law, may certlry 13 ) =~e ~~~e:dw:' J~j~ than 1.., cents. 141 Pop-top cans, thOR with =~~~~I.e cl~:~~OR noareturn leaiJlature. It dlspules environmental claims and ltralel the economic ramlfleatlona. Ac· cordlrctotheWormaUon Bulletin , :::~:.~e:ill -:s~::=t= ti~! c:!!c~=~~~~~:~.;,:; ~ ~~a.::t;a~:= :c:·:·~fJ: ~j~O&~t:,!'\:~ :t:!11~:~ iegltlation reduces tbe a mount~ solid waste produced and facilltat recyclable waste. Baaed on Ore on ' 1 experience Jome p~ple will J tlll uJe canned beverqaifthelltuatloncalllfor ~Ap~tb!'e~l~t ~ depoait refund . The remaining 30 perftlll of these can be retrieved rrom garbap and rriumed for the depoait. It II estimated U!at In the dty o1 Milwaukee ther-e w!U be sa,ooooldepolltsavailable In solid wute daily . Finally, returnableconlalnera can be used several Urnes and hence will COIIICf'VC enerl)' . table below showS the enetiD' consumption or variOUI beveraces ~:~~~io!ncl~:' m~~lne~~ r-esourus to driving tbe delivery Beer s.ta truck Non returnable Bottle M.S 71.1 BI ·Metal Can Ut SU Returnable Bottle ILt n.a Aluminwn Can lU - The Emergency Energy Aulstance Office u.ld a ban eould reduce electric power con~umptioo ~~.~~~in~~n!r'ur~ ~ PI would be aaved. Retumabla bottles use the leut amount of natural au while the alumillum can and the nonreturnable botUe we rive tlll)es aJ much, and the bl· metal three UmK u much. TbeR ugwnen!J from both en vironmentaliJtl and econom!Ra lndlcale a formidable dub of opinions. In a Ji luation where value judgements contend wtth obje<-tive analysiJ, the leaiJJ.atuu mutt a ttempt to balance Ole competinc Interests . Hopefully a viable solution to thlJ dilemml can be found . ~m·m~ru· mru ···rui*m*l**rum~mm~mru~ru!mruruEco-Briefs StudJ Blastl Breeder Rtactw AtteadoaGameLawVI..aloors Tba ONR baa developed a new :f!~Of~~~~eofla~ " cooperative violation report card". A speda1 feature or the PfUd· dresaedcardl , which can be mailed ~~~~fnv:~ri~O:::~~J the "standar~ description of a oenon " to help the dthm dncribe the aUedged violator. lnch.!ded Is ~:k.Jf~~'U;~'~he :~: violator, nature of the vlolaUoa, and ln!onn.atlon on vebicla fa), !IIIIC'd. 8nklea r11h and aame \1\olaUOill, thecardeanbeuad ~list lilteri.ni. vandalism of s nowmobile trail ligna, dellniCUon of state put and ronst properUes, and numerous other viotat*- of natwal reiOUlU laws, the DNR announced. r..-.. ,.,. It Fdnuy it. l l'fl Solarex Corporation. Solar ~ II abWKiant and laf1ely poUutiOf'l ~}Orhe=~ogiu:l -r::rrri::': IOlar enertY and it can be economically competitive with foul! fuels and OIJC:lear energy. Tbe only drawbllckl are the tight money ::iJ~~!.nc:o~r::n;; u:lli~e ~ Rql. Richard Ottinger (N.Y.), QWrman of the Environmental Study Conference , called for lhlfllnc the ftWTID' research and • development funds from ill preaent nuclet{ emphaals towards alter· natlveaourcesofenerp. Under tbe current bud&et the &mOWlt of money allocated for protectill&lhe ~~~!r ~!~'~• ':!:~aJ!r~~ti~ tolar eneqy bucf&el . Research upon the / Breeder reactor waa prne:nted to Cqreu by Amerlcatl Ent.erpr!Je lniUtule for Public Rese.an:h (AEil , an Oflanlution sympathetic to the nuc:leariDdutlry. ~ . SeibtTlln&U)'StheJIIxl.y ~t =hu:eB= f:'~U:.~~ 11 endanaering dnrelopment of other eneq,y re.oun:ea and ahould be abandoned." The development of the Br-eeder C"i!'e: ~ J~ a:mthe ~~to IUI&His the cc:.t wtll c«~Unue ncalate. AlJo the reUabUity and ufriy of the Breeder ructor iJ Wl:k~c!:~C::.'t:a~ Bulletin of the Atomic SdeoUata bave caUed for a ceaaation ol the ~:~~J.~~~b~ made ure and ec1l00fllkal. Jt. Environmental bookshelf • I See~aToBeA.Vertt remaiDtd over RYeGty yun, bt by R.&.ckaliu&cr F.ut.- Wllil ~e Aid •• Q.Niho Flore .....,~ I Seem To Be A Vft'tl is an at- tempttocettheruclrtrexperleoced at vlewiaa; thircs in tarp ~uem.. The boot Ia dtsi&ned like llO other bdore it. It is fresb aDd new- _,.AIMnSCawll R. Buclmlinltn- Fuller 11 C'OI'Iskleredoneoltheoulataodinc m!Ddl ol tbe twentieth centwy. He is the inventor ol the podelk dome =-~~ta~~~ two Jets ol facti and commentary (a revolutionary structure =~•:feb .~:!":or~C:! balanced on lopofeach otberwilh a meuap seperatitJC the ~~ous utilization olsp!lce and retentioo of ~~:!~ ~~~::~~.~= product, and the author of 6ne to Pll&elt2. You 10 from PICe 1 to paa:e 1921. and then tum it over for lt2b baclr. to pqe 1. You examine It llld then reaamioe. 'The numft'OUI boob and eaaya 11bout Uleoa F.artb. f"LLlle- ls 78 yean old, Helsalsowellknownua matbemi!UO.n, poet, phi.IQIOPber, cartotrapber. cbcJreo&rapbel' and ~'":~ ~~es:f:-me while traveUrw for the put )'QJ' or =~r:c·::::::J:!RJ!.~~~ CG~motoaiiLf"'..Uerlsadrop-(lutof Huvard Univenity. V:;:u:th~":.!!:~: :eu! be:fllf'e. It is &eneraUy a bombardment ol relevant f1cts and same name and an explanation ol tis tile histoey. He tdls of being bora erc.s ~td and spending the first four yurs ol hiJ life Reina only iai'Je patterns. His childhood tendency to see luge patterns bas comment pertinant to life on earth. Thetophalfofthebooll hualot ~!~te::'-!: ;·~~uc:; consta nllybt'ol.l&ht to mind. Fuller takes the opportunity to make his Clean water coming? by~veHa ..dl OeanH" water can be a ru.lity, but only at tbe expense of olhef" natural resourc:es. That is the message that Tom libby, of Consolid.ateciPape-,pverecenUylna speech sponsored by the Technical Association of Pulp and Paper percentefficiencywouldresultina doubling of the amoun t of clean-up resoun:es needed 1.o reach the 80 ~cent level. The question that must be answered. said Libby, is how far society wants to co to save some lndUitry. Libby produced fi&u r es to drmonstrat.e what it would cost environmentallyinordet-toremove 80perce~toftbe wa&te ditcllar&ecl from their mills in ooe year. To remove 43 million pounds of pape!' mill waste would requir'e 211 mUiion pounds of fiber and clay, 3 million poundt of cbemk:all and 30 million pounds of coal. The clean-u p ~oceu would allo produre 15810 million BTU. In exceu hut. The amount ol reiOUrCt:l Meded l.o l"ff;\oYe more lba n 10 percent of the wut.e effluent does not lncreue ~oportlonately. libby c:«~tended. Thlll, to go from 10 percent to to induslry is doin& everylhilll it can to meet the standardlaet by the 1972 Water Quality Act. Tbe act .eta ltis.chaiJe standardswhicb mustbe metinthecomifllyean . nsuaesta a "uro discharrt" capability by theyeart915as"adesirable&oal." " We're In the lab tr)ina to out what we will have to do to meet the t915staDdardl." Ubbysa.id. " I don'tlu!ow If we as a corporation can afford. it." " We must learn," he said, bot--rowing bioiQI.Isl. Barry Commoner 's fourthtawofeco&ogy ,U.t ' 'There iJ no free lunch." r- -·- rollowina the IW"Yiva l thqhta of Malthus, Darwin, and Marx, Fuller says: ''TechnoiO&Y provldin& more and more &oods from fewer and rewa- N!IOW"Cee could suarantee that all men could SW"Yive". Fullu has turned me around ~i&:J:!Y!:~~~~~:!~":'':'i,: sorbina: 10me of his Ideal, I viewed the sim plification or life ldeemphasizl.na: teclmoiO&Yl u the "Now quite honestly, I'm not so sure. Fullu dfecUvel)' pull teclU'IoiCCY and man In penpecUve. " PoliUca has undertaken Gilly to reform man-Mt his envlrocunent. Society uaes new technolotia, but continues to thiftk and operate In old ways," he uys. tu FuUer put It, an evol.vlna man in an evolvlna unl11erse, puts "mi nd over what matters "··· meanlns: empha1!1 of tJuma!Ullrian thou&bta. overleu humanitarian emotions. He argues for a revolution but not neceiUI'ily a political revolution. ("Polltlct to be effective mutt eventually mate war"l Fullercalllforand predl4:ta a de:llgn-sdence revolution. "II man cholel obllvlan, he can 10 riaht on leavlq; his fate to his j)olllkal leaden," A)'S FuUu. "U be ctw:x:.el Utopia, he mutt initiate an enormous educational . ~~ -·lmmedlaUey, If not answu to survival. FuUu tends to downplay the im· portance of politkal activity. He see~ a world where polltkl ll outdated . The world is aettl.n& too smaU for Individual poU.Uct and lndivlduallndustriallrowlh. AI he puts It, "Industry worb belt a• a =~!!. ·~:~ - r!!,~ ~~~ independenee depends oa their parllclpatlon In world lndustriallution ." Theessenceoftbetopportionofl SHmToHeAVerillsacallfor reorpniution of priorities. Tbe world needs adeslan and Invention revolution to· aet In tune with epbemeralizatlon, "We ahape our tools and lhenafter, our tools 1hape 111", he adda. The discuuion of wa r , politics and lnduslrlallution Ia euentiaUy *='':ene: ~e'::. ~~r: ~n&ecthl: 1 aegmenf of the boot is Mile, traditional black. The .underaide of lhe book lpqes 192b Mck to paae one) feature areen Ink . This reexam ina tion features a lot of discuulon of education. youth and rutures . EssentiaUy it is a call to actloa, a relnforcement,a pfoverblalkickln ....... One of the last paces reatures an ouUine ol !then ) 71 year old ~~:a:-~o:.~~ Tomorrow.'' Thelalt llneoftheC«<J!stantllne of communication that wraps around throu&hout the book Ia, Man Can Do Anythin& He Wanta. R. Buckmlnst.er Nler Ia an example ollbal axiom. He Ia not a catqory. He Is not a thlna-.. noun. He seems to be a verb. ~~t '::~J!~ ..- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.. 1-1.1. WIITU CUIIUL PIUUTS: ~ fi1\U .., .• .:t ~\:~~ru:;:eno:;;a"~r!tl~ stll!~~~- !Iaure A PO~KA FEST WITH RAY DOROCHW&R S IAifBDI VILLI! DU!GIIII!! IN TBE .......... WI8CON81N FRIDAY FEB.20 8PM-12PM FREE ..- .. D~otii>O .,.,..,-- ~·~ Wl85 in steree HAPPY HOUR PRICES ON BEER! Wom~n cagers carry' the ball llyJollaKellet ' Uthere Is any doubt that UWSP nasawinningbaskttballteam, just ask Marilyn Schwartz. the head coach of the 1110men's basketball teaQJ. Coach Schwartz. pr~ntly in hft' sthyea r ofcoaching,huauicltd the femillt cagen to 3n:l place finishes the pastt~~o-o years In the III'Omen 's sta te tournam~t . compiling a 27-9 rKOnt. ThdrCUI"T'entl'ft'Cif'dis 12.-1. v.i th thrir only lou coming earli•r in the seuon. at the hands of La Crosse, 73-62. ''The La Crosse game was· our toughest ,'' Schwartz s.ald. ''The statisticswttetotaUylnourfavor. but La croue took more shots. Our ~t86-50victoryoverF..a uClaire ~-as our best over~~ ll P.)Yie ol the season . Everyooe scorid and ""~ shot51Jper«n tfromthendd,'' she added. Co.lch Schwartz saki that bet· ~~n:JO and:SS&iflstriedoutfor.the team but beuu.se ol a limited IJudiet only 12 can be kept on the team . Six fre s hmen . two soPhomores, two junlcn, and two senionarecurrenUyon the roster. '"'be girls are very enthusiastic about playing basketba ll ," shetald. '11lere's a pleasant atmosphn"t: among the players. They cheer each other 011 ," sbe added. The brand of baD il a lot bet~« now. "Back in 19'71 , tbe fUD< dammt.alt weren't u &ood." Scrt. "'"llrtz said , " but now the freshman are eomh-. in better pnpared. Tbe things we work on m01t ln practica now are SCTHRS, pkb, and rolls," she ~arked . "Our tea m It very phytical. We 're s trong on rebounding, avenging 1~11 men rebounds per game than our opponents," Sch· warttsold. ''Theteamisaveraging 70 polntl per game while giving up <48 on defense. Our shootinc per· centqe for the Season has ben 46 pl!'f ce:nt from the field and 55 per cen t from lhecluirity line,'' addina that she wished the latter could be higher. "Overall, total team play and unity is sb"ts&td durin& all games," she said. The Pointers scoring auaek is led by sophomore, Sue Brogaard with 12.5 pointl per game.Contributing to the offensive punch are Becky Seeverswithat2.2averq:eand~Jee Simon, tbe team 's leadi ng ~bounder with 9.1 caroms per game, who is also carryi"' a 10 point average. Wendy Kohrt and Marcy Mirm an round out U~e starti ng five ~i th 8.9 and 5.4 avenges respeottivdy. 'The Poi niH women~ only ooe victoeyto aaure them ola berth in th e t t a te tournament at WhitewatH. When u ked on the tf'am's chances, Coach Schwartz replied, we 'relAklngthem "ooeata time." . Becky Seevers, a freshman from Arpin, Wl .. ls a stllrtlna: forwa rd on the te · ble to e«npete on the lot," • "You get tD mmtsandyou have betlff quality of bultetball ," she said. " Basketball ha1 alway• been my 1port, it'• my fav«ite past.time," abe added. Wendy Kohrt , a teftlor from Kewaunee , Wi., ia •tartinc &UMd and team leader for •the Pointers. Thit it her fourth year playing and sheagreesthatthecompeUtionand quality it mi.ICh better than ber rant year. According to Kohrt , thlt has beenthebeltteamshe'tplayedon ; she never has played on a loalfll team wblle at UWSP. Kohrt also Monle Chort.. speaks ICiftl that better attendance would help boost team morale. She added that she p~fen male referees over female referees becaUIIt of their .,.,.,._. Ringmaster respof!ds ' by John Rolldy Q. Caach Chnles , do ; .. thiak tbe "dumb)ltck"syn•omelsamytb, and do you prrfu rnarelnteltiJelllt A. Rick Pfot is an e~lent quarlf'rNclt. Ke was an all ..tate . high school quarterback : He'd like toplaymoreandl'dllke t!)see hlm get a little more action and I think athletrl! ~;~~J:!~~";~e;~~~utft:j A. I really try to recruit good 51udentl . We want tt~rm here for four years, ' "at's 01.1" primary roncern.111e auy who would only be here for one or two yean wouldn 't help ua very much. Ckr rettuitmen t has been geared to the student athlete wilh lhe emphsis on student first . out of there, and I can't think ol anyone a round the Midwest who ~uld do it . But when~ has ti.d ti. You'vrplckftlupalabel ofbrlaJ a cou h with fruky ldeu. Do yM one of the top ten punten in the countr y INAJA I. We've tried him at ddensive back , and ~·e're going to try to get him in there som~ft'e because the guy is basit:ally a football player. Q. Are tbe Poia~n toill& to lie a •ianer next year! lT'IIoty wrnt .... to t a k.etwrrthtffha~'1been much of a fal\..t'f. i'eot calls an ucellent game. I think the two quartft'baclts SUpplement eat:h other real wdl. We c:ould possibly pla y him at another posi tion . Of course he led thecon ferenceinp~M~tl n&.andwas agr~! A. Well : they're different. I've l'lt\"er inhmted a winning ti tuation, andtherdore, fhadto do!Omethin& di fferent. Now our offense it Slarting lOgain a little popuLarity and various coaches are writing !etten and catlin& me asking for advice. Otherteamtaresta rting tD use the shotgWI as a 1upplement lO lht'i rrtalllar offense . Q. 11 it true that tile Dallas Cowboy• called you lut ~ea- .. far tlpl onthe "shot&tan "oltentn! ld.D, A. They didn 't call ua. 1bey wrote a letter requtta ina ~«ne pme films, so I sent some. OriJ.Inally I threw lhe let!H away. ~ the coaches said I should save lhe letter or ebe people mi&ht not ~ieve ua so I pluclr.ed it out of the waste basket. ,...._.,,.,,If Ptlini'J M, 117f I UtHaut~ . l A. 111ey 'vebeenaRerhim,butthey did not &et him . Reed is happy here and he '• &oinc lo ttay here. 1bey 're Mill a ner him, lhou&h . Reed likes Stevens PI:Mnt and he's playing the klndofg.amehe lilteltoplay . He'd juR like" to &et Into the winner's ci rcle a li ttle more like we all would. Reed has no Intention of leavirc thit school. Q. Cotlkt back., II'!VIerbark Rkk ~Htstep'-altd•U.ejoltwltMut tee • ._.. fall.rf at tbe poeJU.! A. ldefinitely think weare. l forsee nothing but good things for us. We should be as good as any tea m we playnextyea r , ...,·hit:h\lll·e werenot in the past season . Our lineba cking should be shored up next season. This was ourweak spotlall season. We 're recruiting linebackers. Q. II hal bfta said U.at yo.r t.na pUrd up tm ,..rqln 1tatlltk•. llllt failedtowlii lhed-&aMn. Wbat aboutlhl1! A. We are primaril y a puiln& tea m , andwedidn'thavear~M~nin& attacklutsea~ . l 'vebeel)~yina for the Jut hro yean that we're going to rWI more, but Joe Pilf!Ck)' was lost in the firtt aame of the season, so we 've had 10 rely on the passmcn thanl 'd\lketo. WelikelO be ranked n~.nber on'e In the comtry in passlnc . We lost 4 game~ byatotalolll point&. We 've got almost the whole team coming back 140 of 431 . We11 hav't1 the maturity to ....i nthedose onet next year. 111e e:cpnieiK't factor wlr11 or klloes pmes for youmoretotha nthe type ol attack Wt' have. StatilliCI don't matter to me. It's winning that COWIIs , ' Pucksters attempt turnabout by Pde UUenld An uildenumed UWSP boc:key lhe last period of the pme the PoUlter lk1ten beaM to domtn.te lhe Ice but were sUII UMble to dCR the pp between lhdr ~eore ud Stout's 11 the fhlll buuer. A btl problem lhlt the Poinlen arefacinJlhlssemesteril•lackol personntllhlt hu 1efl them with onlythreedefensemen, justhllfol' lhe amount llled by m1ny toms. squad will tllke on the Unlven:lty ol Winois.Qiic:..o Clrde toni&bt at the lc:e4Dromeastbeyll)'tomda seven aame loalaa atrult. The Pointers are now eipt aod sixteen lrl tbe win«:. cai:~DDS alter bavift& beftl dull four ec:m· StC\Itive - . . by UW.stout O'¥tr the put two wf!Heodl. In two home gameslaltf"ricbyarwiS.tunlaylhe Pointen bowed in' a couple ol YerJ ph y 1 I c I 1 I I me I . lt!Frkllyni&,htlpmelhe Pointer~ jumped to an earty 2.0 ::SiJ:St~n~ f!:y~n~~ =ltiJ!e"-j!~='"~ ttamJ seemed to be pllyiJC faJrly altboucb the Stout slcat.tn to.'t'fl di~)'edlhe~~os:~l. lboutthete•m'sstatu&lnyunto come. The pucklten, •loa& with ::r:::;~=.~=~ =~~.~~~~ha~bl~ been some' rumors •bout the poulblllty ot the proar•m beln& :'ttm~~·.=~~ha~ lhepme . Anot.btr factor In the Pointers receat lackol~UC"Ct:a m•y be the Pointers Wft UILible to pul all)' put tbe oppositloa's aoalle. DtrGeeat, a rl.ftC)' tenter fnm MmW. tu:med In llrGaC per~ in each cootelt, in· cludU.a37-polntiiC'Ciri.lllapree ln the M«1 vk:tory 0\'ft' RIWI' Falb: His sphqe aaainll the Falc:Daa included I Kbool retGI"d 17 fidd pals in 23 altftnpU. He added IS points in a 7MIIoa to Eau Qaire lad u .. the Pomttrs bowed to Beyond this year's won-lou reconl the people involved with the hockey procram are 1110 w«Tied :::,:.:~~rce~::~~~=~~ ~"3.: more pis wbDe the S.tlldMU • Sleveol Pomt'a O.ve VanDerGeest, who ll cominc oa tranlfen-ed to Loylla In Chlcaao. and alfr ec-ecory, wbo ts still • student here II UWSP. Both ol these players were 1lternate c.splalns on the te.sm 1nd wbile Scott was al«<rinllelder, Grti«J wu 1 . m•instay on ~efense. to form three orfealive llnes if everyone suits~ for the came. But lncueslikeS.turd.ly niJht'saame wben defmseman Steve Freeman was suspended the skalerllrt! olteo lk•th• much more tlwl UIUil ud teams like Stout wilh six more players In! often cap.~ble t.o like ltadaodattbeeadoltbellrlt 5tronloe&r tbeead ol tbe MUOI'I, wu named Wlacoaaln State University Caafennee buketba11 P'llyttol the Week. Alltacb the PaiDten loll two ol lhree Jamea lut week, Vao· lou of two of lhelr key pl1yen from lut semester, Plul Scott who discuu lbe situation 1nd th1t Mr. [)reyfUI bad dO\II'npil~ the Lllk. GYMNASTICS: 0a Saturday, February 21, at4 pm ln Ber-t Gym, the SeC'oDd Annual Alumoi Gymnastics Meet wtll take piKe. The IJIMI.Sll from yean: t.clt WRESTUNG; OnFebnaaryn, the aupplen dnwDed Stout by the 1e0re or 4+4. Earlier this seuon, the Pointers downed Stout 22-11, 10 itunbe.seen tNt tbey bavecome a loac way since tben. Folknrina: the Stout m.stcb, the Pointers dropped • 414 dedlloa.to Whltew.l«, the NAIA's ni.IDber :!~ ~~tli~te!m~~--"!: Gymnutiet Cub abould be rudy Cor them. Make pl&DI to be tbere becaUM ldmiakxlll FREE. one wrestliDI tum . Tbe Whltew.ter m1tcb was Febnwy ... Sports shorts In the Stout matdl, the wUmen for the Pointen: wen. Rkk Pucodc. at 111 pow~dl, Cal Tackea 11 LS4 pounds, Jeff Ketter •t 142 pound&, RonSiwd•tl.Sipoww:II,Alc.a.rter at 110 pow~dl, and eYeD Mite HcMbtin eame throuch wi~ • pin. Slout. . .71. Hefltlisbtdthethreepmeswlth ...... 6Spointa, mUIJ:C21fidd&011J in U WO!'IENS BASKETBALL; 'nils put week lhe women dowMd the UWMbytheiC'OI'eoi$Wtudthe UnivertftyolWltc:GnlinBadl;enby ...... The two victories railed the Poi.nlerl record to 14-1 for the 'Ibis f'rid.ly, the grapplers travel to Elu <lalre for the conlerence championship. The meet will conclude on S.tiiZ"d..y. Friday's evmtl be&ln at 7:JO pm 1nd S.turd.ly'ssLirtat lpm. Thil weeki redpleata of the Dolfllh Award were Malt and Bob Hop0100. Ryln Unlve,.lty of Wleconeln - Stevena Po int ~,7 t., POINTER BASKETBALL IJW-SP VS· . Sotruday, February 21 , Whitewa..,. (H) Wednesday, February 25, Oshkosh (H) "Ezclusivelj"o'l. Wl85 in steree . ._ . . llAI't" / 11'1¥11t, __,. . .. lor s/1 of Centrsl Wisconsin 10 3 .3 FM 103.3 FM 103 .3 FM ,.......,. • · '"' "''' n r-.r lntro please Stensburg speaks by Carol R~Kks Brad .Stensber& is a 26,yur old parasite of tllis W1ivnsity. He has been fumbl inl around with art and eommwlicatlon classes since 1969. Hehasalso been a reclplentola grant from the National En· downment fo r the Arts . has p r oduCfl! the "jlrad Sten!Jbtrj Video Gland Show", and has given art s hows In Stevens Point, Madisoa, Eau Claire and St. Nor- bert'• CoU~e of tul phot.Oi:raphy, sketches and video tapes. Wbea dW y~~~a firll bee:ome lD.. ttrnkd lo elecb'oak art! "Probably from loin& to mwles as a kid. There was reaUy notNng else to do in tbe WIKonsin Rapids area . Shortvldtolare mOftsuittd tomypenon~~lity , _ lhouah,thlnfull Jenalhfilmsare. Usomethirwcat~ 't be done within fifteen minut.el, the hellwithlt." What lloyoafUHiaauciUq:-a ..._t vkkcl! " VIdeo is exc:iUDC becl.u.e you can see the results of what you've dooe immediately, it'aspoo.taneout, &Dd any fool can run lbe qulpmtat." Are yoa sertou a bod,_. • cri! T "No. lt 's f~r~butl t .m'tfeeisthe people of lnd.il , or 'prot.bly me eL ther. MywireMan:isupportS me. Mystuffissoesotericandisot'little importance to anyon~. including me. U my house was: burning down, though, I g~JtSs I would first rescue my video tapes, my photos and drawiflllS, my camera , and lhen I would try to save my couc h, my wire, my dog and my refrigerator." Wha td oyotl thl nla rt coaabttol! ro::~: :Js:!~i'~ :,~ ~!7. 2) You have to do it. 3) It's messy. \Vhal biVe some of yo.&r Wuest lnRueocnbH:~! "One big influence has been jUit paying attention to what video artists like William Wagman have been up to. I pay dose attention to dincton lite Kubrick and A.ra· tonloni too. Plus, tbe five·year subscription to Artforum tbat ::ty~ :::e!Ym~or~ bdpful . Do )' o.& tlaialr. U.. t art .. I IW viewed as •• dfe-.baa&e p~­ capaU• ! "Mavbe to people outside the art world, but not from tboae worlda& wi thin it. Belides, do you know any ~ that know bow to bUcBe electronic equlpmeat ?" pfi Mo lty Roa 'n1111111 The .All/COOPMAN F''lFriday, Feb. 20 F I . 8 P.M. and .I . " at 10:30 P.M.. cR 'c R "SHAFT T in the Paul Bunyon Room on the Video Beam (4'x5' screen) FREE-FREE-FREE BANANA SPLITS The Bermuda ROGER, WENDY & WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15 AllEN CflmR UPPER · 9-10:30 P.M. ADMISSION 50¢ BEER WILL BE AVAILABLE p.,._ ,.,c II Fdn.,.y Zl, It'll T FOR SALE : 5 •trillc beajo wltb s instnxtiaa booka, m . Allo a.a.:t player, GG. FREE STUDENT CLASSIFIED$ CbNifieii..W.•a t iNc.n.e.IU.U. ~ 11 tbe P.,.a&tr Office, • Mila. Ne Ids wiU be ..ltu c.wa- U. ,a-. M_..y • - dudU.. ! I The mu ter of the Jcimcoe ol . tochina tom~ve o.am wUJ be:htldS.t, ApriltO. Torecisterfor lhevwn, P'easecall Dtbl, S4f.4400 or wr:lle to the Sc.hool of Edue.Uoa NOTICE : Jobarly, Cao't WT'Ite. Sea 6: Bart.r., Fnuna • PbU will meet ... R«nember Natural~ uz. 7:30PM Man:h s. You know. The ~ aDd Ha.riq Test for admittance Into tbe Scbool o1 Profeulooal Education will be pven Ttusdroy, Feb. a, from 4:30 PM-4:30PM irl tbe Communie.tlve Diaorden Center, OOPS. Student C.pter ol tbe WlkWfe Soddy Meetiac Moa., Feb. Z3, 7:00 PM in U. Wrl&bt I..Gwlp. there wiUbeapre&eatationolthefll.m "'lbe ReproducUve Behavior ollbt Brook T'nlut" and I party I f· I ""'""'· I I Lnbianlalk force meeting the 2nd and 4th Wed. ol e"'ft"Y month, 7 PM 1t 110:1 Franklin. Woma. Hdplq Womea. S4HI700. J ' WANTED : Freelance writers , artlata a nd pboto&raphtn for new b~mUna, fishlna m.aautne. Write : llldltate OUtdoors, Rl , 8oJ: IS'l·A, Wa,_u, WdCOftlin M«<l. A ride to Superior for the conference ltrim mett • Sat. Feb. :U. Tbe earlier the better. :MI·GII, Debbie or Barb. Q'itical eauys oa rum. and or direcl.ort. Accepted material to be publilbed In MONTAGE, the UWSP mm jolrnal. Mlterial m111t be submitted by Mareb 30. call )16. IDIIIlbepre~ . LOST ' One dirt blue billfold 1t the f1M ArtiBuildinc. u Jomd, pleue lend it. or the coatents to: 201.5 PQr1.qe St . I ~1Dy oeed my miftr'l lkmle. I 21, 8PMin BerJGym . 11.50-Uc.ketl IYailtble at the UC lnform1Uon Desk, &qtr Chef, Sbopko, and • Graham Lane M~a~ie: Shop. ~Oft Slevms Point ampus lo dd.iver 4 cues ol .Point 8ac.h durin& the next week or 10 to anyplace In lower Pftlirwula or Olkqo. Call ftoltr 8rO'Im coUect at 517~ bttweta I AM and 4 PM, 517-3St•ta alter 4 PM. You will be~idfortbebeerand ............. Trinity Lutheran Ctnan:h-comft' of Oarlt and Roten. SUn. aervka I : XI aod 11 AM For dally i'«''O'ded mnnae$44-21117. EYaJIIdleal Frw Onre:h aervleel SUn. t :30 AM CoUqe Qaa ; 10 :30 FOUND: Navy blue warm-up jacht Ia mall I b)' tbe leonia uurU. ldefltify and It's yotn. k!f, 103 Hyer, :u&-S7tO. :~~;. ~:;~:~~ Nldlolson , 34t~. Sun . ~otr , l : 45 AM Collqe and Career Bible a..., 10 :4.5 AM Wonblp, 7 PM EYeniDI Wonhlp ; Wed. _.. 7:30PM Bible Study oa Roman. and Prayer. 81.11 IC.beclule : Sun. 1 :30AM and 1,.0:30 AM at Scbmeekle, Wataon and Wanted to reat over·~ break : lnderwaterc:ameracaw for Pe:ntu Spotmatic F or SP-tooo. cau BrWI, S4t-40Z4. XMI'7or:MI-5710. Prt-JIWria&e Semioars April to a, 34 from 1: IS AM-4:00 PM at tbe Puce campus O!flter. u interest«~ , in attenciq, plene call the UOI otr~ 1000. All attenc~nc i 461 COPS. _ REUGION : I .V. Cbristian Fellow1hip and Campu.s Crut ade praut the Ardlen m concM Thunday Feb. $1.50 ,_ line lor ....,m..a.I - CI.UBW, ,.......,_ II Roach Hall. Newman Unlvenity Parisb..S.t. 4' Bul~ lllqulry ella becinl March 2, It Newman C.mpus I 1 PM Newman Chapel; ~n . 10 AM Ne...man ; 12 noon Qolatl'r al10 I PM Weekday mUI at 12 noon. 7:30 PM mlniatr'J Omte:r, 2101 Fluth AYI . Thil II a eotne La Ba&le: C.tholl~ lnltructioa.. U you are l.ate:relted. pieue call tbe Newmaa offke, :Mf.4MI IOQQ 1nd preflliste:r, or call of yrou ~ morel.afo. Eo1Kop1l Cbur~h of the lA· :='rnia~~ q mau followed by f1m.Uy breakfast SUndays It t AM , low mau 1t 5:15PM SUndl,-. Guitar ~ mau followed by funUJ JUpper 1t 5: 15 PM Fridaya. ! Application are now available for the following SUMMER ORIENTATION POSIDONS: Group Leaden This is a .full-time, 9 week positioo. This person may not hold other jobs or attend summer classes•. He/ she must live in a residence hall u the 9 '!'eek penod and mwt be returning to this campw next fall. Remuneratiori . $HO plus free room and board. Orientation AssislliDIS This is a port-time, 9 week position. This person is permitttd to hold another job 0< attend summer . <411ies. He/ she must live in a residence baD u the 9 week period. n·s•u• ANDRE COLD DUCK a. . ss.so SOUTH POINT BEER & LIQUOR • 2800 C"":~!!;~ ~:nit SOUTH .,..... . fr:':~~ free board lX mo. .....,/ I I l 'Equality, Ube ~ and Frate rnity' regular columns Despite the neat W'llvt:rsal ac«ptarw:eof the Idea put forth last week tMt the white man 's inability to identify forms of government and social controls other than their own led them to bdieve that Indians were universally. Incapable of civiliulion ltinttantproti!Stant clergy dauntleuly carried out ~~~.:t!i~~':. ~n~~r:'.P~~a !:v~!~:r:mtO F: ~uflr:d before they could hope to become Olristianiled. This must have befll a contusing time for moet tribes who were Involved with convef'$ion a ttempts. Reports !rom the clergy had lndicaled that delplte Indian inability lo~t dviliution, they were neva" the leu born of Adamandcooseczueotly,oloriginalsin.lnlightofsuchflnt hand oblervations durin& convenloa experience~ , Colonial America111and Brililh authorities manased to ncopize the ''natural ri&}lts " ol'savqes iD the fonn ol temporary boundaries. Moreover, tbe lmaae of the Indian bad chanaed. God willed that the Indian in hil deplorable savage condition be a distinct obstacle to progrea-man was to learn the bleulnp of hard wort In oven:omlna this menacing ot:.t.c:le and, the:refore, fulfill h1l senaeof mlaion. The Puritan ethic expanded westward In the 1710'• alona ==~~:rth~~~~~~~ ~ !z~:dtJ!~ progress and ldleneu, the abaenee of punult, gmerated 8tJlll !~lings from within the Individual ThiJ wu a lignl.ficant change. Americans, in their a ttempt to make Hvinp out of extremely small plots of land, were obee:ued with the pursuit of progress and were sruOy agravated wbeo larp tracts of land were ,set aa!de for what tbey per-ctiVed u wutdul ''savages''. Beca1.11e maoy lndlanaodeties had practked the art or huntir:w and flshlnl:ln «dtr to maint.in a subliatence economy, and given repeated usuranees that the lands they occupied were thdra for "aa l q as the riven run'', ~ was little need nor time to leam the American method or cultivation. This entire sltUition was Inevitably perceived by ~':anse:~~:: f:!re ldlene~t-tbe moet miSerable state Aside from lhe development olanta&onlstic thoulbtl, there was another Important f~c which coatributed hNvUy to future American pol.lcy and approachel to the Indian problem. Beeauseofawell opedaeeeptanceofu.vaJery there was little need to ulsh any major tribal dif· ferencn , their various f of government. and respective social controls. Cotuequmtly, the oal.y appi"Oich to the Indian problem was thrOUJh bureaucracy, euen::isoed by all major formal Institutions. Frequently, the lowest ol lower subor· dinates in tbe chain of c-ommand were designated to rq~resent the institution In particular contact aitUitions. The au thoriud representative commonly usumed that the Indian spokesman he met with wu rilher of the ~me bureaucratic ~':~~~~=~~~=~~"::~~~e~~ emulate the model In thrir desire for "ofGrt aDd reuon". What was 1'101 known was at the time of 1"771 m&DY tribes thrived on rather efficient systems of emergent a!tuational ::=~ry :~tau:!. '='~em;:;, ~.~ binding a ulbority . Since the CaivlnlM doctrine wu not genented from within the American Indian tribe., there wu, ::.!ta':U:T~"Ld~!:t~~the~~rn·~: thi~~ti~':~:tooftn~~~~~!"tbe 19th and 20th centuries. Since American cabalist thoucht said, tobeoneofp-eater magnitude than that of the McCarthy era, was slowly sublldlllfl, more Ume wu given to the Indian problem . The concept of savagery wu flowering and headina :e~~~':!!~~~~somt!~':;.'::br-:ei ;~e. for a stubborn few , the "t.wny &ldn'' of the uvage •u due entirdy tocUmateand environmental conditions. In any cue, the preval.llna attitude wu lhat civilization wu Inevitable and mtat be acapted by all Indians if they 'Wished to survive and at the same time they were DOt to be of the Amfrican IOciety, but only a part of America's pul A weekly from' student government by ~Baddlllkl II seems the major crisis 1 pred.l~t.ecl ror lhe UW S)'ltem hu subllded. It teems the major problem was one of communica ti0111. To tbe benefit of aU lhil problem was overcome and an ap-eement was re&ched betWftll tbe legislature and the Board or Resents. ~ of~~e=~=~c;~~~ces:r!~ur81~~tc'::'r:ti~ statements concemlna the Board of Relents action. AJI.bouah 1 still believe be ac~ In haste in hit attack on the BMrd, I ~~.~~:?'tc~ .!e::,~C;;~:=:!'J~~ 0 probe into the. academic programs and COUf"'M coatent. Hil concern waa tbe management of the UW fundi . The problem OCCWTed between what was u.ndentood between Senator Bablitch and the Legislature Audit Bureau and what the Bureau present.ecl to the Board of Regents. That problem baa been cleared up to the satisfaction of both sides. A second Im plication Is that Senator Bablltch Is the forefront leader In the attack on the UW system. For that I apo\ogl:u.._Smalor"'Bablltch haa defended the UW and haa beet! receptive to Its needs In the put. I can only hope be continues to do so In the future . But , even with all the mlsunderstindinp and neaatlve implications, one meaaq:e did arrive clear and precise. The UW l)'ltem Ia not a Vocational-Technical system. Evaluations of effectiveness should not be based on em· ployer's reaction to a UW gradUiles' prq~&redDeu to per· form In the "real world". And dfkieney doesn' t_ mean =~::~onz.~::. ~~=~~oris ~U.:::.~~= perience and a continuing one. I just hope it con tin,_ In the UW sptem. · While I'm on the s:ub~t of Smltor Bablitch: 1 ::F.' refer :~our:~~ !:at ~~~et::!! s::;:~~~ ~=~ Tenant Bill now In the Assembly-could chance the relatlon.sblp renters have with landlords. For ltudenta Ulla ~~~~~:.=bllr:.r~~~~~~~tf!:: serious problems In the Assembly. Student support ollhe biU is essential. A letter tn your usembly rq~resentatlve could aid In the passage of thla-blll.·Sittina on y01r hands and bit· · clUng wiU only continue the present situation. You chooM wha t you want. A second bill would redeflne the rape statue~ and provide better protectlon of the law ror rape vlcUma. With all the concerna.bout rape onthlaeampus,aslrllfll~l · Is a POSitive 1tep In dotng somethlna: about So lnatead of Oapplna your jaws, 1.11e y01r otor ski!& . produce a letter to YOUI" State repreeentative on llUIIIIue. Again the choice Is youn. u; Detours around Crime of the century Armageddon by AJ Sluek .H. . .,.-"«-,......y. :.:~ur::::-~~tudy~~~ mappiac ol your natural jukes Is yet to be mpleted! Who ~or";C:'!n~';.'i!~d:tr~Fln~thi~=~i~ attOrdin& to muim, Natve uama... rapect. LEE HARVEY OSWALD: " I 'M J UST A PA~Y" But ...tt! 11Jeroe are tboM amana us wbo ean't fiDd a • utunl vent for tbtit yeaminp. tn frulttatioa lhey loR track ~'!!~~~~!l~~"'~'?:"u~:: direction ol buma.n Interaction. They allow their libido to dqenerateintoa monater. 111eloveact becomes ootolhate and horny means ot ~lion at all C'Oits. ~Dd~~~~~~·~~~~~'l!~ justi~ Lbey are perpetntlq: upon lbemldves and..-. their Yictlms. B«ause a buman bdrchas mammary glands and a slia.hlly difrertnt llf'O'Ienilal medlaniamthauldn't mean lhat they should have to fear walkfrc alone at nile. The anxious nitelt&lkenarenotonlyrobbinJtbelrliltenoflherichtto enjoy a walk in the fifth air they 1re puttlrc lbtmldves thnl ............, ........ Ubention is onen hard to adjust to vltwina. ltt alone u · periencina. but it will (!Ike any olher worthwhile pbtnomtna) come, in time. Peop&e are available to help you ease Into your place on th1t e.ulh. Don't ruin yow- c:banee to expe'f'imce the real thlnp thatlifelw loofrer. Uyour libido is -* beiacsalllfled and anxidy start& to mount up tee the~ ceater, find a sort ear and comfortina let of ii'Ues or ~ate 1 masterpiece but don 'I abuse anolher human being's rights to be walking in themoonli&ht. S.tarec:--..Mitrespect. Uatil a consensus al ratlonalgrallfte~~don is achieved thru public Cpeoplel f'duc11Uon theft are lhlnp th.lt an be done. The rarst is prtvmtion via diKussion. Opm your- soul to a warph• mind. A brotbtr IOir!l sow needs ~~~n~eone to educ11te him about theconseq~.~encesol abandon ina hum~~nity. An OUIICe ol prevenUon Is wwtb a pound ol injultice. Female& c11n kim the medllnk& ol r~~pe avoidloee tlwu tbe oewly atablilbtd Anit-npe unit. Tbey can be rudled at :141- ~i)' ~m~.da~ ~~ir.::uons aDd it is society's lour) job to deal with them. Co-opcoolc ~ Rec;pes lor good h~~ }-;~ - Fe..., . . lt'N .... II htaer Photos bloody good reviews The 115 prints thlt.appea r show a Photoaraphy exhib\la appear "*relY in tbe Fine ArU F4ta C.ristea Gallery. Whethn- It II because tourinl ahowa ue amavailable « the medium is looked alkance at by thoR wbo -.1 nearwtiversal maatery OC ;>rintin& t«hniques, if not wist choices. Entries rut1 the gamut from strong, ~rlul , g111byabytheshorthaln imaces to the boring and Inane. Fortunately the latter are far outnumbered by tbe former . determine such thinp is not known. 1 fall. Jill:: ~, new JChool and ffiii'TY It to a ol personal direction . sense caJI for a wave. a breeu, an)'lhina to brull the sterile monotony . . Larry Hmnan and Olris S;teele. Ptrk.ifll prdu people In tMir :: livutock a uctio na and tatoo parlon. Steele-Ptrldns ahows a aomewhat d a rker side; an omlnoua ly appea rin& masked wrtatler at Newcastle upon the Tyne Is exhibited next to the photo .... of a hideous ly acarred infant · of Ban&Ja~h . At the same time he can portray the wholesome In· nocenceofyouthattheCityof Ulndon School pool , Strong stuH. the work of the areal Life pl\olojournlllial Alrred Eiseutaedt· · -itv lsltedcampus fyearago lut ::~:~ ~!~:~o!· Othn- artists are more conttmed' with desHctina the British lire. Nul GuJ.Ii\'U''I ICCMS In alm05t too tranquil ; hli peop!Hess lmtges ~:C:Ou~:;,~:~~n~ ~h~ What is known Ia that what few ~~~~e~l~~. 'th:r.:-tJd~ According to Mart Edwardl and O!ris Steele-Pmdns , organben and two of tbe fourteen artists leatured , the show is an att~pt to show the dir«tion of pbotofn~phy In today'a Britain. 'l'tle lndivlduiJ featured •~ in the vanJU&rd of a mOVftnent away from tbe strict rommen:ialism and eatrencbed, 1taid pictorialit m that hu c:haractn'ized put Brltiah work, honor of Banaladesh b very , vn-y rifMtive. The pinta of Mark Edwanll ~ovide a atroog be&i.nni.na for the pUtty visitor. A oumber of the shots were taken wbile on asa~&n· mentinAsia; hispbotoofa rottinJ C1)C'1)ae on a C.lcutta rivn- bed, a ttended by dop and vultura Ia one the viewao ia not liltely to aoon forcet. Hl a atarll, cont r uty depictionoftbe m lndleacootinuinC John Wtbb'slii'Wk is of the tripodmOW'II.ed , k1nJ expo~~.~te va riety. The exten<led eXJ)OIUrtS aJiow us to feel a time-movement relation with tiM!subjectmatter,beitaponyona fence or waves Iappin& on a beach. More emphasis of the British Ufatyle is olfn-ed by Roa Me· Connkll, Paul Hill, and otbers. Not aU is outatandlna, however. John Wall's mWldaoe imqes loot II k e rejects from a basic photosraphy clau . Subject matter 1s non~stent. Richard Wood's miniscule pictures are printed uniformlydark , whlchlsnottoobad conslde r lnc the Items In his viewfinder . He a nd Paddy S'um· merhillhave fallenforthe''private reality" aarbace that tw swamped ma ny ,YO:.UIII U.S. photographers. ~ 1n armpits, et al. Dumb, bor•n& stupid imaae:e . ::!~na~O:. ~r1e ~Mpef~ Lucidly they are } more than balan«dbythework olsuch artists as Simoa M.andf:n. wbole photo. are probably the 1trqest Ia the show. His seascapes and Jandac•pes Jhow an ~~~ mastery ol masllpulative prinlinc, and mUll be seen to undentand. 'lbey cannot justly be described. All In aU, a mo&t excelleft t sbow. Two of the artlsta include photoa from the U.S. Blues-jazz critic The uhibit of " YOW'II British Photo&n phen" will be showa throu&h Feb. 21. lll ea rly March the &allery will feature a n exhibit of studen t artworks, exc:l ud ln& photosr•phy. eoJIUcal candidate bullhoriui hls itleua.ae from the bed ola truck could stand as a com ment on ow own elMtlon year attilucles. 1 STUDENT MANAGER OPENINGS Job Specifications: 1. Willing to meet and help people. 2. Ability to meet and accept authority. 3. Ability to make quick, intelligent decisions. 4. £motional stability and even temper. 5. Fairness, honesty and cooperative spir~. 6. Well groomed and neat in a~rance. Any student with two or more semes· ters remaining on campus as of Sep· tilmber, 1976, Is eleglble. If interested, applications are available at the Campus Information Center, and Allen and Debot ·Stu dent Manager' s Offices. DEADLINE FOR APPL¥1Rt'fiS FEBRUARY 23, 1976 · ,. Very high stone SU.pmmpo~illl Stcme's wrm,., Stone •tood qainst Vietnam l q before I~ became popular to do eo, by wrihna In defense of "camp.ll or Coniresalonal Heartnas on the Gulfoi'Tonkin 'inddent',overLBJ ,, HHH ~ Pill l f&nin& the hilloric resolutioo whkb plqtd Ameriel !:~~~~:e.:~~ brou&lit · blJb 10vernmeot offh:iala 10 convinclnJy pr"aented, on ba.~Y- laupta- and jtftina Television videotapes o1 Nb:on't IHI ~raehrjaclr. c:ampaian in which he came oa 11 the p;~ctmtter are eHedivly mixed ~~~~· ~~~u'::n~s~ lf:. wlvtment • early u 1154. Sta rtln& out with a :~:r:fotac:::~~-~s:'!·! Witb on economy baled oo Wlr moterloh prod uellon 011 d distribution , Stone warns ot !he dire consequences 10 monklnd if we ridOun.tlvesotluden'llihofonthe names or militarism, eon"Uptin& every 15peetol Americln ure Ptr~ap• tbe moll thoU1bt provokirc upect ol the movie wos the eooeliJdin& mm device Uled to ~~i.uStooe 's pointoa the rrulilory-industrlol eomplu. mnsr~ :=:a;~. ~~;~: half-tlmefestiviUes lnoheU~er Is tK'Ortfd down the pidlron by.~ ~~~ta~~ :-~=~= :=n~~t'!::U~rm~ chetrlna eodeta, aDd jams • sword as a rtpOrt.tr Ia be feared and respeettdbyboththeldtaodthe ri&hl . Stone, an ardf'nt .uati.fadst wbo wurll'tdiDIIZtfroma~ pr~ job for. badmoutblo& a Mu11ohnl apealler while on assi&!'"'ent atanAmtrk:ant.ecJon meetina.ttoodoutualonenld:aollightamonpt lbt clarba.aota panuMMd press, expolina the wll· cbcrafl ol the McCarthy lnqulaltkm durin& ow 50'1. T~ ,:e:s::nt~.J'Z sludentJ. tome or tbe footqe 1ftdudes bar room talk with Walter jubulenUylnto a man Jlz.e cab · rro.ttd witb delicious ldrc lhll· lpd1s out the !..Illes ol fam0111 ':= ~~erkan History- lD- Intmn!Ueatly spli«d witb oU the ::r:.~::!.~t!tr:n Afro!:~ toil oil low-level fl&bter bomber n.~J»lmlfll VlelnomeM villols ODd bam.lels and the result. ol theM ' 'proeecU.e reocdoo strikel" -dead blbies,KOI'dledeulh, aDd bumin& lles.b, have the some lidr:eniq effect of Hurts ond· ·Miads mottrial. rebels'~~~=s=:e:: ~ePeota&on Pape.tt a nd Wateraate. The film tucceulully described the character of I. F. Stone, the man, who wrote In the fanwell iuue of tu. news weekly In 1971; 1-nledU~pa~tolulvt rudat141111. humor aad &nee•. I clrumM ollak.lqlile nlll.. m ol lh tWHk'llltWIIIId•okh!JIIIlaJ • . .• loJlveoUUJee-forttoU!e opprenHI, · to wrlle tile l r•th e..uclly u I IIW it. to make DO C0111pr-iln oUift' thalli !Mot tf ~uollty l111 poud hy my ow11 laalkq.. dn, to be frH Ia loll- 110 mostcr Olber 111111 my -~~ c-. to Uve 'IP Ia my WltolbM lmiJt tf wbl I cr. MWiplpa'• •aas ....Wbe.... HWNo.. kto mokeo UviiiJ f• my f1111Uy-wlult f*ll'••· •onc•W••uuU [ F. Stone's Weftly ll 1 moY!e about • man wbo worted ot the IJ'Nte.ttull:otourUme, "tofloda ~{~~!.• of soclolhm and '* Someday your dllldrtN' cbildrtn may bock on the mOYie u a stoeyoto spoftsman (oro MWqe ol humonily. lbl complltte t<lllecUon oll. p , . . _., Wtdly IJD.l17lla IYI!Iablt 011 mJcnt. the LRC. rum., "Bad play" good by BMHoa No questjoa oboullt , EUr.abetb Johnson's " A BAD PLAY f"'R AN OLD lADY" II differeat. 'lbe ploy, p-esented February 11·14 by the Studio Thutre, hu no real plot . It :~:.~~~dr~ stqe II oppropnately blre, ucept for • fnr ~tiaJ prop~ end the cut ol three e:.bone:ten, F1owft'· men , Owlle, oad Mary. nowe-~ . ployedb)'Spenct-r P. Prokop, ts the first e:harocter we oee. Helsdressedlneolorlultcups of e:lolh and painted like • clown. nowermoa •eta as lhfl rtncmoster or l~il little . flo.linl circus, spwnna aw-Ue •nd MAry in to pia )inc _aames wbkh pt.rody tbrir emcrk1 1~rbyed 1 by nm Mwny, Is 1 sick ly , hounted -lookin& e:haroclef' who mUes 1 llvlnc by puttlnc dead sol&rs Into toy tanks , cominc his nei&hbor's wife. end havin&niibtn:lares about r11ta. Mary, Ol&rlie's wile, pl1ytd by Dlrice E. Clewell , Is 1 typleol w.rulnlltd wife. 9\e tmtf1es 01 a more lmport.t.nt dlarocter 11 lbe ftldoftheplly . 1be pb.)'WTilht has used the " We &reiUplaymontnllstopofJJ.fe" eonceptosoloolforportr~)'inclbe ortifida!MM of the character's lives . This ortHicillneu 11 cltveklpfd lnonumberolwoys. For insi.IIIC)t, the e:haracten seem to realizethltthrtylrtlnsomeiOrtol a constructed expnitnee-IUC:h u • dream or 1 ploy. 11le nownmon n-en &illft stale direcdOM, curine li&hll. m..le:. etc. Much ol the di•Jocue Is acanldy dnaibtd u ''b.dpottry," lndili..tratesthe in1bilily of the characters to e:ommw.le:lle. Chsrlie ond M1ri ore p1r· titularly unable_ to eommunk:ote. ARTS & LECTURES PRESENTS SUMAMOTO SOPRANO FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27 MICHELSEN HALL SPM -f~fJUST ARRIVED JA~SPORT BAGS,PAKS,TENTS AND ACCESSORIES II ... Newer Math. ., If you're a sop..j/:ore it's not too late to enroll in Army ROTC. Under the Two-Year Program you can attend a six-week Basic Camp next summer, take ROTC in your junior and senior yea}s, and receive commission along with your diploma. In other words, complete a four-year course .!n just two years! And if you're a veteran you don't even have to attend the six-week Basic Camp! a Army ROTC will also pay you $100 a month while you're in ·school (for you vets, that's in addition to your GI Bill) to spend as you wish. ._/ Army ROTC has a lot more 'to offer, too. For more information call or visit ART HARR IS or BOB BROWNE ROOM 204 STUDENT SERVICES BLDG . or CALL 346 - 3821 @ ArOIJ' ROfC Lear n What It Takes To Lead ·j