r 15' 27 ,

advertisement
r
Off-campus 15'
February 27, 1976
r,
.UafonMs"ltl.ldtDtatUW.SUV.Poblt-attmdiacsebooliDMadis..l
••a• diMppolattd by the WI!OU!Ided
. , _ &1111 lnaumOo., CCIDialDed Ia
StudtniSenlttPresidalt8<1b Bad·
zinUi'a column ot t't«ww ry IS ~ar·
ci.!l&lhe ~islativeauditofthe UW
Syatem.
I hive &reat tetptelfot Mr..Bad·
dnUl 'a tnowltdce ol the putiMnt
~taws lnvolvin& the UMnn!ty S)'ltem.
lnlhlllnJtarKt, howewr,ht!seemedto
~ck llleunbalttdpenpectlvewblch I
havefoundiQ refmhln&i'!,.pre¥10111
.
to!Ymru.
:=::mU:=~~~st
=&lldltalecul~"~!:
q~ow: =17~.:::-~
wbk.b•llnedelwlr'dbrcwr~
:!':'lh'fz::,~~~>:-111-:
="i:O:.''~~dll:::!":"'
~tor.,.Biblitm
lnd I wtM 1'11
~
AndlellowWiyouwouldnotYfite ,a
UW.stnena Point II I V~ftdl
ac:bool-yet!
Carol Mnloa
TAUWF EJtcwUn Commit~• Mr111""
Briefly, Bidrlrliiii~MmJIOimplylhat
the
leader of
the
.. ahorUI&hted
lqlllatorl'' lttkin& 10 punlall \be
Rqmtafotlbelrrefur.aiiOcoopente
with the audit ma~~date wu . Smator
WUI~m Bablltch ol Sttvftll Point.
t'lntolaU,thetepalativeauditll
clearlyootlntmdtdiOevalllllcfaculty
r;;r-. ~'=:;:r.:~
lht Boanlol Rqmta Ultd wbeA tJwy
illllial!y rdllltd 10 eooptrlle with the
"dlL
lntruth, tbeiOiepurpaMollhtar.adit
..-.. to•tudJthem.aua:ttlltl'l!l)'lltnu
of UW Central Admlnill ra liu to
dftm~Unehowthei)'Slemltl~
the money ol Wllcoaain'l Wpe)'tn.
kan!Jy,lfeel that Mr. Ba4tilla.t.llt
=:r1:~~~bll~s.:-:
=~!r:~U::=~=~=
lllthoriudlbUIIoettablilllateDant'a
biUofri&htaandrniaeW~'I
111\Yin re&ardln&landlord·tnant
relatlonl.
In the peat Bablitc:h led the np~
llllnatlhtettabUalunentoi~~Mrleea
fot the UV.' s,.tem. He wa-"o In·
atrummtallnllf!lihiiYPitommltleeiO
atlldy comperable fundilli Ill the UW
S)'lttm. -ollhtmaln putpo~aof
whiehWIIIOftiiUI"tthatSievtntPolnt
and othe-r fonner lUte ac:hooll an
&rantedequltylnlundina:forlhe UW
Sptem. •
lnciOIIIIII'nllklllimplyrt:llftltemy
fttllnlthatf>retldent81chiftakllldoin&
In ncdlmt lob Ill lfi'Yint' the ltudmts
of U. UW..Qr-tns Point. lkM·n'ff, In
lhefutllll!lec'ldittdaitirilmwhn'elt
bdollp wbUe li"ID& ~~where
cred!lildlle.
wuu... L..MI&rtto
~tdi ....
M1111peoplemey~~
mbllrcl~tbtiMmater'•Poillrr.
name!ycomlcMrii)5.WilhlhtcltmiN-al
the Student Norm latt Mnlallr,
lell!.t~w•' I'Hdytollkepii«-. AJnmay renembft' It by the ti~ '1tld":
t-
lft«afewpubl~Uonlitlaoktdu ilil
wollldcateh • ·
Solhlaaemest.tt-,lwutoldC.,
Jnlpbks editor DeMb J - 1NI
.. Red " would 1~r wtK~y.
I 1llo lllldentind tNt 11111111P,
«<ltorAIStaoeltwouldDOtleftpl it_,.
oihffWI)', IOI&Ir«diOJO~­
Howe\'er, upon tinbhln& my lint
i..Whnent for the tm\etler, I !lid
te.rntdlhatlttlhertntllallllmeot, llll
lhewholeldellwncerKtlled. Now•'lll
doH the P ointer Willi it •
not! lwuundtrlhelmll"Qklltlllltit
did,
1 min11te,
l le.rntd ~t~trthltMr. StanH.•ould
IIOII IIOW lt to bepubllahtdbtocai!UIIe
didn'tu.ndentlndlt. 'lbbhow.~vtr.tkltl
/IOinecftllrllvmunlhatlhe ratoltlle
.CIIdent
bod)'
wollldn'tlllldentand il.
lfeellhallhlawuebadmovt OCI!llf
«<itor'toart, lorll~etmtthat lleaded
mllnly lnhlltndlhePotn!«'alnlftfll
andnotlheltloldenl'l,
Becluacollhla l lmCO!IIIduilllllllrr
UW c1mputet,, and I may oat ~
anyfYrlherwor\wllhthePoilu«lllllrM
they fum how to mtke 1o1p their railldt.
-..swt~~yca.c. l
tll211S..oll SL
WI
Badzinski bodmouthed 2
~,.lt'IP'IIinl&r711, 1IJ'II
Stanek badmouthed 1
Tenu Pll•lorr
Stanek bodmouthed 2
sucham&IIMI'.Tblswurel.llytdtoM.r.
Staneklmana&ln&fditorl by ML Dowel.
~ea of Polnter
poliey, ol
wbkb I wu not lnfonntd, U Mr. Standi:
sUUlntendedtodi$rq;udmywlllltt;be
had tim~ to eitber CCIIISillt me-and-or
=llluJtr"io!'• homsnothtr
That Mr .
Stan~k
acted directly
Many repreaentatlY'I!Iareunaw-eof
theirposltiOIIIand!IHdposltiverelnfor cemtnt from their constltuenta;
studll!ntashouid <:onlac:l their Assem·
hlymen' and show their support_ for the
provisiOIIIiiiC II.IdedlnUU. Iegislation.
TbebiUdefinestheroleolthelandlonl
In maintaining tht dwdlin& place. It
,."(llldnqulretbtlandlonlto''makeall
repair1 and do whale'llet" is necaury to
apinstlbewilbesoftbe~er.tbe
p.~tandkeepthepremlses lnafitmd
photoanpher, and appar~11tly the
jud&emtnt of the pboto editor
to
1bow n«dl~u d isregard for both
mftllben of hla 1taff u w~u u eoa-
lwbiu.blecondiUon."
5«urity depolita, often a controven.ialluue ,aredeliQedforthefint
lime In WIM:onlln II•. Tbe: m.uimum
allowable amount Is ~ at 0111e
month'srenL TbelandlordWOIIIdhawe
2tcla)'lfrom lbe~ ol the leate to
retumthedli!politorprovldll!npenst
ltltementsfordamaan.
AnotheTprovlsionwouldensurellit
bulc:constitutionslrightsolthettnant
byprohlbitiqlandlordlfromeric:tlnta
tenant in rewlstion for n!portina: code
vlolaUonstohoualngauthorities.
-IIU
lributon.
Tbe:pltyofiUC.hartOIII'ICelstbattbe
cut-o.~ta IIHd were taken out of the
coatut of nlev111t pbotocnpht that
cou ldhuesupportedthea r tlele.
Actually the ~. npreutd to
m~. rqal"'liD,J the trite pig " anterfold"
cubeironiC:UU)'
aprelledwith
ROI'I Thunu' app-altal ol the ~
nant-prde materill of 1M "Youna
British Photoaraphtn" er.hiblt .. ."·
cllmb, borlnaandstupld."
AI lht:M opUUons ate fiom the
rucknhlp of the Poblwr perhlpi you
havecausetoreevaluateyourltellcl
toward absurd, con trived s enllliOI'LiliJm .
"" DlvblooSt.
More on rope
lwu pteasedtoseelhlltthe authorol
" Oetoun around Armageddon" wu 1
man because it is vt:r'J IUIUIUII fora
mantolpeakoutaplnltrape. Yetwith
~~=~~~!.:=!=
There In! man)' m)'lhl surTOUildin&
the crime of npe, myths that have
atways found thrir way Into courtll ol
taw and made It nat to iDlpoalble to
brinlaeoavl.:tlonagalmta raplsL But
thebigettmytbofthem all , lbeone
that allows fOI' the othen to exlll:, md
~~U:~::~:.~r=~~
crime: lhlot the rapbtnpes beaUM: be
l.scirprivedof"natwal"outleta for his
seJ:ualdeslrei.TbblsjllltiiOttruemd l
..11Uld like to quote from Rape :ne
Ylnt Sou-cellook Yw w-t• by Nno
Ywk Radical Pemlnlsu to make my
poinL "II is undentood that rape Is
fundamentally an a~Jn!Ulve rattler
than a 10u.al act, that Ita motlvatloll
and dynam!Q arilt out ol nc.tillty
ratbe-rtbanatesu.alneed. .. "
Rape .. Ill illc:redlbty prevalent llld
milundentond crime-one of the fN'
people tor perhlpa tbe only one! ln
wbkh tht victim Ia more oltm blamed
than the criminal. Read just a fN'
ti!StimOftielofnpevlc:tlmsllldyou..W
wonderhowanyoneeouldreallybelleft
tba:womenwaaltobe raped. (Then! is
an mlightmlnc ptire on this upeet of
npe intheSeptem.ber, lmlslueofMS.
magazine: p. 20, " Was He AUln& For
111"')
Therer-tlyhalc:orneoul:themoM
thorou&h s tudytodateofthehlstory ,
JOCiolacyandpolitia;ol n~pe. ltlsa
book mUUed Aplul 0.. WIU : M",
w-na .. Rape by Sulln BI'OWIIllliUtr
t p.~b. Simon and Sdlusterl. Tbe library
t.s acopy. lrecom.!nend lttoanr-
who want:l to be kil~JW\edcuble coneemtna rape· aDd hopdi!Py you~
~:.!n::t:O:
to0ol0wlthlnt4daysof notifle~~tionol
lhedeftct.
Moremmptele lnfonnallon on the bill
is availahlt from the Ste'llens Point
Tenant Union at the Student CovemmentOftite. Thet-ntUnlonswlllabo
Ma~A.Knmar
=
tr!".~ll~i~~y~tin~l":
tenanttheri&ht tohavt mlnor repaln
t$\OOorleul madelflbelandiordfails
to othen who
kvulyf.. wkilll
Housing h~lp needs help
TolllePih1tr.
Tberelaablllc:urrent.l)'befontbe
State Assembly that cauld ve-Uy affect
the lludtnts liYin& litu.llkln. The lanilord-tenanta~1 tSB382'POft'OI'ed by
Senaton Bablitcll. Flynn. Karnlsch ,
bec:irc:ulallnaapeU!ionins~olSB
392 du~thecorningweek . l fyoufeel
stronglyabcMlbeproviliOIIIofthisblll
sign the Pf'litlon and contact your
Astemblyman. tteou.ldmabthedif·
ferenc:ebet,.'M!Ipusqeanddefeatol
th lsn~er~Ual lelillalloa.
Lyle Updlkt
Dear valentines
TaThe Polalft'
To The l.o•-e ly Girls ol UWSP:
Althoughtherearemany,manyJWftt
andlovt ly girlsonthl.scampul'.aDd I
am fond ol many of !hem. I mUll confHS
tNtldldroot$fndouttbe:tOOvaltnUnes
tNt many or you received. It seems
tNt a certain mt111n of miM and hjs
shady roommate from BufTCitlihs Hall
tookthelibertyol'dolrcll forme. Many
o1 the cardt t.. d my room rw.unber and
jitorle r.~mber on It along with
'"sugeslivt" nyinp. As a raul!, I
r«e~ved many(so-«)lphonec:allalnlhe
ntxl few tla)'l ffOITI younaladles whll
either curioul, mad or " lnteresteci". H r ·, kJrclhilopportUnity
to publld ya polO&IUtoallolyouwho l
didn 'tgtt a dlanr:etiltalktoonthe
P"tone. I hope tNt l.ben! I n! no more
lwrdfeelinp, espec:{allyfromlllmtol
your boyfriendl, since I uaure you all
tNt I am quite happily monoe:am-.
"'en!
24 Hour woiting
TaThe Pol•t«
Q:meem has been YOioed about
procressontbe2-l.hour villilltlonissut.
It .RemS that this issue II not 11 lmport.anttoon-campus&tudentsllt.be
aothOOollaueolfl .Ail ~,
the fl'lf'f1)es , the lime and the mmmitment to out cum:nt luut Is DOt
forthc:omlnl- We •.W eato.nJe IINIH
--a111pn ltlldtou wllo fed •tnaJiylo
pllovolved.
ArationaletopresenttoO..nc:ellor
Dreyfus beiPN 'A'\th on-ampW swdent
support.. l twouldbemoteadv;~ntase­
forltudtnts•hoaredire<:t.ly affec:tedby
openvisitationtoiWpporiiii)'Choo...-..
The 24 hour vlsi tatlm committee
meetsMondaynightsat$ :3DinttleUC
Rl'd Room. If you can' t attend. talk
wi th your Mil ~nt . Relidtnct
hall l tl.dent lnputinlavorol24hour
visitation would great.!)' aid in for·
mulatlng a rat>onale and affirming a
mmmltmenL
McKtnMand~plllfdtbeupper
housee&rlierthlsye:ar. lt hal been
nferrtd to the Autmbly floor With an unfa vorable co mm ittee r ecom-
""""'""'-
Series 9 , Vol. 19, No. 22
Jl• K!rllpatrlck
n-~~~aHatt
• Pre.ldutPII C
:r.! 8alctwln
•Polati'J''
b
11
1111dtlll
npperted
publkatka for lhe llalnn lly fll
WJK.1ill SCnn1 Pol11l Celll111111111y.
::-=~-=.:::7'--:::':'• t"'-r~-.._-N_o
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--
.
~
more letters ...
Sefi's defended
U)"OUCan'lmal!eittoeitll<l!rotthete
Talk Peluer,
Althou&h I n - pNpk's mindl an
orpniution wdl AI SU.wll il
at
detrlmmteltoafaww~ual\'ff111)'
..,SoD Mark
lmqe, tbe .,uit and camaraderie of
IUl'h • dc.e knit aDd Sana; tttndln&
GI'IUliution U.mot be IUpprell<l!d.
'1'hcrea~ll.IUSiaMfls I"'MMmlnttlle
Stn<I!U ot St<l!'t<l!ftll Nnl. One cu 1ft '
Selil .. lhe.-~oru'OWidctmpus.
and~ ..... rewnewSeflt.
Tblcrywuoutforreform andtbe
SiDdi lellders, not bein& blind to lhe
siwatiol.IOUiht to make lhe cN.nge~
netded tol"tatorethttbbint rMpecttbiUtyofaprldrilliorp!liuotlon.
Lut wee~ bein& a cloM fritnel of the
Sefls,lwltnetaed lhepled&ln&olth""
-membl!'l"'l,lndtlletctlvltJ.tsundl!rtakenlll1!rcadmlrablcbyanyone'a
lltndardr;.
Whllenolbei"'allowedtodriM;for
lheWft!k,lhethreepifd&eaiOOka&roup
ol kMis from the Ollleda Foundation to
the: Pointer buket.bl.ll &ame ~Y
nl&ht a&aintt RiVer Falla. ThfJ ailo
toot the wme &;r"'UCC of kldt to the
Pointer hockey &•me 61. Friday. The
people at Cb.lledD W<l!ft t31lr<l!mdy
thankllli jultulbeSiuel'"llare moat
&ratefulandwilhtotl\Dr*alhletlc
dinrtor Robert KnJe&er for his
p:ntrmitybydan.rotln&fr"p&Uftto
lhe:Cb.lledDI!idlfOirtbe:&DIIM!II.
Oa'"""*y,tbe~toot•trip
do...,toRlverPinesbomeforlhea&ed
andlpentanaf~Lelkin&and
villtlnt with tbe folb dowD then . Tbe
R'lllclentswtredei!Chtldtohlvelhe
C'OIIlpanyoflhe~forlheDI­
meetirlp. pieBl' feel free to CG~tad me
J.U4n~ .
Mlcba~IL«~
More help wonted
Ten.. Poiat«,
•
Student Govunm~nt 11 seekln&
foludenu loseo'll on •·arioustt$11 fon:H,
comm illfft and •ninp Ia seau. Tllr
tesk rarcesa~Tenantunioni ,Co-Qps,
Fat"Uill)' and COUT$1! £\'aluations and
Col.lcctlvebaf'llinln&. There• reseaiS
ooeninlheStnaleandon U.C.P .B. We
need studenu at·l,af'lt on most of the
commiuee5. Anyone il\lerell~d In
!helping, and getting in•'OI•·ed., plnse
atop Ill at the Swdent Go\1!tMllnl
orfice. ln the Unl\'tnilyCenler.
bt-:I'US IT TillS IS ,\!\/\' or Til£
I'IIISTt:lt MML SLOTS AIIOl'~O
lktsyAonlen-
l ',\!III'US or drop II o1T •I 1bt
Even more .
·
Alpha Phi Omesa is a Natl-.al Sfr•ice f'ralemi!y for bolh men 111d
III'Ometl. Alril;lntAPO'Ipro_lrctla"the
bloodmobile. the boot uchaqe, 111<1!
ride piide. and othtn that help 111<1!
campuJ or communily,
lnoc-dettoC'IIIIU-theseprojectsand
tate on m«e. II<I!W memben DR
=~~~=~-h!o.':';l:!t~~~~
lft'-.and tbe:manacementwualto
helpin&o~toa&honme«in&that
memben and many Sluefl alumni
plhered to welcome lhe new membel"'l
l!ldmo.toftbem ap-e«! U\Dtwbat llw
pled&Mhaddonewul'q\IDI.Iyuttxin&
w!Uuplalatlleput'pOieandobjecttve.
olAPO. Sundayf't'b. :lati:IO\ntlle
Gl'ftll Room of the Unlftl"'llty center.
Hopetolftyouthere.
J im nrt.tau11
Prnldut APO
att=:;7t ~U:u':~~~-etlve
1
.
~~~ =~·rn~~~e!~
Satun:layltwuaUover. The active
memben and many s~asen all.l!ftftl
plhered to wricomelhe new membel"'l
and mo.t of tll<l!m a&J'ft'd thllt .-bat lhe
pledcershaddonewuequaUyutealnl
=~!r:;"~~l"~~~
Sonow,lheneea:NI')'dlantNhave
bHn rn.de andltila &bill Jtt!$1 iD the
rtpt~a.W,INtpeoplelhould
Lekcnoticeot.
Help wonted
H)W
orantto...-t,ou .. lheSievens
J'l)lnt Cammon Counc il and I need your
"''•
5omeof)'11Upellplelntbedorauimay
natfeellbltlocal dly poiltlcsarellnporu.nt to you, but youw\U when you
move out ol the dormland you hove to
livewlthiiMdty'ahouli.n&C'OdL You
wlllfeellllayour pocbtbooll wbeD
)'Oirland.I<W'dralselyourr«~tbectluae
lhe:~ottUpropertytexe~~wentup.
People lo the Vllla&e. d.ld you Dow
lh.ltlherea~plan~lo,:om«tMam
Drift with llwy. 641 maklnaltamajor
&ast·Wett Routel
~ the
ilnplct th .. w!U hovo 011 the tnmc:
p~llern. .~ your borne. Mil your
e~mpus:doyouwant toaeelhisproj«:t
decided upon without adequate
..-aUoa ot ltudenta like yourMU
wbo m~ live with UU dla..e!
Sludeatsdete:rvetob<l!repretenttdat
Oty KUI )lilt likeev«ybody ~ wrbo
livftiaSlewniPoinL l wDIIItobe)'DW'
aJdtrln.lo bi.M: I ean'twlthwt )'Oir belp.
On Wed., M...ch J, I ,.·ill be in the Red
Room ot 11M L'nivenlly C<l!'lller !Tom J
r;.,':.11,! ~ =-~::'~~:
::r,:tb:i!Fa.~te~ :,~o::e:
lheAprillf'lection. T'hllmeel l.. ls
strictly r.- thaN people who feel U\Dt
they lhouldn'~C'OIIlplaon about llw way
.....
2. All letters to be signed
- nome withheld upon
request
3. Deadline: Monday noon
before Friday issue
Too much help
=
=: =t
Ta !be Pola~er.
Lut Monday we ha~ a lei! In our
1
1 ':-:.e::,t:~~~ ki.!~
1
...:lcrib&heeta. YousotabetteTscwe
lhllnmeand l'mpiued. l .llddedthls
cwne1Dtbe2ndweel!otachool butt
:::.,'.~d.!!
However, nnt lest he wUl be WDI ·
chqtikeahiWI!. IJU.&&nt youltl.ldy
and
.Rood\ Halb-, and the Villa&e """-- I
•
lellerr policy
1. Three hundred words or
less -· longer letters allowed
at Ed. discretion
d!at. Why do
I mentkmd lhlscheaUntiO the In: : ; : - ~~·t worry, I didn't aay
Pa.Jcu .. ,
Talk Polaler,
People Ill Pny_,i.nq,
l'u'nl Tenant'~ l'1i011
atLheStudfntGO\f'l'alllnt
Tallie Plliateo",
thl.-areuniea~~lhe)lltytO t han&e
hlrdlikeany'-'t~udentandleave
tbedleottheeuhome•
aUJF"'-
What o carnival!
To liM Plliateo",
Tbanl!a to studeot par!\clp.at lon.
Winter Carnival W.IIJ a ~
suc:c:eu!
The Kin& and Queen
nomlnaliOI'II,pme.,and&oodfunlhllt
rau.lted helped wash away the winter
bl~. VIckie
and John
BlaDe)' from Slnith ltaU ~i&Md a1
Wloter Camlvli Kin& and Queen thl1
year. R~upwere : Vic:kiMaUiet
Tbom,-
r:;~~~~~aT:n:z::
...
~
SM!eoltheteiiUitaotthepmes.-e
as
follolll-s:
the
0\'erall
wlrinerl for o r &aalutlona were
Delttf.etaandWalaOIIWcmenliedlor
flnt, Alpha Sif;mt Alpbll MCOIId, and
Si&ma Tau Gamma third.
O.'ffall ..·innti'S . for unrteo~nlted
JD'~ lfl'tll! Finl South SimJ, fln l!
nruey·,
f'il>f$1 .
Wu11 c h l u
~:
w
Blind
Bri&ade , ~11\rd
Of'l y w, nnen 111·er•
Gamma , first : Scuba
Or&;~~nllational
Sl&rna
Tau
Clubandl'AB. secotld . andDflll lftt.
third.
Snow Sculpture wuu~en """e W•uon
Women , firsi : Burroughlllaii. I«CCnd ,
111d Fruit ol the Loom , th ird..
t:'AB
I. Find someone who has a freezer.
2· Put a bottle of Jose Cuervo Gold in it.
J.Goaway.
4. Come back later that same day.
5· Open the bottle and pour a shot of the
gol_den! viscous liquid.
6- Drmk tt with grace and dignity.
Or other people. if they're ngt around.
Rccycle mt!
Hous I ng
news and opinion------- - ....
~ Planning for the fu-t ure?
The
~aring
uw.-
Stevens Point,
up r~ an antidpated jump
in fall enrollment, has begun
He t:redils the idea to Professor
Rol and Thurmaier, orficer of
PASCO, who has Slid there a«
e~:n~,"~:SvfU..:"oeb:U~ - ft=~~~~=~~~tl~"!:r~
and Plover : bomeowner1 rentil18
rooms to students.
Melvin . J . Kar& or thl! UWSP
housina: staff says the Point Area
Bus Co-op IPABCQ) has made it
possible for property owners
beyond the immediate ca mpus
Mighborhood to gain extra income
from 1tudmt renttn.
the dty. UWSP Student Government llas h7elped the situation by
paying the co-op for the students'
transportation. That policy is expeeled to continue, but modified
with lhe stipulation that riders pay
a dime instead of ridi!¥1: free .
~ra is abo besinninC to search
out othtt MW pouibilities such u
~~~~:~~~~~~:~ ~~~~~::
~~~~~!tiJ=o:nl~~
housing market last fall and
chances are it will be more critical
thisfall.
Drive and the Whitlna Motel
devotina a floor to stiJdenls u wu
d~intheearlyl!l70'swhtnthe
Johnny Can Write
UWSP will spons« a writing
symposi um , "Johnny , You Can
Write-And Here's How ," on March
3, 4,and5onthecam pus.
The program will future .
nationally known authors, editon
and teachers-Ben Bova, Barblra
Berson, Philip Klass , f'nlma Klass,
J acq ueline Jackson, Li nda
lloeschlet", Dominic Paul Noth, and
. George Hartullil.
Mary K. Croft of the lJWSI>
Engllsb~rtment anddluc:torof
the Writing Laboratory says the
· prngram will be aimed at students,
f1culty a nd members of the com·
munlty intef"ested In developing
their Rills in speclaliud 1reas o1
writing; in addition, thel)'mpoalum
wtll relate lo the cllminishiq& ~I
of writing 5kills of America's
students . The latter: problem, much
discussed in the national press,
most ~lly In Newsweek and
Time , and on educational
television, is I growlq& CODCtm
among educator~-, parent• and
studentl.
The opening session, to be held on
Wednesday, Mn.:h '·at 7:30p.m . ln
Room 112 or the Natural Resources
Building, will feature
the
profeaional participntl in a panel
cllscuuion tilled "Writilll Is Here
To Stay."
Thursday morn ing a t 10 :00,
sy mposium particlpantl will meet
with classelon campwto discuss
particularlnterestssuchuwt'ltlng
children's lilenture, edilina: and
publishing, scientific writing, and
reviewing art and mm.
B eginnin& at 1:30 p.m ., the
Thursday program will feature
work shops and demonstnllons
de voted to non-fiction wrillns.
technical and scienti.Qc wrillrc.
humorous ..Titirc. review writ!~.
social science ..ntirc. and feature
writing and In terviewing.
At 7:30 Thursday evening, In
Room 12:1, L1assroom Center, a
panel of educators and businessmen
will attack the problem "How Do
We Rl&ht ' JohMy 's Writing!" The
panel, moderated by Tom Mccaig,
Assistant Dean ol the UWSP'a
Collqeol Professional Studies, will
include Kenneth H. Sand, principal ,
~~~1fil':n~~~~nR~~
Company; Mardee Ro&e, UWSP
English professor; and Re:c cau
and Tom Howard, UWSP graduate
students . Rnpondin& to the panel'a
comments wiU be 8el1 Bova, Lee
Dreyfus. 1nd Phlllp Klass.
Be&lnnin& at 10:00 a .m. Friday,
symposium members will be
available at several on-ampus •
locatlonsforinformatconveraatlon.
The pablic is invited to attend al l
sessions. There wjll be no admlulon
charge. For fl.lrther information on
schtd ults and locations of speclfk
snsiont, call the UWSP Writing
Labontory, :Mf-3$11.
Mall proiect f inally
gets off the table
Looklngwestyouseethreeamber"
lights. They act as a barleadt Lo
ward off bicycln or any vehicln
other than the Unl~lly's . T'werlty
yardl or so beyond the initial
barricade 1tand four yellow posts.
~:::~~~~~S! ~~;
~~on!!~!~ ~ne~~~~~~
barrltn blocking your nil onto
Isadore street . This is Franklin
Street. si!f' of a proposed ma ll.
Suggested more than five years
ago, the mall may just be nnisbed
this year, according to Ray Specht.
Campus Planner.
When the Pointe!" asked Specht
::c:.':,P;:!jft~ ~ofi;e!t~
comments. '"The pol.llics In this
:;~:~lr:i:'d!t ~ ':~v~
~ Lodate." II seem• that the
nxnmittta and ~ tape involved
in any project of this bro.d scope
and Interet to both the university
and surrounding community runs
inlo problems at many of the auges
of plannlna and implementation.
The 13&,700.00 project will include
landJca plng area• adj1cent to
Franklin as well as the 1lreet itselr.
~~~Ji~e:~~:~r ~:,
~~ ~d~:. •::e!:au~e:! tt~
new Physical Science acldllion,
areas near the CNR building and
alsothe pa.-kinglotdlrec tlyaouthof
the Collins Class room Cen ter .
Specht feels that the redesign of the
parking lot will decrease the silt by
two thi~ but it will sc m hold the
urne number or vehicln as now.
By mid-March the procedures
~f!~!:-:h'~t!!;t~lf!!
~~~~~l ~ ~~.!~=~
should begin. Unti l then the
scudentl will have Lo imagine &rill
and trta when thn'e are now only
pot-holn 1nd barrief"'s.
university had an all-time high
enrollmentsurpauins9,000.
Othe r c.>nti ngen cy propo11l1
wt~~.~ld be to eliminate all sina.Je
room rent a l •rrangements In
cam pusresidencehallsand return
them Lo double occupancy units and
transforming some lounge areas
into bedrooms .
Not counting Steirlef" Hall, which
is leasedtotheChileda Institute for
Educa tional Development, Kara:
bellevt:S he u n locate about 450
additiOI\II aCC11mmodal!ont: beyond
wl\at was rented in the community
and on campus last fall .
lftht enrollmentincreases more
than 450, he predicts a critical
~
situa tion.
·
There have been recent reports
that owners of rooming houses will
be subject to toul}ler safety codes
1nd rqtulatl ons, but Kar& doesn't
believe that will have an a ppreciable effect on the student
housing market. He points out that
those new regulations do not affect
landlords who have two or Jess
students, nor do they 1pp\y Lo
housing outside the city. Many of
the existing r ooming house
operators operalf' on a rather
liUiblesca\e , heuys,lnd wl\lleht
ex p ects they may expren
dlspleasureatsomeoftherules,the
compliance will be met and
regarded as a regular expense.
11leuni\•enltyandthedtyw\llbe
involved in a meeUna for la ndlords
sometime in March to explain the
new regulations.
Kara: 11·1nother in a tone list of
administrators who are expressing
\ncreasill8ditricultyinplannlng fOT
the univer sity's future-even Ill
immediate future . Enrollment
applications are coming at an
earliet" and f11ter rate than In
recentye.ars. andthecampus lsn't
certain what the datil means.
"This is a most confounding
year," Karl notes, "Of~. I
can't think of a predictable" year
that we've had In a Jon& lime."
Winners Pointed out
The ''first
~ef""
Point SpedaJ
Bta" PhooKiraphic Contett h11
drawn to an end . Micl\ael Knap·
stein, a freshman, won the contest
with a black and white ,photo ol a
botlleofPoint,achampagneglass,
a cane and a white &love.
Knapstein w11 his own cloaest
competition In the contest u he also
took second PI•« with another
black and while photo. J im
Warren's cartoon IJ'1IphiC earned
him third pl1ce and Mar1ie
Odahowslc.l's 1iant ~wing pined
her a fourth place finllh .
Other prize w\nnen: Wef'e fifth :
Karen s-dowskl, sixth : Jim Burg,
seventh : Robert Petersen and
eighth : David Tewl.
'111erewef'eover2000ouncesof
prizet u Knaptteln woo a ~ baJTel
:n,~n~~~~~W~r::':J
_,
Qdahowsti Wei'UICh awarded a V.
of Point for sec1>nd pri:r.et 1nd the
rest ol !be w\nnen received third
prlzetln the form of six-packs.
The entries were JLKiced on four
criteria: cre1tiv1ty, promotional
value for the brellr"try, amount of
work and aesthetic value.
Judlts for the contest were
Pointer Graphics Editor Dennis
Jensen, Robert Boyce of the UWSP
Art Department and four
rep r esentatives of the Poi nt
Bl'ewery.
Ken Shibilald , a Bl'eway em·
ployee,aald thatovera ll hew11
fairly pleased wltb the eontnt. He
also added that due to the low
number of entries In this contest
any furthef" eaort would be open Lo
more than just photo and IJ'llphic
entries.
How to get a boolc
So you've heard about a good
book or mapzlne, but the campu1
libury doesn 't have it. How do you
10 about t:ylq~ to aet It on the
'J1,eway to sta rt is by fl1lJ.ng out
the necasary form found at the
information delton thefint Roorof
the LRC. Once this has been
completed, the tec:ltnical servl«t
department will consider the
requett and take 1pproprlate ac·
tion.
Ac«wdi~ Lo Keith Lea, head of
acquisitions for tecbnic.al JerVica,
he has n~er turned down a
reasonable request for a book or
periodical . Lea stilted that MOO h11
been a llocated thi1 year for s tudent
acqulsitions,ofwhlch$273remalns
u:ns:pentu ol December . This MOO
figure ls bllsedonlastyear'Jtolal
amount spent, $411.
'J1,e above figures are vastly
overshad~·ed howevet", by the
amount of money allocated Lo
facult y for the acquisition of
technical bulletins, supplemental
text and perlodkals . The . total
fundilll for faculty acquisitions Is
es timated at $54,000 which Is
div ided between the different
:!:~:r!:f!~~~~~"1~u~:
takes into account the number of
faculty members, number or
ma}on and the numbn' of gradUite
students. Also conside~ i• the
amount of booka written In a par·
"!cular dicsipllne. For example, the
economics departm=t
w·
use
different boc*a more
than the
math department ,
boob are
generally the same )rom ye- . 10
year.
Lei also sta ted that It iJ not un·
common for st!Jdentl to suaest
books to faculty memben · who
eventually orderthtmwlthfaculty
funds . In addition, anothe-r avenue
opentothestudentil theUHofthe
Inter-library loan through which
one can obtain a xeroxed puiodical
from 1nystate university library In
Wisconsin, DlinoiJ or Minnesota.
It is Lei's feeling that the LRC
should not attempt Lo build up 1
fiction library, but rather a large
pool of \nfonnatton for everyone's
use. Hestatedltl.atthereishowever
a "penonal lnlf'rest" section of
current p~per!Mckl on the first
noor to meet the dem1nd for recent
bestsellus .
St!Jdent lnlf'rettand usage ol
acquisitional funclinghulncreued
onJy gradually In the pall few
years . If stiJdentldiJplaymoreof
aninlf'rtstlnoblalning more and
better books throug h the
aforementioned means, it could
result In more funding for student
acquislttonslnlhtfuture.
Therels1:273stlllleft,just waitin&
to be Uled !
l'etwu.,. n.
1111
,.,e 1
,....let'
..:
~.
Tnll F«U Pubtlc Medi111 11111H
T~•ut6 IJIII•· Every Tuesday from 6:30-7:30 In the BlUy
~:'h~~w~::r!v~ro~ ~~~~'::!t~t Billy Mitchell
Room .
t except
April
7th
and
Notes
Nftdtotl : POLITICAL SCIENCE majon: aDd minors ffX" ~eta!
Ne-tdftl : COMMUNICATION rm~jon a Dd minors to direct
• publicity and atudent awa~ campaigu
Needed : SOCIOLOGY and PSYCHOLOGY majors and
minon to foc-mulate aurveys and faculty evaluations.
Nefttd : STUDENTS Interested in thler university 's future.
Join a Tasli FO«e on Tenant Unions, Coops, Academic
Collective Bu&ainlnc , Student-~! Aid or Course 1nd
FKU!ty E\laluatlons.
C.ll346-3721 or atop by tbe Student G~mment U.C.
h t r ochacea
Senltor William Bablitth CD·
Stevenl Pointl hu lntrodutt<lan
amendmenttoensurethatoverseas
protrama tponsored by UW
Schools are allowable under the
proYlliontolthei9'7S-IW7state
budget.
Wisconsin '• biennial at.te budget
reduced travel appropriations for
~tate q:encin by 2.S percent. The
Deputment of Administration
lnterp-eted th is u applyina to all
travel. ~lnterpretatlon , lfim ·
ph~mented.
would have jeopanfu.ed
the se mester -abrNd pr~r~m s
Student government last Sunday
nig.htapproved Relol.ulioa Sl, which
de&ls with a grading l)'llem involving pluses and minuses. Tbe
propclUI now Joel to the Faeulty
~:!,or:r~::~~te~·'r.~
tativclylt'heduledtotakeaHect In
the '77-"78 academic year.
Tbe Envl r onmenlll Co uncil
requested 13)0 to publish 1 com·
prdlenslve land use plan con·
cerning the unlvn-aily lake and
'si.IITtM.I'Idingareaanorthofcam~.
A propoul was made by
l..e&al
t'ndllarriJRMepl'-t
The Fred Harris f« President
Commltloee wiU be sponsorlfC a
~on to listen to the ruulta of
orreredby 1 numbe:rof sc noolsln
the UW System , includlna Stevens
Point.
Bablitch'samendment directs
thatthetnvelpolicyestablishedby
the budget not restrict foreign
"t ravel by UW personnel participating in credit producing instructional programs.
The ilmendment has bHn approved by the Joint Commitlee' on
Finan«andwillnowbeincludedu
par t ol the budget review bill to be:
considered b y the entire
Lqislature.
Aidl Society to hire an attorney to
advise students oa let:al matte.-L
The estimated c:111t to set up the
service il expected to be aromd
$10,000. U the service Is approved
then it il expected to take affec t
next year.
The Stl.ldent Wildl.l(e Sodety also
r~ved from Stude:nt Govn-nment
an aUocation of SISO to be used to
cover the cost of a unlvn-slty
vehicle to the Sb;tb Annual Student
Wildlife Conclave, which will be
held March $-7 at the Univetll ty of
Mis.sotri-Columbla.
chitec:tural hlst«y, architecture,
art history, economies, history,
horticulture , the hum anities ,
journa l ism, l andscape ar ·
chitecture, law, library Jeiencts
and planning .
CerUiicatts of recosnition a~
bei ng mailed to students v.•hoex·
celledacademlca.llyd uringthefoll
semester at UWSP.
Dr. John B. Ellery, vice chan-·
cellor f« academic affain. an·
nounced that m«e thaD 20 percent
oflhetotalnumberoiU20persons
qu.olifiedforinclusiononthehonor
roll. Highest bonon designation
v.<enttopersonJv.·hoseuadeooint
ran&ed from 3.75 tB pll.lll to 4.0
!Straight AI:
high honors f«
gradepolntsfromUtol.H :and
honon for gadtpOints from 3.2 to
3.49.
for addiUona l information :
f1etcber Cox, Jr.,
12021631-5200 Ext 2411
National 1'rlat For Histork Prft
)
···········
The UW..Stevens Point, which
r~eivtd S900,000 Ia additional
fuadin& from UW Central Ad·
·=tr~on~t
r:r·=:Ca!::
equipment, sal• r lea , and in ·
:t~:'c!.Z;::!i:~entslntheln·
to~~ ~~ce~:f:~:~~is~t
Soprano Shigemi Ma isumoto ,
dacribed by crltk:s as "a rising
youn1 &tar" and "one of this
country's ma}or singing talent$,"
will appear In recital at the UWSlevens Point Friday nisht (feb.
analysis and unlvenlty budcet
offiCer, said wd1 OYn- half ol the
1900,000 allocation waa a one-time
arantand lhoae dollar. are &oina
lirgely for the purchase of capital
equipment and supplies that had.
previously been deferred because of
....
The ninth proaram on thiJ ~
season 's Arts and Lectures
calendar , Miu MatsumotO's perfonnance will.be: given in the UWSP
l'oli~htlsen Hall at lpm . She will
sing'ariasof Mou.rt and Rossini ,
lieder of Wolr and Poulenc, and
JapanHefolk sori.p.
m~h'e 'b::~~~-the
university
was Increased by about $340,000
which means that amount will be
incorporated Into the budget th is
year. Abou t two thirdsolthatdoitar
,
WINTER CAitNI\'AL RESULTS0\'t:KAU. WINNERS
Organiutions :
lit - Delta Zeta & Watson Women
bi- Aipha Sigma Alpha
3rd-8igma Tau Gamma
l1nn:!c:osniud Organiz.aUons :
tst- tst South Sims
Znd- F'inley's F'inest
~d -BlindMunchies Brigade
. BUY ONE/GET ONE
FREEL.... ._ ·
IT'S HOW WE COOK ! EM ntAT COUNTS
throug.h training In the vaticQ
fields of historic pn!lttVation .
av~~::'ed ~!~~~~~ og~un~l~r~
llonorRoll llonorf'll
............................................
·········Hardee's······...
~~·u;d ~!:rJ~nex:rl::
~:~~~~r:::s~
. March 2nd at I PM . in the Com·
municatlon Room in the Unh·ersitY
Center. Aslidept'ftl!ntationon the
Harris Campaign will be shoWn.
Bftr wil l be available.
Ovtneu ,\mendmenl
· BUY ONE
DELUXE HUSKEE
GET ONE FREE!
p~'''''""tonar 1 n, ttJ•
Fifty college III.Kieftts wiU be
chosen to pa r ticipate In the
National Trust for Histo r ic
Prese r vation'• 12-week summer
intemshlp prosram this yea r .
Deadline for applications Is
March5.
n,e llust provkls the ll.lmmer
internship, which pays student$ a
salary ol $3.1f per hour, to ISIUI't'
that lhe students lntereatec~ Ia
14th l
.........
Hablllch
STUDENT INTERNSHIJ>I;
I N IUSTORI C PR ESERVATSOS
OfFERED BY NAnONA.L TRUST
News
WJ.,consin
R•P'd'
surven• Point
~~~::~cf:~ow:~J!:f::~
posilionsthatwerevacantforsome
timeorapprovedearlierbutnevtr
I'll led. Add!Uonally, four other nlne-
monthpo5tllonscur~lly ulslln«
will be made Into full year poats:
and thrt't currently temporary
positions will be made permanent.
. The Infla tionary inaeun will
amounttol50,000forthiayearand
m.ooo for the tm budget.
Port two of o series
Shaping the budget
\\bit sWdtat Budl;tt Direct«
Bob Sbaver aod Student Govft"n·
ment Pttsidtnt Bob Badzinsld have
coobd up Cor this year's bud&tt Is
renective or th~ir lmpren lve
financial experience !both have
been workina on the budget area for
student aovemmet~t the last two
yural and unique outlook on
st udent aovernment. In fact
UWSP's dynamic: <bJ may be bolls
to a full blown funliq batUe at Ute
SPBAC hearinp \lo'hkh begin lat~
this month.
Bachinskl and 9'1av~ unvdled
their bud&etinc approach In a
co ncise pamphlet e ntitled
Srarqat~ Fees and AuWar)'
t:.terprit.tt• wt!Jcb wu presented
the weekend ol Jan. 2NO In a
Madiaoa workshop at the United
Council Lqi slatin Conference .
SI\J:kont IIM'I"tlment leaden from
throuahout the UW system were
in.attenda:nce, and weR ot:Rrvably
usurprisedandimpc-esseduwere
UW System Administrators at·
• teondin& the conferex:e . b)' the
tborouabnus and indepetldent
plannin& prop»ed in UWSP's FY'1
........
8adzlnsld paved tbe 'Wa)' for
Sha v er 's ambitiou• dollar
tcrutinizinl pl&ft, by givina p...c.
tical polnten on lbe budletin&
~ · His advice to student
ITOUPI is, " No matt~ hew much
J'OU waa t to a void the budr(et
dilemma , eventually you will out ol
aeeesait)' be faced by it ...
The tnllb ol Bacb:iA.Iti'• words
are to be f~d in the meat of
9'1avn-'s FY'1 bud&et proposal.
Every student oraanlutlon
=-":~1 ~~~::1 ~o~t>:f;~
- lavett•nt bl upltol ..._
•Nt - 91avn- lhotJiht by buying
s ome thina s now , 10me
orga.nluUonJ would become self·
sustain1nc and lower cwts mlaht
result for students in lbe future . He
.sua:ested more elfldent we of
time, enerp and money, and pve
lhe examples of lbe UWSP t11m
Societywhldlhelhoulhtlhouldbe
givta the funds to buy more mm.s,
btcaUH the ret~tal was nearly 50
pft' cent of purchase price.
~~l't!r=~ tos!~:!
- lavettmnl r.- cubloa Shaver SUJJetted mvestina: $25,000
as a revenue producifll fW\d and
aapable futwe IDW"Ce of funds In
cue the projected future
enrollment decline materialize~ .
blaonllve PreJn.,
Alana with the houle Ud)'in&
chores Shaver 'luis dedded to bealn.
Bachinsld hu beeD talldnJ ~ the
premilftoftbeor&aniz.aUonuwdl
as pnctk.al factors that wiU be
importanl to futw-epl&Mifll .
areas of TCN~ni ·Landlord relatiOI'II,
Coop HoullD&. uxl leal aids, a
sedous quesUoa remains to be
Pilei of quaUons for SPBAC's use
in determining the validity of the
applk:atlonl..
Thisyur,in additioatotblusual
(«ms that bave bem aoinc out in
put ,.ears (requirin&tstimatel on
ev~)'thina from the amount of
pmdll to be used to travel caRs
1
~~~rc=·p=re~=~~
t..a'f'ft'•I'I...U.J
Shaver cautioned aJain•t
lhinkin&toonan'OWand not Jookina
down the road beyond one or two
=~rr'...!:"em':tu:'d
Information , which predicts
"precipltlout dec.line" Ia total
enroUmeot alter 1•1 at UWSP,
:·:~m;!c:V~::U~:: ·~=
the time now to prt'plte for the
fut.urt."
Shaver 11 ~ a ,_year
JIICka&e In whk:h lbe SPBAC will
aive special attention to the
roUowlnc ftaten in part from a Jan.
11. tt71 memo from Bob Siblver to
lbe Studeat Activit)' Accounll
Ol.rectonl:
pr~=~'-C::id~
...r::=
lbinCastudentaNnow il 3
PO INTERS they should be
p:ttlnJ more."
- c--t~~.aat.IM ef acU•IUn S~•vn- saki be thouPt a lot of cash
could be saved lf rftOUt'Cft were
pooied aDd procnmminJ of eveW
Wft'e
planned bd1er.
rw:.: ~~-v::Vc!if!m,~ri:~
~.
Utholetastforees
punue lhdr subject matter aod
overcome the t.echnical obRacles of
studftlt money uae under Merger
J.m.plemet~tation , willolher ltudent
lldiviUethavetobecut iaorcle-to
take on new massive fundh!J
proJram.s '! Houltl and Llwyen
9'1aver discounted the arawnent
fr equently put forth In the put thlt
using student monies in a rfttf'Ve
fund woutm't be f&!-r to tbe studenll
at UWSPnow.
''Student~ have lnpul from their
elected repr esentatives I n the
SHARE THE RIDE
WITH US THIS
WEEKEND
AND GET ON
TO AGOOD THING.·
Us me1ns Gr~nd. 1nd 1 lot ol ywr fellow Sludents
who 11e ltlre;,dy on to • good thrng. You letve when you
hlt1. T11vel comlor tlblv. Amve refreshed ai'ICI on trme.
You' ll uve monev. too. over the rrw:reued ••r
!~res. Stwe the rode wnh us on wt-ekel'lds HoltdiVI
Atlylrme. Go Grevl'lound
aren'l<:heapt~dlys !
AllhO\IIll It has been • tradition
for st\dedt 1ovrrnment to KCt'pt
the bud&et alter It comn out of
SPBAC Hurinp (Feb. 23-Marc:b
Il l thJJ need not necessarily be lbe
ease. Howevn-, Shavn- thou&ht the
committee had done a aood job In
=::';.::!t:n!:t,.a::-oJe:'
!
or ao,ooo ... c:hanpd .
total
RdllliiiJllrlecrttiCI
Shav~ Is conf!dtat lh•t the
~~~=~~:a~
student monies . Shaver saki in
to
responte
hypothetical critk:lsm
of hit plan u a bure1ucr1Uc
boondogk, " We11 eliminate red
:!:t!"~~:o!!:~=
p~per."
• on
GREYHOUND SERVICE
TO
ONE · IIOUHD · VOU CAN
WAY
Tfllf'
lEAVE
OlicJgo S13.90
S2M5
4:00p.m.
YOU
.f.IIIIIIVI
!O:OOp.m.
~1z.95S24.6511:30a.m.
5:15p.m.
Madison
6:101un.
$6.40
$1 2.20
4:0011.111.
"''~ YCIUI ~~-~ odcloloOt>.ol clep;MI .... , -rtlwt" lr•IH
R.G. WURL
1125 WEST RIVER lANE
~·
Responsible drinking urge·d
t:ditorsnot.e : Th is is ll'leUt ofabl-
wee kly s p ecial on " Alcohol
Educatillft " a t UWSP
by~JeG~~~ea lb er
As in society. at large irTespon-.
sible ddnkina is a severe problem
forthis unlversity. lnrtspOnse to
the alcohO<I problem, the wtiversity
committee for m'kin& healthy
decisions tCM HD l is in the procen
of an alcohol education umpaign.
The unlversityb united v.i th
COm munity 011anlz.ation5 to par-
ticipate In the alcohol education
program . Among the participants
are residence ball staff, Student
Gover nm e nt , uni versity a d·
min.istraton, faculty, aod health
personel.
R~esentatlvea
from the
Portage County Huma n Services
Board. and the Porta&e County
Akohol and Drua,..Abuse Council
ha \-e become involved. Student
organiutionl have expf'Uied their .
willingnesa to help.
Alcohol consumptioa levels that
are acceptable to students a t this
cam pus come dana:erously close to
alcoholism. Tbe CMHD is striving
to evoke a cha111e In a tti tude concemina the use of the drug by
providlna: Infor mation relevant to
a l c oh o I a nd Itt u se .
c~a':a ~':t \:form~~~~~~
of ~coho! edutatioo. ln the futuft
th e committee plans to distribute
a lco ho l awareness buttons and
posters, and to produce short mm
se gments co n ce rn e d with
responsibledecilionsaboulalc<lbol.
Discussion leaden wbo are
knowledgeable in the area of
alcohol use and abuse a re available
through! the CMHD. It is hoped
that rtsldence Mil wings and
student oraaniu.tioos will take
adva nt.aae · ot their avai labUity.
To chartae student drinkilijl
patterns the CMHD is _promoting
alternatives. The committee has
encouraged residence hall directors
to persuade th elr s tud ents to
provi;le alternate beveraJts to
alcohol at
parties. Hopefully,
peop le who throw off w ca mpus
parties will catch on a nd provide
a lternate beverages for non·
drinll:en and light drinkers.
Alternate activities to drinking
are being suuested by CMHD.
Last
they SU88tsttd tM t the
phy..ed facilities be open to student
use between the hours of 10:00 and
au
rau
2:00 nightly.
or
members at the beginning
last
semesterto arouncl20membersat
Many students are
now lakin& ld\•antage of this.
Much of what the CMHD would
llke todolsMingfkla)~dueto
lack of funding . The CMHD Ms
appliedfrKaSI50,000.00Jra nt to
begin a pr i mary p r even ti o n
program in the area of alcohol
abuse. f'undstoacquireafuJltime
a lcoholeducalion specialist forthis
campusarebeingsought.
During the 1974-1975school year
O!an~lor Dreyfus indica ted tllat
an alcohol education committt-e
lhould befonnedif drinkingwasto
bepenn ittedin thtmiclencehalls.
The alcohol education committee
~arne the CM HD in the fall
semester of the 1975-1976 sc])ool
year.
It has grown from six
~~~~~~~1p ~::;~e;·:
awar e of health problems and to
help th em deal with them .
Concern over the misUfe of
alcohol is not nciuded to the UWSP
campus .
Rutaers University
·sponsors a sum m er school of .
alcohol studies. The University of
Massach11SeUs has marshalled a
divenity of alcohol educa tion and
counseling r esources in order to
cope with a growing alcohol abuse
problem on the Am herst ca mpus.
th~:~~~~ntlal~~~.
An)"oneelse who is interested may
Dan Moor-e, extension
·contacl:
""·
HETZER'S SCHWINN
"~
·
,
:
:: ·
SALES A ND SERVICE
-SINCE 1916-
~·
.
·.. ,
·
tEN SPEED SALE·.
·.
B.ottecchia Deluxe ............. ' 12500
Bottecchia Special . .. . ..... .. . ' 15000
f1aliegh Gran Sport ......... .. . ' 200"
Ralhi gh Super Sport .. . .. .. . .. . ' 12500
Superia No. 3000 . . .. . .. . . . . . . ' 11 000
Araya Deluxe . . . .. . ..... .. . . . . ' 12500
Araya Special . . . . ... .. ...... :•14000
Sale limited to bikes in stock.
Ends March 31 st.
2154 CHURCH ST.
PHONE 344-5145
HUNGRY??
WHERE: NEWMAN CHAPfl
BASEMENT OF ST. STAHS CHURCH
131 FREMONT STfi EET
Fr . VIctor MoNte, a missionary back from Wast Afrlt.ll shows his
own 111m and ta lks of his • • perl~c• among the Ku rinko tribe hi
worked with: How life c1n be s.o much mcw1 maanlngtul and tullllttd
by giYing It to others- "H Ia In giving that w1 recli¥1" (St. Francis)
-Christian, now do you lara from thl1 angl e? Com1, lind out. 11 may
give •om• n - meaning to you r lila and !Mfhapa r-"lrect 111
WE DARE" YOU!
HOW ABOUT
A
SATISFYING
AND
TRULY DEliCIOUS MEAL7
BURGEOFfco
AND~
CORNER OF FOURT"
NO YO 'll KEEP OMIII6 BA
Should dorms be mandatory?
S hould undercl assme n be
!!<Juired to li\-e in residence halb'?
nus question will be consider-ed at
the nt:-.1 Board of Regenla meellng.
In response to charles from
the United Council, and
the Slate As.wmbly, the Board of
1\tgtnla has se,heduled an ana lysis
meelina in March, to de termine if It
shoul d r escind Reaent Polley
Rnolution 171
studft~IS .
Rqer1t ~icy Raolution 173
states. ''Those freshmtn and soph·
mo r e s tud ents who a re not
veterans, married « livina; wi th
parents or auardian , shall be
requi red to live in a Univenity- •
operated residence hall wbea such
attOmoda tiona are avallable."111e
retO!utiongoeson toatatethatthe
Chancell«bas tbeopcion ofmakina
Pft'SOQ.al«gTOUpex«JJ(Jons \fln
his opinion the situation merila it .
There are m«a l, lqal, and fiscal
impliutiona involved i n the
decision. There are those people
•·ho !HI that a dedston by the
BoanltOO\'ertt.-niladedlfon W'llU!d
rHUit in wholesa~ defections to ortnmpus housina. thereby resulting
in a lou of ~ue to the Uninr·
sity.
. ,.. M)
residtnee policies.
ll lhe rt501utlon iJ passed, how
ca n It affect you as an Individual
student ? It etMJ id mean leu «~alto
you for housing. As the demand for
olf campUI housing goes up, and tbt
supply goes down, it could translate
intoextraeash, and!orthe stud e'nts
lj,'ho choose to remai n In
the
rtskltneeballs , ite«~ld mtanless
costforaroom lnantUort tokt"tp
the dorms full .
It takes the best
to challenge
all the rest.
. The State Assembly lntodueed a
bill last December, ·Assembly Bill
tm. whkh sl!pulatn that DO
student be required to live In a
rHidenee hall unless by reason of
tm ploymtnt.
At the UW·P iattevillt, a student
univenity
filed suit with the
eharginc that the policy violated
his ri&hla. In decidin& the ease.
('awyY. Ullsvlll, thejudgedf:elared
thatthn'ewuacrealft'asswance
that the .s tud ent would attain
scholasllcsuc«ssbyllvin&inthe
"'""'·
But iJ scholastic auettSS sui·
fieient arou nda to violate a
ltudt'nt'a rl&ht to choose where he
or she wants to live~ As one student
aaid ."Wtare~yadultl ,
yet by noc allowins ~.w to live ofr
eampm , It is as thatCh they art
sayi nB that ~ art not responsible
enough to u.b cart of ourselves
wi thout bein g s upervised by
tomtone." Amon! cynical student
said , '"Mle only rea10n tlult we
~ 'tal l~tolivtoffea mpUi il
bteauH they ' ve onr built the
dorms and if they 1tt us livr orr
ca mpmt heUnivtnitywould losea
lot or money."
What art th~ pos5ibilities of tht
r tso lut ion btins overturned ~
Pr«edt-nt would inmate ttwlt the
chances are s lim. especially in viN
ol the C'awy • · lllb~·ill. decilton .
Th is 11m~ . however , tw o
«pniz.ationswithdout , tht URHA
and UC. a rt both backins a
rtsaludon ai med
to ovtrhrn
Rtgmt Polky 17l.
There alao exists the possibilty
the Board of 1\qttnta wi ll tum the
~Iter ovrr to tbt resprctiYe
univenitiu on an individual seale.
Presently, Only Madiso n and
Wh itewat~ have non-com DUlaive
Pabst. Since 1844.
The quality has always
come through.
PABST BREWING COMPANY, Milwaukee. Wis.,
Peoria Heights, Ill., Newark, N.J ., los Ange les. Calif.. Pabst. Georgia.
. . .~I
p.-..er
Campus
1o/ upclafe
No more fear and loathing
by Gin ny Shaker
Ca mpus Ttlevisoi n ICJ'VI is a
student ~aniution which bas
been throu&h no small amount of
tu:rmoil this past semester. That
tunnoil appears at an end.
Fo ur years ago, CamP,uS
Television btpn its first ~ason .
There were approximately 30
studtflls invoh·ed and proeraming
'A'as limited to two nights a ~~o·eek .
Since tbattime, CJ'VI\assemesttn
'A'ithsti.SCntmtm~pol;tf"tOO.
Programing hat been expanded to
threenightsperweekpluavarious
remotes and special ~\·tragt at
ot.htrtimes.
At one point last ~mester , crv
=~:~~!~o ~S':!n t~~·acti:
In the organization ga ve up all
pa r ticipatio n . S tudents, faculty,
starr. even Cban«llor Dreyfus,
began to hold caucuses to find some
solu tion to the •rOwin~: oroblem.
The problem involved many
issues, such as con tr ol over
programlna content and. quality .
lack of· adequate atudio time, and
restrictions on personnel and
:'!W:ili:n~~~":.':r..'fo::be:r~fe~
betweeen the parties lnvolftd..
The nuin parties Involved were
Campus Te levision , th e Co m ·
municalion Dept. and Unlvenity
Broadcutlnl (U.S ) . UB, a
relatively new
on cam pus,
Is headed by Bob Burull. As one of
its functions , VB aupervUn and
maintains the television equi pment
and s t u d io at the Learn in1
Resource Center . The Com ·
mu nicalion Dept . and Campus
Television found the guideli nes set
by the UB last semester very di f·
ficult to wort under. Alter much
dtliberation,and wilh the a pproval
of mOlt of the Com . Depl, c:rv
made the dec:lsion to ll'y to work
aaeney
=~~. J11~es:i ~~~~f.;
0
crv were
infer ior to those ol VB
and the or1aniutlon found the
technica l proble ms enco un tered
tremendous.
Eventually,m01toltheproblems
were ove r co m e. Tho ua h t h e
physical wort was fa r ~nater lhan
It wu with UB 's facilities, CTV's
pros.ram min& continlatd. Some of
theproeramswerebroadcast live
from the UNvenity Center Col·
feehouse . For the first ti me, a large
number of people were able to see
Campu1 Television In action and
alsoprQ\idtavaluableinputto the
less, the
con d ition• under which the
PfOil'AIUI. None the
~:r~~:~~~~!~~~
was d ropping and technical
quality was sometimes Jackinc. It
was hoped that a solution would
anive soon.
According to BIU Davis, fonner
CJ'V facultyadvisor,theconnlcts
were due mai nly to differti!Cft in
function of the parties involved. The
Dept. ol Comm unication had a
te ac hin g fu nction a nd Campus
Television a l ea m ina~xpe:rience
function in tenns of an outrtKh
progrsm and also in support ser·
vices to the universi ty .
The recog!ll tion of this fact was a
valuable ai d in working toward a
solution. Las t mld-5emtster, J ack
D ltry , Assista nt Chan«llor of
Academic Affairs, appointed Dea.n
Hanford of Fine Arts to the tern·
porary position of television
C1)Qrdinator. A fact findin1 commitlh', beaded by Hanford, was to
meet regularly and make recOm mendationsonwayatoalleviatelhe
problem and also attempt to
coordlnatettlevisionactivitiesqn
campus. Appointed to the com·
mittee~~o·tre MyrvChrbtophersoo,
chairman of the Comm. Dept., Bill
Da"idson, Bob Bul'\111, Jim Daniels
Negative Heel .,"auru"
~
MEN' S
&
WOMEN' S
ot the
UB 1taff. Dean Eagon of
E.S.I.P .. and Mike Wanserski, CI'V
General Manager.
Tbis group , known as the
Unh·trsity TV Coordinator Ad·
visory Committee, has had much •
su«ess since its inception. The
committee has finalized equipmen t
listsandplansforthenewttltvision
studio to bf located in Gesell
f~!~di~~u~'::~:: d~.:fti;:
Communication Dept . and UB IlOilo'
SHm lo bt ~mmunlcalin& sue·
cessfully . And CTV is again
opcratingamoothly.
Accordifll to Bob Burull. ' 'The
committee opened up a dlaltl!lik
bftw~n the Department of Com·
munlcation , Unive rsi ty Br oad·
'thi~t~nft· ~~caC!~u!e~~:!i~;,.!
and the Dept. ol Communication to
SH thdr roles together better.
Consequently , an organiullon
ca me in to play which helped
University Br!).ldcastinc in tenns of
bfing able to SJI«ifkally know
what hours campus Television
~~o·anlfd and so CDr15tqUently ~~o·e
could PTWide a more Of'Janiz.ed
serv ice."
Dean llanford. in addition to
strvt"latrhairperson, serves also
~~oilcn necess.ary, as mediator. The
prev.ailingattitudeollheTtlevision
Adv isory Committee appears to be
one ol compromise. All ol the
partieainvoh·edallretthata need
exis.~ to tither have Hanford's
poa111on made permanent , or
reorsan lle the ad minist rative
&truc tures invoh·ed.
;~le~i~i::;, ::!~ou~~~~~~!!
Thr.-
011thatiUbjcct,Oavidsonsaid "I
think something must conlinue' to
serveas:~ nadm inist ralivevehide
whereby differences between theU
t';"'O users can be resolved. Now.
c•thtr we come to a scheme
whereby It is differen tl y a d·
ministered tlintsof responsibili ty)
or we have a party that sits bet·
wtocnthet~~o·o, " ll anford~ntly
~~~1i~moi~~!~Jh~~~.11';!:P:i
AT
.SHIPPY
p~ ,.~ tt
.-. . . .,.
n. '"'
SHOES w:~:.
that ol !he TV Advisory Committee
btcotllinutdlorthebalanceofthe
current academic yea r .
As for Campus Teltvi510fl 10
organtution change was initiated
tl'ussemester by members of the
Communication Dept. wor1dn& ....;th
~~!~'!!:nt ch:ml:::· 1 !:;~
due to .11 more academic apprCYCh
to this activity. Each group of
l>tud tnts responsible for ou
program pe r week is auistfd by 1
fac ulty co ns ultant . There ut
cl.lt'fffttly five a roups and lh't
consulta n ts . This r evised
organization has done murh to
elimi na te past difficultie1 lo
schedul.i na studio time. Wansmt.i
said tha t the new a r ranctmtnt bas
been working out very ~~o·ellsofar.
Faculty have functioned IOltly u
a d viso rs a nd cona ultants,and
campus Television rtmal nsstudtnt
run and operated .
A«ordi na to Ut Kyt'l , rn
faculty advisor, ''Thtre are mOI't
faculty cons ultants involved, but l
see them u just that, as CGII ·
s u l t a nt s . Sti ll , I think tht
orsanlzalion m ust make sure it
doel notbecomesubscrvienttotllt
consultants. "
There appea rs IH Uc chance of
Cam p us TV becoming sub·
SeTVIent to anyone. The 1tM4Jie
las t s.e mes ter ccntereda roundlht
proble m of co n trol of tbt
orsaniution, and students and
facultyalikewouldhatelofindthlt
theatruulewasfoughtfornothi...
"So lar this semester I ha,·ewea
nothina but cooperation on the part
-
faculty ,staff,andstudtflts.
hill strtegle appears at an tnd.
Wanserski believes ''This (0111 ·
troveray which took placr Wt
se meste r s houl d 1ervt u an ~
exam pl e t o othe r s tudrat
organizations operatin& on urn~
in tha t they should IC1'U tin• ~thril'
policy towa rd faculty and ad·
ministr ation association." In lilt
fut ure, he hopes that Univfflity
ad ministra tors ha vi ng authonty to
create policy rea a rding studt'nt
organizations consider the 1tudent
foremosti nthelrdec:lslons .
Telev\sion at UW.stevcnJI'oin tit •
undergoina a big chanKe and
Campus Television is very muc~ a
pa rt of it. The new stud io now btii!J
contt r ucte d Is ex pected to be
~b:~:t'e ~f:~e~~.:e' !:.:f.~t
studio and the equi pment IIJ'f~Uy
im proved over tha t prnently ~
=;,'
!~~~~=
faclliUes for teachin&' televisloa .to
be found In the state ol WIJCOniUI·
Name that dorm
Hansen highlighted
condensed from a
1962 Pointer ortk:le
In Oc:tober, 1140, atlllltnts and
r.u:ulty ali.te 11oere pleued lo team
that William C. Hansen had been
~'::to':: =-~of~:,'
esc.
Prnkknt Haasaa. Wbo claims to
be a farm boy, wu born in Neenah
and re«iv~ his education In
\\1thee: Gradu.atlna: from CSC. what
W illiam
Hensen:
was then known as Steven~ Point
Normal School in till , litUe did he
expect to rtturn with the (futirs of
prnidtnt 29 ~an lat«.
After &nduatlon, he tauaht
tchooltwo years bdort he attendfd
::: ::,~~ ~.~~ ~~
namesake of
UWSP's
Hansen Hall
~and additional studies. He
has .tauaN at Menomonee Fall.s, St.
Croix Falls, later hdd tbe prin·
ripalship of the Union f'ne Hlah
Srhoal at MUJtowa. wtlkh ifd lo his
prlndpalship at the Neillsville
O<hoob.
HecotatasleoiC'OUtteteachin&
atlheSlateTeac~Col lq:e at
Eau CWre.
Then in 1t21 be
assumed the s uperintendent 's
duties at Oleonto.
StOlJibton
d.Jimt'd his Mn>kn in IIS2u their
ldlool q:laintendent. He lhN
came to assume hiJ prulftnlial
duties ol esc lOme Z'l yean qo.
Upon as.sumln& his ol6ce, Mr.
Hansenatated that hlJ objective u
prnident of the coUeae was to see
that "the colh!le olferfll the
rnaxim~n~ in traini~pod tucben
who will nnd a dtmand fiX' their
He hu not failed that
objf'ctive.
Since Mr . Hansen became
wrvkft:·
~~:;:: :::·~~~~==::;
IHnlntberesultsofnewlllinp
~ify ~~:u':~,
manyadditionatothecampus. The
Ubrary, Slril'lerHaU,andtbeUnion
are products of a ftw years back ,
Jjo.,.,·~er , tbe recent F1dd House
and plana for the new dormitorin
' andtducationalplantsmeuurethe
prosresa Uult has continued under
hit direction.
He h.u held several important
community and educational
poaltions.
PreMntly , he ia a
member of the school board of the
Plover · Whitinl Buena Vlata
District and it d'airm&r~ of the
Portage County School Committee.
~Rln~t~!!'~M~'::':!!
r.::·~u:.·~r:: ~w_"
ol
Aov~.
The Huuen 'a have four
daUJhten, all who have IJ"aduated
from lbt Un.ivenitJ of W"asconal.a.
1bey are Mi• Hften Hanwn
Slnens Point ; Mrs. Pftr A. Buck'
Ploftr : Mra. Brut-e Sandtncm.
Birmlnaham, Mich ., and Mra:
Robrrt W. Dtan, Rothschild.
President HanHn has aerved u
the !wad of the Stevem Nnt
Ownm- of CDmmm:oe, the Nor·
thweatern Wi..Kon1in Eduutloa
Au~iatlon , and the Southern
Wisconsin Education Assodatlon.
In 111159 he wu prewnted with the
Dia t illlui~ Otiwn award by the
~= Point Oaamber ol Com-
projects,h&a eotl&Jeat the lake.
FTom there, the subject ml&ht
ealily chanae to his family.
esc 11 completlftl ill 17th yur .
Prt'Sldtnt Haftlt'll nc.U. the da)'l
""~y~=:ct~~sclw,oa
wuwtlenttwuotdyfirtft'ft)'Url
old. Then It wu known 11 Stevena
Poin t Nonnal CSPNI. The POIN·
TER wu an already e~tabliabtd
paper. We llad two active men's
deballnJ tuma , Forum and
AIJ'Monaan , wbole IIIDUI ddlete
wua tiJac:IM>ol evt'tll, u waathe
Junior debate with Oahkoeh. The
lheatricalldlhJI&htwutheSenklr
Oasl Play, hdd in the ()per• HotM
-now the Fox 'nleateT.
In alhletkl we had football
buketball, and trac:lc. The ttoi
football team wu the dwnplon o1
the &ate Normal Schook, altbouah
tbtn were 110 eoniltl"tneft 11 we
know than toda,.
These were frinae activi ties. 1be
Norma l Sdloollllelf, llkeCSCtoday
was tbe fac:ulty and the ltudmt
body. We have more buildinp
men facullJ, mon atudenQ now .'
but the ln&arwibM: ~1)', ~
=·t"
de
CorJII,
I• much 1M
ofH~:~iD~ct!':'~~~~~J:~~!
A.uociation and a lite member ol
that or1anh:ation .
He holds
memberships In the Nlllonal
Education. Auodatk>n, the Rot&ry
~~i~~~Y~ the Masonic lodli:e
To know the real ~b" . HanHn ,one
~en'::~~~~y~
f~ trout flshlnc to lemon chUfon
p!e,fort~arehi.sfavorit.e
"hobbies." Then,too, 01.1"" president
O!r,!~do:,~m~~:'1f:
SLEEPING BAGS
by .
North Face
Gerry
Jan sport
Redhead
l'dnary If, 11'11
.... II P"'-1«
Buycentenn~~d
mythology
•
What's that smell?
byMar k\'ollrath
.
For Je\~11 -.roftkJ now I've been
digging into tor at ) our nation"s
history . It's only fa ir that a
bi«ntennlallookatSI:e"ensPointls
in order.
As you might exp«t, Stevens
Point .,.-un't miJCh two hundred
years ago. At that time, the town
had no traffiC lights and the loc:al
rrstdrncedid notsprak Polish. !But
hunt!~
didi!'trvrn tua-.·e ·a name. Were it
notfor~eSI:f:Yell5,we_might
others ~OYed to tbe
a rea Stevens had diacovered
because of its \oc:atlonon theba nlts
the Wisconsi n River which
promiaed phenomenal fiahing
during the sprinasucker and carp
rUIII . Ap~:was later built ac ross
the river fclr - the benifil or the
or
a
"ow
possessed~~o'erenottobedenitd
all be livina in a town without a
m~':n~:fly
dol!
At first, buslneu wu
Customers were SGmt¥t·hat Msi~ni
totellahumanbeinato''lofet.:l'l"'.
The hunlinl skllla that Ste-.·ta~
~~k~::tirv~tod~~~~ndi~
~·One dJiy In the m.id-elgbtecnlh
C'flltury, Slevens was walking fnwn
hishomeln PlaYer to a destination
in Wausau. Unfortunately, SteYf:ll.l
was not familia r with 1M ttffitory,
and wben he encountered Rib
Moutain, Stevens lhou&ht he bad
acc:idMUy headed West aad run
into the Roc:ky Moutains. He im- .
mediately retraced his stes- and
headed brock towards Plover.
Historical documents are 1 bit
unclear, but Stevens apparently
beca me misplaced on the trip back.
Allhou&.h most people wbo are lost
tendtowalkinadn:le.Stevensdid
not. lnst.eadhewa lkedin 1 square.
The present -day market square Is
the historical proof of Steven'•
develop hissens.t of smell to tht
pointwhere hecoulddttec:todorsof
the mills in Wisconsin Rapidsalld
MosiDN on a calm day.
One day, wl\lle Sl:evens was lyina
around trying to think or a way 1o
utllite his new-round skllb, an Idea
came tol\l m. At lu t hediscovt'ftda
way to fin.at~~ee hb tavern -.·tnture
and have the town named aftt'f him
lie would hire hims.tlf out u
filhermen.
Today that same pier is still In
use. Its called the Oarlr. St«oet
bridge and artords west-side
rniden ts the luxury of not havina
todri,·etoWisconllnRapidstopin
acc:ess tothe townseastside.
With the da ily influx of im·
misrants, Stevens devised a plan
lhat.,."OUidmakehimrich-he~~o·ould
bulldallriftlollaver-nsonthespol
he had liDded. He hoped that the
square of tavl!f'ns would rr.erit him
eternal m:osnltion by havin& the
new town bear his name and be
ca ll ed "S te ve n s Sq uare" .
Before Stevens could build his
tavl!f'ns, be knew lhat a brewery In
the area would be necessary to
provide the amber necta r for hls
esta blishmenu. Wtlhlhis ln mind,
Stevens contracted Stanislaus
"Slath" Point ,a brewmaster from
Warsau,a nd convlncedhimtoopen
abre-.,,eryin thearea .
Steven~' plan wastowQ!ft at "Ole
1»-tvo"t'f)' l ndflnancethtta-.·trn~he
~:~:: h!~ ~~~eul:!:~~~r~
Jepeodtdat the knee , the result of
a nasty machete a«ident durin& hls
youth.
Stevenscouldnotgeta)obat the
brewtry. lie was lou short to in·
spec! paulng bottlu on the
:wembly lint. Besides that, he
rouldn " t counttot~~o·enty-four , an
absolu te nrcenity for loadln1
'""·
Stevens
wu in danger of
becoming a foraotten man. The
~~~e:S~e~~m~~g~=l:
his town being called "Point". lie
wasn 't ready to lh'e up withou t a
fiaht . thOII&h.
Stevrnssoondis~·eredthathe
rouldrunonallfoursfasterthan
mostmenrouldrunon thei r feet.
WlthalltUepractire, hewasableto
though. Word soon reached sport.
smen far and wide ol the uncanay
ranine ability of George Strvtns.
Besides belnc a &reat huntrr,
Stevens was somewhat C'OITiic:alto
.,.-atch. According to the diary K ·
counts or an early native olthis
area , Stevens wu also "fun to
watchrelieve himselfaga installf'l!
In the fashion or 1 dol-"
The story has a happy tndinc.
Stevens made a " mint" off thf
hunli"' dOQ gts" and was able to
open the square or taverns that still
sta nds today. 11le town , as "''taU
know, was n 't ta il ed Ste1'e11s
Square, however.
Instead, the town was &1-.'t'll its
' nam e by an unknown Wisconsin
Rapids hunter when he reftrrtdto
Gf:orte Stevens and said : " You
lhoutd ao and see that Ste\"t'I"IS
Point!"
Ste-.·ens 1reatest honor tame
1
::"~Jn~ ;or~~ea' ::n:~: d
=.
11
Then, as today, the school mascot
_ hasalways~na huntlnadoa -
All ..,mtbitiOQ ol ''Swrlodiana,"
feahrina the career ol the world's
fictlonall1ed, first and m oat
r enowned private cons ul li na
detective, hu beea ptac:ed at the
University of Wiaconsln.stevtN
Point ~
The memorabilia is from lhe
collection or Bruce Beaman. son ol
Mt. and Mn. Harold R. Beaman ol
Ht7 Main 51 .. Stevens Point, and a
lftflll graduate ol UWSP with a
~eeinhlstory.
Beaman says he has been
"hooktd"onSberloc:kHol.mes since
1967. when as a man sc:hool soph·
more, he read for an English
as.signment ''The Ad\·enture of the
Spedded S.nd." a short-stor y
ahout the London detective.
His collection. m011 of vohkh is
~in& shown in the lobby of the
Albertson Ltarnlna Resources
Center, consists of mon than 50
hardbound a n d papercovered
editions of ''the satttd wrilinas··
about Holme s ' adventures ;
publications of Sberloc:k Holmes
apprecia tion soc:ieties, macazines,
romic books. a nd c:atlologues.
There are "analytical" books on
the Holmes talea in which each of
the 56 short s tories and four no\·eis
by Sir Arlhw- Conan Doyle, are
dis:s«ted for information about
locales, drus, food , transportation
and even weathef'duriocthe time ol
Holmes ' caner in Victo r ian
DWand.
In addition. the dispby featurea
artwork depicting Holmes aDd
S('ftlt'S from stories. dolhin& such
asthelnver neuo\·en:oat, dt'ff·
stalker caps. pipes, walking stk:ks,
:~a~u;y·~~aP~a~~~=~~~
UpH.
Beaman says U~e most un usual
showpiece Is a copy of an bonorary
diploma in the Art and Science of
Sleuthing whkh wasconftrTed upon
Holm es by
Colorado State
Univenity during a Sbtrloltian
Symposhan last swnmer.
carTitd on an active
COITt'SpOndtn« with Holmes fan_s
lhrou&hout the comtry and in
Canada . Last fall, he and a ma n
from Saskatoon and one from St .
Paul formed a Scion Society of the
Baker Street lrrqulan: of New
~- ::~~~J.
laiC).
Amon& Holmes '"artcionac101," ws
they dncr lbe tbtmselves, Beaman
has auained some Prominence. He
has contributed esuys and other
7~,-?/tM,4
4.-5/IJH.
Titlea for the JTOUP ofOc:ers are
taken from " The Musanve
Ritual "a Holmea ahort story,
. Holmes kept h1l I.W\antweml
correspo ndence olnned to tHe
mantelpieceofhia .fireptace with a
jack-bile. Hen«, the name of the
society tthe sic it neeeuaryJ, and
"titles of the offktrs: ' 'ibe Man·
!~~~~ ..~-a:~~~e~~
Will be present1ng a ...
WRITING
TALK
AND AUTOGRAPHING
Copies of his book • . •
TliE
"'"\~m,s:~R£
•r•" Coffee Served
TO COME ANO VISIT
lliESE POPL.l.AR AUTHORS,
MO ItS ,
TODAY.
-
Author of a score
of marve l ous children's books,
-'J~t,- ?JtM, 5
9-10 4 ,tH,
lnc:ludlng
~==·r
at each of these events .
will be here
to meet and talk
with you.
~~
and also
::
tun.sfixerorsecretuytr~ .
PLEASE JOIN ItS
FOR TliE START OF
A WCJIOCRFlA. OAY!
Weekend' a~ound f
Thursday, March 4
8 PM ••• Q,
"-friday, March S
10 AM. 4f
1 PM · SP/
1 PM -5~
10 PM - 5 p,
10 PM - 5 P,
8 PM -VIC
Saturday, March 6
!
lOPM - SP,
lOAM -2,J
G
8 • 10 PM
by Sunny Sant
"It will be the fint weekend of
!'atarchand I pn:Mniseyoua colorful
show", u id Bee Una Chua .,...hen
first desrribing the weekend to the
newl y organized committee. 11ll'
auemblage, a motley bunch of
internatiooa.Jstudenta , k~ litlk
or nothina about organiulloa of
cilmpuseventJandevt'n less about
their International Weekend.
Today . several monlhs later, the
committft' has evolved into a aroup
· ol confident and aure stutknts who
a~lookin&for~~o.. rdtolheweekend
with unabashed exc:itmenl. Their
plans are now approaching the-
"conc«te" stage and are ready, as
they say, fo r the ''Kick-ofr' '.
Programs ha\'t appeared with the
Jtst of activities comprising the
.,..'ft~nd
and so have the buttons
and pollen.
The 1r;eekend will becin on M.1n::h
4th with the rendition of the Royal
Tahilion Dan«rs. and at ten, the
nut morning, the International
Bauar wiU open the Pr1JVam
Banquet Room in U.C. ' 'The bau'ar
.,..;u have a festive atmospht-re",
said Ylnp , from Nigeria ldlo Is
beadin& the Interior Decontion
Commitlft. •·we have the lay -(lUI. ol
,..._.,
,.1•
u
........,,.n. tt'la
the bazaar in such a way tha t the
ptOPle can fttl tht international
at m01pbeu as wtl.l as see the
Hhibits,buy handk rafts a ndeat."
Mu n whilc Sop h ie , -.·ho is
numerous-itemsfromm issionsand
dealing in lnternaliona l
~ hop s
~~o-are>o. " Wchavt•alsort«ivedhelp
from the .lora I com munity and -.-e
u nexptt:tafN."t>xhibilll frornhere
c:oot"dinatinglhccui~Ur.~ltxhibits
too.'"
and the boutique, is busy com pili l18
the
inventory of a cha rmi ng
collec:tionof assortedjewtlryfrom
ma ny ~ntrits. She has rec:ewtd
l1le OO z.aa r is never com ple te
without th.tpffl'onnl,.artists.and
ht-retooa fascinatinlvarit'tywill
demonslr.lte t.o the croo.~'ds lhcir
unique ex pertise In Bonui, thr
Jo pa nesea rtoldw arfinKO !rff in a
pot , Polish cu p al nlin1 .
calligraphy and many othen. Tht
artists
include both UWSI'
fo reignstudenll III"A'ell as forri&n
s tudents from other cam PIJSd
•
To replmilh \be ener()' of tJw
will
visitonanclolhers-.·homa)' f'IIJO)'
internatlona l culslnethn-t• Yollllll'J
Co fe lnternallonol. Tile cafe .,..-, Ubf
atyplcal cafeonemoyexpl'(I!O if'l'
in the bauar . Snack-s and tid -bill
-.·m be served "rrom a dcurn or M
countriH . 1bo&c enctwlntrd b)' lhr
menu can pu rchase the r«lptS.
whichwill also beavailablr
Thtrewlllalsobeawnunarllll
~- wr~~dH::e;r~~
socioiOI.)' from UW-Ma di!IOII. • 111
conduct it and films on the l!llbjrd
will be shown. f 'Of" film buffs thtrt
will be · a film festiul st-li'C
" claJJical documentritl" trocn
m~r.~;~~~~~fnc;'."~~i.~'llihiiSh vnl•
a colorful show of cb ncf'l. 011
Thunday lhe Yktor Ootl)' !,.
;!~ ~~~y~-:: ~~ :J;:i
dance~ includin& the f1m- ladontslon dance with dry iCC
rnd
Thu~y ,
world
OPINION
SUppoledly the univtn lty com.mlllllt)' is a p&.ce to meet
new people and uptriei\C'e lint Ideal. WeU , quite hone&Uy,
m01tof thei,OOOofusaremllli~ thebolit when it come~ to
fuiHI~iol th a t 1011.
There is aarut majority of people here who don't care lor
are aCrald tol take advantaae ol one ol the areateat· op.
portunlties to aet a rOUIIded education. I'm talldnt
apeclfically about lbe chance to mHt people from olber
cultures that il o((ered by the pretei\C'eof forl~n st~t. on
March_.
8 PM -
Friday, Morch 5
campus.
- Program Banquet Room
'""'"'IATIONAIF - Program Banquet Room
EXHIBITS Program Banquet Room
CLOTIY ENSEMBlE
lOAM·
Banquet Room
' All students :
sO•, Public 1 1.00
photos by
Michael Knopstein
f' tWurylf, ll'fl
P•lfl l
P~
we coli tha t species most successful
that hos mode its own kind its worst enemy
Garrett Hardin
Big Eau Pleine report readied
An interim r~t on the pollution
problems of the Big Eau Plelne
reservoi r and theJ60..1quan mile
~~o"atershed that feeds the 7.~
run.macle lake reKrVH (« the
~~~~g/ ~~N!:ae;'~ to:' m'::mi;:
ft5hld ll problems. It also maltn
four general statemenu based on
the ~~o·ater studies done to date :
l I The reHr'loir at present is
highl)' fertile with a seuonal
ddic:ieney In OJ:ygen.
2.1 The hiBh algae production in
the nowage contr ibutn creatly to
lower oxygen levtls in the wlnti!T
months.
3.1 The nutrient that(~ the
algae 1f0Wth comn (rom seYerll
sources !there a~ significant Ieveii
of nutrients com ing orr the
agricultural lands. but poulbly
C'\'en more significant amounu
comi ng from other sources.
es pecially cheese factory land
disposal sites and municipal
~aae treatment plantsl.
c~ :!t~~~~J.":II
1
give the study a better measure ol
the Importance ol the nutrienta
ori-A::a~~trow"!s~;!-ti~tty Or.
Byron Shaw, a professor oliOOand
water science at UWSP wtth the
assista nce or nine graduate
s tl.denta workinaon the project. It
:~v:~ve':r'=riodu!"f::~~~~
::.C:!':f.e=~~~lz:Sod~lscO:tr::!
rner..-oir aDd Hamann and NoiM:y
Qftli:: watersheds f<r UHDI~
agricultunl runoff.
Thestuclyhua St71,000pricelalor that am<Uit, the Department ot
Natural Resources hu committed
MO,OOO, the University ol Wilcon~ln
Is provktina: SlO,OOO, the U.S. Eo·
Yironmental Protection Ageftcy bas
allocated ne.ooo- a three year
spa n, the Wisconsin Valley lm·
provment Company contributed
H.OOO.andanothet-S3.000to M ,(I)O
science at UWSP, review the Bil
Eau Pleine reservoir data collec·
Thomas Bashaw, a Department
o1 Natura l Resources lndultrlal
waste engineer llefll, Frank
had bftn lnvnted in data collected
~~J~o_r University
Wllconsin
«
DiuolvedOJ:ygen inthewaterat
Halder Bridge on January 30 was
just below three ppm maximum . At
Moon Bridge ~ measuremfllt was
fourtoflveppm fourfeet~th
the Ice and 2.6 ppm at the tUoot
depth. At Splndlft' Bridle be found
a ma ximum .even ppm ol dlaaolved
OJ:ygen. Conditions c:a n chana:e
either way with additional snow
accumu..Uona foUowlnc a period
of
1ood
runot:f.
The Big Eau Pleine Flowage Is
hilh!Y productive ol rish llfe-U the
fish can manage to live through the
tionm~hods
tlmes whtndnnands on avai lable
oxygen let the water are greatest,
says DoctDI' Shaw.
Doctor . Shaw's usembleae of
data. includina water. chemistry,
al1ae samplin1. sediment siUdies,
s uspended solids, bioc hemical
oxygen demancla, l«<iment OJ:ygen
demandl, water now, resen-olr
1Mb and weather, could be llSed In
ve r ifying the accuracy of the
~iversity'scomputermodelolthe
n~=::ry~~t :,~'!:t ...
says Doctor Shaw. ' 'So far the data
looli::l lood-"
The computer will live resear·
chersanopportunilytolookattbe
nowage month-by·month or even
day-by-day. Data ca n even be
placedinthecomputeTforanentire
season lor year I but ice and II'IOW
c:onditions will requl~ modification
of the computer ptOSramridng !Of'
naluatina winter conditiON.
What practical manag~enl will
result from the Intensive awdy~
By programln1 the computer In
different Wl)'l, UWSP npecla to
predict water quality If the water
levels di d n't fluctuate , U the
pollution were reduced. <r If land
laSt pnclkes were chanced. With
that information some lnfoc-med
suggestlont can be ru de on how to
manage the nowage to Improve
water quality In ltneral ' and to
preventfiSnkllls.
Consolidated cleaning up
Soller burns bark and bituminous
-.../'
small coal boilers. The pc'OpC*d
boiler will bum 14 perc:eot wute
bark and II percent watern coal.
1be fuels are used to but water
until It twns to steam . The new
boiler is bei ng built f« SIYC!Tal
reuons . but mainly ~ause
naturar1u suppliers have warned
that supplies ruy have to be
stopped, and the old boiler built in
19llislnneedof replacement. tbe
new plant will amply supply all of
Condolldated'l energy needs.
~~..:'!u~l=-1~ ~:Y!!t~~ ~
p...._,.,elt f'etn..,.n.•n•
plant wiU come from Moolana .
This coal does not bum as cleanly
u moatothft' types; neither does
buli::,wtdchlsalsoused. Butooeof
the more recent pollution devices
will be in operation removing
=ly1 ~1 ::.!::kelut!:O:!ht~i~~
reach the outside air . 1'hU new
Is called an Electronic
Prec:lpilator;ltcollectadtiStpar·
tides by lheuseor 4rS,OOOvoluof
elec:tricity. So. even thou&h the
ba rk andcoaldon't burnasclun u
theprnentfuels . thenewplantwtll
Jtill emit less pollutanta.
'the plant has to con(«m to
d~ic:e
. . . . ... . . . .
tit. En virc)n.f11e ntaf<
-~-----··
•
··TIIf>t:ac~,.,.Ain~~tee : A Bl•q~rllll
fur 'l' ourf'uture;' by Pnl Ebrtkb
a114 An.-e Etwtklirl. a..u. . u.e. New
\'wk. IJU.311 p. &n. I U5.
rr>·i.e•·dlty : PaaiScott
The C<r\'ft'" of '1"he End of AJ-
fluence''
desc ribes the book
exquisitely :
To lldl Willi Ecoloey
To Udl V.'ilh PO&Ierity
To HeU Wilh n-. People
To Hdl With Ot~ Natioos·
Alter All , What did they ever
Do for Us?
U That 's You Motto-Don't Read
Book !
nu.
Dr. Paul Ehrlich first
at~lned
Nlion.al notoriety in his cluaic
boot ' 'The Population Bomb.'' ' 'The
Population
Bomb" stimulated
many people to b«une CCD«nwd
with the populltion-resource
problems facin&lhe Earth .
Paul Ehrlich 's book, "The End of
Artluence" t written with the
l.llilt.a&ceolhiswife, AMe l dub
with a question few ecolocists hke
to Ullt openly about: how m~X:h
&rowth is good?
ll is obvi01.afromtheonsetolthe
book tNt the Ehrlichs believe tht
apoc'alypse is c:omina. Tbe reason
lM Ehrlichs are so pessimistic:
towards !he futuno. with society's
pre 1e nt att i tu de of
' '&nrwttulm&n ia",is ou!linedintbe
fitstha!(of~boolt .
The Dlrlichs refer basically to
two types ol nations: 'lbe 0\'ff·
=~C:ti!0:U:,~~uU::
qued that the problems tacinc the
•arthtodayC11Uidbe501vedbya
redistribution of wea lth and
rnourees bet~~o·een 00 nations and
the UD
a nd within the
bi~ac:hy ol each nation : but due to
a combination ol ianoranee, ~ .
and callousnes:l, a situation has
bftfl created that C11Uid lead to a
~~~;h. or more people starvlna to
nation.s
The food crutK:h and future
famines are &lvfll earetull con sidentlon. Because ol pollution and
natura l cli matic change. it It
doubtful that the lnOIISOOill will be
~li•ble mou&h to feed the millions
wh01e existence Is dtpendent upon
the monsoon s . Further com plicatinc the food question is po!X'
la nd use plannin& which cont.lnuet
to destroy much of the world's m01t
ftf"tile IOils. We lhauld try to
de\·•lop biolockal strains compatibl• with the coming poortr
growln& season, requi rin& le u
•nuay . intensive a&ricultural
production, with men resistant to
disuse~ and pests, whil• at the
same time )ieldina a product which
is
nutritional.
Recycllnaand~rvationare
theEhrlichsaltemaUves tolheOD
TIM
WEISBER·G
~ ;A~~Hc~~o~M.~
~ QUANDT GYM )
f
,
~
(
ALONG WITH • . ..
CORKY SIEGEL
-
TICKETS -
STUDEHTS-$2.00 (IN ADVANCE)
~·
~
,
NON~TUDENTS & AT THE DOOR-$3.00 .,
Tickets available at U.C. Info Dnk
,
Student Managers OHices •
Allen & OeBo~t
Centers.
PRESENTED BY RHC
~---..:~
bookshelf
natlonslovlshde:mands foreneri.Y.
Ma n tran si t a nd communal
5
g'!l!:!:
J~~~:l'in~ us~~g!tti
be different. inaulation standards
will be raised. iftdustry and em·
piO)·enwill work dGier tocether
and alternative SOI.It«S of er~era·/.
e.a .. ~<~l•r power, will augment the
need to purchase fllUg)' from
outside sources, I.e ., the loc:al
uUlity.
.
The Ehrlicl\s contem plate tbe
question ol democracy as a solution
to the myriad of problems· ol
d lstrlbutionofscarceilemsln lftee
soci ety . Historlully , an un derprivilaaed d . . In a capitalistic
society c01.1ld pull themsel ves
through the influx ol material
gooda, but this method IS no longer
feasible becalm! ol shortaae.. If
~:a~uZ'~~m orba':al~o
hope---rebellion and instability will
be hallmarts ollhe future.
The second part of the book
providesuswithsourcesofwhatto
so we can bec-ome forewan)ed
~ad
ol our owa fate. Japan provide. an
excdlent Indicator to 5tudy the
behavior of a hl& hly literate
technoloaically sop h is ti cated
people lacina problems that will
soon be universal in theOOnaUons.
In the rutW"e , Americ.an~ must
plan on bein& lied to by their
&over-nment, rqardleu ol who's in
powu. However, the Ehrlicht do
not com plete ly disreaa rd th e
polltlcal system. They even JO u
far as label the " &OOd " and " bid"
J>?litical leaden In Conaress. The
•dea is fl'lad e very clear !hat
Jovernment cannot snlve !he
pc-oblems ol society- we shou.Idn't
expec t aovernment to , We mUJt
~tain the pioneer alti tude of self·
sufrtciency. Grow your own food ,
learn buic flnt-ak:l , do carpenlry
-.·ork,and learn to live with leu
materislaoocls. The Ehrlichs ar&ue
thatsuchastyleolllfecould leadto
selfrespectandstrenathenincot
family 1nd community ties. Advice
is give n at the end of the book on
how to Pftlll~ )'Olnell with food
shelter, dothina. conserve
ba'i!:.:rcfi'!t.a nutritionally well -
enertf
The Ehr lichl, maale formula to
avoid being drown by the comh!ll
soc:ialtidalwaveis,"Jetlnvolvedln
rr:;:~~~ and maximiu your
The Ehrlichs llJUC that man is on
the lith hour in com104 to terms
with his Immense capac.ty for ~elf
destruction. Their hope is that , with
~ason •nd a 5ense ol uraence, we
can succeed despite the lalenesl ol
the hour. But the Ehtlkhs are
d~ly troubled by the totally
inade qu ate and so metimes
mlsdirtc:ted efforta ol 1ovenunent
and soc:lety to live within Ita means.
Seldom have such 5entlments been
expreued 10 fOl'Cefully a nd with
suc:h sensilivlty.
THANK YOU!
The Un iversity Activities Board and Winter Carn ival Com miHH would like to thank the following lor their dedication and coopefatlon In making Winter Carnival '78 a
great success.
Holly Meier
Sara Vanden Heuvel
Harry Babcock
Na!cyDrewicz
Leigh Bains
Jim Billons
Mark Nerenhausen
Al~a Phi
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Sdlmeeckle Hall
R.H.C.
Student Activnies
Pointer
Publicity Services
University Bookstore
lnlormation Desk
Nancy Gartzae
Kim Kalura
Tom Smyczek
Rick Martin
.bhn Anderson
Suzie Zorn
Meg AHermeier
Delta Zeta
.Alpha Sigma Al~a
Neale Hall
Recreational Services
WWSP
Campus TV
Home Ec. Club
U.A.B.
And Many, Many More
Gila Wildunnt trnpautn IO I"
by \"thh: lt.oulb)' IQa ltt.nm .
~ou!e:'~~~a: r::;:tl~o ~
KidiiiJWilhthtTimH
mEco- Sriefsm
Yilldt'meSI Act afttr their four·
r;hMJtd vehiclts boggtd clown 'Z7
milts inside the Wi lderntss. ille
Fc.-tst Service rtquirtd t~~ to .
remove thei r vehicles by pr•m•tlve
means After uveral wuuccnsful
attemPt~, a mule teamdidthejob.
A 30-day ~ail sentence and a $200
1
nne ~~ ::r"!e:~. \l:.!~h ~~~
=rtd to do +0
~"""'·
h9urs community
011 Plan In Ahub Gulf Gell
Jnanothc! r of aseritsofsetbaeks
few the Council on Envl ronm~lal
Quality. Interior Secretary Thomas
~~~h ~n:':a:r!J!iie!~';
·
off..horeoiltraeiJi n thenorthtrn
G~~:f ~=~;:~ment group ha~
1
~
=r~~u:!:ou~~a~~de:~
I
Wish
~Y
Waan't
Le Roy Holm,
former uw professor of H_o r ·
tleulture. saldthatlheenergyeris_is
will perpetuate the weed problem m
~~~:;r~~~ ':!'r~%,:~~
imp.;~re-.."ftdCilnlrol .
Appt"0\"11
:<
w~
W«<< specialist,
envirtMUnenlal impact that the off.
shore drllllna would !\ave on the
nora and fauna in that area.
Kleppe in a letter to C..E.Q
Chl•rpe;son Russell Peterson
~:cp:~~~~~~~ ~~e !nu=e~ie:U:";
move ahead w1th the lease sale
Holm said lh.1t Wftds e:a~
contamination of whea t 1n
Afghanistan which killed~-~
people and left 10.000 people 111 ' "
the later part of 197$; caused the
lou of enouah corn per acre to feed
IOOpersonsperday ;and forced ·
people of some countrits to spend 7S
per Cfll l of their waklne houn ,
weeding.
Condon In Trouble
Accordine to John Bornefmln,
Nationa l Audubon 501:\ely condor
naturalist,thelastten yearshave
seen condor nwnbers ~line from
60 to 50 birds. Evidenlee suggesll
that the birds ·~ bdna
affe-cted by activity at two oil
drilling silts south of the 5espe
Condor Sanctuary.
•dvenelr
'"'"
leiider&ifanyone\slnterested. For
furthc!r Info on a great way to
· spend 11 1ummer vacation write :
Bike-centennial
Depl. L.T.P.
P.O. Bo:c 1034
MiS10ula,Mt. S91101
Papt r Drive
1be Environmental Council Is
sponsorlnaa paperdriv.! Saturday ,
Feb. 21.
white paper and computer ~ards
s h ou ld be se p arated from
newsprint, ~olortd papel) cards,
1
a%;=: C::hlng to contribute a
substantial amount of paper for
r ee:ycllne can ~a ll the En ·
vironm~lll Council, 346-2055. The
Environmental Council need1
volunttfrl to help collect paper.
""rsonswishin& tohelp cane:ontae:t
the council or be at room 1011 CCC
8:30AM, Saturday.
fW
U.A.B. FILMS PRESENTS: ·
''DIRTY
HARRY_J-'
' MARCH 1MONDAY
9:00P.M.
$1.00
STARRING CLINT EASTWOOD
THE
TERMINAL
MAN
THURSDAY & FRIDAY
MARCH 4 & 5, 7 & 9-$LOO
PROG. BANQUET. ROOM
Operations designed to control
the human mind through Brain
Surgery have taken place and ar
taking ·place at this very mom
Skiers sliden hi
by Stne Ly'-:11.
UWSP's ski team is mall.in& a
name for thescbool, accordin& to
Don Edbferg, tum coach and
competitive skier. 1be team has
competed in four meets thus far
where it finished :nd, 15th, 4th and ·
5threspectivelywith12-14teamsln
competition.
Team members are : Don Edbef&
Cvtho has skied competitively with a
racing club out o( Vail. Colorado for
2 y~arsJ Al Pelef'S, Brad Berry,
Randy DriClta. Tom Wol.fenberg~r.
Mark Bushman, and Jim Smith.
1be ski team is a cllvislon of
UAB's Ski Club. 1be te&m ~\'H
no funding from the University,
except UAB Ski Cub purchased
pllesandllapforslalomaatesf«
the ski team. All other expenses are
covft"ed by ski team members.
EachraceC"OSt$12-JI:ipt>r rac-erfor
transportation and entry fees.
Team members must al5o practice
at thei r own expense.
Sldmeetsareho&tedby 5Chool.s
in Wisconsin and Minnesota. Eau
Caire. Rh·er Fal.li. Stout. UW·
Madison; St . Olaefs and other
collq:es in Wi5Consin, Minnesota
and Iowa have been in competition.
Eau Caire has the strongest
team . Edbe ra attributes their
successtostrongscbool.support
and fullfundinaofthe team 'sac·
tivities. Eau Claire has ei&ht men
thatskiaswellif notbetterthanthe
top lhree skien ol UWSP in Ed·
berJ 'sopinion.
College ski racing has become a
highly competitive sport. Edbft'g
said that several years 110 a &ood
parallel skier could compete but
now a racer needs competitive
~xperience .
Gi;mtslalom ;and slalom are main
most ski meets. A racer
willsltiineache\·entandhl.s times
~\·ents ln
are combined to give a score.
Scores can be
~xtr~mely
close; io
:!~~~re:~%um:~r~!fs !~
eachot.herafter4 runs.
Edberg stressed the opportunity
for women to aet into competitive
sltiifli. UWSP would need 5 women
tof«mateam .
Edberg expressed hope ot hoe tina
nightmeetsatR.ibMt. nex t year. A
meet held close to Stevens Point
would ben~fll UWSP's team as most
olthemeetspresoentlyputicipated
in require being on the road by 5
A.M. Ihedayoflhemeet.
sk1'":c!::~~O:~~~~
3119.
Skater's Sator threafened
by Peter U Utnkl
This past Wednesday the UWSP
Health, Phylical Education and
Recreational Activities Depart·
ment tHPERAl voted for a second
time not to renew hockey <:001ch Ted
Satoc-'steachina:contract.
Until that second vote was taken,
Sator had been actively reaistina
theori&.inalmoveto,ineffect, fire
hlmuafacultymemberwhichalsp
me.anstbeloss ofhlscoachingjob.
In contesting the first vote Satocbuedhisargumentoo two separate
points. For-em01t he said that the
HPERA tenw""ed faculty repeatedly
told him that the results of their
vote was simply a recom mud.aUIIIl
for noD-i"enewal of his contract.
Th is~~ to imply that the
ultim.te decision in such cases rest
in the hands o( someoM else. If that
wu the cue Sator wanted to fUld
out who held that position but uilt
his question wasn't clearly an·
swered.
This point wu examined by Dean
AurUiur Frltsc:hel ot the CoUeae of
Proleuional Studies tCOPS I who
sent a memo to Bob Badzinski.
s tudent government president, in a
an attempt to ex plain the matter.
Badz.lru.ld has reported that the
memo interpr:fla various puts of
the Faculty Handbook (5«. C; S.03.
3.07, 3.«l&and3.ot) which to contract
actions related to this case.
Tbe &ist of the memo is tbat the
vote o1 the department in contract
renewal« non-renewal is (tnaland
that no uniVft"sity administrat«
can overtu r n s uch decisions .
However lhe faculty members
involved does bave mea.ns o( ap·
pealina the decision with the Wt
*P l:leiQI the Faculty Mediation
commiuee whk h can aranta move
for reeoaakleratlon ol the depart·
mental decision.
In the memo Dean Fritsche! notes
thathehadhaddlscussionsonthi.s
point with severa l people · on
campus includin& Robert Bowen.
auistant dean of COPS and HPERA
department chairman . In a
t~lephone conversation after the
vote on Wednesday Bowen stressed
1M idealhat Sat or was not olftcially
fired and that no ooe would know
that until the coach received 10me
kindoloWcialnoticeonMan:ht .
Besides that technicality Bowen
alsopointedoutmorethanoocethat
the vote was only a recom- .
mendatloe, which appears to be
s imply another rhetorical
technicality .
The other contention that Sat«
haswilhlhevoteisthatnoonewill
sa y why they volld against him.
The coach feels that this is unfair,
especially inli&htolhis recordat
UWSP. He ootn that all of his
teachingevaluationssofarhave
been positive and he believes that
his involvement with Pacelli
pucksten. youth hockey, and the
Central Wisc1lftsin nyers has al5o
~t'itedtheUniversity
Durin& a phone call after the
second vote Sator sa.Id that he no
Jona:erwantedtofia;htthevote. He
didn't announce. any definite plans
for the future but seemed confident
in his ability to find a new po~ition
tohislildna:.
Earlier in the week, before the
=t~taySa~orate~~and
contiri!JI! hd efforts a~ developirc
th is school's hockey program . Now
the quality ol the progra m seema
~apordiud due to various !K~
1 t~mmin& from the coach IOil"i h11
job.
In conalderlng the fu ture arowth
the hockey pt'Oiram Sator is
IOmewhat pessimistic for a number
of reasons. 'lbecoach believes that
membership in a conference is an
Important step to take In developing
the school's hockey pr osram
becauselttendstostimulatemore
spectator Interest as the team
competes f« a position in the
conferen«stancllngs. 1be Pointers
have a chance to join in a new
hockey conference with UW.Stout,
UW·River Falls and some Min·
11e101a schools but this opportunity
could be jeopardized if the UWSP
o(
~~s~~~~~ensthe
UWSP hockey
program in its early staaes depends
heavily upon the ability of the
school to attract some top hockey
players . Considering thi1 point
Satorsaid, ' "They~xpect me to &o
outandrecuitkldsf«nextyearllke
~~~.:~not~~~i~·u":
herenextyeartoruntheprocram
on it?"
Withhighschoolstatetournament.s
\prime recruiting times l comina up
In the next few 111eell.a Sator says
that lhis matter could areaUy
hamperthequalityofnutyear 's
team.
Althou&h the hocll.ey team 's
r ecor-1 has been somewhat
disappointing at 9-16 this year ,
then how can I sell some kid
Sator. beli~esthatthepro&ramas
a whole has Improved. The <:001ch
believes that he now has a much
hi&hercaliberteam onthel« than
formercoach RichBiancheclldlut
year .
~Pointershavebeen
playin& many mor-e uperienced
teams this year and quite a few of
their louea have been by only I or 2
•""'·
With Sator 's depa r t ure the
boc:keyprogrammayalso facethe
loss of fundiqsubsidies from the
student government. For the last
three ye.ars the student aovernment
has been picking up the tab for the
teams ice rental at the Iceodrome
and other expenses. When Sator
was hired last fall he wasn't
auaranteed this fundlns of his
~[u'rn4~~!~~~': !:~:
~!
plsea!!s
development.
Satorwasabletosdlhisconcept
for a two year developmenta l
protram to the student leaders and
received a fundin& committment
for that period. Student controller,
Bob Sllaver , noted that when the
sl u dent government accepted
Sator 's proposal they were ac·
~:~~~~.:~ a~~~~~y~~~
were accepting his plans.
"Therefore the hockey prosram
does not automatically retain the
second vear of the fundin& com·
mittment and Jt has been noted that
the studentaovernmenl mlaht be
morereluctsnttofoundapt01ram
in the future that has had three
different coaches in its three year
varsity sl.atus~story .
Shaver added that he thou&ht the
COIICh had done a very good job 10
farin li vinguptohiscommitments
for developing the hockey program.
At recent home aames many fans
have been seen wearing "Save
Sator's Raiders"buUons. showin&a
base of student support for keeping
Salor.
Althou&h it- doesn 't necessari ly
meanthecollal)leofvarsilyhocll.ey
on this campus, the loss ol Coach
Satorjustmayserioualy retardlts
developmenl .
Fnn.J)' n. tsf!
,.,, " P.-wr
J
~·
by Julin Rond y
Cagers go out in style
Oes pile a typical offens i\•e
drought a t theendofthe game, the
Pointers edged the Wh itewater
Wa rhawks at Quandt Gym las t
'-Sa turday night . g&.gS_ The win
avengedanearlier8B-S6 1os.sa t
Whitewater.
Missed free throws nearly did
Poi nt in, as they blew the front end
offourbonussituationslnthefi nal
four minutes . · The Pointers appeared tobein command with 1:08
togo. holdingan86-a l lead. But the
ck>termined Warhawksfoua htback
to within one point wit h nine
. seconds left and possesion of the
ball under the Pointer 's basket.
Rese rve Pointer forward Steve
Mennlthen sa~·ed the victory on
· lheensuingplaybysla pping the
b.:lll away from Whitewater guard
Bill Dailey . Dailey managed to
n."CO\"er the ball and pass off to a
tea mmate ~~o· hoOunga despe ration
shot from half court. The sh'ot ow-as
far off the ma rk as it hit the top of
th e backboard . As the buzzer
M~U nded .t he sparsecrol•odle touta
ro.a r wh ic h was probably louder
thanthesum totalof allthenoise
hea rd in Quooslt G)'m this season.
The Pointers controlled the tempo
of the gam<'. opening up ll·poi nt
leadson threediffcren t occasions.
Ho~~o·cver. UWSP could never quite
pul the Warhawks away, as the
Pointers sq uandered big leads as
quicklyasthcyweremounted.
UWSP d isp layed excell en t
sco ring ba la nce with all five
s tarte rsindoublesfigures. Lloyd
Thornton led the way with 22 points
~ largely on breakaway la}'ups l,
followed by &-9 Da~·e VanDerGeest
with 19. Captain Paul Wolta chipped
in 1~ while freshma n Bob _Repka
and &-7MikeMc0anielcontributed
tO each.
Conferencescoring leaderGe rald
Coleman tossed in 31 points for
Whitewater, · just mi ssing the
conference scoring record Uor one
season ! by 3 points. Most of
Coleman's points came on shots
from t he~30footrange .
Vin Der Geest and McDaniel led
the Pointers in rebound.ing with 11
and 10 respectivetr. Guard Bob
~----Super
by nm Sull ivan and Randy \\1evel
I. Who is the all-lime leading
basketball scorer in Notre Dame
history!
A. Tom Hawkins
B. Orville Moody
C. Austin Carr
D. Ted Baxter
E. Terry Hanratty
Sports Quiz 2----------
Who had the most personal
foulsinoneNBAbasketballseason'
A . Hal Greer
8 . Dave Sthultz
C. Bailey Ho~~o·c ll
D . Gomez Addams
4.
s. Whichoneofthese profootball
players once tried to shoot down a
helicopter "'i t h a rifle on the Ohio
1\lrnpike'
A. Dwight White
8. Ernie
2. 't\'howasthe younges t major
league player of all time!
B.
C.
D.
E.
Gi l McDougald
JWJior Sample
Joe Nuxhall
Otis Campbell
6. Wh ic h oneofthese players hit
four homers in a single major
league game?
A. Don Kessinger
B. Reggie J ackson
C. J oe Adcock
D. Hank Kimban ·-
3. Whichoneoftheseplayers had "
sl xwa lksi n a majorleaguegame!
A . Nor m Cash
B. Walt Wilmot
C. Rud y La RUS50
D. Walte r Cronkite
E . Wa lly Post
Holm ~
C. Jack Lambert
D. Mel Blount
E. Jac k Ham
A. Robin Yount
7. Nametheex.SCattie "Pilotwho
was served with a fake paternity
suit by his teammates.
bic clic
playing wit h a nagging cold, threw
Repka had· a game high se\·en
in22in thehalfwhilethe lanky Van
assists.
DeiGeest fired in 18.
\\bitewater had a 48-36 reboun·
The Pointers were muc:h more
di ng edge, but shot only 42DCT«!!lt
from the field compared to a s~z·,
conservat iveinthe secoodhalf,as
d ing S6 percent by the Pointers."
they were outscored 44·31 by the
Titans . The game had a nice ending
Wh itewa ter took :ZSmore stiots fr om
with the Pointer players smiling
the field th.1n did Poin t. In spite of
their me-dioc re free throw per ·
aodlaugh lng. Bothcoachescleared
cen tage t661.t he Poi nten gained
th ei r benches with about a minute
and a hal( remaining.
thriredgebycanning three more ·
cha r ity tosses than Whitewater .
Repka finished with 31 points.
shootinganab!olutelyincredible82
With the win. the Pointers are
per cen t from the fi eld. Van Der
now 5-10 in league play and 9· 16
overal l. They closeout theirsca.son
Geest totalled 22 markers and 8
Wednesd.::Jy night when they host
reboundS, aod reserve Steve Menzel
Oshkosh at 8 p.m. in the Quand t ' played nothing like a substitute
adding 9caromS ond an excellent
t'ieldhoi.L.'Ie.
fl oor game. Senior Paul Woita .
Then on Wed nesday night the
Point ers clobbered Oshkosh , 91-!H, _playing in his last ga me as a
Pointer, contributed 15 points an~
in a freewheelin' shootout. Point
the s ame leaders hip that he
was in command :ill thewaythanks
provided a ll season long.
to a blisteri ng fast·break and the
Sophmore s tar Ralph Sims led
devastating outside shooting of
Oshkosh wi th 22 points.
Bobby Repka.
· ThePoin tersendedtheseasonon
UWSP surged to a 5540 lead at
a
high note , winning their last two
thehalflargel yont hest rengthofa
games more decisively than the
combined 40 points by Repka an d
fina l scoresindicate. j
Van Der Geest. Repka, despite
A. Steve Hovley
B. Fred Talbot
C.
Ra y Oyle r
D. DOn Mincher
E. Tommy Harper
reg~
8. Which one or these guys has
never played in a World Series!
A. Phil Linz
.\nswtntoSuperSports Qulz
8. Darrell O~aney
C. Denny Coyle
'OOI"LPild JSJ[J
D. Ernie Banks
E, Dal Ma xv ill
3ljJ UO 511.'11 If "!ki,\VJB
~1'(1\tMI I!~'l
iltll JOJ dn ;) UI!l ISJ!J S]lj UnJ
aUIOlj e l!ll J;)uue~ 'l;xuo-v ·ot
. j "Oie.>!li.11SUJI8V SJ]lj S]lj
ne toll.<uemreun;)Uu3lS ·s"!J"S
· PJ.!Oh\ e UJ pa.<e Jd JiMaU S'JU1!fi
SOOS e<Ull]q a ljiJ03UOSI!.'II!IU]lj.)J!d
, Sq~Q JUjd.{J SJ II.Ll "L JOj L oliOJ
9. Whowasthe lastplayer tohav e
sevenhi tsinseven timesa tbatin a
majo r league game~
Ja.{e[dJS""ejillfl SI/O\ IIaUU;)lS 3JUU3}J
~
A. Oa\·e Concepcion
Japta!Jut atuJ!dl!lmqsu!d-::> "6
B.
C.
D.
E.
OJ liUJJUOJ:re ' JGq[e~
"Sii]J;)SeU! Jl'>·<tqd
Wes Unseld
Renn ie Stennttt
Dean Chance
Ed Brinkman
J3A3U tsq00) SlJUeg a]UJ3·Q
·.. mo~ nea .. ur uotnoa
10. Whichoneoftheseplayershit
ahome runinhis firstat-batinthe
majors?
A. Chuck Tanner
B.
C.
D.
E.
Chuck Essegia!l
Chuck Connors
Henna n Franks
Marcel Dionne
'8
UIJr
P<3-Y·8 "L
·awet at{J u1
3J<Inop a peqos jeau "I!P!P'JJO..>pV
aor ,saAe.lij 3al'(lle..... ml! iMU·:J ·g
"R UIIOI! IIJU -13 S.l!!.mq!l1l!d•8 ·c;
'S9-t96JUJS[f10,
!: JOJP'J111!J SC,'I\
(IIJOUI!IJilB J Jlii.'IIO}f .<a[!et~·J ' t
' JUJ0dSU.)A31S
UIO-Jj Jill\ ieii J Jofi! UJ JSJ!J a\11 Stl.'ll
l[l!h\ "168 1 'i:(;JSO!I\y UOSlJ]l!ll\ XJS
Plllj\OUI I!fti.J[I?h\ S,OICJ]tQ-8 "t
"tt6 t
UJ sp;:JlJ a111 JOj llu fl!;Jl!d~JJI?JS
.:MjU34MSJ Sl!.'ll [[ l'ljXnN 00('-0 "l:
"JJ I!J UJ ISn V·J ' I
vm~ nLMsOO~ ·
.~
..::;~. 39¢
MARCH 27& 9 P.M.
·E· MMONSmon.·thurs8-5
fri. 8-9 ·sat- 8-12
PROG. BANILJ!M.
·601 north qivision·
phone 344-4911
HITCHCOCK'S
NOTORIOUS
s1o&7_ - :-
GVMNASnCS: This wetkeod is the
Alwnni Meet at Bert Cymnuium .
!:."vents bqin at 4 :00 Saturday artemoon. 8e there and see the okl
jocks take on ·lhe youna Jtrappera.
Admiuion Is frtoe to all.
Uoc:Uy : lnthftrlalellattempt to
0\'~t the bad habit of losifll ,
the Pointer hockey squad chpped a
pair ol &ames to Dlinois t11k:aaoarele Jut weekend, losinc Friday
niahtHandSaturd.ay afternoon41
WRESTL I SG : Th e UWSP
v.nstlinaltamcapturtdsixthplace
attheconferenc:echampoinsipsthla
put weekend. None of the grapptenplactdfintintheme-et.Rlck
f>t,aC<~c:lr. placed sec:onc1 at Ill
pounds and qualified for the
nationals . Ron Szwet and AI Cartrr
placed fourth at 158 and 190 pounds
respectivrly.
The nationals will be held at
Edinbora, Pa. on March 10,11 , 12,
and 13.
~~oinntr thisyearandfeelstha tthe
Sue Bropard wa1 outltandin& In
pitchlngcorpsandsomenewpeople
~~oilt play an instrwnental part in
doingso. Steinerismoreconcemed
withthe pitchina:andthedefei!S('
thanhe isof thehittinc . Someofr.be
ne•peopleexpecltdtohelpthis
yean team are Mike Cast, Phil
IOismith . and Jeff ATnfelt, all
transfer students. 'J\\'o first year
ltudentsofimportanc:e are f'tank
Stockus and Tom Alfut h.
~ are many &ood returnin&
veteransthll)'tarandthecatchlng
should be re.a.IJood witb the likes of
Dan Ha~BB and Tom Hojnadd
behind r.be plate. Ha~~str Is a rUJ
team leader and Hojnacki is a
dtfentlve IIHI.
Theinfieldiaaveleranlnfieldand
an experienced one. The two best
pitc:hersfrom lu t yearsteam were
!oat th.rw&h vaduation . U the
pitchin& c:omea through then the
Pointen sbou.ld c:ome up with 1
Both team.J finlsed the regular
seuonwith IS.2r«<rds.
UWSP will open tourney play
toni&ht at Whlteattt" against UWRiver-F'allsatfi :OOPM.
Doa't roraet that tbe tum il
lpOniOringa baslr.etballtoumament
on February 21and 2t to raise funds
for their trip. 8e lUre and attend
the James If you want to ate some
great basketball. The&ameswiU be
htki In the Quandt Gymnulum .
ln the Pft!ally.fllled but tquaUy
contested aame the lead chan&ed
hands no leu than five limes. and
sawbothteam.Jikateamanortwo
shot tthf'OUCh a aood portion of both
games.
Unden CArlson played some fine,
aureuive hockey for Point and led
the team In sc:orina with three
pointa on one aoal and two usista.
Mike Tocbterma.a and Dave Veitch
rach had two points with one pal
and ooe aulst each.
Coach Ted Sator aid fn~~traUon
was !be ooly war to describe tht
weekend series With Qrcle, and for
that matter the whole H&SOn .
Sators Raidtn will be Idle this
weekend, but return to the
ktodrome for their final two borne
latnes of the season on March $lh
and 6t.b qainst Dupqe CoiJeae.
f'ac:e«ftimeisat7 :30pm .
WO~EN'S BASKETBALL: Last
Thutaday the womtl'l'l bulr.etba.ll
ltamcameupwithooeolthttrbeat
prrforrnancesoltbtyurulhey
whipped powerful LaCroue 61-57.
UWSP a tie with
The •in
LaC ro ue for t he Wisconsi n
Women's lnttf'Collfliate Athletic
Confere nce ce ntral divi s ion
dwnpionlhip.
II wu a dlfftf'tnt story, however,
on Tuesday, 11 the ~~me two teams
met to dttennine the No. 1 teed f«
tonllht's basketball l.olrnamtnt.
The LaQ-oue Indialll toolr. ad\'lfltage of a bad flnt half by UWSP
and ~~~~nt on the defeat the PoinltT
pis 15-60.
"Poor shooth•. errant pass.il\l,
andnotc:ontr'OUinC the boards wert
the thinp which burt us most ."
'IbOit were the words of Coadl
Marilyn Schwartz u she deattibed
her tram's tint ball play •hie:h
resulted in .a 4WII deficit.
The lndillll built their lead to •
JB as the Pointers continued their
poor shootln& early in the second
I""'
SWI MM.ING: Tlwt swim team took
thl rd~l ace at the confer ence
cham Oftlblp this put •eel!.end at
Eau
Ire. The Pointen had no
cooferen~ champs, but some
Khool records were brdten.
In !be 200 ny, &yan f'ahrenbach
set anewadW)C){ r«0r1:1 with a time
ol2:0U, Mike Slqle came up with
a r«ord 17:(18.1 in the 1650
frHStyle, and Pat Mccabe set the
rec:wd In lhe 200 yard individual
m~{e
=;1:!t
second in the
310 yardfreewitba1 :4Uanclthe
t530yard fnoe witb a 17:01.1. Mall
Ryan took HCOI'Id in the 100 11rd
butterfly•itha$.$.4.
Thtrinalatandinpwere : Ill Eau
Claire I:ZJ Stout 131 St.evens Point
141 Oshkoah t:il l.aCroue 161
Vt'hitewater (71 Superior Ill Rh·erFallaitl Plattevllle.
F'ive 1wimmen will be 1nin1 to
the nationall in !tbrsh.ll , Min·
nesot.a,ln two •eek.J : Mike Slq}e,
Matt Ryan, Bryan Fehrenbach, Jeff
Hill, and Tom Mc:M.abon.
BASEBAU.: Man:h 12 II the bil
dayuthtPolnten leave for their
trip down south to Lalr.e Olarln,
La . They wi ll play a 14 1ame
Khedule wtlh I pouibility of 11
games.
The i r lint 1ame Is a
doubleheader aaaln1 t McNee.e
State. This will talr.e place on
March 13.
Coach Ron SleiMr i& lookina few a
ha¥he Polntert finally caucht fire
~~o·i th
Marcy Mirman and Sue
Brosaard providing t he &pa r k .
!ot:inna n loCOftd two buketl and
Broaaard three to c:ut the Indian~ '
leadtoSI--4.1.
bothgamna&lhe ICOf'ed IS points
last lburaday and came baa •ith
2 1 poinll in the MCOnd m"'t.inc-
winner.
lntro
please
Judi Iris ·blooms
by E . Lytle
Judilrishatbeenafamilarface
around the Fine Arts Building si~
1969 when she rnumed classn on a
partlimebasis.
·
AS('nlormajoringinDrama and
Ps)'Chology, Judi has appeared in
nine plavs. winnin~~; best Actreu of
the Year Award In 1973-74 for her
performance in "Juno and the
Payc:oc k" .
~sldesac:tlng, Judihasworked
osawardrobenitstress,stagehand ,
construc tion crew member, light
board operator, s tage manager,
make-up designer , dirf!Ctor and
assistant directo r of various
p(oductlons.
WMn did you first become '"'
terrsled Ia the Tbuter!
" I've been Interested In perform ing all my life. Basically I'm
anelllrovert.
Do you consider yo.ntlf 111
actrtu!
" I've enjoyed actina but have
never considend myselr an aclr'as.
rve perhaps wished 1 Were at
~rtain times ,butl'vebeenableto
realize where my potential lies."
Vo11 1\lvea't become "s laJt·
JtnM:k"tbtn!
··No. In the bqinning there 's
derinitelyanelemenlof "star-itis" : '
There's nothing !lite a pplause, and
if you allow it, it will go to your
head. This didn't happen because I
was able to be objective about the
caliber of my performance."
In "'hat area do you ftel your
poeential Li es~
" Direeting is deflniUy the area I
am most interested in , probably
because I've had some amounl of
success working with students in
that capacity."
·
What productio n 1\a\·e you en·
jO)'eddolng!
" lcan'tsaytl\atl'veenjoyedmy
experienCesactinginprodue:tlonsto
any large degree because I've
always felt limited In the area of
acting. Therefo~ most rewarding
. was my experience directing the
last play in Studio Theater, Bad
Play For An Old tady."
Would you !ell us about the play!
" It's a story ·about two people who
exist, they don't live, and it is very
much a message play. That's
probably why I wanted to do it."
llow do you view your role 11
dlreelol:'!
"lnitiallyl've sottosayltlsan
ego trip. There is an essence of Godlike control that 1 direetor excercises. But far more than that,
and more Importa nt, you a re ·
allowed the privilege of stimulating
understanding ·and leaTntna. th111
providing a learning expe!'lettce.
Developing the characterlstica with
your. actors gives you the opportunity in a play to expand their
knowledae of Jl(e and hopefully
make them aware of the im. portance of directi ng their own
lives."
•
What Is your major goal ,..heo
dlreetlog 1 atuclent petforma~~oee '!
"Ultimate.ly you are concerned
with the quality of performance,
however, in a educational seiUng
theabilitytoanalyulife orlifein
the play is of equal importance."
llow wouJd you describe tbe\
caliber ol actlnJ • th is camPus!
"As In any educational aystem
you set a mixture of ability. We
have some piopJe' who. r ·reel
potential in Uie area o1 acttng and
many who delude themselves that
they 1\ave this potential. I'm not
sayina this latter group are notalent slobs, m01 l of them have
some degree of ca p ability .
However, this won't aet Uiem Into
professional Uiuter as acton."
What would you sunf•t to
anyoneconslclerlnglhetbeater as a
rartu!
'1'his period in thei r lives of
deciding 11 profession can be very
confusing and very difficult to
handle . And in this confusion they
so metimeslosesightofthe rational
aspec t of choosing a profession.
Theycmotionall yare soi nvolvetl-in
one area, ,which is the case wlth
give us ynur reatUonJ'!
"'llle caliber of performances
was Jess s timulating than I had
anticipated. In fact, compared to
previousconventionsofthisnatu~.
it was mediocre. I thoughl the
critiques in the Pointe r were a bit
unwarranted."
\'ou art also Involved with the
Con~munlly ThnterT
" Yts. l recen llybecamei nvolved
with tryouts. Bad wea ther may
have been a cont r ibuting factor,bu t
community response was so light
that there was not an adequa te
number of people to cast the show."
Wh.at"·ereyow-reactlonatothls'!
l amvuyopinlonatedaatowhy
communilytheater isn'tworking in
Stevens Point. Jnitially they approached the businessmen for a
conlributionandsaid thataftetward
they would not be aKed for any
more support. That wu their fint
mistake. A community theater
• shouldbefundedbythecommunlty .
:d~u!fe~;n:~i~i!:~te ~~
nf:;
community participation from all
areas and income twacketa. They
r estricted t hemse lves to a
relatively small number of people
by not making their need known."
Is the Ste\'tnl Point cOmlh UIIIty
rectptlvetolhuttrT
''This town is m01t receptive to
'comedy and musicall. A amaller
percentage are inlttnted ln more
intellectual theater . Therefore, it is
:~:~~~~,:~::sa l:"t~mc~~
some studen ts pursuing an actinlt
career , tha t th ey Ignore the
possibility of being ' proficient in
anothera~aof theater.lfa student
hasadesi retobe\nvol vedin
theater he should uplore all
aspects of the profession by taking
classes which give him knowledae
and experience in various areas. He
mitht find tl\at he can perform
=j~'!ct~artanotpreviously
Yoa were ln\'olvtd w\lh the
Amtriean College TbtaLer Festival
Ul at waa htld rtcelltly. Could yov
mun ity and I n te ll ect u a ll y
stimulating for the students."
The q~~esllon haa been r aised
concerning-the: poal bUity of UWSP
lhnltr becomilt( lndepenclenl of
un \venlty lundlnJ,relylal(tnllrtly
onlltketnles. '-thllftaslbleT
" No.
I think this would be
det r imental to our educational
goals.
Why!
u:~~:r~y~~~ ~~~!l ':
playsthatwould bemade. It lai n
the educational interata of the
:::,~~~~~~~~~~~h'!,/:r~
varietyc.feducatlonalellperiences.
Our largest ticket sales come from
ligh t co medy a nd musicals .
UNIVERSITY STORE, UNIVERSITY CENTER
ART SALE
...._,.-/ SAVE 10% ON ALL ART &
PHOTO SUPPLIES IN STOCK
PLUS:
MAIN
Al
WATER
P~peJeZZ
I
,.,.,_.,.n,
~
....... 110.00
' Monciay: Gallon of OHIO • . .. •. · · · · .... · ·
(Sa"• 33% ott regular price In Otl. )
Tunciay : FREE 20"130" Mat Baird with min.
$5.00 purchase of Art Matef1als.
:w.ctnasday: Buy 3 tubn SHIV A Block Printing
lnkandgataFOI.IrthtuNFAEEt
'Thursday; All Grumb.char An BNshn V. OH.
' Friday: Buy 4 tub,s Audarnle Wat..- Coklts
and gat 1 Flhh tuba FREEl
• All WMk: Aecetra frM gta11l na amoalopaa
with ..,...,. roll of film purchaMd.
Fr.. acatatawhh..,ary plctura
frame purctt.Md. 13 mit clear)
'10% Discount 60H not appty to spec:lalnla ·m..-c~ncll" .
:,ea~~~~~~. ~~~h~· ~
performedhereln'74, generallydo
not draw capacity aqdlences.
However, thla kind of lea mlna
e•pertence is an essential part of
the drama student's education. If
the prime concern of the departmen t II ticket ula, then the
education of the student will be
limited. We must not loee sight of
the purpose of an educational In· ·
stitutlon. In essence Independent
theater would force us Into a
professional role.
-.. Whatdoyoaseeulhenlueof
lriT
"lt'sthenputicin that it al lows
an element of escapism . Perhaps
th!s pa~ially ellplalna why during
th11 per1od~ty'a confusio? the .
!l Ofn01tal&lais
ren a · varfefy ol
growt"'.
alternatives a nd dlff.ennces of
thought . It's exciting !
!
FORS.U.E :
~with frame, Camp-Ways
"AdventW'er". Excellent con·
dition, will take best otter.
s.MIii0%J and ask for John.
FREE STUDENT CLASSIFIED$
$J.SO pn line for commirrrial uentura
cau
GibsOn Let Paul Deluxe Guitar
Kultom Model 250 Amp., e xcellent
condition , like new , MOO for guitar;
$300foramp., orll600forboth. Call
S46-3121or after Spm 34t-5207and
ask ror carol .
Coupon boob, $11 eadl.
Deanna, 346-2354, nn . 340.
Call
Pre-..soo bike sale at the Point
Pedaler Bike $)op.
RI:."'WARD :
$20rewardfortbesaferellrnofmy
SR·50A Texas Instrument , taken
from the LRC, SUn .. Feb. 15. CaU
Roman Knipp at 422 Smith Hall .
IWIVWbu&forsale. Newpai.Qt ,oil
I ·ater, skJ rack , snow tires, n~dio,
r w seatcoven .
Call 34J.It41
d rin& the next week.
LOST:
Near the Square, tinted "tear drop"
glasses with wraJH!round bows .
Reward-caU 3481.2197 and ask for
T<rry .
w;:;..m-;----------Female needs room ln bouse «
apartment for next school year
CFall '761. J>teasecall346-4531any
time a nd aslc for Vickie, le.ave
message If I'm not ln.
'0-iii~~;-:tu;-;--;,;.:·
Attention-8tudeat Or&anlutlons
To place a display ad in the
POINTER. you must contact the
advertisinc muaaen at least 1
week prior to the date of
publication. Also, pleue include
wbo ahould be contacted for In·
formation and billinc pw-poses.
·---------------
Oauined. Ads mal be tclnH!d Ia ill
person at tbe Pointer Ortke, m
Maia . Noackwlllbelalleaovertbe
pill-. Monday • - dea4Uae.
TO GI VE AWAY :
Help! We want to give away a n
ap&rtment site 1as r qe-tht 4
bunsen work, but the ovet needs
repairs. We'd hate to have to pay
someooe to haul thiJ useful ap·
pliance to a dump. It 's free-:-just
come aad pick it up. cau S4HOI2
directon. Ac«pted material to be
published in MONTAGE, the UWSP
rum journal. Material must. be
submitted by March 30. C&ll 3462007or,..t-51&0.
"REUG'ioN:---------·
Episcopal Church of Lhe In ·
terceulon t Anglican J, comer ol
OluichfrDiis Sta. neardowatown .
Sung mass foiJowed by family
br-eakfast SUndays at t am , low
m ass at S:IS pm SUndays. Guitar
mass followed by famUy ~per at
S: t5 pm · Fridays.
Johnny , Caa't write. Jackie, Dom
and UDda wiJl join Pbl • Fana,
Ben • Barb, you • 1. Good times.
See you 7:30pm N.R. Il2,March 3.
You know.
The anti-rape unit offers legal and
moraiS\Ipporttov\ctlms . Call 341·
0700,Z4hours a day.
NOTICE :
~~e~Fo,tmae;~l~~::~~ ~o:~
Graduate Auistant. The duties
include fa'tP8l"ation for Animal
Blology labotal.ories, testa, and
sttldy sessions, The assistant la
required to give l7boun:of service
per week and to regi.ster for nine
credits of &raduate work per
semester . A salary of ~SO is
currenUy paid . It la a nticipated
thattbesalary for t976-1977will be
approximately the same.
Applications are to Include
transcripts, two letters or recom·
menda tloo, and a statement of
intent regarding graduate study .
Applications are to be sent on or
before March IS to : V. A. Thiesfdd,
Chairman, Department of BlolotY
UW-Stevens Point , Stevens Point,
WI . 54481
Basic Inquiry call bqins March 2,
a t 7:30pm a t the Newman Campus
Minis try Center, 2108 Fourth Ave.
This b a courw In Basic Cathotic
Instruction. H you a re interested,
please call the Newman office , 346+Misoonandpre-regist.er ,oc-call if
you need mor~ information .
Lesblant~forcemeeUnathe7nd
and « h Wed. of every month , 7 pm
at 1302 Franklin . Wom en Helpln&
Women. 3414700.
Pre~arris&e sem inart April tO
and 14 from 1:15am • 4 pm at the
Cam pus Peace Center.
U In·
terested In attending , please call
the UCM oHi«- 346-44481001"1. All
altendlng must be pre-reaistft'ed.
UCM · Pre~arriaae Seminar April
24 from 1: !Sam ·4pm at the Peace
Campus Center. U you are In·
terestedln attendingthlaseminar,
please call the UCM office, 346-4448
andpre1"tlistersoon . All a ttending
must be pre1"tlistered.
Dave, Heff, Rou, Mieki, Todd and
Jerry wish to thank all the people
that attended the Pulasld Palace
Party, Feb. 7. To the penon wbo
walked off with the OOORS pitcher,
PLEASE RE;I'URN. Put it In a
brown pt.per bag and..Leave It oo the
porch, no questions asked.
=
A aecond class In the La m a:e
technique
for treatment of men·
aa-:/cien't~~~~~~
havere&lalef'ed. Thls will,qaln ,
be a two session clau with a A fee .
WormaUon and rqlstration can be
handiN by calling the Health
Cmtft' (346-4641).
Engagement Rings
she will always cherish
EASTER BUNNy
LAY·A·WAY
NOW FOR AN
EASTER
~
•
•
ENGAGEMENT
A
J(eepsake.........
~Ri.
GRUBBA IWElfRS
YOUR DIAMOND & GIFT CENTER
"'hmonds Our Specially"
KIIPSAKE, Clll.MliA & ORANG£ BlOSSOM
DtAMONO RING!
CHECK OUR PRICES
MAIH & THMOST.
OPEN SATlJ AOA V ALL OAV
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--- ~---------r--regular columns
Ope_n
Channel
L.llll'\ .
A week ly from student government
-----~----------
by Rob Badtfnski
Last Sunday Student Go,·ernment passed a proposal to offer
abitmorefle:dbilityinthegradingstructure.lnsteadofthe
fh•elette:rgradeswith tMirOxednumericalequivalent, the
new proposal would offer a 12 point grading structure usiiiJ
plUSC"Sandminusesaswellastheletteryade.Tilenurnerical
assignments would·offer a 12 point range as well. As an
example a b + would be assigned a va lue of 3.33 whi le a Bwouldbea2.61,wltha8stillbeing3.00.
This new propoSal would allow more nexibility in assigning
grades . To those students who always get the B+ or the C+,
this new structure will allow that ach.levemen t to be
recognized. To those who receive the B· or C·, that
achievement will be recognized as well (some of you may feel
~!t !t:p1~~~~~U!~~C~~: t~~s~~~ ~;,e~:Y~:~~c~
1
1
positively to this new proposal.
Another development was a presentation from the Student
Legal Society on a proposal for a legal service for students
next year. Franlt-Ruswick, president of SLS. presented the
proposal that wou ld make an attorney available to students
for one day a week. For $2.00 a s todent could talk with the
attorney and receive legal advice on any matter. Judging
from the number of calls r ha ve received this year for legal
advice,lassume this is a greaUy niededservice for students.
Student Government Is still trying to get th e Tenants Union·
going s tr ong. Some studen ts have already been organizing,
but more are needed if it Is to be successful. U you want this
project to work, con tact the Stevens Point Tenant Union at
346-3721.
In other action, Student Government has approved a fund to
help students who _are victi ms of rape. Working with Dr.
Johnson of the Health Center , any student who receives a
medical examination for rape at the hospital in Stevens Point,
will be reimbursed up to SSO.OO. The members of Student
Government feel this isjustone s tep in helping solve the
problem of rape. More 5U1gestlons are being looked into and a
hopeful sol ution should be forthcoming .
·
If you have any concerns that you feel need to be looked
Into. contact th e Student Government Office at 346-3121 or
stop in at a meeting held on SUnday nights at 6:00pm in the
Red Room of the University Center.
Co-opcook
~
·
'Equality, Uberty and Fraternity'
WQ)IEN IIELP ING WOMEN, INC.
PART I
Women Helping Women \\"Ould llke you to be .aware of the
Anli ·Rape Unit run through the center here in Point. The
membtrs of the unit consist of five women, some students,
some graduates, and some vil:.ti ms of rape themselves. Their
qualifications areas follows: famillartty with techniques of
cOIDlSI!ling, judicial procedures , an ability to commwdcate
withother.abilitytounderstandandreactsensitlvelyto the
needsof sexualassaul t vie tims.
The Anti-Rape Unlthas thrte main obJe(:Uves: Ill witness
support : 121 selr defense training; and (3) community
~~~~ -~~:;s~:::ra~~~ of~~~~~ev:~:~~i.rs!!~
eomplished by accompanying the victim to the pollee
department and hospital as well as through the entire court
proceedings should the vic tim decide to prosecute. This
support aids the victim in pursuing the Initial complaint
through all legal stages. Al l memben of the Anti-Rape Unit
are familiar with court procedures and the ltgal iargon·and
ea n assis tthevletimwithdefinitlohsand eX"!Hanatlona.
lndivi dua l counseling is available to victims during this
lime , to aid her in: "pieking up the pieces". The second ob-
:,edtl~tha~ 0or0~~ ~~~j~~~!.uet~ ~~:Jall~~~1
:.";:~~~ ~utf!ti~~etoa~~~~!':t!:ebl~a~~~f:
=
communityofthis erime.
One other educational program is with the law enfor<::i!ment
agencies within our communitY.. The AnU ·Rape Unit Is
::;:~~de~l~~·=trv:r;~~or':~ ~;u:!~rcement
~ pe~~:·:en!d~ e~~~! ~te::~~xl!m:~t~~ t::
Recipes for good he a lth
byCarrle Wolvln
.
V
Now that you have a big bag, ia r , bin or can aoy flour in
your kitchen to enrich your cookies, bre.ads, pancakes and
burgers, yOu have reached the dead man's neat level ol soy
flour cooki ng. Soy mi lk made from nour, can be used In most
recipes where cow's milk is" called for . You can buy instant
soy milk, If you can find it. Dorothea Van Gundy Jones ' The
Soybean Cookbook offm several methods to make your own
but this seems easiest.
SOY MILK FROM FLOUR
I cup flour
3 cups water
juice of2lemoos, or 3Tbla.lemon juice, or so.
4eupswater
I cup soy flour
Mix water into flour, In the top of a double boiler, very
of
: fo~ ~!!r7~: ~rJtn~~;e~~~~
1
th;:fnesf!!O::!·t!:!
cloth . flavor with a little salt and honey and anythlng else you
like. lfyoudon't"haveadoubleboiler, try a no..tick pan aiiO
stir when you go by, or a little pan In a bigger pan, making
sure it's sta ble.
TlF~.":'sb0~ t~E~~~~"tt:~~:erythe.,of,~~eb.;~~~
and you can buy ii fresh , canned and frozen In large clfies. We
may have fresh air. clean water, and a low crime ra te but we
do ha ve to make our own Tofu. Seems fair enough.
TOF U Irom fl ou.r
Heat water in a big pan, no.stick if you have ·one, until
boili ng. Mix cold water with flour, beating about a minute
until you have a smooth thin paste and add to the water .
Really watch it while it cooks for abbut five minutes; this pan
unwatched can boil all over your kitchen. Add lemon juice, or
vi nea:ar,if you reallydon 'thaveanylemon,and wa tch fort he
e~ to .separate, adding a little more lemon If you n~ it.
Cook In a prtss.ure cooker , in a mold set In water. for an hour
at to lbs. preuu~ for salads, or store in a bowl with water to
cover in refrigerator and use in scrambled tggs, fry, make
patties, add to casseroles, etc . It has almost no taste at all but
takes ioanyseasoning a nd the texture is rea lly intereslimr:.
Naturally. you can get your Soy flour at the Ellis Street
COO_f, 1!116 Eills StreeL Whlle you are there, why not join.
We'\·e s tra ight food too.
of
11
. image of the woman who is a victim
rape of one ' 'who
dresses pro.vocatively or flaunts her sexuality on street .
:r!~:·be~o~"::?d~~~~~J~~! f!~:e:e~~n!!=
'Sa~~n~:::r:h~':/:.~~:~!':"':~~i 1m~u~~~ir
WiridoWs; i t only teases people to rob them . Attording to the
~'ederal ~mi~s.ion on Crimes of Violence, only 4 percent of
reported rapes Involved any provocative behavior.
"Rapes are impulsive and motivated by uncontrollable
desires.''· Men don't get "outofcontrol",theyhavenomore
~j~~~::O~~acoW:~iiJ:et~~::~e:.~~:e!r !!~ventent way for men to evade responsibility for their ovm
sexual actions.
t~~:~k~o;:::: C:lc=!~~~!Y~~erm~f~~~of:;:is'
derived from the Vletorian days , when women's rights were
severely suppr-essed that rape wuone of the few legal
avenues women had for justice ln a man's wor ld .
50
"Women are raped by strange men in dark alleys' ' . Over 80
percentofrapesarep\annedandmost rapesoceurlndoora ·
one third occur in the victim's home. People visualize t~
r~~~~:!~.k.J:!rca'i~:~~:~s~~~:.: :u~or.:.~r::s w!~~
door . Three out of five rapists are married and leading
norm alseJ! IIvesathome. Morethanhalfarel.l'ldet-theageof
:r::::~,i:g~~~? ~;~~~;.~ ~hl~:S7r~ ~::~
''eontrol",notsex. Rapistsanaultvictims lnoniertoeontrol
themandhumiliatethem,notoutofsexualdesire.Housewives,
students, laborers a no profes)lonilt ar e all potential victims
·
!t is a universal crim e committed against women .
· Detours around Armageddon
Crime of the century
byA.Isa.;ndt
PASCO pimped
·Okay, it's time Cor some ragain.
•
1be student &overnment t1u rec-eaUy made a dedsloa thlt
stinks. They've run out oC money Cor one of the most
prOCI'Uiive Ideas lhey'\'e ever mandltfd and hlven1 betn
abletomusterthf:auiSorcommoasensetocontinuell.
f'or the past couple of semesters UWSP studenLI have beer!
able to ride city buses by simply displaylna their student lD
ards. The rides were tabulated and at the end of tach month
the total cost of thiJ l~nth·e to ma.u tnnsportation was
billed to studtnt aovmunent. A diiC'OWlt price oC twenty-tW'O
and a hi! «nts per ride was ullimakly nn.anced by our
atudent acth•ity fee .
Theplanwuaopopularthlttheori&inalactivityfeemoney
allocated for thePf"OifaM was used up. Additional money was
provided for another monlh'a operation while student
IOVffTiment debated the meril.5 of continuliiJ the plan. Debate
may be a bad word to use here because as I viewed it U!ere
was little real dlscuuion orr~ on the continuation of the
plan . Afl.erarush·jobpreparationontheluuebylbettudtt~t
bud&et director the body decid«< to continue rU'WICinc the
plan BUT on a significantly reduced basil.
M thinp stand ri&ht IIOW a totally rree rift plan v.;u eod
around the time ol sprin& break. Atlu tha t each UWSP
atudentwill have to pay t.en~nts outol his own pocbt to ride
the bus while the student activity (H: will al»orb the
remalnin&tv.·elveandahalfcenl!.
The decision stlnkl.
There may be 1 v.·hole Jot of students who nevu ride the bus
but that's tbeir pl!f'OIIIive. For tba5e ol us who use lhe plan
reau.llrty or wbo don't , but eare 1boul the ener&Y ~
si t~tion in lheworld, lhechance to nua few empty ~~eats on a
mau tnnsporUtion vdlk:~ is OM of the wiHII. Illes ol our
IC"Iivity ree ima&iNble. So much of thlt money is spent each
)'ell" on resource-looliJh activities that It m1ka my stomach
wm.
.
When m uch are•ter percen~es of our ICUvtty fHI dolllrs
are wasled each year on activities that racll tewer students
l.han the bus pl1n it seems to be mere foUy to ~.r~ue that the
plan is caterin& to only a sma U pa«ntq;e of the contributors
to the activity fee pool. 1 think It's time lhat the studeat
aovemment reconsider Ill decision to only partially 1Ubsldite
~vte:~~t:a~q~~am towardutiiWna: mass
~~~~~:rn;;•J:eon=~p~~
11
01t1y, I've been arguine and complainin& about the Warren
CommiSSion fornnv.~ . Bif; deal you say, what &ood will it
do for one person to writt' 1 weekly column about an event
which occurred t-h"t' yea~aao~ What is the Rflit In I t~
Well. in caM my writing style is too IUbtle, my whole point
here b tl"llt the murder of •n American president and il!
~=~~ec~~d~ JS'r!e:hl. ~~C:f::~oai~ 1r =t~':s1•
let me remind he or she thatlhis murdu was invesUaated by
a presidcntl1l commiUIOf! re~ntin& th:t most . pov.·trful
intuests In this country, u~eludin& the Cbief JustiCe of the
Supreme Court. Now if that's not a pillar Of Amtf'ic.an society
1nd justice I don't know what Is... Add to this the f1ct thlt this
preidentl~ commissionwu backed up by the world's finest
law enforcement qency bar non~- the F .B.I .
I believe they willfully ~labouled to covtf' up the in·
vesti&aUon ol John Kennedy's murder, which in Itse lf b
inncusable. However, there b ooe lhing that is even worsewe allowed them to get away with It!
All ri&}l t , maybe IIOUndlikeJoe RaJk:1l takin& pot4hoaat
the aovemment- as 111 &ood ~lqe ne-wspaJII!" Wf'll.ers
lhould. Bull rully do believe common Rtue cames into play
in lhis instance. H 1nyonewould take the lime to read some of
the "suppressed " books in our library Hifth floor,
"'Meumenii J,theytoowould teethltthe iOVtr!U1lentllt.elling
usa fai ry·tale. l am rtferrin& to boob wri tt.en by IUthon
such as Wdsbel'l, Rolf man 1nd Mea&hu~ people who
hive worked only with the flcll and whos.e books never aet
into other librlrin while the lhoddy, dime• tore novels on the
Kennedy usaulnatioo do. Onc-e apin, we have no one to
blame but ourselves.
~auseoftheexpendltureofafewextra hundreddo!lars?
v~!!f<x~?!!!~' ·~
ltJ Marlt
DIU.
lnckient ly , ifanyoneoutthere j111t miued the first meet ina
because they lined lMir canary ca11e vo'ith the Pointer con·
tainlnJtheplacelndlime.tl'ltrewillbe;mothermeetlng of
SRIPKAonTuesday, M1n:h 21t6 :30pm m the Red Room of
theUniVet11llyCent.er. ltems diJCUsledv.••llrangefromhov.·
v.·~ can 1et those good books Into local libraries and
bookstores u v.·ell as ways of puttlna: Mat on lqis~ton to
take•standonthisiuue . OiscUI5ionofnt-vo· ~ontht
cou~ .
Kenned'' auassinatiOfl ,..ill 1lso take place. Of
e,·eryoOt IS "':~\come .
(
.
rev1ews
'Daydreamin' BuHetted
creativity, Nasl'iville.fat c~ts with
diamond pinky rings and 'silver
grey hair , have pwnped out song
after song about Jesus, booz.e,
clheating,oran)'cllft'binationoflhe
three. It is their claim that thev
speak for and of The Great Middle
RyGrrgMarr
l havediscoveredthatthe~are
not many people in Stevens Point
who have heard or Jimmy Buffett.
As far as I know, thet"e are about
five of us. whith is unfortunate
because Buffett is an ,...extremely
ta lented YOUIIJ man deservins of
mue:hgreaterrecosnition .
Buffelt makes his home in the
FIOridaKeyesandithastakenqulte
a few years for his musit to now
northward . He Is responsible for
four extellent a lbums whith have
earned him a dedicated. but small
following .
America Of Just Average Folks
Uke You And Me. Even in our
' society, wherelittle surprisesme,l
findithardtoacceptthatthese
songs are truly reprncntational of
Middle America's True Ufe. I am
oever surpt'ised by out limilleu
ability to make fools of ourselves,
but simply can't believe tl\al grtat
numbers of peoole identify with
these songs on either a figurative oc
literal basis.
In my estimation it ·has been
people who have escaped from this
mainstreamof countrymusic,llke '
WaylonJenningsandWillieNelson,
or people who have developed individual music styles using a
country sound , like Kris Kristofferson , J ohn Prine, Steve Goodman,
and Jimmiy Buffett , who have been
responsib le for the current
respectabili tyoftountrymusit.
As a result or this new found in·
terestintomblningtountrymusit
with other musical styles , a ' new
gen~ or singer.songwriten has
emerged in the 70's. Many of their
roots in traditiona l Ameriean and
folk mu slt : the more
pc-ominant of these indude Gordon
URhtroot , Noc-man . Blake and Arlo
Guthrie. as well u the abo~
mentioned.
As one of these Jimmy Buffett is
probably the least recos:nized but ·
by no means least Ullented. Uke his
friendandto-writeronanumber of
songs. Steve Goodman, Buffett's
work is best explained in terms ol
overall balante. " ... this throwbatk
aUarboyofMobile Alabama brings
spacey up-country tunes strewn
with forgotten cubtraps, Con·
rederate memories, themita l
daydreams, · l~anavulgarlly ,
ukt'lele madness and yes Larry, a
tertainsweet.ness ... "lsawav Tom
Mc;G~ne explain.s Buffett's work in
the hner notes to Bufrett's first
a .,-ell
album. His songs are
ba lantcd variety of different
themes, styles, humor and
se r io us ness. "'PeAnut Butter
Conspiracy" is an example of
Buffell's humor:
Lookln' back at my h.anl luck
clays
·
lrullydohaveto·taugb
Workln.ln a dive lor twenty six
dol lars
Sptndln'IIAIIOI'Igran
we ....·tre hungryhudluckheroel
Tr yl n ' Just to alay alive
Sa .,·e'd go do.,-n to the tamer
groe:ery
This is how ,.·e'd survive
'""'"'
Who's gonn1 1te1l the pc-anul
IMillt'r
I"Ugetaunofaanllnn
Ru nnl n up and down the lsln of
lheMiniMarl
Sticken" food In our Jt•n•
We nt\'er took more th•a - ·e
uuldut
Thtre wu pltnly left on the ncb
Welll l wortlf~~o-eevergotrltb "
Wewouldpaythe!llinJMar"tback
Buffettisalsoknownforarather
tontrovenial sona tailed " Why
Don't We Get' Drunk lAnd Strew)"
lrrallydoappreclate lh t lact
you"rtalltin"ht1'e
Your vottt sounds H wonderlul
But your face doni look to dear
So barmaid IK"ing a pl~htr,
another roundo' brew
ll011ey why don"t we ge t drWik
an d strew
This shows the humorous and
lijht side of Jimmy Buffett but
thereisalsoaseriousandaensitive
sidt. "He Went To Paris., is the
tlu'onitleofa man's life who as a
youth searthed for answers that
were finally found nea r the end or
his llfe. Buffett ends the song :
Nowhelivtsinthelsluds,IIJhet
th~U~·~nb his Greta Label
nth" day
lie's wriUn& his memoirs aa d
IO!IInghilhtnin8
Hut he don't care what m0111
ptople uy
Through II yean of perpttual
molJon ,
lfhe llkU)'OII he'll smile then
he"lluy
Jimmy. somt ollts magk, .omt .
ol ltsl ratlc
Bull had a good life a ll the ,.·ay
::,..::. wfnl to l'arlt looklng for
To qutations that bothered his
•®I
Musitally,Buffettl\asusedSteve
Goodman, Vassar Cements, Mike
Utley. and Reggie Young among
othcrslnwhotwasunlllrecentlyhis
ever d"lltn&ing Coral Reefers band
tobringhissongsto lighi. Genera lly
spea king the muslt Is up , tempo,
w\th t hemoresentimental~
being. of tourse, slowu pated.
I realize that so far I have
to mention Butrttt"a new
album whlth Is supposed to be the
subject of this review but havf:
~~e~Jected
~=~:~~~'fn~~th~s~re;~e 1:s:
i:.die~~: . h~r.~~~~h arPf::at~~e.
tomfortable In urging anyone to
buy a specifit album or albums I do
recommend Buffett to those in·
terested in this type of music and to
'those Interested in findinJ a
representativesampleof whatthis
type of musit Is all about. As for
" fl avanaDaydreaml n"' ills the
usual blend or Buffett madness. The
songs will beaDC~redated by Buffett
fan.alitsasanother highqua.lityset
blending the better and well known
elements of ltis style. Buffett has
now established a permanent Coral
Reefer band and hopefully, tome
warmer times in our north woods.
hewillbringhismusit up here for
ustoseeandhea r .As for the fu ture.
all Buffett tan say is " .. .I'm happy
'd:it~in~~~~~m ::~111 i·:Shel~evi~~
~:'!":o!.:mJ;~::~~f.ydreaming,
·
'Dog Day' delight
Do«
O.yAt~er.._
Dlrec:'"' by Shlaty l.lltnet
!\ell~ by
cw -:"tlric lr.
'
EYeryooceinawhileaarut illm
l!lpt inl.o Sleva~~ Not without
fanfare then alipa rl&ht baclt
out." Doc Illy Altemooa" Ia one
film that lhouldn't slip out without
Pacino's porttayal of Sonny Ia
Intense but aympathetic. Paclno't
Sonny is a man driven by equal
parts love, uuineu, and ~:Gn·
fusion. Sonny is a boUlna emotional
cllaract~ wbom Paclno
brinp
~
three d•menalonal lire. Paclno fillt
thesc~with rawpow-er-that
=~~n~~~=~-exampleof
seems to arow more lnl.erae u the
drama unfokb; to Ita lotlcal and
vi olent CUIC:lusion.
eli;~~~,~~·~
lbereis atr.rnaboutlnthettory
v.·hM l.wnet fint allows lbe viewff
to lr.now that Sonny is not robbinato
about a bank robbery which turns
into a thrft rin& media cima
~:::~t:s~~ :!~r:r~,
hostages,
AI Pacino desen·edly copped
anot h er Academ y Award
nomination for his role u Sonny,
. the robber wbo Ia rippioa off the
bank l.o financ-e a aex chanae
operation ror his male wire Leon.
Strange as thla whole scenario
"Doc Day Aftemoon " is
~etm~,
baaed on a rul bank robbery which
OC'C\U"ed ln 1972.
" Dog Day Afternoon"
auceeda
b«ause l.umet's direction never
falten; . It isprecisoeand draws the
viewer Into the rilm't tlahtly knit
fabrk of dramatic intertwininp
andk~ l\i mthere fortwohours.
1be film crackles with ellft'&Y and
stflnS about to explode at every
moment. And wbtft the explosion
doa occur, at the end of the film
wbttl one of lbe robbers it killed, it
it a huJe ddlation of emotion and
tntrp that aboWd leave mOl t
people IMIIIY ·
pr~hlamacho , bu.tbec.alllthela
•n love aodetply with another man
that he will do anythine. Sonny la a
homosexual. Tbe revelation ttrllr.es
the hostages Sonny is holdinJ u
v.-ell u the audience. SUddenly the
viewer 's percq~Uon of Sonny and
just happent to be a homosexual.
There is no repuanance after the
init i a l ahock of So n ny ' t
hom01txuality, As a matter ol fact
Sonny bec-omes more human and
tile viev."H feelt deeply for hla
plight. Lurnet't dJrection ao draWII
the audience Into the picture that
the viewer hopes that the robbers
aet away with their deed. I won't
dr-awmoraiC:QQC:\usionsaboutthat
ex«pt to aay that It Is a trend In
more than just a few movies.
FBI Is made to Joe* lllr.e a terri ble
ocre of an a&ency·that wW murder'
and maim, even If ll1tR li no need.
Small wonder Sonny decides he: has
no alternative. but to Jerew up the
Of count in theftMijullke, which
is made to look. ugly and dirty, ia
dil't'C:ted by Lwnet.
seems to be that thef-t was no
"Doc Day Afternoon" auc-eetdJ;
because it is human and utractt
compassion and pathOI rrom the
viewer. It does those things well.
~=ou~~=t~:i~
jusliceata ii . Hemakes thecop~ln
the movie gun happy
murde~
with aorilla-like mentalities. The
j~~~ =a:!~~tern
::~r:to~~~~ :r;nai'::l;!d~:~
they think is riaht. It Ia no coin·
cidence. that ' 'Se~" waaalso
~~e~~=~
tben.ture of hlaactischa~.
Sonny Ia no lonaer a juat and
honorable bank robber in the
~;~~~~=n t~~u~e:;o "d~
dis~~:uslina to a majority or the
film 't viewers.
Tbat diJaust
thouah. aoonlsll!piacedbyaenulni
CO!lCe'rn for the character u a
human being. 1btre are touchlnc
momeniJ betVt·eoen Sonny and I..ecm
in what btc:omes the first PG Jove
story tNotWI.Iiketht " LoveStory"J
betwe-en two males.
l.umetwiaelychoose:st.oriownplay the homosexuality of Sonny
and makes the film an examination
ol Soony as a penon with probl:enu
and no aood aolutions.
Paci nopla)'l thecharacternotu
an dlemlnate fq: , but aa a penon
who is committina a robbery who
Arts & Lectures Presents
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