aHord - c an

advertisement
· ~er in Madison:."
-·'"--'~
c
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_
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_
_
~
an··we- aHord nuclear power?
15'
-
1976
pays
11 SL MkMel'l HOipitll. Student Gov'l
Ladtofadequa'-equlplntat orl!i:·
pertilelsno,_todlc:tateto 1
performlq art. eompa.ay or to 111
-nencetn.c:oadiUC..oiP«fol"llllllce
Mlrima.U)', UB tbould t.ve 1MC1e ..;
etr«ttoCOCif1ilftltelhelrlllledi Wilh
thole of Spedill Semc.. to PI"O'Iide 11
least..btlant«<l.lahUq.
havetobeartbel'lillnr~~~ndlllb\lrden,IO
~tomwiUbepakl.
Blil. bu~nou
Crime
To the P"IIIH,
~of Feb. WI. 1111, 11 you. art a
ltudmlat UWSP. andba¥11 bem raped ,
~~m:~=.!er':o~'~
11
::!~~"!it
= f~eer~~
rapee. We feel theswdent ehould IICil
_.....
cu.,.. c-•PkiiU.• c-••"•
No lease on life
~:~~':ie"-bt.YhufallediO
rapond to the need~ Ill tbelr COli·
at.Jtuentl. n,etandlori-ttnaDtldWII
bllrfed In lhe As~embly judk!lry
committee and tffecth<tiJ kiUed by wr
~J!:·
111
s~ev-
Polftt .
~~k~~.!=~=
tbebiU,Iia;nedapetitlODdn:ulllldby
tbe Steolena Potnt Te11111t Ulllcla. 1brM
ptUU.. wen prettnled to ow
~tatlve Leorw'd Crwh5.
H~!i~~~~~~r:~~
~tlolluarujor~forhis
.ote. Thb b dlfntvlt for tbe voter to
~~ 1100 Sle\'W Polnl reUdtnU
ecWd llllfimland tbe biU. Cnllbtll wltb
........
... w..,
Cllalnull, . . .
.w. ...
~­
Is Fred dead?
~tteUIO-Iflltbe...alepltd¥koe
lntbeltat.eba!ldifflcully.
ltbuilfortulllltethatOUT~
tiUvt halfaii«<IOrapandtotbll
dearly OeflDed problem. Apia the
Stewm Polol Tf:Mfll UNcia hu bid to'
tlktll'lelrlltiiUve.
'l'bebuleJI"'"IIIODioftbe'landJ<ri.
· =~~~E
,.,ansibilltltt. llwlllbtoffercdlorl
drectvote,bdonwottbtpeopleU\11 ·
Sr~~y.,illlllll.rapoadtoour
jRbknuwe WIUaMreutMmatiiGIN.
Now SteYerw PoiDt hal tbe cwortun11J
~~~~~:!~.r:=~
dleltate. Ld'a tab
GppOrtullity.
actra~Qce
Ill that
LJicllpolllke
IUt.llaat
IMC'reM PUt, WI MUI
Tho good
T•laeP._,
.
Thet'IIOnlalltklaudtl!lcltllcy ol lbt
:.::~e:~.:.:=
=:!:.=-.:~~,.~
.
~~= .:..=t:~:
Wliftfllty.
G . .........
,
~· bod:and-ugly-
Uw-lntentoft..ndlordoftheMontb It
Bed buggedl
toillt«at~n'-and~lalhl
Sl~ Poblt Tea.lnt Uniaa by sr!Dtla&
,-ow
T•aa...P.Ier,
CD~~~.~nelll
Wt 1J«lld like to
on the
~UU::'J!~S:~,';n.SQII
We are l'tllcknlt of 1011 Bn1wley
Slnet. Wewerebome1r1Rnthece111q ,
ldlln. The bed wu not pOed wllh
l{llinteredlllmbtl", pluterandt'e'illnl
the facta. Coa1rvy to
-utk»
we llne .tiOI 1nd do liCit uadtrtaU
''t.cUlabbial" cama-~- Yo..~are
''ar-b' euaprated"
inow-t,-s.
Nukes pukes
tl.lel. 'lhreetofourpueltol~
ctllln&felltlldt.batwalt.Wtdoubt
t.bat--eOiikl huebetakilledlf
herrlbe~lnbedatthetime.
Out
~ant,h!T)'Abowup!Wftll'W\Itlia
anllourolbtlacnatifledolthbiDddelll
andhernnooteelthe~ofthl
~pinds. HtdidiiOtbanthe
required material - . . , to rep~.IT
theedll.lllttthattime.
'nlePolater dklnotmfl!Uoawbylbe
mliqlellltwubra.. . thebedroom
lnq\ltltklallloeatedclrtdlybm.lh
theat.o.ftrwhldllab. 'nle~
palldtbeume•ater lcqedandalipped
lhroucftthemetalfnme. FCIC'1wlately,
the~llrepalred. ... w.fort-tely,lbe.azrceoftblproblera,
the "-killl "-er .. liCit.
AI for the bedbup. tbnle 10 lour
br«Np wereiOUIId 1ut - - ' •·
Within 1 Wftk Aho had hired an a ·
lermirw~lor. A monlhaao-~
bedlua;
lowe!. ApiD, witblllt wecfl
Aho hadblftld ancther attn:n!Aator.
we-reeeivtlftOIItblybedbu&Mf'
w•
~Mthef'aiJUrpaUileclaut.wedld
not brln& the bedbup Ita. bul: Mithu ctld
Aho,
Wtundenl.andthere ..... a,._to
distort the •rUde- to inlnwl lndivld\.1111 In the Tenutl' Unloa. But
U..t ia no
to btcbtab - par-
rc.-
~rlf.nd&ont,wbolncuropiDiondld
not~e iL Ahorqynotbelbebelt,
butheitnotabedlandkrd,uthe
Pointerm.ayllavelud-peopleto
belie¥e. He hu made r!l*in for 11a
within a ~bleamcu~toftltne and
hu ~fl' relUMd MY
nquatwtNve~.
reuonalM
Wedoaatthlnk
JerrywueutOIAtobeaiMdlord. We
tblr*hert&li&nthisallobec:a~~~o~~the
hoUM llfor .. ~e
Wedon«knowwho'ttoblametor
lhisi,.Ye:ua:en.tfdtrtlde, butwe
dolllll* tNt anlpoiOIJ lllnonlu for
JenoyAhDanclabototheAiidelltlol
t011Brawlf1Stl'Ht..
H~ J. v. . . ..
S.ltyA. ' " ' * "
lll lllnw..,.....__
T•lk Plll•ler.
In reptd lo ~ BW Number
:m lor a
W"~
t-)'MJ" IDOnltoriwa oa
- * r poww p~a~~q, I feel
heardtstl!nonlnfrompeoplewllo
~···~--~
wanttbeplanq,
1lldr &J'IIIIDC'ntllrt eoorer the Nme:
no 1deqlilte ~n~Wen. Aecorclnt: to
tbemthtrearenosaret,-orllel.ltll
~ms ; no unnlum abartlc•; no
fet.r ol cttaltropblc 1cdde!q; no
KCUrlt,- probhtm• : no economic
=·:.
~loni.
Lac:kofspeat-luel
~~..::!·{~.
l1w nuclelr llldultrlilfl&bti"' f«
ArVInl-ao bokb blrnd.
P~~tbephik*'l)h)"ollbeentlre
~v illdultty ean be belt tum·
martz.ed In OC..k:l Stobly't tV.P :WixonJln · Poweri:LllhtCo.l a ..wer:
'"Tbrre•relle4oft.td!Nc.al~
lthlnklbereatea!IR'el"lfortbem".
Not "l~'. bu.t"ltbiat.."
Or Superi nttndeat Stephtn1on'1
amwer, t U.S.N~I:Wcridlleplrt - J..
1 ~71 1, froiD Comftlonwnllb·Ed.lton
Dradenf'MelOr, 50 nillellruD Oikap,
an " vibr&Uantf.unUnlt2turbiDI'""
sobld.poweroutput wuonlff'«<
redueed . Plpr~~ In the nat room wtn~
llha.lnlvlolen tly ; ll&bli!l.lflKt ur..
'-n&llll from tiM: cfillq: wtn IWtatinl
•tbouchiDaatrcn~breeza.
Slmillar
vibn.~M¥ft'II)'Nrsqo,
at
&DOthtrCEplant, Md...Wtedinaplpe
=·~noar~, raao.ctlve
..c
His&n~Wer :
" Webe11ditfromeoorfi"J
near mla. Wbtn we hone In 1ttldtnt, It
tadla 111 '-to prevent It oe:a:t Uzne.
Gives ua tblt ftlucb mort o:dldmce tbe
wlltn IOII'Ittbln&
I)'Stem wiD
...,
wor•
~mtSpectedcloahapptD. "
Wff'BI' t the vlbntloN ner eorret·
Plutonlum-DI, I BlioKtln ~. •
duciUelt - - - .._.. Ia mall,
•lltninhaled, pro.b:esbq:t:afiCtf". At
Series 9, Vol. 19, No. 23
tbe'-rin&.aUW-audear~
iltuiXnt"IUIIUI)IItltftMI:ItWUU.t)"OU 1
reply
canbandlelt l plulonhun ),eat-lt.pla)"
witlllt , but OON'Tbreltbeil
The PEOPLE ftiUit ld thelr
,.--taUvtll 11 State and Federal
leftlt • - bnmediltel)" bow the)" r.e1
.tlout Midear pllnta, or WI wW be
pl)'il!llortbeblllflll~ln
billory. ERDAis(ftJ*I'inclolllbl6dbe
tbe nuc:IMr tndultry Ia tbe bilt; la...n-. enriebmentand~
pl.lnta, ttc . Printeindlatry-'ttiU
the riU.. YOU , Tile TAXPAYER , will
Nveto .
............
IMra.IC__.GHUd
·- - -cw.----.
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,...._L_.,...,
o;:.=. ~..:::-·
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· - · - ·- · · - . .- . -
=~~¥~~~_3-;;;:§
.___ ...
.,.._...,....
........,
=~:t~~=.oc;:.:::::::.~":':i!:::".!::'=::
5E:~":;Z"'-:-"':;'-S;=:--z=. -
..
::.=:===-~:"' -=:"',:=.'i~=-- -
request
3. Deodline: Monday noon
before Friday O.Ue
N....:• a. •m,... s
p..._
\·
UAB Coffeehouse Presents
NIN4141LI
oa piaao aad dulcimer
Thurs., Fri. & Sat.
March 25-26-27
9:00.11:00 P.M.
FREE ·
in the U.C. coffeehouse
Ina Is a young woman who writes
& sings with the soul of a 45 yr.
blues singer, and the inno,cen,ce
young girl who wants to share
and the hearts with a friend.
UAB SPECIAL EVENTS
PRESENTS
Alen Center Upper
75e per person
2 for a buck
Dance to your favorite Beatles, Beac_h
Boys and Four ·Seasons Music
N -U K.E
MORATOR,I UM -.DEBATED
byhnyTn~
327peopJe~teredinfavorofa
l'QC)ear montorium bW before the
. Assembly Committee oo Cmunerc:e
and Consumer Affairs, while .120
~tend in oppc.itiixl. at a public
hearing be.ld 11'1 the Sbte Capital
A'11embly Chambers · Monday
March • .
Included amonpl the neuly 500
people jammlna the hearing room
were gm,~pa ol anU.ft.Kie.ar K·
tivisll from the UWSP Environmental Council and tbe
Rudolph-buecL_Lea1ue Aaalnat
Nuclear 0anten <LAND). Anti·
:.u:;:r:~o:U·f?.ere:~:
.. ,AIM:mbly BW. ira t.U. ,,.;.. a s
year ••ra&orla• 011 U11e eM·
........... of IICMar power pluU
aH erealn a .'.. Kinr po'IINS' t:'l'al ..tl.o c••miUee" •I alae
,...ue
··"" ......
IO'fenulr.
• Mil. by
.vc.dJaf lei a
draft...at.ral•
lM
.,
llle . bill by lbe LeJillathe
Reftr'Hct: a.re... ~e e-mltlee
wtU ' ''naJule ucl lletenlaiDe lM
e:deall lei' wlald ajldur power
. . . . . . .peril Ule l&lety. HaiUI
. . . eD'I'lroa•f:Dit ., lM dduary''
aad
will
" report Ill recom·
m~&olMJn-aM
lf:Plalweii)'Jaa....,.l,lt71at
dkll time It wU1 CHR &o exile."
incl\xlina GreeD Bay, Appietan,
• 1bebWw~.tvaDCedibree~
MiiWII~ee and Ft. Atkl.Dioa wen
aft.er the hearUW oa 'Ibvnday
abo in attem.Dee.
• lbrdl 11, oa a H vote by tbe
.u..nbly Chmmerft Md Coa·
sumer Af!'.n Committee wbkb
A FDUP ol hard-batted, unemrecommended Ita paaaae to tbe
plpyed construction workerl
"-emhly.
.
• (testimony reYUied tbl UtWty
YIP 's a nd tbe lateraaUooal - Representative David CJarenBrotberhood of Eleetr'iQI Worbn
t.cb of )bdboo, co--.l&hor ol the
bill WM,pieuamlylwpiled by tbe
eccmittee'a .dedaiaa, aod said,
Cf'OUoRCtiOG ol concerned cUbenl,
''tbree. moathl aao we 11'C1Ukm't
~r_~ _tbls vote from tbe
~en~~~~-
Careabecbcredited Ralpb Milder
mel 01.111!ve clthea support for the
!::;,r;~~
eommlttee recom.-
Howewr:' with cWy a ,_ dan··
left ill tbe Asaembl)''-ioo,ltlla't
Ullely to come up for DOOI' actio~~ ·
beforeacljowmo«<t.
An aid to State SeaaiGr Dale
McKeona.(co-atithoroftbe Nuclear
Moratorhm BW, lpocl80I' 'of an
ideiiUcal bW 1D the Senate which
waa killed. In committee, aud
lonastaudint critic of uuel(ar
aaid ''that if m .were in·
trodueed Ja tbe Allembly now for
JM)WW)
- does
=u!,~~=:lJ~
CGme"' for' a roll-all' It will
onlybetortndout:cmreeordwbo
ltandl when." P1tty votes are
,Deeded 1n tbe Auimbly lor •
m«jority.
aome'
loltead of
for • quick
vlctory,.aWbonot:marebopina:to
laytbe~foralt!llslative
. battle wben they reemveoe
year ltl late January.
om.
:~:!: '!:fet';'~weJ!::
and dilpouJ of wutn. While we
are •lowed down 1ettlni tbC!IIIe
annen, we to all out oa coo·
aervaU011 .. .on raearcb: of bow to
burn coal CfiiliTy with out
pollullnl .. .on aolar,geothermal,
wi nd and non-n u clear
ledlDo&ofy.:.Hiatory will look beck
and NY nuclear wu really a
trlizudUonal type of powa"."
.......
I
Ten.a nt-lancllorclleglslatlon closeted
::;:;b-:.~:~:r::::;.~~
lbele" .
~
BIIWKdluc...,..-
:;
~te SeO.tot Babl!td:l or Slevm1
Pt:llntisaC!HpOCJOI' (~wUh
teverl other SeoaionJ ol TenMI
'-lion! Act ,_
Aa aide to Babllkh uJd be ...
cluppointed wttll the Auembly
actloo . He lhoucbt tlult Ule
prob&ema ol tbe till wre mJoor ud
. the::ldu~otto-='lt*ll:
to lbe Seoale to
pnlblau DOinis.
~mootb
out
~crttkal.tGro.llek
~blymM
O.vid <larmbecb
~~~-~~~!
cb&Uilover tbe -Miembly Adloa.
DacrlbiDC copamoa le&lalatlve
t.ctiel, be AJd, '"Jboee wbo ~
poMd, ttai. bill .trom tbe 1t.wt at·
• ta:Dpted to freak ewrybody out
with a lot of IIDIDdmtatl, 10 tbe
vote will reler It to • committee
SPTUA<U
The over 1300 •IID•hns IUP""
~0:. ~~::n~del~~s::~
TUJ reprutnlltlvea penoaal~y
delivered to Groabek , were
nported Into tbe record when be
voted to · tend the bill back to
eomm!tlee earlia- thiJ mooth.
•
SPTUbu~e~ttaletterolproCelt.
to Leonard Grolhek, dlted Mardi
Mlh, Ul'linl blm to do "everyt!ILq:
lnhispowertol:lriJ:II_tbeblllbltckto
~~
-Ot~=
~ta."
odlforlal
Landlord's Interests rate high
-· News
Until the end ol March, Reed 6
Bartoa, 'America-. olcllst major
silnnmlt.bs , _-re coaductloa a
~~'b =eo:r:::::~~~
:::.:J~~-cirftoedto
Notes
........
N.. . AcMt-'t Pntn-
UWSP bu been IIMcted to eater
this Ccnpetitioa in wbk:b tbe nrst
Grand Awardila JJI*Ikbolarlbip,
Second Grand Awrd il a t:500
K:bolanldp, Tblrd Grar.t Award i1
• 13110 ltbolantUp, aod . , . .
Grud Awndl of $100 eacb
scbolanbtpa. ln adcltioa, then will
be 100 otbft awatdl C'OIIIilti&l ol
sterl.inc lOver, Hne. dai.n. and
ay.tal wlUI a retail vaNe ol ·~
praimatdy JUIO.
· In tbe 197f " Sliver Opinion
Competitloa" , a11 entry form
!u:•:. ~i.,~
!,.~
ttne
simply lilt tbe
~naUoal
ol
bell can·
RertU~C. ehbY Mid
crJa tal from tbe pattern
I·---------~-----~---~--·,
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r
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Stude·nt.-Govemment Election
1
Be a Runner! Po~mon's Include:
1
I
I
16 Representativ~s From Colleges
13 Representative$ from· on and off campus ~is·
lrict$
· ·.
Pre$ident and Vice President .and other salaried
-positions. ·_ ·
I
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1
EleCtion. day: May' -3rd (regiStration .day)"
1
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Pick up ~ nomination papers, Monda,y,
1
~ ---
1
Student ·.Government' office ·in the Uni-
1
-1
I
I
~. . -~Man:h-i9-thrii:-Wednesday~April-21-at
1
1 _ ·_versify -Center.
1
·~-------------~--------·
M.rc•••m ..,., ......._,
JIMMY CARTER
Speaking Tuesday noon at Berg, gymllmlum
.........Je.
~
. . . ,.,.
Collective bargaining no bargain
by Nell K*a, Collq;t Ne. . Senice
U Plul Revete weff atill utll.lld,
be would probl.bly be enlllled in
some lat lfud Bicentennial PR
~~,~~~~~~~~ ~
survey the higher education scene.
He stagers Nell down aDd tben
dri~ off In his' Honda Ovi~,
stoppins at each Collqe and
Wtiversity alq the way to about
:eF:~~C;tb:= h~
eomi.. !"
11ter-e Is
-
more important
DO
mts~a~e for student consumers
than tbat. U you haven't beard it,
you probibly doll't live in the 44out
ol50stateswh«elt&islatorsl\ave
~~~~i!1 o~e~~~i~~~~~~
11
ployees to ualonite and bargain
colle<:llvely wit h manaaement .
Al~ady about one-lcxrth of the
coUq:es a re unionlud in the nine
years since bai'Jainlng hit the
Higher Ed
scene.
Rnt aatred tbat ,
ever~
in tbe
~';!'=~·'=~~~
r!lht of the clecadr.
• rights
Look at It lhis way. Prnioudy
you pr'Obahly had some uy u to
-
howthlngswertfUionyour
campus : students may sil on
faculty senate committees or a
student senate may recommend
policy chanaes. It may not have
beftl much, but it wu tometbinc.
Now the action switdles to a
collective barplnlna tllble where
labor and manaaement make
legally bindlnJ cont r acts that
ovtrTUie whatever your committees
or RIUIIH
mi~t
have to say about
tu rr ie.ul um . dau size. ll tudent
services. aca demic sta nd1rds,
inatlt utlon al ulendar. cam p lll·
governance -in short. all the areu..
in which students won some rilhla
in the late 60's . ,
ln additioa , salary oesotJaUooa
can direcUy affect your tuition. And
breakdowns In the ba rga lnlna
process have led to strikes that
hav e pos tponed or c urtailed
st udents ' educaUoa at about 50
~hoob.
It may be time for some C"OO·
swner protection in the area of
st uden t goveroineot. Studeota
should demand that their elected
olftdals tpend less time h61inobbi~
with faculty and administTalion
· bi&wiasorrer.... bisliingtheir officn
and more time educatina them selves to p-oteet student interests.
lncompeltne't! aside, theft are
enough obstacles to the pr-otection
of student rights in barplni.nJ. ln
~abt.h'~!eh~~ e::::~'':
lettlna students even aue inside
the negotiation room. Students have
been aUowtd to oblerve conll:act
talks at about 2Dsclxlola, bW In only
one cue were invited bkk to help
oesotlat.e a second cmtTaet .
lh=i~~~~~~A!!:
W~ivenitlesmoreand more become
-a bavm for the uoemplo)'ed and u
CITY NEWSTAND ·.
Your One Stop Book Center.
Everything you need lor your school needs. All
the lotest books, ,_lnes and some of the
most unusual greeting cards you,l_ever lind.
Be sure to check our Nle lllble, the book
you've been walling lor may be there and at
prices you won't believe.
CITY NEWSTAND
OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
:d~~:.~=:~.:~
jot. in their fleld, atudmts abould
pin arealet' control over lhd r
education and its pul"ppMS . They
C'OUid do no worse than the
educational "experts".
As faC'ulty mioniu to
over their '1enns and conditions of
em ployment," atlfdtnts ' lhould do
the same to t.raaln over the Ierma
and conditions of their educatloa.
FWtt.apa after studenta, too, wtn a
written contnct, Ute aoclal contTaet can be rmeaotl ated to male
hiJ)ter education what it~ be : a
.,_.,.in
~=e;'!.~ben~~
RLM DEVELOPING
SUPER SPECIAL!!
~
20 EXPOSURE SUDES
AND SUPER 8 MOVIES
PROCESSED
S229
$139
12 EXPOStiiE CCILOI ,....,..
R.MIIEYB.GPEIIAIII
.. ._.•321
Oftef' Good On
Kodltll FUm. .
oi.F
-
.
·~·2
end
Ofhr Oood On' OAF And
KodMFIIm.
OM Rolf Per Coupon
Coupon Expfts 4-2·71
Hamon's Pharmacy
We feature:
High Quality Photofinishing
Fast Sei'Vice
*
*
See us for al your photo needs!
HANNON'S PHARMACY
344-3314
0
A team of economlltt ban
concluded; la a new report, that the
UWSP boolted tbe area eceaomy by
AUmWloaln tm .
=
.=::t::n:
~
~·~lnititutioatotbe.
area
now
probably turpUee:~ ao
million in view of tbe fact that
==~~~':tnt::
UU'eeyun.
'!be stl.dy • •
rece~Uy reJeMed
!;=~:=u~to S:::;~
wbat effect
cam~
of varylba;
lite bave oa tbtlr klcal ecGDOmit:l.
A team ~ by ipedallltl from
UW·Mllwaull.ee locuJed tbelr
rnearcb on til: fout-)'Ur In·
alllulloni .ad seven two-year
ceoten. 'Ibe Slewol PoUlt e&mpul
-• tbli lllleat ot tbe aoou under
•udy.
nndin&• ahowed that I ll' .I
:=.~ ~,;:r
cakulated at well in excea'of
::r ~
1&00,000.
.
In acldlUon, nu.rly U mUUon
~:r~::~~t:.~~~!~b~
!:Ct~':o ~"!u~t;!~:
UWSP ltMlf weat loto- lbe Wll ID
::;:===-=-=
Portaae Couoty . Tbou aame
Countiel.
.
1be report, 'printed i.D aa iDcb·
thklr.doc!Deat, alloootedthat tbe
ftaeal impKt of tbe t-.year UW
Wood Cculty Otater in Manbfield
•u about 11.5 miWaa la tm.
Raeardlen explaiDed Ia their
report that UWSP'a economic
Impact II baled OD dinlct apeodiq
ot about mUUoa,loeru-.1 by a
''lpm:li.Dc multiplier" of U4 to
ellim.lte tbe rippl.iq effect of
m,314 went to Wood County 111d
nearly M ,OOO to Manthon County
for retldents of tbole places who
are aiiOd&ted with tbe Wlivulity.
While l.he filal lmpaet of UVt"SP
was S28 mlllioa, the ~parlson In
~ol.:~ll~::m::; ~=:
111.1
ao
ml~lon ;
mill~«~ ;
Platteville. l ll.l
River Falla, 117.1 miiUon ;
andStclerior • • .smiUJon .
:::,
SALAD
Orde! a salad aod
.~J')IIlelfl·
DiQ r9rt m·to our
wid crisp salad makings.
SM'UIIMV
SIIOf.S
Rill
f.VEIMIM'l
~a&Sualstum
workdays into p4tylby:~.
Everlkoeywr r...'f.'tr.mill•:
t:w~t•thl.•mintotlw:<t•
l'IIIIY·Io.'OinK I'll'>:tA•no..TI~<.•
ll:~~otl'll'ri111101\and :~upt•l••·
llwlooki•Julllri$dltr•ll'
:wR:~~:.~t:")!w··
mulwt.-'\'cnlhchlut'lll
Mond•y (t."l'llikc
Saturday!
Add your choice of
dressing:
Creamy Italian ,
FrenCh or
Thousand Island.
SHIPPYAT WATER
Sl«lS
IIAI~
GeM Exc.-a
~MwllV*8t.lt
ODe day lalt Ncwclber, lbe wtoaW"LIC'OOiirlb'lbeDJ&bl.
Al:w::U two weeb _,., It flrlally
ruppured IDd I cheered wbat its
warm state did to tbe 1D0W I bad
tired ol arwsd <lwiltmal.
Now I Wllla't footilb enouib to
thi.nli: tbat wiabr . _ onr. I've .
~r:~=~
~erdv remiDded me tbat, a t.M.
wmter h.t a rinJ .
JpriDa wW will oul.
U! bt\IMtely, tbe
EveatuaUy
coUeee $ a
ldJedule doem't tab notice ol tbe
retwn ol robilla 01' ereea plmtl. AD
etchtAMdaallll..-ttobetbe
=- ln~':l,...~m~
worms. mo- ttyt lln't true .e. aU.
It c!oem1 tab much willpower to
Itt to a claa ID January unleu
you're addicted to_.., operaa. la
IPrinl. thcMcb. It talllll • super
effort to fqet t.bat t.bere an a
m.Wion piKe you'd rattler be thaD
iD alluffy w..room lillllliDC to a
moootooe lectu:re oo Eaatero
""'""·
..,to,.
' Uyoucloa'tbaTetbewW~to
pt todaa beea..eolu aaHe..
oliJirial fewr, ..W ,aa .-1 • a
out oleala-. ..a..
Ever,uae - - - - ., ~
~~is~'-=-=
' 'ova Uled".
A deotal appolotmeot , for
eumpie, doela't have to be aa
e:x..thatJebyoucdolaJPM
ct.miatry lab aDd JNU you Ia •
dmtiat'a •aitme ~ - ll )'OU ..e
your bad, it caa JU you oa a triM
.........
1o tbe
yan I've bee
to
•tcDcloc
UWSP I"Ye .-d I!WI;J ~
aef.oulol''ZION"~. Iofad.,
lftbereisiUdlattWrc• .. ~
that is ''oW. bat" It's probMJIJ
boca- I
myself.
A pod ''ltaodby ex.." i1 tbe
j:lb Interview. Not only il it e(.
fectlve , but inlliUdorl are aJad to
&ee.)'OUmisaclau bea~~~eoft.bem .
It makel you look like a ao-t:etter.
.!':.·? ·~~ lh~:
~
fairly vacaot
da)'ll the dMa will be
III)'W&J .!.
'Ibeold ''ttq:tdyin the fam.Uy"ls
poaibly tbe mOll risky exc\ISe
avallab&e. ODe ladlvtdtall kDow&ot
::~::,'bh~~
..a later, the atudeat
bnl mm.eu ca\Cbt bel- a
rack aod. bard pl.lce..
~ ol
1be iodi'ridual lo quatioD . . .
II"'C'''Y lboppoJ with Ids motber
wt1eo be bappeaed lo meet bil
biltory loltnld«. FotJetlinl the
~~~~.::.=:c
Jtudeotlotrodl.lce:lbtrtotbein·
"""""·
'Ibe quic.k-11riUtd prof QIKkly
rdreltled tbe ltudeot's memory
wiMD be remubd tbat tbe boy'a
mother "looked vey plOd fOI' a
- & I I 1l'bo bad beea dud lor two
_.._.
M.n.~a.llfll
..Jell
......
· Nome that dorm
•
Watson was ·warrior
b1
Mu"y Dow.!
TJII , handsome.texy and modnt ,
OlulesF. Watsonwutvft"yO\Inaa
woman seeks In a man but teldom
find s. His acco mpli lhments In
wue
oaly by
his own athletic proweu. Cetltral
State loot lftal pride in this
academics
matched
~~ ~I ~tift t~
Bom in the lheJtend WlJCOnlin
:::.m:::,~'!.Tr::i~':;!':
.t!:d:::lt~~e:::::
~=~
tiny seeds of Watson 's prelti&ious
earett". A rambundous lclXJOI boy,
" Frank" Jptnl 1\11 early dayt
sti.XI)'inc 91akespeare, playinc ball
in cowpastures and pulling' little
girb' pl&tdJ .
In 1901 , Watson recei•ed hi•
diploma from PlaUville Normal
Schoolandpackedhlsbap for Iowa
to J.ive scbool teachife a tl}' . 1bb
adVftlbn proved 1bart U•ed aDd
shortJy tben.a!ta- he rttumed to
.dvance bit own education at
college.
The Uninnlty of Chicaao
=~~d~ '::~~~lja!e~
blouomed . Under the &uidante of
C:O.ch Arnot Alonzo Stau. Watson
and his other teammates plqed
lnto the Top Ten. It wu aD exdtina:
era for the school and the JpOrt of
football u -u.
Watson earned his letter and then
advanced to team captain. He
btlptd drive the tum to ~endary
victory. Co.ch Stall lurtbend
their rq~utation by lntroduciiiJ the
forward pau on the Americ1n
footbaU scene . The Oying wtd&t
was outlawed at this same time.
Before Its revoe~llon, wauon en·
~llotofroughandtumble.
Watson 's teachlnJ career
sp&IU'Ifd • period of forty years and
intr'Oduc«<hlmtomanyrqioosof
the eow~try . 1ll ltOIJ, he was cboseft
to bud tbe Geocnpby Dqlartmfllt
:t,={. c;:;-jo:' P~~:!f~ldi
numbtt of p\eu ant dlverm001 .
Beneath the sweetly scented
~~bi~.. Pr~tt;~
belle, Miu Jeaneue Barnet. The
you ng couple courted for a
rapectabletenathoftlmeaod lhet~
opted to many.
The follow l n& year , both
new ljwedlwen!offeredpositlonsln
Nevada . Junette accepted a
teaching poaltloo aod Fnnk
.)
became superintendant . For some
~
this ta~:n.notan~uiJ!
:U~!
toott!rroadqaiDafta'anine
month stay. Thdr destination was
the lndiana Normal School or In·
diana, Pennty\vanla .
ln 1913, Frank W1tson received
his · tn1e calllna. Stevens Pol.nt
~uested bll return to W"IICOMin.
1bis positloa offtml lbe best of
everythl.na. Watson W«<ld held up
the Gq:raphy Departmmt and
coach Football and Tl'ack u well .
Ftant decided that there wu
place lite borne and bid adieu to
Indiana, Pftwylv&D.Ia.
F« tbe next S3 yean, he warted
for the betterment of hither
education and for t he soda!
tnliJhltmntol ol the campus at
no
~~~t::'!e~ti. ~a:=e:t
themtosttkl\lmoutwhtninnted
ol
and counael . He liked to
follow up on his aradu.at.es and toot
pride in their IUCceutJ.
His vtaorous •ltallty led him to
advice
accqK
some admlnlslrati•e dtties
inadditioatoblsnorma.l routine. He
assumed dlrtoctorlhl.pt of the In·
ttnnediate and junior blah Khool
education division and wu ap-
=n~thac~\1m'::'f:'a:'=~~
In l!NO.
Charles F. Watson
namesake of UWSP's Watson Hall
achieved
Watson abo
political
Tft1Cilition !or h.IJinV'Olvement ln
th e ntabiiJhment of the St .
~~~~a:::n::!on":n~=
National Rivera and Harbors in
Congress. The late Senator Wiley
referred to him as the " Father of
the St . Lawrence Seaway. "
In 1941, Profuaor Emerilus
Frank Watson p.e nOtice of hil
~ a';ere~re71~t~la~~;~
Because Q( his popularity and
li&niflcant contributions, he was
chosenas the nameukeforlnew
dormitory In tNI, The dedication
proved a memorable day.
SHOWIIGS AT
3:00P.M.
6:00P.M.
9:00P.M.
,.ad
" 0., npru ..tlitiYn ••
lalU...Uey .. _..._ . . . . dae
Ylllap ....,..••. Te U. ........
we • • , alri"J U. f-e• el
a'-k eHf"l)'. rz.o. lilen
. . .R
c-A..eriea .. .,elce."
••t
Albert Einlleln 1141
-the v(llue ·Of LAND
*-PI ..... d~UfY :
·...... . . _ ,.:....: ..... , . . . .J, Oty, S*. ~:
..
=-.-:.-:;-~c. ~-o.c_:=.-- ~
..... -
c...au-.. LAND, . ..
Real
I~
........ Wll. IUfl
lting
A ·case lor 'ha_
tty Palll Stou
There are many reuoca to be
akeptkal about tbe beoefits man
.:=:
~~1.:~~'::'"
sidered then Ia ample reuoo to call
for a te~~~~Uoo of all further eon·
ltrUctklo. of auclear power planll
aod a auloUI reevaluation of
Am~,.~-. coad.e
statemellt ~power wu made by
Dr. HaDMs Alvea, Nobel Laureat in
. Pb)'ll~ :
•. ,_.....-ulll&fe.U,.lfa
. . ..... ., crMiu1 tntc. w.k ..
,...Uou ,..........
U.ey ....... Uaa_._..,.-,ae•
key
lHtr ....
aaMUp,
.. ll.l.)t.ciDaet &1M w...-u.u•
rucWhtd~,.._ ..
..,_.._..,uu.-il ..
~
..,..._ .... _.. ..
.......... ret*., ...... ..
...............
....... acdrilf, . . . . . renl.... . ,.
-~­
tr.Ms plKe .. ..._ ~ ·
n.
CIIIW. . . .~tl~
-··-
a.c-....... ·-........
- ....
bM&MUMiellpwUt
........... Notact..tl~UII ..
· E.ertcacy Cere CoollDJ 8)'5\eal
<ECCSJ
•
A
nUclur ruct.or operattt at
extremely hl&h ·temperatura and
the ceubeat mutt be removed by a
coolant <e.a.• water) to prevent the
fuel within the reactor core from
meltina the coatalnment veNd
wblcb contain& radioactive
pollutants from the ea'lirnment.
A review of the ECCS by the
American Pb,..kal SDcitty concluded that the ECCS will fuoctkxl
when alled In m01t mumstanca.
',' However, no compreben&lve.,
thOI'OUihJ.y q~UUI Uve bull now
.
~ =~~~~~
ECCS evaluation atudiea bave
coaaldered tbe moat urioua
poulble aeddmta.
1n otber _.w, we JUM1 the
ECCS.Wwor\,butwedon't IIDow•
1bere have been at leal two
UMS wbea the £CO; WU IC·
. ddei'IUy caUed upoa ~t~d falled to
flmctloa. aad cme cue where It wu
I"'!Ddered IDopa-atlve bj a Ike .
Q.aUiy C.tnl
The Ford Fo~clltJoa's Dleray
PolicyProjeet wa•htahlY critical of
the high nle of " abpormal l.n·
ddenlll" at A-plants,statina that
the '"ll«ee&l.rylevelsofquallty
control are not bdnl
achieved ".
A Vlr&lnla Ullllty was reeently
fined the maximum amount
allowed bylaw for providizl& raae
information to the N.uclu r
Reaulatory Qml.m ..loo <NRC> in
connec:tionwtthconstr1rlioaoffour
reactors over aaeolo&lcal fault .
Umltf4UabWtt •
~(,~~~~~~~
but lbty ' won't co'lft' a nuclear·
acddeslt.
.
Printe utilitit:l were lftllially
steptkal of lnVflltlna lD atomic
;:'~~'::ebddt'alpODI!ble
Coop'nl came to the racue by
pusloc the Price-Anden:ln Act .
:: ~:ur;v~delco!=:~~
victims.
campania, whlc:h, in turn, control lar&e portl0111 of our ·
eneru re101.rca lincludln& all, au . cna1 and uraalurn .) A
liven utlllty may be Jttlvlna to mulmbe profits for itseU,
Olae Manhattan Bank , Gmeral El«trlc and AtlaDUc·
RidiOdd all at lhe~Jme Ume.
Corponte ariatoc:rats and toey polilkiaRJ. Govemmett at
:· -::=·~- lllhiswbatare-toluUoowutoupl ,
Today, the WIKOOSin Peopln Blc:enteanial Commlalon Is
hanaklc the enqy monnpoltun in dfi&Y to make a
ltatemeat : My powe- l}'lltm wtlk:b will wrve the pubUc'a
needs and be truly l'ftPQftlive to en'l\ronmenlal concema ·
mutt ,be dmlocraticafly controled by the publ.lc. A ·
moratorlumon\lllUleandunneceu~ry nuclea r powerplanta
ll but a first atep in a. ~e fOf dmlocraey and demottatk
, ::~a~uu:~
Ideal• and principles or ~
FOR MORE lNFOilMATION, CO:otrAcr :
=~= P~PlZI BICENTENNIAL COMMI8810N
M..._, WIUll$
' "· Ul •h$4
JoluiC.S.a'-er
11uclear expansion
Racloactive
wuta are IUbject to
biokJtk.ll
· -pWkatioo -tbey
paa
tbroalb
tbe. fDod cb.m. A
'm.uard dud DeW Haalord - wu
!0\Dl to eoataia a eoncea.tr.uoa ot
caium-m 2,100 tim. aruter than
tbeleYII fCKDdiD Ita food .
~- Vaqpaa of tbe Woodl HD&e
=~-IDitl~-:-a::
widdydbUibulediD tbeote~M~u a
result of man 'a ac:t!Yitiea" in
~ nudewn~te~ Md
otber 1uldear activltMs.
and
.............
8uliaeu Week poiD!fd out CX1
May 11, 11'75, todly tbere-ts DO
cammerdal pi.Mit to baDdle tbe
mow~Cial tou of bJcbly radioactive
Aa
spelltfuel".
.
ClaTeaUy there Ia a - bac~ of
5,000\llld..fuel UMmblies in apeadfud ~*~is at reKton arotmd the
to~mlrJ. The uWitiel call this
problem
''constipation'' .
reoeatJy petitioned tbe NRC tor
permilakm to 11t«e 10 rq,ore •
assemblies at Not Buch. The
~Wt:a= ~o~ad~uO::
~
auareces em Nitty.
RESIGN HERE
n .e TruePr.Wu.
..W"IIalalia Dectric Power Co. bu
Federa l Research aod
Developnent sranti determllle tbe direction of America'• eneray
procram. The EDerJy Releardl
1r1d Devdopmmt Admi.n.lltrab 'a
propoled bud&et for n.caJ 1m
revelas the aoveromenls pronucltarbl!l-
f .
\r
ftn6•
r..a
fRll
,.._
4U
na.u
2U
l5.T
IUT •M
IZM•Jl
--
......
u
......
~~~
l.t
IU..U ·
.... .utt~eru u
, ..,....,
~·'• u · 1 n.U
f'or
mGR 1Dl«1NNtlon
foUowfnl~ :
~I.Kt tbe
NATIONAl.
E:.!.~c.
- ~~~Ailed
:.;:!f ~ l.nfcrm.lkiD
llpCIII
eammouee
rw NueSaT ~IJ'
P.O. Boll ZDI
D:ub'lft.Calll. MMI .
--
--
Wl8COfGII'f-
lMpe~NuCJ.r0...,....
RGUIC5, llaa11t
......,.
~Palnl.W"-'atMII
lhcbta ol laf.-m~~tiGa ............
c - - 1 au-.111 w--.&a
P.O. 8os tM
Fort~ . . . . . . . laUI
.,
I
Environmental bookshelf
~~.u~n:m= =
MA..~ 'S
RESPONSIB1UTY FOR '
~T~!!~~;:!:It~:! Probluu
John Passmore !Scribner's, 1974;
213pp.l
.
by Jolla Balrd C.Uk.U . .U.-.:t.t.e
Proftuor ol Ptal._opll;y VWSP.
John Peumore 's MAN ' S
8ESPONSm1LITY FOR NATURE,
EcoiOiical Problems and W~t.ern
. Tred.itioos tScribner''a, 113ppJ lJ e
wticome new book In the replcUy
u:pandlnJ republic of eo·
He tdls us. for examp&e, !~­
=t~ ~::rO!,. :: ~
anthropo~enesia m~.~:b
controversy
In Put One and supplies, to my
knowledae, the most com·
prelwnlive and well doewnented
dlsc:uuion evalleble in Ol'le piKe of
tradltlonel Weatern ettltudea
tow11ds Man's i-elalloa to Nature.
AlthouJh he denies thet
pr e valllnJ reiiJioua and
c::.
Thh advent'u r e Into "that
prlmordlel oo1e known 11 In·
terdiadpl\nery at udles ~· wu
' provoked, \1110011 becomes dnr, by
.i JTV!Wing ehorul ol ' erlth:a: who
have various exotic litem.Uves to
pr-opoMbutwhoallaareethatlt1a
ho-:~~~uk.!en=
n=ry
preocc\CIIed with hiJhiY special!~
abstrii::tion's all ill own end bas
missedoraltosetherneglectedthe
more JIC'Ofound and prea&inJiuuel.
both practical and _intellectual,of e
culture and elv\liution In erisis, a·
culture end eivillz.atlon so
desperately -in need l.odl.y ol the
kind of unified wo rld· vlew
philoso phy o nce provided .
Professor Passmore's boolr.
1hopdully l herald.s aloag ovt'rdue
chan&e of directioo in moral
•
ph~~-entintolbeceve-from
theaeryrealmofmetaethlca:tothe
hardquestlonsofaubltentiveethk:s
- il accompanied by a Jood du l of
gr~mbling on Or. Passmore's part.
iOphlatriel · IJI\worlby of the lolleal
facility a:therwlse admlnbly
uhlbiled lhrol.llboul the book.
Tbe confidence 1ft Western
traditions to react efrec:Uvely to
massive, stobal envlronmetal
I::'~:!ue:!!~~=
anthtopO«nlriam 11 cllimed by
11
We•::: ~d l:!rnl~~.e;::~!
=~;~C:~:::::·,~'n~~ . ~ · ~oaopby
<pinns to humen
~~C:~J:!:JcbiU~ r nsonl, and , Weatern 1clence
heve been p io n eered by
professional philOsophers .
meiDberofHft.commwUtyhelt neil:
aubjed to Her law.
,
Indeed, Aldo Leopold' a
sucieatkln that we tiumaa. ~
think -or ouneb• u memben of
·cidzens of a · wider, biotic com·
· munlty ao lrrltatea P,rofusor
Pulmore tMt, in Ol'der to refUte II
tp. 111), be raorta; to Pllenl
toc-etJeutm~ewidelypopuluJ
the thesis that our prfteDt eeolor&le
crisla lJ traefllble to bebevior
mediately In the Preface that he twa
' "many times resolved to abort it"
but was dissuacled by friends. And
oltenln theCOI.I'jle of"hlleJ'II.KrU!nl
be betrays tblt sort of cevalier
detertoratloa Ia, I tblnk, 0\'el'l)'
:!t~:~n:u.~J'Jit;:!~~
White, the r aw meterial (from
that.we should turn for ,Wdanee in
~!:!~l:Jor:!~~.:
te nalytlc. etomhtl~. and
materielistic:l that bas raulted il
auehsi&nalruin.ltiooofournet...-al
beritep and whkh threatens- the
more strideatcrith:loftMrnat...-&1
heriteae and which Uu-eatm1- the
morestrldentcritica:cllim-tolil '
but destroy life Itself on the planet
earth.
this un~ted sltu8Uon
C.nben'a's Professor Passmore,
thus, -ms rel~.~:tanUy to bave set
aside his more Important scbolutic
disputations to dlampioo "Weatern
tr~itlons" whk:h ere Unalened by
ahOstofnewbarbari... tthelllr.es
of Leopold, Derling, Ebrlh:h,
QMnmOdll!r, Herdln, White, McHirJ
11!1 al l and hlsboolr.lsan apology for
the ecademlc end \ntelleetual
stal._.·quo.
·
Profesaor Peilmore'a UDdisputed
scholerly ecumen end dlalectkal
skill are in this writer'a judp'lent
· Ec.o-brlefs
~m!':.~=~=-m=:
diltincUy W•tern
iDtellectU&l
effort m.l)' coctribute to a IOiutlllft
oleeoi,Oiieallbd~
problems it abould be fOC\IMid ..,on
the ndleally new way tbe world lt
perffived tn cet~lanponr}' lcleace.
'nleaenuine aDdlormid.lble~k
ol phlla.ophy In tbe lut quarter ol
the IWftitleth eentury ll to toterpret
=:.~u:.~:.~
-==
......
tuoewNieaU U1uKI •
·
· 'Nr:a!:=~IIOIIUIIeHu....ut
1len lJ, Idee~ ........., ..
....
~wtp,...~et.r...
Environmental
lmpect
stete m enta ~or Wood end
SheboyJan Count y proposed
BOOKS
Meh&er , Peter . ne · Aa.~lc
F.ataWUbaHt. New York : Simcm
a· n d Sch u a- te r _. 11 7S.
rn~d~~~te~ 0 =:ctorll~~ntio ~b:
fedenl Nuclear Re&ule to ry
Commia&oa tNRCI.
lkcommendatiqal for rejectim
ol the reports are b!Jhi.IJ)Ited In
Stern&~... Ernell. ....... Lenl
Ra4MIU... New York: a.DarltiDe
Boolu, 1971 .
Novldt, 9\eldoa. 1k tareilal
A&em . Boston : Houahton·Mifntn
•
1 t ~~ ,
::~!::~!dJ!:.~.~u:.o~
c0
P\lblk Documents Ubrary. Tbe
ft110t11werefiledetthellbrerylut •
,..,.
1
PAMPHLETS AND REPORTS
The NRC a t e tement cltea
''numerous defidendea . unclear
deacrlptlona i.nd aoalyaes end
obviow computetloael errors."
The atetemeot c:rltlclus the
utllidea for failure td demllllltrete e
need for the additional planta~ for
lnadequete dlacuulon of plant
coats; for Dot provldl nJ coat
comparilonl ol coal and Dudear·
flo'eled pleota; and for Umitina to
one ae ntenee "el ternatlvu DO\
requiring the Cf'lltioa of new
"Nucleer Eneray :· Promlau ,
Georp L. Well. 40
paaea . Copies ve lleble <n .oo
Promi~e~ ."
~~-!~w~- ~- l,~~~
~t
6.. A&ainat the Flit
Breeder 1\.eedor ." Amory 8 .
Lovinl . ulletln of the Atomic
Sclendlll. Mardi 1973. l\.eprlntl
availeblefrom the Bulletln,l021).J4
F..ntsetbSt., Chleaco.m . all37 ..
EMutY ~rcll Ot!d.Rntcu·
JJP' bud&et request to stlmulete
·
Interest In IO!ar ftlP'IY .
The ennouncement mede no
~~ ~a~:n~fe~O
Preakleftt Ford waa not dbtributed
by tbe ,W)II.te HouM preu offke,
Hla rellp.atlon Jetter ulcl be waa
....
ur'llnl "more -vtcorous federal
roe. -la
tbe .... butlnl and
=~~~
· e ppllc:etlona end In so~
fciriutWI-...mJD&tMa."
.
,...... ,... •• ...maa.ms
we
now race. Totally •new paradl&ml
tin Thomu &lhtl'a H:f1M l have DOw
been introduced In tweaUeth century_ <WtSiem l ldenc:e. 'lbere,
!yin& .. teat In tbe arid rormW. o1
quantum theory, relativity,
molecular blolotY, and ecolo&Y, It 8}
treuure troYe ol the atuff hun
wbkhcomprebea.ive m~ph~
evidence that the bulk of Western
. rellaion. phllo.ophy, and theoloay
hu certainly reauded Man u
separste from, bette!' than, and In
possession of a divine J.!eeue to
exploit with Impunity the rest or
Neture . Profeuor Puamore
himself aeems ao . to sympathize
with the claulcal doctrine of the'
metephysleal 2(Webllity of the
human from the natural world that
heddines'nature' tp.:s,n.l u that
which ''includes everylbln& ettept
man and that which obvioualy been
the marlr. of man's ev-erythioJ
except m~-n and . that wbkh obvioua.ly bean the marlr. of man 's
handlworlr..'' -To me no other doe·
· trloe than thllseemsto insklloualy
to eflC:oureae · calloiJI eeolocle&J
crime. For, ulooJUit Ia uaumed
true, the consequences of h~.man
action within Nature will be
assumed oot toeUect Man blm.self:
Iince he lJ not a · democratic
Mr, Hanilllld that,lnlddltioato
·aafety aad wute ctiapoaal
problema, nuclear Jeneretlnl
plenta "do DOt maR ecooomk:
aenae,eithes-."
•
. HarrilbasllltedtbettbeCon·
struc:Uoo end. open.tma COlts of
nudear faclUUel baa llp!ficaDUy
neeededuttler eatlmet. ud U.t
oool.fued-~...~- ..
:-J:m::'
. prmll mon
. "Qtlz.eal Bl.ll of Rllbta Con1wnet's Guide to NtK:Iter
Power.''• Ptrln.ylviDia InauraDc:t
Dept. P1Dence Bkfl, HatrlabUI'I,
Pem.. Free.
.
Future energy: · the other side
by P ..ISreU
Sean~ Adequate Future Ehef1y
CSAFEJ Ia aD orJanballon in
Central WbeonliD axnprised of
labor, manaaement, uolvenlty
~~~!~~:::,J:eftl~
future ener1y demandt .
Repreent lnc SAFE in oppo&~Uon
to U. Nuclear Maratorium BW iD
lbe State 14:illahre wu Ken
WallettofStevmsPoint.
''Without mft'IY assuraaee any
induatry such as Con10Udated
Papen or Sentry IDsurance would
::=~==.~de=(
Univenity bere." He added that he
hu ''no axe to &riDd with anyooe,
tbinb itls therespona.ibilityoi' his
genttaUon to plan for enough
e nera y for lbe c:omln&
I!Mntionl."
When ubd by the POINTER if
SAFE support• eaeray ~on ­
Hrvatlon Willet re:spon de:d by
II}'UIJ ''SAFE WOUld be: In 114lPGft
of anythfnJ that COGserves me:ru
:::t.~~~~
conservation is tb.t it involves
people: , lnd how h1ve: people:
::~~ to the: s:Dlph
speed
Wlacoa.sin bas basically two
IOW"C:eS o1 enerv for the near
future : coal and nuclear. "We need
both , "'c:la.lm~Willett.
NKku ~~ Kn WWdt alllU Gt:rtnde Dlx•llllatr
ll"f:HIIllotiell . .w.. .., tlte ....en of rMJo.c:U.tty at lite
Maill.- llurtac.
At one or SAFE's first
ortanlu.tional.meetinpttwylslued
tbe tllltemeat
"tbe emotional,
anti~ fette~ in the Luc:ue
Aplnat Nude.ar Dancen CLANOJ
and at lbe UWSP really ~~
ooly a amaU mlnority of the art.a
lbere: 1s enou&b weapoos &rade
materia l from IOUr'CH othn- than
........
LAND 1er11 a Idler by catilied
m.u cballea&iDI SAFE 14 a ctet.te.
" LAND •u k>otinc fonvard to •
debate to darifylbeiuues,llisvery
ciupPCIIIntiftl thtlt SAFE rdtRd
to 11ecept otr olfer," a penon for
LAND told the POINTER, addin&
that " LAND's offer sUU remalnJ
open."
Willet retponded by nyio1 :
'''/ibl,tdoeta debate bet~ SAFE
IDd LAND keOmplllb! The people
lll~arelheonsmatinalbe
dedakJa and they have had Cour
bearinp for the publk to pre.ot
. ~Uaa . Weffootnmllincror
nuclearplanl$.
Last year llldia ex_pJoded a n A·
bomb from plutoanam obt&iDed
from a ructor provided to them by
the Canadians. It has r~e:ntly been
<ildoeed that llrarl had 10.20
Wtlle:t looks very critially ~
the "bact to n.ture: people:" who
WJinttoturnthedocli::b.ck . ' "nle
Jood old daYI
Wtrftl 't
necuwiJy
llclicalnlaclearwea,~.
~~=.: ~y:~~ ~ =':~
Histo ric:ally ~onsumption. of
elfdridty hu doubled every 10
~ars . Wbe:a ulted about levd1na
oCt the de:mani1s for electridty
WUieu retpOnded : ··• don't
bow many years It wOJ be. 'lbere
may be many devkes whkb
lamp. the: ll.itdle:n Icebox aDd the
Sat urda y n lcht blth in the
plvaniud tub , and ~aodles on the ·
X-mas tree. Not only wu thilstyle
o(lifeinconve:nient, W. it poiHIIed
many danJen. Ub fires."
mow
will utilhe ene:rry."
Theanll-outle:arpeopleareUJin&
JICare lactics daims Wilktt. "flrst
they oied ra<iltion and now tbey
daim nacton can blow~ ...
Opponent$ of nuclear power
1
~r:;e',!a:;:r!mlhat ife:a~'U:
'
The Wl~in Rapidt Tribune: on
AUJUII I , 1974 reported that
' "Teslimoay at Madisoo (before: the
Public Service Commillkxll in·
dlcata eost auodated llrith the
orpnbation meetfnp for SAFE
,..ere borne by the WJ~oton 11n
El«lrie Power Co." Thil ae·
euaaUon wu Oat.iy denied by
Willett .
Beca111e of intense oppo.Jlioa to
nuc:ltar power by lfO'C)I within the
community and the
~elentHic
pneral publk Willett thinla Ita
' 'bttlnnlnc to look Ub there wUI be:
a nuc:Sear plant in ~ol• before: we
lfl aDOther ooe in Wllc:aoain."
arms uce . Wi lre:" stronaly
dlnJreed with this araume:nt
callin& it another IC&Te tactl~ ...
statintlhatlmoratoriumwilloot
prevent uy bomb~ because
the sport shop
lb.nlll . . lr11 ...1rl1
,.......
18-4
JolT. Pl.£ASANT. Mkb. UW..SIU't111
Point
wa1
ellmlnatedrniratbe'll'-m'•
Mictwe.t fleeiONI 8aWtbe.ll
TlK!r ... meat but at !nit lila
~Jifll"'dcond.-IHI.r
l.luot IMf beloaet'd !tithe,...,
~pu~,Yolaulloftalmwt.
Gra11d
Valley
Stato
UDlftnltyoiA/Ifndale, Wlcb.,
JhallK:boiatshlptdloal.bad
.Uit-..ldhaiiCIItlromlbe
PaU!ttrJlrltbdoneklnaout •
SUtdetilioewhlch~
iliall:llbeiOUMie1MIIlifiiWI
l"ricky.upt.
Coad Mar\1)'11 Sehwa ru'
o11tllt, wbJC"b bad whipped
MantlallofWe.tV~ll'li~
opellft'
'nlunct.y, C«<dlolded
llleb51-lnlllll0r)'wltb
•noutat.ndlnllt-lno:oni.
"Wecouldhlvc-11,,...
hadDW"dlanc:a." eommmted.
Sdlwartz. pointJnl out tM.l
UW..SP HYa'ai tUn• lA tbe ·
MeGDd haU d.-1 10 11rillllnpolntoflheludaRtr..eblc
Grud Valley upillll a WQ
=--:tzllalftlnw~marJialatoa•
"""U~ta&ewltbabout iCM'
.....
_ ,_
miautaNpMd In the MC'OJid
Tbe Polat« womn'• buld.N.U team ui~~n~H from tiM
OMo ReJklaal T_...mrllt rill a ldlblY. rapedaWe 11-4
--lourecont. Tcua m111111on'11 pktwed ara : Rew I· Kalby
Sc:h..-. Barb Mn. Mary !fllltU, Mwey Mlnlla• Row Z •
'"''belutfCIW'I1liiN.IIMeould
....................
ban
1ooe. eltlltr
way ,"
Wllh'-lbi.A)0--.:1110
play,lbef'oillteniiCGftldlopull
wltbla5WI ••
Wlthaia.-edlremallllal.
lheNattn .... callldlllll't
foul at tbey dnpen.lely IOI.IIbt
........
ne Mlcblpa plarer
wbo
w-.fouledlllttbeer\ldalftnt
lbot....-tbebo.wlrole. 1'be
HCODd aa-pc. failed but tbe
PolDitndlda'IU¥111Welopl
Dlfa abotwlllc:b m.IPI ba"
1'hl~startedwell!Uid
ledaUoftbeflntballlmtlllbe
llaall\tmmutt...._~
Valley edpd Ia fniDL
Sc:.llwut1 e:r edlted Bed:y
Swten, . . . . ~*'
ward rr- ~ f• ~out·
lt&Ddla&perf~. ~
ledbodlteamalll~wltb
llpoiataud UopialledOowa
lorad tlM aa-lniO ~-
"leUy play.d ,._,. wdl ud
W-.doa
oaudrl~ud
oulllldtt.boli,"IIOloldsctlwt.rR.
U111ih Tl111r.UJ'1 wla,
~. lbeNauna.cbd:
lbt u:orl111 bf.l•nce wb.lcb
ban m8de tbe dlf.
mJFI:
f~. Kntlllllaewltbdlbt
polnt.adlwenbBraplrd
udDeiSII!Mift. Wmd:J'Kobrt
.........
:;::::
GVSU Md tbree playcn who
QOIIlblnedl.o_...ODOiata.
...~ :: : :
',"::::·:
HHH
DOLLAR ~
DAZE
\/.
at ultenJ {_. 'eu/t 1000
,.,;;;;;j;
OA'I. SW.Ji'l'f liD.
(LOWER LEVEL)
Jean-cord trade-in. Receive $2.00
off on any jean, cord, or casual slax
in our OAK SHOP by trading in an
old worn ~ut pair (any condition).
OR
Receive a "Lee" belt buckle § o a
a $4.00 purchase with any
•·
pant-belt pur~hase.
How about this! With any shirt purchased receive 25% off on a sim·
ilarly priced 2nd shirt.
Friday-and Saturday March 26 & 27
Alllllse ~illues a"lnour
new pant and sllil1 shop
on the ner level at
.//
1~
.
:!'!!"?¥"~-~
•/ fiNIJ '1ff!11J.Jfl(/()
RED
APDiicali<1ns are now being accepted.
Candidates must be a UW-SP student in good standing with an interest in coordinating the University's
student publication.
Job begins May_j_,_t9.1'6- l!nd runs
thru May 1, 1977-$2,800 total salary.
Send compleie resume' with overall G p .A
journalism experience and other pertlne~t 1~:
formation to:
Dennis Jensen
Chalnnin-UWSP Publlcatloq Board
1028 Okt Main
Pebller,.llll
M~t1X.It71
applications due March 31, 1978
: Pointer nine migrates ·
The karate kid
A atudeal from UWSP has
quaUfkd for competition iD tbe
natioa.al colletiale toun:wnent
ol
tbe Japuae Kwate Aaodat.iorl
IJKA) to be bdd Apil 3 in Mill-
-,.u..
He is Daniel N'*uer, a jwdor
buedonprdiminuy matcbestobe
held at Minneapolis. Besides Mia
Sems, Matthew Kramer of Stevens
Point .;tJ also enter. He wu the
only melftber ol UWSP men 's team
toiCOI"eawinwhenlt
d ...
~yslea)educationlnljor.
' He MlvaDee~ to the national,
foUowinC c:ompditioa Jut wea.md
wbeD be nnllhed thlrd In bls event
tl the Midwest lntercollealate
Karate Tournament at Northwestern University In Evanston,
Dl.
K.nte qanizatiOill are not
common on WdCOftlin campuses,
md studeotl from UWSP ~the
only ones from the state st tbe
f'l!lioaal ewsat.
Nieblluer hal prK'ticed Kar11te
about two and ooe ball yean. and
wUlbelnvolvediD theTftkl.sbodatl.
routine in Kata compdllion. 1t
~~~v:r:~eSO:: ":h~~b 'i'!,~ra~; ~
bklc1dJic and IUICII:il!l techniques '
are demonstn.ted.
Takinl seeood place In women 's
' frll:f: s ty le aparring , but not
qualifying for n.~doa.al competition
was Marioa Semi. Mill Semi Ia an
art student on camp111.
Thi.tlstbefintyearwomeu't flft
..,anina: hu been bdd in JKA
~m~ct!ct!tonQu.llfy for
=~~~:=j~y=
willaetanotherct.oceto~
00 QUALITY
* Fuji
* Gitane
*Peugeot
10-SPEEDS
from
-* Stikai
* Vista
Hostel
111•WawSL
Mard••· lf11 ,.,"II
P.. ll&cr
\·
Archers poised for tourney
by Jolu1 ROIIdy
The .vc.her)' Club 11 aponsorirc a
taumarnent Suncby, Mai"Cb a . The
tournament , fittin&ly caUed ·one
Cabin Fevn- Indoor", wiU bfain at
1pm In Annex 2. Tbere wlJ.! be two
lhootina clasaes : t.re-bow ud
si&ht. The basis ror the division Is
simple. Ban -bow lbootl wltb a
t.si<: bowwhilethe al&htclasauaes
a liaht to shoot with. Traphies will
be a"arded tothetopthree arcben
In u.chcla•.
The Are:btry Cub Is J)lort ot the
IDtramuralpros:ram ben at UWSP.
They shoot every Tuesday n.l&ht
rrorn a. to in lheannt:J~ . Toul"!lllmeat
co-ordin.tor Mike Schwalbe said
that u man_y ~ 30 people bave'lhot
FI\Ll HOU!llH~-
~
'
~()\)~~
- h ba:DP-~,l. bJith5 7
ful !r fofltU5tiED Cf\Rt>t.TiN~
~iRC.Ot-tD\TiO~lN(\:J
t>~~WI\~HJ:f\, Ql!)~!:a..AL- 7
f\t'D 5 \JlMMII'll-6
pocJ !
ALL 5LJf¥)f1EPl ,
~
1'\CN't.~ .
... ~~/~.
301
M1Ch_I_9AN Clve. 3'ti-Zilp
Intra -please ...
Koch cares about carving
Asked about tbe limited ftpolute
ol his wort. to the public Koeh
replied, "I'm proudol it but lt'a aot
~~l•anttotboll.aboutand
ltbe
wood
predominant theme ol the
carvlnp Is lhe
naturalil~
world of blnk. Koch c:ocWden lhll
a e.rry-oYtr from hl&h school and
says that thtre is a ''Cutain
aaimatioa about them that people
llke."
1be tools Koch need~ are at llil
boulreandthblswherebedoel
m05t of his work. " I caa do ve:ry
liWtartwortattcbool,"beM)'I.
To Lei Koch t.be IOUIId ol the radio
ckuini a crutive n:pre.loo b a
deflnitediltnctloo.
Unive~ity
film Society ·Presents
A film you won'J sec on televlsi~n for a long, long time.
A collection
of prize.winnina
and specially
selected films
presented at the
annual New York
Erotic
'U'.J..'U.::O... , film Festival.
The Official
Judges included :
Andf'\Yarhol
Sylvia Miles
Terry Southern
Milos Forman
Xaveria Hollander
HOlly Woodlawn
Gore Vidal.
'Executive Director
of the Festival:
Ken Gaul.
APRIL 1
WISCONSIN ROOM
S1.00
7:00 "9:15
FILM
'' ~ FIImo.
FESTIVAL ·
~·
ll.aCC'd
U11Wri1
f'IOI
..:lmlt;C'd,
March 28 & 29
Wisconsin Room
7:1 5 6 9:1 5P.M.
$1.00
FROM VENUS FILM SOCIETY
Vet$ Corner
-~
........... cOniPus' li4J[I
News for
regular columns
,---~---------------~---
l2i..
. . OJ>e:c"L
nanne.,
A weekly hom tludontgovemment
vets
. Crime of the century'
~- c-a~ L.etop.w
THE MURDER OF OFFICER J . D. nP,.IT
U U. Waft'ID Coatmiuloa eould peraaade !he Americaft
~~~~0:~~~~~!
=-...
~~of-:e ~ Pr'fllldeot Kmnedy.
1be ...... lln'OUDdlal tbe kWiDc ol Oft1c:er nppit tmd to
bt.u doudld • tboM ol U. praldent'a murder. Tbia II
acalaal"MUltof tbe I'IWI.neriDwbidl the Wart"ftt Commiai<:C
~lc
.t .
dealtwitb~yeyewiU....oeowDof'npplt'a
...,... Attora1J DnW Bella. a member of U. Warrta
• CoauD.illioa.ltalfuda cun"eDt propaDeDtof tbe ruxlinp o1
tbal~,a&aadtoututbepenoaiDOitrelpOIIIH:Iie
rorU.diltGrtiaaol~andtbefal:rieaUoaofOnald 't
pill ill botb murders.
illa . . . . te.timoavbdorelbeW.uno~llri­
Eatleoe Jloberta((lnlld'alandlady) lt.lted thlt Onr.Jd left
. bia rcan at approdmalely 1 pm oa the atterDoon of Nov. zz.
till.
Warrea Report further atr.ta thlt Tippit .ulbot
ldDed at I:LS pm about a mUe from Olwald'a
C'rop coo
.
·
ne
a
~"e;':~lDeAmdemceJI.vtGLaanronltatemeatby
Recipes fo< good health
:r:io~~~~~~=~
........
.
toes.am~Jw, :
..,. C.rrle
i~-------------------,
I
me,
I1I """""'"'"""
Befcn
Mary Plttoa,
a lllltar)' public
iD &Dd
ror said
~.sta&eofTau,ODtbildllypenaaallyappMnld..
1 Bows.,
I" ...
1115 o1 1454 SWDmer1ime LaDe,
111 see
T. F .
.AF1'ZR BEING DULY SWORN, ON OA111 Il£POSES
· ~ ~tn.=Uoul• b&GP:.u4ootkeda DallupolkelqUad
I1 ~~lD~~~Ial»nut~tbeeM~oa~=-:
~earaadaotouttoaotoU.toeDe. J~at..a1
-k"a.. ll...,l :ll,.. StYenlpeoplewereattbe-.
,_Wben lpttbereU.firlt~ Ididfta try tobtlptbeof·
fioa'. HlaiiPIU"8dbeyoodbdptome. Amaawutl)'hw:to
UMtberNIO.lDtbe.,.darbutstatedbedida'tt-bo.lo
' operate k. I t - bow and toot tbe radio from blm. I aid,
'1JeBoaperatar. ApolkeolOcerbubeeoabotbere.....
l
_Ir
T. P • .....,.
~aDd IWIII"'I to bef«:e me this Zl day of Noftmber
:,r...::
.,... c-y.
l ,.,..
.
w..,..
·The.,...tthlacabod m.tur.b: that they are really coo·
ftnieal , aDd au ol • are .o bwy. Tbe put lhiDc about
J·
1'biiSLite:oiTauAFTIIJAYnl1UNYFACf
~tna.:r.~~'::!'.~~=:::::k::
-ys, tbeCJb!iOUIUIW'a'istomake)'(U'own.,alul.
I
.
un£a .IIIQt1ITI QUICK
IC\IDiflour(_.loODebalfaoytJcu)
•
' rn:~~
1 C1lp bw.tel',
maraarf!»e, or
powder
IOlld v~e
lborlenlnl
Mia~ iA a tiC bowl~ worll wllb a
~~,_~~~IP' ~- . Stln
.
r::try
cutter
an alrtf&bt
IIIICUml
J~ac-a:Wtaad ~eup-lft'. lllsbeed,roll.outandeut .
Bake oo lilbtiJ but&ered cookie' abed for tG-U mln. at 400
:::;: Or-addaUtdemcnwaCerand~oalbeetfordrop
•
FRUITCOBIILER
AM' a eu ol fruit p6e mix, c:amed fruit , lrolen fruit
=c:..~,.!~r:=._m.,:.u~-:.:·:.::
=-~u:;~~~:=,:.~~.~tiJ
Ule fnit Md bUe at - cSecrecs ~miD trowa - top. Serw
wltb milt 01' whipped loppia&.
•
..
FlAPLESIJACKI
.
=
Scut~~faur(aDJm.iJ:,buti.uloupto ~,i,midour)
l l4 0up1J10a.Wdrym.llk
!
~ actlec bMlac powder
MiaW'IU.odstorelatbeu.ual aJrUchteont.ainft-, next toiJie
biiCUit- mb:.
.....
niEJACKI
I lit cup1 mia
'\4 a., water
:STbU oil
Mia upaod tryoa &reaedhotlridfSe. Mikel tG-12mediwn.
An lmport.llll r.nor ln au ot thtM •ll the belt~
youcanift , Msbopat !be ELLISSTREET(X)()P, ltlfEllil
Sl . 8nd &d the bat for •
·
. Oiscovft' ECKANKAR, 1be Andellt
Science of Soul Tr• vel in the
ectankar Readln& Room, UWSP
Center, Rm 261 , Stevens Poin! , Wis.
$MSI H715 )-34l-MI5.
LesbJI.In Tuk force m~n1 the "'d
and 4th Wtd. or evet"y mon th , 7 PM
at 802 Franklin. Women HelpinJ
Women, 341-mOO.
Contributors for a amall science
fiction short story antholofl)'. St'nd
a ll contributions typed , . triple
sp~ . and wltb ll!lf-&ddreued,
~~~dcrz:nE~cf~
PDL co
An you in tet"esttd In )'OlD' Health
Center! Ge t In vol ved ! Att e nd
meetinp or the Student Polley
Boud at the Health Center every
Wtd, 4:30PM at the Health Centet"
(basement of Net-on Hall) In the
lua,e waiUn1 room . For hrth'er
details comi! or call Jean, ) U ·3fr1$,
Georie, 341·58SI, Ol' Dick , :M6-4Me
(Health Center).
uMc PtHnarria&e Seminar April
)4 , 1:15 AM-4 PM a t the PH«
Center. U you are interested 1D
attentti.rla this seminar, pleue call
the UMC office ,......... and pre·
register lOOn . AU attendlnl _m\111 be
pre-«aiJtered.
Book lclll ln D214 of Science Bid& :
Introduction to Ptycbolotlcal
Ttttina:, by Tatbrop. 'lbe book Is
IP'•Y with a bard COYer and my
name and number are written in·
&lde. Pat"Bwke , 341~.
'
Wst one lkill divlna muk with
anorkle between LRC and PE Bl.dp
Friday , Man:h 5. Reward offered,
caD 3U-«132 after 10 PM.
weddlnc riDI <bMd) fo~&d in
front or Ndlon HaU. ~ M6-3el
between 1 AM and 4:30 Pl!l or ull
One
34J.l:J17 after 4:30 and uk for
!aile.
Tile film that proves war .can be lunl
.
· ~
Starring: . cnnt Ea-stwood
Tally Savalas
Don Rickles
Carroll O'C9nner
~ondaf:~~~~h 29Program Banq~et Room
. Admission $1.00
Another in the Clnt Eastwood Series
.
From wblch there Is No &cepel
FANT.ASnC . PLANEr
Mmoooo<oll 11'111
Fantastic Plant . ,...... A cartoon ~hat'
combines animation, philosophical
theories and Sl.lrreallsm about a
planet far from . earth where two
· r@.!;es of man have-evolved~
·
ThursdaY. and Friday
. Apnl1 & 2
7:00 & 9:00P.M.
Banquet Rciom ·
Dr. Hunter -S. Thompson
famed founder of the Gonzo school of journalism
& Dick Tuck
famed political prankster
appearf"'l tagelfler at UWSP'S h'tl gym Aprll21
for the
LasHver
Polnf•l' symposium
on the relative merits
of humor
In the Am•rkan polltkol system
------------------NATURAL
LIFE JAzz aANo
~~
.
~
TIDE! ~
•un,••ru,..
,..,.,.tt<Tnlln>QAlU.-
1; ,~, •
SAT. APRIL 3
~
754
I
reviews
I am become Death, The
Dtstro)'ft" of Worlds
.Nuclear madness:
-Bhagavad~ib
recogni:r.ed the moral horror of the
weapons and w1nted to avoid ·
dropping more. ''Tbe thqht of
v.ipiD3 out another 100.000 people
_by Barton J .
was · rible,"heinformedtheMin
the ...-ords of one member. "He
didn 't lilr.e the idea ...of lr.illlng 'all
thoselr.ids."'
Berq~ID
HiNIIhlma anc! Nq:asalti In 1945,
and the
H~mb
in 1950, have
raiSKitroublingpolitlcalandm"oraJ
questions which Martin J . Sherwin,
a historian, and Herbert York, a
physitilt, lntdllgtnt.ly address In
"A World Destroyed" and ''The
Advisors." 11lese two Important
books, when laken together, offet'
new waya of viewing the ear ly
atomic arms race and suggest that
the United States m issed algnlfic:ant
opportunltiestoalow lhat race and
tolmproverelationswlththeSoviet
Union.
How can we explain the combat
use of atomic weapons apinst
Japan and the later atomic
ctiplomacy~
Among the Important Manhattan
Project scientists in IM5 who
sanc:tioned the use of A-bombs were
J . Robert Oppenheimer and Edward Teller, who soon became
bitter antagonists in the strug.le
over the "Super" or• H-bomb
(prima rily fusion). Teller, fonnerly
• the uneasy subordinate of Op_penheimer at Los Alamos,
triumphed in this batUe and became ''father qf the H-bomb" ;
v.ilerus Oppenheimer, the "father
of the A-bomb," wu soon pilloried
for spearheadinl the ion, and In 15&4
was labeled a sec~rily risk. WHich
sclentist,Yorlr.asks,lavetbewistt
advice in 1949?
Sherwin corTeetiY and
doquently emphulza that the
Roosevelt
Administration's
decisions shaped President Harry
1'rlman'• early politics. Roosevdt
built the bomb for use aaawst the
enemy, us..ntd that thebombwu
a le&Jtimate weapon, easily sbifted
:r:e:s~~~ ~= ~heJ~~
Union from the Mtttt Manhattan
Project. He ruliz.td that the bomb
could make the An&lo-Amtrlcan
entente~ two most powerful
''policemtn" In the war-.ble to
reatrain the Soviet demands,
~~~i:~~~t
=
=:s:::u;
Oppenheim ~r a nd th e other
scientists on the AEC's Geottal
Adivlsory Commfttee torecut i.D
tie "a better than even chance of
producing the H-bomb in rive
years." It was not on 1niunds or
scientific unfe asibility , but for
military, politicaJ , and moral
re as on s, as the recentl y
dec!Uiified reasons, GAC reports
reveal, that Oppenheimer and hll
associates opposed the SUptt. It
was militarily unnecesaary, and it
was too rnurdm>us. Atomic bombs,
both strategic and tactical, were
sufridentto • Amerlean~ur\ty,
these advisers asserted.
trusted Stalin, neve- abandoned his
~ru=er~i!~~::-r reli~
~::· ~~:f':~Lto~~~
he further strained the fragile
wartime allianCe, may have miued
opportWtities to read! a limited
attOmmodatlon, and tontribuled to
the Cold War.
Tl-uman was the heir or a cluaJ
lepcy : that the bomb was 1
lq.itlmate we1pon ud th.11 It could
for ~atomic
diplomacy qalnll the Sovletlr
anxi0111inhisearlymontbl·
lnlheVt'biteHouse,beb.adnodeslre
to &hare llomlc secreta with the
·Soviets, to inform them even or t.he
existence or the bomb ~Jeet 1
which they knew about throteh
es plona1 e >. or to recoosider
whelllertheA-bombabould be Vied.
Because Its use raised oo moral
issuesforTl-umlnandhllacfviRI'I
and they expected that the explosion would
end the war and
lntimldal.e the Savlet Union, he
comfortably UHd
weapons
which Sherwin, In line with other
revlonlsts, deenu
unneceaury to end the WIT II that
time.
The SUper, they warned, milht
produce too much' radioactivity,
p ..-.,.
Marel11211,1111
Sci~ntis t Yorlr.condudesthat the
President's decision was unwise,
that Teller's counsel wls
dangeroua, and that Oppenheimer
and the majority oa the GAC were
correct. Had the United States
renounced the project, possibly the
Soviets would have done the same.
That was not lilr.ey, Yorlr.
aclr.nowledses. and he does nor rest
h1l case upon thll "least likely"
alternative. Rather, he contends
that even If the United States had
abstained and the Soviets had
produced theirSUper
lnl~(utheydid),theUnited
States would not have been In
dallier: it had many large atomic
weapons, and it would not have
been more than a yur beh1nd In the
H-bomb race, ror mucb of the
necessary researd! was already
scheduled and would have been
cond~a:tedeven without the buildinl
of the Super.
Oncem91e,as with Roosevelt and
Tl-uman and the A'bomb In l~ :l194.5, the ,United Slates may have
missed an Important opportunity at
acrlticaljunc:turetoreac:hiOflle
accommodation with , the Soviet
Un.lon,oral leastto&lowthearma
race: The military risk, as Oppenheimer had ·forecut, was ·
;~~~t~a}.y,~hea:'t!nt~1 :ne~}
portunity," the majority or the GAC
wrote in 1949, "of provldJ.n& by
example some limitations on the
talityofwarandthiBoflimiUngthe
fear and aroiBing the hopes of
mankind." How- often does such
COLPset succeed? '
IBartonJ. Bernstein Ia an usodate
profeuor or hi.Jiory 11 ~ford
University. He wrote "Hirolblma
and NaaasatJ Recoasidered : the
AtomicBombinpofJapa.nand.the
Ori1ins of the Cold War, 11141·
1945.")
;:~~~h~;'~r:~~~~r!!m~~
Progrenive
\
\ '
~~~~Je.-~~m~iJt ==~:
t:!
arnuracewiththeSovietthlion.
Oppenheimer and five of the other
GAC members wanted "an
mquallfkd commitment" that the
United States would nem- build t.he
Super, while two memben
propc»ed a conditional abltinence
tif the Soviets abo renounced this
project ).
be a n instrument
Sherwin's fine boot, "A World
Destroyed", terminates, In dfec:t,
with Naauakt. Had he pushed on a
few more days 1nd fOCUSed
nwnan's thtnkl.nc about ualna: 1
third 1tomk: bomb, he would have
fOUDd that the President suddenly
The Soviets, Yorlr. contends tas
Amid lhe 1rut fear after the Soviet
Oppenheimer had pred icted I.
A-bomb explosion In Auiust 1949,
how could nwnan have dared, . probably 1ained valueable Information from America's rint
evenlfhehadwished,toreslstthls
\tlermoneclear test In 11'52, and
advice? Apin,aswith tli euseof
therefore the American test acthe A-bomb, he tlad no desire to
tually assisted and speeded Soviet
resist. Once more, as In 1945, hl5
rt:Seal'i:h, pernaps by 1-wo or three
most trusted advlsers.-pecially
yeus. Ironically, then, American
Secretary of State Dean Athesonabstinence, even if not matched by
plumped for lhe ·war measure : the
the Soviets, milht have del1yed ijJe
SUper. For num1n, politics and
Soviet development of a !her·
~~::fleSta~~od~ ~~~ monuclear device until about 1111571958.
monucleardevice.
The GAC hoped that an American
decision to foreco this worlr. mi&ht
lead the Soviet Union to follow suit.
They did not believe (and York
qreesl that they were risld.nl
American seclrity. ''Should (the
Soviet Union) use the weapoo
~~~~~!!:llr.~~~
would be ComJ)M'a151Y effecllve to
!be UMOfa Super."
ln lMS, tbele llcientists bad en-
dorsed theatOmk:attaclil on Japu,
and probably their approval the.
had helped malte them acceptable
advisers to the Government. In
1949-1950, when they offered dilferent comJel,lhey were defeated
by T~ller,_Lew Strau. ol the Atomic Energy Commi-.lon, and
others, wbo,in the 'MX'dl of Teller,
believed "it is mwise to renounce,
mllaterally, any weapon wbkh an
=..~n:yse::~:
coiDJel of "realism ."
•
~-l St:u u St.
M ad~ a1 . Wi,_
5.l7m
lfil:'ei 2Sii-S.'i51
Also Euroilpass & Britroilposs
@ Un;Travel Charrers
-- ..._
the beginnings
.......
•-n. .v-k EIU..._.......
~
Rmew " .... lalt
It 11 now tullied tbat qu.aatitiel
olleu lhaa • tblrty-mUUontb olu
Call produtoe
=-~ l q u.ue
The AEC's pluloalum weap:IGI
fKtory, Dtar Denver Cdcndo,
experimced the !DOll eqmaive
induaaw 11re
m biatorJ ..._a
quantity of plutonium IJnltad
IJ"MIIaneoualy . Had It bU111oed
* 2 oz.joee Cuervo'Thquila .
*JUice from one lime (or 2 tbsp.)
• . IISp.supr •
*
2 dashes orange bitten
• ·'Nh.iteofoneecc
*Apa..isqui.tehelp!u1,~-
...-.'
the sport shop
Eanl·an ,: .
· extra $.1 Jt)O . •
.durl
-
.
.·blSt
..~~years
"
~of~tA~
'
~·
·-;,·
-:, - -;--.·- '
:
Army ROTC can make the bil' di.ffminco in fiDanci.aa tboae
last 2 coUege Y8!1"- Here's' the math of OW" program: ·. ,,
Aasic Camp l'nin'ing l6 week~ during summef between
your Sopbo~ore and Jynior years)
... ·1481.74•_
Advanced Course during your JuniQr year.....
99Q.OO .
Advanced Camp Training (6 weeks durin&' summer
betw~~
your Junior and Senior y~).. ·
Advanced Course.during your Senior-Year......... - 900.00
Tot11l ............ ······-·-· ·· ···~·· · ··~
· r-~
.....,,..,,,.....,......,,......,.,_ _ ..._ ... n..ll...d"'il.-c...,.,...,.
.
l.,..oit-.IVIWo l~...,.,p., ... ~,f<>6d..~ .-. A I-....J o,~"""1~-
Thesc amounts will vary acCording to length of school term.
You can eam SIOO per month for.up to lOmontha·a year, but
the average term ia 9 months. In-most instances, the tot.al will ·
uc:eed 12, 700.00.
·
Now, what about your c=omrnittment o~ obUption if you
enroll in Ajvanccd Army ROTC? First, you make no oommit·
tment· " 'hen yuu attend the Basic Camp. This'is the -time! you
ca,n discov<"r first- hand whether Army ROTC is yourthing:
And it gives us an opportunity t.o determine if .f.Ou're good
officer material. Frankly. the Basic Camp ia rough: it's
~~~~~~t:u~t~~:~.:n~~rs;:u u~~~it~~up~v;!7
transportation back home.
If you successfully complete the Basic Camp, you are
ellgible for enrollment in t~. Advanood Course. Then you ·
~:==~cJ:~:~t;;ne!~~~
Army's nee~:hnre sucbl to enter active duty for 3 to 6 months •
. • and then aerve for a time in the active Reeerves. In either'
case. you11
the full pay and alloWance or. an officer •
(approxfmately 110,000 annually While on active-duty.)
·-Your Army RCYfC ca~mi n~ may
' ·
not pny all your costS for .those
final 'l years. ,Bot they'll take a healtby.
bite out of the high cost of
earn
FOR ;MORE I NFOR ,\1AT/ON STOP ~BY
. AND ·sEE. A RT H A kRis ·oR Bon BftowNE, .
ROOM '2j>4 OF THE STUDENT SERVICES
.B.!jlLDING OR CALL J821 .
.
~·
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