Document 11824646

advertisement
~!:~
~0~
Letter•
I·-
Funding around
TotbtPolnltr,
Who's ;dea wasitlo fund the Coop'!
1 wonder nov.· how many students
011
,....................: F.:.U.IDCIItunlvenityleotel
.. In lobe
. . - . ...... lbe "White _
lbe_ .. _ . . _ _ .,..
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a-..-lllldbolf-daoed.,......,
...=u. ....lbe•do-.ua
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~~~ :::::':;.:" malerial
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lor • - - .. two bat ..,
ol
temelter
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=!'!
:UTtr' !7 h~ a!
COI"f'«l, lt b a deckS«! minority. U
thisiltbeease, thenstudotntfeaare
going to be used for the support ol
some outside, off-campus project
whlchwlllonlysenelheneedlolthe
ffiW. What happens to the u.ltariln
principle, lhegmtestgood for the
greatestnurnbtr!
What good are dormitory people •
going to get out ol thil! Food
prepantlon is 1\andlM lara;ely by
~,ru:x:rm::. ~~mrs"··=
factor. Who has time to prepare
daborale orpnic: meals or b~
orpnic:te.U'! Gt11nted, lhereil•cer·
ta.n nutritional value ID orpnic: food,
theyjustartft't espedallyprac:tic.al
to the typical, Involved ~Ueae
atudenL
Any way why the Coop'! Will liar·
dees be nat! Buraet' Ch en My
that lhey ater to men:
studmll. ll thb someone's pet
project for unreveil«< ruJOI'II! I'd
like to 1ft more informaUon bdore
any r11111 ckdlioru; are made-that Is
If they haven't made them a lrudyl
Where's the s tudent Input on thiJI
d«lsion'! How ~an this funding be
justlried aside fnxn poetic, socl.allstic
cueu ..
r.!'~::'
Bobble on
t'or the pUI four yea rs State
Senator Bill Bablitch 1\as worked
.h:ardfor the peopleolttntraiWisconsm and the lludtnll ol UWSP
St:nator Bablitch co-authored a~
fOU&ht for ~te rriorm and new
campaign rriorm la-.••s. lie v.•rote
Wbconsin's new rape law and the no-
fault automobile lnsuranct bill
::!!~~ta~:~~~ ~~i~~
yu rttrm intheSen.ate
Senator Bablitch bai dont a great
.dtal for us a nd now we h.lve the opportun.ty to dosomeChing for hjm. lie
Meds )'1lUr !'e'P and support m his bid
for ~"e-elfthon to the sl.lte Senate If
you would like to help Senator aablit·
c hto continue to v.·orltfor us ln
Madison, plusecontactthePortage
Co. IJ:tmocralic Party a t 3-tt-7073 or
stop '" at 90t Clark or leave your
=~~~l!~ers~).~~t1'; Carter
We needvolunteers toc~dinate
~torBablitch's campalgnon each
~~f:t,:!r=.dorm in every s tudent
Please help us to help Senator
~~:~:~ou~1tng so,
Gentkman such u YOUH:If. Mr:
FlaUey. knowtng all about " trw c-.»u not
to MURDER animalsmustsurtly
know the propft method or &ame
management. Mysel( being lrit of tilt
path. not yet seelftA the light, lett
very left out PLEASE, guldt me..
servation" bei~soriJhteous
lclalmnoctollnowt.hetrue soJutlon
to Insure stable. populations. Being
misguided u you state, 1 seriously
bt.!ltvt. the best method is praentJy
bt.lng Implemented. Lei's not • rtut
bec:ause we stand 11e1 the opposite. side
ol the fence and find flulll in the
pe.oplelht.n. Let . . condt.fllntht.prrsonalities elsewhere.
And so, anU and non b.mtm. 1 aU
not that you stUle your pens and
~C.:~il ~~~~n:~t!=
management which I am truly ilt·
tensted ln. UDiil wbicb lime this occurs. let lndividuala who fund. WOfk
::.-n~~matonacfoe.ma:."~~~
bt.come an endeavor whld\ all m!Jbt
a«ept ita bendita.
Sblc:tnlaaoi•Uoa•.
TocnPrnny
mPny
UHer nonsense
To thef'olnt~.
MarkU. Wattman
a ~mplalrlt by this VCJI.lP be fol~·fd
with a solution, I find this In itaU u.
sportJmanlike Cu~areealledt to
interfttewlthlbetruegalnsone'rt.
mves In the bunttr's endeavor. IJ
theresuchatbingaaalkt:nselo hwlt
!.he hunter'! ApparenUy, there is nooe
or aRt olregulaUonsor limit.
you will be
Totbe P ointer,
T he words uttered by the Presidc:nt
ol the Unltt.d States that Eas tern
Europe is not under the infiiK'nt't' of
the Soviet Union shows a lack ol
knowledge. ol Easttrn Europe by'blw
olthe most lmportantpeopl<'lnthr
Unit~ States. flow many othtr
people do not ~now a thing about
Eastern Europe'! I am willing to
wager many.
How many ol you readers hal't'
heard of the Magna Carta. but not thr
~~~~~tr~a:rJ'~~~~:
Constitution ol May3. 1791, ol GeorKt
WashiniiOfl and not Thomu
Maroryk, and who amona you rull)"
knowswhatattOt.tis!
This Univ,enlly lives studentJ a nd
others the ~hanct.to Sta rn v.·hal !hl."to('
te rms mean a)ong with learning ho-.1'
to speak Ruulan, how to Interpret
Rus.sianph.ilosophJ. orhowt ht.Sol' tt l
government worU. Through tht
Russian-East Central Eurol)('an
Studies program, one hoi!• a chance to
team about these areas and othen . It
- is totbt. c redlt or.thlaUnlverslty that
aprogram such aathlsc:xists.
11\ave betn a part for the past three:
years. Even thOugh It is a good
procnm. It should be imprll\·ed. The'
program should be expanded to ell·
compass more areas ol t::.a~tt-rn
Europe to Clve the studt.ftts a nd
othera a more rouoded vieW ol v.·hat
hasl\apPtnt.dorwhatllbappt.nllllt in
Eutem Europe. This may hrlp
othera from utlftina similar Inane
stalftnentl aa u...e. stated by our
President.
DavWS4efaKic:
toward al u mni that we don ' t
necessarily feel! Tbat ~eem~ so
e:ylbe'::"r!:i:~jc:t. I=!
bave been more appropriate wbea
Wlivenitin were just starting, and
&dting back to your old sdlool was
more difficult. so, that II you were
a bletoaobaekfora :nsit~imelt
wu really quite an occulon. Bell"-,
I thiot that bomecomioi COilDOiel I
feeling o1 abkfina: admintiorl for the
school attendC'd. While I enjoyed my
ICboolyearsatPointandlhlolr:lhere
~~=rf~.:=asc::O.~
dbtinctloo 111 hal any) nor do I feel
insC'parably bound •ltb UWSP like
10roe students do toward their alma
rnaten.. On tbe . ot.her band I don't
think bomecomlnc is inbereatly evil
and tbul needs to be eliminated.
However,! do think it hll kilt Its appeal and needl to be replaced with
The choke is yours
Tou.e......-.
I wisb to take Issue with the
IUtemeat rude by Terry FLIUe,o
that ODJy bunters are covered by tbe
ck:Md huntlnl ruJe lmpoMd Sept. 16.
~=w~~~~=:
der also bullbe PUBLIC from J.tate
li~~~PGa~~~r:
PICNIC AREAS." Unleu tbe
meaning hu chaaaed recently,
'pUblk'mtansf!Vf!r)'body.
Ailo, to allft'er his qutation., r.:»,
=
~':: =~~-= .n:
sencaFonl150dolllnamontbto~y
for a ••aooarwhea they doa'tdrlve, ·
who Rndl Seatry any money II they
are insured with ZCBJ, wbo pays for
anythina: they don't use twltb,
perhlp&, out taxes being lbe ex·
ception)!
I an think ol other places to spend
S22 . 7S a year, otber tban
in
buntina
a nd
flt hlnJ
licenses,
but
unti l aome
better way Is found t o do
w ha t
the
hunteu
are
doing, I will C«<tinue to hunt
b«ause I feel that the few second~ or
minutes"ittakesmetokiUananim.al
is preferable to the months ol suf·
ftrina: nature can ln!Uct, and my use
olthatanim:alasfooclispreferableto
seelna: that ' carcass bloated and
putrifyin& alon& some road, in some
prbaJe dump, or eveD in the ex·
animal's natural habitaL
WbetboEr I'm riJht or~· who
cansay?Ukeothersituations lnlire,
you weiJh the facts, consider )'our
emotiom, make your choice, and,
ri&ht or wrona. you Uve with that
decision.
J••aE.Bnak
Homec:pming or going
TotNPoia\er,
So this 11 homecoming. The belt I
ca n say about it is "big deal" . Cer·
1.1inly I don' t speak for everyone but.
I'd like to Ilk • why c:elebnte
bomecominJ at a U ! I'm not an antitraditionalilt but the evftll setmS
uagaerated 1nd unnec:euary. The
same events are part ol homecoming
every year 10 the old routine teemS·
tiruome and not a U that fun.
Tnditioo is not necessariJy WOf•
~:~~le~~tfl!~:~in~
schedules 10 I'm not oppoled to
recalling Jood times with old friends ,
or hr.>'bl& a arand time but, we have
10 many more activitles that we an
wholehC'artedly particip11te in
IWbaleffrltrikC'I}'OUr fade)' I IOWhy
wute time on 10me event awn·
.moninc
up tbt " Jood !C'!Iowship"
f:e1i.::~~u:e.~1!'!.: Jot more
Ue~:Sw~f~ :\a~~~e ~~
Foods
for
their
donations
of
beveraJes ani! supplies, to lhe olfice
ol ProtC'Ctive Set-vices and !.be office
ol Conferences and Reservatlona for
their cordial assistance in parting
and facilities arranJements.
Special thanlui are due Alpha Phi
Omt~~. a campus fraternity whlch
~~:eor:~~~~::::::
as wen u the Rtup and tskeclown of
the Bklodmobile; lbe Stevens Point
Junior Women's Club wlllch coor·
dlnated the entire IOI.Iclatlon and
:c:;=:n~~e:'"~::::
bet
-:::J
apable aailt.antl who
r::f:eb~~and ..ndwlches
Tile next Bloodmobile will be on
OC'Cember7 and I at the Elks Club.
OlvWI J , Ecllboim, C11alrma11
NDIIIC'WIIJlbC'Idllponrc:q-..•
Co-operating
ToltleP...ter
Justa abort note to let my atudmt
JOvemment reprC'Riltativn (off
campua.-CCC) bow I'm lo favor· ol
the propoA! to join lbe studmts in tbe
Ellis Street Food Coop, soon lo be
located on 4th Avenue and Znd 1treet.
I support the Coop because ol tbe
OIXli.inal fee charJ:ed for tbe student
membenhip with aU Its beoefltl, and
a lso because ol the idea ol the Food
Coop is to provide klwer food pric:el.
AllotbeCoopisoneollbeonlytwo
stores that lknowollntown thatbave
"health fOI;Iilk" at reasonable prices;
plus located corwiderably cloler to
you and pleue vote
:,.mcC:nk
GC'nWIL. Koallol
LC't&cnPolky
·
I. Letten 5hoWd Dot eiiCI!ed I Z50
word maximum. Loacer ietlC'n
aUowedateditor'adilcr'elioa.
t.. Letttn are to be sl&ned u
evidence of &ood fall h. Name
withheld upon request.
1. Deadline-DOOnTunday.
Deposit letters In the boxes oulaide
the Grid, Copl or CCI. Addreu mall
correspoiKience to Pointer, 113
Gtsell, UWSP.StevensPoint.
Series 9, Vol. 20,
No.7
w.-,......._
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........... "*- .. ~·
IU~a.... ..... wt.IMII
---
~CflJ) MI-IMI..
Straightened put?
To Ute PoUlter,
I Wll onc:e I . .distk bunte:r--every
weetmd racina to the woods to infUct
pain and torture oo helplesS little
~=~ ~~~ ::;t ru:t. ~~ ~:
:':'=t!i =-:=~,.~
am a rme, out·
rea.lization ol my sin!; brought to my
published. Now 1
sta.odi.nl member ol the non-bunting
got a new ~I
sodety. I evftl
lv.amaneJy tie up attle and amuh
their heads wide open with my ttulty
sJedse, In the bette' lnteresa ol
taunaoity.
DuSpetluaua
Moving on
TotllePoA.ter
I'm IUfllriled that B. Putchel In
· bercounlr)'lldeiOjoumsdidnotmention the Myrtle Warblen. The
migatioo is In run swing about now
and it is a aood time to oblerve tMM
birds before they move on down
south. Aiittlesunt1owerle«<wiUat·
tractthem.
.
RkkK.illpbvy
POlHftlln'AFP
..................RaadJ'Uace \
.....
.w.......,.._~KIIIf
NucyW.,_
.
omn .....,....o.t.-UII:t.nt
, ........U.C_....._.LyDDRobedi:
He-.~IIIIT....U
P ..... ~G-llltt
......... ~ . . a..
a....__taa.r..VIckJ'BiblQp
...... ~-KDDdJ'
.v. ......... ~o..
C-n ......awt.G..,..,
D1bb61Mel.._
Grlf'WH&ollllr-JlaWI"...... ~MIII Itrlmar
wrteen&.. Alln.bam, Tbertla ISW'!III,
Teny a-v.ty, Temtll Ekuell, Tom
Dlctm.an, JflfDamacli,CUttl:cbl.eln,
&.tt .,.. Ericbon. Sarah Greenwell,
Rauma GrwMt. Heidi Heldt. Jim
Helnb:lnaD, Ken H~, Wary Jirtll ,
Orw!l itNI!WI, Bob Kn.Lipp, M1til
l.anGD, Ont Law, Steve Menu!, J011
Ortllo,Jwryo.tna,ClltfPart•. Kfll
Pe~. LeU Pfeil. Blrb PUid!tl
Sam ~. Ptte Sdlaa. Jltlt
SdluiDac:ber, JlmSiqman,ScGttSim·
Ellyn Sjomu, JiU Unwuuat.
.INA ValldwUt. Milt VIckery, Olria
~inl.
WampWr, Jolla ZaftKI, Kay Zlml1k
Pr~lcll
Bow-., Sue Hlll,
~~·a:!f:e~~~~-=.
.......... ~ Nflf, Bob Vidll
Gn,uta..WartLa..-,MirlaoSurnl
Bloody success
Talll.ePoi•IC'f",
Tile Red Crou Bloodmobile vbit
was a bu&e IUCCC'SI, and everyone
who dooated blood and aU thole wbo
volunteered their timC' dnC'rve
congratu lations. Faculty, area
rakknts, and espedally students
combine-d to exceed lbe quota by 36
pints.
c•muu.Marie
~.
MichaC't
Larbedi, PbiiSand!n, CIIrritWDivlil
'Pt>IMer ' II a NC .... due ,.Wk1U.
hll!H DMr ntltwity .,...,. &. lM
Boani .. Rftnll .. tMt1al"nlt1 ..
Wile. . . .. ltllwrit&n . . .
~~-.,
....... • 1114 t1"'nntty• W*-"'
I!IW-wn. P.UI ... doe)' Ita Mlatt
~:::.'Ilk far
t• _.....,...., ...
~IS: !!JI ~aJe3 . P~
DUE TO CANCELLATIONS
THERE ARE NOW OPENINGS
AT
jb,9f3 l..Pj only ~5,19 ·
5pecially priced new. rel.ea'j£5
··the Village
only !}~90
demo'5 pril!£d from $.1,00
UPSTAIRS
~N_•nu_
9p
APARTMENTS
Includes:
FRIDAY AFTERNOON SPECIAL 3· 7 P.M.
25' - 1 SHOT HIGHBALL
50' - 2 SHOT COCKTAILS
Heat and Water
Pool
Air Conditioning .
Dishwasher & Disposal
2 Bedroom, 2 Bath
Cable TV Hook-up
3 Minutes from Campus
AFTERNOON O.J.
15' -POINT TAPS
MON . OCT . 18 - 40°o OFF ON BAR DRINKS
FROM J PM
CLO':.I~(;
"FOOD FOR PEOPLE NOT FOR PRORT"
FEATUR1NG
RIGHT AT HOME BAND .
With assorted University
·
fau players
s2.00 donation
The Ellis Street Co-op is
moving to 2nd & 4th Ave.
and needs your help
to buy renovation
materials.
Come and
boogie to
good tunes &
straight talk
on your Co-op's future.
5¢ ·8EERS
C!DER AND MUNCHIES
PROGRAM BANQUET. ROOM
7:30- 12 P.M. THURSDAY , OCT. 21
SPONSORED BY STUDENTS FOR COOPS (SCOOPS)
P-.tn PUe 4 Oclobfo IS lf1t
Tenant - Landlord rights reviewed
By Jill U.. unast
.......
Are you having trouble getting your
securitv deoosit bmck?
Undtntanding your lease? Has fOUl'
bndlord been making unannounffii
f~!~-!~~~~~ly ma~hoH
Lorbeck aaidthe L.aootord-Tenant
0~
0111:-proposl-d by Lyle Updike. ...,·ould
ha\·e nddreu t'd mony problems, but
that it died "''hen Updike lost the
primary. lie said that Updike was
compalgni nglorassemblyonthebUI,
trylngtoget ttudentsouttovotelorit
and hlmtelr. Lorbeck explained what
happened to the bill.
"Upd1ke knew the City Council
would never pau the bill and it ....·ou.ld
gotorele~"endum," Lorbe1::k said. lle
These are the types of p~ms
that students have been com ina to the
Student Legal Sevicn t u~tairs UC)
wittl. according to Ted SUllivan,
prniMnt of Student ~I Soc~y.
Hesaidlhatfi.l studentstl!Ope~tol
all student problenu re«lvtd ! thl
yearha\·ehad housing complaints.
SUllivan says that many ol. the
~lions that s tudents have coot'ffn
~~ ~i;:d "~fridIn~ n:,~t;!
really ~din& lhtm and want to know
just.,·hatlhernponsibilitlesoltheir
bndlonlare and thrinas tenants.
Acrorcfing to Sullivan, ol the
~ms studeots have with their
leues are inttr'Jifding who is retponsible for what rq»in. ,..hen a lan·
dlon:l can tattr the buildin&. and
v;hatthel~tisresp:~n~i!Mefor.
Sullivan said that rMily times the
Studetlt - ~1 Servict:S rtf~ the
studmts to the state statutes for informatioo on termination and evktion polides, who does structw-al
~irs,repairsbecauseolnf'lli&tn­
landlord or te"'efft. 01nd other
lcpltechnicalilies.
He wid that m;my students come to
Lrgal Services because they •..-ant to
know...,·holtthecityhousi11Jcocleslre
and whether tbrir house measures up
or not. IIOU5 inlit codes ddine how
manyptQplea landlord can stuff into
a house, lighting. healing, fi.J:tures ,
numMr Or h.1throoms, fire un·
tenanlability iwhat makes a houseao
bad thatitcan notberentedl,etc.
«(I(
::~a~~e~~~~otC:~lf:!ua~v~~
A major problem that s t\Kknts
come in with is return of security
dqloelll, Sullivan said. He said that
th«e is no law wrlttm anywhere
about security drpallts.and what the
conditions must be for ret.tlnment or
retum. Hesaklthatl.:lndlordlrefuse
to r~umS«Utity deposits for various
reasons and there isn't mUC"ha tenant
can do except take him to sma U
claims court.
Sunivan uys that the Student
Le&al Se nices cannot &ive
professional advke to anyone, but
Mr. John Finn, the Student L.egal
he's heard 11' that some placa are
croddy lor the amount ol rent. heat or
cooling won't stay Inside and ~
are simillar problems.
pla·~~~w:~r~!=.:
door neipbor complainlna; about the
sbabbv aooearance of a house. '~'hen
w~recarstn tbefrontJard~ndjunt
all 0\'er. Lorbtc:ll said wben be ...,· ent
tocbeclr.itout,tbeflveguysthat"·ere
Jiving thrre were moving out.
He returned the next day with the
doisdrawupyourdemands, takeitto
your alderman, and he will-present It
to thedtyattorney.
Youallol\avetogetl200signatures
on the proposed bill, IS pen:tnl being
from people who voted in the last
eleoction, Then the bill can voted on
inare!ere~dum .
be
In the cue ol the Landlord-Tenant
bill, many olthe signatures were in·
valkbted because ol a technicality,
Lorbeck said. When people tign the
petition, they must write out all the
Informa tion.
Lorbeck explained that if the first
=:~ ::e•r.e~1~ !:sd ~~~ ~~s~i;'!d~. :!t'~s=~
Servi«sattomeycan.
and building in the house without
the people on the page use ditto
When a tenant wants to take a lanpermit. Headdedthattheysawmice
marka t"l, instead of writing it out,
1
dlord to court, Mr. !-' i nn would advise
the student as to what &rounds are
ne«"SJary lor pro~«Ution, ...,·hat the
la"'S roncerning this action are. and
in general. the ~I procedure.
Sullivan added that the Student Legal
Socielf not only refers students to
Mr. Ftnn. but to the IIOU5in& Inspector. In this ca.e, the problems
U£ually concern housing codes.
Mike Lorbeck. Second Ward Aldn'man, 111ys he hasn't heard much
about s tudent housing problems. All
in the basement and dOled it down.
"Students seem to be afraid to com·
plain." Lorbe<:t sald. and added,
"People ...,.on't come tome."
Lorbeck said that soon he would M
receiving a list or common problems
from the HOWiin&lnspector. lie mentioned that the HOU5ing staff are
more than ...,-Uiin& to help with any
problems a student may have. All a
student has to do is call and the
Housin& Inspector w\11 be there to
cheellonitrightaway.
theirsign.aturesareinvalidated. lle
saysthisilastatela....·.
B«ause ol this, Lorbtc:k said, Updike did not get the ne«ssary number ol signatures and the bill never
went to re!e«t~dum . Lorbeck added
that the concepti or the bill were
&ood. but the enforcing ol it needed to
betZ':tra~:~~~hau:ou.r~~
~~~~ ~!:~!w~~::Cio~:re~o,~~
complaints.
Socialist presidential candidate to visit Point
ber ol bis small party to visll UWSP .
Yearsaao. inoneofhil manybkisfor
the White House, Norman Thomas
made a campus appearance.
Currently, Zeidl'!r teaches a
univenity COUI'Se in Milwaukee, arbitratesllbof'diJputes,Rrvesas-a
consultant to sc:bools and is an active promoter ol KVeral causes indudinl the United Na tions and bis
brand ol socialism which he says
stands for "a democntic
eooperative society and not 1
totalitari.anone:'
UWSP abo aMOUnctd today it bas
reeeiwd rqrets from both Carter
and President Ford for campaign appearances on campus prior to ' the
election.thou&IJatteinptJarestill
bdn& to book t.hrir vice-ptftkiential
runnin& mates, Smaton Walter Mondaleand Robert~. respectively.
Frank P. Zeidler, candidate lor
prt:aiclent on the Socialist Party
tickt'l, will speak Monday afternoon,
Octobtr II, at tbe Univt:rsll)' of
Wisa:lnlin-Str:vens Point. !lis talk
will begin at I pm and last about one
bow' in the Procram-Banquet Room
ol the Univenity Center, sponiOI"ed
by the Student Political Science
A.s$0dalion.
Zeidler will be the thlrd Pf't!lldentia.l candidate this year to speak at
UWSP. The
othen were
Democrats J immy Cartet" and Morris
UdaU. but diffennt from thrir bkls
fcrhiJ,bolftceilthefactZeidlerbu
never had illusions about winnin&. He
has a budget ol St~.ooo from small
contributors.
lnareceatinterVlewhesald "it
would be nice if I could lt'\Ofle per
et:at ol the vote in W~ln " which
il one ol only snm or ei&ht states
The Student Politica l Science
Alloclation which traditionally sponsorscampalgnappearancesalso isin
conUict
with Cona~essman David
Obey t O-Wausau I and hisftt'publican
challenger, Frank Savino, tR·
Wausaul , for a debate but a lime has
not been worked out.
Schedu ledearlie~"wasadebatebet­
we~n
lncumbant U.S. Senator
Willia m Proxmlre, Democrat, and
his challt:nRer, Stanley York.
Republican. II will be Monda y Oct. 2$,
in thef~ldboule bH:inninR at 1 om.
R~presentat lve
Leonard A.
Cr<11hek, the Democratic incumbent.
and his challen&et" Mark Outlon,
Republ ican, will appear at a candidate's forum sponsoud by the
Lea&ueol Women Voters on Monday,
Oct. II at I pm In the SPASH
auditorium.
New assault law protects victim
By Daw•
Ka•fma•
been radica l chan&es in
~have
"antiquated" rapelawslnWisc:onsin
that.ernd tobrutaliutbe rictim.
Acconllna:toareeentpanellnWalJOII
Hall, one such change ba~ be-en an entirely new law that prov1ded g.rtater
protection for the victim once they
havebeoenassaulted.andtoiNtlpte
changes in socit:t.al attitudes toward
ra~akinit
Wednesdotyeveningon
the subject I'! rape and assault were·
Dr. Manlyn Scammon from the
llealth Center. Senator Wllll.ln.
Bablitcb. the chief author' of tbe new
uaault Jaw. and Plllnctotbes Of~
AudTe)' ReeYes o1 tbe Str:ver. Patnt
Polke Dt:part~t . The panel was
:~:!or.~~aa:!edsev!:'.~ f.~~~~
usaU!t.
Or. Scammon spoke ol the rapists
ted out that the word ''rape." hal
~~~':s:': i~i:ece:u.:~~
ol homolelluallty and male& as viclimsoflemaleusault.
Officer lteeves s poke of the
security and procedure taken once
therapeorassaullhasbeen~ted .
The majot" concern. though, is the
s u.te ol mind ol the vktim. The victim Is handled with&reatcareandls
not forced into sayinll any thing nor
terns in rape. She stated that only. l3
olthepersonsinvolvediaagainstpururgedtoprOIH!'Cute. AIIinfotmation is
pereent of the rape~ a re tn·
suing activity, then consent 11 not
keptconrtdential.
given and a conviction ca n be IOUitht.
carccraled. E\·en more astonishing is
Ms. tteevcs stre!lsed tbnt anyone
the fact that Q percent ol the rapes Terms o1 coosent are not necessarilf
everhavlngbeena victim of assault
reported involve more than one per- · ah·en throu&b written ""ords, but
or knowing of fOITleone ...,.ho has ls .
son. Or. Scammon said that the num- 1 rather spa:*.en ...,·ords or 0\'C:rt acli0115
urged to ah·e the neceuary inber ol group or " png," rapes is
that indicate consent. ~xceotions information to the police. Nothin&can
increasinJ:steadily.
elude intoxicated. mentally impaired
be done unleu they are made aware
Stnator Bablitc:h lhonJu.&.l'lly exand persons under the age or 1~.
ollhe lncktent. Otficer Reeves c:vnplained the new asaault law, and t~
Tbe5e ~ are considel'f!d as
cluded with a warnin& against hit·
(OW' dr&retS ol assault. ll was pamunabletopveconsmt
chhlklna.tll)«iallyaklne.
OctpMr tS, , tt11 •• Paaes
P•t.t:r
~~::ifi~Hby ~:r h~bav~i'l ::t~ ~~~!!-'din~ ':::=b~~~ f1!:
modern Inter iors Inc.
Pe1i1M:r Pap:l OdMer'IS,tl11
4
In a memo to the a ldermen, Mayor James Ftl&lson hu uid,
''11tis ~~the diverse oplnkwla of the District Attorney's and City Attorney 's offices In ~ to the Open
Meetiql..lw.
SLDee It hu never been or will be my Intent In addinlltems to
the official agendas for the Plan Commlaalon, Bol;rd of PUblic
Worts, Airport Committee, or Common CouiK:II meetin&J which
I chair to surprise members or aUde controversial lteml
througb, 1 sbaU add only items wlicb Uve been cooaet~ted to by
two-thirds of the majority present aDd only Ill feel an Item is ol
extreme Importance in conduclin& the bus!MSS or our
.
municipality,"
Clearly, what Is at stake Is the publics rlabt to know what
government Is doln&. Although we probably won't know what the
exact drfln!tion ol the law II until a sovemment il tHen to eowt
for violating It, and a judge cleddes what it really means, I feel
lbat the city s hould follow the Intent of the law u cldlned by the
District Attorney.
-At this point, I intend to vote against addlrcltems to the ag'encla of Common Council meetings unleu It lsextmnely Important
U\atweactqulckly.
NOTE
The C.D. hearing mentioned in Jut week's column hal been
moved to Nov. 4th, at 1 pm In the Sentry Int. Audll.orium.
~'""""""""''"""" News
Notes:«<===-q
Child care opening
The Stevens Point League ol
Women Votft'S. in conjww:lion witb
the Marshfield League, has an·
noun«<! a candidates' forum witb in·
cumbent Slate Sfonntnr William
We're sorry!
We made a mistake.
The sale price of the Harmon/Kardon 430
(with 2.5
watts~
5
cta.nnel,
255 00
twtn -~ed
ampllfMr)ll
(not $225.00)
.
Bablitdl and Republican chaUenget"
Sydn:ey ~ at the Marshfield
Pubhc L1bral'}'. Second and Maple
StrftlS, onThursday,<kt. 21 al8 pm.
The evtnl will be broadcast live oveiWDLB Radio and will include a.
question and answet" period.
)
UWSP in Taiwan?
T he Unive~y of Wisconsin·Sie\'ens Point may have a branch
program at a Nationalist Chinese
universityinTaiwanase:~ r lyasnext
fall .
· UWSP Chancellor Lee S. Dreyfus
saki Wednesday he macle.,I:OI'Ita~ts for
this university during a 12 day
e¢uc:alional tour in Taiwan ,.-hic:h had
concluded the day bd'O«.
It v.·oukt be the fifth nation-the
second in Asia -vo~e UWSP has a
branch. Olhen a~ in En&land. Germany, Poland and Malaysia. The
univeni ty also is in the pr0«55 of
~~~o·oridng out an-angtment.s for nev.·
branchesin lndiaandSpain.
Dreyfus had been on an educational
mission to mainland China abou t 18
months ago and had hoped arrange-
ments could be made for a PI'Oiram
the~enlfit,.·eresbortl"!'thana
5emester. But he has Mod diffic:ully
pfORressingwiQ!thatplan.
In 'Falwa n. he says UWSP hu the •
best prospecll o1 co-operating with
the Univen ity of Soochow in suburban Talpai or the University of
Tuu&halinamoN!rural area.
Dreyfus, 1•obo joined other dirKton
ollhe American AsSociaUon of State
Colleges and Univenitits for- the
tOW"", uidlht!Taiwaneseemulatethe
United Sta tes " in just about
e \·etylhing.''
The people ..see themseh·e under
a wa r footing .. and live in pr~ted·
ness ol possible attack ff'1lfTlthe
mainiandChinese. llesaid, OO....·evcr,
that the nationa lists are getting ' '10
they'd like to take a c rack at the
mainlanders and belie ve thay
s o m ed ay will recapt ur e the
mainland ...
Transcendental Meditation
Program
to create an .
IDEAL SOCIETY
r:~:itec<:~!~~:~~c!:;~t",!:f~~~~~o)':r=
college representat h•e seats not fi lled ....-ere changed to "open
seats" and a proportionate number of off ea m pus and on campus
student.slnterested inSGA filled these Immediately.
A second ~ason for the abolition of college representa tive
scatsisthatthepurposefor...,•hichtlieywereextablisb«<lntbe
fint place no longer appli es. They were originally formed to lei'·
ve in the now ftOnoUistant assembly to balance the special interests ol the organiulionswith lhespecial lntenstJ ol the
co~~
forty mtmber body being elt!Cted wi thou t the inclusion
olobvlousspecialinterestgroups,tbeSGA willclo a betterjob
representina the stulknts as a whole. The need fiX' college
representation no longer exists (if ileverdid l. Students m us t be
represented In the most efft!Ctua l manner the two dis tricts
~igna tedbypopula tionolthestudents.
Development of the Individual Is the only effective
way .
FREE Introductory lecture:
Tuesday , Oct. 26- ·7:30P.M.
University Center•
Vasque Hiker. , .
You'll be glad
you've got a .
good!
This medium weight backpacking boot is built
on American lasts to fit American feet. h is
designed for rugged terrain with backpacks of
25 pounds or more- and constructed to provide
protection against rocks from sole to ai'lkle.
Hiker's companmn boot-the Gretchen If is available in ladies' and boys' sites. For the
profes.sional fi tting they require, stop in
~··~··'~'"'''"'"
•nd ...
llyR!~~~~~!':~ That's wh.a t Mao ca Ued for e ve;y seven years to
revive a na tion. Well, much short of a 'ft'VOiution , but a hopeful
IDO'\'e to revh·e responsible repreunta tion in tbe Studm t Government Association is a resolution elimina ting ..college reptf!ltn·
tation .. lnStudent Go,•emment.
Instead olthe present Student Government Asloc:iatlon,con- sisting of students elt!Cted proportiona tely from lbe colleges a nd
on and olf ~ampus districts. the resolut ion calli for a constitu tional ch:&nge to read "Membership of lhe SGA shall COI'IIist
ol forty (.fO I Student Reprewntath·es elected proportionately
from an on-campus and a n off-~a mpus dist r ict. "
What would Instigate such a ~h.ange? There a re several
..
A cry has been sent out asking that the SGA be reduced In site
from 40 s tudent representa tives to 30 or e ven 20. Thil indeed
~~u~~:t:f!!~~~~~: ~~~~c:ww;~
communism·lheratiool~talivf!ltonumberol stucltnts is
l<>olow.
To paraphrase: if this is commu.nlsm, let us make the fnost ol
it Corat least utili!esomeolltspositiveaspedal. Fortyaeatsobv\ou:sly a llows for a g.reatft' dJversifteation olstudent Ideals-is
_
tha t not what governance is all about?
The rt:SOiutlon calling for the abolition ol collq;e representation will be on the docket this Sunday for cons idera tion. If you
wish to presen t yoyr views. a tt end the SG A meeting, a: OOSunday
in Allen Center Upper You r voice as a s tudent Is ata take.
NG MARRIED.
HAVING A PICNIC, BANQUET, COF·
FEE BREAK, COCKTAIL HOUR OR A
VARIETY OF OTHER MEAL PLANS?
THE UNIVERSITY FOOD SERVICE
CAN MEET YOUR NEED
AT A BUDGET PLEASING RATE!
CONTACT JOHN AT 348· 2427
OR JIM AT 348· 3434
People • Place•
Ancient film excavated
u.racepsin!ilmhistory.
Roman film aot olr to a &halty start
commercially, because they bad not
yet. perfected the indoor theater.
Drive-inl •ere 'never very popular
because the horses sot in the •ay.
Besides, It's Dot~y tomalte out In a
chariot- you r feet lteep aett ina
caught in the •heel spokes, and your
othez- important parts get tangled up
intherftns.
Ovid aympathhea •ith thole •ho
try to make out at drive-ins , In hil;
" Art ol Love." He •arrm,""'lllllnlc:t
your lover to never say 'aiddap' no
ma tter •bat happens."
ma~ed~;the~!~;lc:;l'c!d:
in film hlltory, Firat Julius Ceasa r
burned the areal Film Ubrary a t
Alexandria, and lhen Nero attempted
~:r !:eC: oft!fJ:· small mm
::mU:Je~~:,·:~~~b.C::
1
1
and ~!alb," of wbk:b tbe Bible uys,
"Davklaot rave reviews and was in
demand with the talk shows.''
arut
Unfortunately, this
pusaJe bas
been ina«urately translated ill
EDCiilll Bib)es, and readl , " He
kxlkedupoatbeld:nwithrecret.''
Gfft!C'e beame the nat 'film
c:apitoloftbeworid..Sopbodl!:liseo&
sktered to be tbe gra~test of Greet
filmmaktn. His "Oedipus" saies
earned 111m tbe.tlUe, " Kina: of Anc:lent
Comedy." The famous scene In
~~~s:~::~ofthe~=~~
distinc:Uon of bein« the fil"'l pie-in-
~~~~~~e!nr~~~~!;:
" Chriatlau" ..ere burned at the
stake, but it is now aeneraUy ap-eed
that be meant ''Crilk:l.''
Despite numerous hardshls-, the
Roman r.Jm lndultry ~tlnued to
thrive, u -...ecan see by readlna the
boolt ol RevdaUonl, •hid! predkta,
amq olher lhinp, the comln& ol
Ken&ud.
Around medieval lima, lhlnp
rea.Uy bepa to pOe up. t.arae nwn·
ben ol barblriana started cnnltm&
out cheap " B" mcms about JUY1
=r:~~~~
Thw'::t'~nr;~"!
commerc~y autteuful picture
called ' 'Tbe Wild HW'II," wblch, ol
course, spawned hordes ol aequell.
Latef', lhse lilmmalten IWII.ched
to Vlltlaj films, which were eueoliaUy lhe sa methlngutbeHuaplc-
=
·b:ctpllhattht5el'll'Sused
Salat Aupline .,.., the rant rwUy
big medie.-al mmmalter. He made a
dassk movie caUed '"t'he City ol
God," •hkh was about the ba r·
:~nsaitt.;~,a~=l!r"'~~~
vii~ . " When he aot older, be
produc-ed a aeml-autoblocnpblc.al
pk:ture called " Confessions." 1 t •u
a bout this guy •bc.e mother dies,
causina h.im to becixne a Christian.
:e,:t~!'t~.·:1:t~t:C,:!;~:
Later, he develops a fea r ol•omen.
The aae ot reudalism brought with
Ita plague ot rums conceminJ macho
IUYI•ast.ing dragons on their ••Y to
Jerusalem. Also t.bil period pve
birth to tblt eve1'-pOpUIIr entity, the
CerfM!Me.
Despite attacb from rad;o DJ's In
Const.aatmople, and ln~t
her-elks Ulte CusiUI Kubrklt aDd
Flavius Warbol , the bll Holy
Roman Stud!C* ~tinued to contr-ol
the mm iDdustry lhrou&bout the Middle Ages.
Cba.IIIIS lD the ftlm world came
aboutsJowly larJdybec:ausemovles
had to be haack-opied. W'beo
prinUna came alone.~"
monks •ere put out ol
For·
tu.nately,thea-•orld•ai
the
rum
fb:':n~
~-=
:-!
briD&hi&
bein&
America , 't:fi.!nt on
t.alltlatothelndians.
\
Speed up your reading
elimhute it through v.rloua exer-
ByScottSI• pkbtl
cises.
Have you ever- studied all niaht for
a tst, on.ly to Ounk II tbe oext day'?
An!youhavill4 tnlllblededdinlyaur
major'? Does 11 SftiD to take forn'ft'
There are many other
U you amWU'td ''yes" to any ol the
above. a trip to the Readin& and
~~o~n~U::u~ !'!~u'~
~~~~::J J!m~b!:r;.s:t,,
1:
provlnayour rudiq rate.
.1be a veraae col.lece studeot reads
a bout 2:iO •orda pn- minute and you •
can dleclt younell to determine your
0'4'n rate very easily by readina: a
pauaae out ola boot at your oormal
you wilb are:
.
=~~s=~orolc:eon:i;::·r!':.'
U your s peed turns out to be much
leu than 250 • .p.m ., it •ouldn't be a
bad Idea to atop over at the Lib ror
10mehelp.
CTV schedule
Monday, Octoba-11 1 : ~7 : 00 BrUITacb
7:0G-10:30PoinlerFootball
ISPvs.SUperiorl
Writ.inc ror the Eiemeo-
wyr..7: 30-1: 00 8uic Banjo
I :CIO-I:30XtnPoitlt
1:»1:00 SPEC1A.L · Sie¥ml PointPolke ~rtment
Wednesday, Oc:tober zo 7:oo-a:oo Odft.lve Drivlnc
I :GO-I:3e Hooray for-Hollywood
'111unday, Octobft'21 7:00.7:30 i'ointaollnterest
7:»1:00 Rapidl Review IDorothy Uchty Interview)
I : ~:OOF'reeAdmialkla
\
~:~::n::t:c~
Study Sl.IIA lab may be jult the lhlq
to bdp rid you of thole problems.
'I'Ue5Uy. Octoberl97:oo-7:30
\
•
you
Skilllllb.
•
You can Cfl help in decidin& your
toaOthrou&h reaclincau!Jnrnents!
Some ol the prob~ms they can help
iDeruslng reading
«Nn~ion. bow to study for and
• ta ke eums. how to take better lecture notes. bow to study a LH.tboot
for better compnbtnsion, and bow to
listen better.
At the lab. tbey use a very simple
method of helplna you with any
reading or studyin& problt:ms. They
determine what is causing the
problem and then help you pc'llctlc:e to
thin&~
Ooe ol!M ••YI the Lib can bel p
studentl deal •ith their readln&and
study NUll problems II tJlrou&h of.
the-re are 88
Mr . Peelensaldthatln thefutw-e,
he •anla to b:pand .the Psych. tO I
CGW"'eand the services they,_
provide because more and more
studenla are comlna to coUes:e
lacltiDS the alt..llls nece~S~ry for lear·
nlag•tcoUeae_lnds.
He also lndkated that in the future
be ..-anted to split the ReadiDS and
Mr. Randall Peelen, director ollhe
Skillalabuplntot•oparlatomaltell
ferin& Paych. IOI. 11v-ou&bt.bileour-
ae, y01.1 can usually double your
readin& speed aDd eliminate a &ood
deal ol yaur bad 1tudy habltl. Thllla
the thin! year Plych. 101 hu been
~ta•:!,.U:.~.r
Readinc aDd Study Skills Lib with the
auiltance ol Uncia K.aM, tact.
Psych. 101. 'Tb:illl Mr. Peden's flrlt
year OD campus aDd also the firlt
ye.a.rlhellbbuhldafuiJ.timcdlrec·
tor. The Lib .... established by Dr.
Elserlnthwll.hththelpolDr. MOIIer
lour yean aao and .... then Joc.ated
inthebuement olNe.lsonHIIll.
Mr. Peden, akJna • lth Uncia
Kaiset- and five other s tudent em·
ployeea,malteuplhe•ortin&sllffol
Uie lab 1nd are aenenUy on hind,
rudytohetp.
·
eulertoreachmoreatudenta.
Mr. Peelen, In .addi,tion t.D hil; wort
at lhellb, aoatodormsandv.ano..
claiMs &ivinl " How to 1lwdy" t.aiU
and tryin& to malte more people
••areollhelab's ais~
Tbellb II; located in room307ol the
Colliu Clauroom buiJdi.oc and II
open between 9 am 1Dd 4:30 pm on
Monday throu&h Thursday, 1-12 on
Friday, and on n-d.ay and Wed·
nesday e.-en.lnp from 7-t pm. Youeaa stop by or call S41-3511 for u lppoln-L
Odellcr l l. lt'l'l Pap t P.....___
NewTM group formed
series of cliSses, studenls are talJiht ollhls movt:mrnt is to put individuals
so doina inc: r ease
to rid themselves of addictive Mblts,
Transcendental Meditation mnoveS
stress a~mulalion, therefore improVing OUT attitude to.ard olhtn. 11
provides both fresbnesl of body and
mind. Mr. l..ansdorf stated that the
benefits of meditation a re far
reachiDB.
1
our mental
=:U:!:,J!n~=~~:;~~e . \~. ':nd ~UM!~i~re':"':; = e:i"ne~ie:bu:' ~ir~~~-
tradi tiona l belieC1 that man Is
such u smotina and "neptive basically aood. human progress Is
thou&hls."
inevitab&e, and man 's character an
...--..
be•ltered.
The purpose ol TranscendenUII
Arico, mu.ning " opM door" In
Bollvian,teac:hes studentstoachieve Meditation Is to increase our COO·
and maintain the divine life through sciousnKSthroughmedltatlonandby
various ohvsiul and menl.ll n:tr·
ciseiJtaehuc:hanting,dancinland
meditating on wall symbols.
By R. .uaG~Ir.a
1
First yearbook
in five years
Psycbolyn!Msis believes the self is
a tenter ol awareness 1round whic:h
lhe trutKI!is thrownolf balance. To
l'fttore this babnc:e, J)lycbos)'nlhesis
uses IJ'OUP and lndivMtual lhenlpY,
meditation and written aell-analysas.
The stAi n feels an appea ling year·
boolt could draw many new st~ll
to OW' unlvenlty. Eftl')' high sdiOOI
lntheslatewlllberecelvingacopy ol
our new yearbook to use for a rdetfttcecuide. She adds, "Even if your pic.
lure isn't Included In the book, It will
bring bldt many good and valuable
mmloriel." She ff!f:ls "a yearbook
should be a kind ol SCTapbook-a
coUectlon ol fond memories you ra n
:a~a~~er'cl :er;:sm~~~
promotes Jood rdltlons betwem
students,"
10
~~r~1is to~clt.=i::
SuperShef.
.
More thanJust~
quarter pOund burgei
lbanlts to a groupol about t11omty
aggrft.Sh·e. " go.getting" students,
1M yu rbook is MaiMing to talte
form,.·ith the help of new, frtshideas
and a lotoft ime.crt'ativity, andt'ffort . At the pre;4!nt lime. the )'t'arbook Is only in its urly pi.M in&
stages. The sta rr is only at the bottom
ol a ta lt ladder todimb.
Y.'hen 10me
people flrstheardof
the new crea tion, they immediat ely
decided the student body "''as too
b rgeto undm randthe importaoceof
ayt'arboolt. Ju lie ffflsou r campus ls
not toola rge forstuden t.s tobent'fit
from a ndappreciatea yt'arbook. Alt
Ill now, the yea rbook will be a p~·m:ately200pagesin lenglh , but
\IOIIII·ary, as the ptodi.K:tlon
this
process continues. Julie also
e-x-
plainedth:ltacollegt)'ea rbook is
The price is S9.00. The yearbook
should be ldf-suffldtslt after this
year . lblt ls, It should no Jongrr
nefl! fi~Y~nda l a llotmenu from
~udent Govemmtnl or any othn"
organization to fund II. The year·
book will be available after clasm
startlnSept.embt'l'oltm,altbou&h
It can be mailed during summer Ill
lhe studenr• request.
While t!'le Chancellor has been n•ry
supportive ol the new yearbooll, tlkStuc!mt Government hasn't The staff
ill hoplnc for strong student support .
a mostimporl.antfactor.
Yea rboolt time is rlnally hcrt'OII('t'
again. llorbon ls guarant t'rd to bf
paU.f!d with knowl«<ge, full ol ,_.
and old experience~ alike. and ... u
bring back and preerve the na nw Ill
Point.
COMING NOV~ 6 8r 7
SKI SHOW 8r SWAP
SPONSORED BY STEVENS POINT YMCA
!~~~e;~~ :it~~n~o~~ur
:!~~p~=~-
used ski equlpment · from home .
over the fantastic buya on new and used
MEET PRO SKIER JAKE HOESCHLER
SKI MOVIES
DOOR PRIZES
641 Division St.
Stevens Point
.......
--·
T......, WMW!d
CALL YMCA AT 341-1770
Pebter Pagell Octcllterll,lt'lf
By Gt"Be lrwht aDd Ca.•M: Knaua.
ECKANKAR, or ECK, Is not a
yoga, religion. phllotop~y.
metaphysk:al sys tem or a n occult
science. II does not use
drup,
hypnosis,orotherartlriclalmeans of
consciousnessu:panslon.
ECKANKAR teaches that the
heavenly worlds are C'OmpriHCI of
several planes of e:dsten«, e:ach
denoting a certam amount of spi ritual
growth and level ol conKiouaneu.
Thrwghout history, mnkind his
been told that the normal
evohltionary pn!Cftlure 11 ucension
. m~~t!':'=~=,:f'on ~
pmnise that death need not be man 1
onlytickettothebN\'tnly~.
He may, a«<O'dln& to ECK belida,
thnlu.gh the pr;1ctke of Soul Travel,
lb.ily I.J'anSCeftdhlscloakolrleshand
roam unencumbered tl\niU&h the
mighty God Workts.
Soul Travel is said to be the art of
shifting one's attention away h·om
the material,.·orldsinto the worlds of
true btingMSS beyood ftW:f'JY , mat·
tu, time aod space. Through the
spiritual exceteisel of ECK and the
mner tuldance ol the Living ECK
Masttf', one pl'Oves, through his own
nptriencts, that be may exist
beyond the physical body and begins
his journey blck through the lowu
workll known to us ECKiats as the
utral, caiiSI.I. menta l and ctberic
planes to the Soul Plane, the source
fromwherehecam'"
This II uld to break his cycle of '
Karma and reincarnation and finally
ltad him Into rullz.inc himself, the
state of toea! fl'ftdom and wisdom,
and then to realitlng God.
"Soul is tota l cooaciousnesa. II has
the complete knowledge, love aod
power that all men seek, yet few
people reali:e that these qualities are
within themselves. lbey loot to the
ou.tu,lnstead of the mner. self. The
liberation or Soul is, ol courae.
freedom fr om the su rround inl
materiality which has aU but made a
prison for it in the IO'olo·er workll. When
Soul leaves the physical body to jour·
ney into the far worlds, It does so
thnlu&htheT1araTil. thethirdeye. lt
meets the Mahanta. the Living ECK
Master. after pasain« through the
pteolthetenthopening.wboescorts
1t into ht:a,·ellly •orkb where it t:X·
perit-nces the joys and b!isa of life:·
uid Paul Twitchell, one-time Living
ECK Mastt:r. Tbe following is an ac·
count of an ECKistoncampusand his
pointohiew.
As a studen t ol ECKANKAR at
UWSP, my concepts ollife 1nd what
C1lmes arter death. have undei'JOPe
f!Jures ol the put, but can be
conskltnblechlnae.
achieved by anyone of any aae with a
1 bqan studyin& the w..U of
bold heart and adventuresome spirit.
ECKANKAR two yean ago, while at·
tending clasaes at thil univenlty. At
ECK ~chel thecon~·nuation ol the
that point In my life, I w11 going
throuJ,h what Ia termed, a "1tate of ·
search", meanlna that condition or
tollfe. The penonallty will eventually
state o1 mind one has reached In the
be !oat, leavina the individual to ent\IOIVtmenl ol his conadOUIDtSI
d·ure u a ~worttf' with God. The inwhere a particular set of re111~ or
divkluall ty Is the euence ol the In·
phlkJsophica~bellefa no lon&tf' satiSfy
dlvidual.
theatronalnnerdrivefortheex·
pansion of conadouaneaa.
I a m an ECKiat and I foUow the
The whOle purpose ol ECKAN KAR
man-made laws. We are not out to
Ia sim ply that th e indlvidu•l
chart~elodalltruc tures or to become
establishes the fac t ol IUrv\va l
beyond the physkal body or this Hie
and the marC11ement of It Hence,
concerned with mankind in the
Soul Travel.
muse~. but only with eac h p61on aa
an Individual. It Is the study of truth
StudyiiiJ ECK and practicing the
a nd Ia not a product of the
techniques for Soul Travl!'l give one
imaaination or does it have a nythin&
an und enta nd lna of s pirit ua l
todowithpsych\cpmes.
liberationwithinthislifetime. lt lsto
abow us there 11 salvation in thia
Before I got into ECKANKAR, I
lite. or aurvinl of the true sell. No
had little awareness that there wu
other system is so oriented except • aomethlng
beyond what coukl be seen
Hindu religious teachlnp-Vtdlnta,
with the physkal eyes and U:·
yoga, etc,-whkh can give one a senH
perienctd with the physkal body. I
of immortality but not proof olsur·
a m now more aware ol ditrerent
viva!.
planes ol existence wbkh 1re not
available lhroug,h othtf' teachings.
ECKANKAR is a way of LUe. It is
Also that this path cannot be bottled
the mo~t ancient religious teadUna
in crftds or dogma. Evtf'yone must
knO'olo'll to man. All the sacred scripu:ptrience this directly for them·
tures of man and writen, from Plato
seh·es: for aome, this ,-ill take
to Kiplifll, Uve spoken of the "Far
lifetimes.
Country" whkh aU men hope to
When one g.aU. an iNL&ht or 1
reach. There are more than three
million followers of ECKANKAR
thtoulhoul the world todly, proof
that what is btl.n1 aJven hlm in the
atudy of ECKANKAR,ia Truth.
~=~t::~.~::;.,iii!
~~~r~rv~'f~~!i!~r:~~~":
::;~t::n;::n::~:~i~C::i
=;!ic:li!:.:eu:~ .~~
IN CONCERT! ! !
sunday, October 31, 1976
8:00 P.M.-Quandt Gym
TICKETS:~
TICKET OUTLETS:
$4.5 0 vuwsp 5 t u d en t TEA,
STEVENS POINT' UNIVERSITY CENTER, ALLEN CEN·
OEBOT CENTER,
HOUSE WESTEN·
_$5.00/non-student ~.1~'\~~~·
$ 6 .00/day of show . WISCONSINRAPIDS,CHURCHDRUGS
COMMON
~IS, I nf
P1&el1
P.._.,
Homecoming:
A flexible
tradition
8ySharonMa lm5tone
Homecoming hut raditionally been
a time when people are welcomed
Nell. to lheold alma matff'. Parades,
Ooats.and dances are but a few of the
festivities marking the oceauion.
The munlng and relevance of
Homecoming is diffet"ent today than
it Wll half I century 1g0. As people 'l
ideas ehan&e. so do tbtir pattems ol
celebration. Because of thla,
Homecoming fesllvitiet will alwaya
remai n flexible.
The finl Homecoming took pLace in
~;n:~in~~"!, :his Wln~ce!~
tra l Stale Teacben College In
Stevens Poin t was still recruiting a
football team. H was not untllt922
that Homecoming became a reality
locally.
It~ when CSTC rulized a Deed
to secure new students. Advet"lisilll
seemt'd to be the obvious solution to
the dilemma. A commi Uee wa1 ap.
=n~cuh~ ~:'!, ~ :Ski~;
1
1
-were good. The following year a t a
meeting of ·facu lty students, 1nd
alumni, someone su&~ested a n annual ce:lebrttion In which all groups
could participate. Enlhu.siasm
sprud throUghout the group and MW
ideas vo·et"e gmen,ted. As a result of
this meeting, the llomecoming
traditlonwasbomon th iseampus.
On Ck:tober :u, tn:z, CSTC hosted
Milwaukee Norma l School in their first Homecomilll game. Although
M.ilwa ukee won, a pattern for
Homecomi ng 's futu re had ~n
established. The social festivities
began with a pq1 rally, foijovo·ed by a
snake dance. Later a parade four-tofi ve blocks long traveled through the
.........
The parade was I n elaborate
d evice desig ned to instill
homecoming 1pirit. All worked
togethertomaketheatrai r resemble
the Ma rdi Gras in New Orleans. In
boa6r of tbt occasion, Stevens Point
bulinsses arn01ed displaya and
trimmedtheirwindovo·s, whiledtyofficiall dee-orated the streets. Each
yea r a committe-e developed 1 theme
(o be reflected in the ideas the noats
represented 1nd the type costumes
lhatwet"etobewom.
f'1culty members Involved them·
selves extemively in the homecoming
eelebr'atioa. For years they toolt part
in the pa rades, dressing up in
costumes and competing in va r ious
slullts. One year, the women facul ty
members rode different types of
\-ehicleslntheparade. Aftt:r pushlng
her vo•ay through the entire parade on
a scoot.er, ~I iss ROilch complained of
onev.·omoutsboe•nd two worn out
'""·
F'rtquenlly incidents occurred
durilll the parade whk:h added an
element of humor to the scene. One
such qMsode. which took plate during
thelimt:when11oatswerestillbeing
::~:r,.~n 7~i,!i!t J ,\:!nfn-
volved. l'erdinand ll inv. 1 member
of the faculty. prided himself for his~
idea of entet"ing a cannon in the
parade. This latest addition followed
thehay rack, Mr. Steiner,a kn ight ln
armor,rodt:gallanllynexttotbtcannon. The p;~rade mo\·ed jubilantly
acto5S town,andwhen suddenly, the
cannon ex ploded.
The crash startled the horses,
which instinctively took off down the
street. The frightened teaehen on the
ha.yraekcriedatthetopoftheir lungs
foe-help.
The shock ol the cannon was so
greatthatsever:alwlodows in nt:a rby
buildings sha ttered. II took nea rly
t-.·o )'tars before the controveny
~~ payment ol damages was setHomecoming continuL'll to wrow
desptte !IUChproblems. Jtbec:ame increast ngly Important and meaningful
eac h fall . Almost e\'ffyune a ttended ·
alu.mni, student .!i, fa culty. and
restdenlll 1llc reason for such
elabor.ahl«lebrationw~osto lureold
fnends b<lck to their alma mater
!-~~:~en:og~r~he;Ud:.,tsh.!~~
fa culty worked
to make eac h
~::~:~ung a time De\"er to be
<?nest~ntexpressedrepresert­
tall\"e feehngs when he wrote this
welco'!l~ mCSSOlge to the ret urning
Students odm ire their float
:.J~~t:.!- ~nanOc:tober t~iuueoflhe
' 'The longer one is in se:hool, the
more . he comes to rallu the: full
meant~ of bom«oming. He loob .
;~t~~ .;:~e~~ r~~nds~nror:
yean, exchangma wttn tlltll
remiiliscenees which a re an
cherished memoc-ies and dchghhlll•
theircompanionship.
·
''This writerlsonlya senior,sobr
cannot descr ibe att~~tately an iliumnus' feeling on that day , but it t11ry
ue 1nythlng like this , tile!)• an
emotlonslhata retoodl.'f"p topermtt
a n explanation.
"So IJiin, welcome gradsl )lly
there nevet" be a dull momt'nt ia tbt
day. Let us know that you'rt &lad ..
be bade, and we will do our btslr.
show you a hearty and 5incm
welcome."
To enc:oura1e evm gffaler pll"·
tidpatloninfutureye:.rs.pma..-m
desiJnatedfOf"themOitbeilutlfulw,
the m01t comical car, and tht Msl
st unt. By 1~28 almost tvtrt
~ nlutlon bad • flo:l t f1otl
bu tkl illl prowd more l'COIIOIIIIQI
whenorlginalitywasstres;;tdratblr
than beauty.
tum ... _, ............................ .......... .
To add a specia l touch to the
leith·itits. a band was formed. H
became an important part of the
par~. By the end of the decide
iOO!e fell the bud lact«!d JYr·
bci~ion and spirit. Former mem·
bn'salnOilltlhe•lumnireceiv«!dlet·
ten aU Inc them to~ togethe!' on
tlomK'Oming. day to form their own
band v.•hich would ''blow tbe college
band off lhe ma p. ' 1 Rather than com·
~inc. alumni •nd 1tudft\ts teamed
1~. They a-nted in:spintion
to manywboattmded.
Dtdkation of the new football field
took pia~ in 1932. Loud speakers had
beoen installed. For the fint time, play
b)· play events were broadcast to the
Ialii.
Afewyeanlater, thefootblilllpme
.,..as .,.·atcbed by a most dbtinguished
Mils S.ara Margretha An·
flf"St homecoming que-en
" ''-~'·:.·c:-:· ""i
'~r!:U.,~~~o~~
snake dance winding Lis way to the
bonfireandast'mi forma.ldantt.
In pia« .of Homecoming the
foiJov.•ing ye:~r . a lian·est Ball was
held for the studtnts remainin& on
campus. The next year also bfou&ht
an autumn festival The few IMft on
eampus elected a CJUeftl. A Sadie
llawk ins danee made it possible for
ttwgir lstoehooetetheirpartners.
Homecoming, labtltd Football f'"rolk
theyearafter, rn•i\·edpreviousae·
tivitiesandpre-warsehooi spirit.
Th e
!-'riday
before
that
homecoming day. students organlled
a band. At2:30 they marched through
the halls of Main, playing their in·
struments. The musk served to fl) ·
tke the students from the-i r classes
into the auditorium for a ~ asse:m·
bly. After sneral cheers the eapUin
of the foocball team tTtll'l"ned the
homecoming qut.o.en. Loud cheers and
vigorous clapping determined the
boboking.
os Pointers
head for victory
The m~t remarkable bom«omlng
festivitlestooltptaeein i960. Wilh l.be
addition of a "yeU like hell" ntntes t, a
large a-0111·d gathe-ed on the sln!elln
front of the Union. C'ber-rs1ueh as
"Arf, Arf. Arf, Come on Poi nten"
wereheardfrequeDUy.
Studmt.s quickly lost interest. A com·
pleterevivalof~ehoolspiritdktnot
nitrate through to many studenll or
facu lty, who found themselves ca ught
in aperkxlofextremeindividu.alism.
That rngbtthe queen lit the bonfire•
.,.·hk:h, in line with tradition, ,was
organized by the(reshmanclass. Afterwardlasnakedance,enabledp;~r·
tkip;~ntstojoinhands . a rxtin a tulto'
war. crack the whip fashlon, lheenthus~st ie groupmovedtothetqu.are.
yeUrng and sinJing as they danctd.
The evening ended in a juke bo:c dan·
ee inthtgym.
On lfom«ominJ day a crowd
gatllertdto.,.·atch tl"lcp;~radewhtch
.,.·ast.hemost import.antaspeetofthe
.,.·hol e ordea l. Nearl y every
orgamution had a n oot. lhgh ~ehool
bands tra \•ek-d (rom other t010nsto
march before 1 ~ many s pectators.
!-'a~·ulty, as weli al ltudents, actively
and ' eagerly p;lrt ierpated in the
parade The \' tlorGUS spirit .of the
f;u'! I JlWTed the team to \"1Ct01')'.
Durrng the decade of the .fO's the
tuml ostonlyonegame.
Throughout the so·s as tn past
decades. the chid goo/ of each
hom«oming eommrller fOCI.ISed on
making that p.1rtieul:ar llomeeorning
biggetarxlthe btstofall. Pc.ten.
slogans. buttons, pom·poml. and
mums .,.·ere a few olthe devices Uled
to build school spirLt. The atltdents
and fa~l!y e.agerl)' a\\·aited the
return of the alumni and made a
speei.a ld"fortto plllnanexclting
wtdlmd for them.
Hot n'Oht down at rhe Square
Science • Environment
I
Watershed planof~r,,, ';!Y:!~f2..':!s!.~ ..8!,~~!.. ,.
mid 1911:1. That mearw that not mOC"e
Pollutant Dlst:harge Ellmlnallon
This pla n is Oot goi ng to be
de\'eloped just to be shelved says
or municipalities where wute loads
are occurring . The
riven, and thus, If il is going to work ,
treatment pr-ocesses until they meet
~~~Cd'!:~~~~~~fhe:?:.nd SS
~~;'~!cc1~~J!~o~~m~~~
~e~rr:t!"~~ ~:;~~r!d~·~~~
permit
:-,:~~~~~:odl~~~
:~'::~l~e~~~:
=t''tdeanwatergoals," uys
chemists but also the active support
ol Wist'onsin c:iliurw to apprtclate
the Sf'r iousness or the pla n a nd to help
vohere they can.
··:zoe", once il ls totally deve loped,
With 201 in to etrect the ~ulatiGnl
will be m~ string~! . Pennlts will
be iUsued in coopera tion with !he
philosophy of the 2011 plan. Failure to
comply with the regulations will
&!&nature, a nd the approva l or ,the
U.S. Environmtntal Protection Agenc::y. " Thereaftuanystateor!edual
monies g ra nted for pollu tio n
aba tement purposes must be c::on·
silttnt with the 8 plan." The first
phase of the plan is to be com pleted
by Novembu 1. t978. Each year. the
pla n must be upda ted and revii!~~o·ed
so that in the time period between
now and 1983 an adequate water level
ca n be reached. MD« spec\rka lly.
tha t means changi ng the technoiOBiH
res ult lnlhelmposillonoffinesor, un der " max imum c::onsequencft", lm·
pr lson ment ..
Schena:el em phaslz.ed that II Is not
their intention to put oc hu buslnesHS
out ol business. It's just thrir
business to clea n up the rivers They
can' t rea lly do that un~S they
develop standa rds and see to 11 that
they are enfon:ed. That may mean
that industries a re goi ng to lose some
ol their profits into even more
pollution aba temen t equipment but
d lsc ha r fe without inc::reulng
pollullontnwater sys tems.
the!;
Sc::henzel sees great promise In the
progam because it is the " firs!
major environmental efl~t that
streues carrying out the reeom-
~!::ou"::! ·~~~',':re ~o!::~i ~~fc:J~;~u~~:~c~~~~~ffi
8y \'~dtl8illlnltt
A nev.-sc::onftren«'lt'aShelda t
UWSP last Friday, Oc t. 1. to hel p ex·
plain the new watershed ~»an being
developed for the Upper Wiseons in
Ri\·er Basin. This and 1imila r plans
are being devel~ across the nation
in response to tiM! Federal Wa ter
Pollution Cont rol Act Amendments
that went into effec::t in 19'11. Section
lOll ol the amendments requi res that
nates "identify thrir own water
pollution problems and recom mend
a lternative solutions to those
probleml."
Acco rd in&ly,
Wisconsi n is
;le\·eloping a uratershed plan to meet
'"2lll's" s tandards under the dire<: tWo
llf a four ma!l task rorc::e. fleading the
~~ for;rlh iSe~f a~h=~
Marti~. 1 natural r esou rces
specialist ; Ronald Beeker. a planning
ana lyst ; and
Cha rles Olson, an environmental engineer.
The Wisconsi n 208 plan has many
goals as sugested by fede ra l •
reautatlons. Forexample :"mllwa ter
a reasegmentsmustbe assessed f~
quality; munkipal and Industrial
pollu tionsourcesmu.stbeinventoried
and pn)jec::tion made ol future u.-aste
loads: municipal and industrial
waste trtalrMnt nH<Is will be
decided upon : an d the e n vironmenta l.soeial and economic impact ol the plan u.·ill be studied." The
major goal ol the plan is to meet the
POSITION OPEN
STUDENT
'(r
PREVIOUS INVOLVEMENT IN
CAMPUS ORGAN IZATIONS
~
2 REMAINING SEMESTERS
ON CAMPUS
'1: ORGANIZATIONAL AND
LEADERSHIP ABILinES
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL
JERRY DOHA ,
U.C. INFORMATION DESK
APPLICATION DEADUNE: OCT. 22, 1976
:'et~~us~:n!ndth'!'u~~~~e'!ti~h~;
pr~fe~r~~hlsce':'~iti~!tr:
might be unwilling IO com ply with
reaulalions, or be unable to forseoe the
benefitl ol 1ueh a program , but , as
Schenul· explains, regulations are
::Tn:=wr;;t":!:fn~{:~~~Y·
~':li~w::f ~ a~la;~d~ e~
ac::h ~evir~~ the goals. we'll be better
for 11 when we can appreciate more
fts hable and swimmable wa ters
agai n."
Environmental ethics
ByiUtkKingsbury
to ~Ji:~:tg:~~~~of!~r:l~
any environmental catastrophe, sueh
as the plans for a c::oal fired power
plantinanationalpark.or.ckllet- to
home. the coolinuing destruc:lion ol
thewoodsnortholcampusis : why?
\\'hy do we a llow lhern to happen!
Why does G.Lr society place only a
dolla r value on land!
slooenu at this university have a
unique opportunity to ex plore basic
andunconsc::iousa ttltudesandvalues.
on whlc::h people base their lives In
respect to nature, in Environmenta l
Elhhicl ! Philosophy 3801 tau&ht by J
BairdCa lllcott.
'
·
The class follows a logica l now ol
ideal. The first conskferation Is about
how what you are fits in with what
you do-an lnvestip tion in to how
beliefs ca n temper or give akt and
fustlfation for 111~tions. The leC'Ond
1tage is an examination ol the past in
order to klenti fy the bases that we
have built our ldeat a bout nature on.
Many factors are examined lnduding
aha rdlook atthe rol eChriltla nlty
has played.
An exa mination ol the pre.ent ll
then made. What does sdence tell Ul!
How is the process ol evolu tkln
related to man. and does this provide
us with a new understandina of our·
selves u notxpa. rate. distinct. and
above ~lure, but u a part o( the
dyna mw:natureoftheea rth! What
does the often mis·l.lled word
''.«oiC?CY" reallymea n.andolwha t
lt&nlftcanee II man 's role in the environ ment!
•
Then wi th lhl1 back·lround
materla l examlnatlon&are madel ntO
wha t
a
new
a nd
enlighte ned
~!~~=~~a~ ~ba:t~ltOX\~~~,~
and ocher modern envlronmtntal
pnllosopbers are diKussecl hue. as
.>well u the land ethk ol the Nat1ve
Ametic::ans. Discuslions are held on
how we ean come to recocnize ourselves as part or 1 larger commun ity
than the community of ma n.
While ca refully avoiding dogmatic
tqua tionlof what Is "right". thedasa
o!fers anothu point of view that, if
141ken in and put into practice, will
resu lt in a different kind of rela tion·
l hlpw ith naturaireiOU rc::es.
As a diicipline' or philmophy, En·
:!~= o/g'. J'Ikot~J• ':'orkfn~
1
1
to tee II evolve u an extentkln o(
et hk:al theory and thereby raise It in
1tatus and eonsciousnesaln Ute public
eye.
·-
Many 1tudent1 who take the dau
are not "mvironmentally lndined "
but dozens of tbese studentl hit;e
rema rked that this clau hu really
;!!:: ~~u!arouotndem=y ':,~
othu Uvlnglhlnp on this planet, and
feel more involved with the earth.
Some ol the upectl ol the courte
that lt ~tl have found to be m01t
:.~':fo!nd:"ca=I~I:C::I~
,...._rd
Native American lhouibt In
to
land, and how It dif!en Immensely
with the European~ who took the
land and with that of mOlt Americans
today. 11le boot, Black Elk Speall1,
olfen one dilfennt point of v~
toward land. The writ.l.np of Akio
Leopold a re other favorites In the
.......
Eco Briefs
'n.t £au Claire Ddl1 ('Ot'ltf'oversy
:i=:r ~~~::n~ ~~~ ::
to the Marathon County Board
mcding Oct. 2fi"al2 pm. UWSP Environmental Council t 109 CCCI will........,
provide transportation to the
Mu11thoo County Court House for
ttde wanlin& to testify or Jive lhrir
support b)' justbein&there.
AtT&"nnON: nus is to asaare au
!bole atttndina Homecomine events
that thtreisn't any plotapinlt you in
prohibitiac this year's bonfft. Due to
the serious drou&bt mnditions this
yeu,,olfiNisarenotissuin&lnyfire
petm1ts u a ~aution apinst sllrtin&
any acddeatal rlf'fS, wNch toWd
s pread quidly and do considerable
damlae undtf' these conditions. So
take heart and enjoy the other ac·
tivities.
•••••••••••
The ~latest development on the
proposal for 1 bike trallalq Hwy 66
tnortl'leutofStevensPoinU is being
sent to State Senator Bablltch for
prestnlllltiontotheproperagftiCiel.
now the Environmefttal Cou.n·
cil'apropoulcalb forasixfOOiwide
tnil, indudina foot wide yellow lines
on either aide adjacent to the main
highway, but with fid&es toketpon
of(. The extent ollhe trail propoled
will take it from the edge of town
. where H•·y 66 Is the narrowest. to
As of
- ~~~-::-~ · ~~·~.;.;;~-i~~;~~;h·~~ - -CN;t;;u;-;;;~~-~~
county highways.
some of the poison, but umpkll from
Watch for f~ developiMI'Its
the En'litoftmenlal Coundl
throulh
ofr~C"e-)'«<rsupportwillbeneedecl
the riva' continued to ahow cyan.ide
levdl 3h times hiJ,ber than the normalonepaMptf"miUion.
$t~C: f~wS:::S~ whtje !
1
Thousands of salmoa a~ dead u a
ill~! dumplns of up lo
rault ol the
~=o':lc~aa~·:Cr~~~anlde
Althou&h ofncials uy the poisonous
disdlarse apparmUy came from one
ol the nearly 40 copper platina plants
aloqg the river, lbey admit they may
nevubeabletopiapointtheculprit.
The chemk:al flnt wu detected ia
Grand Rapids RWers Sept. 30 durin&
routine sev.·ase umpllna by clty
workers. Concentratlaas ol cyanide
1ft the sewen were Ove tirDe. the petmiuible levels, while copper qu.an·
titk!swe~tStimshl&berthanlhe
legal maximum.
Grand RaP!ds on1inante imJ*ei up
··~
v~ ' "
· y lorit"' to " '""·
leer to help the Environmetllal Councll thil Slllurclay mom.irll with the
Reeyc:linc l)r'Oiram. Non:perie:nce
IM!Ct:SUry, C'Olfee and donuts Rrved
free. Meet In Rm IOi CCC at t am,
Sllturday, October16UI.
Hiking along the glacier 's edge
By RarbhKiild
As iny Wisconlin achool child can
tdl you, there used to be a hu&e
clarier that covered hall of Wisconsin
once upon 1 time, deven thousand
)·e.~rs aao. tr he's an observant child
from a hilly country akla&&OOmiles of
.leniN
organlnd the Wisconsin Ice Age
Trail so the public could enjoy them
are called moraines.
·~-
aroughlynorthwesttosoutbeal tline
Wisconsin, he may tell you
th&ttheg.laciermadethosehil.. that
w:-:!lnir!: rs r:Cg:.n~teru,te:!
un•que land forma ti ons and
tlen!ltiPortageCounty, Tim Victor is responsible ror the ~tinultion
oltbe trail. Hilbi&Jestjob illvolves
aetlin& permissloa and cooperation
from private landownen lo let the
trail croll their property. This Involves agreements that the trail
INike the least pouible Impact and
least Interference with the owners
IN!o.aganent practices.
The Ice Age Trail Is buill for hikers,
a-ou country slden. and sl&ht lftra
to er.joy the Wisconsin sc-mery. C.m·
.-ites are provided by private land
owners
in
places.
From
the
educational point. aspects of the
aru's&eoklo. botany and lOOkJIY,
as ._u u its Indian and ptoneapasts, are being made for pubbc use.
Hy ll.arbP!t!ichel
Thl! smell ol people burning their
lt>~\-H is not around this year and
-...·e· re milling one of the ~ till
t'lerr.ents of autumn. l115tead -...·e·re
more likelyto s mdl Mosinee.
-
Ke-ep your ea" open this season for
the sounds of chaltering chipmunks.
hon.lm\lgte~e. and chiklren shutnmg
lhroughl~ \eaveson tbcir-...·ayhome
from school.
The only ratrictiOI\I to the trail's
use include motor vd\\des, huntinc
wupoa~ , litterin&. and pkklnc or
damaginc vegetatton u well u campin& without permislion.
All the trail wort, from blatin&
tree~ to brushing out trail, Ia done by
volunteer labor. In lhis'Gay and age
there's ao better way lo wort up a
sweat and feel kinship with you:r
ancestors thanc learlnaa trail.
Uyoua~interestedillanyupect
of this trail, there will be a meetinaot
the Portage County Ice Aae Trail Oct.
20,at7pmintbeGrid. llookfortbe
rustictypeaorahikln&boothangirJ&
overthetablet . Ttle-r'ewillbetalk
about wortlna on the trail Oct. 30.
For further- information ~tact Tim
Victor, UAB Trippers:, or En·
viornmenta i Council.
According to Mr. J a mu
UftderA·ood Crockett. October is the
1pringtime of indoor prdenin& lp the
~rdener's cirallar year. Anyone
.:.ltt1'lf the secrets to blooming African
vkllets'!
Slartgetth'l&~.ady(orrte~tt-...eell.'s
echpseolthesull.Oct. Z3. To Reit,
vou ' \1 nf'l!d a plane tickl!t to
Somc'IA'hen.o between cmtra l Africa
a nd kJ\I.·er Australia -..·here it will
pou.
THIS OFFER IS AVAILABLE
ONLY FtAST SEMESTER
PLACE YOUR $10 DEPOSIT
NOW AND RESERVE A SPOT
FOR YOURSELF ON THE
BEACH DURING SPRING
BREAK (MARCH 12· 20)
WME'fH(II YOU CltOOK lOTH THl lUI AHO IIOOM 011
OM.YftCAOOtii - Oo>ITNOW1
CONTACT STUDENT ACTIVITIES l48·-t343
MUST REGISTER 1ST SEMESTER
Oclobn-t$,t l'lf Pa&eU Polater
ISport•\
Pointers move into second
By Jim)labu
t<e~w'!:~ '/~fti~e~':,~~~:'!.!~ te~ ,t;:;have beef! doing all season.
The Pointers reverted back to their piled up 72 yards in 17 carries while
promised 10 do when he ca me to rarely disappointed. Only in ·the
\ Stt\"C"JIS Point li\'t years ago, make second quarter, wen! the Bluegokb
pve quarterback Reed Glordana pa.sscd only %J limes, but completed
some llme to tl\row, which he l:lcktd 16 lot 223 yards and one twcbdown,
the Pointen C1)rlttnders for the able to mount successlul drives. One
ft«nee ti tie .
f minutesef-thecloc:k and fir tea~ plays,
The Pointers pushed for tbrir ron- u the Poinkr defense appeared
Wisconsin Sta te Univtnity Con- n.ya rd drive consumed Marly stx
in the first half, and consequently, the thallo tight end Doug Krvqer early
Poirittrs were able to move the bllll intheaame.
.
upfieldll ya rds in eight plays, ll!nding
Giordana, who undoubtedly passe.
in a Gkirdana sneak from inside the m~ than any other qua rttrback In
fermccr«<rd to2-t and their overall
l't'COrd tollln a lmOit unbtlievable4·t ,
with a 17·9 -..·in over Eau Claire last
Saturday. Although they v..·ere vicI orious at
the 81 ue1olds •
oneyardllnr.
f'rom that point on, the game v.·as
at best dull . Both otrensn sputtemi.
with flasbes ol offensil·e j purts
lacking in both teams. While the Poln·
thecooference, hasyettothrowan interceptloninthel97&season.
The Pointers oow find themselves
in Hcond place in the confer~.
trailing only undefea ted PlatteviUe.
Steve Krueger, It did hold the
B~olds' -..Ot"khorsc! fullback , D J
LeR~y. to just 3$ yards on four!~
carnes.
Meanwhile, Dale !-' leury, roming
off an injury, replaced lnjumi star·
tlng run ningback Steve Stokcs. and
fOf" homecoming. On paper, It would
appear that the Po.ntel"l record
should easily move up to 3-1, butlhe
way !he State University Conference
has been operating this yea r, even the
Yellowjackets could sting an unwary
victim.
~nal~ie.t"r:'- ~~be ~:; w~rt~ ~~PP=i~~:~ 0:;.~~~; f~O:f::~~0 ~lts ~~:~~ d!~h}~;~::a~~=~~ffior~:
1
helpless.
llallblllck Notl carlson capped off
that drive v..i th lll two yard run. With
four seconds ldt. the Potnt ddense
again gave in, and ldt £au Claire just
:h.~~~~:':!!-~ lll(~~ ~~~~~ei;iu~":~~~~goalto :~a~:tin1v~~ C'~~r~";::a~.~=~: ~~r~~ the~~!, ~~u~a~~':tt
UpRt -..·In over LaCroue the weoett
ot cwrse, few should ha\'e wOf"rie-d
before. And Coach Charles may -..·hen the 'Pointers -..·ent to the
ha\'e caught the Bluegold dde!Ue off lfl"kerroom at halftime wi th only
guard, as the Pointers actually ran se\·en poinl5 on the board Since thf! .
the ball twice as many times as !hey Pointers had outscO«d il5 'opponents
passed, something tha t has never In the third quarter of the previous
happened uodtr a CharJes coached week2-H.
Point ruggers stun Milwaukee club
thelead forgood,lt-I. Threeminutes
later, the match was over; Point had
upset the strongest club in the Midwest.
Milwaukee u 1 club, hal been
By T odd C. Brn~ard
The Stevens Point Rugby Club
scored a atunning upset last Sunday,
topping Milwaukee 11-1. Many of the
games mo.-e interesting JDOma~ts
were provided by Point'a. exciting
SUwn Hal!, Ray Newcombe, who
came lhrough with two crucial
scores. Newcombe, who played ruaby
m01t ollbe summer in A.luka, also
plays on the Stevena Potnt football
... m.
Tbe mal.cb btgan at I pm Ocl 10
and wu a tight defenaive battle moat
ol the way. Abou112 minutes into the
~~or:~;~o,=:t:
the stlte of W"tSCOnsln. Each yen the
dub sponsors a tour ol England and
Wales, where the best 1Mml ln the
world compete. Milwa ukee klolted
v~ Impressive in last yea r's tour,
wannln1 one, tying once, and lollng a
veryckllematch.
'
In comparison, ow- loCal club
!:,·~~=e:iu~e:=~ cesu::
sive line and sc1mpered6S meters for
thegame'sfil"ltscore. Pointfollowed
with a suc«SSful follow up to make
the score s-o. Aflft' another 10
minutes. though, Milwaukee'• tx·
perlenced ruggers tied !,he ICOI't at S
withashort.run ofl meter.
The second hll! btgan much Jib
the nrst with both defensn pl1ylng
tough. It wasn' t unti l tO minutes had
paSMd thlt Milwauk~ ·moved In
cl01e enough to uake the lead, a-s.
Point Immediately s truck back by
kiclting a 30 meter 1011 to tie the
KOrea t l , withonlyRVen mlnut.es
remaining. As the d ock wound down,
the Stevens Point club was
desperately inchina:tow•rdtheirgoal·
line. Then, with four mlnuttl left in
the match, Ray Newcom~ 1piadlr·
te-d acrou the &~I line to put Point in
WSUC Standings
Plalleville
Riverf'alla
StevensPoint
w
S
3
4
L.
0
2
1
OahkoQl
3
2
Stout
Whitewater
Eau Ciaire
LICroue
Superior
3
1
2
3
0
2
3
3
2
S
Rftalta Last Week
Stevens Point 17, EauCialre9
Rlvft' f'alll22,01hk01h7
Platteville 10, Stout 1
Whltewater34,Superiors
La Croue21, Wii'IONI7
GamesSatarday, Oct. II
Eau CiaiHitRiverf'altl
Stout atLaen::.e f HC)
Plltteville at Oahtoah
SuperiwatSteYenaPoint t HC)
~- Micbl,pn at Whitewater INC)
P . _ Paplf Odolioa'IS.lrJI
~~.ar~t'.!:;~ a~:res!~rn.~
Campus Bowling
very strong teams. Dod&e County
pulled orf a victory by a very sll&hl
margin, as did Madison. Point
showe-d great promise, however, in
thesefint twOgames. AU of a Iudden,
then, the club pulled together and
toot an excitin£ vi<: tory rrom a great
team. Next weoett, Point will travel to
Kenosha where they hope to continue
thelrwinn ingwaya.
OUr rugby club is atilll n its birth
l t.ages. lt's ayOung,exclling,andin·
teresting club th;it needs you r su~
port. All intereste-d newcomer~ are
very welcome to com-e out, join, and
learn the skiIll of n4Jby football. Give
Todd Brenard. Public Relatklna
Director. a call at :w&-4571 for information about the club's next
meeting . Also, keep watchinl lhe
Polftter for information
Tennis
alcohol
ment Is "800 percent eHeetive,"
DurH~ stated. If you treat one who is
sick el1llugh, he becomes lbe " banner
ca rr ier " for th e whole gang.
" Everytimewe treat one, we educate
others," Duren said. He considers
himself lucky to have been treated.
"Oneoutof36add.ictsgetstreatment
or becomes rehabilitated," he said.
"We lay thctruthonpeoplea ndltls
amating how well they ~:et wen:·
In many cases, Duren ' said it
doesn't make any difference tr lhe
user Is an abuser « an addic t.
" You are dead if you drh·e on the
highway as an abuser or an addict ."
When is a person drinking in
moderation! Duren cited this
prescription as being souncl. One
ounce ol a lcohol for every 50 pounds
perdlly,wilh the intake not greater
than one oun<!e per hour; anymore
than this lends itself to abuse.
··we are being lw:ld ignonnt,"
Duren said. "Everybody Is afraid to
comment lo others a bout abuse and
this will only chlnBC If we
acknowledge that it !s a drug.''
Platteville still on top
Platteville
football Coach Bob
~mans tak es his "you..oa: and lnx:ent" Kktdle KOfPS to Oshkosh
lturday fora m.~jortestagainst the
.ugh-and-rudy Tita n defensive
li t.
The freshman -laden Pioneers s lip!dpast Stout, 10.7, in the final
inute last Saturday and cufl"ently
and alone at the topolthe-Wiscon·
n State University Con!~ with
+0 recon:l. They also woo their only
UW!ga meforthe toochdowntl\atnippedSiout.
Another freshman. Larry Rohr·
wasser of Fra nklin, gained 132 yards
rushlngin%$ attemptll.
Although Rivn Falls turned two
pass intercepti ons into loochdowns
apinst0stlkosh ina22-7victory, the
TII.ilns still pr-esent a formidable
defensive challenge with middle
guard Len Kun:ynske leadlna the
charge.
~n-con ferencepme.
Rlverf-' allsandStevens Polnt, both
Seamans' major concern al the 2-1 in the conference. hope to remain
omer11 Sf'emS to be that his youthfu l wit hin striking dis tance or the
~a rges soon might realiu v.•l\at a
Pioneers in home games Saturda y.
ugh league they 'r e competing in The Fa lcons entertilin Eau Claire,
~- poui blylo&etheirreckk:ssaban- " "hileSie\·ens Point takeson~~.inless
Superior .
.. .,.,e're so young we could lose lo
La Crosse, which whipped Winona
Jybody,"_lheveteran('Oae:hfrels. in a non-lea G ~ game last week. aims
:WI, lhey" rel\anging in there. These lo snap at,.·o-gamtronrerencelosing
ds are so innocent they dOfl 't kno-.o.• slreiik in its llome<:oming game
JYbetln."
againstStout.Whitewaterpla~host
Des pite the youth, the Pioneers do tonalionalpowerNorthnnMichigan
ll'e a healthy blend of yOWlp:~lers mthis,.·eek"snon-ron!erencegame.
ld veterans. t-' reshmcn curit-.f the
Ste\'WS Point"s Jefr Gosa ~· has
'Y against the Blue Devils. Rob caughl mort'touchdov.·n passes C2ll
emens.a Lodi 1\alfback. cilrria.t lti tl\an an\·onc in conference his tory.
nes for 128 yards. iiK'Iuding a T.!:• surpaufng tht old record of 21 by
ord 5eampcr. and also threv.• a 16- Platte\·itle's JUch Smigielski, 1968.W.
lrd option pass to junior Ken Gosa 1\as boosted his career records
okubov.·ski with -12 5«onds lrit in for most p,;ISSCS caught to 18-1 and ya rdspinedonreceptions lo%,397.
90-FM beg ins " Sports line"
Beginnlng on Wednesda y, Oct. 20,
WWSP-f'M will _bring its listeners
something which bas become
somewhat common in many major ·
med ia markets across the country,
bul ne-vet"before heard in thisaru .
The new .program is called "Sportsline," and il will be the firstlisteoer
te~hone call-In show in Ibis are.a
that iscom pletelydevotedtosports.
The show will be aired every Wed-
nesday night besinning at 9:30, and
will run one-halt hour. Sports Director Jim Maht r will host the show.
along with one or two other members
ol the90FM sports department.
rft! '~ :=.c;,~tf~~~~~~~~
severa l cases,wheresports guests
Wilt be invited lo appear on the show.
Anybody wishing to call in and a ir
!heir comnrents In the field or sports
shouldcall 346-2696.
Octobel; t.S, 1n1 Pace 11 Polater
Pickers suffer bogus week
By Rudy Wle,·el, T1m Sullivan, and
MlkeiiiKnnaa
The Superpkhn ,.·ere ahoc:lltd by
up5ets in Weft nve, 1nd a _buneh ol
'•night NFL clubl ,.·ent dOw!! with
us. Weft Five, to be blunt. wu
lnaediblywel.rd!
We were more than allghUy
bduddledoverthetumolrveata. For
example. take the Bu!faki-New
York JN game. The 81111 were
comina: olf a 50-17 win over Kansas
City. It looted like O.J. Slm~ wu
badt In form . The Jets, meanwhile,
had chalked up four 1oues in 1 rOw.
Buffalo wu the obvious choice,
right'!
Wrong. New York beat Buffalo, 17·
14.
Comins up next wu the match
between Detroit and New England.
That one we thought we had In the
proverbial bal. The P1triols had
piled up victories ovtr Miami,
Minnesota. The Redsk.ins scored an
lmpreulve 30 points but
tMChlds33.
unlortunatdya~
All In aU, we stagered iD with 7
winl If the Rams wcm on Monday and
"~~~ COIIfl)let~ly incor:"ect on the
=lx~eo:~ r:-~w;:.~~~~
Haberman and SuUivan slipped tol-2.
Hereareaurcboic:es fortbtslxth
Aod on it wmt an day. The Super
Bowl champion Pitllbut&h Stederl
0:!. ~~~~'!~~~
z:~ F~~-~~· '~ ~
minutes. Then they wen blown out,
JG.O! One of our Jon& lhotl. the Bara,
screwedupanexlrapointandloltto
winby7.
WASIIINGTON OVE R DETRO IT ·
Both of these teams like to use
tricky rake fi~ld-goa l plays,· but
unfortunately for the Uons. they
week in lbe NFL: _
=:dt!~~1:'t,ey~~J:~ ~out.
NEW ENGLAND OVER NEW
V.ORK J ETS- The Mooday Nightet-.
Ia lbil one.tM Jets are in lnluble.
Whalevtt- lhey IC<ft, the PatrioQ will
doubl~. New England by 14.
fol
SEATTLE OVER TAMPA ·BAY •
This ia; the bl& game the world 's been
waiting for. Our roving reporter
Harvey Hirohito thlnklt7 pointa will
betc««<, and lhey 'U a UbeSeatUe's.
CHICAGO OVER LOS ANGELES ·
iJ not a m isprint. Haberman's
system hu the !lams winning easily,
but the NFL iJ good for at least one
upset euh week, and this is It! Bears
winby3.
MIAMI OVER KANSAS CITY • It
wouldn 't bothft' us mtaeb U this game
cancelled or ra ined out ,~
weean't figure out either one of lheH
outfltl. Let'sjustsaywebell~ve lor
hope'! I theDolphlnswlnby~.
SAN FRANCISCO OVER NEW
ORL.EANS · It lsa't olteo lhat we oick
New Orleans towia. la fact, w~·re not
SAN DIEGO OVER HOUSTON ;
The OUtrs depmd toa much on BWy
Johnson's pW'II returns, and the
=to~~lhe~aw~yf::!
Whiteshoes m01t ol the afternoon.
SanDiegowinsbyiO.
·
PIHLADELPHIA AT GREEN BAY
• The Wftkly t.ouup, Wievd and
Sullivan decided the Eagles will
squeak out a win, while Haberm~~n
and Harvey Hirohlto il'llllted It's the
Packers on a last m inute field g01l.
nus
OA KLAND OVER DENVER •
Wa tch out for an aploalon here. lbey
might need two acorebaards to k~
track of the points as the Ralden win,
3>-31.
· Pi ttsburgh, and' oakland. Nnl 11
slouch in the crowd. Meanwhile, the
Uons wwe battered by the non·
contmcling Packen and Wft'e briefly
ldtwithout aCCNi dlontoeollt.
Final K'Cir'e : Detroit 30, New
England tO.
Qr\LLAS OVER ST. LOU IS • It's
about time the Cowboys had to play
50mebody decerlt. If Dallas botMred
to practice this week, they' ll probably
VIKIN GS OVER N EW YORK
GIANTS
The Giants were
mathematically eliminated from
f~{:'!uC:'; :r :;~~r~~
1
Minnesota w!U win thia; by at least ten
poinll.
CLEVELAN.O OVER ATLAI'<o"TA •
The Falcons' running attack II 'about
as dan&erous as Mon&olia'a navy. In
other words, neither one of lhem
eJ:b t. Browns by 6.
pidinatbtlt!now.dlhel'! eersbyl.
BALTIMORE OVER BUFFALO •
game actually could go either
nus
way. Either the Colli will win, or the
Bills wi ll klle. No matter how you
took at thla,lt 'sstill Baltimore by 14.
PITTSBURGII
OVER
CINCJNN'AT1 · 11)t!hometownSteeler
crowd abould go berserk In this
classic: ('(Jn[rontaUon.. We frank.ly
~~ 't;~ ~~~~h wil~e;'den t~
Bengalsbyl7.
There will be an GrP.niutional
meelina for all women wt~hlng to try
out for the 1976-77 UWSP Women's
BasketbaD Team on Thursday, Oct.
~ 1 . U willbebeldat7pmroom 119of
the Physical Education Building.
Women beat NMU
The women's voll eyba ll team
pl.!u'ed five matches this weeke nd
aodup~thei r overall rec:ordto &-2 .
PRESEASON
At :
SKI
SALE!
Starting Oct. 18
.JtKneiiSSLI
DYNAMIC
Winning four out olthe five matclles
at.NorthernM ichiganUniversity,the
Pointers looked great, Coach Moley
said.
" Weare playing better volleyball
every time we get on the court. The
girls a re Improving a nd we no longer
have ai:~~. people who play better than
the Olher Klrls," commented Moley.
Motey a ttribut
the lone lou to
weak ft'I'Vea. The lou came at the
hands ol Westet-n Michigan Univers ity. " In the games against WMU ,
Katby Grotbed: and Wendy Kohrl
probably played the belt they have
allaeason,"aaid M oleyonthe~UC«SS
ofbn·playenevmaftn-thelou.
Beth Warnock, Lila Potelleld lind
Mary Beth WinteKOrn were siiiJI«i
the sport shop
seun-anditwasverya~.~«essful.
Aga instF'erris. PatefiddandWin·
tercom QOt only played welt In their
respective pasltlons 11 aplker and
setter bt!,t played ucellent defense aa
weii, Moleycommtnted.
In the other victories everyone
played well, Moley said. "The Kirb
are beginning to act as one unit which
caused lhe sue«s~aofar. ''
Scores for this weekend's matches
WMU over UWSP 15- 13, II· IS.
15-13: UWSP ovet- UiSC 15-6, 15-13;
UWSP over Grand Va lley State
College 15-10, 12:· tS, 15-13; and UWSP
over Nor!.hern Michigan University
IH, I2·1S, I5-3.
"~~'ef'e :
rsr FLAVORED BRANDY
·~r
'rf!
. Y.l pt.
95¢-
"/j
HAMM'S BEER
'/
case of 24 c:ans
Of>EH EYEAY
NIGHT UNTlL t
.
P ...t.er 'Paie II Oculkr 15,1171
out by Moley as ptaymg well In
the other matches. The Pointers used
11 5- t oHense agains t Lake Superior
State College with Warnock as the
$515
SOUTH POINT
BEER & LIQUOR STORE
UOOCI'Iutdl St.
Ius. 51 Iouth
,
Art• ·Culture
"The Boys in the Band" is not a musical
"The Boys in The Band'' is the
itCOnd thealrial production of the
UWSP season. Written by Mart
Crowley, it is lhe rirst pia)' in which
~'er)'OI'IeiS homosHual.
The central action of "Boys" takP.!'I
place m a New York aputment in
l.be present time. Eight men. ali of
are bomosexual, are gathered
at the apartment ol ooe of them to
celdlratt lhe birthday ot another.
The be&innin& of lhe play Is almost
entirely comedy, with sexual jokes,
inside chatter, and allusion to old
whom
movies and movie ata'rs. But there
arestronghinlsofmiserybeDeathall
ol this gaiety. And with ttJc, uneJI·
peeled arrival of Alan, iln old
··straight" friend of the host ,
e'\'U)'thing begins to fall apart.
The ho&$. Mlc~~l . grow• ~· and
ang ry . his sp1te and sa\•agery
tn•ft"ridingalldeor-ency . Hepr-oposesa
cruelly personal game. and forus h is
guests to play. By the time the p;:~rty
is O\'et" t~ has been a fight . defen·
st"S are in ruins.;md thep.utyendsas
adisaster. Butalthought!K'partyllas
bee n a disaster, one gets the feeling
that the eight birthday celebrators
.,..ill probably meet again at s ome
ot her party. and manage to make do.
Life in the homose.uat 1mrld as
~in t~: pbla ~m~i ~oepar~l~l~~
heterosexuals. There a re jealousies
andverb.al recriminationsandthere
are permanent unions , compa rable to
those ol marriage. as well as inf!Miities and random connections.
just like in the hem-056u.at ...-orld.
AttOrding to student director Bart
Schile...'Jki ,Ste.,•ensPointmaynotbe
ready (or&UCh a taboo subject.
lie feels that "'Boys"" has a pertinent message for present day
society. Basically the message is to
beware of social conditioning as a
basis for s tereoty ping, ror s terotypes
sekSom ...-or.k out. Stereotyping is
dangerousinll! ll (or~solsocl_etyand
even acton themselves are leery of
being vktimiud. In
this particula r
production evidence wu pretent, u
only (ourteen actors audi tioned for
tbenlneroks.
Therolecl dinctor il not easy, and
often times misunderstood. He is the
personwhochoosesthescriptandac, ton. He has fmal decision u to the
stage setting, choice ol t:OStumes and
evmtheligbtlng.
It is tns JOD to
arrange and determine the mood of
each S«nt and guide lhe' actors as
they play it. Bart Schllcwski feels
that dlncting is more of a challenge
than acting. As he viewed it. " ti'K!reis
alitt le bilofthedirectorineveryac·
tor. Unlike tbeactor,thedirectorcan
s[t back and view the finished
product."
''Boys" Isn' t the first finished
product for Hart, A senior from
Marionette, Wisconsin, he has directed several plays. recently working",
on "'Damn Yankees" in Marionetu!
this pilSt s ummer. With plans (or
graduate school. he hopes to secure a
directorialscholarship, thusmake
directing his career .
"The Hoys in the Hand" 15 a unique
production. 1be script coven a lime
period of just two hours, with no
break in the script. 1be cast ronsists
ol nine males. aU ol whom are on
sta11,e at all limes. The characters
and the acton are: Michael, t Greg
LaGault l, Alan U Paul Bll!leln l.
Hank t Dave Lenu. Donald t Da.,•e
Glodows kh ,l.arry. t Mike Dempaey l,
Emory tTim Zimmerm.aMl, Ber·
nard CMike Scotll, and Cowboy
CDavidLamoreuxl .
T ickets for this production are
available at the Theatre- Box OHice
klcated in the Fine Arts bu ilding, on
weekdays f r om II am to o1
pm. The cos t for student ticketa is
Si .OOplus s tudenti.D. andaclivitles
card. The price for the general public
is S%.00. Telep hone rt'SI!rvations ('an
be made.
Performa nces are K heduled for
October 17,UI,III, 20, 21, !2, and 23.
CUr tain lime is 8 pm. There will be
two matinees on October !2 and 23 at
2pm.
Advice for Myoptic Poets
E4Jc.or•s aek ; nr.b col um11 h.Qiustnadias fw aU laod:lvlduals
'-t«nted In publisbial poetry.
My DosSad1H il Me
r~~~at me.
Weromp tocetherandplay.
• Whenitisdoudywearesad.
Whentbesun comeoutmydotsmllesatme.
But I let 10 upld wben we quarrel.
I fed sick.
I really feel sick.
Wby mUityou frown. my friend!
l justwanttobekJv«<.
J'm slck t.be wa y nobody loves me.
ThmmycSocsmilesat me and everythinl
loOK
F or awhile, at least.
Artluu Xav'n' Q.lbble Ill
...-est. HowtYer, lhou&h it il punctuated with ac-ruracy and
precision, the sonnet ilfar from perfect, and illustrates what I
suggest btu is a distw-blna: trend among the av.,IJ.prde ln·
tdJectuallofthecolJe&eset.
" My dot: smiles at me'" nnt disreprdl the facta clllfe. Dogs
do not smile; they merely bare their teeth to allow gases to
eac::ape, u anyone who has t"Ome face to face with a ca nine
latdy, reallus.
'; My dot smiles at me," more importantly, while a type or
lyric cherished by poeta and their mothers IOttUionally dogs! ,
WUitralea a commoa limitation. 1be avenge young writer is
not interested in ldeace nor dogs, nor a rt . The boy is obses.sed
withhimsdl.
"~1 dot smiles at me" i5 not a poem a bout a dot. II b quite
obv10U1ly and ~nuaina:Jy concerned with Arthur X . Quibble
lll andhil~lhtenedleli-Jnterest . Frankly,whocaresabout
=~~~r~~oret.ha n indulge hlssenUmeatatogaln ourln" My dog smiles at me" m~At be im proved by more than
editorial revilion. 1be a u thor mUit.rean-ange hil face, his eyes,
his ea,.,, m Ull at.ndon the obvioUI, the trivial, and the self.
lndulaeat. mLllt attempt to lea rn something worth writln&. TO
SEE. U this Jetms like a plea agai111t self-a pression, to a great
dep'oe It Is. Don' t be utisfied whh shallow insighta about subjects Inher-ently more lntereaUna: to yowwlf than toothen : YOW'
~~or!~~~~w~~~~~~::-:.;.~"f
· Wril.l!beyoadyounelf.
·ro KNOW.
wri~~t~~Jr:':~m~~:f.e;::..~
animals, bwnatll, and other bel np you till.
OCtokr t5,1tt• PIJe II Ptii!IWr
r----:-.,..----;-;;--m-o-g-=-ic_c_e--;l;-lo--1 D~o .p lays ''American Fables"
~~~
thmgsrightoutofexilte~:·Tt~ese
partu:ualr program beg:ln
...,·ith Bach"s ThirrlSonaJ.a inC mlnw.
!lis ca reful e:cK"Ution and thorough
s tybstk: understanding rec~a ted the
spirit of the Baroque and P'"e the
~uste a life-hke quality. The driving
· i'er..-e ol the Bartok's tiNt ''Rhapsody" became clea rly t\' tde:nt in the
tofroru of Mr. Harrell and his ex·
traoniinary accompanist. Meg Bach-mal\ VIs.
nnd si" other vlgneiiC!I make up the
program for the evening.
~orman OiC'\J; Is;~ writt:r, actor,
.:md director. !lis ,..~rc~ Sandra is an
t~cromplished actrtu. lkllied in New
York, they ha,·C! bt.oen perlcwming for
a dou·n
ltwasallthere: the~ble, the
Hy Kent Petzold
.
It was Lynn· HarreJJand his Mag1c
'Cello in Michelsen Hall WedMSday
evenins. September 2:\t . The
proclaimed 'cellist presented a
slngubr and profound recita l whkh
couid hardly be equ~~Ued by any
touring artist in the United States
t« hnique, the intonation. and the
depth of understanding. AU this , plus
a relentless lr.ind of t~r , loving
emotion. commingled 1odtb the music
of Brahms F majoc Sonata to crea te
an int ensely moving rendition which
transcended ordinary musicianship
tothelevelloliecall''a rtistry.''
·
Schubert's "Arpeggione" sonata
and Chopin 's " Introduction and
Polonaise Brillante" concluded the
printed program. The ability ol Meg
Bachman Vas contributed greatly to
music. Her
dramatic presentation,
t-'ables. The dramatic
team of Norman and Sandra Di41t:r.
will perform Amerlun 1-'ablet this
TUesday t\'ening, Oct. 19, at 7:30pm
at the Peace Campus Center.
Among the slr.etchft to be presented
is ' 'Tilly l'Utwieler's Silly Trip to the
f:,o;:·;·:::.ri::: i~Yea~~~~~~';n~~~
abou t childish things. and JP"OW!Og
up, and seeing through a glass
da rlr.ly; abou t raith, hope, and IO\·e...,-hich isstlllthegte~~~testofthese."
"Sonorthebeach." v.•as described by
Dietot"as" A vai.XIevillcfableabout the
American ll('nchant for paving and
improvemtflt·tbrough-technologyan d
about how we sometimes impro1•c
The,- talk to It!
n..,-chHrltl
The,- roar with It!
The,- explode with It!
The,- love It!
B111T 11EY110U1S
£.ALBERT
E'.DiiintR,mco.AD
PROGRAM BANQUET ROOM
t :30 a t:30
(Q-
-
a.
$1.00
Coming Next Thursday & Friday.
BROOK'S COMEDY "THE TWELVE CHAIRS"
By Bob Kra l1pp
The St, PaUl"s Cha mber Orches tra
g~l\'e a perlormanc:e at the Quandt
Gym on October 5. It was the third
prese11t.:ltlon In the Arts and L«tures
series.
Themuaiciansintheorthestrahad
been hesitant and a little unhappy
about playlnlt In the gym, but they
h.ave already ptf'formed In fattoriel
and large airplane hangars . A much
flnersoundwouldtu.vebeenachie,·ed
in Michelsen Hall, but the orchestra's
musical worth Wa.s proved in the ae·
cousllcal wasteland of Quandt Gym.
The lln~t hiU olthe procram eomprised or music by three American
CGmpclM'fl. Charles Iva· Symphony
No, l waa nn~t and IU be&inning was
marred by a n lndedslvenesa In
muaical phraalnl and ensemble
playingingcneral.llcouldn' thave
been a Jaclr. of preparation on their
part although It Is poaible that they
had had no rehearsal to test the
response ol the gym. This flaw was
YOU CAN STICK IT IN THE
CHANCELLOR'S
lO:pm
mon.18th
having
made
ches. :md in C'OII\'ention ~nten from
coasttocoast.
While thl!:ir carftr h.u gone largely
unnoti«d by the mass mt'dia , they
did surface briefly one year when
they opened Theater at Noon, a tun·
cheon theater series at Saint Peter's
Gale in New York's East Side ofri«
diltrict. The New York Timn gave
them a very favorabl e rev tew.
Norman and Sandra have rclean'<i
a record album, 'hndem, which con·
talns some or thei r best known
material r««ded during live performa!K'es. In addition, Norman 's
plays have been widely published
and even more widely performed
notablyintheUnlledStates,CanatJa ,
England. Germany, and Austr.'llia.
He has also published lloliO bookl ol
plays. Fabln & \'audrvllles & Pla ys
and 111r U lr Guard and the- i\ltr·
maid.
~t ....·een lOUr$, Norman and San·
dralive in an old ke cream parlor
next door to the village por;t offtH in
the tinv hamlet of Orient. New York, ,
which is cl01e to lM ocean, on the
eas t~t i pofl...ong is land .
Norman :~nd Sandra Dietot's
,\mtrkan f-'a bles isbeingspot\501'ed
locally by the University Chrillian
Ministry and the f-' rame Mtmorlal
Uni tedl'rt'Sb)·terianChurcn.
Fine performance, bod occoustics
STAARIN Q
FRIDAY
l=.n~letsco~~t'N~~';i
Dlet:~:' a
THE.AUDIENCES
DON'T
JUST SEE IT-
OCTOBER 15
B!SteveEd.ln.(loa
Aserinofhumorous,saUrkal.and.
thought -provoking 1lr.etchet a~ t
•\mrrlun
Longest Yard
years,
numerous nationwide tours. TIK-y
h:n·e pla)'ed hund«ds ol Norman's
unique short drama pie!C1!5 on c:ollegc
and unh·ersity c• mpuses, in chur-
EAR
D OR BAD. ON TWo-WAY
90fm
wwsp
graduaJ\yrcpairedthroughtherest
of the piece and the las t movement
\
wasve-ry ..... ellplnyed.
The rollowing pieces ..... ere by two of
lvt:'l"musicaldiseipla.whotQMether,
gaveanabbrevlafedhistoryoltheflr,
r:o:n"a:~r~~~~~u:.~~~r:.
" Libc" by Carl Ruula wa» from
a longerpiececa lled"MenandMoun·
t.ains" and wu probably the most
dem.andiOJ piece ol mutlc. In com·
~rison,
the nthe r piece by
Wallingford Rlegge-r, was quite easy
to liattfl tn, tbou&h there were
:.~nu that ¥nitely at~tched the
' II was intet"atiOJ that the flnt hair
of the concert wu more dlrfieuit to
listtfl to than the leeond half. It il
usually the othe-r way around.
Havlna the more familia r pieces by
Bach aod Vivaldi in the later part of
the Concfft permi tted them I d]f.
rertflt sort olappreclaUon from wh.at
they a reuaually allowed.
.
Antonio Vivaidi's "Summe-r" from
the Four Sea~~qn~ could not eaally
have been pbyed bette r. The aound
and dramatic eve rgy generated
P~f,~:::=r:.::.:ee w~i~~;.
cu redthreeyeatllago. Bach'a " IJran·
ndenbufJ Concerto No. I " was
simila rly well played ; the solo
prtRntatton was beautifully relaxed
andunrorc:ed. •
The St. Paul Chamber Orchestra
wa.s one ollhe finest tltOUI» to have
played here in severa l· years. The
audrence. though amoll. wu
generally recept ive l whil~ it Is true
that they often didn' t realiu when to •
applaudl and appreciative ol the
mUIIrianahip.'
.
q]
••• 'QEJ(l] '808~
8yT-Pa..U
"-'~ in VA reculations require that a veteran or
elJ&Ible
t's Gl BiD paymet~ts be terminloted where a
abadeat fa to meet lhelebool'aJt.ndardl olpc'OII"eel. lbe VA
will l"ffqUire COWIIdiaa by a VA ~in& PIYcbokJcisl before
paymeatloiG.I.BIUarecoaliftued.
-~wi5;E:Ube~w=~;~~~
~ ; (21
tc:boolarterthe
il
; U) withdraws completely from
Wftkoldusea; 141 r«ftvesnopusin&
pete& for a tenn I.e. receive~ all F 's, W's aod or WF'a ReluJtl
olthe COUDidin&seu.Kin will determine wbetbet' or DOt veteran
or elllible dependent will be able to continue llllder the Gt BIU in
lheirCUM'ftlteduciUonornot.
a
era~~~~ ~:Si~J::~~=~
:=:=~r::,=.=:t~:::.:r~
teDcfia&belorethetermwufl!leranddldDOt&o thnJu&btbefor·
maJ wlthdra-.1 proc«<ure. In thil cue. the Kbool must determ.me thelutdlteolpunw.t.
UDdenWxl tbe subjects or perhas- the atudtnt atoppecl at-
.The school detennmes the last date ol pursuit in a numbe!' o1
ways: I I I lut activity as rtfl«ted in the instruclon l'K'Or'dl·
C2J lut pa peruubmitted; CSI lut examination compJdtd; c41
a stuclel)ts reasonable statemmt ollast date of attendance.
u it is determiD«I lhlt the s tudent t toppfd atttndina: before
tbe end of the term, he must refund to the VA any money be
rectived f« eduation beyond the date ollast punuiL
A common QUestion uktd by vettrlnl wbo hive ttrminated
lbeirscbooUnc ii " Wb.t dol do with lhil VA check I recd~af­
tft' I dropped out alacbool'! Answtr: lmmedilt~y return it to
the Dtarsl YAolnceaDd &UbmitaleUtrtotbe VA with !he died:
=~~~~r:,~re~ret~~.(C;.~~~=::a:
ol'f.c:Uilll. If you choo&e lo wait until the school or VA
rep~
~u;.;~~=!:.~~~>:~~:;;;:'en~ymd
NeJ:t week: How anoverp.)'JMnt isc:ru.ted.
boney when you c:ome bome. And you never ao bact·paddnc or
aw~ country lkiiDC so you don't need llaht, hlp enerv food , or
freae drifJd &oodiea to take alona. And you don't have a poJI(Om
popper oc tbe win&.
Whether you Uveonc;a mpusorolr, settle here or elsewhere, we
otrer lood food, low pnct'S, a~ nk:e foDrdn !be DeW buUdin& we
hope lo off~ more non eatable serv\«!11, and you u n help us get
lnthelhlllpyouwantandneecl.
Come on down to 1111 EUII Street a nd look around , make
suggestlom, meet the folk . Come to the Benefit, 7: 30, O<:tobu
2111, at the Program Banquet Room , Universi ty Center and hear
thefUahtat HomeandJau Oancebancll ... try the!OOfl, have a
beer,andmeetthefolk.
C.ILIIBIB '' E·IIITS
fBI.
SIT.
SUI. ·MGI.
Octobn'U
Octobtrll
Homecoming Games Begin 3 pm
tAilenCenterFieldl
Woman Tennis, Green Bay, 4 pm
Ull
Women Field Hodtey, LaCrosse,
3:30pm !H I
UABF'ilm : THE LONGEST YARD,
6:30 & 9:30 pm t Prog. Banq. Rin .•
Univ.Centetl
·
Alumni Open House,B-11 pm tMaln
Lounge. University Centerl
UA B CH: Pat Houlihan, ~It pm
! Coffeehouse, Unlvtnity Centerl
TUI.
October It
International Club Fa m ily Cet·
Together, <t pm !University Ca.ter)
UAB Course : Co m edy in
Uteralure, 7.. pm 1327 CCI
UAB Course: Leadership, 7·9 pm
!Green Rm. , UniyersityCen terl
UAB Course: Cera mics, 7· 10pm
t Arts&Crafts Rm .. University I
Univ. Film Soc. Movie: THE
PRODUCERS, 7 & 9: 15 pm CProg.
Banq. Rm ., Univ. Center I
Univ. Theatre: TJiE BOYS IN THE
BAND, I pm !Studio T., Fine Arts
Bldg. I
UAB CH: Variety Show, 9-1 1 pm
!Coffeehouse, UnlvenityCenterl 1
Women Field Hoekey, Milwaukee,
RiverFalls , !Oam t HI
Aluritni Homecoming Colree &
Rolls , S:JG.IO: JO am !Concourse,
Univ. Centerl
Alumni Homecoming Brunch, 11
am-I :30 pm !University Center I
Homecoming Parade, 9:30am
Football, Superior t Homecominl l,
2pmtHJ
Alumni Dinner & Dance-Dinner 7
pm-Daoee9pm t Holoday IM I
UAB CH: PAT HOUUHAN, 9-11
pm tCofeehouse, University Center I
Octobtrll
Fac. Recital , C. Knell, Mezzo.M.
Keller, Piano, ~ pm !MIChelsen
Hall, Fine Arts Bldg.)
Univ. Film Soc. Movie: 7&9:t5pm
!Wisconsin Rm., University Center l
Unlv. Thealre: THE BOYS IN THE
BAND, 8 pm (Studio 'Ibeatre, Fine
Arts Bldg.)
-WIB.. DUB.
..........
Women Field Hockey. Oshkosh tT l
Student Recital , 4 pm ! Michelsen
.
Haii, FineArtsBktg.l
Unlv. Film Soc. Movie, THE
PRODUCERS, 7 & 9: 15pm tProg_
Banq. Rm., Univ. Centerl
Unlv. Theatre: THE BOYS IN THE
BAND, I pm !Studio T., Fine Arts
Bldg. I
NOW
OPEN
October:U
UAB Film : THE TWELVE
CHAIRS, 6:30 & 9:30pm !Wis. Rm .,
UnlversilyCenter J
•
UAB Course: Birth Control, 6 :30-8
pm I Green Rm ., University Center I
UAB Course, Ceramics, 7-10 pm
tArts & Cra (ls Rm., University Cen-
""
Housing Ak-ohol Symposium, 7:309:30pm I Wright Lounge, University
Center I
Univ. Theatre: THE BOYS IN THE
BAND, I pm !Studio T .. Fine Arts
Bldf:. J
.
RHCCH: DAVE PARKER, ~ II pm
tDebotCenterl
Oetober 11
Fr. Football, 5:30pm Oshkosh IHI
UAB Course : Conte m porary
Womtn'slsaues, 7·9 pm !Green Rm .,
University Center)
Univ. Film Soc. Movie: 7&9: 15pm
tWis. Rm ., University Centerl
UAB AV: Monday Ni&ht Football,
&- II pm !Coffeehouse, University
Center I
Univ. Theatre: THE BOYS IN THE
BAND, I pm !Studio Theat~. Fine
ArtaBldg.l
FBI._
October t2
Women Swlmm\nJ, Rive r Falls,
6:30pmtHI
Women Tennis, W:WIAC Cham.
t LICrouel
UAB Film : T HE TWELVE
CHAIRS , 6:30 & 9:30 pm ! Wis. Rm .,
University Center I
Unlv. Theatre: THE BOYS IN THE
BAND, I prn !Studio T., University
Cen ter )
Vacancies on -UCPB
(THE UNIVERSITY CENTER
POLICY BOARD)
APPLICATIONS ARE NOW BEING
ACCEPTED FOR:
A
SEMI-WAITED
SOUP AND
SANDWICH
KITCHEN
SERVING YOU FROM 11:15·1:15
MONDAY THRU _FRIDAY
AT
1-"on-campus representative
3-off-campus representatives
The UCPB works c!Qsely with the
University Centers' policies, budget
and programs. Also co-curricular
activities and services. Interested
students should pick up. applica·
lions at •he University Center In·
formation Desk. Return applications
to Info. Desk no later than Wednes·
day, Oct. 20,-1!H6.
r-1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -......
.I
FREE STUDENT CLASSIFIED$
I
I
I
I
'"\
ANNOUNCEMENTS
LOST
FOR SALE
FOR SALE KOWA-sill 2¥.'' squa~
SLR cam~ : 8Smm·2.81ens; pffl'ect
~- ~ new, asking 1:210. 341·5-U2
5
Bright orange stocking
Nit. 3 ,...edt&
ago. Has much sentiment.! Yah,ae.
Pleaseca11John34t-2S59.
Pan fon:ed space Mater, like new,
Automatic thennolt.tt, cau Pat, Stt·
'"'·
'14 Jlod&e van. Run1 wdl but needs
brake shoes. Best offer call Pat, 3~1-
Masters Comp. Eum· Ed. Sat. No¥.
2:0,1:30-t2:30 Rm. 3JOCOPS. R~ter
....· lth Dianne In rm. 402 COPS or c.all
Ex. 4400. Rqistntion deadline is F'ri.
Oc:t.2t.
Phil050phy Club mc:etina Oc:t. 11. I
pm. Marquette Rm. UC. Discussion
on Carter, Rell&ion. and lhe Presiden-
WANTED
1 ~n~le for house nut Kmt:Sitr. 11%4
college ave. 2 blocb from camp..-.
cy: Howwe lldotheymlx!
caii:M4-7462.
7462.
Help!!! Need ride to East Coul for
A ~ir ol 8S 41 car steno spuken
wilh complt'te hook-l.lp. Brand-new
$t0 oow$5Jeff, nn. ll3.ELS119.
Christmas vacation. Will help pay for
p.sanddrlvifl&. Contact Don., ex. 3H3
GIVING AWAY a QuasarT.V., Cr.ala
cassette recon5ef" and m<re in the
Tidtttl fOC' this SUnday's Puller
tickets from Auociatlon ol Bulinesa
and Economic 51\ldents or all Jim E .
........
-
Buslnesa Benefit Rafne-50 cent
Came.Octobef" t7. Debbie,341.65fil .
Caramel Apple Sale spoNOI"ftl by the
Dietetics Club durin&
HomKOmin&: Game.
the
•
at~~orChriaat341-4475.
Babysitter-male or female, T-F!I:.S..
tt:OOam. SI·hr .. :Jblksfrompmpus.
Lesbi.an Tuk fon:oe meetin& Tues.,
~-~~k~:~~.e!!.;..~~~:
Oc:t. I!Kh Van Muir Rm. UC at 6:JO.
aell.344-4882altert.
Tlres, b...kes and mufrltr a ll
Sl700. Randy, Rm.l22. E.x. 3058.
Takara tD-5pHd bicycle'. sun-tour
lulndlebarshilLerS. Hardly\IM'd. lla5
new, now $100. Must K ll. Steve, :J4.6·
Still need a room! Large room !or 1
&irlnNr campus. Sl25 !or rest ol
semesterorne&otlable. Caii344·92S3
Medic.al TechnoioRY study sessions
'71 Volkswagon good cond. saso must
!912.
or341·524J.
new.
Organiut1on of a Gay mtn's JIOUp
will be d1sc:ussed. All interested mm
a~ urged to attend.
will be hekt Mondays at 8:30 In the
VanHise Rm. of the UC.
TOM KAT. SHOP
ALLEY KAT SHOP
. ENTIRE STOCK OF MEN'S
FALL AND WINTER
ENTIRE STOCK OF LONG SLEEVE
LEVI'S, WRANGLER'S,
VICE ROY'S & FADED
GLORY PRE-WASHED
JEANS
REDUCED
WESTERN SHIRTS
25°/o OFF
COATS & JACKETS
20% OFF ..~,
SIZES 38-46
'
SIZES S-M-L-XL
20% OFF
· ENTIRE STOCK OF
UN-WASHED
REDUCED
20°/o OFF
ALL GUYS
· LEVI'S
ENTIRE STOCK
OF
PRE-WASHED JEANS
25°/o OFF SWEATERSREDUCED .
STYLES AND ALL
SIZE~
AVAILABLE
SIZES S-M-L-XL
UN-WASHED
LEVI JEANS
.REDUCED. 20o/o
,
20% OFF
VESTS, CARDIGANS, PULLOVERS,
TURTLES OR COWL·NECKS
LIVE RADIO BROADCASTS 10:00 A.M.- 12:00 P.M .
ON WSPT SATURDAY , OCT. 16th
LISTEN FOR THE FREE GIFTS
TO BE GIVEN AWAY
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