Pe_ople, . Ne ws,

advertisement
.Ne.ws,
Critics probe
assassinations
Arts,
Art. classes
expose'
Pe_ople, Places,
PlcTJetarium ·
series takes off
Sports,
Pointers trounce
Pioneers
November 19, 1976
OH-Campus 15'
Letter•
r:~~~~~~
atralf!d by rl!liiduce hall ~
andsome~flcultyaboutlh,
abuse of alcohol on this cam~
11\ank you very much, .
BiliHet~Jeto, M . D .
UeaiUISt-ntk.-
l-It promoted
ToThe l'olnter,
I.Mt yeer at dill time, Student Govemmeal Md puMd 11
• reiOiutioalaad . . . . . . ftft.tt..NDaticntoucbed.IUCb
areal . . tbt Dilcipllaary Code, f.aaltJ ft&ludon. Sap foodl,
the -pendao ot . . S*elil, aDd Studeat GcrlwftnM!nl coo.
atitutiooal c:baai1a II lbaUid aJ1o bt Dilled U.t U. ftnt
rwoludon . . datedOctaber 11
-
Ulllort.ateiJ, dill ,..... Slals.t ~ .wodltiaa
tSGA) CUDOl boMt ol UmDar ~,_fat, aNy
O...~Mwe.,...-..ed... wudefeatedandanocber
.
:e::-==r=+~~-=-=~.
.W.IedbllfawG'~IDOdln
(IDIMriJ)~Uoa·blcb
-
..
.,.. ............. ..,Caopsapp:111a'L,.._tbt..._SGA'ftlrt
on recwd f• tb* ~ ot a Ubaal. ~w
fader for Slacks
Tothe t•ointl'1'
I, IlK' one, have hadniOUJh h~arlng
about the frustrat ing plig.ht of the
black studen ts on ~ampus . As far as
l ' m~theyha,·eiteasil'1'
thantheaveragewhitestudcnt.
ldoubt if thcrea reSOblackson this
eampus, yet they haft their own
sptcialcounstlllf'dolll·n atllouslng,
their own student organ.iulion. !the
BSC, finuc«< from student funds l,
andtheirOYo·nnewspa per column in
the Pointer. Many of them are ac·
tUilllyasktd to come toschool htre
withtheinducementof special finan·
cialaid funds rtlft'vtdonlyf.w the m.
l am sic\andttredolhearingabout
the polK' disc rim ination against.
blacks. AJ far 1s their " black" die·
tionarylsco~rned.all l sayisgood
luck to u~ing ltln the businl'SS voorld.
lftheyv.•antto staylnthe gheuo,then
I'm sure the1r ~lack slang dictionary
willbeof use.
P.K.
I Namev.lthht'ldupoe~re-q~l l
Drlnklnfl chanf1•
Tbln . . . . &o . . . . . . . .
.,CIIflll*. .... ,...
=~·~.::.-:.=.."':':.:
.aata~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .
·='="-=.:..:.;...:..-:--·
DtwlnltJ ' * I lit
TothePolnltr
This lttltr' is intended lo indicate a
changewhichhasbeenobservedcon·
ttming the use of alcohol by the
1tudent body at UWSP, In the put
lhrftyearstherehasbeena steady
decrNselntlleabuseof alcoholuobserved by 1 dtcreued incidence of
~=~:ndr~rie:!fou::,:!:
abusive behavior at home football
games. Thisi ndlca testo me lhatthe
student body is using alcohol In 1
more mature and controlled manner
!::: ~ ~~tud:t ~
~~~~~e~~=ia
!\ave the I·R option. Locally. furO.
11
information will be available a
algna turea will be solicited on cat
pus. Join the people effott th.:lt h
alreadysucceedf!dln Zlother suln
StevenWat.Jon
Shocklnfl library hours
ToUiePolnter, •
The Idea ol not bdng guaranttrd
place toatudy late nlghta and ,.·ed:e
just shoe~ me. I thh*
scho
has become very Mglectful toU
student and has 1.-t \llludemic pt
spectlve. The policy ol cloliin4 ll
t us
~~·z:~~:ro·~ ~i:~ry."~~
has the adminis trat ion clone. make
deal with the bar ownert of II
Square?
This last WH:k 1 had important lfS
and p~~pen due along with .m:~r
other 1tudents. Being a1 the' bbrat
wu clpHd Saturday nlg.ht. I toed.
study a t the Union. But no• ..-e1
going to haft a danee In lhe BanQU
:=" ~~t:~: ~o!~!':n~
fer~lftheywerecJoscd."A
:~~~h110g~~n:.;·~v;~.t~
physlcsand~akul\11.
I btt I! someone wOWd t.ke a su
:.e:·
r: c::~ t~:t'::~:~
library hcurJ extended.
dtmonstrated ability to control the
useofalcohoi. Withrareexceptlons,'
alcoholabule\a diaappearina I ·
maqlheatudenllat UWSP.
For the rare student who does
abuse alcohol, one of the moat tf·
leetift methoda to help them learn
howtocontrotlheuseofthatdrug\a
fllf' their fMenda to C'llmmunk.ate
about the undesirable actkq oi
behaviors they exhibited while under
tile influmce 0( the dnla. Thla ~-
::a!e::::.~01'1!~.;':.1!~:
foUowiaa day when the student has
S&en•Grdl
=~:ns~is~t::
PoUI&a- PaJeZ Novemllult,lt"'l
Dldthere«ntgeiM!raldectloap
you the fH:Iing your vote and'*
didn'tc:GUnt'! Nowyoubneac~~aAr
to do somethinl lhat can and wi
make the people ol Wisconsin !w-ar
inMadiaon. lt'scall«<the lnitialll't
Referendum Law.
Brieny, the Initiative· Hefermb
Law would amend the state co
J titu tkln to give ~lliuns the ri&ht 1
crea te, amend.orrepeallalfi'S OOtk
state and local levels. Pmently. U
JIO"'·ertomakestatela iii'SotllfOI*
amendments to the const1tutiao
vestf!dexchs.sivelylnthe Senatear
Assembly. Currtt~tly, there Is •
limited I·R law·making authonty :
the city level.
. The Wiscons in Cltlunl fllf' Lf&
Reform ls currently condurtinc
drive to coiled 500,000 signal ur~
m:n\s~~~~::::~~~~~t:..!~
::e:x.!..~~:r:it.'a·:
~~-~·~a~~ta~!n~r!
"planned IOdal eventt" w01.11d
Itt back tothebulineu oleduclt\cl
F,.._LW....._of•JGPA.
,_,-:r!"-·
TedteP.&er,
-..._
I read with Interest Suuame
=·~= l deali.witb
IcansympathhewlthMI. Moore.
A fewmOI'Ithiaao l waspasaedover
forajobthattheempktyerloklmef'\
was "the moll QUIIified candidate
for" becaUM ol my lf!Ddtr. Tbe
irraUonality or it allsurla«d apin
two weeks a&o when 1 was not aran·
ted a n inlet"'iewwltha folk singer
becaUM 1M prtfernd to talk only witb ftmalel. Pretty inune, isn't it'!
My a raument with Ms. Moore is
not 10 much the sub&tanc:e of her
~Ioria! but tbe situation from wbleh
11 aroR. In my two most ~t conf r o nl.ations
wit h
seK ual
discrimination I was forced to
rationalke. The job must not have
~ur had miJCh purpoM If they
didn t want the moll qualifkd ca~
~tertpf'dlessof&mder. The folk
Sln&ermusthlvea hln&-upClwoukt
ha ve rdused to enjoy her music
anymore if only 1CGUJd).
I sua&nt that Ms. Moore'ssituatioo
had not yet met the raUonaliutioa
The auertioa' ln the 1tude:nt hlndbol* that " rnkttnt hall llvin& Is an
lntecnJanddynarnlcpartoltbe total
ed uc ationa l proara m " Is of
questlq na blf' empirical value.
Rathel', this claim appears. to be a
weak a ttempt to rationalize Ito tbe
stude!lll his mandatory mtdent'e in
the balls.
Quite simply, the dorms need to be
filled to PlY for their operation and
oricinal ~t .
It, lherd'ore, appciif1i that the
presen~ policy fosters dlscrim lnatl~ _
by foran& freshman and sophomores
to assume the majority of the
a forementioned ~ts. The (f'ftdom
~\!~~~~~~hous~~~ ~~~
~u!endi~~:.::=~::~'-~
der ~ ~ I Protection provtsion
a rebeinavM>lated.
· 1, ther'dore. urae that individuals
In poe.IUons empowered to Initiate a
chlnae in lhis polky ~m1ne and
perhapsreviseiltotheutisfactionol
tbe most affec ted party-thestudenL
JGe11 S I.Ir.an
i ....
.,-.·~
•
~.
...:
~.:~U:~r~:~
about u.. crv ..,...U.Uoa 1 woWd
cruUy appreciate the omialon of
a ny extra drawlnp.
Ob•-eM•d
~e-eral MaaaJer
~At ten Polky
•
1. Letters should not aceed a 250
worct.._mallimum. Lonaer letters
allowedatedltpr'tdlscretlon.
t. Letters are to be signed u
evidence of &ood faith. Name
w~~~dj~=~y.
lhe~~~:~c~~~~
113
COf'rnpondence to Pointer,
Gesdi,UWSP,SteveilsPolnt.
NOTICE
There will not be another INue of
the P:Dintn until Decmlber 10th due
to Thankl&ivena sc~lin&.
:f~~or~~~~m~~~i:-~~~~=~
editorial. The 111e of Milton was
touc:hin& and n.tremdy noble and aU,
but I don't think It served any useful
purpole. The ouly thin& I rud from
the edllorial is tha t campus leaden
Correcffons
Series 9, Vol. 20,
-::.
:,~ri .~~==!I :lkl!;.
thinpoverrationally.
I'd also like to make a few oUier
comments as kin& as tbe IPIC'e Is
iiVIilable. Barb Pus<'hel deserves
praise as an environmentalist and
writer of consMSerable meriL . Yca~r
environmental sec:tkln would be
almos t neglect.able without her of.
ferinp. The araphic on the former
akdlo!M: in your 1port1 section was
dtildisb and ino;cusable.
Your
recent cut oo studenrs poelly by
Dave Engel was n.tremely insensitive. lfyou chole topubllsbu~
solicited poetry you must Jive with
your choice. Mr. En&d. as 1.11 !&.'
structor·or crutive writinc. appears
to be as dedicated to his profession as
the orderlies in OH t·~ Over lbe
c-.....·, Nes t. OtMrwise ywr paper
is su~rbboth for radin&and forkindlin&.
.ubertStandl
No. 12
A.s~ Genera l Man~~er ol Campus
Tdevision I would like to thank the
Pointer fr. the feature story done on
our orga nization In the November 12
blue, However. there was some i~
formation presented in that artie~
whkh wu not completely accurate
iind 1 would like to clarify these points.
First of a U the use of productioo
facliitMs is not unde.' the can~ .of
tbe Communil»tkln Dept. but rather
Universi ty Tele-Communln tlons
tfonnerly University Broadc:astln&l.
UTC c«~ttols all TV cabl«<ltln&
from tbe campus and also IUpplies
technical usistanH and equipmen t
fr. us. CTV lim ply usa thdr
fadljtles to do CTV programmlnJ..
~=or::!~~~rai~~~
Martdafory dorms
TatllePoiater,
ModificaUon, or abolition of the
Systvn requirinl dor·
mitory residence by first and second
yea r students is ion& overdue. The
U ni~ity
practkeisl~llydiscriminatory.
Jo'urther, iD myop!Aion .• tberestric·
.
~n~:ar:: ·:~
dnelopment ol the Individual. The
halll were funded durin& a period of
rapidly r lsina enropment. Un·
fortunately. the prell!:ftt day situation
does not reOtd the anUdpated
housinaoeedsoly~npast .
lt is distre:uiDCto Moe tNitlftel'lt
decisionl~ln&P"otectklnof
civUiiberttelhavenotbet'na~k<lto
students witb respect fr. freedom of
choice. The teductioa of tbe age or
majority,throuJbwhldtltudeolsare
atso adults. can be iDI.erpret«<u yet
~notm"mandate forlhec:baftRe.
assportin&eventsor&peciall«tures.
The Communication Dept. furnishes
the &rade and credit for the crv ac·
tivlty.
')he Executive Committee is chosen
by the executive committee of the
previous )!ear not by othe1' 1tudenls in
the orpniutioa. however, anyone
from the organiution may tpply lor
a p!»ilion. Peopte on the executive
staff do not recrive three credits but
believe me. we a ll wish we could. M
Genet'al Mana&ft' I receive two
credils, lherestorlheer.ec:utivestarf
receive only one. · Aside from
:r~~=n:~:;~~~~
J'UISTt:R STAn'
t:..II._,MIU)' DDwd
K1~thiHI M•••l"" Rlndy La11. .
\
~~~~~:!' ut--cllldy K.lvlmln,
Ofrk~ M ..ai""Birl>
..r..
Jem-
tM't&. c..-.t..~-w-L)'IUI Robldr.
~=u:'~.Jtm Tmuta, a.t. GeorJe
PNtk' t:.ll&.w-Bob Ham
=
::;:.-:.::=.l:'::J,.Iclly BUtlnp
,\rUt:.lker-lleel.otiiJC'hull
Edlt..-.Debonh Klatt. Debbie M.1
Grapa.lnt~lmWarren
,,.,._. t:.dlar· MIII Kramar
Wrltrr..&.le Abnhlm , Terrdl don·
Mil , Tam Dlckma11. swan Eric~.
S.rah (;reenweU , RallntY Crutnllor,
Ken 1tobbln1. Mary J lrllu. Dawn
Kaulman. Bob Kn lapp, Stne Mtmel.
Jot Orella. Jtn1 ()weal, Olff Plrktr,
Kltft PeuwaW.I..o&a Pfftl. Barb PuKMl.
J'tteSc:bllf!. JaneSc:h\lmlehtr, Jim
Sle1Jml n. Scali Slmpltlnl. Ell yn
Sjoml.n. Jill Unveru11. Joan VIII·
Mort ie. t:;lu;.Walllpier. Kay Jillrnit
t•r.,...rt .... Allcla
Sue Hill.
oow-.
Klffll t.eeoqu.. Ralph Lotltler. Carol
~~:hlte.~ S5-
Production which encompasses a
la raerarea.
I'IMUVI,wn·PhU Netr, Bob VIdal
Tbe 1~ wtlic:b are taped by CTV
are played blck by UTC to the
Stevens Point area a nd microwaved
to Wausau at the 11111e time. Tbe rest
or the information In the artie~ it
corr«t ljutl still have One more com·
ment. l wuverydisappointedatlhe
jud&mftll ol tbe P ...&er when I s.aw
Lorb«k. Phil S.lldm. Carrie Wolvin
!ra~~'tor~,!.un~n!!:1~u.eto~
with blm. l really feel tbd was in poor
tasteudolhemtolmystaff and
Gnpllk..Marlt
La._. Wlrion .sm.
, •• • •lr....JUrie......_. Mictlld
,\d~ .....·Dan
liauliha11
~
~
U.A.B. PERFORMING ARTS .
PRESENTS
II Olr !OWl •••
... we're howl
._::;,l AN EVENING OF JAZZ
AT
"'
THE
CL 8
featuring: THE UNCALLED FOUR
rn"'
~.. lto,_ IOCMI
St...... ,""""',,.•Cirll~
$a"20SCM.oll....a. ......
10Ufi'_..LtlllhuC..d. ..
PLUS THREE
COMEIMt-IOW '!"
SAT., NOV. 10 9 P.M.-MIDNIGHT
p
IN THE UC COFFEEHOUSE .
10.. 0fl,
UGUUII
II'IIUCl
5 1 . OO ~sruoeNrs
•
One
Advanced tickets on sale at UC Info desk. For
resanatlons call 346-4242 .
MONDAY, NOV. 22
9:00P.M.
PROGRAM BANQUET ROOM
·MOUI
"11111/ITIO/l/OG_"
~CASH BAR; .FREE
~ HORS D'OEUVRES
"MY LITTLE
·CHICKADEE"
1'0"11.01',
IIIOIJI.Aill
l'tiiCI
SAMPLE ONLY
51.50-NON· STUDENTS
lEMI.fa1MAI. DI!BS: PUAll. NO BLUE lAMS.
•
STUDENT·FACULTY DISCOUNT
ThePI'ofes5oiONIIOrvOeaMt ®
1 Hour Serv ice Dally , 9 a .m. to 3 p.m .
Open Monday Lll(u S. l urct.y 7 l.m.- 6 p.m.
.
2S7 DIVISION
8
Experts examine failures of
~~!an~~icAmeribnJn-
The followitll
day Sl'e three
stituUons was the tilJe of a nat~!
symposium on the asussinaUons ol
Preiclent John F. Kennedy and Dr.
sessions on the King murctrt- itself by
invnliptor Harokt Weis!M!rg and h ~
attorney James Lesar . The two
Martin Luther-King Jr. held at UWSP
revealed their long efrorts to obtoin
United Statn.
The buk' approach ol the sym1)051um. featuring Harold Weisbn-g,
J ames Lftar, llw•arcl RoHman and
~vid Wrone, -.·as to examine the
fallureoltbe illllllutionsof American
formation Act. With regard to the
auau lnatk>n or King, the pair
ou!IIMJ!the major points exculpatory
to the a«used assassi n James Earl
Rlly: the official IOUt'te of the shots
"''as a flophouse windCM·, yet the win-
::• rir:~ ~ ~:t t?:~id'in~~ ~~:r:r d~m~~:mt11eof Kl1~~
::~~~~r:!\\;::!~"1~ ~~=
prG\'i~ documented proof of an of.
ficiol l f'O\'rf'UP in both cases and interpreted wMt ramifications of this
" prrv~ion of just ice'' meallll to the
Amertcanlcgals)'5\em.
The symposium began Tuesday
Nov. II with UWSP history prole5SOI'
Oa\' id Wrone ~!ding a brief o\·erv'"' ol the C'lvd rights 11l0\'ement and
Or. King's Impact upon it up to the
timeolhisdcat h onApril~.l968.
dow sill upon v.·hicb Ray supposedly
·
:!~ ':r!~"tt!~-~:ty!~fc~
totheshoocinJ,CI\ol rltsStevena.<~raa
a drunk v.•ho idenlified Ray as the
ass;ls:~inonly after being paid $2.'i by a
journal is t IAttOtding to Weisberg,
CBS s hovoed Stev~ a picture ol Ra y
and Ste\'ens said that be ~~o•as noc the
man he 511W in tht-rlophouse window I .
f-' inally Weisberg stated that the
pmumed auassination ~~o·eapon ~~o·as
found ten minutes before tile crime
O«Urnd and that Ray was repairina
~~::are~~.: :lnC:r~ ~~:;":d~
ded."andwecanprovell."
·
iusti~e
uitidsm m.atrunctloned In the Kennedy assassination. Wrone cited the
failu~ of each segment of the
political-ideolotdcnl soec trum with
The H-Cond part of the symposi um
dcalina with the Jf'K assassination
began Thursday: Novembe r 11 .
Weisbera. v1ho hiLs ~~o·rillen six books
on the Kennedy cue. sta ted the
Warren Commisskm und the f-'UI
never conducted a homocide In·
vestigatkm of the crime "and ne-..·er
intended to. " lie backed these
allegat ions with countless pages or
dOC\Iments. including once s«"ret
transcriptS of mt-etinp r! theWa rren
Commission. which show ho~~o• the
coverup was initiated. t' rom this
Weisberg posed thequestiun : lr the
government can coverup th e
assassi nation of an Amer ican
pr-eskient.eantheynol do anyth ina~
rqan:l to the Kennedy USU~inatlon,
and provided seven stepuo readina
assassina tion literature.
H011o·an:l Roffman. at 24, the
younaest serious resucher on the
JF'K auas~ina.lkln and author olthe
critically acclaimed book PrHuriiH
Guilty,pr-ovidedmedicalandball is tic
e\·idence which showed "Oswald did
nOt r!re any shots." Roffman went on
to sta~e that Os~~o•ald had tohaYe been
framed for the assassina tion of
: :.!dent Kennedy by unk,nown per-
In a sur\·ey of Warren Commiuiun
critics. David Wrone s tated that
Kennedy assualnations . All
documents will be provided by Mr .
Weisbe!-a.
A Sidel ight to the symposium was
thre agreement by UWSP to house an
ea:i:= re~ t~=~~~nt.e s~f:,e~!::
0
Movie focuses on responsible drinking
8yCbrisWampler
By this time )' OU ha\·e probabl y
heard or read about the ak:OOoJindu«d death of a 22 year old UWSP
studenther-elastOctobef'.
A «t'tain young male ~~o·ent on a
drinking spree ~~o"ith some friends as
part of an inita tion pledge to an all maSt orpniution. The drinking
S l)rft. or "Death M a~b " as it ~~o·as
commmly referred to by the club
memben resulted in an ewer consumpt ion of alcohoL -..·hich !tad to his
deat h. The coroner detennined that
the amount consumed ~~o·as equal to 29
drlnksolbeer,a lcohol.and wine.
The fatahty provoked strona concern about responsible drinking and
prompted many people to th ink twice
about their drinking h;lbils. It was
also that incl~nt thilt prompted a
few communicatkm prol'es.son to
lake steps tn cu.-bing the " let's go out
a nd get drunk,' habit. n.e result ~~o·as
" 99 Bott}es, Responsibility a nd
Drink ina". a half hour film that
beains with the ev~ing.last October,
==thevirlllesofrespC:i'IThe film. which is soon to be
distributed to universities and high
schools Mtionwi~. does no1 CUJdemn
akoholic beverages per-se, but In-
5teadposesthequestionolwhydo
people drink. Racer Buths 1s tne
dire<:tor ol the film . He. along with
C.\'. Allen and J ames Moe. all com·
munication proft'S60r'S. scripted the
na rrative. lbc photography ~~o·as by
Ralph Milia and Mike Wansenkl,
bothrecentaraduatesolUWSP.
The film open1 on lhe night of Oc·
Iober 17, 1976 as lhe }'(KiOJt man and
hisfriendspnparefora mahtonthe
town. This is follov.·ed by comments
from police. a doctor ....ho describt's
the bioiOf!ical s taaes that lead to
death.andtheroroner.
A major part of the movie is pat·
terned ~~oit h UWS P students rela ting
what they think makes drinking 10
popular. Some of them voi«d
opinions ab«lt the "why's" of
habitual weekend drinking: t'or
mate off the floor and putting him or
her to bed, you understand them. and
ha\'e the urge to hug them and reln·
Ioree your feeling of friendship
tov.•arcbhlm.' '
Comme~ia ladvertisin1was depicted as a biJ contributor to drinking
since it nt'ten seems to couPle akohol
=~~;:~~~.';:'~if:':.!:'~~~
especially enticing to thole just
reaching tne Jqal drinkinaaae.
RIJiet' Bullis, said the film tr!ed to
~i.':cf'~:ere~ls ~~~ ~~0:
mechanism for those that feellondy,
bored or seek to p in peer group approval ~·:. "Do some people liSt' beer
asasocia l vehicletoreachothers,
since . they can' t relax and enjoy
themselves without flnt having a few
beers~"
One of the students In the film said
that " Instead of picking you r room·
lhe Idea that the
lhe oeople that
one or two drinks
~~ ~. ~nmfi'i:
.
basem~t of Roacb Hall. Around ao
people attended, and the feedback
~S::tr:.:w~·~o!~r::tk~a~
"overemphasized"
dr ink ing.
the eYils
of
""""
people thought the film portrayed
negath•eness toward drinking in
general. And thai it too st rongly ldentlnedinferior feelingswith~~o·antinga
couple of .beers.
One sophomore said. " The film
is n' t goina to reform anyone. you
k11011o· ahead ol time if you' re going to
drink or not." And still othen felt the
film raised so me pretty good
questions. Bullis said the reaction
from students ...-hen he has shown the
film was favorable, ~~o·i th only a few
voicing objections.
·-w Bottles, Responsibility and
Drinking" was funded by the office of
ltesidcntLife as recommendedbythe
Com miuee for Healthy Dedsions and
llousing Administration. It was lint
undertsken last s pring by the Communications Oe'J)artment and ~~o·as
completed about a month ago.
Pcomotional flyen are now beina
mailed throughout the C9Untry. "99
Bottles" ~~o·:ls preMnted in Milwaukee
at the Wisconsin Education
Association of Hiah Schools on Oct. 29
and ~~o-as also shown at two nationa l
Conferences ol Dorm Directors and
Administrators and Is in great
demand from other groups 111 we ll.
The film is available for group use at
thellousinaofflce.
College isn't that bod
Tbe American Aaodation ol State
CcOtt:es aod Universities IAASC\Jl
bas rde:ued a new publication sbar··
ply critical ol the " cwer-simpUfled"
ar&uments of some publicists.
poli tidans, and researchers thilt a
colJe&e educaUon Is cleci!Dina In
•alue.
s
Tbe publication was distributed to
state N~Jtae aDd wd•enlty
preiidents at the openinC ol
AASCU'I
meetm& bl New Orleana, includiaa to Olncellor LeeS. Dreyfus
natianal
ol the Uniftt'lity ol Wisc'Gali,._
Stevem Polftt wbo ila Dltionll direc-t«oltheorpnilation.
"Tbe Valueola CoDqe Education"
dte. both tbe eeoaca~ie atld oon-erooomlc benefits ol a collqe
edueatioa. It Ia particularly critic<~ !
ol 1 widely publidud study by
IUdwd Jl"reeman aDd J . Herbert
Hollomaa wbk:b ...-ted tbat tbe
value of a t'OIIege degree 11
dettuiina because its so-called
" rate of return" feU fram aboutJH2
perftnt In 19r1to about HI percent in
1174.
111e AASCU publicaUon notes that
the two economists compared "the
eamlnp in years of •l&orous
economic arvwth in the si:stiel with
the eaminp in yun ol recession,"
and then predided that the job
rnar\etfortbeindel'ulitefuturf'would
continue to be like that ol the
recaaion yean. Tbe publication c:on-tlaua that while there are sewral
arpmentl apinst tbe ••rate ol
return" •w-eb. tbe buic ttilidam
Ia that, ··very few people would not
want collqe for themselvea or their
ch!ldreft merely because h!Jh school
p-aduates today make somewhat
~~~~~r::-.:
m~aspll~~-tes.~ that
colJe&e Jl'lduates baYe a more con-tinuous, leu em tic job hbtory: con-tinue to eam bl.&ber salaries throuah
mot! of lhrir worttlnc years; a re leu
lltely tohavetostsrtoveror1et in to
deadtnd job6; and are more utlafted
with their wort:· and their lives than
non-colle&:e p-aduates.
Anumberolstudksaredtedwhkh
reYeal a range ol non-economic
beoefits, to Individual dqree-boklers
~ueto :r':Y-~t~
aractuatea are betlef' informed aa political !awe~, more
likely to retkter aDd to \'Ole, and to
coUe&e
:!!t.a .;;.:,u:~
l:kef:V~
Inf luenced by prejudices and
stereotypes, and'more lltely to attempt rational a nd non·•i olent
:.'!
=~~C:,:~· both domestic.
AASCU exea.tivedirector Allan W.
Ostar said that while It currently may
be fashionable to challenge Amet'ican
lnsUt uUonl, JUCh as bulineu, govern·
men!, or hi&her education, " there II a
graYe danget' thal these ' populari:ted
arau menta'·apilllt collej;e will han
a long-te rm effect on higher
education policy. We are already
seeing higher- tuition, a cut-back in
sta te support for collqes and unlvet'slties, and enrollment Cf:llinp in
~::~H,riu ~:r u:~
Copies ol "The Value ol a CoUege
Ed!Jeatlon" a re available from
AASCU Publication~, Suite 700. One
Dupont Circle, Washin&ton, D.C.
20CXI&,atSOcetttspercopy;ordenol .
IOOormore, 35cents per copy.
NonmKt-11, I I'll Pale 5 P•ter
Campus construction increases
More than a dozen construction.
projects will be or have been un·
dertaken this s.chc»> yea r · at UWSP
with a total cOlt surpassing a ha lf
million dollars.
If the State Building Commisston
apprO\·es it at a mteti ng Nov. 16,
workalsowillbedOfM!to refurnishttM!
Uni,•enlty Center at an established
CUi\ of about a quarter million
dollars.
·
Harlan Hoffbeck , di rector of
faci lities m anagenent. says he
belie\·es the commissioners will okay
the Unh•er¥ity Center .lob which will
be financed by revenues in the
· .._. building. and not l"rom taxes. There
would be rodecorating in the student
sec:tionolthe building, installation of
an el~·ator and 's ome remodeling.
The 0111et- projects. hov.·e,·er, are
beutg paid from the sta te's c-olfers.
Theyinclude:
·
!-""ranklin Street Mall and adjacent
parkingareatocostabout$215,000. 11
is s till inclesignstatusandbidsforit
will not be let until this winter. Construction
planned to begin in the
s pring.
Grounds ~·ater controls in stea m
andeltctricalpits toprote<:tswi tches
and insulation on pipes. The $50.boo
project is nearly compltied with
major woc-k done by Ben Scipior Cons truct ion of Stenns Point. V11n Ert
Electric.ol Rudolph. and John Jung.
loc. ofMiJv.·aukte.
rs
Fluid mechank:s and hyd.ralics
laboratory for the paper scitnce
depa r tment in the lower level ol the
Science Hall addition. It is nearly
completed with a price lag ol nea rly
$57,000 with Ellis Slone Coostrut tion
Co. of Stevens Potnt as general contrac tor and J ohn Jung, Inc. of
Milwaukee in charge of the plumbing.
H.esurfaclng of tenniS and all·
I:~~~,: ''S:r~!h3~m~
DeBot Center plus repair ol frncing .
atacostolabout $32,000. Bids will bt'
let thlswinterandronstrucllonv.ill
be nextspringor summer.
Physital ~ca t ion Building ~true·
tura l repair of the support a re:~
beneaththeindoorswimmingpool, to
cost about S\.J,OOO. TheprojettY:IIIbe
bid laterfOC""acoostructiondateim·
~~~atclyinlate springoreilrlysum ·
Remodeling tht a rt department
facilities In the ~·ine Arts B\tildingto
include insta llation of ceilings in offi«S and to ·accoustitally trt at
l.aboratoc-ies and studiOIS foe- a to tal
cost of aboutSSO.OOO. Ellis Stone Con·
struction Co. of Stt'\"tnS Poi nt v.tll
handle the job v.·hich v.•iiJ begin soon.
Mainelectrical ser\•iccpov•t•rfat··
tor correction ln\'Oiving in ·
stallation of capacitors m the
primary service to e\'en out htgh
pe.~ksoleltctrical ~- The pro.tt-<:t
..,.ill behandlt-d by E-Con Eltctncof
WisconsinR.apidsatacostol. aboul
$12.000.
Installa tion . of humidity cont rol
equi pmentinthe ~rthall ofthc
Fins Arts Center to avoid·expensh•e
damage to ~pensi\·e pianos. Soik
Plumbing ud Heating ol Stevens
Point has the contract foe- about
$3,220.
Repair of the roof on Collirut
Classroom Center , budgeted for
$21,650wlthseleoetlon olacontrae:tor
~~m~~ later for completion nex t
Steam pit modifications by Hoff.
man Co. of Wausau and Appltion at a
costol$5,300. A pit is being moved
from-asidewalkontoanadjaet"ntlot
ac ross from the Science llall on
Reserve Street.
Jnst:all:lllon or a steam s hut off
vah·e coonector to enable better
n-gul:~tioo of heat to building£ In
\'arious sections of the campus. to
(."'j\abootJ.tS.OOO. TheCQf\tractshll\'1!
not been let .
Jnsuallationofa new stage lighting
and dimming system in Warre n Gard
JenkinsThcatreofthe !-'iooArtsCen·
tcc , tocoslabout$36.ooi:l. Thcpro~t.
h.lsnoc~bid.
E\·alualion of the possibllit)' of
saving Old Mai n, recently completed
atac05tof$\ S,OOO.
Accord ing to some of the locals, the l tudents at UWSP arl'
more familiar with the Public Square than they a rt with the
classrooms. No doubt about it, theeighlten yea rolddrinkinga gl'
and the increased enrollment at UWSP have combined to tre:u a
boomlngbusinessonlhesquare:
•
The downf~·n area of Stevens Point contains some of the
oldest buildings in the city. When a building beromes old and
starts to deterioc-ate its va lue decr eases and the a mount of
property taxes paldonlt alsodecreases. When Ulishappenstoan
entire a rea such as the square, the city loses a lot ol re\'lmue
becauseoldecreasingtaxba.se.
t~~::~n~ny~~=.fea~d':'~~~~r~~r'~
sell the \'aca ntland to a developer . This serves tv.·o purposi'S,
first to increase the tax base In the downtown area and second. to
kcep the s toresinthecily.
pa~t~n:::s!::::. ~~ar:,~:;,:;:::lc1~l~s~~~~~~-~~
land in the downtown. llopefull y the city will be able to find a
developer oocethelandllvat'ant.
gr~J~~t~O::-~~ .t~~~~u~;;;~~rTe:a~~~~~~e;~~
brand new s tore has taken its place. Don't be surprised if it's
l t!llthereelther.
It's all history
Thl' lkPllrt mcnt of History is ac·
ceptinggraduate assis tantshlpapplications for thesecondsemes ter ol
t~ ~urrent academic yta r. ' Apphcahon forms may be procurred
fromthedt1)ilrtmentalsecretaryand
the comple ted applications must be
returnedby DeocembertO. t976.
t\roultl-disciplin:.ry intn.dm·ttooto
the his tory and culturt• of l.ahn
America utilizing vidi.11 t:IJK' kcturr
presenta tions, films . and ) IKies, U
well a live lec tures and chS("IISSiOnL
will beofftredTueslti rl"\·I'IUrtp.
6:30-9:30. room :tl2 CO l'S Ftw' furtbfr
Information contact lt.J 1\n"" ltorl.
cx.t . 2t86,-112COI'S.
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By Jullekrlln
II..&I• FAI.It•
~~~r:~~~~.~~~
re:c:m: =·~a:
sure ol thm\Rives. The rtqulranent II time. TUne to readl 1
plateau. A plateau o1 cratlvlt7. Knowine how far one can go.
knowtna
the limits ol each othn'. A $en1e o1 •cconiplishment
over a finished prt)jec:t. The fact tha t the time Is two A.M . is
irrelevant.
w:e:-~n~e~~~:-!':"n~:n~dt~ne~ri::r~r:S~~
pages of full color. Many pa&solcokwtffec:ti. Thole paaesare
you. The IJ76-77 UWSP community.
on~eJ!~:'.Ca~~~ ~~~e~~~f~lsle!J;ot'O:
bwKtred IDdi\'iduals 011 thlt campus have bougbla yearbook. We
Dtf'd toldlhunclreds rrKif'e thisiC!mMter. llwedoa't theC'OVffis
c~Y.d".===~~~ybenotsom..:b lot us as the
temy-boppers. But lhlt musk trehon lhese halll p&enty, too.
Music, bair styles, pictures-make a n!Mmber. Or at lnJt
throu&b theeyesololhe:nweseehow It was. Weare there, part
ol il t97f Is now. We feel it. We live it. Yean: from now we' U be
other places. Hopeful ly, It will be In the neki we 1\ave prq~a red
for. t~77 can still be t.Mre. A yearbocli remembers.
A yearbook is now. Today. Tomorrow. Steven~ Point m~~yhlve
1.000 st~Kknts. Your picture Is not loin& to be lher'e l'<ll'~ty
times. But this year will. Thinp that happened and are yet to
come. Tw~hundred pagn of knowled&e, experience and events
ofthiJyea r. ThiJ Uorbon.
'
OUr plant were to raiJe the price. We didn 't. We reel the
problem bon our end, too. We are aivina usa~ chance. We
are Jolftl to keep trylna to ruch you. We're Jlvtnc you another
chance. 11..-ilon remains IUS. A small price to ~e these
memories. You can pay at the Students Actlvitia of(ke. University C~ter. We are worltln1 on other outlets. We' U be at
t't!listraUon.
NOW or NEVER. Don't cklle our cover yf't. ltcri•• is you. A
yearbook f'ftn8ins now ror JeMntions to come.
STUDENTS
ALL PLAIN
SWEATERS
CLEANED AND BLOCKED
88¢
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POINT
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STUD£HT Lg,~~~J1~01'10£R
••~
.
"Righ't~on'' says Cambric~ge philosopher
Anscombc's ta skwa 8 notas much to
By George Gutnlhtr
· ~~~~1:' t~r~~~~~y ~~-~
referenceto'rights.
Gertrude Eliubeth Margaret Anscombe, mother ol &e\'en children.
professor at Cambridge University,·
England, a nd a nalytical philosopher,
lectured at UWSP oo Novembet II .
phil~rol herdlscipl!nethinkll .
I
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save 20% to 80%
q·~~I~
a·:i
•ftocw•nd tabM
becomesclearbe<:ausell.·e'l·e Jeuron~
~~ r~~~~~:,'ost~::~~~:t"~-~
~~~~~~:t:c~~~~~::::~-~
r------~----------t
~l11ampsI .
st:Tn~nw~~s ~eha;~~~~~es~~
.
Philosophical Association's annual
meeting.
Anscombe ex plained her thoughts
on the concept of a right to an a.,.·ed
but obviously conlllHd audience. As
._ one ol theforem05l living repn."Sentatlves of the British analytical
tradition in philosophy, she demons tra ted
to !he a ud ience how a
1
~~
:~~~~~~: ~~~~:~~~~~-t~: ~:
Her lec ture on, " Uow Can We Expla in
a Right", was sponsored by the
Philosophy Department of UWSP in
conjunction with the Wisconsin
I
-:::
In expla ining what a right is, An·
scombe sald, "sofaras lknow, noone
has succeeded in this. At best.
thinkers ha\'e sorted OO\distinctions
v\olatethem ,"saidA nst:c~mbe.
wl thinand a roundthe nCMion." She.
It is a molter olcon\'ktion,said
pointed out that ~~~base concepts of
Anscombe, that we complv ~itll
justice on the notion of rights ll'i thout
rules, or rights. This is t~ n.w
reallyknowingwhatorightis.
·
whether we deri\'e rights fi'OIII
Anscombe left her 11 Udicnc~ ll'ithout
a defini tion ol the won! " right" :
ho\1-~·cr. she did proHcr a methOd
~~.-hereby rightscou ldbetl'Stcd for
Anscombe then de\'l!iopfd thougbu
thet r \'Oiidit)',
about what we ca n not do 1n light o1
A right.shesaid, does not exist in
rules. Sheconcluded t hatolten~·edo
naturt": ratherit ls thl'in\·entionoff
not violate rul es in ordtr t~ltot
man to apply only to human beings.
D\'Oid doing h.ann. To a\·Oid doift&
Anst"Ombe said that in one respect a
harm, It Is necessar)· to obr,·
right is lik~a rul~. a promi5e, or an
lcgitimote rules, or not l'iDblt
ooth. When someon~ promises, she
legi timate rights.
ll'ent on, that person Cl't'alts a
_lnordertotest thelt"gitimat')· ofa
necessity lorhimtodosome!,hing.
rtght, 1'_\~ombe ustd a tes;t ~t.·hffltl)·
Anscombe used Arlstotk!'s dcfln·
oect'SSII)' lSCOmpal'f'd t0[)05Sibtlity,
tion of the ~~o·onl " nt'«SSll ry."
Aristntl~ said one- meaning of the
~~.·ord is. "that ~~.• lthout ~~o•hich, som~
actuahty.
goodwill not be obtained. orsom~~v il
11\'0idcd.''
" II it is a necessary task in t.tman
Some 11'ords, said Anscombc, are
Ufe, then a right arises lor those
meanttoinsul't'th.at evil lsa\'Oided :
wholle tasklllstoh.a\'tll'hatbtlon&s
wor-cb like cannot a nd must not. . to theperformoncc ol tha tt.lsk.''&atd
These II'Ords are meant to desc ribe
AllSCombe. lnothcrll.·ords.ilawkl5
the action of, "stopping someone
viewed as necessa ry, then it is the
from doing something," said Anrightofapersontoh.1\·e th:U•hkb
scombe. J'or example, in a chess
makes it possible to complete that
ga me, to stop someone from movi ng
tas k.
in violation of the rules of chess. w~
A human need is fulfilled In
sa)', ·· vou can't move you r king."
bringingu p children.said,\ nscombe.
NOII· itisphysicallyposslbleforth.at
peflOOiomovehisking. llowever , hc
That lllsk can not be cotnplettd
wouldbeinviolationoftherulesifhc
withootacertolnomountllfobtditn·
ce from children. Thercfort' it is a
did.
po ren t's right to demandobtdrenrt
fromthcii-ch ildren.
~
••trtptJghts
'9.95 • ' 69.00 .
,..._., ._,_ .,...,.,~
EMMONS ;:rrl':'::ti!
.
~:~.~~r!~~ ~i~tht~·p1~~n:
1
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Anscombe's treotmcnt of r1gh15
may be s light ly less confusing than
thcnotionofrlghtsis. Thl!re ls.
howeve r , some va lue in wung An·
scombe't cxpla lllltion of rights to
clarifywhat~~o•e- mcanwhen11e say"a
pcrsonhasoright."
Register
your deer
ROCK
N'
ROLL
·
on
qo fm 1:::h:;,_<l!PurJ st.t+ieh · ww sp
POU. t"" Paxea NOvember tt .ttl'l
.............
Program puts students to work
By Pete Scbarr
r~uta r 1ot-- Many of these studetl ts
are placed In their jot. before lhe
school yea r starts and. accordina to
Stgmund, " We ha~ one ol the most
so phlstiuted job pl 1cement
~~p"30 ~orlt-stiJCiy
a:,!!.'"~~~~;,·~
" Alii di4 was get electrodes &Jutd
to my be.1d and get paid lOt" it. hlft
tinws found it hard to slay awake.''
This Is how one sludft't described
jobl hen! a t
Apparently thtrt are a few kinky
parable to Michiga n State and the
fe·,c;:~~caU::::' ,~r ~~~~:!:: ~~~l:~~ru~~:'~~k!" ~~
s tudy program. " What I did was, ah,
I skinned cats. In the biofo&y depart·
ment I ~lieve. My bou ga\'t me :a
scalpel and I skinned U~m down to
the bone.'' "''Mse tvoo st~ts •·Me
paid SUO ~ hour to perform their
wa t to none. •· Of the tola l number ol
students here at UWSP, S2 pe:rttnt
get aKt 14,4951. Many mor e than that
1'8pK'tiveduties.
"'IIIIM!n 1 Yo"tnt to work I 1\ad Itt
vacuum th e carpets in lht
boooltstore•..yah, if I had a ny time
leftl'drtadmagazinn.""
'"AndgHpaKtfor it'! ""
""Sure."'
.. "You ~~.~ paid R:.:ZO an hour to
rf"~ magazines'!"
· " Ya. right.""
1lle wonitudy program in St~ms
Point has btttl around Jlnce the midnineteen sixtk:l. For the past three
years lltlen Si&mund has been the
Employment Coordinator fa.- the
much they will ~vt. ··n *Pend~
on their tota l nnancial noeed, thei r
total d rC"Umslancts. Tbt formula is
based on the Indebtedness level, thei r
dasa level a nd thei r total financia l
ototd. Tbtidta olthtformula is to ld
up a meo.l ol *idini whkh
students.shoukt &dan opportunity to
rec:tivt work-s tudy llrst. The
philolophy ol tht formula is to &d a
student sett)td here bdore they get
~dtdwlthdtbt ,' ' said Sigmund.
A student on work-study is a llowed
to tarn $800 in the ac-ademic sdWIGI
yea r. Matc-hi111a studtflt's5killswilh
applyt'achyear.
When a student a pplies for akl a
formula Is used to ddl"!'mine how
~~=pr~;a~A~~nfn: ~ob~~~~~~~~~m:a~
ltd to expklit Mr. lbal"s a mutuaUy
unprofit.tble situa tion,'" Slcmund
said.
TMre art other ways to exploit
students. "One of the ~ullin il
that they, tDepa ri!Mntsl w1ll take a
studenl in theiJ' major fida and coer-
~=·a"::.h!.~t~~
ac-.demic- yea r to A~pplemtnl students in their ftlucaHon. ··we don' t have
it all yet, but we think that's • ·h.at
we'll Itt,'' she said. Some ol that
money ~~o·ill be e;arntd by students
with job&. Their pay rate will range
from the (ederal minimum of S2.ZO
always matc-h up. The need lJ the
ma&t and latH on thesti.Nkat may not
priority. Then you take what that • woril at a ll fa.- a week or so.''
student has in le'ms ol potential and
Sigmund continued, ·-nee same
try to match him with a job,''
departments will keep the pay rate
Sigmund added.
down iD order to get., the maldmum
Thert art a ftw problems involved
bours of work from the studen ts."
wit h some a reas of ·the work-study
Thtrt Isn' t a aound way to a lleviate
students on· work-study and regula r
)obi. There a~ t3 to t6 off campus
employers in the work-study
prGBram and Sigmund says that
there could~ mort if she had mort
stl.ldtnts that wan ted work. Around
900 su.adents have work-study jobs,
with another 200 to 300 holding
" t'or exa mple, a ~rtmenl said
th.at they ntc'ded thisg1rl because she
wa.s a good worker. This gir l worked
totheextentthatshedr"opptdoutol
sc:hool a nd •·orktd i\legaUy. She earned over her control !Iaure. All
because th is part ic-ula r department
found her 11 good employee and wan·
~~;~a\: t::n~f~'r~m.:Cm';·l!
iro~~~":he ~~rol'fi~:e:· ~ ~:
but when they get them tbty don' t
even k~ how to train lhat student
fa.- thai job. Yet another problem
exists when tm_ployen_put students
to work wllhout time cards. They
don't know if thestudmt is eligible to
earn monty. "Then we have to show
~~~ffta!:ktt~~~~u~:
not to pay them for the work they've
done,'' Sigmund said, "So wt pay
them.''
Bul the problems are few when
c-ompared to the bendits of work·
stu dy. In a rece nt survey c-ondUC"ttd
by the work -studyofflce,91 ])(!I'Ci!ntol
1
~~~ ~~:n t!~~as:eol e~:~·~~
:::i~ J:~'!.t=J:ye:~sa~~1Y~~
Students we~ happy with the way
they wrre trellttd by the personnel,
both supervisOrs and those In the
their hands, otMT th.an talking to the
dean or the department head and
telling them that the student Isn' t
bein&treAttdfairly."
Another problem is that supervisors don ' t supervise. "There a re a
Jot ol A~pervllors in this institution
who want students to work for them,
work-11tudyolf~. Ovttthree-fourths
ol these students felt their !ob5 ~~o·ere
tsMnlial. They al.o indicated that
working did not affec-t thei r other exIra-curric-ular ac-tlvlllts.
First Friends reach ~ut to mental health patients
To k~ mental health patients
from ftelin& isola~ed in their ~·n
community, and to help them rcalllt
that somebody earn. il the goal of a
program called " First Friends.:' -:un
· by the Porta&e County A.ssoc-111hon
for Mental Health.
The Pointer tatktd to Lou Siev·
wri&ht. tht usociatkln:• •. n~~ive
director, about hoW the · t 1rst tnends'" pr-o~t3m c-ame ;about and what
needs it fulfil ls.
Ac-~ to Sievwri&ht, lhtH ~ a
sort ol stigma attached to ge111111
mental health treatment. People
hesitate to stek hel p for mental
Malth problems because of ~ ­
munity attitudes. The:)' a re afrai_d of
hoW others will v~ them, a fraid of
not bein& acttpted by the c-om·
munity. Alio. said S~rig.ht. people
,.,ho llrt com pleting treatment olten
f~·1t~;'~~-~~~ .. are votunttt'f! who
~friend mtnllll health patlents1n or·
dcr to help them aet back Into the
c-ommunltybyprovldlnaaone-to-one.
- rriend-to-friend type of sltu;atloo.
" Volunteen ;and thetr ditnll mgage
1n slm ple..t'\·eryday activi ties like
phonina.shoppin&.hllvi?,gcolfM •. and
• ·atching ball pmes, said Siev·
~~o· ~· program brian about fh·e
)'~arsagowhcllment.allllneues~~>·ere
handled ma&tly 1n hos pital•. !>lany
patic-nl.l from Portage Count y 1111yed
3-t Nor....-ood H01pital In M;anhf~k!
for extended lenl;thl oltime. " t'n·st
fnends'" was set. up to hrip these
-
aboutont'-lndredt'irstFriendshave
btttl a.uigned In the Jut years.
' 'Tbr voluntftrl do it for their own
warm fuuln, " said Sievwright.
''They've got their heads to&tthtt
and area Vtf)' c-a ring ]lind of people."
Indeed, c-aring Is the m01t importa nt
aspec toltheprosram. t'irst Friends
don' t c-wnstl, treat, or give therapy.
They provkte a one-to-one type of
relatklnship that profn.sionals shn·
ply cannot cive pat ients. Ac-cording to
Sievwright ,il's important to cltrnts
that there are peoplt who are-and
~~o· M;a renotgell lng paldt oca rr. lt
~cgttbad:in tolhec-ommunity .
Gradually. the foc-us has c-haqtd.
and more c-ommunity based
programs are opttating on an out·
system. Fin! Friends . _
befriends out·patitnt clients.
Mor~
~tielll
r~~~~~~:!:~~~n \~~~
~r
of the community treatment
~~{;;.'t~ t~gin;;:=~~~~!:
and their motives. ''Tbr ptoi!le tend
to ~~o·ted themseh·es out,· said Sit'\-wr ight . " The program Is not.
enrybody's bag.··
There ill a definite commit~Mnt the
vol unteers must make. Ac-cordina to
S~ew1r1ghl. " Afttt the four tralniog
seuklns, the t' int t'tiends a re ask~...to ~i gn a Clll1trac l lor lhl'ff monUIS.
Hill !UcL'\IIIey, a mrm~ !he rom·
mun11y lrrat~nt I m. and !he
pruJr;am 't tw o
oo rdinators ,
Ma~ret ;and :Marvin Kennev«k.
m~t
•·ith a patient who has been
r~ving tre;atment. and as k him or
her tosignasimilarc-ontrac-t. "
" Bill or someone else from the
treatment team il al~~o-ays prewnt
during the Initial wntact. 8oth the
=
~~~g~ ~~~~r'~·r~::ec:~~~~~
they twave abou t the relationship,"
:x~w~!~~~.'~:~t~~~~~
phone call or a visit. Bolh the dient
and the t'irst t'riend know the tr~atment team member, so It's " like
meeting someone through a (riend,"
said Stevwright.
' Treatment team membft's and
c-oordinators volun l ~r their time to
help the program. The First t 'riends
themse lves are :.Jt ••ol unteers.
Womrn ul all awts. some c-oll~e
studtnta- both men lind women, and
a fN' middle awed men holl\'e been In·
•·oh·ed Slf'V'I\·r.Khl rstm~attd that
shawl! that c-ommunit y attit~Kk-5
toward menta l illnesses a r e
chan&lng. This cets to the root of the
problem. Communily attitudes hnt
to change.
S1evwrlght c-ompa red mrntal
illnesstocan«r. " It's bes\ togo in
• ·hen you first A~specl you need
help."' Hut people are afraid abou l
«<mmunity attitude~ towards menial
lllne;;s,;andso may he~it a teto~k
help.
The " F'in;t t'r iendll" vot unt~rs
rt:.li1e that c-ommunity atti tudes
!:.:J!Ii,':'~~':'~":. a rt
doinlt
If you're interested in becoming a
t"'rst t'ritnd. or In finding out more
about the program, go down and talk
:rea~ ;~w;:f~
!in::e~'~:~
Main Street , or c-aii:H4·5T~ . Chances
a rt if you have something n:!lll to
aive, they have somebody who needs
it.
Sonm~ tt. tt11 Paaet Pelntrr
...
::.:~~~~ndir:, ~~~!
By Mlllhew Kramar
" As our plaoetariwn sun sds
bmeatll the horizon... " intoned a
voice rrnm the envelopinc dlrkneu.
Planfts, moons , stars, galaxies, and
an occasional meteor appear · and
tnv~ •~rou !be "sky", a domed
crl.lina ovtrbead. A journey to Mars,
withnarT.ationontheseart:hforlife
tMrebegan.
•
Jam~ Scott Smith, a UWSP
student, presented an overview ol the
.eardlforlifeonMarsin \ ' llr.IIIJ; A
C1oser Looll. This wu the S«<nd
program ol the UWSP 197&-n
PLanetarium SHies.
A star s tudy at the commencement
of the ~ram ramiliariud the
.audimce with the ~-in~ sky and its
major constelLations. Among OlheT
favorite constelLations, Orion, lhe
hunter, was placed in context '!lith his
roe Taurus, the buU and hls ~leltia l
~anines canis Major and canis
Minor. Guide stars were pointed out
(Of" added eue in lhiscOimi~c<~nnec t·
= ·sound
visual expenence was tnhanetd by
elrecta and b.:lck&lliUDd
was a~compllsh~
15
P~.lecton,
adi.ssol\·tr,andilit
pnoe ol the pla~rium , thf Sp.t.r:
• pro.jf!Ctor. The Si»U planetarium
star~
proJector ~•n project
planet~, moons, et~ .• as seen rro.:b
any place on earth at any hmeoltht
day or yea r.
T hi s
the
~~~ aYt~:~~ :~~~nn':~rtJ~
well as the Impact ollhost rt~~lli
v.·ere related in a n alm01t a•
tidlmatk slide show and ledurt
While the program was «rrl•nly
int.eratlnga ndhadvisualtfrl't"tsthat
were well thought out and
produced, this alone
,..or.
lhwhile viewlnc, It wu 1ts1 than
ab und an t wit h int t' llt t" tual
sti mulation.
Th\swasnotduetoanyfau l\ olthe
prosram but rather to the loll· key
tfft'ittti\·dy
maklnc
..........
ll.avina learned the heavenly land·
marks, a brief history of Mars ex·
plo r atlo n was ups u lized In
1ystemalic style. With roots In sden·
ce fiCtion novels and leu than eta~!
telescopic lnvestigatioo. the fantasy
ol u rly theory wu IUustnted. The
advanced civilizations in domed
ci ties, great canal systems, and Large
areas ol rich ~etation were teen
in a menagerie· ol slides ol fuu:y
telescopic photos and artist's ~
eeptions. II was with the Later phot01
ol "fly·by" m issions ol Ma riners 4,6,
and 7 lhllt IUdl lheorizlnc was ten·
detect ranta1y. Finally with the
photos provided by Mariner 9, whi~h
1tayed In orbit a round Mars for :W9
days, the scene waste! for the Viking
landing on Mars.
Atlhispointinthepnsentation, the
narration was dwarfed by a spectacle
feat
throug.h theu&e of hkktenspeak~
~tation.
The purpose for thiS is
tbatlheplanetariumRrit'SIIril"ts to
appea l to a very general ;~ud~tnre,
from grade school children lo thclr
gl'llnd!athers. The
procr~m
even with this broad appl"al. ,..u
_ both lnlonnaUveand lnterestina.
The Planetarium series provides
sh<lws throulthout the semester on
s~led Sundays at 3:00 pm ln lilt
Planetarium, k:lc:ated on the smJnd
noor ot the science building. \ "illla,;:
A Cloaer Loot will be presenrfd O!K'f
a'al n on Nov. 21. The rte• t show,
g1ven every year due to Its
popularity, will be Tbt' t"hrktm1'
Star. There II no adm ission dlaiJt'
fortheseahows.
Anyone interested in further in·
formation regarding these lhcror.-s,
may conla~t Planetarium dimtor
Allen Blocher.
Viking
Smith bonles his creation
and inoved through space. Soon it
coukt be seen approa~hlng the " red
pla net" wbkh grew Wi th ever in·
creasing site from a tiny red"point ol
~"'r'jij""'
iiii!i"i
"'l~iirJ.IijA;iirndt~".~b~~·!'"'!!J"!'!'!''~h'!"~'~""';;;m";";';;"'~m~'~'hi@orlitihe
visual n~ld as the Viking approa~hed
Its
!laving arTived.
landersetdown onapaoora mic3«1
degree 5CeTie ol the Mars borlzon
destination.
the
which .P'UJ.ttrialized a round t_he entire
~0~
~
BYENCOR;
Here it is
TIE
GRIDIIUI
Need· Something To
oo With
·Your Afternoon Cup Of Coffee?
Try a piece of HOMEMADE
PUMPKIN CUSTARD PIE OR
MINCEMEAT PIE-FREE COFFEE
The winners in the Polntrr '"Wbrn
lslt" con test areas follows ·
Mark Johnson
Peter Madden
Ken ~hulz
NOVEMBER 22 & 23
1:00- 4:00 P.M.
IN THE GRID.
Polalft" PaJelf N..-emWrlt,lfll
MAJN
AT
WATER
I
All the tucky wirmers willl"f'('"rll~'
free movie pasa, ~ornphmentll ol thr
Univenlty Activit let Uoard tUA il l
1be peculia r nxtun: is in tbr
phot01faphwasametalajul t~OI
the outside wall or the t...munic~ions
Buildina.
Reincarnated nerd tells all
troubador. I wrotescadsol toudllna,
helrUelt blllads to tender maidens. I
ByBoa. Halll
=~~In~~=~~~
A number of ~le., many ollhtm
stra.DJdy famil~r. have been alkina
me about my previous lncal"l'loltionl.
It's not tNt ,they'~ Interested In who
lor what) I ••• in my ea rlier
lives-lhey just want t4 know whf)
nerd like me wu allowed to come
back at aU. For lbose of you who
believe lo such thinp, ~ II a brid
outlineofmyprevioutincarnations.
My first locamalioa Otturred
before r«<rded history, 10 you
probably haven't read much about 11.
I was a Neat!Mrtha l cavtman named
Cheswkk. Evea then. that wu an.unpopular name. I don't runembft- toO
much about that lire, poulbly
because my lntelliamce wu rather
rudimentary.
The hlg.h point of that Inca rnation
occurred one morning when, for lack
of a nythln& better to do, I wu rubbing t~~o·o s ticks tosether. By noon,
spontaneous combultion had oeriln'ed. and I had made an imporUnt
discovery. With a little prac tke. I
was able to roas t animal llesh.
f.righleft off pndators, and bum down
several tackyhoulin&projects.
My promisina scientilk career wu
cut short, when I was ltiUed at the aae
oiU., byabiurHbeastthatwuhalf
sabn-tooth tilfl'l' a nd hall Chevrolet
Impala.
My S«<Dd lncarnatton tcdl place In
ancient Ea.rpt. I was a popular
pharoah named Kamin-Getme. I had
a &i&antic palace, tweaty·thouund
personal attendants, four tons of per·
feet rubies. and seven! fried chkten
Crandtises.
My administration was one that
greatly advanced the r.eld ofsc~.
My c hid chemist created a beverase
lhat was made from river water,
ground gJau, and crocodile waste,
which was the forffWiner of all
present day diet colas. Another ol my
sc~tists developed a Tdlon-coated
sacrificial a ltar, wtlich made thinp
much easiuontheclean"'\l p cr-.
ce ID my lOW and music In my '!olce.
Aftes-JgotsickofaUthltcrapola, I
moved into a furnished castle near
Loodon, and proceeded to ICIIndalile
the CGW~try. I wrote several pamphietsonthedaqe:rsofdotnawitbout
alcohol. l lobbiedfuriouslyapinsta
law propcllillllhllcl\astlty belts be
I consider the grutest scientific
achievement of my reign to be the
perfection
or the process of
mumilk:ation, to preserve the bodies
of~ pharoabs. I must admit,
though.that lhada selrtshmotlvefor
perfectina this process. I had certain
reservations abou t tieing dipped in
t~mber .
My third incarnation found me
somewhere in the area of what is now
known u France. 1 Ji,..ed in a
one room hovel with a wile, ei&hteen
lt.ids, a nd a oombft- ol inlectlous
disuses. One day, I was sittin{l,
around l"UIIin& up potatoes, and a
strangeideaoccurredtome.Within24
hours, I had in\·ented the guillotine. I
secured a patent on it immediately,
and lherdore received a 2 fnu~.
uHct.
royalty whenever it was
Within
a few wedts I was lndfpe~nUy
wealthy. For tltose ol you with moral
qualma, let me say that I nevfl'l' intended for my inveatlon to hurt
a nyone. Had II not been for the ex·
tremebloodlnesaot'thetime.,lwould
have no doubt gone down in history as
thelnventoroftheVegamattc., _
_ Anyway, people sta rted loeln& their
~::. ~~!~ep~:~~~::~/~~!r-::
m iserable one-room hovel, and into
1 luxurious three room hovel. II was
there that I spent the rest of my days.
::::r~~~~~=u:~~~!r:!r
ftty rouith ille ocrorrtd In ea rly
Victorian England. For the first
t~~o·enty years ol my life, 1 wu a
.
m~~~~~~ ~~c;':~~~
Drart," delayed the lnvenUon of underwe.rforover :MiyNrs.
When I wasn't wrllin11, I hung
around taverns and bawdy bouse~,
drinkin&. arousing, and sinaln& a ll
the ma.t fllthy sonas ot the day. Soon
I became known arGUnd London as
" The FatberofVIce"- not tomtntlon
everythln1ebe.
I was banished from England shorllyafter anunfor tunateepilode,ln
which I wa.s caught mlxlna aranola
Into the queen's m.uijuan.a s tash. I
wu put on board a ship with 200
gallons of Spo~nlsh wine, and shoved
outlnfotheocean. J wubentonrindlng the United States, but I took I
Wf'OI\& turn $0meplace. I died trying
tofla&down aok:fl>era.
BEFORE YOU MAKE YOUR COMMITMENT
FOR SECOND SEMESTER STOP IN AND
SEE WHAT THE VILLAGE HAS TO OFFER.
Flags
displayed
A permanent displly ol flap bas
been establlahed at U't\'SP to com·
memonte each nation that h11 ever
· wntastudenttothecampul.
After a search throuab unlv~ity
record~ by RVK"II starr members, 42
different coualries wa-e couated and ,
=~t~~.fm'!::i~J~
LOOK
BEFORE ·YOU LEASE
~~=i~~=faft.ement
Do your present housing facilities offer you:
When the '' lntematiGNI Comer"
was dedkated In a recent ttremony,
nag oo.mber 43 waa placed by Marisol
Sancl'la In honor of her native
Dreyfusaakl that roman studenta
~d~~':Ci~~ ~u:~u:;:: ~:
.e, A Security Lock & Intercom System
«
«
«
encoura&ed them 1o pt involved w;th
people of the area in order lo fuJiy understand American lire a nd to assure
a bro.d ectueatlon for themaelves,
A total of" students are c:urrmtly
enrolled at Steftna Poin1 !rom Z3
Corei&n Ianda. n.ey are lft"Ved ~a
romp stutknt advilor, Ma~ Fan&
plus protnms directed in the
division ol c:oaarrlcular lft"Vkt:l by
Air Conditioning?
laundry Facilities?
Beautiful Furnishings?
-tt General Electric Appliance•?
« Heated Pool?
.e, 24 Hour Maintenance?
H~=·t yhuan intemaUonal
dub and also a !at family ~m
~~:?..: ~=:z.'1::,.=t
romp studfttta by lrlvttliiC the
yauU. for Yiaits and occuklaal
mall and proridinl: spedaJ ualltuce and counMl1nL
IF NOT
LIVE AT 'THE VILLAGE'
OFFICE - 301 MICHIGAN
341·2120
N"~•ber lt,lt11 Pa&elt
••'""
Ray Palmer searche
the unique new bwiiness tailed
Gtoeio5yor thet' raruen Brother's pet
eltpha.Jt and tigers but the only thing
)·ou'llhtaraboutf\llyPillmeristhar
he'sont hellofanlceguy.
ltay Palmer is the publishcr.of
St-arrh . $:put' World and t'tyl nx
Sautton C thelattcrhasrecently~
incorpor.~ tedv.-i lhSf';,rehmagazinel .
lie is truly an tmazing man.
Palmer describes himself IS an
editOr, amateur ethnologist, autho..-.
tra\'t ler, amateur archaeoloslst, and
" publisher ol pulp magazines and
books" .
Bornin Milwaukeeini910 t tht!lasl
time !Ia ley's t'Omel appea red to the
e::a rtharldtheyearthat Mark'T'Wain
diedl.hesta rtedrt:adingat theogeof
roor. ll isdietcorutis tedofanavernge
oft6bookJperday durlngh lsyooth
a rid adot~nrt'
Palmer btp n
v.-ritingprofcssionallyattheageol t5
a nd ra n bo.ut of having 01·~ three
million works published.
t'lyln.~~:S;,uren
ByAibt:MStln~k
~~ is a plount liute community about fill~ miles south of
Stevens Point.
Space Wotkl, Search and t'lyinl
Sauce" are space ex ploration,
psychic phenomena and ut-·o r~ar­
ch magazines Pf(ldueed by Palmtr
Publications of Amherst.
Despite the fact that Plllmft'
PubUcatiool Is probably Amhenl's
la rges t industryoutsldeofcornand
potato production, town Jpeople
remain relatively oblivious of Us
products. Youwon' tfindcopiesof
the publications on the magazine
rack at Gene's Supereue or the
s helvtsoftheAmtw:rstlibrary. While
I..ikemOIStvillagesof~rtOOOin
~=~·
!~'::!:t.:sm:~
batery,lhreecwfourtavtmS,Ifew
ps sta tions, a hlrdwa re store, a
friendly little cafe aod a lot of ptoace
of mind.
Amherst is unique how~tt. in a
numberofrespec:ts. ltishorRefora
amall ~munlty ol Amish, !hat
auious religious wet that strictly
rejettsmec:haniudaociety. His the
home of one of the worlcn few
~iningone-rlliJcin:uHS ,
towns~ofltntalkaboutGeorge
Sroda's numti"'UU appearances on
the 'Tonl&flt Show' tspotJSing the
merits ol his "Magic Worm Bedding•·
they aiJIM rmlly don't know or don' t
lt 's
home for a man that has gained
national ~tlon and Publicity u
the '"The Worm CUr". It's borne for
1 firm that spedallus in tbe construction of R. Buckminstn- Fuller's
amadng and beautifu!Jttucture-the
Geodestc Dome, AND ltltthehomeof
Flyt.g S.KU'I. se...u and Space
W«id mapzine&.
c.arelholtoneollheworkS's rortmG~t
'
e:xpens on Uf"' research lives right
inthtirmldst.
The conversation over the counter
at Clyde's Coffee Cup will often cen·
ter on the stra113t ways ol the Amish.
Newllorbuns
Since the establishment of Afllhtnt
Press Illy Palmer has foundtd 1
!'::~ ~::1nU: ~~ e':f::1"!:;,
1
books dealing with the Ottult
religion. Uf'O's and Olht•r btutrf
topics. Search mag:nlllf' ~~~~ r-.
ded In 1951, t' lyln g Sauc-rn 1 )bt
iat.er. . Space World. llhidl 1
:!.~d~~~~pa:t~t'l;=
firstappearedini!IS$.
·
Palmer's brand of pubhshingb:a
dying breed. !lis m::ag:uilws contatn
little advtrllsing t nonc that 15
solicited I. SUbscripl ions are I'5Sft.
tilllly lhe only ~tnlle jtCnrDtN
R«"tnt inc~ases in postal ratrs ~,:t
been devu taling to pubhslltn lik~
Ray Palmer. Production alld m~tl1111
rostshavtlnc~asedtothtpo~nit~t
Palrntf is probably most noted for _ _.lpl'ollts have been tr::ascd
Tha.
the coining ol the phrase " flyi ng
coupled wilh the rtemt apprarall{'f
sauctn'' which rirst appeared in a
ol glossy Ut'O magad!IC'S I you n.
bot* he ro-aulhon!d v.•ith Malthev.• find one ol these numbcn .. thr
Arnold in 1952. Tile majority of his
magar.ine rack at Gene's Supm~tt t
:;:~j~f:.~~r:;~~:~e!~d ~sycc~f; ~n~~hi~:;::;ti~ ma~t " phenomena.
Ra y Palmer's publishing ealftr
spa nsa pcriodofalmost50ytarswith
betterthanhalfofthose yearsusan
independent publisher In the tiny
village of Amhcnt.
At the IJe ol 16 Palmer became
enamored with the appea ra nce on the
t'lytnx Sa11reu and !War(ll cbolb
formerly in digest form t&. i&f
Rf'adtr's Dl&ntl ha\·e bftn~
bintd into one rull·siud &lollY
magazine simlliar to the ~· UFO
arrivals on the newssU'I ndJ. P~lmff
has taken on more outJick printia&
worit to sublktiu his ~PlJIIP
operations and has a lso h1rrda htPIJ
ot~~'SSiandsol thefirst scie~liclion
competantstaffartistarld a rest~rrll
magazine, Amulnx Stories. lfe submilled a manusc: r ipt 10 the
publit'ation that yt<lr but was rejected. Scq:lafttrward he seta goal for
himselr- to become editor or
AmnlnKStorln.
Ray Palmer ruched his Joal some
lv.·elveytars ,later. Under his direc·
torshlp circulation rose from a low of
1~.000 .b tf?re his editorship to 75,000
w1thh11 ft1'31editlonarld93000wlth
hissecond is:sue. Palmerr~ainedat
editor with access tog01·trnmtOtliles
on Ut'O investlaations.
Seareh
StarrhmaJa&lnecont.ainsphotlllol
UF'O's, a spirited c:ollectkln dar·
ticles on s~J<ange ~nncaaad
UF'O.rtlattd phenomena. and a~
~~~y~~!~ttin~r:~;~,!
tier ol our gtntraUon. AlmOil aiJ ol
Search's materill Is pr~'ided br
rndtn wllh varying Mgrets llf n·
J)tf'lise. No relmbursemtrU 11 mack
fot t'Opy.
~
Search magatine is a~•atl.ablt
primarily bf subscriplion from IL1Y
Palmer in Amherst but a ft'l'
newutands In larger rnctropolttall
areasalsocarryl l. o,·~GOOII t"'OIItS
a r e proceutd by the U.S I'05tal Srr·
vi« every othtT month. MIJ!i!IG"
priva te UFO enlhusiall~ '" 1ht
United States, some go tu coiii"!Ct aad
hiJh school libraries. a lt'Vt' I(U u far
awayasAust ralit,and t\·C'ftf~·trp
to the Amhent.Stevms P01n! :.fl'a.
Palmer Publications arid flaY
Palmer a re gearing up rnr ""'
challenges In a field that ha~ ul'ol"l)l
been challtnJlng. Palmt'l", a t an.J&r
when m01t men reti re. ·sho\li ft'l'
slgnsolhisage. lleslillsptnd$-IO if
$0 btlurwedtlat hls o(f ka in Amtwr'
st a ions with tndleu houn cJ rtU~
and researt'h at his home on tbt
Tomorrow River. Ue apparently II
not overly eoncerncd about 1111
future. lfhehastnythlngtn(t)ln ~
with Ma rk Twain 1whom 110111e d llii
folkwttn believe he is incar~ttl ht
Pho!os by Bob Vodal
ilschelkded rorc~ep~~rturetrom•rtb
with the reappeannce ol tt.lt7's
Comet in
I• .
out alien beings
0
care_......'-'..,.,.._,
,.,.,,,.
''"
SEARCH
-
.... CMl . . ,.,..UIIDuMAflii-C.rlftl llA IIIIIH
. . . . . . . , _ _ . . . .}'f ....
=.rn-- ... - .
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Science • Environment
I.
Seminar examines energy choices
natun.l fuels tNt we have left, before
they disappear. He streued that ~~o·e
can exP.Mt aIOWfflng or expectations
or an inereue In the
available oil.
Al·•n move towards lhe fUture, we
can expect a small arowth In
h~le<:trielty since U II not a
v~able means or increasln& enercy
production. Windmills and sola r
energy are bolh viable means or CJb.
taining ener&Y, but windmills a re ex·
pemive and solar energy pt'Oduci!S a
'very low grade of energy. Heat pum·
pa that utilize 10lar enera,y, however,
are viable and are on the Increase In
the Southern states.
Dr . Meyer fe-els that improved ar·
chitec: tural techniques tor utilizing
sola r enercy could Increase the 111e or
the powerful fll)'l that the sun
radiates. Geothermal energy tthe
utilization of natural ateam to tum
By Sntl Simpkins
On Thursday November 4. a
"Enera,y Optkxll" seminar was held
beause
at~'SPtodiscussavailab~me:a.na
ol obtaining energy on a nationwide
level.
The: concern over the entfiY crisis
has been arowln&. aUJin& mixed
reactionsonallsidea. Eeolotiata are
outraged by the ~!salon of pollutants
being belched into lhe sky by eoal
bumin& po-.rer plants; townspeople:
are picketlngthearrivalol"nuclear
~=~ ~.!~1:
thean~wer .
=:rt!
The: sem1na r was designed to ex·
~=:~~:~f~~~~
solid base on which to form lhdr
opinions.
Dr. Walter Mey«. the present
Chairman or the: Nuclea r
Engineering Department of the
Unlv~ity of Missouri, was the auest
speakrrol the seminar. He hal been a
laboratory consultant to various
sdentific projects and ~a~:tively In·
\'olved in a multitude of pr-ojects con·
cemiJll various methods of obtaining
.....,.
Dr. Meyer began the seminar by
saying the main discuuion woulcllap-
=~n~o d: e~~d~1~e t::,~
1
power plants. There b a lfOUp, the
Union Of Concerned Sdentiata, that
has published a paper tNt made an appeal for dialogue on the pro1 and cons
olnuclearene:rtJ' ..
The: Union Of Concerned Scientists'
brought up many aspects or nuclear.
power : the hi&h cost, the low amount
ol'riskinvoived, thelowamountol'environmental damage, the statistical
reliability, and the governmental
maintaining of nuclea r wute. Dr.
Meyer then added that the laflesl
"wart" ol nuclear poweT is lhe
dispoul olthe remaining waste alter
nuclear llaaion. He 1110 emphasiud
that at times, lhe AEC (Atomic
Energy Commiuionl Ia very lnsensitivetothepub!k, btoeauseofita
oeeasionallgnoring ol relevant pubtie
complaints.
:b:lu~~;:~~'TI't~:!a~
meansolprocuringener&Y.
It was pointed out tNt the demand
formt:fl,)'lsstillever·i~asingand
since 1969, we have no longer been
able to supply our own oil. Dr. Meyer
staled tNt the only way in which we
could haveanyhopesolbavingstock·
ralr!~:u:rts ': ::f' =~~~~
program. He said !bat a cooserving of
t per cent a yea r Jol amount of
energy used) from 1970 to the year
2000. woukt result In a :n per cent
savings of energy consumed.
The discussion then turned to other
modes ol obtalnin& energy. the rlrst
tieing nuclear fUJion, which was
de:Kribed as making nuclear rwlon
systems klok benign. Dr. Meyer
pN!dictedthatitwouldbemanyyeal'l
before nuclear fusion would evet~ be
feasible shu there are 10 many
problems connected with it.
Shale oil was mentioned and Dr.
Meyer evaluated It as bein& a
wasteful and daltJerous meana; or CJb.
talnlng energy Since shale waste Ia
extn:mely dangmM and Ia bred by
theextraetionoltheoii.Hesaldthat
tt.:eextradklnofshaleoillslnjurloua
lo unduground water and the
surrounding et~v\ronment ~~o·hich may
be: drulk:ally altered by II. Dr.
Meyualaosaldthatbylheyear2000
shale oil may provide, at the vrry
most, 2 per cenl ol our r:nergy needs.
By the yea r 2000. we will have run
out of otl and gas and the impact of
this has Jed to the hiJher prices that
are now 10 common. Even with the
hilhef priCft of gasoline, there has
been a t2percentriseingal01inecon·
sumptlon si~ last year, when we
spen t 36 billion dollars ror imported
od. Dr. Mey« hinted that this could
indicate a need for eflUJY con·
servatlon. Statlstklalaoshow that a t
theendofare«alveslump, there is
usuallyanlncreaae:lnenergyuse.
Dr. Meyer said thai elevating the
priC"e: for energy Ia the m01t COI'f'Oiive
way to conse:rve
fur:l and that
a llocations would make: more
sense. He alao uid volunteer con·
servaUon won't do it and that conaerv•Uon should be Imposed by lhe
government. Dr. MeyeT feels we
wouldmakethebestuseollhe
~ob:f:r~ l:'~rf!ls~
~~o·as foUnd
that radiation from
nuclea r plants is well below what we
are naturally exposed to while fossil
fuel fatalities are much wone; 50011,000 times higher than a
catastrophit a~ident Involving a
nuclear reactor.
Atomic waste can be succesaru uy
solidified for storage, but even If we
abandol'l c:ommerrial nuclear power,
we still would have a large atomk
;:r~:
1
~':te
/!O::::Ic
'::at!:aJ:
years. Dr. Meyer streued that by
mallin& the waate into a alasslike
form that is highly insoluble, It is
mudleasi«tostore.
Wehaveenough uaableuranlum,
taking Into a«<Unl. optimistic " flndl" that coukt occur In t~ fu ture, to
las t until the year 2060. Thla ls about
3.5 million ton!ll or uranium and does
not take Into account foreseeable
recycling of atomic fuels . Dr. Meyer
said that a nuclear power plant, If
built at today'a prices, woukt c<~~t
arounciiOOmilliondollars for at,OOO
Megawatt plant.
World charter seeks
~
environmental solutions ~
econom.Jc groWth which win not ...m
RyBarbP11scltel
Last month the United Nations Environment Program, UNESCO, and
the Alliance for ENVIRONMENTAL
Education sponsored the Norlh
American Seminar on Environmental
Education In St. Louis. Five olhotr
ae:m inars were being held throughout
the wor ld.
At the North Amuk:an Seminar,
people from the United States and
f:o:~~~~'t;:u~er;:.~
objectlve:a for envi r on ment a l
education in North America and rYC·
ted to the Bei&T~de Charter whic:h
hadbeendeveklped at a prtVklus hdd
W«ld workahop.
T he Be:l1rade Cha r ter first
aueaaes
the
envi r onmental
ailuaUon: " ltlaablohltely vital that
the world's dtlunl Insist upon
rneuurea that will "::A*'' the k1od '?'
any way dlminish their et~vironment
and their living conditions... We need
nothing short of a new iJobal
ethic-an ethic which espouses at·
titudes and behaviour for individuals
and aodeties which are consonant
~:~~nity's place within the
"Above all, it will demand the
aaaura~ol perpetual peace through
coexistence and cooperation aii'Hlfll
nations with ditreren t social
S)'ltema."
The Charter has more in mind than
merely cleaning up dirty nve:n,
''S ubstantial ruourcu for
realloeatlon to meet human needaean
be gained through restricting
miUta ry budgets and reducing com·
~':;~ =a~':J! :~~:':e
goal."
The m~bera of the global group
that wrote the Charter a re more than
nature lovers who want to uve the
wha lea 1 nd condors. They have ae:t
some obtainable 10111 and actions
callin& environmental education
of themOitcritlulelementaof an all·
out attack on tl'le world's en·
vironme:ntal crllls."
"one
environment in ill totality " .,,natural
and man-made, ecolotical, political,
economic, t~hnologlcal, socia l,
leglalative, c:ultu ralandesthe:tlc."
.(
By Scolt SimpkiDs
Once fall arrives hunters eagerly
anticipate the coming hunting
wander about in mindless ecstasy preparing for the big
openin(lday.
lbeseuonal excitement may ovn-whelm him and the hunter may tend
to neglect his work and spend most ol
his time reminiscing of ple&Ynt
rnoments~pastb.lntingseasons. But
ahft" the first high pitched ft\·er
passes, the hun.ter begins to aff«tionateJy. URmble his favorite
guns and huntina clothes so as to be
season. lbey
re<~dy for opening day.
11Jese
treasured Items may bring a remor·
seful sigh in remembrance of days
when pme, and not hunters, were
pifllti!ul.
As each gun is uncased and in·
spected for surface rust, the hunter
may s nap it to his shoulder and down
an imaainary brace of quail ."
provided nobody is watchi!ll. As he
brings oUt the okl single shot .:Z:Z he" II
fondly r«all th;lt crisp Saturday
when shot a monsterf-'oxSquirrelout
ol tbe \"el')' tree his father was
~..-.._...,~.._,.......,,...._.....~.._,.,.._,,..........,_...,~.._,...._,,......,....
camofla&ed beneath. When be unToys are removed from lhe ~I
c.ases his well used Winchester ear· · insulated boots and mink oil 11
bine, he'll recall tlletimeheshot that Jovinglyworkedintotheleathertops.
huge 13 point buck and missed win·
Arteranalmostendlesssearch,the
ning the " big Buck" contest because hunter manages to find his hunting
he ~l«ted tcYenter it. As he pulls hat, which is promptly thrown on the
out his rebuilt Stevens side-by-side 16 ground and stomped on until it looks
gauge that once belonged to his and feels jllll right.
father , he'll relive the time when he
The last few days before opening
knocked down a griukd old drake clay are spent rereadina: old issues of
Mallard the auys down-wind of him ··•'ieldandStream "'. On theeveof the
missed.
b!Jclayhe'lhklpdlnnerandgotobed
Aftn the guns have been cleaned early to be thoroughly rested but will
and replaced in the gun nbinet, the only end up tossin& and turning and
hunter takes out his jacket and JetlinJ up two houn ea rly anxious ly
~~a!~ !:~~tw~t :C~:; afi~j~dt~'::~~ hwr a rrives and
therefrom past hunUngsea.som;--old
hunting licenses. knives. cheese sandwiches. matches and even bottles of
deer scent.
t~~ ~!~1na~etak~t f~
examined for the minute rips and
holes that ' ll gush water Uke mad
when the hunter • • into tbe marsh
first thing In the morning. His moUey
collection ol decoys are given touch·
uo oaint iobl and are tenderly placed
back into lheciKoy _baJ.
By 8ai-bPuldlcl
. We're finally winter-bound: lhe
nver froze over this wedi:. Anyone
forlcesk.atin&parties?
-
Spa!TO'WS are bltirig quite plum p
these days-and not from Hardee's
fretl('h fries.
Rather they nutr up
t~ir!e<~tbers forwarmth inthiscold
vocathet-.
There's a more aesthetic- way ol
humidifyinl your abode In this season
ol dl')'ness. Fill aU your windOW'I with
l)t.nts-some species even like the
north exposure. Remember, this is
the season ollndoor prdeni ng, but I
don't recommend watermelons.
This ea rly twlll&ht atYes a
fort'boding feeling to the psyche. The
iMtinct is to den up like a bea r , with a
crack..ling fire and a mug ol hot apple
ciderforthcdu ration.
...
The farmers are taUtlnJ about a
rccordcropolac«nSthisyea.r. Tile
det'rhavcbeenc.atinJtbeminsteadol
the corn crop. Thisseason'sdeerharvest willhaveauniqueflavor.
-
People predict the severity of the
co ming winter by judging the
thickness ol the animal's fur. But I
gua rantecllwillbethecoldestwintn
when the car breaks dovfn_20 miles
outsldeoftown. •
LAND FOR SAlE
32 acres of choice land located on the
west city limits ·o f Stevens Point. Truly
a natu(allst dream come true. Enjoy
your own .personal wildlife preserve.
Plentiful deer. Active beaver lodge,
and more. Be in the country and en·
joy city conveniences. Details avail·
able. A once in a life time offering
5
0•
at
22,900°
344-5096 ~iled Farm Afi!AKY, Hwy. 54 West
the hunter bursts out the front door,
gun under one arm, and 80 poundsol
··necessary" Items under the other.
Some hunters ean't bear to part with
tbeirsentimental .ttusures.
Thisbehaviorcontinuesthroughout
the fall until January when most of
the hunting seasons have ended. Then
the woods no Jon&er «ho with the
IOUndofhunten"StumDJing"
through the leaves, passing tnrough
their hunter's paradise.
SHARE THE RIDE
WITH US THIS
THANKSGIVING
AND GET ON
TO AGOOD THING.
Us means G•eyhound, lnd a lot ol your l1llow studef)ts
who 111 tlfladv on to a oood thing. YotJ leave when you
like. Ttevel comiOtttbly. Auive 1111eshed 1nd on time.
YotJ"U 11ve money, too. over the incteesed 1ir
fifes . Share the ride with liS on weekends. HolidtVI.
Anytime. Go GreyhotJnd.
GREYHOUND SERVICE
ONIE · IIOUN D· YOU CAN
WAY
Till,
LfAYI!
k.35 11.30
320Pfll:
55.45 SlO.-tO 3·2Qp,..,
11 ..0 SU.20 3.20P-"'·
MAD 111.00 320P-"'
1.(.35
sa_lO 320,,.
1.25pm
e ·20pJ!l.
5-tOP"'·
Aslt"tOU<19tftiiOo\.o\.cldotoOI\II"-PP<tu<tltnCI .. tu<n\IIPI .
AllEN CENTER
STUO£HT MANAGERS OFFICE
34&-3537
...
Wise:ourn Nat unl Resources
m.~gazine • will o(fe:r full eol~
photographs and fe.nu. on parb
and forestry , rWUnc. hwlUna a nd
wikllileal'ldthee:nvi.tuunent.Tber'e
Eco Briefs
The study done for the Feduil
EnergyAdministrationuidlhe:reare
enormous potentill bmtfits In a la w 1
requirinl the deposit nationwide. But
whether the benefits wou ld be •
achieved wou ld depmd on the
publk's willi~ lo return empty
cansandbottlestoretaikn.
The re:por1 by the Research
Trlanale Instit ute noted that
~on's mandatory dqloslt l.lw has
brouJ,ht a 70 percent return ra te. II
cuw:luded tha t a nation wide law
miJht reach10or90percentby t!m.
:::U:nlso !':,a~~i,to-~~
guest writers.
Penons wishinc to ..ubKribe to
WISCOnSin Natunl R.e:sourcts may
~~>Titi to the Departmmt ol Natunl
Resoui"C'es, Box · 719 1, "Madison,
W"IS005in53707, or call the DNR at
Ul0112fi6.M.I9.
0
)
nm~m~bn" that riding the ~~us Kl'·
ves both
you andand
the
Give
It a dlaoce
,doenvironmtnL
your pa rt In
CONC!I'Yingenergy,
Eco mog
6' •
c~
.1
.. ~
·.
-.
To \ntrodu...--e the public to the new
Resou rces
Wisc onsi n Natural
magazine, a special di~CU~nt subscri ption rate is being olfered by the
Wi.Jconsln Departent ol Na tura l
~-:;:;ial
intontuctory rates for
the magazine are: $3.97 for one yea r
(6 luuesl: M.97 for two years 02
issuell: and $9.9'1 for three: years I ll
islueai . On May l ,l!n7,theregula r
sublcTi pCionrateswill &ointoeffec:t.
1bey are $4.50 for one year; SI.OO for
two years: and Sll.50 for three years.
-.
~
•
BoHle deposit
Woukt youreturn emptybeve:rage
cansandbottle:stothe supe:rma rket if
theycarrie:da5centdt'posi t'!Astudy
says tbilt if enough Americans did.
they :wookt consen·e energy, create
jobsandsavebillioosoldollars.
It said such a llw 11>'Wid «<I l tne
container Indus try additiona l inve tments for machinery. manpower
andfacllitits.
Uut it also would stimulate enerK)'
conservatlonandanetincreaM!in
employment and. payroll in the container-related industries, occordins
to the study.
n ecycling con tainers is cheaper
tha n making new throwaways, and
eonsumers could save money if soft
drinks came in returnable cans and
.
bottlcsthere:portsaid.
The institute said tha t if a 5 ctnt
depolit ~~>·ere In full force nationwide
by 1982 and if ronsumers returned 90
=~~~~o~~c:!~!~~· they wou ld
t;b~yi~:.:.:::::ns"::
rr!:y
bottle:s,therepoMsaid.
Good-bye Smokey
The original Smokey the Bear, Internationa l symbol ol fire pRYentioo,
died Ju t w~k. leaving as one of his
mournen a fouttry prole:uor at the
University ol Wilconlln Stevens
"""'-
Jay Cnvena, who joined the
natural resourcs fa'culty here thls
fa ll, was a foutter on the fire In New
Mexico where S mok ey wu _
disroveredi nl 950.
" I u.W that hil paws were burned
and I remember that he bit at my
glovt'S,"Cravmsrftalla.
Smokey died ol old age at the
Nationa l 7.oo in Washing ton , D.C..
and his rema ins ~~o·e~ flown to
Ca pitan, N.M. forbY rlalnea r whcre
he~~o·asfound.
The U.S. ~·orest Service contacted
some or Smokey's bl-st friends lm·
mt-diately following the death, in·
eluding C ra\·en~ . " I had a n
aSSO('Ia tion with Smokey throughout
my cart-er," he sald.
Cra \·ens retired th is summer from
a po5t in Washington, D.C. as deputy
chief for ~he ~a tiona! t'ortsl System.
The original Smokey had ret ired a
littk!earlier and~~o·asl't'placeas arire
prev~lion symbol by a black bear
rescued from a fi re in the western
part of the country.
To a cabin _by the woods
By~1art \'ollralh
' There is an old tabl n, lost In the
woods ol northern WiscONin, that is
inha bitedbyhumo~ns for a fewshort
days each year. The res t of the time,
wi ld creatures live in the okt struc·•
lure tha t illn't really fit to be a
garage. But. whe:neach dt.'ll!rileason
opens, there'• no place you'd rather
...
While this earth may be hUJe, its
magnitude is not what for~ the
separa te worlds in ~~o·hk:heacholus
live. Instead, it is thespeclalplaccs
~~o·e have all found. If you 're a deer
hunter, the okt cabin in the woods II
oneollhem.
The trip to that deer hunting tabin
isn' t appropria tely measurtd in
miles, bt<:ause it is rea lly a three
hour drive that heads backwards In
HELLO BIG TWIN
The Big Twin is two charcoal-flavored
beefsteak burgers ( V. pound) separated by a slice of tangy melted cheese
and topped with shredded lettuce and
Hardee' s own special sauce.
time. Woodsme:a o1 the past ha~
sha rtd theumedrtams tha t bring
you totheramshackleyoulove.
Inside the okt cabin, Coleman tan·
terns hisl,living off a hazy light that
tasts shadows over the cards you
IKlld in )'OUt hands. The woodsy
a roma of ha rdwood logs burning in
the old stove makes you remember
the way a utumn 1melled when you
wereakld,a nd thehea tilrad latesls
a wa rmt h no for~ air system could
match.
The:rea re familia rfacesalla.round
you, faces you a re always happy to
ue. There are rtd and blate orange
colored hats, glovetl, Jpckets and pan·
ts scauered a ll around the cabin.
There are rifl es, being oiled
ritualistically, for the tenth time in
thel.lstweek.
.
There are stories swa pped, being
told for the " umpt~th time", con·
t t.anlly beingenl.lrgtd, bu t always a
joy tohear. The:relltheevll!t'·present
optimism of the upcominl hunt, a
feeling born ol expect.aUon that
h:un ' l had to race reality. Above all,
there d the warm fee:linl of together·
ne:u only bucks alone in the woods
tan know.
OUtside hanp a large moon that
goes unnoli«d in l'ebruary.
In
November thouJh, that same orb
becomes the runing moon, and
everyone notices the s liver glow It
tasts upon everyt hing It touches. As
a thin cOlu mn of smoke riles in to the
night from the cabins chimney, and
llght s neaks outthroulh the window1,
anyone outside is reminded or how
pteasantthe:cablnreally is.
~n the re is the moment when lanter ns begin to flicker a nd die, while
mens llplntosleepl ng baiJ. In the
darkDI.'SI, voices pe:nls t bt<:ause,
while no one can wait for what mor·
ning will brina. nobody wantJ the anticipa tion ol it to end, either . When
sleepdoesarrive,lt brlnpfamillar
dreamswlt h lt .
•
Towards morning, thecibin will be
cold bt<:ause: of a fire that was
steadily dying. Someone will rtstoke
it moments before lantern IIJh tJ
displace the darkntsa. 1ben the
smell of bacon, the 11)11\le:rina of eus.
and the antkipation
.he hunt will
arouse sleqMng sensa. It is the start
ol a day that will always tt.and out
beyond all others If, for no other
reason, because It be:pn in one of the
specin l placesin you r ~~>·orld .
f~:e~:~:: ::c~:::·t~o:!
just eyes tQse:e: it. Perhapathat ll
whyyou iO\-·eitso,andcantakeapart
of it with )'OU'If>'hen you must leave:.
UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY
PRESENTS
LA DOLCE VITA
DIRECTED BY: FREDERICO FELLIHI
This coupon entitles holder to two Big Twins tor
the regula r price of one . At Hardee' s of Stevens
Point. Limit of one coupon per purchase.
~
STARRING: MARCELLO MASTROIANNf& ANITA EKBURG
TUESDAY, NOV. 23
1 & 9:1s
ADM. 51.00
OFFER EXP1AES NOV. 24, 1178
817 DIVISION
__..
PROGRAM BANQUET ROOM
[ Sport• .!
Aerial Circus finishes big
H~' J oe Ordla
d-~ ~~~ ~ro!~ba2i~~
note by downing con!~ eocham pion Plalteville 38-14. The Poin-
tmtook advant.ageoll1Piooeer turnovers. including seven rumbles and ~
fi•·e passintf'rceptions.
In fact . Platte-.:iue 1umbled the: first
three limes t~y had the: ~ II . but .
Point was able to turn only one or the
brelllks into a score.
P latteville
r11Wllly got their p6tent oHeRse roUing
ea rly in the second .quarter, tyi ng
thescore7-7onll l2 ya rdpau from
qu3 rtft'baclt Kurt Gundlach to Dave
Jng,.·ell. The Pointer oHe~
~reputedly since their~ing
Platteville was moving fo r
a not lift- score the nex t timco they had
tWbllll.and tho Pioneers appea red to
:~ek~n~~o;l:' ~~~':Ve~-
ned the game around. Gu.od.lacll
threw a pas.s to wide receivft' Ken
Jakubowski that was low, but the officials ruledi lcom plcte. Pointerhead
coachMMte~rlesdiiputedlheull
sayi ng the ba ll had been trapped.
Charleo~' pi"Qtests earned him a
=l!Y~~=~::~~e=~~
)'ards added on to the play. The
Pi~~~WrS did score to Lake a 14-7 lead,
but Cha rlts' activities seemed to fire
up his tea m.
The Pointtr offense wote up and
theba ll ,to takea2 J.t~halftimetead.
The defMSe stopped Pla tteville cold
the rest of the pmc. When Platteville
found the go1ng tough on lbc ground,
the)· trml to go 10 the air . bu t the
Point scocoodarv y,•as wa iti ng. Steve
Komnedy intercepted lhfee Pioneer
a::,~~ a nd Greg ~·ix picked off two
StevtnS Point scored two more
touchdowns and Bob Hotrman atkled
1
:.;~~,:~~.~~ : !f::!h~l [ :!cit!
be a very pleulng vic tory for
Coacb Charles and his tea m, which
had seen their once bright chances
for the confes-cn«" title vanish with
consecu ti\·e IO&SC:S to Oshk06h and
Jli ver f'ai ll. Point ended up tied with
LaCrosse In the ~nference stnn·
dings,oneJamebehiOOco-chil moions
Platteville, Os hk osh a nd ltlver rOlls.
, Stevens Point ended the season
-.·ltha7-3record, theirbest inmany
yean. Point will lose only li\•e stnr-
~~i~~t t~otr~~~f~i:. ~:nt!~c~~~
ca n look ahead nex1 year and indeed
thto futurelooks brig ht.The krieJ Cir·
CUIWillbebacktotakeanother run at
theconferencetitle in tm .
Pickers predict Vikings over Pack
:!!!~'t!';::;:m S.IUvan. and
This h Ule way the Nf'L'a a~:tlon
wiD IO In Wed. Elcve~~ :
OAKLAND 0\'ER PIIILA·
OELPII I A-Dick
\'erm ieh
major problem with the Eagles is
that he's coaching the team he'd m011t
want to play apinst. Rakten by 14.
BALnMORE 0\'ER MIAMI- Bert
Jones should riddle the feeble Flipper
leCOndary in the Mond.y Nighter.
The Dolphim have no chance unless
Roser CarT dllappears In the Bermuda Triafll]e. Colts by 10.
PITTSBURGGH 0\'ER HOU..
favorite play
Lf that doesn't
wort;, Putorlnican audibleofftothe
dropped pass. Houston 's defense
should sue for overtime as the
~tateitby13.
~N-The Oilers'
as the fumble. And
NEW ENGLAND 0\'ER NY
JETS-<Both teams resemble e:oiJele
OUtfits with their youlh and eng::~m. The Patriots I"C::mmble
NEW ENGLAND OVER NV
J£"r'S..-Botb teams resemble e:ollege
outfits wilh thelr youlh and en-·
tluiasm. The Patriots nsemble
~lahoma , and the Jets are dead-
~,~~7,;:."· Oklllhoma.
SAN D I EGO OVER BU f' ·
f'ALO-BiiJs• fa• daim that their
IUpen.tar, O.J. Slmpaon, can walk on
~~':;c:r;!!b;~_' t -.·alk on ,Lake
DEN\'ER OVER NEW YORK
GIA.''TS- Denver really rolls it up
at home against weak teams. Wu.k?
What did the Giants do t.oea m a Nmpliment? Broncsby20.
CLEVELAND OVER TAMPA
~EE~~.;_~N!~~EP~,.Sf~tT;
Cl~~~r~y ~~ .!~F~~~j
rides on our loiHip. Wievel lilt es the
Rams because they haven't lost in
well in a place that (eatures indoor
plumbing. They' ll win in the
Kingdome by 4.
CIIICAGO OVER .DETROIT-After
the IC:beduJe the Bears have beef!
through , the Lions are a breather.
also sides with L.A. because Anthony
l.eo!ULrd slllllwn' tleamed Jthatthe
ma inprerequisiteforakickretumer
would rather go throup them than
lhe 49tTs' Tommy Hart a nd Cedrick
SMI Francisco s ince 1966. Haberman
~-:=:;• ;=ne:~~~ ~~r~ba·c:. ~r:e tea~ ~::an ~k~:~~~ ::~~
LaFilte. We s hould point out,
however , tha t LaFitte won a battle
every once in a while. The Bur·
~:r~:~~:r~~~:1~
Cowboys might be looking ahead to
their Thanksgiving ~matdl with St.
over them a nyways. Chicago rlnally
getsabre.akandwin~~bytwo.
lntramura/s· going strong
I.J:Iuis. However, the Falcons are
biggtr turteys tha n anything a lUpermarket se:lb. Staubach's shotgun fin-
_
By Cra ll Breltspncber •
This yeAr's Jn tramw-al prOIP'am Is
once again in full swine. 'The openinjl.
event-Touch Football·wasa huge sue-
dleasypkkin'su Dallasclevoun the
o\'ER WASilINGTON-lt's last rite5 ror the
Oves--the.Hill gana:...and Ulil year Ltae
Cl.rdina ls won 't need a touchdown
pusthatWASN'TeaughttoOOifto .
Louis by I .
CINCINNAT I 0\'ER KANS• S
of Allen Center-we
wes-e able to accom modate the &nUcipated increase In teams entering
Intramura l competition. We were
also abletoholdthreechampiOIIShips
for men's Toucb Footb&Jl.
In the First Place Chamoi001hip
defense c:ouldn't guard the Pentagon
if itwasbel ngattacked byUUiuania.
determined lsi West Wa150n team.
11le Second Place Championship
16.
?:t::nth ';~ttd'~~~E~/,!;~
&o-.·ery Boys -.·es-e crowned as the
Third Place Championship te01 m as
they dereated the f'ield Chickens.
The lntramur3.1 \'oJJeyba ll 5eaSOO
is underway wi\JI play<ifs, for men,
scheduled to begm Wed. , Dec. t. The
Net Pickers, 151 Eut Bakiwin, and
4lh North Sims will all be challenging
th e d efe nding champion Big
bl.~~rOu iS
f!~~ ~~c:u~~d~
Bengals rompby
MIN NESOTA 0\'ER GREEN
BA Y-5ince the Purple G&ng always
seems to play one point games<~pln­
st Central Division rivab, the outcome should depend ·on who bloclts
the molt kicks-Nate Allen or Fred
carr. Another ulcer Upc.etter as the
VLkingswinby ooe.
00
Hardman.
f!"u!ora~~e; !~ =~~
ne~theast
~r:dista;:~~!!!~~e!~!d"!
•
Boopers.
Three- ma n basketball playoffs will
also begin on December I, with Mac's
Machine promisi ng to fin is h very
s~g.will hold a Db·ector'a Basketball League again this yea r 1coach
Jim Cla rk 's pride &nd joy I . Entries
for Director 's Lea Rue will be due on
Wed .. J anuary 19. Only the fint ien
tea ms entered will be able to play.
Play begins .on January 23.
Women's lntramura lshasalso had
a successful yea rthusfar. asp.a rticip.ation has been excel ~ t . The
women have crowned the Brewery ·
13omben as the Women's ~·lag Football Cham ps a(ter they handily
ddeated Zncl Eolst Roach. Also,
Women 's volleyball playoUs are
Khtduled to begin on Monday,
November 22. ~·rom all indications,
the women havedem001trated their
ability to make Ule transition from
football to v olley~ll whereas the
men,a rest llltryi ngtointes-~a
pass!
So•·fmbertl, lt'l' Pale ll Poln!.er
~~--»»X-»:<-~:x<-.:~~~~-:-:-_._
rsP0 rf0
Dan. a sopl'lo!nore, finished 20
s«oodsoutofrirstji~. but was the
finil Pointer rur.ner to cro5lll the
line. Don. a~ from GI'Htl Bay.
Sh rls
Fl•ld hockey e nds
'T1Ie UWSP Women'a r~eld hockey
te.m ended the season wilh a 11>-»
record. n.e Pointers ..-ere shut out
only twice, scortd 34 goals aiM! pve
up II.
'Miil la one ollhe belt seasons the
te;~m has ever had. · Moat of the
players will be returnlna with the exceptionolfour graduaU n&senlors.
Cqach Nancy Page was proud ol the
work exhibited by team members.
The last match ollhe season ended
wllhat-1 tie against LaCroue.
Track wlctorf••
Brothers Dan a nd Don Buntman of
Green Bay helped lhe University of
Wisconsin.Stevena Point to a uc:ond
~~~i:~~~~~nc':=i!!~~;
···
_,_,...,..__.__.,._,__,=::-.":""':':':::::1
1
Coach Munson :wid_ the cam
· 'oa! IJ to place at leas t f_JYe w_resll~
m the Mtiona l cha mpt005h1ps thiS
year. This is the s«ood ~a r ot _rebuildin& f9t the UWSP wrestling
prosramiirttf' theprogramboctomed
L.aCrosse finished rirst, the Point
st"Cond, and Ea u Clai re third.
50011 accordlngto Coac hDickiJc n·
nen .'The first game 1s against Southesl Texas Slate In the Quandt IO'm·
111
nasiwn.
rd
finished H\'en th.
~~-hree years ago bt<:ause ol budget
Ricik Zabonkl finished tenth and
E. Ma rk Johnson follo-,·ed ll\tleventh
Last yea r, with Munson as new
coach, UWSP ~an with no -:eturn-
TheCimpua Bowlirv Pin
Huster Award Is given to the EN ·
place.
ing vanity wrestlers a nd flnashed
with a r«<rd ot H .
Oshkosh and River falls a re upeeled to be povo·en a loog with
StevensPoint thlsysr.
TIRE Monday leaaue . Bo'b
Makfs league-kadina n• averaae
was not hurt by his 620 121M, 205, and
gllmes-c:ons\stencyll : Jade
Giesenschlaa:'s second 600 this
Wrestf•rs loolc: good
,.!!~trsn~~n&
~:/~~
";:11
Wresllln& Coach, John Munson, expeels his tu m to be one of the top
powers In the conference.
. .
One of the teams moat prom11mg
members is Rick Pucock of Marine!te who advanced to the national
championships as a frfthman last
year. Coach Munson looks for
Peacocktobetterhis:20-7re(.otdfrom
laat year because ol more experience
a nd increased strenath.
Cal Tackes of Kewaskum, Jelf Ketter ol Adel, and Ron S:wet ol Lan-
f!~·y!!r~-!~ a!:~~b:~!;
McOanl•l rilums
Mike McDaniel, the lone senior
start er for the -UWSP basketba ll
tea m, haa broken a amall bone in his
left hand but lt"may not prevent him
from further competition.
McDaniel, a 1973 graduate of
Racine St. catherine High School,
wasplaylna:defensedurlna:oneolthe
practice pmes when he tried to
deflc!.et a pass, the ball hit his lhumb
resulting in the small fracture.
His availability for the opening
&atneonNov. Z2ndwasqueslionable,
Bowline League awa
:Z II
=::,~~!.•}!;. ~~ ~:~~ ~
put togethef- a 573 series lndudlng a
220 pme: Jim Schmldl'a ~72 1204
game); phil alx other 500 or beller
series(or men.
The women Weren' t aloughlng off
either. Cherie Zierke bombed out I
5r56 series on pmes ol171, till, and
191.
So many people had season, and In
severtl cass, lifetime, high games
and or aeries, it was hard to pick : the
one lop performance. I hope the
~c!.~ ~~ =~~~~~~~:; =U~~y, and 'Miunday
'=~W~h~
it~
~
";
~~·-..--.~~~~~
~~~
~~;~~·ww~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Field .hockey
team ties in
final game
'
I
'· i.>.l. I
!!If .
'!
' -
'
j: <\
I
.;.
By Jo.nVandertkTbe Poi nter field hockey tea m
' played to a tie in the game a'ainst
LaCrosse that had to be a wm for
them for advancement Into the
regionals.
" I was pleased with every one's
play In thai ga me. Every player a:a~e
her all. We outplayed _La~~ 1n
~~ astfaj! ~~=t~· onc;oa~~
team'sefforta.
on
The ga me, played
the neutral
Modison rield, wos scorelt'll nt the
LaCrosse came on early In
the S«ond half to score, but jun iOf-~
t~o~lr. Then
:=~~!;S:!:r~;~~~a1.e~~~~:
X-COUNTRY .SKIING-These are UW-SP students
cipating In the ROTC skiing lab last year.
Another skiing lab Is scheduled this year In F!tbruary.
parti-
Some of our classrooms
aretit classrooms.
Military science eo\IJM~J .recourse- in le.denhip. muaJement and 'military
procedure. You111ea.m how to nauge people, to handle money and equipment.
' But you1lgec. more than j~Ut the cluarnom tbeo.-y . You11 experience it.
So when )"'U ttudy 1n1p ro~ding and land n.~vignion, be rady to lel your
boou dirty In activitiet like ttpptlling, orienteerinc M river·raftina:. Whe-n you
tludy cocnrnonbiliona, plaD on con:ununiating. And when you atudy weapon•.
upeett.oqua.li(ya ttherifle r.nge.
Then, •ben you decide to ent.u advanced ROTC eour.ee 11 a junior, plan on
applying averythlna you'"' learned at • aU-week summer leadenhlp camp.
Military lcience COUrHI offn you cMilena:es. Physical 11 well 11 mental. To
prep1111 you lor l•denhlp nsponsibility IS an Anny officer-when you p-idUitl.
If thlt'l the kiDd of challenre end uperienceyou're kloklnr for, you'rt the
lookiD1 lor._
kind of nudent
••'n
ARMY ROTC.
LEARN WHAT IT TAKES TO LEAD.
FM ....u•. '""""ART HARRIS or BOB BROWNE
2ND FLOOR SSC BUILDING
PHONE 346-3821
more scoring OC'CUr«d and the
Pointers uw their chance for 1
regional berth fade. Their overall
sea5on recor-d with LaCrnue now
s tood at one loas and two lies.
The team fin ished their seawn with
an impresalve lt>-l-:1 mark , outscoring their opponents in total goals
~lo t i.
lli&JI go.l KOren on the aeu;on
1r;ere : Judi Adamakl, a junior, w1t h
11 : J>eoe Simon, a senior, wllh 7 : Sue
Brogard, a junior, with ~ : and Ma ry
Moluhn, a sophomore. with ~ -
P~;e~~ fh:r~~!e!;:M~~:
U nlver~lty ol Minnesoca u bdrlfl the
m01t memorable. " We were behind t>-
~u~ith81~!:a~Jnu~r~t i:n~he~;~~
Moluhn followed with two more
a:oall, both on solo errorta- the lost
goal comina: with 10 1econda
remainiq."
'MIIsyear'st.eam wUJbelolln&four
players to graduation. Tbey are co--
~~i~11~~nL~.l.~~!:. Simon,
Cooch Paa:e doesn' t tee thlt 11
betna:the last great year for Point
Oekt hockey. " We have a n out•
s tandina group ol flnt yea r pLayers
10 weare loollinc forward to another
•trona: team nat year," lhes.aid.
QJ) G0Q[i)0Ql •••
llyC.rrieWolvla "'""'\
Hey, we're really moving ri&ht llon&. The tLU110UI Satu.rdlys
bu been very &ood 1nd very productive. Gee! it's fun to write a
hopeful column. "MK~Ttdays ,.~ need more people, so if you can
~
~-ow~GB~
~~~:ee:u:ek~~~~~==-~
By'M~rie HoldiOUt>, VArep., ,·U-244 1
=r s=~n~~:! ~~~,:_ration oftheCo-opand it ca nonly
Another c hange brought about by the Veterans EduclliOI'IInd
Employment Assistance Act of 1976 COOC"emS adva nce
paymentJ. Advance pr~yment is defined as the check lhlt ia 11
the university It the bqinnln& of the fa ll semester for 111 continuing vet students. Previous to this 1ct, advance payments
were 1utomatk:aJiy prucessed by the un ivenl ty. NO\\• ir the vet
want11n adv1nce payment, he will have to notify the VA, st.l rtingJunet , lm.
Another upectlhlt concerns the vet is the change In the ti me
ol the month thlt the s tuden ts will recel\·e his Gl bill chi!Ck. The
vet rt!«ived hlsNovembercheckatthe beginningol themont h,
but s t.lrting June I , 1171, the vet will receive, ror e umple, his
Nove mber c:heck at the end of the month. In s um , the paymen ts
will come a t theendolthem ont h. This means lhltbelorebeglnningoflhefl ll semester, the vet must notify the VA that he wanIs a n adv1nce pa.yment fot" his tuition fees, ot" he must lake the'
money rnxn his own pocket. If be &fll an 1dv1nc:e payment 11
tbeendol Aua:ust ,lhen his next paymtTlt wouktarrlve1t the end
of October.
in, We hue 1n el«tridan and 1 plumpn--pft'SOQ and they will
~bly prefer money tobn:lwn rice 1ndaranola for payment .
Forewarned II; forearmed. •.not I n enti~ly original statement.
We ruy be ciOiotd frqm just belore Thanksgivins to mid Decem·
ber. 1lle ~ason is to free the volunteers ..... ho 1reworkiqln the
o&dCo-optohelpfinishthenc!WCo-op. Them'ore.bon:l up now for
Thanksgiving eating, munching, a nd house gifts. The other thing
you can do to keep the Co-op clOHd for the s hortest pt'riod of time
pouible Is to get down to either building a nd offer time a nd
!ley you studentJ, now tha t it only rmtJ you $2..50 to become 1
10 pft'Cftlt off member, you only have to buy S2:5.00 ....-orth of
anything to break even. So whef'e a re you !?! Christmas is
comtnc and i1 your account is s mall...or if you ....-ant a JO\·ely personal&ift ...attractlvely pad.aged teas, spk:ft, nutJ. a nd honey
go over a Jot. better than a hash pipe with m05t ol you r kith and
kin.
That's about it exC"ept that you're alwa ys welcome In this
vineyard, ea rl! or late in the day ...Come one...Come All .
'The Spike of Sammie White'
SUPER PICKERS POEM
Tbestory ia tok! by the \' .kings o1 okl,
With minds clea r enou&h to remembe!',
Of 1 play they 1U uy turned theGrut Stond'1ce to clay
Beneathcokl., dark s kies one November.
Minnesota, lt'J uid, wuonepolnt1head,
ButDetroitwiJ comln&l<hlrging',
When quarterback Frtn, thattcamblin' fl'lln,
Told the huddle, " ll's thlrdlndshort ylrdl&e."
ByPIIIIS.IIden
In todliy'a fall moving world, ma n has learned to ~
greatly upon the news media for information. Recently , an Incident took place In our community that brought to !ight a
situation which! feel is ol major importance to rea den.
1be incident was the s tabbing which occu!Tf!d at a local Night
Club. Tbe reporting. or rather, the lack ol reporting on this lnddmt by the t"A·o major l'le'ol'l medlu In Stevens Poi nt , the
Stevens Point Daily Joum.:al 1 nd WSPT radio sta tion was
questtonable. It Is my opinion that proper~~ is essential
in the diuemina tion o1 factul information and the halting ol
Nmon. Because o1 the racial overtones SUtTOUndinR the i'!·
ddmt. It's app;~~t l.hat the5e t"A·o major nev.-s (lUI~ .,.-ere
inadvertanlly doine a disservice to bot h Blac:t and ~Me Communities. T'he1'e are al.,.·ays people ....-hoare ready to hsten to and
act upon a rumor. therefore. a situat1on ol apprchtnsion a_nd
aeneralalann existed among. Black students and thecommun•IY
of Stevens Point this past ....-m .
It hu been common ~lfod&e in the tUadC ('OQ'Imuruty that
many White citizens
!11! prey to rumors lhlt the UWSP
Blad:l are victimlling Whiles in Stevens Point. 'These 1'\lmors
pt"OCHded men rurnors 1 bout a&it.lled Whites coming ~to
Steven~ Point to "1venge" the s tabbin& that took place. I was Informed that t.helerwnon even ruched the H igh~ level.
I hope lhlt the news media ol Stevens Poi nt~ realiu _the
::r~.~~=-nori~=:.:,~r~~r:':~:'~-~~
Poic:;I~
the Univenity level, efforts 1re bel':" made
help
a llevi.lte IOfM of the mioorlty problems. Dit:k Dabner IS one
man who deserves special mention for his involvement.
ev~~:e~;::~~: ~~~H~~~ufn~~e:
Tbefan11t !heMet were nervous, you bet,
When T1rkenton faked It to Foreman,
'MM!yletoui i &UP a• he faded topass,
For both We.ver and N1u molt "''ere a<e~min ' .
But Number 10 threw and the pi&skin sailed true.
A beautiful end tohlsscrambUn,.
Fora lone in then.lght thereranS.mm ie Wbi te,
Rookie wkie recdver fnxn Gr1 mbling.
um Birney w11 bea t, theCf'OII>·d his iL" feet ,
AI Wbitewent streakin&for pr~ydirt.
Only yards to go, he headed for home,
With the ball held high over his shirt.
Now IOfM wounds heal a nd some hurtJ mend.
'f."~=~r:e~:ri;rc~~:s':-mmieWhite,
Lt'm Birney jerked oa his 1nkle.
The balled was dropped, ~nets ol Purple hearts s topped ,
With 1 hush they heard inW'IIC'OI'din,
Therewoukt benoTD, for the s phere bounding free
Wllca pturedbyl lertLeviJohnson:
Nea i Colzle'll tell you; Dave Smith will too.
That s piking the ball's sometimes fatal,
And if your coach is Bud Grant, beUeve me, my man,
You'd be be tter olf on the Edmund FiUgera.ld.
in meetinp between B!Kk studentJ 1nd school ldmnustraton
1
He
u~~=miaU: ~~:.~v~the"'f.::S~.
~=t!;.'::.~~~~::~=~ft'y_ ~:,::,~
alone 1 fed he dmenes a IOUiful " ri&ht on" from m.e and '¥
lOW~- He bu also liven rl'ftly ol hil time to BSC. To awn 11
• up, l 'dhavetouyDick Dabner is l B~c:t Man.
trt~~J.:!.i.~p~f~Ut,sokeep it togetberW'Iil the next
The Je&end lives on fnxn Duluth loSt. P1ul,
Ofthemiuin&sixpolntslhltNovember.
The s pikeol Slm White ill ni&htmare, !hit's right,
Th.lt hill billfold wiU a lwa)'l remember!
.,
A.r ts • Culture
----
I
Students blossom into artists
Hy Shar011 MalmiiOM
Artiata girted with ability in
drawlngorpaintingareoftenbothadmirt'd and envied by those who feel
the.Yiackthalpartic:ularskill, What
most people fail to reeocnlze is that a
~·a talent is not the on1y key to
one's sU«eSS as an artist. The talent
displayed Is a result ol possessing a
creath·emind
and an indeterminable amount of
patience. This must then ~ put Into
practice
with
determination ,
dedication, and an enormous amount
olhardworlt.
Sensitivity Is a clulracteristic
~tial to a good artist. In Ol"der to
achieve this. three qualities are
needed
in
va rious
kDOW!edge of
degreu :
an unthe aurface, and the
the
tooU,
derstanding ot
development of an idea. The mon
ability one has with one of the three
qualitieS, the )tss he ne«<s the other
l\1'0,
•
In drav.ing dau, the tools used
mOlt often are pe:n and ink, pencil,
and charcoal. The ai mplest way to
team how to use them is to become 1
child a pin. Student. are encouraged
by ins[IUC'ton to experiment fredy
with their took. Arm
and wrist
exe rc:ises aid the studenll in
~~ov.er~l!n~he;~~m:;'·pa~~~~~
scribble, smea r. twist and turn In an
effort todisco\·er just howto make the
tools..,·ortfortMm.
~~!~~~~~J:ll~ ~~r~
is thick or thin In ...-eight, rough or
smooth inttxture,whiteoryellowish
incolor,allthtp.aperust'disolthe
finest quality. By applying various
methods,askiUfullartistcanachieve
the exact same thing on different
typesolpaptT. ll blmpoc-tantlhata
student understand the surlace In
front ol him before developing' an
kita.
If
a nd cold. If the repulsive Image concurred ....-ouldn't have caused the
hand to pull away, It would have felt a
~~t~h~:!~~~~~!':ef~~t!~~~vf~rn
and amusing, enables the s tudents to
~.:JW":rt~:. .~~· J;~:.~e;
~:: m~~h~gha~tri~ve ~his
Sft~,i~i~e~r:::irrt.'W~. h~?,ln°~il~~
ficultconcepttoacquire.
" You're making me nervous"
..."That's what its o11 about"
In drawi113 class one day, Mr.
it!b~e~:'~ 1~~~~f~~f ~~~'!i~
!:!\~~n::-:p=~ :h~te~~':r:.
1
\lo'ooden platform on one half. A boord
covered the other hAlf. Around this
conglomeration the stu<knta sat, 011
the floor, a pad ol drawing paper In
front ol eac h of them. Every penon
wastotaketurnsasamodelonthe
contraption. In a limited amoont ol
time the i tudtnll were to draw what
they saw from their angle. Each
model was
to sit in 11n original
poll:n fa~~g n~:fe:~:,ir~~:n-,n
position, Mr. f'a blanopolntedootto
theclassvarlouspointlofinterest
from different anves that the students
might want IOJnc<Jr"P.Oflteln their
drawifll. Either pencil « charcoal
could be used. The student. had 45
~««~ds to draw eac h olthe first few
models. During tho5e seconds. Mr.
FablaM. kept time by pounding a
stick on the noor. He kept thestudeninlormtd as to how muc:h time they
had left. As he walked across the
room a number ol times, stepplna
between students, galing over their
snoulders. he encou raged, them to
hu~~~mtone saki to him, "You're
~~~~ -~~~~t·;t'~~~~~7~J
Planting ideas .
an ~ is left undeveloped, the
After the first u-second tune
period, the s tude:nll began to realiu
what was expected ol them. Some
btcameoveranxiousbeforethewatch
slarted and as the illltructor
talked to them made a few markt: on
their paper. They were ol course
reprimanded and told to draw the pk·
turewiththei r eysfint.
•
By the time most ol the s tudenta
had caught on, the amou nt of time
was decreased to 30 seconds. Shortly
alter It was •reued again to 15
second~ . The time was then incrused
toUs-econdlforthelutff!Wmodtls.
artv;ort Is nothin& but technique. It
lacUaeatlvllyas..,·ellasfttling. All
imaginative mind stimulates ideas.
Oflen a number of thoughls originate
where Gilly one may be chosen. llere
an intelligent mind is vital in cl'lcuini
theideaessentialtotheformationol
apleasin&compmltion.
"'It's like plantin& a seed, you waln
it and ""'ater it. Soon It will begin to
grow. At aome stage durin& Ita
dt'YeJopment it may falter or come up
wrona. ~ it m1111 be wal.n"ed and
worted on. Pinally It will begin to
~n:f:~ ~~~:~~li'l!~
Duringthlstimestude:ntswereencouragtd to get l111lde tbe body by
disco-Yerins: and changlng lines. This
lel&on wu a complete chanp from
the usual reined atmo5phere. It
e,i:.S ~~~~:*:~ ~uti~i~
something els-e. That whkb is meant
to be, it wiU eventually become."
As in the above example, Mr.
FablaM, art instructor at UWSP,
=~:'Y~~;rt!ow~•=
:=!~S:m~l~ J~~ ~~~
be lncorponttd Into their drawing.
To aulst his dau In formulating
Ideas for thel r drawinp, Mr. FablaM
brought a carrot Into dasa. Each
=hprob::S=~rn~la~on
tnat::l o1 forcing Ideas 011 lhe
po~per when difrlcuiUea arise, sbXien-11 are rncouraged to take a break and
think over lhe problem. It often hels»
to
away from the drawing for
awhile, by either examinin& it from a
dist.a~. or by beginning wort on
aet
:n':.~~J:'ex=c:~~~t:!i
proctllloltransf~natttopo~peril
DOt nearly so tedious.
.~dv:-.':!td~.=e::
PoMlft' Pa1Je%t Novtm.,.,rlt.tf71'
::=,:~ :::ecr~~~~ ca~do:;
wanted to. Some drew the whoie
.
=- ~~~m~Acr:'!f'th!
carrotopenanddrewtbeinskie.
~r:a= :~~ n:fdY::;
was then taken. Some ol the pleli.U'~
~Uadenll
lock then became a IOW"CC
f«moreldeaa .
Qulteoltentheartlnstructonbrinl
In books olartwortt done by famoul
In art. Thtsestudeatsare~ap:l
to tttt« art eduatioo u jobl are
quite limited Ia olha areas.
· How-tvft',artists whoarewtllolfor
wort at anotbtr job, may wish lo st1
up a small busira.s
tbtir
wort.
·
senmc
A collection ol dnwinp by 1 few
faculty membtn, students, and for.
mer students from UWSP will be
joininc stlec:ted dnwlngs from othtr
statecolJttes. Thesewillform a show
whlcb wWao on lour for ont yea r .
Universilits and public institutions
throughout the Slate will be lhe
rtcipitnts o( this coUtclion. The
Univenity Reauitinl Committee
graciously furnished the money
ISyJ;uldR ib r.t;a
A distinctly Jap.~nese atm05phert'
Pf:I!Vililed in the Wisconsin Room l.ut
t'ricb.y. Nov. t1 as the Fil"5t Nlghters
ptheff'd for supper on the opming
ntght ol Th~ Mibcto.
The Fint Ni&hters. are a group
numbef"ing nearly 13$ St~·ens Point
rHi<k'nt.s who regularly auend
optTnn~t night perionnancH of thr
m:I,IOI' theater productions a t UWSP.
Thr group, which·is aHiliated wit h the
UWSP Alumni Auociat.ion. was st.a r·
t~ thrftl yurs ago by thNter buHs.
Tho.-gwbolthejtrou p aretofillthe
theater on opening night. prO\•ide
financia l support for the unh·eNity
thtater.andtoi mpr'O'·etherri.:lt ions
brt.,.,·ft"n the uni\-erstty and the eom·
munll)'.
Saga !.-oodSrrvt«eatered tholiUJ'
per,and thestaffdrcs.sed mJ apanese
kim011011borro•••edfrom pt'QI)Ieinthe
eommunily. Tilt mmus ••;ere printed
tn both Japa nese and English and
gan•a shortlk."Sl'npttonofeachcour·
IIC'. l'o!N ~·um iko M~.a membtrol
the t'irsl Nig.hten .,.,-ho
born and
raised m Japan st-n·td as a eon-
.,.,,u
~ lt.antforthemc:tl .
::oncert ushers in an early Christmas
~62-voict Unh·ersityChoir.,.,·ill
prt!iCnt Its annUOII pre-Thanksgiving
l"hris tmas concert on November 23,
at I pm in Michdsen Hall. A concert
cls:fc~ and S«Ular chon l ,.,-orb
under the direction of Kmya rd Smith
ol the UWSP M tak' lkpt., will in·
troduce the 1976 seuon of Christmu
music to bot h campu1 and town com·
muni tits..
Members in the Universi ty Choir
are comprised of music students as
..-ell as studtnt.s in other disciplines
•ho wiShed to partidpat,e, in this ac·
ttv1ty offered by the musie depart·
mmt.
A well established choral
orpnization,itatllinedst.atekvtl
l"t'l"1)1nitionasa mident1al campui
choi r with touring c:apacity. Thdr
lt"&I"C mpgemtflls have ll~tn
them on statewide toun e"ief1 spnng
stmcJttf". 1bey were invited to per·
for m at the SLate ConvmUon for
'tlt'ilc:c.-.in M~aic £ducaton In 1910
and 1'174. The Mpniution further
demonstrated ill reputation as a
"'touring"' choir when it erossed In·
ternatMlnal HaS and bowldaritl to
appear in the Amtrk.a(a Choral Sym·
IIOiium held in Vienna, Austria in
""·
'lbeCboirwiD tntfftllln the.auditn·
wit h traditional songs specially
<'e
eompaoed to illumn"l.lte a Christ mas
Spint . The program ~ig.h~ights_ thrt;t
"k.'Ctions from l:knpmtn IJrttten s
"' A CtreniOO)" of Carob;"" ,.,-hid! ~
• ·riHm for a t-on\·tnt choi r 1n
t:ngla nd. Sinc:ethl.'fl , ilhas~mea
favorite Chr is tmaJ pr~nt.atlOfl and
,.,.ill be a spec1al offering from the
.,.,-ommtnthtChoir.
The Uni\:eNity Madrigal Singers.
.,.,.,11 perform tn t:liu~h:m~un:'et
15 a lt'p.lr.lte choir. They wt ll sm&
~·era l carolsnowbtingprepar~
for lhetrownaMual Elizabethan Om·
nerconeerttobtheklini>tc:-ember.
The eonc:ert .,·Ill also feature the
~br~o:~=.t::"oa;
Pinkham's
"'(..'lu"islmas ~ ntata ·
!e~r!='. . ~~ot;:a:,.~~O:'~:~j
~mtmbers. f',o"ooltht-Rsemors
are David K loes a~ !'tliehatl Rugen
who.,.,·illclimax thetrfouryean of
participation by HrVilll u s tudent
~:rJ·smith. who bas been cmductin& the reaula r choi r lftiKlN
lhroughoUI tbe semester to date
promised '"The festive ewning ol
seasonal "song includes music for
everyont and is certain loput you in a
joyous mood ror the com tn& holiday
se~~no~raeroradmission.
neceuaey to ready
forthe
u-
drawblp
IW".
The art department here is pleased
withlhet~drawlnpsubmllted. They
a.re abo proud ol tbe faet that they
are equally u strong u the art
departments ln lar&er schools.. A~ lhe
present time lheselected drawut&J
a.rebtlncstorfd in the vault located
~~baekquart~artdepart·
A c:omment reunUy made by a
studen t~ c:IOM lo the feelln&s ol
mo5lartilts~.tbeyareatudtn--
ts, instructors, or professionals. He
said : " I enjoy art. When I sit down lo
~·our portablot stages ....-ere put tn
tbe middle of the Wlsc:onlin Room to
sen ·e as the "traditional low tables
used inJ11pan. Amerieanta.blesand
dtairsringf'd !below lab~ lor the
people .,.,.ho didn' t • -ish to sit on
pillows on the floor. The tables were
CO\"ered with red table eloths and
dec:«ated with .,.,·hitt Spider Mums. a
delic:ate~nowerwhlchad­
dtd to the Oritnlll atm01phere.
The C\lltural difftre:ncft between
Japan and Amtriea ....-ere evkltnt in
both the decor and thr food . t'or
draw I can relax. Everyday .
~ctiaolveuthepetlcilrubl '
the p1per. 1 become one with the
~r:rth:rk:ulr:.:!t~
witbeue."
•
"~e
are Urnes whtn I act
discouraced. l 'm afrald that my work
won 't live up to whal Is expected of
me and that because of this I'll fail .
The satisfaction ol llnowlnc my
drawinc kx*s 1ood, especially after
Ovti"Ctlmlng problems and Nlllnc
crucial dedsklnlls whatllHpl me
with lt. Come lo think of it there's lit·
tie else t:d rather do."
The 5upper .,.,.,. not fcweian to
evcryone, asevidenctdbyonediner
.,.,, ho~mented , " My husband and I
have both ustd el"lopstieks. but the
c:ouple.,.,·hosatoext to ushadn"t.They
were being good spo rl s. though."'
Other comments from the dirw.rs as
they .,-ere leavin& for Thf' :\Tikadv
shov.·ed !hat C\"tf"yonc enjoyed the
me.al. Thegencralreactlonolthet"irst
Nig.hters was summed up in
J apanese by llowra rd Woodside who
commen ted."'Genkidesutveryrinel,
genkldesu."
Lw~xt's
GREAl COCKTAIL HOUR
PRICES!
~ FRIDAY -k
25e-1 Shot Drinks
soe-2 Shot Drinks
-k MONDAY NIGHT -k
All Bar Booze 40% Off
'·
4
'
-
.
, :;; "'·.~
-
...
":
~· ~
.... . . , .
....
~
:
.:; .·...
!~
GaUery exhibitS sculptural tapestries
a n idea's tre.atmenl is the sbow'a
j ~;~~O:%~'!:.'!::i'.:v:s~
~ideas c-an be~ in the llT\IIII
l
.:0
i
~
~~~==:::=
in the show a nd appean in almoat
=~ile~;:~~;~~~=~~~~~aC'=
bining and rec:ombini ng with other
""'"·
One ollhe mOJt ei'IC'OUraging things
abou t the show is thfo amount of
IOUC'hingtha i iOC'IOII. The tapest ries
a re rreet y exnmlned, Inside and out.
Tape5trics that mortC'losely resem ·
ble painting.sa renot tCIUC'hednearly
asoltena sa re thesculptur:~lmol\fs.
UWSP ga lle ry director Gary ll agen
describes the a rt is t as "one of the
moving rorc-H in contempora ry
""'e<~vlng. Il ls s tyle shovos one of the
~~~=·~~vf.:~rt exr~:~~~
making."
A s how of tapestries and .
d ra...,·inp by the Spa nish a rt is t Joa.ep
Gra u-Gamp is now being exhibi tC'd
an the Edna Carlsten Gal~ and will
continUe' until Deocembe,r 11. Gra u·
Garrigo has btoen acknowJedaed u
the most attOmplished a nd noced
tapestry ...,·eaver 1'10\11' work ing In
Europe.
Moat ol his 16 tape~tries llli!''
monumental in site, wi th some laki n&
on an an:~i tectul'31 quali ty, deal&nf't
to be viewed frorn aU sides. The
colors he usa are those he i:s surroun-
dC'd by iri the Spa nish countryside'.
The s how's crownina p•ece is
" Energis della Tern" whkh is also
the largHt. It's monumental C'nC'f"liH
derive rrom a n informal s ymmC'Iry in
composition a nd a n astounding
va rietyof...,·eavingtechnKjUC'.
Despi te the variety or the show. the
numberolac tualworkingideasare
depth and sophistication or
'"'·The
The a rtist hlmselr commenl!l, " But
I have j111t bc!gu n to experi~nt :
thet"e are i tillso many pouibilitles. I
think the most exciting creatk>ns are
yet to come. Tape~try iscklH.Iy allied
to man himsetr. For me, It is
something free .and sensual and ~
most accurate means ol exprns•na
thetdeastreel a remoatyalkl.''
Gra u.(iarriga began hisc:areer as a
•·
.,
."'
painter ,acquiringa~tatk>nasa
church muralist. It was through his
workinthechurchesthathebec:a me
interested in the Medieval tapestries
he saw there. By rt"Yi vi.ng the
tapestries in a mode:rn way. he
:~~!~'C:rJ':~a~:n 'd:J
complement to contc-mpora ry a r·
c:hilecture.
Now an important rigure In the In·
te rnatiooal art Wlll'ld, Gra u-Garriga
teachesatthek!.adlngartc-entersor
Europe and has conduc ted a number
or workshops in the United States.
Grau-Garrlg.a's taJ)C'Stries havehung
In o ne-m a n s ho ws a nd g rou p
exhibitions in the lei~dina C'itiH or
Europe'. and North and South
America.
Ills show In the UWSP gallery may
be viewed from lOam to• pm Monda y
through Saturday. and evenings from
7 pm to 9 pm Monday thi'OIJgh TI!ur·
...,.
UNTITLED, FOR DEBORA II JEAN
When time a nd presence melt anew between
• The bounds that dare to circumsc:ribe the flame
Whlcll burns, Its amber dance ronnC'd with am~
FalsC'Iydiscemed. save by the whispen of its name.
ThC'n c-louds s hall part anew. 1nd the warm ina sun
~":~}:'!Tt~~=~a~~::'J~~un • .
Beforethelouofaummer like•&boul
Ravaged the halio'lted g round where it had kept
It's treas ured images, and the leadc-n rain
Of cognizance coursed down whC're once had slept
A me mory now hope less to maintain,
Since rire brewed once more within thc- pyrcThat once freed songs from many a fresh brokc-n lyre.
mark me kinney
Ensemble ·sings in a ribald -mood
""
"Ill
"'
•·
"'"'"
..-:;.•
.
,,
"'""
.."..
•·
....
•
advertised in TV GUIDE
Poilller Pal(e n
Novealbu It, ttl I
....o-.S-A. L-. - -.-F-R-~~~~TUDEN-T.
...
-,~-·ouL-,~-,.-~S-I_F_I_ED-~-,.-.m ""'·
1be new ''Boston" album everyone
is ra vina about. Played once. S3.50.
Cai1Sttve.:u4-4036.
,,=~]
Psychology Timelables for Semester
One girl to sublet apartment for
Call Mary at Ml-'319.
The UWSP Dietetics Club preseniS:
John Uryant Wyman , MD o'f the
Gastroentes-ology Section at the Mar·
shfietdCiiniclnalectureon .. F'iber in
One male to sublet for 1«0nd
semester. Village Apts. Call Steve at
:HI-1693.
Monday. f'Oov. 29'at7 :00 pm, COPS,
second semester. Will llt'lol:iate rtnt.
Electric Smith Corona t)•pev.·riterin
exc:eUent '''ort.ing condition. Ca ll
Judyat3#-116l.
T'wogir lswantedtoshareabedroom.
.....
$250 a semester . Call Polly or Lit J.l l·
Waiter and us't, to' ehel'. Hours and
salary negotiable. Some kncw.·Je<tge'of
or experience wi th FTeneh R rv ke
helpfuJ .butnotnecess.ary. CaiiB)'TOil
atJ.II·3191.
t~
Diet-Facts and Promises.·· on
room\ 16.
__
__.
All rrestunan and sophomore College
ofNaturai Resoort"H majorsmustat-
tend Mass Advising for regist ration
for the Spring Semester . The freshman Sl'Siion will be Moodily. Nov. :29
and the 50phomore session will be
Tuesdays. Nov. 30. Both meetings will
Mgin at 6:00, Wiscoosin Rm .. Ue
Bring a ll regristration materials.
Please wail until after your mass
session for personal advising. if
necesu ry.
~~· ;;enP:~~~~~v~:/:~ r~f:~~
:~~g W~np~~rr:tt:~er orle:h:
Plychology coureUI you wish to preregis!~
for.
The Student llealt h Center has in·
(ormation avallable.Jor student.s in·
tcrested in applyi ng to the Armed
forces rorasclwllarahlpprogram to
support medial or osthcopa thic
train ing costs . Any studentsdesiri n2
more information on how to have
your tuu tucuon tees and educa tional
expenses paid by the Uni ted St.ates
Government contact Dr. Hettler a t
the Student llealthCenter.
CII.EIBII er E·JIITS
PBI.
SIT. · lUI.
MGI.
High School Film Festival. 10 AM· II
PM IUniv. Center I
Women VcXIeyball. MAIAW Tour·
nament
UAB Film : LITTLE BIG MAN, 6:30
& 9:30PM tProg. Banq. Rm., Univ.
Cmter l
UAB Coffeehouse : JAMES
STANLEY. 9-lt PM tCoffeehouse,
Univ. Centn-1
RIIC CH : Pat Houlil\a.n & Sadhana.
IJ:JO. t2.:30AlttLACI
High Sehool Film Festival, 10 AM-9
PMtUniv. Cen ter l
Women Volleyball, MAIAW Tour·
nament
Univ. Theatre: MIKADO . 15 PM
tJ enkins Theatre.l-'lneAr\5 Bldg. I
UAB Nightclub Night. 9- t2.M. n.:01·
feehouse, Unlv. Center I
Univ. Film Soc:. Movie, 7 & 9:15PM
t Wis. Rm.. Univ. Center I
WII.
TUE.
NOVI'II:Ibn- :Z l
Univ. Film Soc:. Movie: LA DOLCE
VI TA, 7 .. 9; 15 PM !Pro£. Banq. Rm.,
Univ. Centerl
UAB Vldeo: Video Doeumentary.
7;:1CHOPM tCom m. Rm.J
UAB Co(feeboule, Variety Show, 9-U
PM tCoffeehoule, Univ. Centn-1
Ca ble Proc. UWSP fch. 31 Writin& for
t.~~~~litli:":!n.
nett Show t Sporta J at H :30, and Tbe
Deer Clinic II 15:3CHO pn.
n tANKSGt\' ING RECESS BEG INS
IIZNI
UAB AV: Packers Game, 12.:30-3:30
PM !Coffeehouse. Univ. Centerl
Univ. Film Soc:. Movie. 7 II 9: 15 PM
t Wis. Rm., Univ. Centerl
Ar tsandCraftsCenter,2. pm,Spring
Demonstra t ion t Ms . Mr yna
Schnieder!
DUB.
Ba.sketbaii,SWTexas l ll l
UAB
Film :
MY
I.ITT t. t-:
( ' III CKADEE . 6:30 & , :30 PM tProg.
Banq. Rm., Univ. Center l
UAB AV : Monday Nigh t Foot ball. 8IIPM tCoHeehou:se, Univ. Cen terl
Cl ble Prog. UWSP tch. 31 specia l:
Pe troleum Lifeline & Pipeli ne ~8. 7·15
ru.
Novl'mbn- 2$
No •·t m bl'r ~
TIIASKSG IVING DA \ '
Tlt.\~K SG IVI ,-.G
ltECESS
_! ••
H you want to give handmade gifts ·
this Christmas, or are looiOng for a
place to be creative, why not stop
in at the ARTS & CRAFTS
CENTER, lower level, University
Center. 2·10 weekdays, 1·5 week·
ends.
The ARTS & CRAFTS CENTER
will be sponsoring a series of in·
structive demonstrations to give
you craft ideas and helpful hints.
Sun., Nov. 21-Mrs. Mryan Schnieder
2·3 p.m.-Spinning (on & off a wheel)
Sun., Dec. 5-Dr. Richard Schnieder
2·3 p.m.-Ceramics/on the wheel techniques
Sun., Dec. 12-Dr. Richard Schnieder
ONLy 5 57.00 PLUS BUS FARE
''
THIS OFFER IS AVAILA BLE
ONLY FIRST SEMESTER
PLACE YOUR $10 DEPOSIT
NOW AND RESERVE A SPOT
FOR YOURSELF ON THE
BEACH DURING SPRING
BREAK (MARCH 12· 20 )
WMtlH£R TOU CHOOSE 80TH THIE IIUS AND ROOM OR
ONL T Tttf. ROOM - 00 fT MOW!
CONTACT STUDENT ACTIVITIES 34tl·4343
•
MUST REGISTER 1ST SEMESTER
2·3 p.m.-Native American Crafts
UAB SPECIAL EVENTS
DOES SOMETHING
SLIGHTLY
OUTRAGEOUS
WE APPEAL TO YOUR GOOD TASTfl
Come to the James Lee Stanley
Coffeehouse Nov. 18 & 19, and
you will have an opportunity to
win up to 10 lbs. of Good Meat. -
BE THERE
.....
AND BE READY TO
B
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