ted Fees $476,529 allocates m

advertisement
A Student Supported News Magazine
~Vol.
24 No. 14
December 4, 1980
•
allocates $476,529 m
ted Fees
By Jeanne Peho8ki
additional $400 is available if. students involved in Music
The Student Government additional funds can't be ob- Activities "must rely on supAssociation (SGA) allocated tained elsewhere. There is a port trom SPBAC and their
$476, 529 from segregated $1,200 limit per program own fund-raising projects for
travel expenses-and capital
fees to various orgapizations .. request.
at its November 23 meeting.
The Chancellor's Reserve purchases, and from
SGA acted upon recom- Fund was allocated $8,500. listening to appeals by mem. mendations from the Student This fund is available for bers of Music Activities, SGA
Program and Budget special programming. Any funded the organization at
_ Analysis Committee (SP- student
or
student $5,500. They -had requested
BAC), the group that is organization may appeal to $20,504.
Members of the UWSP
responsible for suggesting the Chancellor for money
Fisheries appealed to SGA,
amounts to be allocated to from this fund.
and they received $300 to go
each applying organization.
·
towards travel. They had
The allocation must then be
Groups requesting,
but denied funding
requested $777. ·
b
approved Y a majority vote
The Campus Leaders
The Society · of American
of the SGA. If the SGA Association, Political Science Foresters requested $5,084,
disagrees with any re<:ommendations from SPBAC, the
Senate action is final.
SGA Reserves Requests
Some student organizations
were recommended to seek
alternative funding sources
from the SGA Reserves,
which include: Student
.Group Monies, the Student
Senate Reserve and the
Student Programming Fund. .
Student Group Monies was
allocated $2,000. This fund is
used to subsidize operational
expenses 9f a student
organization. The maximum
amount available is $150 per
student organization per
academic year. This reserve
is o~y avail~ble to nonannually
funded
members Timon
organizations.
were given an additional $320
for tapes.
The Student Legal Society
was recommended an
allocation of $8,855. They
received an extra $30 for
telephone costs.
The American Indians
Resisting Ostracism was funded at $4,046. Mter listening
to an appeal, SGA allocated
them an additional $162 to
pay the cook for their annual
pow-wow.
Debate-Forensics was funded .an additional $500 for
travel, making their total
allocation $2,765.
Renea
Bobanski, Hwter Johnson and Sandy Lipke
The Student Senate Reserve
· was funded at $70,900. This
fund is used to subsidize
travel costs of a student
organization,r including
vehicle costs, lodging, and
food. The maximum amount
available on an initial request
is $500. An additional $500 is
available if additional' funds
can't be received elsewhere.
There is a $1,000 limit per
student organization per
academic year. This reserve
is available to any recognized
student organization.
The Student Programming
Fund was allocated $16,000.
This fund is used to subsidize
programming costs of a
student organ~tion, such as
obtaining a speaker .
Available to any recognized
student organization, the
maximum amount available
from this reserve upon an
initial request is $800, and an
Association, Pershing Rifles,
Environm~ntal Education
and
Interpretation
Association and the Asian
Studies
Association .
requested, but were denied
funding. However, SPBAC
recommended that these
groups apply for funding
through the Senate Reserves.
The French Club was also
denied funding, but SPBAC
made no recommendations
as to where it could obtain ·
funding.
Groups recommended no funding, but receiving some
SPBAC recommended zero
funding of Music Activities,
UWSP Fisheries, · and the
Society of the American
Foresters.
However, after reading a
memo from Dean Hanford of
the College of Fine Arts
which stated in part that
SPBAC recommended funding the Association of Community Tasks <ACT) $3,546.
However, after listening to
appeals, SGA funded them an
additional $1,500. $100 is to be
used- toward telephone costs
and $1,400 is to be used for a
"recognition banquet" next
spring for the members of the
group.
·
Intercollegiate Athletics
Groups receiving an
was ·recommended an
increase in funding
allocation of $64 ,519 .
SPBAC recommended that However, SGA approved an
The Pointer be funded at amendment to fund Athletics
$17,560. However, after an additional $7,811. Of this
listening to appeals from amount, $2,500 is to be used
Manag'ing Editor John for awards .and jackets for
Teggatz and Advertising the athletes; $30 will be used
Manager Tom Woodside, to purchase a diving suit;
SGA funded The Pointer an $351 will be used to purchase
additional $2,970 for one ad- shoelaces, game shoes and
ditional Advertising Manager belts for the football team ;
and four paid reporters.
$480 will be used to buy
SET was recommended ari · warm-up suits for the
allocation of $7,263. They women's swimming team ;
but SPBAC reeommended
zero funding. Acting Dean
Newman of the College of
Natural Resources, told SGA
that the group needed m<mey
to go to the national convention. "It's one of the
things that sells our students
to the job market," he said.
SGA allocated them $310 for
national travel.
·$600 will go towards practice
gear for the men's basketball
team; $3,000 will be used
_towards recruitment; $300
will go towards counselors in
the administration, and $50
will be used to buy socks for
the men's tennis team.~
Budgets passed as proposed
SGA passed four budgets as
they were recommended by
SPBAC. These included the
Horizon Yearbook, funded at
$3,555; Hockey, funded at
$7,785 - which was placed in
the Student Senate Reserve
until it _ becomes an intercollegiate sport; Environmental Council funded
at $436 and the University
Film Society, funded at
$2,000.
· · Budgets decreased by
SPBAC, but passed
as proposed
.
The remaining organizations requested more money
than SPBAC recommended,
· but the budgets were passed
by SGA as proposed with one
exception. The Gay People's
IInion (GPU) budget was
decreased by $64; because 32
members of the organization
are not university students.
SGA decided that those members should each' pay. $2 in
dues. GPU received an
allocation of $2,826.
SGA was allocated $17,157;
the Public Administration
Student Organization was
funded $828; University Activities Board received
$50,446; the Spanish Club was
allocated $264; the Black
Student Coalition received
$6,155; WWSP 90-FM was .
. funded at $20,554; the Student
Art League received $2,610;
the Student Budget Administration was allocated
$6,175; the American Advertising Federation was funded $900; Intramurals and
Club Sports was allocated
$41,487; University Writers
received $1,685; the WolDen's
Resource Center was
allocat e d $3,315; the
American Water Resources
Association received $250;
the Wisconsin Parks and
Recreation Association was
funded $223; the Central
Cont. on p. 4
---
'
STUDENTS .~ Why Settl~ For Les·s-?
301 MICHIGAN-STEVENS POINT, WIS.
EACH APARTMENT HAS:
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COLOR COORDINATED RANGE ·AND
REFRIGERATOR, DISHWASHER AND
DISPOSAL
COMPLETELY FURNISHED IN MEDITERRANEAN DECOR
··
CARPETING AND DRAPES
)
AIR CONDITIONING
CABLE T.V. HOOK-UP
INIIVIDUAL HEAT CONTROL
PANELING IN LIVING ROOM
TE~EPHONE OUTLET IN EACH ROOM
LAUNDRY FACILmES
SEMI-PRIVATE .ENTRANCES
EACH STUDENT IS RESPONSIBLE FOR
ONLY THEIR SHARE OF THE RENT.
'
LIMITED -OPENINGS FOR THE.SPRING SEMESTER
I
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-· · NOW· ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS.
.
For Information
'.,And ~ppllcati.on . _
Con,t act:
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CALL 341·2120
BETWEEN -9 A.M. & 5 P.M.
The Pointer Page 3 -~
I
f'ird Youth Leadership
Day held here
By Lauren Cnare
"The Orwellian Decade:
Leadership in the 1980's" was
the theme of the Eighth Laird
Youth Leadership Day on
November 19 at UWSP. Over
300 high school students and
their advisors attended the
conference to hear a number
of people associated with
leadership speak on topics
ranging from the economy to
the
Equal
Rights
Amendment.
The conference, sponsoroo
by the Laird Youth
Leadership
Foundation,
UWSP
Alumni
and
Development Foundation and
UWSf, featured Secretary. of
the Department of Education
and former US Court of
Appeals Judge Shirley
Hufstedler as the keynote
speaker. Hufstedler spoke at
a lunc~eon for the students in
addition to a public address
at Berg Gymnasium.
In her speech, Hufstedler
discussed the history of the
Department of Education
and expressed hope for its
future under the Reagan
administration. She stated
that the US needs a change of
attitude to put all resources
together to improve
education and that there is a
long way to go before this·
country achieves equal
educational access for all.
She ended her speech by
stressing the importance of.
education to keep up with
change and the importance of
,using education to help other
people.
Many other people also
addressed the students in
small group workshoPs and a
question and answer period.
A summary of the topics
discussed followed the
workshops.
Ruby G. Martin, a Virginia
attorney and consultant on
youth employment programs
and former director of the US
Of~ice of Civil Rights, spoke
on the necessity of the Equal
Presents
M*A*S*H
An end-of-the-semester .
special
The Robert Altman Comedy Tha_t
Launched America's Favorite TV
Show.
Shirley Hufstedler
Rights Amendment; former James, vice-chancellor of
Wisconsin Governor Martin UW-Oshkosh, addressed the
Schreiber discussed whether question of whether the
the
economy
was educational system of today
manageable, and Terry can provide leadership for
Norris, vice-president for tomorrow.
research and development at
Paul Hassett,-president of
Nekoosa Papers, committee the Wisconsin Manufacturers
chairman of the Wisconsin and Commerce, examined
Energy Coaliation and the question, "Is the profit
member of the Governor's system supportive of our
Energy Policy Task Force needs in the Eighties?"
examined the feasibility ol UWSP's acting vicealternate energy sources.
· chancellor Daniel Trainer
Marlene Cummings, the discussed l~dership and the
and
advisor to Governor Dreyfus' maintenance
Office
of
Women's development of_ natural
Initiatives, discussed resources and Tom Hatcher,
whether the individual can a specialist in long-range
have an impact in the planning for Futures
Eighties; Professor John Unlimited,
Inc.,
of
Bibby of UW-Milwaukee's Minneapolis, spoke on the
Political Science department_. leadership of technology in
spoke on the future of the the US.
electoral .college, and Walter
Cont. on p. 6
Faculty Senate discusses writing
-emphasis proposal
By John Stein
A proposal that would
require all UWSP students to·
take six .credits of writing
emphasis courses beyond
Freshman English was
referred by the UWSP
Faculty Senate back to the
Academic 1\ffairs Committee
at the Senate's bimonthly
·meetingrThursday, Nov. 20.
The Senate agreed in
principle to the proposal,
which is designed to ensure
that all UWSP students reach
at least a minimal level of
writing ability, but could not
agree on specifics, such as
how the program would be
evaluated and if its
implementation would upset
the distribution among
· faculty of student credit
hours.
· The writing emphasis
University Film Society
proposal had its beginnings
under the chancellorship of
Lee Sherman Dreyfus, when
a literacy task force
determined that some
students were entering the
upper levels of their
education with sub-par
proficiency in writing.
In other academic affairs
matters, the Senate voted to
add a three credit psychology
course on aging, two and
three credit courses on
women in European history
and resource development,
and to add several courses on
Russian
literature,
civilization, and culture to
the Russian and East Central
European Studies program.
Student Government
President Linda Catterson
told the Senate that student
senators had postponed
indefinitely action on a
proposal to reduce the
physical
education
requirement from four
creditS to two. A study will be ·
made by SGA in conjunction
with the !iepartment of
physical education before
action is taken, she said.
Senate Chairman Douglas
Radtke reminded the
senators. that an evening
session of all UWSP faculty
was to follow the meeting ·for
the purpose of voting on
proposed changes in the
Faculty Senate constitution.
Due to· the absence of a
quorum at that meeting,
however, the revised
constitution, it was decided,
will be voted on by the
Faculty Senate at its
December_4 meeting.
Starring:
Donald Sutherland
Elliot Gould
Salley Kellerman
Gary Burghoff .
Sunday & Mo~day
December 7 & 8
7 & 9:15 PBR s1.00
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE TECHNICOLOR ®
0Jt7. UNIVERSAL CITY STUDIOS. INC.
All RtGHTS RESERVED
That's Right, When You
Make Anl purchase At
CAMPUS
RECORDS & TAPES
You Will Receive A FREE
Ticket To
.See The
Movie FM
RogersCinema
Dec. 12 or 13
Limited Seating So
Page 4 December 4, 1980
·consider Peace
Studies Courses
P.S. 230
Nonviolence
L. Burress 3 credits Philosophy,
history and Strategy of Non·
Violence Counts as Humanites.
P.S. 340
The Arms Race And
Arms Control
W. Skelton 2 or 3 credits
The international arms race and
problems of arms control from 1945
.to present, and future prospects.
.,
P.S. 370
Futures
W. Kirby 3 credits
Major problems in individuals fu·
tures. Counts as Social Science.
- I
-
D.M. MOORE, 0.0.
JOHN M. LAURENT, 0.0.
DOCTORS OF OPTOMETRY
FOR APPOINTMENT
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reat For Dorms-Exclusively Here!
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~
Wisconsin Naturalists was the information and vote on
allocated $655; the Child the budli{ets sometime in the
Learning and Care Center spring." Pucci admits that it
received $13,720; the Student would be hard to convince
Chapter of the Wildlife Central Administration of
Society was funded $3,4f7; this plan.
the University Theater was
allocated $7 ,Orl and Arts and
Lectures received$54,160.
Pucci said that he thought
SPBAC was very consistent
in its recommendations,. but
the Senate overturned some
SPBAC members' reactions of its decisions to reflect the
· Some members of SPBAC student interest on the camwere upset with the way SGA pus. "On the whole, the
handled the budget hearings. students on this campus
A common complaint was should be pleased with the
that the Senate was not con- outcome of the hearings,"
sistent, especially in travel Pucci said, even though he
guidelines. Specifically men- admitted there were some
tioned was the Society of the items approved that were
American Foresters, which controversial.
was allocated money for
national travel. SPBAC
recommends funding for
national travel every other
year. Members of the committee were also upset that
SGA approved. $1,400 for a
"recognition dinner" for the
members of ACT and some
expressed disapproval at the
huge increase in the Athletics
budget. One member of SP-.
BAC was so upset over the
"ignorant and irresponsible
way the StudentSenate dealt
with the hearings" that she
resigned. Another SPBAC
member is also considering
resigning for the same
reason.
SGA Vice-President Mike
. Pucci said that the problem
with the entire budget
process is that it is "too
rushed. It takes place within
two-thirds of one semester.
Presidents and treasurers of
organizations are writing up
a budget in their first year in
office for the following fall.
They only have the recommendation of last year's
budget to work with. They
don't know what the real need
. of their organization is, and
that's a problem. The
deadlines are too soon. Central Administration wants
· those budgets by late December or early January. Consequentially. we have to work
with a late November
deadline, because it has to go
through Bud Steiner's office
and be approved by the Chancellor before it goes to
Madison. This results in a
tight schedule for SPBAC.
The Senate gets the information one week before it
votes on it. We woUld like to
propose that the process be
run through first . semester
and the Senate would receive
I
.
Budget to be approved by
Chancellor and Central Administration
The Student Senate went
approximately $4,000 over
the eight percent limit set.
Because of this, the budget
will have to be approved by
the Board of Rege~ts.
However, it first must be approved by Chancellor Marshall, who will then forWard it ·
to Central Administration
and the Board of Regents.
The Board of Regents has
final approval over the
budget recommendation.
Once the budget is approved, the SGA holds aP:
peals in October for groups
who want revisions in their
total budget.
1. 25.6% SPORTS $121,972
1. Intramurals $41,487
2•.Hockey $7,785
3. Intercollegiate Athletics $72,700
2. 11.36% ARTS AND LECTURES $54,160
3.14.88% STUDENT SENATE RESERVE $70,900
4. 10.21% CAMPUS MEDIA $48,667
1. 90 FM $20,554
2. The Pointer $20,530
•
3. S.E.T. $7,583
5. 10.59% U.A.B. $50,446
6. 3.6% S.G.A. $17,157
' 7. 3.36% STUDENT PROGRAMMING FUND $16,000
8. 2.88% CHILD LEARNING AND DAY CARE
CENTER $13,720
9. 17.52% O'J'HER $83,507
,,..,.
~
~
.... _.,... , ,..c.
••
,. :{
The Pointer Pages
Measles and Rubella vaccines to
.be given during Registration
By Jeanne Pehoski
During registration on
December 8, the UWSP
Health Center will be
providing free immunization
for measles and rubella in the
Quandt Gym.
According to Dr. Jim Zach
of the Health Center, about
half - the students on this
campus need to be
immunized. Young adults
between the ages of 14 and 25
are getting the illnesses more
frequently than most people
because a vaccine wasn't
available when they were
youngsters. ...Zach said the
vaccine available from 1963
to 1968 was discovered to be
ineffective.
Last semester, about a
dozen cases of measles
developed on this campus
shortly before the end - of
school._ Zach explained an
epidemic could have
occurred if the outbreak had
happened earlier in the
school year. ''If a person is in
contact with someone who
has measles or rubella and is
not immunized against the
illnesses, 10 to 14 days later
they may develop it. They are
-both highly contagious
diseases.
"The older you get, the
more serious measles and
rubella become," Zach said.
"You may need to be
hospitalized. Indications of
measles include a fever of up
to 104 degrees, severe
respiratory symptoms and
/ extreme body aches and
fatigue lasting two to three
weeks.' Potential complica7
tions include pneumonia
and encephalitis. These can
be fatal or cause permanent
neurological damage, so it
is very important that you
be immunized if you never
had measles."
previous blood test to show
proof of your immunity to
rubella, you should be
vaccinated.
Following
rubella immunization, you
may experience mild joint
pains lasting from one to
three days within two to 10
weeks.
Zach stressed
tfie
importance of being
immunized against rubella.
If a woman is exposed to
rubella in the early stages of
her pregnancy, it could result
in fetal or infant death. Her
child could also be born blind,
deaf, have heart defects or
mental retardation. He added
that 25 to 30 percent of young
adults are not protected
against rubella and
university campuses are a
likely place for ari epidemic
to occur.
Because the vaccines are
live viruses, Zach said,
"There's a theoretical risk
that the modified virus can
still cause infection to the
fetus. For this reason,
pregnant women should not
receive either vaccine, and
pregnancy should be avoided
for three months after being
vaccinated."
People who presently have
an illness with a fever other
than a cold; suppressed
immunity because of a
malignant disease1 weak
defenses towards lmmunities, or are taking corticosteriod medications-such
as Cortisone should not receive either vaccine.
If you have any questions
about the vaccines, contact
the UWSP Health Center at
Zach added that many viral
illnesses will cause rashes.
Hence, measles are often
hard to distinguish without a
special blood test. This is also·
true of rubella, because the
rash is mild for a few days.
Thus, it is very important to
have the illnesses diagnosed
by a doctor. If you think you
had measles or rubella but it
was never diagnosed by a
doctor, Zach recommends ·
you get the vaccine. If you're
not sure you had a rubella
vaccine, you can have a blood
test to determine if you are
immune to the illness. This
test is available through the
UWSP Health Center for
$5.50.
Zach said that you are
immune to meas~s if your
doctor diagnosed you as
having the illness, or if you
were immunized after 1968. If
you get the measles
immunization shot, you may
get a mild vaccine reaction
which consists of a mild
fever, cough and skin rash.
Howeyer, Zach said that a
previous diagnosis of rubella
is often not a reliable
indicator of immune status
because its symptoms are
similar to other viral
diseases. Zach said you
should be vaccinated if you:
weren't
previously
vaccinated or wer·e
vaccinated prior to 12 months
of age. Also, if there is no 346-4646.
University
Film Society
Presents
Humphrey Bogart
And
James Cagney
In
The Roaring Twenties
A classic gangster film about the
rise and fall of three Prohibition racketeers.
•
Tuesday and Wednesday
December 9 and 10
· 7:00 And 9:15
Program-Banquet Room
s1.00
Local Amnesty International
Chapter Formed
By Mike Victor
Several UWSP professors
and students are organizing a
local unit of Amnesty
International (AI), a London
based human rights
organization which works for
the release of prisoners of
conscience throughout the
world.
Hans Wahl, the Midwest
Regional Coordinator for AI,
spoke here at a news
conference and an organizing
workshop November 18.
Wahl said that the strength
of the group comes· from its
diversity. "It transcends the
political issues. The only
thing that is important is the
fact of the iQtprisonment."
AI has been able to survive
because it is stri-ctly
impartial. Human rights
violations in Chile, Brazil or
El Salvador (all countries
which are supplied with US
arms or which had the
previous governments
overthrown with US help) are
as much a target for AI as is
the Soviet Union or other
Communist nations. In this
way AI avoids bein~ labeled
'!radical,'' thus mamtaining
its effectiveness and
credibility.
And the group has been
effective. Through the simple
technique of massive,
international letter-writing.
campaigns, AI has been
instrumental in securing the
release of over 15,000
prisoners jailed for their
political beliefs since 1961. At
least as many have had their
prison conditions improved.
The reason for their
success, according to Wahl,
is the fact that most countries
are extremely sensitive to
adverse publicity.
The USSR which is
, working with' third world
countries, cannot afford to be
viewed as an imperialist
country with gross human
rights violations at home
because most of these
countries have only recently
gained independence from
violent repressive regimes.
· Similarly, right-wing
countries among the less
developed countries are
actively inviting multinational corporations and foreign investments and can
sometimes be moderated.
Amnesty International is a
decentralized group. The
local chapters, or adoption
groups, are principally the
letter-writing base, though
they also employ a variety of
means in working for the
release of prisoners. The
organization publishes a
quarterly journal, The
Matchbox, background
reports, and speciffc country
studies which the local
chapter • uses, as well as
names of prisoners and
information regarding their
imprisonment and a list of
officials to write to.
Prisoners who are about to
be tortured and-or executed
are targeted by AI as "urgent
action" cases and all local
adoption groups are asked to
write letters on behalf of the
prisoner. About 50 percent
are released in a three- to
twelve-week period.
The local chapter will meet
on Monday, December -15.
Inquiries · about
the
organization and the meeting
may be directed to William
Kirby of the Education
Department at 346-3638.
For That
"Someone
-Special"
This
4
\STMAS
~v -
v
the
***
~~~:
-"
GRANADIER
LONG SLEYE RUGBY
..
$15.50
SH~RT
Grey- NAvy - Gold
Gr-ey- MQrOOn- Gold
Univel"'Sity Si-oreUrtivers' CevThi!f" 31./~ -34/31
..
Page 6 December 4, 1980
.,
Pray Sims wins Quiz Bowl
Library Schedule Changes
Exam Week
Saturday, December 13 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
After Hours 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Sunday, December 1410 a.m. to Midnight
After Hours Midnight to 2 a.m.
Monday, December 15 through
.
Wednesday, December 17 7:45a.m. to Midnight
After Hours Midnight to 2 a.m.
Thursday, December 18 7:45a.m. to 11 p.m.
After Hours 11 p.m. to 2 a.m.
Friday,December 197:45a.m. to 4:30p.m.
By J !lne snorek
Pray Sims beat Nelson, 17075 in the finals of the Campus
Quiz Bowl play-offs, to
advance to the regional
competition held in Chicago.
·This "varsity sport of the
mind" was televised over
Cable Channel 3 on
November 23, from 7-9 p.m.
Sims contributed 70 points on
his own to push his team to a
solid victory.
The two other halls that
made the play-offs · were
Burroughs and Smith. In·the
semi-final rounds, Burroughs
team members Mike
Vickery, Pete Zaske, Pat
Nugent, and Pat Pfaffle gave
tie it at 70-70. Then Neil
Niemuth of Nelson correctly
answered the 30-point bonus .
question that led his team to a
110-70 victory.
Smith team members Joe
Keele Chuck Wenthur, Cheri
Eggl~stQ_n, and Car.rie
Dillman gave Pray Stms
quite a scare as they jumped
Nelson a run for its money. At
the end of the first half it was
Burroughs 30 and ·Nelson 70,
but in the second half
Burroughs came on strong to
to a 75-o lead at the start of
the semifinal match. But
after that it was all Pray
Sims. The score ended up a
lopsided 215-95:
_ LRC Circulation Material Due
All circulating materials from the Learning
· Resources Center are due Monday, December 15,
1980.
LEARNING RESOURCES CENTER
VACATIONSCHEDULE
.
· Saturday & Sunday, December 20 & 21 Closed
. Monday & Tuesday, December 22 & 23 8 a.m.-4 p.m.
Wednesday-Sunday, December 24-28 Closed
Monday & Tuesday, December 29 & 30 8 a.m.-4 p.m.
Wednesday-Sunday, December 31-January 4 Closed
Monday-Friday, January 5-9 8 a.m.-4 p.m.
Saturday & Sunday, January 10 & 11 Closed
Monday-Friday, January 12-16 8 a.m.-4 p.m.
Saturday & Sunday, January 17 & 18 Closed
Monday,_January 19 Regular Schedule
J
Note: Heat will be at a minimum, so please dress
warmly.
Bob Nicholson and Bob
Mosier hosted the play-offs,
which were sponsored by the
Residence Hall Council.
Pray Sims' teain of Jim
Murphy, Mike Wubben, Jim
Vangees, and Willie Derleth
and Nelson's team of John
Lodde, Neal Niemuth, Ken
Theide, Cindy Muehlenhaupt,
and Sue Sparrow put on a fine
final match. The score at the
half was Pray Sims 95,
Nelson 20, but in the second
half Nelson staged a
combeack to make it 95-55.
But. Willie Derleth of Pray
EARN
CASH
O'CAMPUS
I
FOR STUDENTS ONLY
Join the NEWSWEEK Team!
Become a NEWSWEEK Campus
Representative.
You'll earn generous commissions and bonuses all school
year when you
• Distribute special student offer cards for
NEWSWEEK and INSIDE SPORTS
- magazines
. • Distribute product information and
posters from our advertisers
We'll supply all of the materials you need to get started.
There's no cost to you.
If you!re interested, send us a note or call us
clo NEWSWEEK Education Program
The Newsweek Building
444 Madison Avenue
New York, New York 10022
(212) 350-2697
Midwest Seminar for
Small Cities held
By Linda Raymon
A Midwest seminar on
"Downtown Revitalizationfor Small and Middle Sized
·Communities" was held at
the Stevens Point Holiday Inn
on November 19 and 20. The
two-day
conference,
sponsored by UWSP,
featured 13 speakers from the
surrounding Great Lakes
states, whose specialties
range from development
planning to the law of
municipal financing.
The seminar leaders held
discussions on community
decision making regarding
. downtown revitalizations,
commercial development·
from public, private, and
developers' perspectives,
and the planning, financial,
and legal implications of
downtown development.
The new Center for the
Small City at UWSP
sponsored the seminar with
assistance from the Upper
Great Lakes Regional
Commission, the Wisconsin
Department of Development,
and the UW extension.
Professors Edward Miller of
the Political Science
Department and Robert
Wolensky of the SociologyAnthropology Department
are Co-directors of the UWSP
Small City programming.
"For many communities,
the first thing that is needed
to revitalize their downtowns
is information," Miller said.
"The purpose of this
workshop was to begin this
educational process so that
these cities can now go forth
with some idea '"'about how to
initiate
downtown ·
revitalization projects and
where to go for additional
assistance.
"Communities want -to
save their downtowns from
deterioration. The downtown
area is an important center
for a community, and we
want to keep it alive.
Interrelated sectors such as
finance, culture, and
business are centralized
there,'' Miller added.
Youtb Day conl
Syndicated columnist
Rowland Evans questioned
the power of the television
over public opinion; Dr.
Russell Lewis, president of
the State Medical Socierty of
· Wisconsin and physician at
Marshfield Clinic spoke on
the topic of national health
insurance, and State
Supreme Court Justice
Shirley
Abrahamson
examined the present system
of justice in relation to the
Eighties.
After the morning .sessions,
an open question an~ answer
session was held in the
Wisconsin Room. Students
were concerned about the
current political trend to the
right, the draft, the decline in
educational quality, energy,
and the presidency of Ronald
Reagan.
·
The last · session of the
conference was a summary
by the group leaders of the
discussions and conclusions
of each of . the workshops.
Chancellor Philip Marshall
ended the day with the
presentation of participation
certificates to each of the
students. He then sent the
future leaders on their way to
determine the future of the
world.
/
The Pointer
Position Available
U.A.B. Vice President
8GJ
I
**********************************
1: ';>_-;.':,,; ''j''"'·.·_
of lines and caps it off with a
breathy "aa-ahh" that will
either tame or arouse the
wild beasts of the Rock and
Roll sexual jungle.
After getting their feet wet
in regge with "Die Young
Stay Pretty" on Eat to the
Beat, the group goes in up to
their knees with "The Tide is
High." This is a song anyone
could get tired of real fast if
they listen to a lot of Top 40
radio. It's pleasant in small
doses, but it lacks the
intensity of real regge .
"Rapture"
i.s
Autoamerican's showcase. If
Blondie ever falls into a rigid ·
formula, this type of song
would be the main
ingredient: an erotic,
pulsating, relentless rockdisco fusion song about the
mystical qualities of love.
Halfway through the song,
the gears shift. The lyrics
change from being sung and
dreamy to being spoken and
comical.
Tom Scott
contributes excellent
saxophone solos and Chris
Stein's guitar just burns
holes in the head. The power
in this song doesn't really
stop, it merely fades out,
waiting to resurface on
another album in a different
incarnation.
"Faces" is
true Blues
number written by Debbie
Harry herself. The · song
features Tom Scott on ·sax .
again, along with Ray Brown
on upright bass and Steve
Goldstein on piano. It's the
kind of song you'd expect to
hear from a blonde-haired
chanteuse drunk on gin,
warbling in a New York City
bar at 3 in the morning. Great
for neon-lit hard boiled I
detective motives.
The album has a few
Of
Contemporary Entertainment
Paid Position
Pickup applications at the U.A.B.
office in Student Activities Complex. Return applications to U.A.B.
by Dec. 9 For more information
call: 346·2412.
STUDENT MANAGERGROUNDS INTERN
-Internship, position runs one full year.
-2 or more semesters left on campus.
-Organizational and leadership qualities.
-Abilities to communicate well with adminis·
tration, faculty, students, and staff.
-Available to work during summer (40 hours per
weekf.
-18 hours per week during school year.
-Preferable landscape knowledge and/or
forestry background.
-Grade point of at least 2.0
Applications available at the lnforma
tion Desk and are due 11:30 p.m. Sun.
Dec. 7.
a
I
WICKER
I
• Baskets
**********************************
hackneyed
clinkers:
''Walk
·
· Like
Me " "Go
Through
It "
• Hanging Furniture
Autoamerican
Blondie
Chrysalis
Reviewed By John Teggatz
Something funny is going
on·here. New Wave bands are
supposed to be tough and
unsentimental.
Debbie
Harry, as the centerpiece of
Blondie, is expected to be the
cool, aloof, jaded New Wave
Jean Harlow, but on
Autoamerican she comes off
as a lukewarm, world-weary
sentimentalist like a latter
day Marlene Dietrich. What
confounds the listener is
figuring out if this is another
journey into camp or a
genuine effort to expand
musical styles.
Two albums ago, with
Parallel Lines, Blondie
pulled an amaz~ng feat: they
scandalized New Wave by
releasing the hook-happy
disco song; "Heart of Glass."
Ironically, the song was liked
by both diametrically
opposed genres. By bridging
the gap .between New Wave
and Disco, the group
destroyed any clear-cut
distinctions , the genres
imposed on each other.
"Heart of Glass" was a hit,
and a formula was born.
• Bentwood Rockers
Eat to the Beat continued to
dissolve the artificial
barriers between musical
styles, but New Wave
hardliners thought· Blondie
sold out. The only things the
group has done is have hit
recordsofverygoodrockand
roll, damn the classifications.
Autoamerican is another
album that is just fine music,
commercialornot.
Side one is brass and
strings oriented, another
ground-breaking step for an
ex-New Wave band.
"Europa" is a heavily
orchestrated Slavic-sounding
whirlwind that starts out
sounding like a movie theme
but de generates into
Kraftwe'rkisms of machine
sounds and synthesizer
burblings. "Europa" segues
into "Live It Up," a midtempo disco song heavy on
the synthesizers.
"Here's Looking at You" is
one of the album's brilliant
digressions. It has a 1940's
Big Band Swing melody,
complete with -a Benny
Goodman sound-alike on the
clarinet. Debbie's singing is
soft and sexy, almost
uncharacteristically innocent~ She coos the last couple
·and "Angels on the Balcony"
are typical of Blondie's older
works. Mter the innovation
on "Here's Looking At You"
and "Faces," these songs fall
flat. By themselves, they're
probably okay.
Autoamerican closes with
an old Lerner and Lowe
chestnut, "Follow Me." This
song is from Camelot...a play
and movie that has troubles
of its own in dealing with
campiness without Blondie
singing one of its songs. Still,
it's very pretty, with lots of
pastoral (but synthesized)
sound effects: babbling
brooks, birds, wind, and
ethereal choirs.
Whether Autoamerican is
all surface with no substance
is a question each listener
will have to answer. -But
Blondie's surfaces are
definitely attractive, and if
one knows that, what's wrong
with that? This is not to say
Blondie is vacant, but if
Debbie Harry remains
elusive and enigmatic, the
depth of the music will
always be obscured by
mysterious eroticism. That
mystery, the audience's
doubts, must be an important
part of Blondie's success.
7
I
•Hampers
I
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.- ·.: ~. ' .
:m·
· . ~llft
..
·( . - .
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.
.
.
.
I . ~-~lj;:/. '~.1:F-i r~:~-1J
I .,
•
.;."·;·~..,
_,~!i'.. iJ
.~ h '; < :- ~:
-·
,.1;i ._
I
I
•Swag Lamps
• Headboards
• Chest & Chairs
• Coffee Tables
•Crockery
• Enamel Ware
• Wooden Utensils
All Occasion Cards
II
•
~..
.c
I
Sundays 12:00 To 4:00
Wee~days 9:00 To 8:00
Saturdays 9:00 To 5:00
I
i•
'I
I
I -~.............................
B~~~~~~~E jl
~
,.......
Page 8 December 4, 1980
Boning up for finals
Exam Prep Talk
By Mike Daehn
Most students do fairly well
studying for the exams that
come along during the
semester. aowever, even the
best of students can be
intimidated by the thought of
being 'tested on an entire
semester's work. That's why
.we may need some specific
advice as finals approach.
1. Structure your time.
Actually sit down and make a
schedule for yourself and
stick to it if at all possible.
Only spend up to 1% hours
per sitting per subject for the
most effective study.
Remember study lime isn't
the time · to finish class
assignments.
2. You should then collect
.the mat~rials for study.
These include notes from the
text, notes taken in class,
handouts, quizzes and lab
exercises. The last three are
especially important because
they give you feedback from
the instructor and an
indication of the points he
may stress on a final.
3. You should try to think of
how the instructor would
make out an exam. Of course,
' in the time allowed for the
final, the whole semester's
work cannot be covered, and
the instructor will have to
make some choices on what
are the most important
areas. You should try to
anticipate those choices
based on your past
experience in that class.
4. Start with an overview of
the material to be covered.
Don't just start at the
beginning and plow through
all your materials. Make
main divisions like those in
an outline and work off of
them.
5. If there are special
details that have to be
memorized, put them on
index cards and review them
occasionally. It also helps at
this point to make up specific
questions that - might be
asked, and answer them.
6. Group study can be
helpful under two conditions:
First, if you have done initial
studying and this is just a
reinforcement and review; _
second, if all the other
members of the group have
done their initial study and-no
one acts as a parasite to the
group. One major advantage
to gr~mp s~udy is that others
Cont. on p. 14
By Jeanne Pehoski
Eddie and orders his men to
If you like gangster movies "take him for a ride." And we
or are a James Cagney or all know what that means;
Humphrey Bogart fan, you'll right? However, Eddie is
enjoy The Roaring Twenties. Clever, grabs a gun and kills
Set in New York during George. Boo-boo. Then, using
Prohibition, this film has one of "the boys" as a shield,
plenty of gunplay and he attempts to fight his way
bootlegging.
through the rest of the
Three buddies (Cagney, hoodlums but is fatally
Bogie and Jeffrey Lynn) wounded. He crawls his way
come home from the war and onto some church steps,
get involved in bootlegging. where he dies. To add a nice Eddie (Cagney) prospers as touch, director ' Raoul Walsh
a bootlegger and retains has it snowing. The police
Lloyd (Lynn) as his lawyer. arrive and ask a woman,
George (Bogart) is a saloon- "Who is that man?" With a
keeper who's in charge of the tear-stained face she chokes,
shipments.
"He used to be a big shot."
Eddie makes it big by How sad. But get the point?
bootlegging. A typical Crime simply does not pay.
Hollywood gangster, he
Cagney and Bogart play
walks all over people who get their parts well, and some
in his way. After ~ll. he's a critics say this film launched
gentleman that the world was Cagney's careev.
built for. However, in typical
The University Film
Hollywood style, they have to Society is presenting this
prove that crime doesn't pay, tear-jerker-the last of
so
Eddie
loses Warner Brothers' classic
everything-even
his series of gangster films-on
friends-in the Depression, Tuesday, December 9 and
and is forced to drive a cab Wednesday, December 10 in
for a living. How degrading.
the Program Banquet Room
Years pass and Eddie of the University Center.
meets George again-who Showtimes are 7 and 9:15
has become a big-time racket p.m. and admission is cheap,
boss. No more nickel-and- folks-only $1.
dime stuff for him. A real
toughie-that Bogie. He traps
Laundermat Services
Only 25 c A Loa~
Give your country
a college education.
The United States Army needs highly motivated young men and women to
serve in responsible leadership positions as officers on active duty and in the
Reserves.
'
. Today, the demands on a young officer are tougher than ever. You not o?ly
have to manage people, but money and materials as well. To make more Important planning decisions than most young executives. And then carry those
decisions out.
These are the reasons why Army RO'PC. courses are offered on campus at
hundreds of colleges and universities. So that students can acquire the leadership training, the ability to perform under pressure, so important to us. Army ROTC benefits are as great as the demands. Scholarship opportunities.
A monthly allowance of $100 (up to 20 months) during your last two years of
college. Practical management experience applicable in civilian life as well as
military. And a starting salary of $15,000.
.
So if you're thinking at5out what to do with your college education, consider
what your country can da with it. Then look into Army ROTC.
U.C. Laundermat Is.
Located' Next To Rec Services
ARMY ROTC.
LEARN WHAT IT TAKES TO LEAD~
Open 9:30 a.m. • 10:30 p.m. Daily
For more information, contact:
Jim Garvey, 104 Student Services Center ·346-3811
Only 25 c A Load'
The Pointer
9
Parkway, plantings, shelter added to Scbmeeckle Reserve
.
I
.
Work on Reserve moves down the road"=====_==================
By Lynda Zukaitis
Numerous improvements
continue to move Schmeeckle
Reserve toward its 1980
completion date.
Since 1976, a 200-acre
unmanaged area landfill site
has been transformed into a
reserve for the preservation
of wildlife and the
surrounding
natural
environment.
The project, funded
primarily Ithrough the Land
and Water Conservation Act
(LAWCON) involved a
quarter million dollar grant
which has been used for land·
acquisitio,n and improvements.
Numerous·· improvements
have enhanced the aesthetics
of the . reserve. Reserve
. Street, which once ran
through Schmeeckle, has
been removed and replaced
by a 1o-foot wide winding
granite trail. Somers
Landscaping has done most
of the work at a cost of
$68,000. The parkway will be
used by the city to maintain
the power and utility lines
which run under the old
roadbed, as well as by
university personnel to do
\ \
\ \
) ii_.
aUtlh co..,ua
\•'
.- -·-·-:~~f----\'i'
.· ,-....:-.
- ~
- I twxt.uw~Fw'
.•1
)J!3:1
\,. .
-·
~
.
SCHMEECKLE
grounds work and upkeep in
the reserve. A bridge has
been constructed at the north ,
end of the parkway to allow ;
for foot and bike traffic over
a seasonal stream.
On both sides of the trail,
natUral woodland vegetation
has been planted. Over 1,000
species of vegetation now
exist in Schmeeckle. Ponds
have been created along the
trail utilizing the natural flow
water from Moses Creek.
u ........·~· from nearby Sentry
Insurance lands have moved
into these ponds. ·
Wetlands are being
preserved by boardwalks
throughout the reserve. The
boardwalks allow for the
viewing of wetland
vegetation and wildlife . in
their natural habitat while
protecting the delicate
e-nvironment.
Three
~··
segments of boardwalk lead
_
_
...
from the parkway ~o the
University Lake.
University
Lake
construction began in 1976.
Located in the southeast
.,. _,1.......
--·---
K*CIULI ltUIII'YI
RESERVE
Plans for the reserve of which most all has been completed. The
fitness trail and some other sectors await spring.
Cont. on p. 10
Reserve Street looking north. Photo taken August, 1976.
Top: Students walk along trails bordering the lake.
Bottom: View of new parkway and new shelter complete
with bathrooms.
Page 10 December 4, 1980
Progress· of the recycling ·
Environmental Notes
Summer job information
-e f~Or'f'5==!5!!!!!========~========================5!!i!!!===========t sessions for students in the
By Lynda Zukaitis
Progress is being made
toward establishing a
recycling center in Stevens
Point.
On November 1, a group of
12~ interested citizens and
town officials • from
surrounding communities
viewed recycling operations
in the Milwaukee area.
Different sites visited were
the Brown Deer Community
Recycling Program, Recom
Incorporated located in
Brookfield, the · Americology
Plant in Milwaukee, and the
Mequon Drop Center.
Presently in Stevens Point,
there is no ·recycling
program. Aluminum can
collection centers are located
in Stevens Point, but are not
city-affiliated.
On campus, one of the
major organizations which the program. s-ponsors have
recycles aluminum ca~ is ·. aJieady , been located and
the
Environmental bylaws will be developed by
Educational Interpretation December3.
Association <EEIA).
EEIA, formed last
The cost of trash collection
semester, has a membership and
disposal
is
ofbetween30-35people. Their approximately · $350,000. By
purpose is to help meet . recycling newspapers: cans
professionals and serve as an and possibly glass, the cost
educational medium They would be reduced by 10..20
are involved in several percent- a saving of $70,000.
activities on campus, one of
which is the collection of
Planning for a pilot
cans. Eight collection bins recycling program during
are distributed around Earth Week is now in
c~mpus. To date, 290 pounds
progress. Until the program
of aluminum cans have been becomes established,
collected from the 26 pop primary recycling emphasis
machines on campus.
Inorderforthecitytoform
will concentrate on
a recycling cooperative,
newspapers. It is hoped that
bylaws will have to be formed
a~ least 25 percent of area
and five organizations found
residents will participate in
which are will· to s nsor
the program.
life sciences have been taking
place this week. There is still
one session left for those who
have not attended. All three
sessions present the same
information so it is only
necessary to attend · one
program.
The sessions are from 7:30
to 10 p.m. in the Classroom'
Center room 125.
The sessions concentrate
on employment with 'state
and federal agencies,
including state. jobs with
Wisconsin, Illinois, and
Minnesota as well as
n gra
an n
.
At the site of the fitness trail,
metal storage sheds were
removed and replaced by
threegradedandlandscaped
mounds. Ponds and trails
have been created.
Fifty percent of the fitness
area is . completed. The
Also near completion iS a
$43,000 shelter building at the
southern entrance to the
reserve. The octagonal
building, which is being
constructed by Altman and
Larson of Wisconsin Rapids,
will be a large open area used
for class instruction and will
contain restroom facilities.
The tone of the building is
rustic, with split cedar
roofing to blend in with the
·
surroundings.
Numerous woodchip tra~ ·
designed at different levels of
strenuous exertion. The
beginning of the trail will be
easier and progression along
the trail will lead to more
strenuous activity which will
peak in the middle. It will
again get less strenuous
toward the end.
·
The reserve has been
extensively used by classes
this fall. Many student
projects and other research
are being conducted in the
natural area. Ecology.Silvics
~
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~•fitness
Cont. &om p. 9
comer of the reserve, the
lake and surrounding area
has been landscaped and
planted to natural vegetation.
Seven different plant
communities will surround
the lake. Swimming has not
been allowed in the recent
past to allow the banks tO'
stabilize before being
subjected to possible heavy
use.
crisscross the reserve to
allow for the viewing of each
small ecotype which
composes the entire reserve.
Visitors are encouraged to
remain on the trails.
Schmeeckle is a heavily
used area and misuse of
_the reserve will result in a
rapid .destruction of the
delicate environment. .
Yet to be completed are the
pine plantings on the ski hill
and the European style
fitness area. The ski hill has
JliiiiiUIIIIHII~IHI-HIIIIII.U-..uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiUimiiii~HIUHI
~ations will
~
employment with the Forest
Service, Park Service, Fish
and Wildlife Service, Bureau
of Land Management, and ·
other federal agencies.
Applications for most
employers will be available,
and these meetings have
concentrated on which jobs .
are available in each agency,
which application forms to
use, and how to properly
complete that application.
Attendance ot these
sessions can introduce you to
the best way to fight the tight
j_ob market and unstable
ec nom .
Professor David Hillier has
set up a micro-environment
study plot to measure the
effect of vegetation on
humidity, wind, a.nd
temperature. Other research
includes studies on the
wildlife, vegetation and
visitor use in Schmeeckle.
New ski trails have been
added and will be ready for
use by this winter. Signs have
also been erected to help
guide the visitor through the
area.
An open house will be held
in the spring of 1981 after
most of the construction has
been completed. Also next
semester, programs will be
held in the reserve. These
will include natural history
walks, bird and night hikes,
owl watches and bird
banding.
IIIIHIIIIU.IIIIRMEFHIIIUIUUIIIUIIIIIfUUUHUftiiHI
Students! !Jake A Study Break ,Next Week
At
Wednesday, December 10
Is·
Cowboy Night
Monday, December 8th
Country Western Music
All Night Long
Is
New Wave Night
.Dance To Your Favorite Punk Rock
Ramones
B·52's
Devo
Romantics
&More
·Free Admission To
Persons We~ring
·Cowboy Hats! . !
'\
200 Isadore St.
Stevens Point
IIIIHIHIIIIIIIIIHHIIIIIIuniUIUIHIIIIUIHHIUUHIHIHIUHIHHIIHIIIIIUIUIHII............uiiiiiiUHIDmlllllllllmiiiiiiDIIDIIIIIIIIIIIIIIBIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIUIIIUH-IIIIUIIHIUIIIIHHIIHHIUHIIHIUIIUHIHIIIHIIIIHIIIUUHIUHIIIIII
The Pointer Page 11
MEN-WOMEN
Getup to
$~,000 for college.
Locatad in the lower level of the UC
Surplus ~qu:ipmenl /
SALE!!
Sunday< Dec. 14
lpm - 4pm
LDmt: and pte\<.. up your ow~ e.qui pmc.nr
and. RECREATE.
Many Army Reserve units are offering a program
that may provide you up to $2,000 to help pay for your
education. If you're eligible, when you join the Reserve
you may receive money for tuition and other educational
expenses for college. vocational or technical school. So
you can concentrate more on getting an education and
less on how to pay for it.
.
And as a Reservist , you learn a skill and earn a startin~ income of over $1,000 a year. That's for using your
• sktll with your local unit just 16 hours a month plus two
weeks active duty for training yearly. The ho4rs won 't
interrupt your studies. And the pay will help Wjth your
other expenses.
Find out more about this Educational Assistance
Program.
• Call Army Reserve
Opportunities
800-000-0000
1
in the UWSP University Cen~er Program Banquet Room
- Meet Today's Army Reserve.
An Equal Opportun1ty Employer
. Sorry
Can't Go Out Tonight
I've Got The Measles!
Should Have Had ·My
FREE
Immunization For
Rubella Rubeola
(
1
.
December 8 at Registrauorl - All Day
I
I
Page 12 December 4, 1980
To The Pointer:
I'm writing in reference to
the rugby article in the
November 20 issue. I think
it's excellent of The Pointer
to give coverage to club
sports. I've seen a couple of
articles dealing with men's
rugby. I so, however, feel it is
rather shortsighted of The
Pointer to fail to mention the
women's rugby club. Was the
writer of the article even
aware of the fact that there is
more than just one rugby
team on campus? Apparently
not! I just wanted to set. the
record straight.
Sincerely,
Katby Reinhard, Pres.
Women's Rugby Club
screw up a wet dream" -we
were becoming depressed,
cold, and hypothermia had
set in.
But be not dismayed, for
behold, off in the western
horizon, a gr~t glimmering
wildlife professor and his
wife, Mr. and Mrs. Hardin,
were thinking of us two peons
at the K-Mart deer check
station. Ala Carte brought a ·
selection of:·
·
1. Cranberry sauce
2. Brown rice (with
mushrooms even)
3.Dressing
4. Turkey (a selection of
white and dark meat, mind
you) . Thank you so much Mr.
and Mrs. Hardin. You
brought us from the depths of
despair and warmed our
hearts as well as our bodies.
To The Pointer:
Where else would you find a
While most of you were professor and wife with such
home sitting around the humanitarianism then here
stereotypic Thanksgiving at Point. Ivy League and the
.dinner recuperating from the · Big 10, you can have your
intense twelve weeks of egotistic reputations, UWSP
school, a few so-called has its own - namely a
devoted students were personal feeling of faculty
manning the K-Mart deer toward their students.
check station on Turkey Day.
You are there, November
A cold northwester' was 27, 1980, goodnight world,
blowing and snow laced the goodnight
America,
eyelids. After listening to the goodnightJohnBoy.
·
Great Almighty Hunter Ray Reynolds
stories and of course Doug Moericke
complaints - "The DNR can
Help Prevent Birth DefectsThe Nation's Number One
Child Health Problem.
MOfCh of Dimes
lillllllllllliiBIRTH DEFEC1S FOUNDATIONiiliilil
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This space contributed b y the publisher.
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F
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The PQinter Page 13 ·
Teacher Evaluations
. 'I'm perplexed by obscure terms find
questions ... " muttered John Locke
about his traditional education and
educators more than 320 years ago. I think
he'd be muttering those same words today
w~re he a student at UWSP_. As a student,
I'm fed up with reading obsolete texts,.
writing senseless papers, and taking
useless tests that never ask for any creative
analysis. I'm tired of being forced to
memorize and then spit back facts and
figures that are never related to reality.
Over and over again, in my classrooms,
I've felt that professors are either
-uninterested or simply don't believe that
students are - creative, intelligent
individuals. Yes, we can think and
respond-we're just not being given the
chance.
I?art of the problem lies in the curriculum
requirements for specific majors and
minors. I have no doubt that many
professors feel trapped by the rigidity of
those requirements and in their frustration
have simply given in to teaching the same
old stuff in the same old way. I doubt many
even think to question the relevance of the
curriculum any more.
·
But the frustration of inane curriculum
requirements shouldn't mean the
classroom presentation should · be inane,
too. The professors at UWSP actually have
a lot of "academic freedom"-to teach
innovative ideas in innovative ways. Must it
always be a l~cture wit.h 1 an occasional
(usually rhetorical) question thrown to the
class? Must we always follow the texts?
In some of the most exciting courses I've
been in, the professor listened instead of
lectured, and encouraged relevant ouj;s-ide
research and reading. In these courses, we
participated naturally because we were
encouraged to explore possibilities and to
question the obvious. I believe we sensed we
were learning something we might need to
know for the real world.
Chancellor Philip Marshall has called for
a new policy of evaluating non-tenured
professors at UWSP. Part of this policy is
peer observation-professors observing
each other in their classrQ:Oms. The theory
behind peer observation is good, but it could
stifle innovative teaching styles. It could be
used by vindictive tenured professors to
drive out those non-tenured professors who
use 1 innovative approaches in their
classrooms.
T$ other part of Ma_rshall's new policy
callsJfor increased student evaluations, but
only in the classes of non-tenured
professors. Over a three year span, 50
percent of the courses of non-tenured
professors must be evaluated, while orily
four ' percent of the courses of tenured
professors must be. But it's been in the
classrooms of tenured professors that l've
felt the most frustration, and had the least
chance to say and do anything about it.
If we, as students, are supposed to be the
benefactors of this educational system, why
not ask us what we think? In my two years
at uWSP I've been asked only once for a
formal class evaluation. Make student
evaluations mandatory- for every class,
.ever)! semester. And make the evaluations
- .coun~-look at the problems cited and find
ways to make needed changes. Give us a
chance- to critique not only the professor,
but the material presented. Ask us what we
. think- you may be surprised to find a lot of
us really do care what and how we're being
taught.
US4~le~;s
:cattJ,y ·A. Wbibnan
'
Pets ectives
Guest Editorials
(like this one)
Guest Editorials-are welcomed if
they are deemed pertinent and
-
-
well-written. Editorials
should
be 2 pages
in length. typed, and
.
'
.
double-spaced. Submit them to: Pointer Editor, 113 CAC
~E PRoMt~ED To UNDERMINE CONE>UMER
PROTEcTioN! ~E PROMIBED To ~END THE.
MARINE~ IN £VERYWI-1E.RE! HS PROMl~ED
To TAKE CONTROL OF OUR BODlE§ FROM
WoMEN! 1-1£ PROMI~ED To RE~TART TJ-~E
ARM~ RACE!
If ~E kEEP~ HI~
AARG\-l!
PROMlaEB···
' - -\-._-f
r------.....,. ...
l-\£'LL BE
THE
FIRaT
ONE
EVER!
F'l::!'l!::;~
Pointer Staff, 1980
Editor-John Teggatz
News Editor-John Slein
News Editor-Jeanne Pehoski
Features-Mike Daehn .
Sports-Joe Vanden Plas
Student Affairs -Chris
Bandettini
Copy-Bob Ham
Photography-Gary LeBouton
. Graphics-Mike Hein
Environment: Steve Schwlk
Advertising manager-Bill
Berenz
·A dvertising Manager-Tom
Woodside
Business Manager-Laurie
Bongiovanni
Office-sherri Zuelke
Secretary-Terri Onsrud
Advisor: Dan Houlihan
The Pointer is a second class publication
<USPS-0982401 published weekly on
Thursliay by the University of WisconsinStevens Point and the UW-System Board
of Regents, 113 Communication Arts
Center, Stevens Point, Wl54481.
POSTMA.STER: Send address change to
The Pointer, 113 Communication Arts
Center, Stevens Point, Wl54481.
The Pointer is written and edited by the
Pointer staff, composed of UWSP
students, and it is solely responsible for its
. editorial content and policy.
Letters to the editor will be accepted
only if they are typewritten and signed,
and should not exceed a maximum of 250
words. Names wiil be withheld from
publication only if appropriate reason is
given. The Pointer reserves the right to
edit letters if necessary and to refuse to
print letters not suitable for publication.
All correspondence should be addressed to
The Pointer, 113 Communication Arts
Center, UWSP, Stevens Point, Wisconsin,
54481.
Written permission is required for the
reprint of aU materials presented in The
Pointer.
•.
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Page 14 December 4,1980
Seasonal
Celluloid
B9fore you stuft
your biain,
feed your stomach!'
A brain does not live by bread alone. It also needs cheese,
and pepperoni, and mushrooms, and all the good things you
find on top of a Pizza Hut® pizza. So before you hit the
books, clip the coupon below and bring it to your local _____
Pizza Hu.t® restaurant. You'll get a great pizza at a great
price. Your stomach will be happy, which will make your brain
happy, which will make your finals happy, which will make
your parents happy ... which will make Christmas break a
whole lot happier!
So clip the coupon and save at Pizza Hut® !
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any large regular or
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any medium regular or
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I
Bring this coupon to your local Pizza Hut® restaurant
and get $2.00 off the regular price of your favorite l<hge
pizza. Or clip the coupon and get $1.00 off the regular
~
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expires May 31,1981. One ·c oupon
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per customer per visit.
I·
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Trivia
Corner
· ~oc~a
:Out.
Copyright Pizza Hut, Inc.
·cash Value: 1120'
------------
U.A.B. Contemporary Entertai~m~nt & Stardate Productions Present
HEAD EAST
With Very Special Guest
TROOPER
Friday, December 5, 1980
7:30P.M. Quandt Fieldhouse
All Seats Reserved- Tickets $7.00 & $8.00
Available At U.C. Info pesk & Graham Lane Music
/
/
Leisure
Time
Activities
Wants .You ...
Buy.Your BUCKS Tickets
For Dec. 5 Indiana Game
~--
Buy Now Only A Few Left
Also ...
Remember Daytona's
First Deposit Deadline
Frida , Dec. 12th
Visual.
. Arts
Rock 'N' Roll
High School
Thurs. &Fri. Dec. 4 &5
6:30 & 9:00 p.m.·P.B.R. of U.C.
Only S
I
I1
. By Mike Daehn
:several movies which have
Although the movie market been received well in the few
is reporting a drop in cities they've opened are ·
attendance of 18 percent from Martin Scorsese's . powerful
a year ago, film companies Raging Bull, Neil . Simon's
continue to crank out their Seems Like Old Times, and
products at an amazing rate. the sexual comedy, A Change
Each hopes to unveil the next Of Seasons. Raging Bull is
Star Wars or at least Animal the story of boxer Jake
House. On the contrary, the LaMotta and ·its leading ·
only flick currently making player, Robert De !'Jiro is
much of a financial splash is already being hailed as the
Goldie Hawn's Private year's best actor. Seems Like Benjamin. Films such as Old Times reunites the crack
Robert Redford's Ordinary comedy team of Ohevy Chase
People · and Universal's and· Goldie Hawn to create
Melvin and Howard have havoc on the screen. A
been hailed as artistic gem'S, Cliange Of Seasm,ts concerns
yet no one's turning out for the sexual revolution, the
them.
generation gap, and God
Still the holidays are fast knows what. else. !Jt features
approaching and the major Shirley MacLaine, Anthony
studios are pinning their Hopkins, and beautiful Bo
hopes (and a great deal of Derek.
money) on a Yule season So even though 1980's
rescue. Some of the most Christmas films might not all
publicized movies coming to be classics,' there's certainly
· an abundance to choose from.
a theater near you:
Dolly Parton, Jane Fonda,
and Lily Tomlin play .a
divorcee making her
entrance into the business
world as a clerk (Fonda), her
inept supervisor (Tomlin)~
and a secretary loyally
By Michael Daehn
devoted to her job (Dolly) in
1) Which three horse races
director Colin Higgins' Nine
to Five.
make up the Triple Crown?
Universal has set a · 2) KLM is the airline of
December 5 release date for what country? t
·
Dino de Laurentiis' latest
3) Name the railroads in
attem t Fl h the game Monopc,l,y. ·
bl kbu t
oc sUnknown
er
P'
as
4) Who would pay Popeye
Gordon.
Sam
Jones
is handling the galactic Tuesday for a hamburger
I
warrior this time around with today?
such notables as Max Von
5) How many islands
Sydow (Ming the Mercifess) make up ' the state of
Hawaii?
1
and Chaim Topol backing
G) Where does Pogo the
him up.
1
With Bob Newhart as the Possum live?
7) Who introduced ice
President,. Gilda Radner as cream to the United States?
his daughter and Madeline
Kahn as the First Lady, we
8) Many prayers end with
may yet have some laughs on "Amen." Translated, what
does it mean?
l
the political system this year
g) What is the name of the
in First Family.
· If you missed Jack Pillsbury Doughboy?
10) Name the first US
Lemmon on Broadway in
Bernard Slade's Tribute, you consumer product ever sold , .
can see him in the film in the USSR.
version this fall with cO:.stars ------~--­
Colleen Dewhurst, Robby
Benson, and Lee Remick. It's
Exams
about a failed screenwriterTV producer-blackjack
conl from1 p. 8
dealer who turns 51 and finds
himself less than happy.
Currently, there's no more
wetsuits or flying saucers for may introduce questions that
·
Richard Dreyfuss. This time you have not considered.
7. Cramming can be useful
around, he's a dedicated
young pianist who gambles if done correctly. First, you
all for the chance to win in should have gone through the
The
Competition. first · five · steps above.
Complications arise through Cramming is only worthwhile
his love for his prime if you have already reviewed
the semester's material and
opponent, Amy Irving.
Neil Diamond co-stars with wish to cover a large amount
Laurence Olivier in an in a short period of time close
updated version of the 1927 to the exam as a review of
tearjerker, The Jazz Singer. earlier reviewing. Actually,
Lucie Arnaz plays Diamond's cramming time is most
manager and Catlin Adams useful to clear up any things
his religiously oriented wife you're not sure of.
Hopefully, we can follow
in this $15 million pic. On a
similar note, Robert these simple suggestions and
Altman's unveiling a not affect the energy crunch ·
holidaytime spectacle. This by burning too much
time it's Popeye, filmed on "midnight oil."
the island of Yalta and
starring the likes of Robin
W~liams _and Shelly Duvall.
1.25 Or
Wear Your New Wave
Tings & Get In For One Dollar!
--
The Pointer
Editor's Nhte: A couple of
weeks ago,i there was a
question concernh.g the
competency ~and training of
the person responding · to
questions in this column. All
members of the Human
Sexuality Task Force are
faculty or staff of the
university. The responses,
while written by individuals,
are. reviewed and edited by
members of the Task Force
at regular meetings .
Questions about the Task
Force may be addressed to
Robert Nicholson, Delzell
Hall.
QUESTION·: I'm worried
about my roommate. He's
super neat ~nd spends most
of his time to himself. He's
friendly enough, but he
doesn't join in the boisterous
fun. I'm picking up all kinds
of signs tha~ he might be a
homo. I like the way he does
more than his share of the
cleaning up Iand all, but I
can't risk having it known
that I share a room with a
faggot. I don't want to put up
with that kind of teasing. I
/ think he goes to that club they
have in Wausau every
. weekend, and I know I have
never seen him with a woman
except to study. What's the
best way for me to get out of
this jam and ~void making a
scene or hav~ng anyone find
·
out?
1
of behavior. These may turn
out to be similar to those of
one's peers, parents, or
society or they may not. The
important thing is that the
rules that you live by become
your own rules. You've been
given a great opportunity to
figure out for yourself what
it's like to be around people
who are different from you,
and.to reevaluate your ideas
about homosexuals.
Women risk
getting certain
kinds of cancer.
That's why you
should talk with
your doctor \
about how you
can protect
yourself.
Doing monthly
breast self-examination and getting reguiar
cancer checkups
are good ways to
stay healthy. And
if youYe got your
health,youve
got it all!
By Diane Irwin
The Women's Resource
Center serves campus and
community persons who have
· an interest in women's issues
and concerns. We offer a
variety of groups, lectures,
demonstrations, information
and referrals.
We have prQgrams for selfimprovement and education.
Assertiveness Training (open
to anyone) points out
assertive behavior and ways
to deal with nonassertive or
manipulative communication. Basic human rights are
an integral component of
assertiveness.
The Women Within is a selfdiscovery excursion. Trained
leaders direct self-awareness
discussions and exercises.
Women in their Thirties is a
group which explores selfinterpersonal
. image,
relationships, career goals,
sexuality and more.
Ceta
is
currently
sponsoring the Displaced
· Homemaker project at the
Center. The project is
concerned with finding
employment for women and
men who have not been
members of the "labor
force'' for an extended period
of time. Project staff will
work with the displaced
homemaker and the potential
employers.
The Escort Service is a
protective action. Between 5
p.m. and 2 a.m., <Monday
throug)l Friday), escort
teams are available for
anyone who is walking home,
to school or to a friend's
home. Escort teams will walk
anywhere within a one-mile
radius of the campus.
The WhistleSTOP program
is based at the Center.
WhistleSTOP is a Community
Safety Program designed to
fight crime on the streets,
improve police-community
relations, an~ foster a new
sense of community spirit.
take
Judicare
We
applications. Judicare offers
free legal assistance for
people with low incomes.
The Center is involved with
many programs. We are
currently working on a selfdefense course for women, a
men's consciousness raising
group, and a feminist fund
raiser. We are always
expanding our library, files
and newsletter.
We work with volunteers
and organizations like
National Organization for
Women, Human Services,
UWSP Women's Studies
Department, Women's _
Awareness Association, and
the Family Crisis Center.
The Women's Resource
Center can provide you with
the opportunity for personal
growth and development.
Stop in at 2101 Main, or call
346-4851. We are open 8 a.m.-8
p.m.
7
~~
GI 0
-
URCECENTER
QUESTION: I never
believed I'd tell anyone about
this, but it has been on my
mind more and more lately.
Your column seems like a
good way. Everyone says
penis size doesn't matter, but
I am smaller than most. Is
there anything I can do?
ANSWER: Not that I am
aware of. It is not uncommon
among males to worry about
penis size. Often in their
minds, size is related to
sexual performance. In fact,
there is no correlation
between the physical size of
the organ and the ability to
perform sexually. To
reassure you, statistically,
erect penis size varies
considerably- from 3 inches
in length to 8 or more inches
and from 1 to 2 inches in
diameter.·
If your concern has a
detrimental effect in your
relationships, and you would
ANSWER: In the long run like to talk more with
the person you have. to someone, please consider the
answer to and live with is Health or Counseling Centers
yourself. The college years as places that have staff who
are a time when many young are
knowledgeable,
women and men begin to understanding, and available
develop their ow~ standards to you for discussion.
15
REGGAE WITH
2nd Street Pub
Reggae PartY
With
Tony Brown And
The Roots Band
Dec. 5-Friday Night: Band Starts At 8:30P.M.
s2.00 Admission
No Cover Charge Before 7:30 p.m., so come early
2nd Street Pub Open Mike Night: Dec. 1·oth.
-·
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l'IEEXLY SPECIALS
We may live without friends, We may live without books, But civilized mon cannot live without cooks. (Bulwor Lytton)
-········
· ____ j,_ --.---~~ n d _a y
, FREE Sma 11 soda
with a purchase
of a hot buy
M o n d a y
Tu e s d a y
2
l1 T~
H-RE IS A TREAT FROM
ROSE 2 ICE CREANS
FOR THE PRICE OF ONE
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; r2e&· Jkdk-"" i& boHl· .19•16.
Pan American Health Day.
---·---·-·-1
Late night studiers
deal, a large coffee
and dessert only . 75
between 8 and 10 Pt1.
14
FINAil> ~-lEEK BREAKFAST
TI'.Elu, Bl.o'Y All EAJU.Y
RISER AND GI:."T YOUR
The "Smellie~
a movie with
scent. debuts
with It's Beyond the
$1. 2S
.15
l
ORDER A JUICY BRAT AND
1
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e(i,'f>~O
~ee G(?),'o'o ~te
23
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"Here he is, Mr. America .. ~
Bert Parks is born, 1914.
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on your
burger.
· \
BETWEEN 2 & 4pm
~,~.;.·
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25
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20
{JJ,..HuluHf!! lxrome.··
tk .Y'~Yal 'II!itt~
FINAL DEAL OF 1980!
'11/yt as a ,,k!Yrlt:dnr iYY"
A SAUCY BEEF AT A REAL
STEAL $1.35.
4!JAtu& iB t./VY1~d-
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measured, 1920.
'"'"
18 ~;:::u:-:::~ 19• .
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Good on rhos "'"'" 0·' ·' f
5 ~~E;ed
CJUSPY LAJtGE FRIES AND
ll'
A SMALL SODA AND PAY S1 . 75. 1t
A CLASSIC, A JU><BO A!ID
LARGE FRIES Pl<ICED AT $1.50 •.
ll'Jd~~g~~~.~;;~o--=v=e_n_ _ __
:0,(1-a.(\0
Human Rinhts Day
.,.
·
17
"Da-da-da- Dum'"
The early bird ie is
here by 7:JO. Get
50
• off on any breakfast
combrnonon oefore 7:JO
1 AM.
Sa t u r d a y
· 11 7v::t:~~,fI'12_., •'~-~·
,.,:-.~._ 13 The size of
a fixed star,
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1327·
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Happy N..,Yearl
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THESE GRID BARGAINS ARE BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE UNIVERSITY FOOD SERVICE.
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HAVE A MERRY CHRISTMAS BREAK AND WE WILL SEE YOU NEXT YEAR.
_ _I
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·- I_ _
\
The Pointer Page 17
orfs
Stickers Successful Season ·Ends
By Joe Vanden Plas
As the old saying goes, all
good things must come to an
end. UWSP's 1980 field
hockey season did just that at
the AlAW Division III
'National Meet in Hollins,
Virginia last week.
Stevens Point dropped its
opener with .Elizabethtown
College <PA) by the score of
4-2. They stayed alive the
next day with a 4-0 shutout
win over Carleton College
(MN) but were eliminated by
Brockport (NY), 2-o.
''This was really an
excellent tournament for us,"
said Pointer ment~r Nancy
Page in the aftermath of
UWSP's most successful
season ever. "We opened a
lot of eyes and were. much
better than people expected,
since we are from the
· Midwest. 1 People expected
the eastern schools to blow us
out, and that never happened.
.We either outplayed the
opposition or played them
even," she noted.
Against Elizabethtown, the
No. 2 seed in the tourney, the
Pointers fell behind 1-o with
just 55 seconds elapsed in the
contest.
·
Shannon Houlihan tied the
score for Point with a goal at
the eight-minute mark.
Elizabethtown regained the
lead at the 17:25 mark · and
took the 2,1 advantage into
the half.
Jane Stangl tied the contest
once more with a corner shot
at the 13:37 mark of the
second half. Then, in what
Page called the turning point
in the game, Elizabethtown
Scored on a penalty stroke to
take a 3-2 lead. The Pointers
had the momentum at that
point, and if the penalty shot ·
would have missed, Page felt
UWSP would have been in an
excellent position to win.
Elizabethtown , added an
insurance goal at 29:43 to
round out the scoring. UWSP
outshot the Pennsylvania
school 26-21, but failed to
convert enough of the shots to
win.
Page's charges kept their
season going by defeating
Carleton College 4-0 in a
consolation bracket contest.
Seniors Mary Schultz and
Ann Tiffe accounted for all
the scoring. Schultz, UWSP's
all-time leading scorer,
scored at the 4:50 and eightminute marks of the first
half. Tiffe added her goals at
the 13- and 15-minute marks
of the second half to secure
the Pointer victory.
Stevens Point's domination
of Carleton was reflected in
the number of shots on goal
as UWSP held a 31-4
advantage. Page, however,
didn't feel her team was as
sharp as the previous day. "I
felt we played better
yesterday (in the opening
loss to Elizabethtown).
Today we played well enough
to win and that is what
counts."
·
UWSP's season ended on
Friday, November 21 with a
loss to State University of
New York-Brockport. The
Pointers dominated play,
getting off 35 shots to SUNYBrockport's nine, but
couldn't put any in the goal.
After a scoreless first half,
Brockport broke the ice at the
-
.
Members of the UWSP field hockey team, top row from liff:
Assistant coach John ' Munson, Karen Konopacki, Jane
Christianson, Barb Bernhardt, Nancy Luedtke, Cathy Roman,
Nancy Schauer, Michelle Anderson, Lisa Varney, Shannon
Houlihan, Valerie Schlaeger, Becky Streeter, Coach Nancy Page.
Bottom row from left: Lori Me Arthur, Sara Boehnlein, Mary
Schultz, Ann Tiffe, Cheryl Montanye, Jane Stangl. Not pictured:
Becky Barile, Mary Grandaw, Jacky Me Clintock, Ellen Rogers,
Tracy Thern and Rai Martin, manager.
13:42 mark of the final period
and added an insurance goal
with 20 seconds remaining in
the game. Page was
obviously disappointed with
the way the Pointers lost.
"It's hard to lose a . game
which you dominate like we
did," she said. "The stat~ics
speak for themselves, we just
couldn't put the ball in the
goal."·
in 1980 was a phenomonal 30.
6-1. ',' I thought the number of
1games
we played was
unusual," commented Page.
"We usually play about 24
games a year. The fact that
we played so many games
against tough opponents is a
tribute to each and every
player. Their dedication to
the sport and their athletic
abilities
were
just
tremendous," added Page in
·
The Pointers overall record praise of her team.
In 1980, the UWSP stickers
disproved the theory that
field hockey in the Midwest is
inferior to field hockey
played in the East. "We
proved that we could match
up to schools in the East,"
boasted Mary Schultz. "We
also proved that field hockey
in the Midwest is equal to that
in the East," she added.
Women Cagers Edge
Sti ·Norbert 67-61
By Joe Vanden Plas
Ann Bumgarner scored 17
points and pulled down 16
rebounds to lead the UWSP
women's basketball team to a
~7-61 victory over St. Norbert
in the season opener for the
Pointers , at
Quandt
Fieldhouse ~onday night.
Stevens Point, ranked 22nd
in a pre-season poll of
Division III teams, got more
than it bargained for from the
stubborn Green Knight
women. The Pointers trailed
St. Norbert 49-46 with seven
minutes left; to play before
rallying behind Bumgarner,
who scored 11 of her 17 points
from the charity stripe.
Pointer Coach Bonnie
Gehling was predictably
.· unimpressed with her team's
initial effort of the season.
"We were very slow. We
practiced hard last week and
at ·this point we're tired,"
explained Gehling. "Our
experience helped us reach
back and we never gave up."
St. Norbert stayed in the
game throughout as neither
team was able to pull away
from the other. The biggest
lead the Pointers had, not
counting final minutes, was a
32-26 advantage late in the
first half. St. Norbert,
however, came back to
narrow the margin to 34-32 at
the half and the game
remained close until the end.
After falling behind late in
the second half, the Pointers
went to a full court press that
held St. Norbert to just 12
points in the final seven
minutes of the contest.
Meanwhile, Bumgarner
made a crucial three-point
play with 6:47left, to even the
score at 49. UWSP sophomore
Jacky Grittner then
connected twice to give Point
...
a 53-49lead with 5: 43left.
The Knight women evened
the score a minute later as
Liz Kleba sank two field ·
goals. The teams exchanged
baskets once more before
Grittner put Stevens Point
ahead to stay with a hoop at
the 3:38 mark. The Pointers
held St. Norbert scoreless for ·a two-minute stretch,
enabling them to build an
eight-point cushion, 63-55,
with 1:30 left to play.
When asked if she thought
the game would be close,
Gehling replied, "No," but
gave St. Norbert credit for
their fine play. "They really
played well as a team," noted
Gehling. "They shot 60
percent in the. first half to
stay close."
· The Pointers held a slight
edge in every statistical
Conlon p. 19
Ann Bumgarner drives for two of her 17 points in UWSP's
67-61 win over St. Norbert.
~
Page 18 December 4, 1980
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THE SNOW IS GONNA
FALL, SO LEARN
HOW-TO GET YOUR
SKIS READY!
By Carl Moesche
It was a game nobody
expected' the UW-Stevens
Point men's basketball team
to lose. They were billed as a
darkhorse to win the WSUC
conference this season, yet ·
they were outhustled,
outrebounded, and outplayed
in their home opener, losing
50-46 to non-conference rival
St. Norbert.
Pointer Coach Dick
Bennett, disappointed in his
team's performance said,
"We were simply outplayed.
We played so carefully that
we lost our aggressiveness."
· UWSP controlled the
opening minutes of the game.
Center Bill Zuiker netted 10 of
the first 15 points as the
Pointers opened up a sevenpoint lead. Zuiker was the
game's leading scorer with 20
points.
Zuiker, who led the
Pointers in scoring last
season, was a one-man show
iii the first half. Despite the
combined cold shooting of
three-for-13 by the other four
starters, Zuiker's 14 points
carried UWSP to a 23-22
halftime lead.
. The Pointers had also done
a credible job in defensing
freshman Joe Emmerich,
who had scored 35 points last
Saturday against UWOshkQsh. Emmerich was
held to a single point in the
first half.
But Zuiker couldn't do it
aione, and early in the second
half Emmerich put the Green
Knights ahead with a threepoint play, and gave them a
lead they would never lose.
St. Norbert went into a
delay offense and a zone
defense, slowing the game
down to . the tempo they
wanted.
The Pointer fast break was
virtually nonexistent, but
Phil Rodriguez and J ef
Radtke began hitting from
the perimeter, keeping them
close. Rodriguez finished
with 12 points, and Radtke
after being shut out in the
first half, finished with eight.
But the Pointers were
beaten badly on the 'boards,
and oftengot only one shot on
offense. Emmerich again
was detrimental with 10
second-half reboun~, givin~
Bill Zuiker (44) shoots over a St. Norbert defender as Phil
Rodriguez looks on.
I
him a game high of 13.
Commenting on his team's
passiveness, Bennett said,
"Our rebounding just wasn't
there. To win, you have to
have offensive rebounds. Bu~
we weren't .attacking
anybody."
This was evident, since in
the first half UWSP went to
the free-throw line only
twice. For the . game, the
Pointers
made
an
embarrassing two of six,
while St. Norberfwent to the
line 20 times and made 12.
Also figuring in the
Pointers' downfall was a lack
of punch from the bench.
With starter Duane
Wesenberg in foul trouble,
Bennett turned to Brian Koch
and John Mack for relief, but
neither player scored. Pete
Zuiker's lone first half field
goal accounted for the only
Paulson 60th at Rochester
Chuck Paulson, a junior on
the UWSP men's crosscountry team, finished in 60th
place in the NCAA Division
III National Meet in
Rochester, N.Y., Saturday.
Paulson was in the top 25 at
the four-mile mark of the
five-mile race, but was
spiked in the foot at that time
and ·subsequently . dropped
drastically in the standings.
Paulson was th.e oniy
member of the UWSP team to
run in the meet as he
qualified for the nationals in
the regional meet last week
and the team did not.
As some consolation for
UWSP's team, which barely
missed qualifying for the
national meet, the Midwest
Region dominated the meet.
Midwest teams finished first,
second, third, fifth, and
seventh in the national
competition.
Individually, Jeff Milliman
of North Central College (Ill.)
won the meet with a winning
time of 25:20.2. Paulson came
across the finish line at the
26:26.0 mark.
.
scoring off the bench.
Meanwhile, Emmerich
slowly began to get his points,
and he finished with a team
high of 14. He also sealed the
victory with some clutch
free-throw shooting down the
stretch.
For Bennett and the
Pointers, it was a very
disappointing loss. He said,
"We weren't doing the right
things out there, especially
rebounding. Nobody was
getting to the boards."· He
continued, "We'll just have to
keepon going though, and do
better."
The Pointers will open
conference action tomorrow
night as they travel to UWPlatteville. On Saturday
night, UWSP will host
Winona in another nonconference game. Tip-off is
at7:30.
·
I
Point coach Rick Witt was
very happy with the effort of
Paulson, noting that the
injtiry was most unfortunate.
"Chuck ran very well and;l
was pleased with the way he
performed. He went out with
the idea of trying to be in the
top 25 and he gave it his best
effort. He was in the top 25
until the four-mile mark
whtm he got spiked and fell to
60th place,
is still
respectable
the 240
runners who
Witt
remarked.
--·
The Pointer Page 19
Conl from p. 17
category.
UWSP
outrebounded-St. Norbert 4742, made 13 charity tosses to
SNC's 11, and made 27 field
goals to 25 for the Knight
women.
Jacky Grittner tallied 16
points and Sue Davis chipped
in 14 for Point in support of
Bumgarner, while Becky
Coenen and Liz Kleba led St.
Norbert with 14 points apiece.
"Ann Bumgarner did a great
job on the line," praised
Gehling. "Grittners' shooting
helped to open up Bumgarner
i.Qside and Sue Davis also did
an outstanding job," she
added, ·
Stevens Point will take its
1-o record to Green Bay this
Saturday when it faces the
Phoenix.
'
The school where the
students rule!
·the pigskin prophets
Rick Herzog
By Kurt Denissen ·
Former Pigskin Prophet
Rick Herzog is the guest
picker this week. Herzog is
attending graduate school in
New Orleans and has been
waiting to match wits with
Denissen all season. The
showdown is here. The yearly
slate stands at 110-72. Now,
week fourteen ...
PITTSBURGH (8-5) OVER
HOUSTON (8-5) ~ The
Steelers become intense
wht}n theirplay-off hopes are
on the line. "Qilers will not
kick the door in this season,"
predicted Herzog. Pitt by 4 in
this Thursday Nighter.
PHILADELPHIA 11-2)
OVER ATLANTA (10-3) TWo top teams in their
respective divisions will meet
head to head. There will be no
Brotherly LovE1 at Veterans
Stadium on Sunday. Battle of
the birds with the Eagles
flying on top by 6.
·
BALTIMORE, (7-6) OVER
CINCINNATI ,(4-9) - QB
Greg Landry and Curtis
· Dickey will run it up against
the Bengals. Cincy will burn
out for the rest of the year.
Colts stifle Bengals by 8.
DALLAS 00-3) OVER
OAKLAND (9-4) - A great
NFC vs. AFC confrontation.
"The Cowboys had ten days
rest while the Raiders had
six. That will be the
difference,'' commented
Herzog. Dallas rambles by 7.
DENVER (7-6) OVER
KANSAS CITY I(6-7> - The
Rocky Mountain Boys will be
ready to pou~d K.C. The
Chiefs will need a medicine
man after this contest Herzog. Broncos by a bun~h.
DETROIT (7-6) AT ST.
LOUIS (4-9) - "Cards will
hang Detroit under the arch
in St. Louis." Herzog picks an
upset. The Prophet will stick
with the Lions to remain in
first place in the NFC
Central.
GREEN BAY (5-7-1)
OVER CHICAGO (5-8) Mathematically sp~aking,
the Packers still have a
chance to capture the
division. Herzog states,
"Loyalty to home town team
prevails. G.B. 21-Chicago .
14."
L.A. (9-4) AT BUFFALO
(9-4) The Prophet goes
with the Bills because of the
home team advantage.
"Even if Coach Chuck Knox
pulls out the old L.A.
playbook, the Bills will come
up short," forecasts the
former Prophet.
MINNESOTA (7-6) OVER
TAMPA BAY )5-7-1)- Both
NFL pickers choose the
Vikes. The Bucs just don't
have the stamina. Vikings
are making a bid for the
division nobody wants. Bucs
getdumpedbylO.
·
NEW ORLEANS (0-13) AT SAN FRANCISCO (5-8) Herzog predicts the Saints
fans can debag themselves
because the Saints will end
their perfect season this
week. The Prophet believes
the49erswillbe-thevictorsof
the crummy game of the
week.
·
N.Y. GIANTS (3-10) AT
SEATTLE (4-9) __,. Herzog
thinks the Seahawks will be
ready and get their first win
at th~ Kingdome. The
Prophet takes the Giants in
this ho-hum match.
CLEVELAND )9-4) OVER
N.Y. JETS (3-10) - "Coach
Rutigliano started out his
career coaching high school
and the Jets squad brings
back memories," chuckled
Herzog. The Browns stifle
N.Y. in this mismatch by 17.
SAN DIEGO (9-4) OVER
WASHINGTON (3-10)- The
Redskins lack offense and the
Chargers have plenty of it-Herzog. Fouts and company
will pass by the Skins by 14.
NEW ENGLAND (8-5)
OVER MIAMI (6-7) -The
Pats must win this contest to
remain in contention for the
AFC East title. The Dolphins
could be a spoiler, but don't
count on it. Both forecasters
pick the J>atriots by a
touchdown. .
All teams wishing to sign December 13 in the Berg
up
for
Intramural Gym. There .are three
Basketball, which starts- divisions: light, middle and
second semester, must have heavyweight, with a men's,
their team's roster in by women's and open division.
December 14. Since All the entires will be
scheduling of the leagues will available at the Intramural
be completed over Christmas Desk, and an entry fee will be
break, it is a must that all established at a later date.
teams hand in their ~oster by
this date. A $10 forfeit fee
must accompany all new
teams. Teams that already
have a $7.50 forfeit fee on
deposit must bring an
additional deposit of $2.50.
This extra fee is due to an
increase in the cost ·of
officials.
- The First Annual All:
The Directors League will Campus Coed- Volleyball
aJ.so be run this year. The Championship, held last
lcitgue is scheduled to start week· at quandt Gym, was
January 25, and only the first . won by Net Time:
10 teams will be taken. The
entry fee is $36. per team,
The Public Administration
which must accompany all Student Organization
entries. Teams will be (PASO) would like to thank
scheduled for seven games, . ·Point Brewery for donating
and a tournament will be held the trophies, medallions,
after the regular season. door prizes and beer. PASO
Trophies will be awarded to would also like to affirm its ·
the 1st, 2nd, and the 3rd place appreciation for all those
players and members who
teams in the tournament.
There will be a wrist- made the tournament a
wrestlin~ tournament held on success.
Net Time
Wins
l~~l~'4/1 HiJ/1:'
1$0Gl~:!'!'::"!~~= Melrocolor f) A NEW WORLD PICTURE
Thurs. &Fri. - Dec. 4 &5
6:30 & 9:00P.M.
Program-Banquet Room
1.25
Only S
Or
Wear Your New Wave Tings
And Get In For One Dollar! .
THERE'S NO EXCUSE!
Roffe Ski W.ear
on SALE now!
Page 20 December 4, 1980
•
CABLE CHANHEL 3
•
A
.SPf.CIAU . -
1'Hl~
· CH~fSfPlA S ...
$otne:1H l N q..
·you
(r)AD6
'fOOLl.$Sl.f.
DELA YEO BROADCAST
AT 9:30P.M.
SAT., DEC. 6
Pointers Vs. Winqna State
TUES., DEC. 9
Pointers vs UW-Parkside
'{ou~
~~at-1'1W(fS
H~LP '{otJ
1111S
(Jt41Qo~
'f£A«... 'At~t.l.
.
'
A-(
f
~P&Cit\L...
h~~
MD
0~1S.
1) The Kentucky Derby, .
the Preakness, and the
Belmont Stakes
2) Holland
~
3) Reading, Pennsylvania,
B&O, Short Line
·
4) His good pal Wimpy
5) 132, but only eight of
them are major ones.
6) In the Okefenokee
Swamp
7) Thomas Jefferson
brought the recipe from
France.
8) So let it be.
9) Poppin' Fresh
. 10) Pepsi Cola
WHO_IS
RIFF-RAFF?
Sells handcrafted items made by
Portage County residents who are
60 years of age or older or 55 if
handicapped.
HOURS:
Find outBy Viewing
The Astounding
The Outrageous
The Unbeatable
Unrepealable
ROCKY HORROR
PICTURE SHOW
December 11 & 12
-·
Wright Lounge U.C.
Showtimes: 7 P.M. & 9:15P.M.
Sponsored By
$1.50
fo~
WI'I'H IOtAS
'{OU(t OWW CAR.l~ftnAS C¥-DS ·
1'oo. N~ 100~ CH~tsrAa~
· Sponsored By:
UWSP FOUNDATION, INC.
- CHANCELLOR'S RESERVE
UWSPSTUDENTGOVERNMENT
owN
Se»D
10:00 A.M. To 4:00P.M.
ITEMS.:
Tuesday • Saturday
Added Holiday Hou~
Scoops Benefit
Sun., Dec. 7th
Wright Lounge
~1.00
Featuring
Admission
Tom Pease & David Russell
, Betsy Godwin & Debbie Schmidt
Yarrow & Friends
'
.
Give every
NEWBORN
the
L
advantage
March
Birth
Dimes ·
Foundation
Page21 .
Studl'nt Affairs
Sponsored by the UWSP
Student Affairs Offices
W ellness Facilitators offer alternatives:
I
New program launched in halls
By Chris BanJettini
Change is an inevitable fact
of life, and it continuously
contributes to the formation
of one's present lifestyle and
personality. .
. It is important to realize
that we all have the choice to
initiatepositivechangeinour
lives.
Self-assessment
followed by positive action
can lead to a more fulfilling,
enjoyableexistence.
Individuals at UWSP who
have identified the need for
change in specific areas of
their lives have many
resources to tap in order to
make a change evident and
realistic in their life.
According to the Lifestyle
Questionnai11e, a high
number of students requested
group activities related to
·exercise programs, weight
reduction, and other selfimprovement programs.
A Wellness Facilitation
program, launched last
October, has been formed for
the benefit of students who
desire change ir! their lives.
Programs, speakers and
other resources related to the
, various dimensions of
Wellness will be maoe
available.
Dr. Bill Hettler, Director of
Health Services, Dr. Dennis
Elsenrath, Director of
Counseling and Human
Development, and Dr. Fred
Leafgren,
Assistant
Chancellor of Student
Affairs, initiated this
program as a result of
requests from many
students.
Wellness facilitators on a
peer level have been hired to
assist Residence Hall
Directors in programming
efforts, and act as resource
people for residents in the
hall.
Facilitators -a re involved in
an ongoing training process,
making the program an
effective presentation of
knowledge throughout the
year. Dr. Bob Cwiertniak of
the Counseling and Human
Development
Center
coordinates this effort.
Renee McCoy, intern
student at UWSP, the
Wellness facilitators on a
day-to~day basis. Carol
Weston researches resources
in the community for
facilitators to utilize.
Expectations of Wellness
facilitators for second
semester include:
1. Demonstration of a
knowledge of all , Wellness
materials, resources and
resource people not only in
the university but within the
community.
2. Exhibit skill in group
facilitation.
, ·
3. Demonstrate the ability
to use a 16 mm film projector
and 35 mm slide projector
and tape equipment.
4. Coordination of two
programs within the hall per
week.
5. Preparation of written
evaluation pertaining to each
program.
Senior Organ Recital: 8
p.m. with DEBORAH MC
COMAS at St. Stanislaus'
Church.
6. Facilitators are not
13. Programs are expected
expected to smoke cigarettes to be conducted in a nonor marijuana.
judgmental manner.
7. It is expected' that
facilitators do not use
psychoactive drugs that are
14. It is expected that the
not prescription.
facilitators will meet with
8. A personal fitness individual hall directors, and
program is expec~ of each other group members on a
facilitator.
~eekly basis.
9. If they use alCohol, it is
expected that they use it in a
responsible manner.
10. It is expected that they
know of three methods to deal
with stress, besides use of
alcohol.
It iS important to point out
that Wellness facilitators ·
recognize each individual at
his or her own level of
Wellness and are available to
assist students in many
ways.
11. Presentation of an
accurate overall concept of
Wellness and a good
understanding of the LAQ is
expected.
If you ~ve any questions
about thiS program, talk to
the Wellness facilitator in
your residence hall. Consider
checking out one of their
programs sometime. Many
who have participated in the
programs say they are an
excellent gr~wing experience
to take advantage of while
living in the halls.
i2. Expected to return to
school one week early both
semesters for training and
preparation for the upcoming
~emester.
Coffeehouse of the University
Center.
on90FM
Tuesday Dec. 9
Saturday Dec. 6
Thursday Dec. 4
Edna Carlsten Gallery
Exhibits: SIT, SIT, SIT
through December 17 in the
Fine Arts Building.
UAB Visual Arts Video
Tape Showing: Raw Energy,
11 a.m.-1 p.m. in the
Coffeehouse.of the University
Center. · .
·
Rec Services Surplus
Equipment Sale: 1-4 p.m. in
the Program Banquet Room
of the University Center.
I
UAB Visua·l Arts Film:
ROCK . 'N' , ROLL HIGH
SCHOOL, 6:30 & 9 p.m. in the
Program Banquet Room of
the University Center.
Percussion Ensemble
Concert: 8 p.m. in Michelsen
Hall of the Fine Arts
Building.
Friday Dec. 5
UAB Visual Arts Film:
ROCK 'N' ROLL HIGH
SCHOOL, 6:30 & 9 p.m. in the
Program Banquet Room of
the University Center.
Women's Basketball: 7
p.m. at Green Bay.
Swimming: Notre Dame
· Invitational Relays, 7 p.m. at
Notre Dame, Indiana.
UC Happy Hour: 3-6 p.m.
with Charles Gloudemans,
Pianist in the Gridiron of the
University Center.
Latter Day Saints Student
Assoc. Dance: 7-11:30 p.m. in
the Wright Lounge of the
University Center.
Contemporary
UAB
Entertainment & Stardate
Productions ·Present: HEAD
EAST and TROOPER, 7:30
p.m. in Quandt Gym of the ·
Fieldhouse.
Basketball: 7:30 p.m. at
Platteville.
nth Hour Specials
Women's Basketball: 7
p.m. at Oshkosh.
High School Band Reading
Univ. Film Society Movie:
Clinic: 8 a.m.-2:30p.m. in the THE ROARING TWENTIES,
Fine Arts Building.
7 & 9:15p.m. in the Program
Swimming: Loyola Univ., 1 Banquet Room of the
p.m. at Chicago, Illinois.
University Center.
Basketball: Winona, 7:30
Basketball: Parkside, 7:30
p.m. (H)
p.m. (H)
"MESSIAH"
Concert:
Oratorio Chorus and Univ.
Sunday Dec. 7
Orchestra, 8 p.m. in
Michelsen Hall of the Fine
Arts Building.
Packers vs. Chicago
Bears: On Video Screen, 1
p.m. in the Coffeehouse of the
Wednesday Dec. 10
University Center.
Planetarium Series: THE
CHRISTMAS STAR, 3 p.m. in
R~gis tration-Materials
the Planetarium of the Check-In: 8 a.m.-4:15p.m. in
Science Building.
the Wisconsin Room of the
Univ. Band Concert: 3 p.m. University Center.
in Michelsen Hall of the Fine
UC · Lunch Time Piano
Arts Building.
Playing: DARBY DREWS,
11:50-12:50 p.m. in the Pinery
of the University Center.
Thursday, December 4
Devo Live Radio Special
Friday, December 5 The
Alvin Lee Band, Free Fatl ·
Saturday, December 6 \
Motorhead, Ace of Spades
Sunday, December 7 Cal
Tjader, Gozame
Tuesday, December 9
Spyro Gyra, Carnaval Wednesday, December 10
-Ziggurat Radio Special
CAMPUS RECORDS & TAPES
PRESENTS
A NOW STORY
WITH NOW lftUOlln....
Monday Dec. 8
Registration: (No classes),
8 a.m.-4 p.m. & 6-7 p.m. in
Quandt Gym of the
Fieldhouse.
Rec. Services Mini-Course:
CROSS-COUNTRY
SKI
MAINTENANCE, 7 p.m. in
the · Green Room of the ·
University Center.
Monday Night Football:
NEW ENG. vs. MIAMI on
Video Screen, 8 p.m. in the
Student Recital: 4 p.m. in
Michelsen Hall of the Fine
Arts Building.
Univ. Film Soc. Movie:
THE ROARING TWENTIES,
7 & 9:15p.m. in the Program
Banquet Room -of the
University Center.
Jazz Ensemble I Concert: 8
p.m. in Michelsen Hall of the
Fine Arts Building.
•••the
at yo..·
at the speed of sound
DC DOLBY"sTEREO ~ Ei1D
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
DEC. 12 & 13
AT ROGERS CINEMA I
STARTS 11:00 P;M • .
FREE TICKETS
RECORDS
Page 22 December 4, 1980
The latest sexual trends analyzed:
By Carol Weston
A person's sexuality is a
personal and private subject.
The decisions people make
about their sex lives are
ultimately their own and
unique to their personality.
There are some national
trends in sexual behavior
. that are interesting and
important to point out. They
may well reflect the students
on this campus and this in
some way may help students
·make decisions about their
sexuality.
The major changes in
sexual behaviors in America
are the increase of
premarital sex and the
decrease in age for first
intercourse. Melvin Zelnik
and John Kantner, professors
in "the Department of
Population Dynamics, School
of Hygiene and Public
Health, Johns Hopkins
University, . conducted a
major study in 1979. They
compared their findings with
surveys done in 1971 and 1976.
Many changes could be
detected by comparing the
results of the three studies.
Of the is to 19-year-old
metropolitan area .women, 30
percent in 1971, 43 percent in
1976, and 50 percent in 1979
reported havmg premarital
sex. For men the figure was
even higher with 70 percent of
men 17-21 in 1979 reporting
having premarital sex. To
bring these figures a little
more to home, 78 percent of
the men and 72 percent of
women in a national survey married and keeping tlie 1976. That's an increase of 11 effective
means
<Kata & Cronin, 1980) of child, and abortion.
percent. Their study also withdrawal, douching, and
There is a decline in the . showed that in 1976, 59 rhythm. Not only is the desire
colleges an~ universities
reported having had sexual number of teenagers getting percent of the women never to contracept important, but
to
resolve used a contraceptive. In 1979 the correct understanding of
intercourse.. Along with the married
increase of premarital sex, pregnancies. In t971, 33 that figure was down to 50 the methods is important.
Yes, there have been and
there has been an increase in percent of pregnant percent.
So why there an increase in there are epochal changes in
premarital pregnancies. The teenagers married while in
level of premarital 1979 the percentage declined unplanned pregnancies? sexual mores in this country.
pregnancies
among to 16 percent. On the other Here are two possible People are having sex at an
teenagers nearly doubled hand, out-of-wedlock births explanations: the increase in earlier age and are not
between 1971-79, changing increased slightly <Zelnik & sexually active people would waiting to be married before
from nine percent in 1971 to 16 Kantner). As recently as increase the numbers, plus they have intercourse.
percent in 1979. <Zelnik & 1977, 16 ·percent of sexually there appears to be a change Unplanned pregnancies are
Kantner). This amounts to active college women in a in the type of ~ontraceptive rising in conjunction with
approximately one million national survey reported used.
these . changes in sexual
Women are shying away mores. Fewer people are
teenage pregnancies a year having undergone an
or one out of every ten abortion <Katz & Cronin). In from the most effective getting married to resolve
teenage women.
Wisconsin alone in 1978 there methods (Pill, 99.9 percent their unplanned pregnancies.
effective, IUD, 96-99 Abortion - and unwedThe increase in sexual / were17,764abortions.
The reasons for the percent). The Pill and IUD motherhood are the options
intercourse is not being
accompanied by an increase increase in premarital have numerous physical side people are choosing. The
of responsible contraceptive intercourse are many, and effects and women are Unplanned Pregnancy
use. Needle (1979) revealed can only be speculated upon. hesitating to use them. They Prevention Campaign on this
that 58 percent of sexually Whether it is right or wrong are using the least effective ·campus was designed to
active women in his study of to be sexually active is not up methods (withdrawal & make s-tudents thinlc about
a large Midwestern to this writer to say. rhythm). The use of the Pill the possible consequences of
sex
without
university had never been to However, the outcome of this and IUD decline.d. 41 percent having
health provider services for . increased sexual activity- in the three years between contracepting. · On this
contraceptives.
Another can, in large part, be 1976-79, while the use of campus, 318 women came to
univer~ity - populatibn of controlled to avoid unplanned withdrawal and rhythm rose the Health Center last year
50,000 had 341 pregnancy pregnancies.
by 86 percent. In 1976 the requesting pregnancy tests.
Using
a
r eli a b I e · three most popular methods The students at this campus
tests in one quarter (Meeks,
Scott, and Crane, 1978). At contraceptive to prevent of birth control were are making choices that are
our own UWSP Health Center pregnancy is within condoms, the Pill, and increasing their chances of
there were 318 pregnancy everyone's reach. There has withdrawal- in that order. having an unplanned
tests run last year, with 105 been some encouraging data In 1979 the popular methods pregnancy. The Health
tests requested so far. this reported. · T~e use of switched to withdrawal, Center is ready to answer any
contraceptives
has condoms, and the Pill (Zelnik question students might have
semester.
How these unplanned increased. Zelnik and 1 &Kantner).
·
about contraceptives. Once
pregnancies are being Kantne~'s study with
Also, in those three years students understand that
resolved .is als~ changing. metropolitan ~rea teenage the use of douching and there are choices with
The· options are: having the women showed m 1979 that 49 withdrawal doubled. Overall · contraceptives, they can pick
child and getting ma(ried, percent used contraceptives in 1979 48 percent of the the method best suited for
who
used them if they are sexually
having the child and giving it with their first intercourse, wome~
up for adoption, not getting
to 38 percent in
used the least active.
Responsibility begins b·efore, not after
Do you know how she feels about birth.
control? Matters of sexual communication are often touchy subjects for conversation. If your relationship with your
woman is a meaningful one, she may
well appreciate discussing your and her
feelings about it. For information on
· contraceptives and · contraceptive individual counseling, come to the University Health .Center~ second floor
Delzell, 346-4646. Information a/so
available on Dial-A- Topes, 346-4357,
on tapes 50 thru 57.
• • •
1-
The Pointer Page 23
for sa!e
For Sale: Albums by The
Beatles, Al Dimeola, Michael
Murphy, Devo, · Rockpile,
Leon Redbone, Steve
Forbert, Rollirig Stones, Ry
Cooder, Linda Ronstadt,
Pointer Sisters, Eno, Elvis
Costello, Paul McCartney
and Wings, Cat Stevens, Lou
Reed, the Who, and Led
Zeppelin. All excellent
condition, most only played
once for taping purposes..
$1.50 to $3 each. Call John,
341-8741 after~ p.m.
For Sale: Bell blue
-metalflake motorcycle
helmet with bubble shield.
Excellent condition. $10. Call
John 341-8741 after 6 p.m.
FOR SALE: Jeeps, cars,
and trucks available through
government agencies. Many
sell for less than $20Q,__ Call
602-941-8014 for your
directory on how to purchase.
FOR SALE: Women's
suede ·winter coat. 1 year old,
very good condition, $50. Call
Jaime at 345-0754.
FOR SALE: Banjo with
case, good condition. $7~. Call
Nancy at 341-8729.
· FOR SALE: One pair of
women's (size 8) rust-color~
shoes, worn only once. Best
offer, call Maureen at 3440994, evenings.
FOR SALE: Stereo
equipment:
receivers,
speakers, and turntable. Call
Mike at 341-5941 for more
info. FOR SALE: UnbeUevable!
Graphic Equalizer ;;- great
gift for yoursel( or anyone's
undernourished
stereo
system, only $85. Call Vic at
344-3552.
FOR SALE: "SKIS"
Kniesles- soft flex 160's with
salomon 444 bindings. Only 1
year old, excellent condition,
super bargainf Call Dave at
346-3789, Rm. 313.
FOR SALE: 5-string banjo.
Great for beginners. Brand
new, $80. Call Claire at 3443667.
FOR SALE: Takara 12speed bicycle, 27 inch frame,
Alloy crank set, center pull
brakes, royal blue color,
seatbag, carrier rack,
generator, light, lock, cable,
cuff strays. A $260 value,
asking $200. Call Steve at 3464116 in Rm. 430 Smith.
FOR SALE: Schwinn
LeTour, excellent shape. Call
346-2769 Rm. 415, ask for Jim.
FOR SALE: 1 pair of
Fischer downhill skis, super
comps, 200 em. with Besser
competition - aluminum
bindings. $200 or best offer.
Must sell! 346-4116, Rm. 422,
ask for Chris.
FOR SALE: one pair
Dynamic VR17 downhill skis
(194 em) with Look Grand
Prix bindings. One pair of
Raichle boots (size 10) with
stand and one pair of Gipon
downhill poles. All equipment
used very little and is in
_excellent condition. A very
good deal! Call Ken at 341-.
5494.
FOR
·SALE:
IBM
Correcting Selectric II. Used,
in excellent condition.
. Changeable typing elements,
cleaning brushes, and cover
thrown in. Asking $800. Call
341-4419 between 5 and 9 p.m.
f
weekdays.
for rent
FOR . RENT: 2-bedroom
apartment to sublet for
second semester. Available
Dec. 22, $190 ~r ,..month. 3
blocks from campus. 2132A
Jefferson. Call344-7901.
FOR RENT: 2-bedroom
unfurnished apartment on N.
Second St. $250 per month
plus utilities, available
January 1.. Call3'l4-41'73.
FOR RENT: One woman to
sublet double room. Large
house, 1624 Ellis St. $375 per
semester · plus utiliUes.
Washer-dryer, shower-tub
available. 10 minute walk
from campus. Phone 345- 0136.
FOR RENT: Female
needed to rent a single room
($400) for second semester
'80-'81. 5 blocks from campus.
~
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIHIIHIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIDIIIIIIIHUIIDIUWIUIIIIUUIIIUUIIIIIIHIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIHIIIIIIUIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
~VARSITY SPECIALS
I ----~~------------------~----------------~---------"Double
"Shot Night"
(Upstairs 7 til close)
Bubble
50¢ Shofsof
Night"
·i
'
• Amaretto
2 Bar Brand
• Ginger
' I.
• Peppermint
i
Highballs s1.00
• Blackberry
1
Upstairs 7-cl·ose
• Bar Whi.skey
·
·
i Tues.
i.·
i
Thurs.
J
Little
Sisters Of Sigma
I
Tau Gamma Happy
Hour (Downstairs)
8·10 $1.75 Bu~ On Tap
"Wine Night"
WED.
(7TH Close)
Pitchers Of Rhine, uPsTAIRs
Rose',1White or
Pink Chablis, Lambrusco
I. 8
3° 0 Pitcher
Sigma Tau Gamma
Fraternity Happy Hour
Downstairs 7·10 $_2.00
Fri. _'~~po~~!R~l"
•
•
•
•
•
•
7:00 til· close
$1.00 Bottles Of
Heineken
Molson
Moosehead
Beck's Bier
John Courage
I
Contact Lynn at 344-2452. -FOR RENT: 2singlerooms
in a four-bedroom apartment
for second semester. For
more info. call Jamie or Dan
at31-8140.
FOR RENT: Student
housing for men. Two
openings in a house 1 block
from campus, -2nd semester.
Phone 341-6079. Please leave
message.
FOR RENT: Student
wanted to share a 3-bedrooi:n
house, walking distance from
campus. $75 per month. Call
341-0633 or 341-3671, after 5
p.m.
Child Care Registrati9n:
The University Child
Learning and Care Center is
now accepting applications
for second semester. We have
openings available for
children ages 2% to 6 who are
children of UW faculty or
staff. The center is open 5
days per week from 7:45 to
4:15p.m. To apply, call 3464370; stop by the center in
Delzell Hall; or inquire at the
Quandt Gym on Registration
Day.
Planning for Earth Day '81
is underway. Earth Day
started in 1970 when it was
· FOR RENT: Wanted: one felt by many people that the
roommate to share double environment was in grave
room.$300persemester,heat danger and people's
included. Close to campus. • awareness needed· to be
Call345-0687.
aroused. It was a success but
the awareness and action
needs to continue if the
wanted
quality of life and the quality
pf the environment we enjoy
WANTED TO RENT: is to continue. Won't you join
Single bedroom apartment us in planning and carrying
for 2nd semester. Call Cindy out this celebration? Earth
at 346-3742 in Rm. 309.
Day is April 22. Here in
WANTED: Pictures of Old Stevens Point we ·will be
Main before remodeling. celebrating from Monday,
(Black and white or color). April20 to Wednesday, April
Call 346-2827. Will pay $$ Ask 22. We have a variety of
activities and speakers
forDanO.
WANTED: Innovative tentatively planned. The
vocalist and guitarist for theme for Monday is
Sixties and New Wave group. Environmental Degredation
Are you ready to rock? The - The Price We Pay.
time is right! Call Tom at 344- Tuesday is Alternative
Lifestyles, and Wednesday is
2105.
'
Environmental Action. If you
would like to help in any way
announcerrents
with this celebration or have
any ideas, drop a note in our
OVERSEAS JOBS mailbox in Rm. 107 CNR
Summer or year round. Bldg.
·
Europe, S. Amer., Australia, · The members of the _
Asia. All Fields. $S00-$1200 Student Health Advisory
monthly. Sightseeing. Free
Info. Write: IJC Box 52.wis Committee <SHAC) and the
University Health Service
Corona Del Mar, CA 92625.
would like to invite you to .a
The
Environmental ski retreat. This weekend
Council is sponsoring paper retreat promises to be full of
and aluminum collection good food, skiing, and talk.
every Saturday from 10 a .m. · The main purposes of the
to 2 p.m. Collection point is at weekend is to discuss health
the Women's Resource promotion on this campus for
Center, beginning Saturday, the upcoming year. Boyd's
Mason Lake Resort in
December 6.
Environmental notes: The Fifield, Wisconsin will be our
hosts on January 23 through
endangered species T-shirts 25. $58.24 is the total cost per
ordered last month from person, but we need a deposit
E.E.l.A. are in! You can pick of $35 by December 1, 1980.
them up in the West lobby of Please contact Carol Weston
the C.N.R. from 9-3 on or' Pat Lamine at the Health
Wednesday and Thursday, Service for your reservation.
Dec. 3 and 4. Meetings: Thankyou.
<E.E.l.A.) next meeting will
be Thursday, Dec. 11 at 7 in
p e r sonals
the Red Room. It will be
important!
Blossom, thanks for
Recreational Services has
FREE: county and state understanding, f>eer. You
maps,
downhill
ski are not crazy, insecure nor
brochures, x-country ski dying. Thanks again Angel.
information, and lots of Tin Cup.
magazines for your reading
Jesus loves you, Bob.
pleasure. Stop down lower
Repent
and turn from your
level UC.
sinful ways! Remember you
Want to act, sing, or dance? can't escape the voice . . .
Shoestring Players need Love and kisses, J .M. and her
young ,
blood
for partner in crime.
"Cinderella." Try-outs are
January 6, 7, from 1-3 at St.
Dave's not here right now.
Paul•s United Methodist. From the M.B. and Pan' 0 Z.
Rehearsals Mon., Wed., and Gumby, Potre, and Doc
'= Fri. from 1-3. Performances · Twister.
I are March_5,6,7,8. For more
• information contact Pat
Mark R. in Pray - Your
Zawadsky at 341-1356.
buddies (including Canoe)
congratulate you on your
recent achievement of
someone special in Neale
Hall. We hope your future ·
endeavors will be as
successful. M.K., B.W., S.N. ·
I
i
I
. I
'
-~-
VERSITY
STORE
346-3431
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