internation-al March 7, 1985

advertisement
March 7, ' 1985
':
internation-al
.
Vol. 28, No. 24
Contents
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t
V1P1Mnn1n ~
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March 7, 1985
Student Government passes
budget•••••••.•..••..••..••••.•••••••......••••......•..P.5
Student Government meeting..•••••..•.•.••....•.. P. 6
A look at the Irish Republican Army•••••••••• ;P. 6
Nicaragua: A look at reality .•.••..•...•••..••.•••• p. 5
Womenfest .••••.••••..•.••.••..•••••••••.••...••••••••.•••• p. 9
Foreign student office......, .••...•...•:....•.•••••••• p. 9
International dinner ................................... p. 9
Wilsa dance group ...................................... p. 10
Organ .donor campaign •••....••••..•••••••••...••.... p~ 10
Pointers return to K.C•..••.••..••••••••••••••.....••• p. 18
Dogfish sixth at national meet .•.•••••••••.•••..•• p. 19
Thinclads win at Milwaukee •..•••••••••.••..••...• p. 20
Lady runners sixth at Tierney Classic..••••••• p. 19
AU-WSUC team announced ......................... p. 19
Grouse research ••.••••••••••..••.••••••••••.••••...••.•. p.14
Eco-Briefs•••••••••.••••••••••••••.•••.•.••••••••••••••..••. p. 14
. Spring thoughts ......................................... .P· 15
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·poihter
STAFF
'
I
I
I
..
EDITOR:
Melissa A. Gross
SENIOR EDITOS.:
Tamas Houlihan
NEWS EDITORS:
Noel Radomski
AlP. Wo,ng
PHOTOGRAPHERS:
Greg Peterson
Assistants:
Mike Grorich
Pete Schanock
Scott Jordan
Fred Hohensee
FEATURES:
Amy Schroeder
SPORTS:
Alan L. Lemke
ENVIRONMENT:
Christopher Dorsey
GRAPHICS!
Kristen A. Schell
ADVERTISING:
AndrewS. Zukrow
Mark Lake
.
BUSINESS MANAGER:
Jeff Wilson
OFFICE MANAGER:
Elaine Yun-lin Voo
COPY EDITOR:
MaxLakritz
ADVISOR:
Dan Houlihan
CONTRffiUTORS:
Michael (Grunt) Gronert.
Kent Walstrom
Scot Moser
LoriHernke
Nanette Cable
Cyle Brueggeman
Robert Taylor
Eric Post
Kevin Kamradt
Mary Beth Strauss
RonAnkley ·
Jim Burns
Kathleen Harris
Tom Raymond
Ken Gronski
Darlene Loehrke
Mike Verbrick
Lynn Goldberg
Scott Roeker
Dan Sullivan
KramSamat
Mary McCartney
Susan Higgins .
Theresa Boehnlein
·--------------------------------------·
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Toward global' awareness
There is a great need for us to
attain a higher level of global awareness today if we are to come to grips
with the crises plaguing the contemporary global political and social sys. tern. We need to be able to discern
trends in the international scene, detect signals warning us of emerging
social problems, to · think seriously
and critically about alternative solutions and possible future worlds, as
well as recommend strategies for
achieving those solutions and worlds.
· We cannot afford to seclude
· ourselves from the rest of the world
because our world has evolved to a
state of interdependence among the
nations. We can no longer ignore the
important fact that our future wellbeing in large part rests on international cooperation and global unity.
We need to give more attention to
major crises like war, social injustice, widespread poverty, and ecological imbalance, which are global in
· scope. It is becoming increasingly
clear that most of these major problems confronting humankind defy national solutions and perspectives and
are generally aggravated, if not directly caused, by the imperatives of
national sovereignty.
To illustrate the interdependence
among the nations, we can consider
as an example the heavy emphasis
placed on international trade·in each
nation. The economic benefits nations
derive from international trade,
which has grown to immense proportions, are multitudinous. The import
and export of goods and services are
of great economic importance to every nation. We need to share the
fruits of our labor if we want to enjoy
and benefit from a larger variety of
goods and services. The importance
of the economic interdependence
amo~g the nations can be seen by the
springing up of numerous giant trade
entities. Big corporations have long
recognized that expansion into other
nations is an effective way to increase their portfolio. These multinational corporations have helped in
creating and fostering a global vii-
.the
pomter
The
Pointer is a second class
publication (USPS-0011240) published
weekly on Thursday by the University
of Wisconsin-Stevens Point and the UWSystem Board of Regents, U3
Conununication Arts Center, Stevens
Point, WI 54481.
POSTMASTER: Sena address
change to Pointer, 113 .Conununication
Arts Center, Stevens Point, WI 54481.
Pointer is written and edited by the
Pointer staff, composed of UWSP
students, and they are soltHy
responsible for its editorial content and
policy.
lage. We must recognize that we are
living in a global village.
In light of the heavy interdependence among nations, we must elevate ourselves to a higher level of understanding of our relationship with
the rest of the world. We cannot continue to live, figuratively speaking, in
a hole, where our view or perspective
of the world is narrow and obscured.
We need to emerge from that "hole"
to achieve a higher level of understanding through gaining deeper insights into other cultures. The rich
and diverse cultures of our world can
ofr'er us with alternative solutions to
problems. The same global problem
is frequently interpreted in <Ufferent
ways by observers from different cultures. Thus, we must attempt to foster transnational and cross-cultural
perspectives in our search for solutions to problems.
Although the study of other cultures
has long been stressed in our educa-:
tional institutions, it can be noted that
many such programs have been eliminated either due to lack of interest or
ignorance. Much has to be done to
boost the study of other cultures. And
ignorance is the mother of hostility.
With most academic institutions
emphasizing career-oriented programs, which are most demanded by
students, we seem to have taken a
step backward in terms of contributing to international cooperation and
global unity. An academic institution
should have the priority and responsibility of enhancing humanki,nd and
preserving our heritage.
While the West has definitely been
in the lead in technology, we cannot
be quite as certain that it has also ·
been in the lead in the arts and philosophy. All we know for certain is
that Western arts and philosophy
have been disseminated more efficiently and more widely than ·any
other intellectual heritage in the
world. We should redress this imbalance in the dissemination of mankind's intellectual heritage. Academic
institutions, the chief disseminator,
Cont.p.21
:
Letters to the editor will be
accepted only if tbey are typewritten
and siped, and sboulcl not aceed a
nwDngn ~ 250 WCII'dl. Names will
be witbbeld frcm publication only if
appropriate reuoa Js given. Pallder
. _ ... the " - to edit letten jf
nee nry and to refule to ~
letters not suitable for publicaUCIIL
All COITapOIIdence abould be
addressed to Pelater, 113
CnmmomlcwttcJa Arts Center, UWSP,
stevens PaUll, Wllcaalln 5Mil.
Wrllt.al ~Is reqaind for
the reprtat o1 au materials
.....,..Ia....._..
Copyrtgt~~ e 1115
Pointer Page 3
('
Week in Review
'Promoting w ,e llness in organi_zations
Creating healthier organizaOpatz terms the field "ripe"
tional environments is the topic for new writings about health-re' of a new book written by the di- lated subjects.
rector of the Institute for LifeHe says the institute receives
about 1,000 requests per month
style Improvement at UWSP.
joseph P. Opatz has penned for information about facilitat"A Primer of Health Promotion: ing institutional programs. CurCreating Healthy Organizational rently, more than 200 colleges
Cultures," published last month and universities throughout the
by Oryn Publications, Washing- country are creating new health
promotion projects, he estiton, D.C.
ijealth promotion is a relative- mates.
ly new phenomenon in the orSome of the institute's most
ganizational setting: So far, recent clients are staff members
much of the wellness emphasis of hospitals and medical facilihas been placed on changing in- ties trying to catch ut> in the
dividual behaviors such .as quit- areas of wellness education and
ting smoking, says the author. ·public service. Opatz says it
But, he adds, people's everyday makes sense for medical personenvironments, the cultures in nel to develop expertise in the
which they live and work, need ' prevention of illness as well as
to be changed in order to sup- its treatment.
port and maintain healthier
The institute is part of the
lifestyles.
. UWSP Foundation, Inc. Opatz
He calls his book a "primer" calls the facility, "completely
because it includes basic infor- self-sustaining." In fact, it d<P'
mation helpful to university stu- nated $25,000 of its income back
dents pursuing careers in health to the foundation last year.
When Opatz was hired as the
promotion, as well as strategies
for professional practitioners program's director, it employed
setting up programs.
·
one person. Now he heads a
The publication, which is staff of five full-time and six
available for purchase at the part-time employees.
UWSP 'Bookstore; is being used
The institute is funded through
as a textbook Jn a wellness man- sales of the Lifestyle Assessagement course at the universi- ment Questionnaire, · computer
ty.
·
software, audio-visual aids and
Some of the subjects he ex- . other educational materials. The
plores in the book are planning, Na~ional Wellness Conference,
implementing, assessing ·and '!~ch attracts hundreds of parmarketing wellness programs in tic1pants from throughout the
corporate and other organiza- U.S. and Canada to the UWSP
tiona! settings. He also includes campus each summer, also
samples of wellness and health helps su~~ort the pro~~an;t·
risk inventories developed at
In addition, the fac1hty s staff
UWSP and examples of pro- members are paid to serve as
grams currently being used at consultants to other organizathe university.
tions. Opatz says they have
rnternational Dinner
signed a contract with the Pentagon to train health profession. als in the military stationed in
West Germany this spring.
Because it is such a new area,
the author and most of his contempO'raries have entered the
health promotion field from
other backgrounds. His training
was in education and manage-
ment.
ployees.
Opatz holds a master's of education from Kent State University and a Ph.D. in higher education studies from the Univ_ersity
of Minnesota. He formerly was
employed by Hennepin County
Government i'n Minneapolis,
where he developed a health
promotion program for 8,000 em-
Since coming to UWSP in 1982,
he has received a $9,500 grant to
develop a microcomputer program which measures probable
life apappeetancy based on lifestyle factors. Campbell Soups
also recently granted $10,000 to
the institute for special.projects.
Foru-m on drinkinQ problems .
A public forum on controver- ners said Jhey are encouraging
sies surrounding consumption of the participation of interested
alcohol, especially among ·the people from beyond the campus.
Elected officials on the panel
young, will be held Monday
will be State Rep. Stan Grusnight, March 11, at UWSP.
Speakers will include public · zynski (D-Stevens Point), Porofficials and · people who are tage County District Attorney
advocates for responsible drink- John Osinga, Portage County
ing .and-or provide services to Coroner Scott Rifleman and
UWSP Student Government
people with drinking problems.President Alan Kesner.
The 8 p.m. session will be in
the Wisconsin Room, sponsored .
The panelists will be Stu Whipas a public service by the staff ple, alcohol education coordinaof Roach Residence Hall. ~lan- tor at UWSP; Mary Ellen Nel-
son of Mid Wisconsin Psycho- ·
therapy of Stevens Point; and a
local emergency medical 'technician.
Moderator will be Boyd Huppert of the WSAW-TV news staff _,
in Wausau.
Topics of discussion will be
new drunk driving laws, pros
and cons of raising the state's
drinking age to 21', legislation
trends on drinking, economic
impact of the drinking age and
drinking's effect on the college
campus.
UWSPholds open house
The University of WisconsinStevens Point will hold its third
annual open house Sunday,
March 24, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
The event will be held in conjunction With the seventh annual
antique show and sale held in
Quandt Gymnasium and the 13th
· annual Festival of Arts in the
Fine Arts Center.
Every academic building will
be open to the public during the
open house. Academic depart-
ments are planning special programs such as: free water testing for nitrates, free ph testing
of soil, various performances by
student and faculty groups in
the College of Fine Arts, free
showing of Walt Disney's "Jungle Book" and radio station
WXYQ's Polka Jamboree.
Peggy Szczytko, of the University Relations staff, is coordinating the open house. Programs
listing times and places of
events will be posted in various
public places throughout Central
Wisconsin. Copies can be requested by calling the office of
University Relations at 346-2481.
The open nouse and Festival
of the Arts are open to the public without charge. Tickets will
be required for people attending
the antique ·show and sale, withproceeds going to the UWSP
athletic program.
Q~intet presents French music
The International Club will nut, milk and rice, from Malayhost its annual dinner on Satur- sia). "Oolong Tea" will be
day, March 9, at 6 p.m. in the served with the meal.
Allen Center at the University of
A national costume fashion
The .Wisconsin Arts quin!ft, a
Wisconsin-stevens Point.
show will be held during dinner. faculty performing group kom
The entertainment will include UWSP, will present a program
About 500 guests will partake
of foods from the Middle East, a ·Chinese lion dance and Chi- of French music at 8 p.m., Sunthe Orient and Central America nese stick dance, a traditional day, March 10, in Michelsen
and view after-dinner entertain- Indian dance and a Malay can- Hall of the Fine Arts Center.
ment including dance, music dle dance. A French song win be
open to
The performance
and comedy.
sung and an ensemble of musi- the public without charge.
Tickets are available for $9 cians playing guitars, bongos
The quintet · will play Jean
each at the University Center and piano will perform. A come- Philippe Rameau's "Suite
Information Desk and the For- dy skit will be included in the Charilpetre"; Jean Francaix's
elgn _Student Office, main flood show.
"Quintette"; Jean Michel DaDelzell Hall. Proceeds from the
mase's "Dix-Sept Variations";
event go to programs conducted
The International Club has 180
by international students.
members of which about 40 are
This year the menu includes: Americans. On the executive
egg rolls (Chinese appetizers); board are AI P. Wong, presicucumber-yogurt . salad (from . dent; Patrick Kearns, vice presJordan); . ~Lollipop Chicken" ident; Lee-Chu Lin, secretary;
· (deboned wings, from Malay- Jacelyn Ong, treasurer; and
sia); Dutch beef roast (from In- Fang Hong, publicity officer.
A "Tribute to the Big Bands"
donesia); "Mee Hoo" (fried rice The Special Events Committee featuring jazz ensembles from
sticks, from Singapore); "Yaki- Ghairperson is Hannie Liew; UWSP will be held at 3 p.m.,
tori" (barbecued chicken with Sports and Games Committee Sunday, March 17, at the Sentry
. sauce, from Japan); "Dodo" Chairperson, Mohamed Fathil Theater.
and "Motoko" (pork aQd vegeta- bin , Ismail; Communication
Proceeds from the concert will
bles, from Cameroon); spicy Committee Chairperson is Hanchicken with rice (from Paki- nah Haddison. Advisors are benefit the UWSP jazz studies
stan); a dessert, 1'Pulut Seri- Marcus Fang and William scholarship fund. Ticket prices
·at the door ljlre $3 for adults and
kaya" (a cake made from ccico- Clark.
is
and Eugene Bozza's "Variations
Sur Un Theme Libre."
Members of the ensemble are
Paul Doebler, flute; Daniel
Stewart, oboe; Andrea Splittberger-Rosen, clarinet; David
Beadle, tiassoon; and Christopher Callahan, horn.
The group, which was founded
in 1971, performs twice a year
on the UWSP campus, as well as
staging tours throughout Wisconsin and Minnesota. The mu-
sicians have played several
times on. "Sunday Afternoon
Live: From the Elvehjem,"
broadcast over the Wiscorisin
Public Radio Network and have
appeared in Vogel Hall of Milwaukee's Performing Arts Center.
The ensemble has premiered
works by composer Raymond
Luedeke and recorded "Contest .
Music for Woodwind Quintet" on
the'Redwood Label: ·
A tribute to iazz ensembles
-
$1.50 for students and senior citizens.
The Mid-Americans Vocal
Jazz Ensemble, directed by
Charles Reichl, the University
Jazz Ensemble, directed by
Mike Irish, and the University
Jazz Lab Band, directed by
Steve Zenz, will perform music
from the past 50 years.. Donald
Greene, chairman of the UWSP
music department, will narrate .
the concert.
The program will include the
music of Glenn Miller, Count
Basie, Duke Ellington, Stan
Kenton, Tommy Dorsey, Woody
Herman, Claude Thornhill, ·Maynard Ferguson and Artie Shaw.
Page 4 March 7, 1985
Sexual harassment is defined Rules and by the courts. It ~ worth of scholarships to deservas unwelcome, sexual advances, subject to disciplinary action in- ing UWSP students. The applirequests for sexual favors or cluding but not liu¥ted to repri:- c~tion deadline for the ROTC
To the Editor:\
Sexual harassment was the other verbal or physical conduct mand, tell!porary suspension, tllree-year scholarship occurs in
topic for SGA's Women's Affairs of a sexual nature. This includes expulsion or discharge of the eatly March. Students interested
in applying should contact the
Committee last Wednesday. Dr. but is not limited to the deliber- harassing individual.
If sexual harassment happens Military Science Department
Bailey, the Affirmative Action ate, repeated making of unsolicOfficer, spoke on sexual harass- ited gestures or comments, or to you here ·at the university, now.
ment here at UWSP. His data · the deliberate, repeated display you have a recourse. Contact the
Many off-campus organiza·~ showed that in the past three
of offensive, sexual graphic ma- Equal Opportunity-Affirmative tions offer scholarships based
years there have been five inci- terials which is not necessary Action Officer and sign a com- upon academic potential and-or
dences of sexual harassment on · for business purposes.
plaint. It then goes to the Chan- group affiliation. Some of these
Sexual harassment is recog- cellor and then the individual is groups are the Knights of Cocampus. I feel the studenis, both
male and female, should be a- nized as a violation of Title VII · confronted with the allegations. lumbus, the Boy Scouts, the
, ware of this happening on cam- of the Civil Rights Act, U.S. H he admits it, it is resolved by Young American Bowling
Equal Opportunity Commission what the student wants. If he de- Alliance, the United Paperworknies t!ie charges, an investiga- ers International Union, and the
tion is started.
National Campers and Hikers
Dr. Bailey/ says the person Association. Many students have
usually has a pattern; he may focused on loans and are not
be hitting on more than one' stu- · aware of the many other availdent hoping one will give in.
able programs. The Military
, "You have an obligation to Science Department has a guide
your fellow students," says Dr. to financial aid called the ColBailey, "to inform them about lege Aid Checkbook, which can
the individUal so that others be picked up in Room 204, SSC.
won't be put in the same situaAdditionally, students can
tion."
make sure of work-study and
Not only can you go to the part- or full.:time employment. If
Chancellor about sexual harass- work-study is curtailed, some
ment, but you can also go to the students may have to seek offDistrict Attorney and file crimi- campus employment. Some may
n
z
nal charges. An investigation have to delay their education
Yias$40.-How
0·
will follow and if proof is found, while they earn and save suffiG.
·(With" This ~oupon)
'
::;)
formal charging, arrest and cient funds to pay for their edu0
0
z
trial. So if you have been sexual- cation.
0
2501 Nebel
ly harassed, I urge you to see
The U.S. Army Reserve and
Dr. Bailey over in Old Main, for the Wisconsin National Guard
Stevens Point, WI
yourself and for your fellow stu- offer educational bonuses to
1344·83861
dents.
qualified students. Additionally,
/
Sue Ellen Burns loan repayment plans or tuition
Student Senator assistance programs are available through the military services. Military recruiters have
• Funding available
information about educational
programs. Recruiters are freTo the Editor:
Students at UWSP should not quently ori . campus and their
- lose heart because of the views phone numbers are availa):>le in
stated in "A Privilege for the the phone book.
I believe any student who
Wealthy?" An education is still
financially possible for most meets the entrance requirements for UWSP can find the
UWSP students.
It is true that President Rea- funding to earn a degree from
gan has advocated limits on fi- UWSP.
Albert A. Shaulis
nancial aid. However, your ediMajor, Aviation
.torial implies that low income
Assistant Professor of
. students will waste their acaMilitary Science
demic talent due to a lack of
funding. That view is not subPeterson's weekly
stantiated by the facts.
epistle
Financial aid, in the form of
loans and scholarships, is availTo the Editor:
able and will continue to be
In recent weeks a rather interavailable at UWSP. The quanti- esting debate on gay rights has
ty of funds and the eligibility been carried on in The Pointer.
criteria may be changed. FinanThose few people who choose
cial aid in the form of loans nor- to lead a total homosexual lifemal\Y has eligibility require- style are being sent a message
ments based on demonstrated fi- from conservative leaders and
nancial need. .Since demon- others. That message is we don't
• 100 miles of Free Towing- Personalized TRIPTIKS
strated
finanCial need is a key care what you do for your jollies
• Rental Car Discounts
• Bail Bond
criteria for loans, it would but keep your sexual prefer• Tire & Gas Service
• Free Tour Books & Campbooks
appear that low income students ences in the bedroom. In other
• Approved auto repair
• NO·Fee Travelers Checks
Will continue to be eligible for words, if you want to be gay,
• Out of town check cashing • Routing Service & Maps
student loans. Students without stay in the closE!t.
• Trip Accident Reimbursement • Approved Accomodations
a demonstrated financial need
Morality can't be legislated
will not be as eligible for loans if and we can't judge against those
Wllether your a driver or a rider, by being a
C!ltbacks are made and they will who . choose to __be gay- some
have to seek other methods of fi- compassion must be shown.
Member of the American Automobile
nancing their education.
What I object to is the efforts of
Association you are entitled to these beneScholarships are typically the homosexual ''political movefits & services•••
awarded based on a Combination ment" to compel the rest of us
of academic performance and to respect their lifestyle. The
All of this and MORE are received by Triple- ·
demonstrated
financial need. aim of such a movement is to leA's 25 million members nationwide. 'For a
The UWSP Foundation and gitimize homosexuality as an
·more enjoyable and worry-free vacation or
many departments at UWSP of- option that is morally no differfer scholarships · to deserving ent than the conventional option.
trip home••.
Yet homosexuality contravenes
students.
Last September, the Military Biblical guidelines and is contraCALL: GREGG HENNING
Science Department awarded ry to human nature.
Stevens Point AAA Representative
scholarships worth $65,000 to
Gay rights advocates state
1984 UWSP Grad.
eight UWSP students based sole- that their lifestyle is superior to
ly on academic performance the heterosexual one and these
and leadership potential, not fi- advocates won't stop until socienancial need. The potential ex- ty accepts it as such. Many
ists for the Military Science De- men, according to studies, will
11ave a great break!
partment to award $650,000 have at least one homosexual
Sexual harassment
:. CHERYLL'S
Personal
Touch
·P.ERM SPECIAL
s.
20
..
g
.,
experience in their lifetime, yet
that doesn't mean those men
will commit themseh:es to a homosexual lifestyle.
Those who lead a total gay life
are a threat to the family and
the reproductive drive that must
exist in any viable society. The
gay rights movement is a ·destablizing and corrupting force
which has turned such civilized
and civil cities as San Francisco
into political and hobo-sexual
,
jungles.
Gays are at war with the values ol the "straight world" as
they live in their psychologically
askew and hostile enclaves.
They attempt to colonize the
workplace and ceaselessly
cruise in search qf the uncertain
or dabbling hetero. Timidity and
permissiveness give them the
keys to the city.
Such a movement can be
stopped when public indignation
mandates it and the media and
people like Melissa Gross stop
giving the movement sucb adu- '
lated attention. The Nazistic nature of homosexuality will eventually end up like Hitler's Germany if they keep pushing. No
one is ev:er going to do more
than feel sorry for those that are
gay and society will put limits
on them if gays insist on carrying on the battle. This nation
will never accept gay rights to
the extent gays want.
If you want to be gay, you
have to be willing to pay tlte
price and stop eating Sunkist oranges!
Jeff Peterson
Don't Take Off For
Spring Break Without
341-3795
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Budget cuts
To the Editor:
On Sunday, March 3, SGA met
to approve final organizational
budget cuts for 1985-86. As a .
graduating president, I am concerned about how the cuts will
affect my organization next year
and in future years. We, like ev-/
ery other Student Government
funded group on campus, took a
fairly large cut (about one-quarter of the amount we requested).
However, I understand SGA
had the responsibility of cutting
)n excess of $100,000 from the
original budget requests. I don't
envy their position and I'm sure ·
they're glad it's all over for this
year.
I think instead of complaining
about how the organizations will
manage in 1985-86, we all should
stop and thank SGA for putting
a great deal of time and effort
into making. the budget cuts as
painless as possible. We will
make do with what we have. I
hope .other groups can say the
same.
·
Thanks again, SGA.
Usa Gay, President
University Wri.ters
Damsel in distress
To the Editor:
My name is Edna T. Oliva and
I am rapidly approaching my
16th birthday. I have been living
in the small country of Ludonia,
with my mother, the queen. But
recently I have discovered that
my real father, Sir James, was
living in this area. My father
does not knbw of me, as yet, be-
Cont.p.21
Pointer Page
s
' .
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.
~'Nicaragua: Students
look at the reality
\
by Noel Radomski
opposing the Sandinistan gov- worthwhile fighting for democleft what the original base of the creased military expenditures.
News Editor ,
ernment aren;t being executed racy. Where would we be if
Nobody· wants to see another
revolution was for."
President- Reagan's second for opposition. They're trying to France didn't give us aid?"
Odahowski believes there will Vietnam. How long this is going
term has been marked by sever- build democracy; they're not
Zweifel also said, "Nicaragua
be continued deaths in Central on...The longer it goes on, the
al tirgent issues, opposed to the trying to destroy it like Somo- is turning into a totalitarian
America, particularly Nicara- more lives that are going to be
relative calmness during the za."
gua, if Congress funds freedom lost, basically innocent ones."
state-into a Marxist s~te. They
first quarter of his team. The
With the · recent arrests of have Russian and Cuban advisfighters. "If Contra aid goes
Zweifel spoke of having a
crisis on the farm belt, the MX three priests in Arizona, the ers. ·..they have Russian ships
through, more destruction of hu- democracy in Nicaragua. "I
manity will occur. Nicaragua support Reagan; we'd like to see
missile system, the budget, tax question of to what extent can· a three to four times a week
simplification and lastly Nicara- sanctuary movement go to pro- · bringing in defense items, which
isn't a great threat. They're people of Nicaragua have a free
gua.
.
teet the lives of the refugees has are fine. I don't ·think it's wrong
about the same size as Wiscon- choice and free chances. We'd
for a country to defend itself.
Sunday, Sec:;_retary of State yet to be answered.
sin, 57,113 square miles with 2.9 like to see all people to vote and
George P. Shultz met with NiZwei!el noted the question of But they're also bringing in very
million people. We shouldn't have a democratic election.
caraguan President Daniel Orte- whether or not the reason for offensive weapons."
fear the children who are learn- We've made some mistakes;
Zweifel explained that the prega in Uruguay to discuss present leaving Central America was poing to read-peasants who are mining harbors, 'the book that
learning farming methods."
should have been monitored a
Nicaraguan issues. They only litical asylum or economic hard- sent Nicaragua is not as demomet for an hoJll", with Shultz ask- ship. "We have, in some in- cratic as it thinks it is. "I think
Odahowski went on to add that little better, but I think, in
ing the Sandinistan government stances, given political asylum that's one of the problems. They . what the U.S. is doing is illegal. essence, supporting freedom
to reduce the Soviet-Cuban pres- to some refugees from Central went from freedom and democ"The way we''re destabilizing fighters is the best thing we ever
ence and Ortega reaffirmed his America. Basically I think the racy in the revolution. . .But
Nicaragua, I think it's illegal; a could do."
decision to ask Cuba to with- problem is too many people who then Ortega got into power, and
In a Mexican newspaper, a
lot of people think so also. We
draw 100 military advisers and are trying to run across the he shut off one of the factions.
always think it's illegal when · writer said, "For 45 years, no
to place a moratorium on the borders, claiming political asy- They became very left wing, a the Soviet Union tries to bring one in the U.S. government
- acquisition of new weapon sys- lum. There is economic hard-· Marxist type of regime. That's
itself in a country-so why isn't asked the Somozas to protect
terns.
ship, in those cases which. are what' freedom fighters are fightit illegal whenthe U.S. does it?" democratic liberties, hold elec- .
Although the media has cov- deemed by the Immigration De- ing for. They used to be com-·
Odahowski added, "What we tions, or free the economy from
ered orily the surface of the Cen- partment to be realistic and gen- rade' in armS with Ortega. Now
have t~ realize is that this move- the monopolistic suffocation by
tral American, particularly Ni- l,line--we've done all we had to - they're fighting him because he
ment is increasing with inCont. p. 7 caragmin issue, two UWSP stu- do. We're still continuing to aid
dents gave opposing reasons for them. But we cannot allow the
supporting or opposing the pre- whole country of El Salvador or
sent Nicaraguan government.
Nicaragua or Honduras to immi. Chris Odahowski, President of grate over here. Everybody
the Committee on Latin Ameri- wants to come to the land of
ca (COLA), stated that Nicara- ~opportunity. We have to keep a
gua is a sovereign independent tight control."
Finance Committee
nation. Referring to the NicaraOdahowski spoke of United
SGA Allocation
Recommendation
FY-6
Request
Orgaaization
guan revolution in 1979 which States aid to El Salvador and
$1,133.00
$789.00
$2,295.00
A.B.E.S.
ousted dictator Anastasio Somo- the ·Contras (freedom fighters)
$1,079.00
$1,079.00
$3,162.00
A.A.F.
za; "During the revolution, the to a reason why there is such a
$0.00
$0.00
$278.00
A.C.S.
j>eople 1>f Nicaragua had to fight movement of the refugees.out of
$3,786.00
$4,436.00
$8,176.00
A.l.R.O.
because they couldn't stand the Central America and to the
$0.00 .
$0.00
$150.00
Apple Users.
totalitarianism of Somoza. The United States. "In a recent bi$49,510.00
$49,510.00
$55,920.00
Arts and Lectures
Somozan government exploited partisan commission, they con$14,337.00
$14,567.00
$15,319.00
A.C.T.
eluded that only 13-15 percent of
. both the land and the people."
'
$3,339.00
$3,199.00
$3,490.00
C.L.A.
Somoza created a country of the U.S. aid is economic-social.
·~ $398.00
$398.00
$1,582.00
College Republicans
extreme poverty while amassing aid, with up to 75 percent of the
$449.00
$1,949.00
$4,976.00
C.S.A.
a personal fortune worth half a aid being military. How can we
$16,778.00
$16,775.00
$16,778.00
U.C.L.c;~.
billion dollars. His holdings in- say those people are coming
$1,997.00
$1,997.00
$2,097.00
C.O.L.A.
eluded 20 percent of the arable here for economic reasons.
$466.00
$466.00
$2,035.00
X-C
Ski
Club
land of Nicaragua and 25 per- When we're providing military
$3,563.00
$3,563.00
$5,248.00
Environmental Co~cil
aid in El Salvador...They can
cent of its industry.
$3,861.00
$2,861.00
$4,690.00
E.E.N.A.
Dave Zweifel, Chairman of the repair the El Salvadoran sol$1,096.00
$1,096.00
$1,533.00
Fisheries Society
UWSP College Republicans, diers and the Contras, but the
$2,149.00
$2,149.00
$7,088.00
Forensics-Debate
spoke on the issue of whether civilians who are being hit by
$0.00
$182.00
.
$0.00
Frisbee
Club
Nicaragua is. a sovereign inde- napalm bombs do not necessari$2,069.00
$2,019.00
$4,617.00
G.P.U.
pendent nation. Zweifel. noted ly nave the resources to repair
$0.00
$857.00
$621.00
German Club
that the recent election of Presi- themselves and their property."
$370.00
$370.00
$546.00
History Club
dent Ortega contained conOdahowski went on to discuss
$3,125.00
$3,125.00
$4,800.00
Horizon
troversies. "In my mind, the the direct link between U.S. and
$2,267.00
$1,463.00
$3,17?.00
International
Club
elections were a scam. The San- El Salvador because U.S. planes
$661.00
$494.00
$1,367.00
Marketing
. dinista governmefit (the Nicara- with heat sensors are going over
$769.00
$769.00
$914.00
Men's
Volleyball
guan government) has neighbor- El Salvador at night, finding out
$2,146.00
$2,146.00
$8,215.00
Mid-Americans
hood councils which hand out ra- where the guerrillas are. "The
$829.00
$829.00
$2,299.00
Non-Trads
·tion cards that' allow the citizens thing is heat sensors don't say
$1,110.00
$652.00
$2,109.00
Parks
and
Recreation
to _get food, shoes and. clothing. guerrillas- they say humanity.
$36,141.00
$36,141.00
$36,096.00
Pointer
The Sandinistas had poll watch- . Who is to say those are civilians
$1,111.00
$1,111.00
$1,038.00
·
Psychology
Club
ei"s inside; however, if you went aiding guerrillas; which is not il$0.00
$0.00
$631.00
P.R.S.S.A.
behind the curtains to vote, they legal under U.N. Charters.
$1,837.00
$3,027.00
$5,887.00
Ski
Team
didn't take kindly to that. They
Odahowski stressed, ''The
$2,972.00
$2,324.00
$4,326.00
S.A.F.
pulled the ration cards so you sanctuary movement has to in$905.00
$905.00
$1,962.00
S.C.S.A.
couldn't eat. So what they have crease. Our government hired
$474.00 .
$0.00
$157.00
Spanish
Club
done was to blackmail them in people to infiltrate the Central
$974.00
$974.00
$1,289.00
StAB
voting for Daniel Ortega. So, I American refugees. The govern$13,717.00
$13,717.00
$23,742.00
S.A.C.-Music
don't think it declares them ·(Ni- ment officials had bugs on them
.$1.927.00 .
$1,927.00
$5,407.00
Student
Art
League
caragua) to be sovereign."
when they went to ~e church
$523.00
$523.00
$523.00
Student
Business
Conun.
Odapowski also added, "What which was helping the refugees.
$637.00
$637.00
$930.00
S.E.A.
is a definition of what a govern- What the government did was
$14,389.00
$14,389.00
$25,396.00
·sETV
'
ment should do? The Somoza unfair for the sanctuary move$35,902.00
$37,934.00
$45,861.00
S.G.A.
government didn't educate the ment."
$8,071.00
$8,071.00
$8,479.00
Stud.
Legal
people--Sandinistas have sta'rtIn President Reagan's last ra$873.00
$673.00
$1,368.00
S.S.A.
ed education programs." With dio speech, he spoke on the issue
$71,236.00
$70,472.00
$87,976.00
U.A.B.
the evidence that in 1982 . the of the freedom fighters (Con$3,022.00
$2,022.00
$5,628.00
U.F.S.
literacy rate went up to 87 per- tras). Reagan is asking Con$13,891.00
$11,738.00
$15,830.00
University
Theatre
cent; whereas before the over- gress to once again give money
$3,356.00
$3,356.00
$4,435.00
University Writers
throw of the Somoza regime the to the freedom fighters.
$636.00
$636.00
$1,747.00
Weight
Club
literacy rate was at 30-40 per- · Zweifel agrees with President
$3,782.00
$3,782.00
$6,505.00
Wildlife
Society
cent. Odahowski further noted, Reagan that Congress should
$8,978,00
$8,778.00
$10,7oo:oo
W.R.C.
"The Somoza government didn't fund the freedom fighters. "I'm
$708.00
$628.00
$1,010.00
Women's
Soccer
believe in opposition. The San- hoping that Congress will give
$32,192.00
$32,192.(10
$37,737.00
WWSP"90FM
dinistas have so far censored military aid to freedom fighters
$375,067.00
$493,147.00
TOTAL
..
. $373,672.00
press-but the people who are because I feel their cause is .well
SGA budget allocation
.
~
-
-
Page 6 March 7, 1985
A special report on the Irish Republican Army
by Susan Higgins
Staff reporter
The Irish Republican Army
(IRA) scored a direct hit on theRoyal Ulster Constabulary base
in Newry, Northern Ireland, last
Thursday.·
Eight officers and one civilian
were. killed and several others
were wounded in the tea-time
attack. Another officer is missing and presumed dead.
The outlawed IRA guerrillas
fired six mortars from the back
of a truck parked 250 yards from
·the base, while the officers were
having their evening meal.
This Is believed to be ·the high- the IRA has received a certain the IRA.
NORAID is suspected of sendest casualty count suffered by . amount of support from Ubya
ing a 7lh ton shipment of a'rms
the predominantly Protestant andthe United States.
RUC since sectarian and politiIt has been reported th_
a t . to Ireland last fall. The cache,
cal fighting broke out in North- many people fighting for the sent from the U.S., was seized
ern Ireland in August of 1969.
IRA have gone to Libya to learn off the western coast of the ReThe effectiveness of the mor- . how to fight. In the meantime, public of Ireland and the five
tars used leads to speculation as certain organizations in the U.S. crew members were arrested of
to just where the weapons came are suspected of supporting the crimes against the state.
from. Although the IRA has IRA by sending funds and arms.
Among the load confiscated
used mortars before, made se,. One such group is NO_B.AID, were several rounds of ammunicretly within the country, they Irish Northern Aid Committee.
tion, automatic weapons and
have never been as efficient as
Although NORAID claims ·Ute hand grenades.
those used in the border town money it raises goes to families
In her speech before Congress
last week.
of imprisoned IRA members, it last month, British Prime MinisIn their struggle to expel the is believed most of their funds ter Margaret Thatcher made a
British from Nprthern Ireland · are used to purchase arms for plea to the American people not
to be "nlisled into making contributions to seemingly innoc~­
ous groups." Thatcher herself
almost became a casualty at the
hands of the IRA last October 12
when a bomb went off in the hotel Mrs. Thatcher was staying at
while attending a conference in
Brighton.
After the attack last week,
Mrs. Thatcher sent a message to
the victims' families calling the
assault a "barbarous deed." .The ·
Prime Minister of Ireland also
c()ndeiDilced the attack in Newry,
calling it "the mass murder of
fellow Irishmen."
'
The latest from Student Governme-n t
by Thel"esa Boebulein
Staff reporter
SGAminutes
Ron Zimmerman, Director of
Schmeeckle Reserve, gave an
informational slide presentation
on past, present and future considerations for Schmeeckle Reserve. Changes in the reserve
have taken place rapidly over
the past 5-10 years with the development of Schmeeckle Reserve Lake, the fitness trail and
the newly opened Visitor Center.
• "We need to look toward the future since areas around the reserve are expanding with construction," said Zimmerman.
Plans have been made to build
a Super 8 Motel next to the Road
Star Inn with the possibility of a
small shopping center opening
up next to IGA. There's also a . Chairperson for SORROC. "In
possibility that condominiums the past, we've only had minor
will be constructed in an empty disagreements on employment,
field next to the lake. "We'd like but the potential for serious leto keep SGA informed on the gal problems does exist. We'd
status of the reserve with the like to give students the opportuhope of some kind of funding for nity to voice their complaints if
they feel they've been treated
the future."
·
Senate elections for 1985-86 W1fairly," said Ms. Gustafson.
will take place Tuesday, March Legislation should be ready
19. Students will vote in their re- some·time this semester.
A resolution on child care
spective colleges, that is, students in professional studies will funding for the Day Care Center
vote in COPS and natural re- at Delzell was discussed by the
source students will vote in the Senate and will be voted on
CNR Building. Students with March 7. The resolution places
undeclared majors· will vote in . the Day Care Center in a sPe-cial
the lobby of Collins Classroom funding bracke~ which helps
ensure adequate monies for the
Center.
A unified set of guidelines on next three years. The center
hiring and firing procedures for presently receives $16,775, onestudent organizations was dis- third of their operatin g .
expenses.
c~ed by frystal Gustafson,
.If you have at ·least
two years of college left,
you can speRd six weeks at
our Army ROTC Basic
Camp this summer and earn
approximately t872
And if you qualify, you
can enter the ROfC 2Year Program this fall and
receive up to $1,000 a year.
But the big payoff
happens on graduation day.
That's when you receive
an officer's commission.
. So get your body in
shape (not to mention your
bank account).
Enroll in Army ROTC.
For more information,
contact your Professor of
Military Science. ·
ARMY ROTC.
.:':':"':i\''''.1111...
--YOU CAN BE.
:, : : Contact:
Major .Jim Reilly
204 sse, 346-3821
0rgan transplant
conference scheduled
Pacific Lutheran University, Tacoma, Wash. Dr. William Hettler, of the UWSP Health Service and lifestyle Improvement
Program, will address the prevention/treatment issue.
Representatives of private and
public insurers, insurance regulators, and the medical profession will discuss a set of interInstitute Director David A: linked questions concerning
Peters of the. UWSP Department third party reimbursement for
of Philosophy said the confer- transplants. They are: Andrew
ence will bring together mem- Korsak of the Health Insurance
bers of the medical and .legal Association of America, Chicaprofessions, representatives of go; Beverly Krutz of Wisconsin
the insurance industry, state Blue Cross/Blue Shield, Millegislatorsand members of state waukee; Dr. Folkert Belzer,
health care regulatory agencies. chairman of the department of
It will be the first public event surgery at the University of Wissponsored by the institute which consin School of Medicine, Madihas been established with grants son; Dr. Alfred D. Dally, chief
from the UWSP Foundation, the Il)edical consultant to Wiscon:
Sentry Foundation of Stevens sin's Medicaid program, MadiPoint, and the Walter Alexander son; and Richard Carlson, asFoundation of Wausau and other sistant -director of the Illinois
Department of Insurance,
sources.
Arthur L. Caplan, ..associate Springfield, Ill.
In weeks following the conferfor the humanities at the Hastings Center in New York and a ence, an institute policy formuleading writer on ethical and lating committee will convene to
policy issues allied with trans- propose and provide the ratio- .
plant technology, will be the nale for revisions in state statlead speaker- in the conference utes or private and public polisegment addressing the topic of cies governing the procurement,
improving state and national funding, and rationing of transmechanisms of organ retrieval. plants. Its report will be pubA legal analysis of Caplan's pro- lished in late spring for memposal will be presented by Ro- bers of the Wisconsin legislature
byn Shapiro, assistant clinical and health care regulatory agenprofessor of health law at the cies and health care profession•
Medical College of Wisconsin in als.
Milwaukee. The practical
In addition, Peters is working
administrative and institutional with members of St. Michael's
aspects of the proposal will ·be Hospital critical care staff in
discussed by Douglas Miller, re- Stevens Point and others to denat transplant coordinator at the velop an informatioh manual for ·
University Hospitals in Madison, inservice programs for inu;msive
and June Lego, emergency care care personnel and emergency
nurse at St. Mary's Hospital in staff on various aspects of organ
Rhinelander..
procurement.
Bryan Luce, senior analyst · As director of the institute,
with the Battelle Memorial Insti- Peters is a specialist in the area
tute in Washington, D.C., will of environmental and medical
discuss the value and limitations ethics and religious studies. He
of cost-benefit analysis and cost. has taught at UWSP the past
effectiveness analysis in formu- eight years, and has three delating policies concerning the grees for Michigan State Univercontrolled development and dif- sity plus a bachelor of divinity
fusion of transplant technology. degree from McCormick SemiLuce is a co-author of a recent nary. He previously taught at
leading text on the methodology Carleton ·College and St. Olaf
of these modes of analysis.
. College, both in Northfield,
The question of whether there Minn. His hometown -is Livonia,
is a higher mora l prior ity Mich.
attached to rescuing people who
For the public, the institute is
are already suffering from end- spons oring regular luncheon-disstage cardiac, liver, kidney, and · cussion groups in conimunities
pancreas diSE!ase than prevent- throughout Central Wisc_onsin.
The institute has administraing the onset of such diseases in
those not yet afflicted with them tive offjces in the medical liwill be examined by Professor brary complex at St. Michael's
Paul Menzel, a philosopher at Hospital.
The new Institute for Health
Policy and Law will sponsor a
conference March 11 at the
University of Wisconsin-Stevens
Point on "Organ Transplantation - Problems of Procurement, Funding and Rationing:
Fashioning Wisconsin's Response."
Pointer Page 7
Certain ideological groups hint
that the U.S. should directly intervene, militarily, into Nicara-'
gua; but former head of the
Central Intelligence Agency
The president of the interna- istan, Bangladesh, Turkey, Mex- ~tansfield Turner disagrees.
tional Populati_on Institute will ico, the Philippines, Indonesia, "We are not likely to get aw~y
make a return visit to UWSP on China, Sri Lanka and Kenya.
•with toppling the Nicaraguan
The former Maryland state government by covert means.
Thui'sday, March 14, to give a
public address and speak to legislator has held a number of Even if we do, though, it will
classes.
administrative posts in state and likely be a pyrrhic victory. The
Wemei: Fomos, an advocate national government as a spe- other costs to us will be high."
for family planning as a human cialist in manpower-labor manThus, when the Nicaraguan
right and reduction of runaway agement. He has participated in people led by the Sandinista Naworld population growth, will be all major forums involving glob- tional Liberation Front (FSLN)
hosted on campus by the Public al population since the 1974 ousted the U.S.-supported dictaAdministration -Student Organi- World Population Conference in tor Anastasio Somoza, the Ni- ·
zation and Phi Alpha Theta bon- Bucharest, Romania. In 1980, he caraguan government must conorary history fraternity.
received the Distinguished Pop- tinue their process of becoming
His public lecture will be at 8 - ulation Service Award.
a sovereign independent deme>o
p.m. in Room 125 of the Univercratic nation. Since the revolusity Center. He will address two Nicaragua, cont.
tion, the country had engaged in
classes earlier in the day.
an intense process of reconstruc- ·
Fomos, who appears often on . the patrimonial dynasty. Today, tion, remaking the entire social,
network television and radio ' all that was given the Somozas _ political and economic fabric of
programs and is quoted in and is denied the Sandinistas; all life. Part of the Nicaraguan
writes articles for nationally-cir- · that was pardoned the Somozas problems may be compounded
culated publications, spoke to is demanded of the Sandinis- by the Reagan administration's
not-so-secret war to destabilize
several groups on campus and tas."
in the community about two
years ago.
The Washington, D.C.-based
Population Institute is a privately funded, nonprofit organization
which strives for stimulating positive actions toward ensuring
more equitable balance between
global population and resources.
It seeks commitments from leaders in both the industrialized
and developing countries to
solve problems of rampant population growth.
Fomos, who has been asse>o
ciated with the institute and its
auxiliary organizations since
1978, is a former faculty member at George Washington
University and worked on pre>o
jects involving population and
family. planning in Tunisia, Pak-
lecture on population
the Nicaraguan government. A agua has manifested certain
war justified by the Reagan problems regarding press freeadministration on the grounds dom; freedom of conscience, and
that U.S. national security is due process of law. However, in..
threatened by the small nation comparison to the Somoza reof 2.7 million people.
gime and to contemporary El
we must also notice that a Salvador and Guatemala, Sanlarge majority of the freedom dinista Nicaragua has a vastly
fighters are . past members of superior human rights record in
the Somozan National Guard. almost every respect. Of partiThe Nicaraguan people do not cular note is the freedom of relihave fond memories of the Se>o gion which, despite tensions with
mozan regime. The United Roman Catholicism over supStates must understand the im- port for the revolution, has gen.plications it may surface if the erally prospered. The very limfreedom fighters are actually ited incidence of terror (arbi-':
past members of the Somozan tracy deprivation of life or liber- ~
government. We must also make ty) and the tolerance of opposisure that the United States does tion political parties in Nicaranot exceed the international gua are remarkable considering
laws, which we both use and that the society is in revolution.
agree with. Thus, the opinions of The regime has handled soine
both students discussed earlier groups and incidents maladroitshould both be respected and ta- ly, but claims of"wholesale and
ken into consideration.
systematic abuses of such rights
As Dr. John A. Booth, Asse>o (e.g., reports of massacres of .
ciate Professor at the University Miskitus Indians) have been disof Texas, San Antonio, said, "In credited as fabrications by politthe area of human rights, Nicar- ically neutral observers."
r,.....·-----.·-------"---------Greyhound gives
· tfie Pointers
a breako,n.. SptingBreak.
..
·.
.
.
.·: . . ·
_
-
·(-
Environmental
education
A consortium oo environmental education, comprised of representatives from 11 states; has
been formed with Rick Wilke of
UWSP as a founding director
and secretary.
' Wilke participated in the organizational meeting recently in
Des Moines, Iowa, where he also
served as one of the speakers
with Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad.
Wilke, who is - director of
UWSP's Central Wisconsin Enviromriental Station and a faculty
member in the College of Natural Resources, spoke on "Environmental Education- A Midwest Perspective_,., _
Consortium· membership- is
comprised of Arkansas, lllinois,
Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Minnes«>ta, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio,
Oklahoma and Wisconsin and
several of the state representatives on the board are graduates
ofUWSP.
Wilke said the consortium's
-effort to further environmental
education will be done through
the enhancement of communication efforts, development of pre>o
gram8, dissemination of environmental education materials,
and assessments of environmen_tal education offerings.
Attempts will be made to secure large grants and allocations from state legislatures.
The organizational meeting, for
example, was financed with a
$10,500 grant from the Izaak
Walton League.
_
- Wilke said plans are to have
the consortium staffed by a fulltime executive director and a
. secretary with headquarters at
one of the representative universities:
He said he would make a pitch
for UWSP to be selected.
Round trip. Anywhere Greyhound goes.
This spring break, if you and y<mr friends are
!hinkingabout h~~ding to the slopes, the beach or
JUSt home for av1s1t, Gre}ilound can take you there.
For only $99 or less, round trip.
Just show usy<mr college student I. D. card
when vou purchase vour Gre'"'<mnd ticket. '
J
J
J"
Your ticket will then he g<xxf fortmve! for 15
days from the date of purchase.
So this spring break, ~ret a real break. Go anywhere Gre}ilound goes for $99 or less. ·
For more infonnation, call Gre}ilound. ·
,\1ust prt'St'lll a Y.didl1 ~k.'I,'C Sludl'llt l.l>. ranJ upun.purdsa.~. Nm~hl'l' diSt1 ounts
;wly. TM.ili.1san-lllllllr.msil'r~allllwxllllortr.M·Ion0rt~1Und UI1l'S, II1C,
andotlll'rpartk:ipatingrarril'r.;.Cl'rtainrt'Siri<:tiunsapply.C lffln-fil'l1iw •
'2- rs-x..Hlflerlimitl'tl. Nc~varKJln Canada.
GO GREYHOUND
And leave the driving to us.
• l\11(1 <iR·~fl• ourllll.ir~s. lnc
--------~
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Page 8 March 7, 1985
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Pointer Page 9·
'Foreign Student Office provfdes .a valuable service
by Amy L. Schroeder
Features Editor .
"Too often people leave here
with a degree, but they don't
... really have an education," said
Dr. Marcus Fang, director of
the Foreign Student Office.
Fang. believes that an "educa·
tion" comes from experiencing
new things, new cultures and
new people. These are the goals
of the Foreign Student Office
which is located in Delzell Hall.
Fang said the office tries to
find ways to help the foreign
students adjust to their new culture, while at the same time experiencing American culture as
it really is.
Some of the "devices" used by
the office are clubs such as the
International Club, which also
. sponsors the International Dinner. Through things· of this na·
ture, Fang said, "Students have
the opportunity to experience
one another. They engage in
activities which inspire togetherness."
Another program that is sponsored by the Foreign Student Office is the host family program.
Fang said, "This is probably one
of the most valuable experiences
gained by foreign students because it gives them a chance to
experience American culture
firsthand." The students don't
actually live with their host fam- ·
ilies, in this case, rather the
family may just be there to take
them shopping, help with orientation, and help overcome homesickness.
Another group which the foreign student office uses to help
orientate the new students is
simply the "veteran" foreign
students.
Fang said whenever a new
student arrives, "we have an
'old' student literally take them
by the hand, and show them
around to places like banks, grocery stores, and K-Mart." Another responsibility of the "veteran" students is to show the
new students around campus
and take them through registration. "That is a very confusing
process for them," added Fang.
"Most of them don't know the
jargon like 'credits,' they have
no idea what words mean when
they're used in these different
contexts."
The Foreign Student Office
also works in conjunction with
Dr. Helen Cornell, in the Semester Abroad Program Office, to
help put together a group known
as SHARE (Student Home
Abroad Relations Experience).
"In this program we are trying
to bring together those students
who have gone abroad, and the
foreign students here to talk ·
about mutual problems experienced and to share with one' another· their common experiences." Fang expressed that
this group has great potential
but that it is also very hard to
get the two groups together due
to conflicting interests.
In addition to sponsoring
groups and activities such as
these, the Foreign Student Office also tries to help the new
students overcome some of their
biggest adjustment difficulties.
Fang said one of the most
common complaints is the food.
"The students are very often not
used to the type of diet we have
here, and it's especially hard for
those who are vegetarians."
. He also added that it is hard
for foreign students to become
acquainted with American students, because they are often.
times not as outgoing as the
Americans. "The foreign students usually sit back and wait
to be approached by the Americans because they (especially
the African students) don't feel
welcome here.
"In other countries, foreign
guests are treated so differently," said Fang. "They are
· guests so the natives go out of
their way to be nic;e to them and
give them special treatment.
Therefore, when the foreign students come here, they expect
the same treatment in return,"
added Fang.
Another thing that is often difficult for foreign students is
adjusting to the language, and
the methods of learning used
here. "They are usually only
used to ~king essay tests, at the
end of a one or two-year period,
therefore it's very difficult for
them to get used to constant
testing in the objective styl(l,''
said Fang.
The Foreign Student office
also runs the English Language
Institute, which aids those for·
eign students who are qualified
to enter the university in all respects except that they have an
English proficiency. The j.nsti·
tute helps bring their English
ability "up to par."
Fang added that another thing
that is usually difficult Jor the
students to adjust to is the
weather. "They are not used to
the cold," he said. "I remember
once when I went to the airport
'to pick up a new student in Jan-.
uary and it was -25 degrees
Fahrenheit and windy, and this
student had flown straight from
his home in Africa where it was
107 degrees Fahrenheit when he
left. He had no coat and was
standing out there shivering."
While there may be many ·
obstacles for foreign students to
overcome, Fang said there are
also many things that they really enjoy about American culture. For example, the music
and their acces~bility to it.
Along with music, Fang said .
they really seem to enjoy wear- ing American fashions even
tho~h they oft:en express that
Contp.21
,~n -nuallnternational- Dinner s~heduled for Satvrday
by Cyle C. Brueggeman
Staff reporter
At 6 p.m., Saturday, March 9,
Allen Center will become a cultural mecca as the International
Club stages its 15th Annual International Dinner. The extravaganza promises to be bigger and
better than _those of previoUs
years. Accordjng to International Dinner Planning Committee
Chair Hannfe liew, "This year
we will be selling 500 tickets (up
fro~ 400 in previous years), so
there will be more opportunities
for people who want to attend
dinner."
\
'
About the dinner itself, Ms.
Liew said, "I.t is a nine-course
meal and we have dishes from
eight countries." I.t begins with
egg rolls, an appetizer from China. The dinner continues with
cucumber-yogurt from Jordan
and then proceeds with the main
courses. Malaysian "Lollipop"
chicken leads that list, t"ollowed
by Dutch beef roast from Indonesia. Fried "Mee Hoon," a
dish from Singapore; Japanese
Yakitori; Dodo and Motoko
(pork .and vegetables) from
Cameroon; and Pakistani spicy
Why does. the International
chicken with rice complete the expected to continue for an O'Connell, Gina Onn, Juliati
main courses. Pulut Serikaya, a hour.
Alaldin, Juwairiyyah Ahmadun, Club hold an International Din- Participants in the entertain- _San-san Hong, Sharifah Rozuta ner annually? "It is one of the
dessert from Malaysia, is the finale of the meal. The beverage ment include Mary Boettcher, bte Syed Fathil, Gina Sia, Mee- main objectives of the club to
promote culture exchange for ·
served with dinner is "Oolong" Dennis Siau, Hannie l.iew, Eliza na Bhaskar and ~thi Pillai.
tea which hails from China.
Omar, Andy Tsang, Joey
Approximately 200 students better understanding_ of people
·
dinner, a "Na tt'onal Kwong, Albert Chen, DorothY·
Dunng
are involved in organw··ng the from different countries," Ms.
Cost ume F a shion Show" WI'll liew, Chee-y·1 Lim• Shir 1ey Lee,
International Dinner. "It takes a liew remarked. In the past, the
entertain diners. This will fea- Lee-Chu lin, Hannah Haddison, ~ew months to plan the dinner·, ~nner has tproven to beteanulefftecLaul-a Tiede, Jeanne La Court,
tive way o "promo c ure
·
ture 12 peop1e weanng
t't t's the bt'ggest functt'on of the exchange. "
·
1
t
f 10 many
t ·re- Quee-Yin Poh Foo, Evelyn
g10na cos
coun
Tickets are avat'lable for $9
1 C ot
F nes.
hion Yeow, Jace1yn Ong, Mee-Lang International Club," said Ms.
. umes
The Na t tona
os
ume
as
l.iew.
As
such,
t't
t's
a
fortnal
dinfr
the UC Informat·ton Desk .
·
te
Kwong,
Lydia
Lee,
Kevin
Leaom
hl 45
Sh l ts
ow as di roug Yth mmu
s..
hy, Alber t Chen, vuong Duong,
ner and gues+"
· Student Off'Ice m
·
..,. are asked to or the F oretgn
t ta
Aft
er nner,
e en er m- p t 1· k K
T'1 0 th
dress accordingly.
Delz ll Hall
ment begins with a {'Traditional ,...:..:a::.;.:.r.:.:C::..::......::.:e:.:a:.:r...:;n:..=s:.L,__::..:~m::.;;.:.:.:..~Y"------......::::....::....------.:.:=e;.:.::=:..:·-------
lWomenfest hosted by WRC
· Chinese New Year Celebration,"
featuring the lion dance. Other
dance numbers include the "Chinese Stick Dance," "Happy
Times,'' "Malay Candle Dance"
and an "Indian Traditional
Dance." The musical entertainment features "A Song for
You," "French Song," "Cantonese Song" and an African
drum instrumental. Also during
the after-dinner entertainment
there is a "Comedy Show."
Rounding out the evening's
Th
program is the "Finale."
e
after-dinner festivities are
by Amy L. Schroeder
Features Editor
In celebration with National
Women's History Week (March
3-9) and International Women's
Day (March 8), the Women's
Reso.urce Center in conjunction
with the Women's Studies Stu"
dent Association spofisored this
year's Womenfest on Sunday,
March3.
Guests were entertained by
music from the Sweet Adelines,
the Womansong Choir (a 3()..
member choir from Madison)
and sing-along leaders Kathryn
Jeffers and Betsy Godwin, and
Helen·Heaton and Jean Rumsey.
Films were also shown
throughout the festival in the UC
Communications Room. They included "Rosie the Riveter,"
"Wisconsin Farm Women,',' "In
the Best Interest of Children,"
"Geore:ia O'Keefe," "The Touch
Film, 1i "Unio.n Maids" and
"Malvina Reynolds."
Several local women also gave
demonstrations on pottery making, sign language, qui
spinning and strudel baking.
Cont. p.IO
Page 10 March 7, 1985
0rgan transplant c·o nference to be held at UWSP
by Lori A. Hemke
Staff reporter
"I feel that I have a moral
obligation to make certain students, faculty and staff at UWSP
know they are invited to the conference," said David Peters,
associate professor of philosophyatUWSP.
The conference that Dave Pet.ers is referring to will be held on
Monday, March 11, in Room 127
of the University Center. The
. subject is organ transplantation.
Problems that will be addressed
include procurement, funding
. , and rationing of organs for:
transplantation. The conference
is being presented by the Institute for Health Policy and Law
at Stevens Point, and will be
chiefly sponsored by the UWSP
Foundation. Other sponsors include the Sentry Foundation and
the Walter Alexander Foundation.
There are three separate sessions included in the conference.
The first , part of the. morning
session begins at !t a.m. and
lasts until 10:50 a.m. It will address transplants and third-party payors including the coverage
criteria and reimbursement restrictions. Some of the questions
this session will answer are
"What criteria are relevant for
coverage . decisions concerning
non-rental transplants" and
"Should third-party payors
-adopt the policy of reimbursing
for trahsplants only at 'centers
of proven excellence.' "
Scheduled speakers include
Andrew Korsak, Assistant Director, Consumer and Professional Relations Division, Health
Insurance Association of America; Dr. Folkert 0. Belzer, M.D.,
Said Peters, "The ISSue of
A.R. Curreri Professor of Sur- - author of the book "Cost Benefit Washington. He is the author of
gery and Chairman, University and Cost Effectiveness Analysis "Medical Costs, Moral Choices." organ transplants is·a nice illusin Health Care."
of Wisconsin School of Medicine;
Another presenter will be Dr. tration of one of the major probThe luncheon session begins at William Hettler, M.D., Universi- lems we face in health care deBeverly J. Krutz, Assistant Vice
President-Health Policy and Re- 12 noon. "Anyone is also invited ty Health Service and Lifestyle livery today. Even if we do
view, Blue Cross-Blue Shield to join us for this session as we Improvement Program, here at come up with a more efficient
way of procuring these organs,
will have chairs.out for those in- UWSP.
terested," - said Dave Peters.
The afternoon session will also who will pay for it?"
In-a study conducted by the
The subject matter is prevention take place in Room 127 of the
or treatment for organ diseases. University Center and will begin Office of Conunissioner of InsurSome questions that will be an- at 1:40 p.m. The subj~ct matter ance for the State of Wisconsin
swered include "Is there a for this session will explore last January, it was revealed'
weightier moral responsibility to more efficient organ procure- that Wisconsin insurance comtreat those already in trouble ment. It will answer the ques- panies would pay up to twothan to help those not yet in tion, "Should hospitals be re- thirds of the cost for a heart and
trouble?"; "What arguments, if quired to inquire of available liver transplant, on~third of the
any, warrant the widespread be- next of kin concerning organ do- cost for heart plus lung translief that we have greater moral nation from the deceased prior plants, and one-fourth of the cost
obligation to treat the already to removing the brain-dead indi- for a pancreas transplant.
suffering in- those not yet, but vidual from . a respirator and Where will the rest of the money
statistically likely, to suffer issuing a . death certificate?" come from?
"We need to find more effi- ·
from these diseases in the fu- Scheduled speakers include
ture?" Presenters include Arthur L. Caplan, Associate for cient methods for this problem,"
Professor Paul Menzel, Depart- the Humanities, The Hastings comments Peters.
ment of Philosophy, Pacific Lu- Center, Hastings-on-Hudson,-----------theran University, Tacoma, N.Y.; Douglas Miller, Renal
Transplant Coordinator, Univer- Womenfest, cont.
Paul Menzel
sity Hospitals in Madison; RoThe Women's Resource Center
byn Shapiro, M.D., Associate Di- commented they were very
rector,
Regional
Center
for
the
United of WI; Dr. Alfred D. Dalpleased with the turnout, since
Study of Bioethics and Assistant they .had close to 400 people in
ly, M.D., Chief Medical ConsultClinical
Professor
of
Health
ant, Bureau of Health Financattendance. ·
Law, Medical College of Wisconing, Wisconsin Department of
Lori Olson and Marilyn Morsin; and June Lego, R.N., EmerHealth and Social Services; and
tell
presented a dramatic comegency Care Nurse, St. Mary's
Richard Carlson, Assistant Didy entitled ''Speaking Briefly."
Hospital in Rhinelander.
rector, Department of Insur"The reason for this conferance, State of Illinois.
There -were two large photoence is not to change policies graphic exhibits titled "Black
The second part of the mornalready in practice in Wiscon- Women Achievement Against
ing session begins at 11 a.m. and
sin," said Peters; "but we hope the Odds" and "A Photographic
finishes up at 11:50 a.m. The
to establish a policy formulating Review of the EaJ,"ly 1900s."
subject for this part of the concommittee in the state that will
ference will be the value and
Several area organizations
make recommendations for new
limits of cost benefit and cost
ways of procuring, funding and which provide services to woeffectiveness analysis in the derationing of organ transplants., . men sponsored information
velopment of public policy conAnother important question booths and informal discussiOI)S.
S!erning transplant technology.
the "fest" was operi to the
,the conference will bring out is
The presenter will be Bryan R.
Arthur Caplan
are we willing to pay for these public and free child care was
Luce, Battelle Memorial Instiprovided. ·
transplants, and who will pay?
tute, Washington, D.C. He is the
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UNIV.: RSITY
.STORswDENTS HELPING STUDENTS
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346· 3431
1'he University Centers
'
·Fast for World Hunger
by Melissa Gross
Pointer Editor
A 24-hour fast for world hunger will be held on Tuesday,
March 12, beginning at 5 p.m.
and· ending on Wednesday,
March 13, at the same time.
Reverend Art- Simmons of the
Campus Peace Center is coordinating the event with the help of
- the United MPUstries in Higher
Education, Canterbury Club,
Newman Student Community,
UWSP Interfaith Council and the
Lutheran Student Community.
"People wishing to fast can
~ .sign up and then go out and recruit sponsors who will pay
them for each hour they fast,"
said Simmons. "Ali money will
then be collected from those who
signed up to fast in the ConSimmons said long-term go~ls
course on March 25-27."
for the fight against world hungAll proceeds from the fast will er should focus on changing the
go tu CROP (Community Relief government's policy on food.
Overseas Project), a division of Simmons feels the -U.S. governthe Church World Service whose ment uses hunger relief as a
goal is to help people create for means of political coercion.
themselves a better quality of
"The Reagan administration
life, which can be marked by insisted on tying food for Mrica
their ability to sustain them- in with arms for Central Ameriselves.
ca," said Simmons. "Congress
"Last semester we sponsored had to O.K. both before one or
a one-meal fast with American the other proposals would go
Food Management," said Sim- through. It.'s situations like that ·
mons. "Residence hall students which slow down relief operasigned up to miss a meal at De- tions."
·
Bot or Allen and American Food
Stude~ts still wishing to sign
Management donated the cost of up for the upcoming fast may do
each meal misSed to Church .so by calling Reverend Art SimWorld Service. The donations to- mons al 346-3678 before 5 p.m.
taled $1,143.59.,
on Tuesday, March 12.
Something to dance about
•
•
by Tom RaymoDd
Staff reporter
What is faster than disco,
more energetic than breakdancing and older than the Charleston? No, not the polka, but Polish folk dancing.
ln Stevens Point there is a
Polish folk dance group, founded
in 1977, calling themselves Wisla, which is Polish for the name
of the main river of Poland that
nearly encircles the country. In
the same way, the leader of the
group says Wisla encompasses
4
some of the history of Poland.
I
tion consisting of 15 people, inUnlike most of the folk dances cluding four musicians. They deseen commonly today, such as monstrate the two types of Polthe polka, Polish folk dancing is ish dance, national which occurs
fast and frenzied, temperamen- on a national scale, and regional
tal and impulsive as well as par- __!V_!lich occurs in a relatively .
tially improvised. No two folk small area. One such demondances can ever be the same, !ltration occurred Tuesday,
which is one reason that there is March 5, with free admission
no such thing as a "Polish" and refreshments. A typical
dance. The temperament and night of Wisla's dancing is not
flair of the _dances match the just dancing however, it also
Polish character.
consists of learning about the origins and development of Polish
Wisla is a volunteer organiza- dances and culture.
Pointer Page}~
/
'~How will the Wolf Survive," in the Vinyl Ju_ngle?
by Rob Taylor
Staff reporter
sion). "Evangeline" comes after
that, a dirty, low-down, hookytonk rocker. "I Got to Let You
Know" is a sort of amphetimined two-step.
The last two songs on the
album are of a different tone.
"Lil' Kind of Everything" is a
dual-acoustic guitar instrumen-
tal that is quiet and somber,
serving notice that if the album
has been good-time music up
until now, there still is reality to
face. The finale, "Will the Wolf
Survive?", seethes desperation.
It almost sounds like a lost page
from the Jackson Browne songbook, but it's grittier than
I know good party music when
I hear it, and How Will the WoH
Survive?, the new record by a
group called Los Lobos, is as
fine a piece of party music as is
likely to be heard this year.
Los Lobos are David Hidalgo
on lead vocals and guitar, Cesar
Rosas also on lead vocals and
gUitar, Conrad Lozano on bass
Lee Greenwood, the Country night, March 19, at UWSP.
and vocals, Louie Perez on Music Association's male vocalHis concert will begin at 7:30
drums, and newcomer Steve ist of the year winner in 1983 p.m. in the Quandt Gymnasium
Berlin (formerly of the Bla- and 1984. will oerform Tuesday where his special performing
sters) on saxophone. Los Lobos
have an amazing array of styles
undertheir belt (this is the most
diverse music to be found on an
American album since Springsteen's compendium of style,
"The River"), from charged
rockers to manic polkas, this is
hard-edged roots music.
The songs on this record sound
old and new at the same time.
There are clearly recognizable
antecedents like '50s rockabilly,
but there are also Tex-Mex fla. vors that have largely been
missing from most new music.
There never has been a popular
fusion of Mexican-American music into rock and roll and Los
Lobos' brand of rock-r&b-country sounds refreshing and exciting. Los Lobos successfully
blend the styles of music that influenced them igto original,
challenging rock.
So, on to the music. The most
kick-ass number is the lead-off
track. "Don't Worry Baby" is a
.tough -duelling-guitars rocker,
guaranteed to send you slippin'
and slidin' around your room.
It's one of two songs on the LP that were co-written with co-pro- . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . - . .
ducer (along with Berlin) TBone Burnett (a former Dylan
sideman, and a solo artist, his
best work is on the Trap Door
EP).
Mter "Don't Worry Baby" has
left you breathless, the pace
slows down for "A Matter of
Time," a rough, but sweet, r&b
ballad. Next up is the mad polka
rush of "Corrida No. 1," which·
is so surprising the .first time
you hear it that you'll probably
laugh out loud. It took awhile for
me to get used to the ,accordion
(an instrument that I've hated
for as long as I can rememberyou know, something only Myron Floren plays), but this album
has stretched my ears a bit, and
now I like it.
"Our Last Night" (which also
features a prominent accordion
line) follows, and it's sort of a
country-swing tune. Side One
closes out with the '50s-style
stomp, "The Breakdown" (the
THE VILLAGE APARTMENTS
other song co-written by Burnett) .
301 MICHIGAN AVENUE
. On the second side, the record
STEVENS POINT
starts hopping right away with
"I Got Loaded" (on several
341-2120
types of substances, too), which
one friend of mine has already
CALL TODAY!
turned into a personal anthem.
"Loaded" is followed by another
polka, this one sung in Spanish
(for maximum incompr~hen-
changed,
running scared now, forced to
hide,
in a land where he once stood
with pride .....
but he'll find his way by morning light."
Los Lobos are fun, but they
Browne ever got. The song at
first seems to be quite literally
about the plight of the wolf, but
midway through the song, "the
wolf" becomes a metaphor for
anyone, or anything, that's ever
been pushed to the edge:
"Standing in the pouring rain,
all alone in a world that's
Cont.p.12
Gram my Awar9 Winner, Lee Greenwood
guests will be members of the
Gamblers, a Stevens Point country band.
The sponsoring Universities
Activities Board is arranging for
reserved ticket sales at ShopKo
stores in Stevens Point, Wisconsin Rapids, Marshfield, Wausau
and at UWSP's University Center Information Desk.
Greenwood, whose recordings
are sold under the MCA label,
has the current top 10 country
hit, " You've Got a Good Love
Comin'; " the current duet hit
with Barbara Mandrell, " It
Should Have Been Love by
Now"; and previous hits including "Ring on Her Finger; Time
on Her Hands" in 1982, " I.O.U."
in 1983, " Going, Going, Gone" in
1983, and "God Bless the USA"
·
in 1984.
ATTENTION!
.theL
nnlnTPr
........ . .
r~
~}JCf
CVf~CR£ '85
THE VILLAGE
gets an
A+
He has ~en named as a Ilijlle
vocalist of the year by several
magazines and organizations
and won a Grammy in 1984 for
the best country vocal performance-male. Radio & Records
Reader's Poll chose him as the
best new artist in 1983.
Greenwood began playing music professionally when he was a
teenager and spent most of his
first 20 years as a music arranger, band leader, show tune writer, backup singer and piano bar
performer, mainly in Nevada.
He gained almost instant recognition after he signed a contract with MCA in 1981 and began writing and performing for '
the firm. His first release, · "It
Turns Me Inside Out" was on
the Billboard country music
char~ for 22 consecutive weeks.
-~
is
accepting applications
for EDITOR pick
them up in the
Pointer Office
RM 117 Comm. Arts Bldg.
Page 12, March 7, 1985
iI n
I ''
l l ''
W n
'-'1
W o rn Q n t
'-'111"11•
German Club
Sprecher) Sie Deutsch? If so,
you are welcome to join German
Club. If not, you are welcome to
join anyway. Perhaps you are
wondering. just what German
Club is and what it does.
German Club's primary purpose is to promote interest in the
language, culture and customs
of the German-speaking world.
It also serves as a liaison be. tween the students and the faculty of the foreign_language department. Through coordination
between students and faculty,
the German Club strives to provide educational and occupation. al opportunities as well as providing a warm social atmosphere for its members.
German Club provides a variety of activities throughout the
year. A few of the ones already
participated in are: Foreign
Language Club picnic, gather-
.
l
ings at Jeremiah's Import
Night, and a trip to the Folkfair
in Milwaukee. Some of the tentative plans on the agenda are:
Foreign Language Awareness
Week, a German dinner, folk
dancing, German Film Week
(March 18-22), a slide show of
Germany and more.
Anyone having a genuine interest in the German language,
culture or customs, regardless
of educational background or
national origin, is cordially invited to become a member.
More information can be found
in the Foreign Language Lab,
located in Collins Classroom
Center, or by contacting one of
the officers: Pat Obertin (President), Lois Hass (VP), Peggie
Stafford (Secretary), Amy Forster (Treasurer), or Kay Janisse
(PR).
FRESHMEN
ORIENTATION
"1985
LEADER
POSITIONS
.
·AVAILABLE
-
Applications are now
being accepted for
the Summer Orientation _Leader Positions.
Full-time from _May
29-July 12, 1985.
Applicants must have
a minimum 2.5 GPR
and be in good $tandng at the un-iversity ..
i_
$90Q plus room and
board. Applications
· ~nd job descriptions
are available in Rm.
103 Student Services
Center. Applications
must be submitted by
-Friday, March 8, 1985.
~-Alpha Mu Gamma
languages, cultures, and peoples ·exposed to new languages.
.-by Jim Lauersdorf
Alpha Mu Gamma sponsors
Do the words Deutsch, and, through them, to foster inFrances, Espanol or Russkiy ternational friendship and un- National Foreign Language
Week fro~ March 3-9. You may
mean anything to you? Not only derstanding.
You say you've never heard of have seen our booth·in the Conare these the names of the four
major foreign languages, taught Alpha Mu Gamma? Well, we're course; we also sponsored a
here, but also students of Ian- going to change that. In the poster contest promoting foreign
guages share a common bond at past, we've sponsored an .annual languages and a get-together for
Foreign Language Banquet, pic- all foreign language clubs on
UWSP.
This common bond among nics and other social events for campus.
Being an honor society, we
UWSP foreign language students our members and anyone interis the Eta Omicron chapter of ested in foreign languages. Just have standards for membership.
Alpha Mu Gamma, the National recently, some of our members You can be a member if you:
Collegiate Foreign Language attended the national convention
a. Have received two grades
Honor Society. ·Our goals are to in Kansas, where they of "A" and one of "B" or higher
recognize and stimulate achieve- . exchanged ideas with members in university level foreign lanment in foreign language study, from around the U.S., learned guage courses.
to encourage interest in other some ethnic dances and were
Or,
b. Have received two grades
of "A" in university level and
grades of "A'; in two years of
high school foreign language
courses.
With both criteria, you must
have an overall GPR of 3.0.
Wouldn't you like to join Alpha
(CheckO~
Mu Gamma in the foreign language and culture experience?
Yes
No
If so, contact your foreign lanDo you want to be the
guage professor, or the foreign
only one who knows
language department office,
when you use an early
Room 490, Collins Classroom
pregnancy test?
Center, phone 346-3036. Now is
the time to check us out since
Would you prefer a test
we induct our new members at
that's totally private to
the annual Foreign Language
perform and totally
Department Banquet which will
private to read?
be held in May.
Would you like a test
that's portable, so you
La Liaison Francoise
can carry it with you and
read it in private?
Studying the French language
and learning about French culAnd how about a simple,
ture is not somethiqg that has to
one-step test with a drabe limited to a classroom setmatic color change that's
ting. La Liaison Francaise
easy to read and is 98%
(French Club) was organized to
accurate?
provide students with the opportunity to speak French and participate in culturally~riented
activities outside the classroom.
La Liaison Francafse -consists
of core group of approximately 15 students, who work hard to
realize the goals pf the organizaIf you checked "Yes" to
tion. Some of the activities to
the above, EPT PLUS is for
date have included: a seminar
you. Use it, and only you
on programs to France, job
will know your test score.
opportunities in French-speak© 1985 Warner-lambert Co.
ing countries via the Peace
Corps, a wine and cheese party,
Folk Fair and the Christmas
party.
Activities for this semester include promotion of National Foreign Language Week (stop by
our booth in the Concourse this
Thursday), Mardi Gras celebration (March 10), and involvement in the French theatre
April30 and May 1 and 2.
Meetings, which are · held
twice a month, are announced in
the Daily, The Pointer, and via
posters in Collins Classroom
Center.
Membership in La Liaison
Francaise is open to anyone interested in. learning more about
the French language and culture
while making new friends and
having fun. For more information, contact Laura at 341-8847.
·t---------------------....,
One test where only
youknowthe score.
DO
DO
DO
a
Wolf, cont.
also aim for greatness. That's a
rare combination in rock and
roll today, where half of the new
groups around are either braindead 01: video-sold. How Will the Wolf Su~ive? is' honest, committed rock and roll. And besides, ' it's also gr'eat party music.
I
. Pointer Page 13
/
Summer. ..
Army ROTC can help put .
yours into shape. With six weeks of challenging, no-obligation leadership training. With
earnings of about $672 plus free room and
board. And with opportunities for up to $5000
more during your next two years of college.
All leadi.ng to your commission as an Army
officer, full time on active duty or part time in
the Reserve or National Guard.
•
Things are sh(lping up.
Start shaping up for summer. Find out more
today about the Army ROTC 2-year program.
Contact: Major Jim Reilly, 204 Student Services
Center, 346-3821
..
How To
~)., ~ON
(trtMoNDAY
J
1
t
Remember your
school lunch box?
Little metal box
clutched tightly in
your sweaty little
hand. Remember
what was in it?
Big baloney· on
white bread with
mayo. One small,
bruised apple. Remnants of an unnameable
cookie destroyed by the
ride. Thermos of room
temperature milk.
Not at all what you'll find in
our lunch box. In ours
resides a slice of Rocky
Rococo Pan Style Pizza. Fresh.
Hot. Fast. Cheesy, saucy, chewy,
crunchy. A celebration for your
mouth. A culinary carouse.
A box full of lunch.
No baloney.
~~~~~ROCOCO COUPON~~~~~
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one feel you're special. Benefit as .
you enjoy reading of the· first-hand
experiences of others, like yourself,
trying to attract someone they like.
, you don't have to be beautiful,
ltby, popular or unique in .a ny way
.these tested winning ways do .vork
!!!!YOne wil~ing to try thea.
We know how you feel about firat .encounters. Maybe you
are afraid to approach aoaeone -- scared you will be
rejected, or worse yet, laughed at or put down, · Perhaps you're aissing your ~hance to aeet soaeone, ~bat
you· fiDd interesting because you don't know the riaht
way to ao about it. Worry no aore.
·
"llOW TO FLll\T ON MONDA'I:" vas written especially
for JPu to overcoae these feara and to aive you
new self-assurance, Discover bow to aake shyness
work for you. Know why "actina out of character"
1a always the vrona tbiog . to do, Learn how to use
the "verbal handshake" tecbnique .plWI aany aore
subtle approach ideas you have yet to think of.
lead how a aere glance, scent or &aile can ignite
a relationship and be sure ~==:1····'!1
'that you·'re uatna thea the tf.
right vay.(You'll kndw you
know howl) Chapt~also
uncover aany sensitive areas
no one ever tells you about
but we tell it like it iii ••.• 1 - - vitb huaor and varath. If ever
you've wanted someone you like
to ''want to" know you then
this book is a~ustl You won't
put it down tili't"a .finbhed.
r=:::
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I
I
Slice and Salad Bar only $1.99
One coupon per person per VIStl
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"1'::C:C."'
•vu
I I ~ II II I I
Signature
433 Division Street
344-6090
1985. Rocky Rococo Corp.
I
J_
-·---------
ity
©
II I I I I I
Eap - - - - -
·~..:N:::es~
Offer exp"es Apnl30. 1985
I
Shalimar, FL 32579
Please send a copy of HOW TO FLIRT ON MONDAY i~ a
plain envelope.{great gift item!) My payment of
$9.95 (plus $1.05 postage and handling) is enclosed. I may return the book anytime within ten
days of delivery for a full refund. · ~~~ ·
State ·
Zip
.-
1·
/
Page 14 March 7, 1985
Solving the dispharynx mystery in
gro~sel
What started as ·a UWSP master's thesis turned out to
be some of the most important ruffed grouse research
of the decade.
'
-
by Christopher Dorsey
Environmenial Editor
In 1980, Sue Marcquenski
embarked on a master's project
intended to unravel some of the
secrets surrounding dispharynx,
a roundworm parasite of ruffed
gro~e and other birds. Adult
dispharynx burrow into the wall
of a ruffed grouse's proventriculus (stomach) and latch on tightly by using two threa.dlike projections called cordons. It's believed that these cordons act
much the same as threads on a
screw in the way they secure the
adult dispharynx to the stomach
wall. The proventriculus will
then enlarge due to the formation of extra tissue inside. This
will often completely close off
passage of food. The grouse then
becomes weak and easy prey for
opportune predators or may
simply starve before an owl or
fox has a chance to catch it.
To understand more about dispharynx and its effect on Wisconsin's grouse population, you
must first understand the life
cycle of this . parasite. The
grouse serves as the host species for dispharynx. The adult
worms pass their eggs out via
the grouse's fecal material.
Once on the ground, the tiny
eggs are ingested by sowbugs
which in turn serve as the intermediate host. Inside the sowbug,
the young larvae develop until
the sowbug is eaten by a grouse
chick. Once eaten by a chick,
larvae grow to adults in the
proventriculus and the cycle
then repeats itself.
Since the project's start in
1980, Marcquenski has relied
heavily on grouse hunters to
supply her with the needed
grouse proventriculus. No one
feels the impact of the bottom of
the grouse cycle more than Wisconsin grouse hunters. According to Marcquenski, "Grouse
hunters, especially at the Sandhill Wildlife Area, have been
fantastic over the last few years
in assisting with specimen collecting. Some hunters have even
offered to comb the grounds
looking for sowbuds (the intermediate host)." Grouse hunters
too wan\ the answer to dispharynx . .
Of the 52 counties where
grouse proventriculi were ~tud­
ied, 31 counties showed the parasite-most being in Southwestern Wisconsin. Marathon County in Central Wisconsin, however, has been the county with the
most consistent data during the
five-year study.
In 1982, the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources contracted Marcquenski to continue
further research on the dispharynx problem. It seems the
grouse the DNR were capturing
in Southwestern Wisconsin to be
traded with Missouri for wild
turkeys were dying before they
could even be shipped. Through
financial backing by the DNR,
Marcquenski concentrated the
dispharynx study on cqunties in
Southwestern Wisconsin.
Examination of southwestern
grouse revealeq a high prevalence of dispharynx worms in
the counties of Richland, Sauk,
Crawford and Vernon. The prevalence of the worm decreased in
birds from more northern counties. Meanwhile, as grouse hunters will attest, 1982 proved to be
another low year for grouse and
in 1983 the population dwindled
Eco-Briefs
posing timPt!r practices that .
would destroy the habitat of the
red-cockaded woodpecker in
southern forests. Forest Service
plans call for eliminating tens of
thousands of acres of old-growth
forest that serves as habitat for
the endangered woodpecker.
by Jim Burns
Staff reporter
-
Fisher Season Due
to Open
Wisconsin trappers will have a
new furbearer to add to their
~ catch next winter as a fisher
trapping season will be opening
in December. Evidently the
DNR has determined that there
is a sizable population up north
that could use some "culling."
More details on the new season
are due out this fall in the 1985
edition of the Wisconsin Trapping Regulations booklet.
NWF Protests Southern
Forest Plans
The National Wildlife Federation has charged that the U.S.
Forest Service is violating the
Endangered Species Act by pro-
even lower.
Just what effect was dispharynx having on overall grouse
p<ipulations? Marcquenski
searched for the answer as she
continued the study. In 1983, she
again found a very high prevalence of dispharynx in extreme
southwestern counties. However,
the research took a new and unexpected twist in 1983. During
the 1981 study of Marathon
Marcquenski showed what researchers call an "inverse correlation." That is, as grouse
populations declined, cases of
dispharynx grew.
~
The direct effect of dispharynx on grouse numbers was likely, but why only the prevalence
in SouUtwest Wisconsin? Marcquenski reached a block in her
research until she searched previous literature on the subject.
r-------------------------~~~~~~~~~~--,
Grouse hunters supply the grouse for research.
County in Central Wisconsin, no
dispharynx were found in the 56
grouse examined. In a similar
sample of 55 birds taken in Marathon County in 1983, 18 of the
birds proved infected with dispharynx.
Why the dramatic shift? What
happened differently in 1983 that
would .account for the dispharynx increase? Marcquenski
delved deeper in search of the
dispharynx impact on the grouse
cycle. By graphing the relative
number of ruffed grouse harvested from 1980 to 1983 and the
number of infected grouse,
She discovered that a researcher conducted studies- on dispharynx in blue grouse in British Columbia. His 1955 research concluded that in areas where dispharynx was present, the grouse
population tended to be more
stable and didn't show the extreme highs and lows of the cycle. This was exactly what was
happening in Southwest Wisconsin. Grouse populations in southern counties tend to be more stable than those in the north,
where high fluctuations are the
rule.
Through 1984, Marcquenski
Club scorer who taped out the
massive measurements. At 203%
pointS, the buck exceeds the current record of 197 points, which
belongs to another Colorado
mule deer that was taken in
Ul69. Official certification as the
Pope and Young Club's World
Record for typical mule deer is
Mother Saves Recordlikely to come at the club's bienBook Mulie Rack
nial meeting in Bismarck, North
If it hadn't been for the ener-.
Dakota, in late April. Surprisgetic endeavors of Bill Barcus' ingly, the antlers were dimenmother, the young lad would sionally equal to the largest typnever have known he shot a new ic~l mule deer known to existworld-record buck. According to the Boone and Crockett record,
Outdoor Life magazine, Bill shot belonging to Doug Burris Jr.
the massive buck during the The main beams taped 28%
1979 Colorado bow season. Due inches, and the greatest outside
to the buck being quite a dis- me;:tsurement was an astounding
tance from the nearest road, Bill 38 inches! "To think if it hadn't
decided to leave the bulky ant- been for my mother!" Bill told
lers behind and pack out only Outdoor Life reporters.
the meat. Mrs. Barcus happened
Germans Face Choice:
to join up with her son at the kill
and took it upon herself to carry
Fast Cars or Forests
Problems with acid rain may
the "wondrous" antlers out of
the mountains for her son. Little soon force West Germans to
did she know that she was car- choose between their love of
rying a set of antlers that could driving at unrestricted speeds
possibly rewrite the record and saving their endangered forbook!
ests. Research showing that
Evidently, word got around on acid rain has already damaged
the huge horns with the eventual up to half the country's forests
arrival of a Pope and Young have sparked a national cam-
paign for slower speeds on the
autobahns. Experts say that nitrogen oxide emissions from
automobiles are the prime culprits in acid rain. Motorists are
told that even slowing down to
80 miles an hour could help halt
the destruction!
had examined over 3,000 grouse
proventriculi. Another surprise
fell upon Marcquenski's research in 1984. After looking at
350 proventriculi last year, noticeable cases of dispharynx
were showing up in the extreme
northern .counties of Washburn,
Marinette; Forest and Iron;
areas where dis pharynx
appeared to be absent in previous years. Again, Marcquenski
was stumped. What allowed for
onlt the occasional infection of
northern birds?
Another search of the literature revealed that in 1937, a researcher by the name of Boughton studied grouse parasites in
three separate areas of MinDEisota. Boughton found a difference
in the types of parasites affecting the grouse in every area that
he studied. Boughton also felt
that other factors such as the
distribution of the . host and intermediate host species, topography, vegetation and climate
should all be studied to understand differences in parasite distribution.
Step-by-step, Marcquenski
considered each of these factors
io find out their effect on dispharynx in grouse. It is generally considered that parasite eggs
survive better in heavy soils because of their moisture-holding
capacity. This allows the eggs a
longer opportunity of beiflg
eaten by sowbugs. In Wisconsin,
the heavier soils are found in the
south as opposed to the northern
counties. This gave at least one
reason explaining tHe higher frequency of dispharynx in southwestern counties.
Coot. p.16
tons of marijuana. With the help
of Army National Guard and
U.S. Customs Seyvice helicopters, officials confiscated and
hauled out irrigation equipment,
booby traps and an arsenal of
semi-automatic and automatic
weapons from remote mountain
sites. Luckily for hunters,
CAMP Program Makes Woods CAMP was a success. But as
Safer for Hunting
growers llve felt the increasing
Thanks to the Campaign pressure from the organization,
Against Marijuana Planting they have been scattering into
(CAMP) task force, California's neighboring states. In response,
forests were made safer for · authorities throughout the counhunters this past season.
try have taken a close look at
Over the past 10 years, mari- CAMP and many are expected
juana growers have used the to adopt similar programs. With
backwoods for concealment of California's second CAMP sestheir illegal plants and have sion well underway, State Attorthreatened to shoot at any hunt- ney General John Van de Kamp
ers who strayed too close. said, "We aim to send a mesJ\ccording to U.S. Forest Service sage to the marijuana cultivaLaw Enforcement Director tors in this state that we intend
Ernie Andersen, "Evidence of il- to run them out of business."
legal marijuana cultivations has
Nebraska, Wyoming Leaders
been found in every national forin Steel Shot
est in the system."
Nebraska has become the first
Last year, 27 local, state and
federal agencies pooled their state to require steel shot for all equipment, resources and man- waterfowl huntirlg statewide, bepower in an attempt to stem this ginning with the, 1985 season. In
problem. The result, CAMP, was Wyoming, the Game Commis- •
a law-enforcement partnership sion has proposed that steel shot
that cut and burned over 130
Cont.p.l5
/
Pointer Page 15
Earthbound '
Early visions of spring
by Darlene Loehrke ·
vague scent that the spring wind
ushers in has not yet' .at=rived.
Staff reporter
The snow is melting leaving That· light, ambiguous presence
sidewalks covered with water. that ever so subtly sets senses
Bare grourid, hidden. from view on end is not yet here.
Spring, the reserved, formal
for so many weeks, i!an be seen.
People, weary of thick winter madame that she is, always
sends a callirrg card ahead to
mitte~ and scarves, . shed their
garments for lighter clothes announce the nearness of her
much as a butterfly leaves its arrival. Her footman carries it
_ cocoon for the freedom of lighter on the brisk wind that arrives
wings. Even tbe birds seem to cold and harsh, yet overnight
flitter with a new vitality as if sets things stirring. You may go
the sun that is melting the snow to bed shivering, hiding under
is also releasing them from their covers longing to stay there
until. the world is green and
sombre winter mood.
At tbe time I'm writing this, it alive, sick of snow and slush and
has been warm for several days. salt that seem to find their way
To many, thoughts of spring are into even the most · concealed
budOing and swelling. I think corners of your life.
Some time in the night you
they best beware, calm their
awake to the faint, almost
haste, sit back and wait.
Something is missing. Some imperceptible drip of water.
v
Eco-Briefs, cont.
be required for all shotgun hunting in 1986. Two other states
along the Central Flyway-Iowa
and Kansas-~ay soon take
action to limit use of lead shot,
too.
·
Thinking it only a- faucet you re..
turn to your dreams of warm
green grass and daffodils.
In the morning as you leave
the house, you notice that something is different. The sky is ominous and gray and -seems to
press down upon the land with a
smothering presence. These are
not clouds like those that have
dumped snow upon you for so
long. These are much more
pressing. They seemAo want to
release some torrential force but
can't and the pressure keeps
building and building.
You notice that _all is quiet. _.
.but for that faint, ever so.. .is
it really there? A dripping that
sends the blood flowing and you
can't quite tell why. Something's
there. The wind that yesterday
turned cheeks pink, today is so
moist and so full of some
essence that you feel your face
expecting it too to be ~oist.
Looking around you feel as if
someone is watching you but
you see only the snow-covered
bushes. Spring is, as Guy Wet~ more CarryI put it, "at the wing,
and waiting for her cue."
Today, even with all its lifegiving warmth, is not the beginning of spring. That elusive footman has not yet arrived so we
must be content to wait. Spring,
as of yet, is not here.
Donate to
Endangered Resources Fund
on your Wjs. tax fprm
Erosion:
.Wisconsin
style
Wisconsin's soil is eroding
faster than at any time in our
history~ven worse than in the
Dust Bowl days of the Thirties.
Every year, 79 million tons of
soil erode from Wisconsin land.
That's over 200,000 tons of soil
every day, or 17,000 dump
trucks full of our precious resource-soil.
Current levels of soil erosion
threaten agricultural produ~tivi­
ty and cause substantial off-site
damages. Cropland erosion
rates are especially high in the
southern one-third of the state,
where the average is 8 to 10
tons-acre-year, or more than
twice the tolerable limits. StateCont. p.16
'
UNDER THE WEATHER?
tt
II'
'It
if
..
Lutheran Laymen Build
NatUre Trail for the Blind
A group of college students
from several Midwestern universities recently banded together to construct a 1,500-foot nature trail' for blind children at
Camp CILA (Central Illinois Lutheran Camp Association). The
trail, located on a 210-acre area
operated by the Central Illinois
District and its Lutheran Laymen's League groups, will provide weekend campers and the
handicapped with not only an
envir.onment to share Christ
with one another, but an environmentally-oriented experience
as well.
"Besides the blind using the
trail, we could blindfold sighted
people . in the · future and show
them how to use their other
senses to 'see' nature aroi.md
them," said project coordinator
· Kris Bueltmann. The project received its funding through camp
funds and loeal businesses which
provided the needed materials.
..........
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I
Oldest Reptile
· Tracks Discovered
A Kentucky stonemason has
discovered the fossilized footprints of a lizard 310 million
years old--t?OSSibly the oldest
evidence of reptile life on Earth.
The six-inch creature -lived
about the time when reptiles
were branching off from the
amphibians, says Nicholas Holton, a Smithsonian fossil specialist.
'
.
ContamfnatM Groundwater
Found in Every State
It looks as though Wisconsin is
not alone in its problems with
groundwater · contamination.
Chemical contamination of
groundwater-the source of
drinking water for .half tlfe U.S.
population-has spread to every
state iri the union, according to
a report by the Congressional
Office of Technology Assessment. Sticklers for the obvious,
·EPA officials then admi~ in a
draft report that its system for
monitoring leaks . from toxic
waste dumps into underground
water supplies was not working.
I
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Delivery
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our drivers from their ·
appointed rounds.
Domino's Pizza Delivers·
in 30 minutes or less.
No problem!
© 1982 Domrno'!. Pizza. Inc.
PIZZA
-
Page 16 March 7, 1985
Earthbound
feels that the warmer tempera- areas. This can create problems
tures in Southwest Wisconsin for grouse chicks if too many
. Grouse, cont.
account for the consistent higher birds are concentrated in a cerprevalence of dispharynx in tain area and the birds are inMter considering soil types,
fected with dispharynx. The fethose
counties.
Marcquenski looked at the disIn the event of cool springs in cal material will then be more
tribution of sowbugs in Wisconthe northeast, the larvae are not concentrated which increases
sin. She found sowbugs as far
mature enough inside the sow- the odds of sowbugs ingesting
north as Bayfield County and as
bugs to develop into adult dispharynx eggs. To support
far south as Richland County. worms
once ingested by a this, Marcquenski also found
Leaving no stone unturned, sowgrouse chick. This could explain that spring drumming densities
bugs seemed to be everywhere.
the reason for Marathon County are higher in Southern Wiscon- Therefore, it didn't appear· that
showing
no sign of dispharynx in sin as opposed to the northern
the sowbug distribution held
1981 when the spring was cool part of the state.
much significance to dispharynx
Through Marcquenski's work,
and in 1983 following a warm
in Wisconsin ·grouse.
spring, the 18 cases that were biologists can more effectively
It was in Marcquenski's next
manage Wisconsin's diverse and
reported.
step that she may have discounique grouse population. When
The
last
element
needing
to
be
vered the key to the dispharynx
proved was the distribution of upland biologists are better able
question. For the dispharynx
the · host (grouse). Wisconsin to understand problems _such as
larvae to develop inside a
does have grouse throughout ~e dispharynx, grouse hunters are
grouse's proventriculus, it must
state-although some grouse going to be the long-term benefirst reach a certain mature
point inside the sowbug. At a takes dispharynx ·an average of nificance of this is that the first · hunters may disagree at times. ficiaries.
temperature , less than 52 de- 36 days to reach maturity. Pro- week in June is the time when However, there are differences------~----grees Fahrenheit, ,the larval portionally, if you raise the tern- most grous~ brood5 are hatching between the structures of the
in Wisconsin. For the larvae to northern and southern popula- Erosion, cont.
be ready for grouse chicks to tions. Some of the differences
eat, they must begin developing can be seen in topography and wide there is about three times
· inside the sowbugs at least 18-36 vegetation. As an example, in as much erosion from water as
days prior to the grouse hatch. Vilas County in the northern from wind, although the Central
Therefore, timing plays a criti- part of the state, there is excel- Sands area erosion from wind is
- cal role in whether or not the lent grouse habitat. There you'll tnore than twice that caused by
grouse _chicks become infected. . find contiilUous forest with open- water. Soil erosion is not inevitaNow to understand why the ings, lowlands for broods, good ble. Conservation practices can
Pre_
s ents
prevalence of dispharynx is low- tnature aspen and birch for cut erosion down to ·tolerable
adults. Marcquenski feels that rates. Yet, erosion continues to
~r in Northeastern Wisconsin,
birds in this area are finding worsen for a variety Of reasons.
JUSt
-look
at
the
average
May
and the EmploY-ers
The State Land Conservation
temperatures for that region. It enough habitat that they aren't
turns out that the average May concentrating in only a few spe- Board, attached to the DepartBlue Collar Rock 'N Roll
ment of Agriculture, Trade and
temperature ranges from 48 to cific areas.
58 degrees Fahrenheit in NorthOn the other hand, in the cou- Consumer Protection (DATCP),
8:30-12:30,
eastern Wisconsin. Contrast this lee region of Southwest Wiscon- adopted 12 recommendations for ·
with Southwestern Wisconsin sin, you'll find forested hilltops bringing cropland erosion under
Free Beer with·paid admission
_where temperatures range from and river valleys that some- control to tolerab,le l~vels by the
54 to 62 degrees Fahrenheit -in times have agricultural fields year 2000. They boldly asked for
Don'' t forget tonightMay. Although temperatures on mixed between them. This does a substantial amount of county
south-facing slopes may even be create a lot of edge which cost-sharing money but required
Y2 gallon jugs of beer
:warmer, resulting in a faster de- grouse like, but Marcquenski farmers benefiting from the
velopment time for the larvae. feels this limits the optimal farmland preservation prograna
In other words, Marcquenski brood habitat in certain local property ~x relief to also meet
these soil erosion goals, called
"cross-compliance." The gover' nor included these provisions in
his budget.
The governor did not include
the recommendation of the State
Land Conservation Boa,rd that,
to ensure reaching the year 2000
goal, the Land Conservation
Board be given regulatory over_sight of county I programs and
the power to enforce state minimum standards in that county if
the interim 1990-1993 goals are
not met._ The governor views
this as politically uilacceptable
to the agricultural community,
despite the testimony of farm
leaders to the contrary.
We agree that control of soil
erosion is a very serious problem deserving state funding,
however, a flood of new money
and encouragement of county
programs, "the carrots," will
not necessarily solve the problem. If interim goals are not
AST OF EDEN
naet, this budget should include
. In John Steinbeck's powerful novel set in California, Dean plays the
the
mechanism, "the stick," to
misunderstood son of a pious farmer (Raymond Massey) on the eve of
ensure compliance. The goverWorld War I, 1n a v1olent and tense story of family conflict and a boy's
OR TIE A STRING ON YOUR FINGER,
yearn1ng for parerytal love.
nor's budget did not include
OR CLIP THIS AD AS A REMINDER!
funding (estimated at $300,QOO
"The deepest film Kazan has ever made .. . more jarring than On the
Waterfront."
per county) to implenaent ero~Andrew Sarris, Film Culture
sion
control plans in the counties
Director: Elia Kazan 1
,
which have completed their
Cast: James Dean, Raymond Massey, Julie Harris Jo Van Fleet Burl lves •
·plans (Trempealeau and Lin115 minutes 19~ (C)
'
'
coln), or will soon complete
their plans (Grant, Green, LaFayette, Pepin, Pierce and St.
Croix). We want these funds reIf you signed up to fast, remember that date! Good
stored 'in order to begin erosion
luck on your fasting ... and THANK YOU for helping
cqntrol measures, such as conthose who can't help themselves. ·
servation tillage, terraces and
contour strips, in. these counties
which have the highest rates of
The money you ·collect from your sponsors can be
erosion.
turned in to the person who recruited you or bring it to the U.C. Booth, March 25-27.
stages will not reach the mature
state inside the sowbug. When
the temperatures are increased
to 70 degrees Fahrenheit, it
perature to 78 degrees Fahrenheit, it takes only 18 days for
dispharynx larvae to reach maturity inside a sowbug. The sig-
2nd ·St. Pub
BOSS .ROSS
Friday, March 8
s1.00
.- .
UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY
_PRESENTS ;
JAMES DEAN
IN
EAST OF EDEN
PUT AN 'X' ON YOUR CALENDAR
E
WED., MARCH 13
_14-HOUR FAST FOR WORLD HUNGER
--
MARCH 12 ~nd 13
7 and 9:15 -p.m.
Sponsored by: Lutheran Student . Commun ity,
UMHE, Newman Community , Canterbury Club,
Interfaith Council.
UCPBR
only $1.75
I
.
Pointer Page 17
--.. Puccini's
937
Best
Sellers
MONDAY, MARCH 18, 1985
8:00P.M.
SENTRY THEATER
The U.S. Government
Printing Office has put
together a new catalog of the
Government's bestselling
books. Books like The Space
Shuttle at Work, Cutting
Energy Costs, Infant Care,
National Park Guide and
Map; Federal Benefits for
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Talents, and Starting a
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Government books. are all
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New Catalog
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ARTS l!f'uwS,.
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Post Office Box 37000 .
Washington, D.C. 20013
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•
SENTRY THEATER
MARCH 26,1985
.-----!-------------------------....---_.. _________________________
01018
This handy
: Save35e
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Campus
Carry-All
is
FREE!
Just buy two (2) of
any size Clear eyes
eye drops and carry
your books, note
pads, pencils,
sneakers, sweatshirt
and shorts in a
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TO RETAILER: As our authorized agent we will pay
you 8¢ plus the face value of the coupon for each
coupon you property accept in connection with the
retail sale of the product indicated. Coupons will be
honored when pre~nted by retail distributors of our
merchandise or associations or clearing houses,
apprOYed by us. ac.ting for and at the sole risk of our retailers. It is FRAUD to present coupons
for redemption other than as provided herein. Coupon void and forfeited if invoices proving
your purchase of sufficient stock to cover coupons are not produced on request, or if coupon
assigned, transferred, sold or reproduced. •
·
COUPON REIMBURSEMENTS ARE NOT ID BE DEDUCTED FROM ROSS LABORA·
TORIES INVOICES. Customer pays any applicable tax. limit one coupon per purchase (or
customer). Cash redemption value tl20th of a cent. Mail coupons to: ROSS LABORATORIES,
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on any size.
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1-cTeareje'Scampus carry":"AiiOif~-,I
Just enclose two (2) proofs-of-purchase (2 front panels of any size Clear eyes packages) for
each FREE Campus Carry-All you order. OR send one (1) proof-of-purchase and $3.49 ($2.99
plus 50¢ postage and handling) for each Carry-All you order, with a check or money order. Mail
together with this completed certificate to:
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and $3.49 for each bag requested.
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Sir'""--
- - - - --
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City·-- -- - - -- --
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~
TEA SHOP
* ,CARD_S
*STICKERS
*JEWELRY
* LEATHER WALLETS
* J·SHIRTS
* SWEAT SHIRTS
* WICKER BASKETS
AND FURNITURE
*POSTERS
*GIFTS & GAG GIFTS
1108 Main Street .
Stevens Point, WI 54481
Phone 344-8811
the area's newest, most exciting junior
and contemporary miss fashion shop.
If you want something new, something different,
come introduce yourself to Scarlet's.
It's the little town store, with the big city look.
35D Park Ridge Dr., Stevens Point, Wl54481
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Page 18 March 7, 1985
·Pointers head to K.C. for third straight year
by Alan Lemke
Sports Editor
UWSP 72, lJWS 43
·There's an old saying in the
sporting world that goes, "It's
hard to beat a team three times
in one year." Well, the UWSP
Pointers obviously pay no attention to proverbial statements.
This was evident by Point's
third victory over UW-Stout this
season, this one coming in the
NAJA District 14 semifinal game
at Quandt Fieldhouse, 72-43.
But, third game or not, Pointer coach Dick Bennett said this
was not a factor they were concerned with going into the game.
"We never addressed that
issue ·of playing them for the
thira time. We simply dwelled
on trying .to do the best job we
could, and if that wasn't enough
we would live with that."
Point came out hard in the
first half jumping out to. a 6-0
lead. However, the Blue Devils
were able to keep it close until
midway· · through the period
when the Pointers hit on three in
a row to take a 10-point advantage at 22-12. They then came
back and hit three more, two by
Terry Porter and one Kirby Kulas layup, to stretch the halftime
margin to 32-16.
better chance of making them
than missing them, and we just
hit them."
Point also had an 11-5 rebounding advantage at the half,
another fact Bennett was
pleased with.
"I thought we did a much better job on the boards and after
their initial thrust I thought we
did a fine job of taking care of
the lane."
When the teams returned for
the second halft a string of Point
steals and Stout turnovers quickly gave Point a 43-20 edge. Then,
when Dimitrich Roseboro
grabbed another steal for Point,
Porter took the pass and
slammed it home, to the delight
of the crowd, which seemed to
seal the Blue Devils' fate. After
this, the Devils were only able to
come within 24 points of their
victors.
With about six and a-half minutes left, the Pointers'· Purple
Gang took to the floor to wipe up
what was left of the Blue Devils.
Although their performance was
less impressive than that of the
starters, Bennett was glad they
got into the game.
"I'm happiest about it, not
necessarily for the rest of the
starters, because they'll have a
day in between anyhow, but because they got a chance to play
more than two minutes. It's
I'm proud of the way they
played." ·
Point did make one line-up
change before the Stout game.
Roseboro started in place of
.Mike Janse who had started
since his return from an ankle
injury. Bennett explained this
move.
"I thought Dimitrich did a
good job out top and Terry was
more active off the ball, and we
were able to give ourselves a
· boost with Mike coming off the
bench. Mike accepted his role
and did the very best he could."
Bennett added, "He should feel
very good about his performance."
Porter and Kulas shared top
scoring honors by dropping in 16
points apiece while Tim Naegeli
added 15 for the Pointer cause.
Point will take to the floor
again Wednesday, when they
meet UW-Eau Claire in the district title game.
Mintz offered his prediction
for the game~
"No question in my mind that
Point will beat Eau Claire. Eau
Claire will be much tougher
.than the last time, but I'd bet on
Point,"
·
Bennett tried to hold back on
any predictions by simply con. eluding, "What it means is, Kan~
sas City's going to get a good
representative."
UWSP 52, UW-EC 41 _
--
Porter's dunk brought the crowd to their feet
and the Blue Devils to their knees.
Bennett s;1id he was very hap-
really great for them to get that
noted three 17-footers by Porter
and a 16-footer by Kulas as
standouts.
·
"We shot the ball from the
baseline · and those shots were
probably 15-foot shots or .tietter.
Those are shots that if you get
them on rhythm you've got a
Although Stout was knocked
out of any further post-season
play, Blue Devil coach Dwaine
Mintz did have words of praise
for his team, which is considered one of the most improved in the WSUC this season.
-"The kids had. a good season.
PY with the way his team shot in kind of playing time, especially
the first half (68 percent). He . in a tournament game."
Co-captains Janse and Porter hold aloft
the District 14 championship trophy.
The Pointers took to the floor
last night in what may have in there where the guys could
been called a "rainbow game." get their acts together."
This seems like a fitting descripAfter almost three minutes
tion, 'because after the Pointers without anyone scoring, Porter
had beaten UW-Eau Claire in connected on an 18-footer from
the District 14 · championship . the right side to give Point a 32game, they had a pot of gold 31 lead, and from that point on .
waiting for them at the end in the momentum all went to the
the form of a berth in the NAIA Pointers. Excellent free throw
National Tournament iri Kansas shooting late in the game seCity.
cured a 52-41 victory for the
The contest started out as a Pointers.
tooth and nail battle, as both
In fact, the free throw shootteams played solid defense and ing was so good the Pointers set
nianaged to keep the score with- a new UWSP free throw shootin two points. However, midway ing mark, dropping a perfect 100
through -the first stanza, the percent of their charity tosses.
Pointers came up with some The previous mark was 22 of 23,
excellent defensive efforts to put set in ·1979-30 and again in 1983themselves in the driver's seat 84. The Pointers nailed a cool 18
by a score of 16-8. The ·Pointers for 18 in last night's contest.
were able to hold this lead as Bennett felt that this was a rethey went into the locker room flection on the poise of his team.
atthe half leading, 24-16.
"That's quite a phenomenal
The pictirre started to look statistic. When they can step to
dim for the Pointers when they the line in a game like this and
came back out for the second nail those shots, that's a real
half. Three hoops by Blugold testimony to the kids."
Rick Dahl cut the Pointer lead
The overall tough play of the.
to' two, and by halfway through Pointers and the Blugolds was
the period, Point found them- an area that Bennett had some
selves trailing by one point for interesting insights into.
the first time in the game since
"I think '!hen you get two
the opening basket by Eau excellent teams together nothing
Claire.
will come easy. There will be
Bennett said this was a con- periods of tightness. There will
cern to him, and he was just be plays that the fans feel
hoping it wouldn't cause his maybe shouldn't be made, but
team to falter. .
what you have to appreciate is
"It was of great concern to us that every time we made a dethat we were not able to put the fensive mistake, Eau Claire caball down, and I was afraid that pitalized. So two really good
we would come back on defense clubs are going to negate one
and do some reckless things, another for a great share of the
and a· couple of times we did, game. It's just a matter of ·who
but there were enough timeouts can get the upperhand. And, I_
think we got it at just the right
spot."
·
Once again the man with the
hot hand for the Pointers was
Terry Porter. Porter racked up
22 points, grabbed three rebounds, and added two assists.
Although there was a stretch
where the Pointer. shots were
not falling, Porter felt that it
was not because they were doing
something diffe~:ent
"We took our usual shots that
we do during the game, but the
rim just didn't take them."
One of the keys to the Pointer
victory was the ability to shu!
off Blugold standout Chester
Smith. Tim Naegeli was given
the chore of guarding the 6-7
senior. Naegeli said there are no
real tricks t-o stopping Smith
outside of good strong defense.·
"You've just got to go out
hard, give good pressure on the
ball, and keep your hands in his
face when he shoots."
From here on in, the chore
gets that much tougher for the'
Pointers. They_head to Kansas
City to begin the tournament
March 14, and a totally new season lies ahead of them. Bennett
said the tournament takes on a
different light from any other
game his team has played to
this point. ·
"When you get down there
(K.C.) everybody has fought
through their district to get
there, so there are no stiffs
I
\
there.
Pointers: Porter 8-15, 6-6, 22; Olson 3-5, 44, 10; Kulas 4-10, ().(), 8; Naegeli 1-3, fi-6. 8;
Janse 1-4, ().(), 2; Roseboro o-1, 2-2, 2.
Blugolds:. Dahl 7-13, 3-31 14; Krueger 3-5,
6-7, 12; Smtth 4-12, ().(), 8; Blatr 2-5, G-2, 4;
Busby ().(), ().(), o.
1
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Ill'\
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Pointer Page 19
#Bennett' and Pointers earn AII-WSUC honors
- MADISON-Three members 11.0 points, 4.7 rebounds and 1.5
of the Wisconsin State Universi- assists per game. He has led
ty Conference champion UWSP . NAIA District 14 in field goal
have been named to the loop's percentage all season and has
all-league team which was an- made .667 percent of his shots.
nounced recently. In addition, He has also converted .674 perPointer coach Dick Bennett is cent of his charity shots.
the conference coach_ of ·the
year.
Named for the second straight
year is All-Ame-rican guard Terry Porter, while gaining their
first mention on the honor team
are junior center Kirby Kulas
and sophomore forw~rd Tim
· Naegeli.
The three were major forces =
in helping lead the Pointers to <cs
their fourth straight WSUC
championship with a 14-2 season c.c
record. UWSP, ranked No. 2 in;
the final NAIA national poll of ;:J
the season, took a 22-4 record
into the NAIA Di,strict 14 semifinals Monday.
Only WSUC runnerup UW-Eau
Claire joined UWSP in landing
more than one player on the
team- with the selection of
Chester Smith and Rick Dahl.
Rounding out the honor squad is
repeat selection Mark Linde of
UW-Whitewater along with newcomers Linus Vander Wyst, UWLa Cr-osse; Kurt Stellpflug, UW- ~
Stout; Todd Potokar, UW- .=
Os_hkosh; and Brian Jass, UW- ~
River Falls.
,
oo
Kulas, a fHi, 200-pound junior El=
from Medford, is scoring at a ::J
clip of 11.2 points per contest.
Tim Naegeli
He is also averaging a teamhigh total .of 6.0 rebounds a
Porter, a 6-3, 195-pound senior
game and has passed off for 1.4
assists per outing. He has shot from Milwaukee, possibly the
.509 arid .839 percent from the most complete player in the confield and free throw line, respec- ference, is averaging 19.3 points,
tively. He leads the t~am in 4.9 rebounds and 4.4 assists per
game. He has converted .568
blocked shots with 23.
Naegeli, a 6-7, 180-pounder percent of his field goals and
-who prepped at Racine's Luther- .817 percent of his free throws.
an High School, was the only He also 'leads the Pointers in the
sophomore 'named to the lO-man defensive categories of steals
all-league team. He is averaging (42), forced turnovers (26), and
recoveries (16).
f
{
The highly honored Porter is
currently the second all-time
leading scorer in UWSP history
with 1,494 points. He is also first
in steals (168), second in assists
(426), 15th in rebounding (423),
fourth in field goal percentage
(.586) and lOth in free throw percentage (.788). · ·
Bennett, the 1983-84 NAIA national coach of the year, earned
the WSUC coach of the year =
award for the second time as he <cs
was also accorded the honor in
1982-83. This year's Pointer c.c
team overcame the unexpected oo
losses of key personnel and set a ~
new league mark for defensive
point average ( 41i.4 . points a
game) while winning U.e title.
Terry Porter-"! don't know
what more this young man can
do for us. His roles are nu_merous and he always delivers
somehow. His contribution has
been mon~ental."
· The ninth year head coach of
the Pointers also reflected on his
own award.
"I feel honored to receive this
award. It is an award given to
me because of the efforts of our
team and staff. A coaching
award is clearly a team awa~d."
f
I
Dick Bennett
Lady runners grab
sixth place finish
Terry Porter
Bennett expressed delight with
the selection of his three players
to the all-conference team and
paid special tribute to each of
them.
Kirby Kulas-"He has been
our workhorse. His work habits
are the best on the team and
this honor is a just reward. He is
seldom the biggest, strongest or
fastest player on the floor, yet
game in and •game out he gets
the job done."
Tim Naegeli-"Tim comes on
as the game progresses. Most of
-~ Stepar'1ski wins; Dogfish sixth.
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. - The style on Friday.
UWSP men's swim team ie- · Samuelson, a senior from
ceived another second place fin- Park Ridge, Ill., placed third in
ish from standout Jeff Stepanski the 200 yard backstroke for the
along with a third from Pete Pointers with a time of 1:56.28.
Samuelson and as a team fin- He had also placed fourth in the
. ished sixth in the NAIA National 100 backstroke on Friday.
Swimming and Diving ChamUWSP's only other individual
pionships which concluded here top 12 finish was turned in by
Saturday.
Greg Schneider. in the 200
Drury College ._won the meet breaststroke where he was lOth
with 368 points ·while Central with a c~ocking of 2:11.64.
Washington was second with 350.
Roundirig out the top six were ·
Denver, 299; Bemidji State, 265;
UW-Eau Claire, 127.5 and
UWSP, 125.0.
Stepanski; a talented junior
· from Menasha, added a second
place finish in the 100 yard freestyle to his already impressive
list of tournament accomplish- ~
ments. He led the race going =:
into the turn but lost his lead at C.C
that point and lost out on first ~
place in a photo-finish. He had a j;::
time of :46.35 while the winning ;:J
time was :·46.28. In the preliminary competition, he set a new
UWSP recortl in the event with a
Jeff Stepanski
time of : 46.28.
In Thursday's competition SteThe Pointers' final points were
panski became_ UWSP's third- earned by the 400 freestyle relay
ever national champion as he foursome of Stepanski, Ken
won the 50 yard freestyle. He Brumbaugh, Steve Davis and
added a fourth in the 100 free- Scot Moser with a fifth place
his baskets are key ones. I believe he can be as good as he
wants to be. This . award is as
much a recognition of his potential as it is recognition of his
·achievement."
'
effort. The group established a
new UWSP record in the event
with a time of 3:08.46.
Point coach Red Blair expressed satisfaction with the
showing of his team in the high
powered meet. .
"I couldn't have asked for a
better effort from this , team,"
Blair praised. "Each and every
guy here la1d it on the line and
gave us his best.
.
~'Jeff Stepanski proved that he
was the class of the sprints. Had
he not had a poor turn in the 100
he would have had a national
championship in that event too.
"Pete Samuelson . has proved
for many years that he is one of
the best backstrokers around
and he showed that again down
here.
"I ani really proud of these
guys. It would have been nice to
finish ahead of Eau Claire, but ·
the diving points again did us in.
We did a heck of a job in the water and. really outscored them
there." '
Earning All-American honors
for the Pointers were Stepanski,
Samuelson, Schneider, Brumbaugh, Davis and Moser.
Blair was also in the spotlight
here as he was inducted into the
NAIA National Hall of Fame.
The UWSP women's track and
UwSP coach Rick Witt, who
field team continued its strong - accompanied .the team to the
early season showing by captur- meet, felt it performed · well
ing sixth place in the John Tier- against some outstanding comney Classic which was held in petition.
Milwaukee Saturday.
"I thought we had some -good
Host UW-Milwaukee easily efforts against scholarship
won the meet with 174 points schools," Witt praised. "We
while Marquette was second were simply out of our league in
with 79. Rounding out the top six tenns of competition.
places were DePaul, 70; UWWhitewater, 45.5; UW-Oshkosh, - "In addition, the women were
short-handed as a couple of key
44.5; and UWSP, 40.
All-American Michelle Riedi, people did not run.
a junior from - De Pere, was
"Michelle Riedi's performagain the individual standout for ance in the high jump certainly
UWSP as she captured first sticks out. .She is so good that
place in the high jump with a she does well against any comtop effort of 5'8". She had·alrea- petition.
dy qualified for the NCAA Divi"Cathy Ausloos is the runner
sion III National Meet.
of the week. She established a
Cathy Ausloos added a third new school record in the 600place finish in the_ 600 yard run yard run and also anchored .the
with a clocking of 1: 28.3.
two relays which placed.
Also placing third was the 880
"We also had many fin~ peryard relay team of Carlene Willkom, Reidi, Barb Knuese and formances by people who didn't
Ausloos with a time of 1:53.3, score, but noticeable improveand the one-mile relay foursome ments were made."
The Lady Pointers return to
of Annette Zuidema, Reidi, Kathy Seidl and Ausloos with a competition Thursday with a
meet at UW-Oshkosh.
time of 3:13.0.
-YOUR FREE RIDE
BUS HOURS:
1:00 P.M.-1:00 A.M.
Thurs.-thru-s.t. Lest Bus
1NftiHOP12:45
• -
Friday Seafood Buffet
'6.95
allyoucaneat:
Steam shrimp, fried scallops,
poorman's lobster, seafood
· Newburg, deep fried shrimp,
potato pancakes, french
fries, hash browns, shredded
onions & seaf()(!d chowder.
Sunday IJrunch
Prime Rib, Broasted Chicken.
Your choice of Omelet. Other
breakfast items, several
desserts, juices, salad bar,
etc.
CATCH THE HOP BUS TO THE HOUSE OF PRIME
IN FRONT OF THE DEBOT C_ENTER
-DAILY SPECIALSFri.-Catltoinle Coolin •1.25
Tun.-tmporta •1.00
s.t.-lllciMiob 75e
Wect.-Pitcher Nloht $1.75
Bun.-Rum- 700 8ecafclt800
. Thur.-MIIraarltaa •1.25
UW.;SP
Mon.-Higha.lla
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PLOVEI
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SERVING EVERY SUNDAY
10 a.m.·2 p.m. lrunch .......•........ • .._, .. $8.25
2:30 p.m.•I:OO p.m~·luffat .•.••.... . ..•.••.•• $8.15
HOUSE OF PRIME
Phon~
345-0264
'EZonfZolr
~
sA-
MADISON
-
Page 20 March 7, 1985
Zakrzewski drops first match
by Ron Ankley
Staff reporter
AUGUST ANA, -111.-A take·
down was all that separated Bill
Zakrzewski _from advancing in
the NCAA Division III wrestling
tournament here last weekend.
Zakrzewski, UWSP's lone representative, came ever so close
in gaining the necessary two
points. He gambled and lost,
bowing 9-6 to Scott Bloom of Qlivet, Mich., in the 190-pound
quarterfinals.
'"A takedown would have won
Thinclads bring
home first place
invitational trop~y
the match," said Pointer coach vice, prompting Munson to say,
John Munson. "He got down "We let him have a few days off
with seven seconds to go and he for nationals."
The Wisconsin State Universihad to try something-he went
for broke with a head seal but ty Conference held its own in the
he couldn't get it. Instead, the · 80-team field. WSUC champ Rivother guy got it."
·
er Falls had two national chamThe match was close through- pions-Dave Brandbold (177)
out, with neither wrestler able and Matt .Renn· (Hwt. )-on its
by Kent Walstrom
to gain the upperhand through way to a third place finish, beStaff reporter
the first two periods. Bloom, the hind national champion Trenton
The UWSP men's track team,
No. 6 seed, held a precarious 7-5 State, N.J.
The third place Falcons may which has shown continuing
lead with 3b seconds remaining
in the third period when J.akr- have wound up ·on top if not for potential through the opening
zewski scored an escape, mak- losing wrestlers in conference weeks of the season, delivered
ing it 7-6. The gamble, however, and regional action.
another · impressive showing
didn't pay off as the clock ticked
"The problem was we beat with a victory at the John Tieroff the final seconds.
each other up in conferences ney Invitational track and field
Zakrzewski was denied a spot and regionals and not enough meet in Milwaukee last weekin the wrestle-backs when were able to go,:' said Munson.
end.
Bloom lost his next match in "River Falls could have taken
Bolstered by five first places
overtime.
their whole team and won."
and a team effort that regisZakrzewski, a junior with
It was another story for the
tered UWSP in 16 of 17 events,
sophomore eligibility, concluded Pointers, whose .season could be
the Pointers ended the day with
season with a 12-6 record. divided into two stages-a sue- 139 points to claim top honors in
Munson felt his lone wrestler cessful first half followed by a the nine-team field.
UW-Milwaukee managed 131
fought ~aliantly to be among the second half marred with injubest 16 wrestlers in the country.
ries: A strong regional showing points in finishing second, followed by UW-Oshkosh, 127, and
"Bill belonged here and repre- added luster to the season for
UW-Whitewater, 103. Also parsented our school well," said Munson.
Munson. "Just to compete here
"Once we started g'etting guys ticipating but far behind in total
points were Parkside, Elmhurst,
is quite an honor/'
back healthy, we were all
Zakrzewski, actually; was a - right," he said. "We started off Platteville, Carroll and Carthwalk-on for Munson. He didn't the season .with a bang, going 6- age.
wrestle first semester and 0, then we lost four conference
Scott Laurent, who led the
joined the squad after a phone matches and came up wounded.
Pointers with a first place finish
call before the second semester
"Looking at individual compein the triple jump (46'10"),
started.
tition, it looked good. We had
missed the national qualifying
"We called him up at Christ- eight guys win 15 or more · distance by two inches and
mas time and asked him to matches for us this season."
earned praise from Coach Rick
come out," said Munson. ZakrSenior co-captains Shane
Witt with the effort.
zewski found time to wrestle Boehnen al'ld Scott Klein closed
"Scott did a great job for us
while juggling school and a out their collegiate careers for
today. His best jump was just
night shift at United Parcel Ser- UWSP.
short of the national qualifying
tlie
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'AAU medals go to Point kickers
DUGOUT
CLUB'S
Starting. Lineup
I 1. Happy Hour Tuesday 8-11 p.m.
t. Happy Hour·Thursday 7·10 p.m.
3~~1a Sefl HappyJ:t~~r-Frl. 5-8 p~m.
4~ Sat. Nl~ht Rugby Happy Hour 6-9 p.m.
So Come On Down
To .
Buffy's Lampoon
/IJ!IIf.,
· VIJq
13~1 2nd St.
-
.
~\~~
.~
Open Noon Til Close
-
..
NACHOS
&
HOT CHEESE SAUCE
ggc
641 Division St.
Stevens Point
distance, but it was two and a
half feet better than any of h,is
previous jumps."
Arnie Schraeder notched a
victory in the mile run (4:13), as
did Mike Walden in the pole
vault (15'2"), Ric Perona in the
intermediate hurdles ( :24.5),
and Tom Peterson in the 880
yard dash (1:55.5).
UWSP added three second
place finishes, including Mike
Nelson in the 1000 yard run
(2:19.3), Rod Wegner in the high
jump (6'6"), and Jim Bednar in
the intermediate hurdles (:25.7).
The Pointers also strung together eight third place finishes
in the win. •
."This was the nicest indoor
meet that we've been to all season, and the competition was
excellent," said Witt, who gave
his team some extra rest in
preparation for the meet. "We
definitely saw the real team
effort come through. We don't
have any superstars, but we
have a solid group of good
athletes which make this a very
fun year."
The Pointers will be put to the
test again this Saturday, when
they head to Oshkosh for another meet at the Kolf Sports Centei:..
gation of America's finest, most acquired through his many
. by Eric Post
highly rated karate competitors, years in karate, but was stopped
Staff reporter
all
vying for the top honors in short of the gold in the final ·
During the weekend of February 23-24, the A.A. U. held its what is considered to be one of championship round where he
annual Winter Games competi- the niost disciplined sports in fought' a close, hard ~itting
tion in Muskegon, Michigan. The existence, hoping to come away match.
Winter Games, with such events with what is the most coveted
as the biathalon, the luge, cross- sports award in existence; the
· Karner, who also teaches karcountry skiing, and wrestling, as goldmedal.
Two Stevens Point men com- ate classes at UWSP, fought a
well as team rosters carrying
some _of the most well-known peted in the 1985 Winter Games, comeback match. Losing in an
names in world class competi- and both of them nearly cap- early round to a competitor on
tive athletes, has all the trap- tured that award. Tony DeSardi, the World Games circuit, Karnpings of the Olympics, except a fourth degree black belt, and er saw that his only chance at
for one thing: the Olympic Jay Karner, first degree black gaining a placement finish lie in
Games doesn't include karate as belt, both brought ho~e silver battling his way through the folone of its international sports. medals in the Heavyweight and lowing roURds to the finals. And
. The A.A.U., on the other hand, Middleweight divisions respec- that he did, in an amazing disdoes sponsor karate tourna- tively. DeSardi, Wisconsin chair- play of technique and proficienman of the A.A.U. and instruc- cy that left his adversaries
ments.
cleanly outscored and which
And what a tournament tbey tor of UWSP karate classes,
sponsored-that weekend. Satur- swept through the tournament placed him in the highest possiday's competition saw a congre- with all the skill and tenacity ble standings allowing one defeat.
~~i'wfLDLANDS~
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EXTENDED EDUCATION
Summer & Fall '85
3-14 units
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This was the first time karate
was included in multi-sport competition by the A.A.U. and DeSardi said that karate's overall
good showing in the games
proved to the A.A.U. the importance of karate as an American
sport. DeSardi also said _that he
thinks the inclusi~n of karate in
other nationally and internationally sponsore-d events is
imminent, and that brings kar~
ate one step closer to being inducted into the Olympic Games.:
Both De8ardi and .Karner are
members of the U~ted States
Karate Team, and DeSardi has
recently returned from the
world championship tournament
h~ld in Holland.
-~---
-·---·---·
Pointer Page 21
Global awareness, cont.
•
again play the key role. We need to
.combine our diStinctive innovation
and tradition with the global pool of
shared achievements. We must attain
a federation of human cultural contributions.
One of the most remarkable things
about the life of mankind is the fashion in ·which particular groups work
out a culture which can be so distinc. tive. We should ~ot only know of these
cultures but we must be able to enter
into their .meaning and quality. Stu- dents should · be encouraged ' to elect
many co'urses · in the history and in
the literature of various nations. Every step in disciplined thought as to
the fashion in which men of ·various
cultures have lived and achieved has
its own great value.
AI P. Wong.
News Editor
ATTENTION!
Prints and Slides
from the same roll
Kodak MP film ... Eastman Kodak's ·
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NAME
ADDRESS
CITY
STATE
ZIP
Mail to: 8Nttle FllmWorka
P.O. BoxC-34056
Seatti~~X'M~ 24
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you.can pick them·up in the Pointer
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.
·Damsel, cont.
cause he and my mother were
separated shortly after their
· brief, but passionate, affair.
Legend has it that my father
had begun a large celebration to
commemorate. that unforgettable night. My mother has passed
on, 15 years now, because of the
lost love of this mysterious man.
I am all that remains to retain
their undying love. Therefore, I
have sworn that I will fil_ld my
father and ask him to take the
throne as king. But alas, my evil
Uncle Lquis seeks the throne for
his own,. and is at this moment
plotting to kill both me and my
father. His men are everywhere; no one is safe.
I must rel}ch my father on my
birthday. I beg anyone havihg
any knowledge -of my father to
contact me. I already have
·a cquired a small group of trusted friends. They graciously
offered to aid me .in my quest.
·But I must not reveal their identity, although they have a code
name: B.U.R.N.O.U.T.S.
Please
help
me,
anyone!!!!!!!!!! (and the plot
- thickens. . . )
·
Edna T. Oliva
The world
is waiting~
Bean ·
exchange
~student.
Foreign Student Office, cont.
clothes are very expensive here
as compared tQ their homelands.
"Foreign students also enjoy
going places," said Fang. "They
love to be invited home for the
weekend or asked .to go on a
shopping trip."
In finishing, Fang added "that
he only wishes that American
students would try harder tO in- corporate the foreign students
into their lives. It's not that difficult," he said, "and they have
so much to offer one another.
.It's an opportunity that not everyone has during their lifetime.
So take advantage of your
opportunities. There's a· world of
knowledge to be learned from
these students!"
C 1984 McDonald's Corporation
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IT'S A
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.
BreakfaotMon.·Sot.
7:30 a.m.·10:30 a.m.
Regular Menu
10:30 a.m.·11 p.m.
Sunday 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
Reg. 11a.m.·11 p.m.
127 Dlvllion St.
\
Page 22 March 7, 1985
Thursday and Friday, March 7 & 8
UAB brings you Monty Python's The Meaning of Ufe, starring Graham Chapman, John
Cleese · Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, Terry Jones
and Michael Palin. In this scathing social satire the sacrilegious satirical six have taken up
th~ monumental task of explaining the meaning of life. The results are pungent, hilarious
and priceless views of sex, religion, birth, war
and death. This relentless and irreverent insanity leaves nothing or no one untouched. Monty
Python- tackles life and wrestles it to the
ground in the most savagely ~rious, rude
and amusing, vulgar and conuc, gross and
sidesplitting film you will ever see. A Monty
Python vignette, The Crimson Permanent
Assurance, a wittily conceived and executed fable that views business as a pirate saga precedes and later invades the feature film. The
Mr. Creosote scene is guaranteed to make yoll..
vomit laughter. Shows are at 7 and 9 p.m. in
the Program Banquet Room of the University
Center. Come and discover the true meaning of
life.'
-·
wanted
FOR RENT-: Summer sublet. Nice
one-bedroom apartment. One block
from campus. $250 whole summer.
One female needed. Lori, 345-1725.
FOR RENT: Student housing for
next year; groups of 4-7, choice locations. Call during -business hours. 3417906.
. FOR RENT: Large three-bedroom
apartment for fall. $825 per semester
for single includes heat and hot water. Nine-month lease requirid. Summer housing also available. 341-1473.
· FOR RENT: One female roommate needed to share a cozy two-bedroom apartment with responsible
working girl. Must be a non-smoker
.with good cleaning habits. Your
share Of rent is $115 per month pi~
utilities. Call Kim between 10 a.m.
and 1 p.m. at 34~.
FOR RENT: Wanted three' people
to sublet three-bedroom apartment.
Available end of May. Call Dave at
345-2161.
for
sale
FOR SALE: Not just good speakers, the best! Venture Electronic
- Systems tntra Acoustic Series 4000
professional speakers; 125 watts, 8
Ohm, frequency response 35 to 22,000
Hz. 12-inch woofer, two midrange
and two tweeters. Brand new with
five-year warranty. Retail price is
$850 per pair;· will sell for $385 per
pair. Call Rick at 424-4243, evenings.
These are speakers of the highest
quality that you must see and hear to
fully appreciate.
FOR SALE: Leather biker's jacket. Medium. Good condition. $85. Call
Bob, 346-4567, Rm. 443.
FOR SALE: 12-string guitar, beautiful condition, hardshell case. Make
an offer. Call evenings, 592-4861.
FOR SALE: Storewide Bag Sale
March 8 and 9 at Second Street Second Hand (1355 Second St.). Bag of
clothes $3. All clothing- included.
Starts tomorrow (Friday) at 1.p.m.
FOR SALE: '76 VW Rabbit. Great
condition, excellent gas mileage. $900
or best offer. Call 341-3270. ask for
• c. •
L
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-. '- Cl C. l
&
&:
ll.
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f
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~
I
A
A •
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Cl\[\1 \ SC(WE
~lass!fte<l
Leah.
for rent
Sunday, March 10
There will be a combmed concert featuring the University
Orchestra with Jon Borowicz,
music director, and the Stevens
Point Area Senior High · School
Orch.estra with Joyce Wotruba,
director. The two will perform
- works by Haydn, Copland, Beethoven and Britten. The music
starts at 3 p.m. in Michelsen Recital Hall of the Fine Arts Center. Free admission.
Sunday, March 10
There will be a Wisconsin Arts ·
Quintet concert with Paul
Doebler, flute; Daniel Stewart,
oboe; Andrea Splittberg-Rosen,
clarinet; David Beadle, bassoon; and·Christopher Callahan,
French horn. It will feature a
program of all French music including works by Rameau,
Francaix, Damase and Bozza.
The concert begins at 8 p.m. in
Michelsen Recital Hall of the
Fine Arts Center. Free admission.
Monday, March 11 ·
Guest artist Lawrence Gwozdz
will be performing on the saxophone beginning at 8:15 p.m. in
Michelsen Recital Hall of the
Fine Arts Center. He will be as-
sisted by Lisa Arnold on the pi- bump fi·om tragedy to tragedy
ano. There will also be a saxo- going out into ,the wo~ld as a
phone clinic with Lawrence false prophet and w1fe. The
Gwozdz at 4 p.m. in Room C-121 movie stars Dudley Moore, Larof the Fine Arts Center. Free aine Newman, James Coco,
Dom DeLuise, Madeline Kahn
admission.
and Richard Pryor.
Wednesday, March 12
Kathleen Demlow will play the
horn in Junior Recital beginning
at 8 p.m. in Michelsen Recital
Hall of the Fine Arts Center. She
will be assisted by Tim Lutz on
the piano. Also the Faculty
Monday, March 11
Brass Trio with Tom Falkavage,
Tune in to 90FM at 5 p.m. for
trumpet, Christopher Callahan,
horn, and Donald Schleicher, In Depth Radio. 'flili! week, the
trombone, will perform. Free Stevens Point snow removal system will be disCussed. Particiadmission.
I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I
pate in this In Depth interview
with Jon Van Alstine, director of
Public Works, and your. host,
Michelle Shockley. Call in with
I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I C I I
· your questions, conunents and
Monday and Tuesday, March complaihts-a~ ~2696.
11&12
·
Wholly Moses will be showing
in Allen Upper at 6:30 and 8:30
p.m. both nights. This is the story of Herschel, who wagted to
be Moses but didn't have the
right connections. Herschel as an Frlday and Saturday, March 8
infant, was cast adrift in the &9
The Pointer men's tennis team
Nile with the hope of being discovered and raised by the Phar- hosts the Point Invite beginning
aoh's daughter. However, Hers- at 2 p.m. on Friday and 8 a.m.
chel is adopted by idolmakers. on Saturday. The action takes
It's downhill from there on as place in the HPERA Building.
.
Herschel and his wife Zarelda Come cheer .the netters on!
off plus one .day a week off.,CSll Kathv. 341-8884.
announcements
ers--drlvers and riders : Please sign
up at the trippers desk if you Wish to
return to Omro during sunnier
weather.
ANNOUNCEMENT: Wednesday,
March 13, is Fast Day! Get yo\lr
sponsors now and join in helping the
world's hungry people. Call 346-3678
for info. Sponsored by Lutheran Student Community.
ANNOUNCEMENT: Need a stimulating event? How about a couple
days in Chicago. Psych Club will be
gomg to Chicago for the Midwest
Psychological Association convention
this May. Details will 'be available at
Psych Club's next meeting March 12,
at 6:33 p.m., in the Red Room, UC.
All members and anyone else still
wanting to join Psych Club are welcome. Dues are $2 per year.
ANNOUNCEMENT : Dr. Carl
Johnson of UW-Madison presents
"The Genetics of Acetylcholine Related Enzymes in the Nematode."
It's tonight at 7 in A224 Science
Building. Everyone is welcome to
attend. Sponsored by Tri-Beta.
ANNOUNCEMENT: St. Urho
chased the grasshoppers out of Finland! Celebrate St. Urho Day at
Peace Campus Center, 5:30, March
16. Call 346-3678 for reservations. A
fine Finnish dinner will be served
(but no grasshoppers).
·
ANNOUNCEMENT : Daytona
Beach Party! You drive-$89. We
drive-$174. The best price on campus .to the world's biggest party. The
deadline has been extended one week
to Friday, March 15, but payment in
f~l is, ~equired. Paul, 344-7712, for
Sign-up mfo~
WANTED: Your rarely used canoe-sell it to me for cash you need
ANNOUNCEMENT: El Club Espanow. Call Daniel, 6-10 p.m., 34~-4359. , no! is a university recognized organiWANTED: YOUNG LIFE is start- zation. It promotes on-eampus and
ing a new club in Stevens Point. within the community the rich and
Looking for alumni who would like to lively Hispanic culture by developing
be leaders. H interested, call 344- an awareness , and appreciation for
1490.
Spanish contributions to and inWANTED: Wisconsin's leading
fluences on our community and counfishing magazine needs help. Writers try's past and present. Through varithat know Wisconsin waters, fishing, ous activities mcluding holiday fiescamping, outdoors, etc. Profit for · tas1 attending the Milwaukee Folk
your knowledge. Write Roadmap to Fa1r, and Tertulias, the club encourWISconsin Fishing, Box 383, Green ages interest in and knowledge of the
Lake, WI 54941.
Spanish language, customs, music,
WANTED: A person to dog-watch a art and traditions. Currently 25
five-year-old German Shepherd-Col- members ·contribute · to the club's
lie until May. Negotiable pay. Call activities. Membership is open to
Paul at 346-2732, Rm. 235. Leave anyone interested in learning and exmessage.
periencing a bit of Hispanic culture.
WANTED: Three people- to sublet On Friday, March 8, the Spanish
three-bedroom apartment. Available Club will be selling Spanish souvenirs in booth No. 6 in the UC Conend of May. Call Dave at 345-2161.
. course. Looking forward to seeing
you there! Happy National Foreigr.
Language Week!
ANNOUNCEMENT: Are you creaFOUND: One female watch found tive? UAB Athletic Entertainment
near DeBot. Call to identify. 346-2527, needs your help. The dog tag logo
Rm. 127, ask for Micki.
has got to go. Come up with something better and you can get a free
sports _pass for next year! Submit
your idea before March 1~ to win! !
ANNOUNCEMENT: Road trip to
EMPLOYMENT: Summer jobs Madison: Details will be available at
opportunity for dietetic majors. Food the next Psych Club meeting, Tuesservice director position open for day, March 12, at 6:33 p.m. (our
qualified applicantS. To run from usual starting time) in the Red
May 24 1985, through August 24, Room, UC. Everyone is welcome.
1!185. All applicants must sign up in People still interested in joining
advance to be interviewed. The inter- Psych Club are also invited to
views will be March 12 in the Career attend. Dues are $2 per year.
Services Office between 9 a.m. and
ANNOUNCEMENT : Spring
PERSONAL: Jeffrey : Now Con. 12 noon. Write: Camp Luther, 1889 Break-south Padre Island. There's stance
and Julio Rule! You have
Koubenic Rd., Three Lakes, WI still a few space left for the Spring
been
replaced! ! Sorry. Love, Veg.
54562, for more info.
Break alternative in tropical paraUnofficial congrats
EMPLOYMENT: Overseas· jobs. dise. ,Reserve yours now. cr & T, toPERSONAL:
the happy couple from Hansen and
Summer, year-round. Europe, South 341-4848.
Roach. Another bachelor bites the
America, Australia, Asia. All .fields.
ANNOUNCEMENT: Lent is a time
! Signed, The Matron of Honor.
$900-$2,000 per month. Sightseeing. to grow in your faith- to share it dust!!
PERSONAL: Le t 's F aith It!
Free info. Write IJC, P.O. Box 52-WI- with others! Join us for worship this You're
invited to enrich your faith at
5, Corona Del Mar, CA 92625.
·
Sunday, 10:30 a.m., Peace Campus our Sunday worship celebration,
EMPLOYMENT: Two females for Center, behind Happy Joe's. Spon- 10:30 a.m., Peace Campus Centersummer hou~ekeeping job. $275 per sored by Lutheran Student Communi- behind Happy Joe's. Sponsored by
month, free room and board on Long ty.
Lutheran Student Community.
Lake, Saxeville, WI. Every afternoon
ANNOUNCEMENT: ParachutPERSONAL: Jimmy J : Happy be-
I o s t & found
employment
Personals
.,._ ,. -
._ ., _. -. .._ -. •
•
lated birthday! Hope it was a good
one! I'm still Y.L.B. Love ya, Lori.
PERSONAL: To the owner of the
toejam collection: I'd like to have
dibs on it. When?
PERSONAL: O.Z. : Thanks for everything-all the times you've · listened and kept me pluggm' alon~. I
don't know what I'd have done Without you! Love, Kim. P.S. Happy
Number23!!
PERSONAL: Dear Stain: Hey, you
D.B., why haven't you written?!? I
thought seeing this in print might
prompt you to, so write!! Dead Toad.
PERSONAL: Cold Licorice:
Alright, alright, no headstands. .
.guaranteed! But, as for big cookies,
J make no promises. Perfect weather
for hot cider, don't you think? Blueberry Muffin.
_
PERSONAL: Hey Garvey: Happy
Birtl)day! Eagle Walk practice or
not, I want to see you on your 8-day.
What kind of cake do you want?
Love, Jill..
PERSONAL: Guess what? Jan,
Jean, Sharron and Kirt are all going
tO Florida ($174 we drive or $89 you
drive) Friday morning March 29
with Campus Marketing. It's gonna
be great!! Ask Paul (344-7712) for
any details. Signed, Fired Up.
PERSONAL: Hi, curious about all
those TIES ad in Pointer Daily??
Come to UC Materials Center and
check out what it is.
PERSONAL: Da-ytona Beach
Trip-We still have some openings on
..the last bus, but hurry first come,
first serve! Hotel only $89, motorcoach and hotel for entire week $174.
Call Paul at 344-7712 for sign-up information.
PERSONAL: To Tom, Jill, Paul:
Thank you for your friendship. It's
meant so much these past months. I
hope it grows stronger in months .to
come. Linda.
PERSONAL: Two .more room"mates needed for spaciol;IS house.
Has laundry, two full baths, garage,
great landlords. $550 per semester
plus utilities. Close to campus and
downtown. Call 341-8884.
PERSONAL: Tol Paw: You are
diamond, just a li~e ro~h around
the edges. I will never give up on
. you. LBK.
PERSONAL: To the boys of Summer IR.G. & B.G. · Hurt me baby,
, Pointer Page 23
I
hurt ine real 1bad, make me write
bad checks; a!ld if you don't like it,
get the f- out! Me.
PERSONAL: Amy Forster : Happy
Birthday Roomie! Sorry it's lil.te.
Hope it was a good one. Love, Your
Roomies.
·
PERSONAL: Attention Area Resi- '
dents: My name is Edna T. Oliva
and I am rapidly approaching my
16th birthday. I have been living with
my mother, the Queen of Ludonia.
But recently. . .
PERSONAL: Corky Bean: Happy
Birthday to one of our favorite people. Sending hugs and kisses on your
big 21. We'lllove you always. Have a
good one-Kris & Heidi.
PERSONAL: Primed and Leaper:
Sorry we didn't include you with 3W.
You know we Jove you anyway! Kri:s
&Heide.
PERSONAL; Eliminate the whips
and chain from your training and
development skills. Come to
S.C.O.T.'s First Annual Interorganizational Training Fair and learn to
get an effective grip on yourself and
people who work for you.
PERSONAL: Marshall: You sex
god you. I don't know if I can handle
all these dates. When are we getting
engaged?? K.
PERSONAL: I have discovered
that my real father, Sir James Oliva,
has been living in this area. My father does not know of me, as yet, because he and my mother...
PERSONAL: Meet TIES!! Would
you like to know more about the
opportunities to get involved here on
campus? Come to TIES at the UC
Materials Center and make an appointment now!
PERSONAL: You know, sometimes I think we're just too nice! But
let's not ever lose that quality. You
both ' are the greatest housemates
ever!! Love, F.
, PERSONAL: Catherine J: I've just
about had it with this .snow and shit.
Let's cruise South on March 29! A
permanent Padre resident.
PERSONAL: Janis: I really am
glad that car and truck didn't take
you away from me. I love you, Mark.
PERSONAL: Chris: What a guy.
Thanks for the walk home Saturday
night. What would we have done
without y_ou? Yqu're a real sweetie!
Love, Lisa & Sue.
·
PERSONAL: Who ever won something with their dog tags? Ask
Roberta Wood, Sue Morelis, or Darlene Vangom!Jel. They've all won.
We'd like to thank the winners. Your
chance may be next, so wear the dog
tags!!!
.
PERSONAL: Earth-Structure:
Just remember, "Life's a bitch and
then you die! " Sally.
PERSONAL: To the person who
took the black hat from 3N Hansen
Bourbon Street: 'Could you return it
please. No questions asked. Kris, 107
Neale, X2458.
PERSONAL: Never assume, because you mak~ an ASS out of U and
ME! But, always be assertive! Come
learn about it with us at. S.C.O.T.'s
First Annual Interorganizational
Training Fair. Don't miss it!
PERSONAL: Me on, my quest. But
I must not reveal their identify,
although they do have a code name,
burnouts. Please help me!!!! (And
the plot thickens. . .)
PERSONAL: I must reach my father before midnight, my birthday.
Anyone having any knowledge of my
father's whereabouts, contact me. I
have already acquired a small group
of friends to aid. . .
PERSONAL: And ask him to take
the throne as King. But alas, my evil
Uncle Louie seeks the throne for
himself. He has sworn to kill both me
and my father ...
PERSONAL: Joan : Thanks for
being such a good friend and roomy.
I don't know what I'd do without you
to help me through all my problems.
Thanks! Love, Colette. ·
PERSONAL: 15 years now, because of the lost Jove of this mysterious man. I am all that remains to retain their undying love. Therefore, I
have sworn to find my father ...
PERSONAL: Were separated
shortly after their brief but passionate affair. Legend has it that my father had begun a large celebration to
commemorate that unforgettable
night. My mother has _Qassed on. . .
PERSONAL: Greg (Jeffrey): Skating is just too cool. Next tune we
should wear •our prom outfits. Then
play-zoom, shorts and Booger and no
kissing unless it says so. P.S. Now
it's two to nothing. Love, Marcia,
Jan &Cindy.
PERSONAL: Everybody just chill
out, OK? Spring fever! Be happy!
Hi, Lisa!
PERSONAL: We don't have staredowns like we used to...probably because they would never end. . .and
because we're not afraid to really
look anymore!
·
PERSONAL: Me? Mischievous?
Never! _Dnder t~e circumstances
you'd think I'd have to be clever to
hook you! But I didn't even try!
What a power trip!
PERSONAL: Nancy: Thanks so
much for inviting me home with you.
I had a great time. Joan.
PERSONAL: Hello Duluth! I must
say, I may be going mental, but I believe Dave C. had a B-day! Hope it
was good! '
PERSONAL: Laurie: Thank you
very much for being there. You are a
good friend! Sue.
PERSONAL: To Chi, our man
from 3 West Hansen: Yes-it's true!!
How does being an usher appeal to
you? Signed, the Happy Couple.
PERSONAL: P.C. Beware! Cujo's
on the loose! Love, Beth.
PERSONAL: Connie, Joy, Laura &
Maureen: Thanks for adding so .
much fun to our lives. We Jove you!
Nancy and Joan.
.
.
PERSONAL: Amy: "D" day is
here, please don't blow the plan for
the lumps! Remember, there's a certain amount of risk in every relationship-get rid of some of those securities! Lynn.
PERSONAL: To my little elf: If
you have the ribs I've got the sauce.
How about a little elfin magic. Meet
me in the timber reserve. J.
PERSONAL: Dear Half-a-Bottle of
Gin: You are one ci my closest
friends and no matter what happens
that will never change. Love, 4 HB
Head.
PERSONAL: Mary: You're a rollerskating queen! I want to see you
in action. Love, Beth.
PERSONAL: To the men minus
"the Boy" : Thanks ·for the "za" on
Saturday. We'll have you over for
dinner-provided that we don't meet
up with Cujo first! Good Lord!
PERSONAL: Cliff, Cathy, Cris and
Carolyn: Thanks so much for taking
over for me last week. The time off
helped. Joan.
•
PERSONAL: The men in No. 25:
Who thinks I smell like a cheese
sandwich? I guess "Ralph Hauren's"
losing it. Norman take another whiff!
Signed, Not Psycho. P.S. I keep
promises.
PERSONAL: Reualc: Thanks for
last week's message. It helped a Jot.·
Thanks for being you. Love, Joel S.
PERSONAL: Do you want to
cheer? Football cheerleading tryouts are coming up! There will be an
informational meeting for anyone interested in becoming a football
cheerleader or stuntman Tuesday,
March 19, from 4-6 p.m. in the Gymnastics Room, Berg Gym. Please
attend.
PERSONAL: Deahn: Thanks for
being the best roomie on campus!
Don't know what I'd do without you.
Love, Lori.
PERSONAL: Support the 1985
Pointer football team-be a cheerleader!! An informational meeting
for football cheerleading try-out will
be held Tuesday, March 19,.from 4-6
p.m. in the Gymnastics Room, Berg
Gym. Anyone interested in being ·a
cheerleader or a stuntman please
attend . .
PERSONAL: Too: Must you
always hide in public. "Here's Looking at You Kid." With care and Jove
and a bestseller.
PERSONAL: It would be greatly
appreciated if the person who took
my black gangster hat from 3W Hansen Saturday night would return it.
Contact Kris in 107, X2458.
PERSONAL: SNM: Windsurfing,
golf, sailing, tennis, deep-sea fishing,
poolside parties, seafood, the zoo,
giant water slide, sunbathing, citrus,
of course, the partying. South Padre,
here we come! KJ.
PERSONAL: Janis, Andy, Sam:
There are just three weeks left until
we are on our way down to bask in
the sun on South Padre Island. Mark.
PERSONAL: Do you want to get
that paper done by Friday? That thesis fmished by semester end? Want
to become a millionaire by the time
you're 30? Consider Goals with us at
S.C.O.T.'s First Annual Interorganizational Training Fair.
PERSONAL: 3W Hansen: Next
time I send you a card, you can fill it
out yourself you Goons! Love, Kris.
So quit whining.
PERSONAL: L~urie: Well you
wanted it, now you got your own personal! I can't wait for Florida; but
we~ll have to cut down on them
doughnuts. From your Florida Buddy.
PERSONAL: Ravaging sex?? Nomanaging stress!! Find out more at
the First Annual Interorganizational
Training Fair held by S.C.O.T. Coming soon!!
PERSONAL: Hey Avers: Last
Wednesday night was fun! Too bad
the electncity went off so early! A
St. Paul's Girl.
PERSONAL: Happy Birthday,
Denny Woik!! We Jove you much!
Have a great day...Love, She-Woman, Battle-Panther, and The Little
Guy From Schmeeckle. (P.S. We will
conquer you!!)
PERSONAL: S.C.O.T. wants you!!
We're the Student Chapter for Organizational Training and we want you
to join us at our First Annual Interorganizational Training Fair. It's
coming soon! !
PERSONAL: F.W.: Howdo we top
last weekend? I believe this calls for
a spectacular application of our 11
rules of life. Don't waste ice mmm..
.E.T.
PERSONAL: Hebe: So what's this
about Military Ball? Is this for real
or should we refer to our lives as
"The Young and Frustrated?" Remember-men are only good for two
things: using and blaming. Pinkie.
PERSONAL: Annie, Fannie and
Mike: So I got a little out of control
with these! I did it because I know
you have no sense of adventure!
Drapernaldia.
·
PERSONAL: Poop: Only after two
years and seven months do you get a
personal. Just to say I love you (and
that white rat you call Kitty)! Love,
"The Alternator Man."
PERSONAL: Last call: 15th
Annual International Dinner and
Entertainment is on March 9, Saturday, 6 p.m. at Allen Center. Get your
tickets before they are sold out!
Tickets are $9 only.
PERSONAL: Kelly Lewis have a
great birthday on March 12. Party
now, remember you're catching up
to me! Guess who.
PERSONAL: Hello Jeff 2 of the
kind and gentle ~es: Hope you have
a good day! You will find out who I
am in a bit. A Schmeeckle Friend.
PERSONAL: 1109 Fremont: Are
our legs in good shape? The Urban
Beautification Committee.
PERSONAL: We're not talking
railroad ties! Would you like to learn
more about T.I.E.S. ?? We're referring to the Total lnvol~ement Educational System. It's an important tool
you could learn about attending
S.C.O.T.'s First Annual Interot:gamzational Training Fair. All aboard!!
PERSONAL: Have you often wondered what George Bush does? Do
you need to know what the role of a
vice president is? Find the answer to
this and more at the First Annual Interorganizational Training Fair.
Sponsored by S.C.O.T.!
PERSONAL: Did you ever wish
you had more time to go for the gusto? Do you just have too much to do?
Well, come to the Student Chapter
for Organizational Training's First
Annual Interorganizational Training
Fair and learn some useful methods
of time management. Don't let the
good life pass you by!
PERSONAL: Can we help you get
unstressed? Come learn with us
about effective techniques for coping
with stress. Attend the Student Chapter for Organizational Training's
First Annual Interorganizational
Training Fair. Coming soon!
PERSONAL: Coming up . . .fast!
don't forget that Wednesday, March
13, is the day for the 24-hour Fast for
World Hunger! Get your sponsors
and go for if! Lutheran Student Commumty.
PERSONAL: Frannie: Do I know
you? Now-1 didn't think so. (Ha,
ha) You girls sure know how to
throw a party. Lisa.
PERSONAL: Sweetie: Never had a
party on your 16th birthday? Well,
we're havmg one that you'll never
forget. Join the 90FM staff. for the
TRMA '85 "Kiss" Off, on March 8
and 9 at 11:30 p:m. at Campus Cinema. This year's movie is American
Graffiti. Sweet 16 and never been
missed!
·
PERSONAL: For those of you interested in Psych Club's trips to
Madison and Chicago, attendance at
the March 12 meeting is mandatory!! For more details look at the
Announcement section...
PERSONAL: Mic & Lisa: thanks
for all the support! (Heaven knows, I
need it!) With your help and Jove I
know that I'll make it, one way or
another. Let's go out real soon and
get normal! Love ya both, Me
Munch.
PERSONAL: Why haven't I
reached self-fulfillment? I need sexa most basic element of Maslow's
hierarchy. Exceptionally lonely male
(charter member of Lonely-Unloved
Club) seeks companionship. Please
phone 344-0996.
PERSONAL: Hey Goomba! Hoiya,
hoiya, hoiya! Anybody want to rent a
tandem? Ya lrnow ...Bessie will be
back soon. Road trip! Who's Hollywood and what does he know about
red hair? Roger.
PERSONAL: Teca: Last weekend
\Vas so special even if it wasn't what
we planned. We know we'll always
have each other and that's a comforting thought. Next year will be the
best reunion this campus has seen.
Fluffy.
.
PERSONAL: UWSP basketball
cheerleaders and stuntmen, you're
looking ~ood!!! Good luck at the
tournaments. Hope to see you all at.
the party!!! Debbie.
PERSONAL: Chris: Bet you
thought I'd forget about your personal. Not a chance! Lisa.
·
PERSONAL: To the off-court
team: Thank you for all your cooperation and dedication to all of this
year's UAB Athletic Entertainment
Activities. You are a special group of
people.
.
PERSONAL: Lost: One black,..hat
from 3W Hansen Bourban Street Saturday, March 2. If found, contact
Kris, 107 Neale, X2548.
PERSONAL: . . .over the top of
his desk. "Run off to Paris with me
and we'll-." "Suck air, oh fair
Prince," said P.E. "I want a career,
or so my. . .cont.
·
·PERSONAL: Dear concerned parent(s) and relatives: I have returned
from my adventure unscathed and
pure. My virtue is still intact. (Or at
least in the same condition it was
when I left.) Good thing I don't
snore! Bird.
PERSONAL: Mark and Deb: Glad ·
to hear the hair situation is in' remission. I suppose you can Jose just so
much of the stuff, though, huh? Jodi
was correct in her evaluation of the
male form in question. If you don't
take her word for it, take mine-1
saw a Jot of it! ! !
I
THE TIME IS NOWGAIN THE KNOWLEDGE OF
EXPERIENCED ORGANI ZATIONAL
LEADERS! !
DISCOVER THE SKILLS YOU
CAN APPLY TO YOUR FUTURE!!
ATTEND OUR KEY:JOTE SPEAKER
WHEN SHE ADDRESSES APPLYING YOUR
SKILLS TO YOU R CAREER.
CHOOSE TO ATTEND ANY OF
.THE SESSIONS TO BE PRESENTED
AT THE FAIR .SUBJ ECTS LIKE:
-MOTIVATION
-ST~ESS
MANAGEMENT
-THE ROLE OF VICE-PRESID ENT
-TIME MANAGEMENT
-WORKING WITH BUDGETS
COME TO S.C.O.T. '&FIRST INTERORGANIZATIONAL TRAINING FAIR!
MARCH 23 AT THE UNIVERSITY CENTER!
WAICH
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WITH A NEW LIGHT SHOW ON
THE WAY, VA ALLEN IS EX~
PECTING A RECORD NUMBER ·
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