· SGA talks, orgariizations question

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Number 29, Volume 22
University of Wisconsin- Stevens Point
Budget Allocations
·SGA talks, orgariizations question
explain why they feel they ual basis and the money taken so on. During the many ques:should be funded. If senators out of special reserves for these tions, Marston interjected, "I do
have any questions, they use types of requests.
• not
how you, Robin Engel,
that time, all the while taking
During deliberations, a mo- can include yourself when you
All student organizations into consideration what the Fi- tion was made to zero fund
wishing to be annually funded nance. Committee recommended GPU. Cheri Marston, one of the
have deliberately discriminated
came before SGA Sunday dur- . the funding to be. GPU representatives, calmly yourself in a Letter to the Edimg' budget allocations. Forty-six
quoted SGA's own Constitution tor printed in The Pointer.
organizations put in requests;
Some organizations, such as regarding removing oneself
41 were allocated funds and five the Accounting Club, the Ameri- from a vote if any biases were
Robin Engel abstained from
were zero funded. (See chart can Indians Resisting Ostracism felt. "We're not unj~y asking
for total listings on page 4.)
Club and STAR were zero fund- for money; we're educating the voting on GPU's amendments,
ed and told they would be better student body, not just the gay but did vote against the final
$595 GPU finally received. SGA
Deliberations, which lasted off making individual requests people."
from 9 a.m. into the early eve.
,
GPU was asked· questions rening, allowed student organiza- for programmmg, travel and so . peatedly on things such as their President Chris Johnson
tions to appear one last time be- on next year. These ·requests • concert-funding requests their allowed Engel's vote and said,
fore the Senate to justify and/or. would be decided on an individ- telephone, postage requests, and "I would rule that he was exby Joann1! Davis
News Editor
see
pressing his opinion as a student, not as a senator."
As a cost-saving measure,
90FM and The Pointer were
granted monies to .purchase
computer equipment to be _
shared between the two organizations. The equipment w_ill
save The Pointer alone approximately $25,000 annually in type- ·
setting costs. 90FM will utilize
it for business operations, daily
logs, Trivia and filing the music
library.
•see Outdoor Section for
CNR's allocation story.
Complaints filed against local health club ·Jazz group's
said that the furnace went out
and that· it was going to cost
Staff Reporter
them $10,000 to replace it,
which is complete assininity,"
Several complaints have been Riley said. "That's what they
filed against the Dynamic used for a scam to close it
Health Club on Division Street down," he added.
in Stevens Point for allegedly.
breaking their contracts with its
According to Riley, after two
membe-rs because they are clos- months they finally just said
ing down. "Right now we're they weren't going to reopen.
basically ob~ complaints - "As of November they're violatfrom any person that wants to ing the contract. Anytime
file-a complaint. We're review- they're closed for a one week
ing them, and both Madison and period, by the. contract the perour offices are reviewing them son is entitled to an extension
to determine what course of on their time. Since they never
action we're going to take," reopened the money should be
said John Cllrlson, an investiga- returned," Riley said.
tor with the District Attorney's
office.
"There is a law in Wisconsin
called a Fitness Center Law
The northside Dynamic and I guess that's one of the
Health Club close<\ in November things we're looking at to deter1985 because the furnace went mine whether there are any
out in the building, according to potential violations of that
Rick Riley, a member of the law," said Carlson. "We're also
club. "What they did was they coordinating our investigation
by Linda Butkus
~.spas.
with the Dept. of ~ustice, the
pertain
"One of the
laws is if they close the spa
Office of Consumer Protection
in Madison," he said. ·
down that you can either get an
Another section of the Fitness extension to another spa or you
can get your money refunded,"
Center Law states, "If any facility or service becomes una- he said. "Now that is the option
vailable at any time dUring the of the consumer not the option
length of the contract, the con- of the spa. They're trying to
sumer is entitled to ail adjusted make it sound like they're givrefund or to a transfer of the . ing you an option to the southunused portion of the member- side spa and in reality that's
ship to another affiliated sa- not true," Riley added.
As of now the comp!aints are
lon."
When most people joined they · being reviewed to see what
were told that they would have ,action is warranted. "Anyone
six days to work out at both interested in filing a complaint
spas (northside an!i,so~thside in can contact our office," said
Plover) three days at each spa, Carlson.
Probably the best thing that
and by closing . down one spa
you're eliminating three days could happen is to get the peoautomatically, said Riley. "The ple together at the university
ones that are getting burned the and file a petition, Riley said.
worst as far as I'm concerned "The more complaints there are
are the students because they the more pressure that's going
to be put on," he said. "The Dyhave no accessibility," he said.
Riley said he talked to the namic Health Club was unavailD.A.'s office and they gave him able ·for comments at the time
. a whole list of state laws that that this article was written.
.f:'B,bJJis is chosen as Comm.
Dept. ChOir
.travel zero.
fu nded
by Carol Diser
Staff Reporter
A lengthy discussion arose
during the funding hearings for
International Club. Senators
objected to the number of students the organization wished to
take to a national convention,
questioning the necessity of it.
After considerable debate, it
was decided to fund mternational Club for mileage but not for
any other travel expenses.
Mary Benepe, a senator from
COPS, said that SGA was not
giving enough funding for minority groups. Two minority
groups, AIRO · (American Indians Resisting Ostracism) and
STAR (Student's Together
Achieving Results) were zero .
funded for the coming year. International Club, which._serves
over 200 students as well as the
community, was allotted $1,012.
Mid-Americans, UWSP's
award winning vOCal jazz performance group, suffered a -setback Sunday when their travel
expense funds were slashed
from $1,000 to zero. The group,
which usually travels throughout the state performing for
high schools, senior citizens, ·
and other groups, may not be
able to tour at all next year.
Said Director Charles Reichl,
"It's very disappointing: A lot
of people won't be able to see
us perform next year because
of the cut. We've always been
treated well before, so this
came as kind of a shock."
The group's technician, their
only paid position, also received
a considerable cut in salary of
over $200. Total amount allocated to :r.fid-Americans was
$3,275.
/Apathy and SGA: A modest proposal
A student was on~e asked why he was so apathetic.
He responded: /1 don/t care to answer./
the idea of this proposal made me a bit uneasy at first, but the
Each year about this time, for those of you not afflicted, leadcloser
the proposal is analyzed, the clearer its merits become.
ers of most campus . organizations prepare their budget proposThe Pointer surely has as much to lose as any other student
als for the following year. For organizations who receive fundorganization if the student body1 decides to reduce our funding,
ing from Student Government Association, this means appearing
but that is precisely why I am able to fairly present such a probefore SGA's Finance Committee. The Finance Committee subposal. If the student body wants to cut funding for The Pointer,
sequently listens to the organization representative justify their
SGA or any other organization, so be it.
budget proposals and makes their own assessment as to just
how m~ch money any given organization needs.
It only seems logical, though, based on past experience, that
SGA would be supportive of this proposal. SGA has; after all,
After the Finance Committee makes their reconunendation,
long criticized the rampant student apathy on this campus. In
leaders from student organizations take those reconunendations
fact, they have purchased advertising space in The Pointer sayand appear before the roughly 30-member student senate, that
ing, "Stay uninformed and uninvolved. Let others make deciunequivocal reflection of the student will. The student senate
sions for you," in an attempt to generate more student involvethen votes on the budget proposals which will .finally complete
metamorphosis into the organization's budget for the next fiscal
/ ment. Oddly enough, many SGA representatives have this student apathy to thank for their SGA positions, since many qualiyear.
fied students never apply for these SGA positions. But here is
The final result, not surprisingly, winds up being a mess that
SGA's perfect opportunity. I can't think of a better way to get
few organizations are satisfied with. I would be the first to
. students actively involved on this campus than by giving them
admit, however, that deciding which organizations sh9uld be
the authority to spend their own segregated fees as they see fit.
funded and at what amount is a difficult job. So to alleviate this
annual uproar, I can't help but consider a proposal recently
Think of the student participation it would generate. Students
made by Dr. Carol Chahey, a University of Michigan journalism
would finally have a vested and direct interest in how student
professor, in light of the dissatisfaction that the university's stu- organizations are financed. It doesn't take a prophet to predict
dent body expressed toward their student government's funding
that many organizations would be lobbying the student body
decisions.
with earnest·intensity to ensure their' share of funding. The net
result would undoubtedly be -to the delight of SGA.- more
Her proposal goes like this: In order to obtain a fair represenstudent involvement and less apathy.
tation of how students want their segregated fees spent (each
student at UWSP pays $69.60 in segregated fees) students should
There would be changes. SGA would no longer have to fret
be allowed to indiVidually decide which organizations they
over the annual budget process. They would simply have to tal- ·
would like to give their $69.60 to. To facilitate the students' del
ly the student surveys taken at registration to determine how
sires, a list of student organizations should be proviqed to each
much money would go to each organization. Similarly, they
student as he or she completes the registration process. A stuwouldn't have to take the heat for budget decisions since those
dent could tl_len check the appropriate box for the organizations
decisions would be made to the student body, not SGA.
he or she would like to see funded and at what amount within
The next step, then, is to see if the student body favors such a
each student's $69.60 limit. SGA would still, however, be responsystem~ If the students do indeed want such a system, one quessible for recognizing new organizations, and the finer details of
tion remains: Will SGA have the leadership to implement such
such a proposal would need ironing.
.
a proposal?
Granted, this is a risky proposal. It's risky because the stuBy Christopher Dorsey
dent body would have direct control over their own segregated
Pointer Editor
fees. "It wouldn't be fair to all organizations," some would
.._
argue, yet it would be tbe most accurate representation of the
_ stUdent body's desires anyone could hope to get. I'll admit that . I
·
I
1 Do you favor the idea of allowing students to allocate their se- 1
Igregated fees as they see fit? Yes - - No 1
.---------~-_.:.
March 13, 1986
___ _______________
I
I
,
I Please return surveys to De
1Tuesday. March 18, at 4 p.m.
~----,
/ .
PobJter in 117 of the Communication Arts Center before
.
I
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L----~--~----------~------~-~------~
'
Editor:
Christopher T. Dorsey
News Editor:
Sealor Editor:
Davis
Amy L. Schroeder
Joanne
Fea~:
Richard L Krupnolt
Sporta:
Kent Walstrom.
. Oaideor:
Andy Savagian
a
Layout Deldp:
. Kenneth M. Drezdzon
BaafneuMuager:
E. Ann Skupniewitz
Advisor:
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Copy Editor:
Jodi ~ymer
Grapldcs:
' Cyndi strack
AdvertlaiDg:
Karen Miller
Office Muager:
Bryan Skaar
Photo Editor:
Peter T. Schanock
Photographer:
David Bode
Celdrlbatan:
-Jim Bums
Brian McCombie
UndaButkus
CarolDiser
JeanDoty
Karen Hettich
S.M. Anderson
Linda Fortier
Wade Turner
ScotMoser ·
Julie Thayer
Lorene Knoth
Kurt Helker
Mark Gehike
Tony Dowiatt
Al Edwards
Scott Huelskamp
Melissa Hardin
Bob Wrzinski
Jacquie Riggle
No. 29, Vol. 22
Dy~eKorda
- Letters to the editor will be
accepted only if th~y are typewri~n and signed, and should
not exceed a maximum of 250
words. Names will be withheld
from publication only if appropriate reason is given. Pointer
reserves the right to edit letters
- if necessary and to refuse to
print letters not suitable for publication. All correspondence
should be addressed to Pointer,
117 Communication Arts Center,
UWSP, Stevens Point, Wisconsin
54481.
Written permission is required
for the reprint of all materials
presented in Pointer. Copyright .(Cl
1985
'
POSTMASTER: Send address
change to Pointer, 117 Communication
Arts Center, Stevens Point, WI 54481.
Pointer is written and edited by the
Pointer staff, composed of UWSP students, and they are solely responsible
for its editorial content and policy.
The Pointer is a second class publication (USPS-098240) published weekly
on Thursday by the University of Wisconsin-stevens Point and the UW-8ystem Board of Regents, 117 Communication Arts Center, Stevens Point, WI
54481.
Polllter -PaJ(e 3
,.
Joanne Davis
Cof11mentary
I
I'
Does SGA' s parlimenta,ry . procedures include manners?
by J0811De Davis
News Editor
Students and government.
Government these days tends to
connote negative and apathetic
feelings in many students'
minds. While the Gramm-Rud, man legislation continues to
grind students' hopes to a halt
on the national level, right here
in Stevens Point, Student Government ground on ·student organizations this weekend during
the 1986-87 budget allocations.
Each year organizations wishing to be annually funded must
submit a budget, one which follows certain criteria, to SGA for
their Finance Committee review. After meeting with the
groups and reviewing the budgets, the Finance Committee
submits their recommendation
of funding to the Senate during
official allocations. The Finance
Conimittee is currently composed of a select group of SGA
members and only one at-large
member (a non-SGA member).
The Senate, composed of
some elected students and some
not, voted this weekend on those
recommendations. Student Government is quick to remind the
student body of the importance
of their decisions. When they
are made with the students in
mind, terrific things can happen.
Their actions this weekend,
however, seemed to dampen
their credibility, Not only did
some senators chatter incessantly while organizations tried
to plead their cases, they also
read comics, browsed through
magazines, paid a pizza delivery man, entered and left the
room at will, and spoke with
members of the audience during
voting. Not only were these
actions rude, but also intimidating to the spokespersons of the
·organizations.
The president of SGA on several occasions saw fit to mock
students appearing before the
Senate. If the students, not
knowing about the "parliamen-
CandidateS
tary procedures" asked if the
Senate had questions, -laughter
from the pr~dent and some
senators resulted. When the
president and executive mrector
of SGA came before their own
Senate to budget themselves,
the president again mocked a
student who had asked that her
members' salaries not be cut.
(Students can ctraw their own
conclusions as to how realistic
it is to have SGA allocate themselves money and answer only
te themselves.)
How can carefully thought-out
decisions be made with the constant upheaval occurring: Can't
common courtesy· be expected
for those who are placed in an
obvious position of submission
in front of a group who claims
to be ''the only governing
board" the students can appeal
to? I understand the proceedings are long and tiresome, but
common courtesy costs little
and offends no one.
The decisions reached under
these conditions, are debatable. ·
Most people, including myself,
are not experts on these mattel'{l. It became clear, however,
if you were a senator who sat
on the Finance Conunittee, you
had an immediate comer on the
market in the use of "call the
question." Call the question is a
statement used, it seems, to
bring a premature end to a debate. In other words, student organizations appearing before
SGA can say no more to change
senators' minds, and other senators must be quick to say
"objection" and then come up
with a reason why they object.
Since the Senate body has had
roughly a 75 percent turnover in
members this year, Iack of experience and nerve may have
played a part in objecting to
this obviously shrewd and
powerful committee. On several
·occasions, the Senate seemed
confused by figures supplied by
the Finance Committee'; some
senators said they didn't have
an adequate breakdown for all ,
parts of an organization's budg-
et and some senators expressed
frustration with the lack of justification for cuts in certain
areas.
Admittedly, not all senators
nor organization can walk away
from the allocations satisfied,
but the time has come to take a
look at how and who makes
these important decisions. Why
was GPU grilled for nearly 10
minutes on bringing a well-.
known singer to UWSP? Yet,
SAF walked away with $300 to
fund performers for a goingaway party. I am not impugning either request-! merely
1Juestion the motives for the .
Senate's questions, the subtleties, and not so subtleties that
occurred when it came to minority groups such as AIRO
(American Indians Resisting
Ostracism), Gay People's--Union
and the International Club.
Discriminatory feelings and
arbitrary <lecisions are not what
organizations at this university-
Cont. p. 27
Forum~----~-----~-­
Fact: -Gnly 8% of UWSP sfudents voted in last year's SGA
elections. The nation's coli e voting avera· e is 6%.
Lisa Thiel and Steve Geiss
If we were elected to represent the UWSP student body, we
hope not only to make the voices of the students heard, but also
to coordinate with the student-elected Senate to activate stu-·
dents to become infonned on isstles, take stands, and become
active in voting and voicing their opinions before it's too late.
We feel that the positions of president and vice-president of SGA
would allow us to have the means and right to attempt this goal
as well as others we have. It win also allow us to use our
leadership e~rience and voice our vast knowledge of student
concerns to those who can make a difference in your favor.
The UWSP Student Government Association is a unique organization in that it involves students in decisions that other university students have no say in. It is involved in many facets of
student life, your life. Senators from each of the four colleges
convene weekly to $hare and discuss the activities, plans and
proposals affecting the student body. From this debate, the Senate makes decisions and establishes policies in the interest of
the UWSP students. Student Government is supposed to be the
voice of the student body, not that of a select few who. are a
part of the organization. We understand this and don't advocate
rule by a few.
Cont. p. 27
Michael Ormond and Diane Barton
Oil Tuesday, March 18, UWSP students will be asked to vote
for Student Government President, Vice-President and Senators to represent them in Student Government for the 86-87
academic year. We are asking you to vote on that day because
. of the significance your vote will have on the future of UWSP ·
students.
We, Michael Onnond and Diane Barton, have chosen to seek
the office of President and Vice-President of Student Government Association because of the genuine interest we have in
serVing students and more specifically UWSP students. We
also believe we are the most qualified candidates.
Why? With our participation in organizations such as the
_Association for Community Tasks (ACT), Computer Science
Association (CSA), Campus Leaders Association (CLA), and
our mutual participation in student senate, we feel we have a
well rounded background .in organizations, activities, and also
understand the importance of such student involvement. ·We, if
elected, wish to stress the importance of such student involvement during our administration. We also feel it is important to
note our experience in regard to working with budgets. We
each have not only been involved with budgets through senate
Cont. p. 27
1
Page 4 March 13, 1986
· SGA allo£ates themselves $33 17J 3 during budgets
·by Theresa Boehnlein
Staff iteporter
_
During the recent controversial Student Government Association budget deliberations
held Sunday, March 9, Chris
Johnson, SGA president, and
Bonnie Helbach, executive director ~came before Student
Senate requesting monies for
This request is up 7.5 percent
the organization.
from last year's budget alloca•
tion.
·
In Chris Johnson's address to
the Senate, he stated, "We realAfter the Finance Commitize you've (Senate) had to make . tee's reconunendation took a
cuts in student organization. cut in supplies, SGA's final
budgets. However, we were satbudget allocation totals $33,713.
isfied with what Finance ComFour areas which were cut inmittee reconunended for SGA."
cluded $3,605 for.salaries; $1,520
SGA's .initial request for the
for 38 representatives to attend
1986-87 school year was $38,876.
a weekend leadership workshop; $40 for supplies; and $253
for catering of recognition parties which included such items
as punch, taco chips with salsa
sauce and cheese trays.
Every student organization,
with the exception of SGA, is
required to produce some sort
of revenue to justify budget requests. Revenue may include
anything from popcorn and tshirts to baked goods and jewelry sales.
"The issue of revenue for
SGA has been addressed frequently by Senate," Bonnie Reibach stated. "It's a valid statement ~owever, senators are
volunteers and it's hard to ask
them to put in the hours for
their positions and then go out
and sell candy' bars," she added.
One expense from the SGA
budget was advertisements in
The Polilter which included four
SGA election ads ($392), two
ads for promotional purposes
($100), five ads for SGA workshops including Who's Who,
Annual Budgets and Women's ,
Affairs {$327), and three miscellaneous ads ($198).
SGA budgeted Pointer ads at
full off-campus rates instead of
the normal 15 percent discount
The Pointer provides campus
organizations. The difference
between SGA's allocation of
$1,017 and the actual price they
would have to pay with the 15
percent discount ($690) would
be a savings of $327 in student
funds.
Some senators found comical relief during
Sunday's budget deliberations.
Another expense involves stress management, and financomputer-generated labels for cial responsibility.
three student body mailings at
$90 per mailing. When Helbach
initially completed the SGA
budget request, she stated, "I
was given an estimate from Records and Registration at a penny a label. In a later conversation, the same person, Larry
ToniGht. March 13th at 7:30
LEARNED
HELPLESSNESS
Sipiorski, from Records and
Registration stated that certain
accounts are a half-cent per label." SGA's labeling would be
considered uatter this tee, which
would mean a savings of $135
from the $270 allocation made
by Student Senate.
Across the board, the majority of student organization salaries were cut to establish uniformity between the various organizations.
Salaries were re-evaluated
based on job descriptions, skills
involved, campus awareness,
in the Wisconsin RM, UC
Dr. Robert A. Rosellini will
Present a Program entided:
Learned Helplessness as an
Animal Model of Depression.
Every.one is Welcome
ADMISSION IS FREE
..
Poblter Page 5
''It's sad to say, but people really iust aren't interested.
Klein
They don't care where the money goes." -SGAScott
Budget Director
.
~
by Carol Dlser
Staff Reporter
According to SGA's own
standards, students have not
been equally represented this
year on both the Firfance Committee and the Student Senate
itself.
According to Budget D"rrector
Scott ·Klein, the Finance Committee should be composed of
the following: the Budget Director, the· Budget Examiner, the
Budget Controller, SGA's Vice
President, four Senators (one
from each college), and four atlarge members (also one from
each college).
'this year the Finance Committee consisted of the four executive board members, three
senators from the College of
Letters and Sciences, one senator each from College of Natural Resources and College of ·
Fine Arts, and one student at
large from the College of Letters and Sciences.
That arrangement leaves the
College of Professional Studies
completely unrepresented. It
also has CNR and Fine Arts
missing a representative each.
College of Letters and Sciences
obviously became the political
clout because of itS larger number of senators. ·
Klein claimed that the ateeded
bal
::: ~d:~ttee co!fd not
be found. Although ads were not
1
placed in the Pointer and the
Daily, Klein said that he and
other SG.A staff approached
people they thought might be interested such as organization
treasurers and other active people even though they might not
be as unbiased as the average
student. "It's sad to say," said
Klein, "but people really just
aren't interested. They don't
care where the money goes."
On the SGA Senate, colleges
were also under-represented
mainly due to the resignation or
graduation of former senators.
Some positions were not filled
until the past month.
The College of Professional
Studies was the most seriously
under-represented with two out
of five senate positions left
unfilled until three weeks ago.
The current senate proportions are five senators for
COPS, four for Fine Arts, 15 for
Letters and Sciences, and six
for CNR. A new resolution for
reapportionment would increase
COPS by one and CNR by one.
The number of senators each
college should have is figured
from the percentage of students
in each college with undeclared
students assigned to the college
that campus predictions say
they will eventually arrive at.
~~----~------~----~~----------------------------------~
How· to co·ntrol stress factors
Futurist speaks
at Point
..
The control of stress is within Begin to get yourself organized,
your capability, but it is also begin pacing yourself, in an esthe jobs of the future, this is
possible to prevent stress. Pre- tablished routine.
by Jacquie Riggle
what to train for. Sometimes
Everyone is subject to various vention means taking control of
Perhaps you might start with
Staff Reporter
they can be right but, more
amounts of stress at varioUS- your life, putting the responsi- a stress log, similar to a time
times in their life. Stress can be bility for your health on you.
log. It will help you identify
David Zach of the Northwest- often than not, they are going to
good or bad, stemming from
High levels of stress may lead special events and their relaern Mutual Life Insurance Co. be off the mark because you
personal or job-related sources. . to what is commonly called tionship to stress in your life.
spoke on the future at a pr&All stress produces chemical burnout. You know the feeling, Watch for symptoms, whether
gram sponsored by Career
and physiological changes lethargy-can't get out of bed in physical or psychological. Your
Planning and Student Develop- ·
ment. The talk, "Future in the
which put your body in a fight the morning, can't seem to get body or mind tries to tell you
World of Work," was held Mooor flight response readiness as your head together for the when something is out of sync.
it prepares for a sudden emer- important test.
Getting sick may be a signal
day at the UC Program Bangency or change.
The number one result of that you may have to do somequet Room.
Zach addressed the upcoming
burnout is lack of personal and thing different about your
Chronic stress has been linked career goals. H you lose sight stress. Being ill is one way your
widespread use of robots by the
to several physical disorders in- of your goals for a semester, body .can deal with stress
year 2000. "There are factories
eluding: depression, headaches, you are more apt to put stress effects.
---1
in Japan where there are no
addictions of all sorts, hyperten- on yourself and become subject
Try to avoid excessive :parking lots," he stated. "Rosion, allergies, reduced sexual to burnout.
change. Plan for change and
bots don't drive to work. They
drive, poor concentration and
There al"e ways to prevent transitions. For instance, you
don't take breaks. They don't do
cardiac ·disorders, to name a stress and burnout. First on the know when fiiials are coming, : sloppy work and don't talk
"'ifetw
•.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilistii"
iiiiisiiiitoiiiistoiiiiiipiiiiiprocriiiiiiastinaiii"
iifiiioiinii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiii~Co~n~t-~p~•.;i2~7~ . back," Zach added.
I
Zach said that the increasing
use of automation did not necessarily mean there would be .an
David Zach
increase in employment. This
will be due to a decrease in the cannot predict the future," Zach
availability of jobs.
commented.
.
"There are many possibili~
What these new service and ties," Zach said. "Those people
'
informational jobs will be is dif- who think we are running out of •
ficult to say, Zach said. "When jobs are suffering more from a
it comes right down to it," he lack of imagination than anystated, "nobody can tell what thing else." Fifty percent of the
the jobs of the future are going jobs that exist today didn't exist
· to be. You see a-lot of forecasts
that say these are going to be
Cont. p. 27
J)y Karen Hettich ·
Staff Reporter
PLEASE
TAKE TIME TO VOfE,
IT ·WILL MAKE·
A·DIFFERENCB
.
.
I
>- ~
\_ .
-\ /
'
)
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'
UW-STEVENS POINT
OPEN HOUSE
MARCH 18th
.Sponsored By
SUNDAY, MARCH 16,1986
11••·5PMPUBLIC WELCOME
This year's OPEN HOUSE will include:
Displays - FREE Soil and Water Testing - Workshops
Mtcrocomputers - Indian Artifact· Display - Computer
Graphics · LRC Rededication Ceremony ond Tour of
Remodeled Facility · live Reptiles - Donee Programs
Popermoking - Vocal Jazz - Comedian Scott Jones
UWSP Athletic Antique Show & Sole - Programs
SUNDAY BRUNCH - E.T. THE MOVIE - Bluegrass Bond
Geology Workshop - Special ART SHOW & SAlE
Native American Demonstrations - FREE PARKING
ACROSS CAMPUS . AND MUCH MORE!
UNIVgRSITY OF WISCONSIN-STEVENS POINT
Complete program listing will be available March
13. 1986. For more . informoiion call 346-2 481.
Page • March 13, 1986
,
l ~E;d~::uc:a;te:-------------ii~am~hheclte;r;~;e~xual~.~an~d,Iram;n~th~e1be~li~e~m~ofrth~e~G~a~y~P~eo:;pl~es~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!~~a student of this uru·vem'ty. But uruon
· are nght
· or wrong is irThis list of quotations can go atmosphere or move elsewhere.
d
M
· t ·
'
heterosexuals'
too
/
that does not mean that I subscribe to the views of a fascist
right wing pigeon who elevates
himself to the role of champion
of "our" interests and reputation. Mr. Engel wishes to enlist
your aid in his campaign to ·
"eliminate this filth." Well, hot
damn, you get the tar, I'll get
the feathers. And while we're
on our Falwellian march to
sanctify the campus, we'll
"eliminate" other forms of dissent. We wouldn't want anything like open-mindedness, humanism, and the free exchange
of ideas to blacken the white, .
right flag.
I'm sure Mr. Engel's sexuality comes dry cleaned. •Or is
there some sort of reaction formation that underlies your vindictive nature on this topic,
Robin? In any case; I will
attempt to comprehend and
communicate, not apprehend
and eliminate. Jesus Christ never reserved the right to persecute. Who does that make you?
When you say .
"we," don't include me. ·
Bob Peterson
To The Editor:
Yes, Mr. Engel, the parents
(and Students) of Stevens Point
shoUld be informed of "Lesbian
and Gay Awareness Week."
Why should they remain uninformed and ignorant about what
• it means to be a homosexual
when they have a chance to
attend one of GPU's programs
on it? Have you ever attended
one of these programs? You
should. Then you could see for
yourself that gay people are
"normal."
Parents who are aware and
educated on what "gay" really
means will not be so shocked
when their son/daughter tells
them that he/she is. Parents
will see that gay people don't
conduct themselves any differently on a day-to-day basis than
do straight people. They don't
eat or drink special foods,
aren't employed in any particular field, and don't go around
overtly displaying their sexuality. "Straight" people, however,
do this all the time.
I am assuming, Mr. Engel,
At .least 10%
that you one day plan to marry
of population
and raise a family. Now, just
suppose one of your children
is homosexual
comes up to you and tells you
To 1be Editor:
that he/she is gay. Are you
This is in response to Mr.
going to shun him/her as an Engel's letter which appeared
outcast of society? Will you per- in the March 6 issue of the
secute your child as a "sin- Pointer.
ner"? How could someone "norTo begin, statistics .have
mal" produce a less than "nor- Shown that at least one out of
mal" child?
every 10 people is either lesbian
You and other people who are or gay. Therefore, it is likely
passing judgment against hoapproximately 900 students~
mosexual and homosexuality that
this campus fit the category
are some day going to ' be par- on
which you believe is misrepreents. Some of you, the parents sented, not to mention the 25Gof gay children. The things you plus people who attended the
do today are only going to be gay/lesbian awareness prohurting your future gay chil- grams.
dren. My advise to you, Mr.
You, Mr. Engel, are the
Engel, is to become "edu- ' unfortunate one because you let
cated"!
· others, whom you don't even
Louise Congdon know, de~rmine the way you
feel about this university and
community, whereas the GPU
represents only its members
Understanding
and is the only organization to
\
speak for gay people.
not persecution
If you had taken the time to
attend any of the many proTo 1be Editor:
Rejoice, UWSP students the grams which were offered dur_almi~ty has taken form rigbt ing Lesbian/Gay Awareness
here m Stevens Point, or is it Week, you would have discovered that there were no overt
th~ second · coming of Hitler?
This "man" will make it qght, displays of sexual "antics," but
he will cleanse our ranks of rather lectures and seminars
those inunoral infidels who dare which pertain to both the heteto trod paths other than that of ro- and homosexual people of
the righteous right wing path to this community.
Kelli FraokeDburg
glory. Yes, Robin Engel is my
Co-President
shepherd, I shall not want (to
Gay People's Union
thirik any other way).
How did I become thus enlightened? Well, by the Apostle
Right to
Engel's letter to 1be Pointer
last week proposing that we
express
support him in llanning the
themselves
GPU. He has appointed himseH
the leader of the "normal peoTo 1be Editor:
ple," in other 1Vords, the leader
In response to Robin Engel's
of a societally subjective, com- letter to the editor on a public
pletely nebulous concept. Did ban of the Gay Peoples Union:
you know that you, as a UWSP ~_tobin, as fellow College Republicans, we must realize the
student, are humiliated
great right our forefathers left
ashamed, misrepresented:
heartbroken and have a bad us, that of freedom of speech
reputation? Mr. Engel has ta- and expression.
ken the liberty of transforming
As much as we disagree with
"I" into "we" and is including their beliefs, I, in contrast to
all of us in his righteous asser- you must support their right to
tions.
express themselves. Whether
relevant, ·instead we must as
Americans support their right
to voice these beliefs.
Also Heterose:mally Yours,
Jeffrey William Burkard
Naive and
close-mm·ded
To 1be Editor:
I am ·writing in response to
the Letter To The Editor in the
March 6 Pointer, which suggested a ban of the Gay People's
Union sign. This, in my mind, is
a very naive and cl~e-minded
suggestion.
First, I would like to point out
I am a heterosexual, and in no
way support or condemn the
GPU. But I do realize there are
more people out there than
white, heterosexual Christians.
A college campus should be a
place in which one learns not
only · more about himself, but
others as well. Students must
understand that people have different ideas, values and beliefs
than their own, and all ideas
must be heard. When we experience other views, we not only
reinforce our beliefs, but we
open our minds to the beliefs of
others.
'
We're not only here. for a
classroom education, but also to
expand our thoughts and understand the world around us. We
must learn to realize gays and
people opposed to our beliefs
live in this world, too, and if we
respect the thoughts and attitudes of those people, the world
will be a much more peaceful
place to live.
SQ I suggest the author of that
letter, who would have most
definitely opposed Martin Luther King's movement in the '60s
get off his high horse and stop
professing that which is right
and wrong. Leave the judgment
of the just. and unjust up to
God!
Scott Pompe
Bible
in the
wrong h8J1ds
on an on. Y pom IS not to
ridicule the Bible, but this
clearly shows how dangerous
the Bible's verses can be when
placed in the wrong hands. To
use the Bible as a six-shooter
against people who are gay or
lesbian, or of some other viewpoint, only cheapens its value
as a book of spiritual inspiration.
·
· Jesus Christ had nothing to
say about homosexuality in the
Gospels. His predominant message was one of love and the
helping of others.
Let's ~op all this bickering
and condemning and leave the
judgment up to God. Let's ~raetice the greatest commandment.
· .love one another·
Terri Rauscher
Plans, obviously premeditated,
to move these women to a diff~rent hall connotated a quarantine. (Apparently hall council is
afraid that these study habits
are contagious.) Their "thoughtful" consideration for an atmosphere where the women
wouldn't be bothered (don't you
mean where they won't be a
h?ther?) was ndt much apprec1ated.
What is all the bother about?
The issue has gone beyond
allowing 4 Sims to have quiet
hours from 8 p.m. to 9 a.m. on
weekdays. It emphasizes the
principle which underlies higher
education. Consider the following:
1) The right to study ought to
take precedence over the right
to socialize, especially since we
pay for two xears of mandatory
on-campus housing.
GPU funding
. 2) Granted, socializing is
controversy
unportant to the development of
the individual. However, to soTo the Editor:
cialize without consideration for
Now is the time when one others (who are affected by
sees the conclusion of the one's actions) is not only immaannual budget hearings, but the ture, but also defeats the conbeginning of the problem was cepts of cooperation and mutual
how td allocate segregated fees respect, upon which community
appropriately. One solution sug- living and the adult world are
gested by those in search of an based.
easy answer is to not fund
3) Contrary to popular vote
groups not supported by the long corridors typical of
majority. Specifically, some dence halls were not designed
people are most adament in for bourbon streets, howling
their non-support of the Gay alleys, stereo battlezones or
Peoples Union. The point to be echo chambers.
made at this time is that $69.60
4) Finally, ·this issue is not
of each and every student's tui- really whether a quiet floor is
tion (supporters and non-supprt- needed. .It is a popularity coners of GPU alike) go towards . te:;t between residence halls
the funding of every organiza- With. ~e campaign method emtion on campus. The decision as P~ social activities and
to which group gets what mon- parties to attract new residents.
ey was determined by the stu- Per~ps if. these activities were
dent senators last Stinday.
curtailed, It would not be necesTo the senatorS and students: · sa~y to compensa~e for the
the GPU serves and is support- qwck turnover of residents (i.e.
ed by more than enough stu- dropouts and academic suspendents on this camp.us and com- dees) · .
munity. During the 7th Annual
To t~1s ~ampu~, and to
Gay And Lesbian Awareness Pray/Suns m particular, the
Week alone, over 250 people quest for academic superiority
a~nded the various program- has app~re!ltlY. been lost
mmg events. This is surely sig- amongst mcotine fits, beer bong
nificant enough to justify fund- attacks and overactive boring and the continuing existence mones. Further, popularity bas
of the Gay Peoples Union. The become .twisted into a con$595 that SGA did allocate GPU ~lomeration of parties and good
is only one percent of the t()tal ~es. ~SP, as a state instituamount of money available. Is tion of _higher education, has
this too much to ask for unique ev~lved mto ~ center of 'high~
programming that is provided livmg and little awareness of
for .everyone and very impor- academe. Then again, what the
tant to a substantial group of hell? Nobody really cares.
students?
Angela Hall
Cheri Marston
Tanj• Westfall
Representing 4S Sbns
To 1be Editor:
This is in response to the Bible quotations condemning hOmosexuality that have . been
brought up by self-righteous
people during the past Lesbian/Gay Awareness Week.
It is truly sad when people
use the verses in the Bible for
their o'wn means. Anyone can
Discrimination in
take things out of context to
the residence halls ·
suit their own whims.
For example:
To 1be Editor:
I Timothy 2:12: "I do not perDiscrimination struck hard
mit a woman to act as a teach- Sunday evening at the
er, or in any way to have Pray/Sims Hall Council meetauthority over a man; she must ing. The issu.e? Why it was necbe quiet."
essary to retain the quiet floor
Why don't these Bible-thump- of Sims? Th~ minority? The woing Christians parade the halls men of 4th floor who prefer to
of the COPS Building and con- _&udy in the privacy of their
vince women education majors rooms.
to change their sinful ways, like
The council listened to the
they do to members of the Gay opinions voiced, which were
People's U:nion?
grossly misrepresented, and
Exodus 21:17: "Whoever then allowed the wing represencurses his father or mother tatives to vote. They promptly
shall be put to death."
·
did away with the study floor
How many students would be and gave the conscientious studon this campus if that were ying minority two choices: forpracticed?
feit the right to study in a quiet
fesi:
Undecided
To 1be Editor:
Is this a typical college student~s story? Five years ago, I
began my college education
with an art education major.
While working with a young art
teacher for a field experience
course, I was talked out of the
art education field. I then
changed to a -communications
major, with an art minor. I
changed to the communications
major because I was told I
would be good in radio by a few
people in my public speaking
course. Being an impressionable
Cont. p. 7
1
Poba&er Page 7
Focus on
Three student bands from ~e
Uuiversity News Service
Two student jazz guitar Uruversity of W~nsin-Stevens
ensembles will perform at 8
p.m., Thursday, March 13, at Point will perform in a "Pops
~eUmv&mtymW~~ Concert" on Sunday, March 16,
at Sentry Theater.
vens Point.
the ·Arts
Baritone Marshall Taylor, a
~or applied voice major from
La Farge, will perform in a recital at 8:15 p.m., Monday,
~e
W~nsin.Stevens
Taylor will be assisted by
Uruversity of
Point.
pianist Martha Thomas and celThe performance in Michelsen list Brenda Villard.
Hall, Fine Arts Center, is open
He will sing works by Vivaldi,
to ~e _public wi~ut charge.
Brahms, Faure, Jves and Fine.
March 17, at
Tickets for ~e 3 p.m. perThe concert in Michelsen
Hall, Fine Arts Center, is open formance are available at the
College of Fine Arts box ·office
to the public wi~out charge.
and at ~e Sentry box office.
Ticket prices are $3 for adults,
The groups are under ~e direction of Mike Irish, coordina- $2 for seruor citizens and you~
tor of UWSP's jazz studies pro- and $1 for UWSP students.
gram.
_The Jazz GuitaJ: ~~ble ,-!1
will perform LeaVItt s Olos 2 ;
~win~'s .."Tengo T~go"; an~
Silver s Psychedelic Sally.
The Ensemble I will play
Russ's "Jacobinia"; Hamilton's
"Wild Magic"; Grusin's "Modaji"; Parker's "Billie's Bounce";
and Crawford's "Take A Look
At Yourself."
The Uruversity Band will be
conducted by Andrea Splittberger-Rosen and ~e Symphoruc
Band and ~e Symphoruc Wind
Ensemble will be conducted by
Donald Schleicher. They will be
joined by guest soloists J. Michael Keller, piano, Joseph
Adams, trumpet, and tenor
Paul Pendergast.
(
.'"\
•
I
Uuiversity News Service
Dancers featured in "Victorian Afterma~ .- A Gesture of
Gender," choreographed by
Karen Studd, are, from left to
Mall, cont. · .
WEDNESDAY
ALL YOU CAN EAT' PANCAKES FOR THE
MONTH OF MARCH
$1-.59
lad of sophomore standing, I
said, "Great! Comm. major for
me! My future is solved!" and
.~ought little about it afterwards.
Last year I completed fulfilling ~e requirements for my
comm. major. I ~en asked myself "O.K. What do I want to do
"Wi~ this major - what can I
do wi~ this major?" I realized
that I had lost any remote desire to go into radio or TV. I
never had ·any desire to go into
public relations, advertising, or
right, Blaine Mastalir, Heidi performed in the annual DanceHegila, Be~ Dietrich, John Mil- ~eatre, March 11-16 at the
lard, Denise Domack and Uruversity of Wisconsin-stevens
Point. The concert is at 8 p.m.,
George McCarthy. The piece is Tuesday ~ugh Saturday, and
among several which will be at 2 p.m. on Sunday.
sales. I also realized I had
hardly learned a damn ~g! Is
it possible for a student to complete ~e requirements for a
major wi~ a 'B' average and
not learn an~? I guess so.
After I became aware of all
of this, I was still left with ~e
question: "What to do wi~ ~e
comm. major?" I ·had never
lost a desire/curiosity for teaching, so why not get certified for
my comm major and art minor
.L. Right?
That's what I decided. I was
accepted into the College of
Prmessional Studies and have
been picking up the education
courses required lor teacher
PARTNER'S PUB
1617 Schofield Avenue
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certification this current school
year. Further complications
have surfaced, however. I
wasn't ~ed wi~ my comm.
me~ods course and have since
lost any desire to teach commurucations. I also - have discovered that I have fallen victim to
what might be called 'student
burnout'. Over the years, my
study habits haven't improved,
~ey've become worse. I already have assignments that were
due two weeks ago. I've lost all
motivation. This past Sunday I
played darts ·and drank beer
from 2 p.m. to 1 a.m. Is this
sort of burnout• common?
Maybe I'm just a borderline
alcoholic - I know that's common to a lot of students. -,
I'm still left wi~ ~e question
m my future. After looking at
~e education option again, I
still ~ I would enjoy teaching.· I'd rather teach art in the
lab-type environment versus the
more structured environment m
commurucations, ~ugh.
So, here I am looking at the
same major I started out wi~ years ago. Am I lost in some
sort of topsy-turvy academic
circle? To complete an Art Ed.
major, I would have to take
courses this summer and fall
and student teach in ~e spring
m '87. Do I want to struggle
~ugh school wi~ next to zero
for ano~er year? I ~ not.
Is this a common tale? Are
~ere other stUdents out there
like me?
Name Withheld
-
Page 8 MaJrch 13, 1986
LOOK NO FURTHER
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\
S~int Patty before the. Hebrew and the fame
by R. IJonel Krupnow
Features Editor
there were a whole slew of
sightings. SJiakes were everywhere.
A lot of the women were seeing 'em, too. The largest sighting came after we had had an
especially long town meeting.
We drank nearly all the Patty
Beer that could be found in the
town. The vision hit Patty first.
"Snakes!" he screamed and
scurried up a tree. 'Course I
never saw them, mind you. But
Patty did, and that was enough
I knew Saint Patty before that
Hebrew ever met him and decided to reward him for ridding
Ireland of snakes. Ay, rid Ireland of the snakes, he did. But I
know the re,al tale behind the
hero and if you want to have a
,..- true understanding of Saint Patty's Day, then pull up a chair.
It all started about 10 years
before that Hebrew came along,
like I was saying. P-atty was sitting under a climbing plant (of
the Genus Humulus) when this
cone-shaped catkins fell on his
head. Well, he jUIJlPS up, he
does, and bellows out: "Hop."
He grabbed the cone and was
about to throw it away when a
huge guest o' wind bl4}.W some
barley across the field right into
his mouth. Spittin' and sputterin'; he tried to wipe the barley
out and ended up getting that
catkins in his mouth.
He stopp(!d cold,' his face all
wrinkled •up, like he was thinking. I thought the catkins might
o' been poisonous. Mother O'
God, I thought he'd died, frozen
like a pillar o' salt. But then he
smiled. Chuckled. His face lit
up like he'd seen the Maker
Himself. "Stout," he muttered.
Just that, "stout."
·
That's when it all started,
reillly. He became obsessed.
We'd spent hours in the woods
trying to formulate the perfect
combination of barley and hops,
to create the perfect stout. And
we finally did. Patty Beer, he
called it. I didn't . mind that I
wasn't given reCognition for my
contribution; after all, he is the
one who got the revelation.
It was three years after that
the snakes invaded Ireland. I
never really saw them, mind
ya. But Patty did and that's all
it took to convince the nation
• that. something was going on.
Soon after Patty gave his to get the whole throng of peospeech OJ! the .square, in Publin,_ ple screaming, "Snakes!" and
jumping on the nearest tree.
Well, we survived . that first
0
0
.
invasion, but it became an ~
creasingly severe problem.
,.
Poor Patty didn't know what to
do. The more snakes he saw,
slimy twits); and the more he
drank, the more snakes he saw:
It was a frightening .Problem,
mind you. Indeed, Mary, Joseph
0
and Jesus had plagued the
0
Motherland with this problem. I
tried to counsel with Patty. We
did our best. But when the Pat~
ty Beer had 811 been drunk, we
stopped thinking and slept. Or I
slept.
I guess Patty must o' been
0 I
communing with God the whole
time 'cause it wasn't long be0
->,p·.·.·.· fore
he had come up with a solution to the snake problem. I
guess I should say that it was
God that came up with the Solution and sort of showed Patty
what to do.
For some odd reason, we had
an unusual dry spell. All the
hops rotted on the vine; the
barley wouldn't grow. · Patty •·
was mighty mad, I tell ya.
Didn't seem to bother him·
much at all when we fir'st ran
outta beer. But a couple of
weeks into the beer drought, he
got real mad.
He started sweating and
moaning. Then he started
screaming about the snakes. ·
"They're everywhere! " he
screamed. "Under the table, on
the windowsill." I didn't see
them, mind you, but P~tty did.
,. and. . .anyway, I started run-Ding around the house, hitting
the walls and table with a
broom, in every spot he said he
saw a snake, until I had driven
them out. But he didn't stop
being mad for a long tiine.
Guess he didn't like the way
that God decided to handle the
snake problem. He gave up on
being mad, however. I mean, ,
how long can you stay mad at
God?
Well, when his anger subsided, the snakes left Iieland
just after that.
Ay, Patty was a brave lad, indeed. He left us not long after
the snakes did. He had drunk a
the more he drank (said it gave
Cont. p~ 27
hiM the courage to face the
1)
I
,.~
~ ·Dance Th~atre presents- ''Fantasy for a Few Good Men''
by Mary Ringstad
Staff Reporter
As a fifth-year senior in the
College of Fine Arts, I have
always been amazed by the
number of UWSP students who
say they are actually "afraid"
to enter the Fine Arts Building
to take a class, let alone attend
something as intangible as a
dance concert. I would now like
to take the opportunity to dispel
those fears by giving you a
sneak preview of what you can
expect to see this week at
DANCE THEATRE.
Most importantly, DANCE
THEATRE is not a · bunch of
people aimlessly jumping
around in tutus; in fact, you
will not find a tutu anywhere
onstage. Each of the choreographers' pieces has a specific
message - sometimes it's an
aesthetic appeal, often a philosophic or societal comment and,
at times, it's just for .entertainment. These messages are not
difficult to comprehend and that
is why .dance is a universal art
form.
Several of · the selections in
DANC)!1 THEATRE comment
on life and society. Karen
Studd's "Life is Like. . ." is an
ensemble, theatrical piece
which combined humor, tension
and earnest contemplation in an
attempt to finish this simile.
Often through the use of individual selective perception, the
audience receives a reflection of
.._,;,
everyday interpersonal situa- about anything." Studd's "VicThere are purely fun works,
torian Aftermath" is a modern too. Caldwell's "Presenting the
tions.
The fear of a nation at war is piece employing humor and sar- 'Love Clouds' " takes us back
examined in "Once Upon A casm to reflect upon the conflict to the 1960s. James Moore's
Time." Ghoreographer Linda of changing sex values and amusing approach to restaging
Gene Kelley's famous '~$ingin'
Caldwell combines modern roles in our society.
The third such piece, Cald- in the Rain" solo dance for sendance with Jerry Harrison's
"Five Minutes" as accompani- . well's "Fantasy for a Few Good ior John Milliird guarantees
ment. The music is based on Men" is aptly named. This im- smiles if not laughs.
These pieces and several
President Reagan's "joking" press,i.ve work was chosen last
announcement of how the USA. - month for the honorary closing more comprise the bill of fare
will begin bombing Russia 'in spot in the Gala performance at at DANCE THEATRE which is
five minutes.
·
the regional American College being staged now. through Sunday, March 16 at Jenkins TheaThree of the pieces look at Dance Festival in Iowa.
"Meshing" by Studd is a per- tre (COFA). Performances are
sex roles in our society. Susan
Gingrasso's "Shrimp Cok Tale" fect example of a piece provid- at 8 p.m.; Sunday's matinee is
gets its. text from a list of ingre- ing aesthetic appeal. The duet at 2 p.m. For only $2, take the
dients on a carton of shrimp between Studd and senior Mi- plunge and enjoy an evening of
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seeks to capture "how the fe- terlocking beings as they bal- ·at the Theatre Box Office. Call
346-4100 for more information.
male body is ~ to sell jusf ance and support one another.
Page 18 March 13, 19U
First of a series
Mysterious Tales of UWSP
It's only a word
I
by Brian McCombie
Staff ~porter
cry and - pow - dictionary in
the ribs. But she learned a new
word.
She still hates me for calling
her my "little marsupial." At
first she thought it was some
French thing - kind of romantic sounding. Then she remembered "strumpet" and asked
what the hell a marsupial was.
Was it good? Was it bad?
"Bad?" I asked. "Only if you
think a cute little opossum is
bad."
The way she was hitting me, I
couldn't even explain that the
marsupial family included kangaroos and koala bears. What's
My girl-friend is very unappreciative. I continually try to
improve her vocabulary and
thereby increase her knowledge
of the world. But she thinks ~t
I'm insulting her.
Once, I inadvertenUy called
her a strumpet. It's not myfault that I've read Shakespeare. Everyone told me that
he was .the greatest writer.
They didn't tell me that he was
also the most vulgar writer in
English literature. So strumpet
slips out, she runs for the dieC~n.
t p. 27
tionary, yells out a Yaqui w a r r - - - - - - - - - - - - - , t
\
Mr ..·lnformation has answers
..
~
'that they keep it like an oven in school money and, of course, rethere so that there won't be any duce your tuition, but since
there will be fewer students,
ice for us to slip on?"
Staff Reporter
your teachers will be able to
"Very good, Jimmy."
give you more attention. How's ·
"I
guess
they
really
do
care
You've seen him ~ore. Mr.
that sound, Jimmy?"
Information is the tall man with about us."
"But couldn't they take the
"They
do,
Jimmy.
No
matter
silver hair. He's the grandfamoney for the swimming pool
what,
the
students
always
come
ther who used to give you carand..."
mels wJten Mom wasn't looking. first."
"Now, now, Jimmy. You said
"Is
that
why
they
want
to
On- warm, spring days he sits
you wanted the s\,Vilnming pool,
on those concrete steps that spend all that money on a new
face the back of the LRC. Right swimming pool, Mr. InformaCont. p. 13
now, though, it's winter, so Mr. tion?"
"ExacUy, Jimmy. Now, some
Information is sitting in the UC
spoil-sports think that we don't
lounge.
All the kids like him, but Jim- need a new swimming pool.
my especially. Jimmy's the Know what they w.a nt done with
stocky kid with the blue wind- the money? They want to spend
breaker and a Brewer's base- it on more teachers."
"Well..."
ball cap. There's always a mis"You're a student, Jimmy . .
chievous grin between his
(No coupon needed for this Tuesday offer.)
What would you like? More
pudgy cheeks.
teachers
or
a
swimming
pool?"
Today's conversation sounds
"Gee, Mr. Information, I
like this:
"Tell me about the library, think I'd like a swimming
pool."
.
Mr. Information."
"Of course you would, my
"Do you mean the LRC, Jimboy."
my?" .
"Is that why they're thinking
"Oops; Mr. Information, I did
it again. I always get those two about cutting the enrollment,
Mr. Information?"
confused."
"What's that, Jimmy?"
"What do you want to know,
"Didn't you hear about it, Mr.
Jimmy?"
"Well, how come it's. so hot in Information? They're thinking
there all the time? They even about cutting the enrollment to
Tax
had a fan in the Reference save money."
Now
I
remember.
"Oh
yes.
Room. Isn't it winter?'~
"That's becaw;e they spent But not only will it save the
millions of dollars remodeling
"Piping Hound
the LRC,·Jiinmy."
Ready to Eat''
partoc•P"'•ns Lottie CcJesars
(fitrY out only One
~·But. . .that do~sn't make
roupon IX' Customef
by Brian McCombie
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any sense.~·
"Well, son, it's hard to understand these things sometimes.
It's so hot in the LRC because
they're concerned with your
health, Jimmy. That's why they
spent all that money."
"But..."
"It's true, Jimmy. Last week,
you told me you slipped on the
ice by Collins, right?"
"You bet, Mr. Information. It
, was like an ice rink over there
for the longest time."
"But you've never slipped on
any ice in the library, have
you?"
"No, Mr. Information."
"Well, Jimmy, what do you
make of that?"
Jimmy's quiet for a second,
trying to put it all together.
"You mean, Mr. Information,
j
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()111Nif)N
, They forgot that prejudice doesn't mean justice
the two or three senators I am
referring to. They motioned to
zero budget GPU. They gave no
justification for their motion,
but given the fa~ that they
have publicly renounced homosexuality, it doesn't take much
to figure out why they motioned
for zero funding. They acted out
of their own religious and personal biases. .
Now that might not seem like
a problem for some. But it
states clearly in SGA's Constitution that a student organization
cannot be denied funding, or
other rights, when on the basis
of their sexual preference.
Those senators did not act out
of concern for GPU's wellbeing, nor for the benefit of the
campus as a whole.
The senators would rather see
animosity continue between gay
students and "straight" (I'm
not sure what that tenn means)
students, while GPU is concerned with increasing the understanding about gay people,
wiping out the myths and striving for1larmony. If the senators
are concerned about the same
~s, why did they act to the
prostitutes npr homosexual
offenders. . .will inherit the
kingdom of God." (I Cor. 6:9)
They are eager.to cite unnatu-_
Who are these people? Where
ral acts as being an abominado they come from? Why do
tion in God's eyes and comthey keep showing up in the
pletely ignore wbat is menStudent Senate?
tioned only eight chapters later
They are a strange breed, no
in Romans:
doubt.
"Then let us no more pass
It should be understood from
judgment on one another' but
the outset tb&t I am not talking
rather decide never to put a
stumbling-block or hindrance in
about the whole of the Student
the Jllay of a brother. I know
Senate. _Rather I am directing
my remarks toward two or
and am persuaded in the Lord
three senators wbo seem incaJesus that notbiRg is unclean in
pable of sep8rating themselves
itself; but it is unclean for any
from their own narrow-minded
one who thinks it unclean."
views and thus upholding SGA's
(Romans 14:13-14)
.
Constitution. l'm referring speThe fact is that we can twist
cifiCally to the budg4}Yhearings
the Bible to say whatever we
that took place thiS weekend,
want it to, to fit our own perand the cuts that were made to
sonal biases. If we are going to
GPU's budget.
·
use the Bible as our reason for
The Gay People's Union sufd~nounclng homosexuality, then
we must also notice those things
fered an unwarranted display of
hypocrisy and bias that no stuwhich contradict its condemnadent organization should . be
tion.
Another falsehood which has
asked to endure. Granted, as I
was told by a member of SGA,
hampered the Gay Rights
the Finance Committee decides
movement ,on this campus and
how much money should be
across the country is the concern about AIDS.
alotted to the various organizations based on size and the ~ntrary?
AIDS is not a gay disease. It
money available.
Personally, I have had my fill can be passed among beterosex1 had some difficulty with his of verse-slinging, BibltHiuoting . ual people as well as bomosexaplanation, since I know stu- ' pseudo-Christians who feel they
·
dent organizations that are are out to save the, world-and
smaller than GPU and one, spe- want everyone to know about it.
They are quick to quote such
cifically, that received nearly
seven times the money.
verses as:
But that aside, the cuts sug"Do not be deceived: Neither
living together prior to margested bY the Finance Commit- the sexually immoral nor idola- riage seems to have little effect
tee do not excuse the conduct of tors nor adulterers nor male on the marriage's stability, the
March Reader's Digest reveals.
Cohabitation as a testing grolind
/
for marriage hasn't !'eally met
the test, concludes researchers.
by R. ~· Knqmow
, Fea&ares Editor
ual people. It is a virus. Researcjl bas conclusively proven
that AIDS can be passed among
heterosexuals-it has been
found in vaginal discharges; it
can't be contracted from water ·
·bubblers, toilet seats or i:8SUal
touching. In Africa, where heterosexuals are as sexually
active as homosexuals, the disease is equally distributed between the two groups.
If AIDS is a punishment sent
by God, then it bas been sent to
punish ~. monkeys
and cbildr~, as well as homosexuals.
It is time we drop the nearsighted, uninformed accusations
and start acting intelligently.
We are · faced with a social
problem, and we need to work
together toward its solution.
There is not room in SGA for
senators who cannot set aside
their biases and work toward a
unified solution to this campus'
concerns. Christ did say that
the most important commandment was to love God, but He
also said that the Second Commandment was to love each
other as ourselves. ,
So, if we are goiiig to fling Bible verses, . we had better keep
love in mind.
Gay people are not oxen to he
burdened with the insecurities
and incompetencies of
"straight" people. They are human beings-people who care,
love, cry and burt. Christ did
not shun or ridiCUle those who
were considered sinners in His .
time. He ate, walked and conversed with prostitutes, thieves
and bums. He strove to understand them and their actions.
They wereJluman.
When Christ saved the woman
from being stoned, He told the
cyowd that those who were
without sin should cast the first
stone. No one did. Christ understood that the woman was human. It's time we understood
that, too.
If we truly want to show
ourselves as Christians, then
we'd better follow the example
of GPU and strive for understanding.
I salute GPU for their efforts
and for facing the actions of a
few misguided senators this
past weekend. GPU acted with
dignity and with a Christ-like
demeanor. They are· the type of
mettle that heroes are made
of-to face seemingly insurmountable odds for the benefit
of all. Congratulations, GPU.
Some more little known facts
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What should you look for in a
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Every year thousands of mon- around for a fixed-rate mort- cent of high school students
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Page U March 13, 1988
~"I'll condemn all queers, male or female".
be gay.
Reporter: Isn't it true that
GPU had ..trimmed its own budget and asked for less monThe editor-in-chief grabbed ey than they had the previous
me as I was heading out the
door:
·
"Get over to the UC and interview Senator Steed. Find out
. why the Student Senate cut
GPU'::~ funding."
"But I don't want to interview
Senator Steed. He's crazy. The
man doesn't have a brain." I
tried worming away.
"Come now, we all have
brains. It's a human condition.
Besides, you're a man, even if
. . _ you do wear an earring. You
can handle it." He slapped me
on the back and returned to his
. desk.
"Verdammte Sheis. . . "
"Go." He pointed his finger
toward the hall.
by R. Lionel Krupnow
Features Editor
/
red. (Laughs again.) I knew a
Commy once. Wore a big, wool
coat with a fur collar and
talked like you. We ain't Russia, boy. We can't allow people
..
Reporter: Why did you want
zero funding for GPU?
·
Seoator: You don't see the
problem here, boy. The Russians sent these AIDS-infested
fags to our shores so they could
weaken our population, insure
an easy takeover of our country. Ain't you patriotic?
Reporter: What about SGA's.
Constitution? Doesn't it say that
students can't be discriminated
agaipst because of sexual preference?
· Seoator: I ain't discriminating! (He stm.Ids upy..shakes his
finger.) I'll condemn all queers,
male ()r female. (He straightens
Reporter: I hardly think that his shirt sleeves.) I've got you
AIDS could cause the downfall on my list, boy. Godless Comof our country. And, even so, mies like you 1are going to be
what does GPU 'have to do with nipped in the bud. But, for now,
that?
I need you. You can tell all
Seoator: I have conclusive your pretty boyfriends that I
proof that the Gay People's am going to see them burn, in
Union at UWSP met with Rus- hell. (He storms away.)
Reporter: I think itls Miller
sian spies, exchanged dirty needles and started this whole time. ·""
•••
All names in this interview
have been changed to protect
the innocent and the guilty.
Reporter: Senator, can you
-tell me why GPU's budget was
cut?
Seoator: The Finance Committee decides all those numbers whether for the Gay People's Union or anyone else.
Reporter: But isn't it true
that you _motioned for SGA to
zero fund GPU?
Seoator: Well, of course I did,
boy. (He looks at me with a
cocked head.) You ain't gay are
you, boy?
Reporter: No.
Senator: Just wondering.
Most men don't wear an .earring. What happened? Get your
ear too close to the stapler
when you were stapling something?
Reporter: Something. Why
did you motion for zero funding?
Seoator: You must be gay.
Those people are godless sinners. Don't you read the Bible,
son? It says in . Romans that
those people ain't going to heaven, and I don't see no reason
why I should support such
heresy.
Reporter: But doesn't it also
say in Romans that nothing is
unclean in itself?
Seoator: Well, you can't believe everything you read, now
can you? (Hits my shoulder and
laughs.) That's a joke, boy.
Can't ya take a joke? You must
nority, huh? That's it. They AIDS epidemic. We have to stop
always give jobs to minorities: the Russian takeover here. It's ·
women, spinks, coloreds. This our duty as Americans. We
must support the Constitution.
country has lost its dignity.
year?
ta go around -exercising all sorts
Seoator: Sure, they asked for of perverted sexual practices.
Reporter: This is a free counless. They figured we might let
that slide. But we're slicker try, isn't it?
Seoator: Sure, it's free. But
than that, son. All senators ain't
how long do you think it's going
as stupid as some people think.
Reporter: What was ~e justi- to be free if we allow fags and
dykes to run around, spreading
fication for zero funding, then?
Seoator: Boy, you don't listen AIDS with the touch of a finmuch. They're fags, boy. Que- ger?
ers. Happy boys. They have
Reporter: You can't get AIDS
ways of raising their own mon- from touching fingers. But why
ey. Hell, they're in bed all the was GPU's funding cut?
time. What do they need money
Seoator: You keep changing
for? We can't support prostitu- the subject, boy. Don't you
tion and perversion, boy.
know how to interview people?
Reporter: Being gay doesn't How'd you get this job? A mimake someone a prostitute...
Seoator: You ain't a Commy,
m:e you? · Your neck's a little _
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UWSP course examines the history of rape
•1
UDivenity Ne-. Serviee
The history of rape has been
researched at the University of
Wisconsin-Stevens Point and the
materials have been used to develop a course that is drawing
"good student response,"
according to Professor Stephen
Pistono.
·The offering has become part
of the curriculum of the women's studies minor. It has
been taught during several previous semesters and will open
again next spring.
Why a course on such a specific problem?
.
Pistono insists that sexual violence against women is a crucial issue in c~ntemporary
American society. Some feminists argue that male sexual violence in the form of rape plays
a critical role "keeping women
in their place and did so historically as well. They maintain
that women in the past rarely
derived redress from the legal
system and in many cases do
not do so today," he reports,
adding that he is in substantial
agreement with their charges.
The 18-year veteran of the
history faculty also says there
is evidence to support feminists'
contentions that rape must be
viewed as a crime of violence
and hostility rather than one of '
strictly passion. In many of the
medieval cases he studied,
rapes were "so violent and per-.
sonal that the sexual dimen- grievances. The following Sunsions are almost lost."
. day she issued a complaint
Pistono's course traces the against the man with two relahistory of rape from -the ancient tives and two other citizens.
The man could prove his innoworld to the present.
He explains that women in cence by simply bringing forth
the Middle Ages were put 12 male oath-helpers who swore
through "excruciatingly painful, that the accused was a person
degrading and humiliating of good reputation whose denial
procedures" before their attack- of the crime could be believed.
er could be put on trial for his
Pistono's students learn that
crime.
- in 13th century England, the
In some Spanish communities, prooess a woman went through
for example, the victim was re- in making an accusation .o f rape
quired to walk around the walls was equally public and spectacof the town and call out her ular. She was required to follow
complaints and the name of the six steps if she wanted to bring
rapist as she made- her way up her assailant to justice: she was
to the gate of the castle, there obliged to create a public outsummoning forth the. town's cry over the crime immediately
elected offtcials to hear her · after it took place, and to exhib-
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it her tom garments and bleeding to men of good standing in
the neighboring ·towns. !fhe
crime had to be explained to local law officers. a formal accusation was required at the first
county court to be held, and the
accusation had to be repeated
before the coroners so that it
could be taken down verbatim
for the public records.
Many women could not face
this long gruelling process,
according to Pistono, and others
failed to bring charges against
their attacker because thete
was a strong possibility that
they would be arrested and .imprisoned for false accusation.
Feminists are "certainly correct," he maintains when they
argue that a male-controlled legal system, historically, offered
women little opportunity· of .
seeking satisfaction for sexual
crimes committed against
them.
.
Still 4wme PQSitive advances
have occurred in the history of
rape laws, Pistono continues. In
ancient societies, rape developed in their law codes not as a
crime against the women but
rather as a crime committed
against her male protector.
Rape was not damage done to
her body, but damage done. to
his goods, to hiS property. Rape
was not a crime against the vic-tim, the woman, but against her
husband or her father inasmuch
as she was male-owned property to be possessed or robbed.
'Beginning in the 12th century,
Pistono's research reveals that
church lawyers began to define
rape as no longer a property
crime, but a crime of violence
against a person. Rape of a Virgin or married woman was considered a major crime of the severity of asSassination and treason.
There was a major exception
to the rule. A husband could not
be found guilty of raping his
wife because by the very act of
marriage she had given her
prior consent to intercourse.
This view of marital rape remained in effect until 1977 when
a landmark change occurred in
Oregon law which eliminated
marriage as a defense against
rape. John Rideout, a 21-yearold short-order cook from Salem, was tried under the law
and found innocent. Ironically,
the first man to be convicted of
raping his wife while still living
with her was sentenced to three
to five years in Saleo;1, MaSs.,
in 1979.
. Besides a consideration of
rape laws, Pistono's course covers the topics of gang rape and
its historical precedents and the
sexual exploitation of lowerclass women by men from the
upper ranks of European society. The class also investigates
trends and statistics concerning
rape in contemporary America.
,_
~
t
'
Po you kno~
what SGA is
- and what the ·
organization does?
Text: R. Lionel Krupnow
Photos: P. Schanock
..
;[
•'~
.. .
_.,..~
Pobater Page 15
s·pending spring break on a spirited trek
by Christopher Dorsey
Pointer Editor
Sacrifices. Each year a small
band of UWSP students join together to trek 200 miles from
Stevens Point to Cassville,
' hoine of a 1,400-acre nature preserve. The preserve is run by
E~gle Valley Environmental- - ists, Inc. EVE is a non-profit organization which, as its name
implies, emr>hasizes the research and management of the
bald eagl~. The preserve is also
home·to one of the largest over. winter populations of eagles in
the continental U.S. The site is
located on the banks of the Mississippi River and has been
known to shelter up to 50 bald
eagles on one winter night.
I
There are roughly 20 students
who will be participating in this ·
year's walk. Along with the students, local celebrities, including Vice-Chancellor Irving
Buchen, Stevens Point Mayor
Michael Haberman and Director of Student Development
John Jury, will be walking part
of the distance. In addition, the
walk's sponsor, the Environmental Council, is trying to con-
vince Senator Robert Kasten to
partake in the action, but at the
deadline of this article 1 there
were no guarantees.
Last year's walkers raised
over $3,000 for EVE and expectations are that at least that
much will agsrln be raised 1his
year. Some backbone participants in this year's walk will
again be Tim and Cindy Byers
and last year's coordinator, Peter Gaulke.
Spring break traditionally
means sun and sand for many
college students, but for eagle
walkers _it means counting the
paces between rest stops. The
walkers will be housed in shelters and school gymnasiums as
they pass through Wisconsin
Rapids, Monroe Center, New
Lisbon, Hillsboro, Richland Center, Blue River, Woodman,
Bloomington and, finally, Eagle
Valley.
...._
Why would these people give
up their spring break for the
eagle? It's a commitment to our
nation's symbol. It will take
more of this kind of spirited
effort to prevent further declines in eagle populations. In
1872, when the U.S. Continental
Congress adopted the bald eagle
as our national symbol, an estimated 140,000 pairs of bald
eagles came to breed in the
\
lower 48 states. Now, about
1,400 breeding pairs remain in
the continental U.S.-only one
percent of the original breeding
'contributed to stifle a major recovery of eagle populations.
The walkers hope to gain public attention of the plight of the
featured on WMTV, the NBC
affiliate in Madison.
EVE runs year-round programs which are open_to the
Eagle walkers travel 200 mBes each break to raise money for bald
eagles.
population.
Why the decline? Despite the
ban of DDT, other factOrs includi,ng habitat loss, toxic chemicals, shooting, accidents, lead
shot and even acid rain have
eagle through coverage in statewide medias. Many small-town
newspapers along the 200-mile
route have already begun coverage of the group and, as a highlight, last year's walkers were
public. These programs include
camping, environmental workshops, summer camps, cross
country skiing, canoeing, pho-
Cont. p. 19
Campus
1
CN R budget cuts bring mixed feelings
/
_-.:.tij Jim Bums
·· Staff reporter
·.
Gigi Milcik, president of The
"We were lucky to get
Wildlife Society, said TWS was $12,700," said Jeff Zehr, a grad, already operating at bare mini- uate student who works at
mum before the cuts, but were Schmeeckle and was very inas "satisfied as they can be." volved in the push for more reTWS was funded $4,048 last serve funding. "At least we
- Organizations at the College year, and will be funded $2,668 were able to hold our own," reof Natural Resources were for 1986-87. Milcik added that marked Zehr, commenting on
among the many on campus the society would have to cut the other SGA all~ted organithat were cut financially by the back on a variety of things, in- zations that were slashed. Zehr
Student Government Associa- . cluding nesting platforms. In speculated that the first activition, but the overall feeling at the past, organization's mem- ties to go will . probably be a
the CNR this week seems to be bers have built nesting · plat- number of summer programs
one of relief.
forms and donated them to area and summer help, with other
Last Sunday the senate of conservation groups. Now TWS cuts to be made at a later date.
SGA voted on budget financing may have to put a price on the
for student organizations. Prac- platforms, which would cause
tically every organization re- problems for many conservaceived some sort of cut in their tion groups which are non-profit
Daniel Trainer, dean of the .
operating budgets, including organizations.
College of Natural Resources,
natural resource oriented stualso expressed disappointment
dents groups like The Wildlife
over Schmeeckle's plight, but
Society, CNR student Advisory
added, "Schmeeckle is a very
,
A
natural
resource
related
faBoard, and Wisconsin Parks
valuable part of this campus.
and Recreation Association. cility that is smarting a lot Trainer stated the CNR's inHowever, the reductions in more than most is the Schmee- structional budget had to be cut
these areas were not as sub- ckle Reserve. The reserve re- due to state mandatory reducstantial compared to other cam- ceived almost the same funding tions, and Schmeeckle lost monfrom SGA as last year ($12,600
pus organizations.
in '84-85 to $12,700 in '86-87), but ey because.it wasn'~ as ~Y
Most of the people involved in because of a $10,000 drop in rev- involved Wlth the instructional
these activities expressed dis- enue from the CNR, Schmee- budget as other academic priorappointment in the, decreases, ckle was in dire need of extra ities. "Something had to give,"
but added it could have been monies from SGA. Schmee- said Trainer, "the Reserve is a
much worse, and that the situa- ckle's request for an additional very important program to the
tion would just have to be dealt $6,596 was not honored by university and to the students at
the university."
SGA's finance committee.
with.
by Andy Sayagian
Outdoor Editor
•
~ -- :;··
RevoluUoDary Pulping
Raymond Young of the UWMadison Forestry Department
says his discovery of a new way
to process pulpwood may cut
paper mill energy and production . costs by 80 percent or
more, cause virtually no air or
water pollution, and double pulp
yields. The procedure, called
"ester pulpilig," recycles the
chemicals that separate wood
fibers and also produces more
of the pulp-processing chemicals.
Biodyne Chemicals, Inc., of
Neenah, Wisc9nsin, is developing a pilot plant that will use
Young's process to produce an
estimated 10-15 tons of pulp per
day. · The plant is expected to
open sometime this year, possibly in the Neenah area.
Earth's atmosphere, the famng
and brightening of some stars
comes from fluctuations in the
rate they bum.
WDdUfe Unaffected
by Pipellne
It has been almost eight years
since the ~Alaskan pipeline
began operation, and several recent wildlife studies indicate
that the line has had little
adverse effect on animals in the
area. In two studies commis-.
sioned by the Alyeska Pipeline
Service Company, scientists
found that moose and Dall
sheep populations were not noticeably affected by the presence
of the pipe. Revegetation of the
pipeline corridor with several
types of grasses has attracted
S111all mammals and birds,
which in tum draw predators to
the site.
Twinkle UUie Star
SAF IDforms DOE
Stars really do twinkle, say
The latest input from the Soastrophysicists at Los Alamos
National Laboratory. Not
Cont. p. 17
always an illusion caused by
/
;
Page 16 March 13, 1986
Education
· Students of all ages learn through CWES programs
.·
by Gregory Scheder'
CWES Writing Intem
The Central . Wisconsin Environmental Station (CWES)
means many things to a variety
of pec:.ple. Since the station's establishment in 1975 , it has
brought environmental education experiences to over 120•000
people. Activities range from
school· programs for grades K-·
12 to a .·week in the woods for
people over 60 in the Station's
Elderhostel program. A major
focUS' of the Environmental &tation is the environmental education of Central Wisconsin stu. dents. This is the audience
which most UWSP students interact with through the programs at CWES.
To the grade and high school
students, a trip to CWES means
a practical experience 1n learning about the interrelationships
of people and their environment. For the teachers who
bring their students, the station
offers programs to reinforce
topics studied in the classroom.
To students from the university
who work at CWES, the station
is a teaching lab to give them
experience in teaching environmental concepts to young peopie. Dr. Mike Gross, associate
fr
the eon
f
professor om
ege 0
_ Natural Resources (CNR), said
it this way: ~'The Station pro-
·.
'
One reason for the success of tant because "the . future be- have been written in the past vision or teaching as well. Sevthe Environmental Station is its longs to the children.:.they have and two people are working on eral are enrolled each semester
focus on instructing young peo- to be taught how to care for the their theses this semester.
as work-study students to help
ple. While children are growing environment," and she hopes to
Students involved at CWES
Cont. p. 19
up, they learn through the im- be instrumental in showing work outside the areas of superpressions made upon them by them how. Interns have greater
their experiences. Many of the responsibility than practicum
stUdents working at the station students because they maintain
feel that this early age is best day-to-day continuity of the profor teaching people about the grams. Andy Gallagher looks at
importance of the environment. his role as an intern as having
Eric Nei, a UWSP practicum a long term effect, "What I've
student, views his role as a learned about the environment
teacher in this way: "W1lile in my college classes is somethey're young, we can get kids thing everybody should
to develop a value system . know...people have to see how
geared to love and appreciate they fit into the environment."
the environment, regardless of As a Resource Management
their previous experiences with major, Andy wants to continue
nature." As a practicum stu- in youth education, and the Endent, Eric spends one day each vironinental Station offers him
week working with the staff at a background to "learn to teach
the station.
others about the environment."
Between 10 and 15 practicum
Undergraduate students are
students are enrolled at CWES not the only people who work at
each semester.. Tammy Peter- the station. Four graduate
son, also a practicum student, assistants serve on the staff ln
views the teachers at CWES as a supervisory capacity, .mainly
"providing a positive education- as program directors, one day
al experience" and sees her job . each week. Graduate assistants
as "bringing the learning alive see that a day's programs run
to benefit the students who smoothly, and many have had
come to the station." Practicum previous experience teaching.
students work one day a week "Marty Martin sees his graduteaching at CWES along with ate work at CWES as a logical
two student interns who work step in his education. "I'm com- ·
every day 9f the week for the fortable with my teaching skills,
semester.
now I need some experience in
Student interns generally the supervisory area, and workhave a ·sm·cere cormm'tment to
as nrngram director mves
.,...
continue in Environmental Edu- me that opportunity." The stacation as a future. Julie Tubbs, tion_ also provides a place for
one of the Spring '86 interns, graduate students to do work on
A UWSP student leads a class on a winter
sees her job at CWES as impor- their Master's Thesis. Seven
_ _'!'-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _tr_e_k_.- - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . . ; . - - - . . . ,
vides leadership and model programs for people interested in
teaching children about the en- r
vironment."
Since its inception, over 300
students from t1fe UW-stevens
Point ·have participated in
teaching programs at the station. The majority of the students teaching at CWES are ResOurce Management majors
from the CNR joined by some
education majors from the College of Professional Studies.
Most undergraduates participate in the course Natural Resources 376, Practicum in Environmental Education and Interpretation, which gives them
credit for their efforts.
mg·
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Pointer Page 17
I
- P~oiect Wild gives cla.ssrooms a natural look
- /"by
better understanding of wildlife
and the envirorunent in which
the animals live. It is a unique
program in that it involves,
educates and entertains students and teacbers in a very
creative and innovative way.
Andy Savagian
Outdoor Editor
People involved in environmental education have ~ways
prided themselves on their responsible dedication, devotion
The program was originally
and drive toward teaching peo- developed by members of the
ple about the envirorunent.
Western Association of Fish and
So what were a bunch of Wildlife Agencies and the Westthese people doing running ern Regional Environmental
- around the woods on Saturday, Educators Council. Extensive
pretending to be all sorts of ani- research, review and field testmals and doing all sorts of cra- ing preceded the final curricuzy things?
lum core that makes up Project
They were being responsible Wild. The program, a spinoff of
envirorunental educators, thai's the successful Project Learning
what. ·
. Tree, began in Wisconsin last
The unusual but important an- April when the first workshop
tics being performed last week- was held at the DNR's MacKenend were part of the Project zie Envirorunental Education
Wild workshop that was held Center.
March 8 at the Central Wiscon- _ Project Wild consists of two
sin Enviroruneiltal station.
activity guides; the first is for
Project Wild is a unique pro- kindergarten through grade six
gram that was . set up to give and the second for grades seven
both students and teachers a through 12. Each guide contains
'
about 80 course activi~; these trained, these people become
activities are the backbone of Project Wild "facilitators."
Project Wild's objective to
Elizabeth Schmidt, a project
teach wildlife diversity and val- facilitator and a coordinator of
ue. Concepts the activities teacl,l the CWES workshop, said the
include wildlife ecological sys- workshop participants were interns and responsible human structed by the use of the activactions, hwrian values and the ity guides. communicating the
wildlife resource, aw~reness project's ideas and activities to
and appreciation of wildlife, "and · others, and given a background
wildlife conservation.
in Project Wild history.
Project Wild's curriculum
Project Wild attracts a wide
"textbooks" are not the kind variety of interested parties,
sold in stores, and that's the added Schmidt. Many are colmajor reason for the workshop · lege students or nature center
held at CWES last Saturday'. To leaders with envirorunental eduimplement the program, the cation backgrounds, while othcreators of Project Wild con- ers are teachers from all sorts
ducted workshops and courses . ?f differ;ent, traditional fields of
to train people who wanted to ~cti~n. . . .
use Project Wild .in their classIt IS this ability to supplement
roo~, nature centers or parks. traditional su~jects .tha!, holds
The activity guides, rather than the key to Pro~ect Wil~. A ~r­
be openly availa6le to an inex- son can use 1~ (ProJect Wild)
perienced public, were used at ' anf!Vhere. . .. m any '~ac~t .of
these worksho.ps to give thetr. curnculum_,
satd
trainees the knowledge and Schmidt. She also satd Wisconbackground essential to make sin facilitators hope to infuse
Project Wild effective. Once the prQgram into the state's
FRESH .I
.
BEST
.;
..;-
-
curriculum and, at the moment,
keep it 'teacher-oriented.' "The
project is reaching so many
more people. . .Wisconsin is
really leaning toward environmental education being essential to the state's curriculum."
The many advantages of PrO:
ject Wild reflect its diversity,
flexibility and creative aspects.
"(One of the biggest advantages) is that the curriculum is
already prepared," concluded
Schmidt. "It's involving, and
it's not dry; students are going
to get something out of it.''
Notes
Cont.~
ciety of American Foresters
was directed toward the U.S.
Department of Energy which is
in its final environmental
assessment of nominating five
sites as suitable for further
study as high-level nuclear
waste repositories.
SAF's input, from its publication Forest Cover Types of the
U.S. and Canada, gave the department significant background for its research on
potential impacts of nuclear
waste deposit sites on forests. ·
Lead Levels l)rop
,
.•
~· -
Lead levels in the Mississippi
River system have dropped by
40 percent in the last decade another sure sign, say scientists, that the antipollution laws
limiting lead additives in gasoline are working. ·
/
M
Aerial Cone
Harvesting .
Hand-picking pi.J1e cones for
use in reforestation programs
may be on the way out.. US foresters are finding that a Canadian device is a more efficient
and productive way to gather
cones. The aerial cone harvester (ACH), consists of a large
metal cone-basket which is lowered from a helicopter over a
conifer. As the ACH is - lifted,
oones are collected, leaving the tree's terminal bud unscathed.
The ACH can harveSt 36 times
more trees-in a day than human
workers, and at the same time
bring in double the amounts of
S®ds per bushel of cones - at
almost half the cost. Best of all,
cones can be picked from the
tops of trees closer to the time
of their exact ripeness, allowing
foresters to take full advantage
of bum~r crops. -
' .
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Page 18 March 13, 1986
Species s}»otlight
.~
Skyborn eagles are being (w atched with a sharp eye
.
derivatives, and possibly heavy nest finally breaks a · tree, the ation's midwinter survey,
metals cause the trouble. These nest is abandoned. Windstorm . cooperators reported sighting
From DNR's Lifetracks
persistent ch~micals are now and lightning also take a cer- 211 bald eagles. The previous
banned but their residues still tain toll of nest trees.
high count was 166 in 1984. A toshould be left
reverberate.
of 138
were inA lot of eagles die of old age
The bald eagle was adopted
as our national emblem in 1782. and associated causes. For
By 1976, our Bicentennial, its those that don't, shooting takes
existence was "endangered" in the heaviest toll. It accounts for 43 states and "threatened" in 50 percent of the annual deaths
five. Loss of habitat, pesticides despite the threat of a $5,000
and shooting caused the decline. fine an~ a year in prison. Often
Before human- settlement, mistaken for other birds, bald .
bald eagles nested along water- eagles do not don their distincways throughout Wisconsin. But tive white heads and tails until
logging, agriculture and sum- age four. Until then, they r~
mer resorts drove the birds semble big, brown hawks
from traditional nesting haunts. (which may not be legally shot
What's left is the territory either!). Some people deliber· around inland lakes and rivers ately kill eagles because they
in the northern third of the hate all birds of prey.
Bald eagles mate for life,
state and some places on the
Great Lakes. However, Great which may be as long as 50
Lakes birds are "iffy," and years! They breed early in Wishave had nesting failures in re- consin and around February ~
gin their cartwheeling acts of
cent years.
courtship. Typically, they nest
In Wisconsin fish is the staple in tall pines or high on rock
food ·in the eagle's diet and the cliffs. It takes about a week for
inland lakes are relatively"' a mating pair to shape hununcontaminated. When eagles dreds of boughs into a suitable
feed repeatedly on fish that col- "eyrie." This is no small task.
lect toxicants, the poisons add One record eagle nest weighed . alone. H disturbed they may eluded in the survey.
up until harmful amounts are two tons! Usually they return to give it up for the season. HikThe eagle nest survey for the
stored in the body fat. In times the same nest year after year ing, snowmobiling and other ·
of stress when these reserves and in Wisconsin several nest- recreational activities need to 1985 breeding season l~ated 246·
are called on for breeding, nest- ing territories have been occu- be well away from any nest territories with at least some
degree of activity. Of these, the
ing and laying eggs, accumu- · pied for 40 or 50 years. One. tree.
Research JUUI Surveys
outcome was known for 214
lated poisons are released .into ejrie in Sawyer County has
Once again, records were set · occupied territories. On~ h~
the bird's bloodstream. Thin- been used since 1918 - more
for the over-wintering popula- dred seventy-one ter~1tor1es
shelled eggs that crack and than 60 years.
break are the result. Embryos
Occasionally a nesting pair tion of eagles in Wisconsin. Dur- : were su~, producmg 282
may not develop properly, or will have two or more nests and ing the National Wildlife X~r- _YOung. This compares to 1984 .
fertilization
be blocked.
rotate between them in different
DDT
its~
the
of the
with 169 successful territories
producing 279 young.
This study was done with
funds from Section 6 and the
"
Nest" pro-
gram with Charles Sindelar
heading up a team of biologists
to fly the nest sites and to band
young birds. Four eaglets were
removed from the nest and sent
to Tennessee (2) and Indiana
(2) for hacking projects in those
states.
Cont. p. 19
~-7-.w _LI!*M
(;-' I
Categories
KING
OF
OLUE3,
and
WSPT
-...PRESENTS
LUCK OF THE
AY
MO~DAY.~
MAit!ll
1. Band,
f
2. Solo/Duet 1
-3. Novelty (comedy, mime, etc.)
4. lip-Sync
*Participants in theEncore Talent Contest
Rnale. will be chosen
from the preceeding
Encore Talent - Contests.
March-• ••• 13 ; ...
April •.••• 10
April • • • • • 17
April •.••• 24
I
- --t!F
ETC Finale
May1
*Must sign up a week
ahead at Campus Activities
Window
(Except for March 13
date-sign up at door)
SPONSORED BY UAB SPECIAL PROGRAMS
AND CONTEMPORARY MUSIC.
Pointer Page 19
Eagles ~ont.
Karen ' Kozie, with funding
from the National Parks Service, is doing an extensive
study of the eagles nesting in
the Apostle Islands National
Lakeshore. Through the use of
telemetry equipment, she will
be following the birds through
their winter migration. She has
also studied food use, nesting,
and fledgling behavior of. the
: birds. Two of the nestling birds
which died this season are
being examined fOr possible
contaminants.
Information and Education
Adopt an Eagle Nest Program
For the 1985 nesting season,
tromp.
1a---
BER initiated a new program to
increase public awareness of
the plight of bald eagleS' and
· concurrently to raise money for
the annual eagle survey and
banding project. For a $100 donation, individuals or organizations are able to "adopt" a nest
and help pay for its management and protection. The donors receive information on the
status of the nest they adopted
and any young that were raised
in it, a photograph of young
eagles in the nest, an "adoption" certificate, and a copy of
Birds of ~Y of Wisconsin.
T~yourseH.
Which early pregnancy test is as
easy to read as red, no-white, yes?
Which is a simple one-step test?
Whic}J. has a dramatic color change
to make the results unmistakable?
Which i~ 98% a~curate, as accurate
. as many hospital and lab tests?
Which is portable for convenience
· and privacy?
.'
CWES cont.
-
with the operation of the facility. Jobs range from maintenance work and kitchen help
(no easy task feeding 50 hungry
grade school students) to an
occasional teachitig· role. These
students can see various
aspects of the operation of an
· environmental education facili_.
ty. Students also help to keep
the station's operating costs
down. Reduced operating costs
continue to keep the station
accessible to everyone.
The Environmental Station offers UW-stevens Point students
a fine opportunity to put their
environmental education skills
into practice. Although viewed
as a place for young people to
learn about the environment,
CWES teaches teachers too.
Students from the University
working at CWES learn while
they teach, and the station offers a strong alternative learning experience for everyone
that visits it.
Trek cont.
tography, hiking, wildflower
identification and bir.ding-to
name a few. There is always a
trained naturalist available to
l~d trips or provide information. For more information on
EVE, write Box 155, Apple River, m. 61001, or phone (815) 5942259.
spe3king on tree farming.
Open House at the CNR on
March 16 - is your organization involved?
CNR Awards Night...,... March
Just a Reminder to all who 14 at the Holiday Inn at 5:30
signed up for the Wildlife Socie- p.m.
ty Conclave in Michigan - The
big dates are March 14-16!
Fire Training starts Saturday
March 15. Starting time is 8
a.m. and classes go until 5 p.m.
Located in room 112 of the
CNR.
National Wildlife Week is
coming up fast! This year's
NWW is from March 17-22.
Speakers are still needed to
give presentations to the public
schools. Contact P .J. Cleveland
at 346-3508 if interested.
Arbor Day Ron. Get ready for
Acid Rain Talk. AWRA and the Arbor Day 5K Fun Run on
SCSA are having a meeting on Saturday' April 19 - starting
Mlrch 17 (Monday) at 7 p.m. in time 9 a.m. sponsored by the
the Communication Room of the student Society of Arborists.
Stop by the SSA desk in room
· UC. The highlight of the eve- 105 of the CNR for more details.
ning will be Carl Watras, who
will speak,on the important acid
rain research that is going on at
the
Eartbweek Bel~. Only 6
Little Rock Lake Project.
more
weeks until Earthweek
Everyone is invited to attend.
SAF Meetblg. The Society of '86! Help is greatly appreciated
American Foresters is holding a and needed. Stop in room 105 a't
general meeting at 7:30p.m. at the EENA desk for more inforthe Founder's Room - Old mation, or to volunteer suggesMain. · Dan Peterson will be tions.
Complled by
Jim Amrhein
. To My Brothers In
~ SIGMA TAU GAMMA:
You're right.
You get a Plus!
W"
,
I don't recall ever saying this to you be·
fore but ••• I just want you to know you
are the most Important people In my life, and I .
care an awful lot about each and every one of you.
Let's help each other continue to strengthen
those bonds of brotherhood which holds our fra·
temlty and each other together.
Your Friend
SAF looks
to, the
past
I
by Bob Crane
SAF
a Brother For Life
'
,BENDER
'
TKE BUTTERS BAR
-HAPPY HOUR
SUPPORT
THE EAG·LE
WALKERS
OVER.SPRING BREAK·
INFO BOOTH
March 13·19
THIS WEEK A
HOUR,· WEAR
CLO:THES. FIRST
LEIS FRIDAY 6-9.
'
I
BEACH HAPPY
YOUR BEACH .
50 PEOPLE GET
$2.50.
ALSO IN UC CONCOURSE, HAT
CITY AND tKE SELLING-HATS,
SHORTS, SUNGLASSES AND MORE.
GET YOURS FOR HAPPY HOUR AN.D
FL'ORIDA.
Come See Us Off
Fri., March'21st
8:30
Will Cover
200 Miles In
Nine Days
Lumberjack Ol~pics
Around the turn of the century SAF, a rough and tumble ·
breed of men known as lumberjacks were in the business of
harvesting timber and shaping
our present day Wisconsin.
These people of yesteryear, the
lack of other entertainment,
often entertained theiQSelves in
engaging in friendly competition
in the tasks of their jobs. Examples of these rustic games
include log rolling, speedchopping, log throwing, pulp toss,
axe throwing1 crosscut saw
races, and tobacco spitting.,
"Lumberjack Olympics" are
alive and well here , at
UWSP. The Foresters Conclave
which is sponsored each spring
by the Society of American Foresters (SAF) has not only carried on many .of the traditional
logger events but has also added several professional forestry ·
events including tree identification, and diameter estimation.
This spring the Conclave will be 1
held on Saturday, April 26, or
the 27th in case of rain. In addition to numerous athletic and
technical events, SAF is holding
a raffle for an ATT computer,
Jonsered chainsaw and many
more prizes, in which they hope
to earn enough money to buy a
tractor for their annual pulpcut.
Following the Conclave the Wisconsin State Chapter will be
holding a free steak feed for all
student national SAF members.
st~ll
\
.....,
Page %0 March 13, 1986
Nelson, Swift t9 be ·inducted into · Hall of .Fame.
-.
ter on the University of Wiscon.sin-Stevens Point campus.
News Release
Displays commemorating the
lives and careers of Nelson and
Swift will be added to materials
put in place last year following
Gaylord Nelson and the late establishment of the recognition
Ernie Swift will be the second program and the posthumous
and third members inducted inductions of Aldo Leopold and
·into the Wisconsin Conservation John Muir.
:Before taking over the chairHall of Fame during ceremonies March 22 in Stevens Point. manship of The Wilderness So- ·
Nelson, who heads The Wil- ciety, Nelson served three
derness Society' was in the city terms in the US Senate as a
. and spoke at the convention of Democrat representing Wisconlake management profession- sin. He also is a former governor. In· both positions, he won
considerable fecognition for his
role in promoting new conservation practices. As a senator, he
introduced and sponsored numerous bills including the first
law to control strip mining, a
ban on the use of DDT and a
ban on the use of phosphates in
detergents. He was-co-author of
.the Environmental Education
Act and is recognized as founder ~of Earth Day and Earth
Week.
Swift, who died in 1968 in Rice
Lake, retired several years
earlier as executive director of
the National Wildlife Federa-
as
tion. He began his career
a
warden for the state and in 1947
became director of the Wisconsin Conservation Department,
forerunner of the Department of
Natural Resources. He later
served as assistant director of
the US Fish and Wildlife Service as well as the top officer of
the Wildlife Federation.
The Wisconsin Conservation
Hall of Fame foundation,
chaired by UW-Stevens Point
Professor Earl Spangenberg, is
supported by 15 state organizations involved in conservation
matters. The foundation's board
voted in February to choose
Nelson and Swift as the next inductees.
·
Spangenberg and the" foundation's executive secretary, William Horvath of Stevens Point,
said their group is interested in
"spreading- the co~servation
idea through the state and nation" by recognizing individuals
"whose life and work have been
impol1ant in the conservation
movement."
Gaylord Nelson
als/officers on March 7, but will
be unable to return fQr the induction. However, representatives of both men's families are
expected to be there.
The public is invited to attend
the ceremonies beginning at 10
... ' a.m. in the theater of Sentry
World Headquarters. The hall of
fame exhibit is housed nearby
in the Schmeeckle Visitors' Cen-
log ho.use workshops
offered
Mbmesota
Great Lakes School of Log
Building announces publication
of its schedule of log building
workshops for spring and summer, 1986. Ten-day sessions on
"Scribe-Fit" or "Scandinavian"
log construction are held monthly throughout the year.
All workshops are taught at
the Great Lakes School Logging
Camp in the Superior National
Forest near Isabella, Minneso- ta, a few miles from the boundary waters canoe area. These
residential owner-builder
·courses are open to both Jtlen
and women, with special rates
for couples and retired persons.
Topics covered include tree cutting, log handling, chainsaw
maintenance and safety, wood
characteristics, hand tool skills,
log scribing, notching, preserva•
tion, hoisting and other operations unique to this style of construction.
Besides the "hands-on" work
with log buildings, sessions fea' ture illustrated lectures on log
furniture, toolmaking, and history. Tuition fee includes instruction, . lodging, and use of some
tools. Advance registration is
necessary. For information
write Great Lakes School of Log
Building, 3544¥.! Grand Avenue,
Minneapolis, MN. 54408 or telephone (612) 822-5955.
/
This Spring Break, if you and Y.QUr
friends are thinking a6out heading to the
slopes, the beach or just home for a visit,
Greyho1.md · can take you there. For only $86
or less, round trip. .
From Feb~ 1through April30, all
you do is show us your college student I. D.
card when you purchase your ticket. Your
ticket will then be good for travel throughout
your Spring Break.
. So this Spring Break, get a real break.
Go anywhere Greyhound goes for $86 or less.
For more information, call Greyhound.
MUSl present a valid cOllege student I. D. card upon purchast. No other
discounts apply. Tickm are nonuansferable and sood for uavcl on Gmilound
Llncs, Inc., and other participating carriers. Certain restrictions apply. Offer
effective 211186 through 413M6. Offer limited. N01. valid in Canada.
·
--GREYHOUND
leave the driving to us=
1725 West River Rd., .344-5300
IC 1986 Greyhound Lines, Inc.
341·4740
Pointer Page 21
MCA RECORDING ARTIST
TICKETS Go ON SALE THIS FRIDAY, MARCH t4tfi: ··
-AT jTHE UNIVERSITY CENTER INFO. DESK-, GRA· UAB
HAM LANE MUSIC & CAMPUS RECORDS AND ..· ·
TAPES ...
·
Page Z2 MarCh 13, 1986
Kent Walstrom
Receives All-American honors
• Harding · finishes sixth at ~AlA Tournament
-
..·-
by UWSP Sports
Information Office
MINOT, N.D.-Richard Harding, a 177-pound UWSP sophomore from Athens, received AllAmerican honors at the NAIA
National Wrestling Tournament
by _placing sixth.
Harding woo both his matches
ThU111daY and advanced to the
quarterfinals Friday. He then
lost to Ted Bullerman of Southwest State, MN-, 20-4. He
bounced back to defeat Todd
Thalken of Hearney St., NE,
overcoming a 10-2 deficit to tie
the match at 10 after regulation
· time expired. He then pinned
Thalken 16 seconds into the extra period. Harding later bested
Don Laurent of Adams St., CO,
11-5. This automatically qualified harding for Saturday's
competition.
He lost to Vince Dawson of
Southern Oregon College by default, losing 6-9. Harding injured his forearm and was unable to continue, thus capturing
sixth place. ·
liead Coach Duane Groshek
wa8 '!'ery pleased with the effort
of Harding.
.
"I think Rich showed tremendous heart and a lot of guts,"
said Groshek. "In the match
with the Kearney St. wrestler
(Thalken), he came back from
a 10-2 deficit to eventually gain
the victory in the overtime."
N.C.,~1.
Groshek · felt the four-wee1t
layoff between conference and
J
~-
';
Top senior high school wrestlers representing Wisconsin
and Minnesota met head-on at
the Berg Gym on the University
of Wisconsin-stevens Point campus Saturday afternoon in the
first of two dual meets between
the states.
The score was neck-and-neck·
until Minnesota captured the
last three matches to win the
Minnesota-Wisconsin Wrestling
Classic, 34-23.
Thirteen wrestlers competed
for each state, and another 13
traveled to Minneapolis Saturday to face different wrestlers
from the Gopher state.
Top wrestlers represedting
the area were Tran Brook of
Nekoosa, Paul DeCarlo of D.C.
Everest, John Carl of Auburndale, Cliff Ange of Athens, and
Rick &eefeldt and Rodney Roth,
both of Stevens Point.
All participants and coaches
thought the experience was fun
and hoped the program continues in Wisconsin.
"The meet has been fun and
the group of kids was just
great," said Wisconsin Coach
Vern Pieper of Stoughton High
School. "They have been just a
super group in a meet like this.
It's important that we get good
representation from our state
and schools, and we did."
Brook won his match at 98
pounds, 15-2, over Jeff Nelson of
Fergus Falls.
national meet competition hurt
Burns.
"I think Ryan lost a little
edge from not being in competition. Psychologically, he was
not where he wanted to be."
Labecki had a bye in the first
round, lost to Jack O'Connor of ·
Central State, OK, 1~. and
then succwnbed to Brad Hanson
of Minnesota-Morris, 7-4.
"It was unfortunate that Jay
cut his lip in the O'Connor
'match,"- says Groshek. "If he
wouldn't have done that, I feel
he could have won the match.
Even O'Connor~came up to him
after the match and said he
thought he was in trouble before
the injury occurred...
Other WSUC participants
placing were Brett Conner of
UW-La Crosse, second at 142;
and 'Brian Keller of UW-River
Falls, third at 167 pounds.
Netters win season opener
-.
Rick Harding
Groshek feels Harding's
accomplishments are even more
worthy of praise because he's
only been wrestling four to five
weeks.
"Rich was ineligible first semester and only started wrestling when school started second semester," he says. "Harding only wrestled 12 matches
before nationals and wound up
-, High school wrestling
clqssic successful
byKareoKuUnski
Staff Reporter
12-6 for the year."
Two other Pointers, Ryan
Bums 'at 118 pounds and Jay
Labecki at 158 pounds, were'
eliminated in the first round of
competition.
Bums lost to the No. 5 seed
Mike Mazurkiewicz Ol Northern
Montana Univ., 5-0, and then to
Fred Kelly of Barber..Scotia,
"I was nervous going into my
match," Brook said. "There
were only two guys in my
weight class, so we didn't have
a wrestle-off. It was exciting to
be here and I had the chance to
meet and get to know the other
wrestlers.''
DeCarlo, who carried a 31-7
record into the meet, defeated
Phil Tangen (a state champion
from St. James) 8-4 at 112
pounds.
"This type of program is a
great idea," said DeCarlo. "Not
only do you get to meet kids
from another state, but you
wrestle with guys you've neverwrestled against before. Now
our previous opponents are our
teanunates."
In the 132 weight class, Karl
of Auburndale High School lost'
his match to Todd Jackson of
Staples, who finished second at
State, 6-2.
"The rivalry was there," remarked Karl. "They wanted to
win just as bad as we did. I'm
glad we have tryouts, unlike
Minnesota, who just pick their
wrestlers. This way you can
make sure you have the best
wrestlers there.''
Dan Borski of Apple Valley
used an illegal throw on Ange
of Athens, which resulted in a
default. Ange hurt his neck in
the match and was credited
with the win at 138.
"Before, we had wrestled
towns in dual meets and were
going out to beat them, but now
we have grown to be friends
Cont. p. 25
Benedict.
Diehl-Zowin, Briones-Benedict,
"Our team is young and to · Polston-Briones and Greenbergby Karen KuUnski
have success early in the sea- Stew Stone.
Staff Reporter
son ·is most beneficial," said'
"In singles, Bryan Zowin and
The UWSP men's tennis team Pointer Coach Dave Nass.. Gary Polston each won both of
opened the season in fine fash- "However, even though we won their matches," said Nass. "It's
ion by winning their own Point- this event, I'm far from pleased especially notable that each
er . Invitational this past week- .with our technique. We have took a tuni at playing the nomend.
plenty of homework to do before· ber one singles spot and won.
On Friday night, a doubles we get our doubles technique up Gary did a fine job with his
tournament was held and the to a level that will be confer- serve all weekend. His
Pointers captured all but one of ence competitive."
opponents couid not handle
the possible nine points to easily
The Pointers swept two meets them. Bryan got better as the
defeat UW-Green Bay, Northern in Saturday's Pointer Open with competition went on. In his fi- .
Michigan and Northeastern Illi- a 6-3 victory over NMU and a ~ nal match and debut at number
nois in a round robin setup.
0 win against Northeastern Illi- one, he played a Buperb allWinning at number one dou- nois.
· court attack game against a
bles for UWSP were Bill Diehl
Winning singles matches for N.E.I. veteran.
and Bryan Zowin, at number Ute Pointers were Polston, - "Zowin combined with Bill
two Gary Polston and Jon Diehl, Zowin, McElhaney, Bene-: (Diehl) to win both matches at
McElhaney, and at number diet, Briones and Doug Green. Cont p 24
three Mike Briones and Peter berg. Doubles victories went to
• •
l
Angelfish ninth at Nationals
by Scot Moser
Staff Repo~r
SPOKANE, WA - The UWStevens Point women's swimming team culminated its most
successful season in the school's
history with its best finish ever
in a national meet by taking
UWS~
ninth place in the NAIA National meet held here this weekend.
Claiming the title of national
champion was Central Washington University, followed by Pacific Lutheran College, UW-Eau
Claire, UW-Milwaukee, Fairmont State College, Canada's
Simon Fraser University, UWGreen Bay, and UWSP.
The strength of the Lady
Pointers' performance was evident in the number of women
their squad had named to the
All-America team. Eight women
flew back . to Stevens' Point as
All-Americans; including Laura
Adee, Theresa Calchera, Jan
qualified eight swimmers as All-American.
Cont. p. 25
-----
I
Pointer Page .23
t
'-
uws~ students place 'in Bodybuilding ChampionshiP
..
by Kent Walstrom
Sports Editor
Four UWSP students competed in the Wisconsin Collegiate Bodybuilding Championships held this past Saturday a~
Eau Claire.
Judy Ziolkowski (Novice and
Open Lightweight divisions) and
John Hintz (Heavyweight Nov. ice) placed first in their respective weight classes while Jon
· Keener earned ·a third in the
Middleweight Novice division
and Rick Miller a fourth in the
Lightweight Novice division.
The competition, open to all
male and female students in the
University of WJsconsih system,
included Novice and Open divisions. The Novice bracket is for
thos~ who have not placed first,
second, or third in a weight or
height class in any bodybuilding
contest. Those who have previously finished second or third in
a Novice contest are eligible to
compete. The open division is
reserved for all com~titors,
providing they are a student in
the UW-system.
Ziolkowski, who also claimed
the women's Overall Championship, is a senior from Stevens
Point and will graduate this
spring with a major in Psychology.
"When you do something like
. this, you really need a lot of
support," •said Ziolkowski, who
began the sport just over three
months ago. "It's not an ego
trip, but you need to· have the
confidence to go up there (on
. stage) and do it."
Hintz, a junior studying wellrie5s and also a resident of Stevens Point, has been active in
bodybuilding for nearly a year.
Along with UWSP's three other
competitors, Hintz trains without the use of steroids or other
unnatural bodybuilding aids.
Keener, a )umor from Fort
Wayne, Indiana, majors in
Wildlife and developed his bodybuilding routine over the last
nine months.
"It was hard work, and I
want to credit everyone who .
helped me and offered encouragement throughout my training," said Jon. "I'd also like to
thank Joe Kruse for putting up
with me during my diet," Keener quipped. "He deserves a
good deal of credit."
Miller, a Business and Advertising junior from Milwaukee,
has participated in the sport of
bodybuilding for two years and,
like his male counterparts,
trains at the UWSP Health
Enhancement Center.
I
It was Miller's second bodybuilding competition, while Ziolkowski, Hintz and Keener were
entered for the first time.
In the women's competition,
those weighing up to 114.5 lbs.
compete in the Lightweight
class, while those over 114.5 lbs.
.fill the Middleweight bracket.
For the men, those weighing
up to 154 lbs. compete in the
Lightweight class, those from
154 lbs to 176 lbs. make up the
Middleweight class, and anyone
entered over 176 lbs. competes
in the Heavyweight class.
. All contestants were judged in
three basic categories: 1) symmetry (balanced proportion. of
muscle groups in relation to
each other), 2) mass and muscle development, and 3) posing
routine.
Although routines are developed in order by the individual
competitor, seven mandatory
poses were required for the
men and five for the women.
Awards were given for first
through third places in each
· weight class and to overall winners in both the No'vice and
Open divisions.
__
,
L-R ,Jon Keener, John IUntz, Judy Ziolkowski, and Rick Miller.
p................................................................................................................' l !
i
· ·.
. !Swimmers finish
Huffy's Lampoon;------
1
1
~
I
Happy Hours Make Having FUN ASI
:...,~
EASY AS ONE, TWO, THREE ~be~~~~e:r:ed-t~~n~;
sa.oot=
11 DUGOUT HAPPY HOUR THURS. 7-10
::.,!;"'~:-t=
- ·
· ~which competed at the NAIA
2) SIASEFI HAPPY HOUR FRI. 6-9 ... $3.00~ National meet held here last
I
1
1
·
I
I
I
3)
~
.
RUGBY HAPPY HOUR SAT.
I weekend. The Dogfish finished
7-10 •• $3.00~ ·:thse~en!:U:dla~~ :v!e s=~
~ mers and ended up the weekend
i ~th seven All-American
sT. PATTY's DAy
Mon d.ay' March 17th·
~
.~
~
1:!9
Happy Hour sa.00
u-
~
I
I
8·12 Band Fastbreak (No Cover)
~
aw~
I
the NAIA National tiltte was Central Washington
IUniversity, followed by Drury
ICollege, Denver University,
UW-Eau Claire, Fairmont State
iCollege, Bemidji University and
..
~u:;fish
~America
named to the Allteam included Bret
Spring Break Happy Hour ~~!:'sto~e.fr:s:!~~~~lo~
March 19th 7-10 s·3 DO :illll400
I freestyle relay; John Rudeen,
medley relay; Jeff Shaw,
•
~400 and 800 freestyle relays;
'~
~
1331 2nd-st.
~
I~
Proof Of Age
Required
I Andy Woyte, 400 medley relay;
~:,dr::;::r.:ki~~e~~ei:y~
I
~and the 400 and 806 freestyle re:illll
'
llays. Individually, it was Ster.,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.~panski stealing the show, win~
7th
ning the 50 in :21.3, placing
fourth in the 200 free (1:44.0 on
Friday) and capturing third
place in the 100 free (: 46.6 on
Saturday).
Stepanski, however, was only
one of an elite· group of seven
who worked together to contribute to the Pointers' impressive
overall finish. On Friday,
Brumbaugh, Woyte, Rudeen
and Stepanski combined to finish seventh in the 400 medley
relay in a time of 3:39.0. Saturday saw Brumbaugh, Shaw,
Johnstone and Stepanski mak:.
ing up the 400 freestyle relay
which took fifth place in 3:10.69•
Earlier on Thursday, Fish,
Shaw, Brumbaugh and Stepanski formed an 800 freestyle relay that ended seventh in 7:06.
Coach Red Blair was pleasantly surprised by the Dogfish's
seventh place finish in the meet
but was frustrated with the facilities in Spokane.
"The pool at Whitworth Col- -..
lege was a slow pool for a national meet to be held in - not
a single national record was
broken by the men this weekend," Blair said. "Take Stepanski for example. I know he
Cont. p. 25
-
Page 24 March 13, 1986
Kulas, Naegeli end season .with a flo~rish
I
by Scott Huelskamp
Staff Reporter
The opened hand and outstretched arm of Kirby Kulas
was raised towards the Quandt
fieldhouse crowd as he yelled,
"Five, Five, Five."
The Pointers had defeated
UW-Whitewater, 65-61, to earn
at least a share of the WSUC
conference title for the fifth
consecutive season. Two days
, later the Pointers defeated UWPlatteville to win the title out-
-
right.
Kulas and twin post Tim Nae. geli were the main instruments
behind the Pointers turnaround
from an early season 1-5 record
to a 22-7 .tinish, including a
string of 15 straight wins.
"After our first game against
Whitewater (a 65-61 loss at
Whitewater) we held a team
meeting and talked things
over," said Kulas. "We knew
we had to play a more intense
style of basketball if we were
going to win the conference.
"The key to our play was that
we just had to go out and do the
things we had been doing in
past seasons, namely, to play
good defense and hustle," added
A stalwart rebounder and
tireless worker, Kulas has the
ability to complement the players around him. "Kirby does
the little things that make others look good," beamed Naegeli. "He finds the open passing
lanes and sets good picks so
people can get the open shots,"
"I think he's made me a better
player. We have been able to
complement each others talents '
the last two years," added Naegeli.
The second halt of the Point-
Cont. p. 25
Kulas.
Kirby Kulas (32) was a dominant force inside
for the Pointen .this season.
· Netters,
cont. from page
number one doubles. Bill had
some return of serve problems,
but counterattacked that with
an outstanding weekend-long
serving demonstration.
"I'd like to congratulate our
team on a job well done. I used
Naegeli felt the team played
up-to its potential. "With a new
coach we each had to learn our
new roles on the team, but once
we dia, everything clicked in. It
was great ,to win the title outright."
The basketball career of Kirby Kulas at Stevens Point ended
with the 47-46 loss to UW-Eau
Claire in the District 14 championship game. As co-captain of
this year's team, he averaged
13.7 points and 6.9 rebounds per
contest and was named to the
All~WSUC team and District 14
team for .the second straight
year.
He transferred from UWGreen Bay after the 1982-83 season and has started all 59
games as the Pointer center.
Kulas set a school record by
playing 1084 minutes in 30
games during the 84-85 season.
· Tim Naegeli (34) led the Pointen· in scoring
and was a unanimous all-league pick.
22--- ----------
every player on the roster
except for orie man who is out
with an ankle injury. At one
point or another, every one of
our men won a match. That's a
positive way to open a season
when you're dealing with a
Native American Center To,
Participate In UWSP Open House·
team comprised almost entirely
of first and second-year players."
YOU'RE. INVITED!
The Pointers will host St. Norbert's in a dual next Tuesday,
March 18, beginning at 3 p.m.
ACTIVITIES: American Indian Speakers on the hour
Children's stores/games an day
Food/Craft stands all day
Oneida Nation Museum Hands·On Exhibit all day
Music/Dressl!)ance Demonstrations 1:00-3:00
WHERE: Native American Center
2nd floor, Student Se.rvices Building
Fremont Street
•
WHEN: Sunday, March 16, 1986
TIME: 11:00 a.m. to 4:30p.m.
EVERYONE WELCOME!
LEGION LOUNGE
·'-
FRIDAY FISH FRY 4·9 P.M.
WALLEYE $3.95 "Best tasting .Fish In Town".
Everyone Is Welcome. Cat:J'Y Outs Available
344·2100.
Sunday, March.16th 3·7 Danca with '
the Jolly Chaps (polka) $2.00 Cover
Tuesday: Steak Night $6.25 _
16 oz. T-Bone with all the trimmings
Live Music Every Sat. 9·12, Sun. 3-7
Happy Hour 4·6 P.M. FREE Popcorn
Reduced Prices On All Drinks
1009 Clark Streetj
Pointer Page 25
and work as a team," · commented Ange. "We work together instead of being enemies. Wf!
were also able to see different
styles of wrestling, which was
very beneficial."
Seefeldt, who entered the
meet with only two losses in 32
appearances this year, faced
the champion from Canby, Tuomo Karila. The match at 155
ended in a 6-6 tie.
"It's nice to wrestle in a meet
like this- because in a way; you
get one step ahead of everybody
else," the Point star said. "This should continue to be just for
is definitely a good program to seniors because it gives them
get into."
one more chance to prove themRoth, -a state champion from - selves. I became friends with
Stevens Point, met third-place the other guys and hope to see ·
state finisher ·Mark Meier of them again." .
Princetown in his match at 185,
but came up short, losing a 12-8
"It's neat that these guys, afdecision.
ter going through a strenuous
"The only pressure I had month of tourneys, can put on
coming into this meet was the their same uniforms and now be
fact that I had won State and part of the same team," Coach ·
everybody was expecting me to Pieper added. "It was a great
experience for everyone inwin, and I lost," said Roth.
"Overall, I think the program volved. The public didn't really
,_
Kulas,
cont. fro.m page
ers' "power in the post" is junior Tim Naegeli, a native of Racine.
Naegeli had . to assume more
of a "'scoring responsibility with
the loss of -All-American Terry
Porter. His ' smooth fifteen-foot
jumpshot and lightning-quick
first step when driving to the
basket helped him lead the
Pointers in scoring, averaging
19.2 points per outing.
. Naegeli feels his game is
con-
24----------
tinuing to improve every year.
"The. last two years Coach
(Dick) Bennett has made my
fundamentals skills better, and
this year Coach Eck has really
helped to improve my allaround game."
Keith Kulas.
Naegeli will begin next season
in pursuit of Terry Porter's alltime scoring record. He is currently 12th on the list, 412 points
behind Porter. "It isn't something that I'm too concerned
about, but it would be nice to
In addition to being selected have. I just want to go out and
' to' the All-WSUC squad and Dis- help the team win ball games,"
trict 14 team, Naegeli was re- . Naegeli added.
cently named co-captain for the
You· can beLNaegeli and the
8fHI7 season, an honor he will Pointers will be back again next
share- :with Walter Grain and year.
know what was going on. But
next year I think they will be
more aware. The wrestlers
worked their tails off and we
JNTRAMURALS The past week was -slow for
Int.ramurals because of the
Pomter basketball game. Also,
some events scheduled for Tuesday, March 11, were cancelled
because of the concert and were
rescheduled for the Monday after break. Check the Intramural
bulletin boards for time and
place. Tournaments will also
start on the Monday after
break.
Correction from the Intramural Swim Meet Results: 4 North
Swimmers,
Fres
-..
Palmquist.
b
,
·
klast
·lor rea .
Introductory Coupons
~~-~~~~--~v~~;ch~k~-oll
S...:' Any Biscuit ·
1
Sandwich
,
only
.
IT'S A GOOD TIME
II FOR
THE GREAT TASTE
·
at participating stores
Orange Juice
Blcon, Egg & ChHse Biscuit •. ·•••• 99e
S.u51gt & Egg. Biscuit .......... 89e
Sausage Blsc~lt ............... .. . 69e
59c
May not be used in conjunction with any other coupon offer.
U.-lt 4 ......... ,., ,.,... Offer good thru 3/31/86.
· IIJIIit 4 ...n~e•.. ,., _,... Offer·good thru 3/31/86.
1
r--------------------------,
. . .
FREE Regular
with the purchose of on, liJcuil Sondwich of ret~·
ular price.
I
.
1 M!IY not be.used in conjunction with 11ny other coupon offer.
-~
IT'S A GOOD TIME
FOR THE GREAT TASTE
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r~~;-----------------------~
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only
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IT'S A GOOD TIME
FOR THE GREAT TAST~
·
•. .
L---~~=~~~~~~~~-------------J
Wis. Rapids, 2128 8th St. So.
Hours: 6-10:30 Mon.-Sat,. 7-11 Sun.
Big Mac® or · ~
~ lb. wtth Cheese
on_ly·
May not be used in conjunction with any othM couifpooffer
. .
Li111t 4 uMwitllll ,., '"'"'Offer good thru 3/31/86
· •
phere for the rest of the, meet" .
Blair said that he had board- ·
ed the plane for Washington
hoping his team might pull out
a loth place finish overall and
that the Pointers' seventh place
finish shows how well they did
swim in spite of the slow pool.
Gelwicks, Roxanne Fink, Pam
Steinbach, Jeannine Slauson,
Kathy Frohberg, and Lynn
h& gBiscui ts .
Come
Upcoming Events: Men's and
Women's Badminton - Entries
due March 17, Tourney held
March 19 from 7 to 11 p.m.; Innertube Water Polo (men and
women), Softball (men and women), Men's Floor Hockey and
Men's Indoor Soccer- Entries
due March 19 with play starting
after break.
Angelfish, cont.
t 'em!
· ·
Roach finished second in the
men's division, not 2 North
Smith as reported.
cont.-----
was ready to crack the low :20s
(in the 50 freestyle) if he could
have been in a faster pool. If
that would have happened I
don't think anyone could have
caught him in the 100 (freestyle) because a fast 50 would
have created a different atmos-
IT'S -A GOOD TIME·
FOR THE 'GREAT-TASTE.
··
even cut some practices short ·
because they were working so
hard. It was a nice experience
and I hope it grows."
99e
Present coupon when ordering . Coupon may not be used in
conjunction with any other coupon or offer ; U_.. 4.....,...
' " '''"•· Offer good thru 3/16/86.
·--~~~~~--·--J
Stevens Point
7-10:30 Mon.-Sat., 7-11:00 Sun.
Jan Gelwicks, as she'd doneall year, continued to dominate
for Stevens Point. On Friday,
she captured fifth place in the
400 individual medley (4:56.4)
and sixth place in the 100
breaststroke (1:11.6). Saturday
saw her finish ninth in the 200
breaststroke with a time of
2:36.6.
Also on Friday the Lady
Pointers placed two relays in
the top 12 as Fink, Gelwicks,
Calchera and Steinbach- formed
a 200 freestyle relay which
placed fourth 1:~1.3 (a _ new
UWSP school record); and
Adee, Fink, Frohberg, and Gelwicks combined in the 400 medley relay to take 12th.
Calchera started things off on
Saturday with a 11th place finish in the 100 freestyle while
Frohberg followed suit by finishing 12th in the 200 butterfly
(2:19.8) . Adee just missed
breaking into the top 12 taking
13th place in the 200 backstroke
in a new school record time of
2:21.6 and Gelwick wrapped up
Saturday's individual action
with her ninth place breaststroke finish.
The 400 freestyle relay of Calchera, Gelwicks, Steinbach and
Fink also took sixth on Saturday with a new school record
time of 3:45.1.
"The fact that we broke seven school records this weekend is
very indicative of our performance. We have been riding pretty high all season I didn't think
that would change when we got
out to Washington.
"This is our first season being
eligible to swim at the NAIA
national meet and I've always
felt that, if we did swim the
NAIA's, we could break into the
top ten in the nation. We obvi/
ously proved that here."
Both Frohberg and Adee were
honored in Washington for their
. academic prowess as well as
their swimming accomplishments when they were named
to the NAIA Academic AllAmerica team.
•
.>
Page 26 March 'ta, 1986
-
t
UAB LEISURE TIME ACTIVITI.ES
PRESENTS:
- 2 Mini-courses in April
.
BEGINNING BALLROOM DANCE -
TAKING CHARGE OF YOUR HEALTH
-A. s hor t co ur se i n se 1f- ca re
Dances:
April 8
15
. "'-I
THE ACTIVATED ·PATIENT
-Becoming a wise health consumer
Jitterbug, Fox-trot, \.>Jaltz or Cha-Cha
(select 3 at sign-up)
OVER THE CO~NTER MED1CATIONS
-Responsible self-medications
22
SIMPLE SELF EXAMS
-Listening to your body
29
PRE VENT ION ~& SELF CARE
-For the active person
All sessions are 6:30 - a:oo pm in the
Green Room of the U.C.
Please sign up flor any or a.l l sessions
at the Campus Activiiies Office
Co- sponsored by
U\~SP
He a 1th Services
When:
Thursday" Ni gilts
April 10, .. 17, 24
7:30 - 9:00 pm
Where:
Instructor:
Cost:
Annex #2 - Quandt
Susan Gi ng t·a sso
(Theatre Arts ) .
$6. 00 pet· coup 1e
-
\
Sign up and pay at the Campus Activities
Office by April_~· ·
\
.
r_
.).
This summer may be your last chance to
graduate froiD college with a degree and an·
officer's commission. Sign up for ROTCs
six-week Basic Camp now. See your
Professor of 'Military Science for details~
But hurry. The time is short.
The space is limited. The heat is on.
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.
....
ARMY RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS
Captain Ste~e Miller
Room 204, Student Ser:Vices Building, 346-4007
Pobder Page 27
. 1
- I
Commentary,
need. SGA's own Constitution,
as a spokesperson from GPU
pointed out, mandates unbiased
decisions. Too often students
have put trust in their goverrimen~-and the government
failed them.
Perhaps we should remember
that Student Governments are a
product of the Vietnam era,
Futurist,
Saint Pat,
s----
ture."
Zach suggested these books in
which one can learn more futurist thoughts: Jobs With a Future, by Marvin Centron and
Reinventing the Corporation
and Mega Trends, by John Nesbith.
cont. from p. 9 - - -
great portion a beer at the celebration, commemorating his
casting out the snakes. As most
people were stopping their Chatter and lying down .to sleep on
· tables, Patty started to walk
· off, his eyes staring at the skylike he was looking for God.
We never saw Patty again.
He walked toward the river-
Thiel/Geiss,
bailk and that was the last I
ever saw of him. I guess God
took him to that holy barley
patch in the sky.
But we can all remember
Safut Patty by drinking some of
his creation and wearing green
(he liked the green snakes the
best). Patty would have wanted
it tliat way.
.
cont. from p.
s--------------
so prepare. You also know breathing or simply relieving
graduation will arrive, so begip stiff neck and shoulder muscles.
now to plan for the change.
Keep a positive attitude. This
Doing some basic planning may little sentence is so important
be overlooked by concentrating that it is finding its way into
on now. In other words, don't medical journals. You may
let those tests sneak up on you.
want to discuss your feelings
The adage goes, "All work with a friend or relative, if you
and no play makes Jack a dull cari. Try writing your feelings
boy." All work also causes down. (Don't forget to burn the
stress to build up in your sys- paper later.) At times, it may
tem. Have fun. Plan for music, be helpful to seei profesSional
poetry, sports, hobbies, what- assistance.
ever, and build it into your sysLearn to tolerate and forgive.
tem. Get some physical exer- Don't hold grudges against
cise daily to help relieve stress. yourself or another person, that
Be moderate and consistent.
only tak~ energy away from
Try not to become anxious be- . something else. Understand the
fore a test. You just need to re- perspective from which others
lax. Use meditation, yoga, deep see, yet don't become depend-
their original purpose was to
provide students with the truths
and with a fair voice to the
higher administration. Today it
seems the original concept has
been forgotten and all that is
left is an organization that
stands for everything students
of the '60s abhored-power, politics and policies.
cont. from.;.
20 years ago.
Zach stated, "The future belongs to those who aren't afraid
to learn. In the future, education won't be a right, but a responsibility. Those that continue
\0 learn will have the power
and the responsibility in the fu-
Stress,
cont. from p. 3
Wo r d
4
cont. from p.
the matter with them?
But I'm persistent. I couldn't
just give up and let her wallow
in ignorance. I had to keep her
mind active. So I told h~r,
'.
"You remind me of a-"
"Stop," she said. "You'd bet- ,
ter be nice."
"Nice? Nice? I'm always
nice."
You know, it hurt though. So I
decided not to tell her what she
reminded me of. No way, no
thank you. Then she realized
that she'd made a mistake. She
cont. from page 3 , - - - -
This is why student representation is only as effective as the ·
communication between SGA and the student body. It is our
goal to promote open lines of communication between SGA, faculty, staff, student organizations, residence halls and the student
body. Your representatives need to know your concerns, and
you need to understand the issues affecting you.
As a student of UWSP, you should be concerned about who represents you. There are several issues, for example: tuition increases, classroom section cuts~ and segregated fee allocation
affecting you right now. Wouldn't you want an infonned, qualified, vocal president and vice-president with interests and goals
similar to your own representing you on these issues?
We feel we are that qualified team you would want representing you at Faculty Senate, United Council, and other important
meetings as well as effectively leading the SGA Executive
Board and senators. Both Steve and I have been actively in:
volved in student leadership positions during our college career.
. I, Lisa Thiel, am presently the president of the University
Activities Board and serve on both the campus and community
Advisory Council and the Athletic Committee. I've held several
student organization positions ranging from RHA Rep. to Athletic Entertainment Programs Coordinator. I was voted Campus
Leaders Association's 1984-35 student leader of the year andreceived a 1986 Who's Who award.
Steve Geis, my vice-president candidate, is presently an ex- ·
perienced SGA senator from the College of Natural Resources.
Previously, Steve was a Resident Assistant for two years and
last year's president of RA Council. He is also pr~ident of Waters Resource Association. Steve is a senior with a major in water chemistry, and I am a communications and business administration major.
We are not people out for a title or power. We sincerely want
to instate, with your input, efficient decision-making processes,
en8ure that senators are using their vote in your best interest,
and create an infonned atmosphere where students can communicate their concerns to SGA and see results. If elected as president and vice-president of SGA, Steve and I
would, with the help of the most qualified executive board we
can recruit and the direction of the senators you choose to represent you Mardi 18, do our best to ensure not only that you're
infonned' about the issues affecting you, · but that your voice is
.sought. You are the wheels and SGA is the driver. Without the
proper direction and follow-through, you will be spinning yo'ur
wheels. With the right choice, Thiel and Geis, you can guaran. tee progress.
ent on your support systems. A
support system may contain not
only people, but little rituals
that take the place of self-con-·
fidence.
Above all, .know yourself.
Identify your strengths and
weaknesses. strive to overcome
your fears and phobias. Learn .
to recognize your abilities and
accept your limitations.·
Stress can be prevented just
by following the above suggestions. The message behind the
suggestions is to know yourSelf,
understand and listen to your
body. Your body is a machine
just like a car; both are major
investments.
·
lo-------....:;.---------
was really sorry she said.
Please. I reminded her of what?
"A wombat/' I told her.
"A wombat?"
She gave me the old raisedeyebrow-once-over and said she
had tn go to the bathroom. She
actually went into my bedroom
and grabbed the dictionary.
Then I heard something hit the
floor. She ran into the room yelling.
"That's another damned marsupia!. "
"Re-enforcement," I told her.
Ormond/Barton,
She didn't seem too happy.
"What other animals do I remind you
Come on. I want
to know."
of?
"A vole," I replied, "a dogong, a hyrax, a duckbilled
platpus, a-"
She was out the door before I
knew it. I didn't even get to
griffin or auk.
Years and years of reading
and I share it with her just like
that. And not even a thank you
Brian.
.
cont. from page
3~­
but have had first- hand experience with the planning and presentation of _such. We empathize with organizations ~d ·feel that
the budget process can be improved and, like all other aspects
of our proposed administration, plan to take steps to improve
them.
It is also our contention that student senators, students and
administration must make an attempt to open lines of communication and strive to maintain them through publicized open
meetings and increased attendance by members of the senate
at hall councils, organization meetings and university functions. We will also encourage students to become members at·
·
large on our various committees.
Our third contention is in regards to representation. Diane
and I feel confident we can utilize the talents and coordinate ·
the directors in achieving ~oals set by the senate. We further
hope to provide senators wtth a chance to focus on issues that
they and their constituents find important such as STOP 21,
tuition increases, minority issues, etc. We also ·want to provide
a chance for senators to be trained and educated thoroughly
about Student Government Association and all issues. We will
put .the necessary emphasis on the importance of making infonned decisions. By having more infonned senators, the environment for effective and accurate representation will ·be
created.
We feel that our background in Senate and the other organizations will provide us with a broad base by which to work
from. We can, due to our experience, use our resources to assist in the process of making decisions. We can make more in- ~
fonned an~ justified decisions by further utilizing the r~
sources of _United Council and United States Student Association and a network of communication whose infonnation would
be a great-assistance to us all year around. With the experience, interest and commitment we have, we hope to provide
the Senate-with the guidance needed and the support wllich is
essential. To achieve this though, two things must happen:
1st:· students mUst believe in the vitality of their opinions
and vote in the upcoming election, and
2) elect the best candidates to serve as Senators and President and Vice-President.
We feel we are the best choice for President and Vice-Presi. dent. Our dedication, commitment and concern to see that students" get a fair deal by not only saying issues will be addressed but by taking action on such, and our genuine interest
in serving UWSP students, qualifies us for these positions.
So we are asking you to join us at the voting ~th on March
18 and cast your vote for the BEST candidates.
Page 28 March 13, 1986
lnte·r views,
•
UWSP chosen as new
headquarters for Institute
cont.--------~---
TRADEHOME SHOES
Date: AprilS
- One schedule. All majors,
especially busine~ a~~­
tion or commumcation. Positions as manager trainee. Loca·tions throughout WI, MN, lA,
NE,.ND;sD.
MANITOWOC PUBLIC
SCHOOL DISTRICT
Date: April 8
One schedule. Education majors. Current vacancies in:
Spanish, elementary gifted 3!'d
talented. Anticipated vacancies
in: elementary, elementary music (vocal), physical education,
psychology, special educationelementary learning disabilities-
behavioral disabilities (dual
certification), speech and language.
LIMITED EXPRESS
Date: April 19
One schedule. Fashion merchandising. majors only. Positions as co-manager trainee (retail). Sign-up schedule will be
posted on March 19 due to
spring ·break..
U.S. NAVY
Date: April16-17
Recruiter will be in the
University Center Concourse
from 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m~ on both
days. All majors. No sign-up
necessary.
''Pit Stops'' offered
·enroute to Fl'orida
by Melissa Hardin
Staff Reporter
To help ensure a safe trip,
coffee, doughnuts and advice on
highway safety and responsible
alcohol consumption will be
offered to Spring Breakers on
their way to Florida at three
Budweiser "Pit Stops."
Located at highway rest areas
in Henryville, Indiana (off I65S) Valdosta, Indiana (off I75S >' and Savannah, Georgia
(off I-958), each "pit stop" will
be open March 7-9, 14-16 and 2123.
' A moderation message will be
reinforced at the pit stops
through distribution of Anheuser-Busch's "Know When to Say
When" and "Buddy System"
alcohol responsibility materials.
The Buddy System concerns the
topics of how to drink responsibly and how to hold safe, responsible parties. How to avoid
drunk driving by setting up a
phone system in your dorm or
organization is included. Bumper stickers, blood-alcohol chart
keychains and other items will
also be distributed.
Robert D. Orr, Indiana governor, said. at the opening last
year, "Tile Budweiser 'Pit Stop'
program represents a unique,
first-of-a-kind partnership be- ·
tween the world's largest brewery and state officials in promoting highway safety."
This is the second year the pit
stops are being offered. Last
year, thousands of college students made a stop; this year
even more are expected.
The pit stops are sponsored
by Budweiser along with the
State Tourism and Highway Patrol Departments of Indiana
and Georgia.
Budweiser has scheduled
activities for Spring Break vacationers in Daytona Beach,
Fort Lauderdale, Fort Walton
Beach and South Padre Island.
state.
Serving as officers are executive director Rick Ringler, a
The University of Wisconsin- professor of English and ScandiStevens Point has been chosen navian studies at UW-Madison,
as the headquarters of tlie new- and associate . director Kent
ly-formed Wisconsin Institute Shifferd, coordinator of peace
for the Study of War, Peace and studies at Northland College.
Global Cooperation.
UWSP's representatives were
The institute is a consortium involved with designing the conof 21 public and private univer- sortium due to the university's
sities and colleges in Wisconsin, long-time sponsorship of its own
devoted to encouraging and le- peace studies program. Charles
gitimizing research and teach- Rumsey, who coordinates
ing about the roots of organized UWSP's program on a rotating
violence, security issues and the basis with other faculty memfactors necessary for a just bers, says the curriculum here
global peace. Funding is pro- was developed in the early 1970s
vided by its members.
as a response to the ROTC proThe central office was estab- gram's start on campus. The
lished at UWSP because of the late George Dixon, a member of
campus's location in .the ~te • the sociology faculty, was inand its offer to proVIde off1ce strumental in its development.
space in the lower level of the
A member of the history lacAlbertson Learning Resources ulty, Rumsey was one of the
Center.
state-wide institute's founders
Sharon Roberts of Stevens and served for a time on its exl>oint was appointed part-time ecutive council. He says the
executive secyetary in January. purpose of the consortium's pro-Prior to moving here last grams is to educate students
August, she operated her own and the public about social rebusiness, editing manuscr~pts sponsibility, -the need for arms
and providing financial sernces control and the futility of nuclear warfare.
to physicians.
Roberts will become involved
He was succeeded· on the exin writing grants to obtain more ecutive group by William Skelfunding for the institute's teach- ton, also of the UWSP history
ing resi>urce center and in com- faculty. His affiliation with the
piling an inventory of all peace institute involves attendance at
studies courses, information three meetings a ye&- and ongoand activities throughout the ing interaction with other repreUDiversity News Service
TREAT
Busch Cityski will be at Daytona Beach March 25-27. A ski
slope of finely crushed ice will
be constructed by the Texan
Hotel. Competitive ski races
and free skiing for the public
will be featured. Instruction by
top professioDals.including Billy
Kidd, first American to win an
Olympic medal for skiing, will
be offered.
·
sentatives. He says this may be
the only consortium of its kind
in the country.
Some of its programs available to member. schools include:
- A Campus Visitors Lecture
Series involving mentbers of the
·executive committee who ~ ·
available .to speak at campuses
throughout the state.
Edward Linenthal, associate
professor of r-eligious studies at
UW-Oshkosh, has been invited
to discuss "Ideological Civil
War in America: The Committee on the Present Danger and
Physicians for Social Responsibility," at UWSP on ~~~
day, March 12. The public IS mvited to attend the free presentation at 7 p.m. in Room .116
College of Professional ~tudies.
_ Ringler, the institute's -executive director, will give a free
public lecture, "What Art,
Literature and Music Have to
Teach about War and Nuclear
War" at UWSP on Monday,
April 7. -His address in 101 CollinS Classroom Center is at 7:30
p.m.
Registration for the confer- ·
ence and information are available thl-ough the institute's office in UWSP's ·Learning Resources Center, 900 Reserve st.,
Stevens Point, 54481 (346-3383).
•
YOURSELF
.
NO.
COUPON
NO
LIMIT
· Daytona Beach is also the site
for two Los Lobos concerts
March 18 and 24. They will be
performing at the Bandshell in
Daytona at 2 p.m. both days.
All . four locations will have
trivia, dance contests and aerobic classes as part of non-consumption activities. Vacationers
can also take part in daily live
radio broadcasts.
The moderation message will
be reinforced by distribution of
the "Know When to Say When"
and "Buddy System" alcohol
responsibility materials and
other Spring Break merchandise on the beaches.
Dig into the cool, rich, delicious
taste of our Peanut B!lster Parfait,®
Or nutty Double Delight.® Or Ius·
· cious Banana Split covered with
flavors like strawberry and pine·
apple. AU made with Dairy Queen®
soft serve, a real dairy product.
Royal Treats, everyone, and now
specially priced.
Now thru March 16
WE TREATYeU liGHT~'
i
-k
3324 Church St., Stevens Point
.
(1 block from South Side Shopko) 34~3400
.
llc*y ~· b I"OUd to suppo<1 our local chlld<en's hospilals 11\rough
the Oomond foundation's a-en's Miracle
~-
ClAM D.O. CotpJ11186
NOW TAKING ORDERS
FOR ST. PATRICK'S DAY
AND ·
EASTER CAKES!
SEMES I ER IN SPAIN
Not just for Spanish majors only, but for everyone: beginners, "in between"
students, and advanced. Put some excitement into your college career!!
. BEGINNER OR ADYANCEP - Cost isabout the
same ea a semester in a U.S. college:$3,670.
Price Includes jet round trip to Seville from
New York, room, board, and tuition complete. Government grants and loans may be
applied towards our programs.
------- ---- - -- - - - -
·
-1
F·9
Hurry, it takes a lot of time. to make all arrangements.
cOllege you attend
your name
your present street address
City
state
Z<P
11 you would like lnlorm•tton on future prog,..,o give
pei'INinenllddfell below.
state
SPRING SEMESTER - Jan. 30 · May 29
FALL SEMESTER - Aug. 29 ·Dec, 19
each year.
FULLY ACCREDITED- A Program of Trinity
Christian College.
For full information - send coupon to:
SEMESTER IN SPAIN
2065 Laraway Lake Drive S.E;. F-9
your permam:!nt street address
e<ty
Live with a Spanish family, attend classes
four hours a day, four days a week, four
months. Earn 16hrs. of credit (equivalentto4
semesters taught in U.S. colleges over a two
year time span). Your Spanish studies wiiJ be
enhanced by opportunltlell not available In a
U.S. classroom. Standardized teats show our
students'language skills superior to students
· completing two year programs In U.S.
Advanced courses also.
Z<P
,
Grand Rapids, Michigan 49506
(A Program of Trinity Christian College)
Pointer Page %9
VOTE MARCH 18TH - .
STUDENTS FOR STUDENTS
Q
u
A
L
I~
T
y
BARTON
* Present Senator
College of Profession·
al Studies
Fine Arts
E
* Treasurer Computer
Science Association
E *··VIce
President
c ampus Leaders
~X
X
p
* Coordinator Associa·
tlon For Community
Tasks
·
Association
P * Workshop Coordinator
Campus Activities
Office
A
QUALIFICATIONS
* Caucus Chair
E
u
.· VOTE
L
I .QUALIFICATIONS
T ORMOND
Y·.; Present Senator
-
Q
·
E
R ,.
DIANE BARTON, VICE PRESIDENT,· ·
,I
E
N Goals: ARC Acti.on Representation & Communication * Provide means of commun-
c
·R
I
E
N
c
ication *Training senate in advance with workshop before school *Attend· organi-
.E
zational meetings & events * Make themselves visible * Listen to students
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SPRING TOURNAMENTS
.lnd STREET PUB
r
OPEN
SINGLES FOOSEBALL TOURNEY
..
. · MARCH 19TH 6:30P.M.
OPEN DOUBLES FOOSEBALL TOURNEY
MARCH 20TH 6:30P.M.
I ·.
Also Take Advantage Of Our
-
SPRING BREAK SPECI·ALS ·
Ren.t ~ outdoor equipment for the
price of a weekend and a day for
the whole break.
·
· ~
$ign Up For All
At
"' (g;
,f
ECREATIOHAL
Thursday - Whitewater Band
Country Rock _- s1.00· Pitchers
· with paid cover all night. -·
'
Saturday - KILL DOZER
New Wave Band 8:30-11:30 · .~ _
Sunday - GROOVE
.Blues 5-9 - 1o~ Taps _
· ~~r band .
~~ . ~
(f ..
.., M"crio. s+.
Ill
ERVICES .
~
'>
Q
r:.....-th St.
UWSP
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1274. N. 2nd
•
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(
Page 38 March 13, 1986
story of an upwardly mobile funny Scott Jones. 'Ibis Friday
husband (lloffman) whose wife and Saturday at 9 p.m. in tbe
(Streep) bas just walked out, UC-Encore will be filled with
leaving him to fend for. himself jokes, music, exotic toys, rub· and their young son. Shown at ber devices, a hilarious slide9:15 in the UC-PBR. Admission show, and mucb, much more all
March.11
is $2 for both films, or-$1.50 for for only $1 with a student ID.
Come cheer on the men's voleach.
Come on down and cbeclc: out
leyball team as they host the
the show! Sponsored by UAB
University of Minnesota at 2:30
March 13-14
Contemporary Music.
in Berg Gym. Admission is
Don't miss UAB-Visual Arts
free!
grand finale! "E.T.-The Extraterrestrial"
will be shown in
I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I
the UC-PBR at 7 and 9:15 p.m.
This will be your last chance to
see E.T. for awhile because it is
being taken out of print for the
I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I
nen seven years. Admission is
March 15-18
$1 with UWSP student I.D. and
It's here! It's the Eighth
$2.25 without.
Annual University Antique Show
March 17, 18 aud 19
and Sale. Sponsored by the.
University Fibn Society preUWSP Athletic Department, it
sents a "Dustin Hoffman Dou. is the biggest in Central Wisconble Feature."
sin. Come on over to Quandt
"The Graduate"-Tbis 1967
Gym on Saturday, March 15,
classic stars Dustin Hoffman,
·
from
10 a.m.-6 p.m. and on SunAnne Bancroft and Katharine
March 11-16
Ross. Mike Nicholas won an
UWSP Theatre presents day, March 16, from 11 a.m.-4
Oscar for best· director of this "Dance Theatre." Some of p.m. and relive a part of the
fibn where a post-grad (Hoff- UWSP's most talented perform- past. ·For more information, call
man) has affairs with both Ross ers display their talents in a va- x-3257.
and her seductive mother (Ban- Tiety of dance numbers. Contact
Tbunday, March l3
croft), causing tremendous the UWSP Box Office for more
Stressed out? Exams got you
complications.
.
down? Relax and take a masinformation, x-4100.
This fibn also features one of
sage. Attend a relaxation and
the best soundtracks ever promassage workshop from 6:30vided by Simon and Garfunkel.
8:30p.m. in Rooms 125/125A of
Shown at 7 p.m. only in the UCthe UC. It will be the most rePBR.
laxing two hours you've spent
"Kramer vs. Kramer"-This
this semester! Sign up at the
1979 film stars Dustin Hoffman,
March U-15
Campus Activities Office. It's
Meryl Streep, Robert Benton
He's a comedian! He's a mu- ·free and everyone is invited..
and Jane Alexander. An Oscar sician! Actually, we're not quite Co-sponsored by UAB Leisure
winner for best picture, "Kram- . sure exactly what he is, but we Time Activities and ·the Lifeer vs. Kramer" portrays the like to call him the hilariously &Ie Assistants.
this 'WeekS
.t
Cl\[\1 \ SC(W~:
~eater
· --..
..
\
________
_____
--~----------
ANNOUNCEMENT! Government homes from $1-u repair.
Also delinquent tax property.
---------------------------------------Qill
~~. En. GH~,
tion or education majors. Re- for information.
ON.CAMPUS
ANNOUNCEMENT: Printer
RECRUITERS
March 17-March 28, 1986
Sponsored by Career Services
Interviews require sign-up for
appointmen1 time and registration \Vith Career Services unless
otherwise noted. ·
Stop by 134 Old Main Bldg.,
or call 346-3136 for further information.
·
U.S. SPORTS ACADEMY
Date: Aprill
Recruiter will be in the
University Center Concourse
from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. providing
information on master's degree
programs in sports science,
sports medicine, sl>orts management, fitness management,
sports coaching, sports research. ·Especially interested in
talking with seniors in physical
education, business ~dministra-
cruiter will i1lso make a presentation on these programs at 7 purchase: The Academic Comp.m. that evening in Room 119 puting P.C. Club is preparing a
of the Phy. Ed. Building. No volume purchase of Panasonic
KX-P1091 printers. Anyone insign-up necessary.
terested in participating should
contact George Kung, en. 4135
before Friday, March 21.
M & I SERVICES
ANNOUNCEMENT: Shaper
Date: April 3
Club Members: Reminder of
Two schedules. Computer in- the Shaper All-Nighter, March
formation systems majors or 14, 10 p.m.-6 a.m. Get everybusiness administration majors body involved and enjoy!
with MIS emphasis or CIS mi- · ANNOUNCEMENT: The
nor. Must be junior or senior UWSP Izaak Walton League
class level with graduation date will be having elections for next
no earlier than 'May 1987. Must year's officers Thursday, March
have completed at least one CO- 13, in Room 224 of the Science
BOL class. Interviews for ·pro- Building. All nominations are
gramming internship extending open floor. Everyone is welfrom June-December 1986.
come.
ANNOUNCEMENT: Come to
the Spring Break Video Dance
Party on April 11 and receive
Cont. p. 28
free posters of Springsteen, Jag-
ger, Clash and more. Also, free
Hooters, James Brown, Sp$gsteen records. Sponsored by
R.~.A. and Chevrolet.
ANNOUNCEMENT: UWSP
Open House Sunday, March 16,
from 11 a.m.-5 p.m. The public
is welcome. For more information, call 346-2481.
ANNOUNCEMENT: Win an
AT&T 6300 PC or a Jonsered
chainsaw. Society of American
Foresters is holding a raffle
with these as prizes. Buy tickets in the Concourse Tuesday or
from an SAF member.
ANNOUNCEMENT: Scott
Jones. . .music, comedy, exotic
toys, rubber devices, hilarious
slideshow. Friday and Saturday
at 9 p.m. in the UC Encore for
just $1 w/UWSP I.D. What
more could you ask for?
ANNOUNCEMENT: To all
the UWSP organizations that
send out regular mailings or
are planning a bulk mailing. ;
Have you asked yourself if
there is a better way to send
out a mailing? The better way
has arrived. The UWSP Bulk
Mailing Service features mechanical label application and
sorting to make mail-ready
mailings. For more information,
stop by or call the BMS Office
located in the Print Shop, UC.
Phone 346-3423.
ANNOUNCEMENT: Are you
Padre or Daytona bound? Then
come and get to know each
other at UAB's Scott Jones
Show this Saturday at 9 p.m. in
the UC Encore. Reduced admission for all .travelers signed up
for UAB trips.
ANNOUNCEMENT: Lutheran
students: Join . us Sunday,
March 16, 10:30 a.m., for a festive worship celebration followed by a free brunch. Call
345-6510 for reservations, leave
message. Peace Campus Center, Vincent and Maria Dr.,
right behind Hal's Grocery.
Sponsored by Lutheran Student
Community.
ANNOUNCEMENT: The
School of Home Econqmics is
accepting applications for graduate assistantships which will
be available during the 1986-87
academic year. To apply, obtain
Cont. p. 31
Classified, cont.
an application from the SOHE
Office, Room 101 COPS. Deadline-April18.
EMPLOYMENT: Thinking of
taking some time off from
school? We need mother's h~lp­
ers. Household duties and child1 care. Live in exciting New York
City suburbs. Room, board and
salary included. Call 203-6220717 or 914-273-1626.
EMPLOYMENT: $1,250 weekly home mailing program.
Guaranteed earnings. Start
immediately. Free details, rush
• stamped, self-addressed envelope to: SI.JI: Box 575, Thorsby,
AL 35171-0575.
'
EMPLOYMENT: Government
jobs. $16,040-$59,230/yr. No~ hiring. Call 805-687-«1011, Ext. R5592 for current federal list.
EMPLOYMENT: Summer
jobs: biology, psychology,
math outdoor recreation, hydrology, history or art. List of
openings. $5.51 to $6.90 per
hour. Send $2 per field for list.
Money back if not satisfied.
Jobmart, P.O. Box 551, Stevens
Point, WI 54481. ,
EMPLOYMENT: Student
writer wanted: Develop/write
brochures, newsletters and flyers on natural history. Write
and distribute news releases in
local paper:; for nature p~o­
grams. Students must quiilify
for work/study. Contact
Schmeeckle Reserve at 346-4992
between 9-5.
EMPLOYMENT: The Asso-:
ciation for Community Tasks is
now accepting applications for
the positions of president and
• vice-president. Applicants must
have a cumulative GPA of at
least 2.0 and have at least two
· ·
semesters on cam;~ are paid positions. A
general knowledge of .ACT programs and procedures is definitely helpful. H interested, stop
down at the ACT Office located
in the lower level of the UC and
pick up an application, due no
later than Monday, March 17.
EMPLOYMENT: The Office
of Continuing Education and
Outreach, 103 Main Building,
Ext. 3717, seeks ~dent to wor~
20 hours/week beginning April
1S possibly full-time summer,
part-time next academic year.
Starting pay $4.00/hour with increase for experience and good
performance. Needed skills include: Program dBase m, Lotus 1-2-3; Wordstar, WordPerfect PFS:File, PFS:Report and
P.F~: Write. Must also be familiar -'With the use of an HP
LaserJet printer and~ T~ba .
p351 printer and associated
~pe sequences for custom setup of documents and reports.
Selection process beginning
March 17. Apply through Gerry
Garski; Office of Continuing
Education and Outreach, Room
103 Old Main, 346-3717.
FOR KENT: Student housing,
very near campus. Nicely. furnished, groups of four to eight.
Call Rich or Carolyn Sommer at
341-3158.
'
FOR KENT: Women, don t
delay, live one block from campus in a newly remod~led
house. 2301 Main. New furniture
and microwave included. Call
341-3092.
FOR KENT: Two-bedroom
apartment, two blocks from
campus. Sublease for three or
four frem May-August. Call 3450162.
.
FOR KENT: One smgle for
1986-87 school year. Rent negotiable. Call 341-2506 and ask for
Jim or Troy .or call 344-0635 and
ask for Eric.
FOR KENT: Room for rent,
1986-87 Two to seven in apartments: Completely furnished,
three blocks from school and
downtown. Get your group together for best selection. Call
344-9575 or 344-2848.
FOR KENT: Summer, next to
campus. Single rooms. $2~0. ~or
full summer, includes utilities
and furnishings. Call 341-2865.
FOR KENT: Beautifully decorated house for six girls. Two
blocks from the university library, $695. Call341-3158.
FOR KENT: One female required for summer housing,
$250 for entire summer; fall"
$650 per semester-includes
beat. Single room, one block
from campus. Call344-7872.
FOR KENT: One female to
share an apartment with three
other girls next semester. One
block from campus, nice place,
furnished. Call now. Ask for
Betsy or Marsha, 346-3683.
FOR KENT: Call now for
summer housing, 344-5031 or
341-5846 after 5 p.m.
FOR KENT: Immediate opening. ·single room in nice duplex
with two other people. $300 per
semester, heat is paid. Call 3451464, leave message.
FOR KENT: Three-bedroom
upper, . three singles, $700 ~!
semester. Landlord pays utilities. Call John at ~9.
FOR KENT: Room in. cozy,
two-bedroom house, one block
from campus. Easy-going, female housemate and do~.
$150/month plus utilities. Available now and summer. Call3410930.
- --.Giii .....
FOR SALE: Sanyo 2050
Quartz lock stereo receiver, 45
watts/channel, $1(10. TEAC V44C cassette deck, $110. Pioneer
PU direct drive turntable, $100.
AAL three-way tower speakers,
$100 for the pair. Pioneer three-
way Speakers with 12-inch woofers, $60 for the pair. Call Scott
at 341-S038.
FOR SALE: 1974 Beetle, $450.
4,000 miles on rebuilt engin~.
New exhaust system. Econonncal buy.
.
FOR SALE: Excellent condition- junior women's clothing.
Medium. Call 341-6358.
_ _, - .._, - - - - •
FOR SALE: Antique spring
E U - - - - - . - bed and mattress. Inexpensive.
Downhill skis, perfect condition,
FOR KENT: Fall and sum- . Olin Mark m, stereo, Call 341mer housing. Large three-bedroom apartments for three stu- ~K SALE: Hart 150's, Raidents. Call341-1473.
chle boots, size 8. Solomon bindFOR KENT: Single rooms for ings and poles, $100 or best ofmale and female, summer and
74
fall semester. Completely fur- fer· Call 346-31 ·
nished, energy efficient, close to
FOR SALE: It's here! Second
campus. Call 341-3546 or 345- Street Second Hand's Third
0985.
Annual Spring Bag Sale, March
FOR KENT: Student summer 13 and 14, 1-5 p.m. Located by
housing openings for males and Buffy's Bar at 1355 Second
females, $200 to $225 for entire Street-on the Square. Fill a
summer. Call 341-2624 or 341- bag of clothes for only $3.
1119.
. ·FOR SALE: Suntan lotion and
oil! Coppertone, Tropical B~end
and For Faces Only. Fust
come, first serve. Only $1, $2,
$3 Call Mike at 345-0162.
FoR SALE: New weight
bench with cast iron weights.
Call 345-1464 and leave message.
FOR SALE: Chair, two hotpots, toaster/oven and lamp.
Call345-1464.
FOR SALE: Carpeting, like
new. aooroximately 12'x18', of!white, silver-grey shag. Use It
all or divide it 'up. Yours for
only $95. Free padding included.
Phone 344-3374.
FOR SALE: 1976 AMC Pacer,
works well, kind of rusty' very
inexpensive. Call 345-1464 for
.
more information.
FOR SALE: Sony D-5 deluxe
portable compact disc player.
Includes speakers and attachment for hookup to home system. Two months old, $190. Call
346-3270.
FOR SALE: Sound Design
AMIFM cassette stereo. Works
great. Call 345-1464. Please
leaye message.
PERSONAL: Johnny Hin~:
Nobody thought you coul~ ~
the bodybuilding competition.
Gu~ you showed all those people who laughed. I knew. you
could win. CongratulatiOns.
1Gootch.
PERSONAL: Ann: It's been
fun, it's been grand and I'm
looking forward to more of the
same.
PERSONAL: A, D and D
Weekend: Thanks for putting
more thrills into good old 105
than we've seen in awhile. Panamon lives!
PERSONAl::.: Kari, Gary,
Amy, Julie and Robin: Thanks
for coming to Wausau! I hope
you had as much fun as I did,
and that none of you suffered
from my cooking. Miss ya alit
Annie.
PERSONAL: Jay: At last,
your very own personal. I miss
you. See you soon. Love, Annie.
PERSONAL: Vote, vote!
Tuesday, March 18, for the candidates who care. Vote
Ormond/Barton for the next
president and vice-president of
StudeJ)t Government. Students
for students.
PERSONAL: Hey Giff: Wake
WANTED: Lead singer for es- up! Get a job, get a life, learn
tablished, heavily e,9uipped and to ski and then you'll be somededicated Top 40 rock/show body. Hope you're feeling betband. Steady weekend work ter!
throughout Wisconsin. Full sumPERSONAL: To Lis's Sister:
mer schedule, good money! All Glad to see you didn't have to
of tOday's popular rock! Inter- get your stomach stumped in
ested? Call 715-848-4108, Wau- . Cambodia. Just a friendly resau.
minder-if you are going to
WANTED: FQur females to sleep there, close the door.
sublet apartment for. the sum-=. Please don't jump, we luv ya.
mer. Four single rooms for Tootsie Roll.
$225/summer session. Right bePERSONAL: Wisconsin BOB:
hind Ponderosa or Vincent St. Roses are red, violets are blue,
For details call Lorie or Sandy the sugar was willing but where
at 2303 or Kelly at 2335.
were you? All tied up at the
WANTED: Two males looking Second St. Pub maybe? E.A.
for apartment for the fall of '86.
PERSONAL: Hi Honey: What
H looking for roommates, do you want for breakfast?
please ~all 346-2996.
Might as well put in your order
WANTED: Typing or \ word now-FAT chance that I'.ll lose
p~ing. Fast, efficient and it all in six days: But will you
dependable. Phone Jo Ann. at still love me? Clair.
341-8532.
PERSONAL: Kay: Roses are
WANTED: Two-bedroom red, violets are blue, I love you
apartment available for sum-. and your body, too! Meet me at
mer sublease from May 17 to Mr. Lucky's this weekend so we
August. Call345-0162.
can get lucky! Love: Kunta. .
WANTED: Typing/word pro- PERSONAL: For commitcessing fast, efficient and top ment and dedication voen(te.
quality: Any time, only 90 cents Ormand/Barton for presid
per page. Call Sally at 345-1464. and vice-president of Student
WANTED: Babysitter wanted Government. Students for stuin my home on Lake DuBay for dents.
a two-year-old and a four- PERSONAL: Honey: Can you
month-old. Flexible hQurs, up to watch the kids while I go away
20 hours per week. Experience this weekend? I'll miss you, but
and references required. Some you know what I'll be dreamlight housekeeping possible. ing. Love, Me.
.
Hourly rates negotiable. Call PERSONAL: To our Reptile
457-2042. ·
Friend: We'll be looking forWANTED: Models needed: ward to seeing you in the show
Males and females for Tuesday, on Sunday. Did you have to
March 18 at 7 p.m. for Groom- learn any new tricks? The S/A
ing for Success Show in Com- Club.
munications Room in UC. .No PERSONAL: Keep .it ali'!e.
cutting involved, . only - qwck Celebrate your Christian faith
changes and styling with liqui9 and keep it growing. Join us
styling tools. Stop by Haircr.aft Sunday, 10:30 a.m., Peace~­
in the UC for details.
pus Center, Vincent and Maria
:.:.•...;.~ -- ==='iiii Dr., right behind Hal's Grocery.
-- - -PERSONAL: Hey Dudes: It
FOUND: Bracelet in School of was a fun ski weekend even
Education Office. Call to identi- though the weather <f!dn't coopfy it, x-2040, or stop by 440 erate. Sorry, I can t explam
COPS.
that one. Why don't you askFOUND: Ladies' ring in Old Orville? He knows everything.
Main Building Wednesday,
PERSONAL: Anne or ? Ya
March 5. Call3717 and identify. know schizophenia can be
LOST: Reddish-brown leather helped by the nice men in ~e
wallet in or near Comm. Build- long white coats. Those flies
ing on Saturday, March 8, be- you' are grabbing can't taste
tw~n 10 a.m. ;md 2 p.m. H
that good, ya know. Love ya,
found, contact Beannie at 346- The Kid.
.
3985.
PERSONAL: Zonk: A female
on 1-West that eats whole Domino's pizzas, a female that gets
PERSONAL: Gonzo: Congra- out of hand and sleeps a lot.
tulations on your A.D. job. 2-N ' Statzo.
Roach.
PERSONAL: Hey Bob: The
----·-...-------
..........
Gator and Scorp want to party
with you in Daytona! We do,
too although we know we won't
T~ember it. Luv ya. Sue and . .
Kristy your roommates.
PERsoNAL: Sliinepuppy and
Magpie: We will sell no cheese
before it's wine. Thram! Best of
luck with your favorite second
eight-week course. I'm pow a
member of the 8 o'clock club,
but I wish I wasn't. Love, Penguin Feet, a.k.a. Wench.
PERSONAL: Only three
weeks to go! Let's show the ~i~
Tau spirit and have a great wtiation for our pledges Bernie,
Joe and Dave. Pledge Educator.
PERSONAL: Hey you awesome bunch of skiers: Thanks
for making it a fantastic weekend up north. I sure had a good
time but I don't think we ate
eno~h. More M&M's anyone?
PERSONAL: Deb: Hope
things work out this Saturday.
Remember I'll always be there
for you. Thanks for being a
great roomie. Lov~. me.
PERSONAL: Carl: Country
Kitchen called and decided to
comply with your request for
ground sausage for yom: friend
with no teeth.
PERSONAL: John idolizes
Terry and Terry idolizes Lal!ce
and Lance idolizes Tommy who
idolizes Brad who idolizes Troy; '
but then again, who doesn't
idolize God?
PERSONAL: Happy Birthday,
Bridgette: Did you get any
green M&M's on your b'day
cake?
PERSONAL: Super Stud Express: Holy "Beep!" Quit pushing ordinary people off the campus sidewalks. By the way, how
do you get into_ Collins? · "All
aboard for Men~." Purple
Haze.
PERSONAL: Tom: Congrats
on your medical school acceptance and thanks for making the
past 2¥.! years very special fOr
me. Love you, Me!
PkasoNAL: C.B.: I love you.
Happy two years. V.B.
PERSONAL: To Nora the
Birthday Girl: Y"ur eyes like
March are soon to be eyes like
dimes. One thing to remember
on your birthday. . .a· night
w/out...is like a foot without a
sock. The Nora's.
_
PERSONAL: Happiness is. .
.having you as my honey and
being your doll. I love you.
PERSONAL: Dear Lar Butt:
We still love you! Olaf, Gage,
Freddy and Otis. P.S. Mike
loves you, too!
PERSONAL: Spring fever,
catch it! Daytona is the place
where Projectionship '86 is gonna shake up the human race.
Just one week 'til we ~e a
space on the beaches to tan our
faces.
PERSONAL: John Exo: Seventeen days until South Padre.
GuE!Ss who?
,
PERSONAL: Hi Punkin Seed!
I love you lots and I'm glad
that you're my Big Squish.
Have a Happy Day!
. PERSONAL: BYRO: Cheer
up! Somebody loves you.
PERSONAL: Hey Gunderson:
How about some more of that
great graffiti! Not to mention
the place.
PERSONAL: Hey all you
"Woodsies!" Meet me in the
Founder's Room-Old Main-on
Thursay, March 13, at 7:3_0.p.m.
Our friend Dan Peterson Will be
talking about "Tree Farm Industry." See you there. J. Appleseed.
PERSONAL: Bobo: Once
again-spring Break. Beer and
Brown Boys will be more-abundant in Florida than Texas. We
drive the first two states, then
party. Sun and beach. Sammy.
•
.
·~
THE CHOICE IS YOURS
STUDENT GOVERNMENT
ASSOCIATION ELECTIONS
· - TUESDAY, MARCH 161986
_______.
CANDIDATES FOR PRESIDENT AND VICE-PRESIDENT
DIANE BARTON, .MICHAEL ORMOND
THE COLLEGE OF FINE ARTS
From L toR Top Row-Kirk Strong, John L'oomans
Second Row--¥ichele Dorothy, Belinda Novotny
,·
LISA THEIL, STEVE GElS
. THE COLLEGE OF PROFESSIONAL. STUDIES
From L to R, Top Row-Joe Bastian
.
Second Row- Kay Roblee, Suzanne Stoller
..
.....
-
f.
THE COLLEGE OF NATURAL RESOURCES
THE COLLEGE OF LETTERS AND SCIENCE
>
From L to R- Rich Strelow, Jason Tishler. Mike Meshak
Not pictured is Pete Straas
-
From L to R,Top Row-John David, Paul Jankowski. John Bennett
Second Row-Connie Mazna, Lori Adams,·
Not pictured is Liz Georgi, Tim Bernauer
t .
•
-----•VOTEINlHE'LOBBYOFYOUR.CQLLEGE _ _ _..__ _
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