Stevens-Point- University-of-Wisconsin • Volume 30, Number 12:/ ----November13, 1986 Private contractor ~, hired to remove lhazardous waste by Karen Rivedal ' News Editor Chemistry Prof. Steven Wright and Director of Risk Management Al Kursevski represented UWSP interests at an infohbational meeting on hazardous waste held in Madison last Tuesday, Nov. 4. At the meeting, representatives from all 26 four-year .schools and twoyear centers in the UW System met with spokesmen from Chern Waste Management, Inc., an Illinois-based firm that has been contracted by the system to dispose of its hazardous wastes. The UW System has received a $501,000 grant from the State Building Commission to begin a hazardous waste clean-up. Due in part to new federal guidelines passed this September, the system must remove th~ waste that has accumulated or face heavy fines threatened by the Environmental Protection Agency and other state and federal regulatory agencies. Although $501,000 may sound like a lot, the large amount of waste to be disposed o( and the costs of a private contractor to do the job could rapidly deplete that resource. Dr. Wright comments on the situation: "We have $501,000 to do the job this year and that won't cover it. We're talking about 13 four-year schools and 13 twoyear centers. Everybody's got to get rid of their stuff. They're trying to streamline the process as much as possible so that for the $501,000 you get rid of the maximum amount of material. The people who are running the show seem to be doing a commendable job in . considering this. ~egents by Debbie Kellom Editor This is the second installment analYzing the UW System B9f1rd of Regents plan for the future of the System. This segment fa,. cuses on the regent plan for the UW Center two-year institu- tions. · plan to utilize Center The plan, approved last Fri- looked at more and more as an day by the Study Group on the outlet to alleviate this perceived future of the UW System, now problem of the future. In the regent's paper on the goes to the Board of Regents. With the UW System Board of Regents concerned about overcrowding at the System's louryear institutions, the UW Center two-year campuses are being · Co~ering those ,;K :i:f . comer market pJ.'ices ••• p. 3 future of the System, "Planning the Future," the board proposes a plan to allow ·more ease for students to transfer credits from these institutions and offers other incentives for the stu- I don't think we'll get rid of all the waste that w;e (UWSP) have ' this year, simply because there isn't enough money to do it." Just how much hazardous waste UWSP lays claim to seems to depend on whom you ' ask in the system. MikeSchmoldt was hired by the UW System in October of 1985 to conduct an all-campus inventory of the toxic and hazardous material present. His survey, which was £onsidered conservative, estimated a total of 274,706 lbs. of hazardous waste. UWSP weighed in at 5,681! lbs. Kursevski, however, has challenged those findings and estimates a total of 600 lbs. of hazardous waste on campus. The conflict seems to revolve around an alleged difference between hazardous waste and hazardous materials. Dr. Wright places the hazardous substances in two categories: "One is waste and one- is material. Waste is what you've used and a hazardous material is a hazardous substance that hasn't been used yet. It's sitting on the shelf, but it's going to be used. "When you report the amount of hazardous material, it ma)tes it sound like it's the amount of hazardous waste, and it's not." According to this argument, a hazardous material left setting in a stockroom could become dangerous, but generally speaking, it won't. Wright explaifls - using the example of eli-ethyl ether, a potentially hazardous organic solvent: "There is ether around. People use 'it as a solvent in organic labs, so we have it on cam- Cont. p. 4 System· dents than to stay enrolled for the full two-year te~r what is referred to as an associate degree. Currently, a disproportionate 63 percent share of the approximate 12,000 students at the Center's 13 campuses have freshman standing. Only 23 percent ~re classified as sophomores and 16 P:rcent are spe- ciaLstudents. The regents' plan is an attempt to utilize the Centers' capability of handling more students. To entice more students to attend these campuses, which are located in cities ranging Cont. p. 3 Memories of an Armistice Day blizzard ••• p. 16 Couch potatoes unite ••• p!'lO leers open with sweep ••• p. 20 Page 2 - 'EDITOR',)·DE)~-~/ / • , _ _ _r_ _ The ,unknown Editorial Editorials usually have a direction-a message. It's my turn to write the editorial and I'm stuck. I do not have any messages, no one I feel like nagging at, no issue I feel righteous enough to whine about. There are issues, though, which con;. fuse me. Every once in a while, as a kid, I'd get involved with .picJting on someone. This was rare and plenty of fun, since I got a good deal of crap myself, being _a bit of a geek back then (complete with plaid, highwater bellbottoms). But while it was .fun to help tie Myron the wonn to Mr. Belcher's Saint Bernard, I naturally felt bad. It just wasn't the right thing to do and I knew it. I get feelings like that today-conflicting viewpoints. They aren't on matters like anning the Contras or financial aid for beer, on which I have strong, well-based opinions. Instead, these are matters that I just don't know how to take. Homosexuality, for exampleJ confuses me. I have nothing against homosexuals. It's their life. Personal freedom, that's my motto, as long as it doesn't hurt ~yon~ else. Yet I was approached by a homosexual once and, man, all that understanding could have been Gerber baby food, creamed liver even. I was horrified. I had the willies. I was suddenly very unsympathetic to the homosexual cause. • I still have nothing against homosexuals, but there's no ~ay I c~ look at two men showing more affection than a "good pass" pat on the back and feel any desire to have a beer with them. - I'm not afraid of catching AIDS; you have to work pretty to get that disease. It's just that homose~uality, when I see It, makes me nervous. bar~ Again, on one level I realite that gays are not evil, sick, or even wrong. They just see things in a waY. that I can't or . won't. And it makes me mad to see some idiotTWllling around screaming, "Kill the faggots, kill the faggots," like some Ayotholla crusader. , . ' It is serious conflict, though. I have two strong, reactions kicking each other in the teeth. One is a· strong desire to be fair and understandipg and the other is a deep social fear of homosexuality. (Some might say: '.'Hey, Bernie, your hostili. is a result of repressed homosexual leanings,'' upon which g~ve a inor~ or less goofy look and say, "Fine, I'll k~p repres- · ~ smg them.") · Women's liberation confuses me, 'too, though not as illtensely. I'm all for the principle~uality and justice, equal pay, equal opportunities, equal rights to pay for dinner. Women still get a lot of crap dumped on them, too, like having to listen to Cathy Rigby talk about feminine protection. · But when did I have to suddeilly start treating women like . ~? This may come as a surprise to some people, but women are very, very different from men. That's why we don't understand each other. Women have that thing called PMS, when they turn into very sensitive werewolves. They also have larger breasts than men. And men get sudden urges. to go out and poun4 their bodies to oatmeal. They also think of ~ex differently than women. ...· My chances of treating a woman as I would treat a man are about the same as Pat .Robertson whopping me across the forehead and curing those tenninal Point Bock runs. All this results in some natural injustices. I'll open a door for a woman, which many consider demeaning. I rather enjoy gawking at pictures of naked female bodies, which many consider disgusting. And I ~on't fart around women either (some may argue that). This is certainly good for the ladies, but a major setback for women's liberation. It means that I'm not relaied enough around women, that I often see them as outsiders, as different enough to deserve some courtesy. I guess it's all a matter of how you look at things. Me, I'm just confused. Bernie Bleske Senior Editor • I~ . - POINTER STfi'FF~ Editor: Debbie C. Kellom News Editor: Karen Rivedal Features: ·Dan Dietrich Sports: Kent Walstrom :Photo Editor: ·Paul Becker Layout and Design: Brenda Prochnow Business Manager: Jim Patrick Typesetter: Ginger Edwards Advisor: Dan Houlihan Contributors: Senior Editor: Bernie Bleske Outdoors: Chris Dorsey Copy Editor: . Becky Frelich Graphics: Jenny Sail Advertising: Thomas Kelley Ottice Manager: AI Cywinski Cartoonisti Kyle White - Brenda Bergelin · Jon R. Pike David Ross Vicky Susa Ed Torpy Scott Huelskamp Wade Turner .Judy Rogala Lisa Strack Gene Cisewski Keith Uhrig Jim Addis Joe Janssen Bob Crane Fr_ank Bosler Karen Kneirler Amy Chier . Letters to the editor will be POSTMASTER: Send address accepted only if they are ~ change to Pointer, 117 CoiDD;lunication written and signed, and should Arts Center, Stevens Point, WI 54481. not exceed a maximum of 250 Pointer is written and edited by the words. Names will be withheld Pointer staff, composed of UWSP stufrom publication only if appro- dents, and they are solely responsible priate reason is given. Pointer for its editorial content and policy. reserves the right to edit letters if necessary and to refuse to print letters not suitable for The Pointer is a second class publipublication. All correspondence cation (USPS-098240) published weekshould be addressed to Pointer, ly on Thursday by the University of 117 Communication Arts Center, . Wisconsin-Stevens Point and the UWUWSP, Stevens Point, Wiscon- . System Board of Regents, 117 Comsin 54481. munication Arts Center, Stevens Written l>ermission is re- Point, WI 544(11. I quired for the reprint of all materials presented in Pointer. I·I - Sigma Tau: Not just for sodOiites anymore that a member's semeste.r GPA exceeds 3.0 and $10 to every member for each one-tenth of a point that the fraternity's curSigma TilU Ganuna, a social rent semester average exceeds ternity at UWSP, has started the cumulative average at the incentive program to pro- end of the preceding semester: te academic excellence The fraternity is funding the among its members. awards from an account it has In addition to granting mone- been building for several years tary awards to the stud~nt with with proceeds from the annual the highest grade point average, spring "Brat Fest . " The Sigma Tau Ganuna has now be- awards, though, are not actual gun to give awards to all those cash awards but rather, a credmembers who have GPA's it that is given to the student toabove a 3.0 and to all the chap- ward payment of his fraternity ter members as a whole, if they dues. The dues are $75 a semespull together and improve their ter, therefore, the most anyone group's cumulative average can be aw~ed is $75. ' grade point. For example the first recipThese new awards amount to ient of the indi~dual award was $10 for each one-tenth of a point Kurt Hartwig of Eagle River by Lisa Strack Staff Reporter - l who received $50 toward payment of his fraternity dues for a ~.53 GPA. / The chapter award was not given this fall because the members' grades, when pooled for averaging, went up less than one-tenth of a point. Richard Burnes, assistant profeSsor of accounting and one of three advisors of Sigma Tau Ganuna, explained that last fall the chapter started thinkin& of ideas that would motivate its members to increase their academic performance. Awarding those persons with GPA's above 3.0 and awarding" the chapter members as a whole if they improve their cumulative GPA · were two ideas that Burnes just happened to think of. He then presented the proposal to the chapter in January ·1986. They decided to go with it, and last spring, the two new awards were established. Burnes explained that the awards were designed because he and the other advisors were concerned that the fraternity members were not doing as well -academically as they should be. They want the fraternity to be a leader on the campus academically, and with chapters in other universities doing very well, they see no reason why UWSP's chapter can't do just as well. · Burnes stated that many people have an "animal house" opinion of fraternities. Sigma Tau Gam_ma, however, doesn't want this image and feels that other things are more important. With the addition of the team and individual awards, Sigma Tau Ganuna now has a total of five awards. Two of the awards, for highest semester GPA arid most improved GPA, are part of the fraternity's constitution. The third is a $2,000 scholarship that is awarded to a current Sigma Tau Gamma member from the Bud Steiner Memorial Scholarship Fund. Burnes explained, however, that not enough time has passed to tell_ if the two new awards will be effective. He hopes that chapter members will become moti-vated enough to work harder but feels that it may take a couple semesters before they·really 'start moving in this direction. Corner Market prices compared by Gene A. Cisewski Staff Reporter - Frequently, students level allegations at University institutions without discovering the facts. Of late, a muqber of charges have been leveled that students are being gouged by high food prices on the UWSP campus. This article is the first in a series which will try to sort the fact from the fiction with regard to what students are paying for nourishment at Point. 55 cents. At convenience stores such as the Campus Corner on Main and Michigan and the Eastside 76 -located next to the Eastside IGA, you'll find your best bargain at 40 cents a can. · convenience outlets, you'll have to settle for Dolly Madison or Hostess pies, but you'll only pay 59 cents. H you're looking for a simple meat and cheese sandwich, the Corner· ·Market is again the most expensive place to shop. A bologna and cheese sandwich at the Corner Market came in at $1.34. Meanwhile, comparable sandwiches at the two convenience· stores cited above were 99 cents and contained more meat. a We ~ our investigation to- · H you're looking to nuke day by comparison shopping, sandwich for that hot, melty beginning with a look .at the, cheese effect that a microwave "Corner Market" located in ~e oven can produce, the Corner uc. Market is again the most costH you're looking for a soda to ly. At $1.65 for a ham & cheese quencb your thirst between on a bun, the UC is consideraclasses, the Corner Market is bly higher than the 99 cents the last place in Stevens Point you'll pay at either competitor. you'll want 1o stop if economy · H you've got a · craving for is an issue with you. A can of Classic C9ke (or any other _something sweet, how about a brand name soda) is 60 cents. slice of pie? You'll pay 85 cents Down the hall and around the ·for a slice at the Corner Market cornet' in the UC Concourse it's for a slice of a -real pie. At the Regents, from p. 1 The one thing that the Senate even if a student may. not use agreed upon was that the pack- it is due to copyright legalities. age would be a comprehensive n' is feared that without such a one, meaning- that if and when mandate, the disks would be coan integrated softw)11'e system pied onto other disks and The controversial SMART is introduced at UWSP it will be passed off as the authentic package was debated at the standard throughout the cam- package. Nov. 5 Faculty Senate meeting. Last spring's proposal to in- pus. . The. ~tudent Government The SMART package has troduce an integrated software system' has yet to receive full Assocla~on was ~t~re ~- already been introduced to support from the student body nounce lts opposl 10n e UWSP Based on attitudes eXor faculty. . package. SGA felt that the , · Senate ting package was too costly for stu- pressed at the mee • The f~culty agreed to. m~ve dents and too difficult to be it appears the ~c premise of ahead Wlth further exammation taught en masse to the faculty a computing enVIronment would of a comp~ter software~· ' and the students. SGA also be welcomed by students ~d although lt was do!!~ Wlth a questioned the systems ' faculty alike, if more ~etails great deal of sk~ptiClSID. Not (overall) academic advantage. could be rel~. For this rea. son the entire package was sent everyone was confident that the SMART pac~ge .was th~ best The proposed package would back to the Academic Aff~ choice. Don Dietrich, Chairman ~ $85 for one semester, $90 Committee for further examma. of the Academic Affairs Com- for two semesters, mtd $100 for ti The actual mandate for mittee, (~ standing committee four 5elllesters. The money for st':dents to buy a computer of the Faculty Senate) assured ~e pac~ge would be returned package remains some time the Senate that other programs m full if the package were re- and several more heated dehad been, and would continue to turned unopened. The reason bates away. be explored. for the mandatory purchase _.______ _ - a by Elly Watson staff J!e~ne~ :0° ft"o~ Wausau, Waukesha and ·Sheboygan to Baraboo, Rice Lake and Marshfield, the regents plan to allow students transferring -from these schools to have their credits accepted in full. Part ·of this plan is to establish a System-wide credit rating so students courses from different campuses will follow a uniform system, intended to ease the students' movement from campus to campus. Another aspect of the proposal is that students graduating from these two-year schools with an associate degree will be considered as having fulfilled the general education requirements at the four-year schools. This is intended to allow students easier access to junior and senior level courses. This is currently not the policy of mQst System campuses. The plan also calls for the Center campuses to streamline their course offerings to avoid duplication. Finally, we found a. category· in which the Corner Market was on par with the competition: milk. Everywhere we've shopped so far, the half-pint cartons of milk were 45 cents. With the exception of milk, the Corner Market in the UC is the most expensive place to shop. Their prices ranged from 20% to 66% higher than their competition for the same or similar products. Often, the less costly items at off-campus competitors proved to be of higher quality. Next week, we'll try to find out why this situation exists. The regents' proposal for ~e four-year institution calls for I_Dcreased tuition, stiffened admis-: sion staadards and likely enroll- , ment caps, which student lobbyists fear would force future students to unwillingly start their education at a two-year 'Cainpus. . ' Newly appointed UW Center System Chancellor Steven Portch, however, said the plan eould help both the . two- and four-year systems, but c~u­ tioned against the perception that the Centers could handle a great influx of freshmen. "The plan could help improve quality everywhere, because at the Centers, the longer students stay the better they do," Portch said in an interview Monday. "Students who . stay 2 years at the Center do as well if not ~tter as students in the four-year schools." Portch said the average size of classes at the Cen~rs is 20 Cont. p. 4 Page 4 Hazardous waste, from p. 1 pus. Is it five or siJr; years old (the time at which ether would J>ecome hazardous)? I doubt it, _ because we're using it all the time." Misconceptions concerning exactly what hazardous waste is may exist. Hazardous waste as defined by the new guidelines accumulates all over campus, not just in the chemistry stockroom. Kursevski describes hazardous waste as "a myriad of things" including solvents like paint thinner used in maintenance, waste from chemistry labs, research done by faculty at UWSP to a small degree, and material used in the Fine Arts Building and the grounds area of the CNR Building. · Under the new guidelines, all of these things must -now be stored and removed within 90 days. In the past, UWSP as a =:. :~~£telj:~ caoccontrrdingib.utetos sotomethurue·vperrsob1.tylemof-' ficials: "The difficulty is that this is a new process for everybody," says Wright, "because the new regulations are coming at us in droves. We've never had to do anything like this before. "Now we've got to gear up and do it. In order to do a good job, you've got to take small steps at first, leading towards a smooth-running operation. "We're taking some very :~ S:P~:h!o::·t!: :J Fleishauer as new Academy president by Janelle Crools Staff Reporter Frederick W. Fleishauer, a circuit judge in Portage County, was recently chosen to be the president of UWSP's Academy of Letters and Science for the 1986-87 school year. Fleishauer, who lives in Stevens Point, has been a member of the Academy since its inception in 1983. Currently, the Academy consists of 15 members who were Howard Thoyre, currently a recommended by the faculty of math professor at UWSP, was the College of Letters and dean of the College of Letters Science and appointed by the and Science in 1983 and is re- dean of that college. Members sponsible for the creation of the are selected because of their Academy. According to Thoyre, ' liberal educational backgrounds the .Academy has done several and successess within th~ir Jdvthings to fulfill its purpose. en fields. Fleishauer was elected to his position by the Acadeexample, it sponsors a public my's four- member executive lecture series in the fall, honors board, as was the organization's students,· faculty and communi- new vice president, Caroline ty leaders in a spring banquet, Fribance. According to Fleishand offers ~areer counseling auer, the Academy hope evenprograms intended to promote tually to develop a four-year rothe value of a liberal education. tation of membership. ' The Academy of Letters and Science is an organization who's purpose, according to its charter, is to recognize "civic contribution, intellectual and academic interest, professional achievement, and , significant support by indiviquals in the promotion of liberal studies in the UWSP service areas." The organization has put notable effort into achieving these primary goals. The first lecture of this year's series was presented Nov. 6 by UW-Madison professor Michael P. Petrovich. compared to the over 30 average for the rest of the System. This allows for more professorstudent interaction . and enhances the quality of the edu- · cation. He said this, coupled with the lower tuition for the Centers, could make the campuses ltlOre attractive for some students. "Students ' going to Centers can save, in costs, one year of college, ..-he said. Portch said that many Center System students tend to transfer to the four-year campuses after one year. This could be due to social reasons or the current cre4it transfer policy, The Acadelily of Letters and which students might be worScience is currently funded by ried about, he said. He said the private contributors. Center's part of the regents' plan would be to ensure that students stay at the Centers another year and receive their associate degrees. ~ in : bri.ef ~ ... "'.·...t .· ·•· .o:L....o. ..., '"'.-"""" uJa" Fallifprolessor, gave an mt.vr a fhlrathon of 115 ttated program entitl~, 144 Ufe · . in $uppot't of for t1te plat), to reo. pe Jiealtb, . Physical oil~ . Re~reation, and uilding.. Along With tile ·prqposa1 to sta~ DiVisiOn, ·died ori. ~· ·~d raising bicycle toQJ:. of ~· • • , I'UMers presented . ·. . .• tile petit,ion that was circulated There .w1U be two,. anqi,J«l 3tQODg·' students la$t week. The ~ coming froJij,JJlf petitiop, in ~port of the. profund, • eaet.. ~. of ~ ··mp than 2,400 Ope• d go to .a ... a~, . ~ . :ra.:tr =~n ·~ .. 3 overalL The other ·. ~Z some money." Drums are already on cam- ship will go to ~ upperetasS' pus to begin the removal proc- ~ Who nul~ m Health. ess, but it may be some time motion Wellrtess. ar., witb,w :m before anything is removed. overall ., graQ.•poiJU aver«g~p~ UwSP officials must first con- 3•0• ·j,;c'& duct another inventory of haz; ,, .,,, ardous waste on campus and · At tile Nov«$ber 6 m~EO( send it to Mike Schmoldt, the L....._......__.__...___ _ _ _...... UW System Hazardous Sub- / stances Management Officer. .--------;,..__-----, Schmoldt will then use these figures from all the campuses to design a priority list. Those ,.,- universities determined to suf-fer the most severe hazardous waste build-ups will be attended to first. It is uncertain at this point where ~SP will stand in the listing. The inventory, which will be . conducted by Kursevski and ·Wright,, is scheduled to begin within a few days. to- Modern View of China/' ~ everdng in •Roc>nl 324 of the COltinS Classroom Center. The presentati.on was open, tp the publlc and gave atef.\.•·~ dents an introduction to the pla~ in China they could vis!t .b1 participating in a studywtraV• el ~ that Will be held Decamber 26 to Januaey 14. UW- Stevens Point ~us. dtr rector .for the ·trip. ls.·P!)UtR$1 b, ~"·of·~al .Aids~;~ .•~ 'in ~ ~t Services Building •·& at· time .Stevens Point haS Jn~yed across.the han ~ of Fri- been involved in the program Uay~"'Nov.1~ ~ stud.ent, ser- and. be is hoping to gain mucb vice$ olfered··by !'jnanciat Aids interest. . ~f Sllft'eJt,SOI'lle Subsequent .de- Anyone interested.in the ~~ys<dtte~f.b~ .mov:e. nar can contact· Oster at •• "~%& !IF' :" ". •. ·. · •. . 4112'for .further details. A.ppUca. ~ben Feinstein, t.f\t..Ri. deadline .·z"-.....:...-----"------------------__..., . Be real. Write news. Dial X2756. ·"d1 ~ WANT MORE Looking for on exciting and challenging career where each day is different? Many ,ll.ir ~eFee people hove such a career as Pilots and Navigators. Maybe you con join them. Find out if you qualify. Contact your Air Force recruiter today. Call SSgt Keith Wilson at (414) 731-3411 collect "I don't think what the regents are talking about is shifting students from Stevens Point to, say, Wausau. What we're talking about, is those who go to a Center campus would stay here a year longer," he said. "We don't want students who don't want to be with us...that doesn't do either of us any good." '- ' , fREE PIZZA HOT.PIZZA just far lauring the Vllage* . . _.J Receive your choice of: ~· FREE use ot a MICROWAVE l)VEN ' DESKJ.OB? Receive a ~ ...====:;, THANA is November 15. tion "We do have the room for more students at the spPhomore level, but I don't know about accepting more freshmen. Our part of the deal, as I understand it, is' that we'll take more sophomores," he said. Portch added that he didn't feel the regent's proposals would force students into choosing a center campus over a four-year campus. ·CHECK .IT ·oUT!' ..-nn~ r====~···· ~ - Regent plans, from p. 3 / or / c/1 FREE BASIC CA~LE TV SERVIC~ ~. for the entire length of your lease! / A'$k for Tom •Receive a coupon good for a FREE Personal Pan Pizza from Pizza Hut. Offer open to UWSP sophomores, juniors & seniors. Student 10 required. Limit - one per person per calendar year. Offer may . be withdrawn without notice. Pointer Page 5 It - : . - - -~ow -·--fl) I )€€ IT . .-.- - - - · Questions about Nicarag~.a ·I by Ed Torpy While I agree with Deb's conclusion, I think her argument is a little weak. There are better reasons why the U.S. should stop funding the Contras, and besides, the U.S. is more than capable of staying out of a conflict if it really wants to. The other side of the Contra aid issue was represented by Gene Cisewski. Gene admitted that the aid is not enough to expect a Contra victory. In his conclusion, he suggested that the sole purpose of the aid might be to keep the Sandinistas too busy in their own country in order to prevent them from aiding Marxist rebels in neighboring countries. Last week, the Pointer ran two opinion pieces concerning U.S. involvement in Nicaragua. The debate centered on whether or not the U.S. should continue to fund the Contras in their batAI~ against the government of W'i1caragua. Deb Kellom argued that unforeseen circumstances could draw the United States deeper into the Nicaraguan war just as it was drawn i,nto the Vietnam War. To illustrate her point, she used the, example of Eugene Hasenfus and concluded that the U.S. should abandon its ·current course of action in Nicaragua and consider diplomacy instead. I , However, when reading Gene Cisewski's article, I noticed two things which seeined out of place. The first was an entire paragraph devoted to explaining that the U.S. welcomed the Sandinistas when they came to power and gave them a considerable amount of foreign · aid during their first 18 months. The logical question is 'what happened to make the U.S. cut off foreign aid to the Sandinistas?' On January 23, 1981, the Reagan administrption suspended U.S. aid to Nicaragua, only three days after Ronald Reagan took office. It would seem obvious that the major event that caused the U.S. to take a 1~ degree turn in its policy towards Nicaragua had little to do with anything Nicaragua did. The· reason for the change in policy was the change in U.S, presidents. The second part of Gene's article which seemed out of place was a lengthy discussion of the difference between human wishes and human rights. The question here is 'why spend so much time saying that things like the level of industrialization, the rate of economic growth and the literacy level of a nation's people · are wishes which should not be concerned with human rights?' The an- For' -sale: UWSP students, two for a penny · enrolled. On the other hand, if President Lisa Thiel telling you ters. That's .right, the labels you only want Fine Arts Majors that the following Tuesday with your name and address ,(or any other major), you can are identical on each letter. You may have .noticed that would be election day. The con1 buy just that list. Or, maybe 0 o-yer Hal~?.wee~ Y '!1 got two tents of those letters, however, How . does it come to pass that it's just freshmen that you want pieces of JunJt mail. One "!'as . is not the subject of this article. Dave Obey and Lisa Thiel have to write to- whatever category, it's still two students for a penfrom a couple of students telling The focus here is on how both you matched? The UWSP Office of Records ny. you that Dave Obey should be of these letters got to you. your congressman because he is . , and Registration is in the mail So what's -the big deal? Well, against the 21 year old drinking If Y.ou still hayen t ~bucked order business. At the rate of if you're Dave Obey and you them mto the cylinder file, you age. The other letter dune from might want to look at the ad- two students for a penny, you know the majority of citizens in student Government Association dress label on each of your let- can have labels printed by the your district favor a 21 year old UniivArl'litv for all the students drinking age, you won't stand up for that issue in news releases or in your commercials. j · On the other hand, you can send a letter to 9,300* students who ·you know are on your side. Then you get out a message _;that needs no public debate. by Gene A. Cisewski' Th3nk_ sgiving Break Specials· .- Rent Outdoor Equipment for the Price of a Weekend for THE WHOLE BREAK .....---Ski Tune-Up Clinics·...:....._____. • Learn How To Completely Tune-Up· Your Skis • X Country Ski Tune-Ups Monday, November 24th 6:30 P.M. FREE l Sign Up at Rec. Services Desk Downhill Ski Tune-Up Tuesday, November 25th 6:30 P.M. Cost- $1.00 ' In another way this list is helpful, let'-s 8ay you're the Marine Corps' ROTC recruiter. You buy a list. of all freshmen males, your most lucrative market. You reach them with a message designed just for them. And, if you're an SGA President with controversies in the campus media, you have a vehicle to reach out and touch someone in your own, personal way. No matter who you are, you now have a way to -market your product to a targeted audience. Invading the privacy and mailboxes of UWSP stu. dents is now made easy with 1 the mail order operations of the Records · and Registration Office. swer is simple; all these things · have seen - dramatic improvement since the Sandinistas came to power. The fact of the matter is, most Nicaraguans are better off now than they were when Somoza was in power. This is one promise that the Sandinistas did keep. One common misconception about Nicaragua is its government. It is often thought that the Sandinistas are in complete control. This simply is not true. The Sandinista National liberation Front is only one of seven political parties. And when one -considers all the improvements that the Sandinistas have made, it's surprising that they have less than a two,.thirds majority in the Nicaraguan Nation~ Assembly. The final question that needs to be asked is 'what has the Reagan administration's policy toward Nicaragua established?' The current policy has succeeded in turning a friendly country dependent on U.S. aid into an enemy. By aiding the Contras, Ronald Reagan has forced Nicaragua to seek niilitary and economic aid from Cuba and the Soviet Union. The only thing Reagan's policy has achieved is to turn a friendly country into a Soviet satellite. Page 6 . __ ____:___ fl) I )€€ IT • Put your degree to work where it can do a world of good Your first job after graduation should offer more than just a paycheck. '- If you're graduating this year, look into a unique opportunity to put your degree to work where it can do a world of good. Look into the Peace Corps. Speak with a Peace Corps Rep! Interviews will be held in the Placement Office on November 20. Be sure to sign up for an interview today. For more info call: 1-800-328-8282. • • Pointer Page 7 Students protest prior-approval We tell about our unique pizza all the time. We tell you about our FRES~ Products made from scratch with FRESH ingredients~ We tell you about our FRESH "Real Cheese". We tell you about our 30 Minute Guaranteed Slice · Delivery. We tell you about our Free Delivery in the Stevens Point Area . . • . NOW TELL US THE TRUTH : • . . HOW ARE WE DOING? by Karen Rivedal News Editor 433 Division ~ 344-6090 FREE DELIVERY ($4.00 B-Good_ C-Average A-Very Good Minimum Order) D-Fair F-Failure Both UWSP and Marquette University require prior approval of material posted or distributed on campus. Recently, a group of Marquette students representing the Progressive Student Organization have challenged the policy as_a _violation of students First Amendment rights and begun a protest on campus. Marquette had been refused ~o ~:~~~~~ =~~~~~ARY FREE SMALL SOFT. DRINK Please Give Us Our REPORT CARDS Without Having To Use These Offerings. Present this Coupon with any or all the OFFERI~GS you feel you will not use and receive a free small soft drink or cup of coffee for your help. Thank You One Coupon Per Person - In Store Only Not valid in conjunction with other coupons or offerings. Expires: 11·2o-86 REPORT -CARD REPORT CARD Who do you feel is our Major Competitor . . ., I ROCKY 12" (2 people .;.... 16" (3- people) CLASSIC THIN CRUST COMP~TITOR vs Price Taste/Quality Variety Friendly Staff Delivery Speed Fast Service _ _ _ Taste (Quality) _ _ _ Price _ _ _ Friendly Staff "------- Restaurant Clean _ _ _ Variety of Toppings _ _ _ Delivery Speed ____ Not Available in Slice \. Need Improvement: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ / Need Improvement: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _---:-_ --------------------- 1 MEAL DEAL $1.99 l ON DELIVERY) PLUS TAX . (ONE TOPPING SLICE, SMALL GARLIC BREAD, MEDIUM SOFT DRINK (SUBSTITUTES EXTRA) EXPIRES: 11·22·86 Not valid with other coupons or offers (P-65) ROCKY ROCOCO, 433 Division ,St. 344-6090 ' EXPIRES: 11·22-86 Not valid with other coupons or offers ROCKY ROCOCO, 433 Division St. REPORT CARD REPORT CARD PAN STYLE WHOLE PIES (Small· Med.• Large) SLICES Need Improvement: ________________ Need Improvement: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ . saoo· OFF Large three topping $2°~ OFF MEDIUM TWO ~OPPING $1 ·00 0 FF SMALL ONE TOPPING Not valid with other coupons or offers ROCKY ROCOCO, 433 Division St. - EXPIRES: 11-22-86 344-6090 birth control to students, because university officials feel this is contrary to the school's strong Catholic belief system. The policy of UWSP, a religiously unaffiliated, public iflstitution, is .considerably different than that of Marquette's. However, material submitted by student organizations for posting are still subject to review and possible rejection by university officials. Jerry Lineberger, director of University Center Services, developed the prior-approval policy for the UC, Debot, and Allen Centers. The Faculty Senate then adopted this policy for the entire campus. Lineberger· describes the situation and its limitations: · "In short form, they (the Faculty Senate) adopted the framework of the University Centers' policy for the campus. But we can't police the campus and we don't pretend to, so it's really up to the areas to be concerned with what belongs up and what doesn't." Materials for posting· must be affiliated with an on-campus organization. This is, according to Lineberger, ·"so we don't have Shopko and K Mart and all the retailers in town putting things up on the boards." Beyond this, UWSP also bans materials in "extremely bad taste" or those that "promote , alcoholic consumption:" \ When asked if the UC has banned any materials, Lineberger concedes: "You always have different standards and different tastes. Some people will put up' whatever they want regardl~. But that's just reality." Reality or not, Marquette students have chosen to protest th~ ban placed on t,heir materials. ----,-- Price _____ Taste/Quality _ _ _ Variety ____ Friendly Staff -,------ ~eat/Clean Restaurant _ _ _ Fast Service _ _ _ Delivery Speed ----,---- Price _____ Taste/Quality --:-----Variety of Toppings __;_______ Friendly Staff ____ 'Available in Slices ____ Neat/Clean Restaurant --'------ Delivery Speed \ $2° 0 OFF.12" TWO TOPPING $3° 0 OFF 16" ~HREE TOPPING to allow the stqdent organization to distribute information on ..... / ~~''''--'~"-n__ • COMIC BOOKS / !1 ANY SLICE QQ WITH ANY BEVERAGE PURCHASED Not valid with other coupons or offers (S/R4o-G/SR/SM5o-PERISAL60) EXPIRES: 11-22-86 • New Issues Every Friday • Many Independent Titles • Over 10,000 Back Issues • 10% Off New Issues ROCKY ROCOCO, 433 Divisiolf St. Downtown Stevens Point 1307 Strongs Ave. 715·344-0600 Mon .-Thurs. 10-6 Fri. lb-8. Sat. 10·5 1 Page 8 ::----b€TTER~--~ Bobby's back · To the Editor: A WELCOME HOMECOMING FOR UWSP GRADUATE Everything was going fine, my flight was early in Wausau on October 9th, via Louis. ville/Chicago. My friend was also on time to pick me up at the airport. We traveled to Bruiser's where I was wel' corned by a number .of friends. The night was going great, for I sure hoped it would on account of my leaving for Eau Claire on Fr-iday before returning to Louisville, Kentucky, on Sunday. It was then about 1 a.m. when a close friend and I · walked out of Grin and Beer It and were arrested for open in, toxicants. I was shocked!!! It was as though we had been picked up for a murder of some kind. I was then locked up like a criminal because I didn't have the $130 te pay the fine. You (the Stevens Point Cop) who picked us up really have something to be proud of. You made your quota that evening. Congratulations! ! I'm sure glad ·that I work on a quota basis as a salesman to have been able to afford to pay. back a friend for my bail.-You, the Stevens Point Police should welcome the college studen~ who bring in revenue to the city and stop Mfassing them as though they are criminals. Yours truly, Robin Engel UWSP Graduate Louisville, KY improved to better meet the needs of phone users. In my case, I missed a very important call which I would have received had my family been able to get through. I'm the first to admit that I am angry with the system and am writing this letter in part to express my dissatisfaction. Secondly, I sincerely hope that my letter will inspire others to acknowledge and pay attention to the problem. I've heard many people tell of similar phone situations. The phones in each individual room are a big step, but what good are they if people can't get through? I encourage all of you who have been affected by this to call x-2562 and tell them you would like to see improvement. No one can see the extent of the problem unless we tell them and ask for improvement. Let's let them know. Valerie Stone · 312 South Hall To the Editor: Is it possible that it has happened again? You guessed it, the Pointer "accidentally" missed relevant facts. In Karen Rivedal's article in the November 6 issue of the Pointer she "missed" many of the important facts of the issue concerning the possible $10 fee for a new physical education facility. Karen Rivedal failed to mention that the present athletic facilities were intended to serve 4500 students and now "accommodates" 9300 students. She also failed to mention that UWSP is in dp"ect competition with UW-Platteville for the new facilities. Another missed fact is ~t UW-Platteville has already passed a similar amendment. H Student Semite hadn't passed their version of this amendment, it would almost assure UWSP of not receiving the money for the new facilities. Karen Rivedal also writes "the success or failure of the petition on campus should be an accurate indicator of the students' willingness to pay the additional fee." Sorry to burst your bubble Karen, but 2300 signatures were collected in the first four days and more are still to come. I truly hope this trend of "missed" facts does not continue. I am extending an invitation to Bernie Bleske, Debbie I{el- lum and Karen Rivedal to attend a Student Senate meeting, with the hoJ!e that they will then be able to report intelligently and accurately, for a change. I wouldn't go so far as to say the Pointer is practicing yellow journalism; but it is definitely turning beige. John Daniels Student Senate Oh yeah? To the Editor: After reading Student Senator John Daniel's entertaining interpretation of the Nov. 6 article on a possible student fee for pool revisions, I feel compelled to explain the situation. You missed the point of the article, John. 'As evidenced by its title, "Student Senate Votes for Additional Fee" its focus was a recent decision to require a student fee for a new pool. The facts concerning additi()Jlal Phy. Ed. revisions were strictly secondary and treated as such. Maybe if you used some note cards, John, and worked on matching the .title of articles with their contents, you'd find this reading business less confusing. Here's another idea that might ·help. Ch~k the Pointer · that came out two weeks ago and look on page three. Here you will find a very complete article written by Senior Editor Bernie Bleske entitled "Extensive Pool and Phy. Ed. Revisions Planned." This · article · mentioned some of the exact phrases you wanted me to repeat least week. I think if yoti use the title-article matching skills we talked about earlier for this piece, you'll be much morepl~ed. Lastly, in regard to your thoughtful apology conce~· my alleged "burst bubbl heck, think nothing of it, John. was unaware that I had inflated a bubble much less had one popped. The statement that's got you in such a tizzy-the one about the success or failure of the petition being an accurate indicator of student willingness to pay the fee--was intended to mean simply that. It was not a prediction of any sort, nor was it an expression of personal opinion. Don't dig so deep John. You only confuse the issues. Try to keep in mirid that it is · not the intent of the Pointer staff to somehow sabatoge the noble aims of UWSP's Student Govemm~nt Association with any manifestations of our-what's the. catchy color phrase this week? oh yeah- beige journalism. That's in next week's news stories. (Incidentally, for the coming winter season, could I suggest sdme journalism in natural , earth tones or maybe some warm pastels?) Karen Rivedal News Editor MOVE AHEAD Reach out and touch someone? • [ An emergency happened-a stroke and then a death of one of my relatives, 200 miles from UWSP. The relatives were con- ~ J tacted, including my own family, who in turn tried to contact me. Naturally, they picked up the phone and got a busy signal. No big deal, except that it was busy for the next four hours until after 11:30 p.m. when they finally gave up for the night. The next · day they were diligently trying to gain a connection only to run into the same busy signal. They grew increasingly frustrated. "The dam kid and her roommate must be sitting on the phone all day." But we weren't. · All this semester people call. ing me from off-campus have mentioned that they were having problems getting a hold of me and were getting a busy signal for extended periods of time. So I checked on the phone. I caned the number for phone problems on campus. I was told that a busy signal while ·my phone' was not in use: meant that the campus cireuits were over-loaded. I would like to see the capacity of the campus phone system MAKING YOUR POINT ON PAPER: MEET THE RIGHT PEOPLE: Dan Dieterich will sharpen our skills in writing resumes and applications. Monday,Nov. 17 at 7:30p.m. Chris Clarke - Epstein of AS1D will show us how to meet and keep career contacts. Tuesday, Nov. 18 at 7:00p.m. ASSERTIVENESS IN BUSINESS: Merry Soyck, of 1st Financial invites you to learn to be assertive in your career. Thursday,, Nov. 20 at 7:00 p.m. I FalJ Trcijnfns &· DeveJopmenC Series- .LOCATION: NICOLET-MARQUETIE ROOM, U.C. COST: FREE ... EVERYONE IS WELCOME! . I I · 1st ANNUAL ' Pointer Classic ~ November 14-15, 1986 Time: 5:00 p.m., -8:00 p.m. K.B. Wil.l ett Arena . UW-Stevens Point University of Notre Dame Augsburg ' St. John's ' Action· Packed Hockey . **************************************************************************** - / EXHIBITION BASKETBALL G.A ME ; UWSP LADY P.OINTERS . . vs. MEXICAN NATIONAL TEAM . , . ~ November 18th.-1:30 P.M~ *All-Sports Passes not valid for this event. , • THIS 12-MEMBER TEAM WILL REPRESENT . MEXICO AT THE PAN-AM GAMES • RESERVE TICKETS: $5.00 GENERAL ADMISSION: $4.00 (ADULTS) GENERAL ADMISSION: $2.00 (STUDENTS W/ID) AT 346-3888~ 0R STOP IN ROOM 122 OF THE QUANDT FIELDHOUSE • CALL ATHLETIC DEPT ***************************************************************************' 3rd ANNUAL TIP OFF TOURNAMENT (Quandt Fieldhouse) \ FRIDAY & SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21st & 22nd GAME TIMES: 6:30 ·& 8:00P.M. NAIA RUNNER-UP 1986 • ST. THOMAS AQUINAS, NEW YORK NAIA PERENNIAL POWER 1 • KEARNEY STATE, NEBRASKA DISTRICT 14 INDEPENDENT . • CONCORDIA COLLEGE, MILWAUKEE 5 TIME WSUC CHAMPION · . _• U.W. STEVENS POINT, STEVENS 'POINT _/'- - '- - -- -FEfiTUR€)--1 Sniffles and · sneezes? Welcome_ to the cold season by Frank Bosler Staff Reporter "Achoo!" Bless you. If you haven't got one already you're one of the rare ones. The - cold season is here and sniffles and sneezes abound. Will dry .feet keep you safe? Will vitamin C do the trick? Just why do we catch the dreaded "common cold"? Even though people don't die from colds and seldom develop serious complications, colds are the layman's handiest reproach for the scientist: "If you can put a man on the moon, why can't you do something about the common cold?" A cold is by definition temporary and self-limiting. The symptoms vary but generally include the usual sore or scratchy throat, sneezing, hoarseness, coughing, a runny nose- -the blahs. . Scientists know more than they used to about how colds are transmitted and about the viruses that cause them. About 200 different cold viruses exist. The sure way to "catch" a cold virus is to get a good dose of it directly in the upper nose, where the temperature and humidity are ideal for its growth. Three· factors influence transmission of a cold: the amount of time spent around the cold · sufferer, the volume of his secretions, and the amount of virus in them. No . one is quite Sl,U"e what makes a person susceptible to colds in general or to any particular cold. • Most people believe that being overtired or under emotional stress can "bring on" a cold. Others blame industrial poilu- tion. There's no proof that I , has shown vitamin C to be more have seen one way or another. than marginally useful, (megaThere is evidence, however, doses of vitamin C can cause dithat smokers are more likely to arrhea and other problems). Also, I have not seen data that catch colds than nonsmokers. What about the weather? states that over-the-counter cold Colds do occur seasonally - preventives are significantly peak periods in the United effective. States are September, October Most colds get better by and early spring - and it's hard themselves and require no visit to keep from blaming weather. to the · doctor. But you should But researchers have never seek professional advice if any been able to positively connect of the following symptoms cold viruses with the weather. occur: oral temperature above Getting chilled or undergoing 103 degrees, severe pain in the rapid weather changes does not chest, head, stomach, ears, or · make you catch a cold. enlarged neck gla.Dds, sore · · One study found that 40 to 90 throat combined with oral ternpercent of persons with colds perature abo-qe 101 degrees for had the virus on their hands. · 24 hours, oral temperatures that The cold bug was shown to sur- remain above 100 degrees for Chicken soup has long been a vive outside the nose for up to three days, and a fever, sore three hours. Cold viruses were throat, · or severe runny nose parent's favorite home remedy also found on about 15 percent · that persists for more than a for the common cold. While the youngster lies in bed, littering of nearby objects such as door- week. ' So what is the best way to the floor with baseballed Kleeknobs, telephones, playthings, coffee cups, and glasses. Touch- manage a cold? listen to your nexe8, chicken soup is delivered ing these objects can transmit body, take care of yourSelf and to the bedside. · There is a degree of faith inthe virus to the hands of a follow the suggestions below. 1. Don't automatically "take vested in that chicken soup, as healthy person, and if this per'if some mystical or magical son puts hands to nose, the vi- something" for a cold. rus will probably multiply. Rub2. A salt-water gargle is help- cure-all is in the broth. But surely the medical value bing the eyes may have the ful for sore throat symptoms. same effect, since the virus can 3. Saline nose drops (1/4 tea- of chicken soup is questionable. pass through the tear duct into -spoon of salt to eight ounces of After all, it usually comes in a the upper nose. water) may clear your nasal ·tin can and sells for 49 cents. Besides, scientists have been So how does one go about passages. studying the common cold and avoiding a cold? The most 4. Hot drinks are comforting. 5. Bed rest will not cure a what drugs assist the body for effective way to keep a cold from spreading is washing. If cold, but-if you feel exhausted, years. Surely if something as simple as chicken soup helped you ~ve a cold, remember that rest. it spreads via your fingers, so Sorry, there is no miracle fight a cold, scientists would wash them frequently in soap cure or home remedy that cures have tested it and reported and warm water. If you are the cold. But there are loads of their findings. They have. around people with colds, in things that make you feel better Researchers at Mount Sinai addition to washing, try to and help pass the time. My preavoid putting r your fingers to . scription: a box of tissues, a Medical Center in Miami conyour nose and eyes. bowl of chicken soup and some- firmed in a recent study that chicken soup does benefit the Though megadoses of vitamin one that wants you to recover. common cold. So until next time, be well. C have been highly touted as a :'m'":'m'",_........,.._,........,............,....,..,,.,....,...,...._...,..._:'m'".....,...._,.,.....,.__~ means of "heading off" a cold, I have seen no clinical data that Chic;:ken soup Study confirms benefits Confessions of a chocoholic guise that I had to try this if I really were to send it as a gift to a loved one this holiday season, my order went out in the next morning's mail. You won't fiDd red eyes and Rationalizing aside, it arrived weight loss as a symptom here. yesterday (fast service). It's In fact, it's just the contrary. gone now. Weight gain and glossy eyes are No, I didn't have any compaa symptom of. chronic chocohol- ny and you're right, I didn't ism. Wi~ the approaching holi- share. In a little over 24 hours days, symptoms are flaring. _ right, so "a little (all right, I've already suffered my .first over" is only 5 minutes), I debinge. It started simply enough, voured a pound ' ot triple chocojust a week ago. Figi's cata- late torte. The remorse is startlogue arrived in the mail. (You ing to set in now, and that's know, Figi's, like the Wisconsin why I've chosen to do my penCheeseman and those other ance by writing this word of companies who will send cheese warning to you. The holidays and sausage and fruitcakes to are coming - look out for the ' your loved ones on holidays.) chocolate. My fantasies were peaked on I guess that the only way to page 55 when I spotted the completely purify my soul is to Chocolate Torte. come clean with the most sor-. My eyes glazed over as I did of details. Like any addict, read ... "heavenly chocolate I, the consumate chocoholic, cream is interwoven with fresh, ordered the torte on credit. moist chocolate cake. That's right, Figi's will give me Then ... doused with the best until Valentine's Day to pay. chocolate covering, ·hand-decor- But the cake is gone, and I may ated and voila-a 16 ounce triple want more. So much for the chocolate extravaganza!'' budget, it'll be another month I couldn't resist. So, under the before I ~ hook up the cable. by Gene A. Cisewski Staff Reporter an as a· In an article in the medical journal CHEST, Mount Sinai researchers claim that chicken soup increases both the rate and time that mucus moves through the nose. The result is that the virus, by being carried out with the I1lucus; has less time to reproduce and grow. Researchers, however, were unable to pinpoint the specific substance that contributes to this action. "We l>elieve that chicken soup contains some yet-undiscovered substance that produces an effect beyond the soothing effect of the soup's hot vapor," a Milwaukee Journal article quoted Alex Chediak, a respiratory specialist at Mount Sinai, as saying. "Researchers have compared the effect of hot water and chicken soup on mucus flow and found the chicken soup causes it to flow faster, longer." DBD Dietrich Features Editor Pointer Page 11 Spr~Chen DeutJch 1 Sie J in Steven·s Point? by Julie Kirchhoff Staff Reporter Have you noticed anyone speaking a foreign language on campus lately? Yes, there are -several foreign students here who speak their native tongue. I'm talking about. American dents, maybe friends of •• yours, who are speaking German. For the first time at Stevens Point, a special wing in Roach Hall has been established where residents are encouraged to speak only in German. The encouragement comes from a native German, Korinna Trautmann, who is here for the year with a program between the German government and the state of Wisconsin. The German program · PAD; Padagogischer· Austausch Dienst (which translates to PeAlagogical Exchange Service), coordinates the exchange of German and American teachers. Trautmann is a participant in PAD. Trautmann is from West Berlin, where she taught English to 16- and 17-year-olds. To enhance her knowledge of English ,!llld to become familiar with American customs, Trautmann applied to PAD last February. After a meticulouS application process and interview in Bonn, Germany, Trautmann was a~cepted and attended several seminars and orientations dur- tevens Point music scene Are there any g·rassroots here? encountered in wanting to perby Jon Pike form their type of music in Steing the swnmer and upon her arrival in Milwaukee. PAD has Staff Reporter vens Point. coordinated the exch.ange of The problem first referred to German teachers for the past Last week's Pointer article by both Dieterich and Overaker three to foilr years. Past partie- "Eau Claire Music Scene" exa- was the · lack of interest. The ipants now help with the orien- mined what happens to under- · both agreed that there is tations. ground music and bands when "closemindedness in this town " Trautmann is trying to teach actively supported by a local . towards thrash and garage m~UWSP German students some- scene. This week, we'll look at sic. thing about Germany that they th_e opposite · case. In other . · A second problem brought up, never knew before. At the same wo~: ~t happens when peo- was ~inding places to play. One time, 'she is learning from the ple InSISt On making under- example was the fact that students through their reactions ground music, but there is no places, like the American Le~ attitudes. It's an interper- scene to support it? gion Hall, wanted "too much sonal learning experience beUnfortunately, I'm talking money up front to hold a concert there." Luckily, the YMCA cause people learn from others about ~ens Point. as well as from themselves, Ask people not from Point offered them a ~ cut to hold Trautmann said. what they think this area lacks. a concert on one of their "Teen In the language lab of the Col- If they're from Madison, Mil- Nights." lins Classroom . Center Traut- , waukee,_ Eau Claire or even The third problem mentioned mann holds conve;sation nq_rtheast Wisconsin, chances was recording. There simply classes in groups of five. They are, they'll sa-l local bands. ar~n't ~Y faciliti~ in Central discuss a variety of subjects There are few bands from Ste- WISConsm. Dan Dieterich, redealing with cultural aspects of ve1_15 Point who play in Stevens called one experience where the · staff of a recording studio Germany. "It creates a special Pomt. interest" said Trautmann "BeYou would think that this botched up their tape. cause i am a native Ge~ would be discouraging to peOple Despite these and other probpeople are more responsive t~ who want _to perform ' under- · lems, bo~ bands are confident _.. about their future. Brad Overmy questions. They realize I ground music here. really want to know." ~o~tely it's not. In fact, aker wants his band to, "Have Many students are interested this Fndar, November 14th, at fun, - f~d. other plac~ to play in corresponding with German a concert m the YMCA, two lo- and give 1t a try at local shows students and Trautmann has ca~ underground bands are in Wisconsin." TED has a demo been busy trying to establish a gomg tQ tm!eash themselves on tape out (an "audition tape pre"pen pal" system between Ger- Stevens Pomt. The concert is . sented to record companies with man and American students. sponsored by the Portage Coon- · ~e hope of getting a contract). Any day now," they expect a Currently, there are six Ger- ty Teen Program. · man people in Wisconsin with The bands TED and. Balance record to ,b e released from PAD. Most of them assist teach- of Terror have been around for Touch & Go, an underground reers in high schools or elementa- about a year now, writing cord label. ry schools. Trautmann's situa- s~ngs, r~hearsing sets, and setThe real question: Can undertion is unique in the respect tling their personnel. ,Both ,Brad ground music make it in CenOveraker (Balance of Terror) tral Wisconsin? S!ld _Dan Dieterich (TED) cited Ma Cont. p. 18 similar __that of rock'n'roll is a story of imitation. For example, there would have been no punk rock ~ovement in England, if Amencan groups like the Ramones had not gone over there and played. That's jUst the way ~~. it happens. Somebody gets out on stage and plays, and someone in the audience says, "Hey, I can do that, too!" It might be too much to hope for, but who knows. Maybe this Friday, thanks to Balance of Terror and TED, some kid in the audience who owns a guitar will see them play and kno~ that he too can do what they're doing. Like I said, it might be too much to hope for, but, if it does happen, it won't be the first time. prob~e.m~ Juniors~Seniors &GradS... YOURSBF t~ey Th:~ry -W6nd!:lr why a a cold, after an. a called a "bot." -Get ,out Look Up ....._ eold last$, NW~~rAl\d!n•i!•l ~ IA-- -RealiZe y()U're a lot more <lte:ati1~e k~ you sane CQUcll potato. SOME CREDIT! ·Just bring a copy of your schooii.D. • No cosigner required·. APPLY NOW ON CAMPUS! Date: November 11 thru 13 Time: 9 A.M.-4 P.M. - DIETICIAN INTERNSHIPS The Air Force can make you an attractive offer- outstanding compensation plus opportunities for professional development. You can have a challenginQ practice and time to spend w1th your family while you serve your country. Find out what the A1r Force offers. Call MSgt Rich Cleveland Place: University Store in UC CITIBAN<O~ at (608) 256-0800 collect Page 12 -------------~~--.9l.rts Comedian Alex Cole performing at UWSP - Review & * '~The. ' Psaltery'' ' Last S~tunlay night, ''The Psaltery" performed in the, ~ PBR of the UC. The program ll:l was sponsored by La Liaison '3 Francaise (French Club). ~ ''The Psaltery" consisted ,. of two artists . from Maine, . Lil- t umne Labbe and Don Hinfdey: The majonty of their ~terial were songs that originated ftorn ''Figure Skating'' by Second Childho_9d . ,\ by Jllaine S.Chultz "Figure Skating" is the fii'St record released by the Oshkosh band Second Childhood. The LP reflects both the good and bad aspects of this band. I have seen them play live 15 times, so the air I blow is ..not as hot as usual. Second Childhood plays a lively type of rock'n'roll with obvious pop influences. Sources as far~ranging as XTC, REM and Madison's Spooner can be heard if not always pinned down. The lyric sheet credits all songs to Jim Reichenberger (vocals and 'guiter). Lyrics are -Reichenberger's passion; and he has a definite way with words. But credit must also go to the rest of the band, (Andy Cox, drums, _P at Hable, guitar and John Kovalski, bass). Without these members Reichenberger's songs could not be as imaginatiVely interpreted. Jim's lyrics are from the same rock'n'roll school of ver- bosity that graduatetl Elvis Costello and Difford/Tillbrook of Squeeze. He succeeds with .intelligent, first person tales of love, love gone bad and other personal matters. · An example: . Hoboken Hoedown that passed through these parts a while back. The music that backs up Reichenberger's words is solid and melodic, as well as current and traditional. Pat Hable uses his Fender I want to know what makes Jazzmaster as an instrument of you tick sounds as well as mUsic. He wily is your face flush with will, at times, create sounds to excitement r color a song much the same I want to know what will do way Chris Stamey used to do the trick with the dBs. I want to know all the intiA constant in the band's live mate details shows has been a drawn-out I want to get all the specific version of Al Green's "Take Me facts to the River." The last time I I want you to be ve.ry explicit saw them do it, Hable played a with me ·solo that was a cross between when you describe your illicit Vietnam 1969 and Detroit Saturacts day Night. from "Secrets" Second Childhood's rhythm No doubt that Reichenberger section is ~ctive but not busy in has his eyes and ears open to a jazz-fusion sense. what goes on around him. .Drummer Andy Cox keeps · Jim also had the foresight to this steady. When they begin include the line "there are live extended jams it is Cox forces at work we can't ignore" who serves as the launch pad, in "Secrets" to motivate a-cer- and often is the only contact the tajn someone to write about the other thre~ have with terra fir- BfilS• S0 n p h0 Works by award-winning pliotographer Michael Brisson are currently on display in the Museum of Natural History at UWSP. The exhibition of the 20 blackand-white ph.Qtographs entitled, . . ~bbe sat on. stage "Portrait of Green Bay," will 'small. wooden boant.unde continue through mid-January feet. TAts is how she ''cloggi¢!t in the museum's gallery. ·and the au.dience,a Brisson, who came to UWSP it sm.md two years ago as director of the educational media services, was the recipient of funding from the UW Sea Grant Institute to develop the photo essay about Green Bay and - its users. The photographs were part of a larger Sea Grant exhibition mounted in 1984. FrenCh-Canadian logging days. f,.abbe's family helJ?ed settle and log the Quebec regio ~cJa and she grew Up'· .ftUlnY of the traditiolUll so•,'1 nuuryof Wbich tbeY perto ma. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK - M·F 9·9, Sat. 9·5, Sun. 12·5 THE NEWEST COST CUTTERS LOCATION . 101 DIVISION STREET (By Kmart) I I I I I I I I I --------------r-------------$1995* I FREE* ZOTOS® Perm I I I· (Regular $24.95 to $29.95) Appointments Recommended Good at Slavens Point .Includes Sh•mpoo •nd Style •with This Coupon (long· b•ir $5.00 extra) · Shampoo and Con d.I1.IDnlng . · ($2.50 Value) with our regul•r $8.00 cut Good •t Stavens Point •with This Coupon I I I I I I I I 101 Division Street North (By Kmart) 345-0300 101 Division Street North (By Km•rt) 345-0300 • Good thru Dec. 15, 1986 Good thru Dec. 15, 1986 ~~~~~ ~~~~~ --------~--------------------OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Co!_ is a solid rock'n'roll drummer. Without him the band could not get away with what it does. Last, but not least, is bassist John Kovalski. His style is similar to Tommy Stinson of the Replacements, in that he can settle into a groove with the drummer or, as he often does, play riffs and counter melodies to what the others are doing. Some of the catchiest hooks on the record come from John's bass (the intro to "Endure Me I Adore You" or "She Sleeps Around"). Ironically, Kovalski was not the band's original bass player, but his sound is integral to the band. When live, he does vocals on such choice covers as "I Knew the Bride" and "Suffragette City." (Collectors have been known to offer gold coins in exchange for his 811-tiihe great version of "Pipeline.") . The band-can by no means be labeled garage or punk in a true sense. They are tight, but at times they let loose with a passion that only comes from working together and years of · practice. · · Hopefully they will release a follow-up record longer than 29 minutes. l PORD ...... ·IW Pointer Page 13 ' / from Lawrence AppletOn. commisinsltitute have the Neville Public Manitowoc Marlthe UW-Manitowthe Green Bay Brisson, former supervisor of still photography services at UW-Green Bay, has won several first prize ribbons in competition sponsored by the Wisconsin News Photographers Association and the Industrial Photography Annual. In addition, he has been invited to exhibit his work in several museums, universities and galleries in the Midwest. He has been a freelance photographer for the daily . newspapers in Milwaukee and Green Bay, the weekly published in Sturgeon Bay and the trade journals of several industries. News Release · Movie Reviews ''Jumpin' Jack Fl.ash'' by Gene A. Cisewski Staff Reporter Penny Marshall makes her motion picture directorial debut in "Jumpin' Jack Flash" (you'll remember her from Laverne & Shirley- she's the one who wore the "L" on her· sweaters). This film, starring Whoopie Goldberg ("Color Purple"), takes the · viewer on a romp through the international espionage community complete with the CIA, KGB and British Foreign Service. H you like to laugh, this movie is for you, provided· of course, that you don't take violent exception to four-letter words. H you like Goldberg, you'll love this .film. Tht!re isn't a scene that she's not in. ·one of J.ter more ·memorable lines fol- Nc.r HIM' LJ.1 HAi-F oF THe 'CAKE,HoPtNv "TO 1'16o TtiA,- He RE#\U..'i ••• Oil. "TWO. --1<:~111/. ~ ANt> AT MA~'i HiSft)R~ ~5 Ttt~'{ Vi$iTEt> JI.IST T"!iS ~ST SIAMMEJl. -·~· lows her vain attempts to get a hardened New York police officer to believe that she's witnessed a murder. As she's being forcefully removed from the station, she shouts, "What are you, some f-ing reject from 'Barney Miller'?" The plot centers on Goldberg, a data entry clerk working at a computer terminal in a New York band. She finds that a L+1<-..'IP..... British intelligence officer has invaded her . computer modem from behind the Iron Curtain where he's trapped. Because of a plot by double agents working in Her Majesty's embassy, Whoopie is the only hope. The visual gags are outrageous as Goldberg becomes intertwined with the intelligence community. Npt having any weapons in her humble apartment, she .is forced to defend herself with· a seven foot toothbrush when whe hears someone in the hallway. It's ' almost too much when a sequinneed gown she's wearing ·gets caught in a paper shredd.er, and when she becomes trapped in a phone booth that's being pulle.d through the streets of New York by a tow truck. Both scenes provide ample laughs. You'll also find yourself sympathizing with Goldberg as she falls in love with the man she's trying to save. First, the relationship bubbles as the comput, .er communications develop. Mter she's been to our agent's apartment and has heard his voice on an answering machine, · it becomes the voice from the computer. The audience is near tears towar$1 the end, as we discover that the agent has stood Goldberg up when they were supposed to meet for the first time over dinner. "Jumpin' Jack Flash" is a delightfully ~Y movie which you probably won't regret §eeing. Looking For Women For Thursday Night C.ty League Dart Team The New Downtown Saturday Night Entertainment Spot Sign-Up! Call 344·2100 BAR --'- Featu~ng Country Rock. The Newly Remodeled Fox Hole Bar Under The Amerlc.n Legion • DowntOwn Cl•rtc St. Home of the "Rugby Arctic FMt" Nightly Specials MONDAY WEDNESDAY $2.00 Pitchers s-c1ose Free Pool & $2.00 Pitchers s-c1ose TUESDAY 3 Point Shorties-$1.00 7-Ciose LADIES' NITE THURSDAY Half Price Drinks (Gin, Vodka, Brandy, Whiskey, Bar Wine, Tap Beer) • ·11 FRIDAY NITE FISH FRY Walleye • $4.50 Haddock • $3.95 .Carryouts Available 4-9 Call 344-21 00 SATURDAY ENTERTAINMENT THIS WEEK ''BUCK SHOT'' Free Beer 7:3o-8:30 Page 14 A _recording artist's perspective Reviving the soul ·IndePendent vs. , maior -labels Some critics call Keene's lyr- have· the opportunity to sell a ics vague. Bqt this might be be- million copies. Of 1course, Staff Reporter cause he tries to match the lyr- there's that other side, too. Ma- - - - - - - - - - - - ics to the moods created by his jor labels can take absolutely Walk into a local record store songs. , nothing and make it sell, like Atoday, and you see a greater Tommy Keene has recorded a Ha. There you had absolutely variety of albums than you're mini-album titled "Back nothing to begin with and it sold used to. The reason for this: the Again... (Try)" for Dolphin Re- a million copies. rise of the independent record cords, an independent label. Htf"' "My relationship with Geffen label. ~ has also recorded for the major is really good. Of course, when Independent record labels (or label Geffen Records, a subsidi- you have that many people inthose old -soul records great: "indies") are small, indepen- ary of The Warner Communica- volved with making a record, it the voice. Dross exemplifies dently owned and operated com- tions empire. His records for can be confusing. I do oc~asion- . this quality on "Give Me the panies that produce only re- Geffen include an LP called 'ally have problems with all that cords, as opposed to major re- "Songs From The Film," and input. But, I imagine that someReason," on Epic Records. . cord labels, which are parts of ' his current release, a mini- times they have problems with The production, instrumentaalbum titled "Run Now." me too." tion, vocals, and lyrics on this the CBS Corporati_on. Independent record labels, "Right now," Keene said, record are all slaves to Luther's voice. The sole purpose of these however, are not new. In fact, "there's not a lot of difference elements (which are done very some major labels, like Atlantic between working for an indewell) is to provide Luther with and Elektra, started out as in- pendent label like Dolphin and a· presents ' the best environment in which dependent labels. The '80s has rna jor label like Geffen. There the seen a large number of individreally isn't a difference until 'to pour out over these ballads. And indeed, the black-urban ualS, who decided not to deal you really _start to take off. "Initially, with a company · charts have been kind to Luth- with major labels, and struck like Dolphin, you'll have five er. There's no reason why it out on their own. Besides the way each label is peopie working a record. With should stop with this disk. My personal picks-for black-urban owned, are there any other dif- Geffen, you'll have 30. Initially, ferences between independent that's the difference; more peo(Thurs. & Fri. Night) hits on this record include and major labels? pie are involved with working "Give Me ·the Reason" and Recently, I was able to talk 8:30 · 12:30 P.M. "There's Nothing Better than with Tommy Keene, a recording . on and promoting the record. "With independent labels, you . Love." But that's not to say that artist who has recorded for both have an opportunity to get out independent and major labels. taco ~o~ e' these are exceptional tracks on Instead of spouting off myself, I and be visible. The Artist and (cO~CIJ epertory people from major R a superb album, rather they decided (since he has the experTuesday Iabels can take a look at· yc,u possess the appropriate market- ience) to ask Tommy. ' . and decide if they want to sign 2 Tacos ing gimmicks for current hit little background might be you. (Artist and Repertory, or singles. "Give Me the Reason" in Aorder: Tommy was raised in "A & R", people are responsiMargaritas & is a duet with Gregory Hines, Chicago, and now calls Marye for getting and maintaining bl Mexican Beer one of Hollywood's hot commo- land his home. He's a guitar recording artists.) dities. player, singer and songwriter. "Then," Keene continued, "if Before I get out of here, Some critics have likened his I here's a tip: the next time you' type of bare-bOnes, jangly pop you get on to a major label, you ~ lure that "special someone" to to that of such American artists I your room for a little "who- of the '60s as Bob Dylan and the knows-what," flip this sucker oq Byrds. the turntable and see if it Tommy, however, sees his doesn't provide that little, spe- music as befug more influenced cial something. (If it doesn't work out, don't by Britain and the 1970s. Cover songs on his r.ecords by such blame Luther. You'd probably artists as The Rolling Stones, Did you know that for more ~ve had a be~er chance seduc- Roxy Music and Lou Reed ' mg a grapefrwt.) than ten years. you've been attest to this. by Jon R. Pike PARTNER'S PUB Singing .Machine· by Jon Pike Staff Reporter Back in the '60s, male singers with distinctive voices tore up both the "black" R & B charts and the "white" pop charts. . Well, the '60s ended, and somewhere along the line, "R & B" became "black-urban." It lost something in the change: that undefinable quality, called "soul." Well, "soul" is back, and in more ways than one. Check out happy hour some Friday. What gets played on the jukebox? That's right, Smokey, Marvin and the 'l:emptations. Also, white sow-imitators from Britian, like Simply Red, are making noticeable impacts on the charts. Not only that but, more importantly, the real stuff's back. You see, Luther Van Dross and his producers remember that one quality that made all Nov. 13 & 14 ,, $1 °0 $100 Some say "no nukes" ~ers say "know nukes" playing your stereo. lighting your hallway and toasting your bread using electricity from the Kewaunee nuclear power plant? . That's good news because the Kewaunee:: plant doesn't burn fossil fuels like coal. In fact. instead of burning nearly 20 million tons of coal, in its first eleven years the Kewaunee , plant used only a small amount of uranium -- which is easy to obtain from rocks and not useful for much else besides energy. That's conservation. Because coal can be used in the future for lots of other things.- Like pharmaceutics. dyes, fertilizers,, and things we haven't thought of yet. For more information about nuclear energy and ijte environment, write: Wisconsfu Public SerVice · Corporate Communications r P.O. 10001 Green Bay. WI 54307-9001 or call (414) 433-1630. ,. • OPEN 24 HOURS • Visit Super Mom's MINI KITCHEN * Daily Soup Specials *Salads * Fountain Drinks * Sub Sandwiches * Fresh Bakery * Cookies i-------· COUPON-~------~------ COUPON ------~ i 1.. I I I Save so~ On Any Super Mom's Sandwich Limit one per customer Expires Nov. 21 I II 20~ Off 32 Oz. 1 I , Drink Reg. s9t . Limit one per customer Expires Nov. 21 I II 1 I L---~------------~--~~---------------~--~ 1616 Maria Dr. .A SUPERAMERIC .. ™ "1~ ~ Swp W~ A 1'libtllif ~~~ CIEDIT CIIDS SIMI AS CASH EB . Stevens Point 345·2~2,i C!!IC IAJ ~..r=- I ~ L r . ' , WISCONSIN PUBUC SERVICE CORPORATION Operator of the Kewaunee Nuclear Power Plant . ' A:nnouncing Three'Pluses For Students A special program tb introduce the new AT&T Plus Card to the University of WISConsin System ' I1.The easy way to !' • . ow___n an AT&T PC. • -With your Plus Card, you can ~~~~,~~ · purchase an AT&T high-speed, l . high capacity personal computer and needed printers, modems and software. The Plus Card lets you pay through convenient monthly payments. AT&T PC's were designed with expansion in mind and are uniquely qualified for university work, with growth potential to meet the demands of schooL.and a future career: ~ ·2.No payments for 6 months. ' If you purchase your PC between now and March 1, 1987 using the AT&T Plus Card you will not have to make any payments before June 30, 19HZ (Finance charges accrue from pUrchase date. Payment delay cannot be applied to telephone calls.)... ·3.~A chance to win a free AT&T PC.No purchase is necessary. And it's easy to enter your name. Just visit the -AT&T display table in yourstudent union, tomorrow, or'call your campus representative for all the-details. The name and number are below. • For all the facts about the Plus Card, dial either number below. Only the - campu~ rep can also tell you abo.ut the special UWS program- the free PC and the deferred payment plan. ·. • 1-800 CALL ATI (1-800-225-5288) Ext. 512 • Randy Peelen 346-3361 -===. ATtJ . • "ftle right choice. _Page 16 _ _ _j i OUTDOOR~ Killer storm . . Arnlistice Day brings chilling memories for ·hunters As .I huddled, shivering while hunting in a marsh this past weekend, staring into a 30 mph wind from the north, I remembered the story my grandfather told me about the Armistice Day blizzard of 1940. story goes. It was tradition to them. , start the day with a big breakGrandpa and Leonard manfast before the hunt began aged to paddle their skiff to a sometime before dawn. small island in the bay where After the two finished eating they weathered the storm in a and swallowed their last gulp of small groove in the rocky shorecoffee, they packed up and left line. They were amongst the s!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l for the bay and the migrating lucky: A~·~. mallards that were sure to Newspaper. accounts from ~; , < greet them in flocks. · that time told of duck hunters They paddled into the early along the Mississippi who froze Outdoors .~.· .F' morning light and shot many to death in their blinds. They Editor ducks that were lured close by were trapped by the .sudden feChris decoys and calls. rocity of .the storm and were Dorsey It was a hunt we can only unable to cross the moat of dream about today, but for treacherous November waters. · Some hun1:ers made it to many hunters that day the dream turned into a nightmare. small islands where they took The temperatures reached shelter beneath their overturned liiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiliii!:;;.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;.iil nearly 60 degrees by midmorn- boats. Many huddled next to Grandp8 and a friend, Leo- ing, but by noon icy winds,. be- each other and their- dogs for warmth. nard Bransen from Gr~ Bay, gan screaming across the bay planned a duck hunt along the · and blew my grandfather's deHunters who did manage to bay near Oconto. They met at a coys into the reeds before he Cont. p. 18 local diner for breakfast, as the could paddle out to retrieve Bow hunting improves as ·deer become more active by·Bnd Gourlie DNR Information Office Deer are _begmning to move throughout the state and archers report improved 'SUccess. Motorists are· alerted to be on the lookout for deer .along the roadways. In the northwest, bow hunters In the south and southwest, pheasant hunting is improving in Dane County as the corn isbeing picked. Archery hunters are registering some nice bucks in Columbia County ~d have found good success also in Fond duLac County. Bow deer hunting has improved throughout ~~~:::rec::;:n:o:: are having good success in the · cess~~~~ ~!~~e;~ ::.~ey~n~i~~~~ai~ good on Lake St. and an[..=:.~::.= grouse _hunters report good Croix Farther south in the west central counties, duck hunting is improving in the La Crosse area as water levels on the Mississippi River drop. More north- · ern mallards are being seen in the Eau Claire area. Limit catches of bass and walleyes are being taken by anglers in the La Crosse area. In north central Wisconsin, duck hunters report some success in the Wisconsin Rapids area and ruffed grouse hunting remains good in the Woodruff ·area. Smaller lakes and ponds are beginning to freez!'l there. Walleye action continues to be good on the Wisconsin River in the Rapids area. Trappers are doing well there on muskrat and mink and the raccoon bar- · vest is good. In the northeast, mallard hunting is good in the cornfields in Waupaca County and there is fairly good bluebill shooting on lakes Poygan and Wfuneconne in Winnebago County. Limits of the Dodgeville area.· About 160,000 Canada geese remain in the Horicon-East Central area of Wisconsin. Walleyes are hitting in the Mississippi River in Grant County and there is good -. ...... ' ' :_) ' " ' Select .deer hunters receive two permits MADISON, WI- Almost 9,000 Wisconsin deer hunters will receive two permits for the 1986 gun deer season this year, according to Department of Natural Resources' licensing officials. Dick Royston, supervisor in the license section, said this -will occur because in eight of the deer management units in the state there were more permits available than there were applicants for them. "As a result," Royston said, "some of the suecessful applicants for hunter's choice permits in those units will be,..issued an antlerless permit along with their hunter's choice permit." That will enable them to take two deer during the 1986 gun season, one of which must be ail · antlerless deer, Royston added. All of the permits will be issued ~Y mail. Royston said the mailing of the hunter;s choice permits to successful applicants began on Monday, October '17. and the final batch of permits will be mailed Tuesday, November llth. .... u· ws· p.·. F•1re cr,e.·w hho·sfs tou-r · state me et•Ing 1n COn·Iunct•I0 n w·t I f s • f A • F o Oc1ety o mencan oresters • by Scott Lindow panfish action on Big Green Lake in Green Lake Counzy. . ;,·-- Cont. P· 18 , twofold purpose in that Editor's Note: The Fire CNR room 112. DNR fire students receive hands-on Crew will hold an organi- specialist Bill Hoffman~ The UWSP Fire Crew will be the featured recently conducted a tour experience 'while provid- zational meeting (Nov. 13) at 7:30 of the Fire Science Ceo- ing fire protection. ter in conjunction with the State Society of American Foresters general . meeting. Participants viewed the computer center, a tool sharpening demonstration, fire weather monitoring, and the fire cache including a fire truck on loan to the fire crew from the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources. The Fire Science Ceoter is located in Plover · and is used for classes and as a dispatch center for the Fire Crew. The UWSP Fire Crew assists the DNR and the ~:W~:~k:~:!~~~~n;: U.S. Forest Service in having excellent succeas in fighting fires as well as Shawano County and al,"e enjoy- 'conducting prescribed ing good success in the Oshkosh burns for organizations area. There is good walleye and like The Nature Consernorthern action on the Wolf Riy~ An ax to grind er in waupaca County and wal- vancy and the InternaQuinn McCarthy of South Hall demonstrates the finer points of sharleyes are hitting in the Fox Riv- tional Crane Foundation. pening an ax whlle at the Fire Center's recent tour in Plover. er at DePere. The Fire Crew serves a / Pointer Page 17 ' - ~hen deer hunting it's the thought thcit counts When they realized I was a man, they took for the woods. by Tim Albers - Staff Reporter That was the extent of my n was another week without hunting for the week but it was much time to hunt. I got out d~finitely worth it. only one night for a couple of Most of the free time I manhours. In those hours I saw five aged to squirrel away was at deer. All five had been across night, so I spent some of it prethe field from where my stand paring for the gun season. Menis but at one point something tally, 1 traced every foot of our startled them and three headed hunting area. Our drives will be toward me. The one in the lead different than last year's, but 1 was a doe. Then· there was a think we will have a good year fawn and a buck. Judging from anyway. 1 am already getting past experience, I would guess mentally prepared for the long that the buck was a year and a nights and early mornings. Ah half old. He had a forked rack ... the good times of hunting but is probably an offspring of season. Sometimes I wonder if I the "Old Buck" of the area. The go to the shack for the hunting Old Buck is a 10-point beast or just for the fun of it. which I have seen on several occasions and was also one of Part of the fun is setting up the other deer in the field. the shack. You see, we hunt in The -deers' progress led them a state forest and do not have a to within 20 feet of me where permanent shack. On the weekthey stopped to see what had end before the opener, we load spookell them. It was al-SG up the trucks with the shack, where they caught my scent. bunks, carpet, staves, and all They just milled around for-a the other necessities. When we while but they were watching get to the pit we start with the where I was. walls. They are two-by-four I let my pounding heart re- framed plywood. The outside diturn to normal and then mensions are 24' by 16'. After attempted to turn toward them the walls are up, we put the for a sho~. I must have moved floor down and then the roof. too fast because they moved We then proceed to put every- away from me. They stopped. ~g iri ":here· it IM:longs. The aoout 20 yards from me and final step ~ to go to one of the tried to figure · out what I was. - local establishments to help one ...---SUNDA v~~ I 2 for 1~ Blood_ y Mary:s '1 2 noon - 5 p.m. Northpoint Sh9pping Center 200 Division Street l.----------------------1 of the guys celebrate his hunters waiting for the season anniversary a week early. The . to open. wives and girlfriends join us, · With all those mouths to feed but we still manage to have a' and the limited space, breakfast good time. preparation begins at three with A week later, the shack starts Wayne stoking the wood stove. teeming with the. group's arriv- He then starts his other tasks al. (I'm usually first.) A couple and by the time he gets back in of hours later, the food and sup- the shack I'm up and ready to plies usually show up with the begin my tasks. The rest of the next arrivals. By the time eve. ctew filters down one-by-one ryone gets there and people are until the whole gang is fed. By ready to go to bed, it is mid- the time Wayne and I are done night and there are 15 eager eating, most of the others are MADISON, WI - Application form8 to order trees and shruJM; from state nurseries are now available, according to Albert Kubiske, state forest, nursery and wild river specialist in the Department of Natural Resources' Bureau Qf Forestry. place their orderS early in order to obtain the species they need. While the present inventory is excellent, supplies of some of the more highly desired species are expected to be exhausted Over 20 million trees and early. shrubs were distributed in 1986 A reminder that trees· and and about the same number are . shrubs purchased from state opThe forms may be obtained available for 1987. However, erated nurseries can be used from department field stations, according to Kubiske the de- only for conservation purposes. U.W. County- Extension olfices mand for seedlings is expected They· cannot be used for landand all department foresters. to be high again this year. It is scaping or commercial Christ-_ Seedlings available include a recommended that landowners . mas tree production. variety of both hardwood and softwood trees, and shrubs for wildlife. In addition, wildlife packets and windbreak-shelterbelt packets are available. ATV owners reminded of new laW change i.n registration MADISON, WI - Owners of snowmobiles and all terrain vehicles (ATVs) are reminded that a recent rule change requires that the registration decal be displayed on the machine before it is put into use. Gary Homuth, Reci'eation Vehicle Safety Officer in the Department of Natural Resources, said the only exception is when an individual purchases a new or used machine from a dealer. "In that case," Homuth explained, "the dealer is required to apply for the· registration and the owner of the newly aequired snowmobile orATV can operate it while waiti,ng for the decal to - arrive by receiving from the dealer and carrying a copy of the registration application." He noted, however, that in the case where the machine is purchased from a private party, it may not be operated by the new · owner tintil the registration has been applied for and a decal received and placed on the vehi'cle. "The supervisor of ATV and snowmobile registrations.in the license section. of the de- - MADISON, WI - Entries in the 1987 Wild Turkey Stamp Design Contest will be available for public viewing on Thursday, oo~@ ~ © 1I[XI~b\ 1100 rn Tonight at 9:30 an encore presentation ·of and partment advises it will take about one week for the registra- -· tion to be processed and the . decal returned to the new own_er." Applications for registering snowmobiles and ATVs are available from any department office or from your local Conservation Warden. First glimpse of Turkey Stamp enlries ~HI tm~e Ah yes ... each November these thoughts become reality. Some people think of the deer they hope to see while in their stands. But for .me, the friends and atmosphere are what cause me to gravitate to the northwoods for one week each November. ON R accepting applications for trees and shrubs from state .. nurseries \ ©rF [MJ ready for the woods so we hurry into our orange coveralls because we don't want to be late gettirig to our stands. Qlash of !\mmtiillruln' a. moae.rn day adaptation t!\ Qlase of 1fiocal !Jock !Jeer' November 13, in Room 417 of GEF 2, 101 South Webste~ ., Street, Madison. Judging of the.45 designs subo mitted in the contest is expected to be completed by 1:30 p.m. , with the design which will be on . the 1987 wild turkey stamp selected. Public viewing· of the contest entries will be allowed from 9:00a.m. to 1:00 p.m. and again at 1:30 p.m. following the judging until3:30 p.m. The 1987 wild turkey season in Wisconsin will consist of four hunting periodS; April· 22-26, April 29-May 3, May ~10, and May 13-17. There are 6,040 permits available for the 1987 hunt to be held in seven zones in southwestern Wisconsin. Applications for permits must be postmarked no lawr that Friday, November 7, 1986. Hunters bagged 793 turkey last spring when 3,495 permits were issued. That is a success rate of almost 23 percent. FOR INFORMATION, . CONTACT: Ed Frank- 608/226-3840. D&er .hunting .. Lbteu to RADIO THEATRE ••• Next Week on the last Thursday of each mouth Page 18 DN,R to begin nine-month investigation Of chemical and non-chemical weed control MADISON, The Wiscon- for thriving fish populations. ment, environmental groups, WI- sin Department of Natural Resources is starting a nine month study to assess the risks of chemical and nonchemical weed · controls. The department is now see\ting names and addresses of individuals interested in review.ing the environmental assessment when it is completed at the end of summer, 1987. . The assessment will take a bard look at the risks of using chemical and other techniques to control algae, rooted plants and swimmer's itch (carried by snails) in water. The advantages and disadvantages of different lake nuisance controls like cht!nncals, plant harvesting, plant cutting and other techniques will be compared. "The Department wants a broad spectrum of people to review the assessment since the document will be. used to form state policies and regulations on controlling nuisance plants and snails in ouf lakes," said Ed .Jepsen, Bureau of Environmental Analys~ and Review. Rooted lake plants provide shelter, food and oxygen vital However, human activities can overfertilize lake waters when rain carries lawn chemicals, , barnyard wastes and leaking septic system wastes into the water. Water and sediments with excessive amounts of phosphorous and nitrogen stimulate algal blooms and thick shoreline weed growth. Chemical and mechanica! weed controls are often used to keep boat launches, beaches and piers clear for summer recreation. The environmental assessU}ent will describe ecological and social trade-offs of chemical controls; mechanical controls 'like cutting and raking; and biological te~hniques like fish stocking and intentionally planting more desirable lake vegetation. The DNR has formed two panels of lake interests to formally review the environmental assessment. The first consists of state and federal agency experts in lake management. The second citizen panel has members from local govern- the aquatic nuisance control business, lake districts and lake property owners. "To accurately gauge public opinion about alternative weed controls, we'd like a variety of lakeshore residents, environmental groups, the aquatic chemical industry, anglers and other people interested in lakes to take part in this discussion," 1 Jepsen said. People who want to receive a copy. of the draft environmental assessment whefi it is available next summer, or want to be notified of meetings to discuss the assessment, should telephone Mary Ellen Vollbrecht, D~R .Lakes Program at (608)267-2453 or Ed Jepsen, Bureau of Environment Analysis and Review, (608)266-5386. You can also contact Vollbrecht and Jepsen by writing the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, P.O. Box 7921, Madison, WI 53707. FOR INFORMATION, CONTACT; Ed Jepsen - 608-2665386. . .---------------------couPoN·------------:---·-:"'t I , _z 2300.Strongs Ave.?i Armistice-blizzard, make it to shore found their vehicles frozen and too cold to start. Others who were able to start their vehicles could not diive as most of the roads were impassable. -~~ '"o '8 from page 16 The blizzard which blew. For people like my grandacross the Dakotas and the parents the memories of that plains of Minnesota only hours ' earlier liad killed dozens from Armistice Day bring a chill the Mississippi to Little Muske- each time November skies send go Lake in eastern Wisconsin. hints of a storm. - The high winds and heavy snow prevented any rescue attempts as hunters were on their own. Families of the hunt- This will complete the distriers sat near radios and tele- bution of permits for this seaphones expecting to hear word son, and there will not be any more issued either prior to «!! on the fate of their kin. My during the season. · grandmother recalls the night The deer management units as the· longest of her life. "No and the number of antlerless one else was home," she said, ·permits which ar~ being issued "and the phone lines were to successful applicants for do:wn, I felt trapped." hunter's choice permits in those • . $100 - ·-~ · Pickup or Delivered D•lly Plus A FREE Quart of Coke On• Coupon Per Pizza at 11 A.M. FOt De~lv.,..& · Exp. 11/27/86 :·. ~!. .,. , t. Italian and American Restaurant · let Terry Kluck or Bob Nitka ·1 .1 V Pickup or Delivered • 1 Hours: One Coupon Per Pizza Open o.n, ., 11 A.M. For o.nv...l•• · Exp. 11/27186 76 589 8145 8,726 TWO GREAT BANDS .. ·~·························································································· FRIDAY .. ' r ~ ' ~; ·' \ 10:15 .. With Special Guest ., .. DOUBLE. DUTY ..••: I ....•• $2°0 Adm~ ...... . FREE - 1f2 Barrel ... ... . of Poi.nt Beer - .: .i . • r SATUJU)AY ' THE -GROOVE'' *OTHER NIGHTLY SPECIALS* SUNDAY · All bar brand mixers and cans of domestic beer........... 7 Free Popcorn & Bud Card Night THURSDAY Rugby Happy Hour• FRIDAY Siasefi Happy Hour • s2oo A.d miSSIOn . · 15~ · Tap ..I SATURDAY . Beers 5~ TUESDAY ·······:········............44te#···················:::. ................................................. : Sunday Night- J .: I I ! t' i I •I I II 1 ~---------------------------------------------- 2nd Street -Pub Presents . IL $ QQ ~~; P=~Yust ~~·;~y:u ;~:za j· • 73 432 73C 1,782 Hours: ap.n Off Any Size Pizza f'J c}~{do '8 .. -- · >~- I ~---------------------------------------------2300 Strongs Ave. ~341-94~41 EXTRA PERMITS ~ , .----~----------------couPoN------------------:"'t units is as follows: 70 2,137 ~-341-94941_ 1 ). Italian and Americ4n Restaurant let Terry Kluck or Bob Nitka make you a pizza just the way you like it. . Two permits, fromp.16 70A 2,599 70E 504 72 638~' f ..., _." ..,..... _., & Siasefi Happy Hour* 1 *Happy Hour- $3.00 at the doorfrom 7-10 Pointer Page 19 Lady Pointers Preview, coAt. fror:n p. 22 Domino's Pizza Delivers• the tastiest, most nutritious 'course' on your busy schedule. We make great custom-made pizza and deliver - steamy hot - in less than 30 minutest So take a break ftom studying and have a tasty treat. One call does it alii Our drive'rs ·carry less than $20.00. ' Limited delivery area. 101 NORTH DIVISION STEVENS POINT y 345-0901 duo combined for 36 points and 22 rebounds per game average. - .AJiother starter, Amy Gradecki, also returns to the squad. A sharpshooting guard, her services will become more valuable with the addition of the three-point stripe this year. All three were All-WWIAC selections last year. The Lady Pointers return four other letterwinners to the squad. Diane Beyer-, Donna Pivonka, and Patti Trochinski all saw action last year and will be valuable assets to this year's team. Also, Mary Miller, younger sister of Karla, returns after being sidelined by an injury last season and will add much needed depth on the inside. A strong recruiting class also looks to add strength to the Lady Pointer line-up. '"We had an excellent year recruiting and have picked up three or four players that should be of inunediate benefit to the team. We were able to add some depth to our inside game and have bolstered the outside game by bringing in some excellent • young guards," said Wunder. Renee B~urget, an inside player who prepped at Eau Claire Regis, is a top recruit who also plays on the Lady Pointer volleyball team. Other freshman recruits who should help are Debbi Shane (Hortonville) and Debbie' Metzger (Waukesha North). Shane came from a good basketball program and should see action, according to Wunder. Metzger is also a solid prospect, but has been slowed by a foot injury and will not be at full strength until second semester. "Barring any unforeseen circumstances, we should have a very successful year," Wunder said. "H we pick up on the style of play we started last sea8on; ' we will have a very solid team. ~ach Davis and I are looking fonvard to what the upcoming season has in store." Dogfish, cant. breaststroke (2:18.56). · Qualifying for nationals were the 400 medley relay team of Pisciotta, Stev.e. Nold, Rudeen and Kevin Parham in 3:44.83 (second place) and Parham in the 50 freestyle in :22.10 (second place). Other second place finishes were awarded to Dave Martorano in the 200 butterfly (2:07.59), Parham in the 100 free (:49.15) and Neil Fandel in the threemeter diving (237.85). Picking up third places were Sam Siegel in the 1,000 free in 10:53.74, Brumbaugh in the 200 free in 1:49.82, Nold in the 200 breaststroke in 2:20.47, , Mike Kerig in the one-meter diving (225.60) and Tim Thoma in the three-meter diving (228.45). "Our divers were tough," said Rudeen and Brumbaugh. "Kerig, Fandel and Tim Thoma all turned in great performances. Scott Thoma is also a bright spot in the 'future for our diving." Earning fourth places were Zenbi in the 1,000 free (1:04.37), Jorgenson in the 50 free (:23.45), Nold in the 200 IM (2:10.64) and Siegel in the 500 free (5:15.23). The Pointers are in action today hosting UW-Oshkosh. / Page 20 H'ost Pointer classic. this_weekend • Point .leers open with · sweep byKarenKuUnski Sports Information Assistant UW-8tevens Point's hockey team displayed a high-powered offense in chalking up a pair of home victories over uw-superior this weekend at Willett Arena. Before a near-capacity turnout of 1,005 fans, the Pointers gained a 10-1 victory Friday night, then returned Saturday with a 6-2 decision that completed the sweep. Friday's game was the season opener for both teams, who hold dual membership in the Wisconsin State University Conference .and Northern Collegiate Hockey Association. The win was worth two points for UWSP iiJ the NCHA standings. "I didn't think this was a 10-1 game at all," said Pointer coach Mark Mazzoleni. "When lowed by a Craig Hedstrom goal thei.i- first goalie went down, it at 15:43, assisted by Jason Wentler and Pete Supple. t~k the wind out of their sails. Pat McPartlin put the Point- · The Yellowjackets scored ers on the board early with a their only goal when Jonne short-handed goal at 1:14 of the Kartsu slipped the puck past first period on an assist by Pointer goalie John Basill at Doug Dietz, John Engstrom 15:58. Dan Stauber and Tim added another UWSP goal, Sundstrom assisted on the goal. working on the power play at Su'perior suffered a blow when 7:40, with assists from Joe starting goalie Bob Montrose sustained a thigh injury early in Butcher and Shawn Wheeler. The Pointers broke the game the second period and had to open in the second period with - leave the game. five goals. The first came at UWSP scored three cushion 8:03 from Rick Dodd (assists goals in the third period-by from Engstrom and McPartlin), Hedstrom (unassisted), Barahofollowed by another power play na (Dietz assist) and Butcher goal from Dodd on an assist (Barahona and Dietz assists) . "I was pleased with the balfrom Engstrom at the 9:07 mark. Butcher picked up a goal anced scoring from all of the at 14:31 on assists from Tim Co- lines," said Mazzoleni. "We meau and Ralph Barahon~. used four lines and six defenseRick Fleming scored at 15:21; men. That's what we wanted to assisted by Charles Harris, fol- do ~d that's what you need to do iiJ this league. Last year we were never able to do that." A major factor in fhe game was that, with 21 penalties called, UWSP was able to convert three of seven power play opportunities while the Yellowjackets didn't score on any of their 10 attempts. Mazzoleni cited the play of goalie Basill: "Games like this are the hardest to play in," he said. "It's hard to hang in there and keep the concentration level up." Basill, who recorded 22 saves, felt he was backed up by good defensive support. "I felt I had to keep my concentration so when the puck came my way I was ready," he said. Fans brought brooms to Point's hockey game on Saturday night at the Willett Arena and thanks to , a hat trick by freshman winter Shawn Wheeler, they were put to use. The Pointers concluded a sweep of a weekend series against UW-8uperior with a 6-2 win. UWSP is now ~ in the Wisconsin State University Conference while ·picking up four points in the Northern Conegiate Hockey Association. The Yellowjackets fall to 0-2. "We expected a hard game," said Mazzoleni. "It's hard to get up for a game after you beat them 10-1. I thought our defense played better, yet was still a little out of control. We bottled them up and they had a hard time coming out." The Yellowjackets did mean business, scoring their first goal , only 24 seconds into the game. Paul Stanaway scored on an assist from Jon Koski. . Wheeler, of Fort· McMurray, Alberta, tied the game up at 1-1 at the 7:26 mark when he scored his first goal on an assist from Tim Coghlin and Pat McPartlin. The Pdinters took Cont. p. 22 I Lanier tjo appear . at tourna-m ent Lite Beer representative Bob Lanier, who with more than 19,000 points is the 12th all-time leading scorer in the history of the National Basketball Association, will appear Friday, Nov. 21, and Saturday, Nov. 22 at the third annual UWSP/Lite Beer . Tip-Off Tournament. He will ~ present team and individual awards to the tourney field, )Vhich should be the strongest ever with UWSP, .St. Thomas Aquinas, Kearney State and Concordia. Lanier began his standout basketball .c areer at St. Bo- · naventure University, where he was voted first team All-American .in 1970. . He was the top NBA draft pick in a draft that also in- . eluded Dave Cowens-who would also later star in the ·The Pointer hockey team converged on -superior's goal Cluring Friday's game at Willett Are- · NBA. Lanier was NBA Rookie of na. UWSP kicked off the new season by winning both games of the weekend homestand. the Year in 1971 and AU-star Game's Most Valuable Player in 1974. Lanier spent nine seasons in Detroit. before joining the Milwaukee Bucks in 1979. _ Lanier led the Bucks to five straight playoff appearances be"Barb's time was 20 seconds to Lynn Palmquist in the 200 fore retiring in 1984. During his by Karen KuUnski Dine first places." Sports Information Assistant Capturing firsts for the Lady faster than her time in this free (2:11.68) and 500 free playing career, Lanier was Pointers were Barb Kolitsch in meet last year," said Huettig. (5:57.17) and Sarah Celichowski named to the NBA's AU-star team seven times. the 1,000 freestyle (11:35~51), "I've nominated her for swim- in the 100 free ( :59.93). The Buffalo, N.Y., native · EAU CLAIRE-A lack of Jan Gelwicks in the 200 individ- mer of the week. Jan had not"We're going to be very depth in the diving department · ual medley (2:18.69) and 200 able performances as did strong," said Huettig. "We only served as president of the NBA hurt, the "!W-stev~ Point wo- breaststroke (2:36.62), and Elaine, who took a year off to had 13 swimmers today, so our Player's Association for five performance is positively im- . years. He also h8s beeri recogmen s SWJD1 team m a 105-70 Elaine Cole in the 50 free work in Sweden. ldaoss to UW-Eau Claire on Satur- (:26.16) and 100 free (:57.50). "The 400 medley relay's time. pressive. We are waiting anx- nized for his Community service y. In 1978, Lanier was givMeeting national qualifying _was only one second off a iously for our divers to finish efforts. .recoveriilg from knee surgery. en the Walter Kennedy CitizenHowever, there were quite a times were Gelwicks in both of school record." We'll show our real strength ship Award by ~e Basketball number' of bright spots despite her events, as well as the 400 Third place finishes for UWSP around the end of the semes- Writers Association of America. the loss. · medley relay of Roxie Fink, went to Murray in the 200 back- ter." He also has recei$d the Jackie "We had a great meet," said Cole, Gelwicks and Dorothy stroke (2.:26.94) and Kolitsch in Robinson Award for leadership, The Lady Pointers return to Pointer coach Carol Huettig, Murray in 4:21.22 (second the 200 breaststroke (2:42.71). action today as they host UW- citizenship and seMce from the "as we. were able to take five of place). Fourth places were awarded Oshkosh. Buffalo YMCA. . Angelfish swamped by Eau CIa ire ' . Pointer Page 21 '1S~C Football Rounqup P1o1nters eye share of by Kent Walstrom Sports~tor / · EAU CLAIRE, WI - It wasn't a particularly good day for football Saturday, unless you happened to be rooting for UW.Stevens Point. , The· Pointers, battling for a share of the league title, came one step closer with a 13-0 win over Eau Claire at Carson Park._ With a game-time temperature of 25 degrees and a l>-below wind chill factor that limited the offensive capabilities of both te~, UWSP's vaunted defense came up with another quality performance while helping the· Pointers (6-1, 7-3) to their seventh consecutive win. The victory over Elau Claire also set ·up a showdown at River Falls this ' Saturday. The .surging Pointers are one game qehind the Falcons ·and tied with La Crosse for second. If the Pointers win next week's final regular season game at River Falls, and if La Crosse defeats visiting Stout, there would be a three-way tie for first in the WSUC. Eau Claire (3-4, 4-5), which won the opening coin flip, chose to ~efer their pick until the second .half. The Pointers then kicked off to start the game, a decision that gave the Pointers the wind at ,their back and helped them to score all of their 13 points in the first quarter. With the Pointer defense again assuming a commanding role, Eau Claire threatened to score only once in the first half. But kicker Evan Sveum missed a 47-yard field goal try early in' the second quarter. While the Pointer defense con- .l\\t'i tinued .their mastery· over con- ' ference opponents by limiting the Blugold o~e~ to a minus Qne yard rushing m 28 attempts and only 71 yards in total ~ffense, UWSP connected on fteld goals . of 21 yards and 39 yards by Kim Drake to grab an early lead: . . ~en, Wlth 52 seconds remammg m the quarter, strong safety Tom Finco stepped in front of a pass from Blugold quarterback Bob Gelhaus and returned the interception 21 yards for the game's ~nly touch~own. Drake's extra pomt made tt.13-0. Although the_ Po!-Ilter .offense was not dommatmg, 1t ~ontro~ed the. ball f~r susta~ed penods of time durmg the third quart~r whe~ the Blugolds had the wmd behind ~em. Quarterback Kirk Baumgartner connected on just eight passes for 70 yards, but sent halfback Mike Christman through the line for 83 yards in 24 carries. Kevin Knuese ripped off another 43 yards and Ken Stellmac~er ad~ed 42. Defenstvely, 1t was the play of linebackers Steve Day, who IJla!laged six solo tackles, three assists, three sacks and a pass breakup, .John. Bechard, three solos, ·one assist, one quarter- WSUC back saCk three tackles for losses and' Brent Harder four solo tackles, that carried the Pointers. Rich Smigaj and Greg Dantoin were also credited with four solo tackles. In addition, Finco, Smigaj, and ,cornerback Scott Nicolai had interceptions. The Pointers face River Falls at 2 p.m. Saturday at RaiDer Field. In other games, UW-La Crosse (6-1, 8-1) downed UWWhitewater 27-14 and UWOshkosh (2-5, 4-5) 'drilled winless UW.Superior 37-16. ' At Whitewater, Ted Pretasky ignored a painful toe injury while rushing for 194 yards in 41 carries to lead La Crosse. More importantly, the win kept the Indians tied for second place in the conference standings with just one game to go. A win next Saturday at Stout would ensure La Crosse of a share of the WSUC title. Whitewater fell to 3-3-1 and l). 4-1 overall. · Petrasky, who entered Saturday's game as ~e leading conference rusher with 891 yards surpassed the coveted 1 000 yard mark while scoring three touchdowns during the contest. Petrasky now totals 1,085 yards in seven coliference games. WSUC STANDINGS Conference WLT River· Falls ................... 7 0 0 La Crosse .....................6 1 0 Stevens I,»oint ..•••...•••••••6 1 0 Whitewater ...................3 3 1 Eau Claire ....................3 4 0 Stout ............................2 4 1 Oshkosh ........................ 2 5 0 Platteville .................... 2 5 0 Superior ..................•...0 8 0 title At River Falls, quarterback Cota picked up 107 yards rushing from the wishbone formation and scored twice to pace the Falcons (7-o; 8-1). The defending WSUC champions kept possession of the ball for more than 40 minutes while gaining their entire 375 yards of ~k " offense on the ground. At Supedor, the Titans jumped to a 24-o lead as · Rob Frahm c::hurned for 191 yards and four touchdowns in the WSUCgame. Superi.or's Scott Tiedens passed for a touchdown and ran for another in the loss. All 810 ' 810 730 54 1 450 261 450 450 010 0 COUNTRY , KITCHEN~ ta\1 · "f.\\~~ "Student Appreciation~' TWO FOR THE SHOW - Pointer guard Craig Hawley drives for a basket during UWSP's "l All students will receive 15% off any regular menu item. t· / exhibition game against the Yugoslavian national team. Hawley fbdsbed the contest with a game-IUgb 27 points as · the Pointers woo, 88-66. · Monday thru Friday _ · 4 p.m. - 12 p.m. thru the month of November Simply show the waitress your student identification card when ordering, and 15% goes off the bill ••. -j ''It's That Easy'' · \ Relax, enjoy the evening and receive ''the fine service of our staff'' PART·TIME OPPORTUNITY Low-key Sales. Possible $500/mo. Exceptional, fully guaranteed pi'Jduct Hne. Cal for Interview appointment. Joel Peplinski, General Manager · 1617 Schofield Ave. (Across from Kmart) JACK PORTER - 344-8553 PORTER PARTNERS IN WELLNESS -- Page 22 ·. Lady Poi.nters to -challenge for crown ' best campaigns ever in 198lHI6. the history of Lady Pointer bas- · Under first year coach· Linda ketball, returns for her second Wunder, the Lady Pointers fin- year as head coach. In addition, STEVENS POINT-The 1986- ished second in the Wisconsin Tresa Davis has been added to · 87 · version of the UW..Stevens Women's Intercollegiate ·Athlet- the staff as an assistant. .Wund.Point women's basketball team ic Conference (WWIAC) and er is looking at the upcoming season optimistically and looks · toward another fine sea- had an overall record of 15-7. Wunder, the third coach in ·stated, "I would be ~ry disSQll after coming off one Of its appointed if we didn't finish in · by UWSP Sports Information Office leers, cont. from _p. 20 the lead after a John Engstrom goal (Ron Shnowske and Rick Dodd assisted) one minute later. Joe Butcher increased the UWSP lead to 3-1 when he scored at 7;~ of the second period, on an assist by Tim Comeau. Two power play goals gave the Pointers a commanding lead heading into the final period. Coghlin scored the first at the 12: 22 mark on assists from Wheeler and Comeau while Wheeler was credited with the second goal at 14:56, assisted by Rick Fleming and Comeau. Wheeler picked up his hat trick early in the third period with a goal at the 1:38 mark. Jim Klenk picked up the assist. "Coach Mazzoleni has an offensive movement that we work around," . said Wheeler, "and if we play the system the way he designs it, it'll work; I was in the right place at the right time. · "I knew Superior would come out harder and we just had to be mentally prepared. I'm on a big high. I can't put it into words. A hat trick is something · you dream about and it's all over so fast, but it did come true." The Yellowjackets rounded out the scoring when Ron Davidson's shot bounced off Pointer goalie John Basill and into the net at 15:48. "I thought their goalie played better," said Mazzoleni. "I didn't think we played very well in the first period. They were more intense and beat us in the one-on-one situations. "In the last two periods, we had good movement and our goals came off what we wanted to do and not their breakdowns. I'm not happy ·with all of our penalties, but I am pleased with the way we were able to kill all of them." Yellowjacket coach Steve Nelson; in his first year at the uw-s helm, felt that both he and his team learned a lot. "We improved from one night ID!Lm~l~\~0 I ~: WANTED!· NJW MEMBERS TO JOIN ·~ Blugolds down Dogfish to the next," he said. "I'm coming out of a high school and didn't know what to expect. Point could be the best team in the league and I respect them. It hurts a little to lose, but now we know what we have to do to come back." Basill recorded 16 Saves for the Pointers while John Van Cleave had 37 for the Yellowjackets. UWSP will host St. Johns, Augsburg and Notre Dame in tl!e first Pointer Classic this weekend. Games are at 5. p.m. both days. by Karen Kulinski Sports Information Service EAU CLAIRE-The UW..Stevens Point men's swim team captured five of nine first places but couldn't overcome the depth of a strong UW-Eau Claire team on Saturday. The Pointers lost to the Blugolds, 117-98. "We were underdogs going in and just couldn't overcome their depth," said co-eaptains John Rudeen and Ken Brum. baugh. "We did take. five of . Linda Wunder P R C S C ~ ? Everyone is Invited to attend our Weekly Rehearsals Thursday evenings at 7 o'clock P.M. * Sentry Auditorium 1421 Strongs Ave. Stevens Point IP@lllliJUI£~ •'"''r~ Ciaa.r.~ . ~ UW-Stevens PointrJ(} _ University of Notre Dame · · Augsburg St. John's November· 14 - 15, 1986 . / BOTH POINT GAMES- LIVE N ·go~M Friday vs~ Augsburg 8pm ·~ Sat~rday .5pm ~onsol~tion gam~ 8pm ·Championship game • 9 0 F M w i 11 b r o-a d c a 8 t A L L h o me a n d a w a y g a m e 8 t h i 8 8 ea8on I. The Health Center will be closed Wednesd~y, November ·19, 1986 2:45 _P.M.- 4:45P.M. Please Note: · You need not be •n employ" of Sentry to join! nine first place finishes, which is something to build on. "We're a very young team With niile freshmen, and those guys showed a lot of character against a tough EC team." Finishing first for the Dogfish were freshman Nino Pisciotta in .the 200 inc.ividua\ medley (2:03.29) and the 200 bac'kstroke (2:05.84), Peter Zenobi in the 200 butterfly (2:04.85), Brumbaugh in the ~ free (4:55.66) and Andy Woyte in the 200 Cont. p. 19 S / Musical Variety Singers * the top two. or three .with all of strong toward the end." the people we have returning. . The Lady Pointers are hoping The coqference will be tough to challenge for the top spot iri again and I look for Whitewater the WWIAC and very well and La Crosse, along with us, to should. Returning to the squad challenge for the top spot. I also ·are UWSP's version of the _ feel that ,Platteville will be a "twin towers," Sonia Sorenson contender as they had a young and Karla Miller. Last year the · team last year and came on Cont. p. 19 *This Includes the Pharmacy .. Pointer Page 23 / I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Cl\[\1 \ SCOI)[ I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M'ZIMA, an "electric" four piece group which combines jazz, classical and folk into a completely new and fresh sound, plays Friday and Saturday nights in the UC Encore. M'ZIMA (the name comes from Kenya's Tsavo National Park springs) covers tunes by Van Morrison, Bruce Cockburn, Chick Corea, and the progressive Timbuk 3. Only $1 with ID. Sponsored by UAB Alternative Sounds. · This week's fabulously free and relaxing TGIF, sponsored by Campus Activities; features the Jazz combo Geary Larrick. From 3 to 5 in the Encore. I -~NNOUNC€M€NT~ \ Annie the musical comedy based ~f course on the comic strip '"Little O~han Annie," opens Friday, Nov. 14, in the Jenkins Theatre. The pl3y, featuring a cast of 27 and a 16 piece orchestra, runs Nov. 14, 15, 18-22 at 8 p.m. and at 2 p.m. this Sunday. Tickets are on sale in the COFA box office. See Jane Fonda and Robert Redford in Neil Simon's romantic comedy · (aren't all of his plays romantic comedies?) Barefoot In the Park. Presented by UAB Visual Arts Tuesday and Thursday, No-... 18 and 20, at 7 and 9:15p.m. in the PBR. Admission is $1.50 for students, -.ll:~ll:l:.;;;;ll' $2.25 public. Chariots of Fire is this week's award winning RHA video. Showing for free Mol). in Amigo's, · Tues. in the Depot Rm., and Wed. in Jeremiah's, all at 7 p.m. You can even eat ' while you watch. How about that! !IOFM radio theatre presents "The Cask of Amontillado." by Edgar Allen Poe, Thurs. at 9:30 p.m. Following that is an original adaption called "A Case of a Local Bock Beer," written by Bob Lewis. Clfl))l F·JED) $1,000 weekly mailing circuBusiness and Economics clubs main lounge in the UC) between will have representatives in the: 9-4 Mon.-Thur. H you haven't lars. Free supplies. Rush Concourse all next week. Stop ordered last year's book yet stamped envelope. Systems, by and check each of the clubs there is a reorder list. It's only Drawer 575, Thorsby,_Alabama 3!i171-0575. out. There may be one which $15. It's not the cover of the Roll- · Travel Field Position immemay interest you ~d relate to ing Stone, but you can get your diately available. Good commisyour major. S.N.I.F. and The History club picture on the cover of the Hori- sions, valuable work experiwill be sponsoring a panel dis- zon Yearbook. The theme of the ence, travel & other benefits. cussion on nuclear aims build- yearbook this year is shoe sizes- Call Bill Ryan 1-800-433-7747 for up which will be held in room one size fits all. We want your _ a complete information mailer. "t ;· h to hi artisti d D-102 of the science building, on P 0 grap c, c an wn C .Thursday Nov. 20 from 7-9 p.m. ten interpretations of the theme. r K Jn K . . · · The panel will consist of an his- All photographs must be in torian, a political scientist, a 35mm color print film. We will SONY Walkman DC 2. Inpolitical activist and an environ- have"a panel select the best mental philosopher. As an infor- essay and' photograph or art- eludes Dolby B and C: Noise mational aJld educational fo- work for the cover of the Reduction, · Quartz Lock, Caprum, the panel will discuss the yearbook. Deadline is Dec. 4 at stan Servo, Amorphous HealY, effects of the nuclear arms race 4:00. Call Horizon x2505 for capacity for metal tapes, and on our culture and our global more info. Sony MDR- 40 dynamic stereo society. All are welcome. Enjoy wilderness: x-c Sking headphones. Rated 1 ·in ConDo you feel your group·is mis- in Boundary Waters over X-mas sumer Reports. Call Jim at 346understood? Or maybe you break. Need to bring skis & 2240 or 341-2139. d.o n't feel that your organization clothing, all else provided. Car top ski racks $10; high is known well enough around Come to Trippers Meeting or chair $2; hot pot $3; ice chisel campus. H you are a member check with Rec. Services. $10; jig pole and ice scoop $5' of an organization suffering · Gatch "Eco-waves"- -Environ- Call344-2719. · from these symptoms, I have mental topics and issues on ramM Compatable ·(Sanyo) an offer for you. , I'm producing dio station WWSP (!IOFM) at Computer with over $400 worth a new feature on SETV titled 4:30 Monday through Friday! A of software for only $995. Call "Organizational Spotlight" de- . three-minute (fresentation by 344-2719. signed to clear up misunder- CNR students and professors Typing and word processing. standings of this type. For more sponsored by EENA (Environ- Fast and efficient. Top quality. info. call me at 346-2951, or mental Educators and Natural- Call anytime. 344-2719. leave a message at the SETV ists Association). Stay tuned!!! RESEARCH PAPERS. office and I'll get back to you, Lutheran students: Join us for 15,278 available! , Catalog · ask for Chris. a lively, refreshing worship eel- $2.00. Research, 11322 Idaho, 206 , Garbage to Gold Dr. Iga Ra- ebration this Sunday, 10:30 a.m. XT, <Los Angeles, CA 90Q25. zui will be presenting a video on at Peace Campus Center, Vin- TOLL FREE HOT LINE: 800composting - the act of turning cent & Maria Br. right behind 351-0222, Ext. 33. VISAIMC or garbage into useable soil. The Hal's Grocery. Sponsored by COD. meeting will be held on Nov. 18 Lutheran Student Community. Minolta SRTSC 50mm lens, at 7:00p.m. in the CommunicaLeather Body Cover, Vivator tions RoQm of the UC. !\11. are Automatic 215 flash attachment welcome to attend. Sponsored Hanimex automatic 1:28 telebySCSA. photo Fl 35mm. Original boxes A S.T.A.R. IS BORN! Stufor all pieces. Call341-7389 after dents T-aking Action Against 4:30. . Rape needs a campus volunteer OVERSEAS JOBS .•. Sum20 gallon aquarium; all set up coordinator. Stipend-$!i00/sem. mer, year round. Europe, S. wrought iron stand. Call 341Training provided. For more America, Australia, Asia. All 7389 after 4:30. info. contact S.L. Schwartz fields. $900 - 2000/month. SightVariety of albums for sale. (608)263-342i, or pick up appli- seeing. Free info. Write: IJC, Late 60s. to mid 70s rock. Concation at your Student Associa- P.O. Box 52-W15, Corona Del tact Tom Mon. - Thurs. 3:30 _ tion office: 5:30 and Friday 11-2 at 346-2240. Mar, CA 92625 Would you believe it? The '78 Bui.ck Lasabre, loaded, $1,250 weekly home-mailing clean, excellent condition. $1200. YEARBOOKS are here. The Horizon yearbook staff will be in program! Guaranteed earnings, '78 Honda Civic, automatic, the concourse Mon. Nov. 17 - start immediately. Free details, dependable. $1200. Wed. Nov. 19. H you ordered rush stamped, self-addressed 1968 T-Bird Classic - dependone you can pick it up then or envelope to: SLH, Drawer 575, able, comfortable. $800. Phone stop by the office (just off the Thorsby, Alabama 35171-0575. 424-4903 after 4:00. '"-QI\ ill€ · I\€NT ' ~eater EMPlOYMENT University Athletics once again brings incredible sports with Pointer Hockey, as they take on St. Johns, Augsbucy, and Notre Dame this Friday and ~turday at 5 and 8 p.m. in the Willett Arena. Hey people, it's another fabulous Campus Preview Day this Saturday; which means, yes, mom's, dad's, and prospective freshmen eYerywhere. Treat them well and show them a good time. Various programs .will ~ be going on around campus for ·t he tourists. · - F o r - R e n Ownr-oomformale t: (to share 1st floor w/male), and own room for female (to share Snrvival knife. , Buck Master, 2nd floor with female). 8 blOcks 7 1/2" blade saw back, hollow .from campus. $100/month • 115 · handle, ' never used. Must sell. utilities. Washer/dryer. Call341Cheap. Call341-6357. 6257. Sharp CMS-45, PhonO'grapgh, For Rent: female senior AM/FM radio, dual cassette, grads looking for subleasers for graphic equalizer with extra spring semester. 2 single bedfeatures. Brand new - excellent rooms, dishwasher, washcondition. $150. Call 346-2502 be- er/dryer etc. $650 for semester. tween 5 and 9 p.m. ask for Nas- Must see. This is first year house has been rented to stuer. Classical gnitar. Hardly ever dents. Call 341-4446 for more 1 used. I will negotiate a price. info. Student housing close to camCall Ben at 346-2153 (evenings pus, very . nice. Call 341-6079. best). x-c Skis, poles, shoes, $40; Please leave message. Single pom for rent: Female Stereo (AM-FM, Speakers, Turntable) $25; 10- Speed bike needed to share house with 5 $50; good dish set for 6, $30. 341- others. Very clean, new carpet~ ing & washer/dryer. · Close to 3407 after 7 p.m. Hart Competition skis, 190 campus. Available Jan. 1187. excellent condition, almost new. Call 341-3755. Female Roommate wanted to $150. Caber size 11 boots also top condition $20. Racing Star share 2 bedroom apartment. poles $15. Geze bindings very $185 a month·, heat included. new $25. Package: $200 call Joe Call 345-1585. at 341.8811. Say there, I'm looking for ApartmeQt - 3 bedroom 2 someone to share a 2 bedroom blocks -from Old Main . home I'm currently living in · $200/month - low utilities. 2103A near the Coop. It's only $80 a Ellis St. Call 341-5952 after 5:30. month plus utilities, such a For Rent: Student housing, deal. Available now or 2nd se-' male and female, single rooms mester, whatever. Call Sandy or completely furnished, energy ef- Dorothy at 341-9031. .. ficient, laundry facilities, close to campus. Call341- 3546 or 345W~NT€0 0985. 1 person to rent house at 2228 Female lead vocalist for esMadison. 6 blocks from campus. tablished top 40 rock band $116/month and utilities. Call based in Central WI. Steady 345-2369 mornings. weekend work, several agenFor Rent: single bedroom in cies, good money, lots of fun. a 2 bedroom home near the We need someone now so we Coop. Just $80 a month plus -can roll. Phone (715)848-4103 utilities. Sure - how can thiS be, (Wausau). you ask. Simply call Sandy or To trade Annie tickets - I Dorothy at 341-9031 to find out. have Nov. 21 and I need 3 for Wanted: a bousemate to Nov. 20. Please call Laura at share 2 bedroom home near 341-0878. DESPERATE_· that Coop. It's now going for $80 a month plus utilities. Just call P€R~ONf!IL~ Sandy or Dorothy at 341-9031 but hurry offer,may end without warning. M.H: I'm leaving you for ZolFor Rent: rooms in clean home 2 blocks from campus for ton... J.B. 2nd semester - very reasonable Schmegma Pi - We're too - furnished - for 4-5 females. small to win but we did it anyCall344-7487. ways! Congrats. COACH 2nd sem. housing. Large 3 bedroom apt. for 3 students. Sorry, out of space. $750/person including utilities. They'll be in next week. Can 341-1473. /. ; Alter11<1tive ~ "' - S{)tJilciS ' ... PRESENTS e · . weti·,.NovX9th the ' ·1 · 9 p.m. in J:-~!S Tickets available at: UC- Info Center Graham- Lane Music .....-.......- .~.....,. $5 with UWSP I.D. $6 without .""()u~ve· neverhad blues th- --1 - :... -,mR . ·- . m - - - . L-ijt 1111£1- M~ ~ .~ .FRIDAY &SfiTURDfiY - NO\JEMBER 14 & 15 U.C. ENCORE 9:00 P__ M. M 'ZI1\1<A high Iights_t.hdr . original · work wit.h the music of Yarious arList.s, including Bruce Cockburq, Chick Corea and Van l ~Iorriso11. I SPONSORED BY: fiDMISSION, $1.75 OR $'1 W/ UWS'P I.D. tEa~ 4'~·;::.~:!" lln.totl /