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advertisement
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Pointer page 2, Thursday, November 3, 1988
-exual assault on campus:
An epidemic on the
by Gabrielle Wyant- Perillo Council women's affairs.
Editor in Clrlef
Male rights activist Roy U.
Ph.D. is a long time
writer on men's issues. Last
May Schenk sent a "Dating
Contract" to many campus organizations.
' Schenk ·argues against inequality in dating situations. His
contract denounces traditional
practices such as the man paying for both parties. He states,
"When a women expects a man
tO pay for her dates she prostitutes herself. She has used her
sexuality to gain something of
significant monetary value. . .
~enk,
the only honorable thing for a
women to do is to take off her
panties and be sexual."
Schenk proposes that women
are "psychologically" violent
agaQtst men.
Dr. Schenk said in an interview, "Rape is basically a violent response to the violence
that women do against men."
"As long as w001en do violence against men, men will
f:Ontinue to do violence against
women," said Schenk.
The Dating Contract would be
sign~ by_both parties prior to
Dating Contract
PREAMBLE: This contract is entered into by the man and
woman involved, whose signatures appear below, in order to
eliminate any possible misunderstandings concerning sexual in. volvement during of following a date.
It is' the understanding of this contract that equality between
the sexes is an important objective and desire of both parties.
To that end, there is no expectation that either party will
expend significantly more money or effort than the other person
without commensurate compensation. Since sexual pleasuring is
one of the important things that men and women share with
each other, this is acknowledged as such a compensation, and
this contract is designed to establish a fair agreement on the
subject. To that end
IT IS MUTUALLY AGREED THAT:
1. It is the understanding of this contract that in most dating
situations each party will pay their own way, and that transportation will be provided alternately by each party. When this
occurs, it is the clear understanding of both parties tltat no contract has been established to become involved sexually; and neither party has any right to pressure the other person to be sexual.
2. An agreement for one party to pay for this date and the
o.the~ p~ to pay for the next date is acceptable. In this situation 1t lS understood that the woman will pay for the first date
and the man will pay for the second date. This is recognized as
a necessary compensation since traditionally the man has paid
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for the dates.
3. In the event that the man pays for the date, except as described in item 2 abOve, the man has the right to determiDe if :
there will be sexual involvement during or after the date, and
the woman hereby assents to this agreement. It is further
agreed that the man is responsible to provide and to use condoms for safety.
·
4. In the ev!IDt that the woman pays for the date, again except
-as described in item 2 above, she has the right to determine if
there will be sexual involvement, and the man hereby assents to
this agreement. However, once such involvement is started, the
woman agrees ~t she does not ·have the tight to unilaterally
stop. In this situation, both parties will assume responsibility to
provide condoms, though it is presumed that only the man will
be responsible for using them.
5. In the event that a date goes poorly, the parties may mutually agree to not be sexual. Alternately the non- paying party
may unilaterally withdraw by reimbursing the paying party for
the costs of the date.
6. This contract applies to this and to any further dates between the parties involved.
Date ----------~~---------------------Si~ture (woman)
Signature (man)
the int"eDded date. The contract
is designed to eliminate misunderstandings between men . and
women. "I wrote the Dating
· Contract to expose the intense
inequality in dating to men's
disadvantage and to initiate discussion of this injustice."
Schenk and his contract have
met strong ·opposition from
campus organizations. The
United CounCil stated that the
contract 'in fact sanctions dateacquaintance rape. The Wisconsin Student Association leaders
have accused Dr. Schenk of
sexism.
"Acquaintance rape is forced,
unwanted intercourse· with a
person yo11: know,"states Mary
Martin, director of the United
According to Schenk, "H you
define rape broadly enough you
can get every woJt)8Jl raped. .
.and if you define rape broadly
enough you can get every man
raped too." "In fact, if you define rape broadly enough you
include everything except the
kitchen sink," he added.
A study by the Rape Treatment Center,. Santa Monica,
California revealed that one of
every six college women said
they had been either raped or
assaulted with the intent to
rape.
Schenk argues that "Date
Rape" would be almost eliminated if women assumed equal
responsibility with men for initiating and paying for dates, an<l
for i,nitiating sex.
"Some feminists seem far
more interested in being able .to
continue blaming men then they
are in solving the problem of
so-called 'Date Rape'. This
blaming of men sidetrackS women from assuming the responsibility of an equal partner and
continues a traditional way that
women control and maintain
power over men. Not to assume
responsibility is sexism.''
Dr. Schenk is a scientist and
longtime writer on men's
issues. He is . the author the
book, "The OtheJ;" Side of the
Coin: Causes and Consequences
of Man's Oppression"; and
"We've been had," from Bioenergetice Press.
Contra~ting can eliminate ''Date .Rape'.'
by Roy
.
U.
Schenk,
'•
Ph.D.
Date Rape? There's a lot of furor, especially on wtiversity campuses, about men's response to
the ambiguity of women's "NO's" when involved in sexual situations. In action practice, she
likely has said NO about 150 times by the time sexual intercourse occurs, if it does, since Warren Farrell (author of Why Men Are The Way They Are) estimates there are that many steps
from the start thru coitus. Certainly most men are vividly aware that most women will say NO
regularly along the way, and then permit the "objected to" step proceed.
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Why do women say No so much, even when they evidently don't really mean it? Simp~y . put, it
is because, they have been socialized to protect their reputations and to let men take all the responsibilities and risks. This boils down to retaining their socialized image of moral superiority.
And saying NO is an important part of the sexist attitude of superiority. Actually, the women
often are in a state of conflict with themselves, wanting to be sexual, but also burdened by
wanting to live up to society's expectation of their female rQle.
It appears that a woman often can permit herself to proceed thru up to 149 of the steps, but
not the 150th step. Stopping at that point might be alright if she were the only person involved.
But she is not. There is also a man involved who may well develop a state of arousal that has
.an intensity which may be best described a8 similar to the intensity of severe cases of Premen- ·
strual Stress Syndrome (PMS). Let's call this Pre-Coital Stress Syndrom (PCS). It is sexist to
condemn men who respond inappropriately under conditions of PCS and not condemn at least
equally the women who participate in getting them there (and also for that matter, not condemning women who commit violence under the stress of PMS). In other· words, if women do ~
not wish to proceed to sexua! intercourse they should avoid becoming involved in intense sexual
foreplay. - Continued on page 8
)s our campus unprepated?
. College presidents are urged experience treating victims port occurred at a large, prito take immediate action to re- from dozens of college cam- vate college in the South, where
duce the inc.idence of sexual puses around the country, we an assailant kicked in a flimsy
assaults on campus and to pro- have seen that most colleges locked door leading to a cOeds
tect tbe rightS of student vic- · are unprepared to deal with this room and sexually assaulted
tims. The report, published by crisis."
her as she was taking a shower.
the Rape Treatment Center of
The report, entitled Sexual It was later determined that the
Santa Monica, California, cites Assault on Campus: What Col- lighting, doors, and locks in the
many cases of campus rape in leges Can Do, cites common college's housing units were inwhich victims have been revic- complaints of campus rape vic- adequate and faci,litated breaktimized by their colleges and tims, including having to live in ins.
recommends major new policies the same dormitory as the asAileen Adams, Rape Treatand programs to remedy this sailant following the rape; ment Center legal counsel and
problem.
unsafe university housing vul- reporter co-author cautions colRape Treatment Center direc- nerable to break-ins by strang- lege administrators, "Colleges
tor and reporter co-author... Gail ers; the absence of any rights that do not provide a safe enviAbarbanel states, "We're facing to . protections for the victim if ronment for students run a high
an epidemic. A recent national she reports the assault and pur- risk of expensive lawsuits."
stirvey found that one in every sues a campus investigation;
The report calls !upon colleges
six college -women had ~ a 1and failure by colleges to take to:
victim of. rape or attempted disciplinary action against
- Adopt and send . to every
rape during the preceding offenders.
student an official policy that
year." Adds Abarbanel, "In our
One case described in the re- Continued on pa~e .8
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rillTITI~rn~
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Dear Editor,
I was required to walk
through the Museum of Natural
History as an assignment for a
biology class. What I saw there
upset me and gave me a great
sense of sorrow for mankind. I
remember when we respected
human lives, as we no longer
do. What has happened to us
that we think so little of human
life that we display the corpses
of children in a museum? I'm
obviously referring to the reproduction display in the museum.
Oh I know these babies are
referred to as "fetus," mere tissue. How can we declare human
life at any point to be non-human, or mere tissue. A developing child ·soon has everything
that makes him human, including a functioning brain and
heart. The human brain developes and grows all during his
childhood years, is it not human
until it has stopped this development? The college learning experience 'is a developing of our
brains, are we not yet human?
H the spark of life is what
makes us human, when we die,
do we become less than human?
I heard some students reply
how fake and unrealistic this
Letter to The Editor:
At a recent American Red
Cross blood drive held at UWSP
Oct. 18, 19, and 20th, 609 people
came to donate blood. These donations could not have come at
a better time, with the blood
supply being particularly ·low
the last few weeks. Thanks to
all the generous people who donated their healthy blood, all
those in need of llfesaving
transfusions will be provided
with a new lease on life.
In addition to the blood donors, there were several other
blood volunteers that worked together to ensure the success of
the blood drive. University students worked together with people from the community by volunteering their time to help in
the various positions at the
blood drive.
Behind the scenes were
University Center Associate di- rector, Jerry Lineberger, and
student manager, Dale Sankey
who planned and implimented
one of the most organized blood
drives at UWSP. Several local
businesses donated the food and
supplies for the canteen section
of the blood drive.
The next blood drive will be
held at the Elks Club in Stevens
Point on December 7 and B.Please make time to donate
blood.
PoJnter
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display seemed to them. They to a funeral. I never buried
thought the exhibits appeared him, but I neither can, nor will
too pale to be real. Somehow I · I ever forget him.
wondered how realistic they
Last week I saw my son here,
would look after being pickled in this display. The next time
in a jar of formaldehyde or you go through the museum,
embalming fluid. We have the look close at this display. When
capability to make models that you get to the last jar, I want
would-.serve the purpose much you all to lool close and to see
be~r than these babies do, so
my son. He has a name, John
why are they still there? Can't Allan Drake. He was born and
we at least give these children died on January 19, 1969. Had
the dignity of a final resting be lived he might have been
place?
walking beside you on this camI want to tell you about the pus. Perhaps he would have
last exhibit in this gruesome been a brother, friend, or lover.
display. Seeing him is what Had ~gs been only a little difreally did me in. On January ferent, he might have been you.
19, 1969, I had a stillborn child. Join me in the sorrow, that this
He was the same size as this life that never lived, was never
last "fetus." Oh I didn't check allowed the burial he was entithe exhibit to determine the sex tled to.
of this baby, I couldn't see well
I don't know who is responsithrough my tears anyhow. My ble for this reproduction . disson never received a proper play, I only know that' it should
burial. The doctors double- not exist on this 9r any other
teamed me in the recovery campus. H those of you who are
room and I signed some kind of responsible have any respect
a release form that I was too for human life please change
doped up to understand. When I this gruesome exhibit and give
asked for the body for burial, it these children, whoever they
was too late. My child had been may be, the one right that no
removed to someplace where he one should be able to take away
would be used tor teaching pur- from us, the right to a death
poses. I have six nieces and a with dignity and a proper fbJal
nephew that were born smaller resting place.
and weighing less than my son,
Tbank you,
but yet he wasn't even entitled
Aileen c. Smith
...
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Helbach
· Dear Editor:We, the un- dersigned, would like to take
this opportunity to commend a
good friend of the University of
Wisconsin- Stevens Point, Senator David Helbach.
During his ten years in the
Legislature, Dave Helbach has
demonstrated a strong commitment to quality education. He
has been especially helpful to
the College of Natural Resources (CNR), going the extra
mile to make sure that projects
such as Treebaven and the new
Paper Science Building became
realities. In addition, his work
on groundwater legislation and
other key natural resource
issues earned him the 1984 CNR
"Environmantalist of the Year"
Award.
We at UWSP are indeed fortunate to have an official of
Dave's caliber representing us
in the Legislature. Please join
us in supporting his bid for reelection this fall.
The Great American
Smokeout. Nov. 17.
Sincerely,
Daniel 0. Trainer
Rocky Roco~o
Introduces:
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Rocky has returned f~om his trip to Mexico & brought back the recipe
for his favorite Taco Pizza. We know you'll love it too!
On Tuesdays, enjoy Rocky's new
Taco Pizza at a new Introductory ·
price ••••
Only ss.SS for a 12" or
sg.gg for a 1:6" pizza
plus tax
FREE DELIVERY -344-6090
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The Presidential De..
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Sincerely,
Jennifer Wanke
Executive Director
Portage County Chapter
American Red Cross
The following is a list of those .
who have reached new gallon
donor levels in their blood donations to the American Red
Cross.
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bate Is on and everyone has their individual choice. But, there's
no debate on where
unique individuals
shop .••
Hardly
Ever
Imports
Certlfted by the National
lnslltute of Automotive Strvlce
,
11 Gallons:
George Check
We're The Fun Store!
1 Gallon:
Sandra Davis; Brian Breka;
Victoria Susa; Gretchen Penn;
1036 Main St.
Jana Kelly; Joel Groebner; Ken
Stevens Point, WI 54481
VanHjegben; Donald Dorn;
344-4848
Paul Gindt; Diane Phillips;
George Check; Lee Klestinski;
Mon~~· 1o-8, Sat. 12~, 12-4
Kim Sura; Mike Moen; RoxAnn L h u r s . 1o-6, Sun~
Bannacb; Mary Kneebone.
l
Best made handsewn on ·
·the face of the earth.
J
MEMBER
* Collision Repairs
* Deer Damage
* Insurance Work
* Free estimates
The only shop in town
that has a student discount program.
(Student ID Required)
This is the original. The first handscwn moccasin
with the sole of a boot. Many have attempted to duplicate
the look of this classic handsewn, but none have been able
to even come close to duplicating its quality.
Pointer page 4, Thursday, November 3, 1988
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This could be your last chance to decide
A Ri·d e to the Polls -
Of 'Toons, the Homeless ond You
In a few days we will vote for
the 41st president of our coun-
by Kyle ~ White
try.
We are students who will vote
for Michael Dukakis because we
know the issues.
We see that if George Bush is
elected it will be impossible for
the middle class to receive financial aide. Bush 1 has cut
spending on education drastically during the past eight years.
Currently, only three cents out
of every tax dollar goes toward
education. George Bush is bad
for education.
Michael Dukakis has programs that will aide our educational system such as S.T.A.R.
(Student Tuition and Repayment), and the National Teachers Excellence fund. Dukakis is
aware of the needs of the student. Dukakis is good for education.
We are Business students who
know that the American economy is not a healthy one. There
is a trade deficit that has grown
drastically under the ReaganBush administratioo. We have a
2,000,000,000,000 dollar deficit
that has grown larger than it
has ever been. Mike Dukakis
has cut taxes 5 times and balanced 10 budgets. Mike Dukakis
knows the meaning of the
healthy econcmy.
We are C.N.R. students that
are concerned about our envi·ronment. Dukakis has one of
the toughest anti-polluting laws
on the books. Dukakis makes
polluters pay up to 80% of clean
up costs to date. He has started
to clean up Boston Harbor even
though the Reagan-Bush administration cut off federal funds
by vetoing the clean air and
clean water acts. Mike Dukakis
is a friend of environment.
On November 8 we will vote
for Michael Dukakis because
George Bush is a deceiver of
the electorate. Bush won't give
up any answers about the IranContra scandal. He tries to
make Dukakis appear to be soft
on crime and against guns.
Crime has gone down in Massachusettes while crime has gone
up across the country. Bush is
the one with questionable connections to the drug running
Noriega. Dukakis supports the
right . of every hunter to bear
arms. Unlike Bush, Dukakis is
against giving machine guns to
inner-city youths so ·they can
suppport their drug habit.
If we listen to the issues instead of the lies the Bush campaign is putting out, we will
vote for Michael Dukakis. The
campaign is going to be close so
every vote will count. Please
get out to the polls and vote for
Dukakis. If you need a ride to
the polls contact Marc 341-1737.
Tom Klawiter
Andy Pech
Election '88-Who's
to blame for the
choices?
Barry Radler
By
Contributor
Many people are disgusted
with Campaign '88 and uncommitted to Election '88. Who's to
blame for such a limited
choice? Charles Dickens said
"My faith in the people governing is, on the whole, infinitesimal; my faith in the People
governed is, on the whole, illimitable." Who's to blame?
First and foremost, as usual,
the press bears much of the
public's chastisement. After all,
the media's purpose is to
honestlr inform the American
So, what's the problem Kyle. agree?
Why don't you just put down
I realize we are busy. I real
Contributor
your pen right now? Well, yeah, ize we are not rich men and woit was fantastic to give dough to men. But in our little, comfortIf you remember last week some hurtin' folks, but why do able, "bubble-worlds" of dorm
(stupid statement, but some we pat ourselves on the back so rooms, Domino's, chemistry ex
people don't) and if you remem- proudly? ·
ams, and woodering if we'll bE
ber last week's Pointer, then
The problem is that we think able to " ... wang chung to
you might remember the bill- it's such a special event when night... " we are deaf and blind.
board size cartoon about the we give and we think of
Thursday night, after the dohomeless.
ourselves as such good boys and nation spots went up in the
Do you remember that pne? girls when we do. I wonder halls, I walked - around to see
It asked for you to give money when giving to others in need how the money was coming in.
(yikes!) to feed the hungry, will become so natural and so I knew it was only the first
needy, and homeless in the Ste- · ordjnary that we won't need pri- night, but I was, hooestly, a lit·
vens Point area.
zes and free pizzas as incentive, tle disappointed.
~
We didlrt do too bad. Caon- which is usually the case.
Why? Well, I know there are
gratulations go to the halls on
People are dying, starving, plenty of good excuses why the
campus who raked in a total of and in pain and that should be · donation cans weren't overflowL:$64=·.:49:.:... .:.:A:...:s:::up~r:.=:em=e..:eff=o.:.:rt:.:·:....__ _.....!!in!!:c:!:e!!n!:!ti~v!:.e_e~n~o!!:u~glh.:....~D~o~y~IO!!:u~· ___
Co_n_tin_ued_o_n-=pa--=-ge_21,
voter of the candidates' policies, (or at the very least let it dela- tical liability, a strategic norm.
views, and character. Right? pidate itself). Conservatives be- Contrary to what the media
But why feed. democracy some- lieve in a plethora of research exhibits, the America of the '80s
thing it doesn't want to eat? on acid rain while liberals want wants to be courted with standThe American appetite for dirty functional legislation now. And ards.
laundry ranks with its obsession so on and so on.
So look at the Joe next to you
with drugs. T-he people govWhy should either Bush or or look in the mirror. It doesn't
erned have pulled out the skel- Dukakis chance alienating any matter who you blame. "Govtons from the closets. The peo- faction. They have been the ernments are always run by
ple governed are the gossiping smart ones, stating vague poli- assholes. But in a democracy
biddies who believe an extra- cies and deftly dodging issues. the assholes are us."
marital affair is .so much more Decisiveness has become a pollcompelling than clean air.
-I
Contrary to the beliefs of
some, the televisioo, radio and
newspaper conglomerate have
done their best to get serious
position statements from politicians, as evidence by four journalists during the recent vice
513 Division St.
341-3363
presidential debate who chose
Walking Distance from campus
to scrap the arranged format of
the debate and ask unscripted
THURSDAY-IMPORT NIGHT,
questions, trying to get gut re. sponses, not ,memorized anImported Beer: Bottles $1.30, On Tap $1.00
swers. They will never be inFresh Shrimp Specials-Free Popcorn at Bar
vited to an orchestrated debate
again because they plied their
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Bring in this ad and get a FREE glass of
·and I endorse legislation. Demowine or tap beer with any dinner purchase.
~ats in~ease spending for soCial semces, Republicans cut it
MlCHELES
UJrn~~u~rn ~ITill~~
Advisor
Pete Kelley
Editor-in-Chief
Gabrielle Wyant-Ji»erillo
Senior Editor
Brenda Boutin
News Editor
Amy Lardinois
Sports EcUtor
Timothy Rechner
Features Editor
Kathy Phillippi
Copy Editor
Tim Bishop
Ad Design/Layout
Graphics Editor
Troy Sass
Photo Editor
Bryant Esch
Business Manager
Timothy Krueger
Typesetters
Rhonda Oestreich
Jill Kasper
Outdoors Editor
Christopher Thoms
Photographer
Peter Bite
Advertising Manager
~cb Feldhaus
ToddOkrav
Letters to the editor will be accepted only if they are typewrit-
ten and signed and should not exceed a maximum of 250 words.
Names will be witheld frcm publicatioo only if appropriate rea;
son is given. Pointer reserves the right to edit letters if necessary and to refuse to print letters not suitable for publication. All
correspondence should be addressed to Pointer, 104 Communication Arts Center UWSP, stevens Point, Wisconsin 54481.
Written permission is required for the repnnt of all mater,ials
presented in Pointer.
The Pointer (USPS- 098240) is a second class publication published 28 times during the school year by the University of Wisconsin Stevens Board of Regents, 230 Communication Arts Center, Stevens Point Wisconsin 54481. Distributed at no charge to
tuition-paying students. Non-student subscription price is $8 per
academic year. Second class postage paid at SteveJ)S Point, Wisconsin.
POSTMASTER: SeDd address change to Pointer, 104 Commu-·
· 1
nication Arts Center, Stevens Point, Wis 54481.
Pointer is written and edited by the Pointer staff, composed of
UWSP students, and they are solely responsible for its editorial
content and policy.
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Pointer page 5
Are You AUWSP StUdent 'Choosing
To Be Sexually Involved?
Because sexually transmitted diseases pose a serious risk to health and life,
the Health Center announces the availability of condoms at the following sites:
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UWSP Health Center Pharmacy
Condom Vending Machines
University Center ·
·
Across from 1st Aids Station and Rideboard, Men's and Women's Restrooms
LRC
After Hours Room·, Men's and Women's Restrooms
.· Laundry Rooms of all Residence Halls
STD/CONDOM QUIZ
!
'
The first three hundred UWSP students correctly answering
this quiz and presenting it to the Health Center reception
desk Will receive ten free condoms, packaged in a brown paper bag. Quiz must be presented in person at the window or
by campus mail. One entry per person. If you need help answering . the questions see "Sexually Transmitted Diseases:
Should You Be Concerned?" and "Sexual Roulette," on page
6 of this issue.
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1.) The three most commonly diagnosed sexually transmitted
diseases in UWSP students are:
a. AIDS/HIV Virus Infection
b. Chlamydia
c. Human Papilloma Virus (HPV, Veneral Warts)
d. Gonorrhea (GC)
e. Pubic Lice
2.) If you choose to be sexually active, you or your partner may
use a method to prevent pregnancy such as birth control pills.
To prevent getting a sexually transmitted disease from a sexual
p~rtner a
is the best protection.
a. Condom
b. Cervical Sponge
c. Diaphragm
d. Jogging 3.) ·The surest way to prevent gettiflg a sexually transmitted disease i s - - - a. Condoms
b. Abstinence
c. Birth control pills
d. Aloe Vera
4.) You can tell if your partner is infected with a sexually transmitted disease such as Chlamyda, HPV (veneral warts), or HIV
(AIDS virus) because he/she will have:
1
a. Oozing sores
b. A.rash over their body
c. A wart on their nose
d. There often is no. way to know unless they are examined
by a health professional and have laboratory tests, or have never been sexually active
5.) For each person with AIDS in the United States there are
approximately - people who asymptomatically carry
and can transmit HIV to others by sexual contact.
a. 5 to 1.0
b. 50 to 100
c. 500 to 1000
d. Flip a coin
6.) The tJlree main risk factors in the United States for the
· spread of the HIV virus that causes AIDS are:
a. Males who have had unprotected sex with other males
b. Intravenous drug abuse
c. Unprotected sexual intercourse with·prostitutes
d. All of the above
_7.) Chlamydia infections in women are a common cause of Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID or uterine tube infection). A common complication of that infection is:
a. Cancer
b. Infertility
c. There are no complications
d. Hair on your palms
_
8.) Veneral wart (HPV) infections of the genitalia are the most
commonly seen STD. It is linked to which of these problems?
a. Cancer of the cervix, vulva, penis, rectum
b. Infertility
c. Severe itching of your teeth
d. Mental retardation
_
9.) HIV infection can be spread by both unprotected homosexual and heterosexual behavior.
a. True
b. False
_
10.) The safest way to have a sexual relationship with someone
where saf!=lr sex practices do not need to be strictly followed is:
a. Your partner tells you that he/she is "clean"
b. He/she is from your home town
c. A monogamous long term loving relationship
d. He/she doesn't have any symptoms
_11.) What is the most common factor impairing the ability of
students to make rational decisions regarding sexual behavior?
a. Alcohol abuse
b. Alcohol abuse
c. Alcohol abuse
d. Alcohol abuse
_12.) Who is ultimately responsible for the protection and wellbeing of your reproductive health?
a. The reliability of your current partner's sexual history
b. You
The Wisconsin Division of Health
d. C. Everett Koop, M.D., SeD.
c:
'•
Pointer page 6, Thursday, November 3, 1988
[illW~
-Sexually Transmitted Diseases:
Should You Be Concerned 2.
, .
I
-Spirits around the world
'
By Jeua Nordlund
feed on blood. These are just a ual transmission of the hwnan
few of the problems that plague immunodeficiency virus of mv,
Contributor
our campus.
the virus that causes AIDS.
Sexually transmitted diseases
How can one avoid all of this? Being relatively inexpensive
(STDs) have reached epidemic Abstinence is one viable alter- and easily accessible, condoms
proportions em .our campus and native. Although abstinence is are a superior choice for the
there is a growing need for stu- the only guaranteed method for student to take an active role in
dent awareness of this problem. preventing STDs, it is not a his or her "safer sex." UWSP
An STD is a sexually trans- choice that is most currently has taken its own active role in
mitted disease pasSed from one being abided by. It has been the prevention of STDs and in
partner to another during inti- shown that 50% of all incoming the education of the student
mate sexual contact. STDs are freshman llave been sexually population about safer sex pracvery common on a campus active prior to _college. It has tices. In addition to healthwhere students are sexually also been shown that 90% have issues classes, and informationactive and are a growing prob- become sexually active some- al materials available at the
time during their college tenn health center, First AIDS Stalem here at UWSP.
tion in the UC, and an STD inIt is estimated that 80% of prior to-graduation.
Using safer sex practices can fonnation table in the LRC,
males and 70% of females who
have had sexual relations, have help reduce the spread of most condom vending machines have
had them with more than one STDs. Body-to-body rubbing, been installed on camptis. The
hugging and kissing are among machines are located in the
partner.
Anyone who is secually active the most safe sex practices. A laundry rooms of the residence
runs the risk of contracting an monogamous relationship is an- halls as well as in certain rest
STD. Three of the most com- other. However, one must re- rooms of the university center
mon STDs diagnosed at the member that some STDs are and the LRC. Condoms will be
health center are chlamydia, asymptomatic and can remain sold for $.50 a piece.
Because UWSP sees STD
venereal warts (HPV) and pu- that way for as long as two
. bic lice. Studies indicate that as years. Thus, a partner could be transmission as a growing·probmany as 15%-20% of the sexual- completely unaware of an STD lem in need of a solution these
ly active populatioo may have and symptoms could arise in ei- machines were installed. UWSP
chlamydia, a bacterial infection ther partner at a later date. Health Center is not advocating
infecting the reproductive sys- The reduction of the ·number of students engaging in intimate
tem and a frequent cause of in- sex partners and the use of con- sexual contact, but instead refertility in women. Venereal doms are also two very imPor- cognizes the reality of hwnan
warts or Human Papilloma Vi- tant factors in reducing one's ~xuality. The machines pro. rus (HPV) is a viral skin infection which causes warty tumors
to grow on the genitalia of men
and women and is linked with bacterial diseases. They are something as life-threatening as
cancer of the cervix, vulva, rec- also moderately effective at AIDs in ou; society, who can
. tum, anA penis. Pubic· lice are preventing accidental pregnan- afford not to.
small hwnan parasites that can cy when used properly. Con- · Be responsible, practice safer
live on the skin surface and doms can also prevent the sex- sex!!
b Blair Cl
day festival. Demonstrations iit_Y____
eary
_ _ _ _ _ elude such topics as Indian fin~
gerpainting, demonstratibns on
how to make Korean "KebabS,"
and a sushi demonstration.
Some of the exhibitions include
Japanese . dances, an Arabian
guitar solo, a Chinese medley
and a tea ceremony.
The International Festival
will have a cafe set up which
will serve a wide variety of international foods: Some of the
items include fried rice, wonton,
bergedels, and egg rolls. Each
of these foods will be · authentically prepared as they would be
in their respective countries.
Staff Reporter
This Friday and Saturday,
Nov.4 and 5, the International
Club and Foreign Students office -are sponsoring the Interna. tional Festival of 1988. This festival, which occurs once every
three· years, has many multinational forms of entertainment, demonstrations, and
course food. This weekend's
event will be held in the P.B.R.
room of the U.C.
The theme of this year's International Festival is "Spirits
around the world." Ai Leng
According to Dr. Marcus
Hong, one of the events coordinators, said that the theme was Fang, the director of the Forchosen because the festival fell . eign Student Program, said that
-so close to Halloween this year. "No student, American or forShe · added that a program on eign, can claim to have resuperstitions from different ceived a complete education if
countries will be presented on he or she has not been exposed
Friday and Saturday.
to the customs and traditions of
An International Film Festi- other cultures."
·
val is part --of the weekend
According .to Paul Lemke, Inevents. Films from Japan, such ter.::ultural Programer,' 'This
as a piece on Swno Wrestling, year's festival will be dedicated
Spain, Singapore, Korea, Hong to Chancellor Philip and Mrs.
Kong, and Malaysia will be Helen Marshall for their continshown in the Encore and Com- ued support of the Foreign Student program throughout Mar- ·
munications room of the U.C.
Demonstrations and exhibi- shall's tenn as Chancellor at
tions are also part _of the two- UWSP.
:~=rar!g~e:!T~ ~~~~~!£~~~~; International
-Festival
b
.t0 e He Id at 'I
\l- •
UWSP Health Service
Sexuality, sexually transmitted diseases _ (STDs), and the
emphasis of educational efforts
such as the Condom Quiz are
controversial issues.
The Health Service staff
members realize that. We are
not making a judgment on
whether sexual behavior is right
or wrong; that is an individual's
decision. HOwever, we are very
concerned about STDs and the
- physical and emotional impact
·they are having upon you, our
patients. .
.
From our experience caring
for UWSP studen~ we stro~ly
feel tha~ condoms ileed to be mclud~ m a campus STD prevention ~~gn. In o~ society. sexuality IS present m every~ from the Song of Solomon
m the Old Tes~e.nt. to TV
~I? ope~as. I think 1t IS hYI_)Ocntical. !-Jl o~ current .soc~al
and po~tical climate to stifle mformation about the role condoms can serve in allowing safer sex.
.Fro~ a dis~ase prevention
VIe~mt, the 1d~ fo~ sexual
relations would ~ life-time mutual monogamy m the context
of ~ livin.g relationshi.p.
Abstine~ce IS also an effective
prevention approach. However,
the _majority of ~en~ that I
see ~ sexually ~ctive. m a suecession of relationships. The
•
·
R0 U Ie tt e
An International Festival,
sponsored by the Foreign Stu.
dent Office and the InternationSTDs that they.present to us for must accept some risk-condoms al Club, will be ~eld from 10
care are manifestations of that. can break, leak and slip off., ~ to p.m., Friday and Saty, ov. 4 and 5 at UWSP.
The consequence of STDs have , Proper -and careful use can
never been higher.
minimize but not eliminate that
There have been 365 cases of risk of acquiring infection.
The event in the University
AIDS reported in Wisconsin .as
To paraphrase Surgeon Genof October 1, 1988. You sbould eral C. Everett Koop: When you Center's Program Banquet
realize that for each person have. sex with someone, you are Room will be dedicated to
with AIDS there are 50 to 100 also having it with that person's Chancellor Philip Marshall and
people who are infected with previous partners. The old ster- his wife, Helen, for their continthe Hwnan Immuno-Deficiency eotype of promiscuity asso- ued support of the foreign proVirus (IDV). That means 18,000 ciated with STDs is not entirely gram on campus. UW-SP curor more people in Wisconsin accurate. Many of the people I rently has 271 students from
who can transmit the virus ·to care for have had only .one or other countries enrolled-the
others, and most of them don't two sexual partners in their life. highest number ever to attend
know they are infected. The But one of those partners previ- the university.
risk of losing in this variety of ously had one or more other
sexual roultette is less, mv in- partners and unknowingly
The public is invited tO attend
fection is still one of the more · acquired an STD. I see the re- the programs free of charge.
uncommon STDs, but the stakes cent losers of sexual roulette _The only costs will be for the
couldn't be higher.
every day.
purchase of food or souvenirs.
The most common STD, veneThe sexual history of your
The International Cafe will
- real warts, is caused by the Hu- partner may be only as reliable feature foods such as wonton,
man Papilloma Virus (HPV) .. as that person's honesty. One egg rolls, fried rice and nooWhen groups of sexually active study revealed 30% of men and 9J.es, almond jelly, pegedel, bakwomen are studied, as many as 10% of women interviewed had lava, a Malaysian dessert, and
25% are found to be infected previously lied to a partner Chinese tea.
with this virus. HPV is an equal about their sexual. history to
opportunity infector, men also obtain another person's agreeget it. Since reliably effective ment to have sex. We often
Highlights of the weekend will
treatment is not available, HPV hear from students that alcohol
is for most a lifetime infection had clouded their judgJ:nent and include an International Cafe,
reSulting in increased risk of led to casual sexual relations exhibitions and sales of importgenital cancer and the possibili- STDs, and pregnancies.
' ed arts and crafts, demonstraty for infection of future sexual
The best approach for people tions, films and carnival games.
partners.
anticipating a new sexual rela- This is the fifth festival held at
tionship is for both people to be UW-SP since 1979.
Prevention becomes -particu- examined and tested -for comlarly critical when disease • mon sexually transmitted distreatment is ineffective. For eases. STDs are often asymptopeople who choose to be sexual- matic.
ly active outside of a monogomUltimate responsibility rests
ous relationship, condoms are with yourself. Don't be another
the best option. However, you victim of sexual roulette.
Sexual
By Jim Zach
u.
J
I
On Thursday, Nov. 3, free cultural films from several countries will be shown in The
Encore of the University Center. On Friday, films will be
·.shown in The Encore and Communications Rooms, and on Saturday, the films will be in the
Communication and Program
Banquet Rooms. All of the
screenings will be from 11 a.m.
to about 1 p.m.
The program on Friday will
begin with an opening ceremony
at 10 a.m., followed by demonstrations of special skills such
as African hair styling, Indian
ceremonial makeup, tradition8I
costumes, food preparation, holiday customs, Japanese paper
folding, dancing and singing.
at,
On Saturday
10 a.m., a
demonstratioo of the Angklong,
an Asian musical iristrument,
will open the schedule of activities which will run throughout
the day and close with a ceremony at 5 p.m.
A fun-fair, featuring free
g~es of chance and prizes,
will add a carnival atmosphere
to the festivities .
, Lydia Lee from Hong Kong,
Ai Leng Hong from Singapore,
and Duong Duong, an' American
citizen originally from Vietnam,
are coordinating the festival.
Pointer page 7
Dukakis or Bush in 1988?
Democratic Presidential in physics, shifting to political
nominee Michael Stanley Du- science. He played baseball
kakis, 54, was born November for Swarthmore, hitchhiked
3, 1933, in Boston, Massachu- across country, and wrote for
setts, and raised in nearby the school newspaper, "The
Phoenix."
Brookline.
While an undergraduate,
His father, Panos Dukakis,
was 16 years old when he came Dukakis learned Spanish when
to America from Greece in he won a fellowship for a sumthe spring of 1912. His mother, mer at the University of San
Euterpe Boukis, was just 9 when Marcos in Lima, Peru. He
also spent a semester in Washshe arrived the following year.
Panos worked in the mills of )ngton, D.C., at American
Massachusetts, studying at night University.
Immediately after graduatto complete high school and
college. In just 12 years, he ing, Dukakis was drafted into
became the first Greek immi- the Army. He served much of
grant to graduate from Har- his 21-month stint in Munsan,
Korea. In 1957 he entered Harvard Medical School.
Euterpe worked her way vard Law School, where he
through Bates College in Maine, graduated with honors, 71st in
graduating Phi Beta Kappa. a class of 468.
D_ukakis won his first public
After facing rejection for teaching positions because of her election, becoming a town
foreign birth) she was accepted meeting member in-Brookline,
as a high school t'eacher in in 1959. A reform Democrat,
he was elected to the MassaNew Hampshire.
Panos and Euterpe were mar- chusetts House of Representaried a month before the stock tives in 1963.
market crash in 1929. fur 50
years, Panos Dukakis practiced
He lost as a candidate for
medicine in Boston, working lieutenant governor in 1970.
six or seven days a week until After serving as host for pubhe was 82, and delivering more lic television's "The Advocates,"
than 3,000 babies.
Dukakis returned to politics
Michael began his political and was elected governor of
career in the third grade, as Massachusetts in 1974. Shortly
president of his class. Known after his election, _he found
for his brilliance as a student, Massachusetts near bankruptcy.
· he graduated at t_he top of his Dukakis cut social expendiclass at elite Brookline High. tures sharply and raised taxesHe:: played varsity basketball at to stem a huge deficit.
Br:ookline, · ran cross-country,
In 1978, he was defeated for
al)d was captain of the tennis the Democratic nomination for
team.
governor. After serving on the
At Swarthmore College out- Harvard faculty, he again won
side Philadelphia, Dukakis the governorship in 1982 and
abandoned his pre-medicine was elected to a third term in
studies after receiving a "D" 1986. ~
Republican presidential nom- ·
inee George Herbert Walker .
Bush, 64, was born in Milton,
Massachusetts, on the southern edge of Boston, on June
12,1924.
His father, the late Prescott
Bush, served as U.S. Senator
from Connecticut from 1952
to 1962.
Bush attended Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts,
graduating in June 1942. On
his 18th birthday, he enlisted
in the U.S. Navy Reserve. Bush
received his wings and commission while still 18, becoming at the time the youngest
pilot in the U.S. Navy.
From August 1942 to September 1945, Bush was on active duty. He flew torpedo
bombers in the Pacific from
the USS San Jacinto, receiving
the Distinguished Hying Cross
and three Air Medals for his
service.
of Zapata Offshore Company, Nixon's Ambassador to -the
After World War II, Bush which pioneered in offshore United Nations.
·
attended Yale University, grad- oil-drilling equipment.
After serving nearly two years
uating Phi Beta Kappa in 1948
as Chairman of the Republiwith a B.A. in economics..He
can National Committee, Bush
In 1964, Bush was defeated in
was captain of the Yale varsity
a bid for the U.S. Senate. His was sent to China, where he
baseball team.
served as Chief of the U.S.
Following his work for run for the U.S. House·of Rep- Liais-on Office. In 1976 he was
Dresser Industries as a trainee resentatives from Houston in named Director of the Central
and salesman in Texas and Cal- 1966 was successful and he was Intelligence Agency. After leavifornia from 1948 to 1950, Bush re-elected to this post in 1968. ing the CIA, he taught at Rice
In 1970, Bush lost the race
was co-founder of a small oil
University in Houston.
royalty firm, Bush-Overbey Oil for U.S. Senate to Houston
Ibllowing his unsuccessful
Development Company in 1951. businessman Lloyd Bentsen. 1980 campaign for the RepubIn 1953, he co-founded Zapata Senator Bentsen is currently lican nomination for President,
Petroleum Corporation and one the Democratic nominee for Bush was Ronald Reagan's
year later, at age 30, he be- Vice President. In 1971 and
Continued _on page 22
came president and co-founder 1972 Bush \\(as President
Have you listened lately~
-
This January will be the 20th
_ anniversary for WWSP 90FM,
our campus radio station. This
year may prove to be the most
successful in the history of the
station.
.
90FM has been working closely with many campus organizations to give you up-to-date information on what is happening
at your University.
In the past, 90FM labeled
itself the "music alternative."
Although this label is no longer
used it is still the case. WWSP
provides the campus and community with various programming that is not often heard on
other radio stations. They offer
music from up-and-coming
bands and musicians such as
Tommy Conwell, Hunters and
/Lf,U!'
.
Collectors and Edie Brickell.
These bands and performers
are on the College Music Journal's charts and have been consistently for the past few
months. The students of UWSP
have been given the opportunity
to hear these bands before they
hit many of the national
airwaves.
WWSP 90FM offers programming for almost any taste. A
few of these include a folk music show, a ~men's show, funky sounds, Sneaky Pete's Blues
Cafe, jazz music, and a block of
main programming. The main
programming consists of new
artists and their music, classic
rock and performers.
90FM also offers album and
cassette giveaways daily.
PI
-
Special events in a year include Jazzfest '88 (November
18-20), and the· everpopular
Trivia weekend (Trivia '89 April
14-16). 90FM is the only station
that offers alternative sports
coverage with UWSP hockey
(November 4 - February 18).
All this is available to you just ·
to the left side of your dial under 89.9.
H you haven't listened to
90FM lately then tune in your
dials. There is a difference.
90FM is here for you. They're
90FM,
-Look for WWSP !JOFM programming guide in issue s of
The Pointer
University of Wisconsin Stevens Point 54481 Business Line 346-3755 Request Line 346-2696
Free Popcorn
Fish Fry
$4.25
Music Just For You!
Spaten
Imported Tap
Beer
BAVARIAN
PIZZA
12"- $9.50
$1.00
TOGO
$7.50
Open 5-10 7 Days A Week
701 2nd St.
344-3365
WWSP·90FM brings
you Pointer hockey
this winter! ! Not
to mention a
fantastic diversion
from that?!**!?
You hear on those
top 40 stations.
Pointer page 8, Thursday, November 3, 1988
Contract
.
I
The reality is that so-called date rape is not just a male prob~em. It is equally a female problem. So let's be honest and open on this subject and just put it bluntly: Women, -don't let the
process start unless you intend to let it p~ thru all150 steps! Alternatively, if a~ coitus·
is not acceptable beCause your "honor" IS unportant to you or ~use you cannot ~ above
your socialization, negotiate an alternative such as mutual masturbation before beginning.
With all the talk about the importance of equality in other areas of our lives, wh~l~ this ·seri- ous question being ignored? Why aren't women~ ~e~ share of .the .r~nsi~ility fo~ ~t­
iating sex? The answer is quite simple. Women are insisting on mamtaining their supenonty
attitudes and the power that goes with their control, rather than accepting equality with men·in
·
this area. This is sexism that is on a par with any macho posturing by men.
In short it's time we men begin demanding of women that they give up their control by
, always being the ones who have, the choice to say NO; and instead that they begin doing their
share of the initiating, coming down off their sexist pedestal of being above being actively and
honestly sexual.
Another ' incredible phenomenon in this age of "equal pay for equal work" and "affirmative
action" is that women are still, to a large extent, expecting men to pay for dates. This cUstom
~ made sense in the days when men were the sole wage earners. Can it be that women still believe that men should pay just for the honor of their presence on a date? That cerf4inly carries
a message of the superior value of women, and is sexism. Actually, if a woman just lets a man
pay, for dates, one of her implicit, silent but obvious messages is that he should be compensated
more for his work so be can afford to pay for the dates.
I think we should be quite open and honest about this. When a woman expects a man to pay
for their dates, she prostitutes herself. She bas used her sexuality to gain something of signifi- ·
cant moJ!etary value. (That ~ a rea80!Ulb~e definition of p~tution). And therefore, the only
fair thing for her is to be an honest prostitute. Unless ~ere IS a contract at th~ start ~t the
woman will pay for the next date, the only honorable thing for the woman to do IS to deliver on
the implicit contract.
Actually, there may not be a second date, particularly if the woman knows she will have to
; pay for it. So if one or the other is to -pay for the first date, let it be the woman. ~ seems like
the only way to avoid misunderstandings as to the nature of the contract. Alternatively let each
pay for their own share.
·
·
This will save a lot of misunderstandings. Thus if a man and woman negotiate that they will
each pay their own way, the contract. is only f~r an evening together with no~~~­
plied. If the woman pays, she can dectde later if she wants more to happen - still recogruzmg
that onelioesn't start what one is not ready to finish. And finally, if the contract is for the man
to pay--:-the man should bring condoms along to assure that the contracted sexual encounter will
be saf~. The exception to this would be the rare occasion when the man or woman is truly giving a gift to the other person as on the celebration of a birthday, special event, etc. But that
only works if both women and men give such gifts.
A safety valve is needed here, of course. Sometimes a date goe8 badly. In such a situation, the
parties may mutually agree not to be sexual. What if a woman, or man for that matter, bacq
out of the contract? Obviously a respect for the other person's dignity as a human niakes forced
sex unacceptable. However, the offending person should be seen as lacking in honor and trust. worthiness, and should be avoided in the future. Alternatively the person could reunburse the
payer for the cost of the date.
.
With this kind of clear understanding between men and women, so called da~ rape can be relegated to a rare occurence by either men or women. In additidn, the relations between men and
women should dramatically improve because a major source of misunderstanding will be elimi- .
na:ted.
''I Like The Natural Look
Of My New Contacts"
': ••And They Were Free!"
Purchase any eyeglasses at regular price and get a pair of
Cooper'rhin daily-wear soft contacts absolutely free! You'lllove
the look_and comfort ... as well as the incredible savings!
Or Select Free Eyeglasses
If you'd prefer glasses, you can select a free pair with clear
single-vision lenses, with purchase of any other pair in stock!
Eye exam not included. Contacts to powers of t6D ; other brands available. Free ey~glasses must be frames
of e~ual or less value. No other discounts apply. See optician at participating locatrons for detailS
Offer good through Nov. 5, 1988
I
lifestyles of,t.h~ ,poor·· and
addicted
The Final Chapter
.
'
with Pete took place at tne restaurant be manages. During it,
we discussed bow his life bas
changed for better or worse ..
The details are trite and would
bore you. I will not play on your
imagined ignorance (if the purpose' of news is to inform, then
a reporter must assume the
public is unaware and uninformed). I will tell you Pete is
clean and serene, straight and
narrow-just for today. I will '
quote Pete's erudition for you:
"What really matters is that
just for today, I am $'aigbt. I
can't say that tomorrOw I will be. I don't know where I'll be a
year from now." Has anyone
'
ever, Pete?
By Chip
Hans Meyeroff said, "Time is
charged with "significance" for
man because human life is live
under the shadow of Time, because the question, what am I,
makes sense only in terms of
what have I become... " The
past cannot be ignored because
;t refuses to go away. It is the
dSSence of self in all of us--the
·past-for image and ego are
dictated by it. By cont,ra.st, the
future is a risk worth taking,
and we gamnble using retrospection. Thusly, concentrate on
"Just for Today."
My third ~d _last il_l~rvie'Ws
Editor's note: Due to circumstances beyond the control of
mortal men and women, Stud
Weasil was not able to write his
usual editorial column this week
(be was sent on special Pointer
assignment to cover the south- .
ern migration of the once
trapped. California whales). In
his place, out of the goodness of
his heart, Stud arranged to
have Paul Hardly fill .in form
him (Paul Hardly is a senior • majoring in conservative radio
\ .
Continued on page 22 · .
u·n prepared? .
condemns rape and sexual
assault.
- Revise student conduct
codes to specifically prohibit
sexual assaults and provide certain rights for victims.
- Establish procedures to
modify living arrangements
when the victims and the
accused live in the same bousing.
- Institute mandatory, campuswide educational programs
on sexuai assault for students,
faculty and staff.
·
·d
·
f
- ProVI e support servJ.ces or
victims, including immediate
medical treatment and counseling, and develop procedures for
how college personnel should respond to victim reports.
Abarbanel added that "The
.
consequ~ces of_ n~ unplement-
· ing widespread cnanges are
potentially enormous. Without
new policies and programs, victims will not come forward tQ
receive the help they need to
recover from their trauma;
most assailants will not be
brought to justice; and campus
rape will continue to escalate."
The Rape Trea~ent Center
of Santa Mooica Hospital was
~blisbed in.1974 and bas promded professional treatment to
~ver 9,000 ~ ~ult victims and their . families. T~?-e
Center bas been instrumental m
effecting legislati
d dmin..
ve an a
·.
~~tiv~ ~ges to e~ce
VIctims rights and prosecution
of offenders. In 1980, the Rape
Treatment Center led the s~c~ ~ort to remove the VIctim resistance standard from
the California rape laws.
PARTNERS PUB
2600 Stanley St.
Stevens Point, WI
•
344-9545
DAY
RUMOURS
9-?
MON. IMPORTS s1.25
17 Oz. Cups of Beer $1.00
Refills are 75e
FREE PEANUTS
TUES. TACO TUESDAY
'We'll Change The Way You Look At Life!'
200 Dlvlalon St.
341..0198
2 Tacos $1.35
·
Margaritas $1.2~
Corona & Caribe $1.2~
WED. PITCHERS s2.50
FREE POPCORN
·
WIN A FREE
FEMME FATALE
TOUR T-SHIRT!
Bring In This Advertisement &
ister For The Giveaway Drawin
I
TEN SHIRTS TO BE AWARDED ·
ENTRY DEADLINE IS NOV. 12, 1988
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY
DRAWING AT CLOSE OF BUSINESS 11
WINNERS WILL BE NOTIFIED
arriers Take Fourth At WSUC
hampionships
hawk, whose
John ~lina,
and26:17
Olson,
times were
Tim
John Gardner
beat us were ranked higher 26:19 and 26:21 in that order. '
UWSP Sports lDformatlos ·
than us, but I still feel that if
"Ceplina, Sparhawk and
OSHKOSH-A feeling of dis- we had all run up to our capa- Olson all ran a little below par
appointment looms throughout bilities we could have been and will need to close the gap
. the minds of the Pointer men's third."
between them and Fossum and
cross country team after ending
As far as individual perfor- Gar~a if we are ~ earn anothup fourth in the conference mances go, Ccfach Witt seemed er trip to the Nationals. Olson
championship meet.
quite happy; "We had some ha;! been having some muscle
"We, and I mean the entire excellent performances from problems and Ceplina has been
team, were disappointed with some of our young men which ill so I ~ow they will run much
our fourth place finish " said speaks well for the future, as better m two weeks. Sparhawk
Coach Rick Witt.- "w~ have we had two freshmen, two soph- just ~ to get aggres,sive and
expected more and when ~ou do mores, and one senior in the top run like I know he can. '
other Pointer finishers innot achieve more you are dis- five," said Witt.
appointed."
. Rod Garcia topped the Point- eluded Kurt Lepak in 4&th
A fourth place finish may er attack as he ~ed 12th (26:43), David Jackson, 52nd
sound dismal, but considering . with a 25:37 time. Enc Fossum (26:45), Shawn Meinke, 53rd
that the Pointers had some key both ran well and gave us the (26:49), T?dd Green, 59th
people missing this position guys up front that we needed. (27:04), R1ch Meinke, 68th
wa8n't so bad. •:We knew going Rod had been ill and really ran (27:29), and Chris Jones in 70th
into the meet that we would be we~ ~t less
100 percent. place with a 27:33 timing.
at less than full strength," said Enc lS a sen1or and is really
"I was very pleased with
Witt, "We had a lot of illnesses mentally tough. He wanted to Kurt Lepak and
Meinke
in the last two weeks as we had run well and did when it count.- as both of them ran the best
to run without two of out top ed," said Witt.
times of their lives. Lepat •nmners in Bill Dean and Craig
The 29th placing of RiCk Hru- not extremely talented, but .......
Staab, and Rod Garcia and Tim by, who was clocked at 26:08, just stuck in there and gives his
Olson had both been ill and not was more than just noticed by best evecy race. Meinke is anquite at full strength."
Coach Witt. "The one man who other .freshman who has continLa Crosse won the wsuc really came through for us was !led get better each meet and
Championship with 27 points fol:. Rick Hruby. He is a freshman 18 gomg to be a good one."
"I have to take a lot of the
lowed by Oshkosh with 39, Eau who just ran his best time by 30
Claire 88, Stevens Point 121
seconds. He is very mature for blame for us maybe not getting
Whitewater 140, PJatteville 1.10' a frosh and is really going to be the third that we wanted. I had
River Falls 195, Stout 205 and an excellent nmner. 1 was fig- our guys go out a little more
'
uring him to be our 6th man · conservative than we usually do
Superior 275.
"The WSUC is so tough that and if he had been our 6th man and we were not able to make
in 28th pia~, we would have up the ground we gave away
you had better be at your best
as we had five teams ranked
been in good shape."
early in the race," said Witt.
Finishing 37th, 38th and 39th
the top 15 in the country," said
"The three teams that respectively were Rob Spar- Continued on page 11
f:ban
Shawn
~
u;
Practice
Wrestling Preview
~Hanson
The first thought that enters
: my mind when I think of wrestling is men wringing with
sweat, running up and down
~cases, spitting and gruntmg, only. because I never quite
grasped the strategy behind the
sport.
Marty Loy, head coach of
Pointer wrestling wants to see a
change in people like myself
and get crowds into the stands. .
The · 1988-89 season for this
contact sport will begin November 11 and 12 with the Tombstone Open in the Quandt Gym
at 4:00p.m.
Kurt
Baumgartner moves the ball ahead on foot
p0' •I nte r· F0 0· t ba II
B Jimm Cull
Y
Y
en
PobJter Sports
"Right now we're just worried about us," said coach John
Miech as he pondered over the
circumstances surrounding our
football teams' chances of making the play-offs.
~ne. UWSP added a 24-yard
field goal, by Dave Schneider
later in the first quarter t~
make the score 10-0.
UWSP . could not muster a
substantial drive the remaining
of the first half until Altoona
native Bob buns intercepted a
Titan pass and gave the PointMiech believes UW-Stevens ers the football on their own 40
UWSP has invited 15 different Point will be invited to the yard line. A complete pass to
universities, bringing 150 to 200 NAIA Division IT play-offs if the Don Moehling, who led the
wrestlers to our Campus.
Pointers win their remaining game with eight catches for 145
two games. The Pointers find yards~ a personal foul penalty
'
assessed against the Titans and
"Recruiting is our strongest themselyes in sole position of a 24 yard pass completion to
point this year," Loy stated as second place in the WSUC with Blanco setup another one yard
he spoke of his top recruits, Joe a 4-2 record, but unfortunately plunge up the middle for Mares
Ramsey (two-time state cham- UW-Whitewater, UW-LaCrosse with only nine seconds remainpion), Mark Poirier (three-time and UW-River Falls all have a
state champion and high school 5-l reeord. Point travels to UW- ing in the first half; giving the
Pointers a 17-0 halftime lead.
All American career record set- R;iver Falls this Saturday, and a
It took Point just over a minVlctory would be the fifth in-ater at 125-3) and Bob Berceau row, and a share of the WSUC ute to make the score 24-0 when
(three-time state champion, · title along with aspirations of a UWSP took the second half
who transferred from N. Michi- play-off birth would remain kickoff and proceeded to move
the football 43 yards and score
gan, where he was second in very much alive.
a TD. This TD was scored on a
1\lCAA Division IT).
20-yard pass completion to
The Pointers have put them- Moehling, after Baumgartner
Returning team captain, John selves in this position by their completed a - key third-downMatczak, who wrestled varsity 36-14 victory over UW~osh and-24 situation by throwing the
last year and two weight last Saturday. Point faced an ball to Todd Bonlander for a 41
classes above his normal class up-and-coming Titan team that, yard pickup.
to benefit the teams record, will on paper, resembles the PointSome life came back to the
be wrestling at his normal . ers because they like to pass. Titan side fo the field when the
· weight, m·aJdng the team but the UWSP aerial attack was ensuing kickoff was returned 90 .
effective as Kirk Baumgartner·
stronger.
passed for 481 yards on 29 com- yards for a touchdown and the
pletions, whereas the Titans two point conversion was also
The Pointer wrestlers are a~rial attack (although it successful to make the Pointer
encouraging students to spec- accounted for over 400 yards) lead only 24-8 with almost the
tate and get involved. They've was constantly being stagnated whole second half still to be
, created a Residence Hall Day by the defense. A school record played. The next two possesthat will be held on January 31. · nine interceptions was the cause. sio~s of the football by the
Last year over 1,000 students of this constant stagnation, and Pomters only resulted in one
participated and won free t- thus enabled UWSP to halt four first down, but on the Titans
shirts and wisdom of the sport. Titan drives deep into Pointer second possession of the ball
This year they hope the number territory and prevent five more Burns intercepted the ball and
ran 96 yards for a touchdown
will double.
from ever beginning.
that set a school record for the
longest interception return for a
The Points' first offe~~ive TD and helped to dishearten the
Coach Loy feels that wrestling
is a sport where the more you drive on this sunny but chilly Titans, as they had just drove
watch it and get involved, the day saw Baumgartner complete 61 yards on 15 plays and probafour of five passes (two were to bly thought they were back in
more you like it.
Theo Blanco who caught 11 the game. It was the second of
So, if you're sitting. at home passes for 122 yards on the a school record· tying three inone night and you want to get !i&Y), driving 67 yards and scor- terceptions of the game for
mg a touchdoWD when Jim Ma- Burns and gave UWSP a 30-8
out and try something new, the
res,
who had 45 yards on 22 car- advantage.
'
Pointer wrestling team would
ries
for the day, ran one yard
love to see you in their stands.
up the middle and into the end Continued on ~e 11
•
Pointer page 11
Baseball
predictions
<continued
from last
week):
By Tim Bishop
Sports Columnist
The continued poor performances by the Badger football
team has shown its results at
the box office in dwindling attendance and putting the finances of the entire Madison
athletic program doubt, but this
is by far, not a national trend.
Northwestern University has
had a much longer dry spell
than the Badgers (since 1952)
but the Wildcats still play before respectable crowds and
that institution's.athletic department is self-sufficient. The
same goes for Columbia, ·who
recently broke Northwestern's
record losing streak.
The, Green Bay Packers, who
had played outstanding football
Meanwhile, Penn State's footfor two weeks and then should ball program continues to enjoy
have won against Washington, tremendous support despite the
fell back to the mediocrity Nitnay· Lion's worst start in
which the team displayed dur- years. All three of these instituing the first five weeks of the tions have had support from
season•
their fans while keeping their
The Pack fell to the ~~alo records of academic integrety
Bills, 28-0 last Sunday m a sparkling. These are all examgame in which the Packers ples of what college athletics
should have been beaten by · are all about-an addition to, not
even more.
an exemption from, academic
About the only bright spot achievement.
was the play of the Packer deNotre Dame moved into the
fense, which did not give up any
points in the second half (Buffa- top position in the college polls
lo did score two touchdowns on following the Fighting Irish's
turnovers by the Green' Bay 22-7 win over Navy. Meanwhile,
last week's number one UCLA
offense).
Buffalo has experienced an lost to unranked Washington
upsurge during the last several State, 34-30, on a last minute
seasons, and for the first time touchdo~.
in five years, 1the Bills are guarThe annual civil war of Pointanteed at least a .500 season,
now at 8-1. 1
'. er hockey was held last SaturChicago Bear quarterback day night, but it wasn't the blue
Jim McMahon suffered yet an- and the gray, but rather. the
other major injury Sunday in Purple and Gold G~~· Po~ter
the first quarter off the Bear's coach Mark ·Mazzolini unvteled
3D-7 loss to the hapless New his 1988-89 squad, which
England Patriots. this time, the appears to be a powerful agmuch ofter outspoken QB hurt a gressive team. The team
knee and, while surgery is not B:ppears to be up. to th~ se~ec­
expected, he will be out· the tion as the favonU: gomg mto
next four to six weeks. Perhaps, the Northern Collegiate Hockey
like an injur¢ farm horse, it is Association .season.
time to take him out back and
Tomorrow night, the Pointers
shoot him to put ~ out_ of his
(and everybody else s) miSery.
travel to UW-Eau Claire to open
The Ba~ger football team r~ . their Wisconsin State University
mained f1rmly entrenched m conference and NCHA seasons.
last place in the Big Ten, fol- Saturday night Point hosts Eau
lowing Satur.day's 9-6 loss ~o Claire for a 7:,30 p.m. game at
Purdue. Ma<;fison, however,. did the K.B. Willett arena.
imr\rmrP. following the preVIOUS
l·err1bru:-ras:me:nt at the hands of
In the National Hockey
League, the Los Angeles Kings
continue to shine since the addition of superstar Wayne
Gretzke. L.A. is now one point
behind division leading Calgary,
while Gretzke's former team,
the Edmonton Oilers, con:tint1es ~
to flounder at 5-4-2 following
sunday's 7-2 loss to the Chicago
Black Hawks.
1st
Uump sag
Footb aII :
Swimmersconsec-
This is the third
utive season a recruit has cho- National Le'ague ChampionThe remainder of the approxi- sen to pursue other personal inship Series (Chicago Cubs vs.
.Los Angeles Dodgers)-A tough, mately 20 minutes of the game terests. The seven recruited
even match, th:e NLCS goes the saw the Titan's quarterback in- swimmers include Jim Chamfull seven games, with Chicago tercepted three more times merlain, Brian Herman, Scott
taking advantage of the home (twice by Troy Pride and once Krueger, Paul Krieger, Bill
field advantage. In game seven, by Jefferson native Tom Gau- Punzel, Jamie Weigle and Toby
Dodger ace Orel Herschiser , gert to give him two intercep- Skov. Andy Connell{ is a transgives up only one hit to the tions on the day) but he also led fer studeat who will be eligible
his team to another score as the this year and is predicted to be
Cubs, but that was enough as
Chicago's Rafeal Pa,lmerio puts Titans closed the gap to 30-14 one of the strong points of the
with less than 10 minutes re- team. The captains are Mike
it somewhere near Sheridan
maining in the fourth quarter. McLellan, Kevin Parham and
Road and the Cubs win, 1..{).
Mares, who gained 159 total SaJn Siegel.
yards on the day, made the fiThe goals for this year are
American League Champion- · nal score 36-14 when he caught
ship Series (Milwaukee Brewers a pass for 64 . yards and then, quite simple, "Swim as well as
vs. Minn,jSOta Twinkies )-As a for the third time in this game, we can and as fast as we can."
ran up the middle form one .
Coach Blair also said if every<!ontras{ to the NLCS,
body hits their personal goals,
waukee dominates Minnesota yard otit and into the end zone.
SETV Telecast of Pointer that combined effort would
throughout, sweeping the series
make up the team goal.
in four games and out:scm:ing Football (Channel 29):
Sun. 6, River Falls, Away,
their opponent, 72-1. The
Minnesota run comes in the
3:00 pm;
The men's team will be missninth inning, when the :aeer
Tue. 8, River Falls, Away • ing six-time national champion
Boys from Milwaukee feel
7:00pm;
Nino Pichota who js out for the
for their haple~ opponents.
Wed. 9, River Falls, Away, year after just having shoulder
7:00 .pm.
surgery. The team will miss a
1989 World Series-The
swimmer of his caliber but it
ever "Lake Michigan Series" is
will undoubtedly make everyplagued by bad weather. After
. body work even harder to pick
Game Four with the series tied
"We seem to run much better up the slack.
by going out llard and hanging
at 2-2, the entire lakefront is hit
on."
with the worst snow storm
history' and the remainder
"We now have to get healthy
The Pointers will start their
the series is cancelled.
in the next two weeks as we get meet schedule Saturday at 1:00
Attempts to revive the series by
ready for the NCAA Regionals. p.m. at Eau Claire.
moving the championship to DeHopefully Bill Dean will be
The new swimming pool will
troit are canned due to lack of
back with us and give us a be started this summer. It will
interest there. As a result, Herb
boost. We will have to be at our be made up of eight lanes and a
Kohl vows to build ·a domed stabest as we will have 8 of the top separate diving area which will
dium in Milwaukee, only to
15 teams in the country in the have two one-meter boards and
move it to Kalamazoo, feeling it
Regional and only 5 will qualify one three-meter board.
would be more profitable there.
for the Nationals."
Ha r r•I e rs
INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS
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Pointer page 12, Thursday, November 3, 1988 .
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Pointer page· 14, Thursday, November 3, 1988
T
----~~~----------------------------------------------------------~~
Wom-en's CC Third /a t Cha_mpionships lady Pointer netters
Finish Third At WWIJ:\C
Meet
Hill.
Oshkosh-A banged-up Pointer women's cross country team
ran excellent and captured a
third place finish this past
weekend at the Oshkosh Country Club in the 11th annual Wisconsin Women's Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference Championships.
The final standings show that
Oshkosh took first with 29 points
followed by La Crosse with 59,
Stevens Point 78, Whitewater 88,
Eau Claire 114, River Falls 178,
Stout 181, Superior 317, and
Platteville didn't have .a team
score.
"I can't say enough about
how the team ran," said Hill,
"It was a battle for third as
Oshkosh and La Crosse were
expected to win, and I was surprised that we came that close
to La Crosse with all- of our injuries.
"We had to beat Whitewater
and Eau Claire," said Hill.
"First we needed to beat Whitewater upfront, second we
needed to break up Whitewater's pack, and third we needed
Renee Breu to move up and fill
in the fifth spot and just be
dose. We accomplished all of
those things.
"Our race plan was to get out
pretty hard on a flat course,"
said Hill. "We did this as we
ran pretty even with Whitewater the first mile. On the second
mile, Whitewater seemed to be
pulling away, but on the third
mile and onward we came on
strong and .took the lead over
them for good. We raced the
whole 5K, and didn't let up at
all."
The top finisher for the Pointer women was Jenny Schoch
who took third with a 18:15.3
time. Beth Weiland also ran
well finishing seventh with a
time of 18:33.7. Nancy Woods
finishing 16th with a 18:58.3
rounded out the top three for
the team.
"All of the top three runners
ran well in Jenny Schoch, Beth
Weiland and Nancy Woods. 1
thought Beth did an exceptionalIy good job," said Hill.
Cindy Ironside took 22nd with
a 19:10.9 clocking as injuries
didn't appear to hamper her at
all.
Finishing 37th was Renee
Breu with a 19:47.1 time. "Renee really came through for us
and ran an excellent race when
we needed it in the fifth posi"She is our runtion," said
~~! ::::e~~ek with her effort
Suzy Jandrin ended up 48th
(20:09.8) and Coleen Brogran
finished 49th (20:12.6). They
were both cited by Hill as running extremely hard.
Other finishers included Beth
Benzmiller, 58th (20:34.6); Lori
Aschenbrenner, 60th (20:41.5);
Maureen Seidl, 63rd (20:58.6);
Kaley Kocher, 65th (21:02.0);
and Katrina Pedersen, 74th
(22:36.9)-,.
After the race, Schoch and
Weiland were named to the AllConference first team as the top
10 runners are given this honor.
Also the next 10 are given AllConference second team honors,
which Woods received.
"This meet gave us confidence going into the regionals
at La Crosse and hopefully we'll
get Amy Cyr back by that time
t? give us even additional conftdence."
/
At 2, Beth Neja won her ""
opening round match, 16-2, 6-1
over Jane Haglund (Sto¥t), then
lost to Wendy Seymour (WhiteUWSP Sports Information water) in the semis, 6;-1, 6-0., ·
MADISON-The UW- Stevens Beth ended up third, beating
Point women's tennis team fin- Penny DeSanto (Eau Claire), 6ished a very respectable third 2, wj 6-3.
Kathy King at 3 singles
in the WWIAC Tennis Championship this past weekend, trounced Sue-Kiel (Stout) 6-0, 6enroute to a third place finish 1, and also won her second
in the conference standings round match, taking Ann Koian
(Eau Claire) to three l!ets, 3-6,
which is their best ever.
With UW-Whitewater and UW- 6-2, 6-1. King took second as she
LaCrosse ahead of them in the lost in the 3 championship to
standings,· the Lady Pointers Stephanie Frob of Whitewater,
knew that they had to have an 6-0,6-3. Alpy Standi beat Kim Canaveexcellent meet at Nielsen Stara
of Stout, 6-2, 6-2 in the opendium. With this in mind, the
Lady Pointers came out smok- ing round of the 4 singles. She
ing as all of the singles and then went on to lose to Julie
doubles players won first round Kuepper (LaCrosse), 6-3, 6-3,
and took third by beating Tiicia
matches.
Stumpf
(River Falls), 6-3, 7-5.
After this fast start, however,
Chris Diehl at 5 s~gles dethe UWSP women's tennis team
seemed to fizzle out and lost all feated Tammy Canavera
but one of the second round (Oshkosh) 6-3, 6-0, lost to Beth
matches, that being in singles Pick (LaCrosse) 7-6, 6-1, and
defeated Amy Spaeth (Whitewawith Kathy King.
With Eau Claire right on their ter), 6-~, 7-6 to place third.
Rounding out the singles
heels, the Lady . Pointe.rs ~ew
matches, Jane Sandef{oot defeated Susan Fredman (Whitethe place they held in the con- watex:) 6-1, 3-6, 7-6, lost' to Sarah
ference standin s. "We couldn't Frieder (LaCrosse) 6-0, 6-3, and
aff d t ·
g
· 1
· t took third by beating Krista
in ~race0 ~~~
:~~g Heidgerken (River Falls), 6-4,
t f" · h ah d f E
Cl · , 6-0.
0 • lD1S
ea o au atre,
said Coach Nancy Page
The doubles performances in. .
·
eluded the 1 team of Kin~-e1·a
~e
wome!l did JUSt that, captunng all thirds and one second winning their first match over
.
.
..
m the smgles competition. The Hintz-Stumpf (River Falls), 4-6,
doubles teams did not fair too 6-2, 6-3. They lost their second
badly either, as they took one round match, ,but eoine back to
third and two fourth place fin- take third by beating K:olian-DeSant (E Cl · ) 7-5 6-0
0
ishes.
·
au aire ' 1 •
In the end, Whitewater came · At #2 doubles, Standifordhak
won the opener over
out on top' of the team standings Tomts
with 48 points followed by La- Widener-Braun (Oshkosh), 7-6,
Crosse with 45, Stevens Point 6-0, but went on to lose the next
35, Eau Claire 34, River Falls , two matches, finishing fourth.
17, Oshkosh 14, and Stout five.
The 3 doubles team followed
Platteville failed to score.
suit, as Diehl-Sanderfoot, deCoach Page was pleased with feated . Wall-Wall (River Falls),
the team's performance and 6-0, 6- 2, and lost ~e next two
had nothing but good things to matches taking a fourth.
The final standingk of the
say about them. "I couldn't be
prouder of the team," said tournament reflected the identiPage. "Each player made a cal final conference standings
significant contribution as we leaving Whitewater with the
needed every point that was crown. With UWSP's third place
earned. We set our goals each finish, and the season ended,
day, and went out and met Coach Page lost a couple of
successful veterans in Amy
them."
Page knew that the singles Standiford and Beth Neja.
"Amy and Beth closed out
matches were very crucial and
attributed a lot to the Lady their tennis careers here at
Pointers high finish.
UWSP on a high note," said
Page, "they have contributed 'a
In #1 singles, Linda Tomtshak great deal to the program as
defeated Tanya Bryan of River each has always given 100%.
Falls, 6-1 and 6-4, but then fell We will miss them."
The season may be over for
to a tough Jill Jacobson of LaCrosse, 6-4, 6-3. Linda followed the team, but Linda 'l'omtshak
up that defeat by taking apart still be practicing hard as she
Suzie Blietz. of Stout, 6- 0, 6-0 to prepares for the NAIA Championships in May.
place third.
h
1
erY ear~=~e~tc~~s~~n:~:fo:~~
Swimmers D1ve nto A not
eo
By Scott Baumann
Contributor
The season has started for the
members of the men's and women's swimming team with a
very hopeful outlook. Dry land
workouts started September 19
and water workouts started October 3.
The Pointers' toughest team
for both the men and the women this year will be Eau
Claire. The teams are coached
by Red Blair with Kenny Brum-
•
·
·
ba ugh as his
a~istant ~oac~.
Both teams are mvolved m siX
~racti~s .a w~ek and op~onal
time IS given m the mormngs.
All of this work will hopefully
make for a good showing at Ute
national meet in Milwaukee
March 2-4.
The women's t.eam is made
up of 14 participants. There are
eight returning swimmers and
five of them are returning as
All-Americans. The team will
·
be & "ded by five new swunmers
this year. Ann Benson is also
returning after taking a year off
h Bl · ·
t"
·d
an
~c
atr ts expec mg
her to ptck up some of the load.
The cap?ins for this year are
Stephame Bass and Debby
Hadler.
The men's team is comprised
of 16 swimmers of which eight
are returning from last year.
Out of that eight, there are
•
three returning All-Americans.
Coach Blair had recruited eight
swimmers this year, but only
·seven will be swimming' this
season.
Continued on page 11
/.~-··- ~-·--· ~,----.. ..• ..---·· ----~-·-~-~
i\,
Who Is This Guy · ~
Dave SwatlSOll . ·
0
COME
FIND OUT ...
NOV. 16
7pm in the PBR, University Center
Sponsored by.
~
W:es:;.:
Tuition
Giveaway
The UWSP Athletic Department is sponsoring THE
GREAT TUITION GIVEAWAY
at the Pointer football game,
Nov. 12, against UW-Platteville.
· A full semester's tuition and
segre£tated fees will be awarded
tr th~> luckv student ticket holder at the Pointers' home finale
:.:. Goerke Field. The game is
scheduled to begin at 2:00p.m.
Be sure to be there to claim
your free tuition payment and
then spend the cash you had set
aside on Spring Break.
.I
Grun~
"Oh no, young mah, if this
attitude doesn't change right
here and now, you can pack
your bags and pedle . you butt
right out of here. And if we
ever... "
I you, or anyone yo know has .
had a similar ex rience,
please contact the .
Children of Troubled
OK, You're OK.
Thanks,
The Grunt
e·
I
,.
,
•
This week's question:
phot·.·~ by Dan Bemant
polling by Kathy Ptu J.ipp1 ·
Name: ~ura Cooney
Name: David Hall
Hometown: Frankfort ll
Hometown: Nekoosa
Major: Accounting
Major: Elementary Education
Academic Year: SOphomore
Acac!emic Year: Junior
Quote: "Mike Dukakis-beQuote: "Morton Downey Jr.
cause Btish has got his head in
because he won't take any s ·
the clouds. 1 We need someone . - from anyone!!
realistic do~-to- earth.''
Which presidential candidate do you plan to vote for and why?
Name: Alyssa Martz
Name: Gary Immel
Hometown: Stevens Point
Hometown: Fond duLac
Major: Piano
Major: Urban Forestry
Acacemic Year: Senior
Academic Year: Freslunan
Quote: "Dukakis because I
Quote: "Dukakis, because he
hate Quayle and Bush isn't my ' would make a good political
favorite person either!!.
cartoon character."
Name: Katy Elsen
Hometown: WiscOnsin Dells
Major: Music
.
Academic Year: SOphomore
Quote: "Bush. Basically I feel
he is the best choice because he
has had the most experience u.o:_
der-pressure."
-
~+ttt~n-'f'H!tllll ~l~4filiHHYJJ
THE HONORARY SOCIETY FOR ACCOUNTING, BUSINESS ANO ECONOMICS
Heavy Metal Music
By Molly Rae
By Lori Staudinger
·Features Writer
Tius workshop is sponsored
by Fast Track, and will be presented by F unice DeBaker of
All Business Students are c(\r St~vens Point. A $1 fee will be
dially invited to attend a "Dress collected at the door.
for Success" workshop to be
We encourage you to attend to
held Wednesday, November 9, learn to Dress for Success! It is .
at 5:30p.m. in rO<m 125 ·(A&BO an important topic, as we will
of the University Center.
all be interviewin~ soon.
CoBtributor
.
I
I
stevens Point's own metal
band, Paris, really rocked the
crowd last Thursday night in
the Encore Room at the now infamous TNT, sponsored by
Alternative Sounds and Concerts committees of the University Activity Board.
The band was tight, professional and overall extr~mely
impressive. If you were one of
the few unfortunates to miss
their show, don't worry. Paris,
along with another university
favorite, Gemini, is scheduled
to open for the Slave Raider
concert l>ecer!lber 1 in the U:C
Program Banquet Room.
Slave Raider, the hottest metal band around, is from Minneapolis and has recently released
an album titled, "Take the
World By Storm," which .is ex-
the Village
I
301 MICHIGAN
I
•
•
•
•
•
One block from campus
Completely furnished
Heat & hot water included
Laundry facilities
Pool & AJC ,
2rid Sem~ster Space
Available! !
Tour "The Village" today
and receive a personal
.pan pizza - FREE! ! !
CALL TODAY!
· I 341-2120
*It's
·
l
*
DATING
live ·£rout .
the
II
I
I
· $25-$50 ON SPACE LEASE ·I
I
I ONLy. OFFI;R GOOD UNTIL II
j - THANKSGIVING
I
I
I
.
L------------------------·
·
1
-~-~ncore
~-*~~J
Final week offer ends 11/24/88
• Sophs, Jrs. and Srs. Only
Ask for Lynn
----------------------CLIP AND SAVE
I
the
•
. F_.jday
Nov. 4·
$1.sowiid · '
Spm
$2..50 w/o id
actly what they are doing. They .
released a video which is being
opened for major acts such as
Twisted Sister, Poison and Ratt.
They have also been featured in
numerous national magazines ·
including Creem and Metal
Hammer.
. .., 1
Keep December 1 open on
your calendar and look for
more information coming soon
on this main event brought to
you by the UWSP Music Coalition.
Pointer page 16, Thursday,
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We Are Not A Club !
I
. WE ONLY SELL CASSETTE
I.
WE ACCEPT
PERSONAL CHECKS OR MONEY ORDERS
•
POSTAGE I HANDLING: ALL ORDEftS MUST INCLUDE
THREE DOLLARS I FIFTY CENTS (3.50). NO MATTER HOW
LARGE OR SMALL THE ORDER. ALL · ORDERS SHIPPED
FIRST CLASS MAIL t TAPES A~E 1000k GUARANTEED
I
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NAME _________
I
ADDRESS -------------+-~------~-
CITV _ _ _ _ sTATE _ _ _ _ ZIP_---:_
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sa.• x I
IIAiE CliEcls PAY-.£ 10:
~~~
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CATALOGUE (1.00) _ ___.:.,__
FOIJIJIIUill£,
POSTAGE & $3.50 .
·ROIIDU3331
HANDLING
---1...::==...:::::.:.::.;._,;_____;__;,___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.
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TOTALI-- - - - ,
:.' Ylll PluM lind me you 1117 Cltlllg wllll ..,.,.. 111111. I_~ 111C1111d $1 •• lllrlllr ......... ENCLOSED ·
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Pointer page 17
~~illurnrn~~
- - - - - - - - f-
~--------------------------~----------------------------------------~~~------~------~
L_____
·Yolllr Alcohol I.Q.
ST. LOUIS-College students
can learn ~bout responsible
drinking through a star-studded
video production entitled "Your
Alcohol IQ: Celebrities Challenge the Moderation Generation."
A The 39-minute video, hosted
Wby "L.A. Law" stars Michael
Tucker and Jill Eikenberry,
uses a quiz-trpe format to involve viewers. Other featured
stars in the_ program include
Patrick Duffy of "Dallas," Lisa
Hartman of "Knot's Landing,"
Richard Dysart of "L.A. Law"
Marla Gibbs of "'rJ:l," Barbara
Bosson of, "Hoopennan," Allyce
Beasley of 1'Moonlighting,"
Robert Walden of "Lou Grant,"
Arte Johnson of "Laugh-In" and
Mickey Doler1z of "The Mon-
kees."
The stars tackle a number of
questions about alcohol, offering
their best guesses about the answers. A panel of alcohol
experts then gives authoritative
answers to the questions.
"Your Alcohol IQ"· teaches
about how alcohol affects the
body, gives tips about how to
consume alcohol responsibly
l
Alcohol Abuse
By Peter Teska
FeatureS COiiti'lbutor
Is alcoholism something you
should worry about?
Without a doubt, alcohol
abuse is, and will continue to
be, a problem for our society.
But how big a problem is it?
Some estimates claim that as
much as 10 percent of the adult
population are, or are on their
way to becoming alcoholics.
But, to the average college
and examines variouS family for its educational value · will student, what does an alcoholic
and societal influences that find it especially helpful to work look like? The most obvious
sign, getting drunk all of the
with their local wholesaler.
shape attitudes about drinking.
The program is being made
"We at Anheuser-Busch are time, represents only a small
available at no cost to video offering "Your Alcohol IQ" as fraction of the problem drinkstores nationwide through J2 the latest in a series of efforts ers. The best general definition
Communications, one of Holly- to urge the public to drink re- is anyone, who when~er they
wood's premier video producers sponsibility," said Michael J. drink, cannot guarantee what
and distributors. It is antici- LaMonica, senior vice presi- their behavior will be after
pated that video stores will in dent-industry affairs for they've started drinking, is
turn provide "Your Alcohol IQ" Anheuser-Busch Companies, probably on alcoholic. If it's evas a free rental to consumers.
Inc. "We would especially urge ery night or only once a year,
The video also is available college students to see the pro- this is the key sign. If you think
through Anheuser-Busch whole- gram. We believe their attitudes that's ridiculous, think again.
Watch out for these people.
salers, who can offer a compan- about drinking are being shaped
ion guide to help small groups during the college years, and
discuss the program after view- we think ~·Your ~Alcohol IQ"
ing it. Groups of ~llege stu-
D ,///
~'
~
~
!
· ~..horrible
0
·
'-..
'----'
To illustrate this dilemma,
I've decided to take you with
by Jeff See
me on my recent trip home. I
Features Writer
invite you to view your parents
The other day in English through mine. I take them
class, one qf my classmates into...THEIR OWN PERSONAL
commented on my new haircut HElL.
with a "WlJYyy!?" A similar I'm excited tqe whole way
comment a~ted me at home, home because it's been three
only it was accompanied at first weeks since my last visit. It'll ·
by a look df shook (imagine be great. They probably missed
someone shaking hands with a me a lot. Maybe they'll give me
live wire). This was followed by some decent food and alot of
· ' one of those "There are very money.
As 1 pull up to the house, the
good specialists who can do
wonders these days."
excitement is so thick you could
You see, I've got a relaxed, cut it with a wet noodle. They
casual look for college. My hair don't come out to greet me.
is closecut around my ears and (Warning sign number one.) I
around the b3ck. My ear is dou- drag my stuff into my room and
ble-pierced (and I don't ·exactly then go to greet the parental
wear three piece suits to class). units.
This is an appearance that I
They are all in the living
like. Not because it's cool, but room as I let out a "Gee mom,
because I find it appealing. I I'm home." It is very hard to
know, you're saying "C'mon describe the look on my parents
Grunt, get tO the point!" So I face at that moment, but in my
will.
·1
never-ending quest to enlighten
I'm sure many of you have my loyal following, -1 will try.
gone home from ,college and "Gee Ward, something's
met resistance from your par- wrong with the Beaver."
ents over anything form your "Don't worry June maybe we
appearance t9 your "new" atti, can get him into the'Betty Ford
tude. I've run into a WALL this Clinic ,
year and I can't understand "~mom, but I didn't do nowhy. (You'd think the fact that thin'"
I ..still play. with my GI Joe
knew better than to send
niight have tipped .them off that him off to school with Whitey
I'm a non-conformist.)
-
"I
boy LaiTy
"But June, how were we to
that he'd get his ear
pierced, change his wardrobe,
get a funky haircut and change,
his major f6rm pre-law to basket weaving with a grass skirt
empihasis?"
"But this is me Dad. I'm still
the same person; it's just that
I've got my own style and I'm
1 ·
t
tru
nali
;~g 00 my
e perso "Oh sure. Just like when Miss
Landers stopped shaving her
armpits, got that mohawk, and .
had "Babycakes" tatooed on 1
her bottom. Beaver, she even
got pregnant with Mr; Rutherford's baby."
''But dad, she got into PCP.
And that's why she did it."
"Exactly. and we want the
7/ know
'fn
Those who tell you all week
how they are looking forward to
getting drunk, have a problem,
as do those who drink to relieve
stress, or combat other personal
problems. People who suffer
blackouts, dri_nk alone, or lie
about how much they are drinking, are even further along.
Alcoholism is as much a behavorial disorder as it is a
physical addiction. Some support programs claim that stop- ,
ping drinking solves only 10 ·
percent of an. alcoholic's problems. The attitude that each
person has towatas alcohol
plays a big role in the process.
Using it safely means that it
doesn't control your life. If it is
controlling yours, or if you want
to learn more about coping with 1
alcoholics around you, call
X3553 and set up a free appointment with the counseling staff
in Delzell Hall.
truth now son. Who's getting yo
these drugs?"
"Now wait one minute. I never heard a peep ou of yo when
Wally grew his hair out and
joined that speed-metal polka
band with Eddie and Lumpy.
For crying out loud, think about
Eddie. Do you think he was
such an obnoxious kid all those
Years for onthinng? That's why
he works in a gas station now
for $3.35 an hour."
·"That; 's the point we're trying to make Beaver. We don't
want yo to end up like your
brother. So you're going to the
clinic to dry out and then when
you get home I'll give yo a nice
glass of milk before dinner.''
"I'm not going. I'm not on
drugs. I'm not a delinquent.
And if this keeps up I'm otta
here for the next three years."
Continued on pag~ 14
by Kelly Berg
Features Colltrlbutor
"Give blood." _
Just the sound of those two
words sends chills down my
spine.
_
Some people enjoy watching
the blood flow into a little bag
and then being shown to a little
room for a free lunch of egg
salad sandwiches, cookies and
juice. They smile, knowing
they've done something good for
the population at large.
_
I gave blood. Once. Four
years ago. And again last week
Wednesday. After swearing never again on that day four years
ago (I don't remember why), I
was surprised at how easily I
was persuaded this year.
1 showed up at my scheduled
time, noon. I had an interview
at 1 o'clock, and a 'meeting with
a teacher, whose class I was
_ about to fail, at 2 o'clock. No
problem.
First, I wait while a very
poor typist spells my name
wrong on a form; three times.
Ten minutes later, I am at the
next station waiting to make
sure my form is filled out correctly. 1 hope it doesn't include
spelling errors.
Another station, another 10
minutes, waiting to get my
blood pressure checked. "Step
down to the next station
please," said the friendly volunteer. The next stop is where
they prick my ear to get blood
out. This isn't so bad.
Then I am sent to the next table to · pick up my very own
plastic bags and needle. Here, I
fill out a card that says whether
to transfuse or not to transfuse
my blood. Why would I give if
they couldn't use it?
Look at the clock, oh good it's
only 12:50. A full10 minutes before my interview. Sit in chair
·
and wait~
Tap on the shoulder and I
hear "next." About now, I start
to panic. Memories of why I
hadn't given blood in four years
come flooding back. Pain.
I sit down on what looks like
an expensive lawn chair and
plop my arm onto the annrest.
Pictures of a huge needle keep
popping into my head. A nurse
comes to find my vein. Can't
find one. Other arm, please.
Still can't find one. Am I dead?
- Oh, there's .a tiny o~e we can
shove that b1g needle mto.
'
Being that my veins are so
tiny, my arm cannot set like all
the others. I have to have a
huge pillow propped und~r my
arm. "Now don't move," she
says callously. This, after she'd
just beaten my arms to. a pulp ~
looking for a place to stick that
needle.
LooK at clock. It's 1:10. I'm
late. Nurse is talking. Telling
·
t
another nurse she's gomg o
have to shove it in all the way
and fast, because my vein is
probably hard if it's small.
Don't say it out loud. Just do it.
Needle's going.in. Sharp pain.
Reflexes send my body slouching into the chair. My leg is in
the air. Why? Nurse is yelling
hold still. How?
,
I try to recompose myself. A
volunteer is staring at me. So
are a lot of other donors. Probably wondering if it's really that
painful and they should leave or
if I'm just a wimp. Someone
says I'm green as one nurse ·
tells the other that she's going
Pointer page 18, Thursday, November 3, 1988
--------------------------------------------------~-----'
squeeze any harder until that
throbbing goes away.
Twenty minutes later, aS I try
to wipe the tears out of the corners of my eyes, I'm done. I'm
really late. It's 1:30.
Features Writer
a
Interface,
five member
group from Madison, invades
the Encore room Saturday from
8 to 11 p.m. Tog~ther for over
two years, they have released a
debut single titled, "Long Lonely Nights," and are featured on
Madison's forthcoming Hometown Album due for release in
November.
Interface does a variety of
cover music from contemporary
heavy rock such as Def Leppard and Motley Crue- to classic
rock like Led Zepplin and Deep
Purple. They also throw in
some danceable originals.
Tonight's TNT, sponsored by
UAB Alternative Sounds is the
Squash Muffins!!! Also from
Madison, they are a young and
energetic quartet who play originals as well as some cover music. (And you can pick up a
"free" Squash Muffin today in
the UC Concourse at the Alternative Sotinds booth display.)
Roulette, a central Wisconsin
I band who was featured at last
year's Riverfront Rendevous
celebration here in Stevens
Point will be playing in the
Encore next Friday night, sponsored by the Music Coalition.
Look for more of them next
week.
What did you think of the
Cheap Trick/Femme Fatale
show? Watch for reviews, pictures and interviews next week.
Give Blood ·
cont. from p. 17
to have to twist the needle because the blood's not coming
out right.
I must have yelled "don't,"
because she's telling me to be
quiet, it won't hurt. Now, she
says, squeeze the ball. I am.
Squeeze harder. Lady, I can't
Needle is out. I'm feeling fine.
Needle's out, my aim is .in the
air. I'm applying pressure. I'm
feeling sick. Wait, I never feel
sick. Then again I rarely ever
cry. Nurse sees I'm turning
green. I'm about to tell her not
to help me. Just stay away,
when all of a sudden I'm flat on
my back. People ate bringing
me water. I'm starting to feel
better. She tells me my blood
donor card will arrive in three
months or less. I want to tell
her she shouldn't bother.
Sit up, slowly. To the little
room. Eat little sandwiches and
drink more water. I hear people
all around telling how good they
feel; they wish they could give
blood every day. I put on my
little sticker that says, "B_e
Nice To Me, I Gave Blood."
Then I think, I better save it to
stick on my test tomorrow. Put
it in my pocket and stand up to
go.
Midnight · Blues 1
By Timothy Rechner
Sports Editor
As the wind blew and the
night fell on Halloween, three
disguised children crossed Division Street at the corner of Ellis
and Brawley.
As I arrived a city police officer was traveling south on Division and turned on the lights of
his squad car, stopping traffic.
The three goblins and their assistant scrambled out into the
street to collect the remainder
of the candy and hurried back
to the curb.
It was explained that one of
A worse nightmare than seemg a ghost happened in the the children had 'tripped while
middle of Division Street when crossing the street and dumped
a large bag of candy one of the the entire bag of candy.
children was carrying broke in
the middle of the southbound
There were no injuries other
lane.
than the broken heart of a child
who lost half the profits of a
Tanya Nichaly, Alex Piotrow- once a year opportunity to have
ski and Kris Eithen were spot- treats given for a smile.
ted .running from the curb, trying to salvage the candy motorThe. Pointer commends Timoists were carelessly crushing as thy for helping these children.
they continued to drive.
You have given tbese children .
•much happiness.
e
I saw the unfortunate happening from a window of a friend's
house while watching the Sunday evening football game. I
went out to aid in the recovery
of the lost treasure and to make
sure their black robed bodies
On my way out, I see a sign · were not crushed as was the
that says, "Give Blood."
candy, by the autos.
It
Feature
Writers
Needed
- Call
Kathy
x-3707
•
The
Skill Mill
Arcade
And
Pool Parlor
200 Division St.
\ I
-
-
-
---
--·-
Nov. 18, 19
Pool Tournament
SAT.
Nov.5
8-11 pm
COOL CLASSICS AND KILLER CURRENTS
QUEEN
VAN HALEN BOSTON
BON JOVI
STYX
ZEP
DEF LEPPARD
P 'PURPLE
BY:
-Guys Singles
-Girls Singles
-Doubles
-Mixed Doubles
Register by Nov. 13
• Prizes, Trophies
$5.00 Entry Fee
Expanded Hours
Sun. 12-12
Mon.-Thuts. 10-12
Fri.-Sat. 1~-1 A.M.
Call
341-6069
For details or stop by
The Skill Mill
In the North Point
Shopping Center
:
I
Pointer page 19
rnrnurnrnrnrn~------~
.rnrnarnrnrnrn=-=~==rn==u=-=~--P-rq-ir-=ie=-=.C=-=h==ick:..::::e::_n-La-'n_d_P_rO_p____os-aI
by Cindy Byers
Outdoors Writer
Carl Hodges is not worried
about the Greenhouse Effect
that is threatening to warm the
A Earth and change the way curwrent ecosystems operate .
Hodges has been working to
make deserts bloom and has a
- dream to 8omeday build giant
greenhouses on Mars. His biggest area a£ expertise is with
halophytes which are salt-tolerant plants. If humans can cultivate halophytes and make them
palatable it may unlock the use
of seawate~ for irrigation. This
would free up 99.5% of the
earth's water which is now
unuseable for irrigation. If
Hodges succeeds this would insure food production even if
weather patterns change.
According to the Izaak Walton
League of America this year
will see the second lowest level
of ducks in the United States in
recorded history. The drought is
of course a factor, but the
IWLA also claims that illegal
kills are a large part of the decline. Highs of 140 million birds
were seen in the 1940s. Only
about 66 million are expected
this year. The IWLA advocates
greater enforcement by fish and
wildlife. . . officials especially to
control baiting of marshes.
They also support expansion of
wetland areas nationwide.
8andhill crane populations
have rebounded in recent years,
but they too would benefit from
more wetland areas.' These
birds gather 1n the fall in various areas and head south. Fall
may be the best time of year to
see sandhills as they are extremely secretive during the
brooding season. In 1936 the
state's popUlation may have
fallen to as little as 25 breeding
pairs. Today there may be as
many as 6,000 bii-ds.
Recent legislation has
updated environmental education requirements for Wisconsin
teachers. One way the DNR is
helping t.e achers reach their
proficiencies is by offering Project Learning Tree (PLT) workshops. PLT ~ttempts to reach a
_b~d philosophical spectrum in
uruts about ,forestry, pollution,
land use and more. The Bureau
o~ _Forestry has taken respon$bility for spreading PLT's use
and cooperates with a number
of state and private agencies.
Millions of1dollars have been
spent to clean up the Great
Lakes by both the United states
and Canada. Many successes
have· been won on pollution control and hazardous waste cleanups. A new problem is the use
of monofilament nets for fishing. If these nets break loose
they become ghost fishers. The
gynthetic materials don't break
down and seabirds and fish can
continue to tangle and die in the
nets. They also wrap around
boat propellors and cooling water intakes. No effective action
has yet been advised.
The United States Navy is
taking steps to reduce plastic
pollution in the world's oceans.
Most seagoing ships dump their
garbage at sea. Millions of marine animals, sea turtles, fish
1
Alf9"
~~~~~
24
-
RHINELANDER, . WI-The
Department of Natural Re-
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and seabirds are killed or
maimed every year from
encounters with plastic wraps,
bags and soft drink holders.
One of the major ways the
Navy is helping is by eliminating plastic food packaging from
ship's stores. Atlantic Fleet submarines are also required to
store all plastics for on shore
disposal.
Several citizen's groups have
sued the federal government to
stop low-level military overflights of the Boundary Waters
Canoe Area (BWCA). About 153
flights took place in 1983 compared to 1,425 in 1986. Most of
these flights are at supersonic
speeds which produce sonic
booms and shatter the stillness
of the area and the wilderness
experience of its paddlers. The
groups advocate the use of
Lake Superior for overflights or
other forest areas not designated as wilderness.
Since 1965 the Land and Water Conservation Fund has paid
. for the purChase of over 5.5 million acres of parks and recreation areas to the tune of $3.2 billion. This fund was sustained
with gas leasing revenues and
surplus federal land sales. It
expires in 1989. Arizona representative Morris Udall has presented the American Trust Act
HR 4127, to continue the pur:
chasing power of the fund by
combining it with the Historic
Preservation Trust. It is
thought that over $1 billion
could be generated within 4
years and the bill would bypass
annual reappropriation.
1989 has been proclaimed the
Year of the Escarpment by the
Wisconsin Academy of Arts
Letters and Science. Thi~
means Wisconsin's Door County
will be in the limelight. The
Door peninsula is underlain by
a wedge of Niagara dolomite
that is 350 feet thick. This natural geologic feature is part of a
larger rock formation that also
reaches the surface at Niagara.
. Falls which gives it the name
Niagara escarpment. National
.and international symposiums
~e the goal of the proclamation. UW-GB is the likely site
for gatherings.
Outdoor
. Writer
Wanted:
Call
6-3707
sources will propose to the DNR
Board in November that 7,196
acres of land in Portage and
Adams Counties be purchased
by the State. The limd is located
in the Portage County towns of
Grant, Pine Grove, Plover and
Buena Vista. 260 acres of land
in the AdamS County town of
Leola is also involved. DNR
Wildlife Manager Jim Keir
says, "The land in question has
been purchased over the years
by the Society of Tynpanuchus
Cupido Pinnatus (STCP) to en~ce and preserve the Prairie
Chicken in exchange for paying
· the. taxes on the property.
The agreement has been a
good one for STCJ;> as the Prairie chickens ahve thrived, but
recently, the State has been
burdened with a growing
property tax bill that threatens
the entire Prairie Chicken PrOgram." As a result, says Keir,
the Department and STCP recent!>:' c~ncluded a .ong series of
negotiations to transfer title of
the 7,196 acres of land to the
State.
"In exchange for the one million dollar sale of the land the
state will be relieved of its
property tax burden and further
agrees that present and future
management of the Prairie
Chicken will Department for future management of the birds
while the remaining half millio~
dollars will be .used by STCP to
finance DNR endangered resource programs around the
state."
Property Owners in the area
of the land purchases are
unlikely to notice any changes
as a result of the transaction
between the DNR and STCP.
Management of the Prairie
Chickens will continue as before. "Just as importantly "
adds Keir, "local property tax'es ·
will not rise because of this
sale." A recent Department of
Revenue study concluded that
as · State aid becomes available
to the towns to offset the ·loss of
land removed from the tax
base, local property taxes in the
project
would on average
be slightly lower. "This State
area
aids in lieu of taxes formula
has been successfully used elsewhere in the state, and I expect
no difference in the Portage and
Adams County towns impacted
by this proposed sale," said
Keir.
·
Private land acquisition in
Central Wisconsin for Prairie
Chicken management began in
the 1950's after the bird populati.on was dwindling and the speCies seemed headed for extinction in the state.
Outdqor Report
· ·MADISON, WI-Bow hunters for those hunters willing to face
are having greater success now inclement weather. Diver duck
that the white-tailed deer have .hunting is good on Shawano
begun their breeding season in Lake. In Grant County, duck
eru;nest. Deer are on the move hunters are having good sucand are being observed more cess; there are a lot of maloften in forest openings farm lards at Poolll.
fields and along the ~dside.
Goose hunting opportunities
Consequently, registrations are are very good in the Ranup.
dolph/Courtland area of ColumRuffed grouse hunters are bia County; large numbers of
having excellent success in Lin- geese continue to use the Mud
coln and Langlade counties. Lake area. There are also plenNorthern woodcock have moved ty of geese remaining in the Exinto Iowa County, providing terior and Horican zones. Hunt~ood hunting. Pheasant hunting ers are reminded to ask permis'in southern Wisconsin is good sion when hunting on private
on public hunting grounds, but lands. Fall fishing in the northnot much activity is reported on west continues to be good for
private land.
the few brave souls that venRaccoon hunting and trapping ture forth. Inland lakes in the
pressure is down due to low pelt Brule area are producing good
prices. The trapping season for catches -of crappies; musky
muskrat and mink should be action is good on the Turtleproductive in the north due to Flambeau Flowage; Lake Supelow water levels.
· rior fishing is slow. Walleye
·In the northwest, flights of fishing is picking up around the
Canada geese are less obvious Woodruff area. Anglers have
now as other northern migrants been catching trout in lakes, but
continue the fall procession. remember that fishing on the
Snow and blue geese, northern "trout only" lakes closes Nomallards and the last of the vember 15th. The lakes that
woodcock are being observed.· have both warm and cold water
There are a few ducks around fish species remain open to fish-
~
until March first.
In the southeast, fishing is
generally slow in Sheboygan
and Omukee counties. Pier and
shore anglers at Milwaukee's
Summerfest grounds are getting
good catches of perch and some
limit catches of chinook and
rainbows. Racine County shore
anglers are finding good action
inside the harbor on the north
side. of the road leading to the
manna. The Root River is producing good to' excellent fishing
from Island Park upstream to
the dam. Pier-and--shore anglers
are catching chinook and rainbows near the mouth of the
Pike River and in Kenosha har!>or. Fishing inland on the Pike
IS excellent at times.
Walleye fishing · on the Wisconsin River has dropped off.
Some nice smallmouth and largemouth bass are being caught
in Pools 10 and 11 on the Mississippi, and they're getting twoto three-pound walleye and
sauger below the Dubuque dam.
Walleye activity is picking up
on Lake Wisconsin and there's
good walleye action in the Eau
Claire area.
·
Pointer page 20, Thursdw November 3, 19118
''NOVEMBER''
SPECIALS
e.
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Two 14" Cheese Pizzas
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Stevens Point, WI
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Phone: 345-0901
With this coupon receive
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1 ONLY $699
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Phone: 345-0901
For Fast, Free DeliveryT· CALL.~.
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Open
Sun.-Wed.-11 a.m.-1:30a.m.
Thur. - 11 a.m.-2:00a.m.
Fri.-Sat. - 11 a.m.-3:00a.m.
j
Pointer page 21
rn. ~UJ rnrnrnill~~~illTI~rnrn~
Social lss\}es Forum
r~~~m rnrnamu\7 ffi~~ill~ rn~
L~1[[~ urnffiu ~ ~ rn~ ~~~rn~rnTI
,
By Maurie Kim
Act Advisor
F. Scott Fitzgerald once said,
''the test of a first rate intelligence is the ability to hold two
opposed ideas at the same time
This particular statement can and still retain the ability to
be very annoying and rather function." Instilling this idea
irritating. I mean really, WHO among the UWSP student body
CARES!!! Scme people actually is the primary goal of the rethink they know everything cently established Social Issues
about "me" just because they Forum.
have associated with someone
As a social issues committee,
. else who happens to be black.
one of our main objectives is to
increase the student's awareMy color, my ~ender or J?lY ness of what is going on in the
shoe size has nothing to do With
my character or personality world around them. On campus
what-so-ever!! And sometimes I and in Stevens Point ' alone,
wish people would consider that there are- a number of conbefore stating, "well, I know, troversial issues that warrant
attention of college students,
one of my best friends is the
but tend to go unnoticed by
black... " .
them~ Our second main objecBelieve me, this does not give tive is to encourage students to
you a license to ILL! Seriously, seek out informatim on both the
the next time you want to utter left and right sides of . an issue
that phrase or compare me (or and determine where they fall
anyone else for that matter) to along the issue's continuum
some irrelevant prejudgements based on that information.
that you have decided to make
We plan to focus on five maon the premises of other peo- jor social issues throughout the
ples character, think twice _(or ~9 academic year by combinthrice if that's what it takes) ing speakers, programs and
and ~ybe you might not insult events in attempt to heighten
that person under that beautiful social issues awareness. Our
skin of color.
Oct./Nov. issue, "Vote 88," has
.... one Of my best friends is black
by Casauncjra McGraw
Contributor
For the past four years I have
heard the exact comment by so
many people who feel tha~ they ·
have to j~ their preJudgements about me or my racial
background by stating " ...well,
one of my best friends is
black... ".
/
'Toons
ing, but J! knoW there were plenty of loilsy excuses, too. A couple that come to mind are laziness and selfishness.
I'm guilty too, so I hope I'm
not coming off as "holier-thanthou". If usually takes a slap in
the head with a two-by-four to
get my eyes off of myself and
on others. Sometimes I wish
that some starving kid or bag
lady would be dropped in the
middle of my living room for
two weeks. How would I deal
with tha~? I couldn't turn off
my T.V. or steer clear of them
as they dug through the dumpsters, then.
How would you deal with that
kind of reality? Why is it different when they're beyond our little world? Are we any less responsible?
Jesus had a lot to say about
the poor and needy (whether
you believe in the Bible or not,
I've never found more reality
or satisfaction than in Christ's
words. They changed my life
and that's hard to dispute or explain away.) In Matthew 25:3146, Jesus basically says, "The
way you love the person you
love the least, is the way you
love God the most." James 2:113 also talks about the poor and
their treatment. Check it out.
So, enough sermonizing, yes?
Yes. For those of you who are
helping the poor, needy, homeless and other broken people,
keep working. For those of you
who have devoted your lives to
yourselves, cut the jive and
start helping to change the
world.' It's gotta be us.
-·
SGA
by Jodi Ott
News Contributor
The Student Government
Association (SGA) meets every
Thursday at 7 p.m. with caualready been planned and im- cuses held from 6:30 p.m. to 7
plemented. For our Nov./Dec. p.m.
issue, we are in the planning
SGA is funded through stu- .
stages of increasing the aware- dent segregated . fees which is
ness of pornography. We expect approximately $78 per student.
and hope to create a lot of con- The month of October was used
troversy among students with to allocate these funds.
this issue. As with all our
Some money iS going to the
issues, we will try to program Student Art League to fund a
both pro and con informa~on trip to Chicago on November
concerning pornography. ~e fifth and sixth to see the work
F. Scott Fitzgerald, we believe of classic artist Gauguin. .
that an informed decision is an
SGA is also working on formintelligent decision.
ing a No Smoking subcommi~
with Mike Mika1sen as chair.
The social issues committee is The subcommittee is gathering
composed of students who are information on smoking in genrepresentative of various organ- eral and they will . be considerizations on campus. Currently, ing one of three choices.
we have representatives from
They will either- leave policies
Association for Community as they stand, modify current
Tasks, University Activities policies or ban smoking comBoard, Students Government pletely. At least one publicized
Association, Young Democrats, open session will be held for
College Republicans, the Wo- students to voice their concerns.
men's Resource Center, and the
Upcoming· on the agenda,
Pointer. But there's always
is a conflict of whether or
room for new faces. If you or a there
not to use student money to
member of your organization is fund male exotic dancers. The
interest in joining our team, University Activities Board
call Maurie Kim or Marie · (UAB) is hoping to bring in
Brooks at X4343 in the Campus male strippers in connection
Activities Complex. We'd love with the issue of pornography
to hear from you.
for an awareness program.
.·R E $ E R V·E 0 F F I C E R S'
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~ ·
oPoiater pq_e 22, Thursday,
November 3, 1•
.. While on 8S!Iignment in New
York CitY,
be was . driving
his most prized possession - a
1924 Ford Woody station wagon,
he was involved in a very serious automobile accident. As he
was driving down a two lane
highway, he ·lost control of his
vehicle and hit a semi head on.
Pinned in the wreckage, the
first people on the scene
assumed that he was a goner.
He had to be removed from
the car in pieces (this was long
before the jaws of life were invented): first his arms, his
legs, and then the rest of his
body. He was rushed to the hos·
pital, where the fonnost experts
in arm and leg reattaching
were assigned to his case. After
a few days, his condition began
to improve, but the question remained: would he ever regain
the use of his once severed
limbs? As it turned out, despite.
as
broadcasting).
,
And now, tbis week's colwnn:
You know the news, now its
time for the rest of the story .........
He was born in Stevens Point,
WisconSin in November of 1938.
His J)arents, Mary and Herb
Doodilizski, were recent immigrants to the United states. In
their wildest dreams, Mary and
Herb could never have imagined what w~ to become of
their only child: he was to become one of the most respected
and revered individuals of twentieth century America.
As a boy, he worked on two
different paper routes - one in
the morning and one in the
afternoon. After high school,
where he grad~ted ~ in his
class (be also lettered twelve
times in four different sports),
he went on to study at the Wisconsin state University in Stevens Point.
While studying communications and acting, he worked at
three different jobs - seventy
five hours per week. Over the
course of the three years it took
him to graduate he carried an
average load of twenty-nine credits per semester.
After graduating with honors,
he took a job as a D.J. andre. porter ·at a country radio station. He worked dilligently, but
he could not deny his one true
dream: to become a famous television celebrity.
But ·then, the fickle hand of
fate slapped him in the face.
many gallons of elmers glue sandwblch at Los Angeles inteJ'o
and an eqUal ainount of fast nati"nal airort, he just hapdrying epoxy, he would never pened to sit down next to one of
again regain the use of his the more influential television
arms and legs.
producers in Hollywood. He
What would become of him? greatly impressed the producer,
Would he have to get a job as a who promptly hired hfm to dCl
baseball base? as a doormat? It his nationally broadcast· telelooked as though his career in vsion show; and, the rest, &
the entertainment business was they say, is history. 1
over.
In just a few short years, He
But as fate would have it, IW! became one of the most
doctor had been a carpenter be- admired of all of ijollywood's
fore he went to medical school. celebrities. His smile and
Using his woodworking skilli friendly manner beCame a Holand the technology which would lywood trademark. He was
later lead to the development of admired by children land ·adults
the six-million dollar man, he · alike. Despite all of the hard
began building him the world's times he endured, he couldn't
most advanced artificial anns ~ve been more of a II_!ICCess in A
and legs.
After being released from the life.
He touched the hearts of mil-·· •
hospital, feeling as though he lions. Through his example, we
had nothing to lose, he caught learn the importance of- desire
the first plane to California. and a hard days work - every-While eating a Corned Beef thing that made America what
it is today (star-spangled Banner playing in backround) -the
greatest country in the history
of the world.
And his name ; you
ask.........Howdy Doody.
But now you know the rest of
the story............. Paul Hardly..........Good day!
.
(In no way is this column
meant to be repre$!1ltative ·of
the natiqnally syndicated radio
show, "Paul Harvey - The Rest
of the Story." In no 1way is tbis
colwnn intended to imply that
the topics chosen by Paul Harvey in "The Rest of 'the Story" _
are stupid and inanel In no way
is tbis column meant to imply·
that Paul Harvey is anything
but an open minded, objective
reporter of the news. In no way
is tbis colwnn meant to suggest
that Paul Harvey should have
retired years ago, while he still
had full control of his faculties.
In no way is this article meant
to imply .that Paul Harvey is a
right-wing, fascist pig, who typlifies the values 1that have
made America what it is today:
the absolute oppr~r of the
underdeveloped, non-democratic
nations of the world. Any similarities between the styles of
Paul Harvey and Paul Hardly
are purely coincidental.) Peace.
-
Bush
·· Press here for a great
data processing career.
....
The right time. The right place.
State Farm is hiring.
If you're a senior with a data
processing, computer science or
math background,Jbere may be
a very special career opportunity
waiting for you in one of the
largest corporate data processing facilities in the country.
There are actuarial and auditing jobs open, too.
Blue Chip. Green light. State
Farm is one of America's leading
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You'll receive expert training.
You'll work on state-of-the-art
choice for Vice President. He
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20, 1981, as the 43rd Vice President of the U.S. He was
reelected in 1984.
During nearly eight years as
Vice President, ,Bush has
chaired task forces on regulatory relief, on Atlanta child
m~rders, on So':l~h Flor~da
cnme, on narcotics crossmg
the border, on community as- A,
sistance in the Southwest, and •
on Japanese trade. ,
As Vice Presidenf, he has traveled over a million miles and
visited 74 foreign countries.
~
·
data processing equipment 'tbu'll
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·You couldn't have a more solid
base to build a career on.
Contact your caimpus
Placement Director about
·State Farm today.
Or visit the State Farm Recruiter: Our representative will
be on pampus November 15
STATE FARM INSURANCE COMPANIES. Horne Offices: Bloomington, Illinois. An Equal OpportunHy Employer.
Friday
Fis~-
Fry
sa.so
..
Pointer page 23
l
f1NNOUNC€M€NT~
Riddle: How can you develop
Do you have the "Bah Humyour learning skills, improve
your health and generally relax bugs?" because you can't get
after a stressful day? Hypnosis any presents for the family for
is the doorway to your expand- · Christmas? Don't be a Scrooge,
ed self. COme learn what hypno- come shopping with UAB Travsis can do for you. UAB Issues el and Leisure time at the Fox '
River Mall Nov. 19. $5 will cov& Ideas will hold a mini-course
Mondays Nov. 7.14.21.28 7-8:30 er your trip which leaves at 9
pm. Just bring $8 to the Univer- a.m. and will return at 7 p.m.
sity Activities window and sign You can sign up at the Campus
Activities window by Nov. 14.
up before Nov 4.
FRESil FROM- ALASKA!!!
PRSSA will hold an executive
board meeting today at 5:00 pJ;n Ever wonder about commercial in the Dodge Room, U.C. Please fishing and journalism in the
Great White North? Hear Point
• dress for pictures.
PRSSA will-- hold a general grad Jana Suchy, Thurs. Nov 3·
meeting Monday November 7th at 7:00 p~ in CNR 112 ~on
at 5:00p.m. in the Green Ro_9m, her expenences.
U.C.
Women's Resource Center
proudly presents "Can't Lie
Low,", an area female f9lksinging trio on Thursday, November
3rd at 7:00.
Free admission and munchies. 'Bring a friend and see
you then!
Starting to look for a job?
Making some career decisions?
Let David Swanson help you!
Cotp.e to "What Color is your
Parachute? Wednesday Nov. 16,
7 p.m.-UC PBR Sponsored by
UAB-Issues and Ideas.
Come eat at the OOPS cafe.
. Tell them you saw it in the
Pointen and help J and L get a
good grade.
/
·
Watch your step! The squash
muffins are coming Thursday, .
November 3rd to the Encore .
with music to' make you move.Free, courtesy of Alternative
sounds. It's ·not just for breakfast anymore!
Hot Tunes!! The Squash Muffins are coming! Thurs. Nov. 3,
8-10 pm. It's free join us in the
Encore and be ready to dance!
UAB Alternative Sounds-Experience the different.
Just lfhO is David Swanson?
Find out Nov. 16 at 7 pm-PBR.
Can't wait!
So you have a cold? Sorry to
"hear' that. Subjects are
needed for a research project
· on the rlffect that an upper respiratory, hearing. Your participation would be greatly appre. ciated. For more information
please hontact ·LeeAnn Moesh
(341-829~)or Eve Pfau. Don't let
that col~ ~ome and go before
we've had a chance to test. Call
today.
Want to learn how to scuba
dive. Here's your chance.
Classes start Sunday Nov. 6
5:00-9:00 pm at the pool and run
for six weeks. For more information and to sign up call 344DIVE or show up at the pool.
Sponsored by Scuba Club.
Folk Fair in Milwaukee on
Saturday November 19. H interested sign-up in Foreign Language Lab to get a seat on the
bus. Cost $6.00. More information available in Language Lab.
SPRING BREAK Representative or Organization needed to
promote SPRING BREAK to
Texas, Florida and Florida &
Colorado. We pay TOP commissions and FREE trips! Call
Sunchase Tours today 1-800-3215911. _ I
- HEY, how about a ride home?
Well, catch the STP van on
Mondays-Thursdays at 9:00 or
11:00 pm. It stops at parking lot
E near CNR, in front of Berg
Gym and in front of the library.
This is a free service provided
by Women's Resource Center
and Protective Services.
For Sale: Pioneer Receiver,
digital with 16 presets, 30
watts/ch., like new. $80 3442414.
Female grad student-looking
for non-smoking roomate. Single
room available immediately.
~hone 345-0233 after 7:00pm
1 room available in 2- bedroom apartment for 2nd semester. Located across the street
from Collins Classroom Center-The Varsity Apts. Rent is $117
per month including heat. Call
341-8719!
·
1 or 2 females wanted to sublease for 2nd semester. Big
house 3 roommates 2 blocks
from campus, $625/sem. call
341-4738, Rebecca
To sublet: 3 single house for
· 2nd semester. $725 per person
includes microwave. Great
house, close to campus. Call
John, Rich or Steve 344-4407.
EMPLOYMENT
Two area nars need bartenders. H yow· interested in this
line of work, then stop by the
Student Employment Office (003
SSC) and ask about jobs 3928 or
3934•
,''Jwastit rubbing
· it in-I just wanted
Eddie to know
the score of
Jast nights game.'' .
~
Go ahead and gloat. You can
rub it in all the way to Chicago
with A18if Long Distance Service.
Besides, your best friend Eddie
was the one who said your team
rould never win three straight.
So give him a calL It rosts a
lot less than you think to let him
know who's headed for the Playoffs.
Reach out and touch someone~ .
If youti like to know more al:xmt
A18if products and services, like
International Calling and the A18if
Card, call us at 1 800 222-0300.
l
Sponsored by Women in Natural Resources and the Fisheries
Society.
I
V.. Lb'. Burger Special
: Burger, Fries
and Drink
€
sr:::-;~ POINT. w1
AD.T ,
The right choice.
.~..:::
;tot'"~
to
~ick:y 'st
_.,.
When You
VOTE
-
NOVEMBER 8th
Vote for.
STATE SENATOR
DAVID HELBACH
•
•
•
•
1972 graduate, UWSP, BA in Communications.
Outstandi~g Alumnus, UWSP Division of Communications 1988.
_
Environmentalist of the Year, UWSP College of Natural Resources.
Fought for state funding to build new Physical Education facility, the Paper
Science Building, the Library addition and the Environmental Station at
Treehaven. .
• Guest lecturer, UWSP Departments of Education, Home Economics, Natural
Resources, and Communications.
• UWSP Commendation for "outstanding achievementS and
leadership·in the state's legislative arena" and "extraordinary
efforts to preserve traditions of excellence throughout the
UW ~ystem."
• 10 years of service in the State Legislature.
• Sen~te Education Chairman, Joint Committee on Finance.
• Member, Senate Education Committee. ·
• Supports tuition cap and access for all students.
"In Dave Helbach, students have a Senator who listens to
what we are saying about issues that affect educati~n and
that affect us. He gives us a voice in the Legislature and
makes sure that voice is heard. UWSP students should be
doing all we can to see that Dave Helbach is re-elected by
a wide margin."
JESSICA CHEVAliER
"I've worked with Dave Helbach and watched him in
action, both here and in Madison. You won't find a harder ·
working Senator. And he's always there when we need
him."
.
KEVIN SHIBILSKI
"David Helbach is one of the most effective proponents of
high~r education in the Wisconsin Legislature."
GENE JOHNSON
"Each time we have gone to Dave Helbach for help, he has
stepped right in and fought for UWSP's needs. A case in
point was the physical education addition, which faced·
elimination from the State Building Commission's project
list. Dave met with each Commission member to fight Tor
the new facility."
· JOAN NORm
Authorized and paid for by Friends of Helbach, Pafty Glennon, Stevens Point, Treasurer.
-
I
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