Day · to be o bserved

advertisement
·to -the preservation of the first amendrr_tent"
.
)IOLl)ME 33 ·N0.26
UWSP
. APRIL 19,1990
.
.
E~rth Day· to be o.b served
~am pus
events scheduled throughout week
by Timothy Byers .
. Staf!Writer
Here we are again! It's time
for ano~er E&flh Week and
Earth Day. Through a number
of lucky events and scheduling
I have been able to participate in
some way in every Earth Day
here at Point since 1982. I think
this one will be just about the
bestyet.
·
I am looking forward especially to hearing our Earth Week
Keynote Speaker David Brower
next Monday night. I would.
urge all of you to make the time
to come to this event. Brower
has been a giant in the environmental movement since the
Second World War and is certainly one of the most important
figures of the 20th Century.
He was the first Executive
Director of the Sierra Club in the
1950s. He founded Friends of
the Earth (FOE) in the 1970s
and now directs Earth Island Institute (EIS) a groUp he also
founded. Through the years ·he
has met with presidents, directors, ordinary folks, and famous
authors. His thrust has been to
preserve and save the Earth for
the betterment of all people.
Some of the battles he has
been involved with are: preventing Grand Canyon dams, setting
aside North Cascades National
Park, preserving Point Reyes
National Seashore and protecting Redwoods National Park.
One of Brower's main sources of strength has been his
work with young people who
have energy and ideas. He has
always surrounded himself with
people who were willing to
work hard, to go the extra mile,
to do the right thing. Though he
is now 79 he has the energy of a
inuch younger man and this has
to be ·from his philosophy of
fighting for the best the Earth
has to offer. .
Brower's concern for the
Earth comes from simple beginnings. His family didn't have
much money, but they made
. ·.J
UWSP EARTH WEEK CALENDAR
Thursday, April 19th: An Anniversary Rally Is
planned Thursday evening at 7 pm. The rally
will be held on the University sundial, with
several speakers, music, and a candlelight
vigil for the Earth. Sponsored by Alliance for
· Sustainable Earth.
Friday, Apri120: Earth Tunes- From 11:30 to
4, musicians Mike Skurek, Ruth Oppendahl,
Tim Byers, and Burnt Toast and Jam will perform envlromental music. Sponsored by Environmental Educators and Naturalists ·
Association and Environmental Council.
Saturday, April21: Hunger Clean-Up sponsored by the Association for Community
Tasks. Beautify the environment and raise
funds for the Portage County Hunger and
Homeless center. For more Info, call ACT at ·
x2260
Sunday, April22: meet Wisconsin's Wildlife
at the Schmeeckle ReseNe from 1 to 4 pm. ·
Take part In crafts and game.s, and view the
works of area wildlife artists.
.
Monday! April 23: Environmentalist activist
and Earth Island Institute Chairman, David
Brower will be the UWSP EARTH WEEK 1990
KEYNOTE SPEAKER, speaking on Monday
evening, at 7:30pm In Collins 101. There will
be copies of_hls autobiography available
for purchase and signing.
Tuesday, April24: The WILDLIFE SOCIETY Is
presenting Assemblyman Spenser Black at 7
pm In CNR 112 speaking on the New Gonservatlon Era for Wisconsin.
Thusday, April 26: The WILDLIFE SOCIETY will
be sponsoring a multi-media presentation
· by former graduate student VIctor
Akemann at 7pm In the UC Wisconsin Room
- about wolves.
Together our efforts are multisure they got out for a camping
Cleanup. Sunday is Earth Day .
plied and the end result is
trip each summer. It was then
and the Schmeekle Reserve Go
greater than we could have·done
he learned that the important
Wild day. Next week sees even
alone.
things in life were the ones ofmore activities. Details about .
Mark it down on your calenfered by the Earth. His own
these and many more are availdar now, Collins Building Lecfamily learned those lessons too
able elsewhere in this issue of
ture Hall, 7:30 p.m. next
as he led his OWn children on
the Pointer. Look for them and
Monday, April 23, David
summer camping trips.
get involved, you are the hope
Brower. You won't regret it.
Former Secretary of the Infor the future.
terior Stuart Udall calls Brower
And don't forget that Earth
one of the pivotal figures who
Day and Earth Week don't end
helped us tum around to a inore .
The problems are still
And don'tforget that April27.
environmentally sound way ·of
there to be solved and the
looking at the Earth. But . Earth Day and Earth delights of the Earth are still
Brower would say we haven't
Week don't end April27. there to be savored. Remember
gone far enough. One needs
The problems are still to get out and have some fun in
only look in the paper for the
the natural world. We can
there •••
latest disaster to know that he is
. spend lots of time worrying, and
speaking the truth.
we should about some things,
Bringing David Brower to
but take a few moments now and
UW-SP has not been easy and
There is much else happenthen to look at the sunset, go
has been a cooperative effort be- . . ing as well this week. Tonight
down to the river to see the
tween many groups: EENA,
is a kickoff rally for Earth Week
ducks, get out into the
SGA, WPRA, Environmental
in the Sundial sponsored by Alcountryside and look for .
Council, Chancellor Sanders,
liance For A Sustainable Earth.
sandhill cranes, or explore the
Dean Haney, and many more.
Tomorrow is the ever popular
river bottoms for the first skunk This effort illustrates the impOrEarth Tunes Day on the Sundial
cabbage.
You will be
tance of working together as a
or in the Encore if the weather is
rejuvenated and the Earth will
group to solve a problem. · bad.
Saturday is Hunger
benefit from your care.
Captain Ecology
Supe_
r hero to sing at rally tonight
by Brian Leahy
Outdoors Editor
Captain Ecology will perform at the 20th Earth Day anniversary rally to be held 7p.m.
at the Sundial tonight.
Captain Ecology performs
songs with environmental messages.
Captain Ecology is a superhero. He is the promoter and
protector of environmental.
wellness.
According to Captain Ecology, environmental wellness is
a philosophy for all life on earth.
It is the ever-growing, everchanging, ever-enhancing state
of well-being which results
from a holistic harmony and
balance of the physical, ecological, and spiritual dimensions of
the environment--supported by
positive and and preventive ·
human actions.
Environmental wellness ties
human wellness into the wellness of the earth. An unhealthy
environment is not conducive to
human health. For example,
breathing in smog is bad for the
respiratory system.
"Imagine evetjthing thatis
good for the environment, that is
environment wellness," said
Captain Ecology.
He also promotes the
philosophy of deep ecology as
compared to that of . shallow
ecology.
Shallow ecology is the standard scientific study oforganisms
Captain Ecology~ who is never seen in the same
room with Shane Totten, will perform tonight's rally
in the Sundial (Photo by Brian Leahy).
and their interactions with their
environment.
Deep· ecology goes beyond
shallow ecology. Deep ecology
niakes value statements about
the environment. Deep ecology
puts ,ecology into a spiritual
sense.
Deep ecology has eight foundations:
1. The well-being and
flourishing of human and nonhuman life on earth have value
in themselves.
2. Richness and diversity of
life forms contribute to the
realization of these values and
are also values in themselves.
3. Humans have no right to
.reduce this richness and diversity except to satisfy vital needs.
4. The flourishing of human
life and cultures is compatible
with a substantial decrease of the human population.
S. Present human .inter-
Continued on page 7
'
.Pointer Page 2 Thursday, April 19th, 1990
-
.NEWS-----.,.----:--•
I.
·-
• •
Comm week features national celebrities
Richard Schlesinger
Two award-winning broadcast
journalists and 20 successful
Communication alumni will be
featured in Communication
Week '90, April 22-26 at the
University of WisconsinStevens Point.
The special week-long event,
sponsored by the University's
Division of Communication,
will include guest lectures,
workshops and career counseling sessions for students.
Author, broadcastelj and syndicated columnist Linda Ellerbee
and CBS News Corresdpondent
Richard
Schlesinger- will
of CBS News, will present a
keynote the week's activities.
public lecture on Monday, April
Both journalists will present
23, in the Program Banquet
evening lectures, which will be
Room of the UW-SP University
open to the public at no charge.
Center. Hispesentationistitled
"Communicaton Week '90 is
"A Broadcast Journalist's
an opportunity for our students
Perspective on Events in 1990."
to learn from a wide variety of
Schlesinger, who recently
communication professionals,"
covered the release of Nelson
according to James Moe, AsMandela in South Africa, is a
sociate Dean and Head of the
frequent contributor to the CBS
Division of communication.
Evening News with Dan Rather.
"We hope our majors will
He has reported from a variety
benefit from having personal
of locales including the Soviet
contact with some of our most
Union and South America. He
successful alumni."
also occasionally anchors ~e
One highlight of the week will
CBS Sunday Night News. .
be alumni office hours. Each
- Before joining CBS News in
visiting alum will be availahle to
1984, Schlesinger, 35, served as
meet wtth communication stuWashingtonBureauChiefofthe
dents one-on-one and in small
Post-Newsweek stations (1980groups during office hours to
1984), and as a reporter coverdiscuss their jobs and offer
ing politics for WPLG-TV in
career preparation advice.
Miami (1976-1980). He has
Many of the visiting alumni
won several local Emmys and a
will also serve as guest lecturers
Sigma Delta au award.
in communication classes
In addition to his public lecthroughout the week.
ture, Schlesinger will be con· "We see this as an excellent
ducting a workshop for
chance to bring outstanding ex- . communication majors on
pertise into our classsrooms,"
careers in broadcasting and
Moe said. "Our students can
journalism:
learn a lot from the real world
Ellerbee, one of the best known
experiences of our past
women in broadcast journalism,
graduates."
will speak on Wednesday, April
Schlesinger, a six-year veteran . 25, at 7:30p.m. in the Pro_gram
•
•
Banquet Room of the University Center. Her lecture is called
"And So It Goes ...An. Evening
with Linda Ellerbee."
Ellerbee spent 11 years (19761986) at NBC News, where she
covered the United States Congress, presidential campaigns
and national political conventions. While at NBC, she also
anchored and wrote the awardwinning
news
magazine
Weekend, Summer Sunday USA, several documentaries,
the Today Show feature series
TGIF, and the pioneer late-night
news program NBC News
Overnight, which was cited by
Linda Ellerbee
the Columbia DuPont Awards
as possibly "the best written and
Pulitzer Prize and is used as a
most intelligent news program
textbook at more than 30 univerever."
sities.
In 1986, Ellerbee moved to
In 1987, Ellerbee left network
ABC to write and anchor the
television news to form her own
prime-time historical series,
company, Lucky Duck-Produc"Our World," for which she won
that year's Emmy for best writ- · tions, which produces programs
for network, syndica_tion, cable
ing.
and public television.
Her book about her career in
In addition to her frequent
television, "And So It Goes",
stayed on The New York Times _ television a~arances, Ellerbee, 45, arites a newspaper
best-seller list for 18 weeks, sold
column which ~s syndicated naone half million copies in
tionally.
hardback and was on the paperback best-seller list for five
months. It was nominated for a
rhompson signs bill
Student leaders praised Governor Tommy Thompson on his
positive signature of Assembly
Bill431, which will require the
UW System to provide information, programming and statistics
on sexual assault and date rape
to all UW students.
United Council President Jim
Smith says that this law, Wisconsm Act 177, will make Wisconsin the national leader in
providing this type of information to students. "By providing
information on the epidemic of
rape on campus to students and
parents, people will be able to
get a realistic picture of what the
campus climate for women is
before choosing a school."
Mary Martin, UC Women's
Affairs Director thanked stu-
dents state-wide for coming out
to actively support the measure.
"I think the Governor might
have been tired of getting phone
calls from all over the state on
this.
Although Act 177 is a
landmark step for the UW, it
will not end the epidemic of date
rape on campus. "We don't expect this information to stop
rape," Martin said. "But if one
person is saved because ot" this
information, all the work and
political fighting in passing this
bill was worth it."
The bill will be implemented
by the UW System and the information will be available to
students next fall. The major
provisiOns of the bill are as follows;
1) The definition of sexual assault (including date rape) will
be provided to $tudents.
2) Information on programs
and services on sexual assault
.will be provided to students.
3) The penalties for varying
degrees of sexual assault will be
provided to students.
4) National, state and campus
statistics (both official and unofficial) will be tabulated and
made public each year ,by all
UW campuses.
5) An oral presentation on
sexual assault will be presented
at freshman orientation.
6) Written materials on sexual
assault on campus will be sent to
every UW studen~ each year.
ROTC subject of press conference
By Blair Cleary
Eaitor-in-chief
·
Department of Defense· ROTC
Members of ~tuaent Governpolicy as "blatant discriminament and the student advocacy
tion." She went on to say that
group, the Jacobins, held a joint
Wisconsin has always been a
press conference yesterday to
leader in the fight against disre-address the issue of discrimination and that "we ask
crimination .
against
today that the deeds and values
homosex~~ m the Reserve Ofof the past be carried proudly
ficersTrammgCorps,orROTC.
and without hesitation into the
Billed as a statewide student
future."
appeal to ihe Wisconsin ConAnn Moran, the administragressional Delegation, the press
tive assistant for SGA, went on
conference was part of an effort
to summarize what SGA has ·
set up by the student governdone.to address the Department
ment association at UWof Defence policy ofROTC disMadison.
Similiar news
crimination. SGA actions to
conferences
were
held
date included a resolution callsimutaniously across the state at ing for action against the policy
other UW campuses.
on a national level, as well as a
Brenda Leahy refered to the
letter writing campaign to Wis-
consin
e
CongreSsmen
and
~nat9f'S. SGA also, according
to Moran, sent a delegation to
Washington, DC. While there,
the group talked to ntimerous
congressmen, restating their
views on the issue to them.
Elliott Madison, of the
Jacobins, said that "the specter
of homophobia must no longer
be able to haunt our campus."
He continued, "I tell you, we
need only stan:d together as students and as voters to exorcise
the spirit of dis' · · ·on."
Craig Sch
eld, presidentelectofSGA, v wedtocontinue
the fight ag~t discrimination
next year during his administration.
Pointer Page 3
. E[J?ITORIAE.
- 1
'
- -
Easter is a time to spend with family; if you
have the time.
by Blair Cleary
'
1
Editor-in-Chief
I
A
•
This week marks the beginning of the part of a Pointer
Editor-in-Chief's career that
causes ' administrators
in
University Public Relations to
loose sleep, Communication
Department Chairmen to cringe,
and Pointer Faculty Advisors to
get ulcerS.
What time is that? Why, the
eleventh hour, of course!
Even as this paper is being
circulated the UWSP Publishing Board is in the pr~ss of
choosing a new Editor-in-Chief
for next year's Pointer. Due to
the fact that I am graduating in
December, I did not re-apply.
This means that in three or four
issues I'~ out of here. ·
Why then, is everyone
described above in such a state
of anxiety? Simple. It is now too
late in the year to start any
process to get rid of the Editorin-Chief. (Unless, ofcourse, the
. r .
Editor-in-Chief were to write
something really,
Really,
REALLY offensive to a large
majority of the people here at
UWSP.) This means that the
Editor can use as . foul of language as he pleases and can
write what he REALLY thinks
about a lot of dummies here in
the university, city, and state.
Does anyone want to know
the seven words tv and radio
can'teveruse? Perhapsanother
colorful metaphor about milk is
in order. (I remember two years
ago when someone did that.
,
YOUR LAST CHANCE!
POINTER
1
•
E D I T 0 R · P 0 S ·1 T I 0 N S
The Pointer Is accepting applications for all paid positions for the
1990-91 School year. Applications are available In the Pointer office
by Its entrance at 104 In the Communications Building. Applicants ·
must have at least a 2.0 GPA and two semesters left at UWSP.
Appllca~lon deadline has been extended to Monday, April 23rd and
must be returned to the Pointer office by that time. -
·I
-APPLYTODAY!!!
_
Posltloos a.vallable lnciude: Bulslness manager, Graphics Editor,
News Editor, Features Editor, Outdoors Editor, Copy Edhor, Sports
Editor, Typesetters, Advertising Editor, Photo Editor and
[
photographers.
BOY did stink hit the fan!) Oh
Think about it. How many
well, let's just let everyone in
classes does an average student
the administration worry for a
have after noon on Friday
week. Bwa ha ha ha hal
anyway? One is average. Some
In any event, the Editor-inhave two. A few may even have
Chi~f's responsibility is do
three but the point is that holdmore than just give people
ing full classes on Friday is not
sleepless nights. Issue$ must be
that big of a deal to many stuaddressed!
. dents. In any event it would be ·
· One iSsue that seems to need
a safe bet to say that most stuaddressing is the so-called
dents would accept full Friday
Easter Break. "So-called" is a
classes in return for a ~onday
good word to describe Easter
off.
break because it really is nothing more than a weekend with a
The Adrnir)istration could
few extra hours thrown in on
probably snatch a day from
. Friday. To come to the point, it
summer vacation and add it to
needs to be longer by at least a
the schedule if the total number
of class days would be in_peril
da1The main reason people try
to get home for Easter weekend _ from losing a day to Easter.
is to spend time with family and
Therefore, the following idea
loved ones. Since people spend
is put before the administration
much of Friday trying to travel
for next year; or the year after if
home, and ' Sunday afternoon
it is too late to get it in for next
getting back, all one really gets
year: UWSP should grant it's
is one full day at home. It's a bit
students the Monday after
sad when a student must decide
Easter as a travel day for Easter
break. The extra day can come
between e~g Easter dinner at
hotpe with family or catching
from the Friday before break or,
the Greyhound in time to get
if necessary, from summer
back to Stevens Point so he or
vacation.
she won't miss classes on MonAny people with opposing
day morning.
Most other universities get
views are encouraged to write
Monday off to allow students
letter~ to the editor.
time to travel back to school
from home. It would seem that
this would be a good idea for
Stevens Point to adopt as well.
AS PETERSON SEES IT:Letters to the editor will be accepted only if they are typed,
signed, and under 300 words in length. -Namt!s ~ be withheld
from publication only if appropriate reason Is givea. The ·
Pointer reserves the right to edit letten if necessary ud to
refuse to print letters not suitable for publication. All correspondence should be addressed 10 'lbe Editor, Pointer, 104
Communications Arts Center, UWSP, Steven's Point, WI,54481.
Written permission
is required for .the reprint or all materials
I
presented,in the Pointer.
The Pointer (USPS-098240) Is a second dass pubUcation
published 29 ,times on Thursdays during the school year by the
University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point and the UW system
Board of Regents. The Pointer is free to all tuition paying students: Non-student subscription price is $10 per academic year.
Second class postage is paid at Ste~ens Point Wisconsin.
POSTMASTER: Send address change to Pointer, 104 Com. munieations Arts Center, Stevens Point, WI, 54481.
The Pointer is written and edited by the .Pointer staff which is
comprised ofUWSP students who are solely responsible for the
editorial con~nt and policy.
P<b!NTERSTIAFE__
I
Editor-in-Chief
Features Editor
Typesetters
Photo Editor
Bl~ir Cleary
Mary Kaye Smith
Rhonda Oestreich
Renee Lezotte
Jill Kasper
Asst. Photo Editor
Business Manager
Outdoors Editor
Tim Bishop
· Brian Leahy
Ad Design, Layout,
and Graphics Editor
-Kelly Berg
Patreece Boone
Brandon Peterson
Sports Editor
Advertising Editor .
News Editor
Kevin Crary
Molly Bernas
Copy Editor
Coordinator
Todd Schantz
Annie K. Arnold
Lisa Stubler
Photographers
Tina Gajewski
Jeff Kleman
Assistant Ad Editor
Senior Advisor
Paul Hershfield
Pete Kelley
Pointer Page 4 Thursday, April 19th, 1990
Media: Gas on the wild fire?
.Child abuse
needs to be
addressed·
Dear Editor:
fanatic who wants to . cause
The spear-fishing season has
trouble directly to the area.
started, and unless you live in a
I'm not saying the media does
vacuum, you've already heard
this intentionally; spear-fishing
about it through the media. In
is a hot controversy now and
fact, just recently, several local
throughout the year. But a week
television stations reported
before the 'season opened, all we
problems at a new spearing site _ heard was how much need for
before any problems had arisen.
security there was going to be,
There were the news stations;
how many entanglements were
expected between the two sides,
cameras poised above the new
lake, reporters ready with ~eir
etc.
. .
tape recorders and notebooks-It's turning into hype. People
anticipating every threat that
hear that trouble is expected at
was sure to be uttered--and in
the docks, so they turn out in
the process, leading every
droves to ~ither help "defend"
Dear Editor:
After living in your town for
just under two years, I would
like to congratulate you on the
wide coverage of important issues that your publication addresses.
Abortion, state . government
and local business problems are
just a few. There is one topic
that needs to be addressed more
readily, that is child abuse and
it's prevention.
Not many people know how·
great the problem child abuse is
in Portage County. In 1987
there were 9.5 cases of child
abuse reported for every 1,000
children. This comes out to be .
approximately 143 cases in one
year. Ofthesecases, 58.47 were
substantiated and of the substantiated cases only 55%.of these
· parents received counseling and
case work.
As you can see nearly half of all
these cases are slipping through
the system. Something has to be
done and must be done quickly.
There are many agencies in
Portage County trying to address the problem of child
abuse, but they need help. I am
· amemberofthePositiveParenting Taskforce, who are trying to
help in any way possible. We
continued on page 5
I
A few thoughts from a non-trad
Dear Editor:
Well it's almost time for summer break and we'll have
another year behind us. To the
departing seniors, we who must
remain behind I salute you; congrats, good luck and all that rot.
So what sage advice could I
give my younger compatriots?
How about a few thoughts on
drugs and alcohol. You've all
heard the expression "Just say
no!" But what are you saying no
to? Well I remember my 70s
friends 4oing drugs and I
remember them mostly staring
at things. You know, its like
you pop a pill and th(m (ind the
nearest convenient object and
stare at for an hour or two. Like
we'd be watching TV and commercial time would come and no
o'ne could remember what the ..
show was about until the com-
mercials were over. Hey I'm
serious. And alcohol, I mean
like one morning you're paying
homage to the porcelain god,
kneeling and giving offerings
should be enough of a hint
you've gone too far.
But for me, the best cure was
to stay sober and watch my
friends who were drinking and
or drugging and just observe
their bizarre behavior knowing
that could be me. Like wow too
much for any body to handle.
The drug handles you it's like it
uses your brain to give it self
life.
How bout soine sex talk. I
mean premarital verses aftermarital. But ifherpis, clap, and
AIDS .etc... doesn't scare you,
there's not much I could add to
get your attention.
April is National Child
Abuse Month
Dear Editor:
I have read many articles addressing the homeless and other
problems affecting our society.
I recognize and respect your efforts as journalists bringing
these topics to the public's attention. However, there is one
issue which .I feel does not
receive enough attention, that is
the subject of child abuse. As
the month of April draws near
we are reminded that April is
National Child Abuse Month.
Each and everyone of us
could learn to improve our
parenting skills. We may just
need someone to tap ns on the
People have a tendency to attract attention' to themselves
when they see 'iaffieras running- what better way than to do
something controversial?
This . is alsc;> becoming the
danger in northern Wisconsin.
Will the problems of spear-fishing escalate because the media
says they will? It's a line that
reporters and editors should be
hesitant to cross: encouraging
people to injure each other for
the sake of a good story sucks
out the goodness in us all.
BeckyKing ·
their side of the issue of just to
watch the action.
Newspapers, television and
radio would undoubtedly get
come great stories from the
spear-fishing season, regardless
if they promote it. They should
remember that their obligation
is only to report the news; not to
create it.
During revolutions that occur
throughout the world, the media
is often banned from reporting.
This is not solely because
leaders don't want the world to
see what 'is going on; it's also
because the media is dangerous.
shoulder when tensions get high
with our son or daughter. A little voice to say "Hey, take a
deep breath and communicate
with your child, don't yell and
become unreasonably angry."
Our relationship with our
child is one which is such as integral part of our lives that it is
difficult to step back and look
objectively. Even so, these
relationships might also prove
to be the most rewarding in our
lives.
Sincerely;
Stacy L. Hoyer
Positive Parenting Taskforce .
. of Portage County
s~dy, study. By the way, I like ·
Elk, but not too fond of venison.
We all know you can't pass
laws against bigotry, ignorance,
etc. but that not to prevent each
of us from passing our own
inner laws to respect each other
and accept one another, as long
as you don't shatter me with
heavy metal, we can get along. ·
So peace to you brothers and
sisters, natives and all those who
inhabit this earth, after all there
is only one-and when we run out
of earths we could be in trouble.
So, wear clean undies every
day, hold hands when crossing
the street, cold milk and cookies
snack, and an afternoon nap
with your favorite blanket and
I'll see yaround the Pangea.
Catch ya later
Wes (Wesley Campbell)
I've also noticed there is
some controversy as to the Indians out there doing all that
spearing and gathering and stuff
.like that Well it seems to me
that we' ans (I guess that would
be us White folks) should be
honoring what our granfathers
- agreed to with them'ans (that
would be the Indian folks)
grandfathers. If you didn't
know, they all got to together
and for the common good made
certain agreements and if they
would have been followed from
the start, little attention would
now be paid to our Indian neighbors do"mg their thing in the ·
spring.
So Indian brother, spear a fat
one and I'll come over some dlly
and partake of your fish boil, but
not right now because it's study,
~~.0
....~
~
-
II 1<011 IJI't:.
0
Uv~l?l 'f,m.
BANK'gONE
..
BENEFIT FOR THE HOMELESS
SATURDAY. MAY 5. 1990
NOON - 10:00 P.M.
-.........
---__
North tntraiNiral Field (Behind ae.,. Grmt
FEATURING:
_,.
the -.NSIDERS•
Father Patriot beware .
-s,ocw......,
~­
To Elliott (alias Father Patriot,)
ons •
ntE AWCA10itS
11Wl-~
On July 28th, 1784 Robespierre and his fellow Jacobins were
lc-ry..... 'N'~·-·
"(lop 40 lodll
-
Sincerely,
-SUIIOC
hunted down, brought to the scaffold, and guillotined. If you continue wearing those obnoxious bells ... history may repeat· itself.
HOISMAH
(c-4ilol
........._~__...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . llli&IIL
a passive, yet fed-up student
AL M*o\5
I
~-
~"'
..........................
..._c...ty .
Pointer Page 5
Steiner Hall Run set for this weekend
Students from Steiner Hall
on the UW-Stevens Point campus will once again be running
in their annual Alcohol Awareness Fund Run Apri120-21.
To promote their lOth annual
run, this year's runners will be
asking the alumni of it's past
nine runs to participate. The
group is running to raise money
for alcohol awareness and
education on the UW-Stevens
Point campus and to. promote
responsible drinkiilg.
This
year's run is being sponsored by
Pepsi-Cola.
·
The runners will leave the
East · Washington Avenue
entrance of the State Capitol in
Madison on .Friday evening,
April 20. The runners will run
in pairs for two miles before
handing off the baton containing .an official proclamation
signed by Governor Tommy
Thompson to afresh pair of runners. The runners should reach ·.
Steiner Hall at approximately
noon on Saturday, Apri121.
Anyone interested in' donat-
ing can contact Eric Nore at
346-2798 or ' stop at the
S.H.A.A.F.R. booth in the
University Center councowse
between April 16-19. · If you
have any questions please contact Eric Nore or contact Sue
Vader at 346-2730.
UWSP nears its enrollment limit
Officials at the Univeristy of
Wisconsin-Stevens Point have
stopped admitting transfer students for the fall semester and
are preparing to do the same for
new freshmen.
~
Vice Chancellor Howard
Thoyre announced that transfer
students turned away in the
months ahead will be encouraged to seek admission to
UWSP for the spring semester,
which begins in January 1991.
Abuse,.
.re trying to enhance awareness
and increase agency coopera- ·
tion in the ongoing prevention
.lf child abuse.
An upcoming state-wide
conference ·. addressing ' child
abuse will be held in Stevens
Point, at the Holiday Inn April
18-20. I hope the Pointer will
help in creating a continued
awareness . of the problem of
child abuse and to assist the
inany agencies in Portage County in the battle against child
abuse.
head a local enrollment
management committee.
Thenumberoftransrerrequ~ts this year w.as 'Ullprecedentd he reported, adding that
900 applications were sub- .
mitted for 300 slots that were
open.
After UWSP was required to
limit its student population, the
enrollment management committee voted to give priority to
students with the best high
school records. That has had a
significant, positive effect on .
the school's retention rate,
which in tum, has caused officials to reduce the number of
new freshmen and transfer students.
.
_
Thoyre said, however, any
new, prospective freshmen affected by an admission freeze
should confer with counselors
on campus about the possibilities of entering next
January.
IMPROVE
YOUR
COMMUNICATION .
SKILLS.
.
frompage4 ·
Thoyre said there is regret
when the university cannot
serve all qualified students who
seek admittance, especially
\yith
extraordinary
those
academic credentials.
"But we have no alternative
under the mandate we have
received from the Board of
Regents to decrease our enrollement," he said.
Thoyre has been ~inted
by Chancellor Keith Sander.; to
-
Brendan McCarthy
Positive Parenting Taskforce of
Portage County
NEW
ALS'
Hammocks, Oyster
shell elephants, new
· incense burners, more
cotton sweaters, tyedie sundresses, and
new posters. Come
ondpwn.
HARDLY EVER
IMPORTS
1006 Main
Street
344-4848
: . · , -·
Sunday12-4
Friday 1o-8
10-6 . Sat 1().5
AnAJ&l'Card helps you rommunicate bettei; beCause you can use it to call from all
· kinds of places. Like a friend's, or a pay phone, or outon the road. You dorit even need to
have.a phone in your name to get one. And ev~ month you get an itemized bill stating
where and when you used the catd. -.
·
1b apply for the AJ&l'~ call us at · ·
·.. . . . .
1800 525!7955,-Ext. 630.
II
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_
Now, if only it were that easy to improv~
The right ChOiCe.
your grade point average. ·
Pointer Page 6 Thursday, April 19th, 1990
':O UTDOORS--Brower to give Earth Week rtastics pervasive
keynote speech April 23
!l!a~~ mod~~p:~~~to
of serveral proposed darns in the
Southwest. The release of films
· and the famous "coffee-table"
exhibition books showed the
public the beauty that would be
under water if the darn projects
were implemented. Because of
the attention which was
generated,
darns _in the
Dinosaur National Monument
and Grand Canyon areas were·
not built.
In 1969, when he founded
Friends of the Earth, Brower
continued his impact ori.
America's wild lands by helping to create national parks and
seashoresinKing'sCanyon,the
North Cascades, the Redwoods,
Cape Cod, Fire Island and Point
Reyes.
Brower i~ now the chairman
of Earth Island Institute, an organization founded to develop
innovative projects for the conservation, preservation, and restoration
of
the
global
environment. Earth Island In. stitute currently has 22 group
projects including Conference~
on the Fate of the Earth, lntema-w
Earth Week keynote speaker David Brower
tional Marine Mammal Project,
Japan and US/USSR Environby Anne Green
mental Exchanges, Radio Earth_
to capture in his photographs.
Contributor
Brower began to produce silent . Island, Ben Linder Memorial
Fund for Appropriate Techno!On Monday, April23. at 7:30
films to promote the backogy, Information for the Public
p.m. in Collins, room Al01, the
country. In 1939, he was the
~rust and many more.
man that former Secretary of the
fli'St to climb Shiprock in New
At 77 years old, Brower is
Interior called the United
Mexico. · Brower has made 70
still going strong. Throughout
. States' most ardent conserfli'St ascenis in the Sierra, Nev.,
his life he has been an individual
vationist will be at UWSP
and Yosemite.
who has made a difference
delivering the keynote speech
He thenjoined the Sierra Club
through his commitment and
for Earth Week. David Brower
as a writer and editor of the club
hard work. Twice nominated
is that conservationist.
·
· bulletin. Brower would evenfor the Nobel Peace Prize and
Born in Berkeley, Calif., . tually become the Sierra Club's
the winner of numerous conserBrower became well known in
first executive director.
vation awards, Brower is an inhis youth as a master technical
As director, he brought the
spiration to many people.
rock climber. Brower worked
membership of the organization
His autobiography' "For
as a wilderness guide in Sierra,
from several thousand to over
Earth's Sake: The Life and.
Nev., and as the public relations
100,000 members, just like its
Times of David Brower," will .
director for the Yosemite Park
founder John Muir.
Under
be released April22. Copies of
and Curry Company; during
Brower's lead, the Sierra Club
his book will be available for
which · time he met Ansel
became more than a hiking club.
purchase at his talk. Brower
Adams.
Brow~r and the Sierra Club
Brower grew to appreciate the
were responsible for bringing-to
will ~tograph books after his
presentation.
beauty which Adams was able
the eyes of the nation the effects
UWSP grad in dolphin documentary
"Where Have All the Dolphins Gone?" a controversial
film depicting the slaughter of
dolphins in the pursuit of tuna,
features a 1980 graduate of the
of
Wisconsin
University
Stevens Point.
It will be aired on the Discovery Channel at 8 p.m. and
midnight on "Earth Day," Sunday, April22.
Kurt Brownell, a former resi.dent of Rhinelander who is now
employed at Fort McCoy near
Tomah, -worked as an inspector
for five years on tuna boats involved in the killing of dolphins.
. He was an observer on 11 trips,
each two to three months long.
"It's the first time things like
this have been shown on
television," said Brownell, who
talks about his experiences on
the boats. "When this film
shows, people will be up in
arms."
In the film, Brownell and
until they are so exhausted that
others discuss the problem and
the mile long purse seine nets
, urge people to boycott all tuna
can be set around them.
products until the industry stops
. ''When the net is closed, the
killing dolphins. They suggest · dolphins and accompanymg
boycotting all canned tuna, not
tuna are trapped. During the
just those companies responchase, speedboats run over the
sible, in order to send a strong
animals _and high powered exmessage to all companies to act
plosives are ·thrown into the
responsibly.
water" he said.
·
The hour-long documentary
"It made me sick to see
is narrated by George C. Scott.
hundreds of dolphins squealing
It includes footage of dolphins
to get air. And the captains .
being killed. At the end of the
hated your(the inspector's) guts
film, a toll free number will apand made life miserable. he
pear on the screen for people to
said. "I tried not to let them
call.
know it bothered me."
"For some unknown reason
Brownell left his job after 11
yellowfin tuna s~im with doltrips to sea. "The last trip wllS
phins in one area of the eastern
really bad and that's what made
tropical Pacific Ocean," said
me quit," he said. "We set nets
Brownell during a recent visit to
one night and killed 50 animals
his alma mater. "When fisherthat weren't supposed to be
men sight a achool of dolphins
killed. The captain saw the data
speedboats are sent out from the
and hit the roof."
ship!-<> chase the animals
Contributor
be produced.
Plastic, it's everywhere in
The mandatory recycling bill
today's modem society. When
is now going tfu;ough the ASyou get home from class
sembly in Madison. Its still not
tonight, take a look at your cuptoo late to let your legislator
board and refrigerator and see
know how you feel on this or
what is packaged in plastic. For
any enviromental issue. You
example, peanut butter jars,
probably think that the legisbread wrappers, milk jugs, and
lator favors speical interest
yogurt containers, just to name
groups and doesn't care what
afew.
you or I think, but you are
The 1990s is the Environmenwrong.
tal Decade and its up to all of us
How will your legislator know
to help maintain the quality of
how to vote on an issue unless
life in which we live.
he/she receives letters from the
public. I urge you to write. on
We live in a throwa'Yay
·society that everything we use
any environmental issue that
getstossedawayandsenttothe
concerns you and let congress
landfill. Plastic is one item we
know how you feel. Here are
need to focus our attention on.
some tips to use when writing
past year, the Federal
elected officials:
Government passed a law that
*address your represenative
required all plastic containers to
or senator
have a symbol on the bottom
*a personal written letter
that shows what type of plastic
using . your own words and
it is. The symbol is in the form
stationery
of a triangle and has a number
*try to identify ~ills by their
on it. Currently, type one, PET
title or number if possible
(polythelene · terephelate), .and .
*keep your letter short and
type two HOPE (high density
limited to one or two points
polyethelene), have markets for ·
*state your reason for writing
recyclability. Intra-State Recy~ask where the legislator
cling Corporation, located adstands onthe issue ,and try to get
jacent to the Point Brewery on
hisorhercommitl:nentforactive
2608 Water St., collects number
suppport of the bill
one and number two type plas*include your name and
tics as well as newspapers,
complete mailing address on the
glass, aluminum, car and truck
letter
batteries and engine oil.
*thank officials when you are
Being a smart shopper can
pleased
,
eliminate some of the plastic
Every day we throw out
consumption. Plastic ketchup
things from toothpaste tubes,
bottles cannot be recycled begrass clipPings, plastic milk
- cause the plastic is laminated
jugs to newspaper. On ·the
into many different layers.
average, a person throws 7.5
Buying ketchup in glass bottles
pounds of solid waste into the
makes it reccyclable.. Another
trash bag daily. Just think about
alternative is to buy beverages
all the waste from your' house,
bottled in glass or aluminum inclassroom, restaurants, factories
that made your clothes, the
stead of the plastic two-liter
.container. Finally, when checkutilities that generate your
ing out at the grocery store and
electricity, etc. This easily can
the checkout clerk asks "paper
amount to 7.5 PQunds/day/peror plastic?" • choose paper.
son,
multiplied by 365
These are just a few ways. that
Continue.d on page 11
.._c_onsum
_ _e_rs_can_h_e_lp_re_d_u_ce_th_e_,...-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___,
This
,I
Pointer Paae 7
!!,lli;ctions on Earth Day
Outdoors Editor
A
W
so. We are capable of changing
our ways to benefit the natural
Earth Day is a tune to reflect
world.
upon the successes and failures
We have attempted to
of our efforts to save our enremove ourselves from the
vironment. As with all wars
some battles have been won natural world. Cities were built.
Nothing is more unnatural than
decisively and others lost paina city. A city is unable to susfully.
In 20 years since the first · tain itself. Food needs to be
trucked in from far away farms.
Earth Day, .we have tremendous
Its garbage needs to be hauled
strides in our treatment of the
away--sometimes on the same
environment. Polluted waters
truck.
have been cleaned up. SmokesWe are now paying the price
tack emissions have decreased.
Toxic chemicals have been for our vain attempts to seperate
. ourselves from the natural
banned.
world. Pollution, starvation and
We have also had ·our
degradation is the result.
failures. The world's human
Now our penance for our enpopulation continues to increase
exponentially. More cars puff vironmental sins is to clean up
out smoke on the nations · the mess we have created. We
cando it.
crowded . highways. Wildlife
We can do it by using our
habitat continues to be
technology wisely. Instead of
destroyed.
using machines that belch out
The future will contain more
pollution we can use others that
triumphs for. the environment.
don't. If our society can put
The public demands that we
men on the moon (a lifeless,
save the environment;
boring hunk of rock) we should
Has any()J)e asked why we
be able to make the effort to save
should save the environment?
our own planet.
Here's an answer. We should
If we don't save "our environsave the environment because
ment" we most surely will sufwe have amoral obligation to do
Captain
Just as Superman has been
From page 1
known to appear outside of
Metropolis, Captain Ecology
ference with the non-human
doesn't limit his activities to
world is excessive and rapidly
Central Wisconsin. He will be
worsening.
performing at a U.S. Fish and
6. Policies must therefore be
Wildlife Service meeting in
changed.
Minneapolis.
·
. 7. The ideological change is
Captain Ecology seeks to
mainly that of appreciating life
educate his audience as ~e perquality rather than adhering to
forms his music. He has created
an
increasingly
higher
a new type of music to express
economic.and materialistic way · his views. The music uses heavy
of living.
metal techniques and is there8. Those who subscribe to
fore termed "environmetal."
. the foregoing points have an
One of Captain Ecology's
obligation directly or indirectly
environmetal songs is titled
to try and implement the neces"Tripping on Acid Rain." In the
sary changes.
song the initials LSD refer to
In order to bring these mes"laced with sulfur dioxide" and
sages to the public, Cap~
not to the psychedelic drug
Ecology, garbed in his superlysergic acid diethylamide.
hero costume, has performed
"The world needs the shakers
before many different audienand agitators to get things
ces. For the last three years he
known.
You can be inhas perfornied at Earth Tunes
volved... and maybe stand up
during the Friday ofEarth Week
and lecture to certain groups of
on the UWSP campus.
people. What I'm trying to do is
He has also appeared in the
to get these types of concepts
Encore Room, Pacelli High
into mainstream life. I figure I
School and area middle schools.
can do that through my music,"
During this year's trivia contest
said Captain Ecology.
he appeared on SVO and also
Captain Ecology plans to
answered phones.
present his_message to a larger
As mentioned before, he will
audience. This summer he will
be performing at tonight's Earth
cut a CD to help in marketing his
Day anniversary rally.
music and its message.
~·~
fer and die. "Our environment"
is just that--ours. Not in the
sense that we own it, but in the
sense that it is where we came
from.
- Humans are evolutionary
products of the environment.
We.evolved as a response to environmental conditions. If the
environment radically changes,
we may go the way of the
dinosaurs.
It not only benefits "Mother
Nature" when we clean up our
act. It also benefits us.
For those of us who have
chosen to clean up our enVironmental act, we have a responsibility to be informed about the
areas of our concem Learn
more about the issues.
The better educated an individual is about a subject, the
better able that individual is to
present a persausive argument
on the su\lject. Missionaiies
would have a hard time converting heathens if they didn'tknow
the Gospel.
'Rt!P._rpl)uctive
7lt!alth au:t!/ ~
VJw:
• Birtb Control Services
• Pregnancy Testing
(
• Counseling .
• Abortion Surgery Tbrougb 15 Weeks
Most unplanned pregnancies occur at .holiday
time and during spring break. Please choose
to contracept.
3800 N. Gillett Street • Appleton
(414) 731-9534
Continued on page 11
Celebrate Hostel Shoppc·s
storeful of values on bicycles.
accessories and bike clothing!
BIKE FEST
Thurs. thru Sat., AprU 19-21
3 DAYS ONLY
BICYCLES
Purchase a Bike and get
your choice of one of si:~~:
great
AccesSOJ."Y
Packages
__ $2850
for only
..
GIANT
Specialized Mountain Toe Clips ................ Reg. $7.95
$5.49
Alloy Mtn. Water Bottle Cages .................,Reg. $5.95 $3.25
Water Bottles- 20 ounce .......................... Reg. $2.99 $1.99
28 ounce .......................... Reg. $3.99 $2.49
High Performance Tires by Specialized ....................... 25% off
Rhode Gear Ultrallle Helmets ................. Reg. $39.95 $29.99
Zefal HPX Tire Pumps ............................Reg. $24.99 $18.95
Zefal Maxi Tire Pumps............................ Reg. $34.95 $24.99
Rhode Gear Cycle Shuttle .................:..... Reg. $64.95 $49.99
Avocet Gel Saddles- Road ...................... Reg. $29.99 $21.95
Mountain ...............Reg. $34.99 $26.95
Y Allen Wrench by Glant......,...................Reg. $3.99 $2.49
Chain Tool by Giant .................................Reg. $5.99 $3.99
Blackburn Mountain Bike Rack .............. Reg. $39.95 $29.99
Kryto ATB Lock w/carrying bracket....... Reg. $34.95 $28.99
Burley Lite Trailer
(In box unassembled) ............................ Reg. $274.95 $239.99
'
. .
Save up to M8.49
If you purchased your bike from us
earlier this year, bring In your receipt
to qualify for this accessory package·
oflcrl
\~
\ ·.
\
'
I
• !f!!!!~ Day Update
A 20th anniversary rally for Earth Day
will take place April19tli at 7:00pm on the
campus sundial. Mayor Schultz Will speak,
along with prominate UWSP faculty. The event
will be hosted by the Alliance for a Sustainable
Earth.
i
Wisconsin
Eau Claire will hold an Earth Day
Environmental Fair on April21.
.
Central
.Wisconsln•s Largest
Selection -of
Bike Clothing
Nike Spiridon Short .........................Reg. $36.00$25.00
ST Touring Short.:........................... Reg. $29_99 $ 19•99
ST Lycra Short ................................ Reg. $34.99 $22.99
Nike Biking Socks ............................ Reg. $6.99 $4.50
ST Bike Jackets ...............................Reg, $44.99 $34.99
ST Windtlght .................................... Reg. $49.99_$34.99
Specialized Cycling Gloves .............. Reg. $14.99 $9.99
Hind ··Nightblade" Tights ............... Reg. $41.75 $32.75
Nike Touring Shoes-1989 Colors ... Reg. $45.00$35.00
Sunbuster ··cycling T~e" Jersey ...:.Reg. $25.00$19.99
SUNBUSTER•
PER,ORMANCf SPORTs APPAREL
-
HINII/I.
J!f!iT
(). ~
if/<
.1~
~ .
·I
Around the Globe
USSR- In the Siberian towns of
Novosibirsk and Akademgorodok, an exhibition
of children's ecology and peace posters from
Wisconsin will be shown.
Shopp,.·~eeParktng,
._
341-4340
929 Main Sl./ 1314 Third St.. Stevens Polnl
mour3rd
Street
customer loll
Pointer Page 8 Thursday, April 19th, 1990
-
FEATURES---- I- I
--~.,..,~ ,. . . . . .
niarket for ·a better world
"Green Shopping"
by Brian .Le8hy
Outdoors Editor
In CO¥junction with Earth
Week, the Alliance for a Sustainable Earth (ASE) will be
conducting a "Green Shopping"
program at the Stevens Point
County Market from April 2130.
Displays of store merchandize that are environmentally
sound will be marked distinctive tags. Products that are
produced with overall good en_vironmental'procedures, such as
organically grown foods, will be
· marked with green tags.
Green tags with the recyling
symbol of three arrows in a triangle will mark products in
recycled or recyclable packaging.
The green tag designation
will be detemiined by the book
"Shopping for a Better World:
A Quick and Easy Guide to Socially Responsible Supermarket
Shopping" published by the
Council on Economic Priori~s
(CEP).
.
The recycling tag designation is determined by information
provi~ed
by
the
Pennsylvania Resource Council.
A poster and flyers will explain the green shopping concept to the supermarket's
customers.
The philosphy behind "Shopping for a Better World" is that
through consumer action, a
company' s policies and activities can be changed. By
buying a company's products, a
consumer is essentially voting
for that company and for what it
stands.
If company policies displease a consumer, they can
refuse to buy that company's
products. In a free market,
economy consumers have the
right and ability to buy com-
p8rable products from another
company.
Writing to companies to
· voice displeasure with their actions is also encouraged. .
.
·:·Shopping for a Better World '
rates compailies on their involvement in the key issues of
giving to ·charity, womens ad. vancement, minority advancement, animal testing, public
disclosure of information, community
outreach, · nuclear
power, business ventures in
South Africa, the environment
and family benefits.
Readers are also given spe- .
cial alerts if the company
manufactures cigarettes or pesticides, markets infant formula
to developing countries or is involved in labor disputes.
According to CEP major
companies such as Borden hav~
met with CEP members to dis-
continued on page 11
Tokugawa talks turtles
by S. Tokugawa
Contributor
It would probably be good to
state that I'm some great critic
of theatre, dance and cinema.
Perhaps it would further help
my credibility if I showed you
how I was educated at the Harvard School of criticism and
have been a successful Broad' way critic for the past five years.
Unfortunately, I'm just an
average Joe that calls the movies
like I see them. For example,
"Batman" was good, "Zulu" was
good; "Star Trek V" was ok but
nothing great, "The Hunt for
Red October" was really well
done; "Indiana Jones and the
Last Crusade" was the movie of
the year and "Star Wars" was the
' best movie .to come out in 15
years.
But enough of this, the movie
topic for this week is the new
release called "Teenage Mutant ·
Ninja Turtles.·~ Now I admit I
enjoyed the comic book of the
same name that has been coming out for some years. The
comic has good art, a good plot,
and is fairly serious. ("Serious"
being relative when one discusses mutant ninja turtles.) In any
event, a Saturday ninja nutle
cartoon followed the comic
book. The cartoon was very
poorly done and was more a
marketing technique for the toy .
stores than a well done serial. I
expected the movie to follow
along the lines of the cartoon.
I was pleasantly surprised.
The makers of the movie softened the Teenage Mutant Ninja
Turtles found in the comic book
so that they would appeal to
younger kids but they remained
true to the actual Ninja Turtle
persona.
1'he plot revolves around a
group of renegade ninjas called
the Foot Clan that .currently
have the city in the grip of a
crime wave.
A television
reporter, while investigating the
crime wave, happens upon the
ninja turtles who save her from
some Foot Clan Ninja who are
out to silence·her. The reporter
befriends the turtles and their
mentor, a mutated ninja master
rat named Splinter. The Foot
Clan finds the turtles hideout
and kidnap Splinter. The Clan
also defeat the turtles in a
pitched martial arts battle fore'
demise as the killer gets closer
to Phillips.
Bring your seatbelts (and
your Holy items) •••
by T. S.
continued on;page 11
White to give Eastern
S & S review ''The First Power'' philosophy lectures ·
by Terry Speers and
Dennis Skrzypowski
Contributors
Billed as "One of the best
thrillers since 'The Exorcist'",
"The First Power", starring Lou
Diamond Phillips, brings you
into the world of the supernatural. Phillips is a cop who's
specialty is hunting down mass
murderers, but his last case
proves to be his hardest.
It all centers around a serial
killer who, through all his killings, is granted immortality (the
first of three supernatural
powers). Phillips character,
who believes the killer is just an
ordinary man with incredibly
,good luck, turns from the hunter
to the hunted. One by one, his
friends meet their untimely
It's only a movie, it's only
a movie ••• by D. S.
"The First Power" promised
wild stunts and action sequences which keep your heart
The movie is one of the best
pounding and delivers with
thrillers I've seen in a long time.
breathtaking cinematography
The special effects and stunts
were incredible and done subtly . and camera magic which make
enough to give the movie an unyou wonder if the villain has the
earthly atmosphere. One of the
power to leap right iilto the
things I liked about this movie is
cinema. The film has the usual
that there weren't any hack' em
quirks and unbelievability
slash 'em scenes. The killer
which often follow films of this
made his point to the audienc.e
nature, but beside the fact that
without having to graphically
Phillips acts stupidly much of
sever his victims limbs.
the time, "The First Power"
Although some scenes felt
delivers the incomprehensible
awkward, the movie delivers. and pulls it off. Although not
steady action and suSpense. I
for those who shy away from
like the movie, and on a scale
roller coasters or 1iaunfed
from 1 to 10 (10 being best), I
houses, I give"The First Power"
give "The First Power" a solid 8.
a61/2.
Beverly White, musician,
nutritionist and scholar of Zen
Buddhism will be at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens
Point, April25, to give two lectures on Eastern religion and
philosophy.
She will discuss "Zen and the
Art of Motorcycle Maintenance" at 9 a.m. in Room 326
of Collins Classroom Center;
"The Synthesis of Buddhism,
Taoism and Confucianism in
Zen" at 1 p.m. in Room 101 of
Collins Classroom Center and
"Philosophies I Have Lived by"
at noon, also. in Room 101 of
Collins Classroom Center. The
Public is invited to attend.
White, who has spoken many
times in the past at UWSP, has
been a longtime teacher and lecturer on American language and
culture at Macalester College In
St. Paul. Most recently she has
been teaching courses on Zen
Buddhism, as well as the art of A
meditational yoga.
W
White has been a student of
Buddhism more than 30 years.
From 1954 to 1956 she was the
first woman allowed to live in
and study at Hosshinji Temple
in Obana, a Zen Buddhist
· monastery in Japan. In Minneapolis she was one of the
founders of the Minnesota Zen
Meditation Center.
White is the author of "Bean
Cuisine" which was published
by Beacon Press in this country
and by Routledge, Kegan and
Paul in EnglandJ
~ing
sponsored
Her visit is
by students an~ faculty of the
UWSP
DePartment
of
Philosophy.
1
by Susan Stadler
Contributor
A
W
_ Many people underestimate
the impact their clothing has on
ftrSt impressions. The fact is a
ftrSt impression is made within
the ftrSt 30 seconds of meeting
someone.
This will most likely be based
on non-verbal cues - especially
clothing. This is particularly
important to keep in mind when
dressing for an interview,
whether for af¢r graduation or
just for summer. A good suit is
the best bet f~r giving a good
impression at your interview.
these basic guideJines can help
you select a suit that will give
this good first impression.
1. Choose a conservative color
- shades of navy, gray, and
brown work good. Go for
darker colors and if there is
pinsirlping or a pattern, make
sure it is a subdued one.
2. Look for natural fibers wool is the best suiting material.
It wrinkles very little. Lighter
weights C&Jl be worn comfortably in the summer. The more
man-made materials in the
. fabric the less the fabric will
breathe, and the more uncomfortable you will be.
3. Make sure the lining fits in
the jacket well. The lining
Pointer Page 9
... l
. Comedian Chris Barnes will be
should be stable enough to hold
performing in The-Encore at 8
the shape of the 4":.0ric but
p.m. tonight, ~pril 19. This
shouldn't be stiff.
show is a TNT (Thursday Night
4. Hems should be 1 3/4" - 2
Talent). That means it's a great
l/2" wide and even. Stitching
show brought to you by the
shouldn't show through on the
University Activities Board and
outside.
it's free!!
S. Buttonholes should be neat
"Using everyday situations,
and spaced evenly. No strings
Chris Barnes drew laughs at the
should be hanging. Top stitchComedy Corner by contorting
ing should be even and straight.
words, situations, and his face,"
Whether you are buying your
according to the Milwaukee
first suit or your fifth, these
Journal. The Journal added that
guidelines will help you choose
"Barnes caught the cro~d off
a quality suit that will carry you
guard and held it's attention
through many years beyond
through his imaginativ~ rap
your ftrSt interview.
If you can't afford a suit right - finish to television tunes such as
"The Beverly Hillbillies."
now, dress as conservatively as
, Barnes is currently working
possisble for an interview the Punch Line Comedy Club
darker colors, dress pants - shirt
Circuit throughout the South
- tie for men, and skirt - blouse
and Midwest. ·He has opened
(jacket if you have one) for
for Jimmy Walker, star of
women (watch out for low neck"Good Times" and "Bustin'
lines). Women should also
Loose," and for George Miller.watch out for wearing too many
Barnes has also apperared on
accessories - go with just a
Show Time at the Apollo in
watch, one or two rings, and
New York City and on Channel
small, simple earrings. Shoes
10's "Pops" Talent Jubilee.
should be medium height. Go
lighter on the makeup, but make .
sure it is polished. Make sure
shoes are clean, polished, and
free of any tears or rips. Keep
90 FM'S TOP 10
theSe simple tactics in mind, and
you will be sure to make an excellent first impression.
1. Sinead 0' Connor -
Point ·P ark Run scheduled
The third annual Point Park
Run will be held Saturday, Aprii
28, beginning with registration
from 9-10 &rm. at Pfiffner
Pioneer Park on the .river, near
downtown Stevens Point.
The fund-raising event is
spon_sored by the City Park
Department and Sigma Tau
Gamma, a social fraternity at the
University of Wiscosin-Stevens
Point.
·
Proceeds will be used by the
organization to fund its
philanthropic wojects.
.
Beginning at 10 a.m. at Pfiffner, the races. will include a
half-mile fun fUll for children
under 12 and SK and 10K routes
through several parks and back
to Pfiffner.
The competitors will be
divided into categories according ·to age. The divisions are:
19 and under; 20-29; 30-39; 40. 49; and SO and over. First place
Spanish Club to present
"La zapatera prodigiosa"
Comedian
Barnes to
perform
tonight
trophies will be awarded to the
top male and top female racers
in each category. The event will
be held regardless of weather.
Last year's competition drew
about 75 participants from the
community and the university,
and planners are hoping for
more than 100 racers this year.
Pre-registration forms are
available at the Campus Activities Office in the lower level
of the University Center and at
the YMCA. Forms are to be
returned to the Stevens Point
Parks and Recreation Department, 2442 Sims Ave. The cost
for early registration is $8 and
registration on the day of the
event is $10. All pre-registered
participants are ~anteed aTshirt, but supplies will be
limited on the day of the race.
Further information is available through Sal Cuomo, 3447625.
"Emperor's
Clothes"
· New
2. Suzanne Vega -- ...
"Book of Dream~
3. Nick Lowe - ·
"You Got the Look I Like"
4. Black Crowes -
"Jealous Again"
5. Midnight 011 -
"Forgotten Years"
6. Cowboy Junkies -
"Sun Comes Up, It's
Tuesday Morning"
7. Plan B-
"Beam Me Up, Scotty!"
8. Chills-
· "Heavenly Pop Hit"
9. Slnead O'Connor -
"I am Stretched on Your
Grave"
10. Jigsaw Seen "Pillar of Salt"
T.he Spanish Club of UWSP
will present "La Zapatera
Prodigiosa" (The Wonderful
Shoemaker's Wife) Tuesday
April24.
.
The play, a farce written by
Federico
Garcias
Lorca,
describes "the spirit of a woman
and at the same time is a fable
about the human $Oul. It is the
struggle between reality and
fantasy -- what is and can be and
the unattainable."
Lorca, the Andalusian poet
and playwright, wrote the piece
in 1926. . He wi\S the only ·
Spanish playwright- of his
generation to sensitively examine women's issues.
The play is directed by Permy
Frank, a Spanish and Theatre .
major. The performance will
begin at 7 pm Tuesday at the
Sentry Theatre. Admission is
gratis and open to the public.
Violin recital scheduled
A violin recital is scheduled
at the University of WisconsinStevens Point at 8 p.m. Friday,
April 20, in Michelsen Concert
Hall of the Fine Arts Center.
freudig euch empor" from Cantata No. 36 Bloch's "Baal
Shem"; and Prokofiewv's
"Sonata in D Major, Op. 94a.
· Gregory Fried, violinist, will
To be performed are Bach's
be joined in the performance by
"Selig ist der Mann" (rom
Michael Keller on piano and
Canata No. 57, "Ach Gott wie · Gretchen d' Armand, soprano.
manches Herzeleid" from CanThe recital is open to the public
without charge.
tata No. 58 and "Schwingt
$3,500
CO.U LD REALLY
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Park is now seeking qualified applicants for_seasonal employment To qualify you must:
1. Be at least 18 years of age.
2. Be available for work from rylay 25 until
September 3.
3. Be able to work weekends and holidays.
4. Have your own transportation.
5. Limited housing available.
FOR IMMEDIATE CONSIDERATION
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Pointer Page 10 Thiand8y, AprR 19th, 1990
Peregrine falcons return to Milwaukee
For the third year in a row, a
falcons has
returned to the 42-story First
' Wisconsin Bank building in
Milwaukee;
~e pair successfully ·raised
two falcon chicks in a nest box
on top of the building last year
and they have .already started
another family this year.
"This is the .third year the same
male has returned to Milwaukee," explained Charlene
Gieek, a nongame biologist with
the Department of Natural
Resource. "He mated with a
female in 1988, both falcons
were inexperienced as parents."
Falcons normally don't mate
until they are two or three years
old, Gieck said.
Last year, the male selected a
different female as a mate and
they raised two chicks, one that
hatched from an egg the female
laid and the other, a captiveraised chick which was added to
the nest box. The same pair,
which can be positively identified by leg bands, has returned
this year and the female has laid
four eggs.
·Both the male and female are
·"' products of peregrine falcon
reintroductio~ P(_Ograms in
other states. 11le male was
released in Fort Sheridan, ill.
and the female was released at
Isle Royal, Mich.
•
''We're really fortunate that
other states in the area are also
pair of peregrine
---~.'--
....
reintroducing peregrine falcons," said Gieck, who coordinates Wisconsin's peregrine .
falcon program for the DNR's
Bureau of Endangered Resources.
'·
The program, funded partially
with donations to the Endangered Resources Fund
through the checkoffon state income tax forms, is entering its
fourth year. Gieck says the
preliminary goal of the program
is to establish 10 breeding pairs
by the year 2000. A total of 28
falcon chicks have been
released in Wisconsin through
1989.
Gieck says it's difficult to track
where the falcons released in
Wisconsin are now.
"Their Latin name, peregrines, .
means 'wanderer,' and that's
exactly what they do. They only
way we'll know where they are
is if someone reports that they
have spotted a peregrine with
one of our leg bands on it," she
said.
Peregrines nest in cliffs, and
historically they may have
nested in as many as 24 different
locations along the Wisconsin
and upper Mississippi rivers and
in Door County. These sleek
birds of prey are about the size
of a crow. They are renowned
for their ability to dive after prey
at speeds of up to 200 miles per
hour.
Like other birds of prey,
peregrines fell victiins to pesticides such as DDT that caused
themtolayeggswiththinshells,
resulting in high reproductive
failure. A federal ban on DDT
in 1972· came too late; by the
early 1960s, peregrines were no
longer nesting in Wisconsin.
Wisconsin listed peregrine fal~
cons as a state endangered
species in 1975.
Earlier efforts to release
peregrine falcons in rural areas
were not successful because
·young peregrines are extremely
vulnerable to predation, mostly
Science Building project approved
-
-a
'..
A $100,000 remodeling
to
create
a
project
. psych6physiology and biofeedback laboratory in tl\e Science
Building at the University · of
..... - Wisconsin-Stevens Point has
been approved by the UW System Board of Regents.
.
The plan requires additional
endorsements from the Wisconsin Building Commission, the
Legislature and Gov. Tommy
ThomJ)sQJt, but campus officials
are not expecting opposition.
Construction is likely to begin
this summer or early fall and be
completed so the laboratories
are fully operational by the
beginning of the spring 1991
sern.ester.
Part of the building area assigned to. :the Department of
Psychology
would
be
remodeled to create a laboratory
comprised of eight small rooms.
Psychophysiological record·
ing !l(luipment and clinical
biofeedback equipment would
be installed to support activities
by students in health and clini.cal psychology plus those pursuing
the
health
promotion/wellness major.
Some of the equipment
proposed for the laboratory
would be used to record electrical activity which takes place in
the human brain to determine
how different events change activity therein.
The biofeedback equipment
records· how people's bodies
react to things in the environment so the information can be
used to teach patients how to
voluntarily control such respon- ,
.. .
ses. For example, those under
stress often develop headaches
and other discOmfort as a result
of muscles becoming tense.
The equipment can monitor this
level of stress, giving off a pitch
that is determined by the level of
stress. The goal is for people to
produce the lowest pitch possible when attached to the
equipment, according to Paul
Schwieger, chairperson of the
Department of Psychology.
About $25,000 worth of equipment already is in use by the
department in psychophysiology and biofeedback studies.
With completion of the
remodeling, another $25,000
would be spent on related
devices.
There are several laboratories
in the state, but SChwieger says
the one planned here would be
"the only one that would be
state-of-the-art."
Padmanabhan Sudevan and
Dennis Elsenrath, both psychology professors, are planning to
be
the
laboratory
administrators. · In anticipation of
his role there, Sudevan will
spend all of next year on a sabbatical at the University of ll- ·
linois in Champaign-Urbana as
a research fellow in one of the
world's
foremost
psychophysiology programs.
Meanwhile, Elsenrath will
spend time at the Menniger
Clinic in Topeka, Kan., to
receive additional specialized
training in biofeedback.
by great horned owls. Currently, biologists are concentrating
on releasing falcons from tall
buildings in cities."Tall buildings simulate the
cliff environment peregrines inhabit in the wild and buil~ings
are less accessible to predators
that might kill peregrine chicks.
Eventually, we hope peregrines
will move into the wild on their
own to establish territories,"
Gieck says.
Peregrines have been released
the past two years in Madison
and there have been some
reported sightings of peregrines
in Madison this spring. Gieck
says the peregrines released two
years ago are old enougli that
they coulcl· return to· establiSh a
nesting territory, but that no
nesting activities have been
confirmed in the area.
Because peregrines are highly
territorial, if a pair does establish a nest in Madison, Gieck ·
plans to look for a release site in
another location, possibly La
Crosse. The recqvery plan calls
for releasing peregrine chicks through 1994.
~
--~
UNI'i-RSITY .
STOR=sruoENTS HElPtlG STUOENlS
lalnrsltr
Caotu
340·~31
LOOK!
AVAILABLE SEPTEMBER 1ST, 1990
The ULTIMATE Student Housing
BRAND NEW TOWN HOME 1 BLOCK FROM CAMPUS
"ENERGY MIXER" CONSTRUCTION HIGHUGHTS -
INCLUDES:
• 4· BR Townhouee & Den
• 2 Full baths
·Large clo.m
• Ful Modem Kltd1en
• 15 cu. ft. RefrlgeratoriiiMar
~
Ful 30 In, elecbtc range/oven
• Built-In dishwasher
·
• Bullt·ln microwave
• Private washer/dryer-not coln-op
• Large Jiving room
• Deluxe carpet • thermal drapes
• Offs1reet parking
• Phone and cable jacks In eech room
- 2"x8" wells (r-191neulatlon)
.
- R-4411111c llllulatlon (14 JnchM deep)
·Wood window ayatem with storms
- 100% efficient zone control heat
- 100% foundation perimeter Insulation
- Insulated steel entry doorl
• Sound prooled and Insulated between units
• Built 1D State of Wleconsln approved plana
·Same type of unit earned Northern States Power Company Energy
Conservation Certlllcateln Menomonie
. · Brand new high elllclancy appllancee
·Monthly utilities average only $15.00 per person
RENTAL TERMS
Groups to 7 persons
Refences required
Rent from $625.00/semester/person
Hurry II Many Already Rented
Campus View
Town Homes
"hHd on group. of 7112 month ...._With - t conectecl- I moe.
HURRY ON THIS OPPORTUNITY!
Call Today! Bill at Parker Bros.
Realty- 341-6688
.
Pointer Page 11
UWSP Blood Drive -- just the facts
STDs
frompageB
December; 198~. Knowledge
of Chlamydiallitfection Among
University Students-D. White
and M. Felts~
·
WORLD HE TH: July, 1988
· Interview Jim Zilch, M.D.
UWSP Health Center Various
Pamplets:
UWSP Health
Center
Shopping
1
frompageB
.
cuss what steps need to be taken
a o get the top rating in each
W(:ategory.
ASE will be selling copies of
"Shopping for a Better World"
next week in the UC Concourse.
Turtles
from page 8
ing them into hiding.
The turtles must come to
grips with the~elves while in
exile and devise a plan to save
theirbelovedmaster. Iwon'tgo
any farther except to say that
there is ·a really neat running
·
ninja fight at the end.
All in all, thelmovie was quite
good. ·It combined action, well
choreographed fight scenes,
light humor, and good special
effects with a fairly easy to follow plot. My biggest complaint
was that REAL ninja turtles,
that is, the comic book brand I
have come to know an<l love,
w.ould never eat pizza and
NEVER EVER say "kowabungadudes.
by Mary Kaye Smith
Features Editor
The Portage County Red
Cross wrapped up its second
blood drive at UWSP this year
on Thursday, Apri112.
The three day drive, which is
co-sponsored by UWSP, fell
· short of its 540 pint quota according to Jennifer Wanke, Executive Director of the Portage
County Red Cross. "It went
very well, although it was a little slower than we would have
liked," said Wanke.
She attributed the decreased
donation amount to the upcoming Easter weekend and a heavy
exam schedule.
The drive was organized by
Jerry Lineberger, UWSP Coordinator, and UWSP student
managers David Hoppe and .
Gabrielle Barrett. It, like past
blood drives, relied on student
and community volunteers to
help attain a reliable community
blood supply for Stevens Point.
· According toW anke, blood
·donation is vital "because there
is no artificial substitue for
Reflections
From page 7
If you seek more knowledge
about the environment, attend
some of the Earth Week events.
An impressive array of guest
speakers will be on campus
during Earth Week. Go and listen to them speak. You· will
learn something.
for the HIV virus (AIDS),
blood at this time. For each pint
hepatitis and other such disof blood that is donated, it is
possible to help between one
eases. · Some of the .donated
and six patients by breaking ·t he
blood is returned to Stevens
blood down into components."
Point to maintain the blood
supply at St. Michael's HospiDonated blood will be used
io help cancer patients,
tal.
To ensure the safety of the
hemophiliacs, surgical patients,
donor, a new sterile needle and
accident victims, newborn
plastic bag are used to collect
babies and numerous others.
Donors are carefully • the blood. · These precautions
make it impossible for the donor
screened before they are alto contract a blood disease while
lowed to give blood. Tht:Y are
giving blood. They have also
given a mini-physical to check
helped to make the Red Cross
for anemia, hypertension and
illness. People who have blood · blood supply much safer than it
diseases (including HIV), can- - was 10 years ago,
The next UWSP Blood Drive
cer, have used intravenous
will occur in the fall of 1990.
drugs, have had sex with a prosKim Hartz, second -year
titute, are using antibiotics at the
time of dortation or have recentBlood Drive volunteer enly had surgery are not allowed to
courages all students to donate
at the upcoming fall drive.
donate to ensure the safety of the
"Giving blood is a really good
blood supply.
To further ensure safety, all ' thing to do. Itsaves so many
of the donated blood is sent to
the American Red Cross
Regional Blood Center in
Madison. There it is screened
a
lives. It bothers me that people
are capable of doing it, and they
don't.
Scott Thoma, Public Relations Intern for the Portage
County American Red Cross
would like to $ee the entire
university community involved
in · the blood drive efforts.
"We'd like to see more of the
faculty donate. It would be a
good example for more student
participation."
A ·first time blood donor
commented, "I was a bit scared
that I would do something
dumb, like fainting. The needle
didn't hurt at all, but I almost
passed out because I insisted on
being upright so I could talk to
my friend giving blood nearby.
I guess the blood drained from
my head first. Still it was good
to know I was helping out someone else."
TACO U11ELL~
Plastics.
iI -FREEI[.e?11iI
~a.
Frompage '6
days/year, then by 4.8 million
Wiseonsin citizens.
These
results show Wisconsin throws
away more than 6.5 million tons
each year.
Six and 1/2·million tons of
Haste is enough to pile a typical
.:ity street six feetdeep, curb to
.::urb, for ~OQ ~s is
'llore than the distance from Su-,erior to Chicago.
I
I
L
16 oz. Pepsi Cola Product
with any purchase.
·1
1
Offer expires May 1. 1990. Umlt one coupon per person per visit.
Not good with any other offer. Good only at participating TACO
BELl restaurants In fhe Stevens Point wausau Schofield area. ~ .
f'fP5I & P£PSI-COI.A ARE RfGimRED TliADEMARKS Of PEPSICO.
•
433 DIVISION ST. STEVENS POINT
also located in Wausau & Schofield
THE WE.EK IN
PO -INT
THURSDAY, APRIL 19-- WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 1990
lt==================
THURSDAY. APRIL 19
SUNDAY. APRtL 22 .
TUESDAY. APRIL 24
Earth Week 1990 Rally, 7-9PM (Sundial)
UAB Visual Arts TNT w/CHRIS BARNES,
Comedian, 8:15PM (Encore-UC)
NATIONAL VOLUNTEER WEEK
EARTH WEEK/EARTH DAY
COMMUNICATION WEEK '90
Schmeeckle Reserve Wildlife Festival,
1-4PM (Schmeeckle Reserve)
Planetarium Show: FIRST LIGHT- ·
THE SPACE TELESCOPE STORY,
2PM (Planetarium-Sci. Bldg.)
Suzuki Concert: VIValdi Strings from
Wheaton College, 2PM (MH-FAB)
SPASH Presents: Basketball Game:
Green Bay Packers vs. St. Pt. .
Educators, 2PM (SPASH)
Tribute to Big Bands Concert, BPM
(Holiday Inn)
NATIONAL VOLUNTEER WEEK
.EARTH WEEK
COMMUNICATION WEEK '90
Spanish Club Theatre Prod.:
LA ZAPATERA PRODIGIOSA (The
Wonderful Shoemaker's Wife), 7PM
(Sentry}
Earth Week Speaker: Assemblyman,
SPENSER BLACK, The NeW
Conservation Era for Wisconsin,
7PM (112 CNR)
New York Voices Concert, BPM (MH-FAB)
UAB Issues & Ideas Program: THE
IMPORTANCE OF CREATIVITY IN OUR
LIVES, 8PM (Nic.-Marq. Rm.-UC)
FRIDAY. APRIL 20
Steiner Hall Alcohol Awareness Fund
· Run (Madison to Stevens Point)
Worn. Softball, Whitewater lnv. 11AM (T)
Faculty Recital: GREGORY FRIED,
Violin, BPM (MH-FAB)
Schmeeckle Reserve Program: WET &
. WILD, Wetlands, BPM (Schmeeckle
Reserve)
SATURDAY. APRIL 21
Steiner Hall Alcohol Awareness Fund
Run (Madison to Stevens Point)
City of St. Pt. Auction of Vehicles &
Bicycles, Beginning at 9AM
(Southside Fire Station)
ACT HUNGER CLEANUP, 10AM-1PM
. Worn. Softball, Whitewater lnv., 11AM (T)
Wind Ensemble, Unlv. Choir & Orchestra
· Concert, SPM (Grand Theatre-Wausau)
UAB Mini-Concerts Presents: THE
OTHERS, 9PM-12M (Encore-UC)
MONDAY. APRil
23
NATIONAL VOLUNTEER WEEK
EARTH WEEK
COMMUNICATION WEEK '9o
Comm. Dept. Speaker: LINDA
ELLERBEE, 7PM (PBR-UC)
Earth Week Kickoff w/Speaker, DAVID
BROWER, 7:30PM (101 CCC)
UWSP Flute Ensemble, 8:15~ (MH-FAB)
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE
<;:ONTACTTIIE CAMPUS ACTMTIES OFFICE
AT 346-4343!!!
UWSP
---------- .
WEDNESDAY. APRIL 25
NATIONAL VOLUNTEER WEEK
EARTH WEEK
COMMUNICATION WEEK '90
Worn. Softball, River Falls, 3PM (T)
Student Recital, 4PM (MH-FAB)
Stu. Org. Advisor Appreciation Dinner,
6PM (Hot Fish Shop)
UAB Issues & Ideas Mini-Courses:
MASSAGE, 7-8:30PM (Comm. Rm.-UC)
& YOGA, 7:30-9PM (Garland Rm.-UC)
Comm. Dept. Speaker: RICHARD
SCHLESINGER, 7:30PM (PBR-UC)
UAB Concerts AIR JAM & GUITAR
CONTEST. 7:30PM (Encore-UC)
Pointer Page U Thursday, April 19th, 1990
SPORTS-....-_________®-=
.Pointers sweep Eau Claire;
prepare for conferenCe opener
by Craig Roberts
Contributor
When his team started the
season, UW-Stevens Point
baseball coach Mike Ruechel
said hitting would be a weak
point.
The Pointers took a .326 team
batting average into Tuesday's
Plover
double-header
at
Memorial Field with UW-Eau
Claire and proceeded to pound
out 21 .hits in sweeping the twinbill, '8-7 and 12-8.
The sweep extended UWSP's
winning streak to nine games
and boosted the Pointers to 107-1 record.
In the Qpener, Eau Claire
jumped out to a 3-1 lead after
two innings and they overcame
a 4-3 deficit with three runs in
the sixth to take a 6-4 lead.
The Pointers were clearly in
need of a lift at this stage. UWSP
had ·already stranded eight runners in five innings and com- .
mitted a pair of base running
. mistakes which cost them two
more runners, both of whom
were in scoring position.
Rick Dallmann drove in a run
in the sixth when he reached on
an error and the tying run also
scored on the play. With two out
and the bases. loaded, Scott
Pritchard delivered a two-run
single to break the tie and give
the Pointers an opening game
victory.
"That was a clutch hit," said
Ruechel. "We needed someone
to step forward and come
through in the clutch and Scott
did that for us.
"That's a tough situation to
come into when you've been sitting on the bench on a cold day
but he came through."
The relief pitching of Steve
Kramer also provided a boost
for the Pointers.
Senior Dave Twaroski, 3-0 OJi
the season, struggled through
the first two innings and Kramer
came on to start the third. He
proceeded to retire 10 straight
batters, four via the strikeout
route, before tiring in the sixth.
He struggled through the final
two innings but came away with
his third victory of the season.
Dallmann and Kerry Braun
led the offense with two hits
apiece. ,
In the night cap, back-to-back
home runs by Dallmann and
freshman Rick Wagner finished
offEau Claire starter Jay Anderson .and helped put the game
away.
The Blugolds led 7-6 heading
into the bottom of the fourth and
Anderson quickly retired the
first two batters he faced. Dave
Schuett then ripped a single and
Dallmann unloaded a towering,
two-run blast over the 370-foot
sign in center field to give the
Pointers an 8-7 lead. Wagner
· followed with a shot in the opposite direction over the rightcenter field fence for his third
homer of the season.
Dallmann ~ove in a pair of
runs to highlight a three run
sixth inning which put the game
away.
.
Rob Wolff picked up the victory by thrciwing 5 1/3 innnings
of six-hit relief. He allowed two
runs and a .walk while striking
outtwo.
.
Wolff also turned in the
defensive p~ayotihe day with
Women's softball
answer calls
by Kevin Crary
Sports Editor
Shortstop Deb Shane puts the tag on a St. Norbert
runner during last Wednesday's meeting with the
Green Knights. (Photo by Tina Gajewski)
Anderson named
schQlar athlete
Senior Scott Anderson is one
of three Wisconsin State
University Conference athletes
to be honored as a scholar athlete for 1989-90 ~inter sports.
Anderson attained a 3.50 grade
pomt .average in .Physical
Education/Health Education,
while also starring on the basketball floor. Anderson was the
Pointers' leading scorer the last
two years, as well as an all-conference:selection and a co-cap-
tain for the 1989-90 Pointers.
Anderson also set the school's
consecutive free throw record
while leading the conference
with a 90.3% efficiency from
the line.
Anderson made the honor roll
five semesters, won the University Leadership Award and Hale
Quandt Memorial Scholarship,
and made the Dean's List and
Who's Who Among American
Students.
one out and runners on first and
second in the sixth inning, Alex
Weis popped up a bunt which
Wolff caught with a headlong dive. He jumped up and fired to
Braun at second base for a
double play as Chris Selle was
caught off the bag.
The heart of the Pointer lineup
came through in game two as
Dave Schuett, batting in the No.
3 spot, was 4-for-4 with fQur
runs scored. Dallmann was 3- for-4with five RBI's and Wagner was 3-for-4 with three runs
and two RBI. Braun also added
a pair of hits and two RBI.
"We won when we didn't play
well and I'm pleased with that,"
Ruechel said. "We made some
mental errors that could of cost
· us but we were able to overcome
them."
The Pointers begin WSUC
Southern Division play on
Friday when they play host to
UW-Platteville in a 1 p.m.
doubleheader at University
Field.
When you call on the UWStevens Point women's softball··
team, odds are very good
someone's going to be home.
After dropping an 11-3
decision in the first game on ·
Tuesday against Eau Claire,
Point "juggled" their lineup,
calling on players~ haven't
seen much action in the season,
and got the reply they were
looking for.
In game two against . Eau
Claire, Point responded with 15
hits and were this-time on the
right side of the lopsided 14-5
score.
"There's really no way to explain the series," said Page, "except that in game one riothing
went our way, whereas in game
two it seemed we could do no
wrong."
Tammy Kuester did no wrong
at the plate 8s the senior from
Rhinelander led the Pointers in
game two with three doubles in
four at bats and seven RBI. But
it was the way the others
answered 'the call that made the
diff~nce.
Freshman Kelly Anklam went
2 for 3 and scored three runs,
while freshman Kelly Rosenau
had one hit in three at bats, scoring once and hitting in two runs.
Sophomore Tina Peters had two
RBI on two hits, while senior
pitcher Steph Sobieck, who had
Oiily 14 appearances at the plate
prior to the game, played
firstbase and maJched Peters'
box
perforrnanc:e.
'The pedormance of our un-
score
~IIII!
FRID~Y
Baseballvs.
Platteville 1pm
(University Field)
SOFTBALL
Friday and
Saturday at ·
Whitewater Invite
Wednesday at
River-Falls
BASEBALL
Saturday at
Oshkosh
Tuesday at
Vlterbo
TRACK
Saturday at
Whitewater
lhvite
(of doubleheaders), it just feels
derclassmen have given us a
great to come out of tlfls one
great amount of confidence in
with a sweep. And it's not just
what we can do," said Page.
two or three people · that are
"We're at the point right now
coming through for us,
where we can count on a hit
everybody's contributing and
from anyone in the lineup and
we're fmally getting the timely
anyone sitting on the bench."
hits."
Point then hosted conference
foe Platteville on Wednesday . The Lady Pointers' timing is
just right as they will head to
and responded with hits when
Whitewater to compete in a
they needed to, recording two
round robin tournament this
comeback wins (9-8, 17-13) and
weekend. Other schools comboosting their record to 12-10
peting are Marian College,
overall and 4-2 in conference.
Olivet College (Michigan),
. Platteville fell to 13-13 and 2-3.
Whitewater, Platteville, and St.
In game one, the Lady Pointers
Norbert.
·
found themselves down 4-1
after a three-run homerun by
"W~ 're excited about this
. Pioneer freshman Lynn Nagy in
weekend's tournament," said
the , top of the fifth. Point
Page. "The games against Plat-.
however answered right back in
teville have given us a trementheir half of the inning with six
dous amount of co~dence in the
runs on five hits, including a
way we can play.
bases loaded triple by Wendy
"We're going to go into ~e
Renk.
tourney believing we can win A
Point added two much-needed
themall."
W
insurance runs in the bottom of
the sixth and managed to hold
off the Pioneers'/seventh inning
C:omeback to record the one-run
victory.
Game two was the same story
and same result. Point was be- COEDSOFBALLTOVRNEY
Entry deadline is April 20 at
hind 13-9 entering the top of the
seventh but again refused to go · 12 noon. The tourney will be down speechless as they held on April21 and 22.
responded with eight runs on
COED BEACH VB'TOURNEY
seven hits to secure the
· Entry deadline is April 27 at
doubleheader sweep.
12 noon. The tourney will be
"I'm really happy about the
held on April 28.
win," said Page of game two. "It
showed that we do have the
MEN'S SOFfBALtTOURNEY
ability to come back when under
Eritry deadline is APJil 27 at
pressure. We proved to oursel12 noon. The toUrney will be
ves that we can win no matter
held on April28 ~d 29.
what the situation.
''We've done so much splitting
Intramurals
I
J
Pointer Page 13
Trac~
teams finish second, fourth at Eau Claire Invite
by Britt Reid ·
and Oliver Queen
.
Kaylene Peterson was named
women:spett:orm~rofthe week
bysconngpointsmfourevents.
Peterson was a part of the
second place 4Xl00m relay
During the Flaster weekend,
team along with Sara Salaj, Lisa
some of the men's and women's
Wnuk, and Amy Voigt (52.43
track teams ventured to Eau
timing) .. She also scored fifth
Claire. It was a relatively nice
places m the lOOm (13.81),
day~- sunny, warm, and some
200m(29.6),andlongjump(l4wind. The women finished in
5.75).
second place, while the men
First place finishes were turned
fmished fourth out of eight
in by Aimee Knitter and Beth
teams.
t
The women had many athletes, . Weiland. Knitter set a fast pace
and broke away from the pack
who have not been scoring,
break into the scoring bracket · early' in the 3000m (10:52.45),
whileWeiland's4:45.12timing
this week. Thel sprint crew did
in the 1500m was just three
a fine job and while Beckie
.seconds off of national qualifySherwood was out with a sore
ing time.
foot, the young sprint team held
Second place fmishers were
their
own
for
the
day.
.
.I
·
Bucks limp into playoffs
Beth Mears in the shot put (429.5), Wnuk (lOOm. hurdles at
17.29), Suzy Jandrin (3000m,
10:57.92), Nancy K.ortenkamp
(800m, 2:24.06), Salaj (200m,
28':59), Sara Sonneman (triple
jump, 34-9.5), and the 4X400m
relay team of Voigt, Sal!lj,
Weiland, and Maureen Se1dl
(4:14.28).
Voigt was the lone fourth place
finisher with a 2:27.9 timing in
the 800m. Tina Sonnemarin
(high jump, 4-8), and Mamie
Sullivan(l500m,5:12.3)turned
in fifth place finishes, while
Wnuk (400m hurdles, 1:16.0)
finished in sixth.
As for the men, "there were
some outstanding performances, and while the times were
not great, they were an indication of some very good things to ·
come," said coach Rick Witt.
Freshman Dean Bryan continued to excel by winning the
400m dash in 49.32 seconds.
Scott Johnson turned in the
other firsf place fmish by winning the 800m in 1:56.79.
Mike Cummings had three ·
very good attempts at the national qualifying height in the
pole vault and lopks to be "back ·
on track", vaulting to 14-6 and
fmishing fourth. .
Scott Halverson (second place,
49-11.5), Josh Neuman (third,
47-7.5), and Blair Larsen all had
their be~t perfopnances in the
shot put, as did Mike Feltz
(fourth, 136-9), and Dan Bammert (sixth, 13.4"'4~in the ham-
mer throw.
"The best performance of. the
·week had to be by the wexght
people," said Witt. "Coach Bill
Wrightdeservesallthecreditas
he has done a great job with
them."
Halverson and Neuman were
named athletes of the week, and
after being told of this accomplishment, Halverson was
speechless and Neuman said "It
was totally awesome to see two
Point shot putters in the top
three."
Chris Larsen (110m· high
hurdles, 15.91), and the
4Xl00m relay team of Moore
Larsen, Tony Biolo and Bry~ ·
(43.61) turned in' the other
second place fmishes.
Biolo also turned in two third
place fmishes (lOOm, 11.~4)
and(200m 23.6) along with the
4X400m ~lay te:W ofCeplina .
Johnson,
Menke
and
Schedlbauer, while M~tt Hamilton was fourth·. (1500m
4:09.70).
'
_.;• ""
Tan & Tone
15 Park Ridge Drive
341.-2778
ONE MONTH $29
3 times per week /20 min. sessions
10-20 min. sessions $30 ·
10-30.min. sessions $40
*Student 10 required
Expires 4-31-90
..
by Tim Wel}tworth
Sports Columnist
I
a
W
While the starting lineup may
be easy for some coaches to
come up with, it has to be the
hardest job for Milwaukee
Bucks' coach Del Harris.
Who's not available tonight?
Or maybe the question should
be: Who is available? Sikma's
back is nagging him: Pressy and
Pierce can't go. Humphries has
the flu. Dunleavy must refrain
from playing to prevent t'urpter
hair loss. And the list goes on. ..
As the Milwaukee Bucks begin
first-round playoff action next
week, . one wonders why this
team can't ever stay healthy.
Do the Bucks and Brewers have
some kind of jinx together?
Healing the disabled athlete is
definitely a commonplace in
''Beertown."
In focusing on the Bucks, they
have lost close to 230 games due
to injuries to multiple players.
It's a Surprise actually that they
have 40+ wins. Good thing they
play ·New Jersey and Orlando
every week (at least it seems
they do).
In last year•s opening playoff
series victory over Atlanta, it
was Fred "Psycho.. Roberts who
played unlike himself in the absence of Terry Cummings.
Does this year's Bucks squad
hold another aoberts surprise?
Tito Horford or Frank Kornet
maybe? No,notachance. Inall
likelihood, it will be the nucleus
of seven ·o r eight guys who will
try and pull off a playoff upset
over
probable
opponent
Chicago.
An evaluation of the Bucks
shows that Alvin Robertson has
been the most consistent, injuryfree performer all season long.
Ricky "Butter" Pierce is good
for 30 points when able to play
and is one of the most underrated players iir the league.
Brad Lohaus has been a pleasant
surprise, but if only he could
shoot from inside ate 3-point
line. Even so, he beats Randy
Breuer in playing ability and
looks by a long Shot. Jay
Humphries established himself
this year as one of the team
leaders, while Jack Sikma has
had a season of nagging injuries
and inconsistencies. "Cadillac"
Anderson will need some new
tires and a tune-up during the
off-season.
It's amazing that Del Harris'
head of thick gray hair hasn't
thinned over the p~t six
months. Even with all the injuries, he still has been able to
put together a legitimate, yet
specUlative, contender. Anything Milwaukee does in the
playoffs is a tribute to their
revolving lineup. But until the
Bucks have the horses that can
pull the load, they won't be able
to compete with the "big dogs"
oftheNBA.
. . .. .... .. ..
MILWAUKEE BREWERS
VS. Minnesota TWINS
...
FRIDAY, MAY 4, 1990
S(GN UP NOW TO JOIN UAB'S BREWER TRIP!!
$6 INCLUDES TRA~SPORTATION AND TICKET
$4 WITHOUT TRANSPORTATION . (ADD_$2 FOR
NON-STUDENTS). SIGN UP BY APRIL 27 AT
THE CAMPUS ACTIVITIES OFFICE (LOWER
LEVEL UC) . BUSES LEAVE AT 3PM ON MAY
4 IN FRONT OF UC AND RETURN AT lAM.
..•
.•"'.
...
( X-3000
)
tlial-an-ovent
.
SPONSORED BY: TRAVEL
&
LEI SURE
Pointer Page 14 Thursday, April 19th, 1990
.
.
CURSE of the TRASH HEAP·.
iY9 Kille L. WMte ·
MOM ALWA'Y'S SAID TO TAKE OUT THE TRASH &
NOW IT'S TIME TO START REC'Y'CLING IT.
look /01" r~oUH,g ~s /01" glass, paper and
alummum m
Unwers~ Ce-nter and the
Residuu;e, Halls. It's gonna take all of"" to olean
'UfJ the mess \Pe''Pe all oreate4, so please heltJ! · ·
the
./
S1H'f"wt4 ~ th~ UtUirJws~P:J C~ R~oUng P¥osrram
Pointer Page 15
SSIFIEOS--___:,___
FOR SA LE RENT
Summer Housing!! 90
Need 1-2 females to share fur. nished apartment. Across the
street from Collins. GREAT
PRICE! call Ann or Becky at
344-6853 today
, New, 2 bedroom, energy efficieJ:?.t, air-conditioning, dish
washer, microwave, 4 blocks
from UWSP cab Patty at 3419705.
~.
------------------Summer Housing. Wanted:
responsible male/female to
share 2 bedroom apartment for
summer.
-furnished clean
-no security deposit
-pets-allowed
-137.50/mo. +utilities
For Sale: Mens 1989 Specialized Sirrus Racing-Touring
Bike.
Shimano 105 components. Excellent condition, ·
used only .3 months. Price includes pump, pak, wrenches,
water cage, extra tube. Great
buy for a serious biker. $450
call 345-0652 and leave mes·
sage.
-
PERSONALS
FREE: Adorable seven-month,
female kitten to good home! I'm
allergic! Call Kelly at 341-8832
or Troy at 341-9371.
If your car or truck runs, its
eligible! Best Beater Contest.
Sunday April29. 3-5 pm. Participants check in at 2 p.m.
Parking lot X (east of Science
Building). The more colors,
rust, noise and smoke the better!
$50 grand prize! For more information call UAB 346-2412.
Please sign up at the Campus
Activities Office--lower level
UC--before April27, 4:30 p.m.
Wed. April 25th, · Mr. John
Moore will introduce the video
"Dreamings:
The Art and
Aboriginal Australia."
The
program will begin at 4 p.m. in
the Science building, room
0314. Join the journey and explore the timeless value of the
oldest continuous art tradition in
the world!
. Fort Kent Man (Village Apts
#4)
.You better have read the book J
gave you. Teenage Muntant
Ninja Turtles! So where's the
truck? I'm still waiting for my
dinner. You could .be getting
yourself in trouble 202 twins
T&J.
Colin Baby
You blow me up!
Wanna go see the frreworks?
the planets are colliding I hear.
Love,CMFC
Prepare your dancing shoes. Is
To Dan, It's been two weeks
without hearing that bump in
the night. Will we ever see you
again? Two women and a rat.
WWSP-90FM
Executive staff positions
for 1990-91 will soon be
available at 90FMWWSP.
CookieJo-
.
Friday good for you? Well you
can't bring Boberoo,just a night
for the girls. Why Jo?
William 412 Pray
You never seem to visit unless
it's to use us for the TV. Just
kidding of course but come visit
anyway.
t
. . . . . ........_.. ..._ ...................... -
JH202Sims,
Koch is pronounced COOK!
(Even if SOME people are to
stubborn to admit it. ..) Can I
make cake or what! 4,000 cal.
per slice is a small price to pay!
STUDENT
HOUSING
90-91 School year.
Duplex , 4blocks from
Campus. Groups of 4
or 3. Single rooms
$300 for summer call
345-2396,9-4:30
Weekdays or 3410255 evenings/
. weekends
-
-
COLLEGE STVIJENTS.
SUIIIIER JOBS
The Private lrdJatry Council has
summer openelngs lor post-secondary S1udentl up to the age o1 21
who are realdents o1 Calument,
Outagamle, or Waupaca County.
Various positions are avaRable:
clerical, maintenance,
groundskeeping, recreation aides,
health care, and general laborer.
Moat jobs are lui time, days and
no weekends I Eam extra cash lor
your education. caa today to see 11
you quality. 414-832-5657 or 1-800236-4044.EqualopportunHy
employer.
SUMIIER EMPLOYMENT
Description: Driving a dump truck
and harvesting weeds on lakes In
Wisconsin, llllnolaand Michigan.
Competitive salary. Ideal tor
Treehaven students and others
who enjoy wOrking outdoors. Attend Informational meeting Saturday, Aprll21 at 9:00 am In room
324 College ol Natural Reaoui'C!IS
Building. Questions- call344~91
To the women on the Square:
NACA You are great, it's been
a great ·semester lets drink!
NACA Club; Holly we miss
You!
lntervarsity Christian Fellowship is doing a series called
"We've Bought the Lie," dealing with racism, pornography,
human sexuality and self image.
Workshop on kindergarten
placement, entry and curriculum. Wednesday, April25,
6:30-8:30p.m., WrightLounge,
UC. Sponsored by UCLCC and
Gesell.
Just in time to relax after finals and escape before summer
work. This seven-day tour of northern Wisconsin Is hard to
match! Daily cycling trips will take you through rare and
compefHrrS)' areas and across breathtaking landscapes. You
Will swim in spring..fed lakes, camp under the wilderness
skies and relax alongside magnificent waterfalls. Write today·
for more information. Cycling Tour Central Wisconsin
Envirom.ental ~ation. 7290 County Road MM. Amherst
Junction, Wl54407.
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YOUR MOVE,
MAYNARD
I
Tonight! Comedian Chris Barnes. · 8 p.m. in the Encore. It's
FREE! Spon:sored by UAB.
DELUXE 4 BEDROOM
Apartment for Sept. 1
rental featuring dishwasher, microwave,
stove, refrigerator,
private laundry, carpet,
drapes, have your own
room, as low as $625
per semester. Groups to
7. can Bill at 341-6688
ATTENTION: POSTAL
JOBS/
Start $11.41/hourl For application info call (1) 602838-8885, Ext. M-17474,
6am-10pm, 7 days.
.SUMMER
INTERNSHIPS
Assistant Manager
trainees, $1040 per month.
Various positions. Rapid
advancement, Need a car.
Call10-4pm
(414} 771-9081
A SUMMER JOB YOU'RE GONNA LOVE!!
North Woods Wisconsin private camp is loOking fc.,.:
COUNSELORS/INSTRUCTORS
ARTS/CRAFTS
CANOEING
ECOLOGY
GOLF
GYMNASTICS
HORSEBACK
*
PHOTOGRAPHY
POTTERY
ROPES COURSE
SAILIHCi
SWIMMING
WATERSKI
*
SAIUNG DIRECTOR TENNIS DIRECTOR
saJBA DIRECTOR
*Leaders for l.Jildemess Canoe and Backpack Trips
*Assistant Cook
*Ntrse <RN or GN> & Assistant
SALARY, ROOM/ BOARD, TRANSP. ALLOWANCE
FOR AN APPUCATIOH. WRITE TODAY TO:
Camp Tlmberlane, 2105 W. Marne Ave., Milwaukee, WI. 53209
Or cal Hike at <414) 228-9111, days or evenings.
\
IT'S UP TO YOU. JULIE & KARL HAVE PULLED
OUT ALL THE STOPS TO MAKE THE VILLAGE
THE BEST STUD.ENT HOUSING IN TOWN . .
NOW ALL YOU HAVE TO DO IS TAKE A
TOUR. SEE FOR YOURSELF, CALL THE VILLAGE TODAY. IT'S YOUR MOVE ...
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20 1 Michigan
' 341-2120
·-----------------------~
POINTER PIZZA --,~
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"POINTER COMBO" . :
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345-0901
Between 8:00 p.m. and closing time, receive
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sausage and four Cokes® for only $6.99.
• One coupon per order
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offer
·
1 • Tax not included
Expires 5-30-90
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101 Division st. N.
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Expires 5-30·90
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10" STUFFER
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ROOMMATE SPECIAL
: I 0" pepperoni pizza and 2 Cokes® : :
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Two I 0" pep~eroni or sausage
piZzas
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: Receive one 10" thick crust pizza with : : Receive two 10" pizzas with cheese and
I pepperoni, extra cheese and two Cokes® for 1
: pepperoni or sausage for only $6.99
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1 only $4.95
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345-0901.1
345 ~9r2!l\,
I • One coupon per order
•
St. N. J
· : • One coupon Pet order • .
101 DMolon
1 • Tax not included
.:
·
Expires 5-30-90 1
1 • Tax not included
Expires 5-30-90 1
:· •
L•••••••••••••••••··~---~
L•••••••••••••••••••••·-~
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Two-·14" pep~eroni or sausage
piZzas
Large Pizza with·one topping
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PARTY PACK
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"POINTER PLEASER". I
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1·
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1
S10• 95
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Receive two. 14" pizzas with
and : .· I
pepperoni..QI sausage for only $10.95
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• One coupon per order
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• Tax not included
:. •
Expires 5-30-90 1
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ch~ese
345 ~92.nQJ
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Receive one large pizza with cheese and one
topping of your choice for only $5.95.
• Onecouponperorder
• Not good with doubles
offer
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• Tax not included
•
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345 _0901
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101 Division Sl, N.
Expires 5-30-90
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345-0901
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101 Division St. N.Stevens Point, WI
Hours:
11 AM-1:30AM Sun- Wed
11 AM - 2:00 AM Thurs
11 AM - 3:00 AM Frl & Sat
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