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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
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            <text>Volume 2, Issue 2</text>
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            <text>Students in Aspin's Campaign</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>filil&#13;
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~&#13;
PO&#13;
&lt;:l\&#13;
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-=rn&#13;
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rn&#13;
~riIi1&#13;
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semesr:n;,~r~T~~:~ngl?:teJ; \scheduJed to open for the 1971 fall&#13;
master plan to be comPlet:~. e t lrd bUilding of the Parkside campus&#13;
Foundation Sponsors&#13;
Environment Program&#13;
Parkside students may now have an&#13;
opportunity to do something about envl~onmental&#13;
problems. The National&#13;
SCIence ~oundation is sponsoring a&#13;
stu~ent-dIrected program aimed at&#13;
solving certain national problems.&#13;
Student projects are intended to deal&#13;
with a problem or set of problems related&#13;
to the physical, biological or social enviromnenl.&#13;
The National 'Science Foundation&#13;
is offering financial support for&#13;
Students in Aspin's Campaign&#13;
A group of Parkside students announced possible.&#13;
tha~ they are formi~g a committee to Marjala said that Congressman&#13;
assist in the campaign of Les Aspin, Schadeberg is one of the most reactionary&#13;
Democratic candidate for Congress. members of Congress and has called for a&#13;
Don, M.arjala, a spokesman for the military victory in Vietnam. Schadeberg&#13;
gro~, said that he fell the race between was recently listed by a national enAspm&#13;
and the incumbent Republican vironment group, "Environmental Ac·&#13;
Congressman Henry Schadeberg tion", as one of the twelve worst&#13;
presented a clear choice for students Congressmen in supplying anti-pollution&#13;
concerned about the war in Indo-China, legislation,&#13;
ecoiOllY'and the economy. The central tasks of tbe Aspin group will&#13;
.Aspm, who is 3?, is a former White House be canvassing distributing literature, and&#13;
aIde. to President Kennedy and an doing headquarters work.&#13;
assistant to Senator Proxinire. He has Anyone interested in working for Aspin&#13;
called for the removal of U.S. troops from should call the Racine headquarters at 632-&#13;
Indo-China as quickly as is physically 4487 or tbe Kenosha headquarters at 654-&#13;
7900.&#13;
selected projects. All projects will be&#13;
student-originated and student-managed,&#13;
and are to be carried out for the most part&#13;
by an interdisciplinary group under&#13;
student leadership.&#13;
Projects are to be planned to occupy&#13;
fully the time of the student investigators&#13;
o~er a 10 to 12week period, and therefore&#13;
Will be conducted during the summer.&#13;
Academic credit may be granted for&#13;
participation in this program.&#13;
There is to be a meeting of concerned&#13;
students Tuesday, Oct. 6, at 2:30 p.m. in&#13;
Room 21OA,Greenquist. Students unable&#13;
to attend ought to contact Mr. Gordon&#13;
Ziemer in Room 279, Tallent Hall.&#13;
COMING EVENTS&#13;
Oct. 9-11 - Sister Bay Fall Festival.&#13;
Fish boil, carnival, street auction, farm&#13;
market, brat fry, ping pong ball drop,&#13;
parade, Sister Bay,&#13;
Oct. 13-18 - Ringling Brothers Circus.&#13;
Arena, Milwaukee.&#13;
Sept. 16-0ct. 11 - New zealand&#13;
Trading Co., London House, $10.75-9,75&#13;
Oct. 16 - Laura Nyro, Auditorium, $6,50-&#13;
3.50&#13;
Oct. 17 - The Guess Who, Auditorium,&#13;
$6.50-3.50&#13;
Security Force&#13;
Not Armed&#13;
" The security men on campus this year&#13;
are not armed, have no authoritation to&#13;
be armed. and w ill nol be armed." according&#13;
to ASSistant Chancellor Clar("oc&#13;
Brockman. There will be IX men on&#13;
campus who will be In uniform while lhl'\&#13;
are working. Eventually. as total campu'&#13;
p~otection and secunry builds up. tberc&#13;
Will be both poll e and sl'cural) offrcer&#13;
"No one should be offended by euber th,·&#13;
security men or even the pohce when thl'\&#13;
become a reality They are here for th'l'&#13;
protection of students and equrpm -nt."&#13;
Brockman Slated lie went on to sa", that&#13;
the other universities had a long history of&#13;
usmg watchmen and police. but "a." far 3.&#13;
Iknow. they have never drawn any gun.&#13;
either in Madison or '1I1waukec."&#13;
,The prtrnary duties of the S('CUflt)pohcc&#13;
Will be to give first ard and to transport&#13;
injured students to hospitals, direct&#13;
traffic. and prevent vandalism and theft&#13;
The Assostant Chancellor POlOted out&#13;
there IS close to eight million dollars in&#13;
vested in buildings alone. plus a srzeabl&#13;
amount that students mav not be aware of&#13;
Invested tn equipment. He pomted out that&#13;
there had been mcidents of vandalism and&#13;
theft on many of the out buildings. Also.&#13;
the campus is not protected by any&#13;
metropolitan police force. "The herirrs&#13;
department has always cooperated with&#13;
us, but are limited because of their size:'&#13;
There will also be a security vehicle&#13;
equipped to patrol the campus.&#13;
The aims of the security force and long.&#13;
term goals were stated in a letter 10 Sgl&#13;
McCerrity which Brockman quoted for the&#13;
Newscope. The intent of the force "IS not In&#13;
establish a conventional police force. bUI a&#13;
compassionate protective service.'&#13;
Academy Honors&#13;
Chemistry Lecturer&#13;
Mary A. Doherty. lecturer 10 chemlSlr)&#13;
at the University of wtsconstn-Parkside.&#13;
was one of four slate educators who wert'&#13;
honored Saturday with life membership.&#13;
in the Wisconsin Academy of Sciene "&#13;
Arts and Letters,&#13;
Miss Doherty was cited for more than 25&#13;
years of service to the academy at the&#13;
academy's centennial banquet at thc&#13;
Wisconsin Club in Milwaukee.&#13;
Miss Doherty has taught pari-lime at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin for the past fi\"('&#13;
years after a distinguished car r as a&#13;
science teacher in Kenosha high schools .&#13;
where she was active 10 the Junior&#13;
Academy of SCience, an officer in science&#13;
teachers' organizations, director of the&#13;
Kenosha County High School SClcnce Fair.&#13;
and recipient of an "oulstandlOg t acher"&#13;
award&#13;
FACTS REVEALED&#13;
By MARC EISEN&#13;
It's not the real Union, and Student&#13;
Government apparently won't have a&#13;
significant hand in the running of it (if the&#13;
Administration's intransigence is to be&#13;
belieVed, but it is the Student Activities&#13;
BUilding, and there is beer there, and&#13;
considering the prolonged difficulty in&#13;
getting the two of them, it is a limited&#13;
VIctOry in itself for the students.&#13;
The rapid construction of tbe building as&#13;
had been hoped by the administration was&#13;
hampered, according to James Galbraith&#13;
of Planning and Construction, by a series&#13;
of roadblocks concerning the availability&#13;
of adequate funds the wisdom of constructing&#13;
a tempor;"'y Activities Building&#13;
when the Union was.tentatively to be buill&#13;
m two or three years, and a report by the&#13;
Slate Bureau of Engineering which saId&#13;
the building would cost $110,000, and not&#13;
the $93,000 the Administration had&#13;
estimated.&#13;
The infighting that marked these areas&#13;
or disagreement was resolved after a&#13;
Coupleof months of maneuvering when the&#13;
Board was convinced adequate funding&#13;
Was available after opposition in the State&#13;
BU dmg Commission over the temporary il . '&#13;
~peets of the building was overcome, and&#13;
nall when cuts were made in the budget&#13;
:~pa~ed by the Bureau of Engineering to&#13;
mg.t within the $93,000 allocated for the&#13;
construction of the building.&#13;
~ fact, part of Bureau's overblown&#13;
estimate budget was due to its own extravagant&#13;
desire to charge Parksid~ $6,000&#13;
for slightly redesigning the plans to make&#13;
them more exact, and for supervising the&#13;
construction of the building. The Bureau&#13;
finally settled for $3,383, and a little less&#13;
, detailed redesigning.&#13;
The charge, however, was unexpected&#13;
by some Parkside people involved in the&#13;
planning, and the money will be taken out&#13;
from furnishing the building, Folding&#13;
partitions, and possibly air conditioning,&#13;
are casualties.&#13;
In fairness to the Bureau, though,&#13;
Galbraith stated the redesigned plans&#13;
assured Parkside a more functionally safe&#13;
building than it would have gollen without&#13;
the plan changes,&#13;
OveraH it was a gruelling few months,&#13;
and Galbraith said, HWe were running&#13;
scared .. , but after it was over Ifell good.&#13;
We had to take some money out to stay&#13;
within our budget, but I think we actually&#13;
made it a better building by doing so."&#13;
The building itself is run by Larvern&#13;
Martinez, the director of Auxiliary Enterprises.&#13;
The supervisor is Karen Bayer&#13;
of his office,&#13;
The building will be open 8:00 a,m. till&#13;
10:00 p,m. Tuesdays through Thursdays,&#13;
and 8:00 a.m. till 1:00 a,m. Fridays. Beer&#13;
will be served 11:00 a,m. till 1:30 p.m" and&#13;
4:00 p.m, till 10:00 p.m: during nights,&#13;
except on Fridays when It will be served&#13;
till closing. .&#13;
Martinez is operating on a contmgency&#13;
fund that was cut sbarply to fit the budgel&#13;
He describes the situation as "tight". He&#13;
smiles when he says it. As a resull of the&#13;
cut he is limited on the extent he can&#13;
furnish the Activities Building,&#13;
Yet be feels the building is adequate, and&#13;
sees the return of beer on campus as an&#13;
example of how the "system" can be made&#13;
.to work.&#13;
It had been Regent policy for the age&#13;
requirement for beer drinking on the&#13;
campuses to be the same as that of the&#13;
townships they were in. And when Somers&#13;
township under the prodding of the Bar&#13;
interests raised its age to 21 a year and a&#13;
half ago, sales of beer at the Brick Factory&#13;
stopped.&#13;
Following that a long process of&#13;
agitation for beer on campus began by&#13;
members of the administration. It&#13;
culminated in an opinion of the state Attorney&#13;
General that said each campus&#13;
could legally set its own age requirement.&#13;
Martinez sees no problem with beer on&#13;
campus, and thinks students will police&#13;
themselves. However, at the present beer&#13;
is being "eased" in. That is the reason for&#13;
the restricted beer drinking hours and why&#13;
advertisement for activities say "refresh·&#13;
ments" and not beer.&#13;
The programming of most special&#13;
events at the building will be coordinated&#13;
by Bill Niebuhr and the Student Activities&#13;
Board. Tbe Board and its subcommittees&#13;
make recommendations on films dances&#13;
and recreation schedules. Its ';'ember~&#13;
this year will be made up mostly of&#13;
About&#13;
Activities&#13;
Building. • •&#13;
students who worked last year on it. They&#13;
are chosen by Niebuhr on the basis of&#13;
interviews, and usually one can assume&#13;
they pretty much mirrOr Ni buhr's&#13;
thoughts,&#13;
He hopes eventually to only IOtervlew&#13;
and choose prospecllve Chairmen, and to&#13;
leave the choosing of the other members of&#13;
the subcommittees to the chairmen&#13;
themselves.&#13;
He does acknowledge that at present&#13;
"whatever we do, it won't be a good&#13;
method of selecting members."&#13;
Eventually when the Union is&#13;
established the Student Activities Board&#13;
will become the Union Programming&#13;
Board. The Union itself then will be run by&#13;
the Union Board, which will be made up of&#13;
students, faculty, administrators, and&#13;
alumni.&#13;
The ·Union win be a private enterprise&#13;
supported from Union fees, money raised&#13;
at the Union, and by Union sponsored&#13;
activities. At the present, however, there&#13;
is no Union fee at Parkside, and the Activities&#13;
Building is not supported by it&#13;
"A streamlined study of successful&#13;
credit practices" is a good description of a&#13;
Consumer Credit CoW'Seto be offered to&#13;
Kenoshans on Monday, October 12. The&#13;
course will be presented by Sterling S.&#13;
Speake, Credit specialist and field lecturer&#13;
for the International Consumer Credit&#13;
Association, and will be held at Howard&#13;
Johnson's Motor Lodge from 7 to 10 p.m.&#13;
Jail-&#13;
~ -~&#13;
·~&#13;
~&#13;
~ C ··"" ."-.&#13;
0&#13;
"' 0 C\&#13;
-&#13;
V'\&#13;
Im ~ ~ ~&#13;
C&#13;
:s&#13;
rll The Library-Learni g c te · semester. The L-L Cente/ .&#13;
11 : J: is ~ched~~ to open for the 1971 fall&#13;
master plan to be complet:. e lbird building of the Park ide campu&#13;
~ Jail&#13;
t~&#13;
Foundation Sponsors&#13;
Environment Program&#13;
Parkside students may now have an&#13;
o~portunity to do something about env1~onmental&#13;
problems. The National&#13;
Science ~oundation is sponsoring a&#13;
student-directed program aimed at&#13;
solving certain national problems.&#13;
. Student projects are intended to deal&#13;
with a problem or set of problems related&#13;
t~ the physical, biological, or social environment.&#13;
The National Science Foundation&#13;
is offering financial support for&#13;
Students in Aspin's Campaign&#13;
A group of Parkside students announced possible.&#13;
tha~ th~y are formi~g a committee to Marjala said that Congressman&#13;
assist m the campaign of Les Aspin, Schadeberg is one of the most reactionary&#13;
Democratic _candidate for Congress. members of Congress and has called for a&#13;
Don M_arJala, a spokesman for the military victory in Vietnam. Schadeberg .&#13;
gro~p, said that he felt the race between was recently listed by a national enAspm&#13;
and the incumbent Republican vironment group, "Environmental AcCongressman&#13;
Henry Schadeberg tion", as one of the twelve worst&#13;
presented a clear choice for students Congressmen in supplying anti-pollution&#13;
concerned about the war in Indo-China, legislation.&#13;
ecol~y, and _the ~onomy. The central tasks of the Aspin group will&#13;
. Aspm, who 1s 32, 1s a former White House be canvassing distributing literature, and&#13;
aide. to President Kennedy and an doing headquarters work.&#13;
assistant to Senator Proxmire. He has Anyone interested in working for Aspin&#13;
called for the-removal of U.S. troops from should call the Racine headquarters at 632·&#13;
Indo-China as quickly as is physically 4487 or the Kenosha headquarters at 654·&#13;
7900.&#13;
selected projects. All projects will b&#13;
student-originated and student-managed,&#13;
and are lo be carried out for the most part&#13;
by an interdisciplinary group under&#13;
student leadership.&#13;
Projects are lo be planned to occupy&#13;
fully the time of the student investigator&#13;
over a 10 lo 12 week period, and therefore&#13;
will be conducted during the summer.&#13;
Academic credit may be granted for&#13;
participation in this program.&#13;
There is to be a meeting of concerned&#13;
students Tuesday, Oct 6, al 2:30 p.m. in&#13;
Room 210A, Greenquist. Students unable&#13;
to attend ought to contact Mr. Gordon&#13;
Ziemer in Room 279, Tallent Hall.&#13;
COMING EVENTS&#13;
Oct. 9-11 - Sister Bay Fall Festival.&#13;
Fish boil, carnival, street auction, farm&#13;
market, brat fry, ping pong ball drop,&#13;
parade. Sister Bay.&#13;
Oct. 13-18 - Ringling Brothers Circu .&#13;
Arena, Milwaukee.&#13;
Sept. 16-Oct. 11 - New Zealand&#13;
Trading Co., London House, $10.75-9.75&#13;
Oct. 16 - Laura Nyro, Auditorium, $6.50·&#13;
3.50&#13;
Oct. 17 - The Guess Who, Auditorium,&#13;
$6.50-3.50&#13;
Security Force&#13;
Not Armed&#13;
Academy Honors&#13;
Chemistry lecturer&#13;
Mary A. Dohcrt\', lecturer m chtm1 In&#13;
at the niv r 1ly· or I co, m,P rk.1d •.&#13;
wa one of four ·talc edu ·a tors who \H n ·&#13;
honored Saturday with hf m •mbc htp&#13;
in the Wiscon. in A ad my f&#13;
Arl and Letters.&#13;
Mi s Dohert wa II d for mor lh n 25&#13;
year of . rvice to th academy t lh&#13;
academy' cent nni I banqu l at th&#13;
Wi con in lub in , 11lw ukt .&#13;
Mi s D h rty ha tau •ht part-11m t th&#13;
Univ r ity of Wi on m for th p t fin•&#13;
years after a d1 llngui h ar r&#13;
science t acher in K no h, hi h . hool ,&#13;
wh re sh wa act1v m th• Jun101&#13;
Acad my of Sci n , an fftc r in&#13;
teach r ' organization , dir tor&#13;
Ken ha County High chool I r&#13;
and r ipi nt of n ''out nchng t&#13;
award.&#13;
FACTS REVEALED About&#13;
Activities&#13;
Building . • •&#13;
By MARC EISEN&#13;
It's not the real Union, and Student&#13;
Government apparently won't have a&#13;
significant hand in the running of it (if the&#13;
Ad~inistration's intransigence is to be&#13;
believed, but it is the Student Activities&#13;
Building, and there is beer there, and&#13;
con~idering the prolonged difficulty in&#13;
g~tting the two of them, it is a limited&#13;
victory in itself for the students.&#13;
The rapid construction of the building as&#13;
had been hoped by the administration was&#13;
hampered, according to James Galbraith&#13;
of Planning and Construction, by a series&#13;
of roadblocks concerning the availability&#13;
of adequate funds the wisdom of constructing&#13;
a tempor~ry Activities Building&#13;
:,Vhen the Union was.tentatively to be built&#13;
m two or three years, and a report by ~e&#13;
State Bureau of Engineering which said&#13;
the building would cost $110,000, and not&#13;
the $93,000 the Administration had&#13;
estimated.&#13;
The infighting that marked these areas&#13;
of disagreement was resolved after a&#13;
couple of months of maneuvering when the&#13;
Board was convinced adequate funding&#13;
Was available, after opposition in the State&#13;
Building Commission over the temporary&#13;
~pects of the building was overcome, and&#13;
finaU when cuts were made in the budget&#13;
r~pa~ed by the Bureau of Engineering to&#13;
ring it within the $93,000 allocated for the&#13;
construction of the building.&#13;
1~ fact, part of Bureau's overblown&#13;
estimate budget was due to its own extravagant&#13;
desire to charge Parkside $6,000&#13;
for slightly redesigning the plans to make&#13;
them more exact, and for supervising the&#13;
construction of the building. The Bureau&#13;
finally settled for $3,383, and a little less&#13;
• detailed redesigning.&#13;
The charge, however, was unexpected&#13;
by some Parkside people involved in the&#13;
planning, and the money will be taken out&#13;
from furnishing the building. Folding&#13;
partitions, and possibly air conditioning,&#13;
are casualties.&#13;
In fairness to the Bureau, though,&#13;
Galbraith stated the redesigned plans&#13;
assured Parkside a more functionally safe&#13;
building than it would have gotten without&#13;
the plan changes. OveraH it was a gruelling few months,&#13;
and Galbraith said, "We were running&#13;
scared ... but after it was over I felt good.&#13;
We had to take some money out to stay&#13;
within our budget, but I think we actually&#13;
made it a better building by doing so."&#13;
The building itself is run by Larvern&#13;
Martinez, the director of Auxiliary Enterprises.&#13;
The supervisor is Karen Bayer&#13;
of his office. The building will be open 8:00 a.m. till&#13;
10:00 p.m. Tuesdays through Thursdays,&#13;
and 8:00 a.m. till 1:00 a.m. Fridays. Beer&#13;
will be served 11:00 a.m. till 1:30 p.m., and&#13;
4:00 p.m. till 10:00 p.m: d~ing nights,&#13;
except on Fridays when 1t will be served&#13;
till closing.&#13;
Martinez is operating on a contingency&#13;
fund that was cut sharply to fit the budgel&#13;
He describes the situation as "tight". He&#13;
smiles when he says it. As a result of the&#13;
cut he is limited on the extent he can&#13;
furnish the Activities Building.&#13;
Yet he feels the building is adequate, and&#13;
sees the return of beer on campu a an&#13;
example of how the "system" can be made&#13;
to work. It had been Regent policy for the age&#13;
requirement for beer drinking on the&#13;
campuses to be the same as that of the&#13;
townships they were in. And when Som r&#13;
township under the prodding of the Bar&#13;
interests raised its age to 21 a year and a half ago, sales of beer at the Brick Factory&#13;
stopped.&#13;
Following that a long proc of&#13;
agitation for beer on campus began by&#13;
members of the administration. It&#13;
culminated in an opinion of the state Attorney&#13;
General that said each campus&#13;
could legally set its own age requirement.&#13;
Martinez sees no problem with beer on&#13;
campus, and thinks students will police&#13;
themselves. However, at the present beer&#13;
is being "eased" in. That is the reason for&#13;
the restricted beer drinking hours and why&#13;
advertisement for activities say "refreshments"&#13;
and not beer.&#13;
The programming of most special&#13;
events at the building will be coordinated&#13;
by Bill Niebuhr and the Student Activities&#13;
Board. The Board and its subcommittees&#13;
make recommendations on films dances&#13;
and recreation schedules. Its :nember~&#13;
this year will be made up mostly of&#13;
pr nt&#13;
a good&#13;
"A streamlined study of successful&#13;
credit practices" is a good de cription of a&#13;
Consumer Credit Course lo be offered to&#13;
Kenoshans on Monday, October 12. The&#13;
course will be presented by Sterling S&#13;
Speake, Credit specialist and field lecturer&#13;
for the International Consumer Credit&#13;
Association, and will be held at Howard&#13;
Johnson's Motor Lodge from 7 to 10 p.m. &#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
CommunicationBest&#13;
For The Three Of Us&#13;
Developing a gelding campus, one constantly on the grow, is a&#13;
task which would probably put gray hair on the best of men. The administration&#13;
should be and is commended for the diligent work and&#13;
spontaneous effort put forth in bringing Parkside to a category_in&#13;
which we stand 4,000 strong and sti1l growing.&#13;
But in your efforts to deliver Parkside's status to a step beyond&#13;
Yale, to a force mightier than Harvard, let's not forget the tiny feet of&#13;
staff and student alike. Let's not forget the Number One asset to your&#13;
almighty regime, Public Relations.&#13;
It is an alarming position as editor to realize all the staff and&#13;
student unrest not yet active as a result of overlooking the rights or&#13;
feelings of others. One instance that is particularly disturbing is the&#13;
excessive authority used by the coordinators of Student Activities on&#13;
Iilm festival, completely disregarding and over-powering a faculty&#13;
member who happened to have made arrangements on the same night,&#13;
same time, and same building for his film society. More the&#13;
irresponsible behavior of the kindergarten student.&#13;
Needless to say, based on first come, first served, the faculty&#13;
member had made arrangements before the administration had - the&#13;
time and place for film society activities were changed.&#13;
Now this is not too disturbing in itself if it were directed through&#13;
the proper channels, but the coordinator never once approached the&#13;
faculty member. This abortive behavior is to be pitied by all, for these&#13;
men are helping to run your school.&#13;
Parkside administrators, throw aside your inhuman airs of&#13;
indifference and be a slight bit different. Try with all your supreme&#13;
effort to establish a network of communications among administrators,&#13;
faculty, and students. Itwould be the best for the three of&#13;
us.&#13;
WARWe're&#13;
Brought Up To Love It&#13;
Uncle Sam and his warmongers have finally reached us on our&#13;
remote island campus of Parkside. The weapons they wield are not the&#13;
recognizable warfare types, but rather the underhanded propaganda&#13;
techniques of Cold War Modern America.&#13;
War Enculturation is their weapon and they sling their unknown&#13;
devastation stone, many men fall.&#13;
Enculturation is the process by which we teach new recruits&#13;
about our society. The germ was planted early in our childhoods and&#13;
began to spread like terminal cancer. We were small, innocent, maybe&#13;
three or four years old, and didn't realize what was right, or wrong.&#13;
Uncle Sam showed us a strange looking pointed object. Uncle Sam&#13;
placed it in our tiny hands and with his 200years of American mightyAmerican&#13;
culture behind him, said "TAKE THIS GUN ANn KI..,&#13;
KIL .., I MEAN (clear throat) AND SHOOT, BANG-BANG AND PLAY&#13;
DEAD." '&#13;
Well now, Uncle Sam, this baby has made his way through&#13;
cowboys and Indians, past Army soldiers and ray-guns. Now Uncle&#13;
~m, this kid ~seighteen and has been taught to love war. Lo~es the&#13;
slicing, stab~mg, and murdering of human lives. But this time,&#13;
America, let It be on your soul, on your conscience. For now we realize&#13;
the game IS real - real bullet~ and real death. We finally realize why&#13;
we are the. way w~ are. But still the war remains here in the form of&#13;
enculturation behind our backs. Student activities war machines -&#13;
JUst a game?&#13;
New Death Statistics&#13;
WASHINGTON - (CPS) - Total U.S.&#13;
deaths 10 the Indochina war have Climbed&#13;
1052.061. according 10 latesl ligures from&#13;
Ihe U.S Department of Defense. This&#13;
Includes 43.568 deaths "resulting from&#13;
action from hostile forces", and 8.493 from&#13;
other causes, such as helicopter accidents.&#13;
114,096. Saigon government troops ha '&#13;
been killed, along with 4 060 th ve,&#13;
allies. The Defense De' 0 er U.S.&#13;
668,874 North Vietna~rtment claims&#13;
soldiers have lost their r ese band NLF&#13;
death lotal for the war ~~e:J9 rlngmg the&#13;
eluding c1vilians and ,091, not m·&#13;
Laos and Cam bod' numerous troops in la.&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
BILLROLBIECKI MARGIE NOER&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
Sven Taffs News Editor&#13;
Connie Petersen Fealure Editor&#13;
Mike Gogola Business Manage&#13;
Jim Hanlon Advertising Manage:&#13;
Bill Jacoby Photographer&#13;
John Pesta Advisor&#13;
Published weekly by the students of the University' of Wiscons]&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 531.40.Mailing address is Parkside's Newsco:-&#13;
UW-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsm, 53140. Business and Editorial telephon~&#13;
number is 658-4861, Ext. 24.&#13;
Oc~..5, 1970&#13;
A Visit With'&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
LETTERS to the editors&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Like when will some people grow up? I&#13;
had my car parked atTallent Hall parking&#13;
lot for the "Night of Shorts". When I&#13;
returned I found what appeared to be a&#13;
ticket. I was mystified at first, thinking&#13;
that some mistake was made. Then I&#13;
looked more closely and saw that the ticket&#13;
was not really a ticket but a message. It&#13;
read as follows: "A lot of people think I'm&#13;
writing you a message, but I'm not. I&#13;
lambasled your car. So Get Screwed."&#13;
The message was not exactly what I&#13;
would call a meaningful one. I checked my&#13;
car over, but found that it was not&#13;
damaged. They did leave another message&#13;
which I read in my rear view mirror as I&#13;
drove home. The words Get F---ed.&#13;
"OR, PALESTINE,&#13;
I GRIEVE FOR TREE!"&#13;
There is an expanse of sand-duned land&#13;
along the eastern shore of the&#13;
Mediterranean Sea which has special&#13;
significance for millions of people, In&#13;
biblical history it is known as Palestine,:&#13;
homeland of the Philistines. Today, with&#13;
some awe and reverence, many call this&#13;
part of our globe "The Holy Land".&#13;
Geographically it is also being referred&#13;
to as being the "Near East" or the "Middle&#13;
East". In the modern political world of&#13;
today this general area comprises Israel&#13;
Lebanon, Syria and the Heshemit~&#13;
Kingdom of Jordon.&#13;
It was the good fortune of Mrs. Gruhl&#13;
and I to visit this part of the world in the .&#13;
year just preceding the lightening war&#13;
between Israel and the Arab countries.&#13;
Pla~e.s so much in the news today are&#13;
familiar to us ... Cairo, Egypt ... Beirut&#13;
m Lebanon . . . Damascus, Syria . , .&#13;
Amman, the capital of Jordon ... Tel Aviv&#13;
Jerusalem, and many other places i~&#13;
Israel.&#13;
Itis about Palestine - The Holy Land&#13;
· the land chosen by God as the place for&#13;
prophetic rev~lations about which I write.&#13;
· . and for which I grieve. It must be the&#13;
newscasts report,jng on what is happening&#13;
there today which have induced these&#13;
mtrospective thoughts.&#13;
I Mrs. Gruhl and I were on the right waveength&#13;
when we visited places in The Holy&#13;
Land ... Jerusalem, Bethany, Nazareth&#13;
:'th~ehe~, the Jordon River. I remembe;&#13;
C n 109 10 the ruins of the synagogue at&#13;
Gaalpe1rnaumon the shore of the Sea of&#13;
1 ee. Centuries ag trembled the bl 0 an. earthquake&#13;
tubble. I tou hedOCksof stone Into a pile of&#13;
..J c one of the stones&#13;
esus, were you here?" Ad' : .&#13;
answered "Ye I ' n a VOice , s, was here."&#13;
We went to the Ch&#13;
::::,~c~~~h~~f~~dinT l:f:ge~d ~d ~~:h&#13;
great church lca c~nhrmation, the&#13;
the same v spans the sIte of Calvary and&#13;
. Glce said "1 Magna Mysterium' was here, too."&#13;
So, in campus .&#13;
"hang-up" ... w~~acular, here is my&#13;
places should Palesti' . 'thYes, why or all&#13;
·four great religi ne, e motherland of&#13;
.. Why must ~:- each professing love.&#13;
perpetual plagu a~d desolahon be a&#13;
holy soil? e on w at we look upon as&#13;
I am sIlocked that Parkside has an bo&#13;
that .could stupe to such childish :tun~&#13;
Tal,king to my fellow students about th;&#13;
incident, I learned that my car was notth&#13;
only one that had been messed a~&#13;
WIth.&#13;
I have two theori~s about why they lroj&#13;
out my car. One is that I've got a ta&#13;
player and they were mad because th""&#13;
couldn't steal the tapes. Another theory'Y&#13;
that they waited in the lounge to see u&#13;
r~action. However, they had not ::&#13;
ticipated that I was not coming to mycar&#13;
till 10:30.&#13;
Parkside students,let's not be viclimsol&#13;
car freaks. Yell at them, they'll probably&#13;
run. Perhaps if you do Parkside's&#13;
Children will grow up! '&#13;
D.M.&#13;
We read first of the Hebrews andtbOr&#13;
exodus out of Egypt about 1200 B.C....&#13;
their concept of One God ... Moses andthe&#13;
Ten "Commandments.&#13;
Then, after a procession of propbell&#13;
came Jesus Christ. John Knox called&#13;
Christ's coming "The Great Event" iD&#13;
history.&#13;
And in the sixth century, Mohammed.&#13;
the Prophet of Allah and founder of the&#13;
Islamic religion, was born in Mecca,&#13;
Parenthetically, King HusseinofJordoo&#13;
has reason to believe that he is a blood&#13;
relative of the Prophet Mohammed.The&#13;
latter had a daughter. Hussein, the&#13;
modern man, is from her long lin. 01&#13;
descendents.&#13;
. And the fourth world religion to emerle&#13;
from that area is the Bahai Faith.l~&#13;
center is just out of Haifa on the weslelll&#13;
slope of Mount Carmel. From he!'&#13;
emotiorial wave-lengths of love qUIetly&#13;
encompass the world. .&#13;
Now each of these religions."&#13;
monotheistic. nr India there is a sa:&#13;
which says that "There is only one&#13;
and a thousand and one ways in which~&#13;
worship Him." I accept that idea.~ ...&#13;
IS Love. Call Him '''Our Father,&#13;
said.&#13;
I wish that you could hear m~&#13;
recorder repeat some of the lnt 111&#13;
(visits, really) that I had WIthfrl~&#13;
made in Jordon and Israel. TheIl' t tbeI'&#13;
are so strong . . . so deep ... tha ~&#13;
seems to be no possible room ~ not&#13;
ciliation. To live and let live ISa 'allY d1'&#13;
known to many of them ... espeel dieJlI&#13;
Arabs. And an eye for an eye"&#13;
rooted in Judaism. te cJllIfINevertheless,&#13;
I believe that lin thel!lll&#13;
possibly last forever. SometimePalesti'"&#13;
Spirit will look down on b1eeddngcom~&#13;
and in a compassionate an lIDs1...&#13;
voice will say, "Silence your gput y&lt;'JI&#13;
Ground your airplanes! .. ' YoII or&lt;&#13;
swords in your scabbards! . ' 'eel"&#13;
brothers! ... Let there be peaI.' IL&#13;
/l,tk4ll~&#13;
Use C/asSifteJs&#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
CommunicationBest&#13;
For The Three Of Us&#13;
D veloping a gelding campus, one constantly on the grow, is a&#13;
ta k which would probably put gray hair on the best of men. The administration&#13;
should be and is commended for the diligent work and&#13;
pontaneous effort put forth in bringing Parkside to a category ~in&#13;
which we tand 4,000 strong and still growing.&#13;
But in your efforts to deliver Parkside's status to a step beyond&#13;
Yale, to a force mightier than Harvard, let's not forget the tiny feet of&#13;
taff and student alike. Let's not forget the Number One asset to your&#13;
almighty r gime, Public Relations. It i an alarming position as editor to realize all the staff and&#13;
tud nt unre t not yet active as a result of overlooking the rights or&#13;
r ting ·· of other . One instance that is particularly disturbing is the&#13;
xc ive authority used by the coordinators of Student Activities on&#13;
film f tival, completely disregarding and over-powering a faculty&#13;
m mb r who happened to have made arrangements on the same night,&#13;
. nme time, and same building for his film society. More the&#13;
irr p n ·ible behavior of the kindergarten student.&#13;
eedle to say, based on first come, first served, the faculty&#13;
m mb r had made arrangements before the administration had - the&#13;
time and place for film society activities were changed.&#13;
ow thi · is not too disturbing in itself if it were directed through&#13;
th proper channels, but the coordinator never once approached the&#13;
faculty member. This abortive behavior is to be pitied by all, for these&#13;
men ar helping to run your school.&#13;
Park ide administrators, throw aside your inhuman airs of&#13;
indiffer nee and be a slight bit different. Try with all your supreme&#13;
ff rt to establish a network of communications among admini&#13;
·trator ·, faculty, and students. It would be the best for the three of&#13;
u .&#13;
WARWe're&#13;
Brought Up To Love It&#13;
Uncle Sam and his warmongers have finally reached us on our&#13;
remote island campus of Parkside. The weapons they wield are not the&#13;
recognizable warfare types, but rather the underhanded propaganda&#13;
techniques of Cold War Modern America.&#13;
War Enculturation is their weapon and they sling their unknown&#13;
devastation stone, many men fall.&#13;
Enculturation is the process by which we teach new recruits&#13;
about our society. The germ was planted early in our childhoods and&#13;
began to spread like terminal cancer. We were small, innocent, maybe&#13;
three or four years old, and didn't realize what was right, or wrong.&#13;
Uncle Sam showed us a strange looking pointed object. Uncle Sam&#13;
placed it in our tiny bands and with his 200 years of American, mightyAmerican&#13;
culture behind him, said "TAKE THIS GUN AND KI..,&#13;
KIL .. , I MEAN (clear throat) AND SHOOT, BANG-BANG AND PLA y&#13;
DEAD." '&#13;
Well now, Uncle Sam, this baby bas made bis way through&#13;
cowboys and Indians, past Army soldiers and ray-guns. Now Uncle&#13;
~":· this kid !s eighteen and has been taught to love war. Lo~es the&#13;
shcm~, stab~mg, and murdering of human lives. But this time,&#13;
America, !et It be on your soul, on your conscience. For now we realize&#13;
the game IS real - real bulle~ and real death. We finally realize why&#13;
we are the_ way w~ are. But still the war remains here in the form of&#13;
~nculturation behind our backs. Student activities war machines _ Just a game?&#13;
WA.&lt;;J:iINGTON - &lt;CPS&gt; - Total U.S.&#13;
I IO th Indochina war have climbed&#13;
•1, ac ordmg to latest figures from&#13;
~ D partment of Defense. This&#13;
lllC!ud 43,568 death. "resulting from&#13;
hon from hostile forces" . and 8,493 from&#13;
oth r ca e .. uch as helicopter accidents.&#13;
114,096 Saigon government troo&#13;
been killed, along with 4 060 ps have, allies. The Defense D • other U.S.&#13;
668,874 North Vietnaepartment claims&#13;
soldiers have lost their l~ese b ~nd_ NLF&#13;
deat~ total for the war to e:39 rmgmg 1?e&#13;
eluding civilians and ,091, not m- Laos and Cambod' numerous troops in 1a.&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
Vol. 2, No,_2 oc~.- 5, 1-970&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NOER&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
Sven Taffs&#13;
Connie Petersen&#13;
MikeGogola&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Bill Jacoby&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
1:'eature Editor&#13;
Business Manage&#13;
Advertising Manage~&#13;
Photographer&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Published weekly by_ the stude~~ of the U~iversity: of Wisconsin.&#13;
Parkside Kenosha Wisconsin 53140. Maihng address 1s Parks1de's Newsco&#13;
uw-Parkside, Ken~sha, Wisconsin, 53140. Business and Editorial telephi:~&#13;
number is 658-4861, Ext. 24.&#13;
LETTERS to the editors&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Like when will some people grow up? I&#13;
had my car parked at Tallent Hall parking&#13;
lot for the "Night of Shorts". When I&#13;
returned I found what appeared to be a&#13;
ticket. I was mystified at first, thinking&#13;
that some mistake was made. Then I&#13;
looked more closely and saw that the ticket&#13;
was not really a ticket but a message. It&#13;
read as follows: "A lot of people think I'm&#13;
writing you a message, but I'm not. I&#13;
lambasted your car. So Get Screwed."&#13;
The message was not exactly what I&#13;
would call a meaningful one. I checked my&#13;
car over, but found that it was not&#13;
damaged. They did leave another message&#13;
which I read in my rear view mirror as I&#13;
drove home. The words Get F--ed . .&#13;
"OH, PALESTINE,&#13;
I GRIEVE FOR THEE!"&#13;
There is an expanse of sand-duned land&#13;
along the eastern shore of the&#13;
Mediterranean Sea which has special&#13;
significance for millions of people. In&#13;
biblical history it is known as Palestine,:&#13;
homeland of the Philistines. Today, with&#13;
some awe and reverence, many call this&#13;
part of our globe "The Holy Land".&#13;
Geographically it is also being referred&#13;
to as being the "Near East" or the "Middle&#13;
East". In the modern political world of&#13;
today this general area comprises Israel&#13;
Lebanon, Syria and the Heshemit~&#13;
Kingdom of Jordon. ·&#13;
It was the good fortune of Mrs. Gruhl&#13;
and I to visit this part of the world in the&#13;
year just preceding the lightening war&#13;
between Israel and the Arab countries.&#13;
Pla~e_s so much in the news today are&#13;
~am1har to us . .. Cairo, Egypt . .. Beirut&#13;
10 Lebanon · · . Damascus, Syria . . .&#13;
Amman, the capital of Jordon ... Tel Aviv&#13;
Jerusalem, and many other places i~&#13;
Israel.&#13;
It is about Palestine - The Holy Land . .&#13;
. the la~d chosen by God as the place for&#13;
prophetic rev~lations about which I write .&#13;
.. and for which I grieve. It must be the&#13;
newscasts reporting on what is happening&#13;
~ere tod~y which have induced these&#13;
introspective thoughts.&#13;
Mrs. Gruhl and I were on the right wave-&#13;
~gth when we visited places in The Holy&#13;
Bend .. . Jerusalem, Bethany, Nazareth,&#13;
sta thl~he~, the Jordon River. I remember&#13;
C n mg m the ruins of the synagogue at&#13;
GTirnaum on ~he shore of the Sea of&#13;
tre~~f ~ ~;~~nes ago an. earthquake&#13;
tubble I t hocks of stone mto a pile of&#13;
"J . ouc ed one of the stones&#13;
esus, were you here?,. A d . : . answered "Ye 1 · n a v01ce • s, was here."&#13;
We went to th Ch&#13;
:~~c!~e. Accor;ng t:~hge~d ~:d !~:h&#13;
great chu~~~olog1cal c~nfirmation, the&#13;
the same voi~r:i~he,~;ie of Calvary and&#13;
Magna Mysterium • was here, too."&#13;
So, in campus · "hang-up" .. . w~,nacular, here is my&#13;
places should Pale f . . . . Yes, why of all . four great religio s me, the motherland of&#13;
wh ns, each professing love&#13;
· · Y must war a d d . · perpetual pla e n esolatton be a&#13;
holy soil? gu on what we look upon as&#13;
I am shocked that Parkside has an bo&#13;
that _could stupe to such childish skn~&#13;
Talking to my fellow students about th·&#13;
incident, I learned that my car was not th:&#13;
only one that had been messed a d&#13;
with. roun&#13;
I have two theor~es about why they tried&#13;
out my car. One 1s that I've got a ta&#13;
player and they were mad because thpe&#13;
couldn't steal the tapes. Another theory ~Y&#13;
that ~hey waited in the lounge to see m~&#13;
r_~cbon. However, they had not an.&#13;
bc1pated that I was not coming to my ca&#13;
till 10:30. r&#13;
Parkside students, let's not be victims of&#13;
car fr~aks. Yell ~t them, they'll probably&#13;
run. Perhaps if you do, Parkside's&#13;
Children will grow up!&#13;
A Visit With '&#13;
An A ware Square&#13;
D.M.&#13;
We read first of the Hebrews and their&#13;
exodus out of Egypt about 1200 B.C ....&#13;
their concept of One God ... Moses and the&#13;
Ten Commandments.&#13;
Then, after a procession of prophets&#13;
came Jesus Christ. John Knox called&#13;
Christ's coming "The Great Event" in&#13;
history.&#13;
And in the sixth century, Mohammed,&#13;
the Prophet of Allah and founder of the&#13;
Islamic religion, was born in Mecca.&#13;
Parenthetically, King Hussein of Jordon&#13;
has reason to believe that he is a olood&#13;
relative of the Prophet Mohammed. The&#13;
latter had a daughter. Hussein, the&#13;
modern man, is from her long line of&#13;
descendents. And the fourth world religion to emerge&#13;
from that area is the Bahai Faith. Its&#13;
center is just out of Haifa on the western&#13;
slope of Mount Carmel. From ~~ emotional wave-lengths of love qmetly&#13;
encompass the world. . Now each of these religions . 15&#13;
monotheistic. In--India there is a sa:&#13;
which says that "There is only one_ 1;&#13;
and a thousand and one ways in which&#13;
worship Him." I accept that idea. And Gt1d&#13;
is Love. Call Him '"Our Father", Jesus&#13;
said. tape&#13;
I wish that you could hear mY ·e11~&#13;
recorder repeat some of t?e i~te~ we&#13;
(visits, really) that I had with ~ri~~liogs&#13;
made in Jordon and Israel. Their t there&#13;
are so strong . . . so deep .. · tha r conseems&#13;
to be no possibl~ ro?rn !ie nol&#13;
ciliation. To live and let hve is a . Uy the&#13;
known to many of them . · · esp~iadeePY&#13;
Arabs. And an eye for an eye 15&#13;
rooted in Judaism. . te cannol&#13;
Nevertheless, I beheve tha~ ha the Jjob&#13;
possibly last forever. Somet~rne paJestine&#13;
Spirit will look dow!l on b~~.edd~0rnpelling&#13;
and in a compassionate an uns! ..&#13;
voice will say, "Silence your g put yl)llf&#13;
Ground your airplanes! · · · you are&#13;
swords in your scabbards! · · · el " be peac · brothers! . . . Let there - I, IL&#13;
"~&#13;
Use Ctassifteds &#13;
Student Questions&#13;
Retention of Teachers Policy&#13;
ministration has no say in such mallers. J&#13;
refer to the intolerable situation in regard&#13;
to student rights. This college exists for the&#13;
soul purpose of education, not as a cushy&#13;
job for incompetant administrators and&#13;
'instructors' that are too busy working on&#13;
their own projects to be able to do an&#13;
adequate job of teaching. Rather than&#13;
hiring and retaining such teachers for the&#13;
purpose or making the administration look&#13;
in the eyes of the Board of Regents and&#13;
stuffing the school with Phds who can't&#13;
teach, we should keep these people out of&#13;
teaching and put them somewhere where&#13;
they can't hurt the students. Teachers&#13;
should be able to teach, they should be&#13;
retained for this reason and released if&#13;
they are unable to.&#13;
How wouJd you evaluate your instructors&#13;
and administrators'? 1 would like&#13;
to feature such evaluations in this paper. If&#13;
you have an opinion you would like to have&#13;
aired about any instructor or administrator&#13;
at UWP, just turn it into the&#13;
office or to this writer personally and it&#13;
will be printed along with all other&#13;
opinions concerning that same person.&#13;
Opinions may be either pro or eon but,lU\I$~&#13;
be signed, signatures to be held cOn,&#13;
fidential if you _h. Individuals to 00&#13;
featured in the next edition will be fro",&#13;
the Science Division of the College of&#13;
Science and Society. If you have any&#13;
comments to make on anyone in this&#13;
department from Dr. Isenberg on down to&#13;
a first year math instructor, let us know.&#13;
Suggestions include competence, ability,&#13;
degree of knowledge, and personality.&#13;
'ILa member Qf the administration oo-&#13;
.jects to this article, call the Newscope and&#13;
this writer will personally interview you&#13;
for rebuttal.&#13;
Elvq In&#13;
Activities Building?&#13;
By WALTBREACII&#13;
Little people commg out of the wood&#13;
work unrecognized, unrewarded (that&#13;
means they're not paid) and for the most&#13;
part unthanked, brought Butch Cassidy&#13;
and the Sundance KId to Parkaide.&#13;
Working through, by, and With Mr&#13;
Neibuhr and the Studenl Activities Office,&#13;
they stole or somehow got hold of thrs&#13;
movie. Working late, after making shoes&#13;
all day, they set up chairs and projecuon&#13;
equipment in the New Student Acuvrues&#13;
BUilding. Unnoticed In the crowd of four&#13;
hundred they removed seventy-Jive cents&#13;
from the pockets of all in attendance and&#13;
placed a magical elfin sign on their wrists&#13;
When the juice freaks had all gone home&#13;
they tirelessly cleaned up the debris,&#13;
pumped out the spilled beer and generally&#13;
got the building all ship-shape and Bristol&#13;
fashion (which means neat l. All the While&#13;
they were working they were merrily&#13;
singing songs about all the movies to come&#13;
and the upcoming concerts, dances, leetures&#13;
and coffee houses.&#13;
However, and now comes the pitch.&#13;
Uncle Elf wants you. So, if you would lik&#13;
to be..an unrecognized, unrewarded and&#13;
unthanked elf (volunteer) just stand on&#13;
any giant toadstool at midnight and in the&#13;
light of a full moon or talk to Dan Dearborn,&#13;
Karl Stomner, Gene Cooper, Diane&#13;
Thomas or that Niebuhr guy.&#13;
BJ Ken Konkol,&#13;
I consider myself as a vocal member of&#13;
the silent majority. Many people I am&#13;
associated with consider me a war;&#13;
mongering member of the righl,wing&#13;
while no doubt certain members of the&#13;
administration feel I lean more towards&#13;
radical left-wingism,&#13;
Ideny both these charges, but I will say,&#13;
a middle-of·the-roacter I'm not.&#13;
Writing for this paper has given me the&#13;
opportunity to vent some of my present&#13;
antagonism against the misruling rulers&#13;
(the establishment is sucha trite phrase)&#13;
by bringing out into the open certain things&#13;
that have been heretofor kept concealed&#13;
from view. His my intention to stir at least&#13;
a portion of the readers out of lhe&#13;
doldrums of apathy, and hopefully to have&#13;
this establishment, if not improved, at&#13;
least awakened.&#13;
I! any of you readers out there in this&#13;
vast sea of learning wish to refute&#13;
anything I say, you will have the opportunity&#13;
to do so. If any wish to come to&#13;
the support of such a platform, you are&#13;
welcomed to do so. If any have something&#13;
to advance, it shall be advanced. Rise,&#13;
loose the shackies of apathy, and stride&#13;
forth in enlightenment.&#13;
Those students who attended UWP last&#13;
semester may remember the furor caused.&#13;
by an issue of this paper which had its&#13;
headline: INSTRUCTOR FIRED. This&#13;
banner referred to the case of Dr.&#13;
Salirnons Cacs who was not be retained&#13;
due to. personal antagonism to certain&#13;
members in administrative positions in&#13;
the College of Science and Society. Not to&#13;
mention any names, but his initials might&#13;
be N. I. .Personal antagonism was not the&#13;
reason given, rather a trumped up excuse&#13;
that Dr. Cacs was not working toward his&#13;
PhD was, and by terms of his contract he&#13;
was not fulfilling the requirement tha l all&#13;
instructors must work towards the PhD.&#13;
Dr. Cacs explained to these certain administrators&#13;
tha t he already had the&#13;
terminal degree in his field and 'even&#13;
provided them with a photostat of this&#13;
document, but since this document IS&#13;
written in a foreign language, these administrators&#13;
would not recognize it.&#13;
Immediately, upon reading of the&#13;
situation, this writer commenced a&#13;
campaign in opposition to the administration&#13;
on this point. Petitions were&#13;
circulated and a campaign waged to&#13;
"Keep Cacs", this last being done almost&#13;
soley through the efforts of John Krumpos&#13;
and Richard Zuffa.&#13;
During the ensuing weeks I attempted to&#13;
talk with the Chancellor in regard to the:&#13;
rash action of those certain administrators.&#13;
I finally got to bjlk lo him&#13;
after seeing his secretary about six times.&#13;
We talked for about two hours during&#13;
which I presented the petitions that had&#13;
been circulated and he said a great deal on&#13;
unrelated subjects which added up to: Dr.&#13;
Isenberg doesn't like Dr. Cacs and I&#13;
(Chancellor Wylie) don't fool around WIth&#13;
people wbo have tenure and why don't you&#13;
go bother somebody else, I've got my&#13;
bands tied. If Prof. Cacs does have hIS&#13;
Doctorate then we" fire him _because he&#13;
isn't: publishing anything, retention of&#13;
tea0ers here ~s based. upon 80 per cent&#13;
PU?~Ish or perIsh, 10 per cent teaching&#13;
ability, and Ifyour Chairman likes you you&#13;
get another 10 per cent, if he doesn't you&#13;
get zero. It doesn't matter if you are the&#13;
?est teacher in your department, you&#13;
mgrattate yourself with the head cheese or&#13;
vour not here anymore. For every student&#13;
mat thinks your competent take five points&#13;
off, students don't count around here&#13;
~nyway, I've got a nice secure position so&#13;
It don't bother me none if we fire every&#13;
.decent teacher in the school.&#13;
. Regardless of the opinion of the administration,&#13;
or perhaps in spite of it, Dr.&#13;
Cacs was voted teacher of the year and&#13;
was presented. with that award at the&#13;
.commencement exercises. Those exercises&#13;
were attended by the President of the&#13;
.Untverstty, Fred Harvey Harrington who&#13;
.made the mistake of talking to this writer,&#13;
because in five minutes he had promised to&#13;
investigate the reasons behind the&#13;
dismissal of Dr. Cacs and the runner-up&#13;
for teacher of the year, Irene Kraemer&#13;
who was also not having here contract&#13;
renewed.. Mr. Harrington is no longer&#13;
President of this University and I haven't&#13;
heard anything regarding the promised.&#13;
investigation anyway.&#13;
This past summer Dr. Cacs had a talk&#13;
with the new Dean of Science and Society,&#13;
Arthur C. Mac Kinney who at first accused&#13;
him of being a pretender to the degree of&#13;
Doctorate, but Dr. MacKinney can read&#13;
German and switched tachs when Dr. Cacs&#13;
showed him the aforementioned photostat&#13;
and a letter from his old professor, who is&#13;
now living in the U.S. and is included in&#13;
Who's Who, who attested that Dr. Cacs did&#13;
indeed have the terminal degree (for those&#13;
in the administration that means PhD).&#13;
The upshol of all this backround is that&#13;
Dr. Cacs is still not being retained here,&#13;
but now is being transferred to the&#13;
University Center System upon the expiration&#13;
of his contract. What was the use?&#13;
Perhaps now the administration will look a&#13;
little further the next time they decide to&#13;
cancel another competent teacher. After&#13;
all, why get rid of the good teaChers while&#13;
plenty of bad teachers (Le. Psychology)&#13;
are being retained.?&#13;
I make no pretences at being an expert&#13;
in the field of education, yet it seems to me&#13;
that were some of my suggestions put into&#13;
effect we would have a more.cor,npelently&#13;
run school. If you think that this means I&#13;
am accusing the present administration of&#13;
incompetance you are m~~t correct: This&#13;
college is full of inequities and If the&#13;
present trend is allowed to go unchecked&#13;
don't be too surprised to find the more&#13;
radical student elements doing something&#13;
about it. Since the far great majority is too&#13;
apathetic to make the attempt and would&#13;
"" content, if also harboring vague&#13;
feelings of uneasyness, to let the present&#13;
situation continue in its oppressiveness.&#13;
I do not advocate use of radical methods&#13;
(i.e. violence) to improve an already poor&#13;
situation, that would serve to make&#13;
matters worse, but beware Board· _of&#13;
.Regeants, others might. I am not referring&#13;
'to special extracurricular p~ob}ems as the&#13;
Vietnam war or equal fights, the adUse&#13;
Classifteds&#13;
CARTHAGE COLLEGE&#13;
ARTS AND LECfURES COMMITI'EE&#13;
Presents Its 197~71Season&#13;
All Events at Carthage College Fieldhouse&#13;
Season Tickets $8.00 Per Person&#13;
Includes Reserved Sealing&#13;
Date Time Event SingleTickel&#13;
Eleo Pomare Dance&#13;
Company +&#13;
Vienna Choir Boya&#13;
from Au.trIII&#13;
Ralph Nador,&#13;
"EnvironmeDtal Haurd.:&#13;
Man Made and Man&#13;
Remedied"&#13;
Emlyn WOllam.&#13;
a. "Curies Dicken."&#13;
Munich Chamber&#13;
Orchestra&#13;
Oct. 21, 1970 8:30p.m. 2.50&#13;
Jan. Z7. 1971 8:00p.m. 3.5.&#13;
Feb. 17, 1971 8:00p.m. I.SO&#13;
Mar.8,1971 8:00p.m. 2.00&#13;
Mar. 17, 1971 8:00p.m. 3.00&#13;
VALUE 11%.:&gt;0&#13;
+ Date of Pomare Dance Co. performance has been changed from Nov. 23 to&#13;
Oct. 21.&#13;
Group Discounts a\laUable for .Ingle eveaU&#13;
Make Checks Payable to Carlbage College&#13;
Please Mail to:&#13;
Concert Manager, College Center Offlce&#13;
Carthage College, Kenosha, Wis. 53.40&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Just South 01&#13;
Talent Hall _.- W4\TCHfS&#13;
u......_·"_i...&#13;
...- ......... c._It. _Tim ••&#13;
iAoCollltn&#13;
NOW OPEN!!!&#13;
MON.-THURS. - 8 a.m.-10 p.m.&#13;
FRI. - 8 a.m.-1 a.m .&#13;
SAT. &amp; SUN. -&#13;
. SPECIAL EVENTS ONLY&#13;
I CHINA I&#13;
......... .- •• IDAL&#13;
S1. ~ '. -=-i:''=:- • IECtSTlY&#13;
'\ ~'U~ ~~~~\.\. 10%0&#13;
~~ Courtesy Discount&#13;
to&#13;
Students &amp; Faculty&#13;
(MUST SHOWIDENTIFICATION)&#13;
STUDENT &amp; WIS. 10 REQUIRED&#13;
GAMES BANOS POPCORN&#13;
MUSIC FOOD DRINKS&#13;
CURRENT MOVIES&#13;
DIAMoND CONSULTANTS Friday Film&#13;
'Up the Down Staircaset&#13;
8 p.m. 75(&#13;
Saturday Dance&#13;
Twisting Harvey and the Seven Sounds&#13;
$1.50 9:00-1:00&#13;
FAIR TRADE ACCEPTED&#13;
Crad.... c.maiOll.,.CertlfiH - .......&#13;
~gg~ __ .1_ .."""'........ 1&#13;
II ._ .&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
-K~NOSHA&#13;
Student Questions&#13;
Retention of Teachers Policy&#13;
~Y Ken Konkol&#13;
J consider myself as a vocal member of&#13;
the silent majority. Many people I am&#13;
associated with consider me a war-·&#13;
mongering member of the right-wing&#13;
while no doubt certain members of the&#13;
administration feel I lean more towards&#13;
radical left-wingism.&#13;
I deny both these charges, but I will say,&#13;
a middle-of-the-roader I'm not.&#13;
Writing for this paper has given me the&#13;
opportunity to vent some of my present&#13;
antagonism against the rajsruling rulers&#13;
(the establishment is such ·a trite phrase)&#13;
by bringing out into the open certain things&#13;
that have been heretofor kept concealed&#13;
from view. It is my intention to stir at least&#13;
a portion of the readers out of the&#13;
doldrums of apathy, and hopefully to have&#13;
this establishment, if not improved, at&#13;
least awakened.&#13;
If any of you readers out there in this&#13;
vast sea of learning wish to refute&#13;
anything I say, you will have the opportunity&#13;
to do so. If any wish to come to&#13;
the support of such a platform, you are&#13;
welcomed to do so. If any have something&#13;
to advance, it shall be advanced. Rise,&#13;
loose the shackles of apathy, and stride&#13;
forth in enlightenment.&#13;
Those students who attended DWP last&#13;
semester may remember the furor caused.&#13;
by an issue of this paper which had its&#13;
headline: INSTRUCTOR FIRED. This&#13;
banner referred to the case of Dr.&#13;
Salimons Cacs who was not be retained&#13;
due to. personal antagonism to certain&#13;
members in administrative positions in&#13;
the College of Science and Society. Not to&#13;
mention any names, but his initials might&#13;
be N. I.. Personal antagonism was not the&#13;
reason given, rather a trumped up excuse&#13;
that Dr. Cacs was not working toward his&#13;
PhD was, and by terms of his contract he&#13;
was not fulfilling the requirement that all&#13;
instructors must work towards the PhD.&#13;
Dr. Cacs explained to these certain ad~&#13;
ministrators that he already had the&#13;
terminal degree in his field_ and · ev~n&#13;
provided them with a photostat of th!s&#13;
document, but since this docum~nt 1s&#13;
written in a foreign language, these administrators&#13;
would not recognize it.&#13;
Immediately, upon reading of the&#13;
situation, this writer commenced a&#13;
campaign in opposition to the administration&#13;
on this point. Petitions were&#13;
circulated and a campaign waged to&#13;
"Keep Cacs", this last being done almost&#13;
soley through the efforts of John Krumpos&#13;
and Richard Zuffa.&#13;
During the ensuing weeks I attempted to&#13;
talk with the Chancellor in regard to the·&#13;
rash action of those certain ad-_&#13;
ministrators. I finally got to h4lk to him&#13;
after seeing his secretary about six times.&#13;
We talked for about two hours during&#13;
which I presented the petitions that had&#13;
been circulated and he said a great deal on&#13;
unrelated subjects which added up to: Dr.&#13;
Isenberg doesn't like Dr. Cacs and_ I&#13;
(Chancellor Wylie) don't fool around with&#13;
people who have tenure and why don't you&#13;
go bother somebody else, I've got ~y&#13;
hands tied. If Prof. Cacs does have his&#13;
Doctorate then we" fire him _because he&#13;
isn't' publishing anything, retention of&#13;
teac~ers here is based upon 80 per cent&#13;
PU?!1sh or perish, 10 per cent teaching&#13;
ab1hty, and 1f your Chairman likes you you&#13;
get another 10 per cent, if he doesn't you&#13;
get zero. It doesn't matter if you are the&#13;
?Cst ~eacher in your department, you&#13;
ingratiate yourself with the head cheese or&#13;
vour not here anymore. For every student&#13;
mat ~inks your competent take five points&#13;
off, students don't count around here&#13;
anyway, I've got a nice secure position so&#13;
it don't bother me none if we fire every ,decent teacher in the school.&#13;
. Regardless of the opinion of the administration,&#13;
or perhaps in spite of it, Dr.&#13;
Cacs was voted teacher of the year and&#13;
was presented with that award at the&#13;
• commencement exercises. Those exercises&#13;
were attended by the President of the&#13;
:University, Fred Harvey Harrington who&#13;
. made the mistake of talking to this writer,&#13;
because in five minutes he had promised to&#13;
investigate the reasons behind the&#13;
dismissal of Dr. Cacs and the runner-up&#13;
for teacher of the year, Irene Kraemer&#13;
who was also not having here contract&#13;
renewed. Mr. Harrington is no longer&#13;
President of this University and I haven't&#13;
heard anything regarding the promised&#13;
investigation anyway.&#13;
This past summer Dr. Cacs had a talk&#13;
with the new Dean of Science and Society,&#13;
Arthur C. MacKinney who at first accused&#13;
him of being a pretender to the degree of&#13;
Doctorate, but Dr. MacKinney can read&#13;
German and switched tachs when Dr. Cacs&#13;
showed him the aforementioned photostat&#13;
and a letter from his old professor, who is&#13;
now living in the U.S. and is included in&#13;
Who's Who, who attested that Dr. Cacs did&#13;
indeed have the terminal degree (for those&#13;
in the administration that means PhD).&#13;
The upshot of all this backround is that&#13;
Dr. Cacs is still not being retained here,&#13;
but now is being transferred to the&#13;
University Center System upon the expiration&#13;
of his contract. What was the use?&#13;
Perhaps now the administration will look a&#13;
little further the next time they decide to&#13;
cancel another competent teacher. After&#13;
all, why get rid of the good teachers while&#13;
plenty of bad teachers (Le. Psychology)&#13;
are being retained.?&#13;
I make no pretences at being an expert&#13;
in the field of education, yet it seems to me&#13;
that were some of my suggestions put into&#13;
effect we would have a more.cor_npe~ently&#13;
run school. If you think that this means I&#13;
am accusing the present administration ~f&#13;
incompetance you are m?~t correct: This&#13;
college is full of ineqwties and 1f the&#13;
present trend is allowed to go unchecked&#13;
don't be too surprised to find the more&#13;
radical student elements doing something&#13;
about it. Since the far great majority is too&#13;
apathetic to make the attempt_ and would&#13;
lie content, if also harboring vague&#13;
feelings of uneasyness, to let the _present&#13;
situation continue in its oppressiveness.&#13;
I do not advocate use of radical methods&#13;
(i.e. violence) to improve an already poor&#13;
situation, that would serve to make&#13;
matters worse, but beware Board . of&#13;
Regeants, others mi~ht. I am not referring&#13;
'to special extracurricular p~oblems as the&#13;
Vietnam war or equal rights, the adWATCH£S&#13;
&#13;
..... • Acctlt...,_&#13;
uttractu•f'I • L-.iM&#13;
.. ,..,. . ..,,... ca,avell• • Tim••&#13;
LeCoultr•&#13;
I CHINA I&#13;
UPAll OlPT.I&#13;
___.. - lllOAL&#13;
C, ')_ --\ \ -e,;,..=.::..=-- ., lECISTlY&#13;
~~~ ~\.\. 10% "\ ~~~ 0&#13;
~~ Courtesy Discount&#13;
DIAMC&gt;NO CONSULTANTS&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
to&#13;
Students &amp; Faculty&#13;
(MUST SH OW IDENTIFICATION&gt;&#13;
FAIR TRADE ACCEPTED&#13;
C,a4iiare Cemoioglst-l!ef'tlfied Diam011tolocist&#13;
~ll8""1A&#13;
.. _.. • ,;He,wice where you sJto,! It - - .&#13;
ministration has no say in such matters. I&#13;
refer to the intolerable situation in regard&#13;
to student rights. This college exi ts for the&#13;
soul purpose of education, not as a cushy&#13;
job for incompetant administrator and&#13;
'instructors' that are too busy working on their own projects to be able lo do an&#13;
adequate job of teaching. Rather than&#13;
hiring and retaining such teachers for the&#13;
purpose of making the administration look&#13;
in the eyes of the Board of Regents and&#13;
stuffing the school with Phds who can't&#13;
teach, we should keep these people out of&#13;
teaching and put them somewhere where&#13;
they can't hurt the students. Teachers&#13;
should be able to teach, they should be&#13;
retained for this reason and released if&#13;
they are unable to.&#13;
How would you evaluate your instructors&#13;
and administrators? I would like&#13;
to feature such evaluations in this paper. If&#13;
you have an opinion you would like to have&#13;
aired about any instructor or administrator&#13;
at UWP, just turn it into the&#13;
office or lo this writer personally and it&#13;
will be printed along with all oth~&#13;
opinions concerning that same person.&#13;
Opinions may be either pro or con bul;n~t&#13;
be signed, signatures to be held l:Oni&#13;
fidential if you -.h. Individuals to be&#13;
featured in the next edition will be fro"l&#13;
the Science Division of the College of&#13;
Science and Society. IC you have any&#13;
comments to make on anyone in this&#13;
department from Dr. Isenberg on down to&#13;
a first year math instructor, let us know.&#13;
Suggestions include competence, ability,&#13;
degree of knowledge, and personality.&#13;
/"Jf_a member Qf the administration 01&gt;-&#13;
. jects to this article, call the Newscope and&#13;
this writer will personally interview you&#13;
for rebuttal.&#13;
Elve~ In&#13;
Activities Building?&#13;
8, \\,\l,T BREA( II&#13;
Lillie pcopl coming out or th woodwork&#13;
unreco niz. d, unr w rded c th t&#13;
means they're not p idl and for th mo t&#13;
part unthanked, brought Butch 1dy&#13;
and the undance Kid to P rk ad .&#13;
Working through, by, and with tr&#13;
, eibuhr and th tudcnt Acllv1ti m c,&#13;
they stole or omehow got hold or 1h1&#13;
movie. Working late, aft r makin ho&#13;
all day, they _ct up chair and projection&#13;
equipment m the . · w Stud nt Act1\·iti&#13;
Building. nnoticed m t crowd or four&#13;
hundred they removed . ev nt ·-fan! cent&#13;
from the pockets or all in all ndanc nd&#13;
placed a magical elfin ign on th •ir wri t .&#13;
When the juice freaks had all gon homt•&#13;
they tirele Jy clean d up the d bri ,&#13;
pumped out the spilled b r and g •n rail)&#13;
got the building all ship-shap and Bri tol&#13;
ra hion (which mean n al l. All th \\hilc&#13;
they were working they wer m rrily&#13;
singing ongs about all the movies to com and the upcoming concerts, dan , lectures&#13;
and coffee hou .&#13;
However, and now com the pitch.&#13;
Uncle Elf wants you. So, ,r you would hk •&#13;
to be.an unrecognized, unrewarded and&#13;
,unthanked elf (volunteer) just ~land on&#13;
any giant toad tool at midnight and in thl'&#13;
light of a full moon or talk to Dan D arborn,&#13;
Karl Stomner, Gen Cooper. Dian •&#13;
Thomas or that Niebuhr guy.&#13;
Use Classifieds&#13;
CARTHAGE COLLEGE&#13;
Date&#13;
Oct. 21, 1970&#13;
Jan. 27, 1971&#13;
Feb. 17, 1971&#13;
Mar. 8, 1971&#13;
Mar. 17, 1971&#13;
ARTS AND LECTURES COMMITTEE&#13;
Presents Its 1970-71 Sea on&#13;
All Events at Carthage College Fieldhouse&#13;
Season Tickets $8.00 Per Person&#13;
Includes Reserved Seating&#13;
Time&#13;
8:30p.m.&#13;
8:00p.m.&#13;
8:00p.m.&#13;
8:00p.m.&#13;
8:00p.m.&#13;
Event mgle Ticket&#13;
Eleo Pomare Dance 2.50&#13;
Company+&#13;
Vienna Cholr Bo s 3.SO&#13;
from Au trla&#13;
Ralph Nader, 1,50&#13;
"Environmental Huard&#13;
Man Made and Man&#13;
Remedied''&#13;
Emlyn William 2.00&#13;
as "Charles Dlcktn "&#13;
1unlch hambtr 3.&#13;
Orchestra&#13;
+ Date of Pomare Dance Co. performance has been changed from No . 23 to&#13;
Oct. 21.&#13;
Group Di counts av a liable for Ingle even&#13;
Make Checks Payable to Carthage ollege&#13;
Please Mail to:&#13;
Concert Manager, C liege enter OUlce&#13;
Carthage College, Ken ha. WI . 53140&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Just South of&#13;
Talent Hall NOW OPEN!!!&#13;
MON.-THURS. - 8 a.m.-10 p.m.&#13;
FRI. - 8 a.m.-1 a.m.&#13;
SAT. &amp; SUN. -&#13;
SPECIAL EVENTS ONLY&#13;
STUDEHT &amp; WIS. ID REQUIRED&#13;
GAMES BANDS POPCORN&#13;
MUSIC FOOD DRINKS&#13;
CURRENT MOVIES&#13;
Friday Film&#13;
'Up the Down Staircase' 8 p.m. 7 S(&#13;
Saturday Dance&#13;
Twisting Harvey and the Seven Sounds&#13;
$1.50 9:00-1:00 &#13;
esearch&#13;
fI'Id 1IaIW7~~ OcLI&#13;
1fM term as pnsident of&#13;
C.. wenllI!-,,&lt;I W-_ HarriJlgtOn&#13;
..&#13;
...... ,PI :adem alIer lW'1\lIIll&#13;
10 bK&lt;lIDe the presidenl&#13;
:=:E;';~;&lt;IfUv,-au. lb~ iDiam Janz of '!be&#13;
tiDeI. HamnglOll bad this&#13;
I ~ 011 the Madison&#13;
h ... odaIisaIon of dof .. t. ..&#13;
....... _lbf1&lt;aU1d ",ermostofthe&#13;
=&#13;
=~aad dd!'1 make it. The)' feel aad tnatrat.od aad tlJtoy turn to&#13;
is a &lt;I dol.. t, tt ts the&#13;
rnoIutlODary It IS not a sign&#13;
=&#13;
:.;~rhboUlltJI is ealal'\itlOlS and ... ID mODey anf "iril."&#13;
Ip"'k'" of tb.. V1&lt;Itenc:e at&#13;
Madlioaa aad dol .. 1 bt spoke of was&#13;
_end by radicals. ~=:_ oee of the major&#13;
... aDd dloappointmenLs of&#13;
_rloortaa', ~ He understood&#13;
• it coucemed lhe ,,-ar, ':=~ vaupa, and other&#13;
• ""' ..... .-.., HarnJWlOn found it&#13;
thai a mo", workable&#13;
~&#13;
~~~E~ program _as never peapIe WIth the ..xving&#13;
l' bt Id,' We're "'&lt;Irking&#13;
but 're not surreePOWER&#13;
...... • tlv. &amp; Spood Sh.p&#13;
2012 52.d&#13;
"First and Finest&#13;
In Speed"&#13;
OSHA'S LARCEST SELECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
OCSCOO T I'tl1CES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
's • • •&#13;
drea's&#13;
Tob««nIisl&#13;
i.u 1911&#13;
"'LW, ..,. ••• y ,,.......&#13;
countries. Harrington also&#13;
his study of adult education IlIaJa to&#13;
States. The Carnegie F lit tbt&#13;
financing that study. He p1a.:'::u..&#13;
011 a book concerning the to&#13;
auna policy of the United ~':i&lt;I&#13;
Eventually, Harrington rna&#13;
teaching - but for the y l'OllIna&#13;
concentrate on research. JII"esent bt&#13;
R-K NEWS&#13;
/&#13;
n&#13;
c&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN IlOAD&#13;
NORTH CITY UIlITS&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
S2nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN, THRU THUIIS.&#13;
~ A.M. TILL ItIDIITE&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL Z A.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
SS(&#13;
\&#13;
AY 10 A.M.. 2 ,.&#13;
OWER&#13;
•• otivo &amp; SpHcl Shop&#13;
2012 52nd&#13;
' a d Finest&#13;
In Speed"&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
PfttCES&#13;
'S&#13;
• • •&#13;
countries. Hanington also .,._ tu study of adult education in to&#13;
States. The Carnegie Foan::&#13;
financing that study. He p1a19 ._&#13;
on a book concerning the .h;.. __ ID&#13;
Cllina policy of the United s-;-1' Of&#13;
E\-entually, Harri~ton may&#13;
teaching - but for the ~t&#13;
concentrate on research. be&#13;
R-K NE&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN 110AD&#13;
NORTH CITY LIIIT1&#13;
CHA&#13;
N&#13;
CHE&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSH&#13;
SUN. THRU THUi&#13;
~1 A.M. TILL MID ITE&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL Z A.&#13;
HAMBURGE&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHE&#13;
{triple deck r)&#13;
55(&#13;
·2, &#13;
Book Prices Are Too H· h&#13;
By SYen Taffs bo k 19&#13;
d&#13;
- 0 expenses A&#13;
other semester awns at Parkside students h . great number of these tonce again students are shocked hy bookstore i~~~e applIed for jobs at the&#13;
an cost of books. And as always, there is employee di hope of being eligible for&#13;
::usual griping, but nobody actually does dismaYed at ~cournts. Another student,&#13;
thIDg about the costs ... except raise exorbita t bo P Ice which she deemed anY n, rrowed a co f h them from the librar py 0 t e book&#13;
YOU''re not going to believe this, but one book for t y - she xeroxed the whole&#13;
f hen cents a pag d of JOYfriends, a res man, tearfully ex- save $1 47' I dl . e an managed to&#13;
inOOto me that after spending $254 for Perh~p" m~t~ mg tax. !:kS she could only afford to carry five suggestionsnel er of these money·saving&#13;
credits. I did my best to console her by Maybe the a appeal to you: Cheer up!&#13;
tellingher about the good 01' days when a book rent ~mlmstratlOn will mstitute a&#13;
dent could hope to afford tuition and professors f~ system. Maybe your&#13;
~s, prOVidedhe got a decentfellowship. books you ~I~:~ se,::ester will choose&#13;
All seriousness aside, there IS only one bookstore will' y wn. Maybe the&#13;
rson I've met bere at Parkside who for your used bglV:SYOUa haU-decent price&#13;
di~dn'thave something nasty to say about will snow on t: F' Whthoknows? Maybe it&#13;
it B kst . Thi our of July the Universl Y 00 ore prices. IS Or maybe somewh ..&#13;
individualpurchased all his books over at there is a group of e~e o~ this campus&#13;
Carthage You should hear what be says are attempting t ra rca students who&#13;
', k t 0 orgamze a kmd of&#13;
about th~U" boo sore" .. . Cooperative bookstore. The kind of store&#13;
However,as we begin the. third week of where used books would b Id t&#13;
the fall semester, most of the requisite Maybe instead of griping y~USOh aId~os~&#13;
texts have already been procured, and the into this book store deal. if the ~d: ca:-&#13;
gripes tjIerefore seem less and less es on, it could save an awful lot of Ie&#13;
relevant.B~t in ease you missed the notice an awful lot of money. peop&#13;
in our preVIOUSIssue, next semester has If you're interested, come talk to me,&#13;
not heen eancelled, so we ~an all look Sven Taffs, in the Newseope office at Kforward&#13;
to another semester s book bIll. campus.&#13;
Consequently, ~any students have gone Or maybe you like spending $70 on books&#13;
to great lengths In theIr effort.s to reduce every semester.&#13;
Selective Service System&#13;
Under Tarr: Old Wine&#13;
In New Sottles&#13;
By BRUCE LOVET1'&#13;
College Press Service&#13;
WASHINGTON- (CPS) - For the last&#13;
fivemonths Curtis Tarr, the new director&#13;
of the Selective -Service System, has been&#13;
engineering a full-scale drive to convert&#13;
theimage of the draft machine from one of&#13;
the inept, unfair, discriminatory&#13;
bureaucracy it was under Gen. Lewis B.&#13;
Hershey, to an eff.icient, modern,&#13;
benevolent agency whicb is seeking to&#13;
meetthe needs of the military while being&#13;
as fair to everybody as it possibly can.&#13;
The image is a good one, with a facelifting&#13;
on every level. Tbe new itrllIge&#13;
doesn't change the fact that the Selective&#13;
Service System is in the business .of&#13;
deciding whieb young lads are going to&#13;
beeome cannon-fodder or peneil-pushers&#13;
for the armed forces.&#13;
But Tarr bas eliminated the most obviousand&#13;
blatant inequities and rhetoric&#13;
that used to anger liberals about Gen.&#13;
Hershey's operation.&#13;
One area in which this is especially clear&#13;
is the respect wbich the new director has&#13;
shownfor the unfavorable rulings recently&#13;
handeddown against the Selective Service&#13;
System by the Supreme Court. In June,&#13;
whentbe Supreme Court ruled that conscientious&#13;
objectors need not base their&#13;
claims on religious grounds, Tarr swiftly&#13;
responded by drafting the first interpretation&#13;
of the law and regulations&#13;
everdoneby the Selective Service System,&#13;
embodying the spirit, and indeed, in&#13;
several instances, the actual words of the.&#13;
Supreme Court decision. ._'"&#13;
In contrast, when, in 1965, the high cQurt&#13;
!""ed that church membership and ·belief&#13;
IDaSupreme Being were not prerequisites&#13;
for CO status, Gen. Hersbey's only&#13;
response was to issue, unexplained, three&#13;
Years later, a new version of the CO form&#13;
Which eliminated references to church&#13;
m~mbership and belief in a Supreme&#13;
Being.&#13;
. The system's new "liberal and modern"&#13;
nnage is also reflected by cbanges wbich&#13;
have been made in tbe system's house&#13;
:gan, ~.elective Service _~~ws, Gen.&#13;
• eragh ber s amusing but grisly fr?nt page,&#13;
nt-WIng editorials have been elimInated&#13;
~d tbe news has taken on a totally new&#13;
fr:*: The format has cbanged fron an oldshioned,&#13;
four-column letterpress job to a&#13;
m?re fluid three-column offset forma ~&#13;
PI1nIed in dark blue ink on pastel blue&#13;
Paper. Tarr has moved his eolumn to the&#13;
:'de pages, and the copy bas lost its&#13;
morous nature. The News used to be&#13;
Packed with wonderful trivialities wbich&#13;
~d like a Ripley's Believe It or Not for&#13;
ha war machine. ~his fascinating copy&#13;
S been dropped and the News now&#13;
:"",:nt~ates on hard news about the&#13;
tiOlling of this system. Tarr also&#13;
lIlakes sure tha t tbe articles mention&#13;
'::t COUrtdecisions whicb bave come&#13;
against tbe system wbenever they&#13;
are relevant. another irmovation for the&#13;
News. ~&#13;
These changes, however, are merely&#13;
deceptive shirts of the system's image.&#13;
Under all the new, liberal rhetoric, the&#13;
system still continues to concentrate on its&#13;
dual role of charmeling the lives of young&#13;
men and providing the military with men&#13;
to be converted into killers.&#13;
Tarr's response to the Supreme Court's&#13;
action in January, which eliminated&#13;
punitive induction of violators of draft&#13;
rules, became clear in late June, when the&#13;
Selective Service regulations were&#13;
amended to allow induction of men whose&#13;
numbers had been reached but who had&#13;
failed to report to a Pre-induction physical&#13;
when ordered to. Confronted with the large&#13;
number of men who fail to report to&#13;
physicals, and the unwillingness of the&#13;
Justice Department to prosecute these&#13;
men for violation of the draft law, Tarr&#13;
amended the regulations in such a way&#13;
that serious resistors could be weeded out&#13;
from procrastinators and men who are not&#13;
certain that they are willing to face prison.&#13;
Under the new regulation, men who fail&#13;
to report for the physical will be ordered to&#13;
report for inducti?n, an~ given ~ complete&#13;
physical at the mduehon stahon. Those&#13;
who fail to show up, or who refuse to step&#13;
forward when their name is called will&#13;
then be reported to the Justice Department&#13;
for refusal of induction. Many men&#13;
who skip the physical are apparently&#13;
expected to report for induction, thereby&#13;
accomplishing the system's purpose&#13;
without the expense and ~assle of a&#13;
criminal prosecution. In this way the&#13;
number of draft law trials is kept low,&#13;
which was the function of the mo~e&#13;
blatantly oppressive delinquency r~es m&#13;
the first place, and yet the ~ystem IS able&#13;
to efficiently deal with the failure of men to&#13;
report for physicals. ,&#13;
While tbe new Supreme Coort rulIng,&#13;
and Tarr's guidelines for Judgmg CO cases&#13;
have doubled the number of new alternative&#13;
service registrants per month over&#13;
the summer and have caused several draft&#13;
board members to resign, the overall&#13;
effect of these actions on the effiCIent&#13;
functioning of tbe system has been mt&#13;
Less tban one per eent of the .eurrent&#13;
registrant pool is involved 10 the ISSue of&#13;
conscientious objection, These few h~~&#13;
easily ignored by tbe systef&#13;
m'tW 'of&#13;
·th 'ts maIO unc Ion carries on WI I '11' . ulating the lives of 22 mI Ion&#13;
manlp . 'ali useful channels. registrants IOto SOCI Y&#13;
The Lost and Found Is IOCited&#13;
at the Informatln ceator&#13;
Talloat Hall. Rm. III&#13;
Report On Convention&#13;
attendance. Without a quorum no busin&#13;
was conducted. It was very similar to the&#13;
previous meetings.&#13;
Thirteen delegales straggled mto the&#13;
fillh meeting 10 hear the reports of commiltees&#13;
lhat had not met Tom R ko&#13;
walked out on the groop after speakIng on&#13;
.financial autonomy Dean Loumoa and&#13;
Tom Kruel presented a rough draft of the&#13;
preamble and student rights section Th.&#13;
session adjourned to consider these brave&#13;
documents.&#13;
Al the sixth meettng seven people ealled&#13;
four on the phone to lower the quorum to&#13;
five: The delegates adopted a chewed up&#13;
version of Loumos' preamble. Marc Eisen&#13;
dared to show us a rough draft of the body.&#13;
Eisen was the structure committee&#13;
menlioned earlier&#13;
The seventh had seven, They managed&#13;
to extensively damage Marc's ego, Elghtyeight&#13;
minor changes were made in the&#13;
body. No new paragraph for the eighth&#13;
session.&#13;
The nmth session was experienced by&#13;
seven, Bev oble passed oot a new rough&#13;
draft of lhe constitulion to insult. The body&#13;
was looking healtluer, altho"llh oor mind,.&#13;
weren't.&#13;
Shot down. Our local wisemen In Tallent&#13;
Hall found a few little loopholes and&#13;
contradictions of Regents Rules In the&#13;
constitution. We patChed, rewrole and.&#13;
made insertions as best our failing minds&#13;
________________ ....!Ocou2!i!l!!d.2ml!&gt;!.a!lna~ge. You'll see&#13;
ByWATER BREACH&#13;
Of the twenty-one students elected by the&#13;
student body last spring, seventeen attended&#13;
the first session of the constitu~onal&#13;
convention. May 15 was a&#13;
meelmg of much animated discussion&#13;
some. heated arguments, and low ac:&#13;
complishment ... a quorwn of eleven was&#13;
set.&#13;
The second meeting had an attendance&#13;
of three less than the first Karyn Carter&#13;
was elected recording secretary for her&#13;
faithful atteodance of the first two&#13;
sessions. Three committees were also&#13;
formed for division of labor. One was to&#13;
deal with Student Government structure,&#13;
the second with a preamble, amendment&#13;
procedure and membership and the third&#13;
committee was to handle student rights&#13;
and responsibilities.&#13;
The third session again showed a&#13;
decrease of three from the previous&#13;
session. Bev Noble was elected chairman.&#13;
"General Aims" were the main topics of&#13;
discussion. Mary Terselic expounded on&#13;
the need for a Clearing House. Student&#13;
Rightist Tom Fesko addressed the group&#13;
about student voice in curriculum and in&#13;
faculty hiring and firing (selection and&#13;
release?). Walter Breach prattled on&#13;
about financial autonomy and com·&#13;
munication,&#13;
The fourth meeting had nine delegates in&#13;
Head,&#13;
sUTvey aU you see,&#13;
sink into the heaviness of it all&#13;
and&#13;
retrieve a synthetic,&#13;
sending yoo mto shneks,&#13;
soaked in loss&#13;
inViting only to take another look&#13;
until you&#13;
find the real thing.&#13;
Poetry Cornet&#13;
Soul Sister,&#13;
ebony brightness in the shadows of my life,&#13;
dancing your beauty along the way,&#13;
singing your love into the world's soul,&#13;
caress my mind&#13;
with the darkness of your brighl eyes,&#13;
snatching the passion from within,&#13;
holding up yoor loveliness,&#13;
seducing the life within me,&#13;
staod up with pride,&#13;
possessing reservoirs of gifts,&#13;
bestowed upon yoor being by some dark goodness.&#13;
FALL SEMESTER LIBRARY HED LE&#13;
September 21, 1970- February 7, 1971&#13;
Monday-Thursday 7:15-10:30 Ali eampuses&#13;
Friday 715 - 5:00&#13;
Saturday 9:00 - 5:00&#13;
9:00· 3:00&#13;
Sunday 2:30 -10:30&#13;
Thanksgiving:&#13;
November 26 Closed&#13;
27 8:00- 430&#13;
28 9:00 - 5:00&#13;
9:00 . 3:00&#13;
Christmas:&#13;
December 19 9:00 - 5:00&#13;
9:00 - 3:00&#13;
20 2:30 -10:30&#13;
21-23 8:00 -10:30&#13;
24 8:00 - 12 noon&#13;
2S Closed&#13;
26 9:00 - 5:00&#13;
9:00 - 3:00&#13;
27 2:30 -10:30&#13;
28-30 8:00 -10:30&#13;
31 8:00 - 12 noon&#13;
January 1 Closed&#13;
2 9:00 - 5:00&#13;
9:00- 3:00&#13;
20-22 7: 15 - 12midnight&#13;
23 7:15- 7:00&#13;
7:15- 3:00&#13;
24 2:30 -12 midnight&#13;
25-29 7:15 -12 midnight&#13;
30 7: 15- 5:00&#13;
7:15 - 3:00&#13;
31 Closed&#13;
February 1-5 8:00· 4:30&#13;
6 9:00- 5:00&#13;
7 Closed&#13;
All campus&#13;
IParkslde)&#13;
lR and K)&#13;
Parkslde only&#13;
All campus&#13;
All camp .....&#13;
(Parks,del&#13;
lR and KI&#13;
IParks,de)&#13;
(R and Kl&#13;
Parkslde only&#13;
All campuse&#13;
(Parksidel&#13;
&lt;R and Kl&#13;
Parkside only&#13;
All eampuses&#13;
All campuses&#13;
(Parksidel&#13;
IR and Kl&#13;
All campuses&#13;
(Parkside)&#13;
&lt;R and Kl&#13;
Parkside only&#13;
All eampuses&#13;
(Parksidel&#13;
(R and Kl&#13;
All campuses&#13;
All campuses&#13;
Parkside only&#13;
Book Prices Are T 00 H· h&#13;
BY Sven Taffs bo k I 9&#13;
d - o expenses A&#13;
Another semester awns at Parkside students have· ap;~:t rum~r of these&#13;
d once again students are shocked by bookstore in the h o~ Jobs at the&#13;
an cost of books. And as always, there is employee di ope of bemg eligible for :e usual griping, but nobody actually does dismayed at scou~ts. Another student&#13;
e thing about the costs ... except raise exorbitant boa price which she deemed&#13;
anY ' rrowed a copy f th boo&#13;
them, . t b 1· th" from the library - h o e k&#13;
You're not gomg o e 1eve 1s, but one book for t s e xeroxed the whole&#13;
f h en cents a page d&#13;
f my friends, a res man, tearfully ex- save $l 47 . 1 d" an managed to&#13;
o th t ft . di $ . , me u mg tax. lained to me a a er spen ng 254 for Perhaps neither of th . ~ ks she could only afford to carry five suggestions a al ese money-savmg&#13;
cr~its. I did my best to console her by Maybe the ad P~_ to_ you: Cheer up!&#13;
telll·ng her about the good ol' days when a book mimstration will institute a&#13;
uld h t ff d t · · ren~al syStem. Maybe your&#13;
student co ope o a or whon and professors tor next semester will choose&#13;
books, provided he g~t a decent _fellowship. books you already own. Maybe the&#13;
All seriousness aside, there 1s only one ?°okstore will give you a half-decent price&#13;
rson I've met here at Parkside who 1or your used b ks&#13;
di ~dn't have som_ething nasty to say about ·1 00 · Who knows? Maybe it w1 I snow on the Fourth of July. the University Bookstore prices. This Or ~aybe somewhere on this campus&#13;
individual purchased all his books over at there 1s a group of radical students who&#13;
Carthage. You should hear what he says are atte~pting to organize a kind of&#13;
about their bookstore. . cooperative bookstore. The kind of store&#13;
However, as we begin th&lt;: third week of where ~ed books would be sold at cost.&#13;
the fall semester, most of the requisite ~ayb~ instead of griping, you should look&#13;
texts have already been procured, and the mto th~s book store deal. If the idea catchgripes&#13;
tperefore seem less and less es on, 1t could save an awful lot of people&#13;
relevant. But in case you missed the notice an awful lot of money.&#13;
in our previous issue, next semester has If you're interested, come talk to me,&#13;
not been cancelled, so we can all look Sven Taffs, in the Newscope office at Kforward&#13;
to another semester's book bill. campus.&#13;
Consequently, many students have gone 9-r maybe you like spending $70 on books&#13;
to great lengths in their effort.s to reduce every semester.&#13;
Selective Service System&#13;
Under Tarr: Old Wine&#13;
In New Bottles&#13;
By BRUCE LOVET1'&#13;
College Press Service&#13;
WASHINGTON - (CPS) - For the last&#13;
five months Curtis Tarr, the new director&#13;
of the Selective ·Service System, has been&#13;
engineering a full-scale drive to convert&#13;
the image of the draft machine from one of&#13;
the inept, unfair, discriminatory&#13;
bureaucracy it was under Gen. Lewis B.&#13;
Hershey, to an efficient, modern,&#13;
benevolent agency which is seeking to&#13;
meet the needs of the military whif e being&#13;
as fair to everybody· as it possibly can.&#13;
The image is a good one, with a facelifting&#13;
on every level. The new irrthge&#13;
doesn't change the fact that the Selective&#13;
Service System is in the business .of&#13;
deciding which young lads are going to&#13;
become cannon-fodder or pencil-pushers&#13;
for the armed forces.&#13;
But Tarr has eliminated the most obvious&#13;
and blatant inequities and rhetoric&#13;
that used to anger liberals about Gen.&#13;
Hershey's operation.&#13;
. One area in which this is especially clear&#13;
IS the respect which the new director has&#13;
shown for the unfavorable rulings recently&#13;
handed down against the Selective Service&#13;
System by the Supreme Court. In June,&#13;
when the Supreme Court ruled that conscientious&#13;
objectors need not base their&#13;
claims on religious grounds, Tarr swiftly&#13;
responded by drafting the first interpretation&#13;
of the law and regulations&#13;
ever done by the Selective Service System,&#13;
embodying the spirit, and indeed, in&#13;
several instances, the actual words of the&#13;
Supreme Court decision. ··-&#13;
In contrast, when in 1965 the high court&#13;
:med that church ~ember~hip and belief&#13;
in a Supreme Being were not prerequisites&#13;
for CO status, Gen. Hershey's only&#13;
response was to issue, unexplained, three&#13;
ye~rs later, a new version of the CO form&#13;
Which eliminated references to church&#13;
m~mbership and belief in a Supreme Being,&#13;
. The system's new "liberal and modern"&#13;
;:age is also reflected by changes which&#13;
ve been made in the system's house&#13;
organ, Selective Service News, Gen.&#13;
~~~bets a~usi~g but grislyfr~nt_page,&#13;
n6ut-wmg editorials have been ehmmated fnd the news has taken on a totally new&#13;
f~k: The format has changed fron an oldshioned,&#13;
four-column letterpress job to a&#13;
m?re fluid three-column offset format,&#13;
Pl'mted in dark blue ink on pastel blue&#13;
~r. Tarr has moved his column to the&#13;
h ide pages, and the copy has lost its&#13;
umorous nature. The News used to be&#13;
llacked with wonderful trivialities which read lik · th e a Ripley's Believe It or Not for&#13;
hae ~ar machine. 1'his fascinating copy&#13;
s een dropped and the News now&#13;
conct ' · func ~n ~ates on hard news about the&#13;
rn tionmg of this system. Tarr also r akes sure that the articles mention&#13;
:ent court decisions which have come&#13;
wn against the system whenever they&#13;
are relevant, another innovation for the&#13;
News.&#13;
These changes, however, are merely&#13;
deceptive shirts of the system's image.&#13;
Under all the new, liberal rhetoric, the&#13;
system still continues to concentrate on its&#13;
dual role of channeling the lives of young&#13;
men and providing the military with men&#13;
to be converted into killers.&#13;
Tarr's response to the Supreme Court's&#13;
action in January, which eliminated&#13;
punitive induction of violators of draft&#13;
rules, became clear in late June, when the&#13;
Selective Service regulations were&#13;
amended to allow induction of men whose&#13;
numbers had been reached but who had&#13;
failed to report to a Pre-induction physical&#13;
when ordered to. Confronted with the large&#13;
number of men who fail to report to&#13;
physicals, and the unwillingness of the&#13;
Justice Department to prosecute these&#13;
men for violation of the draft law, Tarr&#13;
amended the regulations in such a way&#13;
that serious resistors could be weeded out&#13;
from procrastinators and men who are not&#13;
certain that they are willing to face prison.&#13;
Under the new regulation, men who fail&#13;
to report for the physical will be ordered to&#13;
report for inducti?n, an~ given ~ complete&#13;
physical at the mduct10n station. Those&#13;
who fail to show up, or who refuse to step&#13;
forward when their name is called will&#13;
then be reported to the Justice Department&#13;
for refusal of induction. Many men&#13;
who skip the physical are apparently&#13;
expected to report for induction, thereby&#13;
accomplishing the system's purpos e&#13;
without the expense and hassle of a&#13;
criminal prosecution. In this way the&#13;
number of draft law trials is kept low,&#13;
which was the function of the mo~e&#13;
blatantly oppressive delinquency r~es m&#13;
the first place, and yet the ~ystem is able&#13;
to efficiently deal with the failure of men to&#13;
report for physicals. . While the new Supren_ie ~ourt ruling,&#13;
and Tarr's guidelines for Judging CO cases&#13;
have doubled the number of new alternative&#13;
service registrants per month over&#13;
the summer ahd have caused several draft&#13;
board members to resign, the o~':all&#13;
effect of these actions on the efflc1~t&#13;
functioning of the system has been m\&#13;
Less than one per cent ~f the _curren&#13;
re istrant pool is inv_olved m the issue of&#13;
co~scientious objection. These few h~~ easily ignored by the system, . w l&#13;
. on wi·th its main function of carries illi&#13;
manipulating the _lives of 22 m on&#13;
registrants into socially useful channels.&#13;
The LOst and Found is located&#13;
at the Information-center&#13;
Tallent Hall, Rm. zot&#13;
Report On Convention&#13;
B_y WATER BRE ACH&#13;
Of the twenty-one student elect d by th v.&#13;
student body last spring, eventeen attended&#13;
the first se · ion of the constitu~onal&#13;
convention. . tay 15 wa a&#13;
meeting of much animated di cw ion,&#13;
some heated argwnents, and low accomplishment&#13;
... a quorwn of eleven was&#13;
set.&#13;
The second meeting had an attendanc&#13;
of three less than the first. Karyn Carter&#13;
was elected recording secret.an· for h r&#13;
fa ithful attendance of the first two&#13;
sessions. Three committee were also&#13;
formed for division of labor. One w to&#13;
deal with Student Government tructure,&#13;
the second with a preamble, amendment&#13;
procedure and membership and the third&#13;
committee was to handle student rights&#13;
and responsibilities.&#13;
The third session again showed a&#13;
decrease of three from the previou&#13;
session. Bev Noble was elected chairman.&#13;
"General Aims" were the main topic of&#13;
discussi_pn. 1ary Terselic expounded on&#13;
the need for a Clearing House Student&#13;
Rightist Tom Fesko addressed the group&#13;
about student voice in curriculum and in&#13;
faculty hiring and firing ( election and&#13;
release?). Walter Breach prattled on&#13;
about financial autonomy and com- munication.&#13;
The fourth meeting had nine delegate in&#13;
Head,&#13;
Poetry Corner survey all you&#13;
mk into th h avm of it II&#13;
and&#13;
retrieve a ynth tic,&#13;
ending you into hri&#13;
oaked in lo&#13;
im·iUng only to tak anoth r lo&#13;
until you&#13;
find the real lh1 .&#13;
Soul Sister,&#13;
ebony brightness in the hadow of my lif ,&#13;
dancing your beauty along the way,&#13;
singing your love into the world'. oul,&#13;
caress my mind&#13;
with the darkness of your bright eyes, snatching the passion from within,&#13;
holding up your loveliness, seducing the life within me,&#13;
stand up with pride,&#13;
possessing reservoir of gifts,&#13;
bestowed upon your being by ~ome dark goodn&#13;
F ALL EME TE R LIBR R \' S II "D LE&#13;
September 21, I970-February7, 1 il&#13;
Monday-Thursday 7: 15 - 10:&#13;
Friday&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Sunday&#13;
Thanksgiving:&#13;
November26&#13;
'l:l&#13;
28&#13;
Christmas:&#13;
December 19&#13;
20&#13;
21-23&#13;
24&#13;
25&#13;
26&#13;
'l:l&#13;
28-30&#13;
31&#13;
January 1&#13;
2&#13;
20-22&#13;
23&#13;
24&#13;
25-29&#13;
30&#13;
31&#13;
February 1-5&#13;
6&#13;
7&#13;
7: 15 • 5:00&#13;
9:00 - 5: 00&#13;
9: · 3:00&#13;
2:30 • 10:30&#13;
I ed&#13;
8:00 - 4:30&#13;
9: · 5:00&#13;
9:00 - 3:00&#13;
9:00 - 5:00&#13;
9:00 • 3:00&#13;
2:30 • 10:30&#13;
8:00 • 10:30&#13;
8:00 • 12 noon&#13;
Cl .ed&#13;
9:00- 5:00&#13;
9:00- 3:00&#13;
2:30-10:30&#13;
8:00-10 :30&#13;
8:00 - 12 noon&#13;
Cl ed&#13;
9:00- 5:00&#13;
9:00- 3:00&#13;
7: 15 • 12 midnight&#13;
7:15- 7:00&#13;
7:15- 3:00&#13;
2:30-12 midnight&#13;
7: 15 - 12 midnight&#13;
7:15- 5:00&#13;
7:15 • 3:00&#13;
Closed&#13;
8:00 - 4:30&#13;
9:00 - 5:00&#13;
Closed&#13;
II mp&#13;
,\II c mp (&#13;
(Par id )&#13;
(Rand Kl&#13;
Park 1d onl)&#13;
All camp&#13;
All campuse&#13;
&lt;Pa r ide)&#13;
CR and Kl&#13;
All camp e&#13;
CPark idel&#13;
CR and Kl&#13;
Parkside only&#13;
All campuse&#13;
(Park ide)&#13;
CR and K&gt;&#13;
All campuses&#13;
All campuses&#13;
Parkside only &#13;
Ranger Soccer Defelse Rates High SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
Parksldl"sStan larko"'c 1111 batlles a Green Bay player for the ball and seems to&#13;
be 1000lngduring lhl. encounter at the match which UWGB won 2-1.&#13;
mv r. u y of WI consln·Parkside's year with 36 goals in 15 games.&#13;
'lin d f n ," luch ha held opponents UW-Green Bay averaged eight goals per&#13;
10 ltv g I. Inlour games, "as thoroughly game last year, and matched that scoring&#13;
t ted wedn esday when the nallon's pace in drubbing UWP twice, ro-t and 6-0.&#13;
hiJth 1 cnng r team 13 t season. Parkside coach Jim Gibson feels that kind&#13;
(;W Gr n Bay, met the Ranger&gt; at 3 p.m of dillerential between the two sister&#13;
on UY.P' fl ld on the new Wood Road schools no longer exists, and comparative&#13;
mpu~ scores bear him out. UWP tipped Northern&#13;
Park ,,,,,' . tellar Ir hman goahe from Ollnois 1-0, Green Bay won 3-1; Green Bay&#13;
ev. J r. oy, hu k Lee , wuh help from tied Ottawa University I-I, Parkside lost 3-&#13;
dl'f&lt;,"'" standouts Tony Krtedel. Joe Orr O.&#13;
nd Ka.. Ueko" k, ha turned In two Gibson feels his tooters should have&#13;
utout. In UWP' (If t four games. but three wins. Parkside dominated play&#13;
ha r wed IInle help from the otfense. against Notre Dame but settled for a&#13;
", R natn won their first game after scoreless tie, and were beaten 2-1 by&#13;
,,, 0 I and a lie aturday, blanking Marquette despite getting off 35 shots on&#13;
'orlh rn 1I1Inoi l.() on one of only two goal to only five for the winners.&#13;
goal. that they've scored all season During the UWGB game, Parkside once&#13;
Gr"" Bay, by contrast, has rung up 13 again showed their tough defense. The&#13;
oal "hll f hlonlng a 2-1-1 mark and is attack was led by Tony Kriedle and Dale&#13;
r rded a one of the MIdwest's best Nickel.&#13;
er club The Bay Badgers scored nine "Green Bay caught us at our most&#13;
um In wtuppmg Franklin and Marshall vulnerable time, and scored two goals,"&#13;
&amp;-2 nd 100lng 4·3 to Swarthmore last stated Coach Gibson. "The UWP team&#13;
.... {'nd wlthout their oHenslve ace, zach absolutely dominated the game and&#13;
P panlkol ou, a Greek student who was showed the highest scoring team in the&#13;
th nauon' leading collegiate scorer last nation that Parkside is as good, if not&#13;
better, than UWGB."&#13;
Even though the Parkside team&#13;
dominated most of the game, the offense&#13;
lacked goals. Gibson stated, "We hope to&#13;
have more success in goal scoring in the&#13;
roUowing games. All of my players did an&#13;
~tstan~ng job and their interest is very&#13;
high. I Just hope it stays that way."&#13;
"I couldn't believe the turn·out we had&#13;
{o~ our game. I was extremely pleased&#13;
WIththe support of the Parkside fans. I'm&#13;
glad the students do show an interest and&#13;
back up the ranger team," eommenled&#13;
Coach Gibson.&#13;
Orpheum&#13;
Unit" ArtlUI Thlltre&#13;
,~. 1S2-llll&#13;
•&#13;
~&#13;
.--..." .... ftYS&#13;
Xl AMl1CI.-asn UlIASl/. alOI&#13;
UPTOWN RESTAURANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
~W"&#13;
910iian ~&#13;
Planning a party,&#13;
wedding or banquet,&#13;
no party too smaiL&#13;
Call 654-9123&#13;
4437·22nd Avenue&#13;
K&amp;nosho Wi1COn&lt;iin 53140&#13;
Fret Delivery&#13;
654.{)774&#13;
•&#13;
..&#13;
" &lt;. ~D~ ~ ...;&#13;
.~&#13;
Doug Beveridge makes an all-out attempt&#13;
as he drives in on UWGB's K&#13;
to intercept the ball. en Hess&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St&#13;
6 •. m'- till 11 pm' .. ays 7 d&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Ph.ne 657:9747&#13;
The Kenosha Bowlers will meet&#13;
at Sheridan Lanes at 9:00 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 6. This will be a fr.ee&#13;
night of bowling for all people 10-&#13;
terested. The new Parkside bowling&#13;
league will be formed that night.&#13;
The powderpuff Football Leag~e --:ill&#13;
start this Friday. For all you. girls 10-&#13;
terested in having a great tirne and&#13;
wanting to learn more about football,&#13;
please snow up for the games or contact&#13;
Bill Ballester at Racine or Coach Koch at&#13;
Kenosha. . h There is a schedule being made up whic&#13;
will include games against Carthage,&#13;
Dominican and KTl.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
The whole staff urges all of you soccer&#13;
fans to make it to the rest of the soccer&#13;
matches. Last Wednesday's game showed&#13;
excitement, anger, and pride. The Sports&#13;
page would like to congratulate all soocer&#13;
players and Coach Jim Gibson for the allout&#13;
performance that was made.&#13;
Remember, the remaining home games&#13;
are: OCt. 7 against D. of I. Circle CampuS&#13;
at 3 p.m.: Oct. 17 against Platteville at 2&#13;
p.rn.; and Oct. 24 against Wisconsin Junior&#13;
All-Stars at 2 p.m.&#13;
All soccer games are played on the new&#13;
soccer field located on Wood Road right&#13;
next to the Athletic Building.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
WRESTLERS and any tough men interested&#13;
in engaging in this vigorous sport,&#13;
please contact Coach Koch. Mr. Koch&#13;
would like to see more heavyweights out.&#13;
So if you are around 167 or better, give&#13;
wrestling a try. Itwill make a man out of&#13;
you. Practice starts around Oct. 15.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Basketball players will slart their&#13;
practice on OCt. 15 according to Coach&#13;
Steve Stevens. So for all you tall frosh who&#13;
can handle a basketball, give the team a&#13;
break and make your debut.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
The Parkside Intramural GOLF tourney&#13;
will be next week out at Pett's. Everyone is&#13;
eligible. There will be a Champion Flight&#13;
for the people who shoot in the 80s, an A&#13;
Flight for those who shoot in the 90s or&#13;
better, and a women's flight. You pay for&#13;
your own 18 holes and the winners will&#13;
receive certificates. Now let's get tbose&#13;
foursomes up and have a blast out at&#13;
Petrifying Springs.&#13;
N~:JH RANCH&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
~ORTH &amp; 50UTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS,&#13;
AIELLO&#13;
PHONE 6~-3551 e&#13;
Mid- TO'lKJfI&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
.A C,?mplete "FI~p(]1SeP'Vice&#13;
With MoJel'n-De~l~n&#13;
2108 f'!f!Y 9EC()ND.STREIiT&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
3M&#13;
BROWN&#13;
NATI9NAL BANI&lt; .. &amp;1_.'"&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR and RESTAURAN&#13;
Italian-American Foods . ,&#13;
2114 52nd St,&#13;
20 hrs, a dayl7 days a week&#13;
Organ Music&#13;
Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
From 9 p.m. til 2 a,m.&#13;
There will be Naval Reserve Officers&#13;
at Greenquist, Wed. Oct. 7&#13;
in Rm. 111at 10 a.m. till 2 p.m.&#13;
They would like to talk to you about&#13;
being a candidate in their program&#13;
'So why not go ~o see what&#13;
they hay t .. e 0 say, " Interested?&#13;
anger So«er Defense Rates High -SPORTS sHbRTS&#13;
Orpheum&#13;
United Artists Theatre&#13;
ph. &amp;52-5111&#13;
Al/CO&#13;
OICIASSY&#13;
UPTOWN RESTAURANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
~,,,-eiican w&#13;
9ta6a!J'l&#13;
Planning&#13;
~&#13;
a party,&#13;
u dding or banquet,&#13;
no party too small&#13;
Call 654-9123&#13;
4 37 • 22nd Avenue&#13;
e os 0 , Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Pree Delivery&#13;
6 -0 74&#13;
y ar \\-ith 36 goals in 15 games.&#13;
W-Green Bay averaged eight goals per&#13;
game la t year, and matched that scoring&#13;
P'JC in drubbing U\\'P twice, 10-1 and 6-0.&#13;
Par id coach Jim Gibson feels that kind&#13;
of d1Her ntial between the two sister&#13;
. h I no longer exists, and comparative&#13;
cor · bear him out. UWP tipped Northern&#13;
Ulinoi. l·O, Green Bay won 3-1; Green Bay&#13;
tied Ottawa niversity 1-1, Parkside Jost 3-&#13;
0.&#13;
Gibson feels his hooters should have&#13;
thr win·. Parkside dominated play&#13;
gaul);t ·otre Dame but settled for a&#13;
core! tie, and were beaten 2-1 by&#13;
1arquette despite getting off 35 shots on&#13;
goal to only five for the winners.&#13;
During the UWGB game, Parkside once&#13;
again howed their tough defense. The&#13;
attack was led by Tony Kriedle and Dale&#13;
'ickel.&#13;
"Green Bay caught us at our most&#13;
vulnerable time, and scored two goals,"&#13;
stated Coach Gibson. "The UWP team&#13;
absolutely dominated the game and&#13;
howed the highest scoring team in the&#13;
nation that Parkside is as good, if not&#13;
better, than UWGB."&#13;
Even though the Parkside team&#13;
dominated most of the game, the offense&#13;
lacked goals. Gibson stated, "We hope to&#13;
have '!lore success in goal scoring in the&#13;
following games. All of my players did an&#13;
o~tstan~ng job and their interest is very&#13;
high. I Just hope it stays that way."&#13;
"I couldn't believe the turn-out we had&#13;
fo~ our game. I was extremely pleased&#13;
"-1th the support of the Parkside fans. I'm&#13;
glad the students do show an interest and&#13;
back up. the ranger team," commented&#13;
Coach Gibson.&#13;
Doug Beveridge makes an all-out t&#13;
tempt as he drives in on lJWGB' a · to intercept the ball s Ken Hess . .&#13;
SWWEST SIDE&#13;
EET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St&#13;
6 a.m." till 11 p.m. · 7 days&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657:_9747&#13;
The Kenosha Bowlers will meet&#13;
at Sheridan Lanes at 9:00 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 6. This will be a fr_ee&#13;
night of bowling for all people interested.&#13;
The new Parkside bowling&#13;
league will be formed that night.&#13;
The Powderpuff Football Leag~e ~ill&#13;
start this Friday. For all you girls interested&#13;
in having a great time and&#13;
wanting to learn more about football,&#13;
please show up for the games or contact&#13;
Bill Ballester at Racine or Coach Koch at&#13;
Kenosha. . h&#13;
There is a schedule being made up wh1c&#13;
will include games against Carthage,&#13;
Dominican and KTI.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
The whole staff urges all of you soccer&#13;
fans to make it to the rest of the soccer&#13;
matches. Last Wednesday's game showed&#13;
excitement, anger, and pride. The Sports&#13;
page would like to congratulate all soccer&#13;
players and Coach Jim Gibson for the allout&#13;
perfol'mance that was made.&#13;
Remember, the remaining home games&#13;
are : Oct. 7 against U. of I. Circle Campus&#13;
at 3 p.m.; Oct. 17 against Platteville at 2&#13;
p.m.; and Oct. 24 against Wisconsin Junior&#13;
All-Stars at 2 p.m.&#13;
All soccer games are played on the new&#13;
soccer field located on Wood Road right&#13;
next to the Athletic Building.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
WRESTLERS and any tough men interested&#13;
in engaging in this vigorous sport,&#13;
please contact Coach Koch. Mr. Koch&#13;
would like to see more heavyweights out.&#13;
So if you are around 167 or better, give&#13;
wrestling a try. It will make a man out of&#13;
you. Practice starts around Oct. 15.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Basketball players will start their&#13;
practice on Oct. 15 according to Coach&#13;
Steve Stevens. So for all you tall frosh who&#13;
can handle a basketball, give the team a&#13;
break and make your debut.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
The Parkside Intramural GOLF tourney&#13;
will be next week out at Pett's. Everyone is&#13;
eligible. There will be a Champion Flight&#13;
for the people who shoot in the 80s, an A&#13;
Flight for those who shoot in the 90s or&#13;
better, and a women's flight. You pay for&#13;
your own 18 holes and the winners will&#13;
receive certificates. Now let's get those&#13;
foursomes up and have a blast out at&#13;
Petrifying Springs.&#13;
N~:JH RANCH&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
NORTH &amp; SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAIJ&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS.&#13;
AIELLO .&#13;
PHONE658-3551 •&#13;
. fJvfid-To'udn '&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
_A C~.mplete"'floral S.eFVice&#13;
W;th MaJern-Desiqn&#13;
2108 fJ!_':,!Y SEC&lt;&gt;IIID .STREU&#13;
KENOSHA, WllilCQIIISIN&#13;
QM&#13;
BROWN&#13;
NATIC?NAL BANK ., IIIOIM&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR and RESTAURANT&#13;
ltal_ian-American Foods&#13;
2114 52nd St.&#13;
20 hrs. a day/7 days a week&#13;
Organ Music&#13;
Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
From 9 p.m. til 2 a.m.&#13;
Th ere w1 "II b e Naval Reserve Officers&#13;
at Greenquist, Wed. Oct. 7&#13;
.&#13;
in Rm. 111 at 10 a~m. till 2 p.m.&#13;
They would lilce to tallc to you about&#13;
being a candidate in their program&#13;
'So why not go to see what&#13;
they hav t .. e O say, ,f interested? &#13;
Participation in recreationai activities which can be pursued throughout ill . th .&#13;
cornerstone of the ~ ath.le.tic philosophy, and these archers from a physical ed:c~tio:&#13;
course seem to be takmg It to heart. The archery range is located just south of the&#13;
athletic house on Wood Road.&#13;
Movie Review: BUTCH C,ASSIDY&#13;
By WALT BREACH continue will probably nauseate both of us.&#13;
So, let us just say it was a delightful&#13;
mixture of all of these.&#13;
Director George Roy Hill crea ted an&#13;
extremely entertaining cinematographical&#13;
(wow, hun?) portrait of two -fine,&#13;
healthy bandits. After the first couple&#13;
beers the critic was able to discern many.&#13;
'redeeming social values within the context&#13;
of the film. However, after the next couple&#13;
he forgot them.&#13;
Among the many' celebrities there for&#13;
the opening, the star of recording favorite&#13;
Barb Backlund shone the brightest,&#13;
although she was quoted as saying, "I&#13;
haven't recorded anything new in the past&#13;
six months." Others, besides ordinary&#13;
viewers, were three. bartenders,&#13;
Opening night for the Parkside Student&#13;
Activities Movie Series, P.S.A.M.S., was.&#13;
It just was. Friday, Sept. 25 at8 p.m., as&#13;
a matter of fact. It was also over four&#13;
hundred and Butch Cassity and the Sundance&#13;
Kid. Four hundred what you ask?&#13;
Four hundred fans slobbering over Paul&#13;
Newman, Katherine Ross and Robert&#13;
Redford depending of course on the sex of&#13;
the star and in all but a few cases upon the&#13;
sex of the viewer.&#13;
The movie couldn't be called. the typical,&#13;
run of the mill documentary. To continue,&#13;
it also couldn't be called the typical run of&#13;
the mill western, drama, suspense story,&#13;
comedy, biographical flic or adventure. To&#13;
STUDENT RESEARCHERS NEEDED&#13;
for&#13;
ENVIRONMENTAL&#13;
QUALITY STUDY&#13;
Description of Position:&#13;
Assist Faculty in a project to collect, study,&#13;
analyze, and index all previous researches d~ne&#13;
on environmental problems affecting&#13;
SoutheasternWisconsin. Valuable experience will&#13;
be gained in library research, familiarization&#13;
with the broad problem areas in envir?nmental&#13;
quality, and practical use of comput~rlzed d~ta&#13;
lndexlnq and retrieval systems. Starting salaries&#13;
are $1.75per hour.&#13;
Requirements for Position:&#13;
1. You must be a Sophomore or above.&#13;
2. Your average grade must be B or higher.&#13;
3. You should be available 10-15hours per week for&#13;
the Project (preferably including Saturdays).&#13;
4. It is highly desirable that you. have so~e&#13;
background in science,or courses In the SOCial&#13;
science relevant to environmental problems.&#13;
If rt and are interested in the project, 5. you qua I y • F Egerton M please contact Professors. ,.&#13;
Firebaugh, G. Goodman or C. Holzbog.&#13;
USE&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
FOR SALE - 2 guitars. 1 - F'212GUild, 12&#13;
string, excellent condition; 2 • original&#13;
maple white neck Fender Telecast ....&#13;
Original case. Excellent condition. Con·&#13;
tact Fox, 654-3071.&#13;
Thrifty Threads&#13;
For Your Back. ..&#13;
Far Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Feet!&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
-&#13;
The University Artists Series&#13;
annoonces&#13;
13 Sunday afternoon concerts&#13;
featuring:&#13;
carmen Vila, artist in residence, piano&#13;
Annie Petit, affiliate artist, piano&#13;
Keiko Furiyoshi, affiliate artist, violin&#13;
Harry Lantz, associate professor, cello&#13;
~nd guest artists:&#13;
Dona Kombrink, soprano&#13;
James Yc&gt;ghourtjian, classical guitar&#13;
Edward Druzinsky, harp&#13;
David Baker Jazz Quintet&#13;
Gary Kendall, baritone&#13;
Concertdates: Oct. 18,Nov. 1-15-22,Dec. 13,Jan. 10.Feb, 14-28,&#13;
'Mar. 28, Apr. 25, May 2-16&#13;
All Concerts: 4 p.m. Greenquist Hall Concourse&#13;
Season tickets: Adults $tO, Students $5&#13;
Children 12 and under free&#13;
PUblic Information Office&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53140&#13;
Please send me __ adult season tickets - $10&#13;
-_ student season tickets - $5&#13;
Name _&#13;
Address, -:-:-:7""-;-;--:-----::--:-:-:-;:---:--:::--:--,-;--:-&#13;
(Make checks to the University of Wisconsin-Parksidel&#13;
Tickets also available at Public Information Office, Wood Road&#13;
Participation in recreationai activities which can be pursued throughout life · th&#13;
cornerstone of the~ ath_letic philosophy, and these archers from a physical edu;!tio~&#13;
cours~ seem to be takmg 1t to heart. The archery range is located just south of the&#13;
athletic house on Wood Road.&#13;
Movie Review: BUTCH CASSIDY . ByWALTBREACH&#13;
Opening night for the Parkside Student&#13;
Activities Movie Series, P .S.A.M.S., was.&#13;
contmuewill probably nauseate both of us.&#13;
So, let us just say it was a delightful&#13;
mixture of all of these.&#13;
Director George Roy Hill created an&#13;
extremely entertaining cinematographical&#13;
(wow, bun?) portrait of two -fine,&#13;
healthy bandits. After the first couple&#13;
beers the critic was able to discern many&#13;
redeeming social values within the context&#13;
of the film. However, after the next couple&#13;
he forgot them.&#13;
It just was. Friday, Sept. 25 at8 p.m., as&#13;
a matter of fact. It was also over four&#13;
hundred and Butch Cassity and the Sundance&#13;
Kid. Four hundred what you ask?&#13;
Four hundred fans slobbering over Paul&#13;
Newman, Katherine Ross and Robert&#13;
Redford depending of course on the sex of&#13;
the star and in all but a few cases upon the&#13;
sex of the viewer. Among the many· celebrities there for&#13;
the opening, the star of recording favorite&#13;
Barb Backlund shone the brightest,&#13;
although she was quoted as saying, "f&#13;
haven't recorded anything new in the past&#13;
six months." Others, besides ordinary&#13;
viewers, were three bartende~&#13;
The movie couldn't be called the typical,&#13;
run of the mill documentary. To continue,&#13;
it also couldn't be called the typical run of&#13;
the mill western, drama, suspense story,&#13;
comedy, biographical flic or adventure. To&#13;
STUDENT RESEARCHERS NEEDED&#13;
L .&#13;
for&#13;
ENVIRONMENT AL&#13;
QUALITY STUDY&#13;
Description of Position:&#13;
Assist Faculty in a project to collect, study,&#13;
analyze, and index all previous researches d?ne&#13;
on environmental problems affecting&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin. Valuable experience will&#13;
be gained in library research, familiarization&#13;
with the broad problem areas in envir~nmental&#13;
quality, and practical use of comput:nzed d~ta&#13;
indexing and retrieval systems. Starting salaries&#13;
are $1.75 per hour.&#13;
Requirements for Position:&#13;
1. You must be a Sophomore or above.&#13;
2. Your average grade must be B or higher.&#13;
3. You should be available 10-15 h~urs per week for&#13;
the Project (preferably including Saturdays).&#13;
4. It is highly desirable that you . have so'!1e&#13;
b k d ·n science or courses in the social&#13;
ac groun , . t I problems science relevant to env,ronmen a ·&#13;
s. If you qualify and are inter~st;d inE the t~~oje~,&#13;
please contact Professors · ger ' ·&#13;
Firebaugh, G. Goodman or C. Holzbog.&#13;
USE&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
FOR ALE - 2 guita . 1 • r'212 Guild, 12&#13;
string, excellent condition; 2 • orl inal&#13;
maple white ned r-·ender Tel t •&#13;
Original ca e. Excellent condition. Con·&#13;
tact Fox, 654-3071 .&#13;
Thrifty Threads&#13;
For Your Back. ..&#13;
Far Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Feet.'&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
---~-~ ..&#13;
The University Artists Series announces&#13;
13 Sunday afternoon concerts&#13;
featuring:&#13;
Carmen Vila, artist in residence, piano&#13;
Annie Petit, affiliate artist, piano&#13;
Keiko Furiyoshi, affiliate artist, violin&#13;
Harry Lantz, associate professor, cello&#13;
~nd guest artists:&#13;
Ilona Kombrink, soprano&#13;
James Yoghourtjian, classical guitar&#13;
Edward Druzinsky, harp&#13;
David Baker Jazz Quintet&#13;
Gary Kendall, baritone&#13;
Concert dates: Oct. 18, Nov. 1-15-22, Dec, 13, Jan. 10. Feb. 14·28,&#13;
I Mar. 28, Apr. 25, fay 2-16&#13;
All Concerts: 4 p.m.&#13;
Season tickets: Adults $10, Students $5&#13;
Children 12 and under free&#13;
Public Information Office&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53140&#13;
Please send me __ adult season tickets - $10&#13;
__ student season tickets -$5&#13;
Greenqui t Hall Con ours&#13;
Name _______________ _&#13;
Address ----------------- (Make checks to the University of Wisconsin-Parkside)&#13;
Tickets also available at Public Information Office, Wood Road &#13;
· warm and hearty welcome to the Philippine&#13;
Weight Club members give a . .ght lifting demonstration. Pictured here&#13;
representatrves after Salvador Del R~FI~:~hiJiPPine WeighUifting Federa~ion. Tom&#13;
are Eldld,o Dorotheo, coach and hea 0 Salvador Del Rosano, worlds&#13;
Yore, Parkside's Weight Club pres~:~t ~r::;':k~:;:o~~tramurals, Joe Seilski, Jim&#13;
nywelght champ, VIC Godfrdaey&#13;
,. the General Secrelary of the federation. huemateandSalvadorAven mo.&#13;
Salvador Del·Rosario, r,:"enUy crowned&#13;
world's flyweight weight-lilting champion&#13;
from the PhihpplOes, prese~ted a tree&#13;
public demonstration at Parkslde on Sept.&#13;
28The demonstration was held in the UWP&#13;
Kenosha Fine Arts room at 12:30.and was&#13;
n to the public. Following the&#13;
~onSlralion Salvador gave instruc.ti~ns&#13;
in the Kenosha Campus weight-trammg&#13;
room to Parkside students,&#13;
Del-Rosario won the title t:va weeks ago&#13;
in Columbus, Ohio, by equaling the world&#13;
record for his weight class, 114pounds. He&#13;
lifted 7l0lfz pounds on a press of ~14%, a&#13;
snatch of 209, and a clean-and-jerk of&#13;
296V,. The two latter efforts earned him&#13;
gold medals. . .&#13;
Del-Rosario was accompanied by. hIS&#13;
coach and head of the Philippine weight&#13;
Lifting Federation, Eldidio Dorotheo, ~nd&#13;
the General Secrelary of the Federation,&#13;
Salvador Avendanio. All three were&#13;
guests of the UWP Athletic Director Tom&#13;
Rosandich, who this summer was .~a~~&#13;
Advisor of Sports to the Philippine&#13;
Republic by President Ferdinand Marcos.&#13;
Review: HAIR&#13;
By CAROL A SMOLINSKI&#13;
Last Wednesday, Sept. 30, I had the&#13;
great pleasure to go to Chicago and see the&#13;
current "tribal rock" musi~al, I:JAIR, (I&#13;
must confess that it was the fifth time I ve&#13;
seen it). J' t uI I recommend it to everyone. t IS a r y&#13;
different experience that I'm sur~ you&#13;
would never forget. It has a very SImple&#13;
plot, but the way the cOj( presents It&#13;
LaCrosse, and the host, Platteville.&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
OCt. 3 - UW·Milwaukee at MilwaukeeEsterbrook&#13;
Park, 10 a.m. . ,&#13;
OCt. 10 • Platteville Invitational at&#13;
Platteville, 11 :30 a.m.&#13;
OCt. 13 • Platteville, Dominican, at&#13;
home, 4 p.m.&#13;
OCt. 17 • Open&#13;
OCt. 20 • Open&#13;
Oct. 24- Marquette - 5 miles, at home, 11&#13;
a.rn,&#13;
OCt. 31 - Loras . 4 miles, at home, 11 :30&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Nov. 7 - Mid-American - 6 miles, at&#13;
home, 8 a.m.&#13;
NoV.14 - Central Collegiates at Southern&#13;
Illinois, Carhondale&#13;
Nov. 21 - NAIA - 5 miles, at Kansas City,&#13;
Mo.&#13;
Nov. 27· National AAU- 6miles, Chicago&#13;
proves to be very effective.&#13;
The story tells of a young man, ClaUd&#13;
Bukowski, who, Instead of foUOWingh"&#13;
friends at .. draft-card burning ritual a~&#13;
burning his card, decides to turn aw&#13;
from it all and accept the army a~&#13;
Vietnam. In my mind he was very e&#13;
fused as to which would be better, ~&#13;
vagabond type of hfe he was leading \IIith&#13;
his friends, or the army life of reRUlations&#13;
and guns. Throughout the play there \IIer,&#13;
many digs directed at the war, Tricky&#13;
Dick and our overall eslablishment.&#13;
The play made me feel alive and left "Ie&#13;
thinking after Ileft the theatre. The mUsic&#13;
and lyrics generated many. different&#13;
feelings throughout the aUd,ence. A&#13;
woman sitting in front of us didn't corn&#13;
back for the second act. She is obViOUSly:&#13;
very narrow minded person and Was&#13;
needlessly appalled by the nude SCene.I&#13;
consider myself to be someWhat olJen&#13;
minded. You really have to be if YOU see&#13;
HAIR. Jf you go to see it with dOUbtsalld&#13;
expecting the worst, you probably \IIOll't&#13;
get the message or the whole idea behind&#13;
the play. I think I'd rate this play H ...&#13;
Honest.&#13;
If you get a chance and have the money&#13;
I suggest you go and see for yourself '&#13;
Sunmpide glorisll&#13;
&amp; greenhoUJel&#13;
Flowers - Fruit Baskets - Gifts&#13;
Phone: 649·6700 •&#13;
VI and FRANK WEINSTOCK I&#13;
3021- 75TH ST.&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
(,UQ bQI;eVf tV\; ::","&#13;
ill inaivi~t(U(."&#13;
and make It our business&#13;
10 know what our mdtvrdual&#13;
customers want and need.&#13;
We speciahze In fashions&#13;
geared to modern hving&#13;
hand picked for style, qualIty&#13;
and value. And, most&#13;
Important. you can count on&#13;
prompt. courteous. personal&#13;
service at all times. C.ome&#13;
In and browse see how much&#13;
more fun It IS to shop in a&#13;
rela~ed. lrlendly atmosphere&#13;
Hope 10 see you soonl&#13;
Harriers In Meet&#13;
Saturday Morning&#13;
Parkside's cross country team ran&#13;
below expectation with the exception of&#13;
freshman Chuck Dettman. Dettman&#13;
finished third, his time was 1:1 min., 10sec.&#13;
The track was a rough rive mile course&#13;
at Whitewater. There were some muddy&#13;
spots which held up many of our runners.&#13;
Jim McGilsky was the second-best rwmer.&#13;
for Parkside. He finished twelfth with a&#13;
time of 'n min., 48 sec.&#13;
On Saturday, OCt.13, the Pai-kside cross&#13;
country men will bave their hands full with&#13;
the tough Platteville lnvilational. Fifteen&#13;
teams will complete, including Mankato&#13;
State, Northern Illinois, Cartbage, WSU.&#13;
DELICATESSEN - BEVERAGES&#13;
3203 fIFTY·SECOND STREET&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
MARGURI'ITE'S&#13;
6207 • nnd Avenue&#13;
kenosho. Wisconsin 531.40&#13;
Phone, 652-2681&#13;
VILLAGE INN&#13;
and&#13;
P-ancake House&#13;
3619 30th Ave.&#13;
SUN. 6a.m.-12 a.m&#13;
FRJ. 6 a.m.-lp.m.&#13;
SAT. 6 a.m.,-2 p.m,&#13;
21 Variety&#13;
of Pancakes&#13;
LUNCH - DINNERS&#13;
eQUALITY&#13;
- SATIS~ACTION&#13;
-SAVINGS&#13;
ALWAY$&#13;
For YOli and Yourear&#13;
SILL'S DEEP ROCK SERVICE STATION&#13;
2305 RaCine 634-9328&#13;
YourCompl.t. "On Campus" Book an~ Supply center&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORES&#13;
~ Now Open Nights - 6:30-8:00 Monday thru Thursday rJlJm&#13;
Stop in at our conveniently located store on each Campus.&#13;
j ,&#13;
1evr. u&#13;
indiv,cllt ~ ... ~&#13;
nd ma e 1t our business&#13;
to no hat our ind1 1dual&#13;
customers liant and need.&#13;
e ec1ahze in fashions&#13;
geared to modern living&#13;
hand-pie ed for style, qual1&#13;
and value And, most&#13;
1mportan . you can count on&#13;
promp . courteous. personal&#13;
ser nee at all times. Cpme&#13;
m and bro se .. see how much&#13;
more fun ,t is to shop in a&#13;
relax d. riendlv atmosphere&#13;
Hop to see you ... soon'&#13;
. 1 RGURIITE'S&#13;
6207 . 22nd Avenue&#13;
enosho, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone: 652-2681&#13;
28The demonstration was held in the UWP&#13;
Kenosha Fine Arts room at 12:30 _and was&#13;
n to the public. Following . the&#13;
rroonstration Salvador gave instruc_ti~ns&#13;
in the Kenosha Campus weight-training&#13;
room to Parkside students.&#13;
Del-Rosario won the title t~o weeks ago&#13;
in Columbus, Ohio, by equaling the world&#13;
record for his weight class, 114 pounds. He&#13;
lifted 7101 2 pounds on a press of ~14¼, a&#13;
snatch of 209, and a clean-and-Jerk . of&#13;
29614 . The two latter efforts earned him&#13;
gold medals. h.&#13;
Del-Rosario was accompaID;ed by. is&#13;
coach and head of the Philippine Weight&#13;
Lifting Federation, Eldidio Dorothea, ~nd&#13;
the General Secretary of the Federation,&#13;
Salvador Avendanio. All three were&#13;
guests of the UWP_ Athletic Director_ Tom&#13;
Rosandich, who this summer was. ~a~ed&#13;
Advisor of Sports to the Philippine&#13;
Republic by President Ferdinand Marcos.&#13;
Harriers In Meet&#13;
Saturday Morning&#13;
Parkside's cross country team ran&#13;
below expectation with the exception of&#13;
freshman Chuck Dettman. Dettman&#13;
finished third, his time was '1:7 min., 10 sec.&#13;
The track was a rough five mile course&#13;
at Whitewater. There were some muddy&#13;
spots which held up many of our runners.&#13;
Jim McGilsky was the second-best runner&#13;
for Parkside. He finished twelfth with a&#13;
time of '1:7 min., 48 sec. .&#13;
On Saturday, Oct. 13, the Parkside cross&#13;
country men will have their hands full with&#13;
the tough Platteville Invitational. Fifteen&#13;
teams will complete, including Mankato&#13;
State, Northern Illinois, Carthage, WSUReview:&#13;
HAIR&#13;
By CAROL A SMOLINSKI&#13;
Last Wednesday, Sept. 30, I had the&#13;
great pleasure to go to Chicago and see the&#13;
current "tribal rock" musi~al, f,IAIR' (I&#13;
must confess that it was the fifth time I ve&#13;
seen it). · trul&#13;
I recommend it to everyone. It ts a y&#13;
different experience that rm sur~ you&#13;
would never forget. It has a very s1mpl_e&#13;
plot, but the way the cajt presents it&#13;
Lacrosse, and the host, Platteville.&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
Oct. 3 • UW-Milwaukee at MilwaukeeEsterbrook&#13;
Park, 10 a .m. . ,&#13;
Oct. 10 - Platteville lnvttahonal at&#13;
Platteville, 11:30 a.m. . .&#13;
Oct. 13 _ Platteville, Domm1can, at&#13;
home, 4 p.m.&#13;
Oct. 17 - Open&#13;
Oct. 20 - Open&#13;
Oct. 24 - Marquette - 5 miles, at home, 11&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Oct. 31 - Loras - 4 miles, at home, 11:30&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Nov. 7 - Mid-American - 6 miles, at&#13;
home, 8 a.m.&#13;
Nov. 14 - Central Collegiates at Southern&#13;
lliinois, Carbondale&#13;
Nov. 21- NAIA- 5 miles, at Kansas City,&#13;
Mo.&#13;
Nov. '1:l - National AAU - 6 miles, Chicago&#13;
• QUALITY&#13;
• SATIS.F ACTION&#13;
• ·SAVINGS&#13;
ALWAY$&#13;
proves to be very effective.&#13;
The story tells ?f a young man, Claude&#13;
Bukowski, who, instead of . following his&#13;
friends at a draft-card _burrung ritual alld&#13;
burning his card, decides to turn away&#13;
from it all and a~cept the arm, and&#13;
Vietnam. In my mmd he was very co&#13;
fused as to whic~ would be better, th~&#13;
vagabond type of hfe he ~as leading With&#13;
his friends, or the army hfe of regulations&#13;
and guns. Throughout the play there Were&#13;
many digs directed at the war, Tricky&#13;
Dick and our overall establishment.&#13;
. The play made me feel alive and left me&#13;
thinking after I left the theatre. The music&#13;
and lyrics generated many different&#13;
feelings t~ro~ghout the au?ie~ce. A&#13;
woman sittmg m front of u~ didn t come&#13;
back for the secm:id act. She 1s obviously a&#13;
very narrow mmded person and Was&#13;
needlessly appalled by the nude scene, I&#13;
consider myself to be somewhat open&#13;
minded. You really have to be if you see&#13;
HAIR. If you go to see it with doubts and&#13;
expecting the worst, you pro~bly won't&#13;
get the message or the whole idea behind&#13;
the play. I think I'd rate this play H ...&#13;
Honest.&#13;
If you get a chance and have the money,&#13;
I sug~est you go and see for yourself&#13;
SunmpiJe gforisls&#13;
&amp; (}reenhouses&#13;
Flowers - Fruit Baskets - Gilts&#13;
VI and&#13;
Phone:&#13;
&#13;
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 2, Issue 2, October 5, 1970</text>
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