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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 6</text>
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            <text>Weaver Elected University President</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>B ©&#13;
is&#13;
•SH&#13;
2}&#13;
J&#13;
Weaver Elected U niversity P resident&#13;
takf» nwt^lic' ,^.®a v®r&gt; new University of Wisconsin president, will&#13;
nointfvl L«f dutie&#13;
?,&#13;
m Madison by Feb. 1, 1971. Weaver, 55, was apferpno^&#13;
r&gt;oii J* P&#13;
re^ ency ^&#13;
ast Monday afternoon during a press conNmf&#13;
? Bernard Ziegler, president of UW Board of R egents.&#13;
«rAawor n serving as the president of the University of Missouri,&#13;
"Mv ^"J^ented that Madison had been his home until he was 25.&#13;
My heart tells me to return," he said.&#13;
Tm, The new president will receive an annual salary of $45,000. The&#13;
UW president is the state's highest paid official.&#13;
_... a d v i s o r y c o m m i t t e e f o r t h e s e l e c t i o n o f a p e r s o n t o f i l l t h e&#13;
posmon vacated by Fred W. Harrington, who resigned Oct. 1, had&#13;
omitted 195 possible candidates to the Board of Regnets. Seventeen&#13;
names were then given to a special regent's committee which interviewed&#13;
candidates.&#13;
Campus unrest was a subject of the interviews. Ziegler said control&#13;
of violence was in mind when choosing Weaver, but went on: "You're&#13;
not getting a hard nosed stereo-typed person." In Missouri, Weaver felt&#13;
great confidence that the university will overcome its problems. I am&#13;
sure that there can be accommodation for both freedom and discipline.&#13;
The heartbeat of this university deserves protection from destructive&#13;
forces within and forces of repression from without."&#13;
John Weaver will be the fifteenth president of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin. He previously earned his bachelor's, master's, and doctor's&#13;
degrees in geography from UW-Madison. He has held administrative&#13;
posts at Kansas State University, the University of Nebraska, the&#13;
University of Iowa, and Ohio State University.&#13;
New University Budget&#13;
Totals $6.2 5Million&#13;
Boost Our Teams&#13;
Plans are under way for the first&#13;
PARKS IDE BOOSTER CLUB.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 11, is the first meeting.&#13;
It will be held in Room 101 — Greenquist at&#13;
4 p.m. All interested students are invited to&#13;
attend.&#13;
Co-ed is the word, since both male and&#13;
female students are eligible for membership.&#13;
&#13;
Besides helping with Sportsfest (Dec. 4-&#13;
5), Booster Club will also help to select a&#13;
fight song, an alma mater, and a school&#13;
mascot. Other activities would include&#13;
organizing a "bleacher bum" section for&#13;
basketball games and sponsoring bus trips&#13;
to some of the road games.&#13;
As a recognized club under Student&#13;
Activities, the Booster Club also will work&#13;
with the cheerleaders and the Rangerettes&#13;
in promoting school spirit and attendance&#13;
at other athletic events. Miss Doreen&#13;
Christjanson is the advisor. For further&#13;
information contact Kathy Mauer&#13;
Parkside's budget figures for the 70-71&#13;
year were recently made available to the&#13;
Newscope staff. Although a complete&#13;
breakdown of the budget is impossible in&#13;
the space allotted here, there are certain&#13;
facets which should be of special interest&#13;
to students.&#13;
The total operating budget of the school&#13;
this year is slightly more than six and a&#13;
quarter million dollars, of which less than&#13;
one-fifth is paid by student tuition. The&#13;
bulk of the remaining four-fifths is paid by&#13;
taxpayers.&#13;
Of perennial interest to students are the&#13;
funds allotted for student activities. From&#13;
the total operating budget, $335,521 are&#13;
funneled back to the students through&#13;
various student programs, services, and&#13;
activities. This fund is supported in part by&#13;
the profits from such things as the vending&#13;
machines and by the sale of tickets to&#13;
student events, and in part by a "student&#13;
segregated fee' which is taken from the&#13;
tuition we pay.&#13;
The student segregated fee is roughly&#13;
equivalent to the student activity fees&#13;
which are paid at other colleges. This fee&#13;
of $39 per semester is included in tuition,&#13;
and is broken down as follows:&#13;
-—$19.25 goes toward funding a permanent&#13;
student union;&#13;
—$4.40 goes to athletics;&#13;
—$9.25 goes for maintenance of the&#13;
shuttle busses;&#13;
—$1.75 is allotted for student health;&#13;
—$2.50 goes to the intramural program;&#13;
—$1.75 goes to the Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Program.&#13;
It must be noted that last year after the&#13;
budget was prepared, a group of students&#13;
appointed by Dean Darborn were asked to&#13;
make suggestions concerning the breakdown&#13;
of the student segregated fee. These&#13;
students approved of the budget as it&#13;
stood.&#13;
Awa r d ed GM Gr a nt&#13;
A Racine freshman, Bernard R. Vash, is&#13;
the first University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
student to be awarded a General Motors&#13;
Corporation grant.&#13;
A total of five GM grants were awarded&#13;
UW students for the 1970-71 school year&#13;
including two each at the Madison and&#13;
Milwaukee campuses. Each grant is for&#13;
$600 renewable for four years on the basis&#13;
of academic performance.&#13;
Vash, who ranked in the top ten per cent&#13;
of his class at William Horlick high school,&#13;
is majoring in engineering science in&#13;
Parkside's School of Modern Industry. He&#13;
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Vash&#13;
of 2501 St. Rita's Road.&#13;
Standing room only crowd for Fifth Dimension concert. Review on page three.&#13;
John C. Weaver, the new president of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin, will be "good for&#13;
the university and good for Wisconsin" in&#13;
the opinion of UW-Parkside Chancellor&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie.&#13;
Wyllie was one of a 16-member&#13;
presidential search and screen committee&#13;
which aided the University Board of&#13;
Regents in choosing the new president.&#13;
"Because of my personal ties to both the&#13;
University of Missouri and the University&#13;
of Wisconsin, I am pleased that John&#13;
Weaver will be Wisconsin's next&#13;
president," Wyllie said. "I taught nine&#13;
years at Missouri, my three children were&#13;
born there, and I still have many friends in&#13;
Columbia (Mo.). The fact that my son&#13;
(Gordon) is enrolled at Wisconsin and my&#13;
daughter (Kay Ann) at Missouri says&#13;
something about our devotion as a family&#13;
to both institutions."&#13;
"My good friends at Columbia tell me&#13;
that John Weaver accomplished a great&#13;
deal there in a very short time," Wyllie&#13;
continued. "His record at several land&#13;
grant universities marks him as a topflight&#13;
professional. As a new campus chancellor,&#13;
I am particularly pleased that he has had&#13;
experience in administering a multicampus&#13;
system such as ours."&#13;
At Missouri, Weaver headed a system&#13;
which included four degree-granting&#13;
campuses at St. Louis, Kansas City, Roll&#13;
and Columbia. At Wisconsin, he takes over&#13;
a system which includes degree-granting&#13;
campuses at Madison, Milwaukee, Green&#13;
Bay and Parkside, as well as the two-year&#13;
Center System and University Extension.&#13;
Each of the six Wisconsin units is headed&#13;
by a chancellor who will report to Weaver.&#13;
Busses Fueled&#13;
With L P Gas&#13;
Intercampus busses fueled with LP gas&#13;
rather than conventional fuel now are in&#13;
service on runs linking the three campuses.&#13;
&#13;
Use of LP gas (liquified petroleum) or&#13;
other non-leaded gases reduces the particulate&#13;
matter in exhaust materials.&#13;
Some research indicates it reduces&#13;
hydrocarbon emissions as well. Use of nonleaded&#13;
gases also makes possible the use&#13;
of catalytic mufflers capable of converting&#13;
exhaust materials into carbon dixide and&#13;
water with fewer combustion deposits&#13;
resulting.&#13;
The busses are fueled from tank trucks&#13;
each day before beginning their runs and&#13;
carry enough liquified petroleum to&#13;
complete their day's schedule.&#13;
The busses have specially equipped&#13;
engines and fuel tanks.&#13;
The bus system of transportation is a&#13;
key concept in the master development&#13;
plan for the new Wood Road campus where&#13;
private vehicle parking is limited to&#13;
perimeter lots linked to various campus&#13;
buildings by the shuttle bus service. The&#13;
limitation of vehicles in the central&#13;
campus is aimed at its preservation as a&#13;
natural area and as a pedestrian area as&#13;
free as possible from the noise and air&#13;
contaminants &#13;
LETTERS to t he e ditors&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
Upon reading the article in the Oct. 26&#13;
paper about student enrollment, we&#13;
noticed that ten per cent of the male&#13;
students here are veterans. That means&#13;
there are 252 of us waiting for, not&#13;
receiving, veterans benefits. During&#13;
registration, Sept. 16 to 18. our Certificates&#13;
of Eligibility were turned in to the administration&#13;
Not until the end of this&#13;
month (October) did we receive notice&#13;
that they were sent to the V A.&#13;
Although it's too late to do anything&#13;
about the unwarranted delay this year,&#13;
maybe we can awake the administration to&#13;
the fact that we are waiting for. and in&#13;
need of. the money. V.A. officials say that&#13;
it will take at least a month for the checks&#13;
to be sent, from the time they receive the&#13;
paperwork, which means that we 11 m ost&#13;
probably have to wait until December to&#13;
get these G.I. benefits.&#13;
It seems as though the Student Affairs&#13;
Office is uninterested in our monetary&#13;
needs, although we all are assessed from&#13;
five to twenty-five dollars for late tuition&#13;
payment. Since the paperwork is very&#13;
simple and brief to complete, let s hope&#13;
that next year something will be done to&#13;
expedite this process so that this important&#13;
form is sent in much earlier. We&#13;
don't need this delay.&#13;
Hank Mate&#13;
Ted Sternbach&#13;
Disgruntled Vets.&#13;
Dear Editors:&#13;
I with to comment on the speech that&#13;
Doctor MacKinney gave to the faculty. If&#13;
Newscope's Marc Eisen is a reputable&#13;
reporter, as I believe he is, then the&#13;
students of this university should expect&#13;
the teaching quality of th e various Ph.D. s,&#13;
instructors, etc. to plummet from its&#13;
previous heights of e xcellence to a future&#13;
chasm of mediocrity.&#13;
It seems to me that this university is in&#13;
the irreversible process of pushing the&#13;
student into the background in order to&#13;
coddle the non-teacher type Ph.D. who is&#13;
either an ineffectual instructor or one who&#13;
has divorced himself from the very entity&#13;
that produced him, the student-instructor&#13;
relationship.&#13;
One can predict that, in the near future.&#13;
aza&amp;s&amp;si&#13;
"Tteadministration will argue that this is&#13;
oroaress as it will enable the un.vers.ty to&#13;
receive more notoriety via increased&#13;
research and publication Buh wdM*»&#13;
provide a better education for the studenh&#13;
As I feel that the average teaching&#13;
assistant is not qualified t° teach an U y&#13;
dergraduate course, which is what many&#13;
of them are actually doing a&#13;
universities; my answer to this question is&#13;
N] for one, mourn the death of this&#13;
university as an institution of undergraduate&#13;
learning and damn its birth&#13;
as a non-personal factory for selfgratification.&#13;
Thomas W. Yore&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
I would like to applaud you on your&#13;
editorial of October 5, 1970 in the Parkside&#13;
Newscope in which you stated:&#13;
One instance that is particularly&#13;
disturbing is the excessive authority used&#13;
by the coordinators of Student Activities&#13;
on film festival, completely disregarding&#13;
and over-powering a faculty member who&#13;
happened to have made arrangements on&#13;
the same night, same time, and same&#13;
building for his film society.&#13;
When all the student body sees is the&#13;
accomplished fact of two film series at&#13;
Parkside where only one existed before,&#13;
they cannot fully appreciate the underhandedness&#13;
of the administration.&#13;
The facts as stated in the editorial were&#13;
correct. The administration successfully&#13;
upset an already firmly established slate&#13;
of films for the Parkside Film Society.&#13;
I am happy to hear that although the&#13;
Film Society was forced to change their&#13;
night of film-screening for the Student&#13;
Activities' films, their first two films have&#13;
met with considerable success.&#13;
Congratulations and best luck to the Film&#13;
Society.&#13;
Patricia Dudley&#13;
Ex-Co-Chairman&#13;
Parkside Film Society&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
"VARSITY. VARSITY!"&#13;
1 wonder how many of us realize that our&#13;
presence here at Parkside has given each&#13;
of u s an Alma Mater . . . and I had to look&#13;
it up . . . "Alma Mater" means, "The&#13;
institution of learning where one has been&#13;
educated. Latin: Fostering Mother."&#13;
Chills run up and down my spine&#13;
whenever I hear the University of&#13;
Wisconsin band, joined by thousands of&#13;
voices fervently proclaiming, "Hail to&#13;
The, Wis-connn-sin! Wis-connn-sin!"&#13;
I g uess it was the distance from here to&#13;
the Madison Campus which made it&#13;
necessary for me to think hard in order to&#13;
grasp and accept the fact that we are just&#13;
as much a part of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin as are those students who attend&#13;
classes in Bascomb Hall.&#13;
Here we are . . on a campus of rolling&#13;
hills and a couple of buildings. Four&#13;
thousand of us, for the time being, scattered&#13;
on three different sites. And we're&#13;
especially important because we are&#13;
pioneers. We're creating our own environment,&#13;
our own traditions. The sounds&#13;
of bulldozers seep into our lecture rooms.&#13;
We know that great creative forces are at&#13;
work intellectual, technological and&#13;
financial.&#13;
As we walk the path from Greenquist to&#13;
Tallent Halls, what do you see? In later&#13;
years, some of you will see your children&#13;
walk on this campus. Physical facilities&#13;
worth tens of millions of dollars will be&#13;
here then. Your parents paid for (are&#13;
paying for) this installation . . . this institution.&#13;
And your turn will come to help&#13;
foot the bill.&#13;
I'd like to be around when the last&#13;
building has been built on the campus of&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside. But I&#13;
know such tenure is out of t he question. By&#13;
the time the building program has been&#13;
completed I will be lucky if I h ave a seat up&#13;
on a cloud . . . there I will be applauding&#13;
what has been accomplished. And I will&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 6&#13;
November 2, 1970&#13;
bill rolbiecki&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
SvenTaffs&#13;
Carroll Smolinsky&#13;
Mike Gogola&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Bill Jacoby, John Potente&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Business Editor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photography Staff&#13;
Advisor&#13;
IS&#13;
«5&#13;
-So P 5 STAFF&#13;
1^ Terrv Houston, D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, Ken Konkol&#13;
m \ Marc Eisen, Paul Lomartire, Arthur Gruhl, Jim Jams, Walter Breach&#13;
D wi chPd weekly by the students of the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
. a" ipnosha Wisconsin, 53140. Mailing address is Parkside's Newscope&#13;
SS)'washingto RA. Kenosha. Business and editoriai telephone number is a&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
POETRY C O R NE R&#13;
pick up my harp and play my own&#13;
arrangement of "Varsity". So now I will&#13;
make the most of the present and just be&#13;
thankful for the fact that I have had the&#13;
privilege of being here at the beginning.&#13;
And in the meantime there is more&#13;
building going on here than just brick and&#13;
mortar. There are the invisible gems of.&#13;
knowledge garnered by each of us; the&#13;
treasures of friendships made; a college&#13;
newspaper coming to life; the tradition of&#13;
academic integrity being established; and&#13;
the inner satisfaction of k nowing that each&#13;
of u s now has an Alma Mater . . . because&#13;
we are here.&#13;
"Varsity, Varsity!" . . . I'm just a&#13;
sophomore in credits. In years I am a -&#13;
"senior citizen". And in both relationships&#13;
I want to be a credit to you. "Hail to Thee,&#13;
Wisconsin!"&#13;
$3000 So Fa r&#13;
For Kent-2 5&#13;
KENT, OHIO (CPS) — A total of $3 ,000&#13;
has been collected so far for the legal&#13;
defense of the 25 students and faculty&#13;
members indicted by a special Ohio grand&#13;
jury, according to the Kent Stater, the&#13;
student newspaper. $1,000 has already&#13;
been spent on bail money.&#13;
William Kunstler, the lawver who&#13;
defended the Chicago Eight, has offered to&#13;
defend the Kent State 25. Counsel has not&#13;
announced whether the students indicted&#13;
will seek a special federal grand jury&#13;
investigation. Nine of t he 25 still remain to&#13;
be arrested.&#13;
The money, collected during the first&#13;
week following the indictments, was&#13;
funneled through two organizations that&#13;
were immediately set up. They have since&#13;
merged into one fund. The Kent Legal&#13;
Defense Pund&amp;^whichi incorporates the&#13;
THE UNIVERSAL INCENDIARY&#13;
T&gt;m&#13;
with fire raging throughout my being.&#13;
The ashes corrode my soul,&#13;
and it wants out:&#13;
Out of the furnace,&#13;
this conflagration of hate.&#13;
The cooling breeze of friendship sits in the past,&#13;
and somehow I feel it will never return.&#13;
The walls fall down&#13;
and with them&#13;
the strength to quench the flame&#13;
burning the heart from my every fiber.&#13;
Springs and streams are envisioned before me&#13;
but they outreach my grasp&#13;
and I don't care.&#13;
I!&#13;
WANT!&#13;
FLOODS!&#13;
to encompass and overwhelm&#13;
those which ignite me into a bonfire&#13;
which once contained the warmth of&#13;
love,&#13;
but&#13;
now&#13;
finds&#13;
destruction&#13;
its&#13;
only goal.&#13;
Burning, looting, pillaging the citadels of immaturity,&#13;
the brothels of persecution,&#13;
eliminating the entire universe of sick value,&#13;
entrenching snipers within their own snares,&#13;
having the sluts of dependency made impotent&#13;
with such cruel torment with no spark of life&#13;
remaining to instigate their urethral gaze;&#13;
Nothing left to crush me; nothing around to trap me;&#13;
nothing! Nothing! NOTHING!&#13;
. . . save me, my dog, and a bunch of daisies&#13;
with only the sun to give us warmth.&#13;
Peoples Defense Fund created by members&#13;
of the Youth International Party, is&#13;
still receiving donations through P.O. Box&#13;
116, Kent, Ohio, 44240.&#13;
Meanwhile, a whole series of notables&#13;
have released plans to come to Kent, some&#13;
for fund-raising, others for appearances:&#13;
— Judy Collins held a benefit last week&#13;
and raised more than $2,000, which she will&#13;
give to the fund;&#13;
— Jane Fonda, who is involved in GI&#13;
organizing, will appear Nov. 9, sponsored&#13;
by the KSU Veterans Against the War;&#13;
Dr. Benjamin Spock, who is involved&#13;
in campaigns right now, has agreed to&#13;
speak at Kent following the elections;&#13;
Joan Baez and Ira Sandperl from the&#13;
California Institute for the Study of&#13;
Nonviolence will hold workshops on Nov.&#13;
13 to discuss non-violent politics. A concert&#13;
will not be given.&#13;
Thrifty Threads&#13;
For Your BackFar&#13;
Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Feet!&#13;
MULLEN/5&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA^&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
32 00 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 day s&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Ph on e 65 7-9 74 7&#13;
Nickie's&#13;
Sporfswea'&#13;
1 2 0 2 ;&#13;
5 6 , h S"%-6W&#13;
Keno sha, Wis.&#13;
LATEST FASHI ONS&#13;
FOR&#13;
SKI JACKETS -&#13;
R e 9&#13;
'1 5 0&#13;
Now V"&#13;
Prices to&#13;
pocket Fit Your &#13;
Fifth D imension A Soul Exnerience ByWALTBREACH Thp u,,, a. . »A|#d ICIIIC&#13;
THE&#13;
By WALT BREACH&#13;
Length, width and depth; three&#13;
dimensions. Time-space; four dimensions.&#13;
Sound; five dimensions. Sound-art, sensual&#13;
fantasy, and communication; the 5th&#13;
Dimension.&#13;
Monday night the crowd poured in to fill&#13;
the cracker jack box Case Field House like&#13;
a sardine can. They came to be entertained.&#13;
They waited for jingle music&#13;
like "Up, Up and Away", and "Aquarius".&#13;
They c ame away with the experience of&#13;
"The Declaration of Independence",&#13;
"Come On People", "Papercup", and&#13;
"People Got to be Free".&#13;
And they did come to be entertained. An&#13;
audience waiting for a big name group&#13;
doesn't usually have much appreciation&#13;
for an hour-long presentation of interpretative&#13;
dancing. Byron and Lorraine&#13;
were appreciated. They received applause&#13;
well deserved, more than any warm-up act&#13;
normally would expect.&#13;
The sound was off on the first number.&#13;
The audience didn't hear. They were&#13;
getting what they wanted; the 5th&#13;
Dimension medleying "Spinning Wheel"&#13;
and "Windmills of Your Mind". Marilyn&#13;
MCCQO was loved.&#13;
numhpr^it aIm°&#13;
St dropped on the second&#13;
mirnl ,&#13;
tt_&#13;
was a shallow sound. Then a&#13;
"Come On p&#13;
3Ur1 -&#13;
yr&#13;
° sonS&#13;
s&#13;
-&#13;
endin8 w&gt;th&#13;
thl ?r People&#13;
. was turned loose and&#13;
the audience turned on and got into it. Jim&#13;
ha nH T**-&#13;
g0t the audience up to a little&#13;
traK nf a&#13;
PP1&#13;
"&#13;
8 and Papercu&#13;
p" reached tons of grey matter.&#13;
Showmanship and the stage routine, a&#13;
little humor and a little "soul stew" for the&#13;
black-eyed pea section" the band and&#13;
musicians were introduced. Then the real&#13;
music began.&#13;
Heavy songs communicating the&#13;
feelings of the young, liberal, love and&#13;
brotherhood people. The "Declaration of&#13;
Independence", word for word,&#13;
highlighted, accented and interpreted with&#13;
music. Did the message get across? The&#13;
audience was entranced, spellbound, it&#13;
reached, and reached deep. "People Got&#13;
To Be Free" was the perfect follow-up&#13;
number. The audience missed half of it&#13;
before they woke up, and loved the rest.&#13;
The spirit was moved in many. The last&#13;
number, "Aquarius-Sunshine" launched&#13;
the crowd into final orbit; they stayed and&#13;
sang, hands clapping. The evening's entertainment&#13;
was complete and completed.&#13;
OT&#13;
si&#13;
MUSIC FRI.-SAT&#13;
9 - 12 M I D N I T E&#13;
75C&#13;
COFFEE&#13;
HER&#13;
DE&#13;
HOUSE&#13;
3 2 8 MA I N - R A C I N E&#13;
Use Classifieds&#13;
Jim&#13;
ten&#13;
BARBER STUDIO&#13;
" It's Not How Long You Wear It,&#13;
B u t How You Wear It L o n g "&#13;
Hair Styling - Hair Cutting - Hair Pieces&#13;
TOWN &amp; COUNTRY SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
7509 45TH AVE 694-4603&#13;
Jose Ortega, associate professor of&#13;
Spanish at the University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
will present an invited paper on&#13;
"Marks of Identity" in the works of&#13;
Spanish novelist Juan Goytisolo at the&#13;
Midwest Modern Language Association's&#13;
annual meeting Oct. 30 in Milwaukee.&#13;
Ortega came to Parkside this fall from&#13;
Case Western Reserve University where&#13;
he also was an associate professor. He has&#13;
written widely on Spanish literature for&#13;
scholarly publications and received two&#13;
grants supporting his research from the&#13;
American Philosophical Society.&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Dis count&#13;
to Students and&#13;
Fa culty&#13;
(Must Show I.D.)&#13;
CHINA&#13;
Wedgwood - Spode&#13;
Minion - Royal Worcester&#13;
Adams - Bavarian&#13;
Bel leek&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
DIAMOND CONSULTANTS&#13;
Fairtrade&#13;
excepted.&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
Guest Conductor&#13;
Harry Lantz, associate professor of&#13;
u&#13;
sic at the University of Wisconsinarkside,&#13;
has been invited to act as guest&#13;
on due tor of the Tennessee All-State&#13;
fenestra at the Tennessee Music&#13;
Association annual convention&#13;
Get. 28 through 30 i n Knoxville. Lantz&#13;
so will serve as a clinician at the convention.&#13;
&#13;
crwf&#13;
tZ' an internationally known cellist,&#13;
sun -&#13;
tor and music educator, was&#13;
Pervisor of instrumental music for the&#13;
theij00 Schools and conductor of&#13;
loin' uston All-City Orchestra before&#13;
tauS the Park&#13;
side faculty. He also has&#13;
g 1 at the university of Houston where&#13;
was chairman of the instrumental&#13;
Iin;&#13;
IC depar&#13;
tment and conductor of the&#13;
versity Symphony.&#13;
ISO* - '7"&#13;
1o^ r &#13;
Sculptures By Jansky&#13;
On Exhibit&#13;
Twelve recent sculptures by Kollin&#13;
Jansky, an assistant professor of art at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside, will be&#13;
on display from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Nov. 9&#13;
through 13 in the Greenquist Hall Concourse&#13;
at Parkside's Wood Road Campus.&#13;
The sculptures, comprised of polyester&#13;
impregnated fiberglass castings, illustrate&#13;
Jansky's increasing attention of&#13;
pigmenting of resin finishes in his&#13;
sculptures.&#13;
Jansky recently has been experimenting&#13;
with methods of incorporating pigments&#13;
directly into the gel coat of the resin, in&#13;
some cases using methods developed by&#13;
industry and in others seeking out new&#13;
processes which may possibly have industrial&#13;
as well as artistic applications.&#13;
In future work. Jansky plans research&#13;
aimed at metalizing the surfaces of his&#13;
work.&#13;
The pieces in the current show range in&#13;
size from an 18-inch rounded cube to a&#13;
massive work more than seven feet high.&#13;
Much of the work in the show is part of a&#13;
series based on interconnections of three&#13;
basic modules which take the shapes of&#13;
circles and ellipses. In some cases the&#13;
modules suggest anatomical references to&#13;
the human form and in other cases suggest&#13;
purely mechanical forms, depending on&#13;
the manner in which they are connected.&#13;
Jansky, who received his undergraduate&#13;
and graduate degrees in art from UWMadison,&#13;
has won three Milwaukee&#13;
Journal purchase awards for the&#13;
Wisconsin Union Collection and three cash&#13;
awards from the Madison Art Association.&#13;
One of his major sculptures was recently&#13;
purchased for the permanent collection at&#13;
UW-Green Bay.&#13;
During the past year, he has had oneman&#13;
shows at UW-Green Bay and its&#13;
Manitowoc Campus and has participated&#13;
in the Young Faculty Artists Exhibit at the&#13;
Eighth Avenue Gallery.&#13;
Gregory Jomes Group&#13;
Here Saturday&#13;
This coming Saturday night. Nov. 7. will&#13;
mark the first in a series of weekend&#13;
nightclubs and the coffee houses to be&#13;
presented in the new student activities&#13;
building during the coming year. Live&#13;
entertainment will be featured from 9 p.m.&#13;
to 1 a m.&#13;
The building will be set up in typical&#13;
nightclub-coffeehouse manner with small&#13;
tables, checkered tableclothes and candlelight.&#13;
In addition to the refreshments&#13;
normally available in the building, such&#13;
things as cappuccino, coffee borgia,&#13;
chocolaccino, etc., will be added to the&#13;
menu for the evening&#13;
The feature act for this opening weekend&#13;
will be one of Wisconsin's top nightclub&#13;
attractions. "The Gregory James Group".&#13;
Originally scheduled to appear at&#13;
Parkside Oct. 2, the group was forced to&#13;
cancel at the last minute due to a serious&#13;
health problem in one of the member's&#13;
families. This seven-member group of two&#13;
girls and five men aims its performance at&#13;
college aged and young adult audiences,&#13;
SAB, Carthage College, Kenosha, presents in concert: Ticketj ^&#13;
MASON PROFFIT&#13;
AND _&#13;
THE NEIGHBORHOOD&#13;
Playing hit song, "BIG YELLOW TAXI"&#13;
Saturday, November 7th, 8:00 P.M. — CARTHAGE FIELDHOllSE&#13;
Tickets available: Cook-Gere Co., 209 6th, Racine&#13;
College Center Office, Carthage College, Kenosha&#13;
and, at the door&#13;
l/ALEO'S PIZZA „&#13;
KITCHEN ;&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE B OMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m. pREE DEL1VERY 4;00 PM T0 ]2 oq ^&#13;
appearing in both clubs and on college&#13;
campuses throughout the state. Recent&#13;
engagements include new student week&#13;
programs at WSU-Whitewater&#13;
Homecoming, along with performances at&#13;
Summerfest and an extended engagement&#13;
at Milwaukee s "Someplace Else". Their&#13;
program includes hit numbers from many&#13;
top recording groups including The Fifth&#13;
R™T,!°Vril00d&#13;
' Sweat and Tears&#13;
I Bealles&#13;
' The Letterraen' Chicago and many others.&#13;
Admission, covercharge will be Si &lt;yi&#13;
w,.h Parkside and Wisconsin state D&#13;
and will be good for all four shows. ' '&#13;
Canton. N.Y. _ (IP) .&#13;
notTea? tt&#13;
b I!"&#13;
1 n&#13;
°&#13;
W in " E&#13;
solving the pr^lemf „fre&#13;
,e&#13;
SUCh&#13;
CeSsfully&#13;
learning, the president of St I a&#13;
"&#13;
d&#13;
University declared here. Lawren&#13;
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president "emphasized thaT'7 '&#13;
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11:00-1:30&#13;
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French pries or Onion Rings&#13;
or Potat o Salad&#13;
and&#13;
IfjjW or Bottle or G|ass „f Beer ^' ^i.5 or Bee r n.&#13;
M HAPPY HOUR&#13;
on ay thru Friday 7 p.m. to&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20&lt;&#13;
In-1 i. Avai lable For Parties&#13;
l n 9 Frater nity and Sorority Parties&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-I2&#13;
^ BRAT-STOP&#13;
^Northwest Corner 1-94 and Highwa y 50 &#13;
THORN&#13;
By Ken Konkoi&#13;
nr MacKinney has instituted Friday&#13;
fternoon coffee hours in the Kenosha&#13;
31 hers lounge for faculty members in his&#13;
ULrtment. I asked Dr. MacKinney if&#13;
t iden t representatives would be allowed&#13;
f attend. Through a third party I learned&#13;
hat the answer to that was no. However,&#13;
® MacKinney said sometime in the&#13;
^ ' mur ho nnnnrfi 1 n 1 f&lt;"/&gt;«&#13;
^dministrative discussion. I hope it won't&#13;
Jg too far in the future and open to the&#13;
public and press.&#13;
v + + +&#13;
Sometime in December a list will come&#13;
out informing certain teachers that they&#13;
are not going to be retained. Through&#13;
administrative censorship, that list will&#13;
not be m ade public. However, I hope individual&#13;
faculty members will let their&#13;
individual situations be made known. If we&#13;
are victims of administrative supression,&#13;
then students and faculty must stick&#13;
together.&#13;
My faith in my fellow student has been&#13;
partially restored. Last week I actually&#13;
received a letter from someone in regard&#13;
to this column. The following is an explanation&#13;
of my purposes — and also my&#13;
answer to that letter.&#13;
The reason my style is somewhat&#13;
arrogant is that I am in true life more than&#13;
somewhat arrogant — just ask my editors.&#13;
This arrogance has resulted from nearly&#13;
22 years of human experience in which I&#13;
have learned to trust my own judgement —&#13;
that quite a bit more often than not, such&#13;
judgement has proved superior to the&#13;
superior judgement of others (or so they&#13;
thought that their judgement was so). If a&#13;
rephrasal will help some of the readers to&#13;
better understand, I will repeat my&#13;
position.&#13;
The purpose of an academic institution&#13;
is to teach, NOT to provide a secure&#13;
resting place for doting faculty and administrators&#13;
in their old age. Anything&#13;
which interferes with the process of&#13;
competent teaching should be abolished. If&#13;
this includes firing administrators who&#13;
hold more weight on research than&#13;
teaching — so be it. If this should include&#13;
firing of incompetent instructors, tenured&#13;
or not, so be it. If this should include&#13;
abolishing some administrator's pet&#13;
program in order to retain competent&#13;
teachers — so be it, at the same time&#13;
getting rid of the program and and administrator&#13;
if necessary. Anything,&#13;
ANYTHING, whether it be man, program,&#13;
or policy which interferes with a person&#13;
getting the best education possible, should&#13;
be done a way with.&#13;
Teaching: the act, practice or profession&#13;
of teach ing.&#13;
Teach: 1. show, guide, direct 2. to cause&#13;
to know a subject 4. to impart the&#13;
knowledge of.&#13;
Research: 2. a studious inquiry or experimentation;&#13;
esp.: critical and&#13;
exhaustive investigation or experimentation&#13;
having for its aim the&#13;
discovery of new facts and their correct&#13;
interpretation, the revision of accepted&#13;
conclusions, theories, or laws in the light of&#13;
newly discovered facts, or the practical&#13;
applications of such new or revised conclusions,&#13;
theories, or laws. (2): a&#13;
presentation (as an article or book) incorporating&#13;
the findings of a particular&#13;
research.&#13;
Effective: capable of bringing about an&#13;
effect, productive of results.&#13;
Teacher: one who teaches.&#13;
Above excerpts from "Webster's Third&#13;
New International Dictionary",&#13;
Unabridged.&#13;
I hope you are pleased that I have&#13;
escaped generalities and gotten down to&#13;
specifics, such as accusing individuals of&#13;
•mcompetence. Could a non-arrogant&#13;
there may be opportunities for&#13;
%C//&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
NORTH &amp;.SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
KENOSHA —&#13;
FAMOUS FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
RI S ANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
_ STEAKS&#13;
Person make such charges?&#13;
taUWsvsS ? g"' a+neW president m&#13;
me had 1 personally wish the old&#13;
one naa stayed. From the things I hear&#13;
wto saiftelk r&#13;
berS&#13;
°&#13;
f the Adrainis«-ation&#13;
no still talk to me, our new president was tt"rxr:&#13;
,h™&#13;
BWSWFCSRAF&#13;
Inn d&#13;
m»LanS 55 P6r 0601 of the d^ftees&#13;
^°&#13;
men and alim°ny will be&#13;
abolished. Not so many of o ur boys will be&#13;
d&#13;
2 » Vi&#13;
etnam - 55 per cent of them&#13;
would be women. We would be the third&#13;
country in the world to establish such&#13;
equality, right after Communist Russia&#13;
and Israel.&#13;
+ H- +&#13;
Those veterans who are waiting for their&#13;
first checks due them from the GI bill will&#13;
have to wait a month longer than the usual&#13;
long time because the Office of Student&#13;
Records held up the forms for four weeks&#13;
rather than go through the trouble of&#13;
initialing and sending them out on the day&#13;
they were submitted. However, through&#13;
the efforts of the Financial Aids Department,&#13;
short term loans have been awarded&#13;
to some Vets who couldn't wait for Student&#13;
Records to get off their duffs. For these&#13;
actions Financial Aids getsfan A plus and&#13;
Student Records gets an F.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
It has come to my attention that the&#13;
Administration is not responsible for the&#13;
hiring of teachers, a special faculty&#13;
committee does that, a committee whose&#13;
members' names are not allowed to be&#13;
made public knowledge through administrative&#13;
censorship. While the Administration&#13;
may not choose those to be&#13;
hired, they certainly decide who is to be&#13;
retained and they set the false standards&#13;
for hiring in the first place.&#13;
A poll was conducted this past week&#13;
among some 95 students at this school, the&#13;
first 95 I spoke to on the bus and in the&#13;
lounge. Thirty-three students voted to fire&#13;
certain of our administrators immediately,&#13;
ten voted for their retention,&#13;
and 52 voted to give them another chance&#13;
or were undecided. Three others also voted&#13;
to burn down Tallent Hall.&#13;
Film Presentation&#13;
The Parkside Film Society will present&#13;
its third film, "The Cabinet of Dr.&#13;
Caligari", on Nov. 4 at 8 p.m. in Room 103&#13;
at Greenquist Hall. The second part of the&#13;
Flash Gordon series also will be shown.&#13;
"The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari" is an early&#13;
German expressionist film (1919) which&#13;
seeks to depict the inner emotions an artist&#13;
has toward objects and events. Directed&#13;
by Robert Wine, it uses canvas with&#13;
pointed shapes as background for the film.&#13;
It is one of the many FREE thrillers to be&#13;
presented this year thanks to the charity of&#13;
the Film Society.&#13;
Win Golf Honors&#13;
Steve Stephens, Walt Shirer, Dan&#13;
Leissner and Lofton Harris, Jr., came&#13;
away with top honors at the recent UWP&#13;
Snowflake Open golf tournament.&#13;
Stephens and Shirer took the top two&#13;
places in the faculty-staff division.&#13;
Stephens, UWP golf and basketball coach,&#13;
fired an 83, while Shirer, Parkside news&#13;
service coordinator, was three strokes&#13;
back at 86. (Shirer is seeking to have&#13;
Stephens disqualified on the ground that as&#13;
golf coach he is a professional.)&#13;
Leissner paced the students with a oneover&#13;
par 72 on the Petrifying Springs&#13;
course which was the tournament site.&#13;
Harris was next with a 79.&#13;
VILLAGE INN&#13;
and&#13;
Pancake House&#13;
3619 30th Ave.&#13;
SUN. 6 a.m.-12 a.m&#13;
FRI. 6 a.m.-l p.m.&#13;
SAT. 6 a .m.-2 p.m.&#13;
21 Variety&#13;
of Pancakes&#13;
L U N C H - D I N N E RS.&#13;
Draft L aw&#13;
Quirk Aids&#13;
In Deferment&#13;
WASHINGTON (CPS) — A ny man who&#13;
is now deferred, and who would be in the&#13;
lottery selection pool for induction if he&#13;
were not deferred, now has a method to&#13;
take advantage of his high lottery number&#13;
and use it to escape the draft now.&#13;
Under an advisory memorandum sent&#13;
by National Selective Service Director&#13;
Curtis Tarr to all local draft boards&#13;
recently, such men may voluntarily&#13;
relinquish their deferments and enter the&#13;
1-A pool. Prior to this time, this matter had&#13;
been open to debate, and draft boards were&#13;
supposed to maintain all registrants in&#13;
their deferments as long as they continued&#13;
to qualify for them.&#13;
System spokesmen are quite confident&#13;
that no registrant with a lottery number&#13;
higher than 195 will be called this year,&#13;
unless there is a declaration of war or a&#13;
national emergency which requires&#13;
massive mobilization. At the end of the&#13;
year, those men whose numbers have not&#13;
been reached by their local boards and&#13;
who are classified 1-A, 1-A-O or 1-0 are&#13;
moved to a second priority pool. Men have&#13;
not been called from this second priority&#13;
pool or its equivalent under the old system&#13;
since the Korean War.&#13;
Registrants with high numbers who wish&#13;
to take advantage of this opportunity to&#13;
take the draft off their backs may write a&#13;
brief letter to their draft board asking to be&#13;
reclassified 1-A immediately. Any&#13;
registrant who does so is taking a slight&#13;
chance that the system might suddenly&#13;
decide that it needs many more men than&#13;
it is presently planning to take, and should&#13;
think carefully about this possibility,&#13;
however slight. It does appear, from all&#13;
indications presently available, that the&#13;
ceiling of 195 will be valid.&#13;
This rule, of course, only effects men&#13;
who turned 19 or older during calendar&#13;
year 1969. Those turning 19 this year were&#13;
not in the first priority pool and therefore&#13;
will be placed in it on January 1, 1971.&#13;
Therefore, this escape route is&#13;
dangerously uncertain for men not yet in&#13;
this year's pool who are under 20 years old.&#13;
Next year's lottery ceiling number could&#13;
be any number at all, and no one can make&#13;
any predictions about it.&#13;
Women Want Out&#13;
(CPS) — Women want out of the home,&#13;
according to a survey conducted in&#13;
February by Gilbert Youth Research, a&#13;
division of Gilbert Marketing Group.&#13;
Surveying thousands of young women&#13;
between the ages of 14 and 25, the opinionresearch&#13;
organization found that fewer&#13;
than one per cent of the college women&#13;
polled selected "house-wife-homemaker"&#13;
as their main career choice. Only four per&#13;
cent of all young women chose it.-&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU T HURS.&#13;
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FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24&lt;&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55&lt;&#13;
WASHINGTON (CPS) - Total&#13;
American deaths from the Indochinese&#13;
War have climbed to 52,480, according to&#13;
the most recent death count from the U.S.&#13;
Department of Defense. This figure includes&#13;
43,821 deaths "resulting from action&#13;
from hostile forces", and 8,659 from "other&#13;
causes", which include aircraft accidents&#13;
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Looking Up, Down, And Around&#13;
the Academic Totem Pole&#13;
• • • ^ „,hn vou ar&#13;
By ARTHUR GRUHL&#13;
The October 19th issue of NEWSCOPE&#13;
contained two very informative and&#13;
thought-provoking articles. The front page&#13;
feature was headed "Publish of Perish&#13;
and a related article was "Faculty&#13;
Respnds to Speech." Both were written by&#13;
Marc Eisen. He did a fine job of reporting.&#13;
I don't see how anyone can be fully informed&#13;
about what is going on at Parkside&#13;
without reading NEWSCOPE regularly.&#13;
Each new issue is better than the one&#13;
before.&#13;
I was impressed by Dean MacKinney s&#13;
straight-from-the-shoulder remarks. You&#13;
know where he stands. 1 was also interested&#13;
in the comments made by&#13;
members of the faculty .... thoughtful,&#13;
cautious and, in some cases, apprehensive.&#13;
Those nearest the throne gave&#13;
the loudest applause. Those in the gallery&#13;
didn't have much to say ... . or want to&#13;
be quoted.&#13;
Reading the articles by Marc Eisen&#13;
made me do some thinking, too. I did so&#13;
with the perspective of almost fifty years&#13;
of association with college-level people.&#13;
These thoughts I will now share with you.&#13;
F i r s t . . . . I begin with the premise that&#13;
the people who are n i the upper eschelon of&#13;
Parkside are very intelligent, resourceful&#13;
and honorable human beings. They were&#13;
hired to do their respective jobs through a&#13;
competitive screening process. Each must&#13;
have a lot on the ball.&#13;
Secondly, I am sure that our administrators&#13;
and Deans are united in a&#13;
dedication to make Parkside a great&#13;
university. There are many areas for&#13;
greatness and the administrators are the&#13;
ones who will determine the priorities.&#13;
However, the things I consider "great"&#13;
cannot be built in a day. Therefore, I didn't&#13;
buy the "instant greatness' propounded by&#13;
Dean MacKinney. A Charles Lindbergh or&#13;
a Niel Armstrong might become instantly&#13;
great historically, but when it comes to&#13;
institutions, "greatness" takes time. And,&#13;
I sadly recall that the image of greatness&#13;
of an institution can be shattered in an&#13;
instant by the violent and evil act of an&#13;
individual. Then the long and slow process&#13;
of building a new greatness must begin all&#13;
over again.&#13;
I have never stood in awe of people with&#13;
c o l l e g e d e g r e e s . R e s p e c t, of c o u r s e . . . .&#13;
plus a little envy, maybe. And I've seen a&#13;
doctor's degree spoifsome people. I recall&#13;
a fellow who, after he got his PhD became&#13;
a pain in the neck to his friends. One of the&#13;
idiosyncracies he acquired with the degree&#13;
was that he would remind his friends that&#13;
he was now to always be called "Doctor"&#13;
. . . . after we had been calling him "Bill"&#13;
for thirty years. We compromised and&#13;
called him "William". Some of us thought&#13;
that his wife deserved the degree more&#13;
than he did.&#13;
Last June I was at the 45th reunion of the&#13;
Class of '25 at Lawrence College. I was&#13;
with them only one year but they still let&#13;
me tag along. At our table of eight there&#13;
were five PhDs . . . retired school&#13;
superintendents, a couple of retired&#13;
college professors . . . fine, successful&#13;
people.&#13;
I told them that I was planning on&#13;
returning to college .... that I wanted a&#13;
degree.... that it was a goal I hadn't yet&#13;
made and maybe there was still time. At&#13;
least I was going to try. I got an unexpected-type&#13;
of reply from across the table.&#13;
"Arthur", said my classmate of 1921,&#13;
"Your die has been cast and it turned out&#13;
to be a good one. At your age and with your&#13;
background you need a degree like a hole&#13;
in the head. A Degree", he continued, "Is&#13;
like the tail on a pig. It doesn't make the&#13;
pork taste any better, it just tickles the&#13;
ham." I was a little shocked at his&#13;
irreverance. He had a PhD for over forty&#13;
years. And through all of those years, I had&#13;
wanted one.&#13;
Now let me tell you some things that I&#13;
know about people who have earned "a&#13;
doctorate". Believe, me — they have&#13;
traveled a long road since leaving high&#13;
school. They have spent years of time,&#13;
money and effort to gain a goal. Many&#13;
times it called for the combined effort of a&#13;
family.&#13;
Getting a doctorate must give the&#13;
achievers the feeling that at last they are&#13;
in a major league. They quickly find out&#13;
that staying there is something else again.&#13;
Their recently acquired teaching position&#13;
also has a built-in probationary period of&#13;
indeterminate length which hangs over the&#13;
head like Damocles' sword. It's a flexible&#13;
arrangement,&#13;
deP^&#13;
d&#13;
^°considerationspast&#13;
experience and ?&#13;
ns&#13;
stalldable.&#13;
the same thing. The new teacher&#13;
watched by his peers . . • • _ . j g in&#13;
peers. He might need a lot of coaenihg^,&#13;
rr^ofd—:£*. *&#13;
teach, gels sometWng pubhs ed and&#13;
avoids making waves, he (or^she)&#13;
eventually gf™*b security,TWs is&#13;
all a tried and proved process. BuUt mu&#13;
be hard on the probationers and. I ve been&#13;
told, the pay is something less than that&#13;
d Teacherseare really quitehumanwhen&#13;
you get to talk with them. There was one&#13;
for example, who admitted that it wasso&#13;
of a relief to give grades instead of being&#13;
on the receiving end as was the cas&#13;
many years. Listen . . . . we are all&#13;
"graded" every hour of the day . . • • a&#13;
long as we live. When you meet a person&#13;
you are appraising that person .... ana&#13;
visa versa. . , T&#13;
I grade my teachers. I really do. And&#13;
do so in a way that it counts. If I think a&#13;
teacher has done a superior job in a course&#13;
I've taken, I write a letter to the Gnancellor&#13;
and tell him about it. I know that&#13;
that note of mine changes hands a couple&#13;
of times and in a few days I receive an&#13;
acknowledgement thanking me for having&#13;
taken the time to write.&#13;
And, if I feel that I've had a course that&#13;
was something of a bore .... or one in&#13;
which I didn't learn much (for nothing is&#13;
taught unless something is learned) then,&#13;
instead of writing a letter, I wait until the&#13;
course is over and in a quiet and nice way&#13;
tell the instructor how I feel. The last time&#13;
I did this I got a "C" in the subject. I had&#13;
given the professor a "B". I don't wait to&#13;
get my grade first. I know within a month&#13;
after starting a course if I'm on a slow&#13;
freight or in for an exciting ride.&#13;
At the top of the academic totem pole are&#13;
the top-flight, big-campus administrators.&#13;
They are an elite corps who know their&#13;
business and would like to go about doing it&#13;
without having to take the time out to&#13;
listen to the advice on how to run a&#13;
university from people who have not yet&#13;
had the experience of running a Cub Pack.&#13;
Yet these men do listen because they know&#13;
that it s i the way of today. And, I think that&#13;
they are really sorry when they find it&#13;
necessary to say "No" to what someone&#13;
thought was a good idea.&#13;
Incidentally, I had a friend once who was&#13;
really a Square .... an M.D. He had the&#13;
idea that if God wanted kids to tell their&#13;
parents how to run things, he would have&#13;
made them first .... which, I thought,&#13;
was a p retty wild idea, coming as it did&#13;
from an obstetrician.&#13;
"Publish or Perish?"&#13;
"Publish or Perish" brings back theecho,&#13;
"To be or not to be". It sounds like a&#13;
hard-nosed manifesto. Nevertheless, it is&#13;
the best way scholars have found to date&#13;
by which to measure the continual intellectual&#13;
growth of a person with a doctor's&#13;
degree, who, if let alone, could sit up&#13;
there under the protection of tenure and&#13;
stagnate. Maybe the need of a creative&#13;
effort worthy of publication will be onerous&#13;
to some .... but it also serves as&#13;
stagnation insurance. If you know of a&#13;
better way to motivate and evaluate the&#13;
academic development of a PhD, let Dean&#13;
MacKinney know about it.&#13;
Parenthetically, it is probably reasonable&#13;
to assume that those who prescribe&#13;
the publish or perish program are practicing&#13;
what they preach. They must be&#13;
very busy people.&#13;
After a recent class I stopped a minute to&#13;
thank the instructor for a very interesting&#13;
lecture. I had a copy of NEWSCOPE in my&#13;
hand .... For the want of something&#13;
better to say, I asked the instructor,&#13;
"Where are you on the academic totem&#13;
pole?" His reply: "At the very bottom.&#13;
The research I'm doing for my dissertation&#13;
is found mostly in Russian language&#13;
nprin^ifolc Tt'o r.1n&gt;.. . .. &gt; „&#13;
. a man who&#13;
headofa terrificiteacM • become a tophas&#13;
everything ^ ... except a&#13;
flight man in nis&#13;
doctor's de&#13;
.^fD graph I mentioned the&#13;
In an earlier parag V the top adfact&#13;
that I *&#13;
as&#13;
n(&#13;
ce&#13;
^s;Se are highly&#13;
ministrators of J&#13;
a intelligent&#13;
competent, ^°f.&#13;
ce hopeful that some&#13;
people. Theretore am nop^ wj„ be&#13;
sort of a sabatica (his man t0&#13;
made to make it possi ^ work for hia&#13;
accelerate and co P d, several&#13;
PhD. There a« tmdou^ y&#13;
other junior facui y Jd have similar*&#13;
boat. They, &gt; MacKinney referred&#13;
consideration. h "knowledge&#13;
t0&#13;
^&#13;
P3&#13;
t&#13;
r v" Well industry mows how to&#13;
industry - t^p 'training of its junior&#13;
executives and Dr MacKinney fme&#13;
^ufsome&#13;
bof hfs°know.how to work in this&#13;
are3&#13;
' "Ring of the Hill" .&#13;
TMspubUshorperish^usmessremmds&#13;
me of a gamew&lt;spy ^ ^ m y , T h e&#13;
kids. We called Qf §ome vantage&#13;
sisssss&#13;
p Kibe. Someone always wanted to&#13;
be had to be m&#13;
PhDs are good at Playing 5&#13;
argeHill".&#13;
They should be ng °f the&#13;
smarter than most people "in f S'r*&#13;
game is played in more&#13;
sophisticated ways in every Sftoi , K&#13;
.... from labor unions m °^r&#13;
faculties A social organization&#13;
Co%&#13;
pyramid (I ve been calling it a tot ls a&#13;
of power, status, respect m Pole)&#13;
sometimes, resentment. That's tU ^&#13;
life is.&#13;
he Way&#13;
In the business world they piav th&#13;
g a m e u n d e r a d i f f e r e n t n a m e . i t &gt; ^&#13;
"Produce or Else". Instead of nuhv^®"1&#13;
the young executive had better be t ^&#13;
civic affairs, join a country club be ^&#13;
in a convention program, be'sp '&#13;
Ve&#13;
heard in a TV panel discussion aVnd&#13;
name had better appear in a new his&#13;
item once in a while. He does thoS^&#13;
. . . . "Or else". Seth%&#13;
The writer is a real estate broker&#13;
Realtor. I'm still working mv wav S "&#13;
a&#13;
college. I'm a "loner" . . ^Hh&#13;
office. I'm as close as a person conk?&#13;
311&#13;
being one's own boss. ^ lo&#13;
Yet, I too, am involved in this pern*&#13;
king of the hill game only in my bl£&#13;
Ual&#13;
we call it "Sell or Starve". Maintaining ?&#13;
position at or near the top of the hir&#13;
subject to the pushing and puii}ng !&#13;
1 ls&#13;
conscience, to the use of my knowleri&#13;
about real estate, to the activities of&#13;
competitors and to the whims and ripe?&#13;
of my clients.&#13;
j ... iawgu&lt;&#13;
periodicals. It's slow-going and none of my&#13;
work has been published. As things stand&#13;
now there is considerable doubt of my&#13;
being here next year' .&#13;
That reply really jolted me. He was the&#13;
p e r s o n to w h om I d gh ai v e n an " A "&#13;
was g&#13;
en I w;&#13;
major. I saw that old sword of&#13;
Do Wall Street&#13;
Tycoons need&#13;
the Newscope?&#13;
NO!&#13;
Do Nuns need&#13;
the Newscope?&#13;
NO!&#13;
"&#13;
U6"«'au n earlier&#13;
this year. I was going to ask him to be mv&#13;
Advisor when I was a little farther along&#13;
my major. I - saw that niH c,—*&#13;
Damocles suspended by a hair over the&#13;
Do You need the&#13;
Newscope?&#13;
of COUMB you&#13;
do, to find out what'&#13;
happening around&#13;
our Campus!! Because&#13;
we "tell it as it i s." &#13;
\\&#13;
\&#13;
I&#13;
f&#13;
I&#13;
G r e g o r y J ame s&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
SHORTS&#13;
Rangers Defeated&#13;
Holy Redeemer&#13;
The Ranger soccer team defeated the&#13;
Holy Redemer College in a scrimmage last&#13;
Wednesday, 8-1.&#13;
In the first quarter Kari Liekowski&#13;
scored the first goal with 19:40 left to play&#13;
in the quarter. Kiefer scored on a long shot&#13;
in the middle. In the second quarter Joe&#13;
Orr boasted the only goal. The Ranger&#13;
offense went into action in the last quarter,&#13;
started off by Wolf-Dieter-Kiefer, with a&#13;
goal with 9:30 remaining. Kiefer led the&#13;
attack. Then Stan Markavic punched one&#13;
in with 4:45 to go. Dieter then trounced&#13;
another goal at 2:50 left and Joe Orr hit&#13;
with .45 seconds remaining. To follow up,&#13;
the fourth quarter out burst Dale Nickle hit&#13;
the last goal with 2 seconds to go. HR&#13;
scored their only goal in the third quarter.&#13;
The field conditions were very slippery&#13;
and the-weather cold.&#13;
JUDO and KARATE clubs have already&#13;
met and are in full swing. If you missed the&#13;
first meeting, the Judo Club will meet&#13;
every Thursday night at 7:30 till 9:30 p.m.&#13;
There are 11 members in the club so far.&#13;
Bob Clark is the president. The Karate&#13;
Club meets on Thursday morning from 8-&#13;
10 a.m. Mr. Byano Suh is the instructor..&#13;
+ + +&#13;
BOWLING in Racine is at J &amp; W Lanes. So&#13;
far the Racine Campus has six teams;&#13;
coach Dick Frecka is in charge. There is&#13;
still time for more bowlers to join.&#13;
+ 4-4 -&#13;
The SHOOTING CLUB, one of Parkside's&#13;
newest clubs, is being organized by Dave&#13;
Dworak. Trap, pistol and high power rifles&#13;
will be used at the local ranges. We hope&#13;
enough interest will be shown to form a&#13;
Parkside league. All interested students,&#13;
faculty and staff should contact the Office&#13;
of Athletics at Wood Road.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
EQUESTRIAN CLUB is being formed.&#13;
Any interest shown in horses or riding will&#13;
make you eligible for this new club. For&#13;
more information see Vic Godfrey at the&#13;
Athletic office or Linda Welsh.&#13;
Ames, Iowa-(I.P.) — "Commitments for&#13;
the '70s: A Livable Environment" will be&#13;
the theme of the year for the current 1970-&#13;
71 academic year at Iowa State University.&#13;
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A typical touch football game at Parkside - or "Kill the&#13;
guy with the ball!"&#13;
-&#13;
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PHONE 658-3551&#13;
A I E L LO&#13;
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relaxed, f riendly a tmosphere&#13;
Hope t o see y ou ... soon'&#13;
MARGURITTE'S&#13;
6207 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone: 652-2681&#13;
Coming . .THIS SAT., NOV. 7TH&#13;
"WISCONSIN'S MOST POPULAR AND&#13;
EXCITING COLLEGE NIGHTCLUB&#13;
ATTRACTION&#13;
Hoc key Club Makes Debut&#13;
^oT^eZfnTt T °r&#13;
s its first&#13;
Marquette UniveSSr Th?* rS&#13;
°&#13;
f&#13;
a fairlv strnna tl. • he Rangers boast&#13;
The Rangers will h" i" P&#13;
ract,ce sessions.&#13;
win angers will be hoping for their first&#13;
sklte^nL31&#13;
^&#13;
1&#13;
"&#13;
686&#13;
"&#13;
1 has more than 20&#13;
A&#13;
So far this season, the team members&#13;
have shown much enthusiasm. The&#13;
president of the club, Bill Westerlund, has&#13;
expressed great hopes for the future of the&#13;
club. Brian Murray, club advisor, has&#13;
contributed much through encouragement&#13;
of the members.&#13;
To be a successful team, though, we&#13;
need support from the students. You can&#13;
help by coming to the games. The match&#13;
with Marquette will be on Tuesday, Nov. 3,&#13;
at 10 p.m. Wilson Park in Milwaukee&#13;
Rangers Took Carthage&#13;
In S crimmage&#13;
rtiUf 5&#13;
a&#13;
,?&#13;
ger soccer team took on Carthage&#13;
College Wednesday, Oct. 21 in a&#13;
scrimmage game here. Parkside&#13;
wholloped Carthage 14-1.&#13;
Chris Andacht scored the first Ranger&#13;
goal with 17 minutes gone in the first&#13;
TTWD U i&#13;
6 NiCkel then 3dded&#13;
°" t0 P"t&#13;
UWP ahead 2-0 at the end of the first&#13;
quarter.&#13;
Nickels then started off the second&#13;
quarter with a goal from the center with 21&#13;
minutes left to play. Seven goals were&#13;
scored in the second quarter by Parkside.&#13;
Five in the third quarter and one in the&#13;
fourth quarter were scored by UWP.&#13;
Carthage made its only goal in the latter&#13;
part of the fourth quarter. John Powell of&#13;
Carthage made the shot.&#13;
Dale Nickel and Wolf-Dieken each had&#13;
four goals while Chris Andacht and Kari&#13;
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Marquette&#13;
4 - Tim Drewek&#13;
9 - Bruce Jankowski&#13;
10-JimSalasek&#13;
12-Jim Walsh&#13;
13 - Tom Poulson&#13;
Total Team Points&#13;
Three Parkside coeds have been making news in ^ Jeft) Sandy Houston,&#13;
identified with males - long distance running. They a , dvZimmerman,WestAllis,&#13;
Kenosha, sophomore; Mary Libal, Green Bay, junior ai y rg Jn the" cougar&#13;
freshman. Miss Zimmerman recently placed second am g^ UniversityCollegiate&#13;
Cross Country Championship for women at 5ehind the winner.&#13;
Edwardsville. She was timed in 13:21 for the two mile run, 3 ^ i4th jn&#13;
Miss Houston was fifth in 15:02, while Miss Li&#13;
baI&#13;
-i&#13;
amP&#13;
e&#13;
^fh Tnvitationil one and a half&#13;
17:21. Miss Zimmerman also won the Milwaukee TradjCtaMiss&#13;
mile title last weekend in a new course record of 8.12.Miis championship at SIULibal&#13;
15th in the field of 31. In a four mile relay at the &lt;Cougar Champ P ^&#13;
Edwardsville, the Misses Zimmerman and Houston took third, as eac&#13;
nate 440 yard dashes.&#13;
Gymnastics Gets Booming Start&#13;
"What are a gymnast?"&#13;
"What is a gymnastics?"&#13;
"Show me a gymnastic."&#13;
These are but a few of the comments to&#13;
be heard around campus these days. Many&#13;
people want to know just what a gymnast&#13;
is, what gymnasts do and what is a&#13;
gymnastics team. We went to the source,&#13;
Parkside's new gymnastics coach Bill&#13;
Ballester, for some of the answers.&#13;
Gymnastics is many things to many&#13;
people; to Ballester it is a way of life, a&#13;
means of liv elihood, a way to contribute to&#13;
young people and a source of constant&#13;
challenge and inspiration. To a dedicated&#13;
gymnast it is also a way of life demanding:&#13;
hours (3 to 4 hours daily, all year) of hard&#13;
work, sore hands, aching muscles and a&#13;
great deal of self-satisfaction for his efforts&#13;
and discipline.&#13;
To a physical education student it is fun,&#13;
recreational, and a means to develop&#13;
strength, poise, coordination and physical&#13;
habits that can be carried on for years&#13;
after. Gymnastics also affords an excellent&#13;
way of obtaining a teaching&#13;
position. "There are literally hundreds of&#13;
job openings anywhere in the United&#13;
States for people who are interested in and&#13;
trained in gymnastics."&#13;
For the student at Parkside it is a new&#13;
sport for intercollegiate competition; it is&#13;
a physical education class at the Y; it is&#13;
Parkside's new gymnastics club sport.&#13;
Coger Season&#13;
Promising&#13;
The Ranger basketball season opened&#13;
Oct. 15 when 20 men turned out for the&#13;
opening practice session.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens is sure of a much&#13;
better season with his team. "I think our&#13;
new scheduling of the morning practices at&#13;
10:00 till noon at Memorial Hall in Racine&#13;
will better the players." This way the&#13;
players start off fresh at practice and not&#13;
fatigued as they would be after a day of&#13;
classes.&#13;
There seem to be a number of promising&#13;
players out this season, along with last&#13;
year's players. Mike Madsen, 6'8"&#13;
sophomore, looks improved this season,&#13;
backed up by last year's experience.&#13;
Captain Ken Rick is also back up to par&#13;
this season. Hogan and Eli Slaughter are&#13;
back, bringing with them their 24 point&#13;
averages. Their quick shots should be the&#13;
backbone of the cagers' attack. Nick&#13;
Perrine is playing his best, far over last&#13;
year's season. This also will be Steve&#13;
Hagenow's first full year of basketball.&#13;
Tom Fendring, a transfer student from&#13;
"the University of Maryland, is doing a&#13;
good job in practice. The same holds true&#13;
for Dennis Fechelm, 6'2" freshman. One of&#13;
the more pleasant surprises for Coach&#13;
Stephens was Mike Jackson from Kenosha&#13;
Bradford.&#13;
Coach Stephens is pleased with the&#13;
team's attitude and desire to win.&#13;
The Ranger backers will have eleven&#13;
home games to watch. Five will be played&#13;
in Kenosha at St. Joseph high school; four&#13;
games at Racine Case; one at Salem&#13;
Central; and one at Union Grove.&#13;
Coach Ballester is interested in involving&#13;
everyone in gymnastics activity, it&#13;
not actively then through association.&#13;
Intercollegiate Team&#13;
As an intercollegiate sport, Parkside's&#13;
team will be built around a nucleus of five&#13;
boys. Parkside's schedule, which will be&#13;
released very shortly, will include some of&#13;
the top teams in the country. "We are&#13;
actively seeking young men who want to&#13;
be gymnasts and become a part of our&#13;
select group of competitors."&#13;
Club Sport&#13;
There is presently an active movement&#13;
among a group of students to develop a coeducational&#13;
club sport in gymnastics. We&#13;
will have our first organized meeting&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 27, at 8 p.m. at Washington&#13;
Park high school. There will be a meeting&#13;
every Tuesday thereafter at 8 p.m. at Park&#13;
high school.&#13;
To become involved'in this club sport&#13;
you need only interest. Everyone is invited&#13;
to participate in this informal activity. If&#13;
you are interested in socializing, working&#13;
out, taking trips to gymnastic meets,&#13;
supporting Parkside's gymnastics team,&#13;
and learning about physical conditioning,&#13;
you will enjoy being a part of this&#13;
organization.&#13;
Start looking for posters, see Coach&#13;
Ballester, or ask any gymnast: these are&#13;
the ways to become involved. Hecome a&#13;
part of Parkside's new student movement&#13;
— f un through gymnastics.&#13;
Cross Country Team Undefeated&#13;
r cross country team a.m. on the Wood Road Cam&#13;
The Ran&#13;
^&#13;
e&#13;
f ted in dual competition Team Scoring&#13;
remained un&#13;
^*tte 17.38 on the five- Parkside&#13;
bv drubbing Marquette rday Coach place&#13;
mile Wood Road cou ^ ag # unit {. chuck Dettman&#13;
Vic Godfrey said the t 1qss tQ. l. Rlck Lund&#13;
and this avenged the team i - Jim McFadden&#13;
Marquette last y&#13;
ear&#13;
h , f. f first six 5 - Tim McGilsky&#13;
The Rangers f^^&#13;
VRick Lund and 6 - Gary Lance&#13;
places, as Chuck De , ^ in a Total team points&#13;
Jim McFadden broke tape J in&#13;
27:31. Tim McGil y ^) ^ ieading&#13;
Marquette man was Tim Drewek who was&#13;
fourth. now 4-0 will host&#13;
Loras'coUegeof Iowa on Saturday at 11:30&#13;
UWP Site of&#13;
Championships&#13;
annual Mid-America Cross Country&#13;
Championships Saturday, Nov. 7.&#13;
Five events will be run, four sponsored&#13;
by the USTFF and one by the Wisconsin&#13;
Amateur Athletic Association.&#13;
The main event, however, will be the&#13;
men's six-mile open at 12:30 p.m. with&#13;
entries from throughout the midwest&#13;
expected to compete both as teams and as&#13;
individuals.&#13;
Other USTFF events will be the&#13;
Wisconsin Junior High Boys (9th grade&#13;
and under) one and a half milts, at 10:30;&#13;
the Wisconsin State Federation Championships&#13;
for those 18 and over, three&#13;
miles, at 11; and the National Masters&#13;
Championship for those 40 and over, three&#13;
miles, at 11:30.&#13;
The Wisconsin AAU Women's Open&#13;
Championship over two miles will be run&#13;
at 10.&#13;
Parkside is one of three universities&#13;
hosting USTFF championships this fall.&#13;
The first annual Western Championship&#13;
will be held Nov. 21 at Fresno (Calif.) State&#13;
University, and the Ninth Annual National&#13;
Championships Nov. 25 at Penn State.&#13;
USTFF Executive Director Carl W.&#13;
Cooper will be at Parkside for the midwest&#13;
meet. The races will be run over the scenic&#13;
new course which traverses the rolling 700-&#13;
acre Parkside campus.&#13;
Use the Classifieds&#13;
time&#13;
27:3)&#13;
27:31&#13;
27:31&#13;
CALL!&#13;
After this week W e&#13;
must return all remain.&#13;
ing te xts to the pub.&#13;
Ushers . . . If f | , ere&#13;
are any te xts you s t ill&#13;
ne ed or want, come i n&#13;
and buy them&#13;
while th ey are&#13;
availabl e.&#13;
n ow,&#13;
s ti ll&#13;
USE&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
T H E&#13;
OT&#13;
SI&#13;
COFFEE&#13;
MUSI C F RI.- S A T.&#13;
9-1 2 Ml D N I T E&#13;
75J&#13;
HER&#13;
DE&#13;
HOUSE&#13;
3 2 8 M AIN - R A C I NE&#13;
Tewtta*&#13;
,&#13;
DELICATESSEN - BEVERAGES&#13;
3203 FIFTY-SECOND STREET&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 tfoyt&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-9747&#13;
1&#13;
don't just Sit tkere;&#13;
Gn/e L/s Vouv&#13;
Tt« JwSWs&lt;efe&#13;
" Yoir'&#13;
.&#13;
I </text>
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 2, Issue 6, November 2, 1970</text>
            </elementText>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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            </elementText>
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              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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