<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="2464" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.uwp.edu/exhibits/show/rangernews/item/2464?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T20:23:30+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="3057">
      <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/44da65af17f19651757ae7f2fd817d74.pdf</src>
      <authentication>22c05e60cd3223f0be467a5c536845df</authentication>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="8">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="97">
        <name>Issue</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="61642">
            <text>Volume 2, Issue 9</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="96">
        <name>Headline</name>
        <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="61646">
            <text>George W. Beadle to Present Lecture Here</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="95">
        <name>Series Number</name>
        <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="61653">
            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="1">
        <name>Text</name>
        <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="89846">
            <text>George W. Beadle To Presenl Lecture Here&#13;
Nobel laureate George Wells&#13;
emeritus president of . Beadle, Beadle received the Nobel prize. the&#13;
Chicago will the Umven!ty of highest scientific bonor society bestows, in&#13;
at the Univ~~ ~::'::'~~~'1.~':958 ror his research on the relation of&#13;
Wood Road Campus at8 p.m. on Tuesda genes to specific biochemical reactions.&#13;
Nov..24, IDGreenquist HaD, Room 101 n;'~ The prize, which he sbared with Edward L.&#13;
talk ISSponsored by the Parkside Lecture Tatum and Joshua Lederber'g, was in&#13;
and FIDe Arts Committee psysiology and medicine.&#13;
His ~pic will he "Myst~ry and Myth of In addition to the Nohel Prize, he has&#13;
MaIze. The talk, which wiU be iUustrated received the Priestley Memorial Award or&#13;
~Y c~lo~ transparencies, will cover the Dickinson CoUege in 1967; the Kimber&#13;
hngUlStIc,. historical, archeologl'cal, Genetics Award of the National Academy&#13;
m hoI 1 of Sciences in 1960; the national award of&#13;
orp ogicat, cytological and genetic the American Cancer Society in 1959; the&#13;
eVldenc~ o.f.evolution of maize, or corn, E from ti mil Christian Hansen Prize of the Royal&#13;
varietf~~l ve species to modern hybrid Danish Academy of Sciences in 1953; the&#13;
During the day. he also will meet with Dyer Award 01 the ational Institutes of&#13;
Parkside science students. Health in 1951; and the Lasker Award of&#13;
.~is will be the Nobel laureate's second the American Public Health Association10&#13;
VISIt t.o.Parkside in less than a year. He 1950Be'adle 'd 1 f he . . al ted th was presi en 0 t mversrty&#13;
so VISI e campus last May when he of Chicago from 1961until his retirement in&#13;
presented a major public address at the&#13;
Symposium on Biochemistry of Brain and 1968. Prior to that he was professor and&#13;
M chairman of the Division of Biology at the&#13;
themory which brought scientists from Califorma Institute of Technology from&#13;
roughout the world to Parkside. 1946 to 1961. He also has been a member of&#13;
Murphy Represented In Craft Shows&#13;
.. Ceramisl John Satre Murphy of the&#13;
Universtty of Wisconsin-Parkside art&#13;
faculty is represented in two current invita~ional&#13;
.shows and has been granted a&#13;
merit achievement award for works be is&#13;
exhibiting in a third show.&#13;
Murphy received the award for two&#13;
stoneware bowls with platinum and gold&#13;
lusters which are included in the invitational&#13;
Craft Committment Show which&#13;
will open Dec. 7 al the Rochester (Minn.)&#13;
Art Center and will then tour for two years.&#13;
Murphy also is represented in the&#13;
Wisconsin Craft Invitational No. 3&#13;
traveling exhibit opening Friday and&#13;
continuiog through Dec. 20 at L'Atelier&#13;
Gallery in Milwaukee and in the December&#13;
invitational craft show of the Contemporary&#13;
Crafts Association in PorUand,&#13;
The role of the urban university intrigues me.'&#13;
Ore.&#13;
In the Milwaukee show, Murphy has two&#13;
larger luster bowls - one a head bowl&#13;
adorned with faces with copper, gold,&#13;
orange and red lusters and one an abstract&#13;
stoneware bowl with cobalt blue stain and&#13;
platinum luster - and a small porcelain&#13;
wall relief with gold luster mounted in&#13;
ilIexiglass.&#13;
Murphy also has a porcelain wall relief&#13;
in plexiglass in the Portland exhibit. His&#13;
ceramics have been widely exhibited&#13;
throughout the United Slates and were&#13;
included in last winter's Montana Craftsmen&#13;
Exhibit at the Smithsonian Institution.&#13;
Murphy, who received his&#13;
graduate degree from the University of&#13;
Montana, joined the Parkside faculty last&#13;
year.&#13;
Weaver Will Work To Better&#13;
UW Public Relations&#13;
Reprint from Milwaukee Journal&#13;
Madison, Wls; - Improving relations&#13;
between the University of Wisconsin and&#13;
the people of the state will be a high&#13;
priority objective during the administration&#13;
of John C. Weaver, the new&#13;
.preaiden!of IJW._ . .&#13;
In a conservation wilb Edwin Young,&#13;
chancellor of the Madison campus; seen on&#13;
WHA-TV Tuesday night, Weaver siad:&#13;
"We have no greater objective than to&#13;
regain the faith of the people who support&#13;
the university. We have to transmit to&#13;
them that the essence or what lbey have&#13;
always had faith in-is still there, H&#13;
Weaver described university admil)istrators&#13;
as canght between students&#13;
who are demanding a greater role in lbe&#13;
governing of their schools and lbe public&#13;
which is demanding greater accountabiliiy&#13;
from the administrators.&#13;
"People Will Be Heard"&#13;
Referring to the people of lbe slate,&#13;
Weaver said, "They have listened to a&#13;
tremendous amount of noise from the&#13;
campus, even bombs. The people are going&#13;
to be heard.&#13;
"Just as students have interest because&#13;
their educations are at stake, the people&#13;
have an interest because it is their money&#13;
that is bemg spent. I feel the public has a&#13;
right to be heard just as the students have&#13;
a right to be heard."&#13;
Weaver indicated he believed that lbe&#13;
I'IIIe of students was limited to making&#13;
recommendations.&#13;
"I don't lblnk you can turn lbe&#13;
deelslOnmaking process over to the&#13;
ltuden1a. The students should be heard,&#13;
but it may be that the university can't bUy&#13;
an of their recommendations."&#13;
Weaver said the role of the faculty of a&#13;
uniVersity should be broad and deep. He&#13;
IIIlidthe faculi}' should be responsible for&#13;
determining general academic programs&#13;
Ind requirements.&#13;
As for the role of the president of lbe&#13;
IIlivenity, Weaver said, "The day to day&#13;
ClperatiOll8of a campus fall to the ~&#13;
ceDor.The president has faDen back IDtoa&#13;
"without involving ourselves in the civic&#13;
decisionmaking. "&#13;
Weaver said development of urban&#13;
studies at these campuses would provide&#13;
them a growth area without duplicating&#13;
many of the programs or the Madison&#13;
campus.&#13;
"These campuses would have an area of&#13;
development that is untouched. There are&#13;
some things that all campuses must do,&#13;
but when it comes to the more specialized&#13;
programs there must be some rationing. t&#13;
am sure that you don't have to duplicate&#13;
Ph.D. programs in every department on&#13;
four campuses in Wisconsin.&#13;
Weaver said he also opposed "raising&#13;
tuition for in-stale students to anything.&#13;
like rull per student cost."&#13;
"Inevitably students are going to pay a&#13;
greater part of the cost or their education ,I&#13;
they can afford to, but tuition should not&#13;
prevent any qualified student from attending&#13;
the university," he added.&#13;
The conversation between Young and&#13;
Weaver was recorded earlier Tuesday at&#13;
the University of Missouri television&#13;
station at Columbia. Weaver is president&#13;
of the University of Missouri. He is expecled&#13;
to assume his duties in Madison&#13;
sbortly after Christmas.&#13;
somewhat more detached position. The&#13;
president's job is to see that the chancellor&#13;
of a campus has the resources to maintain&#13;
the greatness of his campus."&#13;
Weaver also mentioned maintaining the&#13;
universities relations with the alumni, the&#13;
State Legislature and the governor as&#13;
among the president's responsibilities.&#13;
Urban Campus Role&#13;
Weaver sees increased roles for the&#13;
UW's Milwaukee and Racine campuses as&#13;
urban campuses. "The role of the urban&#13;
university intrigues me," Weaver said. He&#13;
pointed out that the University of Miss"'!ri&#13;
had campuses in Sl Louis and Kansas CIty&#13;
which specialize in problems of the cities.&#13;
•'There must be a tremendous OIr&#13;
portunity to do this in Milwaukee and&#13;
Racine," Weaver said&#13;
"The question is, can we bring the land&#13;
grant idea of service into the urban scene?&#13;
Can we bring to the urban areas the&#13;
knowledge that we have that can work to&#13;
the betterment of urban life. H&#13;
weiver cautioned that this must be done&#13;
Violinist To Perform In UWP Concert Series&#13;
Japanese-born violinist Keiko Furiyoshi,&#13;
affiliate artist in music at the Uruverslty of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, will present the next&#13;
program in the University Artists Concert&#13;
Series at 4 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 22, m&#13;
Greenquist HaD at the UWP Wood Road&#13;
Campus. .&#13;
Single admission tickets will be&#13;
available at the door. (Adults $1, students&#13;
50 cents, cbiIdren 12 and under free.)&#13;
Miss Furiyoshi's program wiU Include&#13;
Vitali's Chaconne, Tcbaikowsky's Concerto&#13;
in D. Major, Op. 35, Mozart's Ada.glO&#13;
in E Major K261. Bloch's Nigu., (lIDprovisationl&#13;
and Sarasate's Gypsy AU'S&#13;
Op. 20. She wiD be accompamed at the&#13;
piano by Genevieve Prevot, a studenl or&#13;
Carmen Vila, Parkside artiSt-m-resldence.&#13;
Miss Furiyoshi, who joined the Parl&lt;Slde&#13;
music staff this faU, comes to UWP from.&#13;
the University of Indiana where she was Ii&#13;
student of Josef Gingold. former concertmaster&#13;
of the Cleveland Symphony&#13;
and nOWhead of ~e violin department at&#13;
the Indiana institution.&#13;
Born in Yokohama, Miss Furiyoshi&#13;
began her study of the violin at the age of&#13;
three at the world-renowned Suzuki School&#13;
- the "little children's music school" of&#13;
Japan.&#13;
She has made concert appearances in&#13;
New York and in the Midwest and returned&#13;
to Japan earlier this year to present a&#13;
recital at Toshi Center Hall in Tokyo. She&#13;
also has made several recordings in&#13;
Japan.&#13;
In January, she wiU present a concert in&#13;
carnegie Hall in the JeWlesse5 Musicales&#13;
International Artists Series.&#13;
MEMO&#13;
In a memodaled Nov. 12Anthony Totero&#13;
warns there will be suspension of&#13;
privileges to recognized student&#13;
organizations unless they dissolve all&#13;
oul8ide bank accounts and deposit their&#13;
funds with the bursar.&#13;
the faculty of Stanford University, Cornell&#13;
Unlvenity, the Califorma Institute or&#13;
Tec/wdocy, the Institut de Biolog,e 01&#13;
Paris and Harvard Umvenity.&#13;
He cu.......,t1yII presldenl of the ChIcago&#13;
Horticultural Society where he rs con-&#13;
&lt;kK:tingmuch of his current research&#13;
Film Series&#13;
At Rondelle&#13;
The Intercollegiate Film Councrl,&#13;
comprised of Parkside, Carthage and&#13;
Dominican students and Iaculty presents a&#13;
film series which is sponsered b) John·&#13;
son's Wax Inc. at (he Golden Roodelle&#13;
All films w ill be shown at the GoIdf'n&#13;
RonMUr Theater at 7:00 p.m. on Sunda~&#13;
evenings.&#13;
Some of the films to be shown arc'&#13;
"War of the Buttons" 7\'0\ 22, 1970&#13;
"The Red Desert" Dec. 6.1970&#13;
"Weekend" Feb. H, 19711&#13;
"Persona" ~lan::h7,I97u&#13;
"L,Avventura" ~1arch21.197U&#13;
The-Janus-New Cinema AprI14.19i0&#13;
(To be announced) Aprl12S. I~U&#13;
The tickets are free. but only a \l'r)&#13;
limited amount of tickets are available&#13;
and these will be given out on "f'dnt'Sda)s&#13;
and Thursday s 10 the GrN"nquisl concoarse&#13;
from 12 nooo lill I p.m. and abo on&#13;
Wednesdays and Thur-sdays at the en&#13;
trance to the lounge at the Itactne campo ...&#13;
from II a.m. Uti It noon. It was Iirst stated&#13;
that tickets would be given oul on Thur-s&#13;
days and Fridays. but do to the mixup of&#13;
trying to get tickets from other school . It&#13;
has been changed to leave Fridays to&#13;
straighten things out.&#13;
The tickets will be given out on the&#13;
Wednesday and Thursday preeeedmg the&#13;
Sunday 01 the film.&#13;
For further mformahon contact either&#13;
Mary Geraets (632·20541 or Jerry Horton&#13;
1633-47691.&#13;
Grant Accepted&#13;
A grant from the Amencan Chemical&#13;
Society Petroleum Research Fund 10&#13;
support of research by Virgmla Scherr. an&#13;
assistant professor of chemistry at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside. \lo as&#13;
accepted al Wausau Fnda)' by lilt'&#13;
University Board of Regents.&#13;
The $7,500 grant will supporl a Ihreeyear&#13;
research proposal by Miss Scherr for&#13;
molecular orbatal studies as a basis for&#13;
understanding conformation, ele&lt;:trofllc&#13;
structure and electroDlc energy of&#13;
molecules&#13;
Besides the correlation between ex&#13;
perimental data and calculation. the study&#13;
seeks to generate mformation which will&#13;
facilitate development of undergraduate&#13;
research ~ograms&#13;
The American Chemical oClely&#13;
program under which lhe grant wa:;&#13;
awarded is designed for r latively new&#13;
holders of the Ph D degree and is&#13;
designed to allow them to conltnue 10·&#13;
wvidual fundamental research In the&#13;
petroleum field&#13;
MISS Scherr received hrr o('l('toral&#13;
degree at Fordham Univen,11\ ,Ind ,.IlAghl&#13;
at Louisiana State Univel"oll"and ( ~lrdU\31&#13;
Stritch College Imm',·d;.tll·l,) bC'fort'&#13;
joining the Parkslde fat:ulh la~l f .111 ...h(·&#13;
was a faculty research ptt~Ill·II ..I·11 al&#13;
Argonne &lt;111.) ational Laboratory&#13;
Recruitm t6 be herr&#13;
The Manne Corps Oll,cer e1ect,on&#13;
Team will VISit the University or&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsm campus on November 25th&#13;
to interview student interested In&#13;
becoming commissioned officers.&#13;
The Omcer Selection Team wtll be&#13;
located in Room 117to provide Information&#13;
pertaining to Manne Officer Programs,&#13;
accordmg to 1st Lieutenant R. W&#13;
DU LAP, the Marme Corps Oflicer&#13;
Selection Oflicer.&#13;
MI ORITY GROUPS&#13;
1 UWPROGRAM&#13;
Indian Americans and Spanishsw-named&#13;
Americans, as well as blacks,&#13;
are eligible for college aid through the&#13;
Consortium for Graduate Study in&#13;
Business ror Disadvantaged Students.&#13;
The enlarged scope or the program, tied&#13;
in with The University of Wiscomin&#13;
Graduate School of Business, includes&#13;
students from such ethnic grou~ as&#13;
Puerto Ricans, Indians, MexicanAmericans,&#13;
and Cubans who are American&#13;
citizens. Its purpose is to hasten the entry&#13;
0( minority persons inlo management&#13;
p&gt;sitions in business.&#13;
George W. Beadle To Present Lecture Here&#13;
No~ laureate George Wells B&#13;
emeritus president of the U . ~die, . Beadle received the obel prize, the&#13;
Chat itcheagou, nW11·v.llerspriesent a fr_ ee pum_b~:7ec1tytureof highest scientific honor society bestows, m ty of 1958 for his research on the relation of&#13;
Wood Road Ca WtSConsm-Parkside genes to pecific biochemical reactions.&#13;
N . mpus at 8 p.m. on Tuesda Th . ov. 24, m Greenquist Hall R Y, epr1ze, which he shared with Edv.ard L.&#13;
talk is_ sponsored by the P~r~i ~~ree Tatum and Joshua Lederberg, was in&#13;
and_ Fme_ Arts Committee. psysiology and medicine.&#13;
~is t~ptc will be "Mystery and Myth of In addition to the Nobel Prize. he ha&#13;
Maize. The talk, which will be illustrated received the Priestley. temorial Award of&#13;
~y c~lo~ transparencies, will cover the Dickinson College in 1967; the Kimber&#13;
hnguistic,_ historical, archeological Genetics Award of the, ational Acad m,·&#13;
m~rphological, cytological and geneti~ of Sciences in 1960, the national award of&#13;
evidence_ o_f _evolution of maize, or corn, the American Cancer ociety in 1959; he&#13;
fro Emil Christian Hansen Prize of the Ro al&#13;
var%tf~~itive species to modern hybrid Danish Academy of Sciences in 1953: the&#13;
Dur!ng t~ day, he also will meet with Dyer Award of the , 'ational Institut of&#13;
Par~side science students. Health in 1951 ; and the La ker A ard of&#13;
. ~1s will be the Nobel Jaureate's second the American Public Health A iation m&#13;
visit t~ _Parkside in less than a year. He&#13;
1&#13;
~~adle was president of the nive 1t,&#13;
also visited the campus last May when he of Chicago from 1961 until h1 retirement in&#13;
presen~ a major public address at the&#13;
Symposmm on Biochemistry of Brain and 1968. Prior to that he wa prof - or a nd&#13;
Memory which brought scient1·sts from chairman of the Div· ion of Biol . at th&#13;
th gh California Institute Technolo · fr m rou out the world to Parkside. 1946 to 1961. He also h been a member of&#13;
Murphy Represented In Craft Shows . . C_eram!st John Satre Murphy of the&#13;
Umvers1ty of Wisconsin-Parkside art&#13;
faculty is represented in two current invitational&#13;
shows and has been granted a&#13;
merit achievement award for works he is&#13;
exhibiting in a third show.&#13;
Murphy received the award for two&#13;
stoneware bowls with platinum and gold&#13;
lusters which are included in the invitational&#13;
Craft Comrnittment Show which&#13;
will open Dec. 7 at the Rochester (Minn.)&#13;
Art Center and will then tour for two years.&#13;
Murphy also is represented in the&#13;
Wisconsin Craft Invitational o. 3&#13;
traveling exhibit opening Friday and&#13;
continuing through Dec. 20 at L'Atelier&#13;
Gallery in Milwaukee and in the December&#13;
invitational craft show of the Contemporary&#13;
Crafts Association in Portland,&#13;
Ore.&#13;
In the 1ilwaukee ho~ .. lurph) h · tv. o&#13;
larger luster bowl - one a h ad bo\, I&#13;
adorned with faces with copper. gold,&#13;
orange and red Ju ters and one an a ·tract&#13;
stoneware bowl with cobalt blue tain and&#13;
platinum lu ter - and a mall porcelain&#13;
wall relief with gold lust r mount d in&#13;
J3)exiglass.&#13;
Murphy also has a porcela in wall r Ii r&#13;
in plexiglass in the Portland exhibit. Hi&#13;
ceramics have been widely exhibited&#13;
throughout the United tates a nd were&#13;
included in last winter' - . 1ontana Craftsmen&#13;
Exhibit at the milhsonian In·&#13;
stitulion. 1urph~ , who received h1&#13;
graduate degree from the niversity of&#13;
Montana, joined the Par ide faculty la t&#13;
year.&#13;
The role of the urban university intrigues me.'&#13;
Weaver Will Work To Better&#13;
UW Public Relations&#13;
Reprint from Milwaukee J oumal&#13;
Madison, Wis: - Improving relations&#13;
between the University of Wisconsin and&#13;
the people of the state will be a high&#13;
priority objective during the administration&#13;
of John C. Weaver, the new&#13;
president of UW.&#13;
In a conservation with Edwin Young,&#13;
chancellor of the Madison campus; seen on&#13;
WHA-TV Tuesday night, Weaver siad:&#13;
"We have no greater objective than to&#13;
regain the faith of the people who support&#13;
the university. We have to transmit to&#13;
them that the essence of what they have&#13;
always had faith in·is still there."&#13;
Weaver described university admirµstrators&#13;
as caught between studen~&#13;
who are demanding a greater role in the&#13;
governing of their schools and the public&#13;
which is demanding greater aceountability&#13;
from the administrators.&#13;
"People Will Be Heard"&#13;
somewhat more detached position. The&#13;
president's job is to see that the chancellor&#13;
of a campus has the resources to maintain&#13;
the greatness of his campus."&#13;
Weaver also mentioned maintaining the&#13;
universities relations with the alumni, the&#13;
State Legislature and the governor as&#13;
among the president's responsibilities.&#13;
Urban Campus Role&#13;
Weaver sees increased roles for the&#13;
UW's Milwaukee and Racine campuses as&#13;
urban campuses. "The role of the urban&#13;
university intrigues me," Weaver said. He&#13;
pointed out that the University of Missouri&#13;
had campuses in SL Louis and Kansas City&#13;
which specialize in problems of the cities.&#13;
"There must be a tremendous o~&#13;
portunity to do this in Milwaukee and&#13;
Racine," Weaver said.&#13;
"The question is, can we bring the land&#13;
grant idea of service into the urban scene?&#13;
Can we bring to the urban areas the&#13;
knowledge that we have that can work to&#13;
the betterment of urban life."&#13;
wea·ver cautioned that this must be done&#13;
·'without involving oursel e in the civic&#13;
decisionmaking. ·· Weaver said development of urban&#13;
studies at these campuses would pro, id&#13;
them a growth area v.,ithout duplicating&#13;
many of the program of the tadison&#13;
campus.&#13;
" These campuses would have an area of&#13;
development that is untouched . Th re are&#13;
some things that all campu es m t do,&#13;
but when it comes to the more pec1alized&#13;
programs there mu t be some rationing. I&#13;
am sure that you don't have to duplicate&#13;
Ph.D. programs in every department on&#13;
four campuses in Wi. con in.&#13;
Weaver said he al o opposed "'rai 1ng&#13;
tuition for in-state tudents to anythm .&#13;
like full per stud nl cosl"&#13;
"Inevitably students are going to pa) a&#13;
greater part of the co l of their education 1f&#13;
they can afford to, but tuition hould not&#13;
prevent any qualified tudent from al·&#13;
tending the university," he ad d&#13;
The conversation between Young and&#13;
Weaver was recorded earlier Tu day at&#13;
the niversity of 1issouri tel v1 ioo&#13;
station at Columbia. Weaver i pr ident&#13;
of the University of 1i ouri. He i expected&#13;
to assume hi duties in 1ad1_on&#13;
shortly after Chri tma . Referring to the people of the state,&#13;
Weaver said, "They have listened to a&#13;
tremendous amount of noise from the&#13;
campus, even bombs. The people are going&#13;
to be heard.&#13;
Violinist To Perform In UWP Concert Series&#13;
"Just as students have interest because&#13;
their educations are at stake, the people&#13;
have an interest because it is their money&#13;
~t is being spent. I feel the public has a&#13;
right to be heard just as the students have&#13;
a right to be heard."&#13;
Weaver indicated he believed that the&#13;
role of students was limited to making&#13;
recornmenda lions.&#13;
"I don't think you can turn the&#13;
decisionmaking process over to the&#13;
student.;. The students should be heard,&#13;
but it may be that the university can't buy&#13;
all of their recommendations."&#13;
Weaver said the role of the faculty of a&#13;
university should be broad and deep. He&#13;
said the· faculty should be responsible for&#13;
determining general academic programs&#13;
and requirements.&#13;
~ for the role of the president of the&#13;
university, Weaver said, "The day to day&#13;
Ol)erations of a campus fall to the chancellor.&#13;
The president has fallen back into a&#13;
Japanese-born violinist Keiko Furiyoshi,&#13;
affiliate artist in music at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, will present the next&#13;
program in the University Artists Conce:t&#13;
Series at 4 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 22, tn&#13;
Greenquist Hall at the UWP Wood Road&#13;
Campus. . . Single admission tickets will be&#13;
available at the door. (Adults $1, students&#13;
50 cents, children 12 and under_ fr~.)&#13;
Miss Furiyosbi's program will mclude&#13;
Vitali's Chaconne, Tchaikowskts Co~-&#13;
certo in D. Major, Op. 35, Mozart s Ada_g10&#13;
in E Major K261, Bloch's Nigu"'l &lt;~-&#13;
provisation) and Sarasate's Gypsy AU"S&#13;
Op. 20. She will be accompanied at the&#13;
piano by Geneviev~ Prev?1, _a st~ent of&#13;
Carmen Vila, Parkside artist-1D-res1de~e.&#13;
Miss Furiyoshi, who joined the Parkside&#13;
music staff this fall, comes to UWP from.&#13;
the University of Indiana where she was .i&#13;
student of Josef Gingold, former concertmaster&#13;
of the Cleveland Symphony&#13;
and now head of the violin department at&#13;
the Indiana institution&#13;
Born in Yokohama, 1i Furi)· hi&#13;
began her study of the violin at the age of&#13;
three at the world-renowned Suzuki School&#13;
- the "little children's music school " of&#13;
Japan. She has made concert appearances m&#13;
ew York and in the Iidwest and returned&#13;
to Japan earlier this year to present a&#13;
recital at Toshi Center Hall in Tokyo She&#13;
also has made several recording in&#13;
Japan. In January, she will present a concert in&#13;
Carnegie Hall in the JeW1esses tusicales&#13;
International Artists Series.&#13;
MEMO&#13;
In a memo dated 'ov. 12 Anthony Totero&#13;
warns there will be suspension of&#13;
privileges to recognized student&#13;
organizations unless they dissolve all&#13;
outside bank accounts and deposit their&#13;
funds with the bursar.&#13;
the faculty of tanford nlv&#13;
University, the California&#13;
Technology, the lnstitut d Bi l 1&#13;
Paris and Harvard ru\ ty.&#13;
He currently is president the Cha&#13;
Horticultural Societ h&#13;
Cklcting much cl his curr nt&#13;
Film Series&#13;
At Rondelle&#13;
Grant Accepted&#13;
i.·&#13;
Indian American and&#13;
surnamed Americans, a well a bl&#13;
are eli ible for college aid through th&#13;
Con ortium for Graduate tudy in&#13;
Bu iness for Disadvantaged tud n .&#13;
The enlarged scope of the program, tied&#13;
in with The niversll of Wi co in&#13;
Graduate School of Busin . includ&#13;
students from uch ethnic grou!)l&gt; a&#13;
Puerto Ricans, Indian . • 1exicanAmericans,&#13;
and Cuban who are American&#13;
citizens. Its purpose is to hasten the entry&#13;
of minority persons mto management&#13;
positions in business. &#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
The Tension Remains&#13;
We have been trying for weeks to make some assessment of&#13;
student feeling. Why? This fall, students seem to have something on&#13;
their minds - some sort of indescribable tension.&#13;
Last pring there were the Kent killings, the bombings, the&#13;
demonstrations. Last summer there was the bombing of Sterling Hall.&#13;
So far this fall nothing destructive has come of any of our various hangups.&#13;
But the tension is there.&#13;
That tension obviates itself in various ways. Students seem less&#13;
than willing to talk about strong issues - after all, where has ~lJting&#13;
led to in the past? And the bombing fad is wearing off - where did that&#13;
type of violence lead? Students appear to be guarding strongly and&#13;
ilently their personal convictions. What can one person do to end the&#13;
war, stop pollution, lower taxes, stop drug abuse - "what can one man&#13;
do, my friend, what can one man do?"&#13;
But the tension remains. Specifically for this campus, we have&#13;
come up with the idea that the underlying feeling is not one of apathy,&#13;
but rather one 01 hopelessness. Students have an interest in such things&#13;
the formation of a student government, or the idea that instructors&#13;
pay more attention to teaching than to research. You can talk until who&#13;
lin.... when and nothing will ever come of anything. It's less or an&#13;
pathetic, 'I don't care' attitude, than it is one or 'who would hear what&#13;
I said' And so there is that undeniable and undefinable tension. Even&#13;
th (acuity are experiencing the pangs or DO communication, as was&#13;
-n by the resolution passed by members of the Social Science&#13;
division.&#13;
Maybe the tension we feel isn't a tension at all. Maybe it's the&#13;
plateau of the so-called student revolution that is apparent in this&#13;
country. There's probably more to come.&#13;
Correction&#13;
The editors of the EWSCOPE received and printed some incorrect&#13;
information in last week's issue. Vice-Chancellor Brockman is&#13;
not co-owner 01 the University Bookstores. Howard Thielen is the&#13;
owner.&#13;
Oil 11(11"'011\\ Y&#13;
t lcve churches I really do. Not just&#13;
ror lh ph)"5lcal components and aesthetic&#13;
values but because or what happens to me&#13;
~ hen Iam Ill)lde of a church. For me, a&#13;
....ffk ...',thout a church service is like a&#13;
pumpl,," P'~WIthout whIpP"'! cream&#13;
3pplt pie ''''lthout cheese •• or a kiss&#13;
"lthout a squeeze. So It IS natural that&#13;
.......0 Mrs CruhJ and I are traveling that&#13;
... not onl) VISit the museums and fine&#13;
I"fStaurants In that area but houses of&#13;
.. on.tup a .. ell&#13;
I tt') to be- reverent at all limes ...&#13;
.. here\"er Irna)' be at any given moment&#13;
In a Quistian church, a Moslem&#13;
mosque. a Je'*1 h synagogue. a Buddhist&#13;
t mple. a Hindu of Shinto shnne or In&#13;
cl room. on the street or In my orrice.&#13;
I) thapel t.n ~. ,Iy be • room ttl my&#13;
home or a . at In an alrplame This aU&#13;
mok for a ,,"ery com"enient arrangement.&#13;
.".nd, mct there IS ooly one God and&#13;
God I t\"er')-v..here. • what difference&#13;
• hQuJd time place or deeore make~&#13;
I hnd m)'self onI,)" mildl,)" Interested in&#13;
t.' tartan procedures although I do&#13;
rt'CO~nlt.e the-Ir lmportance and 1rs"&#13;
Cruhl and I I') do do our share But I&#13;
gr. lh en)o) • me.runglul hturgy. a line&#13;
M'mlon nd beautiful mUSIc. It has been a&#13;
mal ler of opllonal chOice for over forty&#13;
)t·ar Lhat ""e ha,,'e attended the services&#13;
at The First United Methxh I church In&#13;
f me tach unda)' mormng" We recoup&#13;
our lreongth for IInog to the wonderful&#13;
feti~\\, hip ....e find there&#13;
II \\,a out good fortune 10 pend most of&#13;
: plember of 1968 In 'o",,"ay and It was&#13;
1f.....·"ltable that ....e . houJd ""' It se,,'eral of&#13;
II",,. •·..t.,. Churthes" So-c.lled, I&#13;
. uppose. btcause the roughly-he'o'n boards&#13;
whlth make up the Sides 01 the church&#13;
stand on end&#13;
\ l\ r""eglan slave church is made&#13;
('nllrel} of y.0Dd These churches are not&#13;
large You could put the ba e of one Inside&#13;
"Iarg. la room The rools ar~ hIgh and&#13;
It"ep u ually ....Ith t\lo 0 or three hers of&#13;
roofs rl or like. pagoda Th~ lew&#13;
pews In Ide .....ould seal from twent)' to&#13;
Ihlrty people In the 18th century. we wer~&#13;
told there were se\"eral hwtdreds of these&#13;
churches In Norway. Now onl)' twenty-&#13;
~ght remain Each is con Idered a&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
national treasure.&#13;
My "special wave-length" was&#13;
operating when we were in the Fantoft&#13;
Slave church about five miles south of&#13;
Bergen.. As we walked around inside I&#13;
gently touched the wood which had been&#13;
cut from the forest in the thirteenth century.&#13;
Ithought 01 Norway's thousand years&#13;
of Olristian history". . . of the many&#13;
gener.tions which had worshiP"'! in this&#13;
place· And I tho~ht 01 the manv other&#13;
churches Mrs. Gruhl and I had visited.&#13;
1said to Mrs. Gruhl, "Ruth, please leave&#13;
me alone for a few minutes ... Iwanllo&#13;
record my thoughts right now." She was&#13;
familiar with requests such as this, and&#13;
said, "Okay, dear ... see you later." Sh~&#13;
went outside and walked around the&#13;
grounds.&#13;
Now I had the church to myself .nd&#13;
talked to the tape recorder which I always&#13;
carry With me when 00 a trip. That little&#13;
Sony has a wonderful memory and a&#13;
month later, when we were back home I&#13;
played the t.pe ... and this is what Ih~d&#13;
recorded I will simply title it ...&#13;
THE STAVE CHURCH&#13;
These next thoughts are about&#13;
Churches ...&#13;
Ruth and I have been in many&#13;
In our travels 'round the world.&#13;
Here we've met up with another&#13;
Form of reverent architecture ...&#13;
We are told it's caUed a "Stave Church"&#13;
For its boards aU stand on end.&#13;
Cleverly they're fabricated&#13;
What ingenious construction' ..&#13;
Built to raise your eyes tow~rds' heaven&#13;
Built to shed the winter's snows. '&#13;
N~w this old ~orwegian Stave Church&#13;
Brmgs nostalgic recollections&#13;
Of the places where we've worshipped&#13;
Of the churches that we've seen. '&#13;
O1ristian churches without number&#13;
Notre Dame. Westminster Abbey •.&#13;
Washington's National Cathedral&#13;
Cbrist's birthplace in Bethlehem:&#13;
A long tabin in Alask.&#13;
Store!ronl Lutheran Ch~ in Hong K&#13;
Denver's Red Rock Amphitheater ong,&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 9&#13;
November 23, 1970&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NOEll&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
STAFF&#13;
D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, ken Konkol&#13;
Marc Eisen, Arthur Gruhl, Walter Breach&#13;
Sven Tarrs&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Bill Jacoby, JohnPotent~&#13;
N~ws Editor&#13;
. Sports Editor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Published weekly by the studen~ 01 the ti~iversity. "! W~&#13;
P&#13;
kside Kenosha Wisconsin, 5314(). MaIlIng address IS Parksida s N-· .... • r si " . d edito lal t I ho --~,.., 3700 Washingtoo Rd., Kenosha. BUSiness an I rr e ep ne number b ...&#13;
4861, ext. :16, and 652-4177.&#13;
LETTERS to the Editor&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
Re: The letter of Louie Petts 6755808&#13;
USNRR, which appeared in Newscope,&#13;
Nov. 16. .&#13;
Congratulations on receiving your check&#13;
Nov. 6. Your success may be an exception&#13;
instead 01 the rule.&#13;
Personally I haven't been so lucky.&#13;
When I checked with Student Records to&#13;
find out about my VA check I was informed&#13;
that my records had been submitted&#13;
on Oct. 19. On Friday, Nov. 13, I&#13;
went to the local V.A. offi ce in th~ court&#13;
house. There Iwas informed that they had&#13;
called Milw.ukee six (6) limes that&#13;
morning (or six Parkside vets who had not&#13;
received their checks. Finally they quit&#13;
making individual phone calls and began&#13;
to list the complaints, they were going to&#13;
make one call late in the day.&#13;
December is no joke. Two years ago&#13;
some vets got their first check two days&#13;
before Christmas.&#13;
The woman at the VA said that she&#13;
could not pinpoint the fault, but she said&#13;
she was going to ask the Milwaukee office&#13;
to investigate the matter. She also said&#13;
that she had heard that the Student&#13;
Records office had delayed submitting the&#13;
necessary forms so as to save time&#13;
correcting drops and transfers, but they&#13;
were not supposed to do that.&#13;
Yours truly,&#13;
RA16720257&#13;
(Name withheld)&#13;
Where we went one Easter morn.&#13;
Christian Science Church in Boston,&#13;
Salt Lake City's Mormon Temple,&#13;
Mexlcana's Quaclalupe,&#13;
Riverside ChurCh in New York.&#13;
Mifiosionary Church on Mauii&#13;
Chapel at United Nations, '&#13;
Ciose to h,ome Chicago Temple,&#13;
Cluldhood s church on Christmas Eve.&#13;
The High Altar in St. Peter's&#13;
Made 01 gold and alabaster&#13;
Private chapels, tabernacl~&#13;
Prayer nooks in the c·acaco~bs.&#13;
And the church where Albert Schweitzer&#13;
Often went to play the organ ...&#13;
What a privilege it was lor&#13;
Me to play that organ, too!&#13;
~en trn:re .were non-Christian Temples&#13;
WIth. theIr d:llerent rules and cultures,&#13;
Urulled by One Creator&#13;
But with Prophets of th~ir own.&#13;
David's Tomb Room in Jerus'lem&#13;
The G~eat. ~lue Mosque in Istanb~l!&#13;
th~ Ba Hal World Faith in Haila .&#13;
Hmdu Shrines in Singapore. - ,&#13;
Temples shelt'ring jeweled Buddhas&#13;
Shmto ~hrines for contemplation, •&#13;
Many-tiered Chinese pagodas&#13;
W.t Arum in Bangkok Th '1' d M k'd ' alan, an m chooses - each his 0&#13;
. wo.&#13;
So we stand belore the altar&#13;
In thIS. old Norwegian Stave Ch h&#13;
And With loving hearts we thinkuro~ ,&#13;
Our own church and folks back home.&#13;
Dear Sir:&#13;
I agree completely With the IeUe&#13;
censored Ken Konkol lor his PUblic: ~&#13;
01 immaturity. Why Konkol'. ......&#13;
deficiencies must be foisted upon::::&#13;
sludents- at our expense_ is beY!IIII&#13;
His apparently unceasing e!fortl ~~&#13;
sludent and fa~ulty morals certaiaII.&#13;
this campus little good.&#13;
In a recent column Konkol ~ ..&#13;
he was arrogant because he bad !hilI&#13;
years. Gee, what impressive ~&#13;
Sincer.ly-.&#13;
E. B. Tey,JiIIa&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
In response to Mr. Petts (wIKi ....&#13;
dubious pleasure 01 knowing his&#13;
number) whose letter appeared II•&#13;
column, I would like to get a rew..&#13;
straight.&#13;
First, I'm sorry il Imisplaced tII!'"&#13;
of holding up veteran's paperworlt II.&#13;
wrong office - Student Aflairs iDslsIU&#13;
Student Records - the lonner "".&#13;
office I was directed to ask&#13;
concerning VA. benefits.&#13;
Second, I thank him lor his ...&#13;
approach to the problem 01lindinll..&#13;
the paperwork is handled, both hereill.&#13;
the V.A.&#13;
Third, Iwant to point out that ~&#13;
he got his check on the 6th of N.....&#13;
mosf 01 the vets I've talked to got M&#13;
around the 13th, midway between(Jd*&#13;
and December. As Isaid belore til! IsII&#13;
VA Office told me it would lAkl! .-..&#13;
month .&#13;
Although I don't know the majariJ.&#13;
veteran's marital status, I do bloW l1li&#13;
there are some 01 us wbo are IIIIIlil&#13;
which means financi.1 hardship DIll.&#13;
for ourselves, but lor our lamiliel •&#13;
Another point is that the ooly time-:&#13;
swning part 01 the lorms to be -:.&#13;
looking up the number of eredib&#13;
taken and addressing the ......&#13;
Granted, for one person this migbt ..&#13;
quite a while. If so she should ba"&#13;
=&#13;
wh~n so many people depend ..&#13;
money. . •&#13;
And last 01 all, I'd like to clue~.&#13;
Louie, Ted and I aren't in the ..&#13;
crying, just airing a view that ,most II",&#13;
vets we know support. It's posstble!,,"...&#13;
sowell ofl finaancially th.tyuu~ t III&#13;
an unneccessary period of ~~ItiJC.&#13;
most 01 us aren't in that POSltl~ ...&#13;
Still~&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
The Tension Remains&#13;
feel isn't a tension at all. Maybe it's the&#13;
tud nt revolution that is apparent in this&#13;
bly more to come.&#13;
Correction&#13;
ito of th • PE received and printed some int&#13;
information in I ·t week' i ue. Vice-Chancellor Brockman is&#13;
wn r th University Boo tore . Howard Thielen is the&#13;
&lt; ll lH 111 IH\\ ,\ Y&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
national trea ure&#13;
ty " pecial wave-length" wa s&#13;
operating when we were in the Fant.oft&#13;
lave church about five miles south of&#13;
Bergen. As we walked around inside I&#13;
gently touched the wood which had been&#13;
cut from the for t in the thirteenth cen- tury. I thought of ·orway's thousand years&#13;
m Christian hi tory · . . . of the many&#13;
generations which had worshiped in this&#13;
pla~e. And I tho~ht of the many other churches , lrs. Gruhl and I had visited.&#13;
I said to lrs. Gruhl, "Ruth, please leave&#13;
me alone for a few minutes ... I want to&#13;
record my thoughts right now." She was&#13;
familiar with requests such as this and&#13;
said," ay, dear ... see you later.'" She&#13;
went outsid and walked around the&#13;
grounds.&#13;
, '°"' I had the church to myself and&#13;
ta ed to the tape recorder which I always&#13;
carry with me when on a trip. Tha t little&#13;
ny ha a wonderful memory and a month later, when we were back home I&#13;
played the tape ... and this is what I h~d&#13;
recorded. I will imply title it . _ .&#13;
TH E STA\'ECHURCH&#13;
Th ·e next thoughts are about&#13;
Churches . ..&#13;
Ruth and I have been in many&#13;
In our travels 'round the world.&#13;
Here we've met up with another&#13;
Form of reverent architecture&#13;
We ~re told it's called a "Slav~ Church"&#13;
For its boards all stand on end.&#13;
everly they're fabric ated ...&#13;
What ingeruous construction&#13;
Built to raise your eyes towa.rds. heaven,&#13;
Built to shed the winter's snows.&#13;
'ow thi old :orwegian lave Church&#13;
Brmgs nostalgic recollections&#13;
the places where we've worshipped,&#13;
the churches that we've seen.&#13;
Chri tian churches \\-ithout number&#13;
:01r1: Dam~, Westminster Abbey, '&#13;
\\ ashmgton s 'ational Cathedral&#13;
Chri t's birthplace in Bethlehem'.&#13;
A long cabin in Alaska&#13;
torefront Lutheran Ch~rch in Hong Ko&#13;
Denver's Red Rock Amphitheater ng,&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 9&#13;
November 23, 1970&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NOEil&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
Sven Taffs&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Bill Jacoby, JohnPotente&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
_ Photographers&#13;
STAFF&#13;
D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, Ken Konkol&#13;
Marc Eisen, Arthur Gruhl, Walter Breach&#13;
Published weekly by the studen~ of the U~iversity_ of Wisco~inParkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin, 531~- Ma1hng a~dr~s is Parks1de's Newscope&#13;
3700 Washington Rd., Kenosha. Business and editorial telephone number is 6Si&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
LETTERS to the Editor&#13;
To the Editors: Re: The letter of Louie Petts 6755808&#13;
USNRR, which appeared in Newscope,&#13;
Nov. 16. Congratulations on receiving your check&#13;
Nov. 6. Your success may be an exception&#13;
instead of the rule. Personally I haven't been so lucky.&#13;
When I checked with Student Records to&#13;
find out about my V.A. check I was informed&#13;
that my records had been submitted&#13;
on Oct. 19. On Friday, Nov. 13, I&#13;
went to the local V.A. office in the court&#13;
house. There I was informed that they had&#13;
called Milwaukee six (6) times that&#13;
morning for six Parkside vets who had not&#13;
received their checks. Finally they quit&#13;
making individual phone calls and began&#13;
to list the complaints, they were going to&#13;
make one call late in the day.&#13;
December is no joke. Two years ago&#13;
some vets got their first check two days&#13;
before Christmas.&#13;
The woman at the V.A. said that she&#13;
could not pinpoint the fault, but she said&#13;
she was going to ask the Milwaukee office&#13;
to investigate the matter. She also said&#13;
that she had heard that the Student&#13;
Records office had delayed submitting the&#13;
necessary forms so as to save time&#13;
correcting drops and transfers, but they were not supposed to do that.&#13;
Yours truly,&#13;
RA16720257&#13;
(Name withheld)&#13;
Where we went one Easter morn.&#13;
Christian Science Church in Boston&#13;
Salt Lake City's Mormon Temple '&#13;
Mexicana's Quadalupe, '&#13;
Riverside Church in New York.&#13;
Mi~sionary Church on Mauii&#13;
Chapel at United Nations '&#13;
CJ~e to ~ome Chicago T~mple,&#13;
Cluldhood s church on Christmas Eve.&#13;
The High Altar in St. Peter's&#13;
Made of gold and alabaster&#13;
Private chapels, tabernacl~&#13;
Prayer nooks in the cacaco~bs.&#13;
And the church where Albert Schweitzer&#13;
Often went to play the organ . . . What a privilege it was for&#13;
Me to play that organ, too!&#13;
~en th~re _were non-Christian Temples&#13;
W1!11. their d:fferent rules and cultures&#13;
Unified by One Creator '&#13;
But with Prophets of their own.&#13;
David's Tomb Room in Jerus'lem&#13;
The G~eat_ ~Jue Mosque in Istanb~l.&#13;
~e Ba Ha~ Wo~ld Faith in Haifa, · Hindu Shrines in Singapore.&#13;
Te~ples shelt'ring jeweled . Buddhas&#13;
Shinto ~brines for contemplation, • Many-tiered Chinese pagodas&#13;
WMat k~rudm in Bangkok, Thail~nd an in chooses - each hi • . sown.&#13;
So w~ stand before the altar&#13;
In this_ old Norwegian Stave Church&#13;
And with loving hearts we think f ,&#13;
Our own church and folks back h:me.&#13;
Dear Sir:&#13;
I agree completely with the letter&#13;
cen~ored Ke~ Konkol for his public~&#13;
of immaturity. Why Konkol's ·&#13;
deficiencies must be foisted upon C:::&#13;
s~dents- at our expense- is beyotrJ mt&#13;
His apparently unceasing efforts lo lotir&#13;
student and fa~ulty morale Certainly de&#13;
this campus little good.&#13;
In a recent column Konkol asserted&#13;
he was arrogant because he had uveci 21&#13;
years. Gee, what impressive credenliali&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
Sin&lt;:erely YGIII.&#13;
E.B. Tey,&#13;
In response to Mr. Petts (who &amp;aYellli&#13;
dubious pleasure of knowing his&#13;
number) whose letter appeared in llil&#13;
column, I would like to get a few fn&#13;
straight.&#13;
First, I'm sorry if I misplaced the blami&#13;
of holding up veteran's paperwork to&#13;
wrong office - Student Affairs instead fl&#13;
Student Records - the former ns&#13;
office I was directed to ask quelia&#13;
concerning V.A. benefits.&#13;
Second1 I thank him for his sd&#13;
approach to the problem of finding out lloJ&#13;
the paperwork is handled, both here ind&#13;
the V.A.&#13;
Third, I want to point out that al~&#13;
he got his check on the 6th of Novemhlr&#13;
most of the vets I've talked to got&#13;
around the 13th, midway between Octtk&#13;
and December. As I said before the&#13;
V.A. Office told me it would take atxMi a&#13;
month.&#13;
Although I don't know the majonty fl&#13;
veteran's marital status, I do kno&#13;
there are some of us who are mamit.&#13;
which means financial hardship not&#13;
for ourselves, but for our families&#13;
Another point is that the only time OIi"&#13;
swning part of the forms to be sm! 1&#13;
looking up the number of credits&#13;
taken and addressing the eD\'tkf5&#13;
Granted, for one person this mighl&#13;
quite a while. If so she should ha1e&#13;
when so many people depend Oil&#13;
money.&#13;
And last of all I'd like to clue l&#13;
Louie, Ted and i aren't in the halit&#13;
crying, just airing a view that mii;t rl&#13;
vets we know support. It's possible~&#13;
so well off finaancially that yuu ~oo 1&#13;
an unneccessary period of ~~itin&amp;-&#13;
most of us aren't in that pos1llon Hank&#13;
Sti!ID&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing &#13;
THORN&#13;
International Dictionary - Unabridged&#13;
de~mes It a~: "a statement or represen.&#13;
tation r,ubhshed withoot just cause or&#13;
excuse. This representation should also&#13;
have an element of falsehood. O.K.. Fran.&#13;
~ho have I told unwarranted lieS about?&#13;
Speak. me no generalities. speak me&#13;
specifics. I and most people at this&#13;
umvers.'ty are intellectually,&#13;
academically, and emotionally fit to&#13;
~ecogruze something wrong when they see&#13;
It. Also, believe it or not, most of tlie&#13;
student~ and all of the faculty at this&#13;
Univer-sity do pay taxes. Next time yoo&#13;
decide to cut somebody down get yoor&#13;
facts straight before you start. However,&#13;
once again, I compliment you on baying&#13;
the courage to sign your name to your&#13;
convictions· Well done.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
An independent poll was conducted last&#13;
week concerning reader reaction to Thorn.&#13;
It was independent since it was conducted&#13;
by a person not on the staff and personally&#13;
antagonistic to my own column. Twentyfive&#13;
students and 7 faculty were in favor of&#13;
Thorn. 22.students and 5 faculty thought it&#13;
could be improved (usually these&#13;
suggestions cancelled each other out.),&#13;
and 61 students had no opinion!&#13;
+ +.+&#13;
Keep those cards and letters coming in.&#13;
How are we going to know what you want&#13;
to see unless you write and let us know.&#13;
Don't leave it to the other guy, he's as&#13;
apathetic as you used to be. Any comments&#13;
concerning Thorn should be addressed to&#13;
me so that they might be handled more&#13;
efficiently and answered in the same issue&#13;
ra~her than subsequent ones.&#13;
"&#13;
o&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
..&#13;
'C&#13;
J.T.&#13;
I smiled at you&#13;
and discovered life anew,&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
and the times repeated,&#13;
bringing hack the era when&#13;
the Sun ruled the world.&#13;
And although I found the universe&#13;
a vise upon the marrow of my soul,&#13;
I followed you,&#13;
seeking life anew,&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
. and the times repea ted,&#13;
bringing hacl\ the era when&#13;
the Sun ruled the world.&#13;
My touch reached. implored.&#13;
could you understand the universe&#13;
of me&#13;
the sea of darkness and bright suns&#13;
raging all around you&#13;
grasping at life anew.&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
and the limes repeated&#13;
bringing back the era when&#13;
the Sun ruled the world? .&#13;
Somehow, though I clung (crying, "I want you! "seeking a hfeanew)&#13;
your person stung the force&#13;
of my life • I&#13;
you didn't know (you can't! you couldn t.)&#13;
Do you even want to know&#13;
the Wliverse of me,&#13;
this sea of darkness&#13;
and bright suns&#13;
raging all around you&#13;
grasping life anew,&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
and the limes repeated&#13;
bringing hack the era&#13;
when the Sun ruled the&#13;
world?&#13;
But you took my gold and made it tinselsaw&#13;
the beautiful ocean I offered and&#13;
made it a mud puddle ...&#13;
nes For Recognition&#13;
W•• hlngt .... D.C. - (I.P) - In one of the&#13;
first court cases to deal with the&#13;
procedural rights of political .tudent&#13;
organizations attempting to gain official&#13;
recognition. a U.S. District Court judge in&#13;
Connecticut has ordered Central Cooneclicut&#13;
State College to hold a hearing on&#13;
whether to recognize a local chapter of the&#13;
Students for a Democratic Society.&#13;
The chapter complied with college&#13;
procedures in applying for recognition.&#13;
and stated that the local group did not&#13;
follow dictates from any national&#13;
organization.&#13;
The dean of students. three faculty and&#13;
four students voted to recommend that the&#13;
administration grant recognition.&#13;
Nevertheless. President Don James&#13;
denied recognition on the grounds that in&#13;
his view the aims of the national SDS. and&#13;
the charter of the CoUege were incompatible.&#13;
The court's decision concluded that no&#13;
group is enlilled per se to recognition. and&#13;
did not deny the president's authority to&#13;
refuse an application.&#13;
It ruled, however. that once a school&#13;
allows student groups to organize and&#13;
grants recognition to them, it must apply&#13;
constitutional safeguards to aUgroups that&#13;
seek recognition process and a fair application&#13;
of these standards to all groups.&#13;
Suits brought by students against public&#13;
coUege administrators. listed by the&#13;
American Association of State Colleges&#13;
and Universities, include those that claim&#13;
the administration was too lax with&#13;
dissenters as well as those that argue&#13;
unduly harsh measures were used against&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
£~&#13;
dissenters.&#13;
Students and parents 01 students .t OhIO&#13;
Slate University sought injunctions&#13;
agamst a p-ofessor. several teach1f~&#13;
assistants. and four students'&#13;
organizations whom they clerm led activities&#13;
which resulted m dasruption on&#13;
campus&#13;
The Franklin Counly court granled an&#13;
injunclion against specified distrupuve&#13;
action by most of 1he mdivlduals 1O\'oIved.&#13;
but did not enjoin three of Ihe student&#13;
organizations because of legal&#13;
techrucalihes involved&#13;
SwuupiJe gL,ri.Jb&#13;
&amp;' (jru.nlwweJ&#13;
PARTS&#13;
The letterS to' the editors were extionally&#13;
good last week as they usual1y&#13;
cep Iwas especially happy to see the one :;e'"Name withheld by request" who&#13;
tated some things that I have heen trying&#13;
s rd to do all the time. that we do have.&#13;
hary good Psyc. teachers at this school&#13;
~en though the whole department has&#13;
beengiven a bad name by a few students&#13;
whOrao into a great deal of difficulty with&#13;
certain mstructors. However, response&#13;
!rom individual students in naming our&#13;
competent instructors IS woefully slow.&#13;
'\bey seem more inclined to respond to&#13;
... tructors on the other side of the scale.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
There was another letter printed&#13;
alongside my last column that was also&#13;
very good from Fran Jaeschke. She must&#13;
be commended on her lack of apathy. I&#13;
found her metaphor "crown of thorns"&#13;
very appropriate if she meant that as&#13;
.symbolicof the sins of the administra tion&#13;
falling on the heads of faculty and&#13;
slllOOnts. If Mrs. -Jaeseke thinks the&#13;
University audience deserves 'better',&#13;
whydoesn't she write her own column. If&#13;
Mrs. Jaeschke was more than a casual&#13;
reader of this publication she would not&#13;
havewrilten her fourth paragraph. But for&#13;
the inattentive who missed the same article&#13;
that Fran did. I suggest you find a&#13;
copy of the October 26 issue which explained&#13;
exactly that I write only what&#13;
peopleImeet during the week would like&#13;
to see in the next issue, what they believe, I&#13;
would also suggest that Mrs. Jaeschke&#13;
look up the definition of 'Iibel' in the dietionarv&#13;
as I did. Webster's Third New&#13;
------&#13;
_,"-,lOll •&#13;
VI .1Id ftAU IlUlISlOCl&#13;
:SOZ1 ·15TH.T&#13;
FRUlT BASKETS ANn CANDY&#13;
Delivu ACTOlI$ Town or ~ lhe World&#13;
«37· :nnd Av.nu.&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin 53140&#13;
FmV.k""J&#13;
654-0774&#13;
e&#13;
''''=&#13;
as1ers&#13;
Supper Club&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDARED SNAPPER&#13;
wit+. Almondine Sauce&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIM.E RIB&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
to Students and&#13;
Faculty&#13;
CrHllllt Gemololilt-Ce:rtlhed D" .. OII,olol"'&#13;
(Must Show 1.0.)&#13;
Fairtrade Y~gg(JnA,&#13;
excepted DIAMOND CONSULTANTS&#13;
1040&#13;
Sheridan Rd.&#13;
. -&#13;
Ph. 654·1375&#13;
WATCHU=,CU'AII DIrT. J&#13;
-- - _--.. w.tcllft - k_lry "J__ - ,,-... D~",", Sf" ....&#13;
."'_ . _ ymplc:tl' .lI:p."&#13;
C-w_I ... Tl_ Dept&#13;
wc-I_ ,_. Dt~f"""&#13;
---CHIN.-=---] __.- _...,...--... _.-...........&#13;
IIIDAl&#13;
lECISTU&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
HEAVIED-oUT&#13;
Playing games&#13;
with my mind&#13;
searching to find&#13;
the perfect response&#13;
to the groping life&#13;
in which I am myself.&#13;
I decide&#13;
and can go no longer&#13;
hide&#13;
the burning heart&#13;
on my face&#13;
and your strength gives it&#13;
warmth&#13;
and power to stand&#13;
amidst&#13;
the crumbling&#13;
walls.&#13;
Every road&#13;
upon which&#13;
I walk&#13;
Love finds me&#13;
and makes me&#13;
suffer!&#13;
To be friends with love&#13;
is a demanding life&#13;
full of suffering -&#13;
Although I undergo&#13;
this passion,&#13;
Somehow, someway&#13;
I found my peace.&#13;
_ and I'm free!&#13;
I'm Free!&#13;
I'm free at last!&#13;
o Freedom, let me be;&#13;
o Freedom, let me love!&#13;
Let me fr the world!&#13;
THORN&#13;
pART 8&#13;
The letters to the editors were extionallY&#13;
good last week as they usually&#13;
cep 1 was especially happy to see the one&#13;
are. "Name withheld by request" who&#13;
b~ted some things that I have been trying&#13;
~ d to do all the time, that we do have . ~ good Psyc. teachers at this school&#13;
~~en though the whole department has&#13;
been given a bad name by a few studei:its&#13;
who ran into a great deal of difficulty with&#13;
certain instructors. However, response&#13;
from individual students in naming our&#13;
mpetent instructors is woefully slow.&#13;
;ey seem more inclined to respond to&#13;
mstructors on the other side of the scale.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
There was another letter printed&#13;
alongside my last column that was also&#13;
very good from Fran Jaeschke. She must&#13;
be commended on her lack of apathy. I&#13;
found her metaphor "crown of thorns"&#13;
very appropriate if she meant that as&#13;
·symbolic of the sins of the administration&#13;
falling on the heads of faculty and&#13;
students. If Mrs. Jaescke thinks the&#13;
University audience deserves 'better',&#13;
why doesn't she write her own column. If&#13;
Mrs. Jaeschke was more than a casual&#13;
reader of this publication she would not&#13;
have written her fourth paragraph. But for&#13;
the inattentive who missed the same article&#13;
that Fran did, I suggest you find a&#13;
copy of the October 26 issue which explained&#13;
exactly that I write only what&#13;
people I meet d~ring the week wou~d like&#13;
to see in the next issue, what they believe. I&#13;
would also suggest that Mrs. Jaeschke&#13;
Jook up the definition of 'libel' in the dictionary&#13;
as I did. Webster's Third New&#13;
I smiled at you&#13;
Internat~onal Dictionary • Unabridged&#13;
de~nes it as: "a statement or representation&#13;
F,bli~hed without just cause or excuse. This representation should also&#13;
have an element of falsehood. O.K., Fran&#13;
~ho have I told unwarranted lies about?&#13;
Spea_k_ me ·no generalities, speak me&#13;
s~c1f1c~. I and most people at this&#13;
umvers_ity are intellectually,&#13;
acader~ucally, and emotionally fit to&#13;
~ecogruze something wrong when they see&#13;
it. Also, believe it or not, most of Uie&#13;
students and all of the faculty at this&#13;
University do pay taxes. Next time you&#13;
decide to cut somebody down get your&#13;
facts straight before you start. However, once again, I compliment you on having&#13;
the courage to sign your name to your convictions - Well done.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
An independent poll was conducted last&#13;
week concerning reader reaction to Thorn.&#13;
It was independent since it was conducted&#13;
by a person not on the staff and personally&#13;
antagonistic to my own column. Twentyfive&#13;
students and 7 faculty were in favor of&#13;
Thorn, 22 .students and 5 faculty thought it&#13;
could be improved ( usually these&#13;
suggestions cancelled each other out.),&#13;
and 61 students had no opinion!&#13;
+ +.+&#13;
Keep those cards and letters corning in. How are we going to know what you want&#13;
to see unless you write and let us know.&#13;
Don't leave it to the other guy, he's as&#13;
apathetic as you used to be. Any comments&#13;
concerning Thorn should be addressed to&#13;
me so that they might be handled more&#13;
efficiently and answered in the same issue&#13;
rather than subsequent ones.&#13;
,, J.T.&#13;
0&#13;
I&#13;
and discovered life anew,&#13;
.. -&#13;
~&#13;
IC&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
and the times repeated,&#13;
bringing back the era when&#13;
the Sun ruled the world.&#13;
And although I found the universe&#13;
a vise upon the marrow of my soul,&#13;
I followed you,&#13;
seeking life anew,&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
and the times repeated,&#13;
bringing ba~ the era when&#13;
the Sun ruled the world.&#13;
My touch reached, implored,&#13;
could you understand the universe&#13;
of me the sea of darkness and bright suns&#13;
raging all around you&#13;
grasping at life anew,&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
and the times repeated&#13;
bringing back the era when&#13;
the Sun ruled the world'? . . Somehow, though I clung (crying, "I want you!" seeking a hfe anew)&#13;
your person stung the force&#13;
of my life , 1&#13;
you didn't know (you can't! you couldn t.)&#13;
Do you even want to know&#13;
the universe of me,&#13;
this sea of darkness&#13;
and bright suns raging all around you&#13;
grasping life anew,&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
and the times repeated&#13;
bringing back the era when the Sun ruled the&#13;
world'?&#13;
But you took my gold and made it tinsel - saw the beautiful ocean I offered and&#13;
made it a mud puddle · · ·&#13;
HEAVIED-OUT&#13;
Playing games&#13;
Every road&#13;
upon which&#13;
I walk&#13;
Love finds me with my mind&#13;
searching to find&#13;
the perfect response&#13;
to the groping life&#13;
in which I am myself.&#13;
I decide&#13;
and can go no longer&#13;
hide&#13;
the burning heart&#13;
on my face&#13;
and your strength gives it&#13;
warmth&#13;
and power to stand&#13;
amidst&#13;
the crumbling&#13;
walls.&#13;
and makes me&#13;
suffer!&#13;
To be friends with Jove&#13;
is a demanding life&#13;
full of suffering -&#13;
Although I undergo&#13;
this passion,&#13;
Somehow, someway&#13;
I found my peace,&#13;
and I'm free!&#13;
I'm Free!&#13;
I'm free at last!&#13;
o Freedom, Jet me be;&#13;
o Freedom, let me love!&#13;
Let me fr the world!&#13;
Wa hington. D.C. - ( I.Pl - In one of the&#13;
first court ca e to deal with the&#13;
procedural rights or political tudent&#13;
organiz.ations attempting to gain official&#13;
recognition, a U S. District Court judge in&#13;
Connecticut has ordered Central Connecticut&#13;
State College to hold a hearing on whether to recognize a local chapter of the&#13;
Students for a Democratic Society. The chapter complied \\ith college&#13;
procedures in applying for recognition. and stated that the local group did not&#13;
follow dictates from any national&#13;
organiz.ation.&#13;
The dean of students, three faculty and&#13;
four students voted to recommend that the&#13;
administration grant recognition .&#13;
Nevertheless. President Don James&#13;
denied recognition on the grc.unds that m&#13;
his view the aims of the national D and&#13;
the charter of the College were incompatible.&#13;
&#13;
The court's decision concluded that no&#13;
group is entitled per se lo recognition, and&#13;
did not deny the presid nt's authority to&#13;
refuse an application. It ruled, however, that once a chool&#13;
allows student groups to organize and&#13;
grants recognition to them, it must apply&#13;
constitutional safeguards to all groups that&#13;
seek recognition process and a fair air&#13;
plication of these standards to all group .&#13;
Suits brought by students aga inst public&#13;
college administrators listed by the&#13;
American Association or tale Colleges&#13;
apd Universities, include those that claim&#13;
the administration was too Jax with&#13;
dissenters as well as tho e that argue&#13;
unduly harsh measures were u ed against&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
£~ FRUIT BASKETS ANil CANDY&#13;
Deliver A""* Town or ""-th« Worid&#13;
campu&#13;
Toe Franklin ount · court r ntcd n inJunction gains! ified d trupt1v&#13;
action by m _t of the individ im·ol\'cd,&#13;
but did not enjoin 1hr of th tu t&#13;
or anization. bl.'cau or le I&#13;
technfcalitie in\'Ol\'l'd&#13;
SumupiJe gforuts&#13;
&amp; (j,eoJz.owe.s&#13;
3021 • 7,TH ST&#13;
KIE:NOSHA , WISCONSIN ,Jt40&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Free Delit·ery&#13;
654-0774&#13;
3s1ers 8040&#13;
Sheridon Rd. . -&#13;
DIA.MOHD CONSULTANTS&#13;
Supper Club Ph. 654-1375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDAREO SNAPPER&#13;
with Almondine Souce&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIM.E RIB&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
to Students and&#13;
WATCHlS=:J~llt Dll'T. j&#13;
..... . A ~ Wit, ti - '""''" 111--• ._,,.. D -4 Sett'°'t • .,... • .......,. C• pktr ~p,u car.-.. -. • • 'f't Orpt&#13;
L-• lt111g l)e&#13;
IIIOAL&#13;
UGISTU&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Facult Y Gndo,e Gemol cht,Cut1f1cd 0,1111on1olo ilt&#13;
(Must Show 1.0.)&#13;
Fairtrade y~llSo-ru excepted It does iNh a d,fferenc• whre rou sltopf &#13;
From Other Campuses&#13;
Grand Forks, N D - (I.P.) - Two&#13;
national magazines, Readers Digest and&#13;
The AUantic lonthly, bave published&#13;
artkles praising errorts or the University&#13;
of 'orth Dakota New School of Behavioral&#13;
tudles in Education to remodel&#13;
elern ntary school education in the state&#13;
along informal lin&#13;
Th megann Ieeture articles based&#13;
on a thrff-and·a-ball·year study of the&#13;
education of educators, commissioned by&#13;
the arnegie Corporahon Cbarles&#13;
,'berm n, • member of Fortune&#13;
m saIl . rei of editors, and hi wife,&#13;
Arl oe, conducted the tudy and each&#13;
uthoro&lt;! on or the erucl&#13;
+ + +&#13;
~th ny. W Va - II p) - tudent&#13;
tloard of cverne-s offiCIals l\OIIi bave&#13;
ofh pa a'·allabl. ,n the Bethany&#13;
OIl r mbl t Administration bu,ldlng&#13;
l'OUr lncrt"a ent 1 on shared&#13;
de lon·m k,n by tall and students."&#13;
Rubert nderoo. 'ii Pres'dent and&#13;
t n 01 • tud~ts. td In an lOt rvitlA' He&#13;
id .h, mo heralds the decade's&#13;
,wut hll lrmd m tudent abllll1es, in·&#13;
h-n" h nt·...I 4tnd con equ ot new&#13;
tllr linn u chool per onnet&#13;
"' It".J h&gt;R)!&#13;
lud,-" enter the decade of the&#13;
un . I 1 ot reaction is their response to&#13;
thl g or In tantaneou com·&#13;
munlcatlon ,'. 0 an andercox said&#13;
"R&lt;lp,d new repor\lng of developments IS&#13;
compaN~ b)' Immediate ac:tiOft from&#13;
yOung peopl&#13;
"Tr dil,QruIlly. the ''''ory tOllier had&#13;
bUilt 10 pr ur s for long·calrn&#13;
It r loon and pondering ol,mpltcations&#13;
01 , Tho&lt;Cht pr1!Ceded action '0\Ii&#13;
luden. wanl 10 rno\ quickly in a heated&#13;
Ilu lion on campu3 or elsewhere in the&#13;
nation or world. because they feel they are&#13;
a vital part of the solution. . . .&#13;
"When lhere is an explosive Situation,&#13;
educators need to have more speedy&#13;
dialogue with students 10 discuss problems&#13;
01 concern and ways to make their parueular&#13;
contrtbetlcn. The objective is not to&#13;
talk students out of doing something; but&#13;
the conversations do have the benefiCial&#13;
effecl many times of helping stuQents see&#13;
that precipitate decisions and actions are&#13;
not their most effective means of communicating&#13;
their interest and making ~eir&#13;
particular contributions to resolVIng&#13;
problems."&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Hayward, Calif. - (I.PJ - Initiation of&#13;
a new program at California Stale College.&#13;
Hayward, to aid young drug abusers was&#13;
announced recently by President Ellis E.&#13;
McCune.&#13;
He said a federal contract for $260.800&#13;
bas been awarded to the Center for Drug&#13;
Informaloon, Research and Education at&#13;
the college by the National Institute of&#13;
Mental Health. The contract provides&#13;
funds ror IS one- and two-week training&#13;
cycles planned for the year's dw-ation.&#13;
The training will vary in intensity, accordmg&#13;
to the category of the trainee: The&#13;
2~ professional and para-profess,onal&#13;
personnel to be trained will get a more&#13;
mtensi ..·e and in depth course, and wIll go&#13;
to angencies for their field experi~nce&#13;
which are in bospital or clinical settIngs.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
salt Lake City. Utah - (J.P.) -&#13;
Asserting that the University of Utah can,&#13;
in no way, impose censorship or prior&#13;
restraint upon speakers. Alfred C. Emery,&#13;
proressor of law and chairman of the&#13;
President's Commission on Speaker&#13;
Policy, recently released the comPseudo&#13;
Event Of The Week&#13;
WASHINGTON &lt;CPS) - The selective&#13;
Sl......'ce ystem has qUleUy dropped a pI",!&#13;
10 . t up "orientation camps" for men&#13;
grant('(l Consclenl1OUS obJe&lt;:tOl"status who&#13;
do not ht mto any of the standard alternatJve&#13;
""ark . "ignmenls&#13;
In a recent inlen-lew. National Director&#13;
CUrti W Tarr. the rormer president of&#13;
La'l,l,'rtnce ni"'erslty in Appleton,&#13;
Wlsconsin informally discussed his&#13;
(oehngs about the ConSCIentious Objector&#13;
Alternative Sen'ice s.ituation. currently&#13;
pending upreme Court decisions, and the&#13;
new image of the Selective Service&#13;
ytem&#13;
On lhe S&lt;H:alled "o.-ientation camps,"&#13;
Tarr explamed that a study group headed&#13;
by the Deputy Publtc Information Ollicer&#13;
ror the ) tern had corne up with the idea&#13;
01 brlngmg together men who would not&#13;
accepl the k'nd 01 alternative service job&#13;
wluch the .. local boards wanted to gi ...e&#13;
them&#13;
The purpose of these "orientation&#13;
camps" would be to help "adjust" the&#13;
rt"Calcltranls toexi Ung JOb openings, or to&#13;
pro ..·tde special work ror them.&#13;
The Idea never got too rar, though.&#13;
'a'ional Headquarters decided to hold a&#13;
conference and let some of the national&#13;
COI\SC1t'1!l1ouobjector oriented groups in&#13;
on the ,dea and see how they would nact.&#13;
Amo~ the organuations which partiCipated&#13;
10 the mid-October Washington&#13;
meet,ng were the National Interreligious&#13;
....'ce Board for Consc,entious ObJ"Ctors&#13;
the Central CommIttee for Contentious&#13;
Objectors, and the American&#13;
Froerods Ser""ce Committee. They reacted&#13;
ry badly&#13;
The Idea sounded 100 much like the old&#13;
"work camps" of World War n. men who&#13;
opposed fighting the war were auowed to&#13;
alay in what amounted to concentration&#13;
eamps. as long as they paid their ""'"&#13;
room and board&#13;
In the faclsof this unexpected opposition&#13;
from wbat offic:Jals lerm ··C. O.&#13;
agencies" Ihe planners at national&#13;
headquartera. II described by Tarr. "put&#13;
the Idea to bed and let it die in its sleep."&#13;
So the idea of bnrcinC everybody to a&#13;
camp to counsel them Is dead, though a&#13;
proposal to counsel men OIl an individual&#13;
"SOCial worker" basis ia aWl ali ...e.&#13;
(lsienaillly the plan WII flnt thought up&#13;
with the sole inlent of heIplng men who&#13;
could not flfid CO worll. Men who are&#13;
granted CO status can sometimes gain the&#13;
approval of their local board to perform&#13;
alternative service at an acency of their&#13;
own t'booIing. (n many cases however. the&#13;
local DOIrd tries _to be punitive by arbitrarily&#13;
assigning the men to some low&#13;
paying. disagreeable job. and the man&#13;
balks. If no compromise can be worked&#13;
out, the present practice is to call in an&#13;
arbitrator from State Selective Service&#13;
Headquarters. who of len winds up issuing&#13;
a final ultimatum. The proposed plan&#13;
wwld provide a tidy "out" in cases which&#13;
have reached an impasse, and yet avoid&#13;
the sticky appearance of coercion.&#13;
It was a nice idea while lliasted But it&#13;
ran up against an image problem - the&#13;
image of manipulative social engineering.&#13;
And if lbere is anything lbe present-day&#13;
managers of the draft system are conscious&#13;
of, its their image.&#13;
They very proudiy point to the lottery&#13;
selection system, the elimination of&#13;
blatant SOCial engineering in the form of&#13;
job deferments. and the request that&#13;
Congress give the President aulbority to&#13;
revoke undergradua le student&#13;
deferments as examples of the policy of&#13;
"channeling" which former Director Gen.&#13;
Lewis B. Hersey once caued, "One of lbe&#13;
major products of the selecti ...e Service&#13;
Classification process."&#13;
Indeed. very few of the blatantly&#13;
repressive polic:Jes wbich guided General&#13;
Hersey'S 3()-.year administration of the&#13;
draft find many supporters around&#13;
national headquarters bad less than 200&#13;
employees) the national director sets the&#13;
tone for the agency."&#13;
Tarr was asked about this shift if. the&#13;
agency's image and the analysis put&#13;
forward by some draft counseling&#13;
organizations tbat the increased effort at&#13;
image-building is mosUy designed to buy&#13;
the system some time by defusing public&#13;
indignalidh in lbe coming two or three&#13;
years while the Nixon administration&#13;
moves towards its goal 01 a "zero draft."&#13;
He said, "No, I believe it is very true&#13;
that the measures we ha ...e laken bave&#13;
10000eredour prome somewbat, but I would&#13;
ba ...e wanted to do the same things if I had&#13;
been director five years ago. II&#13;
Whatever the motivation, it's clear that&#13;
Tarr himself keeps a eloser ear to public&#13;
opinion than did his predecessor.&#13;
The CO "orientation camp" caper is an&#13;
example 01 that. It grew of a study of what&#13;
to do with the grOlliing number of COS - a&#13;
study headed by a fresh, new public&#13;
relations man who was recently a Marine&#13;
colonel. When itlool&lt;ed like the plan, which&#13;
system officials slill feel has validity.&#13;
woold run lOto some controversy, it was&#13;
dropped,&#13;
- ous report - a simple. 4-&#13;
misSion'S unamm ff 'ng the Conpage&#13;
statement. rea u;::uthe firSt and&#13;
stitutional gua:~~:ls and recognizing&#13;
fourteenth amel..... •&#13;
boundaries established by I~W. "&#13;
. the report the commISSIon&#13;
In Jfte'::'~g present sp;..ker policy and.&#13;
exerrnn d b law students on court&#13;
hada study n;.~g~r~ing Constitutional&#13;
decl~lOns th limit the power of a&#13;
prOVISIOns as ey&#13;
university to control speakers. ker&#13;
The commission also exammed. spe3U S&#13;
Iicies of a number of major .,&#13;
l::.iversilies. held ed0penr ~ea[':;,~s 1'::;;&#13;
mpus and review a IS 0 .&#13;
:Oakers who have appeared on campus m&#13;
the last five years, . .. M&#13;
"The present University policy, r.&#13;
id "has permitted some con- Emery sal • ed b&#13;
fusioo between speakers spoDSO! . Y&#13;
official University groups using Umve.rsltt&#13;
y&#13;
funds d those sponsored by pnva e&#13;
• an·th their own. funds who are&#13;
groups WI iliti permitted to use University fac I es.&#13;
"While both groups may invite speakers&#13;
the nature of the sponsorship should be&#13;
made clear," the report continues. .&#13;
"Only those commillees eslabltshed&#13;
IIDder University policies and procedu~es&#13;
to select any invile speakers and for which&#13;
University funds .,.. have been&#13;
budgeted may in.,.;te speakers to :,ppear at&#13;
the University under the aegIs of the&#13;
University and use the name of. !he&#13;
University in the invitations, advertlsmg&#13;
and program," the report continues.&#13;
• WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHo&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 ·a.m. till 11 p.m. ida"&#13;
,COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-9747&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
~ORTH. &amp; SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
tnic.Q,~ &amp;1"1. Q,t i~&#13;
be~t .... Fri. "e¥. 0\1&#13;
M4~('td tic.ld~ .Mo&#13;
A~\"lIt cleo' ... ·• !.oo&#13;
at. S1cu'td,nQ Co.&#13;
107 £4'" 'b't. J&#13;
RClc.ine.&#13;
8k..tIt£"f:¥:mI£;iM;\l. rDj·. ,q)£_- '1j:~~-~--- fA '\.Ji'VLi' U\&amp;'JfHkJt ...l.JUIK'Jle!Y"" !J«'(.&#13;
NATURE'S CH01CES~ PAOOU~~S PROVIDE ITS PRIZED FL.......OR&#13;
ONLY THE FINEST OF HOPS AND GR"IN5 ....RE USED&#13;
cP/uIid ~:Jjf!IJt in 1893&#13;
From Oiher Campuses&#13;
nation or world. because they feel they are&#13;
a \'ital part of the solution. . . "When there is an explosive situation,&#13;
educators need to have more speedy ·a1ogue ilh tudent to discuss pr~blems&#13;
ol concern and ways to make their particular&#13;
contribution The objective is not to&#13;
t.al tudent out of doing omething, ~ut&#13;
th conversations do have the beneficial&#13;
effect many times of helping stw;lents see&#13;
that precipitate deci ions and actions are&#13;
not th ·r most effective means of communicating&#13;
their interest and making ~eir&#13;
particular contributions to resolving&#13;
probl m ,"&#13;
+ -t&#13;
H yw rd, Calif. - (1.P , - Initiation of&#13;
a new pr ram at California State College,&#13;
H .,.. rd to aid young drug abusers was&#13;
nnounced recent!) by Pre ident Ellis E.&#13;
tcQme&#13;
He id a federal contract for $260,800&#13;
n awarded to the Center for Drug&#13;
Information, Research and Educ~tion at&#13;
1hc colleg by the , ·ational Institute of&#13;
ental Health. The contract provides&#13;
fu for 15 one- and two-week training&#13;
cycl planned for the year·~ dur~tion. Th training ...... n vary in intensity. acrdin&#13;
to the category of the trainee. The&#13;
2 prof ional and para-professional&#13;
rsonncl to be trained will get a more&#13;
int i\'e and in depth course. and will go&#13;
to end for their field experience&#13;
hich are in ho pital or clinical settings.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
lt La e City, tah - &lt;I.P.) -&#13;
rtin that the University of Utah can,&#13;
in no ,1,ay, un censorship or prior&#13;
'traint upon peakers, Alfred C. Emery,&#13;
prof r of law and chairman of the&#13;
Pre 1dent' Commis ion on Speaker&#13;
Policy. recently released the comPseudo&#13;
Event Of The Week&#13;
local ooard trie; . to be punitive by arbitrarily&#13;
assigning the men to some low&#13;
paying, disagreeable job, and the man&#13;
balk . If no compromise can be worked&#13;
out, the present pr-actice is to call in an&#13;
arbitrator from State Selective Service&#13;
Headquarters, who often winds up issuing&#13;
a final ultimatum. The proposed plan&#13;
would provide a tidy "out" in cases which&#13;
have reached an impasse, and yet avoid&#13;
the sticky appearance of coercion.&#13;
It was a nice idea while it lasted. But it&#13;
ran up again.5t an image problem - the&#13;
image of manipulative social engineering.&#13;
And if there is anything the present-day&#13;
managers of the draft system are conscious&#13;
of. its their image.&#13;
They very proudly point to the lottery&#13;
election system, the elimina tion of&#13;
blatant SOCJal engineering in the form of&#13;
job deferments, and the request that&#13;
Congress give the President authority to&#13;
revoke undergraduate student&#13;
deferments as examples of the policy of&#13;
"channeling'' which former Director Gen.&#13;
1,ew· B. Hersey once called, "One of the&#13;
major products of the Selective Service&#13;
C1a ification process."&#13;
Indeed, very few of the blatantly&#13;
repressive policies which guided General&#13;
Hersey's 30-year administration of the&#13;
draft find many supporters around&#13;
national headquarters had less than 200&#13;
employees) the national director sets the&#13;
tone for the agency."&#13;
Tarr was a ked about this shift in the&#13;
agency's image and the analysis put&#13;
forward by some dra ft counseling&#13;
organizations that the increased effort a t&#13;
image-building is mostly designed to buy&#13;
the ystem ome time by defusing public&#13;
indignatid'n in the coming two or three&#13;
years while the , ixon administration&#13;
moves towards its goal of a " zero draft."&#13;
He said, " 'o, 1 believe it is very true&#13;
that the measures we have taken have&#13;
lowered our profile somewhat, but I would&#13;
have wanted lo do the same things if I had&#13;
been director five years ago."&#13;
Whatever the motivation, it's clear that&#13;
Tarr himself keeps a closer ear to public&#13;
opinion than did his predecessor.&#13;
The CO "orientation camp" caper is an&#13;
example of that. It grew of a study of what&#13;
lo do with the growing number of COs - a&#13;
b.Jdy headed by a fresh, new public&#13;
relations man who was recently a Marine&#13;
colonel. When it looked like the plan, which&#13;
system off!cials still feel has validity,&#13;
would run into some controversy, it was dropped.&#13;
. us report - a simple, 4-&#13;
mission's unanuno ffirming the Conpage&#13;
statement . rea f the first and&#13;
·tuti nal guarantees o . . sti o dments and recogmzing&#13;
f Urteenth amen , 0 · blished by law.&#13;
boundanes _estathe report the commission&#13;
In ~e~~g present s~ker policy and . examm d b law students on court&#13;
had_a ~tudy n;.:g:r~ing Constitutional&#13;
decisions li ·t the power of a provisions as they mi · ersi·ty to control speakers. univ · ed speaker The commission also examm . U S&#13;
licies of a number of maJ~r . .&#13;
~iversities, h~ldedopenli ~e:r~!s 1: campus and review a s . speakers who have appeared on campus m&#13;
the last five years. . . . " Mr "The present Umversity policy, · 'd " has permitted some con- Emery sai • ed b&#13;
fusion between speakers sponso_r . Y&#13;
official University groups using Umve_rsitty&#13;
funds, and those sponsored by pnva e 'th their own funds who are groups W1 il'ti ·tted lo use University fac i es. perm1 · ·te kers "While both groups may mvi spea&#13;
the nature of the sponsorship should be&#13;
made clear," the report continues ..&#13;
"Only those committees established&#13;
W1der University policies and procedu:es&#13;
to select any invite speakers and for which&#13;
University funds . · · · have been&#13;
budgeted may invite speakers lo ~ppear at&#13;
the University under the aegis of the&#13;
University and use the name of. ~e&#13;
University in the invitations, 9:dvertismg&#13;
and program," the report continues.&#13;
St. S1&lt;1 ndi nQ Co.&#13;
101 LI"' ~. J&#13;
Re1eine&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 day,&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-97 47&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
NORTH &amp; SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
t\iitG.f &amp;\ue, °'t ,t~ be~t. . . . Fri. Mft, A.l&#13;
M-4o.1\(td titld~ ~-50&#13;
At ~t dooY . · · · • '5.00&#13;
~ tt«tfJI\~~i!NJ\L:f'a&amp;t:BGa.J&lt;i!fon 1tut, NATURE'S CHOICEST PRO'OUCTS PROVIDE ITS PRIZED FLAVOR&#13;
ONLY THE FINEST OF HOPS ANO GRAINS ARE USED&#13;
~ at//mouraf/Jmt m 189.3 &#13;
Koc~ Joins Parkside&#13;
Coach ing Staff&#13;
Jim Koch is the newest and the youngest Front Row left to right: Jan Hennes,&#13;
member of the Parkside coaching staff. He Cris V1akakis, Nancy Michals, Kathy&#13;
is the head wrestling coach, director of Doherty,NancyKonecny, Carla Ricciardi.&#13;
intramurals, and an instructor in physical Second row: Hugh Gately, Steve&#13;
education. Just a year ago the young Lamont, Ken Martins, Bob Clarke, Gary&#13;
bachelor completed work on his Master of Vincent, Jeff Jenkins, Gene Fox, Bill&#13;
Science degree at South Dakota State Berkstein, Tom Beyer, Paul Paricka.&#13;
University. While at SDSU Koch was the&#13;
assistant wrestling coach and assistant teresting season.&#13;
intramural director. He also did his uo- Coach Koch, what are the Mat Maids?&#13;
dergraduate work at South Dakota State That is a pretty easy question. The Mat&#13;
where he graduated with honors majoring Maids are a group of very attractive girls&#13;
in physical education and mathmatics. His who are interested in promoting the sport&#13;
senior year he captained the South Dakota of wrestling. Last year at South Dakota&#13;
wrestling team to a fourth place national. State Ihelped start a group of girls which&#13;
rating. Jim was a member of the South we called Mat Maids to promote our&#13;
Dakota Wrestling Federation Executive wrestling team. As a team we finished&#13;
Committee prior "to coming to Wisconsin. fourth in the national tournament and our&#13;
In an attempt to get an inside view of attendance was up about 500 per match. I&#13;
CoachKocbwe asked him a few questions: can't give the girls all the credit but Ifeel&#13;
eoach KocIi, no","that you have heen at they helped. At Parkside there are aboul&#13;
Parkside for a couple of months what do twelve girls who are interested in heing&#13;
you think of the school? Mat Maids or whatever they want to call&#13;
Myflrst impression was that! wished we themselves. They will help us with&#13;
bad a school that was established, all in publicity, promoting, cheering, and any&#13;
one spot and running smooth. I felt there other ways that they can. I hope that we&#13;
wouldbe alot of inconveniences involved can get them a distinctive and attractive&#13;
with a school in the formulative stage such uniform. I am sure that my wrestlers will&#13;
as Parkside. Now that I have developed feel the practicing is easier and more&#13;
some pride in Parkside Ithink my attitude worthwhile if they know there are people&#13;
bas changed. I can't help but wonder when who care buw they do in the meets. I enIdrive&#13;
thru the Parkside campus and see courage people to come to the first meet&#13;
some of the different departments and see our Mat Maids in action.&#13;
operating out of farmhouses how different&#13;
things will be in a few years. Then Irealize&#13;
that this difference will depend on myself&#13;
and others like me. This school isn't like&#13;
the University at Madison or other&#13;
established scbuols where when you leave&#13;
theschoolit is about the same as when you&#13;
came. Here each student and teacher is&#13;
lUying a founding role. Some day I suppose&#13;
I could he called the the Father of&#13;
Wreatling at Parkside, or any of my&#13;
wrestlers could become known as Mr.&#13;
Wrestling at Parkside. How often do you&#13;
bave an opportunity like that.&#13;
CoachKoch, what kind of a team are you&#13;
going to have this year?&#13;
A wreatling team. I think I know what&#13;
you mean, but this is a hard question to&#13;
answer. Our team is just about as new.as I&#13;
am. At the present we&gt;have three boys&#13;
working out who were on Iast years team.&#13;
They are Bill Benkstein, Paul Paricka and&#13;
Jeff Jenkins. These three were about the&#13;
best on last years team and should do a&#13;
good job for us this year. Bill was last&#13;
years captain, and most valuable wrestler,&#13;
and ia again this years captain. Among the&#13;
newcomers on the squad Ihave three boys&#13;
who I am looking for big things to come.&#13;
They are Steve Lamont a transfer from&#13;
Ricbland Center Junior College, and fresh-'&#13;
men Ken Martin from Coleman and Tom&#13;
Beyer from Clintonville. Rounding out our&#13;
team are HUgh Gately, Gene Fox, Bob&#13;
Clarke, Gary Vincent, Mark Barnhill,&#13;
George Sielski, Tony Kolriik, and Bob&#13;
Sanders.&#13;
Whether these men will be good enough&#13;
to win or not is a hard question. I don-,-t&#13;
~ how good our opposition will be or&#13;
how goodour men will look in c6mpetion. I&#13;
do knowthat my men work hard enough in&#13;
.... etice and have the character necessary&#13;
to be winners. I think it could !?" an inRepresentatives&#13;
of Reach-Out,&#13;
University of Wisconsin student&#13;
organization, work to clear up misunderstandings&#13;
tha t may exist hetween&#13;
students and citizens of the state&#13;
"classified advertisements are SO&#13;
ceots per Iioe for anyone interested.&#13;
All classifieds must be submitted to&#13;
the Newscope offices at Kenosha&#13;
campus by DOOO the Tbursday before&#13;
Monday publication.&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPORTS CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62ND ST DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
The \\B RAT "IS&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:0Q-l:30&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Brat or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
French" Fries or Onion Rin9s&#13;
Or Potato Salad&#13;
and&#13;
Schooner or aottle or Glass of a.er&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS&#13;
Available For Parties&#13;
Including Fraternity and Sorority Parties&#13;
7 p.rn. to 8&#13;
20(&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
,~~ BRAT-STOP&#13;
Northwest Corner 1-94 and Highway 50&#13;
KOCh Joins Parkside&#13;
Coaching Staff&#13;
•i&#13;
Jim Koch is the newest and the youngest&#13;
member of the Parkside coaching staff. He&#13;
is the head wrestling coach, director of&#13;
intramurals, and an instructor in physical&#13;
education. Just a year ago the young&#13;
bachelor completed work on his Master of&#13;
Science degree at South Dakota State&#13;
University. While at SDSU Koch was the&#13;
assistant wrestling coach and assistant&#13;
intramural director. He also did his undergraduate&#13;
work at South Dakota State&#13;
where he graduated with honors majoring&#13;
in physical education and mathmatics. His&#13;
senior year he captained the South Dakota&#13;
wrestling team to a fourth place national&#13;
rating. Jim was a member of the South&#13;
Dakota Wrestling Federation Executive&#13;
Committee prior "to coming to Wisconsin.&#13;
In an attempt to get an inside view of&#13;
Coach Koch we asked him a few questions:&#13;
Coach Koch, now that you have been at&#13;
Parkside for a couple of months what do&#13;
you think of the school?&#13;
My first impression was that I wished we&#13;
had a school that was established, all in&#13;
one spot and running smooth. I felt there&#13;
would be a lot of inconveniences involved&#13;
with a school in the formula live stage such&#13;
as Parkside. Now that I have developed&#13;
some pride in Parkside I think my attitude&#13;
has changed. I can't help but wonder when&#13;
I drive thru the Parkside campus and see&#13;
some of the different departments&#13;
operating out of farmhouses how different&#13;
things will be in a few years. Then I realize&#13;
that this difference will depen9 on myself&#13;
and others like me. This school isn't like&#13;
the University at Madison or other&#13;
established schools where when you leave&#13;
the school it is about the same as when you&#13;
came. Here each student and teacher is&#13;
playing a founding role. Some day I suppose&#13;
I could be called the the Father of&#13;
Wrestling at Parkside, or any of my&#13;
wrestlers could become known as Mr.&#13;
Wrestling at Parkside. How often do you&#13;
have an opportunity like that.&#13;
Coach Koch, what kind of a team are you&#13;
going to have this year?&#13;
A wrestling team. I think I know what&#13;
you mean, but this is a hard question to&#13;
answer. Our team is just about as new. as I&#13;
am. At the present we. have three boys&#13;
Working out who were on fast years team.&#13;
They are Bill Benkstein, Paul Paricka and&#13;
Jeff Jenkins. These three were about the&#13;
best on last years team and should do a&#13;
good job for us this year. Bill was last&#13;
Years captain, and most valuable wrestler,&#13;
and is again this years captain. Among the&#13;
newcomers on the squad I have three boys&#13;
who I am looking for big things to come.&#13;
They are Steve Lamont a transfer from&#13;
Richland Center Junior College, and fresh-· men Ken Martin from Coleman and Tom&#13;
Beyer from Clintonville. Rounding out our&#13;
team are Hugh Gately, Gene Fox, B_ob&#13;
Clarke, Gary Vincent, Mark Barnhill,&#13;
George Sielski, Tony Kolnik, and Bob&#13;
Sanders.&#13;
Whether these men will be good enough&#13;
to Win or not is a hard question. I don~t&#13;
know how good our opposition will be or&#13;
how good our men will look in competion. I&#13;
do know that my men work hard enough in&#13;
Jractice and have the character necessary&#13;
to be winners. I think it could ~ an inFront&#13;
Row left to right: Jan Hermes&#13;
Cris Vlakakis, Nancy Michals, Kathy&#13;
DQherty, Nancy Konecny, Carla Ricciardi.&#13;
Second row: Hugh Gately, Steve&#13;
Lamont, Ken Martins, Bob Clarke, Gary&#13;
Vincent, Jeff Jenkins, Gene Fox, Bill&#13;
Berkstein, Tom Beyer, Paul Paricka.&#13;
teresting season.&#13;
Coach Koch, what are the Mat Maids?&#13;
That is a pretty easy question. The Mat&#13;
Maids are a group of very attractive girls&#13;
who are interested in promoting the sport&#13;
of wrestling. Last year at South Dakota&#13;
State I helped start a group of girls which&#13;
we called Mat Maids to promote our&#13;
wrestling team. As a team we finished&#13;
fourth in the national tournament and our&#13;
attendance was up about 500 per match. I&#13;
can't give the girls all the credit but I feel&#13;
they helped. At Parkside there are about&#13;
twelve girls who are interested in being&#13;
Mat Maids or whatever they want to call&#13;
themselves. They will help us with&#13;
publicity, promoting, cheering, and any&#13;
other ways that they can. I hope that we&#13;
can get them a distinctive and attractive&#13;
uniform. I am sure that my wrestlers will&#13;
feel the practicing is easier and more&#13;
worthwhile if they know there are people&#13;
wr.c, care how they do in the meets. I encourage&#13;
people to come to the first meet&#13;
and see our Mat Maids in action.&#13;
Representatives of Reach-Out,&#13;
University of Wisconsin student&#13;
organization, work to clear up misunderstandings&#13;
that may exist between&#13;
students and citizens of the stat~&#13;
Classified advertisements are so&#13;
cents per line for anyone interested.&#13;
All classifieds must be submitted to&#13;
the Newscope offices at Kenosha&#13;
campus by noon the Thursday before&#13;
Monday publication.&#13;
..&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST SELECTIO&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPORTS CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62 D ST&#13;
The\\ BRAT 1115&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:0Q-1:30&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Brat or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
::renck Fries or Onion Rin9s&#13;
or Potato Salad&#13;
and&#13;
er&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00&#13;
7 p.m. to&#13;
GLASS 20(&#13;
Available For Parties&#13;
Including Fraternity ond Sorority Parties&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
"'~~ BRAT-STOP&#13;
Northwest Corner 1-94 and Highway 50&#13;
8 p.m. &#13;
Seattle Rhymes With Chicago&#13;
By JON HILLSON&#13;
CoU~lt Pres Servic:e&#13;
EATILE (CPS) - Perhaps you've&#13;
heard the n&lt;!W saying; "spread the word&#13;
about attle," and wondered exactly&#13;
what that word, Itrhymes with Chicaso.&#13;
The Seattle consp,racy trial begins on&#13;
evernber 16 In Tacoma&#13;
On April 15, 1970, w,ght people were&#13;
'nd'cted on a rederal llJ'and jury and&#13;
eharg d With con plring. combining,&#13;
conrederaling and agreeing together to&#13;
eomrm: errerses against the Uruted States&#13;
In Vlolalion 01 '8 U 371,2101. and 1361&#13;
(lIoo371 01 the Cnmmal Code imposes&#13;
a pt'nalty 01$10,000and five years in pnson&#13;
(or con ptring to Violate the laws of the&#13;
lion 2101, th Interstate RIot Act&#13;
U!&gt; d In the hlCagO onspiracy. Imposes a&#13;
. 1mliar penalty (or traveling 10, or using&#13;
the r Ihlles or. Interstate commerce with&#13;
lMo mt nt 01 in ihng. organiZing. enc(JUraglng.&#13;
Or participating in a riot. A riot&#13;
I!; any \'101("01 act by' anyone person when&#13;
thr or more persons are assembled&#13;
to\:I,tlwr&#13;
St'chon t. 1 Im~es a $10,000 Cine andor&#13;
a tco }'l'3r pri50n term for damaging&#13;
r('&lt;ltral pl'ropt'rty ,n excess of StOO.Each&#13;
d.,rl'ndant thu, r ces a potenlial $30,000&#13;
ho and '\10' nty ye:1rs in prison&#13;
Thccharg . stem from a demonstrationnot&#13;
""Id on Fcbruary t6 In protest or the&#13;
hlcago 7 cOn\'ictions, Federal in·&#13;
wctments - I'" ued at the behest 01 the&#13;
Ju, tI('~ Department came over the&#13;
prot _ts of Seattle's local prosecuting&#13;
apparatu'&#13;
lOce they were handed down. there has&#13;
tx-en a \·Irtual news black·out of in·&#13;
dlctments. the trial, pre--trial defense and&#13;
Ihe history of the local movement upon&#13;
"hlch such heavy represession has faUen,&#13;
To recapitulate, then. we go back to late&#13;
January. 1970. on the campus of the&#13;
Um\'~rslty oCWashington. in Seattle.&#13;
\\ll\TW,\ llIESE,\TILE&#13;
I.IRER,\ nON FRONT?&#13;
1\11 hael Lerner. at that time an&#13;
ass,stant prolessor or philosophy at uW,&#13;
soon to become oneof the seatUe8 - atTl,&#13;
a teacher and a vet~ran of the Bay Area&#13;
radtcal movement - began reformulating&#13;
.the "new form" of radical organization.&#13;
The autonomous collective, as it was&#13;
caned. was to serve as the arena for indJvidual&#13;
growth as well as the vehicle for&#13;
soclahst aclton. Lerner - since "not rehired"&#13;
by his departmental colleagues -&#13;
found early success in his classes.&#13;
ACtion centered around a tax·incenlive&#13;
program to the general SeatOe area, which&#13;
ha an unemployment that spans both blue&#13;
collar and ",h,te collar working class and&#13;
IS estimated to be about 15 per cent.&#13;
Crealer seattle, with a population of&#13;
about 800,000has an army 01 unemployed&#13;
'.-..orking people - industrial, with less&#13;
than a high school education and&#13;
proCes ional. with Ph Os in engineeringand&#13;
the tax lOcentwe program sought to&#13;
rai e transitional and revolutionary&#13;
demand at the same t~me.&#13;
Soon after its dissemination and coupled&#13;
....ith a public meeting, Seattle Liberation&#13;
Front ( LFl collectives were formed&#13;
round work on the incentive, as well as a&#13;
13 POint program that ranged from&#13;
m,lItanl support to black and brown selfdetermination.&#13;
and similar positions on&#13;
imperialism. to IX)lnts defending youth&#13;
culture. self·defense and an out·and·out&#13;
fight agamst male supremacy. This point&#13;
_ not lived up to by SLF leadership - was&#13;
to underpin the dissolution of the&#13;
orgaOlzahon&#13;
Work on the lax incentive program&#13;
centered on door· to-door campaigns.&#13;
leafletttng unemployment offices armed&#13;
With coffee and donuts and talking to&#13;
students, as well as pushing the program.&#13;
Leadership emerged in the Sundance&#13;
coUechvl,\- each collective took names -&#13;
a group composed of Lerner and a bulk of&#13;
the others indicted for conspiracy. Among&#13;
them - ChIp ~Iarshall, Joe Kelly, Jeff&#13;
Dowd and Mike Abels - were cited for&#13;
crossing state lines and using interstate&#13;
commerce for the inttnt of inciting riot.&#13;
The four - and several others - had·&#13;
migrated from Ithaca New York in&#13;
December of 1969 to live and do political&#13;
work 10 Seattle. Many of the "Ithaca&#13;
pt'ople" had backgrounds in SDS - some&#13;
In Weathermen - but lelt the group&#13;
because of.sharp political disagreements.&#13;
The fledgling organization called&#13;
demonstrations in protest of the conviction&#13;
01 the ChicaGO7 on February 16_&#13;
Reports on crowd size vary - the sea ttle&#13;
commercial papers, both archconservative,&#13;
guessed 2,000, others cite&#13;
3,000. The crowd erupted as it neared the&#13;
federal building as rocks broke government&#13;
windows. Police, appearing from a&#13;
""f'by building, put on, according to&#13;
many on the scene, an uncommonly brutal&#13;
show, beating non-violent demonstratrors&#13;
with vigor,&#13;
one 01 the eight conspiracy defendants&#13;
were arrested at the demonstration.&#13;
Eighty participants were, and the Seattle&#13;
investigating grand jury reported that "at&#13;
least hair' or about 1,000 in their estimate,&#13;
took an "active" part in the melee .&#13;
The massive demonstrations around the&#13;
country varied in the amount of property&#13;
damage exacted. While over 20,000&#13;
peaceful demonstrators marched in&#13;
Boston, the Associated Press chose only to&#13;
report the street-light eng.gemenl between&#13;
5,000 militants and Boston police. In&#13;
spite of the report, the Boston demonstration&#13;
gave Harvard Square its Baptism&#13;
of fire. Demonstrations in numerous cities&#13;
were larger than Seattle's, and in Berkeley&#13;
and Boston at least, the intensity of&#13;
combat and the amount of damage was&#13;
higher than seattle.&#13;
Frantic SLF activity - inwardly and&#13;
outwardly - followed. The Day Aller&#13;
(TDA) demonstration Collectives&#13;
developed rapidly, gusbing young people&#13;
_ numerous UW students - into radical&#13;
politics for the first time. Collectives&#13;
around dormitory organizing, high school&#13;
organizing, free food for street people, Ule&#13;
tax-incentive, campus work, youth culture&#13;
organizing, unemployment projects - and&#13;
the Boeing plant - gained motion in a&#13;
fever·piteh.&#13;
The freneticism of events, the rapidity&#13;
of action and growth manifest weaknesses&#13;
and faults in the SLF. The most cutting&#13;
aspect was male supremancy. Leadership&#13;
soon took the familiar male dominated&#13;
Oavor; the swaggering, hip lifestyle of the&#13;
Sundance collective veneered what many&#13;
women began to see as an oppressive,&#13;
machismo form.&#13;
This contradiction would fester internally&#13;
for months as women sought to&#13;
pt'rsonally confront and work out the&#13;
problem.&#13;
In early April, the Federal Bureau of&#13;
Investigation conducted a private press&#13;
conference with the seattle commercial&#13;
medi,a. More like a battle briefing, its&#13;
ramifications pt'rhaps will only be decided&#13;
by the Tacoma jury.&#13;
Replete with international-conspiracy&#13;
paranoia, the Seattle media began an&#13;
hysterical campaign against the SLF -&#13;
particularly through attacKs on "its selfproclaimed&#13;
leadership, Lerner, Marshall,&#13;
Dowd and Kelley.&#13;
A three part series in the Seattle Post&#13;
Intelligencer - a Hearst owned paper -&#13;
conducted a campaign, a common mixture&#13;
01 half-truth, editorial potiey and witchhunt&#13;
sensationalism - which read&#13;
something like a "conspitacy!" Factual&#13;
mistakes, misquotes, a refusal to&#13;
talk at length - in m-any cases at aII- to&#13;
SLF members, religious reliance on FBI&#13;
information and colorful layout set the&#13;
base for indictments that would come less&#13;
than a week before the invasion of Cambodia,&#13;
the killings at Jackson and Kent&#13;
States, and the Augusta uprising.&#13;
Battered on one hand by the media attack&#13;
- "outside agitator" and "hard-core&#13;
exponents of violence and chaos" cliches&#13;
- and suffering internally from too rapid&#13;
gro~!h, male supremancy, and whirlwind&#13;
activlly, the SLF was dealt a on.,.two&#13;
ptJn:h by the events surrounding Cam-&#13;
~a Week and the issuing of the conspIracy&#13;
indictments, '&#13;
It.led "r:tilitant" actions that week that&#13;
baSically mvolved the inhalation of tear&#13;
gas alter blocking tbe freeway near the&#13;
seattle campus, and began to isolate itself.&#13;
Into the summer its energy was&#13;
generally disapated. Around the country,&#13;
however, heresay and the wishful thinking&#13;
of some SLF leadership was building a&#13;
myth. Movement people began flocking to&#13;
sea~tle: Women in the SLF, however, were&#13;
beginning to pullout.&#13;
WHY A SEATILECONSPffiACY?&#13;
Knowing that seattle'S TDA was by no&#13;
means unique, why federal conspiracy&#13;
indictments, over the protests of local&#13;
prosecuting authorities? .&#13;
To begin with, seattle, an Isolated city,&#13;
has been a testing ground for repressIOn.&#13;
seattle's general strike dunng which&#13;
workers shut down the city precipitated&#13;
mass detention, deporation and busting .of&#13;
scores of militant socialist, commumst&#13;
and anarchist workers a t the end of postWorld&#13;
War I recessions.&#13;
Raids on trade unions, harassment and&#13;
repression - minimized by the media -&#13;
paved the way for then Attorney General&#13;
A. Mitchell Palmer to institute, shortly&#13;
thereafter, similar escapades on a&#13;
national level: the infamous Palmer&#13;
Raids. Thousands of militant workers&#13;
were departed and jailed - no knocks, of&#13;
course - In a 24-hour perlnd and broke the&#13;
back of the trade-union's revolutionary&#13;
wing.&#13;
seattle workers, expecting their general&#13;
strike to move na tionaUy, retreated in&#13;
militant action: their isolation set the pace&#13;
for a dryrun, and Palmer took the experiment's&#13;
results nationally.&#13;
Three decades later, hefore few people&#13;
outside of Wisconsin knew then-senator&#13;
Joseph McCarthy, local witch-hunt&#13;
bearings went on in Seattle, as the redscare&#13;
was tested in the isolated Northwest.&#13;
More than possibly, McCarthy had an eye&#13;
not only to the Pugel. Sounds, but to&#13;
reaction around the country. With "reds"&#13;
scared in seattle, a·nd with a nation&#13;
unawakened to the coming of its saddest&#13;
days, McCarthy mounted a pndium whose&#13;
base had the mark of Seattle lumber.&#13;
Thus, the Seattle Conspiracy trial not&#13;
only fits in~o a general strategy of&#13;
repression - from busting student body&#13;
president mnderates at Kent State to&#13;
Black Panthers in Detroit - but into an&#13;
historical pattern. The Nixon-AgnewMitchell&#13;
regime, its corporate, financial,&#13;
industrial and labor bureaucrat backers,&#13;
have a national strategy. .&#13;
Anchorlnn&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
ADULTS S2.50&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 10 SI.50&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 5 FREE&#13;
Prices Include flnt&#13;
dinner beverag\,&#13;
SUNDAY SPEClAL&#13;
ft.... t Chicken with&#13;
Bloeult. and gravy&#13;
SERVING: Fri. &amp; Sat. 5 p.m. - II p_m,&#13;
Mon. - Thurs. 5 p.m. - 10 p.m.&#13;
Sun. 12 Noon 9 p.m.&#13;
Like any good strategy, it is lime&#13;
And wh!l&lt;:Seattle's only two neWSpa~&#13;
are reactionary - the Hearst P&#13;
telligencer and Scripps HOINardSea04\ latheir&#13;
monopoly powers are still notlIIe_&#13;
secondly, the strategy does ha lotoJ.&#13;
seattle target for certain reasons ;:;,..'!'!&#13;
history and geography. In spite of .;~&#13;
failures and hassles, the SLF made ~'~&#13;
short run, what will some day be ,Ill ill&#13;
as key steps in a revolutionary ~&#13;
While the Justice Department is note1a~&#13;
about this, it has a fundamental POli~&#13;
understanding: and had that wben ~&#13;
was attacked at its peak. "'"&#13;
SLF was a city-wIde movement..&#13;
autonomous project and liVingeollecti'.&#13;
were in constant touch with each ...&#13;
through phone lines, relationshipsoIbIr&#13;
weekly coordinating committee m~&#13;
While maintaining a campus t&gt;be,-&#13;
members organized off ~mpus, Were•&#13;
of school, worked for a living ",ere':&#13;
time in the sense of the word t~t makeo&#13;
Edgar Hoover start to wonder. They ~&#13;
the ivory tower in a way that did&#13;
parallel the fanatacism of Weathet1llelt I1lIt&#13;
the guilt and self-denial of "into-U:&#13;
factory" brigades.&#13;
Even without the SLF apparatus, II1e&#13;
strongest .motton In seattle is ",ith YQ11ll&#13;
and working people, ill the UnionIiII1e&#13;
Unemployed which has staged marebos ..&#13;
Boeing, 10 free fond and clothing II'OJecta&#13;
in white working class neighborhoodo.&#13;
working with the unemployed. ~&#13;
with the realization that unempl"YJDlltl&#13;
continues to skyrocket with recession_&#13;
NBC recentl~ reported that Y.ulll&#13;
unemploymentls up 35 per cent - 8Ild II1e&#13;
growth of unionization among ae~&#13;
engineers, teachers, and other white.&#13;
occupations, SLF's projects - at ..&#13;
according to the Justice Departmentud&#13;
, the corporate power structure ofBoeiIthad&#13;
to he crushed.&#13;
Clearly, the question is not conspirsq&#13;
but politics. The federal indict_&#13;
handed down cities, in Count II, the 11&#13;
"overt acts" indicative of conspiraer&#13;
Only two - the last two - ..&#13;
specifically to violence, and to pbyIiII&#13;
acts of violence committed. No names ..&#13;
GO TO P, 7&#13;
MARGURrrrE'S&#13;
ROB~S-R.gular SI5.00,&#13;
Spedol, $10.00,&#13;
Enjoy Iheo. cool&#13;
evenings in cozy&#13;
comfort!&#13;
Shorl quilI.d; y,l..&#13;
loned ribbon d.....&#13;
the front, 1ined w'&#13;
softaol ny1..&#13;
peach ..&#13;
lavend«'&#13;
Small,&#13;
Margueritte's is&#13;
-9 unlil 9 Monday."'"&#13;
Fridoys, olh., weekdar&#13;
9 'Ii I 5:30, Sunday.&#13;
from 10 a.m. until&#13;
5 p.m.&#13;
6207 • 22nd AyenU'&#13;
. , 531AO Kenosha, WisconSin&#13;
Phone: 652.~681 9006 5heridan Rd. .Phone 694-1733&#13;
VAlEO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS ond&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m,&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave,&#13;
12:00 pllFREE&#13;
DELIVERY 4:00 P.M. TO&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Seattle Rhymes With Chicago&#13;
in Weathermen - but left the group&#13;
because of ,sharp political disagreements.&#13;
The fledgling organization called&#13;
demonstrations in protest of the conviction&#13;
ol the Chica&amp;o 7 on February 16.&#13;
Reports on crowd size vary- the Seattle&#13;
commercial papers, both archcon&#13;
ervative, guessed 2,000, others cite&#13;
3,000. The crowd erupted as it neared the&#13;
fed ral building as rocks broke government&#13;
wmdow . Police, appearing from a&#13;
,by building, put on, according to&#13;
many on the scene, an uncommonly brutal&#13;
how, beating non-violent demonstratrors&#13;
v. ith vigor. ·one of the eight conspiracy defendants&#13;
were arrested at the demonstration.&#13;
Eighty participants were, and the Seattle&#13;
inv ligating grand jury reported that "at&#13;
l a t half' or about 1,000 in their estimate,&#13;
took an "active" part in the melee. The massive demonstrations around the&#13;
country varied in the amount of property&#13;
damage exacted. While over 20,000&#13;
p aceful demonstrators marched in&#13;
Bo ·ton, the ociated Press chose only to r port the treet-fight engageme"nt be-&#13;
·een S 000 militants and Boston police. In&#13;
pile of the report, the Boston demontration&#13;
gave Harvard Square its Baptism&#13;
of fire. Demonstrations in numerous cities w re larger than Seattle's, and in Berkeley&#13;
and Bo ton at lea t, the intensity of&#13;
combat and the amount of damage was&#13;
high r than Seattle.&#13;
Frantic SLF activity - inwardly and&#13;
outwardly - followed. The Day After&#13;
&lt;TOA) demonstration Collectives&#13;
developed rapidly, gushing young people&#13;
- numerous U\V students - into radical&#13;
politics for the first time. Collectives&#13;
around dormitory organizing, high school&#13;
organizing, free food for street people, the&#13;
tax-incentive, campus work, youth culture&#13;
organizing, unemployment projects - and&#13;
the Boeing plant - gained motion in a&#13;
fever-pitch.&#13;
The freneticism of events, the rapidity&#13;
of action and growth manifest weaknesses&#13;
and faults in the SLF. The most cutting&#13;
aspect was male supremancy. Leadership&#13;
soon took the familiar male dominated&#13;
flavor: the swaggering, hip lifestyle of the&#13;
Sundance collective veneered what many&#13;
women began to see as an oppressive,&#13;
machismo form.&#13;
This contradiction would fester internally&#13;
for months as women sought to&#13;
personally confront and work out the&#13;
problem.&#13;
In early April, the Federal Bureau of&#13;
Investigation conducted a private press&#13;
conference v.-ith the Seattle commercial&#13;
medi;1. More like a battle briefing, its&#13;
ramifications perhaps will only be decided&#13;
by the Tacoma jury.&#13;
Replete with international-conspiracy&#13;
paranoia, the Seattle media began an&#13;
hysterical campaign against the SLF -&#13;
particularly through attacks on 'its selfproclaimed&#13;
leadership, Lerner, Marshall,&#13;
Dowd and Kelley.&#13;
A three part series in the Seattle Post&#13;
Intelligencer - a Hearst owned paper -&#13;
conducted a campaign, a common mixture&#13;
of half-truth, editorial policy and witch- hunt sensationalism - which read&#13;
something like a "conspiJ;:acy!" Factual&#13;
mistakes, misquotes, a refusal to&#13;
talk at length - in m·any cases at all - to&#13;
LF members, religious reliance on FBI&#13;
information and colorful layout set the&#13;
ba e for indictments that would come less&#13;
than a week before the invasion of Cambodia,&#13;
the killings at Jackson and Kent&#13;
States, and the Augusta uprising.&#13;
Battered on one hand by the media attack&#13;
- "outside agitator" and "hard-core&#13;
exponents of violence and chaos" cliches&#13;
- and suffering internally from too rapid&#13;
gro~~. male supremancy, and whirlwind&#13;
activity, the SLF was dealt a one-two&#13;
pun_ch by the events surrounding Cambodia&#13;
Week and the issuing of the conspiracy&#13;
indictments.&#13;
It led "militant" actions that week that&#13;
basically involved the inhalation of tear&#13;
gas after blocking the freeway near the&#13;
Seattle campus, and began to isolate itself.&#13;
Into the summer its energy was&#13;
ge~r~lly clisapated. Around the country,&#13;
however, heresay and the wishful thinking&#13;
of some SLF leadership was building a&#13;
myth. Movement people began flocking to&#13;
Sea~tle_. Women in the SLF, however, were&#13;
begmnmg to pull out.&#13;
WHY A SEATTLE CONSPIRACY?&#13;
Knowing that Seattle's TDA was ~y no&#13;
means unique, why federal conspiracy&#13;
indictments, over the protests of local&#13;
prosecuting authorities? . To begin with, Seattle, an isolated c_1ty,&#13;
has been a testing ground for repress1~n.&#13;
Seattle's general strike during which&#13;
workers shut down the city precipitated&#13;
mass detention, deporation and busting _of&#13;
scores of militant socialist, commurust&#13;
and anarchist workers at the end of postWorld&#13;
War I recessions.&#13;
Raids on trade unions, harassment and&#13;
repression - minimized by the media - paved the way for then Attorney General&#13;
A. Mitchell Palmer to institute, shortly&#13;
thereafter, similar escapades on a&#13;
national level: the infamous Palmer&#13;
Raids. Thousands of militant workers&#13;
were departed and jailed - no knocks, of&#13;
course - in a 24-hour period and broke the&#13;
back of the trade-union's revolutionary&#13;
wing.&#13;
Seattle workers, expecting their gener~l&#13;
strike to move nationally, retreated m&#13;
militant action: their isolation set the pace&#13;
for a dryrun, and Palmer took the experiment's&#13;
results nationally.&#13;
Three decades later, before few people&#13;
outside of Wisconsin knew then-Senator&#13;
Joseph McCarthy, local witch-hunt&#13;
hearings went on in Seattle, as the redscare&#13;
was tested in the isolated Northwest.&#13;
More than possibly, McCarthy had an eye&#13;
not only to the Puget Sounds, but to&#13;
reaction around the country. With "reds"&#13;
scared in Seattle, and with a nation&#13;
unawakened to the coming of its saddest&#13;
days, McCarthy mounted a podium whose&#13;
base had the mark of Seattle lumber.&#13;
Thus, the Seattle Conspiracy trial not&#13;
only fits in.o a general strategy of&#13;
repression - from busting student body&#13;
president moderates at Kent State to&#13;
Black Panthers in Detroit - but into an&#13;
historical pattern. The Nixon-AgnewMitchell&#13;
regime, its corporate, financial,&#13;
industrial and labor bureaucrat backers,&#13;
have a national strategy.&#13;
Anchor Inn&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
ADULTS $2.50&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 10 $1.50&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 5 FREE&#13;
Pri~es Include first&#13;
dinner beverag,.&#13;
SUNDAY SPECIAL&#13;
Roast Chicken with&#13;
Biscuits and Jravy&#13;
SERVING: Fri. &amp; Sat. 5 p.m. _ ll p.m.&#13;
Mon. - Thurs. s p.m. _ 10 p.m.&#13;
Sun. 12 Noon 9 p.m.&#13;
9006 Sher!dan Rd. .Phone 694-1733&#13;
VALEO'$&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
Like any good strategy, it is time Les&#13;
And while Seattle's only two new led.&#13;
are reactionary - the Hearst ;pallera&#13;
telligencer and Scripps Howard Sea~ In.&#13;
their monopoly powers are still not t e - Secondly, the strategy does ha otal.&#13;
Seattle target for certain reasons ~ the&#13;
history and geography. In spite of in;o~&#13;
failures and hassles, the SLF made . ~I&#13;
short run, what will some day be r ' Ill its&#13;
as key steps in a revolutionary di,~ While the Justice Department is not:on.&#13;
about this, it has a fundamental P0liti ~ understanding: and had that when S cal&#13;
was attacked at its peak. LF&#13;
SLF was a ~ity-wide movement· . autonomous proJect and living collecti 1ts&#13;
were in constant touch with each ves&#13;
through phone lines, relationshi 0thet&#13;
weekly coordinating committee m:r i'-1&#13;
While maintaining a campus base""-&#13;
members organized off campus wer ' 111&#13;
of sc~ool, worked for a living, 'were'ru~&#13;
time m the sense of the word that makes&#13;
Edgar Hoover start to wonder. They 1&#13;
~· the ivory tower in a way that did t&#13;
parallel the fanatacism of Weathermen not&#13;
the guilt and self-denial of "into-0:,&#13;
factory" brigades.&#13;
Even witho~t ~e SLF apparatus, the&#13;
strongest _motion m ~attle is with YOOtb&#13;
and workmg ~pie, m the Union or the&#13;
Une_mpl~yed w~ch has staged marches 011&#13;
Boemg, m free food and clothing projects&#13;
in white working class neighborh~ in&#13;
working with the unemployed. Coupled&#13;
with the realization that unemployment&#13;
continues to skyrocket with recession _&#13;
NBC recently reported that youth&#13;
unemployment is up 35 per cent - and the&#13;
growth of unionization among aerospace&#13;
engineers, teachers, and other white collar&#13;
occupations, SLF's projects - at least&#13;
according to the Justice Department and&#13;
- the corporate power structure of Boeinghad&#13;
to be crushed.&#13;
Clear I~,. the question is not ~onspiracy,&#13;
but politics. The federal indictment&#13;
handed down cities, in Count II, the 11&#13;
"overt acts" indicative of conspiracy&#13;
Only two - the last two - refer&#13;
specifically to violence, and to physical&#13;
acts of violence committed. No names m&#13;
GO TOP. 7&#13;
MARGURI'ITE'S&#13;
ROBE~-Regular $15.00,&#13;
Special, $10.00.&#13;
Enjoy these cool&#13;
evenings in coiy&#13;
comfort!&#13;
Short quilted; velwl&#13;
toned ribbon down,&#13;
the front, lined witli&#13;
softest nylon&#13;
peach or&#13;
lavendor.&#13;
Small,&#13;
Margueritte' s is&#13;
9 unti I 9 Mondays 010&#13;
Fridays, other weekday&#13;
9 'ti I 5:30, Sundays&#13;
from JO a.m. until&#13;
5 p.m.&#13;
6207 - 22nd Avenue · · 53JAO Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone: 652-~681&#13;
FREE DELIVERY 4;00 P.M. TO&#13;
KENOSHA &#13;
Seattt~con't.&#13;
defined police-state u Thi . ac Ion •s is tbe liti r:'. SLF tr· l: po itieal s.gnificance of th&#13;
13. the same e&#13;
governmental for C~rporate and&#13;
Franco's fascism a~es'l~lCh lubricate&#13;
a score of dicta torshi 01 e machinery of&#13;
coming down on itsPSS8roundthe world is&#13;
Th . eattle antagon' ts&#13;
ere IS no question abo t tha . IS.&#13;
the neeessit of u l Cliches for&#13;
imperialism y not only defending the&#13;
. ~ racism, male supr and repression will be - emancy&#13;
social system which . repeated until the&#13;
the profit mecbam rn egrates them into&#13;
Thi . msm IS abolished.&#13;
th IS IS not only the lesson of Seattle but&#13;
an~ "::'..~sde of Agnew, the advice of Nixon&#13;
wi om of the Bank fA'&#13;
The Sealtle 8 knows well th 0 di ~enca.&#13;
Malcolm X: "the chick e c m of&#13;
home to roost" ens have come&#13;
And they know the real trial is to build&#13;
futu,:" worth liVing for: and that the r ~&#13;
verdict can never be made in courtroo:&#13;
Wrestling Is&#13;
The Lead Off&#13;
The first action of the winter&#13;
sea~ at Parkside will he taken :POthrls&#13;
wrestling UWP W tl. Y e Fr' . res Ing Team On&#13;
Iday Dec. 4, at3 p.m. in the aftern';"n at&#13;
John .Bullen Junior high school the&#13;
.wrestlmg team encounters WSU ~ Point and Mi h' ~ tevens " . c 19an Tech. John Bullen&#13;
jUmor hIgh school is loca ted less than onehaU&#13;
mile south of the Kenosha Cam&#13;
39th flvenue. pus on&#13;
This will be the first action of the season&#13;
for the Rangers. Team memhers h&#13;
there will he a large turnout to cheer thope&#13;
on to a VICtory. em&#13;
The Mat Maids and Coach Koch will he&#13;
makmg theIr debuts at Parkside.&#13;
'Parksides First&#13;
Wrestling Clinic&#13;
By WALTER BREACH&#13;
Once upQIl a time, as all good stories&#13;
sbould begin, a friend 01mine had a kindly&#13;
aunl This kindly aunt had a ninety year&#13;
old uncle. And, as the story goes, one day&#13;
she found him high in an old tree, standing&#13;
one foot on the top rung of a rickety ladder&#13;
and the other on a rather unsure looking&#13;
branch. "Oh, come down, come down."&#13;
she cried when she saw him, "you surely&#13;
will strain yourself." But the old man only&#13;
looked down on her and calmly said, "my&#13;
younger brother is helping me, so don't&#13;
worry." His eighty-nine year-old brother&#13;
t1:len appeared, and was indeed helping&#13;
him.&#13;
What has this got to do with a Booster&#13;
Club you ask? Not much, but I like the&#13;
story. For those who insist on a meaning,&#13;
however, substitute Kathy Mauer for the&#13;
kindly old aunt, the Booster Club for the&#13;
old timer. Then take the student body as&#13;
the younger brother and the tree as the&#13;
effort to raise school spirit, and the story&#13;
makes less sense then hefore.&#13;
The events the Club has plaMed sound&#13;
alright, but after all, we're not just out of&#13;
highschool, at least most of us aren't, well&#13;
maybe some of us aten't Uten agam maybe&#13;
this is just Parkside high school. If so,&#13;
more power to you Booster club, and I sure&#13;
w!JUldlike to be able to smoke on the bus.&#13;
UW LAB FIRST TO AID&#13;
SUPERIOR STUDE '1'8&#13;
The University of Wisconsin ""as the&#13;
first uni . eulti ~verslty to devote its attention to&#13;
tivalmg the land's greatest natural&#13;
resource - the intellectually superior&#13;
student.&#13;
Via the Madison campus Research and&#13;
~uldance Laboratory Cor Superior&#13;
tudents, more than 3.000 students rrom&#13;
high schools all over Wisconsin have taken&#13;
partm the project.&#13;
~&#13;
DE1JCA TESSEN -lEVERAGES&#13;
3203 f1m.secOND STIHI&#13;
l&lt;IN&lt;»&gt;tA. WISCONSIN&#13;
t'l\' ADULT EDl:CATfON&#13;
POPl:LAR IN TATE&#13;
A University of Wisconsin urvej&#13;
Research Laborator) sludy sho"ed that 13&#13;
per cenl of all Wiscon.,n adult par .&#13;
ticipated 1_ In l:W education program In&#13;
THE&#13;
DAISY • PIPEt&#13;
• PAPERS&#13;
• BELl.'&#13;
• INCENSE&#13;
• CANDLES&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Ellllwood&#13;
Students let red carpet service&#13;
(So does everyone elSe!)&#13;
to be seen. In fact, the grand jury itseU&#13;
estimate. at least 1,000 people took "active"&#13;
part i~the disruptive portions of the&#13;
demonstration.&#13;
Still- the alleged criminals - the over&#13;
act continue, name da tes when the con-&#13;
,prators are alleged to "have met in&#13;
seattle" or "to have talked." Accusations&#13;
«:idle crime of "addressing an 'assembly"&#13;
te I "d ' "taking ~ra ~,ass an advocating&#13;
lIacts of VIOlence are enough to issue&#13;
cbarges whose penalties range to 20 years&#13;
inprison.Lerner is "alleged" to have used&#13;
telephones;Marshall "addressed a rally,"&#13;
OOWd, :'spok~ to a gathering." The "overt&#13;
acts" are, 10 one sense, simply the&#13;
chronicling of certain practices guaranteed&#13;
by the Constitution and the Bill of&#13;
Rights.&#13;
10 1970 America, they are cause for&#13;
arresL&#13;
To make the situation more insidious:&#13;
_ Weathermen (whom none of the&#13;
defendantsknow), accused of blowing up a&#13;
"""t-office, were tacked onto the indicbnent&#13;
as co-conspirators "not named&#13;
as defendants."&#13;
'!'benews blackout- save for one article&#13;
in tbeNation magazine and an appearance&#13;
III the Dick Cavett show by one SLF&#13;
lawyer- mesh with the moving of the trial&#13;
from Seattle to Tacoma;' some. 40 miles&#13;
sooth.Moved by a' federal judge over the&#13;
protest of SLF lawyers, Ta.coma has far&#13;
feweryoung people, no youth community&#13;
lI' newspapers, is still dominated by&#13;
seattle's arclH:onservative media, is an&#13;
inconvenience for the defendants and&#13;
makes trial by peer an impossibility.&#13;
And, of course, the Rap Brown statute&#13;
and conspiracy itseU are "thO\lgh-crime"&#13;
laws, needing no specific action by&#13;
defeodants, no crimes, bul intent: It is no&#13;
wCliderthat Chicago 7 lawyer William&#13;
KWlStlerstatedthe primary importance of&#13;
!be Seattle-Tacoma trial. .&#13;
U the federal government can win, if&#13;
there are no mass outcries and if there is&#13;
oot significant support outside the Northwest&#13;
for the seattle 8, the base in once&#13;
again laid for federally oriented decentralized&#13;
masS scale repression. This&#13;
,trategy is partically being employed -&#13;
001WIthoutfederal overtones - in Athens&#13;
Keo~ California and other places. Bui&#13;
federal application leitimizes constant&#13;
federal surveilllince, full utilization of&#13;
Dat~onal .repression apparatus, the&#13;
ven.table Importation of thought police&#13;
asa~t any movement for social change,&#13;
be.• t black and Third World, women's&#13;
oriented, revolutionary, moderate or&#13;
liberal, because everyday, anybody&#13;
comnllts the overt acts cited against the&#13;
Seattle 8 by the federal grand jury.&#13;
Perhaps those facts are what motivated&#13;
IIUl:hbroad-based support for the Seattle 8&#13;
DefenseCommittee: the clergy heads of&#13;
!be. N.ewman Center and the Campus&#13;
Ouiatian Ministry at the University of&#13;
Washington; Engineering and nursing&#13;
pro.fesaions;. lawyers, young people,&#13;
:~~itl~~:~::n,,:,~~andmemherSOf Parkside Booster Club&#13;
The Defense Committee states the law&#13;
ll'edicating the charges against the eight"&#13;
.... 01 dubious conStitutionality, is as&#13;
lr'oad .and.elastic as government wants to&#13;
make.t and threatens the civilliherties 01&#13;
all Americans."&#13;
deThe SLF itself is now gathered into a&#13;
lense collective, which is trying to&#13;
solidifythe large Seattle movement - as&#13;
Wboarell as liberals and moderates - behind a&#13;
d and massive defense.&#13;
.Rallies have been planned in at least 15&#13;
Cities.around the country to coincide with&#13;
!he onglnallrial da te of November 9 since&#13;
mOYedhack to the 23. The demonsU:ations&#13;
~e set (0 confr0!'1tarea media operations&#13;
loree them to cover the trial and to give&#13;
.... ponse to the protests. Coincidentally,&#13;
::: dem~trations can only corroherate&#13;
~OW1ngclaims of reporters in com-&#13;
;::re.al press of censorship, political&#13;
rassment and news 1nanagement.&#13;
~onsPirators Lerner, Dowd, Kelley,&#13;
S, Marshall, Stern, and Roger Lipp- =.expect the trial to go into 1971. The&#13;
. al government, meanwhile, pursues&#13;
~d el Justensen, the eighih conspirator&#13;
a fugitive.&#13;
~ttle situation is, on every level,&#13;
ill . t setting: the concept of the SLF,&#13;
to Ulroads to working people, i!S attempts&#13;
llli Understand the meaning of young&#13;
_~';"Iaas people in the context of social&#13;
~~; the women's action and its&#13;
---...uences; and the namre of federally&#13;
Lirpl. Sellett.&#13;
Parkside's first annual Wrestling Clinic Lt ••• t Pric ••&#13;
last Saturday could only be looked at one ~&#13;
way - successful and huge. Unofficially idinflP..JL&#13;
there were over 500. wrestlers and coaches ~-~7"JJ·&#13;
in attendence. This would make it possibly ~f.&#13;
the largest one-day participation clinic L_,;.6,;.~6:...:5:.6t::;h:...S::t::-. ~K~e~no~s~h~.'__J&#13;
ever ~eld in the sport of wrestling. Instruction&#13;
took place on six individual mats&#13;
by five differ.ent instructors.&#13;
The instructors had many national&#13;
championships between them, but even&#13;
more important then that was that they&#13;
were able to leach their techniques at a&#13;
level that nearly everyone was able to&#13;
understand.&#13;
Coach Koch, the clinic director, felt that&#13;
all the organization and work which he and&#13;
others put into the clinic was worth it. "I&#13;
think we opened a lot of eyes concerning&#13;
the quality of the type of program we are&#13;
trying to run at Parkside."&#13;
TlIt PI•• T. I.,&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
5713 7TH AVE.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Thrifty Thrtads&#13;
For YOIn' 8«....&#13;
Far 0111Filli"gs&#13;
For YOllr FHI!&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
ll(]lrNTOlIIl KENOSHA&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
"Check Our Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Nickie's&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
1202 - 56th Str .. t&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.· 6S2-6904&#13;
LA TEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
SKI JACK ETS - Reg. S~5.00&#13;
Now $27.50&#13;
Prices to&#13;
Fit Your Pocket&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUIl. THIIU THUIIS.&#13;
11A.II. TILL IIIDIlIYE&#13;
Fill •• SAT. TILL Z A.II.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(tri pie decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR and RESTAURANT&#13;
Italian-American Foods&#13;
2114 52nd St.&#13;
20 hrs. a day/] day. a week&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTH CITY LIII1TS&#13;
Organ Music Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
From 9 p.m. til 2 a.m.&#13;
•• '"'j: .... ; , , .&#13;
Seattle_ con't.&#13;
to be seen. In fact, the grand jury itself&#13;
estimates at leas~ 1,000 people took "active"&#13;
part in the disruptive portions of the&#13;
dernonstra tion. . . Still - the alleged crimmals - the over&#13;
act continue, name dates when the conspirators&#13;
are alleged to "have met in&#13;
Seattle" or "to have talked." Accusations&#13;
of the crime of "addressing an assembly , ,&#13;
"taking .k~rate ~!ass" and advocati~&#13;
"acts of violence are enough to issue&#13;
charges whose penalties range to 20 years&#13;
in prison. Lerner is "alleged" to have used&#13;
telephones; Marshall "add!'essed a rally,"&#13;
oawd,:'spok~ to a gathering." The "overt&#13;
acts" are, m one sense, simply the&#13;
chronicling of certain practices guaranteed&#13;
by the Constitution and the Bill of&#13;
Rights.&#13;
In 1970 America, they are cause for&#13;
arresL&#13;
To make the situation more insidious:&#13;
three Weathermen (whom none of the&#13;
defendants know), accused of blowing up a&#13;
post-office, were tacked onto the indictment&#13;
as co-conspirators "not named&#13;
as defendants."&#13;
The news blackout-save for one article&#13;
in the Nation magazine and an appearance&#13;
on the Dick Cavett show by one SLF&#13;
lawyer - mesh with the moving of the trial&#13;
from Seattle to Tacoma, · some 40 miles&#13;
sooth. Moved by a federal judge over the&#13;
protest of SLF lawyers, Ta~oma has far&#13;
fewer young people, no youth community&#13;
or newspapers, is still dominated by&#13;
Seattle's arch-conservative media, is an&#13;
inconvenience for the defendants and&#13;
makes trial by peer an impossibility.&#13;
And, of course, the Rap Brown statute&#13;
and conspiracy itself are "though-crime"&#13;
laws, needing no specific action by&#13;
defendants, no crimes, but intent: It is no&#13;
wonder that Chicago 7 lawyer William&#13;
Kunstler stated the primary importance of&#13;
the Seattle-Tacoma trial.&#13;
U the federal government can win, if&#13;
there are no mass outcries and if there is&#13;
not significant support outside the Northwest&#13;
for the Seattle 8, the base in once&#13;
again laid for federally oriented decentralized&#13;
mass scale repression. This&#13;
strategy is partically being employed -&#13;
not without federal overtones - in Athens&#13;
Kent, California and other places. But&#13;
federal application leitimizes constant&#13;
£ed~ral surveillance, full utilization of&#13;
nat_1onal _repression apparatus, the&#13;
ven_table importation of thought police&#13;
aga~t any movement for social change,&#13;
be_ 1t black and Third World, women's&#13;
oriented, revolutionary moderate or&#13;
libera_l, because every'day, anybody&#13;
commits the overt acts cited against the&#13;
Seattle 8 by the federal grand jury.&#13;
Perhaps those facts are what motivated&#13;
such broad-based support for the Seattle 8&#13;
Defense Committee: the clergy heads of&#13;
the . N_ewman Center and the Campus&#13;
Chr1s?an Ministry at the University of&#13;
Washmgton; Engineering and nursing&#13;
deThfin_ed_ police-state action&#13;
IS IS the liti . ·. SLF trial: l:e ~ Significance of the&#13;
governmental force e c~rporate and&#13;
Franco's fascism and !u v;:1ch lu~ricate&#13;
a score of dictatorshi e machinery of&#13;
coming down on itsp; around the world is&#13;
There is no question abo eattle antagonists.&#13;
~e necessity of not o::it that. Cli~hes for&#13;
imperialisqi, racism m~ defending the&#13;
and repression will be e supremancy&#13;
social system which . repeated until the&#13;
the profit mechan· 1D: egrat~ them into&#13;
Th. . 15m IS abohshed&#13;
1s 1s not only the lesson f ·&#13;
:~ mtheessa~edof Agnew, the a~vi~!?~~i!&#13;
wisomoftheBnk f . The Seattle 8 knows wJ o ~menca.&#13;
Malcolm X: "the cbicke the dictum of&#13;
home to roost,, ns have come&#13;
And they know the real trial is to build a&#13;
futu~e worth living for: and that the real&#13;
verdict can never be made in courtrooms.&#13;
Wrestling Is&#13;
The Lead Off&#13;
The first action of the . · season at Parkside will be ~ter bsports wrestling UWP . en Y the Fr' · Wrestling Team On&#13;
Jo::!ay ~~- 4, at 3 ~-m. ~ the aftern~n at . en Juruor high school the&#13;
.wr~tlmg team encounters WSU-Ste&#13;
~o~t ~d Michigan Tech. John B~*:&#13;
Juruor ~1gh school is located less than one- half mile south of the Kenosha Ca&#13;
39th avenue. mpus on&#13;
i This will be the first action of the season&#13;
or the_ Rangers. Team members ho&#13;
there will_ be a large turnout to cheer the: on to a victory.&#13;
'rh_e Mat ~aids and Coach Koch will be&#13;
makmg their debuts at Parkside. ,&#13;
Parksides First&#13;
Wrestling Clinic&#13;
Parkside's first annual Wrestling Clinic&#13;
last Saturday could only be looked at one&#13;
way - successful and huge. Unofficially&#13;
there were over 500 wrestlers and coaches&#13;
in attendence. This would make it possibly&#13;
the largest one-day participation clinic&#13;
ever held in the sport of wrestling. Instruction&#13;
took place on six individual mats&#13;
by five different instructors.&#13;
The instructors had many national&#13;
championships between them, but even&#13;
more important then that was that they&#13;
were able to teach their techniques at a&#13;
level that nearly everyone was able to&#13;
understand.&#13;
Coach Koch, the clinic director, felt that&#13;
all the organization and work which he and&#13;
others put into the clinic was worth it. "I&#13;
think we opened a lot of eyes concerning&#13;
the quality of the type of program we are&#13;
trying to run at Parkside."&#13;
pro_fessions; lawyers, young people,&#13;
~:1&#13;
~~stJ~~~~~!i~~-rsandmembersof Parkside Booster Club&#13;
The Defense Committee states the law&#13;
predicating the charges against the eight"&#13;
· · · . of dubious constitutionality, is as broad _and elastic as government wants to&#13;
make it and threatens the civil liberties of&#13;
all Americans."&#13;
The SLF itself is now gathered into a&#13;
defense collective which is trying to&#13;
solidify the large Seattle movement - as&#13;
well as liberals and moderates - behind a&#13;
board and massive defense.&#13;
. ~ies have been planned in at least 15&#13;
Cities .ai:ound the country to coincide with&#13;
the ongmal trial date of November 9 since&#13;
moved back to the 23. The demonstr'ations&#13;
~e set Co confro!lt area media operations&#13;
w force them to cover the trial and to give&#13;
~es~nse to the protests. Coincidentally,&#13;
the em~nstrations can only corroberate&#13;
e &amp;~owing claims of reporters in com-&#13;
~~rcial press of censorship, political&#13;
assment and news management.&#13;
A~onspirators Lerner, Dowd, Kelley,&#13;
s, Marshall, Stern, and Roger Lipp-&#13;
~an expect the trial to go into 1971. Tqe&#13;
M' eral government meanwhile pursues&#13;
anidchael Justensen, the eighth co~spirator&#13;
a fugitive.&#13;
The Seattle situation is on every level,&#13;
:e_cedent setting: the co~cept of the SLF,&#13;
to inroads to working people, i!S attempts&#13;
nu understand the meaning of young&#13;
8~ 1e-c1 lass people in the context of social&#13;
gg e; the women's action and its&#13;
consequences; and the nature of federally&#13;
By WALTER BREACH&#13;
Once upon a time, as all good stories&#13;
should begin, a friend of mine had a kindly&#13;
aunt. This kindly aunt had a ninety year&#13;
old uncle. And, as the story goes, one day&#13;
she found him high in an old tree, standing&#13;
one foot on the top rung of a rickety ladder&#13;
and the other on a rather unsure looking&#13;
branch. "Oh, come down, come down."&#13;
she cried when she saw him, "you surely&#13;
will strain yourself." But the old man only&#13;
looked down on her and calmly said, "my&#13;
younger brother is helping me, so don't&#13;
worry." His eighty-nine year-old brother&#13;
then appeared, and was indeed helping&#13;
him. What has this got to do with a Booster&#13;
Club you ask? Not much, but I like the&#13;
story. For those who insist on a meaning, however, substitute Kathy Mauer for the&#13;
kindly old aunt, the Booster Club for the&#13;
old timer. Then take the student body as&#13;
the younger brother an~ . the tree as the&#13;
effort to raise school spint, and the story&#13;
makes less sense then before. The events the Club has planned sound&#13;
alright, but after all, we're not just out of&#13;
high school, at least most of us ar~'t, well&#13;
maybe some of us aten't then agam maybe&#13;
this is just Parkside high school. If so,&#13;
more power to you Booster club, and I sure&#13;
w9Uld like to be able to smoke on the bus.&#13;
UW LAB FIRST TO ID&#13;
SUPERIOR TUDE. •&#13;
The ':Jniversity of Wisc in the&#13;
firs~ un!versity to d vote its attention to&#13;
cultivatmg the land's gr t t natur I&#13;
~::~~ - the intellectually .uperior&#13;
\l_ia the 1adison campus R arch and&#13;
~Uldance Laboratory for Superior&#13;
~udents, more than 3. . tudents from&#13;
high ~ools all over Wiscon in have taken&#13;
part m the project.&#13;
?et«tlcu&#13;
DELICATESSEN-BEVERAGES&#13;
3203 flm-SKOND STlfn&#13;
K!NOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
2704 lotlirep ""·• aodlle, w;,...,,..;,.&#13;
Students get red carpet service&#13;
(So does everyone e l se !)&#13;
T I PINI Tt l•J&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
Larc11t s.11ct1&#13;
6?6 56th St. Kenosha&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
"Check Our Prices Last''&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
65&amp;-2233&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTli CITY L ITS&#13;
THE&#13;
DAISY&#13;
Thrifty Thrtads&#13;
CE.NSE&#13;
OLES&#13;
For Your &amp;u! ..&#13;
Far Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Fut.'&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Nickie's&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
1202 - 56th Street&#13;
Kenuha, Wis.• 652-6904&#13;
LA TEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
SKI JACKETS _ Reg. $,5.00&#13;
How $27 .50&#13;
Pric · to&#13;
Fit Your Pock t&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
11 A. , TILL IDNITE&#13;
FRI. I SAT. TILL 2 A. ,&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR and RESTAURANT&#13;
Italian-American Foods&#13;
2114 52nd St.&#13;
20 hrs. a dayJ7 days a week&#13;
Organ Music Thurs., Fr· , Sot&#13;
F rom 9 p.m. t il 2 o.m. &#13;
SPoNSOReD BY:&#13;
VARSI"l'Yewe&#13;
SIGMA D£t..TA Pf.fl&#13;
PEP -' BOOSlCQ ewB&#13;
CAPTAI""S COUNCIL.&#13;
HOI»&#13;
t\eouT&#13;
-. (t1i.....L.&#13;
TOUGH&#13;
0\..1&gt;&#13;
MrJG.GRi'&#13;
SUBMIT&#13;
IDEAS TO&#13;
NEWSCope,&#13;
STUOeNT as&#13;
-!&lt;~~...&#13;
SPONSOR@ BY:&#13;
VARS•TYcws&#13;
SIGMA DELTA PMI&#13;
PEP.&amp; SOOs-TtR CLUB&#13;
CAPTAIN'S COUNCtL.&#13;
Vc~Ai1L.e&#13;
FE"C.t..A, ·nv,,-&#13;
s~~ Ge-AA.&#13;
Ho~&#13;
AeovT&#13;
'- AAAL.&#13;
Tb~&#13;
01..t)&#13;
~l"Jl"~~r&#13;
~TH~ 'tlA c.E&#13;
LS No.,..&#13;
/&gt;. l,.W A '/...S&#13;
Tb Tt-\€&#13;
ScµlFi- 11 </text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61639">
              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 2, Issue 9, November 23, 1970</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61640">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61641">
              <text>1970-11-23</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61643">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="61644">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="61645">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61647">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61648">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61649">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61650">
              <text>Text</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61651">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61652">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
